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Página 12
... problem of finding one and after much experimenting and labor had succeeded in making one which met every requirement . Then the heavy type emphasized it . " HE TOOK IT UPON HIMSELF TIRE HAS SOLVED THE PROBLEM FOR YOU , " said the ...
... problem of finding one and after much experimenting and labor had succeeded in making one which met every requirement . Then the heavy type emphasized it . " HE TOOK IT UPON HIMSELF TIRE HAS SOLVED THE PROBLEM FOR YOU , " said the ...
Página 15
... problem and assumed the burden of its solution . What a company they were ! In a beautiful southern garden amidst lovely roses I saw a young woman and a little child . The sky was clear and blue but the child did not know ; the birds ...
... problem and assumed the burden of its solution . What a company they were ! In a beautiful southern garden amidst lovely roses I saw a young woman and a little child . The sky was clear and blue but the child did not know ; the birds ...
Página 20
... problems and the first of Dr. Barnardo's Homes was born . In England , Scotland and Canada the Homes were built . From the streets and the gutters he took the boys and none was too wicked nor too hopeless to be given a chance . With ...
... problems and the first of Dr. Barnardo's Homes was born . In England , Scotland and Canada the Homes were built . From the streets and the gutters he took the boys and none was too wicked nor too hopeless to be given a chance . With ...
Página 24
... problems when Jane Addams saw the need for justice and neighborli- ness and took it upon herself . Judge Lindsey , Ernest Coulter and John Gunckel , Katherine Davis and Mary McDowell , hundreds of gradu- ates of our colleges , scores of ...
... problems when Jane Addams saw the need for justice and neighborli- ness and took it upon herself . Judge Lindsey , Ernest Coulter and John Gunckel , Katherine Davis and Mary McDowell , hundreds of gradu- ates of our colleges , scores of ...
Página 38
... problem became her problem and she could not rest until she had found a way to help . As the years passed , her capacity for " feeling another's woe " and for taking it upon herself grew and her state , realizing her value , called her ...
... problem became her problem and she could not rest until she had found a way to help . As the years passed , her capacity for " feeling another's woe " and for taking it upon herself grew and her state , realizing her value , called her ...
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aeroplane answer Argives Army girl asked ATLANTIC MONTHLY belligerent biological blind Bolshevik burden centuries child civilization Clausewitz common conflict coöperation cost defeat dream Empire Europe European evil face fact feel force foreign Foreign Office frontier German Empire Germany Helen Keller hope human affairs hundred individual Jacob Riis Jane Addams Keller League of Nations league-of-nations project limitation live look Machiavelli mankind matter means ment military mind nation in arms never night organization peace Peter Clay phase political possible power idea prepossession problems Queen Victoria realize release rentier responsibility Roman Empire Russia Salvation Army school teacher's house sentiment social soul story streets strength struggle suffering tank task teacher things thought thousand Thyrea tide is sure tion took tribes vast victory village war-process whole women words World-League of Nations world-peace young
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 6 - 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...
Página 6 - HE speaks not well who doth bis time deplore, Naming it new and little and obscure, Ignoble and unfit for lofty deeds. All times were modern in the time of them, And this no more than others. Do thy part Here in the living day, as did the great Who made old days immortal ! So shall men, Gazing long back to this far-looming hour, Say: " Then the time when men were truly men...
Página 6 - Defying leagued fraud with single truth, Not fearing loss and daring to be pure. When error through the land raged like a pest, They calmed the madness caught from mind to mind By wisdom drawn from eld, and counsel sane ; And, as the martyrs of the ancient world Gave Death for man, so nobly gave they life : Those the great days, and that the heroic age.
Página 6 - Then the time when men were truly men : Though wars grew less, their spirits met the test Of new conditions; conquering civic wrong; Saving the state anew by virtuous lives; Guarding the country's honor as their own, And their own as their country's and their sons': Defying leagued fraud with single truth; Not fearing loss; and daring to be pure.
Página 58 - The reef is strong and cruel, Upon its jagged wall One wave, a score, a hundred Broken and beaten fall; Yet in defeat they conquer, The sea comes flooding in, Wave upon wave is routed, But the tide is sure to win.
Página 1 - Philanthropists may think it possible that the disarmament or subjection of the enemy can be effected by some artificial means, without causing too many wounds, and that this is the true aim of all military science. Pretty as that looks, we must refute the error, for, in such dangerous matters as war, errors arising from good-nature are the worst of all. As the employment of physical force to its fullest extent in no wise excludes the cooperation of intelligence, it follows that he who makes use...