Page 121 of Dreadnought


  Richard B. Haldane

  Sir Edward Grey

  Jennie Churchill, 39, in 1893

  Winston Churchill and his mother in 1912 Winston was 37, Jennie 58.

  Winston Churchill in 1904 when he crossed the aisle, abandoning the Unionists to join the Liberals.

  The First Lord inspecting naval cadets, 1912.

  H.M.S. Dreadnought assuming the role of flagship of the Home Fleet in 1907.

  Notes

  ABBREVIATIONS USED IN NOTES

  BD British Documents on the Origins of the War, 1898–1914, ed. G. P. Gooch and Harold Temperley, II vols., London, His Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1927–38

  DGP Die grosse Politik der europäischen Kabinette, 1871–1914, 53 vols., Berlin, 1921–27. Cited by document number. Selected translations into English were done by E.T.S. Dugdale. They are cited together in the Notes.

  FGDN Fear God and Dread Nought: Correspondence of Admiral of the Fleet Lord Fisher, ed. A. J. Marder, 3 vols., London, Jonathan Cape, 1952–59

  KAUTSKY Outbreak of the World War, German Documents Collected by Karl Kautsky, New York, Oxford University Press, 1924

  LVS Letters to Venetia Stanley, by H. H. Asquith, selected and edited by Michael and Eleanor Brock, New York, Oxford University Press, 1982

  PRO Public Record Office, Kew, England

  Trafalgar

  1 “those far distant, storm-beaten ships”: Mahan, The Influence of Seapower upon the French Revolution and Empire, 118

  2 “No captain can do very wrong”: Howarth, 73

  Introduction:

  Sea Power

  1 “black-browed little Spaniards”: Daily Mail, June 26, 1897

  2 “The victualing yard”: PRO, ADM-179, No. 55

  3 “Chief among the foreigners”: Daily Chronicle, June 26, 1897

  4 “even now, the muzzles”: ibid.

  5 “by no means conducive”: The Times, June 26, 1897

  6 “Will they stand the wear and tear”: Daily Mail, June 26, 1897

  7 “The United States officers”: Daily Chronicle, June 26, 1897

  8 “Germany has sent us”: Daily Mail, June 26, 1897

  9 “I deeply regret”: Daily News, June 26, 1897

  10 “a great highway”: Mahan, The Influence of Seapower upon History, 25

  11 “Give me six hours”: Puleston, 117

  12 “France is, and always will remain”: Lady Gwendolen Cecil, IV, 106

  13 “The countries with which”: Paul Kennedy, Antagonism, 191

  14 “I am just now not reading but devouring”: Puleston, 159

  15 “It closed the ranks of the Entente”: Churchill, World Crisis, I, 114–115

  16 “lest she tread on the toes”: Daily Mail, June 28, 1897

  17 “No one looked better”: Daily News, June 28, 1897

  18 “Perhaps her lawlessness”: The Times, June 28, 1897

  19 “Admirals just presented”: PRO, ADM-179, No. 55

  20 “lines of fire”: Daily Chronicle, June 28, 1897

  21 “a myriad of brilliant beads”: Daily News, June 28, 1897

  22 “a fairy fleet”: Daily Mail, June 28, 1897

  23 “At the stroke of twelve”: ibid.

  PART 1: THE GERMAN CHALLENGE

  Chapter 1

  Victoria and Bertie

  1 “I have a feeling for our dear little Germany”: Strachey, 177

  2 “An imbecile, a profligate, and a buffoon”: Longford, 62

  3 “What would you like”: ibid., 27

  4 “You must not touch those”: ibid., 28

  5 “There is no royal road to music”: ibid., 31

  6 “I am nearer to the throne”: ibid., 32

  7 “I am very young”: ibid., 61

  8 “the best-hearted, kindest”: ibid., 66

  9 “All dogs like me”: ibid., 74

  10 “I intend to train myself”: ibid., 130

  11 “Albert’s beauty is most striking”: ibid., 133

  12 “delicate moustachios... beautifulfigure”: ibid.

