The Pan-Angles A Consideration of the Federation of the Seven English-Speaking Nations
Part 18
Law in the Pan-Angle nations, 67 _et seq._
Lee, Robert E., 167.
Legislative control, 94, 108.
Le Rossignol and Stewart, _State Socialism In New Zealand_, quoted, 53 _n._
Leroy-Beaulieu, P., _Les Etats-Unis au Vingtième Siècle_, cited, 51 _n._
Lincoln, President, 27 _n._ 1, 150, 166-167, 168, 226.
Local autonomy, 161, 172, 200, 229.
Lodge, H. C., _One Hundred Years of Peace_, cited, 123.
Louisiana, 133.
Lourenço Marques, 132 _n._ 1.
Magna Carta, 53, 63.
Mahan, Admiral, 32; _quoted_ on Japan among the Nations, 146 _et seq._
Malay Peninsula, Federated States, the, 13, 14, 200 _n._ 1.
Marriage and divorce laws, 71-73; local laws, 72.
Maryland-Virginia, Conference (1785), 26.
Massachusetts: settlement of, 8; the Taunton liberty pole, 10, 11; during the Seven Years War, 134, 178, 179.
_Mayflower_, the, 29, 100.
Mill, J.S., _The Subjection of Women_, quoted, 73.
Milner, Lord, _quoted_, 86; on the federation of the Empire, _quoted_, 188, 201.
Modyford, Colonel Thomas, 184.
Monroe doctrine, the, 125-128, 154.
Monroe, President, 126, 127.
Moore, W. H., _The Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia_, cited, 83 _n._ 1.
Natal, 233
Asiatic Indians in, 123-124.
Zulu rebellion in, 123.
National Church, 74.
Native franchise question in South Africa, 66.
Naval co-operation between the Pan-Angle countries, 158-159, 223.
Naval expansion, effect on Great Britain, 157-158.
Naval strength, importance of, to the Pan-Angles, 157, 158; Colonial efforts for, 158, 182.
Negro problem, 27.
Slavery and the War of Secession, 150, 166.
Suffrage, 66-67.
Nelson, 54.
New England, the town meeting in, 59-61; union of the Colonies in, 203-205, 233.
Newfoundland, 7, 16, 81, 161. Constitution of, 99, 110.
New Guinea, 48.
New Zealand, 13, 16, 48, 61, 81-82, 143-146 _passim_, 158, 234.
Constitution of, 99, 110.
Government of, 193, 194.
House of Representatives, method of election to the Upper House, 60, 109, 110.
Resolutions against Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, 124.
State Socialism in, 53 _and n._
Norman Conquest, the, 5-6, 56.
Norsemen, the, 4.
North America: the struggle for, 178, 179; the centre of Pan-Angle civilization, 191.
Nova Scotia, 233.
Oliver, F. S., _Alexander Hamilton_, quoted, 86, 88, 89, 115 _n._
Otis, of Massachusetts, _cited_, 11.
Page, Ambassador, _cited_, 217, 218 _n._
Panama Canal tolls, 125, 128.
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Pan-Angle, Pan-Angles:
Alliances of, with former competitors, 133.
Characteristics of, 47.
gift for combining, 52.
Civilization, character of, 41.
Clamour for local autonomy, 200.
Communities, tendency to separation latent in, 164-165.
Converging tendency among, 173 _et seq._
Defined, 17-18, 28.
Equality of citizenship in, 11, 13.
Federation of, considered, 93, 129-130, 203, 206 _et seq._, 227 _et seq._
Governments, 108, 193.
History, commencement of, 7.
Language of, 28.
Law among the, 67 _et seq._
Nations:
area of, 81 _n._ 1.
attitude to Japanese immigration, 144 _et seq._
dependencies of, 91-93.
friendship and alliance among, 183.
mutual criticism between, 32-33.
naval co-operation between, 158-159, 223.
population of, 81 _n._ 1.
similarity in forms of government, 94.
