Dear Ivor, This is one of my personal favorites among my own work. Yet it treats lightly so much that is apparently beyond man's wisdom to solve. I made four statements some of which were intended more for feel than for strict interpretation. re slavery, I believe some troops fought to free the slaves, but had Lincoln let the South go in peace, slavery would soon have died as it was economically unsustainable and although man makes his moral progress slowly, goodness would have overcome re Hitler, we would be so saluting re bravery, that is nonsense, a convenient rhyme re freedom, there are some who would prefer to live as serfs in the dark ages, sheep under an evil shepherd, but I think on the whole, man is inspired by calls to freedom and the memorable words of Patrick Henry and Thomas Paine and that freedom is as heavenly a concept as love. Those who find a justification to oppose war never seem to offer a practical means to do so without paying the price for "peace" with freedom. Short of the David/Goliath very, very temporary solution, how should perceived good deal with perceived evil? Is it true that "no cause can earn its keep"? It is that line that I like so. No need for response. This one should float off the board gracefully. Cheers, Ron jgd
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