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Speaker:Wherever you listen to podcasts today, we'll be continuing rilla of Ingleside by Lucy Maud Montgomery chapter 27 Waiting ingleside, 1st November 1917 It is November, and the glen is all gray and brown, except where the Lombardi poplars stand up here and there like great golden torches in the somber landscape.
Speaker:Although every other tree has shed its leaves, it has been very hard to keep our courage alight of late.
Speaker:The Caparado disaster is a dreadful thing, and not even Susan can extract much consolation out of the present state of affairs.
Speaker:The rest of us don't try.
Speaker:Gertrude keeps saying desperately they must not get Venice.
Speaker:They must not get Venice.
Speaker:As if by saying it often enough, she can prevent them.
Speaker:But what is to prevent them from getting Venice?
Speaker:I cannot see.
Speaker:Yet, as Susan fails not to point out, there was seemingly nothing to prevent them from getting to Paris in 1914.
Speaker:Yet they did not get it.
Speaker:And she affirms, they shall not get Venice either.
Speaker:Oh, how I hope and pray they will not.
Speaker:Venice.
Speaker:The beautiful Queen of the Adriatic.
Speaker:Although I've never seen it, I feel about it just as Byron did.
Speaker:I've always loved it.
Speaker:It has always been to me a fairy city of the heart.
Speaker:Perhaps I caught my love of it from Walter, who worshipped it.
Speaker:It was always one of his dreams to see Venice.
Speaker:I remember we planned once, down in Rainbow Valley one evening just before the war broke out, that sometime we would go together to see it and float in a gondola through its moonlit streets.
Speaker:Every fall since the war began, there has been some terrible blow to our troops.
Speaker:Antwerp in 1914, Serbia in 1915.
Speaker:Last fall, romania and now Italy.
Speaker:The worst of all.
Speaker:I think I would give up in despair if it were not for what Walter said in his dear last letter that the dead as well as the living were fighting on our side, and such an army cannot be defeated.
Speaker:No, it cannot.
Speaker:We will win in the end.
Speaker:I will not doubt it for one moment.
Speaker:To let myself doubt will be to break faith.
Speaker:We have all been campaigning furiously of late for the new Victory Loan.
Speaker:We junior Reds canvassed diligently and landed several tough old customers who had at first flatly refused to invest.
Speaker:I even I tackled Whiskers on the moon.
Speaker:I expected a bad time and a refusal, but to my amazement, he was quite agreeable and promised on the spot to take a $1000 bond.
Speaker:He may be a pacifist, but he knows a good investment when it is handed out to him.
Speaker:Five and a half percent is five and a half percent, even when a militaristic government pays it.
Speaker:Father tatisse.
Speaker:Susan says it was her speech at the Victory Loan campaign meeting that converted Mr.
Speaker:Pryor.
Speaker:I don't think that at all likely, since Mr.
Speaker:Pryor has been publicly very bitter against Susan ever since her quite unmistakable rejection of his LoverLike advances.
Speaker:But Susan did make a speech, and the best one made at the meeting, too.
Speaker:It was the first time she ever did such a thing, and she vows it will be the last.
Speaker:Everybody in the glen was at the meeting, and quite a number of speeches were made, but somehow things were a little flat and no especial enthusiasm could be worked up.
Speaker:Susan was quite dismayed at the lack of zeal because she had been burningly anxious that the island should go over the top in regard to its quota.
Speaker:She kept whispering viciously to Gertrude and me that there was no ginger in the speeches, and when nobody went forward to subscribe to the loan at the close, susan lost her head.
Speaker:At least that is how she describes it herself.
Speaker:She bounded to her feet, her face grim, and set under her bonnet.
Speaker:Susan is the only woman in Glenn St.
Speaker:Mary who still wears a bonnet and said sarcastically and loudly, no doubt it is much cheaper to talk patriotism than it is to pay for it.
Speaker:And we are asking charity, of course.
Speaker:We are asking you to lend us your money for nothing.
Speaker:No doubt the Kaiser will feel quite downcast when he hears of this meeting.
Speaker:Susan has an unshaken belief that the Kaiser spies, presumably represented by Mr.
