Yes, a fascinating part of the war, and a thrilling story. I must admit that I am more drawn to this period of the war than industrial slaughter amongst mud, blood and gas of later on. It still has some vestige of humanity left to it, somehow.
Some would say one of the British Army's finest hours (Though I would say that First Ypres was the BEF's greatest feat, an even more hopelessly uneven fight, yet one where they hardly gave an inch, and were destroyed as a force in the process, even though they succeeded in stopping the Germans).
Maybe when I'm done slugging it out between the Boche and Les Pantalons Rouges in Lorraine I'll get some BEF for my 1914 Germans to fight.