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Authors: Max Hastings

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152
‘amid horrendous heat’ ASA Matija Malešič, War Diary 1914

152
‘The army is beaten’ Kisch pp.59–61

152
‘The road is strewn’ ASA B1600/6 AKM Pallavicini

153
‘The army is beaten’ Mitrovic p.69

153
‘We feel heartache’ Krafft-Krivanec p.63 17.8.14

153
‘Wonderful!’ ibid. pp.75–6

153
‘thirty Serb battalions’ ibid. pp.77–8 23.8.14

153
‘One said that 8,000’ ibid. p.84

153
‘our generals are inept’ Kisch p.64 20.8.14

154
‘This represented 71 per cent’ ibid. pp.69–70

154
‘[our men] suffer terribly’ Lampe p.51

154
‘The heart stops’ Krafft-Krivanec p.85 24.8.14

154
‘The impression made’ Lampe p.50

154
‘Everyone lapsed from’ Kisch pp.77–9 29.8.14

154
‘Austrian officers responded’ ibid. p.79 29.8.14

154
‘is indeed the best’ ibid. pp.92–3

155
‘welcomed Serbian troops’ Đurič and Stevanović pp.250–1

155
‘Sir E. Grey presents’ SSA, Belgrade 10-7-419

155
‘Every unit was provided’ Kisch p.73

155
‘Water doesn’t feel’ ibid. p.94 7.9.14

155
‘Of Kisch’s platoon’ ibid. pp.98–9

156
‘How hungry I am’ ASA MS Matija Malešič, War Diary 1914

157
‘Our Serbs fight’ Mitrovic p.75

157
‘Such an order’ ASA B 609 Bachmann MS

157
‘because they too can’ ibid.

158
‘first came a strong guard’ ibid. 15.10

Chapter 5 – Death with Flags and Trumpets

1 THE EXECUTION OF PLAN XVII

159
‘The dust clung’ Lintier, Paul
My Seventy-Five: The Journal of a French Gunner
Peter Davies 1929 p.28

160
‘It is critical that’ Herwig, Holger
The First World War: Germany and Austria-Hungary 1914–18
Arnold 1997 p.35

161
‘As line after line’ Herwig, Holger
The Marne
Random House 2009 p.111

162
‘Next day schoolchildren’ Kuhr, Elfriede
There We’ll Meet Again: The First World War Diary of a Young German Girl
Gloucester 1998 p.31 7.8.14

162
‘stupor and tranquillity’ Gudenhus-Schomerus pp.53–4

162
‘But then I shan’t’ ibid. p.61 20.8.14

162
‘You cannot think’ IWM 99/41/1 MS Letters Madame Jeanne van Bleyenberghe

163
‘When the local burgomaster’ Horne, John and Kramer, Alan
German Atrocities 1914: A History of Denial
Yale 2001 passim

163
‘It doesn’t matter’ ibid. p.17

163
‘Graf Harry Kessler’ Kessler, Harry Graf
Das Tagebuch Vol. V 1914–1916
ed. Günter Riederer and Ulrich Ott Cotta Stuttgart 2008 p.87

164
‘Ruthless destruction’ Schwarte, Max (ed.),
Technik des Kriegswesens
Leipzig Berlin B.G. Teubner 1913 p.115

165
‘That’s what happened’ Blond, Georges
La Marne
Presses de la Cité 1962 p.23

165
‘Pte. Charles Stein’ IWM papers of C Stein 86/30/1

165
‘A company of German reservists’ Mahnke, Dietrich
Kriegstaten und Schicksale des Res.-Inf.-Regiments 75 1914/18
Bremen 1932 p.17

166
‘They really look like’ Gudenhus-Schomerus p.66 28.8.14

167
‘This difference in visibility’ Miguel, Pierre
L’Année 14
pp.104–5

167
‘They told me that’ Herwig
Marne
p.78

168
‘in an indescribable disorder’ Miguel p.110

168
‘In the evening news spread’ Krafft-Krivanec p.183

168
‘For so long’ SB S7 Kaisen Collection, 97/2–3

169
‘Millions of men’ Rivière, Jacques
Carnets 1914–1918
ed. Isabelle and Alain Rivière, Pub. Fayard 1974 p.16

169
‘Lucien Laby’ Laby, Lucien
Les Carnets de l’aspirant Laby, médecin dans les tranchées 28 juillet 1914 – 14 juillet 1919
, Editions Bayard 2001 p.19

171
‘lay siege to Strasbourg’ Delabeye, B. (Lt)
Avant la ligne Maginot. Admirable résistance de la 1ère armée à la frontière des Vosges. Héroïque sacrifice de l’infanterie française
Montpellier, Causse, Graille & Castelnau, 1939 pp.114–15

172
‘A countess’ Strong p.49

175
‘a sublime chaos’ Clayton, Anthony
Paths of Glory: The French Army 1914–1916
p.24

177
‘something struck my knee’ Lacouture p.30

179
‘I can still hear’ Blond p.20

179
‘Frenchmen must look’ Bertie diary 5.11.14

179
‘The battle was lost’ Lintier p.60

180
‘Mown down’ ibid. p.25

181
‘Exhausting week’ Cœurdevey, Edouard
Carnets de guerre 1914–1918: Un témoin lucide
Plon 2008 23.8.14

182
‘5 a.m. movement order’ ibid.

