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Leaves Settlement. 


To Ravages of Time and Vandals—Structures 


Fashioned With Utmost Skill and Beauty 


The Tiny Church That Moller Built for His Mother to Worship 
_ in, There Is a Clock in the Spire and From the Belfry the 
Tiny Bell Summoned the Worshipers of the Tiny Village 


Varo = 


- SHELBURN, N H—Death and vandalism have bated. 
the secret of the mysterious vi 
‘First came the tragic dea 
and builder of what is perhaps the 
Then came the curioys throng, so lon 
the chance to see what was going on in the 
d, They have ruined the village. 
ed on the very large tract 


ment. 


padlacked gates, 
forest wonderlan 
The village of mystery is build 


ate a RE a ee 
By HARRY A. PACKARD 


~ 


a 


llage in the mountains here. 

th of H. R. Moller, designer 
world’s strangest settle- 
g denied by 


of landyowned by Charles Stone of the firm of Stone & Web- 


ster. 


‘Mr Stone, as we 
until its recént purchase by Mr Ston 


ll as Miss Gates, owner of the land 
e, have had “no trespass” 


signs liberally sprinkled along the highway that fronts the 
“village,” but their effor 
come forcibly to see than 
Summer shower, 


Nature Reclaims Spot 

Acting without authority of the de- 
-peendants, if there are any, but 
prompted by a love for the beautiful, 
Miss Gates has caused many of the 
furnishings of the village of mystery 
to be removed to a place of safer 
keeping. 

But coupled with the efforts. of 
those who seek to destroy this thing 
which they call queer, but which 
it pleases the writer to call a 
thing of extraordinary sentimental 
beauty are the ravages of nature. 
Before long the forest will creep 
down and reposess the land. 

Briefly, the facts of the mysterious | 
village—as seen in the eyes of the 
curious throng—are that Mr Moller, 
well-known in his Winter home, in 
Washington, D C, came here a quar- 
ter century ago, 1901 to be exact, and 
built a-tiny village deep in the sylvan 
wilderness. Everything about the 
architecture is cunningly contrived 
and building was done by a master 
hand. Hven, to the, wooden hinges 
that support the rustic doors there is | 
evident the skill of an artisan. 


Years of Labor Represented. ‘ 
Not hours of labor, not days, not 
tweeks—but years and years of pains- 
taking building and designing went 
into the village. 
| There is a tiny church, smaller 
Yhan the entrance of even a village 
@difice, all complete with diamond- 
shaped windows, with stately open 
porch at front, with curiously con- 
trived doors in keeping with the 
structure. The church is complete 
with blinds and even to the spire and 
hung therein—high up in the belfry— | 
the bell to summons the worshipers. 
‘to Sabbath morning service. 


Moller himself was leader of the 
worship held within the white struc- 
ture and his mother the only “con-' 


gregation” who eyer worshipped 
within the sacred portals. | 

With a voice of sadness the inhabi- 
tants of the valley below, who knew 
Moller and respected him in his fixed 
purposes tell how they miss the 
6weet-toned bell that often on a Sab- 
bath evening 


hills that tower over Shelburn. 

Then there would be heard the or- 
fan within the tiny church playing 
an interlude and Moller’s strong 
yoice singing a hymn, and the hills 


* would bring back the echo. Strange, | 


indeed, it was to hear him. 


Theatre Dozen Feet Wide 

Then Moller built a tiny theatre 
gearcely a dozen feet wide and some 
15 feet long. The door is faced up 
of slabs of spruce, cunningly con-— 
trived to resemble log cabin archi- , 
tecture or after the style of the | 
cabin that John Burroughs built 
which it pleased him to call “slab 
pides.” s 

‘There is a tiny ticket window,| 


where the pasteboards “for the eve- 
ning performance” might be sold, 
and an entrance into the orchestra. 
Seats were not added—that being 
one of the jobs that Moller left un- 


finished, ~ 

The interior of the theatre build- 
ing is pleasingly nished. The en- 
trance is ornamented with scroll 
designs worked out with a back-| 
ground on which he fastened inch- 
wide strips of pine painted a pleas- 
ing is pleasingly finished. The en-. 
inal and beautiful. The windows are 
of miniature size, two feet wide and 
3 or 4 feet tall and the many panes 
of glass are diamond shaped. 


in June-time tolled) 
from the tiny belfry and its clang-) 
ing reverberated among the majestic 


ts no more stem the tide of those who 
does protest avail against a sudden 


The general effect of the theatre 


‘interior is black in order 


ing pictures—if a projecting 
tiny and with short focus 
could be obtained—might be 
without any wall reflection 

tracts the light. + 


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0 
4 
| 
P ie, 
\ Temple of Music Nearby 
A little apart from. this 
picture theatre Moller bui 
called his “Grecian Temple 
sic.” The tiny structure is 
keeping with the severe vy 
lines: of ancient architecture. T 
building is hardly high enoug 
a man to stand erect in; ha: 
roof contrived into a roof 


'pandstand effect, railed in w 


tie spruce posts and with 
leading to a lower landing—a 


‘rustic construction—the inter 


ing of small limbs into p 
spruce, charmingly lending | 
selves to the forest trees whi 
friendly branches overhang 
structure, 

There is a tiny dollhouse stor 
tiny cabin for his mother, a ti 
cabin for Moller himself, doghou 
pigeon .lofts, open-air restaurants 
and an almost endless number of 
rustic seats beneath the treé with | 
rustic tables where the village b 
might court beneath the eanop ty 
stars, ; 

- 4! 
Theory of Broken Heart 
There are those of the village 


lage of the wood with ideas t 
Moller may have loved and lost | 
worshipped here the spirit of a 
maiden, Upon this phase the 
“passes no comment but accep 
explanation of his mother that sh 
had taken the young man abro 

on endless trips on this cont 

that there remained but o 


\ 


Pigeon Loft built by Moller—The iron braces and huge posts 


that seemed to tempt his fancy, that 
of building something. He was sick | 


‘bodily ill to say the least, and this 


in no unkindly yvein—and in gratify- 
ing this one whim of his, handing 
him, as she expressed it, a hammer, 
@ Saw and some nails, and this 20- 
odd years spent in the open next to 
nature kept the breath of life alive 


| within him. 


None knew him but to love him. 


“Queer, some folk said, put there are 
‘none who can say he ever raised his 


voice, was anything but a most mild- 
spoken man of charming personality 
and most pleasing manner. He never 
spoke an unkind word to his mother 
and she in turn was most deyoted-to 
him. 


Gave Life for Her Son 
"T am giving my life to my son,” 
‘She often remarked. ' 

His life, a tragedy, ended in trae. | 
edy. He went with his mother some 
three years ago to another Summer 
place of theirs in Vermont and there 


are massive for such a tiny structure. 


| in landscape gardening about their) 
| place, a tree which he was felling’ 
dropped across his body and killed! 
him. 

