“The gratitude of every
home in our Island, in our Empire, and indeed throughout the world, except in
the abodes of the guilty, goes out to the British airmen who, undaunted by
odds, unwearied in their constant challenge and mortal danger, are turning the
tide of the World War by their prowess and by their devotion. Never in the
field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few. All hearts go
out to the fighter pilots, whose brilliant actions we see with our own eyes day
after day; but we must never forget that all the time, night after night, month
after month, our bomber squadrons travel far into Germany, find their targets
in the darkness by the highest navigational skill, aim their attacks, often
under the heaviest fire, often with serious loss, with deliberate careful
discrimination, and inflict shattering blows upon the whole of the technical
and war-making structure of the Nazi power. On no part of the Royal Air Force
does the weight of the war fall more heavily than on the daylight bombers, who
will play an invaluable part in the case of invasion and whose unflinching zeal
it has been necessary in the meanwhile on numerous occasions to restrain.”—British
Prime Minister Winston Churchill (1874-1965), “The Few” speech to the House of Commons, Aug. 20, 1940
In his early days as Prime
Minister, Winston Churchill was intent on preparing his countrymen for
immense sacrifice and on rallying them against the Nazi menace. Eighty years
ago today, he reported, in detail and with the stirring words above, on how courageous
British airmen had withstood the most serious assault ordered by Adolf Hitler
to date.
With France out of the
way, Hitler turned his attention in earnest to Britain. Assured by his
designated successor, Luftwaffe founder Hermann Goering, that German airforce
could overpower British’s in five weeks, he belied that a massive aerial attack
would soften Britain up for a knockout blow by land and sea forces. The Luftwaffe
began by targeting southern England, but on August 13, 1940 switched to raining
punishing blows on British airfields and radio stations.
By “so few,” Churchill
could have been referring not just to the Royal Air Force (RAF) compared with
the whole population of Great Britain but also to its significant disadvantage
against the Luftwaffe. Hitler could call on 1,260 long-range bombers, 320 dive
bombers, 280 twin-engine fighters, and 800 single-engine fighters, versus only
900 fighters for the RAF.
From July 10 to October
12—the duration of the Battle of Britain—the British public watched the
skies, dreaded the bombs that would eventually come their way, and prayed for
the young men rushing to their planes to save them. The first two months were
particularly intense for the airmen, wrote Supermarine Spitfire pilot Richard
Hillary in his memoir of the battle, The Last Enemy (1942):
“[W]e were always so
outnumbered that it was practically impossible, unless we were lucky enough to
have the advantage of height, to deliver more than one Squadron attack. After a
few seconds we always broke up, and the sky was a smoke trail of individual
dog-fights. The result was that the Squadron would come home individually,
machines landing one after the other at intervals of about two minutes. After
an hour, Uncle George would make a check-up on who was missing. Often there
would be a telephone call from some pilot to say that he had made a forced
landing at some other airdrome, or in a field. But the telephone wasn’t always
so welcome. It would be a rescue squad announcing the number of a crashed
machine; then Uncle George would check it, and cross another name off the list.
At that time, the losing of pilots was somehow extremely impersonal; nobody, I
think, felt any great emotion — there simply wasn’t time for it.”
Like its foe, the RAF sustained
heavy losses. Dark days remained, including The Blitz that lasted from
September through the following March. But, through a combination of cool-headed
British military and political leadership and adept use of radar—and Nazi
underestimation of their foe and lack of military intelligence—the RAF prevailed,
of course.
The Website of the Churchill Society London labels the speech I’ve excerpted here “The Few.” No
other label is necessary to identify its contents, so well-known is the sentence
that makes it among the Prime Minister’s most quoted utterances.
That sentence is not just
a masterly exercise in political rhetoric but also in effective English,
demonstrating in microcosm why Churchill would be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature
13 years later. It employs to perfection parallel construction—a series
of phrases held together by similar words, phrases or grammatical structure. That
common element is the word “so,” followed by a set of quantities—with the first
two suggesting immensity (“much” and “many”), but the last providing an
unexpected contrast conveying paucity (“the few”).
Oh, yes, one last thing:
Churchill had a large ego (“All men are worms, but I do believe that I am a
glow-worm,” he observed waggishly). But he knew when to step aside and pay
tribute to others without drawing undue attention to himself.
His audience—both members
of the House of Commons and the larger world who read his words reported afterward—knew
exactly who he meant by “the few,” and it did not include himself. (And that is
part of the reason why I chose to use a photo of the brave airmen rather than
the great statesman who honored them.)
Certain contemporary
world leaders might take note of that—and keep in mind that, for his heartfelt
acknowledgment of others, Churchill has still managed to be remembered
well by posterity.
(I wrote this post while listening to the stirring soundtrack of the 1969 film, The Battle of Britain. Do yourself a favor: When you feel down-heartened by the drumbeat of infuriating news this days, play this YouTube clip of this uplifting music.)
(I wrote this post while listening to the stirring soundtrack of the 1969 film, The Battle of Britain. Do yourself a favor: When you feel down-heartened by the drumbeat of infuriating news this days, play this YouTube clip of this uplifting music.)
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