CHAPTER PAGE
I.[INTRODUCTORY][1]
I.[THE GERMAN MODEL][1]
II.["CAVALRY IN FUTURE WARS"][7]
II.[SIR JOHN FRENCH ON THE ARME BLANCHE][15]
III.[THE BRITISH THEORY OF THE ARME BLANCHE][36]
IV.[CAVALRY IN COMBAT][53]
I.[INSTRUCTION FROM HISTORY][53]
II.[GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF COMBAT][66]
V.[TACTICS AGAINST THE VARIOUS ARMS][86]
I.[THE PURELY CAVALRY FIGHT][86]
II.[THE CHARGE UPON INFANTRY][94]
III.[THE DISMOUNTED ATTACK BY CAVALRY][98]
VI.[THE FIGHT OF THE INDEPENDENT CAVALRY][103]
I.[GERMAN VIEWS][103]
II.[THE BRITISH VIEW][124]
VII.[THE BATTLE OF ALL ARMS][133]
I.[GERMAN VIEWS][133]
II.[THE BRITISH VIEW][154]
VIII.[RECONNAISSANCE][163]
I. [WEAPONS][163]
II.[THE PRELIMINARY SHOCK-DUEL][168]
III.[DIVISIONAL RECONNAISSANCE][172]
IV.[SCREENS] [173]
IX.[THE RIFLE RULES TACTICS][186]
I.[GENERAL VON BERNHARDI ON SOUTH AFRICA][186]
II. [VIEWS OF THE GENERAL STAFF][200]
III.[OTHER CAVALRY VIEWS][205]
X.[THE MORAL][214]

GERMAN INFLUENCE ON BRITISH CAVALRY

[CHAPTER I]

INTRODUCTORY

I. The German Model.

Impartial observers of the recent controversy upon the merits of the lance and sword as weapons for Cavalry must have been struck by one singular circumstance—namely, that there exists in our language no standard modern work upon the tactics and training of Cavalry in modern war, written by a Cavalryman, accepted by Cavalrymen, and embodying and illustrating the lessons of the two great modern wars waged since the invention of the long-range, smokeless magazine rifle. Without such a work, controversy is seriously hampered. The need for it is beyond dispute.

Whatever the extent of the revolution brought about by the magazine rifle, a revolution, by universal admission, there is. Since 1901 a serious firearm has been substituted for the old carbine formerly carried by the Cavalry, and the Cavalry Manual has been rewritten, with increased stress on the importance of fire. It is also the fact that, from whatever causes, the lance and sword have proved, both in South Africa and Manchuria, almost innocuous weapons. These facts demand, to say the least, serious recognition from those who still hold that the lance and sword are the most important weapons of Cavalry. Angry letters to the daily press, desultory and superficial articles in the weekly and monthly press, are not enough. What is wanted is some comprehensive and authoritative exposition of what Cavalry functions are in modern war, how they have been modified by the firearm, and why, with chapter and verse, not by way of vague allegation, the only great wars in which that firearm has been tested are to be regarded as "abnormal" and uninstructive.

For illumination and confirmation on these matters, we are constantly referred, in defence of the lance and sword, by our own Cavalry authorities to foreign countries whose armies have had no experience at all of modern civilized war as revolutionized by the modern magazine rifle. We are referred, above all, to Germany, and, in particular, to the works of a German officer, General von Bernhardi, who (1) writes exclusively for the German Cavalry, without the most distant reference to our own; (2) whose own war experience dates from 1870, when he fought as a Lieutenant, and who has not seen the modern rifle used in civilized war; (3) who believes that no wars, ancient or modern, except the American Civil War of 1861-1865, afford an analogy to modern conditions, and that the modern Cavalryman must base his practice on "speculative and theoretical reflection"; (4) who states that the German Cavalry, owing to indifference to the revolution wrought by the modern firearm, and excessive adherence to "old-fashioned knightly combats," is at this moment wholly unprepared for war and is trained on Regulations which, though quite recently revised, he makes the subject of stinging and sustained ridicule; (5) who is so ignorant of the technique of fire-action by mounted troops that he renders it, unconsciously, more ridiculous even than shock-action; and (6) who firmly believes in the lance and sword, and in the shock-charge as practised "in the times of Frederick the Great and Napoleon."