1171 lines
56 KiB
Plaintext
1171 lines
56 KiB
Plaintext
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18 page printout
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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Contents of this file page
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GEORGE JACOB HOLYOAKE. 1
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A TRIBUTE TO HORACE SEAVER. 3
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A TRIBUTE TO RICHARD H. WHITING. 8
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A TRIBUTE TO ELIZUR WRIGHT. 9
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LOTOS CLUB DINNER IN HONOR OF ANTON SEIDL. 12
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THE TRUTH OF HISTORY. 16
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**** ****
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
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**** ****
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GEORGE JACOB HOLYOAKE.
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TWO articles have recently appeared attacking the motives of
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George Jacob Holyoake. He is spoken of as a man governed by a
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desire to please the rich and powerful, as one afraid of public
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opinion and who in the perilous hour denies or conceals his
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convictions.
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In these attacks there is not one word of truth. They are
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based upon mistakes and misconceptions.
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There is not in this world a nobler, braver man. In England he
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has done more for the great cause of intellectual liberty than any
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other man of this generation. He has done more for the poor, for
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the children of toil, for the homeless and wretched than any other
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living man. He has attacked all abuses, all tyranny and all forms
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of hypocrisy. His weapons have been reason, logic, facts, kindness,
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and above all, example. He has lived his creed. He has won the
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admiration and respect of his bitterest antagonists. He has the
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simplicity of childhood, the enthusiasm of youth and the wisdom of
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age. He is not abusive, but he is clear and conclusive. He is
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intense without violence -- firm without anger. He has the strength
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of perfect kindness. He does not hate -- he pities. He does not
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attack men and women, but dogmas and creeds. And he does not attack
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them to get the better of people, but to enable people to get the
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better of them. He gives the light he has. He shares his
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intellectual wealth with the orthodox poor. He assists without
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insulting, guides without arrogance, and enlightens without
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outrage. Besides, he is eminent for the exercise of plain common
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sense. He knows that there are wrongs besides those born of
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superstition -- that people are not necessarily happy because they
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have renounced the Thirty-nine Articles -- and that the priest is
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not the only enemy of mankind. He has for forty years been
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preaching and practicing industry, economy, self-reliance, and
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kindness. He has done all within his power to give the workingman
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a better home, better food, better wages, and better opportunities
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for the education of his children. He has demonstrated the success
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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GEORGE JACOB HOLYOAKE.
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of cooperation -- of intelligent combination for the common good.
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As a rule, his methods have been perfectly legal. In some instances
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he has knowingly violated the law, and did so with the intention to
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take the consequences. He would neither ask nor accept a pardon,
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because to receive a pardon carries with it the implied promise to
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keep the law, and an admission that you were in the wrong. He would
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not agree to desist from doing what he believed ought to be done,
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neither would he stain his past to brighten his future, nor
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imprison his soul to free his body. He has that happy mingling of
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gentleness and firmness found only in the highest type of moral
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heroes. He is an absolutely just man, and will never do an act that
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he would condemn in another. He admits that the most bigoted
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churchman has a perfect right to express his opinions not only, but
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that he must be met with argument couched in kind and candid terms.
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Mr. Holyoake is not only the enemy of a theological hierarchy, but
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he is also opposed to mental mobs. He will not use the bludgeon of
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epithet.
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Perfect fairness is regarded by many as weakness. Some people
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have altogether more confidence in their beliefs than in their own
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arguments. They resort to assertion. If what they assert be denied,
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the "debate" becomes a question of veracity. On both sides of most
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questions there are plenty of persons who imagine that logic dwells
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only in adjectives, and that to speak kindly of an opponent is a
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virtual surrender.
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Mr. Holyoake attacks the church because it has been, is, and
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ever will be the enemy of mental freedom, but he does not wish to
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deprive the church even of its freedom to express its opinion
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against freedom. He is true to his own creed, knowing that when we
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have freedom we can take care of all its enemies.
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In one of the articles to which I have referred it is charged
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that Mr. Holyoake refused to sign a petition for the pardon of
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persons convicted of blasphemy. If this is true, he undoubtedly had
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a reason satisfactory to himself. You will find that his action, or
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his refusal to act, rests upon a principle that he would not
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violate in his own behalf.
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Why should we suspect the motives of this man who has given
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his life for the good of others? I know of no one who is his mental
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or moral superior. He is the most disinterested of men. His name is
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a synonym of candor. He is a natural logician -- an intellectual
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marksman. Like an unerring arrow his thought flies to the heart and
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center. He is governed by principle, and makes no exception in his
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own favor. He is intellectually honest. He shows you the cracks and
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flaws in his own wares. He calls attention to the open joints and
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to the weakest links. He does not want a victory for himself, but
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for truth. He wishes to expose and oppose, not men, but error. He
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is blessed with that cloudless mental vision that appearances
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cannot deceive, that interest cannot darken, and that even
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ingratitude cannot blur. Friends cannot induce and enemies cannot
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drive this man to do an act that his heart and brain would not
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applaud. That such a character was formed without the aid of the
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church, without the hope of harp or fear of flame, is a
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demonstration against the necessity of superstition.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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GEORGE JACOB HOLYOAKE.
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Whoever is opposed to mental bondage, to the shackles wrought
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by cruelty and worn by fear, should be the friend of this heroic
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and unselfish man.
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I know something of his life -- something of what he has
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suffered -- of what he has accomplished for his fellow-men. He has
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been maligned, imprisoned and impoverished. "He bore the heat and
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burden of the unregarded day" and "remembered the misery of the
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many." For years his only recompense was ingratitude. At last he
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was understood. He was recognized as an earnest, honest, gifted,
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generous, sterling man, loving his country, sympathizing with the
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poor, honoring the useful, and holding in supreme abhorrence
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tyranny and falsehood in all their forms. The idea that this man
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could for a moment be controlled by any selfish motive by the hope
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of preferment, by the fear of losing a supposed annuity, is simply
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absurd. The authors of these attacks are not acquainted with Mr.
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Holyoake. Whoever dislikes him does not know him.
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Read his "Trial of Theism" -- his history of "Cooperation in
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England" -- if you wish to know his heart -- to discover the
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motives of his life -- the depth and tenderness of his sympathy --
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the nobleness of his nature -- the subtlety of his thought -- the
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beauty of his spirit -- the force and volume of his brain -- the
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extent of his information -- his candor, his kindness, his genius,
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and the perfect integrity of his stainless soul.
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There is no man for whom I have greater respect, greater
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reverence, greater love, than George Jacob Holyoake. --
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August 8. 1888.
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**** ****
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A TRIBUTE TO HORACE SEAVER.
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At Paine Hall, Boston, August 25, 1889.
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HORACE SEAVER was a pioneer, a torch-bearer, a toiler in that
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great field we call the world -- a worker for his fellow-men. At
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the end of his task he has fallen asleep, and we are met to tell
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the story of his long and useful life -- to pay our tribute to his
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work and worth.
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He was one who saw the dawn while others lived in night. He
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kept his face toward the "purpling east and watched the coming of
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the blessed day.
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He always sought for light. His object was to know -- to find
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a reason for his faith -- a fact on which to build.
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In superstition's sands he sought the gems of truth; in
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superstition's night he looked for stars.
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Born in New England -- reared amidst the cruel superstitions
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of his age and time, he had the manhood and the courage to
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investigate, and he had the goodness and the courage to tell his
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honest thoughts.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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A TRIBUTE TO HORACE SEAVER.
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He was always kind, and sought to win the confidence of men by
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sympathy and love. There was no taint or touch of malice in his
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blood. To him his fellows did not seem depraved -- they were not
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wholly bad -- there was within the heart of each the seeds of good.
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He knew that back of every thought and act were forces
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uncontrolled. He wisely said: "Circumstances furnish the seeds of
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good and evil, and man is but the soil in which they grow." He
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fought the creed, and loved the man. He pitied those who feared and
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shuddered at the thought of death -- who dwelt in darkness and in
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dread.
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The religion of his day filled his heart with horror.
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He was kind, compassionate, and tender, and could not fall
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upon his knees before a cruel and revengeful God -- he could not
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bow to one who slew with famine, sword and fire -- to one pitiless
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as pestilence, relentless as the lightning stroke. Jehovah had no
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attribute that he could love.
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He attacked the creed of New England -- a creed that had
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within it the ferocity of Knox, the malice of Calvin, the cruelty
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of Jonathan Edwards -- a religion that had a monster for a God --
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a religion whose dogmas would have shocked cannibals feasting upon
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babes.
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Horace Seaver followed the light of his brain -- the impulse
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of his heart. He was attacked, but he answered the insulter with a
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smile; and even he who coined malignant lies was treated as a
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friend misled. He did not ask God to forgive his enemies -- he
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forgave them himself. He was sincere. Sincerity is the true and
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perfect mirror of the mind. It reflects the honest thought. It is
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the foundation of character, and without it there is no moral
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grandeur.
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Sacred are the lips from which has issued only truth. Over all
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wealth, above all station, above the noble, the robed and crowned,
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rises the sincere man. Happy is the man who neither paints nor
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patches, veils nor veneers. Blessed is he who wears no mask.
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The man who lies before us wrapped in perfect peace, practiced
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no art to hide or half conceal his thought. He did not write or
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speak the double words that might be useful in retreat. He gave a
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truthful transcript of his mind, and sought to make his meaning
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clear as light.
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To use his own words, he had "the courage which impels a man
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to do his duty, to hold fast his integrity, to maintain a
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conscience void of offence, at every hazard and at every sacrifice,
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in defiance of the world."
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He lived to his ideal. He sought the approbation of himself.
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He did not build his character upon the opinions of others, and it
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was out of the very depths of his nature that he asked this
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profound question:
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"What is there in other men that makes us desire their
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approbation, and fear their censure more than our own?"
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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A TRIBUTE TO HORACE SEAVER.
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Horace Seaver was a good and loyal citizen of the mental
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republic -- a believer in intellectual hospitality, one who knew
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that bigotry is born of ignorance and fear -- the provincialism of
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the brain. He did not belong to the tribe, or to the nation, but to
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the human race. His sympathy was wide as want, and, like the sky,
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bent above the suffering world.
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This man had that superb thing called moral courage -- courage
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in its highest form. He knew that his thoughts were not the
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thoughts of others -- that he was with the few, and that where one
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would take his side, thousands would be his eager foes. He knew
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that wealth would scorn and cultured ignorance deride, and that
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believers in the creeds, buttressed by law and custom, would hurl
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the missiles of revenge and hate. He knew that lies, like snakes,
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would fill the pathway of his life -- and yet he told his honest
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thought -- told it without hatred and without contempt -- told it
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as it really was. And so, through all his days, his heart was sound
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and stainless to the core.
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When he enlisted in the army whose banner is light, the honest
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investigator was looked upon as lost and cursed, and even Christian
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criminals held him in contempt. The believing embezzler, the
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orthodox wife-beater, even the murderer, lifted his bloody hands
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and thanked God that on his soul there was no stain of unbelief.
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In nearly every State of our Republic, the man who denied the
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absurdities and impossibilities lying at the foundation of what is
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called orthodox religion, was denied his civil rights. He was not
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canopied by the aegis of the law. He stood beyond the reach of
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sympathy. He was not allowed to testify against the invader of his
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home, the seeker for his life -- his lips were closed. He was
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declared dishonorable, because he was honest. His unbelief made him
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a social leper, a pariah, an outcast. He was the victim of
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religious hate and scorn. Arrayed against him were all the
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prejudices and all the forces and hypocrisies of society. All
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mistakes and lies were his enemies. Even the Theist was denounced
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as a disturber of the peace, although he told his thoughts in kind
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and candid words. He was called a blasphemer, because he sought to
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rescue the reputation of his God from the slanders of orthodox
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priests.
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Such was the bigotry of the time, that natural love was lost.
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The unbelieving son was hated by his pious sire, and even the
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mother's heart was by her creed turned into stone.
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Horace Seaver pursued his way. He worked and wrought as best
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he could, in solitude and want. He knew the day would come. He
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lived to be rewarded for his toil -- to see most of the laws
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repealed that had made outcasts of the noblest, the wisest, and the
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best. He lived to see the foremost preachers of the world attack
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the sacred creeds. He lived to see the sciences released from
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superstition's clutch. He lived to see the orthodox theologian take
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his place with the professor of the black art, the fortune-teller,
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and the astrologer. He lived to see the greatest of the world
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accept his thought -- to see the theologian displaced by the true
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priests of Nature -- by Humboldt and Darwin, by Huxley and Haeckel.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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5
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A TRIBUTE TO HORACE SEAVER.
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Within the narrow compass of his life the world was changed.
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The railway, the steamship, and the telegraph made all nations
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neighbors. Countless inventions have made the luxuries of the past
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the necessities of to-day. Life has been enriched, and man
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ennobled. The geologist has read the records of frost and flame, of
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wind and wave -- the astronomer has told the story of the stars --
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the biologist has sought the germ of life, and in every department
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of knowledge the torch of science sheds its sacred light.
