tailieunhanh - The Career of Leonard Wood

In these days immediately following the Great War it is well upon beginning anything--even a modest biographical sketch--to consider a few elementals and distinguish them from the changing unessentials, to keep a sound basis of sense and not be led into hysteria, to look carefully again at the beams of our house and not be deceived into thinking that the plaster and the wall paper are the supports of the building. Let us consider a few of these elementals that apply to the subject in hand as well as to the rest of the universe--elemental truths which do not change, which no Great War can. | Career of Leonard Wood by Joseph Hamblen Sears 1 Career of Leonard Wood by Joseph Hamblen Sears Project Gutenberg s The Career of Leonard Wood by Joseph Hamblen Sears This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at Title The Career of Leonard Wood Author Joseph Hamblen Sears Release Date September 3 2010 EBook 33626 Language English Character set encoding ISO-8859-1 START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CAREER OF LEONARD WOOD Produced by Don Kostuch Transcriber s note Page numbers in this book are indicated by numbers enclosed in curly braces . 99 . They have been located where page breaks occurred in the original book. Obvious spelling errors have been corrected but inventive spelling is left unchanged. Apparently conflicting spelling is not resolved as in Gouraud and Gourand . End Transcriber s note Career of Leonard Wood by Joseph Hamblen Sears 2 Illustration LEONARD WOOD portrait THE CAREER OF LEONARD WOOD BY JOSEPH HAMBLEN SEARS D. APPLETON AND COMPANY NEW YORK LONDON 1920 Copyright 1919 by D. APPLETON AND COMPANY Printed in the United States of America TO GENERAL LEONARD WOOD By Corinne Roosevelt Robinson Your vision keen unerring when the blind Who could not see turned groping from the light. Your sentient knowledge of the wise and right Have won to-day the freedom of mankind. Honor to whom the honor be assigned Mightier in exile than the men whose might Is of the sword alone and not of sight. You march beside the victor host aligned. Had not your spirit soared our ardent youth Had faltered leaderless their eager feet Attuned to effort for the valiant truth Through your command rushed swiftly to compete To hold on high the torch of Liberty-Great-visioned Soul yours is the victory November 11 1918 From Service and Sacrifice Poems Copyright. 1915. 1916. .