The Works of Theodore Roosevelt, Volume 20Charles Scribner's Sons, 1903 |
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Page 25
... gives utterance to the feeling of the great majority of manly and thoughtful men when he denounces the great danger of indiscriminate advocacy of peace at any price , because " it may lead men to tamper with iniquity , to compromise ...
... gives utterance to the feeling of the great majority of manly and thoughtful men when he denounces the great danger of indiscriminate advocacy of peace at any price , because " it may lead men to tamper with iniquity , to compromise ...
Page 37
... give peace to the world . The Arab wrecked the civilization of the Mediterranean coasts , the Turk wrecked the civilization of south- eastern Europe , and the Tatar desolated from China to Russia and to Persia , setting back the ...
... give peace to the world . The Arab wrecked the civilization of the Mediterranean coasts , the Turk wrecked the civilization of south- eastern Europe , and the Tatar desolated from China to Russia and to Persia , setting back the ...
Page 53
... give to French political life its curious , and by no means elevat- ing , kaleidoscopic character . Macaulay's eminently sane and wholesome spirit and his knowledge of practical affairs give him a peculiar value among historians of ...
... give to French political life its curious , and by no means elevat- ing , kaleidoscopic character . Macaulay's eminently sane and wholesome spirit and his knowledge of practical affairs give him a peculiar value among historians of ...
Page 54
... gives . They do not do practical work , and the extreme folly of their position makes them not infrequently the allies of scoundrels who cynically practise cor- ruption . Too often , indeed , they actually alienate from the cause of ...
... gives . They do not do practical work , and the extreme folly of their position makes them not infrequently the allies of scoundrels who cynically practise cor- ruption . Too often , indeed , they actually alienate from the cause of ...
Page 92
... give the names of the living , or I could enumerate among my personal acquaintance fifty clergymen and priests , men of every church , of every degree of wealth , each of whom cheerfully and quietly , year in and year out , does his ...
... give the names of the living , or I could enumerate among my personal acquaintance fifty clergymen and priests , men of every church , of every degree of wealth , each of whom cheerfully and quietly , year in and year out , does his ...
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Abraham Lincoln action admirable Admiral Dewey alike American army asso association battleships benefit Bureau of Navigation captain Captain Mahan century chance character civic civilized command common courage course Cuba danger decent deeds demagogue Dewey duty effort evil expanded fact feel fellow-feeling fellows fighting fox-hunting George Dewey Grant hand healthy honesty honor ideal incal individual infinitely interest islands justice keep kind labor less lesson Lincoln lives long run machine politics Manila Manila Bay manly means merely mighty mind Monroe Doctrine moral nation naval navy necessary neighbor never officers ourselves Paulist Fathers peace Philippines political politician possible practical promise prosperity qualities realize reform remember republic result righteousness self-respect sense ships shrink social soldiers Spain spirit stand strength strive success Sudan THEODORE ROOSEVELT thing tion true Union victory vidual virtues weaklings whole wise wrong