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we say, extremely modest'; and that the Germans now realise that the British 'know how to defend themselves and have 'devised many kinds of protective measures.' The hope of the peaceful shipping of the world resides in those improvised methods of the British Fleet as offering the only means of escape from a state of anarchy at sea whenever maritime war occurs.

The submarine has arrived, and its development will persist. It may be that in a few years the navies of the world will possess under-water ships of 3000 or more tons displacement, carrying powerful armaments of quickfiring guns, in addition to torpedo tubes, with surface speeds exceeding twenty knots-being faster, therefore, than most battleships-and with the added defensive power derived from the ability to evade attack by submergence. Were such vessels able to pursue piratical tactics unimpeded, then indeed these islands might be exposed to the danger of starvation by a real blockade. But the skill and inventiveness of the Navy has hitherto conjured this danger with astonishing success.

Apart from the deplorable incidents which have distinguished the progress of Germany's 'blockade,' in only three of the naval theatres have incidents occurred which call for notice-the Baltic, the Sea of Marmora, and the Black Sea. In each of these naval theatres the enemy had the advantage of superior naval power and in each he has suffered. The occurrences in the Baltic are still shrouded in the mist of war, and it is by no means certain what actual injury the Germans sustained. There is presumption for concluding, however, that the enemy endeavoured to translate his assumed naval power in these waters into military power, and in so doing-in the earlier operations against Windau and in the attacks on the Gulf of Riga-suffered heavy losses. These include the battleship Pommern,' sunk by a British submarine (Commander Max Horton, D.S.O.), the mining cruiser Albatross,' and a number of destroyers. The Russian naval staff have also claimed that a British submarine torpedoed the battle-cruiser Moltke,' but whether that ship was sunk or only damaged is still unknown. The Russians also asserted that the Germans had several cruisers damaged or sunk' during the effort to obtain command of the Gulf of Riga.

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In the Sea of Marmora the enemy has also been reminded that he has no monopoly of the power to use submarines. Early in August a British submarine, on the admission of the Turks, sank the battleship 'Hairredin Barbarossa,' a vessel of over 10,000 tons, which the Germans sold to the Porte in 1910 for 450,000l. Nor is that all. Owing to the activity of British submarines, the enemy's use of the Sea of Marmora for military purposes has been seriously curtailed; and a reign of terror has been created at Constantinople owing to the sinking of transports and storeships and the damage sustained by the wharves. Much the same conditions have been created by the Russian fleet in the Black Sea. Not only have Turkish positions of military importance been bombarded, but several hundred sailing vessels, carrying war and other material, have been destroyed. In these three theatres, where the enemy thought himself immune from serious danger, he has not only been placed on the defensive, but has been compelled by the risks involved to deny himself the military advantages which he thought to enjoy in virtue of his superiority in naval materiel.

To sum up, in Mr Balfour's words:

'No German ship is to be found on the ocean; Allied commerce is more secure from attack, legitimate and illegitimate, than it was after Trafalgar; the German High Sea Fleet has not as yet ventured beyond the security of its protected waters; no invasion has been attempted of these islands; British troops, in numbers unparalleled in history, have moved to and from across the seas and have been effectively supported on shore. The greatest of military Powers has seen its colonies wrested from it one by one, and has not been able to land a man or a gun in their defence.'

ARCHIBALD HURD.

PENGE PUBLIC LIBRARY

CORRIGENDUM.-In No. 444, p. 272, last line, for "right

bank" read "left bank."

FENGE PUBLIC LIBRARY

INDEX

TO THE

TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FOURTH VOLUME OF THE

QUARTERLY REVIEW.

[Titles of Articles are printed in heavier type. The names of authors of
articles are printed in italics.]

A.

Abercrombie, Lascelles, The War
and the Poets,' 395.

Abydos, harbour, 117-position, ib.
-capture, 120-site, 122.

Adriatic, The, and Italy, 327. See
Italy.

Aliens, Enemy, The Treatment

of, 415-violation of international
law and compacts, ib.-the treaty
of the Pyrenees, 416-and other
treaties, 417-419-Napoleon's order
to arrest Englishmen, 420-treat-
ment in other wars, ib.-views of
writers on International Law, 421-
423-harsh treatment of enemy
aliens in Germany, 424-method
in France, ib.-in Great Britain,
425.

Allen, Fanny, her letters, 546-548-
love affair, 547.

Allen, John Bartlett, his daughters,
541.

