A. F. (Albert Pollard) Pollard
Capitolo 76
later this war of positions once more it resulted in a war of movement.
The lines had been stabilized, and between Reims and their Alps
you don't alter from half a dozen of miles to some September point 1914
up to September 1918. The question of October was if and where
they would be sheltered among the Aisne and the sea.
Joffre is revolving movement it was quickly to oppose to, if not indeed
preoperating, from the command tallest German, and in the first days of
There was a general motion of German strengths toward their right October
and the harbors of Channel. The most greater part and the best of the new taxes were expeditious
in Belgium, and the stoutest gathers in the line of fight it was
moved by West East. Alsace was almost bared; the Bavarians
you/he/she had stirred from Lorraine toward Lille and Arras and the Duke of
Württemberg in Flanders Belgian. Von Bulow was expeditious to face
Castelnau and Maud'huy among the Oise and the Sums, and only Von
Kluck and the Crown Prince with a new general, Von Heeringen, from
Alsace had gone away to hold the line of the Aisne. Von Moltke was
replaced by Falkenhayn, and a new phase came above to the German strategy.
The knock-out hit against France had gone to void and the small English
Army threatened with growing. France had been the only enemy that the Germans had
counted in the west, but a new enemy was developing strength and the
German forehead was turned to satisfy the danger of novel.
The British army made a movement that was comprehensive with this
change and symptomatic of the future course of the war. Clearly it was
out of place along the Aisne in trenches that could be contained from French
territorials and where its long communications crossed those of three
Manages French. Need was had in Flanders next to its bases and to the
Harbors of channel that the German ones had now resolved to grab in the hope
of cut or violating the relationship Anglo-French and favoring them
new country on earth and sea against their gathering English the enemies. The