Origin of, 1 _et seq._, 6.
People, the, 22 _et seq._
Pioneers, methods of, 48.
Standard of living, 40, 41, 42, 44.
Struggle for world domination, 133-135.
Struggles with other civilizations, 43, 44, 130 _et seq._
Territories:
acquisition of by, 43, 44.
area of, 48 _and n._ 1.
Women, 51 _and n._ 2.
Papua, 9.
Parliament, British. _See under_ British.
Patriotism and federation, 206-208.
Peel, Sir Robert, 112.
Penington, Isaac, 57 _n._ 4.
People, the, similarity of, in the Pan-Angle nations, 21, 23.
Perry, Admiral, 142.
Philippines, the, 9, 143.
Pitt, William. _See_ Chatham.
Political combinations preservative of individualism, 54.
Political good feeling, 177.
Political status of the six nations, 84 _et seq._
Pollock and Maitland, _History of English Law_, cited, 63.
Popular election, 112.
Population of the Pan-Angle nations, 81 _n._ 1.
Portugal, 131, 153.
Oversea possessions of, 132 _and n._1.
Possessions as distinguished from colonies, 9.
Pownall, C. A. W., _Thomas Pownall_, 134, 152,
Pownall, Governor Thomas, views of, on colonial representation, 187-188, 189; _cited_, 12, 61, 187, 190; _quoted_, 45, 51, 52, 178, 179.
Presentative element in British government, the, 58.
Presentative government in the Pan-Angle nations, 55, 56, 61; tendency towards an increase in, 62,
Privy Council, Judicial Committee of, 90-91, 124.
Queensland, 233.
Quoted passages, meaning of terms in, 19 _n._ 1
Recall, 60, 62.
Referendum, 60, 61.
Reform Bill (1832), 50, 112.
Religion and individualism, 73-75.
Representation: difficulties attendant upon, 60; not in itself enough for Pan-Angles, 200.
Representative government, development of, 54, 56-58; transplantation of, to the colonies, 58, 59.
Representative, a, not necessarily chosen by the people he represents, 59; chosen by elections and referenda, 95.
Rhode Island, 233.
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Rhodes, Cecil J., 149,172; interest in the Irish question, 202 _and n._ 2; views of, as to federation, 202, 203; _quoted_, on English-speaking reunion, 190; the Rhodes' Scholarships, 221, 222.
Roman administration of Britain, 2-3.
Roman Empire population, 17 _and n._
Roosevelt, President, 171 _and n._ 2.
Royal Colonial Institute, 168 _and n._
Rushworth, _quoted_, 40.
Russia, 138-139, 142; growth of, significance for Pan-Angle civilization, 139, 142, 228; checked by Japan, 139.
Saxons, the, 4, 5, 6.
Scotland, union with England, 10.
Scots, the, Goldwin Smith _quoted_ on, 36.
Sea power, importance of, to the Pan-Angles, 157, 158.
Seeley, J. R., _Expansion of England_, cited and quoted, 88, 92, 134, 160, 168.
Self-government, 8, 9, 120, 172, 201; effect of failure to distinguish between self-governing and non-self-governing areas, 13-16; and the right of the British Government, 85 _and n._, 89 _et seq._; effect of improper check to, 161; principles of, violated in the British system, 196.
Sentiment and government, 183.
Separation, the tendency to, 160 _et seq._, 173.
Seven English-speaking nations, the, 16 _et seq._, 79 _et seq._, 189.
Seven Years War, 134, 178.
Shakespeare, _cited_, 28, 29.
Shelburne, Lord, 174.
Shirley, Governor, 185, 199.
Silburn, P. A., _The Governance of Empire_, quoted, 204, _n._
Slavery, the abolition of, 50, 84, 150, 166.
Smith, Goldwin, _quoted_, 36, 150; _cited_, 164.
South Africa, 13, 16, 23, 80, 121, 172, 180.
South Africa:
Asiatic Indians in, 120 _and n._, 123-124, 158.
