Back to Life. Philip Gibbs

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Название Back to Life
Автор произведения Philip Gibbs
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4064066233549



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       Philip Gibbs

      Back to Life

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066233549

       BOOK I—THE END OF THE ADVENTURE

       I

       II

       III

       IV

       V

       VI

       VII

       VIII

       IX

       X

       XI

       XII

       XIII

       XIV

       XV

       XVI

       XVII

       XVIII

       XIX

       END OF BOOK I.

       BOOK II—THROUGH HOSTILE GATES

       I

       II

       III

       IV

       V

       VI

       VII

       VIII.

       END OF BOOK II.

       BOOK III—BUILDERS OF PEACE

       I

       II

       III

       IV

       V

       VI

       VII

       VIII

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      It is hard to recapture the spirit of that day we entered Lille. Other things since have blurred its fine images.

      At the time I tried to put down in words the picture of that scene when, after four years’ slaughter of men, the city, which had seemed a world away, was open to us a few miles beyond the trench-lines; the riven trees, the shell-holes, and the stench of death, and we walked across the canal, over a broken bridge, into that large town where—how wonderful it seemed I—there were roofs on the houses and glass in the windows, and crowds of civilian people waiting for the first glimpse of British khaki.

      Even now remembrance brings back to me figures that I saw only for a moment or two, but remain sharply etched in my mind, and people I met in the streets who told me the story of four years in less than four minutes and enough to let me know their bitterness, hatred, humiliations, terrors, in the time of the German occupation. … I have re-read the words I wrote, hastily, on a truculent typewriter which I cursed for its twisted ribbon, while the vision of the day was in my eyes. They are true to the facts and to what we felt about them. Other men felt that sense of exaltation, a kind of mystical union with the spirit of many people who had been delivered from evil powers. It is of those other men that I am now writing, and especially of one who was my friend—Wickham Brand, with the troubled soul, whom I knew in the years of war and afterwards in the peace which was no peace to him.

      His, was one of the faces I remember that day, as I had a glimpse of it now and then, among crowds of men and women, young girls and children, who surged about him, kissing his hands and his face when he stooped a little (he was taller than most of them) to meet the wet lips of some half-starved baby held up by a pallid woman of Lille, or to receive the kiss of some old woman who clawed his khaki tunic, or of some girl who hung on to his belt. There was a shining wetness in his eyes, and the hard lines of his face had softened as he laughed at all this turmoil about him, at all these hands robbing