| Edmund Burke - 1917 - 608 pages
...in the history of the War that the French, peering through the moonlight at what they thought to be stealthily crawling Germans, found them to be wounded men frozen to death." Lord Northcliffe gives a particularly full account of the Italian fighting and the capture of Gorizia.... | |
| Alfred Harmsworth Northcliffe (Viscount) - 1916 - 382 pages
...in the history of the War that the French, peering through the moonlight at what they thought to be stealthily crawling Germans, found them to be wounded...their countenances that I need no other evidence as to the tragedy through which they have passed. The vast battle of Verdun might have been arranged for... | |
| Alfred Harmsworth Northcliffe (Viscount) - 1916 - 380 pages
...in the history of the War that the French, peering through the moonlight at what they thought to be stealthily crawling Germans, found them to be wounded...their countenances that I need no other evidence as to the tragedy through which they have passed. The vast battle of Verdun might have been arranged for... | |
| Alfred Harmsworth Northcliffe (Viscount) - 1917 - 296 pages
...in the history of the War that the French, peering through the moonlight at what they thought to be stealthily crawling Germans, found them to be wounded...their countenances that I need no other evidence as to the tragedy through which they have passed. The vast battle of Verdun might have been arranged for... | |
| Alfred Harmsworth Northcliffe (Viscount) - 1917 - 302 pages
...in the history of the War that the French, peering through the moonlight at what they thought to be stealthily crawling Germans, found them to be wounded men frozen to death. l During the war, in France and in Flanders, in camps and in hospitals, I have conversed with at least... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1917 - 638 pages
...in the history of the War that the French, peering through the moonlight at what they thought to be stealthily crawling Germans, found them to be wounded men frozen to death." Lord Northcliffe gives a particularly full account of the Italian fighting and the capture of Gorizia.... | |
| Charles Francis Horne, Walter Forward Austin - 1923 - 490 pages
...in the history of the War that the French, peering through the moonlight at what they thought to be stealthily crawling Germans, found them to be wounded men frozen to death. plainly horror and misery depicted upon their countenances that I need no other evidence as to the... | |
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