99 “Lenis was certainly right”: Keynes, Collected Writings: The Economic Consequences, 2: 148. In four years: Hardach, The First World War, 153.
100 By the end of the war: Ferguson, The Pity of War, 322-31.
102 “fate of Germany”: Schacht, My First Seventy-six Years, 158.
103 “hard . . . callous . . . and buttoned down”: Schacht, My First Seventy-six Years, 17.
103 “He managed to look”: Bonn, Wandering Scholar, 303.
104 “Nothing seems sacred”: Roberts, The House That Hitler Built, 182.
104 “He was a man”: Rauschning, Men of Chaos, 117.
104 “caused more trouble”: Macmillan, Peacemaker, 191.
105 “little more than a shot”: Lentin, Guilt at Versailles, 21.
106 “twenty million too many: Holborn, A History of Modern Germany, 566.
106 “the only Jew”: Macmillan, Peacemaker, 201.
107 “costly frontal attacks”: Taylor, English History, 74.
107 The great natural resources: Wolff, Through Two Decades, 261.
108 “unbearable, unrealizable, and unacceptable”: Eyck, A History of the Weimar Republic, 1: 98.
109 “You seem to forget”: Schacht, My First Seventy-six Years, 161-162.
110 “If Germany is to be”: Keynes, “Memorandum by the Treasury on the Indemnity Payable by the Enemy Powers for Reparations and Other Claims,” in Collected Writings
, 16: 375.
110 “the sharpest and clearest”: Russell, Autobiography, 1: 69.
110 “I evidently knew more”: Harrod, The Life of John Maynard Keynes, 121.
111 “an illustrated appendix”: Skidelsky, John Maynard Keynes: Hopes Betrayed 1883-1920, 177.
112 “I tried to get hold”: Keynes, “Letter from Basil Blackett,” in Collected Writings, 16: 3.
113 “greedy for work”: Skidelsky, John Maynard Keynes: Hopes Betrayed, 304.
113 His Bloomsbury friends: Bell, Old Friends: Personal Recollections, 48.
113 “With the utmost respect”: Harrod, The Life of John Maynard Keynes, 201.
113 But to the many other: Skidelsky et al., Three Great Economists, 232, and Harrod, The Life of John Maynard Keynes, 31.
113 He looked so very ordinary: Skidelsky et al., Three Great Economists, 231.
113 “I have always suffered”: Skidelsky, John Maynard Keynes: Hopes Betrayed, 67, 169.
113 “gay and whimsical,” “that gift of amusing”: Bell, Old Friends: Personal Recollections, 52, 60.
114 “probably means the disappearance”: Skidelsky, John Maynard Keynes: Hopes Betrayed, 346.
114 “a sense of impending”: Keynes, Collected Writings: The Economic Consequences, 2: 2-3.