During the eighteen months of European experience I worked with the Red Cross on my arm. The horrors and sufferings of Weissenburg, Woerth, and Hagenau, Strasbourg, Metz, Sedan and Paris—poor twice shattered Paris—and every besieged and desolated city of France fell under my observation and shared the labor of my hands through eighteen hard and dreadful months.
Clara Barton, in public address at Cape May.
Truth, like the sun, submits to be obscured; but, like the sun, only for a time. Bovee.
Our dearly beloved and most honored Clara Barton! She understood fully the meaning of the Red Cross, and knew well how to put into action the great and beautiful, though difficult, duties of the Red Cross. How shall I forget what she was to us here in the year 1870, helping us during the time of war we had to go through with then! God grant her peace eternal! There where her beautiful soul will live in the glory of Christ.
Luise, Grand Duchess of Baden (1912).
OMISSION OF, OR ACQUIESCENCE IN, THE TRAGEDY OF 1904
“PASSES THE BUCK”
It may be we shall let most of the period of the differences with the Red Cross remain in solution till the larger life and letters (by William E. Barton).
Reverend Percy H. Epler,
(In 1915)