Page:The Granite Monthly Volume 1.djvu/313

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

BARNSTEAD REUNION. 305

The old gray school-house where we learned to read, Plodding through Webster's speller, page by page —

The wooden seats, recording many a deed Of famous jack-knife in that early age — The box-like desk where sat the whilom sage.

The meeting-house, with its wide pen-like pews —

Its quaint old pulpit, crimson-decked and high, Where good Priest George, once in three Sundays, rose

To preach the word of Life to you and I ;

How dignified his mien — how keen his eye !

Another view — a homestead, old and brown,

Far from the dusty road— down a long hill; Above its square, flat roof the elms bend down,

As if to guard it from all future ill —

The well-sweep by the door is standing still.

But where are now the aged forms we loved —

Whose hearty greetings met us at the door — Whose deeds and words are strangely interwove

In all the halo that our childhood wore?

Ah ! they will meet our longing eyes no more.

Yes, well to us may Barnstead's soil be dear.

For underneath her sods and drifted snow, We've laid to rest, with many a bitter tear,

As fond, true hearts as earth ean ever know.

Sweet be their sleep, secure from all life's woe!

God bless the old, loved town ! May no dark deed

E'er be connected with her cherished name! And may her future children well succeed

In winning honors that may raise her fame,

Keeping her record free from blot or stain !

��ADDRESS.

��BY GEORGE W. DREW.

When an artist wishes to put upon can- friend E. S. Nutter. It is well for us to

vas the scenery which is before him, he meet as we have this evening and gather

pencils in outline the figure he wishes to up the fragments of history of our native

represent. He can fill in the finer pen- town, as they lie scattered in the minds

cillings at his leisure. of her people.

I bring before you this evening simply It means something more than the

the outlines of a 6ketch— a picture unfin- passing of a social hour. There is much

ished. I have not the artist's hand, or in the sociability of the time, but there is

genius, to complete it. It is for you to a deeper feeling in our hearts. It calls

add the finer pencillings of personal ex- to mind the remembrances of home life

periences and reminiscences, and bring around the old hearth stone, and brings

out the picture as you would have it. out the picture anew, of the family circle.

This re-union of the former residents As we sit here this evening amid the glit-

of Barns£ead was a happy thought of our ter of gas lights, and the festivities of the

�� �