Thread:Hermesto/@comment-33762881-20160812214512/@comment-27637872-20160813014537

I guess we'll get used to it, if it passes the Senate. I think I prefer the original version "thou dost in us command"

According to CTV News, the wording that was changed to "all thy sons" in 1913, presumably to honour men in the armed forces at the approach of the First World War.