WASHINGTON AND THE HOPE OF PEACE. H. G. Wells
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу WASHINGTON AND THE HOPE OF PEACE - H. G. Wells страница 1
H. G. Wells
WASHINGTON AND THE HOPE OF PEACE
Also Known as "Washington and the Riddle of Peace"
Published by
Books
- Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -
2017 OK Publishing
ISBN 978-80-272-3611-4
Table of Contents
I. — THE IMMENSITY OF THE ISSUE AND THE TRIVIALITY OF MEN
II. — ARMAMENTS: THE FUTILITY OF MERE LIMITATION
III. — THE TRAIL OF VERSAILLES: TWO GBEAT POWERS ARE SILENT AND ABSENT
IV. — THE UNKNOWN SOLDIER OF THE GREAT WAR
V. — THE PRESIDENT AT ARLINGTON
VIII. — CHINA IN THE BACKGROUND
X. — “SECURITY”— THE NEW AND BEAUTIFUL CATCHWORD
XIII. — THE LARGER QUESTION BEHIND THE CONFERENCE
XIV. — THE REAL THREAT TO CIVILIZATION
XV. — THE POSSIBLE BREAKDOWN OF CIVILIZATION
XVII. — EBB TIDE AT WASHINGTON
XVIII. — AMERICA AND ENTANGLING ALLIANCES
XIX. — AN ASSOCIATION OF NATIONS
XX. — FRANCE AND ENGLAND— THE PLAIN FACTS OF THE CASE
XXIII. — INDIA, THE BRITISH EMPIRE AND THE ASSOCIATION OF NATIONS
XXIV. — THE OTHER END OF PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE—THE SIEVE FOR GOOD INTENTIONS
XXV.— AFRICA AND THE ASSOCIATION OF NATIONS
XXVI. — THE FOURTH PLENARY SESSION
XVIII. — THE FOUNDATION STONE AND THE BUILDING
XXIX. — WHAT A STABLY ORGANIZED WORLD PEACE MEANS FOR MANKIND
INTRODUCTION
THESE twenty-nine papers do not profess to be a record or description of the Washington Conference. They give merely the impressions and fluctuating ideas of one visitor to that conference. They show the reaction of that gathering upon a mind keenly set upon the idea of an organized world peace; they record phases of enthusiasm, hope, doubt, depression and irritation. They have scarcely been touched, except to correct a word or a phrase here or there; they are dated; in all essentials they are the articles just as they appeared in the New York World, the Chicago Tribune, and the other American and European papers which first gave them publicity. It is due to the enterprise and driving energy of the New York World, be it noted, that they were ever written at all. But in spite of the daily change and renewal of mood and attitude, inevitable under the circumstances, they do tell a consecutive story; they tell of the growth and elaboration of a conviction of how things can be done, and of how they need to be done, if our civilization is indeed to be rescued from the dangers that encompass it and set again upon the path of progress. They record—and in a very friendly and appreciative spirit—the birth and unfolding of the “Association of Nations” idea, the Harding idea, of world pacification, they note some of the peculiar circumstances of that birth, and they study the chief difficulties on its way to realization. It is, the writer believes, the most practical and hopeful method of attacking this riddle of the Sphinx that has hitherto been proposed.
H.G. Wells.
I. — THE