Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA)

 - Class of 1892

Page 23 of 120

 

Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1892 Edition, Page 23 of 120
Page 23 of 120



Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1892 Edition, Page 22
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Page 23 text:

THE GOLDEN ROD. WHY DO THEY COME? IMAGINE yourself standing on a wharf at East Boston, wit- nessing the arrival of a foreign vessel. You see before you the great black hulk of an ocean steam- er entering the harbor. But now her machinery is motionless, her screw has taken its last turn, and she lies at her wharf. Let us board the ship. Before us stands a mot- ley crowd indeed. Here we find the strong and the weak, the rich and the poor, the educated and the ignorant,—in fact, nearly all the types and characteristics of man- kind are here displayed. If we stroll about the steamer examining each group and its dif- ferent quarters, we shall be well repaid. Here is the Englishman, the Scotchman, the Irishman, the German with his inseparable com- panion, his pipe; the Swede, and the Russian Jew, whose quarters can be easily distinguished by the ap- petizing odor of garlic, which per- vades the atmosphere, and “Why do they come ?” is our thought as we gaze at the multitude. To answer, it is necessary to examine the condition of affairs in the different European countries, for it is from Europe that most of this human freight is exported. Let us look first at Russia, that mighty empire which extends across two continents. We see an absolute monarchy where the word of the ruler is the law of the land. Is it then any wonder that so many are anxious to leave this land of abuses, this country where one’s life is continually hemmed in by government officials who are ever scheming to cheat the weak and the poor ? To establish a newspaper or to open a book-store one is obliged to petition the government for the right to do so, and then wait months, perhaps years, before the officials deign to grant this request. One cannot give an entertainment for the benefit of the poor even, without official permission, for the government fears that the money thus raised may be used for traitorous purposes. What is the result of an offence against such a government ? Siberia and all its terrors, too well known to be enu- merated. In Germany we find that much dreaded and omnipresent army system, which this empire is compelled to support in order to maintain the high position she now holds among the great powers of Europe. The reason for so much emigra- tion from Great Britain probably does not depend so much upon the form of government, which is not severe, as it does on the desire for private gain. Ireland, however, is in a far from peaceable state, and in some parts the country is in a deplorable condition. In that coun- try a tyrannical tenant system pre- vails, causing much misery and bloodshed among the poverty- stricken Irish peasants. Italy, although so small a terri- tory, has a dense population, there- fore the inhabitants are closely huddled together ; indeed, many of the poorer class of Naples are com- pelled to seek shelter in the caves of Vesuvius. In Spain, the end of Europe in many respects, a peculiar caste- system of very ancient origin is an important leading cause of the emigration from that country. Besides reasons of this nature are the low rates of passage, the shortness of the voyage, and the dishonest methods used by agents of these trans-Atlantic lines. Whither shall they go ? In America they find a government for the people, of the people, and by the people, a free country and the best educational advantages; they can build houses, live in peace and security ; they are safe from op- pressive and tyrannical measures, and are free to worship as they please. What glorious opportuni- ties does this country offer the am- bitious emigrant. He appears be- fore the moat of the United States, blows his bugle, and lo, the draw- bridge is up, the portcullis falls, and the gate is open unto him ! He enters, and on every hand is gladly

Page 22 text:

