The National Review, Volume 76W.H. Allen, 1921 - English literature |
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Page 2
... Foreign Minister , he and his Department were to have substantially no say in the Peace Treaty and that he would become known in French circles as " Monsieur Zero , " he should have taken the first train home and , so to speak , " blown ...
... Foreign Minister , he and his Department were to have substantially no say in the Peace Treaty and that he would become known in French circles as " Monsieur Zero , " he should have taken the first train home and , so to speak , " blown ...
Page 6
... Foreign Minister has allowed the Foreign Office to be eliminated . It was first raised over Poland and has directly brought us to the present crisis . It was an overt symptom that Mr. Lloyd George was becoming what he now is ...
... Foreign Minister has allowed the Foreign Office to be eliminated . It was first raised over Poland and has directly brought us to the present crisis . It was an overt symptom that Mr. Lloyd George was becoming what he now is ...
Page 7
... foreign Governments not only for an expression of their sentiments , but likewise to safeguard those larger British interests which we share in common with other civilized Powers and of which our Government should be joint trustee . At ...
... foreign Governments not only for an expression of their sentiments , but likewise to safeguard those larger British interests which we share in common with other civilized Powers and of which our Government should be joint trustee . At ...
Page 10
... foreign Powers while not having the slightest intention of observing such undertakings or carrying out such agreements . This attitude of disregard of obligations voluntarily entered into they base upon the theory that no com . pact or ...
... foreign Powers while not having the slightest intention of observing such undertakings or carrying out such agreements . This attitude of disregard of obligations voluntarily entered into they base upon the theory that no com . pact or ...
Page 13
... foreign affairs is the steady and unbroken decline of British prestige — a subject which in old days interested both Lord Curzon and Lord Milner ; but those were the Dark Ages when they never dreamt of becoming colleagues of the Welsh ...
... foreign affairs is the steady and unbroken decline of British prestige — a subject which in old days interested both Lord Curzon and Lord Milner ; but those were the Dark Ages when they never dreamt of becoming colleagues of the Welsh ...
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