Foch the Man - A Life of the Supreme Commander of the Allied Armies by Clara E. Laughlin
page 26 of 128 (20%)
page 26 of 128 (20%)
|
uniform of a French soldier was obliged to pass and repass men of the
victorious army of occupation. The memory of his shame and suffering on those occasions has never faded. How much France and her allies owe to it we shall never be able to estimate. For the effect on Foch was one of the first acid tests in which were revealed the quality of his mind and soul. Instead of offering himself a prey to sullen anger and resentment, or of flaring into fury when one time for fury was past and another had not yet come, he used his sorrow as a goad to study, and bent his energies to the discovery of why France had failed and why Prussia had won. His analysis of those reasons, and his application of what that analysis taught him, is what has put him where he is to-day--and _us_ where _we_ are! From Metz, Foch went to Nancy to take his examination for the Polytechnic at Paris. Just why this should have been deemed necessary I have not seen explained. But it was, like a good many other things of apparent inconsequence in this young man's life, destined to leave in him an impress which had much to do with what he was to perform. I have seldom, if ever, studied a life in which events "link up" so marvelously and the present is so remarkably an extension of the past. Nancy had been chosen by General Manteuffel, commander of the First German Army Corps, as headquarters, pending the withdrawal of the victors on the payment of the last sou in the billion-dollar indemnity |
|