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The ancient creeds have grown absurd. The miracles are small
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and mean. The inspired book is filled with fables told to please a
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childish world, and the dogma of eternal pain now shocks the heart
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and brain.
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He lived to see a monument unveiled to Bruno in the city of
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Rome -- to Giordano Bruno -- that great man who two hundred and
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eighty-nine years ago suffered death for having proclaimed the
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truths that since have filled the world with joy. He lived to see
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the victim of the church a victor -- lived to see his memory
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honored by a nation freed from papal chains.
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He worked knowing what the end must be -- expecting little
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while he lived -- but knowing that every fact in the wide universe
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was on his side. He knew that truth can wait, and so he worked
|
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patient as eternity.
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He had the brain of a philosopher and the heart of a child.
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Horace Seaver was a man of common sense.
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By that I mean, one who knows the law of average. He denied
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the Bible, not on account of what has been discovered in astronomy,
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or the length of time it took to form the delta of the Nile -- but
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he compared the things he found with what he knew.
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He knew that antiquity added nothing to probability -- that
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lapse of time can never take the place of cause, and that the dust
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can never gather thick enough upon mistakes to make them equal with
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the truth.
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He knew that the old, by no possibility, could have been more
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wonderful than the new, and that the present is a perpetual torch
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by which we know the past.
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|||
|
|
|||
|
To him all miracles were mistakes, whose parents were cunning
|
|||
|
and credulity. He knew that miracles were not, because they are
|
|||
|
not.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He believed in the sublime, unbroken, and eternal march of
|
|||
|
causes and effects -- denying the chaos of chance, and the caprice
|
|||
|
of power.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He tested the past by the now, and judged of all the men and
|
|||
|
races of the world by those he knew.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He believed in the religion of free-thought and good deed --
|
|||
|
of character, of sincerity, of honest endeavor, of cheerful help --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
6
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A TRIBUTE TO HORACE SEAVER.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and above all, in the religion of love and liberty -- in a religion
|
|||
|
for every day -- for the world in which we live -- for the present
|
|||
|
-- the religion of roof and raiment, of food, of intelligence, of
|
|||
|
intellectual hospitality -- the religion that gives health and
|
|||
|
happiness, freedom and contentment -- in the religion of work, and
|
|||
|
in the ceremonies of honest labor.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He lived for this world; if there be another, he will live for
|
|||
|
that.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He did what he could for the destruction of fear -- the
|
|||
|
destruction of the imaginary monster who rewards the few in heaven
|
|||
|
-- the monster who tortures the many in perdition.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He was a friend of all the world, and sought to civilize the
|
|||
|
human race.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For more than fifty years he labored to free the bodies and
|
|||
|
the souls of men -- and many thousands have read his words with
|
|||
|
joy. He sought the suffering and oppressed. He sat by those in pain
|
|||
|
-- and his helping hand was laid in pity on the brow of death.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He asked only to be treated as he treated others. He asked for
|
|||
|
only what he earned, and had the manhood cheerfully to accept the
|
|||
|
consequences of his actions. He expected no reward for the goodness
|
|||
|
of another.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But he has lived his life. We should shed no tears except the
|
|||
|
tears of gratitude. We should rejoice that he lived so long.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In Nature's course, his time had come. The four seasons were
|
|||
|
complete in him. The Spring could never come again. The measure of
|
|||
|
his years was full.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the day is done -- when the work of a life is finished --
|
|||
|
when the gold of evening meets the dusk of night, beneath the
|
|||
|
silent stars the tired laborer should fall asleep. To outlive
|
|||
|
usefulness is a double death. "Let me not live after my flame lacks
|
|||
|
oil, to be the snuff of younger spirits."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the old oak is visited in vain by Spring -- when light
|
|||
|
and rain no longer thrill -- it is not well to stand leafless,
|
|||
|
desolate, and alone. It is better far to fall where Nature softly
|
|||
|
covers all with woven moss and creeping vine.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How little, after all, we know of what is ill or well! How
|
|||
|
little of this wondrous stream of cataracts and pools -- this
|
|||
|
stream of life, that rises in a world unknown, and flows to that
|
|||
|
mysterious sea whose shore the foot of one who comes has never
|
|||
|
pressed! How little of this life we know -- this struggling ray of
|
|||
|
light 'twixt gloom and gloom -- this strip of land by verdure clad,
|
|||
|
between the unknown wastes -- this throbbing moment filled with
|
|||
|
love and pain -- this dream that lies between the shadowy shores of
|
|||
|
sleep and death!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We stand upon this verge of crumbling time. We love, we hope,
|
|||
|
we disappear. Again we mingle with the dust, and the "knot
|
|||
|
intrinsicate" forever falls apart.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
7
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A TRIBUTE TO HORACE SEAVER.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But this we know: A noble life enriches all the world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Horace Seaver lived for others. He accepted toil and hope
|
|||
|
deferred. Poverty was his portion. Like Socrates, he did not seek
|
|||
|
to adorn his body, but rather his soul with the jewels of charity,
|
|||
|
modesty, courage, and above all, with a love of liberty.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Farewell, O brave and modest man!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Your lips, between which truths burst into blossom, are
|
|||
|
forever closed. Your loving heart has ceased to beat. Your busy
|
|||
|
brain is still, and from your hand has dropped the sacred torch.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Your noble, self-denying life has honored us, and we will
|
|||
|
honor you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You were my friend, and I was yours. Above your silent clay I
|
|||
|
pay this tribute to your worth.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Farewell!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A TRIBUTE TO RICHARD H. WHITING.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
New York, May 21, 1888.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MY FRIENDS: The river of another life has reached the sea.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Again we are in the presence of that eternal peace that we
|
|||
|
call death.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My life has been rich in friends, but I never had a better or
|
|||
|
a truer one than he who lies in silence here. He was as steadfast,
|
|||
|
as faithful, as the stars.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Richard H. Whiting was an absolutely honest man. His word was
|
|||
|
gold -- his promise was fulfillment -- and there never has been,
|
|||
|
there never will be, on this poor earth, any thing nobler than an
|
|||
|
honest, loving soul.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This man was as reliable as the attraction of gravitation --
|
|||
|
he knew no shadow of turning. He was as generous as autumn, as
|
|||
|
hospitable as summer, and as tender as a perfect day in June. He
|
|||
|
forgot only himself, and asked favors only for others. He begged
|
|||
|
for the opportunity to do good -- to stand by a friend, to support
|
|||
|
a cause, to defend what he believed to be right.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He was a lover of nature -- of the woods, the fields and
|
|||
|
flowers. He was a home-builder. He believed in the family and the
|
|||
|
fireside -- in the sacredness of the hearth.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He was a believer in the religion of deed, and his creed was
|
|||
|
to do good. No man has ever slept in death who nearer lived his
|
|||
|
creed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I have known him for many years, and have yet to hear a word
|
|||
|
spoken of him except in praise.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
8
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A TRIBUTE TO RICHARD H. WHITING.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
His life was full of honor, of kindness and of helpful deeds.
