HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-12-12, Page 7THE PLIGHT INTO EGYPT,
---- .
laturvellens Stories Wound bta the "gospel
et Abe barratsey."
' 111 was not poasible for the active Ian
agination of the early Christians to rest ooze
tent with, St, Metthew'a ebort and plain
vosord, of the Flight, They must know
More about it—how the pilgrimage wee
made, through what places the Holy Fem.
ily peered, what marvels and portents hap-
pened by the way, and where they fouled
a restingiplace, And so the process of
mythextaking and legend -building Magen
in answer to the questions of naiee sad
childish curioaity. The brief record of
the fact was enlarged and embellished and
embroidered with fancies. The literature
of the Flight unfolded:Ma in the apoory-
1 gospels of the sectond and third min -
km and continued ita growth through
e poems and chronicles of the Middle
gee. Nothing eau be more oleer than site
difference between the simple abatement
of St. Matthew that the journey was made
,----a otatement which bears every inark of
being historical, and reads as if it
were merely a transcript of the Virgin
Mary's rerneraberances of that hurried and
dreamlike epieode--and the
WILD, FANTASTIC PABLES
of later times. And yet I thinls these fan-
ciful stories, which were told so often at
the fireside, le the tr nt,' at the resting -place
of the rename and by the camp fires of the
caravan, are worth reading, beos.uee they
are so fresh and childlike, and sometimes so
pretty, and' because they have had imoh
an Inflaense upon art.
• • , •
But the pecan(' hued of marvellous
stories about :the Flight is found in the
"Arable Goapel of the Infancy," which We
, current among the Christians of the East,
and WSB undoubtedly used by Mohammed
in the composition ot the /loran. It is
an Oriental variation upon a Filtered theme
an Asiatic embroidery full of .all kinds or
strange beasta, a sanotified Arabian Nights
Entertainment. It belle of a dumb bride, re-'
•stored to apeeoh by taking the infant Jesus
• in her Nue ; and a creasy woman who would
not wear any clothes brought to her right
mind by the compassionate look of the Lady
Mary; and a girl 'with the leprosy cleaned
by washing in the water in which the child
had been bathed ; and aundry other house-
hold miracles even more
INGENTroIIS AND ASTONISMNG.
It describes the dwelling -place of the /loly
Family at Matarea a town a little to the
e northeast of Cairo, where any eceptioal per-
son may still see the aged sycamore which
(sheltered them, and the "fountain of Mary,'
in whioh she washed her chilcre coat. But
the most wonderful tale of all is the story of
t chanted mule, which runs on this
le -
0 the Holy Family were entering into a
certain city they saw three women coming
out of a cemetery, and weeping. And
when the Lady Mary saw them, she said to
the girl who acoompanied her (the same who
had been cleansed of her leprosy)
hem what calamity has befallen them.'
t they made no reply to the girl's qttes
s, asking her in their turn : "Whenoe
•on ? and whither are you going? For
day is spent, and night is ooming on
aoe." "We are travellers," said he girl,
'and are eeeking a house of entertainment."
hey said: "Go with us, and spend the
glit with us." Accordingly the travellers
cep hed the courteous invitation'and were
twought into a new henna, richly furnished.
Now it was winter, and the girl going, into
the apartment of the women, found them
again weeping and lamenting. Beside them
stood a mule, covered with housings of oloth
of gold, and sesame was put before him, and
the women were kissinghim and feeding
him. And the girl said • "What is all this
ado, my ladiee, about this mule ?" They
replied with tears: "This mule, ' which
thou meat, was our brother, born of the
sante mother with ourselves. When our
father died he lefb us great wealth, and this
only brother. Weedid our besb to get him
married, aud were preparing his nuptials
after the fashion of our country. But some
women, moved by jealousy, bewitched
him, unknown to us ; and one night,
A LITTLE BEFoRE DAYBREAK.
when the door of our hone was shut, we
saw that this our brother had 'been turned
into a mule, as thou now. beholdest Mm.
