A Man Without A Country
Dr. Edward Everett Hale's story, "The Man Without a Country," has been republiehed. In a new introductlon Dr. Hale says: "It was the in tention of this parable, which describes the life of one man, who tried to separate himself from his country, to show how terrible was hls mistake. It does not need now that a man should curse the United States, as Philip Nolan did, or that he should say that he hopes he may never hear her name again, to make it desirable for him to consider the lessons which are involved in the parable of nis life. The man who, by his sneers, or by looking backward, or by revea! ing his country's secrets to her enemy, delays for one hour peace between Spain and this nation is to al' intents and purposes 'A Man Without a Country.' "New York Tribune.
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Ann Arbor Argus
Old News