The Americanism of Theodore Roosevelt: Selections from His Writings and Speeches, Volume 3Houghton Mifflin Company, 1923 - 317 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 21
Page v
... progress , return to the simpler customs of the fathers ; but that , accepting the age of electricity , he wished to see it made sound and fundamentally progressive by being based on the same qualities which INTRODUCTION.
... progress , return to the simpler customs of the fathers ; but that , accepting the age of electricity , he wished to see it made sound and fundamentally progressive by being based on the same qualities which INTRODUCTION.
Page vi
... progress possible in the days of the pioneer . Roosevelt's doctrine may be regarded as a pyramid , with the " pioneer virtues " as the base and the brother- hood of man as the apex . The selections from his writ- ings have been arranged ...
... progress possible in the days of the pioneer . Roosevelt's doctrine may be regarded as a pyramid , with the " pioneer virtues " as the base and the brother- hood of man as the apex . The selections from his writ- ings have been arranged ...
Page 44
... progress from century to century doing little and suffering little , standing aside from the great world currents . We must either succeed greatly or fail greatly . The citizen of a small nation may keep his self - respect if that ...
... progress from century to century doing little and suffering little , standing aside from the great world currents . We must either succeed greatly or fail greatly . The citizen of a small nation may keep his self - respect if that ...
Page 48
... progress or of seeming failure which always come before any final triumph , no matter how brilliant . But we need more than these qualities . This country cannot afford to have its sons less than men ; but neither can it afford to have ...
... progress or of seeming failure which always come before any final triumph , no matter how brilliant . But we need more than these qualities . This country cannot afford to have its sons less than men ; but neither can it afford to have ...
Page 65
... progress can alter . One of these is the truth that the primary duty of the husband is to be the homemaker , the bread- winner for his wife and children , and that the primary duty of the woman is to be the helpmeet , the housewife ...
... progress can alter . One of these is the truth that the primary duty of the husband is to be the homemaker , the bread- winner for his wife and children , and that the primary duty of the woman is to be the helpmeet , the housewife ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American army battle believe boss buffalo century Century Company Charles Scribner's Sons citizens civilized common Copyright corporations corruption courage course dangerous Daniel Boone decent Doran Company duty effort elected evil face feel fight foes followed force G. P. Putnam's Sons German hand Henry Cabot Lodge HERMANN HAGEDORN honest honor hunters hunting hyphenated American ideal Indians individual industrial interest justice kind labor land legislation liberty Lincoln live matter means ment merely mighty Monroe Doctrine moral nation never party peace plutocracy political politician practical preach publishers qualities realize righteousness Sagamore Hill sense Seth Bullock social speak spirit stand Stonewall Jackson strength strive struggle success Theodore Roosevelt things tion to-day treat trees Union unless wealth wilderness words worth wrong York and London