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A Straight Deal or the Ancient Grudge

Chapter 6 Who Is Without Sin

Word Count: 1682    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

first, one suggestion. Most of us, if we dig back only fifty or sixty or seventy years, can

ever made a scandal, broke a heart, or betrayed a trust? Every man Jack and woman Jill of the lot right back to Adam and Eve wholly good, honorable, and courageous?

ancestor; that all sorts of virtue and vice, of heroism and disgrace, are mingled in our blood; t

k pages of our record, and never come upon a single blot? Indeed you cannot. And it is better--a great deal better--that you should be aware of these blots. Suc

d magnanimity that we have shown to Cuba, I have yet to learn of it. They jeered at us about Cuba, did the Europeans of the continent. Their papers stuck their tongues in their cheeks. Of course our fine sentiments were all sham, they said. Of course we int

-sixteen millions. It was we who prevented levying a punitive indemnity on China. Read the whole story; there is much more. We played the gentleman, Europe played the bully. But Euro

in Paris lately? What did we ask for ourselves? Everything we asked, save some repairs of damage, was for other people. Oh, yes! we are quite good enoug

ll be that school textbooks help this inclination to dislike. Certainly we know what contempt and hatred for other nations the Germans have been sedulously taught in their schools, and how utterly they believed their teaching. How much better and wiser for the whole world if all the boys and girls in all the schools everywhere were henceforth to be started in life with a just and true notion of all flags and the peoples over whom they f

declaring war against Great Britain in 1812 were not so strong as they had been three and four years earlier? That during those years England had moderated her arrogance, was ready to moderate further, had placated us for her brutal performance concerning the Chesapeake, wanted peace; while we, who had been nearly unanimous for war, and with a fuller purse in 1808, were now, by our own congressional fuddling and messing, without any adequate army, and so divided in counsel that only one northern state was wholly in favor of war? Did you know that our General Hull began by invading Canada from Detroit and surrendered his w

that this was uncommonly lucky for us--as lucky quite as those ships from France under Admiral de Grasse, without whose help Washington could never have caught Cornwallis and compelled his surrender at Yorktown, October 19, 1781. Did you know that there were

Well, there is more to know than that, and I found it out much later. I found out that General Grant, who had fought with credit as a lieutenant in the Mexican War, briefly summarized it as "iniquitous." I gradually, through my reading as a man, learned the truth about the Mexican War which had not been taught me as a boy--that in that war we bullied a weaker power, that we made her our victim, that the whole discred

ntelligently because we know these faults, so our love of our country would be just as strong, and far more intelligent, were we honestly and wisely taught in our early years those acts and policies of hers wherein she fell below her lofty and humane ideals. Her characte

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A Straight Deal or the Ancient Grudge
A Straight Deal or the Ancient Grudge
“Owen Wister (1860-1938) was an American writer of western novels. He studied at the Harvard Law School, where he was a classmate of Theodore Roosevelt and graduated in 1888. At first he aspired to a career in music, and spent two years studying at a Paris conservatory. Thereafter, he worked briefly in a bank in New York before studying law. Wister had spent several summers out in the American West and was fascinated with the culture, lore and terrain of that region. When he started writing, he naturally inclined towards fiction set on the western frontier. Wister's most famous work remains the 1902 novel The Virginian: Horseman of the Plains. This is widely regarded as being the first American western novel. Amongst his other works are: Lin McLean (1897), The Jimmyjohn Boss and Other Stories (1900), Philosophy 4 (1903), Lady Baltimore (1906), Mother (1907), Padre Ignacio; or, The Song of Temptation (1911) and A Straight Deal (1920).”
1 Chapter 1 Concerning One's Letter Box2 Chapter 2 What the Postman Brought3 Chapter 3 In Front of a Bulletin Board4 Chapter 4 My Army of Spies 5 Chapter 5 The Ancient Grudge6 Chapter 6 Who Is Without Sin7 Chapter 7 Tarred with the Same Stick8 Chapter 8 History Astigmatic9 Chapter 9 Concerning a Complex10 Chapter 10 Jackstraws11 Chapter 11 Some Family Scraps12 Chapter 12 On the Ragged Edge13 Chapter 13 Benefits Forgot14 Chapter 14 England the Slacker!15 Chapter 15 Rude Britannia, Crude Columbia16 Chapter 16 An International Imposture17 Chapter 17 Paint18 Chapter 18 The Will to Friendship--or the Will to Hate19 Chapter 19 Lion and Cub