271 â
These beastly Huns
' Ian McLaine
Ministry of Morale
Allen & Unwin 1979 p. 139
272 â
because they did not feel
' Amery op. cit. p.754 18.12.43
273 â
by far the best
' Dalton op. cit. p.677
273 â
he didn't know why
' ibid. p.736
273 â
He never really understood
' John Wheeler-Bennett
John Anderson Viscount Waverley
Macmillan 1962 p.224
274 â
There is no better warhorse
' ibid. p.256
275 â
He has had no political training
' Dalton op. cit. p.729
275 â
I am in exceptionally good form
' ibid. 20.3.42
275 â
the three profs
' Amery op. cit. p.707
276 â
that the work people
' Headlam op. cit. p.231 5.12.40
277 â
I was disgusted to hear
' Colville op. cit. 2.9.41
277 â
Of eight serious strikes
' BNA AVIA10/269
277 â
a marked absence of discipline
' BNA CAB102/406
277 â
had failed to improve
' BNA CAB70/6
277 â
Strikes continue to cause
' BNA INFI/282 October 1943
277 â
Byrd complained to
' BNA FO371/34115
278 â
I do not see why
' Kennedy MS op. cit. 12.3.42
278 â
Of all wartime industrial disputes
' P. Inman
Labour in the Munitions Industries
HMSO and Longmans 1957
278 â
The Cost of Living Index
' Inman op. cit. p.365 passim
279 â
it became necessary to
' W.H.B. Court
Coal
Longman 1951 p.158
279 â
The mining community
' quoted ibid. p.452
279 â
One can hardly overstress
' Inman op. cit. p.325
279 â
The center of the problem
' BNA CAB123/21
280 â
many of the people
' Min of Health report Cmd.6468
280 â
children in rags
' Richard Titmuss
History of the Second World War: Problems of Social Policy
HMSO 1950 p.115
280 â
From the way men like
' Headlam op. cit. p.243 9.3.41
280 â
Labour MPs, in turn
' Colville op. cit. p.401 19.6.41
281 â
Except for our Fighting Services
' Hansard 29.7.41
282 â
We [Chamberlain's ministers in early 1940]
' quoted McLaine op. cit. p.104
283 â
I was fortunate
' Brooke op. cit. p.247 10.4.42
283 â
no very great contribution
' ibid. p.246 9.4.42
284 â
In many respects he is
' ibid. p.249 11.4.42
284 â
The CIGS told his staff
' Kennedy MS op. cit. 5.4.42
284 â
The extraordinary thing
' ibid.
284 â
I am in entire agreement
' 12.4.42 Kimball op. cit. vol. i p.448
286 â
we are proceeding
' Kimball ibid. p.459
286 â
Arrangements are being made
' ibid. p.515
287 â
This universal cry
' Brooke op. cit. p.243 30.3.42
288 â
I might be the best
' Halifax diary op. cit. 31.3.42
288 â
Concerning the second front
' O.A. Rzheshevsky
Stalin and Churchill: Meetings, Conversations, Discussions
Moscow 2004 pp.113 & 190
289 â
We do not consider this
' ibid. p.157
290 â
It is the irony
' Joan Beaumont
Comrades in Arms
Davis-Poynter 1980 p.99
290 â
Considerable though these
' ibid. p.142
290 â
sending very few aircraft
' ibid. p.147
291 â
They offered no definite
' Rzheshevsky op. cit. p.231
291 â
preparations for the second front
' ibid. p.222
291 â
Finally, we think it
' ibid. p.250
291 â
First, and as the Russian leader
' F. Chuev
140 Conversations with Molotov
Moscow 1991 p.258
292 â
Here Churchill interrupted
' ibid. p.319
292 â
Roosevelt had calmly told
' Harvey op. cit. 10.6.42
292 â
We had to squeeze
' Chuev op. cit. p.66
292 â
the High Contracting Parties
'
Pravda
14.6.42
293 â
found Churchill “smarter”
' Chuev op. cit. p.26
293 â
I knew them all
' ibid. p.65
293 â
As for Roosevelt
' ibid. p.67
294 â
Two-thirds of weapons
' French op. cit. passim
295 â
This vicious rag should
