Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2014 https://archive.org/details/memoirsofphilipp00whit_1 J9 J^lL^ Cojjyi it^hted. A S BarridsS: CJSTT. MEMOIRS OF PHILIP P. BLISS. REV. E. P. GOODWIN, IRA D. SANKEY, AND GEO. F. ROOT. INTRODUCTION BY D. L. MOODY, A. S. BARNES <& COMPANY, NEW YORK, CHICAGO, AND NEW ORLEANS. 1877. EDITED BY D. W. WHITTLE: CONTRIBUTIONS BY Copyright, 1877, by A. S. Barnes & Co. PREFAOE. THE kind indulgence of the reader is asked for the imperfec- tions that may be discovered in these Memoirs. The Editor is a novice in work of this kind. It was undertaken by him at the solicitation of friends who desired, if a life was to be written, a cor- rect and reliable narrative of the facts which, from past association, he could seem to give better than others, and who were willing, in receiving the narrative, to overlook the crudeness of its literary performance. It is not expected that the work will fall into the hands of many outside of those in some way acquainted and in sympathy with the loved friend of whom it speaks, and whose simple desire in reading the book will be to know him better — to know all that can be known of the man and his work. To all such the interest in the subject of the memoir will lead them to overlook its faults. To all others, it can only be said that no claim is made for the book, except that it is a loving and faithful attempt to truthfully narrate what could be recalled from memory, and gathered from all reliable sources, of the life of Mr. Bliss. Much could undoubtedly have been profitably omitted, and no one could feel more keenly than the writer that mucli could profitably be added to make a complete picture of this variously-gifted, large-hearted, consecrated Christian man. What is presented will seem to his dearest friends but fragments of glass, through which will be caught glimpses of the man they knew. This is all that it seems to the writer. 4 PREFACE. But one other word of apology remains to be presented to the general public for the issuing of the book to them. The profits arising from its sale are to be devoted to the mother and such of the family of Mr. Bliss, other than his children, who were depend- ent upon him for maintenance. The impression has been made by statements as to the response to Mr. Moody's appeal, that an abun- dant provision has been realized for his family. So far as the orphan children are concerned, this is happily true. The children of the Sabbath schools have sent in, up to the present time, penny con- tributions amounting in the aggi'egate to about $9,500. This money is in the hands of trustees for the purpose mentioned in the appeal, viz., the erection of a monument and the education and maintenance of the children. It cannot be diverted from this object. All collections, so far as known, are for the same definite pur- pose. The estate of Mr, Bliss is in the hands of an executor, who is under legal responsibility to administer for the benefit solely of the heirs-at-law, the minor children. Whatever may be realized from the railroad company, from insurance, from copyright inter ests, must be kept and accounted for to the minor children when of age. It will thus be seen that while a fair provision is made for the boys, other objects, dear to the heart of both Mr. and Mrs. Bliss, are left wholly unprovided for. Mr. Bliss left a will which stipulated that $200 a year should be paid to his mother ; but in probating the will it was ruled that, as he had changed this clause since the will was dated, and the change was without attestation, the original clause, which was $100 a year, was all that could be allowed. In addition to this mother, there were sisters and neph- ews who were constant recipients of his assistance, and for whom he had plans of future aid that would have been realized to them had he lived. This statement is not made as the basis of any appeal for a con- tinuation of contributions. No solicitations are made that the PEEFACE. 5 book should be bought as an act of charitable donation. The facts are stated to jnstify the publication of the book as giving friends who desire the priyilege, the opportunity of creating a fund to be used in carrying out in some measure the plans of Mr. Bliss for his family. By assignment with the publishers, all copyright profits ■wull be paid over to Eev. E. P. Goodwin, H. G. Spafford and D- W. Whittle, as Trustees. Acknowledgments and thanks are hereby tendered to the friends who have kindly assisted in the preparation of this book, by fur- nishing letters of Mr. Bliss and giTiug incidents connected with his life and work. The obligations that the writer and all friends are under to Messrs. John Church & Co., Mr. Bliss's publishers, and the owners of the copyrights upon the words and music of his songs and hymns, for permitting without cost the use of the words and music com- piled in this work, and the contributions of Mr. Bliss from the Song Messenger, are hereby gratefully acknowledged. The composers, whose chapter of songs, as a memorial to their loved brother and companion in labor, constitutes so attractive and valuable a feature of the memoirs, are cordially remembered for the cheerful assent they have rendered to the request made for their contributions. That God may add His blessing, and that His children who read this book may be quickened in spiritual life, and that some unsaved one may be led to the acceptance of the Lord Jesus Christ by a word or sentence here read and applied by the Spirit of God, is the high- est ambition and sincere prayer of the writer. D. W. Whittle. Chicago, Feb. 19th, 1877. INTRODUCTION. T" HAVE pleasure in giving a word of introduction to the work of my friends, Major Whittle and Doctor Goodwin, in presenting to the public the memoirs of my dear friend and brother, P. P. Bliss. I regret the little time at my disposal prevents my writing more fully concerning the man and his work. I could probably add nothing to the facts of his life that are here compiled, but I would like to tell something of how I loved and admired him. I believe he was raised up of God to write hymns for the Church of Christ in this age, as Charles Wesley was for the church in his day. His songs have gone around the world, and have led and will con tinue to lead hundreds of souls to Christ In my estimate, he was the most highly honored of God, of any man of his time, as a writer and singer of Gospel Songs, and with all his gifts he was the most humble man I ever knew. I loved him as a brother, and shall cherish his memory, giving praise to God for the grace mani- fested in him, while life lasts. D. L. Moody. Boston, February 19th, 1877. ■ \ CONTENTS. CHAPTER L PAGE Mr. Bliss' Ancestry — His Father, Jolin Bliss — His Early Days — Love for Music — First Sight of a Piano — Connection with the Church — Influ- ence of a Pious Father's Example — First Musical Instruction — W. B. Bradbury — ^Bliss' Tribute to his Memory 15 CHAPTER II. Teaching in Rome — Acquaintance with and Marriage to Lucy Young — Her Character — Working upon the Farm and Teaching Music — Letter from Rev. Darius Cook — Mr. Bliss in his New Home — His Father's Last Days — " Grandfather's Bible." 21 CHAPTER IIL Mr. Bliss' First Musical Composition — Twelve Years' Song Writing — Geo. F. Root's Recollections of him — Drafted in the Army — Mr. Bliss re- moves to Chicago — His Labors and his Friends in the West 30 CHAPTER IV. God's Instruments — Mr. Bliss' first Meeting with Mr. Moody — His first Ac- quaintance with the Writer — One of our Household — Memorial by Rev. Dr. Goodwin — ^Mr. Bliss' Connection with the First Congregational Church and Sunday School in Chicago 41 CHAPTER V. In Evangelistic Work — Mr. Moody's Appeal to Mr. Bliss — The Turning Point — Atx Experimental Meeting at Waukegan— Bliss' Consecration of himself to God's Service — His Faith and Self-denial — Working for the Young — An Incident — His Methods of Teaching 49 10 COIJTEKTS. CHAPTER VT. FA6S Mr. Bliss as a Composer and Author — His first Sunday School Hymn — " If Papa were only Ready " — His Systematic Habits and Manner of Work- ing — Tiie Last Hymn he Wrote — The Music burned at Ashtabula — His Facility of Expression 57 CHAPTER Vn. The Joyful Experiences of 1876— Gospel Meetings at St. Louis — Trip to Alabama — " Not Tom Thumb" — Visit to Kenesaw Mountain — The In- spiration of the Scene — " Hold the Fort " and the Incident which sug- gested it 65 CHAPTER VIIL Four Days' Work at Augusta, Georgia — Homeward Bound — Rev. Dr. Vin- cent's Tribute — Visit to Mr. Moody's Old Home — Return to Chicago — Relations with Mr. Sankey and the Brethren in Chicago — Visit to Kala- mazoo, Michigan — Mr. Bliss' Personal Influence there — Interesting Letters 73 CHAPTER IX. Mr. Bliss at Jackson, Michigan — An Affecting Scene at the State Prison — Return to Chicago — The Ministers' Meeting at Farwell Hall — The Last Time Mr. Bliss sang in Chicago — " Are Your Windows Open Toward Jerusalem ? " 80 CHAPTER X. Meetings at Peoria, Illinois — Proposed Trip to England — Letter from a Boy Convert — Thanksgiving Day — ''Jolly Jonathan " , 85 CHAPTER XI. Foreshadowings of the Separation — Mr. Bliss' Last Visit to Chicago — Mer- ry Christmas at Home — The Last Earthly Labors — The Journey to the Valley of the Shadow of Death — " His Works do live After Him" — " A Voice from Heaven " „. . , 90 CHAPTER XII. Mr. Bliss' Hymns — " Press Forward" — " Hail, Happy Morning " — " Peter's Denial Lord Save Me"— ''Once More with Mournful Step"— CONTENTS. 11 " NaugH o Charges False "— " The Ascension " — " Bethesda "— *' There's a Light in the Valley " — " Hosanna, Hosanna " — " Safe with the Master"— "The Beggar by the Wayside"— "I Must Abide with Thee" — " And yet there is Room Remembered "— " Follow Me " —"Look and Live "—" Only Believe"— "Look not upon the Wine" * ' The Spirit Tree "— " Beautiful Rain " 97 CHAPTER XIII. "My Savior's Charms" — "Let the Lower Lights be Burning" — "Jeru- salem so Fair "— " How goes the Battle ? "— " Only a Little Child " — " Where He Leads we will Follow "— " Waiting at the Well "— " Won- drous Love " — " On what Foundation ? " — " Sailing into Port " — " Over Yonder " — " Remember the Poor " — " Passing Away " — " God is always Near Me"— "Man the Life-Boat"—" The Temperance Ship"— "Turn to the Right " — "Only a Step to Heaven" — "To Depart, which is Bet- ter " — " Praying Always " — *' Soon and Forever " 113 CHAPTER XIV. Incidents suggesting some of Mr. Bliss' Hymns — " Whosoever Will " — " Jesus Loves Me " — " Blessed are they that Do " — " Free from the Law" — " Only an Armor-Bearer " — "Pull for the Shore" — "I Know not the Hour" — " Down Life's Dark Vale we Wander" — "The Light of the World is Jesus"— "The Holy Spirit" — "Wishing, Hoping, Knowing" — " Almost Persuaded " — "Hallelujah, 'Tis Done" — "Good News "— " Will you Meet me at the Fountain ? "— " Hallelujah ! He is Risen "—" Seeking to Save"— "At the Feet of Jesus"— "The Half was never Told" 129 CHAPTER XV. Mr. Bliss' Second Collection of Hymns — " My Prayer " — " More to Follow ' — "Calling Now" — "Spirit Divine" — "Beautiful Song of Love" — "Daniel's Band" — "Ask, Seek, Knock" — "Love One Another" — "Fear Not" — "Mourn, Pray, Praise" — " Song in Scripture" — "Good Cheer " — Innocent Childhood " — " Lord Jesus, Come " — " Good Night till Then"—" The Four Rulers "— " To Die is Gain " 147 CHAPTER XVI. Gospel Songs — " Nearer to Me " — " We Trust in the Lord " — " How much Owest Thou ? " — " The Three Mountains " — Gospel Hymns and Sacred Songs — ^" Where are the Nine?" — "Where hast thou Gleaned To- Day ? "— " No Other Name "—Gospel Hymns No. 3—" In Zion's Rock Abiding "— " I'm on the Lord's Side " Hallelujah ! what a Savior ! " 160 12 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XVII. PAGE Song Incidents — Letter from Ira D. Sankey — The Influence of Mr. Bliss' Songs for Good — Gospel Hymns in China and Japan — Letters from Missionaries— Letter from Rev. Arthur T. Pierson— Illustrations of the Power of Song 168 CHAPTER XVin. Mr, Bliss' Hymns in England — Letter from Rev. Henry Burton — A Life Changed by a Hymn — Singing at Nashville, Tennessee — Letters from Ministers, Singers and Converts 179 CHAPTER XIX. Mr. Bliss' Miscellaneous Poems — " Fortune's Best Gift " — " Farewell Old Year" — "'The Wood Bird's Song — "Let us have Peace" — "Aunt Tabitha's Trials "— " The Last Bugle "— " Boys Wanted "~" Work and Pray"— ''There's Monny a Shlip "— " Sire and Son"— "For Me"— " 'Tis the Heart makes the Home " — " Loving Little Lou " — " The Pho- tograph." — " Room for one More " — ''Mr. Lordly and I" — " The Tin Wedding " — " Willie's Wooing " — "John Chinaman " — " A Tragical Tail " — " When Grandmamma is Gone " — " Resolution " — " Bushnell" "Welcome" 19^ CHAPTER XX. Miscellaneous Writings of Mr. Bliss — A School Composition in 1859 — Con- tributions to the Song Messenger — From Grave to Gay and Gay to Grave — How should Children Sing ? — Praise Meetings 308 CHAPTER XXI. Mr. Bliss' Correspondence — Letters to his Family — His Love for them and his Devotion to the Gospel Work — Beautiful Tribute from Florida — "When Jesus Comes." 230 CHAPTER XXII. Letters to a Christian Lady — His Religious Life and Experience — Letters to his Nephew — Words of Wisdom — Letters to his Co-laborer 254 CHAPTER XXIIL Mr. Bliss' Last Hymns — Music by his Friends, Sankey, Lowry, Doane, McQranahan, Root, Stebbins, Case, Palmer, Murray, Christie and Mrs. Scott 273 COI? TENTS. 13 CHAPTER XXIV. PAGE The Disaster at Ashtabula — The Newspaper Accounts — The Story of an Eye-Witness — Mr. Bliss goes back to save his Wife and is burned to Death 290 CHAPTER XXV. In Memoriam — Feeling and Glowing Tributes, in Poetry and Prose, from Editors, Clergymen, Singers and Friends, to the Memory of the De- parted Song Writer , 298 CHAPTER XXVI. The Last of Earth — Memorial Services at Rome, Pennsylvania — Eloquent Address by Rev. Dr. Goodwin, of Chicago 322 CHAPTER XXVII. The Memorial Services in Chicago — Addresses by Mr. Moody, Dr. Goodwin, and Others — The Song Service at the Tabernacle 341 CHAPTER XXVIII. Memorial Services at South Bend, St. Paul, Louisville, Nashville, Kala- mazoo and Peoria 349 I BLISS' LAST HYMNS SET TO MUSIC BY HIS FRIENDS. Set to Music by Paob AjfOTHER Soldier Fallen Oeo. F. Root, 374 I Believe Rev. R. Lowry 275 My Redeemer Jas. McGranalian , 276 Within, About, Above ' T. G. O'Kane 277 Tell Me More about Jesus Jas. McOranahan 278 What wilt Thou have Me to do? W. H. Doane 279 Georgie's Welcome Jas. McGranalmn 280 Wise to Win G. G. Gase 281 Only a Little WilbuT A. Ghristie 282 Constrained by Love Geo. F. Root 283 I Trust, O Lord, to Thee J. R. Murray 284 Stand Still, O Child of God Geo. G. StebUns 285 Arise, Work and Pray Mrs. G.H. Scott 286 The Good News H. R. Palmer 287 When My Weary Hands are Folded Ira D. He Knows. LAST SONG OF P. P. BLISS. 366 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. CHAPTER 1. ME. bliss's ancestry— his FATHER, JOHN BLISS— HIS EARLY DAYS— LOTE FOR MUSIC — FIRST SIGHT OP A PIANO — CONNECTION WITH THE CHURCH — INFLUENCE OF A PIOUS FATHER'S EXAMPLE — FIRST MUSICAL INSTRUC- TION — W. B, BRADBURY AND BLISS'S THIBUTE TO HIS MEMORY. I COPY the following from a memorandum found among Mr. Bliss's papers, endorsed P. P. Bliss, 1861/' and containing the genealogy, memorial and statistics of the Bliss family, obtained from his father, uncles and " The Seventh-day Baptist Memorial The earliest notice of our ancestors that we have is contained in the will of Governor Arnold, dated 1677, in which he gives to his daughter, Damaris Bliss, wife of John Bliss, a parcel of land in the precincts of Newport. Governor Arnold also mentions the name of George Bliss as one of whom he had bought land, and whom he named as one of the first purchasers of the island of Quononicut : Beginning, then, with John Bliss — who, with his brother George Bliss, and, tradition says, one other brother, came from Wales with their widowed mother and were early settlers of Connecticut — we have the following genealogical table, which, with one exception, we know to be correct : John Bliss married Damaris Arnold, 1670. Josiah Bliss, their son, died 1748. William Bliss, son of Josiah, born 1728, married Barbara Phillips, October 20th, 1750. They had seven sons and five daughters. The third son, John Bliss, was born January 17th, 1760, and was the grandfather of the writer. He learned the trade of a shoemaker, and on the fourth day of November, 17 — , married Eeliance Babcock, of Dartmouth, Mass. In 1788, he moved to Greenfield, Saratoga County, New York, and purchased a farm of one hundred acres ; there being at that time 16 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. but one log hut at Saratoga Springs, situated near High Rock Spring, seven miles from his house. In February, 1801, he walked from G-reenfield to Newport, Rhode Island, for the purpose of submitting to the ordinance of baptism. " John Bliss had sixteen children. Twelve were sons, all but two of them survived. My father, Isaac Bliss, was one of twins. He, with his brother Josiah, was born April 29, 1797. He waa married to Lydia Doolittle, June 7, 1831. They had five children : Phebe, born May 27, 1832 ; Reliance, born May 14, 1834 ; Philip Paul, born July 9, 1838 ; Elizabeth, born May 1, 1842 ; James D., born July 10, 1846. Reliance died November 4, 1847 ; James D., February 15, 1847." Under date of January, 1864, in Mr. Bliss' diary is this note : Jannary. — Pa Bliss died, the best man I ever knew." Mr. Bliss had great affection for his father, and dearly loved his memory. I have often heard him speak with great tenderness of his simple, child-like faith. " He lived in continnal communion with hia Savior; always happy, always trusting, always singing. Mother used sometimes to say to him, laughingly, that all his hymns com- menced with the word ^ come ; ' and I can remember many of them that he used to sing. There were ^ Come, ye sinners, poor and needy ; ' ' Come on, my partners in distress ; ' ^ Come, ye that love the Lord.' He was always a poor man, but early in the morning, and after the toil of the day, in the evening, sitting in the porch of his humble home, his voice would be heard in song, and I can almost hear him now, singing upon the other side, ^ Come to that happy land, come, come away.' He was a diligent reader of the Bible, and had the most iiaplicit faith in its teachings, and a deep reverence for its commands. My first recollection of him is his daily family prayer. Devout, tender and child-like ; repeating over and over again, year after year, about the same words, until we all knew them by heart, his prayers were very real, very holy to me in my childhood. It was very hard for father ever to punish us chil- dren, and when he did, he suffered more than we. He would talk to us with great solicitude, and when we would say we were sorry, and would do better, he would be full of joy, and would say, ' That is right ; that is right.' " In addition to this testimony of Mr. Bliss, all the recollections of his sisters and neighbors go to show that he was a man of lovely FAMILY HISTORY. 17 simplicity and tenderness of nature, and of devoted piety. His cliaracter and example had much to do in moulding the character of his son. This father died at Eome, Pennsylvania, in the home of Philijo, and was buried in the village cemetery. His wife, Lydia Bliss, and her two daughters survive to mourn over the loss, to them, of the son who had taken for many years the place of hus- band and father, but also to rejoice that father and son, who were so dear to each other on eartli, are reunited in Heaven. The last . words of the dying father wercy Philip, take care of your mother ; " and most unselfishly was the charge fulfilled until death called him away, and most fitting does it seem that the writer of these lines should be penning them to fulfill the loving task from which the son is forever removed in bodily presence, but which shall still be performed by his memory, cherished and perpetuated in these pages. The work is thrice hallowed in the memory of the dying father's charge, the tender associations connected with this dearly loved brother and friend, and the privilege of a ministry of love to his mother and mine." Philip Paul Bliss was born in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, July 9, 1838, in the usual log home occupied by the early settlers of the mountain and forest region of Northern Pennsylvania. In Feb- ruary, 1844, the family removed to Kinsman, Trumbull County, Ohio, where they resided for three years. In 1847, they returned to Pennsylvania, residing in Espeyville, Crawford County. In N"o- vember, 1848, they removed to Tioga County. During these years of his boyhood, Philip had few advantages in the way of schooling. Moving from place to place and in sparsely settled regions, he had to take such teaching as he could get. His father's singing and praying and reading the Scriptures, his mother's daily lessons, with the contact of the grand scenery around his home, the mountains, valleys, forests and streams of which were ever dear to him, made up, for the most part, the influences that were brought to bear upon his first ten years of life. He early developed a passion for music, and would sit and listen with delight to his father singing, when but a child, and very early sang with him. He would readily catch up a tune, and whistle it or play it upon some rude musical instrument of his own manufacture. Mr. Bliss has told me of the impression made upon him, when he was about ten years of age, by the first piano he had seen. He 18 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. was a larg(3, overgrown boy, and one day, do'vm in the village, as he was passing by a house, he heard music, sweeter than anything he had ever before listened to. The door stood open and he was irresistibly drawn toward the sweet sounds that came from within. He was barefoot, and entered unobserved and stood at the parlor door, listening, entranced, as a young lady played upon the piano. As she ceased playing, he exclaimed, with an intense desire, " 0, lady, play some more." She looked around, surprised, and with no appreciation of the tender heart that had been so touched by her music, said, Go out of here with your great feet," and he went away crushed, but with the memory of harmonies that seemed to him like heaven. In 1849, at the age of eleven years, he went away from home to work upon a farm. His sister says : "I remember well the morning he left. All of his clothing was done up in a handker- chief and carried in his hand. When he went out of the gate, he threw back to us children two pennies and went on down the road and would not look back." In 1851, he had this memorandum : " Worked on farm for Marvin at nine dollars a month." He was then only thirteen years of age. The next year, he was in a lumber camp, on Pine Creek, as assistant cook. In 1853 he was on Dyer's Hill, in Covington, cutting logs. The next year, he worked in a saw-mill in Portage^ New York. Thus five years of his life, from the age of eleven to sixteen, passed on the farm and in the lumber camp, in toiling for bread. With a great desire for education, a portion of the seasons during this period was passed in school, and every opportunity that presented for improvement was eagerly taken advantage of. In 1850, while at school near Elk Eun, a revival commenced among the scholars, conducted by a Baptist minister, and he at that time made his first public profession of Christ. A short time after, he was immersed in the creek near his own home, some four miles from the school, by a minister of the Christian Church, who was at the time holding meetings in the neighborhood. He became connected with the Baptist Church near the school. His own rela- tion of his Christian experience has always been that he never had any marked period of conversion ; that he could never remember the time when he did not love the Savior — when he was not sorry for his sins, and when he did not pray. He undoubtedly ex- EAELY LIFE. 19 pencnced re2;eneration in answer to the pray( rs of a godly father at a very early age, and all through life manifested that he was a child of God. In 1855, he spent the winter in a select school at East Troy, Bradford County, Pennsylvania. In 1856, he worked on a farm in the summer and taught school in the winter, at Hartsville, Alle- gany County, New York. He was then but eighteen years of age, and his quickness of mind for learning, and his industry in the im- provement of opportunities, are in a marked way indicated by the fact that he was fitted to become a teacher. It was, to be sure, a humble position, but still it was a position, and indicated aspiration. The place sought him because, in the judgment of the School Board, he was the man for the place. The following winter he passed at Towanda, Pennsylvania, and at Towner Hill. Here he met for the first time Mr. J. G-. Towner, who was afterward associated with him in concerting, and received that winter, in Mr. Towner's singing school, his first systematic instruction in music. The same winter, he attended a musical convention at Eome, Pennsylvania. This was the first convention he ever attended, and it did much to strengthen his growing passion for music, and to develop his native talent in harmony. In the providence of God, the convention was in charge of W. B. Brad- bury, then in the commencement of his life-work as a composer of sacred music for the children. From the time of this meeting, Mr. Bliss cherished a deep affection for Mr. Bradbury and a rever- ence for the gifts God had bestowed upon him as a composer. How much this meeting had to do with the moulding of his future life, in the turning of his thoughts, almost unconsciously to himself, in the direction of a work similar to Mr. Bradbury's, we can never know. How appropriate now to Mr. Bliss is the song written by him upon the death of the lamented Bradbury : WE LOVE HIM. We love lum,tlioug]i liis friendly hand Has never clasped our own ; His gentle voice and loving smile We never yet liave known. We love the sweet, the blessed songs That he to us has giv'n ; MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. We know he loved us here on earth ; We love him though in heaven. Chorus. — We'll roll the chorus of praise along, Till " Over the River " we go ; He'll lead us then in more beautiful songs Than ever we knew below. We love the sparkling " Golden Chain," The " Shower " of beauties rare ; The " Censer " full of joyous praise, " Fresh Laurels," green and fair. We love to sing his songs of heaven, Of Jesus and His love ; They make us happier here below. And raise our thoughts above. We love the things that he has loved ; We love his earthly name ; And when we know his angel form, We'll love him just the same. We'll love each other better then. We'll love " Our Father " more ; We'll roll a sweeter song of praise Along the " Golden Shore." CHAPTER 11. TEACHING IN KOME— ACQUAINTANCE WITH AND MARTtlAGE TO lUCY TOUNQ — HER CHARACTER— WORKING UPON THE FARM AND TEACHING MUSIC — LETTER FROM REV. DARIUS COOK — MR. BLISS IN HIS NEW HOME — HIS father's last days— " grandfather's BIBLE." IN 1858, Mr. Bliss was at Almond, New York, and in the winter of that year he taught in the Rome Academy at Rome, Penn- sylvania. The previous year, his musical gift had brought him into an acquaintance with the family of Mr. 0. F. Young, a thrifty farmer and a devout Christian man, who, some thirty years be- fore, had come into the valley to teach school, and had married one of his pupils, the daughter of Peter Allen, a leading citizen of Rome, and was now the head of a happy family, consisting of Grandma Allen, her daughter his wife, with their five children, two sons and three daughters. The whole family were singers, and Mr. Young being one of the School Board, Mr. Bliss was invited to make their house his home, and soon became as one of the family. He brought here his younger sister, that she might attend school and be with him for the winter. The descriptions given of Mr. Bliss by his friends, and a da- guerreotype taken at this time, indicate that he was possessed of unusual personal attractions. Of large frame and finely propor- tioned, a handsome, frank, open face, with fine, large, expressive eyes, and always buoyant and cheerful, full of the kindliest feeling, wit and good humor, with a devout Christian character, and of un- sullied moral reputation, he became a universal favorite among young and old. Among his pupils were the children of Mr. Young, who became his most intimate friends. The eldest daughter, Lucy, then about eighteen years of age, was the associate and companion of Mr. Bliss' sister, and thus these young people were thrown much together. During the winter, the singing school, the spelling class and the choir meetings went on as is wont in the country 22 MEMOril OF P. P. BLISS. villages of the East, and these two kept company/' and found ere long that they were necessary to each other's happiness. So, one beautiful morning in the following spring, June 1, 1859, with Pa and Ma Young accompanying, they went in a yery quiet way to the little town of Wysocks, six miles down the valley, and were married by the minister, in the parlor of the minister's house. It is a beautiful ride down the valley of the Wysocken. The hills rise up grandly on either side ; the brook flows rapidly by, its babbling and murmurings heard from the road, hidden some- times in deep dells by overhanging trees, and gleaming in the light through open fields. The woods were filled with wild flowers and singing birds, that June morning, and the world was full of poetry to these two dear friends as they rode to their wedding. Happy in the love of God, happy in each other's love, how rich they were ! Of money they had absolutely none. Mr. Bliss did not possess at this time fifty dollars' worth of worldly goods. Mr. Young derived a comfortable support from his farm, but had noth- ing w^ierewith to endow the young couple, beyond the warm welcome to the old homestead of the loved daughter and the one whom he had long loved as a son. They came back to the home, and Mr. Bliss, taking off his Sunday clothes, went out to work on the farm, and Lucy went into the kitchen to help her mother. I find in his diary this mention of this event in his life : "June I, 1859 — Married to Miss Lucy J. Young, the very test thing I could have done." And looking back upon the eighteen years they have lived together on earth, and all they were to each other, in the experiences of joy and sorrow, of poverty and prosperity, that they passed through, no one who knew them but would acquiesce and recognize the providence of God in bringing them together. Mrs. Bliss was in many things the opposite and the complement of her husband. He was by nature poetical, impulsive, demon- strative, easily moved ; she strongly practical, steady, reticent, and with great adherence of purpose. She was both wife and mother to him from the first of their union. She was of a deep nature, loving, tender in her affection, beyond what most who knew her gave her credit for. His buoyant, joyful, affectionate, warm-hearted demonstrativeness naturally made her more reserved manner seem constrained ; but all who learned to know her loved and ad- mired her, and thanked God that Philip Bliss had such a wife. At STUDYING MUSIC. 33 the time of her marriage, she was a member of the Presbyterian Church in Eome, having made profession of faith in Christ at the age of sixteen. Mr. Bliss, about the time of his marriage, became connected with the same church, and labored efficiently with them in church work, being for some time the Superintendent of a Union Sunday School in the village, and is remembered by many of the grown-up people in this connection. The year after his marriage, Mr. Bliss worked upon the farm for his father-in-law, and received for his support thirteen dollars a month, the amount usually paid to farm hands. That winter he commenced teaching music in Bradford County, at two dollars an evening "and found." The year 1860 he ever reckoned as a mem- orable one in his history. The little knowledge he had obtained of music made him feel deeply how little he knew, and gave him the most burning desire to prosecute a thorough study of the art. His soul was filled with that which he longed to express, but the future looked, dark to him. He had no means and no prospect of being able to secure any further education. For a time he became burdened and depressed with these thoughts. In July and August of that year, a Normal Academy of Music was held in Geneseo, New York, under Perkins, Cook, Bassini and others. It was the great event of the period among the musical peo- ple of the surrounding country. The advantages to be offered in training and culture were unusual, and of the utmost value to those desiring to cultivate music. Poor Bliss obtained the programme, and eagerly pored over the inducements and opportunities it offered. It was just what he needed. It would be such a joy to him to meet these masters in the art — such a help to him for all the future ; but the expense was far beyond his means. He had not a dollar in the world. It was impossible for him to go. He was almost heart- broken about it. He threw himself upon the old settee in the sitting-room one day, when no one but Grandma Allen was in the room, and he says, "I just cried for disappointment. I thought everything had come to an end ; that my life must be passed as a farm hand and country schoolmaster, and all bright hopes for the future must be given up." Grandma was full of sympathy, and wanted to know all about the trouble. After she had been told about the academy, she said, "Now, Phil., what does that cost ?" " Well, Grandma," he said, "it would take as much as thirty dol- 24 MEMOIR OP P. P. BLISS. lars." "Well, thirty dollars is a good deal of money," said the kind old lady ; "I have an old stocking that I have been dropping pieces of silver m for a good many years, and I'll just see how much there is. Perhaps there are thirty dollars, and if there are, why, you can take it and go to the Normal." The stocking was brought out and found to contain more than the thirty dollars, and Bliss spent six weeks of the hardest study of his life at the Normal. God bless dear old GrandmaAllen. The world owes her interest com- pounded a hundred times over as long as she lives, and a grateful re- membrance after her death, for what she did that day for P. P. Bliss. In the winter of 1860, Mr. Bliss formally took up the business of a professional music teacher. In his diary he says : " Old Fanny (a horse) and a twenty-dollar melodeon furnished by 0. F. Young set me up in the profession." The next three years were passed in and about Eome. He was quite successful as a teacher, and during the winter months had plenty of employment. In the sum- mer he worked upon his father-in-law's farm, and again attended the Normal Academy in 1861, and in 1863. In 1861, he writes : Summer at G-eneseo, New York, T. E. Perkins, T. J. Cook and Pychowski, faculty this season." In 1862, there is this memoran- dum : " Worked on farm. Did not go off to school this summer — partly on account of my health and partly on account of my wealth ! Winter, Honesdale, Pennsylvania, made the acquaintance of 1. Brundage, a good Eev. and singer." To be a ^oo^Z minister and a good singer was to occupy a large place in Mr. Bliss' affec- tions, and he ever esteemed Mr. Brundage as a very dear friend. Indeed, long before he entered upon the life of an evangelist, while following the profession of music, he had scores of warm-hearted personal friends among the ministers of the Gospel. He had a great respect for their calling — a desire to be helpful to them in their work, and a love for them individually, which all who came to know him most cordially reciprocated. From no other class of per- sons have so many and so tender expressions of love for his memory and sorrow at his death been received as from the ministers. During these years at Rome, Mr. Bliss' pastor was Eev. Dar- win Cook. Mr. Bliss esteemed him very highly, and ever spoke of him with affection. He has often said that it was Mr. Cook's encouraging words, more than anything else, that stimulated him to excel in his profession, and particularly turned his attention to the BBGINKING OF PROFESSIONAL LIFE. 25 composition of melodies for Sunday school songs. Mr. Cook is still living, and participated in the funeral exercises of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss in Towanda, and writes as follows of his recollections of Mr. Bliss : Merktall, January 81, 1877. Maj. Whittle : Dear Bro. — I am sorry that I can't lielp you more. I went to Rome in 1850, and left in 1858. About 1855, I first met P. P. Bliss in the church at Rome He stood in the choir and sang. In our little company he could not fail to be observed. Therefore I said to Mr. 0. F. Young, my chorister, " That young man's voice is worth a thousand dollars a year. Perhaps he does not know it." Mr. Young took him home with him to dinner, and afterward gave him his daughter. Mr. Bliss afterward said that remark of mine was the first hint he ever received that he had any competency or any possibilities more than ordinary. From that time, I occasionally met him while he was holding singing conventions. He began to compose laughable medleys, and to sing money out of the pockets of the penurious. I well remember that on one occasion such a man gave five dollars to some benevolence, if Bliss would sing his medley. I heard him sing his " Little Willie," at a fortieth wedding anniversary, when the thought struck me, what a power has song to impress the Gospel. I went to him and told him the thought. I mentioned the remark of one who said, " Let me make the songs of a nation, and I care not who makes its laws." I instanced a case at hand then and there, in which his song, in five minutes, had effected more than eight years of preaching. He was married in June, 1859. At the tenth anniversary I met him again, and was greatly pleased at his evident rapid development. When Mr. Brad- bury died, I wrote to him, that if his (Mr. Bradbury's) mantle had fallen on any one, he (Mr. Bliss) must be the man. After the loss of his first child, he wrote to me, and indeed kept me informed of his doings and progress, and when he and Major Whittle were in the South, he had forwarded to me a daily, noSv and then, to tell me of his work. He had not united with the church when I left Rome, in the spring of 1858, and I do not know the precise date of that union. I am thankful that I ever met that man, and that I was permitted to give him encouragement in the right direction. He stated publicly in a large con- gregation " that this man had done him more good than any other man." I don't now recall anything very important in his religious development. We only met occasionally after 1858. His wife grew up in our Sabbath school, was strong, bright, active, promis- ing, with a good musical talent. It was quite natural that the two should ba drawn together. I always esteemed her very highly. Yours in the Lord, Dabwin Cook. Merryall, Bradford Co., Pennsylvania, S6 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. In 1863, Mr. Bliss wites : Geneseo again. Perkins, Bassini and Zundel. A very good term for me. Winter, taught at Cas- tile, New York. Boarded at D. Bovee's. A pleasant winter, only my wife, Lou, was at home ; so I was only half a man, if half.^^ The instructors of Mr. Bliss at these Normals all speak in the high- est terms of his unusual intelligence and remarkable proficiency. Bassini, at his first Normal, selected him as his most intelligent pupil, and in that and succeeding years took unwonted interest in him, in giving him private lessons upon the use of the voice. Much of his remarkable j)Ower in this respect, he felt, was due to the careful and scientific instruction received from Bassini. With a quick apprehension and a thinking mind, Mr. Bliss desired to be intelligent in his profession, and was always wishing to be taught, ever ready to receive, and careful to retain instruction. He never felt that he himself was a master, and ever preferred to be a scholar rather than a teacher. During this period of his life at Eome, from the proceeds of his singing schools, he saved up a few hundred dollars, and bought a little cottage, to which he removed his parents, and for a time set up housekeeping. The dear old father, who had passed most of his days in humble homes in the backwoods, was now sixty-five years of age. The little cottage in Eome was a better home than he had ever lived in. Many months his children, ^^Phil" and " Lou," had planned the surprise that awaited him. They had saved in every possible way to buy and plainly furnish the little home. When all was made ready, Father Bliss was sent for. The day of his arrival in Eome, he stopped at Father Young's for dinner. In the afternoon, the happy children took the gentle, laughing, gray-haired old Christian in the wagon, and riding along the one village street, asked him to pick out the house that they had selected to be his home. Two or three times he essayed to express his choice, picking out the humblest, and each time taking a poorer one, until at last he gave up, a little troubled that he might have been too ambitious. When the happy Phil, almost too full to contain himself, turned the team, and driving back up the street, stopped at a pretty little cottage, a neat piazza in front, a large yard filled with blossoming lilacs and budding apple trees, it looked very beautiful ; and as the strong man lifted his father from the wagon, it was a v^ry happy hour to him, as he said, BRIlfGS HIS TATJIEK TO EOME. 27 "This is your home, father." The dear old man sat down in a chair placed for him upon the stoop, and, with tears running down his cheeks, said, " Phil, I never expected to have so good a home on earth as this." Here the last months of the life of the old saint passed away sweetly, peacefully and happily. The remembrance of these, his last days, were always exceedingly precious to Mr. and Mrs. Bliss. The burden of life in some degree rolled away, and he entered more into the sunlight that awaited him in fullness in the life beyond. "The first time I ever saw Father Bliss," Mrs. Bliss once told me, "he reproved me for laughing on Sunday." Brought up by a Puritan father, living in communion with God, drinking daily from the Bible, the only book he ever read, life was to him very solemn, and everything around him was related to God and to eternity. His children all felt this atmosphere in their association with him, and none of them drank in more of the father's sense of the reality of eternal things than did his son. There is a root and stalk for every beautiful flower that blooms, a spring for every flowing stream ; and all that has given power on the earth to Philip Bliss' songs finds its root in the Bible of the Hebrews, its stalk in the living characters developed by that Bible among the Puritans. The stream of melody that flowed through him, making glad the people of God, had its spring in the intense reality of spiritual things that came down to him from a godly an- cestry. During these months with his children, the father laid aside everything of austerity that had ever associated itself with him, and was like a happy child. Mr. Bliss often thanked God for his goodness in permitting him to have the joy of making his dear father happy, and of being with him in his last days. In January, 1864, after only a few months in the home he thought so much better than he was entitled to, the father died, and was taken to his Heavenly home, to meet the great surprise of knowing what " God hath prepared for them that love Him." There can be no more fitting close to this chapter than the song of Mr. Bliss, written, much of it, from personal recollection, and which he usually pre- faced, in singing, by a few remarks about his father, and by saying, very devoutly, "I thank God for a godly ancestry." MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. MY GRANDFATHER'S BIBLE. A CENTENNIAL SONG. The Sabbath day — sweet day of rest — Was drawing to a close ; The summer breeze went murm'ring by. To lull me to repose : I took my father's Bible down — His father's gift to him — A treasure rare, beyond compare, Though soiled the page, and dim. *' Old friend;" said I, "if thou couldst tell, WTiat would thy mem'ries be ? " And from the Book there seemed to come This evening reverie : " Good will to men, Peace be to thee I My mission aye hath been, To tell the love of Him who died To save a world from sin. " A hundred years ago I sailed, With those who sail no more, Through perils dread ; by land and sea, I reached New England's shore ; There, on a soul-worn, faithful band This soothing psalm did fall : Lord, Thou hast been our dwelling place, In generations all. •* Year after year, in temples rude, Upon the desk I lay. To teach of Him, the Great High Priest ; The Life, the Truth, the Way. And multitudes who listened there To God's life-giving word Are resting from their labors, now, * For ever with the Lord.' ** Anon a lowly home I found. But Love and Peace were there. . . The children with the father read. And knelt with him in prayer ; grandfather's bible. And through the valley, as one passed, I heard her sweetly sing ; O Grave, where is thy victory ? O Death, where is thy sting ? Hold fast the faith,'* the old Book said ; '* Thy father's God adore. . . ; And on the • Rock of Ages ' rest Thy soul forever more." "Amen," said I, " by grace I will, Till at His feet we fall, And join the everlasting song, And crown Him Lord of AIL CHAPTER III. MR. bliss' first MUSICAL COMPOSITION — TWELVE YEARS* SONG "WRITING — GEO. F. root's RECOLLECTIONS OF HIM — DRAFTED IN THE ARMY MR. BLISS REMOVES TO CHICAGO — HIS LABORS AND HIS FRIENDS IN THE WEST. rr^HE first composition of Mr. Bliss, so far as is known, was in in his diary : '^1864. — Lived in Eome, Pennsylvania. Worked on farm some ; wrote music some ; housekeeping some ; taught in ISTunda, Castile, etc. Saved one hundred dollars this year." Mr. James McG-ranahan, for years a musical friend of Mr. Bliss, was, during the summer of 1864, a clerk in the country store and post office of Eome. He sa3^s : I well remember Bliss' first published composition. He sent the manuscript to Root & Cady, and after a time he received back a proof in print. He brought in tlie copy to show me and ask my opinion as to corrections. I had had one or two pieces printed, and knew just how he felt, and we had a very pleasant time over his first piece. It was a great pleasure to him, and yet he had a great deal of wonder that anything he had written was worth publishing. The name of the piece is "Lora Vale," copyrighted by Root & Cady in 1865, and published as sheet music. Before sending to Root & Cady, he had forwarded it to Bradbury, and by him it had been refused, much to Mr. Bliss' disappointment, but he was encouraged by friends to send it to Mr. Root. LOR A VALE. Song and Chorus by P. P. Bliss. Calmly fell the silver moonliglit Over liill and over dale, As with mournful hearts we lingered By the couch of Lora Vale. own house at Rome. He writes LOEA VALE. 31 She was dying, gentle Lora ; She was passing like a si^h From a world of love and beauty To a brighter world on high. Chokus. — Lora, Lora, still we love thee, Tho' we see thy form no more. And we know thou'lt come to meet us, When we reach the mystic shore. Brightly dawned the morrow's morning, Over hill and over dale, Still with mournful hearts we lingered By the side of Lora Vale. She was almost at the river, When the light broke from the sky, And she smiled and whispered faint"" " I am not afraid to die." Softly through the trellised window Came the west wind's gentle breath, But she heeded not its mildness. For she slept the sleep of death ; And beyond the silver moonbeams. Aye, beyond the stars of night, Now she dwells, our darling Lora, In the home of angels bright. This was the commencement of the exercise of his gifts as a composer. The style of the song will show that the conception of the use of song as conveying Gospel truth had not yet come to him. It is a song of sentiment, of a kind good in its way, but which it would have been impossible to have got him to write during the last years of life. The song became popular, and enjoyed a sale of several thousands. Let the reader place in con- trast the words of this song, sweet in its sentiment, but purpose- less in teaching, and without specific mention of Christ, and tlie words of the two latest — so far as is known — hymns that he ever wrote, found in this book, and some correct idea of his development can be obtained. From 1864 to 1876, twelve years, his pen was busy in givmg expression to the songs that came thronging through his soul. All of his work was ^ nne during these years. He was twenty-six years 32 MEMOIR OF P. P. ELISS. old when he wrote his first song, and thirty-eight when he wrote his last. In the year 1863 or '64 he first met Mr. George F. Eoot, of Chicago. The acquaintance then formed became an intimate friendship, and was one of the links in the chain of providences that led him into a larger field of usefulness, and finally into the place God was preparing him for, of a Gospel singer. Mr. Eoot thup writes of his first impressions and memories of Mr. Bliss : My acquaintance with Mr. Bliss did not begin very early in his life, though it might have been near the beginning of his musical career. He had attend- ed a term or two of a normal musical institute, had taught some, and had given some concerts near his home, when he wrote his first letter to me. This letter contained an early — perhaps his first — musical composition, a song entitled Lora Vale. The song was promising, but the letter was more so, as indicating an indi- vidual entirely out of the common run of literary or musical aspirants. I think this letter, with many other mementoes of Mr. Bliss that would now be useful, was in my office aad was destroyed at the great fire of Chicago, Oct. 8 and 9,1871; at any rate, they cannot now be found. We published Lora Vale, and this led to further correspondence. And our interest constantly increased in this many-sided " country-boy," as he called himself. His curious conceits, so piquant and varied, his beautiful penman- ship, his bright nature, that could not seem to see anything unhappy or unbeautiful in life, attracted us strongly, and led often to letters on my part that were not needed for business purposes, but were for the sake of tho answer they were sure to bring. The deeper nature of the man did not show then, but that which did appear was " pure and lovely, and of good report." Whether the proposition to come to Illinois was out of the whole cloth from us, or whether he intimated, as our correspondence progressed, that he would like to come, I do not remember ; but about 1863 or '64 he did come., and pleasant was our surprise to find that our bright and attractive letter- writer lived in a " house " every way worthy of him. It is rare indeed to find both mind and body alike so strong, healthy and beautiful in one individual as they were in him. He went to work, first about the State, holding musical conven- tions and giving concerts and attending to the interests of certain parts of our business ; sending to us occasional communications for our musical paper and occasional compositions. I do not recall particulars about these compositions. I only know that it was my pleasure to look them over and suggest, if I could, improvements, or hint at faults now and then, especially in the earlier ones. I say my pleasure, for never had teacher so teachable and docile a sub- ject for criticism (I can hardly say pupil, for I never taught him regularly), nor one who repaid with such generous affection the small services that were in this way rendered to him. His modesty as well as his generosity always inclined him to give toothers much of the credit that belonged to his own GEO. F. root's REMIKISCEKCES. 33 Heaven-sent gifts. A favorite signature in his letters to me was " Your Poor Pupil Bliss." I do not know of his modes or habits of composition, but do know of his wonderful fertility and facility. His responses to the calls for the many kinds of literary and musical work that we soon found he could do always surprised us as much by their promptness as by their uniform excellence. It is probable that with every topic that entered his mind there came trooping multitudes of congruous ideas, images and words, and he had only to take his choice ; and his choice was always happy, always appropriate and often strik ing in its originality and beauty. As Mr. F. W. Root, in a recent number of the Musical Visitor, says of Mr. Bliss : " His faculty for seizing upon the salient features of whatever came under his notice amounted to an unerring instinct. The one kernel of wheat in a bushel of chaff was the first thing he saw." It was lovely to see how near to all he did was his religion. There was for him no line on one side of which was a bright face and on the other a solemn one. His smile went into his religion and his religion into his smile. His Lord was always welcome and apparently always there in his open and loving heart. It was this that made his liveliness so irresistibly sweet and attractive. YoM constantly felt its sphere of innocence. This hymn, by a kindred spirit, is a most true expression of his constant condition : Thy happy ones a strain begin ; Dost not Thou, Lord, glad souls possess ? Thy cheerful Spirit dwells within ; We feel Thee in our joy fulness. Our mirth is not afraid of Thee ; Our life rejoices to be bright ; We would not from our gladness flee. We give full welcome to delight. Thou wilt not. Lord, our smiles deny ; Dost thou not deem them of rich worth 1 Oar cheer flows on beneath Thine eye ; We feel accepted in our mirth. We turn to Thee a smiling face. Thou sendest us a smile again ; Our joy, the richness of Thy grace, Thine own, the cheer of this glad strain. In speaking of himself in a lecture before a State Sunday School Associa- tion, this pleasant insight occurs. After making the remark, *'Let song develop feeling and then do not fail to use it to direct and purify aflection," he goes on : "I well remember a loving, large-eyed lad who in the day school could scarcely sing the old song of A, B, C, D, E, P, G C Haste thee, winter'), 3 34 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. but that the tears would fall and mark the time. The lad knew not why he wept, but the faithful Christian teacher turned this mighty motive power to heavenly purposes, and gave these outflowing sympathies wholesome food. So the love of song grew and prevailed, so the channel of the affections widened, and so the lad, though taller grown, stands here to plead for song." In another article in his correspondence with our musical paper, he speaks in a characteristic way of the death of a friend who had written some poetry for him ; but other extracts from this article are so illustrative of his every-day life that we also insert them here in their order. He be2:ins with speaking of a " general association of ministers," in which he conducted the music, thus- There was a deal of mighty fine talking, a few earnest prayers, but very little hearty singing. Why is it that so few ministers sing ? Wouldn't it improve their voices, and hearts too ? But please don't put me down as fault-finding. I think S-iusMne and its author had a full share of attention. On the other hand let me tell this. During the convention in Burling- ton, Iowa, a few weeks since, which, by the way, was a " real good one " — though the first since W. B. Bradbury was there, fourteen or fifteen years ago— it was my good fortune to be a guest of I)r. Salter, Pastor of the Congregational Church, and to hear at family worship such solid tunes as DuJce Street, Peterboro, St. Martin''s, etc., sung by all the household, all singing soprano in a spirited manner, making a lasting impression on my soul. I don't believe ministers' and deacons' families are a whit worse than other folks,— N. B. My father was never even a sexton— but I do believe that every Christian family should be a praise-giving band, and, if possible, 'psalm-singers.' Since Burlington, I have sung in Waukegan and Milburn, within forty miles of Chicago, and the statistics show that not one-half of the children of that county (Lake) are in Sunday School, nor in any way ' hear the Gospel sound.' Surely there is work enough to do I An event worthy to be recorded and never to be forgotten is the departure— I can't say death— of Kate Cameron. Her name was first on a list of thirty to unite with our church the very day she received the welcome to the Church above. She has written many sweet spiritual songs, but none more beautiful, I think than " That City," written for The Joy, and sung at her own funeral : " You tell me of a city That is so bright and fair, Oh, why do not the friends I love Talk more of going there ? " Sure enough, I wonder why we don't ? And here again — after we had suggested that he occupy a certain place regularly in the paper. This was among the last things before increasing work on his part and new business relations on ours caused a loving separation, after a nearly ten years' connection. P. P. BLISS, HIS COLUMN. SKLECTED EDITORIAL. In assuming editorial charge of this column, we make our editorial bow (wow), etc. The editor fondly hopes, etc. In our treatment of those vast and vital issues of the momentous future, we shall endeavor to maintain a persis cent, etc. In view of our past editorial experience, we can confidently promige — etc EDITORIAL DEBUT. 35 Onr old friends and acquaintances need scarcely to be told that they may expect us to pay — o, etc. , etc. EDITORIAL COBEESPONDENCE !— AHEM ! Omaha, Neb., July 15, 1873. t/ust five hundred miles in twenty-four hours— and you'll see the center of the world ! No, not quite. We call it, "Away out West," but it lacks thirty miles of being the middle of Uncle Sam's farm 1 [I was tempted to go the thirty miles further, so I could say I'd been half-way across.] And the programmes said, " The Fifth Annual State Sunday School Convention." Though as to numbers and results 'twas called the beginning of things. "Elaborate and elegant," was the unanimous verdict on the church decorations ; " Cordial and complete," the welcome ; "Harmonious and helpful" all the exercises. The success of the music department is the subject of this article. Saml. Burns, Superin- tendent of the M. E. S. S.,.of Omaha, in behalf of the Executive Committee, sent on for fifty copies of the book to be used, and had two or three weeks' practice: so much for preparation. Professor Nightingale, President of the Convention, was, as you'd know by his name, a musical spirit, and gave the singing its proper place and time in each session, so that music seemed to be one of the exercises, and not a mere pastime. So much for selection. Dr. J. H. Vincent, of New York, father and founder of the "'Berean Series^'' and S. School Journal,'''' being the prominent speaker, aided the singing materially, not only by his kindly words concerning it, but by engaging heartily in it, both its chorus and quartette. So much for sympathy. Mr. F. J. Hartley, of London, Eng., also a live worker in S. S., manifested a wonderful interest in everything pertaining to American institutions, and complimented the style of our S. S. songs and the manner in which they are rendered, as worthy of imitation. So much for Christian charity. The Children's Mass Meeting of course was a grand success, and the speeches and songs " splendid ! " Among the pieces sungwere : " Hold the Fort," " Daniel's Band," " More to Follow," " Heaven for Me," " Pull for the Shore," and " Remembered." (At that time r<^- cently issued.) Something about an Old Piano " was sung and apparently enjoyed, but some folks might consider "sacred" songs only appropriate, and perhaps nothing had better be said about " profane " songs in such a solemn convention. (?) All in all, a more social convention (ice cream included) could not be imagined. And ia the years to come, Nebraska will be a bright star in the Sunday School firmament. That her Sunday School singing may be as popular as the U. P. R. R., and her Christian charity be as broad and inviting as her blooming prairies, is the wish of Sunshine. The Joy is a good name for a singing book. Don't you think so ? The name was discov- ered, as a great many other good things are yet to be, in the Bible. Turn to Jeremiah, 33d chapter and 11th verse— and you will find it. Though, as it may not be convenient to turn just now— people seldom turn to look up a quotation— it may be well enough to print it here. " The voice of joy, and the voice of gladness ; the voice of the bridegroom, and the voice of the bride ; the voice of them that shall say, Praise the Lord of Hosts: for the Lord is good ; for His mercy endureth forever." Dear Bliss and dear Mrs. Bliss, I cannot think of you without a pang and a longing, but I know they will gradually wear away, and nothing but joy will remain for our next meeting. Geo. F. Root. The article by F. W. Eoot, in Church's Musical Visitor for January, 1877, quoted from by Mr. Geo. F. Koot, is so excellent in its appreciation of Mr. Bliss that it is given entire : 36 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. I have just been looking in our charming little holiday gift-book, illustra- ting Mr. Bliss' poem, "Hold the Fort," written upon an incident familiar to all, which occurred in our civil war. I consider this work an extraordinary combination of effects, a striking cluster of pure gems of sentiment. The first element in it is an appeal to love of country ; our patriotism stirs mightily within us as we read of the gallant struggles of our soldiers at Altoona Pass — of their heroic endurance and final deliverance by General Sherman. Then we see the thrilling story idealized and glorified by being put to a spiritual use by the evangelist, Major Whittle. Next comes Mr. Bliss' strong, epigram- matic poem, crystalliTiing the parallel drawn by his fellow-laborer, and pointing it with Gospel truth that it may strike home to every hearer. The pictures, however they be considered from a technical standpoint, stimulate the imagi- nation to a more vivid apprehension of the allegory, and then comes the music touching the whole with Promethean fire and giving it wings that it may fly to the uttermost parts of the earth and to the innermost recesses of the soul. A man must be without patriotic enthusiasm, without religious sentiment, and without aesthetic sensibility who can look upon this work unmoved ; and especially will he be affected if he mourns with us the untimely death of the poet-musician, who contributed such important elements to it. If ever a man seemed fashioned by the Divine hand for sj)ecial and exalted work, that man was P. P. Bliss. He had a splendid physique, a handsome face, and a dignified, striking presence. It sometimes seemed incongruous, delightfully so, that in one of such great size and masculine appearance there should also appear such gentleness of manner, such perfect amiability, such conspicuous lack of self- assertion, such considerateness and deference to all, and such almost feminine sensitiveness. He had not had opportunities for large intellectual culture, but his natural mental gifts were wonderful. His faculty for seizing upon the sali- ent features of whatever came under his notice amounted to an unerring instinct. The one kernel of wheat in a bushel of chaff was the first thing he saw. And his ability to control words and phrases so that they should realize a thousand odd conceits of his imagination seemed unlimited. I know that he sometimes met adverse criticism upon the rhymes which he threw off upon local subjects ; but by far the greater number of these little effusions sparkled with wit and appropriateness, and his shortcomings were remarkably few for one who was obliged to make an airy, fantastic muse conform to the circum- scribed requirements of a monthly magazine. Examine the work which really enlisted his whole soul, and you will see nothing but keen discernment, rare taste, and great verbal facility. His Gospel hymns contain no pointless verses, awkward rhythms or forced rhymes, but, on the contrary, they glow with all that gives life to such composition. Mr. Bliss possessed wide human sympathievS, and had a strong social instinct : his acquaintances immediately became his friends, as a natural consequence of his many-sided attractiveness. The last time I saw him for more than a passing moment was at his home, a beautiful little town among the hills of the Upper Susquehanna valley, far enough away from railroads, telegraphs, and the other great auxiliaries of driving care and tumultuous traflSc to allow the im- ■p. W. root's CONTRIBUTIOil. 37 agination to escape from, tlie world. He, with liis wife and little boys, together with a number of relatives, spent a clear sunshiny Saturday of last summer, surrounded by congenial friends from the neighborhood and from a distance, all feeling conscious of living a delightful little pastoral, around which was thrown a peculiarly graceful halo of friendly intercourse. At the close of this golden day, just before taking our departure, four of us, including our host, stood out under the twining branches of the grove in which we were assem- bled, and sang from memory the little quartette, " The Two Roses " — two roses that were there in radiant bloom have been gathered ! — after which Mr. Bliss, full of the glowing happiness which had been evident with him throughout the day, exclaimed : '* 0, dear friends ; why can't you all stay over till to-mor- row ? We would then have as good a Sunday time as we've had a Saturday time to-day ! " Mr. Bliss' voice was always a marvel to me. He used occasion- ally to come to my room, requesting that I would look into his vocalization with a view to suggestions. At first a few suggestions were made, but latterly I could do nothing but admire. Beginning with E flat, or even D flat below, he would, without apparent effort, produce a series of clarion tones, in an ascend- ing series, until having reached the D (fourth line tenor clef) I would look to see him weaken and give up, as would most bass singers ; but no, on he would go, taking D sharp, E, F, F sharp and O, without weakness, without throatyness, without a sound of straining, and without the usual apoplectic look of effort. I feel quite safe in saying that his chest range was from D flat below to A flat above, the quality being strong and agreeable throughout and one vowel as good as another. He would have made name and fortune on the dramatic stage had he chosen that profession and studied a more scientific class of music than that in which he chose to work. The lavishness of natural endowment may be also seen in. his musical compositions, though in not so high a degree. He never composed upon large designs, and so never expanded his natural gifts into any very comprehensive creative ability. But I find enough in his melo- dies to justify myself in saying that he had the instincts of a musical composer. " When Jesus Comes " deserves to live by the side of the best songs of the church ; its intellectual side is well enough, and its emotional element is to me irresistible. And I venture to say that it will live, unless I am also mistaken in the belief that the religious progress of to-day (of which this song is an outgrowth) is giving deeper consideration to the things of the heart than has been given in any epoch known to history hitherto, or, indeed unless certain Gos- pel singers kill the piece by a very mistaken way of rendering it. Mrs. Bliss was so thoroughly devoted to her husband, that her life merged in his. There is a melancholy satisfaction in the thought that this dire calamity did not part this most devoted couple. In 1865:, Mr. Bliss writes: "Summer, concerted with. J. G. Towner. A pleasant singer, honest partner and lively companion. Made a hundred dollars in two weeks. Drafted in the United States Army two weeks." Mr. Bliss reported for duty at Carlisle barracks 3b MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. after being drafted, and after two weeks' service was discharged, it being evident that the war was at an end, and that no more men would be needed. He again writes : " About November 1st, George F. Eoot wrote to ask us if the ^ Yankee Boys ' would come "West and engage with Root & Cady. The ' Yankee Boys ' very readily consented in consideration of a guaranteed salary and expenses paid. Came to Chicago, November 21st, 1865. December, 1865, ^Yankee Boys,' not succeeding in the concert line, tender their resignation to Root & Cady, who gracefully accept, but propose to retain * Mr. Bliss ' in their employ ^if he will stay.' Answer, he will stay. Thus Root & Cady very kindly disengage me from a life which is be- coming irksome. They ofl'er me a Imndred and fifty dollars a month and expenses of self and wife. On settlement, our receipts were so small that I told Mr. Cady I would ask only a hundred dollars a month, which he allowed.^^ At the close of 1868, the firm advanced his salary both for the preceding and succeeding year. From this time on for eight years, Mr. Bliss' occupation was the holding of musical conventions and the giving of concerts, and private instruction in music in towns through the Northwest. For four years his conventions were held under his arrangement with Root & Cady ; after that, by independent appointment. He was very popular as a musical conductor and teacher, and was much sought after for convention work. During the first of his engagement with Root & Cady, Mrs. Bliss was employed as clerk in Root & Cady's store, then in the Crosby Opera House Building, on Washington street, Chicago. This position she filled for about six months, and then accompanied her husband in all of his travels, to assist in his concerts and convention work. Every sum- mer they would return to Rome to visit the old homestead. E ar- ing these visits to his home, in the rest and peace he enjoyed there among the hills, many of Mr. Bliss' sweetest pieces were written. Their home, during these years, they considered as being in Chicago. About one-fifth of their Sundays were probably passed here. They boarded, for some years, with musical companions, Mr. and Mrs. 0. Blackman, and were always deeply attached to these dear friends. In February, 1868, he remained in Chicago some weeks, writing music for a book published by Root & Cady, called '^The Triumph." LIFE 11^ CHICAGO, ETC. 39 On December 28tli of the same year, lie writes : " Bought my gold watch — a hundred and sixty dollars." At the close of this year, he writes in his diary : '*Thus the overruling Provideyce has led me by unmistakable evidences to see and recognize His dealing with me all through life's journey. Truly we have much to be thankful for. My dear wife, my greatest earthly treasure, joins in the opinion that we are and ever have been highly favored of Heaven ; that we find our greatest enjoyment in each other's so- ciety, w^hen striving to make each other happy, and our highest aim is to be useful to ourselves and others, and to ' glorify God that we may enjoy Him forever.' " The sentiment of gratitude that ever actuated Mr. Bliss is shown m these lines. His first impulse, in every good thing that came to him, and in all his joy and happiness, sometimes, to others, arising from comparatively trifling causes, was to fall on his knees and thank God. The sentiment of deep attachment to his wife that pervaded his life is also shown. They were indeed insep- arable and fond of each other and helpful to each other, in all the relations of life here and hereafter, beyond the conception of many who bear the relation of husband and wife, even though they profess that the relationship is sanctified in Christ. May the example of these dear friends in this respect be owned of God to make more happy many a Christian home where they were known and loved, and where what is here feebly represented is known to be true of them. During 1869, Mr. Bliss wrote songs and tunes for " The Prize," a Sunday School book published by Root & Cady, and also wrote some pieces, which were published as sheet music. He held con ventions at Bushnell, Carthage, Randolph, Hamilton, Mason City, Lamoille, Delavan, Secor, Washington, Momence, Peoria and Ha- vana, in Illinois, and in Brockton, New York — thirteen conven- tions in all, running in time from one to four weeks. While at his home in the summer (Rome, Pennsylvania,) he writes : "June 1, celebrated our tin wedding." "June 5. — To Boston for the Ju- bilee. Stopped in ISTew York and heard Parepa at Stein way Hall ; also Levy, the great cornetist, Campbell, the base, and at Boston, Ole Bull, Arbuckle, Gilmore and Co." "June 20.— To Brooklyn to hear H. W. Beecher preach." He closes his memorandums for the year with an acknowledgment of blessings received. Notes 40 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. his settlement with Root & Cady, and mentions that he has "plenty of convention engagements at one hundred dollars for four days." He adds : "In daily contact with G. F. Eoot, J. R. Murray, Balatka, 0. Blackman, W. S. B. Mathews, D. C. C. Mil- ler, H. R. Palmer and other good musicians." This brief mention of his life for one year will show that he was a busy man. He had very little idle time. He had established a reputation and was regarded as successful in his profession, and with a bright future before him as a musician. During this year, 1869, an event occurred in his history, that he regarded of the same pivotal nature in its results to him as was the loan of Grandma Allen, that enabled him to go to Geneseo, and the meeting with Mr. Root, that led to his coming west. This event was the meeting with and forming the acquaintance of Mr. D. L. Moody as narrated in the following chapter. CHAPTER IV". €H)D'S INSTRUMENTS — MR. BLISS' FIRST MEETING WITH MR MOODY — ^HI8 FIRST ACQUAINTANCE WITH THE WRITER — ONE OF OUR HOUSEHOLD — MEMORIAL BY REV. DR. GOODWIN — MR. BLISS' CONNECTION WITH THE FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH AND SUNDAY SCHOOL IN CHICAGO, IN the special manifestation of the power of the Holy Spirit in the Church of Christ, it has often, and perhaps usually, been that the instruments He may have chosen to use have a very inti- mate connection with and relationship to each other, which it is permitted us to trace, and, in so doing, more fully recognize His presence in and with the church, and His overruling providence in the life of every child of God. In the summer of 1869, Mr. Moody was holding Gospel services in Wood's Museum, near the corner of Randolph and Clark streets, in Chicago. For half an hour preceding his theater meeting, he was in the habit of speaking in the open air from the steps of the Court House near by. Mr. Bliss has told me of this meeting as fol- lows : I had been nearly four years in the West, at that time, and had passed a good many Sundays in Chicago, returning from the country where I was occupied holding Musical Conventions ; but I had never met Moody. One Sunday evening, my wife and I went out for a walk, before going to church, and passing up Clark street, we came upon the open-air meeting. I was at once attracted by the earnestness of the speaker, who, I was told, was Moody, and, wait- ing until he closed with an earnest appeal for all to follow him to the theater, we decided we would go, and fell in with the crowd, and spent the evening in his meeting there. That night Mr. Moody was without his usual leader for the singing, and the music was rather weak. From the audience I helped what I could on the hymns, and attracted Moody's attention. At the close of the meeting, he was at the door shaking hands with all who passed out, and as I came to him he had my name and history in about two 42 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. minutes, and a promise that when I was in Chicago Sunday even- ings, I would come and help in the singing at the theater meetings. This was the commencement of our acquaintance. I sang at the theater meetings often after that, and, making longer stops in Chicago in connection with writing music, I was often at the noon meeting, and was frequently made use of by Moody in his yarioue gatherings." How little did either of the two men who met that night at the theater door realize what God was preparing them for, and the relation they would in future years sustain to one another in the work of winning souls. The following year, in May, 1870, I first met Mr. Bliss. I had heard his name mentioned by Mr. Moody, several times, as having sung at some of his meetings, and of his having asked Eoot & Cady where in the world they had kept such a man for four years, that he hadn't become known in Chicago." Mr. C. M. Wyman (since deceased) was at that time in Chicago, working with Mr. Bliss in making songs. He, with BHss, was an earnest Christian, and both came to Moody's meetings when they could. I think the first im- pression Mr. Moody received of the power of solo singing in Gos- pel work he obtained from these two men ; at all events, such impres- sions as he may have had were crystalized by his use of them. He had a sense of personal loss in his tone, as he would say, to think that such a singer as Bliss should have been around here for the last four years and we not known him." At the time mentioned, I received an invitation from my friend, Mr. Talcott, of Eockford, to come out and address the Winnebago Sunday School Convention, and, if possible, to bring a singer with me. I consulted Mr. Moody about a singer and was referred to Wyman. I called upon Wyman, and found that a previous engage- ment would prevent his going. While talking with him. Bliss came in, and, after an introduction, he was solicited by us both to go. He cheerfully and pleasantly consented, and met me at the depot the same afternoon. I was much impressed at this conven- tion with Bliss' power as a singer, and was won toward him from the first as a lovable man. A few days after our return, Mr. T. M. Avery was asking me if I knew who could be obtained to take charge of the singing of the First Congregational Church, then about to move into their new KEY. DR. GOODWIi^'S RECOLLrCTIOI^S. 43 building on the corner of Washington and Ann streets. I told him of my experience with Mr. Bliss, and the opinion Mr. Moody had of him, and that I should like to have him meet him. An ap- pointment was made for a day following, and Mr. Bliss was brought into communication with the people of that church, with the result narrated by Dr. Goodwin. My residence, at the time, was only one block from the church, and as Mr. Bliss wished to be near his new field of labor, he and his wife became inmates of my family, where they remained until they commenced housekeeping in November of the same year. It was at this house, No. 43 South May street, that he wrote, "Hold the Fort," "I am so glad that Jesus loyes Me," and other of his popular pieces. The memory of those days is very pleasant, very sacred to us. A dear old father — since passed into glory— my dear friend and Mr. and Mrs. Bliss' dear friend, Charles Severance, a noble, manly young man, loved by us all, who died the following spring, were then with us. What precious seasons of family worship ; what animated discussions of Bible truth with my father ; what interest in talking over songs and sermons, Sunday schools and plans of work ! How kind and tender deai Bliss was to my invalid father ! How he would cheer him in his joyous, hearty way, and in the singing of his favorite songs ! How welcome he always was when he came home from his conventions , how sorry we always were to have him go. In all the time he was with us, he was always the same kind-hearted, cheerful, loving and lovable man. Of his Christian work at this time the following, contributed by Dr. Goodwin, will furnish the most complete record * In July, 1870, Mr. Bliss became leader of the choir of my First Congrega- tional Church, of Chicago, and a few months later, the Superintendent of the Sabbath school. He continued to hold both of these positions for something more than three years, resigning his superintendency only when he had fairly entered upon his work as a singing evangelist. As may be supposed, I saw him very often during all this period, and came to know him well ; and the memory of the friendship that grew up between us, and interlocked our hearts more and more as the fellowship of worship and work went on, is and will ever be a perpetual joy. His was a nature to invite confidence and to keep it Thoroughly frank and unsuspecting, with not a thought of policy or craft, intensely sympathetic and outspoken, with a heart overflowing with kindness of spirit, a conscience quick to hear and imperative to heed every call of duty, a devotion to the service of the Master that never seemed to falter or grow cold, he drew me to him from the first as a brother and yoke-fellow to be ex- 4A MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. ceedingly beloved and rejoiced in ; and the better I knew him the more 1 admired the unaffected simplicity and beauty of his character — the more I felt impressed with the depth and earnestness of his piety — the more I leaned upon and valued his cooperation. Few pastors, I am persuaded, are privileged to have in their choristers such gifted, sympathizing, efficient helpers. Too often, it is to be feared, the pulpit and the choir gallery are out of harmony as to the ends proposed, or the methods by which the ends agreed on shall be sought ; and the cases are not few, nor hard to find, where in the handling of choir-leaders and those who abet them, the Lord's house is turned into a concert hall, the service of song made largely a device for filling and renting pews, and the minister compelled to sandwich his part in between performances that suggest anything but the worship of God or the salvation of men. Sometimes, indeed, he has to come to his duties in the pulpit after the world and the flesh and the devil have, through the fingers and lips of an unconverted organist and choir-leader, set things moving to their liking, and then turn the service over to them after the sermon, to be finished up as they may elect. Doubtless the devil likes that way of conducting Sabbath services. If he can only get people's heads full of waltzes, and operas, and sonatas and what-not else, before the preaching comes, and then have a chance to follow it up with a march or an aria of his own selection, the preacher's thirty minutes of Gospel will not greatly damage his interests. Little wonder that preaching in such circumstances saves few souls. It is like expecting harvest with the enemy invited to go before the toiler, sow- ing tares, and to follow him gathering up and snatching away the seed. To those who knew anything of P. P. Bliss, it will not be needful to say that he had no sympathy with any such idea of the music of the sanctuary. He shared to the fullest extent my feeling, that the disposition to make the song and service of God's house showy and entertaining was an abomination in God's sight. He held, as I did, that all music in connection with worship, whether by instrument or voice, should be consecrated and worshipful. In his concep- tion, he who led at the organ should be one to come to the keys fresh from his closet, one who should pray, as his hands swept over the manuals, that the power of God might, through him, constrain the people's hearts to worship in spirit and in truth. So he believed that all who led in the service of song should sing with grace in their hearts ; that the music should be strictly spirit- ual music — not selections made on grounds of taste, high musical character, but selections aimed at honoring God, exalting Jesus Christ, magnifying His Gospel — music, in a word, that God's Spirit could wholly own and use to com- fort, strengthen, and inspire God's people, and lead unsaved souls to Christ. Accordingly the highest devotional character marked all his selections, all his rehearsals, all his leadership in the Lord's house. It was his invariable cus- tom to open his rehearsals by prayer. He often invited me to lead in that ser- vice, and to address the choir on the subject of the singing adapted to worship ; and few weeks passed without his impressing the spiritual idea as the all-con- trolling one, and one never to be forgotten by those who were to lead the praises of the congregation. AS A CHOEISTEE. 45 As Mr. Bliss stood in the choir gallery, partly facing the singers, during his leadership, there was exactly in front of him, in the center of the eastern win- dow of the transept a large crimson cross. Many times during rehearsals he would point thither, saying, " I am glad we have the cross always before us. Let us forget everything else when we sing. Let us seek to have the people lose sight of us, of our efforts, our skill, and think only of Him who died there- on, and of the peace, comfort, strength, joy He gives them that trust Him." It is not strange that, with such a chorister in charge, all solicitude about an- thems and voluntaries vanished from the preacher's mind. Whatever the selection, I knew it would be full of worship alike in the sentiment and the rendering, would prepare the way for the Word of God ; and when the sermon was ended, no matter what the final thought, whether admonition, encourage- ment or appeal, I always felt sure that the chorister's heart was one with mine, and that I could commit the closing service to him, as I sometimes did, with perfect confidence that the impression sought to be produced would be deepened. This was preeminently true of Mr. Bliss' management of the singing in all gatherings for prayer. He was a royal helper here. He loved such fellowship, could not bear to have things drag and grow listless and stupid, as they some- times do. His sunny, buoyant nature could not tolerate such an atmosphere, his warm, fresh feelings brought him at once to the rescue. He would break out at such times with one of his ringing songs that would go through all hearts like the blast of a bugle, and set everything astir. He was especially fond of songs that magnified the name and grace of Christ, and urged to larger trust and consecration and engagedness in His service. " Free from the Law," "More Holiness give Me," " I gave My Life for Thee," The Half was never Told," " Hold fast till I Come," were among his favorites, and they would sometimes scatter the gloom and despondency, or coldness of a meeting, as a sudden burst of sunshine through a thick sky puts to rout clouds and fog. In- deed, a stupid, lifeless meeting with P. P. Bliss in it would have been a mar- vel. All through his songs and his words of witness breathed the spirit of absorbing devotion. With him the coming of the Lord was a Scripture truth, so real and vivid that his life felt the inspiration of it in everything he said or did. . He felt profoundly that the Bridegroom might come at any moment, and it was hence his intense desire to have his work done, his lamp trimmed, and to be ready to enter into the marriage. During the last two years while en- gaged as an evangelist, he was rarely present in the prayer-meetings ; but whenever he was there, almost invariably before he spoke or sang, he gave expression to the feeling that possibly he might be witnessing for the last time. The very last evening when he met with us, he came forward near the close of the meeting, uttering this thought, sang as a word of counsel and en- couragement to all young converts, a number of whom had been testifying during the evening, the song whose chorus is : Hold fast till I come, Hold fast till I come ; A bright crown awaits thee ; Hold fast till I come. 46 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. In his Sunday scliool relations, he was especially happy and beloved. It is safe to say that no school ever had a superintendent who held larger place in the children's hearts than he ; and it is easy to see why. He was an enthusiastic lover of children. It never cost him any effort to meet children on their level, for he lived there. He knew a child's nature by instinct, or rather he possessed such a nature, and could no more help gathering about him the little four and five-year-olds of the infant class, and talking to them in a way that every one of them understood wherever he was, than a florist could help gathering roses and j aponicas and fuchsias about him, and talking to them day by day. And the same of older children. The consequence was, that whenever he appeared be- fore the school, every face brightened instantly. Every eye was intent, every ear eager. He never had to ring for order while he was talking ; never had any rough, turbulent boys whom he could not interest and control. The look of his eye, the sound of his voice was all-potent. The members of his school, young and old, felt him to be a personal friend, and so he was. He knew very many of them by name. He entered keenly into all their childish experi ences ; was always ready to listen to the unbosomings which they were eager to pour into his ears ; to answer their questions and give the counsel they sought. It was marvelous to see how completely and without effort he pos- sessed their confidence, and how supremely he swayed them by his opinion. Whatever he said was law and gospel in the fullest sense ; and wherever he went, as it was his delight to go, among the children's homes, especially those of the humbler sort, in times of sickness, his sunny presence and cheery words and stirring songs were better than all medicines. Patience, courage, hopefulness always followed his visits ; and parents were as glad to see him as the children, and often as much helped by his coming, Mr. Bliss' ability to teach children to sing was amazing, and it was com- pensation for a long pilgrimage to see him handle a school when training it musically. From the moment he named a piece, he seemed to inspire all with his enthusiasm. Not an eye would wander, not a face be dull. He would say a few pithy words, explaining the sentiment of the song, a few more, possibly, about the music and how to render it ; sing a strain or two alone, and then, after two or three repetitions, the school would march through and ring it out as if they had been familiar with it for months. It was as if he had the gift of infusing music into everybody. No matter how little musical culture or skill teachers and scholars had, no matter how out of key or out of time, they were naturally inclined to sing. Somehow when Mr, Bliss led, the difficulties and irregularities and discords seemed to disappear, and there was one grand thrill of feeling, one royal burst of harmony. The best thing about this singing was that, like that of the choir gallery, it was never for show. Mr. Bliss would have abominated any attempt at musical display, or anything simply entertaining as truly on the part of children af adults. With him the Sunday school and all the departments and appliances of it meant salvation. He believed with his whole heart in the early conver- sion of children. He was wont to say that he could never remember the time when he did not trust in Christ as his Savior and desire to serve Him. He 9 AS A SUNDAY SCHOOL SUPERII^TEI^DEITT. 47 felt profoundly that wlien Jesus said " Suffer tlie little cliildren to come unto Me and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven," He meant to have parents and all understand that He was the children's Savior, and that in their tenderest years the little ones might know renewing grace and become the children of the Kingdom. He greatly coveted such early trust in Christ, and with increasing devotion brought to bear all the agencies at his command to secure it. Next to the word of God, he felt the instrumentality of song to be most potent and used it mightily. Praying before he sang, praying while he sang, and exhorting all others to sing prayerfully and in the spirit, he led the school. Many times he would stop in the middle of a song to lift up the cross, emphasize the love of Jesus, and urge every heart to immediate decision on the Lord's side. He often did it with tears — tears in his eyes and tears in his voice ; and time and again, as, with that wonderful pathos and sweetness of which he was such a master, he poured forth his soul in the affectionate entreaties of " Calling Now," or " Almost Persuaded," all hearts would melt as if touched of God, and the solemn hush that followed seemed like a moment of universal prayer and consecration. God richly blessed this dear brother's songs and labors in the school. Dur- ing his connection with it there was rarely a communion season without some of its members coming forward to unite with the church ; and if the names of all whom he helped by word and song to accept Jesus Christ as Savior, while he was Superintendent, could be called, there would rise up a great cloud of wit nesses. Doubtless much of the seed sowed proved like that in the parable, seed by the wayside, in stony ground, among thorns, and came to naught. But there was left, nevertheless, a generous portion that brought forth, some thirty, some sixty, some an hundred fold ; and the harvest among the children from his sowing is only begun. We saw but little of Mr. Bliss after he entered upon his work as an evan gelist, but what we did see made us all feel that more and more the spirit of anointing was upon him. Whenever he could, he came back for a visit to the old place of toil and prayer, and never without stirring all our hearts by some word of cheer, or of incitement to larger devotion in the Master's service. Often he would set the blood bounding by a new song rendered as only he could do it ; and very likely he would follow this with a prayer, whose child- like simplicity and earnestness and pathos revealed how intimate his commun- ion was with God, and how he longed to be more and more used in winning souls. It is not too much to say that during these last years Christ was in all his thoughts ; as one of his later songs expresses it : My only song and story, Is Jesus died for me ; My only hope of glory The cross of Calvary. Would that the spirit of such a discipleship might pervade all our singers, our Sunday School superintendents, our teachers, our church members. Then 48 MEMOIR OF P. P, BLISS. there would be singing in the spirit, praying in the spirit, workipg in the spirit, and heaven would be kept jubilant over souls rescued from sin. May God help all who read the record of this consecrated life to enter into the secret of its joy and its power — to be determined not to know anything save Jesus Christ and Him crucified. E. P. Goodwin. CHAPTER V. IK EVANGELISTIC WORK — MR. MOODY'S APPEAL TO MR. BLISS — ^THE TURNINa POINT— AN EXPERIMENTAL MEETING AT WAUKEGAN— BLISS' CONSECRA- TION OP HIMSELF TO GOD'S SERVICE — HIS FAITH AND SELF-DENIAL — WORKING FOR THE YOUNG — AN INCIDENT — HIS METHODS OF TEACHING. letters from Mr. Moody, tlien in Scotland, urging him to give up his business, drop everything and sing the Gospel. Similar letters came to the writer, urging that we should go out together and hold meetings. Mr. and Mrs. Bliss were ready for this, if they could see it as the Lord's will. Mrs. Bliss' characteristic remark was : " I am willing that Mr. Bliss should do anything that we can be sure is the Lord's will, and I can trust the Lord to provide for us, but I don't want him to take such a step simply on Mr. Moody's will." There was much prayer and much hesitation on Mr. Bliss' part in approaching a decision upon the matter. He doubted his ability to be useful in the work ; doubted whether the drawing he felt toward it was of the Lord or his own inclinations. Mr. Moody continued to write. One of his sentences I remember was : "You have not faith. If you haven't faith of your own on this matter, start out on my faith. Launch out into the deep." A solemn providence of God that occurred at this time, and very deeply impressed both Mr. Bliss and myself, is linked in the chain that drew us into the work. In November, 1874, my Christian brother and dear personal friend and nearest neighbor, Mr. H. G. Spafford, received a tele- gram from England announcing the drowning of his four dear children in the loss of the " Ville de Havre." His wife, who accom- panied the children, had been rescued and sent the despatch. These friends were dear to Mr. Bliss and myself, and their affliction was a deep personal sorrow. Mr. Spafford left at once for Europe, to bring home his wife, and while there had a conference with Mr. Moody relating to Mr. winter of 1873- 1-4, Mr. Bliss received many 4 50 1 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. Bliss going with me into Gospel work. Upon his return, he urged the matter upon us, and his words and representations were used of God in bringing us both to regard it as probable that we should respond to the call. Shortly after this return of Mr. Spaff ord, an^ while we were waiting for some opening to indicate the Lord's will, an interview on the cars with Eev. 0. M. Saunders, of Waukegan, Dlinois, led to our arranging to go there for three or four evenings, as an experiment. If the Lord blessed us and souls were converted, we would take it as indication of His will, that He called us into the work. Through Mr. Saunders I am furnished with copies of the following letters concerning these meetings : Elgin Watch Co., Chicago, March 16th, 1874. Bliss, Cole and myself, God willing, will be with you Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings, next week, March 34, 35 and 36. D. W. Whittle Chicago, March, 14, 1874. Dear Brother Saunders : Bro. Whittle will write you that he and I are coming to Waukegan, Tuesday, 24th inst. I know that you and all God's people will pray for the Spirit's power to accompany the effort. Solicit the singers to come and assist me in the singing. Would like a good organ and all the " Sunshine " in town. * * Organ in front of congregation, if possible, and good light all over the room, I venture to suggest. Every time you think of our coming, offer a prayer that it may be purely for God's glory. Amen. Wife and brother unite in love to thee and thine. Sincerely, P. P. Bliss. The Tuesday evening meeting was not an encouraging one, as to attendance, and had no marked result, except in the very power- ful impression upon the minds of Bliss, dear brother Cole and my- self, that the Lord was with us. The next day it rained and we looked for a still smaller audience, but it was twice as large. Be- fore the meeting closed, there were blessed indications of the work of the Holy Spirit upon the people. The place became very solemn, and as dear Bliss sang Almost Persuaded," every word seemed filled with power. In different parts of the house, sinners arose as he sang, presenting themselves for prayer, and souls that night rejoiced in Christ. Our hearts were very full, and a great respon- sibility was upon us. The next afternoon, we all three met in the study of the Congregational Church, where our meetings were held, and spent some hours in prayer. Bliss made a formal surrender of bliss' self-coksecratiok. 51 everything to the Lord ; gave up liis musical conventions ; gave up his writing of secular music ; gave up everything, and in a simple childlike, trusting prayer, placed himself, with any talent, any power God had given him, at the disposal of the Lord, for any use He could make of him in the spreading of His Gospel. Dear Cole united with us in this consecration. It was a wonderful afternoon. As I think back upon the scene in that little study, and recall Bliss' prayer, and the emotions that filled us all in the sense of God's presence, the room seems lit up in my memory with a halo of glory. This meeting of consecration was follow^^d by a wonderful meeting in the evening. Some twenty or more accepted Christ, and a spirit of deep conviction was upon many souls. We returned to Chicago in the morning, praising God — Bliss to find substitutes for his con- ventxons, and I to resign my business position. From that Wednes- day, March 25, 1874, up to December 15, 1876, when I parted from him no more to meet on earth, I never heard Mr. Bliss express a rt^refcthat he made this surrender, that he gave himself to God for Hir> work. His income from his business at this time was good and growing. His reputation as a composer was recognized, and he looked forward with his wife to soon being in a condition where he could settle down and be at home, giving up his convention work. His decision involved the giving up of income, the simple trusting God for all means of support, the relinquishing of all plans for ever settling down in a home, a lowering of his reputation in the eyes of many well-meaning musical friends, who recognized his ability to become a leader in the art, and the taking up of a laborious, self-deny- ing calling — a calling in which it is not possible for one to abide un- less laborious and self-denying. 'None of these things that he gave up did Bliss ever speak of. He was as silent about them as the disciples in the Gospels, when, with their eyes on the Lord, they followed Him over Palestine, are silent about the boats, nets and fishes they left by the sea of Galilee. I think Bliss truly counted these things nothing compared with the joy of being a servant of Jesus Christ, and the gladness of being used to impart life by the Gospel to dead souls. On our way to Waukegan, that morning, he selected a verse which, said he, "let us keep as our watchword in the work." The verse is in Hebrews xii, 2 : "Looking unto Jesus, the Author and Finisher of our faith ; who, for the joy that was set before Him, endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right 52 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. hand of the throne of God." Many and many a time has his cheery utterance of the words Looking unto Jesus" chased away despon- dency, and given grace and courage for the trials of the way. There is a strange silence on the earth to me, as the thought comes that I am never to hear that voice here again. May my memory of it ever be connected with these words, so dear to him, and may the thought that he is up there forever with the Lord be to us all, by the power of the Holy Spirit, a greater inspiration than was the voice so loved, so missed. It is not necessary that I should enter into any detailed account of Mr. Bliss' work while an evangelist. ■ The memorials printed in this book are sufficient evidence of the acceptance of his labors to the church of Christ, and of his endorsement by the ministers of the Gospel of all evangelical denominations as one approved of God. In the chapters devoted to his songs will be found such inci- dents as I can recall connected with his singing the Gospel. The towns and cities he visited in the work were as follows : In 1874 — Waukegan and Turner Junction, Illinois ; Geneva, Wisconsin ; Elgin, Illinois ; "Whitewater, Wisconsin ; Detroit, Michigan ; Pitts- burgh, Pennsylvania. In 1875 — Chicago; Louisville and Lexington, Kentucky ; JSTashville and Memphis, Tennessee ; St. Paul and Minne- apolis, Minnesota ; Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In 1876 — Racine and Madison, Wisconsin ; St. Louis, Missouri ; Mobile, Montgomery and Selma, Alabama ; Augusta, Georgia ; Kalamazoo and Jackson, Michigan ; Peoria, Illinois — twenty-five in all. From all of these places there will be some to meet him in glory and to recognize him as the one through whose personal influence they were led to accept salvation. As memory runs back over the audiences assembled in these various places to hear him sing, and who were often moved by his melodies as the breath of wind moves the bending grain, now weep- ing, now exulting, now thrilled by the Christ exalted in his song, I oSer the fervent prayer that all who ever heard him sing on earth may sing with him in Heaven ; and that any before whom these lines may come, whose memory, with mine, runs back to meetings where they were Almost Persuaded," and almost rose as accepting Jesus, as he sang, but are still unsaved, may now at once decide and give themselves up to Christ. May all the singers whom he loved and so often prayed for be ready, as he was, for the sum- ILLUSTKATIOK OF UKBELIEF. 53 mons home, and may they join that choir of blood-washed ones on high, where he and his dear wife are now singing, Saved by the Blood of the Crucified One." May all the dear ministers in these places, who loved him and prayed with him, and for him, be anointed with power from on high, to win souls, laboring as those v\^ho know not, as he knew not, how short the time may be. During the last year of his life, Mr. Bliss had an increased desire to work for the children and young peo^Dle. He conducted a daily meeting for them, and with most blessed results. Hundreds of them, I believe, have been led to Christ, intelligently and savingly, in his meetings. In Peoria, he expressed to me very decidedly his determination to work more earnestly in that direction. His ten- derness of nature and sympathy fitted him specially for reaching the hearts of the young. They were drawn to him because they knew he loved them. A little incident that occurred in Peoria will illustrate his sym- pathy for children. It was just before Christmas, and Mr. and Mrs. Bliss were busy each day in procuring presents to take home to lit- tle Paul and George, and to Grandma, and all at home. One day Bliss was on the street and noticed, as he was passing, a little girl, poorly clad, standing in front of a toy-store window, gazing intently and longingly at the dolls displayed in large numbers and in a pretty arrangement from large to small, in the window. He stopped at once, and kindly and earnestly said, ^^ISTow just pick out the one that you want, and you shall have it. I will go in and buy it for you." He would have been delighted to do so, he said — had already done it in his own mind — but the child looked around at him with a painful expression of distrust and unbelief, and, gathering her shawl over her head, hurried away, not heeding his repeated assurances that she could have a doll if she wanted it. " That is just the way sinners treat Christ," said he, as he told me about it. "I was real grieved that the little one wouldn't let me do for her what I wanted to, and that she distrusted me, when I just wished with all my heart to make her happy. I think I understand a little better how the Lord feels at our unbelief of His precious promises." I wish all the dear young people and children who have ever attended Mr. Bliss' meetings to know how sincere and tender an interest he had in their welfare. He very much prized the testi- monies of the children given to him on cards, or in little notes, and 54 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. many of them are filed away among liis papers. He had a faculty for interesting the children in the Scriptures, and secured their participation in the meetings by giving out texts and asking each to bring a yerse upon the text and recite it. "Love," "Peace," "Grace," "Faith," "Believe," "Heaven," and other texts were used by him. Of course the singing was made a specialty of in his meetings. He sang a great deal with the children, and some for them. He always secured tlieir attention to the sentiment of the hymns and the truth taught in them, before singing, and would have them pray with him for God to bless the singing. The sing- ing was thus taken up out of the place of mere entertainment too often assigned it in meetings, and was made a spiritual power in worship and in preaching the Gospel. When he prayed, he usually had the children follow him audibly. After singing and prayer, he would have the texts repeated, and request that any who wished to confess Christ as their Savior should do so, after they had re- peated their verse. Many a grown person has been led in this manner, in his meetings (for as many adults attended them as chil- dren), to overcome their timidity, and to know the joy that comes from obeying the word in Eomans x, 10, by "confessing with the mouth the Lord Jesus." After recitation of texts and singing, he would give them a ten uiinute lesson from the word. The follow- ing are some of his outlines for these lessons - HEAR AND REMEMBER. Matt. XV, 10. Matt, xvii, 5. Mark iv, 24. Luke viii, 18. ''What.' "Now." "Hear." "Hear Jolin XV, 14. John XV, 20. Matt, vii, 12. John ii, 5. Remember. Do. Doit. Do ILLUSTRATIONS. ** The man who loved music' " The broken arm." " Two girls who * loved.' " COME. Gen. vii, 1. Come tJwu. Isaiah i, 18. Come now. Matt, xi, 28. Come unto me. Rev. xxii, 20. Come, Lord Jesus. HIS METHODS OF TEACHING. 55 Upon the blackboard he would have C ^ ^ M I Come. Jolin viii, 12. Light. John X, 9. Door. John xi, 11. Good Shepherd. ILLUSTBATIONS. *'Know mmr " Mr. Homer Book." " Mute speaking Father." Sick boy told to eat" "ALL THINGS." 2 Cor. iv, 14. For your sakes. 2 Cor. V, 17. Are become new. 3 Cor. V, 18. Are of God. 2 Cor. vi, 4. Approving ourselves. 2 Cor, vi, 10. Possessing all things. These are given as illustrating his preparation for his meetings, and his method of using the Scriptures. I have wished to give them, and to briefly sketch his manner of conducting meetings, for the benefit others may derive as to methods of interesting the chil- dren in religious services, and also to have Mr. Bliss remembered as something more than a singer, in the evangelical work in which he was engaged. He was much used of God in preaching the word in the manner above set forth, as well as in singing. The services he has conducted alone in various parts of the country, which he used to call "praise meetings," have been much blessed, and were abundant evidence of his ability for the general work of an evan- gelist. It would be an injustice to his memory to think of him as a singer only, and to consider that the part he has borne in the work which has been owned of God was simply that of singing. We pray to the Lord of the harvest to raise up the singer to take his place in singing the Gospel ; but shall we ever have again singer, poet, composer, preacher, all combined in one of like character with Philip Bliss ? If necessary for the church, yes. By the H L Home. Love. "1 AM.' >» 56 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. grace of God lie was what he was. But it seems to many of us that "take him for all in all, we ne'er shall look upon his like again." He has been given to us to show how beautiful the gifts of God may become when shining out through a Christian life, from a soul consecrated by the blood of Christ, and sanctified by the indwelling of the Spirit of God. CHAPTER VI. ME. BLISS AS A COMPOSER AND AUTHOR— HIS FIRST SUNDAY SCHOOL HYMN — *' IF PAPA WERE ONLY READY " — HIS SYSTEMATIC HABITS AND MANNER OF WORKING — THE LAST HYMN HE WROTE— THE MUSIC BURNED AT ASHTABULA— HIS FACILITY OP EXPRESSION. THOUSAISTDS of people who never saw Mr. Bliss feel that they knew and loved him through his hymns. To them and to the generation to come, the principal interest in his life will center around these productions of his pen. It is proposed to collect in this and following chapters such facts in regard to the composition and use of the best known and most widely used of his songs as will be of interest to the world. The first song Mr. Bliss wrote, that was used in Sunday schools or Gospel meetings, is the piece found in G-ospel Songs, entitled If Papa were only Keady." He caught the song from reading in a re- ligious paper of a little boy dying and telling his father, just before death came to take him away, that he was afraid " he would not come to heaven because he couldn't leave the store." ''He wrote the words and music in May, 1867, at Rome, Pennsylvania, and sent it on to Mr. Root, who was much pleased with it and caused its imme- diate publication. The following are the words : IF PAPA WERE ONLY READY. I should like to die, said Willie, if my papa could die too, But lie says he isn't ready, 'cause he has so much to do ; And my little sister Nellie says that I must surely die. And that she and mamma — ^then she stopp'd, because it made me cry. But she told me, I remember, once while sitting on her knee. That the angels never weary, watching over her and me ; And that if we're good (and mamma told me just the same before), They will let us into heaven when they see us at the door. 58 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. There I know I shall be happy, and will always w&^t to stay ; I shall love to hear the singing, I shall love the endless day ; I shall love to look at Jesus, I shall love Him more and more. And I'll gather water-lilies for the angel at the door. There will be none but the holy — I shall know no more of sin ; Though I'll see mamma and Nellie, for I know he'll let them in. But I'll have to tell the angel, when I meet him at the door, That he must excuse my papa, 'cause he couldn't leave the store. Nellie says, that may be I shall very soon be called away ; If papa were only ready, I should like to go to-day ; But if I should go before him to that world of light and joy, Then I guess he'd want to come to Heaven to see his little boy. The books of songs by Mr. Bliss are as follows : "The Charm," 1871 ; The Song Tree," a collection of parlor and concert music, 1872 ; The Sunshine," for Sunday Schools, 1873 ; The Joy," for conyentions and for church choir music, 1873 ; "Gospel Songs," for G-ospel meetings and Sunday Schools, 1874. All of these books are copyrighted by John Church & Co., and it is by their permission that the selections of Mr. Bliss' poetry, given herewith, are taken, for the most part, from these books. In addition to these publications, in 1875 he compiled, and in con- nection with Mr. Sankey edited, " Gospel Hymns and Sacred Songs," and in 1876, his last work was the preparation of the book known as. Gospel Hymns No 2, Mr. Sankey being associated with him as editor. These last two books are published by John Church & Co. and Biglow & Main jointly — the work of Mr. Bliss in them, under the copyright of John Church & Co. Very many pieces of Mr. Bliss' appear in the books of Geo. F. Root and H. R. Palmer, and many were published in sheet music form. A large number of his popular pieces were published in " The Prize," a book of Sunday School songs, edited by Geo. F. Boot, in 1870. From the above it will be seen that he was an industrious worker. From 1870 to 1876, six years, his pen was very busy. The above seven books, forty or fifty songs in sheet form, many pieces in books of others in exchange for what they had furnished him, with much miscellaneous writing as contributor to a musical journal, and in other directions, and all this in connection with his conven- tion, choir and Sunday school work up to 1874, and from that AUTHOESHIP. 