[6]. “Of Kingdoms and Estates.”
[7]. “The Revival of Naval History,” Contemporary Review. November, 1917. While the term “political pamphlet” suggests the influence of the book abroad, it is obviously inappropriate in describing its purpose and method of treatment.
[8]. “The Kaiser’s Dreams of Sea Power,” Archibald Hurd, Fortnightly Review, August, 1906.
[9]. “From Sail to Steam,” p. 303.
[10]. “Captain Romeo Bernotti,” letter to the editor, April 25, 1918.
[11]. “A Great Public Servant,” The Outlook, January 13, 1915.
[12]. “From Sail to Steam,” p. 288.
[13]. “The Influence of Sea Power upon History,” pp. 1–2, 8–10.
[14]. “Naval Administration and Warfare,” Objects of the Naval War College (1888), pp. 193–194, 233–240.
[15]. In a preceding passage the author shows that American naval thought has been preoccupied with problems of material.—Editor.