Speaker:Pryor, promptly inform him of every happening in our glen.
Speaker:Norman.
Speaker:Douglas shouted out.
Speaker:Here.
Speaker:Here.
Speaker:And some boy at the back said, what about Lloyd George?
Speaker:In a tone Susan didn't like.
Speaker:Lloyd George is her pet hero now that Kitchener is gone.
Speaker:I stand behind Lloyd George every time, retorted Susan.
Speaker:I suppose that will hearten him up greatly, said Warren Mead with one of his disagreeable.
Speaker:Ha ha.
Speaker:Warren's remark was sparked to powder.
Speaker:Susan just sailed in, as she puts it, and said her say.
Speaker:She said it remarkably well, too.
Speaker:There was no lack of ginger in her speech anyhow.
Speaker:When Susan is warmed up, she has no mean powers of oratory.
Speaker:And the way she trimmed those men down was funny and wonderful and effective all at once.
Speaker:She said it was the likes of her, millions of her, that did stand behind Lloyd George and did hearten him up.
Speaker:That was the keynote of her speech.
Speaker:Dear old Susan.
Speaker:She has a perfect dynamo of patriotism and loyalty and contempt for slackers of all kinds.
Speaker:And when she let it loose on that audience, in her one grand outburst, she electrified it.
Speaker:Susan always vows she is no suffrage yet, but she gave womanhood its due that night and she literally made those men cringe.
Speaker:When she finished with them, they were ready to eat out of her hand.
Speaker:She wound up by ordering them yes, ordering them to march up to the platform forthwith and subscribe for victory bonds.
Speaker:And after wild applause, most of them did it, even Warren Mead.
Speaker:When the total amount subscribed came out in the Charlottetown Dailies the next day, we found that the Glenn led every district on the island, and certainly Susan has the credit for it.
Speaker:She herself, after she came home that night, was quite ashamed and evidently feared that she had been guilty of unbecoming conduct.
Speaker:She confessed to Mother that she had been rather unladylike.
Speaker:We were all, except Susan, out for a trial ride in Father's new automobile tonight.
Speaker:A very good one we had, too, though we did get ingloriously ditched at the end, owing to a certain grim old dame, to wit, Miss Elizabeth Carr of the Upper Glen, who wouldn't rein her horse out to let us pass, honk as we might.
Speaker:Father was quite furious.
Speaker:But in my heart I believe I sympathized with Miss Elizabeth.
Speaker:If I had been a spinster lady driving along behind my own old nag in maiden meditation, fancy free, I wouldn't have lifted a rain when an obsturperous car hooded blatantly behind me.
Speaker:I should just have sat as doubly as she did and said, Take the ditch if you're determined to pass.
Speaker:We did take the ditch and got up to our axles and sand and sat foolishly there while Miss Elizabeth clucked up her horse and rattled victoriously away.
Speaker:Jim will have a laugh when I write him this.
Speaker:He knows Miss Elizabeth of old.
Speaker:But will Venice be saved?
Speaker:19th November 1917?
Speaker:It is not saved yet.
Speaker:It is still in great danger.
Speaker:But the Italians are making a stand at last on the piev line, to be sure.
Speaker:Military critics say they cannot possibly hold it and must retreat to the Adage.
Speaker:But Susan and Gertrude and I say they must hold it because Venice must be saved.
Speaker:So what are the military critics to do?
Speaker:Oh, if I could only believe that they can hold it.
Speaker:Our Canadian troops have won another great victory.
Speaker:They have stormed the Pasicheneldo ridge and held it in the face of all counterattacks.
Speaker:None of our boys were in the battle, but, oh, the casualty list of other people's boys.
Speaker:Joe Milgrave was in it, but came through safe.
Speaker:Miranda had some bad days until she got word from him.
Speaker:But it is wonderful how Miranda has bloomed out since her marriage.
Speaker:She isn't the same girl at all.
Speaker:Even her eyes seem to have darkened and deepened, though I suppose that is just because they glow with the greater intensity that has come to her.
Speaker:She makes her father stand round in a perfectly amazing fashion.
