Pike County Democrat, Volume 24, Number 6, Petersburg, Pike County, 30 June 1893 — Page 3
THE SONG OF BIRDS. Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage Talks on a Seasonable Topic. The Lessons Tauffht by the Birds in Their Song*—The Melodies are Divinely Taught and are Spontaneous Psalms of Praise. 5 — an The following timely 3Tsfour.se was delivered by Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage in the Brooklyn tabernacle from the text: By them shall the fowls of the air have their habitation, which sing among the branches.— Psalms civ., 12, There is an important and improving subiect to which most people have given no thought, and concerning which this is the first pulpit discussion, namely, the song of birds. If all that has been written concerning music by human voice or about music sounded on instrument by finger or breath were put together, volume by the side of volume, it wauld fill a hundred alcoves of the national libraries. But about the song of birds there is as much silence as though, a thousand years ago, the last lark had, with his wing, swept the door-latch of Heaven, and as though never a whip-poor-will had sung its lullaby to a slumbering forest at nightfall. We give a passing, smile to the call of a bobolink or the: chirp of a canary, but about the origin, about the fiber, about the meaning, about the mirth, about the pathos, abo;ut the inspiration, about the religion in the song of birds, the most of us are either ignorant or indifferent. A caveat I this morning file in the high cotirt of Heaven against that almost universal irreligion.
'tnlsfi U)S graves where holding matin or vesp r irst, 1 remark that which will surprise many, that the song of birds is a regulated ahd systematic song, capable of being written out in note and staff and bar and clef, as much as anything that Wagner or Schuman or llnndel ever put on paper. As VfS Socks are vesper service, we are apt to think that the sounds are extemporized, the rising or falling tone is a mere accident, it is flung up and down by haphazard, the bird did not know what it was doing, it did not fare whether it was a long-meter /psalm or a madrigal. What a mistake! The musician never put on the music rack before him Mepdelssohn’s “Elijah” or Bethoven’s “Concerto” in G, or Spohr’s B flat Syinphony with more definite idea as to what he was doing than every bird that can sing at all corifines.himself to accurate and predetermined rendering. The oratorios, tlie chants, the carols, the overtures, the interludes, the ballads, the canticles, that this morning were heard or will this evening be heard in the forest have rolled down through the ages without a variation. Even the chipmonk’s song was ordained clear back in the eternities. At the gates of Paradise, it sang in sounds like the syllables “Kuk!” “Kuk!” “Kuk!” just as this morning in a Long Island orchard it sang “Kuk!” “Kuk!” The thrush at the creation uttered sounds like the word “Teacher!” “Teacher!” “Teacher!” as now it utters sounds like “Teacher!” “Teacher!” “Teacher!” In the summer of the year 1 the yellow-hammer trilled that which sounded like the word “If!” “If!” “If!” as in this summer it trills “If!” “If!” “If!” The Maryland yellow-throat inherits and
bequeaths the tune sounding’ like the words “Pity me, pity me, pity me.” Tiie white sparrow's “Tseep, tseep,” woke our great-grandfathers as it will / awaken our great-grandchildren. The J “Tee-ka-tee-ka-tee-ka” of the birds in the first century is the same as the “Tee-ka-tee-ka-tee-ka” of the nineteenth eentury. The goldfinch has for six thousand years been singing “De-ree dee-ee-reee.” Put these sounds, which we put in harsh words, they put in cadences, rhythmic, soulful and enrapturing. Now, if there is this order and f systematization and rhythm all through God’s creation, does it not imply that we should have the same characteristics In the music we make or try to make? Is it not a wickedness that so many parents give no opportunity for the culture of their children in the art of sweet sound? If God stoops to educate every blubird, oriole and grosbeak in song, how can parents be so indifferent about the musical development of the immortals in their household? While God will accept,: our attempts to sing, though it be only a hum or a drone, if we can do no better, what a shame that, in this last deeade of the nineteenth century, when so many orchestral batons are waving and - so many academies of music are in fu 11 concert and so many skilled men and women , are waiting to offer instruction," there are so many people who can