134 “Abandon ship”: Corbett, I, 175.
   134 “the sun shining on pink”: Hoehling, 50.
   134 “a terrific crash”: Ibid.
   135 “This time we were so bold”: Thomas, 24.
   135 “Aboukir and Hogue sinking”: Corbett, I, 174.
   135 “a sudden explosion”: Hoehling, 52.
   135 “Keep cool, my lads”: Ibid., 54.
   136 “Knowing where they were supposed to be”: Patterson, Tyrwhitt, 73.
   136 “It was very difficult”: Hoehling, 55.
   136 “They looked just like rows and rows of swallows”: Patterson, Tyrwhitt, 73.
   136 “men climbed like ants”: Thomas, 25.
   136 “She careened far over”: Gray, 36.
   137 “On 22 September”: Groos, II, 56.
   137 “It is well-known”: The Times (London), September 25, 1914, 8.
   137 “of no great value”: Churchill, I, 326.
   137 “We heard Aboukir crying out”: Beatty Papers, I, 136.
   138 “It was pure murder”: Fisher, FGDN, III, 61.
   138 “The disaster . . . followed”: Churchill, I, 326.
   138 “One would expect senior officers”: Ibid., 327.
   138 “a cruiser patrol”: Marder, II, 58.
   138 “were placed in a cruel position”: Ibid., 55.
   138 “that most of the officers concerned”: Churchill, I, 327.
   138 “If one ship is torpedoed”: Goldrick, 133.
   140 “indiscriminate and distinctly barbarian”: Marder, II, 72.
   140 “cowardly weapon” and “the weapon of the weak”: Ibid., 70.
   143 “We can only approve”: Scheer, 62.
   144 “It is suicidal”: Jellicoe Papers, I, 71.
   144 “rely to a great extent”: Ibid., 75.
   144 “This may and probably will”: Ibid., 76.
   145 “full confidence in your contemplated conduct”: Marder, II, 76.
   CHAPTER 8: “SHALL WE BE HERE IN THE MORNING ? ”
   146 “The Grand Fleet was uneasy”: Churchill, I, 380.
   148 “Don’t spend another penny”: Marder, Anatomy, 467.
   148 “I got Rosyth delayed”: Fisher, Memories, 193.
   148 “I have always been ‘dead on’ for Cromarty”: Ibid., 214.
   148 “of the utmost gravity”: Marder, I, 421.
   149 “a great seawater lake”: Hewison, 6.
   150 “The great majority of the men”: Ibid., 52.
   151 “Having to choose between the two”: Ibid., 57.
   151 “The Admiralty have been so frequently charged”: Ibid.
   152 “I often wondered”: Jellicoe, Grand Fleet, 29.
   153 “I can only imagine”: Ibid., 30–31.
   153 “It appeared to me”: Ibid., 30.
   154 “No one, we believed”: Churchill, I, 381.
   154 “prepare for a torpedo attack”: Hewison, 69.
   154 “No trace of a submarine”: Jellicoe, Grand Fleet, 118.
   155 “the fleet could not remain at a base”: Ibid.
   155 “I long for a submarine defense at Scapa”: Jellicoe Papers, I, 73.
   155 “Shall we be here in the morning”: Scott, 276.
   155 “I think it is right that you should know”: Churchill, I, 389–91.
   156 “Every effort will be made”: Ibid., 391–92.
   157 “In pre-war days”: Jellicoe, Grand Fleet, 79.
   157 “No one seriously contemplated”: Churchill, I, 381–82.
   157 “Reproach has been levelled”: Ibid., 383.
   158 “I interpreted my duty”: Ibid., 240
   160 “It seems to be impossible”: FGDN, III, 131.
   CHAPTER 9: PRINCE LOUIS DEPARTS
   163 “We are only playing at war”: Chalmers, 161.
   163 “Winston, I hear”: Beatty Papers, I, 118.
   163 “If he would either leave”: Marder, II, 83.
   163 “If we only had a Kitchener”: Beatty Papers, I, 144.
   164 “waving his stick”: Gilbert, I, 173.
   165 “undertake command”: Ibid., 176.
   165 “What we desire”: Ibid., 197.
   165 “I can’t tell you”: Asquith, Letters to Venetia, 274.
   165 “such a darned fool”: Marder, II, 85.
   166 “a remarkably nice boy”: Brough, 88.
   166 “stick it out a bit longer”: Hough, L and V, 66.
   167 “My dearest Georgie”: Ibid., 111.
   167 “I hate the idea”: Marder, I, 406.
