LXX

LXX

Clara Barton was loved by the people of the whole world.

The Two Martyrs—ByHon. Francis Atwater.

The Two Martyrs—ByHon. Francis Atwater.

The Two Martyrs—ByHon. Francis Atwater.

The Two Martyrs—ByHon. Francis Atwater.

Love is the life of the soul.William Ellery Channing.

The law of Heaven is love.Hosea Ballou.

The soul of woman lives in love.Mrs. Sigourney.

Love—’tis woman’s whole existence.Byron.

The religion of humanity is love.Mazzini.

Love is the Amen of the universe.Novalis.

Love is indestructible;The holy flame forever burnethFrom heaven it came, to heaven returneth.Southey—Curse of Kehama.

Love is indestructible;The holy flame forever burnethFrom heaven it came, to heaven returneth.Southey—Curse of Kehama.

Love is indestructible;The holy flame forever burnethFrom heaven it came, to heaven returneth.Southey—Curse of Kehama.

Love is indestructible;

The holy flame forever burneth

From heaven it came, to heaven returneth.

Southey—Curse of Kehama.

There is in the heart of woman such a deep well of love that no age can freeze it.Bulwer-Lytton.

Love is the beginning, the middle, and the end of everything.

La Cordaire.

La Cordaire.

La Cordaire.

La Cordaire.

Love lives on, and hath a power to bless when they who loved are hidden in their grave.Lowell.

Julia—His little speaking shows his love but small.Lucetta—Fire that’s closest kept burns most of all.The Two Gentlemen of Verona.

Julia—His little speaking shows his love but small.Lucetta—Fire that’s closest kept burns most of all.The Two Gentlemen of Verona.

Julia—His little speaking shows his love but small.

Julia—His little speaking shows his love but small.

Lucetta—Fire that’s closest kept burns most of all.The Two Gentlemen of Verona.

Lucetta—Fire that’s closest kept burns most of all.

The Two Gentlemen of Verona.

Clara Barton was very non-communicative as to her personal affairs, confiding in no one her heart’s secrets.But a woman’s curiosity got the best of the closest friend Clara ever had, and on a certain occasion “Sister Harriette” ventured to draw out of her heart what she had long wanted to know:

“Clara, have you never had a sweetheart?”

“Oh yes!” she replied, “just the same as all other girls.”

“But tell me about yours,” Harriette ventured further.

“I will, sometime,” Clara said.

“Oh, no, tell me now,” Harriette continued.

“No, not now—some other time I’ll tell you all about it,” persisted Clara. Then she said: “Oh, well, I’ll tell you I had a dear friend in my younger days, but he went to California in the rush to the gold fields with my brother David, and never came back.”

“Did you really love him?” asked Harriette again, trying to draw her out.

“Now, don’t ask me anything more, for I am not going to tell you,” replied Clara.

“But you said you would and I am really curious,” continued Harriette.

Clara hesitated, then said: “I don’t feel like it now, but sometime I’ll tell you the story.”

She never told her love,But let concealment, like a worm i’ the bud,Feed on her damask cheek; she pined in thought;And with a green and yellow melancholy,She sat (like patience on a monument)Smiling at grief.

She never told her love,But let concealment, like a worm i’ the bud,Feed on her damask cheek; she pined in thought;And with a green and yellow melancholy,She sat (like patience on a monument)Smiling at grief.

She never told her love,But let concealment, like a worm i’ the bud,Feed on her damask cheek; she pined in thought;And with a green and yellow melancholy,She sat (like patience on a monument)Smiling at grief.

She never told her love,

But let concealment, like a worm i’ the bud,

Feed on her damask cheek; she pined in thought;

And with a green and yellow melancholy,

She sat (like patience on a monument)

Smiling at grief.

