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| This version includes all 8 Books of On War but is abridged. Deletions are extensive and not always obvious, since they include both entire chapters and sections within individual chapters. Book IV should have 14 chapters (#14 is missing); Book V should contain 18 chapters; Book VI should have 30 chapters; Book VII should have 21 chapters. Book VIII is missing Chapters 7 and 8. | Project Gutenberg provides a downloadable plain text file of the 1909 English version of On War, as edited by Colonel F.N. Maude (1908) and translated by Colonel J.J. Graham (1873). The Gutenberg version at present includes only vol.1 (of 3), covering only Books 1-4 (of 8). Clausewitz bears no responsibility for Maude's intro and notes. | See also the Marxists.Org version, which is the same text as Project Gutenberg's, providing only Books 1-4 (of 8). (Note that our Marxist friends have expropriated graphics from The Clausewitz Homepage, but, of course, this suits our own nefarious purposes.) And the BookRags version is similar, as was yet another on-line version, put on line by University of Adelaide history professor David Hart. | This is yet another on-line version, put on line by the Sun Tzu enthusiasts of Sonshi.com. It is the same text as Project Gutenberg's, providing only Books 1-4 (of 8). Nice Japanese graphics flourishes! |
| BIBLIOMANIAis a literary site with extensive links to important works on Reference (Literature and Language), Fiction, (including 60 classic novels), Non-Fiction, Important Classic Works, Biography, Science, Economics, Ancient Texts, Poetry, and Shakespeare. | Project Gutenberg's philosophy is to make information, books and other materials available to the general public in forms a vast majority of the computers, programs and people can easily read, use, quote, and search. |
![]() Marxists.org |
Sonshi.com's sole purpose is to be your one reliable Sun Tzu and strategy resource on the Web. However, it also features a heavily abridged version of Clausewitz's On War. |
The Patton Society homepage has a truncated version of On War at http://www.pattonhq.com/militaryworks/clausewitz.html
See also: Patrick M. Cronin, "Clausewitz
Condensed" (1984) posted by the USAF Air War College
A Necessary Note about These Other On-Line
Versions of Clausewitz's ON WAR
Most on-line versions of On War are abridgements (to one degree or another) of the 1873 translation made by Colonel James John Graham. (An exception is Patrick Cronin's "Clausewitz Condensed," which is derived from the more modern Howard/Paret translation but extremely abbreviated.) The original 1873 Graham translation was published in London by N. Trübner. These texts were probably scanned from one of the issues edited by F.N. Maude after 1908, though most appear to have left out Maude's extensive annotations. This is just as well--Maude was a social Darwinist whose comments seriously distorted Clausewitz's message. Unfortunately, they also generally leave out the prefatory material and notes provided by Clausewitz himself, his wife (who edited and published his works after his death), and Graham. For more information on Graham, his translation effort, and other aspects of Clausewitz's translation into English, see Christopher Bassford, Clausewitz in English: The Reception of Clausewitz in Britain and America, 1815-1945 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994), pp.56-59.
This translation, based on a German edition that deviated significantly from the original, is quite obsolete. It is also difficult to read (i.e., more difficult than intrinsically necessary). On the other hand, the current standard version is not available on-line, and these sites render us a great service by posting this internet version. The standard version is now Carl von Clausewitz, On War, trans./ed. Michael Howard and Peter Paret (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976/84). The Howard/Paret translation is based on much deeper, more accurate scholarship and a more authentic German edition. It is also complete, contains some useful introductory material, and is much easier to read. It suffers from a poor index, but The Clausewitz Homepage provides a word-and-phrase index that helps make up for this deficiency.
Bibliomania's claims to copyright may be somewhat confusing. They do not own the copyright to this translation, which is in the public domain. They do own their particular HTML presentation, however, and third parties may not reproduce it in exactly this form.
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Clausewitz's On War appears in Collection A100a, Best Sellers of the Millenium - 1 to 25. NOTE: Bad pop-ups problem on this site. This is presumably a version of the 1873 Graham translation, which is out of copyright. The same website advertises something called "Illustrations of On
War of Clausewitz Vol 1."
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