Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 November 1881 — Page 3
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1
LAVENDER.
ji£ ..ws
Ho ir prone we are to bide antl hoard Each little token love ha* st^red,n To tell of many happy hoar* "We lay asld* with tender care f§ A tattered book, a curl of air,
A bunch of faded flowers
When death lias led with pulseless hand Our darling to the silent land, Awhile we nit bereft, Bat time goes on anon we rise, Our dead being burled from our eyes,
VVe gather what left.
the books they loved, the songs they sang The little flute whose music rang. So cheerfully of old. The picture* we have watched them paint Tne last-plucked flowers, with odor faint
That fell from fingers cold.
We smooth and fold with reverent care The robes they, living, used lo wear, And painful pulses stir And o'er the relics of oar dead, With bitter rain of tears, we spread
Pale purple lavender.
And when we come in after years. With only tender April tears On cheeks once white with care, To look at treasures put away Despairing on that far-off day,
A subtle Kent is there.
Dew-wet and fresh we gathered them These fragrant floweis—now every stem Is bare of all its bloom. Tear-wet and sweet we stiewed them neie To lend our relics sacred, dear,
Their beautiful perfume.
That scent abides on book and M®* On curl, and flower, and white Ita mute But eloquent appeal, It wins from us deeper soo For our lost dead—a sharper throb,
Than we are *ront. to feel.
It whispers of the long ago, It* love, its loss, Its aching woe. And burled sorrows stir And tears like those we shed of old Roll down our cheeks as we behold
Our faded lavender. —All the Year Round.
THE NEW BIRTH.
BY HERMAN MKHTVALE.
Ood spake in a voice of thunder, Of old from final's hill, And the mystic words of wonder
Thrill the believer still lie sees la the vault above him, With the eyes of faith alone, Gemmed round by tnesouls thutlove him
The great Creator'* throne.
lie sees, In the day of danger, The colutrn ef cloud that led, From ttie mud of the alien stranger,
His Israel whom he fed And kuows, tho' his foot-steps wander Astray in a twilight land, That his home is building yondei,
By tho one unerring hand.
He sees, in the night of peiil. The pillar of lire that shone From the halls of pearl und bury,
To light God's children on And feels that straight from Heaven, •When the eye of sense grows dim, Shall a grander sight be given.
To all who trus*. in Him. -t,
On the page of the mighty ocean He reiifl 'he mUjhller still, Who cuH»•- it* rest,it'.- motion
By the l»w of ills royal will And while in its course diurnal it murmurs, or sings, or raves, He lists to the voice eternal,
In the language of the waves.
He marks in the plants around him The throbs of a life their own, While the wordless worlds that bound him
Whisper their undertone From the hawk and tho hound yet clearer, He hears the secret fall, Which nearer to him srnil nearer
Brlugs the great God of all.
In the leaves that blow and perish In the space of a single hour, As the loves that mo#t we cherish
Die like the frailest (lower— In the living things whose living Withers or e'er they bloom, He reads #f the great thanksgiving.
Which breathes from the open tomb.
The bright spring leaves trturning To the stem whence autumn's fell, And the heart of summer burning,
To change nt winter's spell, The year that again repasses, The grain that agaiu revives, Are signs on tho darkened glasses
That, bar and bound our lives.
I know how the glass must darken To my visions more and more, When the weak oar .trains to hearken.
When the faint eye glazes o'er But the glass shall melt and shiver, Once kissed by the fighting breath, And the light beyond the river
Shine full in the face of Death. Strong-set in a stiong affection, Wo look to the golden pi line, When a mightier resurrection
Shall hurst on the doubts of time And the thoughts of nil the sages, Like the waves of the fietful main, At the base of the roek of Ages
si
sft§ti
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Shall foam and fume in vain. —Spectator.
If there ever was a specific for an one complaint then Carter's Little Liver Pills area specific for Sick Headache, and every woman should know this. Thej are not only a positive cure, but a sure preventive if taken when the approach is ^"ieH Carter's Little Liver Pills act directlyon the liver and bile, and this way /'remove the cause of disease with out first making you sick by a weakening purge. I If vou try theiu you will not be diaappointed.
A horse at Dunkirk, N. Y., refused to eatjantl drink. An examination of the throat revealed a block of wood two und fctena hall inches long by two inches wide Infixed in the back tee'tli of the upper jaw, |reaching across the mouth close to the palate. It was removed with some etFort after which the horse took water and food, and is now all right
QUESTION YOUK DRUGGIST,, and ue will tell you. thaf there is a greater demand for SOZODONTtlian for any other preparation for the teeth. Then ask vourself whether an article for which the demand is general and constant, must not possess genuine merit The mental response will be that it does, since the conclusion is irresistible that if it did not really polish and preserve the teeth, a discerning public would long since have discovered the tact It advertises itself
The wire rope system of railways cost Chicago.
"A
DANIEL GRAY.
In all of the laic Dr. Holland's writings, we know of nothing which equals in pathos and tenderness the following beautiful poem, and its value is enhanced when it Is known that the author describes own father in "Old Daniel Gray."—Ex. If I shall ever win the home In heaven,
For whose sweet rest I humbly hope and pray In the great company of the forgiven,
I shall be sure to/ind old Daniel Gray.
I knew him well in truth few knew him letter, For my young eyes oft read for him the
Word
Aud saw how meekly from the crysta letter, He drank the life of his beloved lord.
Old Daniel Gray was not a man who lifted On ready words his freight of gratitude. Nor was he called among the gifted
In the prayer meeting of his neighborhood.
He had a few old fashioned words and phrases, Linked in with sacred texts and Sunday rhymes And 1 nppose that in his prayers aud graces
I've heard them all at least a thousand tlmos.
I see him now—his form, his face his, motions, His homespun habit aud his silver hair— And hear the language of his trite devotions,
Rising behind the straight-backed kitchen chair.
I can remember how the sentence. sounded— Help us, O I/jrd, to pray and not to f(|nt!" And how the "conquering and to conquer" rounded,
The loftier aspirations of the saint.
He had some notions that did not improve hlifi, He never kissed his children—so they say And finest scenes and fairest flowers would move him
Less than a horse-shoe picked up in the way.
Ho had a hearty hatredbf oppression, And rlgeteous words for sin of every klnu Alas, that the transgressor and transgression
Were linked so closely in his honest mind. He could Bee naught but vanity in beauty, And nanght but weakness in a fond caress And pitied men whose views of Christian duty,
Allowed indulgence in such foolishness.
Yet there were love and tenderness within him, Aud 1 am toid that when his Charley died Nor Nature's need nor gentle words could win him
From his fond vigils at the sleeper's side
And wheu they came to bury little Charley They found fresh dew-drops in hair And on ills breast a rose-bud gathered early
Aud guessed, but did not know, who placed it there.
Honest and faithful.cohetnnt in his calling, Strictly attendant on the means of grace Instant In prayer, and fearful most of falling,
Old Daniel Gray was always in his place,
A pract cal old man and yet a dreamer, He thought that in some strange, un-lovkcd-for way His mighty friend in Heaven the great redeemer,
Would honor him with wealth some golden day.
This dream lie carried in a hopeful spirit, Until in death his patient eye grew dim And his Redeemer called him to inherit
The heaven of wealth long garnered up for him.
So if I ever win the home In heaven, For whose sweet rest I humbly hope and pray In the gr.at company of the forgiven
I shall be sure to find old Daniel Gray.
AN ADDRESS.
Delivered Before the Holland Club, in Holland Dell. Town of Heath, Franklin Co-, Mass-,
On the Sixtieth Anniversary of Dr Holland's Birthday, July 24, 1878, by Prof Joseph
Carhart-
In glancing over the files of an eastern exchange, a few days since, our eye fell upon a report of the celebration of the sixtieth anniversary of Dr. J. G. Holland's birthday, by the Holland club. The report includes an account of an open air dinner, in front of the old house in which Holland speut a portion of his childhood, the rendering of passages from"Cathrina" -and "Bitter Sweet," set to music for the occasion, extracts from short speeches by distinguished guests and an address by our townsman. Prof. Carhart, then a resident of Northampton, Mass., and a member of the club. The recent death of Dr. Holland gives to the address a peculiar interest and we reproduce it from The Hampshire Votiniy (Mats.,) Gazette.—[Ed. Gazette.
A landscape or a work of art gives back to him who looks upon them a reflection of himself. What he soee in them is simply a photograph of his own soul. The same holds good with reference to books and the characters of men. Which of us is competent to speak in fitting terms ot the great man, the anniversary of whose birthday, we have honored ourselves by assembling to celebrate Of him. "Who in this humble hamlet passed his youth, Wwhose fame now dwells where lives a love of truth
A Holland only can do justice to Holland. Yet if only his peers wertfpermitted to speak how few would be the speakers, and how brief would be the exercises on this occasion!
But ii all who have been made better and happier by this noble life, if all who have been made more faithful in dis
^'TftE TORRE HAIJTE WEF.KT.Y OAZEITE:
charge of the many duties growing out of their various relations to society by this editor, essayist, novelist, historian, oratoi, salesman and pect should come and tell the measure of their indebtedness, how full would be the programme!
