4 “I often crossed over”: ibid., 73
   5 “Heavy on the water”: ibid., 49
   6 “When, as a little boy”: Bülow, II, 36
   7 “Believe me, Your Majesty”: ibid., 37
   8 “Today’s victory”: Magnus, 244
   9 “a marine Madame Tussaud’s”: Heckstall-Smith, 44
   10 “I can recall the portly figure”: ibid., 14
   11 “Propose abandon race”: Eckardstein, 45
   12 “old peacock”: Lee, I, 673
   13 “So, then, you’ll soon be off to India”: Magnus, 250
   14 “the Regatta used to be”: Eckardstein, 55
   15 “The Boss of Cowes”: ibid.
   16 “There’s no doubt about it”: Heckstall-Smith, 53
   17 “Half of them”: ibid., 52
   18 “If the Kaiser steered himself”: Bülow, II, 39
   19 “Nevertheless, as we approached Meteor”: Heckstall-Smith, 60
   Chapter 9
   Tirpitz and the German Navy Laws
   1 “because we do not have a fleet”: Herwig, 12
   2 “Who sold his last warship”: ibid., 16
   3 “sharp as jagged iron”: Tirpitz, Memoirs, I, 26
   4 “Sheer slop!”: ibid.
   5 “every man and every penny”: Herwig, Luxury Fleet, 14
   6 “our future is on the water”: Balfour, 206
   7 “Politics are your affair”: Hurd, 200
   8 “one is so far from the world”: Steinberg, 150
   9 “I was very mediocre”: Tirpitz, Memoirs, I, 2
   10 “Between 1864 and 1870”: ibid., 13
   11 “Don’t they look just like sailors”: ibid., 15
   12 “like a mechanic”: ibid., 47
   13 “It was a tossup”: ibid., 49
   14 “We do not know”: ibid., 39
   15 “the eleven best years”: ibid., 67
   16 “Here I have been listening to you”: ibid., 62
   17 “a crowd of ships”: ibid., 68
   18 “a high-minded man”: ibid., 60
   19 “displayed itself in a heterogeneous collection”: ibid., 61
   20 “Why was Nelson”: ibid., 76
   21 “like a gramophone record”: Steinberg, 72
   22 “a considerable force”: ibid., 83
   23 “My intentions... altered”: ibid., 85
   24 “Tirpitz was here”: ibid.
   25 “not a trace of enthusiasm”: ibid., 86
   26 “These are the facts”: ibid.
   27 “the Kaiser hopes to find”: ibid., 89
   28 “was lovely”: ibid., 96
   29 “Only the present State Secretary”: ibid.
   30 “He seems to be toying”: ibid., 109
   31 “and send the bill to the Reichstag”: ibid., 112
   32 “The Kaiser has no rights”: ibid.
   33 “Our doom”: ibid., 116
   34 “to seek out a place”: ibid., 103
   35 “I relinquished my command”: Tirpitz, Memoirs, I, 118
   36 Tirpitz’ June 1897 memorandum: Steinberg, 209–221
   37 “The Reichstag will never agree”: Hurd, 197
   38 “When I became State Secretary”: Tirpitz, Memoirs, I, 129
   39 “but there, money is of no importance”: ibid.
   40 “Every word of the draft Bill”: ibid., 126
   41 “With all the good will in the world”: Steinberg, 140
   42 Tirpitz interview with Bismarck: Tirpitz, Memoirs, I, 134
   43 “he liked the sailors... a hole in the shining coat”: ibid., 139
   44 “I smiled at them”: Hurd, 200
   45 “the development of our battle fleet”: Steinberg, 160
   46 “We are not thinking”: ibid., 164
   47 “Our fleet has the function”: ibid.
   48 “I find the totals”: ibid., 171
   49 “If the popular assembly allows”: ibid., 160
   50 “The present Reichstag”: ibid.
   51 “I considered it my duty”: Tirpitz, Memoirs, I, 143
   52 “All peoples”: Steinberg, 180
   53 “If it is true”: ibid., 194
   54 “There is, especially on the right side of this house”: ibid., 195
   55 “Long live the Kaiser... German Emperor, Berlin”: ibid., 196
   56 “is like the army”: ibid., 197
   57 “I declare expressly”: Hurd, 115
   58 preamble to the Second Navy Law: ibid., 121
   59 “the fare was homely”: Tirpitz, Memoirs, I, 210
   60 “With his swift comprehension”: ibid., 201
   61 “the air of the forest”: ibid., 205
   62 “I could never discover”: ibid., 128
   63 “For example”: ibid., 204
   64 “The naval policy of Germany”: Marder, I, 107
   65 “The... composition of the new German fleet”: ibid.
