195 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
195 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VI June, 1928 No.6
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VALLEY FORGE
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by: Joseph Fort Newton
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Address at the 150th Anniversary, French - American Alliance, Valley
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Forge, May 5, 1928.
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What memories, what historic echoes the very words bring back to
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every patriotic heart! What deeds of daring, what almost superhuman
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endurance they symbolize in the heroic legend of our country! As far
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back as we can remember, in the pride and tenderness of childhood,
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our hearts turned to this spot as to a shrine. Today we take off our
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hats and lift up our hearts, in homage to the heroism of man and the
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mercy of God.
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Surely he is a strange man, and no American at all, who can read the
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story of the winter at Valley Forge, and not feel his warm heart with
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a new pulse of love and loyalty to his country, which inspired such
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devotion and endurance. Who can walk over the old campground, now a
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lovely park, with its memorial Chapel, an exquisite poem in stone, a
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Gothic shrine both of patriotism and religion, and not feel that he
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is indeed on Holy Ground! Such a day should make us renew our vows
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to the ideals for which men were ready and willing to give their all,
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lest we forget what the liberty we enjoy cost in sacrifice.
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One hundred and fifty years ago this land was the scene of events of
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vast import and moment, the meaning of which is felt today, not only
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in our institutions, but in the life of the world. Not simply a new
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nation, but a new kind of nation was struggling to birth in a new
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world, a nation "Conceived in liberty and dedicated to the
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proposition that all men are created equal." It was, indeed, "the
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last great hope of man;" and at Valley Forge the issue hung in the
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balance - due to profound discouragement of the people.
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Lexington, Bunker Hill and Saratoga were behind;
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Monmouth, Stony Point and Yorktown were ahead. Between lay the snows
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of Valley Forge, when the people were depressed, the Army well-nigh
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demoralized, its moral almost broken, and the fortunes of freedom
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were at their lowest ebb. If despair had been possible, our fathers
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would have been the victims of it in that awful ordeal of winter,
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both in weather and in spirit, when the Chief city of the land was
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the playground of the enemy, and the ragged remnant of the army,
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decimated by disease, at times almost starving, was shivering on the
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hills of Valley Forge.
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Even in the brief, austere official documents of the day we realize
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that the hardship of this camp was more trying than the hazard of
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battle; and the diaries and letters of the day which gave the vivid
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human color of the scene makes its details poignant. Huddled in a
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city of huts, under an icy sky, half-clothed and half-fed, the cause
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of freedom almost lost, tempted by offers of compromise, and, in the
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light of a glimmering lamp in a cottage window a tall form pacing to
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and fro, waiting, watching, planning, praying - such is the picture,
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and such is its meaning in our history. Valley Forge was not a
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battlefield where men met the thrilling issues of a conflict; it was
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a campground where they waited, suffered and endured. It has a glory
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all its own, a fame complete and perfect, from which nothing can
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detract, to forget which would be sacrilege.
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The obvious strategy of Washington was to keep the British from
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cutting the Colonies in two, dividing their strength, and defeating
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their hopes. Lexington and Bunker Hill were memorable, but in nowise
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vital as compared with the battles that raged about Philadelphia.
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The danger lay in the middle states of the long coast line. If a
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wedge could be driven through the center of the colonial domain,
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separating their forces and resources, the rebellion, as it was
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regarded in England, would be broken. But it was not to be so,
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thanks to the God of history who gave us a leader and Commander who,
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alike in symmetry of character and splendor of achievement, is one of
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the greatest men in the records of mankind. Frederick the Great said
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that the Trenton campaign was the most brilliant of the century, and
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it was the century of himself and Marlborough. But Washington was
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supreme, not alone in flashes of genius, such as amaze us in
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Alexander and dazzle us in Naploleon, but no less in more useful and
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less glittering gifts which won the loyalty of his people, and led
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him through the intrigues of friends and the treachery of foes to
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victory. In the whole story of the race there is no man to surpass
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him in disinterested nobility, in practical capacity, solid wisdom
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and majesty of moral character.
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It was the military strategy of Washington to prevent the colonial
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republic from being divided and defeated, it was diplomatic strategy
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of Franklin and his fellow workers to divide Europe and, if possible,
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enlist aid for our struggling cause. For several years, work to that
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end had been going on secretly, and in the autumn of 1777 it became
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open and distinct, which no doubt explains the conciliatory Bills,
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offering everything except independence, received and rejected by
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Congress in April 1778, under the influence of Washington saying,
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"that nothing but independence would do" In the meantime, von Steubon
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was training the army in tactics and discipline such as it had not
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know before; and Lafayette - "the Boy," as Cornwallis called him,
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derisively - alike by his gallant courage and chivalrous friendship
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helped to keep American hopes alive.
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At last, after no end of doubt, delay and intrigue. during which
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Franklin revealed his extraordinary tact, patience and skill; on
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February 6th, Treaties of Amity, Commerce and Alliance were signed
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between France and the United States. The Independence of America
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was acknowledged and made the basis of alliance, and it was mutually
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agreed that neither nation would lay down its arms until England
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had conceded our freedom and separate nationhood. A fleet, an army,
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munitions and supplies were promised by the King of France, who
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immediately declared war on Great Britain. So, America was united,
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and Europe was divided, and the issue of liberty in the new world was
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no longer in doubt.
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All historians agree to regard this as the turning-point in our
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struggle for independence; and so it was. But neither the fleet of
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France nor her armies were as valuable to America at that moment, as
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the moral effect, both at home and abroad, of the Alliance. It
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electrified our country; it cemented a discouraged and distracted
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people; it restored their shattered morale, when, at eleven o'clock
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at night, May 4th, the news of the French Treaty reached Washington
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at Valley Forge - so long did it take the tidings to travel.
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May the 6th was a gala day, by General orders; the army, after
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impressive religious services of thanksgiving and joy, was drawn up
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under arms; salutes were fired; cheers were given for the King of
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France and the United States; and in the evening a banquet was given
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by the Commander-in-Chief to his officers. Today we are met on this
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campground of an eternal fame and friendship, to celebrate the
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anniversary of the thrilling event, mingling prayer and play, as was
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done of old; beseeching the God of our fathers to make us worthy of a
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history so noble, a legacy so sacred, and a heritage so heroic.
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Once again, after one hundred and fifty years, we have heard the
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voice of France, the land of Lafayette, in the words of its brilliant
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Minister of State, appealing to America, the land of Washington, to
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join hands, as in the days agone, in a treaty, openly arrived at,
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outlawing war between the two nations forever, as the basis and
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beginning of a better world order. Truly he is a strange man who can
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read such a gallant proposal, so definitely made by a practical
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statesman, and not feel his heart beat faster. What hopes and
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visions fill the mind as one reads the calm measured words of a great
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son of France, offering an olive branch of perpetual peace, and the
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settlement of all disputes by reason and law, thereby giving an
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example of civilized life to all the world:
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"If there were need for those two great democracies to give high
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testimony to their desire for peace, and to furnish to other peoples
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an example more solemn still, France would be willing to subscribe
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publicly with the United States to any mutual engagement tending to
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outlaw war as between those two countries. Every engagement entered
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into in this spirit by the United States toward another nation such
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as France would contribute greatly in the eyes of the world to
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broaden and strengthen the foundations on which the international
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policy of peace is being erected."
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Here are great words of prophetic overture, worthy to be set to
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music; and the land of Washington has made memorable response to a
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spirit so fine and a gesture so gracious. They err who say,
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cynically, that no good came out of the mad hell of the world war,
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when in the open forum of the world, two great republics - bound by a
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common historic faith and friendship - lead the way to the
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enthronement of law above force and reason above passion, in behalf
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of a creative and cooperative goodwill. It makes a kinder light from
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a higher sky fall upon this old campground, and upon the little white
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crosses in France, where heroes sleep together, since, by the
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goodwill of God, it shows that they did not die in vain.
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At last, or soon or late, so the prophets forfeit and proclaimed by a
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Divine pragmatism, men will learn that only the ideal is actually
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practical, and that only when societies and institutions are built
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square with the righteous order of the world, will they endure. The
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path of man through the ages is littered with the wreckage of states
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and civilizations fallen into dust, because they built upon force and
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not upon brotherhood. So runs the record of centuries, as far back
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as written history goes.
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Must it be so always? Is man too blind to see and too stupid to
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learn that the visible is set in the Invisible, and that it is the
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spiritual - seemingly so impalpable and frail - that finally rules,
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and must rule, because the universe is made on that plan? Today it
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means much that practical men are beginning to see what poets and
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prophets have proclaimed from time immemorial - that moral and
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spiritual laws are universal, and that man is wise only when he
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learns the way God is going and makes a highway for the Eternal Will.
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Today, on these hills of Valley Forge, as we celebrate an alliance
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for war, may we devoutly hope and pray that God has brought us far
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enough down the ways of time and tragedy that we are ready, by His
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Grace, to make a great Alliance for Peace, led by two mighty peoples
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who more than once have been one in arts, arms, and ideals - France
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lending aid in the founding of our Republic, and America lending aid
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in the salvation of France and so, by a grand adventure of practical
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and constructive fraternity, lay the corner stone of a new order of
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the ages, making peace a law and not a dream!
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SO MOTE IT BE
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