When the Mollers first came to 
Shelburn they boarded with Miss 
Gates. Knowing of the desire of the 
young man to build something, she| 
volunteered the use of any part of 


her 200-acre farm \for the purpose 
without any rental. ‘There, for near- 


ly a quarter century, Moller ham- 
mered and sawed to his heart’s con- 
tent—the prying throng kept out by 
padlocked gates in the fence he built 
about his miniature village. 

When the Moliers left for a short 
trip to Vermont, leaving their per- 
sonal belongings as if they expected 
to return shortly, that was the last 
seen of them. Shortly Mrs Moller 
wrote to the ‘kind Miss Gates” of, 
the tragedy—just that and nothing 
more. 


Village Reached by Path — 

The little village is just off the 
main-traveled highway ~ that 
from Gilead, Me, to Shelburn, 
It is a sun-kissed spot, m 
quented by Summer folk, wh 
estates on the gentle rolli 
that fringes the Androscoggin 

The approach to the village ise 
tle woods path made formi 
signs that read: 

WARNING 

All persons committing — 

depredations or trespass in 

form will be prosecuted to 

full extent of the law. 

The path follows along a | 
trout brook until, a few hundre' 
| from the highway, the trav 
[sebries to a tiny path erttiged { 


| trees that lead up a sharp rise to 
'stockade gate. The entire e littl 
lage is closed in with a a fre: 


5 i f F 
Interior View of Door on Cabin Moller Built for His Mother 


ence made of rustic design by in- 
weaving of spruce poles and other 
€ woods. Although the fence 
ppears to be highly ornamental it 
s in reality a very solid bulwark 
ainst, trespassers. Now, however, 
the padlock has been removed from 
the gate and picknickers wander at 
eae over the private DIAPER 


Alr of Strange Quiet. 
One who has a good perception 
of the finer sensibilities of life walks 
nd speaks with care as he enters 
the quiet retreat. An air of strange 


quiet Possesses the place, as every- 


nee the trees are growing up in 
the pathways and nature reclaims 
jher own. 


_ Just outside the stockade is the 


rustic bridge that arches the gurgling 
little stream and nearby the pot hole 
from whence came the drinking wa- 
ter for the little village. 
ie The exterior of the little buildings 
lis rustic, usually slab sides fastened 
toa solid boarded framework, Biv- 
e buildings ‘the appearance “of 
og cabins, ‘The little church 


is clapboarded, that is to say the in- 
terior is siding which has a beveled 


-effect to resemble clapboards. The 


church is eight feet wide, eight feet 
high to the eaves, and 18 feet long. 
The tip top of the spire is 20 feet 
from the ground. It has an open 
porch three feet wide, the width of 
the church. 

The entrance has double doors, 
each two feet wide, paneled. They 
come to a peak in the center; the 
tops cut to an angle of 45 degrees. 
Over the door there is a scroll orna- 
ment. The cupola is three by three 
feet at the base, tapering to receive 
the clock. The face of the clock was 
covered during Moller’s life time) 
with three thicknesses of black! 
paper as if he were not ready to 
have the world gaze at the cunning- 
ly wrought face of the clock. Van- 
dals have torn the paper away and 
the face of the clock is visible, the 
hands pointing to 27 minutes past 9. 
i - i 


Pine Grows Inside Chu 

There are three windows 
side of the church, ez 
mond-shaped lights. ( 
cunningly contrived blind 

Up through the side of | 
way through the roof, 
branches spreading over th 
the sacred structure, is 
tree. Moller left the 
and built his church arow. 
careful was he in making 
around the limbs that the 
does not leak. — ' 

‘Nearby the church ther 
“Don’t pick the flowers.” 
the blossoms are, since 
is carpeted with a thick 1 
| needles, is problematical. 
| The tiny store has an 
front. The eaves are bt 
from the ground. The doc 


height and the peak of 
but seven and one-half | 
| The store is six feet di 
declare the structure 
house. righ either 


Pigeon House Not Ordinary 

Even the pigeon house is built op- 
posite from usual styles of architec- 
ture. This seems like topsy-turvy 
land. Bird or pigeon houses are 
usually smaller and set high in the 
air on a tall pole. This house is 
three feet long, two feet high to the 
eaves and 18 inches wide, Not a 
very heavy structure, yet it is set on 
four posts, each eight inches in di- 
ameter and eight feet from the 
ground. The front of the house is 
painted to represent big barn doors. 
The sides of the house is open, to 
admit the birds, but has swinging 
doors that may be let down in case 
of storm. 

The home camp is very rustic. It 
has slabs for outside boarding ‘and 
a very ornamantal door. Coming out 
of the roof and the front gable end 
are large pine limbs ingeniously 
placed jn the roof, or rather the roof 
is placed around them. The spiles 
are green, and while no tree is yisi- 
ble within the camp, careful exam- | 
ination shows that Moller ingenious- | 
ly built the cabin around a small 


pine tree, working the trunk of the) 
tree into the door casing. \ 


The Tiny General Store in Moller’s Village of Mystery, 


Mother’s Cabin Beautiful, 

Next to the theatre building there 
is another cabin—most wonderful of} 
}all. Presumbaly this was the cabin 
| which Mrs Moller occupied. The in-| 
' terior is entirely lined with great 
sheets of birch bark, the whole lin- 
ing paneled off with wooden strips 
one inch wide, painted a brilliant 
red, The effect is striking. Even 
the studding which shows inside the 
room is painted with white stripes 
in diamond effect. 

The insides of the various doors in 


the different buildings are lined with 
bark or similar material. Some are 


first covered with canvas which, after 
being painted a yellowish tint, are 


paneled off with red strips. Many of 


the ceilings, even, are covered with 
birch bark and inlaid with the red 


strips. Some ceilings are first \cov- 
ered with matting. The ceiling of 
the tiny Grecian Temple is inlaid 
with more than 100 eight by eight- 
inch squares. 

Hours and hours of labor! Days 
and days of labor! Years and yeats 
of labor! Nights in June that werd 
hot and sticky; fatigued man after & 
day of nerve-racking puttering over 
the intricate paneling, Hmndless cor- 
respondence with New York dealers 
over gold paint, gold leaf. Such for- 
titude by a man handicapped with 
physical pain, Then tragedy! A 
heartbroken mother, who never 
wanted to see the spot again where 
every bit of intricate building would 
bring back the sad memory of some 
Summertime afternoon. 

Now vandals and destruction! 