Speaker:She runs up the flag whenever a yard of trench on the Western Front is taken, and she comes up regularly to our junior Red Cross.
Speaker:And she does, yes, she does put on a funny little married woman heirs that are quite killing.
Speaker:But she's the only war bride in the glen, and surely nobody need grudge her the satisfaction she gets out of it.
Speaker:The Russian news is bad, too.
Speaker:Karinsky's government has fallen, and Linen is dictator of Russia.
Speaker:Somehow it is very hard to keep up courage in the dull hopelessness of these great autumn days of suspense and voting news.
Speaker:But we are beginning to get in a low.
Speaker:As Old Highland Sandy says over the approaching election, conscription is the real issue at stake, and it will be the most exciting election we ever had.
Speaker:All the women who have got to age, to quote Joe Porier, and who have husbands, sons and brothers at the front can vote.
Speaker:Oh, if I were only 21.
Speaker:Gertrude and Susan are both furious because they can't vote.
Speaker:It is not fair, Gertrude says passionately.
Speaker:There is Agnes Carr who can vote because her husband went.
Speaker:She did everything she could to prevent him from going, and now she's going to vote against the Union government.
Speaker:Yet I have no vote because my man at the front is only my sweetheart and not my husband.
Speaker:As for Susan, when she reflects that she cannot vote while a rank old pacifist like Mr.
Speaker:Pryor can and will, her comments are sulfurous.
Speaker:I really feel sorry for the Elliotts and Crawfords and McAllisters over harbor.
Speaker:They have always lined up in clearly divided camps of liberal and conservative, and now they are torn from their moorings.
Speaker:I know I'm mixing my metaphors dreadfully and set hopelessly adrift.
Speaker:It will kill some of those old grits to vote for Sir Robert Borden's side, and yet they have to, because they believe the time has come when we must have conscription, and some poor conservatives who are against conscription must vote for Laurier, who always has been anathema to them.
Speaker:Some of them are taking it terribly hard.
Speaker:Others seem to be in much the same attitude as Mrs.
Speaker:Marshall Elliot has come to be regarding church union.
Speaker:She was up here last night.
Speaker:She doesn't come as often as she used to.
Speaker:She is growing too old to walk this far.
Speaker:Dear old Miss Cornelia.
Speaker:I hate to think of her growing old.
Speaker:We have always loved her so and she has always been so good to us.
Speaker:Ingleside young fry.
Speaker:She used to be so bitterly opposed to church union.
Speaker:But last night when Father told her it was practically decided, she said in a resigned tone, well, in a world where everything is being rent and torn, what matters one more rending and tearing?
Speaker:Anyhow, compared with Germans, even Methodists seem attractive to me.
Speaker:Our junior RC goes on quite smoothly, in spite of the fact that Irene has come back to it, having fallen out with the lowbridge society.
Speaker:I understand.
Speaker:She gave me a sweet little jab last meeting about knowing me across the square in Charlottetown by my green velvet hat.
Speaker:Everybody knows me by that detestable and detested hat.
Speaker:This will be my fourth season for it.
Speaker:Even Mother wanted me to get a new one this fall, but I said no.
Speaker:As long as the war lasts.
Speaker:So long do I wear that velvet hat in winter.
Speaker:23rd November 1917.
Speaker:The Piov line still holds and General Bing has won a splendid victory at Cambry.
Speaker:I did run up the flag for that, but Susan only said, I shall set a kettle of water on the kitchen range tonight.
Speaker:I noticed little Kitchener always has an attack of croup after any British victory.
Speaker:I do hope he has no German blood in his veins.
Speaker:Nobody knows much about his father's people.
Speaker:Jim's has had a few attacks of croup this fall.
Speaker:Just the ordinary croup.
Speaker:Not that terrible thing he had last year.
Speaker:But whatever blood runs in his little veins, it is good, healthy blood.
Speaker:He is rosy and plump and curly and cute and he says such funny things and asks such comical questions.
Speaker:He likes very much to sit in a special chair in the kitchen.
Speaker:But that is Susan's favorite chair too, and when she wants it out, Jim's must go.
