Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes to War (110 page)

Read Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes to War Online

Authors: Max Hastings

Tags: #Ebook Club, #Chart, #Special

BOOK: Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes to War
2.06Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

373
‘This little battle’ IWM Macleod Papers

373
‘Winston’s little scheme’ Asquith to VS 28.8.14 p.203

374
‘We disgraced ourselves’ Hopman diary 29.8.14 pp.419–20

374
‘Yet next day’ ibid. p.421 30.8.14

374
‘Brains were at’ Young p.10

374
‘The spirit informing’ ibid. p.47

376
‘We heard the Russian’ ibid. p.68

376
‘It must be a heartwarming’ Wolz p.326

376
‘One feels happy’ ibid. p.416 23.9.14

377
‘I am afraid’ Asquith to VS 4.11.14 p.309

378
‘I told Winston’ ibid.

378
‘a veritable volcano’ Churchill Vol. I p.77

379
‘I think it is mean’ Wolz p.417

380
‘To founder without’ ibid. p.420

382
‘The missing of those’ ibid. p.429

382
‘The gravest weakness’ Andrew Gordon passim

383
‘May we have a chance’ Wolz pp.356–7

383
‘Unless war is made’ ibid. p.349

383
‘Ernst Weizsäcker’ ibid. p.324 28.10.14

383
‘Our inactivity causes’ ibid. p.450

383
‘In the North Sea nothing’ ibid. p.101 21.11.14

384
‘From the point of view’ Young p.157

384
‘Once he appeared’ ibid. p.161

384
‘I would give anything’ Wolz p.318 Keyes letter 9.10.14

385
‘the British navy has’
Naval Review
14.10.14

Chapter 12 – Three Armies in Poland

386
‘everything is’ ASA B1600/7 Pallavicini diary 12.8.14

387
‘Of course everybody’ ASA B1492 von Hoefft MS

387
‘it is said that’ Stenitzer, Richard von
Belagerung und Gefangenschaft. Von Przemyśl bis Russisch-Turkestan. Das Kriegstagebuch des Dr Richard Ritter von Stenitzer 1914–1917
ed. Albert Petho Graz Ares 2010 p.23

387
‘jumping into a thick’ Zeynek p.183

387
‘There were subdued’ Reed p.123

388
‘The high command had’ Schneider pp.30–1

388
‘Constantin Schneider’s division’ ibid. pp.60–1 29.8.14

388
‘We were constantly’ ibid. p.35

389
‘Guliewicz, an aristocratic’ Stone p.58

389
‘By contrast, a mile’ Ksyunin p.17

389
‘the Orient had to’ Schneider p.69 30.8.14

389
‘It must be that God’ OS B1492 von Hoefft MS

391
‘A huge gunner’ Knox p.50

391
‘A few younger soldiers’ Reed p.164

391
‘the expression of most’ Knox p.51

392
‘the air was poisoned’ ASA B1492 von Hoefft MS

392
‘On the Austrian side’ Kronenbitter p.522

392
‘The Russians, by contrast’ Schneider p.201

392
‘On several occasions men’ Schindler, John
Disaster on the Drina: The Austro-Hungarian Army in Bosnia in War in History 9
(2002) p.169

392
‘Constantin Schneider’ Schneider p.46

392
‘The ravine was’ ibid. pp.56–8

392
‘You see only’ ASA B1492 Hoefft MS

393
‘This is all we’ve’ Kondurashkin p.40

393
‘bowed, thin men’ ibid.

393
‘Police who were called’ ibid. p.51

393
‘It is said that a Jew’ Knox p.145

393
‘On 16 September, a group’ Stenitzer pp.158–9

394
‘Theodor Ritter Zeynek’ Zeynek p.185

394
‘He and his comrades’ Kuznetsov, Ivan (ed.)
Petrov Pobeg Iz Plenov
Penza 1998 pp.67–8

395
‘It was as if he’ Schneider p.62

396
‘Even at two or three’ Kondurashkin p.31

397
‘With a stab of awareness’ ibid. pp.89–90

397
‘I wanted to check’ ASA B863/1 Rathenitz MS

397
‘When Schneider delivered’ ibid. pp.99–100

398
‘this should not matter’ ANA B 1600/7 Pallavicini diary

398
‘a fabulous cabbage soup’ Ksyunin p.18

398
‘Well sir, I was’ ibid. p.68

399
‘It was an unforgettable’ Knox p.115

399
‘The new occupants’ Schneider pp.231–2 14.12.14

399
‘We pass the time’ Stenitzer p.40

399
‘Keep marching heedless’ Biwald p.344

399
‘The city was very’ Forstner, Franz
Przemyśl. Österreich-Ungarns bedeutendste Festung
Vienna ÖBV Pädagogischer 1997 pp.146, 148

400
‘In September, the rump’ ibid. p.151

400
‘The Russians are right’ Wittgenstein p.21

400
‘Men’s behaviour improves’
Schneider p.108

401
‘the campaign [in the west]’ Jeffrey p.138

401
‘The Austrians’ predicament’ Hoffman p.55

401
‘Come and eat’ Kondurashkin p.67

402
‘In some units it became’ Reed p.154

402
‘Vasily Mishnin’ Palmer and Wallis p.37

402
‘No news except’ ASA B1600/7: Pallavicini MS

402
‘Tell me, sirs’ Kysunin p.6

403
‘Take him away!’ ibid. p.7

403
‘Give him one’ ibid. p.9

403
‘One hears dozens’ Kondurashkin p.25

403
‘There were the same’ ibid. p.370

404
‘I thought of my village’ Kuznetsov p.68

404
‘We awoke to see’ ibid. p.69

404
‘You want to dig in’ ASA B1492 von Hoefft MS

405
‘One saw groups’ Kondurashkin pp.60–1

405
‘where alleged spies’ Stenitzer p.25 22.8.14

405
‘from which shots had’ Schneider pp.72–3

405
‘With only few exceptions’ Reichsarchiv (ed.)
Der Weltkrieg 1914–1918
Vol. II Berlin Mittler 1925 pp.325–7

405
‘The most notable’ see Borck, Karin and Kölm, Lothar (eds)
Gefangen in Sibirien. Tagebuch eines ostpreußischen Mädchens 1914–1920
Osnabrück Fibre 2001 p.8

406
‘On 14 September, escorted’ Sczuka pp.27–30

406
‘In enemy country’ ibid. p.77

406
‘Yet, on the following’ ibid. pp.84–5 6.9.14

408
‘At Otwock railway station’ Samborn
Poland
p.45

408
‘they go on blindly’ ibid. p.48

408
‘How are things’ Kondurashkin p.63

409
‘Alexei Ksyunin’ Ksyunin p.62

409
‘All but the most’ ibid. p.64

Chapter 13 – ‘Did You Ever Dance With Him?’

1 HOME FRONTS

411
‘the impossibility of keeping’ Gide p.80

412
‘In Austria there was’ Krafft-Krivanec p.147 12.10.14

412
‘The government recognised’ Becker, Jean-Jacques
The Great War and the French People
trans. Arnold Pomerans 1985 p.13

414
‘The word “
Durchhalten
”’ Healey p.34

414
‘Austrian women were’ ibid. p.38

415
‘The Marquis of San Giuliano’ Bertie diary 26.10.14

415
‘The Italians imagine’ ibid. 11.10.14

415
‘Otto Zeilinger’ Brenner, Stefan
Das Kriegsgefangenenlager in Knittelfeld: Eine Untersuchung der Akten des Kriegsarchivs Wien von den ersten Bemühungen Otto Zeilingers zur Errichtung des Lagers Knittelfeld bis zur Umwandlung des Kriegsgefangenenlagers in ein Militärspital
MA thesis Graz 2011 pp.45–85

415
‘It proved necessary’
La Vie quotidienne à Nice en Août 1914 d’après
l’Eclaireur de Nice

416
‘I have been too exhilarated’ NS 5.12.14

417
‘A crash programme’ Becker p.23

417
‘Specialist workers were’ ibid. pp.26–7

418
‘In Freiburg’ Chickering
Urban Life
p.358

418
‘Maynard Keynes’ Wittgenstein p.27 5.10.14

418
‘It is a load of private’ Grey to Percy Illingworth 20.9.14, Illingworth Papers

418
‘we do not feel’ Schädla diary 19.9.14

418
‘we had to retreat’ ibid. 23.9.14

418
‘Was it an attack’ ibid. 6.10.14

419
‘So we have even’ ibid. 22.10.14

419
‘Did you ever dance’ Asquith to VS 19.9.14 p.247

419
‘Poor Willy Macneil’ IWM Tennyson MS

420
‘It is my wish’ Horne, John (ed.)
State, Society and Mobilization in Europe during the First World War
CUP 1997 p.41

420
‘The Germans Have Killed’ Flood pp.87–8

420
‘the war as an educational’
Berliner Geschichtswerkstatt
p.183

420
‘Elfriede Kuhr’ Mihaly pp.71, 94

421
‘the children were awed’ Gudenhus-Schomerus p.130 4.11.14

421
‘The trade magazine’ Hirschfeld p.325 10.9.14

421
‘from their reserves’ Macarthur p.69

423
‘Most Europeans were now’ Herwig
Marne
p.101

424
‘I write a daily letter’ ibid. pp.157–8 8.8.14

424
‘You say that you’
www.ladepeche.fr
: 1914–18.
Scènes de vie quotidienne à l’arrière
2.11.08 Sabine Bernèd

424
‘in hope of atrocities’ Asquith p.13

425
‘Ten years ago’ Gleason, A.
What the Workers Want
London 1920 p.250

425
‘Never did I expect’ IWM P404 Baroness de T’Serclaes Vol. III

425
‘At Euston station’ ibid.

