Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Isle of Man, Gibraltar, Malta, St. Helena, Barbados, Cyprus, the Channel Islands, the British Army Navy: Historical, Political, and Geographical History
Messrs. Kegan paul co. Have, I think, done a good service in publishing this Series. If our great Empire is to be preserved, it must be understood; and some of our wars would have been avoided if others had understood us better. The Boers of the Transvaal and the Orange Free State would never have attacked us if they had not been grievously and wickedly misled as to our intentions, and grossly ignorant of our strength and resources.
The rapidity with which we have placed an im mense and well-equipped force in the field at a distance Of 6000 miles has indeed been a surprise to every one, and even I think to ourselves, though we knew that, in the words Of an American statesman, our ?ag waves on every sea and in every port, and the morning drum-beat of her soldiers, following the sun and keep ing company with the hours, circles the earth with one continuous strain of the martial airs Of England.
To maintain that Army and Navy in full efficiency is a duty which I doubt not we Shall perform; but if our Empire is to be permanent it must rest not on force, but on justice, and be held together by the sym pathy and goodwill Of all its parts.
The history Of the world is full Of warnings. Other great empires have risen and fallen again, and if we are to escape their fate, we must avoid their errors.
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