Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 20 February 1895 — Page 4
THE BETTER PART.
There's a gray old church 0:1 :i wind swept hil Where threo hunt y. \v vies cower. The gypsy roses grew there still,
And the thyme :nid St. John's [cold flower, Tlio pule l)lne violets that love the chalk Cling light round the lichen stone, .And starlings chatter and gray owls talk
In the VielXcy o' nights alone
It's a thousand leagues and a thousand years Frojn the brick built, gas lit town *To the church where the wild thyme hears
The been and the breeze of the down. The town is crowded and hard and rough. Let those fight in its press who will, But the little churchyard is quiet enough,
And there's room in the churchyard still. —Pall Mall Budget.
A GERMAN HEROINE.
[Tho following tale was taken from a local Holstein newspaper and translated by tho eminent scholar, Max Muller, *wlio says of it "that it came to him in a heap of other papers, flyViheets, pamphlets and books, but it shone like a diamond in a heap of rubbish, and," Max Muller adds, "as the tale of 'The Old Woman of Sleswick-Holstein' it may help to give to many who have been unjust to tho inhabitants of the duchies some truer idea of the stuff there is in that strong and stanch and sterling race to which England owes its language, its best blood and its honored name."]
THE TALE OF THE OLD WOMAN OF SLESWICKIIOLSTKIN.
When the war against Denmark began in the winter of 1863, offices were opened in tho principal towns of Germany for collecting charitable contributions. At Hamburg Messrs. L. and J£. had set apart a large room for receiving lint, linen and warm clothing or small suras of money.
One day, about Christinas, a poorly clad woman from tho country stepped in and inquired in the pure Holstein dialect whether contributions were received here for Sleswick-Holstein. The clerk showed her to a table covered with linen r::gs and such like articles. But sho turned away and pulled out an old leather purs -, and taking out pieces of money began eounter, "U: marks, "tiii sho had finished her ten
said and shoved tho little pile away. Tho clerk, who had watched the poor old woman while she was arranging her small copper and silver coins, asked her, "From whom does the money come?" "From me," she said and began counting again, "One mark, two marks, threo marks." Thus she went on emptying her purse till sho had counted out ten small heaps of coin of ten marks each. Then, counting each heap over once again, sho said: "These are my hundred marks for Sleswick Holstein. Bo so good as to send them to the soldiers.
While the old peasant woman was doing her sums several persons had gathered around her, and as she was leaving tho shop sho was asked again in a tone of surprise from whom tho money came. "From liio, sho said, and observing that sho wa3 closely scanned she turned back, and looking tho man full in the face sho added, smiling: "It is all honest money. It won't hurt the good cause.''
Tho clerk assured her that no one had doubted her honesty, but that sho herself had no doubt often known want, and that it was hardly right to let her contribute so large a sum, probably the whole of her savings.
Tho old woman remained silent for a time, but after she had quietly scanned tho faces of all present sho said: "Surely it concerns no one how I got tho money. Many a thought passed through my heart while I was counting'that money. You would not ask
1110
to tell you all?
"But you are kind gentlemen, and you take much trouble for us poor people. Hu I'll tell you whence tho money came. Yes, I have known want, food has been scarce with me many a day, and it will be so again as I grow older, but our gracious Lord watches over us. Ho has helped me to boar tho troubles which ho sent. Ho will never forsake me. My husband has been dead this many and many a year. I had 0110 only son, and my John was a lino stout fellow, and he worked hard, and ho would not leave his old mother. Ho ruado my homo snug and comfortable. "Then came tho war with tho Danes. All his friends joined tho army, but the only son of a widow, you know, is free. So ho remained at homo, and no one said to him, 'Come along with us,' for they knew that ho was a bravo boy, and that it broke his very heart to stay behind. I knew it all. I watched him when tho people talked of tho war or •when tho schoolmaster brought tho newspaper. Ah, how he turned pale and red, and how ho looked away and thought his old mother did not see it I But he said nothing to me, ^ud I said nothing to him. Gracious God, who could have thought that it was so hr.rd to drive our oppressors out of the land? "Then C3tne tho news fro»i Frederical That was a dreadful night. We sat in jsilence opposite each other. We knew •what was in our hearts, and v»e hardly dared look at each other. Suddenly he rose and took my hand and said, 'Mother!' God be praised, I had strength in that moment. 'John,' I said, 'our time has come. Go, in God's name. I know how thou lovest me and what thou hast suffered. God knows what will become of me if I am left alone, but our Lord Jesus Christ will forsake neither thee nor me.' "John enlisted as a volunteer. The day of parting came. Ah, I am making a long story of it all! John stood before aae in his now uniform. 'Mother,' he •aid, ono request before we part—if it is to bo.' 'John,' I said to him, 'I know what thou meanest. Ob, I shall weep. I
shall weep very much when I am alone, but my time will come, and we Anil meet again iu tho day of our Lord, jofyu, find the land shall be free, John theil»ud shall be free!'