59 time constantly in evangelistic work, make us marvel that lie found time to do so much. It can only be explained by an admission of his wonderful gifts, that made his song writing not so much a matter of labor as a delight — an outflow of melody that must find expression, and a careful and laborious training of fit methods of expression of words and harmony for the melody with which his soul was filled. He was a very systematic and orderly man in all of his surroundings. Scrupulously neat in person and apparel, and with the sensitiveness of a woman in matters of taste, and a shrinking from all suggestion of vulgarity in anything in him or around him, his study or place of work, wherever he might be, partook of the nature of the man. His books and papers were in order, his desk or table usually clear, and his work prosecuted in a business-like manner. It pained him to have things in a "helter skelter" way about him. A misspelled word in a letter, or the wrong pronunciation of a word in an address, was to him like a note out of harmony in music. His penmanship was very neat, and his letters and manuscripts, as completed by him, are without blots or erasures. He never liked to write a letter with a pencil, and would always copy over a piece of music if possible, rather than to send it to his publishers with erasures. And yet none of his friends will remember him as being one known as a pre- cise man, in a manner to make others feel preciseness in his com- pany. His joyous nature, and happy and good humored way of noticing others' defects, and of carrying out his rules, kept away any uncomfortable feeling on the part of any one associated or brought in contact with him. His tenderness was such he would not have injured the feelings of a child for worlds. Mr. Bliss' best songs were never studied themes connected with the Sunday school lessons of those years. They were studied pieces, and, he himself often said, were not a success. They did not have inspiration in them. He could not sit down at any time, and upon a given theme write a given song that would be a success. Some- times a melody would come to him, and he would work it out and write it down and wait for words. Sometimes the lines for a chorus would be the first suggestion of a hymn. Sometimes the last verse of a hymn would form in his mind and would be written down, and hymn and tune be worked up from it More often the whole hymn, in theme, structure of words, chorus and tune, would be born at 60 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. once, and all written out together. This, he has told mo, was true of the hymns that have been most sung. "Hold the Fort/' " Down Life's dark Vale we Wander," " More to Follow," " Jesus Loves Me," "Windows open toward Jerusalem," were written in this manner. His own soul was full and was thrilled with the themes that took possession of him. My most vivid recollections of him will always be of his entire self abandonment of joy in the consciousness of being used of God in bringing out in song some precious Gospel truth, some exalting view of Christ. He has come to me often with the theme of a hymn, and with his face shining and eyes moist, explained his plan and purpose as in his mind, and asked me to thank God and pray with him that God might bless the song. He never felt that the songs originated with him. They seemed to him to come through him from God. As he grew in the knowledge of God's word, he would marvel at the truth he had expressed in his songs without knowing it. At the time of writing " Hold the Fort," he had no clear views as to the testimony of the Scriptures, that the attitude of the Christian should always be the daily expectation and desire of the personal return of Jesus Christ. When this truth came in power into his soul, he recognized the purpose of God in his writing the hymn, and that its use by the church all around the world was on account of its harmony with the word of God, upon a truth intended to arouse Christians. After his consecration to Christ for His service' in saving souls, Mr. Bliss' experience crystalized more and more into an appre- hension of a personal Savior. Christ risen — Christ ever present with us — Jesus, the real, living, personal Jesus of the Gospels, came closer and closer to him. His communion with Christ was uninterrupted. And his songs in these days abounded with Christ. The last year of his life, nearly all the songs he wrote contain the three themes of Gospel testimony, Christ died for our sins. He lives for our justification, He is coming again in a glory which we are to share. He did not plan these hymns with any purpose to teach these truths, and was surprised himself when his attention was called to the fact of the uniformity of their testimony in these directions. He simply wrote of what filled his own heart and had come to his own soul. "The Half was never Told," " No other Name is Given," " Hallelujah ! what a Savior," "Are your Win- dows open toward Jerusalem ?" "Hallelujah ! He is Kisen," "At HIS LAST SONG. 61 the Feet of Jesus," " Hallelujali ! 'tis Dotie," all of which appear in Gospel Hymns 'No. 2, are examples of the truth of this state- ment. It is also very suggestive to notice the character of teaching, in words furnished by other authors with music written by him, that appear in this same work. I am sure that he did not contem- plate any test of this kind in making his selections from scores of manuscript songs that were monthly sent to him ; he simply set music to the words that inspired music in his soul. I do not think he ever exchanged a word with any one as to any distinctive char- acter of teaching in the songs selected ; but all these words that he selected convey the same leading truths. "Look away to Jesus," « Hold fast till I Come," " Out of the Ark," " Till He come," " It is well with My Soul," etc., are examples. Mr. Bliss' songs can only be understood and appreciated by an understanding of the reality to Mm of the truths they convey, as connected with a per- sonal Christ. The words he sang so grandly — Christ Jesus is my all in all. My comfort and my love. My life below, and He shall be My joy and crown above — just filled his soul. I believe he had no more thought, in singing them, of doing anything for the entertainment of people, or to excite admiration, than the meadow lark mounting to heaven, sing- ing as it soars. He sang from an overflowing heart to the praise of his Savior. The last words that I know of his writing were the two pieces, " My Eedeemer," and " I've passed the Cross of Cal- vary." Nothing that he ever wrote made him more happy. I can see him now, as he came into my room at Peoria and stood by my table, with the words of the latter piece written in pencil, and I can hear his earnest voice as he read the verses and called my atten- tion to the ''empty tomV^ and the ''vantage ground and the tears filled his eyes as he stood for a moment and spoke of the risen Christ, the acceptance we have in Him, and the •\dctory over sin and over the flesh that faith in such acceptance gives the believer. Now he said, " If the Lord will give me a tune for this, I believe it will be used to bring some souls on to the mountain." The Lord gave him a tune during the last week of his life at Rome. He sang it to the family with inspiring effect, but the written music then 62 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS^ used was burned at Ashtabula. It was one of a few pieces that he placed in his satchel, to look over during his journey. The family are all musicians, but cannot recall the melody that inspired them that evening, and we shall not hear it as he sang it until we stand with him in the rapidly-hastening-on resurrection morning, and know, with him, the fullness of Christ's resurrection power. I think that then, among the voices of the redeemed, we shall dis- tinguish his, and hush our praises for a moment to listen to the tune the Lord had given him as he sings — Oh, glorious height of vantage ground, Oh, blest victorious hour ! God grant to all who read a part in that first resurrection. In writing, Mr. Bliss had a marvelous command of words and facility in selecting the very happiest phrases to express his thought. A favorite entertainment with him was to have a word selected, and each of the party present make as many words as possible from the letters contained in the word chosen. After each had written out all the words he could conjure, and lists were compared, it would al- ways be found that he ,had two or three words the most. He loved to make adjectives and alliterations of words, commencing with the same letter, as in the lines, " Earth's fairest flowers will droop and die. Life's dearest joys ^^^J^ee^es^ by." He had all the gifts of a natural poet in instinct and imagma- tion, and the faculty of expressing his thoughts in fitting musical words and sentences. There was a charm in the nicely balanced, sensitive criticism which he would in a deprecating way give upon verses submitted him for criticism, or which he himself had written, that is very pleasant to recall. The pieces that contain most of the true genius of poetry, in the latest edition of Gospel Hymns, as viewed by those of critical taste, would probably be the hymn "Eternity," by Miss Ellen Gates, and " Arise and Shine," by Miss Mary Lathbury ; and no words that he ever set to music ever so inspired Mr. Bliss, or so satisfied his po- etic instincts. He could not read or sing the words* without enthu- siasm. Indeed, the music he wrote for them shows how keenly in sympathy with the words he must have been. Never did music SONGS BY " PAULINA." 63 more aptly express the heart that beats, in living words, than the inspiring melody of "Arise and Shine/' and the sweet, solemn strains of " Eternity/' as completed by him. It is not claimed for Mr. Bliss that the works he leaves behind him would give him a reputation as a great poet. He was very far from classing himself in the list of poets at all. But it is claimed that he possessed the true poetic genius in a far more than ordinary degree, and that, had his life been spared, he would have given ex- pression to poetry equal to the very best of our sacred hymns. There will be many who will claim this for some of the pieces that he has left behind him. Let the hymns speak for themselves, and may his prayer be answered, that the gifts, the style and the person of the author be lost sight of in the theme they present. It has been stated that Mrs. Bliss wrote several hymns which were published in Mr. Bliss' books under the name of "Paulina." This is a mistake. So far as is known, Mrs. Bliss never wrote any hymns or songs. Two pieces of very popular music were suggested by her to Mr. Bliss, and were written out by him and published as her com- positions. One of them was " I will Love Jesus ; " the other, " Eock of Ages." Both melodies are very beautiful, and were Mrs. Bliss' suggestion. The words, " I will Love Jesus," were written by Mrs. Dr. Griswold, of Chicago, for many years a friend of Mr. Bliss, and the writer of many popular hymns set to music by Mr. Bliss, George F. Root, and other composers. Her nom de plume has always been " Paulina." The above and three other pieces written by Mrs. Gris- wold, viz., "We're going Home To-morrow," "Hold Fast till I Come," "Who is on the Lord's Side ?" with music by Mr. Bliss, appear in Gospel Hymns. The name " Paulina " was associated with Mrs. Bliss in the Memorial Services held in Chicago, and the impression there given that she was the writer of the hymns credited to that name. Several pieces known as Mr. Bliss', and made popular by his music, will be missed from this collection. Th ey are omitted because the words were not written by him. Several of them were changed by him to adapt them to the music. Many of them have an entire verse or words for chorus added by Mr. Bliss ; but no pieces, so far as could be known, have been printed in his memoirs, except those of which he was the sole author. Among popular pieces known as 64 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. Bliss' hymns, the following, with the names of the authors of the words, are giyen : The latter piece was found in manuscript, set to music, among Mr. Bliss' papers, and was supposed, by friends, to have been written by him, and has been so spoken of. It was certainly among the last pieces that he set to music, and the thoughts it expresses, so appropriate to what awaited him, were yividly upon his mind in changing the words and arranging the music during his last days. It can thus truly be regarded as his last song. But the sweet poem he used was from the pen of the gifted Alice Carey. All of these corrections and the giving of credit to whom it is due are so in ac- cordance with the spirit of Mr. Bliss, that the writer takes pleasure in making these remarks. " Only Remembered/' " What hast Thou done for Me ? ' " I bring My Sins to Thee," " What shall the Harvest be? " " Look Away to Jesus," Precious Promise," " Crown of Rejoicing," "Eternity," ** Arise and Shine," " Waiting and Watching for Me,' " Till He Come," '* The New Song," " It is well with my Soul," Dr. H. Bonar. Miss Frances Havergal. Miss Frances Havergal. Mrs. Emily L. Oakey. Rev. Henry Burton. Nathaniel Niles. Rev. J. B. Atchinson. Ellen H. Gates. Mary A. Lathbury. Unknown. Rev. E. H. Bickersteth. Rev. A. T. Pierson. H. a. Spaflford. Unknown. Go bury thy Sorrow," He Knows," Alice Carey. CHAPTER VII. THE JOYFUL EXPERIENCES OF 1 876— GOSPEL MEETINGS AT ST. LOTTIS— TRIP TO ALABAMA — "NOT TOM THUMB "—VISIT TO KENESAW MOUNTAIN — THE IN- SPIRATION OF THE SCENE — " HOLD THE FORT " AND THE INCIDENT WHICH SUGGESTED IT. IN writing of the last days of Mr. Bliss, his own words near the close of 1876 are recalled, and naturally introduce what comes to the mind, and lead to a brief resume of the work of the whole of the last year of his life. He counted it a year of special mercy and blessing. He had been permitted to carry out his plans as to places he would like to visit, and as to songs he would like to publish, and had had his prayers answered in the conversion of friends, and deeper spiritual experience for himself and others. The reader can but notice, as he follows him through the year, that, by the mercy of God, his work rounded out to completion, and it was a year passed very much as he would have liked to have had it, had he known that upon the very last day of the year his friends would have been searching for his body, and that his work on earth was to end with 1876. In January of that year, Mr. Bliss was at Racine and Madison, Wisconsin, and was much blessed and very happy in Gospel work. Christians were much revived, and many unsaved in both places were led to Christ. In the latter place he became much attached to Eev. Mr. Bright, pastor of the Baptist Church, who, a few months later, fell dead in his pulpit from disease of the heart. Mr. Bliss was much impressed by the news of his sudden death, and expressed himself as wishing just such a departure. In the latter part of January, Mr. Bliss went to St. Louis, where he remained until March, singing in the Gospel meetings held in the Rink, and holding a service of his own for the young people in Dr. Ganse's (Presbyterian) Church, which was largely attended, and will be long remembered by scores of the young people in St. Louis. 5 V 66 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. He sang the Gospel Hymns in the Jail and Reform Schools and in near- ly all the reformatory institutions, while there. In March, he went to Mobile, Alabama, to fill an appointment for a Gospel meeting. The route chosen was by rail to Yicksburg, Mississippi, and from thence by steamer to New Orleans, and by rail from there to Mobile. Mrs. Bliss accompanied him, and the trip was a great source of pleas- ure to them both. The new section of country, the scenes of inter- est connected with the war, the rapid entering into spring, as they traveled south, all conspired to make the journey a delightful one. In the evening upon the steamboat, Mr. Bliss entertained the pas- sengers for half an hour or more in singing at the piano ; and at the close, when Captain and all who could come in to the cabin were collected, he would sing a familiar hymn, and then very pleasantly propose and lead in worship. The visit to Mobile was a delightful one. The pastors, the Mayor (an excellent Christian man), and Christian people generally, manifested the utmost cordiality and kindness, and did all in their power to make the visit a happy, one, and the meetings a success. God was pleased to add His blessing upon the efforts put forth, and many were impressed by Gospel truth, and many were led to confess Christ. The meetings of Mr. Bliss for young people, held in the Baptist church, were much blessed. The church was crowded each afternoon, and very many were led to the Savior by his preaching of Christ in song, in Bible instruction, and personal appeal. Never did his singing seem more effective than in one of the meetings held in this city, on Sunday evening, in the Opera House. The audience was composed entirely of men, and crowded every part of the house. He sang as solos, "Pull for the Shore," "Noth- ing but Leaves," "What shall the Harvest Be ?" and "Memories of Childhood," with great power. A solemnity came over all who listened as his deep, sweet voice took up the mournful cadence, " Nothing but Leaves," and when he sang the " Trundle Bed," there was hardly a dry eye in the audience. Nearly two hundred men sought an interest in the prayers of Christians, that they might be saved. Mr. and Mrs. Bliss were very happy in the work in Mobile, and cherished pleasant memories of the friends there. After ten days in Mobile, Mr. Bliss went to Montgomery, and sang in the meetings held in the City Hall. Great interest was at once manifested, and the meetings were largely attended. The TEIP THKOUGH ALABAMA. 67 pastors and people here, as at Mobile, were most hospitable and cordial in the welcome extended to their Northern brethren. Here, as in Mobile, special pains were taken to hold services for the colored people, and arrangements made for their attending the gen- eral meetings. Mr. Bliss' singing was greatly enjoyed by the col- ored people, and he in turn was much moved by their wild and plaintive melodies. When he had been singing the song of his com- posing. Father, I'm Tired," they would be broken down in uncon- trollable emotion. His labors at Moatgomery were owned of God, and closed in a meeting participated in by all the pastors, and where scores of souls confessed to a hope in Christ. From Montgomery Mr. Bliss went to Selma, having as fellow- passengers General Tom Thumb and family. Upon arriving at Selma, a crowd was found gathered at the depot to see the General. Mr. Bliss found it difficult to get off the steps of the car, and while standing for a moment before the staring crowd, said solemnly : "Gentlemen, you are mistaken, I am not Tom Thumb." The people with a hearty laugh made way for him. Selma has become well known in Christian circles throughout the country, for the con- secrated activity of a band of Christian laymen, who, under the in- spiration of Hall and Cree, some five years ago, organized there the first Young Men's Christian Association of Alabama. These dear brethren made Christian work in their city a delight to their visit- ors. Their hearts and homes were wide open — their enthusiasm and zeal in the work unbounded. An immense cotton warehouse was cleaned up and seated for the meetings ; ladies and gentlemen from the church choirs came in to supply a fine chorus ; the sainted Rev. Alfred Morrison — taken to heaven just a little before Mr. Bliss — and all the pastors, gave a hearty support to the effort, and a blessed work was enjoyed. Here, as in Montgomery and Mobile, Mr. Bliss conducted young people's meetings, with precious fruit for Christ. Mrs. Bliss returned to Chicago from Selma, to arrange for clos- ing up their house for a summer's remoya^ to Rome, leaving Mr.- Bliss to fill an appointment at Augusta, Georgia. The trip to Augusta was made yia the Selma and Dalton Railroad through Rome, Georgia, and from thence to Atlanta, to give Mr. Bliss an opportunity to visit Kenesaw Mountain, where occurred the inci- dent that gave rise to the song, " Hold the Fort." He stopped at 68 VISIT TO KEKESAW MOUKTAlIri]&y of our school. Oh, how I wish you could have been here. We had a grand exhibition in the Baptist Church, before about 200,000,000,000,000— no 1 no ! 200 spectators ; and it was a show indeed. Such times we had with the gal-gal-galvauic battery and slippers, which made us dance whether we felt disposed to or not ; and such good dia- logues, and everything passed ofiE" so interestingly and agreeably that all en- joyed themselves very well. But when we had finished our performances, and had to take the farewell hand and to say good-bye in earnest, I tell you it seemed like parting with friends, and indeed it was ; for many an eye was filled with tears, and all expressed their wishes that we might meet again, on earth ; but I have reason to believe that if we are not granted this privilege, the greater part of us will meet in heaven, to enjoy each other's friendship forever. I have formed a great many acquaintances in my life, but never did I as- sociate with those that were so dear to my heart, as since I have been here. All are so friendly, so charitably disposed, that one cannot but love their society. I shall prefer staying in Springfield this summer to any other part of the world excepting home. Mr. Campbell wishes me to remain with him this summer, but I have made no agreement with him to that eflect, nor shall I until I hear your minds expressed on the subject. For myself I feel as strong in the Lord as ever and have nothing discour- aging to say to any one, and I thank God I am what I am, and am determined that nothing shall separate me from the love of Christ. Pray for me that I may make Heaven my home when done with the things of this world. I wish I ould be at home to enjoy the good of the meetings with you, but you must remember me. Give my love to all who take the trouble to inquire after my welfare. Write often and give me all the news. When you have made any maple sugar, just send me word, and I will start for home, I reckon ! It is still good sleighing here and pretty cold weather too. No news, I be- lieve, so good bye. In a hurry, P. P. Bliss. 232 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. TOWANDA, StrSQITEHAKNA COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE, AtlgUSt 26, 1857. Dear Friends: You will see by tlie date of this, that I am here, and I can tell you I am well, and well satisfied, too, with my situation, being now comfortably located in the institution and commenced my collegiate course to-day. I put right down to Towanda, Monday afternoon, after I came back from home a-foot ; stayed over night ; came up here Tuesday morn and did chores alt day ; got my board, and was allowed $1.00 to apply on tuition ; since that time have earned 50 cts. There is a chance of my getting all the jobs of work I want to do, which will pay my way. Board, lodging, washing, lights and fuel, room rent included, cost me just $2.00 per week. Have a nice spacious room on the fourth floor, facing Front St., where I have a full view of the whole city and suburbs. A very pleasant place this is, and the people are very hospitable, especially the steward and his wife, which will be of great benefit if I can retain their good will and friendship, which, of course, I shall strive to do. I am a kind of chore-boy, but I am not ashamed of it. I saw wood, bring water, sweep rooms at so much apiece, and am resolved to earn every penny I pos- sibly can honorably. To-day we commenced ; just organized; classed off a few classes. Don't expect to have much of a school this week ; just got arranged into classes. I intended to go to some other school than this, but I guess I could not have been better situated. Hear what Mr. Dayton, the steward, says : " Come along to school one, two or three terms, and if you can't pay me now, pay me after you have earned it ; for if you teach this winter, you can then pay me ; so come along." So I've come, and oh, how I wish I could afford to stay about four years ; but it is as it is, and I won't complain, but " do the very best 1 can," you may be sure. I have taken up Grammar, Algebra, Physiology and Latin for my studies during the coming term. Towanda is twenty miles east of Troy, a direct line of stages running between, and a trusty stage-driver (lucky for me). I must close and save some for next time. Expecting to hear from you soon, I remain as ever Your affectionate Brother, Philip P. Bliss. KiNMTJNDT, iLLrNOis, July 9, 1868. My Dear Mother: I have not heard anything from you since we came West. Phe and Mate have both written ; Mr. Youngs also, but you have not. We hope you are well, and, if so, I think you are becoming quite worldly not to write to any of us. We have all good health and times. Warren is in good spirits as usual. We have six hours' singing per day. But oh ! how warm the weather ! ! Heavy thunder showers also. Expect we'll be here till July 24th ; then go up the Mississippi River to Winona. Pray for us that we may have a pleasant and LETTERS TO RELATIOKS. 233 prosperous Journey. Almost every Sabbatli I go out to address the Sabbath Schools and sing with them. In several towns I have held children's meetings at five o'clock, Sabbath, trying to do something for the cause of the Master. If He shows me the way for work in this direction — and because I like it, I think He will— I mean to give some considerable time to it, and I write es- pecially to ask you to pray for me in this field of labor, the Sabbath School. Pray that I may be blessed in leading the children to Christ, and glorify God, not myself. July 9th, 1868. July 9th, 1838. 30 years ! ! I Do you remember thirty years ago? Well, I don't curse the day, as Job did. No ; I've been so brought up and so blessed, that it is a good thing for me to live, and yet I may say "to die is gain. " Tm growing old! but, I'm not sorry. What! sorry to think we are " Almost home ; " nearer the " shining shore." Nearer through the swamps and snares of this life, nearer the bounds of life eternal ? No, I'm not sorry ! Roll on. Roll on. Good bye. Be faithful. Trust in the Lord forever. Your son, P. P. BusHNELL, Illinois, January 10, 1869. Dear Mother : This is the Lord's Day, but between the services it seems right and proper to write to you. 'Tis very pleasant ; not a cloud to be seen, no wind stirring, all is peace- ful ; the town is quiet, and the bright sun is shining. How this day reminds us of that eternal Sabbath, the rest remaining for the people of God. I sup- pose Pa Young is at home to-day, and has told you all about us. Truly the Lord has been very good to us the past year, and we trust Him for the years to come. I hope you, too, have enjoyed yourself better and are rising to higher life and attaining greater spiritual growth than in years before. I make it my daily prayer that you may be contented, established in the faith and filled with the love of God. Your letters for a few months past, and Mr. Young's report in particular, lead me to hope your last days will be your best. God grant it I I think we may be home in May. Then what shall I bring you ? T think you have been a pretty good little girl, and anything you want, ask for it ! Lou is writing to Phe. We are both in the best of health. Lou never had so good health, she says, since she can remember. There goes the bell ! So good day for this time. May the Lord's word com- fort and sustain you and us. Your own big boy, P. P. 234 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. Carthage, Illinois, January 29, 1869. Deab Mother: Tliis is Sunday, a quiet room, good dinner, pleasant day and sleepy wife — Lou is most sick — all favorable for letter-writing. My mind, for a few days past — though I have been unusually busy — has dwelt considerably on the departed days and friends. Four years ago ! Ho\< swift the years go by. Yet, I don't believe I would recall them, or, if in my power, stay the flight of time. One of Pa's prayer meeting expressions used to be "improve the time." This is what we need to do, then the future has no fears, the past no regrets. How al)out " tin wedding ? " Don't you think 'twill be nice ? We couldn't afford a wedding when we were married. Now I've tried the goods and think I've found a choice article ; so I want to celebrate. Had we better have it in A. P.'s new house, on account of more room — that is, if they'll let us ? Of course you need not say anything of this, to them, or any one else, if you please to keep it. May the Lord give you grace for all your trials and save us all in Heaven. Tour big boy. Bliss. Fatrbuht, October 31, 1870. Dear Phe & Co. How do you do ? and how do your women folks do ? Did Lou tell you of my silver-tipped "baton" present? Having much 'cess and such good times. Wish you and Mate could tend my big conventions all the time. I often thank the good Father for giving me voice and talents in my profession. How much better for me that He led me out of the humble life in which I was born, and I hope better for the world and His cause. I am glad I have such a good sister, too. You always remind me so much of Pa. If we all had his faith and trust • — such humility ! but lam glad and thankful we were always poor ; and oh, we begin to see and feel, how much we owe to Pa for his example and influence. We may be in better circumstances, but we can hardly hope to lead a better, purer, more zealous Christian life. Only if we can meet him " where the wicked cease from troubling, and th^ weary are at rest " — one of his favorite passages. May " Our Father " bless you all. P. P. CmcAGO, February 19, 1871 Mt Dear Mother : I wish I might have written you on your last birthday, which I see by the record in Pa's old Bible, was February 16th, 1805. Seventy-six, ah, no, I mean sixty-six years old ! Well, the Lord be praised for giving me a mother so old and so great and good. I thank Him daily for early influences intended to lead me to Christ. For, whatever of poor advantages, small houses, plain living, threadbare, patched clothing, back- woods society, and unpleasant recol- lections of my childhood I have to cherish, this precious thought — my parents prayed for me, even before I knew the meaning of prayer, and they LETTERS TO ERIEHDS. 235 consecrated me to the Lord and His service, nor can a prayer, earnest and lieartfelt, ever be forgotten before God. I feel the answer to prayer every day. Ani just home from Sunday School; six hundred and eighty-five present ; the Holy Spirit was there also. Pray that the Lord will bless me in the work. Pray for my assistant officers, for the choir, some of whom are not Christians. Pray, too, for L. M., a young lawyer, almost persuaded, and for C. A. Pray, too, for Mr. S., who " can't quite come ; " he knows the way. These three I am very anxious about, but many are seeking the kingdom, and I believe these will yet be saved. Jesus seems very precious to us in our home ; we talk of the Lord, and I love to feel as if He were one of our family — really our^f ather. I meant to tell you all about our new house, and describe our daily life, how we get up at six ; milk our cow, by setting a pail on the back steps with a ticket in it (8c. a quart) ; shake the grate so the fire starts ; make tea, coffee or chocolate, sometimes tea and coffee or chocolate, then buckwheat cakes — good ones — flour from Rome, Pennsylvania, country butter, and beef or veal. The market man comes twice a week and gets our order for whatever we want, and sends a team around with it free of cost. Our fuel is quite a bill ; the rent forty dollars ; so our living is very nearly one hundred dollars a month — just about the same as boarding, and so much nicer. Then we've just bought a P. Annie. Yes, sir, after waiting twelve years, I thought I must have one. The bell is ringing for evening service, so I must go. Now don't scold me for waiting so long, nor for writing so much. I am very busy on The Charm, a copy of which I shall send you as soon as out. Phe must have the first, as she named it. Write often. Lou joins in love. P. P. B. 67 WAsmNGTON Street, CmcAGO, August 4, 1871. Our darling friend, sweet Mrs. Case, The image of your smiling face. With rosy cheeks and eyes so bright. Seems ever pleading : " Write, do write." Since we received your friendly letter, My darling wife has grown much better ; Enjoys the bliss of bed and table, But yet to write seems hardly able. Ah, with what joy would we 'uns greet you, If at the Normal we could meet you 1 What " shakes," and " thrills," what cordial k s. In case the Cases blest the Blisses. Of course, we'll have you at Gustavus*, But oh, from dusty, long rides save us — ** To your house ? " yes, 'tis our decision, Provided you have large provision. 236 MEMOIK OF P. P. BLISS. TMs open question I must pop : Tou didn't tell me where to stop. If at Burgliill, or if at Greenville, Or leave the R. R. at that Mean ville Where, one cold midnight, I remember. We were dumped out — but then, September Will be more pleasant. My intention Now is to have a loud convention. Good-bye, our love to Mc. and Addie ; Be a good girl and mind your daddie. B. P. P. Chicago, Dec. 3, 1871. Dear Friends: Thought maybe you would like to hear a few words from us. We have been roaming as usual, only a little more so. For instance, in the last three weeks we have visited Philadelphia, New York, New Haven, Albany, Providence, Boston, and Portland, Maine. We left Portland Wednesday morning and arrived home late Thanksgiving eve. So we gave our thanks while traveling. We think we have so much to be thankful for. The Lord has been very good to us, and we have done so little in return. Oh I did not tell you what we have been doing East. Mr. Bliss has been singing with D. L. Moody in his fire meetings. Mr. Moody is trying to raise money to rebuild his Mission Sabbath School. We have had a splendid time. You remember how we talked last summer, about going to the Jubilee next spring. It is rather uncertain now whether we can aflFord it or not ; but we shall see. Are you coming to the Chicago Normal next summer? If so, we shall hope to have you with us some of the time. We have not much that is elegant here now, but we have the most "mag- nificent inelegance," that the world has ever known. It is almost a miracle how the people could put up so many little " shanties " in such a short space of time. So you see Mac's folks. Remember us to them. Mr. Bliss says ask if Mr. Case opens his conventions with prayer. That the good Lord may keep you, and bless you and yours, is the earnest prayer of your friend, Lou Bliss, " Remember us to father and mother, brothers and sisters. Don't forget to write. LETTERS TO FRIEITDS. 237 CmoAGO, January 29, 1873. Dear Brother C. C. C. : How is it with thee? And thy darling Annie el Just about now you are preparing for Baconsburg, and Mr, Seward. Do you know my wife actually proposed — as I have to go East in a few weeks, — that we come to B. and attend your Convention 1 Had it not been for an impudent Iowa town calling us away the same week, I do believe we'd a been thar I If this reaches you in Convention don't stop singing — Go right on with " The Multitude of Angels " — and at recess squeeze Mr. Seward's hand awfully for me. Don't promise him to be at Binghamton this summer all the time ; come to Chicago some. Are full of business of all kinds — Conven and S. Sch. — (which means Sunday School). Mr. Young's wife's brother is with us this winter, kind o' helping round. How are the dear friends Mac and Addie ? Bless their hearts 1 Boston Jibulo is rather doubtful since the fire. I'll tell you, instead of going there, you all come here and get used to the climate and city before the Normal. I want to see you very much and tell you how we love you 1 What's the use keepin' such things to one's self all the time ? Seems as if our friends are leaving us every day for the " other side." We must talk fast, the boat is coming. Love to Pa Williams' folks. Do your best. Live near the Lord. Farewell. P. P. B Kind Eases: We wish ye well ; Lou is lying loosely low ! Big-eyed Baby Paul prospers, *' Sunshine" smiles soothingly. "P. P. Jr." j oily; " P. P. Sr." silly 1 [N. B. — That last line is composed for the occasion by Mrs. P. P. Bliss.] What I mean to communicate is the good news that all is well. Only I have to go to Monmouth Monday for a Convention. I don't want to leave home one bit, but Brother Hanchett — you remember him — says come. Chicago seems to me very pleasant and friendly, as all the world ever has. Wish you lived here. Adieu. I must go and sing to baby. He likes me ; you would like him. Come and see. P. P. ^ _ CmoAQO, 11, 9, 72. Dbar Brother C. C. C. c. c. c. c c. Tour $40 favor received this day. Blessings on ye both. Grace, mercy, peace, joy, 238 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. Love, gladness, beauty, Happiness, cheerfulness. Comfort, voice, business, Wife, friends, classes, Oysters and tight pants Be yours forever. P, P. B. & Co. are, as usual, digging ditties at my desk. Choir splendid. S. S. ditto. The Lord's work going on surely. Wife not very comfort- able — hopeful always. A teacupful of love as strong as boneset to each of ye. Our horse is no better, and now the stove's got it ! 't won't draw. How's Greeley ? Poor man. Hurrah for Black ! Why don't Grant and May write to me ? Tell 'em I have a tip of the old elephant's tusk on my desk and will call it '* Mizpah," if Grant will find in Genesis what that jneans. Adieu, Adieu. P. P. B. Chicago, January 15, 1873. Deae Mother: May the Lord be very near to you and bless your soul for the sweet, good letter we received to-day. Lou says that ever since we saw you last year, on the hill, and at Towanda, your letters have been splendid ; and she never en- joyed a visit with you so much in the world as the last one. Darling Paul, how you would love him I I just begin to appreciate what you have done for me! He is a nice, fat boy; sleeps and eats well; has a great big head, big blue eyes and indications of light hair. 0. F. Young ! Lou says as soon as he can go out you shall have a picture. Warren mani- fested a great deal of pleasure, more than we expected. He often mentions him in his letters. Warren is still teaching in Southern Illinois, and can stay here in the West as long as he wishes ; plenty of business for him. I hope Willie Jennings will do well ; and I can agree with you that per- haps he needs contact with the world and business. God bless him ; and the more I can help him and other of my relations, the better. You will find in a box sent to Towanda, a black dress ; have it made "up and down," to wear to Chicago ! Won't we have a good re-union, when we all get home to heaven ? I so want to see Pa Bliss and Reliance — Jamie, and the .blessed Jesus ! ! Truth is : the mercy and favor of Our Father in Heaven seem continually shining on us, unworthy and unthankful as we are. Oh how we ought to praise and love Him. Help us. Can't you and your folks find me some stuff for " Song Tree ^ " Don't go to Boston Jubilee. I don't believe 'twill pay. I'm glad 1 ever knew you. P. P. B. LETTERS TO FRIEKDS. 239 12 South Elizabeth Street, Chicago, May 24, 1873. Sweet Spirits: Tried and True, worthy brother and sister. Our partners in the ever- lasting inheritance. [How thankful ought we to be for such friends !] You speak of friends being convenient — " to pay in advance," etc. I believe it was some such unimportant matter that kept us from the "Feast — ival " at Cin- cinnati. But we are soon to have a " G. B." in Chicagano. Come and " burst." Mv old mither and sister Jennings are visiting us for a few weeks. They both love you as well as they can till they know you better. Yes, indeed, the Lord has blessed " Sunshine " greatly. Help ns to praise Him for it. It's His book any how, and He should have the praise. No end of compliments for page 10. The Paul boy is in his usual spirits — gay and blissful. Next Sunday, I think, he will put on his best (McGranahan's) robes and be baptized. My " Joy " is full. Sunday School prosperous, thirty joined the church last Sunday. We are in our new basement. Kate Cameron died last week. We Bung her " That City," from " Joy," at her funeral. May we all follow her. Amen. [To Mrs. W. J. Crafts.] Chicago, Aug. 7, 1873. Our Dear Sister Sara: How kind of you to send a full volume of your sweet things when we know you must be very busy. You are not " our debtor," neither, indeed, can you ever be ; our lives have been made sweeter and richer by your contact, and the oftener you come by letter or by bodily presence, the better for us. Yes, thank you and your good mother (how we'd love to see her), the Eye Teaching came. It is a rich thing for me, and must do good. Dr. Vincent is jolly — great and good. Some people are great and good, but can't be jolly. I can't like them quite so well. By the way, whence comes the song from which you quote, Watching and waiting for me ? Bro. Hartley gave it all to me, but I am anxious to know if it is copyright. No, I don't seem to rest much in hope of seeing a throng of heavenly ones waiting and watching for me — they might be in better business — nor of hear- ing echoes of my songs there. I want something better. About the best thing in Heaven seems to me will be eternal freedom from sin &nd Jesus' immediate presence. There we shall see His face And never, never sin. If we can will write you from Rome, Pennsylvania, where we must leave Paul with hie grandmother. 240 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. We have delightfully cool weather in Chicago this summer. Are very much occupied with our N. N. Musical Institute, which is a success. Good-bye — Bless you, 3 Blisses love you much. Chicago, Nov. 1, 1873. Dear Phe: Eight years ago to-day, Towner, Bliss and wife, "Yankee Boys," arrived in Chicago. How God has blessed us all the way. Seems as if He picked me out from the beginning ! He must have had His eye on me and on the work He was preparing for me when we lived on Elk Run. He has helped us so far, and surely He will not let go of us now. More and more I am praying for one thing— Consecration to Christ. All from Him, all for Him, all to Him. Aid me by your prayers. May you be a blessing to all and so be always blest. P. P. Chicago, Last day of 1873. Normal. Precious Phriends : Why didn't you stay a week with us? Come back now. I write on business — Real " State" Do you wish to sell your puburban soperty at Ridgeland ? I will give you $150 a foot for 135 feet ! Provided you will take 133^ feet ! on Church Avenue at $1500 a foot in part payment. Seriously — help me to be thankful for about $500 extra copyright which came yesterday. God is and has been surprising me with such success. Help me to make it a real success — and not a hin- drance to my own and others' spiritual — which is the real welfare. My birthday verse is Prov. xxx 9, (beginning with the 8th verse). Please, if you have not seen it, let Mr. Case also see the inclosed criticism on N. N. M. I. concert. This is a little pleasanter, but oh, " what difference will there be ?'* I'd rather have a little girl or boy smile in my face and say, "I think you are real good," which means — though it may be not comprehended — " I think you are some like Jesus," than to have a column of high sounding praises in every newspaper in Chicago. " The things that are not seen are eternal," I tell you ; " the kingdom of heaven is within," and let's you and I get as much of it packed up as possible before we take our long journey. Amen. I am not forgetting the little songs for you and C. C. Forty Kisses From three Chicago, Pebmary 7, 1874. Dear Mother: I thank you for the Portage letter. It is a good one. You must have noticed that lately we do enjoy your letters more than we used to do. You LETTEKS TO FRIE^^DS. 241 will let me say it — that it seems to us your spirit grows sweeter, and your life more even and calm. It is not surprising that it should be so ; for haven't you and your friends prayed for it ? If we are in Christ, may we not all expect to grow more and more like Him ? Let us try to live in the Vine and bear fruit to the honor of His Holy Name. You may be sure we shall pray for you, and I never can forget that you prayed for me and watched over me many years before I could pray for myself. I love to make mention of praying parents in my prayers and conversation. I feel the strength every day of the early relig- ious training and surroundings — just as a man must be benefited all his life- time by youthful physical exercise. I am determined the godly ancestry shall not stop with me, but that Paul shall be the subject of much prayer. He shall inherit a good fortune of faith, even if his worldly goods can be tied up in a cotton handkerchief, as mine were when I started for Troy. Well, we are tired and sleepy to-night. The choir, about frfty in number, came in and surprised us last night ; brought a big basket full of pop-corn, nuts and candy for their own refreshment, and a beautiful silver tea set, six pieces, tea and coiFee pots, cream and sugar bowls, butter dish, and spoon- holder, frosted finish and finely lettered B. Cost seventy-five dollars. You may believe we were surprised and cheered. Bless their kind hearts ! I don't know as I shall ever find such a good choir again. I told them, jokingly, if I'd known I'd got such a fine present, I might have resigned before ! Now when you and Phee come to see us, we can give you better tea, maybe. Good night, be good to yourself and Phe. Take care of little Phil, and I will remember you in my will. P. P. Chicagk), February 13, 1874. KOT OY KONTENT: All well. Tried again to splash on to you at Conneaut or Burghill, and couldn't quite do it. Arrived home last Friday, and the choir had 'sprised us with a clothes-basket full of pop-corn, nuts and candy for themselves and a set of silver tea things — six pieces — for us. Bless 'em ! So much I get for resigning. Who would not be resigned ? I go to Iowa next week, in the region of Br'n Waugh, Eheam, Turgeson, et al. Expect a good time. I just tell you we had a grand, good big conven- tion at Honesdale, Pa., "175" singing "Hallelujah Chorus," "How lovely are the Messengers," " In Heavenly Love Abiding," etc. This was the country of mj 'beginning . — a poor village singin' master. Now " the Professah from Chicago " with his accomplished lady, wearing better clothes and more hair, seemed to make a much profounder effect. I hope we were not vain, but we can't deny a little pride at our success. Paul Bliss is the blessedest child, fat and healthy, good-natured as — as — his par^,— that's me. Oh, I am writing some such good songs — of the prayer-meeting order — now-a days. 16 242 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. The Lord has wonderfully blessed "Sunshine Songs." "Calling Now," I found at Gustavus', or rather at your house, do you remember ? And that like Mac's " Heaven for me," has been sung and complimented very much in this country and in England. Bro. Sankey is doing wonders in Scotland, with Moody. Pray for me and my songs. If it does others half as much good to sing them as it does me to write them I am thankful. To God be all the glory. Our church is to be re-dedicated Sunday. Dohn is to lead the music. I know not what they'll do. More showy music was demanded, and I re- signed, I must insist on plain music for devotion in public worship. And I can have no sympathy with operatic or fancy music for Sunday. Pardon so long a letter ; but I love you. Tours received and oh, how good it seems to have such a sister to write such letters. You'll never know how much you help me. Your sweet patient life — your abiding trust even in the thick darkness — and your earnest sisterly prayers all help me ; and 1 don't know how much, either. But what an accumulation of prayer must be before the throne for some of us. And then the dear Jesus praying for us — think of that ! Earthly friends are good, but what a Friend we have above ! Be sure you are remembered by us — but how much better by Him. Oh, surprising mercy ! to love His enemies, to die to win our love. On His sweet word I'm resting, " I know no safer stand, not e'en where gloj'y dwelleth in Immanuel's land." I send a book in your name to W. H. The best book I've read in a long time — " Arthur Bonnicastle." I hope W. H. will succeed. He has the mate- rial, if he can only cultivate persistent, steady pluck ; if he is not too much like his uncle. My prayers are for him ever. Lou proposes to send you some things you need, if you will tell. A box worth a dollar or $1.50, wouldn't cost more'n 2s. for express. She thinks she can buy things here cheaper than you can there. Make out a list from silk dresses down to sewing machines. I go to Michigan Monday morning. Yours all the way. Bear Ma and Phe: How is it with ye ? I have some news to say : First, I am about to change — in fact, have changed my plan of work. In- tending to write and sing Gospel songs in Gospel meetings, instead of Conven- tion teaching. So giving all my time, voice and heart to the cause of Christ, direct. I've always wanted to do this, and now I can and must. Oh 1 pray that God may use me and bless my songs (His gift) to the win- P. P. B. Chicaso, Mch. 9, 1874. P. P. Chicago, March 38, '74. LETTERS TO FRIENDS. 243 ning of many precious souls. Praise Him continually for selecting me, even me, out of such surroundings, and giving me such honor. You can't imagine how perfectly happy I am, and Lou too, already. Major Whittle and I were at Waukegan three days and gained by the Holy Spirit thirty votes for Christ. He, too, has given up all for Jesus' service, and we shall likely go together a good deal. Pray for us. Your devoted, Phil. Chicago, June 11, 1874. Mr. and Mrs. Crafts : Jude iid. I was married before I was twenty-one. I pity poor folks who have to wait and wait 1 Much valuable time is lost by waiting. But I thank Dr. Vincent for favor received, don't you ? How I wish you would come and see the Blissful family. Why not ? We have more room now than when you were here. Paul would say " De auntie " and " How do unkie." Yes, I know girls don't grow old so fast, if married — therefore I wanted you to marry. Chautauqua ? H'm ! Michigan is a much beautifuller lake, and as to boat rides, etc., we hope to see some crafts here in Chicago, some day, perhaps a fleet of 'em. Let us hear from you often, please. Who is this W. F. Crafts ? What color hair ? What church ? Is he rich ? Tall and handsome ? Good affec- tion, too ? Only may he be as happy in married life as has been his and your loving friend and brother, P. P. Bliss. Maj. Whittle and I are holding meetings, day and night, in the Second Presbyterian Church, South Side. God is .wonderfully blessing us in every way. Help us to praise Him for it. I am preparing a book of Gospel Songs for our special use, and would be right glad to have you send a list of hymns and tunes which have been most successful in your experience. And above all, pray for the book. All the good in it must come ixom God. Chicago, DecemlDer 11, 1874. Dear Mother : I beg your pardon for not sending your $2.00 sooner. I have been away from home and very busy in Gospel singing at Pittsburgh. Lou telegraphed me Tuesday that she and the boys were both sick ; so I came home. Will is almost sick, too. I've been flying around after a doctor, and got a good nurse. Sophy is a little better, so that she can help Annie, and now I guess we are all a little better. I can tell you that this Gospel song singing and talking to people about 244 MEMOIR OF P. P. LLISS. Christ and His love will be my business after tliis. Everything else is poor business. 1 am so thankful for what the dear Lord has done for me since last April. Nothing like it. How good God has been to me since first you knew me. Help me to praise Him, and pray for me, as I know you will while you live. Much happiness to you all. Yours truly, P. P. B, Gaxt House, Louisyille, Kentuckt, Feb. 16, 1875. Dear Mother and Mate: I can't wait — must tell you that the Lord has done and is doing a great and mighty work here. Thousands and thousands crowding daily and nightly to hear the old-fashioned Gospel of Christ. Three or four meetings daily ; 200 or 250 arose for prayers Sunday night. This morning I had a glorious praise meeting in the hotel. Last evening, in the mass meeting in the hall, an immense opera house jammed full — 2500 or 3000 people. Among those who arose for prayer, and went down into the inquiry room with me, and I trust gave her heart to the Lord, was — guess who? My heart is full as I write it— V ***D*W****! Hallelujah ! There is joy in heaven. If all the meetings had been carried on and only this one result, how richly paid I would have been. Yet hundreds of souls just as precious have been saved, we believe. Oh! how good God has been and how precious Jesus my Master is to-day. I write in V * * *'s name, who sends ber love to you all, and asks that you and I set apart Sunday, Feb. 28, to pray for her, and to praise the Lord for His goodness. Of course you will pray and praise for me. It is in answer to your prayers of years ago and to the prayers of him who now dwells in the glory land, that God has chosen me. Not a day, hardly a meeting passes but I think, and can it be that He has chosen me to be an instrument, a vessel in which to carry the water of life to perishing souls ? Oh ! pray daily that I may be a vessel sanctified and meet for the Master's use. I must be brief — want to go and call on V * ''^ * and see if she is in the light this morning. Also want to write to Phe and Lou the news. Five meet- ings for to-day. I sing. All sick at home last I heard. Will had measles ; babies exposed and Lou tired. I hope the Lord will take care of them all. I know He will. Love to all. Joyfully, Phil. April 1. Dear Mother : ********* I send you papers of the meetings, so I needn't write you anything of them ; only must say 'tis a glorious calling to be a messenger for such a King and to carry such tidings, and to see so much success. Oh ! pray for me while you live, and rejoice with me that God has set such LETTERS TO FRIEKJJS. 246 honor upon me. Pray that I have two things, — power of the Holy Spirit and a humble heart. Love to all the dear ones. I expect to come East — Syracuse, New York State Sunday School Convention, June 8. Your happy boy, 664 W. Monroe, Chicago. P. P. BliSS. Dear Sister Phe: Very pretty poetry you sent me. Where did you get it ? The subject, Hope," has always been my motto, and the Christian's hope! It seems to me that I can see Pa now, as he used to stand up in the little old school-house and tell his friends and neighbors of his hope, " which was like an anchor to the soul, both sure and steadfast;" or, his hope finally to come off conqueror — " jea,, more than conqueror through Him that loved us," or he hoped we would all "be up and doing," and hoped we would all meet him in "the bright mansions Jesus has gone to prepare." Oh ! how dark the world would be without " Hope." Take fast hold of the promises — those blessed promises. " If I go and pre- pare a place for you, I will come again and receive you," etc. Let's not for- get who said this ; and won't He come ? We may forget our promises, but Jesus never. We may get tired waiting, but He will come and " receive us." Oh ! be ready ; and when I get to thinking about it I can't help saying — How long, dear Savior, oh, how long Shall this bright hour delay ? etc. Sing that as Pa and Ma used to, on a Sabbath morning, to the tune of Northfield, and think of me. I hope we are getting nearer the kingdom, — making some little progress in Divine life ; not as much as could be wished ; but do you remember Gideon's band in Scripture, "faint yet pursuing." Oh, trust in the Lord, as Job says, " though He slay me yet will I trust in Him." Lord, give us all such trust, and save us through Christ our Redeemer. Amen. P. P. I believe we should think of Jesus when we pray, as a dear friend really listening to us and ready to aid, not as some great power to be dreaded. So let us come with boldness, liberty, freedom, believing His word and hoping in His mercy. He likes to have us come in earnest, as the poor blind men came. Baying, *' Lord, if Thou wilt," and then He is ready to say "I will." ^ , , Chicago, January 9, 1876. Dear Mother: Happy New Year ! What different circumstances the different years bring us. Where and how were we in 1866 ? And January 1, 1856, 1846, etc. This is, on many accounts, the best and happiest New Year we ever saw. I cannot 246 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. begin to recount the mercies of the past, nor do I appreciate the blessings ol the present. I can only say, " The Lord is my Shepherd ; " then 1 am His sheep, and because He cares for me I desire to live for Him. Amen. We are all quite well. Paul and George are a little bad-coldish, but so as to eat and sleep ; Will and Lou ditto. I came home from Milwaukee last night ; have been there six weeks. The meetings for the past week have been greatly blessed. Many professed to accept the Gospel. Praise the Lord. Dear Bro. Whittle goes to Racine this week. I shall join him on Friday. Next week we go to Madison, the capital of Wisconsin, and the week after, the 25th, to St. Louis. Please pray for all these places. God will answer. I can testify -to you that this life of service to Him who hath bought us is a very delightful one. My cup of joy has always been full, but in these glorious meetings it often runs over ; and I have to-day, Sunday, been at home all day with my family, resting and rejoicing. Lou and I have had sweet communion with each other and the Lord. I am thankful for a wife who can enter into and share the joy of Christian consecration and service. Of course it is the greatest trial of our lives, so far, to be separated so much, but it seems to me especially hard for her. My time is so taken up with the meetings, going and seeing, etc., while she is left with the monotonous, every-day duties of home life, and that almost like yours, a widow. But nevertheless, the Lord has given her a cheerful heart, and she is just as content and reconciled as any one could be ; says she would not detain me if she could, and prays, oh, so earnestly, for my success and safety. Again, I thank God for a praying wife and a praying mother. What would I have been but for both ? The Lord only knows. Some talk has been had of our coming to Towanda, but now it looks doubt- ful, at least for the present. If we go South, as invited, from St. Louis to Mobile, Montgomery, Macon, Savannah, etc., shall probably come around to New York or somewhere to meet Moody and Sankey, in March or April. This is all uncertain, but you can say to all who ask, We do not know. If the Lord approve s of the plans, I am thinking of coming East about May and remaining till September or longer. Then you may not be at all surprised if on New Year's, 1877, my letter comes from England. I have no plan nor wisdom. Where " He leads I would follow." Pray that " upper wisdom " be given us in all these things. OwEGO, Tuesday. Dear Case, Smack & Co. : 1 meant it, I wish I could be with you. My prayers and best wishes are for you. In Case we can get home to your concert after next, i. e., July 28, may I sing my Centennial Gospel Song and have the quartet names on slips inclosed ? " Arise and Shine," not yet printed. Our little vis with you yesterday, only makes us hungry for more. Don't fail to go to Rome. We must not, cannot let go of you. Please write oftener the coming year than you did last. LETTERS TO FRIEiTDS. 