Queens And Pawns, by Mary 
Roberts Rinehart 
 
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Title: Kings, Queens And Pawns An American Woman at the Front 
Author: Mary Roberts Rinehart 
Release Date: December 25, 2004 [EBook #14457] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KINGS, 
QUEENS AND PAWNS *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Richard Lammers and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team 
 
[Illustration: MARY ROBERTS RINEHART RETURNING FROM 
THE WAR-ZONE AND CAPTAIN FINCH ON S.S. "ARABIC."]
KINGS, QUEENS AND PAWNS 
An American Woman at the Front 
BY MARY ROBERTS RINEHART AUTHOR OF "K" 
NEW YORK GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY 1915 
 
CONTENTS 
FOR KING AND COUNTRY 
I. TAKING A CHANCE 
II. "SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE" 
III. LA PANNE 
IV. "'TWAS A FAMOUS VICTORY" 
V. A TALK WITH THE KING OF THE BELGIANS 
VI. THE CAUSE 
VII. THE STORY WITH AN END 
VIII. THE NIGHT RAID ON DUNKIRK 
IX. NO MAN'S LAND 
X. THE IRON DIVISION 
XI. AT THE HOUSE OF THE BARRIER 
XII. NIGHT IN THE TRENCHES 
XIII. "WIPERS"
XIV. LADY DECIES' STORY 
XV. RUNNING THE BLOCKADE 
XVI. THE MAN OF YPRES 
XVII. IN THE LINE OF THE "MITRAILLEUSE" 
XVIII. FRENCH GUNS IN ACTION 
XIX. "I NIBBLE THEM" 
XX. DUNKIRK: FROM MY JOURNAL 
XXI. TEA WITH THE AIR-FIGHTERS 
XXII. THE WOMEN AT THE FRONT 
XXIII. THE LITTLE "SICK AND SORRY" HOUSE 
XXIV. FLIGHT 
XXV. VOLUNTEERS AND PATRIOTS 
XXVI. A LUNCHEON AT BRITISH HEADQUARTERS 
XXVII. A STRANGE PARTY 
XXVIII. SIR JOHN FRENCH 
XXIX. ALONG THE GREAT BETHUNE ROAD 
XXX. THE MILITARY SECRET 
XXXI. QUEEN MARY OF ENGLAND 
XXXII. THE QUEEN OF THE BELGIANS 
XXXIII. THE RED BADGE OF MERCY
XXXIV. IN TERMS OF LIFE AND DEATH 
XXXV. THE LOSING GAME 
XXXVI. HOW AMERICANS CAN HELP 
XXXVII. AN ARMY OF CHILDREN 
 
KINGS, QUEENS AND PAWNS 
 
KINGS, QUEENS AND PAWNS 
FOR KING AND COUNTRY 
March in England is spring. Early in the month masses of snowdrops 
lined the paths in Hyde Park. The grass was green, the roads hard and 
dry under the eager feet of Kitchener's great army. For months they had 
been drilling, struggling with the intricacies of a new career, working 
and waiting. And now it was spring, and soon they would be off. Some 
had already gone. 
"Lucky beggars!" said the ones who remained, and counted the days. 
And waiting, they drilled. Everywhere there were squads: Scots in plaid 
kilts with khaki tunics; less picturesque but equally imposing regiments 
in the field uniform, with officers hardly distinguishable from their men. 
Everywhere the same grim but cheerful determination to get over and 
help the boys across the Channel to assist in holding that more than 
four hundred miles of battle line against the invading hosts of 
Germany. 
Here in Hyde Park that spring day was all the panoply of war: bands 
playing, the steady tramp of numberless feet, the muffled clatter of 
accoutrements, the homage of the waiting crowd. And they deserved 
homage, those fine, upstanding men, many of them hardly more than 
boys, marching along with a fine, full swing. There is something
magnificent, a contagion of enthusiasm, in the sight of a great volunteer 
army. The North and the South knew the thrill during our own great 
war. Conscription may form a great and admirable machine, but it 
differs from the trained army of volunteers as a body differs from a soul. 
But it costs a country heavy in griefs, does a volunteer army; for the 
flower of the country goes. That, too, America knows, and England is 
learning. 
They marched by gaily. The drums beat. The passers-by stopped. Here 
and there an open carriage or an automobile drew up, and pale men, 
some of them still in bandages, sat and watched. In their eyes was the 
same flaming eagerness, the same impatience to get back, to be loosed 
against the old lion's foes. 
For King and Country! 
All through England, all through France, all through that tragic corner 
of Belgium which remains to her, are similar armies, drilling and 
waiting, equally young, equally eager, equally resolute. And the thing 
they were going to I knew. I had seen it in that mysterious region which 
had swallowed up those who had gone before; in the trenches, in the 
operating, rooms of field hospitals, at outposts between the confronting 
armies where the sentries walked hand in hand with death. I had seen it 
in its dirt and horror and sordidness, this thing they were going to. 
War is not two great armies meeting in a clash and frenzy    
    
		
	
	
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