Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 December 1878 — Page 3
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THE DEATH OF BRYANT.
Br KDMUND a. BT*DMA!f.
From the Atlantic Monthly—The l*bem Bead at tne Century Memorial Meeting.
How wu it then with Nature whea the soul Of her own poet hearl a voice which came From out the void, "Thou art no longer lent •To Earth!" when that incarnate spirit, blent With the abiding force of waves that roll,
Wind-sradled vapors, circling stars that flame, She did recall? How went His antique shade, beaconed upon its way Through the still aisles of n«ght to universal day? Her voice it
was,
her sovereign voice, which
The Earth resolve his elemental mould And once more came her summons: "Long, too long, Thou lingcrcst, and charmest with thy song! Return! retnm Thus Nature spoke, and made
Hcrslgn and forthwith on the minstrel old An arrow, bright and strong, Fell
from
the bent bow of the answering Sun. "Who cried, "The song is closed, the invocation done!" But not as for those youths dead ere their prime,
New-entered on their music's high domain, 'Then snatched away, did all things sorrow own
No utterance now like that sad, sweetest tone When Bloi died, and the Sicilian rhyme Bpwailed no sobbing of the reeds that plain,
Rehearsing some last moan
•Of Lycidas no s'rains which skyward swell For Adonals still, and still for Abtrophel! The Muses wept not fbr him as for those
Of whom each vanished like a beauteous star Qnonched ere the snining midwatch ef the night The Greenwood Nymplis mourned not his lost dellgni- .... INor Echo, hidden in the tanglod ose.
Grieve! that she could not mimic him afar. He coased not from our sight Like him who, in the first glnd flight of spring, Ftll as an eagle plcrced with shafts from his own wing. This was not Thyrsts! no, the minstrel lone
And reverend, the woodland singer hoar, Who WHS dear Nature's nursling, and the prh'sc Whom most she loved nor had his ofllce ceased But for her mandate: '-Seek again thine own
The wr.lks of men shall draw thy steps no more!'' Sift v, as from a toast Theguest irta that hears a low recall, lie wen aiM l.-ft behind harp ana coronal. •"Return!" she fried, "unto thiue. own return
Too long the pilgrimage: too long the dream In Tnhicb, Kst ihnu shouldst b3 conipanionless, Unto the ora IPS thou hadstarc.SI— The sacred proves tha* th my presence yearn."
The voieo was heard by mountain, dell and stream, Meadow an.l wildernessAll fair things vestured by th3 changing year, Which now awoke in joy to welcome one most dear.
•"Hecomcs!" declared the unseen ones that haunt Thodark recessos, the infinitude Of whispering old oaks and soughing pines. "He comes!" the warders of the forest, shrines Sang jealously. "His spirit ministrant
Henceforth with us shall wt^lk the underwood, .. Till mortal eir dlvintH Its music aided tour choral hy-.n. Rising and falling far iuruugh archways deep and dim!"
The orchard fields, the hillside pastures given, Tut gluduoss on tlie rippling harvestwave Ran like smile, as if a moment there His shadow poisodinthe mi lstunmor air Above the iract cook a pearl siieen
Even r.utloapt the winding river gave Asmndot wclcome whore He cainc, and trembled, lar as to the sea It jves from rock-r bbed heights where its dark fountains be.
His presence brooded on the rolling plain, And on tne lake thore f«ll a sudden calm— His own tranquility the mouaUin bowed Its head, and felt the ooolness of a cloud. And murmured, "He Is passing!" and again
Through all its firs the wind swept like a psalm Its eagles, thunder-browed, In that mist-moulded shape tbeir kinsman knew, And circled high, and in hs mnatle soared from view.
