McGuffey's Fifth Eclectic Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 400 pages of information about McGuffey's Fifth Eclectic Reader.

McGuffey's Fifth Eclectic Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 400 pages of information about McGuffey's Fifth Eclectic Reader.

10.  And now before the open door—­
      The warrior priest had ordered so—­
    The enlisting trumpet’s sudden soar
      Rang through the chapel, o’er and o’er,
    Its long reverberating blow,
    So loud and clear, it seemed the ear
    Of dusty death must wake and hear. 
    And there the startling drum and fife
    Fired the living with fiercer life;
    While overhead with wild increase,
    Forgetting its ancient toll of peace,
      The great bell swung as ne’er before: 
    It seemed as it would never cease;
    And every word its ardor flung
    From off its jubilant iron tongue
      Was, “WarWarWar!”

11.  “Who dares”—­this was the patriot’s cry,
      As striding from the desk he came—­
      “Come out with me, in Freedom’s name,
    For her to live, for her to die?”
    A hundred hands flung up reply,
    A hundred voices answered “I!”

Definitions.—­l.  Bo’re-al, northern. 3.  Yeo’man, a freeholder, a man freeborn.  Dint, stroke. 5.  Man’or, a tract of land occupied by tenants.  Gen’tle (pro. jen’tl), well born, of good family. 7.  Theme, a subject on which a person speaks or writes. 8.  Guise, external appearance in manner or dress. 10.  Soar, a towering flight.

Notes.—­2.  Forgot her ... name.  The reference is to the meaning of the word “concord,”—­harmony, union.

4.  Celestial bound; i.e., the sky, heaven.

6.  The pastor.  This was John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg, who was at this time a minister at Woodstock, in Virginia.  He was a leading spirit among those opposed to Great Britain, and in 1775 he was elected colonel of a Virginia regiment.  The above poem describes his farewell sermon.  At its close he threw off his ministerial gown, and appeared in full regimental dress.  Almost every man in the congregation enlisted under him at the church door.  Muhlenberg became a well-known general in the Revolution, and after the war served his country in Congress and in various official positions.

LXVI.  CONTROL YOUR TEMPER.

John Todd, D.D. (b. 1800, d. 1873), was born in Rutland, Vt.  In 1842 he was settled as a pastor of a Congregational Church, in Pittsfield, Mass, In 1834, he published “Lectures to Children”; in 1835, “The Student’s Manual,” a valuable and popular work, which has been translated into several European languages; in 1836, “The Sabbath-School Teacher”; and in 1841, “The Lost Sister of Wyoming.”  He was one of the founders of the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary.

1.  No one has a temper naturally so good, that it does not need attention and cultivation, and no one has a temper so bad, but that, by proper culture, it may become pleasant.  One of the best disciplined tempers ever seen, was that of a gentleman who was naturally quick, irritable, rash, and violent; but, by having the care of the sick, and especially of deranged people, he so completely mastered himself that he was never known to be thrown off his guard.

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McGuffey's Fifth Eclectic Reader from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.