achieved, will be very warmly appreciated by all ranks of the British Armies.
I thank you, too, for your noble tribute to those who have fallen. Our brave dead, whose blood has been shed together on the soil of your great country, will prove a bond to unite our two peoples long after the combined action of our Armies has carried the common cause for which they have fought to its ultimate triumph.
The unremitting efforts of our forces north and south of the Somme, added to the glorious deeds of your Armies unaided at Verdun, have already begun to break down the enemy’s powers of resistance; while the energy of our troops and their confidence in each other increases from day to day. Every fresh success that attends our arms brings us nearer to the final victory to which, like you, I look forward with absolute confidence.—Yours very truly,
(Signed) D. Haig, General,
Commanding-in-Chief, British Armies in France.
On the 26th Lieut.-General the Earl of Cavan sent the following message to Major-General G. Feilding:
Please convey to the Guards Division my thanks and admiration for the excellent manner in which they carried out their attacks to-day.
A fortnight later General Sir H. Rawlinson conveyed his appreciation of the part taken by the Guards Division in the battle in the following message:
It is only since the reports have come in that it has become clear that the gallantry and perseverance of the Guards Division in the battles of the 15th and 25th September were paramount factors in the success of the operations of the Fourth Army on those days.
On the 15th September especially, the vigorous