



Produced by Julia Miller, Mary Meehan and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)










                      BIOGRAPHY OF REV. HOSEA BALLOU.

                           BY HIS YOUNGEST SON,

                            MATURIN M. BALLOU.


     "He staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief; but was
     strong in faith, giving glory to God: and being fully persuaded
     that what he had promised he was able also to perform."


    BOSTON:
    PUBLISHED BY ABEL TOMPKINS.
    1852.

    Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1852, by
                         ABEL TOMPKINS,
    In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of
                         Massachusetts.

    STEREOTYPED BY
    HOBART & ROBBINS,
    NEW ENGLAND TYPE AND STEREOTYPE FOUNDERY,
    BOSTON.


                           TO THE
                 SECOND UNIVERSALIST SOCIETY
                         OF BOSTON,
    THIS BIOGRAPHY OF THEIR LATE PASTOR IS RESPECTFULLY
                         Dedicated,
                  BY THEIR HUMBLE SERVANT,
                         THE AUTHOR.


[Illustration: Portrait of REV. HOSEA BALLOU, Engraved by H. W. Smith]




AUTHOR'S PREFACE.


To say that the author experiences a degree of diffidence in writing
upon the theme and subject of these pages, would but inadequately
express his true feelings on taking up the pen for this object. But he
does it with a purpose of strict adherence to facts, nor will any matter
be suppressed or one iota added to the truth. No one who shall read a
dozen pages herein relating to the early life of Rev. Hosea Ballou, but
will at once acquit the author of any false pride as it regards
chronicling the events and circumstances of the subject's life. He is
most happy to state the facts literally, and he is satisfied as to the
verdict that every unprejudiced mind will render.

It may be said that a son cannot write a faithful history of a
parent--that such a production must needs be partial,--though we have
numerous instances of the contrary. To such an objection the writer
would reply, that there is but one side to truth, and it is this, and
this only, that the reader will find in these pages. He offers no
labored extenuation or defence,--there are no circumstances that require
it; no appeal or pleading for a verdict of acquittal,--for there are no
charges to refute; but he gives a simple, unvarnished biography of a
true Christian and a faithful disciple of the gospel, whose whole life,
even from earliest youth, has been a beautiful and consistent tribute to
truth. For some time previous to the decease of the subject of this
biography the author contemplated the present work, and for this purpose
has, at various times, kept minutes relative to dates of his father's
movements; and he has also been briefly assisted by memoranda and short
articles from his father's pen, which are embodied herein, relative to
his feelings concerning himself and his doctrine. The framework, so to
speak, of the book, has therefore been in hand for a considerable
period; and the placing of it in a proper form for the printer has been
all the author has attempted since the death of his respected father.

M. M. Ballou.

_Boston, Sept., 1852._




CONTENTS.


    CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY                                         9

    CHAPTER II. BIRTH AND PARENTAGE                                14

    CHAPTER III. EARLY LIFE                                        22

    CHAPTER IV. BECOMES A PROFESSOR OF RELIGION                    38

    CHAPTER V. COMMENCES TO PREACH                                 52

    CHAPTER VI. BECOMES A SETTLED MINISTER                         64

    CHAPTER VII. REMOVES TO PORTSMOUTH, N. H.                      89

    CHAPTER VIII. SETTLES IN BOSTON                               103

    CHAPTER IX. COMMENCES THE UNIVERSALIST MAGAZINE               120

    CHAPTER X. COMMENCES THE UNIVERSALIST EXPOSITOR               136

    CHAPTER XI. DOMESTIC AND PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS             173

    CHAPTER XII. MR. BALLOU AS A CONTROVERSIALIST                 231

    CHAPTER XIII. SPIRIT OF HIS DOCTRINE                          258

    CHAPTER XIV. SENTIMENTS RELATIVE TO DEATH                     322

    CHAPTER XV. END OF HIS EARTHLY MISSION                        366

    CHAPTER XVI. CONCLUSION                                       392




BIOGRAPHY.




CHAPTER I.

INTRODUCTORY.


The gratitude of mankind has not failed to record with honor the names
of those who have been the inventors of useful improvements in the arts,
or the authors of scientific discoveries, of brave warriors and wise
statesmen; ancient history reveals to us the time when the inventors of
letters and the plough, were revered as divinities. If there are any who
are actually worthy of being remembered by the world, they are those who
have proved themselves, by the lives they have led, and by their holy
teachings, to be benefactors of the human family, and true followers of
Christ.

It is conceded by all, that biography is a most important species of
history. Through its agency, men who have been distinguished for merit,
talent, or any peculiar virtue, are remembered, and, though they may be
personally lost to us, yet the good influence they exerted during their
lives, is made to continue for our benefit. The biography of any eminent
individual must be, in some degree, a chronicle of the times in which he
lived, and thus, though the production may be of the most humble
character, the pages of history are enriched, and the records of the
past perfected. We think it was the Rev. John Ewart, M. A., a noted
English divine, who set it down as one of the most interesting
reflections relative to biographical reading, that we may see and know
in heaven, those whose life and excellent works we have read of here.
This is, perhaps, rather a peculiar argument, but not inappropriate in
this connection.

For our own part, we have ever perused, with the liveliest satisfaction,
any book of a biographical character, and believe that such works are
almost universally read with avidity and profit. With living men and
present measures, there is generally some prejudice or passion
connected. But when death has set his seal upon a worthy character, and
he has departed from the din and conflict of the world, then we can
receive the full benefit of his example. For it is very true that genius
rarely shines with full lustre until death hath unroofed it of envy. It
will, therefore, be my object in these pages to adhere to those facts
best fitted to illustrate the personal character of Mr. Ballou, and to
furnish the means of estimating aright the services he rendered to his
own and subsequent times, that his memory may remain to us in evergreen
freshness and beauty, and thus renew to posterity the savor of a good
life.

It is the usual practice with biographers to dwell at length and in
explanation upon the discoveries and doctrines of the object of their
labors, forgetting, apparently, that these things are almost universally
known already, and that the main design of a biography should be to make
public and illustrate the private life of those whom the world already
knows as philosophers, statesmen, divines, or otherwise. It is said of
Mallet, that he wrote the life of Lord Bacon, and forgot that he was a
philosopher. But this is rarely the case, for it is the prevailing
custom, and has ever been, to forget the man in the remembrance of the
philosopher. It is the traits of personal character, those slight, yet
important incidents and anecdotes which mark the individual's every-day
life, that, when preserved and recorded, form the great interest and
charm of biography. Plutarch, the writer of half a hundred lives, in
that of Alexander says:--"As painters labor the likeness in the face, so
must we be permitted to strike off the features of the soul, in order to
give a real likeness of these great men."

Hence, biography written in a true spirit, while something quite
different from history, is, nevertheless, an important supplement and
aid to it, throwing light into its dark corners, and explaining its
obscurity. For the historian, in the spirit of the painter or poet, must
dispense with all the minutiae of detail which would interfere with the
effect of his conception. He has a broad canvas, crowded with many
figures, and in the grouping of these, the bringing out of strong
points, the handling of the light and shade, many minor points must be
obliterated, or thrown into the background. He presents us with truth,
indeed, but not with the whole truth. The historian shows us the warrior
in the hour of battle, on the field of review, or in the pomp of a
military triumph; the statesman in the light of a senatorial victory, as
he appears before the broad gaze of the world; the divine clad in his
sacerdotal robe, at the high altar, or in the pulpit, at the moment of
addressing listening crowds, and swaying the hearts of men by the fervor
of his eloquence.

The biographer, on the other hand, dealing with individuals and not with
masses, painting portraits and not groups, is permitted a more elaborate
finish in the treatment of his subject. He shows us the soldier not only
in the hour of battle, but in the privacy of his tent, or in the bosom
of his family; the statesman in his study, or unbending from his public
tasks in social intercourse; the divine in the daily walks of life, in
the discharge of parochial duties, amid the toils and trials common to
all humanity. The biographer is often at variance with the historian in
treating the same subject. He often shows us the littleness of the
great; for many a prominent actor in the world's great drama wears a
mask upon the public stage that conceals his real features. Few men are
found abroad, beneath the searching light of heaven, with the same
aspect of soul, the same undisguised native promptings, visible in every
act and word, as characterize them at their own firesides, and
surrounded by those who know them most intimately. It is truly going
"behind the scenes" to enter the domestic circle, for there the
artificial man must be dropped, the cloak that is sometimes worn before
the eyes of the world is laid aside, and we have the soul unmasked
indeed.

It will be our endeavor, in the following pages, to illustrate the
perfect harmony of a Christian character, the daily beauty of whose
private life accorded with that of his public career; through whose
existence religion ran like a silver thread, linking all its component
parts together,--who "showed the path to heaven and led the way." The
world is anxious, when it contemplates the memory of such an exalted
character, to know the steps by which the subject rose to the situation
which he filled, as well as the incidents by which he terminated his
noted career. We are gratified to observe such characters in the private
walks of life, to follow them into their families and closets, and to
discover thus how those who challenged the respect and admiration of the
times in which they lived, conducted themselves amid those cares and
duties common alike to the humble and the exalted. These remarks will
introduce the reader to the plan of the present work.




CHAPTER II.

BIRTH AND PARENTAGE.


Hosea Ballou was born, April 30th, 1771, in the town of Richmond, New
Hampshire, a small village situated in the county of Cheshire, in the
southern part of the State; at that time little more than an uncleared
wilderness. The site of his birth-place is now a most attractive and
lovely valley, scooped out from the rough hills and mountains of the
Granite State, and known as Ballou's Dale; surrounded by the most
romantic scenery, the beauties of which he used to dwell upon in after
years, and to sing their praise in verse. The neighboring country is of
a bold and rugged character, and is to this day but thinly settled. It
was here that he first drew breath in an humble cottage-home among the
hills.

The influence of nature in the formation of character has been much
insisted on by metaphysicians, and not without ample reason. The
qualities of men are found to assimilate very closely to the
characteristics of the country they inhabit. Thus the mountaineer is
bold, rugged, hardy, independent, and fond of liberty. In Europe,
surrounded on every hand by despotism, Alpine Switzerland has preserved
its political independence for ages. But especially is the power of
natural scenery witnessed in the nurture of deep religious feeling.

    "The groves were God's first temples."

The first prayer uttered by man was breathed to his Creator in a garden,
among the olive trees of Eden. The disciples of our Saviour listened to
their Lord in the deep wilderness, in the awful solitude of rugged
mountains. In the heart of mighty forests and by the shores of
ever-rushing rivers, the littleness of man, contrasting with the
grandeur of creation, speaks to his awakened soul of the omnipotence and
goodness of God. Where men are banded together in great cities, in the
midst of splendors and triumphs of art, they are apt to feel a pride and
self-reliance which abandon them in the face of nature. Apart from the
frequent spectacle of man's handiwork, the dweller in the country learns
how all human skill is impotent to imitate the smallest feature in the
great work of creation; to create the lightest blade of grass that bends
in the summer breeze; to fabricate even the minutest grain of sand that
sparkles by the river shore. Then, as he lifts his eyes from earth to
heaven, and beholds at night the starry host above him wheeling
unerringly upon their appointed courses, his mind cannot but
acknowledge the existence of God, and the immeasurable greatness of his
attributes.

It will be seen, in the course of this narrative, that the influences we
have alluded to must have produced a powerful effect upon a mind
constituted like that of the subject of this biography.

In relation to the genealogy of the family, we have it in detail as far
back, on the paternal side, as his great-great-grandfather, Matteaurian
Ballou,--so the name was spelled by him,--who came from England, though
a Frenchman by descent, about the year 1640. He occupied a portion of a
royal grant of land, about that time purchased from the Narraganset
tribe of Indians, by the agent of the crown. This tract was situated in
the present State of Rhode Island, where descendants of the family still
reside. This Matteaurian Ballou's oldest son was named John, whose
second son was named Matteaurian, who, also, had a son named
Matteaurian, who in turn had eleven children,--six sons and five
daughters. The youngest of the family was named Hosea, the subject of
these memoirs.

His father, Rev. Maturin Ballou, was remarkable for his unostentatious
manner, his forgiving spirit and meekness, and the strict consistency of
a life devoted, as he truly believed, to the service and glory of his
Divine Master. He remained a highly respected and influential member of
the Baptist church until the time of his death, at the age of eighty-two
years. When his son differed from him so materially in faith, though it
sorely grieved the parent's heart, it never for one moment influenced
him in his affection for his child. His conduct towards him was
uniformly kind and solicitous, as was also the son's regard for his
father of the most loving and respectful character. Whenever referring
to his father, the subject of this biography never failed to do so with
that respect and honor for his memory that was ever cherished by him,
and which formed a beautiful trait of his character.

In this connection it may not be inappropriate nor uninteresting to say
a few words concerning the brothers and sisters of Hosea, the youngest
member of the family. Benjamin, the oldest, was a man of strict
integrity, and possessed a penetrating and powerful intellect. For some
years the power of early influences and associations moulded his life,
and he preached the Baptist religion, but was subsequently converted to
Universalism, by his younger brother, Hosea, and lived and died in its
faith, continuing to the good old age of eighty-two years. This was the
grandfather of Rev. Dr. Ballou, of Medford, Mass.; Rev. William S.
Ballou, of Strafford, Vt., and Rev. Levi Ballou, of Orange, Mass.
Maturin was the second son, who was also a Baptist minister, of strict
morality and honorable career, but who died at the early age of
thirty-five years. In his manuscript, Mr. Ballou says, relative to this
brother: "He grew very liberal in his sentiments towards the last of his
labors, and was one of the most loving and devout Christians that I ever
knew." David was the third son, and he also preached the Baptist faith,
but, like the eldest brother, was ere long persuaded of the truth of the
doctrine of universal salvation, which he preached for many years,
possessing a strong and well balanced mind, and powerful argumentative
abilities. He died at the age of eighty-two. This was the father of Rev.
Moses Ballou, of Bridgeport, Ct. The fourth son was named Nathan, a man
of remarkable mental and physical strength, who gave his attention
mainly to agricultural pursuits, and who lived to be nearly eighty years
of age. This was the grandfather of the present Rev. Russel A. Ballou,
of West Bridgewater, Mass. Stephen was the fifth son and combining many
of the best qualities of his elder brothers, and possessing a most
upright and conscientious disposition, was yet remarkable for the
endowment of a large degree of native wit and good humor. He also
devoted himself to agriculture, and lived to nearly the age of seventy.
All of these brothers were possessed of a handsome competency, realized
by their own economy and industry. The daughters were variously
espoused, and lived, all but one, who died at the age of twenty, to be
venerable and honored in years, and with a numerous offspring.

On the maternal side, these children were descended from Lydia Harris,
daughter of Richard Harris, who, like his ancestors, was a Quaker. His
forefathers came to this country to escape the persecution of the
seventeenth century in England, when the infatuated and tyrannical
Charles was oppressing his subjects by restricting the freedom of
industry, and billeting soldiers upon the people in times of peace; when
the private papers of citizens were searched on mere suspicion, and when
the bigoted Laud ruled with as high a hand and reckless a purpose in the
church, as his royal master did in the state. Citizens claiming the
right of freely uttering what they honestly believed to be true, on the
subject of religion, were fined, whipped, and imprisoned. Ministers and
educated citizens were branded on the forehead, their noses slit, and
their ears cropped, for dissenting from Popish rites and ceremonies. To
escape such intolerable persecution, Quakers crossed the ocean. But,
alas! persecution followed them even in the wilds of America.
Individuals who had left home, friends, country and all, to gain the
privilege of worshipping the Almighty after the dictates of their own
consciences, did not hesitate to deny others that privilege for which
they had themselves sacrificed so much, simply because they differed
from them in form of faith.

We should not omit to mention in this place the remarkable degree of
affection that ever actuated the subject of this biography towards each
and all of the members of his father's extensive family; and this
feeling was reciprocal too; especially have we personally observed this
on the part of the brothers, whom he frequently visited, through the
entire period of their lives. Much older than himself, as far back as
our memory of them extends they were venerable and grey-haired men, and
treated Hosea more like a son than a brother. Their meetings together,
from time to time, were reunions of great satisfaction and happiness.
Fully admitting his superior scriptural knowledge and judgment, they
delighted to converse upon the theme of religion, and mutually to
express the strength of their faith and the joy they found in believing.
It was this younger brother who converted them to the belief of God's
impartial and free grace, and they died at last with their minds freed
from every doubt as it regarded the subject. One or two of these
brothers had believed what was called Universalism quite as early as had
Hosea, but they had believed it as it was then taught on the old
Calvinistic principle, which made it in reality anything but
Universalism. It was from this ill-defined platform, this faith of
inconsistencies, that Hosea brought their minds to embrace that creed
which is now acknowledged as the doctrine of the Universalist
denomination. When he spoke to them and of them, it was with that tender
and affectionate regard with which his heart was ever filled to
overflowing.

I have taken some pains to state the foregoing facts of genealogy thus
carefully, merely for the sake of completeness, and not for the purpose
of establishing the fact that the family is "an old one." The idea that
to be able to trace back one's pedigree any great length of time,
imparts any degree of merit or distinction in itself, is a palpable
absurdity, inasmuch as the further back we refer ourselves in our
origin, the more nearly do we approximate to the same ancestry with the
veriest serf in the world. Sir Thomas Overbury said of a man who
boasted of his ancestry, that he was like a potato plant,--the best
thing belonging to him was under ground! Mr. Ballou was no pensioner
upon the dead. The laurels that surrounded the brow of his riper years
were self-earned, and worthy of emulation.




CHAPTER III.

EARLY LIFE.


The life of Hosea Ballou may be said to have commenced with one of the
saddest of bereavements, for at the tender age of two years he had the
misfortune to lose his maternal parent, who died, leaving him the
youngest of eleven children. Thus it was his unhappy lot never to know
the fond regard and pure affection of a mother, that holiest tie of
humanity. Concerning this matter, Mr. Ballou says, in the brief memoir
or outline of his life with which he has furnished us, "My mother died
when I was about two years old, and, of course, I do not remember her;
but from all I can learn of my mother, I am satisfied that she was of a
most tender and kind disposition. But the treasure was gone before I
could realize its value." The care and guidance of the family then fell
upon the father, whose means for providing for his children's
necessities were of the most simple and limited character. This parent,
a pious and devout preacher of the Calvinistic Baptist denomination,
endeavored, to the best of his ability, to bring up his large family to
fear and serve a God who was merciful to those whom from all eternity he
had elected to be heirs of eternal life, but who was full of holy wrath
towards the greater portion of mankind;--a faith which the honest parent
little thought, at that time, his youngest son, through the
instrumentality of Providence, would so successfully battle against in
the spiritual warfare of after years.

In this connection, Mr. Ballou says:--"We were all taught, and in our
youth all believed, that we were born into the world wholly depraved,
and under the curse of a law which doomed every son and daughter of Adam
to eternal woe. But at the same time God had made provision for a select
number of the human family, whereby they would be saved by the
operations of the divine Spirit, which would result in what was called
conversion, sometime during the life of those elected. Those who were
not elected would remain without any effectual calling, die, and be
forever miserable. When I was a youth it was the sentiment of all
Christian people, as far as I knew, that not more than one in a thousand
of the human family would be saved from endless condemnation.

"Youth were taught to be moral, but that morality was no security
against divine wrath. The conversion of the soul from the state of
nature in which all men were born into the world, was the only security.
One of the worst things ever taught to youth was, that in this world
there is more enjoyment in the ways of vice, iniquity, sin, and
unrighteousness, than in the ways of obedience to the commandments of
God. But we were taught at the same time that the wicked were running an
awful risk, for should they die without repentance, their everlasting
condemnation was sure. All the risk there was, lay in the possibility
that death might be sudden, and give no time for repentance. But the
fact that there is _in_ the way of strict morality, _in_ the path of
true religion, _in_ the road of righteousness, all the rational
enjoyment which our nature is capable of, and that any departure from
right is an equal departure from true happiness, was not taught, to my
knowledge, at that time. Nor did I ever understand this great truth
until taught it by the Scriptures, and my study of them, and by my own
experience."

It was the conscientious belief of Mr. Ballou's father that he ought not
to receive any remuneration whatever, either pecuniary or otherwise, for
his professional services; and, as he devoted himself with the utmost
zeal and the most untiring assiduity to his calling, and was possessed
of little or no personal estate, his family were all obliged to labor
very hard, merely to obtain a simple subsistence. But "even in this was
Heaven ordinant." Thus, from his earliest childhood, Mr. Ballou was
accustomed to toil and labor, and this too under the hardships of a
scanty supply of food and clothing. So destitute even of the most
ordinary articles of raiment, or the means of procuring it, was his
father's family, in the times of his boyhood, that many a long week has
he passed without an under garment of any kind upon his person, and
without shoes or stockings for his feet, even during the inclemencies of
winter, when his employment would frequently call him abroad for a large
portion of the day!

Notwithstanding all these privations and hardships, there was no
repining; the rich glow of health was upon his cheek, and a light and
happy heart, in spite of iron fortune, throbbed in his young breast.
Though such was his early experience, and such the vicissitudes of his
youth, yet in subsequent years he was destined to enjoy freely of the
liberal bounties of Providence, and, through his own frugality and
industry, to be able to give with open hands in charity to others. In
these years of prosperity and honor, when revered and beloved by a whole
denomination, and when ranked among the most powerful intellects of the
age, did he forget, or desire to conceal, the humble character of his
youth, its hardships and trials, or the companions of his early days?
Let those answer to whom he has related these things in censure of false
pride and the vanity of the world. Would it become us, then, who have
seen and realized the full bent of this noble spirit in him, to fail to
speak clearly of these matters? We opine not, and therefore these
records will be found to be full and complete.

The reader will probably agree with us, that there is something
exceedingly striking, as well as most affecting, in the domestic
circumstances to which I have alluded. The character of Mr. Ballou's
father, reminds us of one of those stern old Cameronians of Scotland,
so well described by one of the first writers of the age. With but
little sympathy for his creed, we must nevertheless respect his
sincerity; nor can we wonder at all, with his education in the faith
which he preached, and hampered by the illiberal spirit of the period,
which seemed to mildew every generous prompting of the human heart, that
he clung to it with inflexible tenacity. But we must contemplate with
unqualified admiration the heroic self-denial, the martyr-like firmness,
with which this servant of the Lord pursued what he believed to be the
path of his duty, amidst circumstances of such extraordinary
deprivation. Truly, he abandoned all to serve his Master. His severest
trial must have been to witness the privations of his family. A man can
endure in his own person what it costs him agony to witness inflicted on
those nearer and dearer to him than life itself. The struggles of that
little flock, bereft of a mother's tender care and guidance at the very
time when they most required it, must have given many an anxiously
painful day and night to a father's heart. Yet, we have seen how they
were sustained.

This is probably by no means an isolated case of trial. It is but a type
of the condition of many of the early settlers in a new country,--in
short, a picture of American pioneer life. It is from such beginnings,
and under such circumstances, that the most useful and energetic of our
countrymen have sprung. It is not to the lap of luxury that we are to
look for the source of manly character and manly virtues. The rough
nurture of his early years most unquestionably fitted Mr. Ballou for
the battle of life which he was destined to fight. It trained him for
the long and severe journeyings of his apostolic missions, and it warmed
his sympathies for the poor, while it gave him that indifference to ease
and luxury which so largely conduces to true mental independence. It
taught him also to rely under Providence upon himself; and these early
privations, while they strengthened and indurated him, rendered the
honorably acquired competence and comforts of his later years in life
doubly grateful and acceptable.

Notwithstanding this stern experience of his tender years, and in spite
of every hardship, and the severe labor he was obliged to perform under
such unpropitious circumstances, still he grew up strong, healthy and
vigorous, both in mind and body, possessing a form and face of manly
beauty, with expression and intelligence reflected in every feature. In
stature he grew to be six feet high, his figure very erect, with finely
formed limbs, and a bright, clear blue eye. His whole appearance
indicated good health even to advanced old age, his constitution being
naturally excellent, and his frugal and temperate habits seconding the
kindly purpose of nature. Heaven had marked him for its servant, and
breathed into his soul a spirit of energy and unflinching perseverance,
that no hardship could quench or diminish. Christ chose his disciples
from among the lowly fishermen of Galilee; God herein took an humble but
faithful follower from a cottage amidst the mountains.

Although descended from a devout and eloquent preacher of the
Scriptures, the reader will at once observe that Mr. Ballou was not
indebted in the least particular for the future lustre of his reputation
as a powerful and original thinker, writer and teacher of the gospel, to
his birth, or early condition in life, but that, on the contrary, he was
literally a self-made man, owing his position strictly to individual
merit alone. Enjoying none of the educational advantages resulting from
wealth, or even from a simple competency, yet he steadily rose above
every impending obstacle in his path, to the truly enviable position
which he attained in the hearts of thousands upon thousands who were led
through his teachings, both orally and through the productions of his
prolific pen, to see their God and Father as he is in all harmony and
beauty. Thus it is that poverty of condition and wealth of intellect go
often hand in hand.

"Where, in modern history," asks Rev. A. E. Abbott, in his late eulogy
upon Mr. Ballou, "can another instance be found of a man laboring under
such disadvantages, in the face of such opposition, and yet performing
such a work? Those who have heretofore accomplished much in that field,
have had all the advantages which the most thorough culture of their
times could give. Like the giant of Gath, they have taken the field
encased in polished armor; he, like the stripling of Bethlehem, came to
the contest with only the shepherd's sling and the smooth stones from
the brook."

As no general rule can be adduced for the formation of human character,
so long as the power of early association, the influence of education
and example, each and severally produce in different individuals exactly
opposite effects, so no general rule can be applied as to the result of
certain accessory circumstances. Therefore we deduce no result from the
mere fact of Mr. Ballou's father having been a professed minister upon
the character of his son, having no belief that genius is hereditary, or
that paternal authority can influence its natural course. Indeed, the
reader is doubtless well aware that the opposition of a father to the
natural bent of his child, rarely fails more strongly to develop the
original taste and purpose, generally arousing in the end a spirit of
resistance, that is pretty sure to strengthen by opposition.

Before the age of sixteen, by the utmost perseverance, ingenuity, and
industry, the subject of this biography had learned to read and write
with facility, almost entirely by his own unaided exertions, or with
little assistance of any kind; for had there been a school in the
neighborhood of Richmond, which was not the case, he could have found no
time to attend it, being ever laboriously engaged from morning until
night. He learned to form the letters of the alphabet in the following
ingenious and original manner, which he related to us when a mere child,
we were making the first advances in the use of the pen. After not a
little thought and sober calculation as to how he should accomplish his
purpose,--for pen, ink and paper were luxuries his father's means could
not command,--for paper he substituted thin pieces of birch bark,
neatly prepared for the purpose by his own hands, and for pen and ink he
used coals taken from the fire. With these rude materials, after the
labors of the day were over, seated on the floor, by the light of the
fire,--for candles were too expensive to be afforded in the frugal
household of his father,--he taught himself to write. A student,
actuated by such resolution and determination of purpose, must soon
become a proficient, in defiance of every minor obstacle; and thus he
speedily improved with these humble means.

Some further idea of the limited means of his father's family, and the
extraordinary disadvantages under which his early progress was made, may
be gathered from the fact, that the only books the house contained, or
in fact that the family had access to at all, were a Bible, an old
dictionary, and a well-thumbed pamphlet of the scriptural story of the
tower of Babel. A newspaper in the days of which we write, in the town
of Richmond, would have been considered a most rare curiosity. Perhaps
this very dearth of literary material led Mr. Ballou to be the more
intimate with that volume

    "Within whose sacred pages lies
    The mystery of mysteries,"

with which alone no student can be poor, without which the largest
library is incomplete. It has been remarked of the sacred volume, that,
as the face of nature is bedecked with colors and adornments to render
it agreeable to the senses, so its pages are filled with that luxury of
poetry and language and incident which commends it to every imagination.
Even the half-unbelieving Byron confessed that nothing in literature was
finer than the poetry of the Old Testament. Thus the word, like the bow
of promise, is gilded with the fairest hues. The solemn march of
historical narration, the sublime hymns of triumph, praise and
rejoicing, the records of battles and heroic deeds, the familiar
narrative, the interesting parable, the pithy proverb, the terse and
vigorous delineation of character, the sublime visions of inspired
prophecy, are all there. Of almost every style of literary composition
there is an example, captivating alike to the humblest reader and the
most cultivated critic. It is the beginning and the end of learning. In
the midst of the sublimest flights of human genius, amid the most
burning words of modern eloquence, introduce a passage of scripture, and
how poor will seem the language and the thoughts by which it is
surrounded!

Need we count that house poor in literary possessions which contains a
Bible?

If it be true that there are certain ennobling qualities, to produce
which a soil of privation and poverty is requisite, the reader is
doubtless already prepared to allow that Mr. Ballou was not deficient in
the necessary experience for their possession. A lack of those
advantages which are enjoyed in the "schools of human learning" did not
lead him in the least to undervalue the humble opportunities for
acquiring mental discipline and useful information that every-day life
graciously affords to all. But the clear, free river of knowledge and
unbounded information, that now pours out its wealth at the feet of the
people, was then undiscovered. It has been left to these more modern and
favored times for inventions in the arts to so revolutionize the means
of disseminating knowledge, as to lay the wealth of wisdom at the poor
man's door.

At the age of sixteen he left the paternal roof for the first time, and
made a journey on foot to Guildford, Vt., a distance of about forty
miles from Richmond. Here he visited an elder brother, and, after
working with him upon his farm through the season, returned to his
father's house again in the fall. About one year from the time of his
visit to Guildford, he visited another brother who resided in Putney,
Vt., where he also labored for a season upon the farm, employing all his
leisure moments to the improvement of such simple means as were within
his power to command, aided by the greater experience and better mental
cultivation of his brother. He remained through that season only at
Putney, however, and returned again in the fall of the year to Richmond.

At the age of eighteen he went to Smithfield, R. I., where many of his
relations, on the paternal side, were settled. Here also he devoted
himself to constant labor during the day, and to the eager perusal of
any and all books to which he could obtain access, during the evenings
and a large portion of the nights. He remained in Smithfield but about
six months, again returning to the place of his nativity. In making
these changes he was almost solely actuated by a desire for instruction
and general information, and this being his great aim, we have seen how
much he improved every available means to consummate it, and thus his
exploring and impressible mind was not a little enriched. The time
passed at home during the intermediate and subsequent periods to those
referred to, was employed by him upon his father's farm, in the tilling
of the soil, and in constant efforts to improve his mind. Those who were
older than himself were earnestly questioned for their experience. Those
who had enjoyed any educational advantages were eagerly sought after,
and regarded by him as favored beings, and their conversation listened
to with avidity.

The improvement and development of a mind in this condition, a healthy
mind in a healthy body, is exceedingly rapid. It is then

    "Wax to receive, and marble to retain."

It seizes eagerly on all the food placed before it, and rapidly digests
every acquisition. The condition of a mind with every appliance for
improvement at hand, is not unlike that of a person with every variety
and quality of food set before him for the gratification of a bodily
appetite. Repletion, satiety, and indigestion, follow in one case
precisely as in the other. Many of our modern students are crammed and
gorged with study. The mental appetite is over-indulged; and an attempt
to master too much is doubtless the besetting literary sin of the
present day. The cases of mental dyspepsia are as common as those of
the body. Sound scholarship consists not so much in the quantity of
material consumed, as in the quantity properly prepared for intellectual
nurture. A man may possess a fund of encyclopedic knowledge, and yet his
mental powers may be weakened by the very process of grasping so many
details. He may be good authority to appeal to, but will hardly prove a
sound thinker or a good logician. "Not many, but good, books," was the
golden advice of a wise man on the formation of a library. Self-made
men, like Mr. Ballou, are apt to make judicious selections in culling
the great field of knowledge, while those who pass through a regular,
systematic, academic training, are often forced to fill their minds with
a mass of matter for which they have no use, and to waste much time in
questionable acquirements, simply because in so doing they comply with
the requisitions of a prescribed formula.

It was customary for the young men of all classes in those days to
pursue athletic exercises, such as pitching the bar, leaping, wrestling,
and the like, these being regarded as the surest tests of bodily
strength. Possessing a powerful and active frame, he was ever the victor
in those sports; and from his marked success among his comrades in this
respect, and his fair and impartial disposition, he was universally the
umpire in all disputes growing out of these and like contests for
superiority that arose between one and another. In the matter of his
physical strength, particularly when young, he ever cherished, a
laudable degree of pride, and delighted in accomplishing a large amount
of work within the hours devoted to labor.

In this connection, Mr. Ballou says:--"I have the comfort, even in my
old age, of remembering that I was deemed in our family circle to be a
good child, and marked for giving evidence of being less averse to
necessary labor than others. Though this contributed somewhat to make me
proud, and to think well of myself, in other respects it was of some
advantage to me to be held in esteem by my mates, who ever showed that
they had a peculiar regard for me."

Mr. Ballou undoubtedly owed the vigorous health which carried him
through the exertions of a life protracted beyond the allotted span, to
the athletic training of his youth, in his labors and in his sports. One
of the besetting sins of the present mode of education is the almost
total neglect of physical training, and the forcing system applied to
the mind at the expense of the body. We hear much about sanitary reform
and the necessity of exercise; we write and read voluminous treatises on
the best mode of preserving bodily health, and almost all of us can talk
learnedly upon the subject, and yet in practice we set at naught all our
elaborate theories. How rare it is to see a vigorous, ruddy-cheeked
student. The ancients were wiser than ourselves in this respect, for
with them mental and physical training went hand in hand. A popular form
of instruction was that given orally in the open air; and thus, during
the very hours of study, the frame was submitted to the healthy
influence of pure air. The subject of these memoirs often referred to
the pale cheek, stooping form, and defective vision which are
characteristics of the American student, and he never failed to
inculcate on all proper occasions the preservation of health as a high
moral duty.

While of tender age, and in each successive year, he evinced an ardent
and constantly increasing desire for scriptural knowledge; and the
earliest dawnings of his young mind among his brethren were of a
character that gave promise of the Christian grace and excellence to
which he attained in after years. It is interesting and curious to trace
the unconscious, and, so to speak, the providential adaptation of the
early life to the future calling of riper experience. Mr. Ballou says,
in relation to this subject:--"I was remarkably inquisitive, even when a
mere boy, about doctrines. I was fond of reasoning on doctrinal points,
studied and talked much upon the subject of free will and necessity. I
well remember to have surprised my honored father with such a question
as the following: 'Suppose I had the skill and power out of an inanimate
substance to make an animate, and should make one, at the same time
knowing that this creature of mine would suffer everlasting
misery,--would my act of creating this creature be an act of goodness?'
The question troubled my father, and I let it pass without an answer."

These frequent questions had the effect of causing the father much
uneasiness of mind, and he used often to express great solicitude and
fear for the present and future welfare of his son. Many were his
endeavors to convince Hosea of the dangerous character of the sentiments
that seemed to be springing up spontaneously in his heart, but the
unprofitable nature of these efforts soon became apparent, from the fact
that the simple, natural arguments of the son confounded the father. Boy
as he was, he yet would not take the assertions of faith for argument,
but insisted upon reason, and understanding at all times the "root of
the matter."

To the honor of this truly pious and devout parent, it should be
remembered, however, that these controversies never elicited an
unchristian spirit, or the least anger towards his child. This was a
natural and beautiful characteristic of his father's disposition.




CHAPTER IV.

BECOMES A PROFESSOR OF RELIGION.


At the age of nineteen, there being what was termed a reformation in the
town of Richmond, Mr. Ballou was induced, believing it to be his duty,
to become a professor of religion, and accordingly at that time he
joined the Baptist church, of which his father was pastor, in the month
of January, 1789. It is very evident that he was partly induced to this
circumstance by the bearing of external circumstances and the immediate
associations about him, such as observing the conduct of others of his
own age, who at that time made a formal and public profession of faith,
and also by what he knew very well to be his father's earnest desire. It
seems, therefore, that these matters, rather than any earnest mental
conviction of faith, were instrumental in leading him to join the church
as he did,--inasmuch as none of those objections which he had often made
to his father's belief, had yet been cleared up to his mind.

But this joining of the church was plainly of immediate advantage to
him, as it led him to think still more seriously and earnestly upon the
subject of religion; but, owing to early prejudices, and his limited
means of acquiring information, or of possessing himself of any books
upon such subjects as would have been useful to him, his progress
towards the light of truth was but slow. Mr. Ballou says, in relation to
this conversion:--"I was much troubled in my mind because I thought I
did not stand in such fear of the divine wrath as I ought to do, or as
others had done before they found acceptance with God. I well remember
that as I was returning home from a conference meeting, one evening,
when about a quarter of a mile from home, being alone, I stopped under a
large tree, and, falling on my knees, prayed as well as I could for the
favor I sought." His connection with his father's church, though it
continued but a short period comparatively, seems to have made no slight
impression upon his mind and feelings, for he says:--"I have always felt
towards this people (the Baptist denomination) as one feels towards his
family, and though the religion of Christ consists in love to all men, I
have a peculiar feeling for the Baptists."

In his researches and reading concerning the creed that he had now
publicly professed, he found it impossible to bring his heart to conform
to the doctrine of eternal reprobation, and this in itself, as he
afterwards remarked, was an evidence of no inconsiderable importance, to
his mind, that it could not be true; for why should his Heavenly Father
have implanted in his heart an earnest desire for the salvation of all
mankind, unless that desire was susceptible of gratification, as is
every appetite, mental or physical, with which we are endowed by nature?
Such thoughts caused him much and incessant anxiety of mind, because the
very fact of his entertaining them, if the doctrine he had professed was
true, endangered his eternal salvation; while, on the other hand, if
this creed was not that taught by God's revealed word, then he was
needlessly suffering, to a degree that greatly depressed him.

No wonder that this double incentive led him to search the Scriptures
with the utmost care and attention, and to weigh and decide in his own
mind the relation that one portion bears to another, and finally, with
the help of Heaven, to make up his mind as to the true spirit and
doctrine of the whole. The reader can easily imagine the fervent prayers
he uttered, the sleepless nights he passed, and the arduous study he
performed, in his search for the light of truth. After all this anxious
solicitude, this solitary mental struggle, this prayerful communication
with Heaven, he at length declared himself a believer in the _final_
salvation of the whole human family.

Great was the surprise, disappointment, and chagrin of his father and
friends generally. Being looked up to by the young men of his own age as
a sort of leader in their secular plans and games, the influence of his
example was greatly feared as operating upon the younger portion of the
church; and as his joining it had been the occasion of much rejoicing at
the time, so his declaration of unbelief in its faith was the cause of a
proportionate degree of sorrow. His new declaration was at once
pronounced to be downright heresy, and he was accordingly excommunicated
from his father's church, the document with which he was honored on the
occasion carefully stating that nothing was found against him, but that
he believed in the doctrine that God would finally save all men.

In relation to this subject, Mr. Ballou says:--"Above all else, my
theological bias of mind predominated, and engrossed most of my
attention. As I had formerly been in the habit, while with the Baptists,
of speaking in their meetings, and of offering up prayer at conference
meetings, I now sometimes spoke my sentiments at meetings in my
brother's house. The church of which I was still a member thought it a
duty to call me to answer for the course I had taken, and I was called
upon to meet the accusation of believing in the salvation of all men. I
attended, but did not feel it my duty to deny the charge, or to renounce
my belief. I was therefore excommunicated from the church, my letter of
excommunication carefully stating that no fault was found in me, my
belief in the salvation of all men excepted. I shall ever remember the
tears which I shed on this solemn occasion."

It was about this period that Mr. Ballou, ever in search of improvement,
possessed himself of some book of a liberal religious character as to
the sentiments it inculcated, when his father, chancing to see him
reading it, told him decidedly that he would not have Universalist books
in his house. Promptly acquiescing, as he always did, in his father's
directions, a few days subsequent, the parent, on returning home, found
Hosea reading a book beside the wood-pile, out of doors. "What book are
you reading there?" he asked. "A _Universalist_ book," replied the son,
respectfully. An expression of dissatisfaction escaped the father, as he
turned away and entered the house. Watching until his son had placed the
book in the wood-pile, and left the spot, the parent resolved to possess
himself of it, and perhaps even destroy it. But, lo! when he opened it,
he found it was the Bible.

In an article written many years subsequent, relative to his conversion
to the faith of God's impartial grace, Mr. Ballou says:--"I found, when
conversing upon the subject, that my Calvinistic tenets could be made
either to result in universal salvation, or to compel me to acknowledge
the partiality of the divine favor. This gave me no small inquietude of
mind, as I was unable to derive satisfaction from sentiments which I
could not defend. That which more than anything else contributed to turn
my thoughts seriously towards the belief of Universalism, was the ardent
desire with which I found myself exercised that sinners might be brought
to repentance and salvation. I found it utterly impossible to bring my
feelings to consent to the doctrine of eternal reprobation, and I was
compelled either to allow that such feelings were sinful, or that my
Heavenly Father, in giving them to me, had implanted an evidence in
favor of the salvation of all men, the force of which I found no means
to resist."

As to Mr. Ballou's having been brought up in the faith of Calvinism, it
was not without its benefits upon his after life, for it gave to him a
most unlimited and perfect knowledge of the various items of faith
professed by that sect, as well as the common tenets of all those who
believe in the partial salvation only of the great human family. Owing
to an early desire to understand the doctrine of Christianity aright,
while yet of tender age he became familiar with the arguments used in
support of predestination, election, reprobation, the fall of man, the
penal suffering of Christ for the elect, and many other items of creed
relating to the moral agency of man. Concerning this subject, Mr. Ballou
says:--"As to the doctrine of Calvinism, in which my honored father was
a believer, and which doctrine he preached until nearly the end of his
public labors, my acquaintance with its various tenets, while quite a
youth, was by no means very limited, owing to the pious endeavors of a
parent whose affection for his children rendered him extremely anxious
for their spiritual welfare, and to an early desire of my own to
understand the doctrine of Christianity correctly." It was necessary
that he should understand these matters as he did, and as he could only
do, by serving an apprenticeship to them, so to speak, in order the
better to enable him to refute them in after years, when he should be
arrayed in a moral conflict against them. Thus the pious and well-meant
endeavors of his parent to inculcate the principles of his own faith in
the mind of his child were but a part of the well ordained purpose of
the Almighty, in raising up an able champion for the gospel of truth.

Mr. Ballou says, referring to the period just previous to his
declaration of faith and consequent excommunication:--"In the spring
after I joined the church in Richmond, I went, with my brother Stephen
and our cousin Jeremiah Harris, to the town of Westfield, in New York.
This town is now called Harford. Here we labored together during that
season, attending Elder Brown's meeting. He was of the Baptist order.
Even before I left home my mind had become somewhat shaken in regard to
the doctrine of endless punishment. I found it utterly out of my power
to reconcile it with what all Christians professed of love to the
unconverted; nor could I reconcile it with many plain declarations of
Scripture; but I was by no means persuaded that salvation was for all
men. My brother, knowing that I had trials of mind on this great
subject, expressed a desire that I should have a conversation with Elder
Brown relative to it, hoping thereby that my doubts would be removed. A
conference was therefore appointed, at the house of one of the elder's
deacons. There were a number present, and the elder requested me to name
some passage of Scripture which to my mind favored universal salvation;
expressing at the same time perfect confidence that he should be able to
show me that the passage did by no means favor such doctrine. I opened
to the fifth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and read the
eighteenth verse, as follows:--'Therefore, as by the offence of one
judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness
of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life.' The
elder did not appear to be at all acquainted with the text, for, instead
of directing his remarks to it, he seemed to wander far off, and to talk
very loud, and nothing to the subject. When he paused, I again read the
text, and asked the elder if the same _all men_ mentioned in the first
part of the text, were not mentioned in the last? This simple question
seemed to embarrass his mind; he was evidently out of humor, and
manifested a bitter spirit, which being discovered by my brother, caused
him to desire that the conversation should close, and it did. This
circumstance tended rather to strengthen my mind in favor of universal
and impartial grace, and to induce a more thorough examination of the
Scriptures and the subject. I had no other book than the Bible, and all
my early education lay like a broad sheet to cover that book from my
vision. But one or two passages were found, and from them I found my way
to others which seemed to agree with the first, and it was not long
before I was astonished at my ignorance of the Scriptures. The Bible was
no longer the book it had been to me. I became entirely convinced of the
truth of the doctrine of Universalism."

It was therefore in the town of Westfield, N. Y., that Mr. Ballou came
fully to believe in the final salvation of all mankind. We do not mean
to be understood that he came at once to the full belief of the
doctrine that he afterwards taught, but that he made at this time the
earliest and most important advance towards the belief which he
subsequently declared, and which has since become the creed of
nine-tenths of the Universalist denomination. At this period he believed
the doctrine, as he says he preached it not many months afterwards,
being the fall before he was twenty-one, "when I began to speak in
public," he says, "believing and preaching universal salvation, on the
Calvinistic principles of atonement and imputed righteousness." The few
Universalists that then existed, having obtained proof, to their
satisfaction, that none of the human family would suffer endless
punishment, thought they had sufficient cause for rejoicing, and seemed
to be content to rest their discoveries there. Further _progress_ upon
this subject was left for Mr. Ballou to make and promulgate, as by
careful and unaided research he should come more fully to understand
this most important subject.

"At this time," he writes in his manuscript before us, "fully realizing
that the basis of all spiritual knowledge was the Bible, that blessed
book was ever with me, and not one moment in which I was freed from
necessary labor was occupied save in its perusal. I learned to love it,
to consult its pages with reverence, and prayerfully, that I might
rightly interpret its true meaning. I became very familiar with the
various important passages, which frequently gave me great advantage in
controversy, at that time, on points of faith; for it was the practice
of those days to blindly give credence to such faith as was taught from
the pulpit, and, leaving the minister to reason for the whole
congregation, they themselves rarely consulted the holy text, in a
spirit of inquiry, though they deemed themselves most devout and
reasonable Christians. By individual and careful explorations, I found
my Bible was able to teach me all I desired to know, and that, at the
outset, I had been miserably deceived in my early impressions of God's
word, by not examining and weighing the subject matter of divine
revelation for myself. But such is the force of habit that those early
impressions were at first constantly recurring to my mind, and acting as
stumbling blocks in the way of my onward progress."

It is often said that Rev. John Murray was an earlier preacher than the
subject of this biography; that he is called the father of Universalism
in America; and that Mr. Ballou received his opinions direct from him.
But those persons who say thus, or entertain themselves such an idea,
are mistaken; indeed, as often as this remark is made, it must always be
by those who have thought little, and known less, of the history of
Universalism. No one venerates the memory of Rev. John Murray more than
the author of this memoir, who, indeed, out of respect for his Christian
virtues and excellence, bears his name; but these records must be
faithful in all respects. So far from Mr. Ballou's having obtained the
opinions which formed the great and distinctive features of his doctrine
from Murray, that venerated minister did not believe the creed of
Universalists as taught by the subject of this biography, namely: _that
the Bible affords no evidence of punishment after death_. Even at the
time of Murray's death he held most tenaciously to his early belief; and
he even preached the doctrine on the old Calvinistic principles, between
which and the doctrine promulgated by Mr. Ballou there is a wide
difference.

While in the town of Westfield, a serious accident occurred to Mr.
Ballou, by which he nearly lost his life, being, by some accident, most
fearfully scalded. After much suffering from the injury thus received,
he perfectly recovered, and soon after returned once more to Richmond,
being not yet twenty-one years of age. He now first commenced the study
of the English grammar, and attended for a period a school kept in the
Quaker meeting-house in his native town.

Mr. Ballou says of this first attendance at school:--"It was a private
school, the first one ever opened in the town, and was supported by a
few young people with whom I united; and here I obtained the first
instruction in English grammar. I now set myself to work in earnest to
obtain learning. I studied night and day, slept little, and ate little."

At the close of this school, being actuated by an earnest desire to
obtain knowledge, and realizing more than ever the immense advantage it
bestowed, he determined, for a period, to devote his entire earnings to
this end; and, in pursuance of this purpose, he immediately entered the
Chesterfield (N. H.) Academy, where, by industry and incessant
application, allowing himself but a brief period of time out of the
twenty-four hours each day for sleep, in a very short space of time he
acquired a good knowledge of the ordinary branches of an English
education of those days. The tuition received by Mr. Ballou at this
academy was the first worthy of mention that he had ever enjoyed, and
was of vastly more importance to him than all he had been taught before,
or had himself acquired, as it regarded the rudiments of his native
language. Fortunately, the instructors employed were men of sound
ability, and consequently from his studies here he realized most
important and lasting benefit.

It was not alone the additional theoretical knowledge that he acquired
here that we refer to as being of so much advantage to him; it was also
that which he saw and realized while at this school. It was the spirit
of emulation that was imparted to his disposition by observing others in
their progress, as it regarded mental culture, and the acquirement of
useful knowledge. His early associations had been among that class who
had paid but little attention to mental cultivation. He had enjoyed but
a limited opportunity thus far to judge of the incomparable power and
importance of education; but now he realized it at a glance, and,
determining to let no means within his power remain unexercised in the
great purpose of obtaining knowledge and of cultivating intelligence, he
gathered his golden harvest from every available source, and stored it
in the cells of his brain.

We have heard him refer particularly to this period, as having devoted
the hours of the night, as well as those of the day, to enable him to
keep pace with more experienced minds and better cultivated intellects,
and how apparently gratified the preceptor was to see him able and
thorough in his recitations, knowing the strong disadvantages under
which he labored. It was his good fortune to make the acquaintance of
the teachers on good terms. They seemed prepossessed in his favor, and
were exceedingly kind, and even assiduous, in rendering him every needed
assistance in his studies. This was of unquestionable advantage to him,
and made him, if possible, more attentive than he would otherwise have
been as to studies and recitations, that those who had been so kind to
him might see that their labor was not thrown away. "I well remember,"
says Mr. Ballou, "the kindness and consideration exercised towards me by
Professor Logan, the principal of the academy, who seemed resolved that
my tuition should be of real benefit to me." And thus, indeed, it really
proved, forming a foundation on which to rear a structure of useful
knowledge, and the better to enable him to arrange and discipline his
mind.

On leaving the academy, he obtained a certificate testifying to his
sound moral character and ability, which document proved of considerable
benefit to him afterwards in obtaining various situations as a teacher.
Schools for the young were then kept but a short period at a time in New
England, and thus the teacher had often occasion to change the field of
his operations. Though thus engaged in the calling of a school-master,
his mind, he has frequently told us, was at all times, when not
immediately engaged with his pupils, occupied with the one great subject
that had already taken such root in his heart,--that of religion. His
Bible was ever in his hands or about his person for frequent reference,
and his earnest and constant prayer to Heaven was that he might be able
rightly to comprehend and analyze its doctrinal teachings.

He found his daily increasing knowledge of the Bible to be of great
advantage to him, as he says himself, in argument with others, and also
as it regarded properly weighing and arranging in his own mind its
various parts, and the bearing each sustained to the other. The early
knowledge thus obtained of the holy text never left him, and was
retained with most miraculous power and correctness through his entire
life.




CHAPTER V.

COMMENCES TO PREACH.


While Mr. Ballou was yet but twenty years of age, he made one or two
unsuccessful attempts to preach a regular discourse. That is, he
delivered sermons once or twice at the period referred to, before small
assemblies of his personal friends and relations. But so far from
satisfying himself in relation to his ability for public speaking, he
was quite disheartened by the result that attended these his first
efforts. Yet, by the constant solicitations of those who were curious to
hear him discourse upon the topic of his peculiar views, he continued to
speak, despite of the advice of his immediate friends and relations,
until he not only soon satisfied himself as to his abilities, but also
received the cordial approval of a large number of those who would, at
the outset, have discouraged him entirely.

In relation to this period of his life, Mr. Ballou gives us his own
words, and to the point. But the reader will please to mark that when he
speaks at this period of Universalists, he refers to those who thus
called themselves, but who would, in these days, be more properly
denominated Restorationists. The correctness of this statement will at
once be seen from the fact of his saying that he met John Murray, etc.,
at the first _Universalist_ convention which he ever attended, while
those who are acquainted with that honored teacher's tenets of faith are
aware, as we have already stated in these pages, that he lived and died
solemnly believing in a state of future suffering or punishment; and
more latterly during his life he sustained many controversies with Mr.
Ballou on this very subject.

"In September of the year preceding my beginning to preach," says Mr.
Ballou, "I went to Oxford with my brother David, to attend the first
Universalist convention I had ever met with. Here I saw John Murray for
the first time, and George Richards, and some other public preachers.
The next summer after I was twenty years old, I labored with my brother
on his farm, and late in the fall made my first attempt to preach. This
was on an evening, and at the house of Deacon Thayer, in Richmond. Mr.
Thayer had been a deacon in the Baptist church, but had become a
Universalist, and still retained his office with the last-named
denomination. My brother and Rev. Caleb Rich were present to hear my
first attempt to preach; and, according to what I could learn, they had
their doubts whether I had a talent for such labor, but were not without
some hope. The second time I attempted to preach was in the town of
Brattleboro', Vt., where my brother preached in the daytime, and I
undertook to speak in the evening, being overpersuaded to do so; but
this attempt was a failure, and I was greatly mortified, and thought,
for a time, that I would not engage in a work for which I was not
competent. However, it was not long before I became encouraged to try
again, after which I met with no remarkable failure to produce
discouragement."

The comparative failure of Mr. Ballou's earliest attempts at public
speaking, although soon afterwards followed by complete success, is not
at all surprising. It is exceedingly rare to find the first efforts of
orators satisfactory to themselves and to their friends. The first
attempt of Richard Brinsley Sheridan, the most brilliant orator of his
time,--if, perhaps, we except Burke, who was, however, more
distinguished by the eloquence of his diction,--was a complete and
decided failure. But, knowing himself, he declared emphatically that "it
was in him, and must come out." When General, then Colonel, Washington
rose to respond to a complimentary address of the legislature of his
native colony, he found it impossible to express himself; and the first
efforts of the illustrious and lamented Henry Clay gave no promise of
his future eminence. It would be easy to multiply illustrations of the
fact that it is only step by step that fame and honor are attained. No
one springs at a bound to the summit of his reputation and usefulness.
It is only shallow pretenders who sometimes shine with a false lustre
at the outset of their career, soon to sink into utter insignificance.
But the true man, the man of sterling genius and worth, conscious of a
high mission, and confiding in Providence for the energy and inspiration
necessary to fulfil it, is not daunted with the obstacles that present
themselves at the outset of his career. They are regarded as trials and
tests as to his adaptedness to the purpose for which he is created. From
every rebuff he acquires new strength; he puts forth redoubled energy,
until at last he triumphs over every impediment, and stands forth in the
full energy of his being.

Had not Mr. Ballou been prompted by such a spirit as this, had he not
been possessed of an extraordinary vigor of character, for which he was
ever remarkable, he would hardly have persevered in his attempts to
preach under these discouraging circumstances. It will be remembered
that he did not sit down and compose a discourse which he afterwards
read to his audience; this is comparatively an easy task. He spoke
extemporaneously then, as he ever did afterwards. In subsequent years he
was frequently called upon for manuscript copies of his discourses for
publication. But the sermons were not written until after they had been
delivered; and it was not his practice to put on paper even the heads of
his discourse to take into the desk with him for reference in delivery.
Trusting entirely to his powerfully retentive memory, the arrangement of
his sermons was as methodical and correct as though penned in the
seclusion of his study. We have heard some persons, more nice than
wise, speak of his extemporaneous delivery as an objection, and find
fault because he did not write his discourses, and thus deliver them
from his notes in the pulpit. We have a word to say in relation to this
subject, since it has been thus referred to.

To speak extempore and at the same time to speak well and to the
purpose, to arrange certain points and arguments mentally with nice
precision, so as to deliver them with fluency and effect, must require a
strong and healthy intellect, a powerful and original mind. But a man
with an ordinary degree of mental cultivation, who cannot write a
discourse and read it afterward, must be singularly deficient in his
intellectual capacity. It is impossible for an audience to feel so deep
an interest in the service as that which is felt in listening to the
spontaneous outbreakings of a warm and ardent mind while it is engaged
upon the holy theme. The speaker must invariably grow enthusiastic in so
glorious a cause as he advocates, and his audience necessarily partake
of his feelings. But when there is any particular degree of spirit or
animation evinced by one who is reading his discourse _verbatim et
literatim_, it is of necessity a preconcerted exhibition, and as such
must fail of its effect with the majority. It may be said that no man
can lay out so well his matter, nor give so good and sound an argument,
spontaneously, as when he commits his ideas to paper. This, as a general
thing, must be conceded, for there are comparatively few intellects
sufficiently powerful to adopt the opposite course.

The advantages of extemporaneous speaking are doubtless many. It enables
the individual to place himself in closer contact with the feelings of
his audience, giving him the power to take advantage of any bright
thought that unexpected impulse may impart. An experienced commander
arranges the general plan of an engagement before going into battle, but
he can do no more, for circumstances must guide him in the conflict. He
must improve the opportunity to throw forward his forces just at the
right moment, not too soon nor too late, as such an indiscretion might
change the fortunes of the day, and lose the battle to him who would
else have won it. So with the preacher; he must watch the inner man of
his hearers, and, as he gains ground in the heart, follow up his
influence by well-sustained argument, and strengthen his position by
proper means made available at the appropriate moment,--neither too
lightly nor yet with too much force, but be guided safely by the
strength of the position he already holds in the minds of his audience.

Such things cannot be correctly anticipated, and laid down beforehand,
by comma and period, in the study. Mr. Ballou's arguments were arranged
with the utmost precision, his reasoning followed in the most logical
array, and all the while he was talking to the people in the most
unconcerned and familiar manner, as though each respective member of his
congregation was sitting by his own fireside and the preacher had
happened in. This is the mode of preaching which is effectual, and all
the flowers of rhetoric may seek in vain to attain a like influence
over the hearts and sympathies of an auditory. The latter mode of
preaching may please, but the former will convince; the first will make
worshippers, the last admirers. Thinks the reader that the simple
fishermen of Galilee--yet the chosen of God--sought by the vain and
gaudy ornaments of elegant delivery and studied eloquence to please the
people? No! They preached the holy word in all meekness, striving to
exalt not themselves, but rather the name of him who had sent them.

Mr. Ballou says, relative to the period when he commenced to
preach:--"Mr. Logan, the preceptor, gave me a certificate when I left
the Chesterfield Academy, which was sufficient to enable me to get a
school in Bellingham, Mass. Here I taught school during the other days
of the week, and preached on the Sabbath. When I first engaged in
preaching, it was not with the most distant expectation that I should
support myself by the ministry; but I thought I could keep school some,
and labor some with my hands, and live with but a little income. From
Bellingham I went to the town of Foster, R. I., where my father formerly
lived, and there my father taught a large school and had good
compensation; and here also on the Sabbath I preached in the
school-house where I taught. From this place I went to Scituate, in R.
I., where I preached and taught school. My meetings grew very large, and
I was called on to go to different places,--to Smithfield, Providence,
Pawtucket, etc. After I had spent about two years in keeping school and
preaching, I found that I had used up all my earnings, had laid up
nothing, except that I had more costly clothing than when I first began.
And now, at the age of twenty-four, I was so much called on to preach
that I gave up keeping school, and devoted my time to the ministry,
receiving now and then some compensation for my services."

