We covet peace, and shall preserve it at any cost but the loss of honor. To forbid our people to exercise their rights for fear we might be called upon to vindicate them would be a deep humiliation indeed. Woodrow Wilson as President - Strana 337autor/autoři: Eugene Clyde Brooks - 1916 - 572 str.Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| 1916 - 880 str.
...exercise their undoubted rights, lest those rights should be violated and the Government should have to vindicate them, would be "a deep humiliation indeed." It would be more than a humiliation; it would be a wrong, for "it would be an implicit, and all but an explicit,... | |
| Thomas Williams Bicknell, Albert Edward Winship, Anson Wood Belding - 1916 - 1014 str.
...citizens should be abridged or denied by such action, we should have in honor no choice as to our course. To forbid our people to exercise their rights for fear we might be called upon to vindii-ate them would be, the President said, a deep humiliation. "We covet • ." he said, "and shall... | |
| 1917 - 688 str.
...of the nation is involved. We covet peace, and shall preserve it at any cost but the loss of honor. To forbid our people to exercise their rights for...vindicate them would be a deep humiliation indeed. Tt would be an implicit, all hut an explicit, acquiescence in the violation of the rights of mankind... | |
| 1916 - 666 str.
...of the nation is involved. We covet peace, and shall preserve it at any cost but the loss of honour. To forbid our people to exercise their rights for...humiliation indeed. It would be an implicit, all but an explicit, acquiescence in the violation of the rights of mankind everywhere and of whatever nation... | |
| United States. Congress - 1916 - 166 str.
...of the Nation is involved. We covet peace, and shall preserve it at any cost but the loss of honor. To forbid our people to exercise their rights for...humiliation indeed. It would be an implicit, all but an explicit, acquiescence in the violation of the rights of mankind everywhere and of whatever nation... | |
| 1916 - 1296 str.
...of the nation are involved. We covet peace, and shall preserve it at any cost but the loss of honor. To forbid our people to exercise their rights for...might be called upon to vindicate them would be a deep humilation indeed. It would be an implicit, all but an explicit, acquiescence in the violation of the... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart, Arthur Oncken Lovejoy - 1917 - 136 str.
...of the nation are involved. We covet peace, and shall preserve it at any cost but the loss of honor. To forbid our people to exercise their rights for...humiliation indeed. It would be an implicit, all but an explicit, acquiescence in the violation of the rights of mankind everywhere, and of whatever nation... | |
| Lindsay Rogers - 1917 - 296 str.
...of the nation are involved. We covet peace and shall preserve it at any cost but the loss of honor. To forbid our people to exercise their rights for...humiliation indeed. It would be an implicit, all but an explicit, acquiescence in the violation of the rights of mankind everywhere and of whatever nation... | |
| Edgar Eugene Robinson, Victor J. West - 1917 - 450 str.
...of the Nation is involved. We covet peace, and shall preserve it at any cost but the loss of honor. To forbid our people to exercise their rights for...humiliation indeed. It would be an implicit, all but an explicit, acquiescence in the violation of the rights of mankind everywhere and of whatever nation... | |
| Augustus White Long - 1917 - 458 str.
...of the nation is involved. We covet peace and shall preserve it at any cost but the loss of honor. To forbid our people to exercise their rights for...humiliation indeed. It would be an implicit, all but an explicit, acquiescence in the violation of the rights of mankind everywhere, and of whatever nation... | |
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