A / B / C / D / E /  F / G / H / I / J /  K / L / M / N / O /  P / R / S / T / UV / W / Z

Annual Bibliography of Commonwealth Literature 2007
This paper argues that discourses of love in Ghanaian market literature for youth offer a view into complex negotiations of agency and empowerment. Drawing on Deborah Durham's notion of youth as "social `shifters'" and Francis Nyamnjoh's conception of the "interconnectedness" of agency, I take Ghanaian market literature as one specific case of how African literature for youth foregrounds questions of continuity and change as African societies enter into increasingly complex global relations. In this literature for youth, received notions of love, often constructed out of impressions from American pop and hip hop music, carry new notions of agency that compete with existing "domesticated" forms. Authors like Ike Tandoh and Evelyn Tay employ discourses of love to offer youth alternative avenues for empowerment in a context of socio-economic disenfranchizement. In a creative process of "straddling", this writing both reveals and reproduces the contradictions that obtain in youth configurations of agency.

Current History, A Monthly Magazine

N >> New York Times >> Current History, A Monthly Magazine

Pages:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27



Jan. 29--Officer stops Mrs. Asquith and party on way to the front for
a weekend.


GERMANY.

Jan. 8--Government charges that San Marino has been encouraging
espionage by its wireless station.

Jan. 9--Tobacco sent to French prisoners to be admitted free of duty.

Jan. 10--Retired Belgian General and Lieutenant sentenced to life
imprisonment for aiding Belgians to escape to Holland; it is said that
the Landsturm can still furnish 5,000,000 men; Socialist meeting
prohibited in Saxony.

Jan. 11--Reports from Russia state that German women in men's uniform
have been taken prisoners in bayonet charges recently and that some of
them are wounded and in hospital; sale of blankets forbidden in Berlin
and Brandenburg; the stocks are to be placed at the disposal of the
military authorities; French women and children taken from occupied
territory are being sent home.

Jan. 12--The Pope is negotiating for better treatment of clerical
prisoners.

Jan. 17--Official reports state that the prisoners of war held by
Germany and Austria are now 800,000.

Jan. 22--Escaped British officer charges cruelty toward British
prisoners.

Jan. 23--Money prizes are offered to the first invaders of England.

Jan. 25--Secretary Bryan makes public the text of German Government's
notification of cancellation of exequaturs granted by Belgian
Government to foreign Consular representatives, and the reply of the
United States.

Jan. 27--Prince von Buelow tells Italian statesmen that Italy's
preparations for war are resented and that an ultimatum may be sent;
French charge that German soldiers reverse bullets for short-range
fighting; wife of Greek Consul at Liege sentenced to prison for aiding
Belgians to escape; all neutrals to be expelled from Upper Alsace;
Gen. von Bissing orders all Englishmen in Belgium sent to Germany.

Jan. 30--Value of French territory occupied by the Germans is
estimated at $1,900,000,000 by the Inspector General of the Credit
Foncier, or 7.2 per cent., of the total value of all France; according
to the census of 1911 3,255,000 persons, or 8.2 per cent. of the
population of France, live in this territory; Berlin night life is
under the war ban, yet the opera and theatres are open.


ITALY.

Jan. 11--Troops sent to garrison the Italian islands in the Aegean.

Jan. 12--Demonstration when the body of Constantino Garibaldi, killed
while serving with the French, arrives in Rome; many applications for
nationality by Germans are being refused; Committee of National
Defense formed at Milan.

Jan. 13--Italians in all parts of the world are offering to enlist in
event of war; a special police census shows 700,000 Austrians and
Germans in the country; embassies advise them to leave.

Jan. 23--Vice Consul at Liege dismissed for aiding Belgians; prominent
Italians appeal to neutral countries to take steps to preserve art
treasures in belligerent countries.

Jan. 25--Radicals want war.

Jan. 29--Soldiers of the First and Third Categories are called to the
colors; retired officers fit for service are liable to be recalled.

Jan. 30--Contracts for army and navy supplies are placed in the United
States.

