Tilly Hill's World War I scrapbook

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 Left page:  

 Newspaper clipping pasted vertically in the upper left of a photograph of soldiers wearing gas masks 

The word comes that the enemy is using gas.

 

 Newspaper clipping below that on the left side of the page: 

LORD READING AND FRANCE'S

HEROISM.

A Reader's telegraph from New York on Sunday

says -- Addressing a mass meeting in Madison

Square Garden this evening in honour of

France, Lord Reading said that they met there

to make a plain and open confession of their

admiration for the heroism and endurance of all

classes of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen, and

of their faith in the ultimate result. To-day,

he declared France and Great Britain stand

closer together than ever, and America has knit

the bonds between them still more firmly by

the moral and material support which she brings

as freely to ensure the ultimate victory of the

cause of freedom. The ultimate victory of

the struggle for liberty over despotism became

assured when this great nation, on whose soil

we now stand, ranged herself with the Allies.

 

 Newspaper clipping in top center of page: 

The Spirit of France

    July 14th is the French National Féte 

Day. France has suffered much since

the Féte of 1914; but she has kept

a good heart, and, in so doing, has helped

to sustain the spirit of the Alliance. Her

strength is as the strength of ten because

of the spiritual exaltation to which she has

risen in the crisis of her late M. Maurice

Barrès, in a paper read before the British

Royal Academy on Wednesday, showed

that this exaltation is often displayed

individually as well as nationally. He

read at length the wonderful account given

by Lieutenant Pericard of his experience

in the Bois-brûlé in April, 1915, when it

seemed to him that the dead in the trench

which he was defending, with a remaining

handful of men, rose up and aided them.

     "I felt as though I had grown immeasurably,

that I had a giant's body, a bounding strength,

and in extraordinary lucidity of vision and

thought which allowed me to give orders, fire at

the enemy, and at the same time to parry his

bombs. Twice we ran out of grenades, and

twice we found them at our feet, whole sacks

full, mingled with sandbags. The whole day

we had stood upon them without seeing them.

At last the Germans died. That whole night and

for several following days the religious emotion

that had seized me when I called upon the dead

governed me completely."

M. Barrès believes that the transfiguration

of French soldiers, of which this incident

is an example, is in agreement with the

whole tradition of France from the

Crusades to Jeanne d'Arc and from

Jeanne d'Arc to the Revolution. The

soldiers of France, he says, fight

religiously - for ideas, for beliefs, for

aspirations. The women of France are

not less sublime. Peasant women receiving

the news of their husbands' and their

sons' death on the battlefield with the

cry "Vive la France," and Madame de

Castelnau, who, praying at the altar for

her three sons in battle, and seeing the

hands of the priest tremble, understands

and asks simply "Which 1" - are all animated

by the same spirit, the spirit of

faith and of victory. This is a literary 

man's analysis, but friends of France who

here watched with sympathetic eyes the

manner in which she has borne the ordeal

of the past two years will not say that M.

Barrè's words are extravagant.


 Newspaper clipping at upper right of page of a photograph of a woman's head and shoulders 

NURSE CAVELL

 handwritten: 

Shot by the Germans

Oct 11th 1915


 Newspaper clipping below that, center of right side, of a photograph of a bearded man in a hat and dark suit 

MARTYRED DUNKIRK.

The Rev. W. J. Drought, who has continued

his work at Dunkirk in spite of

the havoc wrought by the German guns

and bombs. The buildings near his

parsonage are all destroyed, but the

church has escaped.


 Handwritten, at bottom of page: 

"The sunlight shall not easily seem fair

To you again

Knowing the hand which once amid your hair

Did stray so maddeningly

Now listlessly

Is beaten into mire by the summer rain."

From the Love of an unknown solider  6 III.Ig 


  Right page: 

 Newspaper clipping which takes up the entire page, oriented vertically, of soldiers in a trench, shooting and climbing over, while a dead soldier lies at the bottom 

The brave legends of the knights of old are not more thrilling than this spectacle of shrapnel-helmeted French chasseurs hurling lumps of rock on the heads of the advancing enemy. The photograph was taken only a few days ago in a trench won from the Germans.

Transcription saved

 Left page:  

 Newspaper clipping pasted vertically in the upper left of a photograph of soldiers wearing gas masks 

The word comes that the enemy is using gas.

 

 Newspaper clipping below that on the left side of the page: 

LORD READING AND FRANCE'S

HEROISM.

A Reader's telegraph from New York on Sunday

says -- Addressing a mass meeting in Madison

Square Garden this evening in honour of

France, Lord Reading said that they met there

to make a plain and open confession of their

admiration for the heroism and endurance of all

classes of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen, and

of their faith in the ultimate result. To-day,

he declared France and Great Britain stand

closer together than ever, and America has knit

the bonds between them still more firmly by

the moral and material support which she brings

as freely to ensure the ultimate victory of the

cause of freedom. The ultimate victory of

the struggle for liberty over despotism became

assured when this great nation, on whose soil

we now stand, ranged herself with the Allies.

 

 Newspaper clipping in top center of page: 

The Spirit of France

    July 14th is the French National Féte 

Day. France has suffered much since

the Féte of 1914; but she has kept

a good heart, and, in so doing, has helped

to sustain the spirit of the Alliance. Her

strength is as the strength of ten because

of the spiritual exaltation to which she has

risen in the crisis of her late M. Maurice

Barrès, in a paper read before the British

Royal Academy on Wednesday, showed

that this exaltation is often displayed

individually as well as nationally. He

read at length the wonderful account given

by Lieutenant Pericard of his experience

in the Bois-brûlé in April, 1915, when it

seemed to him that the dead in the trench

which he was defending, with a remaining

handful of men, rose up and aided them.

     "I felt as though I had grown immeasurably,

that I had a giant's body, a bounding strength,

and in extraordinary lucidity of vision and

thought which allowed me to give orders, fire at

the enemy, and at the same time to parry his

bombs. Twice we ran out of grenades, and

twice we found them at our feet, whole sacks

full, mingled with sandbags. The whole day

we had stood upon them without seeing them.

At last the Germans died. That whole night and

for several following days the religious emotion

that had seized me when I called upon the dead

governed me completely."

M. Barrès believes that the transfiguration

of French soldiers, of which this incident

is an example, is in agreement with the

whole tradition of France from the

Crusades to Jeanne d'Arc and from

Jeanne d'Arc to the Revolution. The

soldiers of France, he says, fight

religiously - for ideas, for beliefs, for

aspirations. The women of France are

not less sublime. Peasant women receiving

the news of their husbands' and their

sons' death on the battlefield with the

cry "Vive la France," and Madame de

Castelnau, who, praying at the altar for

her three sons in battle, and seeing the

hands of the priest tremble, understands

and asks simply "Which 1" - are all animated

by the same spirit, the spirit of

faith and of victory. This is a literary 

man's analysis, but friends of France who

here watched with sympathetic eyes the

manner in which she has borne the ordeal

of the past two years will not say that M.

Barrè's words are extravagant.


 Newspaper clipping at upper right of page of a photograph of a woman's head and shoulders 

NURSE CAVELL

 handwritten: 

Shot by the Germans

Oct 11th 1915


 Newspaper clipping below that, center of right side, of a photograph of a bearded man in a hat and dark suit 

MARTYRED DUNKIRK.

The Rev. W. J. Drought, who has continued

his work at Dunkirk in spite of

the havoc wrought by the German guns

and bombs. The buildings near his

parsonage are all destroyed, but the

church has escaped.


 Handwritten, at bottom of page: 

"The sunlight shall not easily seem fair

To you again

Knowing the hand which once amid your hair

Did stray so maddeningly

Now listlessly

Is beaten into mire by the summer rain."

From the Love of an unknown solider  6 III.Ig 


  Right page: 

 Newspaper clipping which takes up the entire page, oriented vertically, of soldiers in a trench, shooting and climbing over, while a dead soldier lies at the bottom 

The brave legends of the knights of old are not more thrilling than this spectacle of shrapnel-helmeted French chasseurs hurling lumps of rock on the heads of the advancing enemy. The photograph was taken only a few days ago in a trench won from the Germans.


Transcription history
  • October 29, 2017 03:16:48 Thomas A. Lingner

     Left page:  

     Newspaper clipping pasted vertically in the upper left of a photograph of soldiers wearing gas masks 

    The word comes that the enemy is using gas.

     

     Newspaper clipping below that on the left side of the page: 

    LORD READING AND FRANCE'S

    HEROISM.

    A Reader's telegraph from New York on Sunday

    says -- Addressing a mass meeting in Madison

    Square Garden this evening in honour of

    France, Lord Reading said that they met there

    to make a plain and open confession of their

    admiration for the heroism and endurance of all

    classes of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen, and

    of their faith in the ultimate result. To-day,

    he declared France and Great Britain stand

    closer together than ever, and America has knit

    the bonds between them still more firmly by

    the moral and material support which she brings

    as freely to ensure the ultimate victory of the

    cause of freedom. The ultimate victory of

    the struggle for liberty over despotism became

    assured when this great nation, on whose soil

    we now stand, ranged herself with the Allies.

     

     Newspaper clipping in top center of page: 

    The Spirit of France

        July 14th is the French National Féte 

    Day. France has suffered much since

    the Féte of 1914; but she has kept

    a good heart, and, in so doing, has helped

    to sustain the spirit of the Alliance. Her

    strength is as the strength of ten because

    of the spiritual exaltation to which she has

    risen in the crisis of her late M. Maurice

    Barrès, in a paper read before the British

    Royal Academy on Wednesday, showed

    that this exaltation is often displayed

    individually as well as nationally. He

    read at length the wonderful account given

    by Lieutenant Pericard of his experience

    in the Bois-brûlé in April, 1915, when it

    seemed to him that the dead in the trench

    which he was defending, with a remaining

    handful of men, rose up and aided them.

         "I felt as though I had grown immeasurably,

    that I had a giant's body, a bounding strength,

    and in extraordinary lucidity of vision and

    thought which allowed me to give orders, fire at

    the enemy, and at the same time to parry his

    bombs. Twice we ran out of grenades, and

    twice we found them at our feet, whole sacks

    full, mingled with sandbags. The whole day

    we had stood upon them without seeing them.

    At last the Germans died. That whole night and

    for several following days the religious emotion

    that had seized me when I called upon the dead

    governed me completely."

    M. Barrès believes that the transfiguration

    of French soldiers, of which this incident

    is an example, is in agreement with the

    whole tradition of France from the

    Crusades to Jeanne d'Arc and from

    Jeanne d'Arc to the Revolution. The

    soldiers of France, he says, fight

    religiously - for ideas, for beliefs, for

    aspirations. The women of France are

    not less sublime. Peasant women receiving

    the news of their husbands' and their

    sons' death on the battlefield with the

    cry "Vive la France," and Madame de

    Castelnau, who, praying at the altar for

    her three sons in battle, and seeing the

    hands of the priest tremble, understands

    and asks simply "Which 1" - are all animated

    by the same spirit, the spirit of

    faith and of victory. This is a literary 

    man's analysis, but friends of France who

    here watched with sympathetic eyes the

    manner in which she has borne the ordeal

    of the past two years will not say that M.

    Barrè's words are extravagant.


     Newspaper clipping at upper right of page of a photograph of a woman's head and shoulders 

    NURSE CAVELL

     handwritten: 

    Shot by the Germans

    Oct 11th 1915


     Newspaper clipping below that, center of right side, of a photograph of a bearded man in a hat and dark suit 

    MARTYRED DUNKIRK.

    The Rev. W. J. Drought, who has continued

    his work at Dunkirk in spite of

    the havoc wrought by the German guns

    and bombs. The buildings near his

    parsonage are all destroyed, but the

    church has escaped.


     Handwritten, at bottom of page: 

    "The sunlight shall not easily seem fair

    To you again

    Knowing the hand which once amid your hair

    Did stray so maddeningly

    Now listlessly

    Is beaten into mire by the summer rain."

    From the Love of an unknown solider  6 III.Ig 


      Right page: 

     Newspaper clipping which takes up the entire page, oriented vertically, of soldiers in a trench, shooting and climbing over, while a dead soldier lies at the bottom 

    The brave legends of the knights of old are not more thrilling than this spectacle of shrapnel-helmeted French chasseurs hurling lumps of rock on the heads of the advancing enemy. The photograph was taken only a few days ago in a trench won from the Germans.

  • March 19, 2017 03:39:18 Cheryl Ellsworth

     Left page:  

     Newspaper clipping pasted vertically in the upper left of a photograph of soldiers wearing gas masks 

    The word comes that the enemy is using gas.

     

     Newspaper clipping below that on the left side of the page: 

    LORD READING AND FRANCE'S

    HEROISM.

    A Router's telegraph from New York on Sunday

    says -- Addressing a mass meeting in Madison

    Square Garden this evening in honour of

    France, Lord Reading said that they met there

    to make a plain and open confession of their

    admiration for the heroism and endurance of all

    classes of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen, and

    of their faith in the ultimate result. To-day,

    he declared France and Great Britain stand

    closer together than ever, and America has knit

    the bonds between them still more firmly by

    the moral and material support which she brings

    as freely to ensure the ultimate victory of the

    [ ]  of freedom. The ultimate victory of

    the struggle for liberty over  [ ]  became

    assured when this great nation, on whose soil

    we now stand, ranged herself with the Allies.

     

     Newspaper clipping in top center of page: 

    The Spirit of France

        July 14th is the French NatiomissingFéts  There is a tear in the paper 

    Day. France has suffered much since

    the Féte of 1914; but she has kept

    a good heart, and, in so doing, has helped

    to sustain the spirit of the Alliance. Her

    strength is as the strength of ten because

    of the spiritual exaltation to which she has

    risen in the crisis of her late M. Maurice

    Barrès, in a paper read before the British

    Royal Academy on Wednesday, showed

    that this exaltation is often displayed

    individually as well as nationally. He

    read at length the wonderful account given

    by Lieutenant Pericard of his experience

    in the Bois-brûlé in April, 1915, when it

    seemed to him that the dead in the trench

    which he was defending, with a remaining

    handful of men, rose up and aided them.

         "I felt as though I had grown immeasurably,

    that I had a giant's body, a bounding strength,

    and in extraordinary lucidity of vision and

    thought which allowed me to give orders,  [ ]  at

    the enemy, and at the same time to parry his

    bombs. Twice we ran out of grenades, and

    twice we found them at our feet, whole sacks

    full, mingled with sandbags. The whole day

    we had stood upon them without seeing them.

    At last the Germans died. That whole night and

    for several following days the religious emotion

    that had seized me when I called upon the dead

    governed me completely."

    M. Barrès believes that the transfiguration

    of French soldiers, of which this incident

    is an example, is in agreement with the

    whole tradition of France from the

    Crusades to Jeanne d'Arc and from

    Jeanne d'Arc to the Revolution. The

    soldiers of France, he says, fight

    religiously - for ideas, for beliefs, for

    aspirations. The women of France are

    not less sublime. Peasant women receiving

    the news of their husbands' and their

    sons' death on the battlefield with the

    cry "Vive la France," and Madame de

    Castelnau, who, praying at the altar for

    her three sons in battle, and seeing the

    hands of the priest tremble, understands

    and asks simply "Which 1" - are all animated

    by the same spirit, the spirit of

    faith and of victory. This is a literary 

    man's analysis, but friends of France who

    here watched with sympathetic eyes the

    manner in which she has borne the ordeal

    of the past two years will not say that M.

    Barrè's words are extravagant.


     Newspaper clipping at upper right of page of a photograph of a woman's head and shoulders 

    NURSE CAVELL

     handwritten: 

    Shot by the Germans

    Oct 11th 1915


     Newspaper clipping below that, center of right side, of a photograph of a bearded man in a hat and dark suit 

    MARTYRED DUNKIRK.

    The Rev. W. J. Drought, who has continued

    his work at Dunkirk in spite of

    the havoc wrought by the German guns

    and bombs. The buildings near his

    parsonage are all destroyed, but the

    church has escaped.


     Handwritten, at bottom of page: 

    "The sunlight shall not easily seem fair

    To you again

    Knowing the hand which once amid your hair

    Did stray so maddeningly

    Now listlessly

    Is beaten into mire by the summer rain."

    From the Love of an unknown solider  6 III.Ig 


      Right page: 

     Newspaper clipping which takes up the entire page, oriented vertically, of soldiers in a trench, shooting and climbing over, while a dead soldier lies at the bottom 

    The brave legends of the knights of old are not more thrilling than this spectacle of shrapnel-helmeted French chasseurs hurling lumps of rock on the heads of the advancing enemy. The photograph was taken only a few days ago in a trench won from the Germans.


  • March 19, 2017 03:23:29 Cheryl Ellsworth

     Left page:  

     Newspaper clipping pasted vertically in the upper left of a photograph of soldiers wearing gas masks 

    The word comes that the enemy is using gas.

     

     Newspaper clipping below that on the left side of the page: 

    LORD READING AND FRANCE'S

    HEROISM.

    A Router's telegraph from New York on Sunday

    says -- Addressing a mass meeting in Madison

    Square Garden this evening in honour of

    France, Lord Reading said that they met there

    to make a plain and open confession of their

    admiration for the heroism and endurance of all

    classes of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen, and

    of their faith in the ultimate result. To-day,

    he declared France and Great Britain stand

    closer together than ever, and America has knit

    the bonds between them still more firmly by

    the moral and material support which she brings

    as freely to ensure the ultimate victory of the

    [ ]  of freedom. The ultimate victory of

    the struggle for liberty over  [ ]  became

    assured when this great nation, on whose soil

    we now stand, ranged herself with the Allies.

     

     Newspaper clipping in top center of page: 

    The Spirit of France

        July 14th is the French NatiomissingFéts  There is a tear in the paper 

    Day. France has suffered much since

    the Féte of 1914; but she has kept

    a good heart, and, in so doing, has helped

    to sustain the spirit of the Alliance. Her

    strength is as the strength of ten because

    of the spiritual exaltation to which she has

    risen in the crisis of her late M. Maurice

    Barrès, in a paper read before the British

    Royal Academy on Wednesday, showed

    that this exaltation is often displayed

    individually as well as nationally. He

    read at length the wonderful account given

    by Lieutenant Pericard of his experience

    in the Bois-brûlé in April, 1915, when it

    seemed to him that the dead in the trench

    which he was defending, with a remaining

    handful of men, rose up and aided them.

         "I felt as though I had grown immeasurably,

    that I had a giant's body, a bounding strength,

    and in extraordinary lucidity of vision and

    thought which allowed me to give orders,  [ ]  at

    the enemy, and at the same time to parry his

    bombs. Twice we ran out of grenades, and

    twice we found them at our feet, whole sacks

    full, mingled with sandbags. The whole day

    we had stood upon them without seeing them.

    At last the Germans died. That whole night and

    for several following days the religious emotion

    that had seized me when I called upon the dead

    governed me completely."

