of the Supreme Court of the United States; for the
very able chief justice of Massachusetts, George Tyler
Bigelow; and for that famous wit and electric centre
of social life, George T. Davis. At the last
annual dinner every effort was made to bring all the
survivors of the class together. Six of the ten
living members were there, six old men in the place
of the thirty or forty classmates who surrounded the
long, oval table in 1859, when I asked, “Has
there any old fellow got mixed with the boys?”—11
boys whose tongues were as the vibrating leaves of
the forest; whose talk was like the voice of many
waters; whose laugh was as the breaking of mighty waves
upon the seashore. Among the six at our late dinner
was our first scholar, the thorough-bred and accomplished
engineer who held the city of Lawrence in his brain
before it spread itself out along the banks of the
Merrimac. There, too, was the poet whose National
Hymn, “My Country, ’t is of thee,”
is known to more millions, and dearer to many of them,
than all the other songs written since the Psalms
of David. Four of our six were clergymen; the
engineer and the present writer completed the list.
Were we melancholy? Did we talk of graveyards
and epitaphs? No,—we remembered our
dead tenderly, serenely, feeling deeply what we had
lost in those who but a little while ago were with
us. How could we forget James Freeman Clarke,
that man of noble thought and vigorous action, who
pervaded this community with his spirit, and was felt
through all its channels as are the light and the
strength that radiate through the wires which stretch
above us? It was a pride and a happiness to have
such classmates as he was to remember. We were
not the moping, complaining graybeards that many might
suppose we must have been. We had been favored
with the blessing of long life. We had seen the
drama well into its fifth act. The sun still
warmed us, the air was still grateful and life-giving.
But there was another underlying source of our cheerful
equanimity, which we could not conceal from ourselves
if we had wished to do it. Nature’s kindly
anodyne is telling upon us more and more with every
year. Our old doctors used to give an opiate which
they called “the black drop.” It
was stronger than laudanum, and, in fact, a dangerously
powerful narcotic. Something like this is that
potent drug in Nature’s pharmacopoeia which
she reserves for the time of need,—the
later stages of life. She commonly begins administering
it at about the time of the “grand climacteric,”
the ninth septennial period, the sixty-third year.
More and more freely she gives it, as the years go
on, to her grey-haired children, until, if they last
long enough, every faculty is benumbed, and they drop
off quietly into sleep under its benign influence.