Your EnglandPutnam, 1955 - 303 ページ Memoirs of trout fishing, politics, rugby, the London music hall and school masters. |
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198 ページ
... believed that the German - speaking part of Czechoslovakia should be ceded to Germany ; others again for purely selfish reasons ; but most people because they genuinely disliked the whole idea of war . There were of course dissentients ...
... believed that the German - speaking part of Czechoslovakia should be ceded to Germany ; others again for purely selfish reasons ; but most people because they genuinely disliked the whole idea of war . There were of course dissentients ...
222 ページ
... believed in U.N.O. just as their fathers believed in the League of Nations . Nevertheless , there were vast differences . There was the atomic bomb , but in the immediate post - war years the general fear was not so great as now , for ...
... believed in U.N.O. just as their fathers believed in the League of Nations . Nevertheless , there were vast differences . There was the atomic bomb , but in the immediate post - war years the general fear was not so great as now , for ...
269 ページ
... believed that Britain could survive . But the mad dogs of Englishmen believed and , when the Local Defence Volunteers were formed , went out confidently to man the ridiculously planned tank - traps . - - We all were in the same boat ...
... believed that Britain could survive . But the mad dogs of Englishmen believed and , when the Local Defence Volunteers were formed , went out confidently to man the ridiculously planned tank - traps . - - We all were in the same boat ...
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abroad admiration Ambassador American Arnold Bennett attitude Attlee Baldwin bank better Bevin Bolsheviks Brighton Brighton and Hove Britain British Cambridge club Communist cricket Crowthorne dinner diplomats Empire England English Englishman Europe famous father football Foreign Office friends gave Germany Government Hitler House of Commons Hove Jan Masaryk journalists King George knew Labour Lady least living Lloyd George London looked Lord Beaverbrook Moscow never newspaper night-clubs occasions once Oxford Parliament Party peace period played politicians politics popular post-war Prime Minister race realised regarded remember revolution Rugby football Russia Scotland Scots Scottish second world second world war seemed social Soviet Union Standard story Street T. S. Eliot talk to-day told took Tory United victory wanted Wellington College William Slim Winston Churchill write young