About This Book
The collection presents personal letters from a young soldier to his mother written during the opening months of the war, tracing his transition from depot duties to active service while recording daily routines, long marches, crowded trains, and encounters with refugees and wounded. He meditates on duty, fear, and solidarity, contrasts the horrors of combat with consolations drawn from landscape, memory, and an artist's sensibility, and describes censorship, shortages of news, and the emotional toll of separation. The letters combine vivid scene sketching with reflective passages about conscience, courage, and the attempt to preserve inner life amid upheaval.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
Histoire de St. Louis, Roi de France
by Richard Girard de Bury
Johann Sebastian Bach: The Organist and His Works for the Organ
by André Pirro
The autobiography of Arthur Young
by Arthur Young
Dixmude: The epic of the French marines (October 17-November 10, 1914)
by Charles Le Goffic
The works of Richard Hurd, volume 8 (of 8)
by Richard Hurd
Le chevalier d'Harmental
by Alexandre Dumas