Speaker:The last time she put him out of it, he turned around and asked solemnly, when you are dead, Susan, can I sit in that chair?
Speaker:Susan thought it quite dreadful, and I think that was when she began to feel anxiety about his possible ancestry.
Speaker:The other night I took Jim's with me for a walk down to the store.
Speaker:It was the first time he had ever been out so late at night.
Speaker:And when he saw the stars, he exclaimed, oh, will I see the big moon and all the little moons?
Speaker:And last Wednesday morning, when he woke up, my little alarm clock had stopped because I'd forgotten to wind it up.
Speaker:Jim's bounded out of his crib and ran across to me his face quite aghast above his little blue flannel pajamas.
Speaker:The clock is dead.
Speaker:He gasped.
Speaker:Oh, Willa, the clock is dead.
Speaker:One night he was quite angry with both Susan and me because we would not give him something he wanted very much.
Speaker:When he said his prayers, he plumped down wrathfully.
Speaker:And when he came to the petition make me a good boy, he tacked on emphatically.
Speaker:And please make Willa and Susan good, because they're not.
Speaker:I don't go about quoting Jim's speeches to all I meet.
Speaker:That always bores me.
Speaker:When other people do it, I just enshrine them in this old hodgepodge of a journal.
Speaker:This very evening, as I put Jim's to bed, he looked up and asked me gravely, why can't yesterday come back, Willa?
Speaker:Oh, why can't it?
Speaker:Jim's, that beautiful.
Speaker:Yesterday of dreams and laughter when our boys were home, when Walter and I read and rambled and watched new moons and sunsets together in Rainbow Valley.
Speaker:If it could just come back.
Speaker:But yesterday's never come back.
Speaker:Little gems and the todays are dark with clouds and we dare not think about the tomorrows.
Speaker:11th December 1917.
Speaker:Wonderful news came today.
Speaker:The British troops captured Jerusalem.
Speaker:Yesterday we ran up the flag and some of Gertrude's old sparkle came back to her for a moment.
Speaker:After all, she said, it is worthwhile to live in the days which see the object of the Crusades attained.
Speaker:The ghosts of all the Crusaders must have crowded the walls of Jerusalem last night with cordellion at their head.
Speaker:Susan had cause for satisfaction also.
Speaker:I'm so thankful I can pronounce Jerusalem in Hebron, she said.
Speaker:They give me a real comfortable feeling after prismacille and breast Lidovsky.
Speaker:Well, we've got the Turks on the run at least, and Venice is safe.
Speaker:And Lord Lansdown is not to be taken seriously.
Speaker:And I see no reason why we should be downhearted Jerusalem.
Speaker:The meteor flag of England floats over you.
Speaker:The crescent is gone.
Speaker:How Walter would have thrilled over that.
Speaker:18th December 1917.
Speaker:Yesterday the election came off.
Speaker:In the evening, mother and Susan and Gertrude and I foregathered in the living room and waited in breathless suspense.
Speaker:Father having gone down to the village, we had no way of hearing the news, for Carter Flag.
Speaker:Store is not on our line, and when we tried to get it, Central always answered that the line was busy, as no doubt it was for everybody for miles around was trying to get Carter's store for the same reason we were.
Speaker:About 10:00, Gertrude went to the phone and happened to catch someone from Over Harbor talking to Carter Flag.
Speaker:Gertrude shamelessly listened in and got for her comforting what eavesdroppers are proverbially supposed to get, to wit, unpleasant hearing.
Speaker:The Union government had done nothing in the west.
Speaker:We looked at each other in dismay.
Speaker:If the government had failed to carry the west, it was defeated.
Speaker:Canada is disgraced in the eyes of the world, said Gertrude bitterly.
Speaker:If everybody was like the Mark Crawford's over harbor, this would not have happened, groaned Susan.
Speaker:They locked their uncle up in the barn this morning and would not let him out until he promised to vote union.
Speaker:That is what I call effective argument, Mrs.
Speaker:Dr.
Speaker:Dear.
Speaker:Gertrude and I couldn't rest after that.
Speaker:We walked the floor until our legs gave out and we had to sit down for force.
