CHAPTER II: GONCOURT THE DOUGHBOYS CHAPTER III: RATTENTOUT THE FRONT CHAPTER IV: GONDRECOURT THE ARTILLERY CHAPTER V: ABAINVILLE THE ENGINEERS CHAPTER VI: MAUVAGES THE ORDNANCE CHAPTER VII: VERDUN THE FRENCH CHAPTER VIII: CONFLANS PIONEERS, M.P.'s AND OTHERS To M. D. M. and M. H. M: My dears, These letters were all written for you; scratched down on odds and ends of writing paper, in a rare spare moment at the canteen; at night, at my billet, by candle-light; in the mornings, perched in front of Madame’s fireplace with my toes tucked up on an ornamental chaufrette foot-warmer. Why were they never sent? Simply because all letters mailed from France in those days, must of course pass under the eyes of the Censor. And as the Censor was likely to be a young man who sat opposite you at the mess-table, it meant that one mustn’t say the things one could, and one couldn’t say the things one would. So, after my first fortnight over there I decided to write my letters to you just as I would at home, putting down everything I saw and thought and did, quite brazenly and shamelessly, and then keep them,—under lock and key if need be,—until I could give them to you in person. Written with the thought of you in my mind, these letters are first of all for you, and after that for whoever they may concern, being a true record of one girl’s experience with the A. E. F. in France during the Great War. |