THE OR9AN0FTHE NORTH CAROLINA BAPTISTSDEVOTED TO BIBLE RELIQIQN, EDUCATION, LITERATURE AND GENERAL LNTZLLIQLXC2. Volume 88. Number 29- 1 u's m; u The Biblical Recorder. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY. J ' 'f ' OFFICE i PJ" pi, US (up stairs) Fayette ville Street, Raleigh, JH.C. I - Terhs or Bubsobiftio: Oat oopy, one year. i ...,.. 1 w I 3.00 Ooa oopy, els month .................... , . ; 1.00 Clubs of ten (oopy extra to sender) v, 20.00 - Anonymous communications will always - find their way to we waste Muxes. , no exceptions. . , ; in sending letters of business, It to absolutely nee-1 taary tnat you give your poscomoe aaaress in ruu. The date on the label of your paper Indicates when tout subscription expires, and also serves as -a reeP war your money, Obituaries, sixty words long, are Inserted free of barge. When they exceed this length, one cent for eacn word must m paid in adranoe. , t When writing to have your paper changed, please stale we poewuioe at waicn you receive ua paper, as well as the on to which you wish it changed. . Remittances nrairtbe tent by Registered Letter. Fostoffloe Order, PAstal Note, Express or Draft, payable to the order of the Publisher. Do not send stamps. . ; ,;j'V'f v;v?" Funeral SerriceB of Dr. Wm. Royall at Wake Forest College, Jan. 6th, 1893. After devotional exercises conducted by ' Elders N. B. Cobb, J. B. Boone, and Colum i bos Durham, and the reading of selections of Scriptures by the pastor, Elder W. R. Gwaltney, the latter said in substance: ,, Bow the life that is now closed could have - been better or more faithfully spent, those of us who have known Dr Boyall for more than thirty years cannot possibly see. Noth ing but circumstances entirely beyond his control could keep him from the perform t anoe of any doty, great or small. In Board meetings, in committee meetings, in faculty meetings, in meetings with the young preachers on Saturday nights and Sunday afternoons, giving them instruction, in the word of God, in church meetings, in prayer meetings, and in all the Sunday services, he was present, ready to do earnestly his part ' The weather and other causes of absence to many who are young and Btronger were no causes of absence to him. His presence and help could always be relied on, t: I never knew one who seemed to have so much rel ish for his Work and for all his work.- Ever since I came to this place, it has been a mys tery to me to see the amount of work he could do. How he could do so much and be always promptly at . the place and time for its performance, I could not understand. How he could have spent a day or an hour more faithfully or more usefully, I cannot Boo It would seem impossible for an ob server of his daily life to idle away his time or to waste his opportunities. 1 His life was a standing rebuke to any one recreant to doty. He ever set the Lord before him, and in everything he sought the approbation of his eye. Last spring, when we were hold-; ing the funeral services of Mr. Lowery, he said, "If I knew that the Lord would come this evepiog, I would not change my course, bnt would go on with my work as I am do ing it to day." And in Savannah, last Sun- . day, he said to Mrs. Landrum, "If. I knew that the judgment would come this evening I should not change my course." He said on Monday evening, the day before his death, MIt has always been a mystery tome that there should be in the Episcopal Prayer Book a prayer to be delivered from udden death, for if it should be the Lord's will, no manner of death could be so desirable." I never knew one , who Beemed to be so ripe for heaven. . I never came into his presence without feeling a desire to be a meeker and a better man. .When I heard of bis death, I t thought of the twenty-fourth verse of the fifth chapter of Genesis, "Enoch walked with God and was not, for God took him.1 Oar loss in this death is great, is irreparable, bnt our earnest prayer is that the death of him whose life has been such a benediction may be greatly blessed to us all, and we are persuaded that our prayer is not without faith.. . , ' ( , ' t f, Dr. John Mitchell said ; , - - j. . t The dear brother whose remains lie before ns, was one of the purest and best men I have ever known. He was my friend, and , I thank God for such a friend.. I I had the pleasure of meeting him for the . first time in Greenville, S. C, in 1854. Was Intimately associated with him in Fnrman University, and learned to love him as a friend and brother, and to, esteem him very highly for his work's sake. He. was a fine teacher, popular, cultivated, wise, winning, and apt to teach. His scholarship was ao cnrate and extensive. He was a born teacher, , ; , s . i. H W ,v' 'Z: ' - ' A His gentleness made him great He was a christian philosopher. To me be was an unusually fine preacher. In November, 1855, he was with me in a meeting of days at Ebenezer church, in Greenville, 8. 