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Authors: Max Hastings

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439
‘French journalists’ ibid. p.67

439
‘the nightingale of’ Becker
The Great War and the French People
p.162

439

Poilus
, rejecting’ ibid. pp.57–8

440
‘Our Brandenburgers’
Oder-Zeitung
14.11.14

440
‘The war was presented’ Becker p.43

440
‘The story of “the little’ Healey p.230

440
‘an extremely nice’
The Lady
3.12.14

441
‘To know anything’ Young p.32

Chapter 14 – Open Country, Open Sky

1 CHURCHILL’S ADVENTURE

443
‘Dragoons from Darmstadt’ Sulzbach p.32

444
‘it is something’ ibid. p.33

444
‘If Joffre be victorious’ Bertie diary 1.10.14

444
‘We heard the guns’ IWM 99/41/1 Van Bleyenberghe letters 24.9.14

445
‘What are we going’
Daily Mail
31.8.14

446
‘Among the garrison’ IWM 91/3/1 Beer MS

447
‘We needed all our’ ibid.

447
‘Our third night’ ibid.

448
‘Our exodus is’ Festing MS p.55

448
‘He inspected’ ibid. p.62

449
‘the delivery of this’ ibid. p.69

449
‘military training in’ ibid. p.10

449
‘Next day, his brigadier’ ibid. p.74

449
‘Evening soon comes’ Beer MS IWM 91/3/1

450
‘I don’t think I have’ Festing MS p.84

450
‘the devil himself’ ibid. p.85

450
‘the Germans suddenly’ IWM P404 Baroness de T’Serclaes MS

451

Il ne faut pas
’ Bonham Carter p.12 18.10.14

451
‘Darling father’ ibid. p.11

451
‘Antwerp was a’ Churchill
Great War
p.336

451
‘Looking back’ ibid. p.292

451
‘one would have thought’ Festing MS p.95

454
‘Should this narrative’ ibid. p.2

454
‘W is an ex-lieutenant’ Asquith letter to VS 5.10.14 p.263

454
‘Norman Macleod’ IWM 05/63/1 Macleod papers

454
‘our friend [Churchill]’ Gilbert, Martin
Winston S. Churchill
Vol. III p.120

454
‘read like a story’ IWM 05/63/1 Macleod papers

454
‘Feeling of depression’ ibid.

454
‘The Belgian troops have’ Feilding p.10 letter of 10.10.14

455
‘we all admire’ IWM 99/41/1 Van Bleyenberghe MS

455
‘too late to have’ Dunn p.69

2 ‘INVENTIONS OF THE DEVIL’

455
‘While contemplating’ Gebsattel pp.22–3

456
‘soon outstrip’ Hesse p.20

456
‘When these inventions’ Strachan p.233

456
‘I think, sir’ Bridges p.80

457
‘German staff regulations’ Bayerisches Hauptstaatsarchiv, Abt. IV Kriegsarchiv Bavarian Central Archive, Munich, IV. Dept. War Archive HS3180

457
‘Members of the RFC’ Winter, Denis
First of the Few
Penguin 1982 p.18

458
‘The French, alone’ Clayton p.233

458
‘French biplanes flew at’ Rougevin-Baville, Col. J.
Revue historique de l’armée Ministère des armées 1964: L’aéronautique militaire française, les débuts de la guerre aérienne 1914
p.6

458
‘beautiful little birds’ Mayne MS IWM 81/26/1

458
‘It is a strange’ Stenitzer p.56 2.12.14

458
‘when any aircraft’ IWM 80/35/1 Mayer MS

458
‘a dreadful sight’ Craster p.118

458
‘Three Austrian planes’ ibid. p.59 29.8.14

459
‘I remember the clicking’ Baring p.50

460
‘Charles Stein’s’ IWM 86/30/1 Stein papers

460
‘I have had some’ Goebel, Stefan
The Great War and Medieval Memory: War, Remembrance and Medievalism in Britain and Germany, 1914–1940
CUP 2007 p.70

460
‘Caroll Dana Winslow’ Winslow, Carroll Dana
With the French Flying Corps
Charles Scribner’s Sons 1917 p.19

460
‘When they make’ Palmer and Wallis p.36

461
‘When I grow up’ Gudehus-Schomerus p.157 24.11.14

461
‘the war should not’ ibid. p.170 30.11.44

461
‘Rudolf Martin’ Martin, Rudolf
Stehen wir vor einem Weltkrieg?
Leipzig Engelmann 1908

461
‘Germany started aerial’ Kehrt pp.192–3

462
‘It exploded but not’ Baring p.44

462
‘We are fortunate’ Boyle p.209

Chapter 15 – Ypres: ‘Something that was Completely Hopeless’

