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To End All Wars_ A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 - Adam Hochschild [218]

By Root 1025 0
out more": Vansittart to Brigadier-General Sir James Edmonds, 30 January 1926, CAB 45/121.

"Dead, dying and badly": 27 September and 2 October 1915, quoted in Holmes, p. 305.

"It was impossible to bury": Macdonald 2, p. 572.

[>] "The introduction of": "The Question of Training Men for Employment with the Machine Guns now under Supply," General Staff, GHQ, 23 November 1915, quoted in Travers, p. 85.

only one machine gun: Paul Clark to Pershing, 15 May 1918, quoted in Denis Winter, p. 148.

"My attack, as has been": Haig to Kitchener, 29 September 1915, Haig 1, p. 160.

"Douglas Haig came": n.d., Cherry, p. 329.

[>] "I was not faint": E. Sylvia Pankhurst 1, p. 230.

[>] "He was built for": Woman's Dreadnought, 2 October 1915.

"How can you expect": E. Sylvia Pankhurst 1, p. 239.

"corrupted ... by Germanism": 8 December 1916, quoted in Millman, p. 120.

"I absolutely agree": 7 December 1915, Milner Papers, Bodleian Library, Oxford, dep. 351.

"through little old": Buchan 1, p. 31.

[>] "DH never shines": Charteris, regarding a New Year's Eve party at headquarters, Cherry, p. 336.

[>] "How deep is it": Gibbs, pp. 207–208.

"we suddenly confronted": Herbert Read, Annals of Innocence and Experience (London: Faber & Faber, 1946), pp. 142–143, quoted in Ashworth, p. 104.

[>] "They tell me John": Rupert Grayson to the Kiplings, quoted in Holt, p. 106.

"We can but trust": Edward to Rupert Grayson, 15 October 1915, quoted in Holt, p. 106.

"He is dark with": Kipling to Page, 5 October 1915, Pinney, vol. 4, p. 337.

[>] "We fear he is killed": 4 October 1915, quoted in Thompson, p. 321.

"No news": Holt, p. 105.

13. WE REGRET NOTHING

[>] "the greatest expression": Roland N. Stromberg, quoted in William Pfaff, The Bullet's Song: Romantic Violence and Utopia (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2004), p. 29.

volunteering for the army: Robb, p. 72; Winter 1, p. 118.

"national control of": Clarion, 17 March 1916, quoted in Stubbs, p. 729.

"All-British from the core": C. B. Stanton, MP, in the Times, 18 March 1918.

178 "beyond all question": Times, 28 May 1917.

"I am trying, very hard": Marlowe, p. 245.

"It would be difficult": Marlowe, p. 245.

"Shall we call": Astor to Milner and Milner to Astor, 12 January 1916, quoted in Lockwood, p. 124.

[>] "all seem to expect": Haig to Lady Haig, 27 December 1915, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 217.

[>] "preach ... about the objects": Haig Diary, 4 June 1916, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 241.

"We lament too much": Haig Diary, 23 April 1916, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 241.

"The nation must be": Haig, "Memorandum on Policy for the Press," 26 May 1916, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 242.

"The Germans might bargain": Haig Diary, 7 June 1916, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 245.

"some officers who think": Haig Diary, 9 April 1916, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 234.

"lately a certain number": Gilbert, p. 212.

"take the same sort": John Jolliffe, ed. Raymond Asquith: Life and Letters (London: Collins, 1980), p. 217, quoted in "Asquith, Raymond," Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online), accessed 15 March 2010.

[>] "It was a storied antique": Montague, p. 32.

"slackness ... in the matter": Haig 1, 4 September 1916, p. 226.

[>] "All the troops here": Haig to Rothschild, 14 May 1916, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 235.

"The briefing lasted": Morton to Liddell Hart, 17 July 1961, quoted in Denis Winter, p. 13.

"If by any chance": Cuthbert Headlam to Georgina Headlam, 21 July 1916, quoted in Denis Winter, p. 137.

"The so called sharp": Haig to Henrietta Jameson, 1 September 1904, quoted in De Groot 1, pp. 105–106.

[>] "The hopeless bravery": E. Sylvia Pankhurst 1, p. 321.

"I shall never be": Wilson to Milner, 25 August 1915, quoted in Gollin, p. 281.

[>] "This place is polluted": Cecil, p. 275.

"I knew the dear London": E. Sylvia Pankhurst 1, p. 304.

[>] "Strongly repudiate and condemn": Purvis 1, p. 285.

"Freedom's battle has not": Rowbotham, p. 34.

A burly man of: Morel is a principal figure in my King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror, and Heroism in Colonial Africa (Boston: Hought on Mifflin,

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