
In the early days of August 1914, a rag‑tag unit awakens on the fringes of Alsace, half‑clothed and surrounded by the rustle of wheat and the smell of damp earth. The narrative captures the bewildering mix of youthful optimism—young mothers dreaming of future artists—and the stark reality of a regiment that has already moved on. Amid the lingering fog of the “third awakening,” the soldiers confront a landscape that feels caught between ancient epochs.
A pair of Parisian telephone operators becomes the thread that ties the scattered chaos together, their chatter echoing through makeshift lines while they trade fragments of literature, numbers, and bureaucratic orders. Their voices carry stories of distant cafés, museum catalogues, and whispered jokes about "the heart on the hand," offering fleeting moments of humanity amid the grinding routine of war. The narrator, drawn into their world, discovers how the simple act of dialing becomes a lifeline for supplies, morale, and the occasional absurd request.
Through vivid, almost lyrical descriptions, the opening paints a portrait of a frontline caught in a dream‑like state—where the ordinary and the extraordinary intersect, and every rustle of a horse’s hooves or crack of a telegraph line hints at the larger conflict looming beyond the immediate trench.
Language
fr
Duration
~5 hours (325K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
France: Emile-Paul, 1917.
Credits
Chuck Greif & the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net
Release date
2023-06-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1882–1944
Best known for blending wit, fantasy, and political insight, this French novelist, playwright, and diplomat became one of the most distinctive literary voices in France between the two world wars. His works often turn myths and familiar stories into something elegant, surprising, and sharply modern.
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