The Quarterly Review, Volume 235, Issue 467John Murray, 1921 |
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Results 6-10 of 39
Page 248
... nature , a nation shielded from healthy competition becomes more and more inefficient , and less able to stand against its rivals when the protecting barriers fail . As the conditions in the white countries become more and more ...
... nature , a nation shielded from healthy competition becomes more and more inefficient , and less able to stand against its rivals when the protecting barriers fail . As the conditions in the white countries become more and more ...
Page 284
... nature of the case be always preferred to that of posterity , when the beauty of any ' historic ' poem is the subject of dispute . But to criticise Croce's method of criticism is to criticise his theory of art . The two are rigidly ...
... nature of the case be always preferred to that of posterity , when the beauty of any ' historic ' poem is the subject of dispute . But to criticise Croce's method of criticism is to criticise his theory of art . The two are rigidly ...
Page 289
... were not made as the result of an ad hoc deliberation . They suddenly became involved in some detail of the Peace , and the action taken was in some measure determined by the nature of IMPERIAL UNITY AND THE PEACE TREATY 289.
... were not made as the result of an ad hoc deliberation . They suddenly became involved in some detail of the Peace , and the action taken was in some measure determined by the nature of IMPERIAL UNITY AND THE PEACE TREATY 289.
Page 290
taken was in some measure determined by the nature of that detail . The leaders involved also were as much interested in the Peace as they were in the constitution and the theory of the Empire . To this circumstance is due the fact that ...
taken was in some measure determined by the nature of that detail . The leaders involved also were as much interested in the Peace as they were in the constitution and the theory of the Empire . To this circumstance is due the fact that ...
Page 291
T resources and the policy they advocate . To any man with a natural gift for diplomacy this sense will come as an instinct . It would be too much to expect it in every statesman who happened to have secured high office at the time the ...
T resources and the policy they advocate . To any man with a natural gift for diplomacy this sense will come as an instinct . It would be too much to expect it in every statesman who happened to have secured high office at the time the ...
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administration agricultural Allied Anatolian Railway Apocalypse army artistic Asia Asiatic Bagdad Railway Balkan Bulgaria capital Championnet co-operative common connexion considerable Constantinople Covenant criticism Croce danger democracy Deutsche Bank Dominions Dr Charles economic Eleonora Fonseca Europe European existence expression fact favour Ferdinand France French German Goethe Goethe's Greece hand idea Imperial individual industry influence interest Italy Jugo-Slavia King labour land League League of Nations less literary living ment methods million Minister Ministry Naples nations nature Neapolitan never organisation Paris Parthenopean Republic Peace poem poet political population possible present principle question races realised recognised regard representatives responsibility result Roumania self-government Serbia social societies South Africa spirit statesmen success theory tion trade Treaty of Neuilly Treaty of Sèvres Treaty Series Turkey Turkish Turkish Government union unity victory vote wages Weimar whole words writing