The Life of Theodore Roosevelt: Twenty-fifth President of the United StatesG. Richards, 1903 - 391 pages |
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Page xv
... duty , and illustrates the degree with which the will of man has its way , straight through the entanglement of accidents , if he is indomitable . His appearance in the New York Assembly , and as a Senatorial Delegate to a National ...
... duty , and illustrates the degree with which the will of man has its way , straight through the entanglement of accidents , if he is indomitable . His appearance in the New York Assembly , and as a Senatorial Delegate to a National ...
Page 32
... duty clear as a bugle's call and responded wherever he could reach a battlefield . It was to go into politics , to enter the primary meetings , to fight the beasts in the slums and the slimy things that swarmed there . There was the ...
... duty clear as a bugle's call and responded wherever he could reach a battlefield . It was to go into politics , to enter the primary meetings , to fight the beasts in the slums and the slimy things that swarmed there . There was the ...
Page 34
... duty he owed to himself to do what he thought was right and did it thoroughly . No one who heard him but believed that he would always be found fighting against " the wealthy criminal class , " as he put it . Naturally , Cleveland and ...
... duty he owed to himself to do what he thought was right and did it thoroughly . No one who heard him but believed that he would always be found fighting against " the wealthy criminal class , " as he put it . Naturally , Cleveland and ...
Page 58
... duty of presenting his name to this Convention . But it is not I , it is not the State nor the delegates whom I here represent , who present that name to you . It is presented by uncounted numbers of our fellow - citizens , good men and ...
... duty of presenting his name to this Convention . But it is not I , it is not the State nor the delegates whom I here represent , who present that name to you . It is presented by uncounted numbers of our fellow - citizens , good men and ...
Page 61
... duty to accept the Presi- dency , if he was elected , and that nothing more was wanted . One difficulty , however , it was impossible to overcome : General Sherman would certainly not consent to be used in the Convention in opposition ...
... duty to accept the Presi- dency , if he was elected , and that nothing more was wanted . One difficulty , however , it was impossible to overcome : General Sherman would certainly not consent to be used in the Convention in opposition ...
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Abraham Lincoln administration Admiral Admiral Dewey American Anarchist appointed army asked Assistant Secretary better Blaine Brigade Buffalo Cabinet called campaign candidate Captain cavalry Chief citizens Civil Service Reform Colonel Roosevelt Colonel Wood colored command Commission Congress Convention courage Cuba Democratic duty election fact fight fire force Frederick Douglass friends give Government Governor Roosevelt guns hand honor horses interest islands labor land legislation Lincoln Martha Bullock matter Mayor ment miles Monroe Doctrine National Navy Department never nomination Oyster Bay peace Philippines political politicians President McKinley President Roosevelt President's protection question regiment Republican party Rough Riders Santiago Senate Spain Spaniards Spanish speech Theodore Roosevelt thing tion took train treaty troops United Vice-President vote Washington West White House William McKinley words yellow fever York young