Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 February 2009
A few months ago General Smuts, as Rector of St. Andrews University, addressed a stirring appeal to the youth of the world to dedicate itself to the defence of the threatened cause of Freedom. As a young man, General Smuts fought in the Anglo-Boer war for the political freedom of the South African Republics. As a member of the British War Cabinet during the Great War, he was prominent among the Allied leaders in what was declared to be a war to “make the world safe for democracy”. As a signatory of the Treaty of Versailles, he was the first outstanding statesman who, on the very morrow of the signing, had the courage to confess the inadequacies of that settlement, and to appeal to a war-torn world to lay aside the passions of bitter conflict and return to sanity and co-operation. In the League of Nations, which he, more than anyone else, helped to conceive and bring into being, he has sought to create the machinery for the peaceful co-operation between nations.
page 394 Note 1 Presidential Address to the Witwatersrand University Philosophical Society, March 1935.
page 394 Note 2 Freedom, by Smuts, J. C.. London, Alexander MacLehose & Co.Google Scholar
page 395 Note 1 Loc. cit., p. 21.
page 395 Note 2 Loc. cit., p. 30.
page 395 Note 3 Loc. cit., p. 35.
page 396 Note 1 Loc. cit., p. 26.
page 396 Note 2 Loc. cit., p. 27.
page 399 Note 1 Loc. cit., p. 34.
page 400 Note 1 Loc, cit., p. 34.
page 401 Note 1 Cf., e.g., the Riotous Assemblies Act in South Africa, aimed chiefly against Communist and anti-White propaganda among Natives.
page 404 Note 1 Except, of course, where the scholar's special field is Political Theory, or, in present-day Germany, Rassenanthropologie.