|
|||
|
Besides all, his soul was free. He feared nothing, except to do
|
|||
|
wrong. He was a believer in the gospel of help and hope. He knew
|
|||
|
how much better, how much more sacred, a kind act is than any
|
|||
|
theory the brain has wrought.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The good are the noble. His life filled the lives of others
|
|||
|
with sunshine. He has left a legacy of glory to his children. They
|
|||
|
can truthfully say that within their veins is right royal blood --
|
|||
|
the blood of an honest, generous man, of a steadfast friend, of one
|
|||
|
who was true to the very gates of death.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If there be another world, another life beyond the shore of
|
|||
|
this, -- if the great and good who died upon this orb are there, --
|
|||
|
then the noblest and the best, with eager hands, have welcomed him
|
|||
|
-- the equal in honor, in generosity, of any one that ever passed
|
|||
|
beyond the veil.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To me this world is growing poor. New friends can never fill
|
|||
|
the places of the old.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Farewell! If this is the end, then you have left to us the
|
|||
|
sacred memory of a noble life. If this is not the end, there is no
|
|||
|
world in which you, my friend, will not be loved and welcomed.
|
|||
|
Farewell!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A TRIBUTE TO ELIZUR WRIGHT.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
New York. December 19, 1885.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ANOTHER hero has fallen asleep -- one who enriched the world
|
|||
|
with an honest life.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Elizur Wright was one of the Titans who attacked the monsters,
|
|||
|
the Gods, of his time -- one of the few whose confidence in liberty
|
|||
|
was never shaken, and who, with undimmed eyes, saw the atrocities
|
|||
|
and barbarisms of his day and the glories of the future.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When New York was degraded enough to mob Arthur Tappan, the
|
|||
|
noblest of her citizens; when Boston was sufficiently infamous to
|
|||
|
howl and hoot at Harriet Martineau, the grandest Englishwoman that
|
|||
|
ever touched our soil; when the North was dominated by theology and
|
|||
|
trade, by piety and piracy; when we received our morals from
|
|||
|
merchants, and made merchandise of our morals, Elizur Wright held
|
|||
|
principle above profit, and preserved his manhood at the peril of
|
|||
|
his life.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the rich, the cultured, and the respectable, -- when
|
|||
|
church members and ministers, who had been "called" to preach the
|
|||
|
"glad tidings," and when statesmen like Webster joined with
|
|||
|
bloodhounds, and in the name of God hunted men and mothers, this
|
|||
|
man rescued the fugitives and gave asylum to the oppressed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
During those infamous years -- years of cruelty and national
|
|||
|
degradation -- years of hypocrisy and greed and meanness beneath
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
9
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A TRIBUTE TO ELIZUR WRIGHT.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the reach of any English word, Elizur Wright became acquainted with
|
|||
|
the orthodox church. He found that a majority of Christians were
|
|||
|
willing to enslave men and women for whom they said that Christ had
|
|||
|
died -- that they would steal the babe of a Christian mother,
|
|||
|
although they believed that the mother would be their equal in
|
|||
|
heaven forever. He found that those who loved their enemies would
|
|||
|
enslave their friends -- that people who when smitten on one cheek
|
|||
|
turned the other, were ready, willing and anxious to mob and murder
|
|||
|
those who simply said: "The laborer is worthy of his hire."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In those days the church was in favor of slavery, not only of
|
|||
|
the body but of the mind. According to the creeds, God himself was
|
|||
|
an infinite master and all his children serfs. He ruled with whip
|
|||
|
and chain, with pestilence and fire. Devils were his bloodhounds,
|
|||
|
and hell his place of eternal torture.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Elizur Wright said to himself, why should we take chains from
|
|||
|
bodies and enslave minds -- why fight to free the cage and leave
|
|||
|
the bird a prisoner? He became an enemy of orthodox religion --
|
|||
|
that is to say, a friend of intellectual liberty.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He lived to see the destruction of legalized larceny; to read
|
|||
|
the Proclamation of Emancipation; to see a country without a slave,
|
|||
|
a flag without a stain. He lived long enough to reap the reward for
|
|||
|
having been an honest man; long enough for his "disgrace" to become
|
|||
|
a crown of glory; long enough to see his views adopted and his
|
|||
|
course applauded by the civilized world; long enough for the hated
|
|||
|
word "abolitionist" to become a title of nobility, a certificate of
|
|||
|
manhood, courage and true patriotism.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Only a few years ago, the heretic was regarded as an enemy of
|
|||
|
the human race. The man who denied the inspiration of the Jewish
|
|||
|
Scriptures was looked upon as a moral leper, and the Atheist as the
|
|||
|
worst of criminals. Even in that day, Elizur Wright was grand
|
|||
|
enough to speak his honest thought, to deny the inspiration of the
|
|||
|
Bible; brave enough to defy the God of the orthodox church -- the
|
|||
|
Jehovah of the Old Testament, the Eternal jailer, the Everlasting
|
|||
|
Inquisitor.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He contended that a good God would not have upheld slavery and
|
|||
|
polygamy; that a loving Father would not assist some of his
|
|||
|
children to enslave or exterminate their brethren; that an infinite
|
|||
|
being would not be unjust, irritable, jealous, revengeful,
|
|||
|
ignorant, and cruel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And it was his great good fortune to live long enough to find
|
|||
|
the intellectual world on his side; long enough to know that the
|
|||
|
greatest naturalists, philosophers, and scientists agreed with him;
|
|||
|
long enough to see certain words change places, so that "heretic"
|
|||
|
was honorable and "orthodox " an epithet. To-day, the heretic is
|
|||
|
known to be a man of principle and courage -- one blest with enough
|
|||
|
mental independence to tell his thought. To-day, the thoroughly
|
|||
|
orthodox means the thoroughly stupid.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Only a few years ago it was taken for granted that an
|
|||
|
"unbeliever" could not be a moral man; that one who disputed the
|
|||
|
inspiration of the legends of Judea could not be sympathetic and
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
10
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A TRIBUTE TO ELIZUR WRIGHT.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
humane, and could not really love his fellow-men. Had we no other
|
|||
|
evidence upon this subject, the noble life of Elizur Wright would
|
|||
|
demonstrate the utter baselessness of these views.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
His life was spent in doing good -- in attacking the hurtful,
|
|||
|
in defending what he believed to be the truth. Generous beyond his
|
|||
|
means; helping others to help themselves; always hopeful, busy,
|
|||
|
just, cheerful; filled with the spirit of reform; a model citizen
|
|||
|
-- always thinking of the public good, devising ways and means to
|
|||
|
save something for posterity, feeling that what he had he held in
|
|||
|
trust; loving Nature, familiar with the poetic side of things,
|
|||
|
touched to enthusiasm by the beautiful thought, the brave word, and
|
|||
|
the generous deed; friendly in manner, candid and kind in speech,
|
|||
|
modest but persistent; enjoying leisure as only the industrious
|
|||
|
can; loving and gentle in his family; hospitable, -- judging men
|
|||
|
and women regardless of wealth, position or public clamor;
|
|||
|
physically fearless, intellectually honest, thoroughly informed;
|
|||
|
unselfish, sincere, and reliable as the attraction of gravitation.