———— 


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x wae 

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C 


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THN OVNLOTAL RECORD, JANUAWY 12, 127 


ERWIN SMITH HONORED 
BY PHYTOPATHOLOGISTS 


Plant Scientist, Rounding Out Forty 
Years in Department, Eulogized 
at Society’s Dinner 


Not far from the day when he would 
have rounded out his fortieth year in 
scientific work in the United States De- 
partment of Agriculture. Dr. Erwin 
Frink Smith, senior pathologist in charge 
of the pathological laboratory of the 
Bureau of Plant Industry, a pioneer in 
the study of the bacterial diseases of 
plants, and called by one the dean of 
plant pathologists, was the guest of honor 
at the annual dinner of the American 
Phytopathological Society in Philadelphia 
on December 29. Mrs. Smith shared the 
honor with him. The dinner was during 
the meeting of the American Association 
for the Adyancement of Science. About 
200 members of the society and friends 
were present, 

In introductory remarks, the president 
of the society, Dr. I. EH. Melhus, professor 
and chief of plant pathology at Iowa 
State College and the Iowa Wxperiment 
Station, congratulated Doctor Smith 
upon his extensive contributions to sci- 
ence. Doctor Melhus then called upon 
Dr. L. R. Jones, chairman of the depart- 
ment of plant pathology of the Univer- 
sity of Wisconsin and plant pathologist 
of the Wisconsin BWxperiment Station 
and extension service, to speak upon 
Doctor Smith’s services to plant pathol- 
ogy. Doctor Jones was followed by Dr. 
William H. Welch, pathologist of Johns 
Hopkins University and one of the lead- 
ing pathologists of the country, who 
spoke on Doctor Smith's contributions to 
human and animal pathology. Dr. F. Y. 
Rand, formerly of the Bureau of Plant 
Industry and now with the publication 
Biological Abstracts, then, after appro- 
priate remarks, presented to Doctor 
Smith, in the nume of the society, a 
brochure, in which were’ engrossed 
abstraets of the addresses that had just 
been made, followed by the uutographs 
of the members present. 


In his eulogy Doctor Jones said: 

“Wor leadership in the early study of peach 
yellows, most stimulating example of dogged 
work upon a batlling problem, with prophetic 
assurance that knowledge of tobacco mosaic 
and aster yellows was pertinent to the solu- 
tion. Hor leadership in pioneer studies of 
bacterial plant pathogens, with classic publi- 


Pige, cetions, exacting models for all who followed. 


~ 


™~method, 


A kes SS aan contributions to knowledge of 


‘bactPria.in relation to disease in plants. Tor 
epochal “researches in crown-gall. For sym- 
pathetic COU Lo eager young scientists, 
from far.and near™IPor thus exemplifying the 
Pasteurlan characteristies—clear 
stant action, intuitive’ Judgment, precise 

tireless endeavor, sympathetic pa- 
tience, self-sacrificing devotion Ap gervice 
through science, For these things we’ d@light 


vision, in- 


to honor you—pioneer, 
dean of our selence.” 

Doctor Welch said: 'T rejoice in this op 
portunity to speak in behalf of my felluw 
workers and colleagues and to bear tribute 
to the importance and significance to human 
and animal pathology of your studies devoted 
primarily to plant diseases. No one in our 
day has done more to bring these two great 
divislons of pathology into close relation to 
their mutual adyantage. The field whieh 
you have cultivated so successfully, and with 
which your name will always be associated — 
the relation of parasitic organisms, especially 
of bacteria, to the diseases of plants—is one 
of the broadest biological interest. Above 
all, your studies of tumors of plants, which 
you haye demonstrated to be of bacterial ori- 
gin, have brought you into the field of on- 
tology in its broadest aspects. [ere you take 
your place in national and international con- 
gresses and associations devoted to cancer 
research or to medicine in general, and here 
your work is recognized as of the greatest 
interest and importance. While your name 
is associated especially with the champion- 
ship of the parasitic theory of the origin of 
tumors, your studies of the mechanism of 
tumor formation, of problems of histogenesis, 
of formative stimuli and inhibitions of growth, 
and other kindred subjects, are scarcely of 
less importance. It would lead far to tell of 
the whole debt which medicine and pathology 
owe to you, but I cAn not forego mentioning 
the service which you have rendered in mak- 
ing the life and work of Pasteur readily ac- 
cessible and familiar to students of medicine 
and the. general public.” 

Said Doctor Rand: “ What Robert Koch 
was.to the early days of human and animal 
bacteriology, that and more haye you meant 
to the bacteriology of plant diseases. Al- 
most single-handed, you saw it through those 
first years of speculation and_ skepticism 
to its present broad and solid position among 
the sister sciences. During more recent years, 
in your studies of plant and animal tumors, 
you have not hesitated to attack the last 
stronghold of that old contagium-viyum con- 
ception of Henle. In your scientific work 
and in your influence you have made an in- 
delible impression, not alone upon plant science 
or upon animal science but upon the whole 
field of experimental biology. And, what is 
to me most vital and reassuring, through it 
all you have never for a moment lost sight 
of the humanities or the beautiful things 
of thgemind and the world without.” 


Doctor Smith responded. He told how 
he happened to take up plant pathology 
as his life work, and in conclusion he left 
with the younger scientists these two 
ideas which he thought they would do 
well to bear in mind: ‘Always keep an 
open mind; and, when you haye con- 
eluded a piece of research, do it over 
again,” 


prophet, exemplar, 


! 


Brooks Adams 


By Albert E. Pillsbury 


he man in whose memory this is 
written is not a subject for pious platl- 
tudes. Ifo sacrificed to his rugged Inde- 


pendence of character a career which his 


origin seemed to mark out for him; he 
would not flatter the people nor pay 
court to the little great. For this, if for 


nothing else, he deseryes to be remem- 
bered, and his contemporaries owe him 
this debt for public no less than for per- 
sonal reasons, The death of the last sur- 
vivor of President John Adams's great- 
brandsons may be said to mark a period, 
if not an epoch, in the history of this 
community and to call for more than 
ordinary notice. For a century and a 
half that great man and his immediate 
descendants have maintained a position 
that entitles them to be accounted the 
most remarkable as well as the most dis- 
tinguished family of this Commonwealth 
or country, It furnishes the only in- 
stance in which father and son have 
successively been crowned with the high- 
est political honor which the, Neuse has 
to bestow, though in'this it is approached 
by the Harrisons, who produced historic 
characters in the same line in three gen- 
erations, but the connection between the 
two President Harrisons is made by an 
intervenor who was not especially dis- 
tinguished except as he was the son of 
one of them and the father of the other, 
no mean distinction indeed, by itself. 
There is no such interruption of the 
Adams line. Political distinction in this 
country is, to be sure, more or less ad- 
ventitlous, depending largely upon arts 
of popularity or accidents of fortune, if 


nothing worse, which establish no valid 


elaim to permanent remembrance. Some 
names on the roll of our Presidents we 
would gladly forget. 