not sing with any confidence in the house of God, because they have had no culture in this sacred art, or, while they are able to sing a fantasia at a piano amid the flattering fans of social admirers, nevertheless feel utterly helpless when, in church, the surges of an Ariel or an Antioeh roll over them. The old-fash-ioned country singing school, now much derided and caricatnred (and indeed sometimes it was diverted from the real design into the culture of the softer emotions rather than the voice), nevertheless did admirable work, and in our churches we need singing schools to prepare our Sabbath audienees for prompt and spontaneous and inultipotent psalmody. This world needs to be stormed with hallelujahs. We want a hemispheric campaign of hosannahs. From hearing a blind beggar sing Martin Luther went home at forty years of age to write his first hymn. In the autumn I hope to have a congregational singing school here during the week, which shall prepare the people for the songs of the holy Sabbath. If the church of God universaris going to take this world for righteousness, there must be addgd a hundredfold of more volume to sacred music. Further, I notice in the song of birds that it is a divinely-taught song. The
'rarest prima donna of all the earth could not teach the robin one musical note. A kingfisher flying1 over the roof of a temple aquake with harmonies would not catch up one melody. From the time that the first bird’s throat was fashioned on the banks of the Gihon and Hiddekel until to-day on the Hudson or Rhine the winged creature has learned nothing from the human race in the way of carol or anthem. The . feathered songsters learned all their music direct from God. He gave them the art in a nest of straw or moss or sticks, and taught them how to lift that song into the higher heavens and sprinkle the earth with its dulcet enchantments. God-fashioned, Godtuned, God-launched, God-lifted music! And there is a kind of music that the Lord only can impart to you, my hearer. There have been depraved, reprobate and blasphemous souls which could sign till great auditoriums were in raptures. There have been soloists a nd bassos, and barytones and sopranos whose brilliancy in concert halls has not been more famous than their debaucheries. But ther e is a king of song, which, like the song of birds, is Divinely fashioned. Songs of pardon. Songs of Divine comfort. Songs of worship. “Songs in the night,” like those which David and Job mentioned. Song full of faith and tenderness and prayer, like those which the Christian mother sings over the sick cradle. Songs of a broken heart being healed. Songs of the dying flashed upon by opening portals of amethyst. Songs like that which Paul commended to the Colossians, when he said: “Admonish one another in psalms, and hymns, and
spiritual songs, singing, with grace in your hearts, to the Lord.” Songs like Moses sang after the tragedy of the Red sea. Songs like Deborah and Barak sang at the overthrow of Sisera. Songs like Isaiah heard the redeemed sing as they came to Zion. Oh, God, teach us that kind of song which Thou canst te&Sji, and help ns to sinjj it on eastii and sing it iii Heaven. It whs the highest result of sweet sound wl\gp under the playing of Paganini -dne auditor exclaimed reverently: “Oh, God!” and another sobbed out: “Oh Christ!” Further, I-remark in regard to the song of “birds, that it is trustful, and without any fear of what may yet come. Will you tell me how it is possible for that wren, that sparrow, that chickadee, to sing, so sweetly when they may at any time be pounced on by a hawk and torn wing from wing. There are cruel beaks in thicket and sky ready to slay the song birds. Herods on the wing. Modocs of the sky. Assassins armed with iron claw. Murderers of song floating up and down the heavens. How can the birds sing amid such perils? Beside that, how is the bird sure to get its foo<l? Millions of birds have been starved. Yet it sings in the dawn without any certainty of breakfast or dinner or supper. Would it not be better to gather its food for the day before vocalizing? Besides that the hunters are abroad. Bang! goes a gun in one direction. Bang goes a gun in another direction. The song will attract the shot and add to the peril. Beside that, yonder is a thun-der-cloud and there may be hurricane and hail to be let loose an'd what then will become of you, the poor warbler? Besides that, winter will come, and it may be smitten down before it gets to the tropics. Have you never seen the snow strewn with the birds belated in their migration? The titmouse mingles its voice with the snow storms as Emerson describes the little thing he found in tempestuous January: Here was this atom in full breath Hurling defiance at vast death:
