Page:Social Justice without Socialism.djvu/24

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—here we are happily agreed. It is the inferences we draw from this fact that are different. The one that I draw is like one which is recorded in a famous case in antiquity. When the Macedonian armies seemed about to overwhelm Greece, Demosthenes encouraged the Athenians by this very sound bit of philosophy: “The worst fact in our past affords the brightest hope for our future. It is the fact that our misfortunes have come because of our own faults. If they had come when we were doing our best, there would be no hope for us.” Now the evils of our own social system which result from mistakes or faults are just such a ground of hope. Every such evil which can be cited describes one pos-