[178-5] C.A.W. Pownall, Thomas Pownall, London, 1908, p. 157.
[179-1] C.A.W. Pownall, Thomas Pownall, London, 1908, p. 232.
[179-2] Ibid., p. 202.
[179-3] Woodrow Wilson, The State, 1897, rev. ed., Boston, 1911, p. 453: "Despite very considerable outward differences of social condition and many apparent divergencies of interest as between colony and colony, they one and all wanted the same revolution. . . . They did not so much make a common cause as have a common cause from the first."
[180-1] See John Fiske, The Critical Period of American History, 1788-1789, Boston, 1898.
[180-2] Cf. ante, p. 81, note 1.
[180-3] P. A. Molteno's A Federal South Africa, London, 1896, written more than three years before the Boer War, compares the then condition of South Africa with the condition of the American thirteen nations in the days covered by Fiske's The Critical Period of American History, contains a prophecy now fulfilled, and is a valuable comment on many of the needs of the Pan-Angle world of to-day.
[181-1] F. S. Oliver, Alexander Hamilton: An Essay on American Union, London, 1906, p. 447.
[181-2] Richard Jebb, The Britannic Question, London, 1913.
[181-3] Lord Milner, December 14, 1906, at Conservative Club, Manchester, England, in Lord Milner, The Nation and the Empire, London, 1913, p. 142.