Have faith in Massachusetts; 2d ed. - A Collection of Speeches and Messages by Calvin Coolidge
page 13 of 150 (08%)
page 13 of 150 (08%)
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The evidence of evolution and the facts of history tell us of the
progress and development of man through various steps and ages, known by various names. We learn of the stone age, the bronze, and the iron age. We can see the different steps in the growth of the forms of government; how anarchy was put down by the strong arm of the despot, of the growth of aristocracy, of limited monarchies and of parliaments, and finally democracy. But in all these changes man took but one step at a time. Where we can trace history, no race ever stepped directly from the stone age to the iron age and no nation ever passed directly from depotism to democracy. Each advance has been made only when a previous stage was approaching perfection, even to conditions which are now sometimes lost arts. We have reached the age of invention, of commerce, of great industrial enterprise. It is often referred to as selfish and materialistic. Our economic system has been attacked from above and from below. But the short answer lies in the teachings of history. The hope of a Watt or an Edison lay in the men who chipped flint to perfection. The seed of democracy lay in a perfected despotism. The hope of to-morrow lies in the development of the instruments of to-day. The prospect of advance lies in maintaining those conditions which have stimulated invention and industry and commerce. The only road to a more progressive age lies in perfecting the instrumentalities of this age. The only hope for peace lies in the perfection of the arts of war. "We build the ladder by which we rise ... * * * * * And we mount to the summit round by round." |
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