Jump to content

HPB-SB-10-435: Difference between revisions

m
no edit summary
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
 
Line 17: Line 17:
  | item =1
  | item =1
  | type =poem
  | type =poem
  | status = wanted
  | status = proofread
  | continues =
  | continues =
  | author =Lee, Emma
  | author =Lee, Emma
Line 31: Line 31:
}}
}}


...
{{Style P-Poem|poem=You had wronged me cruelly, darling,
You had been unkind, untrue;
And I rose in the night of my anger
And talked with my heart of you.
Less than the winds of summer,
Less than the sands of the sea,
Less than the leaves of autumn,
I said, you are now to me.
 
 
But I saw your face for a moment
To-day on the crowded street,
And the might of my anger vanished,
Like a puff-ball at your feet.
More than the glories of summer,
More than the sands of the sea,
More than the harvests of autumn,
You are all the world to me.
 
 
Love is not love if it vanish
When a cruel deed is done;
Love bears all pain, all sorrow,
And yet goes loving on.
Better a blow from my darling,
Better his frown I see,
Than a kiss from any other,
Or the world to smile to me.
 
 
Better one touch of his fingers
Than the whole of another’s hand;
Better his coldest accents
Than another’s voice most bland.
It is thus I love you, my darling,
And nothing is love but this;
For bliss without thee is sorrow,
And sorrow through thee is bliss!}}
 
{{Style P-Signature in capitals|Emma Lee.}}
 
''Boston (U. S.) Transcript.''


{{HPB-SB-item
{{HPB-SB-item
Line 38: Line 79:
  | item =2
  | item =2
  | type =notice
  | type =notice
  | status = wanted
  | status = proofread
  | continues =
  | continues =
  | author =
  | author =
Line 52: Line 93:
}}
}}


...
{{Style S-Small capitals|Error}} involves loss, but not punishment. The retribution laid upon the transgressor consists in his being made to see the result of his sins, and to remedy it in all its infinitely ramifying consequences, as far as that is possible.
 
{{Style S-Small capitals|The}} heaven of the spirit is a heaven of ceaseless progress through the ages, higher and yet higher, reaching onward and upward to perfection. “Nearer, my God, to thee” is the motto which is inscribed upon it.
 
{{Style S-Small capitals|The}} consciousness of duty done, of progress made, and of capacity for progress developed, of spiritual graces nurtured, of truer insight gained and wider fields of knowledge opened out—this is the spirit’s reward in the past, its earnest of further progress in the future.
 
{{Style S-Small capitals|The}} future life, differing from the present one only in degree, and, in the states immediately succeeding this, only in a very slight degree, is a life of continued progress, in which the sin-stained spirit will be compelled to remedy in sorrow and shame the acts of conscious transgression done in the body.
 
{{Style S-Small capitals|Helps}} man has, if he will avail himself of them; but not a store of merit laid up for him on which he may draw at will, and by virtue of which he may reverse on his death-bed a character which has been the imperceptible growth of a life-time, the laborious aggregation of myriads of daily acts. For these acts man’s absolute accountability is emphatically maintained.
 
{{Style S-Small capitals|The Stage:}}—In the drama the highest thought in every age has found expression. While throne and altar forged and fastened chains, the poor slaves heard upon the stage the actor curse the injustice of the world, and wept with joy to see, even in a play, the captive free. In all the other walks of life, rogues, hypocrites and cowards oft succeed, but on the stage applause greets only those who represent the great, the loving, brave and true, or give to public scorn the very heart of vice.—''Ingersoll.''


{{HPB-SB-item
{{HPB-SB-item
Line 59: Line 110:
  | item =3
  | item =3
  | type =correspondence
  | type =correspondence
  | status = wanted
  | status = proofread
  | continues =
  | continues =
  | author =
  | author =
Line 73: Line 124:
}}
}}


...
J. R.—We wish, on our return to London, to inquire into the historical accuracy of the narrative.
 
{{Style S-Small capitals|Vice President.}}—Your letter is actionable at law, however justifiable it may be. You have not taken the public responsibility of your utterances by appending your name and address thereunto.
 
{{Style S-Small capitals|Recently}} we have received beyond the average of carelessly written communications, both of a private and public nature; the former without the addresses of the writers (who were otherwise known to us), the latter bearing internal evidence that the authors had not taken the trouble to read them through, to correct their own mistakes. We do not laugh upon the public the efforts of those who think readers can be treated so disrespectfully.


{{HPB-SB-footer-footnotes}}
{{HPB-SB-footer-footnotes}}