Mr. Ballou's life as a public minister may be said to have commenced at
the age of twenty. From that time, as it became known that he preached
the doctrine which was deemed by nearly all to be such a heresy, there
were numerous invitations, as he shows us above, pouring in upon him
from all quarters, to come and address the people concerning the faith
he had espoused. His labors were by no means confined to Rhode Island,
but he preached in the neighborhood of Richmond, and in various parts of
Vermont and Massachusetts, improving every moment of leisure time in the
most careful study of the Scriptures. He no longer preached on the
Sabbath only, but also on nearly every consecutive evening of the week.
It was easy to gather an audience, anxious and ready to listen to the
new and most happy doctrine that the preacher taught, and even at this
early period of his ministerial career he began to address those
spontaneous mass assemblies that in after years always gathered from all
directions to listen to him whenever he appeared. Entirely forgetting
himself, and with but one great object in view, that of preaching God's
impartial grace, and of convincing all who would listen to him of the
glorious truths of Universalism, he counted not the hours of mental
labor which now increased upon him, but labored hard and willingly with
his hands to clothe himself, receiving but a mere trifle for his
professional labors. Pay, at this period, he never demanded, and very
rarely expected; he was fully contented with the inward recompense which
he realized.

"At this period of my life," says Mr. Ballou, "my health was very
indifferent. I had most of the time a severe pain in the pit of my
stomach, and my appetite was far from being good, and so debilitated was
I in strength that I have even been obliged to sit while I preached. It
became necessary for me to procure a vehicle to journey in, being too
weak to ride on horseback; however, by care and good advice, I gradually
recruited. My travelling for that period was extensive, from Cape Ann
east, to the Connecticut River west, to Richmond north, and New London
and Hartford south. All my Sabbaths were employed, and many lectures
were attended during each week. I preached in meeting-houses when they
could be obtained, sometimes in school-houses, sometimes in barns, and
not very seldom in groves and orchards, and often in private houses.

"To the people, the doctrine I preached was new, and the opposition
lacked not for bitterness; and such was my condition that I was
constantly in conflict, and never allowed to put off my armor to rest,
day or night. All manner of evil reports concerning me were invented,
and the worst of slander circulated, all tending to make me regardless
of what my enemies said. My answer to all this slander was, while they
speak thus falsely of me, I am in no danger; if I am injured I shall do
that myself."

Theology was a subject of most sombre hue at this period in New England.
Calvinism had twined its choking fibres so closely about the sacred
tree, that its branches drooped, and its leaves withered in the sunshine
of truth. The doctrines taught from the pulpit, while they were listened
to as a duty, were yet repulsive to the heart of the hearer, and
abhorrent to his very soul. The principle of divine love was clouded
wholly from sight by the dark mass of murky error that enshrouded all
scripture teachings. The duties of man to his Maker and to himself were
held forth under fearful threats, as a penalty for disobedience, but the
idea that in the performance of our duty real happiness is alone to be
found, while sin most surely brings its own punishment, was never
publicly advanced. Sinfulness, aside from the liabilities of eternity,
was not held up to be avoided, but rather acknowledged to be pleasant
and desirable, while those who trod the paths of righteousness were
taught to consider themselves as self-sacrificing martyrs, and told to
look for their reward in eternity. It was these obvious inconsistencies
that at first challenged the attention of the subject of this memoir.
And when he stood up and boldly exposed these palpable errors, when he
preached _love_ while others preached _wrath_ to the people, it is not
singular that those who were so diametrically opposed to him in faith
should be ready to believe and propagate any stories that might reflect
upon his character, and thus detract from his influence as exercised
upon those who so eagerly listened to him, and in whose hearts, in the
very nature of things, he was sure of an answering and approving
sentiment.

It is a matter of regret that Mr. Ballou has left no record of his
journeyings and labors during this important period of his clerical
career, as such a narrative would have been most deeply interesting to
his family and friends. The amount of labor he performed must have been
prodigious, and fully accounts for the enfeebled bodily condition to
which he alludes. Every fibre of his intellectual frame must have been
constantly in a state of extreme tension; for his was not the easy task
of preaching on the Sabbath a written discourse which he had taken a
whole week to prepare, but, as we have said, he was called upon almost
daily to address large audiences and promiscuous assemblies. Nor was his
the pleasant duty of the navigator who follows the course of the stream
and the tide. He was a pioneer; he preached a new doctrine; and, as he
says, "the opposition lacked not for bitterness." It is not surely an
exaggeration to declare that Universalism in those days was popularly
regarded with as much hostility as Infidelity itself is now. Hence, in
addition to the severe fatigue of travel, the necessity of finding
constantly new arguments and new illustrations, to sway the minds of
constantly changing auditors, he had to battle valiantly, like a soldier
of Christ, against the most vigorous and determined opposition.

In this condition, how mentally and physically trying must have been his
incessant labors in his Master's vineyard! Neither by night nor by day
could he for a moment lay aside his armor. Standing alone, there was no
respite to his exertions. Later in life he beheld a host of able
followers ready to relieve him of a portion of his duties. His doctrine
was no longer the theme of obloquy and outrage. He outlived calumny and
detraction. But it will be seen that even in extreme old age he did not
spare himself; he did not suffer sloth to creep upon his spirit, nor
rust to gather on his armor. He was still the favored champion of his
cause, and ever ready to minister to the spiritual wants of his brethren
in the faith.

With the close of his itinerant labors, we now come to another important
and interesting epoch in his life.




CHAPTER VI.

BECOMES A SETTLED MINISTER.


The first place in which Mr. Ballou engaged permanently as a settled
minister was in the town of Dana, Mass., in 1794-5. The society here,
not feeling able to pay for an engagement which should occupy him the
whole time, engaged him for a portion, leaving him to supply the
societies in Oxford and Charlton, Mass., also, a portion of the time.
Having now become located, and his residence known, large numbers of
people from a distance gathered to hear him, not only on the Sabbath,
but frequently for several consecutive days of the week besides. Many
there were who held his doctrine to be such damning heresy that they
counted it a sin even to listen to it; while others of his religious
opponents, holding that "there is no error so crooked but it hath in it
some lines of truth," came and listened, and the seed not unfrequently
fell into good soil, bringing forth a hundred fold.

"Often was I greeted at this time," says Mr. Ballou, "by people who
would say, 'Sir, I heard you preach a sermon, a few weeks since, from
such a text,' naming it, 'and I have been uneasy and anxious in my mind
ever since. If your doctrine is true, I must understand and believe it.
But, alas! I fear it is too good to be true; it is so different from
what I have been brought up to believe that I cannot divest my mind of
early prejudices sufficiently to receive it, though Heaven knows how
gladly I could do so.' Then the individual would quote some passages of
scripture which seemed to him to be insuperable objections to the
doctrine I professed, and I would do all in my power to explain these
passages to his mind, in the way I had myself already learned to
interpret them. Usually, with the blessing of Divine Providence, I was
successful, at least in a large degree, and on the following Sabbath I
was pretty sure to find the honest seeker after truth among my
congregation, and the following Sabbath he would be there again,
attentively listening to the word, until, finally, he came forth and
openly espoused the blessed doctrine of God's impartial grace. Thus
encouraged with the growth of the seed that I strewed by the way-side,
my task was a grateful one to my soul, and I was constantly gladdened by
the visible fruits of my efforts in disenthralling men's minds of the
dogmas and blind creeds that early prejudice and the schools had
inculcated."

Let it be borne in mind that at this period he was preaching
Universalism on the principle of the final restoration of the whole
human family, not having satisfied himself yet that there would be no
punishment in a future state of existence, or, indeed, ever thought upon
this subject to any great extent. Owing to the very trifling amount of
his remuneration from the society in Dana, while he resided there,
besides tilling a small portion of land, he was obliged to keep school
during the week, and this engagement was often broken into for lecture
purposes. His keeping and teaching school was a benefit to him beyond
the pecuniary consideration he received, inasmuch as it familiarized him
with many branches of an English education which he would perhaps
otherwise never have acquired, or at least not nearly so thoroughly as
he did by this means.

Uninfluenced by the sneers of his opposers, and the poor remuneration he
received for the preaching of his belief, he never for one moment
wavered in a steadfast purpose, even at this early period, to preach
Christ and him crucified, and the unsearchable riches of God's goodness.
In this connection we are reminded of the remarks of the editor of the
New Covenant, Chicago, Ill., who, in his obituary notice of the decease
of Mr. Ballou, says:--

"But now we are called to mourn the departure of one who, when our cause
had scarcely a name to live,--when it was the subject of the sneer of
the bigot, as well as of the profane curse of the irreligious, and even
its warmest friends scarcely dared to hope for its resurrection to honor
and respect,--bent the energy of a giant mind to a life-long defence and
promulgation of the truth,--by his unanswerable arguments turned the
sneer of bigotry into a smile of hope, and the curses of the profane
into blessings,--of one who has done more in this age for the
liberalizing of religious sentiment than all his contemporaries
combined. Strong in the faith he preached, and steadfastly believing it
must at last triumph, from early youth to mature old age he has kept on
his armor and fought the good fight of faith, and death even found him
at his post as a faithful sentinel, and in the midnight hour he could
answer, 'All is well!'"

At the age of twenty-five, and while resident in the town of Dana, he
became acquainted with the family of Stephen Washburn, in the town of
Williamsburg, Mass., and, after an intimate acquaintance of about a
year, he married their youngest daughter, Ruth Washburn, who was some
eight years younger than himself. His wife, like her husband, had been
brought up to habits of industry and economy; she proved a kind,
constant, and devoted help-mate through his entire life, sharing with
him every joy and every burthen, and, by the influence of a naturally
strong and well balanced mind, a cheerful and gentle disposition,
exercising a most goodly influence upon his life and labors. She became
the careful and prudent mother of a large family, nine of whom lived to
rear families themselves during the life of their parents. Through their
whole lives there was a remarkable oneness of feeling, and a depth of
affection evinced by each for the other, that years served only to
increase, and old age to cement the more closely. But of this matter we
may yet speak more fully.

Mr. Ballou resided in the town of Dana for about seven years, devoting
every spare hour to careful study of the Scriptures, systematizing his
time by a careful division of the hours of the day, and permitting
himself but a very brief portion of time for sleep.

When we say that he devoted his time so assiduously to study, we do not
mean that he occupied himself in the perusal of books alone. He
_thought_ much, communed with himself alone, and even at that period
accustomed himself to a degree of inward or mental communion with
himself, that would seem to exclude the world about him, for the time
being, from his sense of seeing or hearing. This was more observable in
later years, when he often sat long in his study thus, sometimes with
his eyes closed, sometimes with their pupils directed to the floor or
the ceiling of the room, his lips moving, and at last, having seemingly
weighed well some important matter, he would rouse again as if from a
trance, and look about him with apparent satisfaction at the result he
seemed to have accomplished. Sometimes these moments were followed by
the use of the pen for records in his note-book of texts and sermon
heads, sometimes by a reference to the Scriptures, and sometimes by a
walk in the open air; then his lips would be seen to move, and he would
be quite oblivious to all outward circumstances. He studied thus,
carefully and deeply. At times he would walk in the fields or the woods
while thus occupied; and the family never disturbed him by any remarks,
or by calling his attention, while he was thus mentally absorbed. In
another part of this biography, reference will be found concerning this
peculiarity, as exhibited at a later period of his life, and observed by
one who was an inmate of his family, and a student of divinity with him.
The family were accustomed to his mood in these matters, but it usually
affected a stranger, or one not familiar with him, in quite an
impressive and solemn manner; it seemed so much as though he was
communing with unseen spirits, and a power that was invisible to those
about him or to himself, save through the powers of his mental vision.

It would seem that the little bodily rest which he allowed himself at
this period must have induced physical debility; and yet it did not
appear to do so. In travelling, a large portion of his short journeyings
were made in the evening; sometimes at midnight even, and often before
the break of day, in order to fulfil necessary appointments without
encroaching upon his arrangements at home. When stopping for his horse
to take rest and food, himself much fatigued, he would take his watch
from his pocket, and, laying it upon a table near some place where he
could find a recumbent position, he would carefully mark the time, and
say distinctly to himself, "I will sleep now for just one hour, when I
must awake and go on." Singular as this may seem, he has told us that he
never failed to awake at the expiration of the hour, and, much
refreshed, he would mount his horse and press on to fill some
professional engagement, perhaps twenty or thirty miles from the
stopping-place. At other times, while his horse was eating, he would
deliver a sermon, and, having completed it, would, without stopping for
any physical refreshment for himself, start off once more on his
mission.

"In searching the Scriptures," he says, "to enable myself to preach as
the divine oracles taught, I became satisfied that those who were then
called Universalists had founded their doctrine on wrong principles, as
well as other denominations. The doctrine of man's native depravity, of
original sin, of the deserts of eternal misery, of the vicarious
sufferings of Christ, by which he endured, in man's stead, the divine
penalty of God's law, whereby man could escape the punishment due to his
sins, was believed by those who called themselves Universalists, as well
as by Calvinists: also, the doctrine of the Trinity, holding that Christ
is equal to God, or, in other words, is God, being the second person in
the holy Trinity. All these notions, as it appeared to me, were
essential errors, constituting a mass of confusion. I soon renounced all
these views, and preached only God, and one mediator between God and
man, the man Christ Jesus. All my brethren in the ministry, and all our
friends, stood on the old platform, and I found that I had to contend
with Universalists as well as with partialists. But I went to my work in
earnest, laboring, with all my skill and with all my limited talents, to
convince my brethren in the ministry, and all who heard me preach, that
the doctrines of the Trinity, of depravity, of eternal penalty, etc.,
were neither the doctrines of the Scriptures nor of reason. The
opposition to my sentiments fast gave way among Universalists, though
even among them I met with as bitter opposition, in some instances, as
from other denominations. The first time I preached in Bro. Murray's
church, in Boston, was during his absence in Philadelphia, and I then
came out fully with my Unitarian views, which produced great
disturbance. Some were violent in their opposition, while others, and
not a few, fell in with my manner of explaining the Scriptures. I was
then twenty-eight years of age."

Mr. Ballou says that his declaring his views on this occasion was the
cause of "great disturbance." This disturbance was so earnest that some
few of the audience, more bitter than the rest, rose in their seats and
declared that the sentiments which had been uttered were not in
accordance with Mr. Murray's views, etc. Whereupon Mr. Ballou simply
informed them that he had been invited, without solicitation on his own
part, to preach in that desk; that he came there to preach no one's
convictions but his own; that he never had consulted, and never should
consult, the taste of his audience as to the doctrine he preached to
them; but that he should proclaim the truth, as, by the help of Heaven,
he had been enabled to learn it from the Bible, and the truth only!

On the subsequent day Mr. Ballou was formally waited upon by a committee
from the Society, who thanked him for the discourse, and a majority
coincided also in his peculiar views.

The conclusions as to doctrine at which he arrived were based upon
severe study and profound reflection; and when we consider the age at
which he had elaborated and enunciated a creed of such vast importance,
a creed so entirely in advance of his contemporaries, we cannot fail to
be most forcibly impressed with the extraordinary originality and
remarkable precocity of his intellect. Such early vigor and maturity
would have been astonishing in one who had enjoyed all the advantages of
early training, all the aids afforded by the best theological
institutions and instructors; but in one who had passed through so many
hardships, overcome so many difficulties, and was so emphatically
self-taught and self-made, they can only be regarded as evidences of the
highest genius, and the immediate favorable interposition of Divine
Providence.

His unshaken faith and inflexibility of conviction are evinced by the
fact that he stood firm, not only against the opposing sects, but
against the disciples of the improved doctrine which he first preached.
It requires not a little energy to confront declared foes; but to
contend with friends, to risk the loss of their favor and support, is a
trial which few have the boldness to sustain. But the subject of this
biography knew not what temporizing meant; his whole life, his whole
intellect, all his energies, were devoted to the discovery of truth, and
the enunciation of the truth he discovered. Had he stood entirely alone,
without one single friend, without one single proselyte, he would have
spoken as he did, boldly, earnestly, candidly, the apostle and defender
of his faith. The inspiration of his mission was from on high; neither
applause nor opposition changed his views, or in the least affected his
serene and constant equanimity.

The patient and unruffled manner in which he always held a controversy
has been often remarked of him; himself the mark for all manner of
personalities and low reflections, he never descended to such a mode of
warfare, being fully content in the justice and power of his cause, and
considering that as more than equal to low cunning, or, indeed, any
trickery of those who opposed him so bitterly. Flattery would have been
equally powerless in effect upon him, for he looked not to man for
approval, but to his own conscience and his God. Love of applause is a
most natural trait in our dispositions. The hero of a hundred battles
feels his heart glow afresh at the grateful meed of praise; the
politician reads the glowing accounts of his own eloquence with secret
gratification; and who is there so humble that is not susceptible of
flattery, who so high in worldly honors that they do not acknowledge the
potency of applause? And yet we shall be sustained in the remark by all
who knew the subject of these memoirs intimately, when we say, that
neither ridicule nor flattery moved him in the least, the single purpose
of his life being his Master's business; and he ever acknowledged
himself, that he really endeavored to be (and beyond which he aspired
not) the servant of all men. Few persons, with his power over the
masses, and holding the position that was universally accorded to him,
but that would have often brought themselves as _individuals_, with
their _personal_ interests and desires, before the public;
self-aggrandizement will almost always discover itself more or less in
prominent public men. But he knew no such incentive; he had one grand
object in view, one which he never lost sight of, and which was more
than paramount to everything else combined;--it was to inculcate the
religion of God's impartial goodness and eternal grace.

In the thirtieth year of his age, he was induced to accept of the
invitation of the towns of Woodstock, Hartland, Bethel, and Barnard,
Vt., making the latter place his home. While resident here he devoted
himself to ardent and constant study, and in the year 1804 produced his
"_Notes on the Parables_," one of the most popular and useful books,
even to the present day, in the Universalist library. It has passed
through numerous large editions, and a new one, at this present writing,
is about to be put to press. It is a book containing nearly the same
amount of matter as the present memoir in the reader's hand. This book
was written and published at a time when Mr. Ballou's health was really
suffering from the effects of his unremitting labors, both mental and
physical.

"My health," he says, "in those years which I passed in Vermont, was
generally very good. I had some time, previous to removing from Dana,
been gaining health and growing more corpulent, so that my uniform
weight for several years was about two hundred pounds." But at the time
when he wrote the "Notes," for a considerable period he had been
over-tasked, and so much so as to materially affect his health. The
roads about the country were of a very poor character, and being unable
to use a vehicle on many of the routes over which he passed, he was
frequently obliged to accomplish his journeys on horseback, which was a
severe draft upon his strength. In his first preface to the edition of
Notes on the Parables, the author thus refers to the subject of the
book:--

"In my travels through the country in discharge of duties enjoined by
the ministry of the Saviour of sinners, I have met with more opposition
to the gospel preached to Abraham from false notions of the parables of
the New Testament, than from any other source. Often, after travelling
many miles and preaching _several_ sermons in a day, I have found it
necessary to explain various parables to some inquiring hearer, when my
strength seemed almost exhausted. At such times I have thought a volume,
such as the reader has in hand, might save me much labor, and I have
often said to myself, If God will give me a few weeks' leisure, I will,
with his assistance, employ them in writing 'Notes on the Parables.'
This favor has at length been granted, though it was by depriving me of
that degree of health that was necessary to the performance of the
journeys which I had already appointed, yet preserving so much as to
render me composed in my study."

This is undoubtedly one of the most valuable books in the Universalist
library; particularly valuable from the fact of its treating, in the
clearest and most forcible manner, upon those peculiar doctrinal points
which, more than all others, have been the theme of contention among
professed Christians. At the time when Mr. Ballou published this work,
his mind was not fully made up as to the subject of punishment after
death; but the matter had already resolved itself to this in his mind;
that if any suffer in the future state it would be because they would be
sinful there. It was not long subsequent, however, that he came to the
full knowledge and conviction that the doctrine of future punishment was
nowhere taught in the Bible, and this creed he thenceforth ever most
assiduously preached on all occasions.

In his preface to the fifth edition the author says:--"On account of so
many of the parables being used by believers in endless punishment to
support and enforce that sentiment, the author of the Notes was induced
to study them with special reference to the question whether they might
not, with more propriety, be applied in a different manner. Of this fact
he became fully satisfied; even as much so as he is now. But, though he
entertained no scruples on that point, he was not so happy as to be
fully satisfied, in every case, as to the true intent of the parable. In
this situation he cautiously endeavored not to apply any parable to a
subject which was not found to be embraced in the system of truth which
the Scriptures clearly and evidently support. Little harm is done by
applying a parable to a subject to which it was not intended by the
author to apply, provided the subject to which it is misapplied be a
truth clearly supported by either Scripture or man's experience; but to
misconstrue any passage of the divine testimony so as to give support to
what is not true, is unquestionably no small damage; and if the error be
of magnitude, whereby our Heavenly Father is represented in an unlovely
character, or our confidence in his goodness diminished, such
misconstruction is not only a reprehensible violence on the Scriptures,
but a dishonor to their divine Author. I am persuaded that a just
knowledge of the parables is almost indispensably necessary to a
knowledge of the doctrine preached by Christ, as much of his public
communication was in this way. It is in the parables of Christ that we
learn the nature of the two dispensations or covenants; the situation of
man by reason of sin; the character of the Saviour as the seeker and
savior of that which was lost; the power of the gospel as a sovereign
remedy for the moral maladies of man, and its divine efficacy in
reconciling and assimilating the sinner to God. It is by the parables
that we learn the unprofitableness of legal righteousness in point of
justification to eternal life; the absolute necessity of becoming new
creatures, in order to enter the kingdom of God; the true character of
the Saviour as the Lord our Righteousness, and his divine power to make
all things new."

The "_Notes on the Parables_" have unquestionably led thousands of minds
to valuable improvement in the knowledge of the Scriptures, and
converted many a longing soul to the precious and joyful belief of
universal salvation. At the time when these Notes were written, the
light which has now become so general and evident to nearly every candid
seeker after truth,--the true light of the gospel of Christ,--seemed to
be but just dawning; the warm and genial sun of the true faith but
faintly tinged the east; but ere long it rose steadily and majestically,
until it radiated its noon-day warmth, in meridian splendor and beauty.
We should remember that the author of the "Notes" enjoyed the use of no
other book than the Bible in forming and promulgating his own opinions,
which have since become the general belief of the Universalist order.
The book is especially lucid and original in its style, and bears in its
pages constant evidence of deep and careful research.

In an excellent book lately issued by the publisher of this biography,
entitled a Memoir of Rev. S. R. Smith, written by Rev. Thomas J. Sawyer,
D. D., of Clinton, N. Y., we find the following incident related,
referring to this period of Mr. Ballou's life. It is from the pen of the
subject of the memoir, Rev. Stephen R. Smith, concerning whose Christian
excellence too much cannot be said.

"By what means the intelligence that Hosea Ballou would preach on the
following Sunday, in a place fifteen miles distant, could have been
conveyed to a very young man, who did not then know a single
Universalist in the world, is not remembered. He went, however, and
heard a discourse in the morning, from Zech. 6:13; and, for the first
time in his life, felt that he had listened to a sermon that neither
involved an absurdity nor a contradiction. The congregation was not
large, and occupied a school-house in the present city of Utica, then a
meagre and muddy village. A larger congregation was anticipated in the
afternoon, and arrangements were made for the service in the open air,
under some trees, on the bank of the Mohawk river. There, in due time, a
large auditory assembled, and listened to one of Mr. Ballou's best
discourses, from Deut. 33: part of the 16th with the 17th verse. It was
a glorious day, early in June. The silence of Sunday was around us; the
bright blue heavens above us, partly veiled by the branches of a few
scattering oaks; the clear, quiet river at our side; the ruddy and
healthy preacher, in all the vigor of manhood, before us, and pleading
the cause of God and humanity with a group of most attentive hearers.
Such a scene is not to be forgotten; and, altogether, it was one, in
every respect, calculated to make the most lasting impression. And such
certainly were its effects upon the mind of the writer. For, while it
left him without any pretension to the knowledge or belief of
Universalism, as a system of religious truth, it certainly satisfied him
that it was consistent with itself, and with all that we see and know of
the Deity and his moral government. It is scarcely to be doubted that
similar impressions were made on many persons in that congregation."

While resident in Barnard, he wrote also his "_Treatise on Atonement_."
This book, though written so many years since, is still as popular as
when first issued from the press, and has passed, like the "Notes,"
through several large editions. It is contained in a volume of between
two and three hundred pages, and is justly esteemed as one of the
soundest productions that has ever emanated from the author's pen, and
we may, perhaps, add without apparent arrogance, one of the most
thoroughly philosophical and argumentative works of the age. In the
Modern History of Universalism, the author, in speaking of the change of
opinion generally from the ideas preached by John Murray, Winchester,
and other early ministers, says that the belief in the Trinity,
atonement, and kindred notions, was discarded through the influence of
this book.

"The labors of Hosea Ballou, of this city," says the author, "may be
regarded as one of the principal means of the change. In the '_Treatise
on Atonement_,' he has treated the subject at length, maintaining the
subordination of the Son to the Father, the eternal and impartial love
of God to all creatures, and holding forth the death of Christ not as
the cause, but as the effect of this eternal principle of the divine
nature. The very wide circulation of this work evinces the high
estimation in which it has been held by the American Universalists."

We subjoin also the following notice of the "Treatise," because we think
it a most truthful critique relative to the book, which we desire to
have the readers of this biography to understand. In this review, which
appeared not long since in the Evangelical Magazine, the editor says:--

"The decided manner in which the doctrine of vicarious atonement is
rejected, the prominence given to the belief that Jesus was a dependent
being, dependent like ourselves on a common Father and God, and that he
was sent to preach the truth and illustrate its requirements, and by his
exclusive influence to reconcile man to his Maker, were subjects so new,
so startling, that for a time the work appears not to have been very
well received. But the important object was attained. The public
attention, and especially that of Universalists, was drawn to the
consideration of these fundamental and momentous doctrines. The author's
views were very generally adopted by the order, and the book obtained
unbounded popularity. It deserves this distinction, for it doubtless
wrought the great revolution that transformed Universalism from the
Unitarian hypothesis, with all its concomitants, into the simple and
intelligible system formed in the doctrine of the indivisible oneness of
God. It is, perhaps, impossible to estimate the influence which this
work has had upon the so-called Unitarian controversy in New England.
But this much is quite certain, the 'Treatise' was one of the earliest
publications that openly and distinctly rejected the doctrine of the
Trinity, and manfully met the prevailing prejudices respecting that
subject. But aside from these matters, there is not another book in the
country, on the same subject, that has been read by half the number of
persons, or wrought conviction of the truth of the doctrine of the
Divine unity in one half so many minds, as this '_Treatise on
Atonement_.'"

These notices, as we have just intimated, are introduced here to give
the reader, who may not be otherwise acquainted with the "Treatise," a
correct and clear idea of the work. Though among the earliest of Mr.
Ballou's publications, this book is far from being deficient in any
point, either as to sound logical reasoning, or in force and earnestness
of style. Simple, yet profound, it is within the capacity of the
humblest to comprehend and fully understand, while it cannot fail to
challenge the admiration of the scholar and philosopher. It is written
in the plain, straightforward manner which so distinguished his after
productions, and which never failed to carry conviction with it. "The
'Treatise' has been pronounced by one of the strongest minds of the
age," says the publisher of the sixth edition, "to be one of the
soundest arguments in the English language." Were the author's
reputation to rest solely upon this work, we should feel satisfied at
the manner in which his memory must be handed down to posterity.

In his preface to the first edition of the book, he says:--"Many
circumstances might be mentioned, which, in their associations, have
induced me to write and publish the following treatise; but I can say
with propriety, that the principal object was that in which I always
find the greatest happiness, namely, to do what I find most necessary in
order to render myself useful to mankind."

At the time of the publication of this "Treatise," Mr. Ballou had by no
means arrived at such a degree of understanding and belief upon the
subject of the Scriptures as was the case in after years, and, with wise
fore-thought, he thus speaks his mind in the preface to the first
edition:--

"I have often been solicited to write and publish my general views on
the gospel, but have commonly observed to my friends that it might be
attended with disagreeable consequences, as it is impossible to
determine whether the ideas we entertain at the present time are
agreeable to those which we shall be under the necessity of adopting
after we have had more experience; and knowing, to my satisfaction, that
authors are very apt to feel such an attachment to sentiments which have
been openly avowed to the world, that their prejudice frequently
obstructs their further acquisition in the knowledge of the truth, and
even in cases of conviction their own self-importance will keep them
from acknowledging their mistake."

Though he was thus cautious (and what judgment, prudence, and cool
reasoning are evinced in this paragraph), the only change that
experience did bring about, in the author's mind, was, that he became
even more fully convinced, as the experience of years ripened the
harvest of his wisdom, of the truths of his former belief, and made
still further _progress_ (a word that he loved and lived up to), in
addition to certain points that are but lightly touched upon in the
work.

The following letter, relating to this and other works, was elicited by
the presentation to Mr. Ballou of a set, in a new and uniform edition
with some of his subsequent publications; the constant call for these
books, even after several large editions had been exhausted, and a long
period of years had elapsed since their first being issued, requiring
this fresh publication of them. Mr. Ballou having parted with the
copyright at the time of publication, they were of course in the hands
of the trade. This letter is introduced here as illustrative of the
humble estimate he put upon his own important labors and discoveries,
and is also in style very like him. It bears date 1844, and was written,
consequently, when he was seventy-three years of age. It was addressed
to the editor of the Trumpet, and appeared in the editorial columns of
that paper.

     "BR. WHITTEMORE: Please permit me to acknowledge with gratitude a
     favor I have received from Br. Abel Tompkins, consisting of four
     volumes of my writings: my Notes on the Parables of the New
     Testament; my Treatise on Atonement; my course of Lecture Sermons,
     and my Select Sermons. It gives me much pleasure to learn that
     these works have been so favorably regarded by the denomination
     with which I have had the happiness to hold an unbroken and
     uninterrupted connection for more than half a century, as to
     warrant this new edition. The improved style in which these volumes
     now appear cannot fail to give entire satisfaction to all who have
     a good taste, and will doubtless facilitate their sale.

     "When, more than forty years ago, I wrote my 'Notes' and
     'Treatise,' I had never seen any work in defence of the doctrine of
     the Divine unity, and the dependency of the Son upon the Father.
     When this circumstance is duly considered, the reader will be
     satisfied that the writer must have exerted the limited powers of
     his mind to their utmost capacity. This is all the credit he
     claims.

     "HOSEA BALLOU."

Mr. Ballou has long been allowed the credit, which is also most justly
due to him, of having been the first Unitarian writer in this country;
for, as he says above, he had never seen any book in defence of the
doctrine of the Divine unity when he wrote in favor of those principles
in the works referred to. Another evidence of the fact is, that Mr.
Ballou's sentiments at that time were considered most strange and novel
by all.

"In this Treatise," says Rev. Thomas Whittemore, "Mr. Ballou took the
ground that God was never unreconciled to man; that man was the party
who needed reconciliation, for God is love from eternity to eternity,
and that God's love to sinners was the cause of Christ's being sent by
the Father to redeem them. He held that Christ was not God himself, but
the Son of God; a distinct being from the Father,--a _created_ being;--a
doctrine which he had believed and preached for ten years, having
commenced to preach it as early as 1795. He must therefore be regarded
as the earliest defender of Unitarianism the country has produced."

Mr. Ballou says, relative to the doctrine of the Trinity:--"I had
preached but a short time before my mind was entirely freed from all the
perplexities of the doctrine of the Trinity, and the common notion of
atonement. But in making these advances, as I am disposed to call them,
I had the assistance of no author or writer. As fast as these old
doctrines were, by any means, rendered the subject of inquiry in my
mind, they became exploded. But it would be difficult for me now to
recall the particular incidents which suggested queries in my mind
respecting them."

The reader will at once be prepared to admit that Mr. Ballou must have
expended much time and labor in the research and study of the
Scriptures, necessary to enable him to write and publish these works, in
a cause, and upon a theme, wherein he was a pioneer. He steered his
barque into new waters, and was obliged himself to stand ever with the
"lead" in his hand, to ascertain the true soundings, and keep thus in
the narrow channel of truth. Concerning this matter, he has said, in an
article furnished for a work entitled "Modern History of
Universalism:"--

"I never read anything on the doctrine of universal salvation before I
believed it, the Bible excepted; nor did I know, that I can now
recollect, that there was anything published in its vindication in the
world. Nor had I ever heard a sermon on the subject, except in boyhood I
once heard Brother Rich, but concerning that sermon I realized nothing."

In speaking of his advance towards the knowledge of the truth, after his
conversion, he says, in a published article:--

"It may be proper for me to state one circumstance which had no small
tendency to bring me over to the ground on which I have for so many
years felt established. It was by reading some deistical writings. By
this means I was led to see that it was utterly impossible to maintain
Christianity as it had been generally believed in the church. This led
me of course to examine the Scriptures, that I might determine the
question, whether they did really teach that Jesus Christ died to
reconcile an unchangeable God to his own children. You cannot suppose I
was long in finding that, so far from teaching such absurdities, the
Scriptures teach that 'God was in Christ, reconciling the world to
himself.' The question concerning the Trinity was by the same means as
speedily settled."

It is an interesting and curious fact that he should have been aided, as
it were, by the darkness of error to find the light of truth. The
obvious inconsistency in his former belief, made evident by the deist,
did not win him to the faith of the latter, but rather led him to
investigate for himself, and to find a religion more congenial with the
native promptings of his own heart and the evidences of the Bible. His
was an exploring mind; he was not content to receive this faith, or that
position, because others believed it, or because it had remained so long
the unchallenged and unquestioned creed of the church. He must look into
the matter and understand for himself, and make all parts of a doctrine
to harmonize with each other, before he could reconcile it with his own
reason and convictions.

This was a trait of character not alone observable in him as it related
to the subject of religion; he applied the same rule to the affairs of
every-day life, to political economy and business arrangements. He was
always open to conviction, to reason and evidence, but could never
embrace blindly any proposition whatever. Because the political party
which the nearest assimilated to his views of the proper mode of
government adopted this or that policy, he did not by any means consider
it his duty to coincide with them, against his sober conviction, and he
never did so; on the contrary, as often criticising the measures of one
political party as another, and frequently finding much excellence, and
principles worthy of commendation in the national policy of both. For
this reason he could not be a politician, had he experienced an
inclination that way. He was too honest.




CHAPTER VII.

REMOVES TO PORTSMOUTH, N. H.


After the expiration of a period of six years from the time of his first
settlement in Barnard, Vt., and during which season he enjoyed an
uninterrupted flow of kindness and good fellowship with the societies of
his charge, he accepted the invitation of the society of Portsmouth, N.
H., to become their pastor, and to devote his whole time to the good of
the cause in that place. He had formed within the circle of his
professional labors in Vermont a host of kind and warm-hearted friends,
and it was a considerable period after the proposition had been made to
him, before he could make up his mind to accept it. He did so, at last,
however, influenced by several reasons.

First, the large field over which he was obliged to travel, while
settled in Barnard, involved not only much physical labor and expense,
but also the loss of a large amount of time, that might be devoted to
more profitable pursuit. Then the pecuniary emolument offered him at
Portsmouth was considerably larger than he had yet received, and his now
growing family rendered such a fact to be a necessary consideration. And
yet, let it not be supposed that there was any mercenary trait in his
character; such was as foreign to his nature as was deceit, or guile of
any sort, as the progress of this biography will show. He realized,
also, that, while such a change would diminish his physical labors, it
would doubtless enlarge the sphere of his usefulness, bringing him in
contact with larger audiences and more miscellaneous assemblages than
usually gathered to listen to his public communications in a less
thickly settled district.

He says, in this connection:--"I have found throughout my life, that
whatever place I have long tarried in, I have become greatly attached
to, and to the people with whom I associated. This was peculiarly the
case in Barnard, and among the neighboring societies, with whom I was,
for a period of six years, most agreeably, and I trust profitably
associated. I long weighed the proposal from my friends in Portsmouth in
my mind, before I could consent to break up a connection which had
afforded me so much real satisfaction. But might I not render myself
more useful by accepting this call? Was it not the design of my Master
to enlarge my sphere of usefulness in his service? These things I
weighed carefully in my mind, and prayed for counsel and power to enable
me to judge of my duty aright; until, finally, believing it to be my
duty, I accepted the call of my brethren in New Hampshire, and
accordingly removed to Portsmouth."

Duly weighing these matters, he deemed it his duty, as he says, to bid
his brethren in Vermont farewell, and he removed to Portsmouth in the
year 1807, being in the thirty-sixth year of his age. Here he was
installed, Nov. 8, the sermon on the occasion being preached by Rev.
Edward Turner, then of Salem. Though the pecuniary emolument, before
referred to, was somewhat more than he had formerly received, yet it
required an exercise of the utmost frugality and prudence to enable him
to support his family comfortably. Indeed, this could not be done upon
his salary as pastor of the Universalist Society alone, and therefore,
in addition to his other numerous and arduous duties, he again taught
school for a considerable period, while resident in this place, assisted
by Hosea Ballou, 2d, now Dr. H. Ballou, of Medford. If it be true, as
Lord Bacon has said, that reading makes a _full_ man, conversation a
_ready_ man, and writing an _exact_ man, then teaching certainly
embraces the advantages to be derived from all three; and this Mr.
Ballou found to be the case, as he has often said.

While resident in Portsmouth, notwithstanding the labors of the week,
the necessary preparation for the Sabbath, and the earnest efforts that
were required of him upon that sacred day, still he pursued a course of
religious investigations into the subject of the holy text, that we are
at a loss to know when he found time to consummate. It was at this
period that he wrote his "Candid Review," in reply to a work by Rev.
Isaac Robinson, A. M., upon some important doctrinal points. It is
contained in one volume of two hundred pages, and adduces some of the
strongest arguments in favor of impartial and universal grace that have
ever been published, either by himself or others. This book was
exceedingly popular at the time of its first appearance, and created not
a little excitement among religious controversialists in New Hampshire,
and, indeed, throughout the New England States.

He also wrote, while resident in Portsmouth, a series of letters
addressed to the Rev. Joseph Buckminster, upon important doctrinal
subjects, which was published in one volume. A Controversy with Rev. Mr.
Walton was written and published here, besides one or two minor works,
including a school catechism, for a long period of years in general use
among the denomination. In addition to the labor necessary to produce
these in connection with his regular professional duties, he was also
associate editor of a religious quarterly, entitled the "Gospel
Visitant," in which, however, he had no further interest than his
editorial connection. His contributions to this work were copious, and
marked by the same profound reasoning capacity and lucid style that have
characterized every work he has produced. It was while engaged in
editing this publication that he came to the full belief that there was
no punishment after death, and ever after, he preached the doctrine of
universal salvation in this spirit, and labored strenuously in its
defence and support.

Relative to this subject Mr. Ballou has written:--"I cannot say that I
was fully satisfied that the Bible taught no punishment after death,
until I obtained this satisfaction by attending to the subject with Bro.
Edward Turner, respecting the doctrine of the Scriptures upon this
question. We agreed to do the best we could, he in favor of future
punishment, and I on the contrary. Our investigations were published in
a periodical called the 'Gospel Visitant.' While attending to this
correspondence, I became entirely satisfied that the Scriptures begin
and end the history of sin in flesh and blood, and that beyond this
mortal existence the Bible teaches us no other sentient state but that
which is called by the blessed name of life and immortality."

In another article relative to the same subject he says:--"The doctrine
of punishment after death has, by many able writers, been contended for;
some of whom have argued such punishment to be endless, and others
limited. But it appears to me that they have taken wrong ground who have
endeavored to support the latter, as well as those who have labored to
prove the former. They have both put great dependence upon certain
figurative and parabolical expressions, or passages of Scripture, which
they _explain_ so as to cause them to allude to such an event. It
appears to me that they have not sufficiently attended to the nature of
sin, so as to learn its punishment to be produced from a law of
_necessity_, and not a law of _penalty_. Had they seen this, they would
also have seen that a perpetuity of punishment must be connected with
an equal continuance of sin, on the same principle that an effect is
dependent upon its cause."

This brief paragraph will show the reader how Mr. Ballou was accustomed
to argue upon this subject, of such vital importance to all, and which
is a question still in the minds of many of our Universalist brethren,
both ministry and laity.

At the expiration of six years from the date of his settlement in
Portsmouth, and during which time his association with the people of his
charge, and others in that place, had been not only of the most pleasant
and agreeable character, but also highly profitable as it regarded their
mutual spiritual advancement, up to the period of the war with Great
Britain, he made his arrangements to leave Portsmouth, having received
an invitation from the Universalist Society in Salem, Mass., to settle
in that town, and to devote his professional services to their especial
good. Mr. Ballou says of his connection with the society in
Portsmouth:--

"My connection with the people of Portsmouth was very cordial and happy,
until that gloomy war-cloud which brought on a conflict with England
came over the land. The anti-war party was numerous, and very
influential; and, as I could not consent that my country was in the
wrong, a bitter spirit became manifested towards me, which so operated
towards the close of the war, that I became satisfied it was my duty to
stay in that place no longer; and as the society in Salem was without a
pastor, I received an invitation, which I accepted, to remove to that
delightful place."

This was by no means a solitary instance or evidence of the warm
patriotic fire that ever burned brightly in his bosom. He was ardently
attached to the republican principles of our government, and never
failed, on every suitable occasion, to evince the most earnest
attachment for his country. Though a constant and untiring student of
divinity, yet he was by no means a novice in political economy; the
basis of our institutions, and their true spirit as set forth by the
constitution, the influences and natural results of our style of
government, and the political soundness of the nation, were themes on
which he was more than well informed, but yet he always carefully
avoided mingling in party politics.

He removed to Salem in the month of June, 1815, where he found many
cordial and true friends, whose memory and companionship he cherished to
the close of life. While resident here he wrote a pamphlet in reply to
one by John Kelley, A. M., entitled "Solemn and Important Reasons
against becoming a Universalist." This review was comprised in a
pamphlet of eighty pages, and is a strong and powerful argument in favor
of the principles which the author believed, and which he advocated with
such successful zeal. These minor publications of Mr. Ballou's, when now
referred to, convey but a faint idea of the interest which they then
produced. Their extended and immediate influence was evident. Vast
numbers were sold; some zealous people, rejoicing at the joy
unspeakable to which they had themselves attained through the author's
writings and public communications from the pulpit, purchased them by
wholesale, and distributed them gratis, far and near. His hearers, too,
largely increased in numbers, and he was rewarded for his labors by
witnessing the rich harvest that he was reaping in his Master's
vineyard, and the number of souls he was leading in the paths of truth.

While resident in Salem, he also wrote a series of letters in reply to a
series addressed to him by Abner Kneeland, inquiring into the
authenticity of the Scriptures. The book formed of the letters referred
to makes a volume of two hundred and fifty pages. The first edition was
published in Salem, in 1816, the second in Boston, in 1820. The origin
of these letters, which created no small degree of attention, at that
period especially, was as follows: Rev. Mr. Kneeland having at various
times expressed serious doubts and fears relative to the genuineness of
the holy Scriptures, and the system of Divine revelation therein
contained, solicited Mr. Ballou to enter into a correspondence with him
upon the subject, in which Mr. Kneeland agreed to do his utmost to
disprove the truth and authenticity of the Bible, while Mr. Ballou
should take the opposite ground, and as strenuously defend it.

It was thought that this mode of discussion would be of mutual benefit
to them, and at the time of its commencement was designed solely for
their private use. But they were finally published, at the solicitation
of friends, and with the hope that they might be productive of more
extended good. These letters, which are somewhat lengthy, and indeed
necessarily so on the part of Mr. Ballou, who assumed the laboring oar,
were always written, as he has told us, at a single sitting. They are
highly valuable, and were more particularly so at that period, as
forming a powerful chain of evidence in favor of Christianity, and are
characterized, on Mr. Ballou's part, by a vigorous accuracy and earnest
desire after truth, which prepossesses the reader in their favor.

Mr. Ballou knew very well the misgivings as to the truth of the Divine
revelations by which Mr. Kneeland's mind was exercised, and,
notwithstanding other pressing duties and regular engagements, he
consented to a discussion which must needs cost him many hours of study
and labor, hoping thereby to lead one soul, at least, to a full and
clear belief in the gospel of Christ. These letters reached the number
of ten on either side before the correspondence was brought to a close,
when Mr. Kneeland was compelled by the force of evidence frankly to
acknowledge his entire satisfaction and conversion; and having found
such joy in believing, such relief at being released from the iron
thraldom of doubt and fear, he was exceedingly anxious to publish the
entire series of letters.

It should be remembered that at the present day, when we have so many
excellent books to consult, and can avail ourselves of the experience
and research of so many able minds,--men who have fought the good fight
of faith,--it is a very easy matter to sit down and defend the gospel
against the arguments of the sceptic, the ground being already
thoroughly canvassed for us pro and con, and weapons keen and bright
placed in our very hands. But Mr. Ballou enjoyed none of these
advantages; his tools were wrought from the native ore, and skilled
after the fashion of his own mind. Every line he wrote, every opinion he
advanced, was the result of deep and careful study, without the
assistance of any other book save the Bible itself.

"As 1815 was the year after the war closed," says Mr. Ballou, "all kinds
of provisions were extremely dear, and my salary was so poorly paid,
that I could not get money enough from my friends to meet my expenses;
and during the two years and four months I tarried here, I was compelled
to spend about three hundred dollars more than I received, of money
which I had by me when I came to Salem."

While resident in Salem, he applied himself with unremitting industry
and diligence to his studies, devoting his time wholly to writing upon
the subject of his faith, and the exercise of his professional duties as
a minister. His labors here were particularly blessed with success, and
the converts to his church were many. The Salem society under his charge
vastly increased in influence and numbers, and Mr. Ballou had reason to
rejoice at the very evident success of his labors with this people. When
he first came to Salem, his doctrine, even by professed Universalists,
was thought to be too radical, too universal, in short _too good_; but
ere he left them, they had fallen almost unconsciously into his mode of
belief, gradually, step by step, though the passage had been so easy
that they had not realized the change until they found themselves
already convinced.

It was not his practice to assail the unbeliever at once with blunt,
open refutation of his principles, nor to stagger him by an array of
unanswerable arguments, but realizing that a casual analogy often
convinceth when the mind will not bear argument, he adopted an easy and
soothing course of reasoning, and thus gradually and easily sought his
object. Thus was many an otherwise hopeless spirit turned from the
darkness of error to the light of truth. Endeared to all his
acquaintances by his unostentatious character, and by his mild, patient,
and prudent habits, the separation from his society in Salem was
mutually a hard task.

As soon as it was understood that Mr. Ballou had been talked of as
pastor of the Second Universalist Society in Boston, Rev. Paul Dean, of
respectable and influential standing in the order, and settled in
Boston, strove by every manner of means to defeat this purpose. He
feared the bold, unflinching, and manly style of preaching, for which
Mr. Ballou had already become widely celebrated. Himself a man who
avoided all sectional controversy in his preaching, he foresaw that the
advent of Mr. Ballou in Boston would compel him to come out openly and
acknowledge either that he was a Universalist or that he was not. He was
not willing to risk his popularity in the matter, and therefore strove,
by letters and orally, to dissuade Mr. Ballou from coming to Boston,
and finally he declared to him that if he came hither he should consider
it a breach of fellowship, and should ever after treat him accordingly.

Mr. Ballou was not one to be intimidated by threats; personal fear was a
quality that he never realized. He came to Boston, and the sequel shows
a result that is perfectly satisfactory to his friends. Mr. Dean was not
prepared to make any great sacrifice for the sake of truth; it was not
at that time popular for him to preach downright Universalism. The
opinions of most men are governed by circumstances, quite as much as by
truthful evidence; but Mr. Ballou, with a single eye to truth, never
catered for the popular taste, never asked whether the promulgation of
this or that great principle of truth would be acceptable and popular;
he had no such policy in his composition, but dealt only in wholesome
truths, and such as his own heart had baptized in the clear, welling
waters of conviction.

The editor of the _Christian Freeman_, Rev. Sylvanus Cobb, not long
since published an account of his first interview with Mr. Ballou, which
we subjoin in this connection, as being applicable in placing the
subject of the controversy, which is well known to have existed, between
Mr. Ballou and Mr. Dean, in a proper light. In speaking of his first
visit to the city of Boston, from his home in Maine, the writer says:--

"At this time the scheme was in vogue with a few brethren, among whom
Brs. Turner and Dean were conspicuous, for a division of the
denomination, and the erection of a new order, which it was calculated
would be the leading order, nearly swallowing up the other, to be
entitled 'Restorationists.' We impute no evil motive to any one; but
those on whom we called before reaching Bro. Ballou, felt it to be their
privilege to make the projected scheme the chief subject of
conversation, and to express much of the feeling of dissatisfaction
towards Bro. Ballou. We were made to feel quite unhappy; and as we had
heard of Bro. Ballou as a stern and severe man, we expected to be even
more harassed with a talk of 'troubles and difficulties' when in company
with him. At length we were introduced to his presence, and took his
friendly hand. He sat down by us, and with much interest and affection
he inquired into our labors and prospects, and into the interests of the
cause in Maine. We waited to hear him introduce the subject of the
'difficulties' but we waited in vain. At length we attempted to draw him
out, by asking him of the nature of the 'difficulties' among the
brethren here. 'I am ignorant,' said he, 'of any real difficulties.
Certain brethren are believers in a limited future punishment; but I
cannot see that that is any occasion for difficulty. Certainly I know of
no reason why I should have any trouble with these brethren, or esteem
them any the less for their seeing cause to believe as they do. But if
they require me to believe it as essential to the Christian faith, I
feel that it is proper for me to call on them for the proof of the
doctrine. We cannot see with each other's eyes; we must be willing to
allow each other to judge for himself. I love those brethren, and wish
them prosperity and happiness.' And tears started from his eyes when he
spoke. We felt that he spoke from the heart. There was no envy, no
scheming, no party spirit about him. He sought a knowledge of God's
word, and would 'speak God's word faithfully,' and accord the same right
to others.

"And such we have ever found him. We have lived in neighborhood with him
twenty-four years, and have found him one of the most modest,
unassuming, liberal-minded and true-hearted men we ever knew. He was
always pained to see one crowding upon another. He would see all working
and prospering, and rejoicing in each other's prosperity and happiness.
May his spirit be with us all."

We might dilate upon the subject of this controversy, but it is not a
congenial theme. Suffice it to say, then, that the shafts of envy and
ambition launched forth against Mr. Ballou, were as innocent and
harmless, as it regarded him, as the summer winds. It is true that they
caused him anxiety of mind, and not a little annoyance, in disproving
the malignant charges brought against him; but, in the end, these tests
only caused his purity of character to shine out with more surpassing
brilliancy.




CHAPTER VIII.

SETTLES IN BOSTON.


After a peaceful and happy residence in Salem, of a little more than two
years, Mr. Ballou received a cordial invitation from the Second
Universalist Society of Boston to become their pastor. The invitation
was accepted; and, in the forty-fifth year of his age, he removed to
this city, and was installed December 15, 1817, in the church which was
built with the avowed purpose of obtaining his ministerial services; and
here he continued to preach to the people for over thirty-five years.
His letter of acceptance, addressed to the society, is as follows:--

     "SIR: The call of the Second Universalist Society, in Boston,
     inviting me to the labors of the Christian ministry with them,
     together with the liberal terms which accompany said invitation,
     have been duly considered; and, after weighing all the
     circumstances relative to the subject, so far as my limited mind
     could comprehend them, I have come to the conclusion that it is my
     duty to accept their call on the conditions therein stated. I
     largely participate in the 'peculiar pleasure' afforded by the
     consideration of the unanimity of the society, and entertain an
     humble hope that, with the continuance of this harmony, we may long
     continue to enjoy all spiritual blessings in Christ Jesus.

     "The society's most humble servant in Christ,
             "HOSEA BALLOU."

     "To JOHN BRAZER, Esq."

Rev. Thomas Whittemore, a devoted, constant, and consistent friend of
Mr. Ballou, and who was also regarded by the subject of these memoirs
almost like one of his own family, thus speaks of this period:--"This
society had just finished their house, the present venerable structure,
on School-street. They never for a moment had a thought of seeking any
other pastor than the Rev. Hosea Ballou, if it were possible to obtain
his services; and, accordingly, two months before the house was ready
for dedication, a letter of inquiry was dispatched to him, to draw out
his sentiments in regard to a removal to Boston. In the mean time the
house was hurried on to completion. Rev. Messrs. Jones, of Gloucester,
Turner, of Charlestown, Ballou, of Salem, and Dean, of Boston, were
invited to join in the dedicatory services; Father Jones being invited
to preach the sermon, and the others to arrange the remaining services
at their discretion. The dedication took place on Wednesday, October 16.
Mr. Ballou was not present, as he was at the time in the country. On
the following Tuesday a meeting of the proprietors was holden, and Mr.
Ballou was invited to take the pastoral charge by a _unanimous_ vote.
The salary was fixed, at first, at thirteen hundred dollars per annum,
to which donations of fuel were occasionally made. He was installed on
December 25, 1817. Rev. Paul Dean preached, on the occasion, from Acts
20: 24. He also gave the fellowship of the churches. Rev. E. Turner, of
Charlestown, made the installing prayer, and gave the charge. Rev.
Joshua Flagg, who had succeeded Mr. Ballou at Salem, offered the
concluding prayer.

"Thus was Mr. Ballou duly installed as pastor. The congregations that
attended on his ministry were exceedingly large. He soon became widely
known for his eloquence and boldness, and the novel nature of the
subjects discussed by him. His preaching was of a controversial and
doctrinal character. He explained, in his discourses, those texts which
had been supposed to teach the doctrine of a judgment in the future
state, and endless torment. He was repeatedly called on, by letter, from
inquirers after truth, to preach from particular texts of this
character; and, as he gave public notice of the time when he would
explain such passages, his audiences were immensely large. It was usual,
from Sabbath to Sabbath, to see the meeting-house filled, in the
forenoon, so that it was difficult to obtain a seat. In the afternoon,
many would be obliged to stand, especially in the galleries, and around
the head of the stairs; and in the evening the aisles would be crowded,
above and below.

"For the last six or eight years preceding the rise of the Second
Universalist Society, Universalism had produced little or no excitement
in Boston. The First Society remained stationary. Mr. Dean, its pastor,
preached little on those subjects on which he differed from other sects.
In the vicinity of Boston there was no movement in favor of
Universalism. There were scarcely ten Universalist pastors in
Massachusetts. The cause was evidently languid. The rise of the Second
Universalist Society in Boston, and the removal of Mr. Ballou thither,
produced a new state of things. There arose a commotion among the
elements; but the effect was to purify the atmosphere, and give men a
clearer and more extended vision. New societies, holding Mr. Ballou's
sentiments, soon began to arise around Boston."

On settling in Boston, he at once found a host of true and solicitous
friends, whose interest in his ministry, respect for his character, and
attention to his general welfare, enlisted in their behalf his warmest
feelings of regard; sentiments which were ever cherished by him to the
last, and frequently recurred to at his own fireside, and in the quiet
of his family circle. Exercised by a realizing sense of this fact, the
more keenly when he remembers that his father can give oral form to
these feelings no longer, the author of this humble biography has at
its commencement dedicated it to the subject's cherished friends.

We have thus given a memoir of Mr. Ballou's life up to the period of his
settlement in Boston, where he was destined to operate upon a more
extended field of action,--where his mental and physical powers,
thoroughly trained and tested as they had been, were to be taxed more
heavily still; and where he was destined to build for himself a name
that will live in the grateful memory of future generations, and to
erect for himself a monument that points further heavenward than eastern
pyramids,--the savor of a truly Christian life.

Immediately on his becoming settled in Boston, in addition to the duties
of his pastoral charge, and that of writing for two or three religious
periodicals, Mr. Ballou was obliged to answer the frequent demands that
poured in upon him, from every quarter, to lecture and to preach in the
numerous towns within ten, twenty, and often fifty miles of the city, at
a time when the means of communication were, at best, but very
indifferent,--rendering it necessary for him to drive his own vehicle,
in order to reach the desired point without loss of time. So frequent
and urgent were these demands for his services, in towns and villages of
New England, that week-days, as well as Sundays, were occupied in
holding forth to the people, who came from far and near to hear him. Not
unfrequently were several consecutive days thus employed; portions of
the night even being improved in travelling between the several places
when at a great distance apart, and sleep, or rest of any sort, being
but sparingly indulged in. But so zealous was he in the glorious cause
that filled his whole soul,--so thoughtless of self, and so wedded to
his Master's business,--that his own labors seemed to him as nothing;
and neither his energies nor his spirits were wearied for a single
moment. The bow of his mind and body both seemed ever strung and bent,
yet never to lose their elasticity. The amount of actual physical labor
which he thus performed can hardly be estimated; but certain it is that
he must have been almost miraculously sustained, to have endured so much
fatigue without most serious injury.

"Soon after coming to Boston," says Mr. Ballou, "opposition to my
Unitarian views, and to the way in which I explained many important
passages of Scripture, put on a serious aspect. Most of this opposition
was exercised by professed Universalist preachers. There was much
hypocrisy and low cunning set to work in order to check my success; but,
though this was a source of much grief to my heart, it was the means of
calling into action all my resources, which I found it necessary to put
in requisition for the defence of the truth. All this resulted in good.
My editorial duties, my necessarily long sermons three times on every
Sabbath, giving evening lectures at home and in the neighboring towns,
tried to the utmost my physical powers of endurance. With all these
engagements, I was writing and publishing the two volumes of my Lecture
Sermons, and my Select Sermons, which proved too much for my strength,
and I brought on a weakness in my left side that has affected me for
years."

The weakness here referred to was doubtless caused by sitting for hours
together at his writing-table in his study, with only such brief
intervals as were necessarily consumed in taking his frugal meals. At
such times he partook very sparingly of any kind of nourishment,
declaring, when solicited on this point, that his brain was clearer, his
mind more vigorous, when he ate but little, than when he allowed himself
fully to satisfy his appetite. During the hours devoted to writing he
was never disturbed; his children never for one moment forgot that he
was thus engaged; and though they might pass through his apartment,
still it was with a careful step and noiseless way, that showed their
constant consideration for one whom they so much venerated. When he was
thus engaged, for the last thirty years, having become relieved of the
immediate domestic cares of her family, his wife always sat with him,
sewing, knitting, or reading, but never interrupting him. Thus they
grew, year by year, when he was in the house, more and more inseparable,
and the tender regard of each seemed to increase for the other as year
after year whitened their venerable locks.