' BNA PREM4/26/8 7.6.42
295 â
Advocacy of a second front
'
Washington Despatches
ed. H.G. Nicholas Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1981 25.7.42
295 â
A US officer at dinner
' Kennedy MS op. cit. 5.4.42
295 â
No Englishman here
' BNA CAB109/47 Birley to Jacob
296 â
We simply hold no cards
' Dykes diary 12.10.42 quoted Danchev op. cit. p.20
296 â
Private secretary John Martin
' Hassett op. cit. p.68
296 â
No responsible British
' Churchill Archive JACB1/14
297 â
It was Britain's beleaguered
' Douglas Porch
Hitler's Mediterranean Gamble
Weidenfeld & Nicolson 2004 p.208
297 â
Anti-British feeling is still
'
Washington Despatches
op. cit. 14.5.42
297 â
there was little point in supplying
' ibid. 26.6.42
297 â
These English are too aggressive
' Hassett op. cit. 20 & 24.6.42
297 â
a delightful companion
' ibid. 20.6.42
298 â
I knew when I saw
' BNA FO371/30656
299 â
All the old animosities
' USNA RG84 Box 5
299 â
Phrases such as
' ibid. OWI Survey No. 113 10.6.42
299 â
The OWI's July survey
' USNA OWI Survey No. 114 1.7.42
299 â
Some 65 per cent said
' USNA OWI No.117 29.8.42
300 â
The dominant underlying feeling
' BNA FO371/30656
300 â
The Asiatic war has revived
' Yale Lippmann Papers 18.4.42
300 â
old-fashioned imperialism
' BNA FO371/30656 Clark Kerr Despatch 28.9.42
300 â
The Embassyâ¦has a quite fantastically
' BNA FO371/30656 6.7.42
301 â
were about as friendly
' BNA FO371/30656 5.10.42
302 â
We must have a victory!
' Harvey op. cit. 22.6.42
302 â
I told him what Winston
' Kennedy MS op. cit. 18.7.42
302 â
The people do not like
' IWM Cons Shelf P Yates letters 22.6.42
302 â
I myself felt
' quoted Mosley op. cit. p.254
303 â
The enemy did not seem
' Hodgson diary op. cit. p.293
303 â
Mr Churchill's speech did not
' ibid. 5.7.42
303 â
We heard yesterday
' IWM G.W. King 85/49/1 22.6.42
303 â
Russian successes continue
' BNA INF1/292 26.1.42-1.2.42
304 â
We received nothing
' Brooke op. cit. p.223 27.1.42
304 â
There is an extraordinary
' Kennedy MS op. cit. 23.3.42
304 â
Little as I formerly liked him
' IWM Cons Shelf P 2.1.42
304 â
That danger will never come
' McLaine op. cit. p.210
304 â
Reactionary attitudes are spreading
' IWM Belsey 92/12/1 6.8.42
305 â
When the Anglo-Soviet Alliance
' IWM Papers of Mrs E. Elkus
305 â
English people are willing
'
Pravda
5.8.42
306 â
Every week of successful
' BNA INF1/284
306 â
Ismay said that he admired
' Nicolson op. cit. 7.8.42
308 â
The troubleâ¦is that
' Macmillan op. cit. p.46 20.3.43
308 â
I suppose that, with the exception
' Sir Alan Lascelles
King's Counsellor
Weidenfeld & Nicolson 2006 p.41 24.7.42
309 â
The fact that, during one of
'
Los Angeles Times
28.6.42
309 â
Winston is I think
' Amery op. cit. p.818 6.7.42
310 â
His speech sounds very good to us
'
Mrs Millburn's Diaries
Harrap 1979 1.7.42
310 â
He is a giant among pygmies
' Headlam op. cit. p.322
310 â
It is to be hoped that the PM
' Millburn op. cit. p.145 2.7.42
310 â
The simple question
'
The Times
1.7.42
311 â
a most objectionable young pup
' Brooke op. cit. 3.7.42
311 â
“discreditable” and “deplorable”
' Reynolds op. cit. p.303
311 â
The cheek of the young brute
' Brooke op. cit. 3.7.42
311 â
May I suggest with all respect
' BNA AIR8/1074 Dill JSM 300 Aide Memoire on Future Operations 16.7.42
312 â
Churchill, however, believes
' Wallace diary 25.5.43 quoted J.M. Blum (ed.)
