206 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
206 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.III September, 1925 No.9
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GREAT CORNER STONE
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by: Unknown
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CONSTITUTION DAY - SEPTEMBER 17, 1925
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Mr. Brethren, as you well know, a corner stone unites two walls and
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gives unity and solidity to a building, by joining and sustaining its
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many parts. It is the keystone of the foundation. Everything
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depends upon it; everything proceeds from it. If the corner stone is
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faulty the structure is frail. Unless the corner stone is well and
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truly laid upon a solid base, the house will not be stable.
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The Constitution of our Republic is the great corner stone of liberty
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and law in our nation. It was wrought out and laid down upon bedrock
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of righteousness by wise and just men. Everything rests upon it. By
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it all liberty is regulated, all law tested. It unites many states
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into one nation, yet keeps the integrity of each. Truly it is the
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written Will of God for our country, at once its foundation and its
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security.
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Good work, true work, square work went into the making and laying of
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the great corner stone of liberty. It is square with the order of
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the world, in which liberty and obedience, justice and mercy, join,
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or neither is safe. It is true to the needs, duties and hopes of
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man, giving to each the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of
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happiness, and the duty of allowing to others the same rights. Under
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its wise and benign power all may live, and live well, uniting
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individual initiative and social obligation.
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As such it is a bulwark against autocracy and anarchy alike, against
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rule by the few and ruin by the mob. By its wise poise of power,
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representative but not ruthless, we have advanced thus far along the
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path of our history. Under its calm wisdom we map our history.
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Under its calm wisdom we map our path into the future, yet keep the
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treasure of a time-tried past. Upon it is built a "Government of the
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People, by the People, and for the People," which "Shall Not Perish
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From The Earth." It unites the dead, the living and those yet unborn
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into a community of memory, service and hope.
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Gladstone said that our Constitution was the most wonderful work ever
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struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man. But it
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was not struck off. Back of it lay ages of experience, in which the
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race struggled for the rights of man. Out of that mountain of
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history, as out of a quarry, our Constitution was slowly wrought, in
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the face of difficulties and deviances which only a divine aspiration
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and determination in the heart of the race could have overcome.
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Faith cut it, truth shaped it, time polished it, making a chief
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corner stone ready for the builders.
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To put it in our own imagery, the Magna Charta, the Bill of Rights,
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and the Habeas Corpus Act were like the entered Apprentice Degree in
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the great initiation into free government. The Bill of rights and
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Constitution framed by various Colonies, and even the Declaration of
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Independence, may be called the Second degree, in which Fellows in
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the sublime Craft of Freedom wrought brilliantly. At last, as the
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Master Degree, after the shadow of the War, with its blood and fire
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and tears, came the constitution, the final expression in a single
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document, in permanent and definite form, of the will of a Free
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People . . . an august instrument such as man had never known
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before; no vain declamation but a grand affirmation, clear, concise,
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comprehensive; of the principles of organized liberty and just and
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wise law.
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No wonder it has won the homage of mankind as the "Last Best Hope of
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Earth." It divided history into before and after, opening a new era.
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Washington wrote: "I can almost trace the finger of Divine Providence
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through those dark and mysterious days, which first led the colonists
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to assemble a convention, thereby laying the foundation for peace and
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prosperity." Hamilton, also a member of the Craft, was no less
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explicit: "The sacred rights of mankind are not to be rummaged for
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among old parchments or musty records. They are written as with a
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sunbeam in the whole volume of human nature, by the hand of Divinity
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itself. The establishment of a Constitution in time of profound
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peace by the voluntary action of all the people is a prodigy." With
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which agree all the great voices that echo through our history.
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Like all true wisdom, our Constitution was, and is a compromise
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between two widely different ideas of government, a balance between
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the extremes of oligarchy and democracy. Our fathers dreaded the
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madness of the many as much as the arts of the few. They were
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equally afraid of the despot and the mob. Their problem was to guard
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the rights of the states, and yet give the Federal Government
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adequate power. The negotiations were often difficult, and were more
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than once saved from wreck by the tact, patience and wisdom of
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Franklin, Dickinson, Sherman and most of all Madison; who was called
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"The Father of the Constitution." Two ideas were ever present in
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their minds, one that the people should rule, and the other that the
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will of the people should be carefully and deliberately expressed,
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not swayed by gusts of popular passion. As Madison put it, though
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every member of the Athenian Assembly had been a Socrates, the
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aggregate body would have been a mob.