So drew he to the living vei.', which hung Of oldabovethe deep'sunMnagcd face, And sought his own. Henceforward he lei free _ilgi Of vassalage to that mortality
Which men have given a eepulchure among The pathways of their kind—a resting place ^.#^5 ~. Whei bending one great knee,
Knelt the proud mother of a mighty land In tenderness, and came anon a plumed be nil. i'•',* "•*. -*$»- -i' Come one by one tne seasons meetly drest,
To sentinel the relics of their seer. First Spring—upon whose head a wreath was set & Of wind-fiovf#rl knd the yellow violetAdvanced. Then Summer led his leyelieat
Of months, one ever to the miastret dear (Her sweeteyes dewy wet), June, and her sisters, whose ^brown hands entwine The brier-rose and the bee-haunted columbine. Next Autumn, Uke&'mdnarch sad of heart,
Came, tended by his melancholy days, Purple he wore, and bore a golden rod. Hi* sceptre and let fall apon the sod Alone fringed-gentlan ere he would depart.
Scarcely had his train gone darkling down t: the way* When Winter thither trcd—
Winter, with beard and raiment blown before. That was so seeming like our poet aid and hoar.
What forms are these amid the pageant fair? Harping with hands that falter? What sad throng? They wait in vain, a mournful brotherhood, And listened where their lacrelled elder stood For some last music fallen through the air. "What cold, thin atmosphere now hears thy song?"
They ask, and long have wooed
The woods and waves that knew him, but can learn Naught save the hollow, haunting jry, "Return Return!"
A NOVEL ALPHABET.
A was a traitor hung by the hair.—Samuel xviil, 9. was a folly built h'ghln the air.—Genesis, xi„ 9. wis a fountain o'erlooking the tea.—I.
Kings, xvili., 42-43. was a musi buried under a tree.—Genesis, xxxv., 8. E was a first born, bad from his youth—Hebrews, x'., 16. v,'«s a ruler, who trembled at truth .—Acts, xxtv., 25. was a messenger sent with good word.—
Daniel, ix., 21. was a mother loaned to the Lord.—t. Sam. ucl, i., 27-21. I was a name received of the Lord.—Genesis, xxxii., 22-28. was a shepherd in Arabian land.—Exodus, iii., 1. was a place near the desert of sand.—Deutoronomy, i., 10. was a pauper begging his bread.—Luke, xvi., 29-21. was an idol, an object of dread.—Leviticus, xx., 2-3. N was tn architect ages ago.—Genesis, vl„ 18-23. 0' 0 was a rampart to keep out the foe.—II,
Chronicles, xxvil 3-4. was an isle, whence a saint looked above. Revelations, i., 4 9 was a christian saluted In love.—Romans, xvi., 28. was an obscure, yet a mother of kings.—
Matthevr, i., 5.
S was a danite, who di I wonderful things. —Judges, xiv 5-6. was a city that was a stronghold.—II.
Samuel, xx v., 7. was a country productive of gold.—Jeremiah. x., 9. was a queen whom a king Sat aside —Esther, i., 10-22. was a pi ce wherj a man wished to hide
Gent-sis, xix„ 1.
Read I-Timothy, ii'., 15.
IMAGINATION.
AN EXTRACT FROM THE NEW "MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DUE AM." The lunatic, the lover, the politician And the poet, are of imagination all compact. One sees more
I'eylls
than couldstand
On a ten-acre lot that's the madman.
The lover, all frantic, and in every way As oligible for a plaee in the Lunatic asylum, e's Phoebe's beauty In a brow of Egypt, hears her voice In the wind that blows from the Oil refineries on Hunter's Point, That gives other men the yellow fever, And swears he could drink his champagne From her shoe.
The politician cists th% horoscope Over the field, and sees where lifs party Will have enormous gains, but does not Discover until after the election that he ^as Looking Into the wrong end of the machine
Thepoet'seye, in a fine frenzy rolling, Dith glance from heaven to earth, from earth To hea en, thence to the rhyming dictionaryAnil as imagination bodies forth The forms of things unknown, the poet's pen Turns them to shapes, and gives to airy nothing A local habitation and a name Then he takes It around to the editor, 8ay3 hescratjhel it off in a hurry. But that it w'll do to fill up, And gets kicked,down stairs for his pains. "—[Oil City Derrick.
LOVE'S SURRENDER.