Concerning the period of his early settlement in Boston, Rev. Sylvanus
Cobb says:--"When Mr. Ballou entered upon his labors here, benignantly
warring upon the hurtful errors which enslaved and paralyzed the common
mind, and elucidating those prominent gospel truths which are the bread
of life to the soul, there was an extensive movement of mind in the
city, and in the region round about, far and near. When the Twenty-six
Lectures, published by Henry Bowen, were in the process of delivery, the
church was usually filled an hour before the set time of beginning, and
multitudes would be going away who could not find entrance. He had done
much before this, by his ministry in other places, and the publication
of his Notes on the Parables, Treatise on Atonement, and controversy
with Robinson, to advance the cause of truth; but he was now
providentially placed at a commanding stand-point, a central position,
the commercial emporium of New England, whence his influence went out
through all the land. Business men, from different parts, who had
occasion to be in Boston over the Sabbath, would go in at School-street
church, become convinced by the able expounder's arguments, go home,
taking with them some of his publications, and commence a work in their
respective neighborhoods, which, in many cases, resulted in the
formation of societies."

As a sample of the spirit he was forced to encounter, and the animosity
felt against Universalists generally, and their teachings, by the clergy
of other persuasions, we relate the following anecdote. Being in the
town of Mattapoisett, Mass., during one of his short journeys into the
neighboring country to fulfil professional engagements, Mr. Ballou found
that he must stop there for the night. It was soon known in the village
that he was to remain for this period, and he was at once waited upon
by a committee chosen for the purpose, and informed that the town's
people were exceedingly anxious to hear him preach, and that permission
had been obtained for him to hold forth in the Orthodox meeting-house,
if agreeable to himself. Mr. Ballou cheerfully consented to their
wishes, and the people were notified accordingly. It is proper to state,
that several among those who invited Mr. Ballou to preach here, were
themselves large share-holders in the meeting-house, and in two
instances members of the church. Notwithstanding all this, when Mr.
Ballou came to the meeting-house, not anticipating the least opposition
to his purpose, he was met at the door by the Orthodox clergyman then
officiating here, and who positively forbade his entrance. In vain did
Mr. Ballou attempt calmly to reason with him; still the excited pastor
insisted most vociferously that he should not enter, although fully
informed of all the circumstances. Nor would he yield until at length he
was absolutely dragged away forcibly by his own friends.

Erasmus, the reformer of the fifteenth century, "who stemmed the wild
torrent of a barbarous age," was not more strongly opposed by the
bigoted Catholics of his day, who charged him with having "laid the egg
that Luther hatched," than was Hosea Ballou by the partialists of his
times. Particularly was this the case during the early and middle period
of his public labors. The reformation begun by Luther has been well
termed "an insurrection of the human mind against the absolute power of
spiritual order." Its earliest fruit was the vigorous but narrow belief
of Puritanism; then followed the more liberal creeds of the subsequent
period; but it seemed to be left for Mr. Ballou to strike out and
illustrate the doctrine of perfect freedom through Christ, of entire
impartiality and free grace, which the doctrine of universal salvation
inculcates.

Relative to the bigotry and unreasonable spirit often evinced towards
the subject of this biography, and the cause he advocated, we are
reminded in this connection of another anecdote, which is authentic, and
which the subject of these memoirs related to his family.

Not long after Mr. Ballou's settlement in Boston, he received a pressing
invitation to visit the island of Nantucket. The inconvenience of
communication between the island and the main land was considerable, but
he consented, and passed some ten days there, preaching every successive
day and evening to large and interested audiences, creating a very
earnest movement in the matter of religion. On his return, arriving at
New Bedford, he took the stage coach for Boston, and in it found but one
other person. Scarcely had the journey commenced, when his
fellow-passenger opened the conversation by saying,--

"You are just from the island, I suppose?"

"Yes, sir," was the reply.

"Well, they say old Ballou is over there, preaching his heresy. Did you
see him?"

"Yes, I saw him," was the calm reply.

"Well, he's a rough old fellow. I don't like him."

"Why not?" asked Mr. Ballou.

"Because he preaches that all men will be saved and go to heaven in
their sins, and no man in his senses can believe that."

"But, sir, did you ever hear him preach?"

"No; I hope not," said the man.

"Then you may be misinformed as to what he does preach," said Mr.
Ballou, mildly. "Now I think he would say, if he were here, that he did
not believe nor preach as you have represented."

"But what does he believe, then?" said the stranger, somewhat earnestly.

"I think he would say that sinners are to be saved _from_ their sins,
not _in_ their sins. Christ came to save the world from sin, not in sin;
and furthermore we are told in the Scriptures that 'he that is dead is
free from sin,' and he that is freed from sin must surely be holy, and
consequently happy."

"Sir, if I may be so bold," said the stranger, after looking for a
moment somewhat critically, "where do you live when at home?"

"I live in Boston, sir."

"Whose church do you attend?"

"Mr. Ballou's church, sir."

"What is your name?"

"My name is Ballou," he replied, pleasantly.

The man was of course confounded. He stammered forth some excuse; but
though he listened to Mr. Ballou's kindly-meant remarks with the utmost
attention, yet he was evidently very ill at ease, and, watching his
opportunity, left the stage at the next stopping-place.

By careful study, aided by his natural quickness of conception and
vigorous powers of mind, he had, without other assistance than that of
books, acquired a practical knowledge of the Greek and Hebrew languages,
which greatly assisted him in his profession, by enabling him to
translate the most important passages from the original Scriptures, and
thus to throw light upon many points that had heretofore been in some
degree shrouded in mystery, by the one-sided and partial translation
given in our own version of the Bible. At the present day it is well
known that our common translation of the Scriptures is deficient in
several instances, and this too at the most important and most critical
passages. This being the case, Mr. Ballou found the power of translating
for himself to be of the utmost importance as an aid to repel false
argument, as well as being a matter of much personal satisfaction and
enjoyment.

"At different times, and for several years," says Mr. Ballou, in
reference to this subject, "I have attempted to solve peculiar passages
of Scripture, which were so difficult to understand as to lead me to
question the correctness of their reading from the original. In order to
do this, I have studied Greek, and have had some aid from Greek scholars
and Greek lexicons, and have consulted various commentators; possessed
myself of the Septuagint, or Greek Testament, and other Greek works.
With all these helps and efforts, I have been enabled to satisfy myself
relative to any particular passage. I have found but little benefit from
these means in regard to the Old Testament; in respect to the New, I
have often been assisted, and found that my little knowledge of Greek
has been more useful. For similar ends and purposes I obtained a Hebrew
Bible, lexicon, grammar, etc.; but, though I have bestowed not a little
labor on the Hebrew, my other avocations and cares have prevented any
great degree of proficiency, though I have experienced much aid and
assistance in elucidating many points. I might say about as much of my
Latin Bible, lexicon, grammar, and reader. I have made some considerable
use of all these books, and have given many of my leisure hours to the
Hebrew, Greek and Latin languages, but I profess to know so little of
them that it is hardly worth naming; though I must acknowledge I have
found them of considerable use when some arrogant disputant should think
to silence me by an appeal to the original. But it is a fact that I have
never met with many college-learned ministers who appeared to have
retained much of their Greek, if indeed they ever had much. I think it
would require no little study and observation to determine the question,
which amounts to the most, the benefit which the public gain by the
extra learning of their clergy, or the imposition they suffer by
estimating that learning above its value."

This last reference should not be misconstrued by the reader, as
conveying the idea that the subject of this biography was opposed in
any way to education, or educational movements. Those who knew him best
will bear ready testimony to the contrary. Indeed, his own struggles in
obtaining knowledge had given him a just estimate of the true value of
such conveniences as should facilitate the dissemination of intelligence
far and wide. "When I look about me," he says, "and contrast the great
improvements in the means for gaining knowledge,--when I behold the
youth of to-day and remember the youth of my own boyhood,--I am struck
with the contrast that facts present relative to education. I am also
rendered thankful to a Divine Providence, which has been pleased to
advance the improvement in mental culture and the facilities for
learning, in an equal degree with the surprising advancements which have
been accomplished in the arts and sciences. Few are so poor or lowly now
that they may not enjoy the advantages of schools and able teachers, and
I may add that few there are who do not avail themselves of the rich
opportunity which is offered them for storing their minds with
knowledge, and thus preparing themselves for useful members of society.
Half a century since, the case was very different; schools were little
thought of among the poor, and children in the country could seldom be
spared from home to attend those that were occasionally opened. Yet I am
satisfied that the advantages which were offered at that time were even
more assiduously improved than they are at this period. This, however,
was but natural, under the circumstances." No man put a higher estimate
upon knowledge than he did, but it was useful, practical knowledge that
he valued. He had no respect for mere titles and college honors. He had
seen the eclat of a college diploma go further with many simple people
than a sound argument or the possession of sterling wisdom would have
done, and it is not surprising that the observation of such weakness
should have led him to speak out, as we have seen him do in this
connection. He may have felt the remark, too, which his opponents
sometimes sneeringly made of him, that he never enjoyed a classical or
collegiate education.

We have a few words to say relative to this reflection. Now, we solemnly
believe, and are prepared to argue, that a collegiate education would
have materially detracted from his _usefulness_. A scholastic or classic
course of study seems to unfit men in a great degree for active life.
The practical too often becomes merged in the ideal, and the mind grows
effeminate. A theoretical knowledge of human nature is imbibed, and we
are led to contemplate our fellow-men through a false medium; for
essayists write of men as they should be, but rarely as they are. Mr.
Ballou was acknowledged by all who knew him, to possess a remarkable
degree of knowledge concerning human nature, but it was gathered from
men, not books, from experience,--Time's free school,--not from theory.
No other kind of knowledge would have fitted him for the peculiar path
he was born to pursue. A pioneer should be what he was; a follower, the
roads once cleared, and the track made smooth, might, perhaps, without
danger, be less practical and more imaginative. Education, to be truly
useful, should be unequalled in its ability to instruct us in the things
about us, and to strengthen us for the duties that lie in our path of
life. The true being, end, and aim of all study should be, "to improve
men in the best reason of living," while any learning that aims above
the practical interests of life is comparatively unimportant. Even in
the ministry,

    "Church ladders are not always mounted best
    By learned clerks and Latinists professed."

"That learning which makes us acquainted with ourselves," says Mr.
Ballou, "with the powers and faculties of the human mind, with divine
truth, which is plainly revealed, with its power on the mind and heart,
with the concatenations of cause and effect, and to understand our
every-day duty, which grows out of our wants and the wants of those
about us, is learning of a better quality than that which only enables
us to call things by different names, without giving us a knowledge of
their natural qualities either for good or evil."

The main characteristic of Mr. Ballou's habit of mind was that of
looking at all things in a practical point of view. The importance and
real value he attached to things were deduced from his estimate of their
_use_. He regarded life as made up of constantly recurring duties, and
his appreciation of principles, of religion or philosophy, was carefully
regulated by this standard, as to the application they bore to every-day
matters.

The great end of all acquirements should be the ability to discharge
more effectually our duties as men and citizens. "He who is not a better
neighbor, brother, friend, and citizen," says an eminent writer,
"because of his superior knowledge, may very well doubt whether his
knowledge is really superior to the ignorance of the unlettered many
around him." Or, to state this great truth more in brief, a man knows no
more to any purpose than he practises.




CHAPTER IX.

COMMENCES THE UNIVERSALIST MAGAZINE.


On the third of July, 1819, Mr. Ballou commenced the publication of the
Universalist Magazine, in connection with a practical printer,--Mr.
Henry Bowen. As usual in every enterprise wherein he embarked, he
entered into the purpose and plan of the paper with all his heart, its
avowed object being the more extended dissemination of the gospel of
truth, and the elucidation of Christ and his mission on earth. It will
be observed that in whatever new position we find the subject of these
memoirs, it is secondary to, or rather in furtherance of, his Master's
business; he could have entered into no other pursuit, could have been
contented and happy in no other occupation. It was meat and drink to
him, it was the very breath he drew, and the only great object and
purpose of his life-long career.

The object of the Magazine, as stated in the editor's salutatory
article, was to discuss the principles of doctrine, religion, and
morality, and all articles calculated to promote improvement in these
essential matters would be freely admitted into its columns. "The
Universalist Magazine invites the sentiments of different
denominations," says the editor, "to evince themselves to the best
advantage, clothed in their most simple light, and shining in their
purest lustre, that the mind of the reader may be able to know where to
bestow a justifiable preference." Those persons laboring in their minds
under difficulties and doubts concerning any passage of Scripture, were
urged to communicate the same to the Magazine, where they would be
publicly answered, and thus many might reap the advantage of the queries
and the answer. "All articles calculated to elevate the mind to the
contemplation of divine things, to reduce haughtiness, to humble pride,
to exalt the Divine Being, to endear the Saviour, to cultivate piety, to
admonish, to warn, or to justly rebuke, to administer comfort and
consolation, will be gratefully received, and as speedily as convenient
communicated to the public." These were the main objects, and this the
plan of the paper, and to which the editor strictly adhered. Some of the
strongest arguments in favor of universal salvation, which ever emanated
from the pen of Mr. Ballou, were first printed in this paper, and the
influence it exerted was too evident not to challenge the attention of
both friends and foes at that period.

The Universalist Magazine was destined to attain to the most extended
popularity, and proved to be of eminent service to the cause which was
so ably treated upon in its columns, each number for a series of years
containing an essay upon some important passage of the holy text, with
the original construction as put upon it by Mr. Ballou, besides the
elaborate reviewal of numerous discourses and articles which appeared in
other religious magazines, opposed to Universalism. The paper was issued
weekly, and drew very largely upon his time and pen. In his editorial
capacity, even as early as this period, when a systematic effort in the
cause of temperance had scarcely been thought of, and the subject was
seldom if ever referred to in public, we find some forcible articles
from him upon this subject.

This spirit was strictly in accordance with his private life and habits.
Living at a period when it was universally customary to offer a guest or
caller a glass of wine, let him come at what hour of the day he might,
and when the decanters and glasses always stood invitingly upon the
side-board, yet he never used ardent spirit as a beverage, never partook
of it at all, even in after years, when perhaps a partial stimulant
might have been of physical benefit to him, because of a fixed principle
in his own mind concerning its pernicious effects. But, as we have
before intimated, this temperate habit was by no means confined to
ardent spirit alone; the same abstemiousness characterized his daily
meal. He partook only of the simplest food, and of that sparingly. This
excellent habit grew to be a second nature to him, and in all places and
under all circumstances was always exercised.

In connection with essays, leading articles, reviews and sermons, which
he furnished for the Magazine, he also contributed many fugitive poems
to fill the poet's corner. It should be remembered that they were
generally written at a few moments' warning in his sanctum, and in
answer to the printer's call. All of them are, however, indicative and
characteristic of the spirit and state of mind which possessed his
heart. The following piece, taken at random, is a sample.

                 IMMORTALITY.

    "That orient beam which cheers the morn,
      And drives the murky gloom away,
    Through trackless ether swiftly borne,
      To welcome in the infant day,
    Reminds me of the heavenly light,
      Whose rays, dispersing error's gloom,
    Open to man a glory bright,
      In a fair world beyond the tomb.

    Those varying scenes of beauty fair,
      Which welcome in the youthful spring;
    The blooming fields, the fragrant air,
      The leafy groves and birds that sing,
    Remind me of that promised day,
      When from the dead mankind shall rise,
    As pure as light, and wing their way
      To spring eternal in the skies."

For some years Mr. Ballou continued as sole editor of the Magazine, in
addition to his other writings, and the ever pressing duties of his
profession. After gaining a firm footing, this publication passed into
the hands of Rev. Thomas Whittemore, an able and zealous man, who is
still the editor and proprietor. Mr. Ballou continued to write for its
columns regularly for more than thirty years. Mr. Whittemore has changed
or added to its original title, so that it is now known as the Trumpet
and Universalist Magazine, one of the most largely circulated and
popular publications in the whole denomination.

During the year 1819 and the year preceding it, Mr. Ballou had occasion
to make several replies, in pamphlet form, to reviews of his sermons
which he was at that time delivering before the Second Universalist
Society, and which he was induced to write out and publish, by their
request. The reviews here referred to were written by the Rev. Timothy
Merrit, a Methodist minister of this city. In the year 1820, Mr. Ballou
published a pamphlet of some length, entitled "Strictures on a published
Sermon, by Dr. Channing." During this year he also compiled a collection
of hymns, for the use of the denomination generally, but more especially
for the convenience of the School-street Society, with which he was
connected. This collection contained about _fifty_ original hymns from
his own pen, and is the second book of the kind he published, the first
being issued while he resided in Barnard, Vt.

It was about this period that the following incident occurred, and which
we give herewith in Mr. Ballou's own words:--

"By the following anecdote it may be seen into what inconsistencies men
are liable to be drawn by an intense desire to maintain favorite
sentiments. I had an appointment to preach a lecture in the town of
Canton, Mass., where Universalism was quite new, and where there were
but few who believed it. At the time appointed I was there, and among
the many who were present as hearers, was a Methodist minister, whom
before I had never seen. After our introduction, he very civilly asked
me if I was willing, after I got through my discourse, that he should
have the liberty of offering some remarks in relation to it. I replied
that I should have no objections to his having that liberty, reserving
to myself the right to reply to his remarks. To this he agreed. As I
knew my hearers had assembled with an expectation of hearing the
doctrine of Universalism held forth, I took for my text a passage which
seemed to me a strong one in favor of the doctrine: First Tim. 2:
4,--'Who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge
of the truth.' In my discourse, I relied on the will of God as the
foundation of my belief in the final salvation of all men. My sermon was
lengthy, and I endeavored to strengthen my arguments, as well as I
could, by many scriptures and various illustrations, but still relied on
the will of God as the foundation on which stood the superstructure I
raised. When I had got through, I signified to the congregation that our
worthy brother, the Methodist minister, desired to make some remarks on
my discourse, and that I hoped they would candidly listen to what he had
to say.

"He then rose and remarked on various points of my arguments, allowing
their justness and propriety. 'But,' said he, 'as the conclusions which
have been drawn in favor of the salvation of all men rest entirely on
the will of God, if we can prove that God's will is not done, in many
instances which may be named, it follows necessarily that the doctrine
contended for may not be true.' This he then labored to make out. Now,
feeling confident that he had shaken my foundation in the minds of our
hearers, he proceeded to quote passages upon which he relied to prove
the endless misery of the wicked. When he had got through and sat down,
I arose and told the people that I knew no better way to answer to what
our brother had urged, than to allow that he had refuted the doctrine of
the salvation of all men by proving the failure of God's will in many
instances; and this being granted, it also must be granted that God's
will in regard to the endless misery of sinners might fail of being
accomplished also! This reply came so suddenly on the minds of the
congregation that it brought them on their feet, and the aspect which
they presented was so peculiar as to abash our brother, and induce him
to say something more, which the people did not stop to hear. He then
turned to me, and said that he did not mean what I had stated to the
audience. I told him in reply that what I had to do with, was what he
had said."

This is but an example of the various incidents, controversies, and
adventures that he was constantly encountering on his frequent missions
into the country; vicissitudes that taught him much of human nature,
and rendered him ever prompt and ready in reply, familiarized him with
various temperaments, dispositions, and phases of character, and thus
enabling him to speak and act more understandingly when again assailed
in a like manner, as well as to put his experience to other available
use.

In the latter part of the year 1821 and the beginning of '22, Mr. Ballou
passed a considerable period in the cities of New York and Philadelphia,
which places he was induced to visit by the united invitation of the
several societies in these two cities. While in the latter place, he
delivered eleven sermons, which the societies procured a stenographer to
transcribe in short-hand, as delivered extemporaneously from the pulpit.
These sermons were published soon after in Philadelphia, making a book
of two hundred pages, a second edition being published in Boston about
ten years after. Mr. Ballou's manner of delivery was so distinct, his
enunciation so clear, his language so impressive, that a practical
short-hand writer could easily transcribe every word he uttered in a
discourse. There was never any hurry, no impetuosity, no excitement that
betrayed the speaker into undue haste, but, though all was tempered with
warmth and zeal, still it was such admirably controlled earnestness as
never to confuse the mind that followed his spontaneous utterance. We
well remember when the book herein referred to was handed to him for the
first time. "I am surprised," said he, "for this seems almost
miraculous; here are my own words and thoughts literally as I uttered
them, in living and indelible lines upon these pages, while my pen has
never transcribed one letter of the matter. I might have improved this
by reviewing it for the press, but, after all, _it is as God sent it_!"
Reading on, he would pause now and then to say, "I should not have
remembered that I said that, if it was not so literally recalled to me."
These sermons being upon important doctrinal points and subjects, as
indeed were nearly all his sermons, are of peculiar value. The book is
also a very excellent sample of Mr. Ballou's extempore style of
preaching, as these sermons were printed from the reporter's notes,
unrevised by the author, who, indeed, did not see them until they were
sent to him in Boston in book form. At the time these sermons were
delivered, the churches were always crowded to their utmost capacity.
The Sabbath was not only thus occupied, but also many days and evenings
of each week, the simple announcement of a meeting being quite
sufficient to ensure a large and attentive audience for the occasion. In
the mean time, in private circles, Mr. Ballou was forming extensive
personal acquaintance with the hospitable citizens, among whom he
counted some of the warmest friends in the cherished host, who continued
such with him to the closing hours of his earthly career.

"The largest audience I remember to have addressed," he says, "was in
Washington Garden Saloon, Philadelphia, which my friends had procured
for me, finding the meeting-houses far too small to accommodate the
crowds that thronged to our meetings. This hall, which will accommodate
some six thousand people, was crowded to excess. On no former occasion
did I ever feel more pressed with the weight of duty which lay upon me,
nor a more sensible need of divine assistance. The attention of the
audience, and the multitude of friendly hands which were extended to
receive my adieu, seemed to speak a language which signified the
approbation of my divine Master, which, to me, is far better than life."

One of the most marked peculiarities of Mr. Ballou's character was not
only his almost inexpressible degree of simplicity, but his perfect
self-possession, and unmoved and placid calmness, under any and all
circumstances. When he arose to address an audience of thousands, as was
the case above referred to, they awed him not; he would have spoken the
same in a private dwelling of New Hampshire, before a few hastily
assembled friends, or, with the same prophetic unction, in a barn;--the
village school-house or the city church were all alike to him. When he
arose to address an audience, whether of thousands or of scores, it was
always with a heart so full of his theme, so lowly and humble before his
Maker, that not a thought betrayed itself in action of a character to
indicate that he considered _himself_ in the slightest degree, or that
there was such a being as self in existence. And then, when he spoke, it
was not with the adornments of rhetorical elegance, nor with a striving
after effect; not one useless or unnecessary word fell from his lips;
it was simplicity and impressiveness personified. Such preaching was
_natural_; there was not an artificial element in it. No wonder that it
produced such results; no wonder that he should witness the visible
fruits of his labors ripening about him.

It was no spirit of fanaticism that created such a furore in the public
to hear him, it was not _fear_ for their own good hope of salvation that
brought people together in such masses; it was not excitement, that
grand agent of revival meetings generally. No; it was a far worthier
influence than these; it was a desire to hear the good tidings that the
preacher dispensed, as he alone could do. It was to partake of the bread
of life that they came, and they were filled. He was emphatically the
messenger of "peace and good will to men;" and the multitudes who came
to hear the words of promise from his lips, received them as the
shepherds did to whom the angels bore the glad tidings as they "watched
their flocks by night."

After the departure of Christ, and the death of his immediate disciples,
a darkness had crept upon the hearts and souls of mankind; faith in the
boundless love of the Creator had been weakened, as belief in his
vengeance strengthened, and nearly all Christian creeds were gloomy,
disheartening, and repulsive. To dispel these erroneous views,--to
withdraw the clouds that hid the brightness of the bow of promise,--to
reveal all the priceless tenderness and love of the divine nature,--to
radiate the light of hope upon a darkened world, was a task as glorious
as ever fell to the lot of man. What more thrilling discoveries ever
dawned upon the human intellect than those which revealed themselves to,
and rewarded the prayerful search of, him of whom we write? We can
easily understand how the greatness of this mission strengthened and
sustained him in his arduous duties, in his daily gospel labors, in his
long journeyings, in his voluminous exertions with the pen and in the
pulpit. Verily the hour and the man had arrived. It mattered little that
he did not spare himself, that he gave himself up wholly to his
vocation; it was not destined, not designed, that he should succumb in
the good fight; vigor and energy were given him to support him through
all his trials, up to the very verge of a long and eventful life, when
the chief end of his existence had been accomplished.

Not long subsequent to his return from this journey to New York and
Philadelphia, he published a series of "_Lecture Sermons_," in one
volume of four hundred pages. This book, like every one that ever
emanated from his pen, had a very extensive sale, passing through
several large editions, and still finds a ready market. These "Lecture
Sermons" give, like the "Treatise on Atonement," an evidence of the fact
that the author was always working in new veins of thought. He was not
one contented to follow in the beaten track of others; his motto from
the outset was _progress_; and each new work that emanated from his pen
and comprehensive mind, gave fresh token of research and discovery. Not
long after the issuing of the "Lecture Sermons," he published another
book, entitled "_Select Sermons upon Important Passages_," making a
book of three hundred and fifty pages. Like the previous work, this book
is peculiarly characteristic of its author, and treating, as it does,
upon deeply interesting and doctrinal points, it has found a wide
circulation. These books are distinguished alike for patient research,
wise reflections, deep penetration, and the soundness of their moral
influence. The last work has passed through seven editions.

Mr. Ballou was frequently heard to remark, that if we would reason in
reference to the divine economy as we do concerning other matters, we
should soon discard many of the false notions which do so much towards
enshrouding our spirits in darkness, and thus preventing our progress
towards the goal of gospel truth. In illustration of this, we subjoin
the following anecdote, in his own words, as furnished for the
Universalist Magazine at the time of its occurrence. It happened to him
while on a journey from Boston to Watertown, New York, in the year 1824.
While absent from his paper, Mr. Ballou was in the habit of supplying
his editorial columns through the mail, partly made up of correspondence
from the points he visited, and relating to such matters and themes as
were calculated to interest a mind of his peculiar character. The
following anecdote is taken from one of these letters.

"The day following, a widow belonging to Pittsfield, Mass., entered the
stage in that town to go to Denmark, New York, to visit her young son,
whom she had not seen for six years, and who is now about fifteen. This
lady I found to be quite orthodox in her views, and disposed to
question me concerning mine. At the inn in Albany where the stage stops,
we had some serious conversation on the subject of the ignorance and
unbelief of man. Her queries concerning this subject were directed in
the usual way, and were designed to prove that in consequence of
unbelief in the Saviour, the sinner is expected to be cut off forever
without mercy. Having noticed in this lady an anxious desire to find her
son, and perceiving that her affections were tender towards her
fatherless child, I thought proper to try to open her eyes by means of
appealing to her natural affection.

"'Madam, do you think your son will know you?' I asked. She, with
manifest emotion, replied, 'It is so long since he saw me, that I do not
think he will!' 'And should you find that he has forgotten you, so as
not to recognize your person and countenance, do you think he would be
in danger on that account of losing your favor?' Tears started into her
eyes, and the weight of the question was sensibly manifest. She replied
in the softest accents in the negative. 'Well, madam,' I continued,
'should you find that your son has forgotten your countenance, and
should you inform him of the fact of which you find him ignorant, and
yet he should not believe you, should you then feel unkindly towards
your son?' She fully appreciated the question, and answered in the
negative. I then called her attention to the remarkable passage in the
forty-seventh chapter of Isaiah, in which the divine kindness is
commended to exceed the compassion of a mother to her tender offspring.
She signified her satisfaction, and gave me to understand that the
argument had reached its object."

This anecdote, striking and beautiful in its bearings, is also
particularly interesting as being so perfect an illustration of Mr.
Ballou's style of argument. He always brought the subject home to the
feelings and affections of his hearers, illustrating his theme by the
simplest facts. His examples by way of explaining his subject were ever
so aptly chosen, as to seem to have occurred almost solely for his use;
these illustrations were ever drawn from every-day life, and from the
most familiar subjects about us. The family circle afforded an infinite
variety of bearings and illustrations, exceedingly well fitted to
delineate his belief; and those who have been accustomed to hear him
preach, will remember how frequently he referred to the homes of his
hearers for illustrations. In this respect his discourses were a close
imitation of his Master's, who spoke as never man spoke.

There lies open before us at this moment the autobiography of Rev. Abel
C. Thomas, where he speaks of Mr. Ballou on the occasion of his (Mr.
Thomas's) first visit to Boston, and his meeting with the subject of
this biography. "No one will deem me invidious in mentioning Hosea
Ballou. There he stood in the simplicity and maturity of a child-man.
Was it marvellous that his heart-speech should tingle within me as the
voice of a father? He stood up the taller in his manhood for having
bowed to brotherly fellowship with a boy. There was no distinguishing
grace in the act; it was his way _alway_, and he was only the taller on
that account. He was preaching then (O! how luminously and forcibly he
was preaching!) at the age of threescore."

It was ever thus that strangers were impressed on meeting with him. They
had heard, of course, much of Hosea Ballou, they had read his books, or
his essays through the newspaper press; by name and reputation they had
long known him. Some had imagined him proud, austere, and distant. They
approached a man, for the first time, who had reached to his extended
span of life, to his experience and world-wide celebrity, with some
degree of awe; but his warm pressure of the hand, the tender and soft
expression of his eye, the soothing and melodious voice, (that gentle,
soothing, yet impressive voice, how strongly our senses recall it now!)
the kind word,--these instantly dispelled any feeling of distance that
might have arisen in the breast of the new comer; and he found impressed
on every word he uttered, on every lineament of his features, on every
sentiment of his heart, a spirit of divine _simplicity_.

Arrogating nothing to himself, unassuming to the utmost degree, he
counted his own services as nothing, and only aspired to be known as his
Master's follower, and the servant of all men.




CHAPTER X.

COMMENCES THE UNIVERSALIST EXPOSITOR.


During the year 1831 Mr. Ballou commenced, with his nephew, Rev. Hosea
Ballou 2d, the editorship of the "Universalist Expositor," a quarterly
publication. He continued for two years as editor of the work, and
afterwards as a regular contributor for a number of years.

In November, 1834, Mr. Ballou was again induced to make the cities of
New York and Philadelphia a professional visit. He had, previous to this
date, and repeatedly afterwards, been earnestly solicited to settle in
New York, as well as in Philadelphia. Indeed, a systematic effort was
made in the former city to obtain his services permanently, and he was
offered the pecuniary consideration of several hundred dollars more per
annum than he then or ever after received from the Second Universalist
Society in Boston. Besides this increase in salary, there were several
other important inducements offered in order to influence him to settle
among them. But Mr. Ballou had, after so many years' residence and
pastorship in this city and over a society he so much loved, become
deeply and ardently attached to the associations of his charge, and had
formed ties of friendship and love that were almost too strong to sever.
He, however, returned an answer at last to these reiterated applications
and proposals, that he would lay the subject before his society, and
they should decide the matter for him. The society in New York signified
their willingness to have the matter thus settled; and he accordingly
represented the same to the Second Universalist Society, telling them
exactly his own feelings, and bidding them to decide the matter for him.
There was but one voice in the society; the feelings he had expressed
were entirely reciprocated; the vote that he must remain with them, was
unanimous; there was not one dissenting voice. He had been tried, and
found faithful. Cheerfully acquiescing in this decision, the subject was
dropped,--an understanding being had, and indeed a promise given on Mr.
Ballou's part, that he would visit New York professionally as often and
for as long a period at a time as he could make it convenient.

The following letter was written to his wife from New York, during his
visit to that city in this year. It is one in his usual style, and will
show the reader the tender relationship of his domestic associations,
and also the reliance in Divine Providence which ever actuated him. He
never wrote the briefest letter without expressing the same religious
sentiment. The letter is dated New York, October 30, 1834.

     "MY DEAR: It is with gratitude to the kind Protector of our lives,
     that I inform you of our comfortable health. We had a very good
     passage from Boston to this city, except that the sea was quite
     boisterous, which caused our daughters to be quite sea-sick during
     the night. We arrived in this city about nine o'clock, A. M., and
     were kindly received by Col. Harson and family, where we are at
     home until to-morrow morning, when we expect to leave for
     Philadelphia. Clementina and Fiducia" (the two daughters with him)
     "rode about the city yesterday, and had a view of nearly all its
     beauties. We took tea with Mr. and Mrs. Sawyer last evening, where
     we had the pleasure of meeting with Bro. Fuller, who will supply my
     desk and bring you this letter. I preached in Bro. Le Fevre's
     church on Tuesday evening, and have an appointment in Bro. Sawyer's
     church for this evening. I hope that your cold has subsided, and
     that the family are in good health. You will remember that Bro.
     Fuller is a stranger in Boston, and that he will need those
     attentions which will make him feel at home. Give our love to all
     the inmates of our house, and, by the blessing of Heaven, expect us
     at the time appointed.

     "Affectionately yours,
            "HOSEA BALLOU."

     "Ruth Ballou."

We need hardly pause here to analyze this letter. The reader will at
once recognize, in its composition, the affectionate husband and father,
the devout Christian, and the thoughtful friend, all of which were
innate qualities in the writer's heart. The address of the letter was
the style he always adopted towards his wife. The commencement of the
same is a perfect type of his constant acknowledgment of the Divine
favor. The reference to the children who were with him, evinced the same
thoughtfulness for their enjoyment and comfort that exercised his mind
to his last days; his inquiry for his wife's health, hoping that her
"cold" was better, was another evidence of his solicitous affection for
his companion; and, finally, his recommending the bearer as he
did,--"You will remember that Bro. Fuller is a stranger in Boston, and
that he will need those attentions which will make him feel at
home,"--are all most significant of his mind and heart.

"Immediately after my first visit to Philadelphia," says Mr. Ballou, "a
second society was formed, and a large meeting-house was built in
Callowhill. From this society I received a very urgent invitation to
become their pastor; but, as my Boston friends felt desirous to have me
stay with them, I could not think it my duty, for a few hundred dollars
more remuneration for my services annually, to leave them, as my salary
was at that time sufficient for my wants. So late as the year 1844, by
invitation from the Callowhill society, I visited and preached for them
for four weeks. While I was there, my friends proposed sending to Boston
for Mrs. Ballou, with a desire that I would continue with them for an
indefinite period. But my age admonished me not to undertake too much."

We may add here the following memorandum from notes which he gave the
author of these pages relative to a subject before alluded to,
concerning the matter of a larger pecuniary offer for his professional
services:

"At one time, while I tarried in New York, the Pine-street Society
presented me with a pressing invitation to settle with them, offering me
some hundreds of dollars more than I was then receiving for my
professional services, to induce me to remove to New York city. This
official invitation, together with a very brotherly letter from the
society in New York to my own in Boston, in which they endeavored to
assign good reasons for my removal, I took with me to the Second
Universalist Society, in School-street. I had previously given my
friends in New York to understand that I would not be persuaded to leave
Boston, unless my society would give their cordial consent to such a
measure. After submitting this letter to my society, I was given to
understand, in an official manner, that, by a unanimous vote, my society
had resolved that I must remain with them. This of course ended the
matter, as their wish was my guide."

We have related these circumstances more particularly to show the reader
that Mr. Ballou was actuated by no mercenary motive in this matter, and
indeed to prove that it was a principle altogether foreign to his
character. We see that the offer of a greater pecuniary emolument (we
believe the New York society offered him eight hundred dollars more than
he was then receiving per annum, and also to bear the incidental
expenses attendant upon his removal) had no influence upon his mind. If
his society no longer desired his services, he was ready to leave them
at once. If they were still attached to him, and preferred his
ministration to that of any other individual, no pecuniary inducement
should part them. We may use his own words, and say that the evidence of
the unabated regard of the people of his charge, of their undiminished
attachment to him and his services, rendered him far happier than any
amount of silver and gold could possibly have done. Indeed, there was
not one spark of mercenary feeling existing in his heart; it was
contrary to his very nature.

Those who knew Mr. Ballou best were well aware of his punctilious
notions as it concerned money affairs. He would not himself owe any man,
and he liked "short settlements," believing in the old adage that they
"make long friends." He was scrupulously exact in his dealings, and
would be careful not to be overpaid or underpaid in a money transaction;
and these peculiarities may have, with some, led to a belief that he was
penurious in his disposition, though this was by no means the case.
Could we with propriety refer to his numerous private deeds of charity,
to the open-handed dealing that evinced the generous nature of his
disposition and the liberality of his heart, we could exhibit a list of
facts that would disabuse the mind of any one of such an unfavorable
impression. We feel tenacious upon this point, realizing as we do the
untruth of any such deduction; and for any one to make such a remark or
inference, would be at once to expose his own personal ignorance of the
man.

Mr. Ballou was not one to give injudiciously; he was not lavish in his
bestowals; but what he gave to charitable purposes, more or less, he was
careful to know would be productive of real benefit. Once satisfied of
the worthiness of the purpose, he always gave in accordance with his
means. His generosity was unostentatious, and sought such channels as
run beneath the shades of domestic necessities, rather than those
exhibited on hilltops, or that advertise themselves in open places. The
author of these pages has witnessed from childhood a most liberal and
charitable spirit as exercised by the subject of this memoir.

When he was solicited for assistance, he always listened attentively to
every appeal, and carefully examined the case and its merits, when,
being satisfied of its claims for aid, he not only gave himself, but
took pains to interest others for the same end. At times he would call
on his society, either collectively or individually, and thus do a great
good by affording timely pecuniary aid, in many cases. He never asked of
a person his religion before he gave him in charity; all were considered
as members of the same great family, and "where want resided, he knew
the door." The needy found in him a firm and judicious friend; one who
was careful not to do them a harm, in the spirit of kindness, by
encouraging a slothful or idle spirit, but who sent them away wiser and
happier than they came to his door.

"Among the many moral duties," says Mr. Ballou, "which contribute to the
mitigation of the misfortunes of human life, and to administer to the
enjoyments of social beings, that of charitably bestowing a part of what
a liberal Providence has put into our hands, on those who have been
unfortunate in the loss of property, or by sickness, or other
unavoidable visitations, should claim our earnest attention. This virtue
at once combines many moral excellences, and seems to call into action
some of the best qualities of our social nature. It is that, too, which
seems to resemble the bountiful conduct of the Giver of every good and
perfect gift; and in some degree compares with the grace of our Lord
Jesus Christ, who, though he was rich, for our sake became poor, that we
through his poverty might be made rich, and greatly ornaments the gospel
professions of brotherly love. This, too, is a virtue which never loses
sight of the good of its agent, who, being blessed with the genuine
spirit of heaven-born charity, realizes that it is more blessed to give
than to receive. Nor is there anything more acceptable to the Divine
mind of universal goodness, than to see rational beings exerting
themselves to assist one another. 'To do good and communicate, forget
not, for with such sacrifice God is well pleased.'"

While Mr. Ballou was in Philadelphia during the year 1834, he preached
nine sermons, which, like those delivered in the same city at the close
of 1821 and the commencement of '22, were taken down by a stenographer
in short-hand, and published in a volume of two hundred pages. In the
preface to this volume, which, having been, like its predecessor,
obtained through the reporter, was never seen by the author until in
print, Rev. Abel C. Thomas, the publisher, makes the following remarks;
valuable as coming from a discriminating and intelligent mind, and one
which would scorn flattery as it would falsehood.

"Mr. Ballou is in the sixty-fourth year of his age, yet his eye is not
dim, nor his natural force abated. His public communications are
distinguished by extraordinary penetration, perfect knowledge of human
nature, aptness of illustration, and closeness of reasoning. In private
intercourse he manifests the feelings of a heart baptized into the
spirit of the living God. It is impossible to listen to his public
exhibitions of love divine without according to him the meed of
sincerity and intellectual power, and it is equally impossible to mingle
with him in the walks of social life without loving him from the heart."

Mr. Ballou was in the habit of making frequent use of the scriptural
story of Joseph and his brethren, the parable of the Prodigal Son, the
case of Saul of Tarsus, and other familiar parables, to illustrate the
doctrinal points of his discourses upon the holy text. These
illustrations, however, were always apt and appropriate, and any one who
reads the Scriptures must very well know that these parables present
almost innumerable bearings. Although he never did so without
communicating some new point or bearing in the narrative, yet the
frequency of these references was argued by some as an objection to his
style of preaching. In reference to this subject, Rev. Abel C. Thomas,
in an appendix to the book referred to, relates the following
anecdote:--

"After the delivery of a certain discourse in one of our cities, by Mr.
Ballou, one Universalist minister said to another, in a good-natured
way, 'The old man is always _harping_ on Joseph and his brethren, the
Prodigal Son, and Saul of Tarsus.' 'Well,' said the other, 'it is a good
harp, nevertheless, and Mr. Ballou knows how to play upon it. He always
plays a new tune, and I could listen to him all night.'"

His book of nine sermons embraces some of the most stirring and able
arguments that the author ever produced, and it has been read by more
persons probably than any book of the same character in the country. The
first edition was a large one, but was rapidly followed by others.

Mr. Ballou ever delighted in promoting the innocent amusement of his
children in every reasonable way. He never adopted that stern and
unapproachable disguise that but too often estranges the affections of
the child from the parent. He was fond at times of unbending, as it
were, from the extreme tension of mental effort, and entering into the
childish amusements of his family circle; it was only long enough,
however, to endear himself to that circle, for his time was too precious
to admit of much relaxation, however grateful this might be to his
feelings.

It was not with the subject of this biography as with those who wear two
faces, one when at home and another when abroad; there was no deceit in
him; he carried forth from his home the same face he wore there, the
same aspect of mind and body, evincing precisely the same
characteristics in public as he did in private. He knew no change, but
was always eminently natural everywhere.

His social character was such as ardently to endear him to every member
of his large family. While he maintained the dignity and authority
appropriate to his general character, still he ever evinced an
exuberance of good nature, and was amiable, gentle, and even playful at
times, in his domestic and public intercourse.

During the year 1834, Mr. Ballou wrote and published a work entitled,
"An Examination of the Doctrine of Future Retribution," contained in one
volume of three hundred pages. This is affectionately dedicated to the
second Universalist Society of Boston, as a token of regard, by the
author, who had so long presided over this brotherhood in the most happy
fellowship.

In the following extract from the preface to this book, the reader will
find not only the spirit of the work referred to, but will also observe
that the author states, in plain and unmistakable terms, some important
points of his faith,--points wherein he differed from some respected
brethren of the order, but which, however, form almost the universal
belief of the mass of Universalists. Our quotation from this preface
commences as follows:--

"It has always remained the fixed resolution of the writer of the
following essay to keep a mind open to conviction; always active in
investigating religious truth; constantly ready to profess and hold
forth any opinion, however unpopular, and however opposed by divines, by
the schools, or by his dearest friends, when convinced of its truth.
This course has led him to give up many religious tenets which were
taught him in his youth, and not a few which were embraced by the
denomination to which he has from his youth belonged. Travelling this
course, he early renounced the doctrine of endless punishment; the
doctrine of the Trinity; that of native depravity; that of the
imputation of sin and of righteousness; that of the vicarious sufferings
of Christ; and, nearly eighteen years ago, the doctrine of punishment in
the future state. It has been his lot to meet with much opposition on
most of these points, from various denominations, and not the least
strenuous from those of the denomination with which he has been happy to
hold connection. For the painful travail endured from all this
opposition, he has been abundantly compensated by seeing the rapid
advance of the doctrines which he has embraced and endeavored to
advocate.

"The object of the writer of the following pages is to place his views,
respecting the doctrine of a future state of retribution, before the
public, and to preserve his arguments on that subject, that when the
time shall come, as he believes it will, when people in general will
number the tenet of future punishment among those corruptions of
Christianity which will then be abandoned, it may be known that the
writer disbelieved it in his day; and also that the arguments with which
he opposed it may then be known.

"Universalists now take a pleasure in looking back and tracing, from
Origen down to our time, the progress of the doctrine which embraces the
salvation of all men; and so they will doubtless continue to do in
future ages.

"Some may query whether a proper regard to the opinions and feelings of
honest, faithful, and affectionate brethren, who believe in the doctrine
of future retribution, but yet earnestly contend for final restoration,
would not incline the writer to be silent on the subject, and not to
come out with this publication. To this inquiry it is replied, that such
brethren, with their many commendable qualities, are warmly cherished in
the affections of the writer's heart, nor are they the less regarded
because they do not adopt his opinions. And he feels confident that such
brethren will entertain no suspicions of his want of respect for them.
They will not fail to consider that the views of the writer, on the
subject of retribution, are not so wide from theirs as theirs are from
the views of those authors whom they quote as authority in support of
future retribution. They would doubtless sooner embrace the opinion of
no future sin and misery, than defend the doctrine maintained by that
good man, exemplary Christian, and faithful minister, Elhanan
Winchester, which supposed that the wicked, in the world to come, would
suffer, for ages and ages, inconceivable torment in literal fire and
brimstone. Such torment is now denied by our doctors, who maintain
_endless_ punishment, and rejected also by those who believe in a state
hereafter of discipline which shall end in an entire reformation. Such
brethren will also cordially respond to the assurance that the writer of
the following work will never withhold a sincere fellowship from a
faithful brother, because he disagrees with him on the doctrine of
divine retribution.

"It is very possible that some, who have a strong desire that nothing
should be done which should tend, in the least, to endanger the harmony
and cordial fellowship of Universalists, may think that prudence would,
at least, plead for a delay, and suggest the propriety of deferring this
publication to some future time, when it might give less offence. Such
may be assured that their good wishes for the harmony and fellowship of
our order are duly respected; but they cannot be ignorant of the fact
that the doctrine of a future state of punishment has been disbelieved,
by ministering brethren of our order, for many years, and that much has
been published with a view to disprove that doctrine; and, moreover,
that now that doctrine is generally disbelieved by Universalists of our
connection; and yet much harmony prevails, and our fellowship remains,
and is warmly cherished between brethren whose opinions disagree on the
subject of this doctrine. The writer would further remark, that both
age and infirmity admonish him that what he feels it his duty to do, he
ought not to delay; and he cannot believe that any of his brethren can
feel, in the least, wounded because their aged brother should finish his
labors in accordance with the dictates of his own understanding. It is a
happy circumstance, that in the denomination of Universalists, no one
feels bound to defend and support the particular opinions of another,
any further than he is himself convinced of their truth and importance.
Our platform of faith is general, and allows individuals an extensive
latitude to think freely, investigate minutely, and to adopt what
particular views best comport with the honest convictions of the mind,
and fearlessly to avow and defend the same."

In perusing this book, or indeed any of Mr. Ballou's numerous works, the
reader cannot fail to be struck with the complete simplicity and purity
of the author's style, at the same time being deeply impressed with the
magnitude of the subject treated upon: he finds the book to be more like
a familiar friend with whom he is conversing, than the deep logical work
it really is. This is caused by the peculiar clearness and force of the
style, while all is so conceived and put down as to be within scope of
the humblest understanding. All his comparisons and illustrations are
drawn from the most familiar objects about us, bringing our every-day
life and experience to bear upon the theme; and thus his arguments were
doubly forcible and plain. It was the common remark that little
children could understand his sermons, and remember the moral
inculcated. "If I can only make my subject so plain that children will
understand me," he once said in relation to this subject, "my purpose
will be gained, and I shall not be preaching in vain." Probably there
never was a public speaker who possessed more fully the power of making
himself perfectly and clearly understood, in every bearing of his
subject, than did Mr. Ballou. This was commonly remarked of him by all,
and more especially by those in his own profession of the ministry, who
had learned by experience what a difficult matter it sometimes is to
impress an audience with the precise idea intended by the speaker.

About this date, in Mr. Ballou's manuscript memoranda he says:--"I well
remember a conversation I had with a learned doctor of divinity of this
city, some years ago. It happened that we were both going into the
country, and took the same stage. We had not travelled far before the
doctor very politely addressed me, expressing a desire to know my
opinion on a certain passage of Scripture, as he did not know how it was
explained by those of my opinion in religious matters. The stage being
quite full of gentlemen who were strangers to me, but to whom I was
doubtless well known, I was somewhat surprised that the learned divine
should introduce a scriptural subject, and especially one concerning
which he supposed we entertained different views. However, I was well
satisfied that he expected to see me embarrassed in presence of the
passengers, whose curiosity was evidently excited. I replied that I was
not unwilling, on any proper occasion, to give my views on any passage
of Scripture when desired to do so, provided I was satisfied in my own
mind concerning its true meaning.

"There was the most profound attention evinced, and the doctor
introduced Gal. 6: 7 and 8. 'Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for
whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he reap. For he that soweth to his
flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth to the
spirit shall of the spirit reap life everlasting:' the passage being one
with which many occasions had made me quite familiar. I replied
immediately, as follows: 'I presume, sir, you will understand all you
wish to know of my views of this text, if you hear me repeat it, and
duly observe where I lay especial emphasis;--Be not deceived: God is not
mocked; for whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap. For he that
soweth to his _flesh_ shall of the _flesh_ reap corruption; but he that
soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reap life everlasting.' The
moment I pronounced the words of the text thus, there was a smile on the
countenances of all in the stage, and a movement which signified
satisfaction. I merely remarked, in conclusion, that no man who should
sow in one field, would think of going to another to reap. The doctor
made me no reply, nor did he ask any more questions.

"The above is but a sample," continues Mr. Ballou, "of the unnumbered
cases in which I have seen how utterly abortive is a liberal education,
with the addition of a theological school, in freeing the human mind
from religious errors. So far from effecting any such desirable end,
these so highly esteemed advantages generally serve to puff up the mind
and heart with pride, and close every avenue through which light might
be received."

The engrossing habits of a student, and the employment of a large
portion of his time in writing, brought upon Mr. Ballou the weakness in
his left side, before referred to, and which was still more augmented by
his continued use of the pen. This trouble became at last a seated and
irreparable one, and a source of much bodily suffering to him until the
close of his life, though serious attacks of it were but transient, and
usually lasting but a few hours at a time. This affection was of rather
a peculiar character, so that when anything occurred, of an unpleasant
nature, to trouble or distress his mind,--bad news of any sort, the
sudden death of a relative or friend, or any matter of this
character,--it would seem to affect the weak side, and there distress
him.

Mr. Ballou was often solicited, by letters from a distance, for his
autograph, with which he complied in a brief line, most generally; but
personal applications for this object were very frequent during his
journeyings from home. Being asked for his autograph by a young lady in
one of the neighboring towns, who handed him her album for the purpose,
he sat down and wrote the following verses impromptu, and which have
been handed to us for insertion here. They will serve to show his ready
power of versification; he never studied to be a poet, nor ever
_labored_ upon a piece of poetical composition. He found little time to
plant and rear flowers along his pathway of life. At an early period the
soil he tilled was of too bold and rugged a character to cultivate aught
save the sterling literal seeds of truth, the sweetness of whose
blossoms is fragrance to the soul. If subsequently he sometimes plucked
a lily or watered a rose-bud, it has been at breathing-spells between
the holding of the plough and the planting of seed in his Master's
vineyard. He lacked not for refinement and delicacy of taste, or for the
natural promptings of the poet, but there was more important business
for him to perform, and he realized too fully his responsibility to
allow himself to forget for a moment the great aim and business of his
mission. The poem referred to above is entitled

                THE MYRTLE.

    "Come, take the wreath I've twined for thee,
      'Tis wet with morning dew;
    And lessons rare of love and truth
      These flowers shall bring to you.

    The half-blown rose, whose spotless leaves
      Speak of thy hopes as fair,
    And spicy balm, with healing breath,
      Are mingling odors there.

    The sweet geranium so green
      A fragrance doth impart,
    True as the gentle breath of love,
      That fills the youthful heart.

    But most of all I'd have thee mark
      The modest myrtle bough;
    It speaks of love that e'er will be
      As pure and bright as now.

    For though the rose may fade and die,
      The balm may cease to cure,
    Through summer's light and winter's shade
      The MYRTLE will endure.

    Then take the wreath I've twined for thee,
      'Tis wet with morning dew;
    And many a lesson true of love
      These flowers shall bring to you."

We find a letter among our papers, written about the period of which we
now speak. It is from his pen, and bears date New York, April 21st,
1839, on the occasion of a brief visit to that city, and was addressed
to the author of these pages.

     "MATURIN: A kind Providence brought me to this city early yesterday
     morning. I had a very pleasant passage hither, and the good company
     and kind attention of Capt. Parker. I am at the Walton House, which
     was Washington's head quarters during the Revolutionary war. It is
     now between nine and ten o'clock, Sabbath morning. My health is
     good as when I left home. My friends expect me to preach three
     sermons this day and evening. Whether I shall return on Monday to
     Boston, or remain another week here, I have not now the means of
     determining. I pray God to preserve the health of the family, and
     return me soon to enjoy that circle from which it is painful to be
     absent, though I have every attention and necessary accommodation
     for my comfort. Take good care of your health, and tell your mother
     that I shall endeavor to be careful of mine.

     "Affectionately,
         "HOSEA BALLOU."

     "M. M. BALLOU."

This, and a private letter previously given in these pages, are not made
public for any particular information they communicate, but simply to
show the reader the feelings of the writer as expressed between himself
and those whom he loved and in whom he confided. These letters might be
greatly multiplied, but this would perhaps serve our object no better
purpose. If a hundred were to be submitted to the reader, they would
convey no other spirit than is evinced by the two already given. Mr.
Ballou's private correspondence was never very extensive; his letters
were nearly all of a domestic nature, or brief notes relating to
exchanges with other brethren at a distance. The reason that his letters
were so much of this nature, was, that when he transcribed his thoughts
to paper it was for the press. Most men of strong and active minds are
in the practice of relieving them, as it were, by writing down their
thoughts, from time to time, to valued friends; it is a sort of
necessary relief that some minds could not get along without. But Mr.
Ballou's writings were so universally made public, and he was so
constantly supplying the public press with matter, even to the very last
week of his life, that his mind and pen were quite sufficiently worked
in this vein, without seeking any other channel.

During the fall of 1843, Mr. Ballou, then at the age of seventy-two
years, made a long journey to the West, to attend the national
convention of Universalists, held at Akron, Ohio. On the route thither,
in company with Rev. Thomas Whittemore and some other friends, he
visited, for the first time, Niagara Falls. Mr. Whittemore, in writing
home a description of their visit to his paper, the Trumpet,
said:--"When we came to Table Rock, Father Ballou stood in amazement,
and when we urged him to go back over the river before dark, 'Oh!' said
he, 'how can I go away?' He said his thoughts were like those of Peter
on one occasion: 'It is good to be here; let us build tabernacles, and
dwell upon the spot.' A prism was handed to him, through which he could
see the rapids in colors ineffably glorious. 'Oh! my soul! oh! glory to
God!' were his exclamations."

No man had a more thorough appreciation of all that was grand and noble
in nature, no one a keener eye for her myriads of charms that gladden
our daily lives and illumine the pathway of life.

"We heard him, for the first time," says the editor of the American
Phrenological Journal, "at a Universalist general convention, Akron,
Ohio, in September, 1843, where he preached to a very large gathering,
with the ablest men in the denomination preceding and following him.
Many of them delivered more elaborate and carefully studied discourses,
but there was no other who made the brown faces of the old farmers so
fairly _shine_ with admiration and delight as 'Father Ballou.' Many of
them had heard him in New England thirty or forty years previous, and
now, hearing that he was to attend the convention, had come thirty or
forty miles to listen to him once again, and for the last time on earth.
Though then past man's allotted period of 'threescore years and ten,'
his distinctness of utterance, clearness of statement, aptness of
illustration, and force of argument, might well have been taken as a
model by a young preacher; and, though he spoke more than an hour, a
very general regret was evident that he closed so soon. In person Mr.
Ballou was tall and slight, with a bearing of unaffected meekness and
humility."

In the summer of the succeeding year he made another visit to New York
and Philadelphia, in accordance with the promise made some years before,
to come as often and for as long a period as was convenient to him, and
also in compliance with the earnest solicitations of the societies in
both these cities at that time. As we have before remarked, he had
formed many personal friends in both these cities, and it was, as we
have heard him often declare, refreshing to his heart to meet them and
enjoy their liberal and kind hospitality. He felt, too, an earnest
solicitude for the spiritual welfare of those societies, before whom he
had so often spoken with such satisfaction to himself and profit to
them. During this journey southward, by the solicitations of the
societies in Baltimore, Mr. Ballou extended his visit to that city,
where he stopped for a short period, which time he improved by the
delivery of sermons day and evening. On his return to Boston, he
preached a sermon, we well remember, relative to the condition of the
cause of Universalism, and was made glad at heart by the state in which
he found it in these cities, and at being able to make such goodly
report at home. It was like the husbandman going abroad in his master's
vineyard, and counting the harvest of his lord, which he had himself
planted.

The kind and hospitable treatment which Mr. Ballou always received, in
the cities particularly of New York and Philadelphia, seems to have made
a most indelible impression upon his heart. Often has he spoken of it in
his family circle, until we have felt almost as though we had
individually shared the delightful reunions which he described. True, it
was thus wherever he visited, as it regarded making warm and lasting
friends, but he has left memorandums that signify his remembrance more
particularly of the societies of these cities. He says:--"In New York
and Philadelphia, I have ever been made by the brethren to feel that I
was at _home_; kind hearts and hands have ever greeted me in either
place, and some of the happiest and most profitable moments of my life I
think have been passed in ministering to the beloved societies in these
places. Had my Heavenly Father seen fit to render my services less happy
and fortunate in their result in Boston, I should have found a happy
home in either New York or Philadelphia. As it is, my frequent visits to
both have afforded me undiminished satisfaction, and much social
enjoyment. My sincere prayers are constantly offered for their
happiness, well-being, and spiritual good." The great and moving cause
of his exerting such an influence by his words and manners over the
minds of people in his religious teachings, as well as his private
intercourse, was the spirit of sincerity that imbued every motion, while
the beauty and purity of his moral character seemed to sanctify every
word and action, which emanated from him. With not the slightest stain
upon his character from boyhood, he was such a being as people could
afford to reverence, respect, and love.

Through the whole of his long and active career, Mr. Ballou never once
turned aside from the one great object and purpose of his heart, that of
promulgating God's fatherly and impartial love to all mankind, as
evinced in the holy Scriptures and the dispensations of Providence.

In a poem, ending with the two following verses, he has himself
expressed his devoted zeal better than we can do.

    "Not all thy foes on earth can say
    Can turn my heart from thee away;
          And yet my heart is free;
    These wounds and scars, that men despise,
    Are jewels precious in thine eyes,
          And this is all to me.

    "Had I ten thousand years to live,
    Had I ten thousand lives to give,
          All these should be thine own;
    And that foul scorn thy foes bestow
    Still prove a laurel to my brow,
          And their contempt a throne."

