High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 32 text:
“
and bled for American democracy, had returned to France with minds capable of thinking only in terms of liberty. XVise old Benjamin Frank- lin, radiant with democracy, had had translated and spread broadcast among the French the written constitution of America's republic. French thinking everywhere was experiencing a reformation. The mere men- tion of I..aFayette's name sent hurling in the air the cap of the French- man whether a soldier or a mere hanger-on of the saloon. Long be- fore 1789, the French had begun to think in terms of liberty and justice. During the struggle thus precipitated, Louis XVI had been compelled to compromise again and again even to the extent of summoning the old States General at LaFayette's command. XVhen the revolution had con- tinued until 1789, the hurling of bombs and the booming of cannon opened the world's eyes to the warfare despotism had long been waging against those mighty forces mobilizing for years in French minds- forces too great for even a Bonaparte or a Napoleon III to effectually destroy. XVhile -the Russian revolution is only just beginning in its more audible stage and has hardly yet started on its career of violence and bloodshed, its real birth date was red-lettered many years ago. Des- potism, still vigorous, for years has been compromising in fierce struggle with the forces of liberty and justice as they have been gradually mobi- lizing under the orders of trained thought. The sacrifice, by this uu- scrupulous monster, of the Romanoffs is only the last in a long series of compromises. The training of the Russian mind to think in terms of liberty began long ago. Nearly a century and a quarter have passed since Kosciusko, who had breathed with Washington and Laliayette tl1e same American air of liberty and democracy, carried the seeds of discontent home to Russia in his revolt of Poland. In less than another quarter of a century, in spite of all Metternich could do, the seeds of democracy had taken such deep root in the world that despotic Russia felt compelled to become a part to the Holy Alliance to wage everlasting warfare on so great a foe. As a result, the soldiers of Nicholas I were sent to crush the liberty-loving Kossuth in Hungary only to return to their homes in Russia to think more and more loudly in terms of liberty. In the nineteenth century, this thinking became nourished as never before. Face to face with unscrupulous and despotic Prussianism, Russia became the ally of Europe's two great republican nations-l2ng- land and France. Unwittingly, despotism, in thus drawing' more tightly the bonds of association about the Russian people and the Anglo-Saxon. dealt itself an effective blow. Such apostles of liberty as Leo Tolstoi now began writing:- Everything that savors of compulsion is harmful- Freedom is the only criterion. Depotism struggled hard against the onslaughts of freedom by such means as wholesale exiling, imprisonment and strict censorship of dangerous writings such as Green's English I-Iistory, Bryce's American Commonwealth, and the works of 'I'olstoi- but its struggle was in vain. Russians were reading Tolstoi by candle 30
”
Page 31 text:
“
ple of No taxation without representation . Likewise in those sacred provisions,- To no man will we sell, deny or delay right of justice, and No free man shall he taken, imprisoned, destroyed or preeeeded against save hy the legal judgment of his peers or hy the laws of the land, they saw embodied the fundamentals of habeas corpus, trial hy jury and those basic rights of all-life, liberty and property, ln the same school, our fathers learned how, four centuries after the Magna Charta, growing despotism had been beheaded and how, from its clutches, those ancient principles, as enlarged upon in the Petition of Rights, had been set free. They learned how half a century later, when the late King james did endeavor to subvert and extripate the laws and liberties of the land. despotism had been effectually overthrown and liherty and justice firmly established and recorded in the Bill of Rights, No question whatever was left in the minds of our colonial fathers as to what constitute the inviolable rights of mankind. American thought upon the principles underlying liberty and justice had been graduated from the Anglo- Saxon school. Against the arbitrary power of the French system in America, we gladly joined hands with our English brothers. The more we invested in the cause of liberty and justice, the more sacred they he- came and the more determined we were to preserve them. When again, as over our linglish brothers, arbitrary restraint in the person of a German anxious to be King began to assert itself over us too, we could do nothing' else but follow the dictates of our training. Like our lingflish brothers in 1215, 1628, and l689, we struggled with despotism for ten years to secure liberty aml justice as Englishmen. When however by 1776, we found George lll and his cohorts still very uneonipromising, we proceeded to obtain our rights as men-rights which we wrote in blood to form the Great American Charter-rights which we had learned to lc.-ve when linglislnnen in the old Anglo-Saxon school-rights which, under such great liherators as Gladstone, Balfour, .-Xsquith, and l.loyd George, have now firmly anchored themselves in the minds and hearts of our linglish brothers. The French revolution was not a sudden eruption of an unthinking populace. The fall of the Bastile only resounded the audible clash of a struggle long existing between arbitrary power and a people he- coming trained in the spirit and philosophy of liberty and free institu- tions. The French peasant, fighting under his despotie king against the English, had long since come in contact with .Xnglo-Saxon representa- tive government and Anglo-Saxon conception of individual rights. Montesquieu had been horn for a century and two generations of his French brothers had read with great interest his unstinted praise of the English system in his treatise on The Spirit of Laws. Likewise Rous- seau in his Contract Social had firmly planted in the minds of French youth, then grown to manhood, such seeds of liberty as the right of the majority to rule and the sovereignty of the people. The American revo- lution had been fought and the heroic French soldiers, who had struggled 29
”
Page 33 text:
“
light in dingy cellars-Russians were thinking. They assembled in the Russian-japanese war and there gave much. In return they demanded mueh and despotism was foreed to compromise with a Duma and written promises. Now throughout the country men are thinking in terms of liberty. Nilyoukuv and other exponents of the new school are coming to the front. May their training be more universal and consistent that their revolution may grow less bloody than that of the' French, and their victory more complete. Individuals within nations have demonstrated their determination and ability to develop their inherent qualities free from arbitrary re- straint. To-day, the world is in a revolution that indivdual nations may possess the same rights. In 1776, republican government was all but negligible. To-day, four fifths of the world's inhabited area and three fourths of its people are nominally under republican government. lidu- Cation, struggling under adverse conditions, has been responsible for de- moeracy's victory thus far. liducation. if loyally supported, will ulti- mately bury despotie and arbitrary government. Thales was right. Mind and not matter rules the universe. Earle S. Palmer. Thinking If you think you're beaten, you are: lf you think you dare not, you dou't: If you like to win, but yon think you can't, lt's almost a eiueh you won't. lf you think you'll lose, you're lost, N For out in the world we find Success begins with a fellow's will: lt's all the state of mind. If you think you're ontclassed, you are: You've got to think big to rise: You've got to be sure of yourself before You can ever win a prize. Life's battles don't always go To the stronger or faster man: But soon or late the man who wins Is the man who thinks he can. -Exchange. 31
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.