FROM THE CURRENT ISSUE OF
262 pages
Français

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

FROM THE CURRENT ISSUE OF

-

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
262 pages
Français
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

FROM THE CURRENT ISSUE OF

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Publié le 08 décembre 2010
Nombre de lectures 69
Langue Français
Poids de l'ouvrage 8 Mo

Extrait

The Project Gutenberg EBook of New York Times, Current History, Vol 1, Issue 1, by Various
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: New York Times, Current History, Vol 1, Issue 1  From the Beginning to March, 1915 With Index
Author: Various
Release Date: October 5, 2004 [EBook #13635]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEW YORK TIMES, CURRENT ***
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Miranda van de Heijning and the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
CURRENT HISTORY
A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
THE EUROPEAN WAR
VOLUME I.
From the Beginning to March, 1915
With Index
NEW YORK THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY 1915
Copyright 1914, 1915, By The New York Times Company
CONTENTS
NUMBER I.
WHAT MEN OF LETTERS SAY
COMMON SENSE ABOUT THE WAR By George Bernard Shaw SHAW'S NONSENSE ABOUT BELGIUM By Arnold Bennett BENNETT STATES THE GERMAN CASE By George Bernard Shaw FLAWS IN SHAW'S LOGIC By Cunninghame Graham EDITORIAL COMMENT ON SHAW SHAW EMPTY OF GOOD SENSE By Christabel Pankhurst COMMENT BY READING OF SHAW OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT WILSON By George Bernard Shaw A GERMAN LETTER TO G. BERNARD SHAW By Herbert Eulenberg
Page 11
60
63
65
66 68
73 76
80
BRITISH AUTHORS DEFEND ENGLAND'S WAR With Facsimile Signatures THE FOURTH OF AUGUST--EUROPE AT WAR By H. G. Wells IF THE GERMANS RAID ENGLAND By H. G. Wells SIR OLIVER LODGE'S COMMENT WHAT THE GERMAN CONSCRIPT THINKS By Arnold Bennett FELIX ADLER'S COMMENT WHEN PEACE IS SERIOUSLY DESIRED By Arnold Bennett BARRIE AT BAY: WHICH WAS BROWN? An Interview on the War A CREDO FOR KEEPING FAITH By John Galsworthy HARD BLOWS, NOT HARD WORDS By Jerome K. Jerome "AS THEY TESTED OUR FATHERS" By Rudyard Kipling KIPLING AND "THE TRUCE OF THE BEAR" ON THE IMPENDING CRISIS By Norman Angell WHY ENGLAND CAME TO BE IN IT By Gilbert K. Chesterton SOUTH AFRICA'S BOERS AND BRITONS By H. Rider Haggard CAPT. MARK HAGGARD'S DEATH IN BATTLE By H. Rider Haggard
AN ANTI-CHRISTIAN WAR By Robert Bridges ENGLISH ARTISTS' PROTEST TO ARMS! By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle CONAN DOYLE ON BRITISH MILITARISM THE NEED OF BEING MERCILESS By Maurice Maeterlinck LETTERS TO DR. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER By Baron d'Estournelles de Constant
82
87
89
92 93
95 97
100
102
103
106
107 107
108
125
128
129
130 132
140 144
146
THE VITAL ENERGIES OF FRANCE
By Henri Bergson FRANCE THROUGH ENGLISH EYES With Rene Bazin's Appreciation THE SOLDIER OF 1914 By Rene Doumic GERMANY'S CIVILIZED BARBARISM By Emile Boutroux THE GERMAN RELIGION OF DUTY By Gabriele Reuter A LETTER TO GERHART HAUPTMANN By Romain Rolland A REPLY TO ROLLAND By Gerhart Hauptmann ANOTHER REPLY TO ROLLAND By Karl Wolfskehl ARE WE BARBARIANS? By Gerhart Hauptmann
TO AMERICANS FROM A GERMAN FRIEND
By Ludwig Fulda APPEAL TO THE CIVILIZED WORLD By Professors of Germany APPEAL OF THE GERMAN UNIVERSITIES REPLY TO THE GERMAN PROFESSORS By British Scholars CONCERNING THE GERMAN PROFESSORS By Frederic Harrison THE REPLY FROM FRANCE By M. Yves Guyot and Prof Bellet TO AMERICANS IN GERMANY By Prof. Adolf von Harnack A REPLY TO PROF. HARNACK By Some British Theologians PROF. HARNACK IN REBUTTAL THE CAUSES OF THE WAR By Theodore Niemeyer COMMENT BY DR. MAX WALTER
