[Huntingtower by John Buchan]@TWC D-Link book
Huntingtower

CHAPTER XIV
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CHAPTER XIV.
THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE CRUIVES The military historian must often make shift to write of battles with slender data, but he can pad out his deficiencies by learned parallels.
If his were the talented pen describing this, the latest action fought on British soil against a foreign foe, he would no doubt be crippled by the absence of written orders and war diaries.

But how eloquently he would descant on the resemblance between Dougal and Gouraud--how the plan of leaving the enemy to waste his strength upon a deserted position was that which on the 15th of July 1918 the French general had used with decisive effect in Champagne! But Dougal had never heard of Gouraud, and I cannot claim that, like the Happy Warrior, he "through the heat of conflict kept the law In calmness made, and saw what he foresaw." I have had the benefit of discussing the affair with him and his colleagues, but I should offend against historic truth if I represented the main action as anything but a scrimmage--a "soldiers' battle," the historian would say, a Malplaquet, an Albuera.
Just after half-past three that afternoon the Commander-in-Chief was revealed in a very bad temper.

He had intercepted Sir Archie's car, and, since Leon was known to be fully occupied, had brought it in by the West Lodge, and hidden it behind a clump of laurels.

There he had held a hoarse council of war.

He had cast an appraising eye over Sime the butler, Carfrae the chauffeur, and McGuffog the gamekeeper, and his brows had lightened when he beheld Sir Archie with an armful of guns and two big cartridge-magazines.


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