The Americanism of Theodore Roosevelt: Selections from His Writings and Speeches, Volume 3Houghton Mifflin Company, 1923 - 317 pages |
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Page 90
... honor , highest honor , to those who fearlessly face death for a good cause ; no life is so honorable or so fruit- ful as such a death . Unless men are willing to fight and die for great ideals , including love of country , ideals will ...
... honor , highest honor , to those who fearlessly face death for a good cause ; no life is so honorable or so fruit- ful as such a death . Unless men are willing to fight and die for great ideals , including love of country , ideals will ...
Page 91
... honor they seek , these men and women heart - hungry for the children of their longing dreams , are as worthy of honor as the men who are warriors in fact , as the women whose children are of flesh and blood . If the only son who is ...
... honor they seek , these men and women heart - hungry for the children of their longing dreams , are as worthy of honor as the men who are warriors in fact , as the women whose children are of flesh and blood . If the only son who is ...
Page 113
... honor to print certain quotations from speeches I have made , mostly before the Hamilton Club ; and the final quota- tion is : " We must see that there is civic honesty , civic cleanliness , civic good sense , in our whole administra ...
... honor to print certain quotations from speeches I have made , mostly before the Hamilton Club ; and the final quota- tion is : " We must see that there is civic honesty , civic cleanliness , civic good sense , in our whole administra ...
Page 125
... honor . On the other hand , the public that exacts a promise which ought not to be kept , or which can- not be kept , is by just so much forfeiting its rights to self - government . There is no surer way of destroying the capacity for ...
... honor . On the other hand , the public that exacts a promise which ought not to be kept , or which can- not be kept , is by just so much forfeiting its rights to self - government . There is no surer way of destroying the capacity for ...
Page 199
... whom I most respect and honor in American life , are Americans of German parentage or descent or of German birth . One such American , a descendant of one of Blucher's colonels , sat in my Cab- inet ; and he sat beside another American , a.
... whom I most respect and honor in American life , are Americans of German parentage or descent or of German birth . One such American , a descendant of one of Blucher's colonels , sat in my Cab- inet ; and he sat beside another American , a.
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American Belgium believe bird songs blood board of aldermen century Century Company Charles Scribner's Sons citizens civilized Copyright corruption court decent Doran Company duty effort elected elephant evil face fact fear feel fight foes followed force forest G. P. Putnam's Sons hand Henry Cabot Lodge Hermann Hagedorn hold honest honor hunters hunting ideal Indians individual interest justice keep kind labor land liberty live mankind matter mayor means ment merely mighty mind Monroe Doctrine moral nation necessary neighbors never night party peace plains political Powder River Montana practical prairie preach publishers realize righteousness Sagamore Hill sense side social speak stand strength strive success Theodore Roosevelt things tion trail treat trees true unless wilderness words worth wrong York and London