Book Reviews. "I am Sorrow, and must wander forever," said the little one sadly. "Who are you?" "I am Labor. Do you not see how healthy I am and what strong arms I have? " and she took Sorrow in her arms like a little child, and ran across the field laughing with glee. A soft blush crept over Sorrow's pale face as she said with a smile, "Come with me! I can never rest and yet I am often so tired." "I cannot, dear sister, for I must sleep at night that I may work when day comas again. I am in all places,- everywhere and nowhere,- and must laugh and be happy. If I see your eyes my laugh will die. But whenever you call me, I will come and stay where you part, to mike the faces of the sad bright again." Sorrow wandered on in the sunny morning and through the wide world. Patience and Labor have kept their promise and become her true comrades. Often they gather at evening in the ivy-covered house by the lake and read or write in the Book of Life. Robert Dar;-oc/l. BOOK REVIEWS. William and Lucy Smith. PERHAPS the most arresting and monopolizing book of the year is George S. Merriam's Story of William and Lucy Soizith. The editing of the copious extracts from the husband's books and from the wife's memoirs and letters is done with obvious skill, and the extracts themselves are not dulled by anything less than just appreciation and worthy comment upon these exalted lives. His work will be grateful to every one who read "Thorndale" thirty years ago, and has often recurred to that notable book. In it William Smith, an unknown name, cast sincere illumination upon the three great problems,- God, Fate, Immortality. It has taken many feet from dead paths and turned them to the ways of life. It is a singularly natural, gracious, inspiring book. It presented the argument from every side, and made choice inevitable from the mere contrast. It is the fruit of reasonable hope rather than of belief, and suggested a vista. Years afterwards, William Smith wrote "Gravenhurst," and carried on the high thought beyond "Thorndale." In the Progress of Humanity he found the key to the old problems, and without recasting his old conclusions, simply opened them more widely. These two books, rather than his earlier works or his lifelong task as a reviewer in Blackwood and the Quarterlies, give William Smith a permanent place in literature. In this Story we see him in other relations. All his life shy, introspective, free from common thoughts, he knew no home or friend out of his own sex until he met a woman far advanced in middle life who had never desired earler marriage. They married at the ripe ages of fifty-three and forty-three, and the love story of the next eleven years until he died is an in 1The Story of William and Lucy Smith. Edited by George S. Merriam. Houghton, Mifflin, & Co.: Boston: E889. For sale in San Francisco by Samuel Carson & Co. struction to those who think that none except the young know how to love. So far as we can see, the sympathetic touch was perfect. The chapters of those eleven years are keenly delightful. It is more than worth while to know that people have so lived and can so live. Then follows an equal period of mourning, in which the widowed mate, sick with grief, strong in hope, pours out her words about him, his thoughts, his ways, his ever presence in absence. Of the few who can omit much of the extracts on the grave subjects of" Thorndale" and "Gravenhurst," not one will omit a line of the tender mourning of Lucy Smith. Two Unitarian Books. Two books of sermons by Unitarian divines are at hand. Jesus BrouMht Back2 is an effort to portray Jesus from the standpoint of "reverent ration alism." The believer, however, whose mind is "vitiated by the bias of traditional theology," will find this a new sort of reverence. Jesus is not the Messiah, not The Christ, not the Logos, not the Lamb of God. He was not born at Bethlehem, was heralded by no star in the East, never went to Egypt, performed no miracles. More than this, he was a very ignorant man, of limited intellectual power, and still more, he was not morally perfect, being given to bursts of unreasonable anger, and being continually unjust to the Pharisees and others. This will seem a painful process of destructive criticism to "orthodox" people, but not many such will read farther than Mr. Crooker's preface, if they happen to take up so heretical a book. To another class it may prove helpful,-those who have unwillingly given up belief in the Bible and in Jesus because they find the idea of miracle or the supernatural untenable. These will be comforted to find how 2 Jesus Brought Back. By Joseph Henry Crooker. Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co. i889. 1889.] 223
Book Reviews [pp. 223-224]
Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 14, Issue 80
Annotations Tools
