One day I went to visit a friend,
a lady, who came from Hamburg, in Germany. I
was much pleased with a portrait which was hanging
up in her room, and I was particularly struck by the
ornamental drawings with which the picture was surrounded.
They consisted of whip handles, canes, piano keys,
mouth-pieces for wind instruments, all sorts of umbrellas,
and many more things, of every sort, made of cane
and whalebone. The arrangement was so ingenious,
the designs so fanciful, and the execution so good,
that nothing could be prettier. But what of course
was of the most importance, was the face and head
that they were meant to ornament. “What
a benevolent, what a beautiful face!” I said.
“Who is it?”
“My father,” the lady
replied; “and he is more beautiful than the
picture, and he is still more kind than he looks there.”
“What is the meaning of all
these bits of bamboo and these little canes, so fancifully
arranged around the picture?” I asked.
“These little sticks,”
she replied, “tell the story of my father’s
success, and of the beginning of his greatness.
He began his noble and honorable life as a little
Pedler of Dust Sticks.”
“Pedler of Dust Sticks?”
“Yes,” she said; “if
you would like to hear his history, I will relate
it.”
I replied that nothing could please
me better; that I considered the life of a good, great
man the most beautiful of all stories.
“I will tell it to you just
as it was; and you may, if you please, repeat it for
the benefit of any one.”
When I had returned home I wrote the
story down, just as I remembered it, as she had given
me leave to do.
The Christian name of our hero was
Henry, and so we will call him. His parents lived
in Hamburg, in Germany. They were very poor.
His father was a cabinet maker, with a very small
business. Henry was the second of eight children.
As soon as he was eight years old, his father, in
order to raise a few more shillings to support his
family, sent him into the streets to sell little pieces
of ratan, which the people there use to beat the dust
out of their clothes.
Henry got about a cent and a half
apiece for the sticks. If he sold a great number
of these little sticks, he was allowed, as a reward,
to go to an evening school, where he could learn to
read. This was a great pleasure to him; but he
wanted also to learn to write. For this, however,
something extra was to be paid, and Henry was very
anxious to earn more, that he might have this advantage.
There is a fine public walk in Hamburg,
where the fashionable people go, in good weather,
to see and be seen; and where the young men go to
wait upon and see the ladies. These gentlemen
were fond of having little canes in their hands, to
play with, to switch their boots with, and to show
the young ladies how gracefully they could move their
arms; and sometimes to write names in the sand.
So little Henry thought of making some very pretty
canes, and selling them to these young beaux.
He soaked his canes for a long time
in warm water, and bent the tops round for a handle,
and then ornamented them with his penknife, and made
them really very pretty. Then he went to the public
walk, and when he saw a young man walking alone, he
went up to him, and with a sweet and pleasant voice,
he would say, “Will you buy a pretty cane, sir?
Six cents apiece.”
Almost every gentleman took one of the canes.
With the money he got for his canes
he was able to pay for lessons in writing. This
made him very happy, for it was the reward of his
own industry and ingenuity.
As soon as Henry was old enough, his
father employed him to carry home the work to customers.
The boy had such a beautiful countenance, was so intelligent,
and had such a pleasant manner, that many of the customers
wanted to have him come and live with them, and promised
to take good care of him; but Henry always said, “No,
I prefer staying with my father, and helping him.”
Every day the little fellow would
take his bundle of dust sticks and little canes in
a box he had for the purpose, and walk up and down
the streets, offering them to every one who he thought
would buy them. And happy enough was he when
he sold them all and brought home the money to his
poor father, who found it so hard to support a large
family.
All the evenings when Henry was not
so happy as to go to school, he worked as long as
he could keep his eyes open.
He was very skilful, and made his
canes so pretty, and he was such a good boy, that
he made many friends, and almost always found a good
market for his sticks.
The poor fellow was very anxious to
get money. Often his father’s customers
gave him a few pence. Once he came near risking
his life to obtain a small sum. He was very strong
and active, and excelled in all the common exercises
of boys; such as running, jumping, &c. One day
he got up on the top of a very high baggage wagon,
and called to the boys below, and asked them how many
pence they would give him if he would jump off of
it to the ground. Some one offered two.
“Two are too few to risk my life for,”
he replied.
They then promised to double the number;
and he was upon the point of jumping, when he felt
a smart slap on his back.
“That’s what you shall
have for risking your life for a few pence,”
said his father, who, unobserved by Henry, had heard
what had passed, and climbed up the wagon just in
time to save Henry from perhaps breaking his neck,
or at least some of his limbs.
Henry was very fond of skating, but
he had no skates. One day, when the weather and
ice were fine, he went to see the skaters. He
had only a few pence in his pocket, and he offered
them for the use of a pair of skates for a little
while; but the person who had skates to let could
get more for them, and so he refused poor Henry.