  13 “It is with some emotion”: ibid., 132

  14 “You forget, my dearest Love”: ibid., 140

  15 “ill or not, I NEVER, NEVER”: ibid., 143

  16 “the husband, not the master”: ibid., 148

  17 “We prayed that our little boy”: Esher, 2

  18 “spoke German like their native tongue”: Lee, I, 17

  19 “had been injured by being with the Princess Royal”: Magnus, 9

  20 “What you say of the pride”: Longford, 271

  21 “Luncheon: meat and vegetables”: ibid., 276

  22 “Dress... the outward sign”: Esher, 11

  23 “A gentleman does not indulge”: Lee, 1, 49

  24 “You may well join”: Magnus, 17

  25 “I feel very sad about him”: ibid., 25

  26 “You will find Bertie grown up”: ibid., 27

  27 “Bertie has a remarkable social talent”: ibid.

  28 “Bertie’s propensity is indescribable laziness”: ibid., 32

  29 “I am very sorry”: ibid., 28

  30 “He was immensely popular”: ibid., 41

  31 “good looks, health”: Battiscombe, 17

  32 “She is a good deal taller”: ibid., 21

  33 “a pearl not to be lost”: ibid., 23

  34 “Outrageously beautiful”: Magnus, 46

  35 “Alix has made an impression”: ibid., 49

  36 “with a heavy heart”: ibid., 51

  37 “fight a valiant fight”: ibid.

  38 “I am at a very low ebb”: ibid., 52

  39 “How am I alive”: Longford, 307

  40 “Oh, that Boy”: Magnus, 52

  41 “that wicked wretches”: Longford, 315

  42 “After a few commonplace remarks”: Magnus, 59

  43 “I frankly avow”: ibid., 60

  44 “How beloved Albert”: ibid., 62

  45 “dear, gentle Alix”: ibid., 66

  46 “He gives you his blessing!”: ibid., 67

  47 “You may think that I like”: ibid.

  48 “So, my Georgie boy”: Nicolson, King George V, 42

  49 “The Princess had another bad night”: Battiscombe, 83

  50 “I am anxious to repeat”: Strachey, 303

  51 “After ’61”: Magnus, 77

  52 “anything of a very confidential nature”: Longford, 365

  53 “The Prince of Wales... has no right to meddle”: Magnus, 166

  54 “Freddy, Freddy, you’re very drunk”: ibid., 92

  55 “repulsive, vulgar, bad and frivolous”: ibid., 120

  56 “Bertie and Alix left Windsor today”: ibid., 73

  57 “In those heart-rending moments”: Longford, 389

  58 “and as there are 27 archdukes”: Magnus, 101

  59 “I should like to be your son”: Longford, 274

  60 “The weather is still excellent”: Morton, 101

  61 “could never rid himself”: Bülow, IV, 463

  62 “stain forever”: Lee, I, 250

  63 “The country, and all of us”: Longford, 365

  64 “You remind me, my dearest Mama”: Magnus, 197

  65 “One day she chanced to look”: Battiscombe, 209

  66 “She has only to say that the P. of W. has never been fond of reading”: Magnus, 123

  67 “The Prince of Wales writes to me that there is not much use his remaining”: ibid., 236

  68 “Well, ma’am, as soon as I get back”: William II, My Early Life, 78

  69 “We are not amused”: Strachey, 395

  70 “Everyone likes flattery”: Longford, 401

  71 “Today, Lord Beaconsfield”: Strachey, 347

  72 “that half-mad firebrand”: Magnus, 165

  73 “the danger to the country”: Longford, 518

  74 “he speaks to me as if I were a public meeting”: Strachey, 336

  75 “How different, how very different”: Longford, f.n. 569

  Chapter 2

  Vicky and Will
y

  1 “Oh, Madam, it is a Princess”: Longford, 153

  2 “Queen, queen, make them obey me”: Balfour, 64

  3 “Victoria, go and fetch it yourself”: Longford, 259

  4 “Bertie is my caricature”: Magnus, 28

  5 “not to entertain the possibility”: Empress Frederick, Letters, 8

  6 “Poor, dear child!”: Strachey, 279

  7 “I think it will kill me”: Barkeley, 60

  8 “I am not of a demonstrative nature”: Longford, 269

  9 “You ask me... what I think”: Empress Frederick, 10

  10 “Endless dark corridors”: Paget, 53

  11 ‘To govern a country”: Balfour, 67

  12 “You cannot think how dull”: Empress Frederick, 16

  13 “She delivered judgement”: Balfour, 66

  14 “She came from a country”: ibid., 65

  15 “Our darling grandchild... came walking”: Empress Frederick, 24

  16 “a clever, dear, good little child”: Cowles, 29

  17 “The poor arm is no better”: Empress Frederick, 68

  18 “He... would be a very pretty boy”: ibid., 120

  19 “My greatest troubles”: William II, My Early Life, 37

  20 “the weeping prince”: ibid.

