Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1895)
PRISON PH LOSOPHY. Th following id ODe of fillllllMT of form mritteu 1 a convict tu au English prison: I cannot taki my walks abroad, I'm under ! k ami Ley; And Diui b the public 1 applaud For rheir kiu care of uie. The honest pauper in the street Half naked I behold; Whilst lam clad from head to fet-t. And covered from the cold. Thousands there are who scarce can tell Where they may lay their head; But I've a warm and well aired cell, A hath, good lmik, good bed. While they are fed on workhouse fare And grudged their scanty food. Three times a day my meals 1 get. Sufficient, wholesome, good. Then to the British public health, Who all our cure relieves. And while they treat us as they do, They'll never want for thieves'. LITTLE LENA. If . (sr m. - BBS. ' ' s LONG the banks of the great Mis sissippi ltlr, I from tbo head of navigation to the Gulf, the traveler may we a great numlier of while pouts with a dla inouil shaped board fastened at JVtlU' top, 10 WII1CD Hjjlx securely locked a square lantern; a step ladder resting against the post renders the lantern accessible. These are the Government post lights, useil by the pilots of the steamers that ply up and down the river, as beacons to mark the steamboat channel. There are some "l.tHHt of these lights on the rivers of the United States, Keepers for them are selected from among the people living nlong the river, many of them being women, who, ns a general rule, make better keepers than the men. The pay averages about $10 a month, and often this Is the only cash money that some of them receive. As a class they are honest and faithful to their trust, and realize the importance of their charge. Many queer and Interesting charac ters are met with among them, and many a strange history Is locked up In their lives. Innumerable nre the acts of heroism, bravery and unselfish devo tion that often leak out, and which speak louder than words of the honest hearts of these plain people who serve Uncle Sam In this humble way. (me rase In particular stands out now In my mind, that of ft little Dutch girl nil uve fi Lena. Her life was a short "put sad one, and we all took great In terest In her for she grew up almost under our eyes. I llrst met her when she w ns about 5 years of ace. We had landed one day to put up a light on the Mississippi Ulver. and while the men were at work I wandered out Into the woods to gather some nuts, when I came uim.u ft little flaxen-haired girl singing away, happy as a lark. Near her lay n little dogpart "rnt-and tan" and the other part "Just plain dog." He was a faithful friend to her. and no stranger was allowed to come near bis little mistress unless she first spoke to him. The dog barked at me, which caused the child to turn quickly, and on seeing me she smiled and asked me if I would like some of the pecans she had the light, with tli understanding that his daughter w ould do the work. Three years rolled round, and all duf - hig our visits to the light we were al ways sure of a welcome from little lyeiia. who, as rum as she heard our )at w liir.il- would run down the bank, ready for the gang plank to le thrown out, w hen she would run on board and bound up stairs, always with a present for her friend. Sometimes It was a wild flower, nuts or pop-corn, a pair of flying squirrels, or a coon, and once a little white kitten that we named I-na." One day, however, In the spring of l-SirJ, we came to the light and w histled, and ufter landing no little w hite head came down to meet us. everything waa so still and strange. What could It mean? The faces of the mate and the colored deckhands lengthened, as they saw me run down the stage plank, op through the dead weeds towards the cabin, for they knew something had gone wrong. I knocked at the cabin door, entered and found the old man alone. "Where Is I,ena?" I asked. "Oh, sir, she Is gone; lost In the high water." The old man broke down and wept aloud: and I am afraid that I used my handkerchief a good deal. "I did not want her to go to the light It was so stormy, and the river so rough," the old man said. " "I must,' the child answered. 'I promised the boss of the light-bouse boat that I would put the light up every night; and so I must keep my word. It seemed lhat the mother had run away again, some months before, never to return, and the child had attended EDUCATIONALCOLUMN Ml ! W ssssssss 1 I." . St ti.t NOTES ABOUT SCHOOLS AND THEIR MANAGEMENT. A Majority of the Best Teachers la City Schools Are Country-Bred-Crowded Schoolrooms and Health The Evils of Overcrowding. I.I NV'S HOME AT DOOOAX's St.Ot'OH. to the light, which had been moved to an Island a!xut half a mile from shore. She had gone In a skin to light the lamp. The water In the slough which the child had to cross had become swol en to a raging torrent, the wind blow ing a gal", whipping the white caps In to a froth, causing