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A letter from the German Trenches
Raemaekers, Louis, 1916, Chromolithograph
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A letter from the German Trenches
A letter from the German Trenches
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Item no
32980
Title
A letter from the German Trenches
Description
"We have gained a good hit: our cemeteries now extend as far as the sea."
"The unceasing efforts of the Allies and the Germans to outflank one another northwards, after the deadlock of the battle of the Aisne, led to the battle line being extended, by the middle of October 1914, to the sea. In tow striking articles, 'Littérature de Guerre,' published in the 'Journal de Geneve,' 19 April and 14 June 1915, M. Romain Rolland showed that the young German intellectuals were far from sharing in the frenetic bellicosity of their elders. And he cites the following fragments of a verse drama by the young poet, Fritz von Unruh, a lieutenant of Uhlans on the western front:
'The two scenes reproduced by the "Neue Zurcher Zeitung" depict a muddy blood-stained trench where German soldiers, like beasts in slaughter-house, are dying or about to die with bitter words, and the officers, who are getting drunk on champagne round a 42 degree cannon, laughing and stupefying themselves till they fall down overcome with fatigue and sleep. From the first scene I extract these terrible words from one of the men who sit waiting in the trench under the shrapnel, 'a man of 30': 'At home they laugh, - they drink to every victory. - They send us to have our throats cut like butchered beasts, and they say - 'It's war!' When it's all over, they will have no feeling, - they will fete us for a year or two, but the first disabled man going grey and they will be mocking his white hairs....."
Artist / maker
Raemaekers, Louis
Date
1916
Size
34.6 x 25.8 cm
Type
Chromolithograph
Location
Art and Design Library
Copyright
Louis Raemaekaers' drawings are reproduced by kind permission of the
Louis Raemaekers Foundation
.
Raemaekers depicts trench warfare in this composition. Though he frequently illustrates the brutality of German leaders, this cartoon reveals the plight of the average German soldier and his helplessness in the war. Conditions in the trenches were notoriously horrific. A German soldier writes a letter from a trench, looking listless amidst explosions, blood, and death. Raemaekers underscores the dehumanising effects of the war on all who must participate.
The
Louis Raemaekers Foundation
have published a book of his works entitled, 'Louis Raemaekers - with pen and pencil as a weapon'.
Exhibitions with this item
Louis Raemaekers and World War One
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Injured persons
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Soldiers
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