In this service he never wrote or uttered a single sentence that was not
peculiar to himself for its plainness of purpose, yet depth of thought,
and for strong logical reasoning to this grand end. He possessed for his
purpose a large share of ready, manly eloquence, not nervous and
startling, but cool and convincing; and this, coupled with a natural
quickness in discovering the strength or weakness of an argument, ever
insured him victory in religious controversy. No sarcasm, no reflection,
no imputation could throw him off his guard for one moment. He was ever
unruffled, yet forcible, evincing the spirit of the doctrine which he
advocated at all times. It was perfectly impossible to so excite him in
controversy as to lead him to say the least ungentlemanly, or even
abrupt thing. He stood for years as a target for the poisoned arrows of
malice, bigotry and envy, and bore all with a serene dignity of spirit,
which a firm reliance in Heaven could alone have given.

In his public teachings he never indulged in abstractions, never ran
away from his theme, upon abstruse and visionary ideas. He was in this
respect, as in all others, eminently natural, eminently practical,
eminently _original_. We do not find nature teaching us by adducing
vague notions of facts, but rather by a display of the facts themselves.
Abstractions and transcendentalisms are but thick fogs to cloud the
mental vision, while plain matter-of-fact is the clear, bright view of
truth, with the soft, rich perspective of wisdom. It is exceedingly
questionable, when we hear a minister dilating upon the arts and
sciences, or leading his hearers off in a vein of visionary philosophy,
whether that man has a religion worth preaching, or that is congenial to
his own heart.

"He _was a man of great originality and remarkable power_," says Rev.
Mr. Miner. "He walked not in a beaten track. His method of
interpretation was all his own; it was evolved by the new faith which
inspired him, and maintained throughout a self-consistency unknown to
biblical writers fifty years ago. Though his labor consisted in dealing
with the most familiar statements, yet he never failed to shed upon his
theme a new and diviner light, and to invest it with rare and universal
interest. It is no condemnation of his method of interpretation to say
that it seemed, to the perverted understanding of that time, to be
forced and unnatural. The value of this circumstance may be justly
estimated by the fact, that the current methods of the world have been
constantly assimilating to his method, ever since it has been in
conflict with them.

"It was in his style of exposition and clearness of illustration, rather
than in his form of statement, that his originality consisted. It was
manifested not so much by rhetorical aids, as by his vivid embodiment
of the principle he would inculcate. In the early part of his ministry,
he had too much hard work to do, too many open and covert foes to
contend with, too many hurtful errors to overthrow, to permit him to
loiter in the fields of literature for the gathering of verbal and
rhetorical bouquets. He needed not these aids. His thought was rare, and
burned with the truths of God. Howsoever expressed, it was sure to be
remembered. The hearer might have no recollection of the dress. Whether
clothed or unclothed, whether 'in the body or out of the body,' he might
not be able to say. One thing, however, he could say; a new thought,
glowing like the sun in the heavens, with a light all its own, had found
a place in his heart. He who possesses such a power need seek no other.
The trappings of literature can never do the work of truth. They may
dazzle the imagination; but truth alone can warm the heart. They may
lead to the admiration of man, but never to the adoration of God."

This is so much in the spirit of what we have before remarked, that the
quotation is most applicable.

Several short poems are introduced into these pages from Mr. Ballou's
pen. They are generally taken at random from his published fugitive
pieces, unless designed to illustrate some particular trait of character
or frame of mind, some cherished principle of the writer's heart. Though
we claim no fame for Mr. Ballou as a poet, yet his productions in this
line of composition are numerous. A volume of his poems has lately been
collected and published, but these pieces were thrown off in the hurry
of an editor's duty, and evince no care on the writer's part. He has
left us scraps of verse, however, which show that the power was native
in him, and the poet's genius a part of his natural endowment. The
verses that will close the last of this volume, though written in old
age, compare favorably with those of any production of the kind we have
ever met with. As late as the year 1844, he was an occasional
contributor of poems to the press, of a character calculated for the
times. These verses were given to the public under the signature of
"Spectator," and were designed to effect some prominent end, to reform
some acknowledged impropriety, or to commend that which was good and
useful. These, however, were never attributed to him, nor was it known
out of his family circle that he had written them. Some of them were
humorous, some pathetic, some patriotic. His poems were always easy and
liquid in versification, full of point and meaning, expressing much in a
few words, while the ideas are clothed in the sweetest garb of poesy.
Witness the following, which is the only one at hand at this time:

         HYMN FOR FOURTH OF JULY.

    "Arise and hail the jubilee,
    The day that set our nation free;
    In song his honor chant who gave
    Counsel and victory to the brave.

    Ye daughters fair, fresh garlands weave,
    With chaplets strew the warrior's grave;
    Lo! from the mould'ring sod shall rise
    Fame's sweetest incense to the skies.

    Fifty bright summer suns have smiled,
    And fifty harvest moons beguiled
    Childhood and youth, since vernal showers
    First moistened freedom's lovely flowers.

    Let joy throughout our land inspire
    Each manly heart with holy fire;
    And freedom's song, by Miriam sung,
    Be heard from every female tongue."

We well remember to have been present on one occasion, when a
conversation took place between Mr. Ballou and a visitor who had come
from a distance on purpose to see and talk with him on the matter of
religion. He was vacillating in his faith, but was by no means persuaded
of the truth of Universalism. He was a man of wealth, had retired from
business, but having had his mind brought to a serious turn by a very
critical illness, which had nearly proved fatal to him, he had resolved
to make the Scriptures his study until he should be able to say that he
had joy and peace in believing. This he told Mr. Ballou, who commended
his resolution, promised to afford him any and all light within his own
power to impart, and sitting down together, they conversed for some
time.

"I cannot see," said the visitor at last, "why it is that a religion
which promises its believers and followers eternal life for obedience,
and the woe of eternal misery for disobedience, does not make more
truly religious people than your doctrine, which holds forth only
temporary evil for disobedience, and temporary reward for obedience. The
matter seems very plain to me."

"I will tell you the reason of this," said Mr. Ballou, "and in so doing
I will give you an evidence also of the truth of the doctrine I profess.
The reason is found in the very nature of man, his disposition, and
natural promptings. Give to him a task to perform, threaten him with the
most fearful sufferings and torment if he fail to accomplish the duty
you have prescribed for him, and his calculation will naturally be to do
just as little of the hated work as it is possible for him to do and
avoid the punishment. Now, on the other hand, you give him an occupation
which he is satisfied will be productive of his own happiness and good,
that in the very nature of things will produce him an ample and abundant
reward, and the selfishness natural to man will lead him to be
faithful."

"It would most certainly seem to be so," answered the visitor,
thoughtfully.

"Certainly this is plain philosophy," was the answer.

"But I do not exactly understand your application," said the stranger.

"That is just what I am coming to. Present to man a religion of which
the services are calculated to promote his rational enjoyment, which
takes nothing from him without returning more than its value, and in
the spirit of which increase of duty is an increase of happiness, and
there is but little danger but that they will eagerly accept it. This
world is full of labor, toil, and traffic, and the whole is carried on
by the power of this principle."

"I must acknowledge that religion has seemed to be too much sustained by
threats and promises," said the stranger.

"To be sure it has," said Mr. Ballou. "The idea that we perform any
service in order to escape punishment, renders that service tedious and
irksome to us; while, on the contrary, duty is supreme delight when love
is the inducement and the labor."[1]

[Footnote 1: The recollection of this conversation was recalled to the
writer's mind by lately reading one of Mr. Ballou's published sermons,
where a very similar argument may be found.]

The individual above referred to was an Englishman, who came often to
Mr. Ballou's house afterwards, and held similar conversations. This was
no unusual case. Perfect strangers came and sat for hours sometimes,
evidently seekers after truth, and anxious ones too. To such Mr. Ballou
was ever condescending, patient, and took delight in answering all their
queries upon certain doctrinal points, explaining each passage referred
to, showing its bearing upon others, and challenging the visitor's
respect by his urbanity and never-varying politeness in all things.

Mr. Ballou was ever ready and prompt at an answer, and his replies were
frequently tempered with a quick and pungent wit. He was on a certain
occasion, on his way to deliver a lecture in the town of Reading, Vt.,
surrounded by a number of people, when an Orthodox deacon, confronting
him suddenly, asked, with a taunting air and self-sufficient bearing,--

"Will you answer me one question, Mr. Ballou?"

"Certainly, if I can do so at such short notice," said Mr. Ballou,
smiling at the man's impetuosity.

"Well, sir," said the deacon, "what will become of a man who goes out of
the world cursing and swearing, and calling on God to damn his soul to
hell?"

"Do you believe, my dear sir," said Mr. Ballou, "that a righteous God
would answer the vile prayer of such a wicked wretch?"

"Why no," said the deacon, "of course not."

"You have answered your own question then," said Mr. Ballou, quietly,
while the deacon turned away much disconcerted.

It is so true that Folly's shallow lip can ask the deepest question,
that it is well to remember sometimes, that a fool should be answered
according to his folly.

"The frequency of his times of preaching, in the former part of his
ministry," says the editor of the Repository, "can be but ill imagined
now, nor the intense interest with which his message was listened to by
the multitude. At times he would preach between two appointments, while
his horse was feeding,--his pulpit the base of a noble oak, and the
congregation reverently standing in its broad shadow. Taking advantage
of his haste in leaving, some question would be asked him by some
restive, dogmatic deacon, and the undreamed of answer, that came as the
lightning's flash, would add new fuel to the fire of interest he had
kindled in the midst of the people."

In this connection we are reminded of an anecdote, for which we are
indebted to Rev. Sylvanus Cobb, of the Christian Freeman. We introduce
it here to show Mr. Ballou's power of argument without the least
tincture of ostentation. It was often his way in debate to ask some
apparently simple but natural question, which his opponent answering, as
he obviously must do, would almost certainly refute his own fragile
creed or position, and himself and others would be led to see where the
truth really was. Mr. Cobb says:--

"The world at large have known much of the powers and genius of Mr.
Ballou's mind from his published works, but he had most lovely traits of
character which a personal acquaintance only could discover. While an
intellectual giant in strength, he was unaffectedly modest and
unassuming, and never engaged in mere disputations. He would never enter
into a combat for mere personal mastery, nor pursue a noisy contest with
one who showed himself to be insincere and trickish; while his own
meekness and simplicity of spirit, combined with his clearness of
perception, would generally cut down the swaggering, cavilling spirit,
if he came in contact with it.

"An interesting incident, illustrative of this amiable trait of
character, once occurred in a brief exchange of words between him and
Abner Kneeland. Mr. Kneeland had become an atheist, and one day came
into an apartment where there was a little company of our ministering
brethren, among whom was Mr. Ballou. Mr. Kneeland was forward to
communicate this supposed new light to those with whom he was formerly
associated in the ministry of Christ. He could dispense with the use of
a creator of the world and of man, regarding the physical universe and
the human species as eternal in their being without beginning. Yet he
got in the idea, in the course of the conversation, that man is composed
of the elements of nature.

"Mr. Ballou had been sitting in silence, with his elbows resting upon
his knees (an attitude he often assumed when listening attentively to an
argument). At this point he raised his head, and assumed an erect
position of body, and said:--

"'Bro. Kneeland, you seem to have thought a great deal on these
subjects, and perhaps you can give me some useful information. Now we
see around us, in the city and country, a great many wooden houses. Of
what are these houses made?'

"'They are made of timbers, boards, shingles, and the like,' answered
Mr. Kneeland.

"'And out of what,' said Mr. Ballou, 'are these boards and shingles
made?'

"'Out of trees,' replied Mr. K.

"'Then,' said Mr. Ballou, 'all wooden houses were made out of trees. If
so, must there not have been trees before there was a wooden house?'

"'Yes,' said the other, 'of course.'

"'Well, I thought so,' said Mr. Ballou; 'and now,' continued he, 'here
are many brick houses,--of what are they made?'

"'They are made,' answered Mr. Kneeland, 'out of bricks, which are
composed of clay and sand.'

"'Well, then,' said Mr. Ballou, 'if all brick houses are made of bricks,
which are composed of clay and sand, must there not have been bricks
before there was a brick house, and clay and sand before there was a
brick?'

"Mr. Kneeland now, perceiving what application Mr. Ballou was about to
make of his concessions, to explain his philosophy of having men
composed of the elements of nature and yet having no elements of nature
before there were men, began to equivocate! He would not admit the
inference from the fact that all brick houses were made of bricks, etc.,
and he even retraced his steps, and took back what he had admitted in
respect to wooden houses.

"'What!' said Mr. Ballou, 'if all wooden houses were made of trees, must
there not have been trees before there were wooden houses?'

"'No,' replied Mr. Kneeland, 'that need not follow!'

"'Well, then,' said Mr. Ballou, '_how stupid I am_!'

"And as he uttered these words, he dropped his head again, and let
himself back into a posture of quiet rest. Mr. Kneeland at the same time
choked and blushed, and attempted to recover himself for renewed
conversation, but he evidently could not, and so took his departure.

"This is but one of many incidents which might be cited to illustrate
Mr. Ballou's simplicity in the pursuit and love of truth, his readiness
with argument for its support and advancement, in connection with a
modest, unassuming habit, and a hatred of bluster and noisy strife."

A volume might be filled with anecdotes equally characteristic of Mr.
Ballou's manner and style of argument, had we the necessary time to
collect them. But we trust that the few that are compiled and given to
our readers herewith, may sufficiently familiarize them with the
subject's character, both as a Christian and as a theologian. Since
commencing this work, a vast number of anecdotes have suggested
themselves to the writer's mind, and others, new to him, have been
submitted by friends; but only such as have been considered valuable as
illustrating his character, and which are known to be authentic, have
been selected for publication in these pages.




CHAPTER XI.

DOMESTIC AND PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS.


All who knew Mr. Ballou intimately, can bear witness that his home was a
happy one. This, of course, was owing to the manner in which he had
framed and modeled that home after his own heart and the dictates of the
religion he professed. He was the master mind there; his word was law,
his simplest wish strictly complied with. He was looked up to with a
degree of respect and veneration by his children, that was an abiding
evidence of his true character. In the government of his family, he
_led_, but never _drove_, his children, endeavoring, to the utmost of
his ability, to bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord,
and, taking his divine Master for his example, he governed them by love
and kindness alone.

He was strongly characterized for his fondness of domestic enjoyment,
and throughout his whole life, to the very end, evinced the most
constant and tenderest solicitude for each and all of his children. Even
after they had married and settled in life, with families about them,
this solicitude continued as ardent as ever; nor was there one of those
children who would undertake any matter of importance without first
consulting his wishes in the premises, and seeking his advice upon the
subject; so highly were both respected and esteemed. This is mentioned
in this connection, not as an encomium upon the family, but simply to
show the reader the universal love and respect that its head always
commanded. We find this subject referred to by Rev. Henry Bacon, in his
published remarks concerning the decease of the subject of this
biography. He refers to the respect in which his advice was held upon
secular matters, not only in his own family, but by others of his
acquaintance.

"He was great," says Mr. Bacon, "in the clearness with which he saw the
essential truths of the gospel, and in the power with which he
communicated them to others, by that spirit of calm earnestness, and
that wondrous faculty to make himself intelligible, which peculiarly
distinguished him. He was great as a logician; great in wisdom that
penetrates to the reality of character, and opens the real motives that
sway the man; _and his counsel in matters far removed from his peculiar
walk in life was weighed as the utterance of an oracle that must not be
slighted_. Simple in his habits, he lost nothing of life in indulgences
that rob existence of its serenity; fixed in a few great principles, he
made everything contribute thereto for the enlargement of his views of
men and things; and, reverencing the Scriptures with a depth of
reliance that was beautiful to behold, he brought forth the harmonies of
the divine Word in a manner that suggested more than he ever expressed,
though he expressed enough to satisfy millions of souls."

May we add here, how grateful such words of appreciation are to the
hearts of his family.

The following was furnished us by Rev. Thomas Whittemore, and would seem
to come most properly under this chapter of Domestic and Personal
Characteristics. Mr. Whittemore was solicited for something relative to
the subject, being so old and valued a friend of the deceased, and he
thus speaks:--

"The life of Hosea Ballou is, in almost every respect, pleasing to
contemplate. It was a very active life. He travelled much, he preached
often, he studied continually, and he wrote not a little. In the earlier
part of his life he joined teaching of the young in the common sciences
to his other avocations. No small portion of his leisure time he spent
in reading; but he _thought_ more than he read. He was always digging
for gold; not, however, in books, but in the mine of his own intellect.
His mind was very active.

"The most pleasing part of his life was his serene old age. The writer
of this remembers him well when he was forty years of age. Ten years
afterwards, the writer entered his family to pursue a course of studies
for the ministry. Mr. B.'s mind at fifty seemed never at rest. If not
reading, he was busily engaged in mental effort. Often, when he was
walking in the streets, have we seen his lips move, as if he were
talking. At his home, he would sit frequently with his eyes closed, his
lips moving, as if holding conversation with some invisible person; and
when he apparently came to some crisis in his meditations, he showed
some outward sign of his feelings, sometimes by a smile, at others by
suppressed laughter, at others by a sigh.

"A mind thus active is in danger of disturbing, if too much indulged,
the proper action of the digestive powers, which, in their turn, react
upon the mind, and produce lowness of spirits and gloom. Mr. Ballou at
fifty was troubled in this way. His heart had an affection sympathetic
with the stomach, and its action was irregular and intermittent. At this
point of his life, he had lived but three or four years in Boston; and
he had had occasion to perform a large amount both of mental and
physical labor. He had preached three times almost every Sabbath; had
edited, for two years, the 'Universalist Magazine;' had visited many
parts of the country to preach the gospel, sometimes under very
animating circumstances; and these complicated labors were too much for
him. His most sagacious friends then had fears either that he would not
live to old age, or, if he did, that his later years would be unquiet.

"We remember, with very great satisfaction, the exceeding gentleness and
amiability of his wife, in the days of which we speak. While this
excellent lady still survives, it is not proper for us to express all
that may be justly said of her. She presided over her household with a
fidelity, a blandness, a kindness, steady as the current of a river, and
unruffled as a lake in the calmest day. This season of intermixture of
health and sickness, joy and sadness, light and shade, continued for
some half dozen years, when it was very gratifying to Mr. B.'s friends
to see that each change denoted that his life might be protracted
perhaps to old age, and that, peradventure, his old age should be as
serene as his earlier days had been laborious and useful. Such proved to
be the fact. He died in his eighty-second year, and his life grew more
and more serene unto its close; like the sun, obscured somewhat by
passing clouds at noon, but shining clearly during the rest of the day,
making its course through the western sky, and passing away from the
earth, as it were, into the boundless heavens beyond.

"This quiet old age I attribute to several circumstances. Mr. Ballou was
a man of sound sense. It was his aim to make the best of everything. He
was a Christian philosopher. He sought to rule his own spirit. He
believed that humility and meekness were the brightest jewels in the
Christian's crown. He had a firm trust in his Maker's goodness. He
believed that God was the Sovereign of the universe, a Father of
infinite goodness, as well as of infinite power, who executed his will
in the armies of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth; and
who, by everything which he did, and by everything which he permitted
to be done, was seeking infallibly the good of his creatures. What an
influence would such a faith exert on Mr. Ballou's life!

"Added to this, he had a wife whose constant effort and highest joy was
to make her husband happy. Few such women have lived. It is my duty to
declare, that, during thirty years' acquaintance with her, I never have
heard the first unkind word from her lips, respecting any human being.
Towards her husband, there was a devotion that never tired. It was her
constant desire and aim to make him useful and happy. She appeared well
in any society, but home was her genial sphere. Much of the quiet of
Father Ballou's old age must be attributed to her. His children, also,
have been sources of great comfort to him. They diligently aimed to make
him happy. He loved them all with surpassing tenderness, and they loved
him in consequence. Had anything unfavorable happened to either of his
children, it would have been like a dart driven through his soul. We
know that, even in that case, his religion and his philosophy would have
come to his aid; he would have believed that God had a wise purpose in
it; but, even with that alleviation, it must greatly have disturbed his
life. No such affliction, however, awaited him. Two of his sons became
preachers of the same gospel which he had defended, and by their prudent
lives gained the respect of all who knew them. They have not, like many
clergymen, moved frequently from place to place, but, for about a
quarter of a century, have remained stationary pastors. In respect to
the goods of this world, they have been prudent, and have prospered. * *
* * The daughters have all been married to faithful, kind, and prudent
husbands, of whom two are preachers of the gospel, and all, men of
respectability, intelligence, and thrift.

"Such have been the circumstances of Father Ballou's family. But we have
yet to mention another source of the happiness of his last days. He saw
himself standing at the head of a large and prosperous body of
Christians, who loved and venerated him for his labors, the purity of
his character, and the good he had done. He saw their regard for him
manifested at such times, and in such ways, that he had reason to
believe it was not done for effect, but was the outgushing of the real
feeling of their hearts. At the meetings of conventions, associations,
and other public bodies, all were happy to greet the old soldier of the
cross. His strength was spared to him to such a degree, that he was able
to travel and preach up to the close of his life. His last sermon was
delivered within eight days of his death. He used frequently to say that
it seemed to him no man had more to be thankful for than he. Prudence in
diet; prudence in labor; a kind heart; an affectionate companion; loving
children; ease in his worldly circumstances; the homage of the class of
Christians to which he belonged; the respect of mankind at large;
ability to pursue his favorite calling to the end of life; a strong
trust in God, whose commands he sought diligently to obey;--these were
the causes of the serenity of his old age. 'Mark the perfect man, and
behold the upright: for the end of that man is peace.' Psalm 37:37."

Especially was he fond of children and infants. This was a markedly
prominent feature in his feelings; and children, too, never failed to
make friends with him at once. In our own humble experience, we have
made this a criterion of judgment in character. He who warmly and
quickly interests a child,--whose temperament is such that infancy can
easily assimilate with it,--whose sympathies are of a nature quickly to
unite when brought in contact with childhood,--that man has at heart
much of the real _purity_ and _innocence_ which are the main
characteristics of those whom the Saviour blessed. We never saw a child
shun or turn away from him; but we have seen scores of those who were
strangers, put out their little hands and go willingly to him. In his
own family circle his love of children found ample scope and a genial
field for exercise.

More than forty of his own grandchildren might have been gathered
together at one time during his life. But, as we have intimated, it was
not with these alone that the spirit we refer to was evinced; it was the
same with one as with another. All children he dearly loved, and
particularly noticed. There seemed to be a magic power in his voice, and
in the gentle beaming of his clear, expressive eyes, that carried
assurance to their timid bosoms; and they would nestle happy and
undismayed in his arms, or listen to his words, so cunningly adapted to
the powers of their tender intellect.

The secret of Mr. Ballou's remarkable success in his family government,
was, doubtless, his following those rules which he has so well expressed
and laid down for others. It is a valuable excerpt that he has left, and
we doubt not that the reader will thank us for introducing it here, and
in his own words:--"When giving to your children commands, be careful
that you speak with a becoming dignity, as if not only the right, but
the wisdom also to command, was with you. Be careful not to discover a
jealousy that your injunctions may not be attended to; for if the child
sees that you have your doubts, they will lead the child to doubt too.
Be cautious never to give your commands in a loud voice, nor in haste.
If you must speak loudly in order to be obeyed, when it is not
convenient to raise your voice you must expect to be disobeyed; and if
it be convenient for you to speak loudly, you must remember it is
inconvenient for others to hear it.

"But, with regard to manner, be careful to speak in a soft, tender, kind
and loving way. Even when you have occasion to rebuke, be careful to do
it with manifest kindness. The effects will be incalculably better. When
you are obliged to deny the request that your child may make, do not
allow yourself to do this with severity. It is enough for our dear
little ones to be denied of what they may think they want, without
being nearly knocked down with a sharp voice ringing in their tender
ears.

"If you practise severity, speak harshly, frequently punish in anger,
you will find your children will imbibe your spirit and manners. First
you will find that they will treat each other as you treat them; and
after they arrive to a little age, they will treat you with unkind and
unbecoming replies. But if you are wise, and treat your little ones with
tenderness, you will fix the image of love in their minds, and they will
love you and each other, and in their conversation will imitate the
conversation which they have heard from the tenderest friend which
children have on earth."

In this connection we are reminded of a letter, lately published, from
Mrs. C. A. Soule, relative to her impressions touching the death of the
subject of this memoir. It will be remembered that her husband was a
warm and cherished friend of Mr. Ballou's, and that he was associated
with him as colleague over the Second Universalist Society, in
School-street, Boston, as late as 1845.

"As vividly as though it were but yesterday, does memory bring to me
that sunny April day, in 1844, when I first entered the sanctuary where
he had ministered so many years. There was a dedication service, and I
thought then, and I think now, that I never gazed upon a more impressive
sight than was presented at that moment, when the aged pastor took in
his arms the little helpless babe, and in touching words consecrated it
to Him who said 'Suffer little children to come unto me.' That picture
of infancy and age,--how I longed for a pencil to sketch it! Thank
Heaven, memory, with faithful touch, inscribed it on my heart, and it
will ever hang there, one of its most beautiful pictures. And now I see
him at my own threshold. I meet him, and present him my own little one,
my firstborn. How tenderly he caresses it! Long he looks into her
laughing eyes, and then exclaims, in a tone I can never forget, 'How I
wish I could read her thoughts!' Then, sitting down, he tells me that he
never yet looked on a babe without longing to know the workings, the
thoughts, of the infant mind; and afterwards gave me some excellent
advice about so training that little one that when age should enable her
to reveal her thoughts, they might all be pure and beautiful. How
life-like is the portrait I have of him in my mind's eye! It seems so
palpable that I almost feel the light as it streams from that thrilling
eye, and hear the eloquent words that tremble on that 'heaven-touched
tongue.'"

In illustration of the feelings which influenced him as it regarded
intercourse with his children, and consideration for their enjoyment,
and sympathy with them even in many seeming trifles, we relate the
following anecdote, which, though perhaps trifling in itself, is by no
means without value in point of application.

When Mr. Ballou engaged, in 1834, to go to New York and Philadelphia, it
became known to one of his parishioners, who desired to send his child,
a young lady, to the latter city, on a visit to some relations or
friends. His request to take charge of the young person was cheerfully
acceded to by Mr. Ballou. It so happened that the person who was to
accompany him was a classmate at school and a very intimate companion of
one of his own daughters, the eldest then at home. When this daughter
learned that her classmate was to accompany her father on his journey,
she could not but express a wish that she were going also. There were no
railroad conveniences then, nor were scarcely any of the present
accommodations for travelling perfected. It was not only considerable of
an undertaking to commence a journey of three hundred miles, but it
necessarily involved not a trifling expense.

It came to the ears of Mr. Ballou that his child really desired to
accompany him; and, when he understood the circumstances, he immediately
gave his consent,--telling her, playfully, not to say anything to her
young friend of this, but that he would manage an agreeable surprise for
her. The stage came to the house very early on the morning appointed for
starting,--long before daylight. Mr. Ballou and his daughter got in, and
took their places on the back seat, the latter well wrapped up about the
face. They then drove to the house of her schoolmate, who was to
accompany them. She also took her place in the vehicle, exchanging a
salutation with Mr. Ballou, and they drove off in the darkness. It was
not long before the young lady took occasion to remark, casually, to Mr.
Ballou, how agreeable it _would_ have been could Elmina (the daughter)
have accompanied them. "Very,--very indeed," said Mr. Ballou; and they
still drove quietly on. At last, the city being now left far behind, and
daylight having appeared, Mr. Ballou asked the young lady if she knew
the person by her side. On hearing this inquiry, she turned to see her
neighbor's face, and lo! it was her classmate and dearest friend with
whom she had been thus seated so long without recognizing her! The
daughter has since often declared that she knew not which enjoyed the
ruse most on this occasion,--father or child.

During the year 1845, Mr. Ballou, being then seventy-four years of age,
wrote and published two or three essays in the Universalist Quarterly,
upon certain passages of scripture which had seemed to be a
stumbling-block to many of his own denomination. One of these texts was
that commencing, "In my Father's house are many mansions," etc. This, by
some of the order of Universalists, was supposed to signify that in the
future state there would be different degrees of blessedness, in
proportion to the worthiness of the spirit, or to its moral character
and mental cultivation. This idea was thoroughly exploded, as it
regarded many minds, by the article referred to, which was thus the
means of converting many doubtful minds, as they acknowledged, some of
them orally, and some by letters addressed to him from at home and
abroad. The clear, logical style of reasoning evinced in this essay, and
in one published by him not long subsequent in the Quarterly, relative
to the question as to what influence our present being may have on our
future existence, showed conclusively that the full strength and vigor
that originally rendered his writings so forcible were with him still,
that his mental vision was as keen as ever, and that none of his powers
of intellect had waned in their fire.

These articles were penned as correctly and distinctly, as it regarded
the chirography, as was his early custom, and generally written, if not
at one sitting, within the space of a few hours; for, when he had
anything to do, he could not feel contented until it was done. The
article completed, he would carefully fold it, and wend his way
personally to the publishing-house in Cornhill, and deposit it there,
never failing at the appointed time to read the proof, concerning which
he was very sensitive, and very correct. It was but a few days prior to
his decease that he read thus the proof-sheets of his last article,
furnished for the Universalist Quarterly.

In the manuscript which Mr. Ballou furnished the author of this
biography, there appears written about this period, the fall of 1845,
the following interesting paragraph relative to the immense change that
he had lived to see transpire in the religious world about him.

"Since I came to this city, I have enjoyed the happiness of seeing the
cause of religion prosper, and the different denominations growing more
liberal and more charitable towards each other. I have seen, too, my own
peculiar views received very generally, and regarded very favorably by
the denomination to which I have belonged from the commencement of my
public labors. Since I came here I have been rejoiced to see the
wonderful increase of Universalist societies in Boston and the
neighboring towns, as well as in the other States of our Union. There
are firmly established ones now in Roxbury, Cambridgeport, East
Cambridge, Medford, Malden, etc., besides five or six in Boston, to the
commencement and building up of which I have had the pleasure of adding
my mite by way of labor."

It was very natural that he should then contrast the state and condition
of the cause with its feebleness when he first came to Boston. A few
scattered believers were all it numbered then; persecution and obloquy
greeted its defenders at every step. To be called a Universalist was
equivalent to being called anything vile and wicked, and the name was
held as one of reproach by nearly all. But how vastly different was the
prospect that presented itself to his view in the closing days of his
life, and how grateful this must have been to him who had borne the
burthen and the heat of the day! He saw the denomination vastly
extended. He saw Universalists respected not only for numbers, but for
the goodly influence they exerted far and wide.

He saw that there were now nineteen annual state conventions, eighty-two
associations, eight missionary societies, ten hundred and seventy
societies, professing the doctrine; seven hundred and ninety-nine
meeting-houses devoted to this worship, and some seven hundred preachers
in his Master's vineyard, who taught the doctrine of God's impartial
grace. These, and other facts equally illustrating the wonderful change
he had witnessed, caused him, when toasted and called upon at the late
festival of brethren in Boston, to speak to them, to say, that as he
gazed on the crowd before him, and thought of the multitude they
represented, he was reminded of the beginning of Universalism in New
England, and to quote the words of the prophet: "There was a handful of
corn in the top of the mountain, but its fruit shall shake like
Lebanon!"

How apt and true the quotation.

We have seen that the vigor and keenness of Mr. Ballou's mind had in no
way abated, that every mental faculty still shone brightly as at the
prime of his manhood. Let us show the reader statistically what that
mind had performed in its time. During his professional life he
delivered _over ten thousand sermons_. This calculation, which at first
appears to be so very large, is nevertheless strictly correct, and will
not seem to be overrated, when we call to mind the fact that for more
than thirty years of his ministration he not only preached three times
every Sabbath, but _frequently_ for several consecutive days of the week
beside. Until within five or ten years past, three sermons on the
Sabbath has been his usual performance, in the line of his professional
duty. And after his sermons in country towns, the answering of
questions, and the conversation he was obliged to hold in private with
honest seekers after truth, were quite as laborious, in fact, as were
his public services in the pulpit. We have known him to occupy nearly
half the night, not unfrequently, in this manner, patiently and
zealously.

Including his essays and treatises upon doctrinal subjects, his fugitive
sermons furnished for the different magazines and papers of which he was
editor for a long period of time, and afterwards a constant contributor
to the very end of his life, beside a large number which appeared in
pamphlet form, and of which no particular mention is made in these
pages, and the works herein referred to, Mr. Ballou has written and
published enough to make one hundred volumes, containing the same amount
of matter as the one now in the hands of the reader. The mere mechanical
labor of writing such a mass of composition is in itself a Herculean
task; but when we consider that each page is characterized by careful
reasoning upon points that required much thought and study, and that the
whole is largely original; that the author was unaided by any other
books, save the Bible, in the formation of his arguments and opinions;
and that he was a self-made man withal, we shall come to the conclusion,
that, to say the least of it, the subject of these memoirs was
particularly blessed and aided by Divine Providence.

One secret of his having accomplished so much, is the fact that he was
never idle, never contented to sit down with folded arms in his chair
and do nothing; a book or a pen was ever in his hands, except when he
was taking the ordinary and necessary daily exercise. His life had been
too stirring and active for him ever to relapse into dormancy, while
his faculties were left to him. How well we can see him at this moment,
in the mind's eye, as he used to appear at the centre-table, with his
book close by the lamp, of an evening, and his wife opposite to him,
listening to the work which he was reading aloud to her; such is almost
the last evening scene we can recall in connection with him; his clear,
distinct pronunciation, proper emphasis, and fine voice, even in old
age, seeming to portray with singular accuracy the author's ideas, and
to add a charm to the subject treated upon.

Mr. Ballou had always deprecated the idea of capital punishment,
believing the law based on a wrong principle that would take the life of
a human creature, while none but God could give it. During the winter of
1845, there was more than the usual interest evinced by the public on
this subject, and numerous public meetings were held relative to the
subject, and to endeavor to bring about a reform in the criminal code,
so as to exclude the death penalty altogether. At several of these
assemblies Mr. Ballou made eloquent addresses upon the subject, and
wrote a number of articles, which were published, advocating the cause,
in which he felt a very great interest. We subjoin the following poem,
written by him at this time. It is peculiarly illustrative of his plain,
straightforward style of composition.

            THE CRIMINAL CODE.

    If in the heart the virus dwell
    Of murder, can we that expel
    By dire revenge, or shall we find
    We miss the law that governs mind?

    To quench a flame should we engage,
    And fuel add, behold the rage!
    Now fiercer still the flame ascends,
    And fear with consternation blends.

    Man kills his neighbor. Why? Because
    His passions rise against the laws,
    Which God hath written on his soul,
    Unmanned the man, and made a fool.

    To cure the evil, now the law,
    With tiger rage and open jaw,
    Cries out for blood, for blood it cries,
    Seizes the culprit, and he dies.

    Two men are dead in room of one;
    And now the work is but begun:
    The virus spreads, and everywhere
    The deadly taint infects the air.

    And murder now becomes more rife;
    Lighter esteemed is human life
    And he who could not just before,
    Now coolly looks on human gore.

    Revenge is wrong; cannot subdue
    The vile affections, but renew
    Their actions to a flame more dire,
    To rage like a consuming fire.

    When will our legislators learn,
    That blessed, heavenly truth discern,--
    When will it well be understood,
    That evil is o'ercome with good?"

Mr. Ballou always had a purpose in view when he wrote, whether prose or
poetry, and to this end, more than to the musical cadence of the verse,
he exerted his ability at composition, and always successfully.

The subject of this biography was far from being loquacious, and seldom
talked without some important and definite purpose in view. Yet, though
he might be said to be somewhat reserved in speech, he was by no means
secluded or abstracted in his habits, but, on the contrary, generally
evinced the liveliest interest in the conversation of those about him.
He was not one to break in upon the conversation of others, and if his
opinion was given at all, it was almost always because it was solicited.
There is such a thing as eloquent silence; and when we see a mind, much
enriched by study and experience, offered as it were uninvited, at all
times and on all occasions, we see very plainly that there is something
wanting. Sidney Smith said of Macaulay, that he only wanted a few
brilliant flashes of silence to make him perfect!

There are few old people, or such as have reached the advanced age of
threescore and ten, who have not stored up in their memories a fund of
stories and personal anecdotes, many, perhaps, of their own individual
experience. These they are in the habit of relating frequently as they
go on their way of life, and often do so over and over again to the same
individuals, through mere forgetfulness. This is perhaps one of the
earliest evidences of mental decay. Although, in the course of his long
and chequered life, Mr. Ballou had experienced many interesting
incidents, and learned many curious anecdotes, yet it was a very rare
thing for him to relate one, unless when, in conversation or argument,
some one peculiarly applicable to the subject in hand, suggested itself
to his mind as illustrative of some feeling or passion of our natural
dispositions. When he did speak, those about him always _listened_. It
was on such occasions, that, like the sage of "Rasselas," he spoke, and
attention watched his lips; he reasoned, and conviction closed his
periods. This was particularly the case in his large family circle,
where his opinion, as we have before observed, was sought and repeated,
on all subjects and on all occasions. While there never was a parent
more truly respected, there never was one more dearly beloved. This
could not be brought about by an iron rule, and a stern, inflexible
character. No. It was accomplished on his part by the exercise, in his
domestic relations, of that holy fatherly love which formed the basis of
his creed, and which he worshipped in his God.

For a number of years Mr. Ballou was in the habit of carrying a
snuff-box in his pocket, and of using the article as freely as is
generally the case with those who carry it about them. We all know,
doubtless, how very easy a matter it is to contract a habit, and more
particularly is this the case in advanced years. But if it is difficult
for young people to abandon any bad habit, when the practice has once
been fairly contracted,--if it is hard for them to conquer a pleasant
but baleful appetite, with the many channels of amusement, occupation,
and substitutes that youth and physical vigor present,--how much more
difficult must it be for those who are aged and infirm, and who are
thrown so much upon their own resources for amusement, and the means of
agreeably passing their leisure moments. After having made habitual use
of snuff for several years, Mr. Ballou found that it cloyed the nasal
organs or passage, and thus slightly affected his voice as to
distinctness in public speaking. Perceiving this, he laid by the article
at once, without a murmur, and did not use it at all for three years,
and never again habitually. This instance of resolution simply serves to
show the natural firmness of his character, and the complete
self-control which he exercised over himself.

There is still another illustration of this spirit, which we will give
here.

About a year subsequent to the period of his discontinuing the use of
snuff, a physician suggested to him the propriety of smoking tobacco
after each meal, and being at that time slightly dyspeptic, it was
thought that it might aid and stimulate the digestive organs. The
suggestion was therefore adopted, and Mr. Ballou consequently soon
acquired the habit of smoking regularly after each meal, three times a
day, which practice he continued for a period of some two years. This
habit is universally acknowledged to be one of the most seductive in its
character, and one which will draw stronger upon the inclination and
appetite than any other, except perhaps the use of ardent spirits. One
day we observed that the old gentleman did not light his pipe as usual,
after dinner, and we asked him if he had forgotten it. "No," said he.
"I have been thinking that I am becoming a slave to this habit, inasmuch
as I find that I have to do it _regularly_ every day at certain periods.
It is no longer a medicine, but a pleasant habit, and I shall leave it
off until I find that I require it again for my health's sake." His pipe
was thenceforth laid aside, as his snuff-box had been, without a murmur,
or any external advice to influence him; thus showing the strict
self-denial he exercised.

The careful reader will follow out the application of this spirit, for
it was adopted by Mr. Ballou in every bearing in which it was possible
to affect himself, in accordance with the dictates of his better
judgment, not only as it related to simple appetite and agreeable habit,
but it was one of his fixed and fundamental principles of character,
often evinced. Probably no person who possessed the means, ever desired
more to travel over his own and foreign countries, than did the subject
of this biography. Well read in ancient and modern history, and familiar
with geography, frequent reference was made by him to this desire to
visit more particularly Palestine and the East generally. But when urged
to gratify what his children knew to be so strong a wish, and with every
facility offered him, and one or more of his children to accompany him,
his spirit of self-denial caused him to say:--"How much there is to do
yet, that I may accomplish in my Master's vineyard. To gratify this
desire would indeed be delightful to me, but what benefit could it ever
be to my fellow-men?"

He was assiduously kind and thoughtful in relation to animals. For many
years, and until latterly, he kept a horse and vehicle for his own use,
and he was always particular to see _personally_ that the animal was
properly fed and protected. He was accustomed daily to prepare from his
own plate, after dinner, food for a large dog that belonged to a member
of the family, as late as his seventy-eighth year. This kindly
solicitude and thoughtfulness for the dumb animals about him was an
evidence of the natural goodness of his heart. Animals soon learn to
love those that are kind to them, and even the family cat purred more
cheerfully when resting by his feet, while he often gave it a kind
caress.

Mr. Ballou was very regular as to his personal habits, particularly
during the last twenty years of his life. We refer to the taking of his
meals, his sleep, exercise, and the like. In late years he was
accustomed to retire early at night, and to rise very early in the
morning. In former years, as we have shown, he borrowed much of the
night for his hours of study. This was particularly the case when he was
engaged in his earlier writings, and when acting as sole editor of the
various papers with which he was at different times connected. He was
indeed remarkably frugal in his diet, and to this may be attributed, in
a large degree, the constant good health he enjoyed. He ever preferred
the most homely and simple food, partaking of little meat, and more
freely of milk and bread. Before the noon-day meal on the Sabbath, with
his family assembled about the board, he always asked the divine
blessing, in a most impressive manner, but on no other day was he
accustomed to do so aloud.

His hand upon the door, or his footfall upon the sill, was a sweet sound
to us all; for it was with him as Dr. Doddridge said of his venerable
friend Dr. Clark, of St. Albans,--"He brought joy into _every_ house
which he entered, but most of all into his own house, when he returned
to it."

We have once already referred in these pages to Mr. Ballou's wife. Our
feelings would naturally prompt a much more elaborate allusion to her
many virtues, both as a mother and as a wife. But as we design this
biography to be strictly a memoir of Mr. Ballou, we only refer in these
pages to such other matters as are deemed necessary to mention, in
furtherance of the main object of the work. Mr. Ballou was fortunate in
allying himself to a companion who was in every way worthy of him, one
whom he loved with the most tender and undying affection through his
whole life, and who was to him all that a wife should be. Her
characteristics were remarkable industry, simplicity of heart,
devotedness to him, and untiring domestic assiduity. With a naturally
strong intellect and good judgment, she also coupled the agreeable
attraction of personal beauty; but the outward comeliness of her person
was far eclipsed in his eyes by more enduring loveliness.

We have already given, in these pages, some remarks from the pen of the
editor of the Trumpet, who, in a notice of Mr. Ballou's life, given on
the occasion of a full-length portrait being completed of him, for the
School-street Society, at the age of seventy-six, says of his
companion:--"Sept. 15, 1796, he was married to his present wife, a woman
of unsurpassable goodness, concerning whose praise it would be almost
impossible to speak too highly." Mr. Whittemore was, some years since,
an inmate of the family for a considerable period of time, and his words
must therefore have weight, as coming from one who spoke advisedly.

Many of us know from personal experience how great is the influence upon
our lives and actions of her to whom we have been bound by the holy tie
of matrimony. Characters are often made or marred by this association.
The calm dignity of demeanor, the evenness of temper, the perfect
contentment and general life of the subject of this biography, all
manifested the true character of his home relations, influences, and
associations. Had those relations been different from what they were, a
sterner hue would have tinged his character, and a different spirit
doubtless have imbued his whole career in life; at least the inference
is but natural.

The following lines were written by Mr. Ballou, then at the age of
seventy-four years, in an album which he had presented to his wife, and
are introduced here to show the affectionate regard that existed between
them at this advanced period of life. No comment is necessary, save that
the lines were written by a husband to his wife after _fifty years_'
companionship.

              TO MY WIFE.

    "Thou dearest of the dear to me,
      Of the beloved the best,
    Could'st thou but read this heart and see
      The treasures of my breast,
    Assurance surely would be thine
      That undiminished love,
    By age grown better, like to wine,
      Can never faithless prove.

    Not when the virgin rose of youth
      Blushed on thy snowy breast;
    Not when we pledged ourselves in truth,
      And were by Hymen blessed,
    Could strong affection boast as now
      Of such resistless sway,
    When age sits wrinkled on my brow,
      And mortal powers decay."

The patient reader who has followed us thus far in this desultory
memoir, must feel more than a passing interest in her who was the bosom
companion of Mr. Ballou; and in this connection we therefore introduce
the following extract from a communication to the Christian Freeman,
dated Sept. 5, 1851, which refers to a visit to the house of Mr. Ballou,
who had been indisposed for a few days. After a brief introduction, the
writer says:--

"I wish to say a word through you respecting our venerable and beloved
father in Israel, H. Ballou. As your report last week spoke of the
indisposition of this good brother, and knowing there would be a great
desire, both at home and abroad, to know how he might be at this time, I
did myself the pleasure, last Thursday, August 20, to call upon him at
his own peaceful home. Here I met this aged saint, with his faithful
companion, who have lived together over half a century, enjoying that
undisturbed domestic peace and felicity, which it is to be feared that
but few, comparatively speaking, attain to. Indeed, Father Ballou's
family may well be called a '_model_' family, for love and attachment,
fidelity and trust; while the happiness of all is that of each, and the
happiness of each is that of all. They have had eleven children, and
eight are living to bless their declining years.

"Mrs. Ballou has not been so extensively known to the _world_ as some;
but as a _wife_ and _mother_, none can excel her, and her amiable and
happy disposition has enabled her to retain her former pleasant and
affable manner, so that she is the same interesting and agreeable
company that she was when I first knew her, thirty years ago. And hers
is the privilege to have her children rise up and call her blessed.

"And now, with regard to the present health of Father Ballou. I was
pleased to find him much more comfortable than I had expected. He has
been suffering very much from a severe cold which he took about two
weeks since, and which has been attended with a bad cough. He was quite
unwell last Sabbath, and fears were entertained that he would be obliged
to relinquish some of his appointments, which his friends are depending
upon with such deep interest. But the simple remedies which have been
applied, finding such a perfect and unimpaired constitution to work
upon, have wrought a very favorable and happy result; so that, on
Thursday, he seemed very comfortable, though his cough was not wholly
removed. He seemed to have no apprehension but that he should yet, for
some time to come, be able 'to be about his Father's business.' And many
will be the fervent prayers that will ascend from the altar of pure and
devoted hearts, that this faithful watchman on the walls of our
spiritual Zion may be yet spared to us, to teach us the blessed truths
of that glorious doctrine which, for sixty years, he has most faithfully
and perseveringly preached, never shunning to declare the whole counsel
of God.

    'And when he dies, how many hearts will mourn.'"

This communication is from the pen of the sympathizing lady of Rev.
Sylvanus Cobb. It is sufficient to show the opinion held by other people
of Mrs. Ballou, and will also evince the general anxiety and interest
realized at any symptoms of illness experienced by one whom so many
loved and revered.

The only game that Mr. Ballou ever engaged in at all was the very simple
one of chequers. This he would sometimes, though very seldom, sit down
to on a long winter's evening, with one of his children, or perhaps some
aged companion who was fond of the game. It is the most common thing for
two persons, who are good players and thus engaged, to evince not a
little feeling at the result of the game, either of pleasure at success,
or of chagrin at being defeated. But as it regards this matter, we
never saw him evince the least feeling either way, beyond one of his
pleasant smiles, as often caused by defeat as by victory. He was what
would be called an excellent player, but he evinced only a passing
interest in the game.

At the age of seventy-eight Mr. Ballou was still as fluent and distinct
a speaker as at the age of forty. His sermons were still characterized
by the same powerful reasoning on every point, as well as bearing
evidence of constant study, showing also most conspicuously one
peculiarity of his, that of the practical as well as philosophical
character of his investigations. One might think that, having preached
for a term of nearly sixty years at the date of which we write, there
would from necessity be a disagreeable sameness and repetition of ideas
in his sermons; but this was far from being the case. We have heard old
members of his society, who have listened to his public communications
for more than thirty consecutive years, say that they have never heard
him deliver a discourse without learning from his lips some fresh and
beautiful evidence of the gospel truths,--some new and touching
illustration of the ennobling sentiments he professed.

    "Age could not wither him, nor custom stale
      His infinite variety."

He has himself often remarked that each successive year of study made
him happier than before, in the fresh truths and manifestations of
divine goodness developed in that never-failing source of
knowledge,--that flowing river of wisdom,--the Bible.

In his style of speaking, Mr. Ballou was very peculiar. There was none
of the study and pomp of declamation in his delivery,--no attempt at
effect; but he ever spoke to the people, before whom he raised his voice
as that which he professed to be, an humble servant of all men. And yet
he was eloquent, at times brilliantly so, and his oratory has been cited
by competent judges as a rare example to follow. There are comparatively
few men in these days, when the style of ranting, and tearing plain,
straightforward sentiment to tatters, is so prevalent, who can so absorb
an audience as he always did. When he commenced to speak, he would lay
the subject before his hearers in a quiet but distinct tone, so as to
place it within the capacity of a child, calmly and with judgment. Then
as he proceeded he grew by degrees animated, and anon enthusiastic, yet
ever to the purpose, while the expressive countenances of his hearers
evinced how fully they entered into the spirit of the speaker. And when
they retired from the place of meeting, the people were accustomed to
feel that they had listened to profitable matter, and to follow out the
theme which he had so distinctly and legibly marked for them.

In this connection, and as being illustrative of that which we have just
remarked, we quote here from the sermon of Rev. Otis A. Skinner, of
Boston (having been kindly permitted to do so), delivered before his
society, relative to the decease of the subject of this biography.
These remarks are as follows:--

"His sermons were all characterized by strength. They were not pretty,
not declamatory; but noble, grand, strong. The hearer always felt as
though his arguments were unanswerable, his conclusions above dispute.
Who can gainsay that? That is unanswerable! Such has been the feeling of
thousands at the close of his sermons. I question whether there was ever
a preacher who made so many converts by his pulpit labors, as Father
Ballou. Thousands on thousands have been convinced by him; and his
converts were always those most remarkable for ability to reason, and
for hearts of benevolence. He was ingenious as well as strong. The
moment he began to open his subject, you began to be interested. You saw
so much ingenuity in his mode of reasoning, in exposing error, in
illustrating truth, that whatever you might think of his subject, you
could not refrain from listening with marked attention. It was no
uncommon thing for him to excite a smile, to move his whole
congregation; but usually that was done by some ingenious argument that
would electrify every mind present. In his preaching he was never light,
never irreverent, but always grave, serious, devout; but he was
ingenious, and his ingenuity often created a smile."

His discourses in the city generally averaged about thirty-five minutes;
but in the country, where people came many miles to hear him speak,
frequently crowding the place of worship to overflowing, and even
standing at the windows on the outside, so thronged was the house
within, he would sometimes speak from one to two hours. Inspired by the
undeviating attention of the mass of honest seekers after truth who were
before him, and incited by their eloquent countenances, in which he
could read the influence of his words, it was difficult for him to know
when to stop. At such times he was ever zealous, yet prudent, devout
without ostentation, vigorous and unyielding in his opposition to error,
but still always kind and conciliatory. He always complained that on
such occasions he could not find one-half the time he wanted, while
speaking upon the holy theme, and that minutes never flew more quickly
than under such circumstances. The power of his eloquence upon the
people at such times can be but poorly described; it must have been
witnessed to be realized and understood. Honest countenances beamed with
delight, calm and peaceful joy sat on the wrinkled brow and face of age,
the eyes of the young sought each other in sympathy, full of a realizing
sense of the riches of God's goodness. Even children were thoughtful,
and forgot the restraint that the services had put upon them. As has
been said in an extract herein, his converts were many. We do not mean
that by one discourse he accomplished this reformation in their minds;
but he removed the clouds from their mental vision, showed them the
loveliness of the gospel as it is in Christ, and by hints shrewdly
strown and arguments most potent to convince, with references beyond the
point of his discourse, he led them to study and judge for themselves,
when he had left them.

Rev. A. R. Abbott, in a discourse before his society, has expressed in
brief, and very truthfully, some of the characteristics of his style of
preaching. He says:--"His discourses were always simple, powerful,
clear, perfectly intelligible to all, yet made so, apparently, without
the least effort. You find there no attempt to carry his points by any
artifice of oratory. Everything is plain and direct. Even the most
intricate and perplexing subjects, under his treatment, gradually became
clear. His thoughts were like clear waters;--their perfect transparency
disguised their depth. When speaking upon any intricate topic, perhaps
no one ever listened to him attentively, under favorable circumstances,
without being astonished at the apparent ease with which he removed the
difficulties from his subject, and at the felicity with which all his
illustrations were chosen. Often, when his hearers have been wrought up
to an intense and painful interest by some apparently insuperable
obstacle or unanswerable objection to a point he was laboring to
establish, they have been both surprised and delighted, by the
application of some well-known truth or familiar text of Scripture, to
see the light break in upon the dark point like sunlight through a
parting cloud. And when they saw how clear the subject then appeared,
they were vexed with themselves to think that so obvious an explanation
had never occurred to them. His treatment of a subject was like the
prophet's healing the Syrian leper;--the method was so simple that its
efficacy was doubted, till its success was manifest."

Rev. A. A. Miner has kindly furnished us with the following authentic
anecdote, which is very appropriate in this connection, illustrating as
it does the magic-like power of Mr. Ballou's eloquence, and the delight
with which he was listened to by the masses, when his mission carried
him into the country.

"He had an appointment to preach," says Mr. Miner, "some years ago, in
the town of Berlin, Vt. There was residing in that town a
highly-respectable gentleman by the name of James Perly, with whom I was
personally acquainted. Mr. Perly was exceedingly anxious to hear Mr.
Ballou preach; but, unfortunately, he was so lame with the rheumatism
that he could not get into his carriage. The distance to the meeting by
the travelled way was some two miles; but a cross-way, through a piece
of wood, was much shorter. With crutches in hand, he started at an early
hour, determined, if possible, to reach the place of meeting by the
cross-way. He had not proceeded far, however,--having just entered the
wood,--when, to his great annoyance, he found himself arrested in his
progress by a large tree, lying directly across his path. To go round it
was impracticable, from the obstruction of the underbrush; to step over
it was impossible, on account of his lameness. What could he do? After
studying the problem for a time, he threw over his crutches, and,
balancing himself on the body of the tree, managed to roll himself to
the other side, and to regain his feet. At length he reached the place
of meeting, and listened with even more than his anticipated delight.
The speaker was all that he had been led to expect, in person, voice,
and power of reasoning. He was more than pleased,--he was charmed by his
doctrine. The word of divine grace found a most welcome reception in his
heart, and the very glories of the upper world seemed to possess his
soul.

"The meeting over, he wended his way homeward again; 'but whether in the
body, or out of the body, he could not tell.' As he entered his house,
every hand was upraised in astonishment; and with one voice his family
exclaimed, 'Why, Mr. Perly! where are your crutches?' Sure enough, where
were they? The eloquence which had enraptured his soul had heated the
body, and made the lame to leap for joy. He had quite forgotten his
crutches, and returned home without them!

"I give this narration," says Mr. Miner, "on the authority of a sister
of Mr. Perly, herself not a Universalist. To many persons such a story
may seem incredible; but those who are acquainted with the effects of an
intense pleasurable excitement, will find little difficulty in believing
it fully true. Few persons, sympathizing with him, could have heard Mr.
Ballou, on the occasions of his visits to the country, without being
able, from their own experience, to understand something of this
wonderful influence. The writer of this first listened to him at the New
Hampshire State Convention of Universalists, held at Walpole, in 1838;
and rarely, if ever, have I seen a man so deeply interest an audience as
he did on that occasion. Tears of joy rolled down the cheeks of
grey-haired fathers, as the hopes of the gospel burned anew in their
hearts. Such scenes are remembered with gratitude by thousands of
believers throughout New England."

A certain brother in the ministry said to the writer of these
pages,--"You are preparing a biography of your father?" We replied in
the affirmative. "Well," said he, "you have sat down at home and
listened to his preaching before his own society, and have doubtless a
true appreciation of his ability; but you should have seen him before a
body of ministering brethren, at a state or national convention. You
should have seen him there, to write truly of him. When it was announced
at such assemblies that Father Ballou would preach, we all knew what to
expect, and all reaped a harvest of rich thoughts, pure doctrine,
original arguments, and available material for our own future use in a
more limited sphere. He was not only eloquent, he was electrifying; and
while we reverenced him, we also loved him like a father." And this we
feel positive is not merely the opinion of one man, but of the order
generally.

"Would that I could renew the sights I have seen," says the Rev. Henry
Bacon, "where thousands, in a crowded and heated assembly in New
Hampshire, were held in wondering and admiring attention, as the
venerated preacher set forth the 'exceeding great and precious promises'
as exhibitive of creating and preserving Love. The riches of grace were
poured upon the souls of the people as a refreshing shower on the earth;
and hundreds of old men, who had been awakened from the nightmare of
traditional theology, or the sleep of indifference to God and his
service, listened, while the tears coursed down their furrowed cheeks,
as he renewed in their souls the raptures of the past. O never can I
forget one sermon thus delivered, when he spake to us of those who knew
God's name and would put their trust under the shadow of his wings,
which wings were stretched over time and eternity! Eloquent, was he?
Yes, if rapt attention, if profound emotion, if lasting enthusiasm and
tearful gratitude be any test of the effects of eloquence. With no
exertion, that wondrously clear and silvery voice would float over the
congregation, and the auditor who was the farthest removed from the
speaker, caught the simple words, conveying the grandest thoughts most
felicitously illustrated. There was no pretension in his oratory; he
spake right on, warming with his subject, setting up the noblest claims
for adoring obedience to God, in all his requirements, exhorting the
people to religious duty by the mercies of God."

The effect of his words, in public delivery especially, was greatly
heightened by the truly benevolent expression of his countenance, and
by his remarkably venerable appearance. It has been beautifully said of
President Kirkland, that his face was a benediction; and we have often
heard similar comparisons made by those who have known and been familiar
with Mr. Ballou. He wore his hair, white with age, parted smoothly in
the centre of the forehead, and resting behind the ears, but not long in
the neck. In a number of lithographs, engravings and miniatures, in the
possession of his family and others, the hair is represented as short,
and parted thus; but latterly he wore it long, as described above.

There was expressed in his countenance a serenity of disposition that
was peculiar to him, a philanthropy of purpose which characterized all
his dealings, and a wisdom and calm dignity that led even the stranger
to feel a degree of respect for him at once. The blamelessness of his
life and the gentleness of his disposition alone form a theme over which
memory and friendship have poured their consecration. As to the matter
of his personal manner and bearing, while he avoided the strict rules of
forced etiquette, yet he was scrupulously attentive in society to the
dictates of true politeness. His form was as straight and erect at the
age of seventy-five as at twenty.