Jan. 31--Riots in Rome against neutralists.


RUMANIA.

Jan. 8--The nation is mobilizing 750,000 men, of whom 500,000 form the
field army.

Jan. 11--London experts think that Rumania will soon enter war on side
of Allies, her army linking with the extreme Russian left.

Jan. 16--Students in Switzerland summoned home because of
mobilization.

Jan. 22--Orders are placed with Swiss firms for medical supplies.

Jan. 26--Exportation of army supplies to Hungary recommenced.


RUSSIA.

Jan. 9--Girl fights with Cossacks and wins Cross of St. George.

Jan. 10--Only half the number of this year's recruits liable for
military service are called out.

Jan. 20--It is reported that some members of the imperial family are
opposed to the war.

Jan. 21--Troops are warned against bogus proclamations, bearing Czar's
name, circulated by Austrians.

Jan. 22--Orders issued for expulsion of Austrian and German subjects.

Jan. 26--Foreign Minister Sazonof says there will be no peace while a
single soldier of the enemy remains on Russian soil.

Jan. 29--Poles form legion at Warsaw.


RELIEF WORK.

Jan. 8--California's relief cargo is on the way to Rotterdam.

Jan. 9--To date the value of cargoes of food, clothing, and medical
supplies delivered, in transit on the Atlantic, or arranged for from
the United States to Belgium amount to more than $14,000,000; milk and
sugar are scarce in Belgium, the babies feeling the influence of the
food crisis.

Jan. 10--Antwerp Council passes resolution of thanks to Americans,
whose help "is literally saving us."

Jan. 11--American party sent to relieve German and Austrian prisoners
in Russia is halted by the Russian Government pending negotiations.

Jan. 15--Large consignment of supplies is sent to Saloniki by American
Red Cross; Virginia and Maryland send Belgian relief ships; Georgia is
raising funds for a ship.

Jan. 21--American Red Cross issues report of its European activities
from Aug. 1 to Jan. 9; war fund thus far amounts to $1,188,000;
forty-five American Red Cross surgeons and 150 nurses are on war duty
in Europe; Sing Sing prisoners are to knit socks for Polish destitute.

Jan. 23--Mme. Grouitch, wife of the Secretary General for Foreign
Affairs of Servia, arrives in New York seeking funds for seeds for the
Servian Spring planting; Dr. Wickliffe Rose and Ernest Bicknell, who
have been in Russian Poland for the American Red Cross, report from
Berlin that conditions in Poland are worse, if anything, than those in
Belgium.

Jan. 24--Commission for Relief in Belgium has thirty-five chartered
steamships running between American ports and Rotterdam carrying
supplies.

Jan. 26--American Red Cross ships large consignment of supplies for
Constantinople and Servia.

Jan. 27--Commission for Relief in Belgium states that 76,000 tons of
food, in addition to supplies in sight, are needed for next three
months; there are now 1,400,000 destitute, and the number is
increasing daily.

Jan. 28--Committee of prominent American educators plans to have the
20,000,000 children of the United States help war sufferers through a
new fund, to be called the Children of America's Fund.

Jan. 31--Rockefeller Foundation denies that it has withdrawn from
Belgium relief work.




TO HIS MAJESTY KING ALBERT

By WILLIAM WATSON.

[From King Albert's Book.]


Receive, from one who hath not lavished praise
On many Princes, nor was ever awed
By empire such as groveling slaves applaud,
Who cast their souls into its altar-blaze--
Receive the homage that a freeman pays
To Kinghood flowering out of Manhood broad,
Kinghood that toils uncovetous of laud,
Loves whom it rules, and serves the realm it sways.

For when Your people, caught in agony's net,
Rose as one dauntless heart, their King was found
Worthy on such a throne to have been set,
Worthy by such as They to have been crowned;
And loftier praise than this did never yet
On mortal ears from lips of mortals sound.




INDEX

Vol. I. From the Beginning to March, 1915

[Titles of articles appear in _italics_.]


