F r, : y hours of comfort and repose quit# us of the distance. It took nine days by post for the news of the capture of Burgoyne to come to Portland, while the fall of Sedan w r as known the next morning, and the bombardment of Alexandria was in the evening papers. We can girdle the world today in a minute. A hundred years ago the Constitution of the United States had not been adopted. We were not even a nation. A hundred years ago Benjamin Franklin was yet alive at the ripe age of eighty years. George Washington had thirteen years of life to live, and the whole career of Napoleon had yet to unfold itself to the astonished world. But not for me are any of these inspiring themes. My humble talk deals only with a little corner of the great world ; but a little corner which is very dear to us here assembled, because it is beautiful and we love it, and it is our home. A hundred years ago habitable Portland was bounded by High street, I might almost say by Centre street and India, by the harbor and Congress street. Within that little parallelogram were almost all the houses left by Mowatt, with those rebuilt since the devastation made by his fleet eleven years before. Of the fifteen wharves which then pushed a little way into the harbor, not one has preserved its name or its identity. The first five at the east are included in the Grand Trunk grounds, and all the rest must be substantially covered by Commercial street and its improvements. Munjoy hill had still its original pine growth, while Bramhall hill was covered with scrub oak, which were called Vaughan's woods. The swamp extended down to Winter street, and ther^ was a big swamp in front of the Advertiser office, south of Federal street, drained by a brook which discharged itself at the foot of Exchange street. The houses of the poor were of but one-story, with a long, sloping roof. A great chimney in the centre gave two rooms on two sides, with fire-places, and a bed-room and entry on the other sides. The front room had a painted floor, with a few painted wooden chairs, a table for the Bible and psalm book. A few shells were on the mantel, the family register, and perhaps a few rude pictures on the wall. From this room, sacred to IO CENTENNIAL ORATION. " company " and to solemn occasions, the light of day was religiously excluded; board shutters took the place of curtains. The family did not live there. It was too good for them. They lived in the kitchen, amid the steam of cookery, the horrors of washing-day, and the smoke of refractory chimneys. The sides of this room were wainscotted in pine, four feet high, and the rest of the walls were of coarse plaster. The ceiling was also made low, for heat was not to be wasted. If the frame would have made it too high, the split boards on which the plaster was stuck were lowered by studs to lessen the space, which had to be warmed. The ceiling was soon begrimed with the smoke of the fire, and variegated by the steam of washing-day. The heads of the family had chairs, but blocks of wood were good enough for children. Candles, in iron candle-sticks, gave all the light which eked out the day. Japanned lamps for oil were for the front room and for visitors. On the dresser, a ladder of shelves hung against the wall, were displayed treasures of tin and pewter. In a chest was the crockery which adorned the state occasions. The garret was unplastered, each rafter and board, with the chimney itself, had an individuality, from which no cunning device detracted. The architectural lamp of truth shone over the whole structure. The family clothing hung from nails wherever convenient, and in the garret were the family beds. Sometimes a rough board partition divided the garret, but this was rare. If there -was a cellar there was no window to give light, and the sides had to be banked up in the winter with turf or pine boughs to make the cold blasts endurable. The houses of the rich had two stories, with four rooms on the first floor and four chambers on the second, with sometimes a porch, wherein to do the cooking. These houses had good cellars. The chimneys rested on arches, and the spaces under the arches were utilized for jam and preserves and such like delights. There were other houses, very few in number, perhaps not more than two or three, built within a year or two, which were still finer. The first brick house, the Longfellow house, had just been finished. Out of doors the contrast with the present day was still more marked. We were not within a quarter of a century of brick sidewalks. Perhaps there were a few flagstones in front of the dwellings of the rich, though Boston eight years later had none, and there may have been CENTENNIAL ORATION. ll some board walks but the people must have got about for the most part on trodden paths. Fancy the early spring time and the mud puddles ; and the affectionate mud which stuck to you closer than a brother! At night there were no lights out of doors. If you wanted such a comfort you carried it yourself. It was not until 1810 that the town ventured upon the unexampled luxury of furnishing od for forty lamps which were subscribed for by the inhabitants, and then the fire wards in solemn assembly thought these lamps would need to be lighted only a hundred nights in a year. But a hundred years ago street lamps were not