247 I did not sleep a wink last niglit, went to bed about one. Stage came at 3.30. '* Great is tlie Lord," and " The Lord is good, a stronghold in the day of trouble," and kindred themes kept running through my mind — and with my prayers and praises I could not sleep. We go on to-morrow morning, and expect to get to New York the 25th. Please may we find a love-letter from all of you at Biglow & Main's, 76 East Ninth Street, New York ? Yours in haste — a crowd of relatives are waiting — Yours as of old, P. P. Bliss. Lou joins in severest love. May 8, 1876. In regard to your convention, " I pray thee have me excused." This is the best kind of convention ticket, and I am full of engagements as long as I live. Terms : *' Whosoever will may come." Instrument used — " The Sword of the Spirit." Time — " Now is the accepted time." While we were yet Sinners, Christ died for us.'' Homans, v. 8. ACADEMY OP MUSIC. GOSPEL MEETINGS, 7.30 P. M. each Evening, connmencing Dec. 21st, 1875, CONDUCTED BY D. W. WHITTLE akd P. P. BUSS. Singing by Chorus Choir conducted by P. P. Bliss. Solos by P. P. Bliss. ADMIT BEAMEjR WEUNBSDAY EVENING. In addition to Evening Services, a Noon Meeting will be held at the Academy of Music each day from 12 to 1 o'clock, a Bible Reading from 3 to 4 o'clock, and Young People's Meeting from 4 to 5 o'clock. Admission free wrrHoxjT ticket. Tickets for Evening Services can be obtained without cost, upon application at Wisconsin News Co., of Pastors of Churches, or of E. Upson, Chairman Committee, Young Men's Library Eooms, at Academy of Music. EoME, Pennsxlvania, May 8, 1876. Yours received in Chicago. We didn't stop at Burgville. Put the two babies and two girls in a palace car in Chicago, and left the same car in Wa- 248 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. verly, New York, for Towanda — our station. You may have heard of Towanda before. Some second-class Normal is to be held there this summer ; but 'twont be much of a concern 'cause my name isn't on the circulaire. Print, brother, print with care, And print " P. P." on your circulaire. However I may be induced to smile on you during the term — if you give me my "Choice." While in Selma, Alabama, I received the information of Towanda Normal, and at once foresaw G. F. R,, Mac, and Cases, et al., spending a Saturday and Sunday in Rome — ten miles away — "praise meeting" in our church, etc. More than this, D. L. Moody writes me from Chicago: "I want to see you, and if you will tell me where you will be I will come and see you this summer." Wouldn't it be good to have Moody here when you are ? Our boys are pretty well. Paul is a little croupy, running out so much ; but George seems better, right away. Wife is somewhat worn and wearied, but all things considered, we were never better off. Wish you were as well. Love to all the dear Williamses. Yours till we see you — after that we can't promise. P. P. P Kalamazoo, MicraaAN, November 3, 1876- Dear Mamma: Let me give you a good morning kiss and wish you a " Merry November 1 " Your last letter was received, I think, and I was glad, of course, as a good boy ought to be. We have been here two weeks, and about the hest two weeks we ever had. Your prayers are being answered, and I am thankful for a mother who prays. I hope my boys will remember with profit the prayers of their father and mother. Please to pray for them, and for those who have care of them. We have been to Chicago meetings some, and sent you papers. Oh ! what a privilege to live in these days and to be in any way connected with such a work of grace ! Do you enjoy anything or anybody this winter? How is your health and mind and spirit ? Is it well with your soul ? Song of Solomon, ii, 14, is a sweet verse. It is the Lord speaking to us, His ehildren. He wants us to look up and speak to Him. How good He is. What grace ! what grace I I send you a song, Hallehijah, what a Savior ! Mr. Sankey and I are to have a new book in January. Now I must go to prayer-meeting. Guess you'd better direct to Chicago, Y. M. C. A. Don't know how long we'll stay here, nor where we'll go next. Anywhere with Jesus. Yours and His son, P. P. Bliss. LETTERS TO FRIEKDS. 249 JACK AND HIS SON, Which amounts to Jackson, November 18, 1876. Dbak "Ma:" This is our last week here ; next I may write you from Chicago. Yours received. I am sorry for your eye. Do not cry ; do not cry. For I hope it will be better By and by, by and by ; Wipe it with your little handkerchief, Do not sigh, do not sigh, You have eyes worth looking out of, So have I, so have I. Beams and motes are woful bothers, In your eye, in your ej'-e. But a bile on yours or other's Is " too high 1 " — far too high I 1 sent C. W. a box of books, but hear nothing from it. Hope they've got 'em. Thanks for the compliments to my boys. I think you and I have nice sons. I want to see my son P. P. Do you want to see yours ? Well wait till about Christmas, if the Lord will. Lou is making a worsted mat to put on our table. I'll have to go and get a table. [Closed by Mrs. Bliss.] Phil has been called away and his parting words were, "You finish this letter." The mat he spoke of is made of shaded worsted from a very dark scarlet down to a pink ; I think it will be very handsome. When I was keeping house I never found time for any fancy work, and now that I have a little time I am trying to improve it. We have sold or given away nearly all the things we had, so that when we go to keeping house again we will have to start all anew. I have kept my bedding, table linen, and silver, and about all the furniture we have is some clothes boxes. So if we ever do get a house of our own, I shall have everything new to start with. We sent you a paper telling you all about the meetings in Kalamazoo. Whittle and Bliss are being very much blessed in their work. There are many precious souls born into the Kingdom every day. The Lord is very good to us. He keeps our children in such good health, and takes such good" care of us. We get pretty homesick to see the boys, but must wait until about Christmas It is getting so dark that 1 cannot see ; so please excuse me, Hastily yours. Your Smallest Daughter. 250 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. Peoria, Illinois, November 30, Dear Mac ; Yours with music came duly. Thanks. Have only time ' to acknowledge and hope to see you if we come to Eome, Christmas, as we hope to do. HaviDg most blessed meetings here, — still praying the Lord to send you into singing Gospel songs in Gospel meetings. Glad you could call on my folks at Towanda ; wish I could do as much for you. Wishing you a merry Thanksgiving and a Happy " 77," Yours as ever, P. P. AND Lou B. At the time of writing the above letter, Mr. Bliss turned to his companion and said "Who is there that McGranahan could go with to sing the Gospel ? " A few moments' talk followed, but no one could be thought of with whom he would be likely to go. One month from the date of this letter, Mr. Bliss was killed and these lines are now being added in Dubuque, Iowa; where Mr. McGrana- han is sfnging the Gospel in meetings conducted by the companion to whom Mr. Bliss that day spoke. His prayers are answered. A dearly loved friend of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss, in sending copies of letters, thus writes: Jacksonville, Florida, Feb. 28, 1877. Your letter with regard to the memoir you are preparing of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss came duly to hand. Am sorry I could not have replied sooner. I am very glad that you have undertaken this, for I think thereby the world will know more of the character of one of the most unselfish, humble Chris- tians I ever knew. One could not know Mr. Bliss well without being the better for it. He has helped me in my Christian life much, I have played for his musical conventions held in different times in Illinois, and heard much of his teaching in music for the past sixteen years, and the same lovely, simple faith has always been very apparent. My first acquaintance with these dear friends was in Warsaw, New York, my home before I was married, where Mr. B. was employed to lead the choir of the Congregational Church for six months. I belonged to that choir, and under his teaching was made to see more in every hymn sun^f than I had ever before imagined could be found in them. He was always careful to have every part of the choir's worship done in the most reverential, thoughtful manner possible. His Master's glory was always his highest aim. He has had great influence in his convention work, of late years. He always opened the morning session with prayer, followed by some devotional piece of music, which he would always use with good effect ; and then a few words would fall from his lips upon the subject which was so near LETTERS TO FRIEI^DS. 251 and dear to his heart — tlie saving of souls — and all eyes would moisten and hearts were touched in many, many instances. 1 believe the Lord crowned with His blessing all these words. Mr. Bliss' pleasant, genial manner made him a favorite wherever he went, especially among the young ; so every word spoken by him before the convention was treasured and helieved. So he has been doing evangelical work for a good many years. I have copied only such parts of Mr. Bliss' letters as might be of some use to you, knowing you will have no time to waste in reading anything else. I cannot let them go without expressing my thanks to you for this generous work you are doing. I, with hundreds of others, will be so glad to have such a memoir. I cannot cease regretting that so many letters which might have been so useful now are destroyed. Our peculiar circumstances of giving up friends and home in pursuit of health called forth many letters, beautiful letters of loving sympathy, ever turning our thoughts to the Great Healer, and always telling of his own great joy and perfect happiness in working for the Master. It was his real, natural life. His father was just such an humble earnest Christian before him. I have been pained by mistakes made by the press, especially in one case where he was said to have been a Christian for the last six years, and another saying his wife taught him his first lessons of Divine love. She was a loving, faithful wife, but her rich Christian experience was developed under Ms in- fluence, instead of as the press stated. N. E. M. The following are the letters from Mr. Bliss to which Mrs. M. so feelingly alludes : Detroit, MicmGAK, October the last, 1874. Our Dear Brother and Sister: Surely no name is too sacred to represent the relationship, though the many, many miles stretching between us seem to make us very distant rela- tives. How much you are both in my thoughts and prayers. It is sad to say " good-bye." Your penciled note gave us great pleasure, although a portion for me ") had been omitted. Surely our past acquaintance warrants the supposition that anything, everything, we may write, will be perfectly understood and gladly received by each other. Never destroy, copy, or restrain anything suggested in regard to any member of the Bliss family. While this is being written you are being whirled rapidly away, westward, chatting gayly of the aunt-elopes or Buffalo (Bills), plowing snow banks, eat- ing venison, or, it may be, sending back a thought or word to "664," " Gospel Songs," " Paul " and his " corner," etc., etc., while here, in the study of Rev. Arthur Tappan Pierson, Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church — a mighty man, a perfect scholar and such a genial affinity — these lines are penned to 253 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. you tliougli tlie liour is taken from tlie noon prayer-meeting. Four meetings a day leave little time for anything else. So this may be regarded as home missionary work ! You will not expect much in this letter concerning Chicago : a very tender feeling is awakened by the name ; a gentle " redness of eyes " is induced by thoughts of wife and Paul and George. Yet the mighty q uestion of my dear Master's business engages with a profound interest my wJiole soul. While the souls of men are dying, and the good news of the glorious Gospel will be BO eagerly listened to, it is no time to hesitate. Dear Lou is trying hard to say, " Go, and God speed thee," and her true woman's nature is being so ennobled and consecrated that, with no less love for me but so much more for the blessed Jesus and His sweet service, her heart has heaven's own rest of peace. Morning prayer meeting at eight o'clock, attendance from 100 to 250, led by Whittle, Bliss or some other preacher. Requests by the dozen are read, one at a time, and prayer, silent or audible, offered for each one. Five persons arose for prayer this morning ; groups of six or more remained to talk or pray together. Noon meeting daily at Young Men's Hall. Whittle leads to-day. Bible reading every P. m., and to-day a children's meeting at 3 ; Gospel meeting at 7.30 (prayer meeting at 7) ; and oh, how you would enjoy seeing and helping on such a work. Incidents ? Details ? Where to begin, is the only question. Last evening two girls came up to me to " talk religion," just in fun/ 'Twas a painful sight ; my heart was grieved — the Holy Spirit, oh, how much more ! This morning one of them came to prayer meeting and spoke of it with grief and penitence. One of the first families have a " high- toned " girl who hasn't spoken to her father for three years ! She is asking prayer ; but we told her this morning. How can you ask prayer ? how can you pray with such a heart? Scores are being converted — hopefully, joyfully, scripturally converted. Praise ye the Lord. Two weeks more here ; then we go to Pittsburgh. Pray for us there. De- cember or January will probably bring us to Boston, Massachusetts. Anj-Tyhere with Jesus. You will now be released, as the time for children's meeting is near. Let us live near the Lord, be happy, trustful, bold, earnest, real Christians. Serve Him who saves us, because we are saved and not to be saved. Your names are in my prayers. Very sincerely, your brother, P. P. Milwaukee, December 30, 1875. Our meetings here are good. All the churches ' united, crowds attending, and many professing to be saved by believing the Gospel, the gift of God. How I do love to offer it as a free gift and hear the delightful reply, " Why, if LETTEKS TO FKIENDS. 253 my debt is paid, and God says it is, I must believe it or make Him a liar. " " I accept Jesus as my Savior." " Is that the way to be saved?" " I'll live for Him who died for me," etc. etc. No joy in this world like this service. Mrs. M. introduces another letter with the following prefatory note, and tells us the origin of When Jesus Comes : " The following is from our last letter from Mr. Bliss, written a few days before his death. You will probably remember the ride to which he alludes, about the bluffs and cemetery of Peoria. A few years ago while visiting us at Peoria, we took the same places in, in an afternoon drive. It was on a lovely October day ; the air was hazy and dreamy, and all nature was clothed in her brilliant fall colors, making the cemetery a most charming picture. We drove slowly, winding about from path to path, now on the hillside, now in the valley, all keeping perfect silence. We all seemed to feel the same quieting influence. As we left the carriage to go into the house, Mrs. Bliss burst into tears. We went into the parlor together, Mr. Bliss going directly to his own room. While in the parlor, Mrs. Bliss told me what beautiful thoughts she had been having of her babe in heaven, (it was the fall after the birth of her first child,) and said she had never enjoyed a ride so much. All the surrounding circumstances had seemed to make her feel an unusual peaceful resignation to the loss of that child. Before long, Mr. B. came down with a slip of paper in his hand, saying, " Girls, I want to read to you what I have here. See my child that was born of that ride. I have never had more peaceful, enjoyable thoughts than this afternoon." Turning to me, he said, " Nett, I shall never forget that ride." Then he read to us, " When Jesus Comes." I have the same slip of paper now, and I need not say, I prize it. EoME, Peknstlvania, December 20, 1876. We are home for a week or so; expect to leave the family all heie Satur- day. Probably return to Chicago December 30. On my table lie the proof-sheets of " Gospel Hymns No 2," a proposition for a Canadian copyright, and an invitation for Whittle and Bliss to come to London, England, all of which engage my consideration and prayerful thought. I think we may go to England about May 1st. Don't ask me if I shall leave my wife and boys. Pray for us in song prayer with thanksgiving. The meetings at Peoria were very satisfactory. All the churches united, and many professed to accept the " gift of God." May the Lord gis^e you great peace and rest. May all our lamps be trimmed and burning " When Jesus comes." Oh, how we missed you at Peoria, on our ride round the bluffs, cemetery, etc. I wanted to see " Wib," but failed. May the new year bring you abundant blessings. P. P. Bliss. CHAPTER XXII. LETTERS TO A CHRISTIAN LADY— HIS RELIGIOUS LIFE AND EXPERIENCE- LETTERS TO HIS NEPHEW— WORDS OP WISDOM— LETTERS TO HIS CO- LABORER. THE following letters, and extracts from letters, are kindly fur nished by a Christian lady, years ago a teacher of Mr. Bliss, his, first instructor in music, and for whom he always entertained sentiments of the.highest esteem, gratitude and affection, and whom he was led to correspond with in a peculiarly confidential manner concerning his spiritual life and plans of work for Christ, seeking her counsel and sympathy. This lady thus writes t Away back in 1857 I first met Mr. Bliss when he entered the Collegiate Institute at Towanda, in which school I then had charge of the department of music. His complete attention and excellence in the singing class brought him especially to my attention and esteem, and my every remembrance of him at that time is laden with some grace or goodness of character. Always in the true place at the right time, noble, modest and courteous, and of wealth of heart and soul he possessed a princely store. A pure, fresh, sweet life consecrated thus early to the Lord, unostentatious but sincerely glad to be heard in suppli- cation or praise and ofttimes in the midst of professors and pupils, I have heard him in such humble, reverent prayer that I knew he had learned of Him who alone givetli such understanding. I do not know that any of his private letters are to have a place or part in the book which you are helping to prepare, but if I may modestly and unknown to the public help you in the least partic- ular to catch any new or more beautiful picture of our lamented friends, I shall be satisfied. Perhaps in lifting the veil from a life so loyal and devoted to Christ, so faithfully tender to wife, children, home, and friends, you may find in these extracts a few gems which you may like to put upon the golden thread which is to hold the picture of a man so royal and grand, so loving and sweet. After long years of separation, after he had gained new friends, new dignities and new honors, as well as superior mental and spiritual attainments, he came back to find me, with the gratitude and simplicity of a child, thanking me for what I had done for him and begging still to call me "teacher," which name I find in the last letter he wrote to me. In his wonderful friendship and LETTERS TO FRIEITDS. 255 fidelity, I have found strength, peace and comfort. Always in my greatest need his letters came, and if in my invalid days I was ready to Weep or faint or mourn, I had remembered some word or hymn or benediction of his and found courage and peace. The following are quotations from Mr. Bliss' letters : KoT OF KoNTENTMENT, Octobet 6, 1871. Had I received your kind invitation sooner, and had the health of Mrs. B, been sufficient, you would have seen us on the recent trip East. We spent a Sunday in Owego, and are now safe at home again ; but my wife is not well. She has been down the valley and almost across the narrow stream. No ; I don't like such figures. The blessed Lord has led us up the hill, and by the gift of suffering made this poor life more glorious and heaven even dearer. How glad I am at your saying "Jesus the best of all." May you continue to refet in Him ; whether living or dying, be "to " Him ; whether here or yonder, be with Him. If you have received the " Charm " I sent you, let the " Light in the Valley " cheer you, "Over Yonder" win you, and " JSsus Loves even Me " entertain you. The Sunday School and choir and convention work to which I have been called seems to prosper. Conventions every week somewhere ; Sun- day School, 709 last Sunday. Pray for your pupil, that his life may be to manv what yours is and has been to him. [The winter after the great fire, 1872.] Forgive me, but I had a real good cry over the pleasant memories of youi last letter, and since then have been laughing at your mistake in supposing me to be anything else than the overgrown, awkward boy you used to be kind to. Please don't talk about our being on ahead of you and beg for us to wait for you. The best thing in your letter, the best thing about any of us is the re flection of the dear Savior's love. Oh, isn't it the name above every name — precious Jesus ! yes, indeed, we have hugged the interests of the Redeemer's kingdom close, and if I could tell you, but I never can here, how His loving arms here encircle me and mine. Our little " Kot of Kontentment " is on the West Side, nearly a mile from the burnt district. The music books, instruments, sheet music, etc. — the earthly substance in which my plans centered — all gone with the Opera House. Of course we lost all — insurance in "home companies" — but I can't say we've suffered anything by the fire. Good health and plenty to do ; lots of friends, voice and faith ; what need I more ? Now I'll let you rest. Only pray to-night for me, that God may use me more and more for His kingdom. Good-bye. Wait. Won't we have a good song when we all get home f " 256 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. December 22, 1873, I am glad you are only six years ahead of me. If I live fast, maybe I can quite come up to you yet. I honestly think it's beautiful to grow old — one can appreciate good things and avoid bad ones so much better. And now, my sister, poor as is the prop, unsafe as may be the arm, it will be joy to think you do so lean upon it ; to think that you believe in me enough to let your tired heart rest in unquestioning confidence, if it may, in my sympathy. I do feel sometimes that for Jesus' sake, I'd like to bear some- body's burdens, my way is so pleasant, and my life work so agreeable. I can only say He leadeth me beside the still waters. And yet I would not boast of myself. 'Tis not that I am strong ; more likely 'tis that He in tender mercy spares my sad ruin which His omniscience knows a little load would cost. I have an offer to lead the music in San Francisco Tabernacle, Handel and Haydn Society, & Co., at a salary of $3,000 in gold. Do not press me for rea- sons for not going. I only mention this to you because I know you will rejoice in anything like my prosperity. Wife and Paul send much love and unite in an invitation for you to come and see us. Now I must go. Good bye. I'll send you a new song in a few days. So help me by prayer and pen, dear friend, and so use me, heart, hand and voice, as He would have you. Be sure that your influence from my first day at T. till now, has been only helpful and Christian. My music is the better and purer, my life brighter and my heart stronger and larger for your share in instructing me. January, 1874. If the dear Lord so wills it, I'm coming to see you some day, and you shall again be my teacher. I have only. " Sunshine" and " Joy " in my heart and life, and if I might know Him who has given by sharing the gift, I shall be the happier. Chicago, March 10, 1874. Princess Louisa: Your chatty communication containing the " personal heart " letters of the far away E is before me. I can't now remember much of her spirit. However, these are beautiful Christian letters. A rich and varied experience was necessary to develop such a heart. I'll send some music as you direct. This, I must say, is another apology only for the elegant, elaborate letter I owe you. Going, Going, G , and my train leaves in twenty minutes. But between true friends there can be no debit and credit system. Believe me, if we had called at your house, or if ever you do come to our " Kot ov Kontent " there'll be music or would have been time improved. Bah ! what an awk ward sentence ! I'll keep close to the shore after this. So we are well, happy, cheerful, content, peace like a river. Wish you the game now and ever. I am flying from Iowa to Michigan and stop in Chicago for one night to sing my new song, " Work and Pray," at a women's temperance LETTEES TO FKIEiq-DS. song, at a Union Temperance mass meeting. I believe in women, prayer and God ; so there's only one side for me in tlie great crusade. George Rodgers, of England, gave one of liis world- renowned lectures on the " Tabernacle," in our church last evening, and I sang a new song for him, ** Wishing, Hoping, Knowing." I have a very winning call to London, Eng- land, for this summer, to sing " Gospel Songs." Shall I go ? Wife and Paul send much love. — If, when I come home, I can steal awhile away," you may get a letter, song or sermon. Till then as ever. Blissfully Yours. March 31, 1874. My dear wife is fully my equal as a performer and far superior in matters of taste, criticism, etc. You mistake when you suppose criticism " hurts " me. True as Hive, I don't want to know the favorable things said about me, nearly so much as I desire to hear objections. Since writing you before, the way has been very clearly made known to me and my wife, for my immediate future. We have long prayed God to lead me into the widest field of efficient labor. He has repeatedly come near to us in His delightful, conscious manifestations, and now I am fully persuaded He calls me to give my time and energies to writing and singing the Good News. I am constrained, by what Christ is and. has been to me, to offer all my powers directly to His sweet service. Beginning with this desire, prompted, I am sure, by the Holy Ghost, I am willing — we are willing — to leave ourselves where we always have been, in our Father's loving hands. He has led us in spite of our plans into all and only pleasant and prosperous ways. It's no time to distrust or question now. Pardon me if this all sounds like "cant," to you. My meaning is to be honest and real. Pray for us, if you can, that I may be honored by "helping Jesus." Major Whittle goes with me to preach the Gospel while I try to sing it. Our only aim, sincerely, above all else, is to win souls to Jesus Christ. Yours, in His love, P. P. B. July 20, 1874. I did not see the appropriateness of my trying to write, as my wife ought to. Of Paul I can never tell you one half. He is (and always has been) "just the right age to be interesting ; " has twenty or thirty teeth — a large head, brown hair, chubby hands, big feet, of course — a perfectly healthy, happy boy. Can say "Papa's chatterbox," "Mamma's pigeon," and can tease most effectually for — " Nandy ! " Mrs. Bliss is in excellent health and spirits, as nsual. As she is not to read this, I must say she is an extraordinary woman. You don't know many women of such unselfish devotion, sublime faith and ehild-like trust. She lives so near the Lord that I ought to be a good man, 17 - 258 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. Humanly speaking, my life would have been a failure without her. God bless her. I am engaged to write and sing Gospel songs in this country this fal^ and winter. Tours for Lou, Bliss. Augnst 8, 1874. Dear Sister; I am just home for a day from the State Convention of " T. M. C. A," Aurora, Illinois, and go Monday to S. S. Teachers' Assembly at Chautauqua Lake, New York. I wish you were to be there. I wish you could have been yonder. But I mind me of a convention soon to be called " of all kindreds and tongues and nations," where the theme will be " Hallelujah to the Lamb." To that our ardent souls aspire. During that grand convention I'll tell you how good God has been to me and mine. Dear wife desires me first of all to thank you for the kind letter, and to say for her that she is not feeling quite well these days, and begs you will excuse her from writing. Our Paul boy is just all we could wish, every way, and I perceive we are coming to think quite a good deal of him. If and if we could " come to the mountain," about September, I am sure you would be happy. Pardon me for writing on my business paper, but I want you to hear about Gospel Songs, etc. Are you teaching, gardening or what ? You wouldn't send me a picture of yourself, so 1 of course had to make one : Age, 40 ; complexion very fair ; height, 5 ft. 2 in. ; weight, 132 lbs ; hair inclining, ; teeth good ; mouth large ; lips thin, and smiling eyes, blue, large and watery ; dress neat and a perfect fit ; carriage erect and easy ! How's that? 'T would all be impolite in me but for old acquaintance's sake. However, this " tabernacle" will soon be "dissolved," it's the other house I'm most interested in, and I can see that in every utterance of your pen, " the things that are not seen are eternal," aren't they ? — What trifles engage the attention of the king's children ! How we dishonor our loving Father by making so much of every thing else and so little of His blessed word and kingdom. I know I do — God forgive me. Specimen ''Gospel Songs" inclosed. Pray for them and us. 2 Cor. ix, 8 = the seven A's. Yours in Him, P. P. B. March 18, 1875. Major Whittle and I had a series of wonderfully successful Gospel meetings in Louisville, Kentucky. We go to Cincinnati, Ohio, March 28. Pray for ns and write me there, please, care John Church & Co. Wife and sons are well and happy and would be so glad to have you come and visit us. Why not ? The front chamber will be all ready painted, papered, etc., by the time you'll get here and this. I'm away from home much of the time. The piano, a glorious upright, is here and you may have access to a musical library —considerable. LETTERS TO HIS NEPHEW. 259 Are you in the midst of maple sugar, etc. ? When we come to Owego again, " It may be for years," etc. This singing and talking about the Good News of a present, perfect, free salvation and justification by faith is so popular and attractive I don't believe I shall ever find time for any thing else ; and seems to me it's needed. How much of everything else we hear preached, and how little Gospel. I sent you papers from Louisville, will also from Cincinnati. Wife unites in love unchanging. Please to rest in it. Yours ever, P. P. B. The following letters were written by Mr. Bliss to his nephew, who is frequently noticed in the preceding chapter, by his initials " W. H." This nephew was a member of Mr. Bliss' household for some two years during his absence as an evangelist, and was regarded by Mr. and Mrs. B. almost as a son. Okland, Indiana, December 11, 1871. Dear Nephew : Your good long letter came two days ago. It is a good composition and shows a spirit of trust in the Lord and at the same time a desire to help your- self, which, if continued, must lead to a successful life. I am so glad for you that a way is so pleasantly opened for your schooling. God bless you in it. As to agency " or similar means of raising money, I am not very favorable to the sort ; still you might try, after study hours, some physical labor would seem better. Let me make a proposition if you are quite sure that your school is the thing and that you will stay through. I will pay your tuition for you. Then, perhaps you can earn enough to clothe yourself. Of course 'twill be better for you to try (as I know you will) to be helping yourself just the sa,me. If you would as soon, I'd like to have you ask me for money at any time instead of borrowing elsewhere. Don't get in debt. You ask my advice. Be easy in old clothes, don't mind any large, coarse boots ; stand up straight, look pleasant, speak more cheerfully. I know you will succeed as long as you read the Bible and pray much. Watch and pray. CmcAGO, November 22, 1872. Dear Willie: May yours be a happy Thanksgiving day ; will it help to make it such if I tell you that Aunt Lou and I have been talking a good deal about you, and con- cluded to say you may expect $10 a month from us after December. That is, the first January, 1873, and on the first of each month of the year, I will send you check for $10. God bless you with it, my dear boy, and may your mother's prayers be answered. 260 MEMOIR OE P. P. BLISS. Would it be well to keep a strict casli account ? Prove to us all that you can keep out of debt. As a business matter it is always rigbt for us to recommend what we tliink is a good thing. In the things of the Kingdom we should do with our might. I'd be glad to have you look at Congregationalism — that is, I am so happy in this work and with this church, I am desirous of opening its doors to my friends. Did you ever say to what denomination you belong? Of cou'tse you should have a choice, and learn to love your own, and labor for its good. May the Lord guide you into all truth. Pray it earnestly and often. Aunt Lou joins in love. P. P. B. Chicago, October 15, 1873. Dear Willie: I did not receive the letter you mention. I would advise you to teach this winter. Your reoord of work is a good one. ' ' Do not be discouraged " is cheap and common advice, but I know you and I will often be discouraged. Prayer, asking for faith, and reading the promises are my remedies. Be sure, my dear boy, God has great things for us to do and to be. We are all praying for you and watching. Farewell. Your uncle Phil. CmcAGO, February 10, 1874. Dear Friend and Nephew W. H. : How do you do by this time ? You must not think you have been overlooked, forgotten, nor slighted. I have been trying to ascertain what might be the best thing to write. Of course I am not competent to advise ; every one must decide and act for himself. This has been a hard lesson for me to learn, and I've not yet graduated in it. Still, we can by suggestions, etc., often assist each other in making conclusions. So I will speak quite freely as we have talked. I have a great deal of faith in you, to begin with ; or, to speak more properly, I've a strong faith in God, and believe He will by various means de- velop you and in answer to prayers make the most of you. You and I may sometimes complain of a lack of opportunities ; or regret inabilities, when, if we labor and patiently wait, it will appear that " God's ways were best." If we admit that in advance, and then are willing to be led, we certainly must come into a cheerful content ; for of course we desire the lest in all things. I am not sorry to hear that you are with your Pa in the woods ; for 'twas with him in such places, I learned a great many useful things, and received a good education. One thing I am glad to say — "Doc." as we used to call him, always had a good word of cheer for a fellow, and never by word or example led us boys astray. He was a kind, hard-working, pleasant man, whose influence was always on the right side. LETTEES TO HIS KEPHEW. 261 After you wrote to me about " medicine," I wrote to Dr. Anderson — and also went about tliis city to learn wliat I could of the project. The matter, as you proposed it, did not shine very brightly to my eyes ; so I've looked about in other directions. What would you think of going into a drug store for a time ? Or have you abandoned this line of thought entirely ? If in mental and spiritual matters you can be as thorough as you are in physical (chopping and sawing for instance), you'll succeed. And that is what we are expecting of you, old boy I Purpose — Pluck — PUSH ! Faith in self, in friends, in Ood ; Pluck to plan, to push, to plod. [The poetry is original and composed for the occasion ; please commit it to heart and commit your heart to it.] I thought of you and prayed most earn- estly for you as we came through Wellsville. In fact I looked for you a little ; didn't know but maybe you'd happen down by the depot. Well, really, you must pardon me for such a long letter, and I haven't said anything yet. We are all well — that begins to sound like a letter — Paul is awake as usual ; Aunt Lou in the bedroom with him ; Warren off down town somewhere ; Chicago lively and lovely. Won't you and your Pa come out and make us a visit ? I tell you, we'd be mighty tickled to ^ve you. The old ladies switched Chicago in good style, and we weren't asliamed of them. I guess we could get along with you. Come and try it. I go to Iowa next week. This convention business keeps me sliding in the season of it. God bless you. Let me hear from you. Truly your Uncle Phil. May 15, 74. Deab Beardless Boy : Sorry you're sick ; " Beware of dogs." Phil, iii, 2. Guess you worked too hard moving us. I am writing up in the beautiful study which I found all papered and carpeted and in order waiting for me, last week, when T came home from a Gospel meeting trip. Oh, my" boy, I rather guess I've a wife as is a wife. God bless her this minute. What a blessed trial that Mansfield experience was. How did Jennings stand it ? Did he show his Bliss ? or did he at the hotel kneel down and say, " all right ; all things work together for good ? " Of course we are happy and all pretty well. Paul has another tooth and 4 Phenie another dress. House in good shape. I spent a very interesting hour in the barn to-day, sawing and splitting the kindling boards you hauled. I had to think of you considerably. Old Mr. Young, " 0. W.," is around yet ; he seems very feeble ; don't get in till midnight sometimes, poor fellow ! Maj. Whittle and wife come to tea and we have a Gospel meeting on West- ern Avenue this evening. Expect a good time. We go to Whitewater, Wisconsin, next week ; will be there, probably, when you read this. Pray for us. Well, good day, 3 John ii. P. P. B. 262 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. De cboit, OctobOT9, 1874. Deab Will : Don't you begin to believe tliat I don't think of you every day ? I believe in you and in the power of prayer and a life of faith. You must succeed, and in order to true success, if you would enter into the kingdom of heaven, or of science or greatness, you must become as a little child — humble and teachable, desirous of being led. I trust you have this spirit in a good degree ; keep it ; pray for more faith and trust. Don't apply yourself too closely to books and such. Don't stay too long in the rat-pit. Make haste slowly. Save time by waiting for some things. Save health. Confide everything to your loving Aunt Lou. She's a faithful friend, and though her corrections may seem grievous, who wouldn't be correct f The meetings are immense. Crowds and crowds — many standing all through, and many had to go away from the door of one of the largest churches last evening. Your prayers are being answered. Praise God for it. To Him be all, all the glory. Amen. his Uncle x ^ mark. Detboit, November 17, 1874. Dear W. H. J : You are in my thought and prayers daily. I am anxious that your sojourn in Chicago shall do all for you, in every way, that we hope or God intends I need not say to you, and yet it is a pleasure, your aunt and I are " glad you came." Of course I am away so much. T'Ae important thing to me is that you make it pleasant for her. She says you do that, so I am content. Thank God. Only don't let the mental do injustice to your physical and spiritual energies. A holy man means a whole man — symmetrical, well-balanced ; so have a look,, my dear boy, each day, into all things concerning the " full man." Confide all to Him who careth for you. Pray for much. Be courteous to all, familiar with few, intimate with none. Say to the girls that we will be home to breakfast Friday morning and that Mr. and Mrs. Whittle will probably be with us, at about 9 o'clock. Don't forget this. I am glad to hear so good a report from the Bliss boys. Aunt Lou arrived this morning and surprised me on my return from prayer-meeting. I am very glad she could come. The meetings go on grandly ; many souls daily profess Christ, and the church more and more revived. I have some thrilling incidents to relate, when I come home. Pray for the meeting at Dr. Goodwin's church for Sun- day evening next. Read this little book carefully and hand it to some friend. Good bye. Your loving Uncle, P. P. LouisvnxE, Febmary 25, 1875. Dear Will : Put in your vote for Aunt Lou to come next week, if she don't come before, — and she can just as well bring a baby or two as not. Plenty of room and LETTERS TO HIS ]S EPHEW. 263 servants here, AND I want to see 'em ; I'd like to look in at you to-day. Wish you could come to one of these glorious meetings ; but pray on. The Lord is doing a mighty work here. Praise Him, Here's a letter from Harry Moor- house, the " boy preacher." I pray for you ; so does Major, every day, and I believe you are being led of the Holy Spirit. Let us ask God to correct and direct us ; and then be very careful to recognize and follow His leadings. We need to ask wisdom daily, and He says *' it shall be given him," Math, vii, 7, and James i, 5. Now ask. Hastily but heartily. Yours, Uncle Phil. Nashville, May 10, 1875. Deak Will : I don't blame you, 'tis too bad ! Pardon me. Your letters are good and helpful. Your diagnosis of sin, etc., was a good thing, and I used it. No use to try to tell you of our glorious meetings. The papers poorly do that. Oh, pray on for me, that I may be humble and empty, fit for use. Your opinion of Aunt Lou is quite correct. I believe you are to give her a great deal of com- fort in answer to prayers for you. Fight on, my brave boy. Faith is Victory. Take good care of your health and don't study too close. Send your Aunt Lou to this sunny South, if you can. Bite P^ul if he bites George. Yes, I send papers to Allegany, Telegram just received from Montreal, asking us to stop there a week or two on our way to London. Answered we'd come for a few days, beginning June 15, the week after New York Convention. God is so good to us, and His work so precious. You must excuse me if I talk that as you do medicine. Success to you. Live near the Lord, " Looking unto Jesus." Nashville, May 12, 1875. Dear Will : If your Aunt Lou is not here by the time you get this, you need not read it ; for I'll be so disappointed. I'll be ill-natured and won't mean it. I hope you are now about getting on the street cars to go to depot, so she'll be here to-morrow night. My heart is all flatting out, I think, for want of a wise woman to hold it together — what do the doctors call it, home-sickness ? The climate is beautiful here — weather still cold and healthful. If the Lord had sent the usual warm weather, all say our meetings would, humanly speaking, have been much less successful. The people here are so cordial and intense. You must never speak harshly of rebels again. Dear Will [This letter commenced by Mrs. Bliss finished by Mr. B.] Memphis, Tennessee, Satnxday, 1875. We have just returned from a delightful boat-ride on the grand old Missis- sippi. It was cool on the boat, and we all feel greatly refreshed. We saw 264 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. them land a mule, which furnished fun enough to last your uncle and Major a whole year. — And now she is interrupted and this mule continues. We are just wallowing in strawberries and cream ; only the berries are a little sour and the cream is skim milk. Bouquets are coming in by the basket-full. Aunt Lou has been sick as a Swede for two days ; better now. I am well, but it takes two collars a day to keep me singing. Your letters rejoice our hearts greatly. It is in answer to many prayers tnat God is giving you peace, and I expect you to grow in all grace. God grant iL Application is the sure road to success. Stick to your team. Yours joyful, Uncle Phil. Rome, Friday, 1875. Deak Ones all : I wonder how you all get along so well as you seem to ; but " God is great and God is good." We pray for you every day. Received your telegram and the dear boys' pictures last night ; we are very thankful. The picture of Paul is splendid. I think George looks a little as if he were attending clinics, but am glad for as good a likeness as this. You may get this after we come home, so I'll be brief. Expect us Thursday, if not there before. A great and powerful work of grace has begun here ; we all know that God is with us, and souls are being gathered into the fold. Of all the places in the world where I'd love to work for Christ, this old home of ours is the most in- teresting. Oh, how good it is of my Master to let me tarry here for a few days in His sweet service. May He abundantly reward you for helping us. It is all for His sake. To Him be the glory. Amen. P. P. B. CmcAGO, October, 1875. I suggested to Mrs. E. Willson to come West by way of Wellsville and call on you 'uns. Maybe you've planned to go to Tovvanda ; if so, so. Do what and go where you think best, only always remember Psa. xxxii, 8. In every- thing believe that He has proved it to you and me. It will be an awful sin for either of us to ever doubt it. How precious Christ is to me to-day. He has been here in the study all the morning. He is looking over now as you read this — He says, " Fear not, only believe," and I hear your answer, " Lord, I believe ; help Thou mine unbelief," Amen. P. P. B. St. Paul. October 30, 1875. Aunt and I expect to enjoy your success. To see you as the happy proprie- tor of a first-class pill-shop, and a leading scalawag in your bloody business. Go on, I may be sick mysel !, some day, and you may save me an immense Dr. bill. LETTEES TO HIS NEPHEW. 265 I tried your R — for my boil ; but what will now " amuse" me? I have two others ! Will send two or three papers, — to give away. I have sent to your mother and mine, etc, The snow has stopped falling, but 'tis cold and dreary. An old man told us th.s morning in prayer-meeting, that " the Gospel net is being drawn in ; some self-righteous fish will flop over the top of the net, and some low mud suckers creep under ; but a great haul is sure ! " The last night in St. Paul was glorious ; but between two verses of a song Whittle told them if they smelt fire 'twas some papers in the hall below. 'Twas a narrow escape. Some dresses, carpets, etc., burned, but no alarm sounded, or a fearful calamity might have prevented this letter. Give thanks for this. P. P. Minneapolis, Minnesota, November 10, 1875. Deab Will: I am as well as could be expected. Aunt Lou came this morning while we were at prayers. I expected her on the West Wisconsin Road, arriving at 8.40, instead of which she came on the Milwaukee Road at 7.30. She had to run all over town to find me, but I was rather pleased to be found. She has now had her breakfast, and when she gets her hair combed up, we think she will look pretty decent, for a Chicago creature 1 Says she had a pleasant trip, but thinks home is pleasant, too ; and if I'd come home 'twould be better yet. I am delighted with the report she brings of home affairs, including W. H. Surely prayers are being answered, and you and I ought to have more faith. The meetings are going on lively ; increased interest ; good^-esults. Don't know when we may come home — perhaps Monday, maybe Friday, watch ! Aunt says tell you that the woman you saw on the train had a cancer ; been to Chicago to consult doctors. They pronounced her incurable, and she comes home to Minneapolis to die. How thankful we all ought to be. God is good. Let us liw as we talk — praising Him who owns us. I want to write to Roxie and Mr. Maynard ; so you'll excuse brevity. Pray for us. Your unctious Uncle, • P. P. Bliss. Milky Walkt, December 8, 1875. Wear Dill : I hope you are as well as I am ; but what shocking " bad weather," as we say for Rush. Really I think we should never find fault with the weather. Fault-finding rarely pays, except with one's self, where 'tis hardest to find. You have wondered, in a letter, how we could even "endure " you as you were last year. Let me assure you of continued "endurance," and I expect an in- creased interest in you and your welfare. 'Twill be a sad termination to the Jennings and Uliss alliance, the day that we find tendency to deceit and fal- 266 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. sity on either part. True friendship is honest. We hope to see you throngh your studies and in good condition as to heart and life. I believe you desire to be ALL that 'tis possible ; so we will help you all we can, to retain all of nobility of character in all things, and to choose all principles of truth and excellence from the various channels opened up. I hope you will not adopt a habit because I have it, nor because any one else has it, but from choice — be- cause it is good. Of course we will see things in you to criticise ; shall try to do it kindly, for I know you want it done ; and may we all be as little children ; then only can we successfully enter any kingdom of usefulness and peace. God bless you. Of the work here I'll only say it is better, apparently, than in any other place we have ever been in for the first week. Yet this is a German city — a phlegmatic people — a very "hard place." But so much the more need of work ; so much the more honor to Christ in the victory. Four meetings daily, and from twenty to forty professing Christ every day. The Jews are growing more and more approachable and tender, which makes me hope the Lord is the nearer. The Gentiles are rejecting the Gospel according to Scripture. Then the Jews shall be gathered in according to Scripture. "Oh, let my lamp be burning when Jesus comes," is my prayer. Of course I must be allowed to enclose a considerable deal of love to be handed over to my dear boys, Paul and George. I hope their mamma will have started for "Milwaulkey " before you get this. " Remember me" also to Mrs. Maynard, Phenie and Annie. Good P. M. Whittle has gone to Bible reading. I must go to young people's meeting. Tour loving Uncle, P. P. St. Lotus, Febmary, 14, 1876. Dear "Cousm Will:" A happy day to you. Pardon my neglect ; but of course a letter to your aunt is intended for " family use" generally, and so when I hear from her I hear from you as well. Tour interests are ours, — and ours, I hope, are to some extent yours. Am glad your folks are coming into Wellsville. It looks to me as if the Lord might be taking this way to prepare a place for you, and especially to have a home at last for your father and mother. They seem to need one, and never have had one. Let us pray the Lord to lead in all our plans and theirs, constantly. The papers are so full of Babcock and whisky trials and tribulations, that they have no room for report of our meetings. Thtee to five thousand souls every day ; fifty to one hundred asking prayers, daily ; and individual souls hungry for conversation privately, personally, is the condition of things from my stand point. Our prayers and expectations are that this last week will be the best of all. Pray for us daily. I have been to the Missouri Medical College, where the boys at first made fun, extemporized burlesque Whittle and Bliss meetings, sung Gospel songs, LETTEBS TO FEIENDS. 267 etc. Now they are decidedly serious. All come to the Rink. Some happy young converts. One said if we'd continue another week he believed the whole college would be converted. They have earnest, bold Christian pro- fessors. I also had the opportunity of reaching one hundred and fifty young ladies in a seminary with good results. You gave me a good illustration of salvation, sanctification, etc., in that story of the poor, weak boy who only needed good food to make him well. Watch for some more such. Give my regards to Roxie and see that she is fed on the Bread of Life. We must try to help our friends to be happy, joyous Christians. " The joy of the Lord is your strength." Always rejoicing, I am your loving Uncle Phil. Mobile, Marck 11, Sabbath. Dear W. H. : All well. Why don't you one of you write a word, at least, ''All well," every day ? The last we heard was written Tuesday ; most a week, and we get anxious. The work here is the greatest and most apparently successful of any we ever had. Crowds at every meeting, and many seeking the truth. Young people's meeting P. M. is mine ; over one thousand in attendance and one hundred or one hundred and fifty standing for prayers. Isn't it good ? I read a part of lona's letter, and had prayer offered for her, and I think her letter helped to decide many souls. It might not be best to tell her so. The weather here is a failure, orange groves a fraud and the bananas a humbug. Oh for 664 ! You may look for a package of overcoats and under clothing at Re veil's the middle or last of next week. We expect to go to Mont gomery Saturday, and begin there Sunday ; so address us accordingly ; here till the 18th, if by telegraph ; by mail until the 14th ; then to Montgomery, Alabama. We feel confident, from all advices, that you are getting along nicely and we expected you would when we left. Our prayers are heard in the morning and at evening for you all. Here is a ticket for George, and a picture for Paul. Aunt and the Whittles join in love to you all. Lovingly, your Uncle. Montgomery, March 20, 1876. Dear Will: Yours received. Good. Your throat is doubtless measly. Am encouraged about you and your studies. I believe in you, or I'd never have sent for you. You will succeed, and, I expect, be a glorious man, an agreeable companion and friend, a good doctor and a pride and joy of all the family. We are praying for you to be all that is possible ; and though you and I have some mean flesh in us, God's grace can overcome it. Think often of Christ as a personal friend and helper, and less of self or what man can do. Our meetings are glorious. The 268 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. Lord is very near to us and all things are working together. The city is being flooded with circular letters — one kind to Christians, one to unbelievers. A mighty work is begun. Your prayers for us all are being answered. Don't let go of us. Think will be home about April 10th, or 15th. I don't dare to say much about it, or you couldn't read my letter, for the tears would blot it so ; and Aunt Lou has reception from 12 to 1 and she hasn't time to cry. But we love our home and friends. Our boys, dear Paul and George, God bless them and you this minute. Your loving Uncle, P. P. B. MoNT-GUM-OK-KTE, OF GuM MOUNTAIN, March 24, 1876. Deab Will: Sorry you're sick. I should be more inclined to employ you to look after my health when you've learned to take care of your own. We are well. Three little words, but how much they are worth ; we don't begin to appre- ciate them, I am sure. Your good letters from home cheer and quiet us in our home-sickness. The good Lord is greatly blessing His work here ; we never had more blessed meetings anywhere. He is also supplying our wants in other ways, bountifully, for which please help us to praise Him. Good letters from the Homer House. Thank 'em ; also the 664 folks. Bless 'em all. Your U. P. Chicago, June 1, 1876. Dear Will: You remember I had to take what was the sunny side, this morning, but now, at 4 P. m., Fm all right. So in life's journey, bravely endure what you can't cure ; your shady side is coming by and by. I've no excuses for writing to you so soon ; only to reassure you of our real love for you, both for our rela- tion's sake and your own sake. I am asking the good Lord, who has so lov ingly led me, lo, these many years, to guide you fully. Ask Him all about your plans. Seek to honor Him in all things and He will bless you. Turn squarely away from every known evil way of thought and action. Ask the Spirit to search you and reveal yourself to yourself ; then " Look to Jesus." Believe in your Aunt Lou. Be as good to her as you think of ; she's worth it. She did favor my coming, or I'd not have been here to-day ; which you can read and apply to yourself, too. If the way does not open for you to find some pleasant paying business here, I think you can go home if you don't more than pay traveling expenses. 'Twould do you and your folks all a great deal of good. That is why I proposed it — for the moral effect. You want to be all that is possible to your family. Those young brothers must know and love you, and personal worth, impress of character, is more than profession or money. Now talk more with " Aunt Lou " about yourself, your plans, and LAST LETTERS. 269 your future. Accept her suggestions. Slie is a safe adviser ; and be wliat you are capable of being — a clieerful, chatty companion, and a worthy Christian, pure and peaceable. TowANDA, June 16, 1876. Dear W. H. : We had two glorious praise meetings at Rome, Sunday and Monday nights, and yesterday we came to Towanda with divided hearts — strongly convicted that there was work for us in Rome, yet irresistibly drawn toward our home and loved ones. We prepared for our Chicago trip, but prayed for guidance ; and went to bed at eleven, still undecided. Talking and praying at twelve o'clock, the minister from Rome drove up and said they had had two meetings that day and voted unanimously that I should return. We could not fail to re- cognize that as the answer to prayer, and so have decided to go back to what we believe to be the work the Lord hath appointed us. Souls are anxious and we have faith that a great blessing awaits our dear village of Rome. Pray for us. Shall probably stay over Sunday and may not stop at Wellsville on our way home. If, for any reason, you think best, telegraph to Towanda, Pennsylvania, and Aunt Lou will start any day for Chicago straight. Hope the girls have got dresses all made and will have a nice time at the picnic. I wish they and my two boys were here. The Lord reward Mrs. Johnson for her care and love to us. Tell her "inasmuch as ye have done it to the least of these, etc." And now adieu. Bless you. I will write your mother to-day, and I think I'll call on Dr. Anderson, and see him and his plan for you. Uncle Phil. Chicago seems now to come into our programme about Thursday or Friday of next week ; but sooner, if any of you say so. The following letters I received from Mr. Bliss during 1876 ; the last of them being written two weeks previous to his death : Rome, Pennsylvania, May 4, 1876. Dear Whittle: I hardly know where to direct, but I must write to you. We had a most delightful trip from Chicago. The weather was just right, car comfortable, children as good as two good kittens, and "all things worked together for good." Had a blessed visit over Sunday with my sister, in Wellsville, New York, and a union praise meeting of power in Beecher's church there. Arrived safely home, May 2d. George seemed a little tired with the journey, but is getting rested and happy. I, the undersigned, took a dawf ul cold id by head, cubbing hobe frob that warb dibit. Am getting room, etc., ready to begin 270 MEMOIR or P. P. BLISS. work in earnest next week. I wish you were all here with, us and could stay here all summer. But if the Tabernacle needs you — and I don't believe the Lord will let you go there unless you are needed — then that's the place for you. May His presence ever go with us both. Amen. In regard to book, etc., my only thought is to write all summer, if the Lord will please to send me some good hymns, then His wisdom in regard to publishing. I thank you for your interest in me, and hope I shall do nothing to disappoint or grieve you, or especially to grieve my Master and yours. I said to Church about what you and I agreed upon, nothing definite; but in general a book for our work would be wanted next season, and I wanted him to see Moody. My wife has been quite sick, wearied and worn — though not worried — by the journey. Picking and packing is hard work. She has lain in bed all day, but is well enough to laugh at the newspaper article and your joke on the parasols, which, she says, reminds her of the five dollars you owe her since we left the Battle House. Yours resting, P. P. B. Rome, Pennsylvania, May 11, 1876. Deak Brother : Nothing special, only yours received. All well ; I like hymn of " Hope in His Mercy " very much ; shall set it soon and sing it some. Am surprised to hear of Moody running off to so many conventions, etc. Have asked him to give us a little time on his way East, or I'd come to him. We think George is improving. He eats and sleeps Blissfully. Paul has all sorts of circuses with pigs, calves, dead chickens, mice, snakes, lizards and other " nice pets," much to his mother's consternation. I have declined eight invitations (all I've had). Am determined to rest and write all summer. Had a good visit with my mother, yesterday, in Towan- da. My wife, Lucy Jane, is usually busy buying carpets, curtains, paper, furniture, etc. She says I can't stand it and T ain't a-goin' to. I reply, with my proverbial complacency, " All right." Had a good prayer meeting last evening and read together, Psa. cxix, 1 to 8, also 97 to 104 and 129 to 136, "Look and be merciful," " Words giveth light," " Make thy face to shine." May the Lord give us all light, " more light," Father Love used to say. Love to dear Abbie, May,. baby and all; Charlie may wait. Yours when you want me, P. P. B. Rome, Pennstlvania, June 16, 1876. Dear Brother: Yours received. We haven't any earthly house yet. Had a pleasant trip to Chicago while there and return Found the boys and girls all right. LAST LETTERS. 