        item: #1 of 3
          id: 13930
      author: Roosevelt, Theodore
       title: African and European Addresses
        date: None
       words: 54173
      flesch: 58
     summary: I do not for one moment admit that a nation should treat other nations in a different spirit from that in which an honorable man would treat other men. Of course, in any mass of men there are sure to be some who are weak or unworthy, and even those who are good are sure to make occasional mistakes--that is as true of pioneers as of other men.
    keywords: address; american; blood; centuries; change; citizen; civilization; country; course; day; development; duty; egypt; empire; europe; fact; form; good; government; history; justice; life; man; mankind; men; movement; nation; need; new; peace; people; period; power; present; public; qualities; race; roosevelt; science; self; speech; states; things; time; type; university; war; way; work; world; years
       cache: 13930.txt
  plain text: 13930.txt

        item: #2 of 3
          id: 15487
      author: Addams, Jane
       title: Democracy and Social Ethics
        date: None
       words: 48515
      flesch: 55
     summary: Until she marries she remains at home with no special break or change in her family and social life. These dances may be the only organized form of social life which the disheartened employee is able to mention, but the girl herself, in her discontent and her moving from place to place, is blindly striving to respond to a larger social life.
    keywords: alderman; business; charity; children; city; claim; community; democracy; effort; employees; employer; ethics; experience; factory; family; family life; good; household; individual; labor; life; man; men; mind; money; order; people; public; relation; school; self; sense; situation; social; time; visitor; women; work; years
       cache: 15487.txt
  plain text: 15487.txt

        item: #3 of 3
          id: 31196
      author: Ruskin, John
       title: Time and Tide by Weare and Tyne Twenty-five Letters to a Working Man of Sunderland on the Laws of Work
        date: None
       words: 47735
      flesch: 64
     summary: It is by a blundering confusion of ideas between _governing_ men, and _trading in_ men, and by consequent interference with the restraint, instead of only with the sale, that most of the great errors in action have been caused among the emancipation men. I only wish I had either your power, C. Kingsley, Maurice, or some such able pen-generalship, to illustrate and show forth all the wise teaching on law, government, and social life I see in it, and shining like a star through all its pages.[A] I feel also the truth of all you have written, and will do all I can to make such men or women that care for such thoughts, see it, or read it.
    keywords: art; children; classes; day; education; good; hand; help; human; kind; labor; land; law; laws; letter; life; man; means; men; mind; money; nation; people; persons; place; power; present; public; question; right; sense; state; system; things; time; truth; use; want; way; word; work; working; years
       cache: 31196.txt
  plain text: 31196.txt