0.j and for two weeks, day and night, preached the word with great earnestness and power, - and with great acceptance. The people flocked to hear him, and many souls were eon verted. The little church of twenty three members a little more than trebled its membership, having received forty-seven sew members. M'.. - :'vrrV,:'X Dr. Royall was a devout christian, a man f large faith, and zealous for the troth. , Like Enoch "he walked with God; and was not, for God took him," ; , .. , , ,. V PROP. MILLS SPOKE OF HIS CAREEB AT WAKE Dr. William Royall came to Wake Forest in January, ioo, as professor of Latin and German. At that time the methods of in struction in our colleges eenerallv were mar chanical and unphilosophical to an extent hard to conceive of at this day. y And this was especially true in the department of an cient languages, Dr. Koy all's method of teaching was analytical, logical and philo sophical, and created great enthusiasm in his own department' Its stimulating and quickening influence was felt by the entire College. V i'l;: vtfclJ.Uti! -Sn'iSS-';fy:v.;;'sy, When he came to Wake Forest, the class or 1801 had -read the course of Latin laid down in the catalogue, but by special ar rangement we read under him the Satires of Juvenal, Perseus, and Horace's Art of Po etry. Under his guidance, Latin became a "new thing and the reading-of Latin poetry a delightful and profitable exercise. Stimu lated by his teaching, I tead with much pleasure Ovid and the Odes of Horace while in the Confederate army in 1862 and '63. In those days we began college work at daylight and continued it through the fore noon, and, with a brief Interval at noon, through the afternoon to about four o'clock. This did- not give Dr. -Royall enongh..time for work. He taught German at night Be sides, he gave his Saturdays and Sundays to E rescuing, tie was in toe prime of man ood and was the most enthusiastic and per sistent worker I have ever known. , " In la bors more abundant" v h ; ' ( ' In 1861 he published a valuable book of about one hundred pages, " Analysis of the Latin Cases. " After it came from tne press, be found that the same ground was about covered by a larger and fuller work on the same subject published about tne same time. Hence he made no effort to push the circu lation of his own book. ' In January, 1867, the work of the College was resumed by Drs. W. Al. wmgate, wm. Royall, and Professors W. G. Simmons, W. B. Royall, and L. R. Mills. To Dr. Royall more than to any other man is due the or- J'anization of the course of study into schools n-tead of the curriculum. ; ; He left Wake Forest in 1870 and organ ized the Raleigh Female Seminary. A few years afterwards he moved to Louisburg, and thence on account of failing health, he went to Texas. His. health was restored, and he returned to Wake Forest as Professor of Modern Languages in June, 1880, bevabks or nor. lannkau. We think of the man who animated and glorified the now cold body within tbis cas ket My acquaintance with him was begun thirty-six years ago in South Carolina, his native. State, and mine. . A stripling, just graduated from the Cit adel in Charleston, I was invited to Fnrman University to serve as tutor of mathematics. Among the noble men of the faculty who kindly welcomed and encouraged me in my untried work' was Prof. Royall. In onr frequent faculty meetings his gen tle firmness and wise views were always in spiring and strengthening. He was then in the vigor of early manhood, and had already developed his rare power of masterful analy sis, so essentiat to the true teacher. -' uit give a single suggestive incident : To supplement my own training, wnich had been mainly scientific, I took a private course in Greek under the incomparable teacher of that most perfect language, Prof. P. C. Ed wards, whose mantle seems to have fallen on his then eager pupil who now so ably fills the Chair of Greek in this College. While pursuing my studies under the la mented Edwards, I was wonderfully assisted by a compact, thoroughly digested epitome of the essentials of Greek gram ma v which had been skilfully wrought out by Professor Royall, and published for the use of his own academio classes. It threw a flood of light on Kuhner, the standard authority then. ' Towards the close of our three years' asso ciation in the University, the Southern Bap-; tist Theological Seminary was founded in .Greenville. Then came the days of Green ville's phenomenal pulpit power, when men were moved by John A. Broadus and William Williamsthe Apollos, and Jas. C. Furman, who was to South Carolina what the persua sive Wingate was to this State. At such a time even, and in such ' association, Doctor, Royall commanded admiration as a preacher of great power. . . . In 1860 our paths parted ; widely separated for thirty years, wnen, most gratefully to me, they met again in our pleasant associa tion here. So had be impressed me that in all these years he stood ul prominently be fore my mind's eye as a stimulus to doty. Many 'men fade from one's recollection. But who that once knew Dr. Royall will ever forget him 1 wteH'' The gentle-voiced.' sweetly dignified man as we all knew him in the golden autumn of his life, such was he in the days when he gathered bis friends in the pleasant home on the bank of quiet needy river, wnen tnese sorrowing sons and daughters were, for the most part, prattling children. ; They must needs mourn their measureless loss which is his incomparable gain. : & i'.. iXp'Vt He lived to serve. "Having served his generation, by the will of God, he fell on sleeps " '"' -1 'l,t '" ; ' K DB, BOTALL AS A FBEACHKB. . f'V'VvJ;-.. . 77; : .... j , i-: -.i ' v. ' - " if .',. Prof. W. L. Poteat spoke as follows : Shortly before his death, ! the eminent English historian,, --J. Green, said, "I know what men will say of me-' be died learning.'" Nothing now occurs to me more characteristic of Dr. Royall. Next to his love of Christ, his master, passion was love of truth. Indeed,' I doubt whether in bis own thought; he distinguished between the two. ; He was deeply enamored of truth and Eursued it with unabated teal to the day of is death pursued it in health and in sick ness, by all methods and Into every . hiding- Jlace, , A year or so ago he said to metM I eel the necessity of studyinow that I am old more than ever before; for," said he with a smile that already anticipated the joy of the heavenly quest, , ' the more , I can find out here, the higher up I shall start in the Uni versity abover1'- K t -: His mind was of the logical order, with a power, of analysis and insight surpassing that of any man whom it has been my priv ilege to know. He remarked to me inciden tally, not many weeks, since, -that he had some trouble lu recalling names and dates and Isolated, facts, but that he never forgot a line of reasoning that- he had -once mas tered. But there was nothing uncompro mising and cold in his rational method. On the contrary, overspreading the course of the most exacting argument there was the play of a generous glow of feeling .which allured the less gifted and somehow seemed to make them sharers in, the. investigation and in the triumph of the conclusion. In all mr association with him, the moments most precious "in my memty"nosrBrethoser , ' i i i .i i a in wnicn in pnvaie couvef Mtnou ue aiiuweu me to follow him as he moved cantiously about the roots of being, or discussed pro foundly and reverently - the "personality of God and the conditions of the soul's untram melled existence. Such deep themes seemed ever in his thought. The freedom and the confidence of these disclosures of his inmost mind I shallalways treasure with gratitude. It cooTd not be otherwise than that such a combination of qualities and powers should produce a greet preacher, ? Though not con spicuous in some of the lighter accomplish ments of the popular orator, which are of small worth as compared with clearness and grasp of intellect, he never failed to grapple my attention, to instruct me profoundly, and to stimulate me intellectually and spiritu ally. Every text which4 he treated wears for me now a new complexion, more satis fying, more beautiful, more luminous. His method was conversational ever the most effective. With steps not too rapid, he went straight to the heart of the text and laid it open. -His illustrations, which always illus trated, were drawn for the most part either from his wonderfully jrich experience or from' the realm of science.,. , He studied sci ence sympathetically and unremittingly in all its branches, and Mainly, I believe, for the light it might