426
‘One can just sit down’ Wisthaler, Sigrid (ed.)
Karl Außerhofer: Das Kriegstagebuch eines Soldaten im Ersten Weltkrieg
Innsbruck UP 2010

426
‘church parades are’ ibid. p.102 3.11.14

426
‘English life and ways’
The Lady
3.12.14

426
‘Among the many’ ibid. 29.10.14

426
‘the task of feeding’ ibid. 22.10.14

427
‘Sailors whose vessels’ Mihaly p.99 8.11.14

427
‘The little girl and her friend’ ibid. p.88

427
‘a degenerate desire’ Verhey p.82

427
‘Let us pray’ Ambrožič, Matjaz
Dnevniški zapiski dr. Evgena Lampeta (1898–1917)
Ljubljana 2007 p.56

427
‘Everyone wishes ill’ ibid. p.51

427
‘An English acquaintance’ Cooper, C.E.
Behind the Lines: One Woman’s War
Norman & Hobbes 1982 pp.21–2

428
‘I find that I’ Murray, Gilbert
Faith, War and Policy
OUP 1918 p.9

428
‘We here, far inland’ Schädla diary 12.12.14

429
‘Every day there is’ Krafft-Krivanec pp.125–6

429
‘Soon all the committees’
The Lady
20.8.14

429
‘Once again, I forgot’ SB 7, 97/2–17

429
‘Everything has been’ Feilding, Lady Dorothie
Lady Under Fire on the Western Front
ed. Hallam, Andrew and Nicola Pen & Sword 2010 p.13

430
‘Alas I don’t think’ ibid. p.9

430
‘I don’t mind’ ibid. p.12

430
‘Archduchess Maria Josefa’ ASA diary of Rüdiger Freiherr Stillfried von Rathenitz B 863/1 RS (1894–1972) 19.9.14

430
‘The kind manner’
Die Neue Zeitung
no.259 20.89.14

431
‘The King seemed anxious’ Haig p.56

431
‘The King seemed very cheery’ ibid. p.83 4.12.14

431
‘not really fighting’ Asquith to VS 24.10.14 p.285

431
‘It is unbelievable’ ASA Pallavacini 9.10.14

432
‘the awful slaughter’ Hopman diary p.446 25.9.14

432
‘for the last 25’ ibid. p.441 18.9.14

432
‘Today I visited’ Krafft-Krivanec p.180

432
‘a November political intelligence’
Berliner Geschichtswerkstatt
p.124

432
‘We are a unified people’ Chickering p.438

433
‘Therefore it is our’ Horne p.94

433
‘Prussia is today’ Muehlon p.192

434
‘every man who’
Daily Chronicle
12.10.14

434
‘It is a hard task’
Abschiedsfeier für das Ersatzbataillon des Inf.-Rgts. 75
, Bremen 1914

2 NEWS AND ABUSE

434
‘If before the war’ Verhey p.111

435
‘it is with profound’
The Times
8.8.14

435
‘We never appreciated’ Leuchtenberg, William
The Perils of Prosperity 1914–32
Chicago University Press 1958 p.14

435
‘intemperate attacks’ Becker
The Great War and the French People
p.53

435
‘Ministers urged’ ibid. pp.67–8

436
‘It is … wise’ Belloc, Hilaire
The Two Maps of Europe
Pearson 1915 p.102

436
‘pacifist and financial’ Bennett, Arnold
The Letters of Arnold Bennett
ed. James Hepburn OUP 1968 2: 351

436
‘As war is pre-eminently’
New Statesman
1.9.14

437
‘he and Ford Madox Ford’ Buitenhuis, p.72

437
‘our first victory’ Verhey p.130

437
‘very strong and’ Becker
Guerre
p.58

438
‘If damaging rumours’ Ambrožič, Matjaž
Dnevniški zapiski
dr. Evgena Lampeta (1898–1917)
Ljubljana 2007 p.54

438
‘The introduction of trench’ Becker p.66

438
‘Austrian cities were said’ ibid. p.57

438
‘Yesterday evening a silly’ Wittgenstein pp.33–4

438
‘No good news’ ibid. p.36 30.10.14

439
‘These reports caused’ Kupferman, Fred
14–18: Mourir pour la patrie: Rumeurs, bobards et propagande
Editions du Seuil 1992 pp.212–13

Other books

Better Dead by Max Allan Collins
The Owl Keeper by Christine Brodien-Jones
Part-Time Wife by Susan Mallery
Giving Up the Ghost by Phoebe Rivers
A Tattooed Heart by Deborah Challinor
Miss Wrong and Mr Right by Bryndza, Robert
The Rise of Ransom City by Felix Gilman