Forty Years in South China | Page 4

Rev. John Gerardus Fagg
my birth, took me into his watchful
care, and whose parental faithfulness, combined with that of my mother,
was the means of bringing my erring feet to the cross, and kindling in
my soul anticipations of immortal blessedness. If I failed to speak,
methinks the old family Bible, that I brought home with me, would
rebuke my silence, and the very walls of my youthful home would tell
the story of my ingratitude. I must speak, though it be with broken
utterance, and in terms which seem too strong for those of you who
never had an opportunity of gathering the fruit of this luxuriant almond
tree.
"First. In my father's old age was to be seen the beauty of a cheerful
spirit. I never remember to have heard him make a gloomy expression.
This was not because he had no conception of the pollutions of society.

He abhorred everything like impurity, or fraud, or double-dealing. He
never failed to lift up his voice against sin, when he saw it. He was
terrible in his indignation against wrong, and had an iron grip for the
throat of him who trampled on the helpless. Better meet a lion robbed
of her whelps than him, if you had been stealing the bread from the
mouth of the fatherless. It required all the placidity of my mother's
voice to calm him when once the mountain storm of his righteous wrath
was in full blast; while as for himself, he would submit to more
imposition, and say nothing, than any man I ever knew.
"But while sensitive to the evils of society, he felt confident that all
would be righted. When he prayed, you could hear in the very tones of
his voice the expectation that Christ Jesus would utterly demolish all
iniquity, and fill the earth with His glory. This Christian man was not a
misanthrope, did not think that everything was going to ruin,
considered the world a very good place to live in. He never sat moping
or despondent, but took things as they were, knowing that God could
and would make them better. When the heaviest surge of calamity
came upon him, he met it with as cheerful a countenance as ever a
bather at the beach met the incoming Atlantic, rising up on the other
side of the wave stronger than when it smote him. Without ever being
charged with frivolity, he sang, and whistled, and laughed. He knew
about all the cheerful tunes that were ever printed in old 'New
Brunswick Collection,' and the 'Strum Way,' and the sweetest melodies
that Thomas Hastings ever composed. I think that every pillar in the
Somerville and Bound Brook churches knew his happy voice. He took
the pitch of sacred song on Sabbath morning, and lost it not through all
the week. I have heard him sing plowing amid the aggravations of a
'new ground,' serving writs, examining deeds, going to arrest criminals,
in the house and by the way, at the barn and in the street. When the
church choir would break down, everybody looked around to see if he
were not ready with Woodstock, Mount Pisgah, or Uxbridge. And
when all his familiar tunes failed to express the joy of his soul, he
would take up his own pen, draw five long lines across the sheet, put in
the notes, and then to the tune that he called 'Bound Brook' begin to
sing:
'As when the weary trav'ler gains The height of some o'erlooking hill,
His heart revives if, 'cross the plains, He eyes his home, tho' distant

still:
Thus, when the Christian pilgrim views, By faith, his mansion in the
skies; The sight his fainting strength renews, And wings his speed to
reach the prize.
"'Tis there," he says, "I am to dwell With Jesus in the realms of day:
There I shall bid my cares farewell, And he will wipe my tears away."
"But few families fell heir to so large a pile of well-studied note-books.
He was ready, at proper times, for all kinds of innocent amusement. He
often felt a merriment that not only touched the lips, but played upon
every fibre of the body, and rolled down into the very depths of his soul,
with long reverberations. No one that I ever knew understood more
fully the science of a good laugh. He was not only quick to recognize
hilarity when created by others, but was always ready to do his share
toward making it. Before extreme old age, he could outrun and outleap
any of his children. He did not hide his satisfaction at having outwalked
some one who boasted of his pedestrianism, or at having been able to
swing the scythe after all the rest of the harvesters had dropped from
exhaustion, or at
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