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Home  »  Theodore Roosevelt, the Citizen  »  Page 125

Jacob A. Riis (1849–1914). Theodore Roosevelt, the Citizen. 1904.

Page 125

came away with all his ideals bright and unsullied. It was in the Civil Service Commission’s office the cunning was fashioned which, without giving offense, put the Kishineff petition into the hands of the Czar and his Ministers before they had time to say they would not receive it, and gave notice to the Muscovite world that there was a moral sense across the sea to be reckoned with; of which fact it took due notice.
  Still more did the country get out of that Six Years’ War: from end to end of the land the men with ideals, young and old, the men and women who would help their fellows, help their cities, took heart from his example and his victory. Perhaps that was the greatest gain, the one that went farthest. It endures to this day. Wherever he fights, men fall in behind and fight on with new hope; they know they can win if they keep it up. And they will, let them be sure of it. All the little defeats are just to test their grit. It is a question of grit, that is all.