FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28  
29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   >>  
requests for interviews and offers of employment. Also some attractive invitations to dinner and week-ends. The War for the moment seems to be forgotten. Wonderful, the power of the printed word! * * * My first article in _The Morning Post_, distributing blame and praise with my usual deadly accuracy. Wonder what poor NORTHCLIFFE is doing without me. * * * Received long letter from HAIG asking for instructions, which I sent by return. Lunched at the Carlton with some charming musical-comedy actresses. To the Tribunal after. Dined at the National Sporting Club and saw a good fight. * * * A visit from an Italian personage of consequence, who told me that my articles are the talk of Italy. If writing could win wars, he said, my pen would have done it. * * * L. G. came up to Carryon Hall heavily masked. I gave him an excellent dinner and some equally good advice, and he left much heartened. * * * Dined at Lady RANDOLPH'S. A merry crowd there. Every one very gay and amusing; but we forgot that WINSTON was our hostess's son and castigated him badly. Lady JULIET said that with some people, no matter what they begin to talk about, even with Cabinet Ministers, it all comes back to food. * * * Wrote a careful article pointing out that we must have at least one hundred more divisions in the West before next Friday. * * * I was gratified to learn to-day that in consequence of my articles _The Morning Post_ has doubled its circulation, while _The Times_ hardly sells a copy. * * * Lunched with MASSINGHAM of _The Nation_, who eats more sensibly than he writes. In Paris. Saw CLEMENCEAU at the War Ministry. His table was littered with papers and reports, amongst which he pointed out laughingly one of my articles. I can't think why he laughed. Lunched at Voisin's. * * * Left for rapid tour of inspection to British H.Q. Found much to put right. Issued an Order of the Day to soldiers of all ranks. The Germans, hearing of my presence, made desperate attempts to bomb me, but failed. Food at the Front not very alluring. Yesterday's article, I learn, put the wind up the War Cabinet, and great things may result. All my pleasure spoilt, however, by breaking a tooth on a pellet in a Ritz grouse. * * * Visited the French H.Q. and was pleased with FOCH, whom I asked to run over to Carryon when he was ever in any doubt. Sent home a powerful article which, when it is reproduced in all the F
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28  
29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   >>  



Top keywords:
article
 

articles

 
Lunched
 

consequence

 
Cabinet
 
Carryon
 
dinner
 

Morning

 

pointed

 

laughingly


reports

 

papers

 

Ministry

 

CLEMENCEAU

 

littered

 

inspection

 

British

 

employment

 

offers

 

laughed


Voisin

 

writes

 

doubled

 

gratified

 
Friday
 
divisions
 

attractive

 

circulation

 

sensibly

 

Nation


MASSINGHAM

 
Issued
 
Visited
 

grouse

 

French

 

pleased

 

pellet

 

spoilt

 

breaking

 
powerful

reproduced
 
requests
 

pleasure

 

hearing

 
Germans
 

presence

 

desperate

 

soldiers

 

hundred

 
attempts