78 SKETCHES OF GREAT TRUTHS and shows that the need of brotherhood is felt in the hearts of all however difficult they may •find it to express what is there. Every struggle makes the next one a little easier. Various brotherhoods are established, with varying and special aims, but all under the chief heading of bringing people or peoples together in closer relationship. Broadly speaking, all the struggles in the world at the present moment have this ideal at the back of them, and in front of them. The War was a climax, but it was a struggle for freedom, and there can be no brotherhood unless there is freedom, there can be no brother- hood with any part of the nation enslaved, no universal brotherhood so long as any part of the world is enslaved. A glance at each nation reveals this struggle for freedom, the preliminary step to brotherhood. And after the War the struggle for peace—a prolonged struggle—in many ways a more difficult struggle, for in war there is excitement while in a struggle after peace a cool head and a determined aim are necessary, a calculating mind, and an unshake- able will. The League of Nations must be cited as one of the biggest efforts after brotherhood that the world has ever known, all the nations that formed it having caught the gleam of