27
France – Fear – Gabriel Chevallier – September 2015 (Score 8.30)
This is the story of a young Frenchman, Jean Dartemont, who survives the horror of the trenches during the “War to end Wars”, the numerous centenaries of which have been marked in various ways over the four years prior to my reading this book.
It was written by a man who served in the trenches of the French army for the whole four years of the war, and is based largely on his experiences and those of the people with whom he served.
To me it
is also the greatest indictment I have ever read of the idiocy of the rulers
(largely monarchs) of all the old European nations involved, their politicians
and their generals who brought about these monstrous events. I found it to be
even more powerful than “All Quiet on the Western Front” by Erich Maria
Remarque of Germany.
The
opening chapter of “Fear” is incredible. It describes precisely the reactions
of the leaders of the belligerents and the hordes of ordinary people who are
caught up, enthusiastically, in the preparations for what they think will be a
glorious war.
Chevallier
sums it up beautifully when he says, writing of all the nations involved
“Twenty million, all in good faith, following god and their prince …. Twenty
million idiots ….. like me”.
We read
about the “training” which the men go through. It lasts ten months and then
they head for the Front. Life seems rather miserable, even before they reach
the front line. They have interminable marches, day and night. Jean Dartemont
suddenly realises he now has the inevitable companions to accompany him through
the rest of the war – lice – which no amount of scratching, cracking or dousing
will rid him of.
We get a
clear picture of the absolute boredom experienced by soldiers with nothing, not
even a book, to engage them when not carrying out endless drills, trench
digging etc.
Jean’s
unit is sent on a long, confusing, night march to the Front. They eventually
settle in a cellar in a destroyed village a few hundred metres from the front
line. Next day, after a good sleep, he goes for a walk through the remains,
enjoying the glorious weather. He clearly has no inkling of the hell which
awaits him and his comrades.
A few
days later they are moved into the attack and discover the sheer terror of
experiencing a massive bombardment – shell after shell after shell,
interminably.
An even
greater horror comes a day later when they finally reach the trenches at the
old front line from which the attack had been launched. There are hundreds of
fresh French corpses, whole, missing limbs, badly damaged and utterly mangled.
The trench opens out and they can see a huge level area covered by thousands of
dead comrades, young men and boys. I have always had a loathing of the concept
of war and national “glory”, and this strengthened it for me as it did for Jean
Dartemont.
Jean is
wounded and we have a horrific description of the field hospital and its
inmates. Eventually he, along with his companions, is invalided to the rear. He
finds himself in a modern, comfortable, hospital (a former girls’ school) being
attended by caring young upper-class women doing their bit for the boys.
When one
of them asks what it was like at the Front and had he killed any Germans, he
said he had never seen a live German and had spent his time marching, digging
trenches, carrying barbed wire and. like his comrades, being afraid. At the
mention of this word the nurse’s attitude changes. As Jean writes “ever since
the world began, thousands and thousands of men have got themselves killed
because of the word “afraid” on a woman’s lips.
We
accompany Jean through the full four years, witnessing the horrendous
experiences he and his companions endure, the total insanity of the “War to end
Wars” and, by extension, of all wars. To think that that war, of all wars, was
simply a family squabble in which the rulers of all the Europeans involved were
cousins from a long historic line of individuals who ruled their own people by
fear. Many of their descendants still maintain unwarranted positions of
privilege, power and wealth.
I gave
this book a score of 8.5 for its educational value, though I didn’t find it a
great work of literature.