Crayon and Character: Truth Made Clear Through Eye and Ear eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 209 pages of information about Crayon and Character.

Crayon and Character: Truth Made Clear Through Eye and Ear eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 209 pages of information about Crayon and Character.
is celebrated only as the birthday of Him who arose from the dead.  Without it, the world would be in the darkness of despair and disappointment which possessed the disciples as they turned from the cross to resume their former occupations or to hide themselves from the taunts of their tormentors.  Hence, we must make the best possible use of it.  This illustration possesses no new thought; in fact, there is nothing new except as we put into it the newness of our own enthusiasm and earnestness.

The Talk.

“On this beautiful Easter morning I want to tell you of a lady who has done a good deal to help us enjoy this day.  But for her, I believe, we would not have had any of these lovely lilies which represent the purity of the life of the risen Savior.  I do not know the name of this lady.  But I do know that one day she stepped from a steamer at a wharf in her home city of Philadelphia, and that she had been on a visit to the Bermuda Islands, which are six hundred miles out in the Atlantic Ocean.  Perhaps you know that the Bermuda Islands are noted as the place where they raise very large onions, which are imported to the United States.  An onion, you know, is a bulb.  Well, this lady carried with her two bulbs.  They weren’t Bermuda onions, either, as they were too small for that.  She took these two bulbs to a friend who was a florist and asked him to plant them. [Draw the bulb in black.  Fig. 31.] This was in the year 1875.  The bulbs soon sent up strong green shoots and after a while blossomed as beautifully in their strange surroundings as they would have done in their former home. [Complete the drawing of the lily stalk in green; also the lilies, using fine black lines as outlines.] To us these beautiful flowers seem like old friends, because we have known them so long, but these Easter lilies, blossoming in Philadelphia, were the first to spread their sweet perfume in this country.

[Illustration:  Fig. 31]

“Before that time, there was a lily known as the Easter lily, but whose right name is the lilium candidum or Madonna lily.  This latter name comes from the fact that in one of the paintings of the Madonna she holds one of these lilies in her hand.  It, also, is pure white, and similar in form to the Easter lily of today except that it is more bell-shaped.

“During the first four years, these two bulbs in Philadelphia produced one hundred new bulbs.  But what had become of the original bulbs?  Ah, don’t you know that when the bulb produces new bulbs the original bulb dies?  Yes, when the new bulbs form at the sides of the old bulb, the one which gave them life perishes—­in fact, the first bulb gives up its life that the others may live. [Draw the outer bulbs as in Fig. 32.] And while it does so, it spreads the perfume and the beauty of its flowers to delight everyone who sees them.

[Illustration:  Fig. 32]

“From these first bulbs brought to America has come much of the beauty which is now so widespread at Easter time.  The earth is full of the perfume of the Easter lily today.

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Crayon and Character: Truth Made Clear Through Eye and Ear from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.