Sixteen Months in Four German Prisons - BestLightNovel.com
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After I had gathered my luggage together I was marched back to my cell.
Again my spirits drooped upon being asked to give my English address. I saw it all! In my highly strung condition I took this latest expression of Teuton methods to mean that my goods were to be sent home, but that I would have to suffer some dire penalty. I nursed this dark imagining because the prison treatment was not relaxed one iota. I pa.s.sed a restless half-hour. I was heavy-eyed from want of sleep, while my face had a.s.sumed a sickly, revolting pallor from rapidly collapsing health.
Again I was summoned to the Commandant's office. My goods were exactly as I had left them thirty minutes before.
[*large gap]
I was busily strapping up my goods when the door opened to admit the Commandant, guard and four other prisoners, whom I had not seen before.
One tall, good-looking, sprucely dressed fellow impressed me. He looked like a fellow-countryman. I went up to him.
"Are you English?" I asked.
"Holy smoke! What a treat to hear an Englishman. 'Put it there,'" and he extended his hand. I proffered mine which he shook as if it were a pump handle. He with others had been arrested, not as spies, and had been detained in Wesel Arresthaus. But being wealthy he had experienced an easy time.
"What are they going to do with us?" I enquired.
"Why, haven't you heard? They're going to send us to a hotel and then it won't be long before we strike good old England once more!"
[*large gap]
The party were in high spirits. But I was not so elated. I had every occasion to be suspicious of German bluff and inwardly would only believe we were going home when I was safely out of the country. My fellow-countryman, F---- K----, who is a well-known figure in City commercial circles, was wildly excited, and was discussing his future arrangements very keenly.
An escort appeared to accompany us to the mysterious "hotel" about which the Commandant had been talking so glibly. We swung out of the prison.
Glancing at the clock I saw the time was 8.30 p.m. As the main gate clanged behind me I pulled myself together, a new man. My eight days'
solitary confinement had come to an end.
We tramped the street, the people taking but little notice of us.
Presently we met a big party of tourists advancing and also under escort. They proved to be the pa.s.sengers of the pleasure steamer _Krimhilde_, who had been detained. When they saw me, unkempt, ragged, blood-stained, and dirty they immediately drew away. They took me for an excellent specimen of the genus hobo. Within a few seconds however they learned something about my experiences and became very chummy. F---- K---- communicated the fact that we were bound for an hotel, and the spirits of one and all rose.
The escort who had accompanied us from the prison here handed us over to that accompanying the tourists and we marched to the station. A train was waiting and we stepped aboard at nine o'clock. There appeared to be as many soldiers as pa.s.sengers. The members of my party confidently thought the train was bound for a point near the frontier or a restricted area by the seash.o.r.e. But I was not to be lulled into a false sense of security. I questioned one of the officers and ascertained our destination. Returning to the party I laughingly asked, "Do you know for what hotel we're bound?"
"No! What is it? Where is it?" came the eager request.
"The military camp at Sennelager!"
PRISON TWO--SENNELAGER
THE BLACK HOLE OF GERMANY
CHAPTER VI
OUR "LUXURIOUS HOTEL"
Although it was 9.25 Tuesday evening when we boarded the train in Wesel station, _en route_ for the "luxurious hotel where we were to receive every kindness consistent with the n.o.blest traditions of German honour,"
there did not appear to be any anxiety to part with our company. There were about sixty of us all told, and we were shepherded with as p.r.o.nounced a display of German military pomp and circ.u.mstance as would have been manifested if the All-Highest himself, had been travelling.
Wesel station swarmed with officers and men who apparently had nothing else to do but to perambulate the platforms, the officers swaggering with typical Teuton arrogance, and the humble soldiers clattering to and fro in utter servility, merely emphasising their existence by making plenty of noise with their c.u.mbrous boots and rifles.
At midnight the train started. The majority of my companions were the male pa.s.sengers of military age who had been detained from the pleasure steamer _Krimhilde_ while travelling up the Rhine. The military authorities in charge of the train received bulky sheafs of papers, each of which related to one pa.s.senger, and was packed with the most minute details. I am afraid my record must have been somewhat imposing, inasmuch as I commanded considerable and unappreciated attention from the military, while my fellow prisoners regarded me with a keen curiosity.
I must admit that my personal appearance was far from being attractive.
I looked even more ragged, un-cared for, and ill than I was when facing my accusers at the midnight trial some days before. I was s.h.i.+rtless, collarless, and tie-less. My hair was matted and clotted with congealed blood freely mixed with dirt. My face, in addition to a week's growth of hair, was smeared with black marks which I had not been able to remove owing to my inability to get soap to wash myself with. My frock-coat and trousers, frayed at the bottoms, were sadly soiled and contrasted strangely with the fancy pattern tops of my patent boots. In fact, I admitted to the party, that "I must have looked a 'knut' of the finest type!" All things considered I am not surprised that at first I was shunned by one and all, both compatriots and the military guards.
