The Saxon and the Celt: A Study in Sociology |
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Page xii
... Britain , it ought to have similarly modified them in France , 1 Race Traits and Tendencies of the American Negro , by Fred . L. Hoffman , 1896 , Preface . ( American Economic Association's series of publications . ) 2 Anglo - Saxon Britain ...
... Britain , it ought to have similarly modified them in France , 1 Race Traits and Tendencies of the American Negro , by Fred . L. Hoffman , 1896 , Preface . ( American Economic Association's series of publications . ) 2 Anglo - Saxon Britain ...
Page 38
... Britain , p . 15 , cf. 156 ) . It seems safe to say with M. De Quatrefages and M. Reinach , here alone at one ( See Reinach , L'Origine des Aryens , p . 99 ) , that broad and long heads alike are Aryan . " 66 mission , 1 so that the ...
... Britain , p . 15 , cf. 156 ) . It seems safe to say with M. De Quatrefages and M. Reinach , here alone at one ( See Reinach , L'Origine des Aryens , p . 99 ) , that broad and long heads alike are Aryan . " 66 mission , 1 so that the ...
Page 53
... Britain , 2d ed . , pp . 57-65 . 3 De Bello Gallico , ii . 23 . Holtzmann's manipulation of Gallic names , such as vergobretus , in order to show that they are not Celtic but Teutonic ( Kelten und Germanen , S. 90- 119 ) , is really ...
... Britain , 2d ed . , pp . 57-65 . 3 De Bello Gallico , ii . 23 . Holtzmann's manipulation of Gallic names , such as vergobretus , in order to show that they are not Celtic but Teutonic ( Kelten und Germanen , S. 90- 119 ) , is really ...
Page 62
... Britain , 3 while tracing the red - haired Caledonians directly to the Germanic stock , Tacitus distinguishes sharply between the dark and curly - haired Silures , whom he regards as of Iberian descent , and others whom he declares to ...
... Britain , 3 while tracing the red - haired Caledonians directly to the Germanic stock , Tacitus distinguishes sharply between the dark and curly - haired Silures , whom he regards as of Iberian descent , and others whom he declares to ...
Page 66
... Britain , and Brittany , is traced by Professor Rhys , in the form of Brython , to a word meaning clothed or cloth - clad ; and he surmises that the tribe in question used the name to mark themselves off from the non - Aryan aborigines ...
... Britain , and Brittany , is traced by Professor Rhys , in the form of Brython , to a word meaning clothed or cloth - clad ; and he surmises that the tribe in question used the name to mark themselves off from the non - Aryan aborigines ...
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Common terms and phrases
alike ancient Anglo-Saxon Aquitani Aryan barbarism Belgae blond brachycephalic Britain Burton Cæsar Catholic Catholicism Celtic race Celtophobia Celts century character Christian Church Cimbri cited civilisation conquest criticism culture Danes dark doctrine dolichocephalic Dr Smith Duke Duke of Argyll Duke's element England English Englishmen Europe evil fact force France French Froude Galatae Galli Gaul Gauloise generalisation German Gladstone Goldwin Smith Greek Highland historian Home Rule Iberian industry influence invaders Ireland Irish Nationalists Irish Parliament Irish problem Irishmen Italy land language later Lecky literature Lowland matter modern nation Nationalist native nature Norman northern organisation party Poesche political population prejudice Protestant Protestantism racial reason regards religious Richey Roman Rome Saxon scientific Scotch Scotland seems skull Strabo strife Suevi Tacitus tanistry Teutonic theory things tion to-day trade tribes Ulster Unionist Welsh whole writers
Popular passages
Page 165 - I must do it justice : it was a complete system, full of coherence and consistency ; well digested and well composed in all its parts. It was a machine of wise and elaborate contrivance ; and as well fitted for the oppression, impoverishment, and degradation of a people, and the debasement, in them, of human nature itself, as ever proceeded from the perverted ingenuity of man.
Page 300 - ... the superior part has a natural right to govern, the inferior part has a natural right to be governed...
Page 148 - The English, nation was shuddering over the atrocities of the Duke of Alva. The children in the nurseries were being inflamed to patriotic rage and madness by tales of Spanish tyranny. Yet Alva's bloody sword never touched the young, the defenceless, or those whose sex even dogs can recognise and respect.
Page 254 - Unheard-of confiscations were made in the northern parts, upon grounds of plots and conspiracies, never proved upon their supposed authors. The war of chicane succeeded to the war of arms and of hostile statutes ; and a regular series of operations...
Page 148 - ... after, insomuch as the very carcasses they spared not to scrape out of their graves...
Page 30 - Aryan languages together point to an earlier period of language, when the first ancestors of the Indians, the Persians, the Greeks, the Romans, the Slaves, the Celts, and the Germans were living together within the same enclosures, nay under the same roof.
Page 252 - ... there is no nation of people under the sun that doth love equal and indifferent justice better than the Irish ; or will rest better satisfied with the execution thereof although it be against themselves; so as they may have the protection and benefit of the law, when upon just cause they do desire it.
Page 130 - Welsh' gold and ' Welsh' steel, where the Scandinavians led a roving life, fighting and sailing, and riding and feasting, by turns ? Where but in the Western Isles? " Again, where could those curious mythologic fancies, which created Walhall, and made of Woden a heavenly Charlemagne, which dreamed, like Caedmon, of the Rood as a tree that spread through the worlds, which pictured the final doom as near, and nursed visions of an everlasting peace, holier even than...
Page 169 - ... sincerity and good faith with which numbers of Englishmen confess themselves incapable of comprehending it. They know not that the disaffection which neither has nor needs any other motive than aversion to the rulers, is the climax to a long growth of disaffection arising from causes that might have been removed. What seems to them the causelessness of the Irish repugnance to our rule is the proof that they have almost let pass the last opportunity they are ever likely to have of setting it right....
Page 158 - that for the space of five years past there have not been found so many malefactors worthy of death in all the six circuits of this realm (which is now divided into thirty-two shires at large) as in one circuit of six shires, namely, the western circuit, in England. For the truth is that in time of peace the Irish are more fearful to offend the law than the English or any other nation whatsoever.