Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 30 January 1891 — Page 7
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SIN IS A KING.
THE OPENING AND CLOSE OP THE BANQUET.
Writing Evwon the Wall—Revels Shrouded la Bobta of Death—Dr, Tal* foit^e't Sermon,
uev. Dr. Talmage, at Brooklyn and New York, Sunday and Sunday night. Text: Daniel, v., SO. He said:
After the site of Babylon hadG%een selected, 2,000,000 men were employed for the construction of the wall and principal works. The walls of the city were sixty miles in circumference. rThey were surrounded by a trench out of which had been dug the material .for the construction of the city. There were twenty-five gates of solid brass on each side of the square city. Between every two gates a great watch-, tower sprang up into the heavens. From each of the twenty-fivo gates, on either side, a street ran straight through to the gat6 on the other side, so that there were fifty streets, each fifteen miles long, which gave to the city an appearance of wonderful regularity. The houses did not join each other on the ground, and between them were gardens and shrubbery. From house-top to house-top bridges swung, over which the inhabitants were accustomed to pass. A branch of the Euphrates went through the city, over which a bridge of marvelous structure was thrown, and under which a tunnel ran. To keep the river from over~ flowing the city in times of freshet a great lake was arranged to catch the, surplus, in which the water was kept as in a reservoir until times of draught, when it was sent streaming down over the thirsty land. A palace stood at each end of the Euphrates bridge one palace a mile and three quarters in compass, and the other palace seven and a half miles in circumference. The wife of Nebuchadnezzar, having been brought up among the mountains* of Media, could not stand it Sn this fiatf country of Babylon, and so, to please her, Nebuchadnezzar had a mountain '400 feet high built in the midst of the city. This mountain was surrounded by terraccs, for the support of which great arches were lifted. On the top of the?e arches fiat stones were laid then a layer of reeds and bitumen then two rows of bricks, closely cemented then thick 6heets of lead, upon which the soil was placed. The earth here was deposited so deep that the largest trees had room to anchor their roots.
All the glory of the flowery tropics was spread out at that tremendous height, until it must have 6eemed to one below as though the clouds were all in blossom and the sky leaned on the shoulder of the cedar. At the top an engine was constructed which drew the water from the Euphrates far below, and made it spout up amid this garden of the skies. All this to please big wife! 1 think she must have been pleased.
In the midst of this city stood also the Temple of Belus. One of its towers was one-eighth of a mile high, and on the top of it an observatory, which gave the astronomers great advantage, as, being at so great a height one could easily talk with the stars. This temple was full of cups, statues and censors, all of gold. One image weighed a thousand Babylonish talents, which would be equal to $52,000,000, All this by day, but now night was about to cotue down on Babylon, The shadows of her 250 towers began to lengthen. The Euphrates rolled on, touched by the fiery splendors of the settingsun and gates of brass, burnished and glitting, opened and shut like doors of flame.
The hanging gardens of Babylon, wet with the heavy dew, began to pour from starlit flowers and dripping leaf, a fragrance for miles around. The streets and squares were lighted for dance and frolic and promenade. The theaters and galleries of art invited the wealth and pomp and grandeur of the city to rare entertainments. Scenes of riot and wassail were mingled in every street godless mirth and ouU rageous excess and splendid wickedness came to the king's palace to do their mightiest deeds of darkness.
A royal feast to-night at the King's palaco! Rushing up to the gates are chariots upholstered with precious cloths from Dedan and drawn by fireeyed horses from Togarmah that rear and neigh in the grasp of the charioU eers, while a thousand lords dismount, and women dressed in all the splendors of Syrian emerald, and the color blending of agate, and the chasteness of 'coral, and the somber glory of Tyrian purple, and princely embroiederies brought from afar by camels across the desert and by ships of Tarshish across the sea.
Open wide the gates and let the guests come in. The chamberlains find oup bearers are all ready. Listen to the rustle of the robes and to the icarol of the music. See the blaze of the jewels, Lift tho banners. Clap 5the cymbals. Blow the trumpets. Le the night go by with song and dance and ovation, and let that Babylonish (tongue be palsied that will notsuy: "O IKing Belshazzar, live forever!11
Ah, my friends, it was not any comJjnon banquet to which these great (people came. All parts of the earth had sent their richest viands to that itable, Brackets and chandeliers shed itheir light upon tankards of burnished jgold. Fruits, ripe and luscious, in {baskets of silver,entwined with leaves jplucked from royal conservatories, vases, inlaid with emerald and ridged {with exquisite trac3ries, filled with nuto that were threshed from forests of distant lands. Wines brought from the royal vats foaming in the deoanters arid babbling in the chalices. Tufts of cassia and frankincense wafting their sweetnr6« from wall and table.
