| Oscar Browning - 1888 - 422 Seiten
...change in the face of the world almost as great as that of the discovery of the Continent now set free. The Yankees will shout in triumph, but it is they...decision. The great danger of the time, a danger which the European system would have fostered, was a division of the world into European and American, Republican... | |
| 1897 - 1016 Seiten
...serious remonstrance. France will fidget; but it will be with a view of hastening after our example. The Yankees will shout in triumph; but it is they who lose most by our decision. i Name Illegible. The great danger of the time — a danger which the policy of the European System,... | |
| Matías Romero - 1898 - 820 Seiten
...Canning said in a letter which the papers assure has just come to light, and which is as follows : "The great danger of the time — a danger which the...the world into European and American, republican and monarchial : a league of worn out governments on the one hand and youthful and stirring nations, with... | |
| Gabrielle Festing - 1899 - 382 Seiten
...serious remonstrance. France will fidget; but it will be with a view of hastening after our example. The Yankees will shout in triumph; but it is they...lose most by our decision. " The great danger of the time—a danger which the policy of the European System would have fostered, was a division of the... | |
| Harold William Vazeille Temperley - 1905 - 312 Seiten
...change in the face of the world almost as great as that of the discovery of the Continent now set free. The Yankees will shout in triumph, but it is they...decision. The great danger of the time, a danger which the European system would have fostered, was a division of the world into European and American, Republican... | |
| Harold William Vazeille Temperley - 1905 - 318 Seiten
...change in the face of the world almost as great as that of the discovery of the Continent now set free. The Yankees will shout in triumph, but it is they...decision. The great danger of the time, a danger which the European system would have fostered, was a division of the world into European and American, Republican... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1909 - 710 Seiten
...serious remonstrance. France will fidget, but it will be with a view of hastening after our example. The Yankees will shout in triumph, but it is they who lose most by our decision.' (Pesting's ' Prere,' p. 267.) The new material provided by Captain Bagot tends, in the main, as I have... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart - 1916 - 478 Seiten
...change in the face of the world almost as great as that of the discovery of the Continent now set free. The Yankees will shout in triumph, but it is they...decision. The great danger of the time, a danger which the European system would have fostered, was a division of the world into European and American, Republican... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart - 1916 - 474 Seiten
...great as that of the discovery of the Continent now set free. The Yankees will shout in triumph, hut it is they who lose most by our decision. The great danger of the time, a danger which the European system would have fostered, was a division of the world into European and American, Republican... | |
| Harold William Vazeille Temperley - 1925 - 680 Seiten
...make a change in the face of the World almost as. great as that of the Continent now set free. . . . The Yankees will shout in triumph ; but it is they who lose most by our decision. Thtr great danger of the time— a dangrer_which the policy of tbe European Systejn would hayefostered.... | |
| |