the driftwood to cir cle round In a mighty whirlpool, drag ging the frail Iwiat with the brave little girl Into Its awful mouth, to be swal lowed In the yellow, angry waters. They found her little, bruised body caught In a wire feme at the foot of Ii.'lddoli's field some miles below, her l.i-l, -lit little face torn by the cruel barbs on the wire fence. Thus did little Lena die, doing w hat she deemed her duty. The light still stands In the old man's name, and ho receives the pay. but an other keeper, who lives some two miles awav, does the work, pulling four miles each day In nil kinds of weather, so that the old, blind man may not suyve. They laid her to rest at the foot or the bluir back of Doogans slough, nnu there on the green hillside, within a stone's throw of the old cabin, the only home she knew, where she had Kpeut her sad little life, lies all that Is mortal of poor little Lena. Sad, Indeed, are the thoughts mat come up in my mind when lvlsit the little green mound, with only a stake to mark It, and a few fence rails thrown around to keep the cattle out. Sleep on, sleep on, my brave little friend; 'tis better thus by far, for now you are away above the overflow, the "trials and the evils of this wicked, wicked world. St I-otiis Tost Dispatch. '1, y'-Vrr, M 1 V J k St.' " rV I.KNA. THK I.K.IIT-TK.VKKK He Couldn't Kciiieinlier. An old gentleman, who was very ab sent minded, often had to ring fur his servant and say; "Thomas, I am looking for some thing, and now I can't remember w hat It Is." And then Thomas would suggest: "Votir purse, sir, or spectacles, or check book?" and so on, unlil the old Advice for Country Teachers. This article Is especially Intended for the younger class of teachers who are being educated In the country. No doubt, If It were beliif written by many teachers who have spent all their lives lu the city, there would be an Interro gation point after the word educated; but as the writer is a genuine country school product It shall stand unmo lested. Perhaps It might be well to aay in the beginning that the advice Is coming from a man sUIl In the hey-day of youth. Many people do not like the term "advice," especially from the young. "The atrocious crime of being a young man, I shall neither attempt to palliate nor deny;" but If the reader cares to substitute "thoughts" for "ad Vice," It will not in any way change the sense of what Is to be said. To the careful observer the fact has been apparent for a long time, that the best teachers, or a majority of them, In the city scImsiIs, are country-bred. "I know of no way of Judging of the fu ture but by the past; and Judging by the past," the prominent teacher of the future will come from the country. Those of us In city achoola who grew up on a farm can tell every time when we get hold of a country boy. He has that something about him that will over come all difficulties, that Is not found In the city boy. I do not intend to say one disparaging thing of the country schools, but the best teachers in the country do not stay there. Just as soon as they begin to make a reputation they are wanted In the towns and cities, and money will take them there every time. Some day the rural school dis trict of this Slate will see their mis takes, and a mighty change will come upon us. Now It Is to the aforenamed class of teachers I wish to say a word. Of course the poorer class of teachers do not read educational Journals, so there Is no danger of reaching them. Suddenly and almost unexpectedly "Nature Study," "KlemenUiry Science," or whatever you may Term It, Is upon ns, and It has come to slay. It mat ters not what the humanists may say to the contrary, the scientist will be his equal In thp years to come. The humanist claims that the "new educa tion" Is a farce, and tends to play and careless habits of work. We do not propose to argue the question nor to denv that the humanities have aecom plished great things. We do deny llieir accusation and declare once for all time that "there Is no royal road to learning." How profitably you can spend your long hours In the country! I see It all now as It never came to me l"fore. Nature, the great book Is wide open before you. Turn Its pages care fully and read and read again. Go down to the liitlc brook that meanders through the farm of the man with whom yon board. I.le flat down on the bank of that stream and watch Hie lit tle llsh that are there so unconscious ly for your benefit alone; not one hour, nor two, nor even three will satisfy you, If you are once Interested. 1 never spent a more profitable hour In my life than in sitting on the porch one warm evening after a hard thunder-storm, watching the toads as they came from an old cellar to catch thp earthworms as they came up out of the ground. An ant hill Is a good study room, and It will require many hours to get the whole lesson. "These emmets, how little they are In our eyes; We tread them to dust, anil a troop of them dies, Without any regard or concern; Vet us wise we are, if sent to their school There's many a sluggard and many a fool Some lessons of wisdom might learn." 