Speaker:Mother knitted away as steadily as clockwork and pretended to be calm and serene, pretended so well that we were all deceived and envious until the next day when I caught her raveling out four inches of her sock.
Speaker:She had knit that far past where the heel should have begun.
Speaker:It was twelve before Father came home.
Speaker:He stood in the doorway and looked at us and we looked at him.
Speaker:We did not dare ask him what the news was.
Speaker:Then he said that it was Laurier who had done nothing in the west and that the Union government was in with a big majority.
Speaker:Gertrude clapped her hands.
Speaker:I wanted to laugh and cry.
Speaker:Mother's eyes flashed with their old time starringness and Susan emitted a queer sound between a gasp and a whoop.
Speaker:This will not comfort the Kaiser much, she said.
Speaker:Then we went to bed, but we were too excited to sleep really, as Susan said solemnly this morning mrs.
Speaker:Dr.
Speaker:Dear, I think politics are too strenuous for women.
Speaker:31st December 1917.
Speaker:Our fourth war.
Speaker:Christmas is over.
Speaker:We are trying to gather up some courage wherewith to face another year of it.
Speaker:Germany has for the most part been victorious all summer and now they say she has all her troops from the Russian front ready for a big push in the spring.
Speaker:Sometimes it seems to me that we just cannot live through the winter waiting for that.
Speaker:I had a great batch of letters from overseas this week.
Speaker:Shirley is at the front now too and writes about it all as coolly and matter of factly as he used to write a football at Queens.
Speaker:Carl wrote that it had been raining for weeks and that nights in the trenches always made him think of the night of long ago when he did penance in the graveyard for running away from Henry Warren's ghost.
Speaker:Carl's letters are always full of jokes and bits of fun.
Speaker:They had a great rat hunt the night before.
Speaker:He wrote spearing rats with their bayonets and they got the best bag and won the prize.
Speaker:He has a tame rat that knows him and sleeps in his pocket at night.
Speaker:Rats don't worry Carl as they do some people.
Speaker:He was always chummy with all little beasts.
Speaker:He says he's making a study of the habits of the trench rat and means to write a treatise on it someday that will make him famous.
Speaker:Ken wrote a short letter.
Speaker:His letters are all rather short now and he doesn't often slip in those dear little sudden sentences I love so much.
Speaker:Sometimes I think he's forgotten all about the night he was here to say goodbye.
Speaker:And then there will be just a line or a word that makes me think he remembers and always will remember.
Speaker:For instance, today's letter hadn't a thing in it that mightn't have been written to any girl, except that he signed himself your Kenneth instead of yours Kenneth, as he usually does now.
Speaker:Did he leave that s off intentionally, or was it only carelessness?
Speaker:I shall lie awake half the night wondering.
Speaker:He is a captain now.
Speaker:I am glad and proud.
Speaker:And yet Captain Ford sounds so horribly far away and high up.
Speaker:Ken and Captain Ford seem like two different persons.
Speaker:I may be practically engaged to Ken.
Speaker:Mother's opinion on that point is my stay in Bulwark, but I can't be to Captain Ford.
Speaker:And Jim is a lieutenant now.
Speaker:On his promotion on the field.
Speaker:He sent me a snapshot taken in his new uniform.
Speaker:He looked thin and old.
Speaker:Old.
Speaker:My boy brother Gem.
Speaker:I can't forget Mother's face when I showed it to her.
Speaker:That my little gem.
Speaker:The baby of the old house of dreams was all she said.
Speaker:There was a letter from Faith, too.
Speaker:She is doing VAD work in England and writes hopefully and brightly.
Speaker:I think she's almost happy.
Speaker:She saw Jim on his last leave, and she is so near him.
Speaker:She could go to him if he were wounded.
Speaker:That means so much to her.
Speaker:Oh, if I were only with her.
Speaker:But my work is here at home.
Speaker:I know Walter wouldn't have wanted me to leave Mother, and in everything I try to keep Faith with him, even to the little details of daily life.
Speaker:Walter died for Canada.
Speaker:I must live for her.
Speaker:That is what he asked me to do.
Speaker:28 January 1918.
