Fort Worth Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 255, Ed. 1, Sunday, August 5, 1894 Page: 10 of 16
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IBSEN AMD HIS WAYS
He Has Equals in Modern
Scandinavian Literature
STR1NDBERG AND HIS WORK
He Is a Great Writer and an Imperil
tent Pessimist
JOKAS LIE THE NORSE NOVELIST
Ills nomnf An Characterised by t
Bright unit Funny Opllrnlim A oI
untai y Ktilm In Paris
PATHS July SS Uttlfl doubt lt
that Iben la ana of the thrco
great dramatists ct LU generation
It may be tht ho bulk larger la
tb ees ot tho youngster of to day than lis
Mil on j ean honco The chler reason for
this the fapt that the literature of the
modern Scandinavian stags U itmoit un-
known to Kngllth students and critics
When they have said Ibsen tbey have said
their alL III bourgeois studies oC hour
geols Ufa made a strong impression mors
by rcuqa of being aev than because they
aero true Tb last few ynn hats brought
a moro intlniato acquaintance with fleandl
tiavtau literature and boa realizo that
Ibia la not a giant among Norsemen bs
bulks but little larger than bU fIlow
August Strindberg wboso plays have
rninn in usl umwt
anUclpaua SHThaepny i
Kioetcemb CntMg wAyrgl
of Balur iftolatlif tirt la a
oUrganJfftfjOrrhtf mrrdlM Nhli m irJ
TVlWa nXV
iipcn cri nirg O ai
flil HI MB ICJUJJfl
all th XruUm that lifae
toiltatke Instinct Is almost euall by that
I ir naurc Tin blaring red sunsets of
i Turn r ni tt thirty years ag ws
t know that tbry cxlltoJ by b canTaaea
j rottlog ft tb6 art cUerlii Wfai n Monet
tHxan w pami ino lanaacapwa w
changed utterlr tbey had bfn Itk in
baary greei s nd bliiM clotted wb ahad
owa and patchea of light Rut Nawrs 1m
lUted Manet Franc whitened and waa
nHM iriUi maura and nolet ligbla It u
rTuallr tru that In Pflgland iiature Da
Imltatthl Whistler cocturnea
ttbln a few ywira Uiera will ba
of Lauraa of ttirtn lb laat few
yeara haa gln ua Nora Ilelnwre and 11
lido Wanicala llKlu and aioaa wura
clsiJn not equality with man thla waa
Nora flclmsri romantic tl o con-
tend for eupri djacr Again 1 bav noni
ltUon In predicting that the play l u
got aooree cf thcas women
trlndberga method la more clearly Men
In M1m Julia Froaen Julie Tola U a
tuiuui tlia ihiii jt wnlrh la lai 1
In ft country bouie Iho time la BL Jchn a
Ere fwitlral night The Count the waa
i nr hn hon ii ft war One Is In tna
VUchen Joan an I Chrlillnn two aerranta
are dlauanlog tbo Count a only oaugbtrr
Julia From the erTanta chatter one
loam that iho la pretty fooiuh ecopntrlc
abe bao broken off an engagement witn a
young nobleman of the neighborhood 8ho
has ntretol lioracif la the affairs of tha
peaaantryt h attends their dance anl
Jean the laekey fcre haa alngled out f r
apecial attention
Then this half mad girl cntera She t
neurotlo cplleptold In her excitement ber
half Insanity ab make fierce lor to tlio
cringing flunkey It la a curious love
cena It 1 a terrlbtft atudy Th acena Is
InterrupteI by tha entrance of aome ie
ont lo avoid them Julia hluei Mim jeau
in hi tx wirnom Ulien ther reaDoear tbo
girl prdo la broken ahamand daepalr are
UpOU nT OUt lu kixui muim uo
Jeau the matter Btrlndberga own wordi
aro beat em In air Justin Huntly Mo
Cartbys translation
Julio enter aen the dleoror In the If it
cbo and lai her hanils Then ah take
a powder puff and wrwder her far
JvAO fVatvra ftwiisu iuiii j mu t
I
HLvnm TIIHIV
benn the noveltjfnf tb Tarlalan flratnuti I
eeaaon la aa inwarful a Jforrtt In thfl Nur j
drama at lltnrlfc Iblicn IJ v
ny o parenthMfa llial hta lr
been jwrformed JnOeirnatr n f
time I heard QUtrtu IlHnl
year ago In nag Bason i
he Independent Theater f T J
pre in t Froken Julio next avi
A mana work oro tb tat c nn
on Ma llfo I dn not think It la t i
to any touch afeou the ftnrly T
cf this etreauoui Ewftd Hewiatj at u
forty j uara ago X lbleve In i i
without QOey or trtenda be tr t to
make hla war tbfoitth the Ui i if
UpsatiL II o had eltaathini of ti fi i
booter In Mo In tbAt tu i 1 - f slit I
paiertr In many faJMilnna aid mat I
tlacoa Ite wat au Ubrr lit a ad 1 r
apoUieearyi drudge a super In tbo tut tt r
In th ind ha drlttfd Into Journal Uti tin
had no gragh for lul fade and gave It i p
altogether bon lo aecutM an - ji i
litirwlanjhlp Ita had written a cc tipi f
UnnnccciKfiU plnya bjffrti this but it imv
