1910 – The International Peace Bureau

This organization’s prize supported Peace

After ten years of nominations. This satisfied

Many, who saw its congresses and meetings, 

As well as publications, as a proved and tried

Method for securing real non-war progress –

In dozens of conflicts, on themes of great stress.

Its finances faltering, its membership thrived,

But its earlier volunteer leader had died.

DuCommun was replaced by Gobat, who tried

To keep Peace discussion and ‘solidarity’ alive.

It acted as a link for a broad group of nations,

Both for fostering communication and developing positions.

Its popularity in peace circles the world over was great,

And it urged Peace devotees to:  Agitate!

1909 – Baron d’Estournelles

Paul Henri Benjamin Balluet grew up

In a modest large family, fatherless but talented.

He studied law and languages to be a diplomat

In Tunisia,and the French Foreign Affairs, and led

The French delegation to the Hague’s Peace Conference,

Where he supported the idea that arbitration

Was not just a choice, but a moral duty, and hence,

An arbitration court would need a case: litigation.

He brought the U.S. and Mexico together for that purpose,

Supporting international and cross-border European closeness.

After World War I, the Versailles treaty debated,

He supported revisions and the League of Nations created.

He rejected the notion that military might’s outlays

Should outweigh duty-based arbitration’s frays.

1909 – August Marie Francois Beernaert

Beernaert, Belgium’s PM, captured the Prize

For peace work with the Interparliamentary Union.

Its leader made “the Nobel speech,” a wise

Move since Beernaert’s own ‘record’ raised many an ‘eye:’

He worked for King Leopold, Congo’s clandestine tyrant,

Famous for brutally enslaving its people ‘for trade,’

(Which was to be “free” but was not), and continued with comment

Until he gave up, left his post, his fame made . . .

Not before he’d sent spies to stifle Belgium’s Socialism,

Resulting in innocents dragged into court, deaths, and wisdom?

He labored hard on the limits to land-based war

At the Hague, where his peace work and comments meant more.

He sought air warfare be made illegal, to be fair.

His proposal was heard at Geneva – while he was dying there.

1908 – Fredrik Bajer

Bajer, a Dane, received the prize – finally,

For his tireless efforts for Scandinavian unity:

The ‘Scando’ ‘empire’ approach did not work, said he,

And supported Arnoldson’s enthusiasm for “neutrality.”

A soldier who watched Denmark’s hapless war-time fate,

He left that to found the Nordic Society of Free States.

He argued that Nordic monarchies should give way

To republics with common foreign policy goals.

He believed, also, in arms for defence’s day,

But arms held by the people, not their lords.

His work for Nordic neutrality became

The whisper today’s republics boast – with acclaim.

1908 – Klas Pontus Arnoldson

Arnoldson’s work for Peace in Sweden and Norway

Encouraged “neutrality.” He was mocked and scorned.

“I desire peace on earth,” he once wrote.

Radical, “I want all armed forces to be abolished.”

And, “I want a joint police force to be created . . .

That force to be subject to an International Supreme Court.”

All states would have the duty to refer

All international controversies to it,

And be subject to its judgements, to defer

To the “worldwide referendum’s” decision docket.

He supported Norway’s 1905 independence.

For that was called ‘traitor’ in Sweden, his recompense.

1907 – Louis Renault

Reserved Renault also won the Prize that year,

A Frenchman. Diplomacy grew from his belief

That Peace via international law had no peer:

He brought this law to the peace conventions, his ‘brief.’

A bookseller’s son, he became truly erudite,

A professor and French state consultant.  His particular insight

Brought agreement from unlikely state and business partners,

Including at the Hague convention on naval ‘war waters.’

His skill at guiding parties to embrace common intents

Gained him praise and remark. Then he sought to implement

The new law on aggression, and on “disengagement.”

His first love was teaching this law to his hundreds of students.

“There are many different friends of peace,” he lectured,

Imbuing the law with potential, a common juncture.

1907 – Ernesto Teodoro Moneta

Ernesto Teodoro Moneta won the Prize

For his decades of work in Italy, now unified.

There, he fought, as most did, to pry Austrian control from their land.

And when done, as a writer and editor, took a stand,

Suggesting that Italy do what was needed to forgive

The French, an arbitration treaty. Persuasive,

He always encouraged peace with his work, not evasively,

But championed issues of practical merit, progressively,

Such as turning armies into civilian defence forces.

After working as an editor for thirty years, his dream was

To end violence, write and spread peace by all possible means.

Thus, he chronicled and spoke of the varied work on that theme.

His last goal was a “peace league of European states,”

To expel border dangers, envy and nationalistic hate.

1906 – Roosevelt – 2

Ted Roosevelt’s accomplishments were vast:

He fought police corruption in New York;

Enlisted Hague arbitration in order to die-cast

A peace with Mexico; next, drove a fork

In Spain’s Philippines access and its rights;

And mediated peace between Russia and Japan.

But his tactics were often force, and always might.

He helped rebels create Panama, and then he banned

Other nations from building or using the upcoming Canal . . .

His expansionist agenda was called ‘petit mal.’

He saw nations as civilized or not civilized, and when not,

Believed it a boon to industrialize them – by peace or shot.

He believed in “some form of international police power,”

“Willing” and “competent” to stand forth at the appointed hour.

1906 – Theodore Roosevelt

Theodore Roosevelt next won the Prize,

Though many found this near a crime.

The first ‘statesman’ to win, he was, in many’s eyes,

“The most warlike citizen.” (-New York Times)

Born asthmatic, a weakling in New York,

He was tutored and grew strong with sport.

His move West helped prepare him to mount

The “Rough Riders” in Cuba.  To recount,

He said, “Speak softly and carry a big stick,”

Which read: police your way in … and theirs out.

When Republicans eventually decided to ‘pick’

Him by running him as VP, what a bout:

Their surprise was complete when the President died

And the young ‘Cowboy’ succeeded to office, untried.

1905 – Von Suttner – 3

Bertha founded the Austrian Peace Union,

And was active in the Bureau of International Peace

In Bern, attending men’s meetings she was not allowed in,

And wrote, in ‘the Future,’ internationalization would not cease.

Nobel had said to her “My factories may well

Put an end to war before your congresses.”

She took this kindly – Alfred, she claimed, would ‘sell’

His scientific innovation and technical progresses

To bring humankind forward. Alright, he said,

And made a promise to her in that stead:

“Teach me, convince me, and I will do something great

For the movement.”  And then she did that, as we know:

This promise resulted in his gift to Peace when dead,

Of the Prize, itself, the result to which Bertha’s work led.