A

ABBOTT, (Dr.) L., "Militarism and Christianity," 610.

ABOUKIR, 752, 755, 761.

ACLAND, F.D., speech, 277.

ACTORS, Russian, appeal, 817.

ADAMS, Adeline, poems, 593, 1004.

ADCOCK, A. St. J., review of book, "In the Firing Line," 971.

ADLER, Felix, criticism of A. Bennett, 95.

AERONAUTICS, 659, 664, 710, 932.

AERSCHOT, 380, 945.

_After the Russian Advance in Galicia_, 958.

AISNE, Battle of, 635, 650.

ALABAMA Claims, 258.

ALBANIA, 1062.

ALBERT, King of the Belgians, appeal to King George, 287;
tributes in poems, 1210, 1228.

_All-Night Attack_, 979.

ALLENBY, (Maj. Gen.) E.H.H., 620-622, 635, 645.

_Along the German Lines Near Metz_, 731.

ALSACE-LORRAINE, 97, 147, 483, 488, 491, 492, 555, 557, 729, 736.

ALTENBURG, Duke of, letter, 1200.

AMERICANS, arrest on neutral vessels, 1181.

_America's Peril in Judging Germany_, 515.

AMMUNITION, sale of, 1178.

ANDENNE, 1115.

ANGELL, Norman, "On the Impending Crisis," 107.

ANGLO-RUSSIAN Treaty, 45.

_Another "Happy Thought"_, 789.

_Answering the "Chant of Hate"_, 988.

_Anti-Christian War_, 129.

ANTWERP, 682, 784, 787.

_Appeal of the German Universities_, 187.

_Appeal to America for Belgium_, 924.

_Appeal to the Civilized World_, 185.

_Apportioning the Blame_, 548.

ARBITRATION, 150;
treaties, 50, 225.

ARCHER, William, poem, 1114.

_Are We Barbarians?_ 178

ARIF Bey, 1029.

ARNOLD, Winifred, poem, 789.

ARRAS, Battle of, 707.

ARTISTS, British, protest against vandalism, 130;
Russian, appeal of, 817.

_As America Sees the War_, 582.

_As the French Fell Back on Paris_, 689.

"_As They Tested Our Fathers_," 106.

ASHMEAD-BARTLETT, 714.

ASQUITH, (Premier) H.H., criticisms, 23, 29, 62;
statements, 278, 279, 291, 292, 299;
letter to Mayors, 308;
speeches, 309-325.

_At the Kaiser's Headquarters_, 718.

_At the Villa Achilleion Corfu_, 999.

ATROCITIES, German, 104, 129, 185, 192;
Allies accused by Bethmann-Hollweg, 223;
charges against Belgians, 261, 266;
official statements, 374-391;
letters of G.H. Putnam and R.F. Thienes, 563;
statement by Lord Channing, 592;
Aerschot, 945;
French official report, 1132.

_Atrocities of the War_, 374.

_Attack on Tsing-tao_, 745.

AUGUSTA Victoria, _see_ GERMANY:--Empress.

AUSTRIA-HUNGARY:--
Balkan policy, 227.
Conditions in Galicia, 958.
Declaration of war on Serbia, 226.
Ultimatum to Serbia criticised, 109, 136, 189, 195, 202, 203, 339, 559.

_Austria-Hungary's Version of the War_, 225.

AUSTRO-GERMAN Treaty, 298.

AUTHORS, British, defend England, 82;
Russian, appeal of, 817;
British, on Russian literature, 819.

AVLONA, 1065.


B

BAKHMETEFF, (Ambassador) George, on Russia and the war, 364;
authenticity of interview denied, 617.

BALKAN States, 1025-1071.

BALKAN WAR, 247.

BALUHTCHICH, (Serbian Minister,) statement, 1039.

_Baptism of Fire_, 977.

_Barnardiston_, (Col.,) 1104, 1105, 1110.

_Barrie at Bay: Which Was Brown?_ 100.

BARRY, Beatrice, poems, 850, 948, 988.

BASS, J.F., on visit to Russian trench, 963.

BATTLE of Dorking, 13, 61.

BATTLES, _see_ CAMPAIGNS, SEA fights, names of battles.

BAVARIA:--Crown Prince Rupprecht's army orders, 984.

BAZIN, Rene, appreciation of article in London Times on France, 153.

BECK, J.M., "In the Supreme Court of Civilization," 413;
criticisms and replies, 431-448.

BEER, G.L., "What Gladstone Said About Belgium," 448.

BEGBIE, Harold, "As America Sees the War," 582.

_Belgian Battleground_, 1109.

_Belgian Cities Germanized_, 780.

_Belgian Boy Tells Story of Aerschot_, 945.

_Belgian Ruin_, 786.

_Belgian Soldier_, 1215.

BELGIUM:--
Army, 725.
Claims, 48, 97.
Effects of war, 765.
"Gray Book," 371, 413-448.
Neutrality Violation and Treaty of London, opinion of G.B. Shaw, 25,
30, 58;
A. Bennett, 62;
C. Graham, 65;
editorial in New York Times; C. Pankhurst; letter from Shaw to
President Wilson, 77;
H. Eulenberg, 80;
British authors, 82;
J. Galsworthy, 102;
R. Kipling, 107;
G.K. Chesterton, 108, 123;
A.C. Doyle, 136;
R. Rolland, 174;
G. Hauptmann, 175;
L. Fulda, 182;
German professors, 185;
British scholars, 189;
Y. Guyot and Professor Bellet, 196;
British theologians, 201;
von Harnack, 204;
Bethmann-Hollweg, 222;
German analysis of British "White Papers," 241;
"Truth About Germany," 249, 258;
Sir E. Grey, 286;
Asquith, 292, 321;
Lloyd George, 336;
statement by Legation at Washington, 365;
G.L. Beer on Gladstone's views, 448;
J.H. Schiff, 460;
Dr. C.W. Eliot, 484;
Dr. Dernburg, 488;
Prof. Burgess, 511;
A. von Briesen, 551;
W. Ostwald, 572;
Dr. N.D. Hillis, 575;
Germany's strategic railways, 1000;
"A Scrap of Paper," 1120.
Refugees, 48, 614, 776.
Treatment of resident Austrian and German citizens, 268.

_Belgium's Bitter Need_, 614.

BELGO-BRITISH Plot, 204, 369-372; 545-547; 990; 1000; 1101-1119.

BELGRADE, 969, 1042.

BELLET, (Prof.), reply to German professor's appeal to civilization, 194.

BELLOC, Hilaire, "Why England Fights Germany," 993.

BENEDICT XV., Pope, on destruction of Rheims, 392;
letter to Cardinal Mercier, 923.

BENNETT, Arnold, "Shaw's Nonsense About Belgium," 60;
reply from Shaw, 63;
"What the German Conscript Thinks," 93;
comment of F. Adler, 95;
"When Peace Is Seriously Desired," 97.

BERCHTOLD, (Count), on Austria-Hungary, 227.

BERGSON, Henri, "The Vital Energies of France," 152.

BERNHARDI, (Gen.) Friedrich von, criticisms of, 13, 15, 25, 56, 135,
140, 343.

BERNHEIMER, G.E., reply to J.M. Beck, 431.

BERNSTORFF, (Count) Heinrich von, on peace proposals, 274;
on Anglo-Belgian plot, 371.

BETHMANN-HOLLWEG, (Dr.) Theobald von, criticism by G.K. Chesterton, 114;
speeches and statements, 219-225;
conference with Ambassador Gerard on peace, 273;
reply to Asquith, 313;
full text of speech in Reichstag, 989;
on Belgian neutrality, 1113;
"A Scrap of Paper," 1120.

BEVIS, (Dr.), work among the wounded in Belgium, 714.

_Big and the Great_, 1114.

BLACKFORD, (Dr.) C.M., 107.

_Bloodless Capture of German Samoa_, 749.

BODKINSON, H.W., on refugees in Warsaw, 957.

BOEHN, (Gen.) von, 1117.

BOER War, 126, 133, 214.

_Bombardment of Rheims Cathedral_, 392.

BONN, (Prof.) M.J., "Tools of the Russian Juggernaut," 851.

BOON, John, on German entry into Brussels, 679.

BOSPORUS, Strait of, 1027.

BOURTZEFF, (Russian revolutionist), 823.

BOUTROUX, Emile, "Germany's Civilized Barbarism," 160.

BRANDES, Georg, "Fate of the Jews in Poland," 854.

BREZIZINY, Battle of, 740.

BRIDGES, (Col.), 1102, 1107.

BRIDGES, Robert, "An Anti-Christian War," 129.

BRIESEN, Arthur von, "Apportioning the Blame," 548.

BRIGGS, C.C.D., poem, 1198.

_British Authors Defend England's War_, 82.

_Broken Rose_, 1210.

BROQUEVILLE, (Lieut.) de, 714.

BROWN, Cyril, dispatches, 718, 780, 925-938.

BRUSSELS, 679, 780, 1118.

BRYAN, (Sec.) W.J., letter to Sen. Stone disclaiming bias against
Germany and Austria, 1175;
"Seizures of American Cargoes," 1183.

BRYCE, (Viscount) James, on teachings of Bernhardi, 343;
appreciation of letter by Dr. C.W. Eliot, 477.

BUCHANAN, (Sir) George, 229-236.

BUELOW, (Gen.) Karl von, 1115.

BULGARIA, England's overtures, 1031;
Serbs' view, 1036-1040.

_Bulgaria and Kultur_, 1040.

_Bulgaria's Attitude_, 1044.
_See also_ BALKAN States.

BUNSEN, (Sir) Maurice de, 231.

BURGESS, John W., letter on "Truth About Germany," 244;
articles on the war and controversy, 507.

BURGESS, William, letter, 973.

BURNS, John, 23.

BUTLER, (Dr.) N.M., "The United States of Europe," 565.

BUXTON, Noel, 1031.

BYNG, (Maj. Gen.) Julian, 649.


C

CABLE Censorship, 1175.

_Caldron of the Balkans_, 1025.

CAMBON, Paul, 233-242, 355.

CAMPAIGN in Eastern Europe, 738-744; 957-965.

CAMPAIGN in Western Europe, 620-738; 949-953; 1167-1174.

CARGOES, Amer., seizures, 1183, 1188.

CARNEGIE, Andrew, 206, 208;
interview, 451.

CARTOONS, 1073-1100.

CARUTHERS, M.V., poem, 864.

_Case for Germany_, 209.

_Case for the Triple Entente_, 276.

_Case of Belgium_, 1101.

CASTELNAU, (Gen.,) 643, 1170-1173.

_Cathedrale, La_, 472.

CAUSES of the War, views of T. Niemeyer, 206;
Dr. C.W. Eliot, 498;
M.J. Bonn, 852;
H. Belloc, 993.

CHANNING of Wellingborough, (Lord), "What America Can Do," 588.

"_Chant of Hate Against England_", 984;
answer, 988.

CHARLES, King of Rumania, death, career, 1056.

CHARTRES, Annie, poem, 1210.

_Cheerful Spirits in Trench Inferno_, 1217.

CHESTERTON, G.K., "Why England Came to be in It," 108;
"Russian or Prussian Barbarism," 111;
"Disposing of Germany's Civilizing Mission," 115;
"Russia Less Despotic Than Prussia," 119;
"The Bond of Teutonism," 122.

CHILD, O.C.A., poem, 764.

CHRONOLOGY of War, 793, 1007, 1224.

CHURCHILL, W.S., criticism, 13;
speech, 330.

_Civil Life in Berlin_, 943.

COBB, Irvin S., on effects of war in four countries, 765.

_Commercial Treaties After the War_, 863.

_Common Sense About the War_, 11.

_Commercial Aspects of War_, 526.

_Concerning German Culture_, 542.