necessary. There were no amusements. There was not even a fire engine for the boys to run with. There was no theatre. Even twenty years after, the town solemnly reprobated the designs of certain evil minded persons who contemplated a play house, and the legislature was to be asked to prohibit its erection. There were no hacks. Not a ship was owned in town. There was no lighthouse on Portland Head, and there were only sixty-eight arrivals and eighty clearances that year. The first bank had yet to be incorporated thirteen years afterwards. Four or five letters came into town every week and as many went out. The roads were so bad that the mail was sometimes delayed over a month. It took five or six clays to get to Boston. " Now," says Willis, in 1833, with commendable pride, "now the mail is dispatched every day, performing the distance in sixteen or seventeen hours," little dreaming that we should reduce the time to three hours and a half. My successor, if the world has luck, will state it in minutes or perhaps in seconds. We had one newspaper, published once a week on a half sheet. People who did not go on foot went on horseback. Even if a man owned a chaise he was careful about taking it out. There was only one church, which stood where the First Parish now stands, but was broadside to the street. Sunday must have been a hard day to get through. There were no fires in the church. In the coldest winter it was unheated. Little foot stoves with glow- ing embers in them were all that mitigated the most arctic severity. The sermons were probably long, the prayers certainly were. The pews were square, the partitions being nearly as tall as a man. Everybody stood up at prayers. The seats were hinged so that they could be turned up for convenience of leaning. And certainly the 12 CENTENNIAL ORATION. lay Christian ought to have had that convenience. He needed it. It was a provision in favor of life. When you read this quaint entry in Parson Smith's Journal, March 15th, 1740: "Had uncommon assistance; was an hour in each of the first prayers," you cannot repress the feeling inquiry whether the poor parishioners also had " uncommon assistance." To us in these soft and degenerate days it does really seem as if poor unassisted human nature could not have stood it. The rich of that day were well dressed having wigs and three cornered cocked hats and much affluence of style. Everybody, rich and poor, wore breeches. Captain Joseph Titcomb — on whom be peace — first of men wore pantaloons in Portland in 1790. Home- spun must have been much worn and suspenders not at all. The rich must have been able to fare sumptuously every day for there was abundance of fish, flesh and fowl to be had for money. The poor could have had very little white bread. Rye and Indian, with corn bread, must have been a large part of their diet with hasty pudding and molasses. The drinking habits were more than bad. It was quite respectable to get drunk. The rich got drunk and even the clergy at ordinations sometimes "forgot decorum," which is probably the clerical name for the same thing. It was quite a point with the poor man of those days to get drunk on Saturday so that he might have Sunday to sober off in. Liquors were furnished at funerals, and there must have been scandalous scenes, for the selectmen in 1788 "earnestly recommend" that the custom cease. The dead were carried to their graves by bearers. When Commodore Preble was buried in 1807, there was not a carriage in the procession. Of schools there was only one in the town, and thirty pounds was the expenditure for education that year. Cleanliness had not been reduced to a science and vermin of one syllable were not unknown. Cotton was not yet grown in the United States. There were no steam engines in America, and no lucifer matches anywhere on the earth. I have thus given you a rough and imperfect picture (no one knows better than I how imperfect it is), of Portland and its life a hundred years ago. Between that day and this you can each for yourself make the comparison. Is there one who listens to me today who is not glad that his lot has been cast in the Portland of today CENTENNIAL ORATION. I 3 rather than on the Neck in 1786? And yet you will not go half through the next political campaign without hearing some praiser of the days gone by, on either side, bemoaning himself over the degen- eracy of our times. You will hear the phrases, "the poor poorer and the rich richer," rolling in rotund sentences out of those who have so long ceased to be babes and sucklings, that out of their mouths is perfected no praise of God. The rich have grown richer, but so have also the poor. Richer in rights and privileges; richer in com- forts and in happiness. I hold him to be a heathen and a publican who doubts that under the law of nature, the embodiment of which is God, the progress of the poor keeps more than equal pace with the progress of the rich. Far enough indeed are we from perfection. But whoever doubts progress, doubts God. "Whenever," says the president of the great Pennsylvania Railroad, "whenever we cease to spend money on capital account this road will begin to die." Whenever agitation for progress, agitation grounded on sound reasons, or false ones on wise reasons or silly ones, ceases, the race will have got ready to