World War I may not have the same pizazz as its successor, but if you know anything about it, it's trench warfare. That's what all the military players in the second World War were trying to avoid: that horrible attrition that just had men mowed down under machine gun fire. Of course, in the process they just had civilians get mowed down by carpet bombing instead, but that's another issue.
But if there's anything else you'd know about World War I, it's the Battle of the Marne. Essentially Germany had taken out Russia in one battle, so it could turn all of its attention to France one month after the war began. Very quickly superior Germany artillery broke through the French and British line and France was invaded on several points. This was called the Great Retreat, where the Germans actually got within five miles of Paris and winning the war. However the Allies managed to find an opening in the German line and attacked it, forcing them back: This is the Battle of the Marne, which saved the Allies from total destruction. After that everyone dug down and trench warfare began.
The head of the French army was a general named Joseph Joffre. Although there are many things you can say about his leadership, there's one quality that's amazing: He is completely unshakable. While people are panicking around him, he remained as a calm, steady presence who kept his head even during the most dire moments. (France would not have surrendered to the Germans in World War II if he were still running the ship.) I was listening to a podcast about World War I the other day, and someone quoted his autobiography. At that point the British were not impressed with the French performance and were thinking of just leaving because it wasn't really their fight to begin with. Joffre had to convince the head of the British army, Field Marshal John French, to stay and fight in the Marne. (Yes, that is a confusing name, especially when you read lines like, "French did not like the French so much.") Here's what Joffre says when he talked with French about the upcoming counterattack:
I put my whole soul into the effort to convince the field marshal. I told him that the decisive moment had arrived, and we must not let it escape. We must go to battle with every man both of us had, and free from all reservations. So far as the French army is concerned, I continued, my orders are given. And whatever may happen, I intend to throw my last company into the balance to win victory and save France. It is in her name that I come to ask you for British assistance, and I urge it with all my power I have in me. I cannot believe that the British army will refuse to do its share in this supreme crisis. History would severely judge your absence. Then as I finished, carried away by my convictions and the gravity of the moment, I remember bringing down my fist on a table, which stood at my elbow, and crying, "Monsieur le Marshal! The honor of England is at stake!"
Up to this point, French had listened imperturbably to the officer, who was translating what I'd said, but now his face suddenly reddened. There ensued a long, impressive silence, and then with visible emotion he murmured, "I will do all that I possibly can." Not understanding English, I asked [the translator] Wilson what Sir John had said. He merely replied, "The field marshal says yes." I had distinctly felt the emotion which seemed to grip the British commander-in-chief, above all I remarked the tone of his voice, and I felt, as did all the witnesses to the scene, that these simple words were equivalent to an agreement signed and sworn to.
Tea, which was already prepared, was then served.
Man, this guy was almost Churchillian in his writing. Even though this moment took place a century ago, I can palpably feel the tension, the emotion, and the desperation that was in that room. When I was listening to the podcast quoting this, I could feel my breath stop at how incredible this exchange was. But then he had to fuck it up in the final moment. You could've ended it with the signed and sworn agreement, but no, you had to tell us you then chatted over tea afterward. What else do you talk about? How you went to examine the front lines, saw brave young men dying before your very eyes, could see a man still charge even though his bowels were falling from his wounded midsection, and ended that paragraph with that night you ate some ham? Incredible.