[In the World War by Count Ottokar Czernin]@TWC D-Link book
In the World War

CHAPTER II
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In the first place, he never would have agreed to our army being under German control.

It would not have been consistent with his strongly developed autocratic tendencies, and he was too clever politically not to see that we should thereby lose all political freedom of action.

In the second place, he would not, like the Emperor Charles, have yielded to revolution.

He would have gathered his faithful followers round him and would have fallen fighting, sword in hand.

He would have fallen as did his greatest and most dangerous enemy, Stephen Tisza.
But he died the death of a hero on the field of honour, valiantly and in harness.


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