About This Book
A young junior officer records wartime experiences in letters and diary entries that mix eager enlistment, convivial life in transit and in a provincial city, pride in his men, and impatience to reach the fighting. He describes rail and river journeys, entertainments, friendships with fellow officers, and bouts of illness that send him to hospital, where reading, rest, and brief excursions into the countryside and fishing provide solace. Occasional frontline impressions include regular shelling and the strain of awaiting orders, while recurring observations emphasize comradeship, regimental pride, and a persistent attention to landscape and small comforts amid the disruption of war.
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