271 Think Monroe street more desirable than Adams. I have many letters to answer, but in a lot 60x325 would have plenty of room for croquet. The weather is quite warm here, and the taxes in Chicago are nearly as high as at Lake View ! Had a good letter from Brother Sankey, but I wouldn't want to live on a cross street or in a south front. Vincent wants you at Chautauqua, the last three days. I think I will be thar, if we get our house furnished. I want a large dining-room and a bath-room*ten feet square. Augusta is reported to have paid Moody $1,500 and the papers say he deserved it. Would you want a Mansard or a barn to hang your clothes in ? I received $100 from Augusta and if you did $200 there, my part is $60, please endorse $40 on the you owe me; and if our house has a study with east windows in it, I shall be satisfied. Paul is out with Grandpa, mowing the front yard, but I don't believe we'd ever be contented on the South Side ; do you? You said " twelve alsos in 8th Romans." I can't find but eleven. To-morrow is picnic, but I can't afford time to go. I want a house near the street cars. My mother and Mr. Jennings are here ; we are having a family gathering. Take your wife to Chicago and Chautauqua. I'd be willing to go a little west of Wood street on Monroe or Warren avenue. Tend to your part of the horse, and don't be running off to conventions, female prayer-meetings, etc. We might make a bedroom of the back parlor. Give our love to Charlie. Mail and Way. I'll be glad when we're in it and it's paid for. " Tell him to keep cool and get rested for next winter," my wife says. In fact, she says so much, I fear I may have mixed up some things she says about our Chicago home with my letter to you. Rome, PENNSTLVAisriA, August 23, 1878. Dearly Beloved Brother: Tour pome is quite overcoming. My time is too precious and the game too insignificant to reply in kind. Am bent on a month of quiet ; so let me alone. Just replied to Mrs. M.'s cordial invitation to visit them in N. " No," to J. C, who offered to come to Towanda to see me. " No," to a Canadian camp- meeting. No, I have not committed myself to C. or anybody else for anything except the Lord and you. Nothing about book from Bro. Sankey or Moody. I agree with you about book and everything. I guess Moody will let G. H. and S. S. alone as it is. Wife is good and I am glad. All things are working together. Have planned to leave the boys here with Grandma and Aunt Clara, this winter, so wife can go with me. Sent all of our folks (six) to Centennial yesterday for a week. Boys are doing finely. Where are Charlie and May? Wait, like yourself, deserves spanking. Same to your wife. Yours infirm, P. P. B. 272 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. TowAKDA, Sunday, December 17, 1876. Deab Whittle : We are within ten miles of the boys, arrived here at two o'clock this morn- ing, four hours late ; so are spending this Lord's Day with my sister, where my dear old mother is " waiting." I am glad for a day with her who gave me my ^rst music lesson. And she is enjoying us so much. We remember you in our morning prayers. Suppose Chicago is all settled. Nevertheless my feeling is the same, though my faith, I hope, is stronger. If He says go I'm ready. N. B. — The Lord is your Shepherd. He will carry you through. Hope your wife is better. Dear child ! may the Lord bless her to-day. We hope to go to Rome to-morrow. Shall look for a letter from you soon. I hope the Lord will lead the meeting at P. Give our regards to the " singers as well aa the players upon instruments " who are there. Also to the Grier House, Tyngs, Reynolds, "Hams," etc. In peace I go. No fear I know. Wish you the same, P. P. CHAPTER XXIII. MR. bliss' last hymns— music BY HIS FRIENDS, SANKEY, LOWRY, DOANE, MCGRANAHAN, ROOT, STEBBINS, CASE, PALMER, MURRAY, CHRISTIE AND MRS. SCOTT. A FITTING- close to these memoirs is the contribution here made to the memory of Mr. Bliss, by friends who were very dear to him, and to whom he was very dear, and with whom he was in peculiarly pleasant relations, writing songs of praise to the same blessed Redeemer and Lord, sending out the messages of the Gospel on wings of music to the ends of the earth, These friends have kindly taken the hymns that were written by Mr. Bliss during his last days, and for which he had not prepared music, and their compo- sitions, with his words, are here for the first time published, by consent of John Church & Co., by whom words and music are copyrighted. Very kind and loving have been the messages that these brethren have sent with their music. '^I thank you for the privilege," writes dear Mr. Lowry. " Dear Bliss — ^very gladly, very cheer- fully, anything you want," was the tender reply of Root, Palmer, and all who were asked to make this contribution to the memory of their loved friend and brother. " Anything I can do for dear Bliss' orphan boys or for his family, count on me to do it," was the immediate reply of Doane ; and so this tribute comes from full, loving hearts. No thanks are expected by any, but to all this acknowledgment of their kindness is due and is gratefully rendered. Surely, those called of God, and honored with such a glorious mission, are yoked together in much to call forth mutual praise and prayer. Another Soldier Fallen. In Memory of P. P. Bliss. Verses by E. E. REXFORD. ^Con moto. Chorus and Music by G. F. ROOT. 1 L 1. An-oth-er soldier fall- en, In the rank and file of God; A life's grand record 2. Oh, faithful armor-bearer, How ma-ny eyes are dim, Because you join no 3. Oh, comrade in God's army,The battle trum-pet ring; The dear old flag you T — r I A ? m end - ed, An earth- ly pathway trod; Safe in the home he sung of. Till long - er Earth's mighty bat-tie hymn; True heart, loved as a broth- er, Your fought for Up - on the winds we fling; The thought of you will strengthen The .0 9 0 1=^ # — « — J- —+--, — I — I — I — — 1 \ hardest hearts were stirred, Among the Bongi eternal His own sweet voice is heard, friendly hand we miss, But think with heart exultant. He knows what heaven is. weak heart in the fray. And this the word we send you, We'll "hold the fort" to-day ! pa ww w CHORUS. s -St. Oh, no - ble chris-tian sol - dier, Your mem - 'ry shall be . ^ ^ ^ pi dear; 4 -i Y 3^ ' — ^ 1 J J 1 II 1 i — ^ \ M % i~ ? ^ For while you sing the New Song there, Your own shall bless us here. Copyright, 1877, y John Chiirch & Co. 274 I Believe. "Lord, I believe ; help Thou mine unbelief." Mark 9,-24. P. P. BLISS. Rev. R. LOWRY. :3= 1. My fears a - rise, And clouds ob - scure my way ; 2. By sin oppressed, To Thy dear cross I flee ; 3. When Death shall come, O, Sav - ior, come with him. With tear - ful eyes And ach - ing heart I pray : I smite my breast; Be mer ci - ful to me; And bear me home, Where tears no eyes shall dim. Sav - ior, re - lieve. Thy pres-ence brings re - lief; Let me not grieve. Thou canst dis - pel my grief ; In grace re - ceive The ser - vice here so brief; F^Wy—^ - I \j ^=¥^. Fi i ! — FT ^> I I m "Lord, "Lord, "Lord, I is: i I be - lieve ; Help Thou mine un - be - lief."^ I be -lieve; Help Thou mine un - be - lief.'* i; TT-.i„ ml , Tv^ l^T^* J> be - lieve ; Help Thou mine un - be - lief.' Copyright, 1877, by John Church & Co. ^75 p. p. Bliss. Mv Redeemer. James McGranaha'> r 1. I will sing of my Re-deem-er 2. I will tell the won'drous sto-ry, 3. I will praise my dear Re-deem-er, 4. I will sing of my Re-deem-er I And His won-'drous love to me; How my last es-tate to save. His tri - umph - ant pow'r I'll tell, And His heav n - ly love to me; On the cru - el cross He suf-fered, From the curse to set me free. In His boundless love and mer- cy. He the ran - somfree-ly gave. How the VIC -to - ry He giv- eth O- ver sin, and death, ana hell. with Him to be. He from death to life hath brought me. Son of God , ms9 ing, oh! sin S of my Re -deem - er. With His I I I I ( ! t Sing, oh ! sing of my Redeemer, Sing, oh! sing of my Redeemer, With His 5S s blood He pur- chased me, the a blood He purchased me. With His blood He purchased me; On the ^^-! \ ^ N- S ^3 He sealed my par - don, "^aid the cross lie sealed my pardon, OJi "t!a( I e cross He sealed my pardon, Paid the Kepeat P P. after last verse. debt, and made me free, And made me free, and made me free. 1 Copyright, 1877, by John Church «S: Co. 276 Within, About, Above. p. p. BLISS. T. C. O'KANE. -0 0- 1. I looked ivith-in and ponder'd How cold my heart had been; Is 2. I looked about and ponder'd,What shipwrecks strew the strand! Is 3. I looked above and wondered, What glo-ry beaming there ! My 9^ a 3 this the life of faith, I said, Or am I "dead in sin?" I there a God in heav'n a-bove, And will His kingdom stand? How Sav-ior, precious Savior, too ! My man-sion, oh, how fair ! He •6^ see no right or ti - tie, sin is growing stronger, smil - ing says "be ready," y f • g ■ / J I feel no "heav'nly glow," Is How truth and jus-tice fail, Is To join the ransomed throng; I f-f— 1 ^^^^^ 3^ Je - sus Christ my Savior now, How can He save me so ? Is Christ a mighty King to come, Does ev-'ry pray'r aj- vail ? Is know my King is coming soon, Lord Je - sus, oh, how long ! I Je - sus Christ my Savior now, How can He save me so ? Christ a mighty King to come. Does ev - 'ry pray'r a - vail ? know my King is coming soon. Lord Je - sus, oh, how long ! 5 -t Copyxigbt, 1877. by John Church & Co. 277 Tell Me more about Jesns. p. p. BLISS. JAMES McGRANAHAN. 1. 'Tis known on earth and heav-en too, 'Tis sweet to me be- 2. Earth's fairest fiowr's will droop and die, Dark clouds o'erspread yon 3. When overwhelmed with un - be - lief, When burdened with a 4. And when the Glo - ry-land I see, And take the place pre- L. , p. ^ 1 ^—^^-^^—-^-^ — f -p f f ^ r I ^_^^^=g=j= z ^^ — y y ->=: q i y f~ =^ =(=f=t=t= ^-^-jrS — U-¥i — '- uV h U \ l7T > » — y f~ cause 'tis true; The old, old story is e'er new, Tell me more about Jesus, azure sky; Life's dearest joys flit fleetest by. Tell me more about Jesus, blinding grief;Come kindly then to my relief. Tell me more about Jesus, par'd for me,Thro' endless years my song shall be,Tell me more about Jesus. ^ ft ft ^ , ^ ^b ^'-^r ^ f" ' f " f- fi-k,-^L-_^ 1 — 1 — Tell me more a-bout : Te - sus, Tell me more a - bout Je-sus ; ^ ^ • 4- i -»—--»— i- ^b-tT-^ ^--^—^ — y- -1 fc^ — — V — t- Him would I kno-vi j- ' j ' ^ who loved me so *• — .— ^ _^ \/—^ Tell me more a - bout ^ ^ ^ r --^ y — y — y — y- Je- sus. Oopyright, 1877, by John Church & Co. What wHt Thou have Me to Do? "Lord, what wilt Thou haye me to do ?" Acts 9,-6. P. P. BLISS. W. H. DOANE. =1 — hT— — « — ^ — — -9 5 •r-^- tr — ' ^ ^-^-^-^-^^0-^ — . 1. What wilt Thou have me to do, 0 Lord, What wilt Thou have me to do ? 2. What wilt Thou have me to do, 0 Lord, What wilt Thou have me to do ? 3. What wilt Thou have me to do, 0 Lord, What wilt Thou have me to do ? ^-(r8~y— y— y— y— y^- -1 J -! . i i i i Thou hast redeemed me,Thy right I own, Thine are my powers, my Savior, alone. Is it to la-bor? I'll glad-Iy go; Is it to wait ? then let it be so. Sing of Thy mercy who died for me ? Tell the good news, salvation is free ? ^V-y-^-y^=y=y== ^ — \/ — »- —0 — m-^- —0 * 9 «- — j-^ — j-v- Thou hast for me such On - ly Thy will I Say, shall I work or ' * = — ^-'-s-v y ; ' great things done, What wilt Thou have me to do ? ask to know, What wilt Thou have me to do ? sing for Thee, What wilt Thou have me to do ? P P P . . H — ^ — y — y — p — -I — -s i J J ^\ — '1 ^ What is the la-bor ap-point- ed me, Where shall I la-bor for Thee? What is the la-bor ap-point- ed me, Where shall I la-bor for Thee? What is the la-bor ap-point- ed me, Where shall I la-bor for Thee? copyright, 1877, bj John Church A Co. 279 Georgie's Welcome. Words by P. P. Bliss, upon the birth of his little boy, George Goodwin Bliss. •And whoso shall receive one such little child in my name; receiveth Me." Matt. 18,-5. P. p. BLISS. JAS. ^ McGRANAHAN. •4- 1. Welcome in the dear Lord's name, Welcome as can be; He has said "it 3. Je - sus is our Shepherd, dear, We in Him believed; He to us has V-4- ^5 I 1>UETT. is the same As receiv-ing me." Tar-ry, if it be His will, come Senear, Himhavewere- ceiYed. Welcome, then, dear Je - sus, Thou, Ma-ny a happy year; But if not we glad- ly still Bid thee w el-come Who our life didst give, Humbly at Thy feet we bow, And Thy-self re- r-f — ^ REFRAIN. n — here, ceive. Welcome in the dear Lord's name, Wei - come as can be : o #— » ^ 5=t He has said —9 #— "it the same As re - ceiv - ing me.' 15^ Copyright, 1877,:by John Church \ 2=5 1. 1 do be-lieve that Je-sus died To save a world from woe, That 2. I asked a lit - tie child, her face With an - gel light a - glow, How 3. I would see Je - sup, sir, said I, To one in manhood's prime,For I v—y- 1 i h on the cross th she obtained for- ref - uge to the e cruci-fied His giving grace, That rock would fly In mighty love did . I her joy might the ac-cept - ed 5 how. I know. A time. Tel do ook me, believe Thy she gave of for I would 1 11 1 ■ ! N 1 ^ \^ F ■ 'F. P J — L^-l^ IV— U S! 1 1 1 ^^^^ sad surprise, That I should doubtin^.be, While tear drops filled her wonder eyes, She come to-day, Show me the way, aud how; He read the words "I am the way," And 1 — r-r can not un-derstand, But how to come, or what to do I can not un-derstand. answered "He loves me," While teardrops filled her wonder eyes she answered"He loves me. said "Just trust Him now,"He read the words"Iamtheway,"And said" Just trust Him now. 4. -F— r- 5 Dear aged pilgrim, drawing near To death^s dark, shadowy vale. How dost thou "read thy title clear?" Does saving faith avail ? He answered as he neared the shore, And earth's lights grew more dim ; 1: Forever and forever-more, rest it all in flim.:| Jesus, Thou Son of God, to Thee I breathe this prayer sincere: Thine, Thine forever would I be, O save me now and here. It was Thy plan and not my own That Thou shouldst die for me; i: Thine is the power, and Thine alone, trust, O Lord, in Thee.:l Copyright, 1877, by John Church & Co. 284 stand Stm,0,Cliildof GodI Ex. xiv, 13, and 14. Josh, iii, 13. ii Cheon. xx, 17. P. P. BLISS, finished by Major D. W. WHITTLE. GEO. C. STEBBINS. 1. Stand still and trust His might, Who bids your trembling cease; 2. Stand still, tho' Jordan's wave In gath'ring billows roar; 3. Stand still, and sing, and praise, ^ The bat - tie is not thine ; F-=f= i-\ ~^ — 1 The Lord for you shall fight, The Lo:^ will surely save, Stand still, while God displays And ye shall hold your peace. March on to Canaan's shore. His grace and pow'r divine. 1*1' 1 1 ^ 1a 1 1 k — » — » » - r 1 F- 1 H U-l U ■ -1 y-i — h- CBORUS. A 1 (V— ] 1-^ — \ V- 1 — ' ^-1 stand 1 still, oh i \j • w- i, child of -f — » God! Wha( - *■ L_ /-ev - er ill be-t ide ; Stand 1 ^ 1 1 still and trust His word. And in His love a - bide. Stand still and trust His word. And in His love a - bide. Copyright, 1877, by John Church & Co. 285 Arise, Work and Pray. "The effectual, fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much." Jas. 5,-16, "And I will show Thee my faith by my v/orks." Jas. 2, — 16. P. P. BLISS. Mes. C. H. SCOTT. 1. Somewhere, says a mother, my dar-ling is dwelling, I've watched for my 2. Somewhere, in his office, a husband is writing, The tri - als of 3. Somewhere in the wide world, a sis-ter or brother, May now be re- m tez:^=i boy till my eyes have grown dim ; His sins and temp-ta-tions I bus - 'ness have wrinkel'd his brow. The spir - it's entrea-ties he claimed from the broad downward way ; A soul is indan-ger, child. would not be telling, Christ on - ly can save him, oh, pray, pray for him. long has been fightmg, His wife says,Dearchristian friend, pray for him now. fath-er, or moth-er, Oh, slum - ber no long- er, arise, work and pray. 1st and 2d verses. Oh, pray for him now. Oh, pray for him now,Christ only can save him, Oh, pray for him now, 3. Arise,work and pray, Arise,work and pray, Oh, slumber no longer, Arise,work and pray. e,work and pray. Oh, slumber no longer, Ar Copyrlght, 1877, by John Clmrch & Co. 286 The Good News. p. p. BLISS. H. R. PALMER. 1. I've heard the good news in the Gos 2. Some-times when I walk in the dart 3. He tells me that soon I shall - pel, It makes me so hap-py and free, -ness. My path-way I hard-ly can see, Him, I won-der how long it will be; 5 9^ m That Je-sus re-mem-bers the chil - dren, I know But trust-ing "Our Fath-er in Heav - en," 1 know He's gone to pre-pare me a man - sion, I know He will care for me. He will choose for me. He will come for me. 5 _j_ 5 I know He will care for me, for me, I know He will care for me, I know He will choose for me, for me, I know He will choose for me, I know He will come for me, for me, I know He will come for me, "1: ^' Yes, Je-sus remembers the chil - dren, I know He will care for me. But ti'ust-ing "Our Fath-er in Heav-en," I know He will choose for me. He's gone to pre-pare me a man - sion, I know He will come for me. Copyright, 1877, by John Church «fc Co. 287 The Good News. Concluded. rHORFS. I know He will care for me, for me, I know He will care for me, I know He will choose for me, for me, I know He will choose for me, I know He will come for me, for me, I know He will come for me. I— V, t — ^-N-^ -a — ^ — a— -% — ^ " b— y— '^-^Ti ^ —5 — *: Yes, Je - sus re -mem-bers the chil - dren, But tnist-ing "Our Fath-er in Heav - en," He's gone to pre-pare me a man - sion, I know He will care for me. I know He will choose for me. I know He will come for me. B -f- f- 0 0-, 0 —0- A — 1 — 1 — \ h- -0-^-0— \ -\ -T— \J -^-U-V-yr—k I'- .... 1 ^ ',0 h L 1 When My Weary Hands are Folded. 'When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee ; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee." Isa. 43,-2. Words written by P. P. BLISS for I. D. S. I K L IRA D. SANKEY. P ^ ~0- -0- -0- When my wea - ry hands are fold - ed on my faint - ly But a great - er joy 'twill give me if some toil - ing When the songs of earth are o - ver, and my last "good ! N i throbbing breast, And my soul has one can say, I have helped to bye" is said, When my life - less spread her pin - ions bear his bur- den form they fol - low Copyright, 1877, by John Church & Co. 288 When My Weary Hands, etc. Concluded. 1 \ C \ f^-n -hd^ — « — — m 1 — ' — J — 35 — — ^— 1 for the cit - y and have cheered hi to the dwell-ing __ 0 0 _ 0 — , of in on of * • the blest ; the way ; the dead ; 'Twill Oh! 'TwiU be sweet I'll praise be sweet to His if — f— q — f — i« — -i \J U . 1 1^ 1 hear the loved ones sing some dear fa • grace for - ev - er who hath died to friends re-mem -bar and shall mark the mil - iar song, ran - som me, qui - et spot, rit. As I rise to join the chorus of the blood-washed, holy throng. And hath chosen me a shar- er in His bless - ed work to be. Tell - ing on - ly that the sleeper hath not quickly be sn for- got. 1 . , 1 »- — -j ^ ^ ^ -r f ^ » — f »-r^ * * h-9 w — n 4. But if one poor tired wand'rer shall be guided home by me, 'Twere a grander, nobler monument throughout all eternity ; And to Him shall be the glory, unto whom all praise is due. For the love that hath redeemed us, and hath made my Heaven two. 5. When among the ransomed millions, by His grace redeemed I stand. Then my song shall swell the chorus of the glad triumphant band ; Oh, how sweet will be the resting, when my conflicts all are past,^ Oh, the mighty "Alleluia" of our victory at last ! Copyriglit, 1877, by John Cliurch & Ca 289 CHAPTER XXIV. THE DISASTER AT ASHTABULA— THE NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS— THE STORY OF AN EYE-WITNESS — MR. BLISS GOES BACK TO SAVE HIS WIPE AND IS BURNED TO DEATH. THE railroad train on which Mr. and Mrs. Bliss rode to their death left Buffalo, New York, on Friday afternoon, December 29, 1876. At eight o'clock that evening, while approaching Ashta- bula station, and crossing a ravine, the bridge gave way, and the train, with its precious freight of human lives, was precipitated to the bottom. Eresh as is the memory of this horror in the minds of all, the newspaper accounts given at the time will be read now with renewed interest, and fittingly form a part of the record made in these pages. [Dispatch to the Chicago Tribune.] Ashtabula, Ohio, Decemher 30, 187b. The proportions of the Ashtabula horror are now approximately known.. Daylight, which gave an opportunity to find and enumerate the saved, reveals the fact that two out of every three passengers on the fated train are lost. Of the 160 passengers whom the maimed conductor reports as having been on board, but fifty-nine can be found or accounted for. The remaining 100, burned to ashes or shapeless lumps of charred flesh, lie under the ruins of the bridge and train. The disaster was dramatically complete. No element of horror was want ing. First, the crash of the bridge, the agonizing moments of suspense as the seven laden cars plunged down their fearful leap to the icy river-bed ; then the fire which came to devour all that had been left alive by the crash ; then the water, which gurgled up from under the broken ice and offered another form of death , and, finally, the biting blast filled with snow, which froze and benumbed those who had escaped water and fire. It was an ideal tragedy. The scene of the accident was the valley of the creek which, flowing down past the eastern margin of Ashtabula village, passes under the railway three or four hundred yards east of the station. Here for many years after the Lake Shore road was built there was a long wooden trestle-work, but as the road was improved this was superseded about ten years ago with an iron Howe truss. THE DISASTER AT ASHTABULA. 291 built at the Cleveland shops, and resting at either end upon high stone piers, flanked by heavy earthen embankments. The iron structure was a single span of 159 feet, crossed by a double track seventy feet above the water, which at that point is now from three to six feet deep, and covered with eight inches of ice. The descent into the valley on either side is precipitous, and, as the hills and slopes are piled with heavy drifts of snow, there was no little difficulty in reaching the wreck after the disaster became known. The disaster occurred shortly before eight o'clock. It was the wildest win- ter night of the year. Three hours behind its time, the Pacific Express, which had left New York the night before, struggled along through the drifts and the blinding storm. The eleven cars were a heavy burden to the two engines, and when the leading locomotive broke through the drifts beyond the ravine, and rolled on across the bridge, the train was moving at less than ten miles an hour. The head lamp threw but a short and dim flash of light in the front, so thick was the air with the driving snow. The train crept across the bridge, the leading engine had reached solid ground beyond, and its driver had just given it steam, when something in the undergearing of the bridge snapped. For an instant there was a confused crackling of beams and girders, ending with a tremendous crash, as the whole train but the leading engine broke through the framework, and fell in a heap of crushed and splintered ruins at the bottom. Notwithstanding the wind and storm, the crash was heard by people within-doors half a mile away. For a moment there was silence, a stunned sensation among the survivors, who in all stages of mutilation lay piled among the dying and dead. Then arose the cries of the maimed and suffering ; the few who remained unhurt hastened to escape from the shattered cars. They crawled out of windows into freezing water waist-deep. Men, women and children, with limbs bruised and broken, pinched between timbers and transfixed by jagged splinters, begged with their last breath for aid that no human power could give. Five minutes after the train fell, the fire broke out in the cars piled against the abutments at either end. A moment later, flames broke from the smoking- car and first coach piled across each other near the middle of the stream. In less than ten minutes after the catastrophe, every car in the wreck was on fire, and the flames, fed by the dry varnished work and fanned by the icy gale, licked up the ruins as though they had been tinder. Destruction was so swift that mercy was baffled. Men who, in the bewilderment of the shock, sprang out and reached the solid ice, went back after wives and children and found tfiem suffocating and roasting in the flames. The neighboring residents, ^artled by the crash, were lighted to the scene by the conflagration, which made even their prompt assistance too late. By midnight, the cremation was complete. The storm had subsided, but the wind still blew fiercely, and the cold was more intense. When morning came, all that remained of the Pacific Express was a winrow of car wheels, axles, brake-irons, truck-frames, and twisted rails lying in a black pool at the bottom of the gorge. The wood had burned completely away, and the ruins were covered with white ashes. Here and there a mass of charred, smoldering substance sent up a little cloud of 292 MEMOIR or P. P. BLISS. sickening vapor, which told that it was human flesh slowly yielding to the corrosion of the fire. On the crest of the western abutment, half buried in the snow, stood the rescued locomotive, all that remained of the fated train. As the bridge fell, its driver had given it a quick head of steam, which tore the drawhead from its tender, and the liberated engine shot forward and buried itself in the snow. The other locomotive, drawn backward by the falling train^ tumbled over the pier ^d fell bottom upward on the express car next behind. The engineer, Folsom, escaped with a broken leg ; how, he cannot tell, nor can any one else imagine. There is no death-list to report. There can be none until the list of the missing ones who traveled by the Lake Shore Road on Friday is made up. lliere are no remains that can ever be identified. The three charred, shape- less lumps recovered up to noon to-day are beyond all hope of recognition. Old or young, male or female, black or white, no man can tell. They are alike in the crucible of death. For the rest, there are piles of white ashes in which glisten the crumbling particles of calcined bones ; in other places masses of black, charred debris, half under water, which may contain fragments of bodies, but nothing of human semblance. It is thought that there may be a few corpses under the ice, as there were women and children who sprang into the water and sank, but none have been thus far recovered. [Dispatch to the Cleveland Leader.] The haggard dawn, which drove the darkness out of this valley of the shadow of death, seldom saw a ghastlier sight than was revealed with the coming of this morning. On either side of the ravine frowned the dark and bare arches from which the treacherous timbers had fallen, while at their base the great heaps of ruins covered the one hundred men, women and children who had so suddenly been called to their death. The three charred bodies lay where they had been placed in the hurry and confusion of the night. Piles of iron lay on the thick ice, or bedded in the shallow water of the stream. The fires smouldered in great heaps, where many of the hapless victims had been all consumed, while men went about in wild excitement, seeking some trace of a lost one among the wounded or dead. The. list of saved and wounded having been already sent, the sad task remains of discovering who may be among the dead. The latter task will be the most difficult of all, until the continued absence of here and there a friend will allow of but one explanation — that he was among those who took this fatal leap. All the witnesses so far agree to the main facts of the accident. It was about 8 o'clock, and the train was moving along at a moderate rate of speed, the Ashtabula station being just this side of the ravine. Suddenly, and with- out warning, the train plunged into the abyss, the forward locomotive alone getting across in safety. Almost instantly, the lamps and stoves set fire to the cars, and many who were doubtlessly only stunned, and who might otherwise have been saved, fell victims to the fury of the flames. £ THE DISASTER AT ASHTABULA. 293 On the arrival of the Cleveland train, the surgeon of the road organized his corps of assistants, and made a tour of the various hotels, where the wounded were attended to, such help being given to each as was possible. The people of Ashtabula lent a willing hand, and all that human skill and money could do to save life or ease pain was done. The train which came from Cleveland for the purpose was immediately backed into position, and long before daylight the least wounded were being prepared for transportation to Cleveland, to be sent to hospitals or their homes. The scenes among the wounded were as suggestive almost as the wreck in the valley. The two hotels nearest the station contained a majority of these, as they were scattered about on temporary beds on the floors of the dining- rooms, parlors and offices. In one place, a man with a broken leg would be under the hands of a surgeon, who rapidly and skillfully went at his work. In another, a man covered with bruises and spotted over with pieces of plas- ter, would look as though he had been snowed upon, except when the dark lines of blood across his face or limb told a different story. In some other corner, a poor woman moaned from the pain which she could not conceal, while over all there brooded that hushed feeling of awe which always accom. panies calamities of this character. Towards morning, the cold increased and the wind blew a fearful gale whioh, with ths sncv?, that had drifted waiso-deep at points along the iine made all work extremely difficult. At 6 o'clock, the beds in the sleeping-car of the special train were made up and such of the wounded as could be moved were transferred there. The story of most painful interest to us — to all who will read this book, and all who knew and loved P. P. Bliss and his wife — is that told by Mr. J. E. Burchell, partner of Mr. B. F. Jacobs, of Chicago, who was on the ill-fated train. We give his account in full ; There were eleven cars on the train that left Buffalo at two o'clock Friday afternoon. There were two engines, three baggage, one smoker, two coaches, three sleepers and one parlor car. I should judge there were 250 passengers. We pulled out of Buffalo in a blinding snow-storm, an hour late, and ran at the rate of about fifteen miles an hour until about an hour, or may be only half an hour, before the accident, when she slacked up to about ten miles an hour. The second engine was taken on at about Dunkirk. Just before reach- ing the bridge, the snow was very heavy, and at that station near by, the name of which I have forgotten, there was every danger of being snowed in. We had lost an hour and a half from Buffalo to the bridge. Before reaching the bridge, I went through the train and noticed that the coaches and the smoker were filled. The smoker did not come in its regular order. There were two passenger coaches ahead of it. Next behind the smoker was the parlor car, in which Mr. Bliss and his family were, and I noticed it 294 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. was one-third full. I was in the car behind the parlor, and my car was filled Behind that were the three sleepers, which were also nearly filled. We neared the bridge at about 7:45, though due at Ashtabula at 5:15. East of the bridge the country is rolling, and beyond the creek it grows more level. We ran on the structure at a rate of about ten miles an hour, and the whole train was on the bridge when it gave way. The bridge is about two hundred feet long, and only the first engine had passed over when the crash came, the weight of the falling cars nearly pulling back the locom-otive that had passed over. The first thing I heard was a cracking in the front part of the car, and then the same cracking in the rear. Then came another cracking in the front loud- er than the first, and then came a sickening oscillation and a sudden sinking, and I was thrown stunned from my seat. I heard the cracking, and splinter- ing and smashing around me. The iron work bent and twisted like snakes, and everything took horrid shapes. I heard a lady scream in anguish, "Oh! help me ! " Then I heard the cry of fire. Some one broke a window and I pushed out the lady who had screamed. I think her name was Mrs. Bingham. The train lay in the valley in the water, our car a little on its side, both ends broken in. The rest of the train lay in every direction, some on end, some on the side, crushed and broken, a terrible but picturesque sight. Below were the water and broken ice ; seventy feet above was the broken bridge. Mrs. Bingham sank down in the snow and I went back after my coat. Securing that, I went to her and carried her, with a dozen stumbles and falls, up the bank. The snow in the valley was nearly to my waist, and I could only move with diflBculty. The wreck was then on fire. The wind was blow- ing from the east and whirling blinding masses of snow over the terrible ruin. The crackling of the flames, the whistling wind, the screaming of the hurt, made a pandemonium of that little valley, and the water of the freezing creek was red with blood or black with the flying cinders. I did not then know that any lives had been lost. All had escaped alive, though all were bruised or injured. The fire stole swiftly along the wreck, and in a few moments the cars were all in flames. The ruins covered the whole space between the two piers, the cars jammed in or locked together. One engine lay in the creek, smashed to pieces, the ruins breathing steam and fire. I carried Mrs. Bingham to the only house near by, and which appeared to be an engine-house. I was completely exhausted, and remained there forty- five minutes, when the injured began to arrive. I think there were fifty-two brought in alive, but one or two died after their removal to the town, where they were subsequently taken. The town was about a quarter of a mile distant. I did not go back to the wreck, but from the engine-house door I could see into the ravine, and the fearful scene it presented. The sight was sickening. The whole wreck was then on fire, and from out the frozen valley came great bursts of flame. There were crowds of men there, but the fire beat them back, and they could do nothing. The wounded were lying around in the snow, or were laid on stretchers or taken on the backs of men and carried up the blufE. The spectacle was frightful, but those who had gone to assist worked steadily THE DISASTER AT ASHTABULA. 295 and well in spite of tlie intense heat. They carried away all who could be rescued, and then waited mournfully for the flames to subside, so that bodies might be taken out. As fast as the injured were secured, they were taken to the hotel. That was some time before anything could be done, for in thirty minutes after the fall it was impossible to get near it for the fire. I think it likely that a great many were buried under the cars, and lost in that way. The hotel was about a quarter of a mile from the creek, and as the long line of stretchers and stout men bore the sulferers along, the stormy air was filled with moanings of anguish. At the hotel, the wounded were kindly cared for. Physicians and surgeons were early on hand, and every effort was made to relieve the sufi'erers. One lady, whose foot had been crushed, was carried shrieking in labor pains to the little hotel, and during the night she gave birth to a child. From the top of the bluff to the water's edge it is, I should think, from seventy to eighty feet, and along that bluff there ranged lines of excited men looking down on the burning, helpless agony below. It was a heart-rending scene. The mangled, bleeding bodies writhed in the terrible tortures around them. Some died with prayer and some with shriekings of woe on their lips. Some were caught in the iron and woodwork, and held while the flames crept upon them and burned them in the very sight of cool, rippling water. As they died, they fixed their bloodshot eyes longingly upon the snow that beat piti- lessly down, and lay white and beautiful on their smoke-blackened faces. The fire crept steadily on through the snow flakes, leaping from one mass of ruins to another, licking up the blood as it passed along, and crushing out human lives as remorselessly as it curled around the stubborn woodwork. When the train fell, Mr. Bliss succeeded in crawling through a window, supposing he could pull his wife and children after him. But they were jammed fast and every effort of his was unavailing. The car was all jammed up, and the lady and her children were caught in the ironwork of the seats. Finding that he could not save them, he staid there with them and died. Most all the passengers who escaped did so by way of the windows. There was no egress at the doors, for the stoves were there. One lady was pulled from a window, and almost every stitch of clothing stripped from her, and when they were taking her out the rescuing party could hear the screams of women and children for aid, but could render them no assistance. Those who came from the wreck said they could see into the cars and could see the charred trunks of those who had been literally burned to death. They described them as wholly unrecognizable beyond identification, and present- ing the most ghastly scene they had ever looked on. Some of the unfortu- nates were burned literally to ashes, and in some cases only calcined bones were left to tell that human beings had ever been there. Of the fifty-two taken from the wreck, all were more or less injured, and about forty of them dangerously, if not fatally. I don't remember any names. I was badly shaken up and bruised, and I think there was only one man who was as little hurt as I was. 296 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. There was a fire-engine there, but there was no hose. I think the fire lasted about an hour, and by that time all the cars were burned. I don't think any one was taken out alive after the fire. I am fearful that all who were not saved before the flames got headway perished in the general conflagration. I should say there were at the least reckoning one hundred and fifty per- sons killed outright or burned to death, and this in spite of the fact that some of the officers claim that there were only one hundred and sixty-five on the train. I don't know the name of a human being among the killed, except Mr. Bliss and his family, and I don't know the names of any of the injured. All along the road coming from the scene are anxious men, fearful that friends or rela- tives were on the train and killed or injured. Perhaps some of them may yet hear of deplorable losses, for the railroad officials admit that there were over one hundred killed. Fortunately, the dear children of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss had been left at Rome, and they were safe. The father and mother "went before " them into the valley of the shadow of death. CHAPTER XXV. m MEMORIAM— FEELING AND GLOWING TRIBUTES, IN POETRY AND PROSE, PROM EDITORS, CLERGYMEN, SINGERS AND FRIENDS, TO THE MEMORY OP THE DEPARTED SONG WRITER. "TpEOM yarious sources we select a few of the many good things which have been said of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss since the sad event of their death. " None knew them but to love them ; none spoke but to praise them." The editorial columns of the Chicago Biter- Ocean contained the following glowing tribute to our friend, written while it was sfcill supposed that Mr. Bliss' children were among tho lo?t tit Ashtabula : P. P. Bliss, the song writer, the author of "Hold the Fort," "The Armor- Bearer," " Almost Persuaded," and scores of other popular songs, was on the train that went down with a crash to terrible destruction at Ashtabula, He was coming from the holiday meeting at his old home, with its tender mem- ories clinging to him, to hold a grand praise meeting in Chicago, to which he was looking forward with all the wholesome enthusiam of his stalwart, Chris- tian manhood. Moving along a line leading from joyous scene to pleasant duty, he was stopped midway to die with wife and children ; to die in an attempt to save those he loved from a terrible fate. This horror of a railroad disaster has darkened many a home ; in the case of Mr. Bliss it destroyed one — blotted it out as with a thunder crash. The catastrophe has depressed the public, a public already sore to the heart's core over the Brooklyn theater disaster ; but in the death of Mr. Bliss it touches chords that bring it home as a family grief to every church and Sabbath School in America and England. Mr. Bliss was the song writer of the church and Sabbath School. He stood prominent among those earnest workers who have invested Sabbath School music with the cheerfulness, lightness, brightness and briskness that were wanting in the old hymns, and who have added to them new pathos and ten- derness. His works were songs rather than hymns, and they were written under the inspiration of the ideal song writer. In words and music his com- positions were adapted to the longings and wants of those he desired to reach. The illustrations were familiar, the methods were striking, the sentiment was an echo of the feeling in his own heart. He seized quickly upon incident or 298 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. figure, or story, and turned it to good account. Catching suggestions from the actual life of the people, his songs and his musical compositions came to the masses as revelations. The relation of an army incident suggested " Hold the Fort." It was written on the impulse of the moment, and it has traveled the world over. It has been translated into not only nearly all the European lan- guages, but into Chinese and the native languages of India. It is not too much to say that it is popular beyond any other Sabbath School song of the age. And with it travel others almost as popular ; " What Will the Harvest Be ? " " Almost Persuaded," " Only an Armor-Bearer," etc., etc. When we remember that every child, from the lisping four- year-old to the youth of fifteen or eighteen, is singing in Sabbath School and home, " Only an armor-bearer proudly I stand," and that not only in home and Sabbath School, but at political meetings, people have been shouting " Hold the fort, for I am coming," then, and not till then, do we realize how near this man, whom we of Chicago knew so well, was to the people at large. And when we read these songs and hear the simple music, we go further, and realize how much he has helped all people, but particularly the young, toward a better life. Mr. Bliss was a fine specimen of the vigorous and robust man. He was gifted with a sweet voice and an attractive manner. He carried into his musical work the martial bearing and movement of the commander in a great crusade. This spirit breathes along his lines and swells in all his music. Children caught quickly this heroic spirit. His military figures found the nation responsive. He is never, in any composition, at a halt. He is always marching forward or struggling upward. There is always the suggestion of the leader's plume to the front ; there is always a purpose, a hope, a promise, a resolve, at the heart ; there is always present the spirit that moves masses to responsive or heroic moods, or that pathos that calls out the best there is in man. Hence the popularity of Mr. Bliss' compositions, and, more important, the good influence they have exerted. As with Mr. Moody, the people of Chicago have watched the course of Mr. Bliss with peculiar interest. Those earnest in Christian work observed with pleasure his growing toward the conviction that he must enter a wider field. They were familiar with the doubts in his own mind, which went down one by one under the resolve that he must do his whole duty, and they have rejoiced over the good results of his work. And this class of earnest workers, numbering in its ranks Mr. Moody and many of the ministers of the city, have seen with clearer vision than the masses the spirit and purpose of Mr. Bliss. They have known him better and have understood him better 1 han have the people at large. But to all he has spoken as a friend ; and standing appalled before the Ashtabula horror, many will turn shivering to the picture of the song-maker struggling to save his wife and children. And then will come that vivid picture of his own : On, like a fiend in its towering wratli, On, and destruction alone points the path; Mercy ! 0 heaven I the sufferers wail- Feeble humanity, naught can avail. KEY. DR. SEMPLE'S SERMON". 299 So lie went down to death. And of this sudden coming of death he has said : I know not the hour when my Lord will come To take me away to His own dear home ; But I know that His presence will lighten the gloom, And that will be glory for me. People think and speak in formula furnished by this man now dead, and many will recall reminiscences of his home life that make very touching this picture of his terrible death. One of his intimate friends relates how many of his compositions, now famous, first found shape in his own home ; of how, with wife and children and a few chosen friends about him, he first sung the songs that were to be given to the world. And this friend tells of how the singer and his family rejoiced over the perfecting of some work that reflected an experience or trial or struggle or rejoicing that they themselves had lived through. The man spoke from the heart of his home, and no wonder he touched the popular heart. In a sermon preached at Minneapolis, Minnesota, on the 6th of January, Eev. E. F. Semple, D. D., expressed himself as follows respecting Mr. Bliss and his work. Want of space alone prevents our publishing the sermon in full : There are many stricken households, widely scattered, greatly mourning the disaster at Ashtabula bridge. Some of our number lost near kindred on that dreadful night : the joy of the marriage succeeded by the wail of death. And there' was one widely known and greatly beloved. Hence, thousands in this and in other lands, as the electric wire flashed the sad intelligence of his decease, cried in the bitterness of their grief, "Alas ! my brother," Wherever the sweeti" Gospel Songs" were sung, and especially where the voice of him who wrot^tliem had been heard, there is sorrow such as has sel- dom been surpassed. With feelings of peculiar sadness, relieved only by the light from beyond, we who linger a little behind now sing, Down life's dark vale we wander, Till Jesus comes. And hereafter, as we join in the familiar song, there will come to us thoughts of a night dark and stormy ; and as we look through the blinding tempest we shall see a noble form moving calmly on, and a manly face turned heavenward, and shall hear a voice of marvelous compass and sweetness singing, in trustful strains, mingling with, and rising above, the meanings of the wintry winds — Though the pathway be lonely and dangerous, too, Surely Jesus is able to carry us through ; and then as the weary, blistered feet touch the heavenly shore, we catch the triumphant refrain — 300 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. Hallelujah 1 'tis done 1 I believe on the Son, I am saved by the blood of the Crucified One. You all know to wliom I refer. I liave scarcely felt that I could trust my- self to speak his name. I had come to know him intimately, and to love him tenderly, and to confide in him implicitly. The brother beloved who had la- bored with him in Gospel services, and was competent to form a judgment of his character, said of him, " He is the purest minded man I ever knew." There certainly have been few so loving, unselfish and kind. He was singularly art- less. He wore no disguise. In presence dignified and commanding as Saul among the children of Israel, he was in spirit simple, and unostentatious, and confiding as a child. His songs were like himself. They were the utterances of his own great heart. They claimed no relation, and had none, to the meas- ured and lofty poetry of the Homeric hymns. They were sweet lyrics rather. The most intellectual were moved by them. The unlearned understood them. They were fragrant with the love of Jesus, and I doubt not led many to Him. Already they are sung in every land. Though born within the last decade, they have overtaken the sacred hymns of Watts, and Newton, and Toplady ; and some of them will live as long. It was well said of such songs as "Hold the Fort," "Almost Persuaded," " When Jesus Comes," and We're Going Home To-morrow," that, " As the years roll on, like the handsful of seed dropped in the furrow, they chall yield increasing harvests, till from all lands a^ud kin- dreds and tongues there shall come up a mighty throng to cast their crowns at the feet of that dear Lord whose dying love it was our brother's highest joy to magnify." And we fully accord with the judgment of anotjier, that " Evangelical song lost its greatest exponent when Philip P. Bliss staid by the car in Ashtabula Creek," and burned to death in the fruitless attempt to save his wife — an act characteristic of his affectionate and self-forgetful nature. This dear brother has sown seeds in the hearts of many whom I now ad- dress, which I fervently hope shall yet bring forth immortal fruitage in theii salvation. How tenderly did he speak to the young, of Christ, the children's friend, and urge them to come to Him. How earnestly did he pray that they might know Jesus, and rejoice in His light. The memory of those November days will abide with us down to the winter of life, and we shall always be thankful that our dear brethren in Christ, Whittle and Bliss, came this way ; loving evangelists, who pointed us to the wicket gate of Mercy, and bade us hasten to it. *** ***** I recall a sweet and solemn service, when our dear brother and his equally lovely wife sang together a hymn which was prophetic of their end — may it be of our peaceful departure : Through the valley of the shadow I must go, Where the cold waves of Jordan roll ; But the promise of my Shepherd will, I know, Be the rod and staff of my soul. UEV. G. C. WATEEMAJ?". 30i Even now down the valley as I glide, I can hear my Savior say, " Follow me ; " And with him I'm not afraid to cross the tide. There's a light in the valley for me. Now the rolling of the billows I can hear, As they beat on the turf -bound shore, But the beacon light of love so bright and clear Guides my bark frail and lone safely o'er. I shall find down the valley no alarms, For my blessed Savior's smile I can see, He will bear me in His loving, mighty arms— There's a light in the valley for me. Dear brother and sister, sweet singers in Israel, farewell ! There is a strange stillness in the air since you went ; a strange sorrow in our hearts. But it is well ; for God hath done it. Perchance the day on which you left us was a festal day in heaven, and your voices were needed in the song of the redeemed. Farewell ; yet not forever. On some glad day, not afar off, we shall hope to meet you yonder : Saved through the blood of the Crucified One. From Eev. G. 0. Waterman we have the following words of loring praise : Philip Bliss was my friend. I loved him as a brother, and have good rea- son to believe that the love was returned in full measure. My acquaintance with him began a few years before he went to Chicago, and up to that time was intimate, so that a friendship struck its roots into our hearts which has lived and grown through ten years of separation. In those days he was engaged in teaching singing schools, holding musical conventions and occasionally giv- ing concerts with Mr. John G. Towner, who was his first teacher in music. He was a frequent guest at my house, coming sometimes alone, sometimes with Mr. Towner, and sometimes bringing his wife with him, but always welcome. His personal appearance and bearing were such as to attract and win respect and friendship wherever he went. Nature had lavished upon him a profusion of charms. Not Saul or David was more eminent among his fellows for fine physique and manly beauty. Homer would have put him high among his heroes and described him with his choicest epithets. He was at once dignified and genial ; a subtle and peculiar grace, which never degenerated into softness or sickly sentimentality, invested all that he did or said. Behind this there lay, not quite concealed, no small amount of power. These qualities, in com- bination with the instructive faculties which he possessed in a high degree, fitted him in an admirable manner for the work of teaching in his chosen pro- fession. There was running through his temperament a rich vein of genial humor, bubbling forth in all sorts of unlooked-for ways, in odd conceits and quaint terms of expression, in rhymes and jingles, which made him a most delightful companion and correspondent. In it all there was never a drop of 302 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. scalding sarcasm, biting acidity or turbid foulness ; it was always pure, sweet and healthful as the waters from the mountain spring. After a few years of this pleasant intercourse, our paths diverged from the quiet valley in which they had crossed and recrossed so often, his to lead into the heart of the life of the West, mine to wind along in other humble re- treats ; but from time to time golden threads were thrown across the interven- ing space, slender but strong, holding together loving hearts in two circles. When at length the great sorrow of my life came upon me and death quenched the central light of my household, he poured out the wealth of his loving heart in words of tender sympathy, bidding me "lean hard on the great Bur- den-bearer," and helped me with a brother's strong sympathy. I have not seen him since he entered upon his active evangelistic work with Major Whittle, but have followed him with deep interest, and rejoiced in all that God hath wrought through them. Soon after he begun this work, two years ago this very day, January 13th, he wrote me thus : " Do I enjoy this Gospel song singing ? What a queer question for a musical minister to ask ! There never was anything like it. Certainly the Master blesses us greatly, even now ; with greater experience and greater faith we are expecting the increase of blessing. * * * Still there's more to follow;" to this he subscribed himself, " Gospel Songfully Yours." In the Peoria (Illinois) Transcript, we find the following, from Kev. A. R. Thompson, Pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church in that city : O, thou sweet singer ! hast thou passed away While yet thy voice is lingering on our ear ? Must hearts so full of joy but yesterday Give place to sorrow and the bitter tear ? Is thy sweet life of love and song no more ? Thy noble manhood scarcely reaching prime ; Yet in its richness fertile with a store Of sacred melody and heavenly rhyme. No more, sweet singer! Oh these words "no more Thy voice shall thrill and soften every breast ; Thy anthems sung, thy mission now is o'er, And thou hast gone to thy celestial rest. Tender and loving, song was but thy prayer — An inspiration strain from realms above — And in angelic music thou didst bear The soul's petition to a God of love. FEOM KEY. B. W. MORGAK. 