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The Sequel / What the Great War will mean to Australia

Chapter 10 No.10

Word Count: 736    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

prises i

m in Cologne was but

er father was a well-known merchant of Melbourne, but was now living in Sydney. He had sent his daughter to the Leipsic Cons

he older men to the Landstrum, a body of spectacled elderly men in uniform, who felt the spirit wake in their feeble blood and prid

aunt and grandfather in Cologne.

n my movements, than the twice

d at this

ows no enmity with Australia. We have sympathy for the Indians, Canadians and other r

ted, "there has b

th the colonial people. Our hate is for England alone; and when this war is over and we have England at our feet, we shall be welcom

ontrary, and his granddaughter informed me t

t is so is the freedom

the Britisher has in attacking the various vicissitudes that every pioneer meets with in the development of a new land. That is why she let her colonies be snapped up by Australia without a pang; that is why as you say, she let her people hand over Rabaul

ever, was my changed opinion regardin

checking the German rush on Paris and driving it t

ally on the verge of pleading for peace; her fleet cower

e and manufacture had been smashed, causing untold ruination and forcing famine into every home; that the German populace were being crushed under the terr

belief of the Allies a

ore mistaken

rs and miscalculations she was accus

ief obse

s its direct object or not was mad

rote many years ago t

ering-everythi

nquer who bel

uer, and for forty years she ha

es were built fr

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