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started by xcute489 on 08 Jan 15
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    For Prussia came so near to triumph because a vague belief in a Teutonic brotherhood led us to regard the defeat of the Poles and the French as the inevitable fall of inferior and decadent races. 58 As he stressed, 59 It was solely and entirely an educated error. ...It was rare to meet a coster or a cabman who traced the origin of his family to the Folk-Wanderings of the world-conquering Germanic tribe. A costermonger would laugh at a German as a foreigner, exactly as he would laugh at a Frenchman as a foreigner. tee shirt burberry pas cher
    And the costermonger would be right.[ 75][ 75] G. 160;K. 160;Chesterton, 'Starting Afresh', in W. 160;L. 160;Courtney.. echarpe burberry pas cher femme .suite 60 Chesterton, however, seems to have been practically alone in drawing this lesson. More typical was the situation that Robert Graves described. Graves, the poet and novelist, had put off university in160;1914 to enlist in the army and spent much of the war as a junior officer on the Western front. When he finally went up to Oxford in160;1919, he found, 61 "anti-French feeling among most ex-soldiers amounted almost to an obsession. His contemporary and fellow officer and poet Edmund Blunden, shaking with nerves, used to say at this time: \"No more wars for me at any price! Except against the French. If there's ever a war with them, I'll go like a shot. Burberry pas cher femme
    \" Pro-German feeling had been increasing. With the war over and the German armies beaten, we could give the German soldier credit for being the most efficient fighting-man in Europe. … Some undergraduates even insisted that we had been fighting on the wrong side: our natural enemies were the French".[ 76][ 76] Robert Graves, Goodbye to All That, London, Penguin, 2000,...suite 62 Graves's account of his war experience may not be accurate in every respect, but there is no reason to doubt his description on post-war Oxford and Blunden's reaction to the conflict.

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