Although the distance from Wesel to Paderborn--Sennelager is three miles outside the latter town--is only about 95 miles as the crow flies, the railway takes a somewhat circuitous route. Owing to the extensive movement of the troops we suffered considerable delay, the result being that we did not reach our destination until about mid-day on the Wednesday, the journey having occupied nearly twelve hours. The heat was unbearable, and confinement within the carriages, the windows of which were kept sedulously closed by order of the military, thus rendering the atmosphere within stifling, speedily commenced to affect some of the pa.s.sengers. Each compartment carried seven prisoners, and the eighth seat, one of the windows beside the door, was occupied by a soldier--the guard of the compartment--complete with loaded rifle and fixed bayonet.
Sleep was out of the question, but this did not affect us seriously. We were somewhat excited, and spent the hours of the night in conversation and the exchange of experiences. In our party was an English gentleman, Mr. K----,[3] who held an important position in a large business house in one of the cities on the Rhine. Somehow he was attracted to me, moved, no doubt by my general appearance, and because I was now showing visible signs of my incarceration and experiences in Wesel prison. I may say that to Mr. K---- I undoubtedly owe my life, and I never can express my thanks sufficiently for his unremitting attention and kindness during my subsequent illness, as I narrate in due course. Moreover, during his sojourn among us he was a tower of strength, having long been resident in the country, and thoroughly conversant with the language and manners of the Germans.
[Footnote 3: The names and occupations of fellow-prisoners who are still in captivity are purposely disguised, because if the German authorities should happen to read this narrative, and be enabled to identify any of my compatriots who partic.i.p.ated in any of the incidents recorded, they would receive treatment which would be decidedly detrimental to their welfare.--H.C.M.]
It was during this tedious train journey that he related the experiences of the pa.s.sengers upon the unfortunate steamer _Krimhilde_. Many of the Englishmen who happened to be upon this boat had been held up for a week in various towns, owing to the stress of mobilisation. But at last permission was given by the authorities to proceed, and the delayed travellers were a.s.sured of an uninterrupted journey to England.
Unfortunately the pa.s.sage down the Rhine was impeded by fog, and this delay proved fatal. When it was possible to resume the journey, and while the steamer was making a good pace, a river patrol boat dashed up and ordered the captain of the steamer to stop, the reason being that no intimation had been received of the vessel's coming.
The captain protested, but at the point of the revolver he was compelled to turn round and return to the place which he had left only a few hours previously. The re-arrival of the _Krimhilde_ at this point aroused considerable interest, and the authorities demanded the reason. The captain explained, but receiving a re-a.s.surance that everything was in order and as originally expressed, he was free to travel down the river.
Again the journey was attempted and all went well until the boat was approaching Wesel. Then another patrol boat fussed up, the officer of which boarded the steamer. Again the captain presented his permit and expressed his determination to go ahead.
"We don't know anything about that," returned the boarding officer, referring to the permit. "My orders are to stop every vessel carrying Englishmen!"
The boarding-officer turned and ordered all the male prisoners to separate themselves from the ladies. Pa.s.sports were produced upon demand and closely scrutinised. Then the officer, stepping back a few paces, beckoned the nearest man. His name was demanded to identify the pa.s.sport and then a brief hurried cross-examination proceeded, culminating in the question:
"How old are you?"
"Thirty-eight!"
"Step this side!" retorted the officer, who proceeded to examine the succeeding pa.s.senger, to whom the self-same questions were repeated, the final interrogation being the pa.s.senger's age.
"Fifty-seven!" came the response.
The officer scanned the pa.s.sport and finding the answer to be correct remarked, "Step over there!" indicating his left.
By the time the officer had completed his interrogations the male pa.s.sengers were divided into two groups. Meanwhile the women and children had gathered round, following the proceedings, which appeared inexplicable to them, with a strange silence and a fearful dread.
"All you men of military age," continued the officer speaking to the group of younger-looking men, "are to go ash.o.r.e. You will be detained as prisoners of war. You have ten minutes to pack your trunks and to say 'Good-bye!' So hurry up!"
At this intelligence a fearful hubbub broke out. The women and children who were to be separated from their husbands, fathers, and relatives gave way to lamentation and hysterical raving. While the men packed their trunks under official supervision their wives and children clung to them desperately. But the men realising that war is war, accepted the situation philosophically, even cheerfully. They were buoyed up by the official a.s.surance that their detention was merely a matter of form, and that they would soon be released and free to proceed to their homes.
I may say that this is a favourite ruse followed by the Germans in all the camps in which I was interned, and I discovered that it was general throughout the country. It is always expressed whenever the Teutons see trouble brewing. Undoubtedly it is practised to keep the prisoners keyed up to a feverish pitch of hopefulness. Certainly it succeeded for a time, although such announcements at a later date, when we had seen through the subterfuge, were received with ironical cheering and jeers.
At such a sudden and summary cleavage between families many distressing and pathetic scenes were witnessed. On board there happened to be a wealthy young member of the Russian n.o.bility--Prince L----. He was travelling with his sister and friends and was far from well.
The sister approached the officer and pleaded hard for her brother's release. It was refused. Grief-stricken the Princess fell on her knees and with tears streaming down her cheeks, kissed the officer's boots and offered all her jewels--they must have been worth a considerable amount of money--which she hastily tore off and held in her outstretched hands.
For the moment even the officer was somewhat moved. Then in a quiet, determined voice he remarked,