be aald that M literary lira date from id
tlm h turned hi bark 6h JaurnaiUtn lie
vroto no veli hch gained lilm mow dl
tlnctlon With thrftol am not faiulilar
but I understand lixtyifVTY on the reaiiatk
tradition itUIeU baicoma dot n thro igh
SaUaa aol Zola IX pliyt aro nuittrt
which mora nearly concarn ua To sU
Ihey aro a force In Kuioiwai UourUi
Fadren I am eptyMtltf iiil xrt a
greater Influence oA tha jlrani t f tbo future
than any atugle rUj yfcu ran awo be It
ahoeta La Parlelenne banl what
yoq will BLnnilbrxarAt Uy Master
OUf wi produced in liSt lu tbo Kw
TlKSter RtorkhalaU It wae not until 1887
that Fadrmi waa glTn to the world The
torocltua trivlalitlea nC Henri Iiecquo anl
Oeeaf Metenlor aro a water unto win com-
pared with tbla bitter tragedy
btrlndberff la a illatlnguUhed and Im
puUfit pfBtlnittt In thta be I at one
with tbo crftai iUlnkefi of tha past vitb
all tha moral and all the rotulo roct
la Ma caao Ihejta tlack Tlens of life are
deepened by bit pool and solitary exist-
ence aud hi eplteptlo nerva He does not
VipUe men anl Ufa Uh tha aJry indlffer
enca of the young wrltera of the day His
hatrc If Iruial and enomou aa that of
rlwlft U moro than a paulon it la a
malady Neither Bhakeapear nor Iialtao
baa flayed the human beaet so rclnutleisly
a thta cold Nort r Tha hlms of tbo flesh
tha bruUUUf ot -Instinct tha grotesquorlva
of he educated cftnattoncw the universal
IrrciponalbtUty and gotKm -not even Do
tnlttsky nan laid -them Mr with luch un
paring hand- To Und his prototype ono
would have to go to the Greek at indeed
mis haa to da to Qnd tha genesis of any
new mowment in art or letters The
Nortexen to day are merely teaching u
tbt old lessons ot tha CI reek 4ratoa The
ld inuMilona and snarl under tbt
Arena coat and jlbue hat It t Uie iamb
arld very coll very Iromouilu viry bard
very sad ulcered with anaieot ill Thai
Btrlodlrif haa laid beavy emphatl upon
this truth tn beta oUya of flippant and
fatuous tptiunxm mf I awoumed to htia
tar a cerUlw aort of rlirhtsauenMa
And this plat The rather
It U roeroly iha old duel uf x the eter-
nal war of the mat and female Laura
1 the modern woman as tha female novel
lu and tfule drainatUU bare uviK tt her
And here Jep ma uy that t am qakA if
Odtr 0nQ m it la these tnattnra lfd
ImttaiM 0i rltUo Tha yellow At4rifl
aoinan tbt oiwjiftvi lif ewilay li la
wnwmn MSje
part ot lite
a creation
rnlstlaii of
li I
I t
nVIl
mi
f it Un Ir
b the t 0
Utrr Oai T
Jitk Iblt I
must t i
t ifi
-
lieer i i u JM tUvsi uudMf
u No M irf lt leaMlHaii dwT
l ii f Jay itwiiiflw
1 1 To I nut wbeWl a j
It ft beautiful t
eterrtal unHitt Ofni rcrn
t
i Olt wlutt shall ws rt Wro after
vo rill iart a first eUta fcai rn
I the jfr to vtftx
hi fM ties iBiiMAJliii roi n
i a iuw far woMyjlielTv rM
thing af r mvm otWtffQr i
i JtwTf NIkIiI unit the t i
list a I i Ana WtAt nr
I
Ji
f IK JU ll
II Uo
i j j Ji v aX Uy ilit
r M t it i i tn lUiti
w morning rmni Funk
1j d i nufl a are In C ii
It 1 f UU in lt ma t f
tl u I
ell er fnn Jlut Jo m mi
r iri Say thai vu lu
u Lnr ma in jnur arnm
Jean i Hiseltd ii 1 would like to butt W
r N t hirv 1 1 this house I line you vi i
nut dnubt V i von dault It
flii Say thou to me ntw cn us
lane are mi Iftikfr any barriers Say thou
Jean tnittkJtl cannnt Thsra are sttll
ArttMI brton us so lng as we remain In
thl houar It rrn the wst tt roal th
Cuunt 1 ia nv4V met any man who com
iMlleil such renpe t from me I hav enly to
tie his bIovl lylna on a Ulle to ttmX nutle
small I hno Ltity iq hear hi Iwll anl I
XM l hnn Au hvn I I
at hl Im ts u ndini thorn an Mitt and staUly
11 inokrs i shiver Ha t aaW the boot
i i frttit I ineraililnn npiuilii
bit wi i t
i Urtten into us fnmt ohllJheuJ
i iH ftaVrr fraa nt If vk
inn wo enotntr eeunrrv into a
i
111 Citn hlMinlA Hhall linul iik
Hut 1 shall nm kneel dtwn 1 am uot bora u
ItTicl nr there 1 stuff In met hst1 is chsr
a ir In me anl It once I rearh th lowest
branch you sasll wateh me ellmb To day
I am a lathe tut nnt year 1 am a pn
I nytw tn a few years I shall bavs u InMfrae
and then I run Off to ltttinMoTa nhere I buy
a decoration I rsu miark well that I say
can -die a count
Julie HeautUul beautiful
Jean Ah I Ueumanfa a man can buy a
count title and than yuu will U a eountess
my count
do I ear for what I have east
aside Bay that you love m ur eW h what
