To End All Wars_ A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 - Adam Hochschild [219]
[>] "a war which enables": E. D. Morel, Truth and the War (London: National Labour Press, 1916), p. 302.
more than 20,000 men: Pearce, p. 169.
"we women ... will tolerate": Trevor Wilson, p. 402.
[>] "The conscientious objector": Martin, pp. 53–54.
"I did not think": W. S. Adams, Edwardian Portraits (London: Secker & Warburg, 1957), p. 212.
"did not wish to incite": Brockway, p. 70.
"Six men have been condemned": Times, 17 May 1916.
190 "in various secret places": Chamberlain, p. 68.
"The singers can have": Tribunal, 4 January 1917.
[>] "Are you doing work": Socialist, October 1916.
"war will become impossible": Tribunal, 1 June 1916.
"Once you are across": Boulton, p. 165.
[>] "if they disobey orders": Boulton, p. 166.
"As we were leaving": Russell 1, p. 17.
"In France a court-martial": Herald, 6 May 1916, Russell 3, p. 357.
[>] "We have been warned": Boulton, p. 171.
"We regret nothing": Tribunal, 8 June 1916.
"Tell me, when was": Ernest Shackleton, South: The Story of Shackleton's Last Expedition, 1914–1917 (New York: Macmillan, 1920), p. 208.
[>] "Had we used the Navy's": Rudyard Kipling, The Fringes of the Fleet (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page, 1916), p. 118.
[>] "the lash and the chain": Kruse, p. 102.
[>] "When a German holds": John G. Gray, Prophet in Plimsoles: An Account of the Life of Colonel Ronald Campbell (Edinburgh: Edina, 1977), p. 27.
"fighting the Enemy": Haig 1, 5 April 1916, p. 184.
[>] "Nothing could exist": Sir John Edmonds, Military Operations: France and Belgium, 1916 (London: Macmillan, 1932), p. 288, quoted in Trevor Wilson, p. 318.
"Carmen Etonense": Eton College Chronicle, 15 June 1916. My thanks to Mark Goodman for referring me to this source.
[>] "The situation is becoming": Haig to Lady Haig, 20 June 1916, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 251.
"I feel that every": Haig to Lady Haig, 22 June 1916, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 2.51.
"The men are in splendid": Haig 1, 30 June 1916, p. 195.
14. GOD, GOD, WHERE'S THE REST OF THE BOYS?
[>] "We were placed": Boulton, p. 168.
[>] "Rats were not infrequent": Boulton, p. 171.
[>] "I cast many a glance": Anonymous CO, quoted in Boulton, pp. 172–173.
Bertrand Russell and others: Without which, concludes Ellsworth-Jones, p. 203,
"at least some of the conscientious objectors shipped to France would almost certainly have been executed."
"As I stood listening": Anonymous CO, quoted in Boulton, p. 173.
[>] "The hospital received": Brittain, p. 274.
"one could see ripples": Lieutenant G. Chetwynd-Staplyton, quoted in Keegan 2, p. 238.
[>] "I did not come across": G. M. Sturgess, in John Hammerton, ed., The Great War—"I Was There!": Undying Memories of 1914–1918, vol. 2 (London: Amalgamated Press, 1938), quoted in Trevor Wilson, p. 323.
205 "It was an amazing": M. Gerster, Die Schwaben an der Ancre (Heilbronn, Germany: Eugen Salzer, [1918]), quoted in Churchill 1, pp. 658–659.
"When we got to": Private Tomlinson of the Sherwood Foresters, quoted in Keegan 2, p. 258.
[>] "Only three out of": Middlebrook, p. 132.
[>] "I have never had": Middlebrook, p. 261.
"This cannot be": Haig 1, 2 July 1916, p. 197.
"In another fortnight": Haig to Lady Haig, 8 July 1916, Haig 1, p. 201.
"If we don't succeed": Haig to Lady Haig, 13 July 1916, quoted in De Groot 1, p. 253.
[>] "a squadron of Indian": Hutchison, pp. 126–132. Men from two cavalry regiments charged the Germans that day; the Indians were from the 20th Royal Deccan Horse, with the higher-ranking officers all British. The Deccan Horse regimental history records 9 dead and 41 wounded for this engagement, with, surprisingly, half a dozen German prisoners taken. Much of the time, however, the cavalrymen fought dismounted.
[>] "The tide of wounded": Philip Gibbs, Ten Years After: A Reminder (London: Hutchinson, 1925), pp. 32–33.
"cannot have been less": Haig to Robertson, 23 August 1916, quoted in De Groot I, p. 262.
"the total losses": Haig I, 4 September 1916, p. 226.
"Lawford dined": Travers, p. xix.
"The expectation of mankind": Anonymous to Haig, 30 July 1916, quoted