[The Red Cross Girl by Richard Harding Davis]@TWC D-Link bookThe Red Cross Girl INTRODUCTION 23/23
And he was one of those who have gradually taught this country to see the matter in the same way. I must come to a close now, and I have hardly scratched the surface of my subject.
And that is a failure which I feel keenly but which was inevitable.
As R.H.D.himself used to say of those deplorable "personal interviews" which appear in the newspapers, and in which the important person interviewed is made by the cub reporter to say things which he never said, or thought, or dreamed of--"You can't expect a fifteen-dollar-a-week brain to describe a thousand-dollar-a-week brain." There is, however, one question which I should attempt to answer.
No two men are alike.
In what one salient thing did R.H.D.differ from other men--differ in his personal character and in the character of his work? And that question I can answer offhand, without taking thought, and be sure that I am right. An analysis of his works, a study of that book which the Recording Angel keeps will show one dominant characteristic to which even his brilliancy, his clarity of style, his excellent mechanism as a writer are subordinate; and to which, as a man, even his sense of duty, his powers of affection, of forgiveness, of loving-kindness are subordinate, too; and that characteristic is cleanliness. The biggest force for cleanliness that was in the world has gone out of the world--gone to that Happy Hunting Ground where "Nobody hunts us and there is nothing to hunt." GOUVERNEUR MORRIS..
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