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comedy lover

Hi,

Having read so many quotes about year 1914 in Watchtower it's exciting to stumble upon one myself, just by accident (I wasn't looking for it, I was just reading an interesting book). So, here's something I found:

Charlie Chaplin's autobiography ('My Autobiography') has a very interesting account about the first world war and how it changed the world and people. He said something like that people lost their basic virtues and never got them back. Sorry, I don't have the exact quote (or not even the exact page numbers), as I read the book in my own language, but maybe you'll find it in your local libray. Chaplin mentioned this in the part where he described the end of the world war.

tom sheepandgoats

C.L. Don't recall just where it is? Minor detail. I'll accept it as #11. Thanks.

Rob Valkeneers

Agatha Christie (An autobiography, p. 230-232) also mentions how unexpected the war of 1914 was:
'When, in far off Serbia, an archduke was assassinated, it seemed such a faraway incident - nothing that concerned us. After all, in the Balkans people were always being assassinated.That it should touch us here in England seemed quite incredible - and I speak here not only for myself but for almost everybody else. Swiftly, after that assassination, what seemed like incredible storm clouds appeared on the horizon. Extraordinary rumours got about, rumours of that fantastic thing - War! Bur of course that was only the newspapers. No civilised nations went to war. There hadn't been any war for years; there probably never would be again. No the ordinary people, everyone in fact, apart from I suppose, a few senior Ministers and inner circles of the Foreign Office, had no conception that anything like war might happen.It was all rumours - people working themselves up and saying it really looked 'quite serious' - speeches by politicians. And than suddenly one morning it had happened. England was at war.'
She goes on telling how asthonished people were that a war came.

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