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Operation Heartbreak
Duff Cooper; Foreword by Michael Hofmann
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R431
R354
Discovery Miles 3 540
Save R77 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Unique in his own age and a phenomenon in any, Charles-Maurice,
Prince de Talleyrand, was a statesman of outstanding ability and
extraordinary contradictions. He was a world-class rogue who held
high office in five successive regimes. A well-known opportunist
and a notorious bribe taker, Talleyrand's gifts to France arguably
outvalued the vast personal fortune he amassed in her service.
Once a supporter of the Revolution, after the fall of the
monarchy, he fled to England and then to the United States.
Talleyrand returned to France two years later and served under
Napoleon, and represented France at the Congress of Vienna. Duff
Cooper's classic biography contains all the vigor, elegance, and
intellect of its remarkable subject.
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Talleyrand (Paperback)
Duff Cooper
1
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R384
R312
Discovery Miles 3 120
Save R72 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Duff Cooper's classic biography charts the remarkable progress of
Talleyrand; a silver-tongued master diplomat, infamous turncoat,
peacekeeper and libertine. Talleyrand held high office in five
successive regimes from France's Ancient Regime, into the
Revolution of 1789, Robespierre's Terror, Napoleon's epic wars, and
on through restored kings to more revolution. Duff Cooper brings
Talleyrand vividly to life and paints an exhilarating picture of
this tumultuous period in European history
THE SECOND WORLD WAR First Phase CONTENTS PREFACE 9 I RESIGNATION
15 II REFORM 40 III THE NEW SESSION 59 IV THE END OF THE YEAR 83 V
THE NEW YEAR 105 VI THE LULL 137 VII THE IDES OF MARCH . 164 VIII
ITALY 194 IX FRANCE 212 X REACTION 254 XI THE END OF THE SESSION
284 XII AUGUST 317 INDEX 343 PREFACE WRITTEN history is of two
kinds the raw material and the finished product. The raw material
is the stuff that is turned out while the events are happening
speeches, articles, diaries, correspondence of all kinds, from the
dispatches of ambassadors to the private letters of friends. Upon
this mass of material the historian descends. Part of it he
accepts, part he rejects. He finds there many con tradictions. Some
have deliberately written what is false, others, misled by
prejudice, have honestly blundered. Subsequent events will have
helped to distinguish the truth from the falsehood. The further the
historian is re moved from his subject the more scientific will be
his approach to it, the cooler his judgment. But what he gains in
detachment he loses in atmosphere. The longer the flesh has left
the bones the harder it becomes to make it grow on them again in
the likeness of life. This volume is concerned with some of the
events of the last twelve months. It was suggested to me that I
should write a history of that period. To do so at present would be
impossible because tlje raw material of such a history is not
available. A subaltern engaged in one corner of the field cannot
describe a battle that is still in progress. Therefore since I
cannot write a history I have thought well to publish some original
documents, speeches and articles, which may at least serve the
historian when he comes tohis task as evidence of how it struck a
contem porary. PREFACE The value of such evidence must largely
depend upon how far It Is selective and how far It Is complete. If
I had selected from my speeches and articles of the last year only
those which pleased me most in retrospect I should have failed even
to present an accurate picture of what had taken place in the mind
of one individual. If I had altered anything I should not only have
failed but have falsified. For this reason I have reprinted every
article that I have written during this period, nor have I altered
a word except to correct a misprint. I have not however inflicted
on the reader all my speeches because the majority of them have
never been written down, and some of those in the House of Commons,
where the record of Hansard remains, are of no general interest,
such as those on the Army and Navy estimates. Where I have quoted a
speech I have given the whole of it, as it was reported at the
time. The producer of the finished article has another great
advantage over the purveyor of the raw material he can select his
period and assign to it a beginning and an end. History, it has
been said, is a tragedy upon which the curtain is ever about to
fall, and a book like the pre sent must suffer in consequence,
because it deals with a problem that remains unsolved it tells a
story of which the end is not yet. There is one other weakness in
this volume which the reader may remark and of which the author is
aware. It contains several repetitions which have been unavoidable
owing to the system upon which it is planned. But my excuse for
saying the same thing more than once is that I have been meaning
the same thing all the time. I havemeant to convince my countrymen
that we are at war 10 PREFACE with the most formidable adversary
that we have ever faced. That the agreement of Munich was a defeat
in that war and that we could only retrieve it by reorganiz ing our
fighting forces on a new scale. I believed that such reorganization
must demand the introduction of the compulsory principle, beginning
with a national register and ending with conscription. I urged that
we should seek the friendship of Russia and the support of the
smaller European Powers...
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