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without doubt, one of the party. He was then thirty-nine years old. His wife had died during that first hard winter. He was the captain who fought their battles and wholly deserved the name then given to him of Stalwart Standish.

Of course, John Alden was on hand; but he had not yet married Priscilla Mullins; for we read that it was in 1627, four years later, that he went for her; when, on account of the absence of horses, "he covered his bull with broadcloth and rode on his back; when he returned he placed his wife there and led the bull by the ring in his nose." A man capable of such a daring gallantry could certainly have added much to a Thanksgiving feast.

Massasoit was then about forty years old. He was an able-bodied, tall man, "grave of countenance and spare of speech; his face was painted with a sad red and oiled, both head and face, so that he looked greasily." His followers were also painted red and black, yellow and white. They were mostly dressed in skins. Massasoit's dress differed somewhat from

theirs, particularly in the addition of a great chain of white beads about his neck, on which, from behind, hung a little bag of tobacco, which he smoked and offered his friends to smoke. His tribe, a short time before the Pilgrims landed, was numbered by the thousands, but a direful disease had reduced it to such an extent that, at this time, it counted only about three hundred.

As the chief sat, there, the guest of the colonists, he must have heard some little reminiscences given of their hardships endured, as well as of their joys and sorrows. Of course

the mind of Miles Standish went back to the times of three years before, when he led a party of the newly-landed Pilgrims into the thick for

ests in search of the needed food; he must have recalled how they found an Indian grave-mound, in which was a little old basket full of "faire Indian corne, and a large round basket, narrow at the top, with some thirtysix goodly eares of corne, which was a goodly sight," for it held about three or four bushels, which they shared in common, to be saved for seed, and how they had then proposed as soon as they should meet with any of the Indian inhabitants, "to make them large satisfaction," which proposal they had carried out some time afterwards on meeting Massasoit.

Of course they talked over the hearty "welcome" which, two years before, they had received from Samoset, the first Indian whom they had personally known; for they remembered his tall, straight figure, nearly naked, his black hair, long behind and short in front, his beardless face and his bow of two arrows, "the one headed and the other unheaded." They remembered how he had brought Squanto to them as an interpretersince he had been a slave in England -who brought from Massasoit a message, desiring an interview with the Governor; how the Governor had sent Winslow back with him, with a present of "three knives, a copper chain with a jewel attached, an earring, a pot of strong water," and some biscuit, to the great Sachem, who had met them with sixty of his followers: how, after a brief parley, Winslow had been left behind as a hostage, while Massasoit and twenty unarmed followers had met Standish and others at the brook which divided the parties; how they had been conducted to an unfinished building where a rug and cushions had been spread for them; and had met the Governor and some few musketeers, with their "drums and trumpets; and, as they referred to this, Massa

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soit must have remembered how a treaty had then been made that he and his people should offer no injury to the English, which treaty he was proud to feel he had thus far kept. Perhaps he remembered how afraid he was of the guns, so much so, that, trembling all over, he had motioned them away. He surely recalled how, after the interview, having left hostages behind, he was led back to the brook by the Governor himself to rejoin his party, where he found that, in the meanwhile, the Governor had sent for his kettle, and returned it "full of pease." As Governor Carver had died soon after this meeting with the great chief, he was not present at these festivities to add his memories of that pleasant occasion. Perhaps this little reminiscence reminded Massasoit of a little later time, when an embassy, with Squanto as interpreter, from the colonists came to his home in Naragansett Bay, and brought to him as a present a red cotton coat "laced with a slight lace," and to his chiefs some beads and jack-knives, how he received them gladly, adorned himself in the coat, made a great speech," assuring them of his friendship, and cautioning them not to trust the rival tribe of the Narragansetts.

At the mention of this tribe some of the colonists must have been reminded, even in the midst of their feasting, of the sad fate of poor Squanto, who was killed by one of its chiefs, but they were doubtless proud to relate how ten of their number, armed, surrounded the tribe numbering its several thousands, on its own dominions and conquered them. Squanto was dear to the Pilgrims, for it was he who had told them how to cultivate the corn and to manure it with fish; and how to raise and cook the squashes, pumpkins and beans which added so much to their feast.

Massasoit must have missed, in face of the gentleman-born Winslow. these festivities, the bright young leaders being then only twenty-nine He was one of the youngest of the years old but his diplomatic power made him essential in all the negotiations of the colonists. He was off in England at this time on business for the colony, where he remained. till the following spring, when he returned with three heifers and a bull, these being the first neat cattle that came into New England. Perhaps his friends thought that if he could not have the pleasure of partaking of England, he could claim the honor of the first Thanksgiving feast in New having been the first one who was married there; for, his wife having died soon after her arrival, he had White, who was the first Pilgrim married the mother of Peregrine child born there. Massasoit owed much to this generous hearted man, and his friendship for him never joyous occasion, his thoughts must failed. As he missed him on this when he fell very sick, so sick that gone back to the year before in his failure to see Winslow, who hand and cried out: "O, Winsnow! had come to help him, he grasped his Winsnow!" He must have remembered how Winslow washed out his ly cured him. If Winslow himself mouth, gave him medicine, and finalhad been at the feast he could have told a pleasant reminiscence of this sickness; how, when he went to the house of Massasoit to help him, he midst of their charms for him, making found many of the Indians "in the such a hellish noise as it distempered us that were well, and therefore unlike to ease him that was sick."

have

But all feasts come to an end and so did this.

