Russell a poet?

by NikL 6 Replies latest jw friends

  • NikL
    NikL

    Is this for real?
    “If We Only Understood”

    Charles T. Russell
    From “Poems of Dawn” 1912

    Could we draw aside the curtains
    That surround each other’s lives,
    See the naked heart and spirit,
    Know what spur the action gives-

    Often we would find it better,
    Purer than we judge we would;
    We would love each other better
    If we only understood.

    Could we judge all deeds by motives,
    See the good and bad within,
    Often we would love the sinner
    All the while we loathe the sin.

    Could we know the powers working
    To o’erthrow integrity,
    We would judge each other’s errors
    With more patient charity.

    If we knew the cares and trials,
    Knew the efforts all in vain,
    And the bitter disappointments-
    Understood the loss and gain-

    Would the grim external roughness
    Seem, I wonder, just the same?
    Would we help where we now hinder?
    Would we pity where we blame?

    Ah, we judge each other harshly,
    Knowing not life’s hidden force;
    Knowing not the fount of action
    Is less turbid at it’s source.

    Seeing not amid the evil
    All the golden grains of good,
    Oh, we’d love each other better
    If we only understood.

  • Maximus
    Maximus

    Yes, Russell was a poet.

    Maria Russell, that is. And quite a good one at that.

    Maximus

  • NikL
    NikL

    Maria Russell okay.
    BUT...
    This is going around JW circles as being from Charles T.
    Seriously, I would like to know the story on this poem.

  • Maximus
    Maximus

    Sorry. The flip style on the board just got to me.

    JW circles probably cannot believe that Maria was a prolific author, certainly not a chef in dispensing "meat in due season," later in 1950 termed "food at the proper time." But she was, as Pastor Russell admitted in his trial. She was the poet in the family, not Charles Taze.

    There are numerous samples of her poetry, and the one you present is typical.

    ::All the golden grains of good

    That's especially typical. Most of her poems look forward to the ideal Golden Age.

    Maximus

  • Scorpion
    Scorpion

    POEMS OF DAWN: page 299
    "PRIDE GOETH BEFORE DESTRUCTION"

    A King in procession had come to the town,
    Riding an ass that was playing the clown:
    For as people hailed and saulted their King
    And started in joy his great praises to sing,
    The ass made a curtsy and smiled and bowed
    And sat down to salute the worshipping crowd.
    The King in his rage had the ass fully stripped,
    And there on the street had him publicly whipped.

    Which reminds us of some that our Masters had used
    Who, puffed up with pride, their office abused;
    And not honouring Him in all their ways,
    They took to themselves His honour and praise-
    But pride brings destruction, or something quite near it,
    And so they were stripped of the Truth and its spirit;
    For they are deviod of true wisdom, alas
    Who possess the audacity of the ass!

    (Regarding his(Joseph Rutherford) misguided statements as to what we could expect in 1925, he once confessed to us at Bethel, "I made an ass of myself."
    WT 10/1/1984 page 24

  • NikL
    NikL

    Thanks for the info Max. I never knew that Maria Russell was a poet.
    Also thanks Scorp for the reprint of the poem and the WT quote at the end. Very insightfull.
    I have learned something today! :-)

  • RR
    RR

    Writing a poem doesn't make one a poet. Yes, Russell wrote a few poems, many of these appear in the towers of his day.

    RR

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