An on-the-ground travel and observational account of the immediate postwar occupation of the Rhineland and neighbouring districts, blending vivid descriptions of ruined towns, cathedral squares, billets and a wartime Christmas with rural scenes of repair and daily life. The writer moves between cities and border regions, records encounters with civilians and soldiers, and notes reconstruction efforts alongside social and political moods. Chapters alternate local reportage—visits to industrial towns, border basins and historic battlefields—with reflections on electioneering, public resentment, differing perspectives toward occupying forces, and the practical and moral difficulties of enforcing a lasting peace.