As he advanced in years, his style of delivery grew perhaps more
subdued, but none the less distinct and impressive. He spoke perhaps
with less of the fire of zeal, yet with none the less spirit and real
effect. He could not treat of the divine love and sufferings of Christ,
or of the deep and unbounded grace of God, without evincing the warmest
feelings, and moving the audience to tears by his eloquence upon these
touching subjects. He would not unfrequently be completely overcome
himself, in dwelling upon this theme in public.

His was a noble example of a well-balanced mind, without any of that
startling, comet-like splendor, which has usually been considered as the
very light in which genius lives and moves. His faculties were all
brought into admirable harmony, and thus operated with powerful and
never-failing effect. There were no contending elements in his nature;
no struggles of ambition; no strife of penuriousness; no battling of
passion. Like the beautiful harmony of the elements of nature, his bosom
was redolent of concord. And what a worshipper he was, too, of the forms
of nature, and her mysteriously glorious works about him! There was no
object in nature so minute or so apparently unimportant but had
attractions for his scrutinizing eye. He was exceedingly fond of
flowers,--those "illumined scriptures of the prairie,"--of the rural
scenery, the lowing herds and various tenants of the grove. Often have
we heard him praise and dilate upon these, when, a mere boy, we have
travelled with him upon his various missions into the country. He was
one to

    "Find tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
    Sermons in stones, and good in everything."

"Stay for a moment," he said to us, on a certain occasion, as we were
riding through the country, and had just surmounted a high elevation,
commanding a beautiful view of the outspread plain below. It was the
closing of a clear autumnal New England day. "What a mild and holy
religion is breathed by nature in such a scene as this! How soft the
influence that steals over the senses! Though fresh from God's own hand,
and quickened by his presence, it teaches us no terror, no gloom; it
rouses no fierce passions within the heart; it is calm, meek, forgiving;
and equally for all breathing things. How hallowed and God-like are the
blissful teachings of nature!"

He gazed so long, in silence, upon the silvery Connecticut, where it
threads its course not far from Holyoke Mountain, following out the
theme of his thoughts, that we marked well what he had just said, and
remembered it. We had just risen a hill that overlooked the verdant
plains of Hadley, and the scene is as fresh to us now as though but an
hour had intervened. Such appreciations and realizations were most
natural to him; and a vein of illustration, drawn from these lovely
exhibitions of nature, will be found running through the broad meadows
of his doctrinal arguments, like a purling stream, refreshing and
vivifying the verdure of divine truth. A reference to nature in her
rural dress and belongings, as illustrative of the great plan and
purpose of God's goodness and impartiality, was a favorite custom with
him. He would draw thence so many incentives for thankfulness, such
unmistakable tokens of Omnipotent impartiality and universal love, such
powerful reasons for disbelieving the unhappy creed that imputed to a
Being, whose works are redolent of loveliness, attributes so repugnant
to the heart of his children, that few could listen unmoved,--few
refrain from outwardly evincing the realizing sense he produced in their
pliant understandings. With a full appreciation of these divine
evidences of God's goodness, we say it was most natural for him to pause
thus; and, with eyes drinking in of the spirit of the scene before us,
exclaim, as he did, that it "taught no terror, no gloom; but that its
influence was meek, forgiving, and equally for all breathing things."

By strict frugality and industry, Mr. Ballou acquired for himself a
competency, besides dividing a handsome sum of money between his
children; and in this latter respect he was somewhat original in his
mode of carrying out a disposition of his property. He chose to give to
his children while he lived, preferring to witness the pecuniary
assistance he might render to his family, and to participate in its
enjoyments in his own life-time. His means were acquired solely through
patient labor and frugality. He never enjoyed a farthing in the way of
legacy, nor by any fortunate turn of business or speculation. These
matters he never engaged in at all, and often said that he was perfectly
satisfied with a return of six per cent. for his money; and that if
others felt the same, much of misery and misfortune would be spared them
and the world at large. Some idea may be formed of the careful manner in
which he considered his responsibilities by the following facts, namely:
he never placed his name to a note, or due bill, in the whole period of
his life; never borrowed money; never kept an account at any place of
business, but always paid for that which he bought at the time of
purchasing, however large or trifling the amount; and, after his long
experience of life, he endeavored to impress upon his children that an
adherence to these rules, as far as was practicable, would be productive
to them of much good, and prevent a vast deal of trouble, and needless
anxiety of mind, in relation to secular matters.

By the different societies over which Mr. Ballou officiated as pastor,
he lost, in all, a considerable amount of money, through want of good
faith in the payment of his salary. This refers to his associations
before he came to Boston. In one instance, the sum of money thus
sacrificed by him exceeded one thousand dollars; yet he was never known
to institute a suit against any individual or society, but left them to
settle their unfaithfulness with their own consciences.

    "Some write their wrongs in marble; he, more just,
    Stooped down serene, and wrote them in the dust."

His greatly improved prospects, and increased pecuniary means, never in
the least influenced his manner of living, his habits or demeanor. These
ever continued to be characterized by the same simplicity and prudence
that marked his course from earliest manhood. At his house there was
ever the same open and free hospitality exercised; and every one, who
knows anything about the life of a settled clergyman, is aware that he
must, of necessity, have constantly about him a large number of visitors
and partakers of his hospitality. Besides which, as we have before
signified, his hands were ever open for the needy, whose wants he
delighted to supply; enjoying in return that happiness that true charity
alone can impart.

"It always appeared to me inconsistent," says Mr. Ballou, "with the
profession of a minister of the gospel, to live expensively; that is,
far beyond what is required for the necessities and comforts of life. As
the minister is supported by the people of his charge, the propriety of
his living beyond the income of his parishioners in general, seems
questionable. Moreover, it has best suited my natural taste to avoid
extravagances and superfluities."

Tupper, the erudite and truthful author of Proverbial Philosophy, has
very beautifully said,--"The choicest pleasures of life lie within the
ring of moderation." Believing thus, Mr. Ballou wrote contentment on
every dispensation of Providence that fell to his share.

The work we have in hand might be filled alone with the most sincere
eulogiums from ministering brethren, who have referred in public to the
life and character of the subject of this biography; but, in the few
which we have selected and introduced here, we have been guided by the
purpose of presenting only such as have seemed to us--knowing the facts
from long experience--to be the most truthful in the delineation of the
character and disposition of Mr. Ballou. Moreover, the reader will,
perhaps, be too often led to remember that it is a son who writes this
biography of a father; and when he can bring to bear the mind and
evidence of older and abler writers than himself, as treating upon the
subject before us, the work may be thus strengthened and enriched. In
this spirit, and under this chapter of "Domestic Characteristics," the
following extract from the discourse delivered upon this subject by Rev.
Henry Bacon is given:--

"I am not now to speak of a stranger, known only by reputation, but of
one with whom I have been familiar from my earliest childhood. The more
I attained power to judge his qualities, the more have I learned to
esteem the man, his character and ministry. He came to Boston, as pastor
of the Second Universalist Society, when I was scarcely four years old,
and though my parents were members of the First Society, yet their house
was one of his homes. The impression made in boyhood by the stately form
of Mr. Ballou,--his meekness, his speech of singular clearness,
adaptedness and wisdom, his singular temperance at the table, and his
kindness to childhood,--was never removed; and I use no strained and
forced language when I say Hosea Ballou was a great man. I say this, not
looking from a sectarian point of view, but as guided by the principles
that ought to govern us in our judgment of men, comprehensively
regarding their qualities, and what they have been to their age.

"He is a great man who is impelled to bear the new truth abroad, that,
like its Great Source, he may be 'found of those who asked not after
him;' to make the hill-side and the grove, the river shore, the barn,
the humble farmer's room, or the shadow of a great tree, his church, and
there proclaim the gospel in its wholeness, with a readiness that shows
the heart is full of the matter, and with a willingness to answer any
queries, and respond to any voice that speaks a word against the
completeness of the redemption proposed in Christ. By his keen insight
into human nature, his rare powers of logic, his unique use of words,
his intelligibility to the humblest capacity in treating of the greatest
subjects, and his profound wisdom in choosing means to reach directly
the ends desired, Hosea Ballou was a great man. In an instant he
stripped away all the show and tinsel of learned ignorance, or drove the
dart between the joints of the harness of barbarian bigotry, and laid
low the pretender. By his unshaken and majestic faith and trust; by the
steadiness with which he kept the honor of God, in the supremacy and
efficiency of the Scriptures, ever before him; and by the willingness
and capacity to receive any new application of the great principles of
the gospel, he was a great man. All this was crowned and glorified by
his personal character, by the purity of his walk and conversation, his
rare temperance amid the most solicitous temptations, and the harmony he
breathed into all his children and the rule he swayed over them; he was
a great man, abiding the last, best test of greatness, 'being such an
one as Paul the aged.'"

As will be surmised by previous remarks in this work, Mr. Ballou, in the
matter of politics, had of course his preferences of principles and of
men, and he always voted for them, besides keeping himself well read in
the most important political matters of the day, pro and con, and
weighing well in his own mind their bearing upon the true principles of
political economy; but here his interest ceased. He took no active part,
even in conversation, upon the subject, though at times he would show by
his remarks that the great principles of either party were familiar to
him. Still he always avoided, as a topic of conversation, a subject
which is so often the theme of bitter contention between those who in
all other respects are excellent friends. He never changed his political
sentiments, which, however, for very good reasons, were scarcely known,
or, at least, not intimately so, out of the family circle.

His irreproachable life was in itself one of the strongest arguments in
favor of his religion; his mild and dispassionate manner on all
occasions, his unblemished integrity and unimpeachable character,
through his whole life, rendered him universally beloved, as well as
showing a living example of the divine principles he endeavored to
inculcate in his public teachings. There is an energy of moral suasion
in a good man's life, passing the highest efforts of the orator's
genius. The visible but silent beauty of holiness speaks more eloquently
of God and duty than do the tongues of men and angels. A minister's
religious faith should be delivered to his people, not as a matter of
theoretical knowledge,--something learned in the study,--but as
something experienced. "Nothing," says Bishop Stillingfleet, "enlarges
the gulf of atheism more than the _wide passage_ which lies between the
faith and lives of men pretending to teach Christianity." Religion is
not a didactic thing, that words can impart or even silence withhold: it
is spiritual and contagious glory, a spontaneous union with the holy
spirit evinced in our daily lives and example. Those who have true
religion make it the garment worn next the heart, but, alas! too many
make a cloak of it. The most learned divine or philosopher that the
earth has ever known, though he spoke with an eloquence and wisdom near
akin to inspiration, must yet be powerless as to spiritual and godly
influence, if, at the same time that he points to wisdom's way,

    "Himself the primrose path of dalliance treads."

Hooker has very beautifully remarked, that "the life of a pious
clergyman is visible rhetoric;" and some one else, with equal truth,
that "to preach sound doctrine, and lead a bad life, is building up with
one hand and pulling down with the other." Preaching, to be available,
must be consistent.

Mr. Ballou may be said to have _lived_ the doctrine he professed, in the
strictest sense of the phrase, and to have followed the glorious example
set him by his Divine Master. His ambition was to be an imitator of the
meek and lowly Jesus.

    "His preaching much, but more his practice wrought,
    A living sermon of the truths he taught."

Touching this subject he was wont to say to his hearers:--"Brethren, I
want a doctrine that I can prove by reducing it to practice; for we are
enjoined to 'prove all things, and hold fast that which is good.' People
may go to the house of devotion, they may hear learned ministers hold
forth the doctrine of future rewards and punishments, they may admire
the beautiful oratory and flowery rhetoric in which such sentiments are
dressed, but they must leave them all behind them when they go home to
their beloved families. They can never practise the domestic virtues and
duties on these principles of doctrine. The doctrine of Jesus is a
practical one, and we can never do our duty in the family circle unless
we live and conduct according to it."

This is an example of Mr. Ballou's style of argument and of
illustration. He brought everything _home_, where all could understand
the analogy; he never went abroad to seek for illustrations, never
indulged in deep philosophical dissertations, thus hoodwinking his
hearers and marring his subject. The reader will at once be struck by
the force and truth of the remark, that, however sincerely a person may
believe the doctrine of future rewards and punishments, still, on
leaving the house where these principles are taught, he must leave them
behind him. No one, not even the most zealous supporter of such a creed,
ever attempted to practise it in his family circle. Washington Allston
has pithily said, "A man cannot lie _all over_;" so it is a fact that
he cannot be utterly wrong from top to toe; though his mind may be
deceived, and his sentiments indicate partial delusion, yet his _heart_,
ten to one, will be right. Some token of his nicely constructed nature
will turn itself into "king's evidence" against his false theories. And
thus we find men, sincere Christians at heart, who believe and
promulgate the doctrine of partial grace, all the while evincing in
their home influences and general lives, the truth of the gospel of
Christ.

When Mr. Ballou was last in New York, some one of the brethren in that
city induced him to visit the office of the American Phrenological
Journal, where his head was examined after the rules of the science, and
the following characteristics were written out by the examiner, as is
customary in such cases. Since the decease of the subject of these
memoirs, they have been made public through the journal referred to. To
many this extract will possess more than ordinary interest, and we have
therefore given it place here, under the head of personal
characteristics.


                      PHRENOLOGICAL CHARACTER.

     "His organization is very favorable to long life, good general
     health, and uniformity of mind. The vital temperament was
     originally decidedly strong. He has an amply developed chest, lungs
     and digestive apparatus, which have imparted health and prolonged
     life; and the muscular system is also fully represented. His mind
     is active, but not so much so as to prematurely exhaust his
     organization; nor is he particularly excitable. He has general
     harmony and evenness, rather than eccentricity or want of balance.
     The tone of his organization is such as to give him energy and aim
     to carry through his purposes, without friction or waste of
     strength. The size of brain is average, and the vital functions are
     sufficient to supply the exhaustion of mental action; hence he has
     been able to live within his power of sustaining mental labor for
     so long a time.

     "He is remarkable, phrenologically, for evenness of development;
     none of the organs are extreme, and he is not inclined to those
     excesses which cause eccentricity.

     "One of his leading traits arises from Adhesiveness, which gives
     attachment to, and interest in, friends.

     "He still clings to his youthful friends, and enjoys their society.
     This quality of mind enters largely into the whole tone of his
     feelings.

     "He is also kind to children, and interested in them, and quite
     successful in entertaining them, and adapting himself to them.

     "He is interested in woman, and capable of enjoying the marriage
     relations highly, especially the social, domestic relations. He is
     a strong lover of home, but lacks continuity of mind; his thoughts
     and feelings are easily diverted, although he may finish a subject
     that he commences; yet he enjoys variety in the general exercise
     of his mind.

     "His Combativeness is of the higher order, connecting with the
     reasoning and moral, rather than with the animal nature; and it
     gives him the disposition to overcome the obstacles in his way, and
     to argument rather than the quarrelling propensity.

     "He has fair energy, without any surplus, and a full degree of
     appetite, without being excessive. He values property for its uses,
     and is not selfish in money matters. He is remarkable for his
     candor, frankness, open-heartedness, truthfulness, and
     disinclination to deceive; he speaks the real sentiments of his
     mind, as far as he speaks at all. He is not suspicious, but
     confiding, and prefers to rely on the honesty of mankind rather
     than to guard himself against the dishonesty of others. He is not
     vain or showy; has merely ambition enough to stimulate him to do
     what is his duty, without any reference to publicity; but he is
     decidedly independent and self-relying.

     "He does not lean on the judgment of others, nor does he feel that
     his character depends on their opinions; he merely states his own
     opinion, and allows others to judge for themselves.

     "Firmness is another strong feature of his mind: he is uniformly
     firm, each day successively; not stubborn one day, and
     over-yielding the next, but consistently steady and persevering.

     "He is very anxious to do as he agrees, and is just as honest at
     one time as another; is consistent in his professions and
     pretensions, and has always studied to harmonize and balance his
     character, rather than to encourage any extremes.

     "He neither hopes nor fears to excess; enjoys what good there is to
     be enjoyed, and makes the best of an unfortunate occurrence. His
     mind is open to conviction, is ready to look at new things, and to
     be instructed; but is slow to believe, and requires positive
     evidence before he gives his assent. He has a marked feeling of
     worship, deference, and respect, and regard for superiority and
     sacred subjects. Few persons have naturally more of the disposition
     to worship than he.

     "His sympathies are also strong. His feelings are tender towards
     objects of distress, either mental or physical. Imagination and
     sense of beauty and perfection are decidedly strong. He is disposed
     to beautify his ideas, and make as much of them as possible,
     especially by way of elevating the idea, and giving it a refined
     direction.

     "He is not inclined to mimic and imitate others; his ways are
     peculiarly his own.

     "He is mirthful, and enjoys fun as naturally as his food, and it
     has been difficult for him to suppress the disposition to joke. His
     intellectual faculties are well balanced; the perceptive faculties
     are all large. He is quick of observation, readily forms
     conclusions from what he sees, and is very much interested in all
     classes of experiments.

     "He is disposed to make himself as much acquainted with this world
     as possible before leaving it, and is particularly inclined to
     study character and motives, and the conditions of mind. He has a
     good perception of forms, outlines, shapes and proportions, and has
     a good memory of places, localities, and the whereabouts of things.

     "He is quite particular as to order and arrangement, and must have
     everything done correctly: is precise in his style of doing his
     work, or in arranging his ideas. His memory by association is good;
     he is a very punctual man in his engagements, and careful not to
     consume the time of another. He is never in the way of others, and
     does not go where he is not wanted; and, from diffidence and fear
     that he may intrude himself, he does not go where he is really
     desired. He is copious in the use of language, yet is not wordy;
     his language is direct and to the point. He has a clear mind,
     adapted to analytical logic, and drives as straight to a conclusion
     as the bee does to a flower; yet he reasons more by association and
     analogy than from cause to effect.

     "He readily sees the adaptation of one thing to another; he seldom
     makes enemies, or fails to perceive the character and motives of
     others; is more successful than most persons in making friends,
     because he knows how to adapt himself to others, and make himself
     agreeable. He says and does things in a human-nature way.

     "The six leading traits of his character are,--

     "1st. His affection and friendship.

     "2d. Independence and self-reliance.

     "3d. Honesty, justice and circumspection.

     "4th. His devotion and respectful disposition.

     "5th. Sympathy and interest in the welfare of others, and general
     philanthropy of spirit; and,

     "Lastly, His practical common sense, and system, and availability
     of intellect."

Mr. Ballou was once asked, in a most triumphant manner, by a religious
opponent, in the presence of a large number of individuals, "If your
doctrine be true, sir, how is it that it has never been preached before?
Here in the nineteenth century it would seem to be a new discovery." He
replied, in his usual calm and effective manner, "Friend, it has been
taught by two eloquent witnesses at least, so long as the sun has shone
and the rain fallen on mankind. These faithful agents of Almighty love
have ever taught the doctrine of impartial grace to all men; they
dispense their blessings on rich and poor, high and low, and thus bear
witness of the character of Him who sends them."

We well remember being present on a certain occasion when an intimate
friend of Mr. Ballou's asked him,--"Do you not think that the life of a
clergyman is far from being a desirable one, when you consider all the
sorrow and grief that the discharge of the duty attendant upon the
profession necessarily makes one acquainted with?" He replied, evincing
the peculiar light that was ever emitted from his eyes when he spoke
earnestly, "Were I to live my life over again, knowing what I now so
well know, by more than half a century of experience, I would choose
again the same profession I have followed so long. The humble and
faithful servant of Christ enjoys an inward happiness that none but his
Master may know. There is no employment more fitting for the human
heart, more ennobling to the nature of man, than the study of God's
word, and none from which so great and reliable happiness may be
derived." These evidences of his experience were treasured by many who
were accustomed to seek his society for the benefit and pleasure of his
conversation. The brethren throughout the order, and indeed every one
who knew him, seemed actuated towards him by a spirit which the
universal title he bore served to indicate; they always called him
_Father_ Ballou. I do not think there was one minister in the numerous
order of Universalists who did not acknowledge his preeminence in
original talent, wonderful reasoning faculties, and unblemished moral
excellence.

As illustrating this fact, we will let one of these brethren's remarks
upon this subject speak for us here, by again quoting from the eulogy of
Rev. Otis A. Skinner, delivered before his society in this city.

"But he was not merely our leader to the promised land; he entered it
with us, and for more than half a century he continued with us, standing
first in our esteem and affection, honored and beloved, with no effort
to obtain authority, and no ambition to be a leader. The place which he
occupied was voluntarily assigned to him; it was given in consequence of
his true heart, his profound judgment, his undeviating attachment to
principle, his entire freedom from art and management. Envy hurled at
him its arrows, but they fell harmless at his feet; ambition sought to
rise above him, but it sought in vain. There he stood like a father at
the head of his family, content to exercise the sway which he obtained
by his superior judgment, his commanding talents, and his devoted
services. He never dictated; he was never impatient when opposed; he was
never unkind to those who differed from him; he comprehended fully the
true idea of religious liberty, and in no instance exhibited a desire to
act the Pope. We doubt whether, in all the history of the church, an
instance can be found in which a minister has had so high a rank in his
sect, and yet manifested a less desire to bear rule.

"Nothing is more natural than for old men to oppose departures from
their measures. All sects have had those who bitterly denounced every
step taken beyond what they themselves had gone; but our honored father,
when he saw movements for progress, when he saw new men proposing new
plans of operation, placed himself on a level with the humblest, freely
discussed the plan, and yielded with cheerfulness when convinced. Not
only did he yield, but held his mind open to conviction, and on, several
points he came in and worked faithfully for what at first he hesitated
to sanction. He was not like some advanced in years, ever looking to
the past, and talking as though all wisdom was concentrated in it; he
believed that new discoveries were yet to be made; that progress was a
law of the true church, and that measures must be suited to the times.
Hence the most radical, those most desirous for reform, never felt that
he stood in the way: for there was not a reform which engaged the heart
of the philanthropist that did not have his sanction. He was a modern
man, and lived in the present time, as much, almost, as the youngest in
our ministry. _Let us go forward_, was his motto."

Such was the universal meed of honor that was accorded to him by his
brethren in the ministry.




CHAPTER XII.

MR. BALLOU AS A CONTROVERSIALIST.


As passage after passage of scripture, which had heretofore been
misapplied, was satisfactorily explained by his clear and far-seeing
mind, thousands, who had before believed in a partial faith, were
brought to a knowledge of Christ and the gospel. Mysteries were made
plain, and dark ways were lighted, and the veil was thus removed from
the eyes of the prejudiced, or those upon whom the force of education
and early association had exercised supreme sway in matters of religion.
"I have often been led to wonder," says Mr. Ballou, "forcible as is my
own realizing sense of the evidence of impartial grace, that brethren,
brought up and educated in a religion so diametrically opposite, should
yield so readily, as they often do, to the arguments which we present to
them, and not unfrequently being won to our belief and service with the
least exertion on our own part. The reason of this is, that there are
some independent minds, that boldly think for themselves; that
acknowledge no blind obedience to the dogmas of the church, when those
tenets of faith desecrate the rules of reason and justice. The very fact
that it seems to be a part of the faith of partialists to give blind
credence to the declarations of the church, and to consider it an actual
sin to question the assertions of the minister relative to the
signification of the Bible, has done much to keep the minds of men in
darkness. My own youthful condition was an humble example of this fact.
It was only by thinking for myself,--by receiving nothing without
evidence,--that I at last came to that knowledge of Christ and the
gospel which has since been to my life such a sustaining and precious
legacy."

But he was called upon to encounter much opposition in the advancements
which he made, and in latter years, perhaps, quite as often from
professed Universalists as from those who openly opposed the doctrine he
taught. There are many, even at this day, who seem to avoid the subject
of future punishment, and who will not speak out openly whether they
believe or disbelieve it. Such talk vaguely of policy, and the propriety
of preaching _moral_ sermons instead of doctrinal ones, which argument
is, in itself, a most inexcusable aspersion upon the gospel. What kind
of a faith must that be which will not bear to be preached? This
singular idea seems to have extended, in some degree, to the preachers
themselves, who have, in many instances, acquiesced in the caprice of
their hearers upon the subject, or, at least, that portion of them who
reason in this way upon doctrinal matters.

The true reason that doctrinal sermons are decried by some of the
ministers is, that they afford no opportunity for them to introduce,
perhaps, some style or course of reading that inclination may have led
them to adopt. True scriptural teaching calls for sound argument, and
substantial treatises upon the word, and is a strong test of mental
capacity; whereas such sermons as are too often delivered to the people
run upon miscellaneous themes, that were more properly left for
newspaper or magazine articles, and are of a school of composition that
a shallow brain may become a proficient in. We are most forcibly
reminded in this connection of the words of a certain English bishop,
who was travelling in this country a few years since, and who made the
remark, that ministers here take a text from the Bible and preach about
railroads, astronomy, statuary and painting; but that in his country
they not only select their texts from the Bible, but they make its
doctrines and principles the subject of their discourses. That wise old
divine, Jeremy Taylor, found it necessary in his day to chide these
fashionable preachers. "They entertain their hearers," said he, "with
gaudy tulips and useless daffodils, and not with the bread of life and
medicinal plants, growing on the margin of the fountains of salvation."

The true doctrine of the Scriptures is the very fountain-head of all
morality, and those who talk so much about preaching moral sermons and
avoiding doctrinal ones, should pause and consider well their own
inconsistency. Mr. Ballou's sermons were strictly doctrinal ones, ay,
emphatically so; but they were none the less moral also. The principles
are synonymous, as must be evident to any thoughtful mind. That was
excellent advice given to a pious son by Rowland Hill, to preach nothing
_down_ but the devil, and nothing _up_ but Jesus Christ.

The pulpit in these modern times has been sadly perverted by some in all
denominations; its legitimate and holy purpose has been lost sight of by
many; and any predominating hobby of its occupant is rode rough-shod
over the heads of the congregation, to the almost entire detriment of
his usefulness as a religious teacher. They dress up the tenets of faith
in modern livery to please the popular taste, and, perhaps, their own
vanity, forgetting that "religion helmeted is religion no more." The
minister seems, too, often thoughtless of the fact, that while he
preaches, Almighty God is one of his hearers; the various _isms_ of the
times are made to take the place of holy writ, and sermons are
overcharged with abstruse questions and transcendental ideas; or perhaps
so labored with rhetorical flourishes and ornaments, that the hearer,
who seeks to be led by the straight and narrow way, finds himself losing
sight of the grand purpose and end of wisdom, while he tarries by the
way-side to admire the gaudy-colored flowers that line the road.

"Eloquence, to be profitable, must come from the heart," says Mr.
Ballou; "none other will prove effectual. I have heard men speak in
public, yea, in the sacred pulpit, with an apparent effect that was
evinced in every hearer; but when I turned away from the temple whither
we had come up to worship the living God, and was led to review the word
as spoken to that people, I could only recall the minister's excellent
oratory, his faultless gesticulation, his admirable _performance_. Alas!
what great truth had he illustrated, whom had he glorified save himself,
whom enlightened as to the unbounded grace and goodness of God? And then
I have prayed that Heaven would turn the noble endowments with which it
had blessed that brother to a more worthy use, and fill his heart with
that meekness and self-sacrificing spirit that is as a sweet and
acceptable incense before the throne of Jehovah."

Ministers who follow this style of rhetorical and flowery preaching are
not unfrequently pronounced very eloquent, and indeed are able to fix
the attention, and much to interest an audience. But it is unprofitable
eloquence; like the cypress, which is great and tall, yet bears no
fruit. Pope has truthfully said,--"Flowers of rhetoric in serious
discourses are like the blue and red flowers in corn, pleasing to the
eye, but prejudicial to the harvest!" Keeping at the greatest distance
from such errors, Mr. Ballou looked upon man as an intellectual and
responsible being; believing that truth is the food for that intellect
to thrive upon, and keeping the whole range of man's natural duties
before him, his discourses were weighty, not in decorations for the
fancy, but in sound reasoning upon the holy text, and in impressive and
useful practical sentiment. This was his principle of theology, and,
moved by such feelings, he never wasted time

    "In sorting flowers to suit a fickle taste."

Or, as the editor of the Christian Freeman says, relative to this trait
of his character:--"It was not so much his concern to be a man-pleaser,
as to be a teacher and benefactor of men. Hence he would grapple with
the errors of men, and take them out of the way; he would explain and
elucidate the Scriptures; he would appeal to the reason and the moral
sense of the people; and all in the most kind and magnanimous spirit.
Thus he excited the active opposition of the conservative and
creed-bound, elicited the earnest inquiry of multitudes of the people,
and 'filled the world with his doctrine.'"

"He lived faithful to his own convictions of truth," says Rev. W. A.
Drew, of the Gospel Banner, "never sacrificed a principle to the love of
popularity, stood by his integrity as resolutely as ever martyr stood at
the stake, brought no reproach upon his cause, but lived in the
adornment of his profession, and died consistently with his life."

We have felt disposed to dwell somewhat upon this point, and to speak
the more feelingly upon it, for the reason that this was one of the most
frequent objections brought against Mr. Ballou's style of preaching, by
those who found fault at all; and here we are fortunate in being able to
give his own words and views upon the subject. It is true, the extract
which we give does not contemplate the subject in precisely the same
phase as that in which we have considered it, yet it has its bearing.
The objection was brought, of course, mainly by those who, although they
believed, or partially believed, the doctrine of universal salvation,
were yet too timid to acknowledge it. The argument is brought home at
once to our understanding and earnest conviction by the simplicity and
force of the illustration.

"We have often been asked why we preach the doctrine we profess, as this
doctrine maintains that our Creator has made the eternal state secure to
all men, and that the happiness of that state rests on the divine favor,
and not on any influence which we may exercise in this life. No doubt it
seems unaccountable to our opposers that we should argue so much, preach
so much, and write and publish so much, when, after all, we do not
pretend that our eternal state of happiness depends on these exertions.
They do not see why, allowing our doctrine true, it would not be good
policy to say nothing about it. Then we might enjoy the esteem of the
pious of all denominations, and be regarded by the religious community,
avoid all the censure that is now put upon us, and still enjoy our
opinion in silence. Now that our conduct in this respect is not so
unaccountable as our opposers seem to think, a few remarks will serve to
show.

"Suppose my acquaintance with my earthly father to be such as to give me
the most favorable opinion of his whole character, so that I view him as
one of the best husbands, one of the most provident and kind fathers,
and a man of uprightness in all his conduct, against whom nothing in
truth can be spoken. Suppose, under these circumstances, being full of
love and reverence for my father, I hear him evilly spoken of, and that
too by those who profess to be acquainted with him,--yea, by those to
whom people in general look for information, and in whose testimony the
most of people are disposed to place confidence. They go so far in this
evil speaking as to represent the parent, whom I love, as guilty of acts
of injustice and cruelty which deny him the smallest share of humanity.

"What am I to do in this case? I have proof in my hands to stop the
mouths of these evil reporters, and I can do it effectually. To be sure,
I must exert myself in the use of the means which are at my disposal,
and I shall no doubt incur the displeasure of my father's traducers. All
this is, of course, to be expected. But here I am told that almost all
the people composing the community at large, are really of the opinion
of those who thus speak evil of my father; and that, even if I knew
these reports to be false, I had better say nothing about the matter, as
it will only bring me into discredit. Suppose I should be weak enough to
hesitate, and even shrink from the defence of my venerable father's
character, should I not feel justly ashamed of myself? What could be
more base in me than silence and inaction?

"Look again, and see how such a case would be aggravated by
circumstances. My father told me that these traducers would speak evil
of him, and on this very account put into my possession every kind of
evidence which is necessary to refute all these evil reports, and
charged me, by the dear relation in which we stood to each other, and
the love which we have reciprocated, to be faithful in the defence of
his character. Shall I be silent? Shall I be afraid that those who
despise my father will also despise me? Shall I purchase their smiles at
the expense of a character which is dearer to me than my life? What
would it avail to urge in this case, that almost every one in the
community would be against me? Is not this circumstance my
justification? Surely; for, if people did not believe the false reports
before mentioned, there would be no use of disproving them.

"But the subject admits of argument still more forcible. Suppose those
who speak evil of my father are my brethren, and his own beloved
children; and suppose, furthermore, that all who are deceived by this
evil speaking are so likewise. We now have the whole difficulty in our
family. My brethren are deceived concerning my father's character and
conduct; he has never done those base things which they think he has.
But they really believe these errors, and are tormented day and night
with fear that they and their children will fall under the dreadful
scourge of our father's wrath! Now, as I know that all their notions are
false, and that it is a fact that the whole family are abundantly
provided for, day by day, by the kindness and love of our father, can I,
under these circumstances, be justified in not making even an effort to
convince them of their errors? Here we see the honor of our father, the
cause of truth and justice, all unite in calling upon me to open the
evidence which our father has put within my hands for this purpose,--to
give the knowledge of the truth to those who need it. With all these
matters forcibly impressed upon my heart, which I have given to you in
this simple form, how can I justify myself in doing otherwise than I do,
humbly endeavoring at all times to dispel the cloud of error that
partialists have contrived to throw about the received idea of our
Father in heaven,--how can I reconcile it to my own heart to avoid
doctrine, and preach aught else to the people while they starve for
truth?"

Mr. Ballou was declared to be aggressive, in his spiritual warfare, as
well as defensive; and so he was. Every great reformer must be so; every
one that has left a worthy title to that name has done likewise. With a
great truth to promulgate, with new light to diffuse, with a subtle
enemy to encounter, it would not have been enough for him to take a
position and hold it; the war must be carried into the enemy's country,
and the white cross of truth must be made to surmount the loftiest
points in the castles of error, and to float over the banners of
infidelity and partialism. And this was his mode of warfare against
bigotry. He spared neither himself nor the common enemy; his standard
was reared everywhere, even in the very citadel of his religious
opponents; and, strong in the gospel truths he advocated and trusted in,
their arrows of wrath, steeped in the poison of superstition, found no
unguarded point in his armor of gospel mail, but fell harmless to the
earth, or more frequently rebounded to the harm of those who had sent
them. His warfare against error was indeed aggressive; he seized upon
every weak point, and never failed to thrust home. "I call God to
witness," he says, "I feel no enmity towards any name, denomination or
sect, under heaven; but I have a certain object in view which comes in
contact with their errors."

Again he says:--

"In all the statements which I have made of the doctrinal ideas of
others, I have been careful to state no more than what I have read in
authors, or heard contended for in preaching and conversation; and if I
have, in any instance, done those ideas any injustice, it was not
intended.

"The reason," he continues, "why I have not quoted any author, or spoken
of any denomination, is, I have not felt it to be my duty nor
inclination to write against any name or denomination in the world; but
my object has been, what I pray it ever may be, to contend against
error, wherever I find it, and to receive truth and support it, let it
come from what quarter it may. For the sake of ease, however, in
writing, I have reasoned with my _opponent_, _opposer_ or _objector_,
meaning no one in particular, but any one who uses the arguments and
states the objections which I have endeavored to answer.

"It is very probable that some may think me too ironical, and in many
instances too severe on what I call error. But I find it very difficult
to expose error, so as to be understood by all, without carrying, in
many instances, my arguments in such a form as may not be agreeable to
those who believe in what I wish to correct. I confess I should have
been glad to have written, on all my inquiries, so as not to have
displeased any, but to have pleased all, could I have done it and
accomplished my main design; but this, I was persuaded, would be
difficult. I have, therefore, paid particular attention to nothing but
my main object, depending on the goodness of my reader to pardon what
may be disagreeable, in manner or form, as inadvertencies." But all he
did and said was in the spirit of the true Christian. He fought against
error,--not against those who walked in the ways of error; it was a
creed he decried, not his fellow-men;--and the battles he won were far
more glorious than the blood-stained fields that follow in the train of
mortal warfare.

Let us add that the triumphs of truth are the more glorious for being
bloodless, deriving their brightest lustre from the number of the saved,
instead of the slain. Personally he could have no enemy,--he would not
have recognized any human being as such; but against error he waged a
most open and resolute warfare, throughout the entire course of his
life.

In May, 1841, the society over which Mr. Ballou had so long held sole
ministration voted to engage a colleague to assist him in the duties of
pastor, and the Rev. T. C. Adam was engaged by them in this capacity. It
was understood between Mr. Ballou and his assistant that each should
preach on certain Sabbaths; so that when Mr. Ballou did not preach in
his own desk, he might be able to answer some of the constant and
increasing demands upon his services from the neighboring towns.
Although at this time seventy-three years of age, he preached every
Sabbath, frequently delivering three discourses during the day and
evening. Mr. Adam was not long attached to the society; but other
ministering brethren, at the desire of the society, assisted from time
to time in the pulpit. From May, 1842, to May, 1844, Rev. H. B. Soule, a
pure-minded and eloquent brother in the ministry, was the junior pastor,
exercising a most godly influence by his teachings, and making in this
period a host of sincere friends. In January, 1846, Rev. E. H. Chapin
was installed as junior pastor, which situation he filled to universal
satisfaction and continued usefulness for some two years; when, having
resigned his connection with the society, Rev. A. A. Miner was
unanimously invited to become the colleague of Mr. Ballou, and was duly
installed May 31, 1848; retaining his situation until the decease of the
pastor, Mr. Ballou, whose desk he now fills.

The connection of these several brethren with Mr. Ballou personally was
of the most agreeable character, friendly, and profitable to their
mutual spiritual interests. But, without appearing to reflect in the
least upon the other associates in this connection, concerning this
latter brother's union with the subject of this biography, we should be
unfaithful did we not refer to it in the terms it merits, and should
fail to do that which Mr. Ballou himself would have desired. For more
than four years the most uninterrupted and delightful intercourse
continued between them. No son could have been more considerate, kind,
and assiduous, no father more affectionate and grateful, than in this
case. Mr. Ballou has often declared, in our hearing and in his family
circle, the earnest friendship he realized,--nay, the affection which
entirely filled his heart towards one in whom he found no guile, and who
seemed sent by a kind Providence to smooth the declining steps of his
professional career. It is hardly necessary to add here, that this
feeling was shared in by every member of Mr. Ballou's extensive family.

Rev. Henry Bacon says, relative to the period when associate pastors
were connected with him:--"Mr. Ballou was out of his element in
inactivity, and therefore he travelled extensively in many of the
states, especially the New England, 'preaching the glad tidings of the
kingdom of God.' Many feared that he was thus perilling his fame, going
forth after the threescore years and ten were passed; but he wisely used
the labors of his years of full strength, and seemed to renew his youth
as he entered into the expositions of the Divine Word. I never heard
more enthusiastic encomiums on his preaching than within the few last
years; and there was power in the very aspect of the old man's form, as
he stood in the sacred desk, in an old age that was indeed 'frosty but
kindly,'--with a winning and impressive venerableness, full of the
raptures of early years, and casting a beautiful shadow in the way of
those who needed such a guidance to the realms of immortality and
glory."

Not unfrequently, when some of his old friends were called home to their
God in advance of him,--men who had perhaps been converted in their
youth by his teachings, and felt thus strongly endeared to him by the
ties of friendship and spiritual interest,--they would in their last
moments express an earnest desire to have him perform the last ceremony
over their mortal remains. When this was the case, notwithstanding his
advanced age, and even at times in the depth of winter, he always
complied with their desires.

When he had finally made up his mind to the performance of anything, and
was satisfied that it was his duty to do it, nothing in the shape of
ordinary impediments could possibly prevent him from carrying out his
purpose. A case of this kind occurred, for instance, in the winter of
1845, during one of the most severe storms that had been experienced in
this region for years. Mr. Ballou, with the snow of seventy-six winters
upon his head, persevered in accomplishing and performing one of these
Christian deeds of kindness on the occasion of the death of Col. Pierce,
of Gloucester, Mass., a man widely known for his goodness of heart, and
as a warm believer and advocate of universal salvation.

He seemed to have no dread or fear of the elements at all, or of
personal exposure to them; and let the storm rage as severely as it
might, he always kept his appointment, and to the very last was never in
the habit of riding to the place of worship, but walked, in all weather,
in sunshine or in rain. He retained his physical faculties in the same
remarkable degree of preservation as was the case with his mental
endowments. His hearing, up to the last week of his life, never
perceptibly declined; and in his funeral discourse Mr. Miner
says:--"Though the weight of more than fourscore years was upon him, his
vigor was scarcely abated, and his unassisted sight enabled him to read
a Bible of fine print with ease." His step was firm, and his strength
permitted him to walk from one extreme of the city to another, even to
the last time he left his house. The simple deduction from these facts
is, that he was never guilty of excess, or of the abuse of those
faculties which a kind Providence had bestowed upon him in such
perfection.

It was his practice to pray most earnestly with the sick, to whose
bedside he was constantly being called. We would that every reader of
these pages might once have seen him on such a mission of holy
consolation. His step was so quiet and noiseless in the sick room, his
expression of countenance so peaceful and hope-inspiring, his words so
gentle and so redolent of heavenly assurance, that a spell of silence
and peace seemed to surround all things. In prayer with him, "that key
which opes the gates of heaven," did the sick and dying seek for
confidence and consolation in their trying moments.

    "----In his duty prompt at every call,
    He watched and wept, he prayed and felt, for all."

We have been present when, "beside the bed where parting life was laid,"
with his voice pitched to a low, soft cadence, and the sick one's hand
held gently within his own, he has breathed such heaven-inspired
language of peace, held forth the cherished promises of Christ, and
shown the divine character of our Heavenly Father in its true light so
clearly, yet so mildly and persuasively, that a smile of contentment
would light up the pallid features of the sufferer, giving token of the
same light of hope shining within his soul, and leaving an impression on
the hearts of those who knelt with him in that presence never to be
effaced. O! it is a glorious mission thus to be the herald of peace and
good will to the struggling soul at its last moments,--thus to pass it
over, as it were, in confidence to God who gave it!

Often have we heard it said, "I had rather hear Father Ballou pray than
any other person; it seems almost impossible not to follow him in every
thought and expression." The truth is, his whole heart was in the
prayer; he felt what he said; he humbled himself in sincerity before the
throne of Jehovah; while the easy and spontaneous flow of devotional
language that fell from his lips was calculated to charm the ear of the
listener, and lead him to nearer communion with the omnipotent Being
whom he heard so sincerely addressed. His prayers were void of that
unpleasant hesitancy of speech which unfortunately too often
characterizes the delivery of ministers in this exercise. His effort
proved one smooth and liquid flow of devotional thoughts, from a soul
fully baptized in the love of God. On such occasions, the altar of his
heart seemed lighted, and it burned pure and bright before the throne of
his Father in heaven. The immense power of prayer can hardly be
overrated, or its real influence upon our minds properly conceived of,
when uttered in such a manner as we have described. It then becomes the
peace of our struggling spirit, the rest of our care, the calm of our
tempest.

It was thus with all his religious exercises. He never failed to impress
the hearer with his own sincerity, and to imbue his spirit with a
devotional feeling that brought with it refreshing influence and
vivifying hope.

His devotedness to his profession, his untiring zeal in the cause which
he advocated, his frequent self-sacrificing exertions in its behalf,
were the constant theme of his brethren in the ministry. His
never-varying and earnest pursuit of his grand object,--that of
convincing the world of God's impartial love to all mankind,--his
perfect reliance on an overruling Providence, his perfect faith in the
omnipotence of truth and virtue, were all so ardently realized and
manifested in his heart and dealings with his fellow-men, as to be the
remark of all who knew him. His own experience had taught him to place
the fullest reliance upon the Divine goodness, for it had strangely
supported him through adversity, and had carried him through many dark
trials, triumphantly supporting him amidst discouragements which must
otherwise have inevitably overwhelmed a less confiding spirit.

It was a most extraordinary circumstance for him to miss a single
Sabbath from church; and we do not think this occurred a score of times
up to his seventy-ninth year. The weather, however violent, either in
town or country, as we have before remarked, never prevented him from
attending to his professional appointments. Even in physical illness he
never faltered, and has more than once fainted in the desk from bodily
weakness, caused by attending to his services at church when physically
unable to do so. We are forcibly reminded here of a portion of a letter
from Rev. H. B. Soule, then colleague with Mr. Ballou, to Rev. Stephen
R. Smith. Both of these brethren, whose light burned so bright and
lovely at that time, were called home by their Maker before this elder
servant in their Master's vineyard.

"You will want to hear a word of our Father in Israel. He continues in
good health for a man seventy-three years old; he preaches yet as strong
as most men at forty. Nothing but death will ever bring rest to his
labors. Most men, at his age, would sit down, and in dreamy idleness or
mere social converse wait their call. Not so with him; his God-given
mission will not be finished till his lips are sealed forever. He will
preach as long as he can stand; and as long as he does preach his
preaching will be reverenced. Preach as long as he can stand! yes, and
longer! When that aged frame, pangless and cold, sleeps in the grave;
when that voice, eloquent so long with 'good tidings of great joy,'
shall be hushed on earth, then will Father Ballou preach as he never did
before. His life, with its sainted virtues, its noble toil, its
Christian zeal, will be a sermon,--how thrilling, how divine, they will
know who read it. May it be long ere it is written! God bless him in his
old days, and sanctify his example to the young servant who stands
beside him!"

The young brother who thus wrote spoke most truly. He studied well the
character of him with whom he was associated; he realized the present
effect of his words, and the future influence they must inevitably
exercise. "His life," says the junior pastor, "when that voice shall be
hushed upon earth, will preach as he never did before." That time has
now come; we now realize this period referred to. "Though dead, he yet
speaketh." Full of honors and of years, he has lain him down to sleep
his last sleep; but he will still preach to us as eloquently as ever,
perhaps with increased influence, through the memory of his pure and
godly life, and the power of the works he has left behind. "By the world
he will be remembered as the apostle of Universalism," says T. A.
Goddard, the superintendent of his Sabbath-school, in his address to the
school, "the advocate of the paternal character of God; and he will
speak to men as of old, when he charged them to cast away their creeds
and superstitions, and to search the Scriptures for themselves. To his
people he will speak whenever they enter this temple, reminding them of
the many years he dwelt with them in peace, and of the glorious truths
that have dropped from his lips. To _us_ he will speak, with his
benignant eye, as often as we enter this room, telling us, in the
language of the apostle, 'Beloved, let us love one another; for love is
of God.' This theme--the love of God--was, indeed, one which he
delighted to dwell upon; and with what unction would he treat it in all
its length and breadth!" Yea, though his personal work be ended, yet the
influence of his life-long labors will be perpetuated for centuries.

Mr. Ballou was particularly remarkable for his punctuality, and always
took precaution that no matter, of whatever description, should be
delayed by him. This was a point upon which he was always exceedingly
tenacious. Often have we heard him say that punctuality is not merely a
duty that we owe to others, but absolutely a duty to ourselves, and one
of the most important principles that can be adopted and observed in
every and all relations of life; and upon this belief he ever acted. If
he had an engagement to proceed to any of the neighboring towns to
preach, or was about to commence a journey of any considerable length,
which was very often the case, he always allowed a reasonable period of
time to _spare_ at the place of starting, and took good precaution that
he should never find it necessary to hurry in any emergency. In short,
he made it a strict and abiding principle to be _punctual_ in every
case, important or comparatively otherwise. This was one reason why he
was enabled to accomplish so much,--the proper division of time, and
adherence to the appointed period for each specific purpose, giving him
great command of his resources. Thus it has been said of him that he
seemed completely independent of time and place, and so it would almost
appear.

Burning with a constant desire to be about his Master's business, he
could not remain idle for a moment when he realized that he might be
profitably employed to the end of promulgating and enforcing the
religion he taught. As we have before said, personal convenience or
comfort were not taken into consideration at all; he was ever ready,
ever willing, to respond promptly at each call; but so numerous were
these, that he was obliged to adopt the principle of supplying the
society first who came to him first, and those persons who read our
denominational papers will have noticed that his appointments were
frequently announced, up to the very last, for weeks in advance. The
good that he undoubtedly accomplished in these itinerant missions must
have been incalculable. Realizing that he could occupy but an hour or so
in a place, he usually took up some prominent point of theology, and, by
his masterly handling of the subject, cleared its questionable character
entirely from the hearer's mind; and thus having gained one step before
them which would impart a degree of confidence in his faith and general
mode of explanation, he would then go over a most extensive field of
faith, pointing out features here and there, and the props that should
be raised to sustain this portion and that, and leaving the minds of the
people, at last, strongly impressed with a system of theology that they
might themselves understandingly pursue and reason upon, taking for a
groundwork or platform that which he had clearly elucidated to their
minds as the true fundamental basis of the gospel of Christ.

In reference to his frequent travels about the country, we would that it
were possible to obtain more of the numerous incidents, so illustrative
and characteristic, that used so constantly to occur to him. One
anecdote strikes us at this moment, which is not without its bearing, as
it relates to his power for repartee, or rather, we should say, his
ability to turn the most familiar subjects into argumentative use and
advantage.

When it is remembered that Mr. Ballou's belief was that salvation is
_the process_ of making people happy, the point of the following
anecdote will be appreciated. It happened, on one of his short
excursions in the neighboring country, that he stopped at a public
house, where he had occasion to pass through a room which a woman was
about to engage in cleaning. She had heard that he was at the house,
and, being of a different faith, she determined to ask him, if an
opportunity offered, just one single question, which, in her simplicity,
she conceived to be perfectly unanswerable by those who believed in the
doctrine Mr. Ballou advocated. As he came in, she began:--"Your name is
Ballou, I believe, sir?"--"Yes, madam," said he, "my name is
Ballou."--"I'm told that you preach," said the woman, "that all mankind
are going to be saved."--"Yes," replied he, "I do."--"Well, Mr. Ballou,"
continued she, "do you believe they will be saved without first becoming
perfectly holy? Do you believe they will be saved _just as they are_?"
He looked at her mop. "What are you going to do with that mop?" he
asked.--"Why, sir," replied she, "I'm going to mop up the floor."--"Are
you going to mop up the floor," he asked, "before it becomes perfectly
clean? Are you going to mop it up _just as it is_?"

Could a more happily conceived answer have been given to the woman, if
hours had been consumed in its preparation? We opine not; and herein the
reader will observe the instantaneous and lightning-like operation of
Mr. Ballou's mind.

His conversational powers were most remarkable,--remarkable because ever
tempered with such a fund of logical clear-sightedness, such profound
acumen, and such convincing argument upon the topic under discussion;
then we have to add to this the effect of his speech, so distinct and
impressive. Hazlitt's remark of Coleridge, that he was an "excellent
talker,--very,--if you let him start from no premises and come to no
conclusion," would in no way apply to the subject of these memoirs; for,
at the outset of Mr. Ballou's conversation, you would at once divine the
end he aimed at, and would only be surprised at the velocity with which
you found him leading you to the desired result, always established in
his own mind, though he addressed you with the calm and collected
expression that was a second nature to him. No mountain of error seemed
too lofty for him to surmount, with giant strides and unbroken strength;
and you would find his white flag of truth waving from its summit, and
yourself breathing freer and deeper at the consummation of the rough
ascent, before you had fairly found time to realize the power of reason
necessary to surmount the rugged obstacles of the path. And once
elevated above the murky haze of error, his descent with you again to
the lowlands and plains of every-day life was as easy and graceful as
his ascent had been majestic and lofty.

Often, in private conversation with those who had come to his own
fireside to meet him, he was most efficacious. In the grandeur of his
conception, the glory of his theme, and the unequalled sincerity with
which he advocated it, his soul would seem to expand, his eyes to kindle
in the expression to a surprising brilliancy, his lips and countenance
seemed like those of one inspired, while you would have been almost awed
at the man, had not his theme so much more power over your heart. But,
having uttered such language as few could frame, having challenged your
admiration and wonder by the adaptedness of every word, and the
conviction that he forced upon you, he relapsed again into the quiet,
peaceable, domestic soul that he was, and you would seem to look around
instinctively to behold the spirit which had so entranced your faculties
but a moment before, it seeming impossible that it was he who sat so
quietly beside you.

Mr. Ballou's reading was confined almost entirely to sacred history,
and, comparatively speaking, he consulted little else, though he was
well versed on all general subjects, and he carefully perused at least
one daily newspaper regularly. We remember to have asked him, at a late
period of his life, why he did not vary his reading somewhat from the
great theme of divinity, arguing that it might afford some relief to his
mind, and be of both mental and physical benefit to him, by somewhat
relaxing the constant exercise of his brain. He answered us in the words
of Milton,--"The end of learning is to know God, and out of that
knowledge to love him, and to venerate him;" adding, that this was the
great actuating purpose of his labors and study; in short, the being,
end and aim, of his existence. "That which seems to you to be labor,"
said he, "is to me as refreshing recreation. No course of reading could
afford me the pleasure and delight that I find in that which has engaged
me, heart and soul, for more than half a century."

His whole library did not exceed three hundred volumes, but these were
of a character that particularly indicated the nature of his mind and
pursuits, being well worn by constant use, and relating to such subjects
as might be supposed to occupy and interest him. His thorough
acquaintance with the Scriptures was almost unprecedented, and he was
never at fault as to any passage or quotation from its wealth of
knowledge. It was the book he had studied more than all others put
together; nor was there any passage, in the whole of the sacred record,
which had been made the theme of controversy or misunderstanding, that
he had not also made the subject of careful study and exposition.

Every unoccupied moment was given to mental exercise upon the subject
nearest to his heart. We have seen him thus occupied often in the
street, when all the turmoil and bustle of life passed him by unheeded.
On this peculiarity, Mr. Bacon says, in the eulogy before referred
to:--"He wasted no power in frivolity, but as he walked the streets he
seemed to be unaffected by the crowd about him, meditating some new
utterance of the truth. I remember being amused, and yet impressed, by
beholding him, in my youth, walking along with his head bent, and his
lips moving as in speech, heeding not the passers-by or the shows in the
street, appearing as quiet amid the noise and bustle as in the solitude
of his own study. Yet should any one greet him by name, he would
instantly pause, fix his sharp, keen eye upon the face before him, and,
as he recognized the friend, one of the sweetest smiles that ever
illumined a human face would spread over his countenance, deepening till
that countenance was youthful indeed; then, with ready utterance of kind
feeling and warm interest in the happiness of others, he made his
affectionate regards known."




CHAPTER XIII.

SPIRIT OF HIS DOCTRINE.


Mr. Ballou ever strove to make the word and the principles which he
taught appear attractive, by representing them in their appropriate
dress, the livery of joy and peace, and from the principles of fatherly
love and kindness he gathered the strongest motives for humility,
gratitude and obedience. He would tell you that God has written upon the
fragrant flowers of the field, on the breezes that rock them, and the
refreshing sun that nurtures them, indelible tokens of his fatherly
affection, and would refer you to the blooming clover, and the falling
rain, as blessings not to be misconstrued, in God's own hand-writing, a
"way-side sacrament," free to all. He would never tire of depicting the
Almighty through the spirit of the most beautiful emblems in nature, and
ever deducing from them the most amiable and glorious traits of Deity.

The employment he made of the familiar images of nature will remind the
reader of what we have already said touching the influences of his
birth-place. The blue skies, the green pastures, the gushing rivulets,
the everlasting hills that rear their giant summits to the glorious
effulgence of the noon-tide sun, or the cold kiss of the midnight moon,
spoke to his heart a language that his intellect faithfully interpreted.
The constant contemplation of beautiful natural scenery almost
invariably inspires devotional feeling. In the wonderful solitudes of
nature the sneer of the infidel is hushed upon his lips, and the worldly
man forgets the passions, the jealousies, the intrigues, the
heart-burnings and frivolities, of his daily artificial life. But the
heart of the true, thoughtful, right-minded man does something more than
mirror the images presented to his eye. It is not like

    "----a sleeping lake,
      That takes the hue of cloud and sky,
    And only feels its surface break
      As birds of passage wander by,
    That dip their wing and upward soar,
    Leaving it quiet as before."

Before the mind's eye of such a man, the beauties of nature do not glide
away like the figures of a painted panorama, serving only to amuse,
charming the eye for a moment with grace of form and beauty of manner,
and then passing away like an idle dream, the "baseless fabric of a
vision." In the true man, the child of God, the inner, the spiritual
sense is awakened in sympathy with the material organs of vision. For
him each lineament of nature is a revelation, each feature a symbol.
The flowers are to him, as some one has beautifully remarked, the
"alphabet of angels."

We have labored somewhat in these pages, even at the risk of repetition,
to inculcate the idea that Mr. Ballou was one of these students of
nature; and this was the case in a most eminent degree: the teachings
that he received at her feet in youth he garnered up in his heart, to be
repeated, to be illustrated, and illumined with new light from the
brightness of his intellect, to be poured forth again to thousands who
required so eloquent an interpreter. He had learned a lesson he could
never forget, from the beautiful creations of God, of his fatherly
affection. The fierce midnight storm, with its thunder-peals and
lightning-flashes, had no terror for him; he knew better than to
interpret it as a manifestation of the wrath and vengeful fury of the
Deity; for he knew that it was to be followed by a purer and healthier
atmosphere, by the glowing bow of promise, and by brighter smiles from
the unshadowed sun.

In none of the varied phenomena of nature did he behold the God of
wrath, the God of vengeance, the pitiless Deity of the dark theology,
whose horrors he was destined to dissipate and overcome. Far from this.
He deduced from every phase of nature the great truth of the
all-prevailing and inexhaustible love of the Almighty for the children
of his creation. Thus, by the simple symbols and tokens he had
discovered, strewn like flowers along the pathway of life, he sought to
awaken the torpid sense of those "who, having eyes, saw not, and having
ears, heard not," the wonders of the glad tidings the angel-messengers
of the Deity were commissioned to communicate to man.

Mr. Ballou's examples and illustrations of God's unbounded grace and
goodness, as drawn from visible nature, were very frequent. God's word
first, and then God's works, were his strength and shield. Let the
following show his mode of reasoning in this particular. He says:--"If
our Creator has so bountifully provided for our existence here, which is
but momentary, and for our temporal wants, which will all soon be
forgotten, what has he not done for the security of our immortal state,
and for our enjoyment in the everlasting world? Pause, and behold what
boundless scenes of riches and glory are opening to our view in Jesus,
by whom life and immortality are brought to light! We have seen the
brightness of the morning sun, have known the renovating majesty of his
noon-tide rays, have seen a fair creation blest with his universal light
and heat! But this is only a symbol of the Sun of Righteousness; his
brightness is above that of the morning sun, his heat is more renovating
than the rays of the noon. In him our Heavenly Father hath given unto us
eternal life. As the life of the natural is in the sun, so the life of
the moral creation is in Jesus, the light of the world, the life of man.
If the _earth_ be full of the goodness of the Lord, have we not in this
a fair specimen of the rest of his vast creation? Have we any reason to
believe that the _earth_ is more favored with the divine goodness than
any other part or parts of creation? No, surely we have not. All those
worlds which sparkle in the wide expanse of heaven are full of the
goodness of the Lord; and if time be all full of divine goodness, so is
eternity; and if God be universally good temporally speaking, so is he
in relation to spiritual things. What infinite reason have we to
exercise our hearts in gratitude to God, and our affections in love to
him, who giveth us all things richly to enjoy! With what propriety may
we say, 'Let everything that hath breath praise the Lord!'"