i nis scrap oi vuror jusi, ior pwy Frouts the north wind in waistcot gray. For every bird, a thousand perils and disasters hovering and sweeping round and round. Yet, there it sings, and it is a truthful song. The bird that has it the hardest, sings tire sweetest. The lark from the shape of her claws may not perch on a tree. In the grass her nest is exposed to every hoof that passes. One of the poorest shelters of all'the earth is the lark's nest. If she sing at all, you will expect her to surrender the saddest of threnodies. No, no. She sings exultingly an hour without a pause and mounting three thousand feet without losing a note. Would God we all might learn the lesson. Whatever perils, whatever bereavements, whatever trials are yet to come, sing, sing with all your heart and sing with all younr lungs. If you wait until all the hawks of trouble have folded their wings and all the hunters of hate have unloaded their guns and all the hurricanes of disaster have spent their fury, you will never sing at all. David, the pursued of Absalom, and the betrayed of Ahithopliel, and the depleted of “scores that ran in the night,” presents us the best songs of the Bible- John Milton, not able to see his hand before his face, sings for us the famqus poem of all literature, and some of the most cheerful people I have ever met have been Christian people under physical, or domestic, or puplic torment. The songs of Charles Wesley, which we now calmly sing in church, were composed by him between mobs. Further, in the sky galleries, there are songs adapted to all moods. The meadow lark is mournful, and the goldfinch joyous, and the grosbeak prolonged of note. But the libretto of nature is voluminous. Are you sad; you can hear from the bowers the echo of your grief, Are you glad; you can hear an echo of your happiness. Are you thoughtful; you can hear that which will plunge you into deeper profound. Are you weary? you may catch restful air. So the songs of birds are administrative in all circumstances. And We would do well to have a hymnology for all changes of condition. You may sing your woes into peace and rouse your joys into greater altitudes. Upon every condition of body and soul, let us try the power of song. The multitudinous utterances of grove and orchard and garden and forest suggest most delightful possibilities. Further, I notice, that the song of
| birds is a family song. Bren those ol | the feathered throngs which have no song at all, make what utterances they do in sounds of their own family of birds. The hoot of the owl, the clatter of the magpie, the crow of the ; chanticleer, the drumming of the j grouse, the laugh of the loon in the I Adirondacks, the cackle of the ^hen, I the scream of the eagle, the croak ; of the raven, are sounds belonging to each particular family; but when you come to those which have real songs, how suggestive that it is always a family song. All the skylarks, all the nightingales, all the goldfinches, all the blackbirds, all the cuckoos, prefer the song of their own family, and never sing anything else. So the most deeply impressive songs we ever sing are family songs. They have come down from generation to generation. You were sung to sleep in your infancy and childhood by songs that will sing in your soul forever. Where was it, my brother or sister, that you heard the family song—on the banks of the Ohio, or the Alabama, or the Androscoggin, or the Connecticut, or the Tweed, or the Thames, or the Raritan? That song at eventide, when you were tired out—indeed too tired to sleep, and you cried with leg ache, and you were rocked and sung to sleep— you hear it now, the soft voice from sweet lips, she as tired, perhaps more tired than you, but she rocked and you slumbered. ,i-i Oh, those family songs! The songs that father sang, that mother sang, that sisters arid brothers sang. They roll on us to-day with a reminiscence that fills the throat, as well as the heart, with emotion. In our house in my childhood it was always a religious song. I do not think that the old folks knew anything but religious songs; at any rate, I never heard5 them sing anything else. It was: “Jesus, Lover of My Soul,” or “Rock of Ages,” or “There is a “Fountairi Filled with Rlood,"' or “Mary to the Saviour's Tomb.” M others, be careful what you i'our children to sleep with. Let it be nothing frivolous or silly. Better have in it something of Christ and Heaven.
