About This Book
A series of essays traces the moral and literary lineage linking three French moralists—La Rochefoucauld, La Bruyère, and Vauvenargues—to the notions of honor and gallantry that influenced French military temperament. It examines each writer's maxims and ethical outlook, then situates their ideas within accounts from young officers and contemporary letters to show how individualism, rhetoric of sacrifice, and chivalric idealism shaped early-war conduct. The book also considers how prolonged, industrialized conflict tempered those affectations, producing a more restrained, inward heroism while preserving underlying values of duty and patriotic fervor.
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