The Project Gutenberg eBook, African and European Addresses, by Theodore
Roosevelt, et al, Edited by Lawrence F. Abbott
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Title: African and European Addresses
Author: Theodore Roosevelt
Release Date: November 3, 2004 [eBook #13930]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
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AFRICAN AND EUROPEAN ADDRESSES
by
THEODORE ROOSEVELT
With an Introduction presenting a Description of the Conditions under
which the Addresses were given during Mr. Roosevelt's Journey in 1910
from Khartum through Europe to New York
by LAWRENCE F. ABBOTT
1910
FOREWORD
My original intention had been to return to the United States direct
from Africa, by the same route I took when going out. I altered this
intention because of receiving from the Chancellor of Oxford
University, Lord Curzon, an invitation to deliver the Romanes Lecture
at Oxford. The Romanes Foundation had always greatly interested me,
and I had been much struck by the general character of the annual
addresses, so that I was glad to accept. Immediately afterwards, I
received and accepted invitations to speak at the Sorbonne in Paris,
and at the University of Berlin. In Berlin and at Oxford, my addresses
were of a scholastic character, designed especially for the learned
bodies which I was addressing, and for men who shared their interests
in scientific and historical matters. In Paris, after consultation
with the French Ambassador, M. Jusserand, through whom the invitation
was tendered, I decided to speak more generally, as the citizen of
one republic addressing the citizens of another republic.
When, for these reasons, I had decided to stop in Europe on my way
home, it of course became necessary that I should speak to the Nobel
Prize Committee in Christiania, in acknowledgment of the Committee's
award of the peace prize, after the Peace of Portsmouth had closed the
war between Japan and Russia.
While in Africa, I became greatly interested in th
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