+ ++ 

Perhaps the most remarkable if not 
the highest distinction of the John 
Adams Ine Is its intellectual persistence 
through so long a period, and in an 
ascending scale if Henry and Brooks 
may be taken, as scholars would take 
them, to be its deepest thinkers. flor 
three generations the Adams family was 
making history, in the persons of Presi- 
dent John, President John. Quincy, and 
his son Charles Francis, the value of 
whose diplomatic service in England dur- 
ing the rebellion and later in the Geneva 
arbitration Is unequalled in our annals 
since Franklin was at the, court of 
France. , 

After three generations of statesmen 
identified with the greatest public affairs, 
in the fourth, while the older sons © 
Charles Francis Wve not without public 
und literary distinetlon, probably the 
wider intellecttal pre-eminence of the 
Adams family must be aseribed to Hen- 
ry and Brooks as two of the profoundest 
thinkers and most accomplished writers 
of their time in history and philosophy, 
in which they attained international rec- 
ofnition. ‘There Js room for difference of 
opinion about the respective merits of 
the members of this illustrious line; 
there has been difference of opinion 
about it in the Adams family itself. It 
may be doubtful if any two of them 
fully agreed as to whether John or John 
Quincy was the greater man, and Brooks 
was accustomed to say, perhaps not unin- 
fluenced by filial pride, that he regarded 
his father, Charles Francis, as the great- 
est man and his brother Henry as the 
greatest mind he ever knew. This at 
least discredits the gibe of a hundred 
years, having no other foundation than 
the family traits of independence of 
thought and ‘unbridled plainness of 


Wat Bn AAeawse anwar ennita well 


TRANSORI PT, MONDAY, FHBRUARY 14, 1927 


en! and aconomie phases of man's io- 
velopment as exhibited in history, all 
having its root In tho postulate that fa 
is n competitive slruggle for existence In 
which tho wealer are bound to ro to the 
wall. 

In 1907 he interrupted his Mterary 
work so far as to fll succesfully for 
Heveral years the chair of constitutional 
law in Boston University. That such a 
man could translate his views of such 
a subject into language intelligible to a 
class in a modern law school is a testi- 
mony to the variety of his powers. No 
other college ever offered him a chair, 
nor an honorary degree, perhaps antici- 
pating refusal of such a doubtful dis- 
tinction, which would have been quite 
characteristic of him. : 

In 1916 he was sent by the city of 
Quincy to the Constitutional Convention, 
his only adventure into public life, where 
he talked political philosophy to the 
members, who listened respectfully, but 
most of them with the amused curiosity 
of a child at the appearance of a new 
and strange animal. His voice and vote 
were given for the Initiative and Refer- 
endum, which seemed inconsistent with 
his lack of faith in democracy, but he 
privately defended his position on the 
ground that the measure would furnish a 
safety-valye against the oppressions of 


capital. x 
+44 


Brooks Adams possessed talents near- 
ly akin to genius, which a different man 
could, perhaps, haye put to a better use. 
Subject as all men are to the limitations 
of his nature, he was perfectly conscious 
of his own failings and never seemed to 
care to avoid or correct them. If they 
leaned to virtue's side, as most of them 
did, this did not help him in the world, 
and his freedom from the common am- 
bitions of common men still further dis- 
abled him for the career that might have 
been his if he had been differently con- 
stituted. So far from courting popularity 
he seemed to despise it. He wasted with 
a careless hand many gifts of fortune 
that might have aided a self-seeking am- 
bition. He held unpopular opinions, 
which he never attempted to conceal. 

He believed, with other philosophers, 
that the government of Rome under the 
Antonines was the best the world has 
ever seen. He had no faith in the per- 
manence of democracy, declaring his 
conviction that our experiment in free 
sovernment is already an assured failure, 
that sinister but irresistible influences 
are driving us rapidly on the road to 
some form of autocracy, and serious as 
this situation may be, that “it is naught 
beside the terrors which threaten our s0- 
clety, as at present organized, by the 
unsexing of woman.” He scouted all 
theologies, and was indifferent to religion, 
though a regular attendant. at the old 
family place of worship whenever Sun- 
day found him in Quincy. Some of his 
contemporaries unjustly regarded him 
as no more than iw brillfant eynic; un- 
justly, because no views or opinions of 
his were lightly held; they were the re- 
sult of profound study and conviction. 

He was a philosopher of history; the 
greatest questions that have arisen out 
of collective human society were the fa- 
vorite subjects of his thought, which 
never seemed to turn toward the inai- | 
vidual, though he appeared to entertain 
the doctrine of fatalism. If his philoso- | 
phy would be stigmatized as pessimistic, | 
perhaps nothing else could be expected | 
of a man of his mental reach and vision 
who never hesitated to face the truth or 
to accept the logical results of it, 


+ 4+ 4 


Among friends he was a companionable 
man, hospitable, witty and entertaining 
He was especially fond of his dogs and 
his garden. Punctilious in the etiquette 
of small social customs, for many of ths 
conventions of modern socicty he had no 
expression but contempt. With an trac 


Lee, 

After three generations of statesmen 
Identified with the groatest public affades, 
in the fourth, while the older sons ¢ 
Charles Irancis wre not without public 
and literary distinction, probably the 
wider intellectual pre-eminence of tho 
Adams family must be aserlbed to Tfen- 
ry and Brooks as two of the profoundest 
thinkers nd most accomplished writers 
of their time in liistory and philosophy, 
in which they attained international rec- 
ognitlon, There Is room for difference of 
opinion about the respective merits of 
the members of this {llustrious line; 
thera has been difference of opinion 
about it in the Adams family itself. It 
may be doubtful if any two of them 
fully agreed as to whether John or John 
Quincy was the greater man, and Brooks 
was accustomed to say, perhaps not unin- 
fluenced by filial pride, that he regarded. 
his father, Charles Francis, as the great- 
est man and his brother Henry as the 
greatest mind he ever knew. This at 
least discredits the gibe of a hundred 
years, having no other foundation than 
the family traits of independence of 
thought and ‘unbridled plainness of 
speech, that no Adams ever spoke well 
of any other Adams and no two of them 
ever agreed about ‘any other. Their 
idiosyncrasies must be overlooked in 
view of their public virtues. 