Speaker:I shall anchor my stormtossed soul to the British fleet and make a batch of brand biscuits, said Susan today to Cousin Sophia, who had come in with some weird tale of a new and all conquering submarine just launched by Germany.
Speaker:But Susan is a somewhat disgruntled woman at present, owing to the regulations regarding cookery.
Speaker:Her loyalty to the Union government is being sorely tried.
Speaker:It surmounted the first strain, galliantly.
Speaker:When the order about flour came, Susan said quite cheerfully, I'm an old dog to be learning new tricks, but I shall learn to make war bread if it will help defeat the Huns.
Speaker:But the later suggestions went against Susan's grain.
Speaker:Had it not been for Father's decree, I think she would have snapped her fingers at Sir Robert Borden.
Speaker:Talk about trying to make bricks without straw, Mrs Dr, dear, how am I to make a cake without butter or sugar?
Speaker:It cannot be done.
Speaker:Not cake.
Speaker:That is cake.
Speaker:Of course one can make a slab, Mrs Dr, dear, and we cannot even camus, flash it with a little icing.
Speaker:To think that I should have lived to see the day when a government at Ottawa should step into my kitchen and put me on rations.
Speaker:Susan would give the last drop of her blood for her king and country.
Speaker:But to surrender her beloved recipes is a very different and much more serious matter.
Speaker:I had letters from NAN and Die too, or rather, notes.
Speaker:They are too busy to write letters, for exams are looming up.
Speaker:They will graduate in Arts this spring.
Speaker:I am evidently to be the dunce of the family, but somehow I never had any hankering for a college course, and even now it doesn't appeal to me.
Speaker:I'm afraid I'm rather devoid of ambition.
Speaker:There's only one thing I really want to be, and I don't know if I'll be it or not.
Speaker:If not, I don't want to be anything, but I shan't write it down.
Speaker:It is all right to think it, but as Cousin Sophia would say, it might be brazen to write it down.
Speaker:I will write it down.
Speaker:I won't be cowed by the conventions and Cousin Sophia.
Speaker:I want to be Kenneth Ford's wife.
Speaker:There now.
Speaker:I've just looked in the glass and I hadn't the sign of a blush on my face.
Speaker:I suppose I'm not a properly constructed damsel at all.
Speaker:I was down to see little Dog Monday today.
Speaker:He has grown quite stiff and rheumatic, but there he sat, waiting for the train.
Speaker:He thumped his tail and looked pleadingly into my eyes.
Speaker:When will JeM come?
Speaker:He seemed to say.
Speaker:Oh, Doc.
Speaker:Monday there is no answer to that question, and there is as yet no answer to the other, which we are all constantly asking.
Speaker:What will happen when Germany strikes again on the Western Front, her one great last blow for victory.
Speaker:1st March 1918.
Speaker:What will spring bring?
Speaker:Gertrude said today.
Speaker:I dread it as I never dreaded spring before.
Speaker:Do you suppose there will ever again come a time when life will be free from fear?
Speaker:For almost four years we have lain down with fear and risen up with it.
Speaker:It has been the unbidden guest at every meal, the unwelcome companion at every gathering.
Speaker:Hindenburg says he will be in Paris on 1st April, sighed Cousin Sophia.
Speaker:Hindenburg, there is no power in pen and ink to express the contempt which Susan infused into that name.
Speaker:Has he forgotten what day the 1 April is?
Speaker:Hindenburg has kept his word hitherto, said Gertrude, as gloomily as Cousin Sophia herself could have said it.
Speaker:Yes, fighting against the Russians.
Speaker:And Romanians retorted Susan.
Speaker:Wait you till he comes up against the British and French, not to speak of the Yankees, who are getting there as fast as they can, and will no doubt give a good account of themselves.
Speaker:You said just the same thing before, mon Susan, I reminded her.
Speaker:Hindenburg says he will spend a million lives to break the Allied Front, said Gertrude, at such a price.
Speaker:He must purchase some successes, and how can we live through them, even if he is baffled in the end?
Speaker:These past two months, when we've been crouching and waiting for the blow to fall, have seemed as long as all the preceding months of the war put together.
