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       Anonymous

      A German deserter's war experience

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664577146

       I MARCHING INTO BELGIUM

       II FIGHTING IN BELGIUM

       III SHOOTING CIVILIANS IN BELGIUM

       IV GERMAN SOLDIERS AND BELGIAN CIVILIANS

       V THE HORRORS OF STREET FIGHTING

       VI CROSSING THE MEUSE

       VII IN PURSUIT

       VIII NEARLY BURIED ALIVE ON THE BATTLEFIELD

       IX SOLDIERS SHOOTING THEIR OWN OFFICERS

       X SACKING SUIPPES

       XI MARCHING TO THE BATTLE OF THE MARNE—INTO THE TRAP

       XII AT THE MARNE—IN THE MAW OF DEATH

       XIII THE ROUT OF THE MARNE

       XIV THE FLIGHT FROM THE MARNE

       XV AT THE END OF THE FLIGHT

       XVI THE BEGINNING OF TRENCH WARFARE

       XVII FRIENDLY RELATIONS WITH THE ENEMY

       XVIII FIGHTING IN THE ARGONNES

       XIX CHRISTMAS IN THE TRENCHES

       XX THE "ITCH"—A SAVIOR

       XXI IN THE HELL OF VAUQUOIS

       XXII SENT ON FURLOUGH

       XXIII THE FLIGHT TO HOLLAND

       XXIV AMERICA AND SAFETY

      A GERMAN DESERTER'S WAR

       EXPERIENCE

       Table of Contents

      At the end of July our garrison at Koblenz was feverishly agitated. Part of our men were seized by an indescribable enthusiasm, others became subject to a feeling of great depression. The declaration of war was in the air. I belonged to those who were depressed. For I was doing my second year of military service and was to leave the barracks in six weeks' time. Instead of the long wished-for return home war was facing me.

      Also during my military service I had remained the anti-militarist I had been before. I could not imagine what interest I could have in the mass murder, and I also pointed out to my comrades that under all circumstances war was the greatest misfortune that could happen to humanity.

      Our sapper battalion, No. 30, had been in feverish activity five days before the mobilization; work was being pushed on day and night so that we were fully prepared for war already on the 23rd of July, and on the 30th of July there was no person in our barracks who doubted that war would break out. Moreover, there was the suspicious amiability of the officers and sergeants, which excluded any doubt that any one might still have had. Officers who had never before replied to the salute of a private soldier now did so with the utmost attention. Cigars and beer were distributed in those days by the officers with great, uncommon liberality, so that it was not surprising that many soldiers were scarcely ever sober and did not realize the seriousness of the situation. But there were also others. There were soldiers who also in those times of good-humor and the grinning comradeship of officer and soldier could not forget that in military service they had often been degraded to the level of brutes, and who now thought with bitter feelings that an opportunity might perhaps be offered in order to settle accounts.

      The order of mobilization became known on the 1st of August, and the following day was decided upon as the real day of mobilization. But without awaiting the arrival of the reserves we left our garrison town on August 1st. Who was to be our "enemy" we did not know; Russia was for the present the only country against which war had been declared.

      We marched through the streets of the town to the station between crowds of people numbering many thousands. Flowers were thrown at us from every window; everybody wanted to shake hands with the departing soldiers. All the people, even soldiers, were weeping. Many marched arm in arm with their wife or sweetheart. The music played songs of leave-taking. People cried and sang at the same time. Entire strangers, men and women, embraced and kissed each other; men embraced men and kissed each other. It was a real witches' sabbath of emotion; like a wild torrent, that emotion carried away the whole assembled humanity. Nobody, not even the strongest and most determined spirit, could resist that ebullition of feeling.

      But all that was surpassed by the taking leave at the station, which we reached after a short march. Here final adieus had to be said, here the separation had to take place. I shall never forget that leave-taking, however old I may grow to be. Desperately many women clung to their men; some had to be removed by force. Just as if they had suddenly had a vision of the fate of their beloved ones, as if they were beholding the silent graves in foreign lands in which those poor nameless ones were to be buried, they sought to cling fast to their possession, to retain what already no longer belonged to them.

      Finally that, too, was over. We had entered a train that had been kept ready, and had made ourselves comfortable in our cattle-trucks. Darkness had come, and we had no light in our comfortable sixth-class carriages.

      The train moved slowly down the Rhine, it went along without any great shaking, and some of us were seized by a worn-out feeling after those days of great excitement. Most of the soldiers lay with their heads on their knapsacks and slept. Others again tried to pierce the darkness as if attempting to look into the

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