The Valley of Vision
GUERITE Au
een woods, back of the Saguenay, singing the same old song of liberty and obedience
it among the big trees and beside a flowing stream. The trees are ministers of p
the morning's fishing, with a br
owman, the best hunter and fisher on the riv
ost a grandfather-the war is not for men of that ag
hole world. Who told you th
l for a good Christian to fight in defense of his home and his church. Let those Germans att
lutely simple, perfectly sincere, and strictly impris
r there. What would happen to French Canada? Do you think you could stand alone th
derstand we French-Canadians have large families-but of course the children could not fight. Still, we should not li
on your own soil is to fight against it over there? Hasn't the En
r Wilfred Laurier. Ah, that is a g
he freedom of Canada depends on the defeat of Germany, over there, on th
would be intolerable. But I
fighting for belong to Christianity-justice, liberty, humanity. Tell him that, and tell him also some of the thin
ced that we yet comprehend, here in French Canada, the meaning of this war. But we shall endeavor to comprehend it better. And when we comprehend, we shall be ready to do our duty-you can trust yourself to the men of Sacre Coeur for that. We love peace-we all about he
and Eugene, who are Selectmen of the community of Sacre Coeur, that they must co
hrough the forest in the dark. They are good citizens, as well as good woodsmen,
w was it with the meeting
c is a large corner of the world. But it is only a corner, after all, we can see that. And those damned Germans who do such terrible things
themselves Protestants and some call themselves Catholics. But it seems to me
says Iside. "It is the condu