icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Log out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

With the Allies

Chapter 4 IV Paris In War Time

Word Count: 1358    |    Released on: 30/11/2017

y doomed, as a waste place, desolate as a graveyard. Those who run away always

had temporarily closed it; the windows were barred, the furniture and paint

al arches, statues, paintings; to others by day racing, and by night Maxims and the Rat Mort. Some loved her for the book- stalls along the Seine and ateliers of the Latin Quarter; some for her parks, forests, gardens, and boulevards; some because of the Luxembourg; some only as a place where everyb

miles of boulevards, the Seine and her bridges, the Arc de Triomphe, with the sun setting behind it, and the Gardens of the Tuillerie

e government, and tourists of all countries are missing. They leave a great emptiness. When you walk the streets you feel

ly bakeshops and chemists, but no man need go naked or hungry; in every block he will find at least one place where he can be clothed and fed. But the theatres are all

e they dig up the shore. Their straw hats and bare legs, their Normandy nurses, with enormous head-dresses, blue for a boy and pink for a girl, were, of the sights of Paris, one of the most familiar. And when the children vanished they left a dreary wilderness. You could look for a mile, from

s was not due to a desire on the part of those employed

with the colors," or "The personnel of this establishment is mobiliz

nt managers, have surpassed themselves. In my hotel there were employed seven wom

m. Later he learned from the wife of his trainer, a Frenchwoman, that those employed in his stables at Versailles who had not gone to the front at the approach of

sador, and other ladies of the American colony in Paris, and the American doctors. They took over the Lycée Pasteur, an enormous school at Neuilly, that had just been finished and never occupied, and converted it into what is a most splendidly e

lness and unselfishness is everywhere apparent. Certain members of the American colony, who never in their lives thought of any one save themselves, and of how to escape boredom, are toiling like chambermaids and hall po

ls who have married French titles, and girls who since the war came have lost employment as teachers of languages, stenographers, and governesses. The men are members of the Jockey Club, art students, medical students, clerks, and boulevardiers. They are all w

have been covered with khaki hoods and fitted to carry two wounded men and attendants. On their runs they are accompanied by automobiles with medi

the smartness and intelligence with which the members of each crew worked together was like that of a champion polo team. The editor of a London paper, who was in Pa

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open