THE UNWRITTEN SIDY OF GREAT MEN.
■$ t .-.■ ■■«■■ ■ • ' in {he act of tbnm renown, grand,. silent and|(naj^f(j,-f/ ; this is hardly fajij b'epafeHhilTtaostjgraoious aud 6f. humafi 1 beings have to bother thi anialler things. of us little people, No doubfi Mbies snarled and got angry when he had a' sVvere cold in the head, and,if a fly Wt liia 1«» while he was in the desert why jshbuld we Bup. pose he didnqt. jump~and .ujfr violent language, ahd;rub' the isbre "i*l|<ie ? And Crosar— jceßtaiii; he used |ito beoonie^p^ip^ha^CuflitMf«. I to get o^rk#id' fouhdv } that had yndpr" ! the bed, he had to Sweap around [ for them wildly with a broom-hahdla lAnd • ifc uffM^l^^^th^^ra„ '■' - to cry! linagiiia ffeo < . Wqlean shut, cause the buttons were off; St,. Augostuu)
I ; : fiS 6 ! apron round his neok. having his |; ff J-.Jjbmi- of Arc, holdin R tier $ . =.iy2Sl^:m ; hw. - ttbnlh,'M women do, £ \;'^;:fM|e^d%hßrbackhairj.Napol<>on F :i U s3l?.ft?«fo f r'b?4 ?n a'.fFenzyito dinao I'' WW 1 -' night?hirtr trying to f ■■ PM<i»%to.Blflepat2 ; pMofikvi\the £■ : •- Jefferson gettingVud- • ■.■•';ti?!i■W i ß'l(t n e.fenceStp rlbc ?' : S-ri?P / i i^n *"" the mumps; i ' :W t W^r 'aou'sihgliis mfooewiuße' •'■sß? t ■■' tucked ithe:covers ati.the foot ■ • P^«^' S ! a ™ znr '> Jonathan Wanting-to aneeie us;-he. got hiajuou'th .full of hot ./-i-Pl.Noah standing[at his window at nHjhyhrroine bricks at a. cat,—Man ' Adeler, *."" v ' ' ■wEGHER-. ok GLADSTONE AND Pftfiiifctithe recent discouses in Ply-, m QHth;QfiMrph> ; Mr Beecher had occasion toaljuitrate apportion of his arguments ■by a .reference.to the-'careers'-of illustrious meii. i;.fle especially drew attention to the late-Lord•. Beaconsfield and the Prime Minister of' England, pointing a lossoTiTifhich'was' much'to" the""d'fttdva'n" ■ the''dead Statesman, • "No generous heart," hefiiiid,"loves to speak of faultsjliut when' 'I look at the moving ideas of Beaconsflcld's life—the line of his Bta'tftattfßTiship— the line of his inspinew truth has he aiVoovered 1 i'Wliat old truth has he left I burning brighter than before 1 What single •—> good, quality has he made more resplendent, noble and desirable by this humanrace? He.is one..of those.names that, like a pyrotechnic display, burns brilliantly jfor.the admiration of. the crowd. .When the wheeiceases to move it gne&out —it.i^?o,rgotfen,' His life is ended, his power is'ehded, arid he leaves nothing behipd'hira but'the.name-the name 1 But when ha.; who Btands high to-day in the administration of the Empire of Great Britain shall die he will have left many a work: behind him in the line of scholarship and elegant literature, and he will haVO'left 1 an Example of courage for that whioh iB-right, of ambition for advance in the quality of manhood. He will have left the example of a Christian statesman seeking.the, best things by the highest and'pufest ways; and if God spares his life, he will.Have.scattered, I think, from his country those great clouds which threaten so much, but which betoken the rise of. a better day—of a pure nationality and. a nobler morality., God bless our mother.laad! I have a reflection of her glolyjtandl both honor and revere that noble man, who. as a Christian statesman, Btanda pjfoudly-pre-eminent in the Councils of the world, for Iknow of no other. Not him of "Germany; and in my own laßßl where is theman? Of politicians we.have enough; of nascent statesmen we have enough; but where is the man that embodies in himself the royal idea of divine love; that learning, wisdom and akill in affairs \ There is room for such a man, and may God Bend him speedily 1" ' i ; ; \ —■ A Fact Wor.xriKiNowno.-In these times of retrenchment arid Enforced economy, both public and privatp, il is consolatory to know that thoSXwin'du's'/generally tempered to the shorn lamb," andnthat th-re are few m^tupe?| t w/thoutjcompensating advantages. With money in loss abundance its rarehasing.pawiriis'jgreafe-a pound now will go as far as thirty-shillings in the era of 2. ijftpetHy. 1 Aia pioofjof this, the readers of pdt : «%patagraph need only pay a visit to the Mfflwde' ofisurplns'stoolaat Jama Smith's, . ..' 31 tholHouse, (Wellington.: ; -'A,very full and elabiiaje catalogue of the mnnyjlarge.reductions mado jnjhe jmeps; of general drapery and clothing is enclosed"'with Satnday's (July 2nd) issue, and merits a careful perusal on nhoia&i,/ih6lelk"eep"erß, heads of families, opportunities,like the one at present under conßideKHbitj'bfcc'urljrf'feldom-'i'and'it is therefore of imnorianceihat the fullest adMi 1 edriicst period. well-witii the public as to the undoubted vetfKKylof Jits Wrtisecl pride's',•anil ; n'o doubt Wsny country'residents have a lively. ifflfaWinW'dMMtllfy barganisWy' secured in the pas' 1 ' i 'fif|Sai , , , if not superior ■ a to^f re ffiw"i¥%i'P fiei i ed -' oy' 0 y'i n ? toW unpriccdeiiy'loVrMW-at wHichHhtl goods aremarkeawdiJcbunts can be allowed during the saler As an additional a(tr«ib,''th'e ; will include''^'social' presentationfp :^6rth ' beautiful chromolitli'o- ! cardboard, size J ;fi4 v^crjef- 18 inches. No time Bhould therefore Hie lost in paying a «^!yi!'?jWp:th S; sur p lns. stpok r f.ale •WHftrfteln* 9 ilm mil i/i Uindwi. Tll-U11.1.. - II- -111. !'■ ;,. ... ,|,iK
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume 3, Issue 811, 5 July 1881, Page 2
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786THE UNWRITTEN SIDY OF GREAT MEN. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume 3, Issue 811, 5 July 1881, Page 2
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