throw on the truth of God. No man was ever more loyal to the Bible, but he was not shut op in a particular view of it, inaccessible to new troth. He was on the alert .for fresh light to break upon it from the revelations of the physical universe. Not content with a superficial and mechan ical harmony of the facts of science and the Divine truth, he sought the true harmony, which is fundamental and vital. And herein lay the stimulating suggestiveness of Lis preaching. Not long ago he told me he was trying to discover what Jesus meat, when he said, "I am theligM ot the World.". TFor six months," said he, "I have been reading all I can find in the Library on the subject of light Tyndall's Lectures, Roscoe's Spec trum Analysis, etc. but I an't preach on that text yet" M'ji; v The last sermon which I heard from him, that of thanksgiving day, on the text "Bless ed are they that dwell ; in thy; house; they will be still praising thee,? was a typical one. After briefly setting forth the delights of public worship, he advanced to his main E)int, which contemplated the kingdom of odas a watch tower, a point of observa tion, from which the facts of individual and of universal experience might be seen in their proper perspective and relation. In this elevated position he was a cordial op timist, and saw how the progress of science, the discord of the industrial world, the sift ing of Biblical criticism, and the ambitions of evil men were but factors in the growing good of ahe world, converging upon the con summation of the kingdom of God. I do not think of Dr. Royall as dead. I think of him, in an unbroken life, with the same tastes that controlled him here, pur suing his studies of the Divine mysteries in the University of God, where all is light And in Gods own time I would fain follow him there. . , . , THB STUDENT'S VIEW Ot DB. BOTALL. ? ' 1 Bro. )U T. Newton, In behalf of the stu dents, spoke as follows: - 1 ',, In sneakinff of Dr. Rovall. it remains for me, as a student,, to speak of his life as we (the students) saw it . ( - First, in his work in the class-room, he never seemed to desire to make the impres sion upon us j that he had a great store of knowledge from which he would give us a bit here and there as we were able to receive it, but he seemed to come among os as our brother, yea, if I! may say it, oar servant, And here' his christian character seemed to manifest itself as clearly as at any point; for he seemed in this way to be seeking to follow Christ, who said of himself. "The Son of man came not to be ministered unto,' but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many." As. has already been said of him, he continued to seek after knowledge himself, and at the same time helped us in , our efforts to higher attainments. If I may so illustrate it, he seemed to be reaching out with one hand; for more and yet more, and with the otber to he taking hold of us to as sist us to his own leveL. , '. r Again, in bis government of the class, he did not control by the exercise of his author ity as a professor of the institution. Surely he could have done this as well as any man, and bis superior reputation and scholarship would have given him a greater right to have done so, but he did not rnle in this way. ; " His great heart, full of love and in terest to all, gave him control o those under luscare. . , Ir-,-; Hi . He also manifested a special interest .in the young ministers. We all felt as free to go to him and seek advice as to our own fathers. There was a glow ? of sunshine ' always about him which seemed to invite us near, On Sunday evenings he met a class of young ministers to which he gave instruction from texts of Scrfpture; and otherwise looking to their assistance in future work. A few days before his departure he was heard to remark that he enjoyed his Sunday evening class jnore than all the other work of the week. , I cannot help'thinking of this institution as being a family in which there are larger and smaller children. When the father of a family is called away, the larger children, realizing their responsibility, may bear it better; but the little children do not see how they will get along without him So we, as the little children of this institution, do not just now see how we can do without the in fluence of this au.TivetJhsm aj6Mhs.l9, whose influence over ns will be good, but all men are not alike, and we will greatly miss the special influence which his life had upon us., It seems to me that, if I had been stand ing by