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' h 1 JACKSON ft BTTTiTi COMPANYr Entered at the PostofClce at Wilmington, I , N. C, as second class matter, V ' April IS, 1837.1 TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. I ' POSTAGE PHUT AID. y THU DAIL MESSENGER by xnll, tone yar, 17.00; six . months, 13.50; three months, $1.75; one month, 60 cents. Served In the city at 60 cents a month; vne week, 15 cents; SL75 for; three months mr 17.00 a year. - J .' - j "' THE SEMI-WEEKLY MESSENGER (two 8 page papers), by mall, one year, fLOO; six months, 50 cents. I in advance. TTHiMTNGTON, N. C SUNDAY, JUNE 19, 1898. A GREAT WRITER -if CAVIARE , TO THE GENERAL" ! If any one were to look into any taanual of English literatWe of a 'date so ifar Ib ack a s 1870 or 1875, lie would ' hardly fin-d the naime of Edward THtz gerald'. Tf Jhe were . informed fairly .well as to this author lie wouM be tastonlshed at the strange omission. fl?he explanation is found in. the fact 1tnat a man Of genius, and a scholar of fcrausual altta'inments had failed to im press the British mind at large how ever high the appreciation of j him, fey la few great men and some 1 accom plished men pf letters Who had Ibeen drawn 'to him. In fact a genius of the most delightful and rarest quality, but erratic, :slngular and unique had lived, moved-arid had his being in England and had only curiously moved a very ifew of the Ibest cultured and 'most richly endowed; It is a strange fact In literature." In the last few year 3, and particularly wi thi n! the ! present year, there has been an awakening as tfto the marked merits Ofj Fitzgerald. The man whose closest personal1 friends the greatest admirers were the three greatest authors of their time Ten nyson; Cartyle and Thackeray, 4 was of distinigu'ished personality and splendid gifts. fThackeray was asked whom he ioved, best among the men he knew. He aid promptly calling him lovingly "Dear told Fitz." He al so s'aid that. Tennyson was the wisest and greatest man! he ever knew. ') ' Fitzgerald had a Ante genius that was. not Teadily discovered. Itl is describ ed as "elusive," and yet it was genuine. Mr. Joel Benton lately wrote of ihini in the New York Times' s "Saturday Re view," 'that he had "a strikingly high and commanding intellectual altitude yet his achievements are i .visibly, spectacularly, nor outward." The truth is he often i not vulgarly lived most jof his manhood, a 'life of a literary re- -fcluse far away from "the madding -"crowd," and cultivated letters, and . .amused himself With wriftirjg the most delightful letters to his ifriends, and now and then ew choice dashing in- Jto poetry or discussing something in a literary way. He was 'born In 1809, on March 21, in Suffolk county, the year tthat gave to the world Tennyson and Gladstone and Darwin among English. men, and Abraham Lincoln, the South ern born child of miraculous fortune, and Tr. Oliver Wendell Holmes. H(f .Was a reader o'f , the : ' -liest ; booksl tAmong other books 'he reald wei Shakesipeare's "Sonnets," that but few mep. o'f passing culture everj read, and If ewer. 'still ever understand. But by common consent of the foremost critics ?they are of strange beauty and ex cellence and are f ull worthy jof the most exalted and majestic genius of the entire world of letters When Fitzger ald in 1832 had first read the Sonnets lie was fairly enraptured. He was jt went y-three and wrote: "T believe I am unprejudiced when I Bay 1 had but., half an idea of him. Demigod as he seemed before, till I read 'them carefully ; 1 have - Ibeen truly lapped in these Sonnets for pome-time; they seem all stuck about fcny heart, like the ballads that used to be on : the walls of Londot I' ; I icould talk for an hour about them." ; : (From his xin'iversity life to1 its close She and Tennyson were the warmes't, Snost familiar o'f friends. He criticised , Hhe great poet, with utmost ' freedom, and he prophesied great things olf the tyoung