"I want to go home," Franz whispered, his voice cracking. "I forgot what my mother’s kitchen smells like."
The iron whistle didn’t sound like a call to glory anymore. To Paul, it sounded like a scream frozen in metal.
The barrage started at dusk. It wasn't a skirmish; it was an erasure. The sky turned a bruised purple, torn apart by flashes of orange light. Paul huddled in the dugout as the ceiling rained dust and maggots upon them. Opposite him, Franz was shaking—a rhythmic, violent tremor. 1m.w3st3n.n1chts.n3u3z.2022.hdrip.720p.subesp.mp4
Six months ago, the classroom in Northern Germany had been filled with the scent of old paper and the thunderous rhetoric of Kantorek, their teacher. He had spoken of the "Iron Youth," of a duty that transcended the self. Paul and his friends—Kropp, Müller, and the youngest, Franz—had marched to the enlistment office with ink still staining their fingers, their chests puffed out with a pride they hadn't yet earned.
Now, the only scent was the thick, cloying smell of wet clay, cordite, and the sweet rot of No Man’s Land. "I want to go home," Franz whispered, his voice cracking
In that hole, the rhetoric of the classroom died. There was no "enemy." There was only a man who loved, a man who breathed, and a man who was now still. Paul realized then that the war wasn't fought against people, but against the very souls of those trapped within it.
But the "Iron Youth" was brittle. When the order came to go over the top, the world dissolved into a gray fever. Paul ran, not because he was brave, but because the mud behind him was exploding. He saw Kropp fall, his scream swallowed by a mortar blast. He saw the French wire tangling men like flies in a spider’s web. The barrage started at dusk
He wrote nothing. There was nothing new to say. On the official report for the day, the entry was brief, cold, and final: "All quiet on the Western Front."
This website uses cookies in order to improve your web experience. Read our Cookies Policy