Foreign policy, American, 289 ff.;
the Monroe Doctrine in, 291-297;
of Jeffersonian Republicans, 292;
wisdom of continued policy of isolation, 298, 310;
correct policy would be to make American system stand for peace, 299;
international system advocated for South and Central America, and
Mexico, 300-303;
the question of relations with Canada, 303-306;
suggested treaty bearing on relations between United States, Canada,
and Great Britain, 306;
systematic development of, an absolute necessity, 306-307;
colonial expansion, 308-309;
questions of, raised by future of China, 309-310;
isolation of United States is only comparative, under modern
conditions, 310.
Fortunes,
the inheritors of great, 204, 382-384.
France,
faith of Frenchmen in, 2;
origins of national state in, 218, 219;
effect of Revolution on national principle in, 223-224;
lack of representative institutions a defect in its government
to-day, 228;
democracy and nationality in, 239 ff.
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