+ + + 


Brooks Adams has led the retired life 
of a scholar and writer, comparatively 
unknown to his contemporaries, but with 
all his limitations, he was a man of a 
hich order of ability who has never been 
taken here at his true value. After grad- 
uating from Harvard in 1870, he began 
as a lawyer, and in his later ‘years de- 
clared it to be the great disappointment 
of his life that he had not succeeded in 
that profession, but his mental structure 
was too inflexible for it and his powers 
would have been wasted in that fleld. 
Finding the trial unsatisfactory, his ac- 
tive but scholarly mind turned to the pur- 
i suit of letters, In 1886, being asked by,a 
publisher to write a short history of 
Massachusetts for the Commonwealth 
serles, he broke upon the literary world 


with “The Emancipation of Massachu- 
setts,’ in which he demolished and re-}| 
wrote the history of the colony and prov: | 
ince of Massachusetts Bay, originally © 
chronicled by the priestly oligarchy 
against which the book was launched, and 
in later times principally by eminent 
members of the Congregational clergy. 
|It made a great stir, especially in relig- 
|ious circles, and brought severe criticism 
and even denunciation upon the author, | 
but he lived to see it pass to a second | 
edition as accepted history. 

His elaborate preface to this edition in 
1919, in compass a book by itself, discloses 
the breadth of his studies and the devel- 
opment of his mind in the interval, 
though other published works had al- 
ready done this. The ‘‘Emancipation” 
was followed in 1896 by “The Law of 
Civilization and Decay, an Essay on His- 
tory,” a study of the movement of human 
society from the earliest times, in which 
the philosophical bent of his mind is 
given full play. He regarded this as his 
most significant work, and doubtless it 
contains his profoundest speculations. 
This, like others of his productions, was 
translated and reproduced in continental 
Europe, and while it passed several suc- 
cessive impressions here, probably it has 
given him a wider reputation abroad 
than he ever had at home. ; 

“America’s Economic Supremacy,” in 
1900, was a collection of essays strung at 
various times on the thread of economic 
and consequent political and social 
changes in the position and equilibrium of 


the nineteenth century; and “‘The New 
Empire,” in 1902, also a collection of es- 
says, dealt especially with the influence 
of geographic environment upon races 
and nations. In 1913 he published “The 


| Theory of Social Revolutions,” the thesis 


theologies, and was Indifferent to religion, 
though a regular attendant. at the old 
fainily place of worshlp whenaver Sun 
day found him in Quincy, Somo of his 
contemporaries unjustly regnrded him 
as no moro than a brillant cynie; un- 
justly, because no views or opinions of 
his were lightly held; they were the re- 
sult of profound study and convietion, 

Ho was a philosopher of history; the 
sreatest questions that have arisen out 
of collective human society were the fa- 
vorite subjects of his thought, which 
never scemed to turn toward the indl- 
vidual, though he appeared to entertain | 
the doctrine of fatmism. If hig philoso- 
phy would be stigmatized as pessimistic, 
perhaps nothing else could be expected’ 
of a man of his mental reach and vision 
who never hesitated to face the truth or 
to accept the logical results of it, 


+++ 


Among friends he was a companionable 
man, hospitable, witty and entertaining 
He was especially fond of his dogs and 
his garden. Punctillous in the etiquette 
of small social customs, for many of th's 
conventions of modern society he had no 
expression but contempt. With_an iras- 
cible temper, which rarely did any per- 
manent harm, he had a warm and gener- 
ous heart and open hand, as many have 
occasion to know who will remember him. 
with grateful affection. He carried 
frankness almost to a fault, yet any 
friend -who knew him well would feel 
that he had imposed an obligation of tha 
same frankness after his death that he 
always indulged while living; that, like 
Cromwell he would be painted exactly as 
he was, and that posthumous padding of 
the angles on the surface of this unusual 
and remarkable character would be an 
injustice to the memory of one whose 
dominant traits were candor, courage, 
independence, and as complete freedom 
from hypocrisy as is permitted to man. 

ae ee ; 
a 


Governments and Nations, especially in} 


QesTarAerals I 7d Lae 


CIC ame EL REE 


| Carmona has encouraged the ex- 
pectation of a new republican con- 
vstitution and new electoral laws, 
, enabling the people to form a Par- 
liament, whereupon they would be 
,in a position to elect a President. 
| After that, he says, the power will: 
be with “the political party which 
‘ean understand and carry out best 
the reforms and improvements made! 
bundér the dictatorship’—an enig- 
matic statement which awaits inter- 
pretation. His announcement of an 
economic restoration throughout the 
country by his government is merely 
anticipatory. But he has shown 
that he is thinking seriously of im- 
portant public questions. Hope will 
accompany curiosity in regard to his 
political career. 


The Adams Dynasty 


Somebody on a time coined the 
the phrase “the Adams dynasty.” 
For whatever purpose it may have 
been intended, in whatever spirit it 
may first have been used, it may 
| fittingly be applied to what perhaps 
is the most remarkable family rec- 
ord in the history of the United 
States, and a record now brought 
to mind by the passing of Mr. 
Brooks Adams, great-grandson of 
the man who fought for the dec- 
taration of independence in the Con- 
tinental Congress and the successor 
of Washington in the presidency. 

John Adams, the head of the great 
line, was the second President; 
John Quincy Adams, his son, was 
the sixth President. 

' John Adams was our first min- 
ister to England, John Quincy 
Adams also was minister to Eng- 
land, and Charles Francis Adanis, 
the grandson of the second Pres- 
\ident, for seven years filled that 
-great post under conditions which 
made his service comparable only 
with that rendered the American 
republic by Benjamin Franklin. 

- John Adanis was one of the three 
commissioners who negotiated the 
peace that terminated the war for 
independence; John Quincy Adams 
was one of the five commissioners 
who arranged the treaty which 
ended the second war with Eng- 
land; Charles Francis Adams was 
the American member of the court 
of arbitration of five members 
which decided the Alabama Claims. 

John Quincey Adams was only 11 
years old when he went with his 
father on his first mission to Paris 
in 1778 as his secretary and he 
served in the same capacity when 
his father was busy with the nego- 
tiations which ended the revolution; 
Henry Adams as a young man was 
secretary to his father, the Amer- 
ican minister in London, through 
the civil war period; Brooks Adams, 


also in early manhood, attended his} 


TE 
the most tempestuous political sea-, 
son that the world ever witnessed, 
when the elements of civil society 
are rapidly and inevitably returning 


to chaos in Kurope, and al the mo- 
ment when the fame of the prede- 
cessor has heaped to such accumula- 
(t ti 


ion the burden of the successor’s 
task.” And he ends in‘ sonorous 
Latin: “It remains for me as a man, 
as an American, and as your son, 
only to say quod felix faustumque 
sit.” 