303 Thy noble wife I of self the counterpart, Whose voice and being blended with thine own : In counsel, love, encouraging thy heart, Till she, so loving, in thy nature shone. Bright spirits both ! your work on earth is done, Your memory in sweet song shall ever live — Your life of faith and love ere now has won A crown of Him whose joy it is to give. R. W. Morgan, editor of The Christian, published in London, England, discourses, in a letter to his journal, as follows, respecting the work of Mr. Bliss : "And devout men carried Stephen to his burial, and made great lamenta- tion over him." Something of this kind has been repeated here. The lamen- tation is over two of the sweetest singers in Israel — Mr, and Mrs. P. P. Bliss — without even the mournful satisfaction of carrying them to their burial. I scarcely know how to write the sorrowful tidings which I have to send to-day. I had gone to Canada for Christmas week, and returned on Saturday night (Dec. 30) to meet these friends in Jesus, and make some final arrangements as to their coming to England with Major Whittle in the spring. Though I had heard on the way of a frightful railway accident at Ashtabula, in Ohio, it did not occur to me that they would be traveling by that very train — the Pacific Express. But on arriving at Chicago I was appalled to hear that they had perished on the previous night. I have already written of my sojourn at Peoria, where I spent a few days with them. Mr. Bliss was a saint indeed, and his wife a true helpmate to him. A prince and a great man is fallen in Israel," and of him and his sweet wife it may well be added, " They were lovely and pleasant in their lives, and in their death they were not divided." On Saturday night, Major Whittle, Mr. Farwell, Mr. Jacobs and others went to the scene of the accident, to endeavor to recover the remains, but a telegram to Mr. Moody says that most of the bodies recovered are quite unrec- ognizable ; and there seems no likelihood of anything being found of this beloved brother and sister whom Chicago mourns, and thousands all over the land and through the world are mourning, and will mourn more deeply, as the hymns he wrote, and which they sang together, are more fully understood. Their bodies have probably been burned to ashes, but they are themselves transfigured, and to us the hymns are transfigured also. We have been saying one to another that, read in the light of this fiery translation, they seem all changed to prophecies. How differently shall we now sing — I know not the hour when my Lord shall come, To take me away to His own dear home. But I know that His presence will lighten the gloom, And that will be glory for me. 304 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. I know not the form of my mansion fair, I know not the name that I then shall bear ; But I know that my Savior will welcome me there, And that will be heaven for me. After the Chicago fire he wrote and dedicated to Mr. Moody the words and music " Roll on, O billow of fire 1" the chorus of which must have come back with even more vividness in the fire in which he perished than when written in recollection of the fire from which he had escaped. How much more tenderly shall we now sing that childlike carol which was the one that took the earliest hold of us at home — I am so glad that our Father in heaven Tells of His love in the Book He has given. Wonderful things in the Bible I see ; This is the dearest— that Jesus loves me. It melts one's heart to think how, in the agony of that last hour, the hus- band and wife needed to cling, as to an anchor within the vail, to the assur- ance that, even in this terrible ordeal, "Jesus loves me." After a visit to a beautiful cemetery in Peoria, Illinois, and with his thoughts specially drawn toward the "blessed hope, and the glorious appear- ing of the great God and our Savior Jesus Christ," he wrote — Down life's dark vale we wander, TiUJesus comes, and although the death of the individual is not the coming of the Lord to receive His bride to Himself, yet what a sublime fulfillment did those simple lines receive on that dreadful night ! He'll know what griefs oppressed me, When Jesus comes. Oh, how His arms will rest me. When Jesus comes. And now that he is gone how inspiriting will be the war-song, as we think how, trusting in the living God, he held the fort in death I — Ho, my comrades, see the signal Waving in the sky ; Eeinforcements now appearing, Victory is nigh. '* Hold the fort, for I am coming 1 " Jesus signals still, Wave the answer back to heaven— *' By thy grace we will." A story was told yesterday of a missionary in South Africa going into a kraal to rest, and the first sounds he heard were from a Zulu singing this tune. So these stirring strains go round the world. TRIBUTES TO HIS MEMORY. 305 As we remember how our noble brother stood, and how he fell, shall we not mean something more than ever before in singing ? — Dare to be a Daniel I Dare to stand alone ! Dare to have a purpose firm I Dare to make it known I To us here, it seems as if his patient and truthful voice was singing out of the darkness and terror of that wintry storm — Brightly beams our Father's mercy, From His lighthouse evermore ; But to us He gives the keeping Of the lights along the shore ; and that he appeals, with outstretched hands, on behalf of others — Let the lower lights be burning, Send the gleam across the wave ; Some poor fainting, struggling seaman You may rescue, you may save. For he met his end not far from the very spot (Cleveland harbor) where the catastrophe occurred, which, related by Mr. Moody, was the occasion of his writing — Trim your feeble lamp, my brother, Some poor seaman, tempest-tost, Trying now to make the harbor, In the darkness may be lost. He was a man full of sympathy, and the wisdom of the truest Christian sympathy shows itself in the hymn in which he counsels the burdened one. Go tell it to Jesus, and all will be right. Gently and lovingly he leads the mourner on : Go gather the sunshine He sheds on thy way. He'll lighten thy burden— go, weary one, pray. And there is a moral grandeur in the self-sacrijEice and generosity which he commends, and which were indeed but the reflection of his own inner life : Go bury thy sorrow, let others be blest ; Go give them the sunshine, tell Jesus the rest. In the same vein of advancing experience is the familiar hymn which was suggested by Mr. Moody's address on Assurance — I wished He was mine, > And then began hoping that Jesus was mine. I'm hoping no longer, I Jcnow He is mine. 20 306 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. At the Industrial Exposition at Chicago it was an every-day appointment "Meet me at the Fountain," Our sweet singer, his mind always set on the things above, caught up the words, and wrote — Will you meet me at the fountain, When I reach the glory -land ? Will you meet me at the fountain ? Shall I clasp your friendly hand ? Other friends will give me welcome, Other loving voices cheer, There'll he music at the fountain ? Will you, will you, meet me there ? I spent but a few days in his society, but the impression he has left upon my heart is well expressed in the question and the assurance — Will you meet me at the fountain ? I shall long to have you near, When I meet my loving Savior, When His welcome words I hear. And so I might go on, for " Still there's more to follow." Oh, the grace the Father shows ; Oh, the love that Jesus shows ; Oh, the power the Spirit shows ! This was his experience, and although the flow of his sweet melodies is stayed on earth, before the throne — drinking of the water of life which pro ceeds from the throne of God and the Lamb — he will praise on through the long day of his eternal life ; and the refrain of the unfinished song through the ages to come will be — Still there's more to follow. Perhaps it is well that the stream of song has been diverted to the heavenly land. We might have gone on asking for some new thing, thinking more of the songs than of the salvation of which they speak, and forgetting the Giver in the gift. Therefore the only wise God our Savior has transfigured those we have, and shown us depths of sacred tenderness, and love, and courage that we had only dimly seen before ; and, thus enriching the songs we possess. He has caught up the singer to His throne and heart, while we are left to urge them that are Almost persuaded now to helieve. Almost persuaded Christ to receive, to yield, and say — Fully persuaded, Jesus is mine : Fully persuaded. Lord, I am thine. And as one by one saved souls confess the Savior's name, our departed friend will remember that he said, and by the grace of God fulfilled his pledge — FKOM PHILIP PHILLIPS. 307 Surely my Captain may depend on me, Though but an armor-bearer I may be. Now he is gone, and liis memory is very fragrant. We may write liis epi- taph in the words of Dr. Sonar's hymn, which Mr. Bliss had set to music, and the second verse of wliich is peculiarly suitable and true of his most unselfish life— So, in the harvest, if others may gather Sheaves from the fields that in spring I have sown ; Who plowed or sowed matters not to the reaper : I'm only remembered by what I have done. And no doubt can remain on any heart that there has been a full and blessed answer to the aspiration, which he had set to sweetest strains — And when, with my glorified vision, at last The walls of " that city " I see, Will any one then at the Beautiful Gate Be waiting and watching for me ? And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me Write, Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth : yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors ; and their works do follow them." — Rev. xiv, 18. George 0. Needham, the evangelist, wrote to a friend, soon after Mr. Bliss' death : A great and sore trouble has fallen upon us. Messrs. Moody, Sankey, Whittle, Stebbins and others of us who were identified in work with our departed friend can only weep and mourn to-day, though sorrowing not as those who have no hope. During the past three years, Mr. Bliss had been identified with Major Whit- tle in Gospel labors, and both men were the bosom friends of Messrs. Moody and Sankey. In personal appearance he was a fine specimen of a vigorous man. Large, well-proportioned, noble in presence — he never failed to produce an impression on the passer-by. Possessing princely manners, and imbued with a true spirit of the Christian gentleman, a man of rare worth and grace and spiritual attainments has passed from us. Since the hope of our Lord's coming dawned upon the heart of our brother, he loved to speak of that prospective day. The last time I talked with him, he said he would interweave that truth into his new hymns, and so teach the peo- ple to look and wait for the Son from heaven. Many of his pieces are full of the gladness and the joyousness of that hope. A year ago, during Mr. Bliss' life, Philip Phillips, the singer, wrote : Mr. P. P. Bliss combines the rare gifts of writing and singing Sacred Song, and like Chicago, his home, has come into public favor rapidly, and while 308 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. young. He is an excellent Christian man, a member of tlie Presbyterian Church, and about thirty-two years of age. This present year he has resigned his position as chorister of a large church in Chicago, and cast in his lot as singer with D. W. Whittle, as a lay evangelist. They are at the present time laboring in the Southern States of America. Mr. Bliss has brought out the Charm" and "Sunshine" of Sacred Song, and goes about literally as an; ensample of his book. He is author of " Almost Persuaded," " Hold the Fort," " When Jesus comes," " I am so Glad that Jesus Loves Me," ' ' Dare to be a Daniel," " Only an Armor-Bearer," " What shall the Harvest be ?" etc. The following poem, by Eey. Arthur T. Pierson, D. D., of Detroit, comes to us with the explanatory words of the author : " I read at an immense mass meeting held here in the Opera House, Sunday afternoon, the following impromptu yerses, in memory of P. P. Bliss. A harp draped and adorned with floral decorations was placed on the platform ; and knowing that this was to be, I framed these Yerses after my morning service. If you publish them, please let italics go in, as I have interwoven strains from Bliss' favorite songs, and the italics indicate them. The haste in which they were written will explain their crude shape, as I could not destroy their impromptu character by attempt at revision. The harp of Zion's psalmist now is still, Ten thousand eyes, in bitter grief, have wept. Because the hand that, with a master's skill, These silver chords so long, so sweetly swept, Is turned to ashes in the fatal flames ! Because no more that voice Redemption sings An-d sounds the Name above all other names. With whose high praises even heaven rings. The harp is still ! the harper is not here ! No more shall that anointed silver tongue Arouse the dull and inattentive ear. And teach us how the gospel may he sung ; How poet's harp and heart, alike devote. Both words and melodies may consecrate, Till Jesus' call may sound on every note. And win the wanderer to the narrow gate I The earthly harp is still, but up on high. Where everlasting anthems ceaseless roll, A golden harp, resounding in the sky. Thrills with the triumph of a ransomed soul. FEOM harper's WEEKLY. 309 There, 'mid tlie liost of tlie celestial clioir, His sorrow buried, and his heart at rest, He has " more holiness," his soul's desire — Safe in the arms of Jesus — on His breast ! Weep not for him, who now doth fully know The depth of mercy and the grace divine. The blood that washed and made him white as snow^ And sings with rapture — " Yes, I know He's mine" He leadeth him. He guides him icith His eye ; Light of the world. He brightly beams on him ; And, brethren, we shall meet him by and by When not a tear the ransomed eye shall dim. Catch up and echo ye his trumpet tone : het whosoever heareth shout the sound ; We'll tell of Him who saves and saves alone, Till sinners shall receive — the world around ; Shall shout 'tis done, Ltoo,believe the So}i — Till prodigals come home and kiss His feet. Till hearts emptied of self, by grace are won. Nothing but vessels, for His use made meet. He'd bid us, could he speak, from mansions fair, Beseue the perishing — not mourn the dead. Bid burdened souls dismiss their load of care. And know that Jesus loves them — for them bled. He seems to shout, from over Jordan's wave. Hold ye the fort ! by help of grace divine. Let lower lights be burning, you may save Some struggling sailor — if your light doth shine. We will not weep ! tchen Jesus comes, we'll fly, Our weary souls shall rest ; we're going home. He gave his life for us, why should we sigh ? For soon our weary feet no more shall roam. We're coming to the cross, anew to be With Jesus crucified — that so, ere long We may the saitits and our dear Jesus see. And join, with harps in hand, in that new song. Harper^ s WeeTcly published an excellent portrait of Mr. Bliss, accompanied by the following references to liim : Among the victims of the dreadful railroad calamity at Ashtabula were the evangelist Philip P. Bliss and his wife. Mr, Bliss was the author of the 310 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. well-known liymn, " Hold the Fort." He was on Ms way to take part in the Gospel meetings at Chicago, where he was highly esteemed. Probably no modern hymn has been more widely sung in England and America than the one just named. According to the statements of those who were in a position to know, Mr. Bliss made a heroic effort to save his wife when he might have saved himself, and, failing in this, remained and died with her, the two offer- ing their prayers together as the fatal flames approached them, like the old martyrs at the stake ; and thus, united in life, they were not divided in death. Those who remain pursuing the work in which he was engaged have already provided the means for educating his children, two young boys, and bringing them up in the way their father walked, and for erecting an appropriate monu- ment to the memory of this faithful pair. The death of Mr. Bliss has elicited throughout the country many expressions of sorrow. He was but thirty-eight years old at the time of his decease, and had only in the later years of his life become a proficient in music. Ten years ago, he entered the music store of Messrs. Root & Cady in Chicago, and remained there until the great fire of 1871. Since then he has been an active evangelist, and with Major Whittle has made long tours through the country. Some of his best-known pieces are, " Hold the Fort," " Pull for the Shore," " Jesus loves even Me." His songs have done much to popularize the religious movement of our day, which has so visibly affected the masses of the population in England, Scotland, Ireland, and the United States. Simeon G-ilbert writes to The Advance as follows : The telegraphic announcement that Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Bliss were on boaru the fatal train which plunged into the gulf with that broken bridge at Ashta- bula, Ohio, and perished with the rest, sent a pang of sorrow throughout the country. All who perished in that most appalling disaster left friends to mourn their loss and cherish their memory ; but in the case of Mr. Bliss, whose hymns and tunes had made him a favorite in thousands of churches and with millions of Sunday School scholars, his mourners, on both sides of the Atlantic, are innumerable. The life of Mr. Bliss was a voice — the voice of one singing, with a wonder- ful persuasiveness, of the "good tidings of great joy for all people." He wrote his own hymns, composed his own tunes, and sung them,too. During the past three or four years, his Gospel hymns and tunes, popularized partly by himself, and still more by his dear friend, Mr. Sankey, have been used of tener and by larger numbers than those of any other cotemporary composer. Being dead, he yet speaketh, and the circumstances of his death will give a peculiar sacredness to the songs and tunes which he has left us. No doubt some of them will, having met a special want in the development of the Chris- tian life of the period, and served their temporary, but not on that account unimportant, use, pass away ; but some of them, we are confident, will take their place among those which the church will not let die. Those who shall hereafter pause to trace the distinctive qualities, the timbre, so to speak, of FEOM SIMEOIT GILBERT. 311 the Christian life of this time, will note that what Charles Wesley was to John Wesley, Mr. Bliss has been to Mr. Moody. The best of Mr. Bliss' hymns and tunes are simple and lucid utterances of the heart of the Gospel and of the Christian experience of those who put com- plete trust in Christ as a perfect Savior. Not keyed to the same pitch as Lutbier's famous battle-hymn, "A strong tower is our God," he yet gauge^i the popular temper and want of the churches equally well. The present more particularly aggressive form of evangelistic work owes as much to what Mr. Bliss and his singing co-laborers have contributed as to any other human instrumentality. In George Herbert's " Country Parson," the parson preaching is told that he must first "dip in his own heart" his words before he speaks them. Mr. Bliss had experienced his own songs before he composed them. It is not claimed that he was a great poet, or that he possessed the genius for some of the sublimer strains of music, but he had the sense and the tact which are not often equaled in matching words and tunes, and suiting both to the popular requirement. Mr. Bliss was only thirty-eight years old. He was born in Rome, Pennsyl- vania. His parents were very poor, and his early advantages were extremely limited. To the last, his admirable wife was to a singular degree his greatest helper. One of his first instructors in music was Mr. Root. Coming to Chi- cago some ten years ago, he was employed in the music establishment of Root & Cady. The great fire of 1871 dissolved that connection, and he has been wont to say that the fire was the making of him, setting him at liberty to devote himself to the special kind of work to which he felt himself called of God. His first church connection was the Methodist, but coming to Chi- cago he united with the First Congregational Church, Dr. Goodwin's, and was for a number of years both its chorister and Sunday School Superintendent. One of the sweetest of the hymns and tunes composed by him is the one entitled, "When Jesus Comes." Among those most in use, and which have been most evidently blessed in the using are the " Hallelujah, 'tis Done ! " " Calling now for Thee ; " " Whosoever Will ; " " That will be Heaven for Me ; " '* Hold the Fort ; " " Once for All ; " " We're going Home To-morrow ; " the one so dear to the little ones, " Jesus Loves even Me ; " " More to Follow ; " " Where Hast thou Gleaned To-day ; " "The Light of the World is Jesus;" "Let the Lower Lights be Burning ; " " Pull for the Shore," and " My Prayer." Last Sunday, in some schools, and we presume in many, the hymns used were exclusively those which Mr. Bliss has left us. The one beginning, " Free from the law, oh, happy condition," Mr. Moody thinks will live always. Of late, as is well known, he has been the constant associate in evangelistic work of Major D. W. Whittle. No one can possibly feel his loss more deeply than our friend Major Whittle. They had seemed as necessary to each other as Moody and Sankey. At the time when he met his death he was on his way to Chicago to join Major Whittle in carrying forward the work in this city begun by Messrs. Moody and Sankey. The first report was that Mr. and Mrs. Bliss, with their two little children, were all caught up in an undivided group 312 MEMOIR OP P. P. BLISS. to their heavenly home. It was since ascertained, however, that the children had been left with their grandmother in Rome, Pa. Eev. W. W. Patton, who knew Mr. Bliss long and intimately, thus speaks of his life and labors : Among the many victims of the Ashtabula calamity, none will be more widely and deeply mourned than Mr. P. P. Bliss, who perished with his wife, their remains being entirely consumed by the flames. He was the author of the most popular of the pieces sung in the Moody and Sankey meetings in this country and abroad, such as " Hallelujah,'tis Done ; " " What shall the Harvest Be?" "Whosoever Will;" "More to Follow;" " That will be Heaven for Me;" " My Prayer ; " " Almost Persuaded ; " " How Much Owest Thou?" and many others, both the words and music of which were composed by him. He also wrote the music to many others of the favorite hymns which are sung in those meetings. In addition to this, he was an uncommonly effective singer, having a rich baritone voice, well cultivated and full of expression. Mr. Bliss was born in the wilds of Northern Pennsylvania, and was of quite humble extraction. He had but few advantages in early life. He married, young, a lady of his own social position, who had much strength of character, who through life was his unfailing good genius. " I owe everything to my wife," he once remarked to a friend. Mr. Bliss for a time was in the employment of the publishing firm of Root & Cady, Chicago, and held musical conventions at leading points through the Northwest. His early religious connections were with the Methodists ; but, on going to Chicago, he united with the First Congregational Church, under the pastoral care of Rev. Dr. Goodwin, and became the leader of the choir and the Superinten- dent of the Sunday School, during a period of several years. Such was the kindness of his heart, the warmth of his piety, and the personal interest which he took in the members of the choir and school, that he won the affec- tion as well as the regard. of the whole church which now mourns him with a special sense of bereavement. When Major Whittle, induced by the example and urgent entreaty of Mr. Moody and other Christian friends, surrendered his business and gave himself to the work of a lay evangelist, Mr. Bliss decided to become his fellow-laborer, and to "sing the Gospel," while Mr. Whittle preached it. And this he has done for the three past years with great success, visiting not only numerous places in the Western States, but also Louisville, Nashville, Atlanta, Memphis and other points at the South. Being tall and well- developed in his physical frame, with clustering black hair and a handsome face, and possessing easy and polished manners and a very joyous temperament, together with a wealth of sympathy, he impressed most favorably those who saw and heard him, whether in public or in private. His singing, like that of Mr. Sankey's, often led sin- ners to Christ, by its touching presentations of Gospel truth. He was not much of a poet, in the high sense, but he had a poetic susceptibility of feeling and an unusual skill in versifying evangelic doctrine in the very phrases of TKIBUTES TO HIS MEMOEY. 313 Scripture, as also in adapting the music to the sentiment so as powerfully to impress the hearer. What multitudes have been thrilled by his lines ; Hallelujah, 'tis done ! I believe on the Son ; I am saved by the blood of the Crucified One I At the time of his death, he was announced to lead, at Dr. Goodwin's church, a " praise meeting" of the Sunday School, on the afternoon of the last Sunday of the year, and also to sing, at a later hour, in the afternoon services of the Tabernacle. It had been arranged that, after the departure of Moody and Sankey for Boston, Whittle and Bliss should take their places, and carry on the glorious work. But, so far as Mr. 'Bliss was concerned, this was not to be. He had long enough " held the fort," and was to be relieved from further earthly service. The last piece which he sang at the First Congregational Church, before he went East to spend the holidays with family relatives, began with the lines of his own composition : I know not the hour when my Lord will come To take me away to His own dear home ; But 1 know that His presence will lighten the gloom, And that will be glory for me 1 In the Ciimlerland Presbyterian "Mrs. E. 0. D." pays poetical tribute to " The Sweet Singer." He came to " sing for Jesus," his armor shining bright : We knew that we could trust him ; the Savior was his light. The weary wanderer, seeking peace, he guided to the throne, And the rich music of his voice was used for God alone. The willing servant of the Lord is lost to mortal sight ; To him, or us, no warning came ; God's will— it must be right. We shiver in our anguish, and the world's warm throbbing heart Hath felt the stroke of the angel wing that bore the cruel dart. We trust that in that bitter hour the struggle soon was o'er ; Perhaps he did not know 'twas death till on the other shore, Where with the darling of his heart po safely by his side, He only wondered and rejoiced that they together died. The pearly gate was open, they saw "the mansion fair," And found the Savior " waiting, watching " for them there ; Waiting to bid them welcome home, to clasp them by the hand, And give them quiet, peaceful rest in the brighter, better land. 314 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. The reason why the summons came, our Father knoweth well ; We only know we miss him here ; the rest we cannot tell. But let us to the mercy seat bring all this grief and sorrow. And wait to hear him sing again when we "go home to-morrow." A gentleman in St. Paul, who took a deep interest in the meet- ings of Whittle and Bliss, which were held in St. Paul about a year ago, contributes the following : The sad death of Mr. Bliss, the evangelist, the preacher of Christ's Gospel by song, has come to this city with peculiar force, and burdened many hearts here with the most genuine sorrow. It is, therefore, most fitting that some pen should strive to put into words that which so many hearts feel, and though any written tribute must fall short of adequate expression, still all who knew and loved Mr. Bliss will be thankful that the attempt was made. We cannot in St. Paul speak of him as we knew him long ago ; in other communities he grew up, and in other places had his most intimate associa- tions. But he was nevertheless our fellow-citizen, our friend, our brother. In an emphatic and peculiar sense he had no continuing city ; no West, no East, no North, no South could claim him. Wherever souls needed the divine bless ing and comfort of the Gospel ; wherever there were those whose sensibilities could be touched by the sweetest of music, the glad evangel of salvation by Christ — there was Bliss' home for the hour, the day, the week, the month. He counted all m6n for brethren, and his heartfelt desire was that all, like he, should turn their faces to the heavenly Jerusalem and, accepting the Savior, whose love he so sweetly sung, be ready at any moment for the summons which should call them to be its inhabitant. Those more intimately associated in arranging the details of the work which Messrs. Whittle and Bliss engaged in in St. Paul will call to mind the circum- stances under which we first became acquainted with our brother Bliss. It will be remembered how earnestly it was desired by the committee in charge that Whittle should not fail to bring him with him ; how circumstances prevented this ; how something in the services was missing till he came, and how all realized, after his coming, that Whittle had seemed shorn of a portion of his power till Bliss was present to preach by song the same Gospel he so earnestly spoke to the people. All will recollect, too, the magnificent presence God had bestowed upon the inai . It was attractive and impressive, drawing attention at once to the sing- er, and aiding the effect which his song had upon all who heard it. How sweet and tender was his voice, like the spirit of the words which he wrote and of the music which he composed. How strong were his notes — like the splendid physique of the singer — like the deep feelings that were in his heart for the souls of those who listened. Those brought into more familiar contact with Mr. Bliss will gladly join in ascribing to him a nature similar to his voice, both sweet and strong. It was, TEIBUTES TO HIS MEMORY. 315 many think, in tlie incidental and less public services that his character shone out most clearly and appeared to the best advantage. He has, ere this, greeted those in Heaven whose weary hours he cheered while in St, Paul by singing and praying beside their beds. No invitation to a service of this sort was ever declined; nay, more, he seemed glad of these quiet opportunities to cheer and comfort, and convert, no doubt, in many in- Btances, his fellow-travelers. At the County Jail ; at the County Hospital ; at the State Reform School he held lij;tle singing services, always striving to appear at his best and give those who heard him at these places the very sweetest of his efforts. His modesty about his musical attainments was always apparent, but at no time more so than when in the praise-meeting, which he held while here, though the Opera House was filled by the hope of hearing him sing often, he did not give a single solo piece during the whole two hours of service. It is needless that mention be made of his hymns and their music, both words and tunes having been written by him in many instances. In services almost innumerable, on this quiet Sabbath, they are being sung to the praise and glory of the God whom he served, and so is his highest ambition satisfied. So shall he live on earth as well as in heaven ; so " being dead, he yet speak- eth " in sweetest words. One characteristic of these hymns in the light of his sad death cannot fail of notice. Take them up to select those appropriate to sing at a memorial ser vice of him, and how fit are they. How often he sang I know not the hour when my God will come To take me away to his own dear home ; * But I know that His presence will lighten the gloom, And that will be glory for me. Truly the call came suddenly, and the gloom was very heavy on that awful night, but he died realizing what he sang while living. His last hymn in St. Paul contained this verse : For those who sleep, And those who weep. Above the portals narrow, The mansions rise Beyond the skies. We're going home to-morrow. So it was to him and his wife but " going home." They were one by all the sacred ties of earth — one in holy purpose of blessing their fellow-men — one in the sad circumstance of death. God will take care of their children, for He never breaks His promises. So, dear brother, to-day in singing your hymns, we bid you farewell in our hearts till we shall meet " over there," and once more hear your voice still praising the Ijord whose Gospel you so faith- fully preached to us here in song. 316 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. At the session of the Plymouth (Ohio) Musical Convention, under the direction of Prof. H. S. Perkins, of Chicago, the follow- ing resolutions were passed : Whereas, The dispensation of Providence, in the sad, heart-rending ca- lamity at Ashtabula, Ohio, on the evening of December 29, 1876, in which occurred the death of Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Bliss, of Chicago, while in the zenith of their usefulness ; and Whereas, Fully recognizing them as worthy, valuable members of society and of the musical profession ; also desiring to condole with the rela- tives of the deceased in this time of their great affliction, therefore, by the Huron County Musical Convention now in session at Plymouth, Ohio, be it Besohed, That we have been greatly pained by the very sad and untimely death of Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Bliss, of Chicago, for whom we entertained the greatest respect and friendship. Resolved, That our most heartfelt sympathies and condolence be extended to the widowed mother, sisters, and other relatives in this hour of their great sorrow and affliction ; and that a copy of these resolutions be presented to the Chicago papers for publication, and a copy be transmitted to the surviving members of the family. [Signed by Committee.] H. S. Perkins, Chicago ; the Rev. J. H. Gray Attica, Ohio ; A. L. Simmons, Steuben, Ohio ; H. H. Johnson, Havana, Ohio Thomas Parkison, Mansfield, Ohio. Eev. J. B. Atchinson, of Detroit, after many warm expressions ' of his sympathy with the brother left here, writes of Mrs. Bliss as follows : There is no man, living or dead, that ever exerted such a powerful influence over me for good as did Brother Bliss. My acquaintance with him for the past few years has greatly changed and directed my religious work, and, now that he is gone I feel his influence still. There were many sad tears in our home — where he and his wife had a hearty welcome — when the news of his death reached us. Only a short time before he died, I received a letter from him which is so characteristic of his piety, friendship, cheerfulness, wit and pleas- antry, and in all such a striking coincidence, when considered in relation to his death, that I can but hope it may find a place in your forthcoming work. The following is a true copy : Peoria, Illinois, December 1, 1876. Dear Brother : Finally— AT last— IN CONCLUSION— Here's your " Open Window." Scrrow/w?/ am I that I hadn't one before. 'Sense me. Meetings g'OocZ— wish you the same. Wife is with me. Hope to go home Xmas. Trnly, Blittle & Whiss. TEIBUTES TO HIS MEMORY. 317 And. it proved to be his " Finally — at last — in conclusion " to me. How literally were his hopes fulfilled, that he should go home Christmas, and what a proof is his signature of his very close relation to you and at the same time 60 characteristic of his pleasantries and cheerful spirit. Dear Bliss ! I almost hear thy bugle voice singing — O crown of rejoicing, O wonderful spng, O joy everlasting, * O glorified throng, O beautiful home. My home can it be, O glory reserved for me. God bless you, my dear Whittle. My feeble prayers shall aid you all they can. Yours in glad sorrow, J. B. Atchinson. At a conference, held January. 2, 1877 of the pastors of several Evangelical churches of Louisville, Kentucky, representing the Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist, Episcopal and Lutheran churches, the distressing intelligence was communicated of the death of Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Bliss in the dreadful railway disaster at Ashtabula, Ohio. Whereupon Rev. Stuart Robinson presented the following memorial minute, which was unanimously adopted : In view of the peculiar and interesting relations of Christian friendship between Mr. and Mrs. Bliss and our people, growing out of the labors of Messrs. Whittle and Bliss as evangelists, so remarkably blessed of God, among us, we deem it eminently appropriate that some formal public expression be given of our profound sorrow and our tender sympathy in the grief of the kindred and friends of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss under this most mysterious Provi- dence. We desire to bear an affectionate testimony to the signally elevated Chris- tian character of these servants of Christ, so earnest and faithful, yet withal so modest and unassuming, and so wise in winning souls. We recall with gratitude to God the marvelous gifts and culture of the sweet Gospel singer whose strains were blessed of God as the means of comforting and edifying God's people, of encouraging desponding souls, of determining the halting, of directing the inquiring, and of awakening the souls slumbering in sin. We can only mingle our tears in silence with those of the bereaved who, " with groanings that cannot be uttered," mourn that death should have come to their loved ones in a form so awful and distressing. " We are dumb. We open not our mouth because Thou didst it." Yet fully assured that this dread- ful affliction that was for a moment " wrought out for them an exceeding and 318 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. eternal weight of glory," we bless God, and we exhort these bereaved friends to bless God for His marvelous loving kindness in preparing them by His grace for so signally useful and blessed, though so brief, a career on earth, and for receiving the welcome plaudit, " Well done, good and faithful servants ; enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." It is the sweet assurance of God's word, that not only "Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord," but also that " their works do follow them." Tens oj thousands in the church on earth will continue to be blest through the works of Mr. Bliss. They will sing the Gospel songs with ever grateful remem- brance of him who put into their mouths these new and beautiful strains, long after he himself, called by his Lord to " come up higher," shall be singing in strains ineffably more beautiful and glorious in the church above, with the one hundred and forty-four thousand and with ''the harpers harping upon their harps," the new song before them. Stuart RoBiNsoif, Chairman of Com. J. M. Morris, Sec'y. On the day following the memorial seryices in Chicago, the Tribune said, in its editorial columns : The intense interest and deep feeling manifest at the various services held yesterday testify to the affection and esteem in which P. P. Bliss and wife were held in Chicago, and to the sorrow and grief of this community at their sad fate. At the meetings led by Mr. Moody and Mr. Sankey, at the Chicago Ave- nue Church and the Tabernacle, tearful tributes were paid by the co-workers of the gifted evangelist so suddenly removed from his chosen sphere of use- fulness, and at Racine, Wisconsin, where Messrs. Whittle and Bliss had suc- cessfully carried forward the work of revival, memorial services were also held yesterday. It will be a comfort to many sorrowing hearts to learn, through the dispatch sent last evening to the Tribune by Major Whittle from Ashtabula, that the two sons of Mr. Bliss, who were reported as having shared the fate of their parents, are safe at Rome, Pennsylvania, not having been on the doomed train. Henry Moorhouse, the evangelist, writes as follows : My first acquaintance with dear Mr. Bliss was some seven years ago, when, accompanied by Mr. Moody and Mr. Herbert Taylor, I called upon him at his room, and was charmed by his sweet simplicity of manner and earnest love for the Lord Jesus Christ. At that time his hymns, which were very sweet, did not contain the same earnest, simple Gospel truths which afterward made them so solemn and so powerful in winning souls to the Lord Jesus. Year by year, as I again and again visited America, I saw him growing rapidly in the blessed truths of the Bible, and was greatly blessed and charmed by his com- pany and conversation. During dear Mr. Sankey's visit to England, how won- TRIBUTES TO HIS MEMORY. 319 derfully the Lord used those sweet hymns eternity alone can tell, as thousands of dear Christians have been cheered as we have sung together " I Know not the Hour my Lord will Come," and " Down Life's dark Vale we Wander till Jesus Comes," and other kindred hymns. With all my heart and soul I sympathize with the dear bereaved mother and little children, and I joy and rejoice with dear Mr. and Mrs. Bliss, who now are safe within the vail and who to-day are with their blessed Lord who loved them and gave Himself for them. "Wirt Arlaud, an old school friend of Mr. Bliss, said of "Hold the Port : " The best known of his pieces originated in a vivid description by Major Whittle of the signaling from Kenesaw Mountain " over the heads of the rebel host." It has gone round the world and comes back in the Chinese tongue. It has been issued as a holiday gift book in elegant form by William F. Gill & Co., with appropriate pictures by Miss L. B. Humphrey and Robert Lewis, and finely engraved by John Andrew & Son. When we last saw him he had been to visit, with Major Whittle, the spot from which the message was sig- naled to the Commander fifteen miles distant — " Hold the Fort ! " Picking up a bundle, he showed us three hickory sticks that he had cut on the mountain and said : "You see we still hold the fort. These are some canes that I am going to have mounted for my boys and myself. My boys are darling little fellows, and I have been feeling quite sad to-day, since I left them with theiii^ grandfather at Rome and have got to leave them behind as I go to Chicago." At a later date, Mr. Arland wrote : The ■winters are drifting like flakes of snow. And the summers like buds between, since we trudged that long snowy winter, twenty-one years ago, to the same school. The ripe fruit of his manhood was but the generous fulfillment of the early promise of a stalwart and genial boyhood, and tliat deep hearty voice that was loudest on the play-ground or in the songs of the noontide recess, but needed development to form that whfich fell with a powerful charm on hearts yearning for the peace that passeth all understanding. We met him for the last time at Elmira in October, and we felt that our friend had not changed, nly ripened, and his fervent " God bless you, A " as the Erie train drew np to bear him to Chicago, was the blessing of one we knew in the days when the principles of life are tried. His love of music was a prominent trait in his character, and many an evening have we sat and listened to his violin, wonder- ing how he who then knew only how to play by ear could pla,y to touch our feelings so wonderfully. He could not read music at this time. His rich, pow- erful bass voice was an unfailing help in the school music, and across all these years we can hear it as he sang : 320 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. Shed not a tear o'er your friend's early bier, When 1 am gone, I am gone Pause when the slow tolling bell you shall hear, When I am gone, I am gone. Think as you stand by my half opened grave ; Think who has died His beloved to save ; Think of the crown all the ransomed shall have When I am gone, I am gone. Eev. D. W. Morgan, of Griggsville, Illinois, relates the following incident relative to Mrs. Bliss, which may be of interest to our readers : I think it was during tlie summer of 1868, shortly after Mr. Bliss liad begun to turn his attention to writing for our Sunday Schools, that I was in conversation with Mr. George F. Root concerning him. We recalled several of his recent pieces, and I remarked upon his wonderful versatility of talent as a hymn writer, song writer and singer. Mr. Root replied, with emphasis, " Yes, I consider Mr. Bliss as incompara- bly the rising musical man of our day. He is destined to more than fill the place made vacant by the death of Mr. Bradbury." In Mr. Bliss' generous and enthusiastic acknowledgment of indebtedness to his noble wife for early encouragement in his musical tastes, he would speak of her selling the two cows which were part of her marriage patrimony to enable him to pursue his musical studies at Geneseo, New York. And that she was moved by a pure, wifely ambition to study and work in the same direction with him, that she might be his peer, or at least his constant sym- pathizer and support in musical endeavor, of this all are persuaded who have listened to her rich, trained voice in solo or accompanying the stronger voice of him on whom she leaned. But the following incident will illustrate the keen insight which thorough training and close observation had given her in voice culture — that which pertains to the use and abuse of the vocal organs. It was, perhaps, in November, 1869, when I was pastor of the Baptist Church in Gardner, Illinois. I had worked up a musical convention of two weeks for Mr. Bliss, who, with his wife, was conducting a similar convention in Peoria. I wrote them, as they were on the eve of coming to us, saying that I should await their coming and see them safel^ ensconced in our home, and see the convention started, but that I did not expect to sing a note nor preach a ser- mon for three months ; that T was under the doctor's ban, my throat granulated and bleeding and stubbornly resisting all treatment. My church had voted me leave of absence for the winter, made generous provision for my support, and advised me to spend the winter in the South. Mr. and Mrs. Bliss came, and the first evening, as we were seated about the fire, Mrs. Bliss said : " Mr. Morgan, I don't think you need to go South for the recovery of your throat, nor even to give up preaching or singing. I think I can tell what is the difficulty with your throat, and can point out its remedy. 'Tis brought on by a vicious elocution. You are using an assumed tone of TRIBUTES TO HIS MEMORY. 321 voice, and are probably unconsciously imitating some one's voice that you have admired. The orotund is not your natural voice. By its use you have brought an undue stress on the larynx and vocal chords, and they have yielded to over tension. Your remedy is to adopt, arbitrarily, a more tenor key of voice. ^ Raise it at least two tones in conversation, reading and preaching." I thanked her, but replied that I thought her remedy altogether impracticable ; that I could not take up at once another tone of voice. But she insisted that it could be done ; that they would be with us for two weeks, would watch me closely and help to enforce the cure. I tried it, sang in most sessions of the convention, and preached the next Sabbath. My throat toughened and I hav« never from that day lost a religious or other service from diseased throat. The hint may be worth the attention of other public speakers and singers. Mr. Morgan adds : I have long been accustomed to think of Mr. Bliss and speak of him as my ideal Christian gentleman — the most perfect specimen I had eyer met." 21 CHAPTER XXVII. THE LAST OF EAKTH— MEMORIAL SERVICES AT ROME, PENNSYLVANIA— ELO- QUENT ADDRESS BY REV. DR. GOODWIN, OE CHICAGO. THE village of Eome, Pennsylvania, contains a population of about three hundred, and is located in the Wysocken Valley, surrounded by high hills, and is about ten miles from Towanda, Pennsylvania. The funeral services in memory of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss were held on Sunday, January 7, in the Presbyterian Church, of which both of them had been members during their residence in Eome. Before the hour of service (11 o'clock), sleighs, from all directions, coming over the hills loaded with the families of friends and relatives from a distance, were arriving at the church. By eleven o'clock it was crowded in every part. The following relatives of the deceased were present : Lydia Bliss, his mother ; Mrs. M. E. Wilson and husband, and Mrs. Phebe Jennings and husband, sisters and brothers ; "Wm. H. Jennings, of Chicago, nephew of Mr. Bliss ; Mrs. Andrus, sister of Lydia Bliss, with her son and daugh- ter, the latter residing in Elmira, JST. Y ; the wife of Mr. McEwen, who was present ; Mrs. Betsy Allen, grandmother of Mrs. Bliss ; 0. F. Young and wife, father and mother of Mrs. Bliss ; A. P. Young and wife, 0. W. Young and wife, George E. Young, Mrs. C. C. Barnes and husband, Mrs. J. L. Ellsworth, and Melita Young, brothers and sisters of Mrs. Bliss ; Nathan and Thomas Young, Mrs. Daniel Pitcher, and Mrs. Dunham, uncles and aunts of Mrs. Bliss, with their families ; also several cousins and more distant relatives were present. A remarkable fact in connection with this large circle is that they are all Christians. The services were opened by the reading of the hymn : " God is the refuge of His saints," by Eev., Mr. Keatley, pastor of the Meth- odist church. Mr. and Mrs. McGranahan, life-long friends of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss, and well known in musical circles, led the singing of the congregation. MEMOBIAL SERVICES AT ROME. 323 The following scriptures were read by the pastor of the Baptist Church : John xvii, 18-24 : Acts i, 7-11 : Acts yii, 55-GO : 1 Cor. XV, 12-23 and 50-58 : 1 Thess. iv, 13-18. Prayer was then offered by Eev. G-. ^Y. Chandler, pastor of the Methodist Church of Towanda. The hymn, " Rock of Ages " (set to music composed by Mrs. Bliss), was sung by the choir. A report of a meeting held in Chicago, on the Sunday after the news of the disaster, was then read by Major Whittle, who made the following remarks, explaining the circumstances of the depart- ure of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss from home and of his being on the ill- fated train : We have to-day no remains of these beloved friends ; none will ever be found ; and I am asked to make a brief statement of the circumstances of their death. Mr. and Mrs. Bliss left their home the 30th of December and went to Towanda and Waverly. The last heard of them was a letter to the father on Thursday that they had bought tickets by way of the Lake Shore road, and expected to be in Chicago Friday night. The letter closed with the sentence, " God bless you all for time and eternity " — probably the last letter he ever wrote. Mr. Bliss was expected in Chicago to help carry on the work of Messrs, Moody and Sankey. Saturday morning in Chicago, when I read of the terrible accident at Ashtabula, my heart was filled with fear, and I sent a telegram to Towanda to know whether they were there. It was some time before an answer could come. His friends supposed he was twelve or eighteen hours in advance of this train. During the day, while waiting, we went to the rail- road office and tried to get dispatches from the train, but could only learn that it was a terrible accident, and that Mr, Bliss was not on the later train that left on Saturday afternoon. My alarm increased, but I could not take it home to my heart. But Saturday afternoon, a telegram was received from Mr Bur- chell, who knew Mr. Bliss intimately, saying that *' Bliss, wife and children are among the dead." And we started immediately for A slitabula. We arrived there on Sunday morning, and for three days I was there while the wreck was removed, and every search was made that could be to find some relic of these dear friends. The few bodies recovered were unrecognizable except in two or three instances. We thought then that the dear little children were there. And when the dispatch came from Towanda that the children were safe at home, I fell on my knees and thanked God that the children had been spared. I came away Tuesday night. Everything had been removed. A stream of water five feet deep in the deepest and two feet in the shallowest part flowed by. The bottom was dragged. Eleven cars had fallen, one on top of another. The cars were broken in fragments. The lamps set fire to the oil. It was a fierce wind and a terribly stormy night. The woodwork, everything was 324 MEMOIK OF P. P. BLISS. burned, tlie iron melted and not a fragment of anvtliing was left that we could find. And so we are left here to-day with nothing of these friends but the thought of them in glorv. Mr. Burchell says he passed through the passenger coaches, and that at the last station before the accident " the snow was heavy and I got out," he says, "to get some sandwiches, and found the two ordinary cars crowded and the smoking-car full. The next, a parlor car, was one third full. Mr. Bliss and family were there. I was in the next car. Behind that were three sleep- ing-cars." He gave the statement : " 1 believe Mr. Bliss got out through a window, expecting to get his wife and children through, but the car was blocked up and escape was impossible. I believe Bliss was burned to death trying to save his wife and children." This, he says, is his conjecture. There is a story at Ashtabula of Mr. Bliss escaping and going- back, saying his wife and child were in the wreck, and he would rather die with them than escape without them. I cannot find that this is true. That man had a wife and child there, and we know that Mr. Bliss had no child there. I suppose that some one seeing the man thought it was Mr. Bliss, and that gave rise to the supposition that the children were on board. We showed Mr. Bliss' pic- ture to the passengers who were saved. We found one lady who recognized it. As to how he came to be on the train : He left Waverly on the train which ought to have been at Buffalo at midnight on Thursday ; but it met with an accident twenty miles from Waverly, was delayed, and did not arrive in Buffalo until five o'clock — too late to make connection. He left that train at Hornells- ville, probably thinking that as they could not connect, they would wait over and get a night's rest. I find his name at the Osborne House, Thursday night. He took the train in Buffalo Friday noon, and so was brought to Ashtabula to be in the accident. His trunk went on safely. This is all we know of the story. We are here, a circle of friends and rela- tives, and I tell you the story as we know it. A favorite hymn of Mr. Bliss "I know not the hour when my Lord will come/' was then very beautifully sung by the choir. Mr. McGrranahan, the composer of the music of this hymji, the words of which were written by Mr. Bliss, was so overcome as to be unable to conclude the singing. An address was then given by the pastor of the First Congrega- tional Church in Chicago, of which Mr. and Mrs. Bliss were mem- bers at the time of their death, Rev. E. P, Goodwin, D. D. For nearly three years Mr. Bliss had been chorister and Sunday School Superintendent at the church of which Mr. Good^vin is pastor. The following is Dr. Goodwin's address : My friends, I feel that I have come here as a kind of representative of that great family that to-day all through the land bows under the grief that has ADDRESS OF REV. DR. GOODWIIfl. 325 gathered us, and mingles its tears and prayers with those of this dear circle. In- deed, I seem almost to be a member of this household, so personal to me is this affliction. This dear brother had been for years one with whom I had wrought for the Master in most delightful accord. Our aims were one, our sympathies in unison, our friendship hearty, and one of these precious children bears, as you may know, my name. I come hence not to speak in any formal way, but out of the depths of my heart to utter a few words of loving tribute to one whose character and work I delight to honor. Let me connect what I have to say with two passages of Scripture, viz., Psalm cxvi, 15 : Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints." Rev. xiv, 13: "And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Write, Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth ; yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors ; and their works do follow them." Dear friends, God makes no mistakes. He has made none in allowing the calamity which has gathered us here in sorrow, let us make none in reasoning about it. The significance of God's Providences does not lie in what we think but in what God says about them. In his testimony we can alone find sure anchorage for faith, sure solace for bereavement. Our reasonings, apart from His Word, instead of scattering the darkness, often deepen it ; instead of lift- ing our burdens from our hearts, often magnify them and torture us with * keener sense of helplessness. We can as easily reason the darkness out of a room, as the darkness out of God's dealings. We get rid of the gloom when we stop debate, open the shutters, and let the light shine in. And we get rid of the gloom that enwraps us in these trial times of faith, when we stop arguing and throw open the windows of our souls to the light of God's Word. The first thought, therefore, which I suggest in connection with this Provi- dence is, that God's children are not to look upon death with dread, but to anticipate it with lightness of heart, and, by whatsoever form it may come, welcome and rejoice in it. If the death of God's saints is precious in His sight, and the day in which it comes better than the day of birth, surely His children need not be dismayed ; much less need they go through life, as many do, oppressed and tortured by gloomy apprehensions of the last hour. Where God's face beams, our faces ought to brighten. Where God pronounces His benediction, and all the blessed of the Upper Presence join in special jubilee, we may at least dismiss our fears, and even though it be through tears, lift up our song. I remember well when I could not say this. Death was the one depressing, despairful word of all Scripture. No sound ever sent such chills through my blood as the mournful knell that was wont to be rung out from the village church whenever there was a death in the community. A funeral was of all places the place of terror. The somber crape fluttering so forbiddingly at the door, the closed blinds, the hushed voices, the grave faces, the robes of the mourners, the tears and sobs, the sepulchral utterances of the minister, the mournful Ijymns — all this went to make a burial service distasteful and gloomy in the extreme. From a child I never attended one, even of a relative, if it could be avoided. This feeling was dominant for years. Indeed, I was 326 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. well on in tlie ministry, before the true teachings of Scripture were so uppre- hended as to break the hold of the pagan ideas which had begotten such dis- may. But, thank God, the light of the Word as it is in these texts, and every- where through these inspired utterances, came at last, and I saw death as a foe vanquished through Christ, its terrors all abolished, and the child of God priv- ileged to go through life anticipating it as the hour of his grandest triumph, It'-s highest exultation. Look now at the testimony of the Word. Even the Old Testament emphasizes this thought. The old patriarchs had no dread of dying. There is something beautiful even in the composure with which they heard the voice, and laid aside their tent-life for the better country. How significant the record that they " fell asleep," " were gathered to their fathers," " entered into rest," What more touching and home-like, and free from everything like fear, than the picture of a father, conscious that his last hour is close at hand, calling his children about his bed-side, declaring the fact of his near departure, giving them his dying counsels and benediction, and then quietly wrapping his mantle about him and lying down for the death angel to close his eyes. Take the death of Moses. First he was closeted with God 1 Then God rolled away the cloud from the mountain top, touched his eyes, and gave him a vis- ion of that fair land, in all its length and breadth, which he had so coveted to enter. When He took him, as it were, in His arms, as a mother would take a child, and as the vision of the land of promise faded away, there came instead the vision of that other country, even the heavenly, of which the earthly in- heritance was but the feeble type ; and as its surpassing beauty burst upon his soul, he passed into the presence of the King and was clothed upon with a transfiguring glory. Who of us that would have drawn back dismayed from that dying hour, had it been permitted us to be there ? Who that would have thought there was need of crape, or sable plumes, or melancholy dirges to befit that burial V But Moses is no exception. Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of every saint. And God putting underneath the everlasting arms, giving now our last earthward look over all that is loveliest and best, and then swinging the gates and giving us to stand within the city and join the everlasting song, what is this to all God's chosen but death stripped of its terrors* and the valley of the shadow transformed into the shining highway by which the chil- dren of the Kingdom enter into glory. By the witness of manifold Christian experiences there is blessed reality in this. How many times have we stood by the dying and seen the light of heaven break over the pale face, and all the lines of pain and trouj^le seem to be smoothed out as God has spoken to His chosen. And how many times have we seen the thin lips part while the coun- tenance shone, and caught some feebly whispered word, jubilant testimony that death was robbed of its sting and the grave of its victory. And this is the spirit of the Gospel. It knows nothing of dread, nothing of depression or dismay as connected with the dying of God's people. On the contrary every witness respecting it is of unqualified cheer. It is " falling asleep," "entering into rest," "going home," being "present with the Lord." It is hence that which is to be coveted, and to secure which is inestimable ADDEESS OF KEY. DE. GOODWIN". 327 gain. Instead, therefore, friends, of going up and down in the world with despondency in our faces and wailings on our tongues because death confronts US and we cannot escape, let us know a more excellent way. Let us no longer borrow the eyes of pagan mythology and see death as a hideous demon roam- ing the earth for victims with an insatiate fury. Let us see him rather through the sweeter unveiling of the Gospel, a blessed angel of light come to set us free from burdens, toil, vexation, pain, everything that annoys, and to give us welcome into the ineffable and abiding blessedness of our Father's house. It does not matter, as respects this sunny forelook, in what way death may come. We are wont to emphasize the terribleness of a catastrophe like this ; and viewed in its physical aspects it is terrible beyond all comprehension. But this text-truth holds good, nevertheless. Can you imagine anything more torturing than the death that Stephen died ; to be set up as a target for paving stones, and to have bone after bone broken and life fairly battered out ? It makes one shudder to conceive of it. There must have been the keenest pain ; but do you imagine Stephen's thoughts were absorbed in that ? Ah, no. As the cries of rage rang in his ears, and the cruel missiles rained down upon him, there opened to him in the sky a vision of glory that made him forget every- thing else. He saw the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing on the right hand of God ; and gazing upon that face, the face of his risen and glori- fied Lord, he no more heeded the crashing stones, no more the clamoring out- cries, but with a prayer of forgiveness on his lips " fell asleep " as sweetly as a child. Our brother's anticipations of death were all of this unclouded, hopeful kind. You find no word of gloom in his hymns, but when he touches the thought of death he almost invariably breaks out into a strain of peculiar ex- ultation. Take that beautiful song, " That will be Heaven for Me," sung in the opening services. It reads like a prophecy, and it exactly represents its author's feeling. " I know not the hour when my Lord will come To take me away to His own dear home ; But I know that His presence will lighten the gloom, And that will he glory for me." Or take that other still more prophetic song, " There's a Light in the Val- ley/' I shall find down the valley no alarms, For my hlessed Savior's smile I can see ; He will hear me in His loving, mighty anjis, There's a light in the valley for me. Death, no matter what its form, had for Philip Bliss no terrors. He be- lieved with all his soul, that Jesus Christ came to "abolish death," to destroy him that had the power of death — that is, the devil — and deliver them who through fear of death were all their life-time subject to bondage. Hence, though leading his life on in the daily expectation that the end might come, he was not only undismayed, but overflowing with gladness. I doubt not that 328 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. if, after that terrific plunge, there was a moment of consciousness, his soul was full of peace, and was borne up in its chariot of fire with a shout of vic- tory. And that serenity in facing death by whatever form it may come, and that triumph over it, it is the privilege of all God's children to have. The other thought connected with these Scripture texts which I suggest is, that the kingdom of Christ is in no sense so related to human instrumentali- ties that when any of them drop out it sufiers loss or hindrance. We are apt to think that it does. Our plans are largely conditioned by circumstances as to their results. If a crop fails, or a war breaks out, or a panic occurs, or sick- ness comes, our hopes are wrecked ; and we are so conscious that we are hedged about by possible mishaps, and can forecast no plans which may not be frus- trated, that we naturally think it must be so with God. Like us. He must have His forming times and seasons, must have His chosen instruments and agencies ; and if these fail, there must be great difficulty in making their place good, and the kingdom, hence, be checked. We have a feeling that certain honored laborers are so thoroughly identified with the urging forward of the Gospel that they cannot be spared; that their place cannot be filled. Mr. Moody's words over the sad tidings were the instinctive utterance of thousands of Christian hearts : " Know ye not that a prince and a great man is fallen this day in Israel ? Who shall take the place of this sweet singer, and carry on his noble work for Christ ? It seems as if this consecrated voice and pen could not be spared, as if they had hardly crossed the threshold of their mission for the good of men and the glory of God." But I go back to the word of God, and the history of His church, and I say, God takes in all the meaning of this providence, and He has made no mistake. Suppose we had been among the chosen people when God called Moses up higher, and the question had been put to us, Can you spare Moses ? Shall God take him and provide you with another leader ? We should undoubtedly have made quick answer, "Spare Moses? the man whose counsel is as the word of the Everlasting One? him who communes with God face to face and holds back by his prayers the judg- ments we deserve ? him who led us up out of Egypt, gave us our laws, our ritual of worship, and has brought us safely through all our enemies to the very borders of the land of promise ! No, now more than ever we need him. The land bristles with sons of Anak, and is full of fenced cities, how can we possess it? We must have him for counselor, for intercessor, for captain of the host. Take any one else, but spare us Moses. If he be taken all hope dies." But God had other plans. He knew how to take Moses and yet pro- vide for Israel so that they should go forward to the immediate possession of the land and the longed-for and abundant fruitage of their hopes. Or, to put the case stronger, consider how indispensable, judged from a human standpoint, was the continuance in His work of the Lord Jesus Christ. He was the embodiment of the mind and heart of God. He knew all truth, and exactly how to unfold and apply it to men's hearts. He knew all wants, and woes, and wrongs, and was eager to put them all away. He was God in- carnate, and down on men's level that He might feel the beating of their hearts, eatch the cry of their need and break the curse of sin. How could He be ADDRESS OF EEY. DR. GOODWIN. 329 spared, and men be equally helped, and His Gospel pressed on with equal potency? Who could open the blind eyes, unstop the deaf ears, empty all the hospitals, and asylums, and infirmaries as He did? Who could so unfold the words of heaven, bind up the broken hearts, cast out the evil spirits, prove to men that God had not forgotten the world nor had its control wrested from Him by the devil ? Yet the work of Christ only spread itself over three and a half years ; and before even that brief career is ended, we hear from his lips the strange words, " It is expedient for you that I go away." But what was the effect of Christ's departure ? Why, that after He left the world, there was more of Christ in it than before. The promise of the Comforter, conditioned upon His going away, was fulfilled, and the power of the Holy Ghost came upon the whole company of believers. And thus, while the Lord Himself ascends to heaven, there to carry on the work of His inter- cession for His Church, these anointed men and women, in whose hearts the one absorbing purpose is to magnify Jesus Christ, go out and are multiplied a thousand fold, and spread the knowledge of His Gospel to the very ends of the earth. Christ remaining in the world is a single personality, teaching, healing, saving, and keeping His band of followers clinging timidly to His skirts, only echoing faintly His words and repeating feebly His works. Christ gone from the world and ascended into glory is potentially Christ repro- duced among all His disciples, and these going forth with unparalleled enthu- siasm, boldness and power, preaching Christ's Gospel, re-enacting Christ's life among all the nations and ages. So is it of every great worker. When he seems to drop his toil, he only begins it. While he enters into rest, God takes up the work which he let fall, and sends it out with His indorsement to repeat and multiply itself while the world stands. Do you suppose that when Charlotte Elliott wrote those words now so familiar in all lands : Just as I am witliout one plea, she dreamed of their destiny ? She lived in one of the quiet, unknown ham- lets of Old England ; and hardly one in a score that sing this sweet song knows her name. But how God has taken that one hymn, born, doubtless, in the closet, and sent it round the world, and down through all generations to save souls and exalt Christ. So will it be of our brother's work. Already witness has come to us that these Gospel songs have been translated into Chinese ; and not long since, a missionary in Southern Africa wrote home, that while on one of his tours to establish a station for preaching the Qospel, he heard what seemed familiar music in one of the native kraals which he was passing. Curious to know what was the occasion, he entered the hut and found the Zulu children all engaged in singing in their native dialect, " Hold the Fort \" By a forelook kindred to this would God have us all inspired for our work. It may be true, it ought to be true of every loyal disciple, that the fruitage for Christ after death should be to that preceding it, as the harvests that wave over the prairies to the first handful of seed scattered thereon. And when such leaders as our brother are called home, not only will they being dead yet speak, 330 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. but tlieir very dying, instead of checking tlie Kingdom, shall urge it on. There will be a Joshua to follow every Moses, an Elisha every Elijah, and working through all, the counsel that never knows defeat. Turning now to some features of our brother's character which have im- pressed me, let me notice first, the wonderful sunniness or hopefulness which marked his life. I think I might safely call him the most joyous Christian I have ever known. It was a rare thing to see a shadow even transiently cloud- ing his face. I remember when he came to me with one of his Sunday School singing-books just ready for the press, and desired help as to a fitting name. While we were conversing, suddenly his countenance lighted up with the words, " I believe I have it: why not call it Sunshine?" And some of you will recall how, on the cover there was emblazoned the full -orbed splendor of the sun. So when the " Gospel Songs " came out, the cover bore the same device with an open Bible in the heart of the rays. No symbol could have been more apt. His life, if not always led on under a clear sky, always had the sun shining through the clouds. Not that he was exempt from trials. He had his share of earthly disappointments, and the keen discipline they bring. He knew what it was to be misapprehended ; to have mean and selfish motives at- tributed to him ; to be talked of as having a desire for self-glorification in lead- ing the praise-service of the sanctuary ; to be accused of singing for pay. If any of you have known what it is to have the conceit fasten upon people's minds that you are other than you seem, sordid when you aim to be unselfish, hypo- critical when you seek to be devout, you can understand Mr. Bliss' feelings under such imputations. Yet he never gave visible token of it. And he knew sore trials. He knew what it is to stand by the bed-side of a beloved wife, and press the hand that seems growing chill with the frost of death, and be watch- ing the face for the last look, and day after day looking for the dreaded end to come. It was a marvel to me how he could go through this and be so calm. I thought it must be by a prodigious effort of will ; but I found, as I knew him better, that it was the consciousness of God's tender presence and upbearing love that sustained him. His anchorage was within the vail, and he believed and proved that God would be as good as His word, and keep him in perfect peace whose mind was stayed upon Him. So when the younger of these pre- cious children seemed daily slipping out of his embrace, and he bent over the crib that he expected would so soon be empty, to take what might prove the last kiss, his hopefulness suffered no eclipse. There seemed always to be an open door between his soul and the city of light. As might be anticipated, his hymns and music are full of hope and exulta- tion. There is hardly a rdelancholy verse or strain among them all. Almost invariably both songs and music swell and grow jubilant as they move on. Hallelujahs ring all through them. And not a few, however they begin, land us in the glory of the better country before they close. Glad tidings are in- deed in them, and are their inspiration. When the sweet singer put his magnificent voice into the rendering, charged with the fervor of his sympathetic soul, as it was his delight to do, they that listened had a hint of what the joy of the Upper Presence will be. His buoy- ADDEESS OF REV. DR. GOODWHS". 331 ancy was contagious. I have known him, when a prayer meeting' dragged, when very likely the minister was dispirited and others shared the feeling, to sweep his hand over the keys of the piano, and alike by touch and voice scatter the despondency as a burst of sunshine scatters fog ; and this because he sang as he felt. On one of the last occasions when he was with us, in a JQying visit to our cicy made during his work as evangelist, he came in late and sat in the rear of the room. Espying him, I called him forward to sing the hymn en- titled " My Prayer." He struck the piano keys, stopped, and reading the words in the latter part of the first stanza, " More joy in His service," said, " I don't think I can sing that as a prayer any more. It seems to me 1 have as much joy in serving the blessed Master as it is possible for me to bear." And the very last time he was present in a prayer gathering, after listening to the testimony of a number of young converts, he stepped to the piano, and after a word expressive of his delight in hearing the new voices, he said he would sing a new song that he hoped would encourage those who had recently come out for Christ. Then in his own royal way, that thrilled every heart, he gave us " Hold Fast till I Come : " Oh spirit o'erwhelmed by thy failures and fears, Look up to thy Lord, tho' with trembling and tears ; Weak faith, to thy call seem the heav'ns only dumb ? To thee is the message, " Hold fast till I come." Hold fast till I come. Hold fast till I come ; A bright crown awaits thee ; Hold fast till I come. This was his spirit always. Mr. Moody says God cannot use a discouraged Christian. If that be so, it is easy to see one prime factor of Brother Bliss' success in his work. He never lost heart, and so never compelled God to set him aside and use some one else. And this is what the Master wants us all to be, what the world greatly needs to see, — buoyant, cheerful, singing believers. The current idea is that the religion of Christ is something burdensome, disheartening, a sort of sack- cloth-and-ashes life, chiefly led on through humiliations, fightings, fears. Christian people are largely responsible for this. Like the children of Israel in the desert, we are always ready to murmur at the roughness of the way, the lack of comforts, the bitter handlings of Providence. Many grumble far more than they give thanks. They forget the daily manna, the sufficient grace, the fellowship of the Spirit, the better country. Oh, the darkness that settles on so many Christian faces, and the despondency that enwraps so many Christian lives. How little do we impress those that know us best as being the children of a King I How seldom do they think of us as possessors of incalculable treasure, walking ever through green pastures, fearing no evil, having God's arms about us, and our faces shining with the joy of our communion with Christ and the anticipations of the glory that is only a few heart-beats away ! I fear that instead of this, as they see our somber faces and hear our dolorous witness, they think of treadmills and service under the lash. This ought not 332 KZMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. so to be. Dear brethren, let this life so overflowing with gladness help us to better things. Let it help us to that appropriation of our privileges as those who have been redeemed, delivered from condemnation, made now the chil- *• dren of God., the heirs of the kingdom, that shall banish doubt and keep the songs of jubilee breaking continuallv from our lips. ^ Another trait of our brother's character was his thorough unselfishness. It seems strange that he should have been even suspected of being sordid or eager for self-glorification. And yet there are those, as has been intimated before, that thought him covetous of praise and pav. Xever was suspicion more gTotmdless, nor was there the slightest taint of sordidness about him. When he entered upon his career as a Gospel singer, his profession was yielding him a handsome revenue, and (as his publishers have assured me) he was certain to realize affluence. He turned his back on these prospects, and like the brother with whom he was associated, he surrendered income and ambitions, and with a family to be cared for, unhesitatingly committed himself to a life that prom- ised not a penny. And he never murmured, never was downcast and never regretted the decision. Some of the facts respecting this unselfishness are very significant as showing how completely this spirit ruled him. Take that grand tribute paid him by Mr. Moody in the Tabernacle at Chicago last Sab- bath morning. He stated, that the royalty on the Gospel Songs and Hymns amounted to |60,000. He proposed to Mr. Bliss that he should take $5,000 of this sum and provide himself with a home. Mr. Bliss promptly declined the oSer. They had agreed, as he felt, that whatever income was derived from the books should be devoted, to benevolent uses. And he added, that if his Master was able to go without a home, he was sure fie could until some other way opened to secure it. Mr. John Church, the Cincinnati publisher of his music, said to me : " TAlien Mr. Moody returned from Europe the last time, Mr. Bliss had nearly ready for publication a book which I am cenain would have netted not less than $10,000 or $12,000. Notwithstanding, when Mr. Moody wished him to issue a volume jointly with Mr. Sankey for use in revival ser- vices, he at once complied, and without a word of regret over the great pecu- niary sacrifice, transferred all his choicest songs and music to the new book." Such things were characteristic, not exceptional. He had what I fear compar- atively few Christians have, a charity fund to which he sacredly devoted a given part of his income. I do not know what that proportion was. but it has come to my knowledge that on occasion it yielded $1,000 in six months. Xo matter what needs pressed, that fund was never invaded. And the signifi- cant thing about it was that it never seemed to run dry. He has put repeatedly into my hands sums ranging from $10 to |:25 to be used among the poor. And when I expressed surprise at his being able to spare it, his reply was that God. was very good to him and he never lacked, I have known him to hand his pocket-book to our church visitor after some recital of guflfering or destitu- tion, and tell her to help herself in behalf of those in need. I suspect that when the charity fund failed through the demands upon it, there was a fresh £issignment of income. Would that more of the Lord's people would follow that praaice. ADDEESS OF EEV. DR. GOODWIiq". 333 Then our brother was always glad to lend himself to every service where- by he could lighten the burdens of any afflicted heart. He never spared him- self in the line of ministering comfort at funerals, and services among the poor, and where the Shepherd had taken children to the upper fold. Now in the cottage of the day-laborer, now in the attics, or tenement houses where poverty and wretchedness abound, everywhere he was to be found scattering gloom, upbearing faith, solacing aching hearts, preaching Christ with the mar- vels of his song. How often as he sang have the tears and sobs ceased and the light broken in on the faces full of dismay 1 There are many homes where the music of that voice bringing God's comforts to the soul in its trouble, lingers in a memory that will never die. So when our brother sang, as he so often did, by the bedsides of God's afflicted children, he was greatly blessed in bringing out the bright side of God's providences. I have in mind a sister to whom the night brings no darkness and the day no sun, who rarely missed a visit from this pilgrim singer when he was in the city. And I have it from her lips that when that silver voice rang through her heart, and set forth the Christian's hope and triumph, her repinings ceased, her depression passed away, and forgetful of herself she was filled with joyful thoughts of Christ, and with the spirit of acquiescence in His will. Naturally this unselfishness found its highest expression in devotion to the work of winning souls. Always single-hearted, and faithful in using his opportunities for doing good, after he took up evangelistic labor he came to have a peculiar intensity of zeal in spiritual things. He hungered for more knowledge of Christ, more of the indwelling power of the Spirit, and this to the end that he might save men. In his later years, this desire was very marked. His testimonies in social meetings always emphasized it ; his daily conversation had it for a constant theme ; his appeals to Sabbath School chil- dren, his songs were full of it. Even his ordinary correspondence, not only that of a friendly character, but that relating to business, was permeated with it. From the letters I have seen, I am constrained to believe that during the last three years, those letters, of whatever kind, were exceptional, that did not contain some word of earnest witness, encouragement or appeal in behalf of Christ and His salvation. I saw, the other day, a purely business letter in which toward the end was a most affectionate entreaty to accept Christ and live for Him. I remember a letter to a member of the choir, in which he pressed upon her very earnestly the claims of her Savior, and she traces to that appeal the beginning of her life of faith. And how many of you can bear like witness to his solicitude for your salvation? In how many of your homes has he prayed during his transient home visits ? With how many of you has he had personal interviews concerning your eternal welfare ? How faithful he was to his Master and to you in these days of his last fellowship on earth. When he instituted those Bible readings and plead for souls, neither you nor he dreamed the end was so near, and that this was his last work for the Lord he loved. But if he had known it, wherein could he have been more faithful ? Up and down this valley he went day after day, telling the old, old story, and seeking 334 MEMOIK OF P. P. BLISS. to persuade all who heard, to believe and be saved ; and, as I learn, nearly a score of new-born souls rejoice to-day in the hope of eternal life through these labors. This was his spirit always. He never had a choir rehearsal that was not opened with prayer ; and the burden of his prayer was, that the singing might exalt Christ. In the center of one of the stained windows of the transept of the church was a large crimson cross, and around it the words, "God forbid that I should glory save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ." Mr. Bliss often called attention to that symbol and its motto, and said, " I am glad the cross is always before us when we sing. Let us seek to forget ourselves and magnify Christ." A little incident that occurred at the time of the burning of our church, in January, 1873, illustrates this. The front gable of the church was surmounted by a large cross, and underneath it was an immense window studded with pur- ple stars. As the flames rolled up from within, the starry emblazonry shone out very beautifully ; and when, climbing higher, they fairly garlanded the cross and, standing there among the gleaming stars, it seemed to dash the fiery billows back as with majestic disdain, the sight was grandly impressive. Com- ing up to a young man, a member of the Sabbath School, Mr. Bliss laid his hand upon his shoulder, and said, "James, why not give your heart to the Savior to-night? Why not come to the cross this very hour? See it yonder! it was never so beautiful, never so dear to me as now." And I have it from the lips of the young man, now a member of the church, that those words on the pave- ment brought him to a decision, and then and there he planted the cross in his heart. So this dear brother wrought ever. And no words could more truly set forth the one absorbing purpose that ruled his life, than those of one of his later and most effective pieces : ' My only song and story Is— Jesus died for me ; My only hope of glory The cross of Calvary. Would that the thousands of Christian people whose hearts are saddened by this providence, might, through it, come to know a spirit of like coveting of souls. I name as a final characteristic that our brother was preeminently a singer of the Gospel. Taking both songs and music into the estimate, I think I may safely call him the Gospel singer of the age. Certainly I know of no one in the whole range of hymnology that has put Gospel truth into song with the clearness, and fullness and power which stamps the compositions of P. P. Bliss. Many of his songs, especially his later ones, are little else than Scripture versi- fied and set to music. Take, for example : " Jesus of Nazareth Passeth By," " Free from the Law," "Look and Live," " Whosoever Will may Come," ADDEESS OF REV. DR. GOODWm. 335 " Hear ye the Glad Good News from Heaven ? " " Almost Persuaded," Seeking to Save," " No Other Name." There is Gospel enough in almost any one of them to lead a troubled soul to Christ. And in no hymns with which I am acquainted, not even Charles Wesley's, is the doctrine of salvation by the blood of Christ as the sacrifice for sin, so clearly stated, so fully emphasized ; and no wonder — these songs were born in the closet and at the foot of the cross. This is why, as Mr. Moody testifies, no songs so lay hold of people's hearts. In words and music they are surcharged with the very spirit of the Gospel. And herein lies the secret of the power which they are destined to wield in after years. Take the hymns that have wrought themselves imperishably into the aflFections of God's people, such, for example, as : " Rock of Ages," "Just as I am," " Nearer, my God, to Thee," " Jesus, Lover of My Soul," " All hail the Power of Jesus' Name," and what is the reason of the place they hold ? Obviously this, that they em-^ body truths which go to the heart of the Gospel, truths that have to do with the most vital experiences of the soul in seeking and working out salvation. So of these songs of Philip Bliss. And this is why the Chinese and the Zulus sing them. They do not sing "Hail Columbia," or the "Star Spangled Ban- ner." They do not care for the story of our native land ; they have no interest in either its past or its future. But the story of Jesus Christ, of the Lamb slain that sinners might have pardon, that story finds a response in their hearts. They know they are in darkness. They know they are in trouble. They know the curse of sin binds its yoke upon their souls, keeps its cry of woe upon their lips. And when they hear these songs, they recognize the offer of help, the opening up of a way of deliverance. In a word, the conscious want of men the world over is Christ, and these songs preach Him. They press him so fully, that if a ship were wrecked among the South Sea Islands, where no mis- sionary has ever yet set foot, and the survivors should have no Bliss, nothing but a copy of the " Gospel Songs," I should expect in five years to find churches and Sunday Schools and revivals and missions among the heathen round about. They have been most wonderfully blessed already. At the farewell meet- ing in London, after the labors of Brother Moody and Brother Sankey were closed in that city, Lord Shaftesbury said that "if Mr. Sankey had done no more than teach the people to sing ' Hold the Fort,' he would have conferred an inestimable blessing on the British Empire." Mr. Sankey bears witness that these songs laid hold of the English people with wonderful power. Major Cole says, *' the ragged children of London, children who are largely street waifs, living in the utmost ignorance and degradation, flocked to hear and sing these songs till they had ten thousand of them at a gathering. And to this day, they 336 MEMOIE OF P. P. BLISS. are to be lieard on the streets, in the courtyards, stables, sliops, factories, homes, everywhere. Mothers rock their babes to sleep with them alike among the rich and the poor. Nobility and peasantry find common inspiration in them, and to the suffering and dying of every rank they minister inexpressible blessing. But their grandest work, at home and abroad, has been in preaching the Gospel and winning souls. Let me give a single illustration of many connected with the recent revival services in Chicago. One of the reformed inebriates says that he had been for years one of the hardest of drinkers. His friends had given him up as a hopeless case, and he had given up himself and expected to die as he lived, and meet a drunkard's awful doom. In this condition he came to Chicago,' and one day, when more than half-intoxicated, wandered aimlessly with the crowd into the Tabernacle, and found a seat in the gallery. He was too intoxicated to know much about what was going on, and did not re- member anything about the text or the sermon. During the evening, Mr. San- key sang " What shall the Harvest be ? " And when he came to the words — *' Sowing the seed of a lingering pain, Sowing the seed of a maddened brain, Sowing the seed of a tarnished name. Sowing the seed of eternal shame ; O, what shall the harvest be ? " the singer's voice rang through the inebriate like a trump of judgment, and fairly sobered him. The conscience so long dead was roused and began to lash him with the words of the song. His wasted, wretched life passed in painful review before him. The promise of his youth blighted, the ambitions and hopes of manhood turned to ashes, his family beggared and disgraced ; his name a byword of shame, his friends among the pure and good all alienated and his fellowship only with the low and vile, his whole career one dark, damning record of folly and sin, and before him a gathering night of hopeless despair — ^he could not endure the torment of such a vision. It was hell before the time. So he went out and tried to drown the song in drink. But it would not die. It rang in his ears by day and by night, and forced him again and again to the Tabernacle. By and by his sin so burdened him that he went to Mr. Sawyer's inquiry room, and there God met him, took his feet out of the horrible pit, planted them on the Rock and put a new song into his mouth. And now he is doing with his might to help others bound by the same curse find the blessed liberty of the Gospel. This is only one case of scores, that during this single revival have been led into the kingdom through the agency of these hymns. So it has been elsewhere, so it will continue to be. I believe, with Mr. Moody, that God raised up Philip Bliss as truly as Charles Wesley to save men by singing the Gospel. And herein lies the guaranty of a mighty harvest of souls in the days to come. Few of us have ever read John Wesley's or Isaac Barrow's sermons ; but there are none of us who do not sing Charles Wesley's hymns, and Isaac Watts' versions of the Psalms. The preacher's horizon relatively to the ADDKESS OF REV. DR. GOODWIN". 337 singer's is an exceedingly narrow one. He may reach tlie men of his city, his country, his age, possibly a handful in other lands and in after years ; but the singer's voice ranges all lands, all ages. Not only does it not die, but it gathers potency with every cycle of years. Such hymns as Rock of Ages, Just as I Am, My Faith looks up to Thee, will be sung as long as there are saints to be helped or sinners to be saved. Every generation will only widen their influence and magnify their power as agencies which God delights to honor. I do not hesitate to say that some of my Brother Bliss' songs will go down the future side by side with these in their ministry of Christ and salva- tion. And the fruitage of his life before God called him, blessed as it was, compared with that which shall yet be garnered, will prove only as the first fruits to an ingathering that only the arithmetic of heaven can measure. He dropped the seeds by handfuls, but the harvest shall wave like Lebanon. While I say these things, I do not forget how thoroughly identified with our brother in all his aims and work, was his dear wife, over whose early going home we both mourn and rejoice to-day. She not only cheerfully accepted the call of Providence which took her husband so largely from home, but with constant and potent aid of voice and pen she helped to crown his work with an abundant success. He appreciated such cooperation, and often recognized it, saying that he " was more indebted to his wife than any one else for what he was and what he had done." " Lovely and pleasant in their lives, in their death they were not divided." Their memories are alike precious, and their works will alike follow them. In the mountains of the Tyrol, it is the custom of the mothers, and wives and children to go forth when the twilight gathers, to welcome home their husbands, and fathers and sons, from their care of the flocks up the mountain heights. And as they go they sing a strain or two of some national air, and then listen, till apparently from the clouds there float down to them the answer- ing refrains, and they know that all is well, and that ere long they will see the faces and be clasped in the arms of those they love. Something so may we not venture to imagine it here. In the deepening twilight of our sorrow we lift our eyes to the uplands of the better country, longing for the fellowship of these dear departed ones. And as we look, the sweet strains they taught us and "which we were wont to sing together, break instinctively from our lips, and lo, in the pauses of our song there seems to float down to us from the heavenly heights the refrain borrowed from our lips, " Watching and waiting for you." Dear friends, we are the pilgrims, and these who have gone before are the ones at home. And a little way on, a few more steps only of this rough and thorny way, after a few more pains, and griefs, and tears, and a little more blessed toil for Christ and for souls, we shall receive their welcome, share their joy, and abide in our Father's house forever. I should be unfaithful to the spirit of my brother, and to the significance of this Providence, if I did not add a word of solemn admonition. Dear friends, you have been wont, some of you, to meet the appeals of the Gospel for your personal acceptance of Christ, with that old excuse, " when I have a conve- nient season." Very possibly you used it, or had it in your thought, when you 22 338 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. were pressed by my brother during these last meetings held here the week before he died. You may have sat where you now do, and as his loving eye searched you out, and his tender entreaty fell on your ear, you may have answered, " Yes, I ought to decide for Christ, I ought to make sure of the sal- vation of my soul, and when I have a convenient season, I will." Ah, that hoary lie, how many souls it has deluded into perdition. What a mighty witness this catastrophe to the Scripture doctrine — now is the accepted time. Suppose our brother had gone through that train on that fatal evening and said to his fellow-travelers, " We propose to have a little Gospel meeting in the parlor car. We will sing a few hymns, have a word or two of Scripture, and a few testimonies and prayers as any feel inclined. We should be glad to have you there." Suppose, further, that such a meeting had been held, and that just before the train reached Ashtabula, Mr. Bliss had said : " Friends, this has been a delightful hour. It has made heaven seem very near, and eternal things very real. It is not to be expected that we shall ever meet again, and now be- fore we part, I feel impressed to invite any who have not yet accepted Christ, to receive Him now. Now He stands at the door. Now the Spirit calls. To- morrow may be too late. I will sing a little song and while I sing, will not those present without conscious peace with God, make the great decision." Then, after singing in his touching way " Almost Persuaded," imagine that just as the whistle sounded for their last stop, he closed the meeting. What various comments would have followed. Let us hope that there would have been one or two at least to accept the offered salvation and to pass from death unto life. But the greater number would doubtless have stood aloof. Some would have said, " This gentleman sings well, I should like to hear him in a concert where they had something besides hymns." Some, " This matter of salvation is of great importance ; I have often wished I were a Christian, and when New Year's comes round I believe I will set about being one in earnest." Others, These evangelists are all alike ; they don't think it impertinent to interrupt a game of cards, ag this one did ours, or a pleasant story, or conversation. Then they are always talking about ' blood,' and * wrath,' and despair, and making every one feel so uncomfortable. I wish they would keep their reli- gion to themselves." Possibly some would have sneered, and as they stepped on board as the train started from Ashtabula, said, *' what folly to be frightened into getting on one's knees and crying for forgiveness here on the cars I There will be time enough for that when we get home. They are having a revival in our town, and the true place to settle such a question is a church, or a man's home." Then a moment of adjustment to their places, the cards dealt, the books resumed, the jests exchanged, the storm noted and their watches exam- ined to see how late they would be at Cleveland : then that terrific plunge — the convenient season forever beyond their reach ! Oh, friend, if you are here unsaved, let the voice of this dreadful calamity emphasize that one word now. The word of God has no invitation, no promise for to-morrow. Repent now. Believe now. Escape for thy life now. May God help you every one to believe this day on the Lord Jesus Christ and to be saved. ADDRESS OF MAJOR WHITTLE. 339 At the close of Mr. Goodwin's address, Major Whittle announced as a closing song a hymn that had just been found among Mr. Bliss' papers — probably his latest work — entitled He Knows." He remarked that had Mr. Bliss desired to leaye a special message of comfort to his bereaved friends appropriate to their present calamity, he could not have left anything more beautiful or more comforting. So I go on in the dark, not knowing ; I would not if I might ; I would rather walk with God in the dark Than walk alone in the light ; I would rather walk with Him by faith Than walk alone by sight. Before the singing of the hymn Major Whittle briefly addressed the people as follows : I cannot but say a word to God's people who are here in this village. It seems to me that Christian men and women here should consecrate themselves anew to God. It is not a light thing to have the providence of God come to any of us as it has come to you. You have had two of God's servants among you. Mrs. Bliss stood shoulder to shoulder with her husband, consecrated to God, ripening for Heaven ; a noble, Christian woman ; my sister in Christ Jesus. I loved her as I loved her husband. You have had these two servants of God and they have left their testimony here. Dear friends, I would not want to die in this village professing to be a Christian, and go up to God with a barren record. Some of you went to school with them and know how right down thorough they were. Take up this work. Let the memory of this dear brother inspire us. Let his songs inspire us. His heart was here in Rome. He prayed for you here in Rome. He loved these hills. This valley was dear to him. A year ago he started a union Sabbath School, for he loved the children. Consecrate yourselves anew to this work. Let his name be attached to a union Sunday School. And as the echo of his glorious voice has rung over these hills, may it never die away till we are called to meet him in glory. You loved that noble man as a brother. You loved his wife, that dear, dear sister. You could not bear to have a word said against him. But you grieved Philip Bliss in the deepest sympathy of his heart. When he looked back upon these hills for the last time, he carried away an ache in his heart that many of you had a part in putting there. You never have given your hearts to his Savior. Philip Bliss loved Jesus Christ; and that anybody that he loved should not love Jesus Christ made his heart ache. All the best impulses of your heart are upon the side of Jesus. My friends, I beg of you in the name of Christ, in the name of Philip Bliss, in the name of his dear wife who grew up 340 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. in your valley, and is now in Heaven, I beg of you, young women, young men, middle aged, give your hearts to God. I do pray God that this may be a blessed day to this valley, to these pastors, and to friends all. And I want Brother Goodwin to lead us in prayer before we sing, that we may consecrate ourselves to the service of our Master, and that you will decide : I take Philip Bliss' Savior as my Savior, his God as my God. The Elmira (New York) Advertiser, from which we have largely drawn for the materials for this chapter, says : " The services were about two hours and a half in duration and were very solemn and impressive throughout. The many relatives of the deceased, and the fact of this having been the home of their childhood, and many present remembering them as schoolmates and early friends, made it seem to the whole community like a house- hold grief. Never has any event in the history of this beautiful valley so profoundly moved its population. Mr. and Mrs. Bliss were enthroned in the hearts of the people. Their memory will linger long round those beautiful hills and among the people of the Wy- socken Valley ; — the place they loved to call their earthly home. His last labor for the Master was done here. During the two weeks of his holiday visit he held almost nightly meetings and visited from house to house, inviting his friends to accept Christ. G-od blessed his labors, and a score or more during his visit turned to the Savior. At an afternoon service on the day of the funeral, many more who had been impressed during Mr. Bliss' labors publicly manifested their decision to accept Christ and commence a Christian life. " By special request, a union meeting was also held in Towanda in the evening — a memorial service participated in by all the pastors and people. Eev. Darwin Cook, pastor of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss twenty years ago in Eome, who gave Mr. Bliss his first encouragement to devote himself to the composition of music, and who married them, was present and offered prayer. Upon invitation, at the close, a large number rose as desiring the prayers of Christians that they mi^ht enter into a Christian experience." CHAPTER XXYII. THE MEMORIAL SERVICES IN CHICAGO — ADDRESSES BY MR. MOODY, DR. GOOD- WIN, AND OTHERS — THE SONG SERVICE AT THE TABERNACLE. FOE the account of the memorial services held in Chicago, we are much indebted to the daily newspapers, and have in part adopted their language as our own, as it eloquently portrays the character of the services and the deep feeling betrayed by the people. A large congregation assembled at the Tabernacle on Sunday morning, December 31, 1876. Mr. Moody had announced a sermon on " The Return of Our Lord," but from the drapery of mourning around the platform and the galleries, with its heavy lines and festoons of black and white, and the pure beautiful white crowns which stood upon the speaker's stand, it was evident that, instead of the coming of the Lord to us, the topic of the morning was to be the departure of loved ones to Him. The announcement in the papers that Mr. Bliss, with his entire family, had perished in the fearful wreck of the railway train at Ashtabula, Ohio, fell with such weight upon the ears and hearts of his thousands of friends in Chicago, that for hours it was impossible for them to realize it, or even to believe it to be true. But, if any of them went with linger- ing hopes to the meeting, one look at the great Tabernacle with its emblems of death overhanging the promises of eternal life which are inscribed on its walls, was sufficient to show that the only hope of ever seeing or hearing this sweet singer of our Israel again was in joining him on the other shore. Four crowns all together, and all for one family ! Not often does heaven bestow so lavishly. One for Paul, one for " Paulina," one for the son who bore his father's name, and one for little George Goodwin ; these crowns are woven of pure white camellias and lilies, but those crowns are made of " glory." While the congregation was assembling the choir sang softly and lovingly several of the favorite hymns written by the man whose name Death had written on the tablets of history, and whose record 842 MEMOIR OF P. P. BLISS. God had written in the Book of Life. Presently Mr. Moody entered, and, as all eyes were turned to see how this man, twice broken under the weight of affliction since these meetings began, would bear himself, and as all ears were listening for his first word in his great sorrow, he stood up in his place and, with manifest trouble to keep back the sobs and tears, he repeated those words of David, " Know ye not that there is a Prince and a great man fallen in Israel ! " Then, almost unable to speak for weeping, he said, " Let us lift up our hearts to God in silent prayer." A long period of silence fol- lowed, broken at length by signs of overpowering emotion, in the midst of which the voice of Dr. Chamberlain was heard giving thanks to God for the hope of eternal life, on behalf of this entire household who had been borne on angels' wings from the place of terror and death up to the bosom of God. The congregation then joined in singing: "In the Christian's Home in Glory there Eemains a Land of Best;" after which Mr. Moody arose and said : I was to take up the subject of our Lord's return, but I cannot control my feelings so as to speak as I intended. I will take up that subject at another time. When I heard last night that Mr. Bliss and his whole family had perished, at first I could not believe it, but a despatch from a friend who was on the train took away all hope, and left me face to face with death. For the past three months I have seemed to stand between the living and the dead, and now I am to stand in the place of the dead. Mr. Whittle and Mr. Bliss were announced to hold the 4 o'clock meeting in the Tabernacle to-day, and now Mr. Farwell, and Mr. Jacobs, and Mr, Whittle, with other friends, have gone to see if they can find his remains to take them away for burial. I have been looking over his hymns to see if I could find one appropriate to the occasion, but I find they are all like himself, full of hope and cheer. In all the years I have known and worked with him I have never once seen him cast down. But here is a hymn of his that I tlfcught we might sing. Once after the wreck of that steamer at Cleveland, I was speaking of the circumstance that the lower lights were out, and the next time we met he sang this hymn for me ; it is the sixty-fifth in our collection ; let us sing it now. It begins, " Brightly beams our Father's mercy," but still more brightly beams the light along the shore to which he has passed. It was in the midst of a terrible storm he passed away, but the lights which he kindled are burning all along the shore. He has died young, — only about 38 years old, — but his hymns are sung round the world. Only a little while ago we received a copy of these hymns translated into the Chinese language. In spite of the mourning it is sweet to think that this whole family passed away together, father and mother, Paul, only 4 years old, and little George, only MEMORIAL SERVICES IK CHICAGO. 343 2 years old, all gone home safe together. There comes a voice to us saying, "Be still and know that I am God," but we know that " our Father doeth all things well." The sixty-fifth hymn was then sung. Mr. Sankey read from a letter he had received from Mr. BHss near his old home in Towanda, Pa., in which his happy faith in God and his love for his dear old mother were sweetly expressed. Eev. Dr. Goodwill, of whose church Mr. Bliss had for many years been a loved and honored member, then came forward and said : Ever since these sad tidings came I have been trying to say, " Not my will, but Thine be done." I don't know of any death that has come so near to me. For years I have been almost as a part of that household ; one of the little ones bore my name ; we have worked and prayed together, and I have known very much of his heart in connection with the great mission of his life, and shared in his ever-increasing delight that God was using him and his music so wonder- fully. It was hours after the awful news came before I could see any light, but at last I seemed to see a vision of a great praise service in heaven with Brother Bliss leading it — he was to have led a praise meeting at our Sunday- school this afternoon — and then I found light in this darkness. Out of the fifty Sunday-school scholars who are now waiting to be received into the fellowship of our church, there is hardly one but can bear witness to his helpfulness in leading them to Christ. This morning it seems wonderful to me that this whole family should be taken up together, all at once, to enter the world of praise and take up the new song ; a f wdl household now, for one had gone before. Out of this affliction has come to them an exceeding and eternal weight of glory, and so I begin to feel it, as well as say it, all is well, all is well. It is not that the Lord does not care for us ; but " Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints,'' a»d " The day of his death is better than the day of his birth.' Thirty-five times have I been called this year to comfort the mourning ones in my congregation, and the thought has come to me of a little praise meeting in Heaven to-day of those who have come up from that First Congregational Church. This is not the time to speak as I would like to speak, but this I can say, that no man is so identified with the work of the Lord but that God can glorify him, and still carry on the work. Here is that thirteenth hymn whieh Mr. Bliss sung for us the other night. He began by say^j^ " Brethren, I don't know as I shall ever sing here again (and he never did), buc I want to sing this as the language of my heart." Let us sing that hymn," said Mr. Moody, which was done. The next speaker was Eev. Dr. Thompson, who had only the previous evening returned from a double funeral service among his relatives in another State, to which he had been summoned by 344 MEMOIBS OF P. P. BLISS. telegraph, and where he had been singing the hymns of Brother Bliss at the bedside of the sick at the very hour of the awful calamity. He has learned, said the Doctor, the form of his mansion fair, and the song that the angels sing. " A few days ago I received a letter from a friend who had been annoyed at the charge that Brother Bliss sang for gain, and desiring me to disprove it if I could ; and when I spoke to him about it, he said, with a smile : ' I sing for Christ ; I have not even a home to my name.' His songs are sung round the world, and it seems to me they are sung in glory, too. By and by the work of the preacher will be done, but the singing will go on forever ; singing the name of Jesus and the triumph of the redeemed.". After further remarks by Mr. Moody, prayer was offered by Kev. Dr. Williamson, especially in behalf of the mother of the deceased. The twenty-second hymn was then sung — " We^re Going Home.'' Mr. Moody then appointed two committees ; the first to raise money and erect a monument to the memory of the dead, consisting of Messrs. T. W. Harvey, J. V. Farwell, Henry Field, and J. D. Sankey. Mr. Henry Field, of Field, Leiter & Co., was appointed treasurer of this fund, to whom all contributions may be addressed. Mr. Moody requested that as there were so many who would want a share in this work of love, that none should give more than a dollar. A collection was then taken for that purpose, the only one ever taken in the Tabernacle. The other committee was to draft resolutions and communicate them to the friends of the deceased. It consists of the Eev. Messrs. Goodwin, Bishop Cheney, Dr. Parkhurst, Dr. Everts and Dr. Petrie. The benediction was pronounced by the Eev. Mr. Walker. At the afternoon services, the Tabernacle was more than com- fortably filled. Those who were there wore on their countenances a funeral aspect. Around the pulpit and along the gallery were long stretches of whi^^nd black muslin, festooned in grieving recollec- tions of Mr. Bliss' untimely end. A spirit of sadness prevailed, and the religion that teaches that the death of good men should bring no mourning in its train seemed to bring very little consolation to the vast number of sorrowing friends, so sudden had been their bereavement. The usual exercises opened with music. MEMOEIAL SERVICES IN CHICAGO. 