The Idea of a League of Nations |
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Page 5
... mutually unsympathetic , there were also coming into play throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries , for the first time , upon a quite unprece- dented scale , another series of forces diametrically opposed to human separations ...
... mutually unsympathetic , there were also coming into play throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries , for the first time , upon a quite unprece- dented scale , another series of forces diametrically opposed to human separations ...
Page 22
... mutual consent , with a view to minimizing the horrors of war , belongs rather to legend than to sober history . It is true that the story of the Horatii and the Curiatii meets every schoolboy in the first pages of his Livy ; but it is ...
... mutual consent , with a view to minimizing the horrors of war , belongs rather to legend than to sober history . It is true that the story of the Horatii and the Curiatii meets every schoolboy in the first pages of his Livy ; but it is ...
Page 25
... mutual advantage- rules which all parties held it to be , on the whole , to their own interest to observe . The German War Book quite frankly places the chief sanction of such trammels on military action , not in humanity , but in the ...
... mutual advantage- rules which all parties held it to be , on the whole , to their own interest to observe . The German War Book quite frankly places the chief sanction of such trammels on military action , not in humanity , but in the ...
Page 27
... mutual conflict in life is often grossly overstated and the element of mutual help suppressed . Prince Kropotkin's book , Mutual Help , has shown how the successful survival of most gregarious species depends far more on the co ...
... mutual conflict in life is often grossly overstated and the element of mutual help suppressed . Prince Kropotkin's book , Mutual Help , has shown how the successful survival of most gregarious species depends far more on the co ...
Page 35
... mutual criticism and cordial coöperation . Consider again the numerous nations in the British Empire , which act in unison through the Imperial Government , imperfect and unrepre- sentative as it is ; consider the dissolving ...
... mutual criticism and cordial coöperation . Consider again the numerous nations in the British Empire , which act in unison through the Imperial Government , imperfect and unrepre- sentative as it is ; consider the dissolving ...
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Common terms and phrases
accept aeroplane Argives armament armies battle belligerent biological Bolshevik cavalry Christendom civilization Clausewitz combatant competition conceivable conception conflict coöperation council criticism defeat dream Europe European example fact fight force Foreign Office frontier German German Empire greater hitherto hostility human affairs human nature impossible inclosures individual inevitable instances intense invention ization King of France Lacedæmonians League of Nations league-of-nations project limitation lives logical loyalty Machiavelli mankind ment mental mercenaries military millions mind modern war-process Modern warfare moral munitions mutual nation in arms never objection overgrowth Pathan peace phase political possible power idea preparation prepossession probability realize reason release rentier Roman Empire rules Russia scale scientific social sort Spartan species story substantial truth suffering survive tank theory thing thought thousand three hundred Thyrea tions tribes unification vast vendetta victory village marksmen wars whole word World-League of Nations world-league project world-unanimity
Popular passages
Page 42 - I found, in brief, that all great nations learned their truth of word, and strength of thought, in war; that they were nourished in war, and wasted by peace ; taught by war, and deceived by peace; trained by war, and betrayed by peace; — in a word, that they were born in war, and expired in peace.
Page 18 - Von der Goltz in The Nation in Arms (English translation, page 22) : — If, from humanitarian principles, a nation decided not to resort to extremities, but to employ its strength up to a given point only, it would soon find itself swept onward against its will. No enemy would consider itself bound to observe a similar limitation. So far from this being the case, each would avail itself of the voluntary moderation of the other to outstrip him at once in activity. If it be said that, in past times,...
Page 42 - We talk of peace and learning, and of peace and plenty, and of peace and civilization ; but I found that those were not the words which the Muse of History coupled together : that on her lips, the words were — peace and sensuality, peace and selfishness, peace and corruption, peace and death.
Page 22 - THE IDEA OF A LEAGUE OF NATIONS. II' MANY people have said to themselves, like Jeannette in the touching old ballad, — If I were King of France, or, still better. Pope of Rome. I'd have no fighting men abroad, no weeping maids at home; All the world should be at peace, or, if kings must show their might, Then let those who make the quarrels be the only men to fight. But even Jeannette evidently realized that the idea of making the fate of a tribe or a nation depend upon the fortunes of one or two...
Page 21 - If I were King of France, Or, still better, Pope of Rome, I 'd have no fighting men abroad, No weeping maids at home." But. squire, are you really for peace at any price ? I remember what you once wrote in approval of the extermination of the Canaanites by the children of Israel, and of the soldier's duty, taught not only at the Pass of Thermopylae, but in...
Page 25 - It must be remembered that undisguised atrocities on a stupendous scale — such, for instance, as the massacre in cold blood of whole regiments of helpless prisoners — would be too strong for the stomach of even the most brutalized people, and would tend to bring war into discredit with all but its monomaniac votaries. If we look into the matter closely enough, we shall find that all Geneva Conventions and such palliative ordinances, though excellent in intention and good in their immediate effects,...
Page 6 - All political and social institutions, all matters of human relationship, are dependent upon the means by which mind may react upon mind and life upon life — that is to say, upon the intensity, rapidity, and reach of mental and physical communication.
Page 42 - I saw it to be quite an undeniable fact. The common notion that peace and the virtues of civil life flourished together, I found to be wholly untenable. Peace and the vices of civil life only flourish together. We talk of peace and learning, and of peace and plenty, and of peace and...
Page 25 - ... redeeming features' of war. But the necessities of war completely override all such weaknesses as soon as they begin to endanger actual military interests. And the logic of war tolerates them only as cheap concessions to a foolish popular psychology. It must be remembered that undisguised atrocities on a stupendous scale — such, for instance, as the massacre in cold blood of whole regiments of helpless prisoners — would be too strong for the stomach of even the most brutalized people, and...