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The Proud Tower: A Portrait of the World Before the War, 1890-1914

Page 71

by Barbara W. Tuchman


  188 Basle Cathedral, “dangerous” consequences: Annual Register, 1912, 367.

  189 Jaurès’ speech: Joll, 155.

  190 A survey of French student life: Les Jeunes Gens d’Aujourd’hui, q. Wolff (see Chap. 5), 275.

  191 “If these were my last words”: Brockway, 39.

  192 Vorwärts on Austrian ultimatum: Vayo, 78.

  193 “We relied on Jaurès”: Zweig (see Chap. 6), 199.

  194 Jouhaux’s proposal to Legien: Joll, 162.

  195 La Bataille Syndicaliste: ibid., 161.

  196 Brussels Conference: Balabanoff, 4, 114–18; Vandervelde, 171; Stewart, 340; Joll, 164.

  197 Hardie, “Only the binding together”: Fyfe, 136.

  198 Jean Longuet quoted: Goldberg, 467.

  199 Bethmann-Hollweg: Joll, 167.

  200 Jaurès’ death: Humanité, Figaro, Echo de Paris, Aug.1/2.

  201 Spanish Socialist in Leipzig: Vayo, 81.

  202 Bernstein, “golden bridge”: Hans Peter Hanssen, Diary of a Dying Empire, Indiana Univ. Press, 1955, 15.

  203 Kaiser, Deschanel, Jouhaux: The Times, Echo de Paris, Aug. 5.

  Afterword

  1 Graham Wallas: Preface to 3rd ed. of Human Nature in Politics, 1921.

  2 Emile Verhaeren: La Belgique sanglante, Paris, 1915, Dédicace, unpaged.

  About the Author

  BARBARA W. TUCHMAN achieved prominence as a historian with The Zimmermann Telegram and international fame with The Guns of August, a huge bestseller and winner of the Pulitzer Prize. There followed five more books: The Proud Tower, Stilwell and the American Experience, in China (also awarded the Pulitzer Prize), A Distant Mirror, Practicing History, a collection of essays, and The March of Folly. The First Salute was Mrs. Tuchman’s last book before her death in February 1989.

 

 

 


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