1 would own a good magnifying glass, a few good natural histories, a text or two on geology and some botanies. what we hare been doing lu the aea'ol for years. The public schools of to day are over -classified, and orU-.ualiry Is crushed out. The teacher In the country school Is free to work out the true plan of educating our children. Study rather how you may u class: fy than bow to classify. I'aidology Is the ology of the times, and the man or woman w ho comes nearest to working It out now, w 111 be the pilot into whose hand we shall put the educational wheel by and by. How strongly I am tempted ut times to cut loose and go back for a few years to the country school again, where I cau plan, study, and work out some of the problems now confronting us. Iet uiebeg of you, good friends, to improve your opportu nities. Work out your educational sal vation will) love and Joy. And now I come to my thirdly. Live much with the poets and statesmen of this and other lands. Make Iongfel low. Iwell, Whlttier, Bryant, and Holmes your constant companions. Parts of them should be your own. Commit much and In your nature study you will be surprised at the wonderful knowledge these men had of the very subjects under Investigation. The speeches of Patrick Henry, Daniel Webster anil Abraham Lincoln are fountains from which the more you draw, the more you will find they con tain. You need not feel one whit asham ed if you are found In some of your evening strolls perched upon a log, or stone, rehearsing some of these match less gems. It would be hard for some of us to estimate the debt we owe to the pioneer teachers who, time after time, directed our attention to "Pitt s Reply to Sir Itobert Walpole." "Marco Bozzarls." "Itlenzl's Address to the Itomnns," "Massachusetts and South Carolina." Not long since I found my self repeating "Spartnctis to the Glad iators at Capua." It has been stored away long years, but it comes back more readily to-day than the minister's text of a week ago. lastly, but not least by any means, read the Bible. Not that you may be able to discuss theology. Not that you may be a Methodist, Presbyterian, Bap tist or Catholic, but that you may have constantly with you a store house from which your pupils may "hear the con clusion of the whole matter." "Prove all things; hold fast to that which Is good." No other such teachers have ever lived ns Christ and Paul. If they have been the chiefs of teachers, where can we find better pedagogy? Do not understand from what has been said that I wish to detract from the reading of magazines, Journals of education, or books on education; nor from the study of the branches you are expected to teach. Far from It These things say I unto you, that you may have life and have It more abundantly. To sum It all up then: First, study na ture. Second, study the child. Third feast largely In the field of literature and In lliis I would include history Fourth, read dally some portion of Scripture. These things do, and in ten years from this time you will bo the chosen people. Ohio Kducntlonal Monthly. "...C.V.., I , ,J iyJ;!r-Tj: 'JN-J 'A W $ v THE young woman who comes from the schools and colleges, di ploma In hand, expects in a ma jority of cases, to accomplish some thing In the world, and for the world. What will she do? Plato wrote ages ago: "All the pur suits of men are the pursuits of wom en, also," but woman, excepting in in dividual cases, has been slow In claim ing her right to those pursuits, and in demonstrating her ability in them. It Is only In recent years that she has learned what Plato said so long ago. But now wherever you find telling men. you will find women working as hard and accomplishing as much as tneu brothers. The young graduate of 18U5, will take her place by the side of her working brothers and sisters, In the school room, the newspaper office, the shop, In the arts, on the farm every where you will nnd her, and every where she will be doing her whole duty and more. And then, some of them will take a place not so Important in the public eye, but, after all, a dearer plac In the heart of every true woman ana man-a woman's place In a home. where the greatest work for the world Is accomplished, and who will say mai the trained mind does not do a better work In the home than the untrained , M..M l.aai,Ub one; Homes oo noi sunn our girls ure not ignorant What will the graduate of uo qoj everything, and she will do it well! And now while she is happy, auu proud, and maybe a little too Import ant, and Is It cruel to say m some times a little too much In evidence, let us not forget that she Is In earnest very much In earnest, and this Is well, for It is only the earnest people who ac complish. The fury of her earnestness