_Concerning the German Professors_, 192.

_Confiscation of German Patents_, 849.

CONGO Conference, 259.

CONNAUGHT, (Prince) Arthur of, 646.

CONTRABAND, 1176, 1183, 1188.

COWEN, F.H., music for hymn to Belgium, 1126.

COX, John H., on fighting in Alsace, 736.

_Credo for Keeping Faith_, 102.

CRESSY, 753, 755, 761.

_Crowds See the Niger Sink_, 760.

CULTURE, 160, 178, 193-203; 317, 541, 543, 613, 821.

_Culture vs. Kultur_, 543.

CURZON, (Lord), criticism, 13;
speech, 308;
letter to London Times, 329.

CYPRUS Island, 1035.


D

_Damp Humor of the Night Watch_, 1206.

DANKL, (Gen.), 959.

DARDANELLES, Strait of, 1027, 1031.

DARRAIL, (Gen.), 1172.

DAVIS, R.H., on Rheims Cathedral, 932.

_Dawn of a New Day_, 678.

DAWNAY, (Maj.) Hugh, 649.

DECLARATION of London, 1182.

_Declaration of the Russian Industrial Interests_, 835.

DEFENDER, 973.

_Defense of the Dual Alliance_, 438.

DELCASSE, T., letter denying use of dumdum bullets by French, 376.

DERNBURG, (Dr.) Bernhard, on German review of the evidence, 229;
reply to letter by Dr. C.W. Eliot, 487;
"The Case of Belgium," 1101.

D'ESPEREY, (Gen.) Franchet, 652.

DETENTION Camps, _see_ PRISON Camps.

_Diary of Lydia Evans_, 981.

D'IBERVILLE, 1211.

DIECKMANN, (Maj.), 1118.

DISARMAMENT, 50, 97, 223.

DIXMUDE, Battle of, 712, 715.

DOUMIC, Rene, "The Soldier of 1914," 156.

DOYLE, (Sir) A.C., "To Arms!" 132;
on British militarism, 140.

DUBAIL, (Gen.), 1173.

DUCARME, (Maj. Gen.), 1104, 1105.

DUMDUM Bullets, sale by Amer. firms, 1179.
_See also_ ATROCITIES.

DURYEE, (Mrs.) Nina Larrey, appeal for aid for Belgians, 776.


E

ECOB, J.H., on the German Emperor, 510.

ECONOMIC Aspects of War, discussed by F.H. Giddings, 526;
article by Prof. I. Fisher, 594;
article by R.G. Usher, 600.

_Effects of War in Four Countries_, 765.

_Effects of War on America_, 600.

EGYPT, Sultan, _see_ HUSSEIN KAMEL.

ELIOT, (Dr.) C.W., criticism, 182;
letters, 465, 473-506.

EMDEN, poem, 816;
at Penang, 1211.

_Emden's Last Fight_, 758.

EMMICH, (Gen.) von, 935.

ENGLAND:--
Agreement with France, 239.
Army, views of G.B. Shaw, 31, 32, 34;
H.G. Wells on need of equipment, 91;
recruits, 106, 132, 299, 304, 306, 312-333;
reports of officers, 619.
Conditions described by I.S. Cobb, 765;
interview with F.H. Smith, 772.
Declaration of war upon Turkey, 1035.
Foreign Office, 13, 19, 28, 30, 61.
Invasion by Germans, 89, 92.
Labor problem, 49.
Labor Party, 31, 33, 36.
Navy, 311, 332.
Overtures to Bulgaria, 1031.
Russian Alliance, 81, 103, 107, 203, 207, 223.
Ultimatum to Germany, 291.
War Office, 34.
"White Paper," 19, 61, 228, 413, 431-448, 548.
_See also_ BELGO-BRITISH Plot.

_England Caused the War_, 989.

_English Artists' Protests_, 130.

_Entrance of France Into War_, 350.

EPIRUS, 1052, 1065.

ESCAILLE, de l', 237.

ESCHENBACH, (Councilor,) 986.

