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Fighting For Peace
PREFACE
Henry Van Dyke
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       _ FOREWORD
       This brief series of chapters is not a tale
       "Of moving accidents by flood and field,
       Of hair-breadth 'scapes i' the imminent deadly breach."
       Some dangers I have passed through during the last three years, but nothing to speak of.
       Nor is it a romance in the style of those thrilling novels of secret diplomacy which I peruse with wonder and delight in hours of relaxation, chiefly because they move about in worlds regarding which I have no experience and little faith.
       There is nothing secret or mysterious about the American diplomatic service, so far as I have known it. Of course there are times when, like every other honestly and properly conducted affair, it does not seek publicity in the newspapers. That, I should suppose, must always be a fundamental condition of frank and free conversation between governments as between gentlemen. There is a certain kind of reserve which is essential to candor.
       But American diplomacy has no picturesque meetings at midnight in the gloom of lonely forests; no confabulations in black cellars with bands of hireling desperadoes waiting to carry out its decrees; no disguises, no masks, no dark lanterns--nothing half so exciting and melodramatic. On the contrary, it is amazingly plain and straightforward, with plenty of hard work, but always open and aboveboard. That is the rule for the diplomatic service of the United States.
       Its chief and constant aims are known to all men. First, to maintain American principles and interests, and to get a fair showing for them in the world. Second, to preserve and advance friendly relations and intercourse with the particular nation to which the diplomat is sent. Third, to promote a just and firm and free peace throughout the world, so that democracy everywhere may live without fear.
       It was the last of these three aims that acted as the main motive in my acceptance of President Wilson's invitation to go out as American Minister to the Netherlands and Luxembourg in the summer of 1913. It was pleasant, of course, to return for a while to the land from which my ancestors came so long ago. It seemed also that some useful and interesting work might be done to forward the common interests and ideals of the United States and the Netherlands--that brave, liberty-loving nation from which our country learned and received so much in its beginnings--and in particular that there might be opportunity for co-operation in the Far East, where the Dutch East Indies and the Philippines are next-door neighbors. But the chief thing that drew me to Holland was the desire to promote the great work of peace which had been begun by the International Peace Conferences at The Hague. This indeed was what the President especially charged me to do.
       Two conferences had already been held and had accomplished much. But their work was incomplete. It lacked firm attachments and sanctions. It was left to a certain extent "hanging in the air." It needed just those things which the American delegates to the Conference of 1907 had advocated--the establishment of a Permanent Court of Arbitral Justice; an International Prize Court; an agreement for the protection of private property at sea in time of war; the further study and discussion of the question of the reduction of armaments by the nations; and so on. Most of these were the things of which Germany had hitherto prevented the attainment. A third International Peace Conference was necessary to secure and carry on the work of the first two. The President told me to do all that I properly could to forward the assembling of that conference in the Palace of Peace at the earliest possible date.
       So I went to Holland as an envoy of the world-peace founded on justice which is America's great desire. For that cause I worked and strove. Of that cause I am still a devoted follower and servant. I am working for it now, but with a difference. It is evident that we cannot maintain that cause, as the world stands to-day, without fighting for it. And after it is won, it will need protection. It must be Peace with Righteousness and Power.
       The following chapters narrate some of the experiences--things seen and heard and studied during my years of service abroad--which have forced me to this conclusion. To the articles which were published in Scribner's Magazine for September, October, and November, 1917, I have added two short chapters on the cause of the war and the kind of peace America is fighting for.
       The third peace conference is more needed, more desirable, than ever. But we shall never get it until the military forces of Germany are broken, and the predatory Potsdam gang which rules them is brought low.
        
        
       End Transcriber's Notes - Some words:
       apologue
       Moral fable; an allegory.
       arbitral
       Relating to arbiters or arbitration.
       bahn
       Pathway.
       Belial
       Spirit of evil personified; the devil; Satan; worthlessness.
       billet-doux
       Love letter.
       chatelaine
       Mistress of a castle or fashionable household. Clasp or chain for holding keys, trinkets, etc., worn at the waist by women; woman's lapel ornament resembling this.
       confabulations
       Conversation; discussion.
       Credat Judaeus Apella! [non ego]
       "Let the Jew Apella believe it; not I".
       Roughly, "tell it to someone else, not me."
       escutcheon
       Shield or similar surface showing a coat of arms.
       flagitious
       Shamefully wicked, persons, actions, or times. Heinous or flagrant crime;
       grandiloquently
       Speaking or expressed in a lofty style; pompous, bombastic, turgid, pretentious.
       identic
       Identical in form, as when two or more governments deal simultaneously with another government.
       lycanthropy
       In folklore, ability to assume the form and characteristics of a wolf.
       Mare Liberum
       Body of navigable water to which all nations have unrestricted access.
       mendax
       Given to lying.
       miching mallecho
       Sneaky mischief.
       Mittel-Europa
       German term approximately equal to Central Europe.
       non possumus
       We cannot.
       obeisance
       Movement of the body showing respect or deferential courtesy; bow, curtsy, or similar gesture.
       passier-scheine
       Pass; permit.
       persona grata
       Acceptable person or diplomatic representative.
       poilus
       French soldier, especially in World War I.
       Potsdam
       Capital city of the federal state of Brandenburg in Germany, southwest of Berlin. Berlin was the official capital of Prussia and later of the German Empire, but the court remained in nearby Potsdam, and many government officials also settled in Potsdam. The city lost this status as a second capital in 1918, when World War I ended and the emperor Wilhelm II was deposed.
       refractory (persons)
       Hard or impossible to manage; stubbornly disobedient.
       sagacity
       Sound judgment.
       schmuck
       Obnoxious, contemptible, clumsy or stupid person.
       schrecklichkeit
       Frightfulness; horror.
       soubrette
       Maidservant in a play displaying coquetry, pertness, and a tendency to engage in intrigue. Flirtatious or frivolous young woman.
       trepanning
       Using a small circular saw with a center pin mounted on a strong hollow metal shaft that is attached a transverse handle: used in surgery to remove circular disks of bone from the skull.
       ululation
       Howl, as a dog or a wolf; hoot, as an owl; to lament loudly and
       shrilly.
       Vallombrosa
       Resort in central Italy, near Florence; a famous abbey.
       vicegerent
       Person appointed by a head of state to act as an administrative deputy.
       voluble
       Continuous flow of words; fluent; glib; talkative: articulate, garrulous, loquacious. _