Title: The Terror
Author: Arthur Machen
A Project BookishMall.com of Australia eBook
eBook No.: 0604051h.html
Language: English
Date first posted: July 2006
Date most recently updated: July 2006
This eBook was produced by: Malcolm Farmer
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After two years we are turning once more to the morning's news with
a sense of appetite and glad expectation. There were thrills at the
beginning of the war: the thrill of horror and of a doom that seemed at
once incredible and certain; this was when Namur fell and the German
host swelled like a flood over the French fields, and drew very near to
the walls of Paris. Then we felt the thrill of exultation when the good
news came that the awful tide had been turned back, that Paris and the
world were safe; for awhile at all events.
Then for days we hoped for more news as good as this or better. Has
von Kluck been surrounded? Not to-day, but perhaps he will be
surrounded tomorrow. But the days became weeks, the weeks drew out to
months; the battle in the west seemed frozen. Now and again things were
done that seemed hopeful, with promise of events still better. But
Neuve Chapelle and Loos dwindled into disappointments as their tale was
told fully; the lines in the west remained, for all practical purposes
of victory, immobile. Nothing seemed to happen, there was nothing to
read save the record of operations that were clearly trifling and
insignificant. People speculated as to the reason of this inaction; the
hopeful said that Joffre had a plan, that he was "nibbling," others
declared that we were short of munitions, others again that the new
levies were not yet ripe for battle.
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