Life, 1889-07-18 · page 6 of 16
Life — July 18, 1889 — page 6: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Life Magazine Page 34 This page contains **no political cartoon**. Instead, it features two distinct sections: 1. **"Our Fresh Air Fund"** (left): A nostalgic illustration of a cottage with children playing outside, accompanied by text describing Life magazine's charitable initiative sending 48 children to the country. The accompanying donation list shows contributions from readers supporting this welfare program. 2. **"Mr. Henley's Verses"** (right): A literary review praising William Ernest Henley's poetry collection, with quoted verses and critical analysis. The reviewer compares Henley's work favorably to Stevenson and Shelley, emphasizing its emotional and musical qualities. The page is primarily **philanthropic and cultural content** rather than satirical commentary.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
After July sth, we sent forty-eight children to the country. Work teen cottages pied. Each of the cot ~ UM ONE OF THE SEVENTEEN COTTAG n the village is progressing rapidly. re now filled with childn Ten of the seven- and before this number of “$ VILLAGE FOR CHILDKES contains seven or eight children and a matron, Later on, when our readers give us so much money that the welfare of more children $a pleasant necessity, we shall place ten or eleven in each and there will be no crowding Reds and bedding, chairs, asins, furniture for the dining room and kitchen, and a good supply of groceries for the susten: there. Previously Acknowledged . $1,962.58 Oy ee 26.00 4.00 + 10.00 4.00 400 E 1.00 Centennial pa 3.8. N.Y. and Unexpected Dividend from J.D. Fo. 2:39 LM. Hand and H.W, Learned 12,50 Cash for Fresh Air Fund... 10.60 A.C. K., Philadelphia $00 a Eyerman . 20.00 dith Chetwood . . $00 Kitty Clover eae: $.00 Six Little Puritans 8 cx From Harold. 4.00 Watching Quarters - 1095 fobs Halifax, Boston + 38.00, Profits of a Fair, Contributed by Four Girls, K. SM. 1. MLW. Ko M. and EM, of Minneapolis, Mino. $528 ¢ of the hilarious throng are also Alfred T. Martin D. E. Moand A.B. M. From Little Helen Dean . Will, Mary and Ritchie Aleid : Miss L.A. W. Won Fr Shelton L and A. B. W. lor Entertainment Edward King, Jr. « Marguerite Henckel. ‘The Little Girls’ Sewing Club of Farmington, Conn. Three Colorado Children W. 5. and F.LG.C C,H. Smith Io His Name . Mrs. Geo, S. Silsbee. S. LA. MH Toral MR. HENLEY’S VERSES. T is a pleasant thing to know that so good “A Book of Verses” as William Ernest Henley’s has reached a second edition. In everything they are so modest—like the { songs of a bashful singer whose voice is only heard when he ] is alone on some hill-top where he breaks into music for joy and the love of it. This poet is so hopeful when he is sad, so gay when he has suffered. He has made up his mind that “life's a dream worth dreaming “—and he dreams it passing! accomplished and the long day done; My wages taken, and in my heart Some late lark singing, Let me be gathered to the quiet west, The sundown splendid and serene, Death.” Like the poems of his friend Stevenson, these songs are the tributes of love and affection—of the gentler emotions that always make life worth living. For what can fate bring to any man that may rob him of the love of his friends? And while that remains existence is a pleasure. There is a lyrical quality in many of the poems which is an echo of Shelley—a choice of simple and musical words to express gentle fancies : “A wink from Hesper falling * Fast in the wintry sky, Comes through the even blue, Dear, like a word from you. Is it good-bye ? “* Across the miles between us Isend you sigh for sigh. jood-night, sweet friend, good-night ! Till life and all take fight, Never good-bye.” The deepest note of the volume is in the poem “ Matri Dilectissim: "—a tribute to a mother, dead. Deep and tender feeling is expressed in the solemn, irregular measure of unrhymed lines: “Between the river and the stars, O royal and radian. soul, Thou dost return, thine influences return Upon thy children as in life, and death Turns stingless, What is death But life in act ?- Sweetest, how should the grave Re victor over thee, Mother, a mother of men ?” . . . I* the May Over/and there is a creditable and judicious essay on “ Realists in Prose Fiction,” by Wilbur Larre- more, which contains an acute estimate of George Meredith's work, The writer believes that ‘‘in the essential qualities of realism, Meredith is unsurpassed,” that “no novelist except Tourgéneff has surpassed him in the power of impart- ing deep insight by a page of fragmentary dialogue ;” that he is “ over-real” only in depicting the intellectual life of his characters, where his creative imagination leads him to exag- gerations; and that in picturing the emotions his touch “is confident and unerring.” The prevailing tone of Meredith, comicbooks.com