Speaker:I work all day feverishly, and waken at 03:00 at night to wonder if the iron legions have struck at last.
Speaker:It is then I see Hindenburg in Paris and Germany triumphant.
Speaker:I never see her so at any other time than that accursed hour.
Speaker:Susan looked dubious over at Gertrude's adjective, but evidently concluded that A saved the situation.
Speaker:I wish it were possible to take some magic draught and go to sleep for the next three months and then waken to find Armageddon over, said Mother almost impatiently.
Speaker:It is not often that Mother slumps into a wish like that, or at least the verbal expression of it.
Speaker:Mother has changed a great deal since that terrible day in September when we knew that Walter would not come back.
Speaker:But she has always been brave and patient.
Speaker:Now it seems as if even she had reached the limit of her endurance.
Speaker:Susan went over to Mother and touched her shoulder.
Speaker:Don't you be frightened or downhearted, Mrs Dr dear, she said gently.
Speaker:I felt somewhat that way myself last night, and I rose from my bed and lighted my lamp and opened my Bible.
Speaker:And what do you think was the first verse my eyes lighted upon?
Speaker:It was and they shall fight against thee, but they shall not prevail against thee, for I am with thee, saith the Lord of hosts to deliver thee.
Speaker:I am not gifted in the way of dreaming, as Miss Oliver is, but I knew then and there, Mrs Dr dear, that it was a manifest leading, and that Hindenburg will never see Paris.
Speaker:So I read no further, but went back to my bed, and I did not waken at 03:00 or at any other hour before morning.
Speaker:I say that verse, Susan read over and over again to myself the Lord of hosts is with us, and the spirits of all just men made perfect, and even the legions and guns that Germany is massing on the Western Front must break against such a barrier.
Speaker:This is in certain uplifted moments.
Speaker:But when other moments come, I feel like Gertrude, that I cannot endure any longer this awful and ominous hush before the coming storm.
Speaker:23rd March, 1918.
Speaker:Armageddon has begun the last great fight of all.
Speaker:Is it?
Speaker:I wonder.
Speaker:Yesterday I went down to the post office for the mail.
Speaker:It was a dull, bitter day.
Speaker:The snow was gone, but the gray, lifeless ground was frozen hard, and a biting wind was blowing.
Speaker:The whole glen landscape was ugly and hopeless.
Speaker:Then I got the paper with its big black headlines.
Speaker:Germany struck on the 21st.
Speaker:She makes.
Speaker:Big claims of guns and prisoners taken.
Speaker:General Hague reports that severe fighting continues.
Speaker:I don't like the sound of that last expression.
Speaker:We all find we cannot do any work that requires concentration of thought, so we all knit furiously, because we can do that mechanically, at least.
Speaker:The dreadful waiting is over, the horrible wondering where and when the blow will fall.
Speaker:It has fallen, but they shall not prevail against us.
Speaker:What is happening on the Western Front tonight?
Speaker:As I write this, sitting here in my room with my journal before me, jims is asleep in his crib and the wind is wailing around the window.
Speaker:Over my desk hangs Walter's picture, looking at me with his beautiful, deep eyes.
Speaker:The Mona Lisa he gave me the last Christmas he was home hangs on one side of it, and on the other a framed copy of The Piper.
Speaker:It seems to me that I can hear Walter's voice repeating it.
Speaker:That little poem into which he put his soul, and which will therefore live forever, carrying Walter's name on through the future of our land.
Speaker:Everything about me is calm and peaceful and homey.
Speaker:Walter seems very near me.
Speaker:If I could just sweep aside the thin wavering little veil that hangs between, I could see him just as he saw the Pied Piper the night before.
Speaker:Corsulette over there in France tonight.
Speaker:Does the line hold?
Speaker:Thank you for joining Bite at a Time books today while we read a bite of one of your favorite classics.
Speaker:Again, my name is Brie Carlyle, and I hope you come back tomorrow for the next bite of Rilla of Ingleside.
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Speaker:For the rest of the links for our show.
Speaker:Take a look in the broken.
Speaker:Let's see what we can find.