Under my window, under my window, All in the midsummer weather, Three little girls with fluttering curls Flit to and fro together There's Mary th her bonnet of satin sheen, And Emma with her mantle of silver green, And Kate with hers sarlet feather.
Under my window, under my window, Ajt Leaning stealthily over, Merry and clear the voice I hear Of each glad-hearted rover, "f .^1? Ah! sly little Kate, she steals my roses, And Emma and Mary twine wreaths and posies, iA As merry as bees in clover. I"-
Under my window, undermy window, In the blue midsummer weather, Stealing slow on hush'd tip-toe, I catch them all together! wife Mary with h^r bonnet of satin sheen, And Emma with her mantle of silver green, Ind Kate with her soarlet feather.
Undermy window, under my window, And off through the orchard closer While Emma she flouts, and Mary she pouts, They scamper and drop their posses But dear little Kate takes naught amiss,' And leaps in my arms with a loving kiss, And I give her ail my roses.
BURNS AND INGKERSOLL.
Col. Inger&ol), says the Cincinnati Gazette, has told us a good deal about Burns, and it is only fair that we should tell what Burns ^yote about him, or some one very like him.
Addressing a young friend, he says:
"The great Creator to revere Must sara become the creature But still the preaching can't forbear,
And even the rigid feature. Yet ne'er with wits profane tq range Be complaisance extended: An atheist laugh's a poor exchange'
For Deity offended.
"When ranting round in pleasure's ring Religion may be blinded. Or If she give a random sting,
It may be little minded. But when on life we're tempest driven, A conscience but a canker.
J'~*
A confidence fixed on heaven Is sure a noble anchor."
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
THE LONDON CLUBS.
HOW MEN LIVE AT THEM AND WHAT IT COSTS.
From the London Week.
There are many clubs at which, for various offenses, as for want of punctuality in paying subscriptions, playing tor stakes higher than those allowed by the club rules, remaining beyond the hour fixed for closing, and so on, fines are imposed. But there is only one club in London where a sentence of temporary banishment may be passed upon a member, whose conduct is considered worthy of blame, though not sufficiently so to deserve expulsion. At the last established of the great political clubs, the Devonshire, in St. James street, the committee possesses the ri ht of exilitig a member for a year, during which period the proscribed one must pay his subscription as if he were continuing to enjoy the advantages of the club. The position of a member thus formally and effectively sent to Coventry can not be a pleasant one. His feelings on returning to the society o5 those who have found it desirable to keep him at a distance for an entire twelvemonth must be tar from nviable. On due reflection, however, he would doubtless prefer suspension to expulsion.
One oi the latest clubs in London seems to be the BeefSteak and here the lateness of the hours someti i.es kept is sufficiently indicated by the rules. The club is supposed to close at 3 and after 3 o'clock the head waiter is empowered to call the attention of the members remaining to the tact that it is past 3. At 4 o'clock he enjoys the right ot taking down the names of the members still at the club, and may further, at the first convenient opportunity, exercise the privilege of submitting them to the committee. If several of the late 6tayers proved to be members of the committee, n» very serious consequences would follow from a strict application of this rule.
Two of the dearest clubs in London, so far as regards the sum charged for entrance money and annual subscription, are the Travellers' and the Reform. At each of these clubs the entrance fee is £31 ios., the annual subscription £10 Ios. At the Carlton the entrance fee is £20, the annual subscription £10 ios. At the Junior Carlton the entrance fee is £20 5$., the annual subscription £8 Ss. Often, however, the charges far dinners, wines and refreshments are in inverse proportion to the charges for entrance and subscription. Thus, to judge by the cost of articles of refreshment out of which no great profit is likely to be made, at the Beef Steak Club, where the entrance fee is £10 ios., the annual subscription £4 3s., the charge for a cup of tea with cream is 6 pence. At the Arts' Club, where the entrance fee is £10 ios., the annual subscription' £6 6s., a cup of tea with milk costs 5 pence. At the Reform Club (entrance, £31 ios. annual subscription, £10 ios.) a cup ef tea with cream costs 4 penre At the artistic clubs (Arts, Beef Steak, Savile) a half bottle of ordinary French wine is charged 1 shilling or is. 2J. At the Reform the same discription of wine can be had for 6 pence the halt bottle. At the large clubs, on the other hand the charge for table-money, especially for strangers' table money, is in some cases unreasonably high.
