
PRAYER FOR PEACE
FOREWORD
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
A striking blend of poetry and historical commentary, this work opens with a haunting series of prayers for peace that summon catastrophic visions of plague, silence, and iron‑clad domination. The lyrical verses set a tone of moral questioning, inviting listeners to contemplate the paradox of seeking tranquility through the very forces that unleash war. From these evocative beginnings, the narrative shifts to a sober examination of America’s early‑nineteenth‑century anxieties, drawing on contemporary newspaper accounts that lament a burned Capitol and the uneasy promise of “democracy without preparation.”
The author then turns to the era of World War I, dissecting President Wilson’s ambiguous pleas for preparedness and the nation’s reliance on volunteer militias over a standing army. By juxtaposing past missteps with the rhetoric of the 1914 war effort, the book probes how idealism, fear, and political rhetoric have shaped U.S. foreign policy. Listeners will find a thoughtful, thought‑provoking exploration of the tension between lofty ideals and the gritty realities of war, presented in a voice that is both lyrical and rigorously analytical.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (384K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-12-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1858–1919
Remembered as a larger-than-life president, he was also a prolific writer, naturalist, soldier, and reformer whose restless energy shaped American politics and conservation. His life mixed public ambition with real physical courage, from ranching in the Dakotas to leading the Rough Riders and later winning the Nobel Peace Prize.
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