464
‘we heard Antwerp’ IWM Tennyson MS

464
‘A month ago everyone’
New Statesman
10.10.14

465
‘they all jumped up’ IWM 86/30/1 C. Stein papers

465
‘the whole population fleeing’ IWM 91/3/1 Beer MS

465
‘The incessant stream of’ IWM 82/26/1

466
‘Our cars were going’ Feilding p.20

467
‘The Belgians have never’ Craster p.106

468
‘that is the soul’ Givray pp.191–3 12.10.14

468
‘rather a nice’ Craster pp.108, 111

469
‘We are getting’ Macdonald, Lynn
1914
Michael Joseph 1987 p.357

469
‘Allied prisoners, when they’ Baring p.54

472
‘Everywhere we advance’ Craster p.107

472
‘It is all rot’ ibid. p.111

472
‘we looked a ragtime’ Richards, Frank
Old Soldiers Never Die
Mott 1983 p.31

472
‘Little did we think’ ibid. p.34

472
‘native infantry were no’ ibid. p.39

473
‘We are the Coldstream!’ BNA WO95/1342

473
‘it is too much like’ Craster p.132

473
‘they came on in’ BNA WO95/1348

473
‘Lionel Tennyson’ IWM Tennyson MS p.121

474
‘Churchill wrote of’ Churchill
Great War
Vol. I p.378

474
‘I did not imagine’ Cocho, Paul
Mes Carnets de guerre et de prisonnier 1914–1919
Presses Universitaires de Rennes 2010 pp.8, 19

474

Il faut absolument
’ Craster p.113

475
‘Maria, this sort’ Palmer and Wallis p.29

475
‘Sgt. Gustav Sack’ Hirschfeld p.29

475
‘everything is quite’ ibid. p.30

475
‘I am freezing!’ ibid. p.31 2.11.14

475
‘A great grey mass’ Macarthur p.43

477
‘Every man … was exhausted’ Macdonald p.368

477
‘what awful sights’ ibid. p.370

478
‘By 4 p.m. the bulk’ Haig p.75

480
‘It must be clearly’ Hamilton, Ernest
The First Seven Divisions
Hurst & Blackett 1916, p.83

482
‘My dear Maria’ Palmer and Wallis p.33

483
‘A perfect hurricane’ IWM88/52/1 Edgington diary

483
‘They weren’t an organized’ Macdonald p.398

484
‘We got the guns out’ ibid. p.389

484
‘We had no idea’ ibid. pp.396–7

484
‘crowds of fugitives’ Haig p.83 4.12.14

486
‘they made no attempt’ Macdonald p.399

486
‘His kilt in rags’ Maze, Paul
A Frenchman in Khaki
Heinemann 1934 p.75

486
‘I’m afraid your division’ Craster p.125

487
‘serious-faced men’ IWM 82/26/1 Mayne MS

487
‘The news from’ Lacouture p.32

487
‘We could see’ Craster p.127

488
‘It came on’ ibid. p.128

488
‘I suppose one’ ibid. p.129

488
‘When I think’ ibid. p.140

489
‘very shaky even’ ibid. p.131

489
‘The Lincolns, Northumberland’ Haig p.78

490
‘It struck me that’ ibid. p.81

491
‘We hold on’ Craster p.134

493
‘Everybody in a panic’ IWM T.H. Cubbon diary

493
‘Cpl. William Holbrook’ Macdonald p.418

494
‘Doesn’t it look’ ibid. p.420

494
‘Attacks repeated with’ BNA WO95/1342

494
‘This wet is hell’ Feilding p.32

495
‘Churchill referred afterwards’ Churchill
Great War
Vol. I p.325

495
‘Out of the 1,100’ Macdonald p.421

496
‘The noise of the guns’ Craster p.119

Chapter 16 – ‘War Becomes the Scourge of Mankind’

1 POLAND

497
‘Here everything is’ Hoffman p.57 8.10.14

497
‘We have been too long’ Groß, Gerhard P. (ed.)
Die vergessene Front. Der Osten 1914/15
. Ereignis, Wirkung, Nachwirkung Paderborn Schöningh 2006

