The National Review, Volume 43, Issue 1W.H. Allen, 1904 |
From inside the book
Page 106
... in Washington who has a familiar acquaintance with India and Persia and who has scratched something more than the surface of those lands of mysteries . It comes rather as a shock to one's ideas of 105 THE NATIONAL REVIEW.
... in Washington who has a familiar acquaintance with India and Persia and who has scratched something more than the surface of those lands of mysteries . It comes rather as a shock to one's ideas of 105 THE NATIONAL REVIEW.
Page 245
... corruptions of localities in China , Korea , and Japan , it will scan the atlas sheet which shows India and the countries at its West and North - West . It will become familiar with the map of Persia and the Persian Gulf , and with the.
... corruptions of localities in China , Korea , and Japan , it will scan the atlas sheet which shows India and the countries at its West and North - West . It will become familiar with the map of Persia and the Persian Gulf , and with the.
Page 246
... Persian Gulf do not form an appendix to the book . The Middle Eastern Question is especially interesting at the present moment , for Persia and the Persian Gulf are to India what Korea was to Japan , and one reads in Mr. Chirol's easy ...
... Persian Gulf do not form an appendix to the book . The Middle Eastern Question is especially interesting at the present moment , for Persia and the Persian Gulf are to India what Korea was to Japan , and one reads in Mr. Chirol's easy ...
Page 251
... Persian Gulf heartening the Indian officers who watch our interests in that desolate and repulsive region , and reviving and cementing old friendships and alliances with the tribes on the littoral . He sees , too , a mission advancing ...
... Persian Gulf heartening the Indian officers who watch our interests in that desolate and repulsive region , and reviving and cementing old friendships and alliances with the tribes on the littoral . He sees , too , a mission advancing ...
Page 252
... Persian Gulf may be explained by her open - sea requirements ; but it is an ideal which explains the " presence of Russian agents all through Afghanistan , ” and " Russian influence in Tibet and practical Russian sovereignty at Lhasa ...
... Persian Gulf may be explained by her open - sea requirements ; but it is an ideal which explains the " presence of Russian agents all through Afghanistan , ” and " Russian influence in Tibet and practical Russian sovereignty at Lhasa ...
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