The Price of Vision
Houghton Mifflin 1977
312 â
Well, how are we
' Kennedy MS op. cit. 18.7.42
313 â
We failed to see
' Pogue op. cit. vol. iii p.330
315 â
What energy and gallantry
' Harvey op. cit. 30.7.42
315 â
He felt the need
' Eden op. cit. p.338
316 â
looked exactly as though
' Ronald Winfield
The Sky Belongs to Them
William Kimber 1976 p.69
316 â
Often had I seen
' WSC
The Second World War
op. cit. vol. iii p.412
316 â
Old Miles
' Harvey op. cit. p.307 14.10.43
316 â
There seem to me
' IWM 4/27/1 8.7.42 Papers of Lt.Gen. Sir Charles Gairdner
317 â
far too many cases
' Charles Richardson op. cit. p.119
317 â
In the Middle East there was
' Moorehead op. cit. p.412
318 â
I intend to see every
'
Speaking for Themselves
op. cit. p.467 9.8.42
318 â
The general received his dismissal
' Kennedy MS op. cit. 23.8.42
319 â
All right. You can have
' Roskill
Churchill and the Admirals
op. cit. pp.236-7
321 â
Our NKVD resident
'
Studies on the History of Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service
Moscow 2007 op. cit. 4.8.42
322 â
Churchill departed for the USSR
' ibid. 12.8.42
322 â
We know from a reliable source
' ibid.
325 â
I am downhearted and dispirited
' Moran op. cit. p.68 13.8.42
326 â
You know, I was not
' Harriman op. cit. p.161
326 â
May God prosper
' Moran op. cit. p.138
327 â
Don't be afraid
' Golovanov
Memoirs
Moscow 2007 p.345
328 â
No one but the Prime Minister
' Richardson op. cit. p.144
328 â
Churchill was decidedly
'
Action this Day
op. cit. pp. 215-16
329 â
He appealed to sentiments
' Brooke op. cit. p.300 13.8.42
329 â
Stalin told me the British Navy
' Harriman op. cit. p.161
330 â
When Harriman reported
' ibid. p.169
331 â
The deliveries were curtailed
' Trukhanovsky op. cit. pp.283-4
332 â
savages
' Harriman op. cit. p.352
332 â
He commissioned the ambassador's wife
' CAC Churchill Papers CHAR1/379/12-20
334 â
have changed so frequently
'
The Times
19.8.42
334 â
While I grumble
' Garfield op. cit. p.280
334 â
When looking back
' Brooke op. cit. p.314 24.8.42
335 â
was the only one trying
' ibid. p.324 24.9.42
335 â
super-chief of staffâ¦Dill agreed
' Amery op. cit. p.830 25.8.42
336 â
Churchill later described
' Moran op. cit. p.85
336 â
It is an awful thing
' Amery op. cit. p.838 24.9.42
336 â
a “bent” man, and couldn't
' Harvey op. cit. 9.10.42
336 â
The dominance of Churchill
' Hume Wrong diary 4.11.42
336 â
He sat down
' Kennedy MS op. cit. 17.10.42
337 â
If we are beaten
' Moran op. cit. p.91
337 â
the unnecessary battle
' Porch op. cit. p.290
337 â
Winston was like
' Lascelles op. cit. pp.66-7 23.10.42
339 â
I am terribly anxious
' Amery op. cit. p.840 26.10.42
339 â
How minute and fragile
' Norman Craig
The Broken Plume
IWM 1982 p.79
339 â
There is more jam
' Nicolson op. cit. 2.11.42
339 â
If
Torch
succeeds
' Brooke op. cit. p.338 4.11.42
340 â
A sense of exaltation
'
The Times
11.11.42
341 â
The self-respect of the British Army
' Dalton op. cit. p.519
343 â
Pity our 1st victorious general
' Bonham-Carter diary op. cit. 7.11.42
343 â
It was nice Monty
' Kennedy MS op. cit. 1.8.43