England, Canada and the Great War by Louis-Georges Desjardins (1849 – 1928)
by LibriVox
January 1, 1970 10:00 am
Mr. Desjardins was driven to write this work to refute statements uttered by the nationalist Henri Bourassa, which the former feared painted all Quebecers with the same unpatriotic brush in respect to their contribution to the Great War. (Summary by Cathy Barratt)
Recent Episodes
00 - Preface
55 years ago01 - Introduction and Chapter I. Who are the Guilty Parties?
55 years ago02 - Chapter II. The Persistent Efforts of England in Favour of Peace
55 years ago03 - Chapter III. The Call to Duty in Canada
55 years ago04 - Chapter IV. Recruiting by Voluntary Service
55 years ago05 - Chapter V. Intervention of Nationalism
55 years ago06 - Chapter VI. What Do We Owe England?
55 years ago07 - Chapter VII. Canada is not a Sovereign State
55 years ago08 - Chapter VIII. German Illusions
55 years ago09 - Chapter IX. The Nationalist Error
55 years ago