Sixteen Months in Four German Prisons eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 357 pages of information about Sixteen Months in Four German Prisons.

Sixteen Months in Four German Prisons eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 357 pages of information about Sixteen Months in Four German Prisons.

The skipper was an interesting, typical sea-dog from the waters of the North Sea, and a thorough God-fearing man.  He related a story which made our blood boil.  He said his two companions and himself were summoned by the guards at mid-day, and instead of receiving the dinner ration had been taken to a covered hand-cart.  The guard told them to push it, and at the same time handed them shovels and picks.  Under escort they dragged this mysterious load, which was carefully covered with a tarpaulin, for about three miles to a very lonely spot.  At last they came to a deep hole.  They were compelled to back the cart to the brink of the pit, and were then curtly bidden to tip it sharply.

To the utter amazement of the skipper and his two colleagues the action of tipping the cart shot into the hole, with considerable force, the corpse of a Belgian.  He was dumped into the hole in this rough and ready manner, head first, and to the disgust of the Britishers the body was clothed merely in a shirt!  They were then commanded to refill the hole.  Thus, without the slightest burial ceremony, with a brutality which would not have been shown to a dog, and without the slightest expression of regret, save one of silence from the three Britishers, the unknown Belgian was consigned to an unknown grave.  Who the Belgian was, or how he came by his death, no one ever knew, but it is surmised that he died from exposure upon the field during the night of the 11th.

These three fishermen being friendless and homeless, my chum and I decided to see what we could do for them.  We proposed to attach a lean-to shelter to our hut.  Poles were driven into the ground, and to these horizontal members were attached, the latter having the inner ends sunk into our walls.  For the roof we used our blankets.  It was a primitive shelter, but it protected the three men from the rain which again broke over us and for this expression of camaraderie they were extremely grateful.

Our transference to the field provoked the most spirited bout we had ever witnessed between the Commandant and Dr. Ascher.  The doctor could do nothing towards securing us shelters:  that was exclusively a matter for Major Bach to decide.  But he had control over the sanitary arrangements, and he condemned these unequivocally.  The stench rising from the open latrines which swept over the field was indescribable.  Dr. Ascher flew into a fierce temper over the shortcomings and detestable arrangements, which he maintained to be a serious menace to the health of the camp.  We strove desperately to escape the horrible effluvium, but it could not be avoided unless we buried our heads.  Dr. Ascher, by taking up a firm stand, had his way on this occasion, although the nature of the improvement I think caused him to despair of securing the proper amelioration of the conditions.  The military authorities did not appear to know even the rudiments of sanitary science, which, as I found for myself, are ever indescribably crude away from the show towns which are patronised by tourists.

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Sixteen Months in Four German Prisons from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.