will wear off after a time, ana uie world will not hang with Mich heavy responsibility upon her individual hands, but when she begins her real work, whether lu the home or In public, her broad purposes, her steadfastness, her fidelity, will be the result or ner earnestness of to-day. What will she do? She will be the mother, the teacher, the trainer, me helper, the comforter, the inspiration of men. The sweet girl graduate of IKIir, has a lifetime of deeds before her - and she will do them. Womankind. Morning and evening, early and late. genilemati would way at last: "or whenever tup weather will permit, go course, that's It. Thank you. Thomas." ! to the fields, the woods and the streams. ' one 'night Die old gentleman had ' One afternoon In a little country school cue lo his room. Ml were In bed. when house, as I stood within a! ilie window, Thomas was startled by hearing hi.) , I saw a Jay fly several tlm gathered. She seemed not a bit anain, and chatted with me In her queer Utile wav until we became quite good friends. I asked her who she was, her age and where she lived. She told me that she did not have any father, that he had gone away ever so long ago. even before she was born; that she lived with her mother and grandfather in the little log house near by. Her grandfather was blind, and the only anpiwrt they had was what the mother could earn by working for the neighbors and by the little patch of corn and garden truck they raised In a small clearing back of the cabin. I walked with the child down to the bouse and there found the grandfather, an old man, wrinkled with age and ex posure and blind. I asked him alsmt himself and the child. He told me that he came from Holland and had been lu this country some time, and had suf fered great misfortune. His wife had been dead a number of years, and his family had become scattered. Ills daughter, a fair woman of 22, the mother of the child, had given him a great deal of trouble. She had been very wild, and some years before she ran away with agootl-looklng young fel low; one of a party that wee making a survey of new railroad near the place where they lived. She was noon deserted by the man, who became tired of her. She returned, sick and forlorn, to the old home In the woods, bringing a Utile Babe with her. Wt appointed the old nti keeper ot to a fence He rushed up- P"Ht aml I,l,t head Into a hole made by the blue birds. An invest igaiioii after school led me to a dis.overy. lie had carried quite n number of acorns and put them away for w infer, making niui.il better preparation for food than had the man from whose farm the acorns came. An hour down on the bank of the creek, watching the musk rat or the woodchuck, will open your eyes and lead you on to conquer other worlds. Do you know anything of the habits of the woodpecker, wren, whip poorwill, sparrow, crow, chipmunk, mole, flying squirrel, grasshopper, but terfly, crayfish, and a thousand living If not, begin at oncp to muster's bedroom bell. stairs and threw open the door "Thomas," said the old geiifle nnu. , "I came up here for something nnd ; now I can't remember what It :n." j "Wasn't it to go to bed, sir?" "Of course," said the old gentleman; , "so It was. Thank you, Tho'ma-t. I Had I aiooiis Friends. , The late Samuel Staples, of Concord, Mass., was famous for his friends, among whom were Fmersou, Thoreau, ' Alcott and Bull, the Inventor of the Concord grape. Mr. Staples was at one time the town Jailer, and he once had Alcott aud Thoreau for prisoners, the creatures? fonder for a few hours, the latter for study tbem and you will he preparing n iiIl'IiL Alcott' offense was the nun- for the work of ten yenw hence. payment of a small tax debt, which he refused on principle-. "I never heerd a man talk houester," said Mr. Sta ples. F.niersoll aim rticou weiv imioe Do not neglect the plants and atones. Begin with the early weeks of March to search the woods and you will be sur prised at the lessons yon will learn atid dlale neighbor or .nr. ninpics, a mi on at me neip t m-ne icsmmn i'iw'wini. his llrst marriage Emerson was th. of- the teaching of the day. The study of Delating clergyman, while Alcott wa the stones will depend to a gnat ex present as a witness. It was his pride tent upon the locality In which yon find that he had taken care of the property yourself. But it matters not where you .. ,, shiftless persons In Concord are, there Is something In nature for than any other man. Hlg Teleacope for Ilerlln. For the Berlin exposition In 1K1MI a monster telescope Is now being wrought The four lenses measure each 110 centimeter (about forty-five you to Httidy. The children should be Invited to go with you. There may be In school one who, you have thought, wat h dull pupil, whose eyes will be oiiencl and he will be boro again. Thtrse trips give you splendid oppor tunities for studying the children a 'vilw nf Owi-crnwfllni?. 