SCENES IN THE GREAT WAR
was nothing now but a vast graveyard stretching from the foot of the Swiss mountains to the margin of the North Sea. Here a charred and blackened mass of stones, which had once been a group of houses; there a cottage by the roadside, once sweet and pretty under its mantle of wild roses, now hideous with a gaping hole torn in its walls, and its little bed visible behind curtains that used to be white. And yet Nature was going on the same as ever—hardly giving a hint that the Great Death had passed that way. Our boys at the front wrote home that the leaves were beginning to show on the trees, that the grass was growing again, and that in the lulls of the cannonading they could hear the birds singing.
NATURE GOES HER OWN WAY
We found it heart-breaking. But it has been
always so. I was in Naples during the whole
period of the last great eruption of Vesuvius,
and, looking through the gloom of the heavens,
piled high with the whorls of fire and smoke that
were covering the Vesuvian valleys and villages
with a grey shroud, waist deep, of volcanic dust,
I thought the face of Nature in that sweet spot
could never be the same again; but when I went
back to it a year later I could see no difference.
I sailed south through the Straits of Messina a
few weeks before the earthquake, and, returning