Allens,Wedgwoods, and Darwins,

540-their correspondence, ib.-
marriages, 541 John Bartlett
Allen's daughters, ib.-Elizabeth,
ib.-Harriet, Emma, and Louisa,
542-Caroline and Catherine, ib.—
Jessie, 543-546-Fanny, 546-her
letters-546-548-the Wedgwood
family, 550-Emma Darwin, 550-
554-Charles Darwin, 550-his deli-
cacy, 551-literary works, ib.-
children, 552.

Vol. 224.-No. 445.

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2 R

nationalities, 466-power of re-
cuperation, 467-principle of the
Balance of Power, 467-469-pro-
blem of reconciling the claims of
the Slav race, 469-want of political
insight, ib.-character of her policy,
469-471-case of the Trentino, 472-
Trieste, 473-Dalmatia, 474-Bos-
nia, ib.-Bohemia, 475-the Czechs,
476-Ruthenes, ib.-policy of Mag-
yarisation in Hungary, 477-spirit
of nationalism, 478-introduction
of universal suffrage, ib.-solution
of the problem, 479-481-plan of a
Trialism, 480.

Austria-Hungary, campaign against
Russia, 266-275, 566-581-against
Italy, 275-279-number of casual-
ties, 561.

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Black Sea trade, its importance, 108–
110.

Blockade and War-Zones, 226.
See War-Zones.

Blood, Colonel W. P., 'The Progress
of the War-By Land,' 266— The
War-By Land,' 566.

Bodley, J. E. C., his essay The
Decay of Idealism in France,' 384.
Bohemia, war between nationalism
and Germanisation, 475.

Bon, M. Le, 'Lois Psychologiques
de l'Évolution des Peuples,' extract
from, 465.

Books, Some, on the War, 483—

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the essence of Journalism, 484-P.
Vergnet's 'France in Danger,'
486-G. Bourdon's 'The German
Enigma,' 487-E. Reich's 'Ger-
many's Swelled Head,' ib.-F. S.
Oliver's Ordeal by Battle,' 488-
F. Harrison's 'The German Peril,'
489-W. T. Arnold's 'German
Ambitions,' 490-J. A. Cramb's
‘Germany and England,' 491, 494-
497, and Origin and Destiny of
Imperial Britain,' 492-494-Dr J.
W. White's Text-Book of the
War for Americans,' 500-Sixty
American Opinions on the War,'
501-W. H. Dawson's 'What is
Wrong with Germany?' ib.-C.
Brock's Thoughts on the War,'
503-Dr H. Rose's 'Origins of the
War,' 504-J. Beck's Evidence in
the Case,' 505-Sir G. Parker's
The World in the Crucible,' ib.—
J'Accuse,' 506-Prof. Stowell's
'The Diplomacy of the War,' ib.—
J. W. Headlam's History of
Twelve Days,' 507.

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C.

Caliphate, The, 162-its future and
number of caliphs, ib.-neglect of
the Prophet Mohammad to appoint
a rule of succession, 163-Abu-
Bekr elected caliph, 164-nomi-
nation of 'Omar, 165-hereditary
character, ib.-succession of 'Oth-
man, 166-election of Ali, ib.-
Mo'awiya assumes the caliphate,
167, 170-the Seceders or Kharijis,
ib.-the mystical idea of the Hidden
Imam, 168-result of the great
Schism, 170-administration of
'Abd-el-Melik, 171-accession of the
'Abbasid Caliph, 172-character-
istics of the Iranians, ib.-the
caliphate of Baghdad, 173-qualifi-
cations for a caliph, 175.

Camoëns, his epic ‘Lusiad,' 375.

Carducci, G., his estimate of Tasso.
23.

Caspar, M., 'Die Reform der höheren
Schulen in Preussen,' 130.
Cerebro-Spinal Fever or spotted
fever,' 157-treatment, ib.

Chéradame, André, La Crise Fran-
çaise,' 387.

Cholera, mode of transmission, 160-
number of cases, ib.

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D.

Dalmatia, Slav population, 474.
Dante, Aligheri, compared with
Tasso, 23.

Dardanelles, The, 108-the Trojan
War, ib.-importance of the Black
Sea or Euxine trade, 108-110-
crossing of the Straits by Xerxes,
111-by Alexander, 112-the cur-
rent and wind of the Hellespont,
113-the Trojan system of defence,
114-Athenian method, 115–119-
the harbours of Abydos and Sestos,
117-the 'impregnable castle' of
Justinian, 120-advance of the
Turks, 121-fall of Constantinople,
ib.-the forts of Chanak and Kilid-
ul-bahr, 122.

Dardanelles, The, attack on, 279-282
-plan of operations, 280, 295, 581-
585.

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