The National Review, Volume 70W.H. Allen, 1918 |
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Page 11
... result so far is confusion , mistrust , bewilderment , exasperation , and ever - deepen- ing disgust . Surely the forty - five millions of people inhabiting these islands and the four hundred millions in the British Empire are entitled ...
... result so far is confusion , mistrust , bewilderment , exasperation , and ever - deepen- ing disgust . Surely the forty - five millions of people inhabiting these islands and the four hundred millions in the British Empire are entitled ...
Page 18
... result of General Pétain's operations by the end of the third week of August is that , besides securing many thousands of prisoners and inflicting a mortifying blow on the enemy , on the west of the Meuse the French are up to the south ...
... result of General Pétain's operations by the end of the third week of August is that , besides securing many thousands of prisoners and inflicting a mortifying blow on the enemy , on the west of the Meuse the French are up to the south ...
Page 46
... distinguished General and then pitchforking him into a post without even ensuring that he has a chance of fulfilling the duties assigned to him . The result of this arrangement was that both Lord Kitchener and 46 THE NATIONAL REVIEW.
... distinguished General and then pitchforking him into a post without even ensuring that he has a chance of fulfilling the duties assigned to him . The result of this arrangement was that both Lord Kitchener and 46 THE NATIONAL REVIEW.
Page 47
result of this arrangement was that both Lord Kitchener and Sir A. Murray became jointly responsible for the supreme direction of the war , a system which was obviously foredoomed to failure . There is reason to believe that Sir A ...
result of this arrangement was that both Lord Kitchener and Sir A. Murray became jointly responsible for the supreme direction of the war , a system which was obviously foredoomed to failure . There is reason to believe that Sir A ...
Page 49
... results of Sir W. Robertson's policy have been the defeat of the German army on the Somme , which enabled the French to relieve Verdun and inflicted so severe a blow on the enemy , both in respect of casualties incurred and in the loss ...
... results of Sir W. Robertson's policy have been the defeat of the German army on the Somme , which enabled the French to relieve Verdun and inflicted so severe a blow on the enemy , both in respect of casualties incurred and in the loss ...
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