MHHHmuwwwiwminiH'i'W'iM-'"" rpgr- ---(' r The Commoner. VOLUME 6, NUMBER 3 Sii' . i. & jp Kfc "THE GREAT WORLD'S ALTAR STAIRS" Hugh 0. Pentecost, of Now York, In an ad dress recently delivered In that city said: "It 1b a curious fact that while this thing called lovo io recognized as beautiful, it produces so much misery. I'vo tried to find out why this is true, and I have reached the conclusion that it is bo cause humanity is divided in two classes masters and slaves. Ono class must dominate the other, and It is the domination, the tyranny of lovo, which has wrecked lives and blnstod characters." It is not the tyranny of lovo but the tyranny of the forces against which lovo contends that is responsible for the world's woes. Many havo wondered why pain has seemed to be love's in separable companion; but those who havo reached tho high peaks of lovo aud have felt the keenest Stings of grief know that while "a mighty pain to lovo it is, 'tis a pain that pain to miss." That it seems to havo been ordained that thoso who lovo most must suffer tho keen est griefs is ono of tho mysteries. Mr. Pente cost Is not tho only man who has been perplexed in tho presonco of these problomB. Wo havo all tried to discover tho why of many things. Maternity means pain, yet women aspire to it. Tho mothor goes through tho very shadow Of tho vnlioy of death, and yot sho does it willing ly because it is tho fulfillment of tho law of her boing. But what is all that pain compared with tho exquisite joy when "tho mothor feels for tho first time her first bom's breath." "With the world's experience before them par ents know that children bring responsibility and, perhaps, sorrow. But they long for tho respon sibility and spend their lives in efforts to avert tho sorrow. Tho lad knows that when ho goes "gathering tho myrtlo with Mary" lovo may stroll at his sido, and that while after love comes marriage, after marriage comes burdens and finally parting in death. But was over a lad kept from a ''Mary's" side by thoughts like these? Friendshipspure aud holy between men and between women have grown up in all the history of tho world. Every friendship wo cul tivate means tho enlargement of our onnnrhmf. ties for griof; for when we win a frlojnflweLte' "" mo uviy vii uju ui urn luuugmuii consid eration nil Jils hopes, his struggles, his fortunes things which need not concern us If we avoid tho temptation to cultivate that friendship. But v-otfho would avoid these associations even if by uiMUf, ovj muy UUU1U UIUL UUl HOinO Ot tUO IOl'CeS that, In the presonco of a friend's woes, tug away at one's heart strings? . Wo boo a little child hungry and cold crying for succor. Why is it that tears come unbidden to our oyes and wo hasten to give relief? . Wo seo a man struggling with adversity. ..Why does ho havo our sympathy and aid? , Wo ,seo one woman deserted by a faithless lover another fighting against poverty, another standing bravely beside a sick or, perhaps, a . v 'some senate inconsistencies When the senatorial colleague of tho late Senator Mitchell was tempted to move an adjourn ment of the. senate out of respect to his late col league's memory, ho was warned by senators who may fairly be charged with "straining at a gnat to swallow a camel" that something unpleasant would occur if such a motion wore made. That motion was not offered. Senator Burton of Kansas was long ago Warned that ho must not undertake to occupy his feeat in the senate until his acquittal of the charges toado against him. faeb Senator Dietrich of Nobraska who, unlike tho poverty-stricken Burton and Mitchell was a wealthy man and who, also unlike Burton and Mitcho 1 had powerful influences behind him, round it necessary to resort to technicalities in order to avoid Indictments brought against him In tho federal court. Later he was acquitted by a senate committee, but at no time was ho re quired to submit to tho humiliations placed upon his less favored colleagues. i A V1515'8 B Senatr Burton, In order that ho might draw his mileage, was led to the thresh old of tho senate, complying technically with the SSSnnHn1!? h at Sena.t0rsi drawIns eage must actually bo in tho senate chamber. Evidently senators object to Mr. Burton's oc cupying a seat in tho senate and acting as a representative of Kansas, but they seein to hi quite willing for him not only to draw pay for debased husband. Why does she command our concern? Wo seo a brutal man beating a helpless beast, and wo protest. Why? We see sorrow and woe on every hand. Wo see might grappling with right; the weak strug gling against tho powerful; and individuals fight ing to overcome some great personal temptation. No need to point out the evils nor to say that men's sympathies go as truly as the needle seeks the pole to the right side of these con tests. Why? These evils are not the product of love. They aro to bo conquered or minimized by the power of lovo which Disraeli described as "the principle of existence and its only end." "Why is lovo?" asks Mr. Penticost. Well, why is life? Why the many unsolved and un solvablo things with which the human being is confronted? And why is death? Aye, let him who would ask "Why is love?" first explain tho neces sity for death; for while death seems to strike its crudest blows at those who love the most, those who love the most are able to withstand the sor rows death inflicts upon the living. "Love's arms were wreathed about the neck of Hope, And Hope kiss'd Love, and Love drew in her breath In that close kiss and drank her whisper'd tales. They say that Love would die when Hope was gone. And Love mourn' d long and sorrow'd after Hope; At last she sought out Memory, and they trod Tho same old paths where Love had walked with Hope, And Memory fed the soul of Love with tears." Every daily newspaper discloses the close companionship between love and sorrow. It is shown that the sins of indifferent or thoughtless men fall heaviest upon the innocent people who lovo them. If a composite tale could be written,, of the life stories provided in our penitentiaries, the dramatic interest