
THE SOUL OF THE WAR
Chapter I The Foreboding
Chapter II Mobilization
Part of the active army of France was already on the frontiers. Before the first whisper of war had reached the ears of the people, large bodies of troops had been sent to the frontier towns to strengthen the already existing garrisons. But the main army of the nation was pursuing the ordinary pursuits of civil life. To resist the might of Germany, the greatest military Power in Europe, already approaching the frontiers in vast masses of men and machines, France would have to call out all her manhood which had been trained in military service.
Chapter III The Secret War
Chapter IV The Way Of Retreat
Chapter V The Turn Of The Tide
Chapter VI Invasion
Chapter VII The Last Stand Of The Belgians
Chapter VIII The Soul Of Paris
In the opening months of the Great War, a determined correspondent roams the battle‑scarred landscapes of northern France, chasing the fleeting chance to witness combat firsthand. His prose captures the restless anxiety that swept through England and the front‑line towns, painting a vivid picture of soldiers’ hopes, fears, and the everyday reality of war‑torn life. Through careful listening and unflinching observation, he brings the reader into the mud‑laden trenches and the uneasy quiet of waiting camps.
When the journalist finally joins a British volunteer ambulance unit at Ypres, his eye for detail turns the chaotic, wounded world of field hospitals into a moving tableau of human endurance. He also sketches the transformed streets of Paris, where civilian life adapts to the looming threat, and offers a candid critique of military leadership while remaining deeply sympathetic to the ordinary man. The narrative balances stark reportage with an undercurrent of melancholy, hinting at the profound cultural shift that the conflict will soon imprint on an entire generation.
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (733K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1877–1962
Best known for his vivid reporting from the First World War, this British journalist and novelist brought the front lines to readers with unusual immediacy. His books and dispatches helped shape how a generation understood war, politics, and everyday English life.
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