THE END
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SWITZERLAND. By Frank Fox.
This volume will give to the reader a good knowledge not only of the scenery of Europe's playground but of the Swiss people and their life. A little nation which has supplied Europe at various times with bands of both heroes and waiters, which is celebrated alike for generous hospitality to refugees and the most strictly commercial hospitality to tourists, has a paradoxical aspect whatever way it is regarded. The author seeks to describe rather than to explain the Swiss, but gives a closely compressed record of their early history as some key to the curiously contradictory elements of their national character.
ENGLAND. By Frank Fox.
The task of describing England was for good reason given to a visitor to the Mother Country. It will be found that Mr. Frank Fox has done his work well. A stranger to England will have his attention drawn to the features of her life which are most characteristic: residents in England will find interest in studying an impression of their country from a sympathetic Australian observer. Within a very small compass there is a bright living picture of England, her history, her institutions, her people, her green country-side, her historic monuments.
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AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. By G. E. Mitton.
It was through Austria-Hungary that the great crisis in Europe arose. Yet how few people know anything about the country, although both in the matter of national history and scenery Austria-Hungary is well worth considering. Its story of romance, its scenery is not behind any in Europe, though, except for the Tyrol and the Dolomites, it is far from well known. In the reconstruction of political frontiers which will necessarily follow the War, the races of the Dual Monarchy will have to be taken into account, and it is essential to know something of them if we would be abreast of the times.
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GREECE: MONTENEGRO: TURKEY
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THE SPIRIT OF THE ALLIED NATIONS
A SERIES OF ESSAYS BY
PAUL STUDER, M.A., Professor of the Romance Languages in the University of Oxford.
ALEXIS ALADIN, Ex-member of the Russian Duma.
PAUL HAMELIUS, D. és L., Professor of English Literature in the University of Liège.
J. H. LONGFORD, B.A., Professor of Japanese in the University of London.
R. W. SETON-WATSON, D. Litt., New College, Oxford; Author of The Southern Slav Question, etc.
SIDNEY LOW, M.A., Balliol College, Oxford, Lecturer on Imperial and Colonial History, King's College, London University; Author of The Governance of England, A Vision of India, etc.
Edited, with an Introduction and Appendix, by SIDNEY LOW
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TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES
Both "Serbia" and "Servia", "country-side" and "countryside" are found in this text.
At p. 54, the phrase "I was through the war" may be an error for "I went through the war", but has been left unchanged.
There is only one typo: "howevre" (on p. 21) has been changed to "however".
Four words in the index have a different spelling from that used in the text. Kossovo, Nova Zagora, Chorlu and Zablak are indexed as "Kossova", "Nova Sagora", "Tchorlu" and "Zablack" respectively. These spellings have been left unchanged.