And we are sorrowful, as thonseeet, having
no father to comfort na ; and there is no wise
man or magielanin the World that We have
omitted to send for, bub nothing has done us
any good." And when the girl heard this,
she sad: "Be Of good courage, ladies, And
weep no more; for the cure of your calamity
ie near; yes,' it is presently in your own
home. For,I also was a leper. Bat when
I saw that woman, and along with herbat
young child, whose name is Jesus, I:sprinkl-
ed my body with the water wherein his
mother had washed Mtn, and I was cured.
I know that he can deliver you from your
affliction ale. But arise, go to Mary my
mistress, bring hot. into you own apartment,
tell her your seoret, and !supplicate her to
have pity upon ' you." When the women
had listened to the girl's words they
• hastened to the Lady Mary and brought
her into their chamber, and sat down
before her, weeping and saying: "Our mis-
• teem, Lady Mary, have pity upon thy ser -
yenta, for no one older than oureelyee, no
head of our &rani, is left—
NEIVIER EA.THER NoR BROTHER—
to live with us ; but this mule whioh thou
semis was our brother, whom women have
bewitched into this condition. We beseech
• thee, therefore, to have pity upon us." Then
, grieving at their misfortune, the Lady Mary
• took up the Lord Jetue and put him on , the
mule'e back, and she 'wept with the women,
tied said to Jesus Christ, "Alas, my son,,
heal this muieby thy mighty powereind make
him a. reasonable man as he was before.'
Andwi en those words were spoket, the
shape he mule was Ohanged, and he bo.
cern a eung man of engaging appearance.
Where on there was greaejoy in the house.
hold, and the grateful sisters immediately
concluded to marry their bkother bo the girl
who had 1: eon the means of bringing him so
great a betefit, ,i • .
All alias especiollylhe happy tnerriage,le
:lite in the style of Soiteherezede. It is no
aa., ili`k. the sober records of the evange/iste
ail a dist, y of fireworks Is like the ilent
are; and e very ()anthem goon far totrove,
r tab hetet illustrate that historical charm -
'or of otur r gospeis.—[Etenry van Dyke,
n Harpagaztne for December.
leasi"• ise
tw- . Yes, to Both.
"ADA oust have been a good deal of e
sateteorologireigiM foresee the flood 1" ' "An
well as an eibeddlogist to ideoat,ble to get Out
of the way of it -eels ? '
•
Dick (aged eig4rtittil itisgehted , to
•Tommy. keel telt) ^ON 011Orta at &Ming
"a whopper" Wore net a.encoess) —"If yet.
Again' ter 41e, whir don't yet stand uP fe lb
like a
• A ORUEL DE4TIT•
,
A iiinketat Shelia( Wells wow It reels, to be
Meumsdi
Ji ram H. Morgan, eheriff of Sherman
county, ,South Dakota, le a native of thie
city, says the Now ork 'Star, who has
been in the west over thirty years. He is
here on a visit to his 'relatives on Staten
Wend.
"I find," paid the ;Iberia to me the other
night, "that the question whether r a man
should be hanged or exeouted electrically
has been settled. 1 am glad to find that
eleobrioity has carried the day, for 1 assure
you that death by hanging is intensely Pain.
ful." '
"Why, sheriff," I said, "is ft possible that
you wee hanged ?"
• "Otitis so, and it was no joke. When
the war closed I went met to seek my for-
tune, and had a pretty hard time before
found anything even resembling it. One
herd winter two °them and Myeelf went into
Wyoming on a prospecting expedition, and
had to maintain ourselves' chiefly by hunt.
ing. Antelope were very mann just then,
and we suffered oonsiderably from hungers
One morning we separated, the better to
scour the country, agreeing to meet on a
distent hill at noon, My companions were
hardly out of eight when 1 shot a steer, and
was in the act of (Milting it up when three
fieroeilooking cowboys swooped down upon
me. I am, Ma pat see, swarthy, and they
took rne for a Mexican, As they also were
dirty looking, 1 nsade the same mistake,
and ettluted them in the little Spanish I had
picked. up. It hemiened that a tall cot
ton tree was conveniently close, and, with-
out &tying a word, one of the men threw
she lariat er9Und ray neck, teemed the
other end of the rope (Wei a dont limb ; hie
two companione pulled upon it, and I was
in the twinkling of an eye going through all
the agonies of hanging. The pain was
frightful. There was a tremendous rushiurt
through mei ere, the sky and everything
else turned blood red, pins and needles
seemed to be sticking into every pti: of my
body, and &lithe ewe time the book of my
head fatten If lb were being sandbagged at
the rate of.forty strokee a seoond. How long
It lasted I muldn't bell. To tne It seemed
hours. Wheal regained consciousness+ one of
my friends was pouring whiskey down my
throat and the other was rubbing my cheat
with the mune liquid. It appeared that my
comrades had returned 6 elms to out me
down before life had fled, but just then 1
wished they had let me be. The process of
resuscitation was if poesible, still more
agonizing than the hanging, but. as the man
condelmned by. law does nob suffer in that
regard, there tte no use in dwelling upon it"
"But why did they bang you?"
