INTRODUCTION.
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
X.
XI.
XII.
XIII.
XIV.
XV.
XVI.
XVII.
PREFACE
THIS
fearful and disgraceful record of a Nation’s shame and of an
Emperor’s complicity in atrocious crimes against God and man is no
work of fiction, but a plain unvarnished statement of the grim and
terrible work of the Kaiser’s Huns of Attila which I have
considered it a duty to lay before the British public.Modern
Germany, frothing with military Nietzschism, seems to have returned
to a primitive barbarism. Belgium, a peaceful modern nation, has been
swept by fire and sword, and its honest, pious inhabitants tortured
and massacred, not because the German soldiery desired to wreak such
vengeance upon a people with whom they could have no quarrel, but
because they had been encouraged “to act with unrelenting severity,
to create examples which by their frightfulness would be a warning to
the whole country.”The
wild orgies of blood and debauchery, the atrocious outrages, murders,
and mutilations, the ruthless violation and killing of defenceless
women, girls, and children of tender age, have been, it is now
admitted by the Germans themselves, carried out with their full
knowledge, and even as part of the actual plan of campaign of their
War-Lords.Germany,
though boasting of her culture, her refinement, her honest home-life,
and the peaceful efforts of her Emperor, has for ever lost her place
among civilized nations. It now stands revealed that when her
diplomatic methods of base chicanery and lying fail then she does not
hesitate to resort to acts so dastardly and inhuman as to have no
parallel. Not only has she broken her most solemn treaties and moral
engagements, but all the rules of civilized warfare to which she was
a signatory at The Hague she has also violated, merely regarding them
as “a scrap of paper.”Not
content with resorting to every act of savagery and every refinement
of cruelty which degenerated minds, filled with the blood-lust of
war, could conceive, her troops, by order of her generals, have made
a practice all along the line of placing before them innocent women
and children to act as a living screen, in the hope that the Allies
would not, from motives of humanity, fire upon them.One
cannot read a single page of this awful record—the German Black
Book—without being thrilled with horror at unspeakable acts of
civilized troops, who, at the behest of their Kaiser, and the exposed
yet still ruling
camarilla
at Berlin, have become simply as the Huns of Attila.The
contents of this book are no hearsay stories, but hard facts
officially recorded in
dossiers
in the French and Belgian Ministries of War, most of them, indeed,
sworn statements taken before burgomasters, mayors, prefects, and
magistrates. Even our brave fellows wounded in the Kaiser’s savage
attack upon Europe have brought back from the front similar
narratives of the most appalling crimes. Evidence of German trickery
and savagery we have, too, in our midst, for trains, sentries, and
policemen have been shot at under cover of darkness by men who mean
to emulate the methods of their compatriots.The
frightful deeds which have been done over the face of Belgium and in
France are, no doubt, intended to be repeated in Great Britain, and,
if it were possible, the Red Hand of Destruction would certainly be
laid very heavy upon us—more heavily, perhaps, because we, by our
honesty of purpose, have incurred the hatred of Kaiserdom.I
would bid all sufferers in Belgium and France to remember that when
Attila of old came to Chalons, full of ostentation as the great
War-Lord, he came to his own undoing, and his dominion at once
disappeared to the winds. There is One with Whom vengeance lies for
wrongs, and most assuredly will He mete out the same dread Fate of
death and obscurity to the unblushing War-Lord of Germany, who,
daily, with his blasphemous impiety, lifts his bloodstained hands and
thanks his Maker for his shameful “successes.”WILLIAM
LE QUEUX.WHAT
THE KAISER SAID:
“When
you meet the foe you will defeat him. No quarter will be given, no
prisoners will be taken. Let all who fall into your hands be at your
mercy. Gain a reputation like the Huns under Attila.”This
quotation from an address of the Kaiser to German troops, before they
were dispatched to Peking in 1900, was circulated on post cards
throughout Germany.
FOREWORD
WHO
WERETHE
HUNS OF ATTILA?The
Kaiser, we read, has exhorted his soldiers to make themselves as much
dreaded as the Huns of Attila. It is worth while to recall the
methods of this savage, for he was nothing better. In one expedition
across Greece and in another across Italy he reduced seventy of the
finest cities to smoking ruins and to shambles. The inhabitants were
either slaughtered on the spot or marched away in chains to end their
lives as slaves. Men, women, children, babies—all came alike to
this black demon of outrage and destruction. Briefly, the Monarch of
the Huns may be best described as the worthy leader of one vast gang
of Jack-the-Rippers.And
this is the blood-guilty ruffian whom the Kaiser now holds up as his
exemplar! Judging by Louvain, he is no unworthy follower of his
Master.
AUTHOR’S NOTE
In
addition to the sworn facts and statements supplied officially to me
by the Belgian Government, I have here included some others which
have been recounted by wounded men who have returned from the front,
by doctors who have attended them, and by the special correspondents
of Reuter’s, the Central News, and other news agencies, and of the
London and provincial newspapers.German
Atrocities.Mr.
Asquith has described the sacking of Louvain as “the greatest crime
committed against civilization and culture since the Thirty Years’
War. With its buildings, its pictures, its unique library, its
unrivalled associations, a shameless holocaust of irreparable
treasures lit up by blind barbarian vengeance.”