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by J.M. Judy


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Title:  Questionable Amusements and Worthy Substitutes

Author:  J. M. Judy

April, 2001  [Etext #2603]


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Questionable Amusements and Worthy Substitutes.

J. M. Judy




Introduction by George H. Trever, Ph.D., D.D.  The manuscript of
This book was not submitted to any publisher, but was put in its
present form by JENNINGS & PYE, for a friend of the author.
Address.  Chicago: Western Methodist Book Concern, 1904.




INTRODUCTION.

BY GEORGE H. TREVER, PH.D., D.D.
Author of Comparative Theology, etc.


A BOOK on "Questionable Amusements and Worthy Substitutes"
is timely to-day.  Such a grouping of subject matter is in itself a
commendation.  Possibly we have been saying "Don't" quite enough
without offering the positive substitute.  The "expulsive power of a
new affection" is, after all, the mightiest agency in reform.  "Thou
shalt not" is quite easy to say; but though the house be emptied, swept,
and garnished, unless pure angels hasten to occupy the vacated
chambers, other spirits worse than the first will soon rush in to befoul
them again.

The author of these papers, the Rev. J.M. Judy, writes out of a full,
warm heart.  We know him to be a correct, able preacher of the gospel,
and an efficient fisher of men.  Having thoroughly prepared himself
for his work by courses in Northwestern University and Garrett Biblical
Institute, by travel in the South and West of our own country, and by a
visitation of the Old World, he has served on the rugged frontier of his
Conference, and among foreign populations grappling successfully with
some of the most difficult problems in modern Church work.

The following articles aroused much interest when delivered to his own
people, and must do good wherever read.  In style they are clear and
vivid; in logical arrangement excellent; glow with sacred fervor, and
pulse with honest, eager conviction.  We bespeak for them a wide
reading, and would especially commend them to the young people of
our Epworth Leagues.

WHITEWATER, WIS., March 2, 1904.


PREFACE.

"QUESTIONABLE Amusements and Worthy Substitutes" is a
consideration of the "so-called questionable amusements," and an
outlook for those forms of social, domestic, and personal practices
which charm the life, secure the present, and build for the future.  To
take away the bad is good; to give the good is better; but to take away
the bad and to give the good in its stead is best of all.  This we have
tried to do, not in our own strength, but with the conscious presence
of the Spirit of God.

The spiritual indifference of Christendom to-day as one meets with it
in all forms of Christian work has led us to send out this message.
"Questionable Amusements," form both a cause and a result of this
widespread indifference.  An underlying cause of this indifference
among those who profess to be followers of Jesus Christ, is lack of
conviction for sin, want of positive faith in the fundamental truths of
the Scriptures, too little and superficial prayer, and lack of personal,
soul-saving work.  Is the class-meeting becoming extinct?  Is the
prayer-meeting lifeless?  Is the revival spirit decaying?  Is family
worship formal, or has it ceased?  However some may answer these
questions, still we believe that the Church has a warm heart, and that
signs of her vigorous life are expressed in her tenacious hold for high
moral standards, and in her generous GIVING of money and of men.

Our point of view has been that of the person, old or young, regardless
of sect, race, party, occupation, or circumstances, who has a life to live,
and who wants to make the most out of it for himself and for his fellow-
men, and who believes that he will find this life disclosed in nature, in
history, and in the Word of God.  J.M.J.

ORFORDVILLE, WIS., March, 1904.


CONTENTS

PART I.
QUESTIONABLE AMUSEMENTS

CHAPTER                                                                             PAGE
I. TOBACCO,.................13
II. DRUNKENNESS,................26
III. GAMBLING, CARDS,...............53
IV. DANCING,...................70
V. THEATER-GOING,..............84

PART II
WORTHY SUBSTITUTES

VI. BOOKS AND READING,.............99
VII. SOCIAL RECREATION,............118
VIII. FRIENDSHIP,.................130
IX. TRAVEL,...................147
X.        HOME AND THE HOME-MAKER,.........170



PART I.
QUESTIONABLE AMUSEMENTS.

"The excesses of our youth are drafts on our old age, payable about
one hundred years after date without interest."--JOHN RUSKIN.


I.
TOBACCO.

Tobacco wastes the body.   It is used for the nicotine that is in it.
This peculiar ingredient is a poisonous, oily, colorless liquid, and
gives to tobacco its odor.  This odor and the flavor of tobacco are
developed by fermentation in the process of preparation for use.
"Poison" is commonly defined as "any substance that when taken
into the system acts in an injurious manner, tending to cause death
or serious detriment to health."  And different poisons are defined
as those which act differently upon the human organism.  For example,
one class, such as nicotine in tobacco, is defined as that which acts as
a stimulant or an irritant; while another class, such as opium, acts with
a quieting, soothing influence.  But the fact is that poison does not act
at all upon the human system, but the human system acts upon the
poison.  In one class of poisons, such as opium, the reason why the
system does not arouse itself and try to cast off the poison, is that the
nerves become paralyzed so that it can not.  And in the case of nicotine
in tobacco the nerves are not thus paralyzed, so that they try in every
way to cast off the poison.  Let the human body represent the house,
and the sensitive nerves and the delicate blood vessels the sleeping
inmates of that house.  Let the Foe Opium come to invade that house
and to destroy the inmates, for every poison is a deadly Foe.  At the
first appearance of this subtle Foe terror is struck into the heart of the
inmates, so that they fall back helpless, paralyzed with fear.  When
the Intruder Tobacco comes, he comes boisterously, rattling the
windows and jostling the furniture, so that the inmates of the house
set up a life-and-death conflict against him.

This is just what happens when tobacco is taken into the human system.
Every nerve cries out against it, and every effort is made to resist it.
You ask, Will one's body be healthier and live longer without tobacco
than with it?  We answer, by asking, Will one's home be happier and
more prosperous without some deadly Foe continually invading it, or
with such a Foe?  When the membranes and tissues of the body, with
their host of nerves and blood vessels, have to be fighting against some
deadly poison in connection with their ordinary work, will they not
wear out sooner than if they could be left to do their ordinary work
quietly?  To illustrate:  A particle of tobacco dust no sooner comes
into contact with the lining membrane of the nose, than violent
sneezing is produced.  This is the effort of the besieged nerves and
blood vessels to protect themselves.  A bit of tobacco taken into the
mouth causes salivation because the salivary glands recognize the
enemy and yield an increased flow of their precious fluid to wash him
away.  Taken into the stomach unaccustomed to its presence, and it
produces violent vomiting.  The whole lining membrane of that much-
abused organ rebels against such an Intruder, and tries to eject him.
Tobacco dust and smoke taken into the lungs at once excretes a mucous-
like fluid in the mouth, throat, windpipe, bronchial tubes, and in the
lungs themselves.  Excretions such as this mean a violent wasting away
of vitality and power.  Taken in large quantities into the stomach,
tobacco not only causes an excretion of mucus from the mouth, throat,
and breathing organs, but it produces an overtaxing of the liver; that is,
this organ overworks in order to counteract the presence of the poison.
But one asks, If tobacco is so injurious, why is it used with such
apparent pleasure?  A small quantity of tobacco received into the
system by smoking, chewing, or snuffing is carried through the
circulation to the skin, lungs, liver, kidneys, and to all the organs of
the  body, by which it is moderately resisted.  The result is a gentle
excitement of all these organs.  They are in a state of morbid activity.
And as sensibility depends upon vital action of the bodily organisms,
there is necessarily produced a degree of sense gratification or pleasure.
The reason why these sensations are pleasurable instead of painful is,
in this state of moderate excitement the circulation is materially increased
without being materially unbalanced.  But as with every sense indulgence,
when the craving for increased doses becomes satisfied, when larger doses
are taken the circulation becomes unbalanced, vital resistance centers in
one point, congestion occurs, then the sensation becomes one of pain
instead of one of pleasure.  This disturbance or excitement caused by
tobacco is nothing more nor less than disease.  For it is abnormal action,
and abnormal action is fever, and fever is disease.  It is state on good
authority, "that no one who smokes tobacco before the bodily powers
are developed ever makes a strong, vigorous man."  Dr. H. Gibbons
says:  "Tobacco impairs digestion, poisons the blood, depresses the
vital powers, causes the limbs to tremble, and weakens and otherwise
disorders the heart."  It is conceded by the medical profession that
tobacco causes cancer of the tongue and lips, dimness of vision,
deafness, dyspepsia, bronchitis, consumption, heart palpitation, spinal
weakness, chronic tonsilitis, paralysis, impotency, apoplexy, and
insanity.  It is held by some men that tobacco aids digestion.  Dr.
McAllister, of Utica, New York, says that it "weakens the organs of
Digestion and assimilation, and at length plunges one into all the
horrors of dyspepsia."

*Tobacco dulls the mind.*  It does this not only by wasting the body, the
physical basis of the mind, but it does it through habits of intellectual
idleness, which the user of tobacco naturally forms.  Whoever heard of
a first-class loafer who did not e-a-t the weed or burn it, or both?  On
the rail train recently we were compelled to ride for an hour in the
smoking-car, which Dr. Talmage has called "the nastiest place in
Christendom."  In front of me sat a young man, drawing and puffing
away at a cigar, polluting the entire region about him.  In the short
hour enough time was lost by that young man to have carefully read ten
pages of the best standard literature.  All this we observed by an
occasional glance from the delightful volume in our own hands.  The
ordinary user of tobacco has little taste for reading, little passion for
knowledge, and superficial habits of continued reasoning.  His leisure
moments are absorbed in the sense-gratification of the weed.  But if as
much attention had been given in acquiring the habit of reading as had
been given in learning the use of tobacco, the most valuable of all
habits would take the place of one of the most useless of all habits.
When we see a person trying to read with a cigar or a pipe in his mouth,
Knowing that nine-tenths of his real consciousness is given to his
smoking, and one-tenth to what he is reading, we are reminded of the
commercial traveler who "wanted to make the show of a library at
home, so he wrote to a book merchant in London, saying:  "Send me
six feet of theology, and about as much metaphysics, and near a yard
of civil law in old folio."  Not a sentimentalist, a reformer, nor a crank,
but Dr. James Copeland says:  "Tobacco weakens the nervous powers,
favors a dreamy, imaginative, and imbecile state of mind, produces
indolence and incapacity for manly or continuous exertion, and sinks
its votary into a state of careless inactivity and selfish enjoyment of vice."
Professor L. H. Gause writes:  "The intellect becomes duller and duller,
until at last it is painful to make any intellectual effort, and we sink into
a sensuous or sensual animal.  Any one who would retain a clear mind,
sound lungs, undisturbed heart, or healthy stomach, must not smoke or
chew the poisonous plant."  It is commonly known that in a number of
American and foreign colleges, by actual testing, the non-user of
tobacco is superior in mental vigor and scholarship to the user of it.  In
view of this fact, our Government will not allow the use of tobacco at
West Point or at Annapolis.  And in the examinations in the naval
academy a large percentage of those who fail to pass, fail because of the
evil effects of smoking.

Tobacco drains the pocketbook.  "Will you please look through my
mouth and nose?" asked a young man once of a New York physician.
The man of medicine did so, and reported nothing there.  "Strange!  Look
again.  Why, sir, I have blown ten thousand dollars--a great tobacco
plantation and a score of slaves--through that nose."  The Partido cigar
regularly retails at from twenty-five to thirty cents each.  An ordinary
smoker will smoke four cigars a day.  Three hundred and sixty-five
dollars a year, besides his treating.  A small fortune every ten years!  A
neighbor of ours on the farm used to go to town in the spring and buy
enough chewing tobacco to last him until after harvest, and flour to last
the family for two weeks.  Among all classes of people this useless drain
of the pocketbook is increasing.  In our country last year more money was
spent for tobacco than was spent for foreign missions, for the Churches,
and for public education, all combined.  Our tobacco bill in one year
costs our Nation more than our furniture and our boots and shoes; more
than our flour and our silk goods; one hundred and forty-five million
dollars more than all our printing and publishing; one hundred and
thirty-five million dollars more than the sawed lumber of the Nation.
Each year France buys of us twenty-nine million pounds of tobacco,
Great Britain fifty millions, and Germany sixty-nine million pounds, to
say nothing of how much these nations import from other countries.
Never before has the use of tobacco been so widespread as to-day.  "The
Turks and Persians are the greatest smokers in the world.  In India all
classes and both sexes smoke; in China the practice--perhaps there more
ancient--is universal, and girls from the age of eight or nine wear as an
appendage to their dress a small silken pocket to hold tobacco and a
pipe."  Nor can the expense and widespread use of tobacco be defended on
the ground that it is a luxury, for the abstainer from tobacco counts it the
greater luxury not to use it.  The only explanation for its use is, that it is a
habit which binds one hand and foot, and from which no person with
ordinary will power in his own strength can free himself.

Tobacco blunts the moral nature.  It is not certain how long tobacco has
been used as a narcotic.  Some authorities hold that the smoking of tobacco
was an ancient custom among the Chinese.  But if this is true, we know
that it did not spread among the neighboring nations.  When Columbus
came to America he found the natives of the West Indies and the American
Indian smoking the weed.  With the Indian its use has always had a
religious and legal significance.  Early in the sixteenth century tobacco
was introduced into England, later into Spain, and still later, in 1560, into
Italy.  Used for its medicinal properties at first, soon it came to be used
as a  luxury.  The popes of Italy saw its harm and thundered against it.
The priests and sultans of Turkey declared smoking a crime.  One sultan
made it punishable with death.  The pipes of smokers were thrust through
their noses in Turkey, and in Russia the noses of smokers were cut off in
the earlier part of the seventeenth century.  "King James I of England
issued a counterblast to tobacco, in which he described its use as a
'custom loathsome to the eye, hateful to the nose, harmful to the brain,
dangerous to the lungs, and in the black, stinking fumes thereof nearest
resembling the horrible Stygian smoke of the pit that is bottomless.'"  As
one contrasts this sentiment with the practice of the present sovereign of
England, his breath is almost taken away in his great fall from the
sublime to the ridiculous!

While we do not believe a moderate use of tobacco for a mature person
is necessarily a sin, yet we do believe that it does blunt the moral sense,
and soon leads to spiritual weakness and indifference, which are sins.
To love God with all one's heart, mind, soul, and strength, and one's
neighbor as himself, means not only a denial of that which is questionable
in morals, but a practice of that which is positively good.  However noble
or worthy in character may be some who use tobacco, yet by common
consent it is a "tool of the devil."  Every den of gamblers, every low-down
grogshop, every smoking-car, every public resort and waiting-room
departments for men, every rendezvous of rogues, loafers, villains, and
tramps is thoroughly saturated with the vile stench of the cuspidor and
the poisonous odors of the pipe and cigar.  "Rev. Dr. Cox abandoned
tobacco after a drunken loafer asked him for a light."  Not until then had
he seen and felt the disreputable fraternity that existed between the users
of tobacco.

Owen Meredith gives us a standard of strength and freedom, which is
an inspiration to every lover of rounded, perfected manhood and
womanhood:

    "Strong is that man, he only strong,
     To whose well-ordered will belong,
      For service and delight,
    All powers that in the face of wrong
      Establish right.

    And free is he, and only he,
    Who, from his tyrant passions free,
      By fortune undismayed,
    Has power within himself to be,
      By self obeyed.

    If such a man there be, where'er
    Beneath the sun and moon he fare,
      He can not fare amiss;
    Great nature hath him in her care.
      Her cause is his."

Only let the "will," the "powers," the "freedom," and the "self"
of which the writer speaks become the "Christ will," the "Christ
powers," the "Christ freedom," and the "Christ self."  Then the
strongest chains of bondage must fly into flinters.  For "if the
Son make you free, ye are free indeed."  (John viii, 36.)




II.
DRUNKENNESS.

I. A TEMPERANCE PLATFORM.


WE bring to you three words of counsel with respect to this subject.
First, Beware of the Social Glass; second, Study the Drink Evil; third,
Openly oppose it.  This is a Temperance Platform upon which every
sober, informed, and conscientious person may stand.  Would it be
narrow or uncharitable to assert that not to stand upon this platform
argues that one is not sober, or not informed, or not conscientious?
The crying need of to-day is, that men and women shall be urged into
positions of conviction and activity against this most colossal evil of
our time.  In our country the responsibility for drunkenness rests not
with the illiterate, blasphemous, ex-prison convicts who operate the
250,000 saloons of our Nation, nor yet with the 250,000 finished
products of the saloon who go down into drunkards' graves every
year, but with the sober, respectable, hard-working, voting citizens
of our country.  Nor does this exempt women, whose opportunity to
shape the moral and political convictions of the home is far greater
than that of the men.  When the women of America say to the saloon,
You go! the saloon will have to go.  The moral and political measures
of any people are easily traceable to the sisters and wives and mothers
of that people.  You and I and every ordinary citizen of our country had
as well try to escape our own shadow, as to try to escape the responsibility
that rests upon us for the drunkenness of our people.  To help us to do our
whole duty in our day and generation in this matter is the purpose of our
message.

II. BEWARE OF THE SOCIAL GLASS.

The first and least thing that one can do to destroy drunkenness, is to be
a total abstainer.  Beware of the social glass!  But quickly one replies,
"Why should there be any social glass?"  "Why allow sparkling, attractive
springs of refreshing poison to issue forth in all of our social centers, and
then cry to our sons and daughters, to our brothers and sisters, Beware?"
My friend, we must deal with facts as they are.  There should not be a
social glass; but what has that to do with the fact that the social glass is
here?  You answer, "Why allow these fountains of death to exist?" while
we cry to our loved ones, "Beware!"  We do not advocate the presence
of these fountains; but while we seek to destroy them beseechingly we
cry, "Beware!"  The social factor in the liquor traffic is its Gibraltar of
defense.  Rare is the young man who has the intellectual stamina and
moral courage to resist the invitations to take a social drink.  And in our
frontier and foreign towns many of our bright and respected girls use the
social glass.  But in its use is the beginning of a fateful end.  The subtlest
thing in this world is sin.  Listen!

    "Sin is a monster of so frightful mien;
      To be hated needs but to be seen;
      But seen too oft, familiar with the face,
      We first endure, then pity, then embrace."

The subtle thing about it is, that the first embracing of any sin seems to be
but a trifling, an occasional affair.  For one who lives in an ordinary city
of a thousand inhabitants or upwards, unless he is an "out-and-out"
Christian and selects only associates like himself, it becomes a real
Embarrassment not to indulge in a social drink.  It seems polite, clever,
the kindly thing to do.  And the sad fact is, that the majority of unchristian
young people and many older ones do not decline.  To prove this we have
but to look at the human wrecks along the shore.  Two young men lived
near our home.  Their parents were well-to-do.  The family grew tired of
the farm and moved to town.  The boys fell in with bad company.  They
did not decline the social glass.  Soon they furnished other young men with
drink from their own pocket.  This was fifteen years ago.  To-day one of
them is a hardened sinner, violent in his passions and blasphemous against
God.  The other one, having spent a term in our Illinois State University at
Champaign, married a beautiful neighbor girl and moved to Missouri.  Here
he lived off the money of his father's estate, practicing his early-learned
habits of drinking, gambling, and loafing.  He moved from State to State
until, finally left in poverty, he tended bar in a saloon.  While visiting with
relatives in his old neighborhood a few years ago he stole a watch and some
money from his own nephew, and was tried in the courts, and sentenced to
the penitentiary for one year.  His wife, having carried the burden of
disgrace and want through all these years, with the seven unfortunate
children were released from him to struggle alone.  All this we have seen
with our own eyes as the years have come and gone.  The downfall and
ruin of this young man, and the unsaved fate of his brother, easily may be
traceable to the "social glass" and the boon companions of the social
glass--tobacco and playing-cards.  Last year I met a man who had prided
himself in the fact that he could drink or let it alone, and thought that it
was all right to take a "social glass" occasionally.  Election time came
around; he fell in with his friends, and, as one always will do sooner or
later who tampers with it at all, went too far.  Before he knew it he was as
low in the gutter as a beast.  It was three days before he was a sober man
again.  He work had ceased, he had disgusted his fellow-workmen,
disgraced his Christian family, and had humiliated himself so that he was
ashamed to look any man in the face until he had repented of his sins
before God, and had promised Him, by His help, that he would never
drink another glass.  What a pleasure it was to hear that old man, as he
is close to sixty years of age, to hear him tell in a spirited religious
service of how he had strayed from his path and had got lost in the woods,
but thanked God that he was out of the woods, and by His help would
remain out.  When we become undone in Christ He lifts us up and starts
us on our new way rejoicing in His love.  If Christ Himself were here in
body, do you know what He would advise on this point?  He would say:
"As it is written;" "Look not thou upon the wine when it is red, when it
giveth its color in the cup, when it goeth down smoothly:  at the last it
biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder."  Beware of the social
glass, my friend, for though it promises pleasure, it gives but pain; it
promises joy, it gives but sorrow; it promises deliverance, it gives but
eternal death!

