and climes, and his deeds everywhere bear 

 the stamp of Jewish individuahty. A Greek 

 is a Greek ; a Chinaman remains a China- 

 man. In Hke fashion the race-traits color all 

 history made by Tartars, or negroes, or Ma- 

 lays, or Japanese. 



The climate which surrounds a tribe of men 

 may affect the activities of these men as in- 

 dividuals or as an aggregate, education may 

 intensify their powers or mellow their preju- 

 dices, oppression may make them servile or 

 dominion make them overbearing; but 

 these traits and their resultants, so far as 

 science knows, do not "run in the blood," 

 they are not " bred in the bone." Older 

 than climate or training or experience are the 

 traits of heredity, and in the long run it is 

 always " blood which tells." 



On the other hand, the deeds of a race of 

 men must in the end determine its blood. 

 Could we with full knowledge sum up the 

 events of the past history of any body of 

 men, we could indicate the kinds of men 

 destroyed in these events. The others 

 would be left to write the history of the 

 future. It is the " man who is left" in the 



The 



Human 



Harvest 



History 

 deter- 

 mines 

 blood 



[41] 



