Over the Canadian Battlefields

audiobook

Over the Canadian Battlefields

by John Wesley Dafoe

EN·~1 hours

Chapters

Description

A young journalist’s 1919 journey takes listeners across the scarred fields of northern France, where the remnants of ruined churches and monasteries loom over the sites where Canadian troops fought. He writes with the immediacy of a fresh‑off‑the‑press reporter, describing the stark landscape, the lingering smell of mud, and the quiet reverence that already surrounds places like Vimy Ridge and Arras. His observations capture both the physical hardships of the terrain and the emerging sense that these battlegrounds will become a lasting pilgrimage for future generations of Canadians.

The narrative also explores the practical hurdles of visiting a still‑restricted military zone, noting the need for special passes and the lack of civilian accommodations. Yet the author envisions a future where marked shrines, maps, and memorials guide visitors through the historic sites, turning the battlefield into a living classroom of sacrifice and national pride. Listeners will hear the early stirrings of a national memory that, even a century later, continues to shape Canada’s identity.

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Details

Full title

Over the Canadian Battlefields Notes of a Little Journey in France, in March, 1919

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (70K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2014-11-07

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

John Wesley Dafoe

John Wesley Dafoe

1866–1944

A towering voice in Canadian journalism, he led the Manitoba Free Press for more than four decades and helped shape national debates on politics, democracy, and Canada’s place in the world.

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