About This Book
A sequence of personal essays and travel impressions interwoven with reflections on the outbreak and consequences of a major European war. The narrator recalls serene prewar scenes and civic efficiency, notes small signs of foreboding, and then charts the abrupt descent into mobilization, violence, and mourning. The work considers how sensory triggers and anniversaries revive memory, contrasts domestic comforts with public calamity, and probes questions of culpability, national character, and civilian suffering. Its structure blends anecdote, historical observation, and moral commentary to illuminate the human and social dimensions of wartime experience.
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