genius. iAfter. a visit from him . Sn 1835, he wrote "that the. more I feave seen him the more cause I have Ito think him "great." In .1849 he - . Vro,tet2kThackerays ".VanityiFair" and f Ithe great impression he made by it. r JEfe said the author was "courted by IDukes and Duchesses and wits of both eexes." !We are pleaseJd to) see; lately Jthat he liked "Peridumls," ! saying "it was quite delicious" and to him "so tnature." It is the healthiest, breeziest bf the gneat novels of a supreme gen ius. ! It Is full of life and vigor and idash arid wit and great human; inter Jest, and it Is now known that he infear i porated into It no little of -himseif in . fcis .hero. . j f We think Fitzgerald failed of jappre : Elation In Wat he wrote of Tenny- Json's "'The Princess" in 1848. It is bet- Jter liked now. Indeed it is the most beautiful poem of its length written lln a half tentury, land possibly, much Sionger. The exquisite songs In the . jpoem. are almost of unrivalled beauty ,fetnd melody an)d perfection of form. Of jTerinj'son's "prose sayings" he .thought Itherii wonderfully clever, the "finest of - ny man he knew., He failed, too, strange to i say, to value "In Memoriam J as the soundest, most judicious crit- I leal minds have valued It since and now. He admitted It! was "full of fin est things," bvtfhe evidently fell short in admiration and true discernment of Its magic i qualities off thought, style. music, , philosophy, uplifting power. He did not like the stranza. used nor the "monotony." He was so enamored I of the poet's, 'Ibrlght sayings," that at one time he kept! a note book of them, an4 In late years regretted Tie did not continue to take them down as they were "decisive verdicts as well as - illuminating." Among lAmertcans he had two attached; friends and ad mirers in 'James Russell (Lowell and Prof esfeotr Charles E. Norton. - in 1894 his' "IJetters and Literary Re mains" were published in three vol umes.! They were edited toy an ac complished English Aldis ! Wright. They author, William have been read by 'the' chie'f ;' literary men of Great Britian and the North, !but are not gen erally known. I (There is but tone opin ion as fro ttheir .remarkable Interest and excellence , The literati olf the Eng lish speaking I world have placed a high mark of superiority upon the let ters, and, I so far as they are accorded a we; acre informed, place among the best eplstdlasy productions of tue cen turies, from Cicero's-7 petters to Abticus unto the present M r. Benton who is a sane ".'The critic, says thU: ; 1 correspondence alone would take rahkjat once wtfh the best things mg. TB18 libera tely, I do not hesitate to say de- wniie rememiDenng vvai- pole's letters so much qouted by Emer stand in altitude though unfortu- son ; Cowper's. which with hisi-lbes't verse, nately krioiwn to so fw; . Matthew Ar- noldfs, clothed With his iimparab e touch and icharmr thd 'Carlyle-Emerson epistles ; and,, to be namalble list hThere brief, the whole cotild not be it is easy to; see, anything less than a distinctly ich personality in one who held "on level ; terms friends these letters 'the rosary represent." of ! When Fitzgerald lay dead his friend Tennyson, 'not knowing of the sad be reavement awaiting him, wrote a lit- tie poem dedicated to htm. They were never read by. the eyes that flashed forth genius nor reac bed the tender, sympathetiic sul thaif kindled at h'is coming. Writing of the letters Mr. Benton Says' engagingly as. 