Difference between revisions of "Jellicoe:After Jutland"
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On 11 July, 1916, Balfour wrote to Lady Jellicoe: | On 11 July, 1916, Balfour wrote to Lady Jellicoe: | ||
− | <blockquote>I can most truly assure you that I am as anxious as you are that your husband should allow himself a rest. I ventured diffidently, but most earnestly, to press him upon this point when he was in London immediately after the great battle, and the opinion I held then I hold with undiminished strength at the present moment. There have, of course, been a good many small, though sometimes troublesome, questions about the despatch: but these are now over, and not merely the Allied, but the neutral world is, I believe, more than content.<br><br>I fear I could hardly "<u>order</u>" Sir John to take a holiday:! but, in the interests of the country as well as his own, I wish most earnestly that he would.<ref>Letter of 11 July, 1916. Jellicoe Papers. British Library. Add. MSS. 71556. f. 118.</ref><blockquote> | + | <blockquote>I can most truly assure you that I am as anxious as you are that your husband should allow himself a rest. I ventured diffidently, but most earnestly, to press him upon this point when he was in London immediately after the great battle, and the opinion I held then I hold with undiminished strength at the present moment. There have, of course, been a good many small, though sometimes troublesome, questions about the despatch: but these are now over, and not merely the Allied, but the neutral world is, I believe, more than content.<br><br>I fear I could hardly "<u>order</u>" Sir John to take a holiday:! but, in the interests of the country as well as his own, I wish most earnestly that he would.<ref>Letter of 11 July, 1916. Jellicoe Papers. British Library. Add. MSS. 71556. f. 118.</ref></blockquote> |
==Footnotes== | ==Footnotes== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Revision as of 09:12, 25 February 2011
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On 11 July, 1916, Balfour wrote to Lady Jellicoe:
I can most truly assure you that I am as anxious as you are that your husband should allow himself a rest. I ventured diffidently, but most earnestly, to press him upon this point when he was in London immediately after the great battle, and the opinion I held then I hold with undiminished strength at the present moment. There have, of course, been a good many small, though sometimes troublesome, questions about the despatch: but these are now over, and not merely the Allied, but the neutral world is, I believe, more than content.
I fear I could hardly "order" Sir John to take a holiday:! but, in the interests of the country as well as his own, I wish most earnestly that he would.[1]
Footnotes
- ↑ Letter of 11 July, 1916. Jellicoe Papers. British Library. Add. MSS. 71556. f. 118.