< Page:The New Europe - Volume 3.djvu
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CHIEF CONTENTS OF VOL. III
| No. 27. | Japan’s Stake. | |
| Japan’s Stake in the War. By Tokiwo Yokoi. | ||
| Great Britain, Palestine, and the Jews. By Ibri. | ||
| The Russian Revolution and the Balkans. By Belisaurius. | ||
| “The Case of Archbishop Szeptycki” | ||
| The Prime Minister and America. | ||
| “If England and France fail to destroy German militarism, their prestige as leaders in liberal civilization is at an end.”—Marquis Saionji (1916). | ||
| No. 28. | The Transition. | |
| The Transition from Old to New Europe. | ||
| Free Russia, Greece, the Southern Slavs—and Italy? By Sir Athur Evans. | ||
| The Emancipation of Italy. | ||
| The Austrian Enigma. | ||
| The Last Moments of Tsardom. By An Eye-Witness. | ||
| “Et, peuples, je compris que j’entendais chanter L’espoir dans ce qui fut le désespoir naguère, Et la paix dans la gueule horrible de la guerre” —Victor Hugo (1871). |
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| No. 29. | Diplomacy. | |
| A Note on Diplomacy. By A. F. Whyte, M.P. | ||
| The Russian Peasants and Socialism. By Rurik. | ||
| Austria Infelix. By Thomas G. Masaryk. | ||
| Bulgaria and Prussia—A Comparison and a Hope. By Belisarius. | ||
| Sidelights on Italy. | ||
| “I found that the British lion was, in his knowledge of Europe, a mere child.”—Srgjan Tucić (1916). | ||
| No. 30. | Russia Liberatrix. | |
| The Emancipation of Finland. By Mrs. H. M. Hyndman. | ||
| The Letts under Germans and Russians. | ||
| Three Weeks at Athens. By John Mavrogordato. | ||
| The New Europe through Russian Eyes. By Rurik. | ||
| Prince Yusupov and Rasputin. | ||
| How the Revolution came to the Caucasus. | ||
| The Italian Front in Winter. | ||
| “To compare Russia of to-day with the Russia that is to come is to compare Chaos to the Universe.”—Sir Charies Dilke (1878). | ||
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