moving quite rapidly. A hundred yards ahead in the starlight I can make out the narrow hull of a destroyer, which leaves a sharp, white wake in which we follow. Here and there are scattered lights-distant windows along the water-front. We light one cigarette after another, and I produce a couple of pounds of cake chocolate, which is quickly and gratefully consumed. The time drags slowly. The shore fades out, then draws near again. Sometimes there are many lights; sometimes almost none. We pass a lighthouse. I recognize and then. Then I recognize everything at once. I know where we are. A faint pale line begins to show along the horizon and the side-wheeler staggers against the chop made by the tide running against the wind. We turn, and just ahead I see the huge gray bulk of a converted German ocean-liner against a pier. The destroyer has swung away, running free of us in a wide circle. Behind us I now discover three other similarly convoyed side-wheelers. From the smokestacks of the transport the smoke is pouring in dense masses, but no lights gleam from her port-holes. She is simply a black blot against the sky-line. The officers say good-by to me; we leave the pilot-house and go back to the saloon. "All right, boys!" says Jack. "A couple of hours more and you can get your phonographs going." "Rather set my jaws going!" retorts a fat boy, and the crowd laughs good-naturedly. The steamer bumps gang-plank is run out. and adjust their clothes. to the dock, on the opposite side of which yawns the black hole in the side of the transport. The company files off one boat and directly on to the other, where each man is handed a slip with the number and location of his berth. against the wharf and the The men pick up their rifles Jack and I lead the way on The system is perfect; the embarkation takes place almost in silence. "Well, father!" Jack has turned to me and, smiling and happy, lays his arm on my shoulder. The moment has come, then. What shall I say? There was so much of encouragement and affection that I had carefully planned to put into my parting speech-how we were all so proud of him and would think of him every moment until his return; how, of course, he would returnthe war certainly would be over soon; and how we knew he'd do his duty; and so on. He knows every- How fatuous it would all sound! thing I want to say-perfectly well. to make a fuss about. Yet I can't let him go like that -just like that-without saying anything! While I hesitate, a private hurries up and, first saluting him, touches Jack upon the arm. "Capt. Stanton, the colonel wants you!" "All right!" answers Jack. He bends over quickly and touches his lips to my cheek. "Good-by!" he exclaims cheerfully. "Kiss mother for me and Margery!" "Good-by, Jack! I hope-never mind! Good-by, old fellow!-Oh, Jack-" But he has gone. The last company marches aboard and the slidingdoor is pulled to. The smoke is coming even thicker now from the transport's funnels, and there is a white froth rising from beneath her stern. Silently the hawsers are slipped. Over behind the city's castellated sky-line there is a yellow glow, and the water of the river is tinted with purple. A cold wind creeps round my ankles. It is chilly after the warm pilot-house. Slowly the great leviathan separates herself from the wharf and backs away, out into midstream. Not a light is visible. Not a man is above deck. She looks like an interned empty German liner whose mooring is being shifted. Yet inside her black hulk ten thousand of the youth of America are starting on their great crusade for the maintenance of humanity-that freedom shall not perish from the earth. VII WHY JACK HAS GONE "So speak ye, and so do, as they that shall be judged by the law of liberty. For he shall have judgment without mercy that hath showed no mercy * * James ii: 12, 13. Why have I sent my son across the seas to fight? Two years ago, on the Sunday following the torpedoing of the Lusitania, a party of sixteen people was assembled at luncheon in the Long Island country house of a distinguished New York lawyer. Inevitably the sole topic of conversation was the attitude the United States should adopt toward the German Government, which had thus wantonly murdered so many helpless American men, women, and children. Of those present several were jurists of wide reputation or persons of more than ordinary intelligence and standing in the community. After a lengthy, general discussion of that barbaric act, I remember saying that I wished that our government would immediately declare war upon Germany or, at least, sever diplomatic relations pending what reparation was possible and adequate guarantees that such methods of warfare should be discontinued. To my surprise there was little echo to these sentiments, and upon my asking our host to submit the question to a vote of those at the table, only one other man and his wife agreed with me and mine. Our friend smiled tolerantly. "How could war prove anything but an inconceivable disaster!" he remarked, as he pushed back his chair. "It must be the last-and only the lastresort." That already seems a lifetime ago. My friend, as he readily admits, neither knew what he knows now nor conceived it to be possible. Had he done so he would have been then, as I was, for war. To-day that same middle-aged lawyer-that conservative standpatter-is touring the country stimulating by his eloquence hundreds, if not thousands, to enlist. He is for the war-to a finish. For peace only with victory. I do not say that my friend is a different man, but he is an outraged one. He exercises still the discriminating processes of mind that have made him a leader of the bar, and which enabled him to weigh more or less calmly the specious arguments advanced by Germany for her ruthless undersea warfare. The mental habits of a lifetime rendered him incapable of adopting any other attitude toward Germany than that which he would have maintained toward a fellow practitioner in a court of justice-that of courteous consideration. He was accustomed to give every devil |