Qorgwus banners unfolding in the
breeze that came through the open windows bewitohed with ihe perfume of hanging gardens. Fountains rising up from inclosures of ivory, in jets of crystal, to fall in clattering rain of diamonds and pearls.
Statues of mighty men looked down from niches in the wall upon crowns and shields brought from subdued empires. Idols of wonderful work standing upon pedestals of precious stones. Embroideries stooping about the windows, and wrapping pillars of cedar, and drifting on floor inlaid with ivory and agate. Mu6ic, mingling with the thrum of harps and the clash of cymbals, and the blast of trumpets in one wave of transport that went rippling along the hall and breathing among the garlands, and pouring down the corridors, and thrilling the souls of a thousand banquet1.t-rs. The signal is given, and the lords and ladies, the mighty men and women of the land, come around the table, Pour out (he wine! Let foam and bubble kiss the rim! Hoist every one his cup, and drink to the sentimeut, "O King Belshazzar, live forever!" Bestarred headband and carc»net of royal beauty gleam to the uplifted chalices, as again and agnin and again they are emptied. Away with care from the palace! Tear royal dignity to tatters! Pour out the wine! Give us more light wilder music, sweeter perfume! Lord shouts to Lord, Captain o^les to Captain. Goblets clash, decanters rattle. There come in the vile song and the drunken hiccough and the slavering lip and the guffaw of idiotic laughter, bursting from the lips of Princes, flushed, reeking, bloodshot, while mingling with it all I hear, "Huzza! huzza! for great Belsba.:zarl*
What is that on the plastering of the wall? Is it a spirit? Is it a phantom Is it God Out of the black sleeve of the darkness a finger of fiery terror trembles through the air, and comes to the wall, circling about as though it would write, and then, with sharp tip of flame, engraves on the plastering the doom of the King. The rusic stops. The goblet falls from the nerveless grasp. There is a thrill. There is a elart. There is a thousandvoiced shriek of horror. Let Daniel be brought in to read that writing. He comes in. He reads it: "Weighed in the balance and found wanting."
Meanwhile the Assyrians, who for two years had been la.ying seige to that city, took advantage of that carousal and came in. I hear the feet of the conquerors on the palace stairs. Massacre rushes in with a thousand gleaming knives. Death bursts upon the scene, and I shut the door of that banqueting hall, for I do not want to look. There nothing there bu:,torn banners and broken wreaths, and the slush of upset tankards, and the blood of murdered women, and the kicked and tumbled carcass of a dead King. For "in that night was Belshazzar, tho King of the Chaldeans, slain."
I go on to learn that when God writes anything on the wall, a man had better read it as it is. Daniel did not misinterpret or modify the handwriting on the wall. It is all foolishness to expect a minister of the Gospel to preach always things that the people like, or the people choose. Young men, what shall I preach to you to-night? Shall I tell you of the dignity of human nature?, Shall I tell you the wonders that our race has acomplished? "Oh, no," you say: "tell the message that came from? God." I will. If there is any handwriting on the wall, it is this lesson: "Accept of Christ, and be saved!" I might talk of a great many other things but that is the message,and so I declare it.
Jesus never flattered those to whom he preached. He Baid to those who did wrong, and who were offensive in sight, "Yt generation of the vipers! ye whited sepulchers! how can you escape the damnation of hell!1' Paul the apostle preached before a man who was not ready to hear him preach. What subject did he take? Did he say, "Oh! you are a good man?" No ho preached £of unrighteousness to a man who was' unrighteous: of temperance to a man who was the victim of bad appetites of the judgment to come to a man, who was un-1 fit for it So we must always declare the message that happens to oome to us. Daniel must read it as it is. The King of Terrors has there a ghastlier banquet: human blood is the wine, and the dying groans are the music. Sin has made itself a king in the earth. It. has crowned itself. It has spread a banquet It in vita all the world to come to it It has hung in its banqueting hall the spoils of all kingdoms and the banners of all nations, It has gathered rom all music. It has strewn from its wealth the tables, the floors, and the arches. And yet hew often is that banquet broken up, and how horrible is its end. Ever and anon is there a handwriting on the wall. A King falls. A great culprit is arrested. The knees of wiokedness knock together. God's judgment, like an armed hoit, breaks in upon the banquet and that night is Belshazzar, the King of Chaldeans slain.
