by E. Alexander Powell 
Special Correspondent of The New York World 
With Photographs by Mr. Donald Thompson 
The Siege and Fall of Antwerp 
Foreword 
Nothing is more unwise, on general principles, than to attempt to write 
about a war before that war is finished and before history has given it 
the justice of perspective. The campaign which began with the flight of 
the Belgian Government from Brussels and which culminated in the 
fall of Antwerp formed, however, a separate and distinct phase of the 
Greatest of Wars, and I feel that I should write of that campaign while 
its events are still sharp and clear in my memory and before the 
impressions it produced have begun to fade. I hope that those in search 
of a detailed or technical account of the campaign in Flanders will not 
read this book, because they are certain to be disappointed. It contains 
nothing about strategy or tactics and few military lessons can be drawn 
from it. It is merely the story, in simple words, of what I, a professional 
onlooker, who was accorded rather exceptional facilities for 
observation, saw in Belgium during that nation's hour of trial. 
An American, I went to Belgium at the beginning of the war with an 
open mind. I had few, if any, prejudices. I knew the English, the French, 
the Belgians, the Germans equally well. I had friends in all four 
countries and many happy recollections of days I had spent in each. 
When I left Antwerp after the German occupation I was as pro-Belgian 
as though I had been born under the red-black-and- yellow banner. I 
had seen a country, one of the loveliest and most peaceable in Europe, 
invaded by a ruthless and brutal soldiery; I had seen its towns and cities 
blackened by fire and broken by shell; I had seen its churches and its 
historic monuments destroyed; I had seen its highways crowded with
hunted, homeless fugitives; I had seen its fertile fields strewn with the 
corpses of what had once been the manhood of the nation; I had seen its 
women left husbandless and its children left fatherless; I had seen what 
was once a Garden of the Lord turned into a land of desolation; and I 
had seen its people--a people whom I, like the rest of the world, had 
always thought of as pleasure-loving, inefficient, easy-going--I had 
seen this people, I say, aroused, resourceful, unafraid, and fighting, 
fighting, fighting. Do you wonder that they captured my imagination, 
that they won my admiration? I am pro-Belgian; I admit it frankly. I 
should be ashamed to be anything else. 
E. Alexander Powell 
London, November 1, 1914. 
I. The War Correspondents 
War correspondents regard war very much as a doctor regards sickness. 
I don't suppose that a doctor is actually glad that people are sick, but so 
long as sickness exists in the world he feels that he might as well get 
the benefit of it. It is the same with war correspondents. They do not 
wish anyone to be killed on their account, but so long as men are going 
to be killed anyway, they want to be on hand to witness the killing and, 
through the newspapers, to tell the world about it. The moment that the 
war broke out, therefore, a veritable army of British and American 
correspondents descended upon the Continent. Some of them were men 
of experience and discretion who had seen many wars and had a right 
to wear on their jackets more campaign ribbons than most generals. 
These men took the war seriously. They were there to get the news and, 
at no matter what expenditure of effort and money, to get that news to 
the end of a telegraph-wire so that the people in England and America 
might read it over their coffee-cups the next morning. These men had 
unlimited funds at their disposal; they had the united influence of 
thousands of newspapers and of millions of newspaper-readers solidly 
behind them; and they carried in their pockets letters of introduction 
from editors and ex-presidents and ambassadors and prime ministers. 
Then there was an army corps of special writers, many of them with
well-known names, sent out by various newspapers and magazines to 
write "mail stuff," as dispatches which are sent by mail instead of 
telegraph are termed, and "human interest" stories. Their qualifications 
for reporting the greatest war in history consisted, for the most part, in 
having successfully "covered" labour troubles and murder trials and 
coronations and presidential conventions, and, in a few cases, Central 
American revolutions. Most of the stories which they sent home were 
written in comfortable hotel rooms in London or Paris or Rotterdam or 
Ostend. One of these correspondents, however, was not content with a 
hotel window viewpoint. He wanted to see some    
    
		
	
	
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