14
Heartbreak House
bombs crashed, houses crumbled, and aircraft guns distrib-
uted shrapnel on friend and foe alike until certain shop win-
dows in London, formerly full of fashionable hats, were filled
with steel helmets. Slain and mutilated women and children,
and burnt and wrecked dwellings, excuse a good deal of vio-
lent language, and produce a wrath on which many suns go
down before it is appeased. Yet it was in the United States of
America where nobody slept the worse for the war, that the
war fever went beyond all sense and reason. In European
Courts there was vindictive illegality: in American Courts
there was raving lunacy. It is not for me to chronicle the
extravagances of an Ally: let some candid American do that.
I can only say that to us sitting in our gardens in England,
with the guns in France making themselves felt by a throb in
the air as unmistakeable as an audible sound, or with tight-
ening hearts studying the phases of the moon in London in
their bearing on the chances whether our houses would be
standing or ourselves alive next morning, the newspaper ac-
counts of the sentences American Courts were passing on
young girls and old men alike for the expression of opinions
which were being uttered amid thundering applause before
huge audiences in England, and the more private records of
the methods by which the American War Loans were raised,
were so amazing that they put the guns and the possibilities
of a raid clean out of our heads for the moment.
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