Hawaii and a Revolution: The Personal Experiences of a Correspondent in the Sandwich Islands During the Crisis of 1893 and SubsequentlyDodd, Mead, 1898 - 330 páginas |
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Página 6
... carrying the revolution to a successful issue , gave the country the purest , best , and most efficient government it had ever known . In the meantime the King and his adherents carried on a continual struggle to regain their lost power ...
... carrying the revolution to a successful issue , gave the country the purest , best , and most efficient government it had ever known . In the meantime the King and his adherents carried on a continual struggle to regain their lost power ...
Página 18
... carrying a flat package , suspended from his breast by ribbons . This was a new Constitution . The procession pro- ceeded to the Throne Room , the household troops being drawn up in line from the west gate to the entrance of the Palace ...
... carrying a flat package , suspended from his breast by ribbons . This was a new Constitution . The procession pro- ceeded to the Throne Room , the household troops being drawn up in line from the west gate to the entrance of the Palace ...
Página 22
... carried out , peaceably if possible , by force if neces- sary , and in the latter case it would have meant landing American marines from the warships in the harbour to fire upon the American residents of Honolulu . The tenor of the ...
... carried out , peaceably if possible , by force if neces- sary , and in the latter case it would have meant landing American marines from the warships in the harbour to fire upon the American residents of Honolulu . The tenor of the ...
Página 24
... carried to an extreme . The status quo having been finally restored , the Provisional Government began at once to prepare for the organisation of a republic . A constitutional convention was called , to be held in Honolulu . It met in ...
... carried to an extreme . The status quo having been finally restored , the Provisional Government began at once to prepare for the organisation of a republic . A constitutional convention was called , to be held in Honolulu . It met in ...
Página 25
... carried his animosity to the extreme point of withdrawing the U. S. S. Philadelphia from the Honolulu harbour early in September , and in spite of the emphatic warnings of Admiral Walker , then in command of the Pacific Squadron . Even ...
... carried his animosity to the extreme point of withdrawing the U. S. S. Philadelphia from the Honolulu harbour early in September , and in spite of the emphatic warnings of Admiral Walker , then in command of the Pacific Squadron . Even ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Admiral algaroba American annexation arrived asked beautiful birds Blount blue Boston Cabinet called Captain Swinburne carriage carried cats Chicago chief Chinese civilisation Cleveland colour Constitution coronet Court crowns crutches Diamond Head door drawing-room English entire European ex-Queen feathers Finnegan flag floor flowers gardens hand harbour Hawaii Hawaiian Islands Hilo holoku Honolulu interest Japanese kahilis Kaiulani Kamehameha Kauai King Kalakaua Kona coffee labour lanai land leis Liliuokalani lived looked Lunalilo mantles matter ment miles Minister Molokai monarchy morning native native Hawaiians never night Niihau o'clock Palace palms passed political President Dole Princess Princess Kaiulani Provisional Government Queen Queen's band realised received Republic revolution rose royal Royal Hawaiian Hotel Samoan San Francisco scarlet seemed sent servants ship side steamer stood streets tion treaty trees tropical United verandahs woman women yellow young
Pasajes populares
Página 4 - ... and demanding of the King the dismissal of his Cabinet, the restitution of the $71,000 received as a bribe from Aki (a Chinaman negotiating the unrestricted sale of opium in the Islands), the dismissal of one Junius Kaae from the Land Office, and a pledge that the King would no longer interfere in politics." The Cabinet was one of the most corrupt that had ever existed in the Islands. It was composed of WM Gibson (a Mormon emigrant sent out from Utah as a missionary), Minister of Foreign Affairs...
Página 175 - I come unattended, except by loving hearts that came with me over the wintry seas. I hear that Commissioners from my own land have been for many days asking this great nation to take away my little vineyard. They speak no word to me, and leave me to find out as I can from rumours in the air, and they would leave me without a home or a name or a nation.
Página 147 - I therefore request your excellency to receive him favorably and to give full credence to what he shall say on the part of the United States, and to the assurances which I have charged him to convey to you of the best wishes of this Government for the prosperity of the Hawaiian Islands. May God have your excellency in His wise keeping. Written at Washington, this 27th day of September, in the year 1893. Your good friend, GROVER CLEVELAND.
Página 134 - ... beautiful in her old age, disdaining that servile conformity to prevailing fashion which makes many old people at once ugly and contemptible: speaking English with a slight, oldfashioned, refined Scotch accent, which gives naivete to everything she says, up to the latest novelty in theology and politics: devoted to her children and grandchildren, the life of the family, and though upwards of seventy, the first to rise, and the last to retire in the house. She was away when I came, but some days...
Página 146 - GREAT AND GOOD FRIEND: I have made choice of James H. Blount, one of our distinguished citizens, as my special commissioner to visit the Hawaiian Islands and make report to me concerning the present status of affairs in that country. He is well informed of our sincere desire to cultivate and maintain to the fullest extent the friendship which has so long subsisted between the two countries, and in all matters affecting relations with the Government of the Hawaiian Islands his authority is paramount.
Página 291 - The President has the power of veto, which may be overridden by a two-thirds vote of each house. CHARACTER OF LAWS. — The foundation of the legal system of the country is the common law of England. The penal law and practice is codified, and there are no penal offenses except those enumerated in the code.
Página 299 - Once only hath that appeared which is glorious, It is wonderful, it is altogether holy} It is a blooming glory; its nature is unwithering, Rare is its stock, most singular, unrivaled, One only true vine. It is the Lord, &c.' Another, composed in 1830, entitled 'A Mele on the Creation,' exhibits much beauty, force and simplicity of diction.
Página 86 - I frankly confess -L' that my sympathies were wholly with the natives; I took the view — so easy to acquire from books and from other sentimentalists like myself — that the natives were being robbed of their birthright by the relentless whites, who, in their greed and with their superior cunning, had seized and held the balance of power. It was a fixed hallucination which it took some time to clear away; and during the educating process the only judicious course to pursue was to listen, and observe...
Página 320 - ... character. It has been charged that it is puritanical, hard, and narrow — an easy accusation, always upon the tongue of the demagogue, and of those who confound liberty with licence. The only real question involved, when all the charges of clamouring factions are sifted and their demands are analysed, is: Shall what now exists — society, wealth, comfort, in which even the poorest shares — be dissipated by hands incapable 1894.] CONCLUSION.
Página 175 - Today, three of the sons of those missionaries are at your capital asking you to undo their fathers' work. Who sent them? Who gave them the authority to break the Constitution which they swore they would uphold? "Today, I, a poor, weak girl with not one of my people near me and all these Hawaiian statesmen against me, have strength to stand up for the rights of my people.