345 I gave my life for thee, My precious blood I shed That thou might'st ransomed be And quickened from the dead — I gave, I gave My life for thee ; What hast thou given for Me ? Mr. Moody had hoped for some better news, he said; hoped that it might turn out to be a mistake, but a late despatch from Maj. Whittle dispelled all this, and confirmed the first horrible report of the death of Mr. Bliss and his family, whose remains had been re- covered though not recognizable. Mr. Sankey saug " Watching and Waiting for Me," and the audi- ence were still as death as the beautiful words rang out. Mr. Moody said that he had looked forward to this Sabbath to hear Maj. Whittle preach and Mr. Bliss sing. Only Friday night he had told his wife that he was weary, and he anxiously awaited the rest this Sunday promised. But now he found he must take Maj. Whittle's place. Only one text suggested itself to him, and had been ringing in his head all day : ** Therefore be ye also ready." He called on those who had heard him preach for three months to bear him witness that he had said nothing about death, confining himself to life. But it might be that before long God might lay him away, and send some one to take his place, and he could not forbear saying a word urging upon all the necessity of regeneration and preparation. His voice was more subdued than usual, and in all he said and in all his readings from the Scriptures, it. came tremulously and mingled with tears. He spoke painfully and with difficulty, the words some, times utterly unintelligible. " Be ye therefore ready. Don't put it ofi". There are some who may say I am preaching for effect and making use of this good man's death to frighten you." Satan might even say that of him and say it truly. He was preaching for effect, and he hoped the effect would be to save the soul of every human being before him. He felt that he must warn them — must warn them of the wrath to come and the death pursuing. That death hath sent many a warning durmg the year, and now an awful one had come. Many of them had looked down upon the dead faces and opened graves of departed friends. Would they not heed those warnings ? Would they not heed this last one, that might be even nearer to themselves than any before ? Death had taken them by surprise, and 346 MEMOIES OE P. P. BLISS. had taken Mr. Bliss at the very time the speaker was writing out the notices of Bhss' appearance to-day. He and his wife were snatched from Hfe. But they were ready. They might have suffered for a few minutes, maybe for an hour, but when they reached heaven there was none in all the celestial choir that sang sweeter or played better on his golden harp than P. P. Bliss. He would rather have been on that train and taken that awful leap, and died like P. P. Bliss and his wife, than had them go as they did. And every man would feel so who knew God and was ready to die. Oh ! might they profit by the calamity. Mr. Moody prayed long and earnestly for the unsaved souls, and invoked the richest outpourings of mercy on the obstinate hearts. At times during the prayer he stopped for some minutes, utterly unable to control his emotions. Then came a silent prayer, during which about two dozen arose on invitation, to be remembered in the invocation. " Eock of Ages,'^ sung by the congregation, closed the services. The morning services on the same day, at the Chicago Avenue Church — widely and popularly known as "Mr. Moody's Church" — were conducted by Messrs. Moody and Sankey. Mr. Sankey sang several of his Gospel solos, one, "When Jesus Comes," a favorite of Mr. Bliss, creating a profound impression on the audience. The whole service— hymns, prayers, and sermon — had reference to the sad end of Mr. Bliss and the dreadful railroad accident of Friday. Prior to the sermon Mr. Moody offered up a fervent prayer for Divine help to sustain them in the sad bereavement which had come upon them. During the sermon which followed, Mr. Moody said: This being tlie last day of the year, I had been looking forward to it as one of the most solemn days of the year, and I had prepared some thoughts to bring out on this occasion. But little did I think it was going to be as solemn as it is. My thoughts have been drifted into another channel entirely. A text came into my mind when I heard of the sudden death of Mr. Bliss and his family. He was coming to the city to fill his appointment here to-day. He was to have been with us this morning, and it seems almost as if I am standing in the place of the dead. It is always solemn to stand between the living and the dead, as a preacher does ; but it is a great deal more solemn to step into a dead man's shoes, as I feel to have done to-day. The text that occurred to me is in the twenty-fourth chapter of Matthew and the forty-fourth verse : " Therefore be ye also ready." Death often took us by surprise, but it did not find Mr. Bliss MEMORIAL SERVICES IN CHICAGO. 34:7 unprepared. He and his mfe had been ripening for heaven for years, and I have been thinking of that family before the throne this morning singing the sweetest song they had ever sung. We should profit by this awful calamity. God is coming very near this city ; there was never before such an inquiring after God as there is now ; and this last stroke of Providence ought to be a warning to every one to get in readiness to meet the Lord. If you do not take this warning I do not know what would move your hearts. There are three things every man and woman ought to be ready for — life, death, and judgment. Life is uncertain ; no man can tell at what hour or in what manner Death may visit him. Accidents like the one which occurred Friday are by no means un- common, and may strike down any one of us. It therefore behooves every man to place his trust in Christ, so that he might be prepared to meet Him at any moment. On the evening of the 5th of January, an additional service was held at the Tabernacle. Inside the building there were at least 8,000 people ; outside there were 4,000. The exercises were to be more than ordinarily interesting, for it was to be a song-service in memory of Mr. Bliss. Early in the evening the crowd assembled to pay their last tribute, anxious to assist in the rites. The Tabernacle was filled. The doors were locked. Those inside patiently awaited the exercises. Outside, the unfortunates pulled and pushed and crowded against the building and begged and implored the inexorable doors to open unto them. It was of no avail. Until the service was ended the disap- pointed held possession of the sidewalks, hoping to hear through the open windows, even if they could not participate. The whole service was musical, with a brief introduction to the hymns by Mr. Moody and short prayers. Hallelujah ! 'tis done, I believe on the Son, I am saved by the blood of the Crucified One, and the congregation took up the chorus. Hold the Fort " came next, the children singing the fourth verse and the choir the refrain. There were hundreds of young voices and they sang with a will. Mr. Moody related the circumstances under which the hymn was written. " Beneath the Cross of Jesus," a hymn not so well known appa- rently as the rest, was sung exquisitely by Mr. Sankey. Then Mr. Moody prefaced "EoU on, Oh! Billow of Fire," with an anecdote of its basis. To the children again was committed the twenty-third hymn, " I am so glad that Jesus loves me." They sang sweetly, and 348 MEMOIES OF P. P. BLISS. at the conclusion there was a rattle of applause in the audience. "Whosoever will may come" brought the congregation to their feet. "At one of the Expositions," said Mr. Moody, "a common inyita- tion was, ' Meet me at the Fountain,' and upon this Mr. Bliss wrote the hymn, 'Will you meet me at the Fountain?'" Mr. Sankey sang it. " Precious promise God hath giyen," and Mr. Moody read the twenty-third psalm, and Mr. Sankey sang, " There's a Light in the Valley for Me." "Weary Gleaner, Whence Cometh Thou?" Mr. Moody spoke of the Gospel meetings in JSTew York, where the ser- vice had been entirely of song. He thought such meetings profit- able. From a friend he had learned that the last seen of Mr. Bliss he had a Bible in his hand and was composing a song never to be heard on earth, only to swell the waves of music that roll across the Heavens. " Only an Armor-bearer Proudly I Stand," sang Mr. Sankey, the congregation joining in the chorus. "Fading Away like the Stars in the Morning," a rich, beautiful hymn, was exqui- sitely rendered by Mrs. Johnson, and Mr. Sankey followed with " Waiting and Watching," the most pathetic of all Bliss' music. " Eock of Ages," to the music composed by Mrs. Bliss, and Hold the Fort," were sung by the congregation as they dispersed. CHAPTER XXYIII. MEMORIAL SERYICES AT SOUTH BEND, ST. PAUL, LOUISVILLE, NASHVlLLE, KALAMAZOO AND PEORIA. 0 widely was Mr. Bliss known, and so warmly was he beloved, that the grief at his death was well-nigh universal among all professing the faith of Jesus. Not alone at Rome and Chicago, but at numerous other places, memorial services were held in honor of the dead singer. We have culled largely from the newspaper reports of these services, and present them here in connected form, as a part of the record this book was designed to perpetuate. On the evening of January 21, a large congregation assembled at the Reformed Church in South Bend, Indiana, to attend the services held there in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss, which were conducted by the pastor. Rev. N. D. Williamson. The songs sung were of Mr. Bliss' own composition, and were very elfectively rendered by the choir and congregation. Two — " Eternity " and " Almost Persuaded " — were sung as solos by Miss Maud Wellman. The pastor enjoyed the personal . acquaintance of Mr. Bliss, and the affectionate regard which he entertained for him was evident in the deep feeling betrayed by the tones of his voice in discoursing of his unspeakably sad fate. Many of the congregation also knew Mr. and Mrs. Bliss, and more than one gave evidence of tears to the manner in which their hearts were touched by the dreadful story. At the close of the sermon. Prof. J. Sydenham Duer read with tender effect the lines written on Mr. Bliss' death by Rev. Dr. Pierson, of Detroit, entitled " The Silent Harp." Hon. Schuyler Colfax had intended to be present and pay a tribute to the memory of Mr. BHss, in lieu of which he sent a tender and beautiful letter, which was read by the pastor. Our limits forbid our giving it space. Mr. Williamson selected as his text Revelation xiv. 13 : " Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord — that they may rest from their 350 MEMOIRS OF P. P. BLISS. labors, and their works do follow them."" We copy the greater por- tion of his discourse : To " die in the Lord " is indeed blessed. But to die in the Lord it is not needful that you die in your bed, at the close of a wasting sickness, attended by skillful physicians, surrounded by tearful friends, and bearing witness with your dying breath to the mercy of the Lord. To die in the Lord it is not necessary to have your body garnitured by all the taste and skill that loving friends and experienced undertakers can furnish, nor to have it followed by a long train of relatives and friends, nor to have it deposited in the grave or the tomb amid the sobbing of the multitude, nor to have the spot visited by admiring friends dur- ing the years and centuries that follow. To those who die in the Lord, death may come on the highway with thunder- ing crash, with shrieks and moans, and suffocated breath, and mangled limbs, and frost, and fire, and storm-winds ; and it may turn the body into undistin- guished ashes, mingled with the snows and waters, so tl*at no friend who seeks them with the intensest gaze of agony, that he may bear them to their sepulture, and no admirer who would beautify the earth that covers them with garlands of gratitude, can tell where they are. For even amid the tornado crash, the rending earthquake, and the consuming fire, the God of the elements and the God of grace can enwrap their souls in His everlasting arms of peace, and bear them with swifter than lightning wing into the realms of the painless and the glorified. And He can keep watch and guard over the ashes of their physical decay, until the dawning of the resurrection morn, when the power that made the God- like Adam out of the dust of the earth will restore them in Christ-like forms of excellence and glory ! And the empha- sis that such a departure gives to the faith and labors of a godly life, may carry the praises of the Lord, through the instrumentality of that life, infinitely far- ther on the broad world and down the reaches of time than a thousand peaceful death-bed utterances possibly could do. Yes ! those whose memories we ' honor to-night — who went into eternity on the sad evening of the 39th of December, from the Ashtabula bridge, amid the terrors and horrors of that carnival of death and destruction, without any premonition of the approach of the grim monster in his most hideous mien, and whose physical forms disappeared from human view in that valley of death as completely as that of Moses did on Mount Nebo when the Lord buried him — died in the Lord, and of them the " voice from heaven " is " heard saying unto me, write, blessed are the dead which die in the Lord ; yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors ; and their works do follow them." Professor Bliss and his wife went to Rome, Bradford county. Pa,, to spend the holidays, preparatory to entering with Major Whipple on the labors of suc- ceeding the brethren Moody and Sankey in the tabernacle work in Chicago. Their last visit in Rome was passed not wholly in tarrying with their relatives and friends, but in assisting in a series of religious meetings during the last week of the year. The last night Professor Bliss was in Rome, which was Wed- nesday night, December 27th, he sang a sacred song, the music of his own com- MEMORIAL SERVICES AT SOUTH BEJfD. 351 posing, and the words written by his wife, entitled Hold Fast till I Come." As he was about to sing it, he remarked, " Here is a song I have never sung in pub- lic, and I don't know as I shall ever sing it again." This song is the last one we have heard of his singing in the earthly assemblies of the saints. On Thursday morning, they left Rome. On Friday evening just before dark, Professor Bliss was seen by a passenger whose life was spared, sitting in a car by the side of his wife, with his open Bible on his knee, and both seemed intently engaged in the study of the Sacred Word, while he was composing a Bible song, which earth was never to hear. And this is the last we know of them in the body. The report that it was Professor Bliss who escaped from a burning car, and went back to rescue his wife, and perished with her, may be true ; it would be just like his tender, generous, manly nature ; but we do not know. The ill-fated train in which our friends had embarked, was made up of two express and two baggage cars, two day passenger cars, one drawing-room car, and four sleepers — eleven cars in all — drawn by two locomotives. As it was crossing the chasm spanned by the Ashtabula bridge, which was only about one- fourth the length of the train, the first locomotive had barely reached the farther abutment, when the bridge went down sixty feet, carrying with it the other locomotive and the cars that followed it ; and then, oh, horror of horrors ! the other cars, with their heated stoves, and lighted candles, and precious freight of human lives and hopes, went leaping down one after another, one on the top of the other, crashing through each other, and as they leaped headlong into the chasm, the fiery stoves went sweeping through some of them from one end to the other, with their ponderous, blistering force, crushing, mangling, and burn- ing the hapless inmates. And soon the bright light, shooting its red glare heavenwards, told the watchers at the station — some of whom are with us to-night, who also had the blessed privilege of ministering there to the wants of numbers of the wounded — the story that was hissing with tongues of flame in the ears of the pinioned prisoners in the deadly gorge below, that the fire fiend was completing the work of the wrecking fiend. What passed between our sunny-hearted friend and his noble wife in these moments freighted wilh the intensest terror that wreck, and frost, and storm, and fire can combine to produce, we know not. But we can imagine that what- ever the number of moments they were compelled to await in that whirlwind of fire the summons home, they had grace to remember the song of their own they had sung two nights before : Oh, child, in thy anguish, despairing or dumb, Remember the message, Hold fast till I come 1 And we can know that at whatever point before the completion of that great holocaust, their ransomed spirits left the mangled and charred bodies behind, they started singing : Where He may lead I'll follow, My trust in Him repose, And all the time in perfect peace, I'll eing, " He knows, He knows." 352 MEMOIES OF P. P. BLISS. Had we the power to follow and witness the effect of the announcement of the tragical earthly end of these two writers of sweet sacred song, as it traveled and is traveling over the round world, what varied scenes of sorrow and regret would we witness ! Here we see the brethren who have been his especial co-laborers, hasten to the scene of disaster as quickly as possible, in a vain anxiety to secure at least the bruised and mangled bodies of their dead friends for Christian burial. There we see the great tabernacle, with its vast assembly of eight thousand inside, and as many waiting outside in the cold in the vain hope of gaining entrance, filled and surrounded with mourners. Yonder we look upon the multitudes gathered at the home funeral service, where their last earthly ministrations were rendered. And on the Atlantic, and on the Pacific coast of America, and between, and over the waters to the east, and to the west, and the south, in Europe and Asia and Africa, the sad tidings bring regret and eulogy and grief to assembled thousands, and to solitary readers and hearers. The Christian songs that have belted the world with their melodies, have caused and will cause their writers to be mourned the world over. " Their works do follow them." And words of sorrow for the dead, and of gratitude to God for what His ser- vant and handmaiden have done in the realm of song, have been spoken in multitudes of places by the great and the obscure. Mr. Williamson here continiied as follows : My personal acquaintance with Professor and Mrs. Bliss began in 1865, one year after he came to Chicago. His musical convention work here was done, I have been informed, in 1869. He began his purely evangelistic work with Major Whittle at the beginning of 1874, and had grown greatly in spirituality and force of character, as well as in breadth and power of influence. It was our earnest endeavor to secure his services, with those of Brother Whittle, for the series of union meetings just closed, but God so ordered affairs that the closing labors of his life were employed elsewhere, and we were saved the severity of the shock, which otherwise would have fallen on us. Still God has come so near to us in this solemn providence, that it becomes every man, woman, and child who has heard the songs of this man and woman, to ask himself and herself. What good ought I to get, what good can I get from it to my immortal soul ? If there should be one here who has not sung or heard the Bliss hymns and music before to-night, it will well become even such an one to ask. What good use can I make of those I have just heard ? How much more should we do it, who have become so familiar with some of this music and have sung these Gospel Hymns so often? A service in memory of Mr. Bliss was held at the House of Hope Church in St. Paul, Minnesota. There had been put upon the blackboard the words, ^^In memory of our brother Philip P. Bliss," and, the board being wreathed in evergreens and the evergreens MEMORIAL SERVICES AT ST. PAUL. 353 sprinkled with white lihes, the whole formed a beautiful tablet. It was placed upon the wall behind the platform, and under it was a cushion of flowers and yines upon which it seemed to be resting. In commencing the sermon, the Superintendent, Mr. Cochran, read the hymn, both the words and the music of which Mr. Bliss wrote, " When Jesus Comes," saying that in no better way could his memory be honored than by singing heartily the hymns which he wrote to the praise of God. The congregation, composed of the reg- ular attendants upon the Sabbath School and those who had come in to participate in the services, then read alternately with the Superin- tendent the first eleven verses of 1 Thessalonians v., after which Mr. Charles H. Bigelow led in prayer. Then was sung the hymn, the words of which Mr. Bliss wrote to music furnished by another, " I know not the Hour when my Lord shall Come," after which Eev. Mr. Breed, the pastor of the church, addressed a few words " to the grown people present." He said he thought it was generally the case that the manner and circumstances of our death would generally be found in some measure to have been anticipated by the thoughts and works of our lives. He called attention to the fact that a mem- ber of this very church and Sabbath School, whom no one would have thought to be anticipating sudden death, but to whom death had come almost unannounced, by terrible accident, had marked in his Bible two of the verses which had just been read. " But of the times and the seasons, my brethren, ye haye no need that I write unto you." " For yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night.^^ Those who" had watched beside the death- bed of that young man have testified that he met his death, sud- denly as it came, calmly and with full faith in his Savior. So, in tMnking of this sad death which came to our brother Bliss, and reading the hymns, could any one fail to be struck with their foreshadowing of the suddenness of his end. Those that have already been sung were examples of it, but perhaps the most striking, not only in its spiritual but physical aptness, was — ■ Througli the valley of the shadow I must go Where the cold waves of Jordan roll, But the presence of my Savior will, I know. Be the staff and support to my souL Literally, Mr. Bliss was called at death, to pass through a valley of the shadow, and literally the cold waves overwhelmed him upon that awful night. 354 MEMOIES OF P. P. BLISS. And yet why should he or any of us be astonished at the suddenness of death, for do we not "know perfectly," as the Apostle saith, "that the day of the Lord so Cometh as a thief in the night V One remaining thought : the lesson to us of Mr. Bliss' life was to consecrate whatever talent God had given to us to His service. It was in his case a musical gift ; he had fully consecrated it, and perhaps more than any other writer of sacred music of the century, his name and memory would live and his music be the means of converting souls to Christ for years and years to come. After Mr. Breed had ceased speaking, Mr. Cochran said that what he had to say was to be addressed to the children present. He then reminded them how Major Whittle and Mr. Bliss when holding services in St. Paul had devoted part of their vacation day, Saturday, to holding a children's service ; how the last one had been held in this very church the last Saturday of their stay in St. Paul. He then described how two children, 5 and 7 years old, had remembered the text from which Mr. Bliss had spoken that morning, making the five words which composed it answer to the five fingers of his left hand while he pointed to them with his right, and thus fixing them in the minds of the children. The text was, " Daniel purposed in his heart and after he had spoken from it he made a request of the children, and these same little children here in St. Paul had remembered this request, though it was made more than a year ago. It was that the children present should remember when they said their prayers at night to pray for Major Whittle and his (Mr. Bliss') little children, from whom they were so often and so long separated. The speaker felt sure that though Mr. Bliss' voice was forever silent in this world, yet if he could to-day speak from Heaven he would make exactly the same request, that the children of St. Paul and every- where should pray for his little boys, who never again on earth would know a father's or mother's love, and the message he would deliver from heaven would be the same message he gave on that Saturday morning in this church, that all would imitate Daniel and accept Daniel's God in Jesus Christ. Another memorial service was held in St. Paul, of which the following letter gives an account : St. Patil, Minn., Jan. 31, 1877. Maj. D. W. Whittle : My Dear Brother — ^We had a memorial service in our little church (Day- ton Avenue Presbyterian) which was to us very interesting. Mr. Bliss had MEMOKIAL SEEVICES AT ST. PAUL. 355 endeared liimself to us not only by his sweet songs, but our children had been to his children's meetings here in Saint Paul, and so nearly all of them knew him personally. During our memorial service a boy 13 years old (son of Senator M.) arose and said he wanted to bear testimony to Mr. Bliss' influence upon him. He stated, between sobs, that the singing of " I've Found the Pearl of Greatest Price " had been the means of leading him to the Savior. Other incidents were given showing how warmly our people felt toward him. We do not forget your labors here, and it may cheer you to know that none of the boys and girls belonging to our Sunday School who were converted at that time have gone back again to the world. A boys' prayer meeting was started soon after you went away, and has been maintained ever since. May God prosper you in all your labors. Very truly yours, L. A. Gilbert, Superintendent Dayton Avenue Sunday School. At Louisyille, Kentucky, the death of Mr. Bliss caused the most profound sorrow. His eyangelical labors there created for him a general regard, while among those with whom he came in personal contact, he was held in affectionate esteem. As one of the local papers expresses it, the great success achieved in that city "was, as far as a religion « ^wpVpriirig concerned, something thzt surpassed all precedent. The singing of Mr. Bliss tended strongly to popu- larize the meetings, and his gospel songs are still used in many of our churches and Sunday Schools." A memorial service was held at the Chestnut Street Presbyterian Church. The attendance, notwithstanding the rain and snow that checkered the weather's general inclemency, was so large that the seating capacity of the church was wholly inadequate to accommo- date the congregation. The aisles and every vacant space were filled with stools and chairs, and many remained standing until the close. After reading the parable of the fig tree (Luke xiii), the pastor, Rev. Mr, Simpson, proceeded to say that the words were peculiarly appropriate to the occasion for two reasons. In the first place, this was the fourth New Year's Sabbath he had spent among them as their pastor, and the words seemed to come with peculiar solemnity to all who had rejected his message: "These three years I come seeking fruit, and find none; cut it down;" while the interceding Savior pleaded once more, perhaps only once, "Let it alone this year also." The parable finally presented the touching picture of the great Intercessor standing between the sinner and his doom, and pleading one more year's delay. How solemn to reflect that He only asked one year, and even that was not 356 MEMOIES OF P. P. BLISS. assured ; and after that even Jesus promised to cease to plead for the hardened and impenitent. Having at some length expounded these thoughts, he pro- ceeded to the second and principal part of his discourse — in reference to the occasion as a memorial service. In the second place, he said, the parable had reference to two very sudden calamities that had occurred — the slaughter of certain Jewish worshipers by Pilate, and the destruction of eighteen by tne falling of a tower in Siloam. How suitably its lessons connected themselves with the many appalling disasters which had lately shocked the public mind; and how tenderly these lessons were impressed by the sad memories of the terrible death they had met to-night to improve. If any might have claimed exemption from such a fate it was one whose usefulness seemed scarcely in its prime, and if he were not spared how could the careless and indifferent risk delay? Mr. Simpson then referred to Mr. Bliss' connection with the work in Louisyille two years pre\iously, and the loving recollections he had left behind him in hundreds of hearts. "The eyangelists had always regarded it as the most cheering work of their lives, and hopes had been cherished of their return this winter. Their plans, however, had been made to spend the winter in Chicago, continuing the work Mr. Moody had begun, and then visit Europe in the summer, and begin the work in Great Britain." The speaker closed by an earnest appeal to all who hesitated to accept the G-ospel, to begin at once to seek the Savior, whose greater love and more terrible sacrifice for them had been feebly shadowed forth in this sad calamity. Mr. Bliss had died to save a dear wife, and failed; Christ had died to save His enemies, and, as a living, loving, pleading Friend, stood now at every heart, crying, " Behold I stand at the door and knock ; if any man hear my voice and open the door, I will come in to him and sup with him, and he with me."' The noblest tribute they could lay upon the grave of then- dear friend was to know that even his death and its lessons had led a great multitude of the unsaved to the Master he loved so well. In response to this appeal, many persons rose in acknowledgment of their purpose to begin that night to seek the Savior, and after a solemn prayer for them, the service closed. The First Cumberland Presbyterian Church, in Nashville, Tenn., was crowded on the occasion of the Bliss memorial services, even the space in the rear of the seats being completely filled. The exercises opened by a portion of the choir singing "Almost Persuaded." Dr. Baird said that only a few years ago there was a new era in MEMORIAL SERVICES 12^ NASHVILLE. 357 secular songs. People discovered that little children could sing, and from this sprang songs fall of simplicity and truth, that were caught up and set the world on fire. He paid a touching tribute to Mr. Bliss, dwelling briefly on the striking simplicity of his character, his Christian earnestness and devotedness to the cause of Christ. The songs thty would sing to-night were compositions of Mr. Bliss, in some cases both the words and music. The next song they would sing was probably at this very moment ringing along the streets of London and Edinburgh, and throughout America. "I am so glad Jesus Loves Me" was then sung, and followed by a prayer from Rev. M. B. DeWitt, in which he alluded to the consecra- tion on the altar of Christ, and the removal of the " Sweet Singer " and evangeUst from his work in this world to take up his songs in Heaven. The song " "Watching and Waiting " then followed. Mr. DeWitt made a few remarks, and was followed by Dr. Baird, who offered a series of resolutions, which were adopted by a rising vote. Eev. A. J. Baird, pastor of the First Cumberland Church, sends us the following letter respecting the above meeting : Nashville, Tek>\, Jan. 8, 18T7. My Deab Bro. Whtitle : Last night was a memorable evening with. us. We held a service of song in my church in memory of our dear Brother Bliss. Our service consisted of prayer, a few remarks by different persons, but chiefly singing. The choir, orchestra and congregation joining. Oh, it was so sweet to recall the holy memories of the meetings held by yourself and our lamented brother. Many were there who were brought to the Savior during those meetings. Our songs were : "Almost Persuaded," " Waiting and Watching," " Jesus Loves even Me," "Hallelujah, 'tis Done," "Free from the Law," "When Jesus Comes," "That will be Heaven for ISIe," " Hold the Fort." It is a joy to join with the friends in Chicago and elsewhere in cherishing the precious memory of our dear de^Darted brother and sister. A. J. Baikd, Pastor First Cumberland Presbyterian Church. A commemorative service in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Bliss was held in the Presbyterian Church at Kalamazoo, Michigan, under the auspices of the Young Men's Christian Association. The arrange- ments for the meeting were in the hands of a committee of one from each of the co-operating churches. Abundant material for draping 358 MEMOIRS OF P. P. BLISS. tlie church was loaned hy several of the merchants. Mrs. Jas. Allen supplied the artificial flowers used, made the beautiful cross, crown and shield used in the decorations, and gave her aid, with Mrs. Frank Eussell, Mrs. J. C. Burrows and Miss Smith, to the work of preparation. The skill and taste exhibited by these ladies be- tokened how much they had the subject at heart. The drapery of black and white extended fully around the church on the galleries, and was beautifully arranged in folds. The platform v/as arranged in nearly the same manner as when it was occupied by the evangel- ists, during their revival work in that city. An organ was placed upon it, with the motto Mr. Bliss had on his : God so loved the world that he gave his Only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not Perish, but have Everlasting Life," forming an acrostic of the word " Grospel." The singer's chair was in the posi- tion as when used by him, and appropriately draped. The chair Mrs. Bliss used was elevated so as to indicate to the audience the place occupied in the choir by her. It was also fitly draped. The drapery was centred over the pulpit, and drooped to the doors on either side ; and at the point of the draping over the center was a cross on a shield ; underneath it, in large capitals, the title of the last song Mr. Bliss sang while in Kalamazoo — " Waiting at the Beau- tiful Gate.'' Over one door leading into the chapel was a superb cross ; on the other, a crown. Everything betokened taste and in- tense interest for the work. The choir held the same position as be- fore, with the change of the organ to the center. The organ repre- senting Mr. Bliss' was silent. Prof. C. J. Toof presided at the other, and Mr. W. F. Leavitt, who rendered Mr. Bliss effective aid during his period of service there, took direction of the choir. The ministers present, the members of the choir and the ushers wore suitable badges of mourning. Long before the hour of beginning the house began to fill rapidly. At the second ringing of the bell, it was tolled with thirty-eight measured strokes, that being the number of years of Prof. Bhss' life. By this time the church was filled to overflowing, and many were standing about the doors. The exercises were opened by the singing of the hymn, " I know not the hour when my Lord shall Come." Eev. Mr. Sherwood pronounced a brief and feehng invo- cation. " The Home over There " was sung, and the fifth chapter of Kevelation was read (containing the words, "And they sung a MEMOEIAL SEEVICES IN KALAMAZOO. 359 new song/' etc.) by the Moderator of the meeting, Rev. Jos. H. France. A prayer was offered by Eey. Dr. Hodge. Mr. Leavitt sang as a solo, with great tenderness and clear expression, one of the favor- ite songs of Mr. Bliss, " Oh, to be Nothing." The presiding oflQcer then introduced the chief exercises of the evening with a short and earnest address, delivered with very earnest and effective feeling. Capt. Ford, from the Committee on Resolutions, prefaced the re- port with an explanation that the Scripture used in the first sentence was the text of Rev. xiv, 3, taken in part as the basis of Hymn 44, in the Gospel Hymns, music by Prof. Bliss; that the reference to South Africa was called out by the reported singing of his hymns in the wilds of the Zulu country ; the first (Quotation of poetry was from the 86th of the Gospel Songs, the older book of Mr. Bliss, both words and music by him ; the text cited in the first resolution was the theme of Hymn 24, Gospel Hymns, words by Mrs. Bhss, music by her husband, from which the extract was made in the second reso- lution; the extract in the fourth resolution was from the 41st of the Gospel Hymns, words and music by Bliss ; and that in the fifth was from the 79th hymn, music also by Mr. Bliss. He then read the resolutions, as follows : Philip Paul Bliss and Lucy Bliss, his wife, have gone to sing, as it were, a new song before the throne — that song which no man can learn but they which are redeemed from the earth. Their tragic death overshadows the whole Christia,n world. From the north of Scotland to the Zulu huts of South Africa, from the Far East to the Far West — wherever their songs are sung, the poets and singers will be mourned. He, cut off in the prime of his splendid manhood, with all his great powers at their best ; she, worthy companion of his joys and toils — ^have left time for eternity in the black gorge of death that opened at Ashtabula. At one dread plunge they went to make real the truth of his own sweet song : Through the valley of the shadow I nmst go, Where the cold waves of Jordan roll ; But the promise of my Shepherd will, I know» Be the rod and the staff to my soul. Even now down the valley as I glide I can hear my Savior say, " Follow Me," And with Him I'm not afraid to cross the tide, There's a light in the valley for me. Like the singers of Nehemiah, Brother and Sister Bliss " kept the ward of their God." By the talents and abilities they consecrated to the Redeemer ; by their pure, strong, unselfish Christian character ; by the priceless service they have done and through the works they leave shall yet do in His cause among 360 MEMOIRS OF P. P. BLISS. men, they liave earned a memory wliicli the world shall not willingly let die. Therefore, resolved : 1. That the citizens of Kalamazoo and vicinity, so lately blessed by these sweet singers, do deeply mourn the bereavement of their families and friends, and the loss of their living presence from the fields of Christian usefulness ; doubting not, however, that they were " willing rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord." 2. That our deepest sympathies, in this hour of trial, go out to tlie widowed mother and sisters of the brother gone, to the parents of Mrs. Bliss, to the little ones thus orphaned, to all other relatives of the sainted dead, and to the great throng of friends who are bereft. May all remember that. For those who sleep And those who weep, Above the portals narrow, The mansions rise Beyond the skies,— We're going home to-morrow. 3. That the special and fraternal sympathies of this people be extended to the friend and Christian brother, the companion and co-laborer of the dear departed. Major D. W. Whittle, who loved them with a love like that of David for Jonathan, "passing the love of women;" and we hope and pray that he may be upstayed by the Everlasting Arms, that the blow may be mercifully softened to him by the Divine Hand, and blessed to the strengthening of his heart and tongue for the great work that remains to him. 4. That, while this visitation of Providence seems mysterious and dark, we humbly recognize that He doeth all things well." No darkness have we who in Jesus abide, The Light of the World is Jesus ; We walk in the light when we follow our God, The Light of the World is Jesus. 5. That the life and labors of the lamented dead shall be perpetual incen- tives to the best work we can do for the Master. Sowing the seed with an aching heart, Sowing the seed while the tear-drops start. Sowing in hope till the reapers come, Gladly to gather the harvest home. Oh, what shall the harvest be ? * 6. That the contributions of this community be respectfully solicited in aid of the Bliss Memorial Funds, noy^ being raised. At the commemoration services at Peoria, Illinois, Centennial Hall was crowded and many failed to find seats. Eev. J. D. Wilson, of Christ Eeformed Episcopal Church, opened the service by asking the choir to sing the hymn, " In the Christian's Home in Glory/' after which Eev. W. B. Mcllvaine led in prayer. MEMORIAL SERVICES IN PEORIA. 361 Eev. W. C. Mappin then read, as the scripture lesson, selections from the 6th and 7th chapters of Eevelation, and the choir sung, softly and beautifully, the song, " Go, Bury thy Sorrow," and " When the Comforter Came," followed by a hymn that will always be dear to Peoria Christians, as it was written by Mr. Bliss in that city, viz. : " When Jesus Comes," beginning, Down life's dark vale we wander. Till Jesus comes ; We watch and wait and wonder, Till Jesus comes. Eev. John Weston, of Calvary Mission, was the first speaker. He said : We can almost see our departed brother as he sat and sang before us, but a few days ago, his whole heart in his song. He has gone home ; he was waiting and ready. What a gloom fell upon us last Sabbath, as the sad word came to us. So like the old prophet of old, he went home to heaven, not a vestige left of him on earth. Let a double portion of his spirit rest on us who are left. We ask why did God take His servant away so ? It is not ours to tell, " God moves in a mysterious way." The time will come when we shall see the wis- dom of God's dealings with us. His glory shall be seen after all. It says to us, " Be ye also ready." Out of the dark valley comes the voice to us, be faith- ful and devoted to His service. Also a lesson to those who are not God's children. We would not bring our friends back. They sing the " New Song ' to-night ; but to jx>u who have no such hope the warning comes, " Prepare to meet thy God." You have heard him sing ; let his sweet voice invite you to follow him to his home in heaven. Eev. Mr. Thompson, of the First Baptist Church, then spoke. Mr. Bliss was a man of tender sympathy. Knowing sorrow himself, he felt for others ; feeling tenderly himself the love of Christ, he desired all others to know the same. A man of eminent abilities, he was humble and trustful, and gave all glory to his God. How his face would glow as he sang "Hallelujah, what a Savior." How my own soul felt as he sang his thrilling songs. I am told wherever he went in domestic life he left the savor of his Savior behind a consecrated life. He is gone. We feel as if he was still needed with us. God can make his death more effective than his life. " He being dead, still speaketh." He speaks in song round the world to-night. It was said of Sampson "he slew more in his death than while living." How many may be brought to Jesus by what we call his untimely death. " He walked with God," and " he is not, for God took him." The Master has said, "Come up higher." One of his songs says, " We'lLsoon be at home over there ; " now he is thero. Another, " I know not the hour," etc. He did not know the hour, but Jesus called and took him away 362 MEMOIKS OF P. P. BLISS. in His own time. He knows "the song tlie angels sing" now. The last song our brother sung with us was the 32d, "We're Going Home To-morrow." Shall we meet them there when God calls us to meet all of those who have gone before ? The 22d hymn was then sung with deep feeling by the entire au- dience. Eev. A. A. Stevens, of the First Congregational Church, next came forward and spoke tenderly and kindly of the dead singer: He spoke of the effect of his songs upon himself. "It seems as if we were just waiting for him to come in." He spoke specially of the songs, " Are your windows open toward Jerusalem ? " and " The half was K'ever Told." Now he knows the whole of the glories of heaven. It is a blessed thought that our brother loves us still as he did when here. How bright the prospect of our meeting dear friends again in the better world. How it strengthens us for our worS. If any shall linger now to accept Christ, how can they when they re- member his love and prayers so recently for them? We cannot see aU the plan, but we " know all things work together for good to those that love Cod." Mr. Stevens spoke of the cheerfulness of Mr. Bliss — always cheerful. " We don't sing enough," said he. Let us cherish him because he was so much like his Master. Eev. Mr. Wilson at this point led in an earnest prayer asking for all submission to the will of Cod. Hymn No. 13 was then sung — I know not the hour when mj Lord will come. Eev. Ira J. Chase, of the Christian Church, followed in some very appropriate remarks. He wondered what Mr. Bliss was doing when death came. He quoted Mr. Bliss' motto for 1876, Be ye there- fore steadfast," etc. It was his habit to select a text to be his motto for the year. Perhaps he was selecting his verse. Perhaps he was singing. At all events he was ready. I am glad those who have spoken have made it a practical matter with us all. What testimony will we leave behind us ? Why don't you all prepare for the future ? God calls to us. It is for each one to say, Oh ! to be ^ waiting and watching ' up there ! " Mr. Chase then read a tribute to the memory of the dead singer, written by some friend and given to him. MEMORIAL SBEYICES IK PEOP.IA. 363 Eev. Mr. Wilson spoke, and asked to have " "Watching and Wait- ing " sung, but those aecustomed to sing would not venture to sing it. They could not, and No. 50 was taken in its place : " I will Guide Thee with Mine Eye." Eev. H. S. Beavis, of Grace Church, was then called upon, and said : " Silence might now be golden." He could not soon forget the pleadings of this departed brother as he plead with the youth of our city. His is one of the lives that speak to us and bid us make our lives sublime. It tells us of the record we are to make. It seems as if it were cut short in the very midst of fire and storm. Bliss met trials and storms and overcame them, and speaks to us to go forward. He added enthusiasm and untiring industry to his energy, and added to all consecration to the Master's work. He breathed it in his praye^j ; he carried it in his life ; he sung it in his songs. Let us imitate him and make our lives beautiful, and leave behind us the fragrance of a consecrated Hfe. Eev. Mr. Wilson followed in an earnest and tender reference to tlie dead. We would not bring them back — he is happy now. There are some who might have come to Jesus if they could have heard another song. There is one hymn that has not been referred to to-night, " Hold the Fort." What joy the words " I am coming " brought to the beleaguered garrison at Allatoona ! " Hold the Fort " was then sung with feeling by the choir and entire congregation. After singing this hymn, Eev. Mr. Wilson asked Wm. Eeynolds, Esq., to take charge of the meeting. A request was made for all who had found Christ during the meetings held here recently to rise. A large number arose. " N'ow," said the speaker, " who will join these and decide now ? While they sing a verse of Hymn 59, let them rise." Some arose, and Eev. Mr. Thompson led in prayer, asking that the death of those beloved ones might be the means of leading many to think of the awful future. After prayer, No. 15, " There is a Gate that Stands Ajar," was sung, and one of the saddest and most impressive meetings ever held in Peoria was closed. The following extract from a private letter from Peoria, written previous to the holding of the above meetmg, and soon after the reception of the news of the Ashtabula disaster, will be -read with interest : 364 MEMOIES or P. P. BLISS. In every cliurcli in the city, yesterday, the sad tidings were told, and heart- felt, loving, stirring words were spoken, while we all wept together. Mr. Eey- nolds made most touching and thrilling mention in Sabbath School, asking those young people who had been brought to Christ through. Mr. Bliss' meetings to rise. Over thirty arose to testify of what he had done for them. Oh ! how many precious souls will sparkle as gems in his crown ! We conclude this chapter and the Yolume with a few letters from Christian friends and co-workers. The first is from Eev. Dr. J. H. Brookes, of St. Louis : St. Louis, Jan. 1, 18T?. My Beloved Brother : Since yesterday morning there has seemed to be a pall upon earth and sky. One of the Elders came to the study, just before the hour of preaching, and asked me if I had heard the sad news, and then told me with sobs that Bliss had been killed. The tidings stunned me, it was so unexpected, so impo|^ible, my poor heart said. Mention was made of the heavy loss the church had sustained when we met for public worship, and the tears of many attested the strength of the hold our dear brother had taken upon the affections of the saints here. Again we met in the evening, and remained in prayer and meditation upon the word, and singing many of the sweet songs Mr. Bliss had composed, until the old year had gone away and the midnight hour announced that we were entering upon a new year. Many were the allusions to Bliss and his family, and to you also, stricken to the ground by this sudden and appalling blow. Oh, how my heart bled for you, as the thought of your loneliness and desolation of spirit and bitter disappointment occurred to me ; but it only led some at least — no doubt many — ^to bear you before the Lord in fervent supplica- tion. Surely He is saying to you now, as never before, ** Be still, and know that I am God," and " What I do thou knowest not now, but thou shalt know here- after." Yes, He will make this strange providence perfectly plain very soon, for, *' Yet a little while and he that shall come will come, and will not tarry." It is the time, dear brother, for your faith to meet the deep darkness rolling over you with the cry, " Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him." A young man in his prayer, last night, referred to Bliss as having taught many of us to sing " Waiting and Watching," and now he is waiting and watch- ing for the saints he had cheered on earth. Even so ; he is just on the other side of the river, .waiting and watching for his companion in testimony and service. Let us more and more be waiting and watching for that blessed hope, when at our gathering together unto Jesus, we shall meet our beloved ones who sleep in Him. Oh, in the presence of such a sore affliction, how our hearts cry out, "Even so, come. Lord Jesus!" How pitifully little the world seems! How contemptible, self ! How near, eternity 1 How bright and glorious the home toward which we are traveling ! These hurried words have been written as fast as my pen can move, just to LETTERS mOM PRIEi^DS 365 let you know that some of God's dear children in St. Louis have fellowship in your sorrow, and are bearing you up in their hearts in prayer. The Lord will bless this terrible trial in drawing you nearer to Himself, and giving you more singleness of heart. In a common grief, but a common hope, too. Yours in Him, J. H Brookes. Melwaukee, Jan. 18, 1877. My Dear Brother Whittle: I have thought much about you of late and especially since the death of our dear friends, Mr. and Mrs. Bliss. "We had had several very sad afilictions in our church, and this one of their so sudden departure, coming at the close of the year, made the year go out in gloom. I shall always remember the last months of 1876 as a time of abundant and almost overwhelming sorrow. How happily the year began — for me, at least — when we were working together in this hard field of Milwaukee. The work was a joy and it was a joy to see its results, though they were not such nor so large, seemingly, as we had wished. In God's sight they may have been far greater than the ones we had expected. In the first ter- ror of the calamity of December 29, it was difficult to get near to the divine point of view. But we are doubtless now both calm in the view that the acts and the kingdom of our dear Father have all space and all eternity to interpret them. They are not to be judged by a single fearful night and a single dreadful ravine. The flesh shrinks from the thought of the bruised and mangled frames of those so loved, but the spirit of faith remembers One who was more bruised for our ini- quities. And that God can use, in some mysterious way, the bruising of the body for the healing of souls, the great example of the wounded Saviour teaches us. It seems terrible to the shrinking flesh to think of dying by fire, but God has brought some of the richest blessings to His church through fire. God's be- loved Zion owes much discipline of purifying and exaltation to this element of fire. It is the great law of the Lord, expressed most astonishingly upon Calvary, that the world shall be saved with suffering. Thus the crushed, and "broken frame Oft doth sweetest graces yield, '"■ And this suffering, toil and shame. From the martyr's keenest flame, Heavenly incense is distilled. The converts of last winter stand well ; we are having some more continually, and I am hopeful of good results in the Sunday Schools. I wish I might have an afternoon's quiet talk with you. Do you never long for some quiet ? I do, and think it necessary to the highest life of the soul. With love, Geo. T Ladd. LAST SONG OF P. P. BLISS, He Znows. p. p. B. mm ^ I 1. I know not wliat awaits me, 2. One step I see before me, God kind - ly veils mine eyes, 'Tis all I need to see, J ji 9 — • 1 1 r- IV- j — 1^ ^ N N 1 — fs_^ -^Z' 0 — And 0 The lig 0—0~i—i — 1 'er each step of my ht of heav'n more bi 4^ ^ 4^ J0. ^ ^ — 1 «H 9 9—0 O — onward way He m ightJy sbines, Whe 9- t — ^^-^ — akes new scenes to rise; 'n earth's illusions flee; -* — k-» — — 1 1 \ ^'i, V ^ 1 1 — -f- 1 y— 1 ^^.J^ 1 ^ *-J M;-::-t— J 0 — 0 — €. 0 — 0 # — ' 1 0 — . J — « < And ev - 'ry joy He sends me comes A sweet and glad sur-prise. And sweet-ly thro' the si-lence comes His lov - ing ' 'Fol - low Me.'* f! r — r r — I ^ — » > ^-1- 1^ t=ii=t ^-r — ^ L — 1 Si/ P Chorus. --^ -^A-^ N-l r — N ^- ri j-g — ^ 0 — L Where « 1 He m ay lead I'll fol - low, My J 5 f trust in Him re-] ^ . ^ - f ^ -1. ' I 1 pose; Copynghted, 1877, by J, Church & Co. 366 He Kiiows."Coscldei. ' — i rj— ji.' ; z9—^ i •* Tid — 1 1 And ev - 'ry hour in per-fect peace I'll sing, He knows, He knows, And ev - 'ry hour in per-fect peace I'll sing, He knows, He knows. After last verse only. _____ He knows, He knows, He knows He knows. icS.LL. 1 1 I f — f- ' > T^"^ ^"^=^1 3. 0 blissful lack of wisdom, 'Tis blessed not to know; He holds me with His own right hand, And will not let me go, And lulls my troubled soul to rest In Him who loyes me so. 4. So on I go, not knowing, I would not if I might; I'd rather walk in the dark with God Than go alone in the light; I'd rather walk by faith with Him Than go alone by sight. 367 A WONDERFUL RECORD OF REVIVAL TIMES. MEMOIRS OF REV, Cl^ARLES G, FiNNEY, (the celebrated revivalist preacher), WRITTEN BY HIT^SELF, WITH A PORTRAIT ON STEEL, AND FAC-SIMILE SERMON IN MR. FINNEY'S OWN HANDWRITING. 477 PAGES. POST-PAID, $2.00. " The narrative is personal, involving the experiences both of the author and of those with whom he had to do. It presents the memories and heart yearnings of a veteran pastor with a passion for saving soiils. " BY REV. THEO. L. CUYLER, D.D. A wonderful volume it truly is. To read it, stirs the soul like a trumpet. This country has seen but one Charles G. Finney. The most remarkable feature of this extraordinary book is the mpematuraZ element. Finney lived, preached, and labored as if the Spirit of the Most High dwelt in him and spoke through him. Certainly mighty works were wrought by his trenchant voice ; and many who " heard it, said that it thundered." Some of the foremost Christian laymen in the Empire State were converted xmder his ministry. He probably led more souls to Jesus than any man of this century. BY REV. R. S. STORRS, D.D. I have read it with the greatest interest, and am impatient for leisure enough to read it again. What a fiery John the Baptist he was in his earlier ministry 1 What a marvelous movement that to which he gave an impulse, so mighty and so wide I BY REV. LYMAN ABBOTT. I congratulate you on publishing, in Dr. Finney's biography, the most fascinat- ing religious biography that I ever read. It is as dramatic, as full of surprises, almost as marvelous in its manifestation of divine power, as the Book of Acts. It is coining out at just the right time. A. S. BARNES & COMPANY, Publishers. VIJ This is the Lord's House, and in His name we offer a most hearty welcome and Christian fellowship to all who worship here. Our aim is to make our Church attractive, homelike and helpful. To strangers and those without a Church home, we open wide our doors, and in the spirit of our Lord, bid you welcome here. In case of any serious sickness, please inform the Minister at once, which will be appreciated. il^oto g[o lap OH?g lihlp. When in sorrow, read John 14. , When men fail you, read Psalm 27- When you have sinned, read Psalm 51. When you worry, read Matthew 6:19-34. Before Church service, read Psalm 84, When you are in danger, read Psalm 91. When you have the blues, read Psalm 34. When God seems far away, read Psalm 139. When you are discouraged, read Isaiah 40. If you want to be fruitful, read John 15. When doubts come upon you, try John 7: 17. When you are lonely or fearful, read Psalm 23, When you forget your blessings, read Psalm 103. For Jesus' idea of a Christian, read Matthew 5. For James' idea of religion, read James 1: 19-27. When your faith needs stirring, read Hebrews 1 1. When you feel down and out, read Romans 8: 31-39. When you want courage for your task, read Joshua 1. (Keep this in your Bible.) who knew tliem wlien living here, have left a precious heritage in the children who are now following in the path the parents trod In truth our own Church can claim them as our own, as their training for their life -work was largely accompliBhed in our city, and who among us would refuse to call "our own?" There is a call comes from far away Korea for help in the work begun by these two devoted people, but now nobly being carried on by the daughter, for needs of her school. If then, you desire to help, give clothing, stationery, or anything useful. Consult the Minister or Miss Amelia Nies, and ll>t^y will help you. evening. November 12. after the Prayer Meeting, to elect a delegate to the Lay Electoral Conference. # tS tt h SI II 9:30 A. M. Sunday School. Mr. H. T. Wilbur, Superintendent. 10:45 A. M. Public Worship. The Sacrament of The Lord's Supper. 6:30 P. M, The Epworth League Prayer Service.Topic, "Our Relation to Others. 7:30 P. M. Public Worship. Sermon by the Minister. 7:30 P. M. The Ladies' Aid Society Meeting in the Chapel. IT? ^ tt^ 0 ^ tt ij 7:30 P. M. The Prayer Meeting, in charge of the Minister. V The Epworth League will assist in the singing. (HIi n r u ^ a y 7:30 P. M. Important Business Meeting, and social of the Epworth League. All welcome. r i h H ij 7 30 P. M. The Choir Rehearsal. 7:30 P. M. The Atinual Woman's Foreign Missionary Society Meeting in the Chapel. The members of the congregation are cordially invited. iUUcmorml Maw^tB Pivs^ ^lutsh In arif^ Ctfttrrlf Ua-Mtt^ by Mrs. Harriet Hatz, as a memorial to her son Samuel, who died November 1, 1918. "THE GOOD DIE NOT" •'With silence only as their benediction, God's angels come Where, in the shadow of a great affliction, the soul sits dumb, Yet would we say, what every heart approveth— our Father's will, ('allingto Him thedear ones whom He loveth, is mercy still. Not upon U3 or ours the solemn angel hath evil wrought; The funeral anthem is a glad evangel; the good die not! (aod calls our loved ones, but we lose mot wholly what he has given, They live on earth in thought and deed, as truly as in his heaven." -John G. Whittier. SE:!)* iCjtJii^a' Alii ^stcwti^ lUUl 'Mxslh i\it Wi^ster ^npper on Monday and Tuesday evenings, November 10 and 11. Oysters in all styles will be served, and the tickftjts will be 35 cents. All are invited. October 28. 1919, Mr. M. Roy Evans and Miss Alma C. Brenner, both of this city. It was a happy occasion. Eugene Weldeu Fickea, Jr., son of Eugene W. and Sarah Fickes.