the Sabots Clatter Again, by 
Katherine Shortall 
 
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Title: Where the Sabots Clatter Again 
Author: Katherine Shortall 
Release Date: July 29, 2004 [EBook #13048] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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THE SABOTS CLATTER AGAIN *** 
 
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[Illustration: Where the Sabots Clatter Again by Katherine Shortall] 
[Illustration: Katherine Shortall (autograph), December 1921]
The Radcliffe Unit in France collaborated with the French Red Cross 
in its work of reconstruction after the Armistice. It was as a member of 
this unit and as chauffeuse in the devastated regions that the writer 
received the impressions set forth in these sketches. 
 
Where the Sabots Clatter Again 
by Katherine Shortall 
[Illustration: street scene] 
Ralph Fletcher Seymour Publisher 410 S. Michigan Avenue Chicago 
PUBLISHED FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE RADCLIFFE COLLEGE 
ENDOWMENT FUND IN AN EDITION LIMITED TO 150 COPIES 
SECOND EDITION OF 150 COPIES 
1921 
 
WHERE THE SABOTS CLATTER AGAIN. 
 
THE BRIDE OF NOYON. 
A returning flush upon the plain. Streaks of color across a mangled 
landscape: the gentle concealment of shell hole and trench. This is what 
one saw, even in the summer of 1919. For the sap was running, and a 
new invasion was occurring. Legions of tender blades pushed over the 
haggard No Man's Land, while reckless poppies scattered through the 
ranks of green, to be followed by the shyer starry sisters in blue and 
white. Irrepressibly these floral throngs advanced over the shell torn 
spaces, crowding, mingling and bending together in a rainbow riot 
beneath the winds that blew them. They were the vanguard.
* * * * * 
In the midst of the reviving fields lay Noyon: Noyon, that gem of the 
Oise, whose delicate outline of spires and soft tinted roofs had graced 
the wide valley for centuries. Today the little city lay blanched and 
shapeless between the hills, as all towns were left that stood in the path 
of the armies. The cathedral alone reared its battered bulk in the midst; 
a resisting pile, its two grim and blunted towers frowning into the sky. 
Nobly Gothic through all the shattering, the great church rose out of the 
wreckage, with flying buttresses still outspread like brooding wings to 
the dead houses that had sunk about her. 
But Noyon was not dead. We of the Red Cross knew that. We knew 
that in cellars and nooks of this labyrinth of ruin already hundreds of 
hearts were beating. On this calm September morning the newly 
cleared streets resounded with the healthful music of hammer and saw, 
and cartwheels rattled over the cobblestones, while workmen called to 
each other in resonant voices. Pregnant sounds, these, the significance 
of which we could estimate. For we had seen Noyon in the early 
months of the armistice: tangled and monstrous in her attitude of falling, 
and silent with the bleeding silence of desertion. Then, one memorable 
day, the stillness had been broken by the first clatter of sabots--that 
wooden noise, measured, unmistakable, approaching. Two pairs of 
sabots and a long road. Two broad backs bent under bulging loads; an 
infant's wail; a knock at the Red Cross Door--but that was nearly eight 
months before. 
The Poste de Secours was closed for the first time since Madame de 
Vigny and her three young infirmières had come to Noyon. Two 
women stood without, one plump and bareheaded, the other aged and 
bent, with a calico handkerchief tied over her hair. They stared at the 
printed card tacked upon the entrance of the large patched-up house 
that served as Headquarters for the French Red Cross. 
"Tiens! c'est fermé," exclaimed Madame Talon, shaking the rough 
board door with all her meagre weight, "and I have walked eight 
kilometers to get a jupon, and with rheumatism, too."
"Haven't you heard the news?" asked her companion with city-bred 
scorn. 
"Ah? What news?" The crisp old face crinkled with anticipation. 
"Why, Mademoiselle Gaston is to be married today." 
"Tiens, tiens! est-ce possible? What happiness for that good girl!" and 
Madame Talon, forgetful of the loss of her jupon, smiled a wrinkled 
smile till her nose nearly touched her chin, and her eyes receding into 
well worn little puckers, became two snapping black points. 
"Is it really so? And the bridegroom--who is he?" 
There followed that vivacious exchange of questions and answers and 
speculations which accompanies the announcement of a marriage the 
world over. 
Mademoiselle Gaston was the daughter of an    
    
		
	
	
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