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The Times Great War Letters: Correspondence during the First World War

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Год написания книги
2019
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The Times Great War Letters: Correspondence during the First World War
James Owen

Samantha Wyndham

The Times has the most famous letters page of any newspaper. This selection spanning the years 1914-1918 shows precisely why. While many letters relate to issues around the Great War, there is room for a myriad of subjects concerning the great British public of the time which capture the mood of the nation at this key period in British history.Since 1914 the Times’ Letters page has taken the temperature of the British way of life and provided a window on the national character. This series of correspondence captures the mood of the nation up to the end of the Great War.

COPYRIGHT (#ulink_ebfe5f9c-0def-5854-9cbf-0865bff98102)

Published by Times Books

An imprint of HarperCollins Publishers

Westerhill Road

Bishopbriggs

Glasgow G64 2QT

www.harpercollins.co.uk (http://www.harpercollins.co.uk)

times.books@harpercollins.co.uk (mailto:times.books@harpercollins.co.uk)

First edition 2018

© This compilation Times Newspapers Ltd 2018

The Times

is a registered trademark of Times Newspapers Ltd

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.

The contents of this publication are believed correct at the time of printing. Nevertheless the publisher can accept no responsibility for errors or omissions, changes in the detail given or for any expense or loss thereby caused.

Copyright in the letters published in this volume belongs to the writers or their heirs or executors. HarperCollins would like to thank all those letter-writers who have given permission for their letters to appear in this volume. Every effort has been made to contact all individuals whose letters are contained within this volume; if anyone has been overlooked, we would be grateful if he or she would contact HarperCollins.

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

Cover image © MSSA / Shutterstock

Our thanks and acknowledgements go to Lily Cox and Robin Ashton at News Syndication and, in particular, at The Times, Ian Brunskill and, at HarperCollins, Gerry Breslin, Jethro Lennox, Karen Midgley, Kerry Ferguson, Sarah Woods and Evelyn Sword.

eBook Edition © November 2018

ISBN 9780008318536

Version: 2018-11-19

CONTENTS

Cover (#uf6aa06c2-dcfa-51ef-b02b-e85b8db02011)

Title Page (#ud4558f54-4134-5440-befe-1b96ce0667c0)

Copyright (#ulink_119d605b-edd4-5066-825a-e5d965d0863f)

Dedication (#ulink_8cdc26c8-8f90-5966-b6cb-1157a51d73be)

Introduction (#ulink_4fd466bf-bd3f-5560-9fa7-d0513c950d80)

1914 (#ulink_51f40e60-ecc7-58fa-af76-24149c84997d)

1915 (#ulink_b5dad09c-f9e8-585a-b728-5a416bbb9577)

1916 (#litres_trial_promo)

1917 (#litres_trial_promo)

1918 (#litres_trial_promo)

Index of Letter Writers (#litres_trial_promo)

About the Publisher (#litres_trial_promo)

DEDICATION (#ulink_5a39c326-bf5b-5868-bec2-1ceb9e511fab)

In memory of the dead of the Great War, among them

John Anstruther (1888-1914), Reggie Wyndham (1876-1914)

and Ian Chrystal (1888-1917).

INTRODUCTION (#ulink_62e3c0db-757f-54ab-a409-8676a71ad4f8)

“The correspondence column of The Times may be regarded as the Forum of our modern world,” wrote the evangelist Frederick Meyer to the newspaper in 1915, “in which the individual may deliver his soul.”

The paper has published letters since its establishment in 1785, but in the nineteenth century these had often been lengthy political tracts rather than brief observations on current events. As Meyer noted, however, by the time what became known as the Great War began, the Letters Page had started to assume a form we would recognise today.

This was partly because they were, for the first time, at least on occasion, being grouped together rather than distributed throughout the paper. This greater focus arguably increased their impact, cementing in turn the page’s status as Meyer’s contemporary Roman forum – a meeting place-cum-soap box, albeit principally for the ruling class.

These developments were to be accelerated by the war that dominated everyone’s thoughts between 1914 and 1918. The letters in this selection track its progress, albeit with the proviso that strict government censorship meant that the public was unaware for much of the conflict about the true state of events, and the conflict’s real horrors.

Even so, these letters offer the most direct of routes back into the mentality of a society that was on the cusp of changing forever. And, besides delivering their soul and having their say, in a perhaps surprising way correspondents bare it, too. Set among letters from familiar names – David Lloyd George on the danger of drink, Edith Cavell on nursing before she was executed by the Germans – and ones from the pseudonyms then permitted, there are those from grieving parents still (within the conventions of the day) raw from their loss.

Many of the letters speak for themselves but it may be of help to have an outline of their increasingly distant context. The war did not come as a surprise. Conflict between the great European powers had been long feared, and expected, particularly given Germany’s desire in the preceding decades to challenge Britain’s naval, and hence imperial, supremacy.

Nonetheless, it was with some reluctance that the prime minister, Herbert Asquith, whose party had strong pacifist traditions, committed his Liberal government to war at the start of August 1914. This was technically in response to Germany’s violation of Belgium’s neutrality in entering its territory to get around France’s defences; but in reality, it was the inevitable outcome of a complex system of international alliances and dynastic ambitions.

The assassination of the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne at Sarajevo by Serbian-backed terrorists had given the Austrians a pretext to declare war on Serbia, egged on by their German cousins under Kaiser Wilhelm II. This in turn brought to the fray Russia, ruled by Tsar Nicholas II, as Serbia’s pan-Slavic protector. Germany, which had built up a huge army and navy, had long planned to fight at the same time Russia and France, who were both allied with Britain.
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