   168 “German princeling” and “court favorite”: Hough, L and V, 161.
   168 “I am sure you must miss”: Ibid., 163.
   168 “She hopes and expects”: Ibid., 171.
   168 “perhaps the outstanding officer”: Chatfield, 84.
   169 “There are literally hundreds”: Marder, I, 407.
   169 “He is the ablest officer”: Randolph Churchill, II, 534.
   169 “more English than the English”: Fisher, FGDN, II, 398.
   169 “if his name had been Smith”: Randolph Churchill, 534.
   169 “There is no one else”: Hough, L and V, 301.
   170 “All my experience at the Admiralty”: Randolph Churchill, II, 630.
   170 “unworthy of the royal mind”: Gretton, 88.
   170 “We met every day”: Churchill, I, 241.
   170 “It happened in a large number of cases”: Ibid.
   170 “I accepted full responsibility”: Ibid., 240.
   171 “Quite concur”: Marder, II, 88.
   171 “court favorite”: Hough, L and V, 88.
   171 “I heard by chance”: Marder, II, 86–87.
   171 “I have never known more malignant rancour”: Hough, L and V, 196.
   172 “Should a German boss our navy”: Ibid., 246.
   172 “to live more in England”: Kerr, 126.
   172 “never understood”: Ibid., 335.
   172 “Sir, when I joined the Royal Navy”: Churchill, I, 90.
   173 “whether it was true”: Hough, L and V, 301.
   173 Germhun: Ibid., 302.
   173 “The latest rumor”: Ibid., 300.
   174 “the conversation having turned”: Ibid., 303.
   174 “In time of war”: Ibid.
   174 “Dear Lord Charles Beresford”: Ibid., 304.
   175 “Prince Louis was a big man”: Marder, I, 407.
   175 “you must not ever consider leaving”: Hough, L and V, 305.
   175 “Winston has been pouring out his woes”: Ibid.
   175 “grave doubt is expressed”: Gilbert, I, 215.
   175 “Blood is said to be thicker than water”: Marder, II, 86.
   175 “Winston came here”: Asquith, Letters to Venetia, 287.
   176 “Poor Louis B’s resignation”: Hough, L and V, 307.
   176 “Louis behaved with great dignity”: Asquith, Letters to Venetia, 290.
   176 “I have lately been driven”: Churchill, I, 435.
   176 “I beg you to release me”: Gilbert, I, 225.
   176 “There is no more loyal man”: Nicholson, 251.
   176 “profound sorrow”: Kerr, 258.
   176 “mean and contemptible slander”: Ibid.
   176 “a national humiliation”: Ibid., 256.
   176 “It was an awful wrench”: Goldrick, 155.
   176 “up to the end”: Marder, II, 87.
   177 “On one day”: Haldane, 302.
   177 “before the war ended”: Ibid., 306.
   177 “he started and grew pale”: Nicholson, 309.
   177 “George Rex”: Hough, L and V, 319.
   177 “Arrived Prince Hyde”: Kerr, 289.
   177 “to right a great wrong”: Kerr, 285.
   CHAPTER 10: ADMIRAL VON SPEE’S VOYAGE
   179 “to keep the native population”: Hough, Pursuit, 29.
   180 “We must take advantage”: Ibid., 27.
   180 “Thousands of German Christians”: Balfour, 209.
   181 “as if he had swallowed a broom handle”: Hough, Pursuit, 20.
 &n 
					     					 			bsp; 181 “The women seemed”: Ibid., 32.
   182 “To my shame”: Ibid., 33.
   183 “I do not think we were far wrong”: Pochhammer, 16.
   183 “Very nice place, indeed”: Ibid., 22.
   183 “alone of the Marianas”: Ibid., 36.
   184 “a glorious sight”: Ibid., 42–43.
   184 “Strained relations”: Bennett, Naval Battles, 53.
   185 “threatened state of war”: Poch-hammer, 49.
   185 “The whole beautiful world”: Ibid., 51.
   185 “the British had elected”: Ibid., 55–56.
   185 “The monotonous noise”: Ibid., 60.
   186 “Von Spee was a cut flower”: Churchill, I, 295.
   187 “In event of a war against Great Britain”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 46.
   187 “It is impossible to judge from here”: Ibid., 64.
   190 “If coaling the whole squadron”: Ibid., 62.
   190 “We wish you success”: Pochhammer, 68.
   190 “I thank Your Excellency”: Hohenzollern-Emden, 39.
   190 “I shall proceed to Chile”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 63.