The limited time assigned will permit me to mention only a few of the many things tuat have impressed me in the career ot this remarkable man.
As the child Samuel was early brought to the temple of the Lord and dedicated to his service so the child Holland was rouglit to this, nature's beautiful temple, and in a different w»y but in the same spirit dedicated to the service of that same God. Here he communed with God an.l when He spoke to him, through the song of the birds, that'made the woods vocal, through tree and tnwor, from mountain and valley from the green fields and clear sky, through all nature, alive with the all prevadieg spirit of God, the child answered, "Speak Lord, for thy servant heareth." Few knew or suspected, tho preparation for future greatness going on in the heart ot that child except the fond father who bade him listen and respond to the voice of God, and his faithful teacher, Miss Hunt, who-isjpresent to-day and who "always knew that Josiah would come to something."
With the deep religious inspiration rooted in these pastoral solitudes Holland went torth into other scenes.
If we knew not a single fact connected with the period of bis life following the one spent here, yet, having read his works, we would not hesitate to say he met with trials. "The fineness of such metal is not found in fortune's love" but rather in the "wind and tempest of her frown." When we read his helpful words we know that he Who wrote has suffered—know that he has grieved, Has hungered, struggled, kissed the cheek of death, And ranged the scale of passions till his sml is deep, and wide, and soft with 'sympathy Nay more than this, that he has found at last Peace like a river, on whose waveless Ude He floated while he sung. This is the key Thut frees the prisoned heart, and fills our eyes With tender tears ane brings to life again Our better nature..
He only is great who is a helper of his kind and none may stand upon that eminence until they have been made worthy through suffering. "God gives no value unto men
Unmatched by need of labor. Aad cost of worth has ever been The closest neighbor.
"But straight the gate, the path unkind, That leads to life immortal, And few the careful feet that find
The hidden portal."
The author of those verses has paid the cost, the meed of labor has traveled the path unkind and entered the straight ttate with the immortal few to whom it is given to rear the beautiful fabric of social life which it is the object ol all good men to support to discover truth and maintain it, to develops the powers, to regulate the passions and to ascertain the privileges of man.
In early man-hood the prolific pen of Holland dashed off a great number of articles on a variety of subjects, of that high commanding merrit which caused everybody to read and, having read, to exclaim: A nwe light has risen in the land! During the years that have followed, that light has continued steadily to rise higher, its stretigth to grow greater, its beams to spread wider, until now it beautifies every mansion, carries warmth and comfort into every cottage throughout the land. "One science only will one genius fit,
So vast Is art, so narrow human wit: Not only bounded to peculiar arts But oft In those confined to single parts Like kings we lose the conquests gained before By vain ambition still to make them more."
To this rule, which Pope so well expresses, Dr. Holland is one of the very few exceptions. He has entered every department of literature and now lasting fame in each, lie is many men in one. Greeley was an editor, Hollond is an editor Mrs. Stoweis a novelist, Holland a novelist Bancroft a historian, Holland a historian Emerson an essayist, Holland an essayist Sumner was a statesman, Holland is a ssatesman Bryant a poet, Holland a poet Beecher an orator, Holland an orator. In quality of work equal to each in his speciality,in versallity greater than either.
As an editor he is bold and instructive. The property of no party, the slave to no creed, bowing to nothing but God and conscience he is free to approve or condemn, to build up or tear down as the occasion requires. The most pressing want of the people at the hour of writing determines his subject, which, heaving chosen, whether relating to politics ot religion, art or domestic life, he treats with a brilliancy that makes him read, plainness that makes him understood, a pungency that makes him felt, and a justness and copiousness that makes it unnecessary for other writers to give the subject further treatment.
As
a
novelist,Dr. Holland has given
us works that have te do wilh genuine, practical lite in which the interest does not depend upon a plot so intricate and (angled that it would never be unrarveled outside of a novel, upon hair-breadth escapes and impossible achievement, but .upon the life that is in them. His characters are not •, "Faultless monsters, that the world ne'er saw," breathing amoral atmosphere unattainable to mortals, but they are men and women, breathing the same atmosphere that we breathe, in whom we see the same struggle for mastery between the good and evil which we experience in ourselves. In their weakness they come near onough to
Sey
it hold of as, while in their strength, are enough higher than we to lift us up. Each character is a distinct individual and is permitted to act out his individuality or is acted upon by the other characters just as men and women naturally act and react upon each other. They are never forced abont like puppets to fit the plot, or to surprise and so catch the attention of the shallow-minded. By his profound knowledge ot human natmre the author discovers to us the secret springs of human action. When he has amoral to inculcate he does not thrust
MM
himself upon the attention as a special pleader, and steel the heart against the truth by creating a suspicion of pious fraud. The lesson proceeds naturally from the character and situation ana, being informed, is made a welcome guest by the heart of the reader. Throughout the West no essayist is so generally read as Holland. The subjects of which his essays treat give them a commanding interest to all classes, while the manner of their treatment makes them truly classical. Rarely arc so many excellences combined in a single writer. One is copious, but coarse wise, but dull witty, but shallow elegant, but weak strong, but stilled chaste, but insipid interesting but conceited while in the essays of Holland may be found nearly every excellence that ean be attributed to a writer.
