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Some Prophecies that Failed. ■ • Mr L. F. Austin, in his " Note Book " in the Illustrated London News, has been amusing himself and his readers by doing some engineer-hoisting with their own petards. In the last number | to hand he deals with the action of the colonies in connection with the South African war, and contrasts it with the attitude Mr Morley and Mr Archibald Forbes prophesied they would assume in the event of the Mother Country becoming involved in a serious crisis. ! He caustically remarks that " Mr John I Morley has blamed the Government for lack of foresight. No man is better qualified by temperament to enjoy his own shortcomings, and he will be grateful to me, I am sure, for serving up a perfect feast of them from the third volume of his • Miscellanies.' Years ago, in an essay on Sir John Seeley's • Expansion of England,' Mr Morley predicted that when England became involved in a serious war her | colonies would refuse sympathy, money and men. He quoted another prophet, Mr Archibald Forbes, who wrote in 1883 these remarkable words : — • I, at least, have the implicit conviction that if England should ever be engaged in a serious struggle with a Power of strength and means, in what condition soever that struggle might leave her, one of the outcomes would be to detach from her the Australian colonies.' What does Mr Archibald Forbes think to-day about his ' implicit conviction ?' Was ever a prophecy more handsomely • knocked out * by the hand of history ? I don't think Mr Forbes will bring up bis champion for another round, but I should like to know what Mr Morley thinks now of the issue which he challenged with such luckless zeal. 1 It would be a happy day,' he wrote, 'for the Peace Society that should give the colonies a vote on Imperial war.' What does the Peace Society think of the ' happy day ' that sees Australia and Canada eagerly sending their best and bravest to fight and die for the Empire on the South African veldt ? Perhaps Mr Morley has forgotten that unfortunate essay ? Or did some acute spasm of misgiving shoot through him when he read of the Canadian who, on hearing that his brother had fallen in action, promptly volunteered to fill the gap ? Did Sir Wilfred Laurier's noble assurance that the Canadian dead would be • for ever held in the grateful remembrance of their countrymen ' remind Mr Morley uncomfortably of bis own estimate of colonial chivalry? 'Australia has militiamen ; but who supposes they can be spared in any numbers worth considering for long campaigns ? Why should Australia subscribe blood or money for the preservation of the Empire ? • The Australian, having as much as he can do to carry on from hand to mouth, would speedily repent himself of that" close and filial union with the Mother Country, which he is 1 now supposed so ardently to desire, when he found his personal resources crippled for the sake of European guarantees or Indian frontiers.' Or the upholding of British supremacy in South Africa ! Prophets like Mr Morley seem to be always haunted by the dread that the British Empire will imitate the Roman, though there is absolutely no. point of resemblance between the two Mr Morley was so apprehensive of this that he found great comfort some 15 years ago in the apparent impossibility of Australian federation. The ' best-informed persdns ' in Australia did not believe in it. To-day it is a great fact, and the first manifestation of the new Australian unity is the most practical evidence of " close and filial sympathy with the Mother Country. . . . There is a mighty company of discredited prophets just now, and Mr < Morley will have no lack of congenial society, I feel a sincere compassion for . some earnest friends of mine, who were • confident, two months ago, that the | Boers were unconquerable in the field, j and that British generalship was finally discomfited. A Vienna editor has lately confessed that he is compelled to publish fantastic Boer 'victories' every day, because he would otherwise lose half his subscribers. This offers a new refuge for unfulfilled prophecy. If history will not shape itself accordto your liking, why believe in history ? Why not say it is a minx, and puff it away, after the Horatian method of treating malicious fortune ?"— H.B. Herald. You can depend on ridding your children of worms with Wade's Worm Figs, the wonderful Worm Worriers. Is. Old fsßhions in dress may be revived but no old-fashioned medicine can replace Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Bemedy. For sale by W. Hamer, Chemist, Foxton, SUDDEN CLIMATIC CHANOES Give you " that tired feeling. " Just the help wanted is Wolfe's Schnapps. A cheering cordial that restores mental and physical vigor. NOTICE TO TRESPASSERS. \ NYONE found trespassing on the f\ Herrington Estate in pursuit of garo.ft or otherwise, will be p/oseoutecK ROBTNSO& BROS. March 29 tb. 1900. COXTON BOROUGH COUNCIL* NOTICE. The Foxton Borough Council at a special meeting held on the 19th March, 1900, passed the following resolution : — " That this Council by special order take all needful steps to sell the piece of waste land on No. 1 Line to Mr A. S. Eastern." It is intended to confirm the above at a special meeting on the 7th May, 1900. R. CHAPMAN, Town Clerk,

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19000426.2.20.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, 26 April 1900, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
886

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Manawatu Herald, 26 April 1900, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Manawatu Herald, 26 April 1900, Page 3

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