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The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume II by Burton Jesse Hendrick
page 46 of 510 (09%)
directly into the hands of the Germans. So matters go on from bad
to worse.

Bryce[9] is very sad. He confessed to me yesterday the utter
hopelessness of the two people's ever understanding one another.

The military situation is very blue--very blue. The general feeling
is that the long war will begin next March and end--nobody dares
predict.

W.H.P.

P.S. There's not a moral shadow of a doubt (1) that the commander
of the submarine that sunk the _Arabic_ is dead--although he makes
reports to his government! nor (2) that the _Hesperian_ was
torpedoed. The State Department has a piece of the torpedo.


V

The letters which Page sent directly to the President were just as
frank. "Incidents occur nearly every day," he wrote to President Wilson
in the autumn of 1915, "which reveal the feeling that the Germans have
taken us in. Last week one of our naval men, Lieutenant McBride, who has
just been ordered home, asked the Admiralty if he might see the piece of
metal found on the deck of the _Hesperian_. Contrary to their habit, the
British officer refused. 'Take my word for it,' he said. 'She was
torpedoed. Why do you wish to investigate? Your country will do
nothing--will accept any excuse, any insult and--do nothing.' When
McBride told me this, I went at once to the Foreign Office and made a
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