| Canada - 1914 - 196 pages
...frontier rendered, as he would readily understand, tlie situation exceedingly grave, and I asked him whether there was not still time to draw back and avoid possible consequences, which both he and I would deplore. He replied that, for the reasons he had given me, it was now impossible... | |
| Electronic journals - 1914 - 438 pages
...frontier rendered, as he would readily understand, the situation exceedingly grave, and I asked him whether there was not still time to draw back and avoid possible consequences, which both he and I would deplore. He replied that, for the reasons he had given me, it was now impossible... | |
| World War, 1914-1918 - 1914 - 284 pages
...frontier rendered, as he would readily understand, the situation exceedingly grave, and I asked him whether there was not still time to draw back and avoid possible consequences, which both he and I would deplore. He replied that, for the reasons he had given me, it was now impossible... | |
| Stanley Solomon Sheip, Alfred Bingham - World War, 1914-1918 - 1914 - 366 pages
...frontier rendered, as he would readily understand, the situation exceedingly grave, and I asked him whether there was not still time to draw back and avoid possible consequences, which both he and I would deplore. He replied that, for the reasons he had given me, it was now impossible... | |
| Gregory Mason - World War, 1914-1918 - 1914 - 106 pages
...frontier rendered, as he would readily understand, the situation exceedingly grave, and I asked him whether there was not still time to draw back and avoid possible consequences, which both he and I would deplore. He replied that, for the reasons he had given me, it was now impossible... | |
| Morgan Philips Price - World War, 1914-1918 - 1914 - 494 pages
...frontier rendered, as he would readily understand, the situation exceedingly grave, and I asked him whether there was not still time to draw back and avoid possible consequences, which both he and I would deplore. He replied that, for the reasons he had given me, it was now impossible... | |
| Emile Joseph Dillon - Germany - 1914 - 256 pages
...frontier rendered, as he would readily understand, the situation exceedingly grave, and I asked him whether there was not still time to draw back and avoid possible consequences, which both he and I would deplore. He replied that, for the reasons he had given me, it was now impossible... | |
| John McFarland Kennedy - War - 1914 - 218 pages
...frontier rendered, as he would readily understand, the situation exceedingly grave, and I asked him whether there was not still time to draw back and avoid possible consequences, which both he and I would deplore. He replied that, for the reasons he had given me, it was now impossible... | |
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