III. STUDY THE DRINK EVIL.

We hear it said, "No use to picture the horrors of the drink evil;
every one knows them already."  In part, this is true.  All of us
know more than we wish it were possible to be true; and yet no
one can ever realize its horrors until caught, and torn, and mangled
in its pinching, jagged, griping meshes.  It is one thing to know by
a distant glance, it is another thing to know by the pangs of a
broken heart and of a wrecked life.  For those who are not thus
caught in its meshes to realize its horrors so as to seek its destruction
but one course is possible; namely, To study the evil.  Let the
teacher tell of its ravages; let the minister proclaim its curses; let
the poet sing it; the painter paint it; the editor report it; the novelist
portray it; the scientist describe it; the philosopher decry it; the
sisters and wives and mothers denounce it--until all shall unite in
smiting it to its death!

We should study the drink evil in its relation to disease.  That strong
drink tends to produce disease is no longer questioned.  "During the
cholera in New York City in 1832, of two hundred and four cases
in the Park Hospital only six were temperate, and all of these
recovered; while one hundred and twenty-two of the others died.
In Great Britain in the same year five-sixths of all who perished
were intemperate.  In one or two villages every drunkard died, while
not a single member of a temperance society lost his life."  "In Paisley,
England, in 1848, there were three hundred and thirty-seven cases of
cholera, and every case except one was a dram-drinker.   The cases
of cholera were one for every one hundred and eighty-one inhabitants;
but among the temperate portion there was only one case to each two
thousand."  "Of three hundred and eighty-six persons connected with
the total abstinence societies only one died, and he was a reformed
drunkard" of three months' standing.  "In New Orleans during the last
epidemic the order of the Sons of Temperance appointed a committee
to ascertain the number of deaths from cholera among their members.
It was found that there were twelve hundred and forty-three members
in the city and suburbs, and among these only three deaths had
occurred, being only one-sixth the average death-rate."  "In New York,
in 1832, only two out of five thousand members of temperance
societies died."  The Northwestern Life Insurance Company of
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, one of the oldest and most successful
Companies in the Northwest, has lived for nearly forty years next
neighbor to lager beer interests.  The shrewd men of this company
have studied the influence of the beer industry upon those who engage
in it.  The result is, that they will no longer grant an insurance policy
to a beer-brewer, nor to any one in any way engaged in the business.
In their own words their reason is this:  "Our statistics show that our
business has been injured by the short lives of those men who drink
lager beer."

Then, we need to study the drink evil in its relation to society.  "A
recent report of the chaplain of the Madalen Society of New York
shows that of eight-nine fallen women in the asylum at one time,
all but two ascribed their fall to the effect of the drink habit."  "A
lady missionary makes the statement that of two thousand sinful
women known personally to her, there were only ten cases in which
intoxicating liquors were not largely responsible for their fall."  "A
leading worker for reform in New York says that the suppression of
the curse of strong drink would include the destruction of ninety-nine
of every one hundred of the houses of ill-fame."  "A missionary on
going at the written request of one of these lost women to rescue her
from a den of infamy remonstrated with her for being even then
slightly under the influence of drink."  "Why," was her indignant
reply as tears filled her eyes, "do you suppose we girls are so dead
that we have lost our memories of mother, home, and everything
good?  No, indeed; and if it were not for liquor and opium, we
would all have to run away from our present life or go mad by
pleadings of our own hearts and home memories."

Only by a study of the drink evil shall we know its ravages in the
home.  Those of us who have lived in the pure air of free, country
home-life can not easily realize the moral plague of drunkenness
as it blights the home in the crowded districts of city slum life.
Nor is the home of the city alone cursed by the drink evil.  Three
years ago this last holiday season we were doing some evangelistic
work in a neighboring town, a mere village of a couple hundred
inhabitants.  I shall never forget how the mother of a dejected home
cried and pleaded for help from the ravages of her drunken husband.
She said that he had spent all of his wages, and had made no
provision for the home, in furniture, in books for the children, nor
in clothing for them nor for her.  She had come almost to despair,
and was blaming God for allowing her little ones to suffer because
of a worthless man.  O, the world is full of this sort of thing to-day,
if we only knew the sighs and heartaches and blasted hopes of those
who suffer!  In a smoking-car one day a commercial traveler refused
to drink with his old comrades, by saying:  "No, I won't drink with
you to-day, boys.  The fact is, boys, I have sworn off."  He was
taunted and laughed at, and urged to tell what had happened to him.
They said:  "If you've quit drinking, something's up; tell us what it
is."   "Well, boys," he said, "I will, though I know you will laugh at
me; but I will tell you all the same.  I have been a drinking man all
my life, and have kept it up since I was married, as you all know.  I
love whisky; it's as sweet in my mouth as sugar, and God only knows
how I'll quit it.  For seven years not a day has passed over my head
that I didn't have at least one drink.  But I am done.  Yesterday I was
in Chicago.  Down on South Clark Street a customer of mine keeps
a pawnshop in connection with his business.  I called on him, and
while I was there a young man of not more than twenty-five, wearing
thread-bare clothes, and looking as hard as if he had not seen a sober
day for a month, came in with a little package in his hand.  Tremblingly
he unwrapped it, and handed the articles to the pawnbroker, saying,
'Give me ten cents.'  And, boys, what do you suppose that package was?
A pair of baby's shoes; little things with the buttons only a trifle soiled,
as if they had been worn once or twice.  'Where did you get them?'
asked the pawnbroker.  'Got 'em at home,' replied the man, who had
an intelligent face and the manner of a gentleman, despite his sad
condition.  'My wife bought 'em for our baby.  Give me ten cents for
'em.  I want a drink.'  'You had better take those back to your wife; the
baby will need them,' said the pawnbroker.  'No, she won't..She's
lying at home now; she died last night.'  As he said this the poor
fellow broke down, bowed his head on the showcase, and cried
like a child.  'Boys,' said the drummer, 'you can laugh if you want
to, but I have a baby of my own at home, and by the help of God
I'll never drink another drop.'"  The man went into another car, the
bottle had disappeared, and the boys pretended to read some papers
that lay scattered about the car.  Ah, this is only one out of hundreds
of such scenes that are being enacted every day in our saloon-cursed
cities.

We should study the drink evil to see how it makes people poor and
keeps them poor.  A story is told of a drinking man who related to
his family a dream that he had had the night before.  He dreamed
that he saw three cats, a fat one, a lean one, and a blind one; and he
was anxious to know what it meant that he should have such a
strange dream.  Quickly his little boy answered, "I can tell what it
means.  The fat cat is the saloon-keeper who sells you drink, the
lean cat is mother and me, and the blind cat is yourself."  "In one
of our large cities," one day, "a laboring man, leaving a saloon,
saw a costly carriage and pair of horses standing in front, occupied
by two ladies elegantly dressed, conversing with the proprietor.
'Whose establishment is that?' he said to the saloon-keeper, as the
carriage rolled away.  'It is mine,' replied the dealer, proudly.  'It
cost thirty-five hundred dollars.  My wife and daughter couldn't do
without that.'  The mechanic bowed his head a moment in deep
thought; then, looking up, said with the energy of a man suddenly
aroused by some startling flash, 'I see it!'  'I see it!'  'See what?"
asked the saloonkeeper.  'See where for years my wages have gone.
I helped to pay for that carriage, for those horses and gold-mounted
harnesses, and for the silks and laces for your family.  The money I
have earned, that should have given my wife and children a home of
their own and good clothing, I have spent at your bar.  By the help
of God I will never spend another dime for drink.'"  South Milwaukee
has five thousand inhabitants.  Three large mills operate there.  A
reliable business man, foreman in one of the mills, told me that the
laboring people of South Milwaukee put $25,000 each month into
the tills of the saloons.  Dr. J.O. Peck, one of the most successful
pastor evangelists of recent years, tells of a man "who crossed Chelsea
Ferry to Boston one morning, and turned into Commercial Street for
his usual glass.  As he poured out the poison, the saloonkeeper's wife
came in, and confidently asked for $500 to purchase an elegant shawl
she had seen at the store of Jordan, March & Co..  He drew from his
pocket a well-filled pocketbook, and counted out the money.  The man
outside the counter pushed aside his glass untouched, and laying down
ten cents departed in silence.  That very morning his devoted Christian
wife had asked him for ten dollars to buy a cloak, so that she might
look presentable at church.  He had crossly told her he had not the
money.  As he left the saloon he thought, 'Here I am helping to pay
for five-hundred-dollar cashmeres for that man's wife, but my wife
asks in vain for a ten-dollar cloak.  I can't stand this.  I have spent my
last dime for drink.'  When the next pay-day came that meek, loving
wife was surprised with a beautiful cloak from her reformed husband.
She could scarcely believe her own eyes as he laid it on the table.
'There, Emma, is a present for you.  I have been a fool long enough;
forgive me for the past, and I will never touch liquor again.'  She
threw her arms around his neck, and the hot tears told her heartfelt
joy as she sobbed out:  'Charley, I thank you a thousand times.  I
never expected so nice a cloak.  This seems like other days.  You are
so good, and I am so happy.'"  The drink bill of our Nation for last
year was over a billion of dollars, more money than was spent for
missions--home and foreign--for all of our Churches, for public
education, for all the operations of courts of justice and of public
officers, and at least for two of the staple products of use in our
country, such as furniture and flour.  More than for all these was the
money that our Nation paid for drink last year.  When the people of
our country get their eyes open to the cost and degradation of the
drink evil, something definite will be done by every one against it.

The drink evil in its relation to lawlessness and crime, and to political
corruption, reveal still more ghastly aspects of it than we have yet
mentioned.  The saloon strikes at the very heart, not only of law and
order, but at personal liberty and justice in securing law and order.  It
was in a police court in Cincinnati on Monday morning.  Before the
judge stood two stalwart policeman and a woman.  She was charged
with disorderly conduct on the street and with disturbing the peace.
The policemen were sworn, and one of them told this story, to which
the other one agreed.  He said:  "I arrested the woman in front of a
saloon on Broadway on Saturday night.  She had raised a great
disturbance, was fighting and brawling with men in the saloon, and
the saloonkeeper put her out.  She used the foulest language, and with
an awful threat struck at the saloonkeeper with all her force.  I then
arrested her, took her to the detention house, and locked her up."  The
saloonkeeper was called to the witness stand, and said:  "I know dis
voman's vas making disturbance by my saloon.  She comes and she
makes troubles, und she fights mit me, und I put her de door oud.  I
know her all along.  She vas pad vomans."  The judge turned to the
trembling woman and said:  "This is a pretty clear case, madam; have
you anything to say in your defense?"  "Yes, Judge," she answered,
in a strangely calm, though trembling, voice:  "I am not guilty of the
charge, and these men standing before you have perjured their souls
to prevent me from telling the truth.  It was they, not I, who violated
the law.  I was in the saloon last Saturday night, and I will tell you
how it happened.  My husband did not come home from work that
evening, and I feared he had gone to the saloon.  I knew he must
have drawn his week's wages, and we needed it all so badly.  I put
the little ones to bed, and then waited all alone through the weary
hours until after the city clock struck twelve.  Then I thought the
saloons will be closed, and he will be put out on to the street.
Probably he will not be able to get home, and the police will arrest
him and lock him up.  I must go and find him, and bring him home.
I wrapped a shawl about me and started out, leaving the little ones
asleep in bed.  And, Judge, I have not seen them since."  She did
not give way to tears, for the worst grief can not weep.  She
continued:  "I went to the saloon, where I thought most like he would
be.  It was about twenty minutes after twelve; but the saloon, that
man's saloon"--pointing to the saloonkeeper, who now wanted to
crouch out of sight--"was still open, and my husband and these two
policemen were standing at the bar drinking together.  I stepped up
to my husband and asked him to go home with me; but the men laughed
at him, and the saloonkeeper ordered me out.  I said, 'No, I want my
husband to go home with me.'  Then I tried to tell him how badly we
were needing the money that he was spending; and then the saloon-
keeper cursed me, and told me to leave.  Then I confess I could stand
no more, and said, 'You ought to be prosecuted for violating the
midnight closing law.'  At this the saloonkeeper and policemen rushed
upon me and put me into the street; and one of the policemen, grasping
my arm like a vice, hissed in my ear, 'I'll get you a thirty days' sentence
in the workhouse, and then we'll see what you think about suing people.'
He called a patrol wagon, pushed me in, and drove to jail; and, Judge,
you know the rest.  All day yesterday I was locked up, my children at
home alone, with no fire, no food, no mother."  The judge dismissed
the woman; but the saloonkeeper, the perjured policemen, nor the
corrupt judge were ever prosecuted for their unlawfulness.  The whole
affair was dropped because the saloon power in Cincinnati reigns
supreme.  "This case is a matter of record in the Cincinnati courts."
It is a disgraceful fact that the liquor-traffic rules in politics to-day.  A
saloonkeeper in Richmond, Virginia, overheard some one talking of
reform in municipal politics, when he scornfully said:  "Any bar-room
in Richmond is a bigger man in politics than all the Churches in Richmond
put together."

IV. THE PRACTICAL QUESTION FOR US HERE AND NOW IS,
How may we openly oppose this drink evil?

The Churches need not expect a widespread revival of religion until
professing Christians do their duty with respect to the saloon.  Mothers
and fathers need not expect their sons to remain sober while the saloon
opens to them day and night.  Wives need not expect their husbands to
remain devoted and loyal until the saloon is abolished.  What is our
duty?  How shall we oppose the evil?  How do the American people
deal with evils when they deal with them at all?  When Great Britain
went a little too far in "taxation without representation," what course
did the American Colonies adopt in remedying the evil?  Their chief
men said, "These Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and
independent States."  The popular voice of the people decided it.
When the British Government unduly impressed American seamen,
how was the difficulty settled?  The representatives of the people,
their lawmakers, declared war against the opposing nation, and
forced her to cease her oppression.  The popular vote decided it.  When
Negro slavery darkened the entire sky of our country, and caused our
leading men to realize that we could not long exist half-slave and
half-free, how was the dark cloud dispelled?  The representatives of
our people, the lawmakers of the land, in letters of blood wrote the
immortal Thirteenth Amendment to the American Constitution:
"Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment
for crime, whereof the person shall have been duly convicted, shall
exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction."
When we wanted to increase our territory in 1803, and in 1845, and in
1867, how did we go about it?  The representatives of the people, the
lawmakers of the land, voted to make the purchases, and they were
made.  When a Territory is organized, or a State comes into the Union,
what is done?  The representatives of the people, the lawmakers of the
land, vote upon it, and it is done.  When treaties are to be made with
foreign countries; when immigration of foreigners is to be regulated;
when money is to be borrowed or coined; when post-offices and
post-roads are to be established; when counterfeiting is to be punished,
and public abuses are to be reformed, whose business is it?  The
Constitution of the United States says the representatives of the people,
the lawmakers of the land, have this power.  When will the drink evil
cease in our country?  When our representatives in Congress, or
lawmakers, stand for the abolition of the American saloon, and vote
it out of existence; then, and not until then, will drunkenness cease.
When will we have representatives in Congress, lawmakers who will
stand for the abolition of the saloon, and who will vote it out of
existence?  Not until you and I have select them, and place them there
with our vote.  To expect Christian temperance in our country from
any other source is absolute folly.

The abolition of drunkenness by local option is selfish, unpractical,
and unscriptural.  You vote the liquor-traffic out of your town; we
vote it in ours.  Remember every saloon exists only by vote of the
people.  Your young people come over to our town for drink.  We have
the curse of God upon us.  "Woe unto him that giveth his neighbor
drink."  (Hab. Ii, 15.)  It is unpractical, for so long as intoxicants are
made they will be sold.  It is selfish, for to vote against the saloon in
your town election, and to vote for it in your State or National election,
is to drive the mad-dog on past your door to the door of your neighbor,
when you might have killed him.

The abolition of drunkenness by regulating the traffic through license
is the most gigantic delusion that Satan ever worked upon an intelligent
people.  It is a well-known truth that "limitation is the secret of power."
The best way to provoke an early marriage between devoted lovers is
bitterly to oppose them.  The stream whose water spreads over its low
banks is without depth and current and power.  But confine the waters
between high, narrow banks, the bed of the stream is deepened, and
its mighty current supports animal life and turns the wheels of mill
and factory.  The regulation of the liquor-traffic by license makes it
a financial and political power second to none in America to-day.  To
vote for any party or man who advocates liquor license, is to give a
loyal support to the American saloon.

To expect the abolition of drunkenness solely through processes of
education is to preach one thing and to practice another.  It is to
perpetuate an evil that costs two hundred and fifty thousand precious
lives every year.  It is to leave to the next generation a work that God
expects us to do here and now.  Dr. Banks relates an incident
witnessed by Major Hilton on the coast of Scotland.  "Just at the break
of day the people of a little hamlet on the coast were awakened by the
boom of a cannon over the stormy waves.  They knew what it meant,
for frequently they had heard before the same signal of distress.  Some
poor souls were out beyond the breakers perishing on a wrecked vessel,
and in their last extremity calling wildly for help.  The people hastened
from their houses to the shore.  Out there in the distance was a dismantled
vessel pounding itself to pieces.  Perishing fellow-beings were clinging
to the rigging, and every now and then some one was swept off into the
sea by the furious waves.  The life-saving crew was soon gathered.  "Man
the life-boat!" cried the man.  "Where is Hardy?"  But the foreman of
the crew was not there, and the danger was imminent.  Aid must be
immediate, or all would be lost.  The next in command sprang into the
frail boat, followed by the rest, all taking their lives in their hands in the
hope of saving others.  O, how those on the shore watched their brave
loved ones as they dashed on, now over, now almost under the waves!
They reached the wreck.  Like angels of deliverance they filled their
craft with almost dying men--men lost but for them.  Back again they
toiled, pulling for the shore, bearing their precious freight.  The first man
to help them land was Hardy, whose words rang above the roar of the
breakers:  "Are you all here?  Did you save them all?"  With saddened
faces the reply came:  "All but one.  He couldn't help himself at all.
We had all we could carry.  We couldn't save the last one."  "Man the
life-boat again!" shouted Hardy.  "I will go.  What! leave one there to die
alone?  A fellow-creature there, and we on shore?  Man the life-boat
now!  We'll save him yet."  But who is this aged woman with worn
garments and disheveled hair, with agonized entreaty falling upon her
knees beside this brave, strong man?  It is his mother!  "O, my son!
your father was drowned in a storm like this.  Your brother Will left
me eight years ago, and I have never seen his face since the day he
sailed.  No doubt he, too, has found a watery grave.  And now you will
be lost, and I am old and poor.  O, stay with me!"  "Mother," cried the
man, "where one is in peril, there is my place.  If I am lost, God surely
will care for you."  The plea of earnest faith prevailed.  With a "God
bless you, my boy!" she released him, and speeded him on his way.
Once more they watched and prayed and waited--those on the shore--
while every muscle was strained toward the fast-sinking ship by those
in the life-saving boat.  At last it reached the vessel.  The clinging
figure was lifted and helped to its place.  Back came the boat.  How
eagerly they looked and called in encouragement, and cheered as it
came nearer!  "Did you get him?" was the cry from the shore.  Lifting
his hands to his mouth to trumpet the words on in advance of their
landing, Hardy called back above the roar of the storm, "Tell mother
it is brother Will!"

My friend, simply talking and praying will not save our loved ones
from drunkards' graves.  We must man the life-boat of municipal, State,
and National reform, and vote for principle and Christian temperance
until we save the last man.  He may be "brother Will."



III.
GAMBLING.

CARD-PLAYING

GAMBLING has become a moral plague of modern society.  In one
form or another it has entered the rank and file of every department
of life--in private parlor over cards; in hotel drawing-room over
election reports; in college athletic grounds over brains and brawn; in
the counting-room over the price of stocks; in the racing tournament
over jockeying and speed; in the Board of Trade hall over future prices
of the necessaries of life; in the den of iniquity at dice; in the drinking
saloon at the slot-machine; in the people's fair at the wheel of fortune;
in the gambling den itself at every conceivable form of swindling trick
and game.  Gambling has come to be almost an omnipresent evil.  In
treating this subject, it is our purpose to point out something of the
nature of its evil, not only that we may be kept from it but that we may
save others whom it threatens to destroy.

Gambling grows out of a misuse of the natural tendency to take risks.
A social vice is some social right misused.  Men have the social right
to congregate to talk over measures of social and economic welfare.
But if they discuss measures which oppose the principles of free
Government, their meeting together becomes a crime against the
State.  A personal vice is some personal right misused.  As some one
has put it, "Vice is virtue gone mad."  It is a personal right and a
personal virtue to be charitable, even beneficent.  But since justice
comes before mercy, if one uses for charity that which should be
used in payment of debt, his virtue of beneficence becomes a vice
of theft.  So it is with gambling.  It is giving the natural tendency
to chance, to risk an illegitimate play.  The person who is afraid to
risk anything accomplishes but little in any way, is seldom a
speculator, and never a gambler.  Usually the gambler is the man
who is naturally full of hazard, who loves to run risks, to take chances.
Nor will one find a more practical and useful tendency in one's make-
up than this.  See the discoverer of America and his brave crew for
days and days sailing across an unknown sea toward an unknown
land.  But that was the price of a New World.  Note the hazard and
risk of our Pilgrim Fathers.  But they gave to the world a new
colonization.  See the Second greatest American on his knees before
Almighty God, promising him that he would free four million of
slaves, providing General Lee should be driven back out of Maryland.
General Lee was driven back, and that immortal though most
hazardous of all documents, from man's point of view, was read to
his Cabinet and signed by Abraham Lincoln.  All great men have
taken great risks.  Not a section of the United States has been settled
without some risk.  No business enterprise is launched without some
risk.  To secure an education, to learn a trade, to marry a wife, all
involve some risk, much risk.  The tendency to risk, to hazard, to
chance it is a practical and useful tendency.  Only let this tendency
be governed always by wisdom and justice.  No person ever became
a gambler until consciously or unconsciously he forfeited wisdom
and justice in his chances and risks.

Gambling takes a variety of forms.  First of all is the professional
gambler.  He has no other business.  His investment is a "pack of
cards" and a box of "dice.  See him with his long, slender fingers;
with his shaggy, unkempt hair; with keen eyes, and a sordid
countenance.  He is prepared to "rake in" a thousand dollars a night,
and would not hesitate to strip any man of his fortune.  The professional
is found at county fairs, on railway trains, in gilded dens, and at public
resorts.  Being a professional outlaw, and subject at any time to arrest
and imprisonment, usually he has an accomplice.  Sometimes a gang
work together, so that it is with perfect ease they may relieve any
unwary novice of his money.  They know human nature on its low,
mercenary side, and soon can find their man in a crowd.  But few
persons have started out in life having it for their aim to get something
for nothing who, sooner or later, have not been "taken in" by this gang
of swindlers.  They know their kind.  The end of the professional
gambler is final loss and ruin.  He will make $100, he will make $500,
he will make $1,000, he will make $2,000; then he will lose all.  Then
he will borrow some money and start anew.  And again he will make
$200, he will make $600, he will make $1,200, and he will lose all.
Like the winebibber and the professional murderer, the professional
gambler has his den.  Not a large city in the world is without these
haunts of vice.  Who is it that feeds and supports them?  The novice
at cards and dice, husbands and sons of respectable families, just as
the occasional dram-taker supports the saloon.  As one has asked:

    "Could fools to keep their own contrive,
  On whom, on what could gamesters thrive?"
                                                     --GAY.

The penny novice seeks the penny gambling den.  The aristocratic
speculator seeks the gilded gambling den.  The expert trickster of
large luck and large fortune makes his way to Monte Carlo, the
gambling Mecca of the world.  Monte Carlo is a famous resort
situated in the northwest part of Italy.  It is notorious for its gambling
saloon.  This city of nearly four thousand inhabitants is located in
Monaco, the smallest independent country in the world.  Monaco is
about eight miles square, and lies on a "barren, rocky ridge between
the sea and lofty, almost inaccessible rocks."  The soil is barren,
except in small tracts which are used for fruit-gardens.  For centuries
the inhabitants, the Monagasques, lived by marauding expeditions,
both by sea and land, and by slight commerce with Genoa, Marseilles,
and Nice.  But in the last century the people have converted their
country and city into a world-wide resort.  In 1860, M. Blanc, a famous
gambler and saloon proprietor of two German cities, went to Monaco,
and for an immense sum of money received sole privilege to convert
their province into a gambler's paradise.  Soon immense marble
buildings arose in the midst of such beauty as to make it a modern
rival of the gardens of ancient Babylon.  Costly statues, gorgeous vases,
graceful fountains, elegant basins, and beautiful terraces, all of which
are made alluring by blooming plants, by light illuminations, and by
free concerts of music day and night,--these are the attractions in this
gambler's paradise.  Here fortunes are won and lost in a night.  For, as
has been sung,

    "Dice will run the contrary way,
      As well is known to all who play,
        And cards will conspire as in treason."
                    --HOOD.

Then we have the speculator in commerce.  He is the denizen of
the Board of Trade hall.  He speculates on the prices of next week's,
of next month's meat and breadstuffs.  And still this sort of gambler
may be a book-keeper in a bank, a farm hand, or a clerk in a
grocery store.  It ha become so simple and so common a practice
for persons to speculate on the markets that any person with ten
dollars, or twenty-five dollars, or a hundred dollars may take his
chances.  Tens of thousands of dollars to-day are being swept into
this silent whirlpool, the gambler's commerce.

Also we have the pool gambler.  He is actuated by love of excitement.
He is found at the race course, at the baseball diamond, and at all
sorts of contests, where he may find opportunity to be on the outcome.
It is a common thing for young men to steal their employers' money,
for young girls to take their hard-earned wages to stake on games and
races.  Recently $175,000 were paid for the exclusive gambling right
for one year at the Washington Park races in Chicago.

Last of all, we have the society gambler.  He is growing numerous
to-day.  He is the same person, whether clad in full dress in the drawing-
room of the worldling, or in common dress around the fireside of the
unchristian Church member.  Like the professional gambler his
instrument is "cards," and he can shake the "dice."  His games are
whist, progressive euchre, and sometimes poker.  The stakes now are
not money, but the gratification of excitement and the indulgence of
passion.  One, two, four hours go by almost unnoticed.  Prizes are
offered for the best player.  As a Catholic priest told me after he had
won a small sum with cards.  Said he:  "We just put up a few dollars,
you know, to lend devotions to the game."  So prizes are offered in
the social gambling "to lend devotions to the game."  It is under such
circumstances as these that young men and young women receive their
first lessons in card-playing.  A passion for card-playing is called forth,
developed, and must be satisfied, even though it takes one in low places
among vile associates.  "A Christian gentleman came from England to
this country.  He brought with him $70,000 in money.  He proposed to
invest the money.  Part of it was his own; part of it was his mother's.
He went into a Christian Church; was coldly received, and said to
himself:  'Well, if that is the kind of Christian people they have in
America, I don't want to associate with them much.'  So he joined a
card-playing party.  He went with them from time to time.  He went a
little further on, and after a while he was in games of chance, and lost
all of the $70,000.  Worse than that, he lost all of his good morals; and
on the night that he blew his brains out he wrote to the lady to whom he
was affianced an apology for the crime he was about to commit, and
saying in so many words, 'My first step to ruin was the joining of that
card party.'"

In all of its forms gambling is loaded down with evil.  In the first place
it destroys the incentive to honest work.  Let the average young man
win a hundred dollars at the races, it will so turn his head against slow
and honorable ways of getting money that he will watch for every
opportunity to get it easily and abundantly.  The young girl who risks
fifty cents and gets back fifty dollars will no longer be of service as a
quiet, contented worker.  The spirit of speculation, the passion to get
something for nothing, is calculated to destroy the incentive to honest
toil and to honorable methods of gain.  As one values his character, as
he values his peace of mind, so should he zealously guard himself
against overfascinating games of chance.  Once we had a family in our
Church who played cards, and who taught their children to play cards.
Of course these families had no time for prayer-meeting, nor for
Christian work.  Card-playing for amusement or for money will
create a passion that must be satisfied, although one must give up home
and business and pleasure.  In a town where we once lived a young man
and his wife attended our Church.  In every way the husband was kind,
and attentive to business.  But he had fallen a victim to playing cards
for money.  When that passion would seize him he would leave his
business, his hired help, his home and wife and little one, and would
lose himself for days at a time seeking to satisfy that passion.  An
enviable husband, father, citizen, and neighbor but for that evil; but how
wretchedly that ruined all!  Dr. Holland, of Springfield, Massachusetts,
says:  "I have all my days had a card-playing community open to my
observation, and yet I am unable to believe that that which is the
universal resort of starved soul and intellect, which has never in any
way linked to itself tender, elevating, or beautiful associations, but,
the tendency of which is to unduly absorb the attention from more
weighty matters, can recommend itself to the favor of Christ's
disciples.  I have this moment," says he, "ringing in my ears the dying
injunction of my father's early friend:  'Keep your son from cards.  Over
them I have murdered time and lost heaven.'"

Gambling is dishonest.  It seeks something for nothing.  Man possesses
no money, that he might risk giving it to some rogue to waste in sin.
All the property one possesses, he possesses it by stewardship to be
used wisely and honestly for good.  Every age has needed a revival of
the Golden Rule in business.  Much of the business of to-day is attended
to on the dishonest principle that characterizes gambling, "Get as much
as possible for as little as possible."  This spirit is first cousin to the
spirit of gambling.  The only difference is, one is called wrong and is
wrong; the other is wrong and is called right.  Tell the gambler he is a
thief; he will acknowledge it, and will beat you, if he can, while he is
talking to you.  Tell the other man he is a thief, and he will sue you at
court and win his case, although it is just as wrong to steal $100 from
an unbalanced mind, as it is to steal $100 from an unlocked safe or
off of an untrained football team.  It will be an easy matter to produce
professional gamblers so long as society upholds dishonest dealers by
another name.  What men need in this matter is moral and spiritual
vision, spiritual discernment.  Some persons live by taking advantage
of those who are down.

In all of its forms gambling leads to a long train of crimes.  In addition
to his crime of theft the professional gambler, through passion or drink,
becomes a murderer.  I knew a professional gambler who killed a man,
with whom he had been playing cards for money, for fifty cents.  After
it was all over the man was sorry he had done it, for he had committed
the crime in a passion while he was intoxicated.  The one who speculates
on the markets is not counted dishonest by the world, but how often and
how quickly it leads one into crime!  In our neighboring town in Illinois
a man of a good family and of good standing in the community began to
speculate on the Chicago Board of Trade.  He was as honest a person,
perhaps, as you or I.  He thought he was.  For years he had been a
trusted, Christian worker, and treasurer of the Sunday-school.  But he
made just one venture too many.  He had lost all; could not even
replace the Sunday-school fund that he had simply used, no doubt
expecting to replace it with usury; but the loss and disgrace were too
much for him to face, so he deserted home and friends and honor and
all, and secretly ran away.  The speculating gambler became a deserting
embezzler.  The person who has acquired a passion for betting on races
and games is on a fair way to professional gambling and to speculating
on the markets.  And rarely does one ever escape these, if once he gets
a start in them.

The evil of society gambling is most dangerous of all, because it is
most subtle of all.  Ah first no one would suspect an innocent game of
cards, played just for fun. You may be the fourth one to make up a
game; you may not know how to play, but you are told you can quickly
learn.  You brave it, and go in for a game.  The next time a similar
circumstance arises, you can not easily decline, for you must confess
you have played, and so you go in as an old player.  This may be as
far as the matter ever goes with you.  But here is one who is more
impulsive than you; his surroundings are entirely different.  He learns
to play, and comes to revel in it.  A passion is created for the game.
He is shrewd; soon learns the tricks, and one evening--purely by
chance, as it seems to him--he wins his first five dollars.  Strange
possibilities with cards lay hold upon him.  He is consumed by that
passion.  He plays for business, for keeps; he has become a professional
gambler.  Ah! this is no finespun tale; it is being worked out every
year in our country, all over the world.  Among many things for which
I have to thank my father and mother not the least is, that they would
allow no gamblers, nor gambling, nor the instruments of gambling
about our home.  Better keep a pet rattlesnake for your child than a
deck of cards; for if he gets poisoned by the snake he may be cured;
but if the passion for card-playing should happen to seize him, there
is little chance of a cure.  The inmates of our penitentiaries to-day,
almost to a man, testify that "card-playing threw them into bad company,
led them into sin, and was one of the causes of their downfall."  Dr.
Talmage was asked if there could be any harm in a pack of cards.  He
Said:  "Instead of directly answering your question, I will give you as
My opinion that there are thousands of men with as strong a brain as
you have, who have gone through card-playing into games of chance,
and have dropped down into the gambler's life and into the gambler's
hell."  A prisoner in a jail in Michigan wrote a letter to a temperance
paper, in which he gives this advice for young men:  "Let cards and
liquor alone, and you will never be behind the gates."  Friends, not
every one who touches liquor is a drunkard, but every drunkard
touches liquor; so not every one who plays cards is a professional
gambler, but every professional gambler plays cards.  Is there nothing
significant about these facts.  "A word to the wise is sufficient."  "In
a railway train sat four men playing cards.  One was a judge, and two
of the others were lawyers.  Near them sat a poor mother, a widow in
black.  The sight of the men at their game made her nervous.  She
kept quiet as long as she could; but finally rising came to them, and
addressing the judge, asked:  'Do you know me?'  'No, madam, I do
not,' said he.  'Well, said the mother, 'you sentenced my son to State's
prison for life.'  Turning to one of the lawyers, she said:  'And you,
sir, pleaded against him.  He was all I had.  He worked hard on the
farm, was a good boy, and took care of me until he began to play
cards, when he took to gambling and was lost.'"  Dr. Guthrie writes:
"In regard to the lawfulness of certain pursuits, pleasures, and
amusements, it is impossible to lay down any fixed and general rule;
but we may confidently say that whatever is found to unfit you for
religious duties, or to interfere with the performance of them; whatever
dissipates your mind or cools the fervor of your devotions; whatever
indisposes you to read your Bibles or to engage in prayer, wherever
the thought of a bleeding Savior, or of a holy God, or of the day of
judgment falls like a cold shadow on your enjoyment, the pleasures
you can not thank God for, on which you can not ask His blessing,
whose recollections will haunt a dying bed and plant sharp thorns in
its uneasy pillow,--these are not for you..Never go where you can
not ask God to go with you; never be found where you would not like
death to find you.  Never indulge in any pleasure that will not bear
the morning's reflection.  Keep yourselves unspotted from the world,
not from its spots only, but even from its suspicions."



IV.
DANCING.


DANCING is the expression of inward feelings by means of
rhythmical movements of the body.  Usually these movements are
in measured step, and are accompanied by music.

In some form or another dancing is as old as the world, and has been
practiced by rude as well as by civilized peoples.  The passion for
amateur dancing always has been strongest among savage nations,
who have made equal use of it in religious rites and in war.  With
the savages the dancers work themselves into a perfect frenzy, into
a kind of mental intoxication.  But as civilization has advanced
dancing has modified its form, becoming more orderly and
rhythmical.  The early Greeks made the art of dancing into a system,
expressive of all the different passions.  For example, the dance of
the Furies, so represented, would create complete terror among
those who witnessed them.  The Greek philosopher, Aristotle, ranked
dancing with poetry, and said that certain dancers, with rhythm applied
to gesture, could express manners, passions, and actions.  The most
eminent Greek sculptors studied the attitude of the dancers for their
art of imitating the passions.  In a classical Greek song, Apollo, one
of the twelve greater gods, the son of Zeus the chief god, and the god
of medicine, music, and poetry, was called The Dancer.  In a Greek
line Zeus himself is represented as dancing.  In Sparta, a province of
ancient Greece, the law compelled parents to exercise their children
in dancing from the age of five years.  They were led by grown men,
and sang hymns and songs as they danced.  In very early times a
Greek chorus, consisting of the whole population of the city, would
meet in the market-place to offer up thanksgivings to the god of the
country.  Their jubilees were always attended with hymn-singing and
dancing.  The Jewish records make frequent mention of dancing, but
always "as a religious ceremony, or as an expression of gratitude and
praise."  As a means of entertainment in private society, dancing was
practiced in ancient times, but by professional dancers, and not by the
company themselves.  It is true that the Bible has sanctioned dancing,
but let us remember, first, that it was always a religious rite; second,
that it was practiced only on joyful occasions, at national feasts, and
after great victories; third, that usually it was "performed by maidens
in the daytime, in open air, in highways, fields, or groves;"  fourth,
that "there are no instances of dancing sanctioned in the Bible, in
which both sexes united in the exercise, either as an act of worship
or as an amusement;" fifth, that any who perverted the dance from a
sacred use to purposes of amusement were called infamous.  The only
records in Scripture of dancing as a social amusement were those of
the ungodly families described by Job xxi, 11-13, who spent their
time in luxury and gayety, and who came to a sudden destruction;
and the dancing of Herodias, Matt. Xiv, 6, which led to the rash vow
of King Herod and to the murder of John the Baptist.  So much for
the history of dancing.

The modern dance in which both sexes freely mingle, irrespective
of character, purely for amusement, at late hours, at which intoxicants,
in some form, are generally used, is, essentially, an institution of vice.
The modern dance is as different from the dancing of ancient times,
and from the dancing sanctioned in the Bible, as daylight is from dark,
as good is from bad.  The modern dance imperils health, it poisons the
social nature; it destroys intellectual growth; and it robs men and women
of their virtue.  Let us understand one another.  To attend one dance may
not accomplish all of this in any person.  One may attend many dances,
and he himself not see these results marked in his character, but some
one else will see them.  For in the nature of the institution the modern
dance affects in all these particulars those whom it reaches.  The
tendencies in a single dance are in these directions.  In a way peculiar
to itself the modern dance imperils health.  Though detestable and out
of date, as are the modern kissing games, yet no one ever heard of one
of those performances continuing until three and five o'clock in the
morning.  Young people do not stay up all night, ride five, ten, and
twenty miles to play authors, or to snap caroms, or to play charades, as
interesting in a social way as these innocent amusements may be.  The
fact that one will go to this extreme in keeping late hours to attend the
dance, and will not keep such late hours for any other form of amusement,
proves that the dance, as an institution, is at fault in producing such
irregularities.  And then who ever heard of one having to dress in a
certain way to attend a purely social gathering.  But let a young lady
attend a fashionable ball or a regular round dance of any note, whatever,
and if she wears the civil gown she will be thought tame and snubbed.
She must dress for this occasion, and thus, from a health point of view,
so expose her body that after the excitement and heat of a prolonged
round she takes her place in a slight draught of air, and a severe cold is
contracted.  And this exposure is further increased by the sudden change
from a close, hot room to the damp, chilly air of the early morning, on her
journey home.  It is possible to guard against all of this, but are those
persons who attend such exercises likely to be cautious in such practical
matters.  At least, this risk of exposure for men and women is peculiar
to the dance, and it is certain that many are physically injured in this
way.  The modern dance poisons the social nature.  The chief exercise
at the modern dance is dancing.  Those who have attended dances, as a
social recreation, have complained that they never have an opportunity
to get acquainted with one another.  Such a luxury as a complete
conversation on any theme is out of the question.  It is a form of
amusement that stultifies the communicative faculties, and fosters
social seclusion.  Some one might say this may be a good thing, since
every grade in moral and social standing are represented.  Yes, but this
only acknowledges the lack of opportunity for social fellowship.  It is
not true that the dance, as an institution, is not patronized by the most
capable in conversation and companionship?  Certainly this is true in
the so-called higher society, among those whose sole ambition is to
excel in formal manners and in personal appearance at the gay function,
and at the social ball.  To be communicative one must have something
to communicate, and this means a cultivation of the mind and heart.
True social fellowship is one of the sweetest pleasures of life and always
has its source in the culture of the soul.  Whatever may be said for or
against the modern dance, it is true that because of the mixed characters
of its attendants, and for want of opportunity to communicate, the social
nature becomes neglected and abused, and may be fatally poisoned.

The modern dance destroys intellectual growth.  The person who has
the dance-craze cares no more for mental improvement and growth than
a starving man cares for splendid recipes for fine cooking.  The thought
of a problem to be solved, of a book to be read, of an organ exercise to
be practiced, of all things, are most tame to the one who is filled with
dreams of the last dance, and with visions of the one that is to come.  To
grow, the mind must be free from excitement.  The fault with the dance
in this respect is that it has in it a fascination that does not exist in the
ordinary social amusement.  Some persons complain that they can not
get an evening to go off well without dancing.  But this is only an open
confession to mental vacuity, to intellectual poverty.  For one need know
but little to flourish at the dance.  And always, where little is required,
intellectually, little is given.  It is the rule that those who are in the
greatest need of mental cultivation and growth are those who make up
the dancing crowd.  And the fact that the dance, as an institution, in no
way stimulates intellectual thought, destines those who dance to remain
on the lower intellectual plane.

Last, and worst of all, the dance robs men and women of their virtue,
and this often at the first unconsciously.  If it is not for health and
physical vigor that one follows up dancing; if it is not the peculiar
social tie that binds dancers together; if it is not the incentive to
intellectual growth and equipment, what is it?  A secret lies hid away
somewhere in the institution of the modern dance, that makes it the
chiefest attraction of worldly-minded and often of base-hearted people.
What is that secret?  Ah, my friend, it is the appeal to the most sacred
instincts and passions of a man and of a woman!  This appeal is peculiar
to the modern dance by the accident of physical contact that men and
women assume in dancing, and also by the circumstances that attend it,
namely, mixed society, late hours, and the customary use of strong
drink.  No honest, normally passionate person, who has made it a
practice of attending dances, will deny the truth of this charge.  One
may never have thought of it in this way, but when he stops to think he
knows that it is true.  It is through ignorance of these circumstances, and
of their bad effects, that many a well-meaning person, presumably to
have a good time, or to acquire heel-grace, goes into the dance, secures
a passion for dancing, and through its seductive influences are led into
sin and shame.  The following is an incident out of his own experience
related by Professor T. A. Faulkner, an ex-dancing master.  Professor
Faulkner is the author of the little book entitled "From the Ball Room to
Hell."  A book which every person who sees no harm in dancing should
read.

"Here is a girl.The one remaining child of wealthy parents, their idol
and joy.  A dancing-school having opened near their home, the daughter,
for accomplishment, was sent to it.  She came from her home, modest,
and her innate spirit of purity rebelled against the liberties taken by the
dancing-master, and the men he introduced to her.  She became indignant
at the indecent attitudes she was called upon to assume, but noticing a
score of young women, many of them from the best homes in the town,
all yielding to the vulgar embrace, she cast aside that spirit of modesty
which had been the development of years of home-training, and setting
her face against nature's protective warnings, gave herself, as did the
others, to this prolonged embrace set to music.  Having learned to dance,
its fascinations led her an enthusiastic captive.  Modesty was crucified,
decency outraged, virtue lost its power over her soul, and she spent her
days dreaming of the delights of the sensual whirl of the evening.  Hardly
conscious of the change she had now become as bold as any of the women,
and loved the embrace of the charmer.  The graduation of the class was,
of course, the occasion of a waltzing reception.  To that reception she went,
attended by her father, who looked with a proud heart on the fulsome
greeting his dear one received.  After a little the father retired, leaving his
daughter to the care of the many handsome gallants who danced attendance
upon her.  The reception did not close until the small hours of the morning.
Each waltz became more voluptuous; intoxicated by sensuality, the
dancers became more bold, and lust was aroused in every breast.  How
many sins that reception occasioned, I do not know; this, at least, is sure,
that this girl who entered that dancing-hall three months before, as pure as
an angel, was that night.robbed of her honor and returned to her home
deprived forever of that most precious jewel of womanhood--virtue.  Her
first impulse the next morning was self-destruction; then she deluded
herself with the thought of marriage with her dancing companion, but
he still further insulted her by declaring that he wanted a pure woman
for his wife.  What was her end?  Shunned by the very society which
egged her on to ruin, her self-respect was gone with her lost purity, she
went to her own kind, and in shame is closing her days."  "Of two
hundred brothel inmates to whom Professor Faulkner talked, and who
were frank enough to answer his question as to the direct cause of their
shame, seven said poverty and abuse; ten, willful choice; twenty, drink
given them by their parents; and one hundred and sixty-three, dancing
and the ball-room."  "A former chief of police of New York City says
that three-fourths of the abandoned girls of this city were ruined by
dancing."  Of the dance, one says:  "It lays its lecherous hand upon the
fair character of innocence, and converts it into a putrid corrupting
thing.  It enters the domain of virtue, and with silent, steady blows takes
the foundation from underneath the pedestal on which it sits enthroned.
It lists the gate and lets in a flood of vice and impurity that sweeps away
modesty, chastity, and all sense of shame.  It keeps company with the
low, the degraded, and the vile.  It feeds upon the passion it inflames,
and fattens on the holiest sentiments, turned by its touch to filth and
rottenness.  It loves the haunts of vice, and is at home in the company of
harlots and debauchees."  George T. Lemon says:  "No Church in
Christendom commends or even excuses the dance.  All unite to condemn
it."  The late Episcopal bishop of Vermont, writes:  "Dancing is chargeable
with waste of time, interruption of useful study, the indulgence of personal
vanity and display, and the premature incitement of the passions.  At the
age of maturity it adds to these no small danger to health by late hours,
flimsy dress, heated rooms, and exposed persons."  Episcopal Bishop
Meade, of Virginia, declares:  "Social dancing is not among the neutral
things which, within certain limits, we may do at pleasure, and it is not
among the things lawful, but not expedient, but it is in itself wrong,
improper, and of bad effect."  Episcopal Bishop McIlvaine, of Ohio,
putting the dance and the theater together, writes:  "The only line that I
would draw in regard to these is that of entire exclusion..The question
is not what we can imagine them to be, but what they always have been,
will be, and must be, in such a world as this, to render them pleasurable
to those who patronize them.  Strip them bare until they stand in the
simple innocence to which their defenders' arguments would reduce them
and the world would not have them."  A Roman Catholic priest testifies
that "the confessional revealed the fact that nineteen out of every twenty
women who fall can trace the beginning of their state to the modern dance."



V.
THEATER-GOING.

WITH drunkenness, gambling, and dancing, theater-going dates from
the beginning of history, and with these it is not only questionable in
morals, but it is positively bad.  Every one who knows any thing about
the institution of the theater, as such, knows that it always has been
corrupting in its influence.  Not only those who attend the theater
pronounce it bad, as a whole, but it is frowned upon by play-writers,
and by actors and actresses themselves.  Five hundred years before
Christ, Jew, Pagan, and Christian spoke against the theater.  It is
stated on good authority that the dissipations of the theater were
the chief cause of the decadence of ancient Greece.  At one time,
Augustus, the emperor of Rome, was asked as a means of public
safety, to suppress the theater.  The early Christians held the theater
in such bad repute as to rank it with the heathen temple.  And to
these two places they would not go, even to preach the Good News
of Jesus Christ.  Nor has the moral tone and character of the theater
improved, even in our day.  Dr. Theodore Cuyler, for many years
an experienced pastor in Brooklyn, Says:  "The American theater
is a concrete institution, to be judged as a totality.  It is responsible
for what it tolerates and shelters.  We, therefore, hold it responsible
for whatever of sensual impurity and whatever of irreligion, as well
as for whatever of occasional and sporadic benefit there may be bound
up in its organic life.  Instead of helping Christ's kingdom, it hinders;
instead of saving souls, it corrupts and destroys."  Dr. Buckley gives
this testimony:  "Being aware of the fact that the drama, like every
thing else which caters to the taste, has its fashions--rising and falling
and undergoing various changes--now improving, and then degenerating,
I have thought it desirable to institute a careful inquiry into the plays
which have been performed in the principal theaters of New York during
the past three years.  Accordingly, I procured the copies used by the
performers in preparing for their parts, and took pains to ascertain
wherein, in actual use, the actors diverged from the printed copies.
They number over sixty, and, with the exception of a few unprinted
plays, include all that have been produced in the prominent theaters
of New York during the three years now about closing..It is a singular
fact, that, with three or four exceptions, those dramatic compositions,
among the sixty or more under discussion, which are morally objectionable,
are of a comparatively low order of literary execution.  But if language
and sentiments, which would not be tolerated among respectable people,
and would excite indignation if addressed to the most uncultivated and
coarse servant girl, not openly vicious, by an ordinary young man, and
profaneness which would brand him who uttered it as irreligious, are
improper amusements for the young and for Christians of every age, then
at least fifty of these plays are to be condemned."

In the first place the theater leads one into bad company.  As a class,
the performers are licentious.  How can one be in their company, be
moved to laughter and to tears and not be contaminated by them?
One who has studied the theater tells us that the "fruits of the Spirit
and the fruits of the stage exhibit as pointed a contrast as the human
imagination can conceive."  The famous Macready, as he retired from
the stage, wrote:  "None of my children, with my consent under any
pretense, shall ever enter the theater, nor shall they have any visiting
connection with play actors or actresses."  Dr. Johnson asks the question:
"How can they mingle together as they do, men and women, and make
public exhibitions of themselves as they do, in such circumstances,
with such surroundings, with such speech as much often be on their
lips to play the plays that are written, in such positions as they must
sometimes take, affecting such sentiment and passions--how can they do
this without moral contamination?"  And we would ask, how can persons
live enrapt with this sort of thing for hours and hours each week, the year
around, and not become equally contaminated, for to the onlooker all this
comes as a reality, while to those who are performing, it is hired shamming?
Therefore, as the pupil becomes the teacher, so the attendant at the theater
becomes like the one who performs.  So that to go to the theater is to "sit in
the seat of the scornful or to stand in the way of sinners."  "There you find
the man," says one, "who has lost all love for his home, the careless, the
profane, the spendthrift, the drunkard, and the lowest prostitute of the street.
They are found in all parts of the house; they crowd the gallery, and
together should aloud the applause, greeting that which caricatures religion,
sneers at virtue, or hints at indecency."  Not only the actors and the onlookers
of the average theater are vile, but all of the immediate associations of the
playhouse must correspond with it.  If not in the same building with the
theater, in adjoining ones, at least, are found the wine-parlor and the
brothel.  It is generally conceded that no theater can be prosperous if it is
wholly separated from these adjuncts of evil.

The theater, therefore, kills spiritually and degrades the moral life
of the one who attends it.  The theater deals with the spectacular.
This appeals to the eye, to the ear, and to all of the outer senses.
Spirituality depends upon a cultivation of the spiritual senses that
Grace has opened up within the soul.  Hence, the spectacular is
directly opposed to the spiritual.  The deep, contemplative, spiritual
soul could find little or no food in the false, clap-trap representations
of the modern stage.  And to find an increased interest here is
evidence that one lacks spiritual life, at least deep-seated spiritual
life.  This is why so many professing Christians are so eager to go to
the card-party, to the dancing-party, and to the theater.  The inner-
sense life of the soul is dead, and one must have something upon
which to feed, hence he feeds upon the husks of "imprudent and
un-Christian amusements."  And let one who has a measure of
spiritual life, instead of increasing it, seek to satisfy his soul-
longing by means of the spectacular, of false representations in
any form, soon he will lose the spiritual life that he has.  And this
loss will be marked by an increased demand for the spectacular.
The surest proof to-day that the spiritual life of the Church is waning
in certain sections, is not so much that her membership-roll is not
on the increase, but that professing Christian people are running
wild after cards and dancing and the theater.  Evangelist Sayles
declares:  "The people of our so-called best society, and Christian
people, many that have been looked upon as active workers, sit
now and gaze upon scenes in our theaters, without a blush, that
twenty-five years ago would not have been countenanced..The
moral and spiritual life of many a Christian has been weakened by
the eyes gazing upon the scenes of the theater."  Says he, "The
Christian, through attendance upon the playhouse, creates a relish
for worldly things, and so spiritual things become distasteful."

Then, to go to one theater, sanctions all.  To have heard and to have
seen Joe Jefferson in "Rip Van Winkle," Richard Mansfield in "The
Merchant of Venice," or Edwin Booth or Sir Henry Irving, or Maude
Adams, or Julia Marlowe in their best plays, is to have received a
deeper insight into human nature, and a stronger purpose to become
sympathetic and true, but who can afford to sanction all that is base
and villainous is the institution of the modern theater for the sake of
learning sympathy and truth and human nature from a few worthy
actors, when he may find all of this as truthfully, if not as artistically,
set forth by the orator, by the musician, by the painter, and by the
author?  It is not cant, it is not pharisaism, it is not a weak claim of
Christianity, but it is common honesty, mighty truth, a cardinal and
beautiful teaching of Jesus Christ to deny one's self for the welfare
of the weaker brother.  Let one go to hear Mansfield in Shakespeare,
and his neighbor boy will take his friend and go to the vaudeville, and
his only excuse to his parents and to his half-taught mind and heart
will be, "Well, Mr. So-and-So goes to the theater, he is a member of
the Church and superintendent of the Sunday-school; surely there is
no harm for me to go."  To the immature mind what seems right for
one person seems lawful for another.  This is because such a person
has not learned to discriminate between what is bad and what is good.
Therefore, if the theater as an institution has more in it that is bad than
It has in it that is good, rather if the general tendency of the theater, as
an institution, is bad, the safe thing for one's self and for those who
read one's life as an example, is to discard it entirely.

In view of these facts, no person can attend the theater at all without
hurting his influence.  The ideal life is that one which gives offense
of stumbling to no one.  A successful preacher who had an aversion
toward speaking on the subject of questionable amusements, when
asked what he believed concerning a certain form of amusement,
replied:  "See what I do, and know what I believe."  It is a glorious
life whose actions are an open epistle of righteousness and peace,
read and believed and honored by all men.

"Some time ago a gentleman teaching a large class of young men
in a Chicago Sunday-school, desired to attend a theater for the
purpose of seeing a celebrated actor.  He was not a theater-goer,
and thought that no harm could come from it.  He had no sooner
taken his seat, however, than he saw in the opposite gallery some
of the members of his class.  They also saw him and began commenting
on the fact that their teacher was at the theater.  They thought it
inconsistent in him, lost their interest in the class, and he lost his
influence over the young men.  That teacher tied his hands by this
one act, so that he could not speak out against the gross sins of the
theater."

Those who defend theater-going say that if Christian people would
patronize the theater that it would be made more respectable.  But
over a thousand years of history proves that this principle fails here
as it does elsewhere.  A Christian woman marries an unchristian man
with the hope that he will become a Christian; a steady, sensible
woman in all other matters marries a man who drinks, with the
thought of reforming him; one associates with worldly and sensual
companions, expecting to make them better; but, alas, what blasted
hopes, what wretched failures in all of these instances, at least in the
most of them!  You can not reform vice; you may whitewash a sin,
but it will be sin, still.  To purify a character or an institution one
must not become a part of it by sympathy, nor by association.  This
is what the psalmist meant when he said, "Blessed is the man that
walketh not in the counsels of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way
of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful."  And so it is, that
every effort at reforming the theater, thus far has failed.  The Rev.
C.W. Winchester says concerning the reforming of the theater:  "The
facts are, (1) that the theater in this city and country never had the
support and encouragement of moral and religious people it has now;
(2) that the theater here was never so bad.  Clearly, if Christian patronage
is going to reform the theater, the reform ought to begin.  But the grade
is downward.  The theater is growing worse and worse."  Dr. Wilkinson
makes this statement on the question of reforming the theater:  "Now
the Protestant Christians of New York number, by recent computation,
less than seventy-five thousand souls, in a population of a million.
Supposing a general agreement among them all that a regular attendance
at the theater was at this juncture the most pressing and most promising
method of evangelical effort, they would not then constitute even one-
tenth of the numerical patronage which the management would study
to please."  Dr. Herrick Johnson says:  "The ideal stage is out of the
question.  It is out of the question just as pure, chaste, human nudity
is out of the question..The nature of theatrical performances, the
essential demands of the stage, the character of the plays, and the
constitution of human nature, make it impossible that the theater
should exist, save under a law of degeneracy.  Its trend is downward;
its centuries of history tell just this one story.  The actual stage of to-
day..is a moral abomination.  In Chicago, at least, it is trampling
on the Sabbath with defiant scoff.  It is defiling our youth.  It is making
crowds familiar with the play of criminal passions.  It is exhibiting
women with such approaches to nakedness as can have no other
design than to breed lust behind the onlooking eyes.  It is furnishing
candidates for the brothel.  It is getting us used to scenes that rival the
voluptuousness and licentious ages of the past."  As never before to-
day, has the theater asked for the support of Church members.  And
the ideal stage, with virtuous performers, and with pure dramas, are
held up as a sample of what Christian people are invited to attend.  Dr.
Cuyler says:  "Every person of common sense knows that the actual
average theater is no more an ideal playhouse than the average pope
is like St. Peter, or the average politician is like Abraham Lincoln.  A
Puritanic theater would become bankrupt in a twelvemonth.  The great
mass of those who frequent the playhouse go there for strong, passionate
excitements..I do not affirm," says Dr. Cuyler, "that every popular play
is immoral, and every attendant is on a scent for sensualities.  But the
theater is a concrete institution, it must be judged in the gross and to a
tremendous extent it is only a gilded nastiness.  It unsexes womanhood
by putting her publicly in male attire--too often in no attire at all."

"So competent an authority as the famous actress, Olga Nethersole,
recently declared that the only kind of play which may hope for success
with English-speaking audiences at the present day is the play which is
sufficiently indicated by calling it immoral.  There is no doubt about it
that the theater, as at present conducted, is pulling the stones from the
foundations of public morality, and weakening, and in many quarters
endangering, the whole structure of society.  The atmosphere of the
modern theater is lustful and irreverent.  It is a good place for Christians
to keep away from.  It is a good opportunity for the strong man to deny
himself for the sake of his younger or weaker brother."



PART II.

WORTHY SUBSTITUTES.

"Get the spindle and thy distaff ready, and God will send thee flax."


VI.
BOOKS AND READING.

MANY BOOKS, MUCH READING.


TO-DAY every one reads.  Go where you may, you will find the
paper, the magazine, the journal; printed letters, official reports,
exhaustive cyclopedias, universal histories; the ingenuous advertise-
ment, the voluminous calendar, the decorated symphony; printed
ideals, elaborate gaming rules, flaming bulletins; and latest of all,
we have begun to publish our communications on the waves of the
air.  In this hurly-burly of many books and much reading, it is no
mean problem to know why one should read; and what, and how,
and when.  Especially does this problem of general reading confront
the student, the lover of books, and those of the professions.  Essays
are to be read, the historical, the philosophical, and the scientific;
novels, the historical and the religious; books of devotion, books of
biography, of travel, of criticism, and of art.  What principles are to
guide one in his choice of reading, that he may select only the wisest,
purest, and helpfulest from all these classes of books?


WHY READ.

Read to acquire knowledge.  Knowledge is the perception of truth.
One arrives at knowledge by the assimilation of facts and principles,
or by the assimilation of truth itself.  Three sources of knowledge are
experience, conversation, and reading.  Experience leads one slowly
to knowledge, is limited entirely to the path over which one has passed,
and is a "dear teacher."  To acquire knowledge by conversation is to
put one at the mercy of his associates, making him dependent upon
their good favor, truthfulness, and learning.  But reading places one
in direct communication with the wisest and best persons of all time.
To acquire knowledge by reading is to defy time and space, persons
and circumstances, at least, in our day of many and inexpensive books.
Through books facts live, principles operate, justice acts, the light of
philosophy gleams, wit flashes, God speaks.  Every book-lover agrees
with Channing:  "No matter how poor I am..if the sacred writers will
enter and take up their abode under my roof, if Milton will cross my
threshold to sing to me of Paradise, and Shakespeare to open to me the
words of imagination and the workings of the human heart, and Franklin
to enrich me with his practical wisdom, I shall not pine for want of
intellectual companionship, and I may become a cultivated man, though
excluded from what is called the best society in the place where I live."
Kingsley says:  "Except a living man, there is nothing more wonderful
Than a book!--a message to us from the dead,--from human souls whom
we never saw, who lived, perhaps, thousands of miles away; and yet
these, in those little sheets of paper, speak to us, amuse us, terrify us,
teach us, comfort us, open their hearts to us as brothers..If they are
good and true, whether they are about religion or politics, farming,
trade, or medicine, they are the message of Christ, the Maker of all
things, the Teacher of all truth."  The wide range of truth secured through
reading acts in two ways upon the reader.  It spiritualizes his character,
and it makes him mighty in action.  Knowledge on almost any subject
has a marked tendency to sharpen one's wits, to refine his tastes, to
ennoble his spirit, to improve his judgement, to strengthen his will, to
subdue his baser passions, and to fill his soul with the breath of life.
It is only upon truth that the soul feeds, and by means of knowledge that
the character grows.  "It cannot be that people should grow in grace,"
writes John Wesley, "unless they give themselves to reading.  A reading
people will always be a knowing people."   Reading makes one mighty
in action when it gives one knowledge, since "knowledge is power," and
since power has but one way of showing itself, and that is, in action.
Knowledge takes no note of hardships, ignores fatigue, laughs at
disappointment, and frowns upon despair.  It delves into the earth,
rides upon the air, defies the cold of the north, the heat of the south; it
stands upon the brink of the spitting volcano, circumnavigates the globe,
examines the heavens, and tries to understand God.  With but few
exceptions, master-minds and men of affairs have been incessant
readers.  Cicero, chief of Roman orators, whether at home or abroad,
in town or in the country, by day or by night, in youth or in old age, in
sorrow or in joy, was not without his books.  "Petrarch, when his friend
the bishop, thinking that he was overworked, took away the key of his
library, was restless and miserable the first day, had a bad headache the
second, and was so ill by the third day that the bishop, in alarm, returned
the key and let his friend read as much as he liked."  Writes Frederick the
Great, "My latest passion will be for literature."  The poet, Milton, while
a child, read and studied until midnight.  John Ruskin read at four years
of age, was a book-worm at five, and wrote numerous poems and dramas
before he was ten.  Lord Macaulay read at three and began a compendium
of universal history at seven.  Although not a lover of books, George
Washington early read Matthew Hale and became a master in thought.
Benjamin Franklin would sit up all night at his books.  Thomas Jefferson
read fifteen hour a day.  Patrick Henry read for employment, and kept
store for pastime.  Daniel Webster was a devouring reader, and retained
all that he read.  At the age of fourteen he could repeat from memory all
of Watt's Hymns and Pope's "Essay on Man."  When but a youth, Henry
Clay read books of history and science and practiced giving their contents
before the trees, birds, and horses.  Says a biographer of Lincoln, "A book
was almost always his inseparable companion."

Then, read for enjoyment.  Fortunately, a habit so valuable as reading
may grow to become a pleasure.  So that as one is gathering useful
information and increasing in knowledge, he may have the keenest
enjoyment.  Such an one sings as he works.  He has learned to
convert drudgery into joy; duty has become delight.  But even for
such an one a portion of his reading should be purely for rest and
recreation.  If one has taught school all day, or set type, or managed
a home, or read history, or labored in the field, or been shopping,
heavy, solid reading may be out of the question, while under such
circumstances one would really enjoy a striking allegory or a well-
written novel.  Or, if one is limited in knowledge, or deficient in
literary taste so that he may find no interest in history, science,
philosophy, or religion, still he may enjoy thrilling books of travel,
of biography, or of entertaining story.  In this way all may enjoy
reading.  "Of all the amusements which can possibly be imagined
for a hard-working man, after his daily toil, or in its intervals, there
is nothing," says Herschel, "like reading an interesting book.  It
calls for no bodily exercise, of which he has had enough or too much.
It relieves his home of its dullness and sameness, which, in nine cases
out of ten, is what drives him out to the alehouse, to his own ruin and
his family's.  It accompanies him to his next day's work, and, if the
book he has been reading be any thing above the very idlest and
lightest, gives him something to think of besides the mere mechanical
drudgery of his every-day occupation, something he can enjoy while
absent, and look forward with pleasure to return to."


WHAT TO READ.

First of all read something.  "Southey tells us that, in his walk one
stormy day, he met an old woman, to whom, by way of greeting, he
made the rather obvious remark that it was dreadful weather.  She
answered, philosophically, that in her opinion, 'any weather was better
than none.'"  And so we would say, excluding corrupt literature, any
reading is better than none!  In this day of multiplicity of books who
who never reads may not be an ignoramus nor a fool, but certainly he
robs the world of much that is useful in character, and deprives himself
of much that enriches his own soul.  Then one should select his books,
as he does his associates, and not attempt to read everything that comes
in his way.  No longer may one know even a little about every thing.
It might be a mark of credit rather than an embarrassment for one to
answer, "No," to the question, "Have you read the latest book?" when
the fact is recalled that 30,000 novels have been published within the
past eighty years, and that five new ones are added to the list daily.


READ HISTORY.

One has characterized history as both the background and the key to
all knowledge.  No other class of reading so much as this helps one
to appreciate his own country, his own age, his own surroundings.
Extensive reading of history is a sure remedy for pessimism, prejudice,
and fanaticism.  In so far as history is an accurate account of the past,
it is a true prophecy of the future for the nation and for the individual.
Who reads history knows that men always have displayed folly,
Weakness, and cruelty, and that they always will, even to their own
obvious ruin.  Also he knows that every time and place have had their
few good men and women who have honored God, and whom God has
honored.  Nothing so teaches a person his own insignificance and the
small part that he plays in the world as does the reading of history.  Nor
is history to be found only in the book called history.  If you want to
know the life of the ancients, as you know the life of your own
community, read Josephus.  Do you want a glimpse of early apostolic
times, read "The Life and Times of Jesus," by Edersheim.  Do you want
to see the battlefield of Waterloo, visit Paris in the beginning of the
nineteenth century, stop over night with Louis Philippe, see the English
through French spectacles, and the Frenchman through his own; do you
want a glimpse of the political despotism, court intrigue, and ecclesiastical
tyranny in France a hundred years ago; do you want to hear the crash of
the bastile, and see Notre Dame converted into a horse-stable; do you
want a picture of the "bread riots" and mob violence that terminated in
the French revolution of 1848; in short do you want a tale of French life
and character in its brightest, gloomiest, and intensest period, read "Les
Miserables," by Victor Hugo.  To-day one must read current history.  It
is not enough to plan, work, and economize, one must make and seize
opportunities.  And this he can do only as he is alive to passing events.
In a few years one may outgrow his usefulness through losing touch
with advancing ideas and methods of work.  To keep abreast of the
times one must read the newspaper and the magazine.  The newspaper
is the history of the hour, the magazine is the history of the day.  The
magazine corrects the newspaper, and "sums up in clear and noble
phrase those fundamental facts which are only dimly seen in the newspaper."
A serious and growing tendency is that the newspaper and magazine shall
take the place of the best books.  A few minutes a day is enough for any
newspaper, and a few hours a month is enough for any magazine.  The
greatest part of one's reading should be that of books.  Who gormandizes
on current events will pay the price with a morbid mind and with false
conclusions in his reasoning.


READ BIOGRAPHY.

The life of a great man is a continual inspiration.  No other exercise
so fires a soul with noble ambition as the study of a great life.  Real
life is not only stranger than fiction, but it is more interesting than
fiction.  No boy should be without the life of Washington, of Lincoln,
of Webster, of Franklin.  Every girl should know by heart brave
Pocahontas, sympathetic Mrs. Stowe, queenly Frances Willard, and
kind-hearted Victoria.  No private library is complete without
Plutarch's "Lives," the "Life of Alfred the Great," of Napoleon, Grant,
and Gladstone.


READ SCIENCE.

The fourteen-year-old child may master the practical principles of
natural philosophy, and yet how many intelligent persons remain
ignorant of the most commonplace truths in this branch of learning!
With a little attention to the natural and mechanical sciences, a new
world of beauty and truth opens up before one.  He sees objects that
once were hid to him; he hears sounds that once were silent; he enjoys
odors that once retained their fragrance.  His whole being becomes a
part of the living musical world about him, when he has his senses
opened to appreciate it and to become attuned to it.  One should read
some science throughout his life, in order to remain at the source of
all true knowledge.  Here he learns to appreciate the language of
nature.  When expressed by man, this is poetry.


THEREFORE, READ POETRY.

Ten minutes a day with Tennyson, Browning, Emerson, or Lowell,
will teach one a new language, by which he may converse with the
wind, talk with the birds, chat with the brook, speak with the flowers,
and hold discourse with the sun, moon, and stars.  The deepest and
mightiest thoughts of all ages have been expressed in poetry, the
language of nature.  "Poetry," says Coleridge, "is the blossom and
fragrance of all human knowledge, human thoughts, passions,
emotions, languages."


READ BOOKS OF RELIGION.

"Religion," says Lyman Abbott, "is the life of God in the soul."
Every truly religious book treats of this life.  The only purely
religious book is the Bible.  It is the source and inspiration of every
other religious book.  The Bible is a "letter from God to man, handed
down from heaven and written by inspired men."  Its message is free
salvation for all men through Jesus Christ; its spirit is divine love.  No
wise person is without this letter, and every thoughtful and devout
person reads it daily.  One may never find time to follow a course of
study, nor to pursue a plan of daily reading; he may never know the
wealth of Dante, the grandeur of Milton, nor the genius of Shakespeare,
but every one may make the Bible his daily companion and guide.


HOW TO READ.

Enter into what you read.  No book can thrill and move one unless he
gives himself up to it.  Lack of fixed attention is the cause of the
half-informed mind, the faulty reason, and the ever-failing memory.
The cause of this lack of attention may be an historical allusion of
which one is ignorant, or a new word that he fails to look up, or an
overtaxed mind, or unfavorable surroundings.  Whatever may be this
hindrance it must be removed or overcome before one can enter into
what he reads.  A thought is of no value until it registers itself and
takes a room in the mind.  This is why we are told on every hand,
that a few books well read are worth more than many books poorly
read.  The secret of Abraham Lincoln's power as a public speaker
lay in his clear reasoning, simple statement, and apt illustration.  This
secret was secured by Lincoln through his habit of mastering whatever
he heard in conversation or reading.  "When a mere child," says
Lincoln, "I used to get irritated when anybody talked to me in a way
I could not understand.  I don't think I ever got angry at anything else
in my life.  But that always disturbed my temper, and has ever since.
I can remember going to my little bedroom, after hearing the neighbors
talk of an evening with my father, and spending no small part of the
night walking up and down, trying to make out what was the exact
meaning of some of their, to me, dark sayings.  I could not sleep,
though I often tried to, when I got on such a hunt after an idea, until
I had caught it, and when I thought I had got it, I was not satisfied
until I had repeated it over and over; until I had put it in language
plain enough, as I thought, for any boy I knew to comprehend.  This
was a kind of passion with me, and it has stuck by me; for I am never
easy now when I am handling a thought until I have bounded it north,
and bounded it south, and bounded it east, and bounded it west."  And
so to enter into what one reads, means that he will master the thought.
The most that a university can do for one is to teach him to read.  Who
has learned how to read has secured a liberal education, however or
wherever he may have learned it.

Then, one should learn to scan an author.  This means to take a rapid
observation of his thoughts.  Much of one's common reading matter
should be scanned.  All local news, much magazine literature, and
many books should be used in this way.  It is mental sloth and waste
of time to pore over a newspaper or a book of light fiction, as one
would a philosophy of history or a work of science.  As Bacon aptly
puts it, "Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and
some few to be chewed and digested; that is, some books are to be
read only in parts; others to be read, but not curiously; and some few
to be read wholly, and with diligence and attention.  Some books also
may be read by deputy, and extracts made of them by others."  One's
mind is like a horse, it soon learns its master.  Feed it well, groom it
well, treat it gently, you may expect much from it.  It is reported of
Dr. Newell Dwight Hillis that he has read a book a day for over
twenty years.  He has learned to squeeze the thought out of a book at
a grasp, as one of us would squeeze the juice from an orange.  Take
a glimpse into his library.  Five hundred volumes of sociological
literature, four hundred volumes of history, two hundred of cyclopedias,
gazetteers, books of reference; four hundred volumes of pure science,
one hundred volumes of travels, two hundred and fifty volumes of
biography; one hundred volumes of art and art history; a section on
psychology, ethics, philosophy, and the relation between science and
religion, and a thousand volumes of literature, pure and simple.


WHEN TO READ.

First, read at regular hours.  This is for those who follow literary
pursuits.   No professional person should respect himself in his work
who has no special time for reading and study, and who does not
conscientiously adhere to it.  The pulpit, the law-office, the doctor's
office, the teacher, and the editor's desk, each clamors for the man, the
woman, who can think.  To appreciate God and to sympathize with
the human heart; to know law and the intricate special case; to understand
disease and relief for the suffering patient; to have something to teach
and to know how to teach it even to the dullest pupil; to know human
character and to be able to enlighten the public mind and the public
conscience; all this requires in the one who serves a deep and growing
knowledge and experience which may be realized only in the grasp of
truth contained in the up-to-date and best authorized books.  The use
of books with this class of persons is not optional.  They must buy and
master them, or a few years at longest will relegate them with their old
books and ideas to the dusty garret where they belong.

Then, many must read on economized time.  The farmer, the mechanic,
the merchant, the shopkeeper, each may find a little time for daily reading.
Ten minutes saved in the morning, ten minutes in the afternoon, and ten
minutes in the evening, this is half hour a day.  In a week this gives one
three hours and a half, in a month fourteen hours of solid reading, and
in a year one will have read seven days of twenty-four hours each.  Think
of what may be accomplished in an average lifetime in common reading
by the busiest person, who really wants to read.   "Schliemann," the
noted German scholar and author, "as a boy, standing in line at the
post-office waiting his turn for the mail, utilized the time by studying
Greek from a little pocket grammar."  "Mary Somerfield, the astronomer,
while busy with her children in the nursery, wrote her 'Mechanism of
the Heavens,' without neglecting her duties as a mother."  "Julius Caesar,
while a military officer and politician found time to write his Commentaries
known throughout the world."  William Cobbett says:  "I learned grammar
when I was a private soldier on a six-pence a day.  The edge of my guard-
bed was my seat to study in, my knapsack was my bookcase, and a board
lying on my lap was my desk.  I had no moment at that time that I could
call my own; and I had to read and write among the talking, singing,
whistling, and bawling of at least half a score of the most thoughtless of
men."  Among those whom we all know who have risen out of obscurity
to eminence through a wise economy of time which they have used in
reading and study, are, Patrick Henry, Benjamin West, Eli Whitney, James
Watt, Richard Baxter, Roger Sherman, Sir Isaac Newton, and Benjamin
Franklin.



VII.

SOCIAL RECREATION.

DEFINED.


The normal young person who does not dissipate is bursting with
life.  The natural child is activity embodied.  The healthful old person
craves exercise.  Life, activity, exercise, each must have some method
of spending itself.  Some normal method, some right method, some
attractive method must be chosen.  By normal method we mean that
which calls into use the varied faculties and powers of the entire
being, body, mind, and heart.  By right method we mean that which
does not crush out a part of one's being, while another part is being
developed.  By attractive method in the use of life, activity, exercise,
we mean that which appeals to one's peculiar desires, tastes, and
circumstances, so long as these are normal and right.  Some chosen
profession, trade, or work is the rightful heritage of every person.
Each man, woman, and child should know when he gets up of a
morning, what his work is for that day.  Consciously, or unconsciously,
he should have some outline of work, some end in view, some goal
toward which he is stretching himself.  Dr. J. M. Buckley asks:  "Have
you a purpose and a plan?"  And answers, "Life is worth nothing till
then."  The child is in the hands of his parent, his teacher, his guardian.
These must answer to Destiny for his beginning and growth.  "Satan
finds something for idle hands to do."  Hence the necessity of
vigilance on the part of those who hold the young.  But "all work and
no play, makes Jack a dull boy."  This rule is good whether "Jack" be
a puny girl, a feeble grandfather, a hustling, responsible father, a busy
mother, or even a mischievous lad.  Every person who rises each
morning, dresses himself and goes about his work as if he knew what
he were about; who has some useful work to do, and does it, sooner
or later, needs rest.  True, night comes and one may rest.  And sweet
is the rest of sleep; a third of one's life is passed in this way.  Sancho
Panza has it right when he says:

"Now blessing light on him that first invented sleep!  It covers a man
all over, thoughts and all, like a cloak; it is meat for the hungry, drink
for the thirsty, heat for the cold, and cold for the hot."  But one craves
a recreation, a rest which work nor sleep can give.  Man has a social
nature, a longing to mingle with his acquaintances and friends.  Let
one be shut in with work, or sickness, or weather, for whole days at a
time, and see how hungry he gets to see some one.  A recreation at a
social gathering literally makes a new being out of him.  He is
recreated.  It is this form of recreation that we consider here, social
recreation.


A NECESSITY.

Social recreation is a necessity in a well-ordered life.  As with many
other common blessings we forget its benefits.  Nor are these benefits
so evident until we see the blighting result in the life of the one who,
for any reason whatsoever, has become a social recluse.  We have
known a few persons who have once been in society, but who have
allowed themselves to remain away from all sorts of gatherings, for
a number of years.  In every case, the result has been openly
noticeable.  They have become boorish in manners, unsympathetic
in nature, and suspicious in spirit.  Thus they have grown out of
harmony with the ideas and ways of those about them, have come
to take distorted and erroneous views of affairs and of men.  Man is
a composite being.  Many factors enter into his make-up.  He lives
not only in the physical and intellectual, in the religious and social,
in a local and limited sense, but his life expands until it touches and
molds many other characters and communities besides his own.  In
all of these spheres of his influence and work on needs to be sobered
down, corrected, stimulated.  In no other way is this better accomplished
than through one's very contact with his fellows in the religious
gathering, among his workmen, in the political meeting, at the assembly,
in the social gathering whenever and wherever persons may see one
another and talk over common interests.

A SPECIFIC SENSE.

In a specific sense, by social recreation, we mean those pastimes and
pleasures which all persons, except the social recluse, enjoy as they
meet to spend an afternoon or an evening together.  Now, how may
we get the largest amount of pleasure, of rest, of recreation from such
gatherings?  How may we best benefit ourselves, inspire one another,
and in it all, honor God?  It is no small task to accomplish these three
ends in all things, in one's life.  We have agreed that some social
practices are positively bad.  And we have tried to show why the
"tobacco club," the "social glass," the "card-party," the "dancing-party,"
and the play-house reveries should be avoided.  We have left these
forms of so-called "questionable amusements" out of our practice and
let our of our lives.  To what may we turn?  Where may we go?  We
turn to the social gathering.


BUT IT MUST BE PLANNED.

No social gathering can successfully run itself.  See what forethought
and expenditure are given to make successful the "smoking-club," the
"wine-social," the "card and dancing parties," and the "theater."  Not
one of these institutions thrive without thought and cost in their
management.  Put the same thought and expense into the gathering
for social recreation, and you will find all of the merits of the
questionable institution and none of its demerits.  No company has
larger capabilities than the mixed company at the social gathering.
Nor may any purpose be more perfectly served than the purpose of
true social recreation.  Here we find those skilled in music, versed
in literature, adept at conversation; we find the practical joker, the
proficient at games, and last, but not least, those "born to serve"
tables.  This variety of genius, of wit, of skill, of willingness to
serve, is laid at the altar of pleasure for the worthy purpose of making
new again the weary body, the languishing spirit, the lonely heart.
Let the right management and stimulus be given to this resourceful
company, and the hours will pass as moments, the surest sign of a
good time.


SOME ESSENTIALS.

DINING, SOCIAL HOUR, GAMES.

No social recreation is complete without dining.  And yet the least
important part of this meal should be the taking of food.  It is a
serious fault with the modern social that too much attention is given
to the variety and quantity of food, and not enough to merriment in
taking it.  To be successful, the social company should gather as
early as possible; the first hour-and-a-half should be given to greetings
and to social levity of the brightest and wittiest sort.  If one has an
ache or a pain, a care or a loss, let it be forgotten now.  It is weakness
and folly continually to be under any burden.  Here every one should
take a genuine release from seriousness and earnestness in weighty
and responsible affairs.  Let all, except the serving committee for
this evening, take part in this strictly social hour-and-a-half.  When
the late-comers have arrived and have been introduced, and the people
have moved about and met one another, almost before the company
are aware of it they are invited by the serving committee to dine.
Usually all may not be served at once.  Now that the company has
been thinned out, the older persons having gone to the tables, short,
spirited games should be introduced in which every person not at
luncheon, should be given a place and a part.  At this juncture it is
not best to introduce sitting-games, such as checkers, authors, caroms,
or flinch, for the contestants might be called to take refreshments at
a critical moment in the contest.  With a little attention to it, appropriate
games may be introduced here that need not interfere with luncheon.
Fully half an hour should be spent at each set of tables, where at the
close of the meal, some humorous subject or subjects should be
introduced and responded to be those best fitted for such a task.
Almost any person can say something bright as well as sensible, if he
will give a little attention to it beforehand.  While the second and third
tables are being served, let those retiring contest at games of skill,
converse, or take up other appropriate entertainment directed by the
everywhere present entertainment committee.  By this time half-past
ten or eleven o'clock, some who are old, or who have pressing duties
on the next day may want to retire.  If the serving committee have been
skillful in adjusting the time spent at each table to the number of
tables, etc., by eleven o'clock the serving shall have been completed.
Now, the young in spirit, whether old or young, expect, and should have
an hour at the newest, liveliest, and most recreative games.  No part of
the evening entertainment should be allowed to drag.  To insure this a
frequent change of social games is needed.


AVOID LATE HOURS.

As late hours tend to produce irregularity in sleep, in meals, and in
work; and since the object of the social is recreation, the company
should retire about midnight.  Oftentimes people stay and stay at
such a gathering, until the hostess, the entertaining committee, and
the people themselves are worn out.  And yet, who is at fault?  This
is a critical point in the modern popular social.  How shall the company
disband in due season?  In his "Autocrat of the Breakfast Table,"
Oliver Wendell Holmes gives a suggestion on this point for the
private visitor, who does not know how to go.  Says Holmes:  "Do
n't you know how hard it is for some people to get out of a room
when their visit is really over?  They want to be off, and you want
to have them off, but they do n't know how to manage it.  One would
think they had been built in your parlor or study and were waiting to
be launched.  I have contrived a sort of ceremonial inclined plane for
such visitors, which being lubricated with certain smooth phrases, I
back them down, metaphorically speaking, stern-foremost, into their
'native element,' the great ocean of outdoors."  There are social companies
as hard to get rid of as this.  They want to go, and every one wants them
to go, but just how to make the start, no one seems to know.  Dr. Holmes
and his "inclined plane" may have been successful with the private caller,
but who will be the "contriver of a ceremonial," one sufficient to land the
social company into its "native element, the great ocean of outdoors?"
No, this most delicate of the problems involved in a successful modern
social must be left to a tactful hint from the entertainment committee,
and to the wise choice of a few recognized leaders in the company.


NEW COMMITTEES.

Special committees should have charge of the serving and of the
entertainment.  As far as possible these should vary with each
successive social.  It is an erroneous notion, prevalent in nearly
every community, that only "certain ones" can do this or that; the
consequence is that these "certain ones" do all the work, are deprived
of the true rest and relief which the social is meant to give, while
others who should take their turn, grow unappreciative, and weak in
their serving and entertaining ability.


THE AVERAGE SOCIAL A FAILURE.

As it is conducted to-day, the average social is a failure.  Late at
arriving, want of introductions, lack of arranged entertainment, late
hours,--all go to weaken and to dull the average young person in
place of to cultivate his wits, his special genius at music, reading,
and conversation, and to recreate him in body, mind, and spirit.  To
make a success of the social gathering some one must keep in mind
the personal convenience and happiness of every person present.
When this is done and the social gathering becomes notable for the
real pleasure that it gives, then we shall be able to drive out the
"questionable amusements," because we have taken nothing from
the person, and have given him new life and interest.



VIII.

FRIENDSHIP.

BONDS OF ATTACHMENT.


Each person is connected with every other person by some bond of
attachment.  It may be by the steel bond of brotherhood, by the
silvern chain of religious fellowship, by the golden band of conjugal
affection, by the flaxen cord of parental or filial love, or by the silken
tie of friendship.  One or more of these bonds of attachment may
encircle each person, and each bond has its varying strength, and is
capable of endless lengthening and contracting.  Brotherhood is a
general term, and as it is used here, comprises the fellow-feeling that
one human being has for another, this is universal brotherhood.
Brotherhood comprises the fellow-feeling that attracts persons of the
same race, nation, or community, this is racial, national, or community
brotherhood; also, it comprises the fellow-feeling that exists between
persons of the same avocation, calling, or work, this is the brotherhood
of profession; it comprises the fellow-feeling that joins persons of the
same order or party, this is the brotherhood of order; it comprises the
fellow-feeling that joins brothers and sisters of the same home, this is
the brotherhood of family.  Religious fellowship includes that spiritual
intercourse which is held between persons of the same religious faith
and practice.  Conjugal affection comprises that feeling of mind and
heart which unites husband and wife.  Filial and parental love exists
between parent and child.  While friendship comprises that soul union
which exists between persons because of similar desires, tastes, and
sentiments.  Each of these bonds of attachment has its characteristic
mark, its essential feature.  The essential feature of universal brotherhood
is common origin, present struggle, and future hope; the essential feature
of racial, national, or community brotherhood is patriotism; the essential
feature of brotherhood of the order is mutual helpfulness; the essential
feature in brotherhood of the profession is common pursuit; in brotherhood
of the family, common parentage; in conjugal affection, attraction for
opposite sex; in parental and filial love, love of offspring and love of
parent; while in friendship the essential feature is harmony of natures.


WHAT IS FRIENDSHIP?

No human relationship can be more beautiful, nor more abiding than
true friendship.  It is a spiritual thing, a communion of souls, virtuously
exercised.  How one is impressed and pleased to see another horse just
like his own, to see another dog exactly resembling his own, to meet a
person who speaks, looks, and acts like some one he has known.  It is
a surprise, mingled with mystery and delight.  But with what increased
surprise and delight does one meet with a "person after his own heart."
All men have recognized the strength and beauty of right self-love.
The second great law of Christ's kingdom is declared in terms of true
self-love.  "Love thy neighbor as thyself."  Every one loves himself,
because one's self is the truest and best of other lives filtered through
his own soul.  When one finds in another that which perfectly answers
to his own soul-likings and longings, he has found another self, he has
found a friend.  Friendship is the communion of such souls, although
they may be absent from one another.  The highest friendship may grow
more perfectly when friends are separated, then it is unmixed with the
alloy of imperfect thought and action.  Then it is nourished by the past,
for only the past buries all faults; it is encouraged by the future, for
only the future veils the awkwardness and shortcomings of the present.
The character of friendship is determined by the character of friends.
Negative personalities wanting in taste, conviction, and virtue produce
only a negative friendship.  Intense personalities produce intense
friendships; noble personalities, noble friendships, and spiritual
personalities, spiritual friendship.  In the true, spiritual sense, before
one can become a friend, he must become an individual.  He must
stand for something in thought and purpose.  If this is not true,
friendship becomes a flimsy affair.  For souls to commune with one
another there must be harmony; unity, agreement of desires, sentiments,
and tastes.  Not the harmony of indifference, nor a forced agreement, but
a beautiful and natural response of soul to soul.  Such equipment for
friendship finds its basis only in individual character.  Character is
conduct become habitual.  If one spurns reason, and follows his impulse
and passion, he becomes unreliable, and does not know the issues of
his own heart and life.  Who knows what such an one will do next?  To
make it soar well or sail well, friendship must have ballast.  This ballast
is worthy, individual character.  It would be more exact to say there can
be no true friendship without individual character.  Although many
elements constitute the character of the true friend, yet two elements are
essential--sincerity and tenderness.  Sincerity is the soul of every virtue,
while true words, simple manners, and right actions make up the body.
If the soul of virtue is present one does not always demand the presence
of the body, but if the body of virtue is absent, one had better take a
search after the soul.  If sincerity is unquestioned, words, manners,
actions have great liberty; but if words, manners and actions are
lacking in straight-forwardness, it is time to question sincerity.  This
is true in all human affairs involving motive and conduct.  Especially
is it true in friendship.  Sincerity knows its own.  By a glance it
penetrates the very heart of its true friend, and leaves translucent and
transparent its own.  Sincerity gives steadfastness and constancy to
friendship.  Insincerity mars and breaks friendship.  Who has not
seen a soul spring into life through the love of a radiant friendship;
and then following a series of hollow pretenses, insincerities, that
friendship fails, and the beautiful creature stifles and dies.  As one
tells us, "such a death is frightful, it is the asphyxia of the soul!"  Then,
tenderness is an essential element in the character of a friend.  Says
Emerson:  "Notwithstanding all the selfishness that chills like east
winds the world, the whole human family is bathed with an element
of love, like a fine ether."  With Emerson, we believe that every
person carries about with him a certain circle of sympathy within
which he, and at least one friend, may temper and sweeten life.  Much
of the kindness of the world is simply breathed, and yet what an aroma
of good cheer it sheds in grateful lives.  Tenderness possesses a
sensitiveness of sympathy to an extreme degree.  It shrinks from the
sight of suffering.  It treats others with "gentleness, delicacy, thought-
fulness, and care.  It enters into feelings, anticipates wants, supplies the
smallest pleasure, and studies every comfort."  Says one:  "It belongs
to natures, refined as well as loving, and possesses that consideration of
which finer dispositions only are capable."  Tenderness is a heart
quality.  It is the luxury of a pure and intense friendship.  It tempers one's
entire nature, making his whole being sympathetic with grace and favor.
It is manifest in the relaxing feature, in the penetrating glance, in the
mellowing voice, in the engracing manners, and in the complete
obliteration of time and distance, while with one's friend.  We recall the
friendly visits spend with our friend, Lawrence W. Rowell, during his
medical course in Rush College, Chicago, while we were in attendance
at the Northwestern University, in Evanston, Illinois.  Rowell was
intellectual, spirited, gifted in conversation, highly sympathetic, informed,
critical, yet charitable, a close student of human nature, a love of
philosophy, of musical temperament, of noble heart, of exalted purpose.
Our visits were kept up bimonthly throughout one year.  We would spent
Saturday evening and Sunday together.  Those visits revealed to me the
magnetism, intensity, and tenderness of a friend.  Truly, with us time and
distance were almost completely obliterated from our consciousness.  I
say distance, for we would walk together.  Tenderness suits the amiable
and gentle in disposition, but it comes with a peculiar charm from the
austere nature.  It is one of the stalwart virtues, and is often concealed
behind a crusty exterior.  Severity and tenderness adorn the greatest lives.


THE TEST OF FRIENDSHIP.

What is the uncertain mark of a friend?  Have I a friend?  How many
friends have I?  I can invoice my stock, my goods, my land, my money,
can I invoice my friends?  One may not always know the actual worth
of a friend, but he knows who are his friends, quite as well as he knows
who are his nephews and cousins.  "A friend is one whom you need and
who needs you."  Has one a bit of good news, he flies to his friend, he
wants to share it.  Has one a sorrow, he seeks his friend who will gladly
share that.  Does one meet with a defeat or victory, instantly he thinks
of his friend and of how it will effect him.  Friends need one another,
as truly as the child needs its mother, or the mother her child.  Is one
tempted to commit a wrong in thought or action, his friend, though
absent, appears at his side and begs him not to do it.  If one is in doubt
or uncertainty, he summons his friend, who become a patient reasoner,
and an impartial judge.  Who does not find himself, daily, looking
through other people's glasses, weighing on other people's scales,
sounding other people's voices?  It is a habit that friends have with
one another.  You can not deprive friends of one another, any more
than you can lovers.  Ah, true friends are lovers of the heaven-born
sort; for their agreement is grounded in nature.  They are not chosen,
they are discovered.  Or, as Emerson says, they are "self-elected."

     "Friendship's an abstract of love's noble flame,
          'Tis love refined, and purged from all its dross,
      'Tis next to angel's love, if not the same,
          As strong as passion in, though not so gross."

Thus writes Catherine Phillips.


FRUITS OF FRIENDSHIP.

True friendship gives ease to the heart, light to the mind, and aid to the
carrying out of one's life-purposes.  First, ease to the heart.  The presence
of a friend is a beam of genial sunshine which lights up the house by his
very appearance.  He warms the atmosphere and dispels the gloom.  The
presence of a true friend for a day, a night, a week, lifts one out of
himself, links him with new purposes, and immerses him in new joys.
Friends breathe free with one another.  They inspire sighs of relief.
Embarrassment disappears; liberty reigns supreme.  Hearts are like steam
boilers, occasionally, they must give vent to what is in them, or they will
burst.  This is the true mission of friends, to become to one another
reserve reservoirs of "griefs, joys, fears, hopes, suspicions, counsels, and
whatever lieth upon the heart to oppress it," or elate it.  You recall those
familiar lines of Bacon:  "This communicating of a man's self to his
friends works two contrary effects; for it redoubles joys and cutteth
griefs in halves; for there is no man that imparteth his joys to his friend,
but he joyeth the more; and no man that imparteth his griefs to his
friends, but he grieveth the less."  The following selected lines, slightly
changed, set forth this first fruit of friendship.

    "A true friend is an atmosphere
      Warm with all inspirations dear,
      Wherein we breathe the large free breath
      Of life that hath no taint of death.
      A true friend's an unconscious part
      Of every true beat of our heart;
      A strength, a growth, whence we derive
      Soul-rest, that keeps the world alive."

Then, friendship sheds light in the mind.  "He who has made the
acquisition of a judicious and sympathetic friend," says Robert Hall,
"may be said to have doubled his mental resources."  No man is wise
enough to be his own counselor, for he inclineth too much to leniency
toward himself.  "It is a well-known rule that flattery is food for the
fool."  Therefore no man should be his own counselor since no one is
so apt to flatter another as he is himself.  A wise man never flatters
himself, neither does a friend flatter.  As a wise man sees his own
faults and seeks to correct them, so a true friend sees the faults of his
friend and labors faithfully to banish them.  The one who flatters you
despises you, and degrades both you and himself.  An enemy will tell
you the whole truth about yourself, especially your faults, and at times
that both weaken and hurt you.  A friend will tell you the whole truth
about yourself, especially your neglected virtues, but at a time to both
strengthen and help you.  The highest service a friend can render is
that of giving counsel.  The highest honor one can bestow upon his
friend is to make him his counselor.  It is no mark of weakness to rely
upon counsel.  God, Himself, needed a counselor, so he chose His Son.
"His name shall be called Wonderful, Counselor, the Mighty God, the
Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace."  Isa. ix, 6.  Counsel, says
Solomon, is the key to stability.  "Every purpose is established by
Counsel."  Prov. Xx, 18.  Who despiseth counsel shall reap the reward
of folly.  A friend is safe in counsel, according to his wisdom, for he
never seeks his own good, but the good of his friend.  It is a saying, "If
some one asks you for advice, if you would be followed, first find out
what kind of advice is wanted, then give that."  But this is not the way
of a friend.  He has in mind the welfare of the friend and the cause his
friend serves.  Honor does not require that one shall follow the advise
of his friend, rather liberty in this is a mark of freedom and trust
between friends.

A friend aids one in the carrying out of his life purposes.  Who is it
that helps one to places of honor and usefulness?  It is his friend.  Who
is it that recognizes one's true worth, extols his virtues, and gives tone
and quality to the diligent services of months and years?  It is his
friend.  Who is it, when one ends his life in the midst of an unfinished
book, or with loose ends of continued research in philosophy or science
all about him; who is it that gathers up these loose ends and puts in order
the unfinished work?  It is his friend.  Who is it that stands by the open
tomb of that fallen saint or hero and relates to the world his deeds of
sacrifice and courage which spurn others on to nobler living and thereby
perpetuates his goodness and valor?  Who does this, if it is done?  It is
his friend.  A friend thus becomes not only a completion of one's soul
as he is by virtue of being a friend, but also he becomes a completion
of one's life.  Then, one's relation to his fellowmen is a limited
relationship.  He may speak, but upon certain subjects, on certain
occasions, and to certain persons.  As Francis Bacon says, "A man can
not speak to his son but as a father; to his wife but as a husband; to his
enemy but upon terms; whereas a friend may speak as the case requires,
and not as it sorteth with the person....I have given the rule," says he,
"where a man can not fitly play his own part, if he have not a friend, he
may quit the stage."


HOW TO GET AND KEEP A FRIEND.

A real friend is discovered, or made.  First, discovered.  Two persons
notice an attraction for one another.  They see that their desires are
similar, they have the same sentiments, they agree in tastes.  A feeling
of attachment becomes conscious with each of them, slight association
fosters this feeling, it increases.  New associations but reveal a broader
agreement, a closer union, a perfecter harmony.  The signs of friendship
appear.  Heart and mind of each respond to the other, they are friends.
This is the noblest friendship.  It has its origin in nature.  It is, as H. Clay
Trumbull says:  "Love without compact or condition; it never pivots on
an equivalent return of service or of affection.  Its whole sweep is away
from self and toward the loved one.  Its desire is for the friend's welfare;
its joy is in the friend's prosperity; its sorrows and trials are in the
friend's misfortunes and griefs; its pride is in the friend's attainments
and successes; its constant purpose is in doing and enduring for the
friend."

Then, friends are made.  Two persons do not especially attract one
another.  But, through growth of character, modification of nature, or
change in desires, sentiments, and tastes, they become attracted to each
other.  Or in spite of natural disagreements or differences, through the
force of circumstances they become welded together in friendship.
Montaigne describes such an attachment, in which the souls mix and
work themselves into one piece with so perfect a mixture that there is
no more sign of a seam by which they were first conjoined.  Says
Euripedes:

        "A friend
    Wedded into our life is more to us
    Than twice five thousand kinsman one in blood."

Such was the friendship of Ruth and Naomi.  Orpha loved Naomi, kissed
her, and returned satisfied to her early home; but Ruth cleaved unto her,
saying:

    "Entreat me not to leave thee,
     And to return from following after thee:
     For whither thou goest, I will go;
     Where thou lodgest, I will lodge:
     Thy people shall be my people,
     And thy God my God:
     Where thou diest, will I die,
     And there will I be buried:
     The Lord do so to me, and more also,
     If aught but death part thee and me."

The keeping of a friend like the keeping of a fortune, lies in the getting,
although in friendship much depends upon circumstances of association.
However subtle may be the circumstances which bring friends together,
or whatever natural agreement may exist between their natures, still
there is always a conscious choosing of friends.  In this choosing lies the
secret of abiding friendship.  Young says:

    "First on thy friend deliberate with thyself;
     Pause, ponder, sift:  not eager in the choice,
     Nor jealous of the chosen; fixing fix;
     Judge before friendship, then confide till death."

Steadfastness and constancy such as this seldom loses a friend.

Last of all, abiding friendship is grounded in virtue.  Says a famed
writer on Friendship:  "There is a pernicious error in those who think
that a free indulgence in all lusts and sins is extended in friendship.
Friendship was given us by nature as the handmaid of virtues and not
as the companion of our vices.  It is virtue, virtue I say . . . that both
wins friendship and preserves it."  And closing his remarks on this
immortal subject, Cicero causes Laelius to say:  "I exhort you to lay
the foundations of virtue, without which friendship can not exist, in
such a manner, that with this one exception, you may consider that
nothing in the world is more excellent than friendship."



IX.

TRAVEL.

A PERSONAL EXPERIENCE.


We have set in order some facts, incidents, and lessons gathered from
a hasty trip to the old country during the summer of 1899.  The journey
was made in company with Rev. C.F. Juvinall, for four years my room-
mate and fellow-student, and my estimable friend.  On Wednesday,
June 21st, we sailed from Boston Harbor; reached Liverpool, England,
Saturday morning the 1st of July; visited this second town in the British
kingdom; stopped over at the old town of Chester; took a run out to
Hawarden Estate, the home of Gladstone; changed cars at Stratford-on-
Avon and visited the tomb of Shakespeare; staid a half day and a night
in the old university town of Oxford, and reached London on the evening
of July 4th.  Having spent a week in London, we crossed the English
Channel to Paris; remained there two days, then made brief visits to the
battlefield of Waterloo, to Brussels, Amsterdam, Hull, Sheffield, Dublin,
and back to Liverpool.  We sailed to Boston and returned to Chicago by
way of Montreal and Detroit, having spent forty-nine days--the
intensest and delightfullest of our lives.  At first, we hesitated to treat
this subject from a point of view of personal experience, but since it
is our purpose to incite in others the love for and the right us of all
helpful resources of happiness and power, it seemed to us that we could
no better accomplish our purpose with respect to this subject than to
recount our own observations from this one limited, imperfect journey.


AN EYE-OPEN AND EAR-OPEN EXPERIENCE.

One is always at a disadvantage in relating the faults of others, for he
seems to himself and to his friends to be telling his own experience.  We
were about to speak of the superficial way in which Americans travel.
One who has traveled much says that "the average company of American
tourists goes through the Art Galleries of Europe like a drove of cattle
through the lanes of a stock-market."  Nor is it the art gallery and museum
alone that is done superficially.  How many persons before entering
grand old Notre Dame, or the British Houses of Parliament, pause to
admire the elaborate and expansive beauty of the great archways and
outer walls?  It is possible to live in this world, to travel around it, to
touch at every great port and city, and yet fail to see what is of value
or of interest.  A man on our boat going to Liverpool, said that he had
traveled over the world, had been in London many a time, but had not
taken the pains to go into St. Paul's, nor to visit the Tower of London.
A wise man, a seer, is one who sees.  It is possible to live in this world,
and not to leave one's own dooryard, and yet to possess the knowledge
of the world, and to tell others how to see.  Louis Agassiz, the scientist,
was invited by a friend to spend the summer with him abroad.  Mr.
Agassiz declined the gracious offer on the ground that he had just
Planned a summer's tour through his own back yard.  What did Agassiz
find on that tour?  Instruction for the children of many generations, a
treatise on animal life, and later a text-book of Zoology.  Kant, the
philosopher, the greatest mind since Socrates, was never forty miles
from his birthplace.  On the other hand, Grant Allen, author, scholar,
and traveler, says:  "One year in the great university we call Europe,
will teach one more than three at Yale or Columbia.  And what it
teaches one will be real, vivid, practical, abiding . . . ingrained in
the very fiber of one's brain and thought. . . .  He will read deeper
meaning thenceforward in every picture, every building, every book,
every newspaper. . . .  If you want to know the origin of the art of
building, the art of painting, the art of sculpture, as you find them
to-day in contemporary America, you must look them up in the
churches, and the galleries of early Europe.  If you want to know
the origin of American institutions, American law, American thought,
and American language, you must go to England; you must go farther
still to France, Italy, Hellas, and the Orient.  Our whole life is bound
up with Greece and Rome, with Egypt and Assyria."  But whatever
advantage travel may afford for broad and intense study, whatever
be its superior processes of refinement and learning, yet it is well
to remember this, that at any place and at any time one may open
his eyes and his ears, his heart and his reason, and find more than
he is able to understand and a heart to feel!  You can not limit God
to the land nor to the sea, to one country nor to one hemisphere.
Thus the kind of travel of which we speak is the eye-open and ear-
open sort.

Let us note first, then, that travel is a study of history at the spot
where the event took place.  The history of a nation is a record of
its great men.  You tell a faithful story of Columbus, John Cabot,
and Henry Hudson; of Winthrop, John Smith, and Melendez; of
General Wolfe, General Washington, Patrick Henry, and Franklin;
of Jefferson, Adams, Jackson, and Webster; of Abraham Lincoln,
Wendell Phillips, John Brown, and General Grant; of John Sherman,
Grover Cleveland, and William McKinley, and you an up-to-date
history of the young American Republic, acknowledged by every
country to have the greatest future of all nations.  So, if one reads
with understanding the inscriptions on the monuments of Gough,
O'Connell, and Parnell, he will get the story of the struggles of the
Irish.  Enter London Tower, "the most historical spot in England,"
and recount the bloody tragedies of the English people since the
time of William the Conqueror, 1066 A.D.  Here we have a "series
of equestrian figures in full equipment, as well as many figures on
foot, affording a faithful picture, in approximate chronological
order, of English war-array from the time of Edward I, 1272, down
to that of James II, 1688."  In glass cases, and in forms of trophies
on the walls, we find arms and armor of the old Romans, of the
early Greeks, and Britons, and of the Anglo-Saxons.  Maces and
axes, long and cross bows and leaden missile weapons and shields,
highly adorned with metal figures, all tend to make more vivid the
word-pictures of the historian."  Of the small burial-ground in this
Tower, Macaulay writes:  "In truth there is no sadder spot on earth
than this little cemetery.  Death is there associated, not, as in
Westminster Abbey and St. Paul's, with genius and virtue, with
public veneration, and with imperishable renown; not, as in our
humblest churches and church-yards, with every thing that is most
endearing in social and domestic charities; but with whatever is
darkest in human nature and in human destiny, with the savage
triumph of implacable enemies, with the inconstancy, the ingratitude,
the cowardice of friends, with all the miseries of fallen greatness and
of blighted fame."  We note a few names chiseled here:  Sir Thomas
More, beheaded 1535; Anne Boleyn, beheaded in this tower, 1536;
Thomas Cromwell, beheaded, 1540; Margaret Pole, beheaded here,
1541; Queen Catharine Howard, beheaded, 1542; Lady Jane Grey
and her husband, beheaded here, 1544; Sir Thomas Overbudy,
poisoned in this tower, 1613.  Since travel is a study of history at
the spot where the event took place, let us cross the rough and famed
English Channel to visit one of the many noted spots of France.  We
select the site of the Hotel de Ville or the town-hall of Paris.  "The
construction of the old hall was begun in 1533, and was over seventy
years in its completion.  Additions were made, and the building was
reconstructed in 1841.  This has been the usual rallying site of the
Democratic party for centuries.  Here occurred the tragedy of St.
Bartholomew in 1572; here mob-posts, gallows, and guillotines
did the work of a despotic misrule until 1789.  (As we left for
Brussels on the evening of the 13th of July, all Paris was gayly
decorated with red, white, and blue bunting, ready to celebrate the
event of July 14, 1789, the fall of the Bastile.)  On this date, 110
years ago, the captors of the Bastile marched into this noted hall.
Three days later Louis XVI came here in procession from Versailles,
followed by a dense mob."  Here Robespierre attempted suicide to
avoid arrest, when five battalions under Barras forced entrance to
assault the Commune party, of which Robespierre was head.  Here,
in 1848, Louis Blanc proclaimed the institution of the Republic of
France.  This was a central spot during the revolution of 1871.  The
leaders of the Commune party place in this building barrels of
gunpowder, and heaps of combustibles steeped in petroleum, and on
May 25th they succeeded in destroying with it 600 human lives.  A
new Hotel de Ville, one of the most magnificent buildings in Europe,
has replaced the old hall.  This is open to visitors at all hours.  To
study history at the spot where the event took place means work as
well as pleasure, so we took our luncheon and sleep in our car while
the train carried us to Brussels, and out to Braine-l'Alleud, where, on
the beautiful rolling plain of Belgium, June 18, 1805, Napoleon
Bonaparte met his Waterloo, and Wellington became England's idol.

A railway baggageman was on our train returning to his home in
Cleveland, Ohio.  In conversation, he said:  "I have been with this
company for twenty-two years; have drawn two dollars a day, 365
days in the year for that time, and I haven't a dollar in the world, but
one, and I gave it yesterday for a dog.  But," said he, "I have a good
woman and the greatest little girl in the world, so I am happy."  This
is one of a large class of persons who receive fair wages all their lives,
and yet die paupers, because they plan to spend all they make as they
go along.  In conversation with a gruff, old Dutch conductor between
Albany and New York City, I ventured to ask him if he had ever
crossed the ocean.  "No," he said, "nopody eber crosses de ocean, bud
emigrants, and beoble vat hab more muney dan prains."

Travel is a study of religious institutions.  Among the most interesting
in Europe, that we visited, are Wesley's Chapel, Westminster Abbey,
St. Paul's Cathedral, and Notre Dame.  The Church of Notre Dame,
situated in the heart of Paris on the bank of the Seine, was founded
1163 on the site of a church of the fourth century.  The building has
been altered a number of times.  In 1793 it was converted into a temple
of reason.  The statue of the Virgin Mary was replaced by one of
Liberty.  Busts of Robespierre, Voltaire, and Rosseau were erected.
This church was closed to worship 1794, but was reopened by Napoleon
1802.  It was desecrated by the Communards 1811, when the building
was used as a military depot.  The large nave, 417 feet long, 156 feet
wide, and 110 feet high, is the most interesting portion of this massive
structure.  The vaulting of this great nave is supported by seventy-five
huge pillars.  The pulpit is a masterpiece of modern wood-carving.  The
choir and sanctuary are set off by costly railings, and are beautifully
adorned by reliefs in wood and stone.  The organ, with 6,000 pipes, is
one of the finest in Europe.  "The choir has a reputation for plain song."
On a small elevation, in the center of London, stand the Cathedral of
St. Paul's, the most prominent building in the city.  From remains found
here it is believed that a Christian Church occupied this spot in the times
of the Romans, and that it was rebuilt by King Ethelbert, 610 A.D.  Three
hundred years later this building was burned, but soon it was rebuilt.
Again it was destroyed by fire, 1087, and a new edifice begun which was
200 years in completion.  This church, old St. Paul's, was 590 feet long,
and had a leaden-covered, timber spire, 460 feet high.  In 1445 this
spire was injured by lightning, and in 1561 the building was again burned.
Says Mr. Baedeker, whose guidebook is indispensable in the hands of a
traveler, "Near the cathedral stood the celebrated Cross of St. Paul, where
sermons were preached, papal bulls promulgated, heretics made to recant,
and witches to confess, and where the pope's condemnation of Luther was
proclaimed in the presence of Woolsey."  Here is the burial place of a
long list of noted persons.  Here occurred Wyckiff's citation for heresy,
1337; and here Tyndale's New Testament was burned, 1527.  It was
opened for divine services, 1697, and was completed after thirteen years
of steady work, at a cost of three and a half millions of dollars.  This sum
was raised by a tax on coal.  The church is in the form of a Latin cross,
500 feet long, with the transept 250 feet in length.  "The inner dome is
225 feet high, the outer, from the pavement to the top of the cross, is 364
feet.  The dome is 102 feet in diameter, thirty-seven feet less than St.
Peter's.  St. Paul's is the third largest church in Christendom, being
surpassed only by St. Peter's at Rome."  Three services are held here
daily.  The religion of Notre Dame is Roman Catholic, but that of St.
Paul's and Westminster is of the Church of England.  What shall we say
of Westminster Abbey, the most impressive place of all our travel!  As
my friend and I entered here and took our seats for divine worship,
preparatory to visiting her halls, and chapels, and tombs, I think I was
never more deeply impressed.  I said to myself, "What does God mean
to allow me to worship here?" and I seemed to realize how little my
past life had been.  I felt that circumstances and not I myself had
thrust this new privilege, and thereby new responsibility, upon me.
Westminster Abbey!  A church for the living, a burial-place for the
honored dead; a monument to genius, labor, and virtue; England's
"temple of fame;" the most solemn spot in Europe, if not in the world!
Here lie authors, benefactors, and poets; statesmen, heroes, and rulers,
the best of English blood since Edward the Confessor, 1049 A.D.  We
must now leave this sacred spot to visit, if possible for us, a more
sacred one, the birthplace of Methodism, or more accurately speaking,
in the words of Bishop Warren, the "cradle of Methodism."

On City Road, London, near Liverpool Street Station, is located the
house, chapel, burial-grounds, and tomb of John Wesley.  Across the
street, in an old Nonconformist cemetery, are the graves of James
Watt, Daniel Defoe, and John Bunyan.  Across the narrow street to
the north is the tabernacle of Whitefield.  We learned that Friday,
July 7th, was reopening day for Wesley's Chapel.  What a distinguished
body of persons we found at this meeting!  Dr. Joseph Parker was the
speaker of the day.  The Rev. Hugh Price Hughes, president of the
Conference, presided at the memorial services.  Rev. Westerdale,
present pastor, successfully managed the program of the day, especially
the collections, for he met the expense of the rebuilding and past
indebtedness with the sum of over fifteen thousand dollars.  He told
those discouraged ministers with big audiences to go and take courage
from what the mother-church, with her small number of poor
parishioners, had done.  In the evening, Bishop Warren, on his return
to America, called in and gave an interesting talk.  He was followed
by Fletcher Moulton, member of Parliament.  You may not realize the
feeling of gratitude with which we took part in this eventful service of
praise, prayer, and rededication!  On the next day we returned to see
the books, furniture, and apartments of Wesley, himself.  We sat at his
writing desk, stood in his death-chamber, and lingered in the little room
where he used to retire at four in the morning for secret prayer.  From
here he would go directly to his preaching service at five.  Wesley put
God first in his life, this is why men honor him so much now that he
is gone.  We took a farewell view of the audience-room from the very
pulpit into which Wesley ascended to preach his Good News of Christ.
From the several inscriptions on Wesley's tomb, we copied the following
one:  "After having languished a few days, he at length finished his
course and life together.  Gloriously triumphing over death, March the
2nd, Anno Domine, 1791, in the eighty-eight year of his age."

In Liverpool, on the day of our arrival, July 1st, an old, gray-haired man
was shining my shoes.  He observed that I was from across the water,
and that an Englishman can readily tell a Yankee.  He began to praise
America.  He said that Uncle Sam was only a child yet, that America
was destined to be the greatest country in the world; that her trouble
with Spain was only a bickering; that the present engagement was only
his maiden warfare, and that he "walked along like a streak of lightning."

Saturday evening, July 8th, witnessed the greatest military parade in
London for thirty years.  The Prince of Wales reviewed twenty-seven
thousand London volunteers.  Early in the morning citizens from all
over England began to gather in front of the English barracks, and at
the east end of Hyde Park.  By two o'clock in the afternoon hundreds
of thousands had packed the streets and dotted the parks and lawns,
until, in every direction one could witness a sea of faces.  After the
royal and military procession began, the patient Johnnies, with their
sisters, sweethearts, wives, mothers, grandmothers, and great-grand-
mothers, stood for five hours to see it go by.  The Englishman does
not tire when he is honoring his country.  At the close of this parade
we dropped into a barbershop for a shave.  The gentleman seemed to
understand that I was a long ways from home.  "You fellows," I said,
"can tell us as far as you can see us."  "Yes," said he, "by your shoes,
your hat, your coat, your tongue, and even by your face.  We can tell
you by the way you spit.  A spittoon here, pointing about ten feet away,
give a Yankee two trials, he will hit it every time."

Travel is a study of the genius of man as shown in architecture, in
sculpture, and in painting.  Ninety-seven plans were submitted for
the Houses of Parliament, including Westminster Hall.  That of Sir
Charles Barry was selected, and the present imposing structure was
built, covering eight acres, at a cost of $15,000,000.  The style is
perpendicular (Gothic), with carvings, intricate in detail and highly
picturesque.  The building faces the river with a 940 feet front, but
her three magnificent square-shaped towers rise over her street front.
The clock tower at the northwest corner is 318 feet high, the middle
tower is 300 feet, and the southwest, or Victorian tower, is 340 feet
high.  The large clock with its four dials, each twenty-three feet in
diameter, requires five hours for winding the striking parts.  The
striking bell of the clock tower is one of the largest known; it weighs
thirteen tons, and can be heard, in favorable weather, over the greater
portion of London.  One never tires in looking at this noble building.
It is appropriately adorned inside and out with elaborate carvings,
statuary, and paintings.  Here are located the Chamber of Peers, the
House of Commons, and numerous royal apartments, lavishly fitted
up to be in keeping with the office and dignity of the building.

Crystal Palace, situated about eight miles southeast of St. Paul's,
consists entirely of glass and iron.  Its main hall, or nave, is 1,608
feet long, with great cross sections, two aisles, and numerous lateral
sections.  The two water towers at the ends are each 282 feet high.
If you were at the World's Fair in Chicago, and visited the Transportation
Building, you may imagine something of the magnitude and beauty of
Crystal Palace, with her orchestra, concert hall, and opera-house; with
her fountains, library, and school of art; with her museums, gardens,
and arenas; with her parks, panoramas, and her numerous exhibits of
nature and art.  Near the center of the palace "is the great Handel
Orchestra, which can accommodate 4,000 persons, and has a diameter
twice as great as the dome of St. Paul's.  In the middle is the powerful
organ with 4,384 pipes, built at a cost of $30,000, and worked by
hydraulic machinery.  An excellent orchestra plays here daily."  The
concert-hall on the south side of the stage can accommodate an
audience of 4,000.  An excellent orchestra plays here daily.  "On each
side of the great nave are rows of courts, containing in chronological
order, copies of the architecture and sculpture of the most highly
civilized nations, from the earliest period to the present day."  The
gardens of Crystal Palace cover two hundred acres, and are beautifully
laid out "with flowerbeds, shrubberies, fountains, cascades, and
statuary."  "Two of the fountain basins have been converted into sport
arenas, each about eight and one-half acres in extent."  Nine other
fountains, with electric light illuminations, play on fireworks nights
and on other special occasions.  It is common for 15,000 visitors to
attend these Thursday night firework exhibits.  Colored electric light
jets deck the fountains, flower-beds, and halls.  Crystal Palace was
designed by Sir Joseph Paxton, and cost seven and a half million of
dollars.  Well may it be called London's Paradise.

Shall we say that the greatest piece of constructive architecture of any
country is that of Eiffel Tower!  Situated on the left bank of the Seine
River, it overlooks Paris and the country for fifty miles around.

In its construction, iron caissons were sunk to a depth of forty-six feet
on the river side, and twenty-nine and one-half on the other side.  When
the water was forced out of these caissons by means of compressed air,
"concrete was poured in to form a bed for four massive foundation
piers of masonry, eighty-five feet thick, arranged in a square of 112
yards.  Upon this base which covers about two and a half acres rises
the extraordinary, yet graceful structure of interlaced ironwork" to a
height of 984 feet.  Eight hundred persons may be accommodated on
the top platform at once.  It was completed within two years' time,
and is the highest monument in the world.  Washington monument
ranks second, being 555 feet high.  From the summit of Eiffel Tower
one may secure a good view of Paris, her public buildings, chief hills,
parks, and boulevards, monuments, and embankments.  An imitation
of Trajan's column in Rome, is 142 feet in height, and thirteen feet in
diameter.  It is constructed of masonry, encrusted with plates of bronze,
forming a spiral band nearly 300 yards in length, on which are represented
the "battle scenes of Napoleon during his campaign of 1805, and down to
the battle of Austerlitz.  The figures are three feet in height and many of
them are portraits.  The metal was obtained by melting down 1,200
Russian and Austrian cannons.  At the top is a statue of Napoleon in his
Imperial robes.  This column reflects the political history of France."
The design sculptor is Bergeret.  For their antiquity the mummies and
statues in the Egyptian galleries of the British Museum are very
interesting.  They embrace the period from 3600 years before Christ to
350 A.D.  "The tomb of Napoleon by Visconte," and "the twelve colossal
victories surrounding the sarcophagus by Pradier," are among the finest
works of Parisian sculpture.  The sarcophagus, thirteen feet long, six
and one-half feet high, consists of a single huge block of reddish-brown
granite, weighing upwards of sixty-seven tons, brought as a gift from
Finland at a cost of $700,000.  The Louvre, Paris, contains one of the
finest art galleries in Europe, and with the Tuilleries, covers about eight
acres, "forming one of the most magnificent places in the world."

In our limited experience at travel we have yet to find a single object of
beauty or utility that is not the product of skill, of genius, of great labor.
Every monument bears testimony of struggle, of bloodshed, of hard-
earned victory; beneath every tomb that honor has erected rests the body
of incarnate intelligence, fidelity, and courage.  In the shadow of every
great cathedral lies collected the moth and rust from the coppers of
myriad-handed toilers of five and ten centuries.  The towers and domes
of London, and Paris, and Amsterdam, and Dublin are monuments to
the genius of the architect and to the faithfulness of the common toiler.
The parks and gardens tell of centuries of wise and faithful application
of the laws of growth, of symmetry, of design in form and color.  The
historic chapels of worship and learning breathe the very incense of
devotion and reverence for truth; while the conservatories of sculpture
and painting preserve what is divinest in human experience.  Age alone
can produce a great man or a great nation.  Decades for the man and
centuries for the nation; these are the measuring periods for real
achievement.  But all this is on the human side.  Correggio and Titian
in painting; Bacon and Bailey in sculpture; Raphael and Michael Angelo
in sculpture and painting; and Sir Christopher Wren in architecture,--
the works of art of such as these elevate and purify one's thought and
feeling.  But the profoundest impressions that come to one from travel,
come alone from the works of nature.  The Crystal Palace in London
can not compare in glory with the crystal ripples of a mid-ocean scene.
The botannical gardens of the Tuilleries in Paris do not stir the soul as
does the splendor of the Welsh mountains.  The rockery plants of Phoenix
Park, Dublin, are insignificant compared with growths of ferns and moss
On the rock ledges of Bray's Head, south of Dublin.  No panorama that
man has painted can equal the scene of Waterloo battle-field, observed
from the earthen mound near the fatal ravine.  So, we shall always find
it true, that as the heavens are higher than the earth, so the thoughts of
God are higher than the thoughts of man, and his ways than man's ways.


X.

HOME AND THE HOME-MAKER.

WHAT IS HOME?


"RECENTLY a London magazine sent out 1,000 inquiries on the
question, "What is home?"  In selecting the classes to respond to the
question it was particular to see that every one was represented.  The
poorest and the richest were given an equal opportunity to express
their sentiment.  Out of eight hundred replies received, seven gems
were selected as follows:

    "Home--A world of strife shut out, a world of love shut in.
    "Home--The place where the small are great and the great are
small.
    "Home--The father's kingdom, the mother's world, and the
child's paradise.
    "Home--The place where we grumble the most and are treated
the best.
    "Home--The center of our affection, round which our heart's
best wishes twine.
    "Home--The place where our stomachs get three square meals
daily and our hearts a thousand.
    "Home--The only place on earth where the faults and failings
of humanity are hidden under the sweet mantle of charity."

Dr. Talmage defines home, as "a church within a church, a republic
within a republic, a world within a world."  Dr. Banks writes, "It is
not granite walls, or gaudy furniture, or splendid books, or soft carpets,
or delicious viands that can make a home.  All of these may be present,
and yet it be only a dungeon, if the great simplicities are not there."
Sings one:

    "Home's not merely roof and room,
       Needs it something to endear it.
      Home is where the heart can bloom,
        Where there's some kind heart to cheer it.

      Home's not merely four square walls,
        Though with pictures hung and gilded,
      Home is where affection calls,
        Filled with charms the heart hath builded.

      Home!  Go watch the faithful dove
        Sailing 'neath the heavens above us,
      Home is where there's one to love,
        Home is where there's one to love us."

We believe the five sweetest words in the English language to the
largest number of persons--words which carry with them intrinsic
meaning and blessing are these:  "Jesus," "Mother," "Music," "Heaven,"
"Home."  "Twenty thousand people gathered in the old Castle Garden,
New York, to hear Jennie Lind sing.  After singing some of the old
masters, she began to pour forth 'Home, Sweet Home.'  The audience
could not stand it.  An uproar of applause stopped the music.  Tears
gushed from thousands like rain.  The word 'home' touched the fiber
of every soul in that immense throng."  In an early spring day, when
the warm sun began to invite one to bask in his rays, my wife, delicate
in health, lay drowsing on some boards near the house.  The large
garden spot spread out to the rear of her; a beautiful grassy lawn
carpeted round a deserted house, granary, and shop-building in front of
her.  She was living over her girlhood days.  She thought she was in the
old home orchard, where she used to doze, dream, and play.  The songs
of the birds seemed the same; the same gentle breezes played with her
hair; the same passers-by jogged along the roadside; the same family
horse nibbled the tender grass in the barnyard.  How sad, and yet how
sweet are the memories of early days!  The tender associations of home
never leave one, however roughly the coarse hand of time would tear
them away.  It is because home means love that its associations and
lessons remain.


ESSENTIALS TO A HAPPY HOME.

Although home means love, yet love alone may not insure happiness.
In addition to love, without which a true home can not exist, we select
four essential requisites to make home life useful and happy.  These
are intelligence, unselfishness, attractiveness, and religion.

First, Intelligence.  Much of the misery of the world in individual and
family life is due to gross ignorance.  Once the father of a family said
to me, "We did not get our mail to-day, I miss my reading."  Knowing
the man we were surprised at such a remark, and ventured to ask him
what papers he took.  A list of ten or a dozen papers was named.  All
of them were newspapers.  One was a general daily, two were local
dailies, and the rest were local weekly papers.  No intelligent person
would have carried over three of those papers from the post-office.
This man spent hours upon a class of reading that should be finished
with a few minutes each day.  In this same family the mother told me
that she had never rode on a railway train, and that she had never been
outside of her own county.  This is an exceptional case, but it illustrates
how that ignorance makes thrift and happiness impossible in a home,
neither of which belong to this family.  Here every law of health is
violated, foresight in providing for the physical comforts of the home
is wanting; little attention is given to the education of the children; no
sacrifices to-day enrich to-morrow; life is a humdrum, a routine, a
dread, with no exuberance, joy, or hope.  In time, such a life leads to
failure and gloom, to secret, then to open vice, and to a final shipwreck
of the home and of the individual.  In a similar yet in a less marked way,
the career of many a home is ended.  No one may be directly to blame,
but want of common knowledge and common wit have set a limit
beyond which such a family may not go.  The intelligent family has
some sort of a history which it is their privilege and duty to perpetuate.
Members of the intelligent family are moral sponsors for one another,
the mother for the daughters, the father for the sons, the brothers and
sisters for one another.  They find their own best interests in the interests
of one another.  The intelligent family is not superstitious.  They act upon
the wisdom of the ancient poet, "every one is the architect of his own
fortune."  They look to cause and condition for results.  They spell "luck"
with a "p" before it.  The intelligent farmer plants his crop in the ground,
rather than in the moon, and looks for his harvest to the seed and the
toil.  The intelligent merchant locates his business on the street of largest
travel and makes the buying of his goods his best salesman.  The intelligent
man of letters thrives at first by making friends of poverty and want, until
one day his genius places his name in the temple of honor.  So it is with the
artist, the musician, the inventor, the architect.  To be happy and useful
in one's lot, one must know something of the sphere in which he lives and
works, of its practical wisdom, and must be prepared to live, or glad to
die for the cause he serves.  No indolent, superstitious, or ignorant family
need look for abiding happiness nor expect to be permanently useful.

Then unselfishness is essential to happy home life.  It is a serious
matter for two persons, even when they are naturally mated, to
undertake to live together in peace and harmony.  It is a more serious
matter when they are not naturally mated.  It is more serious still
when children enter the home, for they bring with them conflicting
tendencies, dispositions, and wills.  Often have we wondered how it
is that families get on as well together as they do when we have
considered, what natural differences exist between them, and what
little teaching and discipline have been used to harmonize these
differences.  An harmonious home is truly begun in the parental
homes of the husband and wife.  Two persons may be perfectly
suited to one another, and yet they may be selfish in wanting their
own way.  As one grows up, if he is allowed to have his own way
regardless of the rights and privileges of others, he becomes a
selfish person, and his parents are to blame.  A selfish person in the
home plans for his own comfort, decides and acts as he wishes, and
seeks to satisfy his own desires.  He does not take into consideration
the plans, wishes, and desires of other members of the family.  It is
understood that his authority is supreme.  Not one member of the
family dreams of expressing dissent to his dominion.  A so-called
peace of this sort is not uncommon among families.  This supreme
authority may be vested in husband, or wife, or in one or all of the
children.  A forced peace of this kind is worse than rebellion and is
as bad as open war.  How can any persons be so presumptuous as to
think that any person, or a number of persons, exist solely for his
comfort and advantage!  Let two such selfish persons get together,
a permanent riot is assured.  Unselfishness in the home means
thoughtfulness, discipline, self-control.  Each child is taught the
rights and privileges of others as well as his own.  When two
unselfish persons join their lives there begins a holy and beautiful
rivalry in seeking the rights and privileges of one another.  The very
atmosphere of such a home is deference, respect, and love.  As the
stranger, the neighbor, the friend, comes and goes, he catches the
spirit of it and carries it with him into his own and other homes.
Children born into such a home early imbibe its spirit, and, O, the
inspiration one receives from going into that family circle!  No
home-life can be an inspiration and a blessing where selfishness is
allowed to reign.  Nor can it be useful and happy.

Ella Wheeler Wilcox describes a selfish, though a kind and loving
husband:


THEIR HOLIDAY.

THE WIFE:

Our house is like a garden--
  The children are the flowers,
The gardener should come, methinks,
  And walk among his bowers.
So lock the door of worry,
  And shut your cares away,
Not time of year, but love and cheer,
  Will make a holiday.

THE HUSBAND:

Impossible!  You women do not know,
The toil it takes to make a business grow:
I can not join you until very late,
So hurry home, nor let the dinner wait.

THE WIFE:

The feast will be like Hamlet,
  Without the Hamlet part;
The home is but a house, dear,
  Till you supply the heart.
The Christmas gift I long for
  You need not toil to buy;
O, give me back one thing I lack:
  The love-light in your eye.

THE HUSBAND:

Of course I love you, and the children, too.
Be sensible, my dear.  It is for you
I work so had to make my business pay;
There, now, run home, enjoy your holiday.

THE WIFE, TURNING AWAY:

He does not mean to wound me,
  I know his heart is kind,
Alas, that men can love us,
  And be so blind--so blind!
A little time for pleasure,
  A little time for play,
A word to prove the life of love
  And frighten care away--
Though poor my lot, in some small cot,
  That were a holiday.


To preserve the family circle, the home must be made attractive.  No
amount of practical wisdom, of Puritanic piety, nor mere kindly
treatment will hold a family of children together until they are strong
enough to resist the temptations of the world.  The home must be made
more attractive than the street or places of amusement.  The average
boy or girl who loses interest in home and uses it chiefly as an eating
and sleeping place, does so with good reasons.  Home has lost its
charm.  No provision is made for his pastime and pleasure.  Not
finding this at home he will go elsewhere in search of it.  "An
unattractive home," says one, "is like the frame of a harp that stands
without strings.  In form and outline, it suggests music, but no melody
arises from the empty spaces; and thus it is an unattractive home, is
dreary and dull."  How may home be made attractive?  We have
presupposed a certain amount of education and culture in the home
by maintaining for it intelligence and unselfishness.  Any home that
is intelligent and unselfish is capable of being made attractive.  In
the first place, in as far as it is practicable, each member of the family
should have a room of his own and be taught how to make it attractive.
Here, one will hang his first pictures, start his own library, provide a
writing desk, and learn to spend his spare moments.  Recently we
visited a home in Chicago.  The rooms are few in number and hired.
The family consists of father, mother, and three children, now grown.
During our short stay in the home I was invited into the boys' room.
The walls are literally covered with original pencil designs, queer
calendars, odd pictures; the dresser and stand are lined with books
and magazines, with worn-out musical instruments, art gifts from
other members of the family, and ball-team pictures, while two lines
of gorgeous decorations stretch from wall to wall.  This is still these
young men's little world, their interests have centered here.  No less
than five kinds of musical instruments were visible in this home.  The
walls of the living room and parlor are made beautiful with simple
tasteful pictures made by the daughter, whose natural gift in art was
early cultivated.  The table, shelves, and mantelpiece are decorated
with china bowls, plates, and vases, simply, yet elegantly adorned.
This work was done by the daughter and mother.  Not a large but a
choice collection of flowering plants relieved the bay window of its
emptiness.  This is an attractive home.  The children never have cared
to spend their evenings on the street nor at places of amusement.  Games
of skill, innocent, instructive, and entertaining, may be used to make
home life more attractive.  Only let the amusements of the home be
under the direction of father and mother, and be practiced by them.
Here is a chance to teach shrewdness, honor, interest, and by all means,
moderation.  To overdo at games and amusements is more harmful
than to overwork.

Religion is essential to happy home life.  A family may get on for a
time very smoothly without prayer, Bible study, faith in God, and
love for Jesus Christ; but no family life is completed without a storm,
many storms of some sort.  Years may pass as on a quiet sea, but one
day at high noon, or, perhaps, in the silent, early hour, a small cloud
is seen in the distance; it comes nearer; the wind begins to blow, the
thunders peal, the lightnings flash, the old home, for so long an ark
of safety, is being tossed on the billowy waves.  A testing time is at
hand.  Mother is gone, or father has ventured too far and lost all; or
son has disgraced the family name; or daughter is in shame; or the
darling of the home is no more!  It makes a vast difference who is at
the helm when the storms of home life rage.  It is a mark of highest
wisdom to place the family ship under the world's best Captain, Jesus
Christ.  He never lost a life.  He alone can arrest the lightning, quiet
the waves, inspire confidence, and restore peace and good will in any
storm.  But religion is not only useful in trouble, it is an ornament in
peace and prosperity, in the making and building of the home.  Tempers
must be controlled, dispositions cultivated, conduct improved, hearts
softened, and minds purified and disciplined.  To accomplish all of
this, no substitute can be made for the spirit and faith of Jesus Christ.

"'Dear Moss,' said the thatch on an old ruin, 'I am so worn, so patched,
so ragged, really I am quite unsightly.  I wish you would come and
cheer me up a little.  You will hide all my infirmities and defects; and,
through your loving sympathy no finger of contempt or dislike will be
pointed at me.'  'I come,' said the moss; and it crept up and around, and
in and out, till every flaw was hidden, and all was smooth and fair.
Presently the sun shone out, and the old thatch looked bright and fair,
a picture of rare beauty, in the golden rays.  'How beautiful the thatch
looks!' cried one who saw it.  'How beautiful the thatch looks!' said
another.  'Ah!' said the old thatch, 'rather let them say, 'How beautiful
is the loving moss!'"  So it is with the religion of Christ, it adorns and
beautifies the life who really wears it; so that the plainness of that life
is covered, its ruggedness softened, and its "pain transformed into
profit and its loss into gain."

Charles M. Sheldon gives as an essential for a permanent republic, "A
true home life where father, mother, and children spend much time
together; where family worship is preserved; where honesty, purity,
and mutual affection are developed."

J.R. Miller beautifully sums up the secret of happy home-making in
one word--"Christ."  Christ at the marriage altar; Christ on the bridal
journey; Christ when the new home is set up; Christ when the baby is
born; Christ when the baby dies; Christ in the pinching times; Christ
in the days of plenty; Christ in the nursery, in the kitchen, in the parlor;
Christ in the toil and in the rest; Christ all along the years; Christ when
the wedded pair walk toward the sunset gates; Christ in the sad hour
when the farewells are spoken, and one goes on before and the other
stays, bearing the unshared grief.  Christ is the secret of happy home
life."


THE HOME-MAKER.

Just as a surly husband, a dissipated father, or a reckless son may blight
a home and destroy its happiness, so may a thoughtful, virtuous, and
kind man in the home change its very atmosphere and help to make it
a heaven.  As a home-maker man has the ruggeder part.  It is his to
provide.  The man who falls short of this in the home does not do his
part.  No woman can respect a man much less love him, who places
her, her work, her life, her home, her world under constant embarrassment
by a scant and niggardly provision.  She loses her ambition, ceases to
make her self and her home attractive; disorder, filth, unwholesome
food, lack of spirit on her part is the result.  She can not be to him, most
of all, what he expects her to be, a companion, a counselor, a comfort--a
home-maker.  Also, it is the part of the man in the home to shield the
woman from the heavier burdens and responsibilities.  Let him count the
cost of his enterprises, secure himself against hazardous speculations,
and give his wife and children to realize that his shoulders, and not theirs,
are to bear the load of financial obligation and material support.  This
leaves the woman with her finer instincts and sensibilities to make the
home the dearest spot on earth to husband, children, and to all who cross
her threshold.  The house is her dominion.   There she is queen.  What a
tender and beautiful one she may become!


SOME PRACTICAL HINTS.

The true home-maker does not spend all of her time with her ducks,
chickens, pigs, and cows, nor yet with her neighbors, her club, nor her
Church.  She finds some time to cultivate her intellectual nature and the
finer feelings of her children.  She does not degenerate into a mere
household drudge.  She is not the slave of her husband, but his companion.
If she has musical ability, she keeps up the practice of her music; if she
is inclined to literature, she reads some every day.  Whether literary or
not, every woman should spend some time each day in reading that she
might keep abreast with the world, at least with her companion, in the
movements and thoughts of every-day life.  The true home-maker plans
to have a few minutes each day which she calls her own, in which she
may do as she pleases regardless of call or duty, that she might relax
herself, remove the strain of intense effort, rest, give her nature its free
bent and inclination.  It will pay her in every way.  She will accomplish
more and better work in the busy hours.  A spirit and a force will
characterize every effort.  The women of to-day are overworked.  They
can not do themselves, their families, not their homes the true spiritual
service that it is their part to do.  Plan for a few minutes rest with the
daily routine of care.  But how is one to do this with so many demands
made upon her?  For she is expected to be seamstress, laundress, maid,
cook, hostess, a companion to her husband, a trainer of her children, a
social being, and a helper in the Church.  If it is impossible or impracticable
for one to have a servant, she will find these few minutes for daily recreation
and study only in a wise choice of more important duties, and will allow the
less important ones to go undone.  Many housewives could well afford
to keep a helper.  It becomes a question which is of greater importance,
the life and health of the wife and mother, or the paltry wages of a servant?
We knew a family in Illinois who were quite able to keep help in the home,
but did not do so.  The mother made a slave of herself, in a few years
broke in health, and left a large family of small children to struggle alone
in the world.  The stepmother, who soon came into the home, could afford
one servant girl and part of the time two.  This is a common experience in
ill-managed homes.  Or this question arises, Which is of greater importance,
to make more money or to improve the moral tone of the home; to seek
to gratify the outer senses, or to seek to elevate the spiritual life of the
children and the parents?  In pleading for rest and study for the mother in
the home we plead for the highest interests of the entire family.  For how
can a wife be a companion to a husband when she is made irritable and
nervous from overwork and worry.  How can she be a true mother to her
children and neglect their mental and spiritual growth?

Napoleon once said:  "What France wants is good mothers, and you may
be sure then that France will have good sons."  Thomas McCrie, an
eminent Scotch preacher, used to tell, with great feeling, of how his
mother, when he was starting out for school in the city, accompanied
him along the road a little way, and then leading him into the field where
she could be alone, prayed with him, that he might be kept from sin in
the city, and become a very useful man.  That moment was the turning
point in his life.  A few minutes a day spent with the eager, susceptible
child mind, will bring everlasting blessing upon the father and mother.





End of Project Gutenberg Questionable Amusements and Worthy Substitutes

