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What Makes a
Nation Great? by Alexander Blackburn (1844-1921)
Not serried ranks
with flags unfurled,
Not armored ships that gird the world,
Not hoarded wealth nor busy mills,
Not cattle on a thousand hills,
Not sages wise, nor schools nor laws,
Not boasted deeds in freedoms cause --
All these may be, and yet the state
In the eye of God be far from great.
That land is great
which knows the Lord,
Whose songs are guided by His word;
Where justice rules twixt man and man,
Where love controls in art and plan;
Where, breathing in his native air,
Each soul finds joy in praise and prayer --
Thus may our country, good and great,
Be God's delight -- man's best estate.
(from One Nation
Under God: an anthology for Americans
by
Robert Gordon Smith)
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