A. F. (Albert Pollard) Pollard
Capitolo 21
13th-15 meeting place the strong remainders, despite their construction
underground, to a mass of hull-hole with a handful of wounded or
unconscious survivors. The last to be reduced it was Strong Loncin which
brave commander, General Leman, was found poisoned and mean-dead
from suffocation. He had succeeded in to postpone the German advance for
a serious week.
Any more could be done with the disposition his/her strengths and the German
masses of infantry were pouring through the Meuse to Visé, toward
Liège of Verviers, on the correct bank of the Meuse toward Namur and
more distant south through the Ardennes. The German cavalry that scattered
on the east and north-east country of Brussels and sometimes it was
rejected by the Belgians, it was only a screen how defective
air-job failed to penetrate, and the frequent appointments were only
the brushes of outposts. Among a week from the autumn of Strong Loncin
halves Belgium overflows and the true threat revealed. Belgium was
weak in front of the avalanche and his/her only disposition of hope in France. But
the French army was still mobilizing on his/her northern forehead and his/her
raids in Alsace and Lorraine didn't do anything to assuage the
pressure. The Belgians had to fall again toward Antwerp, while discovering
Brussels in which it was busy from the Germans on the 20 and mulcted
a preliminary tax of eight million pounds, and going away to the
the fortifications of Namur the assignment than except the German advance to the
northern frontiers of France. Namur tried a broken reed. The troops
what paraded through Brussels with impressive pomp and the regularity
it was only a detail of the correct and extreme wing of the strength invadenda;
the mass was advancing along the bank of north of the Meuse and
the whole one overflowing than to south and to east of Belgium of the river. On the
15 that an attempt to grab Dinant and the river that cross above of Namur it was
rejected by French artillery; but there apparently was not cavalry to
follows on this success, and to the Germans it was permitted to bring them