Volume 50, Number 17 · November 6, 2003

What Price Glory?

By Steven Weinberg

AMONG THE BOOKS DRAWN ON FOR THIS ESSAY

A Stillness at Appomattox: The Army of the Potomac, Vol. 3
by Bruce Catton

Anchor, 438 pp., $14.95 (paper)

The World Crisis, Vol. 4
by Winston S. Churchill

Scribner, 322 pp.(1964; out of print)

Infantry Warfare in the Early Fourteenth Century
by Kelly DeVries

Boydell and Brewer (distributed in the US by University of Rochester Press), 216 pp., $29.95

Crusade in Europe
by Dwight D. Eisenhower

Johns Hopkins University Press, 608 pp., $19.95 (paper)

The Carmen de Hastingae Proelio of Guy, Bishop of Amiens
translated and edited by Catherine Morton and Hope Muntz

Clarendon Press, 149 pp. (1972; out of print)

War in European History
by Michael Howard

Oxford University Press, 175 pp., $15.95 (paper)

From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow, Vol. 4
by Arthur J. Marder

Oxford University Press, 364 pp. (1969; out of print)

Atlanta 1864: Last Chance for the Confederacy
by Richard M. McMurry

University of Nebraska Press, 229 pp., $35.00

Winged Defense: The Development and Possibilities of Modern Air Power—Economic and Military
by William Mitchell

Dover, 320 pp. (1988; out of print)

Coral Sea, Midway, and Submarine Actions, May 1942–August 1942
by Samuel Eliot Morison

Book Sales, 307 pp., part of a fifteen-volume set, $12.99

A History of the Art of War in the Middle Ages
by C.W.C. Oman

Burt Franklin, two volumes (1924; out of print)

The Art of War in the Middle Ages, AD 378–1515
by C.W.C. Oman, revised and edited by John H. Beeler

Cornell University Press, 176 pp., $13.50 (paper)

Mohammed and Charlemagne
by Henri Pirenne

Dover, 304 pp., $12.95 (paper)

Hankey: Man of Secrets, Vol. 1, 1877–1918
by Stephen Roskill

Naval Institute Press, 672 pp. (1970; out of print)

The Victory at Sea
by William S. Sims

James Stevenson, 428 pp., $25.95 (paper)

The Bayeux Tapestry: A Comprehensive Survey
edited by Frank Stenton

Phaidon, 182 pp. (1957; out of print)

Eisenhower's Lieutenants: The Campaign of France and Germany, 1944–1945
by Russell F. Weigley

Indiana University Press, 822 pp., $30.95

A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II
by Gerhard L. Weinberg

Cambridge University Press, 1,198 pp., $45.00

Medieval Technology and Social Change
by Lynn White

Oxford University Press, 216 pp., $13.95 (paper)

The Gesta Guillelmi of William of Poitiers
translated and edited by R.H.C. Davis and Marjorie Chibnall

Oxford University Press,248 pp., $92.50

War offers ample opportunities for most varieties of foolishness. Among these, there is one sort of folly to which war is especially well suited: the lust for glory. One can hardly ever be sure about a commander's motives in any one case, but there are familiar signs of that lust: a readiness to accept a challenge to fight under unfavorable circumstances; a preference for taking action independent of allies or colleagues; an unreasoning predisposition for offense rather than defense; and an effort to seize a decisive role in winning victory. Examples come easily to mind. Antony accepted Agrippa's challenge to fight by sea at Actium, though he was stronger by land. In 1421 the Duke of Clarence violated the orders of his brother, King Henry V, and died attacking five thousand French troops with 150 mounted men-at-arms and no archers. To recapture the glory he had won by riding around McClellan's army in search of its flank during the defense of Richmond in 1862, J.E.B. Stuart in June and July of 1863 led his cavalry on a wild ride through Maryland and Pennsylvania, even though it left the Army of Northern Virginia without the reconnaissance it needed in the week before the Battle of Gettysburg. Admiral William F. Halsey Jr. commanded the Third Fleet to chase Japanese battleships and carriers while other Japanese battleships threatened American soldiers landing on the beaches of Leyte Island.



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