To End All Wars_ A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 - Adam Hochschild [214]
[>] "We are ready": Baron von Eckhardstein, Lebenserinnerungen, Vol. 3, Die Iso-lierung Deutschlands (Liepzig, 1921), p. 184, quoted in Tuchman 2, p. 27.
"the omission of the customary": Fromkin, p. 166.
[>] "The quiet grave tones": Churchill 1, pp. 94–95.
"We are in measurable": Michael and Eleanor Brock, eds., H. H. Asquith: Letters to Venetia Stanley (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985), pp. 122–123, quoted in Fromkin, p. 188.
[>] "This country has gone": War 1914: Punishing the Serbs (London: His Majesty's Stationery Office, 1919), p. 74, quoted in Fromkin, p. 216.
"We shall never hit": Fromkin, p. 218.
"likewise obliged to mobilize": Serge Sverbeev to St. Petersburg, 29 July 1914, quoted in Albertini, vol. 2, p. 499.
[>] "I will ... smash": Fromkin, p. 231.
[>] "men's wars": Suffragette, 19 June 1914.
"The walls of the room": Tuchman 1, p. 421.
[>] "It is impossible": Tuchman 1, p. 460.
"I have done all": Telegram, Nicholas II to George V, Times, 5 August 1914.
[>] "In spite of all my": Stefan Zweig, The World of Yesterday (Alcester, UK: Read Books, 2006), p. 173.
"The victory of Germany": "Reflections of a Nonpolitical Man" (1917), quoted in Tuchman 2, p. 311.
[>] "Every German friend of peace": Carsten, p. 18.
"The government has managed": R.J.W. Evans and Hartmut Pogge von Strandmann, eds. The Coming of the First World War (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2001), p. 120.
"Few English people": Manchester Guardian, 3 August 1914.
[>] largest demonstration there: Manchester Guardian, 3 August 1914.
"You have no quarrel": Benn, p. 324.
"we are fighting against": Times, 20 September 1914.
[>] "that the fatherland's poorest": Carsten, p. 17.
"Henceforth I know no parties": Tuchman 1, p. 462.
"There are no more": Paul Deschanel, quoted in Tuchman 1, p. 462.
"holy war of civilization": 4 August 1914, quoted in Kramer, p. 183.
"wants to crush": Rheinische Zeitung, 5 August 1914, quoted in Kramer, p. 244.
[>] "The working class went": Tuchman 1, p. 462.
[>] "A single worry": Weintraub, p. 70.
"joined with our elders": Waugh, p. 93.
"Semi-barbarians": Hobhouse to Smuts, 8 August 1914, quoted in Kaminski, p. 287.
95 "look of surprise": A. Mor-O'Brien, ed. The Autobiography of Edmund Stonelake (Mid-Glamorgan Education Committee, 1981), p. 157, quoted in Benn, p. 326.
"I would rather see my two": E. Sylvia Pankhurst 1, p. 34.
"He looked neither left": Emrys Hughes, quoted in Benn, p. 326.
[>] "It is better to have": Cecil, p. 236.
"flushed, excited face": Cecil, p. 239.
8. AS SWIMMERS INTO CLEANNESS LEAPING
[>] "God's vengeance upon": Suffragette, 7 August 1914 (postdated; this issue actually appeared some days earlier), quoted in Mitchell, p. 247.
"this criminal war": Mulvihill, p. 110.
[>] "crumpled in body": Fenner Brockway, quoted in Benn, p. 329.
"Across the roar of guns": Labour Leader, 13 August 1914, quoted in Boulton, pp. 44–45.
"to go up to him": John Bruce Glasier, James Keir Hardie: A Memorial (Manchester, UK: National Labour Press, 1915), p. 66, quoted in Benn, p. 332.
[>] "Now, God be thanked": "Peace," 1914 and Other Poems (London: Sidgwick and Jackson, 1918), p. 11.
[>] "purification, liberation": Kramer, p. 163.
"You will be home": Tuchman 2, p. 119.
[>] "Never!": Tuchman 2, p. 38.
"easy to see": Kenneth Godsell Diary, quoted in Richard Holmes, "The Last Hurrah: Cavalry on the Western Front, August—September 1914," in Cecil and Liddle, p. 280.
"Keep constantly on your guard": Macdonald 1, p. 62.
[>] "They are a low lot": French to Kitchener, 15 November 1914, quoted in Holmes, pp. 202–203.
"In my own heart": Haig 1, 11 August 1914, p. 56.
[>] "well and cheery": John French, p. 144, 14 August 1914.
"I think I know": French to Kitchener, 21 August 1914, quoted in Cassar, p. 104.
"The usual silly reports": John French, p. 145, 15 August 1914.
"I saw the 4th Brigade": French Diary, 20 August 1914, quoted in Holmes, p. 211.
"than I am of the bullets": Cecil, p. 241.
[>] "He said that up to date": Cecil, p. 243.
"The empty stage":