Black, George Fraser / 2008-07-23 00:00:00
EBOOK SCOTLAND'S MARK ON AMERICA ***
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Libraries, Marilynda Fraser-Cunliffe, and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team.
SCOTLAND'S MARK ON AMERICA
By GEORGE FRASER BLACK, PH.D.
With a Foreword By JOHN FOORD
_Published by_
The Scottish Section of "America's Making" New York, 1921
FOREWORD
It has been said that the Scot is never so much at home as when he is
abroad. Under this half-jesting reference to one of the
characteristics of our race, there abides a sober truth, namely, that
the Scotsman carries with him from his parent home into the world
without no half-hearted acceptance of the duties required of him in
the land of his adoption. He is usually a public-spirited citizen, a
useful member of society, wherever you find him. But that does not
lessen the warmth of his attachment to the place of his birth, or the
land of his forbears. Be his connection with Scotland near or remote,
there is enshrined in the inner sanctuary of his heart, memories,
sentiments, yearnings, that are the heritage of generations with whom
love of their country was a dominant passion, and pride in the deeds
that her children have done an incentive to effort and an antidote
against all that was base or ignoble.
It is a fact that goes to the core of the secular struggle for human
freedom that whole-hearted Americanism finds no jarring note in the
sentiment of the Scot, be that sentiment ever so intense.
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