The National Review, Volume 54W.H. Allen, 1910 - English literature |
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Results 6-10 of 100
Page 47
... German occupation of Antwerp , if they could only realise that the mouth of the Scheldt is very nearly as important to us as the mouth of the Thames , we should hear less about the defence of our coasts , as if the beginning and end of ...
... German occupation of Antwerp , if they could only realise that the mouth of the Scheldt is very nearly as important to us as the mouth of the Thames , we should hear less about the defence of our coasts , as if the beginning and end of ...
Page 63
... German Fatherland ? " may arise , which will cause the appearance of a German army and a German fleet in all the ports of Belgium and Holland ? - Then comes the question : Are Mr. Dicey's pessimistic con- clusions inevitable ? If we ...
... German Fatherland ? " may arise , which will cause the appearance of a German army and a German fleet in all the ports of Belgium and Holland ? - Then comes the question : Are Mr. Dicey's pessimistic con- clusions inevitable ? If we ...
Page 173
... German assets , being reckoned equivalent to the addition of several battleships to the German Navy . Our readers are never surprised to learn that the President of the Board of Trade is involved in anything detrimental to England ...
... German assets , being reckoned equivalent to the addition of several battleships to the German Navy . Our readers are never surprised to learn that the President of the Board of Trade is involved in anything detrimental to England ...
Page 174
... German philosophy and his wishy - washy sentimentalism , it must in fair- ness be admitted that Mr. Haldane means to be a good Briton- he is not of the stuff of which traitors are made . His eyes have long been opened to the German ...
... German philosophy and his wishy - washy sentimentalism , it must in fair- ness be admitted that Mr. Haldane means to be a good Briton- he is not of the stuff of which traitors are made . His eyes have long been opened to the German ...
Page 175
... German pro- gramme of four " Dreadnoughts per annum was the further reduction of the British programme from three to two . We would not be understood as casting any reflection whatsoever upon the late Lord Tweedmouth , the recipient of ...
... German pro- gramme of four " Dreadnoughts per annum was the further reduction of the British programme from three to two . We would not be understood as casting any reflection whatsoever upon the late Lord Tweedmouth , the recipient of ...
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Admiralty American Arbitration army Asquith Australian battleships believe better Board Britain British Navy Budget Cabinet Canada Canadian Cape Colony capital CARLYON BELLAIRS Chancellor Churchill Colony Constitution Court danger defence Dreadnoughts duty effect Election Empire England English existence expenditure fact favour Federal Finance Bill fleet foreign French German Government hand House of Commons House of Lords Imperial important increase India interests Labour land legislation less Liberal Lloyd George Lord Advocate Lord Charles Beresford Lord Kitchener Lord Lansdowne Lord Rosebery matter ment naval never opinion organisation Parliament passed peace Peers political present principles programme question Radical realised reason regard result secure ships Sir John Fisher social Socialist speech Tariff Reform thing tion to-day train Unionist Unionist Party vote whole Winston Churchill