Proud Tower - Barbara W. Tuchman [323]
78 Haldane on public apathy: q. Annual Register, 245.
79 Speaker Lowther on the Irish: Ullswater, II, 85; “sinister and powerful” and “direct, obvious”: Morley, II, 349–50.
80 “Antique bantam”: from a poem by an admirer which appeared in the Morning Post, q. Pope-Hennessy, 123.
81 Charwoman’s song: Sitwell, Great Morning, 57.
82 “He kept things together somehow”: Sackville-West, 307.
83 Laureate’s poem: Austin, II, 292.
84 “Our glorified grocers”: Lucy Masterman, 200, told to her by Lloyd George.
85 Asquith’s list: Spender, Asquith, I, Appendix.
86 “We are in grim earnest”: Grooves of Change, 39.
87 Transport strike, “it is revolution!” q. Halévy, VI, 456.
88 Tom Mann imprisoned: Clynes, 154.
89 Even the heat was “splendid”: Sir Edward Grey, Twenty-Five Years, London, 1925, I, 238.
90 Lady Michelham’s party: Williams, 192–93.
91 “Your bloody palace”: Birkenhead, 175.
92 “The golden sovereigns”: Cyril Connolly, reviewing Nowell-Smith, The Sunday Times, Oct. 18, 1964.
93 Last horse-drawn bus and preponderance of motor-taxis: Somervell, 28; Nowell-Smith, 122.
94 Hugh Cecil: Churchill, 201; also Churchill’s Amid These Storms, New York, 1932, 55; also Gardiner, Pillars, 39.
95 The Cecil scene: besides accounts in the daily press there are illustrations of the scene in Punch, Aug. 2 and 16; and Illus. London News, July 29.
96 “Disorderly assembly,” for the first time: The Times, parl. corres., July 25, 1911.
97 Of six peers at dinner, none had made up his mind: Midleton, 275.
98 “You’ve forgotten the Parliament Bill”: Christopher Hassall, Edward Marsh, London, 1959, 173–74.
99 “A real danger” and chagrined peer: Newton, Retrospection, 187.
100 Balfour, “nothing but politicians”: q. Young, 315.
101 Asquith’s tribute: Guildhall speech, Nov. 9, Fifty Years, II, 129–31.
102 Wyndham, “ice age”: Blunt, II, 339.
8. The Death of Jaurès
Bibliography
BALABANOFF, ANGELICA, My Life as a Rebel, New York, Harper, 1938.
BEER, MAX, The General History of Socialism and Social Struggles, Vol. II, New York, Russell & Russell, 1957.
BERNSTEIN, EDOUARD, My Years of Exile, New York, Harcourt, 1921.
BRAUNTHAL, JULIUS, In Search of the Millennium, London, Gollancz, 1945.
COLE, G. D. H., A History of Socialist Thought, Vol. III, The Second International, 1889–1914, Parts I and II, London, Macmillan, 1956.
COLEMAN, MC ALISTER, Eugene V. Debs, New York, Greenberg, 1930.
DE LEON, DANIEL, Flashlights of the Amsterdam Congress, New York, Labor News, 1929.
DESMOND, SHAW, The Edwardian Story, London, Rockliff, 1949.
DULLES, FOSTER RHEA, Labor in America, New York, Crowell, 1960.
(L’EGLANTINE), Jean Jaurès; Feuilles Eparses, Brussels, l’Eglantine, 1924.
FISCHER, LOUIS, The Life of Lenin, New York, Harper, 1964.
FYFE, HAMILTON, Keir Hardie, London, Duckworth, 1935.
GAY, PETER, The Dilemma of Democratic Socialism: Bernstein’s Challenge to Marx, New York, Collier, 1962.
GINGER, RAY, The Bending Cross: A Biography of Eugene Debs, Rutgers Univ. Press, 1949.
*GOLDBERG, HARVEY, The Life of Jean Jaurès, Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 1962.
GOMPERS, SAMUEL, Labour in Europe and America, New York, Harper, 1910. (For autobiography, see Chap. 3.)
HARVEY, ROWLAND HILL, Samuel Gompers, Stanford Univ. Press, 1935.
HENDERSON, ARCHIBALD, Bernard Shaw, New York, Appleton, 1932.
HILLQUIT, MORRIS, Loose Leaves from a Busy Life, New York, Macmillan, 1934.
*HUNTER, ROBERT, Socialists at Work, New York, Macmillan, 1908.
INTERNATIONAL SOCIALIST CONGRESS, Proceedings; published variously. Nos. 1, 1889, Paris, and 3, 1893, Zurich, are in German, entitled Protokoll. No. 4, 1896, London, is in English; Nos. 2 and 5–8 are in French, entitled Compte rendu analytique. No. 5 was published by the Cahiers de la Quinzaine, Paris, 1901.
JAURÈS, JEAN, Bernstein et l’Evolution de la Méthode socialiste (text of lecture delivered