Monday 17 December 2012

1905-12-30



Wasn’t it Sancho Panza who prayed a benediction on the man who invented sleep? The vicious taste for early rising is an acquired taste. No man ever gets up early in the morning because he likes it. Necessity, an unquiet conscience, a tooth ache or dyspepsia is always at the beginning of a downward course of early rising. That it is a vicious habit we are prepared to maintain, for when it has gained a hold upon a man, when he has really acquired a smacking relish for it, he has lost forever the power to enjoy an occasional morning nap – as dessert after the feast of slumber – and he is a plague to everyone in the house. He rattles the furnace or hard coal burner when honest people should be calmly sleeping the sleep of the just, and he arouses his wife and daughters and sets the pots and pans on the cooking range on a wild dance, and then before Dame Nature has had half a chance to get the world ready for daylight, he goes shouting through the house, and the beauty sleep with which wife and daughters have been vainly coquetting is frightened away by the distracting din. Horrid man! Then he is nearly always nervous, irritable and pugnacious. Probably he was out the night before at a lodge meeting, and the late supper brought on one of his usual fits of indigestion. He cannot sleep himself, and thinks the family should awake early in sympathy with him. He rushes on his nervous way through life, makes innumerable mistakes through an unsteady brain, and either worries his way into an early grave or makes life miserable for everyone around him.

          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

          Early rising is a modern invention. Abraham, Jacob, Moses, Joshua and the other patriarchs mentioned in the Bible got up early so seldom that it is considered a matter worthy of note in the scriptures, and the only approach to a command to arise early is a resolve of the Psalmist : “I will awake early in the morning” – a resolve which there is no record of having been kept; and judging from our own personal experience under similar circumstances, he doubtless slept later on the occasions than usual. Alarm clocks were unknown in the days of the patriarchs, and the man who invented them must have been enemy to his family and his race. The Psalmist did not resolve to arise early in the morning simply to awake. On the other hand, there are many passages of scripture that would seem to condemn the habit. Isaiah seemed to appreciate the reason which leads many to arise early, when he says ; “Woe unto them that rise up early in the morning that they may follow strong drink.” This is certainly scriptural proof that some of the old boys were no better than men of the present generation. And that after being out all night at the lodge, they had a cottony taste in their mouths in the morning that had to be cured with the hair of the dog that bit them. “And when they arose early in the morning, behold they were all dead corpses.” Ah! those sly old rascals. What times they must have had, and it is only when we take a dip into sacred history that we really get the bottom facts.

          ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

          Then what a knowledge of the ways of the early risers who keep house is evinced in the proverb of the wise man : “He that blesseth his friend with aloud voice rising early in the morning, it shall be counted a curse to him.” Not only is early rising not commanded by scripture, but it is a sin against nature. It is false to suppose that it will make one healthy or wealthy or wise. In times of pestilence or epidemics, the early riser is the first to fall, and the man who works before breakfast feels wrong in his stomach all day, and the chances are that he will be led into the habit of taking a “bracer” or two to tone up his stomach before eating the matutinal meal. It unfits a man for business, it makes him nervous and unsettled, and nine times out of ten, he leaves home in the morning without kissing wife and the babies, and if he goes out of doors, he is apt to give the dog a parting kick. He who got off that old chestnut that the early bird catches the worm, forgot to tell the whole that the early worm is caught by the bird. It does not make a man wise to get up at the peep o’day. The morning sleep is as much needed as that of the night, and it is more enjoyable when one knows and feels that it is time to be up and doing. It has its economy in the life of man. The half-conscious half hour in the morning has its ministry to the brain, and the wise man is he who listens dreamily to the sound of Angelus bell, who presses his feet against the footboard of the bed, who puts the pillow into new shape again, and wanders off into dreamland. The labor unions have not divided time fairly. Instead of eight hours for work, eight hours for sleep, two hours more should be looped off work and added to sleep.

          --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

          Before Hamilton lost its prestige as a lake shipping port, the wharves down at the bay used to be lined with vessels of all descriptions during the winter months, and consequently there was a large number of the families of the sailors who made their home here. The other day we came across a list of shipping that spent the winter of 1867-68 at this port, which may recall to the memory of those interested in lake navigation 35 and 49 years ago, the stirring times when Burlington bay was a seaport. The vessels that wintered here that year were the steamers Osprey and Ottawa; propellers Acadia and India; brigs Southampton,  L. D. Woodruff, China, D. McInnes, Florence, New Dominion, Malta, Orion, Marco Polo, Union Jack and John  Rae. The schooner Persia, with a full cargo, got caught in Burlington canal and was frozen there till the ice let go its hold. The schooner Alvord with a cargo of grain, was driven on Burlington beach as she was trying to get away with her last shipment for the season, and it was not till springtime that she was released.

          ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

          A story was told of S. B. Freeman, the silver-tongued orator of the bar back in the early ‘50s. He was once employed to plead two cases in court, which were precisely alike, but in one he was engaged for the defendant and in the other for the plaintiff. It happened that both cases were tried the same day, the one following the other. Mr. Freeman made an eloquent plea of half an hour to the first jury, and when they had retired the other case was called. Although the cases were almost identical, he made use of entirely different arguments to the jury. This rather amused the judge, and he quietly reminded his learned friend that he had changed his tune, repeating to him what he had said before in the other case. With one of his blandest smiles, Mr. Freeman replied : “May it please your honor, I might have been wrong half an hour ago, but know I know that I am right.” He finished his argument, and when the two juries returned with their verdicts, Mr. Freeman had won out in both cases.

          -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

          When the waterworks were first opened in this city, the chairman of the commissioners had the principal streets watered from the hydrants by means of a section of hose. This was done at very little cost, and the plan was continued till the men who owned horses wanted the job of sprinkling the streets with the old-fashioned sprinklers.

          -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

          When he was a young man, George Black, manager of the G. N. W. telegraph office in this city was in rather a ticklish place, in a case that was being tried between the Great Western railway company and James M. Hillburn, concerning the transportation of a carload of cattle. On behalf of the railway company, Mr. Black was subpoenaed, by whom it was sought to prove that certain instructions had been sent by telegraph as to what disposal should be made of the cattle. Here was a delicate point to settle. If Mr. Black violated the confidence reposted in him as a trusted and confidential officer of the telegraph company, he would be liable to a heavy fine and imprisonment. If he refused to produce the original copy of the message in court then he was liable to be treated as a contumacious witness and fined or imprisoned as the court directed. Aemilius Irving, solicitor for the railway company, insisted as his right that the message be produced in court, and this brought the question up to the judge for decision. Mr. Black was between two fires; he must either violate the confidence reposed as the manager of the telegraph office, or run the risk of going to jail or paying a fine if he persisted in his refusal to furnish the original message. It was a new point in law, and never been passed upon by the Canadian courts. The case was being tried in the division court, Judge Alexander Logie, presiding. Mr. Black was firm in his refusal to produce the copy of the message, and the judge ordered that he be fined $8, and in default of payment the manager should spend ten days in jail. In consideration of the circumstances, Judge Logie was willing to remit the penalty, if Mr. Irvine would consent , but the lawyer would not listen to the court’s plea for mercy. Mr. Black paid the fine. Probably the old manager has a vivid recollection of the trying ordeal through which he passed.

          ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

          The old year is slipping away and in a few hours more, it will be numbered with the past. Let us hope that the readers of the Musings can look back with pleasure to the past, and that the future years may bring them a renewed happiness and prosperity. It is a good time, on the threshold of a new year, to look back upon the records of the past, and if there is aught that needs changing, determine to begin 1906 with a clean balance sheet. What more appropriate time for the drinking man to resolve to begin a new life and free himself from the slavery of the intoxicating cup. Why should less than 100 saloon keepers in Hamilton be supported in luxury at the expense of 15,000 to 20,000 workingmen? Why should you, my tippling friend, be one of that number to rob yourself and your family of the comforts of life, that a man may stand behind a bar and hand you out that which, as Shakespeare says, “steals away your brains?” The Muser can go back in memory to hundreds of young men who began the race of life with him more than a half century ago who dropped by the wayside because of an accursed appetite for strong drink. The love of liquor has been the besetting sin of men who might today be living in comfort instead of in perury and want. But we have gone over this subject time and again in these Musings, still the desire to call it up again is strong in the writer’s heart today. Ten years ago, a Hamilton man who had passed through the terrible ordeal of a drunkard’s life determined to begin the new year by turning over a clean page in his life history. He is a man of fine education, charming manners, and even in his worst estate was kind and affectionate to his family. A fortune had been left him by a wealthy relative and being of a convivial nature, he found friends only too willing to help him get rid of his money. The larger part of that fortune crossed the saloon bar and his life was wrecked. Ten years ago today, he decided to call a halt, and having but one more day to the close of 1896, he decided to celebrate it by testing his holding capacity. On new year’s morning, when he appeared at the breakfast table, he announced to his family that there was to be a new order of things thereafter, and a new man was going to take the place at the head of the household. Henceforth he would never taste another glass of liquor. Say! wasn’t that a happy household that new year’s morning! And he has been faithful to his promise. One morning this week, he met the writer in the street, and he was so jolly and happy that he could not refrain from telling the story of his reformed habits. “For the first two years,” said he, “the old appetite kept biting and demanding the old stimulant, but I fought it out; and since then I have had no ore desire for liquor, and the past ten years have been the happiest of my life.” He had that English bulldog grip in his makeup that brought him through the trail victoriously. It is worth the trial, my unfortunate brother, and if you have not already decided to begin a new life next Monday, make the resolve now, and back it up with your manhood. To how many families would it be a happy new year if the husband or son with an appetite for strong drink would manfully decide to cut it out and begin a new lease of life and happiness?

No comments:

Post a Comment