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قراءة كتاب Woodrow Wilson and the World War A Chronicle of Our Own Times.

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Woodrow Wilson and the World War
A Chronicle of Our Own Times.

Woodrow Wilson and the World War A Chronicle of Our Own Times.

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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TEXTBOOK EDITION

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THE YALE CHRONICLES
OF AMERICA SERIES

ALLEN JOHNSON
EDITOR

 

 

GERHARD R. LOMER
CHARLES W. JEFFERYS
ASSISTANT EDITORS

WOODROW WILSON
AND THE WORLD WAR

A CHRONICLE OF OUR OWN TIMES
BY CHARLES SEYMOUR
1921

TORONTO: GLASGOW, BROOK & CO.
NEW YORK: UNITED STATES PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION, INC.

Copyright, 1921, by Yale University Press

 

Printed in the United States of America

CONTENTS

 


WOODROW WILSON AND THE WORLD WAR

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CHAPTER I

WILSON THE EXECUTIVE

When, on March 4, 1913, Woodrow Wilson entered the White House, the first Democratic president elected in twenty years, no one could have guessed the importance of the rôle which he was destined to play. While business men and industrial leaders bewailed the mischance that had brought into power a man whose attitude towards vested interests was reputed none too friendly, they looked upon him as a temporary inconvenience. Nor did the increasingly large body of independent voters, disgusted by the "stand-pattism" of the Republican machine, regard Wilson much more seriously; rather did they place their confidence in a reinvigoration of the Grand Old Party through the progressive leadership of Roosevelt, whose enthusiasm and practical vision had attracted the approval of more than four million voters in the preceding election, despite his lack of an adequate political organization. Even those who supported Wilson most whole-heartedly believed that his work would lie entirely within the field of domestic reform; little did they imagine that he would play a part in world affairs larger than had fallen to any citizen of the United States since the birth of the country.

The new President was fifty-six years old. His background was primarily academic, a fact which, together with his Scotch-Irish ancestry, the Presbyterian tradition of his family, and his early years spent in the South, explains much in his character at the time when he entered upon the general political stage. After graduating from Princeton in 1879, where his career gave little indication of extraordinary promise, he studied law, and for a time his shingle hung out in Atlanta. He seemed unfitted by nature, however, for either pleasure or success in the practice of the law. Reserved

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