Defenders of Democracy; Contributions from Representative Other Arts from Our Allies and Our Own Country, Ed. By the Gift Book Committee of the Militia of Mercy

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Author: Militia of Mercy

The Test

It has been my fortune to see something of the war with the army in France, and something also of what war means for those at home who, having sent out sons and brothers, are themselves compelled to wait and watch. I have seen suffering beyond imagination, pain, hardship and misery. I have seen anxiety and sorrow which I should have guessed beforehand men could not have borne without going mad. But I have also seen the human spirit rise to wonderful heights. Men and women have shown themselves greater, nobler, stronger than in the old days of peace I thought they could be.

It would not be very astonishing if the strain of war had called forth a fresh greatness in those whose lives were already seen to be in some way great; in our leaders, our teachers, our thinkers. Or if an added nobility had appeared in our aristocracies of birth, intellect, education, wealth, or whatever other accidents set men above the mass of their fellows. Of such we expect a great response to a great demand. And we have not been disappointed. The old rule of life, NOBLESSE OBLIGE, has proved that it still possesses driving force with the most of those to whom it applies. The thing which has amazed me is the greatness of the common man.

This I in no way expected or looked for. I confess that, before the war, I was no believer in the great qualities of those who are called "the people." They seemed to me to be living lives either selfish, sometimes brutal, always sordid; or else mean, narrow, and circumscribed by senseless conventions. I believed that society, if it progressed at all, would be forced forward by the few, that the many had not in them the qualities necessary for advance, were incapable of the far visions which make advance desirable. I know now that I was wrong, and I have come to the faith that the hoe of the future is in the common people who have shown themselves great.

So, I suppose, I may contribute to a book with such a title as "The Defenders of Democracy." For now I am sure that democracy has promise and hope in it. Only I am not sure that democracy has even begun to understand itself. The common people have displayed virtues so great that those who have seen them unite in a chorus of praise. Their leaders, elected persons, guides chosen by votes and popular acclamation, have shown in a hundred ways that they will not, dare not, trust the people. Our silly censorships, our concealments of unpleasant truths, our suppression of criticism, our galling infringements of personal liberty, witness to the fact that authority distrusts the source from which it sprang; that the leaders of our democracy reckon the common people unfit to know, to think or to act. If we are defending democracy we are sacrificing liberty. Will you, in America, do better in this respect than we have done? you believed in the common people before England did. You believe in them, if we may trust your words, more completely than England does. Do you believe in them sufficiently to trust them? Or do you think that democracy can be defended only after it has been blindfolded, hand-cuffed and gagged? This is what you have got to show the world. No one doubts that you can fight. No one doubts that you will fight, with all your strength, as England is fighting. What we wonder is whether your great principle of government, by the people and for the people, will stand the test of a war like this.

[signed]James O. Hannay

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Chicago: Militia of Mercy, "The Test," Defenders of Democracy; Contributions from Representative Other Arts from Our Allies and Our Own Country, Ed. By the Gift Book Committee of the Militia of Mercy, ed. Iles, George, 1852-1942 and trans. Colt, Oliver C. in Defenders of Democracy; Contributions from Representative Other Arts from Our Allies and Our Own Country, Ed. By the Gift Book Committee of the Militia of Mercy (New York: Doubleday, Page, 1909), Original Sources, accessed May 31, 2023, http://www.originalsources.com/Document.aspx?DocID=HE2JPQXR8F3M3K7.

MLA: Militia of Mercy. "The Test." Defenders of Democracy; Contributions from Representative Other Arts from Our Allies and Our Own Country, Ed. By the Gift Book Committee of the Militia of Mercy, edited by Iles, George, 1852-1942, and translated by Colt, Oliver C., in Defenders of Democracy; Contributions from Representative Other Arts from Our Allies and Our Own Country, Ed. By the Gift Book Committee of the Militia of Mercy, Vol. 36, New York, Doubleday, Page, 1909, Original Sources. 31 May. 2023. http://www.originalsources.com/Document.aspx?DocID=HE2JPQXR8F3M3K7.

Harvard: Militia of Mercy, 'The Test' in Defenders of Democracy; Contributions from Representative Other Arts from Our Allies and Our Own Country, Ed. By the Gift Book Committee of the Militia of Mercy, ed. and trans. . cited in 1909, Defenders of Democracy; Contributions from Representative Other Arts from Our Allies and Our Own Country, Ed. By the Gift Book Committee of the Militia of Mercy, Doubleday, Page, New York. Original Sources, retrieved 31 May 2023, from http://www.originalsources.com/Document.aspx?DocID=HE2JPQXR8F3M3K7.