Book Reviews. "I am Sorrow, and must wander forever," said the little one sadly. "Who are you?" "I am Labor. Do you not see how healthy I am and what strong arms I have? " and she took Sorrow in her arms like a little child, and ran across the field laughing with glee. A soft blush crept over Sorrow's pale face as she said with a smile, "Come with me! I can never rest and yet I am often so tired." "I cannot, dear sister, for I must sleep at night that I may work when day comas again. I am in all places,- everywhere and nowhere,- and must laugh and be happy. If I see your eyes my laugh will die. But whenever you call me, I will come and stay where you part, to mike the faces of the sad bright again." Sorrow wandered on in the sunny morning and through the wide world. Patience and Labor have kept their promise and become her true comrades. Often they gather at evening in the ivy-covered house by the lake and read or write in the Book of Life. Robert Dar;-oc/l. BOOK REVIEWS. William and Lucy Smith. PERHAPS the most arresting and monopolizing book of the year is George S. Merriam's Story of William and Lucy Soizith. The editing of the copious extracts from the husband's books and from the wife's memoirs and letters is done with obvious skill, and the extracts themselves are not dulled by anything less than just appreciation and worthy comment upon these exalted lives. His work will be grateful to every one who read "Thorndale" thirty years ago, and has often recurred to that notable book. In it William Smith, an unknown name, cast sincere illumination upon the three great problems,- God, Fate, Immortality. It has taken many feet from dead paths and turned them to the ways of life. It is a singularly natural, gracious, inspiring book. It presented the argument from every side, and made choice inevitable from the mere contrast. It is the fruit of reasonable hope rather than of belief, and suggested a vista. Years afterwards, William Smith wrote "Gravenhurst," and carried on the high thought beyond "Thorndale." In the Progress of Humanity he found the key to the old problems, and without recasting his old conclusions, simply opened them more widely. These two books, rather than his earlier works or his lifelong task as a reviewer in Blackwood and the Quarterlies, give William Smith a permanent place in literature. In this Story we see him in other relations. All his life shy, introspective, free from common thoughts, he knew no home or friend out of his own sex until he met a woman far advanced in middle life who had never desired earler marriage. They married at the ripe ages of fifty-three and forty-three, and the love story of the next eleven years until he died is an in 1The Story of William and Lucy Smith. Edited by George S. Merriam. Houghton, Mifflin, & Co.: Boston: E889. For sale in San Francisco by Samuel Carson & Co. struction to those who think that none except the young know how to love. So far as we can see, the sympathetic touch was perfect. The chapters of those eleven years are keenly delightful. It is more than worth while to know that people have so lived and can so live. Then follows an equal period of mourning, in which the widowed mate, sick with grief, strong in hope, pours out her words about him, his thoughts, his ways, his ever presence in absence. Of the few who can omit much of the extracts on the grave subjects of" Thorndale" and "Gravenhurst," not one will omit a line of the tender mourning of Lucy Smith. Two Unitarian Books. Two books of sermons by Unitarian divines are at hand. Jesus BrouMht Back2 is an effort to portray Jesus from the standpoint of "reverent ration alism." The believer, however, whose mind is "vitiated by the bias of traditional theology," will find this a new sort of reverence. Jesus is not the Messiah, not The Christ, not the Logos, not the Lamb of God. He was not born at Bethlehem, was heralded by no star in the East, never went to Egypt, performed no miracles. More than this, he was a very ignorant man, of limited intellectual power, and still more, he was not morally perfect, being given to bursts of unreasonable anger, and being continually unjust to the Pharisees and others. This will seem a painful process of destructive criticism to "orthodox" people, but not many such will read farther than Mr. Crooker's preface, if they happen to take up so heretical a book. To another class it may prove helpful,-those who have unwillingly given up belief in the Bible and in Jesus because they find the idea of miracle or the supernatural untenable. These will be comforted to find how 2 Jesus Brought Back. By Joseph Henry Crooker. Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co. i889. 1889.] 223
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- The Stone Elephant of Inyo - Dan De Quille - pp. 113-117
- Colombian Presidents - F. B. Evans - pp. 117-127
- A Pledge - S. W. Eldredge - pp. 128
- The Old Notion of Poetry - John Vance Cheney - pp. 129-141
- Time O' Day - W. S. Hutchinson - pp. 142-151
- Reminiscences of Indian Scouting - A. G. Tassin - pp. 151-169
- Conradt - Adeline E. Knapp - pp. 169-174
- Memory - Wilbur Larremore - pp. 174
- Wine, Brandy, and Olive Oil - R. G. Sneath - pp. 175-179
- A Soldier under Garibaldi - Flora Haines Loughead - pp. 179-190
- Hunting the Bison - Dagmar Mariager - pp. 190-196
- Good Courage - Francis E. Sheldon - pp. 196
- The Cabin by the Live Oak, Chapters I-IV - T. E. Jones - pp. 197-205
- Recent Fiction, II - pp. 205-211
- Recent Biography, II - pp. 212-216
- Etc. - pp. 217-223
- Book Reviews - pp. 223-224
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"Book Reviews [pp. 223-224]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ahj1472.2-14.080. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 22, 2025.