Swords and Ploughshares: Or, The Supplanting of the System of War by the System of LawLondon, 1912 - 249 pages |
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Page 2
... languages , and physics . A little survey of well - known historic facts may properly precede discussion and may recall to the reader that the peace movement was not born with the Czar's rescript nor cradled by a Carnegie Peace ...
... languages , and physics . A little survey of well - known historic facts may properly precede discussion and may recall to the reader that the peace movement was not born with the Czar's rescript nor cradled by a Carnegie Peace ...
Page 21
... language , it would have been richly worth the while . But great advance was made , not the least step in which was the provision for the Third Hague Con- ference . This doubtless means a fourth and a fourteenth and fortieth . That the ...
... language , it would have been richly worth the while . But great advance was made , not the least step in which was the provision for the Third Hague Con- ference . This doubtless means a fourth and a fourteenth and fortieth . That the ...
Page 33
... language was made one of the required studies , and thus American ideas and literature have been made familiar , even though the power to speak English has not become universal . It was an American missionary who first suggested a ...
... language was made one of the required studies , and thus American ideas and literature have been made familiar , even though the power to speak English has not become universal . It was an American missionary who first suggested a ...
Page 35
... language and so have only second - hand avenues into the literature and history of Japan . So , in your hasty tour through a section of Japan , you could not have noticed that at the entrance of count- less towns and villages a high ...
... language and so have only second - hand avenues into the literature and history of Japan . So , in your hasty tour through a section of Japan , you could not have noticed that at the entrance of count- less towns and villages a high ...
Page 37
... language , live with the people , have strong friendships among the educated classes , read the papers , and are agreed on this one vital point— the way the Japanese think about us . They have watched not without anxiety the ...
... language , live with the people , have strong friendships among the educated classes , read the papers , and are agreed on this one vital point— the way the Japanese think about us . They have watched not without anxiety the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Admiral Mahan Agriculture American Andrew Carnegie annual arbitration armaments army and navy attack auxiliary language battleships BERTHA VON SUTTNER Britain Bureau Carnegie century China citizens civilised Cosmopolitan Clubs cost danger defence delegates dollars economic Elihu Burritt ence enemies England English Esperanto Europe European fact fight Filipinos flag force foreign France future Germany good-will Hague Court honour Hugo Grotius human hundred increase independence interests International Congress International Peace International Peace Bureau International Peace Congresses Japan Japanese justice killing land League ment military millions nations naval never Norman Angell organisation Pan-American patriotism Peace Congresses peace movement Peace Society Philippines pledge political present President promote question railroads realise religion republic Russia schools Second Hague Conference Secretary Senate South America Suttner teach teacher thing thousand tion to-day trade treaty United wars wealth women word
Popular passages
Page 113 - And all merchant and trading vessels employed in exchanging the products of different places, and thereby rendering the necessaries, conveniences and comforts of human life more easy to be obtained, and...
Page 237 - The preservation of peace has been put forward as the object of international policy; it is in its name that great States have concluded between themselves powerful alliances; it is the better to guarantee peace that they have developed in proportions hitherto unprecedented their military forces, and still continue to increase them without shrinking from any sacrifice. " All these efforts nevertheless have not yet been able to bring about the beneficent results of the desired pacification. The financial...
Page 238 - The economic crises, due in great part to the system of armaments a entrance, and the continual danger which lies in this massing of war material, are transforming the armed peace of our days into a crushing burden, which the peoples have more and more difficulty in bearing.
Page 76 - That a commission of five members be appointed by the President of the United States, to consider the expediency of utilizing existing international agencies for the purpose of limiting the armaments of the nations of the world by international agreement, and by constituting the combined navies of the world an international force for the preservation of universal peace...
Page 237 - Government thinks that the present moment would be very favorable for seeking, by means of international discussion, the most effectual means of insuring to all peoples the benefits of a real and durable peace, and, above all, of putting an end to the progressive development of the present armaments.
Page 237 - The intellectual and physical strength of the nations, labor and capital, are for the major part diverted from their natural application, and unproductively consumed. Hundreds of millions are devoted to acquiring terrible engines of destruction, which, though today regarded as the last word of science, are destined tomorrow to lose all value, in consequence of some fresh discovery in the same field.
Page 77 - For myself, I was bitterly opposed to the measure, and to this day regard the war, which resulted, as one of the most unjust ever waged by a stronger against a weaker nation.
Page 183 - WAR I abhor, And yet how sweet The sound along the marching street Of drum and fife; and I forget Wet eyes of widows, and forget Broken old mothers, and the whole Dark butchery without a soul.
Page 238 - I'outrance, and the continual danger which lies in this massing of war material, are transforming the armed peace of our days into a crushing burden, which the peoples have more and more difficulty in bearing. It appears evident, then, that if this state of things were prolonged, it would inevitably lead to the very cataclysm which it is desired to avert, and the horrors of which make every thinking man shudder in advance.
Page 115 - The Contracting Powers agree to prohibit, for a period extending to the close of the Third Peace Conference, the discharge of projectiles and explosives from balloons or by other new methods of a similar nature.