On a certain other occasion it became necessary for her attorneys to know in detail of her finances, and their origin, so they plied her with questions:—

THE CLARA BARTON MONUMENTBuilt at her expense in the cemetery at North Oxford, Massachusetts. In her will Clara Barton left sixteen hundred dollars for the permanent maintenance of the Barton cemetery lot.William E. Barton.No more fitting tribute could be paid by the American people than the raising of a monument that will perpetuate the life work of Clara Barton.Lieutenant-General Nelson A. Miles.Monuments and endowments are the physical testimonials, but they do not express the entire obligation. The life of Clara Barton should be familiarized to every child. Woonsocket (R. I.)Call.Congress should pass a Special Act setting aside a plot and defraying the expenses of a suitable monument over the last resting place of the noble woman who has served the nation in peace and in war.Manchester (N. H.)Mirror.As we passed one particular monument in the cemetery at Buffalo Clara Barton said: “There is a design which I wish to have copied, and sometime to have a monument put up in my family yard in Oxford for my Father and Mother, my brothers and sister and to be ready for me when I join them.” The design was copied and the monument placed as Miss Barton desired.Francis Atwater.

THE CLARA BARTON MONUMENTBuilt at her expense in the cemetery at North Oxford, Massachusetts. In her will Clara Barton left sixteen hundred dollars for the permanent maintenance of the Barton cemetery lot.William E. Barton.No more fitting tribute could be paid by the American people than the raising of a monument that will perpetuate the life work of Clara Barton.Lieutenant-General Nelson A. Miles.Monuments and endowments are the physical testimonials, but they do not express the entire obligation. The life of Clara Barton should be familiarized to every child. Woonsocket (R. I.)Call.Congress should pass a Special Act setting aside a plot and defraying the expenses of a suitable monument over the last resting place of the noble woman who has served the nation in peace and in war.Manchester (N. H.)Mirror.As we passed one particular monument in the cemetery at Buffalo Clara Barton said: “There is a design which I wish to have copied, and sometime to have a monument put up in my family yard in Oxford for my Father and Mother, my brothers and sister and to be ready for me when I join them.” The design was copied and the monument placed as Miss Barton desired.Francis Atwater.

THE CLARA BARTON MONUMENTBuilt at her expense in the cemetery at North Oxford, Massachusetts. In her will Clara Barton left sixteen hundred dollars for the permanent maintenance of the Barton cemetery lot.William E. Barton.No more fitting tribute could be paid by the American people than the raising of a monument that will perpetuate the life work of Clara Barton.Lieutenant-General Nelson A. Miles.Monuments and endowments are the physical testimonials, but they do not express the entire obligation. The life of Clara Barton should be familiarized to every child. Woonsocket (R. I.)Call.Congress should pass a Special Act setting aside a plot and defraying the expenses of a suitable monument over the last resting place of the noble woman who has served the nation in peace and in war.Manchester (N. H.)Mirror.As we passed one particular monument in the cemetery at Buffalo Clara Barton said: “There is a design which I wish to have copied, and sometime to have a monument put up in my family yard in Oxford for my Father and Mother, my brothers and sister and to be ready for me when I join them.” The design was copied and the monument placed as Miss Barton desired.Francis Atwater.

Attorney—Now, Miss Barton, tell us where you got all your wealth.

Miss Barton—I haven’t much wealth—what do you mean?—Everything?

Attorney—You inherited some money did you not? Tell us about that.

Miss Barton—I inherited, no—Oh! yes, I got some money once, but why should I tell you?

Attorney—It may be brought up in “the investigation” by the attorney on the other side and we don’t want any surprise sprung on us.

Miss Barton—Well, that seems reasonable—I’ll tell you. My brother andanotherwent to the California gold fields; my brother returned,—the othernever didreturn. But he left me all his savings, $10,000 in gold.

Attorney—What did you do with the $10,000?

Miss Barton—I always regarded this too sacred to use, so I placed it in a New York bank. This was in 1851. I kept it there on interest until President Lincoln commissioned me to look up the names of the missing soldiers. I did not consider ittoo sacredfor this purpose, and so in 1865 I drew it out of the bank, then with the interest about $15,000, and used it to pay the expenses....

The romance includes the trip in a sailing vessel around the “Horn,” the “49ers outfit” in San Francisco, and on the way to the “placer diggins,” the death scene in the pueblo of Los Angeles, the story of the sack of “gold dust” that reached the sweetheart, and its use later in giving cheer to thousands of unhappy homes.

Only on the two occasions were these disclosures of that heart secret, and yet visions of her sweetheart aresaid to have appeared to Clara in her dying hours. The most sacred of the heart secrets of womankind Clara Barton carried with her to the other world—a secret of her love affair which her closest friends think may have been the inspiration of her self-sacrifice for humanity.


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