About This Book
A compact, originally infertile island is described as having achieved disproportionate modern influence through seafaring power, trade, and a self-sustaining civilizational model. The text blends geography and climate with historical comparison to Rome, Spain, Venice, and Holland to explain how commerce, accumulated wealth, and naval mastery extended influence worldwide. London, especially financial institutions, is shown as the pivot of global exchange. Social and political factors cited include a mixed but vigorous race, town and village institutions fostering law and liberty, and a tendency toward individual religious conscience. The work concludes by listing these forces as explanations and markers of future prospects.
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