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    Introduction

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    My daughter Christine, who wrote me these letters, died at a hospital
    in Stuttgart on the morning of August 8th, 1914, of acute double
    pneumonia. I have kept the letters private for nearly three years,
    because, apart from the love in them that made them sacred things in
    days when we each still hoarded what we had of good, they seemed to me,
    who did not know the Germans and thought of them, as most people in
    England for a long while thought, without any bitterness and with a
    great inclination to explain away and excuse, too extreme and sweeping
    in their judgments. Now, as the years have passed, and each has been
    more full of actions on Germany's part difficult to explain except in
    one way and impossible to excuse, I feel that these letters, giving a
    picture of the state of mind of the German public immediately before
    the War, and written by some one who went there enthusiastically ready
    to like everything and everybody, may have a certain value in helping
    to put together a small corner of the great picture of Germany which it
    will be necessary to keep clear and naked before us in the future if
    the world is to be saved.

    I am publishing the letters just as they came to me, leaving out
    nothing. We no longer in these days belong to small circles, to
    limited little groups. We have been stripped of our secrecies and of
    our private hoards. We live in a great relationship. We share our
    griefs; and anything there is of love and happiness, any smallest
    expression of it, should be shared too. This is why I am leaving out
    nothing in the letters.

    The war killed Christine, just as surely as if she had been a soldier
    in the trenches. I will not write of her great gift, which was
    extraordinary. That too has been lost to the world, broken and thrown
    away by the war.

    I never saw her again. I had a telegram saying she was dead. I tried
    to go to Stuttgart, but was turned back at the frontier. The two last
    letters, the ones from Halle and from Wurzburg, reached me after I knew
    that she was dead.

    ALICE CHOLMONDELEY,
    London, May, 1917.
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