With Our Soldiers in France. Sherwood Eddy

With Our Soldiers in France - Sherwood Eddy


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       Sherwood Eddy

      With Our Soldiers in France

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066226602

       ILLUSTRATIONS

       The American Y.M.C.A. Headquarters in Paris . . . . . . Frontispiece

       FOREWORD

       CHAPTER I

       AT THE FRONT

       CHAPTER II

       WITH GENERAL PERSHING'S FORCE IN FRANCE

       CHAPTER III

       A DAY IN THE "BULL RING"

       CHAPTER IV

       WITH THE BRITISH ARMY

       CHAPTER V

       LIFE IN A BASE CAMP

       CHAPTER VI

       THE CAMP OF THE PRODIGALS

       CHAPTER VII

       RELIGION AT THE FRONT

       CHAPTER VIII

       THE WORLD AT WAR

       APPENDIX I

       EXTRACTS FROM "ETERNAL PEACE"

       BY

       IMMANUEL KANT

       APPENDIX II

       EXTRACTS FROM "THE TREATMENT OF ARMENIANS" BY VISCOUNT BRYCE

       APPENDIX III

       LINES WRITTEN BY A SOLDIER IN THE ENGLISH ARMY ABOUT MARCH, 1916.

       APPENDIX IV

       LETTER FROM LORD KITCHENER TO HIS MEN

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       The "Eagle Hut" in London

       Harry Lauder Singing at a Y.M.C.A. Meeting. The officer seated at the extreme right is Captain "Peg"

       Wholesome and Entertaining, Home Refreshments in London

       Three Thousand Soldiers in the Crowded Hut

       Table of Contents

      The world is at war. Already more than a score of nations, representing a population of over a thousand millions, or two-thirds of the entire human race, are engaged in a life-and-death struggle on the bloody battlefields of Europe, Asia, and Africa. No man can stand in the mouth of that volcano on a battle front, or meet the trains pouring in with their weary freight of wounded after a battle, or stand by the operating tables and the long rows of cots in the hospitals, or share in sympathy the hardship and suffering of the men who are fighting for us, and remain unmoved. The man must be dead of soul to whom the war does not present a mighty moral challenge. It arraigns our past manner of life and our very civilization. It gives us a new angle of observation, a new point of view, a new test of values. It furnishes a possible moral judgment by which we can weigh our life in the balance and see where we have been found wanting.

      These brief sketches are only fragmentary and have of necessity been hastily written. The writer has been asked to state his impression of the work among the men in France. He did not go there to write but to work. He has tried simply to state what he saw and to leave the reader to draw his own conclusions. A mere statement of the grim facts at the front, if they are not sugar-coated or glossed over, may not be pleasant reading, but it is unfair to those at home that they should not know the hard truth of the reality of things as they are.

      Before the war broke out, it was the writer's privilege to make an extended tour for work among students in Russia, Turkey, Bulgaria, Serbia, and Greece, and to visit Germany. Since the declaration of war, he has visited France, Italy, and Egypt, and has observed the effect of the war throughout Asia, in tours extending over nearly the whole of China and India. Last year he was in the British camps among the soldiers of England, Scotland, and Wales. Since America declared war he has been working with the various divisions of the British and American armies in France, from the great base camps, where hundreds of thousands of men are in training, up to the front with the men in the trenches.

      For the sake of those who will follow with deep interest the boys who are already in France, or who will shortly be there, brief accounts are given of the various phases of a soldier's life in the base camps, the training school of the "Bull Ring," at the front,


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