disappear from the earth. Look around you and see what a hundred years in this little peninsula has done for the comfort of us all. The streets and side- walks and parks belong to rich and poor alike. In 1786 what but an errand of mercy or necessity would have tempted a strong man to struggle with the mud and darkness of an April night in the journey from the head of High street to the foot of India? In 1886 any girl can go at night from Munjoy to Bramhall dry shod, lighted on her cheerful way by the blaze of electric lamps. When I thus think of the progress of the last century, and the sure progress of the next, I hope to be forgiven for the deep-seated envy with which I regard the happy Portlander of 1986. I have no design to give you a history of Portland today. That history has been written by Mr. Willis and Mr. Goold, and its earlier scenes have had full justice clone them by Mr. Baxter. And why should I try to do ill what they have done so well? My only design, by some glances here and there, is to show to our people how well worthy of study is the history of their own city. HereVwelead our prosaic, every-day lives, have happened events as tragic, scenes as thrilling as ever adorned the stories of those old world cities, for the sight of which we cross the rolling ocean. The quaint old letters 14 CENTENNIAL ORATION. reveal love as tender and true, courage as undaunted and steadfast and patriotism as lofty and ennobling as any which have been celebrated in story or in song. Great deeds thrill us wherever done, — great words wherever spoken, for human nature is broader than place and wider than kinship; but where great deeds have been done and noble words spoken at our very homes, on our very hearth- stones and by our own kith and kin, the thrill of pride becomes more positive because more personal. Who is there of you who hears me today who does not read with redoubled emotion, born of this sentiment of home and kinship, how this town waited with uneasy expectation and excited hope the issue of that gallant little sea fight in which the prowess of England and the courage of America were measured against each other by the brave sailors on the Enterprise and the Boxer? On this spot can human emotion ever cease to kindle when our thoughts rest on that little procession which conducted the dead captains to their romantic burial on the green hill side " Which overlooks the tranquil bay Where they in battle died." There is but one old world romance more touching than this ; that these two gallant young heroes who never met except as foes should lie side by side like brothers through the long night of time, over- looking the scenes of their last heroic endeavor. What heart here is not richer with honest sympathy ; who does not feel a deeper human interest in the great Commodore Preble when he has read the tender, manly letter in which he avows his love for the lady who afterwards bore his name. Love in all ages is the same, the same sweet mystery when fortune favors, the same awful sorrow, when fortune frowns. But Edward Preble, the gallant sailor, the scourge of the Barbary pirates, was our hero and we have a personal interest in the emotions of his heart as well as in his glory and his fame. Who here does not have an individual delight, a personal satis- faction when he stumbles on that sturdy phrase in the old moldy deposition where deponent saith that George Cleeve, on being told he could have his house and land at Spurwink if he would attorn to Trelawney, indignantly declared "he would be tennant to never a man in New England." Thus spoke the spirit of the new continent CENTENNIAL ORATION. I 5 which echoes in our hearts today. The vigorous men who had put between them and the servitudes and tenancies of the old world, three thousand miles of watery waste, meant in the new world to be the peers of all others and the servants of none. There is a little passage in the old diary of the great General Knox, whom George Washington loved, which interests us more than it does all the rest of the world. When the brave General was sent to Ticonderoga to bring cannon for the siege of Boston, he records on the first day of the year 1776 that he wrote letters to General Washington "and one to my lovely Lucy." — That "lovely Lucy," dead now long years ago, was the daughter of Hannah Waldo, the spirited girl who, tired beyond endurance, and angered beyond repression at the indecision and procrastination of her lover, refused in the presence of all the wedding guests to marry the only son of Sir William Pepperell, the greatest magnate there ever was in all New England. The "lovely Lucy" had all her mother's temper, and more than her mother's pride, and the great general whose artillery had been prevalent in many a siege and on many a field was not always master of the stately mansion he built in the wilds of Maine. The town of Falmouth was twice destroyed. Twice was it sacked and left desolate. One scene in the first destruction, in 1676, always laid strong hold on my imagination. When the savages swooped in, killed the brave grandson of George Cleeve and carried the Bracketts into captivity, George Burroughs, the minister on the Neck, escaped to Cushing's Island, with ten men, six women and sixteen children. On the north slope, towards Peak's Island, can perhaps