The Americanism of Theodore Roosevelt: Selections from His Writings and Speeches, Volume 3Houghton Mifflin Company, 1923 - 317 pages |
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Page 38
... able to instill into his men his own in- tense ardor in battle , and so quick in his movements , so ready to march as well as fight , that his troops were known to the rest of the army as the " foot cavalry . ' 99 In the spring of 1863 ...
... able to instill into his men his own in- tense ardor in battle , and so quick in his movements , so ready to march as well as fight , that his troops were known to the rest of the army as the " foot cavalry . ' 99 In the spring of 1863 ...
Page 75
... able to hold your own in the world of politics , the world of business ; able to keep your head above water , to make your work sat- isfactory , to make it pay . If you do not , you cannot do good to others . You must never forget for a ...
... able to hold your own in the world of politics , the world of business ; able to keep your head above water , to make your work sat- isfactory , to make it pay . If you do not , you cannot do good to others . You must never forget for a ...
Page 217
... able and ready to take our own part . The man who cannot take his own part is a nuisance in the community , a source of weakness , an encouragement to wrongdoers and an added burden to the men who wish to do what is right . If he cannot ...
... able and ready to take our own part . The man who cannot take his own part is a nuisance in the community , a source of weakness , an encouragement to wrongdoers and an added burden to the men who wish to do what is right . If he cannot ...
Contents
Daniel Boone and the Founding of Kentucky | 3 |
THE ELEMENTAL VIRTUESTHE BASIS | 45 |
Character | 51 |
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