| Theodore Roosevelt - National characteristics, American - 1897 - 394 pages
...selects as popular heroes the men who have led in the struggle against malice domestic or foreign levy. No triumph of peace is quite so great as the supreme triumphs of war. The courage of the soldier, the courage of the statesman who has to meet storms which can be quelled... | |
| United States Naval Institute - Marine engineering - 1897 - 892 pages
...selects as popular heroes the men who have led in the struggle against malice domestic or foreign levy. No triumph of peace is quite so great as the supreme triumphs of war. The courage of the soldier, the courage of the statesman who has to meet storms which can be quelled... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - 1897 - 392 pages
...selects as popular heroes the men who have led in the struggle against malice domestic or foreign levy. No triumph of peace is quite so great as the supreme triumphs of war. The courage of the soldier, the courage of the statesman who has to meet storms which can be quelled... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - Political science - 1897 - 396 pages
...selects as popular heroes the men who have led in the struggle against malice domestic or foreign levy. No triumph of peace is quite so great as the supreme triumphs of war. The courage of the soldier, the courage of the statesman who has to meet storms which can be quelled... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - Hunting - 1897 - 544 pages
...heroes the men who have led in the struggle / against malice domestic or foreign levy. No tri\ umph of peace is quite so great as the supreme \.triumphs of war. The courage of the soldier, the courage of the statesman who has to meet storms which can be quelled... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - 1904 - 394 pages
...selects as popular heroes the men who have led in the struggle against malice domestic or foreign levy. No triumph of peace is quite so great as the supreme triumphs of war. The courage of the soldier, the courage of the statesman who has to meet storms which can be quelled... | |
| Carl Schurz - United States - 1913 - 560 pages
...describes how war arouses noble emotions, stimulates patriotism, brings forth heroic examples and how "no triumph of peace is quite so great as the supreme triumphs of war. " To be sure, he has also a word of recognition for the merits of peace, but it is rather of the conventional... | |
| Frederick W. Marks - Biography & Autobiography - 1982 - 268 pages
...Nor was he afraid to point out that war brings out the best in man, as well as the worst, and that "no triumph of peace is quite so great as the supreme triumphs of war."18 Temperamentally impatient, there was little room in his system of values for the "patient Griselda"... | |
| Trygve R. Tholfsen - Europe - 1984 - 324 pages
...race." In the same vein he wrote in a letter in 1895 that "this country needs a war." He announced that "no triumph of peace is quite so great as the supreme triumphs of war." His lyrical praise of warfare is in the European mode: "Every man who has in him any real power of... | |
| |