yet be seen the remains of the rough stone breast-work, behind which these poor people awaited death or rescue. What a blessing it was to George Burroughs that the prophetic vision so longed for in the earlier ages of the world was not vouchsafed to him. Over those long nights of vigil and those weary clays of waiting, with the unpitying ocean on the one side and the merciless savages on the other, there hung no black foreboding of the shameful death on the scaffold to be inflicted on him by his fellow Christians', more cruel in their ignorance than the heathen in their wrath. Death by tomahawk and scalping knife he was to escape, only to meet a sadder doom at the hands of his fellow Christians. George Burroughs was executed for witchcraft at I 6 CENTENNIAL ORATION. Salem, in 1692. It was a shameful death; but not to him. He died as a brave man should, steadfast, prayerful and high of heart. Neither religion nor infidelity, neither faith nor science, nor the wit of man hath ever explained that mysterious way of God so often manifest in human history, when the brave, upright, truthful, manly man is driven ignominiously from the world, leaving it with all its honors and delights to the victorious miscreant, the sinuous schemer and the crawling coward. Yet in the great cycles of the Almighty the wicked flourish only for a season, while righteousness is like the stars, forever and ever. Falmouth was destroyed the second time in 1690; but the year before it narrowly escaped destruction. In the old orchard, opposite Deering's Woods, near which the boys of my day and neighborhood used to spend many a holiday, unconscious of the tragic events which marked its earlier history, was fought the greatest Indian fight in the district of Maine. On the 17th of September, 1689, there had landed at Peak's Island two hundred savages who awaited until the 20th, a reinforcement, which doubled their number. During those three days the people could have expected nothing but destruction. They were few in number, utterly unable to cope with their enemies. It must have been a joyful sight to them, when at three o'clock on Monday afternoon, Major Benjamin Church came sailing into the harbor with the longed for but unexpected reinforcements. At night-fall, the Major, having carefully concealed his forces mean- while, drew close to the shore, landed his soldiers, made his dispositions, ordered himself called two hours before daylight and then, like a prudent man, went to bed. The Indians, during the night paddled across Back Cove and landed in the rear of the Brackett farm. Promptly the next morning at half an hour before daylight, Captain Church, not knowing where the enemy were, stationed a part of his forces a half a mile from the town, probably in Deering's pasture, had them send out scouts, and himself returned to town. Before he could get breakfast an alarm called him back and he learned from Brackett's sons the position of the enemy. Captain Hall appears at once to have marched against the foe, crossing the creek above Deering's Bridge and to have been hotly engaged, while the two other captains, remaining on the other side, fired at the Indians over the heads of Capt. Hall's company. CENTENNIAL ORATION. I 7 Church, who had returned again to town to cause the musket balls, which were too big for his guns, to be hammered into slugs, found a few bullets and three knapsacks of ammunition and hurrying back had them transported across the creek. Then seizing the situation with the eye of a good soldier, he demanded how he could cross the creek farther up. When he was told there was a bridge, probably near where the railroad now crosses Portland street, he took the two companies remaining on this side the stream and ran shouting to the bridge. Crossing, and leaving there an ambuscade of six men, he ordered Captain Southworth with his company of English, to go down the edge of the marsh to the assistance of Captain Hall, while he, with the company of Indians, would go through the brush and attack the enemy in the rear. After much ''bad travelling" through the matted brush, he had just got into position, when the word came that the enemy were making for the bridge. He rushed back to intercept them and his ambuscade told him the enemy were skirting the swamp at the head of the creek, further up, on their way to the Neck. Not knowing the country, he scattered his men and started in pursuit. He seems to have gone around Bramhall's Hill to Thaddeus Clark's farm, where the peaceful, undisturbed cattle, grazing in the field showed him that no Indians had passed that way. Hastily retracing his steps to the field of battle, he found the victory had been won, that his march to the rear, though abandoned, had done its work, and the Indians had dissappeared, carrying with them their dead. Church's forces lost twenty-one killed and wounded. Among them were two soldiers from the fort and two townsmen. But the town, which had thus happily escaped, was not long to enjoy its security. The next year witnessed the successful attack which rendered Falmouth Neck an uninhabited wilderness for six and twenty years. Fort Loyall, of which all traces have now dissappeared, was built just before 1680, by the aid of Massachusetts. There has been left us no description of this fort, but it must