'Le Sourire' was one of the many light-hearted Parisian
magazines featuring 'racy' drawings of semi-clad mademoiselles, as well as
stories and jokes of a similar nature. Paterned after the succesful 'la Vie
Parisienne', 'le Sourire' and other similar magazines all followed the same
recipe. Such magazines were enormously popular both before, after and during
the Great War and quite innocent when all was said and done, despite the
reputation they enjoyed abroad. Straight-laced Anglo-Saxons and Americans
especially thought such publications the ultimate in perdition and impending
moral ruination and warned against their acquisition. Usually to little avail
one hopes.
Generally speaking, magazines such as 'le Sourire' tried
to keep war-related subjects at a distance, though as good french patriotic
publications they knew where their duty lay. One of the more important services
such magazines provided however was the placement of personal announcements in
which soldiers of all nationalities, could request 'adoption' by a 'marraine'
or godmother.
These (hopefully) attractive, light-hearted, gay and sensitive
ladies would then enter into correspondence with their adoptive 'godsons',
sending letters of good-cheer and heart-warming sentiment to bolster the lonely
soldiers' morale at the front. And when soldiers were allowed on leave, there
was always the hope that something more profound might blossom from a war-time correspondence.
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