|
|||
|
Such was Elizur Wright, -- one of the staunchest soldiers that ever
|
|||
|
faced and braved for freedom's sake the wrath and scorn and lies of
|
|||
|
place and power.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A few days ago I met this genuine man. His interest in all
|
|||
|
human things was just as deep and keen, his hatred of oppression,
|
|||
|
his love of freedom, just as intense, just as fervid, as on the day
|
|||
|
I met him first. True, his body was old, but his mind was young,
|
|||
|
and his heart, like a spring in the desert, bubbled over as
|
|||
|
joyously as though it had the secret of eternal youth. But it has
|
|||
|
ceased to beat, and the mysterious veil that hangs where sight and
|
|||
|
blindness are the same -- the veil that revelation has not drawn
|
|||
|
aside -- that science cannot lift, has fallen once again between
|
|||
|
the living and the dead.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And yet we hope and dream. May be the longing for another life
|
|||
|
is but the prophecy forever warm from Nature's lips, that love,
|
|||
|
disguised as death, alone fulfills. We cannot tell. And yet perhaps
|
|||
|
this Hope is but an antic, following the fortunes of an uncrowned
|
|||
|
king, beguiling grief with jest and satisfying loss with pictured
|
|||
|
gain. We do not know.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But from the Christian's cruel hell, and from his heaven more
|
|||
|
heartless still, the free and noble soul, if forced to choose,
|
|||
|
should loathing turn, and cling with rapture to the thought of
|
|||
|
endless sleep.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But this we know: good deeds are never childless. A noble life
|
|||
|
is never lost. A virtuous action does not die. Elizur Wright
|
|||
|
scattered with generous hand the priceless seeds, and we shall reap
|
|||
|
the golden grain. His words and acts are ours, and all he nobly did
|
|||
|
is living still.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Farewell, brave soul! Upon thy grave I lay this tribute of
|
|||
|
respect and love. When last our hands were joined, I said these
|
|||
|
parting words: "Long life!" And I repeat them now.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
END
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
11
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LOTOS CLUB DINNER IN HONOR OF ANTON SEIDL.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
New York, February 2, 1895.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MR. PRESIDENT, MR. ANTON SEIDL, AND GENTLEMEN: I was enjoying
|
|||
|
myself with music and song; why I should be troubled, why I should
|
|||
|
be called upon to trouble you, is a question I can hardly answer.
|
|||
|
Still, as the president has remarked, the American people like to
|
|||
|
hear speeches. Why, I don't know. It has always been a matter of
|
|||
|
amazement that anybody wanted to hear me. Talking is so universal;
|
|||
|
with few exceptions -- the deaf and dumb -- everybody seems to be
|
|||
|
in the business. Why they should be so anxious to hear a rival I
|
|||
|
never could understand. But, gentlemen, we are all pupils of
|
|||
|
nature; we are taught by the countless things that touch us on
|
|||
|
every side; by field and flower and star and cloud and river and
|
|||
|
sea, where the waves break into whitecaps, and by the prairie, and
|
|||
|
by the mountain that lifts its granite forehead to the sun; all
|
|||
|
things in nature touch us, educate us, sharpen us, cause the heart
|
|||
|
to bud, to burst, it may be, into blossom; to produce fruit. In
|
|||
|
common with the rest of the world I have been educated a little
|
|||
|
that way; by the things I have seen and by the things I have heard
|
|||
|
and by the people I have met. But there are a few things that stand
|
|||
|
out in my recollection as having touched me more deeply than
|
|||
|
others, a few men to whom I feel indebted for the little I know,
|
|||
|
and for the little I happen to be. Those men, those things, are
|
|||
|
forever present in my mind. But I want to tell you to-night that
|
|||
|
the first man that let up the curtain in my mind, that ever opened
|
|||
|
a blind, that ever allowed a little sunshine to straggle in, was
|
|||
|
Robert Burns. I went to get my shoes mended, and I had to go with
|
|||
|
them. And I had to wait till they were done. I was like the fellow
|
|||
|
standing by the stream naked washing his shirt. A lady and
|
|||
|
gentleman were riding by in a carriage, and upon seeing him the man
|
|||
|
indignantly shouted, "Why don't you put on another shirt when you
|
|||
|
are washing one? " The fellow said, "I suppose you think I've got
|
|||
|
a hundred shirts!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When I went into the shop of the old Scotch shoemaker he was
|
|||
|
reading a book, and when he took my shoes in hand I took his book,
|
|||
|
which was "Robert Burns." In a few days I had a copy; and, indeed,
|
|||
|
gentlemen, from that time if "Burns" had been destroyed I could
|
|||
|
have restored more than half of it. It was in my mind day and
|
|||
|
night. Burns you know is a little valley, not very wide, but full
|
|||
|
of sunshine; a little stream runs down making music over the rocks,
|
|||
|
and children play upon the banks; narrow roads overrun with vines,
|
|||
|
covered with blossoms, happy children, the hum of bees, and little
|
|||
|
birds pour out their hearts and enrich the air. That is Burns.