  21 “the result justified [the] method”: ibid., 37

  22 “Hinzpeter was really a good fellow”: Kürenberg, 14

  23 “His education will... be an important task”: Lamar Cecil, “History as Family Chronicle,” in Röhl and Sombart, Kaiser Wilhelm II: New Interpretations, 95

  24 “a stern sense of duty”: William II, My Early Life, 31

  25 “Willy is a dear”: Balfour, 81

  26 “I am sure you would be pleased”: Empress Frederick, 119

  27 “happy hours spent”: William II, My Early Life, 20

  28 “It is impossible to find two nicer boys”: Empress Frederick, 168

  29 “Willy would be satisfied”: ibid., 174

  30 “the feverish haste and restlessness”: William II, My Early Life, 158

  31 “passionately interested... to go to Egypt”: ibid., 162

  32 “It was so big”: ibid., 17

  33 “I knew nothing”: Bismarck, The Man and the Statesman, I, 346

  34 “Fritz a furious letter”: Empress Frederick, 41

  35 “A loyal administration”: ibid., 46

  36 “Fritz... has for the first time in his life”: ibid., 43

  37 “we are dreadfully alone”: ibid.

  38 “I feel that I am now every bit as proud”: Empress Frederick, 65

  39 “To us and to many”: ibid., 138

  40 “I wonder why Bismarck”: ibid., 191

  41 “A bottle of champagne”: William II, My Early Life, 95

  42 “I really found my family”: Lamar Cecil, “History as Family Chronicle,” in Röhl and Sombart. Kaiser Wilhelm II: New Interpretations, 96

  43 “my son, the complete Guards officer”: Holstein Papers, II, 34

  44 “nice but silly”: Balfour, 86

  45 “For a woman in that position”: ibid., 87

  46 “Hallelujah Aunts”... “blessed set of donkeys”: Lamar Cecil, “History as Family Chronicle,” in Röhl and Sombart, Kaiser Wilhelm II: New Interpretations, 98

  47 “the English colony”: ibid., 99

  48 “a false and intriguing character”: ibid., 100

  49 “our state of dependence on England”: William II, My Early Life, 210

  50 “Considering the unripeness”: Bismarck, New Chapters, 6

  51 “My service in the Foreign Office”: William II, My Early Life, 211

  52 “Now Bismarck governs”: Holstein Papers, II, 202

  53 “Have you asked the Crown Princess?”: ibid., 195

  54 “Everyone agrees”: ibid., 164

  55 “You have only to look”: ibid., 195

  56 “knowing her liking for stewed peaches”: ibid., 166

  57 “My father... has a soft heart”: Thomas Kohut, “Kaiser Wilhelm II and His Parents,” in Röhl and Sombart, Kaiser Wilhelm II: New Interpretations, 75

  58 “Now I cannot talk to my father”: ibid., 76

  59 “The extraordinary impertinence”: Balfour, 101

  60 “the old hag”: Holstein Papers, 11, 254

  61 “William is always much surprised”: Balfour, 101

  62 “He did not condescend”: Empress Frederick, 200

  63 “The dream of my life”: ibid., 215

  64 “The doctors determined”: Bismarck, The Man and the Statesman, II, 331

  65 “not more dangerous”: William II, My Early Life, 284

  66 “recovery of my father’s voice”: ibid., 285

  67 “the idea of a knife touching his dear throat”: Barkeley, 193

  68 “the greatest living authority”: Holstein Papers, II, 344

  69 “fibromatous swelling... like any other mortal”: William II, My Early Life, 285

  70 “My arrival gave little pleasure”: ibid., 288

  71 “You ask how Willy was”: Empress Frederick, 256

  72 “My father took his sentence”: William II, My Early Life, 289

  73 “To think that I have such a horrid, disgusting illness”: Empress Frederick, 260

  74 “My darling has got such a fate”: Queen Victoria, I, 359

  75 “The more failing”: Longford, 503

  76 “emaciation and the yellow color”: William II, My Early Life, 294

  77 “I thank you”: Empress Frederick, 286

  78 “At this moment of deep emotion”: Queen Victoria, I, 390

  79 “In my entire ministerial career”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 205

