| PAGE |
What is a State of War | 67 |
Active Persons and Passive | 67 |
That War is no respector of Persons | 68 |
The Usages of War | 69 |
Of the futility of Written Agreements as Scraps of Paper | 70 |
The “flabby emotion” of Humanitarianism | 71 |
That Cruelty is often “the truest humanity” | 72 |
The perfect Officer | 72 |
Who are Combatants and who are not | 75 |
The Irregular | 76 |
Each State must decide for itself | 77 |
The necessity of Authorization | 77 |
Exceptions which prove the rule | 77 |
The Free Lance | 78 |
Modern views | 79 |
The German Military View | 80 |
The Levée en masse | 81 |
The Hague Regulations will not do | 83 |
A short way with the Defender of his Country | 83 |
Violence and Cunning | 84 |
How to make an end of the Enemy | 85 |
The Rules of the Game | 85 |
Colored Troops are Blacklegs | 87 |
Prisoners of War | 88 |
Væ Victis! | 89 |
The Modern View | 89 |
Prisoners of War are to be Honorably treated | 90 |
Who may be made Prisoners | 91 |
The treatment of Prisoners of War | 92 |
Their confinement | 92 |
The Prisoner and his Taskmaster | 93 |
Flight | 94 |
Diet | 95 |
Letters | 95 |
Personal belongings | 95 |
The Information Bureau | 96 |
When Prisoners may be put to Death | 97 |
“Reprisals” | 97 |
One must not be too scrupulous | 98 |
The end of Captivity | 99 |
Parole | 100 |
Exchange of Prisoners | 102 |
Removal of Prisoners | 102 |
Sieges and Bombardments: Fair Game | 103 |
Of making the most of one’s opportunity | 104 |
Spare the Churches | 105 |
A Bombardment is no Respector of Persons | 105 |
A timely severity | 106 |
“Undefended Places” | 108 |
Stratagems | 110 |
What are “dirty tricks”? | 111 |
The apophthegm of Frederick the Great | 111 |
Of False Uniforms | 112 |
The Corruption of others may be useful | 113 |
And Murder is one of the Fine Arts | 114 |
That the ugly is often expedient, and that it is a mistake to be too “nice-minded” | 114 |
The Sanctity of the Geneva Convention | 115 |
The “Hyenas of the Battlefield” | 116 |
Flags of Truce | 117 |
The Etiquette of Flags of Truce | 119 |
The Envoy | 120 |
His approach | 120 |
The Challenge—“Wer da?” | 120 |
His reception | 120 |
He dismounts | 121 |
Let his Yea be Yea, and his Nay, Nay | 121 |
The duty of his Interlocutor | 121 |
The Impatient Envoy | 122 |
The French again | 122 |
The Scout | 124 |
The Spy and his short shrift | 124 |
What is a Spy? | 125 |
Of the essentials of Espionage | 126 |
Accessories are Principals | 126 |
The Deserter is faithless, and the Renegade false | 127 |
But both may be useful | 127 |
“Followers” | 128 |
The War Correspondent: his importance. His presence is desirable | 129 |
The ideal War Correspondent | 130 |
The Etiquette of the War Correspondent | 131 |
How to tell a Non-Combatant | 133 |
War Treaties | 135 |
That Faith must be kept even with an enemy | 135 |
Exchange of Prisoners | 135 |
Capitulations—they cannot be too meticulous | 136 |
Of the White Flag | 139 |
Of Safe-Conducts | 140 |
Of Armistice | 141 |
The Civil Population is not to be regarded as an enemy | 147 |
They must not be molested | 148 |
Their duty | 149 |
Of the humanity of the Germans and the barbarity of the French | 149 |
What the Invader may do | 151 |
A man may be compelled to Betray his Country | 153 |
And worse | 153 |
Of forced labor | 154 |
Of a certain harsh measure and its justification | 154 |
Hostages | 155 |
A “harsh and cruel” measure | 156 |
But it was “successful” | 156 |
War Rebellion | 157 |
War Treason and Unwilling Guides | 159 |
Another deplorable necessity | 159 |
Of Private Property and its immunities | 161 |
Of German behavior | 163 |
The gentle Hun and the looking-glass | 165 |
Booty | 167 |
The State realty may be used but must not be wasted | 168 |
State Personalty is at the mercy of the victor | 169 |
Private realty | 170 |
Private personalty | 170 |
“Choses in action” | 171 |
Plundering is wicked | 171 |
Requisitions | 174 |
How the docile German learnt the “better way” | 175 |
To exhaust the country is deplorable, but we mean to do it | 175 |
Buccaneering levies | 177 |
How to administer an invaded country | 180 |
The Laws remain—with qualification | 181 |
The Inhabitants must obey | 182 |
Martial Law | 182 |
Fiscal Policy | 184 |
Occupation must be real, not fictitious | 185 |
What neutrality means | 187 |
A neutral cannot be all things to all men; therefore he must be nothing to any of them | 187 |
But there are limits to this detachment | 188 |
Duties of the neutral—belligerents must be warned off | 188 |
The neutral must guard its inviolable frontiers. It must intern the trespassers | 189 |
Unneutral service | 191 |
The “sinews of war”—loans to belligerents | 191 |
Contraband of War | 191 |
Good business | 192 |
Foodstuffs | 192 |
Contraband on a small scale | 193 |
And on a large scale | 194 |
The practise differs | 194 |
Who may pass—the Sick and the Wounded | 195 |
Who may not pass—Prisoners of War | 196 |
Rights of the neutral | 196 |
The neutral has the right to be left alone | 197 |
Neutral territory is sacred | 197 |
The neutral may resist a violation of its territory “with all the means in his power” | 197 |
Neutrality is presumed | 198 |
The Property of Neutrals | 198 |
Diplomatic intercourse | 199 |