Here is a young man who says: "I can not see why they make such a fuss about the intoxicating cup. Why, it is exhilarating. It maks me feel well, can talk better, think better, feel better. I can noi see why people have such a prejudice against it." A few years pass on. and he wakes up and iinds himself in the clutches 'of an evil habit which he tries to break, but can not: and be cries out "Oh Lord God! help me!" It seems as though God would not hear his prayer and in an agony of tody and soul he cried out "It biteth like a serpent and itsti igeth liice an adder" How bright |t was at the tart! How black it was at the last!
Here is a man who begins to read corrupt novels. -'They are so charming!" says he! "I will go out and Bee for myself whether all these things are no.". He ojpeas the gate of pnioful
life. He goes in. A sinful sprite meets him with her wand, She waves het wand, and it is all enchantment. Why it seem as if the angels of God had poured out phials ot purfume on the atmosphere. As he walks on he finds the hills becoming more radiant with foilage and the ravines more re-onant with the falling water. Oh! what a charming landscape he sees! But that sinful sprite, with her wand, meets him again but now she reverses the wand, and all the enchantment is gone. The oup is full o& poison. The fruit turns to ashes. All the leaves of the bower are forked tongues of hissing serpents. The flowing fountains fall back in a dead pool, stenchful with corruption. The luring songs became curses and screams of demoniac laughter, Lost spirits gather about him and feel for his heart and beckon him on with''hail brother! hail, blasted spirit hail!" He tries to get out He comes to the front door where he entered, and tries to push it back, but the door turns against him, and in the jar of that shutting door he hears these words: "This night is Belshazzar, the King of the Chaldeans, slain." Sin may open bright as the morning. It ends as dark as night!
I learn further from this subject that death sometimes breaks in upon a banquet Why did he not go down to the prisons in BabylonP Thefe were people there who would like to have died. I suppose there were men and women in torture in that city who would have welcomed death. But he comes to the palace and just at the time when the mirth is dashing to the tip-top pitch, death breads in at the banquet. We have often seen the same thing illustrated. Here is a young man just come from college. He is kind. He is loving. He is enthusiastic. He is eloquent. By one spring he may bound to heights toward which many men have bef.n struggling for years. A profession opens before him. He is established in the 1 His friends cheer him. Eminent men encourage him. After awhile you may see him standing in the United States Senate, or moving a popular assemblage by his eloquence, as trees are moved in a whirlwind. Some night he retires early. A fever is on him. Delirium, like a reckless charioteer, seizes the reins of his intellect Father and mother stand by and see the tides of his life going out to the great ocean The banquet is coming to an end. The lights of thought, and mirth, and eloquence are being extinguished. The prarlands are snatched from the brow. The vision is gone. Death at the banquet!
I have also to learn from the subject that the destruction of t'.ie vicious, and of those who despise God, will be very sudden. The wave of mirth had dash* ed to the highest point when that assyrian army broke thoough. It was unexpected. Suddenly, almost always comes the doom of those who despise God and defy the law* of men. How was it at the deluge? Do you suppose it came through a long north-east storm, so that people for days before were sure it was eomingP No I suppose the morning was bright that calmness brooded on the waters that beauty sat enthroned on the hills when suddenly the heavens burst, and the mouutains sank like anchors into the sea that dashed clean over the Andes and tho Himalayas.
The Bed Sea was divided. The Egyptians tried to cross it. There could be no danger. The Israelites had just gone through where they had gone, why not the Egyptians? Oh! it was such a beautiful walking place! A pavement of tinged shells and pearls and on either side two great walls of waters—solid. There can be no danger
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Forward, great host of the Egyptians! Clap the cymbals and blow the trumpets of victory! After them! We will catch them yet and 'they shall be destroyed. But the walls begin to tremble. They rock! They fall! The rushing waters! The shriek of drowning men! The swimming of the war horses in vain for the shore! The strewing of the great host on the bottom of the sea or pitched by the angry wave on the beach—a battered, bruised and loathsome wreck! Suddenly destruction came. One half hour before they could not have believed it Destroyed and without remedy.
The destroying angle went through Egypt. Do you suppose that any of the people knew that he was coming? Did they hear the flap of his great wingP No! No! Suddenly, unexpectedly, he came.
Skilled sportsmen do not like to shoot a bird standing on a twig near by. If they are skilled they pride themselves on taking it on the wing, and they wait till it starts. Death is an old sportsman, and he loves to take men flying under the very sun he loves to take them on the wing.
Are there any here who are unprepared for the eternal world Are there any here who have been living without God and without hope? Let mo say to you that you had better accept of the Lord Jesus Christ, lest suddenly your last chance be gone.
