8 'Cbc Conservative. Till : MOIIAL , OF Til 13 CUD AX IVAN. War , the almost certain concomitant of empire , is alleged to have a most blessed effect on the internal harmony of nations. This \ve are told not only in the press , but from the pulpit ; some going oven so far as to intimate that the restoration of national haimony was a sufficient object for this war. The moral world would be strangely out of joint if a nation could cure itself of factiousness or of any internal disorder by shedding the blood and seizing the possessions of its neighbors. War has no such virtue. The victories of the Plantagenets in Franco were followed by insurrections and civil ware at home , largely owing to the spirit of violence which the raids on Franco had excited. The victories of Chatham were followed by disgraceful scenes of cabal and fac tion as well as of corruption , terminat ing in the prostration of patriotism and the domination of George III and North. Party animosities in the United States do not seem to have been banished or even allayed by the Cuban war. Set ting party divisions aside , no restoration of harmony appeared to be needed , so far as the white population was con cerned. Not only peace , bxt good will between the North and South had been restored in a surprising degree. The blue and gray had fraterni/.cd on the field of Gettysburg. It was to harmon ize white and black that some kindly influence was manifestly and most ur gently needed. But all through the war and since the war American papers have been almost daily recording cases of lynching , sometimes of such a charac ter as to evince the last extremity of hatred and contempt. The negro is lymphatic , apathetic , patient of degra dation and even of insult. But San Domingo saw that ho had a tiger in him ; and when the tiger broke loose hell ensued. There has been at least one in stance of the retaliatory lynching of a white man ; and now we have a bloody battle of races at Yirdcn. Why should the American commonwealth want more negroes ? # * # * * What is this mood styled "imperial ism , " "jingoism , " expansionism , " "Greater Britain , " which has suddenly come over the world ? How is it that all at once moderation , regard for right , and what was deemed common pru dence are discarded , and in their place we hear avowals of thirst for aggran dizement , and proclamations of the law of force , far more philosophic in form , but hardly more moi'al in spirit , than the utterances of Attilla or Timur ? Europe has become an arsenal and drill ing-ground. The bread is taken from the mouths of toil to furnish destruc tion with its implements ; the toiler him self is pressed into its hosts ; mad com petition in ai'mamonts has gone on till the Czar himself stands aghast and ap peals to reason and humanity. The people everywhere groan. Socialism and anarchism , as a natural consequence quence , prevail. America "at last catches the infection , and , as might bo expected from her receptivity and vi vacity , in its extreme form. Lord Salis bury , casting the world's horoscope , predicts that the weak nations will all be devoured by the strong , and appar ently that the process will go on till , instead of the community of nations , each contributing out of its special treasure to the common store , there will be left only one great predatory power. That power , we flatter ourselves , will be the Anglo-Saxon ; and we think that the nations ought to look forward with gladness to its solo domination. But the nations may differ from us in taste ; at all events thny may prefer variety. What , again , we would ask , is the ex planation of this paroxysm of aggran dizement ? Is it the sudden opening by exploration of Africa and other regions hitherto unappropriated by civilized man ? Is it the intense thirst of gain ? Is it mere restlessness and satiety of peaceful industry and life ? Is it the re moval of religious restraints on self- aggrandizemenjb by the decadence of Christianity ? It seems not altogether to bo the last , since one mode of expan sion is to send a missionary in advance , and , when he gets into trouble with the natives to follow him with * ' ' , up a 'pun itive expedition. " * * * * * When talk of "the we great common wealth of English-speaking people , " and think of it as pursuing a common policy , it is as well to remember that the Brit ish part of it comprises two hundred millions of Hindus , who with other alien races comprehended in the empire , form about four-fifths of the whole. Its interests , relations , and liabilities are not likely to coincide very closely with those of the United States. It is with the imperialist party in England which is also in the main that of aristocracy and militarism , that the alliance would practically bo formed. By that party it is that the prospect of an Anglo-American combination for the purpose of common aggrandizement is so eagerly hailed. At present , thanks to the recoil from home rule whioh threatened the dismem berment of the United Kingdom , imperialism is completely in the ascen dant. But when home rule has been fairly buried , there may be a liberal and moderatist revival. Already there have been symptoms of it in more than one of the recent by-elections. For the propagation of Anglo-Saxon ideas and institutions no diplomatic or military combination is required. Ideas are propagated b- the press ; while par liamentary government and trial by jury have made the round of the civil ized world without the firing of a gun. To impose peace upon all nations by the fiat of the two great Anglo-Saxon powers , wo are sometimes told , would bo the beneficent object of the combi nation. The nations would presently object to having peace or anything else imposed upon them by anybody's fiat ; they would take arms to assert their in dependence ; and the end , instead of universal peace , might be a general war. Goldwin Smith in the November Forum. NO HALF WAY DESTINY. " We carry no exemption from the evils that have overtaken that other nation , as proud , as self-confident as wo our selves. Give us a few generations of foreign wars and splendid victories and colonial domination , and we may expect to emulate the Spanish character , and to hold as high a place as the Spaniards in the estimation of the world. If wo adventure ourselves in the course that lies so invitingly open to us , and go forth in quest of glory and power , after the Spanish fashion , it seems likely that we shall achieve what we go for ; but we must take it with its liabilities , for ourselves as well as for others. It may , indeed , be , as so many are ready to assure us , that there is a great destiny before us. Are we ready to accept that destiny , the whole of it , to the end ? There is an illuminating story of Zeno , that highly orthodox Stoic philosopher of the ancient time. His slave had been found out a thief , and was tied up for punishment , but pleaded in mitigation , "O Zeno. I was predestinated to steal. " "Yes , " said his master , "and predestinated to be flogged for it. " We cannot take half this des tiny and leave the rest. From a sermon by the Rev. Dr. Leonard W. Bacon. , . SAT.ISDUUY. years the habit of the American press to berate and beslime the name of Lord Salisbury as an English statesman who was always busy in "backing down" under every serious complication with foreign powers. In no single instance has the illustrious survivor of the Cecils failed to compel admiration for his steadiness and force in every serioiis crisis which England has had to con front during his long public service. If either Englishmen or Americans would know the real reach and courage of this powerful statesman in great interna tional controversies , they would do well to recall the "peace with honor" which Lord Salisbury and Disneli brought to London from Berlin , or pay a short visit to Paris at about this time. The Society Lecture Course at the State Normal School , Peru , Nebraska , for the ensuing winter promises to bo very entertaining and instructive. Cit izens of Nebraska City may find it to their advantage and improvement to attend the same. The first lecture will be given on November 19 , by James Hedloy.