153
153
156
160
170
174
175
176
178
180
185
187 188
192
194
198
201
203 206
208
NUMBER II.
WHO BEGAN THE WAR AND WHY?
SPEECHES BY KAISER WILHELM II. 210 THE MIGHTY FATE OF EUROPE 219 As Interpreted by Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg, German Imperial Chancellor. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY'S VERSION OF THE WAR 226 By Kaiser Frawz Josef and Count Berchtold A GERMAN REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE 228 Certified by Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, German ex-Colonial Secretary "TRUTH ABOUT GERMANY" 244 Attested by Thirty-four German Dignitaries SPECULATIONS ABOUT PEACE, SEPTEMBER, 1914 273 Report by James W. Gerard, American Ambassador at Berlin, to President Wilson. FIRST WARNINGS OF EUROPE'S PERIL 277 Speeches by British Ministers GREAT BRITAIN'S MOBILIZATION 294 Measures Taken Throughout the Empire Upon the Outbreak of War
SUMMONS OF THE NATION TO ARMS British People Roused by Their Leaders TEACHINGS OF GEN. VON BERNHARDI By Viscount Bryce ENTRANCE OF FRANCE INTO THE WAR By President Poincare and Premier Viviani RUSSIA TO HER ENEMY "THE FACTS ABOUT BELGIUM" Statement Issued by the Belgian Legation at Washington BELGO-BRITISH PLOT ALLEGED BY GERMANY Statement Issued by German Embassy at Washington, Oct. 13. ATROCITIES OF THE WAR BOMBARDMENT OF RHEIMS CATHEDRAL Protest Issued to Neutral Powers from French Foreign Office, Bordeaux, Sept. 21. THE SOCIALISTS' PART
308
343
350
358 365
369
374 392
397
NUMBER III.
WHAT AMERICANS SAY TO EUROPE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CIVILIZATION Argued by James M. Beck CRITICS DISPUTE MR. BECK DEFENSE OF THE DUAL ALLIANCE--REPLY By Dr. Edmund von Mach WHAT GLADSTONE SAID ABOUT BELGIUM By George Louis Beer FIGHT TO THE BITTER END An Interview with Andrew Carnegie WOMAN AND WAR--"Shot, Tell His Mother" (Poem) By W.E.P. French, Captain, U.S. Army THE WAY TO PEACE An Interview with Jacob H. Schiff PROF. MATHER ON MR. SCHIFF THE ELIOT-SCHIFF LETTERS By Jacob H. Schiff and Charles W. Eliot LA CATHEDRALE (Poem Translated by Frances C. Fay) By Edmond Rostand PROBABLE CAUSES AND OUTCOME OF THE WAR Series of Five Letters by Charles W. Eliot, with Related Correspondence THE LORD OF HOSTS (Poem) By Joseph B. Gilder A WAR OF DISHONOR By David Starr Jordan MIGHT OR RIGHT By John Grier Hibben JEANNE D'ARC--1914 (Poem) By Alma Durant Nicholson THE KAISER AND BELGIUM (With controversial letters) By John W. Burgess AMERICA'S PERIL IN JUDGING GERMANY By William M. Sloane POSSIBLE PROFITS FROM WAR Interview with Franklin H. Giddings
413
431 438
448
451
458
459
464 465
47 2
473
501
502
503
506
507
515
526
"TO AMERICANS LEAVING GERMANY" A German Circular GERMAN DECLARATIONS By Rudolf Eucken and Ernst Haeckel THE EUCKEN AND HAECKEL CHARGES By John Warbeke CONCERNING GERMAN CULTURE By Brander Matthews
CULTURE VS. KULTUR
By Frank Jewett Mather, Jr. THE TRESPASS IN BELGIUM By John Grier Hibben APPORTIONING THE BLAME By Arthur v. Briesen PARTING (Poem) By Louise von Wetter FRENCH HATE AND ENGLISH JEALOUSY By Kuno Francke IN DEFENSE OF AUSTRIA By Baron L. Hengelmuller RUSSIAN ATROCITIES By George Haven Putnam "THE UNITED STATES OF EUROPE" Interview with Nicholas Murray Butler
A NEW WORLD MAP By Wilhelm Ostwald THE VERDICT OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE By Newell Dwight Hillis TIPPERARY (Poem) By John B. Kennedy AS AMERICA SEES THE WAR By Harold Begbie TO MELOS, POMEGRANATE ISLE (Poem) By Grace Harriet Macurdy WHAT AMERICA CAN DO By Lord Channing of Wellingborough TO A COUSIN GERMAN (Poem) By Adeline Adams WHAT THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS MAY BE