    M. Barrès believes that the transfiguration

    of French soldiers, of which this incident

    is an example, is in agreement with the

    whole tradition of France from the

    Crusades to Jeanne d'Arc and from

    Jeanne d'Arc to the Revolution. The

    soldiers of France, he says, fight

    religiously - for ideas, for beliefs, for

    aspirations. The women of France are

    not less sublime. Peasant women receiving

    the news of their husbands' and their

    sons' death on the battlefield with the

    cry "Vive la France," and Madame de

    Castelnau, who, praying at the altar for

    her three sons in battle, and seeing the

    hands of the priest tremble, understands

    and asks simply "Which 1" - are all animated

    by the same spirit, the spirit of

    faith and of victory. This is a literary 

    man's analysis, but friends of France who

    here watched with sympathetic eyes the

    manner in which she has borne the ordeal

    of the past two years will not say that M.

    Barrè's words are extravagant.

     


  • March 19, 2017 03:20:52 Cheryl Ellsworth

     Left page:  

     Newspaper clipping pasted vertically in the upper left of a photograph of soldiers wearing gas masks 

    The word comes that the enemy is using gas.

     

     Newspaper clipping below that on the left side of the page: 

    LORD READING AND FRANCE'S

    HEROISM.

    A Router's telegraph from New York on Sunday

    says -- Addressing a mass meeting in Madison

    Square Garden this evening in honour of

    France, Lord Reading said that they met there

    to make a plain and open confession of their

    admiration for the heroism and endurance of all

    classes of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen, and

    of their faith in the ultimate result. To-day,

    he declared France and Great Britain stand

    closer together than ever, and America has knit

    the bonds between them still more firmly by

    the moral and material support which she brings

    as freely to ensure the ultimate victory of the

    [ ]  of freedom. The ultimate victory of

    the struggle for liberty over  [ ]  became

    assured when this great nation, on whose soil

    we now stand, ranged herself with the Allies.

     

     Newspaper clipping in top center of page: 

    The Spirit of France

        July 14th is the French NatiomissingFéts  There is a tear in the paper 

    Day. France has suffered much since

    the Féte of 1914; but she has kept

    a good heart, and, in so doing, has helped

    to sustain the spirit of the Alliance. Her

    strength is as the strength of ten because

    of the spiritual exaltation to which she has

    risen in the crisis of her late M. Maurice

    Barrès, in a paper read before the British

    Royal Academy on Wednesday, showed

    that this exaltation is often displayed

    individually as well as nationally. He

    read at length the wonderful account given

    by Lieutenant Pericard of his experience

    in the Bois-brûlé in April, 1915, when it

    seemed to him that the dead in the trench

    which he was defending, with a remaining

    handful of men, rose up and aided them.

         "I felt as though I had grown immeasurably,

    that I had a giant's body, a bounding strength,

    and in extraordinary  baridity  of vision [ ]

    through which allowed me to give orders, [ ] at

    the enemy, and at the same time to parry his

    bombs. Twice we ran out of grenades, and

    twice we found them at our feet, whole sacks

    full, mingled with sandbags. The whole day

    we had stood upon them without seeing them.

    At least the Germans [ ]. That whole night and

    for several following days the religious emotion

    that had seized me when I called upon the dead

    governed me completely."

    M. Barrès believes that the transfiguration

    of French soldiers, of which this incident

    is an example, is in agreement with the

    whole tradition of France from the

    Crusades to Jeanne d'Arc and from

    Jeanne d'Arc to the Revolution. The

    soldiers of France, he says, fight

    religiously - for ideas, for beliefs, for

    aspirations. The women of France are

    not less sublime. Peasant women receiving

    the news of their husbands' and their

    sons' death on the battlefield with the

    cry "Vive la France," and Madame de

    Castelnau, who, praying at the altar for

    her three sons in battle, and seeing the

    hands of the priest tremble, understands

    and asks simply "Which 1" - are all animated

    by the same spirit, the spirit of

    faith and of victory. This is a literary 

    man's analysis, but friends of France who

    here watched with sympathetic eyes the

    manner in which she has borne the ordeal

    of the past two years will not say that M.