Observe how vastly different was the effect produced by the tenets of
faith preached by many around him! How far from lovable was the
portraiture drawn of God and Heaven by those who held forth the creed of
the old school!

How many preachers of this school have won their ephemeral reputations
solely by awakening the terrors of their auditors, and have been
esteemed great in proportion to their ability to produce fainting,
convulsions, tears and groans, among women and children! The perverted
vision of such men rests on no image of nature, except such as they can
distort to symbolize some imaginary dreadful attribute in the God of
their theology. He is clothed by them in storms and clouds, as the
heathen Jove was depicted grasping in his hand a sheaf of thunderbolts.
From their portraiture every gleam of light is excluded,--it is a murky
and repulsive mass of shadows. The gentle and fragrant flowers, the
sweet perfumes and rainbow colors with which the face of nature is so
prodigally decked, claim no word or thought of theirs; they cannot
employ these images in their illustrations, they cannot reconcile them
with their gloomy theories,--their very existence is unaccountable to
their perverse vision.

"That gloomy, heart-dejecting something," says Mr. Ballou, "which has
been maintained in our world at an incalculable expense of treasure, of
comfort, peace and joy,--at the expense, also, of the tender charities
of the heart, and the benevolent sentiments of the soul,--though called
religion, is all counterfeit. It has drawn a sable curtain over the
mildly radiant countenance of our Father in heaven, and in room of
leading the mind to contemplate the Divine Being with pleasure and
delight, it has attached a horror to the sacred name, which gives a
stupefying chill to the heart, repels the mind, and forces it to seek
relief in the contemplation of visible and sensible objects; and after
becoming the author of this horror and disgust in the soul, it artfully
takes the advantage of the deception, to inculcate a belief that the
reason of these feelings is the natural depravity of the human heart!
Such are the views which youth are led to entertain of religion, that
they contemplate it as something calculated to deprive them of their
present comforts, and only useful as it relates to a state of existence
hereafter, where, as a recompense for sacrifices which they make of
happiness in this world, they are to receive extensive and lasting
blessings. With such reflections, it is natural to delay the concerns
of religion as long as possible, with an intention to submit to its
unpleasant requirements in season to win the prize. This is evidently
the reason why youth are so little inclined to employ their thoughts on
divine things, and to prefer amusements and trifling vanities to the
acquisition of Christian knowledge.

"But true religion presents the Father of our spirits as the most lovely
character of which the mind can possibly conceive. It directs to the
contemplation of that almighty power which controls a universe, and to
view all its elements in harmony with the unchangeable love of God to
his creatures. In youth, while the heart is tender, and sensibility
quick and lively, what an exquisite delight the mind is capable of
enjoying, by penetrating through visible objects and the beauty of
temporal things, to the contemplation of that wisdom, power and
goodness, which are manifest through the medium of these outward forms!
If the fragrance of the rose can so gratefully delight the sense, how
much greater is the pleasure to the rational mind which flows from the
consideration of that wisdom and goodness which gave this power to the
rose, and this capacity to sense! From this single item let the mind
glance through all creation, and freely indulge the reflection that the
universe is as full of the divine goodness as the rose or the lily of
the valley. Freed from superstition, what heart would not be charmed
with the character which the Saviour gives of our Heavenly Father?
'Behold the fowls of the air; for they sow not, neither do they reap,
nor gather into barns, yet your Heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not
much better than they? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow;
they toil not, neither do they spin; and yet I say unto you that even
Solomon, in all his glory, was not arrayed like one of these.'"

These mute, but beautiful and eloquent testimonials of their Maker's
love and gentleness, would rebuke the dogmatism of the schools; and
hence they naturally avoid to mention the graceful, refined and touching
features of nature. They prefer rather to revel in their own dark and
unwarrantable conceptions of a future state, to gloat over the
prospective agony of their brethren, to conjure up horrid pictures of
future suffering and woe, and madly to pronounce all as being necessary
to the full glory of God, and the exemplification of his almighty power.
What wonder, then, that thousands, turning with loathing and shuddering
from the image of a deity clothed with all the repugnant attributes of
the most debased humanity, plunge into hopeless unbelief, refusing all
credence in such a being, and in any future state whatever? Was it not a
Herculean task to combat the immemorial and prescriptive dogmas of
powerful and learned preachers, armed with all the rhetorical imagery of
the schools for working terror and despair in the hearts of their
listeners?

Again Mr. Ballou says:--

"The preacher of the old school exhorts his hearers, above all things,
to the practice of the most rigid self-denial; and assures them that
God will be highly pleased with their abstaining from those pleasures
which he has placed within their reach. The most innocent amusements,
the most harmless recreations, he declaims against with the utmost
vehemence, as damning sins. He considers religion essentially to consist
in a perpetual effort to suppress and eradicate that propensity to
acquire temporal happiness which the God of nature has made to be the
spring of our actions. But on no subject does he delight to dwell so
much as on the future punishment of the wicked and impenitent. He
dresses up the Father of the universe in the awful robes of eternal
wrath and unbounded indignation, filled with incessant anger at the
crimes of the wicked, exerting infinite wisdom in devising the modes and
augmenting the severity of their punishment.

"The eternal din of future punishment soon loses all effect in
frightening the people, and has no influence but to impress a melancholy
gloom on their minds. Mankind are to be animated to strive to enter the
gates of heaven by the love of God and of goodness. He who attempts it
through fear of damnation exhibits no evidence of holiness of heart. As
well may we call a man honest who, having an inclination to steal,
refrains for fear of the whip, as we may a man religious, who, having
vicious inclinations, restrains them, and conforms to the exteriors of
religion, for the purpose of escaping the flames of hell. It is matter
of much regret that the amiable religion of Christianity should be so
disfigured and misrepresented as to deprive many people of the
happiness of enjoying it. Jesus Christ has in the clearest manner
inculcated those duties which are productive of the highest moral
felicity, and consistent with all the innocent enjoyments to which we
are impelled by the dictates of nature. Religion, when fairly considered
in its genuine simplicity and uncorrupted state, is the source of
endless rapture and delight. But, when corrupted with denials,
mortifications, and a punctilious observance of external rites, it
assumes a form disgusting to men of taste, and a relish for social
happiness, and is productive of the most destructive consequences. It
drives one part of mankind into the practice of superstition, hypocrisy
and bigotry; and, by exciting a distaste and aversion in the minds of
the other part, it excludes them from the rational pleasure arising from
the practice of genuine religion. The road to heaven is pleasant and
delightful, if mankind will go the right way; and certainly God will bid
the saint as sincere a welcome to the realms of immortal felicity who
has in the journey of life tasted the temporal delights of innocence, as
he will him who has abstained from them. Why, then, should we leave the
path that is strewed with flowers and roses, for the purpose of going in
another through a wilderness beset with thorns and briars, when both
parts will terminate in the same happy country?"

People listen to the dogmas of the schools, and are filled with awful
forebodings; terror is the predominating principle in their bosoms, and
sorrow takes possession of their hearts, speaking out from their
faithful countenances in sadness. How far is the true influence of the
gospel from inducing such results as this! Mr. Ballou believed, with
Fenelon, that "true piety hath in it nothing weak, nothing sad, nothing
constrained. It enlarges the heart; it is simple, free, and attractive."
If this were not the true nature of the gospel, how could there be
"peace and joy in believing"?

He held that the true way to cleanse the hardened and rebellious heart
is to inundate it with a deluge of love, the only weapon of Omnipotence.
Reason with the sinner, he will meet you with subtle argument; threaten
him, and he will meet you blow for blow; against future interest he will
adroitly balance present pleasure. The human heart rises against
severity or oppression, while it is soothed by gentleness, as the waves
of the ocean rise in proportion to the violence of the winds, and sink
with the breeze, until it becomes a gentle zephyr, into mildness and
serenity. Love, the warm sunshine of our existence, subdues the sinner
at once; there is not one in a thousand whose heart is so hardened that
its genial warmth will not melt it. True it is that force can subdue
numbers, cunning conquers force, intellect can master cunning, but love
conquers all. There is a vast difference between a wounded heart and a
contrite spirit. You may break ice by force into a thousand pieces,--it
is ice still; but expose it to the warm sun, and behold! how quickly it
will melt!

We have enlarged somewhat upon this doctrine of divine love, and trust
that our readers will bear with us in our desultory career, since this
principle is the fundamental basis of Universalism,--the starting-point
and the goal, the Alpha and the Omega, of Mr. Ballou's spiritual
experience and teaching. By it he reconciled the impulses of his heart
and the promptings of his intellect. The principle of God's perfect,
unchanging and eternal love of man, was the great discovery of his
earliest manhood, the object of his self-imposed mission, the
inspiration and solace of his labors, the spirit and joy of his
existence. His adamantine belief in this great idea, daily strengthening
by the study of God's works and word, was his shield and spear. It
touched his lips with living fire, as he stood in the pulpit, or beneath
the blue canopy of heaven, where he often preached; in the solitude of
his study, in the busy haunts of men, it fed the flickering lamp of life
when it waned with severe exertion, and it shone like the brightest star
of heaven on his dying bed. It was no solitary joy; the treasure he had
found he journeyed through the land to share with others. From his lips
the glad tidings rang through every nook and corner; and he lived, as we
have seen, long enough to hear the accents caught up by the willing and
faithful watchmen of the gospel, and the cry of "All's well!" echo from
port to port, from battlement to battlement, on the castles of Zion,
through the vast circumference of his native land. He saw his
denominational congregation swollen from a little band of eager
listeners to an auditory numbering hundreds of thousands. He saw the
shadows of unbelief flying from the face of truth, as the mist of
morning disappears before the rising sun. And he felt joyful, but not
proud or elated, in the consciousness that his sacred mission had been
crowned with such complete success, and that multitudes recognized the
truth which he first enunciated, that _the law of God was the law of
love_.

But let us give place here to his own words, beautifully expressed, and
illustrating his belief, and the _spirit_ of his doctrine, as appears in
a poem he wrote upon this theme, some years since. It is entitled

                 GOD IS LOVE.

    "When lovely Spring, with flowery wreaths,
      Comes on young Zephyr's wing,
    And every bird soft music breathes,
      'Tis love that makes them sing.

    Love blossoms on the forest trees,
      And paints each garden flower,
    Gives honey to the laboring bees
      In every sylvan bower.

    Love breathes in every wind that blows,
      And fragrance fills the air;
    Meanders in each stream that flows,
      Inviting pleasures there.

    Love brings the golden harvest in,
      And fills her stores with food;
    It moves ten thousand tongues to sing
      Of universal good."

"If we believe that God so loved us that he sent his Son to die for us,
we ought to love one another," he says. "Shall I not love those objects
whom my God loves? Shall I not love all those for whose sins he sent his
Son to be a propitiation? Most assuredly. This is a consequence
naturally to be expected from our belief. I do not say that all who
profess the doctrine do love one another as they ought; but I have the
confidence to say that no one who possesses the real sentiment, the real
principle, in his heart, can do otherwise than love all mankind. And
here you will easily perceive that all the commandments of the gospel
are to be obeyed. For when we love one another and love God, what duty
is there that will be neglected? If this will not lead us to our duty,
what will? Will terror make us do our duty? No; for, referring once more
to the similitude, what drove your children away? It was believing the
story they were told of your character. What _brought_ them back?
Knowing you were good. And know you not that it is _the goodness of God
that leadeth to repentance_? Why, then, should not his goodness be
preached to sinners? Why should we be told such awful stories with
regard to eternity? Why should we be told that there is an everlasting
state of burning, in order to induce us to love our Father in heaven? O!
incongruous doctrine! Let it be banished from the world, and let the
angel of the covenant proclaim the love of God to mankind; and may the
world be converted. Man will then love his fellow-man; we shall all see
that we are the children of God, that we are all the objects of God's
love, and all the objects of our Saviour's grace. Believe this truth,
treasure it up in your hearts, let your affections move with assent,
love God and love one another, and the God of love and peace shall be
with you."

All his writings and all of his conversation, both public and private,
were thoroughly imbued with this belief and principle of universal love;
it ran like a golden stratum through all his life and conduct, imbuing
every sentiment and every thought. His doctrine was such that a
realizing sense of its character must invariably thus affect the firm
and relying believer. He never held forth dark threats, nor adopted,
like many preachers about him, the doleful tones of grief when he talked
about religion. "If good people," says Archbishop Usher, "would make
their goodness agreeable, and smile instead of frowning in their virtue,
how many would they win to the good cause!" Mr. Ballou was affected, in
his cheerful and happy belief of universal salvation, like Haydn, who,
in answer to a query of the poet Carpani, how it happened that his
church music was ever of an animating and cheerful character,
answered,--"I cannot make it otherwise. I write according to the
thoughts which I feel;--when I think upon God, my heart is so full of
joy that the notes dance and leap as it were from my pen."

How many there are among us who, the moment the subject of religion is
mentioned, put on long faces, and talk as if they were mourning their
own lot and that of all creation, "in hopes to merit heaven by making
earth a hell!" Such people, by their example and bearing, would lead us
to believe that churches are institutions reared for the purpose of
encouraging long faces and dyspepsia, instead of pure altars from whence
may ascend the glad incense of grateful hearts. How strongly it is
impressed upon us that "God loves the _cheerful_ giver!" and did not
Christ reproach the Pharisees for disfiguring their faces with a sad
countenance? To use the forcible language of another, they make of
themselves "Hypocrites, who, to persuade men that angels lodge in their
hearts, hang out a devil for a sign in their countenances." "It is quite
deplorable," says Lady Morgan, "to see how many rational creatures, or
at least who are thought so, mistake suffering for sanctity, and think a
sad face and a gloomy habit of mind propitious offerings to that Deity
whose works are all light and lustre, and harmony and loveliness."

Such was the philosophy of the subject of these memoirs, such his
religion, such the doctrine which he taught. He found no cause for
sorrow in his belief, but a never-failing fountain of joy ever welled up
in his breast, pure and sparkling.

Mr. Ballou's religious belief, the faith which he promulgated with such
zeal and wonderful effect, can be summed up in a few words. He held that
God judges the human family in the earth; that every man must receive
according to the sin he hath done, and that there is no respect of
persons. That the "righteous shall be recompensed in the earth, much
more the wicked and the sinner." That the future state of existence will
be one of unalloyed happiness for the whole human family. That God is a
being who governs the world with a parent's regard, and not with the
wrath of a tyrant; that the world could be led to love him, but never
driven to do it through fear. That love, not wrath, should be preached
to the people. That all punishment is designed by the Divine Spirit for
the reformation of the sinner, and consequently must take place where
the sin is committed. That the reward of good deeds is to encourage well
doing, and must come when and where the worthy acts are done. He
believed in no more dreadful hell than is produced by the consequences
of sin about us, with the still, bitter gnawings of conscience; and in
no sweeter or more desirable reward than an approving conscience, and
the natural consequences of doing good. He taught that man must be saved
from his _sins_, not from the _punishment_ of them,--_that_ is
impossible,--and that to be happy we must "do justly, love mercy, and
walk humbly with God."

He believed that, in order to prove that misery will exist in the future
or eternal state, it must first be made to appear that sin will exist in
that state. But this he did not believe could be proved from any
scriptural testimony; on the contrary, he was fully convinced that the
Bible taught that "He that is dead is freed from sin." To quote his own
words on this point: "We have shown, in order for justice to require the
endless misery of any moral being, it must, of necessity, require the
endless continuance of sin, than which nothing can be more absurd."
Again he says: "We have sufficiently argued that man cannot be miserable
in consequence of moral condemnation, any longer than he is, in a moral
sense, a sinner." And we have often heard him make the remark, in regard
to limited future punishment, that if any one would produce but only one
passage of scripture which proves, beyond a reasonable doubt, that sin
or the sinner will exist, as such, in the eternal, immortal state, then
I give up my doctrine of no future punishment; but until this is done, I
shall hold to the doctrine that the Scriptures do not teach the
principle even of a limited future punishment. Mr. Ballou would not
allow analogy to take the place of scriptural proof on so important a
subject as the destiny of man in the immortal state. He had nothing to
do with mere assertions, which had not a "thus saith the Lord" for their
support, on any doctrinal point.

This feature of his mind cannot be too strongly insisted upon. He was
not content with relying on the _spirit_ of the Scriptures, which would
have fully sustained his doctrine, but he conciliated the spirit and the
letter, and rested every proposition he advanced on this immutable and
impregnable basis. If ever a man strictly obeyed the injunction to
"search the Scriptures," it was Mr. Ballou. They were the armor from
which he drew the shield that sheltered him in conflict, and all the
shafts that garnished his quiver. He had the very words of Christ and
his apostles for every item of his creed, and such creed alone would he
accept as might be adapted to this standard. He was not one of those
self-complacent and easy theorists, who readily support their favorite
doctrine by a few ambiguous texts, or an arbitrary construction of a
mooted passage. He was far too conscientious for this; the language of
learned commentators, however elegant the phraseology and plausible the
reason, never satisfied him. His standard was fixed in the Bible.

There was little of the enthusiast,--to use the term in its common
acceptation,--nothing of the bigot and fanatic, in his nature. He first
convinced himself of the truth of his ideas; he reflected and pondered
them deeply by himself, in some of those abstracted moods peculiar to
him, examining them in every light, trying them by every test,
dispassionately and calmly; and then gave them to the world, armed at
all points, and ready for defence against attack. And how prompt and
ready he was to defend what he had satisfied himself was the truth, we
need not reiterate here. The language in which he enforced his arguments
was simple and clear, because his ideas were so. They needed not the
tinsel garb of rhetoric, the flowers of a refined oratory, to make them
presentable to the world; they needed no foreign or artificial aid;--no,
they stood forth clear, simple, strong, arrayed in the garb and radiant
with the light of truth and of nature. They stood the test of public
scrutiny, because they had been refined in the alembic of his own severe
and critical mind. This simplicity, which is fast becoming an
old-fashioned virtue, commended the preacher to the earnest seekers
after truth. It is a pretty fair inference to arrive at, when you hear a
religion preached which requires disguise and ornament, that the truth
is not in it. Where truth is there need be no such garbing; it is only
error that requires to be gilded, like the covering to bitter pills,
used to render them sweet. The gospel of Christ appeals to the judgment,
not to the taste.

In relation to the argument of analogy, as used to prove the doctrine of
punishment in a future state, we subjoin the following, in his own
words:--"Another ground on which the advocates of a future state of
rewards and punishments place much dependence for the support of the
doctrine, they denominate _analogy_. We think it too hazardous to
attempt anything like an accurate statement of the particular arguments,
which are made to depend on this principle, in favor of this doctrine;
for we might be liable to some mistakes, which would represent the views
of its advocates differently from their mode of representing them. Our
liability to misrepresent in such an attempt seems unavoidable, on
account of the fact that there has been nothing like a system of
reasoning yet exhibited on the general subject. We feel safe, however,
in saying, that, as far as we have been informed, those who rely on what
they call analogy to support the doctrine of future retribution, hold
that, in all respects which are necessary to carry sin and its miseries
into the future state, that state will be analogous to this mode of
being. So that, reasoning from analogy, as moral agents sin, and
thereby render themselves miserable in this world, the same moral agents
may continue to do the same in the world to come. In connection with
this argument it is urged, that, as it is evident to our senses that sin
often escapes a just retribution in this world, it must be recompensed
in another state, or divine justice must forever be deprived of its
claims.

"On reasonings of such a character, we shall use the freedom to say,
that they appear to have no higher authority than mere human
speculations injudiciously managed. That they are nothing more than
simple speculations, is evident from the fact that they are not founded
on any divine authority. We presume that their own advocates never
ventured to support them by scripture authority. And that they are
managed injudiciously, is very apparent from the circumstances, that
while they profess to be justified by the principle of analogy, they are
a direct denial of the very analogy on which they depend. Theologians
who endeavor to exert an influence over the minds of people by means of
these speculations, are constantly urging that in this world we see sin
procuring for its agents the riches and honors of the world, while it
escapes judicial detection, and goes unpunished. Now, if they were
consistent with their analogy and with themselves, they would see at
once that in the next state of existence sin will procure for its agents
the riches and honors of that world, and there, as well as here, escape
judicial detection, and go unpunished. They would likewise see that as
divine justice can quiet its own claims in this world, without
administering a full and adequate retribution of human conduct, it may
do the same in the future state. In this way we might proceed and make
the future state precisely like the present; for we have no more
authority for carrying sin and its miseries into a future world, than we
have for carrying all other things into that state which we find in
this. Reasoning from all that we know, we must believe that, so long as
men sin, they will do so from the beguiling power of temptation. If,
then, we believe that sin will exist in the future state, we must
suppose that temptation will there act on the mind with a deceiving
influence. In this world the wicked are allured with the hopes of
temporal gain, and these attractions are strengthened by the belief that
crime will not be detected, and that punishment will be avoided. Were it
not for these hopes and allurements, no wrong-doing would be practised
in this world; and to suppose that we shall transgress the law of God in
the future world, without any temptation, is a speculation altogether
arbitrary and capricious, as well as contrary to _analogy_."

"Of late, the writer of this," says Mr. Ballou, in one of his last
published sermons, "has seen an inclination, in some of the professed
preachers of Universalism, to adopt some of the peculiar opinions of our
Unitarian fraternity. Among other things, is the opinion that men carry
into the next world the imperfections of this; so that their moral
condition hereafter will depend on the characters they form while here
in the flesh; but that they may and will improve and progress in virtue
and holiness in the spirit world. This opinion being rather newly
adopted, and as it seems to ingratiate them into favor with Unitarians,
it is quite natural for such preachers to devote not a small share of
public labor to lead the minds of their hearers to the adoption of such
views of the future state. Whenever the writer of this discourse comes
in contact with these labors and opinions, he feels it to be his duty,
in a friendly, brotherly, and candid manner, to endeavor to bring them
to the test of some acknowledged standard. It is worthy of
consideration, that the New Testament gives us but little on the subject
of man's future state. There can be no doubt but Jesus was known to
believe and preach a doctrine embracing the fact of the resurrection,
and an immortal state for the human family. All this is clearly
manifested by the question asked him by the Sadducees respecting the
resurrection. In the answer which Jesus returned, we have all which
gives us any account respecting the state of man hereafter which was
spoken by him. In this answer, we are told the following facts:--1st.
That, in the future world, they will neither marry nor be given in
marriage. 2d. That, in that state, men will be the children of God,
being the children of the resurrection. 3d. That they will be equal unto
the angels, and that they can die no more. 4th. That the doctrine of
the resurrection was shown by Moses, and that God is not the God of the
dead, but of the living, for we all live unto him. St. Paul says more on
the subject of the resurrection, and of the future state, than did
Jesus. He says, 'As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made
alive.' He also distinguishes man's state and condition in the future or
resurrection state, from his condition here, as follows:--'It is sown in
corruption, it is raised in incorruption: it is sown in dishonor, it is
raised in glory: it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power: it is
sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body.' Thus we are taught
that our future state will differ from the present as incorruption
differs from corruption; as glory differs from dishonor; as power
differs from weakness; as a spiritual body differs from a natural body.
Now, if we allow ourselves to carry our speculations respecting our
future state not only beyond all the Scriptures say on the subject, but
so as to adopt distinctions in that state, which evidently conflict with
the divine Word, do we not say, by so doing, that divine Revelation is
not only incomplete, but also inaccurate?"

He believed that all those promises which give the assurance of the
final _holiness_ and _happiness_ of the entire race of man depend solely
on the will and power and goodness of God, and not on any conditions for
the creature to perform. While dwelling upon this theme, which he
delighted to do, he says:--"Let us pass to the prophecies of Isaiah; see
Chap. 25: 6, 7, 8.

"'And in this mountain shall the Lord of Hosts make unto _all_ people a
feast of fat things. * * * And he will destroy in this mountain the face
of the covering cast over all people, and the vail that is spread over
all nations. He will swallow up death in victory; and the Lord God will
wipe away tears from off all faces; and the rebuke of his people shall
he take away from off all the earth: for the Lord hath spoken it.' No
one will doubt that the provisions here spoken of are those which are
provided in the gospel of salvation,--made for all people. The vail of
darkness which is over all people is to be taken away. Death is to be
swallowed up in victory, and tears wiped from off all faces. The rebuke
of God's people shall be taken from off all the earth. And the proof is
in the above passage, 'for the Lord hath spoken it.'"

Mr. Ballou says:--"I look with strong expectation for that period when
all sin, and every degree of unreconciliation, will be destroyed, by the
divine power of that love which is stronger than death, which many
waters cannot quench, nor the floods drown; in which alone I put my
trust, and in which my hope is anchored for all mankind; earnestly
praying that the desire of the righteous may not be cut off. The fulness
of times will come, and the times of the restitution of all things will
be accomplished. Then shall truth be victorious, and all error flee to
eternal night. Then will universal songs of honor be sung to the praise
of Him who liveth for ever and ever."

In relation to the subject of his faith, Rev. A. A. Miner, in his
funeral sermon delivered on the occasion, says:--

"Let me say, then, that he was _a man of unswerving faith_. He believed
in the Bible as the treasury of divine revelation. His ministry was
based upon it. Few men have confined themselves so exclusively to its
themes. None have treated those themes with greater clearness and power.
He studied the sacred page with a spirit equally removed from the
Germanic philosophy, on the one hand, and from Calvinistic bigotry on
the other. In the fulness of its promises, the riches of its grace, and
the blessedness of its hopes, his soul continually delighted. It was to
him the 'Book of books;' and, at the advanced age of more than fourscore
years, its truths, still fresh in his memory, continually employed his
understanding, and its glories enraptured his heart.

"He believed also in God;--in God as the supreme good. He believed in
him as sovereign,--not simply as a candidate for sovereignty, but as
already sovereign; nor alone as sovereign to create, to uphold, to rule,
to condemn, and to chasten or destroy. So far had the _world's_ faith
gone. He regarded him as sovereign, not to do evil, but to do good, and
to do good only. He believed God limited by his very nature to the doing
of good,--that he is no more able to do evil than he is to be untrue.
And, since it is admitted, on all hands, that there are moral influences
by which some will be saved in perfect harmony with the exercise of
their own voluntary powers, he believed that a God who is really
sovereign in his moral domain can accomplish in all souls whatever is
possible to be accomplished in any. Thus, from the character of God he
saw freely flowing the blessed promises of his word.

"His faith, too, in Christ stood related to the affectionate Father as
the sovereign cause. Christ was God's messenger to man. He came not to
procure the Father's love for the world, but as a testimony of that
love. He came not to open to man the door of mercy, but to strengthen
man to walk in the already open door. His mission was not simply to
explore the wide-spread moral waste, but to possess and cultivate it;
not to make salvation possible, but actual; for God 'hath appointed him
_heir_ of all things,'--'hath given all things into his hands, that he
should give eternal life to as many as God had given him.' Thus it was
his mission to _accomplish_ a work, rather than to _offer_ to accomplish
it; and, by his ever-memorable prayer on the cross, he perfected the
power by which the world will be saved; as he said, 'And I, if I be
lifted up from the earth, _will draw all men unto me_.'"

No one who has thus far followed this unpretending but truthful
biography, can fail to admit the full justice of the foregoing analysis
and eulogy of Mr. Ballou's moral and mental nature. The faith of which
Mr. Miner speaks was the strongest characteristic of the man. It
illumined his whole life. His intellect was not clouded by doubts. In
the geniality and genuineness of his faith he proceeded to the study of
the book of books; every leaf he turned in the sacred volume confirmed
the steadfast belief of his soul. He read it not as a verbal critic, not
as a worldly philosopher, ambitious to found some system on the hints he
might discover, but as a Christian seeking, where he knew he should
discover it, the eternal light of truth. It was, indeed, to him a source
of unsullied, uncloying, constant delight. Daily and hourly he
discovered new beauties and new truths in its pages. Its story rolled
before him like a wave of unbroken harmony, until his mental vision
became almost microscopic in its powers of detection. Thus filled with
the word, thus made conversant with its glowing truths and beauties, he
constantly renewed and multiplied the means of awakening and confirming
faith in others.

As we have labored to show, his reverence and love for his Maker were
boundless; they absorbed his whole being--not, however, to the exclusion
of earthly objects of affection, for he well knew that a true love of
our Father in heaven is totally incompatible with the neglect of his
creatures. Therefore, he was as unlike as possible to those ascetics of
the middle ages, or the recluses of our own day, who fancy that a strict
seclusion from the world, and a complete abandonment to religious
exercises, is the most acceptable offering that can be made at the foot
of the altar. This was an idea that found no sympathy in his bosom; he
knew that there was nothing inharmonious between religious and social
duties, and that to love our fellow-creatures is a proof of love towards
God. His devotion was filial, but of that transcendent nature which far
surpasses all the affections of this world. His boundless love of God
rested on his vivid conception of his nature, as all-powerful,
all-merciful, and all-good, the enthroned sovereign of the universe, the
Father and Benefactor of each and all of the human race.

In a recent letter to the "Star in the West," Rev. George H. Emerson
says:--

"The theological mission of Hosea Ballou was this:--_to assert the
benevolent and perfect sovereignty of Almighty God_. I once said to him,
'Suppose the idea of God's sovereignty were taken out of you, how much
would there be left of you?' His answer was significant, and comprised
three words,--'_O my soul!_' Of course, these three words, of themselves
simply, convey no answer; but the tone with which they were uttered
said, very distinctly, that, the idea of God's sovereignty taken away,
there would be no Hosea Ballou. But this great man did not simply
believe that God is a sovereign, but, further, that God is a
_benevolent_ sovereign; he not only believed that God ruled in the
armies of heaven and among the inhabitants of the earth, but that he
ruled them with the especial object of bestowing happiness; he not only
believed that God worked all things after the counsels of his own will,
but that it was God's will that all should be saved and come to a
knowledge of the truth. Every one who has heard or read him will
recollect how frequently he would illustrate his views of the divine
government by the beautiful story of Joseph and his ten brethren:--'But
as for you, _ye_ thought evil against me; but _God_ meant it unto good,
to bring to pass as it is this day, to save much people alive.' This
verse contained volumes of meaning with Father Ballou."

Such was the sum and substance of his doctrine, his life-long mission,
the creed he held forth to the people for more than sixty years.

Some of his religious opponents have frequently charged him with
card-playing, an amusement which we conceive to be of no evil import in
itself, but the charge was designed as a matter of reproach against him.
Now, we happen to know, and can say for a certainty, that Mr. Ballou did
not know one card from another, nor could he have named a dozen cards
rightly, had his very life depended upon his doing so.

This may be thought, perhaps, a trifling matter to notice; but the truth
is, his religious opponents, finding no evil in him that they might
expose, invented this charge to prejudice the public mind, and one
minister in New England more than once publicly declared it from his
pulpit; though, when called upon by one who heard him, and who knew the
subject of this biography, he was puzzled to produce the name of his
informant. It is within our own recollection that these stories were
rife, and that they were very generally talked of. It was also
sneeringly said that he preached to the lowest classes of society, and
that respectable or intelligent persons never attended his meetings;
that some of the most wicked and sinful of the community were found
listening to him, and that they were always welcome!

These declarations were often made as evidences, weighing not alone
against him, but also against the truth and godly character of his
doctrine; they were preferred by clergymen from their pulpits, and often
in opposition religious papers; but, of course, this was more frequently
the case during his early settlement in Boston than in subsequent years.
The first part of the latter charge brought against him needs no
refutation; an intelligent public can judge of its truth; but we cannot
refrain from calling the attention of the reader to the spirit that
prompted the last clause. How very like it is to that evinced by the
Pharisees of old, who said reproachfully of their Divine Master, "This
man receiveth sinners and eateth with them." And now mark the reply of
Jesus to these grumblers:--"The whole," says he, "need not the
physician, but they that are sick." "The most wicked and sinful of the
community," said Mr. Ballou's revilers, "are found listening to him, and
they are always welcome!"

The truth is, that Mr. Ballou made no distinction or selection among
auditors; he as readily preached to the poor and humble, as to those
"clad in purple and fine linen," who "fared sumptuously every day." He
never withheld his services; it might be, perhaps, that he preached with
more fervor to those who stood in the clearest need of consolation and
good tidings, than to those who enjoyed every opportunity of mental and
intellectual culture. But it is certain, that a preacher with the
universality of Mr. Ballou's vocation neither can nor ought to draw
distinctions; he is summoned to speak whenever and wherever his services
are needed, and the preacher of the gospel who should refuse because the
call came from the sinful would be as much to blame as he would be to
disregard the call of the righteous. The true soldier of Christ and the
gospel recognizes no distinction of rank; his consolations are as warmly
given to the nameless sufferer, as when beside the couch of the
millionaire.

Still less is the minister of the true religion to refuse to afford
words of encouragement and advice to the unfortunate being who is
struggling in the toils of sin. To such an one his mission is absolutely
imperative; he must wrestle with the perturbed and darkened spirit, he
must aid the awakening conscience, struggling to throw off the burthen
of evil passions, he must point to the undying love of God to man, and
bid the tears of the sinner be dried up in the effulgent smile of
Omnipotence. If, therefore, sinners crowded to hear the discourses of
Mr. Ballou, it was a tribute of which a preacher of the gospel might
well be proud. "To comfort and help the weak-hearted, and to raise up
those who fall," is essentially the province of the conscientious
preacher; and no one, however hardened his heart, could have listened to
the sincere and earnest words of the subject of these pages, without
deriving some hope, some consolation, and some strength, from the
glorious doctrine he preached so eloquently; and that there were very
many who were thus ransomed from the thraldom of sin and consequent
misery, there can be no reasonable doubt.

Was it true that "sinners flocked to hear him," as has been said so
often by his opponents in the way of reproach against his doctrine, as
being conducive to the pleasure of such persons? Let us pause for one
moment, and review what he used to say that was particularly pleasing to
this class of hearers. The following, for instance, will suffice us,--it
is from his own pen:--"The vile affections of sin will burn to the
destruction of the sweetest harmonies of nature; the whitest robes of
innocence are stained with its indelible crimson; the soul is drowned in
the black waters of iniquity, and the whole mind, with every faculty, is
plunged into the hell of moral death. Yet, listen to the worst of
torments, in consequence of sin. 'A wounded conscience who can bear?' A
fire that burns all the day long, a sword that continually pierceth the
soul, a sting that cannot exhaust its poison, a fever that never turns
till the patient dies. 'A dart struck through his liver.' What ails the
sinner?--why his hand on his breast? There gnaws the worm that never
dies,--there burns the fire that is never quenched. A consciousness of
guilt destroys all the expected comforts and pleasures of sin. How
strange it is that, after a thousand disappointments in succession, men
are not discouraged! O sin! how you paint your face! how you flatter us,
poor mortals, on to death! You never appear to the sinner in your true
character; you make us fair promises, but you never fulfilled one; your
tongue is smoother than oil, but the poison of asps is under your lips;
you have impregnated all our passions with the venom of your poison; you
have spread gloomy darkness over the whole region of the soul; you have
endeavored, with your stupefactive poison, to blunt the sword in the
hands of the cherubim, which, for your sake, keeps us from the tree of
life. A mistaken idea has been entertained of sin, even by professors. I
have often heard sincere ministers preach, in their reproofs to their
hearers, that it was the greatest folly in the world for people to
forego salvation, in a future state, for the comforts and pleasures of
sin in this. Such exhortations really defeat their intentions. The wish
of the honest preacher is, that the wicked should repent of their sins,
and do better; but, at the same time, he indicates that sin, at present,
is more productive of happiness than righteousness; but that the bad
will come in another world,--that, although doing well is a hard way,
yet its advantages will be great in another state. Just as much as any
person thinks sin to be more happifying than righteousness, he is
sinful; his heart esteems it; though in some possible cases, for fear of
the loss of salvation in the world to come, he may abstain from some
outward enormities, yet his heart is full of the desire of doing them.
It is as much the nature of sin to torment the mind, as it is the nature
of fire to burn our flesh. Sin deprives us of every rational enjoyment,
so far as it captivates the mind. It was never able to furnish one drop
of cordial for the soul; her tender mercies are cruelty, and her breasts
of consolation are gall and wormwood."

Mr. Ballou's style of preaching was of a kind calculated to create
regret in the hearer's heart at his own shortcoming, and to plant a
contrite spirit there, rather than fear for the punishment of his sins.
The object of his sermon was not to terrify the sinner, but rather to
lead him into the ways of peace and pleasantness. His sermons were of
the character referred to by Louis XIV., when he told that eminent
preacher, Massillon, "Father, I have heard many great pulpit orators,
and I have been much pleased with them, but every time I hear you I am
exceedingly displeased with myself;" alluding to the sorrow for sin
which Massillon's sermons created in him. This is the true and effectual
style of preaching, such as will convert sinners from the error of their
ways, by inducing a correct feeling in their own bosoms, not by
frightening them out of their senses. Representing before men's eyes
such oceans of wrath that they feel as though they were sinking to
perdition, will undoubtedly lead them sometimes to _profess_ religion,
as a drowning man would catch at a straw; but their profession is made
by instinct, not conviction,--by an undefined consciousness of
necessity, not by any incentive of love.

It might be said of Mr. Ballou's sermons as Thomas Fuller said of
Perkins in his eulogy: "His sermons were not so plain but that the
piously learned did admire them, nor so learned but that the plain did
understand them. Unshelling theological controversies of their school
terms, he made of them plain and wholesome meat for the people."
"Children can understand him," was the constant remark of the
ministering brethren, in relation to Mr. Ballou's sermons; and he has
said often, "If I can make children understand me, then I am satisfied;
for surely it must then be that older minds will comprehend my words."
In this connection we are forcibly reminded of the true incident of the
minister and the child. Forcible, simple as it is!

"Mother," said a little girl, seven years old, "I could not understand
our minister to-day, he said so many hard words. I wish he would preach
so that little girls could understand him; won't he, mother?"

"Yes, I think so, if we ask him."

It was not long after that the little girl's father saw her going over
to the minister's, and calling her back to him, he asked:--

"Where are you going, Emma?"

"I am going over to Mr. ----'s, father," was her innocent reply, "to ask
him to preach small!"

A hint this that many might improve by.

To the place of his birth Mr. Ballou was fondly attached, and often
visited it during the latter years of his life, in company with his
children. He seemed thrice happy among those well-remembered hills and
dales, where "the dreams of youth came back again." Aside from the fact
of its being the home of his childhood, which in itself will strew with
roses the bleakest spot in Christendom, the valley of his nativity had
many picturesque and glowing natural beauties, of a character to impress
the lover of nature with admiration. Here he had set his snares at the
skirts of yonder wood, and here made his morning ablutions in the clear
running brook. Adown the crevices of this huge old rock, when a little
boy, surfeited with the abundance of wild strawberries, he had pressed
out their juice, and adown the green crevices in the mossy stone the red
liquid had made its way. These old stumps, now decayed, and like himself
passing away, once bore the orchard fruit that he had watched with
anxious eye to its ripening. And this mass of rocks, this ruined cellar,
is the only remnant left of the cot where he was born. Not a stone nor a
tree was forgotten,--not one but brought back its peculiar legend to his
quickened heart. And here was the old burial-ground, on the hill-side,
where the dust of his father and kindred reposed. With what awe had he
ever looked upon that place when a boy! How many times strolled
thoughtfully among the rank grass and moss-grown slabs, whose gray old
forms, now bending hither and thither with age, gave faint and feeble
token of names long, long since passed away,--

    "With uncouth rhymes and shapeless sculpture decked."

While on a visit to this spot, accompanied by his second son, Rev.
Massena B. Ballou, in 1843, he lingered long and thoughtfully among the
tomb-stones, and at last said:--"I believe I could sleep sweeter here,
among the hills of Cheshire, by the side of my early home and kindred,
than in the grounds of Mount Auburn." And this was in truth
characteristic of him and of his feelings, as the reader will have
gathered ere this. A retiring spirit governed him at all times, unmoved
by one single prompting of ambition or a desire for fame, and only
zealous in the service of his Lord and Master. His works he desired to
leave behind him as perfect as might be, because he hoped that, even
after he had himself ceased to live, they might be productive of good to
his fellow-men; but it was the only memento he wished to leave behind.
"I can hardly conceive of language," he says, "to express the flood of
tender emotions that overflow my heart, when I look upon that valley and
those well-remembered hills. I seem as if touched by some potent wand,
and to be changed from age to youth again. It becomes impossible to
realize the crowd of incidents and experiences that have thronged my
pathway for more than half a century. I am once more in that frugal,
happy home, where contentment ever smiled upon us, and the kind words of
my brothers and the affection of my sisters, more than compensated for
what by some would have been considered not an enviable lot. Though that
cottage is now levelled by Time's ruthless hands, yet how prominent it
stands before my mind's eye! That aged and beloved parent now rests on
yonder hill-side. Those brothers and sisters,--how various the fortune
of each! All, _all_ have now passed that portal to which my own
footsteps are steadily wending." He was often inspired to pour out his
feelings in song, after visiting Richmond and the haunts of his youth,
for his heart was full of the memories of those days that had endeared
the spot to him. The following lines upon this subject were composed for
his children to sing with instrumental accompaniment, and are written in
the metre of one of his favorite songs, the air of "Dumbarton's Bonny
Belle."

             BALLOU'S DELL.

    "There are no hills in Hampshire New,
      No valleys half so fair,
    As those which spread before the view
      In merry Richmond, where
    I first my mortal race began,
      And passed my youthful days,--
    Where first I saw the golden sun,
      And felt his warming rays.

    There is no spot in Richmond where
      Fond memory loves to dwell,
    As on the glebe outspreading there
      In Ballou's blithesome dell.
    There are no birds that sing so sweet
      As those upon the spray,
    Where, from the brow of 'Grassy Hill,'
      Comes forth the morning ray.

    Unnumbered flowers, the pride of spring,
      Are born to flourish there,
    And round them mellow odors fling
      Through all the ambient air.

    There purling springs have charms for me
      That vulgar brooks ne'er give,
    And winds breathe sweeter down the lea
      Than where magnolias live!"

This is but one of a large number of pieces composed by Mr. Ballou while
inspired by the same theme. It will serve to show the reader the
hallowed and inspiring feelings that lived in the writer's heart, as his
memory went back in freshness to the days and associations of his
boyhood, as in retrospection he shook away the snow of time from the
evergreen of memory.

The attachment to one's birth-place, to the home of early youth, "be it
ever so humble," is a beautiful trait of character, and is significant
of a refined and noble spirit. It is in masses one of the first and most
prolific fruits of civilization, distinguishing a stable community from
a nomadic tribe; and, as another peculiarity of the trait, it is most
touchingly exhibited in the least fortunate members of the human family.
The Icelanders, dwelling in a hyperborean region, where for a large
portion of the year they are deprived of the light of the sun, and
depend upon the stars and the Aurora Borealis to guide their footsteps
in the long, long winter midnight, are accustomed to say, with a spirit
of unmistakable fondness and affection, Iceland is the fairest country
of the globe! The poor Highlander regards the smoky hut where he was
born with enthusiastic love. As life draws gradually towards its close,
this feeling deepens in the human breast. Standing on the extreme verge
of existence, and just about to leave the world forever, man, as he
turns to survey the pathway he has travelled, overlooks its midway
stations, and fixes his eyes upon the starting. The beginning and the
end of the journey are then brought close together; from the earthly to
the eternal home there is but one step; from the tenderest recollections
of his earthly parent he passes into the presence of his Father in
heaven. Love of home! what a theme for the essayist!

It would almost seem as if the deprivations and hardships of his
youthful days must have thrown an unhappy spell about his early home,
and as though the memories that came up to him from the long vista of
years would be laden with recollections of want and severe trial, of
personal endurance, of scanty food and more scanty clothing; in short,
of all the stern realities of his childhood's home. But this was very
far from being the case with him. He has often said to us, in relation
to this subject, that he deemed his life at that time anything but
unhappy,--that what now appeared to be so great hardships, by
comparison, were then but trifling discomforts, and matters of course.
He was never inclined to set up for a martyr, or to gather any credit
for having endured patiently, and risen in time above the fortunes of
his youth. He could only recall this period of his life with feelings of
pleasure. Such feelings as these force upon us the conviction that there
is ever about the place of one's birth a spell that hardship seems only
the more closely to bind about the heart,--that deprivation and want but
the more strongly cement. The cheerful allusion to the affectionate
regard of his brothers and sisters, and the remark that contentment ever
smiled upon his early home, show the true spirit of the man, and the
natural trait which ever influenced him to make the best of everything.

"How I used to cherish a kind word from my father, when I was a boy!"
says Mr. Ballou. "He was in some respects an austere man; and when I was
born, being the youngest of our large family, he had got to be advanced
in years, and looked with a more serious and practical eye on the events
of life and all things about us. He was Puritanic, strictly religious,
as he interpreted the meaning of that word, and his mind was ever
engrossed upon serious matters. But when he put his hand sometimes upon
my head, and told me I had done well, that the labor I had performed
might have been more poorly done by older hands, or that I was a good
and faithful boy, my heart was electrified beyond measure; and I
remember his words and smile, even now, with delight."

How the simplicity and purity of the man shine forth in this little
paragraph!

"It may be interesting to your readers to know how Father Ballou was
regarded in the town of his nativity," says the Rev. Joshua Britton,
Jr., of Richmond, N. H., in a communication addressed to the Christian
Freeman. "He was accustomed to visit this place once in every few years,
and always received a cordial and hearty greeting. It was my privilege
and happiness to spend a few days with him on the occasion of his visit
here in October last. I removed to this town in October, 1850, and soon
learned that there was a general desire among our friends to see and
hear their fellow-townsman again. The approach of cold weather prevented
our taking any immediate steps to accomplish this object. In June, 1851,
I saw him at the meeting of the State Convention in Chicopee. He had
many affectionate inquiries to make respecting his friends in Richmond,
but then he could not name any time when he would visit us. In July I
wrote him, and he replied August 5, and said:--'I want very much to
visit Richmond, and will on one of the days you have named.' He
suggested that we could complete the arrangement at the convention
meeting in Boston. We did so, and fixed upon Sunday, October 12th, as
the day when he would be with us. He was careful to have no appointment
for the following Sunday, in order that he might remain in this
vicinity. He was met at Fitzwilliam depot, by one of our friends, on
Friday, October 10th, and conveyed to his residence. Sunday was a
favorable day for meeting, and there was a large audience from this and
the adjacent towns in this state and in Massachusetts. It was a happy
day for us all; but I must not dwell here.

"Though I enjoyed the meeting very much, yet my enjoyment was still
greater on the following week, in the society of our aged friend and
father, at my own home and the homes of our mutual friends in this town.

"It may be proper to state that Father Ballou had no very near
relatives here. None, I believe, by the name of Ballou. He was a cousin
of Father Luke Harris, and with him and his family he spent a portion of
the time quite pleasantly. He seemed happy in being once more in his
'native Richmond.'

"Three days the writer accompanied Father Ballou while he made calls
upon various families in different parts of the town. We were uniformly
kindly received; and those not acquainted with Father Ballou can hardly
conceive the ease and success with which he familiarly approached
all,--the young, the middle-aged, and the aged. We had brief interviews,
but they were agreeable and profitable. Prayer was offered with and
consolation afforded to the sick. In one or two instances we met with
those whose minds were in doubt on doctrinal points: these, of course,
listened to a few words of explanation. Then there was the going back to
former days, and a rehearsal of time's numerous changes. We visited the
old burying-ground, and stood by the graves of the parents of my aged
companion. We visited the old homestead, the place where he was born,
and spent his boyhood. This was changed, and unchanged. The buildings,
fences, and some of the fields, presented a new aspect, but the valleys
and hills remained as before. At the homestead we entered the orchard,
where the owner was engaged picking apples. We walked about and found
apples, of which my companion ate, though he declined taking any, a
short time previous, on an adjoining farm. We also, by invitation, dined
here, and had a pleasant chat with the family. This farm is a mile and
a half east of our meeting-house. Grassy Hill is on its eastern border,
and overlooks the valley in which it is situated. Some will recollect
the poetry of our friend, 'My native Richmond.' He repeated this, at my
suggestion, at a dwelling in full view of this eminence; and as the
words 'Grassy Hill' were spoken, he gracefully waved his right hand in
that direction, his countenance expressing satisfaction and delight.

"Several times, during his stay, the inquiry was agitated,--'Will you
come to Richmond again?' His reply was, ''Tis uncertain,--I may; should
life be spared, and my health remain as good as it is at present, I
think I may.' But, as we had some reason to expect, this proved to be
his last visit. He was conveyed to Winchester on Friday, where he
preached on the following Sabbath. He returned on Tuesday, Oct. 21st. I
made a few calls with him on the afternoon of that day, and in the
evening he spent an hour at our singing-school, tarrying with us at
night. On the following morning we bade him 'good-by,' and he proceeded
homewards to visit a daughter, rejoined his wife, and in due time
reached their home in Boston."

In Mr. Ballou's letter to the Trumpet, describing this visit, he says:--

     "When I arrived at the depot in Fitzwilliam, I was met by a worthy
     and respected friend, from Richmond, who came on purpose to convey
     me to his hospitable dwelling in the neighborhood of the place of
     my birth. Our road passed through the farm on which I was born,
     and on which my childhood and youth were spent. All around lay the
     hills and the mountains, the valleys and streams, which I always
     carry with me on the map of fond memory. But where were the father,
     the mother, the brothers and sisters, who watched over my infancy
     and guided my youth? The hope of the gospel answers, in HEAVEN!
     Before the Sabbath, I was conveyed by our worthy Brother Britton,
     the beloved pastor of the Universalist society, to the dwellings of
     a number of my kindred and friends, who received me with a welcome
     corresponding with the esteem in which they were held by me. But
     some bitter drops were mingled with the sweet cordials of
     friendship and love. Some deaths had recently removed the beloved
     and respected, causing those sanctifying sorrows to which love and
     friendship are heirs. When the Sabbath came, I was conducted by
     Bro. Britton to the house of devotion, and into the pulpit where he
     is wont to break the bread of life to the flock of his charge. I
     was agreeably surprised at beholding the crowded congregation,
     which filled the house to its utmost capacity with people, who came
     not only from all parts of Richmond, but from all the adjoining
     towns. * * * * When I beheld this large assembly, all of which
     seemed to be moved with one spirit, every countenance presenting
     the same expression of desire and expectation, I felt oppressed
     with a sense of my weakness, and lifted my desires to Him who is
     able to strengthen the weak, and from what seems a scanty portion
     to feed the multitude.

     "I could not avoid a comparison between what I then saw with the
     condition of the cause of divine truth sixty years ago, when I
     first attempted to speak in its defence in a private dwelling in
     this Richmond. Then, but a few could be collected to hear the
     impartial and efficient grace of the Redeemer proclaimed and
     defended.

     "The Universalist meeting-house in Richmond is quite respectable
     for size, conveniently constructed, and neat in appearance. The
     society who worship here is not very numerous, yet I believe more
     so than that of any other denomination in town. As far as my
     acquaintance enabled me to judge, I had reason to believe that
     better disposed disciples of the Divine Master are seldom found.
     Bro. Britton preaches here one-half of his time. He is a sober,
     candid, well-educated and faithful pastor, and highly esteemed by
     his society here, and also in Winchester, where he labors
     successfully the other half of his time. His family consists of an
     amiable companion, who knows the importance of her station, and is
     faithful in the discharge of its duties, and an adopted daughter,
     who is justly held in high esteem both by those whom she regards as
     her parents, and by all her acquaintances.

     "The Sabbath following my appointment in Richmond, which
     appointment was on the second Sabbath in October, I preached in
     Winchester. The day was extremely rainy and cold, and few
     comparatively attended meeting. The society here has a very good
     and convenient house, and its condition at present is said to be
     promising. The friends of truth here are firm and steadfast, full
     of hope and confidence, promising perseverance unto the end.

     "After my labors on this rainy Sabbath, I found myself much
     exhausted, and was sensibly unwell. My friends were kind and
     attentive to me, and the worn-out servant was well provided for. On
     Wednesday a respectable merchant of Richmond brought me in his
     carriage to the depot in Fitzwilliam. By aid of Divine Providence I
     arrived the same day at Lancaster, where I found my wife and our
     family connections in good health, and my own somewhat improved.
     Thanks be to God for all his mercies!

     "HOSEA BALLOU."

With other numerous calls upon his time and attention, and in addition
to his never-ceasing professional and parochial labors, Mr. Ballou has
had at various times over _twenty_ ministerial students, who, for the
time being, generally became residents of his family, and who studied
the profession with him. To these young men he devoted his powers with
the same untiring zeal that characterized his other professional labors.
His mode of instruction with these students was peculiar; he went with
them always, to use one of his favorite phrases, "to the root of the
matter," and was never content until he had imbued their minds with at
least a portion of the realizing sense he himself experienced relative
to all the main points of the faith he advocated. His words of advice to
them were few, but they were just what each one needed, and no more. He
was never fulsome with them, but complimented when it was deserved,
checked when it was necessary, and suggested when improvements might be
made, but ever inculcating those Christian qualities which shone forth
as a burning light in his own loveliness of character. Nearly all of
those students are now teachers of the gospel of Christ, men honored for
their Christian spirit, and as true disciples of the gospel. Most of
these are settled in the New England States; and, as we write, we easily
recall the names of numbers who are much respected and beloved by the
denomination to which they belong.

In the instruction and guidance of so large a number of candidates for
the sacred calling of the ministry, he assumed a very weighty addition
to his constant labors. We have seen that his parochial, ministerial,
scholastic and editorial duties, were exceedingly onerous, and many
would have shrunk from the idea of adding to such an accumulation of
labors. But it was a principle of Mr. Ballou's life never to neglect a
single opportunity of serving the great and sacred cause in which he had
embarked; he felt the full force of his mission, and to it he was
constantly ready to devote every energy of his physical and mental
nature, every moment of his time, looking to the source of all power for
the strength and inspiration necessary to sustain him in his task.
Among those who felt a vocation to preach the word of God, there was an
earnest desire to pursue its study under the guidance of one who was the
father and oracle of the creed they had espoused. They felt that,
transmitted through other mediums, many of the rays of light that beamed
from his original mind must necessarily be lost; they sought to derive
directly from him the clear instructions, the vigorous reasoning, the
straightforward mode of investigation, which distinguished him. They
wished to be near him, to follow his example in everything pertaining to
a Christian's duty. As to himself, he was never so happy as when
imparting instruction to those who really desired and sought it. His
inquiring and intelligent spirit constantly sympathized with minds of
kindred stamp, nor did he ever lose his warm sympathies for youth. With
the motto _progress_ inscribed upon his banner, he was at heart and in
soul as much with the young as the hoary-headed. The child-like
simplicity of his nature brought ardent youth very near to his vigorous
and green old age, harmonizing the two extremes in a wonderful manner.

In biographical writing there is often an obvious and studied obscurity
in regard to some certain portion of the subject's life. The reason for
such a course, on the part of the author, is very plain; for there are
few public men, who are deemed worthy the notice of a biographical
record, who do not look back with regret, and often with deep
mortification, to some heedless act of early life;--some deed wherein
the laws of right and wrong have been disregarded, and honorable and
upright principles trampled under foot; some thoughtless moment, when
the tempter has found them with their armor off, and has led them into
contact with evil that has pierced their defenceless bodies, and left
there scars deep and rankling, as monuments of the frailty of their
nature. In reference to this subject as it relates to Mr. Ballou, there
is not one hour of his life which will not bear the scrutiny of strict
justice. From his very boyhood he was remarkable for firmness of
principle, and unwavering integrity of purpose. Had he a personal enemy
in the world, that person could not point to a single act of his life
that it would not give us pleasure to chronicle here!

We know that this is saying much, and that the reader will be apt to
look back and re-read the last passage; but, while we write this strong
language, we wish to be understood as doing so in all calmness and
judgment; each word, as written, is duly set down and abided by. Now, we
humbly ask, how many are there, among those to whom the world accords
the meed of greatness, that can have this language applied to them and
their characters in truth? I do not mean to signify that there are no
such men; but to say--and the experience and personal knowledge of all
will bear testimony to the fact--that such cases are very rarely found
in this every-day world.

When we go back and consider Mr. Ballou's early life, the very limited
means he enjoyed of mental cultivation, and all the vicissitudes through
which he has passed, and contrast this view of his life with the
station which he ultimately filled, and consider the works of his pen
and mind, we are led to remember that it has ever been the fate of
genius to climb the rugged steeps of fame and honor under the greatest
disadvantages; that the brightest gems the exploring mind has brought
from the caves of knowledge have been wrought, before they were given to
the world, with the poorest means, and the least available tools. It is
the circumstance of those very disadvantages that has elicited more
mental diamonds than all the schools and richly-endowed institutions in
the world.

Though the difficulties and impediments that thus environ the path of
genius seem like a heavy stone about the neck, yet they are very often
like the stones used by the hardy pearl-divers, which enable them to
reach their prize, and to rise enriched. Adversity is to genius what the
steel is to the flint,--the fire concealed in the one is brought out
only by contact with the other. "Hard is the task," says Coleridge, "to
climb into the niches of Fame's proud temple; rough and cold is the
road; but rougher and stronger than the rocks that strew it are the men
who toil over it. Up they climb from the cottages and lowly homes of the
world; over Alps and Alps do they stride, heaving the millstone of
persecution from their towering heads, and bursting into the sunshine of
glory, despite of all that circumstances could do to keep them down."

The experience of all mankind shows that nothing great can be
accomplished without labor. The original difference between men who
have achieved greatness, and those who have died in obscurity, is,
perhaps, after all, very inconsiderable; but the same ideas which in the
latter died in their birth for want of culture, in the former, fostered,
sustained and developed, by assiduous labor, flourished, and produced
both flower and fruit. Uncultivated genius is a melancholy spectacle; it
is like the light of a shooting star, brilliant, flashing, but
evanescent, dazzling the eye for a moment, and then sinking into outer
darkness; while cultivated genius, blazing with a steady, constant and
pure flame, dispenses a surer and vivifying warmth far around it,--its
light is not that of the meteor, but the planet. All history and all
experience go to show that the bane of genius is not adversity, but
prosperity. It was not Alpine toils, but "Capuan delights," that
decimated the ranks of Hannibal's army, and wasted them away; it is not
the cold north wind, but the genial sunshine, that destroys the mighty
avalanche. The soul of genius, like the iron of the mine, must undergo
the ordeal of fire, ere it can become steel. We might quote many
examples of history to prove that this is a universal law of our nature.
It is true that some have achieved greatness when their worldly
circumstances were easy and affluent; but in such cases the gift of
genius has been accompanied by a mental organization which imposed
internal struggles, and hence the rule may be said to be without
exceptions.

