Modern Eloquence: Vol III, After-Dinner Speeches P-Z eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 556 pages of information about Modern Eloquence.

Modern Eloquence: Vol III, After-Dinner Speeches P-Z eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 556 pages of information about Modern Eloquence.

In the history of civilization first one nation rises and becomes the torch-bearer, and then another takes the torch as it becomes stronger, the stronger always pushing the weaker aside and becoming in its turn the leader.  So it has been with the Assyrian, and Babylonian, and Median, and, coming on down, with the Greek, the Roman, the Frank, and then came that great race, the Anglo-Saxon-Teutonic race, which seems to me to-day to be the great torch-bearer for this and for the next coming time.  Each nation that has borne the torch of civilization has followed some path peculiarly its own.  Egyptian, Syrian, Persian, Greek, Roman, Frank, all had their ideal of power—­order and progress directed under Supreme authority, maintained by armed organization.  We bear the torch of civilization because we possess the principles of civil liberty, and we have the character, or should have the character, which our fathers have transmitted to us with which to uphold it.  If we have it not, then be sure that with the certainty of a law of nature some nation—­it may be one or it may be another—­it may be Grecian or it may be Slav, already knocking at our doors, will push us from the way, and take the torch and bear it onward, and we shall go down.

But I have no fear of the future.  I think, looking around upon the country at present, that even if it would seem to us at times that there are gravest perils which confront us, that even though there may be evidence of weakening in our character, notwithstanding this I say, I believe the great Anglo-Saxon race, not only on the other side of the water, but on this side of the water—­and when I say the Anglo-Saxon race I mean the great white, English-speaking race—­I use the other term because there is none more satisfactory to me—­contains elements which alone can continue to be the leaders of civilization, the elements of fundamental power, abiding virtue, public and private.  Wealth will not preserve a state; it must be the aggregation of individual integrity in its members, in its citizens, that shall preserve it.  That integrity, I believe, exists, deep-rooted among our people.  Sometimes when I read accounts of vice here and there eating into the heart of the people, I feel inclined to be pessimistic; but when I come face to face with the American and see him in his life, as he truly is; when I reflect on the great body of our people that stretch from one side of this country to the other, their homes perched on every hill and nestled in every valley, and recognize the sterling virtue and the kind of character that sustains it, built on the rock of those principles that our fathers transmitted to us, my pessimism disappears and I know that not only for this immediate time but for many long generations to come, with that reservoir of virtue to draw from, we shall sustain and carry both ourselves and the whole human race forward.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Modern Eloquence: Vol III, After-Dinner Speeches P-Z from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.