Charles Francis Adams left four 
surviving sons. The eldest was John 
Quincy Adams, 2d, who gave much 
attention to politics and whose 
career illustrates the singular in- 
dependence of opinion and action 
which has been a marked character- 
istic of the family. The second son, 
Charles Francis Adams, Jr., was the, 
civil war soldier, the railway ex- 
pert, and a tireless investigator of! 
historical questions. Henry Adams 
possessed the versatility to produce 
such varied works as a History of 
the United States, covering the ad- 
ministrations of Jefferson and Mad- 
ison; such famous works as Mont 
St. Michel and Chartres, the Letters 
to a Niece, and the Education, as 
well as two novels, one the anony- 
mous “Democracy,” the other “Es- 
ther,” given to the public under a 
pseudonym. Brooks Adams startled 
all New England with his Emanci- 
pation of Massachusetts in 1887, and 
again by his remarks on democracy 
in an address delivered in 1915. 

Truly a wonderful succession. 
Longevity seems to have been in 
the blood. John Adams passed away 
when nearly 91, John Quincy Adams 
in his 81st year, Charles Francis 
Adams and one of his sons attained 
the age of 80, and two other sons 
were 79. 

One thing many times we have 
wondered about. After John Quincy 
Adams retired from the presidency 
he did not retire from public life. 
He entered the House of Represen- 
tatives, and there held a seat from 
1831 to 1848. In his seat, on the 
afternoon of Feb, 21 in the latter 
year, he received his fatal stroke, 
and he died two days later. Abra-'| 
ham Lincoln was a member of | 
that Congress. Did he witness the 
scene and participate in the excite- | 
ment when the “ old man eloquent” | 
sustained that blow? t 


ee 


father in a like capacity during the} 


| Alabama arbitration proceedings, 
Perhaps it is not too much to say 


that ‘the Aiptory of ae conntry. offers 
auiittst senha hey ise 


dg €* 


John Aduma, the head of the ment |ivpain by his remarks on democracy 
line, wax the second President; {in an address delivered in LOI, 
John Quincy Adams, his son, was Truly a wonderful succession, 
the sixth President. Longevily seems to have been in 
_ John Adams was our first min-|the blood. John Adams passed away 
ister to England, John Quincy | when nearly 91, John Quincy Adams 
Adams also was minister to Eng-}in his 81st year, Charles Francis 
land, and Charles Francis Adanis,| Adams and one of his sons attained 
the grandson of the second Pres- the age of 80, and two other sons 
| ident, for seven years filled that| were 79. 

'great post under conditions which One thing many times we have 
made his service comparable only | wondered about. After John Quincy 
with that rendered the American|Adams retired from the presidency 
republic by Benjamin Franklin. he did not retire from public life. 
‘John Adams was one of the three He entered the House of Represen- 
commissioners who negotiated the tatives, and there held a seat from 
peace that terminated the war for!1831 to 1848. In his seat, on the 
independence; John Quincy Adams!afternoon of Feb. 21 in the latter 
was one of the five commissioners|year, he received his fatal stroke, 
who arranged the treaty which|and he died two days later. Abra- 
ended the second war with Eng-lham Lincoln was a member of 
land; Charles Francis Adams was|that Congress. Did he witness the 
the American member of the court| scene and, participate in the excite-| 
of arbitration of five members|ment when the “ old man eloquent” | 
which decided the Alabama Claims. | sustained that blow? i 

John Quincy Adams was only 111 y 
years old when he went with jg 
father on his first mission to Paris 
in 1778 as his secretary and he | 
served in the same capacity when} 
his father was busy with the nego- 
tiations which ended the revolution; 
Henry Adams as a young man was|, 
secretary to his father, the Amer-| 
ican minister in London, through| 
the civil war period; Brooks Adams, 
also in early manhood, attended his} 
father in a like capacity during the 
Alabama arbitration proceedings. 

Perhaps it is not too much to say} 
that the history of no country offers} 
a precisely parallel record to that 
of which some features are here in-| 
‘dicated. And show those Adamses | 
did appreciate each other! The 
jAmerican minister in London wrote 
this son, Charles Franc{fs Adams, Jr.“ 
nearly at the end of the year 1861: 
‘“Tt may be my predilection that 
biasses my judgment, but I think 
I see in my father the only picture 
of a fullgrown statesman that the 
history of the United States has 
yet produced.” And Henry Adams, 
as secretary to his father, wrote 
from London to his brother in the 
Union army in 1863: “The minister 
was grand. I studied his attitude 
with deep admiration. Not all the 
applications of his friends could,’ 
make him open his mouth to put 
the public right on his letter or on 
the gross falsehoods. . . . The 
time had not come. Of course he 
was cursed for his obstinacy, but he 
is used to that.” : 

Meantime Charles Francis, the 
younger, was helping to keep his 
fathor and lila brothers rleht about 
the qualifications of Abraham Lin- 
coln. In London they had the no- 
tion that the government was Se- 
ward, The keenly perceptive cavalry 
ofileer wrote thus after the second 
jinaugural: ‘The rail-splitting lawyer 
‘is one of the wonders of the day. 
{Once at Gettysburg, and now again 
‘on a greater occasion, he has shown 
ja capacity for rising to the demands | 
,of the hour which we should not 
expect from orators or men of the 
schools. This inaugural strikes me 
in its grand simplicity and direct- | 
ness as being for all time the his- 
torical keynote of this war....Not a 


nearly al the end of the year 1861: | 
It may be my predilection that | 
biasses my judgment, but I think 
I see in my father the only picture 
of a fullgrown statesman that the 
history of the United States has 
yet produced.” And Henry Adams, | 
as secretary to his father, wrote 
from London to his brother in the! 
Union army in 1863: “The minister 
was grand. I studied his attitude 
with deep admiration. Not all the 
applications of his friends could. 
make him open his mouth to put. 
the public right on his letter or on 
the gross falsehoods. . . . The 
time had not come. Of course he 
jwas cursed for his obstinacy, but he 
‘is used to that.” 

