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sted in tendering you and yours that right hand of friendship which you have so nobly justified. You fought us fair. You have uprisen from the ashes of the past like the Phoenix of old. You are Briton with the best. Fair fight breeds no ill-will. It is the man, and the nation, that fights foul and flings God and humanity overboard that lays up for itself stores of hatred and outcastry and scorn which the ages shall hardly efface. And Germany once was great, and might have been greater. Delenda est Germania!--so far as Germania represents the Devil and all his works. The following lines were written fourteen years ago when we welcomed the end of the Boer War. We are all grateful that the hope therein expressed has been so amply fulfilled. That it has been so is largely due to the wisdom and statesmanship of Louis Botha. No matter now the rights and wrongs of it; You fought us bravely and we fought you fair. The fight is done. Grip hands! No malice bear! We greet you, brothers, to the nobler strife Of building up the newer, larger life! Join hands! Join hands! Ye nations of the stock! And make henceforth a mighty Trust for Peace;-- A great enduring peace that shall withstand The shocks of time and circumstance; and every land Shall rise and bless you--and shall never cease To bless you--for that glorious gift of Peace. Germany, if she had so willed, could have come into that hoped-for Trust for Peace. But Germany would not. She put her own selfish interests before all else and so digs her own grave. JOHN OXENHAM. [Illustration: BOTHA TO BRITAIN "I have carried out everything in accordance with our compact at Vereeniging."] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- BELGIUM IN HOLLAND In the present crisis of Belgian affairs there is much to remind the historical student of the events which led to the fall of Antwerp in 1585, and the outrageous invasion of the Southern Netherlands by the army of Parma. Then, as now, Holland opened her arms to her wounded and captive sister. The best Flemish scholars and men of letters emigrated to the land where Cornheert and Spieghel welcomed them. Merchants and artisans flocked to a new sphere of energy in Amsterdam. Several of the professorial chairs in that city, and in the great universities of Leyden and Harderwijk,
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