|
|||
|
Then, you must know that I was raised respectably. Certain books
|
|||
|
were not thought to be good for the young person; only such books
|
|||
|
as would start you in the narrow road for the New Jerusalem. But
|
|||
|
one night I stopped at a little hotel in Illinois, many years ago,
|
|||
|
when we were not quite civilized, when the footsteps of the red man
|
|||
|
were still in the prairies. While I was waiting for supper an old
|
|||
|
man was reading from a book, and among others who were listening
|
|||
|
was myself. I was filled with wonder. I had never heard anything
|
|||
|
like it. I was ashamed to ask him what he was reading; I supposed
|
|||
|
that an intelligent boy ought to know. So I waited, and when the
|
|||
|
little bell rang for supper I hang back and they went out. I picked
|
|||
|
up the book; it was Sam Johnson's edition of Shakespeare. The next
|
|||
|
day I bought a copy for four dollars. My God! more than the
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
12
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LOTOS CLUB DINNER IN HONOR OF ANTON SEIDL.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
national debt. You talk about the present straits of the Treasury
|
|||
|
I For days, for nights, for months, for years, I read those books,
|
|||
|
two volumes, and I commenced with the introduction. I haven't read
|
|||
|
that introduction for nearly fifty years, certainly forty-five, but
|
|||
|
I remember it still. Other writers are like a garden diligently
|
|||
|
planted and watered, but Shakespeare a forest where the oaks and
|
|||
|
elms toss their branches to the storm, where the pine towers, where
|
|||
|
the vine bursts into blossom at its foot. That book opened to me a
|
|||
|
new world, another nature. While Burns was the valley, here was a
|
|||
|
range of mountains with thousands of such valleys; while Burns was
|
|||
|
as sweet a star as ever rose into the horizon, here was a heaven
|
|||
|
filled with constellations. That book has been a source of
|
|||
|
perpetual joy to me from that day to this; and whenever I read
|
|||
|
Shakespeare -- if it ever happens that I fail to find some new
|
|||
|
beauty, some new presentation of some wonderful truth, or another
|
|||
|
word that bursts into blossom, I shall make up my mind that my
|
|||
|
mental faculties are failing, that it is not the fault of the book.
|
|||
|
Those, then, are two things that helped to educate me a little.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Afterward I saw a few paintings by Rembrandt, and all at once
|
|||
|
I was overwhelmed with the genius of the man that could convey so
|
|||
|
much thought in form and color. Then I saw a few landscapes by
|
|||
|
Corot, and I began to think I knew something about art. During all
|
|||
|
my life, of course, like other people, I had heard what they call
|
|||
|
music, and I had my favorite pieces, most of those favorite pieces
|
|||
|
being favorites on account of association; and nine-tenths of the
|
|||
|
music that is beautiful to the world is beautiful because of the
|
|||
|
association, not because the music is good, but because of
|
|||
|
association. We cannot write a very poetic thing about a pump or
|
|||
|
about water works; they are not old enough. We can write a poetic
|
|||
|
thing about a well and a sweep and an old moss-covered bucket, and
|
|||
|
you can write a poem about a spring, because a spring seems a gift
|
|||
|
of nature, something that cost no trouble and no work, something
|
|||
|
that will sing of nature under the quiet stars of June. So, it is
|
|||
|
poetic on account of association. The stage coach is more poetic
|
|||
|
than the car, but the time will come when cars will be poetic,
|
|||
|
because human feelings, love's remembrances, will twine around
|
|||
|
them, and consequently they will become beautiful. There are two
|
|||
|
pieces of music, "The Last Rose of Summer," and "Home Sweet Home,"
|
|||
|
with the music a little weak in the back; but association makes
|
|||
|
them both beautiful. So, in the "Marseillaise" is the French
|
|||
|
Revolution, that whirlwind and flame of war, of heroism the highest
|
|||
|
possible, of generosity, of self-denial, of cruelty, of all of
|
|||
|
which the human heart and brain are capable; so that music now
|
|||
|
sounds as though its notes were made of stars, and it is beautiful
|
|||
|
mostly by association.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now, I always felt that there must be some greater music
|
|||
|
somewhere, somehow. You know this little music that comes back with
|
|||
|
recurring emphasis every two inches or every three-and-a-half
|
|||
|
inches; I thought there ought to be music somewhere with a great
|
|||
|
sweep from horizon to horizon, and that could fill the great dome
|
|||
|
of sound with winged notes like the eagle; if there was not such
|
|||
|
music, somebody, sometime, would make it, and I was waiting for it.
|
|||
|
One day I heard it, and I said, "What music is that?" "Who wrote
|
|||
|
that?" I felt it everywhere. I was cold. I was almost hysterical.
|
|||
|
It answered to my brain, to my heart; not only to association, but
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
13
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LOTOS CLUB DINNER IN HONOR OF ANTON SEIDL.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
to all there was of hope and aspiration, all my future; and they
|
|||
|
said this is the music of Wagner. I never knew one note from
|
|||
|
another -- of course I would know it from a promissory note -- and
|
|||
|
was utterly and absolutely ignorant of music until I heard Wagner
|
|||
|
interpreted by the greatest leader, in my judgment, in the world --
|
|||
|
Anton Seidl. He not only understands Wagner in the brain, but he
|
|||
|
feels him in the heart, and there is in his blood the same kind of
|
|||
|
wild and splendid independence that was in the brain of Wagner. I
|
|||
|
want to say to-night, because there are so many heresies, Mr.
|
|||
|
President, creeping into this world, I want to say and say it with
|
|||
|
all my might, that Robert Burns was not Scotch. He was far wider
|
|||
|
than Scotland; he had in him the universal tide, and wherever it
|
|||
|
touches the shore of a human being it finds access. Not Scotch,
|
|||
|
gentlemen, but a man, a man! I can swear to it, or rather affirm,
|
|||
|
that shakespeare was not English, but another man, kindred of all,
|
|||
|
of all races and peoples, and who understood the universal brain
|
|||
|
and heart of the human race, and who had imagination enough to put
|
|||
|
himself in the place of all.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And so I want to say to-night, because I want to be
|
|||
|
consistent, Richard Wagner was not a German, and his music is not
|
|||
|
German; and why? Germany would not have it. Germany denied that it
|
|||
|
was music. The great German critics said it was nothing in the
|
|||
|
world but noise. The best interpreter of Wagner in the world is not
|
|||
|
German, and no man has to be German to understand Richard Wagner.
|
|||
|
In the heart of nearly every man is an AEolian harp, and when the
|
|||
|
breath of true genius touches that harp, every man that has one, or
|
|||
|
that knows what music is or has the depth and height of feeling
|
|||
|
necessary to appreciate it, appreciates Richard Wagner. To
|
|||
|
understand that music, to hear it as interpreted by this great
|
|||
|
leader, is an education. It develops the brain; it gives to the
|
|||
|
imagination wings; the little earth grows larger; the people grow
|
|||
|
important; and not only that, it civilizes the heart; and the man
|
|||
|
who understands that music can love better and with greater
|
|||
|
intensity than he ever did before. The man who understands and
|
|||
|
appreciates that music, becomes in the highest sense spiritual --
|
|||
|
and I don't mean by spiritual, worshiping some phantom, or dwelling
|
|||
|
upon what is going to happen to some of us -- I mean spiritual in
|
|||
|
the highest sense; when a perfume arises from the heart in
|
|||
|
gratitude, and when you feel that you know what there is of beauty,
|
|||
|
of sublimity, of heroism and honor and love in the human heart.
