Abstract

Editorials

April 4, 1918 issue

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The superiority of French leadership to British leadership must be accepted as one of the lessons of the World War I. The inscription stating that history is past politics in the historical seminar of Johns Hopkins University presents an incomplete truth, for much history is present politics. The death of Henry Adams recalls the feeling of many Southern scholars that his work betrayed prejudice, or at least an imperfect sympathy with the South, Jefferson, and Democratic-Republicanism. If the schools of French and British history have on the whole led along the right paths, those of Germany have not.

See Also:

WORLD War, 1914-1918; POLITICS, Practical; ARMIES; HISTORY; GERMANY; FRANCE; GREAT Britain
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