There was near by, at the time, a man whose profession
was gambling; and he said to Henry, “I will
show you a way by which you can double and triple
your money, if you will come with me.”
Henry followed him to a little booth,
in which was a table and some chairs; and there the
man taught him a gambling game, by which, in a few
minutes, he won a dollar.
Henry was going away with his money,
thinking with delight of the pleasure he should have
in skating, and also of the money that would be left
to carry home to his poor father, when the gambler
said to him, “You foolish boy, why won’t
you play longer, and double your dollar? You
may as well have two or three dollars as one.”
Henry played again, and lost not only
what he had won, but the few pence he had when he
came upon the ice.
Henry was fortunate enough that day,
after this occurrence, to sell a few pretty canes,
and so had some money to carry to his father; but
still he went home with a heavy heart, for he knew
that he had done a very foolish thing.
He had learned, by this most fortunate
ill luck, what gambling was; and he made a resolution
then, which he faithfully kept through his whole after
life, never to allow any poverty, any temptation whatever,
to induce him to gamble.
Henry continually improved in his
manufacture of canes, and he often succeeded in getting
money enough to pay for his writing lessons.
There were Jews in the city, who sold
canes as he did, and he would often make an exchange
with them; even if they insisted upon having two or
three of his for one of theirs; he would consent to
the bargain, when he could get from them a pretty
cane; and then he would carry it home, and imitate
it, so that his canes were much admired; and the little
fellow gained customers and friends too every day.
The bad boys in the city he would
have nothing to do with; he treated them civilly,
but he did not play with them, nor have them for his
friends. He could not take pleasure in their society.
Henry was a great lover of nature.
He spent much of his life out in the open air, under
the blue skies; and he did not fail to notice what
a grand and beautiful roof there was over his head.
The clouds by day, the stars by night, were a continued
delight to him. The warm sunshine in winter,
and the cool shade of the trees in summer, he enjoyed
more than many a rich boy does the splendid furniture
and pictures in his father’s house.
One beautiful summer afternoon he
was going, with his canes on his shoulder, through
the public promenade on the banks of the little bay
around which was the public walk. The waves looked
so blue, and the air was so delicious, that he was
resolved he would treat himself to a row upon the
sparkling waters; so he hired a little boat, and then
got some long branches from the trees on the shore,
and stuck them all around the edges of his boat, and
tied them together by their tops, so as to make an
arbor in the boat, and got in and rowed himself about,
whistling all the tunes he knew for his music, to
his heart’s content. He went alone, for
he had no companion that he liked; and he would have
none other.
At last what should he see but his
father, walking on the bank.
Henry knew that his father would be
very angry with him, for he was a severe man; but
he determined to bear his punishment, let it be what
it would, patiently; for he knew, when he went, that
his father would not like it; and yet he said, in
telling this story to a friend, “I was so happy,
and this pleasure was so innocent, that I could not
feel as sorry as I ought to feel.”
Henry bore his punishment like a brave boy.
It was too bad for the poor fellow
to have no pleasures; nothing but work all the time.
This was especially hard for him, for no one loved
amusement better than he.
He relished a piece of fun exceedingly.
In the city of Hamburg there was a place where young
girls were always to be seen with flowers in their
hands to sell. He had observed that the Jews,
of whom he bought the pretty canes, were often rude
to them, and he determined to punish some of them.
There was one who wore a wig, with a long queue to
it. The girls had their long hair braided and
left hanging down behind.
One day this man was sitting in this
flower market, with his back to one of these girls,
and Henry took the opportunity, and before either
knew what he did, he tied the two queues together;
the young girl happened not to like her seat very
well, and got up rather suddenly to change it, and
off she went with the Jew’s wig dangling behind
her, much to the amusement of the spectators, and especially
of Henry, who saw and enjoyed it all highly, though
pretending to be very busy selling a cane to a gentleman,
who joined in the general laugh.
Lucky it was for Henry that the Jew
did not discover who it was that had played this roguish
trick.
Henry saw how difficult it was for
his father to support the family, and was very earnest
to get money in any honest way. One day the managers
of a theatre hired him to take part in a play, where
they wanted to make a crowd. He was pleased at
the thought of making some money to carry home; but
when he went behind the scenes, and saw all that the
actors did, he ran away and left them, caring not for
the money, so he could but get away from such disgusting
things.
Thus did Henry live, working from
early morning till night, going to school with a little
of the money he had earned, when his father would
allow him to take it; keeping himself unstained by
the wickedness that he often saw and heard in his
walks through the city; observing every thing worth
noticing, and making friends every where by his honesty,
purity, and kind-heartedness.
At this time the French were in Hamburg,
provisions were dearer than ever, and Henry’s
father, with all the help he received from his son,
could not support his family in the city.
One day he called Henry, and said,
“Do you think you could support your mother
and younger sister and brother in some other place?”
