Pax Britannica: The Climax of an EmpireThe second in the trilogy, this work captures the British empire at its dazzling climax-the diamond jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1897, celebrated as a festival of imperial strength, unity and splendor. Portrays the British at the height of their vigor, imposing their traditions and tastes on peoples of the world. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 17
Page 462
... Irish character : for the Anglo - Irish were the Middle Nation , English to the Irish , Irish to the English . They shared many of the common settlers ' attitudes . They loved the Mother Country in the principle , but not always in the ...
... Irish character : for the Anglo - Irish were the Middle Nation , English to the Irish , Irish to the English . They shared many of the common settlers ' attitudes . They loved the Mother Country in the principle , but not always in the ...
Page 464
... Irish regiments of the British Army waiting to welcome a soldier's son . The Anglo - Irish were the Establishment of Ireland . Their newspaper was the Irish Times , their church the Church of Ireland , disestablished by Gladstone in ...
... Irish regiments of the British Army waiting to welcome a soldier's son . The Anglo - Irish were the Establishment of Ireland . Their newspaper was the Irish Times , their church the Church of Ireland , disestablished by Gladstone in ...
Page 465
... Anglo - Irish monuments . Irish wolfhounds lay sleepy at the foot of the Royal Irish Regiment's memorial , scrolls and battle honours all around , with a frieze illus- trating the storming of the Shive Dagon pagoda in 1852. Cobwebby ...
... Anglo - Irish monuments . Irish wolfhounds lay sleepy at the foot of the Royal Irish Regiment's memorial , scrolls and battle honours all around , with a frieze illus- trating the storming of the Shive Dagon pagoda in 1852. Cobwebby ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
administration adventure Anglo-Indian Anglo-Irish Australia Boers Bombay Britain British Army British Empire Britons building Burma Cairo Calcutta called Canada Canadian celebrated century Ceylon church Civil Club Colonial Office coloured command Company Cook's Crown died Dublin East India Egypt Egyptian England English Englishmen European everywhere flag foreign French frontier gardens garrison gold Governor grand harbour honoured horses imperial imperialists Ireland Irish island Jameson Raid kind Kipling knew labour ladies land lived London looked Lord ment miles military million Mutiny native never Nile nineties once palace Parliament Pax Britannica police possessions princes Queen Victoria race railway regiment Rhodes Rhodesia River road Royal Navy rule Salisbury seemed servants settlers ships Simla soldiers sometimes South Africa St Lucia station stood Street territories thought town trade tropical Uganda Railway Viceroy West White Rajah Wolseley wrote young Zealand