have been large, for the town buildings were within the walls, which were made of logs. Besides Fort Loyall, there ware the Ingersoll garrison, at the foot of Exchange street and the Lawrence garrison on Munjoy. Fort Loyall was built near where Fore street crosses India, and stood on what was then a bluff fifteen feet or more above the water, 1 8 CENTENNIAL ORATION. an elevation which did more than anything else to ensue its downfall. During the year 1690 the Massachusetts authorities, despite the pro- tests of Major Church and the prayers of the people, had been gradually withdrawing the troops which garrisoned it. Only a few days before the fatal attack the captain in charge, Simon Willard, departed for boston with the soldiers of his company, leaving behind him less than seventy men. While Massachusetts was thus render- ing our little settlement helpless, the enterprising Frontenac, the Governor of Canada, was organizing destruction for the whole dis- trict of Maine. Early in January a small force started from Montreal, and gathering recruits as it moved, reached the banks of the Kennebec at Winslow, where they were joined by the Baron Castine and by Hurtel with his forces, red-handed from the massacre at Salmon Falls. All these French and Indians were gathered together early in May under command of the Count de Portneuf. From the Kennebec they marched to Merrymeeting Bay, and came to the Islands. The defenders of Fort Loyall seemed to have had no conception of the numbers to be arrayed against them. When the enemy first made their appearance, climbing over Munjoy Hill and planting themselves in ambuscade, Lieut. Thaddeus Clark, a gallant Irishman, with thirty of the stoutest youth, stepped out as bravely as gaily to drive away the lurking foes. But as they rushed up with loud hurrahs, the enemy poured in one volley and sprang upon them with sword and hatchet with such fierceness and in such numbers that onlv five, all wounded, escaped to Lawrence Garrison near by. That night, the 16th, Fort Loyall was summoned to surrender and the answer came "that they should defend themselves to the death." That night, also, the men from the garrison came into Fort Loyall where had been gathered the people of the town. It must have been a doleful company that sheltered itself behind those frail palisades. Thirty of their best and bravest lay killed and wounded and their wives and mothers and companions knew that they themselves were cut off from all succor and surrounded by howling savages. The light and smoke of their burning dwellings added new horrors to the scene. They soon found that under the bluff on which their fort was built, the enemy had gathered, out of reach of cannon ami musketry, and were slowly and surely undermining their defences. After four days of suspense and terror, after the greater CENTENNIAL ORATION. I 9 part of the men had been killed or wounded, after destruction by fire became a terrible certainty, the brave little garrison surrendered and were for the most part handed over to the savages. Quarter was promised but the promise was not respected. How many sur- rendered no muster list disclosed. We only know that a few came back from Canada. While the fight was raging two men from Spurwink climbed the hill and saw the burning dwellings, while a little shallop from Piscataqua sailed into the harbor in time to see the sturdy defence of the garrisons. These spread the news far and wide. After Casco fell, the marauding savages with fire and flame, completed the destruction of all which the fleeing and captured inhabitants had left behind them. Of the last war episode in the history of Portland I shall not speak. Its bombardment by Mowatt everybody knows. A more wanton, indefensible assault upon an undefended city has not dis- graced the annals of modern warfare. But while the city has thus suffered by war and rapine it has also been the scene of much pomp and pageantry. Indeed the waters of Casco witnessed a great scenic display before a white man had set his foot on shore, for did not bold Captain Christopher Levett in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred and twenty-three sail down the harbor " with the king and queen and prince, bow and arrows, dog and kettle, in his boat, his noble attendants rowing by us in their canoes?" and was not meat, drink and tobacco given to the lordly savages ? and is not the same figured in Mr. Goold his book ? Let us hope, to complete the glowing scene, that great fishes chased each other with heads like "the stone horses in a gentleman's park," that Michael Milton's Triton looked on approving, having not yet "dyed the water with his purple blood," while the " tyrant" bear on the shore paused a moment from his pursuit of the succulent lobster in the shallow pool. On one great day in 1754 we had here the Governor of Massachu- setts, and a Governor of Massachusetts of that day was a superior being, and suspected it himself. There came also a majority of the Council, and the Speaker of the House and eight hundred troops. They stayed with us ten days, and there was great feasting and parade. They treated with the Indians and went their stately way back to Boston, and lived happily ever afterwards. 