him when his spirit was called away, I would have felt like saying, in the lan guage of Elisha, "My father, my father, the chariot of Israel and the horsemen thereof .? I esteem it a privilege to pay this tribute to the memory of him whom we not only re spected and honored, but whom, In our . in most hearts, we sincerely loved. ' The subject allotted . to President Taylor , , ; : DOtTOB BOTALL AS A TEACHEB. '' f : , He spoke as follows vxi:'vB ' : How can one speak briefly, as I must; and yet adequately, of the great educator who is gone from among us! . That be was 'a great educator, no one can question , If a libt of the foremost teachers that the South has produced should be made, his name would stand very high upon the roll. Long before I had ever met him, I had come to associate together the names of Hooper and Royall and Curtis, a triumvirate of scholars who ennobled especially among Southern Bap . tists, the calling and work of a true teacher. Time is allowed meld do little more than mention just a few of the reasons of , this pre-eminence. - $frz-iJ'r':yi 1. H was thoroughly equipped for hu ivork. Few, I imagine, have any idea how broad and accurateWere bis attainments. In his early life in Charleston, as I have reason to know, he memorized many of the Odes of Horace and passages from other Latin and Greek authors." His college training was received under the great and good Dr. Thorn well, who was in the South what Dr. Wayiand was in the North. Those who knew Dr. Royall not only saw in him a type of an Old fashioned Southern gentleman, but also a representative of the best liberal cul ture of a time when learning had not be come so specialized as jit is now. - . - , , , i q Tn ail hia vnrk aa a tflAoher. Tie never forgot that Tie was a preacher qf the gospel.; I well remember that at a time when my twn mind was agitated by the question of going into tne paswraH or oi wvupjiiug professor's, chair, he presented with clear ness and force the considerations which had led him; while a preacher, to give so much of his life to the instruction of the young.1 And those who know how he impressed himself, or rather, the Christ that was in him, upon others, and what large service he rendered in helping to . prepare others to preach more effectively, can never donbt the wisdom of his course. :. :xJ. v,'-'"- ""v-' 1 V.. 8. Jfis faithfulness. ' ne was at all times ready to undertake even more than hia just share to be done, and when he had under taken it. he did it, not perfunctorily, but with all his heart , ,Not infrequenUy have I seen him on his way to his recitation room when I did not believe that he was well enough to leave his fireside. . V -ft , -y 1 1 -, 4. He commanded the respect of all who studied under htm. No one could take liberties with him. He was always easy of approach to those who heeded his counsel or assist-; ance, but there was a dignity in his bearing arhfoh ranellpil nnwnrrAntfld intrusion. He t.nnA h onnial. bnt was never fliDDant I never knew a word or anecdote to pass his lips wnicn wouia onng a omm w uiovuw V UIVUVBVT I 'W MWW J - o r '. commanded respect, and while never sought for popularity, ne was one ot ne most oo-; loved of all the teachers in the State. 1 't 5. ffe grew to the last. He never ceasea tn ha a BMiditnt. Few men of his acre have kept their minds as fresh as he did. His kvai anrl AAra TArA : ftlwnVS OnftH. and his mind and heart receptive, for new truth or ...... mLl. J new pnases oi oia irum. xaia is uce icaauu vrhv h wm mi anGoififul a teacher, for when any man ceases to be a student and a learn er, it is high time that he quit teaching. No man, as ivrnom vi xvuguy uaou iu oj, vau get a refreshing draught from a stagnant pool, i Dr. Royall brought into his lecture room and into the pulpit a mind freshened kv onnatnnt antlvitv and laden with the Spoils of recent acquisition! Such men never grow oia: tney never wear out. - it is witn saaness not zor nim out tor ourselves that I. contemplate the vacancy that has been made in our number. Whither shall we go to find such another man I Ye might possibly find one of as deep piety, though that were hard to do, ...We may tied some specialist who can carry as well the work of. hia School. Z There maybe others who can preach with as much freshness and fullness and unction as be. But where shall we find one. man who as a icholar, a student,, a teacher, a preacher, a christian, and a man, can take his place ! . ; . . . After the conclusion of the exervUes ia Memorial Hall,, the Jong procession weDded its way to the cemetery, where Wingate and Wait and Brooks and Walters and fcimmons sleep. There by loving bands the remains, were laid to rest " ' : - ' ' 1 ELIZABETH BAILEY BOTALL. 