ESSAD Pasha, 1063.

ESTOURNELLES DE CONSTANT, (Baron) d', letters, 146.

EUCKEN, (Dr.) Rudolf, defense of Germany, 534.

EULENBERG, Herbert, letter, 80.

EUROPEAN Federation, _see_ UNITED States of Europe.

EVANS, Lydia, diary, 981.

_Exit Albania?_ 1062.

"EYEWITNESS," reports, 650.


F

"_Facts About Belgium_," 365.

_Fall of Antwerp_, 682.

_Fate of the Jews in Poland_, 854.

FAY, Frances C., translation of "La Cathedrale," 472.

FERDINAND, King of Rumania, 1057.

FERDINAND, Tsar of Bulgaria, speech from the throne, 1044.

FERGUSSON, (Sir) Charles, 641.

FERRIMAN, Z.D., on Serbians' re-entry into Belgrade, 969.

FICHTE, J.G., 162.

FIELDING, (Lady) Dorothie, 1714.

_Fifteen Minutes on the Yser_, 949.

_Fight to the Bitter End_, 451.

FILIPESCU, N., on Rumanians in Hungary, 1061.

_First Fight at Lodz_, 740.

_First German Prisoners_, 974.

_First Invasion of Serbia_, 742.

_First Warnings of Europe's Peril_, 276.

FISHER, Irving, on probable economic effects of the war, 594.

FITZ CLARENCE, (Brig. Gen.), 649;
tribute from Sir J. French, 649.

FLANDERS, Fighting in, 646, 1167.

_Flaws in Shaw's Logic_, 65.

FLEXNER, Hortense, poem, 612.

_Flight Into Switzerland_, 966.

FOCH, (Gen.), 647.

FOSBENDER, (Gen.) von, 1148.

_Four Months of War_, 1169.

_Fourth of August_, 87.

FOWLER, (Col.) J.S., 645.

FOX, Frank, 685, 686.

FRANCE:--
Army, 156.
Capital moved, 357.
General conditions, 146, 765, 767, 770, 772, 982.
Invasion of Germany, 221, 261, 264.
Treatment of resident German and Austrian citizens, 268.
Vital energies of, 152.

_France and England as Seen in War-Time_, 772.

_France Through English Eyes_, 153.
_See also_ CAMPAIGN in Western Europe.

FRANCIS JOSEPH, Emperor of Austria, 225, 226.

FRANCKE, (Prof.) Kuno, reply to letter by Dr. C.W. Eliot, 478;
"French Hate and English Jealousy," 554.

FRANCO-PRUSSIAN War, 13, 69.

FREDERICK WILLIAM, _see_ GERMANY--Crown Prince.

FRENCH, (Sir) John, tributes, 304, 306;
reports, 619;
order to troops, 654;
arrival in Paris, 768.

FRENCH, W.E.P., poem, 458.

_French Amenities_, 1220.

_French Hate and English Jealousy_, 555.

_French Official Report on German Atrocities_, 1132.

"_From the Body of This Death_," 1119.

FRONDE, 1211.

FULDA, Ludwig, 180.


G

GADKE, (Col.), 141.

GALICIA, 958.

GALLIENI, (Gen.), 702.

GALSWORTHY, John, "A 'Credo' for Keeping Faith," 102;
poem, 1126.

GEBWEILER, 738.

GEIER (S.S.), 1181.

GEORGE V., King of England, messages and addresses, 294, 298, 307, 1035;
visit to troops, 1035.

GERARD, (Ambassador) J.W., report on peace talk in Germany, 273.

_German Airmen_, 932.

_German Attack on Tahiti_, 748.

_German Declarations_, 534.

_German Entry Into Brussels_, 679.

_German Generals Talk of the War_, 934.

_German Review of the Evidence_, 228.

_German Religion of Duty_, 170.

GERMAN Samoa, 749.

_German Story of the Heligoland Fight_, 754.

GERMAN-AMERICANS, 578.

GERMANS, criticisms of, 93, 95, 124, 170.

