Series 01 Part 02: Hughes family correspondence, 3 April 1917-22 September 1918 - Page 553
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[Page 553]
2.
bye I let the "Hermes" people publish an account of your scrap with Richthofen, but only on condition that your name was not to appear, as I knew you would regard that as swank. They kept faith, & there is nothing to connect you with the story which they give in your own words. I am posting a copy of the August Hermes with this letter, but in a separate cover. The editor of Hermes told a fellow I know to look out for the story "which was more like a chapter from one of Jules Verne's romances then anything he had ever read"!
It was good news that you were recommended from France for promotion. One of your regrets when you were returning to England in May was that this might not come through. You really must have a fairly good "dossier" (to use the famous word of the Dreyfus trial) in a pigeonhole somewhere in the War Office.
I am also posting you the "Billy Book", a series of caricatures of Billy Hughes by Low, one of the best known of the Bulletin men. It is really extremely well done, even if a bit savage, as Billy is not a hero in the eyes of Bulletin men. The Bulletin cartoons are usually very striking, and are in my judgment in the very front rank of war cartoons published throughout the Empire & the United States. Norman Lindsay, who is Low's colleague, is a genius of the mordant type of Raemaeker, [Louis Raemaekers] & many of his war cartoons are not only fierce and dramatic and tragic in their intensity, but they are often splendid