Thus they kept their first Thanksgiving, and Massasoit and his ninety

followers returned to their own dominions.

It is pleasant to know that this great sachem, in his long life of eighty years, never forgot his treaty with the Pilgrims, but was true and helpful to them in many ways.

It is complimentary to the colonists, in their treatment of him, that after his death his two eldest sons went to Plymouth and asked them to give them English names, and the court named them Alexander and Philip. Boston Courier.

[For Manford's Magazine.] CHRISTIAN UNIVERSALISM.

REV. WM. TUCKER, D. D.

Christianity is the system of moral and religious truths and doctrines taught by Christ and his apostles. I hold that Christianity as presented in the teaching of Christ and the the apostles is a system of Universalism. There is no Unitarianism, partialism, uncertenarianism, or agnosticism about it. Its spirit is one of universal benevolence. It reveals a divine provision of universal salvation. It reveals God as the Father of all men. The relation between God and man is a universal relation. We are all his children. Created by him in his own moral and spiritual image. We were made in his likeness and as his children we possess his intellectual, moral and spiritual nature. We have not only material and animal, but spiritual, divine, and eternal life. Universalism naturally grows out of and results from the universal Fatherhood of God, and the universal brotherhood of men. That such is God's relation to us as our Father, and our relation to him as his children is clearly taught by by Christ, and the inspired apostles. This universal relation of Fatherhood and sonship is the basis in the relations of men for universal salvation.

God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth on him might not perish but have everlasting life. As the Father of all men he loves all men and sends his Son to save them. He will have all men to be saved and come unto the knowledge of the truth. The living God is the savior of all men, and especially of them that believe. It is according to the revelations of Christianity, the will, purpose, and plan of God to save all men. To this he is prompted by his relation to all men as their Father, and his love for all men children.

as his

Christianity presents Christ as the universal savior, as the author of universal salvation. "He is the true light that lighteth every man that cometh into the world." "He is the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world." "He came not into the world to condemn it, but that the world through him might be saved." "He tasted death for every man." """ He gave himself a ransom for all men." "If Christ died for all then were all dead." "As in Adam all died so in Christ shall all be made alive." "He is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole world."

Wherefore as by the sins of one man judgment came upon all men unto condemnation, so by the righteousness of one the free gift hath come upon all men unto justification of life." "If I be lifted up says Christ I will draw all men unto me." "God is in Christ reconciling the world unto himself." Christ is the universal savior in Christian revelation. Universal salvation is a doctrine of the Christian religion. Christianity is a system of Universalism. mands universal love, promises universal salvation and restoration, and inspires universal hope.

It com

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"Don't know you!" "Don't know me! Four years last December

I signed on your paper. Pray don't you remember?

You were trading in stocks, and the market went down;

For the want of my thousands you'd have lost every crown,

And I have lost all, though stocks have arisen.

I signed, and I lost, and they put me in prison;

My wife and my child lie cold in the grave,

And me, who saved you, I beseech you to save."

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Why don't they remember? I can not forget,

I lost my house, Carlo, to pay that man's debt;

Twenty thousand I had; not a cent did I

owe;

But it took every farthing--I saw it all go;

Not a friend have I now. Indeed it is true.

God forgive me, poor Carlo, here is one: it is you.

I would not mind, Carlo, if 'twas only warm weather,

For then to the graveyard we'd trudge on together,

And crouch down in the grass that droops down by the stone

Where dear wife and baby lie sleeping alone.

Many a night there, have both you and I, Cuddled down 'neath the stars and the still summer sky,

No one disturbed us; and strange as it

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once more;

Let us cuddle down here by the steps at the door;

Some one may come and perhaps take us in,

Some one whose heart is not all dead with sin;

But what if they don't? Let it be our last night,

We have wandered, and suffered, and starved enough, quite;

Alas, for the want here of Christ's holy love;

But there's some One will care for us both up above.

"O, for the rarity of sweet, Christian charity,

God's holy charity, under the sun,"

If Christ were to come here, seeking for some here,

To call them his own, O, would he find one?

How little behavior, like thine, blessed Savior,

How much that resembles the dark fiend of hell,

While souls are forgot, as though Christ had died not

The souls of our brothers that die where they fell.

EVERY power we have may be made to help us in any right work, whatever that is.

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