There seems in the development of club life to be a growing tendency to wards admitting strangers on all possible occasions. Forty years ago until, in the year 1837 the Army and the Navy Club was established, there was not a club in London at which a member could enter tain a friend. At the Senior United Service, the Athenaeum and the Carlton, member, now as when these clubs were first started, cannot offer a visitor any refreshment. At the Reform Club a mem ber may invite friends to dinner and entertain them as liberally as he pleases during and after the evening meal. But he cannot offer any kind of refreshments to a visitor whom he has not formally invited at least two hours beforehand to dine with him.
At the Garrick Club strangers may be invited to dine, and *ny kind of soup, fish, made dish and pastry may be offered to them but they are not allowed to have a slice from the joint. A particular kind of steak ha6 been invented at this club, as if for the consolation of visitors, to whom it is served in lieu of roast meat.
At most of the theatrical clubs
Strang
ers are freely admitted—so freely, and at the Arundel cases are said to have occured in which members arriving late at night found that there was nothing for supper, the provisions having all been consumed by hungry visitors. The Garrick can scarcely be considered a theatrical club, though a certain number of actors still belong to it. It is considered an advantage, however, in being proposed for Garrick, not to have anything to do with the stage, as it is desiiable at he Athheuaem not to have written a book.
A certain number of actors and a good manv musicians are members of the Westminster Club in Albemarle street, said to have been founded chiefly for the convenience of a certain number of gentlemen at the West End who happen to be engaged in trade. Probably no club in London has abetter cook or a better cellar than the Westminster. Here, as at the Arts' Club and the Savile, a housedinner is served daily in table-d'hote fashion at a very moderate charge. There seems to be no limit at the Westminster to the number of friends whom a member may invite either to dinner or to supper. It is one of the few large clubs at which a good deal of supping (togetnor with a certain amount of late cardplaving) takes place. At the large West End clubs of the first rank, an order for supper causes a certain sensation. After 10 o'clock the servants consider that the day's work is at an end the din ing-room is imperfectly lighted and the chop, the steak or the slice of cold ifteat has to be eaten in solitude, and gloom.
It is very difficult to dine late, and afterwards to sup this feat being one which, as a rule, can only be performed by voung men with digestive powers fully developed and not yet impaired, or bv actors, who, dining early, need a second meal at night. All the clubs, then, to which a certain number of actors belong are supper clubs. The last established of the theatrical clubs, the Green Room, differs from all the other clubs in having one night each week set apart for musical performances. Every club'
Absolutely Pure*
At the Devonshire Club stranger* may be invited to lunch, a practice not permitted at the Reform. As the youngest and in some respects the best of the military clubs—the N»val and Military in Piccadilly—garden parties are given during the summer, to which, naturally, ladies are invited. Ladies, too, are invited to the conversazioni of the Arts' Club, and ladies are in other and more direct ways of their own accord, without invitation of any kind, entering gradually into club life.
The most liberal club, to judge' from the terms of its written constitution, is the Carlton, and the next most liberal the Reform. At several of the Conservative clubs—the Junior Carlton, for instance, the Conservative and also the Junior Conservative—a candidate is required not only to be a Conseryative but to declare himself a follower of the recognized leader of the Conservative party. At the Reform Club it is only necessary to be a "reformer," and until our laws and methods of legislation and of political administration are absolutely perfect, who can say that he is not in some degree a reformer? At the Carlton no profession of faith whatever is demanded from a candidate.
At the Travellers' Club the primary condition of membership is that the candidate shall have travelled out of ths British Islands to a distance of at least 500 miles from London in a straight line. This in the present day is not a very formidable requirement. At the new Travellers', however, it is not even stipulated that the candidates shall have been as far as Brighton.
There is a certain preten'iousneas in one of the rules of the Union Club (since adopted by the Oriental) which sets forth that the club is to consist of so many gentlemen "of the first distinction and character." The ideal here proclaimed is not a bad one to aim at. But both at the Oriental and the Union there are plenty of men who, whatever their character may be, are certainly not of the "first distinction."
Members are not allowed to take anything in the shape of wine, liquors or provisions into a club, nor to take anything of the kind out. At the Senior United Service Club, however, they are permitted bv a special rule to introduce game, venison or turtle, but nothing else, for the use of themselves, or of other members.
AND THINGS, a cat nip tea?—flew
„1 PEOPLE Who ever sa York Mail.
The miners cry—Give us coal'd weather.—New York Express. The laborer is worthy of his excelsior.—Cincinnati Saturday Night.
To keep apples from rotting, put them in a cool place-where there is a large family of children—Lowell Courier "Wherewill you put me when I come to see you at your castle in the air?" asked a gentleman uf a witty girl. "In a b'own study," she replied.
Professor—" Where they very far apart, Mr. J.?" Mr* J. (confilsedlv)—"No, sir: they were very near apart. (General smile.)—[Acta Columbiana
A Gruve Rebuke—Individual fresh from his club: "My good sir (nic), can you tell tne where this w-(hic)-way lead? to?" Sedate party—"To the churchyard."—[Fun.
The Herald office is under many obligations to for a nice large turkey, already fattened for Thanksgiving. (We leave the blank open for bids.)—[Edindinburgh Herala.
Professor in Natural History: ''Mr. C. is there any case in which an animal has 'gills?*Mr. C. after a moment's reflection): "Yes, sir in the case of a rooster.—[Yale Record.
Fencing has almost ceased to be an accomplishment among our young men. Soon it may be said that in the bright lexicon of youth there's no such word as foil.—[Cincinnati Saturday Night.
A Seymour, Indiana, man picked up a stick of cordwood tne other night, and chased a cat across the back' yard. He didn't catch the cat, but he caught the clothes line with his teeth, and now when he smiles the corners of his mouth pass each other at the back of his neck.—[Burington Hawkeye.
Cincinnati is a musical city. Only a few weeks ago they 6tole Theodore Thomas from New York, and now a prominent belle of the city has run away with a negro minstrel not the one that sings and dsnces the cellar door flap, but the one that wears the spotted shirt and takes the tickets.—[Burlington Hawkeye.
A policeman who had offered his hand to a young woman and been refused, arrested her and took her to the stationhouse. "What is the charge against this woman?" asked the lieutenant. "Resisting an offer, sir," was the reply. She was discharged, and so was the officer.—[Cincinnati Saturday Night.
M. Offenbach is said to compose well only tn the spring time and by the seaside. How great men do differ to be sure. We never could compose worth a cent by the seaside. Our grandest thoughts come to us when we are asleep, and the deuce of it is that we always forget the hang of them in the morning.—^New York Commercial Advertiser.
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has a right to make its own rules, but th« introduction of amateur singing may well be objected to by two classes of members —those who cannot endure music, and those who really like it.
An old
eat. Thts
of pantry, wholly without eggs, cult her dyspeptic husband cane: ils are used. Approved by the N
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and tXPOTENtiV, the neult of Mir'
auoM or eexual exeeetee In maturcr jeare, or other casiee, which prwliioe Mm* of tbe (bllowing effeoU: Nervoatoeu, •emlnal emluiona, debility, dlmneu of eight, defective mem.
pimpica on the faoe, arerelon to eooietT, lou of
power, ow.. rendering MARBIAUE
8EXVAK
IHPRdriK,
are rerma.
nentlr oured. Pamhlet (36 pagea) relating to the above, aent la •eated envelope, fbr two 3-cent atampe. Ooninltatlon free an4 COHFIDSKTiAL, ttoomi eeparato fbr ladiea and gentlemen,
MARRIAGE GUIDE. OR SEXUAL PATHOLOGY,
Thte Intonating work of
TWO
HUNDRED larM'alie page*
ILLt'STRiTIMO everything on the auhjeot of the generative yfgaoi that la worth knowing, and much that te not publi»ba a any tfcer -or*. I'RICS FIFTY CS.VI8, BEST
BY BAIL
By order of the United States Oistrlc Court, for the District of Indiana. I wilt offer for sale to the highest bidder on Tuesday. Doc. 17tt. 1878, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, at my ofllce over the Prairie City Bank, the entire stock of wall paper.
