
In September 1919 the scarred town of Noyon stirs to life, its ruined cathedral standing like a stubborn sentinel amid crumbling walls. Fresh poppies and tender grasses push through shell‑hole scars, hinting at renewal. A Red Cross volunteer narrates the fragile hope that breathes through the early post‑war streets.
A sudden clatter of wooden sabots on the cobbles brings a cartload of supplies—and an unexpected invitation to a wedding that has become the town’s whispered miracle. Mademoiselle Gaston, daughter of an ancient Noyon family, tended the wounded under occupation and now faces a personal crossroads. Her quiet optimism signals a tentative step toward normalcy.
The narrative stitches together the sounds of rebuilding—hammer strikes, workers’ chatter, and the rustle of new shoots—to portray a community mending its torn fabric. Through intimate observations and understated dialogue, listeners sense the bittersweet rhythm of recovery, where each small advance recalls loss yet points toward life ahead. It is a gentle meditation on resilience after conflict.
Language
en
Duration
~37 minutes (35K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
This eBook was produced by Steven desJardins and Distributed Proofreaders.
Release date
2004-07-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

Her firsthand books about postwar France capture the grit, compassion, and stubborn hope of rebuilding after World War I. Writing from lived experience, she brings readers close to the people and places struggling back to life.
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