"They were driving a herd of cattle to
Idaho and it was one of their steers that 3
had shot. When my friends arrived and
explained, the cowboys out me down and
when I was ready to receive them they were
profuse in their apologies.
"That is how I know that hanging is one
of the most cruel deaths to which you oan
put a man."
The Perils of Buffalo•huntinif-
On the occasion in question, my brother
and cousin were on their way homeward,
They were just mounting one of the long,
low swells /Ma whioh the prairie was broken
when they heard a low, muttering, rumbling
noise, like far-off thunder. It grew eteadily
louder and, not knowing what lb meant,
they hurrled forward to the top of the rise.
As they reached it, they stopped short in
terror and amazement, for before them the
whole [stable was Weak with raadly ruithing
buffaloes.
Afterward they learned that another
couple of hunters, four or five miles off, had
Bred into andstampeded a large herd. This
herd, in ibe rush, gathered others all thun-
dering along together in uncontrollable and
increasing panto.
The surprised hunters were far away from
any brokom ground or other plitoe of refuge;
while the vast herd of huge, plunging, read -
detailed beads was charging straight down or
them not a quarter of a inile distane. Down
they came I—thousands • open thousands,
their front extending a -mile in breadth,
while the earth skook beneath their thunder-
ous gallop, and as they came closer, their
shaggy frontlete loomed dinsly through the
columns of dust thrown up from theidry
The two hunters knew that oheir only hope
for life wamto split the herd, which, though
Ib had no becetd a front, was not very deep.
If 'they 'failed they would ineeltably be
tramped bo death,
Waiting eintil the beasts were in close
range, they opened a rapid fire from their
heavy breech -loading rifles, yelling at the
top, of their voices. For a Momeot the result
seemed doubtful. The HBO thundered
dandily down on them; then it swayed
violently, as two or 'three of the brutes iaa-
mediately in their front fell' 'beneath the
bullets, while the neighbor'smade violent
efforts to press eff sideways. Then &narrow
wedge-shaped rift appeared in the line, and
widened as, it mune up °loser, and the
buffaloes, shrinking from their foes in front,
strove deepeeately to edgeaway from the
dangerous neighborhood ; . the shouts and
shots were redoubled ; the hunters were
almoat °linked by the cloud of duet through
which they could see the stremis Of dark huge
bodies pestling within rifle -length on either
side.; and,in a niceneet the peril was over,
arid the two men were left alone on the plain,
unharmed, though witb their nerves terribly
:shaken. The herd careered on toward the
horizon, save five Mdividuale who had been
killed or disabled by the ,seleots—SrProm
"Buffalo -Hunting," in Ste 'Mehotas,
foi-
Dsoswber.
•
Two of a Kind (lot AoqUittnted-
.k.
"This," mild the hum who was `tray ling
on the oars, as lielppened his valise' art&Jkok
out a bottle, "is menixture called Dr. •;Yin-
kineen's Indiepeneable. I nevertravel with-
otrieit. It is the best and most agreeable
tonieinow on the isirbet, by all odds,"
;gleam not co 4011;tt !spent tlatite".replied th
rdan W 'Woe cootipying these et with him,
"I bere'e=and he °Petted hie 'own vanes
egtd took out a Pottle—"a tOnid called Dr,
ybold's Bate:tot, which I have used for
several, yeare and consider the best prepar-
ation ever made. No man ought ever te---."
"I have no doubt it fo alairly good mai-
eine in its way," broke in the other, "but if
you liad over tasted D. tisnkinten's
peneable you Would throw that nuff of yours
away,"
41 know all about Dr. Jenkinson'el note
trent, and I knelt, exadly -what it's made
of."
