A HILLTOP ON THE MARNE
By Mildred Aldrich
Being Letters Written June 3-September 8, 1914
Note To Tenth Impression
The author wishes to apologize for the constant use of the word English in speaking of the British Expedition to France. At the beginning of the war this was a colloquial error into which we all fell over here, even the French press. Everything in khaki was spoken of as "English," even though we knew perfectly well that Scotch, Irish, and Welsh were equally well represented in the ranks, and the colors they followed were almost universally spoken of as the "English flag." These letters were written in the days before the attention of the French press was called to this error of speech, which accounts for the mistake's persisting in the book.
La Creste, Huiry,
France, February, 1916.
To My Grandmother Judith Trask Baker That Staunch New Englander And Pioneer Universalist To The Memory Of Whose Courage And Example I Owe A Debt Of Eternal Gratitude
A HILLTOP ON THE MARNE
June 3, 1914
Well, the deed is done. I have not wanted to talk with you much about it until I was here. I know all your objections. You remember that you did not spare me when, a year ago, I told you that this was my plan. I realize that you--more active, younger, more interested in life, less burdened with your past--feel that it is cowardly on my part to seek a quiet refuge and settle myself into it, to turn my face peacefully to the exit, feeling that the end is the most interesting event ahead of me--the one truly interesting experience left to me in this incarnation.
I am not proposing to ask you to see it from my point of view. You cannot, no matter how willing you are to try. No two people ever see life from the same angle. There is a law which decrees that two objects may not occupy the same place at the same time--result: two people cannot see things from the same point of view, and the slightest difference in angle changes the thing seen.
I did not decide to come away into a little corner in the country, in this land in which I was not born, without looking at the move from all angles. Be sure that I know what I am doing, and I have found the place where I can do it. Some time you will see the new home, I hope, and then you will understand. I have lived more than sixty years. I have lived a fairly active life, and it has been, with all its hardships--and they have been many--interesting. But I have had enough of the city--even of Paris, the most beautiful city in the world. Nothing can take any of that away from me. It is treasured up in my memory. I am even prepared to own that there was a sort of arrogance in my persistence in choosing for so many years the most seductive city in the world, and saying, "Let others live where they will--here I propose to stay." I lived there until I seemed to take it for my own--to know it on the surface and under it, and over it, and around it; until I had a sort of morbid jealousy when I found any one who knew it half as well as I did, or presumed to love it half as much, and dared to say so. You will please note that I have not gone far from it.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Hilltop on the Marne by Mildred Aldrich
- 2: At the north side of the salon
- 3: Just halfway between me and Meaux
- 4: Halfway between you will find Couilly Saint Germain
- 5: Then I close and bolt all the shutters downstairs
- 6: Every one calls him Pere Abelard
- 7: He never needs a sou except for that shave
- 8: I am going to as far as Amelie allows me
- 9: I must tell you about that crimson rambler
- 10: Even take you to the theater what is more
- 11: It will be the church bells at Bouleurs
- 12: Retired to the Hermitage of Quincy
- 13: The procession at Voisins was a primitive affair
- 14: I don't deny that 1870 was the making of modern France
- 15: But war right here if the Germans can cross the frontier
- 16: In the old Galerie des Machines
- 17: If I get pulled up violently by the roots
- 18: And he could telephone to the Demi Lune
- 19: Even Couilly has a German or two
- 20: And who is not just now full of stories of 1870
- 21: The old blacksmith is a veteran of 1870
- 22: There were soldiers everywhere
- 23: I work in my garden intermittently
- 24: That we are cleaner than our progenitors
- 25: And sent Amelie out to see what was going on
- 26: By the time we got to the road which leads east to Montry
- 27: When Amelie came to get breakfast
- 28: So the schoolmistress and her husband
- 29: He made the same gesture toward Esbly
- 30: Amelie was busy putting my few pieces of silver
- 31: And Meaux was about the same distance beyond it
- 32: Opened jar after jar of jam and jelly
- 33: Another division across the Marne
- 34: The Uhlans came back to my mind
- 35: So Pere came and drew buckets and buckets of water
- 36: I am the corporal of the guard
- 37: Of the Bedfordshire Light Infantry
- 38: And by the time I had eaten my breakfast
- 39: And cannot put our pickets out of sight of one another
- 40: Which is the line of march from Meaux to Paris
- 41: That we are the sacrificed corps
- 42: Pere had been to Couilly they had all left there
- 43: I found him fast asleep on the bench in the arbor
- 44: So I said he could have a glass of cider
- 45: But Monthyon and Penchard were enveloped in smoke
- 46: When I saw Amelie standing there
- 47: Amelie got breakfast as if there were no cannon
- 48: Poor old Pere just hates the war
- 49: Amelie had taken the road across the fields
- 50: Amelie is only ten years younger than I am
- 51: A bicyclist in the ambulance corps
- 52: They will be more useful to Joffre later
- 53: I had never tasted eau de vie des prunes
- 54: At the library door he stopped
- 55: Said the officer as the Taube continued to rise
- 56: I had not seen Amelie since the regiment arrived
- 57: Marched along the road to Meaux