Books, thoughts, deeds, imperishable memorials of their author, so
laboriously accomplished, do not die with the body. No; a thought once
expressed never dies;--it must exert its influence, and be the pioneer
to many more. Like the gentle ripple upon a calm, placid lake, it starts
upon the world a speck, but ceases not to expand its force until it
reaches over all extent. Man does not die with the body; as the soul
shall live forever, so does the influence he has exerted upon society
live after him, and by that influence is he judged. Is not this thought
in itself a strong incentive to virtue and well-doing? What man or woman
is there, however humble be their sphere of action, but desires most
earnestly to leave behind a good and honored name?

An ancient maxim avers that "spoken words fly away, but written ones are
permanent." But modern science teaches us that no sound uttered by the
lips of man is lost,--that the vibration of the air bears it onward and
onward, through all time. How very few there are in this world whose
words, written and spoken, are so considered that they are willing to
have them consigned to immortality! How few whose utterance of a year
old will bear the test of their own judgment! There are moments of
existence, generally the closing ones, when all our words and deeds
crowd back upon the memory with overwhelming force. There are records of
men in seasons of extreme casualties, who have testified to the painful
accuracy of memory under such imminent circumstances; and there are few,
indeed, who so shape their lives as to be enabled to bear with
equanimity a retrospective glance on the panorama of their existence. So
to have lived that, in ceasing to live, they have no reason to blush
for their existence, as it regards the daily duty of the
Christian.--Alas! in seasons of trial and temptation this duty is often,
very often, forgotten; the way-side of life is strewn thick with
temptations and allurements to win us from the straight and narrow path.
Fruits of golden promise tempt the hand to pluck them, and it is only
after tasting that we discover them to be only dust and ashes, like
those which grow on the fated shores of the Dead Sea. Happy, then, and
worthy of all reverence, is he whose unwavering course through life has
ever been onward and upward. The summit gained, whence both the promised
land and that of his earthly pilgrimage are in view, he can turn back
and say, as his vision embraces the line which his feet have trod so
toilsomely, yet ever so cheerfully:--"I have held that path without
variation; no temptation has seduced my footsteps to the right or to the
left, nor have my lips uttered aught upon that journey which a wish, in
this trying moment, would recall!"

There have been, at various times, and in different works, short
biographical sketches of Mr. Ballou's life given, from various
pens;--these, of course, contemplate only his public career, and are
quite brief. In the third volume of the Universalist Miscellany,
published in 1846, there appear the following remarks from the pen of
the editor, which we subjoin. After giving a short account of his public
career, the writer of the sketch referred to goes on to say:--

"We have not time, even if we had the ability, to give a just
description of him as a man, a Christian, and a preacher. We will not,
however, permit the occasion to pass without offering a word on each of
these points.

"We presume no one was ever more highly beloved and truly respected by
his acquaintances than Mr. Ballou. Pleasant in his disposition, and
honest in his dealings, he has uniformly enjoyed their confidence and
esteem. Though he always sustains a becoming dignity of character, and
is never light or trifling, he has a pleasantry and shrewdness which
render his company peculiarly agreeable.

"As a Christian, Mr. Ballou is firm in faith, and catholic in spirit.
While he believes with undoubting confidence what he preaches, and has
no respect for what he considers error in doctrine, he never manifests a
want of kindness towards those of an opposite faith. We are aware that
many entertain a different feeling; but they misjudge him. It is true
that for the insincere and hypocritical he has no feeling; and, if he
had, he would not be faithful to his ministry.

"As a preacher, Mr. Ballou, for clearness of conception and power of
argument, has few, if any, superiors. We have often heard him preach
with an unction and power that we have never heard surpassed. But we do
not design, in this article, to speak at length of his qualities as a
preacher.

"No man ever enjoyed the respect of our denomination more than does Mr.
Ballou. He is cordially loved and esteemed by all who believe in the
salvation of the world."

These remarks are valued the more highly as coming from one who was
intimate with the subject of this biography for a long period, and also
as a fair and unprejudiced tribute to his character and life by a
brother-laborer in the vineyard of Christ. The number of the Miscellany
which contains the remarks we have quoted is embellished by a mezzotint
likeness of Mr. Ballou, from a painting by E. H. Conant, and engraved in
the finest style of art by Sartain. This picture, however, is inferior,
as to likeness, to many others which are preserved of him.

We conceive the following, from the pen of the venerable and beloved
Father Streeter, the oldest minister in the Universalist denomination
now among us, to be of great interest; the work in hand would be quite
incomplete without it. It is the impression of a faithful brother
concerning the deceased, from the commencement to the close of his
professional career.

     "I first saw Father Ballou a short time before the commencement of
     his public ministry. It was in the town of Vernon, then called
     Hinsdale, in the State of Vermont. At that time there was but one
     open and decided Universalist in the place. This solitary champion
     of the common salvation had long been impressed with a desire to
     have the gospel of the grace of God, in the fulness of its
     universality, preached to those of his neighbors who might feel
     disposed to give it a hearing. An arrangement was at length made
     with the Rev. David Ballou, an elder brother, to deliver a lecture
     in the place.

     "The day was designated, and due notice of the meeting given. At
     the appointed time the preacher came, and Hosea came with him. He
     was then a tall, slim young man, with an aspect, however, which
     indicated profound thought, and a deep solemnity of feeling. In his
     general appearance there was a marked peculiarity, a certain
     something which arrested and fixed the attention, and which
     impressed the beholder with the conviction that no ordinary
     individual was before him,--that the germs of eminence, the genuine
     elements of intellectual greatness, were embodied within him.

     "Such, at any rate, was the impression among the more inquisitive
     and discriminating who attended that meeting. At the close of the
     sermon, Hosea gave an exhortation, and offered the concluding
     prayer; and this effort was spoken of, especially by the less
     conservative and bigoted, as one of rare spirituality and power. It
     became the topic of general remark, and of high encomium.

     "The next day, if I mistake not, he made his first attempt as a
     preacher of the everlasting gospel, as a public advocate of the
     sublime doctrine of the salvation of all men 'by the blood of the
     cross.' It was, as I have often heard him say, a partial failure.
     The exordium went off very well; but, as he proceeded with the
     discussion, he often hesitated, now and then came to a pause, and
     was finally obliged to sit down before he had reached the original
     design of the discourse.

     "He was deeply mortified. He was discouraged. He resolved to
     abandon all thoughts of the ministry. He felt himself utterly
     incompetent to the efficient discharge of its high and momentous
     duties. His friends, however, interfered in the premises. They
     succeeded in changing his purpose. They persuaded him to persevere
     in the work of a Christian minister, and it was not long before he
     made his second attempt at sermonizing. The effort succeeded. It
     was a complete triumph. The manner in which he acquitted himself
     was a matter of deep astonishment to his friends, and to all who
     heard him. In that meeting his lofty and invaluable career finds
     its legitimate date. It was followed by no faltering, no
     irresolution, no shrinking from toil, however laborious, or however
     wearing to the physical frame or to the mental powers.

     "He soon became immensely popular. His fame went forth as on the
     wings of every wind. From all quarters, far and near, the
     Macedonian cry, 'Come over and help us,' poured in upon him. These
     calls, so far as it was possibly practicable, were promptly and
     cheerfully honored. His labors, of course, became exceedingly
     abundant,--almost, indeed, without intermission. By day and by
     night he was found at his post, and zealously doing his great work.

     "He frequently held meetings in the town where he was born and
     brought up, and in nearly all the towns in that region. His
     circuits often embraced some hundreds of miles, and in making them
     he preached almost every day, and not unfrequently several times in
     a day; and wherever it was generally known that he was to hold
     forth, immense crowds rarely failed to be present, that they might
     listen to his testimony. Though a mere youngster, I myself once
     walked, or rather ran, eight miles and back, to hear him. The news
     of the meeting did not reach me till somewhat late on Sabbath
     morning, and no mode of conveyance to the place could be obtained.
     I was, of course, reduced to the necessity of either losing that
     rare spiritual treat, or of making my way to it on what Mr. Murray
     used to call 'apostolical horses;' in other words, on foot. And so
     great was my anxiety not to lose a word that might fall from his
     lips, that I forgot to take with me a crumb of anything for a
     lunch, and so I lost my dinner; or, rather, I had to make it on the
     sermon and the prayers which I had heard, and it was truly one of
     the most luscious meals which it has ever been my good fortune to
     eat. It was devoured with a high relish.

     "The subject of these remarks was the youngest of five brothers,
     three of whom were preachers; and I once had the privilege of
     attending a meeting at which four of them, with the venerable
     father, were present. Hosea was the preacher. He seemed to have
     made special preparation to meet the peculiarities of the occasion.
     Contrary to his usual custom, the sermon was written. At the proper
     time he commenced its delivery. The old father--himself a Baptist
     clergyman of considerable note--and the elder brothers, were seated
     around him.

     "He was not familiar with the use of a manuscript, and, of course,
     to read from one he found to be a new and somewhat awkward
     business. For a little time, however, he persevered in the effort.
     The experiment was far from being satisfactory either to himself or
     to the congregation. In spite of him, the eye would quit its hold
     upon the contents of the paper, and wander about among the dense
     masses who filled the seats below. These excursions caused him to
     lose his place. He often found it again with no little difficulty,
     and sometimes not without a most vexatious delay.

     "At length his patience gave out. Its power of endurance was
     completely exhausted, and, taking up the manuscript and rolling it
     between his hands, he deliberately put it in his pocket.
     'Brethren,' said he, 'I shall weary your patience with these
     notes.' This was the end of all hesitancy. He proceeded in the
     discussion of his subject with his accustomed fluency, and
     everything flowed onward with the smoothness of oil. It was a
     season of deep and thrilling interest.

     "The venerable father, though not a Universalist, and with no
     disposition to become one, listened to the arguments and
     illustrations of this youngest of his sons with the profoundest
     attention. I carefully watched the muscles of his face, and plainly
     saw that mighty emotions were stirring within him. Every now and
     then a large tear would start out from the eye, and course down
     the furrows in his time-worn and manly cheek. It is not strange
     that such should have been the case, for the discourse was one of
     peculiar tenderness, and of uncommon pathos and power. Probably it
     was rarely, if ever surpassed, even by the speaker himself, in the
     palmiest days of his ministry.

     "Indeed, Father Ballou's pulpit powers were of an exceedingly high
     order. Taken as a whole, my impression is that I have never known
     his equal. Never have I seen a man who could hold his hearers so
     perfectly under his own control. They were entirely at his command.
     He clothed them in smiles, or melted them to tears, and these
     things he seemed to do at pleasure. This power embodies the chief
     component in true eloquence. We often refer, and with profound
     admiration, to the pulpit talents of Griffin and Beecher, of
     Channing, and Dewey, and Chapin. And to these men the meed of rare
     eloquence unquestionably belongs; but still, taken all in all, they
     fall far below the standard of Father Ballou. Theirs is an
     eloquence of another and a humbler type. They deal chiefly with the
     intellect,--with the demands of a literary and refined taste; he
     dealt more especially with the latent chords of the heart,--moved
     and controlled the deeper sympathies and more refined affections of
     the human soul. Relying but little upon books, he went principally
     upon the profundity and strength of his own resources. The
     structure of his mind approached very near to an actual intuition.
     He grasped the whole of a subject at a glance. His powers of
     analysis were prodigious, and singularly accurate. He stopped not
     to inquire what others had thought or done. He examined every
     subject for himself. Like the diver for pearls, he plunged to the
     depths of divine truth; and, when he had found a precious gem, he
     rose with it to the surface, held it up before the eyes of the
     people, and said to them, This belongs to you, and there are more
     of the same sort where I found it,--enough for you all, and for the
     millions of the race to which you belong.

     "But it was not in the office of a Christian minister, merely, that
     Father Ballou excelled. He was admirable in every sphere of life.
     As a husband and a father, the head of a numerous family, he was
     truly a model man. He knew how to rule his own household. His word
     was law, and obedience to it was prompt and cheerful by all around
     him. There were no family jars in that well-ordered and happy home.
     The idea, perhaps, is an extravagant one, but I have often thought
     that his house was the nearest fac-simile of the great mansion of
     the Infinite Father on High of which I could form a conception.

     "And then as a brother and a friend he had no superior. With the
     exception, perhaps, of some members of his own family, there is no
     one living who enjoyed so long and so intimate an acquaintance with
     him as myself; and it is one of the happiest reflections of my
     life, that, in all our intercourse, not a single unkind word or
     emotion ever passed between us.

     "Indeed, I never knew his kindly regards mastered but once, and
     that was after the endurance of many gross and most cruel
     provocations. But on one occasion his philosophy and his religion
     failed him, and then his brow was mantled with the very majesty of
     wrath, the frowning aspect of a deep and withering indignation. The
     roll of a moment or two, however, and it was all over. The old
     saint was himself again, and never, from that time to the day of
     his death, did I ever hear him utter an unfriendly word in relation
     to the individual by whom he had been so grossly and wickedly
     abused. But I must not enlarge. I have no wish to deal in flattery;
     but, injustice to my own feelings, and to the memory of our
     departed father, I must say that he was one of the very best men
     with whom it has been my happiness to associate. Indeed, I doubt
     whether he had a solitary failing,--so far, I mean, as the
     convictions and purposes of his own mind were concerned.

     "S. S."




CHAPTER XIV.

SENTIMENTS RELATIVE TO DEATH.


Mr. Ballou was ever governed by a calm resignation to the decrees of
Providence, and as it regarded the subject of his own death,--that
thought which is said to make cowards of us all, that theme upon which
we are too much inclined to dwell with feelings of dread and fear.

Notwithstanding we are taught by Christian philosophers that life should
be a preparation for death, there are very few of us who regard this
inevitable event in its proper light. Dr. Young uttered a most profound
truth when he said:--

    "Each man thinks all men mortal but himself."

A man recognizes the certainty of this event's taking place with regard
to his neighbor, his friend, and the members of his own family. He feels
that the hour of separation from his aged and beloved parents must come;
that the brother or sister, whose infant joys and sorrows are his own,
whose sympathy has cheered his manhood, must one day be taken from him;
that the wife of big bosom must close her eyes in death; that the stern
messenger may at any time smite the darlings of their little flock,
gathered around his knee in play or prayer; and while they are yet in
life he prepares for them the last resting-place in some sheltered spot,
some woodland cemetery, where the brightest smile of nature may gild the
place of their repose. But he cannot realize that he himself, in the
pride of his manhood, the blood coursing cheerily through his veins, a
sense of vitality giving an elasticity to every movement, will be called
upon to lay down this glorious panoply of life, to feel the bounding
blood curdle and become as ice within his veins, and the bright vision
of the world fade into nothingness before his glazing eyes. He himself,
by some miracle, must be snatched from the universal doom. Thus death
finds almost every man unprepared. The very criminal, upon whose ears
fall the deep tones of the funeral knell, hopes for a reprieve even at
the foot of the scaffold. The soldier cannot think of death as he mounts
the "imminent deadly breach;"--his comrades may fall, but he must
escape. Thus, in our strange, delusive sophistry, even if we think of
death, we seek to alienate the idea from ourselves.

As it regarded the death of any member of his extensive family circle,
what a tower of strength and consolation he ever was to the mourning
hearts of his children! How calm and serene he would appear when called,
in the providence of God, to sympathize with them at the loss of their
little ones, near and dear to their parental hearts! However deep the
distress of soul which exercised the breast of any member of his family
by the solemn visitation of death, his venerable presence would always
restore peace to the almost broken heart, and make the sunshine radiate
once more in the mourner's bosom. He had several trials, and keen ones,
too, through which he passed, of this character. His third daughter,
Mrs. Whittemore, wife of Rev. Benjamin Whittemore, was called upon to
lay one and another of her tender offspring in the grave, until, at
last, when the third was placed there, she exclaimed, in the agony of
her heart, that she could not leave the tomb where half her loved ones
lay in death. But for his presence even reason might have deserted her
throne; but his calm and sainted expression, his holy balm of religion,
his simple words of hope, were as oil upon troubled waters. So again was
he similarly exercised, through visitations of death, in the family of
his eldest son, Rev. Hosea F. Ballou, and Rev. Massena B. Ballou; in the
family circle of his third daughter, Cassendana, wife of Joseph Wing;
and again in the home of his fourth daughter, Elmina, wife of Rev. J. C.
Waldo; and also in the circle of the sixth daughter, Fiducia, wife of
Abijah W. Farrar.

But more particularly was this power of consolation evinced as exercised
in his own family, when the eldest daughter, Fanny, widow of Leonard
Holmes, was taken from life. It was the first death that we had known in
our immediate circle of brothers and sisters, and the stroke had all
the power and force of a first great sorrow. Then his spirit shone forth
in all the Christian beauty and loveliness of its influence. Then the
majesty and holy power of his religion was evinced in letters of light.
And while referring to this family,--for there were six orphan children
left behind,--we might appropriately refer to the munificent bounty of
his hand towards them; of a home purchased and given to them; and of
much fatherly kindness and generosity towards those orphan children.
This spirit of resignation he infused largely into his children, who in
turn offered to his own spirit that strength of hope and divine reliance
which in periods of trial he had imparted to them. This might be said to
be particularly the case with Clementina, his fifth daughter, wife of
Isaac H. Wright, who, without the domestic care of a family, was enabled
to be much and often at home,--especially if any physical illness
affected either father or mother,--and who, with others of the children,
was with him night and day, constantly, during his last illness, and the
closing hours of his life.

We have before referred to the grateful influence his presence exerted
in the sick room, and when called upon to lift up his voice with the
dying; but so prominent a trait of character, as evinced in his home
relations, should not be omitted here. It may be interesting to remark,
in these domestic notes, that Mr. Ballou resided, for over thirty years,
with his second daughter, Cassendana, and her family, in Boston. A more
cheerful and happy home it would be difficult for fancy to paint. There
was no contention there,--no jealousies, no jarring of interests;
everything seemed to take its hue from him; and calm domestic joy and
serene contentment reigned over all. He seemed to exhale the atmosphere
of peace, and no contending elements could withstand the soothing
character of his presence.

Mr. Ballou's idea of death, as being but the portal to blissful
immortality, may be gathered by the following, from his own pen:

"The idea of immortality makes everything in life valuable. Here we may
lay up all our treasures, where neither moth nor rust can corrupt, nor
thieves break through and steal. Here God's bright favor will never grow
dim, nor will our love and gratitude ever decay. Do you see Hope's
celestial form, leaning on her anchor, and, while the raging waves of a
restless sea dash against her, she remains unmoved? Do you observe her
aspect firm, and her eyes turned towards heaven? And would you wish to
cast her down, and wreck her on the quicksands of dismal doubt? Go,
brother, to the chamber of sickness, where life's waning embers can no
longer warm the dying heart; there hear from cold and quivering lips
this hope expressed: 'I long to be with Christ,--I long to be at rest!'
Would you blast this amaranthine flower? Would you plant in its stead
the nightshade of despair? Listen no longer to the wild suggestions of
fancy and wandering imaginations, under the specious pretence of
searching after truth. For Jesus is the way, the truth and the life.

    'Give me the light of this bright sun to see;
    All other lights like meteors are to me.'"

"I think one thing is certain," says Mr. Ballou, in one of his last
published articles, "and that is, that the opinion that we immediately
enter on that state into which the resurrection introduces mankind is
far more desirable, to all people, than the opinion that ages of
unconscious sleep succeed our brief existence here in the flesh. * * *
In conclusion, I will say that I am sensible that there are passages of
scripture which seem to favor the opinion of a general, simultaneous
resurrection, which appear difficult to reconcile with such as I have
above noticed; but that they outweigh them I have no sufficient reason
to allow. The supposition that all who have died have until now remained
in an unconscious state, seems more like annihilation than well accords
with our glorious hope."

Mr. Ballou's mind was ever made up to meet death at any moment; and,
with implicit reliance on the goodness and fatherly care of Him in whose
hand we all are, and who does not permit even a sparrow to fall to the
ground without his knowledge, he left all to the wise decree of Heaven,
and loaded not his soul with fear of the result. He conversed but little
upon the subject; but when he did so, it was with a cheerful spirit and
contented mind.

His profession was such as to make him familiar with death in all its
forms. It was no strange subject to him; but, on the contrary, one which
had engaged much of his thought and earnest consideration. With so full
and implicit a reliance in the complete sovereignty of the Almighty as
his religious belief imparted, he could have no fear or doubt as to the
perfectness of the decrees of Providence. He literally argued everything
for good, and that nothing transpired without a purpose of the Director
of all things; and in that purpose he recognized but one principle,
which was the _good of the children of men_. These premises once
established in his mind, what fear could he possibly entertain of death?
It is a part of the Divine economy,--that was enough for him. Applied to
any dispensation of Providence, or to tenets of faith, this same
reliance will be found evinced in all his ministrations and life. He
says:--"We have ever this pleasing reflection,--this sublime, this
instructive lesson,--that the wisdom which constitutes the vast frame of
the universe, and which organized all nature,--the power that raised
this glorious superstructure upon its basis,--has ever been directed,
and ever will be directed, towards the _good_ and _benefit_ of mankind.
That there can be no such thing as partiality, or anything like cruelty,
in all the system of God, as the moral governor of the world, is as
plain a proposition as can possibly be stated. There is not in the bosom
of our Father in Heaven any principle but goodness to his children.
There is not in the bosom of our Heavenly Father, nor can there be,
anything like cruelty or partiality; but his eternal wisdom is ever
working for the benefit of his creatures."

He held the grave to be a calm, safe anchorage for the shattered hulls
of men,--the portal through which the spirit passes to God who gave it.
Concerning this subject there are a few lines from his pen so applicable
in this connection, that we cannot refrain from transcribing them here.
In common with those pieces which we have already given the reader,
there is no effort at grandeur in the piece; the beauty and propriety of
the poem is undisguised by metaphor, being put down in the tender and
persuasive language of a Christian heart, pleading for the good of man,
and the honor of its Maker. Mr. Ballou's poetical productions are such
an index of his soul, his real character, that we are induced again to
refer to the fact. They are ever like himself, simple, yet forcible, and
never without a purpose, and most incontrovertible argument, expressed
or implied. The following poem was written in his seventy-third year,
and is entitled

            FEAR NOT DEATH.

    "Why call we death to man a foe?
      Why should we fear to die?
    Does heavenly wisdom teach us so?
      Let us the question try.

    Is he of independent might?
      Does he himself sustain?
    These questions if we answer right,
      Will make our subject plain.

    See ye his scythe, his dart, his spear?
      Who placed them in his hand?
    Know this, and give the winds your fear;
      Dauntless before him stand.

    Death is a messenger of God,
      And God is love, we know;
    Nothing can come from him but good,--
      No enmity can flow.

    Death only comes when he is sent,
      Commissioned from on high;
    And all his weapons, too, are lent,--
      Why fear we, then, to die?

    Death comes, a friend to mortal man,
      To set his spirit free;
    Nor he, nor any creature, can
      Reverse the blest decree.

    Had death on us an evil eye,
      Would he our pains remove,
    And set our spirits free to fly
      To peaceful realms above?

    Teach not your children, parents dear,
      To dread what God may send;
    Nor fill their tender hearts with fear
      Of Him who is their friend."

There is a lesson here that it would be well for us to remember, a
principle that should be planted and nurtured in our breasts. Death has
been too long looked upon as "the great enemy of our race," while it is
in truth but the calling home of the spirit by the Great Shepherd. 'Tis
but the wedding of the soul with Paradise, the starting post for heaven.
These were the sentiments entertained by Mr. Ballou, and which governed
his mind even to the last.

He says, relative to this deeply interesting and important subject to
us all:--"We are as pilgrims and strangers on earth, as were all our
fathers. The places which now know us will shortly know us no more. How
reasonable, then, is it, that we should often bring this great truth
under serious consideration! If duly considered, it will exert a
favorable influence in relation to the estimates we may make of all
temporal things, and give a favorable direction to our purposes and
determinations. Our fleshly bodies, like the grass of the earth, are
composed of the elements of nature; these elements support both the
grass and our fleshly bodies; and as the grass finally withers and
returns back from whence it came, is decomposed and joined with the
elements of which it was composed, so do our bodies return to the earth
from whence they came. Dust we are, and unto dust we must return. The
certainty of our mortality is as apparent to us all as it can possibly
be made. However seldom we may think on the subject, however we may
endeavor to put it out of our minds and thoughts, however we may
endeavor to drown the subject by devoting our attention to worldly
objects and worldly pursuits, we know that in a short time we must be
called to leave all this bustle of life, close our eyes on all earthly
things, and return to the bosom of our common mother, the earth, from
whence we came.

"As the question whether man should exist or not was not submitted to
him, no more is it left to him to say whether he will continue in this
state forever, or depart out of it. 'All flesh is as grass, and all the
glory of man as the flower of grass; the grass withereth, and the flower
thereof falleth away.' So hath the Creator appointed and ordained; and
it is not in the power of man to prevent this withering of the grass,
and this falling of the flower of grass. However endearing are the ties
of consanguinity, however tender and affectionate are kindred hearts
towards each other, with whatever longings and fond desires fathers and
mothers may look on their sons and daughters, and with whatever devotion
they may nourish these flowers and watch over them, they are altogether
like the grass and the flower of grass. They are perishable. It is not
in the power of children, however affectionately they may love their
fathers and mothers, and however they may desire the continuance of such
kind friends, to prevent that waste of constitution and strength which
time and disease are sure to bring. The whitened locks, the wrinkled
face, the tottering frame, the palsied limbs and faltering voice, are
sure indications that the time of departure is at hand.

"How wonderfully beautiful is the full-grown grass, with its blushing
and fragrant flowers! We cast our eyes over the luxuriant meadow; with
pleasure we behold its beautiful flowers, seeming to vie with each other
in glory; and though we may fancy a preference for this or for that, no
person ever beheld a blossom that was not beautiful to the eye. So we
behold the society of man in health and in the prime of strength; and
how pleasing is the sight! Look at these sweet babes! we may fancy a
preference for the beauty of this or that, but no one can help admiring
every such endearing object. Look around and behold the sparkling eye
and blushing cheek of youth and beauty; but remember these are flowers
gathered for the tomb! Whether we see them or not, Time has wings;
whether we realize it or not, his flight is rapid. What is time when it
is past? Nothing!"

    "He taught us how to live, and O! too high
    The price for knowledge! taught us how to die!"

Touching the matter of death-bed scenes as they refer to religious
belief, and the influence that such scenes and circumstances exerted
over his own mind, he says:

"It has often been said, by the enemies of the doctrine for which I have
contended, that it would do to live by, but not to die by; meaning that
it would not give the mind satisfaction when sensible it was about to
leave a mortal for an immortal state. As to the truth of the assertion I
cannot positively say; that moment has not yet been experienced by me:
and as those who make the remark have never believed the doctrine, I
cannot see how they should know any better than I do. Thus much I can
say: I believe I have seen, and often heard, of persons rejoicing in the
doctrine in the last hours of their lives; but I do not build my faith
on such grounds.

"The sorrows or the joys of persons, in their last moments, prove
nothing to me of the truth of their general belief. A Jew, who despises
the name of Christ from the force of his education, may be filled with
comfortable hopes, in his last moments, from the force of the same
education. I have no doubt but a person may believe, or pretend to
believe, in the doctrine of universal salvation, when he knows of no
solid reason for his belief, but has rather rested the matter on the
judgment of those in whom he has placed more confidence than he has, in
reality, on the Saviour of the world; and I think it very possible that
such Universalists may have strange and unexpected fears, when the near
approach of death, or any other circumstance, should cause them to think
more seriously on so weighty a subject.

"What my feelings might be concerning the doctrine which I believe, was
I called to contemplate on a _death-bed_, I am as unable to say, as I am
what I may think of it a year hence, should I _live_ and be in _health_.
But I am satisfied, beyond a doubt, that if I live a year longer, and
then find cause to give up my present belief, I shall not feel a
consciousness of having professed what I did not _sincerely believe_;
and was I called to leave the world and my _writings_ in it, and at the
_last hour_ of my _life_ should find I had _erred_, yet I am satisfied
that I should _possess_ the _approbation_ of a _good conscience_ in
_all_ I have _written_."

That Mr. Ballou felt fully prepared to die, there can be not the least
doubt, though he did not say so in the exact words that would express
this state of mind. He frequently, during the last two or three months
of his life, made use of expressions, as relating to current events, in
a way that led those about him to see that he was striving,
particularly, to have every matter of business, or family arrangement,
so completed as not in any way to be contingent upon himself. Then his
frequent observations relative to the idea that he was nearly worn out;
and in his sermons, too, his often repeating at this time how near he
was to the brink of the grave, and that those who heard him might
realize the honesty of his reasoning and the sincerity of his doctrine,
since, with so short a span of existence left to him, he could not in
any instance bring himself to support what he did not most solemnly and
religiously believe to be the gospel of Christ, and in full accordance
with the word of God; the caution already referred to as given to his
wife, and various other simple but expressive tokens that he evinced
during the few weeks previous to his decease,--all go fully to show that
his mind was made up to die, and that he foresaw, as it were, the
approach of his demise, with almost prophetic vision. The philosophy, or
sophistry, therefore, as to looking upon death as the inevitable
visitant to others, but as something which must miraculously pass him
by, did not exist in his mind. He looked upon death as "the messenger of
God, commissioned from on high;" and he held himself calmly ready to
answer the blessed decree of Heaven.

Though almost constantly engaged at his study of the holy text, or in
other reading and writing, still, so domestic was Mr. Ballou in his
disposition and feelings, that he always took a lively interest in all
the arrangements of the family, and in each one's well-being, seeking to
cause as little unnecessary labor as possible on his own account. No
motives other than those of the kindest character could possibly have
induced this thoughtfulness, on his part; for all those about him, even
the servants, always deemed it a pleasure to serve him in his slightest
expressed desire, while his children ever sought to anticipate his
wishes. In his directions to those called upon to attend him, there was
none of the austerity or sternness of a master evinced in his manner of
speech. The order direct we never heard from his lips, but, in giving
directions, it was ever in the form of permission,--"You _may_ do this,
or you _may_ hand me that;" and the appropriateness of this mode of
speech was most apparent, since it was a privilege to us all to fulfil
his desires.

With profane history, ancient and modern, he was well acquainted; and at
the age of seventy-four, five and six, he devoted some considerable time
to the reviewal of both, and particularly to the history of our own
country. With Rollin, Plutarch, Smollet, Hume, Prescott, Bancroft, etc.,
he was perfectly familiar. At this period he was engaged, as we have
said, in re-perusing the works of his library, treating mainly upon
profane history. As may be supposed, to one of his disposition, home was
very dear, and he was always happiest with his family.

    "To them his heart, his love, his griefs, were given;
    But all his serious thoughts had rest in heaven."

During the whole of his public ministrations and professional career, he
never labored with more evident effect and general influence than at
this time. The ripened harvest of his experience was poured forth in the
most simple and touching truthfulness, and his discourses were redolent
of holy manna to the souls of his hearers; the sober arguments of
conviction obtained even more fully than in former years, when the vigor
of ripened manhood added its physical powers to the balance. Persons who
had sat under his preaching for many years would listen with the most
absorbed attention, as well as with surprise, to hear the easy flow of
eloquence that seemed to come from an inspired heart, bearing witness to
his quick, sure discernment, and boundless fertility of invention,--the
truth and exemplifications of divine goodness were ever so fresh and
abundant in the feast he spread, the arguments so logical and
convincing. He was endowed in many respects with the great requisites
for a lawyer, possessing a mind exceedingly active, capable of
constantly commanding its own resources, and a faculty of tenaciously
pursuing his argument with exceeding force and power.

It really seemed, latterly, that, realizing how brief must be his
labors, and how near he was to the end of his earthly mission, he
labored with increased zeal, and consequent success. His eyes, when in
the desk, seemed to kindle with superhuman fire, his thoughts to flow
with inspired eloquence; and those who heard him must have entered most
thoroughly into his own spirit, for we have heard, from all directions
where he preached, very earnest remarks of the striking effect produced
by his discourses. And this effect was by no means confined to the
laity; many of his ministering brethren have told us that they had never
heard him discourse with more power, nor ever with such decided effect,
as was the case within the last two years of his life. It was impossible
for him to answer all of the demands upon him, but neither ordinary
inconveniences nor distance ever caused him to decline to respond to
those who, at this late period of his life, sought his counsel. In vain
did we beseech him to consider his bodily comfort, and not risk his
health and try his strength so much, at his advanced age, by these
constant travels. "I am vain enough," he said, "to believe that I still
do some good, and I am never so happy as when exercised by such a
realizing sense; but, whether at home or abroad, I am still in my
Maker's hands, and he will do with me as to him seemeth good."

Mr. Ballou's manuscript was always remarkably plain and correct, being,
in many respects, very characteristic of himself. It was regular,
exceedingly neat, and well executed, yet unostentatious, and in no
degree ornamental. For our own part, we would give more for a scrap of
the hand-writing of one whom we had never met, or even of him whom we
had casually seen, to enable us to judge of the general characteristics
of the individual's disposition, than for the testimony of many an
intimate friend. It is, of necessity, in a very great degree, a sample
of the man; and when we look upon it, and think that it was the work of
his hand, the emanation of his brain, mechanically and mentally his, it
possesses peculiar interest.

Mr. Ballou was sometimes addressed, by letter, from a distance, from
those who were strangers to him, and sometimes by brethren in the
ministry, who would request him to reply to certain queries which they
proposed, that they might reap the advantage of his wisdom. These
letters were various in their character; some related to religious
questions, some to his own history, and some as to its bearing upon his
belief in the tenets of faith. One who professed to have read his
numerous works, and who was also an ardent believer in the doctrine of
universal salvation, converted through his writings, sent the following
queries to him in a letter some time in 1847, during his seventy-sixth
year. Having the letter and reply, we subjoin the spirit of the former,
and give the latter to the reader entire.

"_Queries._--With what feelings do you look back upon your past life,
its influence and results, its commencement and its end? As it regards
your published works and writings, has experience strengthened the
opinions and points laid down in them, or have you after years of study
and reflection found cause for change? What is the present end and aim
of your life, and how does it differ from the morning of your existence?

"_Reply to Query 1st._--When I survey the course of my past life, as I
often do, I am filled with wonder; and a clear conviction that, as a
whole, it has been appointed and directed by Infinite Wisdom, all but
reduces me to nothing. True, I can simply realize that I exist; and can
compare myself to a drop of water in the midst of the ocean, dependent,
as I always have been, on that Being who holds the unmeasured deep in
the hollow of his hand. I am fully satisfied that none of the eventful
incidents of my life would have been what they were, had not an
overruling Providence disappointed my own plans and purposes in many
instances. Pursuant to these considerations, in viewing the apparent
'influences and results' of my labors, I should be quite at variance
with the conviction of my own understanding, should I indulge a feeling
to credit them to myself. With such views of the past and present, I
feel satisfied, and even thankful.

"My childhood and youth were, like most of others, full of vanity. My
public life commenced with no extensive prospects. I do not know that
the thought ever entered my mind that my public labors would ever
procure me a livelihood.... My main desire now is that it may please Him
whose I am and whom I serve, so to direct that what remains of my
fleeting days may in no way dishonor, but promote, the cause of his
truth, to which I have so long been devoted.

"_Reply to Query 2nd._--All the _important_ doctrinal points contained
in the several works which I have published are still my honest
convictions; and as they were widely different from the views generally
entertained by theologians, I examined them with all possible care, and
have never seen cause to rescind them. And I can add, that I have never,
in my public labors, allowed myself to present to my hearers any
sentiment, or to expound any portion of scripture, but in accordance
with the sober convictions of my understanding.

"_Reply to Query 3d._--The main object by which I was actuated at the
commencement of my public labors was to understand the true doctrine of
the Scriptures, and by all possible means to convey conviction of its
truth to the understanding of all who had ears to hear; and my present
aim is to finish, in the best manner I can, these labors, by persuading
people, not only to understand the true nature of the gospel, but to
cherish its blessed hopes, and to faithfully practise its precepts."

During a visit of the author of this biography to the Southern and
Western States of the Union, in the summer of 1846, he had an
opportunity to witness the most evident token of the popularity of Mr.
Ballou in these sections, and the high esteem in which his writings are
held. This was particularly the case in the State of Ohio, the most
distant point from his home that Mr. Ballou ever visited. Here, in
passing through the state, we had frequent occasion to register our name
and place of residence, which often led to our being asked whether we
were a connection of Hosea Ballou's; and when the existing relationship
was made known, there were no bounds to the hospitality that was urged
upon us. In Cincinnati, it so happened that an original lithographic
print of Mr. Ballou was being struck off just as we left the city, and
we were kindly furnished with the first dozen impressions taken from the
stone. This lithograph is from a crayon drawing taken from life, at
Akron, Ohio, during the visit of Mr. Ballou to that town in 1844, by an
artist sent up from Cincinnati for the purpose. The likeness is a good
one in many respects, but much inferior to several taken in Boston, both
as it regards likeness and as a work of art.

During the summer of 1847, Mr. Ballou visited his eldest son, Rev. Hosea
F. Ballou, at his residence and farm in Whitingham, Vt., where for
several days he applied himself to labor on the land; reaping, mowing,
and the various departments of farming, during the week, and to public
services in that and the neighboring towns on the Sabbath. These few
weeks of healthy toil invigorated him to a most surprising degree, and,
though more than seventy-five years of age, I was assured by those who
were on the spot that he did the work of a day-laborer with ease, and
that his hand wielded the scythe with the steadiness and effect of early
years. He told us afterwards himself how sweet his food tasted, how
refreshing his bed felt, and how clear and invigorated his brain was, by
this homely labor, and the sweat of the brow. He would sometimes sigh at
the constraint of his town life, and eulogize the green fields and
verdant hill-sides. He says: "All of us have our prescribed duties, and
the economy of nature requires certain tastes and temperaments that
will apply themselves to the various concerns of life. We find the
mechanic, the farmer, the minister, the artisan, the lawyer, all endowed
with some prominent qualities, which particularly fit them for the
proper discharge of their peculiar calling; and this is necessary, that
all things may be done well and harmoniously. But, of all the business
occupations of life, it has always seemed to me that the farmer's
employment must be the most agreeable. The country is real, the city is
artificial; one is nature, the other is art. In the earlier portions of
my life, I gathered some experience in tilling the soil; in boyhood and
early youth, it was almost my sole occupation. Even as late as my
residence in Salem, I was accustomed to plant and cultivate a portion of
ground. The great charm of the farmer's element is that it brings him in
such close contact with nature; his labor, so healthful and
invigorating, being performed to the soft hymns and sacred melodies that
creation ever chants in open fields and woodlands."

During this season Mr. Ballou travelled considerably in the New England
States and New York, in accordance with letters of invitation sent to
him from every direction. During the month of August he preached at
numerous places in the vicinity of Montpelier, Vt., and the route
thither from Boston. This journey was peculiarly gratifying to his
feelings; everywhere he was received with that warmth of heart and real
sincerity that invigorate the soul. Meeting-houses were abandoned as
too small, and temporary pulpits were erected in the open air, from
whence he addressed the thousands who came from far and near to listen
to his words. His name was so well known, and his character so beloved,
throughout the order, that the simple announcement of his presence drew
multitudes together, who listened with the utmost avidity to his words,
which carried with them the "clear running wine of conviction."

Here let us pause for a moment, and ask the reader to consider what a
powerful and godly influence the life of such a man must have exerted
upon community, and those persons with whom he was brought into frequent
contact. There was such perfect harmony, such a beautiful consistency,
between his pure Christian life and the religion he taught, that the
most thoughtless could not but observe and note it. We heard an old man
say, but a few days ago,--"Before I knew your father I heard that he was
one of the vilest of men; that he was intemperate, profane, vulgar, and,
in short, everything that was bad. But when I saw him, meek,
unostentatious, gentle, reverential, and preaching such glorious truths,
I said to myself, so was his Divine Master reviled and persecuted!" This
was the false report that was raised against him thirty and forty years
since. The subject of this biography did not answer these calumnies; he
_lived_ them down, and manifested as strong an argument in favor of his
doctrine by his every-day life, as by his oral communications from the
pulpit. His writings, too, evincing the same spirit as his personal
career, manifesting so much sincerity, and logical force of argument,
garbed in such simple language, and yet conveying such sublime truths,
and these so largely enforced by a personal knowledge of their
author,--at least throughout a large portion of the eastern
states,--must have exerted, and will continue to exert, an influence of
almost incalculable extent.

It is in perfect unison with the analogy of nature that the sunset of
life should be more cheerful and joyous than the meridian. The sweetest
notes of the nightingale are heard at evening, the woods put on their
most cheerful aspect in the autumn of the year, and the sun is the
brightest when about to sink beneath the horizon. It was at this period
of life that Mr. Ballou seemed to have arrived at the goal of his
ambition, actuated only by

    "Those calm desires that ask but little room."

The principles which he had so long and so strenuously advocated
prevailing beyond all precedence, his family happily settled in life
about him, and himself respected and beloved by an entire denomination
as a faithful disciple of Christ and a true Christian. In a conversation
with him upon the comforts and troubles of old age, we asked him, one
day, about this period, what was his greatest trouble. He facetiously
referred us to the reply of Fontenelle, who was asked, in extreme old
age, what inconvenience he experienced, when he replied, "None, but that
of existence," signifying by this answer how really happy and contented
he was.

For the last twenty years of Mr. Ballou's life, it was not an uncommon
occurrence for strangers from a distance to call on him and introduce
themselves, as desirous of looking upon him and making his acquaintance.
"I have read your works, and it has seemed as though I knew you well
already, for they are like familiar conversations." This would be the
purport of their language. "Your books," they would say, "have made me a
Universalist; and I could not feel satisfied until I had seen personally
one to whom I am so much indebted, and whom I so highly respect." This
was the case in more than one instance, at different periods, when
Englishmen declared that it was the great purpose that had influenced
them in visiting the Union. In such cases they met with a cordial and
hospitable welcome at his house and table, and hours of pleasant
discussion would ensue upon the doctrines of the Scriptures, and
congenial themes. Many were the visitors from various parts of the
country with the same avowed purpose, and similarly influenced.

In the latter part of 1848, owing to some unfortunate exposure to the
weather, he was most violently attacked with ague in the face, so severe
as to cause the whole face to swell so much as to close one of the eyes
entirely. The attack lasted in its effects for several days, and was
exceedingly painful. Though moved with the keenest regret at the pain we
knew he must suffer, still we could not but admire the strength of mind
and calm philosophy with which he endured it. Not a murmur escaped his
lips, and intervals occurring between the most severe moments of his
suffering were devoted to writing or study, while the constant kind
offices of those about him, and more particularly those of his
dearly-beloved partner and children, were ever received with grateful
words, and tokens of a full appreciation of the warm love that prompted
them.

In the summer of 1847, the School-street Society requested of Mr.
Ballou, through its standing committee, that he would sit for a
full-length portrait, to be the property of the society, and to be hung
in Murray Hall, adjoining the church. Mr. Ballou agreed to their
proposition, and granted the requisite sittings, and a magnificent
portrait was produced. The picture is as large as life. The preacher is
represented standing in the pulpit of the School-street church, the
fingers of the right hand inserted in the Bible, the left slightly
extended. The likeness and expression are perfectly life-like, and true
to the original. From this excellent painting several copies have been
taken for his family and friends.

This painting was the source of a great degree of satisfaction to the
society and Mr. Ballou's friends generally, for, in common with many
others left of him, it is excellent as a likeness, and therefore is a
pregnant page in his history; for, of the three principal channels of
judging and arriving at the knowledge of character, namely, looks, words
and actions, the former is the most faithful. Professions pass for
nothing, actions may be counterfeited, but a man's _looks_ he cannot
hide. A modern writer, in language perhaps too forcible, says:--"A
man's whole life may be a lie to himself and others, and yet a picture
painted of him by a great artist would probably stamp his true character
on the canvas, and betray the secret to posterity." Subscribing in a
large degree to this principle, we consider that the paintings, busts,
medallions, and likenesses generally, of Mr. Ballou, may be highly
valued as speaking his true character in the expression, and telling a
faithful story of the original.

As it regards the likeness which the publisher has placed in the
commencement of this biography, to those who have not seen the subject
of the picture within the last few years, it may look perhaps a little
too aged; but in this respect it is the most truthful of any likeness of
him extant. He has been often represented, as the reader is aware, at
almost every period of his life since his thirtieth year; and with more
or less correctness, in each instance, as it regarded his expression and
formation of features at that time; but it strikes us that those who
have been familiar with Mr. Ballou's face to the last of his career will
esteem this engraving, aside from its superior artistic excellence, as
transcribing for us the _last_ looks of his dearly-loved face.

In a notice of the large painting now hanging in Murray Hall, which
appeared in the Trumpet of Sept. 4th, 1847, the editor says:--

"He (Mr. Ballou) is now in excellent health, firm, erect, and preaches
vigorously; his mind is unimpaired; he is strong in the faith to which
the labors of his life have been given, and we do not see why he will
not be able to preach for ten years to come, should his life be spared.
He can preach three sermons with but little fatigue, while some of the
middle-aged can hardly find strength to preach twice of a Sunday."

In the fall of 1847, Mr. Ballou, then in his seventy-seventh year,
attended the Universalist convention in New York city, where he
delivered a sermon before the brethren assembled there, which created no
small degree of notice, and was pronounced by those who heard it to be
one of extraordinary power and force. Some of the brethren at once
called upon him for a copy for publication; but when he told them that
he had no copy himself, and that it was entirely extemporaneous, their
surprise was great. That one of his advanced age could deliver a
discourse of so remarkable a character, with every point arranged in the
most exact order, abounding in powerful and well-sustained argument and
varied phases, unless assisted by notes, seemed almost impossible.

So much sensation did this discourse create, that Mr. Ballou acceded to
the earnest solicitations that besieged him, and wrote it out for the
press, and it was published in pamphlet form. He remarked to us,
concerning the matter, that it was much harder for him to write it than
it would have been to have written two sermons from a given text, since
he had to _recall_ what he had spoken extempore weeks before. But this
was done so exactly as to create surprise in those who had listened to
it from the pulpit, for its correctness and likeness to the oral
delivery.

We subjoin a short sketch from this sermon, because it is so
characteristic of the spirit that actuated Mr. Ballou at all times; a
spirit of the utmost simplicity,--one of the striking peculiarities of
real genius,--both in his public teachings and private life, and also as
a specimen of his purity and force of style at this period of life. The
contrast drawn between the gospel of Christ and the polished creed of
the schools is striking and obvious.

"With all the pomp, with all the glory, with all the wealth, and all the
learning of the schools, among both Jews and Gentiles, let us, for a
moment, compare the simplicity that was in Christ. Born in a family
which was supported by mechanical labor, brought up in laborious habits,
destitute of wealth and the honors of the schools, he commenced his
public labors. To assist him in the ministry of his doctrine, a few
fishermen, and others of useful occupation, were chosen. The doctrine
which Jesus taught was as simple and easy to understand as the common
affairs of life. His sermon on the mount, containing the sublimest
beatitudes, and all the duties of life, requires but ordinary talents to
understand. His manner of teaching by the use of parables communicated
truth in the most simple manner. When he justified his favor to
publicans and sinners, of which he was accused by the Pharisees and
Scribes, how simple was his method! 'What man of you, having an hundred
sheep, if he lose one of them, doth not leave the ninety and nine in
the wilderness, and go after that which is lost, until he find it? and
when he hath found it he layeth it on his shoulder, rejoicing. And when
he cometh home, he calleth together his friends and neighbors, saying
unto them, Rejoice with me; for I have found my sheep which was lost.'
And how sublimely simple, if I may so say, was his application of his
parable! 'I say unto you, that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one
sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons,
which need no repentance.' On foot, see him travel from city to city!
Fatigued and weary of his journey, see him resting himself by Jacob's
well at Sichar; and mark the simplicity of his conversation with the
woman of Samaria! To set his disciples an example of humility, behold
him who gave sight to the blind, hearing to the deaf, healing to the
sick, soundness to the maimed, and life to the dead, gird himself with a
towel, and wash their feet!

"How poorly has the simplicity which is in Christ been maintained by the
Christian church! Read its history, in which we learn its conformity to
such worldly institutions and customs as are pleasing to human ambition,
and all the vain pride and corruption which characterized pagan
idolatry. That subtilty with which the serpent beguiled Eve is
constantly at work, persuading us to seek to render religion popular in
the eyes of the world. That spiritual wickedness may be maintained in
high places, high places must be established and supported. So deeply
is the love of popular esteem rooted in the heart, that it is to be
feared many are inclined to concede to opinions and customs inconsistent
with their better judgment, for the sake of that shining phantom."

We remember an incident which occurred to Mr. Ballou in January of 1848,
which he related to us at the time. He had occasion to enter an omnibus
to proceed from one extreme of the city to another, when, having
scarcely become seated, an elderly woman, who was occupying a seat
immediately opposite, said to him,--"Mr. Ballou, do you not constantly
preach to your congregation, 'O ye generation of vipers! how can ye
escape the damnation of hell?'" Mr. Ballou turned his keen, piercing eye
upon her, and seeing that some bigoted and fanatical individual had
recognized him, and desired to commence an argument, replied,--"No,
madam; that class do not attend my church!" The woman had not
anticipated so decided an answer, and, shading her eyes with her hands,
contemplated the floor of the coach the remainder of the passage.

So little self-pride had Mr. Ballou, and so little comparatively did he
think or care about having any biographical sketch appear of him after
his death, that it was with the utmost difficulty that we persuaded him
to attempt a manuscript of even a few pages, that a more authentic
record might be preserved for the aid of the subject when it should be
taken in hand. But all that we were able to procure from him the reader
will find duly credited in these pages. Mr. Ballou had an ambition,
however, that his written works should be preserved after him; for in
them he had labored for the good of mankind, and he hoped those labors
might not prove unavailable. His wish was highly gratified, in this
respect, during his life, by the very wide circulation they attained,
and the numerous editions of them which were published, showing that
they were largely read and valued by the Christian world.

Having partially yielded to our reiterated solicitations for some few
pages of manuscript, if only relating to the simplest affairs, he sat
down, and commenced a sheet of paper in the same humorous vein in which
he was always sure to treat the idea of writing of himself. This
commencement was as follows:

"I have never learned that there were, before my birth, any prophecies
delivered by any one, or that any one had dreamed anything concerning
myself. If there happened, at the time of my birth, an earthquake, or
the appearance of a comet, or any other phenomenon of nature which
indicated anything relative to me, or signified what manner of person I
should become, in what employment my life should be spent, whether I
should become useful to society or a nuisance, the fact has never come
to my knowledge."

The life of Mr. Ballou is so intimately woven with the annals of
Universalism that the account of the one must be an almost complete life
of the other. He nursed the first dawn of belief in impartial and free
grace to all mankind, and lived to see the blessed doctrine grow and
spread over the land, like the day, from its breaking to the meridian.
He was the pioneer, the leader, the propagator, of Universalism.

During April, 1848, he visited and preached in Philadelphia, New York,
&c., and on his return expressed himself as he always did of the
brethren in those cities, and that he had been made most happy in his
communion with them.

About this period, an infatuated preacher of future punishment,
somewhere in the northern part of New York State, while in a high state
of excitement, declared to his audience that Universalists and Infidels
always renounced their belief before they died, and absolutely instanced
old Hosea Ballou, as he termed him, who had _lately_ died, penitent and
fully repentant for his evil life, entirely refuting all his former
belief, and praying to be saved from the wrath to come. Equally
ridiculous allusions were made to his wife, who was said to have showed
more consistency, and to have died stubbornly adhering to her old
principles. This ridiculous assertion was reported in a paper published
in the vicinity, and a copy marked and sent to Mr. Ballou.

We asked him if he had not better address a brief letter to the editor,
just to confound the propagator of the falsehood. "No," said he; "I have
learned, by experience, that libels, if neglected, are forgotten; if
resented, they too frequently pass for merited satire."

In the month of June, 1849, Mr. Ballou visited Troy, N. Y., for a few
weeks, and preached there and in the neighborhood, with his accustomed
vigor and mental power. His clear, musical tones of voice were as
perfectly modulated as ever, and his mental and physical vigor was the
occasion of remark by all who listened to him.

One of Mr. Ballou's latest impromptu efforts at versification was
elicited by a request for his autograph, by a young lady, who presented
her album for this purpose, and in which he wrote the following lines:

              THE MAID I PRIZE.

    "The maid I prize may not be one
      Whose beauty dazzles vulgar eyes;
    Those glowing folds 't were wise to shun,
      Where death in hidden poison lies.

    The maid I prize may not rely
      On costly robes my heart to win;
    The rose's blush, the lily's dye,
      Can ne'er commend a breast of sin.

    The maid I prize has tears for grief,
      And soft compassion for the poor;
    'Tis her delight to grant relief;
      Where want resides she knows the door.

    The maid I prize hath chosen that part
      The golden Indies cannot buy;
    And garnered in a pious heart
      A treasure far above the sky."

As late as December, 1851, and January, 1852, Mr. Ballou passed five
weeks in the city of New York, preaching to the societies there
frequently three times of a Sabbath, and at conference meetings during
other days of the week. He was often called upon for lengthy remarks,
which he most cheerfully and heartily gave. He was never so happy, never
so well, as when engaged about his Master's business; and though, at
this age,--eighty-one,--his form was a little bent, and his step less
firm than of yore, yet in the pulpit he stood as erect as at fifty. His
whole soul seemed to dilate, and his firmness of voice and body to be
like iron; so much so, indeed, that it was usual to hear remarks to this
effect, from all quarters, wherever he appeared.

During this his last visit to New York, he wrote to us as follows:

     "MATURIN: A kind Providence brought me safely hither in due course,
     and I have already made several appointments and promises relative
     to my services while I tarry here. As in years gone by, I find the
     same cordial hospitality here, and brotherly love extended towards
     me still. I need hardly say how grateful this is to my feelings. We
     grow, perhaps, more sensitive, as we advance in age, as to these
     little kindnesses and attentions, that unitedly go to make up the
     quiet peace and happiness of private life.

     "Our Heavenly Father has smiled upon the sacred cause in this
     place, and the churches flourish here exceedingly. Even now I am
     about to proceed to New Jersey, to dedicate a new temple, raised to
     the service of the living God. To me, the increase of the
     denomination with which I have so long been identified is a source
     of peculiar satisfaction. My bodily health is fully as good as when
     I left Boston; and, by the blessing of Divine Goodness, I trust
     again to be at home in a brief period, to enjoy the society of
     those near and dear to me. Please tell your mother to duly regard
     her health, and remember me kindly to all the family.

     "Affectionately,
     "HOSEA BALLOU."

"After the singing of another anthem," says the correspondent of the
Trumpet, in a letter from Newark relative to the dedication referred to,
"came the sermon, by our venerable and beloved Father Ballou, from the
fitting words recorded in 1 Chron. 16: 29. The audience was not large,
but respectable in number; and from the first moments when the
gray-haired speaker stood up before the people till he sat down again,
the most marked and almost breathless attention was given. The speaker
believed that 'the name of the Lord' expressed all the attributes of His
adorable character. He proceeded to notice some of those attributes,
with wonderful power and simplicity, enforcing the truth that _goodness_
must be coextensive with _wisdom_ in the Divine character. He
illustrated the workings of the law of love, as opposed to the law of
fear, by the examples of the grateful offerings of our people to the
beloved Washington and Lafayette. The people honored them, not because
a terrible penalty was threatened should they refuse to yield the
tribute, but because they loved them. Worship, true worship, cannot be
_bought_; it must be _free_. It can be offered only to a God infinite in
goodness and mercy. Father Ballou affectionately exhorted the people to
give unto the Lord, in the neat temple they had reared, the glory so
justly due for all his revelations of good will to the children of men.
As children, filled with gratitude, should they come into his courts. A
severe, yet _kind_-spirited rebuke, was administered to those who go to
church simply to display fine apparel, or because it is fashionable. In
doing our duty, we are happy, we offer unto the Lord; while they who
serve fashion and popularity have just their reward, _and no more_.

"I have never listened to this aged servant of God with greater delight
and profit than on that occasion. It hardly seemed possible that so
clear, and forcible, and eloquent a production, could come from the
mouth of one who has borne the brunt of eighty-one years."

At the age of four score, Mr. Ballou preached before the New York
Convention of Universalists, at Boston, in September, 1851. Concerning
this occasion, Rev. A. C. Thomas, in the autobiography before quoted
from, says: "He (Mr. Ballou) is an exception to the 'labor and sorrow'
affirmed of those who, by reason of strength, attain that period of
life. He was, indeed, feeble in body; but 'his eye was not dim, nor his
natural force abated.' He saw as clearly as ever into the 'root of the
matter,' and largely exemplified his peculiar force of argumentation.
Was there ever a clearer or more forcible illustration than the one he
presented regarding a mother and her child?--'Your child has fallen into
the mire, and its body and its garments are defiled. You cleanse it, and
array it in clean robes. The query is, Do you love your child because
you have washed it, or did you wash it because you loved it?'"

Mr. Ballou's contributions to the press largely increased during the
latter years of his life, and the articles he wrote, at various times,
during this period, will bear the most critical examination, as it
regards the soundness of their doctrinal points, the excellence and
purity of their style, and the Christian spirit they invariably show
forth in every line. These contributions to the press have appeared
mainly in the "Trumpet and Universalist Magazine," the "Universalist
Quarterly," and the "Christian Freeman."

In 1851, at the solicitation of Rev. Mr. Usher, book publisher, Mr.
Ballou edited a collection of his sermons, and wrote some original
articles, which were published under the title of "A Voice to
Universalists." This book also contained a collection of Mr. Ballou's
fugitive verses, published many years since, and written for the poet's
corner of his paper. We can, perhaps, give no better review or reference
to this book, than by copying Rev. Thomas Whittemore's published review
of it, which we subjoin.

"The '_General Epistle to Universalists_' is itself worth the price of
the book. Tell us not that this might have been published in tract, or
any cheap form. It would never have served its mission thus to be read
and thrown away. It should have been where it is, in a large, splendid
book, to grace our centre-tables, and to be taken thence and read as
often as once a month.

"The same remarks may be made in relation to the '_Advice to Young Men
who design to enter the Ministry_.'

"The '_Short Essay on Universalism_,' '_The Doctrine of Universal
Salvation shown to be included in the Divine Commands_,' and '_The
Utility of Evil_,' are likewise valuable mementos of their author; and
so are the two _Convention Sermons_.

"And then, in respect to the metrical compositions, we could not spare
them from this book. True, the author, as he modestly says in a note to
the reader, makes no pretensions to being a poet; yet his poetry is to
us exceedingly precious. It is in this we discover more clearly the
moral likeness of the man. In the frontispiece we have a satisfactory
likeness of the outer man; and how should we consent to tear from the
book this no less accurate likeness of the soul? In these hymns we see
the author in his characteristic meekness of spirit, self-abasement,
pure and ardent devotion, and all-sustaining faith in the wise and
perfect government of God. Here, too, in these hymns and poems, are
specimens of the author's clearness and precision of intellectual
discernment, and his argumentative acumen. The work shall go down to
posterity as a memento of Father Ballou."