Sir,.,
tMSHOT
belonging
to the estate of Foltix A Traquair bankrupts. TERMS OF SALE: Half cash, balance la flvc months, the defered(payment to be evidenced by note, bearing 7 per cent, interest payable in bank, and secure I by undoubted personal security.
M. C. HUrfTER, JR. Assignee, Ac,
Toire IT auto, Intl.
The Pest Doubts-Shot-Gun In the world for the money. Warranted genuine twlst,wltn/t«i»4r.
^"GrUN!!
we Warn, Box Cktj
Belt,
Boat Box Cap* antt
JPuneh.
for
$19,
«e«mmf«d
Wats
Also our celebrated Kentucky Rifle
or no
sale. Send
for Il
lustrated Catalogue and Price Lists to JasiM Bown HOB, Enterprise (inn Works,
Established, 1848.
IMAIM WooABt., flfMuryk,
T.AMSefS and others engaged In tho rorma onof bands or orctiostras should semi foi
tlon of bands our new descriptive catalogue, devoted exclusively to information concern ing Band and Orchestral talnlng elegant engravIngs of the lateal and most approved style of In* straments now in use. Mailed free. Address IW ft HJSAIaY.
State aod Monroe SU Chisago
ASK WILSON & McCALLAY'S vmiR,"HAPPYTHOUGHT"
W A E 2 I
PLUG TOBACCO
DEALERI
mul
BEST CNEW IN THE MARKET. OTSOLD EVERYWHERE
Great
AGENTS I STANLEY'S w«k._ Uf asms iTHB0B8H
181
"ARK
WANT!.?-1 CONTINENT!0™*
Legitimate Boole. Published by Harper & Brothers. H. W. DERBY dt CO.. Columbus, O., General Agents for Ohio aad Indiana.
BEWAKE OF FRAUDULENT BOOKS-
NO CURE-NO FEEB
if
private oa pi*
core of all
Ditto*
etreet, Chk-aco. for tbe cure
l. Chronic ami Special DUeaw, Hcailaal Weak
of (ha
Reform
Hehool. and aaa s«
IfervejM PeMUty, and LeAjlaatwl, permanently
lafgeti practice la (be Butted Malaa. LAat with*
BIEli'reqeMRg*Mallxwftl with b*ma and hoard, call
BB CtJlDEl ms pqph lllactraiM. UUUS iIKH and gentlemen tend fifty Ceate for Sample of Bab lode aad CkcaUr oflmaortut IsfemaMa br eifma. Commi ^"•MI. KellabU Female rUk, |S a Baa*
BITWirn VDu Prom Xervous 5 %J J? MS
Debility, Lost
•^••••HM|£Bergy,Haily Vigor,
Syphilis, or any fora o-
Usease,cured.at the old Western Medical Inf ititutc,2M Vine street, Cincinnati, by tb nly sure and reliable rem dies. No char* intll cured. Cailor write for free v* „g. barges low .Half tbe poor.
ELECTION NOTICE.
Terre Haute & Indianapolis R. Co.) Terre Haute, Dec. loth, 1878. The annual meeting of the stockholders of this company, will be held at the office of the company, in Terre Haute on Monday, January 6th, 1879, between the hours of ten and twelve A. M. for the purpose of electing seven directors foe the ensuing year.
W. H. BLXKIKGHAM. Secretary
JJECEIVER'i NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that tbe nntlersinged has been appointed by the Vigo Ureal#' Court, receiver to settle the partnership affairs of Abraham A. Eldridge, deceased, and Hamilton Ndrige. Tne estate
WESLER RANDOLPH!solvent.is Keoeiver.