Henry replied directly, “Yes, dear father, I
can; at least, I will try.” So his father
sent him with this part of his family to a cheaper
place, about fifty miles inland. He gave him five
dollars and his blessing, as they parted.
Here was our friend Henry in a strange
town, a small place, with no friends there, but just
fifteen years old, and with his mother, and brother,
and sister depending upon him for their daily bread.
Henry was a brave boy; so he did not
allow himself to fear. With his five dollars
he secured small, cheap rooms for a week, bought some
bread and milk for the family, and after a good night’s
sleep set out, the next morning, to obtain work.
He went into the street, and after a while read upon
a sign, “Furniture varnished.” He
went into the shop and asked for work. The man
asked him if he could varnish well. Henry replied,
“Yes, I can.” He was very skilful,
and he had varnished his canes sometimes, and he felt
sure he could.
“You came from Hamburg?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Perhaps you know some new and
better way than we have of varnishing?”
“What method do you take?” asked Henry.
The man told him.
Here Henry’s habit of observing
was the means of his getting bread for himself and
family. He had noticed a new and better way that
varnishers employed in Hamburg, and though he had not
tried it with his own hands, he was sure he could
imitate what he had seen. He said that he knew
a better way. The man engaged him for a week,
and was much pleased with his work; he did not want
him long, but gave him a recommendation when he parted
with him.
After this Henry went to the baker
of whom he had bought bread for the family, and asked
him for employment. The baker told him he wanted
his house painted, and asked him if he could do it.
“Yes,” said Henry, “I can do it
well, I know.”
The baker liked him very much, and
gave him the job without any hesitation.
The baker’s apprentices had
noticed what a good fellow Henry was, and would often
give him, in addition to the loaf for the family,
some nice cakes to carry home. So he was, as you
see, now working among friends.
Henry had never painted before; but
he had observed painters at their work, and he did
it well. He soon became known to all the people
of the town, and made many friends. He was never
idle. He made canes when he had no other work.
He varnished, or painted, or did anything that he
could get to do, and supported the whole family comfortably
for two years.
At the end of this time, his father
sent to him to bring the family home to Hamburg.
Henry left without a single debt, and in the place
of the five dollars carried home ten to his father.
I must tell you of a piece of Henry’s
economy and self-denial. He grew very fast, and
his boots became too small for him. While he was
getting every thing comfortable for others, he denied
himself a pair of new boots, and used to oil the old
ones every time he put them on, so as to be able to
get his feet into them, and never complained of the
pain.
Our hero for I am sure
he was a true hero was now seventeen.
The French had left Hamburg when he returned, but
it was still necessary to have a body of soldiers
to protect it, and he joined a corps of young men.
They made him distributer of provisions. His office
was one given only to those known to be honest and
worthy of confidence. The citizens began even
then to show their respect for the little pedler of
dust sticks and canes. We shall see what he was
yet to be.
Henry returned to cane-making, to
which he and his father soon added work in whalebone.
They were pretty successful, but, as they had very
little money to purchase stock and tools, could not
make a great business.
It was about this time that Henry
became acquainted with one who was to form the greatest
happiness of his life. There was a poor girl in
Hamburg who was a seamstress, and who not only supported
herself but her mother by her needle. Her name
was Agatha. She had a lovely face and very engaging
manners; her character was still more lovely than
her face; and she had only these to recommend her,
for she was very poor. Henry became strongly
attached to her, and she soon returned his love.
Henry’s father and mother did
not approve of this connection because the girl was
very poor; and as their son was so handsome and agreeable,
had now many friends, and was very capable, they thought
that he might marry the daughter of some rich man perhaps,
and so get some money. But, although Henry was
ready to jump from a wagon twenty feet high for a
few pence, and would walk the streets of the city
twelve hours a day for money, he would not so disgrace
himself as to give that most precious of all things,
his heart, for gold, and so he told his parents.
“I shall,” said he, “marry
my dear Agatha, or I shall never marry any one.
She is good, and gentle, and beautiful; and if I live,
she shall have money enough too, for I can and will
earn it for her. I shall work harder and better
now than I ever did before, because I shall be working
for one whom I love so dearly.”
Henry’s parents saw that it
was in vain to oppose him, that it would only drive
him out of the house, and that they should thus lose
him and his work too; so they gave the matter up.
From this time Henry worked more industriously,
if possible, than ever. He did the same for his
father as before; but he contrived also to find some
hours in which he might work for himself exclusively.
All that he earned at these times he devoted to his
new and dearest friend. He would purchase with
the money he earned some pretty or comfortable thing
to wear that she wished and had denied herself; or
sometimes he would get some nice thing for her to eat;
for she had delicate health, and but little appetite.
