The Works of Theodore Roosevelt: The strenuous lifeP. F. Collier, 1901 - 19 pages V. 1, 2, 3, 4 -- The winning of the West. v. 5, 6 -- The naval war of 1812. v. 7 -- Hunting the grisly and other sketches. v. 8 -- The wilderness hunter. v. 9 -- Hunting trips of a ranchman; Hunting trips on the Prairies and in the mountains. v. 10 -- American ideals; Administration-civil service. v. 12 -- The strenuous life. v. 13, 14, 15, 16 -- Presidential addresses and state papers. |
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Page 1
... FEELING AS A POLITICAL FACTOR CIVIC HELPFULNESS CHARACTER AND SUCCESS . 3 23 . 37 58 80 98 THE EIGHTH AND NINTH COMMANDMENTS IN POLITICS 107 THE BEST AND THE GOOD PROMISE AND PERFORMANCE THE AMERICAN BOY . • • 113 119 128 MILITARY ...
... FEELING AS A POLITICAL FACTOR CIVIC HELPFULNESS CHARACTER AND SUCCESS . 3 23 . 37 58 80 98 THE EIGHTH AND NINTH COMMANDMENTS IN POLITICS 107 THE BEST AND THE GOOD PROMISE AND PERFORMANCE THE AMERICAN BOY . • • 113 119 128 MILITARY ...
Page 9
... feeling the mighty lift that thrills " stern men with empires in their brains " —all these , of course , shrink from seeing the nation undertake its new duties ; shrink from seeing us build a navy and an army adequate to our needs ...
... feeling the mighty lift that thrills " stern men with empires in their brains " —all these , of course , shrink from seeing the nation undertake its new duties ; shrink from seeing us build a navy and an army adequate to our needs ...
Page 14
... feel proud of the valor of our sea - captains , of the re- nown of our flag . Their motives may or may not have been good , but their acts were heavily fraught with evil . They did ill for the national honor , and we won in spite of ...
... feel proud of the valor of our sea - captains , of the re- nown of our flag . Their motives may or may not have been good , but their acts were heavily fraught with evil . They did ill for the national honor , and we won in spite of ...
Page 23
... 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 in- iquity , to compromise with unrighteousness ...
... 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 in- iquity , to compromise with unrighteousness ...
Page 28
... been confined strictly to those that are civilized . It can only come when both parties to a possible quarrel feel the same spirit . With a barbarous nation peace is the exceptional condi- tion . On 28 Expansion and Peace.
... been confined strictly to those that are civilized . It can only come when both parties to a possible quarrel feel the same spirit . With a barbarous nation peace is the exceptional condi- tion . On 28 Expansion and Peace.
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Abraham Lincoln Admiral Dewey Algiers alike American army association battleships benefit Captain Mahan captains cause century chance character cial civic Civil Civil War command courage course Cuba danger Decalogue deeds demagogic Dewey disaster duty effort evil fact feel fellow-feeling fighting fox-hunting hand healthy honesty honor ideal incal individual infinitely interest justice keep labor legislation less lesson Lincoln lives long run machine politics Manila Manila Bay mankind manly means ment merely mighty mind Monroe Doctrine moral nation naval navy necessary neighbor ness never ourselves Paulist Fathers peace philanthropic Philippines political politician possible practical promise qualities realize reform Republic result righteousness self-respect sense ships shrink social soldiers Spain Spanish spirit statesman strength strive success task thing tion Tom Brown true victory virtues wage-workers weakling Wendell Phillips whole wise wrong