497
‘Tomo Župan’ Dr Tomo Župan NUK/R, Ms 1390, m. 29, Spominji XXVII

498
‘Many more men’ NUK/R, Ivan Vrhovnik, Ms 1207, m.74

498
‘For God’s sake’ Schneider pp.138–40

498
‘they walked with shaky’ ibid. pp.144–5

499
‘Faced with a crippling’ ibid. p.154

499
‘At first the War Ministry’ Biwald pp.534–5

499
‘As a further consequence’ ibid. pp.261–2

499
‘Czech officers were’ Tolstoy, A.
In Volyn
p.371

500
‘notwithstanding the fact’ Samborn
Mobilization
p.288

500
‘I would have liked’ Hoffman diary p.58

500
‘waterlogged trenches’ Koenigswald p.26 26.10.14

501
‘Your Excellency!’ Knox p.205

502
‘On the evening of the 23rd’ Reichsarchiv Vol. II pp.152–226

503
‘it seemed as if’ Schneider pp.210–11

503
‘This news gave’ ibid. p.212

504
‘the defeated … do not see’ ibid. p.200 20.11.14

504
‘Any victories gained’ Hoffman diary p.58

505
‘a minor curiosity’ Cole, Laurence, Hämmerle, Christa and Scheutz, Martin (eds)
Glanz – Gewalt – Gehorsam. Militär und Gesellschaft in der Habsburgermonarchie (1800 bis 1918)
Essen Klartext 2011 pp.55–76, citing Angelique Leszczawski-Schwerk

505
‘In the course of 1914’ Schneider p.239

505
‘War becomes the scourge’ Zeynek p.192

507
‘The scene was fantastic’ ibid. p.202

507
‘the strategic defeat’ Groß p.55

508
‘A government agent’ Figes, Orlando
A People’s Tragedy
Cape 1996 p.258

508
‘Right dress!’ Tolstoy p.377

2 THE SERBS’ LAST TRIUMPH

509
‘If we do not get’ Slavka Mihajlović 17.11.14 in Đurič and Stevanović p.141

509
‘Making war means’ Kronenbitter p.107

510
‘They say that he’ Kisch p.185 6.11.14

510
‘News that the brave’ Mihajlović 6.11.14 in Đurič and Stevanović p.149

510
‘Incredible cold’ ibid. p.151 16.11.14

510
‘On the walls’ Kisch pp.174–5

510
‘All those chaps’ ibid. pp.195–7 13.11.14

511
‘our own troubles’ ibid. p.198

511
‘We no longer have’ ASA B729 Wüster MS

511
‘with infantry dispersed’ ibid. 4.12.14

512
‘By the time the soldiers’ Kisch p.239 16.12.14

512
‘Anger and mistrust’ ASA B1600/7 Alex Pallavicini MS

512
‘The doctor had to’ ASA Bachmann MS

513
‘I am sad’ Reed p.86

514
‘What are these French’ ibid. p.49

Chapter 17 – Mudlife

515
‘who must face’ Schädla diary 1.11.14

516
‘In those early’ Richards p.41

516
‘in this kind’ Reimann p.180 letter of 26.11.14

516
‘a most extraordinary’ IWM Tennyson MS 2.10.14

517
‘Some eggs’ IWM Mayne MS 81/26/1

517
‘thus they cannot’ IWM Mayer MS 80/35/1

517
‘Our chief work’ Craster p.161

517
‘They have all sorts’ Robert P. Harker 6.11.14, Reimann p.240

517
‘They describe lying’ Barthas pp.43, 45

518
‘infantrymen felled by’ Naegelen R.
Les Suppliciés
Paris 1927 p.89

519
‘As matters stand’ Binding, Rudolf
A Fatalist at War
p.69

519
‘One of our companies’ Cowan letters, private collection

520
‘Sergeant Swinchat’ IWM Tennyson MS 25.9.14

520
‘I said we wanted’ Haig p.83

521
‘would amount to the sacrifice’
New Statesman
14.11.14

521
‘I have seen the government’ Clarke pp.70–1

522
‘The enormous wastage’ Blenkinsop, Maj.-Gen. Sir L.J. et al.
History of the Great War: Veterinary Services
HMSO 1925 p.71

522
‘The BEF’s horses and mules’ ibid. p.510

522
‘Vets catalogued examples’ ibid. p.703

522
‘Veterinary officers … foresaw’ ibid. p.64

523
‘Among a bunch’ ibid. p.175

523
‘René Cassin’ Winter p.63

525
‘that a giraffe’ Richards p.45

525
‘Lt. Adolf Spemann’ HStA Stuttgart, M 660/041 No 2 Spemann diary 6.11.14

526
‘What is this conflict’ Lacouture p.32

526
‘The French abandoned’ Gudenhus-Schomerus p.173 3.12.14

527
‘Please note that’ Barluet, Alain
Les Fraternisations de Noël
pp.171–2

527
‘Louis Barthas’ Barthas p.40

527
‘he really hit’ SB S7, 97/2–3 Kaisen collection

528
‘The war is like a cinema’ Ziemann, Benjamin
War Experiences in Rural Germany 1914–23
OUP 2007 p.44

BOOK: Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes to War
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