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The American Spirit by Mrs. A.J. Wilder
“The food administration now becomes a great machine of mercy destined to carry the American spirit into the homes and hearts of a great hose of bewildered, confused human beings, hungry, discouraged, saddened, submerged by the wreckage resulting from the war. They have gone thru fire for us. The least we can do is help them to their feet, to see that they are fed and clothed. Don’t let your community backslide! Play the game thru! America hates a quitter.” These ringing words were spoken by Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, president of Stanford University. As a nation we have made a great reputation. It now remains to live up to it. Just what is this American spirit that our overseas force of fighters and helpers have carried into Europe? It is a spirit of helpfulness and courage, of sympathy and sacrifice, of energy and of fair play. We have sent our fighting men to the aid of the wronged and helpless and food and clothing to the starving and destitute. Never before in history have the people of a whole nation denied themselves foot that they might feed the hungry of other nations. I am sure that a great many people felt a sort of flatness and staleness in life when the war ended. Altho they were glad and deeply thankful, there was an unpleasantness in going back to ordinary things, a letting down from the heights to which they had attained, a silence in place of the bugle call to duty, to which their spirits had become attuned. But there is a chance to exercise still further those qualities which, in spite of all the horrors, have made the war a glorious thing by showing how the good still rises triumphant over the bad in the heart of humanity. The appeal of Dr. Wilbur comes most appropriately at this time for the American spirit as it has been displayed is really the spirit of Christmas or in other words the spirit of Christianity, a practicable example of loving and serving and giving. It is a wonderful thing for us to have accepted as our own such national ideals, but we cannot hold them as a nation unless we accept them for our own as individuals. So the responsibility rests upon each of us to keep our country true to the course it has taken and up to the high standard it has reached.
Mrs. A.J. Wilder. "The American Spirit." Missouri Ruralist (December 20, 1918): 11.
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