247 “to keep an eye on Charlie”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 124.
   247 “that damned fool”: Bennett, Naval Battles, 105.
   247 “one of the most brilliant”: Hough, Great War, 105.
   247 “pedantic ass”: Tarrant, Invincible, 44.
   248 “Never such utter rot”: Fisher, FGDN, III, 77.
   248 “The destruction of the German [Spee’s] Squadron”: Bennett, Naval Battles, 105.
   248 “Very well, we sail”: Ibid., 58.
   248 “Your main and most important duty”: Ibid., 59.
   248 “small flocks”: Tarrant, Invincible, 46.
   250 “In some trepidation”: Hickling, 66.
   250 “Very well, Luce, we’ll sail tomorrow”: Ibid.
   253 “1. Little result”: The Naval Staff guidelines for Spee appear in Hirst, 156–58.
   253 “proposed to put”: Tirpitz, II, 83–84.
   254 “to encroach in any way”: Ibid., 84.
   254 “What are your intentions”: Hirst, 159.
   254 “The cruiser squadron intends to break through”: Pitt, 72.
   254 “German if possible”: Ibid., 73.
   255 “The seas were huge”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 134.
   255 “Rain clouds hung over the jagged peak”: Pochhammer, 191.
   CHAPTER 14: THE BATTLE OF THE FALKLAND ISLANDS
   258 “A four-funnel and a two-funnel”: Hirst, 171.
   258 “Enemy in sight”: Ibid.
   258 “Well, for God’s sake, do something”: Hickling, 74.
   258 “Mr. Hirst, go to the masthead”: Hirst, 173.
   259 “Send the men to breakfast”: Pitt, 103.
   259 “He came at a very convenient hour”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 140.
   259 “engage the enemy”: Ibid., 142.
   259 “As we got near the harbor entrance”: Dixon, 26.
   260 “Admiral Spee arrived at daylight this morning”: Churchill, I, 436.
   260 “As we approached”: Pochhammer, 201.
   261 “Do not accept action”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 143.
   262 “The visibility of the fresh, calm atmosphere”: Pochhammer, 202.
   262 “It was a perfect day”: Hough, Great War, 113.
   262 “struck by the magnificent weather”: Tarrant, Invincible, 56.
   262 “No more glorious moment”: Hirst, 177.
   263 “Two vessels soon detached themselves”: Pochhammer, 202–3.
   263 “ships’ companies have time”: Tarrant, Invincible, 57.
   263 “Picnic lunch”: Ibid.
   264 “transports or colliers”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 144.
   264 “Towards noon”: Pochhammer, 203–4.
   264 “to get along with the work”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 145.
   264 “Engage the enemy”: Hirst, 179.
   264 Fidgety Phill: Tarrant, Invincible, 58.
   264 “the roar from the forward turret guns”: Verner, 8.
   265 “Gneisenau will accept action”: Pitt, 110.
   266 “The German firing was magnificent”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 147.
   266 “It is certainly damned bad shooting”: Hickling, 82.
   267 “we did not seem to be hitting”: Tarrant, Invincible, 61.
   267 “At this rate”: Hickling, 82.
   267 “With the sun still shining on them”: Pitt, 112.
   267 “A shell grazed”: Pochhammer, 206.
   268 “Every minute we gained”: Ibid., 208.
   268 “The thick clouds of smoke”: Ibid., 209.
   269 “for the first time, I experienced the luxury”: Verner, 10–11.
   270 “a truly lovely sight”: Hough, Pursuit, 155.
   270 “She was being torn apart”: Tarrant, Invincible, 67.
   270 “rapid independent”: Pitt, 118.
   270 “We were most obviously hitting”: Verner, 11.
   270 For the signals between Spee and Maerker, see Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 149–50.
   270 “Endeavor to escape”: Pitt, 128.
   271 “the men with their powder-blackened faces”: Pochhammer, 210.
   272 “All men overboard”: Ibid., 217.
   273 “We cast overboard”: Spencer-Cooper, 104–5.
   273 “Lower all your boats”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 154.
   273 “The ship inclined”: Pochhammer, 217–22.
   274 “Flag to Inflexible”: Ibid., 227.
   274 “In the name of all our officers”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 155–56.
   276 “Am anxious to save life”: Hirst, 191.
   276 “If anyone can reach the ensign”: Ibid., 194.
   277 “We are a crippled old ship”: Dixon, 19.
   277 “Our shooting was rotten”: Ibid., 22.
   279 “outrageous” and “an overwhelming desire”: Pochhammer, 240.
   279 “emphatic and unanimous”: Verner, 25.
   279 “There is nothing at all to show”: Copplestone, 169.
