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AMERICAN COMMENTS

LIFE IN "THE OLD GIRL.” “I may have missed a few of the Dominions and a good many of the Crown colonies, but- nevertheless I saw enough to come away feeling that there is a lot of life in the old girl yet,” says Mr Walter Lippman, one of America’s leading journalists, in the Herald-Tribune on the World’s Fair at New York and the British pavilion. In fact, It seemed to me that the inherent strength of Britain was most surely revealed in the good manners of the British exhibit, in the total absence of vain glory, and of the desire, manifested elsewhere to knock your eye out. The British are exhibiting their tradition of political freedom with Magna Carta as the centre. They are exhibiting their social reforms, showing not, as in some other pavilions, that all problems are solved, but how much progress has been made in solving them. And the British are exhibiting very honest, and not at all showy, goods that they manufacture. What they seem to be trying to say is that they cherish freedom, and would like to work and to trade, and to solve the unsolved problems of social living. I came away thinking that only the strong can be so modest, and only the honest heart can be so quiet.”

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TAWC19390823.2.37.14

Bibliographic details

Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 59, Issue 4176, 23 August 1939, Page 8

Word Count
220

AMERICAN COMMENTS Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 59, Issue 4176, 23 August 1939, Page 8

AMERICAN COMMENTS Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 59, Issue 4176, 23 August 1939, Page 8

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