Paths of Glory | Page 2

Irvin S. Cobb
and the Germans were
already across the line, beating down the sod of France with their
pelting feet.
Besides we had stopped often, for there was so much to see and to hear.
There was the hour we spent at Merbes-le-Chateau, where the English

had been; and the hour we spent at La Buissière, on the river Sambre,
where a fight had been fought two days earlier; but Merbes-le-Chateau
is another story and so is La Buissière. Just after La Buissière we came
to a tiny village named Neuville and halted while the local Jack-of-all-
trades mended for us an invalided tire on a bicycle.
As we grouped in the narrow street before his shop, with a hiving
swarm of curious villagers buzzing about us, an improvised ambulance,
with a red cross painted on its side over the letters of a baker's sign,
went up the steep hill at the head of the cobbled street. At that the
women in the doorways of the small cottages twisted their gnarled red
hands in their aprons, and whispered fearsomely among themselves, so
that the sibilant sound of their voices ran up and down the line of
houses in a long, quavering hiss.
The wagon, it seemed, was bringing in a wounded French soldier who
had been found in the woods beyond the river. He was one of the last to
be found alive, which was another way of saying that for two days and
two nights he had been lying helpless in the thicket, his stomach empty
and his wounds raw. On each of those two nights it had rained, and
rained hard.
Just as we started on our way the big guns began booming somewhere
ahead of us toward the southwest; so we turned in that direction.
We had heard the guns distinctly in the early forenoon, and again, less
distinctly, about noontime. Thereafter, for a while, there had been a lull
in the firing; but now it was constant--a steady, sustained boom-
boom-boom, so far away that it fell on the eardrums as a gentle
concussion; as a throb of air, rather than as a real sound. For three days
now we had been following that distant voice of the cannon, trying to
catch up with it as it advanced, always southward, toward the French
frontier. Therefore we flogged the belly of our tired horse with the lash
of a long whip, and hurried along. There were five of us, all Americans.
The two who rode on bicycles pedaled ahead as outriders, and the
remaining three followed on behind with the horse and the dogcart. We
had bought the outfit that morning and we were to lose it that night.
The horse was an aged mare, with high withers, and galls on her

shoulders and fetlocks unshorn, after the fashion of Belgian horses; and
the dogcart was a venerable ruin, which creaked a great protest at every
turn of the warped wheels on the axle. We had been able to buy the
two-- the mare and the cart--only because the German soldiers had not
thought them worth the taking.
In this order, then, we proceeded. Pretty soon the mare grew so weary
she could hardly lift her shaggy old legs; so, footsore as we were, we
who rode dismounted and trudged on, taking turns at dragging her
forward by the bit. I presume we went ahead thus for an hour or more,
along an interminable straight road and past miles of the checkered
light and dark green fields which in harvest time make a great
backgammon board of this whole country of Belgium.
The road was empty of natives--empty, too, of German wagon trains;
and these seemed to us curious things, because there had until then
been hardly a minute of the day when we were not passing soldiers or
meeting refugees.
Almost without warning we came on this little village called
Montignies St. Christophe. A six-armed signboard at a crossroads told
us its name --a rather impressive name ordinarily for a place of perhaps
twenty houses, all told. But now tragedy had given it distinction; had
painted that straggling frontier hamlet over with such colors that the
picture of it is going to live in my memory as long as I do live. At the
upper end of the single street, like an outpost, stood an old chateau, the
seat, no doubt, of the local gentry, with a small park of beeches and
elms round it; and here, right at the park entrance, we had our first
intimation that there had been a fight. The gate stood ajar between its
chipped stone pillars, and just inside the blue coat of a French cavalry
officer, jaunty and new and much braided with gold lace on the collar
and cuffs, hung from the
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