The Outlaws Quotes

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The Outlaws The Outlaws by Ernst von Salomon
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The Outlaws Quotes Showing 1-3 of 3
“Among those troops that I had joined were plenty of regular units with reliable officers, crowds of restless adventurers on the lookout for a fight and with it the chances of loot and relaxation of ordinary rules of conduct. Patriots could not bear the idea of break down of law and order at home and wish to guard the frontiers from the incursion of the Red Flood. There was the Baltic Landswehr, recruited from the local gentry who were determined at all cost to save their 700 year old traditions, their noble and vigorous yet fastidious culture, the Eastern bulwark of German civilization. And there were German battalions consisting of men who wanted to settle in the country who were hungering for land. Of troops desiring to fight for the existing government there were none. The like-minded ones were soon dissociated from general mass which was swept eastwards by crash of Western front. We seemed suddenly to have collected as if a secret signal. We found ourselves apart from the crowd. Knowing neither what we are we sought not gold. The blood suddenly ran hotly through our veins and called us to adventure and hazard. Drove us to wandering and danger. And herded together those of us who realized our profound kinship with one another. We were a band of warriors, extravagant in our demands, triumphantly definite in our decisions. What we wanted we did not know, but what we knew we did not want. To force our way through the prisoning walls of the world. To march over burning field, to stamp over ruins and scattered ashes, to dash recklessly through wild forests, over blasted heaps to push, conquer, eat our way towards the East, to the white hot dark cold land that stretched between ourselves and Asia. Was that what we wanted? I do not know if that was our desire and they was what we did. And the search for reasons why was lost in the tumult of the continuous fighting.”
Ernst von Salomon, The Outlaws
“War had taken hold of them and would never let them go. They would never really belong to their homes again. The war was over ... but the armies were still in being.”
Ernst von Salomon, The Outlaws
“Deutschland brannte dunkel in verwegenen Hirnen. Deutschland war da, wo um es gerungen wurde, es zeigte sich, wo bewehrte Hände nach seinem Bestande griffen, es strahlte grell, wo die Besessenen seines Geistes um Deutschlands willen den letzten Einsatz wagten. Deutschland war an der Grenze. Die Artikel des Versailler Friedens sagten uns, wo Deutschland war.”
Ernst von Salomon, Die Geächteten: Roman