The article in this book entitled the "Utility of Evil" is one of great
power and force. Mr. Ballou's theory is, that what _we_ call evil does
not exist without the wise permission and appointment of the infinitely
good and gracious God. In the article on this subject he says:

"Reader, do not be offended at the title of this short article, and call
it impious. Will you say you never before heard that evil is useful?
Will you say the suggestion is wicked, and could be made by no other
than one who is wicked? Well, suppose all which you imagine be true, may
it not be well to be calm, and deliberately consider that, though you
have never before heard of this thing, it may, notwithstanding, be a
divine truth? If you will be candid, and bring your mind into a suitable
condition to be reasoned with, we will call you to the consideration of
questions which, if properly answered, will lead us into the true light
of our subject. 1st. Is evil self-existent? If no one will allow this,
there is no need of argument to disprove it. It follows, of course, that
evil had a cause which produced it; this is self-evident. 2d. Is it not
equally self-evident that the cause which produced evil is good? If we
say that the cause which produced evil was evil, we thereby say that
evil existed before it existed! When these several points are
understood, we are prepared to state the following axioms:

"1st. That which had no beginning had no cause to produce it. 2d. If we
should say that good had an origin or a cause, We should be compelled to
say that that cause was evil! 3d. If we allow that evil had an origin or
cause, we must allow that the origin of evil is good." pp. 115, 116.

From the commencement of 1852 until within a week of his death, we find
him constantly active, with the weight of fourscore years and more; yet
he never for a moment faltered in his mission. During the last year of
his life he preached in seven different states, and in about forty
different places. His pen was still as busy as ever. One Sunday found
him in Maine, the next in New Hampshire, the third in Vermont; now he is
in New York, New Jersey, or Rhode Island, preaching the word with
unabated zeal and surprising effect in all directions. The copy of the
Trumpet that announces his death contains two articles from his pen,
commending to the order two lately published biographies, showing forth
as illustrations of what a true and noble aim will empower the soul to
do amid the humblest circumstances, one of the strongest illustrations
of which is his own life. His last paragraph reads thus: "We need not
look forward to the good time, for it is now come, when ministers are
esteemed for their knowledge of divine truth, and their ardent love for
the same, together with their faithfulness in dispensing it to the
people, and their living and walking in the precepts of Jesus." At the
time of his death he had two appointments already arranged, one in
Massachusetts and one in New Hampshire, besides several under
consideration.

"Verily, he was at his post to the last," says Rev. T. B. Thayer, in his
eulogy upon Mr. Ballou; "and when the messenger came, he was ready. He
fell in the full armor of God, with the helmet of salvation on his head,
his spotless heart covered with the breastplate of righteousness, his
feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace. In one hand he
held the shield of faith, and in the other the sword of the spirit,
which is the word of God,--the sword which he had for sixty years
wielded with such success in his multiplied battles with error and sin,
and by which at last he was, through Jesus Christ, made conqueror, and
more than conqueror, over death and the grave. Verily, the old man died,
as he had lived, faithful, courageous, serene, victorious, to the last."

It was in these ripened days of his experience that his counsel was
eagerly sought by all, laity and clergy, in private and in public. His
activity and anxiety to be about his Master's business carried him
constantly into the midst of all important denominational assemblies;
and here he was ever received, both his presence and his counsel, with
profound respect. If there was contention, misunderstanding, or
difficulty of any sort, all eyes were turned upon him who sat so quietly
and thoughtfully in their midst; he was their peace-maker, his calm
voice stilled the tempest, his finger pointed the way towards the
right. As Mr. Thayer says in the eulogy just quoted from:

"It will be a long time before we shall get accustomed, in our
associations and conventions, to the absence of that venerable form,
those gray hairs, and that voice of wisdom, and gentleness, and love,
which came like oil on the troubled waters of debate, and drew out the
entangled threads of thought, and by quaint queries, by questions which
answered themselves, questions plainer than most men's answers,
penetrated to the heart of every subject, and showed us, as by a flash
of light, the exact point where the truth lay. We shall often desire in
our councils his presence, his clear thought, his persuasive language,
his gentleness of manner, and his conclusive logic."

Mr. Ballou had a most remarkable faculty of seeing through any abstruse
question or subject that came up for discussion before any body with
which he was sitting in fellowship, and could at once seem to set all
right in their midst, by a few shrewdly-uttered words. Another brother
has said of him in this respect:

"It was wonderful how he would put the needle in amid the tangled skein
of reasonings, in a debate, and untie the knot just where the whole
might be wound off without any difficulty; and how he would hold to the
essential point in an important discussion, and dissipate every
obscuration that threatened to darken and eclipse it, was astonishing,
and showed where his power as a master reasoner lay. Such was the man."

We must now turn from these desultory remarks and references, to
describe the end of his earthly mission.




CHAPTER XV.

END OF HIS EARTHLY MISSION.


How shall we speak of the close of that life which we have so feebly
succeeded in portraying,--how depict the sunset of his soul upon
earth,--how describe the unfeigned and unbounded sympathy and mourning
of a whole denomination,--how refer to the appropriate ceremonies--the
funeral obsequies--that were so beautifully and tenderly performed by
the society over whom he had so long held such heart-sway, and whom he
loved better than all else on earth, save his family? How shall our
feeble pen portray these striking and long to be remembered scenes?
Throughout this entire subject we have written tremblingly, and with a
full realizing sense of the magnitude of the theme, and the humble
ability of our pen. But here we feel our hand indeed too feeble, our
sensibilities too acute, and shall call to our aid stronger minds and
abler pens.

In no more appropriate place than here can we refer to his parting with
the loved companion of his bosom. His wife had been confined to her
chamber for some weeks, by severe indisposition, just previous to his
own last illness, nor was she able to leave it until some time after the
last obsequies in honor to his memory. On the morning that Mr. Ballou
was taken ill, he came to her from his own dressing-room, kissed her
tenderly, and bade her adieu, with all the gentle and affectionate
solicitude with which a young husband might have left his bride; and,
passing down stairs to the parlor, was preparing to depart for the scene
of the convention at Plymouth, when he was suddenly taken in a fainting
fit. A couch was immediately removed to the room where he was taken so
suddenly ill, and he was not removed from it until he fell quietly
asleep in death. Little did the fond wife and companion of his bosom
think, when he bade her thus farewell, that it was for the last
time;--that it was the last time she should ever behold, on this earth,
that countenance that had never been turned upon her save in love and
tenderness,--that noble brow that had been her pride and glory in its
sublime truthfulness and purity of expression,--those eloquent lips that
had been such a well-spring of heavenly truths! But such it was. Herself
too ill to be removed from her chamber, she never saw him afterwards;
and she still cherishes his memory as associated with that fond and
endearing look that accompanied his last kiss and farewell!

In relation to the manner in which he had prepared the mind of his wife
for the event which he seemed so clearly to foresee, Rev. Mr. Miner, in
his farewell sermon, said:--

"He had often exhorted his companion to hold herself in readiness for
his departure, forewarning her that every separation from her might be
the last. But a few days previous to his death, he had renewedly
impressed this upon her mind. What a sublime spectacle was this! At more
than fourscore years of age, braving the rigors of mid-winter and the
extreme heat of summer, and regardless of the dangers that attend the
rapid conveyances of our time, this veteran preacher 'takes his life in
his hand,' and goes forth continually to promulgate the everlasting
gospel!"

We must not omit to give the reader a brief article which Mr. Ballou
left among his papers, relating to the close of his earthly career. It
was folded in with his accounts, will, and other important papers, and
was written in his usual legible hand. It was in the spirit of a preface
to the will which followed, and in which every matter had been plainly
arranged, with that regard for impartiality, strict justice and
completeness, that was in accordance with his nature, and all that he
did or said in relation to any subject in which he engaged.

     "In view of that solemn event, which must unavoidably take place,
     which will end my mortal days and close my labors on earth, I make
     this serious and important declaration: I humbly and earnestly pray
     that the Father of the spirits of all flesh may, in that mercy
     which he has revealed in our Lord Jesus Christ, forgive all that in
     my whole life he sees amiss in me. This prayer is offered in that
     _faith_ for which I adore him who hath given it to me.

     "I heartily regret that I have not been a better husband, a better
     father, and especially a better and more useful minister of the
     gospel of divine grace. For my faults in these particulars I ask
     the forgiveness of the kind and faithful wife of my bosom, of my
     dearly-beloved and dutiful children, and of the discerner of my
     heart and thoughts, to whom I offer devout and unfeigned gratitude,
     that, by his favor, I have been enabled to do as well as I have in
     the relation of a husband, and father, and minister of the gospel
     of Christ. I sincerely return thanks to all my brethren in the
     common faith, for all their kindness to me. I sincerely thank the
     great fraternity of Christians, united with me in the precious
     faith in which we believe, and especially the church and society
     with whom, for more than thirty years, I have lived in love, and
     with whom I have labored in word and doctrine, for all their
     numerous favors.

     "Hosea Ballou."

       *       *       *       *       *

     "A great man has fallen," says the editor of the Trumpet. "There
     have been but few such men as Father Ballou. We can truly say that
     those who knew him best loved him most. Those who had heard him
     preach the oftenest, and who had read the most thoroughly what he
     had written, felt more than others the power of his mind, and were
     more deeply convinced than others that he was intellectually, as
     well as religiously and morally, a great man. His life was
     protracted beyond fourscore years; he enjoyed a very large share of
     health and strength through that whole time. He was never idle; he
     worked, up to the last week of his life, in the harvest-field, and
     actually died with the sickle in his hand. He was taken sick at his
     own house; and, after six days of comparatively light suffering, he
     gently fell asleep in death, quietly as an infant falls into
     slumber, and at the moment when he seemed to be putting his body in
     the posture for the coffin.

     "It is in vain for us to attempt to give, in this brief sketch, an
     account of the travels of Father Ballou; the small but interesting
     and instructive incidents of his life,--his sermons, his
     controversies, the different books he wrote, the judgment of
     impartial men concerning him,--all these things must be left to be
     described at a time and under circumstances when full justice can
     be done to the illustrious man. His character, too, must be drawn.
     For ourself, we say, most unreservedly, we never knew a better man.
     We say this, after having lived in his family under his immediate
     tuition, and since that time spent more than thirty years side by
     side with him, 'in journeyings often,' in mutual consultations, and
     in very frequent interviews. If we ever saw a person equally
     amiable, kind, upright, gentle and true, it is the aged widow who
     survives him. If he was more than a father to us, she was more
     than a mother. She can never be honored too much for her goodness.
     To her must be attributed much of the ease and quietness he enjoyed
     in life, and without which he could not have accomplished the full
     measure of the good for which he is now beloved and reverenced. So
     much for the moral qualities of this venerable man and woman. There
     remain yet to be described (but it cannot be done here) the
     child-like simplicity of the man; his benevolence; his blindness to
     the faults of others; his open eye to their virtues; his strong
     sense of rectitude; his remarkable and long-continued habits of
     justice; his wonderful mind, so clear, so strong, to the last; his
     eagle-eyed sagacity; his strong faith in God and his word,--a faith
     like a mountain for its towering height and firmness; his devotion
     to the truth; his love of the work of the ministry; his truly
     religious character; his susceptibility to deep devotional feeling;
     his love of conventions and associations for the seasons of public
     worship they gave him so many opportunities to enjoy; his love of
     conference meetings; his power over the people; his closing sermons
     at conventions; his prayers at the separation, when all, old and
     young, male and female, clergy and laity, would be melted into
     tears;--ah! who shall attempt to describe all these things?"

     "For myself (for I will throw off the editorial style), I
     acknowledge that I feel most deeply the loss of this steadfast
     friend. I mourn, not for him, but for _myself_. To me he had been a
     father. He found me in my early manhood, and drew me out from
     seclusion. He taught my lips to pray. He turned my attention to the
     ministry; and he sought and obtained the means to support me, when
     I had not a cent with which to help myself. He was in the desk with
     me when I stood up tremblingly (in the town-house in Roxbury) to
     preach my first sermon. He introduced me to the society in Milford,
     Mass., where I had my first pastoral charge, and where I formed the
     tenderest relations of human life; and he was the cause of my being
     invited, in the year 1822, to settle at Cambridgeport, where I ever
     since have lived. For six years thereafter, I was associated with
     him in conducting the 'Universalist Magazine;' and from that time
     to his death he has been a constant contributor to the columns of
     the 'Trumpet,' refusing for the last ten years all pecuniary
     compensation, although repeatedly pressed upon him. He has been the
     earnest, steadfast friend of my wife and children; my earthly guide
     and counsellor, who has reproved me, but not too often; my teacher
     to the end of his life; a man of whom I have learned more
     concerning God and the divine word, and the relation between God
     and man, than I have learned from any other human source. How can
     the event of such a man's death transpire, without exciting in me
     extraordinary sensations? And yet I am not inconsolable. When I
     reflect upon what he was, upon the length of his life, upon the
     great measure of good he accomplished, upon the fact that he was
     permitted (although so much away) to die at home, surrounded by
     his most exemplary and loving children, after a very brief
     sickness, and to die so gently, almost in the act of binding
     sheaves in the harvest-field,--I cease to mourn. I thank God for
     what he was; and if I could call him back to earth, I should not
     dare to do so. I thank God that I saw him within an hour of his
     death, and that he knew me, and extended his hand, and that I was
     permitted to take it and kiss it. And now, although there never
     will be, for there never can be, another man to me like Father
     Ballou, I will be reconciled. And I will close this brief sketch
     with the words of Job,--'The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken
     away; blessed be the name of the Lord.'"

Passing over the feelings of sorrow, yet of calm resignation, that
exercised the aged widow and mother, and the large circle of devoted and
loving children, who have so fully realized the solemn character of this
bereavement, we wish to give here the series of resolutions presented to
the mourning family by the second Universalist society, over which Mr.
Ballou had presided for a period of so many years. They were
communicated to the family in the same delicate and feeling manner in
which all else relating to the melancholy event had been performed by
those engaged in it. They are as follows:

     "Whereas it has pleased Almighty God to call to himself our
     venerable father in Israel, Rev. Hosea Ballou, the senior pastor of
     this society, who departed this life on the 7th day of June, 1852,
     aged 81 years; and whereas, in recurring to the events of his long
     and memorable life, we bring to mind the time when he first
     appeared as the fearless advocate of what he then and ever
     afterwards felt to be God's truth as revealed in the Holy
     Scriptures; the moral courage with which he sustained that truth
     amid all the assaults of learning, bigotry and tradition,
     continuing faithful to the last in the path that was revealed to
     him as the path of duty; therefore,

     "_Resolved_, That the present prosperous aspect of the Universalist
     denomination, and the gradual infusion of its principles into those
     of other Christian denominations, are monuments of honor to its
     pioneers, of whom Hosea Ballou was one of the chief.

     "_Resolved_, That the denomination of Universalists have therefore
     lost, in this dispensation of Divine Providence, a champion whose
     latter days they have delighted to honor; a practical example of
     the working of the faith once delivered to the saints; and one who
     has most ably worn the breastplate of righteousness and borne the
     shield of faith, and who has gone down to the grave 'full of years
     and full of honors.'

     "_Resolved_, That as sole pastor of this society during a period of
     about twenty-seven years, and as senior pastor for about eight
     years, his career has been uniformly marked by a wisdom and
     kindness, in all his intercourse with its members, both
     individually and collectively, which prevented even the approach of
     any discord between them; and by a large and broad charity, which
     made all mankind his brothers, and children of the same paternal
     God.

     "_Resolved_, That in the death of this venerable Christian, whom we
     have so long looked up to as a pastor, yea, even as a father, this
     society especially has met with a heavy loss; and while we feel
     deeply the weight of this afflicting bereavement, yet we would
     gratefully acknowledge the kindness of an all-wise Providence in
     having spared his life and continued his usefulness in so signal
     and uninterrupted a manner, during the protracted period of his
     connection with us.

     "_Resolved_, That in the simplicity of his daily life, which was
     most truly a life without guile, we see a proof of his devotion to
     principle worthy of all honor; and in his inflexible integrity he
     has left an eloquent lesson, which all, young and old, may read
     with profit.

     "_Resolved_, That we sympathize most sincerely with the afflicted
     widow, children and other relatives, of our deceased pastor, in
     their bereavement; that we feel the poverty of language to
     administer consolation, and can only point them to the sublime
     truths of gospel grace which their departed relative spent his life
     in teaching; that we fervently commend them to Him who 'tempers the
     wind to the shorn lamb;' and, while we can hardly expect to assuage
     their grief with the wound yet so fresh, we would bid them sorrow
     not as those without hope, but remember how many a weary soul has
     found rest from the teachings of him they now mourn, and direct
     them to the glorious faith that he is 'not lost, but gone before.'

     "_Voted_, That the foregoing resolutions be signed by the Moderator
     and Clerk, and published in the 'Trumpet' and 'Freeman,' and that a
     copy of the same be forwarded to the family of our deceased pastor.

    "G. W. Gage, _Moderator_.
    "Newton Talbot, _Clerk_."

It still remains for us to describe the funeral ceremonies; and here
again we copy from others. The description is as it appeared in the
Trumpet.

"The funeral of this venerable man, and faithful old Christian teacher,
took place on Wednesday, June 9th. Prayer was first offered at the
house, in the hearing of the widow, who had not left her chamber, and
scarcely her bed, for some thirty days. This part of the services was
strictly private. The corpse was then taken to the church, with the
members of the family in carriages.

"The church had been very appropriately put in mourning for the
occasion. The large portrait in the vestry was shrouded in crape,
showing nothing but the figure of the aged preacher, as he stood in the
pulpit. In the great chapel, the pulpit, and the recess back of it, were
dressed in drapery of black crape. The entire front of the gallery, all
around the house, was festooned with black. The organ, also, was
appropriately dressed in mourning, in good keeping with the other
arrangements.

"The house was thrown open for the public at two o'clock, at which time
large crowds were waiting at the doors; and for a full half-hour before
the services were commenced, every seat and foothold upon the floor,
aisles, window-sills and recesses, excepting reserved pews, were
occupied. At three o'clock the corpse arrived. The clergy, numbering
somewhere between sixty and a hundred, proceeded from the vestry to the
pews assigned them. The members of the Second Universalist Society also
had their appropriate places. The corpse was borne to the position in
front of the pulpit, the bearers proceeding in the following order:


    Rev. Dan'l Sharp, D. D.,     THE BODY.       Rev. Edward Turner,
    Rev. S. Barrett, D. D.,                      Rev. S. Streeter,
    Rev. S. Cobb,                                Rev. T. Whittemore,
    Rev. L. R. Paige,                            Rev. Josiah Gilman.

"During the entrance, the organ gave forth a mournful prelude. The sight
was a most affecting one,--so vast a multitude with such an expression
of sorrow upon their countenances.

"1. The services were introduced by a funeral chant, after which

"2. Scriptures were read by Rev. O. A. Skinner.

"3. The following hymn was sung, many of the congregation joining their
voices to that of the choir.

                  HYMN.

    "On Zion's holy walls
      Is quenched a beacon-light;
    In vain the watchman calls,
      'Sentry! what of the night?'
    No answering voice is here;
      Say,--does the soldier sleep?
    O, yes,--upon the bier,
      His watch no more to keep.

    Still is that heaven-touched tongue,
      Pulseless the throbbing breast;
    That voice with music strung
      Forever put to rest
    To rest? A living thought,
      Undimmed, unquenched, he soars,
    An essence, spirit wrought,
      Of yon immortal shores.

    Peace to thee, man of God!
      Thine earthly toils are o'er;
    The thorny path is trod,
      The Shepherd trod before.
    Full well he kept his word,--
      'I'm with thee to the end;
    Fear not! I am the Lord,
      Thy never-failing friend!'

    We weave no dirge for thee,--
      It should not call a tear
    To know that thou art free;
      Thy home,--it was not here!
    Joy to thee, man of God!
      Thy heaven-course is begun;
    Unshrinking thou hast trod
      Death's vale,--thy race is run!"

"4. Prayer, by Rev. Thomas Whittemore.

"5. Hymn, 'Vital Spark of Heavenly Flame!'

"6. Sermon, by Rev. A. A. Miner, junior pastor, from 2 Cor. 5: 1,--'For
we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we
have a building of God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the
heavens.'

"7. Hymn, 'Unveil thy Bosom, Faithful Tomb.'

"8. Concluding Prayer, by Rev. Sebastian Streeter.

"9. Benediction.

"During the singing of the last hymn, persons began to press around the
coffin, to get a last view of the departed. Notice was therefore given,
at the close of the service, that the coffin would be placed in the
entry, and all would have an opportunity to see, as they passed out;
but, on account of the great number, each must content himself with a
brief farewell view. The funeral procession was formed in the following
order: 1st. Bearers, in carriages. 2d. The body. 3d. The committee of
the society. 4th. The clergy of the Universalist denomination, amounting
to nearly a hundred. 5th. The members of the Second Universalist
Society. 6th. The friends from the neighboring towns. 7th. The mourners,
in carriages.

"This procession extended from the head of School-street to the corner
of Boylston-street, being nearly half a mile.

"An immense body of people had arrived at the ground previously to the
funeral procession. The corpse was borne to the temporary
resting-place, in the burying-ground at the foot of the Common, where it
was deposited. The lid of the coffin was raised, and those who desired
passed by once more, and then the solemn scene was closed."

The last Sabbath that Mr. Ballou preached was on the 30th of May,
1852,--eight days before his death,--at Woonsocket, R. I. The texts were
the following:

"FORENOON.--Ecclesiastes 12: 13, 14. 'Let us hear the conclusion of the
whole matter: Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole
duty of man. For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every
secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil.'

"AFTERNOON.--Titus 2: 11, 12. 'For the grace of God that bringeth
salvation hath appeared to all men, teaching us that, denying
ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously and
godly, in this present world.'"

The fact of Mr. Ballou's having preached his last sermon in Rev. John
Boyden's desk, a brother who had once been an inmate of his family as a
student of divinity, has elicited the following letter, which seems
particularly appropriate here:

     "DEAR SIR:--

     "I rejoice most sincerely to learn, as I do this day, that you are
     so soon to give us a memoir of Father Ballou. And, if it be not
     asking too much, I should be glad of a little space, that I may
     record my tribute of filial affection. He was to me a father,
     indeed; and to him I owe more than to any other man,--and, perhaps,
     all others,--for the little good I may have accomplished as a
     minister of Christ. He was my teacher when he knew it not.

     "When I was about fourteen years old, I heard him preach, in the
     town of Brookfield; and I am sure the impression that sermon made
     will remain to the end of my life. It was designed to unfold the
     riches of Christ Jesus. As the theme opened, the audience became
     intensely interested; and, as the preacher gathered and arranged
     the sacred testimony, to unfold the gracious purposes of our
     Heavenly Father as manifested through the Redeemer, we seemed like
     hungry children, watching the maternal hands that feed them. And
     when he laid the precious burden before us, he would exclaim, in
     all his wonted earnestness, '_Do_ you _see the unsearchable riches
     of Christ?_' Again he would go forth, gathering other fruits of the
     divine love, and again repeat, as a part of his text, 'Do you see
     the unsearchable riches of Christ?' This was the conclusion of each
     division of the discourse; and it served not only to rivet it in
     our minds, but, by the involuntary mental response which it
     induced, made us almost co-workers with the speaker, and thus gave
     us growing interest in the theme.

     "From that hour, and from the influence of that single discourse, I
     had a strong desire to aid in unfolding the 'unsearchable riches of
     Christ' to my fellow-men. My young heart felt, for the first time,
     that there was a fulness in the provision which our Father had made
     for us that the world had not known; and it seemed to me I _must_,
     some time, preach that blessed gospel. Not more than three or four
     years after that time, I heard him preach one of his masterly
     sermons, in Charlton, which fired my soul anew with a desire to
     enter the ministry. His text was, 'For we preach not ourselves, but
     Christ Jesus the Lord,' &c. After reading the text, he carefully
     folded his glasses, put them in his pocket, as was his custom, and,
     while the audience were waiting with breathless attention, that
     they might secure the first word that should fall from his lips, he
     began thus:--'The text _supposes_ that there _is_ such a thing as a
     man's preaching _himself_.' The audience _breathed_,--a token that
     they already possessed the key to the sermon. But it was a
     remarkable characteristic of his sermons, that, though you might
     early anticipate the conclusion to which he was coming, yet you
     could not foresee the _process_ by which he was to lead you, since
     that was peculiarly original. That sermon strengthened my
     conception of the glory of the gospel as we understand it, and
     especially when he contrasted with it the fading and sickly glory
     of all forms of partialism. He made us understand how easy and
     agreeable a duty it was to preach Christ; because in him there was
     neither inconsistency, partiality nor cruelty. A sermon from this
     text, I know, has been printed; but _that_ sermon I have never seen
     on paper, nor can my poor pen describe the heavenly glow of
     feeling expressed by the countenances of that assembly. Perchance
     the record is in heaven.

     "On the fourteenth day of May, 1829, I entered his family as a
     student; and let me here say it was _home_. There were my adopted
     father and mother, brothers and sisters; and never were the
     beautiful relations indicated by these endearing words in a single
     instance marred. God bless them, for the words of sympathy and
     encouragement that fell upon the ear of the timid young man! The
     recollections of my experience in that family tell me that no man
     knows the good he is doing, if his heart be right. There is a world
     of power in a single word, when it falls on a needy and congenial
     soil.

     "During the last week of that month, and when I had, as yet,
     written but one sermon, Father Ballou engaged with Father Leonard,
     of Gloucester, that I should supply his desk the following Sunday.
     I remonstrated. I had never spoken in public, except to declaim as
     a school-boy; and it seemed to me I _could_ not stand up alone and
     preach all day, and especially so soon after formally commencing my
     studies. But to all this his reply, in substance, was, that the
     gospel was very easy to be understood; that the matter of it was
     all furnished to my hands; that I was only a _steward_ of God's
     grace, and had only to give to the people what was given to me in
     the divine word. Well, I told him I would go, if he said so; but he
     would have to bear the responsibility, if I failed.

     "In the morning, before leaving for Gloucester, I read my last
     sermon to him; and then it was that he gave me a word of
     commendation, that was like a generous shower upon the parched
     ground. And this was followed by the well-remembered injunction:
     'Brother Boyden, I have only one word to say in reference to your
     labors, and that is, _be in earnest_. Don't speak one word without
     making the people understand and feel that you believe it with all
     your heart.' This was the only charge he ever gave me, till, at my
     ordination, in Berlin, Ct., in 1830, he enjoined it upon me to
     carry the spirit of our holy religion into all my labors, and
     especially when I should go to the chamber of sickness, and to the
     house of mourning. The tremulous words, as they fell from the lips
     of the father upon his son, stirred the whole audience with
     emotion. They were treasured in many hearts, and often repeated,
     both by the old and young, who waited on my ministry.

     "For myself, I must say they made a lasting impression on my mind;
     and often, since that time, as I have visited the sick and dying,
     has that venerable form preceded me, renewing the tender
     injunction, 'Come in the spirit of the blessed Redeemer.' I trust
     those words were not thrown away. And when, as will happen with
     most men, my wearied frame has imparted languor to my speech, I
     have sometimes been aroused by the sudden recollection of that
     stirring appeal--'Be in earnest.' I know it has often quickened and
     warmed my zeal; and when I remember that it was the motto of his
     life to the last, I pray that it may be to me as a live coal from
     the altar.

     "_Punctuality_ is another of the sterling virtues that cluster
     around that name, and his example has been of special service to
     me. It characterized all his labors. I have known him much for
     twenty-three years, and I never knew him to be late in fulfilling
     any engagement, and he always took time, so as not to be in a
     hurry. On the occasion of the installation of Bro. A. Bugbee, of
     Charlton, some years ago, he delivered the scriptures and gave the
     charge. In the course of his address, he dwelt upon the above-named
     virtue with no little feeling. 'Bro. Bugbee,' said he, 'when you
     come to church, _come in season_. Don't let the people come here
     and wait, and wonder within themselves, saying, Where is Bro.
     Bugbee? Is Bro. Bugbee sick? And O, don't forget to take time,
     before you commence your services, to put up a silent prayer to
     God, that he may aid and assist you in the discharge of your sacred
     duties.'

     "I know that that occasion was one of peculiar joy to many hearts,
     and it was as the blessing of God on my soul. The religious spirit
     within us was quickened; and many a time since, in my humble
     efforts to preach the gospel, that 'silent prayer' has brought
     celestial fire from heaven, and imparted new life to my spiritual
     being. Doubtless there are many in the ministry whose experience
     accords with my own in these things, and whose usefulness may be in
     a good measure attributed to the personal influence of that great
     and good man, who, great as he was, could not have comprehended
     the vast results of which his unostentatious life was the agent.
     And may we not all be encouraged to hope, that, if we live good
     lives, the harvest will extend beyond the ken of the sower?

     "But the most interesting fact, to me, in the life of my spiritual
     father, is, that he closed his public services in my own pulpit, in
     the presence of a delighted congregation, and, as I believe, of an
     approving God. His last sermons are well remembered, even by
     _children_. He has never preached here with greater zeal, power,
     and comprehensiveness. We accept his services as the blessing of a
     dying hour, and our veneration for the man is mingled with
     gratitude to the everlasting Father, for so great a gift to our
     world.

    "Fraternally yours,
    "J. BOYDEN, JR.

    "_Woonsocket, July 6, 1852._"

The following is taken from the report of L. W. Ballou, superintendent
of the Sabbath-school attached to the Woonsocket Universalist Society,
which school the subject of this biography visited and spoke before on
the day referred to. It is especially interesting as being connected
with his last public efforts.

"On the thirtieth of May it was our privilege to be visited by, and to
receive the last public instructions of, our venerable Father Ballou;
for in one week from the time he left us 'the golden bowl was broken,'
and that voice to which we had so recently listened, and which had
breathed life and joy into so many souls, was hushed forever. But in his
works, in his example, in the glorious doctrines which for more than
sixty years he labored to establish, he still lives and speaks, and will
live and speak for ages to come. Long, I trust, shall we remember that
venerable form, that cheerful and benevolent countenance, and the words
of encouragement and hope with which, for the last time, he addressed
us, rejoicing that we were no longer taught as in times past, and as
some are even now, that by nature we are children of wrath, and under
the curse of God; but that God is our father, our benefactor, our best
friend,--that he cares for and is blessing us always. Thus did our aged
father close his public ministrations, in proclaiming the same great
doctrine which he had spent his life to establish,--the unbounded,
universal, and unchangeable love of God to man.

"Let us be as faithful to the truth, and in the performance of our duty,
in the sphere in which we move, as he was in his, and the same rich
blessings will attend us."

The subject of this biography entered most heartily and sincerely into
the spirit of Sabbath-schools; and since their general introduction in
our societies, throughout the order, he has taken peculiar satisfaction
in improving every suitable occasion for addressing and encouraging both
teachers and scholars in the object which engaged them, wherever he was
called to preach. In his own society he had seen the great good to be
derived from such an institution, as it regards the rearing of the
tender mind in the garden of the Lord; and he often mingled
professionally with children and teachers. The able and feeling remarks
of the superintendent, Mr. Goddard, as given above, will show the
appreciation in which the members of the school had been taught to hold
their pastor, and the spirit that actuated the hearts of the teachers
towards him, under whose Christian teachings they had, most of them,
been brought up from childhood.

The following verses, an invaluable legacy to Mr. Ballou's family, and
to all those who really loved him, were written by him in anticipation
of the closing hour of his life. The date we cannot give, as the
original paper bears none; but, from accessory circumstances, and
remarks which he made to his wife, that he felt he was "nearly worn
out," and that she must be prepared to hear of his decease at any
hour,--perhaps, even, away from home,--they may be supposed to express
his feelings more particularly within a very few days of the close of
his life. They require no dedication from us. They are priceless, and
beautiful in the extreme.

The verses are thus introduced:--

     "A minister, experiencing certain infirmities of body which
     strongly suggested to him that he might be suddenly called away,
     wrote the following

               FAREWELL ADDRESS.


                    I.

    No more thy beams mine eyes delight,
    Thou golden sun! the shades of night
        Are o'er my vision cast.
    Adieu to thy bright, cheering rays,
    Thy morning light, thy noon-tide blaze,
        Thy settings in the west.

                   II.

    And thou, sweet moon, whose silver beam
    Did on my evening rambles gleam,
        I need thy light no more;
    And you who twinkle in the skies
    No more shall set, no more shall rise,
        To me, as heretofore.

                  III.

    Ye waves of ocean, fare you well;
    Adieu to mountain, hill and dell,
        Rich fields and gardens too;
    Your flowery robes and fragrance sweet
    No more my peaceful walks shall greet;
        I bid ye all adieu.

                 IV.

    Ye murmuring streams, whose winding way
    Through flowery meads and woodlands lay,
        And every limpid rill,
    And all ye feathered tribes of air,
    With voices sweet and plumage fair,
        Accept my last farewell.

                   V.

    Adieu, sweet Spring, the time of flowers!
    Thy zephyrs soft, thy falling showers,
        No more have charms for me;
    Maternal Summer, too, adieu!--
    These eyes no more thy beauty view,
        Nor thy rich treasures see.

                  VI.

    Autumn and Winter's social glee
    Afford their charms no more to me,--
        They but a moment last;
    For life's short season now is o'er,
    I taste its joys, its griefs, no more,--
        The transient scene is past.

                  VII.

    Ten thousand friends, and more, farewell!
    With gratitude affections swell
        Within this breast of mine;
    And you, my foes, although but few,
    Do share in this, my last adieu,--
        May mercy on ye shine!

                 VIII.

    Thou sacred desk, where oft I've stood
    To plead the cause of truth for God,
        To you I say farewell;
    That I've been faithful to my Lord
    I call for witness on his word,--
        His word he will fulfil.

                  IX.

    And you, my congregation dear,
    Kindly regard the farewell tear,
        So freely shed for you;
    For all your favors to your friend,
    May Heaven blessings to you send,
        And every grace renew.

                  X.

    One struggle more shall end the strife;--
    My children dear, my loving wife,
        Ye dearest joys of earth,
    Accept this last, this fond adieu;
    While I have lived I've lived for you,
        But now resign my breath.

                  XI.

    That Power which does for birds provide,
    And clothes the grass in all its pride,
        Much more shall nourish you;
    On that kind arm in peace recline,
    Submissive to the will divine,--
        Believe his promise true.

                  XII.

    And now my work on earth is done,
    To thee, my Lord, my God, I come,
        Still trusting in thy grace;
    As earth recedes may I arise,
    To be with Jesus in the skies,
        And see his lovely face!"




CHAPTER XVI.

CONCLUSION.


A modern writer says, after a visit to the splendid tomb of David Hume,
at Edinburgh, "When I looked upon the spot, I could not forget that his
best powers had been deliberately exerted to load the minds of men with
doubts of their God."

    "To poison at the fountain's source
    The stream of life throughout its course."

Let us contrast the feelings thus naturally arising in the mind, as it
contemplates the life of the English historian, with those that will
spring up spontaneously in the heart of him who looks upon the last
resting-place of the subject of this biography. His whole life was a
practical plea for the glorious character of his Heavenly Father, and
every power of his nature, both mental and physical, was entirely
devoted to and expended in bearing witness of God's love and impartial
grace. Who covets the world-wide fame of the infidel historian? Who
would not leave behind him the glorious memory of the true Christian?
Greatness may build the tomb, but goodness must write the epitaph.

    "Only the actions of the just
    Smell sweet, and blossom in the dust."

We have thus brought the narrative of Mr. Ballou's life down from its
commencement to its close. In the execution of the task, it is feared
that many imperfections and deficiencies will be detected; but we have
the consolation of reflecting that, at least, we have not been guilty of
exaggeration, and throughout have sought only to present the truth in
the clearest light, and with the same simplicity that the subject of
these pages would have commended. We have most ardently endeavored to
make manifest the pure character, consistent conduct, the high
intellectual ability, the unaffected piety, and laborious and unremitted
services of the deceased to the great cause he espoused in early life.
Had he placed a higher estimate upon his own labors, he would have left
behind him a complete record of his toils, that would have interested
the most careless and worldly reader. But, while he never spared
himself, he appears to have seen no unusual merit in his unexampled
labors; he was simply discharging his duty to his Maker and his
fellow-men. The thought of challenging admiration for his sacrifices of
comfort, for his exposures and trials, seems never to have occurred to
him; and hence the minutes of his personal adventures are brief and
imperfect. He has only given us enough to enable us to guess at the
extent of his toil. For the result of his labors and travels, we have
only to look around,--to behold the multiplied churches springing up
where he first preached in school-houses, dwelling-houses, or even
beneath the fruit-trees, to numerous congregations that have found faith
and hope through his ministrations, who fondly regard him as the father
of their order, and who rise up to bless his name. Though his lips are
now sealed forever, yet his doctrine, a precious legacy, is left for us
still, in his own language; and, with the example and influence of his
pure life, we may find the surest guide to the understanding of the
gospel as it is in Christ.

It is true that the bow is broken; but the arrow is sped on its message,
and will pierce the heart of error. The subject of these pages was not a
man for his own time alone; he has lived for all time. We find in the
pages of history actors upon the stage of life peculiarly fitted for the
immediate period in which they lived; men active, bold, successful, and
ever ready for any emergency; men governed by principles and incentives
peculiarly adapted to the day and hour, without whom it would have been
difficult to realize the seeming destiny of man, and the results and
history of the times. Yet those persons, if they were to exist now,
would be out of their element; there would not occur the same exigencies
to call forth their particular endowments of courage and endurance. They
illustrated tangible matter, and performed deeds of personal prowess;
but Mr. Ballou enunciated, defined, elucidated and illumined, a great
principle, a fundamental truth, something that will live through all
eternity,--not the ephemeral act of an hour, which, however timely and
important at the moment, is forgotten with the casualty that gives it
birth. No! Mr. Ballou was not for his own time alone,--he was for all
time.

His advent in the religious world was the commencement of a new era in
the church; and from that day and that hour the little glimmering of the
light of truth which was seen as afar off grew daily larger, and
brighter, and clearer, as, in the onward journey of his years and his
understanding, he came to behold the gospel as it is in Christ, and to
preach it to the world. Nature about him had taught this impartial grace
and goodness of God for ages and ages, but the tongues of men had been
fabricating and declaring another creed. It was no new truth that he
illustrated and believed; but he gave it oral form, and depicted it
before men's eyes.

Our task draws now to its close; we have recorded the closing incidents
of that life on whose eventful record we have reverentially dwelt, and
we must soon resign the pen with which we have feebly depicted the story
of departed worth. It remains for us to give a rapid retrospective
glance at the career we have traced, with a brief recapitulatory view of
the subject. The author has made no attempt at fine writing, and has
sought only to present a "plain, unvarnished tale," in keeping with the
unostentatious simplicity of the subject of his pages. In these busy and
stirring days, most readers crave an exciting book of thrilling
incident. In preparing the life of a distinguished warrior, or a bold
adventurer, startling incidents and scenes crowd upon the writer, till
the task of condensation becomes both imperative and difficult. The
turbulent stream, rushing from its mountain home, tumbling amidst rocks
and dashing over precipices, affords a picture at every point of its
progress; while the course of a river, that rises in some placid lake,
and pursues its pathway noiselessly and tranquilly, till lost in the
world of waters that swallows up its individuality, however pleasing an
object of contemplation, is little fitted to figure in an elaborate
personal record, or to minister to the restless eye of the lover of the
bold and startling in nature.

The life of the subject of these pages may be compared to that of a
quiet streamlet, making itself felt by the verdure and freshness it
diffuses around it, but not startling the ear by the tumult of motion.
Hence, those who merely take up a book for amusement or excitement, will
find themselves disappointed with this biography. It was not, however,
for such tastes that the book was designed. It is rather a medium of
communication between filial affection, and that scarcely colder feeling
of friendship and respect, shared by a large and increasing denomination
of Christians, whose common love for the subject of these pages will
secure indulgence towards the author.

They will rather follow the delightful traits of Christian character he
evinced, will admire the truth and genuineness of his nature, the sweet
simplicity of his soul, and the magnitude and glory of his doctrine,
than pause to criticize the simple garb that has clothed these special
and important matters. It will be the kernel, not the shell, that our
readers will discuss; and if we have, in our humble way, succeeded in so
portraying the life of our parent as to place it any more clearly and
faithfully before men's eyes, then we have done a good work, and our
labor has not been in vain. If, by the exhibition of his happy faith,
and the application of his own arguments, we shall have succeeded in
confirming even one soul in the sacred and cheering faith he advocated,
we shall have sufficient reward in our own heart for the toil of this
work. He would have labored continually and unceasingly to lead a soul
in the straight and narrow way; no fatigue, no disappointment, was ever
any hindrance in his path, when duty held the lamp. His eyes were turned
onward and upward; they overlooked the rugged way, strewn with rocks and
quicksands, over which he strode towards the great goal of his life, the
promulgation of God's fatherly love to man.

More fortunate than many whose works have enriched the world, we have
seen that Mr. Ballou lived long enough to enjoy an honorable fame. Long
before he died the voice of calumny was hushed. He had accomplished what
Burke had advised for the refutation of slander,--he had "lived it
down." The shafts of malice fell harmless from the shield of his
unspotted conscience. He had achieved a greater triumph yet than the
surviving of the assaults aimed against his reputation as a man; he
lived to behold the truth he had so advocated, in which and for which he
lived, adopted by hundreds of thousands as the staff of their lives and
the rock of their salvation. It would be difficult to find, in any age,
the record of a greater victory of intellectual power.

As we have fully shown, Mr. Ballou started in life with no aids for the
development of his mental energies. His circumstances were such as would
have completely crushed a majority of gifted minds. Isolation,
privation, the want of mental stimulus, surrounded him. The example and
aid of elder scholarship was wanting. The steps to the temple of
knowledge were hewn by his own hands out of the rugged and unyielding
rock. He had no strong hand to grasp his own, and bear him up, and stay
his tottering footsteps. Yet, with an iron grasp, he seized upon the
rudiments of knowledge, and made them his own. And, while satisfying the
cravings of his nature, he neglected no duty of life. Those who had
claims upon his industry suffered no injury or loss from this source,
for the hours devoted to his early studies were heroically subtracted
from hours of repose. When others rested from bodily toil, he was
wakeful and toiling mentally.

The energy displayed in his pursuit of knowledge, under such
extraordinary difficulties, prepares us for the yet greater energy
exhibited in his subsequent course. Accustomed to accomplish his purpose
by severe labor, we find him continually proposing to himself questions
of difficulties to be solved only by severe intellectual exertion. He
cultivates his moral intellectual nature so rigidly, that he is not
lightly satisfied on any subject. But we are most impressed with the
beauty of his spiritual nature. Most energetic minds are, we think,
prone to scepticism. They doubt, resolve their doubts, and then cling
firmly and forever to the truths they have established.

It is said, "A resolved doubt is the strongest proof." Paul began by
opposing religion, and ended as one of its champions. But with Mr.
Ballou there was no necessity of going through with this usual process.
His existence and his belief were identical. He recognized his Maker in
his words and in his works; faith was his earliest companion, and she
was with him to the last. Her light illumined his earliest and his last
step; as it beamed upon him with its morning radiance, and cheered his
noon-tide with its glow, so it was the broad, unshadowed sunset of his
life.

We have seen how early his inquiring and steadfast mind began to pierce
the shadows and darkness with which dogmatism had obscured the true
nature of God, and the spirit of his law. The clouds were not dispelled
all at once. By degrees they rolled away, as his vision strengthened,
until, at length, his eyes beheld the full glory of God in its effulgent
splendor. The moment when the last veil was withdrawn, and he beheld the
glorious form of Truth embodied in the creed which he ever afterwards
professed, was the crown and summit of his existence. Then he found and
grasped a treasure which the world could not take away. Years might
pass before the many would embrace his doctrine; but he knew that it
must eventually make its way to men's hearts and understanding, and that
it would be universally recognized and triumph in the end.

From the moment of his discovery, his mission was decided, his calling
confirmed, his path through life traced out as clear as daylight. He
felt called upon and inspired to preach the gospel of love to all
mankind; and he went forth upon his mission, resolved to fulfil it to
the utmost of his strength and talent. Surely no man ever more
faithfully performed his allotted task. In the discharge of his duty, we
behold him fearing no toil, sparing no exertion, shrinking from no
obstacle. A man loving peace and quiet, yet he hesitated not to assume
the weapons of controversy when his doctrines were assailed. With him,
indeed, the truth was everything,--himself nothing. Hence, we are left
no record of his many journeyings, his lonely wayfarings, his midnight
labors. He accounted these things as nothing, as dust in the balance,
weighed against the service he espoused, and the gospel interests which
he strove to advocate.

The following letter addressed to us from Manchester, N. H., a few years
since, now lies open before us, and will serve to show the reader the
indomitable perseverance that the subject of these memoirs brought to
bear upon his professional duties;--how little he spared himself in the
prosecution of his great mission; how totally he disregarded bodily ease
or comfort, when brought in opposition to the prosecution of his sacred
mission on earth. It is also another of those brief, meaning and
affectionate epistles such as he ever wrote, exhibiting the same
reliance upon Divine Providence that ever exercised his bosom:--

     "MATURIN: Last Sabbath was to me a day of severe trial. Early in
     the morning I was attacked with a sudden illness, which so weakened
     me by meeting-time that, although I made two determined efforts to
     go on with my discourse, the last was as unsuccessful as the first,
     and I was finally compelled to yield to my bodily weakness, giving
     the people to expect my services in the afternoon. Dr. Colburn
     kindly conveyed me to his house, and he and his good lady so nursed
     me that, by meeting-time in the afternoon, I walked to church and
     went through with my usual services, sparing myself the labor of
     reading the hymns. Through the goodness of an all-ruling
     Providence, that has ever sustained and supported me in every
     trial, I am now recovering, and am quite as well as before this
     attack, save that I am very weak.

     "The reason I have written you particularly is, that your mother
     and the family generally may not be alarmed by the report which
     will very naturally reach you before I can return home. Please send
     me a few current newspapers. Affectionately,

     "HOSEA BALLOU."

He neglected no means for the advancement of truth; discourses from the
pulpit, colloquial discussions, written essays, poetical effusions, all
were brought to sustain the one great idea he advocated. Though his oral
instructions were poured forth on every occasion, he well knew the
mighty power of the press over the minds of community, and he wielded
this agent with vigor and effect. As his example in the pulpit was
followed by a host of disciples, so did his essays in the press give
birth to a race of vigorous literary champions of the gospel. But, above
all, was the "daily beauty of his life" the strongest evidence of the
sincerity of his convictions, and the truth of his doctrine. The example
that teaches better than precept was manifested in his social existence.
His cheerful deportment, his resignation under trials, were proofs of a
"peace which the world cannot give."

His principles forbade him to teach or to show that this beautiful world
was created as a gloomy prison-house to the sons of men. Late and
copious extracts from his own pen, in these pages, will abundantly show
this. He delighted to point out the radiance of the raiment with which
our Heavenly Father has gladdened our temporary abiding-place. He loved
to trace the "smile of the Great Spirit," in the gushing water-courses,
the verdant meadows, the bright skies, the murmuring woodlands, the
flower-enamelled fields, and the blue arch that bends over all,
enclosing it within a crystal sphere. He was no enemy to social
enjoyment; no frown of his ever checked the joyous laugh bursting from
young lips, or dimmed the brightness of the domestic fireside. In the
relations of husband, father, friend, he was loved and revered,--how
dearly and deeply, let the sorrow that has fallen on our hearts at
parting speak!

He has gone from our midst! His stately form will no more gladden our
eyes, the music of his voice will no more warm our hearts, the pressure
of his hand will no more answer responsively to ours. But he has
departed, full of years and fame, to that bright world above, whose
glory was the theme of his existence. Emulating the virtues which his
well-ordered and beautiful life exhibited, cherishing the gospel truths
in all their purity, simplicity and attractiveness, as he taught them,
may we improve our own lives by the recollection of his, and open our
hearts to the still yet eloquent sermon he now preaches to us from the
silent tomb! And let that sacred belief, which he taught us to rely upon
and to hold as most dear to our hearts, fill us with a hope and
assurance of a final and happy reunion with him in heaven! In his own
family he fully succeeded in implanting a spirit of belief in and entire
reliance upon God's love to his children; and, could the reader behold
the influence that this belief now exercises over the heart of his aged
widow, what a tower of strength and calm resignation she realizes from
the faith he impressed upon her, he would find fresh reason for
Christian fortitude, and new hope and faith in the gospel.

And now, ere the reader closes these pages, permit the author to ask for
the book a kind consideration, and to solicit the lenient judgment of
the public for these records of a parent's life, written and compiled
amid the arduous duties attendant upon his editorial calling. The work
has little else to recommend it, save the homely truthfulness of its
record, and the sincerity that has dictated its composition.

To the many friends of Mr. Ballou, and more particularly to the
denomination, clergymen and laity, with whom he has so long held
fellowship, the author trusts this book may prove an acceptable memento
of one whom they delighted to honor.




NEW WORKS,

JUST PUBLISHED.


MEMOIR OF REV. S. R. SMITH.

By Rev. T. J. SAWYER, D.D. With a splendid Portrait. Pages 432. Price,
in plain binding, $1; in full gilt binding, $1.50.

Dr. Sawyer has had an acquaintance with the subject of this Memoir for
twenty years; besides, he has in his hands all the papers which Mr.
Smith left behind him, copies of letters, &c. The work is made up, to a
considerable extent, from those various materials, and may therefore be
regarded as in a manner an autobiography. The last words written for the
press by Father Ballou relate to this book and the Life Sketches of
George H. Clark, hereafter referred to. Mr. Ballou says:

"Having carefully read this Memoir, and by it having been made
acquainted with many particulars in the life of a highly-esteemed
brother in our ministry, with whom I have, for many years, enjoyed a
most cordial and affectionate fellowship, it is a pleasurable duty to
recommend the work to the favorable consideration of the whole
fraternity of believers in the gospel of a world's salvation.

"The learned writer of the Memoir has taken much pains to bring together
much of the writings of his favorite subject, whereby he has rendered
the work in a great degree autobiographical, and made his readers
acquainted with the strength of mind, temper, spirit and taste, of our
departed brother. This work carries us back to the parentage, birth,
childhood and youth, of one who has distinguished himself, by the
evident aid of divine wisdom, as an able, faithful, and successful
minister of the gospel of our Divine Master. And if our young men, who
are desirous of making the ministry of divine truth their profession,
would carefully read this work, poverty in its more meagre shapes would
present no formidable objection. Br. Smith, having successfully grappled
with poverty, and won a praise and a name which throw crowns and diadems
into the shade, seems now to be looking down on these youth, and
pointing them to the path which he has trod, to bid them put their trust
in Him by whose aid he has won an unfading crown.

"Br. Sawyer surely deserves the gratitude of our denomination for the
justice he has done to the character of our departed brother, and for
the encouragement which this Memoir is calculated to give to our
brethren who are laboring in our Master's vineyard. And our thanks and
patronage should be generously rendered to the publisher of this work,
not only for the handsome style in which it appears, but for his
laudable devotion to the cause of truth, and his successful labors for
its prosperity."

"Great interest has been excited in the denomination by the promise of
this book. * * The life of such a man, from the pen of one so highly
distinguished and so gifted as Rev. Dr. Sawyer, cannot but awaken a
wide-spread and anxious desire for its appearance. It has now been given
to the public, and well does it sustain the reputation of all parties
concerned in its publication. * * A work of this class has never
appeared in the denomination which, for fineness of paper, beauty of
print, and neatness of binding, has excelled this. We predict that it
will have a very large sale."--_Christian Ambassador._

"It will be read with great interest by all."--_Trumpet._

"Mr. Sawyer has done well in allowing his hero to tell so
much of the story of his times through his own letters and
reminiscences."--_Christian Inquirer._

"His example is full of encouragement to others, and cannot fail to
stimulate thousands, who are drooping, to push on in the career of
self-improvement."--_Yankee Blade._

"This is one of the most thoroughly executed Biographies that we have
met with among recent publications of the kind. * * * The Memoir is
worthy of the author and of the venerated subject; and, if we mistake
not, it must exert a powerful influence for good upon the Universalist
Connection, as well as upon others, through the more noble example it
holds up of a true minister of Jesus Christ. By it, he, 'being dead, yet
speaketh.'"--_Universalist Quarterly._

"This is a specimen of true Biography. We have attentively and
gratefully read it, and our estimate of the man, the greatness of his
aims, and the thoroughness of his devotion thereto, has been increased.
There is nothing of the spirit of man-worship here; and if there be any
lack, it is on the side of enthusiasm of personal friendship, holding
back the writer from a full expression of heartfelt admiration of his
subject."--_Ladies' Repository._

       *       *       *       *       *

GRACES AND POWERS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE.

By Rev. A. D. MAYO. 12mo., about 300 pages. Price 75 cents.


This is a series of twenty sermons, by Mr. Mayo, on the above subject,
which cannot but prove a valuable acquisition to our Denominational
Literature.

"This is a beautifully printed book, and its interior life and its ideal
corresponds with its actual. * * The style of the author is modern and
graceful, and the moral influence of the work cannot be otherwise than
safe and good."--_Banner._

"Mr. Mayo's composition reveals a pure spark of genius, gleaming, if it
does not blaze, running like a bright thread and clue through the
labyrinth of thought, and bringing to light many a blessed region of
truth and peace."--_Christian Register._

"We have been greatly charmed in reading it, both by the earnestness and
depth of its thought, and the sweetness and purity of its
style."--_Blade._

"Its influence, wherever it circulates, will be most elevating and
sanctifying."--_Christian Ambassador._

"We take pleasure in saying that this volume of sermons has our hearty
fellowship, and the prevalence of the spirit in its pages would enlarge
vastly the communion of liberal Christians."--_Christian Inquirer._

       *       *       *       *       *

LIFE-SKETCHES OF REV. GEORGE H. CLARK.

By his Brother. With a fine likeness. 16mo. 160 pages. Price 50 c.

Sketches of the eventful life of this early-fallen brother were written
by the request of many friends. The volume embraces a rapid succession
of scenes and incidents, drawn from numerous papers left by the
deceased, and portrayed by one dearly familiar with him from early life.
Father Ballou's note of this work is as follows:

"This brief memoir of our young and esteemed brother in the ministry of
God's universal efficient grace commends itself as an affectionate
tribute to the memory of the departed, from the pen of a loving brother.
It must also be grateful to the whole family circle, who survive the
departed son and brother, to have in their possession so valuable a
treasure.

"This work will be read with interest and profit by youth in general,
and especially by such as think of devoting their lives to the
ministerial profession. When such shall learn the fact, that moderate
circumstances and limited means do not necessarily prevent a young man
from becoming a minister and a pastor, highly esteemed and beloved by a
good and respectable church and society, they need not shrink from a
hope of success.

"We need not look forward to the good time, for it is now come, when
ministers are esteemed for their knowledge of divine truth, and their
ardent love for the same, together with their faithfulness in dispensing
it to their people, and their living and walking in the precepts of
Jesus."

"The subject of these memoirs died young. He had been in the ministry
but a few years. He had lived, however, and labored, a sufficient length
of time, to prove himself to be an able and eloquent preacher of the
gospel, and to become endeared to all who formed his acquaintance. It
abounds with incidents in the life of the deceased."--_Christian
Ambassador._

"The book abounds in incidents, and is very interesting."--_Banner._

"The book is one of thrilling interest."--_Freeman._

"The book is a record, traced with a loving, sympathetic, and brotherly
hand, of the trials, hopes, joys, sorrows, life experiences and death,
of a professional as well as a natural brother."--_Springfield
Republican._

"This is an affectionate tribute to the memory of a worthy man,--one of
the many instances where high aims are unfortunately united with slender
means, rendering life not so much 'a battle and a march,' as a perpetual
struggle. We respected the brother whose life is here sketched, and have
thoroughly read the volume with interest."--_Ladies' Repository._

       *       *       *       *       *

GLIMPSES AND GATHERINGS,

During a Voyage and Visit to London and the Great Exhibition, in the
Summer of 1851. By Rev. W. A. DREW, Commissioner of the State of Maine.
With a Portrait. About 400 pages. Price $1.

The undersigned issues, in connection with the publishers of the Gospel
Banner, the above work. It is one of the most attractive and instructive
volumes of travel ever published.

"This volume consists of letters written by the author to the _Gospel
Banner_, of which he is the well-known editor, during his recent visits
to Canada and England. During their original publication they were read
with keen interest by the numerous patrons of that paper, as well as by
the Maine public generally; and it was a happy idea to gather them into
a volume for more distant readers, as well as for future perusal and
reference. The author has a sharp eye for observation, as well as great
felicity in description; writes in an easy, off-hand, yet vigorous
style; and, on the whole, has placed before us the clearest and most
graphic picture of London and the sights in the Crystal Palace that we
have yet met with. Not the least interesting portions of the volume are
the descriptions of Montreal, Quebec, and their environs, to the
accuracy and felicity of which we can testify."--_Yankee Blade._

"An interesting series of sketches."--_Univer. Quar._

"It is highly attractive in narration of incidents, scenery and sights.
What makes it more valuable to us is a very natural likeness of the
author, executed with much skill and beauty."--_Christian Ambassador._

       *       *       *       *       *


THE WORKS OF REV. HOSEA BALLOU.

The death of this Patriarch of the Universalist Ministry gives
additional value to his Works, and especially to those written in the
years of his strength and vigor.

The subscriber is the publisher of those works, and will furnish sets of
the same, or single volumes, issued in the best style of typography and
binding.

I. Notes on the Parables of the New Testament. One vol. 12mo., 297
pages. Price 50 cents. First published in 1804.

II. A Treatise on the Atonement. One vol. 12mo., 328 pages. Price 50
cents. First published in 1805.

III. Series of Twenty-six Lecture Sermons. Delivered in the
School-street church, Boston. One vol. 12mo., 375 pages. Price 62-1/2
cents. First published in 1818.

IV. Twenty-five Select Sermons. Delivered on various occasions, from
important passages of Scripture. One vol. 12mo., 360 pages. Price 63
cents. First published in 1828.

These are the works in which the convictions of Father Ballou are best
expressed, and circulation should be given to them by all who are
desirous of diffusing the wisdom of that sainted man. The "Notes on the
Parables" are remarkable examples of Scripture interpreting Scripture;
the "Treatise on Atonement" is a piece of mental reasoning intelligible
to the humblest capacity; and the "Lectures" and "Select Sermons" are
rare expoundings of the divine word, and the great principles of
Scripture truth.


The subscriber is also preparing to issue a fine edition of the above
works, to be bound in a uniform style with the Biography; and the whole
will then be sold at $4 per set.

A. TOMPKINS.

BOSTON, August, 1852.

AGENTS WANTED TO CIRCULATE THE FOREGOING WORKS.





End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Biography of Rev. Hosea Ballou, by
Maturin M. Ballou

*** 