   66 “The Admiralty had proof”: ibid.
   PART 2: THE END OF SPLENDID ISOLATION
   Chapter 10
   Lord Salisbury
   1 “The Queen cannot conclude”: Tuchman, Proud Tower, 39
   2 “His bitterest detractors”: Willoughby de Broke, 186
   3 “as if to discover”: Young, 100
   4 “an almost embarrassing wealth”: Asquith, Fifty Years, I, 273
   5 “an existence among devils”: Gwendolen Cecil, I, 9
   6 “I am bullied”: ibid., 13
   7 “I am obliged”: ibid.
   8 “Never were two men”: ibid., 49
   9 “It is the peculiarity of my complaint”: ibid., 50
   10 “Your prohibition”: ibid.
   11 “That which is my main expense”: ibid., 59
   12 “never left cards”: ibid., 63
   13 “First rate men”: ibid., 158
   14 “blazing indiscretions”: ibid., II, 21
   15 “returning to the cold and greasy remains”: ibid., I, 71
   16 “I dislike and despise”: ibid., 96
   17 “Ah, Robert, Robert”: ibid., 97
   18 “My impression”: ibid., II, 45
   19 “that half-madman”: Blake, 605
   20 “a Russian agent”: ibid., 607
   21 “Oh! if the Queen were a man”: ibid., 637
   22 “much of the trouble”: Blake, 577
   23 “I do not know”: Blake, 746
   24 “Der Alte Jude”: ibid., 646
   25 “Six hours of my day”: Gwendolen Cecil, II, 287
   26 “He looks ill and sleeps badly”: A. L. Kennedy, Old Diplomacy, 37
   27 “Prince Bismarck with one hand”: Crankshaw, 350
   28 “What with deafness”: Gwendolen Cecil, II, 287
   29 “very agreeable indeed”: A. L. Kennedy, Salisbury, 126
   30 “laboring oar”: Gwendolen Cecil, II, 297
   31 “Order of Chastity”: A. L. Kennedy, Salisbury, 371
   32 “France is... England’s greatest enemy”: Gwendolen Cecil, IV, 106
   33 “by sympathy, by interest, by descent”: A. L. Kennedy, Salisbury, 67.
   34 “Nous sommes des poissons”: E.T.S. Dugdale, I, 249; DGP, IV, 265
   35 “the sea and her chalk cliffs”: Bülow, II, 38
   36 “England’s strength”: Queen Victoria, III, 23
   37 “Splendid Isolation”: Gwendolen Cecil, IV, 86
   38 “the supremacy of the interests of England”: ibid., 89
   39 “British foreign policy”: Taylor, Essays in English History, 125
   40 “A great sleeper”: Gwendolen Cecil, II, 16
   41 “One subject only”: ibid., III, 210
   42 “Do whatever you think best”: ibid., II, 238
   43 “Buccaneers”: ibid., III, 208
   44 “he had left a madman”: ibid., 214
   45 “I was told”: ibid., 25
   46 “Our political arrangements”: ibid., IV, 219
   47 “left a nasty taste”: ibid., II, 15
   48 “Hey, diddle diddle”: ibid., III, 8
   49 “There were evenings”: ibid., 6
   50 ? 
					     					 			??My father always treats me”: ibid., 12
   51 “N. has been very hard put to it”: ibid., 13
   52 “He may be able”: ibid.
   53 “What a dreadful thing”: Queen Victoria, I, 26
   54 “triumphant success”: ibid., 31
   55 “fortune would not be equal”: ibid., 34
   56 “Every day, I feel the blessing”: ibid., III, 37
   57 “if not the highest”: Tuchman, Proud Tower, 9
   58 “I will not have the Queen worried”: Gwendolyn Cecil, III, 190
   59 “Always speak the truth to the Queen”: ibid., 181
   60 “everything”: ibid., 182
   61 “Lord Salisbury offers this suggestion”: Queen Victoria, III, 593
   62 “I am too horrified”: ibid., 396
   63 “Lord Salisbury entirely shares”: ibid., 397
   64 “Letter received”: ibid., I, 443
   65 “Sir—In furtherance of the conversation”: ibid., 442
   66 “She had an extraordinary knowledge”: ibid., III, 186
   67 “It appears that his head”: ibid., 398
   68 “hot-headed, conceited”: ibid., 441
   69 “He was simply afraid to do so”: ibid., 442
   70 “an enormous calamity”: Gwendolen Cecil, IV, 364
   71 “It is a curious Nemesis”: Queen Victoria, I, 591
   72 “this perfectly useless piece of rock”: E.T.S. Dugdale, I, 172; DGP, IV, 53
   73 “possession of Heligoland”: ibid., II, 37; ibid., VIII, 16
   74 “The conditions you enumerate”: Queen Victoria, I, 614
   75 “Lord Salisbury quite understands”: ibid.
