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- $Unique_ID{how04538}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{True Stories Of The Great War
- VIII - A Thousand Men And Horses Over A Rocky Gorge}
- $Subtitle{}
- $Author{Gordon-Smith, Gordon}
- $Affiliation{}
- $Subject{
- }
- $Date{1917}
- $Log{}
- Title: True Stories Of The Great War
- Book: With The Serbian Stoics In Exile - Under The German Yoke
- Author: Gordon-Smith, Gordon
- Date: 1917
-
- VIII - A Thousand Men And Horses Over A Rocky Gorge
-
- On the next march a new experience awaited us. The road ran for miles
- through a rocky gorge, and nothing else. The bed of the river was the only
- means of travel. There is nothing so nerve-racking as to keep one's eyes
- constantly glued to the ground, when each step presents a new problem. Of
- course, every now and then one of the stones would turn under our feet, and
- this meant a plunge up to the knees in icy water.
-
- So far as the eye could see there was nothing but this rocky bed,
- winding between towering basaltic cliffs. The task of transporting a
- thousand men and horses under such conditions was almost superhuman. If the
- Albanians had been openly hostile not one man would have come out alive.
-
- The Albanian, like most peasants, is grasping and fond of money, but
- once you cross his threshold your person and property are sacred. I never
- had the slightest fear once I entered an Albanian house.
-
- On the road everything is possible. The tribes live at war with one
- another and respect for human life is non-existent. It would have been as
- much as our lives were worth to travel an hour after darkness. But during
- the daylight an armed party inspires a certain respect.
-
- The men physically are probably the handsomest in Europe. I have never
- seen anywhere such beautiful children as those of the Albanians. Not one in
- a hundred knows how to read or write or has even been more than twenty miles
- from home.
-
- It was through such a country the Serbians had to transport soldiers,
- and that with the Germans and the Bulgarians in close pursuit.
-
- The last stages of the march were probably the hardest, as fodder for
- the animals and food for the men was practically unprocurable. Money
- difficulties also increased daily, the Albanians refusing to accept Serbian
- script at any rate of exchange. They would, however, give food and lodgings
- for articles of clothing, shirts, underwear, socks and boots. On the last
- stage we had, therefore, to resort to the primitive system of barter, buying
- a night's lodging with a shirt and a meal with a pair of socks.
-
-