20 CENTENNIAL ORATION. I do not remember these two scenes, but I do remember the boyish face of the Prince of Wales, and that remarkable hat of the Duke of Newcastle, which I trust his "posterity have preserved, for it must have descended from his ancestors. I remember also the wonderful grandeur of the saluting ships as they belched fire until the white smoke covered the sea and floated away against the black and lowering sky. I little thought as I saw that mighty line-of-battle ship, the " Hero," sail majestic out of the harbor with her ninety guns tier on tier, that I should live to see that representative of England's pride and glory as obsolete and defenceless as the old block-house at York. Yet only ten years afterwards there came steaming into the harbor the tall iron ship, the " Monarch," before whose powerful cannon and armored prow the great ninety-gun ship, which would have been the pride of Nelson in the days of his highest glory, could have had no refuge even in flight. But the mighty "Monarch," with its towering sides and its turrets of iron, which bore the dead philanthropist across the sea, the monitors which welcomed her to our shores, and even the great admiral, whose benignant face added a two-fold charm to the glory of his mighty deeds, were but the ornaments of the great historic event their presence signalized. The honors thus paid to the remains of an untitled citizen solely because he had been the benefactor of his race, marked another epoch in our progress toward that happy day when the bronze statues of military leaders on horseback will no longer be the sole adornment of capital cities, when war, noble and ennobling as it sometimes is, shall cease from the earth; when the great brotherhood of men shall become a fact and not a dream ; when we shall have not only liberty and equality, but every talent and strength and power unselfishly consecrated to the good of all, we shall have true fraternity also, that bright vision alike of Com- munist and Christian. Yet while I thus celebrate the longed-for victory of peace, and my hope of the speedy coming of the golden age, I was no more insen- sible than you when we beheld together on that wonderful day of June, only a year ago, the old men who had gone forth to battle in the prime of their manhood, the middle-aged men who had conse- crated to their country the flower of their youth, go marching by the famous general, whose mind, as he stood uncovered to their cheers, CENTENNIAL ORATION. 2 1 must have been thronged with strange memories of the brave days gone by. Ah ! we cannot help it. Whatever reason may teach, or wisdom dictate, that heart is dead that does not vibrate with all its chords to the flow of martial music and the measured march of men who met death face to face on the stricken field. I know that one here in my place today ought to speak in no stinted terms of the enterprising, solid and strong men and women who lived here one hundred years ago, whose sturdy descendants are scattered all over this hall. But to do it worthily would require not the knowledge born of hurried moments snatched from more engross- ing duties, but that ripe acquaintance with all our history which William Willis carried with him to the grave, and which William Goold possesses today. Even then the day would be far spent before I could close. Nor can I speak fittingly of the poets and artists, statesmen and scholars, who have adorned our history, and have helped to make the old town famous to the outer world. What justice would a page of description do to the character, the poetry, the genius of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ? How could I, in a passing mention, dis- tinguish between what was brilliant and what was frivolous in Nathaniel Parker Willis. Would you have me undertake to portray in a sentence the strange genius of John Neal ? I might as well try to bring back to this generation the pleasure and laughter which Jack Downing's Letters caused to the generation which flourished before I was born. Nor have I any idea that I could mete out the proper phrases for the ripe scholarship of Henry B. Smith, the theology of Dr. Nichols, the pastoral worth of Edward Payson, or the great administrative powers of Bishop Bacon. It would be invidious to select from the living, or I could not refrain from offer- ing my tribute of admiration and regard to that aged minister who came to us from over the sea, whose noble face, whose stately beauty of language, whose full, strong, upright life has always made him seem to me the ideal Christian minister, preaching the faith and practice of which his own life is the shining example. I should feel much freer to speak, for they were almost of my day, of the fame which was lost to us by the untimely death of William Law Symonds, and of the fame which Walter Wells might have won had not that strong intellect been overborne by so frail a body. 2 2 CENTENNIAL ORATION. Nor will I speak of the statesmen except as I saw them. Time would fail me to do justice to them also. George Evans came to Portland in his old age. I well remember hearing him present a case in court; and the impression which his quiet power, clearness and strength made on me then, has enabled me since to understand how he might have been the peer of the best in the days of Webster, and Clay, and Calhoun, and to comprehend what manner of man he was in his prime, when