The garden at the entrance of Stanford University is so big that it seems to be big enough to do any scale of celebration! In the corner of the garden is a group of sculptures by Rodin, the righteous people of Calais. The sculptures are derived from a history of the fourteenth century of the British and French centuries of war, when British troops were about to conquer the French city of Calais, and the two sides began negotiations, and King Edward III proposed the cruel conditions: the city of Calais must elect six noble citizens. Let them die to preserve the city. These citizens must take off their hats, barefoot, shackle them, and go out of the city with the keys to the gates, in a shame. As a result, six righteous people came forward to sacrifice the whole city.