Modern Eloquence: Vol III | Page 2

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Emerging from Her Isolation 1225 The Sphere of Woman 1229
WHITE, ANDREW DICKSON Commerce and Diplomacy 1232
WILEY, HARVEY WASHINGTON The Ideal Woman 1240
WILSON, WOODROW Our Ancestral Responsibilities 1248
WINSLOW, JOHN The First Thanksgiving Day 1253
WINTER, WILLIAM Tribute to John Gilbert 1257 Tribute to Lester Wallack 1260
WINTHROP, ROBERT C. The Ottoman Empire 1263
WISE, JOHN SERGEANT Captain John Smith 1266 The Legal Profession 1271
WOLCOTT, EDWARD OLIVER The Bright Land to Westward 1273
WOLSELEY, LORD (GARNET JOSEPH WOLSELEY) The Army in the Transvaal 1280
WU TING-FANG China and the United States 1284
WYMAN, WALTER Sons of the Revolution 1288

ILLUSTRATIONS
VOLUME III
PAGE
PRISCILLA AND JOHN ALDEN Frontispiece Photogravure after a painting by Lasalett J. Potts
"LAW" 872 Photo-engraving in colors after the original mosaic panel by Frederick Dielman
HORACE PORTER 897 Photogravure after a photograph from life
THE MINUTE MAN 936 Photogravure after a photograph
THEODORE ROOSEVELT 998 Photogravure after a photograph from life
LORD ROSEBERY (ARCHIBALD PHILIP PRIMROSE) 1008 Photogravure after a photograph from life
HENRY WATTERSON 1189 Photogravure after a photograph from life
THE NATIONAL MONUMENT TO THE FOREFATHERS 1210 Photogravure after a photograph

THOMAS NELSON PAGE
THE TORCH OF CIVILIZATION
[Speech of Thomas Nelson Page at the twentieth annual dinner of the New England Society in the City of Brooklyn, December 21, 1899. The President, Frederic A. Ward, said: "In these days of blessed amity, when there is no longer a united South or a disunited North, when the boundary of the North is the St. Lawrence and the boundary of the South the Rio Grande, and Mason and Dixon's Line is forever blotted from the map of our beloved country, and the nation has grown color-blind to blue and gray, it is with peculiar pleasure that we welcome here to-night a distinguished and typical representative of that noble people who live in that part of the present North that used to be called Dixie, of whom he has himself so beautifully and so truly said, 'If they bore themselves haughtily in their hour of triumph, they bore defeat with splendid fortitude. Their entire system crumbled and fell around them in ruins; they remained unmoved; they suffered the greatest humiliation of modern times; their slaves were put over them; they reconquered their section and preserved the civilization of the Anglo-Saxon.' It is not necessary, ladies and gentlemen, that I should introduce the next speaker to you, for I doubt not that you all belong to the multitude of mourners, who have wept real tears with black Sam and Miss Annie beside the coffin of Marse Chan; but I will call upon our friend, Thomas Nelson Page, to respond to the next toast, 'The Debt Each Part of the Country Owes the Other.'"]
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN:--I did not remember that I had written anything as good as that which my friend has just quoted. It sounded to me, as he quoted it, very good indeed. At any rate, it is very true, and, perhaps, that it is true is the reason that you have done me the honor to invite me here to-night. I have been sitting for an hour in such a state of tremulousness and fright, facing this audience I was to address, that the ideas I had carefully gathered together have, I fear, rather taken flight; but I shall give them to you as they come, though they may not be in quite as good order as I should like them. The gift of after-dinner speaking is one I heard illustrated the other day very well at a dinner at which my friend, Judge Bartlett and I were present. A gentleman told a story of an English bishop travelling in a third-class railway carriage with an individual who was swearing most tremendously, originally, and picturesquely, till finally the bishop said to him: "My dear sir, where in the world did you learn to swear in that extraordinary manner?" And he said, "It can't be learned, it is a gift." After-dinner speaking is a gift I have often envied, ladies and gentlemen, and as I have not it I can only promise to tell you what I really think on the subject which I am here to speak about to-night.
I feel that in inviting me here as the representative of the South to speak on this occasion, I could not do you any better honor than to tell you precisely what I do think and what those, I in a manner represent, think; and I do not know that our views would differ very materially from yours. I could not, if I would, undertake merely to be entertaining to you. I am very much in that respect like an old darky I knew of down in Virginia, who on one occasion was given by his mistress some syllabub. It was spiced a little with--perhaps--New England rum, or something quite as strong that came from the other side of
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