of things is going to continue for a good many
years after the war. God knows we (I mean the
American people) are doing everything we can to alleviate
it but there is so much more to be done than
any group of forces can possibly do, that I have
a feeling that we have hardly touched the borders
of the great problem itself. Of course here in
London we are away from all that. In spite
of the rations we get quite enough to eat and
it’s as good as it is usually in England, but
we have no right to complain. Of course
we are subject to air raids, and the wise air
people here think that early next spring we are going
to be bombarded with thousands of aeroplanes,
and with new kinds of bombs and gases in a well-organized
effort to try actually to destroy London.
Possibly that will come; we must simply take our chance,
every man sticking to his job. Already the slate
shingles on my roof have been broken, and bricks
have been knocked down my chimney; the sky-light
was hit and glass fell down all through the halls,
and the nose of a shrapnel shell, weighing eight pounds,
fell just in front of my doorway and rolled in
my area. This is the sort of thing we incidentally
get, not of course from the enemy directly, but
from the British guns in London which shoot these
things at German aeroplanes. What goes up
must come down. Between our own defences
and the enemy, God knows which will kill us first!
In spite of all this I put my innocent head on my pillow every night and get a good night’s sleep after the bombing is done, and I thank Heaven that nothing interrupts my sleep. This, and a little walking, which is all I get time to do in these foggy days, constitute my life outdoors and precious little of it is outdoors.
Then on every block that I know of in London there is a hospital or supply place and the ambulances are bringing the poor fellows in all the time. We don’t get any gasolene to ride so we have to walk. We don’t get any white bread so we have to eat stuff made of flour and corn meal ground so fine that it isn’t good. While everybody gets a little thinner, the universal opinion is that they also get a little better, and nobody is going to die here of hunger. We feel a little more cheerful about the submarines than we did some time ago. For some reason they are not getting so many ships. One reason, I am glad to believe, is that they are getting caught themselves. If I could remember all the stories that I hear of good fighting with the submarines I could keep you up two nights when I get home, but in these days one big thing after another crowds so in men’s minds that the Lord knows if, when I get home, I shall remember anything.
Always heartily yours,
W.H.P.
To the President
London, December 3, 1917.
DEAR MR. PRESIDENT: