What is Back of the WarBobbs-Merrill Company, 1915 - Всего страниц: 430 |
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Стр. 224
... Rheims ? " presently suggests the General . " I am sorry that I shall have to leave you there , " he remarks . " The General is going to bestow the Legion of Honor on a wounded soldier who won it as all our men do by distinguished ...
... Rheims ? " presently suggests the General . " I am sorry that I shall have to leave you there , " he remarks . " The General is going to bestow the Legion of Honor on a wounded soldier who won it as all our men do by distinguished ...
Стр. 225
... Rheims . Already you had come greatly to like and admire this fighting French commanding officer ; and this reminds you of the curious fact that , with notably few exceptions , the soldiers , either German or French , are quite the most ...
... Rheims . Already you had come greatly to like and admire this fighting French commanding officer ; and this reminds you of the curious fact that , with notably few exceptions , the soldiers , either German or French , are quite the most ...
Стр. 229
... Rheims : " They shelled the town yesterday - seventeen people were killed , " observes the General casually ; " and , ” he continues reassuringly , " they bombarded it this morn- ing , also , although we have no troops in the town ...
... Rheims : " They shelled the town yesterday - seventeen people were killed , " observes the General casually ; " and , ” he continues reassuringly , " they bombarded it this morn- ing , also , although we have no troops in the town ...
Стр. 230
... Rheims itself , the curious indifference of civilians to the dangers of active warfare , which so surprised you when you first observed it on the eastern and west- ern German battle fronts , again compels your notice . People are about ...
... Rheims itself , the curious indifference of civilians to the dangers of active warfare , which so surprised you when you first observed it on the eastern and west- ern German battle fronts , again compels your notice . People are about ...
Стр. 231
... Rheims artistic monuments of one craftsmanship of the middle ages now lost to the world . These bits of unrestorable art , so cunningly fixed in the marvelous pattern of these ancient and noble windows , were shaken from their places by ...
... Rheims artistic monuments of one craftsmanship of the middle ages now lost to the world . These bits of unrestorable art , so cunningly fixed in the marvelous pattern of these ancient and noble windows , were shaken from their places by ...
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Admiral Admiral von Tirpitz alliance Allies Alsace Alsace and Lorraine American answered Monsieur army artillery asked automobile batteries battle Belgian Belgian neutrality Belgium Britain British camp cause cent commander conflict course declared Doctor Südekum Dutch Emperor enemies England English example exclaimed eyes face fact feeling Field Marshal fighting fire force France Franchet d'Esperey French front German Emperor German Socialists German soldiers Germany's Grand Admiral guns hundred idea ideal industrial inquired Kultur labor large number look Lord Lord Bryce March mean ment military mind Monsieur Bergson Monsieur Hervé Monsieur Schneider nation naval navy observed opinion pan-Slavist party peace perhaps prisoners Professor von Harnack reason remarked Russia Shaw shell ship side Sir Edward Grey Social Democratic Socialist spirit stand talk territory thing thought thousand tion victory women wounded YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY
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Стр. 346 - Government to another without the consent, by plebiscite or otherwise, of the population of such province. 2. No Treaty, Arrangement, or Undertaking shall be entered upon in the name of Great Britain without the sanction of Parliament. Adequate machinery for ensuring democratic control of foreign policy shall be created. 3. The Foreign Policy of Great Britain shall not be aimed at creating Alliances for the purpose of maintaining the Balance of Power...
Стр. 339 - Belgium, honor and interest would have united us with France. We had refused, it is true, to give her or Russia any binding pledge up to the last moment. We had, however, for many years past led both to understand that, if they' were unjustly attacked, they might -rely upon our aid.
Стр. 346 - Great Britain shall propose as part of the Peace settlement a plan for the drastic reduction, by consent, of the armaments of all the belligerent Powers, and to facilitate that policy shall attempt to secure the general nationalisation of the manufacture of armaments, and the control of the export of armaments by one country to another.
Стр. 339 - We keep our word when we have given it, but we do not give it without solid practical reasons, and we do not set up to be international Don Quixotes, ready at all times to redress wrongs which do us no hurt. .... Even had Germany not invaded Belgium, honour and interest would have united us with France. We joined the Triple Entente because we realised, however late in the day, that the time of "splendid isolation
Стр. 121 - I do not like you, Doctor Fell; The reason why I can not tell; But this, I'm sure, I know full well, I do not tike you, Doctor Fell.
Стр. 340 - ... certainly, was a desire to preserve the peace of Europe, but it was the chief only because to preserve that peace was the one certain way to preserve our own. In the event of war we saw, as our fathers had seen, England's first line of attack and of defence in her Continental Alliances. When we subsidized every State in Germany, and practically all Europe, in the Great War, we did not lavish our gold from love of German or of Austrian liberty, or out of sheer altruism. No; we invested it for...
Стр. 381 - No province shall be transferred from one Government to another without the consent by plebiscite, or otherwise, of the population of such province.
Стр. 349 - ... crowned with success; they suggest the despair of those who have played a desperately risky game and lost. The one Power which, on the showing of the White Paper, marched on calmly and imperturbably throughout, was Russia. The Germans could not stand by passively while Russia destroyed Austria : honour and interest alike made such a course impossible. They were bound by their Alliance, and they felt convinced that if they were passive it would be their turn next to be overrun by the Russian hordes.
Стр. 351 - Imperialists will be calling out for a strong . Germany to balance a threatening Russia. A mechanical fatality has forced France into this struggle, and a comradeship, translated by secret commitments into a defensive alliance, has brought us into the war in her wake. It is no real concern of hers or of ours. It is a war for the Empire of the East. If our statesmanship is clearsighted, it will stop the war before it has passed from a struggle for the...
Стр. 340 - England is fighting for exactly the same kind of reasons for which she fought Philip II, Louis XIV, and Napoleon. . . . She is not fighting primarily for Belgium or for Serbia, for France, or for Russia. They fill a great place in her mind and in her heart. But they come second. The first place belongs, and rightly belongs, to herself.