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officer. There he will find Homeric military ardor baptized by Christian sentiment.

Full red the furnace fires must glow,

That melts the ore of mortal kind;
The mills of God are grinding slow,
But ah, how close they grind!
To-day the Dahlgren and the drum
Are dread Apostles of his rame,
His kingdom here can only come
In chrism of blood and flame.

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CHAPTER IX.

JOHN ALBION ANDREW.

Governor Andrew's Death Caused by the War-The Governors Dr. Beecher Prayed for-Governor Andrew a Christian Governor-Gov. Andrew's BirthHe goes to Boston to Study Law-Not Averse to Unfashionable and Unpopular Causes His Cheerfulness and Social Accomplishments-His Sunday School Work-Lives Plainly-His Clear Foresight of the War-Sends a Thousand Men to Washington in One Day-Story of the Bluc Overcoats— The Telegram for the Bodies of the Dead of Baltimore-Gov. Andrew's Tender Care for the Poor-The British Minister and the Colored Women-The Governor's Kindness to the Soldier's Wife-His Biblical Proclamations-The Thanksgiving Proclamation of 1861-The Proclamation of 1862-His Interest in the Schools for the Richmond Poor-Cotton Mather's Eulogy on Governor Winthrop-Gov. Andrew's Farewell Address to the Massachusetts Legislature -State Gratitude to Governor Andrew's Family.

AMONG the many heroic men who have sacrificed their lives in the great battle of liberty in our country, there is no one who deserves a more honored memory than John A. Andrew, Governor of Massachusetts.

We speak of him as dying in battle, for it is our conviction that Governor Andrew was as really a victim of the war as if, like Lincoln, he had been shot down by a bullet. His death was caused by an over tax of the brain in the critical and incessant labors of

the five years' war. He had been previously warned by a physician that any such strain would expose him to such a result, so that in meeting the duties and exigencies of his office at the time he did, he just as certainly knew that he was exposing himself to sudden death as the man who goes into battle. He did not

fail till the battle was over and the victory won, then with a smile of peace on his lips, he went to rest by the side of Lincoln.

It was a customary form in the prayers of the Rev. Dr. Beecher, to offer the petition that God would make our "Governors as at the first, and our counsellors as at the beginning." These words, spoken with a yearning memory of the old days of the pilgrim fathers, when religion was the law of the land, and the laws and ordinances of Christ were the standard of the government, found certainly a fulfillment in the exaltation of John A. Andrew to be the Governor of Massachusetts.

It has been said of Lincoln by a French statesman that he presents to the world a new type of pure, Christian statesmanship. In the same manner it may be said of John A. Andrew, that he presents a type of a consistently Christian State Governor.

The noble men of America who have just consummated in the 37th and 38th Congresses the sublimest national and moral reform the world ever saw, are the spiritual children of the pilgrim fathers. So are Garrison, Phillips, John Brown, and other external helpers in bringing on the great day of moral victory. They were men either tracing their descent in lineal blood to Puritan parentage, or like Garrison, spiritually born of the eternal influences which they left in the air of the society they moulded.

These sons of the Puritans do not, it is true, in all points hold the technical creed of their ancestors, any more than the Puritans held the creed of the generation just before them. Progress was the root idea

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