   76 “Your answer respecting Heligoland”: ibid., 615
   77 “confidentially”: A. L. Kennedy, Salisbury, 220
   78 “It is wise”: Gwendolen Cecil, IV, 367
   79 “Lord Salisbury respectfully draws”: ibid., 371
   80 “Lord Salisbury hopes”: ibid.
   81 “His Majesty gave the English”: Steinberg, 76
   82 “William is a little sore”: Queen Victoria, II, 547
   83 “Your Kaiser seems to forget”: Eckardstein, 59
   84 “Seeking an outlet”: Holstein Papers, I, 161
   85 “By his boorish behavior”: E.T.S. Dugdale, II, 339
   Chapter 11
   The Jameson Raid and the Kruger Telegram
   1 “I would annex the planets”: Elizabeth Pakenham (Longford), 25
   2 “the Colossus”: Garvin, III, 31
   3 “my darling”: Rotberg, 14
   4 “On one occasion”: ibid., 89
   5 “younger and more fiery sons”: Elizabeth Pakenham (Longford), 22
   6 “What have you been doing”: ibid., 34
   7 “If there be a God”: Rotberg, 415
   8 “When a community”: The Times
   9 “The nostrils of a racehorse”: Elizabeth Pakenham (Longford), 59
   10 “The eyes of an affectionate dog”: ibid.
   11 “a Scotch terrier”: ibid.
   12 “we drew closely together”: Rotberg, 127
   13 “All the ideas are Rhodes’”: Elizabeth Pakenham (Longford), 63
   14 “Anyone could take the Transvaal”: ibid., 62
   15 “I’m going”: Rotberg, 539
   16 “CRISIS IN THE TRANSVAAL”: The Times, January 1, 1896
   17 “The position of thousands of Englishmen”: ibid.
   18 “There are girls in the gold-reef city”: The Times, January 11, 1896
   19 “an act of war”: Elizabeth Pakenham (Longford), 47
   20 “a peaceful arrangement”: ibid.
   21 “If it were supported by us”: ibid.
   22 “a little nation which was Dutch”: William II, My Memoirs, 80
   23 “If the child is ill”: Gooch, History of Modern Europe, 215
   24 “To threaten us”: Balfour, 192; DGP, XI, 7
   25 “Our little republic”: E.T.S. Dugdale, II, 365
   26 “contrary to German interest”: ibid., 367; DGP, XI, 4
   27 “The status... is one”: Carroll, 366
   28 “We will wash”: ibid.
   29 “needed no instructions”: ibid.
   30 “had gone so far”: E.T.S. Dugdale, II, 368
   31 “absolutely blazing”: Balfour, 194
   32 “if it had been anyone else”: Steinberg, 83
   33 “Now suddenly”: Lee, I, 725
   34 “His Majesty developed”: Holstein Papers, II, 469
   35 “‘That would mean war’”: Lee, I, 721
   36 “Oh, no, don’t you interfere”: Holstein Papers, I, 162
   37 “I express my sincere congratulations”: Lee, I, 722
   38 “I express to Your Majesty”: ibid.
   39 “Nothing that the government has done”: Carroll, 372
   40 “universal delight”: Röhl, 166
   41 “tempestuous”: Bülow, IV, 665
   42 “crude and vehement”: ibid.