"You do, eh 2"
"V es dr, and know Dr. Rybold's extract
is made'henn preofeely the same formula
and adulterated ingredients old Jenhinnon
on
ly out pure materials banned of the vile
a,
"It's Made kohl the flaidde formula, is it
"Exactly the name."
"You , lying old ignoramus,how do you
know what it Made ?
"How de X krtatV, you insulting oid Seettn-
drel ? I'm Dr, Itybeld, sir 2"
, "I am glad 1 have found i-ott out, you
nfornal villain. 1 em Dr. Jenkinstm
Fx.Sla
The superintendent of comma ',times nearer
the threbbing home of poor h lanky than
any other effieial 6 Walshiogto ,061y8sjetber
to Ithe New, Xerk 4.1cribtutes' Of all the
doper:anent* hie alone le ,nzelt governed by,
olvit-Bervioe laws, an cl tio eqOontly , that
olaile of people whom ViotedHuge sweeping-
ly desoribed as "Les Mieerableir turn to the
census bureau. Sense Who apply are gentle-
women of middle age who can not past a
olvilmervice exambaation, beoeute when they
wore young, girla were taught to be house.
WiYee and no provision was made for a
widowhood or advert* circumstances when
they, would be forced to earn thole, own and
their ohaldren's bread. Mr. Porter, the
superintendent, say e there is always one
question thet he le foroed to pub to appla
canto that goes through them like a knife.
It is the simple and legitimate peetion.
4i What oan you do?" Marvelous it is the
number of people in the world who have no
definite Idea of their own oapabilities.
When the ,queetion doesn't bring bears it is
usually followed bee wringing of the hands
and a helplese " I cannot tell," but rarely by
a direct Confident answer. One of there
oases is unmatehed be -pathos, •Mr, Porter
boarded for a time afterceming to the °apt -
tat atitt hotel where he noticed that his waiter
Was unusually attentive. The man did not
seem to care for fees, nor did he ask anys
thing for himself. For a month or two this
dumb admiration was married on until finally
/err. Porter said:
"What is 4, Wanaoe ? You seem to have
something on your Mind."
"Yes, Rah; Ise been studyin', sah, as how
like nuff day mOut be some place blithe ()en-
sue for my young infamies. She's desarvinl but
is to proud to ask Joh anything. Ise been
stailyite nigh% yeah how Wellies° could get
nomethin' foh de misfile, and when de head
waitals, salt, sent you to my table, I jest
said, de Lawd will provide."
"Who Is the woman, Wallace r Mr.
Porter flaked.
"She's de only chile of my ole pasaa 'fo
de waif. Mosta wan kild an' mite& an' de chile
came norf When day loss' all. Dew lib above
Great Fait, an' dean bell At, eah, but dey'a
ver' posh,
As Wallace finished some one oame up to
talk with, Mr, -Porter and the matter was for-
got -ben: !Wallace knew how bo wait, and it
was mit Until another fortnight that he said,
hopetally;
" My -young iliisaia, sah, 1 folmot to say
dab Ate ' ver' intellectual axed° everything
conedionely."
Wallace had ' the darker's aptitude kw
sounding -words and palmed among his
oolle_agutte as, that. mysterious Titian, a
"college gradilete." There was a ludicrous
pedantry about hirn that made one thkik he
must have been born a college graduate. Ic
was his elect deetiny. Mr. Porter received
furiher .00nfidenee from the honest fellow,
who oould do what few white people would
do in this selfieh world—ask a favor for
some one elate before himself, and, in thie
case, for the daughter of the man under
whom he had suffered boncfage.
Promising to remember the "young
nalesie," Mr. Porter left and might have for-
gotten her If it had not been for the faithful,
ever-waechful Wallace. Finally one Satur-
day night he said
Well, Wallace, 1 have something for
your young mistress. • Tell her to come
around to the eensus bureau next week and
there will be some work for her. "
Later he learned from the lips of the
"young missis" that Wallace bad walked
fourveen miles through the rain that Satur-
day night after his work was done to tell
her the good news of her appointment. She
had, not known that he was seeking the
plaoe for -her, although. for some iveeke he
had remarked Saystetiously "De Imwd am.
providin'."—[Ohleago
Not Bo Bandy -Legged. as Re Looked.