Heavy tears stood in the poor old wo»au's eyes as she repeated her sad tale,
but she soon collected herself and continued: "I did not think then it would be so hard. The heart always hopes even against hope. But for all that," and here the old woman drew herself up and looked at us like a queen, "I have never regretted that I bade him go. Then came dreadful days, but the most dreadful of all was when we read that the Germans had betrayed the land, and that they had given up our land, with all cur dead, to the Danes! Then I called on the Lord and said: 'O Lord, my God, how is that possible? Why lettest thou th-a wicked triumph and allowest the just to perish?' "And I was told that the Germans were sorry fpr what they had done, but that they could not help it. But that, gentlemen, I could never understand. We should never do wrong nor allow wrong to be done. And therefore, I thought, it cannot always remain so. Our good Lor.l knows his own good time, and i:i his own good time he will come and deliver us. And I prayed every evening that our gracious Lord would permit me to see that day when the land should be free and our dear dead should sleep no more in Danish soil. And as I had no other son against that day I saved every year what I could save, and on every Christmas eve I placed it before moon a table, where, in former years, I had always placed a small present for my John, and I said in my heart, 'The war will come again, and the land will be free, and thou shalt sleep in a free grave, my only son, my John!' "And now, gentlemen, the poor old woman has been told that the day has come, and that her prayer lias been heard, and that tho war will begin again, and that is why she has brought her money—the money she saved for her son. Good morning, gentlemen!"
But before she had left the room an old gentleman said, loud enough for her to hear: "Poor body! I hopo sho may not be deceived." "Ah," said the old woman, turning back, "I know what you mean. I have been told all is not right yet, but have
to count aloud on the faith, men. The wicked cannot prevail mark, two marks, three against the just. Man cannot prevail against the Lord. Hold to that, gentle-
marks. "That makes ten marks," she 1 men. Hold fast together, gentlemen!
This very day I begin to save up again. Bless her, good old soul! And if Odin were still looking out of his window in the sky, as of yore, when he granted victory to the women of tho Lombards, might he not say even now:
When women are heroes, What must tho men bo like? Theirs is the victory. No need of me.
The Chignon, 1771.
I had my heddus roll on. Aunt Storer said it ougftt to made less. Aunt Doming said it ought not to be made at all. It makes my head itch and ache and burn like anything, mamma. This famous roll is not made wholly of a red cow tail, but is a mixture of that and horsehair (very coarse) and a littlo human hair of yellow hue, that, I suppose, was taken' out of the back part of an old Wig. Nothing renders a young person more amiable than virtue and modesty without tho help of false hair, red cow tail andD (the barber).—"Diary of Anna Greeu Winslow," Alice Mono Earle.
WHEM
—Exchange.
Picture of a Bachelor.
Mr. Joseph Tipton was a bachelor of exceedingly methodical habits. Prim and neat in appearance, he never affected any new fashions, but always looked exactly the same day after day—pepper and salt colored trousers, with black cutaway coat. No one had ever seen him in a different attire. Not oven when he was supposed to be indulging in a holiday did he condescend to a more comfortablo looking costume. He was so much tho creature of routine that it would have been 110 comfort to have been in any other garments than those ho usually wore. He was short, his figure had a slight idea of developing into rotundity, but evidently it was only a
half formed idea, for ho remained com- defeat of Fredericksburg until Hooker paratively thin. Ho had a mild, ordinary looking face, which he tried to make severe by cultivating his rather thick eyebrows well over his eyes, but if you took the troublo to look underneath them and behind tho gold rimmed glasses you would have discovered that his eyes wero of dull grayish hue, tho reverse of what ho desired to mako them appear. Still tho littlo irritable, narrow lines about tho mouth and chin prevented his l'aco from wearing that benevolent look which would have inado children know ho was their friend. Iio was just tho man who held children and
dogs at arm's length, which showed a Hooker
certain warp in the littlo man's character.—London Society.
The Writing of "Ben-Hur."
