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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13816 ***
+
+THE JERICHO ROAD
+
+by
+
+W. BION ADKINS
+
+Author of "Twelve Steps Toward Heaven," "The Anonymous Letter," etc.
+
+1901
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Like the rivers, forever running yet never passed, like the winds
+forever going yet never gone, so is Odd-Fellowship.
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+WORTHY AND GENTLE BROTHERS
+
+I DEDICATE THIS LITTLE BOOK TO THEE, SINCERELY HOPING THAT IT WILL
+AFFORD YOU MUCH PLEASURE AND BE THE MEANS OF INCITING YOU TO GREATER
+EFFORT IN BEHALF OF OUR BELOVED ORDER. MAY THY YEARS BE MANY AND THEIR
+SEASONS ALL GOLDEN AUTUMNS, RICH IN PURPLE CLUSTERS AND GARNERED
+DELIGHTS.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+"I have lived much that I have not written, but I have written nothing
+that I have not lived, and the story of this book is but a plaintive
+refrain wrung from the over-burdened song of my life; while the tides
+of feeling, winding down the lines, had their sources in as many broken
+upheavals of my own heart." A book, like an implement, must be judged
+by its adaptation to its special design, however unfit for any other
+end. This volume is designed to help Odd-Fellows in their search for
+the good things in life. There is need of something to break the spell
+of indifference that oftentimes binds us, and to open glimpses of
+better, sweeter, grander possibilities. Hence this volume, which is a
+plea for that great fortune of man--his own nature. Bulwer says:
+"Strive while improving your one talent to enrich your whole capital as
+a man." The present work is designed to aid in securing the result thus
+recommended. We send it forth, trusting that it will find its way into
+the hands of every Odd-Fellow and every Odd-Fellow's friend and
+neighbor, and that those who read it will gather from its pages lessons
+which shall enable them to pluck thorns from their pathway and scatter
+flowers instead.
+
+W. BION ADKINS.
+
+October 1, 1899.
+
+
+
+
+ TODAY'S DEMAND
+
+ God give us men. A time like this demands
+ Strong minds, great hearts, true faith, and ready hands;
+ Men whom the lust of office does not kill;
+ Men who possess opinions and a will;
+ Men who have honor;
+ Men who will not lie,
+ Tall men, sun-crowned, who live above the fog
+ In public duly and in private thinking.
+ For, while the rabble, with their thumb-worn creeds,
+ Their large professions and their little deeds,
+ Mingle in selfish strife, lo! Freedom weeps,
+ Wrong rules the land, and waiting Justice sleeps.
+ God give us men!
+
+ --Selected.
+
+
+
+ TOMORROW'S FULFILLMENT
+
+ * * In the long years liker must they grow;
+ The man be more of woman, she of man;
+ He gain in sweetness and in moral height,
+ Nor lose the wrestling thews that throw the world;
+ She mental breadth, nor fail in childward care--
+ Till at the last she set herself to man,
+ Like perfect music unto noble words;
+ And so these twain, upon the skirts of time,
+ Sit side by side, full summed in all their powers,
+ Self-reverent each and reverencing each.
+ Then reign the world's great bridals, chaste and calm;
+ Then springs the crowning race of human kind.
+
+ --Alfred Tennyson.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+Objects and Purposes of Odd-Fellowship
+
+The Higher Life
+
+Pithy Points
+
+The Bible in Odd-Fellowship
+
+Brother Underwood's Dream
+
+The Imperial Virtue
+
+Quiet Hour Thoughts
+
+Love Supreme
+
+Gems of Beauty
+
+Husband and Father
+
+Odd-Fellowship and the Future
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY
+
+On April 26, 1819, Thomas Wildey, the English carriage-spring maker,
+together with John Welch, John Duncan, John Cheatham and Richard
+Rushworth, instituted the first lodge of Odd-Fellows at the Seven Stars
+Tavern in Baltimore, and it was given the name of Washington Lodge No.
+1. From this feeble beginning has grown the immense organization of
+today. The Odd-Fellows claim a venerable antiquity for their order,
+the most common account of its origin ascribing it to the Jewish legend
+under Titus, who, it is said, received from that Emperor the first
+chapter, written on a golden tablet. The earliest mention made of the
+lodge is in 1745, when one was organized in England. There were at
+that time several lodges independent of each other, but in a few years
+they formed a union. Toward the end of the century many of them were
+broken up by state prosecutions, on suspicion that their purposes were
+seditious. The name was changed from the Patriotic Order to that of
+the Union Order of Odd-Fellows. In Manchester, England, in 1813, some
+of the lodges seceded from the order, and formed the Independent Order
+of Odd-Fellows.
+
+The order's first appearance in America was in 1819. The purposes of
+the order were so changed by the founders here, that it is said to be
+almost purely an American organization. It was based on the Manchester
+Unity, which was really the parent institution. In 1842, this country
+severed its connection with that of England.
+
+Lodges connected with either those of England or America are
+established in all parts of the world. The real estate held by the
+organization exceeds in value $20,000,000, and there is scarcely a town
+in the country that has not its Odd-Fellows Building. The total
+revenue of the order is nearly $10,000,000 per annum. Yearly relief
+amounts to nearly $4,000,000 a year.
+
+
+
+
+ THE JERICHO ROAD
+
+ "A traveler passed down the Jericho road,
+ He carried of cash a pretty fair load
+ (The savings of many a toilsome day),
+ On his Jericho home a mortgage to pay.
+
+ "At a turn of the road, in a lonely place,
+ Two villainous men met him face to face.
+ 'Hands up!' they cried, and they beat him sore,
+ Then off to the desert his money they bore.
+
+ "Soon a priest came by who had a fold;
+ He sheared his sheep of silver and gold.
+ He saw the man lie bruised and bare,
+ But he passed on by to his place of prayer.
+
+ "Then a Levite, temple bound, drew nigh;
+ He saw the man, but let him lie,
+ And clad in silk, and filled with pride,
+ He passed him by on the other side.
+
+ "Next on the way a Samaritan came
+ (To priest and Levite a hated name);
+ The wounded man he would not pass,
+ He tenderly placed him on his ass.
+
+ "He took him to an inn hard by;
+ He dressed his wounds and bathed his eye;
+ He paid the landlord his full score;
+ If more was needed would pay him more.
+
+ "Ah! many travel the Jericho way,
+ And many are robbed and beaten each day;
+ And many there be on the way in need,
+ Whom Priest or Levite never heed;
+ And who to fate would yield, alas!
+ If some Samaritan did not pass."
+
+
+
+
+THE OBJECTS AND PURPOSES OF ODD-FELLOWSHIP
+
+We are taught that "God hath made of one blood all nations of men to
+dwell on the face of the earth," and when we say mutual relief and
+assistance is a leading office in our affiliation, and that
+Odd-Fellowship is systematically endeavoring to improve and elevate the
+character of man, to imbue him with a proper conception of his
+capabilities for good, to enlighten his mind, to enlarge the sphere of
+his affections and to redeem him from the thralldom of ignorance and
+prejudice, and teach him to recognize the fatherhood of God and the
+brotherhood of men, we have epitomized the objects, purposes and basic
+principles of our order. Odd-Fellowship is broad and comprehensive.
+It is founded upon that eternal principle which teaches that all the
+world is one family and all mankind are brothers. Unheralded and
+unsung, it was born and went forth, a breath of love, a sweet song that
+has filled thousands of hearts with joy and gladness. To the rich and
+the poor, the old and the young, at all times, comes the rich, sweet
+melody of this song of humanity to comfort and to cheer. For eighty
+years the light of Odd-Fellowship has burned before the world, a beacon
+to the lost, a comfort to the wanderer and a protection to the
+thoughtless. Eighty years of work for humanity's sake; eighty years
+devoted to teaching men to love mankind; eighty years of earnest labor,
+consecrated by friendship, cemented with love and beautified by truth.
+In ancient times men sought glory and renown in gladiatorial combat,
+though the victor's laurel was wet with human blood. In modern times
+men seek the plaudits of the world by achievements for human good, and
+by striving to elevate and ennoble men. Looking back through nineteen
+centuries we behold a cross, and on it the crucified Christ, with
+nail-pierced hands, and wounded, bleeding side, but whose heart was so
+full of love and pity that even in His dying agonies He had compassion
+upon His persecutors, and cried out, "Father, forgive them, for they
+know not what they do."
+
+That event was the dividing line between the ancient and the modern
+era; between the rule of "brute force" and the "mild dominion of love
+and charity." The mission of Odd-Fellowship, like that of the lowly
+Nazarene, is to replace the rule of might with the gentle influence of
+love, and to teach a universal fraternity in the family of man. To
+meet and satisfy and better keep alive the nobler elements of man's
+nature. Many orders have been instituted, but none can challenge
+greater admiration from men, or deserve more blessings from heaven,
+than the Independent Order of Odd-Fellows. Looking back along the
+pathway of the century behind us we behold the wrecks of many orders.
+The morning of their life was beautiful and full of glorious promise,
+but the evening came and they had perished. Rich costumes, impressive
+ceremonies, beautiful degrees and magnificent effects, all lie buried
+and forgotten. It was not because their founders lacked energy or
+enthusiasm, not because their members were less susceptible to the
+beauty and poetry of tradition and ceremony, but because success and
+perpetuity come not from human effort, but are the outgrowth of a
+life-giving principle. The sculptor fashions from the marble a form of
+surpassing loveliness, its lines are those of grace and beauty. We
+stand before it charmed, whispering our admiration, but the impression
+on the heart is only passing. The poet sings of home, of mother and of
+love; the meter may be faulty and the words may charm not, but the
+sentiment is true and touches our hearts. The experience it recites is
+common to humanity, and wherever its sweet tones are heard it softens
+men's natures and makes them better, truer and nobler. Who among us
+would be willing to exchange the influence of the immortal song "Home
+Sweet Home," or be willing to forget the Christian's "Nearer My God to
+Thee," for all the inanimate beauty of art? One charms the eye, the
+other touches and calls to life the best and sweetest emotions of the
+human heart. So it is with fraternal societies. Flashing swords,
+glittering helmets, jeweled regalias and beautiful degrees may touch
+the vanity and excite the admiration, but to win the heart we must
+satisfy its longings, feed its hopes and lift it above the narrowness
+and selfishness of its daily experience. Odd-Fellowship strives to
+touch the heart and better feelings, rather than feed the vanity of man
+or arouse his admiration for gorgeous displays. Its work is an
+exemplification of the living, practical Christianity of today. In
+almost every state in this fair land of ours can be found Odd-Fellows'
+homes, within whose walls the orphan is no longer motherless. For each
+and every little one within these homes, one million Odd-Fellows feel a
+father's love and pledge a parent's care.
+
+Add to all this great work the little deeds of love, the little acts of
+kindness that make life beautiful; add kind words of cheer and friendly
+help and tender consolation, and add again the benefit of union, the
+strength that comes from hearts united in God's work among mankind, and
+you have caught a glimpse of the life-giving principle that has made
+Odd-Fellowship one of the grandest fraternal and beneficiary
+institutions the world has ever known. The work it has done can not be
+fully estimated until the record is read in the bright light of
+eternity. In that glad day the tears that have been wiped away will
+become jewels in somebody's crown, and the sobs that have been hushed
+will be heard again in hosannas of welcome.
+
+Onward! is the ringing, pregnant watchword of the world. The vast,
+complicated, ponderous machinery of life is kept in motion by tireless
+and irresistible forces. The multiform and magnificent affairs of men
+and of nations are all impelled forward with an energy and a velocity
+as wonderful as glorious to behold.
+
+Not retrogressive, but progressive--not enervating, but energizing--not
+ephemeral, but substantial--not from bad to worse, but from the
+imperfect to the consummate, are the characteristics by which are so
+prominently distinguished the tidal waves of the world's progress today.
+
+Activity and achievement came with creation, and constitute an
+inflexible, irrepealable law of the universe. In stir and push we have
+light and life, but in idleness, and superstitious clinging to
+fossilized ideas and bygones, we have demoralization, decay and death.
+
+Fortunately for the world, and agreeably with infinite design, man
+plods his way in harmony with the law alluded to. Not all men, but the
+great masses of them, wherever "The true light shineth," especially
+when accompanied by rays and helps from one of the noblest and grandest
+of confraternities our world has known, "The Independent Order of
+Odd-Fellows." When the huge planet which we call our world had been
+tossed into being from the furnace fires of Omnipotence, and the
+maternal lullaby began to gather force on hill top and in valley, the
+discovery was naturally enough made that association and co-operation
+were preferable to isolation and unrelieved dependence; and from that
+hour forward, this principle has been interwoven into the very
+framework of human society. The purpose has been the elevation and
+improvement of mankind. For, though the first product was pronounced
+"good," it quickly degenerated; and there came an emphasized demand for
+reform.
+
+
+EARLY ORGANIZATIONS.
+
+Human isolation is an unnatural condition. It antagonizes the highest
+and best interests of the world. Its influence is never beneficent,
+but always and necessarily harmful. If the truest well being of the
+universe, and the supremest glory of Jehovah could have been attained
+by conditions of solitude, it is not impossible that the good
+All-Father would have given to every man a continent, and so have made
+him monarch of all he surveyed.
+
+Physically regarded, there is no limit to Omnipotent power. A
+continent, and even a world, was therefore within the pale of divine
+possibilities. Jehovah, however, is not only great, but he is the
+Greatness of Goodness. High and holy ends were to be accomplished, and
+happy purposes to be secured, by means of human instrumentalities, and
+be jointly shared by Creator and creature.
+
+Among the earliest of Deific utterances, therefore, we have this: "It
+is not good that man should be alone." I concede that, primarily, the
+companionship of woman is here intended. But the declaration is not
+only good in this, but equally so in other regards. A lifetime of
+solitude with no incentives to action--nothing to draw out, exercise
+and expand the latent powers of the soul--no interchange of thought--no
+clashing of opinion--no towering resolves to stimulate--no difficulties
+to surmount! What imagination so fertile that it could picture a more
+hateful or intolerable Hades than would be such a condition of affairs?
+
+Hence, in the early days of the world's history we discern the
+principle of association and co-operation, with plans and systems
+embodying its practical application. Organizations came into being,
+obedient to the summons of necessity. How well the various
+organizations have wrought along the pathway of centuries, and how
+great or small may have been the measure of their success, I am not
+here to discuss, much less to determine. Each has done its work in its
+own way, and pockets responsibility for results. Common courtesy and
+candor suggest that each has been largely animated by highest and
+worthiest of motives.
+
+
+ODD-FELLOWSHIP,
+
+Reared upon the broad catholic principle of brotherhood, extending its
+helpful hand from nation to nation, and from continent to continent,
+linking its votaries together with the golden triple chain of
+Friendship, Love and Truth, can afford to be friendly with each, and
+have a kindly word for all societies that reach down after and raise up
+a fallen brother, and if possible make him wiser, better and happier.
+Should a like courtesy be extended to this order, while it would
+certainly constitute a new departure, it would prove none the less
+gratifying. But, from certain sources, the order has been the
+recipient of a peculiar kind of consideration, so long that "the memory
+of man scarce runneth to the contrary." Inflamed appeals and bristling
+denunciations have gone out against it, "while great, swelling
+words"--swollen with hatred, bigotry, prejudice and superstition--have
+assailed it relentlessly and almost uninterruptedly. Mainly, these
+assaults have been met with the terse and pointed invocation, "Father,
+forgive them; they know not what they do."
+
+That this great and potent brotherhood may not, in all its parts and
+jurisdictions, have so deported itself, and so carried forward its
+work, as to be justly free from unfavorable criticism and merited
+censure, is probably true. As with organizations, there is sometimes
+too much haste displayed in gathering, and too little discrimination
+exercised in selecting, the materials that are brought as component
+parts of the great superstructure of Odd-Fellowship. Too much daubing
+with untempered mortar--too great a desire for the exhibition of
+numerical force, and the multiplication of lodges--too much regard for
+the outward trappings and paraphernalia, and too little regard for the
+internal qualities of those seeking membership in the fraternity. Such
+deplorable departures, as well from the primary as the ultimate objects
+had in view, are not fairly attributable to anything that may be
+reasonably considered as an outgrowth of the order, but come despite
+its constant teachings and warnings. Bad work they of course make, and
+so at times and to a limited extent bring the fraternity under the ban
+of popular displeasure, but shall the world predicate unfavorable
+judgment upon a few and unfair tests? If so, and the principle
+logically becomes general, pray who shall be appointed administrator of
+the effects of other social and moral organizations, and even of the
+church itself? For in these regards all offend, if offense it be.
+When the principles of Odd-Fellowship are carefully studied it is
+apparent to every candid mind that it is founded upon that eternal
+principle which recognizes man as a constituent of one universal
+brotherhood, and teaches him that as he came from the hand of a common
+parent, he is in duty bound to cherish and protect his fellow-man.
+Viewed in this light, Odd-Fellowship becomes one of the noblest
+institutions organized by man in the world. If the beauty and grandeur
+of universal brotherhood could be impressed upon the minds of all the
+people, how very different from the past would the future history of
+the world read. What a delightful place this old stone-ribbed earth
+would be if men would look upon each other as brothers, members of one
+common family; enjoying the many comforts of one home; trusting to the
+guidance and protection of one Father--God. We are more nearly related
+than we think. Running through all humanity there is a link of
+relationship and a bond of sympathy that can not be exterminated. The
+principle of brotherly love is so great and broad that all mankind
+could unite in offices of human benefaction. Brother. Oh, how sacred
+and how sweet when spoken by a true heart! Whether it be in the home
+circle, lodge-room, or in some distant land, it sends the same soothing
+thrill of joy to the heart. Let us pause just a moment to think of the
+time and place when we first learned to call each other brother. Ah!
+Methinks no Odd-Fellow will ever forget his first lesson. He will
+always remember how quickly he was changed from the haughty disposition
+manifested by that one of old, who, when he prayed, went to the public
+square, or climbed to the house top, and thanked God that he was not
+like other men, to the humble attitude of that one who stood afar off
+and bowed his face in the dust, crying aloud, "O Lord! Be merciful
+unto me a sinner." How very much like this ancient boaster are
+thousands of the human family today. Sitting in high places,
+surrounded by wealth and power, they see nothing beyond the narrow
+circle in which they move. They are deaf to the low, sad wail of
+sorrow that comes from some breaking heart. Seated by their own
+comfortable fireside they give no thought to the lonely widow standing
+outside in the cold. It distresses them not that the keen, wintry
+blast sends its icy chill to the already broken heart. No thought, no
+feeling, for this poor creature that must now fight the fierce battles
+incident to human life, all alone. How sadly these tender duties to
+suffering humanity are neglected when left to the cold charity of the
+world.
+
+Odd-Fellowship seeks to lessen sorrow and suffering. It supplies
+temporal wants; gives encouragement; aids and comforts those who are in
+distress. In sickness we watch by their bedside and administer to
+their wants. If death calls, Odd-Fellowship forsakes not its follower,
+but hovers near, listening attentively to the last words and parting
+instruction of the dying one. Brothers and friends, let me admonish
+you to do all the good you can while in health and strength, for at
+most life is short and we know not how soon the Angel of Death will
+unfold his broad, shadowy wings over our path and call us to give an
+account of our stewardship; then all that will remain of us on earth
+will be the good or evil we have done.
+
+Odd-Fellowship is full of sacred teachings and sublime warnings. It
+teaches us that we are in a world full of temptations, sin and sorrow.
+We see the emblems of decay all around us. The strong man of today may
+stand forth, nerved for toil, with all the bloom of health mantling
+cheek and brow, seemingly as strong and vigorous as the mighty oak, and
+yet tomorrow he will fade as the autumn leaf. Then he realizes how
+foolish it is to be vain; thinks of the instability of wealth and
+power, and the certain decay of all earthly greatness. Odd-Fellowship
+teaches us that charity springs from the heart, is not puffed up, seeks
+not its own. It makes us strong, and encourages us to push on through
+life, even though we are beset on every side with toil, danger and
+strife. Brothers, let nothing cause you to turn back or away from the
+principles of our noble order. Cling closer and closer each day to
+honesty and truth, and bear in mind that be the road ever so rough and
+untraveled, narrow and dark, if you follow truth you will find light at
+the end of the journey.
+
+
+THE SECRESY OBJECTION.
+
+More common, perhaps, than any other filed against it has been the
+objection that Odd-Fellowship does its work secretly, this objection
+being not unfrequently urged by persons of candor and honest impulses.
+"If," it is demanded, "the aims and purposes of the order be legitimate
+and praiseworthy, why shroud them in mystery rather than give them the
+broad sunlight of publicity."
+
+The objection is not new, nor is it urged with any increase of its
+original force, whatever may be the fact in the matter of vehemence.
+Answer might be made: The order does not choose to ascend to the house
+tops for the purpose of heralding its affairs to the world. But that
+answer would not be satisfactory, nor is any likely to be that may be
+presented, now or hereafter. It is nevertheless true that there are
+certain matters pertaining to the order and its works with which the
+outside world has no sort of concern, even as with those very peculiar
+secret societies, the individual, the family, the church and the state.
+If other organizations prefer to resort to the newspapers, the pulpit,
+the rostrum and other information conduits for the purpose of
+advertising their wares, their greatness and their goodness, and the
+vast amount of humanitarian work they are doing and purposing, such is
+their unquestioned privilege.
+
+But if the preference of Odd-Fellowship be for quieter and less
+obtrusive methods, pray who shall fairly contest its right of choice?
+
+And then it should be remembered that there are matters in which the
+right hand is prohibited the privilege of interfering with the
+prerogatives of the left, and the left with those of the right. Nor
+should the fact be forgotten that there is Divine example, if not
+precept, for the established "modus operandi" of the order. Upon a
+certain occasion the Great Teacher had performed a very humble service
+for one of his disciples who was sadly at loss for the why and the
+wherefore, and the answer, received to his inquiry was: "What I do thou
+knowest not now, but thou shalt know hereafter."
+
+And in the grand hereafter, when the films of ignorance and the
+warpings of prejudice and superstition shall have melted away under the
+bright sunlight of Eternal Day, it is not impossible that our vexed,
+inquisitive, worrying opponents may be permitted to look back over the
+pathway this order has traversed, glance at the work that has been
+wrought and peradventure discover how unreasonable, as well as
+fruitless, has been the warfare they have been pleased to wage with
+such persistent fury. A long time to wait, maybe, but then good things
+do not come rapidly nor all at once. Meanwhile, to encourage them in
+their waiting, their watching and their worrying, let them take this
+lesson from the same Great Teacher: "The wind bloweth where it listeth,
+and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh
+or whither it goeth." Ah, no! it will not do, because you can not see
+and comprehend all of everything, inside as well as outside, to
+conclude that it must necessarily be bad. Adopt that theory, and you
+not only fly in the face of reason, but bump your head against almost
+everything in nature, in art and in science.
+
+Secrets! yes; they are within us and without us, above us and beneath
+us and all about us, and "what are you going to do about it?" Well
+might Israel's old and gifted poet king write: "We are fearfully and
+wonderfully made," soul and body, the mortal and the immortal, the
+material and the immaterial, strangely and mysteriously conjoined!
+God's secret, this! Will you denounce Him and withdraw allegiance from
+Him, for the reason that He fails to make clear to you a clear and
+satisfying revelation? The same old singer said thousands of years
+ago, "The Heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament showeth
+His handiwork." And those heavens, with that firmament, are charged
+and surcharged with mightiest and profoundest secrets. We seize the
+telescope and "plunge into the vast profound overhead, intent upon
+mastering the secrets of the revolving spheres."
+
+We travel from star to star, from system to system, until we reach yon
+lonely star that appears to be performing the Guardian's task, upon the
+verge of unmeasured and immeasurable space. We may descry and describe
+the form and outlines of those heavenly bodies, detect their movements
+and approximately determine their distances and dimensions. But what
+more? Little that is satisfying. When they had a beginning, what
+purposes they subserve in the sublime system of God's stupendous
+universe, and when they shall have a consummation, we may not certainly
+know. Secrets, these, and such "Secret things belong unto God." We
+would like to know these secrets, but must wait; for there, "roll those
+mighty worlds that gem the distant sky," as distantly and dismally as
+when Chaldean and Egyptian astronomers and astrologers viewed their
+movements three thousand years ago, rifled meanwhile of but few of
+their well kept secrets. He that pencils the lily and paints the rose
+and gives to every blade of grass its own bright drop of dew, has been
+pleased to say: "Hitherto shalt thou come and no further." And there
+is great unwisdom in setting up factious opposition to the fiat of
+Omnipotence. Possess your souls in patience, O friends! wait, as we
+must wait, before knowing all, or even knowing much. If you can not be
+Odd-Fellows, you can at least be _men_, with an effort.
+
+
+WHAT IS ODD-FELLOWSHIP?
+
+"But, sir," you demand, "can you tell us something more about
+Odd-Fellowship, its purposes and its Work?" I can, a little. Come
+with me, then, and we will look into the lodge. Ah! In the most
+conspicuous place there stands an altar--upon it the open Bible, the
+world's great word of Life and Light. Upon the principles enunciated
+by that Book, largely rests the great superstructure of Odd-Fellowship.
+The Bible is to the order what the sun is to the material universe--its
+illuminator and vivifier, even as it also is the, guide to faith and
+practice. A man may neglect his closet, his church, his Bible, but
+when he enters the lodge he is bound to listen to the voice of his
+Maker, as it thunders from His word; and while the lodge does by no
+means lay claim to the possession of religious attributes, yet has it
+been the means, by the constant use of the Bible, of turning many from
+the ways of wrong-doing and sin, into paths of pleasantness and peace;
+and by a unique system of symbolism and a comprehensive and practical
+application of its sublime truths, the faith of the believer has been
+strengthened, enlarged and rendered usefully active.
+
+Odd-Fellowship's plan of benefaction addresses itself to the physical
+as well as the moral nature, and, reaching out from its immediate
+subjects, permeates by natural affinity every sphere in which active
+sympathy may be invoked. Its mission and its results are not only
+active and substantial, but often so effective by its consequential or
+indirect influence as to penetrate entire communities. In this
+connection I will say Odd-Fellowship is not a religious organization.
+Our work pertains particularly to this life, educating the heart of man
+to practical beneficence, alleviating the sufferings of humanity and
+elevating the character of man. Odd-Fellowship was not organized for
+the purpose of ridding the world of all its sorrows, but to ameliorate
+and to soften the suffering to which the human family is heir. It is
+an association of men who have united themselves for the purpose of
+smoothing the ragged edge of want, and extending to those who are bound
+down by the iron bands of misfortune a helping hand. Odd-Fellowship
+holds no affinity with the classifications or distinctions of society,
+but dispenses charity to all alike. It does not array itself against
+the church, nor presume to arrogate its functions, or to supervise its
+teachings. Its lodges are not the council rooms of enmity to
+religious, civil, moral or social organizations. Far otherwise; all
+its oracles and instructions in relation to these grave subjects find
+their warrant and authority in the divine law, under the inspiration of
+which it proclaims the Golden Rule as the sublimest illustration of the
+law of love. Odd-Fellowship keeps a close watch over its subjects, and
+constantly impresses upon their minds the fact that their hearts must
+not foster evil, the progenitor of crime, or hatred and vice, whose
+evil consequences must continue to afflict mankind until the coming of
+that time to which hope looks forward with ardent joy, when one law
+shall bind all nations, tongues and kindred of the earth, and that law
+will be the law of "_Universal Brotherhood_." Odd-Fellowship also
+teaches us that we are never to judge a man by his outward appearance.
+A man's form may be clothed with rags, his hands may be rough and hard,
+his cheeks may be browned by the rays of summer's sun; yet underneath
+all this there may be an honest heart. If so, we take him by the hand
+and call him brother. Odd-Fellowship teaches equality; we must meet
+upon one common level. The brother who lives in the rough log cabin
+enjoys the same right and privileges as the monarch on his throne. We
+live, we move and have our being, and are indebted for all things to
+the One Great Ruler of the Universe--God. All persons are desirous of
+being happy, and happiness is sought for in various ways.
+Odd-Fellowship teaches that man is responsible for his own misery. I
+believe that no mere misfortune can ever call for exceeding bitter
+sorrow. As long as man preserves himself from contamination of that
+which is evil and foul, he can not reach any very low depth of woe. By
+his own act, by his own voluntary desertion of the true aim of life,
+and by that alone, is it possible that a man should drink his cup of
+misery to the dregs. The want of happiness, so prevalent, is thus the
+natural consequence of the inherent blindness of men. By it they are
+led to pursue eagerly the phantom of _wealth_, _rank_, power, etc.,
+white neglecting that which alone can satisfy the wants of the soul.
+If men could really know what is their chief good, we should no longer
+hear on every hand prayers offered up for those idle accoutrements of
+life, which may indeed be enjoyed, but often bring only
+dissatisfaction, and can be dispensed with without inconvenience to
+mankind.
+
+Many persons say Odd-Fellowship is contrary to the teachings of the
+Bible. The way such people read their Bible is just like the way that
+the old monks thought hedgehogs ate grapes. They rolled themselves
+over and over where the grapes lay on the ground. What fruit stuck to
+their spines they carried off and ate. So your hedgehoggy readers roll
+themselves over and over their Bibles and declare that whatever sticks
+to their spines is Scripture and that nothing else is. But you can
+only get the skins of the texts that way. If you want their juice you
+must press them in cluster. Now the clustered texts about the human
+heart insist as a body, not on any inherent corruption in all hearts,
+but on the terrific distinction between the bad and the good ones. "A
+good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that
+which is good, and an evil man, out of the evil treasure, bringeth
+forth that which is evil."
+
+"They on the rock are they which, in an honest and good heart, having
+heard the word, kept it."
+
+"Delight thyself in the Lord, and He shall give thee the desires of
+thine heart. The wicked have bent their bow that they may privily
+shoot at him that is upright in heart." For all of us, the question is
+not at all to ascertain how much or how little corruption there is in
+human nature, but to ascertain whether, out of all the mass of that
+nature, we are the sheep or the goat breed; whether we are people of
+upright heart being shot at, or people of crooked heart doing the
+shooting.
+
+And of all the texts bearing on the subject, this, which is a quite
+simple and practical order, is the one you have chiefly to hold in
+mind: "Keep thy heart with all diligence, for out of it are the issues
+of life."
+
+The will of God respecting us is, that we shall live by each others
+happiness and life; not by each others misery or death.
+
+Men help each other by their joy, not by their sorrow. There is but
+one way in which man can ever help God--that is, by letting God help
+him.
+
+A little boy, who had often heard his father pray for the poor, that
+they might be clothed and fed, interrupted him one day by saying,
+"Father, if you will give me the key to your corn crib and wheat bin, I
+will answer some of your prayers."
+
+Ah! my friends, always keep in mind this truth, "One hour of justice is
+worth seventy years of prayer."
+
+Call not this, then, a Godless institution, rioting in selfishness and
+infidelity, as it has been denominated by certain super-excellent
+Christians, who appear to have fully persuaded themselves that no good
+can possibly come from such a Nazareth. For, with the constant and
+unvarying light of the Holy Bible, that illuminated lexicon of the
+sweet Beyond, and of the approaches thereto--that trusty talisman of
+all hopeful hearts--that competent counselor of the wisest and the
+best--that inspirer of joy and satisfaction born of no other book--that
+precious presager of immortal life beyond the river--that divine guide
+to faith and practice, can by no means fail in the ultimate working out
+of its sublime purposes.
+
+In the ranks of Odd-Fellowship there are many of the truest, noblest,
+sharpest and most holy men in the civilized world. None of these have
+been able to make that "Godless and selfish" discovery. This brilliant
+achievement is reserved for those favored mortals that never saw the
+inside of an Odd-Fellow's lodge, and are entirely ignorant of its
+character and practical workings. The order has increased largely in
+wealth, power and influence. Large cities and towns, which formerly
+paid little or no attention to us, now eagerly welcome us to their
+hospitalities.
+
+Judges and governors vie with each other in doing us honor, and well
+may we be proud of the position the order has attained. Just think of
+it a moment: when you clasp hands with an Odd-Fellow here in your own
+home, you are really clasping hands with one million men who have
+obligated themselves to stay with you through every trial and
+misfortune. Wonder no longer, then, at the growth and stability of
+this great fraternity, or that its votaries cling to it with such
+unshaken and unswerving fidelity. Ah! it is no light matter, no small
+privilege, to be admitted to membership in such an organization--so
+freeing one's self from the surgings of self-seeking and selfish
+considerations--free from the trammels of prevailing prejudice and
+passion--free from the false educational influences that warp the mind
+and drive charity from the heart.
+
+Our order's emblem is the three links,
+
+FRIENDSHIP, LOVE AND TRUTH.
+
+Friendship, love, truth--golden links these, that not only bind
+together their obligated votaries, but that recognize and embrace,
+because of worthiness and plighted faith, that behind the back as well
+as face to face, have a defensive, kindly word and a brother's generous
+deed; that, amid the upheavals of communities and the crumbling of
+nations, systems and governments, swerve not from their course, and are
+corralled by no arbitrary bounds, and that, whatever the dialect, the
+nationality or the religion of men, read upon humanity's brow the
+inscription written by the finger of infinite love--a man and a
+brother, a woman and a sister.
+
+A faithful and true friend is a living treasure, estimable in
+possession and deeply to be lamented when gone. Nothing is more common
+than to talk of a friend; nothing more difficult than to find one;
+nothing more rare than to improve by one as we ought.
+
+The only reward of virtue is virtue. The only way to have a friend is
+to be one. Such is friendship. Next in our golden chain is Love.
+Love is the stepping stone to heaven. This principle teaches man his
+capabilities for good, enlightens his mind, enlarges the sphere of his
+affections and leads him to that true fraternal relation which was
+designed by the Great Author of his existence. Love teaches us to be
+self-sacrificing. For a bright instance of this we point you to Moses,
+the great law-giver of the Jews. He turned his back on the splendors
+of Pharaoh's court and chose rather to share the wretchedness of his
+lowly people than serve as a king for their oppressors, finally dying
+in sight of that inheritance, which, though denied to him, was given to
+his ungrateful countrymen. How very bright on the pages of history
+shine such acts of love and sacrifice. This principle belongs to no
+one organization, party or sect. It can be made to bud and bloom as
+well under the fierce rays of the torrid zone, midst the icebergs of
+Greenland, or the everlasting snows of Caucasus. It always carries the
+same smile, whether in the cabin or in the palace. Following in its
+footsteps there is such a halo of glory, such a gentle influence, that
+it gathers within its sacred realm antagonistic natures, controls the
+elements of discord, stills the storm, soothes the spirit of passion,
+and directs in harmony all of man's efforts to fraternize the world.
+In this strangely selfish and uncertain world none are so affluent or
+favorably circumstanced as not at some time and in some way to become
+dependent. Oh! there are emphasized essentialities that are not
+embraced among the commodities of the market, and in order to the
+realization of which money possesses no purchasing power. To relieve
+the pungent pinchings of penury with raiment, food and shelter, and so
+send the sunshine of gladness to the poor and needy, is
+something--indeed is much. But, ah! the delicate and intricate
+mechanism of mind is out of gear, a secret sorrow swells and sways the
+heart, and unitedly they cry: "Who will show us any good? Who remove
+this rankling sorrow? What good Samaritan competent to the task of
+affording relief to this dazed brain?" Oh! it is here that the trained
+votaries of the triple brotherhood bring to bear their wondrous power.
+If it be true "that one touch of nature makes the whole world kin," it
+is equally true that the ties of brotherhood here would wield their
+most potent influence, and of the true Odd-Fellow well may it be said,
+"He hath a tear for pity, and a hand open as day for melting charity."
+
+TRUTH! crown jewel of the radiant sisterhood of queenly graces! She
+can not be crushed to earth. The eternal years of God being hers, she,
+no more than her author, can go down. Error may fling widely open his
+arsenal gates of defilement and deceit, and seek so earnestly and
+tirelessly the usurpation of her throne; but there she sits, as firmly
+and gracefully as when the morning stars sang together and the sons of
+God shouted for joy. Such is truth, the rarest of all human virtues.
+
+The man who is so conscious of the rectitude of his intentions, as to
+be willing to open his bosom to the inspection of the world, is in
+possession of the strongest pillars of a decided character. The course
+of such a man will be firm and steady, because he has nothing to fear
+from the world and is sure of the approbation of heaven. While he who
+is conscious of secret and dark designs, which, if known, would blast
+him, is perpetually shrinking and dodging from public observation, and
+is afraid of all around, and, much more, of all above him. Such a man
+may indeed pursue his iniquitous plans steadily; he may waste himself
+to a skeleton in the guilty pursuit, but it is impossible that he can
+pursue them with the same health-inspiring confidence and exulting
+alacrity with him who feels at every step that he is in pursuit of
+honest ends by honest means. The clear, unclouded brow, the open
+countenance, the brilliant eye, which can look an honest man
+steadfastly, yet courteously, in the face, the healthfully beating
+heart and the firm, elastic step, belong to him whose bosom is free
+from guile, and who knows that all his motives and purposes are pure
+and right. Why should such a man falter in his course? He may be
+slandered, he may be deserted by the world, but he has that within him
+which will keep him erect, and enable him to move onward in his course,
+with his eyes fixed on heaven, which he knows will not desert him.
+
+Odd-Fellowship teaches its members to be men of honor. When I say
+honest, I use it in its larger sense of discharging all your duties,
+both public and private, both open and secret, with the most
+scrupulous, heaven-attesting integrity; in that sense, farther, which
+drives from the bosom all little, dark, crooked, sordid, debasing
+considerations of self, and substitutes in their place a bolder,
+loftier and nobler spirit, one that will dispose you to consider
+yourselves as born not so much for yourselves as for your country and
+your fellow-creatures, and which will lead you to act on every occasion
+sincerely, justly, generously and magnanimously. There is a morality
+on a larger scale, perfectly consistent with a just attention to your
+own affairs, which it would be folly to neglect; a generous expansion,
+a proud elevation and conscious greatness of character, which is the
+best preparation for a decided course in every situation into which you
+can be thrown; and it is to this high and noble tone of character that
+I would have you to aspire. I would not have you to resemble those
+weak and meagre streamlets, which lose their direction at every petty
+impediment that presents itself, and stop and turn back, and creep
+around, and search out every channel through which they may wind their
+feeble and sickly course. Nor yet would I have you resemble the
+headlong torrent that carries havoc in its mad career; but I would have
+you like the ocean, that noblest emblem of majestic decision, which in
+the calmest hour still heaves its resistless might of waters to the
+shore, filling the heavens day and night with the echoes of its sublime
+declaration of independence, and tossing and sporting on its bed with
+an imperial consciousness of strength that laughs at opposition. It is
+this depth and weight and power and purity of character that I would
+have you resemble; and I would have you, like the waters of the ocean,
+to become the purer by your own action. Men are sometimes ruined
+because they aim not at virtue, but only at the reputation which it
+brings. Odd-Fellowship teaches its members to be brave, honest and
+diligent. If we have these attributes, victory must surely crown our
+efforts. How often in the history of our country have men of humble
+birth come forth in time of danger, and, nobly risking all, even to
+death, or disgrace worse than death itself, stood between their country
+and defeat, and built for themselves a glorious name. Nor, alas! is
+the opposite case to this unknown. Some of America's proudest sons
+have, by their own acts, sunk themselves into the inner-most depths of
+infamy and vice.
+
+ "Virtue alone is true nobility.
+ Oh, give me inborn worth! dare to be just,
+ Firm to your word and faithful to your trust."
+
+Knowledge is a mighty rock in a weary land, and to you, brothers, 'tis
+permitted to smite this rock, and from it gushes fountains of living
+waters, which form rivers of wisdom, flowing to the uttermost parts of
+the earth, carrying the proper idea of life to the souls of men. The
+river of science flows in a deep, straight course, searching out the
+hidden mysteries, and demonstrating facts, while Truth builds her
+defenses on its shores, and Love rears her fair palaces and calmly
+enjoys the result of labor and research. History, with its broad
+stream bringing knowledge down through the vanished centuries,
+revealing many a lost art, which avails us much in these later days.
+Mysteries which magicians have left behind them--secrets for ages
+undusted--that we may read the records of the past.
+
+Experience builds citadels upon these heights. Flowing parallel to
+history is the great, turbid stream of politics. Its crimson billows
+cast wrecks upon the strand, and the moaning waves strangely blend the
+tones of grand martial music with the discords of despair and
+disappointment, for it is a treacherous tide. Along its winding shores
+war builds her forts, and there are fields of carnage and blood, and
+dark fortresses of envy, from which fly the poisoned shafts of malice,
+falsehood and revenge, and there are many graves in which lie ambition,
+glory and renown, with all their brilliant dreams. Opposite to this
+from the rock of knowledge gush the sweet fountains of poetry and
+music, singing on their way through fair, secluded dells, where there
+are moss-covered rocks, clinging vines, fragrant flowers and ferns and
+singing birds. In their shining waves of light are mirrored the azure
+sky, golden sunshine and fleecy clouds, while youth, beauty, laughter
+and joy stray along the verdant shores, keeping time to the music of
+the merry spray and weaving garlands to crown their radiant brows.
+
+Not far from the rock of true knowledge flows a deep stream, calm,
+clear and beautiful. Majestically it sweeps through stately forests,
+extended plains and lofty mountains; and the fair cities of honesty,
+temperance and truth are built upon its shores. This wonderful stream
+is fed by the ever-living fountains of honor, morality, justice, mercy
+and divine love. The music of its waves sends forth hymns of true
+patriotism, love of country and of home; and the sweet songs of faith
+and immortality float upward like strong, white wings, bearing the soul
+away on pure melody above this world of longing and of hope, until it
+rises to meet the world of glory and fulfillment. Upon these shores
+faith, hope, charity and security have reared their white temples,
+which shall ever represent a living institution, bearing on its banner
+as a motto these beautiful words:
+
+FRIENDSHIP, LOVE AND TRUTH.
+
+The stream which I have just described is the great river of
+Odd-Fellowship, and flows into the vast ocean of eternal peace, and
+such is the momentum and indestructibility of Odd-Fellowship, that,
+like a great river fed from inexhaustible sources, men may come and men
+may go, but it goes on forever and forever.
+
+Brothers, these are the streams flowing from the smitten rock whose
+fountains you unseal.
+
+Standing at the mouth of the Columbia River, one can hear the ocean
+waves moaning, surging, thundering forevermore. You can not stay the
+rushing tides that come and go, ebb and flow, until time shall be no
+more; and there the great river of the west, the mighty Columbia,
+pouring her floods into that vast, boundless sea, so shall
+Odd-Fellowship pour her deep, exhaustless stream into futurity, and all
+the combined forces of opposition, ignorance and fear shall have no
+power to stay the onward rushing, overwhelming flood. Wafted back to
+us from the unexplored shore across that sea--softly whispering through
+the rose marine spirit of the mist--intuitive knowledge reveals the
+throne of the Grand Lodge above, from which flows the pure river of
+life, on whose shores grow the trees of knowledge and of life immortal,
+which bear no fruit of sin, but whose leaves are for the healing of
+poor, suffering humanity. Brothers, build such a character as will
+cause Christ and the angels to rejoice when they behold it. Then, when
+life's work is done, when the blessed Master calls, you will not look
+mournfully into the past, but will look eagerly into the mighty future
+just opening before you.
+
+And as your life goes out amidst the rustling of an angel's wings--like
+a summer sea asleep upon a sandy shore--you will not regret that you
+practiced the principles laid down by our noble order,
+
+FRIENDSHIP, LOVE AND TRUTH.
+
+
+
+
+THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+Manhood, fully developed and symmetrically formed, through the various
+stages of the world's history, has been the great conservative element
+of society, and has been in high request. Some ages, however, have
+seemed to make a larger demand for this element than others, and this
+age of ours is one which yields to none of its predecessors in its call
+for manliness of character--for men of the right stamp. The perils of
+the times are imminent, and the demand for a high grade of intelligence
+and great strength of moral principle never was stronger. New
+developments of human genius and activity, are constantly arising, and
+new dangers to the dearest interests of society are calling for
+vigilance. This is neither a stagnant nor a tame and quiet age. It is
+an age of activity, of enterprise, of speculation, of adventure, of
+philosophizing and of both real and pseudo reforms. The age eminently
+demands vigorous and mature manhood. Therefore, study, think,
+investigate, learn. Remember, however, that it is not knowledge stored
+up as intellectual fat which is of value, but that which is turned into
+intellectual muscle. Out of dull and selfish seclusion go forth.
+Regulate with care your basal endowments. Prove thy strength, and
+render it sure. Deliver thy conceptions from narrowness, thy charity
+from scrimpness, thy purposes from smallness. Deny thyself and take up
+thy cross. Do and dare, love and suffer. So shalt thou build a
+character that will abide all the tests which future years or ages may
+bring.
+
+Bear constantly in mind that you are endlessly improvable. "It is for
+God and for Omnipotency to do mighty things in a moment; but
+degreeingly to grow to greatness is the course that He hath left for
+man." To the conscious human self there belong possibilities of such
+moment that no one can well study them without being either thrillingly
+impressed or made to experience unusual emotions. The conclusion is,
+therefore, unavoidable, that every soul can become great. By processes
+of culture to which it is able to subject itself, it can perpetually
+increase in wisdom, in strength, and in nobleness.
+
+The soul's chief capabilities may, for the sake of elucidation, be
+represented as so many different rooms within itself, each of which can
+be made to have a spaciousness equaled by no material amplitude ever
+yet ascertained, and each of which, so long as it is kept in the
+process of growth, is and will be susceptible of fresh furnishing.
+These apartments of the minor man are too wonderful to admit being
+depicted either by a writer's pen or by a painter's brush. Their most
+distinguishing characteristics can, at best, only be indicated. Who
+can tell how much knowledge can find place in them, or what volumes of
+feeling they can contain? Who can declare the magnitude of the
+grandest traits that, in them, can have freedom to thrive and bear
+fruit? Who can estimate the length and breadth, the height and depth
+of the loftiest inspirations or the noblest joys that, in them, can be
+experienced? To give a full expression to the utmost intelligence,
+potency, amiability, purity, meritoriousness and majesty that can
+reside in the capability--rooms of a human soul--would be equivalent to
+picturing the imaginable or to portraying the infinite, and to do
+either the one or the other is impossible. One may be sadly
+indifferent to the value of his soul's foremost capabilities, may
+inadequately exercise them, and may secure to them merely a dwarf-like
+compass; but there is never a time when they can not be made to
+transcend the limits of development to which they have attained. Their
+possessor can educate them forever. He can unceasingly add to their
+roominess and resource. In all time to come he can cause them to
+continue to exceed breadth after breadth. Oh, who can conceive how
+great his mental being is able to become? Who can comprehend how
+elevated a life it is possible for him to live? Who can be liable to
+overrate the vastness of the destiny for which he was created?
+
+In the language of Hughes, "Our case is like that of a traveler on the
+Alps, who should fancy that the top of the next hill must end his
+journey because it terminates his prospect, but he no sooner arrives at
+it, than he sees new ground and other hills beyond it, and continues to
+travel on as before." The thought of the soul's improvability is well
+adapted to quicken torpid virtue and to revive drooping aspirations.
+It tends to scatter the gloom resulting from disappointed endeavors.
+Let it but have a star-like clearness in the mind, and there will
+spring from it an ever-new interest in life and being.
+
+We know that the paths of usefulness and affection must sometimes be
+strewn with smitten leaves and faded bloom, and that the heart must
+sometimes be chilled by harsh changes, even as the face of nature is
+chilled by rude winds. We know that we are doomed to find thorns in
+roses, and to suffer from "thorns in the flesh." We know that there
+are for us hours when the sunshine without must be darkened by shadows
+within; when we must be pierced by trials; when we must be humbled by
+afflictions. Yet, so we but duly know our mental possibilities, how
+much there is to animate us and to make us hopeful. Well may we go our
+way, with a high ambition and with good cheer. Well may we prize, as a
+stage of action, this old stone-ribbed earth, whereon we can behold the
+beauty of emerald meadows and of blossoming plants, and can hear the
+songs of russet-bosomed robins and the prattle of children, the voice
+of the vernal breeze, and the sound of the summer rain. Oh, who that
+ever muses on the soul's heirship to the divine, can wish he had never
+been born? I am grateful for my existence. I rejoice that I have
+place amid the bright-robed mysteries which surround me. I glory in
+the shifting scenery of the seasons. No flaw do I find in the sun, the
+moon, or the stars. No prayer have I to make that the grass which
+grows at my feet may be fairer than it is, or that the mornings and
+evenings may be more attractive. Let me know as I may, and feel as I
+should, the truth that I am endlessly improvable, and I am assured that
+the soul of the universe will somehow sweeten every bitter allotment
+that falls to me, will "charm my pained steps over the burning marl"
+which belongs to the course of probationary experience, and will assist
+me joyfully to approximate the greatness of His own infinite and
+tranquil character. It is bliss to feel that the soul is an
+ever-enduring entity. Unlike the clouds and the snow-heaps, the fluids
+and the liquids, the rocks and the metals--unlike all the generations
+of living organisms--it neither wastes away nor loses its
+distinctiveness. Nay, it outlasts every transmuting process, and, as a
+self-identifying self, is endlessly living.
+
+If we reach the high plane of a perfect manhood, we must climb. "Come
+up hither, and I will show thee things which must be hereafter."--Rev.,
+iv, 1. In this mystical Revelation we behold the seer, John, dreaming
+at the base of the celestial hill, and in his dream he hears a voice
+commanding him to rise to the summit of the eternities, where,
+standing, he shall behold all things that must be. This vision has an
+infinite significance, in that no small part of the felicity associated
+with the| idea of eternity is the thought that, with ample mind, we
+shall perfectly understand the mighty plan and enterprise of God, and
+know with perfect knowledge that which is dark and obscure now. But
+not only has this truth to us an infinite significance; it has also a
+temporal one, in that it tells us that there is an immediate
+relationship between elevation of life, between high thinking, living
+and doing, and the power to command the future. "Come up hither, and I
+will show thee things which must be hereafter." That is, let us stand
+high and we see far and wide, let us stand high and we see deep.
+Elevation grants perspective and yields the possession of those years
+not only that are, but that are not. Now, so understood, these words
+have much inspiration, comfort and solace for all of us, for a very
+large part of man's life is future. Indeed, the great regulative force
+of every human spirit is not so much the present and the past--present
+opportunity and past experience--as future ideality. The architectonic
+principle of life is not the momentum that sweeps down to us from the
+years that have been, but the ideal that lies deep in the years that
+are yet to be. This is the mysterious, occult power that moulds, forms
+and fashions our stature, and that is determining the greatness or the
+littleness of our destiny. And not only is the future architectonic,
+it is also an inspiration and refuge for our anxieties, defeats and
+inadequacy, his incompetency, how little he has achieved, realizes his
+inconsequence and insignificance, and he looks forward and sees triumph
+in tomorrow; he beholds the summit of the hill, and says, "There I
+shall stand victorious some future day." Today incomplete, tomorrow
+complete; today imperfect, tomorrow perfect; today bound, tomorrow
+emancipated; today humiliated, tomorrow crowned. Hence, the future is
+man's refuge, hope and strength. And in a yet more profound sense does
+the future exert a wonderful power over our lives, in that it holds for
+us the inheritance undefiled and incorruptible, the patrimony of
+eternity. And who can measure the influence of this belief over human
+character? Blot it out, and what inspiration have we to struggle on?
+If we are to perish as the beast of the field, wither like the grass,
+and vanish like the transient cloud, man has no grand, sublime
+impulsion in this life. But let him believe that he is the child of
+God, that there is an immortal soul, not only in him, but an eternal
+sphere awaiting him--let him believe that here he is but in the bud,
+that these seventy years are but the seed time, and that infinite eons
+lie before him for fruition and efflorescence, and you magnify his
+spirit, enlarge his hope, and inspire him with a zeal to conquer and
+achieve.
+
+But now there is a popular philosophy that tells us that man can only
+know two points of time: that point of time through which he has
+gone--the past, and that point of time in which he is now living--the
+present. He may know experience and he may grasp opportunity, but he
+can know nothing of futurity. The future is a riddle, an unexplored
+continent, a _terra incognita_ into which no human eyes have ever pried
+or ever may pry, sealed as it is by the counsel of God against the
+curious vision of His children. And to some extent I think we all must
+admit that this popular notion holds true. There are those to whom the
+future must be a blank, who peer into it and behold nothing there.
+
+I have noticed that no great poem, no great religion, no great creation
+of any kind, was ever written or conceived by people who lived in the
+valleys, cramped by the hills. The hills narrow one's horizon, make
+one insular, provincial, limited. And what is true of literature and
+art is true also of life. The man of low ideals never vaticinates; the
+man who is living down in the lower ranges of existence never
+prophesies. The man with a low brow has always a limited perspective;
+so, also, the man with a low heart or a low conscience. The sordid man
+can never measure the consequences of his wealth. He may know that
+tomorrow he will be as rich as he is today, or richer, but he can not
+prognosticate what his riches will mean to him tomorrow--whether he
+will find in them more or less felicity, whether they will be a
+blessing or a burden. Neither has the base man, the immoral man, any
+clear vision of futurity. He lives in doubts and fears, and is begirt
+with clouds and confusion. He half fears that there is a law of God,
+and half doubts it; half believes in retribution, and half doubts it;
+half believes in moral cause and effect, and half doubts it. He sees,
+with no certain sight, the inevitable penalty awaiting his wrong-doing,
+else he would not and dare not sin. No man would sin, could he read
+the future; no man would defy the Infinite, did he unerringly know that
+God is a just God, and that He shall visit inevitable retribution upon
+him who trangresses His holy law. The wicked man, like the sordid man
+living in the low lands, never vaticinates, and can not, not by reason
+of any want of talent or conscience, but by reason of want of altitude
+of vision. But St. John does not tell us here that all men shall know
+all things that must be; that all men have a sense of futurity. What
+he does say is that there is an intimate and indissoluble relationship
+between elevation and futurity; that only the man who stands upon the
+altitudes can command the future; for only there, when he is at his
+best, and when he is living on the summit of his soul, does he behold
+the true and perfect action of the forces and the laws of the Eternal.
+It is not "Stay down there and I will show thee things which must be
+hereafter," but "Come up hither"--live, aspire, ascend into the
+altitudes of mind; ascend into the altitudes of feeling; ascend into
+the altitudes of conscience; live where God means you to live, and
+then--"I will show thee things which must be hereafter."