   280 “Well, Beamish”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 154.
   281 “It really is a spanking victory”: Ibid., 166–67.
   281 “It has done us all”: Beatty Papers, I, 174.
   281 “like an armadillo”: FGDN, III, 77.
   281 “the only substantial victory”: Fisher, Records, 221.
   281 “We cannot but be overjoyed”: Fisher, FGDN, III, 91.
   281 “This was your show”: Churchill, I, 452.
   282 “Your letter pleasant”: Ibid.
   282 “criminal ineptitude”: FGDN, III, 101.
   282 “report fully reason”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 171.
   282 “Their Lordships selected me”: Marder, II, 125–26.
   282 “Last paragraph”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 173.
   283 “dilatory and theatrical”: Tarrant, Invincible, 71.
   283 It was “an irony”: Marder, II, 124.
   283 “No one in history”: Bennett, Coronel and the Falklands, 137.
   284 “at the head of some magnificent gorge”: Hirst, 219.
   285 “villainous-looking face” and “pendulous nose”: Dixon, 60.
   CHAPTER 15: FISHER RETURNS TO THE ADMIRALTY
   287 “He is a wonderful creature”: Asquith, Letters to Venetia, 266–67.
   287 “We talked all day”: Churchill, I, 73.
   287 “fell desperately in love”: Fisher, FGDN, II, 397.
   288 “My dear Winston”: Randolph Churchill, Young Statesman, 530.
   288 “My dear Fisher”: Ibid.
   288 “My beloved Winston”: Churchill, I, 79.
   288 “I want to see you very much”: Randolph Churchill, Young Statesman, 532.
   288 “I plied him with questions”: Churchill, I, 77.
   288 “I began our conversations”: Ibid., 78.
   288 “I think Winston Churchill”: Mackay, 432.
   288 “betrayed the navy”: Randolph Churchill, Young Statesman, 565.
   289 “The liquid fuel problem”: Churchill, I, 132–33.
   289 “Contact with you”: Mackay, 454.
   289 “Winston is quite cross”: Ibid.
   289 “Tomorrow old Fisher comes down”: Gilbert, I, 216.
   289 “[Watching] him narrowly to judge”: Churchill, I, 401–02.
   289 “make our country feel”: Gilbert, I, 215.
   289 “that I could work”: Churchill, I, 402.
   290 “with some reluctance”: Marder, II, 90.
   290 “He seems as young as ever”: Ibid.
   290 “He is already a Court Favorite”: Gilbert, I, 226.
   290 “Undoubtedly the country will benefit”: Ibid., 227.
   290 “They have resurrected old Fisher”: Chalmers, 160–61.
   291 “horrible appointment”: Wemyss, Life and Letters, 186.
   291 “Everything began to move”: Bacon, Fisher, II, 161–62.
   292 “a genius without a doubt”: Fisher, FGDN, II, 409.
   292 “I was ne 
					     					 			ver in the least afraid”: Churchill, I, 402.
   292 “Lord Fisher was the most distinguished”: Ibid., 403.
   292 “the formidable energy”: Ibid., 405.
   292 “I can’t dine out”: Gilbert, I, 264.
   292 “Once, I remember”: Gretton, 198.
   293 “extraordinary spectacle”: Hough, Great War, 145.
   293 “an almost unsleeping watch”: Churchill, I, 405.
   293 “we made an agreement”: Ibid.
   293 “Port and starboard lights”: Ibid., 406.
   294 “everything that can be finished”: Ibid., 454.
   294 “make his wife a widow”: Keyes, Memoirs, I, 130.
   295 “large light cruisers”: Marder, II, 96.
   295 “They were an old man’s children”: Churchill, I, 459.
   295 “Lord Fisher hurled himself”: Ibid., 456.
   295 “order to his subordinates”: Gilbert, I, 228.
   295 “I backed him up”: Churchill, I, 460.
   296 “a projectile”: Fisher, FGDN, I, 291.
   296 “criminal folly”: Marder, II, 192.
   296 “a million Russian soldiers . . . within eighty-two miles”: Bacon, Fisher, II, 188.
   296 “on that 14 miles”: FGDN, II, 455.
   296 “convoy and land”: James, A Great Seaman, 138.
   296 “We gratefully accept”: Churchill, II, 39.
   297 “storm and seize”: Marder, II, 186.
   297 “a palpable reluctance”: Churchill, II, 42.
   297 “Churchill would often look in”: James, A Great Seaman, 144.
   297 “I am wholly with you”: Churchill, II, 43.
   297 “Although the First Sea Lord’s strategic conceptions”: Ibid., 41–42.
   298 “how an attack on Borkum”: Marder, II, 190.