am i tiiw
Jean I will say It a thouisnd times liter
en Uut net here Anl abo all liys
terles or all Is lost We must manan the
affair quietly Ilk sensible popls 111 TtskeS
outa rigtr ws m td and lights it fit
dawn there end I will sit hwre and then we
can hat as If nothing h1 baptned
JuliaOb my Oodl hav you no feettnact
JeaI why there U nn ne mnre seuslUr
than 1 but 1 can eomtnsud my feullnga
J till A short ilut bbo you wvutd bav
kUcml my shoe and now
Joan rntdlr VVn b roro Hut now 9 hare
gamathing W to it i k Kbtiur
The clrl has no money Jn vtih inm
and curses drives her to rob her fathir
box When she returns he Insists upon sot-
tittx err at
tn take her
cansx with hwr loan snit ln s from her
u lltn - urai irani wan pa
alun hum hat i 1 1 hat a turn upou
hlu and mi bn ct i ui enters the
i t ShPiaiiitKsi for ht is h hotit
v- i rii imn Mr
J in t
h iil r ti
tt
1
t 1
t t 4D thruita knltfl Into
n r i m I pi ie g - mu to Kill herself
i h s I- n nn mint yt irj Utrg mpBt
p i v BrlH H bHH told
li p rh hsi b i EiVen t
1 s i lh th aunding
fvco or pathos ot this Swedish tusaterplec
tin I sirindtmrg tUttd for tho best
hlPra Jnavl drwra TbeUadlng novol
t t -art buth k rwcyUat H would savor
J J i WKEk JJM j - -- Si T Otr H 2lfa CT
THE GAZKlii JfOlCX WOltTII TEXAS SUNDAY AUUTJST 0
of takod funeral meats to write of that
grand gray giant HJornn Jonas Lie
however was virtually nnkniwn to tha Eng
llh readlDg public until a fw weeks ago
ben a translation of hi lat r at nits ap-
peared In London It U Ilka pausing from
a morgue to aunny fields to turn from
Birlndbrrg to He lie baa all the blltbs
and sunny optimism of a girl In love
ren when he ha occaelon to write of that
naughty world where tha convention of
virtue disregarded ne still cries cneeniy
Alls for tha belt In this beat of all
deml monde
He was born In Tromioe a hyperborean
town In tha Arctic Circle It Is a pleasant
pla however nestling In a green Island
abelte rod by thn akrrfs from the blasts of
the north I or many yenr Lie ba lived
In Tarts a voluntary exile like Ibien of
Munich Hut be has alnaya bad a gragh
I Ioto that word for the land of his birth j
the glamour tl nf the north la epon blm
Hers Is hi own words
There the condition of nature aro Intense
the contranta colossi There atretrn dsserts
of gray stone s In prehistoric time e e
man jwi iarnta to matte niraim Dim
lion n smldat It alt an Incredible wealth
of aspert A sua a summer splendor which
does not last for tuvlv hours only but tor
three months altheut pause c aseleesly chang-
ing In Loamy with a prodigal variety cf bril-
liant hues A transparent perfumed Simon
there si limpid that ohJortB ity miles away
Itwk rtoRe at hand iht fields put on a xrcen
brown mantle and the little Mrrh tree dance
high tip on the slop like tings ot damstla
of 1U llhllst the fragrance nf atrawtierrles
embalms ths Mir with a penetration greater
loan In any reatnn els where the days te
come m warm that nn Is fain tn bathe In Iho
marrelouBly crystalline pool Hut the con
trast nine months nlht cf dnrkn mi and
when the sUrnin fall tliimb from the
fields wwpinn off the dwftllnns In their
rage and the wares of the try sea mother the
high rrnfa and the Islets In their fmim end
sometimes smash the boats near thn roast on
the Tery hod or tlta sea Itsolf laid tr by
their mighty tt nmha 1he giant renditions
without any ef the ordinary trannltlnns be-
tween the extremes are conditions Ihnt engen-
der fantBr panrip anil hitwaril ruthur thn
slow and sure Ithor
Lie tKi after the Scandinavian fnthlnn
concerns himself with woman position In
marriage lcrhap this I lnvlUble This
Is the age of woman She dominate every-
thing liar llttla Alaerppant emotions aro
studied she is taken seriously Ther
jwms ti be no remedy for this stato of af-
fair Henry ljabourhero urges the govern
meot o put to death all women over 40
years of age but that Is only a make-
shift
Lie a Views arn nf the Inst century lie l
soul brother to Mis Tane Autttln Ills so-
ber anl earnest stories Uiach how this
jeresy will shock the molern woman 1 that
lovo and conjugal duty are one Hut It li
not for hi dldactlex that I ak you to lovo
Jonna Lie Faith not For ho I lord nf
the ma tn Is heir to all the Viking III
home I n the deep pine r wets or far North
on the strong ioU sea Ueal The Pilot
