The Hohenzollerns in America eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 190 pages of information about The Hohenzollerns in America.

The Hohenzollerns in America eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 190 pages of information about The Hohenzollerns in America.

So it was decided to hold the Kermesse and give all the profits realised by it to the Victims of the Peace.  Everybody set to work again with a will.  The Kermesse indeed had to be postponed for a few months to make room for the changes needed, but it has now been held and, in a certain sense, it has been the wildest kind of success.  The club, as I said, has been a blaze of light for three weeks.  We have had four orchestras in attendance every evening.  There have been booths draped with the flags of all the Allies, except some that we were not sure about, in every corridor of the club.  There have been dinner parties and dances every evening.  The members, especially the ladies, have not spared themselves.  Many of them have spent practically all their time at the Kermesse, not getting home until two in the morning.

And yet somehow one has felt that underneath the surface it was not a success.  The spirit seemed gone out of it.  The members themselves confessed in confidence that in spite of all they could do their hearts were not in it.  Peace had somehow taken away all the old glad sense of enjoyment.  As to spending money at the Kermesse all the members admitted frankly that they had no heart for it.  This was especially the case when the rumour got abroad that the Armenians were a poor lot and that some of the Turks were quite gentlemanly fellows.  It was said, too, that if the Russians did starve it would do them a lot of good.

So it was known even before we went to hear the financial report that there would be no question of profits on the Kermesse going to the Armenians or the Russians.

And to-night the treasurer has been reading out to a general meeting the financial results as nearly as they can be computed.

He has put the Net Patriotic Deficit, as nearly as he can estimate it, at fifteen thousand dollars, though he has stated, with applause from the ladies, that the Gross Deficit is bigger still.

The Ladies Financial Committee has just carried a motion that the whole of the deficit, both net and gross, be now forwarded to the Red Cross Society (sixty per cent), the Belgian Relief Fund (fifty per cent), and the remainder invested in the War Loan.

But there is a very general feeling among the male members that the club will have to go into liquidation.  Peace has ruined us.  Not a single member, so far as I am aware, is prepared to protest against the peace, or is anything but delighted to think that the war is over.  At the same time we do feel that if we could have had a longer notice, six months for instance, we could have braced ourselves better to stand up against it and meet the blow when it fell.

I think, too, that our feeling is shared outside.

5.—­The War News as I Remember it

Everybody, I think, should make some little contribution towards keeping alive the memories of the great war.  In the larger and heroic sense this is already being done.  But some of the minor things are apt to be neglected.  When the record of the war has been rewritten into real history, we shall be in danger of forgetting what war news was like and the peculiar kind of thrill that accompanied its perusal.

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The Hohenzollerns in America from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.