   298 “Welcome back”: Gilbert, I, 264.
   298 “We one and all”: Ibid., 184.
   298 “First Sea Lord to see”: Churchill, II, 358.
   298 “Winston has so monopolized”: Fisher, FGDN, III, 99–100.
   299 “The situation is very curious”: Beatty Papers, I, 173.
   299 “inkling that he was”: Bonham Carter, 321.
   CHAPTER 16: “ THE REQUIREMENTSOF THE COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF WEREHARD TO MEE T ”
   300 “weakening the Grand Fleet”: Winton, 154.
   300 “Is Princess Royal to go”: Goldrick, 172.
   300 “Princess Royal’s coal expenditure”: Jellicoe Papers, I, 81.
   301 “Princess Royal should have proceeded”: Goldrick, 172.
   301 “The Tiger is absolutely unfit” and “a present for the Germans”: Fisher, FGDN, III, 68.
   301 “We cannot rely”: Jellicoe Papers, I, 97.
   301 “The inferiority”: Ibid., 99.
   301 “I admit the force”: Fisher, FGDN, III, 82.
   303 “we must always be ready”: Ibid., 443.
   303 “The requirements”: Churchill, I, 443.
   304 “Since war began”: Ibid., 445.
   304 “We cannot reinforce you”: Ibid., 447.
   304 “I think we have to stand fast”: Ibid.
   304 “As A. K. Wilson observed”: Ibid., 448.
   305 “The coast has been so denuded”: Ibid., 445.
   305 “The Admiralty have in mind”: Ibid.
   305 “I regret to appear importunate”: Jellicoe Papers, I, 94.
   305 “as I am directed to use this base”: Churchill, I, 447.
   305 “I know perfectly well”: Ibid.
   305 “have five torpedoes each”: Churchill, I, 447.
   305 “You know the difficulty”: Jellicoe Papers, I, 103.
   305 “wearing”: Churchill, I, 448.
   305 “No one can blame”: Ibid., 447–48.
   306 “It is necessary to construct”: Ibid., 527–28.
   306 “The next day”: Scott, 272.
   307 “The ships could not accompany the fleet”: Jellicoe, Grand Fleet, 173.
   308 “mislead the Germans”: Churchill, II, 299.
   308 “astonished to see”: Denham, 50.
   CHAPTER 17: THE YARMOUTH RAID AND ROOM 40
   310 “the battle fleet must avoid”: Scheer, 68.
   310 “escort the cruisers”: Goldrick, 159.
   310 “I don’t want”: Waldeyer-Hartz, 127.
   311 “Two battle cruisers”: Groos, II, 265.
   312 “Early in the morning”: Churchill, I, 440–42.
   313 “I won’t wear it”: Waldeyer-Hartz, 129.
   313 “It appeared that the risk”: Groos, II, 267.
   313 “One could not assume”: Ibid.
   314 “short, thick-set man with keen blue eyes”: Beesly, 9.
   314 “a mauve shirt”: Ibid., 10.
   315 “The fuses are lit”: Kahn, Enigma, 19.
   316 “the German light cruiser Magdeburg”: Churchill, I, 462.
   316 number 151: Beesly, 5.
   317 “drying before Ewing’s fire”: Kahn, Enigma, 24.
   317 “Some days earlier”: Ibid.
   317 “SKM key”: Beesly, 24.
   317 “No fears”: Ibid.
   318 “virtual certainty”: Ibid.
   CHAPTER 18: THE SCARBOROUGH RAID: “WITHIN OUR CLAWS”
   319 Queen of Watering Places: Daily Mail, Dec. 17, 1914, 8.
   319 “greatness, vastness of enterprise”: Perrett, introduction.
   320 “I could see in the mist”: Daily Mail, Dec. 17, 1914, 6.
   320 “Just before eight o’clock”: Ibid.
   320 “resolutely in bed”: Roskill, Beatty, 105.
   321 “was killed”: Daily Telegraph, Dec. 19, 1914, 10.
   322 “a special lookout”: Ward, 7.
   324 “deplorable” and “which was stationed”: Keyes, Memoirs, 151.
   324 “1,150 shells”: Groos, III, 82.
   324 “The Germans have come”: Daily Chronicle, Dec. 17, 1914, 7.
   325 “I must get that medal”: Daily Mail, Dec. 18, 1914, 5.
   325 “Look, there’s my teddy bear”: Ibid.
   325 “assassin squadron” and “Scarborough bandits”: Marder, II, 149.
   325 “the stigma of the baby-killers”: The Times, Dec. 21, 1914, 8.
   325 “a colossal act of murder”: Ibid.