'he quotes immortal lines probably the coinage more' of 'Fitzgerald than really a ver- sion made jby him from the Oriental Omar Khayyam: 1 "The letters ; are in fact, literature arid biography in matchless wedlock shedding oh so many things human, and on high discourse ia tenderly warm and lambent light. lM.y it not 'be said of them in a paramyith drawn from their writer's and Omar's wrords: ' "Irani indeed has gorie wth all his ' Rose, j And Janischyd'S Sven-rtnged Cup where! no one knows; But still a Ruby Vine, j kindles in the And many a Garden by the water . bloiws.f ; : We had ipurpos'ed in this connection dwelling for a little While upon the Englishnxari's. most famous work that which . has probably ; iven. h'im immor- i - - tality, his as it is ca known as stanzas, or translation or paraphase led, of an Eastern poet Omar Khayyam Whose Rubaiyat Wer rendered in to ' verse th at not ohl y r es c ued ( the Oriental from oblivion 'but ma'de his interpreter forever fankous.! It is more an original the part work than' a translation on jof I Fitzgerald. Professor George. Saintsbury, Whom we . have found to' be- one of the safest of living critics, as he is one o'f the .(best inter preters of genius', says of the transla tion or version or paraphase of the "Rubaiyat.'l remarking upon the great liberties the. Englishman took with the i ij . '. a .'art it. l! 2U. J! original, anu saying tnat in- spite ox this want Of llberatness and faithful- ness to the brigmai, that "yet the total effect is reproduced as berhaips rio other translator has ever He says farther on: ' reproduced i'L" ''But the beauty of the poeni is unmistakable and alto gether astounding. V The J melancholy rienness oil tne roiling quatrain witn its unicorn rhymes, passion and play fulness, the abundance of imagery. the power of thought the seduction of the rhetoric;, makes the poem actually though not original orj English, one, Of the T greatest of-v English poems. We compared some of the original ' - - " !i - . Persian translated literally into Eng--lish with the marvellous work of Fitzgerald and it was easy to see how he had injected a new interest ".intro duced. a new power that were riot found land fascination in. the original. Edmund Gdsse, . critiq of delight and replete with vefbal felicities, says of the version.i "It appears that he took Dryden's license, and; carried it fur ther; that he steeped himself in" the language arid feeling and then threw over of his author, his version the robes of his own peculiar style." We may recur ;to Fitzgerald and quote more at length from Gosse, with something from Andrew Lang. This rich genius! died in 1883 on the 14th of June, in ihis 75th year. He was at Trinity College, Cambridge University, with Tennyson and : Thackeray. Just think of three such friends, not to name threej or four others of the set who were highly endowed, as these immortals, at one college at one time Alfred the Great, Thackeray the Great and Fitzgerald i the distinguished . and - . .... ; , . . , .. j marvellously endowed; Sincc jotting this down we find that at Cambridge there was no acquaintance between Tennyson arid our author. He published his great poem on the 15th of January, 1857. It was long be fore its distinguished merits were recognized by literary men, save, by a f" ir;r 7 ' very few. He married the daughter of Bernard Barton, the poet-Quaker and friend of Lamb, but of her we" know nothing, nor how long their wed ded life continued. Of some others of his writings we may write again. Sudden's Arnica Salve The best salve In the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, jTever Sores. Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup- tlons, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or monej refund ed. Price 25 cents per bo-- For sale by R. R. BeJlaxny. . BEUGOUS EDITORIALS FOR SUNDAY ' The sincere, evangelical, consecrated,- earnest Bishop ofLiverpool, Rev. Dr. Ryle, author of some very useful tracts that forty years ago were wide ly circulated and "fmprovingly read, still lives loved, esteemed, venerated. He is now in his 83rd year, and ; the oldest of all English bishops. He is vigorous for his years and diligent with pen; and speech. He Is a church dignitary' to confide in, to admire, to love, for he is good and faithful and lovable. i ' The aged "General" Booth,' of the very useful Salvation Army, was late ly preaching to 400 ministers in Phil adelphia. It is said he quickly