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قراءة كتاب Tales from a Famished Land Including The White Island—A Story of the Dardanelles

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Tales from a Famished Land
Including The White Island—A Story of the Dardanelles

Tales from a Famished Land Including The White Island—A Story of the Dardanelles

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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TALES FROM A FAMISHED LAND


TALES FROM A FAMISHED LAND

INCLUDING

The White Island—A Story of the Dardanelles

BY

EDWARD EYRE HUNT

Author of “War Bread,” Etc.

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GARDEN CITY      NEW YORK

DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY

1918


Copyright, 1918, by Doubleday, Page & Company

All rights reserved, including that of
translation into foreign languages,
including the Scandinavian

COPYRIGHT, 1916, 1917, BY THE REPUBLIC PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC.
COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY COMPANY
COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY THE AMERICAN RED CROSS SOCIETY
COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY THE OUTLOOK COMPANY
COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY P. F. COLLIER’S SONS


To the
MEMORY OF E. O.


Collier’s Weekly, The Outlook, The New Republic, The Atlantic Monthly, and The Red Cross Magazine have published certain of these tales in serial form, and to them my thanks are due for permission to republish in book form.

FOREWORD

Herbert Clark Hoover, chairman of the Commission for Relief in Belgium, once called that amazing organization, “the door in the wall of steel.” Between November, 1914, and March, 1917, when America entered the world war, there had passed through that door millions of dollars in money, thousands of tons of foodstuffs and clothing, and four or five dozen young Americans, most of them just out of their ’teens, who played a part in Belgian history which they are still trying to explain in words of one syllable to admiring relatives and friends!

Theirs is a story of sweet romance, gallant adventure, grotesque comedy, and grim tragedy. The tales which are here set down are a part of their story. These tales are not strictly truth, but they are not fiction. They are both. They try to describe the state of mind, the atmosphere in which History—both truth and fiction—is made; the atmosphere behind long lines of barbed-wire and bayonets, behind waves of poisoned gas, in a famished land where ten million heroic people, both French and Belgians, have silently and steadily fought to keep their self-respect, their sanity, and their courage.

These tales have been written in a spirit of gratitude and love; with gratitude and love first of all to Herbert Clark Hoover, then to the other officers and members of the Commission for Relief in Belgium, and then, and perhaps most of all, to those unnamed French, Walloon, and Flemish millions with whom we Americans stood shoulder to shoulder on the inside of the “door in the wall of steel.”

E. E. H.

4 Place de la Concorde, Paris
New Year’s Day, 1918.


CONTENTS

PAGE
Foreword ix
I. Saint Dympna’s Miracle 3
II. Love in a Barge 19
III. The Odyssey of Mr. Solslog 29
IV. Figures of the Dance 46
V. The Saviour of Mont César 61
VI. Ghosts 86
VII. The Deserter 96
VIII. The Glory of Tinarloo 114
IX. A Flemish Fancy 122
X. The Swallows of Diest 135
XI. Pensioners 148
XII. Doña Quixote 160
XIII. In the Street of the Spy 167
XIV. The White Island—A Story of the Dardanelles 176


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