After work was done in the shop, and
the family had gone to bed, Henry used to hasten to
his dear Agatha, and pass two or three happy hours
with her. They both had fine voices, and many
an hour they would sing together, till they would
forget the weariness of the day, and the fact that
they had nothing but their love for each other to
bless themselves with in this world. They worked
harder, they denied themselves more than ever, they
were more careful to be wise and good for the sake
of each other; and so their love made them better
as well as happier.
At last, when Henry was nineteen,
his parents consented to his marrying and bringing
his wife home to their house. As there was no
money to spare, they could only have a very quiet wedding.
They were married with-out any parade or expense,
and never were two excellent beings happier than they.
The young wife made herself very useful
in her husband’s family. She worked very
hard, her husband thought harder than she
ought to work, and he was anxious to be
independent, and have a house of his own, where he
could take more care of her, and prevent her injuring
herself by labor.
There was some money due his father
in Bremen; and, after living at home a year or so,
Henry took his wife with him, and went there to collect
the money.
There they lived two years, and there
they suffered severely. They were very poor,
and they met with misfortunes. At last Henry’s
wife and their two children took the small-pox; but
they all lived and got well, and their love for each
other was only made more perfect by suffering; for
they learned patience and fortitude, and were confirmed
in what they both before believed, that they could
bear any trouble if they could share it together.
At the end of the two years, they
returned to Hamburg. During their absence, Henry’s
mother had died, and his father had married a woman
who had a little property.
Henry now felt no longer anxious about
his family, and set up for himself in the cane and
whalebone business. He took a small house, just
big enough for his family, and they invited his wife’s
sister to live with them and assist in the work.
Henry was very desirous of setting
up a cane and whalebone factory, and doing business
upon a larger scale, but had not the means to obtain
suitable machinery. He wanted a large boiler,
but it was too expensive, and he knew not what to
do. Here his excellent character was the cause
of his success. A gentleman who had known him
from the time when he used to carry about dust sticks
to sell came forward and offered him a large boiler,
and told him that he might pay for it whenever he
could conveniently. Henry accepted the kind offer,
and commenced business directly.
His old customers all came to him,
and in a short time he was able to hire a man to help
him. It was not long before he wanted another,
and then another man. Every thing prospered with
him. He made money fast. His business grew
larger constantly. He did all sorts of work in
whalebone and cane; now he added ivory, umbrella sticks,
keys for pianos, canes, and whip handles, and made
all sorts of things in which these materials are used.
Henry was so well acquainted with
his business, so industrious and faithful, was known
to be so honest and just in his dealings, and was
so kind in his treatment of his workmen, that all who
wanted what he could supply went to him, and his success
was very great. He grew rich. It was not
a great while before he was able to build a large
factory in the neighborhood of the city.
The little pedler of dust sticks was
now one of the richest men in Hamburg. He had
four hundred men in his employ, had a large house in
town, and another in the country. He was thus
able to indulge his love for nature. After a
hard day’s work, he could come home and enjoy
the beautiful sunset, and look at the moon and stars
in the evening, and hear the nightingale sing, and
join with his Agatha in the song of praise to the
Giver of all good things.
Henry did not, because he was rich,
lead a lazy and selfish life. He still worked
with his own hands, and thus taught his workmen himself,
and made their work more easy and agreeable by his
presence as well as by his instructions. He was
continually making improvements in his business, inventing
new things, and so keeping up his reputation.
He exported large quantities of the articles made
in his factory. Every year his business grew larger,
and he gained still higher reputation.
Henry’s fellow-citizens offered
him some of the highest offices of honor and profit
which the city had to bestow; but he refused them.
The only ones he accepted were those that gave no pay.
He was one of the overseers of the poor, and was always
one of the first to aid, in any way he could, plans
for the benefit of his suffering fellow-beings.
He gave money himself generously, but was very anxious
not to have his charities made public.
He was one of the directors of the
first railroad from Hamburg.
He engaged all his workmen with reference
to their character as well as their capacity, and
no one of them ever left him. He was their best
benefactor and friend.
So lived this excellent man, as happy
as he was good and useful, for sixteen years with
his dear wife; they had seven living children; but,
as I before told you, she had very delicate health,
and it was the will of God that these two loving hearts
should be separated in this world, as we hope, to
meet in heaven to part no more. After sixteen
years of perfect love and joy, he parted with his dear
Agatha.
Henry bore his sorrow meekly and patiently.
He did not speak, he could not weep; but life was
never again the same thing to him; he never parted
for a moment with the memory of his loving and dearly-beloved
wife. He was then only thirty-five years old,
but he never married again; and when urged to take
another wife, he always replied, “I cannot marry
again.” He felt that he was married forever
to his dear Agatha.
I must relate to you some of the beautiful
things Henry’s daughter told me about her mother.
Agatha had such a refined and beautiful taste and
manner that though, from her parents’ poverty,
she had not had the benefit of an education, yet it
was a common saying of the many who knew her, that
she would have graced a court. She never said
or did any thing that was not delicate and beautiful.
Her dress, even when they were very poor, had never
a hole nor a spot. She never allowed any rude
or vulgar thing to be said in her presence without
expressing her displeasure. She was one of nature’s
nobility. She lived and moved in beauty as well
as in goodness.
When she found she was dying, she
asked her husband to leave the room, and then asked
a friend who was with her to pray silently, for she
would not distress her husband; and so she passed away
without a groan, calmly and sweetly, before he returned.
An immense procession of the people followed her to
the grave, to express their admiration of her character
and their sorrow for her early death. There were
in Hamburg, at that time, two large churches, afterwards
burned down at the great fire, which had chimes of
bells in their towers. These bells played their
solemn tones only when some person lamented by the
whole city died. These bells were rung at the
funeral of Agatha.
Henry, ever after his separation from
her, would go, at the anniversary of her birth and
death, and take all his children and grand-children
with him to her grave. They carried wreaths and
bouquets of flowers, and laid them there; and he would
sit down with them and relate some anecdote about
their mother.
It is a custom with the people of
Germany to strew flowers on the graves of their friends.
The burying ground was not far from the street, and
often unfeeling boys would steal these sacred flowers;
but not one was ever stolen from the grave of Agatha.
The sister of whom we have before
spoken, whom we will call also by her Christian name,
Catharine, loved her sister with the most devoted
love, and when Agatha was dying, promised her that
she would be a mother to her children, and never leave
them till they were able to take care of themselves.
She kept her word. She refused
many offers of marriage, which she might have been
disposed to accept, and was a true mother to her sister’s
children, till they were all either married or old
enough not to want her care. Then, at the age
of fifty, aunt Catharine married a widower, who had
three children, who wanted her care.
From the time Henry lost his dear
wife, he devoted himself not only more than ever to
his children, but also to the good of his workmen.
He sought in duty, in good works, for strength to bear
his heavy sorrow; so that death might not divide him
from her he loved, but that he might be fitting himself
for an eternal union with her in heaven.
Henry never forgot that he had been
obliged to work hard for a living himself, and he
also remembered what had been his greatest trials
in his days of poverty. He determined to save
his workmen from these sufferings as much as possible.
He recollected and still felt the
evils of a want of education. He could never
forget how with longing eyes he had used to look at
books, and what a joy it had been to him to go to school;
and he resolved that his children should be well instructed.
The garden of knowledge, that was so tempting to him,
and that he was not allowed to enter, he resolved
should be open to them. He gave them the best
instructors he could find, and took care that they
should be taught every thing that would be useful
to them the modern languages, music, drawing,
history, &c.
Henry had found the blessing of being
able to labor skilfully with his hands; so he insisted
that all his children should learn how to work with
their own hands.
“My daughters,” he said,
“in order to be good housewives, must know how
every thing ought to be done, and be able to do it.
If they are poor, this will save them from much misery,
and secure them comfort and respectability.”
He insisted that those of his sons
who engaged in his business should work with the workmen,
wear the same dress, and do just as they did; so that
the boys might be independent of circumstances, and
have the security of a good living, come what would.
Thus every one of his children had the advantages
which belong to poverty as well as those of riches.
Their father said to them, that if they knew what
work was, they would know what to require of those
who labored for them; that they would have more feeling
for laborers, and more respect for them.
Henry was truly the friend of his
workmen. He gave them time enough to go to school.
He encouraged temperance; he had a weak kind of beer,
made of herbs, for them to drink, so that they might
not desire spirit. He gave them, once a year,
a handsome dinner, at which he presided himself.
He encouraged them to read, and helped them to obtain
books. He had a singing master, and took care
that every one who had a voice should be taught to
sing. He bought a pianoforte for them, and had
it put in a room in the factory, where any one, who
had time, and wished to play, could go and play upon
it; and he gave them a music teacher.
He did every thing he could to make
their life beautiful and happy. He induced them
to save a small sum every week from their wages, as
a fund to be used when any one died, or was sick, or
was married, or wanted particular aid beyond what
his wages afforded.
Henry’s factory was the abode
of industry, temperance, and cheerfulness. The
workmen all loved him like a brother. It was his
great object to show them that labor was an honorable
thing, and to make laborers as happy as he thought
they ought to be.
Henry was much interested in all that
related to the United States of America; and he was
very angry at our slavery. He felt that slavery
brought labor into discredit, and his heart ached for
the poor slaves, who are cut off from all knowledge,
all improvement. Nothing excited in him such
a deep indignation, nothing awaked such abhorrence
in his heart, as the thought of a man’s receiving
the services of another without making adequate compensation;
or the idea of any man exercising tyranny over his
brother man.
Henry’s workmen were the happiest
and best in Hamburg. They loved their employer
with their whole hearts; there was nothing they would
not do for him. When his factory had been established
twenty-five years, the workmen determined to have
a jubilee on the occasion, and to hold it on his birthday.
