Your mothers have prayed for you, my friends, for many and many a day, Perhaps these days of life will soon be o"er, Come, give your hearts to Jesus, get on the narrow way, And meet her on that happy golden sh.o.r.e.
Oh, come just now while still there"s room, and pardon free for all.
The Savior pleads, oh, do not longer roam.
And then with Jesus in your heart, you will send the message To your dear mother, praying still for you at home.
SOON THE DEATH-BELL WILL TOLL.
When the last Gospel message has been told in your ears, And the last solemn warning has been given you in tears; When hope shall escape from its place in your breast, Oh, where will your poor weary soul find its rest?
CHORUS.
Soon the death-bell will toll--look after your soul; O, sinner be ready, for the death-bell will toll.
When the darkness of death shall compa.s.s you round, When the friends you have loved are all standing around; Unable to save you now from the tomb, Unable to alter your terrible doom.
When before the white throne of His Judgment you stand, "What have you to answer?" the Judge will demand; Oh, terrible moment to be standing alone, When mercy forever and forever is gone.
THE END OF THE WAY.
The following beautiful lines were written by a girl in Nova Scotia, an invalid for many years:
My life is a wearisome journey; I"m sick of the dust and the heat; The rays of the sun beat upon me, The briars are wounding my feet.
But the city to which I am journeying Will more than my trials repay; All the toils of the road will seem nothing When I get to the end of the way.
There are so many hills to climb upward, I often am longing for rest, But He who appoints me the pathway Knows what is needed and best.
I know in His word He has promised That my strength shall be as my day; And the toils of the road will seem nothing When I get to the end of the way.
He loves me too well to forsake me, Or give me one trial too much; All His people have been dearly purchased, And Satan can never claim such.
By and by I shall see Him and praise Him, In the city of unending day; And the toils of the road will seem nothing When I get to the end of the way.
When the last feeble steps have been taken, And the gates of the city appear, And the beautiful songs of the angels Float out on my listening ear; When all that now seems so mysterious Will be plain and clear as the day-- Yes, the toils of the road will seem nothing When I get to the end of the way.
Though now I am footsore and weary, I shall rest when I"m safely at home; I know I"ll receive a glad welcome, For the Savior Himself has said "Come."
So, when I am weary in body, And sinking in spirit I say, All the toils of the road will seem nothing When I get to the end of the way.
Cooling fountains are there for the thirsty, There are cordials for those who are faint: There are robes that are whiter and purer Than any that fancy can paint.
Then I"ll try to press hopefully onward, Thinking often through each weary day, The toils of the road will seem nothing When I get to the end of the way.
Appendix.
The matter which I have here appended I thought of too much value to omit from this volume. The first article is explanatory in itself. The second is by a prisoner whom I have known for many years. The third (regarding Christ in Gethsemane) was written by a prisoner as a letter to myself. I hope the reader may profit by the reading of each page.
E. R. W.
THE PERSONNEL OF PRISON MANAGEMENT.
Address of C. E. Haddox, warden of the West Virginia penitentiary, to the National Prison a.s.sociation, at its annual session, Louisville, Ky., Congress of 1903:
This is the age of industrial development. On every side we see colossal enterprises undertaken and prosecuted to a successful and profitable conclusion.
Great railroad systems span the continent, carrying millions of pa.s.sengers and countless tons of freight, with safety, celerity and dispatch, to the doors of factory, workshop, store and consumer.
Immense industrial enterprises are constantly being projected, consolidated and carried on in a manner to excite the admiration, mayhap, the wonder and fear of mankind.
Colossal financial transactions amaze the minds of those uninitiated to the magnitude and the intricacies of such undertakings.
The unexplored recesses of the earth are exploited in a manner and on a scale heretofore undreamed of and unknown, and every department of enterprise is carried on to a degree that distinctly stamps this decade as the acme of industrial enterprise and achievements, the golden age of industrial prosperity, and the acquirement of material improvement and material gain.
If it be asked why such strides have been made along industrial lines, the answer is that it is due to ORGANIZATION AND SPECIALIZATION.
The PERSONNEL of the management have devoted their lives, their talent and their energies to the special work before them. They have been drilled and educated along special lines; they have been deaf and blind to outside matters not relevant to the work in hand, and by close and careful study, by unceasing and constant labor, care and effort, having evolved, projected and carried on these immense enterprises.
The National Prison Congress at its meeting this year is mindful of the material progress of the country.
This a.s.sociation is equally ambitious along the lines peculiar to itself to obtain from the various penal inst.i.tutions of the country the highest and best results morally, educationally, reformatively, and as an incident, punitively and financially.
How shall we keep pace in penal improvements with the great material progress of the outside world?
The answer necessarily must be, that improvements in our department of work must come, as they do elsewhere, by the investigation, the study, the thought and the effort of those who are in actual control, of those who are in a position to see, to observe and to know.
In other words, the question as to whether prisons are to improve, whether their work shall continue to be of a higher and n.o.bler character, whether we are finally and forever to break away from the customs of the galleys of France, the prisons of Hawes in England, of the Mamertine of Rome and of Rothenburg in Germany, will depend utterly, entirely and absolutely upon the personnel of the prison management of the country.
Prof. Henderson, in his admirable address delivered at the Philadelphia meeting in 1902, on "The Social Position of the Prison Warden," says: "Some inst.i.tutions have no marked qualities; they have walls, cells, machinery, prisoners, punishments, but no distinct, consistent and rational policy."
Where this is true it means that the worst possible condition of affairs exists. Such an inst.i.tution has the dry rot. It is managed (or rather mismanaged) by time servers, too careless to feel the high responsibility devolving upon them, and too listless to acquaint themselves with the many opportunities spread before them to improve and keep pace with the onward march of progress.
Such officers in their abuse, by inaction, of the opportunities afforded them, commit "Crimes against criminals" and through them against society.
On the contrary inst.i.tutions which have distinct features and characteristics, have them as the result of the careful investigation, the patient research and thought of those who are in responsible and actual control, and these characteristics and features reflect the wisdom and intelligence of those who have given their energies and their lives to the special work before them.
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
In the management of penal inst.i.tutions a Board of Directors or of Control is, ordinarily, the nominal head.
By the laws of most states they are supposed to fix the administration policy, to restrict and define the powers and duties of the officers in actual and intimate control.
In some inst.i.tutions they meet a day or so each month, in most inst.i.tutions not so frequently. Their duties while at the inst.i.tution may or may not be largely perfunctory, and as they are generally active business men at home in other channels, the day or two a month or quarter is apt to be regarded by the unthoughtful as a respite or surcease from other duties. The main duty of a Board of Directors or of Control may be said to be the determining of the general policy upon which the inst.i.tution shall be conducted, and a cursory oversight of the conduct of its affairs.
THE WARDEN.