And Then, With A Steady
Confidence, We Used To Declare How Certain We Were That We Should
Achieve All That Was Desirable, Not Exactly By Trusting To Our
Prayer To Heaven, But By Relying Almost Exclusively On George The
Third Or George The Fourth.
Now I have always thought that that
was rather a poor patriotism.
Luckily for us, our national conduct
has not squared itself with our national anthem. Any patriotism
must be poor which desires glory, or even profit, for a few at the
expense of the many, even though the few be brothers and the many
aliens. As a rule, patriotism is a virtue only because man's
aptitude for good is so finite that he cannot see and comprehend a
wider humanity. He can hardly bring himself to understand that
salvation should be extended to Jew and Gentile alike. The word
philanthropy has become odious, and I would fain not use it; but
the thing itself is as much higher than patriotism as heaven is
above the earth.
A wish that British North America should ever be severed from
England, or that the Australian colonies should ever be so severed,
will by many Englishmen be deemed unpatriotic. But I think that
such severance is to be wished if it be the case that the colonies
standing alone would become more prosperous than they are under
British rule. We have before us an example in the United States of
the prosperity which has attended such a rupture of old ties.
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