18. To understand the people in a revolution we must know their history.
19. The accumulated thought, feeling, and tradition of a nation constitute its strength, which is its national spirit. This must not be too rigid, nor too malleable. For, in the first place, revolution means anarchy, and, in the second place, it results in successive revolutions.
War and Peace Studies.
By the Author.
Peace, War, and Humanity. Printed by Judd & Detweiler, Washington, D. C., 26 pages, 1915, 8o.
Comparative Militarism. Reprint from publications of the American Statistical Association, Boston, December, 1915, 3 pages, 8o.
Atrocities and Outrages of War. Reprint from the Pacific Medical Journal, San Francisco, April, 1916, 16 pages, 8o. Gives data for Civil War, Boer War, Bulgaria, and Russia and Germany, 16 pages, 8o.
Some Moral Evils of War. Reprint from Pacific Medical Journal, San Francisco, August, 1916, 8 pages, 8o. Refers especially to Boer War.
Reasons for Peace. Machinists' Monthly Journal, Washington, D. C., July, 1916, pages 708-710, 8o.