    Barrè's words are extravagant.

     


  • March 19, 2017 03:09:20 Cheryl Ellsworth

     Left page:  

     Newspaper clipping pasted vertically in the upper left of a photograph of soldiers wearing gas masks 

    The word comes that the enemy is using gas.


     Newspaper clipping below that on the left side of the page: 

    LORD READING AND FRANCE'S

    HEROISM.

    A Router's telegraph from New York on Sunday

    says -- Addressing a mass meeting in Madison

    Square Garden this evening in honour of

    France, Lord Reading said that they met there

    to make a plain and open confession of their

    admiration for the heroism and endurance of all

    classes of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen, and

    of their faith in the ultimate result. To-day,

    he declared France and Great Britain stand

    closer together than ever, and America has knit

    the bonds between them still more firmly by

    the moral and material support which she brings

    as freely to ensure the ultimate victory of the

    [ ]  of freedom. The ultimate victory of

    the struggle for liberty over  [ ]  became

    assured when this great nation, on whose soil

    we now stand, ranged herself with the Allies.


     Newspaper clipping in top center of page: 

    The Spirit of France

        July 14th is the French NatiomissingFets  There is a tear in the paper 

    Day. France has suffered much since

    the Fete of 1914; but she has kept

    a good heart, and, in so doing, has helped

    to sustain the spirit of the Alliance. Her

    strength is as the strength of ten because

    of the spiritual exaltation to which she has

    risen in the crisis of her late M. Maurice

    Barres, in a paper read before the British

    Royal Academy on Wednesday, showed

    that this exaltation is often displayed

    individually as well as nationally. He

    read at length the wonderful account given

    by Lieutenant Pericard of his experience

    in the Bois-bruld in April, 1915, when it

    seemed to him that the dead in the trench

    which he was defending, with a remaining

    handful of men, rose up and aiden them.

         "I felt as though I had grown immeasurably,

    that I had a giant's body, a bounding strength,

    and in extraordinary  baridity  of vision [ ]

    through which allowed me to give orders, [ ] at

    the enemy, and at the same time to parry his

    bombs. Twice we ran out of grenades, and

    twice we found them at our feet, whole sacks

    full, mingled with sandbags. The whole day

    we had stood upon them without seeing them.

    At least the Germans [ ]. That whole night and

    for several following days the religious emotion

    that had seized me when I called upon the dead

    governed me completely."

    M. Barres believes that the transfiguration

    of French soldiers, of which this incident

    is an example, is in agreement with the

    whole tradition of France from the

    Crusades to Jeanne d'Arc and from

    Jeanne d'Arc to the Revolution. The

    soldiers of France, he says, fight

    religiously - for ideas, for beliefs, for

    aspirations. The women of France are

    not less sublime. Peasant women receiving

    the news of their husbands' and their

    sons' death on the battlefield with the

    cry "Vive la France," and Madame de

    Castelnau, who, praying at the altar for

    her three sons in battle, and seeing the

    hands of the priest tremble, undertands

    and asks simply "Which 1" - are all animated

    by the same spirit, the spirit of

    faith and of victory. This is a literary 

    man's analysis, but friends of France who

    here watched with sympathetic eyes the

    manner in which she has borne the ordeal

    of the past two years will not say that M.

    Barre's words are extravagant.


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  • 52.57259130000001||-9.374874500000032||

    Tarbert, Co, Kerry

    ||1
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  • Story location Tarbert, Co, Kerry
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ID
4450 / 52142
Source
http://europeana1914-1918.eu/...
Contributor
Mary Lavery Carrig
License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/


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