They eat on the sofa. They had jtisb come
to et, mutual • understanding, and he had
measured her finger for the engagement ring
and they were in the flub throes of tender
reminiscence.
• "You do net remember," he said in a bram-
bling voice. "You do not remember when
you first saw me."
"Yes, I do."
"Did any little thrill or throb bell your
heart thin happy moment would come? No,
that could not be enfolded."
"Yee. Something did seem to whisper
that we might become man, and wife."
"My darling—," he said, and he kissed
her fondly.
"Yes, I remember, I saw you from the
window leaving the house, and I thought you
wereibandy legged; and 1 thought how aw-
ful it would be to marry a bandy-legged man
but it was only the glass In the window that
was unefen and made you look SO,"
'ese
. To Battle With the Smoke.
The Limited Liability Company, dear to
the British heart, after exhausting every
other resource, has now appears i in a con-
crete form to make London amokelese and
the £150,000 of shares offered to the public:
to -day 'night certainly to 'tempt thousands
of the aufferieg inhabitants to become sub.
scribers. A chemical compound, lb seems,
has been discovered whites, sprinkled upon
the coal, will prevent the millions of chim
ey pots in London from botching forth the-
rboniferous gas, and London, it an anti -
f g company can be found, will .shortly re.
j ice in blue' skies and someMee, add will set
up as it rival of Constaulnonlee •
Heavy raingiglit enenth ruined 15,000,000
aores,setZiAlhathe 'renew Valley, Mina.
Th eon 91 Richard Wagner has determin-
to fbilow in,the footsteps of Ms father,
dmievete „himeelf to musio. He has
reedy taken his first step, having (mused
h name to be entered on the students' roll
ab the celebrated Raiff Academy or Music
gohool 6 Frankfort -on -the -Male. The
young man bears the name of Siegfried, and
theme who are intimate with him say that
the earabitiott of his life is to oondttot tibia
performapeee of his fatherworks at Bay -
tenth in the' theatre devoted wholly to his
nitteleS
At a fdotball niateh played Ian week ou
the grounds of the North Western DniVer-
eity ab Evanston,I11„ the captain of one tean)
hadtan ,B3Ye So bhdly injured that:he will
pro,beblyeleseillie while ono of the opposing
team bed lie jaw badly smashed. trbere, is
reason to 'believe tha;t in the days of Mecatt-
lay's Now Zealander people will look book
upon some of the sports of the present age
with much the same feeling that we has
with legated to the gladiatorial peatimee of
the old .1tornatim
Who Saying "Cotton is King" le still true
in the aenso that &dem makes the greatest
figate in the sforeign trade of the United
State. The export of 'oteteh is twice as
valuable ats the export' of wheat or previelene
and cattle, and sit or seven times as valuable
Ete tiae eerporb of corn. But i:be home eind-
erittlpiiidu of some of there articles 18 ranch
greater than that of cotton. The value of
the oaten crop is estimated at $350,000,000
or $860,000,000. The value of the ourn crop
n about $630,000,000, and a the wheat °rep
abed t 400,000,000.
JOHN. LABATT'S
Indian Pale 41.eanc XXXBrown Stout'
•
ein ttn
an
qcr
-----.2/1ANUFAOTTMERS OF -----
Highest awar:te ana Medals for Purity and Excel-
lence at Oentennial Exhibition, Philadelphia,
1076; Canada, 1875 ; Onetralia, 1877; and
Paris, France, 1878.
•l'ISTIMONIALS SELECTED:
• Prot.M Croft, Publio Analyst, Toronto, says had it
bo be perfeetly aoundoontaining no impurities or adulter-
atior.e, atm, can stronglyreniumend it as porteobly pure and
a very superior malt er,"
John 13 it mimes, Protestor of Chernistry,Montreal, says:
"I and thorn to be remarkably Bouni ales. brewed from
pure malt and hops.
