JF Ptak Science Books Overall Post 5136
"La Victoire"1 is a moving address from the archbishop of Reims, Louis-Augustin Marmottin, celebrating the end of the war, and was printed in June 1945. The monsignor in particular notes the sacrifices and millions of deaths of "knights of all nations" on the feast of St. Joan: “Knights of all skies, sailors of all oceans, soldiers of all battlefields..." in the fight against Hitler. He writes: "Chevaliers de tous les ciels, marins de tous les océans, soldats de tous les champs de batailles. Il faudrait les saluer tous, les héros de la Pologne et de la Belgique, de l’Alsace et des Ardennes, qui soutinrent le choc initial, terrible, ceux de Stalingrad, des plaines ukrainiennes et des monts du Caucase qui les premiers connurent la victoire, ceux de l’Egypte et de la Tunisie, ceux de l’Italie et de la Normandie et de la Provence, de l’Alsace encore et de l’Allemagne, et tant d’autres dont le sacrifice a fait notre salut"--(from page 4). ["“Knights of all skies, sailors of all oceans, soldiers of all battlefields. We should salute them all, the heroes of Poland and Belgium, Alsace and the Ardennes, who sustained the initial, terrible shock, those of Stalingrad, the Ukrainian plains and the Caucasus mountains who were the first to achieve victory. , those of Egypt and Tunisia, those of Italy and Normandy and Provence, Alsace again and Germany, and so many others whose sacrifice made our salvation."] It should be noted that the cathedral's construction began in the 13th century (followed by a complicated history of construction and renovation) and is the traditional site for the coronation of French kings, and also contains a statue to St. Jeanne d'Arc in full armor.
Notes:
1. MARMOTTIN, Louis-Augustin, Msgr. (1875-1960) "La Victoire. Cathedrale de Reims, 13 Mai 1945." Printed in Reims (Imp. Du Nord Est), 1945. Original wrappers 7"x 5", 6pp. Provenance: Library of Congress with their rubber stamp on rear wrapper. Condition: Good. The paper is somewhat browned and weakened and there are old folds here and there in the wrappers. Acceptable condition, overall. [Note: WorldCat states two years of publication—1945 and 1946—though this copy has a rubber stamped date at the foot of the title page stating "21 6 45", or 21 June 1945.] WorldCat locates only THREE copies, all in France.
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