Better have in it something that will help that boy thirty years from now to bear up under the bombardment of temptation. Better have in it something that will help that daughter thirty years from now when upon her come the cares of motherhood, and the agonies of bereavement, and the brutal treatment of one who swore before high Heaven that he would chei ish and protect. Do not waste the best hour for making an impression upon your little one, the hour of dusk, the beach between the day and the night. Sing not a doleful song, but a suggestive song, a Christian song, a song you will not be ashamed to meet when it comes to you in the eternal destiny of your son and daughter. The oriole has a loud song, and the chewink a long song, and the bluebird a short song, but it is always a family song, and let your gloaming song, to your children, whether loud.or long or short, be a Christian song. These family songs are about all we keep of the old homestead, ‘ The house where you were born will go into the hands of strangers. The; garments that were carefully kept as relics will become moth-eaten. The family Bible can go into the possession Of only one of the family. The lock of gray hair gnay be lost from the locket, and in a jew years all signs and momentoes of the old homestead will be gone forever. But the family songs, those that we heard at two years of age, at five years of age, at ten years of age, will be indestructible,, and at forty or fifty or sixty or seventy years of age will give us a mightjt boost over some rough place in the path of our pilgrimage. Many years ago a group of white children were captured and carried off by the Indians. Years after a mother^ who had lo^t two children in that capture went among the Indians, and there were many white children in line, but so long a time had passed the mother could not hell which were hers until she began to sing the old nursery song, and her two children immediately rushed up, shouting" “Mamma!” “Mamma!” Yes, there is an immortality in a nursery song. Hear it, all you mothers, an immortality cf power to rescue and save. What an occasion that must have been in Washington, December 17, 18511, when Jenny Lind sang “Home, Sweet Home,” the anthor of those words, John Howard Payne, seated before her. She had rendered her other favorite songs, “Casta Diva,” and her “Flute Song,” with fine effect, but
when she struck Home, sweet Home, John Howard Payne rose under the power, and President Fillmore and Henry Clay, and Daniel Webster, and the whole audienee rose with him. Anything connected with home ransacks our entire nature with a holy power, and songs that get'well started in the nursery or by the family hearth roll on after the lips that have sung them are forever silent, and the ears that first he ard them forever cease to hear. Saint Francis d’ Assisi preached a sermon to birds and pronounced a benediction upon them, -but all birds preach to us, and their benediction is almost supernal. While, this summer, amid the works of God, let us learn responsiveness. Surely if we can not sing, we can hum a tune, and if we can hum a tune, we can whistle. If we can not be an oriole, we can be a quail. In some way let us demonstrate our gratitude to God. Let us not be beaten by the chimney swallow? and the humming bird and the brown-thresher. Let us try to set everything in our life to music, and if we can not give the carol of the song sparrow, take the plaint of the hermit thrush. Let our life be an anthem of worship to the God who created us and the Christ who ransomed us, and the Holy Ghost who sanctifies us. And our last song! May it be our best song! —I account the Scriptures of God to be the most sublime philosophy.—Sir Isaac Newton.
THE U. 5. Government Chemists have reported, after an examination of scores of different brands, that the Royal Baking Powder is absolutely pure, of highest leavening capacity, and superior to all others.
MILITARY NOTES OF THE DAY. Cigars are given to the soldiers in the Italian army as part of their daily rations. , Liberty cap was first used in the T'nited States as one of the devices on a flag of the Philadelphia Light Horse guards, a company of militia organized some time prior to the revolution. The warships of eight nations which recently lay in the Hudson river all, except the American, served liquor to their crews. British, German, Russian, French and Italian sailors have their daily allowance of grog. M. Hofmeisteh, a Bavarian lieutenant, has been expelled from the German army on account of his socialistic opinions, and it is said that a judicial inquiry will be held with the object of ascertaining to what extent he has succeeded in imbuing his comrades with his own belief in socialism. Emperor William will command in person the Sixteenth army corps at the autnmn maneuvers. A novelty in the maneuvers will be the appearance behind the cavalry of a corps of sharpshooters, armed With the now small-caliber-rifles, provided with smokeless powder and riding in steel-clad, bulletproof vehicles.
