Recently added books

Letters of a Soldier 1914-1915

Creator: Anonymous
Translator: -
Contributor: -
Editor: -


Brand new books:


We spend child-like days; indeed we are children in regard to these events, and the benefit of this war will have been to restore youth to the hearts of those who return. Dear mother, our village has just had a visit from two shells. Will they be followed by others? May God help us! The other day they sent us a hundred and fifteen, to wound one man in the wrist! A house in which a section of our company is living is in flames. We have not seen a soul stirring. We can only hope that it is well with them. I am deeply happy to have lived through these few months. They have taught me what one can make of one's life, in any circumstances. My fellow-soldiers are splendid examples of the French spirit. . . . They swagger, but their swagger is only the outer form of a deep and magnificent courage. My great fault as an artist is that I am always wanting to clothe the soul of the race in some beautiful garment painted in my own colours. And when people irritate me it is that they are soiling these beautiful robes; but, as a matter of fact, they would find them a bad encumbrance in the way of their plain duty.
The Great North-Western Conspiracy in All Its Startling Details

THE GREAT NORTH-WESTERN CONSPIRACY IN ALL ITS STARTLING DETAILS. _The Plot to plunder and burn Chicago--Release of all Rebel prisoners--Seizure of arsenals--Raids from Canada--Plot to burn New York--Piracy on the Lakes--Parts for the Sons of Liberty--Trial of Chicago conspirators--Inside views of the Temples of the Sons of Liberty--Names of prominent members._ ILLUSTRATED WITH PORTRAITS OF LEADING CHARACTERS, ETC., ETC. By I. WINSLOW AYER, M.D. [Illustration: I. WINSLOW AYER, M.D.] INTRODUCTION.
_Christmas Morning._ What a unique night!--night without parallel, in which beauty has triumphed, in which mankind, notwithstanding their delirium of slaughter, have proved the reality of their conscience. During the intermittent bombardments a song has never ceased to rise from the whole line. Opposite to us a most beautiful tenor was declaiming the enemy's Christmas. Much farther off, beyond the ridges, where our lines begin again, the _Marseillaise_ replied. The marvellous night lavished on us her stars and meteors. Hymns, hymns, from end to end. It was the eternal longing for harmony, the indomitable claim for order and beauty and concord. As for me, I cherished old memories in meditating on the sweetness of the Childhood of Christ. The freshness, the dewy youthfulness of this French music, were very moving to me. I remembered the celebrated _Sommeil des Pelerins_ and the shepherds' chorus. A phrase which is sung by the Virgin thrilled me: '_Le Seigneur, pour mon fils, a beni cet asile_.' The melody rang in my ears while I was in that little house, with its neighbour in flames, and itself given over to a precarious