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The result of their labors was a Republic, not a democracy; as too
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few seemed to realize. In a democracy, such as we see in
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Switzerland, the people make and administer the laws, which may be
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possible in a small country of intelligent and homogeneous
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population. What it means in a large country of mixed races has been
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shown us of late in Russia, where pure democracy ended in the worst
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kind of autocracy. In a Republic, what Washington called "The
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Delegated Will of the People," is vested in representatives elected
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by the people. The rank and mass of the people will not be bothered
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with the details of state, even when they are capable of dealing with
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them, as is shown in our time by the amazing neglect of the ballot.
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The wisdom of our fathers has been justified in ways too many to
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name.
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Ours is representative government, not a pure democracy, as we need
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to keep in mind, if only because in recent years the tendency has
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turned more and more toward democracy. As such it is hedged about
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with every kind of device to avoid hasty and ill-judged action, in
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order to protect people from themselves, and yet to give expression
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to their real and considered will. As we look back over our history
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we see this wise balance of power tipping now toward one extreme, and
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then toward another, always with bad results; and it behooves us to
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keep the poise, if we would keep our sanity which is our safety.
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Of the Constitution Convention, it may truly be said that a more
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remarkable assembly of men has never been forgathered in history,
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anywhere or at any time. They were young men, for the most part,
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though men were deemed old earlier in those days than they are today.
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Madison was only thirty-six; Dayton of New Jersey twenty-one. As
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Masons. we have a right to be proud of the number and quality of the
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men of our Craft who sat in that conclave of the great. Washington,
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who presided, was one of our Craft; Franklin, whose quaint humor
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saved many a tense hour; and Hamilton, in whom genius and wisdom
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joined; as well as others. Indeed, it has been said that with very
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few men out of the room, the convention could have been opened on the
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Third degree of Masonry.
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Thus Freemasonry, in the formative days as in all the years of its
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story, influenced profoundly, creatively the organic law of the
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Republic. How well they wrought is shown by the fact that for sixty-
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one years, from 1804 to 1865, not a single amendment was added. In
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the five years following the Civil War, the 13th, 14th and 15th
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amendments were ratified. Then for forty-three years no other
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amendments were adopted; when a movement, vast as a flowing tide, to
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extend an idea and spirit of democracy found expression in the 16th,
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17th, 18th and 19th amendments. Just now the tide is ebbing, but it
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will no doubt return, in obedience to law of ebb and flow. If we are
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true to our history and genius of our Republic, we shall have a care
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to do nothing in haste, lest we injure a wise plan in order to make
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in immediate gain.
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Let me tell a story, a true story, in order to point a moral. In a
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lumber camp in the West, a group of radical lumber-jacks - men from
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the ends of the land - were one evening discussing the sad state of
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the world, and especially the wickedness of the Government. They
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agreed, unanimously, that our Government is all wrong, if not
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actually rotten, a dirty, capitalistic conspiracy against the rights
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of the man who works. They said that it ought to be torn to pieces
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and made over again. Among them was a young minister, a missionary,
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who listened to their talk, and even drew it out at full length by
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the questions he asked. Finally, pretending to agree with the
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radical ideas, he wrote on a piece of paper the following which he
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proposed as a basis of a just state:
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"We, the people, in order to form a more perfect union, establish
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justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common
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defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of
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liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this
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Constitution."
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"That's the stuff! Hit 'em again ," they yelled. "If we had a
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Government built on that dope, every feller would have a square deal,
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and a chance to live a bit. Some head you got Padre; go on, give us
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more."
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"Listen boys," said the Padre; "What I read is the Preamble to the
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Constitution of the United States. If we tore everything to pieces
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and set out to make it all over, do you think we could do a better
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job?"
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The missionary himself told me the story, adding that as he listened
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to the talk of the evening - earnest, passionate and bitter - he
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himself was inclined to agree with much of it, until he began to
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consider how a better state could be constructed. This led him to
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think of the Constitution, its wisdom and poise and justice; and the
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wonder of it dawned on him like a revelation. He remembered the
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saying of Hamilton, that it is of great importance, not only to guard
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against the oppression of rulers, but also to protect one part of
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society from the injustices of another part. He recalled his very
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words:
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"Justice is the end of Government. It is the end of civil society.
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It ever has been, and ever will be pursued until it be obtained, or
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until liberty be lost in the pursuit."
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As Lincoln put it, between those who will "Let Nothing Alone" and
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those who will allow no change at all, there is a middle way of wise
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and cautious advance. He approved the praise of Burke for those men
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in Public life who have "Disposition to conserve and the ability to
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improve," adding that we must have not only the wish but the ability
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to improve, else we shall lose what we have while blunderingly trying
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to get what we want.
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To defend, preserve and obey the Constitution of our Republic is the
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first obligation of every citizen, as it is the first oath of every
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officer. To teach its history and meaning is the duty of school and
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church and lodge - making it the Bible of our Political Religion; and
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to observe its birthday ought to be a universal festival from end to
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end of the land.
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