Meantime Charles Francis, the 
younger, was helping to keep his 
father and his brothers right about 
the qualifications of Abraham Lin- 
coln. In London they had the no- 
tion that the government was Se- 
ward. The keenly perceptive cavalry 
officer wrote thus after the second 
inaugural: ‘The rail-splitting lawyer 
is one of the wonders of the day. 
Once at Gettysburg, and now again 
on a greater occasion, he has shown 
a capacity for rising to the demands 
of the hour which we should not 
expect from orators or men of the 
schools. This inaugural strikes me 
in its grand simplicity and direct- 
ness as being for all time the his- 
torical keynote of this war....Nota 
prince or minister in all Europe 
could have risen to such an equality 
with the occasion.” ' 

Reading the correspondence and 
the diaries of the several members 
of this family is fascinating to all 
who care for anything else than 
the mere surface movements of 
our national history. Almost every 
member of the line seems to have 
been an inveterate diarist and letter- 
writer. While John Quincy Adams 
was representing the young republic 
abroad his father was at the head 
of the government of the nation. 
He addressed his father in the 
formal manner of a diplomat re- 
porting to his superior, as “My dear 
Sir,” and he devoted his paper to 
the enlightenment of the senior for 
‘his official guidance as to the course 
‘of European politics. His father re- 
called him from Europe in 1801 lest 
his incumbency cause embarrassment 
to. the incoming President. Some 
‘years earlier the son had sent a 
message to his father as the pros- 
pective President in succession to 
Washington which is an excellent 
fllustration of the manner of this 
correspondence: 

“Your indifference concerning the 
‘event of a possible future competi- 
tion; the determination to be alto- 
gether passive, and the intrepidity 
| with which the prospects of either 
decision are contemplated, I readily ; 
believe; and rejoice in believing 
them, because I have no doubt but 
‘that the transaction will call for 
ithe exercise of all those qualities in 
‘an eminent degree... You are aware 
,of the dangers to which the station 
at the helm will be exposed during 


SS 


PROF, CHARLES B, FAY, 
ON TUFTS FACULTY 3 
‘SCORE YEARS, RESIGNS 


Was Dean of the College’s Graduate| 
School from 1912 to 
1923 


The resignation of Professor Charles 
E. Fay, for sixty years a teacher at 
Tufts, was accepted today by the trustees 
at their December meeting. When he 
had seen fifty years of service he at- 
temptod to resign from the faculty, but 
his resignation was refused by the trus- 
tees. During his career as a teacher, 
begun when a boy in his teens, as master 
of a little red schoolhouse in Nashua, 
'N. H., he has successfully become 
scholar, educator, alpinist, writer and 
lecturer, 

Professor Fay was born in Roxbury, 
, on the tenth of March, 1846, His father, 
Rev, Cyrus H. Fay, was then pastor of 
‘the Universalist Church in Roxbury; his 
mother was a native of Tavistock, Eng- 
land. She died when he was only four 
years old, and his childhood was passed 
partly at the home of his grandparents 
in Concord, N, H., and partly with his 
father. 


Education Began at Early Period 


His education began at an early pertod, ; 
as he entered a private school in New! 
York city at the age of four. Owing to! 


the alternation between one’ home and | 


Dr, Charles E. Fay 


‘After Sixty Years on the Faculty at 
Tufts He Resigned Today 


the other, hiv achool lire Was considerably | 


varied, When alx yernrs old, ho wan a 


Pupil at Pombrole Aoudomy, N, H,, undor - 


the guardianship of hia funta, Who ware 
Ukewlse pupils there, Metween tho ages 
of eleven and Sixteen ho was a member 
'of the high schools at Concord, N, H,, 
l Middletown, Conn,, and Providence, R. sy 
from tho last of which he Was graduated, 
This sehool wns thon regarded os ono 
of the best in New Jngland, 

Although this Securing: of a secondary | 
education al varloug schools necessarily - 
‘interfered with the unity of his course 
and delayed its completion, it had, never- 
theless, many advantages, and Professor 
Fay himself is convinced that his experi- 
ence of the world was in this way ren- 
dered the fuller, and thal, on the whole, 
he was a gainer rather than a loser by 
the process. He was the youngest mem- 
ber of most of his classes, and a fondness | 
for mischief was as characteristic of 
him as his readiness in learning. The 
later enabled him to maintain a position 
at or very near the head of the class, 


First Tanght in District School 


A few months after his graduation | 
from high school he was offered the po-! 
sition of teacher at a district school In 
Nashua, N, H. Following the adyice of 
his father, he accepted the position, and 
his career as teacher began. 

At the close of a term of seventeen 
weeks there he returned to his home in 
Providence, and Shortly after became 
master of the Middle District Grammar 
School in Bristol, R. I., where he taught 
for somewhat more than a year, This 
sojourn in Bristol was perhaps the criti- 
cal point in his life. Here he made the 
acquaintance of Joshua Kendall, who 
Was at that time principal of the Rhode 
Island State Normal School, Constant in- 
tercourse with this scholarly man led Mr, 
Fay to reconsider a former determina- 
tion not to take a college course, and, 
under.Mr. Kendall’s instruction, he began 
the study of Cesar. 

He gave up his school in Bristol in 
1864, and turned his attention wholly to 
preparation for college. He decided to 
come to Tufts, and entered in the fall 
of 1865, : i 


Was Graduated in 1868 


Since he had previously covered a large 
number of the regular college require- 
ments, he was able to gain one year in 
his course and to graduate in 1868, when 
he at once received from Tufts the ap- 
pointment of Walker Special Instructor 
in Mathematics. Literature and the lan- 
guages, however, had appealed to his 


| tastes far more than mathematics, and 


had received the best of his efforts. It 
was the ministry that seemed destined 
to furnish his life-work, for, in addition 
to his work as instructor at the college, 
he supplied the pulpit of what was then! 
the Allen Street Unitarian Church at 
North Cambridge, 4 

In the summer of 1869 the new pro- 
fessorship of French and German at! 
Tufts was offered Professor Fay, with} 
leave of absence for one year in Burope, 
This year was spent in travel and study. 
in France, Germany and Ttaly, and in 
the next autumn he took up the work of 
organizing his department, During his, 
Stay in Europe he met in Florence Miss 
Mary W. Lincoln, of Boston, to whom 
he was married after their return from, 
abroad. | 
‘On his return to Tufts, Professor Fay! 
was made Wade Professor of Modern 
Languages in 1871, was Secretary of the 
School of Arts and Sciences, 1873-81, and | 
was dean of the Graduate School from 
1912 to 19238, He received his master's | 
degree in 1877 and later a degree of Litt. | 
D. was conferred upon him in 1900. i 


a eee a | 


| ing’ part in the founding of tha Appa- 


American Alpine Club, 1902, _ 
| president of the Appalachian~ Club in 
| 1878, 1881, 1893 and 1905, and has served 
| as president of the Alpine Club. He also 
| edited their publications, 
(for forty years) and “Alpina, Americana,” 
| furnishing 


Ta Plonoer Educator 


Ag oan Amerlenn eduentor aterioy 

Tray wis wmone the ploneers, Ila wad na 
| foundor of the Modern Languigo Asso. 
elation of America and also of the Now 
ongland Modern Language <Assoclation 
and of the New Mingland Assoclation of 
Colleges and Preparatory Sehools, of 
which he whe president in 1888-89, THs 
work tn devoeloplmas these orguntaations 
from thelr infaney Is well known to nl 
these of an enariier generation, 

It is perhaps as an Alpinist that Pro- 
fessor ay is hest known the world over, 
He began climbing-mountains at the age 
of Ofty years as a recreation, and nearly 
every summer since that time has seen 