1 ; Had my dear, father been called. upon to name the human influence that had operated most powerfully upon him, in stimulating him to all noble endeavor, in inspiring him with hopefulness and -conrage. and patience. andchanty, those who know the estimate he placed upon her who walked hand in hand with him for well nigh half a century, need not to be told what would have been his re eponsa When sometimes in the course of a sermon he would draw his most telling il lustration from some Incident of real life, any of' the family who might be present JrftUldA40.PcOcogni2e In the principal Character the cherished one, of "whom, witoin. " the hallowed precinct of home, he was wont to speak as the bravest and most self forget ful of beings. ' ' ' - i . . After her death; which occurred on Jnly 24th, 1892, the desire being expressed by members of the family that some account of her life should be prepared for publication, he declared his purpose to do this himself so Boon as he might venture to undertake it. Two or three times, when reference was made- to the subject he would simply re mark that the time bad not yet come. So interwoven had been their lives that the least jar still caused to bleed afresh the wounds their temporary severance had made. . My mother was born at Mount Pleasant,, near Charleston, S. C, Aug. 8, 1821, and was the oldest child of Dr. Roberts. Bailey, a well known and highly esteemed physician in his day, having received his professional education in London and being a contrib utor to one or more of. the leading medical Journals of this country. She was a sister of )r. Thomas P. Bailey, late President of the Medical Association of South Carolina. . On Oct 12, 1843, she was married to my father.. Into this union she entered with the foil consent of her miud to be a preacher's wife, and never was station more faithfully,, more beroicdly filled. Forty years ago amid the wilds of Florida, my father, often absent for weeks on the frontier as a missionary, bravely and lovingly she did her part as the help mate of the Lord's servant Nor did one of the little ones, over whom so tenderly and faithfully and wisely she watched, ever hear from her lips a whisper of discontent at her lot in life. Her exalted conception of the preacher's calling was such as to invest that calling in the minds of her children. with a wholesome sacredness and dignity, while it left untrammelled the man of God, who knew that all was well at home so far as a heart loyal to his Master and his Master's servant could make it so. Wherever duty -found him,' whether in the pulpit the coun try school, or the professor's chair, her un wavering confidence in the integrity of hi purpose rendered her an intelligent and cheerful sympathiser with him in every de tail of hia work; : When there was no token of appreciation from others of ardnons task performed, her "well done" was often to hi soul as the prophecy of the Master's plaudit . When she was taken from his side, though the ambition to fulfil his mission teemed to suffer no abatement, all desire simply to live was gone ; to depart and be with Christ seemed far better. v v V.-',. ' The last two years that my mother spent N on earth were in some respects the sweetest and brightest years of her life. Though par alyzed and in a measure helpless, her pres ence was to ns all a well spring of gladness. , " The King hath called her higher Into his royal dome. '" The trumpet tone hath sounded,: ' 1 Her willing voice replied; ' f Now with encircled glory,1 , She sitteth at his side.. . . Christ's perfect ; 'blood tht clcanseth'r Was all her entrance plea; That crimson stream which floweth Hath set her spirit free. j And, VI am trusting JeBus , Was the keynote of her life, ' ' She realized his power ! 1 ' Throughout her earthly strife." ' W. B. KOYiLL, 'A minister in the East recently sai l: " I ". brethren, the collection will now l3t for my expenses for a trip, fori r-i away for my health. ; The rnoro I r the longer I can stay." The Ixr; t ( tion ever, made in that church v. i t and the question now bein cor. M whether the size of the coilec" ::i compliment to the preacher, cr (' r The Standard.' Self-knowledge U th.it i ourselves which t ' t-h t i what we ouht tj I i i comfortably and t '. j ? hereaftcr.l':-;. rl