'The Forum has two articles on "The Criminal Crowding of Public Schools.' which show such an alarniing stair "f facts as to raise the question In u minds of parents having children I school age whether the risks incui i In running the gauntlet of public st ruction are not so gravely perilous as to outweigh the possible advantages. In Brooklyn, Boston, Minneapolis, New York. Philadelphia. Milwaukee, De troit. Buffalo -and Richmond the same difficulties exist in greater or less de gree. There are not school houses enough to hold the children. There are not teachers enough to tench them As a rule, the children do not have air space enough, adequate means of ven lihuiiiii. or proper light They nre packed like sardines In crowded nnd stuffy rooms, where single teachers are expected Jo instruct classes often ranging in number from fifty to HKi, nnd even 1"0 pupils. Commenting on these alarming con ditloiis the Philadelphia Record says "Schools where the. children are over crowded for room and fresh air to breathe; where the teachers are over crowded wilh work; where light Is bad where l lie desks anil seats nre so nr- ranned ns lo insure physical discom fort, where there Is no adequate pro vision for the care of wraps, and where often the playgrounds are restricted, dark and In proximity to closets giving forth foul odors, are, Indeed, schools of pestilence as well as of instruction. They are the ready disseminators of contagious diseases. Would It not be a matter of prudence to remedy these evils before we appoint an army of truant hunters to chase children Into dangerous and unsanitary confine ment? Or, If we must have compul sory education, should not the nren of compulsion be limited to the area In which proer provision shall have been made for the physical well being ns well as the mental Improvement of pu pils? There nfe K.miO or 10,mx) chil dren of school nge in Philadelphia for whom there Is no place In the school houses. What nre the truant drivers to do with them? Fnlll we. shall build school nouses lhat would be tit sanitar ily for places of assemblage; until we shall provide capable teachers In suffi cient number to permit of the success ful discharge of their function, nnd un til we shnll properly provide for the physical comfort of both teachers and pupils, even If under any circumstances the State might Judiciously exercise such a power, will necessarily be cruel or Ineffective, or btith." Trof, One-Piece Gurment. Three "bicycle women" were talking the other day, nnd, of course, It goes without saying that they were talking of wheels and or the time tney uau mnde, and above nil they were talking of this season's bicycle gowns. They AS A WAT.KIXO SKIRT. TRAWN UP FOR BICTCI.E. Inches) in diameter, but the length of g,,, to wl)rh but little attention has Uie Instmment will be but five and one H-pn K,vpn , fho yellTn by u half meters. The lenses, therefore, will wmM cvrtaniy be a very foolish doctoi be larger, nut mo telescope sooner, w)0 wotd prrtb, the same trent than the Yerke telescope. Rteluhell, mmt for all aigsp,, .t that It Just la Munich, will shape tha less. Edward Everett Hale, Jr., son of the author and preacher, has resign ed the chair of English In the Fnlver plty of Iowa, and will go to Union Col lege, Schenectndy, N. Y. Prof, c! D. Jameson, of the chair of civil engineer ing, has also resigned, to practice ola profession. w-fiied excited over this last topic. Fi nally one of them said she had a cos tume In process of construction that met all objections. She said: "The costume Is a one-piece garment and makes a splendid walking skirt There aro a pair of elastic cords ar ranged skillfully at the side, and when a body wants to mount nil she, has to do is to pull at these nice little cords, nnd behold, the skirt rises In graceful folds on each side, leaving thp limbs In the trousers unimpeded while on the w heel. And the costume Isn't immod est a bit. It really is pretty. You can wear anv kind of waist with It that you wish. I bought n skirt and I'm going to wenr my Norfolk jacket with It The skirt Is light as can be, and Is made so that is has a sheer effect in front, and when It. Is drawn up nnd back there Is but lit tie cloth to blow about No more muddy skirts nnd draggled gaiters for me. And the best of It all Is that It doesn't appear a bit like dress reform, and yon can thus hnve all the gnln of comfort without the fnme which you la dles and your husbands seem to find so stringently objectionable." Stay In the Conntry. The constant Influx of girls from the country Into our lnrge cities brings with it portentous dangers and evils. Dreaming of an easy time, good wages, a better wardrobe and more congenial companions; daw.lcd with the vision of city amusements, nnd hoping, per haps, to find a mnrriageatut! partner nnd Rotrh down Into a eomfortnble city home, thousands leave the farm or the village nnd Hock to the metropolis. Here ninny of them confront