[101-2] Ibid.

[102-1] J.B. Thayer, John Marshall, Boston, 1901, p. 63

[103-1] J.B. Thayer, John Marshall, Boston, 1901, p. 61.

[104-1] Round Table, London, November 1910, p. 62.

[104-2] Ibid., p. 62.

[105-1] Round Table, London, November 1910, p. 62.

[105-2] "Pacificus," Federalism and Home Rule, London, 1910, p. 2.

[105-3] Ency. Brit., vol. vii. p. 15: "Again, as a term of party politics, constitutional has come to mean, in England, not obedience to constitutional rules . . . but adherence to the existing type of the constitution or to some conspicuous portions thereof,—in other words, conservative."

[107-1] Woodrow Wilson, The State, 1898, Boston, rev. ed., 1911, p. 378.

[107-2] Ency. Brit., vol. vii. p. 14.