The National Review, Volume 89W.H. Allen, 1927 - English literature |
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Page 4
... face of events that are fresh in all our minds and to which Lord Birkenhead pointedly recalled the attention of the House of Lords in moving the Address to the King for transmission to the new Emperor of Japan ? We quote the Secretary ...
... face of events that are fresh in all our minds and to which Lord Birkenhead pointedly recalled the attention of the House of Lords in moving the Address to the King for transmission to the new Emperor of Japan ? We quote the Secretary ...
Page 5
... face , not to say hitting us in the eye , at home and abroad we frankly confess that we disbelieve in it as a doctrine and profoundly distrust its prac- titioners . We are convinced that it is the wrong attitude for the statesmen of any ...
... face , not to say hitting us in the eye , at home and abroad we frankly confess that we disbelieve in it as a doctrine and profoundly distrust its prac- titioners . We are convinced that it is the wrong attitude for the statesmen of any ...
Page 6
... face " for the Home Government , either with phantoms who may have form but lack substance , or with Bolshevists who do not regard themselves as bound to observe any obligation to " bourgeois , " " Capitalist , " or " Imperialist Powers ...
... face " for the Home Government , either with phantoms who may have form but lack substance , or with Bolshevists who do not regard themselves as bound to observe any obligation to " bourgeois , " " Capitalist , " or " Imperialist Powers ...
Page 23
... face of the reiterated assertions of several of His Majesty's Ministers that one foreign Government is displaying such hostility to everything British everywhere that we should be abun- dantly justified in breaking off all official ...
... face of the reiterated assertions of several of His Majesty's Ministers that one foreign Government is displaying such hostility to everything British everywhere that we should be abun- dantly justified in breaking off all official ...
Page 33
... face facts or by pretending that things are other than what they are . Nothing could be more eloquent of the moral of the Government , or of the dry - rot spreading from the Treasury Bench , than that it should be left to Sir Alfred ...
... face facts or by pretending that things are other than what they are . Nothing could be more eloquent of the moral of the Government , or of the dry - rot spreading from the Treasury Bench , than that it should be left to Sir Alfred ...
Contents
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897 | |
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Common terms and phrases
airship American army Austen Chamberlain Bank of England believe Bill birds Bishops Britain British Empire British Government Cabinet cause cent Chang Tso-lin China Chinese Church of England Conservative defeat Dominions doubt Downing Street Edge enemies English Eugene Chen fact favour fleet foreign France French German give ground hand Hankow Hertzog hope horse hounds House of Lords Imperial Conference industrial interests Labour Laity land League of Nations less Liberal lions Lloyd George Locarno London LXXXIX matter means Measure ment miles Moscow never once opinion Parliament Party peace play political politicians position Prayer Book present Prime Minister question race Ramsay MacDonald realize reason regard Russia seems Socialist South Africa Soviet Statesmen strike things Tilden tion to-day trade union Treaty troops United whole