As an historian be gives not only a record of events but the philosophy of the events. His history of western Massachusetts, no barren skeleton of dates and names, but clothed with tlesh and blood, instinct with the life of the grand old pilgrim pioneer trom whom he draws his inspiration, and written in a style that makes history as fascinating as a novel, "is, says Xllibone," one of the most valuable contributions to local history ever given to the world."
As a wise statesman and practical politician Dr. Hollrnd has rendered the nation invaluable service.
During the terrible trial by fire through which he saw his country pass he addressed himself to the judgment and patriotism of her sons in language powerful against the wrong, mighty in favor of the right.
Recognizing the fact that in union only there is strength, he admits the necessity of political parties, and adds the weight of his mighty influence to the one whose general arms he considers most patriotic, and the one best fitted to serve the common meal. But he is no blind partisan, hanging upon the skirts of power, living in perpetual dread lest he should fail to be all things unto all men who may have a petty office to fling to self or iriends, but a manly man as well as partisan, who has ever recognized the truth of that principle which recently crvstalized into the sentence "He serves his party best, who serves his country best." 4,
The crisis called for great men. Not expounders and champions of narrow creeds, retailers of second-hand dogmas and worn out rules and formulas, but strong, honest, liberal men, whose searching penetration could discover truth where'er her hiding place, whose liberality prompted them to recognize her wherever found, and whose genius could give her expression, not in stereotype phrase, but in the simple, honest language of every day life, made pungent bv the'conviction that a grand man stood behind the written or spoken word. Dr. Holland was, and is, one of the very few men who met the demands ot the time.
Truth being an eternal principle, in its essence is always the same but with the change in language and in modes of life which time brings, cemes also the necessity of a change in the methods of expressing it. Dr. Holland possesses the rare faculty of changing the expression without losing one iota of essential truth. While he approaches the subject with reverence and lays off his shoes as becomes one who treads upon holy ground, yet he never feels called upon to lie for God in defense of any dogma, however venerable by age or respectable by its associations, nor does he create a suspicion of pious fraud by indulging in the language of cant. As a religious teacher he reaches all classes: the young and the old those who think and those who feel. Examine BitterSweet, after it has been in a public library a few weeks, and you will find its pages disfigured by the soiled fingers of toil, and, on the margin of its leaves, opposite the choicest passages, you will se the pencilled comments ot the critical and discriminating.
A man ol public affairs, successful in business enterprises and yet a poet ot a high order!
His poetry is the "blossom and fragrance" of American thought and passion. He admits in it nothing whimsical nor fantastic. It is sometimes sad but always sweet and beautiful fraught with deep religious conviction, clothed in chaste, melodious language that at once captivates the fancy while the portals of mind and heart, responding to the magical touch, are thrown wide open to admit the message it brings.
He is in perfect unison with his time and country. He reaches out in the same direction that the good and great of his contemporaries stretch their hands but his long arm reaches a little further.
Mere talent as displayed in fine writing does mot succeed in the' happiest, highest sense.
Behind the thought that we are asked to accept we must feel that there is a man. And we like to stand fare to lace with him, behold his form, look into his eyes, listen to the sound of his voice. These things give to oratory a power that the written word knows not of.
Who has heard Dr. Holland diliver, with his manly eloquence, his lecture on "Self Help," "The National Heart," "Art and Life," that have not received an impulse that has ever since ^been a motive power in his life. "When he speaks, what elocution flows!
Soft as the fleeces of decending snows, The copious accents fall with easy art Melting they fall and sink into the heart."
V~i'"v.
1
While his patriotism and independence have constrained him to criticis the errors of his party, yet his tact and genius have enabled him to correct the error without estranging him from its best leaders and adherents.
