"I see what you mean," rejoined Dorn. "Such teaching of children would change the men of the future. It would mean peace for the generations to come. But as for my boy—it would make him a poor soldier. He would not be a fighter. He would fall easy victim to the son of the father who had not taught this beautiful meaning of life and terror of war. I'd want my son to be a man."
"That teaching—would make him—all the more a man," said Lenore, beginning to feel faint.
"But not in the sense of muscle, strength, courage, endurance. I'd rather there never was peace than have my son inferior to another man's."
"My hope for the future is that all men will come to teach their sons the wrong of violence."
"Lenore, never will that day come," replied Dorn.
She saw in him the inevitableness of the masculine attitude; the difference between man and woman; the preponderance of blood and energy over the higher motives. She felt a weak little woman arrayed against the whole of mankind. But she could not despair. Unquenchable as the sun was this fire within her.
"But it might come?" she insisted, gently, but with inflexible spirit.
"Yes, it might—if men change!"
"You have changed."
"Yes. I don't know myself."