
A stirring wartime essay confronts listeners with the stark reality of Britain’s home front during the Great War. Written in a direct, courtroom‑like voice, it charges the nation’s alcohol trade with feeding famine, slowing supplies, and even lengthening the conflict. The author weaves together striking statistics about destroyed food cargoes, soaring consumption, and the hidden cost of drunkenness on the war effort. By framing the debate as a trial, the piece forces the public to weigh moral responsibility against survival.
The narrative blends impassioned rhetoric with vivid snapshots of daily life—crowded pubs, ration queues, and the looming threat of German submarines. It urges citizens to consider how a single habit can undermine a nation’s resolve and endanger lives. Listeners will hear a compelling call for collective action, urging temperance as a patriotic duty. The work captures a moment when ordinary choices were cast as matters of national security, offering a powerful glimpse into the social pressures that shaped wartime Britain.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (123K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-12-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1875–1943
Best known for creating beloved reference works for young readers, this Welsh-born writer and journalist helped shape how generations of children discovered history, science, and the wider world. His books mixed education with enthusiasm, making big subjects feel approachable and alive.
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