British Government and the internal affairs of, 123, 213.
Chinese indentured labour in, 123.
Constitution of, 99, 110.
Emancipation of slaves in, 84.
Government, 193.
Law in, 69.
Natives and the franchise in, 66-67.
South African Provinces, convergences of, 168.
South African Railway Rates Conference (1908), 216.
South African War, 172, 174, 182.
Spain and her possessions, 131.
Spreading: the tendency to, in Pan-Angle history, 100-161, 172.
State Church, the, 74.
Stead, W. T., _cited_, 190.
Suffrage, the, 63, _et seq._
Local differences in, 64-65.
Local option, 65.
Negro, 66-67.
Sex disqualification, the, 64.
Switzerland, Inter-cantonal, arbitration in, 216.
Taft, W. H., _Popular Government_, cited, 60 _n._ 3; quoted, 65.
Taunton liberty pole, the, 10, 11.
Taxation and representation, 12, 13, 209.
Tendencies, 160 _et seq._
Revealed in Pan-Angle history, 160.
Teutonic: invasion of Britain, 4; system of government, 113-114, 116, 117.
Texas, 49 _n._ 1, 82.
Thayer, J. B., _John Marshall_, quoted, 102, 103.
_Times, The_, quoted, 120 _n._ 1.
Transvaal, 138.
Indian question, 125.
_Transvaal Leader_, cited, 132 _n._ 1.
Trusts or combinations, 52.
Unconstitutional: different meanings of the word in Great Britain and in United States, 104-108.
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_United Empire_, 168 _n._ 2.
United States, the, 1, 9, 16, 45, 83 _n._ 2, 178, 179, 180, 228. _See also under_ American.
Administration, the. _See_ Government.
Centralization, the demand for, in, 170.
Colonies, federal government of, 189.
Conference of Governors in, 171 _and n._ 2, 172.
Conservation in, 171.
Electoral College, 106, 111 _and n._, 112.
Executive, the, 116.
Federal Constitution of, 99-103 _passim_, 106, 107, 109 _and n._
Federal Government of, 90, 111-118 _passim_, 170-172, 189, 193, 200-201.
Immigration, 22, 23, 24 _n._ 1.
Law in, similar to the law of England, 70; appointment of the judiciary, 114.
President, the, 62, 101,114, 116, 117; election of, 111; and administrative subordinates, 117.
Secession movement in, 165; sacrifices to preserve the Union, 168, 173; the War of Secession, 150, 166-168, 172, 174.
Senators, indirect election of, 60.
State governments in, 65, 114.
States rights, the demand for, 170.
United States: Upper House, election to, 109, 110.
United States and British Isles, effect of federation on sources of disagreement between, 125 _et seq_.; treaties between, 182-183.
United States and the Britannic nations, 182, 230-231.
Vancouver Island, 210 _n._
Virginia, settlement of, 8.
The House of Assembly in, 9, 59.
Voltaire, treatise on Toleration, _cited_, 34.
Washington, George, _cited_, 107; _quoted_, 225.
Webster, Noah, 34.
William the Conqueror, 5, 55.
Willson, Beckles, _The Great Company_, cited, 49 _n._ 2.
Wilson, Governor (of Kentucky), 171 _n._ 2.
Wilson, Woodrow, _Mere Literature_, quoted, 95, 166-168; _The State_, quoted, 107, 114 _n._, 118 _n._
Witenagamot, the, 55, 57, 61.
Women's share in American colonization, 51 _and n._ 2.
Worsfold, W. B., _The Union of South Africa_, quoted, 67, 69.
Yellow races, the, 140 _et seq._
[Transcriber's Notes:
All spellings have been preserved as printed. The appearance of [_sic_] is as printed in the source book.
Footnotes have been numbered as "ppp-nn", where "ppp" is the page number and "nn" is the footnote's number on that page. This matches the original Index entries.
Footnote 30-1 was not numbered in the source book, nor was there a referring footnote number in the source text on page 30. ]