would not attaeh to those chapters dealing directly with-trie crime or the criminal, butraiUeMo -the pages that are blotted JS&- tae-cears and written in the heart's blood of those who suffer for love's sake. "Oh Shepherd, tell this youth what 'tis to love!" "It is to be all made of sighs and tears. It is to be all made of faith and service." Yet who would abandon the faith, who would avoid the sighs, the service and the tears if to do so they must abandon love? There are some natures so sympathetic that men in grief and trouble turn instinctively to them; and men of such natures walk through life arm in arm with sorrow perhaps none of it of 'their own making, but all of it resting heavily upon them. We can not tell why it is that with all of their intimate association with grief these men would not exchange places with those who live far apart from the sorrows of their fellows. If we would describe the value of love let us imagine what the world would be if dispos sessed of that which has been called "the sweet est joy, the wildest woe." Look at the .man who living "withdrawn in the place of liis self-content" never cultivates a genuine friendship for man, woman or child. There are a few such men, per haps, in every large community. The sorrows of others do not disturb them. They are not subjects of the so-called "Tyrant" Love, hence are not required to submit to the mysterious bur dens that fall upon those who dwell within Love's realm. They avoid many of the shadows of life, but do they ever feel the touch of its real sun shine? We can not explain why it was ordained that love and sorrow should be such close companions any more than we can explain many other prob lems of life. But we do know that without love life would not be worth living, and that its at tendant sacrifices and sorrows soften the heart and ennoble the character in proportion ,'to tho depth of the affections. We do know that no one who has felt the touch of "the divine pas sion" would retrace his steps even though by do ing so he would be permitted to forget the bad as he would be required to forfeit the good. If Mr. Pentecost would learn of these things let him consult any man who has walked in the sunshine as well as in the shadows of Love's domain. That man would tell him that looking through the vista of years he would not forswear allegiance to Love, the great ruler of the human heart, because the sunshine breaks through all the shadows and with all the dark recollections the blessed memories are supreme. He would tell him that the rosy cheeked girl from whom he snatched a kiss under the mistletoe twenty years, or more ago is now the matron of forty; that the roses have been transferred to the cheeks of her girls and her boys, but that she is the same today as Bhewas yesterday and the same yesterday as when "The golden hours on angel wings Flew o'er me and my dearie; For dear to me as light and life Was my sweet Highland Mary." Since then many shadows have fallen 'on that home. At that hearthside there may be vacant, chairs; in the family archives there may be docu ments wet with tears. The inmates of that home know what it is to suffer; but they know, also, what it is to love; and they who know of these things can not be convinced that love is a tyrant. Those who have suffered yet have been, strengthened by the very force which made their sorrow keen, can tell Mr. Pentecost that love, rather than being a tyrant tat revels in misery, is a relentless foe to tyranny and a faithful min ister in affliction. Those who, at love's bidding, have passed under the rod will not find it diffi cult to believe that that which Mr. Pentecost likens to a tyrant is better described as: " "The great world's altar stairs, that slope through dark ness up to God." BICHARD L. METCALFE. service he did not render but to draw mileage for travel he did not officially make. " Newspaper dispatches recently told us that the same senators who had refused to permit a motion for senate adjournment in honor of Mitchell, and who had made -it plain to Mr. Bur ton that he should not attempt to occupy a seat in the senate, attracted the attention of the gal leries in rushing to the seats occupied by Chaun cey M. Depew and Thomas C. Piatt for the pur- ?nAnf 0LeXeU(llng cordial ereetlng to those em inent defenders of national honor those faithful champions of republican doctrine. n,Yet Bom s?natrs wonder how it happens t?h S the intelligent people of America the repute SGnate lB- rapidly fallInS int dis- JJJ PAINTED TO LOOK LIKE IRON ffrnJ0!8101 Atto,rnQy Jerome spent considerable li WpiTeCUting Mr' HaPl, editor of Col lier s Weekly on the charge of libel alleged to .in v been committed against Justice Deuef who 5 been shown to have been connected with The nub lication known as "Town Tonics Mn P? STuTmSEr"" F S 1e See: S?7? tUG Gthods employed by "Town Toni" ssMsr '" - was The Hapgood-"Town Topics" trial has at tracted widespread attention, and it is clear that Collier's Weekly rendered a distinct service to the community when it inserted the probe in "Town Topics" methods. It will occur to a great many people as strange that Mr. Jerome does not employ some of the time on his hands in proceeding against some of the insurance mag nates whose embezzlements were exposed during the insurance investigation. Mr. Jerome's re-election was hailed by men everywhere as a distinct victory for good gov ernment; but already many who heretofore ad mired him are expressing disappointment because of his failure to vindicate the great confidence displayed in him by the people of New York. Some people are beginning to suspect that, as Bismarck said of Salisbury, Mr. Jerome is "a wooden lath painted to look like iron." JJJ TEXAS TENTH " ,,. Texas was omitted in the statement giving relative standing of states in primary pledge plan. It should occupy position number 10, which was accorded to Kansas, This would push Kansas down to eleven and each other state down one notch. JJJ TllORft "linnor. fnaiirrrontoll mm.A..i .L-' il urn nous lot of thundering In, their adyanc? 75K - t4?