   191 “The seemingly limitless desert”: Pochhammer, 83.
   191 “In the evening”: Hough, Pursuit, 58.
   193 “If no enemy ship approaches”: Hirst, 72.
   194 “vastly to his astonishment”: Spencer-Cooper, 46.
   194 “to gaze at the outside”: Hough, Pursuit, 78.
   195 “in glorious sunlight”: Pochhammer, 135.
   196 “furniture removal”: Hohenzollern-Emden, 78.
   196 “we had five or six vessels collected”: Bennett, Naval Battles, 55.
   196 “The Emden’s company”: Ibid., 59.
   196 “the chief reason”: Marder, II, 104.
   197 “It is almost in our heart”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 72–73.
   CHAPTER 11: ADMIRAL CRADOCK’S VOYAGE
   198 “The map of the world”: Churchill, I, 296.
   198 “we could not be”: Ibid., 295.
   198 “as the days succeeded one another”: Ibid., 408.
   201 “Probably Scharnhorst, Gneisenau”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 54–55.
   203 “She was the fastest”: Chatfield, 47.
   203 “the guns . . . on the main deck”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 17.
   203 “It certainly is the limit”: Ibid.
   203 “Sir William White”: FGDN, II, 432.
   204 “Sighted Monmouth”: Hirst, 15.
   204 “Later on, when leave could be taken”: Ibid., 6.
   208 “It is advisable to operate”: Ibid., 57.
   208 “Gneisenau and Scharnhorst”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 80.
   208 “No certain information”: Ibid., 81.
   209 “Few can steam well”: Jane’s Fighting Ships—1914, 53.
   209 “If she did not break down”: Marder, II, 106.
   210 “Situation changed”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 82.
   211 “I have a feeling”: Sweetman, 79.
   211 “urgent importance”: Ibid.
   212 “it blew, snowed, hailed”: Spencer-Cooper, 22–23.
   212 “We finally got past caring”: Ibid., 23.
   212 “It seemed to both the captain”: Chatterton, Gallant Gentlemen, 70.
   213 “a good square meal”: Hirst, 52.
   213 “snug as a bug”: Ibid., 54.
   213 “She has already been condemned twice”: Ibid.
   213 “It appears that Scharnhorst”: Churchill, I, 410.
   213 “Does Defence join my command”: Ibid., 411.
   213 “regulations of the Panama Canal Company”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 91.
   215 “It always appeared to me”: Chatterton, Gallant Gentlemen, 71–72.
   215 “It would be best for the British ships”: Churchill, I, 411.
   215 “Settled”: Ibid.
   215 “I understand from our conversation”: Ibid., 411–12.
   216 “a citadel around which”: Ibid., 414.
   216 “entirely a contrary opinion”: Hirst, 94.
   217 “I trust circumstances”: Ibid., 93.
   217 For William Denbow, see: Hough, Great War, 96.
   217 “It is clear that”: Ibid., 412.
   218 “Good Hope left”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 95.
   218 “shining with that special, well-groomed”: Sweetman, 74.
   218 “would come wandering up”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 14.
   218 “one of our very best officers”: Fisher, FGDN, II, 101.
   218 “the navy was not”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 15.
   219 “When a hammock is being used”: Ibid., 14.
   219 “fought hard, played hard”: Hough, Pursuit, 86.
   219 “Engage the enemy more closely”: Sweetman, 74.
   219 he hoped when his time came: Dreyer, 90.
   219 “That ribbon”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 26.
   219 “Cradock thought his chances were small”: Marder, II, 111.
   219 “only in case”: Ibid., 112.
   219 “I will take care”: Ibid., 111.
   219 “The admiral was a very brave old man”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 92.
   219 “He knew what he was up against”: Ibid., 95.
   219 “With reference to orders”: Churchill, I, 416.
   220 “gravely preoccupied” and “This telegram is”: Ibid.
   220 “Defence is to remain”: Ibid., 417.
   221 “The words ‘sufficient force’ must have seared”: Hirst, 96–97.
   221 “tired of protesting”: Ibid., 97.
   221 “I am going to attack the enemy now”: Ibid., 29.
   221 “I am sure I should”: Churchill, I, 416.
   221 “Speaking of Admiral Cradock’s position”: Ibid., 418.
   221 “Two of the lieutenant commanders”: Hirst, 99.
   221 “Monmouth, Good Hope and Otranto coaling”: Churchill, I, 417–18.
   222 “alone this time”: Chatterton, Gallant Gentlemen, 72.
   222 “that we expected to sight the enemy”: Ibid.
