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TRAGEDIES OF WAR

HOW THE NEWS CAME. TWO POIGNANT STORIES. Many poignant stories have been submitted in response to the Sunday Despatch’s invitation to readers to tell how they first heard news of the war. Mrs R. Prietzel, of Newcastle, England, wrote: “War brought to me—the English wife of a German doctor—a terrible choice. My husband was a gallant German gentleman. I loved him devotedly, but I had been married before, and Dick, my only son, was English to the core. We sat together, the three of us, on that fateful night, looking down on the excited crowd thronging the Wilhelmstrasse. “A whisper ran along that mighty crowd. The worst had come. Dick stood up, white-faced, trembling. ‘Mother, he said, ‘England will want me. I am going back.’ Then they shook hands, those two men I loved. Stepfather and stepson, but henceforth enemies. I came back with Dick. Three months later they were both dead, killed within a stone’s-throw of each other on the same day.” This story was sent in by Miss A. Roberts, of Chelsea, in England: “We had waited seven years for the wonderful moment when we should stand together before the alter to be made man and wife. He was a soldier, and had been stationed out East, but at last he got a home station. On my way to the church in my bridal finery I thrilled with every motion as I envisaged him waiting for me at the alter steps. “A messanger met me at the church door to tell me ‘England is at war,’ and that there would be no weddng, as my man was already en route for Belgium. There was no wedding—there never has been. He was killed.”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ST19331027.2.120

Bibliographic details

Southland Times, Issue 22157, 27 October 1933, Page 12

Word Count
287

TRAGEDIES OF WAR Southland Times, Issue 22157, 27 October 1933, Page 12

TRAGEDIES OF WAR Southland Times, Issue 22157, 27 October 1933, Page 12