}him mounting the heights in elther Hue 
rope or western America. So well known 
| have been his ascents that a huge moun- 
|tain In the Canadian Rockies near Baniff, 


has been named Mount Fay in his) 
honor. ' 


In American Mountaineering 
In American mountaineering: ho has, 
held an especially prominent place, tak- | 


lachian. Mountain Club, 1876, and the | 
He was} 


“Appalachia” 


numerous articles for the 
richly illustrated mono- 
“The Recky Mountains 
latter, His writ- 
numerous other 


former and a 
graph, entitled 
of Canada,"' for the 
ings inelude also 
monographs and mazazine articles. 
He is cotunted among the: pion-| 
eers in the exploration of the Alpine’ 
regions of the Dominion. His activity in, 
this field has been recognized abroad by | 
his election as an honorary member of 
the linglish, Italian and Canadian Alpine 
Clubs, and of the Centro Ixcursionista 
de Cataluna of Spain; Ie was a delegate | 
of the American Alpine Club and the Ap-° 
palachian Mountain Club to the fiftieth 
‘anniversary of the Alpine Club of Lon- 
,; don, and to the International Congress 
of Alpine Clubs at Monaco, in 1920, 
where he was, by order of the prince, 
knighted and made an officer in the 
Order of St. Charles. 


His First Ascents 


His first ascents in the Canadian 
Rockles include Mounts Hector (1895); 
Lefroy, Victoria, and Gordon (1897); Niles 
(1898); Vaux (1901); Goodsir and Daly 
(1903); Castor (1895); Pollux (1897); Daw- 
sen (1899); and his second ascents, Mount 
Fay, named in his honor by the Canadian 
Government, His other ascents include: 
third ascent of Stephen (1895); Temple, 
which he was the first to ascend by the 
southeast arete, in 1904; first ascent by 
the southeast arete of Bagle Peak, 1904; 
the first crossing of Cathedral Pass in 
1903; and Mumm’s Peak, 1913. 


Four Peaks in One Day 


In the autumn of 1910, he ascended in 
one day four’ peaks of the Sandwich | 
range, covering ten thousand feet of alti- 
tude, eighteen miles of trails—in one day, 
and in his sixty-fifth year. In his’ sev- 
enty-sixth year he took charge of a 
tramping party of young people going up 
| to some of the high passes, and set the 
pace and kept it for :‘“children'’ of 
twenty-five and thirty, who had all they 
could do to keep up with the pacing 
;Professcr. “Old? Not a bit of it,” he 
jsaid at that time, ‘a‘ man is as old as 
his arteries are, and I believe mine are 
as young as they ever were. I have all 
the recuperative power that I had when 
fifty years old, and that was when I be- 
gan mountain climbing.” 


Other of Professor Iay’s outside inter- 
ests include: The Round Tablo of Bos- 
ton, of which ho was a charter member 
and later vico president; the Iriday Iive- 
ning Club; the Boston Shakspeare Club, 
the Cambridge Shakspeare Club; the Bos- 
ton branch of the American Folk Lore So- 
ciety, charter member; Bostoner Deutsche 


Gesellschaft, charter member, executive | 


committee, vice president; Massachusetts 
Forestry Association, charter member 
and executive committee; Metropolitan 
Improvement League, Boston, charter 
member, executive committee; New Eng- 
Jand Grenfell Relief Association, execu- 
tive committee; in 1921 he was elected 


an honorary member of the Boston} 


Browning Society; he was a_ fellow 
in the Harvard Travellers’ Club, and 
was vice president in 1911-12; he is a} 
member of Phi Beta Kappa, president of | 
the Massachusetts Delta Chapter in 1903) 
and 1919, ; : j 


a nel 


J 


Boston Camsrint 


324 WASHINGTON STREET, BosTon 8, Mass. 


| (Entered at the Post Office, Boston, Mass., 
‘ as Second Clase Mail Matter) 


Valentine 


Written by’ Josephine Preston Peabody 
for Abbie Farwell Brown in 1898; 
never before published. 


AMBERLOCKS and Ravenswing 
Wandered hand in hand 
Singing about ‘everything 
They could understand. ' 
Amberlocks and Ravenswing 
Ever had a mind to sing! 


Were they happy, were they drear, 
Swift they told their mind, 
Tho’ they met no listener 
But the hasty wind; 
‘And the weeds, that could not 
choose, 
Had to hear the oldest news. 
Very, very busy they, 
~Making poetrys all the day: 
Pointed stars out, each to each, 
With no need of other speech, 
Sunned their heads and wet their 
shoes, 
Trudged the roads and sang the 
news, ‘ 
(Since they had a mind to sing) 
Slept and went a-berrying. 


When they had no thing to say 
Still they sang the livelong day: 
“Nothing, Nothing, Not a thing!’ 
Amberlocks and Ravenswing. 


The other is Centaurea macrocephala Puschk., a native of Armenia, 
according to Dailey, and more or less cultivated here. we had a fine 
clump of it in the Garden for quite a while, but I think it has died 
out nowe 


Oldest Harvard Grad 
Marks 95th Birthday 


GEORGE A. PEABODY, '52 


OLDEST GRADUATE OF 
HARVARD IS NOW %5 
George Augustus Peabody, ‘52, Has 
Quiet Birthday 


Meorse Augustus Peahody Marva 


62, and oldest graduaty of that colleg 
Yesterday passed 1is 86th birthday | 

quietly at tis home in Danve 
he has been ill for the last several 
months there was no forn observ- 
ance of the sinniversary, but he wel- 
Fomed a tumber of friends who called 
at his home during the afternoon. He 
recelved many congratulatory messages 

and flower 

Ha ¥ In Salem, Aug, 23, 1831, 
son of George and Clar . (Endicott) 
Peabody. Follow !nge 5 graduation 
from Hurvard College he at- 
tended the Harvard law si , recely- 
ing his degree there In 1855. He never 
practiced law, however, He married | 
gusta A. Withe at Eol- 

WN. H. She died in 8. 
lmmediate farnily olrela includes 
rs, Mrs. William rowninshield 
Bnd ie tt s F and Bar 
Harhor i} Sears 


a= — FROM TI! 
THE INTERVAL HE VALLE 
Y AND MOUNTAINS 


PINE GROVE 
! PHILBROOK FARM My FROM cagoT 


SHELBURNE. 


yar y See 


ey 


~~ 4 dys ij 2 abs, 


LS eile Fp Se Oe 

The frat fhe. Liasifat 1% 
sont A herns « 

TGgtee ae f tha Lin, app fom cho 
Cue. wad ripe Nie coc ttal 

3 (ae 

‘the Ooo Vitec woh de sot f 


ts 
ts