533
534
537
541
543
545
548
553
554
559
563
565
571
573
581
582
587
588
593
594
By Irving Fisher EFFECTS OF WAR ON AMERICA By Roland G. Usher GERMANY OF THE FUTURE Interview with M. de Lapredelle GERMANY THE AGGRESSOR By Albert Sauveur MILITARISM AND CHRISTIANITY By Lyman Abbott
VIGIL (Poem)
By Hortense Flexner NIETZSCHE AND GERMAN CULTURE By Abraham Solomon BELGIUM'S BITTER NEED By Sir Gilbert Parker
NUMBER IV.
THE WAR AT CLOSE QUARTERS
SIR JOHN FRENCH'S OWN STORY Famous Dispatches of the British Commander in Chief to Lord Kitchener STORY OF THE "EYE WITNESS" By Col. E.D. Swinton of the Intelligence Department of the British General Staff THE DAWN OF A NEW DAY (Poem) By Edward Neville Vose THE GERMAN ENTRY INTO BRUSSELS (With Map) By John Boon THE FALL OF ANTWERP By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle AS THE FRENCH FELL BACK ON PARIS By G. H. Perris THE RETREAT TO PARIS By Philip Gibbs A ZOUAVE'S STORY By Philip Gibbs
600
605
609
610
612
613
614
619
650
678
679
682
689
691
704
WHEN WAR BURST ON ARRAS By a Special Correspondent THE BATTLES IN BELGIUM (With Map) By The Associated Press SEEKING WOUNDED ON BATTLE FRONT By Philip Gibbs AT THE KAISER'S HEADQUARTERS By Cyril Brown of The New York Times HOW THE BELGIANS FIGHT By a Correspondent of The London Daily News A VISIT TO THE FIRING LINE IN FRANCE By a Correspondent of The New York Times UNBURIED DEAD STREW LORRAINE (With Map) By Philip Gibbs ALONG THE GERMAN LINES NEAR METZ By The Associated Press THE SLAUGHTER IN ALSACE By John H. Cox RENNENKAMPF ON THE RUSSIAN BORDER By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle THE FIRST FIGHT AT LODZ (With Map) By Perceval Gibbon THE FIRST INVASION OF SERBIA (With Map) By a Correspondent of The London Standard THE ATTACK ON TSING-TAU By Jefferson Jones THE GERMAN ATTACK ON TAHITI As Told by Miss Geni La France, an Eyewitness THE BLOODLESS CAPTURE OF GERMAN SAMOA By Malcolm Ross, F.R.G.S. HOW THE CRESSY SANK
By Edgar Rowan
GERMAN STORY OF THE HELIGOLAND FIGHT By a Special Correspondent of The New York Times THE SINKING OF THE CRESSY AND THE HOGUE By the Senior Surviving Officers, Commander Bertram W.L. Nicholson and Commander Reginald A. Norton THE SINKING OF THE HAWKE
707
711
714
718
725
727
729
731
736
738
740
742
745
748
749
752
754
755
757
By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle THE EMDEN'S LAST FIGHT By the Cable Operator at Cocos Islands CROWDS SEE THE NIGER SINK By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle LIEUTENANT WEDDIGEN'S OWN STORY By Herbert B. Swope and Capt. Lieut. Otto Weddigen THE SOLILOQUY OF AN OLD SOLDIER (Poem) By O.C.A. Child THE EFFECTS OF WAR IN FOUR COUNTRIES By Irvin S. Cobb HOW PARIS DROPPED GAYETY By Anne Rittenhouse PARIS IN OCTOBER From The London Times FRANCE AND ENGLAND AS SEEN IN WAR TIME Interview with F. Hopkinson Smith THE HELPLESS VICTIMS By Mrs. Nina Larrey Duryee A NEW RUSSIA MEETS GERMANY By Perceval Gibbon
BELGIAN CITIES GERMANIZED By Cyril Brown of The New York Times THE BELGIAN RUIN By J.H. Whitehouse, M.P. THE WOUNDED SERB From The London Times SPY ORGANIZATION IN ENGLAND British Home Office Communication CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR THE MEN OF THE EMDEN (Poem) By Thomas R. Ybarra
NUMBER V.
THE NEW RUSSIA SPEAKS
AN APPEAL BY RUSSIAN AUTHORS, ARTISTS AND ACTORS
758
760
762
764
765
767
770
772
776
777
780
786
788
790
793 816
817
  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents