Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Mar 1903, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

and thes whes the time comes to isis That ar Becorste the walls of your Some you will sot seed to spend any time to decide what © use, nor much thought about Bow it should be done. - If you will write us for sug- gestions we will do what we can 10 help you out... Cee i a sale Sart anf puis desiens emprhere. Newer sill is boil. 3 8 d The, glad oe land not far awa, Where nom. are sick, or poor, or The place where we shall find our And as we think of all we knew Who there have met to part no Nn Our longing hearts desire home, t With, all the strife and trouble o' --Brow a em The_expressed dissatisfaction log sermons and prayers seems general; and so, in reverting to hope 1 am, like a motion to ad alwdys in order. It was jus otpet Sunday that, 1 listened clergyman pray until' began there would be mo time left f sermon. oe was a srous. and so he prayed rd everything. The contrast betwee EE x prayer and Peter's was very m NSS en : "Lord, save me, or 1 perish!' or = . the apostle's supplication. Shot = ; y to the point (it was, and i : : swered it immediately. Had Pet témpted the prayer I listened cently, he would have drowned ke could possibly have finished vnth St ie #But this prayer remind of ior) another supplication. & lengthy an trying si in the strong French neo bourg surrendered to the Ne land militiamen under Gen, I rell and the English squadron Members of President | ington. Preside: ven vessels "under Command ren. The victorious officers dec hold a grand banquet on the ing night in honor of thei achievement. ~ Parson chaplain to Gen. Pepperrell, course, had to: be invited. noted for his. fierceness and h prayers, and many, dreading ence, stayed away from th But, in this case, it 'was t pected that happened. To prise of everyone Parson Moc requested to say grace, did sc following brief manner : "Good Lord, we .have so & thank Thee for that time will short, and we must leave it fe ity. Bless - our food and fe upon this joyful occasion, for of t our Lord. Amen." with that he sat down. there is a lesson here for som: men. Time is too short f prayer; let them leave part ¢ eternity. * r -. This has been called the young men, yet mone of the prodigies of our day have plished aught worthy of cor with the precocious achieven David, Alexander and Napoley Pitt] Mozart and Chatterton. hali a century ago Charles Fox swaggered about at the twenty-one, a lord of the ac and a thorn in the side of Ge and later his great rival, Pitt, a lad of twenty-three, the office of the chancellor of chequer, becouiing premier of the following year. In an the Munsey Magazine the triumphs of the great men ix are dealt 'with from Alexand Macedon and Edward, th Prince, to Napoleon and Pit _age of thirty Alexander wa for more worlds to conquer: the Black Prince, fought wit tion at Crecy at the age and Napoleon commanded t army in Italy at the age © seven. The roll call of youth in before the term was made almost all ages under thy three score and tem, was one.. Splendid, picturesque ing all of them were, from shepherd boy who began h as king at eighteen, to C finishing his tragic chronic! same ; from Alexander don, t splendid, insok swinging all the eastern W the circle of the Greek poss fore he was thirty-three, Watt, the Scoich. peasant watched his grandmotbe: steaming and bubbling stove, and so made po _steam engine "as we know Napoleon Bonaparte, they sican upstart, sweeping the from Iialy before he was t to Rafael, who at thirty: finished hi tex, master of Mexico, at th Schubert, who died at

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy