[785.] Politica Segreta Italiana, by Diamilla Muller, p. 346 (1891).

[786.] Copin Albancelli, Le Pouvotr occulte contre la France, p. 388.

[787.] Series of article entitled "Boche and Bolshevik" by Nesta H. Webster and Herr Kurt Kerlen, which appeared in the Morning Post for April 26, 27, June 10, 11, 15, 16, 1922. Reprinted in book form by the Beckwith Company of New York.

[788.] Boche and Bolshevik, p 39.

[789.] The General Staff and its Problems, II. 556

[790.] One of the pamphlets emanating from the first of these lines and entitled "England's War Guilt" reached the present writer. Its purport is to show that "England alone was the chief agent of the war," and that Lord Haldane and Sir Edward Grey, by encouraging Germany to believe that England would not intervene, led her into a trap.

[791.] Georges Goyau, L'Idée de Patrie et l'Humanitarisme, p. in (1913).

[792.] August 19, 1919.

[793.] My italics.

[794.] Daily Herald for January 26, 1923. So tender a regard did the Daily Herald entertain for the feelings of German magnates that its susceptibilities were deeply shocked at the correspondent of another paper, who, after lunching with Herr Thyssen, was so "ungentlemanly" as to comment afterwards on the display of wealth he had witnessed (Daily Herald for February 2, 1923). Yet the Daily Herald reporter had seen nothing ungentlemanly in attending a garden party at Buckingham Palace and publishing a sneering account of it afterwards under the heading of "Pomp and Farce in the Palace" (date of July 21, 1921).