woke them up, when he fired point-blank at close range in this wise: ? "You won't let a man drown himself, why let him damn himself?" They were moved But he did not rest with this direct shot. He went on: "Are you satisfied to armuse people on their way to hell ? You say you believe that their souls are in danger, and yet your service is to tickle them with entertainments, to . preach milk- and-water twaddle or way over their heads. The fact is you don't believe your belief And the crowd of j min isters laughed and applauded! j'lt is safe to say," - says the Universallst Leader of Boston and Chicago'that in all his long experience, in the worst phases of slum life. General Booth never met more incorrigible sinners than these, ministers of the Gospel who laughed at their conviction as dishon est and. inhuman." That is the way th Universahsc or gan looks at it. Is it far off in what it says? Is it not close shooting, both that of the preacher and the editor? Js General Ttooth. clean out of it? Who with open eyes can believe it? The, editor says farther: "Is it not a fact that theoretically they believe that the multiUides with which they laugh and joke tjpon the street are lost? And yet they give them no warning, and 'amuse them on their, way to hell!' When the general gets all the rest of the world into the Army, he has a fine field for service among the orthodox ministers."?. There , is verily serious food for thought in that arraignment. Thirk of "a lost soul." What it imports, and what should be done to save a soul from being lost. - "All unrighteousness is sin," says the New "Testament. "Sin is the trans gression of law," is another Scripture. "For they loved the praise of men more than the praise of God." "So then' every one of us shall give ac count of himself to God." "The soul that sinneth, it shall die." If these declarations of God. -amount to any thing, sin is very deceitful and very grievous, and it is no easy thing to be a genuine Christian, a true disciple of the Crucified and - Risen Lord. The results of sin are seen in this life and in death, in time and in eternity. "Know yet not that the unrighteous shall not inherit "the Kingdom of God?" If these and a great many other Scrip tures bearing upon sin and its conse quences are true then it is a very-difficult thing indeed to live for God and walk , worthy - of the vocation where- with we are called. The way is nar- I ' " . . i row indeed that leads to eternal life in glory. ' The chief end of: man is to I glorify God, arid his cElef aim should be to get home to Heaven. It requires great circumspection,, exceeding pray er, constant effort, unyielding stead fastness "to make the trip" and reach the goal and win the crown. The con dition of eternal salvation is perse .. . verance unto the end. Those who weary in well doing and cease to strive to enter in shall never enter in.- That is ; God's teaching and is in the bless ed Word of Life, plain,, clear, unmis takable. No man with ordinary sense can mistake the way or fail to under- I -stand the truth. God Is willing to save, but it is. conditioned upon sincere repentence, true faith and a godly, consecrated, faithful life. No perse verance, no crown. One of the most deceptive of all false sayings is that man may do evil that good may come of it. It is as falla cious as any of the devil's cunning coinages, and is stamped with the in signia of hell. It beguiles and disap points. It destroys all morality and truth. The end does not justify the means. A religion based on such vain philosophy as that to pursue evil ways and commit all manner of sin that out of it may come some gdo'd .is not one whit better or purer or wiser than any of the exploded religions of the past. It is really no better than Mohammedanism or latter-day Mor monism. ; The religion of Jesus Christ is one of purest morality, purest life. It is to live indeed the Christ-life, to emulate . the perfect pattern of the Master, the Divine Son. Any one who will read thee Sermon on the Mount will see what is required to be a disciple of the Saviour, - as He expounds it. .Read the various letters. of Paul, Peter and John and you will see. how exalt ed the Divine standard is, and how all manner of sin is shut out from the Kingdorn of Heaven. "If ye then be risen Wlia nn81- inose cmngrs 1 wWch ar ae' Again, Gd saithf risen with Christ, seek those things . 