Abstract
MANY who listened to the national lecture broadcast by Dr. T. R. Glover on December 19 of last year on the challenge of the Greek must have recalled the plea for courage and magnanimity with which Sir Arthur Salter closed his “Recovery”, and that rectorial address of General Smuts at St. Andrews on “Freedom”, which should be among the enduring monuments of the literature of 1934. The adventure of the new age, the call to creative thought, to the untiring endeavour to give to every man the physical comfort, leisure and free access to all the world's rich heritage which he possesses the capacity to enjoy, demands courage and vision, but demands above all the individuality and freedom which were among the outstanding characteristics of the Greek.
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Creative Thought and Social Service. Nature 135, 485–487 (1935). https://doi.org/10.1038/135485a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/135485a0