Roosevelt: A Study in AmbivalenceJackson Press, Incorporated, 1919 - 159 pages |
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Page 21
... blood on Stephen's Green they shed , Thy murdered Pearses , and thy Casement's fate , Can add one fathom to thine ancient hatc , Nor make thy gaoler's gory hand more red , For persecution is thy daily bread . Death has no sting , since ...
... blood on Stephen's Green they shed , Thy murdered Pearses , and thy Casement's fate , Can add one fathom to thine ancient hatc , Nor make thy gaoler's gory hand more red , For persecution is thy daily bread . Death has no sting , since ...
Page 24
... blood . I am proud of my ancestry . I desire to interpret what is best in the land of my fathers to the land of my children . But America is first in my heart . The American of to- morrow must not be a Germanized American , and he shall ...
... blood . I am proud of my ancestry . I desire to interpret what is best in the land of my fathers to the land of my children . But America is first in my heart . The American of to- morrow must not be a Germanized American , and he shall ...
Page 36
... blood who denounced their fellow citizens in order to demon- strate their own loyalty . A CERTAIN Hermann ( with two ns ) Hagedorn , like myself , the son of a German father , was more royalist than Lord Northcliffe in his devotion to ...
... blood who denounced their fellow citizens in order to demon- strate their own loyalty . A CERTAIN Hermann ( with two ns ) Hagedorn , like myself , the son of a German father , was more royalist than Lord Northcliffe in his devotion to ...
Page 39
... whole tribe were to commit hari - kiri in the Opera House to the strains of " Lohengrin ” as a protest against both German music and their own German blood . Who shall sound the perplexities of human nature ? A ROOSEVELT 39.
... whole tribe were to commit hari - kiri in the Opera House to the strains of " Lohengrin ” as a protest against both German music and their own German blood . Who shall sound the perplexities of human nature ? A ROOSEVELT 39.
Page 42
... Blood of his heart shall leave too dark a stain On Harvard's crimson for the years to blend . Smooth - tongued assassins , mumbling as ye bend Above his wounds , hush ! He may bleed again . Marking afar from tender olive tree The milk ...
... Blood of his heart shall leave too dark a stain On Harvard's crimson for the years to blend . Smooth - tongued assassins , mumbling as ye bend Above his wounds , hush ! He may bleed again . Marking afar from tender olive tree The milk ...
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Common terms and phrases
287 Fourth Avenue admiration ambivalence American citizen Americans of German attacks attitude ATTORNEY Authors Barbarian Belgium believe Blank blood Britain British Colonel Confessions course Dear Dernburg Edgar Allan Poe EDITOR emotional England English fact fair-weather feel Flame foes Freud friends friendship for Germany genius George Bernard Shaw George Sylvester Viereck German Americans German Propaganda Gertrude Atherton hands hate heart Henri Barbusse Hugo Muensterberg Kaiser Labor Relief leader League of America letter literary Louis Mirror ment mind nation neutrality of China never newspaper Nineveh OFFICE OF GEORGE Oyster Bay PADRAIC PEARSE patriotic Perhaps poems poet poetic Poetry Society political Pro-Germanism professed friendship Psychoanalysis remarkable replied Roose Sagamore Hill seemed Shaw Songs of Armageddon sword Theodore Roosevelt things tion to-day tribute unconscious United Vampire velt verse Viereck:-I Vigilantes violation Whitman Wilson write written York City York Evening Mail