a sttiatfon far different from that which they Imagined In advance of their actual experience of city life. The wages they get are meager; their lodgings are far from comfortable; they have no home lif'?; they face new temptations and trials, and their life becomes one of hardship and trouble. In the store, factory, shop or office they are beset with danger and annoyance, while all about them are pitfalls spread for un wary feet Rom of them, with ana- iual aptitudes for' stenography, type writing and kindred occupations, or with fine executive gifts, make thlr way to the top and secure first-cUM posts; but a great multitude struggl and almost starve on $5 or $0 a weak. This latter clasa are not able to bt any money; a week's Illness bring them Into debt, and a mouth withool employment renders them object of charity. How much better It would b for most of them were they to stay at home, help in the household, or accept such work as might be available on the farm or in the village. Our larg cities now conta'n thousands of girt In a sorry plight either without em ployment or struggling for bread flria who might have remained In comfort at home, or who could have found work of some sort In a country towa to support them, with less coot ot strength, nerve power and vital force -to sny nothing of the dangers which now beset them In the city. What kindness It would be to thousands who are heedlessly planning to rush city ward "to find something to do," could a persuasive word reach them and uyt "Better stay at home." Philadelphia Times. Woman Garbage Inspector. Miss Jane Addams, or "St Jane," U her friends affectionately call her, bu been appointed garbage Inspector in the Mneteentn Ward, Chicago, and with a big star on her jacket will patrol the squalid street and noisome al jjleys and see that f.spC uie city uauuscuif "if does his work and 7 earns bis money, S ChA wnntpd thai contract herself, miss addams. and was prepared to give ten times the amount of bond required by the city authorities, but some of the male persuasion with a strong political "pull" secured the cov eted work. "I didn't want to make any money out of the contract" Miss Addarn say, "but I suppose the present contraotof has that Idea In mind. He must keep the alleys clean, however, or he wlfi find soiuo one after him who mean business." Miss Addams is wealthy and merely accepted the office she hold for phllautrople reasons. She was bom In Cedarville, 111., thirty-five years ago and Is the youngest child of John H, Addams, who was for many years a member of the Illinois State Leglsla ture. She was graduated from Rock ford College in lml and entered tho Women's Medical College, Philadel phla, but falling health compelled her to abandon her work there. In 188 and In 18110 she went to London to study tho methods of Toynbee Hall and fit herself for a similar work In th slums of Chicago. Invitations to Church Weddtnita. There Is a good deal of dispute In re gard to the etiquette of acknowledg ment of a card for a church wedding. Some high authorities assert that th Invitation Is so general and means so little particular attention thnt no notice need be taken of It except lit the regn. lar line of future visits to the bride and to the bride's mother. But Mrs. John Sherwood, who Is, probably, our Amer lcnn soclnl orncle, declares thnt a card Is obligatory at the hour of the wed ding. If one cannot attend, and that If the house address Is unknown thlseard should be sent to the church. If this Is necessary most people err wofully, for few non-attendants send the card. mm Some Ohio girls hnve formed an as sociation to wear tho bloomer costume. Twenty-four have already adopted the short dress. Full woman Ktiffrnge in South Au tralia Is an accomplished fact Queen Victoria has signed the bill and It haa become a law. Miss Stainforth and Miss Larpent have opened an agency In London for the renting of houses and flats and to secure lodgings for those who desire them. This they do not only In Lon don, lint In towns on the continent They also do Rhopplng for their out- of town customers and propose to add a theater-ticket bureau. Miss May Proctor bas taken up her father's work and recently gave an en tertaining lecture for the benefit of the Woman's Press (Tub in New York on Other Worlds Thnn Ours," which waa Illustrated with many pictures and maps. Several young women In Loudon have started a novel and sensible dress making establishment They take last season's dresses and make them ovef In the prevailing fashion. No entirely new dresses are made, and the charge are reasonable. Miss Susan B. Anthony, who, at 75, Is lithe, graceful and active, ascrlbea her heakh to her regular habits. 8b has eschewed late suppers, rich food and overwork. After her day' work she goes straight to her rooms, takes a bath, drinks a cup of hot milk and eat a cracker. Then she sleep nine hoara and arises refreshed. , : ' . v '