[164-4] For a general account of Ireland in this connection, see Price Collier, England and the English, London, 1911, pp. 230-262; and for a constitutional discussion, Cf. Round Table, London, December 1913, pp. 1-67.
[164-5] H.S. Perris, Pax Britannica, London, 1913, p. 139.
[165-1] As Home Rule, like other political terms, has been used to denote many theorems, its meaning in any statement depends somewhat on the particular instance.
[166-1] W.H. Taft, Popular Government, New Haven, Connecticut, 1913, p. 137.
[166-2] Ency. Brit., vol. xxiii. p. 178, Letter of Abraham Lincoln to Horace Greeley, August 1862.
[167-1] Cf. W.H. Taft, Popular Government, New Haven, Connecticut, 1913, p.151: "It is essential . . . in the life of our dual government that the power and functions of the State governments be maintained in all the fulness that they were intended to have by the framers of the Constitution."
[168-1] Woodrow Wilson, Mere Literature, Boston, 1900, pp. 208-210.
[168-2] United Empire is also the title of the magazine published monthly by the Royal Colonial Institute, London.
[168-3] C. W. Dilke, Greater Britain, London, 1868; J. R. Seeley, The Expansion of England, London, 1883.
[169-1] G. R. Parkin, Imperial Federation, London, 1892, p. 25.