THE GOLDEN ROD. PERSONAL EDITED BY Jennie Griffin, Herbert Holmes. Mabel Oxford and Carrie Baker, 93, took part in the choruses of ‘‘Priscilla.’' Dr. Sheahan, ’65, will read Ra- cine’s Athalie with French II. once a week. They are to be en- vied. Helen Nutting, ’93, and Marcia Reed, ’94, have recently learned that some ivy does not agree with them. They now look natural. On Thursday, October 15, twen- ty-four schoolmates of Gertrude Hall, ’94, surprised her at her home in Newbury avenue, Atlan- tic. Miss Hall has been confined to the house for six weeks, and has just returned to school. DIRECTORY OF ’90. Dolly A. Baxter—Normal Cooking school, Boston. Grace G. Bigelow—At home. Lucy W. Brown—Bridgewater Nor- mal. Ida J. Cameron—Quincy Training class. Stella M. Crocker—At home. Bartholomew J. Crowley—Book- keeping, Boston. Mary A. Deasy—Shorthand writer, Boston. Augusta E. Dell—Quincy Training class. Henrietta J. Dell—Thayer Acade- my, Braintree. Alice Dunn—Quincy Training class. Henrietta E. Esson—Quincy Train- ing class. Elizabeth T. Gearin—At home. Charles C. Hill—Carpenter, West Quincy. Charles A. Hobart—Bookkeeper, Boston. Annie M. McCormick—Quincy Training class. Catherine C. McGovern—Quincy Training class. Charles W. Miller—Studying at home. Harry O. Parker—Technology col- lege, Boston. Carleton C. Perry—Architect, Bos- ton. Maude W. Perry—Music teacher, Newport. Charles K. Pierce—Taunton Iron Works, Boston. Maud E. Polsom—Bradford Acad- emy. John J. Reardon—E. H. Doble’s, Quincy. William L. Sullivan—Bbston col- lege. Lucy B. Tarbox—Quincy Training class. Florentine A. Walters—Bryant Stratton’s, Boston. Catherine E. Walters—Bridge- water Normal. Why should not Swin(e)burnian poetry be popular in Chicago ? Our base ball players claim that “Slide, brother, slide!” is the mas- culine of “Scoot, sister, scoot!” This is referred to English IV. English III. are hunting with Doctor Holmes after his Captain. They are glad to know that, in spite of his eighty-two years, the old man is as buoy-ant as ever. Eve was the first “sweet girl graduate.” Her essay dealt with “Fruits and their effects.” As Eve means “life-waker” it is safe to say that there was no sleeping in the audience. “The habit of doing one’s work well is not the whole of morality, but it is the heart and core of mor- ality.” “Franklin Pierce was the four- teenth president, and his initial let- ters stand for fourteenth president. There are fourteen letters in his name.” “The progress of the nineteenth century towards anarchy and so- cialism has been considerably re- tarded by the great bulwark of savings bank deposits.” “If love for country,for humanity, for individual rights, be implanted in the hearts of the school chil- dren, the writers of political mel- ancholy will have to choose some other field for their operations.”



Page 24 text:

THE GOLDEN ROD. welcomed. His entrance is not barred on account of birth, race, or color. He is the equal of all. Which path shall he choose ? By earnest and faithful attention to duty he is bound to succeed, and may perhaps become a successful business man. He may become a citizen, enter the political field and represent a portion of the people. He may hold any office with the exception of the presidency. Amer- ica’s great free institutions, the evening schools, public libraries, and reading rooms, will advance him on the road to success. In conclusion, what can be a more appropriate greeting to those coming from afar than these elo- quent words of Webster? “We welcome you to the blessings of good government and religious lib- erty. We welcome you to the treasures of science and the de- lights of learning. We welcome you to the transcendent sweets of domestic life, to the happiness of kindred, and parents, and children. We welcome you to the immeas- urable blessings of rational exis- tence, the immortal hope of Chris- tianity, and the light of everlasting truth. —John W. Thompson. MA NGER-BIR THS. TWO simple little words, only three syllables in ajl, and we do not need Webster or Worcester to aid us in understanding them ; vet some of the best-loved words m our language can boast of no greater power than these. When we think of manger, the lowly sta- ble and the domestic animals natur- ally come to our mind, and they suggest a humble birth. Many believe implicitly in the doctrine of inheritance, out if a man inherits good traits and does not improve them or use them for any good purpose, it is not an honor for him to point with pride to distinguished ancestry. Poe and Byron are sad illustrations of this fact, and one cannot count the people who with a goodly inheri- tance of mental and physical powers have failed to develop them- selves. We may find examples of manger-births in every department of life—in statesmen and generals, in philanthropists and poets, in professional and business men. In a log-cabin in Kentucky, far away from all schools, churches, li- braries, and places of instruction, miles from the nearest neighbor, a boy was born of very poor parents. So far from what we now deem ne- cessities of life, what could be ex- pected of him ? He was flat-boat hand, country store-keeper, post- master and surveyor, yet he man- aged to acquire a Knowledge of law by borrowing books at an office at night, and returning them in the morning. At twenty-five he was sent to the legislature, thence to congress, and thence to the White House. As president, his life was identified with the history of his country. Thus Abraham Lincoln rose from flat-boat hand on the Mississippi to president of the United States. In South Danvers, now named Peabody from the name of its ben- efactor, stands a house which is always visited by strangers because it was the home of one of our greatest philanthropists. On that spot lived George Peabody, the boy of poverty and the millionaire phil- anthropist. What an amount of good he did for both America and England ! He gave two and a half millions for dwelling-houses for the poor in London, and three and a half millions for the education of the poor in the southern states. He endowed museums for Harvard and Yale, and also one in Salem. Who shall represent the poets? Why!- “All honor and praise to that right-heart- ed bard, Who was true to the cause when such service was hard, Who himself was so free he dared sing for the slave, When to look but a protest in silence was brave.’ Who has not read the Voices of Freedom? Whittier was not born of rich parents. On the contrary, he was born in very poor circum- stances, and until his eighteenth

Suggestions in the Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) collection:

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Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1895 Edition, Page 1

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Quincy High School - Goldenrod Yearbook (Quincy, MA) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 1

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