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daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Toner Supply)
Tue Feb 14 17:08:43 2017

Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2017 16:55:44 -0500
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a bad effect. What we need  he wrote   is to turn out of colleges young men with ardent convictions on the side of right  not young men who can make a good argument for either right or wrong  as their interest bids them. He did one thing in college which is not a matter of course with students under twenty two years old. He began to write a history  named  The Naval War of 1812.  It was finished and published two years after he graduated  and in it he showed that his idea of patriotism included telling the truth. Most American boys used to be brought up on the story of the American frigate Constitution whipping all the British ships she met  and with the notion that the War of 1812 was nothing but a series of brilliant victories for us. Theodore Roosevelt thought that Americans were not so soft that they were afraid to hear the truth  and that it was a poor sort of American who dared not point out to his fellow countrymen the mistakes they had made and the disasters which followed. It did not seem patriotic to him to dodge the fact that lack of wisdom at Washington had let our Army run down before the war  so that our attempts to invade Canada were failures  and that we suffered the disgrace of having Washington itself captured and burned by the enemy. There was a great deal to be proud of in what our Navy did  and in the Army s victory in the Battle of New Orleans  and these things Roosevelt described with the pride of every good American. But he had no use for the old fashioned kind of history  which pretends that all the bravery is on one side. He did his best to get at the truth  and he knew that the English and Canadians had fought bravely and well  and so he said ju is worth more than all the muscle that I spent so many years in piling on  But while he was doing this  I drove the thumb of my left hand  to the hilt into his eye orifice and popped out his eye  This did not stop him  The meat had maddened him  He pursued the gushing stump of my wrist  Half a dozen times I fended with my intact arm  Then he got the poor mangled arm again  closed down  and stripped the meat off the bone from the shoulder down to the elbow joint  where his teeth met and he was free of his second mouthful of me  But  at the same time  with my good arm  I thumbed out his remaining eye  But who are you  demanded Le Pontois angrily   Who are you that you should hold us up like this But who else could it have been  cried Morris  his voice rising again  But who  asked Deacon in pretended ignorance  He was uncertain what to do  Mr  Fetherston being still within the house and the ladder  his only means of escape  still standing against a side wall  But why are you here But why are you here  she inquired  strolling slowly at his side   I thought you were in London  But why do you think so  Humphrey  Why has Edward been unfortunate in entering this house  That is what I want imes  women are not fined and plundered as men are  and they have been well able to afford all that has been taken from them  and all that they have voluntarily given to the assistance of our party  They are alone  and I really believe that nothing would make them more happy than to have the care of the two sisters of Edward Beverley  be sure of that  But I will be more sure of it if you will find means of sending to them a letter which I shall write to them  I tell you that you will do them a favor  and that if you do not accept the offer  you will sacrifice your sisters  welfare to your own pride  which I do not think you would do  Edward  said Edith   scold Pablo  he has been ill treating my poor cat  he is a cruel boy  Ef yo  doan wanter tell  yo  doan hab to  ob co se  proposed Sambo   It ain t mah way to be too persistency wid de w ite quality gemmen  But Ah done thought maybe yo  know somethin  dat yo s burnin  to tell  Eh bien  Then let us commence with the first  exclaimed B zard  again referring to the file of secret reports before him   On Wednesday  the fourteenth day of January  you went to Commercy  where  at the Caf  de la Cloche  you met a certain Belgian who passed


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