They kept their intention a secret from him till the
day arrived; but they were obliged to tell his children,
who, they knew, would wish to make arrangements for
receiving them in such a way as their father would
approve of, if he knew of it.
It was summer time; and on Henry’s
birthday, at seven o’clock in the morning, (for
they knew their friend was an early riser,) a strain
of grand and beautiful music broke the stillness of
the early hour, and a long procession of five hundred
men was seen to wind around the house.
The musicians, playing upon their
fine wind instruments, and dressed very gayly, came
first. Then came those of his workmen who had
been with him twenty-five years; then his clerks and
book-keepers; then followed his other workmen, and
then all the boys who were employed in his factory.
All wore black coats, with a green bow pinned on the
breast.
They drew up in a circle on the lawn
before his house; and five old men, who had been with
him for twenty-five years, stood in the centre, holding
something which was wrapped up in the Hamburg flag.
Now all the musical instruments played a solemn, religious
hymn. Immediately after, the five hundred voices
joined in singing it. Never did a truer music
rise to heaven than this; it was the music of grateful,
happy hearts.
When the hymn was sung, the book-keeper
came forward and made an address to his master, in
the name of them all. In this address they told
Henry how happy he had made them; how much good he
had done them; how sensible they were of his kindness
to them, and how full of gratitude their hearts were
towards him. They expressed the hope that they
should live with him all their lives.
Now the old men advanced, and uncovered
what they bore in their hands. It was a fine
portrait of their benefactor, in a splendid frame.
The picture was surrounded on the margin by fine drawings,
arranged in a tasteful manner, of all the various articles
which were made in his factory, views of his warehouses
in Hamburg, of the factory in which they worked, of
his house in town, of the one in the country where
they then were, and of the old exchange, where he
used to stand when he sold canes and dust sticks.
Then the old men presented to him the picture, saying
only a few words of respectful affection.
The good man shed tears. He could
not speak at first. At last he said, that this
was the first time in his life that he regretted that
he could not speak in public; that if he had ever done
any thing for them, that day more than repaid him
for all. They then gave him three cheers.
They now sang a German national tune, to words which
had been written for the occasion.
The children, who, as I told you,
knew what was to happen, had prepared a breakfast
for these five hundred of their father’s friends.
All the tables were spread in the garden behind the
house, and Henry desired that all the store rooms
should be opened, and that nothing should be spared.
After an excellent breakfast, at which
the children of the good man waited, the procession
marched around to the fine music; and the workmen,
having enjoyed themselves all the morning to their
hearts’ content, went to partake of a dinner
which the family had provided for them in a large
farm house. Here they sang, and laughed, and
told stories till about eight o’clock in the
evening, when they returned by railway to Hamburg,
in a special train which the railroad directors ordered,
free of expense, out of respect for Henry. The
railroad was behind Henry’s house, and as the
workmen passed, they waved their hats and cheered
him and the family till they were out of hearing.
The picture I had so much admired
was a copy of this very picture which the workmen
had presented. The original was hung up in Henry’s
drawing room, as his most valuable possession.
No wonder his daughter felt proud of that picture,
and loved to show her copy of it to her friends.
Near it hung a likeness of his dear Agatha. She
was very beautiful. It was a pleasant thing to
hear the daughter talk of her father and mother.
Thus did Henry live a useful, honorable,
and happy life the natural result of his
industry, perseverance, uprightness, and true benevolence.
Like Ben Adhem, he had shown his love to God by his
love to man.
One of Henry’s sons had come
to this country, to set up a cane and whalebone factory
in New York. The father had aided him as far as
he thought best, but urged him to depend as far as
possible upon his own industry and ability.
This son followed his father’s
example, and was very successful; but was obliged,
on account of the bad effects of our climate upon his
health, to return to his native land. The father,
who was anxious to visit the United States, and wished
much to see his daughter again, who was particularly
dear to him, determined to come, for a while, in his
son’s place. Henry thought also that his
health, which began to fail, might be benefited by
a sea voyage.
One reason why he wished much to visit
America was, that he might see, with his own eyes,
the position of the laboring classes in the Free States.
Of the Slave States he never could think with patience.
His daughter told me that the only time when she had
seen her father lose his self-command, was when a
gentleman, just returned from the West Indies, had
defended slavery, and had said that the negroes were
only fit to be slaves. Henry’s anger was
irrepressible, and, although it was at his own table,
and he was remarkable for his hospitality and politeness,
he could not help showing his indignation.
Nothing could exceed his delight at
what he saw in this part of our country. The
appearance every where of prosperity and comfort; the
cheerful look of our mechanics and laborers; their
activity; the freedom and joyousness of their manners, all
spoke to him of a free, prosperous, and happy people.
He was only, for any long time, in
New York, where his son’s factory was, and in
Massachusetts, where his daughter lived. Unhappily
his health did not improve. On the contrary,
it failed almost daily. Still he enjoyed himself
much. While in this part of the country, he took
many drives around the environs of Boston with his
daughter, and expressed the greatest delight at the
aspect of the country, particularly at the appearance
of the houses of the farmers and mechanics.
He found, when in the city of New
York, that attention to business was too much for
his strength; so he resolved to travel. “Nature,”
he said, “will cure me; I will go to Niagara.”
He brought with him, as a companion
and nurse, his youngest son, a lad of fifteen years
of age. The boy went every where with him.
When they arrived at Niagara, Henry would not go to
the Falls with any other visitors; he only allowed
his son to accompany him. When he first saw this
glorious wonder of our western world, he fell on his
knees and wept; he could not contain his emotion.
He was a true worshipper of Nature, and he courted
her healing influences; but he only found still greater
peace and health of mind; his bodily health did not
return.
His daughter, who, like all Germans,
held a festival every Christmas, wrote to urge him
to pass his Christmas with her at her Massachusetts
home; he was then in New York. He replied that
he was too ill to bear the journey at that season.
The pleasure of the thought of her Christmas evening
was gone; but she determined to make it as pleasant
as she could to her husband and children, though her
thoughts and her heart were with her sick father.
In the morning, however, a telegraphic
message arrived from her father, saying he would be
with them at eight o’clock in the evening.
With the Germans, the whole family
make presents to each other, no matter how trifling;
but some little present every one receives. Henry’s
little granddaughter was dressed in a style as fairy-like
as possible, and presented her grandfather with a
basket of such fruits as the season would allow of,
as the most appropriate present for a lover of Nature.
A very happy evening the good man had with his children.
He was forced to return to New York.
It was not many months after that his daughter heard
that he was very ill at Oyster Bay, where he had gone
to a water cure establishment. She went immediately
to him, and remained with him, nursing him, and reading
to him, till he was better, though not well.
During this period, when he was able
to bear the fatigue, his daughter drove him in a gig
round the neighboring country; and she told me that
such was his interest in the laborers, that he would
never pass one without stopping, and asking him questions
about his mode of working, &c. He could not speak
English; but she was the interpreter.
At last he insisted upon his daughter’s
returning to her family. There was something
so solemn, so repressed, in his manner, when he took
leave of her, that she was afterwards convinced that
he knew he should never see her again; but he said
not a word of the kind.
His health grew worse; his strength
failed daily; and he determined to return to Germany,
so as to die in his native land. He wrote to
his daughter, to ask her, as a proof of her love for
him, not to come to say farewell. She was ill
at the time, and submitted with a sad and aching heart.
She had seen her dear, excellent father
for the last time. He lived to arrive in Hamburg.
His workmen, when they heard of his arrival, went
to the vessel, and bore him in their arms to his country
house, where he died eight days afterwards.
He showed his strong and deep love
of nature in these his last hours; for when he was
so weak as to be apparently unconscious of the presence
of those he loved, he begged to be carried into his
garden, that he might hear the birds sing, and look
upon his flowers once more.
When he knew he was breathing his
last, he said to his children who were standing around
his bed, “Be useful, and love one another.”
His death was considered a public
calamity in Hamburg. His workmen felt that they
had lost their benefactor and brother. His children
knew that life could never give them another such friend.
His body was placed in the great hall,
in his country house, and surrounded by orange trees
in full bloom. Flowers he loved to the very last;
and flowers shed their perfume over the mortal garment
of his great and beautiful soul. One after another,
his workmen and his other friends came and looked
at his sweet and noble countenance, and took a last
farewell.
In Germany, when a distinguished man
dies, he is carried to the grave on an elevated hearse
decorated with black feathers and all the trappings
of woe; but Henry’s workmen insisted upon carrying
their benefactor and friend to his last home in their
arms. Their sorrowing hearts were the truest
mourning, the only pomp and circumstance worthy of
the occasion; and their streaming eyes were the modest
and unobtrusive, but most deeply affecting, pageant
of that day. All the inhabitants followed him,
with mourning in their hearts. Remembering Henry’s
love for flowers, his fellow-citizens made arches
of flowers in three places for his mortal remains to
pass under, as the most appropriate testimonial of
their love. The public officers all followed
him to the grave, and the military paid him appropriate
honors. Three different addresses were delivered
over his body by distinguished speakers, and then hundreds
and hundreds of voices joined in singing a hymn to
his praise written by a friend.
Henry made such an arrangement of
his business, and left such directions about it, as
to make sure that his workmen should, if they wished
it, have employment in his factory for ten years to
come. He divided his property equally amongst
his children, and bequeathed to them all his charities,
which were not few, saying that he knew that his children
would do as he had done, and that these duties would
be sacred with them.
Such a life needs no comment.
Its eloquence, its immortal power, is its truth, its
reality.
Among the many beautiful things that
were written in honor of Henry, I have translated
these as peculiarly simple and just.
“On the grave of the
good, great man.”
“Henry , a man
in the best sense of the term, strong in body and
soul, with a heart full of the noblest purposes, which
he carried out into action, without show and with
a child-like mind.”
“To the great Giver of all things
thankful for the smallest gift. To his family
a devoted father. To his friends a faithful friend.
To the state a useful citizen. To the poor a
benefactor. To the dying a worthy example.”
“Why was this power broken in
the prime of life? Why were the wings of this
diligent spirit clipped? Why were stopped the
beatings of this heart, which beat for all created
things? Sad questions, which can only find an
answer in the assurance that all which God wills for
us is good.”
“Peace be with thee, friend
and brother! We can never forget thee.”
Around their father’s
grave the children stand,
And mourning friends
are shedding bitter tears;
With sorrowing faces
men are standing here,
Whose tender love did
bear him in their arms
In sickness once, and
now once more in death,
Him who protector, friend,
and helper was;
And many eyes whose
tears he wiped away,
Are weeping at his narrow
house to-day.
When the frail vestments
of the soul
Are hidden in the tomb,
what then remains to man?
The memory of his deeds
is ours.
O sacred death, then,
like the flowers of spring,
Many good deeds are
brought to light.
Blessed and full of
love, good children
And true friends stand
at his grave,
And there with truth
loudly declare,
“A noble soul
has gone to heaven;
Rich seed has borne
celestial fruit;
His whole day’s
work now in God is done.”
Thus speak we now over
thy grave,
Our friend, now glorified
and living in our hearts.
A lasting monument thou
thyself hast built
In every heart which
thy great worth has known.
Yes, more than marble
or than brass, our love
Shall honor thee, who
dwellest in our hearts.
These tears, which pure
love consecrates to thee,
Thou noble man, whom
God has called away
From work which He himself
has blessed,
These grateful tears
shall fall upon the tomb
That hides the earthly
garment of our friend.
O, let us ne’er
forget the firm and earnest mind
Which bore him swiftly
onward in his course;
How from a slender twig
he built a bridge
O’er which he
safely hastened to the work
Which youthful hope
and courage planned.
Think how the circle
of his love embraced
His children and his
children’s children, all,
His highest joy their
happiness and good.
Think how he labored
for the good of all,
Supporter, benefactor,
faithful friend!
How with his wise and
powerful mind
He served and blessed
his native place!
His works remain to
speak his praise.
How did his generous,
noble spirit glow
With joy at all the
good and beautiful
Which time and human
skill brought forth!
He ever did the standard
gladly gain
Which light, and truth,
and justice raised;
And when his noble efforts
seemed to fail,
Found ever in his pure
and quiet breast a sweet repose.
We give to-day thy dust
to dust.
Thy spirit, thy true
being, is with us.
Thou art not dead; thou
art already risen.
Loved friend, thou livest,
and thou watchest o’er us still.
Be dry our tears; be
hushed our sighs;
Victor o’er death,
our friend still lives;
Takes his reward from
the Great Master’s band.
Deep night has passed
away. On him
Eternal morning breaks.
He,
From the dark chamber
of the grave,
Goes to the light of
the All-holy One.
Weep, weep no more!
Look up with hope on high!
There does he dwell.
He liveth too on earth.
The Master who has called
him hence to higher work,
To-morrow will call
us perhaps to-day.
Then shall we see him
once again. He, who went home
From earth in weakness
and in pain,
Is risen there in everlasting
joy and strength.
Till then we here resolve
to live like him,
That we, like him, may
die religious, true, and free.
When any little boy reads this true
story of a good, great man, I would have him remember
that Henry began to be a good, great man when only
eight years old. Henry began by being industrious,
patient, and good humored, so that people liked to
buy his sticks. Then he was faithful and true
to his father, and would not leave him, not even for
the sake of gaining some advantages. Henry used
all his faculties, and, by making his pretty canes,
he got money, not to buy sugar plums, but to pay for
instruction. When he did wrong, he took his punishment
cheerfully, and did not commit the same fault again.
All the virtues which finally made him a good, great
man he began to practise when he was only eight years
of age, when he was really a little boy.
I would have every little boy and
girl who reads this story try to imitate him.
If he is poor, let him learn to do something useful,
so to earn money that may help his father and mother,
and perhaps be the means of giving him a better education.
If he is rich, let him seek to get knowledge, and
let him remember those who have not as much as he
has, like little Eva, who taught Uncle Tom. Let
him remember that the selfish and the lazy cannot
be truly happy; that selfishness is its own punishment
in the end; that no children and no men are truly
happy or truly good who do not obey the words of the
noble-minded Henry on his death-bed
“Be useful, and
love one another”