Beadle's Dime National Speaker, Embodying Gems of Oratory and Wit, Particularly Adapted to American Schools and Firesides. Various

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and eloquent words, their healing counsels, their generous affections, the whole man, in short, whom we revered and loved and would fain imitate, especially when his image is impressed upon our recollections by the pencil or the chisel, goes forth to the admiration of the latest posterity. Extinctus amabitur idem.

      LET THE CHILDLESS WEEP. – Metta Victoria Victor

      The news is flying along the streets:

      It leaves a smile with each face it meets.

      The heart of London is all on fire —

      Its throbbing veins beat faster and higher —

      With eager triumph they beat so fast —

      "The Malakoff – Malakoff falls at last!"

      Hark to the murmur, the shout, the yell —

      "The Malakoff's fallen!" – well, 'tis well!

      But let the childless weep.

      I am faint and stunn'd by the crowd;

      My head aches with the tumult loud.

      On this step I will sit me down,

      Where the city palaces o'er me frown.

      I would these happy people could see

      Sights which are never absent from me;

      The sound of their joy to sobs might swell,

      They would swallow tears – well – it is well!

      But let the childless weep.

      If they could see my two young sons

      Shatter'd and torn by Russian guns, —

      The only children God gave me – dead!

      With the rough earth for a dying bed.

      Side by side, in the trenches deep —

      Perchance they would weep as I must weep.

      No sons of theirs on that red hill fell,

      And so they smile and say, "'tis well!"

      But let the childless weep.

      I know where in the cottages low

      Women's faces grow white with woe;

      Where throats are choked with tears unshed

      When widows' children ask for bread.

      I think of one whose heart has grown

      As cold and heavy as this stone.

      But cabinets never think so low

      As a mother's anguish, and so – and so

      Why let the childless weep.

      O Queen! your children around you sleep;

      Their rest at night is sweet and deep.

      Do you ever think of the mothers many

      Whose sons you required, and left not any?

      Do you think of young limbs bruised and crush'd

      And laughing voices forever hush'd?

      My soul with a fierce rage might swell,

      But grief hath all the place – 'tis well!

      Let the childless weep.

      Could God have seen with prophet eye,

      When He piled the Malakoff hill so high,

      That it was to be soaked through and through

      With streams and streams of blood-red dew,

      And covered over with anguish? – no!

      Or He would have leveled it small and low.

      It is man who is haughty, fierce, and cruel —

      Who heaps on his altar the living fuel!

      Let the childless weep.

      England! England! haughty and bold!

      You still covet what you behold;

      To have your own proud will and way

      You will make widows, thousands a day.

      You buy your power with human life,

      And the sobbing child and hopeless wife

      Give up their dearest at your call —

      But hearts must break and towers must fall

      Let the childless weep.

      Weep? I can not weep while around

      Swells the victory's awful sound.

      The Malakoff fell, – but England's way

      O'er the bosoms that loved her deepest lay.

      Victoria's children laugh in glee! —

      Does she remember mine, or me?

      Oh, footman, leave me this cold stone —

      My sons are dead and I am alone —

      The childless can not weep.

      OUR COUNTRY'S GREATEST GLORY. – Bishop Whipple, of Minnesota, 1860

      The true glory of a nation is in an intelligent, honest, industrious Christian people. The civilization of a nation depends on their individual character; a constitution which is not the outgrowth of this is not worth the parchment on which it is written. You look in vain in the past for a single instance where the people have preserved their liberties after their individual character was lost. The ruler represents the people, and laws and institutions are the simple outgrowth of domestic character. It is not in the magnificence of the home of the ruler, not in the beautiful creations of art lavished on public edifices, not in costly cabinets of pictures or public libraries, not in proud monuments of achievements in battle, not in the number or wealth of its cities, that we find pledges of national glory. The ruler may gather around his palace the treasures of the world, amid a brutalized people; the senate chamber may retain its faultless proportions long after the voice of patriotism is hushed within its walls; the marble may commemorate a glory which has forever departed. Art and letters may bring no lesson to a people whose heart is dead; the only glory of a nation is in the living temple of a loyal, industrious, and upright people. The busy click of machinery, the merry ring of the anvil, the lowing of peaceful herds, and the song of the harvest home, are sweeter music than pæans of departed glory or songs of triumph in war. The vine-clad cottage of the hill-side, the cabin of the woodsman, and the rural home of the farmer are the true citadels of any country. There is a dignity in honest toil which belongs not to the display of wealth or the luxury of fashion. The man who drives the plow, or swings his ax in the forest, or with cunning fingers plies the tools of his craft, is as truly the servant of his country, as the statesman in the senate or the soldier in battle. The safety of a nation depends not on the wisdom of its statesmen or the bravery of its generals; the tongue of eloquence never saved a nation tottering to its fall; the sword of a warrior never stayed its destruction. There is a surer defense in every Christian home. I say Christian home, for I know of no glory to manhood which comes not from the cross. I know of no rights wrung from tyranny, no truth rescued from darkness and bigotry, which has not waited on a Christian civilization. Would you see the image of true glory, I would show you villages where the crown and glory of the people was in purity of character, where the children were gathered in Christian schools, where the voice of prayer goes heavenward, where the people have that most priceless gift – faith in God. With this as the basis, and leavened as it will be with brotherly love, there will be no danger in grappling with any evils which exist in our midst; we shall feel that we may work and bide our time, and die knowing that God will bring the victory.

      THE UNION A HOUSEHOLD. – Ibid

      The great object which the statesmen of the Revolution sought, was the defense, protection, and good government of the whole, without injustice to any portion of the people. Experience had taught them that it was impossible for a great republic to grow up where its every act of public policy was