[The Log School-House on the Columbia by Hezekiah Butterworth]@TWC D-Link bookThe Log School-House on the Columbia CHAPTER XVIII 8/37
We are now beginning to see the hand of Providence, and to realize how great was the work that these people did for their own country and for the world. And Marlowe Mann--whose name stands for the Christian schoolmaster--no one knows where he sleeps now; perhaps no one, surely but a few.
He saw his college-mates rise to honor and fame.
They offered him positions, but he knew his place in the world. When his hair was turning gray, there came to him an offer of an opportunity for wealth, from his remaining relatives.
At the same time the agency offered him the use of a farm.
He accepted the latter for his work's sake, and returned to his old friends a loving letter and an old poem, and with the latter we will leave this picture of old times on the Oregon: "Happy the man whose wish and care A few paternal acres bound; Content to breathe his native air On his own ground. "Whose herds with milk, whose fields with bread, Whose flocks supply him with attire; Whose trees in summer yield him shade, In winter, fire. "Sound sleep by night, study and ease, Together mixed sweet recreation; And innocence, which most doth please, With meditation. "Blessed who can unconcernedly find Hours, days, and years glide soft away, In health of body, peace of mind; Quiet by day. "Thus let me live unseen, unknown; Thus unlamented let me die; Steal from the world, and not a stone Tell where I lie." HISTORICAL NOTES. I. VANCOUVER. The remarkable progress of the Pacific port cities of Seattle and Tacoma make Washington an especially bright, new star on the national flag. Surrounded as these cities are with some of the grandest and most poetic scenery in the United States, with gigantic forests and rich farm-lands, with mountains of ores, with coal-mines, iron-mines, copper-mines, and mines of the more precious treasures; washed as they are by the water of noble harbors, and smiled upon by skies of almost continuous April weather--there must be a great future before the cities of Puget Sound. The State of Washington is one of the youngest in the Union, and yet she is not too young to celebrate soon the one-hundredth anniversary of several interesting events. It was on the 15th of December, 1790, that Captain George Vancouver received his commission as commander of his Majesty's sloop of war the Discovery.
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