[201] F. Melian Stawell, I. J. E., April, 1915, pp. 296, 297.
[202] C. D. Burns and L. S. Woolf have made a good deal of these tendencies. Cf. C. D. Burns: The Morality of Nations, and L. S. Woolf: International Government.
[203] C. D. Burns: The Morality of Nations, p. 237.
[204] For these and similar facts see C. D. Burns: The State and Its External Relations. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, 1915-1916, p. 300.
[205] Lippmann: The Stakes of Diplomacy, p. 45.
[206] The New York Times of Nov. 27, 1917, contained a report to the effect that the United States Government was preparing to notify Berlin of the steps that had been taken in the United States regarding the internment of unnaturalized Germans in this country. It was the purpose to inform Germany of the number of those interned, who they were, and how they were treated. The object was to reassure Germany that the interned Germans were not being ill-treated, and so to protect Americans interned in Germany.
[207] Trotter: The Instincts of the Herd in Peace and War, pp. 121, 122.
[208] Zimmerman: On National Pride, p. 306.
[209] Lippmann: The Stakes of Diplomacy, p. 224.
[210] H. H. Powers: The Things Men Fight For, p. 7.