   325 “The bombardment . . . was”: Daily Chronicle, Dec. 17, 1914, 8.
   326 “So far as the Hartlepools”: Ibid.
   326 “Demonstrations of this character”: Ward, 28.
   326 “The best police force”: Marder, II, 148.
   326 “It would no doubt”: The Times, Dec. 18, 1914, 9.
   326 “The purpose of the Royal Navy”: Ibid., Dec. 17, 1914, 9.
   326 “We hope that the authorities”: Ward, 28–29.
   327 “There has been”: Daily Telegraph, Dec. 18, 1914, 10.
   327 “Cannot we use”: Ibid., Dec. 19, 1914, 10.
   327 “This does not, however, prevent”: Scheer, 68.
   329 “Have lost touch”: Waldeyer-Hartz, 133.
   329 “Bombardment off shore”: Ibid.
   330 For the conversation between Hipper and Raeder, see ibid., 134.
   330 “decided in favor”: Groos, III, 77.
   330 “with remarkable coolness”: Ibid., 78.
   331 “Operation completed”: Goldrick, 202.
   331 “Where is the main fleet”: Waldeyer-Hartz, 136.
   332 “flying raid” and “insult bombardment”: Marder, II, 130.
   332 “They can never again”: Goldrick, 191.
   332 “Good information just received”: Churchill, I, 465.
   333 “before daylight tomorrow”: Ibid.
   333 “were precisely the sort”: Goldrick, 192.
   334 “A great deal of cruising”: Churchill, I, 464.
   334 “was only thirty miles south”: Groos, III, 63.
   335 “an imperturbability”: Goodenough, 86.
   335 “never spoke”: Goldrick, 215.
   335 “passed in the dark”: Young, 90.
   336 “I think raid”: Ibid.
   CHAPTER 19: T 
					     					 			HE SCARBOROUGH RAID: HIPPER ESCAPES
   338 “fairly turned tail”: Corbett, II, 28.
   339 “Here at last”: Marder, II, 136.
   339 “Our premature turning”: Scheer, 71.
   339 “Never again”: Goldrick, 195.
   339 the one heaven-sent opportunity: Churchill, I, 472–73.
   339 “On December 16”: Tirpitz, II, 285.
   339 “There was . . . no compulsion”: Churchill, I, 473.
   341 “Am keeping in touch”: Young, 93.
   341 “I am being chased”: Ibid.
   342 “if I might lead around”: Chatfield, 129.
   342 “The fine sunrise”: Young, 92.
   342 “Are you going after Roon”: Corbett, II, 29.
   342 “Have heard nothing of Roon”: Goldrick, 197.
   343 “Scarborough being shelled”: Young, 94.
   343 For the exchange of signals between Warrender and Beatty, see Young, 94.
   343 “I was in my bath”: Churchill, I, 466.
   343 “The bombardment of open towns”: Ibid., 467–68.
   345 “Light cruisers must go in”: Goldrick, 202.
   345 “Enemy will in all probability”: Corbett, II, 36.
   345 “Enemy is probably returning”: Churchill, I, 468.
   345 “At eleven o’clock”: Ibid., 475.
   346 “Engaged with enemy cruisers”: Young, 97.
   347 “Tell that light cruiser”: Ibid., 98.
   347 “Light cruiser resume station”: Corbett, II, 38.
   347 “Enemy’s cruisers bearing south by east”: Goldrick, 206.
   348 For the signals exchanged between Beatty and Goodenough, see Chalmers, 171, and Goldrick, 206.
   348 “Enemy in sight”: Goldrick, 207.
   348 “No, not until the Vice Admiral signals”: Dreyer, 103.
   349 “Our golden moment”: Ibid., 103–4.
   349 “He never spoke to me”: Ibid., 103.
   349 “Enemy cruisers and destroyers in sight”: Corbett, II, 40.
   349 “Enemy’s course east”: Goldrick, 208.
   350 “Relinquish chase”: Ibid., 209.
   351 “Am being chased”: Groos, III, 256.
   351 “five enemy battleships”: Ibid., 257.
   351 “Enemy is out of sight”: Ibid.
   351 “Are you in danger”: Ibid., 258.
   351 “No”: Ibid.
   352 “Telegraph and telephone”: Churchill, I, 468–69.
   353 “Twenty destroyers”: Goldrick, 209.
   353 “Certainly not advisable” and “It is too late”: Ibid.
   353 “I had a most trying day”: Keyes, Memoirs, I, 145.
   353 “The High Seas Fleet is at sea”: Ibid.
   353 In the Admiralty War Room: For the discussion, see Churchill, I, 470.
   354 “We sent you a terrible message”: Keyes, Memoirs, I, 148–49.