|
|||
|
This is what I mean by being spiritual. I don't mean denying
|
|||
|
yourself here and living on a crust with the expectation of eternal
|
|||
|
joy -- that is not what I mean. By spiritual I mean a man that has
|
|||
|
an ideal, a great ideal, and who is splendid enough to live to that
|
|||
|
ideal; that is what I mean by spiritual. And the man who has heard
|
|||
|
the music of Wagner, that music of love and death, the greatest
|
|||
|
music, in my judgment, that ever issued from the human brain, the
|
|||
|
man who has heard that and understands it has been civilized,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another man to whom I feel under obligation whose name I do
|
|||
|
not know -- I know Burns, Shakespeare, Rembrandt and Wagner, but
|
|||
|
there are some other fellows whose names I do not know -- is he who
|
|||
|
chiseled the Venus de Milo. This man helped to civilize the world;
|
|||
|
and there is nothing under the sun so pathetic as the perfect.
|
|||
|
Whoever creates the perfect has thought and labored and suffered;
|
|||
|
and no perfect thing has ever been done except through suffering
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
14
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LOTOS CLUB DINNER IN HONOR OF ANTON SEIDL.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and except through the highest and holiest thought, and among this
|
|||
|
class of men is Wagner. Let me tell you something more. You know I
|
|||
|
am a great believer. There is no man in the world who believes more
|
|||
|
in human nature than I do. No man believes more in the nobility and
|
|||
|
splendor of humanity than I do; no man feels more grateful than I
|
|||
|
to the self-denying, heroic, splendid souls who have made this
|
|||
|
world fit for ladies and gentlemen to live in. But I believe that
|
|||
|
the human mind has reached its top in three departments. I don't
|
|||
|
believe the human race -- no matter if it lives millions of years
|
|||
|
more upon this wheeling world -- I don't believe the human race
|
|||
|
will ever produce in the world anything greater, sublimer, than the
|
|||
|
marbles of the Greeks. I do not believe it. I believe they reach
|
|||
|
absolutely the perfection of form and the expression of force and
|
|||
|
passion in stone. The Greeks made marble as sensitive as flesh and
|
|||
|
as passionate as blood. I don't believe that any human being of any
|
|||
|
coming race -- no matter how many suns may rise and set, or how
|
|||
|
many religions may rise and fall, or how many languages be born and
|
|||
|
decay -- I don't believe any human being will ever excel the dramas
|
|||
|
of Shakespeare. Neither do I believe that the time will ever come
|
|||
|
when any man with such instruments of music as we now have, and
|
|||
|
having nothing but the common air that we now breathe, will ever
|
|||
|
produce greater pictures in sound, greater music, than Wagner.
|
|||
|
Never! Never! And I don't believe he will ever have a better
|
|||
|
interpreter than Anton Seidl. Seidl is a poet in sound, a sculptor
|
|||
|
in sound. He is what you might call an orchestral orator, and as
|
|||
|
such he expresses the deepest feelings, the highest aspirations and
|
|||
|
the intensest and truest love of which the brain and heart of man
|
|||
|
are capable.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now, I am glad, I am delighted, that the people here in this
|
|||
|
city and in various other cities of our great country are becoming
|
|||
|
civilized enough to appreciate these harmonies; I am glad they are
|
|||
|
civilized at last enough to know that the home of music is tone,
|
|||
|
not tune; that the home of music is in harmonies where you braid
|
|||
|
them like rainbows; I am glad they are great enough and civilized
|
|||
|
enough to appreciate the music of Wagner, the greatest music in
|
|||
|
this world. Wagner sustains the same relation to other composers
|
|||
|
that Shakespeare does to other dramatists, and any other dramatist
|
|||
|
compared with Shakespeare is like one tree compared with an
|
|||
|
immeasurable forest, or rather like one leaf compared with a
|
|||
|
forest; and all the other composers of the world are embraced in
|
|||
|
the music of Wagner. Nobody has written anything more tender than
|
|||
|
he, nobody anything sublimer than he. Whether it is the song of the
|
|||
|
deep, or the warble of the mated bird, nobody has excelled Wagner;
|
|||
|
he has expressed all that the human heart is capable of
|
|||
|
appreciating. And now, gentlemen, having troubled you long enough,
|
|||
|
and saying long live Anton Seidl, I bid you good-night.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
END
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
15
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE TRUTH OF HISTORY.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1887
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Thousands of Christians have asked: How was it possible for
|
|||
|
Christ and his apostles to deceive the people of Jerusalem? How
|
|||
|
came the miracles to be believed? Who had the impudence to say that
|
|||
|
lepers had been cleansed, and that the dead had been raised? How
|
|||
|
could such impostors have escaped exposure?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I ask: How did Mohammed deceive the people of Mecca? How has
|
|||
|
the Catholic Church imposed upon millions of people? Who can
|
|||
|
account for the success of falsehood?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Millions of people are directly interested in the false. They
|
|||
|
live by lying. To deceive is the business of their lives. Truth is
|
|||
|
a cripple; lies have wings. It is almost impossible to overtake and
|
|||
|
kill and bury a lie. If you do, some one will erect a monument over
|
|||
|
the grave, and the lie is born again as an epitaph. Let me give you
|
|||
|
a case in point.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A few days ago the Matlock Register, a paper published in
|
|||
|
England, printed the following:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CONVERSION OF THE ARCH ATHEIST.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Mr. Isaac Loveland, of Shoreham, desires us to insert the
|
|||
|
following: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
November 27, 1886.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Dear Mr. Loveland. -- A day or two since, I received
|
|||
|
from Mr. Hine the exhilarating intelligence that through his
|
|||
|
lectures on the 'Identity of the British Nation with Lost
|
|||
|
Israel,' in Canada and the United States, that Col. Bob
|
|||
|
Ingersoll, the arch Atheist, has been converted to
|
|||
|
Christianity, and has joined the Episcopal Church.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Praise the Lord! ! ! 5,000 of his followers have been
|
|||
|
won for Christ through Mr. Hine's grand mission work, the
|
|||
|
other side of the Atlantic. The Colonel's cousin, the Rev. Mr.
