National Life and Character: A Forecast |
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Page 1
... colonies , will become more and more powerful . — Moreover , the tendency to entrust the State with wider functions has long been adopted in Continental policy , and is being acclimatised in England . This inquiry does not assume that ...
... colonies , will become more and more powerful . — Moreover , the tendency to entrust the State with wider functions has long been adopted in Continental policy , and is being acclimatised in England . This inquiry does not assume that ...
Page 3
... colonies , anticipated that they would grow up as the United States had grown , and being challenged for his support of them , declared that he had " called a new world into existence to redress the balance of the old " ( 1826 ) . " 3 ...
... colonies , anticipated that they would grow up as the United States had grown , and being challenged for his support of them , declared that he had " called a new world into existence to redress the balance of the old " ( 1826 ) . " 3 ...
Page 5
... colonies from danger , would hasten their emancipation . " “ We have caught them at last , " said Choiseul , when it was definitely agreed that Canada should be sur- rendered ( 1763 ) ; and in fact little more than twenty years elapsed ...
... colonies from danger , would hasten their emancipation . " “ We have caught them at last , " said Choiseul , when it was definitely agreed that Canada should be sur- rendered ( 1763 ) ; and in fact little more than twenty years elapsed ...
Page 18
... colonies in Australia and New Zealand is particularly instructive , because it shows what the English race naturally attempts when it is freed from the limitations of English tradition . The settlers of Victoria , and to a great extent ...
... colonies in Australia and New Zealand is particularly instructive , because it shows what the English race naturally attempts when it is freed from the limitations of English tradition . The settlers of Victoria , and to a great extent ...
Page 37
... It seems as if England for the moment was a little weary of India , and disposed to regard the Colonies as rather troublesome allies than dependencies , but was actively sanguine of possibili ties in I UNCHANGEABLE LIMITS OF HIGHER RACES ...
... It seems as if England for the moment was a little weary of India , and disposed to regard the Colonies as rather troublesome allies than dependencies , but was actively sanguine of possibili ties in I UNCHANGEABLE LIMITS OF HIGHER RACES ...
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Popular passages
Page 43 - The day will come, and perhaps is not far distant, when the European observer will look round to see the globe girdled with a continuous zone of the black and yellow races...
Page 41 - Ali, and his more ferocious son, absolve themselves of their impious vow, that when the British armies traversed, as they did, the Carnatic for hundreds of miles in all directions, through the whole line of their march, they did not see one man, not one woman, not one child, not one four-footed beast of any description whatever. One dead uniform silence reigned over the whole region.
Page 233 - ... it is melancholy to say it, but the chief, perhaps the only, English writer who has any claim to be considered an ecclesiastical historian, is the infidel Gibbon.
Page 1 - We know that coloured and white labour cannot exist side by side; we are well aware that China can swamp us with a single year's surplus of population; and we know that if national existence is sacrificed to the working of a few mines and sugar plantations, it is not the Englishman in Australia alone, but the whole civilised world, that will be the losers.
Page 33 - You know me very ill if you do not think that of all the letters I have ever wrote to You this one gives me the most pleasure, and I want no other return but...
Page 44 - We were struggling among ourselves for supremacy in a world which we thought of as destined to belong to the Aryan races and to the Christian faith; to the letters and arts and charm of social manners which we have inherited from the best times of the past.
Page 59 - He said that the ancient civilizations of the world had been undermined and destroyed by two causes, — the increase of standing armies, and the growth of great cities ; and that modern civilization had now added to these sources of decay a third, in the hypothecation of every nation's property to other nations.