Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,188 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works.

Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,188 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works.

I am one of those who so regard it.  Those are not bitter or scalding tears that fall from my eyes upon “the mossy marbles.”  The young who left my side early in my life’s journey are still with me in the unchanged freshness and beauty of youth.  Those who have long kept company with me live on after their seeming departure, were it only by the mere force of habit; their images are all around me, as if every surface had been a sensitive film that photographed them; their voices echo about me, as if they had been recorded on those unforgetting cylinders which bring back to us the tones and accents that have imprinted them, as the hardened sands show us the tracks of extinct animals.  The melancholy of old age has a divine tenderness in it, which only the sad experiences of life can lend a human soul.  But there is a lower level,—­that of tranquil contentment and easy acquiescence in the conditions in which we find ourselves; a lower level, in which old age trudges patiently when it is not using its wings.  I say its wings, for no period of life is so imaginative as that which looks to younger people the most prosaic.  The atmosphere of memory is one in which imagination flies more easily and feels itself more at home than in the thinner ether of youthful anticipation.  I have told you some of the drawbacks of age; I would not have you forget its privileges.  When it comes down from its aerial excursions, it has much left to enjoy on the humble plane of being.  And so you think you would like to become an octogenarian?  “I should,” said the Counsellor, now a man in the high noon of bodily and mental vigor.  “Four more—­yes, five more—­decades would not be too much, I think.  And how much I should live to see in that time!  I am glad you have laid down some rules by which a man may reasonably expect to leap the eight barred gate.  I won’t promise to obey them all, though.”

Among the questions addressed to me, as to a large number of other persons, are the following.  I take them from “The American Hebrew” of April 4, 1890.  I cannot pretend to answer them all, but I can say something about one or two of them.

“I.  Can you, of your own personal experience, find any justification whatever for the entertainment of prejudice towards individuals solely because they are Jews?

“II.  Is this prejudice not due largely to the religious instruction that is given by the church acid Sunday-school?  For instance, the teachings that the Jews crucified Jesus; that they rejected him, and can only secure salvation by belief in him, and similar matters that are calculated to excite in the impressionable mind of the child an aversion, if not a loathing, for members of ‘the despised race.’

“III.  Have you observed in the social or business life of the Jew, so far as your personal experience has gone, any different standard of conduct than prevails among Christians of the same social status?

“IV.  Can you suggest what should be done to dispel the existing prejudice?”

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