If you've ever wondered where the phrase: "Win the battle but lose the war," this is where it came from.
A "Pyrrhic victory," is named after King Pyrrhus of Epirus (Greece), who accomplished a phenomenal feat by beating the Roman Army not just once, but twice in 280 B.C. But in doing so, he lost a significant portion of his army including all his close friends and seasoned generals. He didn't have enough men to finish the job by taking his army into Rome.
If you've ever wondered where the phrase: "Win the battle but lose the war," this is where it came from. The Twilight Zone ran on CBS from 1959 to 1964. Although we can look back now and think some of the programming was cheesy, it was very advanced for its time. Rolling Stone magazine ranked the show 7th of all-time favorite television shows. TV Guide ranks it the 26th best television show of all time. Just about any ranking has the show in the Top 10 of all science fiction television shows.
The show was Rod Sterling’s baby and besides narrating the show and being the show’s producer, he also wrote or co-wrote 92 of the show’s 156 episodes. He was 35 years old at the time. This is an extraordinary accomplishment in the world of science fiction although it went beyond science fiction and ran right into horror. The episode called: “To Serve Man,” was just about as scary as War of the Worlds but the horror set in with the last line of the show. Basically, aliens had visited the earth, they said in peace, but at the end of the show a man deciphered a book the aliens had brought with them and it was a cookbook with humans as the main ingredient. I probably saw the episode about 50 years ago and I still remember it. By the way, Sterling launched another scary show, this time on NBC, called Night Gallery in 1969 and it ran through 1973. The Twilight Zone was loaded with future Hollywood stars like Anne Francis, Burt Reynolds, Claude Akins, Jack Klugman, Martin Landau, William Shatner (before Star Trek), Ron Howard, etc. There were very few shows at the time that were considered the place to perform in just one episode. The Twilight Zone gained traction again with a successful movie in 1983 followed by a television show that ran from 1985 thru 1989. The theme song for the new show was by The Grateful Dead. Unfortunately Rod Sterling didn’t see the relaunch of his Twilight Zone creation as he passed away in 1975 at the age of 50. Sterling didn’t just smoke while he narrated the show, he smoked about three packs of cigarettes a day. Although he didn’t get lung cancer, he began having heart attacks. After his second heart attack it was decided he’d have open heart surgery but unfortunately, he suffered a third attack on the operating table and he never made it out of the hospital. He was greatly missed by not only people in the business but also at Ithaca College where he’d been a professor for almost 15 years. King Henry V (1386-1422), was an interesting character. First, he was 6’3” tall which was unheard of back then. When his father was king, he tried to do about everything he could to stay away from becoming the next king. Even though he was the oldest, he wanted his younger brother to assume the role so he wouldn’t have the hassles. But when his brother died in battle, he knew he’d be stuck with becoming the next king.
He enjoyed hanging out with the commoners and he especially enjoyed being a soldier and he was one of the best England had. As it was in those days, England was constantly engaged in a fight somewhere either protecting their land or going after someone else’s. His father was often sending for him to get him to the palace, but he rarely abided by his wishes always making the excuse that he was needed in battle. King Henry IV was trying to get his son in the graces of the Royal Court so the transition to power when he died would be easier. Another thing Henry enjoyed doing was complaining about how the country was being run by his father. Being out with the commoners made him more aware of the difficult conditions people were living in. He also didn’t like how his father handled diplomacy. He thought the king did a terrible job of building alliances with other countries. And lastly, he was idealistic about England and France in that it was established years earlier that the King of England was also supposed to be treated as the King of France, a dual monarchy. His father did nothing to assume this crown and France did whatever they wanted and built their own monarchy with eyes on England to conquer. Henry was summoned to the palace when his father was dying, and the king begged him to take the crown. The greatest reason he decided to do it was that it would give him a chance to implement all the ideas he’d come up with to make England a better place for all their citizens and to build better relationships with other countries so they could look out for each other. In the back of his mind he also wanted to see what he could do to get France under English rule. Henry was just 27 years old at the time. He wasn’t like a typical king in those days in that he was humble and didn’t act like he knew all the answers. He brought in trusted advisors including a friend of his who was an old war hero and made him his military advisor. He wasn’t Royal Court material as he was a rough and tumbler and a lot of people thought it was funny that he had become Sir John; even him. King Henry made the decision to go to war with France and he and his army sailed there to take over the country. They encountered an army much larger than theirs and many of his advisors wanted to sail back to England, but Sir John said they could win the battle. The other advisors told King Henry that Sir John had lost his mind and was going to destroy their army and England. Sir John’s strategy was to draw France into the battle by sending out a smaller force to confront them. He thought that France would send pretty much everyone they had to annihilate England’s first wave of soldiers in hopes of getting England to surrender. France not only had the advantage of the size of their army, but they were also on top of a hill. Figuring they’d send their entire army into the open field at the bottom of the hill where England positioned their ranks, he had men with longbows ready to unleash a massive number of arrows onto France’s army when they approached. England used longbows while France mostly used crossbows so in this case, England had the advantage of a long-range arsenal. Then his most strategic move of all was that he knew the ground was muddy and that France’s soldiers would have heavy armor. In order to not make France think there was a problem with the ground, the initial wave England sent also had armor but, he and King Henry, told all the other soldiers to remove their armor so they could be more agile during the fight; these men were hidden on both sides of the hill. King Henry couldn’t help himself and joined in the fight as well. Sir John was right and France sent about everyone they had and the fight began then all of a sudden England’s soldiers without armor conducted a surprise attack and when everyone was in the trenches sliding around in the mud, the English soldiers could maneuver much easier and began mowing down the French Army. The “Battle of Agincourt,” became a huge win for King Henry and was immortalized in one of Shakespeare’s’ plays. France surrendered and King Henry agreed to marry the daughter (Catherine), of the King of France as a gentler way of becoming king of their country. Their citizens would be much more receptive to the change in rulers if one of their own was on the Royal Court. Just a few years later, there was unrest in France and King Henry went there to help squash the rebellion. He didn’t die in battle but presumably died of dysentery or heat stroke. His reign lasted nine years and he died at the age of 35. Out of all the kings England has seen, King Henry V is considered one of the greatest. |
Author: John Mann |