有声读物: Nothing of Importance
- Download In Memoriam and Preface audio
- Download First Impressions audio
- Download Cuinchy and Givenchy audio
- Download Working-Parties audio
- Download Rest audio
- Download On the March audio
- Download The Bois Français Trenches audio
- Download More First Impressions audio
- Download Sniping audio
- Download On Patrol audio
- Download 'Whom the Gods Love' audio
- Download 'Whom the Gods Love'—(continued). audio
- Download Officers’ Servants audio
- Download Mines audio
- Download Billets audio
- Download 'A certain Man Drew a Bow at a Venture' audio
- Download Wounded audio
- Download Conclusion audio
有声读物类型
作者
描述
Fighting in France during the Great War, Bernard Adams, an officer with a Welsh battalion, was moved to chronicle what he saw and experienced: the living conditions and duties of officers and “Tommies” (enlisted men) in their dank, rat-infested trenches and behind the lines; the maiming and deaths; and the quiet periods described in official reports as “nothing of importance”. Adams relates his wounding in June, 1916 and its aftermath. The concluding chapter, which he wrote during his convalescence in “Blighty” (soldiers’ slang for England), is an impassioned reflection on war. Following several months of recuperation Adams returned to the front where, on February 26, 1917 he was wounded again. The following day he died. (Lee Smalley)
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