Abstract
IT can be but seldom, when a man's life has been prolonged to well over eighty years, that his death is generally felt as a serious public loss. Lord Bryce's sudden, if happy, death on January 22, in his eighty-fourth, year, is a shock which will be felt equally here and in the United States, where only last summer he had been engaged both by lecturing and in social intercourse in spreading a better under, standing of the problems of Great Britain and 1 Europe. Years ago, by his great work on “The American Commonwealth,”and at a later date by his tact and manifold activities while our Ambassador at Washington (he was reputed to have visited' every State in the Union), Lord Bryce had made
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FRESHFIELD, D. Lord Bryce, O.M., F.R.S. Nature 109, 113–114 (1922). https://doi.org/10.1038/109113a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/109113a0