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I do not
put our victory in the World War
in the proud list of Democratic
achievements. Though fought under
the leadership of the greatest Democrat
since Jefferson, and although without
the support of his party in every
crisis it could not have been brought
to its successful and triumphant
conclusion, it was the people's
war in a peculiar sense. The patriotic
support given to the government
during the war by men of every political
faith, proves that passionate love
of country and intense devotion
to our institutions are a part of
the creed of every political party
in the nation.
But I do
insist that we shall hear no more
of the old slander that the Democratic
party cannot be trusted to lead
in a great war. We may give to individual
Americans the full measure of praise
which a grateful republic will always
shower upon the men who sprang to
its defense with unprecedented valor
and unhesitating devotion to its
Christian cause. But the impartial
historian must and will write it
down as an incontrovertible fact
that the party in power rose with
unstinted enthusiasm to the needs
of the hour, while its leadership
translated the will and spirit of
the American people into decisive
and courageous action, without which
ignominious failure would have been
our portion in the Armageddon of
the nation.
It has never
been any reflection upon the courage
or the patriotism of the millions
of northern Democrats who followed
his leadership, for history to accord
to Abraham Lincoln and the party
which he led the full measure of
credit which was their due for saving
the Union in the dark days of the
Civil War. The great empire on whose
dominions the sun never sets gratefully
acknowledges that success could
not have come to British arms without
the superb political leadership
of that masterful little Welshman,
David Lloyd George. While France
-- rescued from the very jaws of
death by the courage of her sons,
whose blood has colored all the
rivers that wash her sunny slopes
-- does honor to the skill of her
generals, the courage of her men,
and the sacrifice of her women by
acknowledging the chief debt to
be due the old tiger of France,
Clemenceau.
Must we forever
sit silent under partisan charges
of waste, extravagance or mistake
-- many of them the necessary accompaniment
of war -- without any credit for
the great and overwhelming result
which we achieve? Let history begin
to tell the truth now, and it will
say that the common courage of our
men and women, the combined efforts
of capital and labor, the joint
support of city and farm, all were
welded into an irresistible force,
by a leadership never surpassed
in the history of parliamentary
government. And that was the leadership
which the Democratic party gave
to the world when it joined its
practical achievements with its
high ideals behind Woodrow Wilson.
The hard
won victory of American arms will
prove but a hollow and unavailing
triumph if we do not make certain
that out of it shall come a greater
liberty, a better America, and a
surer peace - - these three, and
the greatest of these is peace,
for peace means liberty for everyone.
Peace means America forevermore.
And peace means the bright new skies
of that glorious day which was ushered
in by the Master when He blessed
a weary world: My peace I give unto
you. My peace I leave with you.
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