The document appears to be a fictional conversation between world leaders during World War I, with the King of Belgium refusing to lose his soul despite military losses, while Turkey and Austria express weariness with the war. It also references an investigation into an unspecified major crime.
The document appears to be a fictional conversation between world leaders during World War I, with the King of Belgium refusing to lose his soul despite military losses, while Turkey and Austria express weariness with the war. It also references an investigation into an unspecified major crime.
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The document appears to be a fictional conversation between world leaders during World War I, with the King of Belgium refusing to lose his soul despite military losses, while Turkey and Austria express weariness with the war. It also references an investigation into an unspecified major crime.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
THE KAISER: "So, you see--you've lost everything."
THE KING OF THE BELGIANS: "Not my soul." Turkey: "I'm getting a bit fed up with this. I shall kick soon." Austria: "Well, I was thinking of lying down." “I say, old girl, do let me carry something.” The crime of the ages-who did it?