No enemy : A tale of reconstruction by Ford Madox Ford

"No enemy" by Ford Madox Ford is a novel written in the early 20th century. Framed as “A Tale of Reconstruction,” it follows Gringoire, a poet and veteran, whose postwar life with Mme. Sélysette in a ramshackle “Gingerbread Cottage” blends frugal gardening and passionate cookery with haunted memories of the front. A visiting “Compiler” records Gringoire’s monologues as he wrestles with economy, landscape, and conscience, seeking a private sanctuary after collective ruin. The book centers on the inward work of recovery—how a sensitive man rebuilds meaning from soil, pots, and remembered battlefields. The opening of the novel introduces Gringoire through the Compiler’s weekend visits, sketching a long, lean, boastful-yet-modest poet turned trench veteran who now lives simply with the loyal and lively Mme. Sélysette. We see his fervor for economical cookery and intensive kitchen gardening (and his impatience with explaining methods), his credo that “brains” beat manure, and his war-forged desire to make a gracious life on a minute pension. The narrative then shifts to Gringoire’s war-time “landscapes”: rare, piercing moments when the world broke through the pressure of conflict—Kensington Gardens poised under a threat of invasion, a small Essex station just as news of a great commander’s death arrives, and a Somme hillside flooded with the blue shimmer of swallows’ backs. He recalls an officers’ camp beneath a sky pricked with observation balloons, a sudden inner vision of a protected green nook—a gingerbread cottage with a trickling stream—that becomes his emblem of peace. Sent to a hilltop observation post at Mont Vedaigne, he notes the vast views over towns and ridges, the meticulous stitch of shells along enemy lines, and, while waiting hours for a late-arriving general, feels the ache to be across the sea in an inviolable corner of English country. An interlude after peace finds him in the garden, debating the word “Hun,” distinguishing his scorn for the warmongering intelligentsia from any hatred of common soldiers, and steering the talk back to the interior task the tale means to illuminate. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

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About this eBook

Author Ford, Ford Madox, 1873-1939
LoC No. 29024226
Title No enemy : A tale of reconstruction
Original Publication New York: The Macaulay Company, 1929.
Credits Sean/IB@DP
Language English
LoC Class PR: Language and Literatures: English literature
Subject World War, 1914-1918 -- Fiction
Subject War stories
Category Text
EBook-No. 77802
Release Date
Copyright Status Public domain in the USA.
Downloads 430 downloads in the last 30 days.
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