182
‘theatrical and a great error’ Bertie diary 10.9.14

182
‘The Mulhouse business’ Gide diary 4.9.14

182
‘There can be no talk’ Herwig
War
p.89

182
‘Jacques Rivière’s regiment’ Rivière pp.20, 30, 31, 46

183
‘It was finished’ ibid. pp.33, 39

183
‘From that comes’ ibid. p.42

183
‘With us, the army’ ibid. 8.9.14 p.80

184
‘Even before the
fight’ Jones, Heather et al. (eds)
Untold War: New Perspectives in First World War Studies
Leiden 2008 p.29

184
‘Lieutenant, will we’ Herwig Marne p.100

185
‘What good things’ IWM 09/65/1 Papers of Sir James Stubblefield

185
‘We civilians know’ SB 7, 97/2–17

185
‘decked itself out’ Chickering
Urban Life
p.431

185
‘An elderly dowager’ Strong p.100

186
‘I think that the French’ Bertie diary 16.8.14

186
‘There is much more’ ibid. 31.8.14

186
‘We soldiers were usually’ Flood p.51

186
‘Louis Barthas’ Barthas pp.19–20

186
‘Self-evidently’ ibid. p.88

2 ‘GERMAN BEASTLINESS’

187
‘Our cavalry patrols’ Horne and Kramer p.96

187
‘all soldiers are comrades’ Rivière p.35

188
‘It is utter rot’ Wolz, Nicolas
Das lange Warten. Kriegserfahrungen deutscher und britischer Seeoffiziere 1914 bis 1918
Schöningh Paderborn 2008 pp.354–5

188
‘An American in Paris’ Gide 15.11.14

188
‘We fought the Guard Corps’ IWM HET/1 P229 Trevor papers

188
‘It seems to be universally’
New Statesman
10.10.14

189
‘the clamour of’ Holroyd p.447

189
‘We can state’ Horne and Kramer p.419

191
‘Our soldiers have been’ ibid. p.36

191
‘Decidedly, I do not like’ Knoch, Peter (ed.)
Menschen im Krieg 1914–1918
, Ludwigsburg Pädagogische Hochschule 1987 p.78

191
‘Harry Graf Kessler’ Kessler 22.8.14

192
‘We pushed on’ ibid. p.47

192
‘Russian atrocities have’ ibid. p.80

3 LANREZAC ENCOUNTERS SCHLIEFFEN

198
‘As if at manoeuvres’ Spears p.134

198
‘they were like eager children’ ibid. p.135

198
‘[a] most dangerous person’ Jackson, Julian
The Fall of France
OUP 2003 p.91

Chapter 6 – The British Fight

1 MONS

201
‘Last mile ½ battalion’ IWM 07/63/1Harcourt-Vernon MS

202
‘No longer was it’ Harding Davis, Richard
With the Allies
Duckworth 1915 p.22

202
‘These French people’ Craster J.M. (ed.)
Fifteen Rounds a Minute
Macmillan 1976 p.23

203
‘All day men have been’ IWM 07/63/1

203
‘When he personally’ GW interview transcript

208
‘There was no hatred’ Bridges, Sir Tom
Alarms and Excursions
Longman 1938 p.73

208
‘I said to this’ BBC Home Service radio broadcast 23.8.54

209
‘Funny to notice’ IWM 07/63/1 Harcourt-Vernon MS

209
‘They were in solid’ Terraine, John
Mons
Batsford 1960 p.91

210
‘God! How their artillery’ Ascoli p.92

210
‘The men were digging’ IWM 89/7/1 Wollocombe papers

211
‘it was too late’ ibid.

211
‘Our faithful gunners’ ibid.