1 ''"ft. . :;. : 11 " 1 ' . . "A new i(kirt "also will I ,glve yon," and againif41l3ierefore, if any man. be in Christ, fihe is a new creation' A holy life admits tJf no sin, and no dol ing of evil jthat possibly somebody in some wasjmay be blessed by "your transgressfsjn! ; Thdt is not God's way and no goc0 man's way. A very abl? Baptist paper, The Chi cago Standard, says that it accepts "the supreme importance of the ap peal to conscience, the 'keener sense of God and hotter hate of sin and more strentiis' fight for holiness that marks tnireaching of those who are most suc4sul in winning the allegi ance f to Christ." The pulpit must . preacTil a higher Christian life. It must' prch holiness as the Bible now teaches it as Paul, the inspired, taught it.fepThe. bars - are far too low now. If a ian is indeed a Christian; a real discle of the blessed Redeem er, he will; le taught of the Holy. Spirit, and be ledf by the Holy Spirit. Then this must follow a s a sure, fundamen tal princit-fthe Holy Spirit wilt nev er lead mi into open sin or to adopt questionably, jmuch less sinful and im moral pralqes will never o long as the JWorld tands guide a man con- trary to th 'true, : revealed Word of God. He Jjvih never be taught or in fiuenced bytfie Holy Spirit 'to do evil of any kin;; that good may perchance come. Gofiil never; inconsistent and never malcf I mistakes, and God can not teach 0u incorrectly or 'influence you to gdf lnto evil, courses. Do not sin and sai. God did it or God allows Do noi4i. Ik :5PT Of all tKft1hiitPs na id trt'-thfi errpat . - x . . the most'! illustrious. Gladstone, we nave s.eeni none so toucning-, so im pressively j 5oDle in fact, as the one paid him arr-English map of letters who said leias a great religious force n his country, and a great power for i . . - Christiahliili the world. -He was all through h1H political life ; a sincere, deeply earfttesi Christian statesman, of most sinceffiand pure convictions and principles Jnderlying ; that made : him truly great! He made the BibJe his guiding staiSt and upon its impregnable truths he; ftppd as a; rock. Ks life was pure,ht,s 'devotion great, hia piety sincere ndScQnstant, his conduct ever shaped ancpntrolled by God's im mutable lavj He was-in character a marvel amp?4g statesmen, the greatest of England's,'.public men and, the most thoroughly Christian. . The London Westminstepazette, reviewing him as , a unurynman" at the close saia this of himH't 1 'Politics m-ete- no consideration, and Dr. Benson as said to have found a letter offer!i fieri hi m nrnmntinn rfn Viis return frOrAcjtihg for the" Tory candi-- aaxe ior uata anage. rrne gooa of the church washis one and only consid eration. Hv was not to be found at cnurcn cons ings, exceptthose of rare importance; but "his siiem influence, his knowledge of detail, ard his unsparing woVk .in behalf of ant; cause- which he espous ed, have ha -much to do with not only church legislation the less j of which; in Jjfi pinion, the bettef-but in developink jthe component .parts of church Iife sv3 as to -weld into an homo geneous whef complicated interests and diverse ppiinions. That so devout -n 4-1'. SVf.wVs 1 1 ' S . -1 at once haV retained the affection of eqallyheld in reverence by 'rmiSLS or all classes,: is one )st rjtf iking phenomena of the yet oeen em Nonconform! of the most cnaracter afiil transnarpnt sinopntv." n- a " ITT" . SIIEVTTIES.. . - People wilf riot attend primaries.. In Chicago ' MqCinley received " 200,000 votes. The Republican primaries 'late ly held coulj fnuster but 36,000 voters. On March If L1898, Barbee and Smith telegraphed venator Bate, of Tennes-H see, that theA statement was false that I . 