Soldiers of the Legion - Trench-Etched

Fiction & Literature, Literary
Cover of the book Soldiers of the Legion - Trench-Etched by John Bowe, anboco
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: John Bowe ISBN: 9783736419957
Publisher: anboco Publication: July 10, 2017
Imprint: Language: English
Author: John Bowe
ISBN: 9783736419957
Publisher: anboco
Publication: July 10, 2017
Imprint:
Language: English

"Good luck, my soldier! You Americans are an extraordinary people. You are complex. We have thought we understood you—but, we do not. We never know what you will do next." I asked my French landlady, who thus responded to the news that I had joined the Foreign Legion, for an explanation. She said: "In the early days of the war, when the Germans advanced upon Paris at the rate of thirty kilometers a day, driving our French people before them, pillaging the country, dealing death and destruction, when our hearts were torn with grief, Americans who were in Paris ran about like chickens with their heads cut off. They could not get their checks cashed; they had lost their trunks; they thought only of their own temporary discomfort, and had no sympathy for our misfortunes." "But," she continued, "the same ship that took these people away brought us other Americans. Strong and vigorous, they did not remain 8in Paris. Directly to the training camps they went: and, today, they are lying in mud, in the trenches with our poilus." "Now, we should like to know, if you please, which are the real Americans—those who ran away, and left us when in trouble, or those who came to help us in time of need. Are you goers or comers?" Self-proclaimed "good Americans," who pray that when they die they may go to Paris, are no more the real Americans than is their cafed, boulevarded, liqueured-up artificial, gay night-life Paris—the only Paris they know (specially arranged and operated, by other foreigners, for their particular delectation and benefit!)—the real Paris. Such Americans, whose self-centered world stands still when their checks are but unhonored scraps of paper, the light of whose eyes fades if their personal baggage is gone, with just one idea of "service"—that fussy, obsequious attendance, which they buy, are they whose screaming Eagles spread their powerful wings on silver and gold coin only. Their "U. S." forms the dollar-sign.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

"Good luck, my soldier! You Americans are an extraordinary people. You are complex. We have thought we understood you—but, we do not. We never know what you will do next." I asked my French landlady, who thus responded to the news that I had joined the Foreign Legion, for an explanation. She said: "In the early days of the war, when the Germans advanced upon Paris at the rate of thirty kilometers a day, driving our French people before them, pillaging the country, dealing death and destruction, when our hearts were torn with grief, Americans who were in Paris ran about like chickens with their heads cut off. They could not get their checks cashed; they had lost their trunks; they thought only of their own temporary discomfort, and had no sympathy for our misfortunes." "But," she continued, "the same ship that took these people away brought us other Americans. Strong and vigorous, they did not remain 8in Paris. Directly to the training camps they went: and, today, they are lying in mud, in the trenches with our poilus." "Now, we should like to know, if you please, which are the real Americans—those who ran away, and left us when in trouble, or those who came to help us in time of need. Are you goers or comers?" Self-proclaimed "good Americans," who pray that when they die they may go to Paris, are no more the real Americans than is their cafed, boulevarded, liqueured-up artificial, gay night-life Paris—the only Paris they know (specially arranged and operated, by other foreigners, for their particular delectation and benefit!)—the real Paris. Such Americans, whose self-centered world stands still when their checks are but unhonored scraps of paper, the light of whose eyes fades if their personal baggage is gone, with just one idea of "service"—that fussy, obsequious attendance, which they buy, are they whose screaming Eagles spread their powerful wings on silver and gold coin only. Their "U. S." forms the dollar-sign.

More books from anboco

Cover of the book Mercedes of Castile; Or, The Voyage to Cathay by John Bowe
Cover of the book The Mediterranean: Its Storied Cities and Venerab by John Bowe
Cover of the book The Caxtons: A Family Picture by John Bowe
Cover of the book The Unbidden Guest by John Bowe
Cover of the book Ring of the Niblung by John Bowe
Cover of the book A Complete History of Music by John Bowe
Cover of the book My Monks of Vagabondia by John Bowe
Cover of the book The Bab Ballads with Which are Included Songs of a Savoyard by John Bowe
Cover of the book Tales of the Caravan, Inn, and Palace by John Bowe
Cover of the book The Pirate and The Three Cutters by John Bowe
Cover of the book Ben-Hur by John Bowe
Cover of the book Servetus and Calvin - Important Epoch in the Early History of the Reformation by John Bowe
Cover of the book Monsieur Bergeret in Paris by John Bowe
Cover of the book Through the South Seas with Jack London by John Bowe
Cover of the book Crime and Punishment by John Bowe
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy