[!-- Note Anchor 10 --][Footnote 10: Autobiography, vol i. p. 239.]

[!-- Note Anchor 11 --][Footnote 11: Ibid., vol. i. p. 320.]

[!-- Note Anchor 12 --][Footnote 12: Autobiography, vol. i. p. 341 (from "The Rejected Stone").]

[!-- Note Anchor 13 --][Footnote 13: Autobiography, vol. ii. pp. 453, 454.]

[!-- Note Anchor 14 --][Footnote 14: Addresses and Reprints, p. 432.]

[!-- Note Anchor 15 --][Footnote 15: Speech before the American International Arbitration Society, January 1911.]

[!-- Note Anchor 16 --][Footnote 16: See Mr. Hobson's Imperialism and The Psychology of Jingoism; Norman Angell's The Great Illusion.]

[!-- Note Anchor 17 --][Footnote 17: "It is especially in the domain of war that we, the bearers of men's bodies, who supply its most valuable munition, who, not amid the clamour and ardour of battle, but singly and alone, with a three-in-the-morning courage, shed our blood and face death that the battlefield may have its food—a food more precious to us than our heart's blood; it is we especially who, in the domain of war, have our word to say—a word no man can say for us. It is our intention to enter into the domain of war, and to labour there till, in the course of generations, we have extinguished it"—Olive Schreiner's Woman and Labour, p. 178.]

[!-- Note Anchor 18 --][Footnote 18: Of course, other causes combined for the Barcelona outbreak—hatred of the religious orders, chiefly economic, and the Catalonian hatred of Castile; but the refusal of reservists to embark for Melilla was the occasion and the main cause.]

[!-- Note Anchor 19 --][Footnote 19: Quoted in J.A. Hobson's Psychology of Jingoism, p. 52.]