“Siberia was wolf-haunted that year. They followed close on the scene of battle, feasting on the dead. Both sides strung enemy corpses on trees alongside the roads and the wolves gnawed off their feet. Perhaps it was these images that Ungern remembered when he spoke later of leaving ‘an avenue of corpses’ from Urga to Moscow. Sometimes, emboldened by the abundance of human flesh, the wolves grew bold enough to attack men, even - barely known before - men in groups.”
- James Palmer (On Baron von Ungern-Sternberg) in The Bloody White Baron.
- James Palmer (On Baron von Ungern-Sternberg) in The Bloody White Baron.