  80 “My own dear Empress Victoria”: Longford, 505

  81 “What a woman!”: ibid., 506

  82 “he assured me he would”: Queen Victoria, I, 405

  83 “a jolly little body”: Holstein Papers, I, 142

  84 “I don’t understand”: Bülow, IV, 618

  85 “It was terrible”: Queen Victoria, I, 408

  86 “I soon noticed”: William II, My Early Life, 300

  87 “We are living in sad times”: Empress Frederick, 229

  88 “The Crown Princess’s behavior is typical”: Holstein Papers, II, 348

  89 “the English Princess who is my mother”: Thomas Kohut, “Kaiser Wilhelm II and His Parents,” in Röhl and Sombart, Kaiser Wilhelm II: New Interpretations, 79

  90 “The decisive interference”: William II, My Early Life, 285

  91 “though he fully believed”: Queen Victoria, I, 377

  92 “Am in greatest distress”: ibid., 416

  93 “I am broken-hearted”: ibid., 417

  94 “Darling, darling, unhappy child”: ibid., 507

  95 “None of my own sons”: ibid., 417

  96 “Try, my dear Georgy”: Magnus, 202

  97 “Colonel Swaine arrived from Berlin”: Queen Victoria, I, 417

  98 “The Queen is extremely glad”: ibid., 421

  99 “Let me ask you to bear with poor Mama”: ibid., 423

  100 “There are many rumors”: ibid., 424

  101 “where I hope to meet”: ibid., 425

  102 “Trust that we shall be very cool”: ibid., 429

  Chapter 3

  “Blood and Iron”

  1 “not as friends, but as tools, like knives and forks”: Stern, 231

  2 “A Swabian family”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 177

  3 “he was the clever sophisticated son”: Taylor, 12

  4 “by no means intended”: ibid., 18

  5 “I asked myself what harm the Indians had done me”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 21

  6 “I have never been able to put up with superiors”: Taylor, 20

  7 “I like piety”: ibid., 28

  8 “On a night like this”: ibid.

  9 “We have been saved”: ibid., 56

  10 “Yes, it is a hot day”: Robertson, 85

  11 “It is one of those houses”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 73
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  12 “When I have been asked”: ibid., 87

  13 “on ice”: Taylor, 43

  14 “Bismarck receives no news”: Cranksnaw, Bismarck, 103

  15 “Hidden in a steep ravine”: ibid., 123

  16 “Were I at all inclined”: ibid., 124

  17 “Periculum in mora!” Eyck, 53

  18 “He is here”: Taylor, 51

  19 “Germany does not look”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 133

  20 “The Prussian monarchy”: Robertson, 128

  21 “Here in the Landtag”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 139

  22 “Whether the Germans in Holstein”: ibid., 164

  23 “Austria was no more wrong”: Taylor, 87

  24 “the thankless task”: Robertson, 212

  25 “You know that I was against this war”: Bismarck, The Man and the Statesman, II, 52

  26 “It is France which has been beaten at Sadowa”: ibid., 220

  27 “If you want war”: ibid., 221

  28 “with a very, very heavy heart”: Eyck, 168

  29 “The honor and interests of France”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 263

  30 “an assurance that he will never”: ibid., 267

  31 “to the last gaiter button”: Robertson, 259

  32 “I don’t like so many Frenchmen”: Taylor, 133

  33 “We are no longer looked upon”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 299

  34 “I’d sooner have had a horse”: Taylor, 134

  35 “haloed by the iron radiance”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 304

  36 “His words inspire respect”: Robertson, 299

  37 “The Emperor is not my monarch”: Balfour, 21

  38 “The fig leaf of absolutism”: ibid., 23

  39 “Can’t we get into a side street?”: Eckardstein, 17

  40 “I took office”: Taylor, 164

  41 “It is not easy to be emperor”: ibid., 137

  42 “I am bored”: ibid., 138

  43 “I have the unfortunate nature”: ibid., 12

  44 “Faust complains”: ibid.

  45 “Far from it, I am all nerves”: ibid.

  46 “You see, I am sometimes spoiling for a fight”: Holstein Papers, II, 39

  47 “That seems to me to be rudeness”: ibid., 52

  48 “Oh, he never keeps his friends for long”: ibid., I, 126

  49 “Part of the trouble”: ibid.

  50 “I am no orator”: Taylor, 198