_Germans as Seen from a Convent_, 981.

GERMANY:--
Address to Americans, 533.
Army, criticisms, 93, 95, 141;
mobilization, 252;
strength, 255;
officers, 256;
reports of correspondents, 718, 731, 925-934;
prisoners, 974;
commanders' proclamations, 1116.
Crown Prince's message to America, 1187.
Empress's appeal to German women, 211;
birthday celebration, 722.
General conditions, 765, 943.
Navy, 134, 215, 217, 254, 256.
Reichstag, 250.
South African intrigues, 127, 133, 214.
Treatment of resident citizens of hostile nations, 267.
White Book, 189, 413, 431-448.
_See also_ CAMPAIGN in Western Europe.

_Germany and World Empire_, 493.

_Germany of the Future_, 606.

_Germany the Aggressor_, 608.

_Germany vs. Belgium_, 1102.

_Germany's Civilized Barbarism_, 160.

_Germany's Strategic Railways_, 1000.

GIBBONS, Perceval, dispatches, 777, 961, 964, 1207.

GIBBS, Philip, dispatches, 691, 704, 714, 729.

GIDDINGS, F.H., "Possible Profits from War," 526.

GILDER, J.B., poem, 501.

GLADSTONE, W.E., 287, 317, 448.

GLEESON, 714.

_Glory of War_, 1004.

GOLTZ, (Baron) von der, 1118.

GOSCHEN, (Sir) E., 230-238.

GOUGH, (Maj. Gen.) H. de La P., 645.

GRADOW, Battle of, 965.

GRAHAM, Cunninghame, criticism of G.B. Shaw, 65.

GRANT, Lawrence, criticism of G.B. Shaw, 74.

GRAY Book, _see under_ BELGIUM.

_Great Britain's Mobilization_, 294.

_Grecian Neutrality Defined_, 1050.

_Greco-Rumanian Friendship_, 1053.

GREECE, 1050.
_See also_ BALKAN States.

GREEN, Horace, 686.

GRIENDL, (Baron,) 1102, 1104, 1108.

GREY, (Sir) Edward, criticisms, 13, 18, 19, 61, 67, 232-243;
appeal for national unity, 276;
letters, speeches, &c., 277, 279, 281, 290, 314, 355, 1111, 1120, 1188.

GRIVEGNEE, 1116.

GUESDE, Jules, 396, 398.

GUYOT, YVES, reply to German professors, 194.


H

HAASE, Hugo, speeches, 401.

HAECKEL, (Prof.) Ernst, criticisms, 123, 525;
defense of Germany, 534.

HAENISCH, (Gen.) von, 938.

HAESELER, (Gen.) von, 722.

HAGGARD, (Capt.) Mark, 128.

HAGGARD, H.R., "South Africa's Boers and Britons," 126.

HAIG, (Lieut. Gen. Sir) Douglas, 620, 637, 639, 641, 645, 648, 649.

_Hail!_ (Hymn to Belgium), 1126.

HAPSBURG Family, 138.

_Hard Blows, Not Hard Words_, 103.

HARDIE, Kier, on British Socialists and the war; questions Sir E. Grey,
409.

HARDY, Thomas, poem, 924.

HARNACK, (Prof.) Adolf von, criticism, 123;
address to Americans in Germany, 198-203.

HARRISON, Frederic, "Concerning the German Professors," 192.

HASKINS, H.S., poem, 1166.

HAUPTMANN, Gerhart, letter from R. Rolland, 174;
reply, 175;
"Are We Barbarians?" 178.

HAVENITH, E., on Anglo-Belgian plot, 372.

HAWKE (cruiser), 757.

_He Heard the Bugles Calling_, 1198.

HEIGEL, Edward, 686.

HEINE, Henry, poem, 525.

HELLPACH, (Prof.) W., 986.

HELIGOLAND, battle, 754.

_Helpless Victims_, 776.

HENDERSON, Arthur, on British Socialists and war, 409.

Pages:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27
Copyright (c) 2007. topboookz.com. All rights reserved.