7 ;i - .... t! per cent., oL any other fee, fn case" the claim was toaid. The Atlanta: .Tmir. nal of the h instant, published the corresponderje 'between Senatdr Bate ana liar Dee na smun ana saya "All this gives th; matter a very ugly look, --,Hoi;-i4Jfei'K---i,-:-f. mith, the - agents of. the- church in, position where some ex- planation of qeir conduct is necessary xr it can posbiy be madew. At present. these partiS J stand in a "very i bad Uight." ; It. iss said hjree Of Lieutenant Hobv- son's seven 'nen were Irish Murphy, Kelly ' and iMontague "Erin Go Bragh hurah ! It is no new thing as. to Irisn bfuck and dash. A recent statement, from abroad is that the grfcat statesman, now Pope of Rome ii-j XIII,. "had the highest admiration or Mr. Gladstone, whom he regardedM3 the; greatest . English man of mbdjji times and 'during the illness of ! Gladstone his .Holiness followed the: daily bulletins with the keenest sympathy. His death is the occasion of S treat. erief to thePore A war coisjpondent ofThe London x iraes says; .Auieriea.n unuorm the 'ugliest Bnj record," and ays i better "suite io the comic opera t is to the army?t' ! He praises "the disci- pline and fighting qualities of -officers and men of army. In the wa;rupon the south the War Derartmenf -ued an order (No. ; 100X dated 24th lof April, 1863, saying that I - 1 - i" i --.'... ... "bombardsnprtt is justified even with out notice.' the Spaniards should! reach Bostor.1 or lyew; York and . ct upon that; 0iier No. 100, " what a tojsvl and uproar ri be heard. People will say "Serveathem right, uign: uuy "west parties i:$je as easy as a noistage stamp stks when wet. In- Miriiesota silver Yepublicans, populists ajd-idemocrats combine", for the spoils. i U In '-bleeding" Kansas, democrats a.a spopuliscs will' f Use, and all for omce.iThe democratic platform; 1 Hke the denbcrats generally, is dead against tgrffl coMi egtst 'I THE MECHANICS HOJfE ASSOCIATION. i SUBSCRIPriON LIST TOR THE Stock in the Sixteenth Series! -U-l ; x gis : now opm3 ; yyi ; p ; Payments Will Commence SaturdayV July 2nd. THAT THIS STOCK IS THE SAFEST CAN BE KEADILY ASCEBTAINED BY INQUIRY OP AtiY ONS OP ITS NUMEEOUS STOCKHOLDERS, APPLY TO j i NATHX JACOBI, President.. TWENTY SHARES of the Paid Premium of 25 cent a Share, making june 11 Im" 2,000 ITards Fine CrasfaV rejpa- lar price 5c, for 3c Fans from 3c up Ladles' Shirt ATaist 50c. Gent's Negligee Shirts 75c- Colored Drop Stitch Indies' Hose Lisle Thread, formerly 50c,- fori 25c. - f : ;- ' " - - I' . A beautiful Line of White and Colored Parasols. : ! Tiii and Colored Sash IUfo-H boas. ; . One lot of Fine Embroidery Inserting and Colored Embroid-j err, worth from 10c to 35c, for 5c per yard. v ' i i One let of Embroidery worth from 35e to 75c, for 20c pery'd. Suede Kid Gloves, 8-button length, only in white, formerly $1.50 aud $1.75, now $1. j Ladles' and Gent's Neckwear. f New Hue of Val Laces 25 cents a pieee. . . ' Jewel Delts at 75c. DOBBIN: & "TUOKER'i 123 and 125 Fayetteville Street, OUE SEE IS HAVING AN EXTENSIVE SUMMER Printed Indiain Silks and Printed Pdulaiid Silksi. :.:-v v-:.' : i..-?:i v!;: Hi !: 1.1 i I It offers the choice tlOIl at 09C JTeV Yard. deSlgllS, JUSt imported r f x - , SI. 00 Per Yard. - I Y fi IT ncJTTa TlQTTni no n jtm s ut ixuj v w r3i im.ii seasonable silks offered June 12 sun thur UST BE AVJ .TANTALIZING LOT -GArUSB, WE CAN'T TELL ALL ABOtfTrTHEEVI Itt PfRINT. PRINTEEErS .INK j mai .'luii 'miff btdry, BUT IT DOESN't PUT JHE GOODS IN ALTJrHEXR I BEAUTY BEFORE YOUR EYES, TEE BARCPAlNS OPFERESO rESEHVE-.tMlORIi THAN! WE CAN 3AY )F I THEM. 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The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
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June 19, 1898, edition 1
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