   224 “Clear the decks”: Pochhammer, 138.
   224 “Maneuver well executed”: Hirst, 101.
   224 like a haystack: Pitt, 5.
   CHAPTER 12: THE BATTLE OF CORONEL
   225 “in a quarter of an hour”: Pitt, 57.
   225 “Does my smoke”: Pochhammer, 141.
   225 “When the sun was sufficiently low”: Ibid, 141–43.
   226 “We had in sight”: Chatterton, Gallant Gentlemen, 74.
   226 “But when we saw those damned four funnels”: Copplestone, 236.
   227 “We all thought he would leave Otranto”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 38.
   227 “I cannot go down and engage”: Ibid.
   228 “Follow in the admiral’s wake”: Pitt, 8.
   228 “I am going to attack”: Hirst, 105.
   228 “And now began the saddest”: Churchill, I, 422.
   229 “the most rotten show imaginable”: Marder, II, 113.
   229 “The waves rose high”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 31.
   230 “The enemy had the range perfectly”: Hirst, 106.
   230 “As the two big enemy ships”: Copplestone, 143.
   231 “her funnels illuminated”: Hickling, 47.
   231 “She looked like a splendid firework display”: Copplestone, 143.
   232 “The moon was rising”: Chatterton, Gallant Gentlemen, 77.
   232 “Are you all right”: Hirst, 109.
   233 “I want to get stern to sea”: Ibid., 110.
   233 “I felt that I could not help her”: Chatterton, Gallant Gentlemen, 78.
   233 “It was obvious”: Hirst, 110.
   233 “It was awful having to leave”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 35.
   233 “utterly dispirited”: Hickling, 50–51.
   234 “Both British armored cruisers”: Bennett, Coronel an 
					     					 			d the Falklands, 36.
   235 “I fired until the Monmouth”: Sweet-man, 72.
   235 “It was terrible to have to fire”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 37.
   235 “Have sunk enemy cruiser”: Ibid.
   235 “Bravo, Nürnberg”: Pochhammer, 154.
   235 “With God’s help”: Ibid., 157.
   236 “The creature just lay there”: Copplestone, 145.
   236 “Good Hope, though bigger than Scharnhorst”: Pitt, 65.
   236 “pretty, black-eyed women”: Pochhammer, 163.
   237 “When I went ashore”: Pitt, 64.
   237 “drunken, mindless idiot”: Ibid., 66–67.
   237 “I drink to the memory”: Ibid.
   237 “They will do nicely for my grave”: Ibid.
   237 “I am quite homeless”: Hough, Pursuit, 116.
   237 “Defence has been ordered”: Churchill, I, 419.
   238 “We were already talking to the void”: Ibid.
   238 “The Admiralty have no official confirmation”: Official Naval Dis-patches, 32.
   238 “a belligerent warship”: Ibid., 33.
   238 “Can you imagine”: Marder, II, 115.
   238 “the British have allowed their old cruisers”: Sweetman, 73.
   238 “Poor old Kit Cradock”: Beatty Papers, I, 159.
   239 “He had no clear plan”: Marder, II, 110.
   239 “I fear he saw red”: Chalmers, 180.
   239 “let himself be caught”: Marder, II, 110.
   239 “I cannot accept for the Admiralty”: Churchill, I, 414–16.
   239 “It ought not to be necessary”: Ibid., 424.
   240 “we could instantly concentrate”: Ibid., 414.
   240 “The Defence had been refused him”: Marder, II, 111.
   240 “I will take care I do not suffer”: Ibid.
   241 “We are of the opinion”: Churchill, I, 426.
   241 “Why did . . . [Cradock] attack”: Corbett, I, 356–57.
   242 “by attacking the memory”: Bennett, Naval Battles, 102.
   242 “Not under control”: Hirst, 124.
   CHAPTER 13: “VERY WELL, LUCE, WE’LL SAIL TOMORROW”
   244 “Carnarvon, Cornwall should join”: Churchill, I, 469.
   245 “But I found Lord Fisher in a bolder mood”: Ibid., 465.
   245 “Order Invincible”: Ibid., 466.
   245 “Sir John Jellicoe rose to the occasion”: Ibid.
   245 “important not to weaken the Grand Fleet”: Jellicoe Papers, I, 82.
   246 “Once ships fall into dockyard hands”: Churchill, I, 473.
   246 “The earliest possible date”: Ibid.
   246 “Friday the thirteenth”: Ibid.
   246 “Invincible and Inflexible are needed”: Ibid., 475.