[The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume I by Burton J. Hendrick]@TWC D-Link book
The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume I

CHAPTER XII
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He said that both Mr.Bryan and Mr.
Lansing had remarked upon your leaning in that direction and he thought that it would materially lessen your influence.

He feels very strongly about this." Evidently Page did not regard his frank descriptions of England under war as expressing unneutral feeling; at any rate, as the war went on, his letters, even those which he wrote to President Wilson, became more and more outspoken.

Page's resignation was always at the President's disposal; the time came, as will appear, when it was offered; so long as he occupied his post, however, nothing could turn him from his determination to make what he regarded as an accurate record of events.
This policy of maintaining an outward impartiality, and, at the same time, of bringing pressure to bear on Washington in behalf of the Allies, he called "waging neutrality." Such was the mood in which Page now prepared to play his part in what was probably the greatest diplomatic drama in history.

The materials with which this drama concerned itself were such apparently lifeless subjects as ships and cargoes, learned discourses on such abstract matters as the doctrine of continuous voyage, effective blockade, and conditional contraband; yet the struggle, which lasted for three years, involved the greatest issue of modern times--nothing less than the survival of those conceptions of liberty, government, and society which make the basis of English-speaking civilization.

To the newspaper reader of war days, shipping difficulties signified little more than a newspaper headline which he hastily read, or a long and involved lawyer's note which he seldom read at all--or, if he did, practically never understood.


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