CHAPTER VIII BROTHERHOOD THE word brotherhood has become hackneyed, I suppose because we hear so much of it and see so little result. The scoffers laugh at the word because it is misapplied, but all struggle -after it in one way or another. A brotherhood does not consist in people with no backbone, who lean on and " cadge " their fellows, slackers who wish to have their own bed easy, made up at the expense of others, and by others' exertions. To be brotherly is not to be "mushy," or sentimental, or weak. It is true that the world is dominated by the idea that strength is might, that physical strength means power, that force is that which must rule, that gentleness is considered weak, a soft answer cowardly, and quietness and stillness a sign of weakness. This is no Hew idea but has been so all through long ages. The parable of the Good Samaritan is often cited, the story of the traveller who fell among thieves who rob- bed him and left him half dead. A certain