Entering the Operations Room to confirm a decision already taken, Joffre said to the assembled officers, “Gentlemen, we will fight on the Marne.”
He signed the order that would be read to the troops when the bugles blew next morning. Ordinarily the French language, especially in public pronouncements, requires an effort if it is not to sound splendid, but this time the words were flat, almost tired; the message hard and uncompromising: “Now, as the battle is joined on which the safety of the country depends, everyone must be reminded that this is no longer the time for looking back. Every effort must be made to attack and throw back the enemy. A unit which finds it impossible to advance must, regardless of cost, hold its ground and be killed on the spot rather than fall back. In the present circumstances no failure will be tolerated.”
That was all; the time for splendor was past. It did not shout “Forward!” or summon men to glory. After the first thirty days of war in 1914, there was a premonition that little glory lay ahead.
Source:
Tuchman, Barbara W. "Gentlemen, We Will Fight on the Marne." The Guns of August. New York: Macmillan, 1962. 477. Print.
Original Source(s) Listed:
Poincaré, III. 136.
AF, I, II, Annexe No. 2641.
Further Reading:
Marshal Joseph Jacques Césaire Joffre
Première bataille de la Marne (Battle of the Marne) / Le Miracle de la Marne (Miracle of the Marne)
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