Rev. P: 3, Rd. Page w Professor el Chemistry, Laval Un „vex
eity, , guebee. says have analysed the Indian Pale,,Ale
reanufaetured b vJohnLebatt, London, Ontario, and tave '
found it a ugataie, containing hut little alcohol, of a 'ugh -
°Lours Say0r, and of a very agreeable ta,t a.c1 'superior
qnality, and compares with the best imported :Iles, I have
also analyzed the Porter Wxx stout, of the 80.1X13 brewery,
which is of excellent quality; its flavor is very agreeable ;
it is a tones more energetics than the Alum ale, f or it is a
little richer In a loohol, and eau be compared edvautago-
ously with any imported article.
ASK YOU.Et GROCER, POR, IT.
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01011303 bottles for 32. Faehbettto lasts 533 00555, Addreed
A. DIXON, Sex 805, TORONTO, oAxer)A.,
111111AME 610111101On PREPAIIIITIONS.
SUPERFLUOUS HAIR 'ApptIgAlit:tV 1,1°47104/
cuporfluoua War W101.0fit metre 50 the mon. varreette
PIMPLES ANDtiLlICKNEAOSPbo'AVAtIg
tro,110 to 80days. Warranted. ndeofox 80 dayetrnatitient, 51.
ANTI.COR 10111.5640g PILLS'xr°,111olttlegitie
point fri is Matter bf collottua, whathor bacanno it ia ,aaaara
fattabla or .anfasta53able-,-7.4.%, FOLKS ming _
VOltPULtDDIOD 331053" !ONO 13 PIS. a inonth. nee 0000,
aialgoaa ;gantain no pOisen,rind•haver fail. Price int ono
inezuh'd treatment, es; 01 three nocnotha niodiohic, OG,
Warranted.
COMPLEXION tlittFile6/"ANNANt'm*
Mem% tho akin, develon the ferns, Earmleta. SPITISnaaAhL-"etsa
13 lilolt, Warralltad. Pries et a toLer air bOrr1.16r 53.
AdtlTees IIXIADDIDS114 lititeeneelestitelmela
Pia goo mug- Street 41M'ilet 7ficirou'tqa 00,
aitlkVei'smttitrtApe,vktltnli9etgiltttr,fiarAttfXtr,)N
Atoteh of nature—A kise.
Aein••••••••111Malei
4toiti.t° d Cs> 0•C'‘' cp°'
(-0 . od.
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145'
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Manufactured only by Thomas Ilolloway, 78, New Oxford Street,
iate 588, Oxford Street, London.
Vr Purchasers should look to the Label on the Bozos and Pots
If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious.
prVIROZI031.710..4•11w.Y.lwx•
rd
The Undersigned wishesito inform the public in general tbatIlle) keeps
--conSitantly in stock --
All Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL
DRESSED OR UNDRESSED.
a. large stock of Hemlock always on hand ab mill; prices. Flooring, Siding,
dressed—inch inch -and -a -quarter, inch -and -a half and two inch. Sash Done',
Blinds, Mouldings and all Finishing Material, Lath, &c.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY. —Competition challenged.. The best and thei
largest stook, and at lowest peices. Shingles A 1.
AlI (tressed lumber thoroughly seasoned and ready for use. No shrinkage
assured. A call will bear out the above,
H E OLD ESTABLISHED Jas.Willis,l/lanager
L73
AGENT:
Hay Totogship Farmers' Mut-
ual Fire Insurance Co.
A PURELY rARMERS" COMPANY.
Live Stook also insured, when in the Isidro
or cm the road in charge of owner, or servant
alromanufaotttrer of the Itatiroyed Sneezing
Washer and aftliteor itiaebineuie Agrait foe
Tomb Stones and the 'Watson eIanelentenkie
Utadertekilie promply 'attendee, to.
G. II0LT212.Alte
Zatioh,
stiiia ee. ' ' •
,K,,1 1VVANTED •NO 30.. 'AEI CB IfilfDARSAJit , Permatteut
, . tiOrg4 gliattlItteed. ettLitirP oud NIKO:shame PAUL
... liar advantages to boginnera, Stook 600spI 55, ivItli faetstellthg epee
OlITIOT PRIOR. 1Y1: „(;:tarank) what re echo* ,,, V7100 0
Iter,06.. littremmeneen, ilmeriester, . ( no:1801sec
• dok+,...+Akitio.t.41.1....A.S.N.sionaumrinyaiil