The Pride of Palomar by Peter B. (Peter Bernard) Kyne
page 124 of 390 (31%)
page 124 of 390 (31%)
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French republic in all its wars, while a blind submission to an
overlord made Germany invincible in peace and terrible in war." "I wonder what spiritual binder holds the people of the United States together, Mr. Parker?" Don Miguel queried naively. "Love of country, devotion to the ideals of liberty and democracy," Parker replied promptly, just as his daughter joined them. Farrel rose and surrendered to her his chair, then seated himself on the edge of the porch with his legs dangling over into a flower-bed. His face was grave, but in his black eyes there lurked the glint of polite contempt. "Did you hear the question and the answer, Miss Parker?" he queried. She nodded brightly. "Do you agree with your father's premise?" he pursued. "Yes, I do, Don Mike." "I do not. The mucilage in our body politic is the press-agent, the advertising specialist, and astute propagandist. I wonder if you know that, when we declared war against Germany, the reason was not to make the world safe for democracy, for there are only two real reasons why wars are fought. One is greed and the other self-protection. Thank God, we have never been greedy or jealous of the prosperity of a neighbor. National aggrandizement is not one of our ambitions." |
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