211
‘A very trying day’ IWM 88/52/1 Edgington papers

211
‘masses of grey-clad’ Sheffield
The Chief
p.72

211
‘if Sgt. —’ IWM 89/7/1 Wollocombe MS

212
‘You are the
only’ Wencke p.224

213
‘the spirit of victory’ Zuber p.132

213
‘Gentlemen, please’ ibid. p.136

214
‘even had time to think’ IWM 89/7/1 Wollocombe MS

216
‘Our troops advance’ Longerich p.20 24.8.14

216
‘a long and trying march’ Craster p.37

216
‘most disheartening’ ibid. p.39

216
‘I have never been’ Harris, Simon
History of the 43rd and 52nd (Ox and Bucks) Light Infantry in the Great War 1914–18
Simon Harris 2012 p.22

217
‘The whole way back’ Rose narrative, Journal of the Wiltshire Regiment

217
‘But who will feed’ Spears p.319

217
‘It makes you cry’ IWM 99/41/1 Madame Jeanne van Bleyenberghe correspondence

217
‘their guard does not’ Haig p.65

218
‘I like most others’ Craster pp.44–6

219
‘D.H. had … been’ ASC1938

2 LE CATEAU: ‘WHERE THE FUN COMES IN, I DON’T KNOW’

219
‘That evening their colonel’ ASC1938 Bird Narrative

221
‘You needn’t bother’ ASC 1938 Edmonds letter 11.5.33

222
‘Don’t call a’ ibid.

223
‘everyone spoke in’ Spears p.228

223
‘The sense of doom’ ibid. p.230

223
‘It was perhaps’ ibid. p.233

224
‘to me it was a period’ ASC1938 Murray letter of 18.12.30

224
‘[the airmen’s] maps were black’ Baring p.25

224
‘A sun-baked drowsy’ Spears p.235

225
‘Salisbury Plain’ Ascoli p.97

225
‘At the outset’ Priestley, R.E.
The Signal Service in the European War of 1914–18
W. and J. Mackay 1921 p.33

226
‘On your feet!’ Cave and Sheldon
Le Cateau
p.40

226
‘An hour later’ ASC1938 Bird narrative

226
‘[He] was most anxious’ ASC1938 Arthur Hildebrand letter of 21.12.30

227
‘It is impossible to miss’ IWM HET/1 P229 Trevor papers

227
‘I did not think’ Ascoli p.100

227
‘We could see a [British]’ Cave and Cowley p.52

228
‘too terrible for words’ IWM HET/1 P229 Trevor papers

228
‘Capt. R.G. Beaumont’ ASC1938 Beaumont letter

229
‘we sat there talking’ IWM 89/7/1 Wollocombe papers

229
‘At the same time’ Cave and Sheldon p.76

230
‘I have lost my’ ibid. p.106

230
‘what we want to do’ ASC 1938 Bird narrative

231
‘which left me pretty well’ Ascoli p.105

231
‘About 2.30 the situation’ IWM HET/1 P229 Trevor letter of 2.9.14

233
‘however, we retired’ IWM HET/1 P229 Trevor letter of 14.9.14

233
‘It was a wonderful sight’ Terraine p.152

233
‘I must warn you’ ASC1938 Bird narrative

235
‘Our losses had been’ Cave and Sheldon p.80

235
‘In the British centre’ ASC1938 Major C.M. Usher Narrative

236
‘The British had withdrawn’ Cave and Sheldon p.100

236
‘but the British also’ ibid. p.163

237
‘No news of II Corps’ ASC1938 Edmonds letter 11.5.33

238
‘I fancy Haig’ ibid.

Chapter 7 – The Retreat

239
‘marched to St. Quentin’ IWM 88/52/1 Edgington diary

240
‘behaving in a scandalous’ Babington, Anthony
For the Sake of Example
Leo Cooper 1983 p.6

242
‘Marches are much slower’ IWM 07/63/1 Harcourt-Vernon MS

242
‘The chief’ Clarke p.67

242
‘They were acting’ BNA WO95/1347

243
‘We had to wait’ H. Goatham taped interview transcript, GW files

243
‘despite the fact that’ Macarthur, Brian
For King and Country
Little, Brown 2008 p.21

245

Les anglais sont
’ Baring p.28

245
‘quite calm, approachable’ ASC1938 HS Jeudwine letter

245
‘it was the old story’ Craster p.50

246
‘In six weeks’ Reichsarchiv (ed.),
Der Weltkrieg 1914–1918
, Vol. I Berlin Mittler 1925 p.440

248
‘One is already beginning’ Thompson p.98

248
‘We Germans have’ ibid. p.106

249
‘the French considered’ Spears p.250

249
‘He manipulated his units’ ibid. p.269

250
‘A French officer gleefully’ ibid. pp.339–40

252
‘I stand bad news’ Smith, Leonard et al.
France and the Great War 1914–1918
trans. Helen McPhail CUP 2003 p.41

254
‘It is one of the worst’ Harris p.44

255
‘The Germans did not’ Craster p.56

255
‘Do you know that’ Thomson p.45

BOOK: Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes to War
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