|
|||
|
Ingersoll, wrote to Mr. Hine soon after he began lecturing in
|
|||
|
America, informing him that his lectures had made a great
|
|||
|
impression on the Colonel and other Atheists. I noted it at
|
|||
|
the time in the Messenger. Bradlaugh will yet be converted;
|
|||
|
his brother has been, and has joined a British Israel Identity
|
|||
|
Association. This is progress, and shows what an energetic,
|
|||
|
determined man (like Mr. Hine), who is earnest in his faith,
|
|||
|
can do.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Very faithfully yours,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
H. HODSON RUGG."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How can we account for an article like that? Who made up this
|
|||
|
story? Who had the impudence to publish it?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
16
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CONVERSION OF THE ARCH ATHEIST.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As a matter of fact, I never saw Mr. Hine, never heard of him
|
|||
|
until this extract was received by me in the month of December. I
|
|||
|
never read a word about the "Identity of Lost Israel with the
|
|||
|
British Nation." It is a question in which I never had, and never
|
|||
|
expect to have, the slightest possible interest.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Nothing can be more preposterous than that the Englishman in
|
|||
|
whose veins can be found the blood of the Saxon, the Dine, the
|
|||
|
Norman, the Pict, the Scot and the Celt, is the descendant of
|
|||
|
"Abraham, Isaac and jacob." The English language does not bear the
|
|||
|
remotest resemblance to the Hebrew, and yet it is claimed by the
|
|||
|
Reverend Hodson Rugg that not only myself, but five thousand other
|
|||
|
Atheists, were converted by the Rev. Mr. Hine, because of his
|
|||
|
theory that Englishmen and Americans are simply Jews in disguise.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This letter, in my judgment, was published to be used by
|
|||
|
missionaries in China, Japan, India and Africa.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If stories like this can be circulated about a living man,
|
|||
|
what may we not expect concerning the dead who have opposed the
|
|||
|
church?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Countless falsehoods have been circulated about all the
|
|||
|
opponents of Superstition. Whoever attacks the popular falsehoods
|
|||
|
of his time will find that a lie defends itself by telling other
|
|||
|
lies. Nothing is so prolific, nothing can so multiply itself,
|
|||
|
nothing can lay and hatch as many eggs, as a good, healthy,
|
|||
|
religious lie.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And nothing is more wonderful than the credulity of the
|
|||
|
believers in the supernatural. They feel under a kind of obligation
|
|||
|
to believe everything in favor of their religion, or against any
|
|||
|
form of what they are pleased to call Infidelity."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The old falsehoods about Voltaire, Paine, Hume, Julian,
|
|||
|
Diderot and hundreds of others, grow green every spring. They are
|
|||
|
answered; they are demonstrated to be without the slightest
|
|||
|
foundation; but they rarely die. And when one does die there seems
|
|||
|
to be a kind of Caesarian operation, so that in each instance
|
|||
|
although the mother dies the child lives to undergo, if necessary,
|
|||
|
a like operation, leaving another child, and sometimes two.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are thousands and thousands of tongues ready to repeat
|
|||
|
what the owners know to be false, and these lies are a part of the
|
|||
|
stock in trade, the valuable assets, of superstition. No church can
|
|||
|
afford to throw its property away. To admit that these stories are
|
|||
|
false now, is to admit that the church has been busy lying for
|
|||
|
hundreds of years, and it is also to admit that the word of the
|
|||
|
church is not and cannot be taken as evidence of any fact.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A few years ago, I had a little controversy with the editor of
|
|||
|
the New York Observer. the Rev. Irenaeus Prime, (who is now
|
|||
|
supposed to be in heaven enjoying the bliss of seeing Infidels in
|
|||
|
hell), as to whether Thomas Paine recanted his religious opinions.
|
|||
|
I offered to deposit a thousand dollars for the benefit of a
|
|||
|
charity, if the reverend doctor would substantiate the charge that
|
|||
|
Paine recanted. I forced the New York Observer to admit that Paine
|
|||
|
did not recant, and compelled that paper to say that "Thomas Paine
|
|||
|
died a blaspheming Infidel."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
17
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CONVERSION OF THE ARCH ATHEIST.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A few months afterward an English paper was sent to me -- a
|
|||
|
religious paper -- and in that paper was a statement to the effect
|
|||
|
that the editor of the New York Observer had claimed that Paine
|
|||
|
recanted; that I had offered to give a thousand dollars to any
|
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charity that Mr. Prime might select, if he would establish the fact
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|
that Paine did recant; and that so overwhelming was the testimony
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brought forward by Mr. Prime, that I admitted that Paine did
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recant, and paid the thousand dollars.
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|
|
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|
This is another instance of what might be called the truth of
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|
history.
|
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|
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|
I wrote to the editor of that paper, telling the exact facts,
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|
and offering him advertising rates to publish the denial, and in
|
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|
addition, stated that if he would send me a copy of his paper with
|
|||
|
the denial, I would send him twenty-five dollars for his trouble.
|
|||
|
I received no reply, and the lie is in all probability still on its
|
|||
|
travels, going from Sunday school to Sunday school, from pulpit to
|
|||
|
pulpit, from hypocrite to savage, -- that is to say, from
|
|||
|
missionary to Hottentot -- without the slightest evidence of
|
|||
|
fatigue -- fresh and strong, -- and in its cheeks the roses and
|
|||
|
lilies of perfect health.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Some person, expecting to add another gem to his crown of
|
|||
|
glory, put in circulation the story that one of my daughters had
|
|||
|
joined the Presbyterian Church, -- a story without the slightest
|
|||
|
foundation -- and although denied a hundred times, it is still
|
|||
|
being printed and circulated for the edification of the faithful.
|
|||
|
Every few days I receive some letter of inquiry as to this charge,
|
|||
|
and I have industriously denied it for years, but up to the present
|
|||
|
time, it shows no signs of death -- not even of weakness.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another religious gentleman put in print the charge that my
|
|||
|
son, having been raised in the atmosphere of Infidelity, had become
|
|||
|
insane and died in an asylum. Notwithstanding the fact that I never
|
|||
|
had a son, the story still goes right on, and is repeated day after
|
|||
|
day without the semblance of a blush.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now, if all this is done while I am alive and well, and while
|
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|
I have all the facilities of our century for spreading the denials,
|
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|
what will be done after my lips are closed?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The mendacity of superstition is almost enough to make a man
|
|||
|
believe in the supernatural.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And so I might go on for a hundred columns. Billions of
|
|||
|
falsehoods have been told and there are trillions yet to come. The
|
|||
|
doctrines of Malthus have nothing to do with this particular kind
|
|||
|
of reproduction.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And there are also many other falsehoods which the church has
|
|||
|
told, the which if they should be written every one, I suppose that
|
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|
even the world itself could not contain the books that should be
|
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|
written"
|
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|
|
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|
The Truth Seeker, Now York, February. 19. 1887.
|
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|
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|
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|
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|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
18
|
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