INTERESTING LAWS. When Bourbon county, Kentucky, elects a judge he is elected for Kfe on good behavior. Since 1850 only four judges have been elected, each of them holding office until he died. TnE Texas legisla ture has passed a law providing that the H oney received from the direct tax refund shall be re* stored, as far as possible, tto the persons who paid tire tax or their representatives. 1 At Le Mars, Iowa, there is a novel penalty for intoxication. Any man who is twice arrested for drunkenness must submit to a course of treatment at a gold-cure institute, or work on the streets ten days with a ball and chain. The Illinois village of Ava has an ordinance prohibiting any dance to be held within fifty feet of a dramshop. Any reputable person can have a license to run a dance-hall with such reAriction on payment of a license fee of five dollars a day or night. —The English colonies in America in 1754 had a population of 1,485,634, of whom 293,738 were negroes. The French were scarcely 100,000 in number, but were strong in Indian allies, who, stretching along the whole interior frontier of the English colonies, and disgusted with constant encroachments upon their territories, as well as illtreatment by the English, were always ripe and ready for cruel warfare. THE MARKETS.
New York. June 26. CATTLE—Native Steers. 94 70 @ UOTTON-Jdiddling. © FLOUR—Winter Wheat. 1 95 @ WHEAT—No. 2 Red. 7l!W@ CORN—No. 2. 48>4@ _ OATS-Western Mlxod. 38!i@ 39 PORK—New Mess. 19 50 © 19 9.» ST. LOUIS COTfTON—Middling. @ 731 BEEVES-Cholre Steers. 6 00 @ 5 45 Medium. 4 50 @ 4 to HOGS—Fair to Select. 5 90 @ 6 2i SHEEP—Fair to Choice. 3 75 @ 5 00 FLOUR—Patents. 3 15 @ 3 to Fancy to Kxtra Do.. 2 50 2 WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter... 6 'S@ «03« CORN—No. 2 Mixed. 37X0 38 OATS—No. 2...... RYEr-No.2. 48 TOBACCO—Lugs. 6 50 Leaf Burley. 10 00 HAY—Clear Timothy.... 10 50 BUTTER—Choice Dairy. 14 EGGS—Fresh... PORK—Standard Mesa (new)., .... BACON—Clear Rib.. LAUD—Prime Steam. CHICAGa CATTLE— Shipping. 4 30 H1X3S—Fair to Choice. 6 00 SHEEP—Fair to Choice.• 4 25 FLOUR—Winter Parents. 3 50 Spring Patents. 3 65 WHEAT—No. 2. Spring. 59 No. 2 Red. 61! CORN—No. 2. OATS—No. 2. „ PORK—Mesa (new). 19 35 © KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers.... 4 30 @ HOGS—Ail Grades. 5 35 © WHEAT—No. 2 Red. 55 0 OATS-No. 2. 26i/s@ CORN—No-2. 33>i@ NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR—High Grade. 3 15 @ CORN—No. 2..• • © OATS—Western. 37 @ HAY—Choice. 17 00 @ PORK—New Mess. & BACON—Sides.". ® COTTON—Middling. @ CINC1NNATL WHEAT—No. 2 Red. ® CORN—No. 2 Mixed. 0 OATS—No. 2 Mixed. 0 PORK—New Mess. 0 BACON—Clear Ribs. 0 COTTON—Middling. ©
MAKES ITSELF FELT —the great, griping, ^old-fashioned pill. Not only when you take it, but unpleasant, from first to last, and it only gives you a little temporary good. The things to take its place are Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. One of these at a dose will regulate the whole system perfectly. They’re' tiny, sugar-coated granules, scarcely larger thau mustard seeds. They act in Nature’s own way. No reaction afterward. Their help lasts sad they do permanent good. Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, Sick or Bilious Headaches, and all derangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels are prevented, relieved, and cured. Thev’re the cheapest, for they’re guaranteed'to give satisfaction or money is re- ’ Nothing can be “just as good.” turned.