Not only has the country passed through a great civil war since Dr. Holland entered upon his career as a public man, but, during the same period, society has iieen stirred to its depths by great religious and social questions, filled with profound interest and fraught with the deepest consequence. The reaction against the undue austerity of the Puritans had reached its climax the church was divided against itself, each division hurling its anathemas against every other, producing a discord like •'harsh bells, jangling and out of tune" many forms ol faith, many tradition inherited from the fathers were weighed in the scales by fierce criticism and found wanting an impatience of moral restraint, induced by some of the conditions of American life was everywhere prevalent society was casting loose from all the old land-marks of religion and being hurled into the vortex ot infidelity.
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What a singular destiny is his! To be regarded in his own age as a classic! To receive from his contemporaries that homage which men of genius have in general received only from posterity.
Fifty-nine years old to-day! Why he has hardly reached his prime yet, nevertheless his works have a larger sale than those of any other author in America. His opinions are quoted in the lecture room of the college, in the pulpit and the press his name on the lips of every one and a house-bold word in all the land.
Such a man as Dr. Holland is a vitalized medium, through which God communicates his truth to the race. A perfected instrument upon which the Almighty Artist plays the harmonies of heaven. Now there breathes, soft and low, the]dulcet strains of love, and men, engaged in the fierce, ambitious race for wealth and fame, pause to listen, with bated breath, while ibeir sordid hearts grow tender and yield to the spell now martial music issues forth, and men, fired with patriotic fervor, pot on ^their armor aud, in the name of the God ot battles, go forth to fight and die for country now a diviner strain holds the heart spell-bound and weary and heavy laden souls, oppressed with care and tempest-tossed with doubt see the rough places becomc smooth, the "bitter made sweet.
MBS. LYDIA PINKHAM. OF LYNN, MASS.
DUOOTBBKH OF
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For all Female Complaint
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are what the disease or all' tera. Dont wait aatU you al only feel bad or miaambl*,! It nay save yo«r Ufe.lt has1
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4
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KESI9
Dr S.Silsbso's External Pile Hemedy
Gives tmant relief and is an infallible
CURE FOR ALL KINDS OF PILES*
aoirt ny OmgjnBttCTerjrwhere. Price, $1.00prr tioa orep'iitlby mall Samples sent Jrte to l'hvslclans »nd all sufferers. Dy P. NcnutncnterA Co., lfox 894L Hew YtrkClty Bolemaouraatoreraof "AnalMfF
ItSTHMtl
Permanently
Dr.Stinson'sAsthmaRemedyl Is nneqnaled as a positive I Alterative and Cure fori Asthma aaiDynepria, and all their attendant evil
CURED
evils. It does not merely
afford temporary relief, bat is a permanent cars. Mrs. B. F.
Lee,
of Belmore,
a,
OUQh
night without kesp it, send for
says of it: •Jam
lurprUed at the tpeedv effect* of your remedy. It it the ftnt medicine in At yeari that hat tooemed my cough and made expectoration eat]/. now tleep oJZ
.. If year druggist doss not Jse and testimonials to H.P.K.PWK
Brsadwsy, Mew Tm
1 1
No. 12828. State of Indiana, County of Vigo in the Vigo Circuit Court, September term 1881. Isabelle Fuller, VH James H. Fuller in divorce.
Re it known that on the 28th duv of Hep teiuher, 1881, It was ordcrea by the Courtthat the Clerk noilfy by pnblication -aid James H. fuller as non-residant of the pehdency of this action against hlin.
Said defendant is therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against him and tnat the same will stand for trial at the November terra of said Court In ttie year of 1881. MBBHILLN. SMITH, Clerk. fl C. Royse, ft'ty. for plaintiff.
ft
OlUll* and AND ALL OMIASM to Halsrisl rsUsslsfsftt* A W.1BBASTBD CUB1.
ftrtotb il.OO- Mim-»
QTARTLINC OoiSCOVERY!
LOtT MANHOOD RESTORCD. A Tictim tf youthful fasprndencs caosinff Premature Decay, Nsrvoos Debility, Lost Man* bood, etc, baring tried in vain every known remedy.ha* discovered a simple self cure,which he will send FREE to bis fellow-sufferer*, dr*« .T. if. ItcEVES. 43 Chatham St. N. X.
Manhood Restored
A victim to early imprudence, causing, nervous debility, premature ecay, etc. having tried in vain every known remedyhas discovered a simple means of self curet which he will senu FREE to his fellow-saf* ferere. Address J. H.P.EEVE8.43 Chatham treet. New York.
tfc« permanent local agency for the Mk of our
to*! ooouerrear. Partlcnlirifitc. CO.. P. a Box M05, 0T Loca, Ma.
SISsS!