he attacked John Quincy Adams with such vigor and power that the old man eloquent, who never declined battle with any other man, saw fit to make him no reply. The most impressive scene I ever witnessed took place in this very hall. Here, almost on the very spot where I now stand, William Pitt Fessenden stood, before the constituency which had loved and honored him for so many years. The hall was black with the throng- ing multitude. It was at the beginning of a great presidential cam- paign, the last he was ever to witness. The great problem of recon- struction was to be reviewed. Mr. Fessenden had been the master spirit in its solution. The war debt was 10 be assailed. Mr. Fessenden had been chairman of the committee of finance and secretary of the treasury. To all this was added the intense per- sonal interest of his recent defeat of the impeachment of Andrew Johnson. With full knowledge of the storm about him, but with the courage of perfect conviction he faced the responsibility. The occasion was a great one, but the man was greater than the occa- sion. Calmly ignoring, except in one sharp, incisive sentence, all that was personal, with his old vigor, terseness and simplicity, he explained to his townsmen the momentous issues of the campaign. From the moment he began, the party rage commenced to cease and the old pride in his greatness and honesty began to take its place. How strong he looked that night! Although all the world might falter, you knew that calm face would be steadfast. To him had happened the rare good fortune of having the courage and character which matched a great opportunity. Few men would have been so brave, and fewer still successful. I have not spoken of the conduct of our city in either of the wars waged beyond its limits. That subject also would be too vast for an occasion like this. Nor do I like to speak at all of the one within the memory of us all. For us it has as much of sorrow as of glory. CENTENNIAL ORATION. 23 It brings up to me always the vision of a fair young face, the quiet associate of the studious hours, the bright companion of the days of pleasure. Can it be that I shall never look into those cheerful eyes again? Can it be that neither the quaint jest of the happier hours nor the solemn confidences of the heart just opening to full sense of the high duties of life will ever again fall upon the ear of friendship or of love? It can be no otherwise. He can only live in my memory, but he lives there, sublimated in the crucible of death, from all imperfections, clothed upon with all his virtues, and radiant with all the possibilities of a generous youth. Other companions have failed in their careers, but not he. All the world has grown old, but he is forever young. And yet the dead, however sweetly embalmed, are but the dead. One touch of the vanished hand were worth all our dreams. All our memories, however tender, are consolation only because there can be no other, for the lost strength and vigor of the living, the stilled pulsations of a heart no longer beating to thoughts of earth. What safe my heart holds, holds many a heart in this great audience. The generations to come will celebrate the glory. This generation knows the cost. With many words unspoken, with many thoughts unsaid, I must hasten to the close. There have been those in times past who have dreamed of a greater Portland than that on which our eyes now rest. They have believed that at some not distant day the old town of Falmouth, from Spurwink to Clapboard Island, would swarm with uncounted thousands ; that on the land on either hand between us and the ocean the great warehouses would yet stand, bursting with riches brought over the sea and across the continent; that the great roadsteads where the tall sloops used to ride before a white man lived on the shore, would be studded with ships and thronged with the commerce of the world. If this wild vision shall ever become a reality, and the things of earth then concern us who sit here, there will not be wanting those who will think with sad, regretful remem- brance of the golden sunsets which now gild the White $ills and pour their softened radiance over the darkening forests, over the fields rich with bright vendure, and over the tranquil waters of the broad river, which ebbs and flows near the base of Bramhall's Hill. They will long also to stand again on the Munjoy of today and look out on the smooth, untroubled expanse of sea, on the great «reen 24 CENTENNIAL ORATION. islands and all the varied landscape which lies between the eye and the horizon's edge. For whether your eye looks seaward or shore- ward, there is no more beautiful city than the beautiful Portland of today. No wonder the thoughts of the great poet were so often on the lovely spot of his nativity. No wonder the brave and famous admiral, storm-tossed on many a sea, longed to take his eternal rest amid these bright scenes of his childhood. Yet this longing was not born of the memory of beauty alone. Whatever fame great achieve- ments may bestow ; whatever honors the world may give, it is ever the most cherished hope of every seeker after fame or fortune to be kindly remembered and lovingly honored on the spot which gave him birth. Wm, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS t 012 608 637 4 t m. \* •T ^ ■ ¥