Your Death Would Be Mine: Paul and Marie Pireaud in the Great War

Front Cover
Harvard University Press, Nov 11, 2006 - Biography & Autobiography - 341 pages

Paul and Marie Pireaud, a young peasant couple from southwest France, were newlyweds when World War I erupted. With Paul in the army from 1914 through 1919, they were forced to conduct their marriage mostly by correspondence. Drawing upon the hundreds of letters they wrote, Martha Hanna tells their moving story and reveals a powerful and personal perspective on war.

Civilians and combatants alike maintained bonds of emotional commitment and suffered the inevitable miseries of extended absence. While under direct fire at Verdun, Paul wrote with equal intensity and poetic clarity of the brutality of battle and the dietary needs (as he understood them) of his pregnant wife. Marie, in turn, described the difficulties of working the family farm and caring for a sick infant, lamented the deaths of local men, and longed for the safe return of her husband. Through intimate avowals and careful observations, their letters reveal how war transformed their lives, reinforced their love, and permanently altered the character of rural France.

Overwhelmed by one of the most tumultuous upheavals of the modern age, Paul and Marie found solace in family and strength in passion. Theirs is a human story of loneliness and longing, fear in the face of death, and the consolations of love. Your Death Would Be Mine is a poignant tale of ordinary people coping with the trauma of war.

 

Selected pages

Contents

Introduction
1
How Sad the Countryside Is
27
Here It Is Extermination on the Ground
79
Oh How I Suffered My Poor Paul
127
No One Is Happy in War
177
We Are Martyrs of the Century
227
Conclusion
281
Notes
303
Index
333
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2006)

Martha Hanna is Associate Professor of History, University of Colorado, Boulder.