and His Wife read Rullntid road Tha
Man with Heoond Bight and you Mil know
thq aaa as you hare novr knovvn It IM
mund OuVa pronounces Lie tha greatest of
Norways novelists an pinion ltb which
I do uot agree In aplto of tht high author-
ity of Mr Ootso s name I do not cars for
his piyehology I do not lne hi gently
dr mot rstlo gently opiimlMie lovers and
spousLrt I cannot bring myself to believe
that life Is all beor and skit tine nnd ma rl
tunny It Is when be summons strong us It
wind and tho whitening sras that I take off
my hut and saluto hlru bypeiborion lord
and bttlr of tbo iklnga
yams innwrOt
CZREWITCII AND HIS IMANCEE
tlio uiiit foui Who Hay Rome liny
Ittilti tlyr All thn Hum in
Tiie portrait of the Caarortitei given
Usrawltb Is tho tat it out tahen nt Parm
lad I tho we It nfi r thn piarrnjo uf
Uta Grut I UuKj u 1 iJilrbrm or Haw
when t e taiiltth vielmd ilj fuiura
wife i iclaUfjiii t9 boon r tho engage-
xrtv cJKwrroi
hup was taida nulul rh Dihm
f t vtua plcturv la ula i given her
Sfe to flatfcorad by the pirtrat 1
ulu to appreciate bt m t n v mr
nt V h r fti l Untra W 1 ft deligli
i i Aa she speaks the cbaug
l 1 i p her expicsalun and her
mat nn mi tiaas or cusatt
deep lntelllrenoo fa set nates eyery ttne who
has
tho urlvileee of hearing hr
Tho liaarewitoh Is -at presont Tlilllng
Queeu iotorla He will t married to
the Trinces AUx aeXt September so
that In th natural course of events aha
will It she live be Lmpreaa of all the
Kusia
Jluuiul to He duratea
toting nien sen the Uwiston Mat
Journal wbo tiae to ssjrai u hard fr en
educatlun nowadays may think ihetr efforls
and ssotMcm Iras arduous if ihey buy Uie
Itev lr Joseph Itlcker a account of his be
from his borne tn IsreoafieM user tbeew
Hauipshlre Hue to Watorvllie With i iirt
of Ms nojwhi tnught bat of vheat end
had ground In lite mill aud took It la hi
mom In thw colUht IU then beuuht a Jig uf
iboUihi hired u woman to da hie bikiat
and Ms eakea end molasses formed bis dalfr
food tor lbs first term
AiiTmiNbiC
II I a country 1 1 the sun
lull if fortmlti n yesterdays
Wbuii liftw Unas Bummer In his earo
And nil the cutanea of hsr gate
UstTet kea itutn the open sea
T th Mup n y n tnlns nnd beyond
Tho w ii u nstunda
To hi u nfc s a sgebond
In tbo bralanuH Uod mad man
Out of ih wmndertsg dust rose say
And In thH end hi life shall be
A wandstlnit Ind and blown away
There la a tavtrn I have heard
Nit tir and frugnl kept by One
ih kn thu thlldntn of ihw Word
nd wulfumea each when day Is daae
Sumv v t h uan Is ioueh set
In r rthern nljthr nnd snowdrtns keep
Tne Blletit door he hearth t rold
And alt my follow gou4 to sleip
Hal I mymi her the sea
Thunder wt oo the shore
know wbro llva tho hosulry
And b shmiid niien nw the dior
C nmn m a Wk t Lyrics
AN OLD BATTLE FIELD
A Vivid Description of the
Sceiies About Paducah
CHANGES SINCE THE WAR
The
Country Between Fort Henry
and Fort Donelson
WHERE GRANrS ARMY MARCHED
fHow the Gibraltar of the Cumberland
Looks Toly IoTr os It IVas and
Is eellog of the People
DOVfcn Tennr Aug 2 Tho Influence
of friends rather than any merit of my own
secured me a staff appointment after the
battle of Mill Spring Ky and 1 was at
onco transferred to the Army of the Ten-
nessee thrn being assembled under General
Grant at 1 alucah Slnco that day In early
1cbruiry lbt2 until a few da ago I bad
not visited Isdumh
I am reminded here of a fact nblch must
have before tbls Impressed many people
North and South and that I that up to
tbo civil war there was no country of like
area lo the world so entirely tradltlonlesa
as the United States west cf that strip of
roast line In which our forefathers carried
on tbo ww for Independence There arc no
moro beautiful rivers t t tho world than tho
Cumberland and the Tennessee yet from
their lOurca In the Appalachian range to
their mouths In the Ohio up to 1SG1 there
was neither bend bank nor stretch that
had connect d with tt an Incident of ro-
mance unless it might be the somewhat
rnrimost hiumk u avb BFrrtTEn
CIlANOK JH T1IS HAQiKt AKI 1IMJY
mythical dolni attributed to Drnie on tho
uumperiana i ot rur rmm aonurset uet
tysburg ithli was only a baautlful rural
village the slopes ajout It th pituro
flnlds for peaceful kino till the til rlt of
contenting armle liftel BT0ty u i itiu
aid valley nut stream Into Ufa height uf