+
+And now, if you will consult your own experience or meditate on
+history, if you will scan the great things thought and the great things
+done, and the great things wrought and the great things won by man, you
+will see that they have been always wrought and won and done and
+thought upon the heights. The Muses live upon Parnassus, the Deities
+upon Olympus. Jehovah has his abiding place on Zion. David says, "I
+look unto the hills, whence cometh my help." Not unto the meadows, or
+the streams, or by the forests, or the cities, or the seas, but "unto
+the hills, whence cometh my help." He looks high, and his high vision
+grants him spiritual perspective. And Jesus speaks his great sermon,
+not by the Jordan, but on the mount. He is transfigured on a mount,
+crucified on a mount, and ascends to the right hand of His Father from
+a mount. Everywhere the heights play a great part in the history of
+human thought, feeling and faith. All great truth comes down; it does
+not rise up. All great religion comes down; it does not rise up. It
+is not the wilderness, nor the low lands, nor the level places, but
+Mount Carmel, Mount Horeb, Mount Zion, the Mount of the Beatitudes and
+the Mount of Transfiguration that are focal points of righteousness and
+faith. And when you look at and reflect upon men--the great men, the
+men who have moulded the world, who have made the massive contributions
+to humanity, who have dealt the Titan strokes that have redeemed the
+race from its servitudes and bestialities, who, like Atlas, have upheld
+and lifted up the world; who, like Prometheus, have brought to man
+precious gifts from Zeus, and so delivered him from the tyranny and
+dominion of his ignorance, superstitions, fears and passions--you will
+always find that they are men who have lived upon the lofty summits of
+the Spirit, and therefore have been seers of the future and have seen
+"those things which must be hereafter."
+
+Every high-minded man has always lived in the future. Take the
+sovereign prophet of the ancient faith. The world about him is dark
+and desolate; Israel's powers are at the ebb; the great faith that she
+has inherited is degraded, sensualized, formalized, buried under a
+debris of priestcraft, infidelity, idolatry and corruption; and yet
+this prophet stands upon the hills and dreams--dreams against the
+present, dreams through all the darkness environing him--and sees the
+day when the faith of Israel shall be the faith of the world; when the
+law of Israel shall dominate the conscience of the world; when the
+Savior of Israel shall be the Savior of the world, and when the Jehovah
+of Israel shall be the Jehovah of the world. Standing high, his soul
+soaring, thinking lofty thoughts, he beholds Israel in glorious
+perspective as the nation that shall lead man from bondage to liberty,
+from darkness to light. Or think again of the life, the history, the
+hope of Jesus, and behold in Him a perfect illustration of this truth;
+this truth that there is an intimate relationship between high living
+and high thinking, high doing, high willing and the vision of the
+future. What right had Christ to hope at all? What right had He to
+think of a Kingdom of God that was going steadily to conquer and take
+possession of this earth? What right had He to think that His Gospel
+would come to be the regnant gospel over the minds of men? What right
+had He to think that His own beautiful spirit would prevail over the
+perverse and rebellious will of society? What right had he to think
+that the world would ever come to accept His marvelous beatitudes as
+truth? What right had He to believe that the cross would ever be a
+universal symbol of salvation? Judged from the near point of view, by
+immediate results, by the facts that were right before His eyes,
+history records no more conspicuous and terrible failure than the life
+of Jesus. A Savior, and yet disbelieved in by the people; a Savior,
+and yet scorned by the multitude; a Savior, and yet called a "wine
+bibber" and a "glutton;" a Savior, and yet humiliated and degraded; a
+Savior, and yet dying ignominiously upon the cross. Where is there any
+ample redemption, any glorious assertion of the mind, in these sad,
+gloomy, hopeless facts? And yet He said, "I, if I be lifted up, shall
+draw all men unto Me." How did He dare make such a prophecy as that?
+How did He dare arrogate to himself such a dominion as that? Why,
+simply because, living in the altitudes, he had vision of things that
+must be. He knew that He had righteousness in His heart, and that
+righteousness must at last be established. He knew that His spirit was
+a spirit of peace and good will towards men, and that peace and good
+will towards men must ultimately prevail. He lived on the heights, and
+He saw those things that were to be. And now, what is true of these
+great men may be true of every one of us, according to the loftiness of
+our living. Every one of us may command the future--may, in a measure,
+prophesy and weigh the consequences, and calculate the issues of our
+own life; and every one of us can live a far larger, fuller and richer
+life, in the years that are to be than we can live in the past or in
+the time that is now.
+
+And first, let me say to you that the man that lives upon the altitudes
+of his spirit beholds with sure vision the issuance of his life in
+triumph. We speak of life habitually as being a complicated and
+intricate thing, and no doubt it is, upon its lower ranges. A man is
+prosperous today, sweeping, with sails full set, before the breeze, his
+bark leaping gladly, mounting buoyantly upon the waves; but no man can
+tell what the morrow will bring forth to him. Prosperity is not a
+matter of certitude, security or permanency. An ill wind comes, and
+the vessel is swept to disaster; on the shoals or rocks, rushing to
+destruction against some Scylla or swallowed up by some Charybdis. And
+what is true of prosperity is true of power. Today a man is the idol
+of the people, flattered, honored, extolled and crowned by them. They
+gather round him and intoxicate him with their plaudits. He is the man
+of the people, the great man of his day, but who can tell how long this
+will rule enthroned? An unfortunate speech, an error of conduct, a
+moment of indecision, a failure to appeal to the demagogic instincts of
+the race, and he is ruthlessly bereaved of his honor and his glory
+gone. The idols of yesterday are the broken statues of today; the
+heroes of yesterday are the "have-beens" of today. So capricious, so
+ephemeral, so mutable, so mercurial, so impermanent are the whims of
+humanity, and so unstable its idolatries and adorations.
+
+And as the mighty fall, so the obscure rises. Names that were unknown
+ten years ago are blazoned almost on the skies. The insignificant come
+up and take the scepter in their hand. The poor man of a little while
+ago is the rich merchant or the successful lawyer of today. This is
+his hour, this the moment of his power. Strange, is it not? There
+seems to be no method, no system in those lower planes of life. The
+rich become poor and the poor rich, the strong weak and the weak
+strong; the ruler becomes the ruled and the ruled the ruler; the master
+becomes the servant and the servant the master. No order, no system,
+no method anywhere in mundane things, and therefore no power of vision
+and vaticination.
+
+But now in the higher things there is none of this impermanence and
+instability. Everything is in order here. When man is living in the
+fulness of his nature, when he is living on the heaven-kissing
+pinnacles of his spirit, when his whole being is harmonious with the
+great and glorious laws of God, his future is assured; it is bound to
+be a great and beautiful success. No possibility of failure upon the
+heights; every possibility of failure upon the level; every possibility
+of disaster down there, but upon the peaks there can be no disaster, no
+mistake, no accident, no dethronement; there must be inevitable and
+unconditional achievement. Of course, I do not mean popular
+achievement--achievement as men usually count achievement, or success
+as men ordinarily rate success. So measured, every great man's life
+has been a dismal failure. Paul's life was not a popular success, nor
+was Isaiah's, nor was Augustine's, nor was Savanarola's, nor was
+Socrates', nor was Christ's life a popular success. Measured by
+terrestrial standards, measured by the low ideals of humanity, these
+lives were all ignominious failures, every one of them; but measured by
+the Divine standard, by the mind and will of God, they are triumphant
+victories.
+
+And now I say that every man whose point of view is high, who is
+standing upon the very highest reaches of his own being, seeking
+sincerely to be true to all that is heroic and great in his
+heaven-endowed nature, that man is bound to be, by the decree of the
+Eternal, an ultimately successful man. He is bound, just so surely as
+God's sun is bound to come tomorrow, he is bound to be crowned, not
+only with a celestial but with a terrestrial success--success as God
+measures success. He may feel pain; he may feel the slings and arrows
+of outrageous fortune; he may experience neglect; he may contend
+against a host of untoward circumstances; he may groan under the
+pressure and weight of many woes; he may weep bitter, burning, scalding
+tears of sorrow and grief, but still he must triumph, for God is just
+and will crown with a perfect equity His faithful children.
+
+And so, my friends, the central truth that I deliver to you is this,
+that life, life upon the summit of the soul, is the supreme,
+resplendent luminary. Not argument, not philosophy, not the elaborate,
+logical processes of the intellect, not the Bible, not the church, but
+life; this is the great infallible interpreter. Live and ye shall see.
+"Do my will," says Christ, "and ye shall know." Stand high and firm on
+the summit of your soul and ye shall see the things that must be
+hereafter--a victorious righteousness, a triumphant life, and the
+redeemed hosts swathed and folded in the light of Him who is
+everlasting, omnipotent and all-loving.
+
+
+
+
+PITHY POINTS
+
+Brethren, be merciful in your judgment of others.
+
+Every temptation promptly resisted strengthens the will.
+
+There is a sad want of thoughtful mercy among us all.
+
+Every step we take on the ladder upwards helps to a higher.
+
+If we are true Odd-Fellows we will put away all bitterness and malice.
+
+Brothers, remember the moral harvest comes to all perfection; not one
+grain is lost.
+
+As Odd-Fellows there are loads we can help others to carry, and thus
+learn sympathy.
+
+The test of truthfulness is true dealing with ourselves when we do
+wrong and true dealing with the brethren when they fall.
+
+It is a serious reflection that even our secret thoughts influence
+those around us.
+
+The Brotherhood has a Father watching over it, "who is the same
+yesterday, today and forever."
+
+Man alone is responsible for the eternal condition of his soul. We
+make our own heaven or hell, not by the final act of life, but by life
+itself.
+
+Truth supplies us with the only true and perfect standard by which to
+test the value of things, and so corrects the one-sided, materialistic
+standard of business.
+
+If an Odd-Fellow begins right I can not tell how many tears he may wipe
+away, how many burdens he may lift, how many orphans he may comfort,
+how many outcasts he may reclaim.
+
+Love edifies; that is, it builds up perfectly the whole man, secures an
+entire and harmonious and proportionate development of his nature. It
+does so by casting out the selfishness in man which always leads to a
+diseased and one-sided growth of his nature.
+
+No two souls are endowed in an exactly similar way. And for the
+difference of endowment there is a reason in the Divine mind, for each
+soul in its generation has its appointed work to do, and is endowed
+with suitable grace for its performance.
+
+We are not Odd-Fellows in the true sense unless we put away all
+bitterness, malice and selfishness. Common sense of mankind is quite
+right when it says a man's religion is not worth much if it does not
+make him good. Have goodness first--out of goodness good works will
+come.
+
+Every good work requires every good principle. A man with very
+prominent and striking characteristics will always be a perfect man. A
+perfect man has such harmonies that he scarcely has a characteristic.
+To be fruitful in every good work you must have in your heart the germs
+and seeds, the springs and sources of all Christian virtue.
+
+We are all greater dupes to our weakness than to the skill of others;
+and the successes gained over us by the designing are usually nothing
+more than the prey taken from those very snares we have laid ourselves.
+One man falls by his ambition, another by his perfidy, a third by his
+avarice, and a fourth by his lust; what are these but so many nets,
+watched indeed by the fowler, but woven by the victim?
+
+Sorrow is not an accident--occurring now and then--it is the very woof
+which is woven into the warp of life, and he who has not discerned the
+divine sacredness of sorrow, and the profound meaning which is
+concealed in pain, has yet to learn what life is. The cross manifested
+as the necessity of the highest life alone interprets it.
+
+Equity--An eternal rule of right, implanted in the heart. What it asks
+for itself it is willing to grant to others. It not only forbids us to
+do wrong to the meanest of God's creatures, but it teaches us to
+observe the golden rule, "All things whatsoever ye would that men
+should do unto you, do you even so to them." There is no greater
+injunction--no better rule to practice.
+
+Don't rely on friends--don't rely on the name of your ancestors.
+Thousands have spent the prime of life in the vain hope of help from
+those whom they called friends, and many thousands have starved because
+they have rich fathers. Rely upon the good name which is made by your
+own exertions, and know that better than the best friend you can have
+is unquestionable determination, united with decision of character.
+
+How little is known of what is in the bosom of those around us! We
+might explain many a coldness could we look into the heart concealed
+from us; we should often pity where we hate, love when we curl the lip
+with scorn and indignation. To judge without reserve of any human
+action is a culpable temerity, of all our sins the most unfeeling and
+frequent.
+
+How a common sorrow or calamity spans the widest social differences and
+welds all, the rich and poor, in one common bond of sympathy, which,
+begetting charity and all her train, softens the hardest heart and
+banishes the sturdiest feeling of superiority! Over the lifeless body
+of the departed, enemies and friend can weep together, and, burying
+strife and differences with their common loss, feel a kinship which
+unites them, and which all humanity shares.
+
+Don't be exacting.--An exacting temper is one against which to guard
+both one's heart and the nature of those who are under our control and
+influence. To give and to allow, to suffer and to bear, are the graces
+more to the purpose of a noble life than cold, exacting selfishness,
+which must have, let who will go without, which will not yield, let who
+will break. It is a disastrous quality wherewith to go through the
+world; for it receives as much pain as it inflicts, and creates the
+discomfort it deprecates.
+
+Verily, good works constitute a refreshing stream in this world,
+wherever they are found flowing. It is a pity that they are too often
+like oriental torrents, "waters that fail" in times of greatest need.
+When we meet the stream actually flowing and refreshing the land, we
+trace it upward, in order to discover the fountain whence it springs.
+Threading our way upward, guided by the river, we have found at length
+the placid lake from which the river runs. Behind all genuine good
+works and above them, love will, sooner or later, certainly be found.
+It is never good alone; uniformly, in fact, and necessarily in the
+nature of things, we find the two constituents existing as a complex
+whole, "love and good works," the fountain and the flowing stream.
+
+Never give up old friends for new ones. Make new ones if you like, and
+when you have learned that you can trust them, love them if you will,
+but remember the old ones still. Do not forget they have been merry
+with you in time of pleasure, and when sorrow came to you they sorrowed
+also. No matter if they have gone down in social scale and you up; no
+matter if poverty and misfortune have come to them while prosperity
+came to you; are they any less true for that? Are not their hearts as
+warm and tender if they do beat beneath homespun instead of velvet?
+Yes, kind reader, they are as true, loving and tender; don't forget old
+friends.
+
+Young men! Let the nobleness of your mind impel you to its
+improvement; you are too strong to be defeated, save by yourselves.
+Refuse to live merely to sleep and eat. Brutes can do this; but you
+are men. Act the part of men. Prepare yourselves to endure toil.
+Resolve to rise--you have but to resolve. Nothing can hinder your
+success if you determine to succeed. Do not waste your time by wishing
+and dreaming, but go earnestly to work. Let nothing discourage you.
+If you have no books, borrow them; if you have no teachers, teach
+yourself; if your early education has been neglected, by the greater
+diligence repair the defect. Let not a craven heart or a love of ease
+rob you of the inestimable benefit of self-culture.
+
+Have the courage to face a difficulty, lest it kick you harder than you
+bargained for. Difficulties, like thieves, often disappear at a
+glance. Have the courage to leave a convivial party at the proper hour
+for doing so, however great the sacrifice; and to stay away from one
+upon the slightest grounds for objection, however great the temptation
+to go. Have the courage to do without that which you do not need,
+however much you may admire it. Have the courage to speak your mind
+when it is necessary that you should do so, and hold your tongue when
+it is better you should be silent. Have the courage to speak to a poor
+friend in a seedy coat, even in the street, and when a rich one is
+nigh. The effort is less than many people take it to be, and the act
+is worthy of a king. Have the courage to admit that you have been in
+the wrong, and you will remove the fact in the mind of others, putting
+a desirable impression in the place of an unfavorable one. Have the
+courage to adhere to the first resolution when you can not change it
+for a better, and abandon it at the eleventh hour upon conviction.
+
+
+
+
+THE BIBLE IN ODD-FELLOWSHIP
+
+The Bible is a book for the understanding; but much more it is a book
+for the spirit and for the heart. Many other kinds of learning are
+found in the Bible. It is a manual of Eastern antiquities, a handbook
+of political experiences, a collection of moral wisdom as applied to
+personal conduct, a mine of poetry, a choice field for the study of
+languages. The Bible is the book of God, and therefore it is the book
+of the future, the book of hope. It pierces the veil between this and
+another life, pointing us on to the realms of light. In sorrow, in
+sin, and in death we may, if we will, find in the Holy Bible patience,
+consolation and hope. The Bible opens the widest, freest outlook for
+the mind into the eternal, enlarging a man's range of spiritual sight,
+and enabling him to judge of all things in both worlds in their true
+proportion. The Bible gets into life because it first came out of
+life. It was born of life at its best. Its writers were the tallest
+white angels literature has known. No other literature has five names
+equal to these: Moses, David, Isaiah, Paul and John. These men and the
+others wrote as they were moved by the Holy Ghost. The messages of the
+Bible are the loftiest in the range of human thought. There have been
+many magnificent periods like the age of Elizabeth, the time of the
+Renaissance and the age of Victoria, but no other single century has
+ever done anything equal to the production of the New Testament in the
+first century. The Bible has a sound psychology. It seeks to
+influence the whole man. It pours white light into the intellect. It
+grapples with the great themes upon which thinkers stretch their minds.
+John Fiske's three subjects are all familiar themes to the readers of
+the Bible. Its style is incomparable in grandeur and variety. It
+approaches the intellect with every form of literary style. It is the
+supreme intellectual force in the life of the common people. It has
+been teacher and school for the millions. The Puritans, for example,
+used it as a poem, story book, history, law and philosophy. Out of it
+New England was born. It has been the chief representative of the
+English language at its best. Anglo-Saxon life and learning are
+saturated with it. The literature of England and America is full of
+the Bible. Shakespeare and Tennyson are specimens. Each of these
+authors quote from nearly every book in the Bible, and each of them
+refers to the Bible not less than five hundred times. Herbert Spencer
+admits that it is the greatest educator. It is winning its place in
+school and college. No education is complete without a knowledge of
+this literature. It is the privilege of Odd-Fellowship to enthrone the
+Bible in the lodge-room, and in the home. It teaches the intellectual
+life from above and lifts it to the Bible's own level.
+
+Dean Stanley was visiting the great scholar, Ewald, in Dresden, and in
+the course of the conversation, Ewald snatched up a copy of the New
+Testament and said, in his impulsive and enthusiastic way, "In this
+little book is contained all the wisdom of the world." There is a
+sense in which this statement is not extravagant. The book contains
+the highest and fullest revelation of truth the world has known. The
+greatest themes man's mind can ponder are here presented. The most
+profound problems with which the human intellect has ever grappled are
+here discussed. We maintain that a mastery of the contents of this
+book will in itself provide an intellectual discipline no other book
+can give. Refinement of character, refinement of thought, refinement
+of speech, all of the essential characteristics of the intellectual as
+well as of the spiritual life, have been found in our own church from
+the beginning, among those whose only advantages have been a personal
+religious experience and the consequent love and continuous study of
+God's word as well as among those who have had all the advantages of
+the schools. No man need be afraid of exhausting the truth in the
+Bible. No man can ever flatter himself that he has got beyond it.
+Whatever his intellectual attainments may be, the Bible will still have
+further message for him.
+
+There was a very suggestive spectacle on the streets of London one day,
+just after Elizabeth had become England's Queen. As she was riding by
+the little conduit at the upper end of Cheapside an old man came out of
+it, carrying a scythe and bearing a pair of wings. He represented
+Father Time coming out of his dark cave to greet the young Queen. He
+led by the hand a young girl clad in flowing robes of white silk, and
+she was his daughter, Truth. Truth held in her hands an English Bible,
+on which was written "Verbum Veritatis," and which she presented to the
+Queen. It was a pageant prepared for the occasion but suggestive for
+this occasion as well. Truth is the daughter of Time. Our backs may
+be bent and our hair may be gray before we can lead Bible truth forth
+by the hand. We may be old before we know much; our intellectual life
+may be matured in fullest measure and we still can know more; we must
+grow a pair of wings before we know it all--even if we do then.
+
+The Bible is the conquering book. It has already dominated English
+literature, so that almost the whole of its text from Genesis to
+Revelation might, if all the copies of the Bible were suddenly lost
+from the world, be restored in piecemeal fragments gathered out of the
+books in which the Book has been quoted, Then, besides, there are the
+Bible thoughts that have indirectly, we might almost say insidiously,
+permeated the literature of Europe and America. More than that, the
+Bible has been industriously for years securing its own translation
+into hundreds of tongues and dialects of the globe. The Koran does not
+take pains to translate itself, and, indeed, refuses to be translated;
+but in contradistinction with such apathy of false faiths, the Bible
+courts transcription into foreign tongues, loses nothing in the
+process, but thereby gains for itself the homage of multitudes who, on
+reading it for the first time, cry, "This is the book we long have
+sought, that finds us out in the deepest recesses of our being and
+satisfies the profoundest cravings of our souls." The Bible is the
+comforting book. There is no volume like it for consolation. It is
+the only sure and steady staff for pilgrim spirits to lean upon, and
+the only book that is quoted at the bedside of the sick. It is a book
+to wear next the heart in life, and upon which to pillow the head in
+death. No other so-called "scriptures" of the world say the things
+that the Bible says, or supply the hopes that its promises afford. The
+Bible is not simply a book; it is The Book. It is the best book of any
+kind that we have. We can not do without it, either here or hereafter.
+There are many books in the world, but there is only one book. The
+Bible is unique. It is in a class by itself. It seeks to control
+everything, but it co-ordinates itself with nothing. It sets forth
+imitable examples of character, but it is not itself imitable. No one
+has ever written or ever will write a second Bible. The very phrase
+which every one uses, "The Bible," signifies the uniqueness of this
+book. It is a whole library in itself, and yet it is more than a
+simple collection of books. There is a homogeneity and consistency to
+the whole which lead us to speak of scripture as being a single story,
+not many revelations. The Bible is the exhaustless book. It may
+sometimes prove exhausting to its light-minded readers, but it never
+exhausts itself. "It is the wonder of the Bible," observes Dr. Joseph
+Parker, who has preached more than twenty-five volumes of sermons upon
+scriptural subjects, "that you never get through it. You get through
+all other books, but you never get through the Bible." On the basis of
+a rationalistic criticism, this quality of exhaustlessness is really
+inexplicable. And when we come to realize that, after all has been
+said as to scrolls and tablets and styluses and human factors and
+copyists, God wrote the Bible, we understand why it is that scripture
+is so rich in treasures of wisdom. We see that we can not exhaust the
+Bible because we can not exhaust God. The Bible wields an influence
+that can not be estimated. The spoken word is powerful, the printed
+word surpasses it. The one is temporal, the other is eternal; the one
+is circumscribed, the other is unlimited. The spoken sermon of today
+is forgotten tomorrow; the written word of thousands of years ago still
+sways the masses of today.
+
+The whole civilized world bows down with reverence before the book of
+all books, the Bible. The Roman sword, the Grecian palette and chisel,
+have indeed rendered noble service to the cause of civilization, yet
+even their proudest claims dwindle into insignificance when compared
+with the benefits which the Bible has wrought. It has penetrated into
+realms where the names of Greece and Rome have never resounded. It has
+illumined empires and ennobled peoples, which Roman war and Grecian art
+had left dark and barbarous. Where one man is charmed by the Odyssey,
+tens and hundreds of thousands are delighted by the Pentateuch; where
+one man is enthused by the Philippics of Demosthenes, millions are
+enthused by the orations of Isaiah; where one man is inspired by the
+valor of Horatious, tens of millions are inspired by the bravery of
+David; where one man's life is ennobled by the art in the Parthenon,
+scores of millions of lives are ennobled by the art in the sanctuary:
+where one man's life is guided by the moral maxims of Marcus Aurelius,
+hundreds of millions find their law of right and their rule for action
+in the Bible. It is read in more than two hundred and fifty languages,
+by four hundred millions of people living in every clime and zone of
+the globe. It constitutes the only literature, the only code of law
+and ethics, of many peoples and tribes. For thousands of years it has
+gone hand in hand with civilization, has led the way towards the moral
+and intellectual development of human kind, and despite the hatred of
+its enemies and the still more dangerous misinterpretations of its
+friends, its moral law still maintains its firm hold upon the hearts
+and minds of the people, its power is still supreme for kindling a love
+of right and duty, of justice and morality, within the hearts of the
+overwhelming masses. Were it possible to annihilate the Bible, and
+with it all the influence it has exercised, the pillars upon which
+civilization rests would be knocked from under it, and, as if with one
+thrust of the fatal knife, we would deal the death blow to our
+morality, to our domestic happiness, to our commercial integrity, to
+our peaceful relationships, to our educational and chart-table
+institutions.
+
+There are wives and mothers, who stand with lacerated hearts at the
+open grave and see the light of their life extinguished beneath the
+cruel clods, and yet, they bear up bravely, resting their bent forms
+and supporting their tottering feet on the staff of hope and trust
+which the Bible affords. Take that solace from them, and you may soon
+have occasion to bury the wife next to her husband, and the mother next
+to her child. There are husbands who, when sitting lonely, dependent,
+in the circle of their motherless, weeping children, find the good old
+Book the only comforter; take it from them and you drive them to the
+madhouse or to suicide. There are maidens grieving, pining, their
+hearts broken, their lives blighted, their career irretrievably
+blasted; take the solace from them which this book breathes into their
+withered hearts, the solace that suffering innocence will be
+recompensed, that a God of justice rules, take that solace from them
+and you have taken all that makes life bearable. There are millions of
+people pining in bondage, toiling in obscurity, suffering physically
+and mentally for no crime of their own, sick and hungry, friendless and
+hopeless; take the book from them that teaches them the lesson of
+patient endurance, and you may write the word Finis, and close the
+records of civilization forevermore. It is the one book that has a
+balm for every wound, a comfort for every tear, a ray of light for
+every darkness.
+
+Its language all people can understand, its spirit all minds can grasp,
+its moral laws all people can obey, its truths appeal not only to the
+lowly and simple, but also to the highest intellect, they win the
+spontaneous approval, not only of the pious, but also of the most
+skeptical. At a literary gathering at the house of the Baron von
+Holbach, where the most celebrated atheists of the age used to
+assemble, the gentlemen present were one day commenting on the absurd
+and foolish things with which the Bible abounds. The French
+encyclopedist, Diderat, a materialist himself, startled his friends by
+his little speech: "But it is wonderful, gentlemen, it is wonderful. I
+know of no man who can speak or write with such ability. I do not
+believe that any of you could compose such narratives, or could have
+laid down such sublime moral laws, so simple, yet so elevating,
+exerting so wide an influence for good, and awakening such deep and
+such reverential feelings, as does the Bible." Diderat spoke the
+truth. Place the most celebrated systems of philosophies or the most
+famous code of ethics, into the hands of the masses, and see whether
+the subtleties of their learning, the elegance of their diction will
+touch their hearts as deeply as does the Bible. All the genius and
+learning of the ancient world, all the penetration of the profoundest
+philosophers, have never been able to produce a book that was as widely
+read, as voluminously commented on, as dearly loved, as this book,
+neither have all the law-givers of all the lands, and of all ages, been
+able to produce a code of law and ethics that was universally and as
+implicitly followed as that of the law-giver, Moses.
+
+The Bible is an emblem of Odd-Fellowship, because it is the
+Odd-Fellows' text-book. Here we get our doctrines for faith and our
+rules for practice in all the relations of life. As Odd-Fellows, we
+believe the Bible is the word of God, because in their enmity humanity
+has never been able to destroy it or rob it of its power; nor have any
+who reject it given us a book to take its place. The intellect and
+culture of our day can not improve the teachings of Christ, nor set
+before us a nobler ideal life. As Odd-Fellows, we believe in this
+beautiful emblem, because our hearts attest its truth. We need not be
+told that the landscape is beautiful, or that the song of birds is
+sweet. When we see the one and hear the other, we know it. As the eye
+discerns the beautiful, and the ear discerns sweet sounds, so the heart
+of man discerns the divineness of the Bible teachings and sets its seal
+to their truth. As Odd-Fellows, we believe in the scriptures, because
+the experiences of all true believers, of whatever name, or age, or
+country, prove it to be the "bread of life" and the "water of life" to
+a needy and suffering world. Age by age the evidence of experience is
+accumulating, and growing stronger, and for a soul to distrust the
+revelations made unto it, and the divine leading of the human race, is
+as though the eye should disbelieve in the sun shining at mid-day. We
+recognize the Bible as a precious boon to man, the gift of the Great
+Father above. It is a "light to our feet and a lamp to our path." It
+is a compass whose never-failing needle directs us safely across the
+desert sands of life, and through the dark labyrinths of an evil world,
+and its precious promises gives us comfort while we bear the burdens
+and endure the sorrows, pain and anguish incident to human life.
+
+Since our organization is founded on the Bible, we should, as
+Odd-Fellows, become more conversant with it. Many evils creep into our
+lodges that could be avoided if we used the Bible more in our talks for
+the good of the order. Intemperance is an evil that does us much harm.
+What does the Bible say in regard to it? Proverbs, xx, 1, says: "Wine
+is a mocker, strong drink is raging, and whosoever is deceived thereby
+is not wise." Proverbs, xxi, 17: "He that loveth pleasure shall be a
+poor man; he that loveth wine and oil shall not be rich." Ah me! what
+dead courage, what piles of bleached bones that was once the
+concentration of all that was great and lofty and true. What
+aspirations, ambitions, enterprise and resolutions--what genius,
+integrity and all that belongs to true manhood--have been swept from
+the tablets of time into oblivion by King Alcohol and his horrid half
+brothers, the gambling hell and the brothel.
+
+A few years ago a noted wild-beast tamer gave a performance with his
+pets in one of the leading theatres. He put his lions, tigers,
+leopards and hyenas through their part of the entertainment, awing the
+audience by his awful nerve and his control over them. As a closing
+act to the performance, he was to introduce an enormous
+boa-constrictor, thirty feet long. He had bought it when it was only
+two days old, and for twenty years he handled it daily, so that it was
+considered perfectly harmless and completely under his control. He had
+seen it grow from a tiny reptile, which he often carried in his bosom,
+into a fearful monster. The curtain rose upon an Indian woodland
+scene. The wild, weird strains of an oriental band steal through the
+trees. A rustling noise is heard, and a huge serpent is seen winding
+its way through the undergrowth. It stops. Its head is erect. Its
+bright eyes sparkle. Its whole body seems animated. A man emerges
+from the heavy foliage. Their eyes meet. The serpent quails before
+the man--man is victor. The serpent is under control of a master.
+Under his guidance and direction it performs a series of fearful feats.
+At a signal from the man it slowly approaches him and begins to coil
+its heavy folds around him. Higher and higher do they rise, until man
+and serpent seem blended into one. Its hideous head is reared above
+the mass. The man gives a little scream, and the audience unite in a
+thunderous burst of applause, but it freezes upon their lips. The
+trainer's scream was a wail of death agony. Those cold, slimy folds
+had embraced him for the last time. They crushed the life out of him,
+and the horror-stricken audience heard bone after bone crack as those
+powerful folds tightened upon him. Man's playful thing had become his
+master. His slave for twenty years had now enslaved him.
+
+The following is a will left by a drunkard of Oswego, New York State:
+"I leave to society a ruined character and a wretched example. I leave
+to my parents as much sorrow as they can, in their feeble state, bear.
+I leave to my brothers and sisters as much shame and mortification as I
+could bring on them. I leave to my wife, a broken heart--a life of
+shame. I leave to each of my children, poverty, ignorance, a low
+character, and the remembrance that their father filled a drunkard's
+grave." It behooves us as Odd-Fellows to ponder well the lessons
+taught by our order. Unless the principles that are laid down are
+fully carried out, we can never be Odd-Fellows in spirit and in truth.
+Today is our opportunity; act now. Have you ever seen those marble
+statues fashioned into a fountain, with the clear water flowing out
+from the marble lips or the hand, on and on forever? The marble stands
+there, passive, cold, making no effort to arrest the gliding water. So
+it is that time flows through the hands of men, swift, never pausing
+until it has run itself out, and the man seems petrified into a marble
+sleep, not feeling what it is that is passing away forever. And the
+destiny of nine men out of ten accomplishes itself before they realize
+it slipping away from them, aimless, useless, until it is too late.
+"Be such a man, live such a life, that if every man were such as you,
+and every life a life like yours, this earth would be God's Paradise."
+
+Remember that no good the humblest of us has wrought ever dies. There
+is one long, unerring memory in the universe, out of which nothing
+dies. A chill autumn wind, blowing over a sterile plain, bore within
+its arms a little seed, torn with ruthless force from its matrix on a
+lofty tree, and dropped the seed upon the sand to perish. A bright
+winged beetle, weary with flight and languid with the chilly air,
+rested for a moment on the arid plain. The little seed dropped Aeolus
+served to satisfy the hunger of the beetle, which presently winged its
+flight to the margin of a swift running stream that had sprung from the
+mountain side, and cleaving a bed through rocks of granite, went gaily
+laughing upon its cheery way down to the ever rolling sea. Sipping a
+drop of the crystal flood, the beetle crawled within a protecting
+ledge, and, folding its wings, lay down to pleasant dreams. The Ice
+King passed along and touched the insect in its sleep. Its mission was
+fulfilled; but the conflict of the seasons continued until the white
+destroyer melted in the breath of balmy spring. And then a sunbeam
+sped to the chink wherein the body of the insect lay, and searching for
+the little seed entombed, but not destroyed, invited it to "join the
+Jubilee of returning life and hope." Under the soft wooing of the
+peopled ray, the little seed began to swell with joy, tiny rootlets
+were developed within the body of the protecting beetle, a minute stem
+shot out of its gaping mouth, and lo! a mighty tree had been carried
+from the desert, saved from the frosts of winter, nurtured and started
+upon its mission of life and usefulness by an humble insect that had
+perished with the flowers. The agent had passed away, but, building
+better than he knew, the wide-spreading tree remained by the margin of
+the life-giving stream, a shelter and a rest to the weary traveler upon
+life's great highway through many fretful centuries.
+
+A child abandoned by its mother to perish in an Egyptian marsh may
+become the instrument to deliver a nation from bondage, and an
+unostentatious man, unknown to fortune and to fame, may become the
+agent of a mighty work destined to benefit the human race as long as it
+may last upon the earth. George Eliot says, "Our deeds are like
+children that are born to us; they live and act apart from our own
+will. Nay, children may be strangled, but deeds never; they have an
+indestructible life, both in and out of our consciousness."
+
+No man has come to true greatness who has not felt in some degree that
+his life belongs to his race, and that what God gives him he gives him
+for mankind. The different degrees of consciousness are really what
+make the different degrees of greatness in men.
+
+While Odd-Fellowship does not claim to be a religious institution, yet
+so closely is it allied to Christianity that we deem it proper to
+discuss these questions. I quote from Dr. Lyman Abbott's lecture on
+"Christianity and Orientalism," as follows: "Religion as a thought has
+four questions to answer: First, What is God? Second, What is man?
+Third, What is the relation between God and man? Fourth, What is the
+life which man is to live when he understands and enters into that
+relation? There is no other question; there is nothing left. What is
+God? What is man? And how are men to live when they have entered into
+that relationship? Now, Christianity has its answer to each one of
+those four questions. God--one true, righteous, loving, helpful Father
+of the whole human race. God--love. And love, what is that? Such a
+life as Jesus Christ lived on the earth. What is man? Man is in the
+image of God. If he is not, if he fails in that, he fails being a man.
+He is in the image of God, and not until he has come to be in the
+image, of God will he be a man. What is a statue? I can see a nose, a
+mouth, appearing out of the marble block. No, it is not a statue, it
+is a half-done statue. Wait until the sculptor is through, then you
+will see the statue. Not till God is done will you see a man, and you
+never saw one except as you saw him in Jesus of Nazareth. And what is
+the relation between this God and this man? It is the relationship of
+the most intimate fellowship that the human soul can conceive; one life
+dwelling in the other life, and filling the other life full of His own
+fullness. You can not get any closer relationship to God than that.
+When this fullness has been realized, when you and I have the fullness
+of God in us, when God has finished, the man life will result. Just
+such a life as Christ lived, with all the splendor of self-sacrifice,
+with all the glory of service, with all the magnificent heroism, with
+all the enduring patience."
+
+
+
+
+BROTHER UNDERWOOD'S DREAM.
+
+Being invited some time since to deliver an address before a benevolent
+institution, and being pressed amid the daily business cares which
+surrounded, I was fearful I should not be able to command sufficient
+time for preparation of the task. Returning home, I retired to my bed,
+my thoughts still keeping themselves in active motion in their endeavor
+to "think out" what I should say. In this state of mind I fell asleep,
+and soon was in dreamland. I dreamed that death had taken place, and
+as I approached the gates of the unseen world, I was met by an angel,
+who kindly tendered his services in escorting me through the realms of
+Heaven. Being a stranger there, I gladly and gracefully accepted his
+kind invitation. Proceeding along the pearly streets, enraptured with
+the beauties which surrounded me, I saw a multitude of people, the
+number of whom figures fail to compute; but I noticed there were
+dividing lines, and they were gathered in companies. Observing a
+beautiful body of water in the distance, and a gathering of one company
+by its banks, I inquired of my escort who they were. He replied they
+were Baptists, and said "they always keep near the water's edge." Just
+beyond was another company, which my faithful attendant informed me was
+a Presbyterian band, and that their infant baptism views still clinging
+to them was one of the causes of their "corralling" together. Just
+then we heard loud and prolonged shouting and singing of the hymn
+"Shall we gather at the river," and, pointing to the spot from whence
+it came, near a beautiful stream not far off, the angel said: "Those
+are the Methodists. They never cease shouting, and so loud are they at
+times that they annoy the Episcopalians, whom you see on the opposite
+side of the stream, in their discussion of the doctrine of apostolic
+succession." Seeing still other gatherings farther on, I was anxious
+to go thither and mingle with them; but my guide remonstrated, saying:
+"You can see from this standpoint the representatives of all churches.
+There, said he, are the Catholics and the Jews, the Universalists and
+the Congregationalists, the Unitarians and the Moravians, all with
+their varied 'creeds,' and if you go that way you will be surrounded by
+them, each trying to prove that you got to Heaven through their
+peculiar doctrine or faith."
+
+Turning to the right, we moved on, only to pass to more gorgeous and
+beautiful apartments, where the streets were golden. Here I observed
+another multitude, but it was one body. "This," said the angel, "is
+the gathering of the various priests and pastors, rectors and rabbis,
+and the ministers and the elders who are trying to unite on some common
+ground upon which their congregations (which we had passed) might
+stand, where there would be but 'One Lord, one faith, one baptism.'"
+Gal., iv, 5. For, said the angel, until then, they go not up with
+their churches and creeds to higher seats above, for "neither
+circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision." Gal., v, 6.
+
+Proceeding on our way we approached a magnificent archway, over the
+lintels of which was inscribed, "The Christian's Home in Glory." The
+grandeur of this new apartment exceeded all the rest, a description of
+which lies beyond the power of words, "For eye hath not seen, nor the
+ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man the things which
+God hath prepared for them that love him." I Cor., ii, 9. This I found
+to be the abode of the apostles, martyrs and Christians of all ages.
+Here was Paul and Peter, and the prophets, the thief on the cross and
+Bunyan, Lazarus and Baxter, Stephen and Father Abraham, Martha and Mary
+and the widow who gave her two mites. Pausing, I beheld, with banners
+above, an innumerable number "marching on," with Lincoln and Lovejoy,
+Lyman, Beecher and John Brown in the advance, and on the banners was
+inscribed, "These are they which came out of great tribulation." Rev.,
+viii, 14. The angel said: "That is the multitude of poor slaves from
+the cotton fields of earth, doing homage to their deliverers." "They
+shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun
+light on them, nor any heat." Rev., vii, 16. Here I also found Watts
+and Wesley singing, while Bliss (who had but lately been translated
+from earth to heaven by way of Ashtabula bridge), catching the
+inspiration, was setting the songs of Heaven to the music of earth.
+Gazing on the many thrones and crowns, there were some of peculiar
+brightness. I looked on one, and what was the inscription? Was it, I
+was a Methodist? No. I was immersed? No. I was a Jew? No. But
+rather this: "Because I delivered the poor that cried and fatherless,
+and him that had none to help him, the blessing of him that was ready
+to perish came upon me, and I caused the widow's heart to sing with
+joy." Job, xxix, 12, 14. And this was the crown of Job. And there was
+another just beyond, and I read the inscription. Was it, I was a
+Presbyterian? No. I prayed by quantity? No. I was a Universalist?
+No. But "Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is
+this, to visit the fatherless and the widow in their affliction and to
+keep himself unspotted from the world." James, i, 27. And while the
+memory and name of Peabody, the philanthropist, is and shall be honored
+and loved for ages to come in two hemispheres, his crown of glory in
+heaven is second to none. But there was still another. It was worn by
+one of queenly beauty, and she sat upon her throne; the splendor of her
+robe and the brilliancy of her apparel dimmed my vision. I read her
+inscription, set, as it was, in Heaven's choicest diamonds. Was it, I
+was an Episcopalian? No. I was baptized? No. I was a Catholic? No.
+But thus: "I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat; I was thirsty, and
+ye gave me drink; I was a stranger, and ye took me in; naked, and ye
+clothed me; I was sick, and ye visited me; I was in prison, and ye came
+unto me." Matt., xxv, 35, 36. And before her throne stood thousands
+who had come up from the battle fields of the Crimea, and the widows
+and orphans, the lame and the halt, the blind and the deaf from the
+streets and alleys of London, and as they shouted their hallelujahs
+before her, they carried banners on which were emblazoned these words:
+"Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my
+brethren, ye have done it unto me." Matt., xxv, 40. And the crown of
+Florence Nightingale glistens brightly in Heaven. Passing on, and
+observing a large number of vacant thrones and crowns, I naturally
+asked, for whom are these? The angel replied: "For the Christians of
+earth; the managers of the 'homes' for the friendless, the widows and
+the orphans, and those who, regardless of their respective church
+creeds and doctrines, like their Master when he was on earth, go about
+doing good." The angel vanished, and I awoke.
+
+MORAL.--Brethren, in our tenacity for church creeds, let us not fail in
+the practice of a little daily Christianity. "Finally, brethren, if
+there be any virtue and if there be any praise, think on these things."
+Gal., iv, 8.
+
+
+
+
+THE IMPERIAL VIRTUE
+
+ Though sophists may argue, or philosophers prate,
+ The evils of lying they can not mitigate.
+ Our God's law is truth! Who then dares justify
+ A falsehood? Remember, a lie is a lie!
+ Let this he our motto, in old age or youth:
+ "All lying is sinful, so, stick to the truth!"
+
+"Truth we accept as a cardinal virtue, and require its practice on the
+part of all the votaries of Odd-Fellowship while traveling the rugged
+journey of life in search of reward and rest." Truth is above all
+things else, and every Odd-Fellow knows full well that his obligation
+binds him to speak the truth. Remember a lie is never justifiable. It
+does the person more harm than that he seeks to avoid by telling a
+falsehood would do. "What is truth?" This question of Pilate is in
+the air today. It is repeated on every side and in every department of
+intellectual pursuit. It always pays to tell the truth under all
+circumstances. Abraham came near bringing a whole nation into trouble
+in lying about his wife. Be it said to the honor of President Grant,
+that once a visitor called at the White House wishing to see him. The
+door-keeper told the servant to tell the visitor the president was not
+in. General Grant, who was very busy, heard what was said. He called
+out, "Say no such thing. I don't lie myself, and won't allow anyone to
+lie for me." Tell the truth always. "I said in my haste all men are
+liars." Psalms, cxvi, 2.
+
+It was a very sweeping assertion that the Psalmist made, and one that
+incriminates us all. He probably did not mean that all men were liars
+in the sense that everybody always spoke untruthfully, but that the
+great majority of people would, under certain stress of circumstances,
+equivocate to suit the conditions of the occasion. If that was what he
+meant, he uttered a sage truth when he said very hastily one day: "All
+men are liars." Though a hasty utterance, facts seem to prove its
+truthfulness. The greatest mischief-maker in the world today is the
+liar. I honestly believe that lying causes more real anguish and
+suffering than any other evil. It would be effort wasted to spend much
+time in proof of this assertion of David's, so we will attempt to
+classify briefly, that each of us may know where he belongs. First,
+there is the deliberate lie. This species needs no particular
+definition. All are acquainted with it, all have met it, some have
+uttered it. You all know it when you see it; it is barefaced and
+shameless; it reeks with the mire of falsity and is foul with the slime
+of the pit infernal. This lie contains not an atom of truth, is
+tinctured not with a grain of fact, but is a full-blooded,
+thoroughbred, out and out lie. Then we have the campaign lie. A
+large, open-faced fellow, loud-voiced and blatant; bold, daring and
+sweeping; it claims everything, asserts everything, denies anything.
+
+During the campaign this lie is a factor. Men buy papers to read it,
+and go miles to hear it. The campaign lie is the greatest worker in
+the canvass for votes. He pats the workman on the back and promises to
+fill his pail with sirloin steak and fresh salmon, when, if the other
+man is elected, he will have to carry liver and codfish. He grasps the
+merchant strongly by the hand and promises him larger sales and better
+profits in case his party gets into power; he enters the magnate's
+office and promises him increased dividends and no strikes; he promises
+everything till after election, when he has no more promises to make.
+
+There is the polite lie, too. A very gentle affair this. A very
+proper lie, clothed with the attire of an elegant etiquette and of
+graceful form. It is never harsh and never rude, but smooth as oil, as
+gentle as a zephyr. The number of polite lies that are told every day
+are legion. It would be useless to attempt to classify them, worse
+than useless to try to enumerate them. They are of all sizes, colors,
+descriptions and shapes. They have much in common, but differ widely
+in particular. No locality is destitute of this venerable and classic
+falsehood. The ancients used it, the moderns still cling to it; the
+poor find it handy, the rich could not keep house without it; it
+abounds in every clime and thrives in every latitude. The polite
+hostess says to the departing guest: "We have been delighted by your
+visit; do us the favor to come again," when she sincerely hopes that
+most any catastrophe may overtake her rather than another visit from
+this same personage. There are the every-day expressions, 'Not at
+home,' which the housemaid is instructed to give the caller; and a
+score of other social lies which in truth deceive nobody, nine times
+out of ten. Society would lose little and gain much if the polite lie
+could be banished, and every man say what he thought and speak as he
+felt.
+
+Another lie I will notice is the business lie. The business lie is a
+very matter of fact lie. It sounds well. There are some genuine
+bankrupt sales, of course; there are a few bona fide smoke, fire and
+water mark-downs undoubtedly, but there are more advertised in a week
+than there are failures and fires in a year. Good, staple merchandise
+will usually bring its value, and he who advertises an unheard of
+bargain has generally set a trap for the unwary. One class of goods in
+the window marked a certain price, an inferior class on the bargain
+counter at the same figure. You bargain for a piece of furniture at a
+surprisingly low figure; when it is delivered you have every reason to
+suppose that it is like what you bought in appearance alone. A roll of
+cloth marked "all wool," it is half cotton, and the rest shoddy. The
+business lie, though found so often, is never the friend of merchant or
+purchaser. It is the foe of all honest transactions. Office,
+salesroom and storehouse would be better without it; proprietor, clerk
+and purchaser would thrive better if rid of it.
+
+The lie of gossip. If by some power, human or divine, the gossiping
+tongue could be silenced and the tattling mouth effectually closed,
+half of the evil of this world would already be stopped, and the other
+would commence to languish for want of patronage. The lie of gossip is
+the blackest of them all. The blackest of all the black horde, the
+very worst of the whole evil troop; insinuating, sly and crafty, it
+creeps around with a serpent's stealth, and carries beneath its tongue
+the deadly poison of ten thousand adders. The venom can be extracted
+from the cobra's fangs, but no power on earth can tame the tongue of an
+unprincipled gossip. Some lies you can kill, but the lie of gossip is
+imperishable. You may clip its wings, but its flight is unhindered;
+you may cut off its head, but two will grow out in its place; you may
+crush it to earth beneath the heel of denial. Let it alone and
+possibly the dirty, contemptible, infamous thing will die; touch it not
+and it may droop and languish; do not chase it and it may grow weak for
+want of exercise.
+
+Oh, my dear reader, above all things, don't have your life a lie, your
+career a falsehood. Be no hypocrite, live no lie, and the God of all
+truth will see something in you to admire if you live truthfully and
+honestly before all men. Truth is a sure pledge not impaired, a shield
+never pierced, a flower that never dieth, a state that feareth no
+fortune, and a port that yields no danger. We can not build a manly
+character unless we are in possession of the imperial virtue, truth.
+Ah! truth is the diamond for which the candid mind ever seeks. It is
+the sanction of every appeal that is made for the good and the right.
+It may be crushed to earth, it may be long in achieving victory, but it
+is omnipotent and must triumph at last. Christ brought truth into the
+world. Truth, then, is a personal, experimental and practical thing.
+It is a thing of the heart, and not mere outward forms; a living
+principle in the soul, influencing the mind, employing the affections,
+guiding the will, and directing as well as enlightening the conscience.
+It is a supreme, not a subordinate matter, demanding and obtaining the
+throne of the soul-giving law to the whole character, and requiring the
+whole man and all his conduct to be in subordination. Truth blends
+with every occupation. It is noble and lofty, not abject, servile and
+groveling; it communes with God, with holiness, with Heaven, with
+eternity and infinity. Truth is a happy, and not a melancholy thing,
+giving a peace that passeth understanding, and a joy that is
+unspeakable and full of glory. And it is durable, not a transient
+thing, passing with us through life, lying down with us on the pillow
+of death, rising with us at the last day, and dwelling in our souls in
+Heaven as the very element of eternal life. Such is truth, the
+sublimest thing in our world, sent down to be our comforter and
+ministering angel on earth.
+
+It is plainly God's intention, as in nature and in history, that our
+human life should grow better and more joyous as it advances, and that
+the best shall not be at the first, but shall wait until we are ready
+for it. The highest and largest blessings can come to men only when
+the men are fitted to hold and to use them. If you are going to give a
+man a purse or a diamond you can thrust it into his hand in his youth,
+or on the street, even when he is asleep; but if you would give to him
+a great truth or virtue, if you would make him a noble character, you
+must wait upon the man's growth, and be content if after many years you
+see only a flash of what you would give him appearing. Step by step,
+through all the gradations, we travel, and if faithful to truth, Christ
+will make in us a perfect manhood, and of us a perfect society. His
+gift is so great, vital and complex, that He can not bestow it all in
+the beginning. He would make our life an increasingly joyous life, and
+give us the best of its wine at the last of its feast. Christ would
+have us always increasingly hopeful and joyous, and never of sad
+countenance. All our faculties were designed to minister to our joy.
+All the great world of life below is a happy world. The children of
+the air and the water are all baptized into joy. Even the solitary
+creatures that carry their narrow houses with them have their joys,
+which are well known to their intimate acquaintances. So in the world
+of adult man we find the joy of life disproportionate to condition and
+faculty. In the faces of the men we meet on the streets we see many
+scars and dark lines of storm and care; only seldom do the faces we
+meet there wear the rainbow. Men are without joy because they have
+violated the laws of nature, they have subordinated their manly powers,
+reason and conscience to their animal instincts; they have lived by
+wrong theories and wrong methods, and for unmanly ends, and thus have
+exhausted the joy of life's banquet.
+
+A man can have deep and continuous joy only if his life is continuously
+rational and progressively manly. He must put away childish things and
+live for truth and right, for love and immortal virtue. If our hearts
+sadden as our years increase and our thoughts widen, it is because
+there has been a defect in our vision and a sophistry in the logic of
+our conduct. If the growing corn comes only to the blade and to the
+ear, and not to the full golden corn in the ear, we may be sure it is
+because there has been something wrong in our gardening. Christ comes
+into our wasting life to give us a new, a higher and a better joy; to
+give us new truth, new faith, new arguments, new motives, new impulses
+and new joys. Christ gives us the Heavenly Father, and thus lifts us
+into the dignity and beatitude of a divine nature, relationship and
+destiny. Man is a child of the skies, and can not find rest complete
+and joy abiding in anything less or lower. Bearing now the image of
+the earthly, we must go on to bear the image of the heavenly. To have
+our manly joy ever increasing we must keep the heavenly in sight and
+take our way from it.
+
+Christ brings us into the living alliance with forces and personalities
+that are spiritual, and thus makes us strong to resist all animal
+temptations and those impulses toward greed and wrong which, if
+indulged, drain our life of its manly felicities. He would have us
+lift our manly cups to God, and make their rims to touch the heavens.
+Christ would have us to live for other's welfare and to know the joy of
+duty and of sacrifice. It is the man who is living for wife, and
+child, and neighbor, who has flung himself with all his might into the
+carrying forward of some great cause that blesses his fellow-men, who
+knows the true and increasing joy of the manly life. The happiest
+woman in the world is the mother who is living for her child. It is in
+working out the salvation of other people that we find the true joy of
+our own. It is this joy that carries the martyr through his fiery
+tasks with a song and a shout. To be able at the end of our days to
+look up to God and say, "I have finished the work thou gavest me to
+do," is to have the best wine at the last of our feast. We must have
+joy; it is indispensable. It makes us healthy and strong and enables
+us to be of some use in the world. It is so necessary to our best
+becoming and doing that we must put away everything that increases it.
+We must have the joy of truth and virtue, of duty and sacrifice, of
+hope and love, which is the joy of the eternal life. Christ thus holds
+out to us a joy that lasts, and one that satisfies forever.
+
+Jesus was no cynic, no ascetic, and no fanatic. He loved the great
+outward world, and was the friend of all men. He was hated only by the
+Pharisees, if to these He spoke sharply, His words to the children were
+sweet as a mother's, and in His words about the birds and the flowers
+you hear the tones of a lover. He loved the lakes of sweet Galilee,
+her hills, her fields and her olive groves; and among them often took
+His disciples apart to rest awhile. Adopt Christ's views of God; of
+the future; Christianize your opinions, your character and your
+conduct, and you will have manly joy even in the midst of sorrow.
+Christ lived much in communion with God. He lived much out of doors,
+in the fields and among trees, the birds and the flowers.
+
+We must come back to nature. Happy the man who owns a piece of ground
+in the country and lives on it betimes, where he can hear the robins
+singing their hymns and the winds chanting their litanies; where he can
+see the sun rise and feel the hush of the hills; where the spirit that
+is in the beautiful world can touch and bless him as it did the blessed
+Christ.
+
+Brothers, I wish you great joy. Live in the constant sense of the
+Heavenly Father's loving presence, and of nature's veracity and
+friendly intention. Distrust all doctrines, all opinions and all ways
+of living that destroy manly joyousness. Never lose sight of the fact
+that a noble life is a truthful life. Truth is a trust. He who has
+discovered any portion of useful truth has something in trust for
+mankind. God is the author of truth, and when man seeks this imperial
+virtue and acquires it, he is in possession of great power.
+
+This brings us to the final practical thought. This power must be
+appropriated. The cable car that is unattached to the cable will make
+no progress and stand still forever, even though the engines in the
+power house glow with heat, and the cable, gliding along in the center
+of the track not two feet away, is laden down with power. The cable
+car must close its grappling iron and grip the cable before progress
+can be made. It must come in contact with the power. An electric lamp
+will swing dark and unlighted while all the other lamps about it send
+forth enlightening rays, and all the dynamos in the world may be
+revolving in the engine house, sending a surging current within a few
+inches of the isolated lamp, and all in vain unless it come in contact
+with the power. You must turn the switch and let the current flow in,
+and then the lamp will itself shine and will illumine its surroundings
+like the rest. So, in like manner, if we are to make progress in this
+life, we must lay hold of the cable. We must come in contact with the
+Divine. If we do not, the power of God is of no avail to us. If we
+would be lights in the world, we must come in contact with the Divine
+spirit, we must unbar the doors to our hearts and let the current of
+divine power and love flow into our lives and illumine them.
