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A boy saves his choice seat in a tree, anticipating the great victory parade on Bastille Day, 1916. Illustration by Abel Faivre.
Text:
14 Juillet 1916
Qu'est-ce que tu fais la-haut.
Je retiens ma place pour la revue après la grande victoire.
What are you doing [up] there?
Keeping my place for the review [parade] after the great victory!
Reverse:
Publicité Wall - Paris.
Dèposit. Gènèr., Boice, 43, Chausée d'Antin.

A boy saves his choice seat in a tree, anticipating the great victory parade on Bastille Day, 1916. Illustration by Abel Faivre.

Image text

14 Juillet 1916

Qu'est-ce que tu fais la-haut.

Je retiens ma place pour la revue après la grande victoire.



What are you doing [up] there?

Keeping my place for the review [parade] after the great victory!



Reverse:

Publicité Wall - Paris.

Dèposit. Gènèr., Boice, 43, Chausée d'Antin.

Other views: Larger

Sunday, July 14, 1918

"The celebration of Bastille Day on July 14 [1918] was the climax. The morning shone bright and clear. French airplanes filled the sky over the city. The streets were full of flowers. There was a smell of strawberries in the air.

A brilliant military parade was deployed down the Champs Elysées. All Paris dressed in its best to crowd the wide sidewalks.

Preceded by the Garde Republicain in their gleaming helmets, riding their fine horses, detachments from all the Allies, carrying their national colors and led by bands playing their national airs, marched in dress uniforms from the Arc de Triomphe to the Place de la Concorde. There were French Chasseurs Alpins in bérets and black tunics, British Lifeguards, Italian Bersaglieri in roostertail hats, Portuguese, an anti-Bolshevik unit of cossacks in astrakhan, representatives of the Bohemian and Slovak regiments that had thrown off the Austrian yoke, Poles, Romanians, Serbs, Montenegrins, Greeks in their stiff white kilts. The United States was represented by units of the 1st Division.

Towards midnight American M.P.'s with a tense look on their faces darted out of their headquarters on the rue St. Anne. They went through hotels and nightspots rounding up officers and men on leave. All leaves were cancelled. The offensive had begun."

Quotation Context

Germany had already mounted four offensives on the Western Front in 1918, the last ending on June 14. Through the following month The Allies expected a fifth at any time. The Champagne-Marne Offensive began at midnight, of Bastille Day, July 14.

Source

Mr. Wilson's War by John Dos Passos, page 350, copyright © 1962, 2013 by John Dos Passos, publisher: Skyhorse Publishing

Tags

1918-07-14, 1918, July, Bastille Day, Bastille Day 1918