Yonge Charlotte Mary

A Book of Golden Deeds


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write, we hear of an American Railway collision that befell a train on the way to Elmira with prisoners. The engineer, whose name was William Ingram, might have leapt off and saved himself before the shock; but he remained in order to reverse the engine, though with certain death staring him in the face. He was buried in the wreck of the meeting train, and when found, his back was against the boiler he was jammed in, unable to move, and actually being burnt to death; but even in that extremity of anguish he called out to those who came round to help him to keep away, as he expected the boiler would burst. They disregarded the generous cry, and used every effort to extricate him, but could not succeed until after his sufferings had ended in death.

      While men and women still exist who will thus suffer and thus die, losing themselves in the thought of others, surely the many forms of woe and misery with which this earth is spread do but give occasions of working out some of the highest and best qualities of which mankind are capable. And oh, young readers, if your hearts burn within you as you read of these various forms of the truest and deepest glory, and you long for time and place to act in the like devoted way, bethink yourselves that the alloy of such actions is to be constantly worked away in daily life; and that if ever it be your lot to do a Golden Deed, it will probably be in unconsciousness that you are doing anything extraordinary, and that the whole impulse will consist in the having absolutely forgotten self.

      THE STORIES OF ALCESTIS AND ANTIGONE

      It has been said, that even the heathens saw and knew the glory of self- devotion; and the Greeks had two early instances so very beautiful that, though they cannot in all particulars be true, they must not be passed over. There must have been some foundation for them, though we cannot now disentangle them from the fable that has adhered to them; and, at any rate, the ancient Greeks believed them, and gathered strength and nobleness from dwelling on such examples; since, as it has been truly said, 'Every word, look or thought of sympathy with heroic action, helps to make heroism'. Both tales were presented before them in their solemn religious tragedies, and the noble poetry in which they were recounted by the great Greek dramatists has been preserved to our time.

      Alcestis was the wife of Admetus, King of Pherae, who, according to the legend, was assured that his life might be prolonged, provided father, mother, or wife would die in his stead. It was Alcestis alone who was willing freely to give her life to save that of her husband; and her devotion is thus exquisitely described in the following translation, by Professor Anstice, from the choric song in the tragedy by Euripides:

           'Be patient, for thy tears are vain

           They may not wake the dead again:

           E'en heroes, of immortal sire

           And mortal mother born, expire.

               Oh, she was dear

               While she linger'd here;

           She is dear now she rests below,

               And thou mayst boast

               That the bride thou hast lost

           Was the noblest earth can show.

           'We will not look on her burial sod

             As the cell of sepulchral sleep,

           It shall be as the shrine of a radiant god,

           And the pilgrim shall visit that blest abode

             To worship, and not to weep;

           And as he turns his steps aside,

             Thus shall he breathe his vow:

           'Here sleeps a self-devoted bride,

           Of old to save her lord she died.

               She is a spirit now.

           Hail, bright and blest one! grant to me

           The smiles of glad prosperity.'

           Thus shall he own her name divine,

           Thus bend him at Alcestis' shrine.'

      The story, however, bore that Hercules, descending in the course of one of his labors into the realms of the dead, rescued Alcestis, and brought her back; and Euripides gives a scene in which the rough, jovial Hercules insists on the sorrowful Admetus marrying again a lady of his own choice, and gives the veiled Alcestis back to him as the new bride. Later Greeks tried to explain the story by saying that Alcestis nursed her husband through an infectious fever, caught it herself, and had been supposed to be dead, when a skilful physician restored her; but this is probably only one of the many reasonable versions they tried to give of the old tales that were founded on the decay and revival of nature in winter and spring, and with a presage running through them of sacrifice, death, and resurrection. Our own poet Chaucer was a great admirer of Alcestis, and improved upon the legend by turning her into his favorite flower—

           'The daisie or els the eye of the daie,

           The emprise and the floure of flouris all'.

      Another Greek legend told of the maiden of Thebes, one of the most self-devoted beings that could be conceived by a fancy untrained in the knowledge of Divine Perfection. It cannot be known how much of her story is true, but it was one that went deep into the hearts of Grecian men and women, and encouraged them in some of their best feelings; and assuredly the deeds imputed to her were golden.

      Antigone was the daughter of the old King Oedipus of Thebes. After a time heavy troubles, the consequence of the sins of his youth, came upon him, and he was driven away from his kingdom, and sent to wander forth a blind old man, scorned and pointed at by all. Then it was that his faithful daughter showed true affection for him. She might have remained at Thebes with her brother Eteocles, who had been made king in her father's room, but she chose instead to wander forth with the forlorn old man, fallen from his kingly state, and absolutely begging his bread. The great Athenian poet Sophocles began his tragedy of 'Oedipus Coloneus' with showing the blind old king leaning on Antigone's arm, and asking—

           'Tell me, thou daughter of a blind old man,

           Antigone, to what land are we come,

           Or to what city? Who the inhabitants

           Who with a slender pittance will relieve

           Even for a day the wandering Oedipus?'

POTTER.

      The place to which they had come was in Attica, hear the city of Colonus. It was a lovely grove—

           'All the haunts of Attic ground,

           Where the matchless coursers bound,

           Boast not, through their realms of bliss,

           Other spot so fair as this.

           Frequent down this greenwood dale

           Mourns the warbling nightingale,

           Nestling 'mid the thickest screen

           Of the ivy's darksome green,

           Or where each empurpled shoot

           Drooping with its myriad fruit,

           Curl'd in many a mazy twine,

           Droops the never-trodden vine.'

ANSTICE.

      This beautiful grove was sacred to the Eumenides, or avenging goddesses, and it was therefore a sanctuary where no foot might tread; but near it the exiled king was allowed to take up his abode, and was protected by the great Athenian King, Theseus. There his other daughter, Ismene, joined him, and, after a time, his elder son Polynices, arrived.

      Polynices had been expelled from Thebes by his brother Eteocles, and had been wandering through Greece seeking aid to recover his rights. He had collected