+
+The great design of Odd-Fellowship is to improve the morals and manners
+of men, to promote their interest, well being and happiness. Great
+prudence is demanded in our daily life and conversation. We should be
+actuated by a realizing sense of our position, and by example, action
+and generous thought, recommend our cause to the consideration of
+others. We should persevere for the attainment of every commendable
+virtue, to raise the mind from the degrading haunts of intemperance and
+folly; we should be distinguished for usefulness to society and the
+community at large. A good Odd-Fellow must necessarily be an upright
+and useful member of the community. The precepts inculcated are
+calculated to stimulate to the faithful performance of every moral and
+relative duty; and an individual who holds a standing with us, and is
+careless and negligent of these things, is a reproach to the
+Order--they wear the livery, and bow before the same shrine, but in the
+heart and practice they belie their profession. Profanity,
+intemperance and every species of immorality are rigidly
+discountenanced. We have pledged ourselves to aid in diffusing the
+principles of brotherly love throughout the world. We have assumed the
+office of guarding the holy flame which burns on the altar of
+benevolence, and we are bound to cherish its principles. That brother
+is recreant to every honorable feeling who can trifle with the solemn
+pledge he has taken.
+
+A duty we owe to the community is to cultivate the principle of virtue,
+to lend holy serenity to the mind, and shed around a halo of light and
+glory to direct the steps of others in virtue, to happiness and
+greatness. The man who treads only in virtue's ways, when every act is
+honest, acquires the confidence and friendship of others, thus
+benefiting others, and thus benefiting the community, which, also, the
+center of another circle, continues this influence to those that
+surround it, purifying the thought, emboldening the idea and elevating
+the man. How grand is the position Odd-Fellowship now occupies--a
+world of honesty in a world of deceit, with a character strictly
+virtuous and solely dependent upon its members for the perpetuity of
+that character.
+
+It depends upon the brethren to be virtuous, upright, honest and
+benevolent, thus sustaining in its purity the noble reputation it now
+enjoys, which will continue a bright and shining star in the
+constellation until time shall be no more, when it will be perpetuated
+in the glorious light of eternity. Amid the wrecks of institutions and
+powerful interests that were a short time since thought to be
+impregnable against all assaults, the Independent Order of Odd-Fellows
+still maintains its vantage ground, and bears its banners proudly up.
+With its doors thrown so widely open to applicants for admission,
+composed as it is of nearly every shade of thought or educational
+influence, whether of sect or party, with all the infirmities incident
+to human nature, modifying by their weakness its true purposes, or
+retarding its advancement, its unity and moral force, its stability and
+progress are truly wonderful. Its bond of cohesion, so frail and yet
+so potent, is seemingly inexplicable. It is the recognition of the
+principles of brotherhood and fraternity, and the practice of their
+resultant virtues. To appreciate and practice is to attain strength.
+We are weak and frail. Odd-Fellowship is strong, and its principles
+are as eternal as the stars. The history of the past is little but a
+record of the domination of physical force. The law of might was the
+law of right. Violence and strife, outrages and wrong, have been for
+ages the common heritage of the race. Man has been the sport and
+victim of human passions, and notwithstanding the culture and the
+progress of the race, the earth yet resounds with the tread of armed
+combatants. Weary, sad-eyed toilers groan under the burden of war,
+countless millions are squandered upon the maintenance of
+non-producing, destructive hosts.
+
+Widows and orphans, nay, the very angels in heaven, if they are
+permitted to look down upon us from their bright abodes in bliss, must
+mourn over the sad result of man's semi-barbarism, and his worship of
+the world's materialism. Long ere this mind should have been the
+controlling force in all nations claiming to be civilized. Pure
+intellect and its struggles, its aspirations for light and truth,
+should have relegated to the regions of barbarism and darkness mere
+animal contests. Not only so, but intellectual supremacy should have
+been in its turn subordinated, or crowned by true spiritual life. "God
+is a spirit, and they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit and
+in truth." Man would occupy a higher and happier position than he at
+present fills if he had earnestly co-operated with good agencies for
+the unfolding and development of his better nature.
+
+The special mission of Odd-Fellowship is to incite and stimulate the
+dormant moral energies to action, to rouse the lethargic, encourage the
+timid, and to strengthen the aspirations for a nobler and a better
+life. Reaching out its helpful hand to the needy and distressed upon
+the one hand, and with the other battling with selfishness, intolerance
+and vice--with all that dwarfs man's moral nature--it appeals to
+something within us, to be earnest advocates of its principles, by
+making them a living faith and illustrating its beneficent purposes.
+If we make one man purer and better, and that man one's own self, we
+have done something toward the betterment of the world. The voices of
+the past and of the present all speak to us today. Men and brethren,
+let us hearken unto them, and putting our trust in God, let us march
+onward, side by side together, until the standards of our order are
+planted upon the highest summit of achievement, and as their glorious
+folds are illuminated by the Sun of Righteousness, may the simple yet
+the sublime legend emblazoned thereon be seen and acknowledged by the
+nations, as with uplifted eyes and reverent hearts they read, "God is
+our Father, and we are all brothers."
+
+
+
+
+QUIET HOUR THOUGHTS.
+
+Genuine love and sympathy are what wins the hearts of our fellows.
+
+A Christian ought always to wake up in the morning in a good humor.
+
+Remember that sorrow and pain soften the heart and sweeten the temper.
+
+The young man who sees no beauty in a flower will make a mean husband.
+
+If you love young people's work you will prove it by laboring and
+sacrificing for it.
+
+Begin active work in your society at once, and do not fail to see that
+each one has something to do.
+
+The fact that God gives any consideration to mere mites of humanity
+scattered about the surface of this little world of ours is conclusive
+proof of His infinity.
+
+What a blessing it is that we can not always do what we wish to do, or
+have everything our own way.
+
+Many words are no more an indication of depth of feeling and heart than
+are boiling bubbles in a frying pan.
+
+There are some people who would scorn to keep bad company, but who
+think the worst kind of thoughts by the hour.
+
+Do not wait for somebody else to put your society on the roll of honor.
+If you want a thing well done, do it yourself.
+
+If the very hairs of our head are numbered, then why should we not
+consult the Father in regard to all our temporal affairs?
+
+How the heart of God must yearn for the record of lives devoted to
+humanity. He asks no higher service of man than this.
+
+The truly great man is that one who is satisfied if he is doing to the
+utmost limit of his capacity the thing which he has at hand.
+
+God would never make the mistake of helping any young man or young
+woman who did not make every possible effort to help himself.
+
+Do not make the mistake of thinking you are the biggest man in your
+society. Bigger men than you have died and have not been missed after
+forty-eight hours.
+
+The girl who is caught by gold-headed canes, carried by heads with no
+brains on the inside and only pasted hair on the outside, has a
+pitiable future before her.
+
+No pain, no privation, no sacrifice endured for Christ is a loss, but
+is rather a gain. Christ will not forget those who suffered for Him
+when He comes to make up His jewels.
+
+Sunday manners are just like Sunday clothes; everybody can tell that
+you put them on for the occasion only, and know that you are not used
+to wearing them through the week.
+
+The devil led the Prodigal Son away from a good home into the gay
+society of the world, and amused him with the pleasures of sin till he
+got him down, then he fed him on husks. That is the way he works.
+
+A good many church members do not like to have it known how much they
+give for missions. They remind us of the man who said, when asked
+about the amount he gave, "What I give is nothing to nobody."
+
+The reason why some people do not want the preacher to preach on
+personal sins, is because they are afraid he might say something
+against them.
+
+When we see a man going to get water at his neighbor's well, we
+naturally suppose his own is dry. So when we see a Christian seeking
+the pleasures of the world, we suppose he no longer finds pleasure in
+religion.
+
+To know which way a stream of water is flowing, you must not look at
+the little eddy, but at the main current, and to know which way a life
+is tending, you must not look at a single act, but at the whole trend
+of the life.
+
+Satan likes to discourage people, to hinder them in the performance of
+their Christian duties, but remember that Christ has said, "My grace is
+sufficient for you." Go steadily forward in the line of duty and
+success will crown your efforts.
+
+The light of a candle can not be seen very far in the light of a
+noon-day sun, but at night it may be seen for a long distance and may
+be a guiding star to some poor wanderer. And so, God sometimes darkens
+our way that we may shine.
+
+The man who prays for the conversion of the heathen, and then spends a
+great deal more for tobacco than he gives to missions, is certainly not
+very consistent in his praying and giving.
+
+Thomas Hood once wrote to his wife: "I never was anything, dearest,
+till I knew you; and I have been a better, happier, and more prosperous
+man ever since. Lay by that truth in lavender, sweetest, and remind me
+of it when I fail."
+
+"I believe one reason why such numerous instances of erudition occur
+among the lower ranks is, that with the same powers of mind the poor
+student is limited to a narrower circle for indulging his passion for
+books, and must necessarily make himself master of the few he possesses
+before he can acquire more."--_Walter Scott_.
+
+Christians should not forget that God uses human agency in the work of
+salvation. The only reason that there are not more saved, is because
+the people of God do not put themselves at his disposal for the work.
+The Lord wants all to be saved, but they will not be saved until the
+people of God are willing to let the Lord use them to bring the lost
+unto Himself.
+
+Deceit and falsehood, whatever conveniences they may for a time promise
+or produce, are, in the sum of life, obstacles to happiness. Those who
+profit by the cheat distrust the deceiver; and the act by which
+kindness was sought puts an end to confidence.
+
+The judges of the election can not tell the difference, when they are
+counting the votes, between the one cast by the minister of the gospel
+and the one cast by the saloon-keeper, when it has been cast for the
+same party. Vote for principle rather than for party.
+
+"Let every man," said Sydney Smith, "be occupied in the highest
+employment of which his nature is capable, and die with the
+consciousness that he has done his best." If the highest employment is
+not to be found in our avocations, let us seek it in our leisure.
+
+Beware of anger of the tongue; control the tongue. Beware of anger of
+the mind; control the mind. Practice virtue with thy tongue and with
+thy mind. By reflection, by restraint and control, a wise man can make
+himself an island which no floods can overwhelm. He who conquers
+himself is greater than he who in battle conquers a thousand men. He
+who is tolerant with the intolerant, mild with the fault-finders, and
+free from passion with the passionate, him I call indeed a wise man.
+
+Brothers, keep posted in what your lodge is doing; knowing who is sick;
+inquire if there is not some widow in need of help; some poor orphan
+that should be clothed and provided with a home and sent to school.
+Remember that the widow was your brother's wife, and the children your
+brother's. Be a brother to the widow, and a kind uncle to your
+brother's children. There is plenty of work for you, and you agreed to
+do it. Cheer up the care-worn traveler on his pilgrimage--help the
+weak and weary, the lonely and sad ones. Time is passing by, and we
+have none too much of it in which to do our work. Remember that if we
+expect to complete our labor, now is the time; soon all will be over
+with us, and then all that we shall leave behind, by which to be
+remembered, will be the good or evil we have done. If we have done
+good it will be emblazoned on many hearts, and our names will be spoken
+of with reverence and love; but if we have done evil, our names will be
+blotted out of the memory of the good and true, and we despised.
+
+ "How is't the sons of men are sad,
+ Oppressed with grief and care?
+ How is't that some of this world's goods,
+ Have such a scanty share?
+ Why should the orphan's piercing cry,
+ Assail so oft our ear,
+ And thousands find the world to be
+ All desolate and drear?
+
+ "We do not solve the mystery
+ Of woes, the lot of man,
+ But in the lodge we all unite
+ To do the good we can.
+ 'Tis there we learn the pleasing task
+ To soothe the troubled breast,
+ To educate the orphan child,
+ And succor the distressed.
+
+ "Our motto--Friendship, Love and Truth--
+ These e'er shall be our guide,
+ Our aim shall be, of misery
+ To stop the running tide."
+
+ We ask not what's a brother's faith,
+ What country gave him birth;
+ But open the door to every creed
+ And nation of the earth.
+
+ Hail, Charity! Odd-Fellows all
+ Bow down before thy shrine;
+ They raise no altar, make no vow,
+ That is not wholly thine.
+
+
+
+
+LOVE SUPREME.
+
+Love is the key to the human heart. If we want to have power with God
+and man, we must cultivate love. It is love that burns truth into the
+hearts of people. A man may be a good lawyer without love. There may
+be a good surgeon without love. A man may be a good merchant without
+love. But a man can not be a good Odd-Fellow or Christian without
+love. I would rather have my heart full of love than be even a
+prophet. If a man is full of love, Paul says, "he is greater than a
+prophet." A wife would rather live in a cabin with the love of her
+husband, than to live in a palace without it. If I love a man I will
+not cheat him or slander him or envy him. I pity people who are
+constantly looking out for slights. It is better to look on the bright
+side rather than the dark side of life. Love will lead us to look on
+the bright side. Some persons are always magnifying the faults of
+others. They use a magnifying glass in this business. If you want
+power with persons, speak as well as you can of them. Self-control is
+a great thing. This comes and stays through love. How many dwarfs
+there are in God's church now. They have not grown one inch
+spiritually in twenty years. If our hearts are full of love, we are
+bound to grow. Many other graces pass away, but love is eternal. The
+most selfish man is the most miserable man. A man may be miserly with
+his money, but no man can be miserly with love. Love creates love.
+The more we love, the more we will be loved. Love must show itself.
+Love demonstrates its presence by action. Our lives, after all, are
+mere echoes. I speak harsh to a man, and he will speak harsh to me.
+If a man has bad neighbors it his own fault. If a woman has bad
+servants it is her own fault. If we make others happy we will be happy
+ourselves. If you are not happy, go and buy all the poor people near
+you a turkey for Christmas. "He that noticeth others shall be noticed
+also himself." If you want to get your own soul above its own
+troubles, go and do good to some unhappy soul. If we do this work, I
+believe we will have to do it in this world. There will be no tears to
+wipe away, or sorrows to assuage, or afflictions to remedy in the other
+world. This work is for this world. It is a blessed work. It is the
+best investment a man can make. It pays an hundred fold. Labors of
+love demonstrate better than the church membership that we are in the
+Master's service. This is the Master's business. Though my way
+through life has often been through graveyards and through glooms, I
+have loved and I have been loved, and I know that life is worth living.
+Love is the fulfilling of the law; the end of the gospel commandment;
+the bond of perfectness. Without it, whatever be our attainments,
+professions or sacrifices, we are nothing. Love obliterates the
+differences in education, wealth, station, religion, politics and
+nationality. It is a promoter of peace and harmony; it cultivates the
+social graces; it makes friends of strangers and brothers of
+acquaintances; it softens the asperities of life; it worships at the
+shrine of piety, and recognizes the omnipotence of God and the
+immortality of man. It is religious not sectarian, patriotic but not
+partisan. It glows by the fireside, radiant with perpetual joy. It
+glorifies God in worship and in song. It blesses humanity in genial
+mirth and human sympathies. It is a perennial fountain at which the
+old may drink and grow strong. It is a daily benediction to its
+devotees, and, like "a thing of beauty, is a joy forever." It stands
+like the statue of liberty, a beacon light to the tempest-tossed and
+wayfaring mariner and brother, pointing him the way to the haven of
+refuge, to the right living and right doing.
+
+Oh love, thou mightiest gift of God; thou white-winged trust in Him who
+doeth all things well; thou one light over His darkest providences,
+lingering to cheer when all else has passed away, thy whisper upon the
+dull ear of night. But alas! this world was made to break hearts in,
+while love was sent from heaven to heal them. The precious balm,
+though, is so scarce that many must die for want of it. Oh, the
+might-have-been! What human soul has not sung that dirge? Verily, the
+winds come, howling it by like an invisible band of mourners from the
+grave of all things. Alas! is anything in this life real, or are we
+indeed shadows, and this world altogether a shadowy land, while the
+blackened skies above give us only glimpses of a far-off better home,
+better friends and better love? Alas! Heaven's loudest complaint to
+mortals is ever for lack of love. Even He who sitteth upon the throne
+of thrones knoweth what it is to stretch out His arms in utter
+desertion of no one to love Him, no one to seek Him, and no one to fear
+Him--"no, not one." Then as we may best show our love to Him by loving
+one another, is it not well that we commence loving those around us at
+once? Ah! yes, and like the ambitious vine, do thou reach out all thy
+tendril thoughts to what is nearest, the while aspiring to the oak or
+the pine of the loftier trust, even the faith of Abraham that was
+accounted unto him for righteousness. Would I had some new phrase for
+love, some new figure for hope! How lonely and weary must that life be
+without love, how tasteless all its joys, and how vacant every scene.
+If we have the spirit of love we will live for others. Auguste Comte
+inscribed on the first page of his work, "Politique Positive," wherein
+he depicted in systematic form, life that had been forming itself
+throughout human history, these words: "Order and progress--live for
+others." The force of this thought is, in accord with Odd-Fellowship,
+which teaches love of our kind, love of right, zeal for the good.
+
+Man's happiness consists in living as a social being, living for self
+in order to more truly live for others. This is summed up in the word
+humanity. But affection, as the true motor force of life, must have a
+foundation, must stir us not only to the right things, but to the right
+means; in other words, action must be guided by knowledge. Improvement
+must be the aim of social life, as it is the incentive to individual
+effort. It is not enough to desire the good, or to know how to achieve
+it, we must labor for it. Associated effort gives the opportunity for
+gaining grander results than centuries of divided activity. The
+conception of humanity has grown nobler. The good of the vast human
+whole is now acknowledged as the end of all social union. Humanity
+embodies love; the object of our activity; the source of what we have;
+the ruler of the life under whose span we work, and suffer and enjoy.
+
+All religions, all social systems worthy of the name, have sought to
+regulate human nature and perfect the organization of society by
+proclaiming as their principles the cultivation of some grand social
+sentiments. Philosophers, moralists, preachers have united in saying:
+"Base your life upon a noble feeling, if you are to live aright; base
+the state upon a generous devotion of its members to some great ideal,
+if it is to prosper and be strong." All have agreed that the
+difference of life could only be harmonized by placing action under the
+stimulus of high unselfish passion. Odd-Fellowship has grown strong
+under this governing law. The banner it bears aloft proclaims
+sentiments that are attractive to all the nations of the earth. We are
+strong in as far as we truly interpret, for the good of humanity, this
+elevated aim, this devotion to fraternal ends.
+
+Compte defines religion as consisting of three parts--a belief, a
+worship, and a rule of life--of which all three are equal, and each as
+necessary as any other. As is truly said, "Society can not be touched
+without knowledge; and the knowledge of social organization of humanity
+is a vast and perplexing science. The race, like every one of us, is
+dependent on the laws of life, and the study of life is a mighty field
+to master." Enthusiasm of humanity would be but shallow did it not
+impel us to efforts to learn how to serve--demanding the best of
+conduct, brain and heart. The power of Odd-Fellowship lies in its
+fraternity. It goes forward with irresistible magnetism when its
+fraternal principles are truly interpreted. It furnishes to men a
+strong union, where general intelligence, by attrition, is increased;
+it provides a high moral standard; its objective action is such as
+touches the common heart of humanity; and by its grand co-operative
+system it gives the finest means of securing those advantages that tend
+to the securement of material comfort and mental and spiritual peace
+and happiness.
+
+Drummond says: "Love is the greatest thing in the world." Read what
+Paul says about it in I Cor., xiii: "Though I speak with the tongues of
+men and of angels, and have not love, I am become as sounding brass, or
+a tinkling cymbal. And though I have the gift of prophecy, and
+understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all
+faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not love, I am
+nothing. And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though
+I give my body to be burned, and have not love, it profiteth me
+nothing. Love suffereth long, and is kind; love envieth not; love
+vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up: Doth not behave itself unseemly;
+Seeketh not her own. Is not easily provoked. Thinketh no evil;
+rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth; beareth all
+things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things.
+Love never faileth; but whether there be prophecies, they shall fail;
+whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be knowledge,
+it shall vanish away. For we know in part, and we prophesy in part.
+But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part
+shall be done away. When I was a child, I spake as a child; but when I
+became a man, I put away childish things. For now we see through a
+glass, darkly; but then face to face; now I know in part; but then
+shall I know even as also I am known. And now abideth faith, hope,
+love, these three, but the greatest of these is love."
+
+The more I study Odd-Fellowship, the more I become convinced that I
+have just crossed the threshold, and that new truths and sublime
+lessons await me, of which I never dreamed. Brothers, there is hidden
+treasure in our order for which we must dig. It must be brought to the
+surface. We must know more of the beauties of this great organization
+of ours. "The greatest thing," says some one, "a man can do for his
+Heavenly Father is to be kind to some of His other children." "I
+wonder why it is that we are not all kinder than we are? How much the
+world needs it. How easily it is done. How instantaneously it acts.
+How infallibly it is remembered. How super-abundantly it pays itself
+back--for there is no debtor in the world so honorable, so superbly
+honorable, as love. Love is success. Love is happiness. Love is
+life." "Where love is, God is. He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in
+God. God is love. Therefore love." "Without distinction, without
+calculation, without procrastination, love. Lavish it upon the poor,
+where it is very easy; especially upon the rich, who often need it
+most; most of all upon our equals, where it is very difficult, and for
+whom perhaps we each do least of all. There is a difference between
+trying to please and giving pleasure. Give pleasure. Lose no chance
+of giving pleasure. For that is the ceaseless and anonymous triumph of
+a truly loving spirit. I shall pass through this world but once. Any
+good things that I can do, or any kindness that I can show to any human
+being, let me do it now. Let me not defer it or neglect it, for I
+shall not pass this way again. We can be Odd-Fellows only while we act
+like honest men."
+
+Every Odd-Fellow ought to be a "gentleman." Do you know the meaning of
+the word "gentleman"? "It means a gentleman--a man who does things
+gently, with love. And that is the whole art and mystery of it. The
+gentleman can not in the nature of things do an ungentle, an
+ungentlemanly thing." "Love doth not behave itself unseemly." Life is
+full of opportunities for learning love. Every man and woman every day
+has a thousand of them. There is an eternal lesson for us all, "how
+better we can love." What makes a good artist, a good sculptor, a good
+musician? Practice. What makes a man a good man, a man of love?
+Practice. Nothing else. If a man does not exercise his arm he
+develops no biceps muscle; and if a man does not exercise his soul, he
+acquires no muscle in his soul, no strength of character, no vigor of
+moral fibre, nor beauty of spiritual growth. Love is not a thing of
+enthusiastic emotion. It is a rich, strong, manly, vigorous expression
+of the whole round Christian character--the Christ-like nature in its
+fullest development. And the constituents of this great character are
+only to be built up by ceaseless practice. To love abundantly is to
+live abundantly, and to love forever is to live forever. We want to
+live forever for the same reason that we want to live tomorrow. Why do
+you want to live tomorrow? It is because there is some one who loves
+you, and whom you want to see tomorrow, and be with, and love back.
+There is no other reason why we should live on than that we love and
+are beloved. It is when a man has no one to love him that he commits
+suicide. The reason why, in the nature of things, love should be the
+supreme thing--because it is going to last; because in the nature of
+things it is an eternal life. It is a thing that we are living now,
+not that we get when we die; that we shall have a poor chance of
+getting when we die unless we are living now.
+
+No worse fate can befall a man in this world than to live and grow old
+alone, unloving and unloved. At any cost cultivate a loving nature.
+Then you will find as you look back upon your life that the moments
+when you have really lived are the moments when you have done things in
+a spirit of love. As memory scans the past, above and beyond all the
+transitory pleasures of life, there leap forward those supreme hours
+when you have been enabled to do unnoticed kindnesses to those around
+about you, things too trifling to speak about, but which you feel have
+entered into your eternal life. I have seen almost all the beautiful
+things God has made; I have enjoyed almost every pleasure that He has
+planned for man; and yet as I look back I see standing out above all
+the life that has gone, four or five short experiences when the love of
+God reflected itself in some poor imitation, some small act of love of
+mine, and these seem to be the things which alone of all one's life
+abide. Everything else in all our lives is transitory. Every other
+good is visionary. But the acts of love which no man knows about, or
+can ever know about--they fail not.
+
+Odd-Fellowship ought to grow. The kinship of the human race--how
+beautiful a thought! Without mutual aid the race would perish. Think
+of it. Throughout life you are dependent upon your fellow-man. Who
+can live without a friend? When you have no money and no home, where,
+brothers, will you find food and shelter? When low with fever, the
+tongue parched, the brain wandering, who will give you water, bathe
+your throbbing temples, and watch over you lest you die? See the old
+man. The frosts of seventy winters have whitened his head; his eye is
+dim; his limbs tremble; reason and memory fail; he is an infant again.
+He goes down to the valley of the shadow of death. Who shall lead him
+and comfort his weary soul? Who lay his body gently and reverently in
+the grave, and sod it over with green grass? So with us all. A man
+alone in the world, without a human being who cares whether he live or
+die! Not a hand to touch, nor a voice to hear, nor a smile to receive!
+Human affections forever sealed to him; no fireside; no home with
+father, mother, brothers, sisters; no little children, no son to be
+proud of; no daughters to caress; no "good night;" no "good morning."
+Who could bear it? The sun could not warm such a man. The brightest
+days and the greenest fields could not give him pleasure. Better chain
+him on a rock in mid-ocean and leave him to the vultures, than thus rob
+him of his kinship with the human race.
+
+This world is beautiful, and it is full of priceless sympathies. All
+creation is glorious with melody. The morning stars, saith the Bible,
+sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy when it was
+made. The universe of stars, and suns, and planets and globes, swing
+harmoniously through space. Not a sparrow falleth to the ground
+without our Father's notice; not a soul yearns, or sorrows, or
+rejoices, but He knoweth it. He hath made of one blood all nations of
+men to dwell together on the face of the earth. We are bound to each
+other by indissoluble ties. It is a law of nature that we must all
+work for each other. Though ten thousand miles apart; though oceans
+roll between us and continents divide us, we labor not for ourselves
+alone. You plow the furrow in California and sow the wheat for your
+brother in Louisiana, while he plants the cane and cotton for you. The
+good Siberian is this day roaming over snows and ice, hunting the otter
+and gathering furs, that you may be warm. Men are diving in the
+Persian gulf for pearls to grace your wives and daughters. The
+silkworm of India and China may have spun the threads of your dress,
+the Frenchman may have woven it; the hardy mariner braved the seas to
+bring it here. Truly, we are brothers. A common Father brought us all
+into this world, and to a common Father we all go. Let us, then, help
+one another, in money (if need be), in education, in sympathy.
+
+There is one feature of the order we desire to emphasize, and that is
+its full sympathy with those that labor and toil. No reference would
+do justice to the order that did not emphasize this fact. It is its
+pride and glory. It is from this class its membership is chiefly
+drawn. It was with this class it originated, the first lodge in the
+United States having been organized by half a dozen humble mechanics;
+Thomas Wildey, their leader, was a blacksmith. You see it had no
+aristocratic origin, and its broad and catholic sympathy, its
+popularity with this class is explained. They know its value, and have
+seen its active charity and experienced its beneficence. A man who has
+no sympathy with the humble and the lowly, a man of mean and narrow
+heart, will find no congenial dwelling place in our lodges. The true
+Odd-Fellow is a man of heart; his hand is open to every worthy appeal
+of the needy, and he is honest and upright in his life. It enforces no
+religious or political tests; in these every member is free; but it
+does teach and urge its members to be grateful to their Creator and
+loyal to their country. In conclusion, let me urge upon the living,
+fidelity to the teachings of Odd-Fellowship. If these are respected it
+will make you better citizens, better husbands, better fathers, better
+men. It is a cultivation of the heart and the better feelings, and
+expands our humanity. If you are poor, it will come to you, or your
+family, sometimes as a benefaction. If you are rich, you can afford to
+give, and with a good Odd-Fellow that is more blessed than to receive.
+
+I want to say here what I have often said in the lodge-room. I love
+Odd-Fellowship, above all, for the heart there is in it. For its
+display on the street and its pageantry I care but little. I shrink
+from it rather than follow it. But its benevolence, its active
+charity, and its mission of good will, I admire. When death's
+unwelcome presence rests within our portals, and obedient to his call a
+loved one has gone hence, we should give the mortal remains of the
+departed brother a decent sepulture; fondly cherish the remembrance of
+his virtues, and bury his frailties "beneath the clods which rest upon
+his bosom." We should then direct our thoughts and cares to the
+desolate home, where the widow, clad in the robes of grief, her heart
+cords broken and bleeding, is weeping over earth's only idol, now lost
+to earth forever. Then, too, should we extend the helping hand to the
+fatherless children, and endeavor to so direct their steps that their
+paths may be paths of usefulness and honor. These are the imperative
+duties. But our ministrations of charity and benevolence should by no
+means be confined exclusively within the pale of the order. This
+crowded world, with its eager millions, maddened with ambition's
+unquenchable fires, trampling under foot and well-nigh smothering each
+other in the great rush of competitive strife, is full of poor
+unfortunates, daily appealing for generous sympathy and assistance.
+
+Though not members, it may be, of our peculiar family, yet the poorest,
+the humblest, the most wretched, is a human being--"the master-piece of
+His handiwork"--and, as such, demands our aid and comfort as far as
+practicable. Life has been compared to a river. Aye, and beneath its
+murky waters lurk countless reefs and shoals. Many a beautiful bark,
+sailing, seemingly, under the very star of hope, dashes upon them, and
+is lost. All along its shores are scattered the wrecks of stranded
+vessels, once laden with joyous hopes and brilliant prospects.
+Odd-Fellowship renders the passage of this river safe by a bridge of
+mystic form,
+
+ "On one side is friendship planted--
+ Truth upon the other shore;
+ Love, the arch that spans the current,
+ Bears each brother safely o'er."
+
+It should be the most pleasing duty of Odd-Fellows to point our
+fellow-travelers to this beautiful and stately arch; to lead
+thitherward their weary steps. Such would be assistance more permanent
+than can be rendered by silver or gold. The time is certain to come
+when every young man is thrown back upon himself--must leave the
+tranquil security of the parental home, and seek a refuge among
+strangers. When beyond the reach of family influence--beyond the reach
+of that tender providence which so carefully guarded him from vice, and
+soothed his griefs and sympathized with all his youthful aspirations
+and pleasures--when this influence ceases to surround him, what will
+continue its ministry of love? What will be to him father, mother,
+brother, sister--home? Will society? No! Society to its deepest core
+is selfish, corrupt, unnatural and unloving? Society will not, and can
+not. He is in the great world--allurements and temptations are rife
+around him--he is sick and in distress, and must suffer alone, with no
+one to console him with a word of comfort, sympathy, or love; he has no
+attention but such as money will purchase--he dies, and the cold eyes
+of strangers only look upon the grave, if, indeed, a grave he has.
+This is a life picture, and it is at this point the beauty and utility
+of Odd-Fellowship is seen, for the order is a vast family circle,
+spread throughout the community; always powerful and efficient to
+preserve those who are brought within the sphere of its influence. He
+who is a member of this fraternity may go where his father's counsel
+and his mother's care can not reach him, but he can not go beyond the
+reach of that larger family to which he belongs! Silently and
+invisibly, yet with unslumbering assiduity, Odd-Fellowship watches over
+him, and by its wise counsels, its tender sympathies and rational
+restraints, saves him from the ways of vice.
+
+Mythic story tells us that the ancient gods invisibly and secretly
+followed their favorites in all their wanderings, and when exposed to
+danger, or threatened with destruction, would unveil themselves in
+their awful beauty and power, and stand forth to preserve them from
+harm or to avenge their wrongs. Odd-Fellowship realizes this myth of
+the pagan gods; she surrounds all her children with her preserving
+presence, and reveals herself always in the hour of peril, sickness or
+distress. Nowhere in our country can a true Odd-Fellow feel himself
+alone, friendless or forsaken. The invisible, but helpful arms of our
+order surround him wherever he may be. And should he be overtaken by
+illness or misfortune, be he in any part of the country, and never so
+poor, he will, if he makes his wants known, receive as a right the
+necessary assistance, and friends to watch over him with fraternal
+solicitude. And should he fall a victim to disease, the brothers of
+charity will be there to close his eyes, and with solemn, yet hopeful,
+heaven-born rites, consign his body to the repose of the silent tomb.
+Odd-Fellowship is an embodiment of family love and affection, and is
+the only substitute for home influence, and the only green spot in the
+dreary waste of life which binds these brothers to the tender practice
+of every virtue--guides in prosperity and health, and as a ministering
+angel bends over them with tenderest pity in their chamber of
+suffering. True, there are sorrows which it can not reach--there are
+griefs which it can not remove; notwithstanding, it still pursues its
+way, imparts its healthful influence, and accomplishes its beautiful
+and holy ministry of benevolence and charity. If it can not heal the
+wounds of misfortune, it administers the balm of sympathy, friendship
+and love. My dear reader, learn to give encouragement to those around
+you.
+
+Everybody feels the need of encouragement, from the humblest artisan to
+the king on his throne. We hear of the choice spirits who have been
+the world's idols, how they came up through terrible trials alone and
+almost unaided, setting aside obstacles that would have crushed others,
+and fighting their way to the very pinnacle of fame. Aye! but great as
+they were, they needed and received encouragement. In some part of
+their poor home they saw the smile that spoke the hearty appreciation
+of the genius, though, perhaps, the lips said nothing. Even West left
+on record, "my mother's smile made me a painter." The encouragement of
+a little child will send the blood more warmly to the heart, and even
+the appreciation of a poor dumb brute is worth its gaining. Give
+encouragement. Everybody needs it--men, women and even children. Oh!
+how many a dear little heart has been chilled into ice when the coarse
+laugh has greeted its rude hieroglyphics in the first attempt to
+portray its ideal. The child sees warm visions of sunlight and beauty
+in those uncouth angles. Whole minds of thought lie concealed under
+those strange shapes. To the young mind's eye they are wonders, and
+the tiny fingers have built monuments that deserve not to be thrown
+down so rudely, when a smile that costs nothing would have left them
+standing to be finished into finer shape and more classical proportions
+in the years that are to come. You do a positive injury to the dullest
+child when you reward his little efforts with contempt. It is a wrong
+that can never be repaired, for the disheartment that strikes the happy
+spirit, flushed with the consciousness of having achieved something new
+and great, comes up in after time with the very same vividness at every
+trivial disappointment. Give encouragement. You men of business, who
+know so well what a good, hearty "go ahead," coupled with a frank,
+merry face, will do in your own case--give encouragement to the young
+beginner, who starts nervously at the bottom of the race, and who,
+though he may put a bold outside on, quakes at the center of his being
+with the dread that among so many competitors he shall always be left
+in the rear. Hold out your hand to him as if you thought the world was
+really large enough for two, and bid him God-speed. Tell him to come
+to you if he feels the need of a friend to advise with him. Don't
+emulate your sign in overshadowing him. Out upon these mean, cringing
+souls who would grudge God's sunlight if it shone upon a piece of
+merchandise as good as their own. They are poor, barren wretches, who
+plow furrows only in their own cheeks, and plant wrinkles on their
+brows. Above all things, if you have any tenderness or compassion,
+encourage your pastor, your physician, and your editor. Suppose, once
+in a while, they do, in expressing their own honest views, say
+something that conflicts a little with your own starved or plethoric
+notions. Suppose they do dare to tell you the truth sometimes in a way
+that makes you cringe, and you say to yourself, "he has no business to
+be personal," when the poor man never thought that his homely coats
+would fit; don't grow cold, and cast sheep's eyes, and nudge somebody's
+elbow in a corner, and whisper all around, and say complacently, "Yes,
+Brother A. is a good man--but--"
+
+Those "buts" and "ifs" ought to be christened intellectual revolvers,
+for they kill more reputations than any other two words in the English
+language. We have known instances where pastors and editors and others
+have felt weary of living, from having to encounter the spirit of
+discouragement among their brethren; and oh! how many wives, husbands
+and children, are dying deaths daily from this same prolific source of
+suffering. Give encouragement, then, wherever and whenever you can,
+and you will find that you have not lived in vain. If God blesses
+those who offer but a cup of cold water in charity, how much more will
+He regard the kind heart that has refreshed a weary spirit fainting by
+the way. Death quickens recollections painfully. The grave can not
+hide the white faces of those who sleep. The coffin and the green
+mound are cruel magnets. They draw us farther than we would go. They
+force us to remember. A man never sees so far into human life as when
+he looks over a wife's or mother's grave. His eyes get wondrous clear
+then, and he sees as never before what it is to love and to be loved;
+what it is to injure the feelings of the loved.
+
+Let us deal gently with those around us. Remember every day a flower
+is plucked from some sunny home; a breach made in some happy circle; a
+jewel stolen from some treasury of love; each day from summer fields of
+life some harvester disappears--yea, every hour some sentinel falls
+from his post and is thrown from the ramparts of time into the surging
+waters of eternity. Even as I write, the funeral of one who died
+yesterday winds like a winter shadow along some silent street. Daily,
+when we rise from the bivouac to stand at our posts, we miss some
+brother soldier whose cheering cry in the sieges and struggles of the
+past has been as fire from heaven upon our hearts. Each day some pearl
+drops from the jeweled thread of friendship--some harp to which we have
+listened has been hushed forever. Love, however, annihilates death
+even; blots away all record of time and creates the world it lives in;
+conjures back arms to embrace, lips to kiss, and eyes to smile,
+whispers its own praises and breathes its own names of endearment.
+Thus, love maketh the light to our dreams and planteth hope in the
+midst of our sorrow. In darkness and in danger, too, love cometh to us
+ever, ever, now warning, now chiding, now blessing, and always safely
+guarding. Love lightens labor, shortens distance and quickens time.
+Love teaches us to forgive, helps us to forget and whitens the memory
+of all things. Love paints every hope, brightens every scene and
+maketh beautiful whatsoever it shines on. Love is wisdom. Love is
+high. Love is holy. Love is God. Love gloweth in the hearts of the
+angels, wreathes the smiles on their brows and melts the kisses on
+their lips. Love is the light of the beautiful beyond.
+
+
+
+
+GEMS OF BEAUTY
+
+More hopeful than all wisdom is one draught of human pity that will not
+forsake us.
+
+Laughing is one of the products of civilization. In the uncivilized
+tribes laughter is entirely unknown.
+
+Let him who neglects to raise the fallen fear lest, when he falls, no
+one will stretch out his hand to lift him up.
+
+Time is a species of wealth which it is impossible for us to hoard, but
+which we may spend to good advantage.
+
+Character is the eternal temple that each one begins to rear, yet death
+can only complete it. The finer the architecture, the more fit for the
+indwelling of angels.
+
+It is only by labor that thought can be made healthy, and only by
+thought that labor can be made happy; and the two can not be separated
+with impunity.--_John Ruskin_.
+
+Don't moralize to a man who is on his back. Help him up, set him
+firmly on his feet, and then give him advice and means.
+
+There is a pleasure in contemplating good; there is a greater pleasure
+in receiving good; but the greatest pleasure of all is in doing good,
+which comprehends the rest.
+
+Morality without religion is only a kind of dead reckoning--an endeavor
+to navigate a cloudy sea by measuring the distance we have to run, but
+without observation of the heavenly bodies.
+
+Most people keep too strong a hold of their personality to be able to
+forget themselves in their subject; they carry an unacknowledged
+self-consciousness along with them. If to be single-minded is to have
+an undivided interest in things, they are not single-minded.
+
+Real affection is independent. A woman may passionately love a man who
+does not care for her, and men have gone mad for the sake of women who
+were indifferent to them. That affection which survives coldness or
+even contempt on the part of the subject is a stronger proof of its
+strength than jealousy, however well founded.
+
+To have a respect for ourselves guides our morals, and to have a
+deference for others governs our manners.
+
+If you want to be miserable, think about yourself, about what you want,
+what you like, what respect people pay you, and what people think of
+you.
+
+One great impediment to the rapid dissemination of new truths is that a
+knowledge of them would convict many sage professors of having long
+promulgated error.
+
+The leaves that give out the sweetest fragrance are those that are the
+most cruelly crushed; so the hearts of those who have suffered most can
+feel for others' woes.
+
+Each of us can so believe in humanity in general as to contribute to
+that pressure which constantly levers up the race; can surround
+ourselves with an atmosphere optimistic rather than the
+contrary.--_Selected_.
+
+He who has more knowledge than good works is like a tree with many
+branches and few roots, which the first wind throws on its face; while
+he who does more than he says is like a tree with strong roots and few
+branches, which all the winds can not uproot.--_Talmud_.
+
+If we waited until it was perfectly convenient, half of the good
+actions of life would never be accomplished, and very few of its
+successes.
+
+A helping word to one in trouble is often like a switch on a railroad
+track, but one inch between wreck and smooth rolling prosperity.
+
+Prayer is the key of day and lock of the night; and we should every day
+begin and end, bid ourselves good morrow and good night, with prayer.
+
+In order to love mankind, expect but little from them; in order to view
+their faults without bitterness, pardon them. The wisest men have
+always been the most indulgent.
+
+There are souls which fall from heaven like flowers, but ere the pure
+and fresh buds can open they are trodden in the dust of the earth, and
+lie soiled and crushed under the foul tread of some brutal hoof.
+
+Many of the men we calmly set down as failures may have been doing as
+much as those who have made ten times as much noise in the world. A
+great deal of the best work in the world is anonymous, if we do not
+confine the term to writing.
+
+To a man of brave sentiments midnight is as bright as noonday, for the
+illumination is within.
+
+That man who lives in vain lives worse than vain. He who lives to no
+purpose lives to a bad purpose.--_Nevins_.
+
+Labor is the law of the world, and he who lives by other men's means is
+of less value to the world than the buzzing, busy insect.
+
+Deep is the sea, and deep is hell, but pride runneth deeper; it is
+coiled as a poisonous worm about the foundation of the soul.--_Tupper_.
+
+The integrity of the heart, when it is strengthened by reason, is the
+principal source of justice and wit; an honest man thinks nearly always
+justly.
+
+Be firm, but be not too hasty to decide; weigh well before you act,
+but, having weighed, act promptly, and abide the result. This is the
+test of judgment.
+
+Wit loses its respect with the good when seen in company with malice;
+and to smile at the jest which plants a thorn in another's breast is to
+become a principal in the mischief.
+
+Success never did, never will come to that young man who knows
+everything--in his own opinion.
+
+In love, as in everything else, truth is the strongest of all things,
+and frankness is but another name for truth.
+
+Frequent disappointment teaches us to mistrust our own inclination, and
+shrink even from vows our hearts may prompt.
+
+For children there is no leave-taking, for they acknowledge no past,
+only the present, that to them is full of the future.
+
+To love, in order to be loved in return, is man, but to love for the
+pure sake of loving, is almost the characteristic of an angel.
+
+Fond as a man is of sight-seeing, life is the great show for every
+man--the show always wonderful and new to the thoughtful.
+
+The sweetest book in all the world, if properly read, is the Bible.
+Its leaves are as fragrant as a bed of violets in full bloom.
+
+Pity gilds mortality with rays of immortal light, and through faith
+enables its possessor to triumph over sin, sorrow, tribulation and
+death.
+
+If we can not live so as to be happy, let us at least live so as to
+deserve happiness.--_Fichte_.
+
+Little by little fortunes are accumulated; little by little knowledge
+is gained; little by little character and reputation are achieved.
+
+Don't rely for success upon empty praise. The swimmer upon the stream
+of life must be able to keep afloat without the aid of bladders.
+
+Industry--In seeking a situation, remember that the right kind of men
+are always in demand, and that industry and capacity rarely go
+empty-handed.
+
+Frankness is the child of honesty and courage. Say just what you mean
+to do on every occasion, and take it for granted that you mean to do
+what is right.
+
+To be always intending to lead a new life, but never to find time to
+set about it, is as if a man should put off eating from one day to
+another till he is starved.
+
+A man loved by a beautiful and virtuous woman carries a talisman that
+renders him invulnerable; every one feels that such a one's life has a
+higher value than that of others.
+
+The great beauty of charity is privacy; there is a sweet force, even in
+an anonymous penny.
+
+Every heart has its secret sorrows, and oftentimes we call a man cold
+when he was only sad.
+
+A promise should be given with caution, and kept with care; it should
+be made with the heart and kept with the head.
+
+"The mind of a young creature," says Berkely, "can not remain empty; if
+you do not put into it that which is good, it will be sure to use even
+that which is bad."
+
+We all see at sunset the beautiful colors streaming all over the
+western sky, but no eyes can behold the hand that overturns the urns
+whence these streams are poured.
+
+We often live under a cloud, and it is well for us that we should do
+so. Uninterrupted sunshine would parch our hearts. We want shade and
+rain to cool and refresh them.
+
+Poverty is very terrible to you, and kills the soul in you sometimes;
+but it is the north wind that lashed men into vikings; it is the soft,
+luscious south wind that lulls to lotus dreams.
+
+There is nothing so valuable, and yet so cheap, as civility; you can
+almost buy land with it.
+
+It has been justly said nothing in man is so Godlike as doing good to
+our fellows.--_Selected_.
+
+Contentment swells a mite into a talent, and makes even the poor richer
+than the Indies.--_Addison_.
+
+Never was a sincere word utterly lost, never a magnanimity fell to the
+ground; there is some heart always to greet and accept it unexpectedly.
+
+There are people who often talk of the humbleness of their origin, when
+they are really ashamed of it, though vain of the talent which enabled
+them to emerge from it.
+
+A witty old deacon put it thus: "Now, brethren, let us get up a supper
+and eat ourselves rich. Buy your food, then give it to the church;
+then go and buy it back again; then eat it up, and your church debt is
+paid."
+
+Self-sacrifice is the essential mark of the Christian, and the absence
+of it is sufficient at once to condemn the man who calls himself by
+that name and yet has it not, and to declare that he has no right to
+it.--_Bolton_.
+
+There are many comfortable people in the world, but to call any man
+perfectly happy is an insult.
+
+Women often make light of ruin. Give them but the beloved objects, and
+poverty is but a trifling sorrow to bear.--_Thackeray_,
+
+Independence is a name for what no man possesses; nothing in the
+animate or inanimate world is more dependent than man.
+
+Wealth is to be used only as an instrument of action, not as the
+representative of civil honors and moral excellence.--_Jane Porter_.
+
+There is nothing purer, nothing warmer than our first friendship, our
+first love, our first striving after truth, our first feeling for
+nature.--_Jean Paul Richter_.
+
+Shakespeare is as much out of the category of eminent authors as he is
+out of the crowd. He is inconceivably wise; the others
+conceivably.--_Representative Men_.
+
+A smooth sea never made a skillful mariner. Neither do uninterrupted
+prosperity and success qualify a man for usefulness and happiness. The
+storms of adversity, like the storms of the ocean, arouse the faculties
+and excite the invention, prudence, skill and fortitude of the voyager.
+
+It is not work that hurts men. It is the corrosion of uncertainty; it
+is the anticipation of trouble; it is living in a state of painful
+apprehension. Therefore we should endeavor to rise out of the
+atmosphere of gloomy forebodings. The man who is lifted above fear and
+its whole brood of mischief can go through twice as much trouble as a
+man who is subject to its influence.
+
+He that looks out upon life from a sour or severe disposition, with
+hard and stringent notions, is ill prepared to meet the experiences of
+the world; but he who has the sweetness of hope, he who has an
+imagination lit up with cheerfulness, he who has the sense of humor
+which softens all things--he who has this atmosphere of the mind--has
+made himself superior to accident. As the angel described by Milton,
+who was smitten by the sword, and whose wounds healed as soon as the
+sword was withdrawn, so ought man to be; and when he receives a spear
+thrust in life, no sooner should the spear be withdrawn than his flesh
+ought to "close and be itself again."
+
+A married man falling into misfortune is more apt to retrieve his
+situation in the world than a single one, chiefly because his spirits
+are soothed and retrieved by domestic endearments, and his self-respect
+kept alive by finding that, although all abroad is darkness and
+humiliation, yet there is a little world of love at home over which he
+is monarch.
+
+
+
+
+HUSBAND AND FATHER
+
+Miss Frances Power Cobb is right, and she is wrong, when she says: "It
+is a woman, and only a woman--a woman all by herself, if she likes, and
+without any man to help her--who can turn a house into a home." She is
+unquestionably right in her judgment, that it is a woman who can, if
+she will, turn a house into a home, but she is much in the wrong in her
+assertion that it is a woman all by herself, without any man to help
+her, who can effect such a beneficial transformation. Woman possesses
+magical powers in the way of building up a home; but home naturally
+implies the presence and protection of man--and it is man himself, if
+he likes, and without any woman to help him, who can give that home a
+semblance of that place where, as some people believe, the wicked
+suffer after they have "shuffled off this mortal coil." The husband
+can never make the home, but he can succeed most admirably, if so he
+choose, to unmake it, to banish its happiness and comfort, to exile
+from it its ministering angels of peace and content, to shatter woman's
+sweet and blessed work to its very foundation. Let the wife
+concentrate, all day long, all her care and ingenuity and love upon
+building up her little paradise at home, let her hands be ever so busy
+in strewing fresh flowers around the domestic hearth, let her heart be
+ever so happy throughout the day in the discharge of her domestic
+duties, let her countenance be ever so beaming in her sweet
+anticipation of the happy smile of appreciation, of the kind word of
+sympathy and encouragement, which shall be her reward when her husband
+returns; and then see this star in her domestic firmament enter,
+sulking and surly, blind to all that her busy hands have so lovingly
+prepared, grim and gruff to her and the little ones, who have been
+fitted up in their neatest and cleanest, in which to welcome their
+father's return, and then see whether you can agree with Miss Cobb's
+assertion "that it is a woman, and only a woman--a woman all by
+herself, if she likes, and without any man to help her--who can turn a
+house into a home." See how her heart sinks, how her voice, full of
+mirth and glee and music before his coming, dies in her throat, how the
+little ones, full of merriment all day long, tremblingly hide in the
+corner, or withdraw from the room; see how the intrusion of this grim
+spectre of malcontent shuts the door upon domestic peace and happiness,
+and withers every pious resolve to make home the dearest, sweetest,
+most contented and most sacred spot on earth, and then calculate how
+long, under such disheartening surroundings, woman will be able all by
+herself, and without any man to help her, to prevent her house from
+becoming anything and everything except a home.
+
+While studying language, I observed that most of my mistakes in grammar
+occurred in the feminine gender, and thinking over the cause of it, it
+dawned upon me that, belonging to the masculine sex, I was in the habit
+of thinking in that gender, and that my teachers were men, and that my
+text-books and grammars had been written by men, and that the masculine
+gender predominated so strongly in the exercises, that it was but
+natural for me to make the greatest number of mistakes in the gender to
+which the least attention had been given. When dealing with the social
+and domestic question, the unbiased among us can not but observe a
+similar failing. Many a serious mistake has been made by man when
+speaking or writing concerning women, because our speakers and writers
+and preachers and teachers belonged from the very beginning of
+civilization, almost exclusively to the masculine sex, a sex which has
+never tired in exalting itself at the expense of the weaker sex, in
+emphasizing woman's inferiority to man, in asserting its rights, and in
+complaining about its wrongs, and as woman did not write or speak for
+herself, we have heard but little of her side of the story, know next
+to nothing of her just rights and of her grievous wrongs, seldom dream
+that she, too, has rights that must be respected, and suffers wrongs
+that must be corrected.
+
+The universities, colleges and all great institutions of learning of
+this and other lands refused, until quite recently, to recognize woman
+as a human being possessing a mind in need of training, and therefore
+excluded her from their privileges, and the order of Odd-Fellows
+partook of the same spirit and excluded the better half of the human
+race from its lodge-rooms. Man had ever been a selfish, conceited,
+cowardly tyrant from the day in which our father Adam disgraced his sex
+by taking without question the forbidden fruit; and, after eating it,
+crying with selfish, pusillanimous cowardice: "The woman thou gavest to
+be with me gave me of the tree and I did eat," and he has always sought
+to make and keep woman an inferior, dependent, submissive slave. To
+this end he has striven to keep her in ignorance, exclude her from all
+the avenues of knowledge, and then, because she did not possess the
+knowledge that he had forbidden her, proclaimed throughout the world
+that she was mentally inferior to man, and in consequence unfit to be
+admitted to the various institutions and associations in which men
+sought to improve their minds.
+
+The object of Odd-Fellowship is to improve and elevate the character of
+man, to enlighten his mind and enlarge the sphere of his affections,
+and of course woman, as being mentally weak and naturally inferior to
+man, was excluded from its sacred precincts. Now, however, things are
+changed; nearly all educational institutions worthy of mention admit
+women, and the Rebekah of today, emulating the Rebekah of old, will be
+hand in hand with her brothers in all good works. She will accompany
+him on his errands of mercy, watch beside the bedside of anguish,
+foregoing pleasure to follow in the path of duty.
+
+I would have every man know--who has a wife--that "mutual benefit from
+harmonious partnership work" is an axiom in as full a sense as "in
+union there is strength."
+
+There are two sides to every question, and in this article I shall deal
+with the woman's side. I want to present especially the wife's side of
+the question to every Odd-Fellow, hoping that it will be of lasting
+benefit in many ways. I know full well that only one accustomed to
+deal with high and holy things, one whose glance is ever at sacred
+things, one who, as it were, administers the treasures of the kingdom
+of God, can fittingly touch this subject. It would be easy for me to
+be a cheap wit, to rake up the old scandal of Mother Eve, to even
+declaim with windy volubility that a woman betrayed the capital, that a
+woman lost Mark Anthony the world and left old Troy in ashes. But far
+be it from me! Rather would I assume a loftier mood; rather would I
+strike a loftier note, and, with blind Homer, beg for an unwearied
+tongue to chant the praise of woman. It is true Eve lost us Eden, but
+in that garden of monotonous delight, had we been born there, we would
+never have truly known what woman is. O, Felix Culpa! O, happy fault!
+that has shown the world the mines of rich affection of woman's heart,
+that else would never have been discovered. O, happy fault, that has
+shown the world a wealth of woman's nature, her capability for love,
+the radiance of her tenderness, her infinite pity, her unswerving
+devotion, the solace of her presence in sickness and sorrow, the depth
+and sweetness of her mercy.
+
+A river of pure delight flowed through paradise, but blind Adam never
+saw it, never dreamed of it until the flaming sword cut him off
+forever; but he has since drank of it, and so has every man who has
+ever tasted the sacramental wine of woman's true affection. The seamy
+side of life has been laid bare to me. Its sorrows and its anguishes
+have I often witnessed, but into that pool of Bethesida of the world's
+anguish, with healing do I see ever come an angel, a pitying woman.
+The influence of wife and mother is ever near me; their faces are the
+most lovely; their hearts the most tender of all in this world--my
+mother and my wife. And for their sake, and for the sake of all the
+mothers, wives, sisters and daughters, whom I daily meet doing good, I
+long and I earnestly yearn for the eloquence and grace to half express
+the thoughts that rise within me of what the world owes woman.
+
+To me every good woman is the fair fulfillment of dreamed delight. She
+is the first at the cross and the last at the grave. All that is
+highest and best in the world is nurtured and fed by the milk of her
+nobility. The Christ of all greatness and hope was born of a woman.
+The noble women of the world! O, would that the days of chivalry were
+not past, that I might unsheath a lance in their name, for their glory!
+But in our more prosaic days, what can I do but let the will suffice
+for the deed, and say to the woman, "God bless you." I propose to let
+her speak for herself today. I propose to accept her invitation to
+accompany her through the various spheres of her domestic life, and see
+whether she alone is responsible for that vice and crime and misfortune
+which moralists and superintendents of penal and charity institutes
+trace back to neglects at home; whether it is always the wife and
+mother that is responsible for unhappiness in marriage and for the
+increase of divorces; whether the husbands and fathers are always the
+saints and martyrs, or whether they are not very, very often the root
+of the whole evil themselves.
+
+We retrace our steps and begin with our observations of the husband and
+father a few months prior to that solemn day, on which he plighted his
+vows of protection and faithfulness, on which he took into his care and
+trust a woman's life and happiness, on which he sacredly promised, in
+the name of God, and in the presence of witnesses, to love her, to
+honor and cherish her, to provide for her, to be faithful to her in all
+his obligations as husband, in youth and in old age, in sunshine and in
+darkness, in prosperity and in adversity. We make first his
+acquaintance in the happy days of his courtship. He is burning with
+love. He is the facsimile of Shakespeare's lover, "sighing like a
+furnace." Her praises are on his lips always. He avows himself her
+slave and worships her as a goddess. It is in her company alone that
+he can find happiness. Whether at home or in society, he is always at
+her side. Life is dreary where she is not. He wonders how he could
+have lived so long, or how he could continue existence, without her.
+How regular and how punctual he is in his calls, and how he scowls at
+the clock for running away with time so fast! Not a wish does she
+express, no matter how unreasonable and extravagant, but he eagerly
+gratifies it. How numerous his little attentions and his kind
+remembrances! How thoughtful of her birthday, and how lavish in floral
+tributes and costly presents! How numerous and how lengthy his letters
+when separated! How sweet their moonlight walks and talks! How bright
+her future, which he maps out! How many the pledges which he breathes
+forth between his ardent kisses; never a harsh word shall break on her
+ear, never a wish of hers shall be ungratified, never a trouble shall
+mar her happiness; such a love as his has never been before, and will
+never be again; he only lives for her happiness; his affection will
+never cool, he will be a lover all his life; their whole wedded life
+will be one never-waning honeymoon.
+
+In the drama the plot usually ends with marriage. At the instant when
+it is reached, when all obstacles are removed, the curtain falls, and
+the young people have no further existence for us. But in the
+practical world the play goes on. The curtain rises again, the same
+personages reappear, only they frequently play different parts, and
+what was before a comedy or a melo-drama often changes into a tragedy.
+Sad and tearful scenes are often enacted by them. The misery and pain
+are no longer inflicted by their former enemy, but by their own hands.
+He, who prior to marriage overcame almost insurmountable obstacles to
+make his lady fair his happy wife, now moves heaven and earth to make
+that wife as miserable as possible.
+
+A number of years have passed since last we observed the lover. He is
+husband and father now, but what a change these few years have wrought
+in him! Forgotten are the lover's vows. She that once his goddess
+was, is now his slave. The fulsome flatterer of former times has
+degenerated into a chronic fault-finder. With the change of her name
+has begun his change of treatment of her. Cast aside are the many
+courtesies and expressions of endearment that marked his conduct to her
+prior to marriage, and which were the thousand golden threads that day
+by day throughout their courtship wove their hearts closely into one.
+No bouquets and no costly gifts any more. The anniversary of her birth
+and of their wedding day passes by unnoticed by him. His former
+efforts to entertain her, to make himself agreeable to her, have
+altogether ceased. Rarer, and ever rarer, become his parting and his
+coming kiss, his "good-bye, dear," and his "good evening, darling."
+Fewer and fewer become his words of praise. Irksome becomes the task
+of staying at home. He, who once upon a time found life dreary where
+she was not, who vowed that in her company alone he found happiness,
+who could not await the evening that would bring him to her, who
+declared that his affection would never cool, and their whole wedded
+life would be one continuous honeymoon, now finds her company tedious,
+her home unattractive. He looks upon his home as his boarding and
+lodging-house, upon his wife as the kitchen scullion, or as the nurse
+of his children, for which services he generally allows her so many
+dollars a week. At the breakfast table his face is buried in the
+morning paper. He rises without interchanging a word with wife and
+child. Absent from home all day long, he is absent still, even when
+home in the evening. No sooner has he swallowed his meal, when he
+buries himself in the newspaper for the rest of the evening, or dozes
+on the sofa till bedtime, or he has an important business engagement
+down town, or some meeting to attend, or an important engagement brings
+other husbands to his house, where they transact any amount of business
+in the exchange of diamonds for hearts, and clubs for spades.
+
+All day long she has been toiling hard in her home, toiling with hand
+and brain. She has been preacher and teacher, physician and druggist,
+provider and manager, cook and laundress. The children had to be
+attended to, purchases had to be made, the meals had to be provided,
+the servants to be looked after, the house to be gotten in order; there
+was mending and sewing and baking and cleaning and scrubbing and
+scouring, which had to be done; there were the children's lessons, and
+practicings that had to be looked after; there were the children's
+ailments that had to be cured, and there were the hundred other things
+the husband never dreams of, and which tax a woman's nerves and
+strength as much, and often more, than his occupation taxes him. But
+not a word of appreciation, not a look of sympathy and encouragement
+from him, who never tired to sing her praises before they were married,
+who vowed that never a harsh word should remotely break on her ear,
+never a trouble should mar her happiness. On the contrary, he has no
+end of faults to find, and she is doomed to listen to the same old
+harangue on economy and saving. She has been saving and stinting until
+she can save and stint no more. She has patched and mended and turned
+and altered until she could patch and mend and alter no more, and still
+the same complaints; the table costs too much, the dry goods store
+bills are too long, the seamstress comes into the house too often, the
+physician is consulted too much, and of such as these many more. Not a
+word does he say about the expensive cigars he smokes, the wines he
+drinks; about his frequent visits to the sample-room, and about the
+liberality with which he treats his friends there; about the sumptuous
+dinners he takes at noon in the down-town restaurant, while wife and
+children content themselves at home with a frugal lunch; about the
+money he loses at the card table, or in his bets on the games and races
+and politics. And of the children he takes but little notice. He has
+not seen them all day long, and he is too tired to be bothered with
+them in the evening. He must have his rest and quiet. The mother
+worried with them all day long, she may worry with them in the evening,
+too. It is enough for him to supply her with the means wherewith to
+care for their wants, further obligations he has none; these are a
+mother's duties, but not a father's.
+
+They tell a story of a learned preacher who had isolated himself from
+his children on account of his dislike to their noise. One day, while
+taking a walk, he was attracted by the beauty and wonderful
+intelligence of a little boy. Inquiring of the nurse whose child it
+was, she answered, much astonished: "Your own, reverend sir, your own."
+Judging from the attention that some fathers bestow on their children,
+I am inclined to believe that this learned preacher has many an
+imitator among his sex, for whom not even the inexcusable excuse of
+absorption in studies can be set up. I have read of a business man,
+who one day thanked God that a commercial crisis had thrown him into
+bankruptcy. He said it afforded him an opportunity to stay at home for
+awhile, and get acquainted with his own family, and that for the first
+time he learned to know the true worth of his wife, and that he found
+his children the sweetest and dearest creatures that ever lived, and
+not for all the business of the world would he again deprive himself of
+their sweet association. Prior to his misfortune, or rather good
+fortune, his business had so absorbed him that he had altogether
+forgotten that there were sacred claims at home that demanded his
+interest and his service.
+
+Not all our orphaned children are in our orphan asylums, or under the
+supervision of "The Orphans' Guardians." There are more of them at
+home with their fathers and mothers, and especially among our
+well-to-do families. There are children growing up who scarcely know
+anything else of their father except that he is referred to during the
+day by their mother when they are bad, as that dread personage who
+would inflict a severe chastisement on them when he returns, or whose
+presence silences their fun and makes their own absence agreeable. He
+makes no effort to entertain them, takes no interest in their
+pleasures, in their progress at school. He is simply their punisher,
+but not their friend, and it is not at all surprising to see children
+growing up with a conception of their father such as that little boy
+had, who, when told by a minister of heaven, and of the meeting of the
+departed there, asked: "And will father be there?" On being told that
+"of course he would be there," he at once replied, "Then I don't want
+to go." Occasionally wife and husband spend an evening out, or they
+entertain company at home, and oh, what a transformation she observes
+in him. In other people's homes, or when other people are present, his
+stock of material for conversation is unlimited. Then and there he is
+full of fun, bright and cheerful; when alone with his wife he has
+scarcely a word to say; he moves about the house with the lofty
+indifference of a lord, and with a heartless disregard of every member
+of the household. At home he is cold and cross and boorish, in other
+women's parlors he is polite and considerate and engaging. He has a
+smile and a compliment for other women, none for his wife. If they
+attend an evening reception, he brings his wife there, and he takes her
+home; during the interval she has little, if any, of his company. She
+may be shy, she may be a stranger, she may not be much accustomed to
+society life, she may feel herself out of place in the gay assemblage,
+she may be unentertained or bored or annoyed, it matters not to him as
+long as he is having a good time with the boys, or is encircled by the
+ladies fair, who unanimously think him the most gallant of men,
+unrivaled in his wit and wisdom and conversational powers, and who
+secretly sigh if but their husbands were like him.
+
+To such an extent is this wife-neglect carried on that a lady not long
+ago made a wager that, in nine cases out of ten, she would distinguish
+between married and unmarried couples. She won the wager. When asked
+to explain her method of discrimination, she said: "When you see a
+gentleman and a lady walking in silence side by side, it is a married
+couple; when their conversation is continuous and animated, and
+smile-and-laugh-provoking, they are single. When a gentleman sits next
+to a lady in the theatre, and never keeps his opera glass away from the
+boxes and galleries and stage, he is her husband; when his eyes rest
+more on her than on the stage, it is her lover. When a lady, who sits
+at the side of a gentleman, drops her glove, and she stoops to hunt it,
+it is a married couple; if he stoops quickly to pick it up it is an
+unmarried couple. When a lady plays, and a gentleman stands near her,
+and does not turn for her the pages of the music book, it is her
+husband; when you see his fingers in eager readiness to turn the leaf,
+it is not her husband."
+
+There is in every true woman a spark of divinity, which glows in her
+heart, and blazes into a most luminous light when a husband's love and
+respect and sympathy and appreciation and encouragement fan that spark
+into activity. But woe to the home where cruel hands quench that
+flame. The sun is the heater and illuminator of our whole solar
+system. The vast supplies which it sends forth daily must be
+compensated, or else it would soon expend itself, and our world would
+go to ruin. Nature, therefore, hurls millions of meteors every second
+into the sun's fiery furnace to keep up the supply of heat and light.
+The wife is the sun of the household. Her womanly attributes give the
+light and warmth and happiness of the home to all who cluster around
+her. But a wife's love and self-sacrifice for her home are not
+infinite. They soon exhaust themselves, where love is unreturned,
+where a husband is a tyrant, where self-sacrifice is unappreciated,
+where faithful and prudent industry is accepted as a labor of duty, and
+not as a labor of love, where she is simply regarded as his
+housekeeper, and not as his devoted helpmate, where his presence alone
+is sufficient to cast gloom and fear over the entire household. Woman
+was made to bless mankind, but also to be blessed in return; to make
+society better for forming a part thereof, but also to receive some
+recognition for her work.
+
+Endurance is woman's prerogative. Suffering is her heirloom.
+Disasters, which would crush the spirit of man, often turn her heart to
+steel, and she performs deeds grand and heroic. Disheartened by
+continuous neglect, she will make heroic efforts to throw her influence
+all the more affectionately over her home. Wounded deeper and ever
+deeper, she will toil on, hiding from the world the pangs of wounded
+affection, "as the wounded dove will clasp its wings to its side and
+cover and conceal the arrow that is preying on its vitals." But the
+shafts of continuous neglect will pierce her heart at last--a husband's
+continuous neglect extinguish, at last, the sacred flame upon the
+domestic hearth. She, too, finds home irksome. She, too, learns to
+find more pleasure abroad than in her home. She, too, thinks light of
+liberties and indiscretions. The grown children learn to emulate their
+parents' example, and seek their pleasures also abroad. The little
+children are left to servants to finish the corruption begun by
+parents. And so the home, the very spot designed by God to become the
+chief school of human virtue, the seminary of social affections, the
+keystone of the whole fabric of society, the germ-cell of civilization,
+becomes a hotbed of corruption, and almost as often on account of a
+husband's neglect and sins, as on account of a wife's ignorance or
+frailties or failings. Our stock of advice to wives and mothers seems
+inexhaustible. Almost every one of the stronger sex has his fling at
+woman, and his remedy to offer, which, if immediately followed, will at
+once eradicate unhappiness in marriage, decrease the number of
+divorces, and lessen vice and crime in society.
+
+Might not a little advice be also profitable to man? Is there not room
+for improvement in the stronger sex as well as in the weaker? Reform
+in the one sex will be of little benefit unless there is reform in the
+other sex as well. Our husbands and our fathers, too, need reforming,
+and that reform must begin very early in their lives, before yet they
+enter into marriage, before yet they enter upon the days of their
+courtship. Our young men need curbing. Youthful precocity must be
+checked. "_Cito maturum cito putridum_" says the Latin, "soon ripe,
+soon rotten." We allow our young men, some of them exceedingly young,
+too many liberties. We allow them to sow too many wild oats. If their
+intention is some day to take unto their care and keeping a woman's
+life and happiness, to pluck from out a comfortable and contented home,
+and from the embrace of devoted parents, a pure and happy and trusting
+young woman, who has never felt the wrench and shock of life's storms,
+nor the cold shoulder of neglect, nor the gnawing tooth of want, then
+let them see to it in time that they may bring to her a heart as pure
+and mind as uncorrupted, and character as unpolluted as they expect
+from her.
+
+The law of heredity, of transmission of ancestral poison, is as
+operative in the male sex as in the female. A pure and healthy
+offspring must be preceded by a pure and healthy parentage. A
+rottening tree never produces luscious fruit. "Like begets like." An
+enfeebled father means not only feebleness in the next generation, but
+also perpetuated misery and vice and crime. Marriage is sacred and
+necessary and obligatory, but not all marriages are so. There are some
+marriages from which woman should recoil as much as she would from
+death itself. Rather that death would woo her than a man--if I may be
+permitted to honor him with that name--whose constitution is
+undermined, whose strength is sapped, and whose marrow and blood are
+poisoned. Rather an old maid than a profligate's nurse. Rather a life
+of single blessedness than the housekeeper of a wreck of a husband.
+Rather single and happy and stainless and conscience-free than a mother
+of an unfortunate offspring, that have the sins of their father visited
+upon them, and that shall one day curse their parents for having given
+existence to them. Another remedy for unhappy marriages will be found
+in the cessation, of the anxiety on the part of so many parents _to get
+their daughters married off_. It is but natural that this constant
+anxiety should make the daughter feel that she would like to lessen her
+parents' dread, and cease being a trouble to them, especially when
+there are younger sisters crowding fast upon her, and so she says
+"Yes," even when the word almost chokes in her throat, even though she
+knows in her heart that he is not her ideal, nor the man that will make
+her happy. It is not true that any husband, who can support a wife, is
+better than no husband. Marriage means more to a sensible woman than
+an alliance with a husband for the sake of being clothed and fed and
+housed. She has a heart and soul and mind that have their wants, and
+if they be starved, unhappy marriage, if nothing worse, is the result.
+
+Mothers and fathers! Have you watched over your daughter from the day
+of her birth; have you guarded her from infancy to girlhood, and from
+girlhood to womanhood; have you suffered for her sake; have you
+surrendered comforts and sacrificed pleasures for her sake; have you
+toiled and stinted and saved for her sake; have you afforded her the
+best education and all the pleasures and opportunities that your means
+will allow, and all to wish yourselves rid of her; to think that any
+husband, who can support your daughter--sometimes not even so much is
+expected from him--no matter how old, how uncultured, how unsuitable to
+her tastes and wants, is better than no husband? A father's personal
+attention to the training of his children will in time reduce
+materially unhappy marriages, and greatly lessen the miseries and vices
+of society. He owes his children more than support and chastisement.
+Society holds him responsible for their character. The duties of
+training devolve upon the father as much as on the mother. A father's
+wider experience and worldly wisdom prove valuable contributions to the
+mother's simpler knowledge in the raising of their children. A
+father's continuous absence, or neglects, or severity, or unkindness,
+or heartlessness, has made more reprobates and scamps and criminals in
+this world than all the failings of women combined. Think less of your
+dignity and more of your duty. Rather that your child should love you
+than fear you. You can maintain your authority and dignity by love and
+gentleness as well as by frowns and threats and chastisements. You may
+walk and talk and study and play with them, and yet have their full
+respect. The great and warlike Agesilaus did not think it beneath him
+to entertain his children during his leisure hours, to join them in all
+their merry sports, and permit himself to crawl on his fours with his
+little child upon his back. If you would raise good children let your
+example at home be accordingly. As you will teach them so they will
+act. If you are a devil they will scarcely be angels. Children are
+keen observers. An old proverb says that a father is a looking-glass
+by which children dress themselves. See to it, fathers, that the glass
+be clean, so that your children's morals may be pure.
+
+A little more memory on the part of the husband will prove a powerful
+remedy for the eradication of unhappy marriages and for the lessening
+of divorces. She is the same woman after marriage that she was during
+the days of your courtship, and a good deal better. Why so forgetful
+of all the sacred vows and solemn pledges which you plighted then? Why
+so constant then and so inconstant now? Why so affable and faithful
+and loving and attentive then, and why so inattentive and bitter and
+sullen and neglectful now? Why such a profuseness then in your
+courtesies and smiles and flowers and gifts and kisses, and why such a
+lack of them now? Is it because of wrinkles? Is it because of her
+faded beauty? She has lost it in your service. She has come honestly
+by her wrinkles. She got them in the sick-bed, in the kitchen, in the
+nursery, by the bed of your sick children, by the grave of your child,
+by painful night-watches and overtaxing day toils, by your harsh words,
+and by your heartless treatment. This is all she has in return for her
+beauty and youth and cheerful mind and happy disposition, which she
+laid at your feet when you asked her to join her destiny with yours. A
+little courtesy, a kind attention, a bouquet of flowers, a small token,
+a word of appreciation and of encouragement is not much to you, but it
+is a world to your wife. Your smile is all the reward she craves. Her
+heart thirsts for it, and when given, its effect upon her soul is as
+the refreshing dew upon the withered grass. It is a mistake to believe
+that she can draw in her married life on your love-deposits during
+courtship. If love is to prosper, the supply must be ever fresh. The
+love of the past will never satisfy the need of the present. Love
+constantly and carefully cultivated will increase its blessings as
+fruit trees double their bearing under the hand of the gardener. It
+will be killed, as will the fruit tree, if the gardener's hand grows
+neglectful and noxious influences are permitted to impede its growth.
+Let your wife be your helpmate and not your housekeeper. She shares
+your sorrows, your defeats, let her also share your thoughts and plans.
+Unbosom your thoughts to her. Lay open to her your heart and soul.
+Trust her with your confidence, she trusts you with hers. The men who
+succeed are those who make confidants of their wives. The marriages
+that are happy are those where husbands and wives have no thoughts
+apart. The children that are well raised are those that have had the
+example of loving and confiding parents before them. Proud of your
+confidence, she will labor to deserve it. She will study to please
+you. In your prosperity she will be your delight; your stay and
+comfort in your adversity. She will return your confidence and
+affection in full measure. Gloom will vanish from the hearth, and
+happiness will hold dominion within the home. "Her children will rise
+up before her and call her happy; and her husband will sing aloud her
+praises."
+
+Marriage is, perhaps, the only game of chance ever invented at which it
+is possible for both players to lose. Too often, after many
+sugar-coated words, and several premeditated misdeals on both sides,
+one draws a blank and the other a booby. After patiently angling in
+the matrimonial pool, one draws a sunfish and the other a minnow. One
+expects to capture a demigod, who hits the earth only in high places,
+but when she has thoroughly analyzed him, she finds nothing genuine,
+only a wilted chrysanthemum and a pair of patent leather shoes, while
+he in return expected to wed a wingless angel who would make his Edenic
+bower one long drawn out sigh of aesthetic bliss. The result is very
+often that he is tied to a slattern, who slouches around the house with
+her hair in tins, a dime novel in her hand, with a temper like aqua
+fortis and a voice like a cat fight--a voice that would make a cub wolf
+climb a tree; a fashionable butterfly, whose heart is in her finery and
+her feathers; who neglects her home to train with a lot of intellectual
+birds; whose glory is small talk; who saves her sweetest smiles for
+society and her ill temper for her family altar. If I were tied to
+such a female as that, do you know what I would do? You don't, eh?
+Well, neither do I. There was a time, we are told, when to be a Roman
+was to be greater than to be a king; yet there came a time when to be a
+Roman was to be a vassal or a slave. Change is the order of the
+universe, and nothing stands. We must go forward, or we must go
+backward. We must press on to grander heights, to greater glory, or
+see the laurels already won turned to ashes upon our brow. We may
+sometimes slip; shadows may obscure our paths; the boulders may bruise
+our feet; there may be months of mourning and days of agony; but
+however dark the night, hope, a poising eagle, will ever burn above the
+unrisen tomorrow. Trials we may have, and tribulations sore, but I say
+unto you, O, brothers mine, that while God reigns and the human family
+endures, this nation, born of our father's blood, and sanctified by our
+mother's tears, shall not pass away, and under heaven, for this great
+boon, this great blessing, we'll be indebted to the women of
+America--God bless them. Finally, brethren, be serious while I impart
+this concluding lesson: "She--was--a--good--wife--to--me. A good wife,
+God bless her!" The words were spoken in trembling accents over a
+coffin-lid. The woman asleep there had borne the heat and burden of
+life's long day, and no one had ever heard her murmur; her hand was
+quick to reach out in helping grasp to those who fell by the wayside,
+and her feet were swift on errands of mercy; the heart of her husband
+had trusted in her; he had left her to long hours of solitude, while he
+amused himself in scenes in which she had no part. When boon
+companions deserted him, when fickle affection selfishly departed, when
+pleasure palled, he went home and found her waiting for him.
+
+ "Come from your long, long roving,
+ On life's sea so bleak and rough;
+ Come to me tender and loving,
+ And I shall be blest enough."
+
+That hath been her long song, always on her lips or in her heart.
+Children had been born to them. She had reared them almost alone--they
+were gone! Her hand had led them to the uttermost edge of the morning
+that has no noon. Then she had comforted him, and sent him out strong
+and whole-hearted while she stayed at home and--cried. What can a
+woman do but cry and trust? Well, she is at rest now. But she could
+not die until he had promised to "bear up," not fret, but to remember
+how happy they had been. They? Yes, it was even so.
+
+It was an equal partnership, after all.
+"She--was--a--good--wife--to--me." Oh, man! man! Why not have told
+her so when her ears were not dulled by death? Why wait to say these
+words over a coffin wherein lies a wasted, weary, gray-haired woman,
+whose eyes have so long held that pathetic story of loss and suffering
+and patient yearning, which so many women's eyes reveal to those who
+weep? Why not have made the wilderness in her heart blossom like the
+rose with the prodigality of your love? Now you would give worlds,
+were they yours to give, to see the tears of joy your words would have
+once caused, bejeweling the closed windows of her soul. It is too late.
+
+ "We have careful thoughts for the stranger,
+ And smiles for the sometime guest,
+ But oft for own,
+ The bitter tone,
+ Though we love our own the best."
+
+
+
+
+ODD-FELLOWSHIP AND THE FUTURE
+
+There is infinite and perennial fascination in the contemplation of the
+future. The past is a fixed province, the finished result of an
+ever-moving present. The future is the province of the poet, the
+prophet and the seer. The past is adamant, the future is plastic clay.
+The past is with God alone; the future is with God and man. We toil
+for it; dream of it; look to it; and all seek so to
+
+ * * * "Forecast the years,
+ As find in loss a gain to match,
+ Or reach a hand through time to catch
+ The far-off interest of tears."
+
+Let us consider the future as a field and Odd-Fellowship as a force.
+The future is a field, billowing with the ripening harvest of golden
+possibilities. It is as wide as the world, for the world is the field.
+It comprises every zone and clime; every nation and tribe; every island
+of the seas. Wherever we find one of our fellow-men in darkness and in
+chains, there is our field. It is as long as from now to the coming of
+Christ. A moment's survey of the field will convince us that the
+greatest conquests are yet to be made. There is battle ahead, great
+interests to be gained, great incentives to heroic effort. The times
+call for men--broad-browed, clear-eyed, strong-hearted, swift-footed
+men. Odd-Fellows, not behind you but before you, not in the past but
+in the future, lies the widest and richest field of Odd-Fellowship's
+possibility. Turn your faces, not toward the waning light of
+yesterday, but toward the growing radiance of a better morning. The
+force is commensurate with the field. The cry of every true Odd-Fellow
+ought to be the cry that leaped from the heart of Isaiah when his lips
+were touched with the coal from off the altar: "Here am I, Lord, send
+me." Our order is no longer a puny and helpless infant, but a lusty
+giant, panoplied in the armor of truth and clad in the strength of
+perpetual youth. We have riches untold. We have institutions for the
+care of the old, and the orphan, the equal of any of which the world
+can boast. We have a grasp on the sympathy and confidence of the
+masses which is immeasurable. We stand for principles that are the
+incarnation of God's infinite thought and throbbing love. We are
+equipped for conquest. What answer shall the force make to the cry
+from the field? As loyal Odd-Fellows, let us take our answer from the
+Great Commander. What answer did He make to a dying world? What did
+he come to do? He came to lift fallen humanity. He came to bind up
+the wounds of those who were bruised and bleeding. He came to speak
+words of cheer and sympathy to hearts bowed in sorrow. He came to
+break the chains of bondage and restore mankind to its former beauty
+and greatness. Our mission is identical with His. Our work is
+identical with His work. We are His representatives. Our highest
+destiny is the working out of His purposes. The world with all its
+boasted progress has not advanced beyond the need of a Savior. It is
+the same at heart now as it was when the blessed feet of Christ trod
+its hills and valleys. Men change, but man changes not. The same
+problems are confronting us as confronted them. It may be trite, but
+it is tremendously true, that our primary and ever-present duty is to
+seek and save the lost. We are to win them to faith in high and noble
+ends, and having won them to faith in our mission is not enough. They
+are to be instructed, cultured, enlarged, inspired, ennobled, until man
+looking in the face of man shall see the face of Christ shining
+through. He is to be the accepted Lord and law-giver in every realm of
+human thought and activity. He is to rule in the family. He is to
+rule in business. He is to rule until the demon of hate, malice and
+injustice has been throttled. He must rule in the affairs of state.
+He must rule in society, until the watchers at the gate shall announce
+to Him who sitteth upon the throne: "Thy kingdom has come and thy will
+is done in earth as it is in heaven." Christ is the solution of man's
+most difficult problems. He came to save men. How did He go about the
+task? He gave himself. We can accomplish our task only as in burning
+earnestness we give ourselves. What depth of humiliation, what
+self-devotion, what unmeasured sacrifices, what unspeakable suffering,
+what unfathomable anguish, what toil and anxiety, what love and pity,
+what loneliness and sorrow, are crowded into those three words, "He
+gave himself."
+
+If we as an order would give ourselves to the principles taught by our
+institution, we could win the world in the next half century. If we
+are to be truest to the future, we must stand by the side of the Great
+Teacher and proclaim a complete and perfect truth. Our platform should
+be neither broader nor narrower than His. If there is one truth in
+revelation that we can not give its proper setting and due emphasis,
+then we are not the keepers of God's truth. To my thinking, there are
+no organizations formed by man that can appeal more confidently to the
+Word of God for confirmation than the Odd-Fellows. We appeal to sane
+reason and common sense. No organization can hold up a higher ideal of
+individual freedom and worth. But there is a danger that we become
+narrow, that we violate the maxims of sane reason and common sense,
+that we lose the balance between individual prerogative and the claims
+of a united brotherhood. We can not accomplish the aims of our order
+by onesidedness. We are to become "all things to all men." We are not
+to be prisms breaking up the rays of light and declaring that this or
+that color is the most important. We as Odd-Fellows are to be lenses,
+converging the rays and bringing them to a focus upon the hearts of men
+as the white light of God's eternal truth.
+
+This is a practical age, and if we are to win we must demonstrate the
+superiority of our faith and practice over that of other claimants, not
+only in terms of the Written Word, but also in terms of manhood.
+Odd-Fellowship is standing upon the golden dawn of a new morning. It
+is to be a day of battle and conquest. It is truth blazoned upon the
+page of history, that if we as Odd-Fellows are true to our standard, to
+our possibilities and to our Maker, he will lay the suffering of a
+throbbing world in our arms that we may lay it at the feet of Him who
+died to redeem it. Let us cherish high hopes, noble aims, and lofty
+ideals. Never since the world was peopled has mankind stood in such
+anxious expectancy, awaiting the outcome of the immediate future, as in
+these closing years of the nineteenth century. Men are wistfully
+trying to peer through the portals of the year nineteen
+hundred--marveling, as the effects and forces of applied science is
+unfolded to our comprehension, and discovery moves on, each invention
+leading in another, in stately procession; we, all the while rapt in
+wonder, are straining in hope and fear to catch the coming word, and to
+comprehend its import. Never was speculation so rife, never was the
+field of human observation so unobstructed and expanded, nor the
+ascertainment and sifting of facts so facile. Never were opinions more
+diverse, nor was it ever so obviously important to detect and assert
+the philosophical principle, in recognition and obedience to which the
+laws of human government may be preserved and kept in view, and the
+retrocession of mankind prevented. At no stage of history was it more
+important to call to mind the great principle that government is a
+means, and not an end, and is instituted to maintain those general
+liberties which are essential for human happiness and progress. At
+this time, Odd-Fellowship looks toward the future with longing eyes,
+and its followers lift high their banner, on which is inscribed that
+beautiful motto, "Friendship, Love and Truth."
+
+After all, what lives in this world? Is it thought pulsations alone or
+deeds done? If thought alone, then the lowest thought coordinated in
+the brain of man would live. Something must be combined with thought
+in order to have a lasting effect. There must be thought and deeds and
+sentiment. Sentiment must go to the very existence of the race. On
+these forces may be built up structures that live and breathe a
+benediction on all mankind. I ask you to cast your eye over the world
+and note the permanency of such institutions as have come down to us,
+and are alive, and such as we say will live. I venture your first
+question will be: "What is the foundation on which they rest? Why,
+through the slow, revolving years have these institutions lived and
+thrived and grown? Have they lived on greed, or a desire for pelf or
+power, or out of human desire for adulation and praise? Or have they
+lived because of man's needs, and out of human wants?" If we probe to
+the bottom we will find this the corner-stone of all laudable
+ambitions, because man needs man, and needs help into a higher plane of
+usefulness and activities.
+
+We find institutions coming down to us from a date which the memory of
+man runs not to the contrary; indeed, some so old that the musty
+volumes of the long ago reveal not their origin. But simply the need
+of man for man would not entirely account for the duration of society
+in its ancient form. There must be still other underlying principles.
+There must be love and the acknowledgment of the brotherhood of man all
+along the way of life, or the family would go to ruin, society would
+dissolve, citizenship would not exist, states and principalities,
+kingdoms and powers would exist only as an idea in the brain. There
+would be no command to be our brother's keeper, no plighted vow that
+"The Lord be between thee and me, and between my seed and thy seed
+forever." Man would, as an individual, stand absolutely alone, like an
+atom dropped from the abyssmal depths onto this earth of ours. The
+little wild flower struggles through leafy mold, endures the
+tempestuous blast of winter, that when spring comes it may bloom to
+gladden the earth and scatter sweet incense all around. But without
+the cementing influence that runs like a thread all through society,
+man would not, could not, cast a sweet odor even on his own life, and
+dying would leave no benediction on the lives of others. And here the
+command comes, "Gather into thy quiver the lives and aspirations of
+others, that fitted to thy bow they may go forth scattering blessings
+by your help and by your kindly influence." So all great achievements
+have been based on great fundamental principles, and each principle has
+for its object the betterment of the conditions of mankind.
+
+Truth is said to be eternal. It was just as true at the dawn of
+creation that the square described on the hypotenuse of a right-angle
+triangle is equal to the square described on the other two sides, as it
+was when Pythagoras enunciated the theorem. "Thou shall not kill," is
+a law written by the Divine hand amid tempest and fire, but it stands.
+"Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself," rings from the portals of
+heaven through the gates of humanity and its command will not go
+unheeded. They are all great fundamental truths. Do you observe that
+they live? Give heed also to the fact that they stand for a better
+condition among men, for more helpfulness and higher elevations.
+Truths enunciated, whether old or new, that live, only have one
+tendency, viz., to raise man to better conditions. Since the dawn of
+creation there has been a constant tendency to arise from a lower to a
+higher estate. Self-preservation, self-helps, self-culture have been
+the trend of thought and action. And this has not been altogether an
+effort in the individual for his own personal advancement, but for the
+advancement of the race. Men have undergone sacrifices, humbled and
+almost debased themselves, that the succeeding generation might live on
+a higher plane, physically, morally and spiritually, than they
+themselves enjoyed. I do not know of any act of humanity that calls
+forth louder praise than to so act and speak and do as that humanity
+shall not only catch the inspiration, but shall make material progress
+on a better understanding of surrounding conditions. Odd-Fellowship,
+in its essence, is no new institution. Its principles, practices and
+precepts have existed from the beginning of the race.
+
+When Abraham stood with the churlish Lot on the line dividing the
+plains and highlands and said, "I pray thee let there be no contention
+between thee and me, if thou goest to the right hand I will go to the
+left, or, if thou goest to the left hand I will go to the right," he
+breathed the pure essence of unselfish devotion to the founder of a
+race. The acts of kindness shown by the traveler as the caravan plods
+its tortuous way across the sands of the desert; the mission of the
+wise men from the east in search of a Redeemer, all show forth that
+trait that you and I, my brother, try to emphasize while vowing
+devotion to the triple links. I said a moment ago that Odd-Fellowship,
+in its essence, was no new institution, and so it is not. As we know
+it in reality we have simply crystalized its workings. Instead of
+humanity, by its individual exertion, seeking to perform the task, we,
+as an organized band, have taken up the subject. What was paramount
+with individuals has become a living force with the multitude. What
+was before an invitation to duty has now become a command.
+
+In seeking after friendship we do not court the beasts of the fields
+and the fowls of the air as the hermit does, but we seek man; not man,
+but men; not this little society or faction, but embrace all mankind in
+the issue. If we seek for love it is not love for pelf or power, but
+love for man and God. In truth we do not depend on the right conduct
+of individuals, but accept truth as it is written in nature's open
+book, emblazoned on the sky of hope that bends over us, and speaks in
+all the higher attributes of life. Time was when the inclination of
+men was to withdraw into clans. Ishmael stood in the desert by himself
+with his hand against every man. His true descendant, the Arabian
+sheik, draws his mantle about him, and surrounded by his little band
+withdraws within his own circle, and woe betide him who attempts to
+break through. But in this came no advancement, no progress. The
+Ishmaelite of old is the same today. Wherever progress and advancement
+has shown itself it is found that true regard for all mankind has been
+the cardinal doctrine. "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself."
+Soon a broad catholicity of ideas seizes the multitude and man no more
+lives for himself than he lives for others. He who lives closest to
+the true heart of humanity lives nearest to God. Show me a man who
+lives for himself alone, and you will present almost a social outcast.
+Society tolerates him no more. In all the plans and calculations of
+life he is not numbered.
+
+For two thousand years the command has come stronger and stronger for a
+closer unity on social lines and fraternal regard. Not to segregate
+but to crystalize and raise the status. The conditions of our social
+life are such that we can not live entirely to ourselves. The monk may
+withdraw himself from the gaze of the world, the anchorite may seek a
+hiding place in caves and dens, but they ignore entirely the demands of
+society upon them. If I were the only person in the world there would
+be no social problem. I would commune with myself and God and nature
+about me, without reference to my surroundings. There would be no
+social environment; no one to please, no one to whom I am indebted by
+nature or acquired obligation, and so I would remain. But we do not
+find the conditions to so exist. We must look squarely in the face the
+facts as they are. On all sides we are surrounded by a multitude who
+rightly make demands of us and which we can not ignore. If I were
+alone, I would do as the patriarchs of old did, erect a little altar of
+stone, rude and unsightly, and bow myself down before it and commune
+with Deity. But here we find that different types of men have
+different religious views, and different spiritual aspirations, and so
+churches must be erected; and while all tend to the same end, each
+hopes to reach it by a different route. I must respect all these
+views. Only one can be my view, but my social surroundings are such
+that all have rights which I am bound to yield some obedience to.
+
+Again, if I were alone there would be no need of law, because both good
+and bad would be represented in my personality. There could be no
+murder, no crime, no punishment; but with all the manifold people with
+different tendencies, there must be law, or the social fabric would go
+to pieces by the strong trampling on the weak. Hence I must stand with
+reference to the law on the right side or the wrong side, and all
+humanity regardful of each other's rights must line up on one side or
+the other. In addition to our churchly ties and duties, we have family
+duties, and there begins the first of duty, first of government, first
+of obligations as citizens. And so I say we live in relation to those
+who surround us, and we can not live unmindful of them. We are touched
+by humanity everywhere, and walk elbow to elbow down the vale of life,
+supporting or destroying, and whether our pilgrimage be long or short
+we can not destroy the facts as they exist.
+
+It must be seen with only a hasty glance that with the varying
+conditions of men, with their different mental dispositions, moral
+ideas and social status, that a crying demand comes all the time for
+some organization where men can unite on a common level--some place
+where a divergence of political or moral views do not bar an entrance,
+where the family ties remain sacred, and more sacred because of the
+organization. It seems that men groped about for just such an
+organization, and men's wants are necessities, and social and civil
+status might be brought to a common level with all who might be brought
+into the assembly. It is believed by Odd-Fellows that our organization
+furnishes just this want. All the life that a man wants outside of his
+spiritual life has its food here, and society and family and man's
+relations to man have been helped by it. I state it without fear of
+contradiction, that no order has been more potent for good than ours.
+It has been the hand-maiden of civilization wherever it has established
+itself; it has smoothed out the asperities of life for many, many
+individuals; it has defended character, protected life and limb, and
+stood as champion of all good between man and man and between God and
+man.
+
+Every agency by which men are advanced, socially and morally, is an
+agency that guides government and state and individual up to a higher
+plane of development. Odd-Fellowship and Christianity go hand in hand.
+There is not a tenet of the order in any department that is repugnant
+to the highest development of Christianity. Indeed, it could not be
+so, for any lesson that is drawn from the three pillars of our order,
+Faith Hope and Charity, is a lesson pointing to the better life here
+and hereafter.
+
+In the eighty years, last past, who can estimate the benign influence
+of the lives and actions of men, yea, on their eternal destinies, of
+the oft-repeated utterances pointing to the Fatherhood of God and the
+brotherhood of man--a sermon that has been painted on the bow of God's
+eternal promise since Paul stood on the Mars Hill and preached this
+everlasting, unchangeable doctrine to the heathen world. When I think
+that since 1830 there has been expended for the relief of the members
+of this order and their families millions of dollars, in all right
+undertakings, and know that many hearts have ceased to ache, many cold
+feet covered, many a tear dried up, many a naked person clothed and
+many a hungry mouth fed, it rejoices my heart. I know also that such
+love could not spring from the hearts that were kindled by no spark of
+the Divine, but the lesson comes to you and to me, my brother and my
+sister, that he who opens not only the granary of earthly substance,
+but opens also the portals of the heart, and lets the Divine spark
+kindle into a blaze, will be thrice blessed in that day when the jewels
+of the eternity are made up. I do not desire to convey the impression
+that all our civilization is the outgrowth of Odd-Fellowship. We are
+too much inclined on such occasions as these to become mutual
+admiration societies and think that all the good things that we enjoy
+could not have been possible if our particular order had not existed.
+I do not wish to convey that impression. I only desire it to be
+understood that this order has been helpful in all right undertakings,
+and constantly endeavors to espouse the right and discard the wrong.
+It does not take the place of the church or the Sunday school or the
+prayer-meeting. It does not invade the pulpit, but only stands as an
+auxiliary to all these institutions that touch the better side of our
+natures. It inveighs against no religion or creed, and has no
+religious belief other than that we are brothers; nor does it encroach
+upon the domain of the politician. If Odd-Fellowship had more in it
+than the social and restraining influence one meets and is subjected to
+in the lodge-room, it would be sufficient inducement to organize and
+perpetuate lodges. No true Odd-Fellow crosses the threshold of his
+lodge-room but he feels he is treading on more sacred ground than the
+busy marts of trade, or in the office or counting house; he feels that
+he is coming home where dwells the purest principles of
+humanity--friendship, love and truth.
+
+But there is more in the workings of this order than the social. Its
+object is to touch humanity in all its phases. To rejoice with those
+that rejoice, and weep with those that weep. It sustains the living
+with friendship; causes man to stand firm in his integrity by the truth
+it teaches, and embrace the whole world with charity. The three links
+of friendship, love and truth mark the fuller and better development of
+this life, reaches beyond the grave, reaches beyond the vision, extends
+into the portals of the other and the better life. We may profess
+friendship, but that is an empty profession; our membership in a lodge
+is fruitless and our meetings produce no good results unless we have
+charity. It is but a small part that we should perform our mystic
+rights, typifying friendship, love and truth, but that we should so
+live them and act them that the touch of a member is the touch of a
+brother whose words sweeten the asperities of life and whose last
+offering is a tribute at the grave. We may be rudely brought back to
+the world with its pomp and show, its pageantry and vanity, by an
+emblem of mortality presented to us, but should we not ever have the
+spectre of mortality before our eyes? In the mad rush through life we
+forget the kinship of man to man. We are too often forgetful that the
+hand of a brother is reaching upward for succor. We forget that we are
+mortal, and the heart grows cold; our sympathies extend only to those
+around and nearest to us, forgetful that all mankind is our brother,
+and that he is especially our brother and friend who has mercy. But in
+this mad rush in life we are suddenly and almost rudely brought back to
+a full realization of our mortality, our helplessness, our emptiness,
+our nothingness, when we stand at the grave of our departed brother and
+reflect that here lies one who was born and had ambitions and died as
+we must die. His ambitions and hopes all went in the grave with him.
+The little grassy mound and the little marble slab is all that remains
+visible to tell us that he was our brother. Life would hardly be worth
+living; its struggles would be disastrous, its triumphs vain, empty
+bubbles, if the clods that fall upon the coffin and the sprig of
+evergreen tell the whole story of an Odd-Fellow. No, the very fact
+that we bury our departed brother teaches us that the grave is not the
+end of all. Though our brother dies he shall live in our hearts, in
+the flowers that we cast, in the precious memories that forever cluster
+around the links, the heart and the hand, the altar and the hour glass.
+When the supreme moment comes and the brother gathers his arrows into
+his quiver and fades from sight into the grave, we know that he has
+passed the portal into the land of the eternal, but the quiver and the
+arrows will ever stand as the badge of friendship. The heart may cease
+to beat, and the hand fall listless in death, yet the heart and hand
+will ever be emblems of love, and denote that when the hand of an
+Odd-Fellow is extended his heart goes with it.
+
+The good Odd-Fellow has constantly before his mind the book of books.
+His first sight into a lodge-room catches sight of that divine missive
+to man. It is his solace in life, and its precepts his consolation in
+death. It ever stands to him as an exhaustless fountain of truth. On
+these three cardinal principles he lives and dies, and in the constancy
+of that life we venerate his memory and do him kindly offices. It is
+the nature of a man to be communistic. It is only the anchorite that
+withdraws himself from the societies of man and communes with himself
+and his God. All right-thinking men desire and enjoy the society of
+their kind and kindred spirits. You had as well lock the sane man in
+the felon's cell as to doom him to live without the society of his
+fellows. The family is the first and best society. Perhaps the church
+is next, which is only the human family on a larger scale, fitting and
+preparing the members for a community in that house not made by hands.
+Next to my church I prize the secret organization to which I belong,
+where the cardinal principles of our holy Christianity are taught. The
+deathless friendship of David and Jonathan teaches me that though I may
+live in the king's palace, be clothed in purple and fine linen every
+day, be in the line of regal succession, yet I do not live to myself.
+
+I would herald broadcast that tenet of our order, "that we do for
+others as we would have others do for us, and that if I find my brother
+in distress, I must bind up his wounds, lift him from the quagmire of
+despond and set him on his feet." If any lesson stands out boldly
+before the mind of the Odd-Fellow it is truth. He finds it on his
+banner wherever he goes. Friendship is ephemeral. It lasts only
+through life. It may die, it will die. The grave ends it all. The
+silent messenger that comes to king and peasant alike, and causes the
+scepter of the monarch to be laid by the crook of the shepherd, ends
+our friendship. Love comes from God. God is love. It touches us at
+every point of our lives. From the cradle to the grave, every moment
+of our lives we are the objects of love to some one, and we love in
+turn. But human love must end. After life's fitful dream, the cares
+and vanities, the vexations and pleasures of life have no terror or
+concern for us, the love that thrilled our whole being will return to
+the source from whence it came. But truth will never die. It is the
+"imperial virtue." The heart may fail; it will fail, and the hand fall
+listless by the side. The arrow will fall after being shot into the
+air and never return, and the bow will be broken; the altar will be
+thrown down; the sand, grain by grain, run through the hour-glass, and
+the glass be shattered; the eye grow dim; the world roll up as a scroll
+and pass away; the hills may crumble and the pyramids melt with fervent
+heat; all the friendships will die and the love return to the Father
+that begat it, but truth will stand. It is indeed the imperial and the
+imperishable virtue. There, above the chaos and the confusion of time,
+it will stand to warn men from the wrong, and beckon them to do right.
+
+Despite the glamor of the world that secret societies propagate a
+secresy of men's actions at the expense of truth and justice, it can
+not obtain in a lodge of this order. No man ever took upon himself the
+vows and studied the underlying motives, and practiced the lessons of
+the order, but he becomes a better citizen. If he has become a good
+husband and father, he becomes better in his domestic relations. If he
+has been charitable before, he becomes more so now. Men's weaknesses
+he looks upon as human frailties, until time and sense teach him that
+frailties have degenerated into positive perversity of character and
+baseness of heart. He will condemn falsehood and hypocrisy wherever
+found.
+
+The object of religious organizations is to make men better and fit
+them for the life immortal. The object of government and its laws is
+to make and protect good citizens and repress vice. The object of this
+secret organization is to bind men more firmly together for mutual
+protection, for help and sustenance, to look after their families, and
+to be in a broad sense our brother's keeper. I would not be understood
+as placing a secret organization in place of the church, or in the
+place of a political government. By no means. Each has its own proper
+and particular sphere of action. No one in its actions and endeavors
+is inimical to the actions of the others. Each rests on its own
+peculiar foundation, but all dovetail together, and all make a
+harmonious whole. The man who is a good Christian is better by being a
+good Odd-Fellow. If both a good Christian and a good Odd-Fellow, he
+comes nearer being the typical citizen. If man reveres the law of this
+order, he will have more devotion to his church, his home, his flag and
+his country. I have no fault to find with those who do not believe in
+uniting with a secret organization, but I do object to any man
+inveighing against the objects and purposes, the ends and aims, of our
+order when he knows nothing about it. I do not expect every man to
+belong to my church, for men in their constitution and mental make-up
+can not see alike theologically. But I do accord to every member of
+every church the hope of getting to heaven if he lives up to the
+teachings of this particular sect. I believe in justification by faith
+and good works, but I have no use for a man who decries this doctrine
+when he never exercised a particle of faith nor did a good deed in his
+life. And so I would say to any one who thinks he stands on some lofty
+pinnacle and scents danger to the family tie, or church, or state, or
+society, because of the existence of secret orders, that he thinks and
+talks of something he knows nothing about. If I should desire to draw
+comparisons, I could say truthfully that during the last year this
+order gave more in charity and benefits to its members in Illinois than
+any religious denomination in the state. Look around your own
+community and see if it be not so. Think of the widow with
+tear-stained cheek, from whose door the wolf has been kept, because the
+charitable hand of our order was upon her. Count the orphan children
+of members of our order who have had shoes put on their feet, clothes
+put on their backs and food in their mouths. Enumerate the sufferers
+on beds of anguish, racked with pain and scorched with fever, who have
+had the nightly vigil of Odd-Fellows to smooth their pillows, dampen
+their parched lips and moisten their feverish brows. Watch the funeral
+pageant with its long train of mourners, brothers, dropping the
+evergreen in the grave, and doing the last sad offices, and then croak
+no more that secret societies are baneful to our civilization. He who
+thus sustains and soothes and encourages will be reckoned as twice
+blessed in that day when the secrets of all hearts are disclosed, and
+men are rewarded according to the deeds done in the body.
+
+"[*]Some years ago I stood out on the great plains this side of Denver.
+To the north, the south and the east was one vast stretch of plains,
+the eye interrupted only by the horizon. I turned and looked to the
+west, and clearly outlined in the distance was the chain of the Rocky
+Mountains--the backbone of the continent. There I saw Long's Peak,
+Pike's Peak, and the Spanish Peaks, as mighty sentinels--watch
+towers--that had served as landmarks to many a weary traveler on the
+Santa Fe trail. They stood as the manifestation of the might of an
+Omnipotent Power. So I turn to the record made by this order in the
+last eighty years, and find colossal sums of money--not hoarded, but
+collected to relieve humanity, to educate the orphan, to bury the dead
+and to befriend the widow. I see arising, as if by magic, asylums for
+our needy. I see a great host, one million strong, advancing, shoulder
+to shoulder, elbow touching elbow, all bent on deeds of mercy and acts
+of love. Are not these also mighty sentinels erected amid this
+surging, striving throng of humanity to serve to guide man in the road
+to a higher and better life? These peaks of the Rockies may crumble
+and pass away, but a force for good once set in motion never loses its
+force. It is eternal. To beautify, to strengthen, to adorn and to
+expand our order and more fully present its magnificence to the world,
+we have the department of Patriarchs Militant. It depicts as gallant a
+band as ever marched to the sound of martial music or deployed for
+battle. As the knights under Richard Couer de Leon or Peter the Hermit
+marched forth to rescue the Holy Sepulcher from the hand of the infidel
+and guard its sacred entablatures, so will our chevaliers as bravely
+guard our ritual, our mystic rights, our honor, the honor of our
+mothers wives and sisters, as a sacred trust.
+
+"And so our order moves forward to greater conquests. In the past it
+has worked marvels for humanity. May we not, for the future, predict
+better and more highly wrought out achievements? Humanity has been
+taken as it is and in the progress of refinement has been raised to a
+higher standard. It is the hand-maiden of civilization that works
+under even yoke for the best sides of humanity. While it does not
+displace or attempt to displace the church, it aids. It has
+friendship, love and truth as the three human graces, and clings to
+faith, hope and charity as the Christian virtues. It is now like the
+city that is set upon the hill. It can not be hid. Out upon a rocky
+point of the ocean's shore at Minot's ledge is a great light-house,
+erected by the fostering care of the government to protect the mariners
+on the high seas. Its great light swings around, now flashing on the
+land and now sending its rays far out across the billowy ocean. It is
+a grateful act of a great government. Many a bewildered seaman has
+caught its rays and sheared the prow of his ship further out to sea to
+avoid the dangerous shoals.
+
+"So we, imitating the kind of example of the generous government, and
+measuring our acts by the example of the blessed Master, have erected a
+light-house here for the protection of humanity from its ills. Now it
+shines on us as mortals hastening to a final consummation of things;
+again it throws its beams out across the illimitable sea of hope, where
+sooner or later we all may ride, and by the light here given we may
+steer our bark into a haven of final rest. Today we are on the
+tempestuous ocean of life. We who feel that we are on the deck, let us
+throw the life-line and the life-preservers to him who is about to
+sink. Let us make this order even a greater light-house than our
+fathers ever dreamed of. It can be done, because it is so ordained.
+What God in his good providence orders can be, will be accomplished.
+With thankful hearts we have passed over more than three quarters of a
+century of existence as an organization. We are speeding onward to the
+century mark, and whether we remain to see its wonderful processes or
+not, humanity will be here demanding just what we have done in the
+past. Let us lay the work strong today and transmit it in higher
+forms, so that the end of the century of our existence as an order
+shall see better life, better hope and higher aspirations. Let the
+Subordinates, Patriarchs, Rebekahs and Chevaliers all form a cordon
+around the altar of our beloved order, where the fires shall never be
+extinguished while friendship, love and truth endures, and faith, hope
+and charity are necessities.
+
+"Grand as has been the record of Odd-Fellowship from 1819 to the
+present, it is but the sunbeams from the birth of the day that will
+develop grandly into a magnificence that shall combine all the charms
+of the morning, the glare of the noontide, and the blaze of a sunset
+splendor in an endless panorama of glory and grandeur. And if, with
+such a picture before our eyes, painted by a faith founded upon the
+achievements of eighty years, and our intimate knowledge of the vast
+practical benevolence that begins at the cradle and ends only at the
+gate of heaven, the Odd-Fellow is not dazzled by the sublimity of
+Odd-Fellowship and awed into a reverence for its work and character,
+there is a lamentable defect in his appreciation of the beautiful, and
+an utter failure to read the joys and dignity and influence of a
+properly developed and appreciative Odd-Fellow. Let it never be
+forgotten that there is nothing groveling in Odd-Fellowship. Mutual
+relief, it is true, is a leading office in our affiliation, but
+Odd-Fellowship seeks to elevate the character of man, make him what God
+intended him to be; and while such a helpful influence is extended to
+each one of us who have chosen to come within its holy power, may we
+endeavor to lift ourselves up to the high standard of the order of
+which we are a part, faithfully discharging our duties to ourselves and
+to the world; shedding its benign influence and hallowed inspiration
+alike in the palace with its draped windows and velvet laden floors and
+in the cottage nestling among the flowers of the humble dooryard;
+glowing with the same peerless luster in halls of learning and in
+workshop and factory; kissing with the same tender, holy touch the
+rough hand that guides the implement of industry, and the soft hand
+that guides the pen; making character the test of merit and the heart
+the bond of friendship, and recognizing the equality and holy influence
+of noble womanhood. Odd-Fellowship is the unerring, resplendent
+guiding star to that grand development of human nature to which hope
+looks forward with such ardent joy, when one law shall bind all
+nations, tongues and kindred, and that law will be the law of universal
+brotherhood."
+
+
+[*]Extract from address delivered by Hon. E. G. Hogate.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13816 ***
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+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #13816 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13816)
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Jericho Road, by W. Bion Adkins
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Jericho Road
+
+Author: W. Bion Adkins
+
+Release Date: October 20, 2004 [eBook #13816]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE JERICHO ROAD***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Al Haines
+
+
+
+THE JERICHO ROAD
+
+by
+
+W. BION ADKINS
+
+Author of "Twelve Steps Toward Heaven," "The Anonymous Letter," etc.
+
+1901
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Like the rivers, forever running yet never passed, like the winds
+forever going yet never gone, so is Odd-Fellowship.
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+WORTHY AND GENTLE BROTHERS
+
+I DEDICATE THIS LITTLE BOOK TO THEE, SINCERELY HOPING THAT IT WILL
+AFFORD YOU MUCH PLEASURE AND BE THE MEANS OF INCITING YOU TO GREATER
+EFFORT IN BEHALF OF OUR BELOVED ORDER. MAY THY YEARS BE MANY AND THEIR
+SEASONS ALL GOLDEN AUTUMNS, RICH IN PURPLE CLUSTERS AND GARNERED
+DELIGHTS.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+"I have lived much that I have not written, but I have written nothing
+that I have not lived, and the story of this book is but a plaintive
+refrain wrung from the over-burdened song of my life; while the tides
+of feeling, winding down the lines, had their sources in as many broken
+upheavals of my own heart." A book, like an implement, must be judged
+by its adaptation to its special design, however unfit for any other
+end. This volume is designed to help Odd-Fellows in their search for
+the good things in life. There is need of something to break the spell
+of indifference that oftentimes binds us, and to open glimpses of
+better, sweeter, grander possibilities. Hence this volume, which is a
+plea for that great fortune of man--his own nature. Bulwer says:
+"Strive while improving your one talent to enrich your whole capital as
+a man." The present work is designed to aid in securing the result thus
+recommended. We send it forth, trusting that it will find its way into
+the hands of every Odd-Fellow and every Odd-Fellow's friend and
+neighbor, and that those who read it will gather from its pages lessons
+which shall enable them to pluck thorns from their pathway and scatter
+flowers instead.
+
+W. BION ADKINS.
+
+October 1, 1899.
+
+
+
+
+ TODAY'S DEMAND
+
+ God give us men. A time like this demands
+ Strong minds, great hearts, true faith, and ready hands;
+ Men whom the lust of office does not kill;
+ Men who possess opinions and a will;
+ Men who have honor;
+ Men who will not lie,
+ Tall men, sun-crowned, who live above the fog
+ In public duly and in private thinking.
+ For, while the rabble, with their thumb-worn creeds,
+ Their large professions and their little deeds,
+ Mingle in selfish strife, lo! Freedom weeps,
+ Wrong rules the land, and waiting Justice sleeps.
+ God give us men!
+
+ --Selected.
+
+
+
+ TOMORROW'S FULFILLMENT
+
+ * * In the long years liker must they grow;
+ The man be more of woman, she of man;
+ He gain in sweetness and in moral height,
+ Nor lose the wrestling thews that throw the world;
+ She mental breadth, nor fail in childward care--
+ Till at the last she set herself to man,
+ Like perfect music unto noble words;
+ And so these twain, upon the skirts of time,
+ Sit side by side, full summed in all their powers,
+ Self-reverent each and reverencing each.
+ Then reign the world's great bridals, chaste and calm;
+ Then springs the crowning race of human kind.
+
+ --Alfred Tennyson.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+Objects and Purposes of Odd-Fellowship
+
+The Higher Life
+
+Pithy Points
+
+The Bible in Odd-Fellowship
+
+Brother Underwood's Dream
+
+The Imperial Virtue
+
+Quiet Hour Thoughts
+
+Love Supreme
+
+Gems of Beauty
+
+Husband and Father
+
+Odd-Fellowship and the Future
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY
+
+On April 26, 1819, Thomas Wildey, the English carriage-spring maker,
+together with John Welch, John Duncan, John Cheatham and Richard
+Rushworth, instituted the first lodge of Odd-Fellows at the Seven Stars
+Tavern in Baltimore, and it was given the name of Washington Lodge No.
+1. From this feeble beginning has grown the immense organization of
+today. The Odd-Fellows claim a venerable antiquity for their order,
+the most common account of its origin ascribing it to the Jewish legend
+under Titus, who, it is said, received from that Emperor the first
+chapter, written on a golden tablet. The earliest mention made of the
+lodge is in 1745, when one was organized in England. There were at
+that time several lodges independent of each other, but in a few years
+they formed a union. Toward the end of the century many of them were
+broken up by state prosecutions, on suspicion that their purposes were
+seditious. The name was changed from the Patriotic Order to that of
+the Union Order of Odd-Fellows. In Manchester, England, in 1813, some
+of the lodges seceded from the order, and formed the Independent Order
+of Odd-Fellows.
+
+The order's first appearance in America was in 1819. The purposes of
+the order were so changed by the founders here, that it is said to be
+almost purely an American organization. It was based on the Manchester
+Unity, which was really the parent institution. In 1842, this country
+severed its connection with that of England.
+
+Lodges connected with either those of England or America are
+established in all parts of the world. The real estate held by the
+organization exceeds in value $20,000,000, and there is scarcely a town
+in the country that has not its Odd-Fellows Building. The total
+revenue of the order is nearly $10,000,000 per annum. Yearly relief
+amounts to nearly $4,000,000 a year.
+
+
+
+
+ THE JERICHO ROAD
+
+ "A traveler passed down the Jericho road,
+ He carried of cash a pretty fair load
+ (The savings of many a toilsome day),
+ On his Jericho home a mortgage to pay.
+
+ "At a turn of the road, in a lonely place,
+ Two villainous men met him face to face.
+ 'Hands up!' they cried, and they beat him sore,
+ Then off to the desert his money they bore.
+
+ "Soon a priest came by who had a fold;
+ He sheared his sheep of silver and gold.
+ He saw the man lie bruised and bare,
+ But he passed on by to his place of prayer.
+
+ "Then a Levite, temple bound, drew nigh;
+ He saw the man, but let him lie,
+ And clad in silk, and filled with pride,
+ He passed him by on the other side.
+
+ "Next on the way a Samaritan came
+ (To priest and Levite a hated name);
+ The wounded man he would not pass,
+ He tenderly placed him on his ass.
+
+ "He took him to an inn hard by;
+ He dressed his wounds and bathed his eye;
+ He paid the landlord his full score;
+ If more was needed would pay him more.
+
+ "Ah! many travel the Jericho way,
+ And many are robbed and beaten each day;
+ And many there be on the way in need,
+ Whom Priest or Levite never heed;
+ And who to fate would yield, alas!
+ If some Samaritan did not pass."
+
+
+
+
+THE OBJECTS AND PURPOSES OF ODD-FELLOWSHIP
+
+We are taught that "God hath made of one blood all nations of men to
+dwell on the face of the earth," and when we say mutual relief and
+assistance is a leading office in our affiliation, and that
+Odd-Fellowship is systematically endeavoring to improve and elevate the
+character of man, to imbue him with a proper conception of his
+capabilities for good, to enlighten his mind, to enlarge the sphere of
+his affections and to redeem him from the thralldom of ignorance and
+prejudice, and teach him to recognize the fatherhood of God and the
+brotherhood of men, we have epitomized the objects, purposes and basic
+principles of our order. Odd-Fellowship is broad and comprehensive.
+It is founded upon that eternal principle which teaches that all the
+world is one family and all mankind are brothers. Unheralded and
+unsung, it was born and went forth, a breath of love, a sweet song that
+has filled thousands of hearts with joy and gladness. To the rich and
+the poor, the old and the young, at all times, comes the rich, sweet
+melody of this song of humanity to comfort and to cheer. For eighty
+years the light of Odd-Fellowship has burned before the world, a beacon
+to the lost, a comfort to the wanderer and a protection to the
+thoughtless. Eighty years of work for humanity's sake; eighty years
+devoted to teaching men to love mankind; eighty years of earnest labor,
+consecrated by friendship, cemented with love and beautified by truth.
+In ancient times men sought glory and renown in gladiatorial combat,
+though the victor's laurel was wet with human blood. In modern times
+men seek the plaudits of the world by achievements for human good, and
+by striving to elevate and ennoble men. Looking back through nineteen
+centuries we behold a cross, and on it the crucified Christ, with
+nail-pierced hands, and wounded, bleeding side, but whose heart was so
+full of love and pity that even in His dying agonies He had compassion
+upon His persecutors, and cried out, "Father, forgive them, for they
+know not what they do."
+
+That event was the dividing line between the ancient and the modern
+era; between the rule of "brute force" and the "mild dominion of love
+and charity." The mission of Odd-Fellowship, like that of the lowly
+Nazarene, is to replace the rule of might with the gentle influence of
+love, and to teach a universal fraternity in the family of man. To
+meet and satisfy and better keep alive the nobler elements of man's
+nature. Many orders have been instituted, but none can challenge
+greater admiration from men, or deserve more blessings from heaven,
+than the Independent Order of Odd-Fellows. Looking back along the
+pathway of the century behind us we behold the wrecks of many orders.
+The morning of their life was beautiful and full of glorious promise,
+but the evening came and they had perished. Rich costumes, impressive
+ceremonies, beautiful degrees and magnificent effects, all lie buried
+and forgotten. It was not because their founders lacked energy or
+enthusiasm, not because their members were less susceptible to the
+beauty and poetry of tradition and ceremony, but because success and
+perpetuity come not from human effort, but are the outgrowth of a
+life-giving principle. The sculptor fashions from the marble a form of
+surpassing loveliness, its lines are those of grace and beauty. We
+stand before it charmed, whispering our admiration, but the impression
+on the heart is only passing. The poet sings of home, of mother and of
+love; the meter may be faulty and the words may charm not, but the
+sentiment is true and touches our hearts. The experience it recites is
+common to humanity, and wherever its sweet tones are heard it softens
+men's natures and makes them better, truer and nobler. Who among us
+would be willing to exchange the influence of the immortal song "Home
+Sweet Home," or be willing to forget the Christian's "Nearer My God to
+Thee," for all the inanimate beauty of art? One charms the eye, the
+other touches and calls to life the best and sweetest emotions of the
+human heart. So it is with fraternal societies. Flashing swords,
+glittering helmets, jeweled regalias and beautiful degrees may touch
+the vanity and excite the admiration, but to win the heart we must
+satisfy its longings, feed its hopes and lift it above the narrowness
+and selfishness of its daily experience. Odd-Fellowship strives to
+touch the heart and better feelings, rather than feed the vanity of man
+or arouse his admiration for gorgeous displays. Its work is an
+exemplification of the living, practical Christianity of today. In
+almost every state in this fair land of ours can be found Odd-Fellows'
+homes, within whose walls the orphan is no longer motherless. For each
+and every little one within these homes, one million Odd-Fellows feel a
+father's love and pledge a parent's care.
+
+Add to all this great work the little deeds of love, the little acts of
+kindness that make life beautiful; add kind words of cheer and friendly
+help and tender consolation, and add again the benefit of union, the
+strength that comes from hearts united in God's work among mankind, and
+you have caught a glimpse of the life-giving principle that has made
+Odd-Fellowship one of the grandest fraternal and beneficiary
+institutions the world has ever known. The work it has done can not be
+fully estimated until the record is read in the bright light of
+eternity. In that glad day the tears that have been wiped away will
+become jewels in somebody's crown, and the sobs that have been hushed
+will be heard again in hosannas of welcome.
+
+Onward! is the ringing, pregnant watchword of the world. The vast,
+complicated, ponderous machinery of life is kept in motion by tireless
+and irresistible forces. The multiform and magnificent affairs of men
+and of nations are all impelled forward with an energy and a velocity
+as wonderful as glorious to behold.
+
+Not retrogressive, but progressive--not enervating, but energizing--not
+ephemeral, but substantial--not from bad to worse, but from the
+imperfect to the consummate, are the characteristics by which are so
+prominently distinguished the tidal waves of the world's progress today.
+
+Activity and achievement came with creation, and constitute an
+inflexible, irrepealable law of the universe. In stir and push we have
+light and life, but in idleness, and superstitious clinging to
+fossilized ideas and bygones, we have demoralization, decay and death.
+
+Fortunately for the world, and agreeably with infinite design, man
+plods his way in harmony with the law alluded to. Not all men, but the
+great masses of them, wherever "The true light shineth," especially
+when accompanied by rays and helps from one of the noblest and grandest
+of confraternities our world has known, "The Independent Order of
+Odd-Fellows." When the huge planet which we call our world had been
+tossed into being from the furnace fires of Omnipotence, and the
+maternal lullaby began to gather force on hill top and in valley, the
+discovery was naturally enough made that association and co-operation
+were preferable to isolation and unrelieved dependence; and from that
+hour forward, this principle has been interwoven into the very
+framework of human society. The purpose has been the elevation and
+improvement of mankind. For, though the first product was pronounced
+"good," it quickly degenerated; and there came an emphasized demand for
+reform.
+
+
+EARLY ORGANIZATIONS.
+
+Human isolation is an unnatural condition. It antagonizes the highest
+and best interests of the world. Its influence is never beneficent,
+but always and necessarily harmful. If the truest well being of the
+universe, and the supremest glory of Jehovah could have been attained
+by conditions of solitude, it is not impossible that the good
+All-Father would have given to every man a continent, and so have made
+him monarch of all he surveyed.
+
+Physically regarded, there is no limit to Omnipotent power. A
+continent, and even a world, was therefore within the pale of divine
+possibilities. Jehovah, however, is not only great, but he is the
+Greatness of Goodness. High and holy ends were to be accomplished, and
+happy purposes to be secured, by means of human instrumentalities, and
+be jointly shared by Creator and creature.
+
+Among the earliest of Deific utterances, therefore, we have this: "It
+is not good that man should be alone." I concede that, primarily, the
+companionship of woman is here intended. But the declaration is not
+only good in this, but equally so in other regards. A lifetime of
+solitude with no incentives to action--nothing to draw out, exercise
+and expand the latent powers of the soul--no interchange of thought--no
+clashing of opinion--no towering resolves to stimulate--no difficulties
+to surmount! What imagination so fertile that it could picture a more
+hateful or intolerable Hades than would be such a condition of affairs?
+
+Hence, in the early days of the world's history we discern the
+principle of association and co-operation, with plans and systems
+embodying its practical application. Organizations came into being,
+obedient to the summons of necessity. How well the various
+organizations have wrought along the pathway of centuries, and how
+great or small may have been the measure of their success, I am not
+here to discuss, much less to determine. Each has done its work in its
+own way, and pockets responsibility for results. Common courtesy and
+candor suggest that each has been largely animated by highest and
+worthiest of motives.
+
+
+ODD-FELLOWSHIP,
+
+Reared upon the broad catholic principle of brotherhood, extending its
+helpful hand from nation to nation, and from continent to continent,
+linking its votaries together with the golden triple chain of
+Friendship, Love and Truth, can afford to be friendly with each, and
+have a kindly word for all societies that reach down after and raise up
+a fallen brother, and if possible make him wiser, better and happier.
+Should a like courtesy be extended to this order, while it would
+certainly constitute a new departure, it would prove none the less
+gratifying. But, from certain sources, the order has been the
+recipient of a peculiar kind of consideration, so long that "the memory
+of man scarce runneth to the contrary." Inflamed appeals and bristling
+denunciations have gone out against it, "while great, swelling
+words"--swollen with hatred, bigotry, prejudice and superstition--have
+assailed it relentlessly and almost uninterruptedly. Mainly, these
+assaults have been met with the terse and pointed invocation, "Father,
+forgive them; they know not what they do."
+
+That this great and potent brotherhood may not, in all its parts and
+jurisdictions, have so deported itself, and so carried forward its
+work, as to be justly free from unfavorable criticism and merited
+censure, is probably true. As with organizations, there is sometimes
+too much haste displayed in gathering, and too little discrimination
+exercised in selecting, the materials that are brought as component
+parts of the great superstructure of Odd-Fellowship. Too much daubing
+with untempered mortar--too great a desire for the exhibition of
+numerical force, and the multiplication of lodges--too much regard for
+the outward trappings and paraphernalia, and too little regard for the
+internal qualities of those seeking membership in the fraternity. Such
+deplorable departures, as well from the primary as the ultimate objects
+had in view, are not fairly attributable to anything that may be
+reasonably considered as an outgrowth of the order, but come despite
+its constant teachings and warnings. Bad work they of course make, and
+so at times and to a limited extent bring the fraternity under the ban
+of popular displeasure, but shall the world predicate unfavorable
+judgment upon a few and unfair tests? If so, and the principle
+logically becomes general, pray who shall be appointed administrator of
+the effects of other social and moral organizations, and even of the
+church itself? For in these regards all offend, if offense it be.
+When the principles of Odd-Fellowship are carefully studied it is
+apparent to every candid mind that it is founded upon that eternal
+principle which recognizes man as a constituent of one universal
+brotherhood, and teaches him that as he came from the hand of a common
+parent, he is in duty bound to cherish and protect his fellow-man.
+Viewed in this light, Odd-Fellowship becomes one of the noblest
+institutions organized by man in the world. If the beauty and grandeur
+of universal brotherhood could be impressed upon the minds of all the
+people, how very different from the past would the future history of
+the world read. What a delightful place this old stone-ribbed earth
+would be if men would look upon each other as brothers, members of one
+common family; enjoying the many comforts of one home; trusting to the
+guidance and protection of one Father--God. We are more nearly related
+than we think. Running through all humanity there is a link of
+relationship and a bond of sympathy that can not be exterminated. The
+principle of brotherly love is so great and broad that all mankind
+could unite in offices of human benefaction. Brother. Oh, how sacred
+and how sweet when spoken by a true heart! Whether it be in the home
+circle, lodge-room, or in some distant land, it sends the same soothing
+thrill of joy to the heart. Let us pause just a moment to think of the
+time and place when we first learned to call each other brother. Ah!
+Methinks no Odd-Fellow will ever forget his first lesson. He will
+always remember how quickly he was changed from the haughty disposition
+manifested by that one of old, who, when he prayed, went to the public
+square, or climbed to the house top, and thanked God that he was not
+like other men, to the humble attitude of that one who stood afar off
+and bowed his face in the dust, crying aloud, "O Lord! Be merciful
+unto me a sinner." How very much like this ancient boaster are
+thousands of the human family today. Sitting in high places,
+surrounded by wealth and power, they see nothing beyond the narrow
+circle in which they move. They are deaf to the low, sad wail of
+sorrow that comes from some breaking heart. Seated by their own
+comfortable fireside they give no thought to the lonely widow standing
+outside in the cold. It distresses them not that the keen, wintry
+blast sends its icy chill to the already broken heart. No thought, no
+feeling, for this poor creature that must now fight the fierce battles
+incident to human life, all alone. How sadly these tender duties to
+suffering humanity are neglected when left to the cold charity of the
+world.
+
+Odd-Fellowship seeks to lessen sorrow and suffering. It supplies
+temporal wants; gives encouragement; aids and comforts those who are in
+distress. In sickness we watch by their bedside and administer to
+their wants. If death calls, Odd-Fellowship forsakes not its follower,
+but hovers near, listening attentively to the last words and parting
+instruction of the dying one. Brothers and friends, let me admonish
+you to do all the good you can while in health and strength, for at
+most life is short and we know not how soon the Angel of Death will
+unfold his broad, shadowy wings over our path and call us to give an
+account of our stewardship; then all that will remain of us on earth
+will be the good or evil we have done.
+
+Odd-Fellowship is full of sacred teachings and sublime warnings. It
+teaches us that we are in a world full of temptations, sin and sorrow.
+We see the emblems of decay all around us. The strong man of today may
+stand forth, nerved for toil, with all the bloom of health mantling
+cheek and brow, seemingly as strong and vigorous as the mighty oak, and
+yet tomorrow he will fade as the autumn leaf. Then he realizes how
+foolish it is to be vain; thinks of the instability of wealth and
+power, and the certain decay of all earthly greatness. Odd-Fellowship
+teaches us that charity springs from the heart, is not puffed up, seeks
+not its own. It makes us strong, and encourages us to push on through
+life, even though we are beset on every side with toil, danger and
+strife. Brothers, let nothing cause you to turn back or away from the
+principles of our noble order. Cling closer and closer each day to
+honesty and truth, and bear in mind that be the road ever so rough and
+untraveled, narrow and dark, if you follow truth you will find light at
+the end of the journey.
+
+
+THE SECRESY OBJECTION.
+
+More common, perhaps, than any other filed against it has been the
+objection that Odd-Fellowship does its work secretly, this objection
+being not unfrequently urged by persons of candor and honest impulses.
+"If," it is demanded, "the aims and purposes of the order be legitimate
+and praiseworthy, why shroud them in mystery rather than give them the
+broad sunlight of publicity."
+
+The objection is not new, nor is it urged with any increase of its
+original force, whatever may be the fact in the matter of vehemence.
+Answer might be made: The order does not choose to ascend to the house
+tops for the purpose of heralding its affairs to the world. But that
+answer would not be satisfactory, nor is any likely to be that may be
+presented, now or hereafter. It is nevertheless true that there are
+certain matters pertaining to the order and its works with which the
+outside world has no sort of concern, even as with those very peculiar
+secret societies, the individual, the family, the church and the state.
+If other organizations prefer to resort to the newspapers, the pulpit,
+the rostrum and other information conduits for the purpose of
+advertising their wares, their greatness and their goodness, and the
+vast amount of humanitarian work they are doing and purposing, such is
+their unquestioned privilege.
+
+But if the preference of Odd-Fellowship be for quieter and less
+obtrusive methods, pray who shall fairly contest its right of choice?
+
+And then it should be remembered that there are matters in which the
+right hand is prohibited the privilege of interfering with the
+prerogatives of the left, and the left with those of the right. Nor
+should the fact be forgotten that there is Divine example, if not
+precept, for the established "modus operandi" of the order. Upon a
+certain occasion the Great Teacher had performed a very humble service
+for one of his disciples who was sadly at loss for the why and the
+wherefore, and the answer, received to his inquiry was: "What I do thou
+knowest not now, but thou shalt know hereafter."
+
+And in the grand hereafter, when the films of ignorance and the
+warpings of prejudice and superstition shall have melted away under the
+bright sunlight of Eternal Day, it is not impossible that our vexed,
+inquisitive, worrying opponents may be permitted to look back over the
+pathway this order has traversed, glance at the work that has been
+wrought and peradventure discover how unreasonable, as well as
+fruitless, has been the warfare they have been pleased to wage with
+such persistent fury. A long time to wait, maybe, but then good things
+do not come rapidly nor all at once. Meanwhile, to encourage them in
+their waiting, their watching and their worrying, let them take this
+lesson from the same Great Teacher: "The wind bloweth where it listeth,
+and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh
+or whither it goeth." Ah, no! it will not do, because you can not see
+and comprehend all of everything, inside as well as outside, to
+conclude that it must necessarily be bad. Adopt that theory, and you
+not only fly in the face of reason, but bump your head against almost
+everything in nature, in art and in science.
+
+Secrets! yes; they are within us and without us, above us and beneath
+us and all about us, and "what are you going to do about it?" Well
+might Israel's old and gifted poet king write: "We are fearfully and
+wonderfully made," soul and body, the mortal and the immortal, the
+material and the immaterial, strangely and mysteriously conjoined!
+God's secret, this! Will you denounce Him and withdraw allegiance from
+Him, for the reason that He fails to make clear to you a clear and
+satisfying revelation? The same old singer said thousands of years
+ago, "The Heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament showeth
+His handiwork." And those heavens, with that firmament, are charged
+and surcharged with mightiest and profoundest secrets. We seize the
+telescope and "plunge into the vast profound overhead, intent upon
+mastering the secrets of the revolving spheres."
+
+We travel from star to star, from system to system, until we reach yon
+lonely star that appears to be performing the Guardian's task, upon the
+verge of unmeasured and immeasurable space. We may descry and describe
+the form and outlines of those heavenly bodies, detect their movements
+and approximately determine their distances and dimensions. But what
+more? Little that is satisfying. When they had a beginning, what
+purposes they subserve in the sublime system of God's stupendous
+universe, and when they shall have a consummation, we may not certainly
+know. Secrets, these, and such "Secret things belong unto God." We
+would like to know these secrets, but must wait; for there, "roll those
+mighty worlds that gem the distant sky," as distantly and dismally as
+when Chaldean and Egyptian astronomers and astrologers viewed their
+movements three thousand years ago, rifled meanwhile of but few of
+their well kept secrets. He that pencils the lily and paints the rose
+and gives to every blade of grass its own bright drop of dew, has been
+pleased to say: "Hitherto shalt thou come and no further." And there
+is great unwisdom in setting up factious opposition to the fiat of
+Omnipotence. Possess your souls in patience, O friends! wait, as we
+must wait, before knowing all, or even knowing much. If you can not be
+Odd-Fellows, you can at least be _men_, with an effort.
+
+
+WHAT IS ODD-FELLOWSHIP?
+
+"But, sir," you demand, "can you tell us something more about
+Odd-Fellowship, its purposes and its Work?" I can, a little. Come
+with me, then, and we will look into the lodge. Ah! In the most
+conspicuous place there stands an altar--upon it the open Bible, the
+world's great word of Life and Light. Upon the principles enunciated
+by that Book, largely rests the great superstructure of Odd-Fellowship.
+The Bible is to the order what the sun is to the material universe--its
+illuminator and vivifier, even as it also is the, guide to faith and
+practice. A man may neglect his closet, his church, his Bible, but
+when he enters the lodge he is bound to listen to the voice of his
+Maker, as it thunders from His word; and while the lodge does by no
+means lay claim to the possession of religious attributes, yet has it
+been the means, by the constant use of the Bible, of turning many from
+the ways of wrong-doing and sin, into paths of pleasantness and peace;
+and by a unique system of symbolism and a comprehensive and practical
+application of its sublime truths, the faith of the believer has been
+strengthened, enlarged and rendered usefully active.
+
+Odd-Fellowship's plan of benefaction addresses itself to the physical
+as well as the moral nature, and, reaching out from its immediate
+subjects, permeates by natural affinity every sphere in which active
+sympathy may be invoked. Its mission and its results are not only
+active and substantial, but often so effective by its consequential or
+indirect influence as to penetrate entire communities. In this
+connection I will say Odd-Fellowship is not a religious organization.
+Our work pertains particularly to this life, educating the heart of man
+to practical beneficence, alleviating the sufferings of humanity and
+elevating the character of man. Odd-Fellowship was not organized for
+the purpose of ridding the world of all its sorrows, but to ameliorate
+and to soften the suffering to which the human family is heir. It is
+an association of men who have united themselves for the purpose of
+smoothing the ragged edge of want, and extending to those who are bound
+down by the iron bands of misfortune a helping hand. Odd-Fellowship
+holds no affinity with the classifications or distinctions of society,
+but dispenses charity to all alike. It does not array itself against
+the church, nor presume to arrogate its functions, or to supervise its
+teachings. Its lodges are not the council rooms of enmity to
+religious, civil, moral or social organizations. Far otherwise; all
+its oracles and instructions in relation to these grave subjects find
+their warrant and authority in the divine law, under the inspiration of
+which it proclaims the Golden Rule as the sublimest illustration of the
+law of love. Odd-Fellowship keeps a close watch over its subjects, and
+constantly impresses upon their minds the fact that their hearts must
+not foster evil, the progenitor of crime, or hatred and vice, whose
+evil consequences must continue to afflict mankind until the coming of
+that time to which hope looks forward with ardent joy, when one law
+shall bind all nations, tongues and kindred of the earth, and that law
+will be the law of "_Universal Brotherhood_." Odd-Fellowship also
+teaches us that we are never to judge a man by his outward appearance.
+A man's form may be clothed with rags, his hands may be rough and hard,
+his cheeks may be browned by the rays of summer's sun; yet underneath
+all this there may be an honest heart. If so, we take him by the hand
+and call him brother. Odd-Fellowship teaches equality; we must meet
+upon one common level. The brother who lives in the rough log cabin
+enjoys the same right and privileges as the monarch on his throne. We
+live, we move and have our being, and are indebted for all things to
+the One Great Ruler of the Universe--God. All persons are desirous of
+being happy, and happiness is sought for in various ways.
+Odd-Fellowship teaches that man is responsible for his own misery. I
+believe that no mere misfortune can ever call for exceeding bitter
+sorrow. As long as man preserves himself from contamination of that
+which is evil and foul, he can not reach any very low depth of woe. By
+his own act, by his own voluntary desertion of the true aim of life,
+and by that alone, is it possible that a man should drink his cup of
+misery to the dregs. The want of happiness, so prevalent, is thus the
+natural consequence of the inherent blindness of men. By it they are
+led to pursue eagerly the phantom of _wealth_, _rank_, power, etc.,
+white neglecting that which alone can satisfy the wants of the soul.
+If men could really know what is their chief good, we should no longer
+hear on every hand prayers offered up for those idle accoutrements of
+life, which may indeed be enjoyed, but often bring only
+dissatisfaction, and can be dispensed with without inconvenience to
+mankind.
+
+Many persons say Odd-Fellowship is contrary to the teachings of the
+Bible. The way such people read their Bible is just like the way that
+the old monks thought hedgehogs ate grapes. They rolled themselves
+over and over where the grapes lay on the ground. What fruit stuck to
+their spines they carried off and ate. So your hedgehoggy readers roll
+themselves over and over their Bibles and declare that whatever sticks
+to their spines is Scripture and that nothing else is. But you can
+only get the skins of the texts that way. If you want their juice you
+must press them in cluster. Now the clustered texts about the human
+heart insist as a body, not on any inherent corruption in all hearts,
+but on the terrific distinction between the bad and the good ones. "A
+good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that
+which is good, and an evil man, out of the evil treasure, bringeth
+forth that which is evil."
+
+"They on the rock are they which, in an honest and good heart, having
+heard the word, kept it."
+
+"Delight thyself in the Lord, and He shall give thee the desires of
+thine heart. The wicked have bent their bow that they may privily
+shoot at him that is upright in heart." For all of us, the question is
+not at all to ascertain how much or how little corruption there is in
+human nature, but to ascertain whether, out of all the mass of that
+nature, we are the sheep or the goat breed; whether we are people of
+upright heart being shot at, or people of crooked heart doing the
+shooting.
+
+And of all the texts bearing on the subject, this, which is a quite
+simple and practical order, is the one you have chiefly to hold in
+mind: "Keep thy heart with all diligence, for out of it are the issues
+of life."
+
+The will of God respecting us is, that we shall live by each others
+happiness and life; not by each others misery or death.
+
+Men help each other by their joy, not by their sorrow. There is but
+one way in which man can ever help God--that is, by letting God help
+him.
+
+A little boy, who had often heard his father pray for the poor, that
+they might be clothed and fed, interrupted him one day by saying,
+"Father, if you will give me the key to your corn crib and wheat bin, I
+will answer some of your prayers."
+
+Ah! my friends, always keep in mind this truth, "One hour of justice is
+worth seventy years of prayer."
+
+Call not this, then, a Godless institution, rioting in selfishness and
+infidelity, as it has been denominated by certain super-excellent
+Christians, who appear to have fully persuaded themselves that no good
+can possibly come from such a Nazareth. For, with the constant and
+unvarying light of the Holy Bible, that illuminated lexicon of the
+sweet Beyond, and of the approaches thereto--that trusty talisman of
+all hopeful hearts--that competent counselor of the wisest and the
+best--that inspirer of joy and satisfaction born of no other book--that
+precious presager of immortal life beyond the river--that divine guide
+to faith and practice, can by no means fail in the ultimate working out
+of its sublime purposes.
+
+In the ranks of Odd-Fellowship there are many of the truest, noblest,
+sharpest and most holy men in the civilized world. None of these have
+been able to make that "Godless and selfish" discovery. This brilliant
+achievement is reserved for those favored mortals that never saw the
+inside of an Odd-Fellow's lodge, and are entirely ignorant of its
+character and practical workings. The order has increased largely in
+wealth, power and influence. Large cities and towns, which formerly
+paid little or no attention to us, now eagerly welcome us to their
+hospitalities.
+
+Judges and governors vie with each other in doing us honor, and well
+may we be proud of the position the order has attained. Just think of
+it a moment: when you clasp hands with an Odd-Fellow here in your own
+home, you are really clasping hands with one million men who have
+obligated themselves to stay with you through every trial and
+misfortune. Wonder no longer, then, at the growth and stability of
+this great fraternity, or that its votaries cling to it with such
+unshaken and unswerving fidelity. Ah! it is no light matter, no small
+privilege, to be admitted to membership in such an organization--so
+freeing one's self from the surgings of self-seeking and selfish
+considerations--free from the trammels of prevailing prejudice and
+passion--free from the false educational influences that warp the mind
+and drive charity from the heart.
+
+Our order's emblem is the three links,
+
+FRIENDSHIP, LOVE AND TRUTH.
+
+Friendship, love, truth--golden links these, that not only bind
+together their obligated votaries, but that recognize and embrace,
+because of worthiness and plighted faith, that behind the back as well
+as face to face, have a defensive, kindly word and a brother's generous
+deed; that, amid the upheavals of communities and the crumbling of
+nations, systems and governments, swerve not from their course, and are
+corralled by no arbitrary bounds, and that, whatever the dialect, the
+nationality or the religion of men, read upon humanity's brow the
+inscription written by the finger of infinite love--a man and a
+brother, a woman and a sister.
+
+A faithful and true friend is a living treasure, estimable in
+possession and deeply to be lamented when gone. Nothing is more common
+than to talk of a friend; nothing more difficult than to find one;
+nothing more rare than to improve by one as we ought.
+
+The only reward of virtue is virtue. The only way to have a friend is
+to be one. Such is friendship. Next in our golden chain is Love.
+Love is the stepping stone to heaven. This principle teaches man his
+capabilities for good, enlightens his mind, enlarges the sphere of his
+affections and leads him to that true fraternal relation which was
+designed by the Great Author of his existence. Love teaches us to be
+self-sacrificing. For a bright instance of this we point you to Moses,
+the great law-giver of the Jews. He turned his back on the splendors
+of Pharaoh's court and chose rather to share the wretchedness of his
+lowly people than serve as a king for their oppressors, finally dying
+in sight of that inheritance, which, though denied to him, was given to
+his ungrateful countrymen. How very bright on the pages of history
+shine such acts of love and sacrifice. This principle belongs to no
+one organization, party or sect. It can be made to bud and bloom as
+well under the fierce rays of the torrid zone, midst the icebergs of
+Greenland, or the everlasting snows of Caucasus. It always carries the
+same smile, whether in the cabin or in the palace. Following in its
+footsteps there is such a halo of glory, such a gentle influence, that
+it gathers within its sacred realm antagonistic natures, controls the
+elements of discord, stills the storm, soothes the spirit of passion,
+and directs in harmony all of man's efforts to fraternize the world.
+In this strangely selfish and uncertain world none are so affluent or
+favorably circumstanced as not at some time and in some way to become
+dependent. Oh! there are emphasized essentialities that are not
+embraced among the commodities of the market, and in order to the
+realization of which money possesses no purchasing power. To relieve
+the pungent pinchings of penury with raiment, food and shelter, and so
+send the sunshine of gladness to the poor and needy, is
+something--indeed is much. But, ah! the delicate and intricate
+mechanism of mind is out of gear, a secret sorrow swells and sways the
+heart, and unitedly they cry: "Who will show us any good? Who remove
+this rankling sorrow? What good Samaritan competent to the task of
+affording relief to this dazed brain?" Oh! it is here that the trained
+votaries of the triple brotherhood bring to bear their wondrous power.
+If it be true "that one touch of nature makes the whole world kin," it
+is equally true that the ties of brotherhood here would wield their
+most potent influence, and of the true Odd-Fellow well may it be said,
+"He hath a tear for pity, and a hand open as day for melting charity."
+
+TRUTH! crown jewel of the radiant sisterhood of queenly graces! She
+can not be crushed to earth. The eternal years of God being hers, she,
+no more than her author, can go down. Error may fling widely open his
+arsenal gates of defilement and deceit, and seek so earnestly and
+tirelessly the usurpation of her throne; but there she sits, as firmly
+and gracefully as when the morning stars sang together and the sons of
+God shouted for joy. Such is truth, the rarest of all human virtues.
+
+The man who is so conscious of the rectitude of his intentions, as to
+be willing to open his bosom to the inspection of the world, is in
+possession of the strongest pillars of a decided character. The course
+of such a man will be firm and steady, because he has nothing to fear
+from the world and is sure of the approbation of heaven. While he who
+is conscious of secret and dark designs, which, if known, would blast
+him, is perpetually shrinking and dodging from public observation, and
+is afraid of all around, and, much more, of all above him. Such a man
+may indeed pursue his iniquitous plans steadily; he may waste himself
+to a skeleton in the guilty pursuit, but it is impossible that he can
+pursue them with the same health-inspiring confidence and exulting
+alacrity with him who feels at every step that he is in pursuit of
+honest ends by honest means. The clear, unclouded brow, the open
+countenance, the brilliant eye, which can look an honest man
+steadfastly, yet courteously, in the face, the healthfully beating
+heart and the firm, elastic step, belong to him whose bosom is free
+from guile, and who knows that all his motives and purposes are pure
+and right. Why should such a man falter in his course? He may be
+slandered, he may be deserted by the world, but he has that within him
+which will keep him erect, and enable him to move onward in his course,
+with his eyes fixed on heaven, which he knows will not desert him.
+
+Odd-Fellowship teaches its members to be men of honor. When I say
+honest, I use it in its larger sense of discharging all your duties,
+both public and private, both open and secret, with the most
+scrupulous, heaven-attesting integrity; in that sense, farther, which
+drives from the bosom all little, dark, crooked, sordid, debasing
+considerations of self, and substitutes in their place a bolder,
+loftier and nobler spirit, one that will dispose you to consider
+yourselves as born not so much for yourselves as for your country and
+your fellow-creatures, and which will lead you to act on every occasion
+sincerely, justly, generously and magnanimously. There is a morality
+on a larger scale, perfectly consistent with a just attention to your
+own affairs, which it would be folly to neglect; a generous expansion,
+a proud elevation and conscious greatness of character, which is the
+best preparation for a decided course in every situation into which you
+can be thrown; and it is to this high and noble tone of character that
+I would have you to aspire. I would not have you to resemble those
+weak and meagre streamlets, which lose their direction at every petty
+impediment that presents itself, and stop and turn back, and creep
+around, and search out every channel through which they may wind their
+feeble and sickly course. Nor yet would I have you resemble the
+headlong torrent that carries havoc in its mad career; but I would have
+you like the ocean, that noblest emblem of majestic decision, which in
+the calmest hour still heaves its resistless might of waters to the
+shore, filling the heavens day and night with the echoes of its sublime
+declaration of independence, and tossing and sporting on its bed with
+an imperial consciousness of strength that laughs at opposition. It is
+this depth and weight and power and purity of character that I would
+have you resemble; and I would have you, like the waters of the ocean,
+to become the purer by your own action. Men are sometimes ruined
+because they aim not at virtue, but only at the reputation which it
+brings. Odd-Fellowship teaches its members to be brave, honest and
+diligent. If we have these attributes, victory must surely crown our
+efforts. How often in the history of our country have men of humble
+birth come forth in time of danger, and, nobly risking all, even to
+death, or disgrace worse than death itself, stood between their country
+and defeat, and built for themselves a glorious name. Nor, alas! is
+the opposite case to this unknown. Some of America's proudest sons
+have, by their own acts, sunk themselves into the inner-most depths of
+infamy and vice.
+
+ "Virtue alone is true nobility.
+ Oh, give me inborn worth! dare to be just,
+ Firm to your word and faithful to your trust."
+
+Knowledge is a mighty rock in a weary land, and to you, brothers, 'tis
+permitted to smite this rock, and from it gushes fountains of living
+waters, which form rivers of wisdom, flowing to the uttermost parts of
+the earth, carrying the proper idea of life to the souls of men. The
+river of science flows in a deep, straight course, searching out the
+hidden mysteries, and demonstrating facts, while Truth builds her
+defenses on its shores, and Love rears her fair palaces and calmly
+enjoys the result of labor and research. History, with its broad
+stream bringing knowledge down through the vanished centuries,
+revealing many a lost art, which avails us much in these later days.
+Mysteries which magicians have left behind them--secrets for ages
+undusted--that we may read the records of the past.
+
+Experience builds citadels upon these heights. Flowing parallel to
+history is the great, turbid stream of politics. Its crimson billows
+cast wrecks upon the strand, and the moaning waves strangely blend the
+tones of grand martial music with the discords of despair and
+disappointment, for it is a treacherous tide. Along its winding shores
+war builds her forts, and there are fields of carnage and blood, and
+dark fortresses of envy, from which fly the poisoned shafts of malice,
+falsehood and revenge, and there are many graves in which lie ambition,
+glory and renown, with all their brilliant dreams. Opposite to this
+from the rock of knowledge gush the sweet fountains of poetry and
+music, singing on their way through fair, secluded dells, where there
+are moss-covered rocks, clinging vines, fragrant flowers and ferns and
+singing birds. In their shining waves of light are mirrored the azure
+sky, golden sunshine and fleecy clouds, while youth, beauty, laughter
+and joy stray along the verdant shores, keeping time to the music of
+the merry spray and weaving garlands to crown their radiant brows.
+
+Not far from the rock of true knowledge flows a deep stream, calm,
+clear and beautiful. Majestically it sweeps through stately forests,
+extended plains and lofty mountains; and the fair cities of honesty,
+temperance and truth are built upon its shores. This wonderful stream
+is fed by the ever-living fountains of honor, morality, justice, mercy
+and divine love. The music of its waves sends forth hymns of true
+patriotism, love of country and of home; and the sweet songs of faith
+and immortality float upward like strong, white wings, bearing the soul
+away on pure melody above this world of longing and of hope, until it
+rises to meet the world of glory and fulfillment. Upon these shores
+faith, hope, charity and security have reared their white temples,
+which shall ever represent a living institution, bearing on its banner
+as a motto these beautiful words:
+
+FRIENDSHIP, LOVE AND TRUTH.
+
+The stream which I have just described is the great river of
+Odd-Fellowship, and flows into the vast ocean of eternal peace, and
+such is the momentum and indestructibility of Odd-Fellowship, that,
+like a great river fed from inexhaustible sources, men may come and men
+may go, but it goes on forever and forever.
+
+Brothers, these are the streams flowing from the smitten rock whose
+fountains you unseal.
+
+Standing at the mouth of the Columbia River, one can hear the ocean
+waves moaning, surging, thundering forevermore. You can not stay the
+rushing tides that come and go, ebb and flow, until time shall be no
+more; and there the great river of the west, the mighty Columbia,
+pouring her floods into that vast, boundless sea, so shall
+Odd-Fellowship pour her deep, exhaustless stream into futurity, and all
+the combined forces of opposition, ignorance and fear shall have no
+power to stay the onward rushing, overwhelming flood. Wafted back to
+us from the unexplored shore across that sea--softly whispering through
+the rose marine spirit of the mist--intuitive knowledge reveals the
+throne of the Grand Lodge above, from which flows the pure river of
+life, on whose shores grow the trees of knowledge and of life immortal,
+which bear no fruit of sin, but whose leaves are for the healing of
+poor, suffering humanity. Brothers, build such a character as will
+cause Christ and the angels to rejoice when they behold it. Then, when
+life's work is done, when the blessed Master calls, you will not look
+mournfully into the past, but will look eagerly into the mighty future
+just opening before you.
+
+And as your life goes out amidst the rustling of an angel's wings--like
+a summer sea asleep upon a sandy shore--you will not regret that you
+practiced the principles laid down by our noble order,
+
+FRIENDSHIP, LOVE AND TRUTH.
+
+
+
+
+THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+Manhood, fully developed and symmetrically formed, through the various
+stages of the world's history, has been the great conservative element
+of society, and has been in high request. Some ages, however, have
+seemed to make a larger demand for this element than others, and this
+age of ours is one which yields to none of its predecessors in its call
+for manliness of character--for men of the right stamp. The perils of
+the times are imminent, and the demand for a high grade of intelligence
+and great strength of moral principle never was stronger. New
+developments of human genius and activity, are constantly arising, and
+new dangers to the dearest interests of society are calling for
+vigilance. This is neither a stagnant nor a tame and quiet age. It is
+an age of activity, of enterprise, of speculation, of adventure, of
+philosophizing and of both real and pseudo reforms. The age eminently
+demands vigorous and mature manhood. Therefore, study, think,
+investigate, learn. Remember, however, that it is not knowledge stored
+up as intellectual fat which is of value, but that which is turned into
+intellectual muscle. Out of dull and selfish seclusion go forth.
+Regulate with care your basal endowments. Prove thy strength, and
+render it sure. Deliver thy conceptions from narrowness, thy charity
+from scrimpness, thy purposes from smallness. Deny thyself and take up
+thy cross. Do and dare, love and suffer. So shalt thou build a
+character that will abide all the tests which future years or ages may
+bring.
+
+Bear constantly in mind that you are endlessly improvable. "It is for
+God and for Omnipotency to do mighty things in a moment; but
+degreeingly to grow to greatness is the course that He hath left for
+man." To the conscious human self there belong possibilities of such
+moment that no one can well study them without being either thrillingly
+impressed or made to experience unusual emotions. The conclusion is,
+therefore, unavoidable, that every soul can become great. By processes
+of culture to which it is able to subject itself, it can perpetually
+increase in wisdom, in strength, and in nobleness.
+
+The soul's chief capabilities may, for the sake of elucidation, be
+represented as so many different rooms within itself, each of which can
+be made to have a spaciousness equaled by no material amplitude ever
+yet ascertained, and each of which, so long as it is kept in the
+process of growth, is and will be susceptible of fresh furnishing.
+These apartments of the minor man are too wonderful to admit being
+depicted either by a writer's pen or by a painter's brush. Their most
+distinguishing characteristics can, at best, only be indicated. Who
+can tell how much knowledge can find place in them, or what volumes of
+feeling they can contain? Who can declare the magnitude of the
+grandest traits that, in them, can have freedom to thrive and bear
+fruit? Who can estimate the length and breadth, the height and depth
+of the loftiest inspirations or the noblest joys that, in them, can be
+experienced? To give a full expression to the utmost intelligence,
+potency, amiability, purity, meritoriousness and majesty that can
+reside in the capability--rooms of a human soul--would be equivalent to
+picturing the imaginable or to portraying the infinite, and to do
+either the one or the other is impossible. One may be sadly
+indifferent to the value of his soul's foremost capabilities, may
+inadequately exercise them, and may secure to them merely a dwarf-like
+compass; but there is never a time when they can not be made to
+transcend the limits of development to which they have attained. Their
+possessor can educate them forever. He can unceasingly add to their
+roominess and resource. In all time to come he can cause them to
+continue to exceed breadth after breadth. Oh, who can conceive how
+great his mental being is able to become? Who can comprehend how
+elevated a life it is possible for him to live? Who can be liable to
+overrate the vastness of the destiny for which he was created?
+
+In the language of Hughes, "Our case is like that of a traveler on the
+Alps, who should fancy that the top of the next hill must end his
+journey because it terminates his prospect, but he no sooner arrives at
+it, than he sees new ground and other hills beyond it, and continues to
+travel on as before." The thought of the soul's improvability is well
+adapted to quicken torpid virtue and to revive drooping aspirations.
+It tends to scatter the gloom resulting from disappointed endeavors.
+Let it but have a star-like clearness in the mind, and there will
+spring from it an ever-new interest in life and being.
+
+We know that the paths of usefulness and affection must sometimes be
+strewn with smitten leaves and faded bloom, and that the heart must
+sometimes be chilled by harsh changes, even as the face of nature is
+chilled by rude winds. We know that we are doomed to find thorns in
+roses, and to suffer from "thorns in the flesh." We know that there
+are for us hours when the sunshine without must be darkened by shadows
+within; when we must be pierced by trials; when we must be humbled by
+afflictions. Yet, so we but duly know our mental possibilities, how
+much there is to animate us and to make us hopeful. Well may we go our
+way, with a high ambition and with good cheer. Well may we prize, as a
+stage of action, this old stone-ribbed earth, whereon we can behold the
+beauty of emerald meadows and of blossoming plants, and can hear the
+songs of russet-bosomed robins and the prattle of children, the voice
+of the vernal breeze, and the sound of the summer rain. Oh, who that
+ever muses on the soul's heirship to the divine, can wish he had never
+been born? I am grateful for my existence. I rejoice that I have
+place amid the bright-robed mysteries which surround me. I glory in
+the shifting scenery of the seasons. No flaw do I find in the sun, the
+moon, or the stars. No prayer have I to make that the grass which
+grows at my feet may be fairer than it is, or that the mornings and
+evenings may be more attractive. Let me know as I may, and feel as I
+should, the truth that I am endlessly improvable, and I am assured that
+the soul of the universe will somehow sweeten every bitter allotment
+that falls to me, will "charm my pained steps over the burning marl"
+which belongs to the course of probationary experience, and will assist
+me joyfully to approximate the greatness of His own infinite and
+tranquil character. It is bliss to feel that the soul is an
+ever-enduring entity. Unlike the clouds and the snow-heaps, the fluids
+and the liquids, the rocks and the metals--unlike all the generations
+of living organisms--it neither wastes away nor loses its
+distinctiveness. Nay, it outlasts every transmuting process, and, as a
+self-identifying self, is endlessly living.
+
+If we reach the high plane of a perfect manhood, we must climb. "Come
+up hither, and I will show thee things which must be hereafter."--Rev.,
+iv, 1. In this mystical Revelation we behold the seer, John, dreaming
+at the base of the celestial hill, and in his dream he hears a voice
+commanding him to rise to the summit of the eternities, where,
+standing, he shall behold all things that must be. This vision has an
+infinite significance, in that no small part of the felicity associated
+with the| idea of eternity is the thought that, with ample mind, we
+shall perfectly understand the mighty plan and enterprise of God, and
+know with perfect knowledge that which is dark and obscure now. But
+not only has this truth to us an infinite significance; it has also a
+temporal one, in that it tells us that there is an immediate
+relationship between elevation of life, between high thinking, living
+and doing, and the power to command the future. "Come up hither, and I
+will show thee things which must be hereafter." That is, let us stand
+high and we see far and wide, let us stand high and we see deep.
+Elevation grants perspective and yields the possession of those years
+not only that are, but that are not. Now, so understood, these words
+have much inspiration, comfort and solace for all of us, for a very
+large part of man's life is future. Indeed, the great regulative force
+of every human spirit is not so much the present and the past--present
+opportunity and past experience--as future ideality. The architectonic
+principle of life is not the momentum that sweeps down to us from the
+years that have been, but the ideal that lies deep in the years that
+are yet to be. This is the mysterious, occult power that moulds, forms
+and fashions our stature, and that is determining the greatness or the
+littleness of our destiny. And not only is the future architectonic,
+it is also an inspiration and refuge for our anxieties, defeats and
+inadequacy, his incompetency, how little he has achieved, realizes his
+inconsequence and insignificance, and he looks forward and sees triumph
+in tomorrow; he beholds the summit of the hill, and says, "There I
+shall stand victorious some future day." Today incomplete, tomorrow
+complete; today imperfect, tomorrow perfect; today bound, tomorrow
+emancipated; today humiliated, tomorrow crowned. Hence, the future is
+man's refuge, hope and strength. And in a yet more profound sense does
+the future exert a wonderful power over our lives, in that it holds for
+us the inheritance undefiled and incorruptible, the patrimony of
+eternity. And who can measure the influence of this belief over human
+character? Blot it out, and what inspiration have we to struggle on?
+If we are to perish as the beast of the field, wither like the grass,
+and vanish like the transient cloud, man has no grand, sublime
+impulsion in this life. But let him believe that he is the child of
+God, that there is an immortal soul, not only in him, but an eternal
+sphere awaiting him--let him believe that here he is but in the bud,
+that these seventy years are but the seed time, and that infinite eons
+lie before him for fruition and efflorescence, and you magnify his
+spirit, enlarge his hope, and inspire him with a zeal to conquer and
+achieve.
+
+But now there is a popular philosophy that tells us that man can only
+know two points of time: that point of time through which he has
+gone--the past, and that point of time in which he is now living--the
+present. He may know experience and he may grasp opportunity, but he
+can know nothing of futurity. The future is a riddle, an unexplored
+continent, a _terra incognita_ into which no human eyes have ever pried
+or ever may pry, sealed as it is by the counsel of God against the
+curious vision of His children. And to some extent I think we all must
+admit that this popular notion holds true. There are those to whom the
+future must be a blank, who peer into it and behold nothing there.
+
+I have noticed that no great poem, no great religion, no great creation
+of any kind, was ever written or conceived by people who lived in the
+valleys, cramped by the hills. The hills narrow one's horizon, make
+one insular, provincial, limited. And what is true of literature and
+art is true also of life. The man of low ideals never vaticinates; the
+man who is living down in the lower ranges of existence never
+prophesies. The man with a low brow has always a limited perspective;
+so, also, the man with a low heart or a low conscience. The sordid man
+can never measure the consequences of his wealth. He may know that
+tomorrow he will be as rich as he is today, or richer, but he can not
+prognosticate what his riches will mean to him tomorrow--whether he
+will find in them more or less felicity, whether they will be a
+blessing or a burden. Neither has the base man, the immoral man, any
+clear vision of futurity. He lives in doubts and fears, and is begirt
+with clouds and confusion. He half fears that there is a law of God,
+and half doubts it; half believes in retribution, and half doubts it;
+half believes in moral cause and effect, and half doubts it. He sees,
+with no certain sight, the inevitable penalty awaiting his wrong-doing,
+else he would not and dare not sin. No man would sin, could he read
+the future; no man would defy the Infinite, did he unerringly know that
+God is a just God, and that He shall visit inevitable retribution upon
+him who trangresses His holy law. The wicked man, like the sordid man
+living in the low lands, never vaticinates, and can not, not by reason
+of any want of talent or conscience, but by reason of want of altitude
+of vision. But St. John does not tell us here that all men shall know
+all things that must be; that all men have a sense of futurity. What
+he does say is that there is an intimate and indissoluble relationship
+between elevation and futurity; that only the man who stands upon the
+altitudes can command the future; for only there, when he is at his
+best, and when he is living on the summit of his soul, does he behold
+the true and perfect action of the forces and the laws of the Eternal.
+It is not "Stay down there and I will show thee things which must be
+hereafter," but "Come up hither"--live, aspire, ascend into the
+altitudes of mind; ascend into the altitudes of feeling; ascend into
+the altitudes of conscience; live where God means you to live, and
+then--"I will show thee things which must be hereafter."
+
+And now, if you will consult your own experience or meditate on
+history, if you will scan the great things thought and the great things
+done, and the great things wrought and the great things won by man, you
+will see that they have been always wrought and won and done and
+thought upon the heights. The Muses live upon Parnassus, the Deities
+upon Olympus. Jehovah has his abiding place on Zion. David says, "I
+look unto the hills, whence cometh my help." Not unto the meadows, or
+the streams, or by the forests, or the cities, or the seas, but "unto
+the hills, whence cometh my help." He looks high, and his high vision
+grants him spiritual perspective. And Jesus speaks his great sermon,
+not by the Jordan, but on the mount. He is transfigured on a mount,
+crucified on a mount, and ascends to the right hand of His Father from
+a mount. Everywhere the heights play a great part in the history of
+human thought, feeling and faith. All great truth comes down; it does
+not rise up. All great religion comes down; it does not rise up. It
+is not the wilderness, nor the low lands, nor the level places, but
+Mount Carmel, Mount Horeb, Mount Zion, the Mount of the Beatitudes and
+the Mount of Transfiguration that are focal points of righteousness and
+faith. And when you look at and reflect upon men--the great men, the
+men who have moulded the world, who have made the massive contributions
+to humanity, who have dealt the Titan strokes that have redeemed the
+race from its servitudes and bestialities, who, like Atlas, have upheld
+and lifted up the world; who, like Prometheus, have brought to man
+precious gifts from Zeus, and so delivered him from the tyranny and
+dominion of his ignorance, superstitions, fears and passions--you will
+always find that they are men who have lived upon the lofty summits of
+the Spirit, and therefore have been seers of the future and have seen
+"those things which must be hereafter."
+
+Every high-minded man has always lived in the future. Take the
+sovereign prophet of the ancient faith. The world about him is dark
+and desolate; Israel's powers are at the ebb; the great faith that she
+has inherited is degraded, sensualized, formalized, buried under a
+debris of priestcraft, infidelity, idolatry and corruption; and yet
+this prophet stands upon the hills and dreams--dreams against the
+present, dreams through all the darkness environing him--and sees the
+day when the faith of Israel shall be the faith of the world; when the
+law of Israel shall dominate the conscience of the world; when the
+Savior of Israel shall be the Savior of the world, and when the Jehovah
+of Israel shall be the Jehovah of the world. Standing high, his soul
+soaring, thinking lofty thoughts, he beholds Israel in glorious
+perspective as the nation that shall lead man from bondage to liberty,
+from darkness to light. Or think again of the life, the history, the
+hope of Jesus, and behold in Him a perfect illustration of this truth;
+this truth that there is an intimate relationship between high living
+and high thinking, high doing, high willing and the vision of the
+future. What right had Christ to hope at all? What right had He to
+think of a Kingdom of God that was going steadily to conquer and take
+possession of this earth? What right had He to think that His Gospel
+would come to be the regnant gospel over the minds of men? What right
+had He to think that His own beautiful spirit would prevail over the
+perverse and rebellious will of society? What right had he to think
+that the world would ever come to accept His marvelous beatitudes as
+truth? What right had He to believe that the cross would ever be a
+universal symbol of salvation? Judged from the near point of view, by
+immediate results, by the facts that were right before His eyes,
+history records no more conspicuous and terrible failure than the life
+of Jesus. A Savior, and yet disbelieved in by the people; a Savior,
+and yet scorned by the multitude; a Savior, and yet called a "wine
+bibber" and a "glutton;" a Savior, and yet humiliated and degraded; a
+Savior, and yet dying ignominiously upon the cross. Where is there any
+ample redemption, any glorious assertion of the mind, in these sad,
+gloomy, hopeless facts? And yet He said, "I, if I be lifted up, shall
+draw all men unto Me." How did He dare make such a prophecy as that?
+How did He dare arrogate to himself such a dominion as that? Why,
+simply because, living in the altitudes, he had vision of things that
+must be. He knew that He had righteousness in His heart, and that
+righteousness must at last be established. He knew that His spirit was
+a spirit of peace and good will towards men, and that peace and good
+will towards men must ultimately prevail. He lived on the heights, and
+He saw those things that were to be. And now, what is true of these
+great men may be true of every one of us, according to the loftiness of
+our living. Every one of us may command the future--may, in a measure,
+prophesy and weigh the consequences, and calculate the issues of our
+own life; and every one of us can live a far larger, fuller and richer
+life, in the years that are to be than we can live in the past or in
+the time that is now.
+
+And first, let me say to you that the man that lives upon the altitudes
+of his spirit beholds with sure vision the issuance of his life in
+triumph. We speak of life habitually as being a complicated and
+intricate thing, and no doubt it is, upon its lower ranges. A man is
+prosperous today, sweeping, with sails full set, before the breeze, his
+bark leaping gladly, mounting buoyantly upon the waves; but no man can
+tell what the morrow will bring forth to him. Prosperity is not a
+matter of certitude, security or permanency. An ill wind comes, and
+the vessel is swept to disaster; on the shoals or rocks, rushing to
+destruction against some Scylla or swallowed up by some Charybdis. And
+what is true of prosperity is true of power. Today a man is the idol
+of the people, flattered, honored, extolled and crowned by them. They
+gather round him and intoxicate him with their plaudits. He is the man
+of the people, the great man of his day, but who can tell how long this
+will rule enthroned? An unfortunate speech, an error of conduct, a
+moment of indecision, a failure to appeal to the demagogic instincts of
+the race, and he is ruthlessly bereaved of his honor and his glory
+gone. The idols of yesterday are the broken statues of today; the
+heroes of yesterday are the "have-beens" of today. So capricious, so
+ephemeral, so mutable, so mercurial, so impermanent are the whims of
+humanity, and so unstable its idolatries and adorations.
+
+And as the mighty fall, so the obscure rises. Names that were unknown
+ten years ago are blazoned almost on the skies. The insignificant come
+up and take the scepter in their hand. The poor man of a little while
+ago is the rich merchant or the successful lawyer of today. This is
+his hour, this the moment of his power. Strange, is it not? There
+seems to be no method, no system in those lower planes of life. The
+rich become poor and the poor rich, the strong weak and the weak
+strong; the ruler becomes the ruled and the ruled the ruler; the master
+becomes the servant and the servant the master. No order, no system,
+no method anywhere in mundane things, and therefore no power of vision
+and vaticination.
+
+But now in the higher things there is none of this impermanence and
+instability. Everything is in order here. When man is living in the
+fulness of his nature, when he is living on the heaven-kissing
+pinnacles of his spirit, when his whole being is harmonious with the
+great and glorious laws of God, his future is assured; it is bound to
+be a great and beautiful success. No possibility of failure upon the
+heights; every possibility of failure upon the level; every possibility
+of disaster down there, but upon the peaks there can be no disaster, no
+mistake, no accident, no dethronement; there must be inevitable and
+unconditional achievement. Of course, I do not mean popular
+achievement--achievement as men usually count achievement, or success
+as men ordinarily rate success. So measured, every great man's life
+has been a dismal failure. Paul's life was not a popular success, nor
+was Isaiah's, nor was Augustine's, nor was Savanarola's, nor was
+Socrates', nor was Christ's life a popular success. Measured by
+terrestrial standards, measured by the low ideals of humanity, these
+lives were all ignominious failures, every one of them; but measured by
+the Divine standard, by the mind and will of God, they are triumphant
+victories.
+
+And now I say that every man whose point of view is high, who is
+standing upon the very highest reaches of his own being, seeking
+sincerely to be true to all that is heroic and great in his
+heaven-endowed nature, that man is bound to be, by the decree of the
+Eternal, an ultimately successful man. He is bound, just so surely as
+God's sun is bound to come tomorrow, he is bound to be crowned, not
+only with a celestial but with a terrestrial success--success as God
+measures success. He may feel pain; he may feel the slings and arrows
+of outrageous fortune; he may experience neglect; he may contend
+against a host of untoward circumstances; he may groan under the
+pressure and weight of many woes; he may weep bitter, burning, scalding
+tears of sorrow and grief, but still he must triumph, for God is just
+and will crown with a perfect equity His faithful children.
+
+And so, my friends, the central truth that I deliver to you is this,
+that life, life upon the summit of the soul, is the supreme,
+resplendent luminary. Not argument, not philosophy, not the elaborate,
+logical processes of the intellect, not the Bible, not the church, but
+life; this is the great infallible interpreter. Live and ye shall see.
+"Do my will," says Christ, "and ye shall know." Stand high and firm on
+the summit of your soul and ye shall see the things that must be
+hereafter--a victorious righteousness, a triumphant life, and the
+redeemed hosts swathed and folded in the light of Him who is
+everlasting, omnipotent and all-loving.
+
+
+
+
+PITHY POINTS
+
+Brethren, be merciful in your judgment of others.
+
+Every temptation promptly resisted strengthens the will.
+
+There is a sad want of thoughtful mercy among us all.
+
+Every step we take on the ladder upwards helps to a higher.
+
+If we are true Odd-Fellows we will put away all bitterness and malice.
+
+Brothers, remember the moral harvest comes to all perfection; not one
+grain is lost.
+
+As Odd-Fellows there are loads we can help others to carry, and thus
+learn sympathy.
+
+The test of truthfulness is true dealing with ourselves when we do
+wrong and true dealing with the brethren when they fall.
+
+It is a serious reflection that even our secret thoughts influence
+those around us.
+
+The Brotherhood has a Father watching over it, "who is the same
+yesterday, today and forever."
+
+Man alone is responsible for the eternal condition of his soul. We
+make our own heaven or hell, not by the final act of life, but by life
+itself.
+
+Truth supplies us with the only true and perfect standard by which to
+test the value of things, and so corrects the one-sided, materialistic
+standard of business.
+
+If an Odd-Fellow begins right I can not tell how many tears he may wipe
+away, how many burdens he may lift, how many orphans he may comfort,
+how many outcasts he may reclaim.
+
+Love edifies; that is, it builds up perfectly the whole man, secures an
+entire and harmonious and proportionate development of his nature. It
+does so by casting out the selfishness in man which always leads to a
+diseased and one-sided growth of his nature.
+
+No two souls are endowed in an exactly similar way. And for the
+difference of endowment there is a reason in the Divine mind, for each
+soul in its generation has its appointed work to do, and is endowed
+with suitable grace for its performance.
+
+We are not Odd-Fellows in the true sense unless we put away all
+bitterness, malice and selfishness. Common sense of mankind is quite
+right when it says a man's religion is not worth much if it does not
+make him good. Have goodness first--out of goodness good works will
+come.
+
+Every good work requires every good principle. A man with very
+prominent and striking characteristics will always be a perfect man. A
+perfect man has such harmonies that he scarcely has a characteristic.
+To be fruitful in every good work you must have in your heart the germs
+and seeds, the springs and sources of all Christian virtue.
+
+We are all greater dupes to our weakness than to the skill of others;
+and the successes gained over us by the designing are usually nothing
+more than the prey taken from those very snares we have laid ourselves.
+One man falls by his ambition, another by his perfidy, a third by his
+avarice, and a fourth by his lust; what are these but so many nets,
+watched indeed by the fowler, but woven by the victim?
+
+Sorrow is not an accident--occurring now and then--it is the very woof
+which is woven into the warp of life, and he who has not discerned the
+divine sacredness of sorrow, and the profound meaning which is
+concealed in pain, has yet to learn what life is. The cross manifested
+as the necessity of the highest life alone interprets it.
+
+Equity--An eternal rule of right, implanted in the heart. What it asks
+for itself it is willing to grant to others. It not only forbids us to
+do wrong to the meanest of God's creatures, but it teaches us to
+observe the golden rule, "All things whatsoever ye would that men
+should do unto you, do you even so to them." There is no greater
+injunction--no better rule to practice.
+
+Don't rely on friends--don't rely on the name of your ancestors.
+Thousands have spent the prime of life in the vain hope of help from
+those whom they called friends, and many thousands have starved because
+they have rich fathers. Rely upon the good name which is made by your
+own exertions, and know that better than the best friend you can have
+is unquestionable determination, united with decision of character.
+
+How little is known of what is in the bosom of those around us! We
+might explain many a coldness could we look into the heart concealed
+from us; we should often pity where we hate, love when we curl the lip
+with scorn and indignation. To judge without reserve of any human
+action is a culpable temerity, of all our sins the most unfeeling and
+frequent.
+
+How a common sorrow or calamity spans the widest social differences and
+welds all, the rich and poor, in one common bond of sympathy, which,
+begetting charity and all her train, softens the hardest heart and
+banishes the sturdiest feeling of superiority! Over the lifeless body
+of the departed, enemies and friend can weep together, and, burying
+strife and differences with their common loss, feel a kinship which
+unites them, and which all humanity shares.
+
+Don't be exacting.--An exacting temper is one against which to guard
+both one's heart and the nature of those who are under our control and
+influence. To give and to allow, to suffer and to bear, are the graces
+more to the purpose of a noble life than cold, exacting selfishness,
+which must have, let who will go without, which will not yield, let who
+will break. It is a disastrous quality wherewith to go through the
+world; for it receives as much pain as it inflicts, and creates the
+discomfort it deprecates.
+
+Verily, good works constitute a refreshing stream in this world,
+wherever they are found flowing. It is a pity that they are too often
+like oriental torrents, "waters that fail" in times of greatest need.
+When we meet the stream actually flowing and refreshing the land, we
+trace it upward, in order to discover the fountain whence it springs.
+Threading our way upward, guided by the river, we have found at length
+the placid lake from which the river runs. Behind all genuine good
+works and above them, love will, sooner or later, certainly be found.
+It is never good alone; uniformly, in fact, and necessarily in the
+nature of things, we find the two constituents existing as a complex
+whole, "love and good works," the fountain and the flowing stream.
+
+Never give up old friends for new ones. Make new ones if you like, and
+when you have learned that you can trust them, love them if you will,
+but remember the old ones still. Do not forget they have been merry
+with you in time of pleasure, and when sorrow came to you they sorrowed
+also. No matter if they have gone down in social scale and you up; no
+matter if poverty and misfortune have come to them while prosperity
+came to you; are they any less true for that? Are not their hearts as
+warm and tender if they do beat beneath homespun instead of velvet?
+Yes, kind reader, they are as true, loving and tender; don't forget old
+friends.
+
+Young men! Let the nobleness of your mind impel you to its
+improvement; you are too strong to be defeated, save by yourselves.
+Refuse to live merely to sleep and eat. Brutes can do this; but you
+are men. Act the part of men. Prepare yourselves to endure toil.
+Resolve to rise--you have but to resolve. Nothing can hinder your
+success if you determine to succeed. Do not waste your time by wishing
+and dreaming, but go earnestly to work. Let nothing discourage you.
+If you have no books, borrow them; if you have no teachers, teach
+yourself; if your early education has been neglected, by the greater
+diligence repair the defect. Let not a craven heart or a love of ease
+rob you of the inestimable benefit of self-culture.
+
+Have the courage to face a difficulty, lest it kick you harder than you
+bargained for. Difficulties, like thieves, often disappear at a
+glance. Have the courage to leave a convivial party at the proper hour
+for doing so, however great the sacrifice; and to stay away from one
+upon the slightest grounds for objection, however great the temptation
+to go. Have the courage to do without that which you do not need,
+however much you may admire it. Have the courage to speak your mind
+when it is necessary that you should do so, and hold your tongue when
+it is better you should be silent. Have the courage to speak to a poor
+friend in a seedy coat, even in the street, and when a rich one is
+nigh. The effort is less than many people take it to be, and the act
+is worthy of a king. Have the courage to admit that you have been in
+the wrong, and you will remove the fact in the mind of others, putting
+a desirable impression in the place of an unfavorable one. Have the
+courage to adhere to the first resolution when you can not change it
+for a better, and abandon it at the eleventh hour upon conviction.
+
+
+
+
+THE BIBLE IN ODD-FELLOWSHIP
+
+The Bible is a book for the understanding; but much more it is a book
+for the spirit and for the heart. Many other kinds of learning are
+found in the Bible. It is a manual of Eastern antiquities, a handbook
+of political experiences, a collection of moral wisdom as applied to
+personal conduct, a mine of poetry, a choice field for the study of
+languages. The Bible is the book of God, and therefore it is the book
+of the future, the book of hope. It pierces the veil between this and
+another life, pointing us on to the realms of light. In sorrow, in
+sin, and in death we may, if we will, find in the Holy Bible patience,
+consolation and hope. The Bible opens the widest, freest outlook for
+the mind into the eternal, enlarging a man's range of spiritual sight,
+and enabling him to judge of all things in both worlds in their true
+proportion. The Bible gets into life because it first came out of
+life. It was born of life at its best. Its writers were the tallest
+white angels literature has known. No other literature has five names
+equal to these: Moses, David, Isaiah, Paul and John. These men and the
+others wrote as they were moved by the Holy Ghost. The messages of the
+Bible are the loftiest in the range of human thought. There have been
+many magnificent periods like the age of Elizabeth, the time of the
+Renaissance and the age of Victoria, but no other single century has
+ever done anything equal to the production of the New Testament in the
+first century. The Bible has a sound psychology. It seeks to
+influence the whole man. It pours white light into the intellect. It
+grapples with the great themes upon which thinkers stretch their minds.
+John Fiske's three subjects are all familiar themes to the readers of
+the Bible. Its style is incomparable in grandeur and variety. It
+approaches the intellect with every form of literary style. It is the
+supreme intellectual force in the life of the common people. It has
+been teacher and school for the millions. The Puritans, for example,
+used it as a poem, story book, history, law and philosophy. Out of it
+New England was born. It has been the chief representative of the
+English language at its best. Anglo-Saxon life and learning are
+saturated with it. The literature of England and America is full of
+the Bible. Shakespeare and Tennyson are specimens. Each of these
+authors quote from nearly every book in the Bible, and each of them
+refers to the Bible not less than five hundred times. Herbert Spencer
+admits that it is the greatest educator. It is winning its place in
+school and college. No education is complete without a knowledge of
+this literature. It is the privilege of Odd-Fellowship to enthrone the
+Bible in the lodge-room, and in the home. It teaches the intellectual
+life from above and lifts it to the Bible's own level.
+
+Dean Stanley was visiting the great scholar, Ewald, in Dresden, and in
+the course of the conversation, Ewald snatched up a copy of the New
+Testament and said, in his impulsive and enthusiastic way, "In this
+little book is contained all the wisdom of the world." There is a
+sense in which this statement is not extravagant. The book contains
+the highest and fullest revelation of truth the world has known. The
+greatest themes man's mind can ponder are here presented. The most
+profound problems with which the human intellect has ever grappled are
+here discussed. We maintain that a mastery of the contents of this
+book will in itself provide an intellectual discipline no other book
+can give. Refinement of character, refinement of thought, refinement
+of speech, all of the essential characteristics of the intellectual as
+well as of the spiritual life, have been found in our own church from
+the beginning, among those whose only advantages have been a personal
+religious experience and the consequent love and continuous study of
+God's word as well as among those who have had all the advantages of
+the schools. No man need be afraid of exhausting the truth in the
+Bible. No man can ever flatter himself that he has got beyond it.
+Whatever his intellectual attainments may be, the Bible will still have
+further message for him.
+
+There was a very suggestive spectacle on the streets of London one day,
+just after Elizabeth had become England's Queen. As she was riding by
+the little conduit at the upper end of Cheapside an old man came out of
+it, carrying a scythe and bearing a pair of wings. He represented
+Father Time coming out of his dark cave to greet the young Queen. He
+led by the hand a young girl clad in flowing robes of white silk, and
+she was his daughter, Truth. Truth held in her hands an English Bible,
+on which was written "Verbum Veritatis," and which she presented to the
+Queen. It was a pageant prepared for the occasion but suggestive for
+this occasion as well. Truth is the daughter of Time. Our backs may
+be bent and our hair may be gray before we can lead Bible truth forth
+by the hand. We may be old before we know much; our intellectual life
+may be matured in fullest measure and we still can know more; we must
+grow a pair of wings before we know it all--even if we do then.
+
+The Bible is the conquering book. It has already dominated English
+literature, so that almost the whole of its text from Genesis to
+Revelation might, if all the copies of the Bible were suddenly lost
+from the world, be restored in piecemeal fragments gathered out of the
+books in which the Book has been quoted, Then, besides, there are the
+Bible thoughts that have indirectly, we might almost say insidiously,
+permeated the literature of Europe and America. More than that, the
+Bible has been industriously for years securing its own translation
+into hundreds of tongues and dialects of the globe. The Koran does not
+take pains to translate itself, and, indeed, refuses to be translated;
+but in contradistinction with such apathy of false faiths, the Bible
+courts transcription into foreign tongues, loses nothing in the
+process, but thereby gains for itself the homage of multitudes who, on
+reading it for the first time, cry, "This is the book we long have
+sought, that finds us out in the deepest recesses of our being and
+satisfies the profoundest cravings of our souls." The Bible is the
+comforting book. There is no volume like it for consolation. It is
+the only sure and steady staff for pilgrim spirits to lean upon, and
+the only book that is quoted at the bedside of the sick. It is a book
+to wear next the heart in life, and upon which to pillow the head in
+death. No other so-called "scriptures" of the world say the things
+that the Bible says, or supply the hopes that its promises afford. The
+Bible is not simply a book; it is The Book. It is the best book of any
+kind that we have. We can not do without it, either here or hereafter.
+There are many books in the world, but there is only one book. The
+Bible is unique. It is in a class by itself. It seeks to control
+everything, but it co-ordinates itself with nothing. It sets forth
+imitable examples of character, but it is not itself imitable. No one
+has ever written or ever will write a second Bible. The very phrase
+which every one uses, "The Bible," signifies the uniqueness of this
+book. It is a whole library in itself, and yet it is more than a
+simple collection of books. There is a homogeneity and consistency to
+the whole which lead us to speak of scripture as being a single story,
+not many revelations. The Bible is the exhaustless book. It may
+sometimes prove exhausting to its light-minded readers, but it never
+exhausts itself. "It is the wonder of the Bible," observes Dr. Joseph
+Parker, who has preached more than twenty-five volumes of sermons upon
+scriptural subjects, "that you never get through it. You get through
+all other books, but you never get through the Bible." On the basis of
+a rationalistic criticism, this quality of exhaustlessness is really
+inexplicable. And when we come to realize that, after all has been
+said as to scrolls and tablets and styluses and human factors and
+copyists, God wrote the Bible, we understand why it is that scripture
+is so rich in treasures of wisdom. We see that we can not exhaust the
+Bible because we can not exhaust God. The Bible wields an influence
+that can not be estimated. The spoken word is powerful, the printed
+word surpasses it. The one is temporal, the other is eternal; the one
+is circumscribed, the other is unlimited. The spoken sermon of today
+is forgotten tomorrow; the written word of thousands of years ago still
+sways the masses of today.
+
+The whole civilized world bows down with reverence before the book of
+all books, the Bible. The Roman sword, the Grecian palette and chisel,
+have indeed rendered noble service to the cause of civilization, yet
+even their proudest claims dwindle into insignificance when compared
+with the benefits which the Bible has wrought. It has penetrated into
+realms where the names of Greece and Rome have never resounded. It has
+illumined empires and ennobled peoples, which Roman war and Grecian art
+had left dark and barbarous. Where one man is charmed by the Odyssey,
+tens and hundreds of thousands are delighted by the Pentateuch; where
+one man is enthused by the Philippics of Demosthenes, millions are
+enthused by the orations of Isaiah; where one man is inspired by the
+valor of Horatious, tens of millions are inspired by the bravery of
+David; where one man's life is ennobled by the art in the Parthenon,
+scores of millions of lives are ennobled by the art in the sanctuary:
+where one man's life is guided by the moral maxims of Marcus Aurelius,
+hundreds of millions find their law of right and their rule for action
+in the Bible. It is read in more than two hundred and fifty languages,
+by four hundred millions of people living in every clime and zone of
+the globe. It constitutes the only literature, the only code of law
+and ethics, of many peoples and tribes. For thousands of years it has
+gone hand in hand with civilization, has led the way towards the moral
+and intellectual development of human kind, and despite the hatred of
+its enemies and the still more dangerous misinterpretations of its
+friends, its moral law still maintains its firm hold upon the hearts
+and minds of the people, its power is still supreme for kindling a love
+of right and duty, of justice and morality, within the hearts of the
+overwhelming masses. Were it possible to annihilate the Bible, and
+with it all the influence it has exercised, the pillars upon which
+civilization rests would be knocked from under it, and, as if with one
+thrust of the fatal knife, we would deal the death blow to our
+morality, to our domestic happiness, to our commercial integrity, to
+our peaceful relationships, to our educational and chart-table
+institutions.
+
+There are wives and mothers, who stand with lacerated hearts at the
+open grave and see the light of their life extinguished beneath the
+cruel clods, and yet, they bear up bravely, resting their bent forms
+and supporting their tottering feet on the staff of hope and trust
+which the Bible affords. Take that solace from them, and you may soon
+have occasion to bury the wife next to her husband, and the mother next
+to her child. There are husbands who, when sitting lonely, dependent,
+in the circle of their motherless, weeping children, find the good old
+Book the only comforter; take it from them and you drive them to the
+madhouse or to suicide. There are maidens grieving, pining, their
+hearts broken, their lives blighted, their career irretrievably
+blasted; take the solace from them which this book breathes into their
+withered hearts, the solace that suffering innocence will be
+recompensed, that a God of justice rules, take that solace from them
+and you have taken all that makes life bearable. There are millions of
+people pining in bondage, toiling in obscurity, suffering physically
+and mentally for no crime of their own, sick and hungry, friendless and
+hopeless; take the book from them that teaches them the lesson of
+patient endurance, and you may write the word Finis, and close the
+records of civilization forevermore. It is the one book that has a
+balm for every wound, a comfort for every tear, a ray of light for
+every darkness.
+
+Its language all people can understand, its spirit all minds can grasp,
+its moral laws all people can obey, its truths appeal not only to the
+lowly and simple, but also to the highest intellect, they win the
+spontaneous approval, not only of the pious, but also of the most
+skeptical. At a literary gathering at the house of the Baron von
+Holbach, where the most celebrated atheists of the age used to
+assemble, the gentlemen present were one day commenting on the absurd
+and foolish things with which the Bible abounds. The French
+encyclopedist, Diderat, a materialist himself, startled his friends by
+his little speech: "But it is wonderful, gentlemen, it is wonderful. I
+know of no man who can speak or write with such ability. I do not
+believe that any of you could compose such narratives, or could have
+laid down such sublime moral laws, so simple, yet so elevating,
+exerting so wide an influence for good, and awakening such deep and
+such reverential feelings, as does the Bible." Diderat spoke the
+truth. Place the most celebrated systems of philosophies or the most
+famous code of ethics, into the hands of the masses, and see whether
+the subtleties of their learning, the elegance of their diction will
+touch their hearts as deeply as does the Bible. All the genius and
+learning of the ancient world, all the penetration of the profoundest
+philosophers, have never been able to produce a book that was as widely
+read, as voluminously commented on, as dearly loved, as this book,
+neither have all the law-givers of all the lands, and of all ages, been
+able to produce a code of law and ethics that was universally and as
+implicitly followed as that of the law-giver, Moses.
+
+The Bible is an emblem of Odd-Fellowship, because it is the
+Odd-Fellows' text-book. Here we get our doctrines for faith and our
+rules for practice in all the relations of life. As Odd-Fellows, we
+believe the Bible is the word of God, because in their enmity humanity
+has never been able to destroy it or rob it of its power; nor have any
+who reject it given us a book to take its place. The intellect and
+culture of our day can not improve the teachings of Christ, nor set
+before us a nobler ideal life. As Odd-Fellows, we believe in this
+beautiful emblem, because our hearts attest its truth. We need not be
+told that the landscape is beautiful, or that the song of birds is
+sweet. When we see the one and hear the other, we know it. As the eye
+discerns the beautiful, and the ear discerns sweet sounds, so the heart
+of man discerns the divineness of the Bible teachings and sets its seal
+to their truth. As Odd-Fellows, we believe in the scriptures, because
+the experiences of all true believers, of whatever name, or age, or
+country, prove it to be the "bread of life" and the "water of life" to
+a needy and suffering world. Age by age the evidence of experience is
+accumulating, and growing stronger, and for a soul to distrust the
+revelations made unto it, and the divine leading of the human race, is
+as though the eye should disbelieve in the sun shining at mid-day. We
+recognize the Bible as a precious boon to man, the gift of the Great
+Father above. It is a "light to our feet and a lamp to our path." It
+is a compass whose never-failing needle directs us safely across the
+desert sands of life, and through the dark labyrinths of an evil world,
+and its precious promises gives us comfort while we bear the burdens
+and endure the sorrows, pain and anguish incident to human life.
+
+Since our organization is founded on the Bible, we should, as
+Odd-Fellows, become more conversant with it. Many evils creep into our
+lodges that could be avoided if we used the Bible more in our talks for
+the good of the order. Intemperance is an evil that does us much harm.
+What does the Bible say in regard to it? Proverbs, xx, 1, says: "Wine
+is a mocker, strong drink is raging, and whosoever is deceived thereby
+is not wise." Proverbs, xxi, 17: "He that loveth pleasure shall be a
+poor man; he that loveth wine and oil shall not be rich." Ah me! what
+dead courage, what piles of bleached bones that was once the
+concentration of all that was great and lofty and true. What
+aspirations, ambitions, enterprise and resolutions--what genius,
+integrity and all that belongs to true manhood--have been swept from
+the tablets of time into oblivion by King Alcohol and his horrid half
+brothers, the gambling hell and the brothel.
+
+A few years ago a noted wild-beast tamer gave a performance with his
+pets in one of the leading theatres. He put his lions, tigers,
+leopards and hyenas through their part of the entertainment, awing the
+audience by his awful nerve and his control over them. As a closing
+act to the performance, he was to introduce an enormous
+boa-constrictor, thirty feet long. He had bought it when it was only
+two days old, and for twenty years he handled it daily, so that it was
+considered perfectly harmless and completely under his control. He had
+seen it grow from a tiny reptile, which he often carried in his bosom,
+into a fearful monster. The curtain rose upon an Indian woodland
+scene. The wild, weird strains of an oriental band steal through the
+trees. A rustling noise is heard, and a huge serpent is seen winding
+its way through the undergrowth. It stops. Its head is erect. Its
+bright eyes sparkle. Its whole body seems animated. A man emerges
+from the heavy foliage. Their eyes meet. The serpent quails before
+the man--man is victor. The serpent is under control of a master.
+Under his guidance and direction it performs a series of fearful feats.
+At a signal from the man it slowly approaches him and begins to coil
+its heavy folds around him. Higher and higher do they rise, until man
+and serpent seem blended into one. Its hideous head is reared above
+the mass. The man gives a little scream, and the audience unite in a
+thunderous burst of applause, but it freezes upon their lips. The
+trainer's scream was a wail of death agony. Those cold, slimy folds
+had embraced him for the last time. They crushed the life out of him,
+and the horror-stricken audience heard bone after bone crack as those
+powerful folds tightened upon him. Man's playful thing had become his
+master. His slave for twenty years had now enslaved him.
+
+The following is a will left by a drunkard of Oswego, New York State:
+"I leave to society a ruined character and a wretched example. I leave
+to my parents as much sorrow as they can, in their feeble state, bear.
+I leave to my brothers and sisters as much shame and mortification as I
+could bring on them. I leave to my wife, a broken heart--a life of
+shame. I leave to each of my children, poverty, ignorance, a low
+character, and the remembrance that their father filled a drunkard's
+grave." It behooves us as Odd-Fellows to ponder well the lessons
+taught by our order. Unless the principles that are laid down are
+fully carried out, we can never be Odd-Fellows in spirit and in truth.
+Today is our opportunity; act now. Have you ever seen those marble
+statues fashioned into a fountain, with the clear water flowing out
+from the marble lips or the hand, on and on forever? The marble stands
+there, passive, cold, making no effort to arrest the gliding water. So
+it is that time flows through the hands of men, swift, never pausing
+until it has run itself out, and the man seems petrified into a marble
+sleep, not feeling what it is that is passing away forever. And the
+destiny of nine men out of ten accomplishes itself before they realize
+it slipping away from them, aimless, useless, until it is too late.
+"Be such a man, live such a life, that if every man were such as you,
+and every life a life like yours, this earth would be God's Paradise."
+
+Remember that no good the humblest of us has wrought ever dies. There
+is one long, unerring memory in the universe, out of which nothing
+dies. A chill autumn wind, blowing over a sterile plain, bore within
+its arms a little seed, torn with ruthless force from its matrix on a
+lofty tree, and dropped the seed upon the sand to perish. A bright
+winged beetle, weary with flight and languid with the chilly air,
+rested for a moment on the arid plain. The little seed dropped Aeolus
+served to satisfy the hunger of the beetle, which presently winged its
+flight to the margin of a swift running stream that had sprung from the
+mountain side, and cleaving a bed through rocks of granite, went gaily
+laughing upon its cheery way down to the ever rolling sea. Sipping a
+drop of the crystal flood, the beetle crawled within a protecting
+ledge, and, folding its wings, lay down to pleasant dreams. The Ice
+King passed along and touched the insect in its sleep. Its mission was
+fulfilled; but the conflict of the seasons continued until the white
+destroyer melted in the breath of balmy spring. And then a sunbeam
+sped to the chink wherein the body of the insect lay, and searching for
+the little seed entombed, but not destroyed, invited it to "join the
+Jubilee of returning life and hope." Under the soft wooing of the
+peopled ray, the little seed began to swell with joy, tiny rootlets
+were developed within the body of the protecting beetle, a minute stem
+shot out of its gaping mouth, and lo! a mighty tree had been carried
+from the desert, saved from the frosts of winter, nurtured and started
+upon its mission of life and usefulness by an humble insect that had
+perished with the flowers. The agent had passed away, but, building
+better than he knew, the wide-spreading tree remained by the margin of
+the life-giving stream, a shelter and a rest to the weary traveler upon
+life's great highway through many fretful centuries.
+
+A child abandoned by its mother to perish in an Egyptian marsh may
+become the instrument to deliver a nation from bondage, and an
+unostentatious man, unknown to fortune and to fame, may become the
+agent of a mighty work destined to benefit the human race as long as it
+may last upon the earth. George Eliot says, "Our deeds are like
+children that are born to us; they live and act apart from our own
+will. Nay, children may be strangled, but deeds never; they have an
+indestructible life, both in and out of our consciousness."
+
+No man has come to true greatness who has not felt in some degree that
+his life belongs to his race, and that what God gives him he gives him
+for mankind. The different degrees of consciousness are really what
+make the different degrees of greatness in men.
+
+While Odd-Fellowship does not claim to be a religious institution, yet
+so closely is it allied to Christianity that we deem it proper to
+discuss these questions. I quote from Dr. Lyman Abbott's lecture on
+"Christianity and Orientalism," as follows: "Religion as a thought has
+four questions to answer: First, What is God? Second, What is man?
+Third, What is the relation between God and man? Fourth, What is the
+life which man is to live when he understands and enters into that
+relation? There is no other question; there is nothing left. What is
+God? What is man? And how are men to live when they have entered into
+that relationship? Now, Christianity has its answer to each one of
+those four questions. God--one true, righteous, loving, helpful Father
+of the whole human race. God--love. And love, what is that? Such a
+life as Jesus Christ lived on the earth. What is man? Man is in the
+image of God. If he is not, if he fails in that, he fails being a man.
+He is in the image of God, and not until he has come to be in the
+image, of God will he be a man. What is a statue? I can see a nose, a
+mouth, appearing out of the marble block. No, it is not a statue, it
+is a half-done statue. Wait until the sculptor is through, then you
+will see the statue. Not till God is done will you see a man, and you
+never saw one except as you saw him in Jesus of Nazareth. And what is
+the relation between this God and this man? It is the relationship of
+the most intimate fellowship that the human soul can conceive; one life
+dwelling in the other life, and filling the other life full of His own
+fullness. You can not get any closer relationship to God than that.
+When this fullness has been realized, when you and I have the fullness
+of God in us, when God has finished, the man life will result. Just
+such a life as Christ lived, with all the splendor of self-sacrifice,
+with all the glory of service, with all the magnificent heroism, with
+all the enduring patience."
+
+
+
+
+BROTHER UNDERWOOD'S DREAM.
+
+Being invited some time since to deliver an address before a benevolent
+institution, and being pressed amid the daily business cares which
+surrounded, I was fearful I should not be able to command sufficient
+time for preparation of the task. Returning home, I retired to my bed,
+my thoughts still keeping themselves in active motion in their endeavor
+to "think out" what I should say. In this state of mind I fell asleep,
+and soon was in dreamland. I dreamed that death had taken place, and
+as I approached the gates of the unseen world, I was met by an angel,
+who kindly tendered his services in escorting me through the realms of
+Heaven. Being a stranger there, I gladly and gracefully accepted his
+kind invitation. Proceeding along the pearly streets, enraptured with
+the beauties which surrounded me, I saw a multitude of people, the
+number of whom figures fail to compute; but I noticed there were
+dividing lines, and they were gathered in companies. Observing a
+beautiful body of water in the distance, and a gathering of one company
+by its banks, I inquired of my escort who they were. He replied they
+were Baptists, and said "they always keep near the water's edge." Just
+beyond was another company, which my faithful attendant informed me was
+a Presbyterian band, and that their infant baptism views still clinging
+to them was one of the causes of their "corralling" together. Just
+then we heard loud and prolonged shouting and singing of the hymn
+"Shall we gather at the river," and, pointing to the spot from whence
+it came, near a beautiful stream not far off, the angel said: "Those
+are the Methodists. They never cease shouting, and so loud are they at
+times that they annoy the Episcopalians, whom you see on the opposite
+side of the stream, in their discussion of the doctrine of apostolic
+succession." Seeing still other gatherings farther on, I was anxious
+to go thither and mingle with them; but my guide remonstrated, saying:
+"You can see from this standpoint the representatives of all churches.
+There, said he, are the Catholics and the Jews, the Universalists and
+the Congregationalists, the Unitarians and the Moravians, all with
+their varied 'creeds,' and if you go that way you will be surrounded by
+them, each trying to prove that you got to Heaven through their
+peculiar doctrine or faith."
+
+Turning to the right, we moved on, only to pass to more gorgeous and
+beautiful apartments, where the streets were golden. Here I observed
+another multitude, but it was one body. "This," said the angel, "is
+the gathering of the various priests and pastors, rectors and rabbis,
+and the ministers and the elders who are trying to unite on some common
+ground upon which their congregations (which we had passed) might
+stand, where there would be but 'One Lord, one faith, one baptism.'"
+Gal., iv, 5. For, said the angel, until then, they go not up with
+their churches and creeds to higher seats above, for "neither
+circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision." Gal., v, 6.
+
+Proceeding on our way we approached a magnificent archway, over the
+lintels of which was inscribed, "The Christian's Home in Glory." The
+grandeur of this new apartment exceeded all the rest, a description of
+which lies beyond the power of words, "For eye hath not seen, nor the
+ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man the things which
+God hath prepared for them that love him." I Cor., ii, 9. This I found
+to be the abode of the apostles, martyrs and Christians of all ages.
+Here was Paul and Peter, and the prophets, the thief on the cross and
+Bunyan, Lazarus and Baxter, Stephen and Father Abraham, Martha and Mary
+and the widow who gave her two mites. Pausing, I beheld, with banners
+above, an innumerable number "marching on," with Lincoln and Lovejoy,
+Lyman, Beecher and John Brown in the advance, and on the banners was
+inscribed, "These are they which came out of great tribulation." Rev.,
+viii, 14. The angel said: "That is the multitude of poor slaves from
+the cotton fields of earth, doing homage to their deliverers." "They
+shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun
+light on them, nor any heat." Rev., vii, 16. Here I also found Watts
+and Wesley singing, while Bliss (who had but lately been translated
+from earth to heaven by way of Ashtabula bridge), catching the
+inspiration, was setting the songs of Heaven to the music of earth.
+Gazing on the many thrones and crowns, there were some of peculiar
+brightness. I looked on one, and what was the inscription? Was it, I
+was a Methodist? No. I was immersed? No. I was a Jew? No. But
+rather this: "Because I delivered the poor that cried and fatherless,
+and him that had none to help him, the blessing of him that was ready
+to perish came upon me, and I caused the widow's heart to sing with
+joy." Job, xxix, 12, 14. And this was the crown of Job. And there was
+another just beyond, and I read the inscription. Was it, I was a
+Presbyterian? No. I prayed by quantity? No. I was a Universalist?
+No. But "Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is
+this, to visit the fatherless and the widow in their affliction and to
+keep himself unspotted from the world." James, i, 27. And while the
+memory and name of Peabody, the philanthropist, is and shall be honored
+and loved for ages to come in two hemispheres, his crown of glory in
+heaven is second to none. But there was still another. It was worn by
+one of queenly beauty, and she sat upon her throne; the splendor of her
+robe and the brilliancy of her apparel dimmed my vision. I read her
+inscription, set, as it was, in Heaven's choicest diamonds. Was it, I
+was an Episcopalian? No. I was baptized? No. I was a Catholic? No.
+But thus: "I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat; I was thirsty, and
+ye gave me drink; I was a stranger, and ye took me in; naked, and ye
+clothed me; I was sick, and ye visited me; I was in prison, and ye came
+unto me." Matt., xxv, 35, 36. And before her throne stood thousands
+who had come up from the battle fields of the Crimea, and the widows
+and orphans, the lame and the halt, the blind and the deaf from the
+streets and alleys of London, and as they shouted their hallelujahs
+before her, they carried banners on which were emblazoned these words:
+"Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my
+brethren, ye have done it unto me." Matt., xxv, 40. And the crown of
+Florence Nightingale glistens brightly in Heaven. Passing on, and
+observing a large number of vacant thrones and crowns, I naturally
+asked, for whom are these? The angel replied: "For the Christians of
+earth; the managers of the 'homes' for the friendless, the widows and
+the orphans, and those who, regardless of their respective church
+creeds and doctrines, like their Master when he was on earth, go about
+doing good." The angel vanished, and I awoke.
+
+MORAL.--Brethren, in our tenacity for church creeds, let us not fail in
+the practice of a little daily Christianity. "Finally, brethren, if
+there be any virtue and if there be any praise, think on these things."
+Gal., iv, 8.
+
+
+
+
+THE IMPERIAL VIRTUE
+
+ Though sophists may argue, or philosophers prate,
+ The evils of lying they can not mitigate.
+ Our God's law is truth! Who then dares justify
+ A falsehood? Remember, a lie is a lie!
+ Let this he our motto, in old age or youth:
+ "All lying is sinful, so, stick to the truth!"
+
+"Truth we accept as a cardinal virtue, and require its practice on the
+part of all the votaries of Odd-Fellowship while traveling the rugged
+journey of life in search of reward and rest." Truth is above all
+things else, and every Odd-Fellow knows full well that his obligation
+binds him to speak the truth. Remember a lie is never justifiable. It
+does the person more harm than that he seeks to avoid by telling a
+falsehood would do. "What is truth?" This question of Pilate is in
+the air today. It is repeated on every side and in every department of
+intellectual pursuit. It always pays to tell the truth under all
+circumstances. Abraham came near bringing a whole nation into trouble
+in lying about his wife. Be it said to the honor of President Grant,
+that once a visitor called at the White House wishing to see him. The
+door-keeper told the servant to tell the visitor the president was not
+in. General Grant, who was very busy, heard what was said. He called
+out, "Say no such thing. I don't lie myself, and won't allow anyone to
+lie for me." Tell the truth always. "I said in my haste all men are
+liars." Psalms, cxvi, 2.
+
+It was a very sweeping assertion that the Psalmist made, and one that
+incriminates us all. He probably did not mean that all men were liars
+in the sense that everybody always spoke untruthfully, but that the
+great majority of people would, under certain stress of circumstances,
+equivocate to suit the conditions of the occasion. If that was what he
+meant, he uttered a sage truth when he said very hastily one day: "All
+men are liars." Though a hasty utterance, facts seem to prove its
+truthfulness. The greatest mischief-maker in the world today is the
+liar. I honestly believe that lying causes more real anguish and
+suffering than any other evil. It would be effort wasted to spend much
+time in proof of this assertion of David's, so we will attempt to
+classify briefly, that each of us may know where he belongs. First,
+there is the deliberate lie. This species needs no particular
+definition. All are acquainted with it, all have met it, some have
+uttered it. You all know it when you see it; it is barefaced and
+shameless; it reeks with the mire of falsity and is foul with the slime
+of the pit infernal. This lie contains not an atom of truth, is
+tinctured not with a grain of fact, but is a full-blooded,
+thoroughbred, out and out lie. Then we have the campaign lie. A
+large, open-faced fellow, loud-voiced and blatant; bold, daring and
+sweeping; it claims everything, asserts everything, denies anything.
+
+During the campaign this lie is a factor. Men buy papers to read it,
+and go miles to hear it. The campaign lie is the greatest worker in
+the canvass for votes. He pats the workman on the back and promises to
+fill his pail with sirloin steak and fresh salmon, when, if the other
+man is elected, he will have to carry liver and codfish. He grasps the
+merchant strongly by the hand and promises him larger sales and better
+profits in case his party gets into power; he enters the magnate's
+office and promises him increased dividends and no strikes; he promises
+everything till after election, when he has no more promises to make.
+
+There is the polite lie, too. A very gentle affair this. A very
+proper lie, clothed with the attire of an elegant etiquette and of
+graceful form. It is never harsh and never rude, but smooth as oil, as
+gentle as a zephyr. The number of polite lies that are told every day
+are legion. It would be useless to attempt to classify them, worse
+than useless to try to enumerate them. They are of all sizes, colors,
+descriptions and shapes. They have much in common, but differ widely
+in particular. No locality is destitute of this venerable and classic
+falsehood. The ancients used it, the moderns still cling to it; the
+poor find it handy, the rich could not keep house without it; it
+abounds in every clime and thrives in every latitude. The polite
+hostess says to the departing guest: "We have been delighted by your
+visit; do us the favor to come again," when she sincerely hopes that
+most any catastrophe may overtake her rather than another visit from
+this same personage. There are the every-day expressions, 'Not at
+home,' which the housemaid is instructed to give the caller; and a
+score of other social lies which in truth deceive nobody, nine times
+out of ten. Society would lose little and gain much if the polite lie
+could be banished, and every man say what he thought and speak as he
+felt.
+
+Another lie I will notice is the business lie. The business lie is a
+very matter of fact lie. It sounds well. There are some genuine
+bankrupt sales, of course; there are a few bona fide smoke, fire and
+water mark-downs undoubtedly, but there are more advertised in a week
+than there are failures and fires in a year. Good, staple merchandise
+will usually bring its value, and he who advertises an unheard of
+bargain has generally set a trap for the unwary. One class of goods in
+the window marked a certain price, an inferior class on the bargain
+counter at the same figure. You bargain for a piece of furniture at a
+surprisingly low figure; when it is delivered you have every reason to
+suppose that it is like what you bought in appearance alone. A roll of
+cloth marked "all wool," it is half cotton, and the rest shoddy. The
+business lie, though found so often, is never the friend of merchant or
+purchaser. It is the foe of all honest transactions. Office,
+salesroom and storehouse would be better without it; proprietor, clerk
+and purchaser would thrive better if rid of it.
+
+The lie of gossip. If by some power, human or divine, the gossiping
+tongue could be silenced and the tattling mouth effectually closed,
+half of the evil of this world would already be stopped, and the other
+would commence to languish for want of patronage. The lie of gossip is
+the blackest of them all. The blackest of all the black horde, the
+very worst of the whole evil troop; insinuating, sly and crafty, it
+creeps around with a serpent's stealth, and carries beneath its tongue
+the deadly poison of ten thousand adders. The venom can be extracted
+from the cobra's fangs, but no power on earth can tame the tongue of an
+unprincipled gossip. Some lies you can kill, but the lie of gossip is
+imperishable. You may clip its wings, but its flight is unhindered;
+you may cut off its head, but two will grow out in its place; you may
+crush it to earth beneath the heel of denial. Let it alone and
+possibly the dirty, contemptible, infamous thing will die; touch it not
+and it may droop and languish; do not chase it and it may grow weak for
+want of exercise.
+
+Oh, my dear reader, above all things, don't have your life a lie, your
+career a falsehood. Be no hypocrite, live no lie, and the God of all
+truth will see something in you to admire if you live truthfully and
+honestly before all men. Truth is a sure pledge not impaired, a shield
+never pierced, a flower that never dieth, a state that feareth no
+fortune, and a port that yields no danger. We can not build a manly
+character unless we are in possession of the imperial virtue, truth.
+Ah! truth is the diamond for which the candid mind ever seeks. It is
+the sanction of every appeal that is made for the good and the right.
+It may be crushed to earth, it may be long in achieving victory, but it
+is omnipotent and must triumph at last. Christ brought truth into the
+world. Truth, then, is a personal, experimental and practical thing.
+It is a thing of the heart, and not mere outward forms; a living
+principle in the soul, influencing the mind, employing the affections,
+guiding the will, and directing as well as enlightening the conscience.
+It is a supreme, not a subordinate matter, demanding and obtaining the
+throne of the soul-giving law to the whole character, and requiring the
+whole man and all his conduct to be in subordination. Truth blends
+with every occupation. It is noble and lofty, not abject, servile and
+groveling; it communes with God, with holiness, with Heaven, with
+eternity and infinity. Truth is a happy, and not a melancholy thing,
+giving a peace that passeth understanding, and a joy that is
+unspeakable and full of glory. And it is durable, not a transient
+thing, passing with us through life, lying down with us on the pillow
+of death, rising with us at the last day, and dwelling in our souls in
+Heaven as the very element of eternal life. Such is truth, the
+sublimest thing in our world, sent down to be our comforter and
+ministering angel on earth.
+
+It is plainly God's intention, as in nature and in history, that our
+human life should grow better and more joyous as it advances, and that
+the best shall not be at the first, but shall wait until we are ready
+for it. The highest and largest blessings can come to men only when
+the men are fitted to hold and to use them. If you are going to give a
+man a purse or a diamond you can thrust it into his hand in his youth,
+or on the street, even when he is asleep; but if you would give to him
+a great truth or virtue, if you would make him a noble character, you
+must wait upon the man's growth, and be content if after many years you
+see only a flash of what you would give him appearing. Step by step,
+through all the gradations, we travel, and if faithful to truth, Christ
+will make in us a perfect manhood, and of us a perfect society. His
+gift is so great, vital and complex, that He can not bestow it all in
+the beginning. He would make our life an increasingly joyous life, and
+give us the best of its wine at the last of its feast. Christ would
+have us always increasingly hopeful and joyous, and never of sad
+countenance. All our faculties were designed to minister to our joy.
+All the great world of life below is a happy world. The children of
+the air and the water are all baptized into joy. Even the solitary
+creatures that carry their narrow houses with them have their joys,
+which are well known to their intimate acquaintances. So in the world
+of adult man we find the joy of life disproportionate to condition and
+faculty. In the faces of the men we meet on the streets we see many
+scars and dark lines of storm and care; only seldom do the faces we
+meet there wear the rainbow. Men are without joy because they have
+violated the laws of nature, they have subordinated their manly powers,
+reason and conscience to their animal instincts; they have lived by
+wrong theories and wrong methods, and for unmanly ends, and thus have
+exhausted the joy of life's banquet.
+
+A man can have deep and continuous joy only if his life is continuously
+rational and progressively manly. He must put away childish things and
+live for truth and right, for love and immortal virtue. If our hearts
+sadden as our years increase and our thoughts widen, it is because
+there has been a defect in our vision and a sophistry in the logic of
+our conduct. If the growing corn comes only to the blade and to the
+ear, and not to the full golden corn in the ear, we may be sure it is
+because there has been something wrong in our gardening. Christ comes
+into our wasting life to give us a new, a higher and a better joy; to
+give us new truth, new faith, new arguments, new motives, new impulses
+and new joys. Christ gives us the Heavenly Father, and thus lifts us
+into the dignity and beatitude of a divine nature, relationship and
+destiny. Man is a child of the skies, and can not find rest complete
+and joy abiding in anything less or lower. Bearing now the image of
+the earthly, we must go on to bear the image of the heavenly. To have
+our manly joy ever increasing we must keep the heavenly in sight and
+take our way from it.
+
+Christ brings us into the living alliance with forces and personalities
+that are spiritual, and thus makes us strong to resist all animal
+temptations and those impulses toward greed and wrong which, if
+indulged, drain our life of its manly felicities. He would have us
+lift our manly cups to God, and make their rims to touch the heavens.
+Christ would have us to live for other's welfare and to know the joy of
+duty and of sacrifice. It is the man who is living for wife, and
+child, and neighbor, who has flung himself with all his might into the
+carrying forward of some great cause that blesses his fellow-men, who
+knows the true and increasing joy of the manly life. The happiest
+woman in the world is the mother who is living for her child. It is in
+working out the salvation of other people that we find the true joy of
+our own. It is this joy that carries the martyr through his fiery
+tasks with a song and a shout. To be able at the end of our days to
+look up to God and say, "I have finished the work thou gavest me to
+do," is to have the best wine at the last of our feast. We must have
+joy; it is indispensable. It makes us healthy and strong and enables
+us to be of some use in the world. It is so necessary to our best
+becoming and doing that we must put away everything that increases it.
+We must have the joy of truth and virtue, of duty and sacrifice, of
+hope and love, which is the joy of the eternal life. Christ thus holds
+out to us a joy that lasts, and one that satisfies forever.
+
+Jesus was no cynic, no ascetic, and no fanatic. He loved the great
+outward world, and was the friend of all men. He was hated only by the
+Pharisees, if to these He spoke sharply, His words to the children were
+sweet as a mother's, and in His words about the birds and the flowers
+you hear the tones of a lover. He loved the lakes of sweet Galilee,
+her hills, her fields and her olive groves; and among them often took
+His disciples apart to rest awhile. Adopt Christ's views of God; of
+the future; Christianize your opinions, your character and your
+conduct, and you will have manly joy even in the midst of sorrow.
+Christ lived much in communion with God. He lived much out of doors,
+in the fields and among trees, the birds and the flowers.
+
+We must come back to nature. Happy the man who owns a piece of ground
+in the country and lives on it betimes, where he can hear the robins
+singing their hymns and the winds chanting their litanies; where he can
+see the sun rise and feel the hush of the hills; where the spirit that
+is in the beautiful world can touch and bless him as it did the blessed
+Christ.
+
+Brothers, I wish you great joy. Live in the constant sense of the
+Heavenly Father's loving presence, and of nature's veracity and
+friendly intention. Distrust all doctrines, all opinions and all ways
+of living that destroy manly joyousness. Never lose sight of the fact
+that a noble life is a truthful life. Truth is a trust. He who has
+discovered any portion of useful truth has something in trust for
+mankind. God is the author of truth, and when man seeks this imperial
+virtue and acquires it, he is in possession of great power.
+
+This brings us to the final practical thought. This power must be
+appropriated. The cable car that is unattached to the cable will make
+no progress and stand still forever, even though the engines in the
+power house glow with heat, and the cable, gliding along in the center
+of the track not two feet away, is laden down with power. The cable
+car must close its grappling iron and grip the cable before progress
+can be made. It must come in contact with the power. An electric lamp
+will swing dark and unlighted while all the other lamps about it send
+forth enlightening rays, and all the dynamos in the world may be
+revolving in the engine house, sending a surging current within a few
+inches of the isolated lamp, and all in vain unless it come in contact
+with the power. You must turn the switch and let the current flow in,
+and then the lamp will itself shine and will illumine its surroundings
+like the rest. So, in like manner, if we are to make progress in this
+life, we must lay hold of the cable. We must come in contact with the
+Divine. If we do not, the power of God is of no avail to us. If we
+would be lights in the world, we must come in contact with the Divine
+spirit, we must unbar the doors to our hearts and let the current of
+divine power and love flow into our lives and illumine them.
+
+The great design of Odd-Fellowship is to improve the morals and manners
+of men, to promote their interest, well being and happiness. Great
+prudence is demanded in our daily life and conversation. We should be
+actuated by a realizing sense of our position, and by example, action
+and generous thought, recommend our cause to the consideration of
+others. We should persevere for the attainment of every commendable
+virtue, to raise the mind from the degrading haunts of intemperance and
+folly; we should be distinguished for usefulness to society and the
+community at large. A good Odd-Fellow must necessarily be an upright
+and useful member of the community. The precepts inculcated are
+calculated to stimulate to the faithful performance of every moral and
+relative duty; and an individual who holds a standing with us, and is
+careless and negligent of these things, is a reproach to the
+Order--they wear the livery, and bow before the same shrine, but in the
+heart and practice they belie their profession. Profanity,
+intemperance and every species of immorality are rigidly
+discountenanced. We have pledged ourselves to aid in diffusing the
+principles of brotherly love throughout the world. We have assumed the
+office of guarding the holy flame which burns on the altar of
+benevolence, and we are bound to cherish its principles. That brother
+is recreant to every honorable feeling who can trifle with the solemn
+pledge he has taken.
+
+A duty we owe to the community is to cultivate the principle of virtue,
+to lend holy serenity to the mind, and shed around a halo of light and
+glory to direct the steps of others in virtue, to happiness and
+greatness. The man who treads only in virtue's ways, when every act is
+honest, acquires the confidence and friendship of others, thus
+benefiting others, and thus benefiting the community, which, also, the
+center of another circle, continues this influence to those that
+surround it, purifying the thought, emboldening the idea and elevating
+the man. How grand is the position Odd-Fellowship now occupies--a
+world of honesty in a world of deceit, with a character strictly
+virtuous and solely dependent upon its members for the perpetuity of
+that character.
+
+It depends upon the brethren to be virtuous, upright, honest and
+benevolent, thus sustaining in its purity the noble reputation it now
+enjoys, which will continue a bright and shining star in the
+constellation until time shall be no more, when it will be perpetuated
+in the glorious light of eternity. Amid the wrecks of institutions and
+powerful interests that were a short time since thought to be
+impregnable against all assaults, the Independent Order of Odd-Fellows
+still maintains its vantage ground, and bears its banners proudly up.
+With its doors thrown so widely open to applicants for admission,
+composed as it is of nearly every shade of thought or educational
+influence, whether of sect or party, with all the infirmities incident
+to human nature, modifying by their weakness its true purposes, or
+retarding its advancement, its unity and moral force, its stability and
+progress are truly wonderful. Its bond of cohesion, so frail and yet
+so potent, is seemingly inexplicable. It is the recognition of the
+principles of brotherhood and fraternity, and the practice of their
+resultant virtues. To appreciate and practice is to attain strength.
+We are weak and frail. Odd-Fellowship is strong, and its principles
+are as eternal as the stars. The history of the past is little but a
+record of the domination of physical force. The law of might was the
+law of right. Violence and strife, outrages and wrong, have been for
+ages the common heritage of the race. Man has been the sport and
+victim of human passions, and notwithstanding the culture and the
+progress of the race, the earth yet resounds with the tread of armed
+combatants. Weary, sad-eyed toilers groan under the burden of war,
+countless millions are squandered upon the maintenance of
+non-producing, destructive hosts.
+
+Widows and orphans, nay, the very angels in heaven, if they are
+permitted to look down upon us from their bright abodes in bliss, must
+mourn over the sad result of man's semi-barbarism, and his worship of
+the world's materialism. Long ere this mind should have been the
+controlling force in all nations claiming to be civilized. Pure
+intellect and its struggles, its aspirations for light and truth,
+should have relegated to the regions of barbarism and darkness mere
+animal contests. Not only so, but intellectual supremacy should have
+been in its turn subordinated, or crowned by true spiritual life. "God
+is a spirit, and they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit and
+in truth." Man would occupy a higher and happier position than he at
+present fills if he had earnestly co-operated with good agencies for
+the unfolding and development of his better nature.
+
+The special mission of Odd-Fellowship is to incite and stimulate the
+dormant moral energies to action, to rouse the lethargic, encourage the
+timid, and to strengthen the aspirations for a nobler and a better
+life. Reaching out its helpful hand to the needy and distressed upon
+the one hand, and with the other battling with selfishness, intolerance
+and vice--with all that dwarfs man's moral nature--it appeals to
+something within us, to be earnest advocates of its principles, by
+making them a living faith and illustrating its beneficent purposes.
+If we make one man purer and better, and that man one's own self, we
+have done something toward the betterment of the world. The voices of
+the past and of the present all speak to us today. Men and brethren,
+let us hearken unto them, and putting our trust in God, let us march
+onward, side by side together, until the standards of our order are
+planted upon the highest summit of achievement, and as their glorious
+folds are illuminated by the Sun of Righteousness, may the simple yet
+the sublime legend emblazoned thereon be seen and acknowledged by the
+nations, as with uplifted eyes and reverent hearts they read, "God is
+our Father, and we are all brothers."
+
+
+
+
+QUIET HOUR THOUGHTS.
+
+Genuine love and sympathy are what wins the hearts of our fellows.
+
+A Christian ought always to wake up in the morning in a good humor.
+
+Remember that sorrow and pain soften the heart and sweeten the temper.
+
+The young man who sees no beauty in a flower will make a mean husband.
+
+If you love young people's work you will prove it by laboring and
+sacrificing for it.
+
+Begin active work in your society at once, and do not fail to see that
+each one has something to do.
+
+The fact that God gives any consideration to mere mites of humanity
+scattered about the surface of this little world of ours is conclusive
+proof of His infinity.
+
+What a blessing it is that we can not always do what we wish to do, or
+have everything our own way.
+
+Many words are no more an indication of depth of feeling and heart than
+are boiling bubbles in a frying pan.
+
+There are some people who would scorn to keep bad company, but who
+think the worst kind of thoughts by the hour.
+
+Do not wait for somebody else to put your society on the roll of honor.
+If you want a thing well done, do it yourself.
+
+If the very hairs of our head are numbered, then why should we not
+consult the Father in regard to all our temporal affairs?
+
+How the heart of God must yearn for the record of lives devoted to
+humanity. He asks no higher service of man than this.
+
+The truly great man is that one who is satisfied if he is doing to the
+utmost limit of his capacity the thing which he has at hand.
+
+God would never make the mistake of helping any young man or young
+woman who did not make every possible effort to help himself.
+
+Do not make the mistake of thinking you are the biggest man in your
+society. Bigger men than you have died and have not been missed after
+forty-eight hours.
+
+The girl who is caught by gold-headed canes, carried by heads with no
+brains on the inside and only pasted hair on the outside, has a
+pitiable future before her.
+
+No pain, no privation, no sacrifice endured for Christ is a loss, but
+is rather a gain. Christ will not forget those who suffered for Him
+when He comes to make up His jewels.
+
+Sunday manners are just like Sunday clothes; everybody can tell that
+you put them on for the occasion only, and know that you are not used
+to wearing them through the week.
+
+The devil led the Prodigal Son away from a good home into the gay
+society of the world, and amused him with the pleasures of sin till he
+got him down, then he fed him on husks. That is the way he works.
+
+A good many church members do not like to have it known how much they
+give for missions. They remind us of the man who said, when asked
+about the amount he gave, "What I give is nothing to nobody."
+
+The reason why some people do not want the preacher to preach on
+personal sins, is because they are afraid he might say something
+against them.
+
+When we see a man going to get water at his neighbor's well, we
+naturally suppose his own is dry. So when we see a Christian seeking
+the pleasures of the world, we suppose he no longer finds pleasure in
+religion.
+
+To know which way a stream of water is flowing, you must not look at
+the little eddy, but at the main current, and to know which way a life
+is tending, you must not look at a single act, but at the whole trend
+of the life.
+
+Satan likes to discourage people, to hinder them in the performance of
+their Christian duties, but remember that Christ has said, "My grace is
+sufficient for you." Go steadily forward in the line of duty and
+success will crown your efforts.
+
+The light of a candle can not be seen very far in the light of a
+noon-day sun, but at night it may be seen for a long distance and may
+be a guiding star to some poor wanderer. And so, God sometimes darkens
+our way that we may shine.
+
+The man who prays for the conversion of the heathen, and then spends a
+great deal more for tobacco than he gives to missions, is certainly not
+very consistent in his praying and giving.
+
+Thomas Hood once wrote to his wife: "I never was anything, dearest,
+till I knew you; and I have been a better, happier, and more prosperous
+man ever since. Lay by that truth in lavender, sweetest, and remind me
+of it when I fail."
+
+"I believe one reason why such numerous instances of erudition occur
+among the lower ranks is, that with the same powers of mind the poor
+student is limited to a narrower circle for indulging his passion for
+books, and must necessarily make himself master of the few he possesses
+before he can acquire more."--_Walter Scott_.
+
+Christians should not forget that God uses human agency in the work of
+salvation. The only reason that there are not more saved, is because
+the people of God do not put themselves at his disposal for the work.
+The Lord wants all to be saved, but they will not be saved until the
+people of God are willing to let the Lord use them to bring the lost
+unto Himself.
+
+Deceit and falsehood, whatever conveniences they may for a time promise
+or produce, are, in the sum of life, obstacles to happiness. Those who
+profit by the cheat distrust the deceiver; and the act by which
+kindness was sought puts an end to confidence.
+
+The judges of the election can not tell the difference, when they are
+counting the votes, between the one cast by the minister of the gospel
+and the one cast by the saloon-keeper, when it has been cast for the
+same party. Vote for principle rather than for party.
+
+"Let every man," said Sydney Smith, "be occupied in the highest
+employment of which his nature is capable, and die with the
+consciousness that he has done his best." If the highest employment is
+not to be found in our avocations, let us seek it in our leisure.
+
+Beware of anger of the tongue; control the tongue. Beware of anger of
+the mind; control the mind. Practice virtue with thy tongue and with
+thy mind. By reflection, by restraint and control, a wise man can make
+himself an island which no floods can overwhelm. He who conquers
+himself is greater than he who in battle conquers a thousand men. He
+who is tolerant with the intolerant, mild with the fault-finders, and
+free from passion with the passionate, him I call indeed a wise man.
+
+Brothers, keep posted in what your lodge is doing; knowing who is sick;
+inquire if there is not some widow in need of help; some poor orphan
+that should be clothed and provided with a home and sent to school.
+Remember that the widow was your brother's wife, and the children your
+brother's. Be a brother to the widow, and a kind uncle to your
+brother's children. There is plenty of work for you, and you agreed to
+do it. Cheer up the care-worn traveler on his pilgrimage--help the
+weak and weary, the lonely and sad ones. Time is passing by, and we
+have none too much of it in which to do our work. Remember that if we
+expect to complete our labor, now is the time; soon all will be over
+with us, and then all that we shall leave behind, by which to be
+remembered, will be the good or evil we have done. If we have done
+good it will be emblazoned on many hearts, and our names will be spoken
+of with reverence and love; but if we have done evil, our names will be
+blotted out of the memory of the good and true, and we despised.
+
+ "How is't the sons of men are sad,
+ Oppressed with grief and care?
+ How is't that some of this world's goods,
+ Have such a scanty share?
+ Why should the orphan's piercing cry,
+ Assail so oft our ear,
+ And thousands find the world to be
+ All desolate and drear?
+
+ "We do not solve the mystery
+ Of woes, the lot of man,
+ But in the lodge we all unite
+ To do the good we can.
+ 'Tis there we learn the pleasing task
+ To soothe the troubled breast,
+ To educate the orphan child,
+ And succor the distressed.
+
+ "Our motto--Friendship, Love and Truth--
+ These e'er shall be our guide,
+ Our aim shall be, of misery
+ To stop the running tide."
+
+ We ask not what's a brother's faith,
+ What country gave him birth;
+ But open the door to every creed
+ And nation of the earth.
+
+ Hail, Charity! Odd-Fellows all
+ Bow down before thy shrine;
+ They raise no altar, make no vow,
+ That is not wholly thine.
+
+
+
+
+LOVE SUPREME.
+
+Love is the key to the human heart. If we want to have power with God
+and man, we must cultivate love. It is love that burns truth into the
+hearts of people. A man may be a good lawyer without love. There may
+be a good surgeon without love. A man may be a good merchant without
+love. But a man can not be a good Odd-Fellow or Christian without
+love. I would rather have my heart full of love than be even a
+prophet. If a man is full of love, Paul says, "he is greater than a
+prophet." A wife would rather live in a cabin with the love of her
+husband, than to live in a palace without it. If I love a man I will
+not cheat him or slander him or envy him. I pity people who are
+constantly looking out for slights. It is better to look on the bright
+side rather than the dark side of life. Love will lead us to look on
+the bright side. Some persons are always magnifying the faults of
+others. They use a magnifying glass in this business. If you want
+power with persons, speak as well as you can of them. Self-control is
+a great thing. This comes and stays through love. How many dwarfs
+there are in God's church now. They have not grown one inch
+spiritually in twenty years. If our hearts are full of love, we are
+bound to grow. Many other graces pass away, but love is eternal. The
+most selfish man is the most miserable man. A man may be miserly with
+his money, but no man can be miserly with love. Love creates love.
+The more we love, the more we will be loved. Love must show itself.
+Love demonstrates its presence by action. Our lives, after all, are
+mere echoes. I speak harsh to a man, and he will speak harsh to me.
+If a man has bad neighbors it his own fault. If a woman has bad
+servants it is her own fault. If we make others happy we will be happy
+ourselves. If you are not happy, go and buy all the poor people near
+you a turkey for Christmas. "He that noticeth others shall be noticed
+also himself." If you want to get your own soul above its own
+troubles, go and do good to some unhappy soul. If we do this work, I
+believe we will have to do it in this world. There will be no tears to
+wipe away, or sorrows to assuage, or afflictions to remedy in the other
+world. This work is for this world. It is a blessed work. It is the
+best investment a man can make. It pays an hundred fold. Labors of
+love demonstrate better than the church membership that we are in the
+Master's service. This is the Master's business. Though my way
+through life has often been through graveyards and through glooms, I
+have loved and I have been loved, and I know that life is worth living.
+Love is the fulfilling of the law; the end of the gospel commandment;
+the bond of perfectness. Without it, whatever be our attainments,
+professions or sacrifices, we are nothing. Love obliterates the
+differences in education, wealth, station, religion, politics and
+nationality. It is a promoter of peace and harmony; it cultivates the
+social graces; it makes friends of strangers and brothers of
+acquaintances; it softens the asperities of life; it worships at the
+shrine of piety, and recognizes the omnipotence of God and the
+immortality of man. It is religious not sectarian, patriotic but not
+partisan. It glows by the fireside, radiant with perpetual joy. It
+glorifies God in worship and in song. It blesses humanity in genial
+mirth and human sympathies. It is a perennial fountain at which the
+old may drink and grow strong. It is a daily benediction to its
+devotees, and, like "a thing of beauty, is a joy forever." It stands
+like the statue of liberty, a beacon light to the tempest-tossed and
+wayfaring mariner and brother, pointing him the way to the haven of
+refuge, to the right living and right doing.
+
+Oh love, thou mightiest gift of God; thou white-winged trust in Him who
+doeth all things well; thou one light over His darkest providences,
+lingering to cheer when all else has passed away, thy whisper upon the
+dull ear of night. But alas! this world was made to break hearts in,
+while love was sent from heaven to heal them. The precious balm,
+though, is so scarce that many must die for want of it. Oh, the
+might-have-been! What human soul has not sung that dirge? Verily, the
+winds come, howling it by like an invisible band of mourners from the
+grave of all things. Alas! is anything in this life real, or are we
+indeed shadows, and this world altogether a shadowy land, while the
+blackened skies above give us only glimpses of a far-off better home,
+better friends and better love? Alas! Heaven's loudest complaint to
+mortals is ever for lack of love. Even He who sitteth upon the throne
+of thrones knoweth what it is to stretch out His arms in utter
+desertion of no one to love Him, no one to seek Him, and no one to fear
+Him--"no, not one." Then as we may best show our love to Him by loving
+one another, is it not well that we commence loving those around us at
+once? Ah! yes, and like the ambitious vine, do thou reach out all thy
+tendril thoughts to what is nearest, the while aspiring to the oak or
+the pine of the loftier trust, even the faith of Abraham that was
+accounted unto him for righteousness. Would I had some new phrase for
+love, some new figure for hope! How lonely and weary must that life be
+without love, how tasteless all its joys, and how vacant every scene.
+If we have the spirit of love we will live for others. Auguste Comte
+inscribed on the first page of his work, "Politique Positive," wherein
+he depicted in systematic form, life that had been forming itself
+throughout human history, these words: "Order and progress--live for
+others." The force of this thought is, in accord with Odd-Fellowship,
+which teaches love of our kind, love of right, zeal for the good.
+
+Man's happiness consists in living as a social being, living for self
+in order to more truly live for others. This is summed up in the word
+humanity. But affection, as the true motor force of life, must have a
+foundation, must stir us not only to the right things, but to the right
+means; in other words, action must be guided by knowledge. Improvement
+must be the aim of social life, as it is the incentive to individual
+effort. It is not enough to desire the good, or to know how to achieve
+it, we must labor for it. Associated effort gives the opportunity for
+gaining grander results than centuries of divided activity. The
+conception of humanity has grown nobler. The good of the vast human
+whole is now acknowledged as the end of all social union. Humanity
+embodies love; the object of our activity; the source of what we have;
+the ruler of the life under whose span we work, and suffer and enjoy.
+
+All religions, all social systems worthy of the name, have sought to
+regulate human nature and perfect the organization of society by
+proclaiming as their principles the cultivation of some grand social
+sentiments. Philosophers, moralists, preachers have united in saying:
+"Base your life upon a noble feeling, if you are to live aright; base
+the state upon a generous devotion of its members to some great ideal,
+if it is to prosper and be strong." All have agreed that the
+difference of life could only be harmonized by placing action under the
+stimulus of high unselfish passion. Odd-Fellowship has grown strong
+under this governing law. The banner it bears aloft proclaims
+sentiments that are attractive to all the nations of the earth. We are
+strong in as far as we truly interpret, for the good of humanity, this
+elevated aim, this devotion to fraternal ends.
+
+Compte defines religion as consisting of three parts--a belief, a
+worship, and a rule of life--of which all three are equal, and each as
+necessary as any other. As is truly said, "Society can not be touched
+without knowledge; and the knowledge of social organization of humanity
+is a vast and perplexing science. The race, like every one of us, is
+dependent on the laws of life, and the study of life is a mighty field
+to master." Enthusiasm of humanity would be but shallow did it not
+impel us to efforts to learn how to serve--demanding the best of
+conduct, brain and heart. The power of Odd-Fellowship lies in its
+fraternity. It goes forward with irresistible magnetism when its
+fraternal principles are truly interpreted. It furnishes to men a
+strong union, where general intelligence, by attrition, is increased;
+it provides a high moral standard; its objective action is such as
+touches the common heart of humanity; and by its grand co-operative
+system it gives the finest means of securing those advantages that tend
+to the securement of material comfort and mental and spiritual peace
+and happiness.
+
+Drummond says: "Love is the greatest thing in the world." Read what
+Paul says about it in I Cor., xiii: "Though I speak with the tongues of
+men and of angels, and have not love, I am become as sounding brass, or
+a tinkling cymbal. And though I have the gift of prophecy, and
+understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all
+faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not love, I am
+nothing. And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though
+I give my body to be burned, and have not love, it profiteth me
+nothing. Love suffereth long, and is kind; love envieth not; love
+vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up: Doth not behave itself unseemly;
+Seeketh not her own. Is not easily provoked. Thinketh no evil;
+rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth; beareth all
+things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things.
+Love never faileth; but whether there be prophecies, they shall fail;
+whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be knowledge,
+it shall vanish away. For we know in part, and we prophesy in part.
+But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part
+shall be done away. When I was a child, I spake as a child; but when I
+became a man, I put away childish things. For now we see through a
+glass, darkly; but then face to face; now I know in part; but then
+shall I know even as also I am known. And now abideth faith, hope,
+love, these three, but the greatest of these is love."
+
+The more I study Odd-Fellowship, the more I become convinced that I
+have just crossed the threshold, and that new truths and sublime
+lessons await me, of which I never dreamed. Brothers, there is hidden
+treasure in our order for which we must dig. It must be brought to the
+surface. We must know more of the beauties of this great organization
+of ours. "The greatest thing," says some one, "a man can do for his
+Heavenly Father is to be kind to some of His other children." "I
+wonder why it is that we are not all kinder than we are? How much the
+world needs it. How easily it is done. How instantaneously it acts.
+How infallibly it is remembered. How super-abundantly it pays itself
+back--for there is no debtor in the world so honorable, so superbly
+honorable, as love. Love is success. Love is happiness. Love is
+life." "Where love is, God is. He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in
+God. God is love. Therefore love." "Without distinction, without
+calculation, without procrastination, love. Lavish it upon the poor,
+where it is very easy; especially upon the rich, who often need it
+most; most of all upon our equals, where it is very difficult, and for
+whom perhaps we each do least of all. There is a difference between
+trying to please and giving pleasure. Give pleasure. Lose no chance
+of giving pleasure. For that is the ceaseless and anonymous triumph of
+a truly loving spirit. I shall pass through this world but once. Any
+good things that I can do, or any kindness that I can show to any human
+being, let me do it now. Let me not defer it or neglect it, for I
+shall not pass this way again. We can be Odd-Fellows only while we act
+like honest men."
+
+Every Odd-Fellow ought to be a "gentleman." Do you know the meaning of
+the word "gentleman"? "It means a gentleman--a man who does things
+gently, with love. And that is the whole art and mystery of it. The
+gentleman can not in the nature of things do an ungentle, an
+ungentlemanly thing." "Love doth not behave itself unseemly." Life is
+full of opportunities for learning love. Every man and woman every day
+has a thousand of them. There is an eternal lesson for us all, "how
+better we can love." What makes a good artist, a good sculptor, a good
+musician? Practice. What makes a man a good man, a man of love?
+Practice. Nothing else. If a man does not exercise his arm he
+develops no biceps muscle; and if a man does not exercise his soul, he
+acquires no muscle in his soul, no strength of character, no vigor of
+moral fibre, nor beauty of spiritual growth. Love is not a thing of
+enthusiastic emotion. It is a rich, strong, manly, vigorous expression
+of the whole round Christian character--the Christ-like nature in its
+fullest development. And the constituents of this great character are
+only to be built up by ceaseless practice. To love abundantly is to
+live abundantly, and to love forever is to live forever. We want to
+live forever for the same reason that we want to live tomorrow. Why do
+you want to live tomorrow? It is because there is some one who loves
+you, and whom you want to see tomorrow, and be with, and love back.
+There is no other reason why we should live on than that we love and
+are beloved. It is when a man has no one to love him that he commits
+suicide. The reason why, in the nature of things, love should be the
+supreme thing--because it is going to last; because in the nature of
+things it is an eternal life. It is a thing that we are living now,
+not that we get when we die; that we shall have a poor chance of
+getting when we die unless we are living now.
+
+No worse fate can befall a man in this world than to live and grow old
+alone, unloving and unloved. At any cost cultivate a loving nature.
+Then you will find as you look back upon your life that the moments
+when you have really lived are the moments when you have done things in
+a spirit of love. As memory scans the past, above and beyond all the
+transitory pleasures of life, there leap forward those supreme hours
+when you have been enabled to do unnoticed kindnesses to those around
+about you, things too trifling to speak about, but which you feel have
+entered into your eternal life. I have seen almost all the beautiful
+things God has made; I have enjoyed almost every pleasure that He has
+planned for man; and yet as I look back I see standing out above all
+the life that has gone, four or five short experiences when the love of
+God reflected itself in some poor imitation, some small act of love of
+mine, and these seem to be the things which alone of all one's life
+abide. Everything else in all our lives is transitory. Every other
+good is visionary. But the acts of love which no man knows about, or
+can ever know about--they fail not.
+
+Odd-Fellowship ought to grow. The kinship of the human race--how
+beautiful a thought! Without mutual aid the race would perish. Think
+of it. Throughout life you are dependent upon your fellow-man. Who
+can live without a friend? When you have no money and no home, where,
+brothers, will you find food and shelter? When low with fever, the
+tongue parched, the brain wandering, who will give you water, bathe
+your throbbing temples, and watch over you lest you die? See the old
+man. The frosts of seventy winters have whitened his head; his eye is
+dim; his limbs tremble; reason and memory fail; he is an infant again.
+He goes down to the valley of the shadow of death. Who shall lead him
+and comfort his weary soul? Who lay his body gently and reverently in
+the grave, and sod it over with green grass? So with us all. A man
+alone in the world, without a human being who cares whether he live or
+die! Not a hand to touch, nor a voice to hear, nor a smile to receive!
+Human affections forever sealed to him; no fireside; no home with
+father, mother, brothers, sisters; no little children, no son to be
+proud of; no daughters to caress; no "good night;" no "good morning."
+Who could bear it? The sun could not warm such a man. The brightest
+days and the greenest fields could not give him pleasure. Better chain
+him on a rock in mid-ocean and leave him to the vultures, than thus rob
+him of his kinship with the human race.
+
+This world is beautiful, and it is full of priceless sympathies. All
+creation is glorious with melody. The morning stars, saith the Bible,
+sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy when it was
+made. The universe of stars, and suns, and planets and globes, swing
+harmoniously through space. Not a sparrow falleth to the ground
+without our Father's notice; not a soul yearns, or sorrows, or
+rejoices, but He knoweth it. He hath made of one blood all nations of
+men to dwell together on the face of the earth. We are bound to each
+other by indissoluble ties. It is a law of nature that we must all
+work for each other. Though ten thousand miles apart; though oceans
+roll between us and continents divide us, we labor not for ourselves
+alone. You plow the furrow in California and sow the wheat for your
+brother in Louisiana, while he plants the cane and cotton for you. The
+good Siberian is this day roaming over snows and ice, hunting the otter
+and gathering furs, that you may be warm. Men are diving in the
+Persian gulf for pearls to grace your wives and daughters. The
+silkworm of India and China may have spun the threads of your dress,
+the Frenchman may have woven it; the hardy mariner braved the seas to
+bring it here. Truly, we are brothers. A common Father brought us all
+into this world, and to a common Father we all go. Let us, then, help
+one another, in money (if need be), in education, in sympathy.
+
+There is one feature of the order we desire to emphasize, and that is
+its full sympathy with those that labor and toil. No reference would
+do justice to the order that did not emphasize this fact. It is its
+pride and glory. It is from this class its membership is chiefly
+drawn. It was with this class it originated, the first lodge in the
+United States having been organized by half a dozen humble mechanics;
+Thomas Wildey, their leader, was a blacksmith. You see it had no
+aristocratic origin, and its broad and catholic sympathy, its
+popularity with this class is explained. They know its value, and have
+seen its active charity and experienced its beneficence. A man who has
+no sympathy with the humble and the lowly, a man of mean and narrow
+heart, will find no congenial dwelling place in our lodges. The true
+Odd-Fellow is a man of heart; his hand is open to every worthy appeal
+of the needy, and he is honest and upright in his life. It enforces no
+religious or political tests; in these every member is free; but it
+does teach and urge its members to be grateful to their Creator and
+loyal to their country. In conclusion, let me urge upon the living,
+fidelity to the teachings of Odd-Fellowship. If these are respected it
+will make you better citizens, better husbands, better fathers, better
+men. It is a cultivation of the heart and the better feelings, and
+expands our humanity. If you are poor, it will come to you, or your
+family, sometimes as a benefaction. If you are rich, you can afford to
+give, and with a good Odd-Fellow that is more blessed than to receive.
+
+I want to say here what I have often said in the lodge-room. I love
+Odd-Fellowship, above all, for the heart there is in it. For its
+display on the street and its pageantry I care but little. I shrink
+from it rather than follow it. But its benevolence, its active
+charity, and its mission of good will, I admire. When death's
+unwelcome presence rests within our portals, and obedient to his call a
+loved one has gone hence, we should give the mortal remains of the
+departed brother a decent sepulture; fondly cherish the remembrance of
+his virtues, and bury his frailties "beneath the clods which rest upon
+his bosom." We should then direct our thoughts and cares to the
+desolate home, where the widow, clad in the robes of grief, her heart
+cords broken and bleeding, is weeping over earth's only idol, now lost
+to earth forever. Then, too, should we extend the helping hand to the
+fatherless children, and endeavor to so direct their steps that their
+paths may be paths of usefulness and honor. These are the imperative
+duties. But our ministrations of charity and benevolence should by no
+means be confined exclusively within the pale of the order. This
+crowded world, with its eager millions, maddened with ambition's
+unquenchable fires, trampling under foot and well-nigh smothering each
+other in the great rush of competitive strife, is full of poor
+unfortunates, daily appealing for generous sympathy and assistance.
+
+Though not members, it may be, of our peculiar family, yet the poorest,
+the humblest, the most wretched, is a human being--"the master-piece of
+His handiwork"--and, as such, demands our aid and comfort as far as
+practicable. Life has been compared to a river. Aye, and beneath its
+murky waters lurk countless reefs and shoals. Many a beautiful bark,
+sailing, seemingly, under the very star of hope, dashes upon them, and
+is lost. All along its shores are scattered the wrecks of stranded
+vessels, once laden with joyous hopes and brilliant prospects.
+Odd-Fellowship renders the passage of this river safe by a bridge of
+mystic form,
+
+ "On one side is friendship planted--
+ Truth upon the other shore;
+ Love, the arch that spans the current,
+ Bears each brother safely o'er."
+
+It should be the most pleasing duty of Odd-Fellows to point our
+fellow-travelers to this beautiful and stately arch; to lead
+thitherward their weary steps. Such would be assistance more permanent
+than can be rendered by silver or gold. The time is certain to come
+when every young man is thrown back upon himself--must leave the
+tranquil security of the parental home, and seek a refuge among
+strangers. When beyond the reach of family influence--beyond the reach
+of that tender providence which so carefully guarded him from vice, and
+soothed his griefs and sympathized with all his youthful aspirations
+and pleasures--when this influence ceases to surround him, what will
+continue its ministry of love? What will be to him father, mother,
+brother, sister--home? Will society? No! Society to its deepest core
+is selfish, corrupt, unnatural and unloving? Society will not, and can
+not. He is in the great world--allurements and temptations are rife
+around him--he is sick and in distress, and must suffer alone, with no
+one to console him with a word of comfort, sympathy, or love; he has no
+attention but such as money will purchase--he dies, and the cold eyes
+of strangers only look upon the grave, if, indeed, a grave he has.
+This is a life picture, and it is at this point the beauty and utility
+of Odd-Fellowship is seen, for the order is a vast family circle,
+spread throughout the community; always powerful and efficient to
+preserve those who are brought within the sphere of its influence. He
+who is a member of this fraternity may go where his father's counsel
+and his mother's care can not reach him, but he can not go beyond the
+reach of that larger family to which he belongs! Silently and
+invisibly, yet with unslumbering assiduity, Odd-Fellowship watches over
+him, and by its wise counsels, its tender sympathies and rational
+restraints, saves him from the ways of vice.
+
+Mythic story tells us that the ancient gods invisibly and secretly
+followed their favorites in all their wanderings, and when exposed to
+danger, or threatened with destruction, would unveil themselves in
+their awful beauty and power, and stand forth to preserve them from
+harm or to avenge their wrongs. Odd-Fellowship realizes this myth of
+the pagan gods; she surrounds all her children with her preserving
+presence, and reveals herself always in the hour of peril, sickness or
+distress. Nowhere in our country can a true Odd-Fellow feel himself
+alone, friendless or forsaken. The invisible, but helpful arms of our
+order surround him wherever he may be. And should he be overtaken by
+illness or misfortune, be he in any part of the country, and never so
+poor, he will, if he makes his wants known, receive as a right the
+necessary assistance, and friends to watch over him with fraternal
+solicitude. And should he fall a victim to disease, the brothers of
+charity will be there to close his eyes, and with solemn, yet hopeful,
+heaven-born rites, consign his body to the repose of the silent tomb.
+Odd-Fellowship is an embodiment of family love and affection, and is
+the only substitute for home influence, and the only green spot in the
+dreary waste of life which binds these brothers to the tender practice
+of every virtue--guides in prosperity and health, and as a ministering
+angel bends over them with tenderest pity in their chamber of
+suffering. True, there are sorrows which it can not reach--there are
+griefs which it can not remove; notwithstanding, it still pursues its
+way, imparts its healthful influence, and accomplishes its beautiful
+and holy ministry of benevolence and charity. If it can not heal the
+wounds of misfortune, it administers the balm of sympathy, friendship
+and love. My dear reader, learn to give encouragement to those around
+you.
+
+Everybody feels the need of encouragement, from the humblest artisan to
+the king on his throne. We hear of the choice spirits who have been
+the world's idols, how they came up through terrible trials alone and
+almost unaided, setting aside obstacles that would have crushed others,
+and fighting their way to the very pinnacle of fame. Aye! but great as
+they were, they needed and received encouragement. In some part of
+their poor home they saw the smile that spoke the hearty appreciation
+of the genius, though, perhaps, the lips said nothing. Even West left
+on record, "my mother's smile made me a painter." The encouragement of
+a little child will send the blood more warmly to the heart, and even
+the appreciation of a poor dumb brute is worth its gaining. Give
+encouragement. Everybody needs it--men, women and even children. Oh!
+how many a dear little heart has been chilled into ice when the coarse
+laugh has greeted its rude hieroglyphics in the first attempt to
+portray its ideal. The child sees warm visions of sunlight and beauty
+in those uncouth angles. Whole minds of thought lie concealed under
+those strange shapes. To the young mind's eye they are wonders, and
+the tiny fingers have built monuments that deserve not to be thrown
+down so rudely, when a smile that costs nothing would have left them
+standing to be finished into finer shape and more classical proportions
+in the years that are to come. You do a positive injury to the dullest
+child when you reward his little efforts with contempt. It is a wrong
+that can never be repaired, for the disheartment that strikes the happy
+spirit, flushed with the consciousness of having achieved something new
+and great, comes up in after time with the very same vividness at every
+trivial disappointment. Give encouragement. You men of business, who
+know so well what a good, hearty "go ahead," coupled with a frank,
+merry face, will do in your own case--give encouragement to the young
+beginner, who starts nervously at the bottom of the race, and who,
+though he may put a bold outside on, quakes at the center of his being
+with the dread that among so many competitors he shall always be left
+in the rear. Hold out your hand to him as if you thought the world was
+really large enough for two, and bid him God-speed. Tell him to come
+to you if he feels the need of a friend to advise with him. Don't
+emulate your sign in overshadowing him. Out upon these mean, cringing
+souls who would grudge God's sunlight if it shone upon a piece of
+merchandise as good as their own. They are poor, barren wretches, who
+plow furrows only in their own cheeks, and plant wrinkles on their
+brows. Above all things, if you have any tenderness or compassion,
+encourage your pastor, your physician, and your editor. Suppose, once
+in a while, they do, in expressing their own honest views, say
+something that conflicts a little with your own starved or plethoric
+notions. Suppose they do dare to tell you the truth sometimes in a way
+that makes you cringe, and you say to yourself, "he has no business to
+be personal," when the poor man never thought that his homely coats
+would fit; don't grow cold, and cast sheep's eyes, and nudge somebody's
+elbow in a corner, and whisper all around, and say complacently, "Yes,
+Brother A. is a good man--but--"
+
+Those "buts" and "ifs" ought to be christened intellectual revolvers,
+for they kill more reputations than any other two words in the English
+language. We have known instances where pastors and editors and others
+have felt weary of living, from having to encounter the spirit of
+discouragement among their brethren; and oh! how many wives, husbands
+and children, are dying deaths daily from this same prolific source of
+suffering. Give encouragement, then, wherever and whenever you can,
+and you will find that you have not lived in vain. If God blesses
+those who offer but a cup of cold water in charity, how much more will
+He regard the kind heart that has refreshed a weary spirit fainting by
+the way. Death quickens recollections painfully. The grave can not
+hide the white faces of those who sleep. The coffin and the green
+mound are cruel magnets. They draw us farther than we would go. They
+force us to remember. A man never sees so far into human life as when
+he looks over a wife's or mother's grave. His eyes get wondrous clear
+then, and he sees as never before what it is to love and to be loved;
+what it is to injure the feelings of the loved.
+
+Let us deal gently with those around us. Remember every day a flower
+is plucked from some sunny home; a breach made in some happy circle; a
+jewel stolen from some treasury of love; each day from summer fields of
+life some harvester disappears--yea, every hour some sentinel falls
+from his post and is thrown from the ramparts of time into the surging
+waters of eternity. Even as I write, the funeral of one who died
+yesterday winds like a winter shadow along some silent street. Daily,
+when we rise from the bivouac to stand at our posts, we miss some
+brother soldier whose cheering cry in the sieges and struggles of the
+past has been as fire from heaven upon our hearts. Each day some pearl
+drops from the jeweled thread of friendship--some harp to which we have
+listened has been hushed forever. Love, however, annihilates death
+even; blots away all record of time and creates the world it lives in;
+conjures back arms to embrace, lips to kiss, and eyes to smile,
+whispers its own praises and breathes its own names of endearment.
+Thus, love maketh the light to our dreams and planteth hope in the
+midst of our sorrow. In darkness and in danger, too, love cometh to us
+ever, ever, now warning, now chiding, now blessing, and always safely
+guarding. Love lightens labor, shortens distance and quickens time.
+Love teaches us to forgive, helps us to forget and whitens the memory
+of all things. Love paints every hope, brightens every scene and
+maketh beautiful whatsoever it shines on. Love is wisdom. Love is
+high. Love is holy. Love is God. Love gloweth in the hearts of the
+angels, wreathes the smiles on their brows and melts the kisses on
+their lips. Love is the light of the beautiful beyond.
+
+
+
+
+GEMS OF BEAUTY
+
+More hopeful than all wisdom is one draught of human pity that will not
+forsake us.
+
+Laughing is one of the products of civilization. In the uncivilized
+tribes laughter is entirely unknown.
+
+Let him who neglects to raise the fallen fear lest, when he falls, no
+one will stretch out his hand to lift him up.
+
+Time is a species of wealth which it is impossible for us to hoard, but
+which we may spend to good advantage.
+
+Character is the eternal temple that each one begins to rear, yet death
+can only complete it. The finer the architecture, the more fit for the
+indwelling of angels.
+
+It is only by labor that thought can be made healthy, and only by
+thought that labor can be made happy; and the two can not be separated
+with impunity.--_John Ruskin_.
+
+Don't moralize to a man who is on his back. Help him up, set him
+firmly on his feet, and then give him advice and means.
+
+There is a pleasure in contemplating good; there is a greater pleasure
+in receiving good; but the greatest pleasure of all is in doing good,
+which comprehends the rest.
+
+Morality without religion is only a kind of dead reckoning--an endeavor
+to navigate a cloudy sea by measuring the distance we have to run, but
+without observation of the heavenly bodies.
+
+Most people keep too strong a hold of their personality to be able to
+forget themselves in their subject; they carry an unacknowledged
+self-consciousness along with them. If to be single-minded is to have
+an undivided interest in things, they are not single-minded.
+
+Real affection is independent. A woman may passionately love a man who
+does not care for her, and men have gone mad for the sake of women who
+were indifferent to them. That affection which survives coldness or
+even contempt on the part of the subject is a stronger proof of its
+strength than jealousy, however well founded.
+
+To have a respect for ourselves guides our morals, and to have a
+deference for others governs our manners.
+
+If you want to be miserable, think about yourself, about what you want,
+what you like, what respect people pay you, and what people think of
+you.
+
+One great impediment to the rapid dissemination of new truths is that a
+knowledge of them would convict many sage professors of having long
+promulgated error.
+
+The leaves that give out the sweetest fragrance are those that are the
+most cruelly crushed; so the hearts of those who have suffered most can
+feel for others' woes.
+
+Each of us can so believe in humanity in general as to contribute to
+that pressure which constantly levers up the race; can surround
+ourselves with an atmosphere optimistic rather than the
+contrary.--_Selected_.
+
+He who has more knowledge than good works is like a tree with many
+branches and few roots, which the first wind throws on its face; while
+he who does more than he says is like a tree with strong roots and few
+branches, which all the winds can not uproot.--_Talmud_.
+
+If we waited until it was perfectly convenient, half of the good
+actions of life would never be accomplished, and very few of its
+successes.
+
+A helping word to one in trouble is often like a switch on a railroad
+track, but one inch between wreck and smooth rolling prosperity.
+
+Prayer is the key of day and lock of the night; and we should every day
+begin and end, bid ourselves good morrow and good night, with prayer.
+
+In order to love mankind, expect but little from them; in order to view
+their faults without bitterness, pardon them. The wisest men have
+always been the most indulgent.
+
+There are souls which fall from heaven like flowers, but ere the pure
+and fresh buds can open they are trodden in the dust of the earth, and
+lie soiled and crushed under the foul tread of some brutal hoof.
+
+Many of the men we calmly set down as failures may have been doing as
+much as those who have made ten times as much noise in the world. A
+great deal of the best work in the world is anonymous, if we do not
+confine the term to writing.
+
+To a man of brave sentiments midnight is as bright as noonday, for the
+illumination is within.
+
+That man who lives in vain lives worse than vain. He who lives to no
+purpose lives to a bad purpose.--_Nevins_.
+
+Labor is the law of the world, and he who lives by other men's means is
+of less value to the world than the buzzing, busy insect.
+
+Deep is the sea, and deep is hell, but pride runneth deeper; it is
+coiled as a poisonous worm about the foundation of the soul.--_Tupper_.
+
+The integrity of the heart, when it is strengthened by reason, is the
+principal source of justice and wit; an honest man thinks nearly always
+justly.
+
+Be firm, but be not too hasty to decide; weigh well before you act,
+but, having weighed, act promptly, and abide the result. This is the
+test of judgment.
+
+Wit loses its respect with the good when seen in company with malice;
+and to smile at the jest which plants a thorn in another's breast is to
+become a principal in the mischief.
+
+Success never did, never will come to that young man who knows
+everything--in his own opinion.
+
+In love, as in everything else, truth is the strongest of all things,
+and frankness is but another name for truth.
+
+Frequent disappointment teaches us to mistrust our own inclination, and
+shrink even from vows our hearts may prompt.
+
+For children there is no leave-taking, for they acknowledge no past,
+only the present, that to them is full of the future.
+
+To love, in order to be loved in return, is man, but to love for the
+pure sake of loving, is almost the characteristic of an angel.
+
+Fond as a man is of sight-seeing, life is the great show for every
+man--the show always wonderful and new to the thoughtful.
+
+The sweetest book in all the world, if properly read, is the Bible.
+Its leaves are as fragrant as a bed of violets in full bloom.
+
+Pity gilds mortality with rays of immortal light, and through faith
+enables its possessor to triumph over sin, sorrow, tribulation and
+death.
+
+If we can not live so as to be happy, let us at least live so as to
+deserve happiness.--_Fichte_.
+
+Little by little fortunes are accumulated; little by little knowledge
+is gained; little by little character and reputation are achieved.
+
+Don't rely for success upon empty praise. The swimmer upon the stream
+of life must be able to keep afloat without the aid of bladders.
+
+Industry--In seeking a situation, remember that the right kind of men
+are always in demand, and that industry and capacity rarely go
+empty-handed.
+
+Frankness is the child of honesty and courage. Say just what you mean
+to do on every occasion, and take it for granted that you mean to do
+what is right.
+
+To be always intending to lead a new life, but never to find time to
+set about it, is as if a man should put off eating from one day to
+another till he is starved.
+
+A man loved by a beautiful and virtuous woman carries a talisman that
+renders him invulnerable; every one feels that such a one's life has a
+higher value than that of others.
+
+The great beauty of charity is privacy; there is a sweet force, even in
+an anonymous penny.
+
+Every heart has its secret sorrows, and oftentimes we call a man cold
+when he was only sad.
+
+A promise should be given with caution, and kept with care; it should
+be made with the heart and kept with the head.
+
+"The mind of a young creature," says Berkely, "can not remain empty; if
+you do not put into it that which is good, it will be sure to use even
+that which is bad."
+
+We all see at sunset the beautiful colors streaming all over the
+western sky, but no eyes can behold the hand that overturns the urns
+whence these streams are poured.
+
+We often live under a cloud, and it is well for us that we should do
+so. Uninterrupted sunshine would parch our hearts. We want shade and
+rain to cool and refresh them.
+
+Poverty is very terrible to you, and kills the soul in you sometimes;
+but it is the north wind that lashed men into vikings; it is the soft,
+luscious south wind that lulls to lotus dreams.
+
+There is nothing so valuable, and yet so cheap, as civility; you can
+almost buy land with it.
+
+It has been justly said nothing in man is so Godlike as doing good to
+our fellows.--_Selected_.
+
+Contentment swells a mite into a talent, and makes even the poor richer
+than the Indies.--_Addison_.
+
+Never was a sincere word utterly lost, never a magnanimity fell to the
+ground; there is some heart always to greet and accept it unexpectedly.
+
+There are people who often talk of the humbleness of their origin, when
+they are really ashamed of it, though vain of the talent which enabled
+them to emerge from it.
+
+A witty old deacon put it thus: "Now, brethren, let us get up a supper
+and eat ourselves rich. Buy your food, then give it to the church;
+then go and buy it back again; then eat it up, and your church debt is
+paid."
+
+Self-sacrifice is the essential mark of the Christian, and the absence
+of it is sufficient at once to condemn the man who calls himself by
+that name and yet has it not, and to declare that he has no right to
+it.--_Bolton_.
+
+There are many comfortable people in the world, but to call any man
+perfectly happy is an insult.
+
+Women often make light of ruin. Give them but the beloved objects, and
+poverty is but a trifling sorrow to bear.--_Thackeray_,
+
+Independence is a name for what no man possesses; nothing in the
+animate or inanimate world is more dependent than man.
+
+Wealth is to be used only as an instrument of action, not as the
+representative of civil honors and moral excellence.--_Jane Porter_.
+
+There is nothing purer, nothing warmer than our first friendship, our
+first love, our first striving after truth, our first feeling for
+nature.--_Jean Paul Richter_.
+
+Shakespeare is as much out of the category of eminent authors as he is
+out of the crowd. He is inconceivably wise; the others
+conceivably.--_Representative Men_.
+
+A smooth sea never made a skillful mariner. Neither do uninterrupted
+prosperity and success qualify a man for usefulness and happiness. The
+storms of adversity, like the storms of the ocean, arouse the faculties
+and excite the invention, prudence, skill and fortitude of the voyager.
+
+It is not work that hurts men. It is the corrosion of uncertainty; it
+is the anticipation of trouble; it is living in a state of painful
+apprehension. Therefore we should endeavor to rise out of the
+atmosphere of gloomy forebodings. The man who is lifted above fear and
+its whole brood of mischief can go through twice as much trouble as a
+man who is subject to its influence.
+
+He that looks out upon life from a sour or severe disposition, with
+hard and stringent notions, is ill prepared to meet the experiences of
+the world; but he who has the sweetness of hope, he who has an
+imagination lit up with cheerfulness, he who has the sense of humor
+which softens all things--he who has this atmosphere of the mind--has
+made himself superior to accident. As the angel described by Milton,
+who was smitten by the sword, and whose wounds healed as soon as the
+sword was withdrawn, so ought man to be; and when he receives a spear
+thrust in life, no sooner should the spear be withdrawn than his flesh
+ought to "close and be itself again."
+
+A married man falling into misfortune is more apt to retrieve his
+situation in the world than a single one, chiefly because his spirits
+are soothed and retrieved by domestic endearments, and his self-respect
+kept alive by finding that, although all abroad is darkness and
+humiliation, yet there is a little world of love at home over which he
+is monarch.
+
+
+
+
+HUSBAND AND FATHER
+
+Miss Frances Power Cobb is right, and she is wrong, when she says: "It
+is a woman, and only a woman--a woman all by herself, if she likes, and
+without any man to help her--who can turn a house into a home." She is
+unquestionably right in her judgment, that it is a woman who can, if
+she will, turn a house into a home, but she is much in the wrong in her
+assertion that it is a woman all by herself, without any man to help
+her, who can effect such a beneficial transformation. Woman possesses
+magical powers in the way of building up a home; but home naturally
+implies the presence and protection of man--and it is man himself, if
+he likes, and without any woman to help him, who can give that home a
+semblance of that place where, as some people believe, the wicked
+suffer after they have "shuffled off this mortal coil." The husband
+can never make the home, but he can succeed most admirably, if so he
+choose, to unmake it, to banish its happiness and comfort, to exile
+from it its ministering angels of peace and content, to shatter woman's
+sweet and blessed work to its very foundation. Let the wife
+concentrate, all day long, all her care and ingenuity and love upon
+building up her little paradise at home, let her hands be ever so busy
+in strewing fresh flowers around the domestic hearth, let her heart be
+ever so happy throughout the day in the discharge of her domestic
+duties, let her countenance be ever so beaming in her sweet
+anticipation of the happy smile of appreciation, of the kind word of
+sympathy and encouragement, which shall be her reward when her husband
+returns; and then see this star in her domestic firmament enter,
+sulking and surly, blind to all that her busy hands have so lovingly
+prepared, grim and gruff to her and the little ones, who have been
+fitted up in their neatest and cleanest, in which to welcome their
+father's return, and then see whether you can agree with Miss Cobb's
+assertion "that it is a woman, and only a woman--a woman all by
+herself, if she likes, and without any man to help her--who can turn a
+house into a home." See how her heart sinks, how her voice, full of
+mirth and glee and music before his coming, dies in her throat, how the
+little ones, full of merriment all day long, tremblingly hide in the
+corner, or withdraw from the room; see how the intrusion of this grim
+spectre of malcontent shuts the door upon domestic peace and happiness,
+and withers every pious resolve to make home the dearest, sweetest,
+most contented and most sacred spot on earth, and then calculate how
+long, under such disheartening surroundings, woman will be able all by
+herself, and without any man to help her, to prevent her house from
+becoming anything and everything except a home.
+
+While studying language, I observed that most of my mistakes in grammar
+occurred in the feminine gender, and thinking over the cause of it, it
+dawned upon me that, belonging to the masculine sex, I was in the habit
+of thinking in that gender, and that my teachers were men, and that my
+text-books and grammars had been written by men, and that the masculine
+gender predominated so strongly in the exercises, that it was but
+natural for me to make the greatest number of mistakes in the gender to
+which the least attention had been given. When dealing with the social
+and domestic question, the unbiased among us can not but observe a
+similar failing. Many a serious mistake has been made by man when
+speaking or writing concerning women, because our speakers and writers
+and preachers and teachers belonged from the very beginning of
+civilization, almost exclusively to the masculine sex, a sex which has
+never tired in exalting itself at the expense of the weaker sex, in
+emphasizing woman's inferiority to man, in asserting its rights, and in
+complaining about its wrongs, and as woman did not write or speak for
+herself, we have heard but little of her side of the story, know next
+to nothing of her just rights and of her grievous wrongs, seldom dream
+that she, too, has rights that must be respected, and suffers wrongs
+that must be corrected.
+
+The universities, colleges and all great institutions of learning of
+this and other lands refused, until quite recently, to recognize woman
+as a human being possessing a mind in need of training, and therefore
+excluded her from their privileges, and the order of Odd-Fellows
+partook of the same spirit and excluded the better half of the human
+race from its lodge-rooms. Man had ever been a selfish, conceited,
+cowardly tyrant from the day in which our father Adam disgraced his sex
+by taking without question the forbidden fruit; and, after eating it,
+crying with selfish, pusillanimous cowardice: "The woman thou gavest to
+be with me gave me of the tree and I did eat," and he has always sought
+to make and keep woman an inferior, dependent, submissive slave. To
+this end he has striven to keep her in ignorance, exclude her from all
+the avenues of knowledge, and then, because she did not possess the
+knowledge that he had forbidden her, proclaimed throughout the world
+that she was mentally inferior to man, and in consequence unfit to be
+admitted to the various institutions and associations in which men
+sought to improve their minds.
+
+The object of Odd-Fellowship is to improve and elevate the character of
+man, to enlighten his mind and enlarge the sphere of his affections,
+and of course woman, as being mentally weak and naturally inferior to
+man, was excluded from its sacred precincts. Now, however, things are
+changed; nearly all educational institutions worthy of mention admit
+women, and the Rebekah of today, emulating the Rebekah of old, will be
+hand in hand with her brothers in all good works. She will accompany
+him on his errands of mercy, watch beside the bedside of anguish,
+foregoing pleasure to follow in the path of duty.
+
+I would have every man know--who has a wife--that "mutual benefit from
+harmonious partnership work" is an axiom in as full a sense as "in
+union there is strength."
+
+There are two sides to every question, and in this article I shall deal
+with the woman's side. I want to present especially the wife's side of
+the question to every Odd-Fellow, hoping that it will be of lasting
+benefit in many ways. I know full well that only one accustomed to
+deal with high and holy things, one whose glance is ever at sacred
+things, one who, as it were, administers the treasures of the kingdom
+of God, can fittingly touch this subject. It would be easy for me to
+be a cheap wit, to rake up the old scandal of Mother Eve, to even
+declaim with windy volubility that a woman betrayed the capital, that a
+woman lost Mark Anthony the world and left old Troy in ashes. But far
+be it from me! Rather would I assume a loftier mood; rather would I
+strike a loftier note, and, with blind Homer, beg for an unwearied
+tongue to chant the praise of woman. It is true Eve lost us Eden, but
+in that garden of monotonous delight, had we been born there, we would
+never have truly known what woman is. O, Felix Culpa! O, happy fault!
+that has shown the world the mines of rich affection of woman's heart,
+that else would never have been discovered. O, happy fault, that has
+shown the world a wealth of woman's nature, her capability for love,
+the radiance of her tenderness, her infinite pity, her unswerving
+devotion, the solace of her presence in sickness and sorrow, the depth
+and sweetness of her mercy.
+
+A river of pure delight flowed through paradise, but blind Adam never
+saw it, never dreamed of it until the flaming sword cut him off
+forever; but he has since drank of it, and so has every man who has
+ever tasted the sacramental wine of woman's true affection. The seamy
+side of life has been laid bare to me. Its sorrows and its anguishes
+have I often witnessed, but into that pool of Bethesida of the world's
+anguish, with healing do I see ever come an angel, a pitying woman.
+The influence of wife and mother is ever near me; their faces are the
+most lovely; their hearts the most tender of all in this world--my
+mother and my wife. And for their sake, and for the sake of all the
+mothers, wives, sisters and daughters, whom I daily meet doing good, I
+long and I earnestly yearn for the eloquence and grace to half express
+the thoughts that rise within me of what the world owes woman.
+
+To me every good woman is the fair fulfillment of dreamed delight. She
+is the first at the cross and the last at the grave. All that is
+highest and best in the world is nurtured and fed by the milk of her
+nobility. The Christ of all greatness and hope was born of a woman.
+The noble women of the world! O, would that the days of chivalry were
+not past, that I might unsheath a lance in their name, for their glory!
+But in our more prosaic days, what can I do but let the will suffice
+for the deed, and say to the woman, "God bless you." I propose to let
+her speak for herself today. I propose to accept her invitation to
+accompany her through the various spheres of her domestic life, and see
+whether she alone is responsible for that vice and crime and misfortune
+which moralists and superintendents of penal and charity institutes
+trace back to neglects at home; whether it is always the wife and
+mother that is responsible for unhappiness in marriage and for the
+increase of divorces; whether the husbands and fathers are always the
+saints and martyrs, or whether they are not very, very often the root
+of the whole evil themselves.
+
+We retrace our steps and begin with our observations of the husband and
+father a few months prior to that solemn day, on which he plighted his
+vows of protection and faithfulness, on which he took into his care and
+trust a woman's life and happiness, on which he sacredly promised, in
+the name of God, and in the presence of witnesses, to love her, to
+honor and cherish her, to provide for her, to be faithful to her in all
+his obligations as husband, in youth and in old age, in sunshine and in
+darkness, in prosperity and in adversity. We make first his
+acquaintance in the happy days of his courtship. He is burning with
+love. He is the facsimile of Shakespeare's lover, "sighing like a
+furnace." Her praises are on his lips always. He avows himself her
+slave and worships her as a goddess. It is in her company alone that
+he can find happiness. Whether at home or in society, he is always at
+her side. Life is dreary where she is not. He wonders how he could
+have lived so long, or how he could continue existence, without her.
+How regular and how punctual he is in his calls, and how he scowls at
+the clock for running away with time so fast! Not a wish does she
+express, no matter how unreasonable and extravagant, but he eagerly
+gratifies it. How numerous his little attentions and his kind
+remembrances! How thoughtful of her birthday, and how lavish in floral
+tributes and costly presents! How numerous and how lengthy his letters
+when separated! How sweet their moonlight walks and talks! How bright
+her future, which he maps out! How many the pledges which he breathes
+forth between his ardent kisses; never a harsh word shall break on her
+ear, never a wish of hers shall be ungratified, never a trouble shall
+mar her happiness; such a love as his has never been before, and will
+never be again; he only lives for her happiness; his affection will
+never cool, he will be a lover all his life; their whole wedded life
+will be one never-waning honeymoon.
+
+In the drama the plot usually ends with marriage. At the instant when
+it is reached, when all obstacles are removed, the curtain falls, and
+the young people have no further existence for us. But in the
+practical world the play goes on. The curtain rises again, the same
+personages reappear, only they frequently play different parts, and
+what was before a comedy or a melo-drama often changes into a tragedy.
+Sad and tearful scenes are often enacted by them. The misery and pain
+are no longer inflicted by their former enemy, but by their own hands.
+He, who prior to marriage overcame almost insurmountable obstacles to
+make his lady fair his happy wife, now moves heaven and earth to make
+that wife as miserable as possible.
+
+A number of years have passed since last we observed the lover. He is
+husband and father now, but what a change these few years have wrought
+in him! Forgotten are the lover's vows. She that once his goddess
+was, is now his slave. The fulsome flatterer of former times has
+degenerated into a chronic fault-finder. With the change of her name
+has begun his change of treatment of her. Cast aside are the many
+courtesies and expressions of endearment that marked his conduct to her
+prior to marriage, and which were the thousand golden threads that day
+by day throughout their courtship wove their hearts closely into one.
+No bouquets and no costly gifts any more. The anniversary of her birth
+and of their wedding day passes by unnoticed by him. His former
+efforts to entertain her, to make himself agreeable to her, have
+altogether ceased. Rarer, and ever rarer, become his parting and his
+coming kiss, his "good-bye, dear," and his "good evening, darling."
+Fewer and fewer become his words of praise. Irksome becomes the task
+of staying at home. He, who once upon a time found life dreary where
+she was not, who vowed that in her company alone he found happiness,
+who could not await the evening that would bring him to her, who
+declared that his affection would never cool, and their whole wedded
+life would be one continuous honeymoon, now finds her company tedious,
+her home unattractive. He looks upon his home as his boarding and
+lodging-house, upon his wife as the kitchen scullion, or as the nurse
+of his children, for which services he generally allows her so many
+dollars a week. At the breakfast table his face is buried in the
+morning paper. He rises without interchanging a word with wife and
+child. Absent from home all day long, he is absent still, even when
+home in the evening. No sooner has he swallowed his meal, when he
+buries himself in the newspaper for the rest of the evening, or dozes
+on the sofa till bedtime, or he has an important business engagement
+down town, or some meeting to attend, or an important engagement brings
+other husbands to his house, where they transact any amount of business
+in the exchange of diamonds for hearts, and clubs for spades.
+
+All day long she has been toiling hard in her home, toiling with hand
+and brain. She has been preacher and teacher, physician and druggist,
+provider and manager, cook and laundress. The children had to be
+attended to, purchases had to be made, the meals had to be provided,
+the servants to be looked after, the house to be gotten in order; there
+was mending and sewing and baking and cleaning and scrubbing and
+scouring, which had to be done; there were the children's lessons, and
+practicings that had to be looked after; there were the children's
+ailments that had to be cured, and there were the hundred other things
+the husband never dreams of, and which tax a woman's nerves and
+strength as much, and often more, than his occupation taxes him. But
+not a word of appreciation, not a look of sympathy and encouragement
+from him, who never tired to sing her praises before they were married,
+who vowed that never a harsh word should remotely break on her ear,
+never a trouble should mar her happiness. On the contrary, he has no
+end of faults to find, and she is doomed to listen to the same old
+harangue on economy and saving. She has been saving and stinting until
+she can save and stint no more. She has patched and mended and turned
+and altered until she could patch and mend and alter no more, and still
+the same complaints; the table costs too much, the dry goods store
+bills are too long, the seamstress comes into the house too often, the
+physician is consulted too much, and of such as these many more. Not a
+word does he say about the expensive cigars he smokes, the wines he
+drinks; about his frequent visits to the sample-room, and about the
+liberality with which he treats his friends there; about the sumptuous
+dinners he takes at noon in the down-town restaurant, while wife and
+children content themselves at home with a frugal lunch; about the
+money he loses at the card table, or in his bets on the games and races
+and politics. And of the children he takes but little notice. He has
+not seen them all day long, and he is too tired to be bothered with
+them in the evening. He must have his rest and quiet. The mother
+worried with them all day long, she may worry with them in the evening,
+too. It is enough for him to supply her with the means wherewith to
+care for their wants, further obligations he has none; these are a
+mother's duties, but not a father's.
+
+They tell a story of a learned preacher who had isolated himself from
+his children on account of his dislike to their noise. One day, while
+taking a walk, he was attracted by the beauty and wonderful
+intelligence of a little boy. Inquiring of the nurse whose child it
+was, she answered, much astonished: "Your own, reverend sir, your own."
+Judging from the attention that some fathers bestow on their children,
+I am inclined to believe that this learned preacher has many an
+imitator among his sex, for whom not even the inexcusable excuse of
+absorption in studies can be set up. I have read of a business man,
+who one day thanked God that a commercial crisis had thrown him into
+bankruptcy. He said it afforded him an opportunity to stay at home for
+awhile, and get acquainted with his own family, and that for the first
+time he learned to know the true worth of his wife, and that he found
+his children the sweetest and dearest creatures that ever lived, and
+not for all the business of the world would he again deprive himself of
+their sweet association. Prior to his misfortune, or rather good
+fortune, his business had so absorbed him that he had altogether
+forgotten that there were sacred claims at home that demanded his
+interest and his service.
+
+Not all our orphaned children are in our orphan asylums, or under the
+supervision of "The Orphans' Guardians." There are more of them at
+home with their fathers and mothers, and especially among our
+well-to-do families. There are children growing up who scarcely know
+anything else of their father except that he is referred to during the
+day by their mother when they are bad, as that dread personage who
+would inflict a severe chastisement on them when he returns, or whose
+presence silences their fun and makes their own absence agreeable. He
+makes no effort to entertain them, takes no interest in their
+pleasures, in their progress at school. He is simply their punisher,
+but not their friend, and it is not at all surprising to see children
+growing up with a conception of their father such as that little boy
+had, who, when told by a minister of heaven, and of the meeting of the
+departed there, asked: "And will father be there?" On being told that
+"of course he would be there," he at once replied, "Then I don't want
+to go." Occasionally wife and husband spend an evening out, or they
+entertain company at home, and oh, what a transformation she observes
+in him. In other people's homes, or when other people are present, his
+stock of material for conversation is unlimited. Then and there he is
+full of fun, bright and cheerful; when alone with his wife he has
+scarcely a word to say; he moves about the house with the lofty
+indifference of a lord, and with a heartless disregard of every member
+of the household. At home he is cold and cross and boorish, in other
+women's parlors he is polite and considerate and engaging. He has a
+smile and a compliment for other women, none for his wife. If they
+attend an evening reception, he brings his wife there, and he takes her
+home; during the interval she has little, if any, of his company. She
+may be shy, she may be a stranger, she may not be much accustomed to
+society life, she may feel herself out of place in the gay assemblage,
+she may be unentertained or bored or annoyed, it matters not to him as
+long as he is having a good time with the boys, or is encircled by the
+ladies fair, who unanimously think him the most gallant of men,
+unrivaled in his wit and wisdom and conversational powers, and who
+secretly sigh if but their husbands were like him.
+
+To such an extent is this wife-neglect carried on that a lady not long
+ago made a wager that, in nine cases out of ten, she would distinguish
+between married and unmarried couples. She won the wager. When asked
+to explain her method of discrimination, she said: "When you see a
+gentleman and a lady walking in silence side by side, it is a married
+couple; when their conversation is continuous and animated, and
+smile-and-laugh-provoking, they are single. When a gentleman sits next
+to a lady in the theatre, and never keeps his opera glass away from the
+boxes and galleries and stage, he is her husband; when his eyes rest
+more on her than on the stage, it is her lover. When a lady, who sits
+at the side of a gentleman, drops her glove, and she stoops to hunt it,
+it is a married couple; if he stoops quickly to pick it up it is an
+unmarried couple. When a lady plays, and a gentleman stands near her,
+and does not turn for her the pages of the music book, it is her
+husband; when you see his fingers in eager readiness to turn the leaf,
+it is not her husband."
+
+There is in every true woman a spark of divinity, which glows in her
+heart, and blazes into a most luminous light when a husband's love and
+respect and sympathy and appreciation and encouragement fan that spark
+into activity. But woe to the home where cruel hands quench that
+flame. The sun is the heater and illuminator of our whole solar
+system. The vast supplies which it sends forth daily must be
+compensated, or else it would soon expend itself, and our world would
+go to ruin. Nature, therefore, hurls millions of meteors every second
+into the sun's fiery furnace to keep up the supply of heat and light.
+The wife is the sun of the household. Her womanly attributes give the
+light and warmth and happiness of the home to all who cluster around
+her. But a wife's love and self-sacrifice for her home are not
+infinite. They soon exhaust themselves, where love is unreturned,
+where a husband is a tyrant, where self-sacrifice is unappreciated,
+where faithful and prudent industry is accepted as a labor of duty, and
+not as a labor of love, where she is simply regarded as his
+housekeeper, and not as his devoted helpmate, where his presence alone
+is sufficient to cast gloom and fear over the entire household. Woman
+was made to bless mankind, but also to be blessed in return; to make
+society better for forming a part thereof, but also to receive some
+recognition for her work.
+
+Endurance is woman's prerogative. Suffering is her heirloom.
+Disasters, which would crush the spirit of man, often turn her heart to
+steel, and she performs deeds grand and heroic. Disheartened by
+continuous neglect, she will make heroic efforts to throw her influence
+all the more affectionately over her home. Wounded deeper and ever
+deeper, she will toil on, hiding from the world the pangs of wounded
+affection, "as the wounded dove will clasp its wings to its side and
+cover and conceal the arrow that is preying on its vitals." But the
+shafts of continuous neglect will pierce her heart at last--a husband's
+continuous neglect extinguish, at last, the sacred flame upon the
+domestic hearth. She, too, finds home irksome. She, too, learns to
+find more pleasure abroad than in her home. She, too, thinks light of
+liberties and indiscretions. The grown children learn to emulate their
+parents' example, and seek their pleasures also abroad. The little
+children are left to servants to finish the corruption begun by
+parents. And so the home, the very spot designed by God to become the
+chief school of human virtue, the seminary of social affections, the
+keystone of the whole fabric of society, the germ-cell of civilization,
+becomes a hotbed of corruption, and almost as often on account of a
+husband's neglect and sins, as on account of a wife's ignorance or
+frailties or failings. Our stock of advice to wives and mothers seems
+inexhaustible. Almost every one of the stronger sex has his fling at
+woman, and his remedy to offer, which, if immediately followed, will at
+once eradicate unhappiness in marriage, decrease the number of
+divorces, and lessen vice and crime in society.
+
+Might not a little advice be also profitable to man? Is there not room
+for improvement in the stronger sex as well as in the weaker? Reform
+in the one sex will be of little benefit unless there is reform in the
+other sex as well. Our husbands and our fathers, too, need reforming,
+and that reform must begin very early in their lives, before yet they
+enter into marriage, before yet they enter upon the days of their
+courtship. Our young men need curbing. Youthful precocity must be
+checked. "_Cito maturum cito putridum_" says the Latin, "soon ripe,
+soon rotten." We allow our young men, some of them exceedingly young,
+too many liberties. We allow them to sow too many wild oats. If their
+intention is some day to take unto their care and keeping a woman's
+life and happiness, to pluck from out a comfortable and contented home,
+and from the embrace of devoted parents, a pure and happy and trusting
+young woman, who has never felt the wrench and shock of life's storms,
+nor the cold shoulder of neglect, nor the gnawing tooth of want, then
+let them see to it in time that they may bring to her a heart as pure
+and mind as uncorrupted, and character as unpolluted as they expect
+from her.
+
+The law of heredity, of transmission of ancestral poison, is as
+operative in the male sex as in the female. A pure and healthy
+offspring must be preceded by a pure and healthy parentage. A
+rottening tree never produces luscious fruit. "Like begets like." An
+enfeebled father means not only feebleness in the next generation, but
+also perpetuated misery and vice and crime. Marriage is sacred and
+necessary and obligatory, but not all marriages are so. There are some
+marriages from which woman should recoil as much as she would from
+death itself. Rather that death would woo her than a man--if I may be
+permitted to honor him with that name--whose constitution is
+undermined, whose strength is sapped, and whose marrow and blood are
+poisoned. Rather an old maid than a profligate's nurse. Rather a life
+of single blessedness than the housekeeper of a wreck of a husband.
+Rather single and happy and stainless and conscience-free than a mother
+of an unfortunate offspring, that have the sins of their father visited
+upon them, and that shall one day curse their parents for having given
+existence to them. Another remedy for unhappy marriages will be found
+in the cessation, of the anxiety on the part of so many parents _to get
+their daughters married off_. It is but natural that this constant
+anxiety should make the daughter feel that she would like to lessen her
+parents' dread, and cease being a trouble to them, especially when
+there are younger sisters crowding fast upon her, and so she says
+"Yes," even when the word almost chokes in her throat, even though she
+knows in her heart that he is not her ideal, nor the man that will make
+her happy. It is not true that any husband, who can support a wife, is
+better than no husband. Marriage means more to a sensible woman than
+an alliance with a husband for the sake of being clothed and fed and
+housed. She has a heart and soul and mind that have their wants, and
+if they be starved, unhappy marriage, if nothing worse, is the result.
+
+Mothers and fathers! Have you watched over your daughter from the day
+of her birth; have you guarded her from infancy to girlhood, and from
+girlhood to womanhood; have you suffered for her sake; have you
+surrendered comforts and sacrificed pleasures for her sake; have you
+toiled and stinted and saved for her sake; have you afforded her the
+best education and all the pleasures and opportunities that your means
+will allow, and all to wish yourselves rid of her; to think that any
+husband, who can support your daughter--sometimes not even so much is
+expected from him--no matter how old, how uncultured, how unsuitable to
+her tastes and wants, is better than no husband? A father's personal
+attention to the training of his children will in time reduce
+materially unhappy marriages, and greatly lessen the miseries and vices
+of society. He owes his children more than support and chastisement.
+Society holds him responsible for their character. The duties of
+training devolve upon the father as much as on the mother. A father's
+wider experience and worldly wisdom prove valuable contributions to the
+mother's simpler knowledge in the raising of their children. A
+father's continuous absence, or neglects, or severity, or unkindness,
+or heartlessness, has made more reprobates and scamps and criminals in
+this world than all the failings of women combined. Think less of your
+dignity and more of your duty. Rather that your child should love you
+than fear you. You can maintain your authority and dignity by love and
+gentleness as well as by frowns and threats and chastisements. You may
+walk and talk and study and play with them, and yet have their full
+respect. The great and warlike Agesilaus did not think it beneath him
+to entertain his children during his leisure hours, to join them in all
+their merry sports, and permit himself to crawl on his fours with his
+little child upon his back. If you would raise good children let your
+example at home be accordingly. As you will teach them so they will
+act. If you are a devil they will scarcely be angels. Children are
+keen observers. An old proverb says that a father is a looking-glass
+by which children dress themselves. See to it, fathers, that the glass
+be clean, so that your children's morals may be pure.
+
+A little more memory on the part of the husband will prove a powerful
+remedy for the eradication of unhappy marriages and for the lessening
+of divorces. She is the same woman after marriage that she was during
+the days of your courtship, and a good deal better. Why so forgetful
+of all the sacred vows and solemn pledges which you plighted then? Why
+so constant then and so inconstant now? Why so affable and faithful
+and loving and attentive then, and why so inattentive and bitter and
+sullen and neglectful now? Why such a profuseness then in your
+courtesies and smiles and flowers and gifts and kisses, and why such a
+lack of them now? Is it because of wrinkles? Is it because of her
+faded beauty? She has lost it in your service. She has come honestly
+by her wrinkles. She got them in the sick-bed, in the kitchen, in the
+nursery, by the bed of your sick children, by the grave of your child,
+by painful night-watches and overtaxing day toils, by your harsh words,
+and by your heartless treatment. This is all she has in return for her
+beauty and youth and cheerful mind and happy disposition, which she
+laid at your feet when you asked her to join her destiny with yours. A
+little courtesy, a kind attention, a bouquet of flowers, a small token,
+a word of appreciation and of encouragement is not much to you, but it
+is a world to your wife. Your smile is all the reward she craves. Her
+heart thirsts for it, and when given, its effect upon her soul is as
+the refreshing dew upon the withered grass. It is a mistake to believe
+that she can draw in her married life on your love-deposits during
+courtship. If love is to prosper, the supply must be ever fresh. The
+love of the past will never satisfy the need of the present. Love
+constantly and carefully cultivated will increase its blessings as
+fruit trees double their bearing under the hand of the gardener. It
+will be killed, as will the fruit tree, if the gardener's hand grows
+neglectful and noxious influences are permitted to impede its growth.
+Let your wife be your helpmate and not your housekeeper. She shares
+your sorrows, your defeats, let her also share your thoughts and plans.
+Unbosom your thoughts to her. Lay open to her your heart and soul.
+Trust her with your confidence, she trusts you with hers. The men who
+succeed are those who make confidants of their wives. The marriages
+that are happy are those where husbands and wives have no thoughts
+apart. The children that are well raised are those that have had the
+example of loving and confiding parents before them. Proud of your
+confidence, she will labor to deserve it. She will study to please
+you. In your prosperity she will be your delight; your stay and
+comfort in your adversity. She will return your confidence and
+affection in full measure. Gloom will vanish from the hearth, and
+happiness will hold dominion within the home. "Her children will rise
+up before her and call her happy; and her husband will sing aloud her
+praises."
+
+Marriage is, perhaps, the only game of chance ever invented at which it
+is possible for both players to lose. Too often, after many
+sugar-coated words, and several premeditated misdeals on both sides,
+one draws a blank and the other a booby. After patiently angling in
+the matrimonial pool, one draws a sunfish and the other a minnow. One
+expects to capture a demigod, who hits the earth only in high places,
+but when she has thoroughly analyzed him, she finds nothing genuine,
+only a wilted chrysanthemum and a pair of patent leather shoes, while
+he in return expected to wed a wingless angel who would make his Edenic
+bower one long drawn out sigh of aesthetic bliss. The result is very
+often that he is tied to a slattern, who slouches around the house with
+her hair in tins, a dime novel in her hand, with a temper like aqua
+fortis and a voice like a cat fight--a voice that would make a cub wolf
+climb a tree; a fashionable butterfly, whose heart is in her finery and
+her feathers; who neglects her home to train with a lot of intellectual
+birds; whose glory is small talk; who saves her sweetest smiles for
+society and her ill temper for her family altar. If I were tied to
+such a female as that, do you know what I would do? You don't, eh?
+Well, neither do I. There was a time, we are told, when to be a Roman
+was to be greater than to be a king; yet there came a time when to be a
+Roman was to be a vassal or a slave. Change is the order of the
+universe, and nothing stands. We must go forward, or we must go
+backward. We must press on to grander heights, to greater glory, or
+see the laurels already won turned to ashes upon our brow. We may
+sometimes slip; shadows may obscure our paths; the boulders may bruise
+our feet; there may be months of mourning and days of agony; but
+however dark the night, hope, a poising eagle, will ever burn above the
+unrisen tomorrow. Trials we may have, and tribulations sore, but I say
+unto you, O, brothers mine, that while God reigns and the human family
+endures, this nation, born of our father's blood, and sanctified by our
+mother's tears, shall not pass away, and under heaven, for this great
+boon, this great blessing, we'll be indebted to the women of
+America--God bless them. Finally, brethren, be serious while I impart
+this concluding lesson: "She--was--a--good--wife--to--me. A good wife,
+God bless her!" The words were spoken in trembling accents over a
+coffin-lid. The woman asleep there had borne the heat and burden of
+life's long day, and no one had ever heard her murmur; her hand was
+quick to reach out in helping grasp to those who fell by the wayside,
+and her feet were swift on errands of mercy; the heart of her husband
+had trusted in her; he had left her to long hours of solitude, while he
+amused himself in scenes in which she had no part. When boon
+companions deserted him, when fickle affection selfishly departed, when
+pleasure palled, he went home and found her waiting for him.
+
+ "Come from your long, long roving,
+ On life's sea so bleak and rough;
+ Come to me tender and loving,
+ And I shall be blest enough."
+
+That hath been her long song, always on her lips or in her heart.
+Children had been born to them. She had reared them almost alone--they
+were gone! Her hand had led them to the uttermost edge of the morning
+that has no noon. Then she had comforted him, and sent him out strong
+and whole-hearted while she stayed at home and--cried. What can a
+woman do but cry and trust? Well, she is at rest now. But she could
+not die until he had promised to "bear up," not fret, but to remember
+how happy they had been. They? Yes, it was even so.
+
+It was an equal partnership, after all.
+"She--was--a--good--wife--to--me." Oh, man! man! Why not have told
+her so when her ears were not dulled by death? Why wait to say these
+words over a coffin wherein lies a wasted, weary, gray-haired woman,
+whose eyes have so long held that pathetic story of loss and suffering
+and patient yearning, which so many women's eyes reveal to those who
+weep? Why not have made the wilderness in her heart blossom like the
+rose with the prodigality of your love? Now you would give worlds,
+were they yours to give, to see the tears of joy your words would have
+once caused, bejeweling the closed windows of her soul. It is too late.
+
+ "We have careful thoughts for the stranger,
+ And smiles for the sometime guest,
+ But oft for own,
+ The bitter tone,
+ Though we love our own the best."
+
+
+
+
+ODD-FELLOWSHIP AND THE FUTURE
+
+There is infinite and perennial fascination in the contemplation of the
+future. The past is a fixed province, the finished result of an
+ever-moving present. The future is the province of the poet, the
+prophet and the seer. The past is adamant, the future is plastic clay.
+The past is with God alone; the future is with God and man. We toil
+for it; dream of it; look to it; and all seek so to
+
+ * * * "Forecast the years,
+ As find in loss a gain to match,
+ Or reach a hand through time to catch
+ The far-off interest of tears."
+
+Let us consider the future as a field and Odd-Fellowship as a force.
+The future is a field, billowing with the ripening harvest of golden
+possibilities. It is as wide as the world, for the world is the field.
+It comprises every zone and clime; every nation and tribe; every island
+of the seas. Wherever we find one of our fellow-men in darkness and in
+chains, there is our field. It is as long as from now to the coming of
+Christ. A moment's survey of the field will convince us that the
+greatest conquests are yet to be made. There is battle ahead, great
+interests to be gained, great incentives to heroic effort. The times
+call for men--broad-browed, clear-eyed, strong-hearted, swift-footed
+men. Odd-Fellows, not behind you but before you, not in the past but
+in the future, lies the widest and richest field of Odd-Fellowship's
+possibility. Turn your faces, not toward the waning light of
+yesterday, but toward the growing radiance of a better morning. The
+force is commensurate with the field. The cry of every true Odd-Fellow
+ought to be the cry that leaped from the heart of Isaiah when his lips
+were touched with the coal from off the altar: "Here am I, Lord, send
+me." Our order is no longer a puny and helpless infant, but a lusty
+giant, panoplied in the armor of truth and clad in the strength of
+perpetual youth. We have riches untold. We have institutions for the
+care of the old, and the orphan, the equal of any of which the world
+can boast. We have a grasp on the sympathy and confidence of the
+masses which is immeasurable. We stand for principles that are the
+incarnation of God's infinite thought and throbbing love. We are
+equipped for conquest. What answer shall the force make to the cry
+from the field? As loyal Odd-Fellows, let us take our answer from the
+Great Commander. What answer did He make to a dying world? What did
+he come to do? He came to lift fallen humanity. He came to bind up
+the wounds of those who were bruised and bleeding. He came to speak
+words of cheer and sympathy to hearts bowed in sorrow. He came to
+break the chains of bondage and restore mankind to its former beauty
+and greatness. Our mission is identical with His. Our work is
+identical with His work. We are His representatives. Our highest
+destiny is the working out of His purposes. The world with all its
+boasted progress has not advanced beyond the need of a Savior. It is
+the same at heart now as it was when the blessed feet of Christ trod
+its hills and valleys. Men change, but man changes not. The same
+problems are confronting us as confronted them. It may be trite, but
+it is tremendously true, that our primary and ever-present duty is to
+seek and save the lost. We are to win them to faith in high and noble
+ends, and having won them to faith in our mission is not enough. They
+are to be instructed, cultured, enlarged, inspired, ennobled, until man
+looking in the face of man shall see the face of Christ shining
+through. He is to be the accepted Lord and law-giver in every realm of
+human thought and activity. He is to rule in the family. He is to
+rule in business. He is to rule until the demon of hate, malice and
+injustice has been throttled. He must rule in the affairs of state.
+He must rule in society, until the watchers at the gate shall announce
+to Him who sitteth upon the throne: "Thy kingdom has come and thy will
+is done in earth as it is in heaven." Christ is the solution of man's
+most difficult problems. He came to save men. How did He go about the
+task? He gave himself. We can accomplish our task only as in burning
+earnestness we give ourselves. What depth of humiliation, what
+self-devotion, what unmeasured sacrifices, what unspeakable suffering,
+what unfathomable anguish, what toil and anxiety, what love and pity,
+what loneliness and sorrow, are crowded into those three words, "He
+gave himself."
+
+If we as an order would give ourselves to the principles taught by our
+institution, we could win the world in the next half century. If we
+are to be truest to the future, we must stand by the side of the Great
+Teacher and proclaim a complete and perfect truth. Our platform should
+be neither broader nor narrower than His. If there is one truth in
+revelation that we can not give its proper setting and due emphasis,
+then we are not the keepers of God's truth. To my thinking, there are
+no organizations formed by man that can appeal more confidently to the
+Word of God for confirmation than the Odd-Fellows. We appeal to sane
+reason and common sense. No organization can hold up a higher ideal of
+individual freedom and worth. But there is a danger that we become
+narrow, that we violate the maxims of sane reason and common sense,
+that we lose the balance between individual prerogative and the claims
+of a united brotherhood. We can not accomplish the aims of our order
+by onesidedness. We are to become "all things to all men." We are not
+to be prisms breaking up the rays of light and declaring that this or
+that color is the most important. We as Odd-Fellows are to be lenses,
+converging the rays and bringing them to a focus upon the hearts of men
+as the white light of God's eternal truth.
+
+This is a practical age, and if we are to win we must demonstrate the
+superiority of our faith and practice over that of other claimants, not
+only in terms of the Written Word, but also in terms of manhood.
+Odd-Fellowship is standing upon the golden dawn of a new morning. It
+is to be a day of battle and conquest. It is truth blazoned upon the
+page of history, that if we as Odd-Fellows are true to our standard, to
+our possibilities and to our Maker, he will lay the suffering of a
+throbbing world in our arms that we may lay it at the feet of Him who
+died to redeem it. Let us cherish high hopes, noble aims, and lofty
+ideals. Never since the world was peopled has mankind stood in such
+anxious expectancy, awaiting the outcome of the immediate future, as in
+these closing years of the nineteenth century. Men are wistfully
+trying to peer through the portals of the year nineteen
+hundred--marveling, as the effects and forces of applied science is
+unfolded to our comprehension, and discovery moves on, each invention
+leading in another, in stately procession; we, all the while rapt in
+wonder, are straining in hope and fear to catch the coming word, and to
+comprehend its import. Never was speculation so rife, never was the
+field of human observation so unobstructed and expanded, nor the
+ascertainment and sifting of facts so facile. Never were opinions more
+diverse, nor was it ever so obviously important to detect and assert
+the philosophical principle, in recognition and obedience to which the
+laws of human government may be preserved and kept in view, and the
+retrocession of mankind prevented. At no stage of history was it more
+important to call to mind the great principle that government is a
+means, and not an end, and is instituted to maintain those general
+liberties which are essential for human happiness and progress. At
+this time, Odd-Fellowship looks toward the future with longing eyes,
+and its followers lift high their banner, on which is inscribed that
+beautiful motto, "Friendship, Love and Truth."
+
+After all, what lives in this world? Is it thought pulsations alone or
+deeds done? If thought alone, then the lowest thought coordinated in
+the brain of man would live. Something must be combined with thought
+in order to have a lasting effect. There must be thought and deeds and
+sentiment. Sentiment must go to the very existence of the race. On
+these forces may be built up structures that live and breathe a
+benediction on all mankind. I ask you to cast your eye over the world
+and note the permanency of such institutions as have come down to us,
+and are alive, and such as we say will live. I venture your first
+question will be: "What is the foundation on which they rest? Why,
+through the slow, revolving years have these institutions lived and
+thrived and grown? Have they lived on greed, or a desire for pelf or
+power, or out of human desire for adulation and praise? Or have they
+lived because of man's needs, and out of human wants?" If we probe to
+the bottom we will find this the corner-stone of all laudable
+ambitions, because man needs man, and needs help into a higher plane of
+usefulness and activities.
+
+We find institutions coming down to us from a date which the memory of
+man runs not to the contrary; indeed, some so old that the musty
+volumes of the long ago reveal not their origin. But simply the need
+of man for man would not entirely account for the duration of society
+in its ancient form. There must be still other underlying principles.
+There must be love and the acknowledgment of the brotherhood of man all
+along the way of life, or the family would go to ruin, society would
+dissolve, citizenship would not exist, states and principalities,
+kingdoms and powers would exist only as an idea in the brain. There
+would be no command to be our brother's keeper, no plighted vow that
+"The Lord be between thee and me, and between my seed and thy seed
+forever." Man would, as an individual, stand absolutely alone, like an
+atom dropped from the abyssmal depths onto this earth of ours. The
+little wild flower struggles through leafy mold, endures the
+tempestuous blast of winter, that when spring comes it may bloom to
+gladden the earth and scatter sweet incense all around. But without
+the cementing influence that runs like a thread all through society,
+man would not, could not, cast a sweet odor even on his own life, and
+dying would leave no benediction on the lives of others. And here the
+command comes, "Gather into thy quiver the lives and aspirations of
+others, that fitted to thy bow they may go forth scattering blessings
+by your help and by your kindly influence." So all great achievements
+have been based on great fundamental principles, and each principle has
+for its object the betterment of the conditions of mankind.
+
+Truth is said to be eternal. It was just as true at the dawn of
+creation that the square described on the hypotenuse of a right-angle
+triangle is equal to the square described on the other two sides, as it
+was when Pythagoras enunciated the theorem. "Thou shall not kill," is
+a law written by the Divine hand amid tempest and fire, but it stands.
+"Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself," rings from the portals of
+heaven through the gates of humanity and its command will not go
+unheeded. They are all great fundamental truths. Do you observe that
+they live? Give heed also to the fact that they stand for a better
+condition among men, for more helpfulness and higher elevations.
+Truths enunciated, whether old or new, that live, only have one
+tendency, viz., to raise man to better conditions. Since the dawn of
+creation there has been a constant tendency to arise from a lower to a
+higher estate. Self-preservation, self-helps, self-culture have been
+the trend of thought and action. And this has not been altogether an
+effort in the individual for his own personal advancement, but for the
+advancement of the race. Men have undergone sacrifices, humbled and
+almost debased themselves, that the succeeding generation might live on
+a higher plane, physically, morally and spiritually, than they
+themselves enjoyed. I do not know of any act of humanity that calls
+forth louder praise than to so act and speak and do as that humanity
+shall not only catch the inspiration, but shall make material progress
+on a better understanding of surrounding conditions. Odd-Fellowship,
+in its essence, is no new institution. Its principles, practices and
+precepts have existed from the beginning of the race.
+
+When Abraham stood with the churlish Lot on the line dividing the
+plains and highlands and said, "I pray thee let there be no contention
+between thee and me, if thou goest to the right hand I will go to the
+left, or, if thou goest to the left hand I will go to the right," he
+breathed the pure essence of unselfish devotion to the founder of a
+race. The acts of kindness shown by the traveler as the caravan plods
+its tortuous way across the sands of the desert; the mission of the
+wise men from the east in search of a Redeemer, all show forth that
+trait that you and I, my brother, try to emphasize while vowing
+devotion to the triple links. I said a moment ago that Odd-Fellowship,
+in its essence, was no new institution, and so it is not. As we know
+it in reality we have simply crystalized its workings. Instead of
+humanity, by its individual exertion, seeking to perform the task, we,
+as an organized band, have taken up the subject. What was paramount
+with individuals has become a living force with the multitude. What
+was before an invitation to duty has now become a command.
+
+In seeking after friendship we do not court the beasts of the fields
+and the fowls of the air as the hermit does, but we seek man; not man,
+but men; not this little society or faction, but embrace all mankind in
+the issue. If we seek for love it is not love for pelf or power, but
+love for man and God. In truth we do not depend on the right conduct
+of individuals, but accept truth as it is written in nature's open
+book, emblazoned on the sky of hope that bends over us, and speaks in
+all the higher attributes of life. Time was when the inclination of
+men was to withdraw into clans. Ishmael stood in the desert by himself
+with his hand against every man. His true descendant, the Arabian
+sheik, draws his mantle about him, and surrounded by his little band
+withdraws within his own circle, and woe betide him who attempts to
+break through. But in this came no advancement, no progress. The
+Ishmaelite of old is the same today. Wherever progress and advancement
+has shown itself it is found that true regard for all mankind has been
+the cardinal doctrine. "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself."
+Soon a broad catholicity of ideas seizes the multitude and man no more
+lives for himself than he lives for others. He who lives closest to
+the true heart of humanity lives nearest to God. Show me a man who
+lives for himself alone, and you will present almost a social outcast.
+Society tolerates him no more. In all the plans and calculations of
+life he is not numbered.
+
+For two thousand years the command has come stronger and stronger for a
+closer unity on social lines and fraternal regard. Not to segregate
+but to crystalize and raise the status. The conditions of our social
+life are such that we can not live entirely to ourselves. The monk may
+withdraw himself from the gaze of the world, the anchorite may seek a
+hiding place in caves and dens, but they ignore entirely the demands of
+society upon them. If I were the only person in the world there would
+be no social problem. I would commune with myself and God and nature
+about me, without reference to my surroundings. There would be no
+social environment; no one to please, no one to whom I am indebted by
+nature or acquired obligation, and so I would remain. But we do not
+find the conditions to so exist. We must look squarely in the face the
+facts as they are. On all sides we are surrounded by a multitude who
+rightly make demands of us and which we can not ignore. If I were
+alone, I would do as the patriarchs of old did, erect a little altar of
+stone, rude and unsightly, and bow myself down before it and commune
+with Deity. But here we find that different types of men have
+different religious views, and different spiritual aspirations, and so
+churches must be erected; and while all tend to the same end, each
+hopes to reach it by a different route. I must respect all these
+views. Only one can be my view, but my social surroundings are such
+that all have rights which I am bound to yield some obedience to.
+
+Again, if I were alone there would be no need of law, because both good
+and bad would be represented in my personality. There could be no
+murder, no crime, no punishment; but with all the manifold people with
+different tendencies, there must be law, or the social fabric would go
+to pieces by the strong trampling on the weak. Hence I must stand with
+reference to the law on the right side or the wrong side, and all
+humanity regardful of each other's rights must line up on one side or
+the other. In addition to our churchly ties and duties, we have family
+duties, and there begins the first of duty, first of government, first
+of obligations as citizens. And so I say we live in relation to those
+who surround us, and we can not live unmindful of them. We are touched
+by humanity everywhere, and walk elbow to elbow down the vale of life,
+supporting or destroying, and whether our pilgrimage be long or short
+we can not destroy the facts as they exist.
+
+It must be seen with only a hasty glance that with the varying
+conditions of men, with their different mental dispositions, moral
+ideas and social status, that a crying demand comes all the time for
+some organization where men can unite on a common level--some place
+where a divergence of political or moral views do not bar an entrance,
+where the family ties remain sacred, and more sacred because of the
+organization. It seems that men groped about for just such an
+organization, and men's wants are necessities, and social and civil
+status might be brought to a common level with all who might be brought
+into the assembly. It is believed by Odd-Fellows that our organization
+furnishes just this want. All the life that a man wants outside of his
+spiritual life has its food here, and society and family and man's
+relations to man have been helped by it. I state it without fear of
+contradiction, that no order has been more potent for good than ours.
+It has been the hand-maiden of civilization wherever it has established
+itself; it has smoothed out the asperities of life for many, many
+individuals; it has defended character, protected life and limb, and
+stood as champion of all good between man and man and between God and
+man.
+
+Every agency by which men are advanced, socially and morally, is an
+agency that guides government and state and individual up to a higher
+plane of development. Odd-Fellowship and Christianity go hand in hand.
+There is not a tenet of the order in any department that is repugnant
+to the highest development of Christianity. Indeed, it could not be
+so, for any lesson that is drawn from the three pillars of our order,
+Faith Hope and Charity, is a lesson pointing to the better life here
+and hereafter.
+
+In the eighty years, last past, who can estimate the benign influence
+of the lives and actions of men, yea, on their eternal destinies, of
+the oft-repeated utterances pointing to the Fatherhood of God and the
+brotherhood of man--a sermon that has been painted on the bow of God's
+eternal promise since Paul stood on the Mars Hill and preached this
+everlasting, unchangeable doctrine to the heathen world. When I think
+that since 1830 there has been expended for the relief of the members
+of this order and their families millions of dollars, in all right
+undertakings, and know that many hearts have ceased to ache, many cold
+feet covered, many a tear dried up, many a naked person clothed and
+many a hungry mouth fed, it rejoices my heart. I know also that such
+love could not spring from the hearts that were kindled by no spark of
+the Divine, but the lesson comes to you and to me, my brother and my
+sister, that he who opens not only the granary of earthly substance,
+but opens also the portals of the heart, and lets the Divine spark
+kindle into a blaze, will be thrice blessed in that day when the jewels
+of the eternity are made up. I do not desire to convey the impression
+that all our civilization is the outgrowth of Odd-Fellowship. We are
+too much inclined on such occasions as these to become mutual
+admiration societies and think that all the good things that we enjoy
+could not have been possible if our particular order had not existed.
+I do not wish to convey that impression. I only desire it to be
+understood that this order has been helpful in all right undertakings,
+and constantly endeavors to espouse the right and discard the wrong.
+It does not take the place of the church or the Sunday school or the
+prayer-meeting. It does not invade the pulpit, but only stands as an
+auxiliary to all these institutions that touch the better side of our
+natures. It inveighs against no religion or creed, and has no
+religious belief other than that we are brothers; nor does it encroach
+upon the domain of the politician. If Odd-Fellowship had more in it
+than the social and restraining influence one meets and is subjected to
+in the lodge-room, it would be sufficient inducement to organize and
+perpetuate lodges. No true Odd-Fellow crosses the threshold of his
+lodge-room but he feels he is treading on more sacred ground than the
+busy marts of trade, or in the office or counting house; he feels that
+he is coming home where dwells the purest principles of
+humanity--friendship, love and truth.
+
+But there is more in the workings of this order than the social. Its
+object is to touch humanity in all its phases. To rejoice with those
+that rejoice, and weep with those that weep. It sustains the living
+with friendship; causes man to stand firm in his integrity by the truth
+it teaches, and embrace the whole world with charity. The three links
+of friendship, love and truth mark the fuller and better development of
+this life, reaches beyond the grave, reaches beyond the vision, extends
+into the portals of the other and the better life. We may profess
+friendship, but that is an empty profession; our membership in a lodge
+is fruitless and our meetings produce no good results unless we have
+charity. It is but a small part that we should perform our mystic
+rights, typifying friendship, love and truth, but that we should so
+live them and act them that the touch of a member is the touch of a
+brother whose words sweeten the asperities of life and whose last
+offering is a tribute at the grave. We may be rudely brought back to
+the world with its pomp and show, its pageantry and vanity, by an
+emblem of mortality presented to us, but should we not ever have the
+spectre of mortality before our eyes? In the mad rush through life we
+forget the kinship of man to man. We are too often forgetful that the
+hand of a brother is reaching upward for succor. We forget that we are
+mortal, and the heart grows cold; our sympathies extend only to those
+around and nearest to us, forgetful that all mankind is our brother,
+and that he is especially our brother and friend who has mercy. But in
+this mad rush in life we are suddenly and almost rudely brought back to
+a full realization of our mortality, our helplessness, our emptiness,
+our nothingness, when we stand at the grave of our departed brother and
+reflect that here lies one who was born and had ambitions and died as
+we must die. His ambitions and hopes all went in the grave with him.
+The little grassy mound and the little marble slab is all that remains
+visible to tell us that he was our brother. Life would hardly be worth
+living; its struggles would be disastrous, its triumphs vain, empty
+bubbles, if the clods that fall upon the coffin and the sprig of
+evergreen tell the whole story of an Odd-Fellow. No, the very fact
+that we bury our departed brother teaches us that the grave is not the
+end of all. Though our brother dies he shall live in our hearts, in
+the flowers that we cast, in the precious memories that forever cluster
+around the links, the heart and the hand, the altar and the hour glass.
+When the supreme moment comes and the brother gathers his arrows into
+his quiver and fades from sight into the grave, we know that he has
+passed the portal into the land of the eternal, but the quiver and the
+arrows will ever stand as the badge of friendship. The heart may cease
+to beat, and the hand fall listless in death, yet the heart and hand
+will ever be emblems of love, and denote that when the hand of an
+Odd-Fellow is extended his heart goes with it.
+
+The good Odd-Fellow has constantly before his mind the book of books.
+His first sight into a lodge-room catches sight of that divine missive
+to man. It is his solace in life, and its precepts his consolation in
+death. It ever stands to him as an exhaustless fountain of truth. On
+these three cardinal principles he lives and dies, and in the constancy
+of that life we venerate his memory and do him kindly offices. It is
+the nature of a man to be communistic. It is only the anchorite that
+withdraws himself from the societies of man and communes with himself
+and his God. All right-thinking men desire and enjoy the society of
+their kind and kindred spirits. You had as well lock the sane man in
+the felon's cell as to doom him to live without the society of his
+fellows. The family is the first and best society. Perhaps the church
+is next, which is only the human family on a larger scale, fitting and
+preparing the members for a community in that house not made by hands.
+Next to my church I prize the secret organization to which I belong,
+where the cardinal principles of our holy Christianity are taught. The
+deathless friendship of David and Jonathan teaches me that though I may
+live in the king's palace, be clothed in purple and fine linen every
+day, be in the line of regal succession, yet I do not live to myself.
+
+I would herald broadcast that tenet of our order, "that we do for
+others as we would have others do for us, and that if I find my brother
+in distress, I must bind up his wounds, lift him from the quagmire of
+despond and set him on his feet." If any lesson stands out boldly
+before the mind of the Odd-Fellow it is truth. He finds it on his
+banner wherever he goes. Friendship is ephemeral. It lasts only
+through life. It may die, it will die. The grave ends it all. The
+silent messenger that comes to king and peasant alike, and causes the
+scepter of the monarch to be laid by the crook of the shepherd, ends
+our friendship. Love comes from God. God is love. It touches us at
+every point of our lives. From the cradle to the grave, every moment
+of our lives we are the objects of love to some one, and we love in
+turn. But human love must end. After life's fitful dream, the cares
+and vanities, the vexations and pleasures of life have no terror or
+concern for us, the love that thrilled our whole being will return to
+the source from whence it came. But truth will never die. It is the
+"imperial virtue." The heart may fail; it will fail, and the hand fall
+listless by the side. The arrow will fall after being shot into the
+air and never return, and the bow will be broken; the altar will be
+thrown down; the sand, grain by grain, run through the hour-glass, and
+the glass be shattered; the eye grow dim; the world roll up as a scroll
+and pass away; the hills may crumble and the pyramids melt with fervent
+heat; all the friendships will die and the love return to the Father
+that begat it, but truth will stand. It is indeed the imperial and the
+imperishable virtue. There, above the chaos and the confusion of time,
+it will stand to warn men from the wrong, and beckon them to do right.
+
+Despite the glamor of the world that secret societies propagate a
+secresy of men's actions at the expense of truth and justice, it can
+not obtain in a lodge of this order. No man ever took upon himself the
+vows and studied the underlying motives, and practiced the lessons of
+the order, but he becomes a better citizen. If he has become a good
+husband and father, he becomes better in his domestic relations. If he
+has been charitable before, he becomes more so now. Men's weaknesses
+he looks upon as human frailties, until time and sense teach him that
+frailties have degenerated into positive perversity of character and
+baseness of heart. He will condemn falsehood and hypocrisy wherever
+found.
+
+The object of religious organizations is to make men better and fit
+them for the life immortal. The object of government and its laws is
+to make and protect good citizens and repress vice. The object of this
+secret organization is to bind men more firmly together for mutual
+protection, for help and sustenance, to look after their families, and
+to be in a broad sense our brother's keeper. I would not be understood
+as placing a secret organization in place of the church, or in the
+place of a political government. By no means. Each has its own proper
+and particular sphere of action. No one in its actions and endeavors
+is inimical to the actions of the others. Each rests on its own
+peculiar foundation, but all dovetail together, and all make a
+harmonious whole. The man who is a good Christian is better by being a
+good Odd-Fellow. If both a good Christian and a good Odd-Fellow, he
+comes nearer being the typical citizen. If man reveres the law of this
+order, he will have more devotion to his church, his home, his flag and
+his country. I have no fault to find with those who do not believe in
+uniting with a secret organization, but I do object to any man
+inveighing against the objects and purposes, the ends and aims, of our
+order when he knows nothing about it. I do not expect every man to
+belong to my church, for men in their constitution and mental make-up
+can not see alike theologically. But I do accord to every member of
+every church the hope of getting to heaven if he lives up to the
+teachings of this particular sect. I believe in justification by faith
+and good works, but I have no use for a man who decries this doctrine
+when he never exercised a particle of faith nor did a good deed in his
+life. And so I would say to any one who thinks he stands on some lofty
+pinnacle and scents danger to the family tie, or church, or state, or
+society, because of the existence of secret orders, that he thinks and
+talks of something he knows nothing about. If I should desire to draw
+comparisons, I could say truthfully that during the last year this
+order gave more in charity and benefits to its members in Illinois than
+any religious denomination in the state. Look around your own
+community and see if it be not so. Think of the widow with
+tear-stained cheek, from whose door the wolf has been kept, because the
+charitable hand of our order was upon her. Count the orphan children
+of members of our order who have had shoes put on their feet, clothes
+put on their backs and food in their mouths. Enumerate the sufferers
+on beds of anguish, racked with pain and scorched with fever, who have
+had the nightly vigil of Odd-Fellows to smooth their pillows, dampen
+their parched lips and moisten their feverish brows. Watch the funeral
+pageant with its long train of mourners, brothers, dropping the
+evergreen in the grave, and doing the last sad offices, and then croak
+no more that secret societies are baneful to our civilization. He who
+thus sustains and soothes and encourages will be reckoned as twice
+blessed in that day when the secrets of all hearts are disclosed, and
+men are rewarded according to the deeds done in the body.
+
+"[*]Some years ago I stood out on the great plains this side of Denver.
+To the north, the south and the east was one vast stretch of plains,
+the eye interrupted only by the horizon. I turned and looked to the
+west, and clearly outlined in the distance was the chain of the Rocky
+Mountains--the backbone of the continent. There I saw Long's Peak,
+Pike's Peak, and the Spanish Peaks, as mighty sentinels--watch
+towers--that had served as landmarks to many a weary traveler on the
+Santa Fe trail. They stood as the manifestation of the might of an
+Omnipotent Power. So I turn to the record made by this order in the
+last eighty years, and find colossal sums of money--not hoarded, but
+collected to relieve humanity, to educate the orphan, to bury the dead
+and to befriend the widow. I see arising, as if by magic, asylums for
+our needy. I see a great host, one million strong, advancing, shoulder
+to shoulder, elbow touching elbow, all bent on deeds of mercy and acts
+of love. Are not these also mighty sentinels erected amid this
+surging, striving throng of humanity to serve to guide man in the road
+to a higher and better life? These peaks of the Rockies may crumble
+and pass away, but a force for good once set in motion never loses its
+force. It is eternal. To beautify, to strengthen, to adorn and to
+expand our order and more fully present its magnificence to the world,
+we have the department of Patriarchs Militant. It depicts as gallant a
+band as ever marched to the sound of martial music or deployed for
+battle. As the knights under Richard Couer de Leon or Peter the Hermit
+marched forth to rescue the Holy Sepulcher from the hand of the infidel
+and guard its sacred entablatures, so will our chevaliers as bravely
+guard our ritual, our mystic rights, our honor, the honor of our
+mothers wives and sisters, as a sacred trust.
+
+"And so our order moves forward to greater conquests. In the past it
+has worked marvels for humanity. May we not, for the future, predict
+better and more highly wrought out achievements? Humanity has been
+taken as it is and in the progress of refinement has been raised to a
+higher standard. It is the hand-maiden of civilization that works
+under even yoke for the best sides of humanity. While it does not
+displace or attempt to displace the church, it aids. It has
+friendship, love and truth as the three human graces, and clings to
+faith, hope and charity as the Christian virtues. It is now like the
+city that is set upon the hill. It can not be hid. Out upon a rocky
+point of the ocean's shore at Minot's ledge is a great light-house,
+erected by the fostering care of the government to protect the mariners
+on the high seas. Its great light swings around, now flashing on the
+land and now sending its rays far out across the billowy ocean. It is
+a grateful act of a great government. Many a bewildered seaman has
+caught its rays and sheared the prow of his ship further out to sea to
+avoid the dangerous shoals.
+
+"So we, imitating the kind of example of the generous government, and
+measuring our acts by the example of the blessed Master, have erected a
+light-house here for the protection of humanity from its ills. Now it
+shines on us as mortals hastening to a final consummation of things;
+again it throws its beams out across the illimitable sea of hope, where
+sooner or later we all may ride, and by the light here given we may
+steer our bark into a haven of final rest. Today we are on the
+tempestuous ocean of life. We who feel that we are on the deck, let us
+throw the life-line and the life-preservers to him who is about to
+sink. Let us make this order even a greater light-house than our
+fathers ever dreamed of. It can be done, because it is so ordained.
+What God in his good providence orders can be, will be accomplished.
+With thankful hearts we have passed over more than three quarters of a
+century of existence as an organization. We are speeding onward to the
+century mark, and whether we remain to see its wonderful processes or
+not, humanity will be here demanding just what we have done in the
+past. Let us lay the work strong today and transmit it in higher
+forms, so that the end of the century of our existence as an order
+shall see better life, better hope and higher aspirations. Let the
+Subordinates, Patriarchs, Rebekahs and Chevaliers all form a cordon
+around the altar of our beloved order, where the fires shall never be
+extinguished while friendship, love and truth endures, and faith, hope
+and charity are necessities.
+
+"Grand as has been the record of Odd-Fellowship from 1819 to the
+present, it is but the sunbeams from the birth of the day that will
+develop grandly into a magnificence that shall combine all the charms
+of the morning, the glare of the noontide, and the blaze of a sunset
+splendor in an endless panorama of glory and grandeur. And if, with
+such a picture before our eyes, painted by a faith founded upon the
+achievements of eighty years, and our intimate knowledge of the vast
+practical benevolence that begins at the cradle and ends only at the
+gate of heaven, the Odd-Fellow is not dazzled by the sublimity of
+Odd-Fellowship and awed into a reverence for its work and character,
+there is a lamentable defect in his appreciation of the beautiful, and
+an utter failure to read the joys and dignity and influence of a
+properly developed and appreciative Odd-Fellow. Let it never be
+forgotten that there is nothing groveling in Odd-Fellowship. Mutual
+relief, it is true, is a leading office in our affiliation, but
+Odd-Fellowship seeks to elevate the character of man, make him what God
+intended him to be; and while such a helpful influence is extended to
+each one of us who have chosen to come within its holy power, may we
+endeavor to lift ourselves up to the high standard of the order of
+which we are a part, faithfully discharging our duties to ourselves and
+to the world; shedding its benign influence and hallowed inspiration
+alike in the palace with its draped windows and velvet laden floors and
+in the cottage nestling among the flowers of the humble dooryard;
+glowing with the same peerless luster in halls of learning and in
+workshop and factory; kissing with the same tender, holy touch the
+rough hand that guides the implement of industry, and the soft hand
+that guides the pen; making character the test of merit and the heart
+the bond of friendship, and recognizing the equality and holy influence
+of noble womanhood. Odd-Fellowship is the unerring, resplendent
+guiding star to that grand development of human nature to which hope
+looks forward with such ardent joy, when one law shall bind all
+nations, tongues and kindred, and that law will be the law of universal
+brotherhood."
+
+
+[*]Extract from address delivered by Hon. E. G. Hogate.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE JERICHO ROAD***
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