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Marriage In Ancient Bom*.
The woman of Rome in old days wa married at nightfall. She was dresse* in a white robe, a symbol of her virgin purity, bound round her waist with woolen sash her hair was plaited ink six tresses, after those of the vesta vircrins on ber hesd she wore a flame colored veil and a fresh wreath of th: sacred verbena, for the wife and priest ess in her family. Under the protec tion of Juna Domiduca (the hom leader) she passed through the streets accompanied by her friends, at lighted on her wav with torches. B, her side there walked a young bo carrying an open basket in which la.i a hank of wool, a distaff and a spindl' —for spinning was the great duty tho Roman matron of the republic. be a good spinner was a gem in he: crown of virtues, by the side ot chasti ty and frugality.
Iceland.
In Iceland there are no prisons and no officers answering to our policemen. In 1874 it celebrated j,the one-thous-andth anniversary of its colonization, and at the same time became independent of Denmark, though subject to the king of Denmark as the head of the Icelandic government. Iceland's new government Is thoroughly republican in spirit^ all citizens having equal rights and perfect reftgious liberty.
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Non-Resident Notice.
THBSTATK OP INDIA.VA, HANCOCK COUXTT, SS: In the Haneouk Circuit Court, February Term, A. D. 1891. Alonzo Tvner vs James i. Xyneret al.
No. 6106. Complaint to Quiet JLitle to iieal Estate
BEIT
KNOWN, That, on this 22nd day of January, in the year lv9t. tlw above named plaintiff, by his Attorneys, tiled in the office of the Clerk oft te Hancock Circuit Court, his complaint ng tinst the defendant, in the above entitled cau^e in relation to Real Estate, together with the affidavit of competent person, thai the residence of each uf t!n defendants, herein, ti-wit: .Samuel Ixingual
Longnaker wife ot .wamuel Longnukc.':
Samuel Longnaker deceased: tho unknown heirs Samuel Longnaker deceased, l£lcsha K. Whartoa, Wharton wife of Elesha Wharton do ceased the unknown heirs of Elesha F. .Wharton, decpas d,J:un3s Glundon, Ulan don wife of James Ctandon, deceased, unknown heits of Jame* (ilandoa deceasoil. Johu Justice, Justice, wife of John Justice deceased and the MIInown heirs vi John Justicedccca^ed, feaniuel Fleming. Flemit.jr wife of Samuel Fleming deceased, and the unknown heirs ol Samuel Fleiiiingdcoeased, is unknown. £aid defendants are therefore hereby notified of the tilf'ig of sail complaint and pendency of said actinn against ttiein, and that unless they appear and answer or demur thereto, at the lliiig said ca"se on the 43id Judicial day of the na.vt Term uf said Court, to be lie'd and continued at the Court House in Greenfield, l^inni-ig on the First .louday in February, next, the sa ne t-e:ug the 2 I.M1 day of March, 1891, said comp a nt,and ut matter.-, and things therein eoutaincd ai,i alleged, will be heard and determined in their absence.
Witness tny hand and the seal of said Court hereunto affixed, this 2'2ud d.tv of 'anuarv, 1 Sill.
CHA.'.i,l£.S IiOWNINti, Cleric.
John Binford & John J. lioubford, Attur-ievs for FlaintllE .mt"
Notice of Final Settlement.
THE STATE OF INDIANA HANCOCK, COUNTY SS: In the matter of theestnto of Alexander T. Foley, deceased. No. CSS in the Hancock Circuit Court.
February Term, A. 1„ 1891.
BEry,
IT KNOWN, That on the 15th day of JanuaA. 1)., 1891. James L. Foley, Administrator of the Estate of Alexander Foley deceased, tiled in the otliue of the Clerk of the Hancock Circuit Court, his final settlement account in said estate. The creditors, hairs and legatees of said dcccdent arc hereby notified of the liIin« and pendency of said final settlement account, and that the some iset down for hearing on February 9th, A. D., 1891, the same being the 1st Judicial day of the February Term, A. D.. 1891, to be begun, held and c.iutinned at the court-house in the city of Greenfield, com cnclngon Monday, the 2nd day of Februan A. D. 1891, and that unless thoy appear on Baid dav and show cause why said final settlement account should not be approved, the same will be heard and approved In their absence.
In Witness Vv liereoi, I have hereunto subscribed my name and atiixod the seal of said Court, this 15th day of January, A. !., 1891.
CIIAKLES DOWNING, Clerk llanoock Circuit Court.
L. W. GOODING, Attorney. 312
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