Proud Tower - Barbara W. Tuchman [313]
101 Next Sunday at Longchamps: Le Temps, June 12/13, 1899. Henri Léon, the Nationalist leader and cynic in M. Bergeret à Paris, describes how hooligans yelled “Pa-na-ma! De-mis-sion!” under his orders. “I beat time for them and they yell the separate syllables. It was really done with taste.”
102 Lucien Herr’s argument: from Vie de Lucien Herr, by Charles Andler, q. Goldberg, 254.
103 Socialists split on support for Government: Zevaès, v. 142, 47.
104 Marquis de Galliffet, silver-plated stomach: Castellane, 99; “air of a bandit chief”: Reinach, V, 168–69; on arresting members of his club: Radziwill, Letters, 340; “courage and effrontery”: Reinach, loc. cit.
105 Millerand, “cat in a downpour”: Suarez (see Chap. 8), I, 259.
106 “Invite those chaps to dinner”: from Louis Thomas, Le Général de Galliffet, 1910, 247 (supplied by Mr. Painter).
107 Rennes trial: eyewitness accounts by Marcel Prévost, New York Herald, Aug. 8/9; Severine and others, q. in Reinach, V; Barrès, 146; Zevaès, v. 142, 53; Benda, 211; London Times, New York Tribune, Aug. 8/9. Evidently it is a rule that discrepancies in observation increase with intensity of emotion: Dreyfus’ hair was “white” according to The Times, “auburngrey” according to the Tribune; his moustache “jet black” according to The Times, “frankly red” according to the Tribune.
108 G. A. Henty: Hyndman, 184.
109 Galliffet, “I don’t budge from my office”: Radziwill, Letters, 340.
110 Labori “looked like Hercules”: Meyer, Mes Yeux, 152.
111 “I’ve just killed the Dreyfus”: Paléologue, 241.
112 Queen Victoria’s telegram: Reinach, V, 544.
113 Clemenceau: In l’Aurore, Sept. 10, 1899.
114 Comtesse de Noailles weeping: Painter, 299.
115 Foreign reaction to Rennes verdict: The Times, Sept. 12, 13, 14, 1899; Barclay, 162.
116 Grieg’s “Indignation”: Finck, Grieg (see Chap. 6), 104.
117 Galliffet, “That’s something to see”: Lonergan, 369.
5. The Steady Drummer
Bibliography
Official publications of the proceedings of the two Peace Conferences at The Hague are the following:
FRANCE, MINISTÈRE DES AFFAIRES ETRANGÈRES, Documents Diplomatiques, Conférence Internationale de la Paix, 1899, Paris, Imprimerie Nationale, 1900.
——, Deuxième Conférence Internationale de la Paix, 1907, Paris, Imprimerie Nationale, 1908.
*GERMANY, AUSWARTIGEN AMT, Die Grosse Politik der Europäischen Kabinette, Berlin, 1924–25. Band 15: Rings um die Erste Haager Friedenskonferenz. Band 23: Die Zweite Haager Friedenskonferenz. (Referred to in Notes as GP.)
GREAT BRITAIN, FOREIGN OFFICE, Correspondence respecting the Proposal of HM the Emperor of Russia for a Conference on Armaments, Russia, No. 1 (1899), Cd. 9090, London, HMSO.
——, Correspondence respecting the Peace Conference held at The Hague in 1899, Misc. No. 1 (1899), Cd. 9534, London, HMSO. (The material in these two volumes is referred to in the Notes as F.O. 83, 1695–6-7–8-9 and 1700. These are the reference numbers for the autograph originals in the Public Record Office which I consulted in preference to the published version.)
——, Correspondence respecting the Second Peace Conference held at The Hague in 1907. Misc. No. 1 (1908), Cd. 3857, London, HMSO.
——, Further Correspondence, Cd. 4174, Misc. No. 5 (1908).
HAGUE, THE, The Proceedings of The Hague Peace Conference, 4 vols. Translation of the official texts (originally published by the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs), prepared in the Division of International Law of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; ed. James Brown Scott, Oxford Univ. Press, 1920–21, Vol. I, 1899; Vol. II, III, IV, 1907.
UNITED STATES, The Hague Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907, ed. James Brown Scott, 2 vols., Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1909. The second volume contains the instructions to and reports of the American delegates and the correspondence in 1904 and 1906 relating to the calling of the Second Conference.
Other Sources
ADAM, PAUL, “Physionomie de la Conférence de la Haye,” Revue de Paris, August 1, 1907, 642–72.
BACON, ADMIRAL SIR REGINALD HUGH, The