General Lew Wallaco in his lecture 011 "Bon-Hur" recounts some facts in connection with tho writing of that famous novel. At tho timo lie wrote the story General Wallace had never visited tho Holy Land, and under tho circumstances his accurate pictures are little short of marvelous. All tho information he had was obtained from personal acquaintances who had traveled through Palestine and from reading the writings of other authors. A large map was bofore him as he wrote, and he constantly had to draw on his imagination, but in this respect he was always fortunate and never made a blunder in his descriptions. In fact, the Palestine of "BeuHur" is generally regarded as authoritative, and General Wallace relates with keen relish how a younger author wrote a story, the scene of which was laid in the Holy Land, and stole all his descriptions bodily from "Ben-Hur." General Wallace says that his hardest task in writing the book was to find a hero. His favorite passage in the story is the scene of Ben-Hur's house, where he describes the miracles of Christ. General Wallace believes that more art is displayed in this passage than even in the famous chariot race, which is generally regarded as the strongest passage of the book.
FRENCHMEN LAUGH.
How They Regard Outsiders Who Criticise Their Country,
A Parisian who during the few years of his residence in New York has observed American sensitiveness to any criticism from foreigners says that this reminds him of a difference between Frenchmen and Americans. "Wheu an Englishman or a German or any other foreigner," he remarked, "who has been in France writes a book finding fault with Frenchmen, or their manners, or their cookery, or their domestic habits, or their fashions, or their architecture, or their ways of life, we do not take offense at the book, but wo ridicule and laugh at tho author of it. There aro bonmots about the poor author in the journals, there are caricatures. We sneer in good fun at his ignorancoof France and our customs. We have pleasant times over him, and he puts all Paris in an agreeable humor. If he be a person of consequence, we dramatize him in a comedy which will make the habitues of a cafe chantant happy for an hour. "Let a German get obfuscated over French cookery we speak of the horrible things that are eaten in Germany. Let an Englishman do it we advise him to devour his raw ros bif of the cannibals. They do not like French esprit. That is because they aro very stupid. They do not admire Paris. We remind them of such gross places as Hamburg or Manchester. We do not get angry at tbem, but mock them in the spirit of gayety. Thus they aro mortified. We Frenchmen know that everything in Franco is tho best in the world and do not caro for tho ignorant words of incompetent barbarians. France is sufficient for herself, and tho soul of France is Paris, which all the world tries to imitate, at which we are amused. "But the Americans, unliko tho French, aio very sensitive as to tho things said about them by the foreigners who scribble books. This is evidence of their immaturity, their lack of self respect, their consciousness that they can be successfully assailed, their apprehensions that they must liavo weaknesses which are visiblo to strangers or their knowledge that the boasting in which they sometimes indulge is mere bombast. "It is two generations since Mrs. Trollope ridiculed tho Americans in her jolly book, yet when I uttered her name one day to a Puritan of Boston he got enraged at her memory. This is foolishness in tho Americans, who have a fine country, a satisfactory population, manners that are not intolerable and some curious French cookery perpetrated by Germans. The Americans must attain to the equilibrium of mind which characterizes the Frenchmen. They must take no more heed than Frenchmen take of what the foreigners think of them. They must laugh at every word uttered by their foreign critics. Above all, they must refrain from reading the piquant books of their assailants. The French would not read a foreign book which depreciated France. Yet Americans are always ready to buy English books which slur their country and people."—New York Sun.
Lincoln's Frankness With Hooker.
At no stage of the war was tho Army of tho Potomac in such a demoralized condition as during the period from tho
was called to tho command. Lincoln believed that some of Burnside's corps commanders wero unfaithful to him, and wliero was ho to get a commander? It is an open secret that Sedgwick, Meade and Keynolds each in turn declined it, and the president finally turned to Hooker as the only man whoso enthusiasm might inspire tho demoralized army into effectiveness as an aggressive military power. That Lincoln was mrch distressed at tho condition then existing is evident from many sources, but I10 makes it specially evident iu a characteristic letter addressed by him to
011
the 2(5th of January, 1SG3,
telling him of his assignment to tho command of tho Army of tho Potomac. In this letter I10 says to Hooker: "I think that during General Burnsido's command of tho army you havo taken counsel of your ambition and thwarted him as much as you could, in which yon did a great wrong to tho country and to a most meritorious and honorable officer. I have heard, in such a way as to believe it, of your recently saying that both tho army and tho government needed a dictator. Of courso it was not for this, but in spite of it, that I have giveji you tho command. Only those generals who gain success can set up as dictators. What I now ask of you is military success, and I will risk the dictatorship."
