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...from Virginia, and Alabama, and from all the South, believing in the sovereignty of their states, went back to join the Confederate army,--and their names Harvard has forgotten. Let Northern men believe the Southerners' judgment to be mistaken, but let them never doubt their faithfulness, nor their valor in the cause to which they gave their lives...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MEMORIAL DAY SERVICES. | 5/31/1901 | See Source »

...heroes. If we keep to our declared policy of war only for the liberation of Cuba, then they will have an enduring place in history. If, in the end, we pervert these ends, and are inspired by the lust of conquest, they will be remembered only as men of valor. Only wars of high aims leave behind imperishable names of greatness. The fate of the dead hero is in the hands of those who survive...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MEMORIAL DAY SERVICES. | 5/31/1898 | See Source »

...There should be neither mental nor moral confusion as to the real meaning of this Memorial Day and this Memorial Hall. I unite with the late William J. Potter of the class of 1854, who warns us not to be caught by the sentimental sophistry that since there were valor and heroism and courage and fidelity to conviction on both sides, we may commemorate those virtues of both armies as American...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Memorial Service. | 6/1/1896 | See Source »

Fidelity to conviction is praiseworthy, but the conviction is sometimes very far from praiseworthy. Slavery and polygamy were convictions. Such monuments as Memorial Hall commemorate the valor and heroism that maintained certain principles-justice, order and liberty. So long, then, as there is a distinction between the principles of liberty and those of slavery, may this Memorial Hall stand for those who fought for liberty and not for those who fought for slavery...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Memorial Service. | 6/1/1896 | See Source »

...poets of the north of France. Fortunately for us it was their delight to take for their theme the novel moral ideals and virtues of the time. The troubadours loved to tell first of all of courtesy as high in the rank of virtues; then of valor, of generosity, of perfect refinement and gentleness. There were other virtues which do not now pass as such. Youth was lauded, age condemned. Without joy, whether active or passive, none could be virtuous; still less without measure, by which was meant method, regularity, decorum. But greater than all these was the virtue most...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROFESSOR MARSH'S LECTURE. | 10/31/1895 | See Source »

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