The National ReviewW.H. Allen, 1910 - Great Britain |
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Page 32
Great satisfaction has been caused throughout the Empire by the announcement that the Prince of Wales will inaugurate the new South African Government in the course of next year . No one has ever accused Lord Lansdowne of bravado .
Great satisfaction has been caused throughout the Empire by the announcement that the Prince of Wales will inaugurate the new South African Government in the course of next year . No one has ever accused Lord Lansdowne of bravado .
Page 47
It is not a large step from marching your troops through a neutral State to incorporating that State in your Empire , especially if selfinterest demands it , and a successful war with France would precipitate the absorption of the ...
It is not a large step from marching your troops through a neutral State to incorporating that State in your Empire , especially if selfinterest demands it , and a successful war with France would precipitate the absorption of the ...
Page 50
... which has up to the present been faintly stirred by the thought of danger to its own hearths and homes , may realise that it possesses besides these an empire containing some 400,000,000 souls for whom it is responsible .
... which has up to the present been faintly stirred by the thought of danger to its own hearths and homes , may realise that it possesses besides these an empire containing some 400,000,000 souls for whom it is responsible .
Page 51
PARTY GOVERNMENT AND THE EMPIRE It would have been interesting to hear a discourse from the famous Swedish Chancellor Oxenstiern — who exhorted his son to observe with how little wisdom the world was governed - on the relations existing ...
PARTY GOVERNMENT AND THE EMPIRE It would have been interesting to hear a discourse from the famous Swedish Chancellor Oxenstiern — who exhorted his son to observe with how little wisdom the world was governed - on the relations existing ...
Page 52
patible with the consolidation , or even the continued existence of the British Empire ? De Tocqueville maintained that there was no such thing as the English “ Constitution . ” He used the word as applying to Constitutions defined by ...
patible with the consolidation , or even the continued existence of the British Empire ? De Tocqueville maintained that there was no such thing as the English “ Constitution . ” He used the word as applying to Constitutions defined by ...
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