Hooker accopted this pointed admonition like a true soldier. His answer was: "Ho talks to me like a father. I shall not answer this letter until I have won a great victory."—Colonel A. K. McClure in McClure's Magazine.
The "Tramp" Printer.
Tho typesetting machines are fast thinning out the ranks of tho journeyman printer, who was once such a familiar character iu the newspaper offices. One of this class dropped into The Constitution office night before last He listened sadly to the click of the linotypes in an adjoining rooifi and said, with grim humor, "That's the deathknell of the tramp printer." He came back an hour afterward with some two columns of philosophy and incident that he had written, the text of which was the "Glory of the Traveling Printer. There was the story of Amos Cummings going to Tho Tribune a tramp printer and getting a job. "Governor Hogg of Texas onco held cases, and ho held them in more than one town," the story went. "He is still a member of the union and pays his dues regularly. I called on him in Austin recently, and he said he was very glad to tee me indeed. In fact, ho alwayB w&s glad to see a printer. I had quite a pleasant chat with him. They say thp governor has a presidential bee ill his Donnet."—Atlanta Constitution.
JAPANESE RITES.
Frederick VHliers Describes Funerals After the liattle of Ping-Yang.
Many of the sick and wounded who die aro cremated. Their ashes aro collected, placed 111 small square boxes, interred for a time in the little cemetery outside the foreign settlement at Chemulpo, and after awhile exhumed and sent to Japan. The ceremony I beheld Vi Chemulpo after the fight at PingYang was not impressive or solemn, but simply curious. Eighty bodies had been cremated in various parts of the country and forwarded to the treaty port in small boxes. These were placed in two large, black cases at the hospital, and preceded by a motley group of coolies, citizens and soldiers were carried to the burial plot-
First cam a coolies with branches of foliage and white streamer^ iin their hands. Then a few soldiers, marching with reversed arms. Immediately preceding the black cases was a Shinto priest in yellow kimono and a black gauze shako. Round his neck was a purple cord, at tho end of which hung a fan. In his right hand was a flute, which from time to time as the procession wended its way he tooted on, producing an inharmonious sound which reminded me of my own attempts on that instrument when a boy. Tho coolies, the followers and tho lookers on seemed to treat the whole thing more as a good joke than a solemn function and chatted and laughed to their hearts' content.
Arrived at the cemetory, the procession halted before the altar, on which wero placed bottles of saki, fruits, eggs and birds of various kinds, including a livo rooster. Behind this hospitable board were placed the remains of the SO bodies. Tho Shinto priest, who stood alono before tho edibles, stretched out his hands and made soveral passes with his fan in the direction of the rooster, groaned aloud, then clapped his hands threo times, after which ho indulged a little on tho flute. Then ho groaned again, straightened himself, retired a few paces, took soveral paces to the left and right, then advanced again, groaned and tooted. Ho then requested by a sign one of the mourners to advance and take his place.
He then handed 0110 of tho branches of foliago to tho gentleman and retired. The mourner proceeded to lay the branch on a small table in front of the altar, then saluted and moved away to allow another mourner to take his place. When all the branches were piled on the table, the black cases wero opened and the small square boxes taken out by the coolies and carefully interred. The Shinto priest retired to the bosom of his family, with the saki bottle, the live rooster and the rest of the chow. In lieu of tombstones, the Japs use, when campaigning, small wooden posts to mark the resting plaoo of their dead.—Frederick Villiers.
COLD
WEATHER ABROAD.
Snowstorms
An Merestin
of the
ungary and
Northern Sicily.
LONDON, Feb 30.—A dispatch to The Standard from Berlin says that a heavy snowfall In the upper Rhine districts has blocked railway traffic. The weather is intensely cold in northern Hungary
A Rome dispatch to The Standard says that thrre has been a tremendous snowfall in the department of Syracuse. Sicily. Many towns and villages are isolated In some districts the almond, orange and lemon trees have been destroyed.
ISrazilinn Revolutionists Active. LONDON. Fob. 20.—A dispatch to The
Times from Montevideo says that advices received there from the Brazilian frontier are to the effect that the Brazilian revolutionists are active and are massing well-armed well-mounted bodies of men in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. The revolutionists are under tho command of Admiral Da Gama, who took such a prominent part in the naval operations before Rio Janeiro.
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