Immortality
I hi gen much of th gffaoilest scnerr
In the world but I doubt if Inad cau
rKal In alclu e q h stittj tan aicly vtl
i it that U taecn the rajnpani of tho
Mkfiheoy nt 1 Cu nlrl tiif rntujr at ret
tig rain tbo Oil j u li t It th fill awtt
nto fdgl hills Ji tibifgH oid Alabami
t tlm rtgiari of tr in iUyt and moun-
tain pock r ro of tt n ro it rturtrnfece and
hpUjiit thay hor the i mi tut hao their
wroca In tho glci c b 1 ghts Jial ony
trsdUIua sruiectl th 1 1 ri That iitm l
he heart or mm i i pl boat Jtajter till
me gu 1 fctiUHf nogttxon tr tiint was
to gi vn btnw tJsn Potato to cry local
name alnna tt r Sanimlniv ftnetie
lbltMit iriiiiiiatM 1iTam mi
was mil
11 p ma II tJM 9li in
onili
Vn
Illg T n 1
i Iml - I ko
now tht f i
Irt I ttr Uitt i
lur In th
ani IodVId
tne mgffrtl i
Jtms the m
Inlciost that
i i
n Jtt i
nf
lli -
r i antu
i
Ih thn
li lge t
I Ig I 1
i I I I r it i I
d I t I ig I
ii tho i 1- i ijf vr t j
of 1 1 t t th t uih
Is ape nun u fiun ition and
o unKnt wn tu th 1 i idor
uf 1800 AI the rliliro bo a i tin iJints
III but of il nggs army nn 1 th hmiir
r th I lirll n flfnaa
UIWI TIKllll l
in t f if iu iiAH i
tl ns ie I Jtss tlthaait to a at ittiirlto
i II of t 1 Uintuauga wliili ii ilm Inn
ntte of the Therokeca nuans a river of
1 1 Tie does not a tk to lnrjulio tho
mlKin of tha aboriginal name for ho Know a
t It well that It deserves its appellation
thu ugh a more recent and gig ant k stiug
glo If It were his fortune good or had to
be a member of Uher army In November
1863 as ho gazes over the fclorlous laad
soape h will forget the lapse of long
year ami aggin see tha nimie of tha
Union and those of tho Confederacy facing
each ether on the mountain anl plain He
JH recoil tho ulght in November when
the While Star lLMalou of the Twelfth
Corps began tha asoult on the mountain
Through the black uncertain hours he wilt
hear the thunder of the artillery again and
again like fireflies see the flashes of ths
rifles aloug the mountain side He will
remember tho awful suspense that came
upon the armv when tho Ilrlng died out
and the 7ft otM man waiting to assault
Missionary Illdge resting on their arm
Impatient to know how the faattlo ha gone
Again he will see dawn breaking over
the mountain to the east and looking
eagerly to Lookout sea It envoloped In
Clou Is as b looks tha ctouda rise higher
and higher like a curtain on a mighty
battle icene and s tt lilts ho will see
through bla glass men In blue along the
mountain where eterdny men tu gray
Mnbw0 1hw M1 Ww
it will lift uatll at last the cloud Is die
alpaied anl he will see on the higheat
point where jsebmUy flatLd the banner
of Cbeatham a Corns the Star aid htrlpea
borne to tho tophust point by Goary s com-
mand Again he will hear the mighty
eheer of tbs lnlon army as It recognise
the vict ry of It comrades on tbo right
and again be will sea the blue wart Itaal
created sweeping up against Missionary
Hldge and ncitlog the batteries on th
Aud so if he will take the route recently
taken by myself from rtuiunooga th At
Isnta overy hill and i alley anl itieain will
recall to hint some deed of daring on tho
part of friend or foe
Tho Mississippi ha been called the great-
est and grandest river tn the worii but
P t 1801 tt Is doubtful it even Siberia
bad a river Jnore InUnaely prosaic From
Oalro to New Orlo in tu numbered Islind
and its muddy bends were a wan tin In
htsterto Interest a tha Dert f Sahara
tt I no longer so
Hvery island every curve every town
and every bluff la now replete viitb hti
torto Interest
Taducah at fh mouth of the Tennessee
i not Ilka the Faduoah Itivcr of old The
froni the rivers commerce which one
iuAi h a taming mput and a center lar
the trade of the lower Ohio It haa grown
by natural increase vud has intuti of the
thrift that characterises a Aortit rn town
Its men are as hospitable as of vjM a the
- etiirniun ut Kinft mrv quite ai beauti-
ful as their mothers which is yirut nmeh
Tilginmn wh ootunuudoJ Fort Henry ub
twiiuuu Hiuvu was cauinartrt
to lbrllr fc hnu cn 0JSnS
ta Phi n a PtinSnkla mnA n xvu
p Irom CAirrf or dqu rrom Iouliviila
unm imanirr tnttm a talrr tor
On iiwtil Vtailftn up lw Tnnw
nJ 1 nmAnbcr vW aittlncUy u ajrlt
S11 J1 a t wen of
durH behli lb Hr41J tpctfl nd
na red u calon ot th Coarlorcr 1
rffeU
m
