To End All Wars_ A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 - Adam Hochschild [212]
"I rub as much salt": Emily Hobhouse to Mary Hobhouse, 26 January 1901, Van Reenen, p. 49.
"If we can get over": Milner to Chamberlain, 7 December 1901, quoted in Krebs, p. 52.
[>] "What an army": Balme, p. 183.
"pro-Boer ravings": Milner to Kitchener, 7 June 1901, quoted in Pakenham 1, p. 511.
[>] "Sir, the lunacy": Hobhouse to the Committee of the Distress Fund, n.d., Van Reenen, p. 148.
"I had thought of that": Roberts, p. 224.
"Your brutal orders": Hobhouse to Milner, 1 November 1901, Van Reenen, p. 151.
"restarting the new": Farwell 2, p. 444.
"The white man": Cecil Headlam, ed., The Milner Papers, vol. 2 (London: Cassell, 1933), p. 467, quoted in Adam Smith, pp. 123–124.
[>] "play the game like gentlemen": Blackwood's Magazine, 1902, quoted in Adam Smith, p. 122.
"fascinating and most hopeful work": Adam Smith, p. 117.
"I must say I am": Adam Smith, p. 118.
[>] "A very small memento": Cassar, p. 32.
"I daresay that he": Esher to Knollys, 16 January 1904, in "French, John Denton Pinkstone," Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online), accessed 9 March 2010.
"This is certainly": French to Sir Charles Boxall, 20 October 1901, quoted in Holmes, p. 117.
4. HOLY WARRIORS
[>] "In the campaigns": French to Winifred Bennett, 19 March 1915, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 138.
"I am thoroughly satisfied": Haig 3, pp. 223–224.
"moral factor of an": Ellis 1, p. 56.
[>] "I have often made up": Denis Winter, p. 33.
"the rôle of Cavalry": Douglas Haig, Cavalry Studies: Strategical and Tactical (London: Hugh Rees, 1907), pp. 8–9.
[>] "I asked myself": Women's Franchise, 11 July 1907.
"I'm quite safe": Mulvihill, p. 73.
"The women began to": Daily Mirror, quoted in Linklater, pp. 113–114.
[>] 21 days in solitary: HO 144/847/149245.
"If she insists on": Linklater, p. 114.
She called for equality: Despard 1, p. 6.
"I had sought and found": Women's Franchise, 11 July 1907.
[>] "I began to think": Emmeline Pankhurst, p. 28.
"like a stringed instrument": Ethel Smyth, Female Pipings in Eden (Edinburgh: Peter Davies, 1933), pp. 194–195, quoted in Purvis 1, p. 100.
[>] "She was slender, young": E. Sylvia Pankhurst 4, p. 221.
"She was one of those": Helen Crawfurd, quoted in Winslow, p. 13.
[>] "We are soldiers": Standard, 27 May 1913, quoted in Purvis 1, p. 221.
"We leave that to": Emmeline Pankhurst, pp. 264–265.
"I wish that a sensible": Kipling to Mrs. Humphry Ward, 2 February 1912, Kipling Collection, Dalhousie University.
[>] "a short, wiry": Rupert Grayson, Voyage Not Completed (London: Macmillan, 1969), quoted in Holt, p. 104.
"Howe wood yu": Kipling to John Kipling, 6 October 1908, Kipling 2, p. 73.
"Don't you bother": Kipling to John Kipling, 18 May 1908, Kipling 2, p. 59.
the poet declared he admired: Gilmour, p. 198.
[>] but what would they do: Cecil, p. 180.
"It is a spirit": John Buchan, A Lodge in the Wilderness (Edinburgh: Blackwood, 1906), p. 28.
"Do ye wait for": "The Islanders," 1902.
[>] "withholding from others": Roberts, p. 252.
"a fatal mistake": Cecil, pp. 181–182.
[>] "looks well, a bit thinner": Cecil, p. 220.
[>] "I shall tear up": Purvis 2, p. 159.
5. BOY MINER
[>] "That night the baby": Hardie, pp. 1–2.
"We were great friends": Hardie, p. 2.
[>] "The rich and comfortable classes": Benn, p. 259.
"We'll hae nae damned": Benn, p. 22.
"a longing, profound": Countess of Oxford and Asquith, ed., Myself When Young: By Famous Women of To-Day (London: Frederick Muller, 1938), p. 262.
57 "walk and sing and meditate": Tuchman 1, p. 421.
"Abandon hope all ye": Hope Hay Hewison, Hedge of Wild Almonds: South Africa, the Pro-Boers and the Quaker Conscience, 1890–1910 (London: Currey, 1989), p. 340, quoted in Lowry, p. 17.
"Are you working here, mate?": Labour Leader, February 1906, quoted in Benn, pp. 211–212.
[>] "Can I do anything?": Benn, p. 203.
[>] "worth having lived": John Bruce Glasier, James Keir Hardie: A Memorial (Manchester, UK: National Labour Press, 1915), p. 24, quoted in Benn, p. 189.
"militarism":