   43 “tore his hair”: Eckardstein, 86
   44 “England, that rich and placid nation”: Holstein Papers, I, 160
   45 “answered... in accordance with German public feeling”: Lee, I, 727
   46 “eine Staats-Aktion”: ibid., 722
   47 “an expression of the Kaiser’s annoyance”: Holstein Papers, I, 160
   48 “The Jameson Raid caused”: William II, My Memoirs, 80
   49 “The nation will never forget”: Lee, I, 723
   50 “England will concede nothing”: The Times, leader, January 7, 1896
   51 “With respect to the intervention”: The Times, January 7, 1896
   52 “to have an additional squadron”: ibid., January 9, 1896
   53 “this most gratuitous act”: Balfour, 195
   54 “Those sharp, cutting answers”: Queen Victoria, III, 20
   55 “My dear William”: Lee, I, 724–25
   56 “is entirely suited”: ibid., 725
   57 “hint to our respectable papers”: Queen Victoria, III, 13
   58 “Most beloved Grandmama”: Lee, I, 725
   59 “without enquiring too narrowly”: Queen Victoria, III, 20
   60 “I should like to hear”: Bülow, I, 340
   61 “You see, I was a naughty boy”: Elizabeth Pakenham (Longford), 99
   62 “should probably have joined Jameson”: Young, 173
   63 “Dr. Jim had personal magnetism”: Margot Asquith, III, 26
   64 “excess of zeal”: Elizabeth Pakenham (Longford), 119
   65 “Old Jameson”: Rotberg, 523
   66 “Neither”: ibid., 550
   67 “As to one thing”: Spender, Campbell-Bannerman, I, 198
   68 “Do not tell me”: Rotberg, 390
   69 “Thank goodness”: Elizabeth Pakenham (Longford), 256
   70 “So little done”: ibid., 158
   71 “The Jameson Raid”: Eckardstein, 85
   72 “in his telegram to Kruger”: Bülow, IV, 665
   73 “England will not forget”: ibid., 664
   74 “The incident may have its good side”: Tirpitz, Memoirs, I, 85
   75 “the outbreak of hatred”: ibid., 86
   Chapter 12
   “Joe”
   1 “The Republic must come”: Garvin, I, 152
   2 “The Divine Right of Kings”: ibid., 467
   3 “Lord Salisbury constitutes himself”: ibid., 392
   4 “a Sicilian bandit”: ibid., II, 80
   5 “My impression”: ibid., I, 467
   6 “In that case”: ibid.
   7 “I would advise him”: ibid.
   8 “round the garden walks”: Morley, Recollections, I, 148
   9 “swell”: ibid., 179
   10 “Here in England”: Lee, I, 333
   11 “it seems almost impossible”: Garvin, I, 79
   12 “Unfortunately, it wasn’t true”: ibid., 209
   13 “a man who never told the truth”: ibid., 227
   14 “Radical demagogue”: Magnus, 131
   15 “His strength in debate”: Spender, The Public Life, I, 88
					     					 			br />   16 “watched him and wondered”: ibid., 89
   17 “a man of obvious mystery”: ibid., 86
   18 “the Irish people are entitled”: Garvin, II, 21
   19 “It was mischievous or worse”: ibid., 147
   20 “To preserve the Union”: ibid., I, 140
   21 “It was unthinkable”: Spender, The Public Life, I, 88
   22 “Judas, after betraying his Master”: Garvin, II, 480
   23 “Traitorl”: ibid., 250
   24 “no fraternizing”: Spender, The Public Life, I, 88
   25 “Dear lady, welcome home”: Garvin, II, 371
   26 “Mrs. Chamberlain is very pretty”: ibid., 372
   27 “Mrs. Chamberlain looked lovely”: ibid.
   28 “was always ready to discuss politics”: A. L. Kennedy, Salisbury, 255
   29 “She unlocked his heart”: Garvin, II, 373
   30 “She brought my children nearer”: ibid.
   31 “must have been dear and refreshing”: ibid., 563
   32 “proud to call myself a Unionist”: Garvin, II, 607
   33 “frenzied enthusiasm”: ibid., 334
   34 “I am an Englishman”: ibid., 333
   35 “Already the weary Titan”: Asquith, Fifty Years, I, 290
   36 “Prince Bismarck has rendered us”: Garvin, I, 496
   37 “this incarnate representative”: ibid.
   38 “I don’t like to be cheeked”: ibid., 497
   39 “saw work to be done”: ibid., III, 9
   40 “I believe that the British race”: ibid., 27
   41 “It is not enough to occupy”: ibid., 19
   42 “My dear Salisbury”: ibid., 95
   43 “an ostentatious order”: ibid., 96
   44 “The shadow of war”: ibid., 179
   45 “If the panic”: Eckardstein, 93
   46 “Chamberlain has rather risen”: Garvin, III, 244
   47 “two-headed administration”: ibid., 203
   48 “Chamberlain has Salisbury”: ibid., 286
   49 “Affairs now are so difficult”: Queen Victoria, III, 22
   50 “Isolation is much less dangerous”: ibid., 21
   51 “public opinion”: ibid., 248
   52 “I agree with you”: ibid., 249
   53 “It is not a question”: Asquith, Fifty Years, I, 290
   54 “unquestionably the most energetic”: Eckardstein, 103
   55 “The English fleet”: Garvin, III, 262
   56 “would have to show himself”: ibid., 257
   57 “I admitted”: ibid., 260
   58 “if I thought that Parliament”: ibid.
   59 “The Jubilee swindle”: ibid., 269
   60 “At the same time”: ibid., 270