which tha women carried on their breasts
Floct of gunboat In tho center of a great
rontlnent were a novelty In warfare but
they proved Id be m it potent factors In
thn and the aubsequi nt eninpaign along
tha MiisiaaiDDl and It tributaries Had
theta steamers beet gathered for spectacu-
lar effect with their streaming colors anl
many band th teult noutd have been
all that tha gwatcat potentate couli deir
but on this occasion tho humblest spectator
could not blind mmseii to tneir srm bib
nlfieanee
Th Tfinnpasee la Indeed a OUeeniy river
unchanged after thirty three years a It
will be ror centuries to come ivuay a
IsinlHsw
m7WSWm
ma ifiumT urra enix roitr ort uotsaa
U41XCU T UCT LET OB tlHAI B MtOT
find tbo clearings and woods along its
banks the drowsy little Milage and the
log cabins with occasionally a house uf more
pretensions much as they were when in
early February the transports and gun-
boats rnoted up to attack Fort Henry
Frtfodono seem to have effected ro chanr
In the crowds of ragged anl happy negroes
along the banks or singing lu groups at
tho points where tho steamers take on
wood
I remember wo expected to have a hard
light at Fort Henry and that the veriest
military povlco was surprised when it sur-
rendered with hardly the show of a con
teat
Uetwoen Fort Henry and Fort Donelson
the Cumberland and Tennessee approach
nearer to each other than at any other
point Knowing that Urge reinforcement
were coming up the Cumberland to meet
him Orant made no stay at Tort Henry
but vith come 20 000 min crossed tbo
panlDSjla to attack Fort Donelson then
under the oommand of General Flod
Ileforo starting on tbla trip I bad an
Mclpated much pleasure In going over the
Hue ot the old campaign but I must
confess to s feeling ot Indescribable sad-
ness a alone I turned my bone s head
eastward to follow the course taken by
Urnnt s army That army composed large
ly of Illinois troop was for its num
bers as fitio a body of men as over shoul-
dered a musket or drew a saber All were
young Intelligent eager and confident anl
although as tbey advanced tb hal and
elect beat Into their faces I can recall
the battle light that gavn a certain beauty
to even the homeliest How many of them
are loft How many returned after the
four years of desperate struggle to their
Illinois home and how many ot these
fortunate ones survhe to the present day
fw years more I said to myself
1 and thn last of these mm will have an
sware d the myetta angels bugle call and
iroarod the dark river to the white tent
if the gllbnt and jolnot the gnat army
f comrade gone before and mly history
nr the local traditions ot the places they
1 tu made famous will survive to tell of
their valor But the r h b which tbey
tit tji v 111 be drained on 1 the battle mount-ins
on whloh tli v lie will be leveled
with tha plan b r r th awry of tbetr
Anting dies out r i the r of their hero
Ism fit ej to a IT t nn nd
Ther 1j abstlut v ni chango In tho
country bctwui J its iipnry anl Don
elson It ia iht mnin heavily tlmberol
ruillns lai 1 Ii v aa ot old cut Into gulcbus
at tha boticm of whkh floy atrsgrns Into
tha immnerlaml and thn lannHiM
Kxreptlug Vloksburg tha Confederates
had uo otrongw post In tha Wast stronger
K
iiaiiu ii iiuv uunkPis urn iqb 0m
n It tiy l i t c
el i i I i
e 1
j nbc
proper i nij I
acr BOii our If I L i
tioue outlying hirin
tha i TlH TianfUnti
tl i nic of a bend
a on tbo
u t river Im
f I the fjrt
t bout slty
v fits and
i Ho p r
About thoio w r for 40A n rnn n i
lb timber m rolled tbo trooi falllrg
outrraril end tlilr hraache sblrpemd ao
u to pmrnt ormldblo abattl to au aU
Urklnft Army
Tho bottl of Tort Dnnrl in was tbi
Rrrfi
tilt JUL t
i ii b h
t nt i
al cl i i
rcn kip I
i er oiip 1 1 li
tod la
Dut It h
n 1
Hi
ti tho t
t III
roill atik iiitn
ind uattk
1 moil hrre
rami Tin
ititBin r
1 lOV Bill
llvir Dnrk
t the Con
nirnm i a
now me tatilo w i f iK t or ths victory
on but n not ilio olwn mad by
time slnro that Sunday morales on th
1910 ot robruary 18112 btn ivilto flan
Dooteil rom all Iho omluncM ot llio criat
tort and tbo I nlon Army marched In
Outer la cupola ot who Court Houa
rlt tm niiKl with
tho drd nud wjundrd or both 1 Im after
the bitll at Port Henry th trooir
earthwork ot Honolaon aro rapidly
log to tho level ot tl hllu mi lo th
wnt and north a trong room enmth
1 rim1 th t1M on CouplJd
by tho abattl
that proved o dlMtroui to
our chrglo oolumni Doter Itelf l but
little chatted tb mhahltonti tl 1 polm
out hou rkI by bullet or srape
hot and all th older naldmcM haV
hltorl talu by retuon of their avtas
W p aoM to which M great oldler ai
carried wounded or In which ho Ud
Thl n not tho onl light at Uoneln
lwaiiboquntlytuckeO T byI orretVho
a dlarniuly repul01 d thl II tl
hnrIVr ta ui tai been
tho focu ot
tome of tha moat ilrrtne
aeenv ot th ar llre nr to b found
core of nun aol wl11 dlt nMlJ
rmrabr th Ornt bowl and all T ub
atviucnt fight and ho ar quit rdy to
s1 W bout
t n them
Although
tm year bvt adJm
tlwao troublou time olher
general on
must come anl go botoro h l f
jrerdrd by tb conma bmSj
The men lth hom I found th greatest
Plenaure n talking here j oro tie Told r
fMtate sodlni UWC ho rimcJ
rated In the conniel llrato IIIm
lbr at they do not withhold thtnwd a
SriM Km l ce 0gb In peak
nrot th gaiuitr 0 ih emmiSuSi
D oXS 1 Obr4
At a oiatter ot tact did not out
number them two to on but our
army
btttr appomud nd mora ably commAV
ani1 liiolor 10212 itf
ct tt Confederate
but
tow bo
nour
bfor thi rend
hJSplu 0 SiSSJ
noloVcdd KS HS nr
m oiueohat In tilkKi itVh uKi plnM
nay Men taught to
apeak cf a Vnnv
aouMwhat footaroptnou uul thl
o doubt
i
roajiway fc
SllgUltj CloiuidlottiU
Krora rarwn We liy f
oidsjni Ttrouu1d4 if-
ssssr tnr pji1
sQtm
fy -
DAVID B HILL AS A SENATOR
His tearlfsness nnd 1illlty Have Won
II im Friends In Ilotti iArll
Washington Aug i It Is somewhat
amusing Just at this time to note
the surprlie that Is manifested by
well Inform d men of both tb great
parties because of tho strength ilevelopod
by United States Senator David D Hill as
an orator and debater tn tbo higher branch
of our National Legislature Frc mfnent
newspapers too have derptcd columns to
tbe sudden rise of this man from a petty
politician to a man capable ot more Chan
holding his own with tbe beat men In the
United States Senate
There ate few men In public Ufa wore
misunderstood than Senator Hill He has
been depicted as a peanut politician as a
friend and patron of the saloons as a aeml
thuif as a man of small mental caliber
and less education and so on and so on
It may surpriso some persons to be in-
formed that all these statements are wrong
When that romarksblo Judge of men Sam
uel J Tllden tonic tip young Hill then a
young lawyer and newspaper man and n
member of an utterly corrupt legislature
yet under the stigma of tbe Tweedrlog he
dll It because Hill had shown himself to
bo absolutely fearless and lncorrtiptlblo
His courago indeed Is one of his strong-
est points Ho has I een called an ally 6f
Tammany Hall As a matter of fact
Tliehard Frokcr waa opposed to Hill tn the
first Dut Hill Md behind him pretty much
the whole Stato of ew Vork outside of
New lork City and Tammany Hall bad to
eat the leek
It Is also tiua that In all bis career Hill
ha held tho ordinary sort of politician at
arms length He I escntially a tactician
He never yet went Into a fight that he had
not prepared for aod no argument can move
him from a position once taken He I ab-
solutely fearless He fights hi own battle
anl takes all responsibility
Tnero is no man in public uto viobq
habits aro more above reproach Uo hai
never tasted a drink ot liquor in his life
Ho never smokes Ho Is unmarried but
no scandal has ever been breathed of In
connection with his name
I am marrltd he said to mo once po-
litics Is my wife
Hero he rpoko truly Ills whole mind
Is given to tbo study of politics of the high
er sort and thero Is probably no man lu
public life who Is better read In tho hl
tory of great political revolutions of all
uunirea man is senator Jllll
Senator Hill has boen sneeicd at as a law
yer by somo critics and yet the fact re
mains that tho law firm of ivhich he I
head Is credited with earning the largest
fee ever pal 1 In any simile case In thin
country It was In a case against Cornell
University and Senator Hills firms foes
wero in the hundreds of thousands ot dol-
lars Outwarlly Senator Hill I one of
the most Impassive of men an 1 yet at tlmr n
h9 becomes In a wny an enthusiast -but
not in public It Is a fact tMt his political
enemies all like him because tn ttu
expression or the chief of thr httt
In the onen and vmi Vunt h inri
him