Pretty Gowns. A dainty black gauze, made up for afternoon wear, is figured with a little transparent chine design in black. The lining of this gown is apricot-colored satin. The skirt is made in the new circular shape. The skirt of gauze alone is cut in the circular form. The satin slip skirt is considerably narrower, and is udited to the skirt of gauze only at the belt. The gauze skirt is trimmed at the bottom with a fourinch band of black Chantilly lace, laid over apricot satin, with a second band of the same kind about fourteen inches below, the belt. The bodice is made rather full and round for a slender figure, with a triple girdle of black satin. A bertha of the gauze-like material, bound with black satin, is placed across the back, and ended in short, jabot-like revers in front. The sleeves are in the high leg-o'-mutton shape, of the tissue over satin, and extended well over the arm.—Chicago Mail.
, KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free fiom every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. “EVERYBODY’S LAW BOOK,” Is the title ofthe new 750 page work by J. Alexander Koones, L.L.B., Member of tire New York 3ar. lten ables every man and Woman to be their own lawyer It teaches what are your rights and how to maintain them. When to begin a law suit and when to shun one. It conUins»the useful information every busi ness man needs in every Bute in the Union. It con tains business forms of every variety useful to the lawyer as well as to ail who have legal business to transact. Inclose two dollars for a copy or inclose two cent postage stamp for a table of contents and terms to agents. Address BENJ. W. II1TCIICOCK, Publisher. 385 Sixth A venue. New York. arUAXI THIS FAESB stwy tins jeawxuu
00 NOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, 3! __linsmels, and Palnte which st the bauds. Injure the iron, and barn red. I The Rising Bun Store Polish is Brilliant, Od' less. Durable. *n<l the consumer pays tor ae I or glass packs je srlth every purchase. UCKSKM BEECHES itxts TIOD BEST MADE, BEST F1TTIN6, BEST HMm m jAj
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No Alkalies; — OR — Other Chemical* are used in t ie preparation of w. baker &<».»» BreakfasiCo aoa It which 1* abaolu elf pure nutt solulf t. i Mlthasmorethanthree t nut i Ike ctrenyth of Cocoa UU4 jawith Starch, Arrowroot or "’Sussar. and ia far mor» Jay
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I.1 EWIS’ 98 <* JlYE POWDERED AND PER.' Ti HXJt Lj» [tents' (PATENTED) Tue strongest and | made. Unjike other Lye a fine powder and packs ' v ith removable lid, the cai t a re always ready tor usv' make the best perfume!/ Soap In 20 minntes tei/A.WlA tug. It is the beat fbr elsa /min* waste pipes, distnfeotinf ■ inka cosets, washing bottles, n lints* trees,etc. PEXXA.SAT.T H F B C6t
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O. W. F. SNYDER, M. lWMafi McVlckei’u Theater, ChlcafiOfiltti
BIOYOLUS.
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WANTED 1060 me^n W w m k I V I IN EVE BY COUNTY TO C:rHW HORSE SHOE:* PLUG TOBACCO. MILLIONS ARE NOW CHEWIN6 IT AND WILL HAVE NO OTHER. WHY PONT YWT
They End this way ; —the names of most so-called^ washing compounds. Arc! it' isn’t an accident, either. It’s to make them sound something, like Pearline. That is the original washing compound— the first and in every way thebest. These imitations are thus,
named in the hope of confusing you—in the hope that you u' mistake them for Pearline. For most people, that ought to - be enough. It ought to convince them that the article so imitated, so copied, so looked-»p to, is the one that is the best, to use. If your grocer sends you an imitation,be honest—send i it back—demand Pearline. ass James pyle, New Vat THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE. THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS^ CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN.