Mr Hill cares nc thine f r Hi n - nr
uiier una ins one dlsslp f nn l all
Ills buflncsa i politic H nuv n ver
be Presllont lut a a u i n tl ur lu
politics rwtdy fertile and s 1 t thoro
I perhaps no man who fllhj s mu h of tbe
public ejo as he does
DR HOUGHTOTS WAV
A Clerxjmnn Who Mullein Hf
iinrt Nuickt n Tin Oi l
tw the
aVlHM Comnrcll Oatt
- irrovrs
M3WiOM i 4
Ono of tho last men In N rk wi om
one would think or charging th V In
fraotion if a city ordinance i t fir
George Houghton ret tor of thi ruui h cf
the Transfiguration more populi h I ni
na the Little Church Aroun 1 the r w r
in Twenty ninth tnut near Fifth av ue
L Dr OLghnn regularly 1 nt
which some of our sapient local I ik
ers have said must not be done Th lavi
makers yeara ago declare 1 thn fi irh
sparrow to bo an lntotopsr a thlof a t illy
5nltataU a nmin They al
o or-
dained that no elttun ehoull house or In
tl WayFtertaIn the PUf
And hero is the head o 1 ft Cf
IJr Houphton a offending
Mmrm I tiw IliB fftvunln f
Houghtr rhurch pi I rp i
of the pi pi lest liuie
po s 1 1 iT
of the tlLy Ther la chare l g h
greon pv rd
ebidd by r ir
Gtl V t rrtep aPouad ih D ho
nn n juuniain in trio u rl
alia totb boauty of tho Kfr i
f am s v nd gttraft th t t
loo tbo c but Dr Hou ht n hi a
Tho ria ill haa bfcn t it u
louy of lilrdft
oho i th i
otrrow whlPh nl y kn vi n
1 p It r s It I a pro ip
l03 an I thr lm it to thn
type of birds do nnt Ilk t i
a I ubllc pl Thiy prof r
of Central 1ark v0 h r
pr Itoughtnn i lion nt tl
a muio una nrip h brc h
r
before
mourn c
kf f lht n d nt kioi
brlght oyI clcr lively fealhrd V- It
ublaultou mi iSS m
MCtSH IH RETIREMENT
Tho yir11 - rldnt or ITIneeton
1 reel l ilZl
NEW YORK Ausuu 4
I met on troajway Iho other day a man
ffiSSS - -
ho did not cotuo to vn i a unuI
tor frlng ot IdThlk uT
n or wrlnk rd and hla Si
anco I a Jaunty and youthful a tES I
wSSAfS
ng reading om day Fir th
length and orejuih tfSSli
gl lakliialli v lkHd m
From th YartSiioo sZ
oboSandrolSa X B
tmrd tliS SfJ SrJi thl I th
Ihu eek B fluarter
k5 r t mr lurk a lettln i
tunc i72Joa fememher
iiiiwi tn ympalhtti on
t d3M I
Tli Prograi
ttS5i
vCVJr laynir mat ti
PRIESTS IN
ine ForlheorDlnj j
encfiaristie
T NUMBERS 30f
A Toplo to II i
- li
od J
NOTRE DlMRlnj 1
h
- Uuies to c of ari
Interet 10 M
Church Th oranlJj3
In tbla convention fJ
lift In f - SJl
thing ha eir r1
country in fur n
United Bute thoujuT
In Europe mora nik7 1
lo prhap th
In th orld puVjS
ive
cortinu ui
1
i ft
prtcjis and no
CAUPrtAl CTSBO
ary orders The UiAam
ganljtation aro in fari iiu
aui4 MVtiUUe VPiW
Tho h id f tho hum lith
is Uishop ii g of CovitiirXt
Ullltl UI
iri lu 1
t vm nihi r Lu
h L j
fectloa ot
dovotl n
The L
rouniry
an Am a
whte
utility
r a
a ot acres
e la tnturitff
y sillmr w
orK
than 15
la expected that t 1
theio matter wi Je
boped tbat out ci
action toviard carlo WV
dlaablel IBW
a may be
old ago It I 10 l WJ
Midi botweeu rrlJiM
l nf nHBStf M
moit p a leal to
trt Unn to th CrTOtrS
satlierlng at Sot
tnnuima to tho
acrib d mat la
in Ituto on iui 5 Si
of th relan ma bet f
will il
aupdi i it
0LW w
It tO
li iliill
i i h f It w ljii
TO rty tb ill I 1w
i l in- rre
ly w Ad tha I Mat I
ia H iil
nopalortowftJS
Utllo it may tcm rZ
JSVfl
fevAJ
I
meobtretcn
ArcbtUiijp 4 1
nn Urjirmi t
o ginertl ri
1 L9i tlfrc
ed streais
rit Uinivii
u shtpg nt Bs
T v bad Kto ft i
d tiw
t b icfluj
t j I t ai ti synifutif
ga iiza r rapidly ai ki
t P hoM a iou
Hon For reaias t Un
through r th pra
renew 1 rjaalt sUlh
Vfnti 1 1 tb frt1
will- c folly sue
Cihbom i d to beware
Ar hbl n p l bind tindyiilui
op Spauldii ip and otiert
i a
-5 C sAm
Dr
ho mm
f mill
iii ir ttHosa
t or z
tJ of c lime bo la
ln c oidaub W
Clr 1 mUttr t dtJOT
I I tl ai5
I h tar r
l reit v non
in Untid etc
jjuM o il n
A- Mfi m
111 b
other t
Is no cl r
of their
li wt v
B MS IP
j fl ar m
mi yn
taitt
n
i suptrian tM
elanfii IJR
Iutfl at the m y ot OrtJ
be aure thiy rv wfii
put eufh an aj i al InvoJrrfW
and c y a d ti sW
c i -a t sn many
a i ir
in n i
mem
In m d
no cla
1
I
t
to
r
I
a p
I b
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Fort Worth Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 255, Ed. 1, Sunday, August 5, 1894, newspaper, August 5, 1894; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth109914/m1/10/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .