-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/a7ce9f34f1ac0c9309e371565926c018.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=W2xzW1AyYXFn0Y4jcvStwiAhwJl2zfP0gjHcQDSiWVieGESRSLBqXbpMMFCwQ6Vl%7EaD%7EeT6jJOD1fBYCk-PD4TAIAXRcfgy7VIXa7EL0XAvp4HSxlSZCK7Smddu-G2ngsuaeGLZmOTwVFvN7-FKD0-0eaoQdp6u-P2Wxv9-3H-Md8j8cQWS6DQtY3geA1SpgK4Xs8oJdyiUpbrIzWPqeefuk6VGcIGzc3Fg2V4sLI67OUh7WSDtxH7dmgR6JGO59eKyOMt4THOmfzJlAnpxGxY%7E0ayCfI4cJ%7E%7EGeQCN3yCkBxmcS0zW0yUBU7qfjGOG9HKCYMaHvW3w%7EohUwBqdMpA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
f0ccce05bfc478ede484bfafe10e1ad9
PDF Text
Text
.,
·.. ,
111 nrh IA;all flrrtiugn
FOURTH SEASON-1910-l I
.·
;(
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
\'
PROGRAM FOR JANUARY
,
1.
Miss MARION ALTHEA BURT, Violinist.
Miss BEATRICE HoLBROOK, Pianist.
Grieg ·Sonata in C Minor, Opus 45I. Allegro Molto ed Appassionato.
II. Al_legrettt> Espressivo alla Romanza.
III. Allegro Animato.
Hnt_N, "Ring Out, Wild Bells."
ADDRESS, 11 The Man at the Bottom"
.. .
·
.
-Dr. Samuel Zane Batten·.
HYMN, 11 To Labor."
\ Q_URSTIONS FROM THE FLOOR,
PROGRAM FOR JANUARY 8.
Miss HARRIETT WESTCOTT, Contralto.
Mn, GEORGE MENDALL TAYLOR, Accompanist
1.
2.
11
0 Rest in the Lord" .
My Ro~e.of Yestere'en"
' Hvr.rn, "Tl{y Kingdom Come."
11
3, 61 The Bird and The Rose"
4• ",The Promise of Life "
jJfendelssohn
Ri[:h
,·
. Horrocks
Cowen
ADonnss, "What Religion Can ·Do for a Man"
-Bishop Lawrence.
HYMN, 11 Creation."
Q_URSTIONS . FROM THE FLOOR.
HOW SUPPORTED : These meet_ings are made possible through
left .to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
) by the late · DANIEL SHARP FORD, who owned The Youth's
f'tl#/Otl, The · management of the meetings is in the hands of a
mhtoo from .tho Social ,Union. ·
.i•·
fund,
BORGE W, COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
l1eretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
ffl!IR at Room 31 Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays ,
Telephone, Hayma rket 0340.
d
,t
0
n
\
l
(.
�RING
OUT, WILD
THY
BELLS. ·
KINGDOM
COME!
"'rhy kingdoin co me!" 0 L~rd ~ve daily cry,
,veary and sad with earth's lohg strife and paint
How long, 0 Lord!" Thy sufPring children s igh,11Spced Thou the dawn, and o'er the nations reign I''
Hing out, wild bells, to the wild sky,
The !lying cloud, the frosty light;
0
The ye:~r is dying ii\ the night;
H.ing ont, wild bells, and let him die,
Ring, happy bc}ls, across the s now;
Thy kingdom comf! then all th e din of war,
Like Some dark dream, sh.a ll Vf1nish with the night I
Pcac...'e, holy peace, her myriad gifts shall pour,
Resting secure from tJanger and affright.
The year is going, let him go;
Thy kingdom come! no more shall deeds of shame,
Hing out the old, ring in the new,
Brutish and base, destroy the soul divine :
Bright with Thy love's all-i>urirying flame
Thy human temples evermore shall sh~ne !
· Hing out the false, ring in the true.
Hing out a s lowly dying
c~luse,
Thy kingdom conic! mad greed for wealth and power
No more s halJ grind the weaklings in the dust .
Then mind anti strength Shall share '~hy·amp le Jower,
Broth ers in Thee, and 0;1e in equal trus·t.
AnJ. ancient lorms of party strife; .
Hing out th e feud of r..ich and poor,
H.ing in redress
\<1 all
mankind,
-Tt1111yso11.
..
'
B~.
(To the tune of;, Austria,.)
Thro' the clamor and the riot
That is heard from sea to sea ,
I can feel the coming quiet
Of the government to be
Vain the effort to dissC1~1biC
For th e truth is clear lo all,
And the ol<l conditions tremble
Like a ruin doomed to fall.
As ihc sun first tint s the bonier
Of th C'·dar kness , Vith liis light,
So the faint far gleam of - order
Gild~ the chaos of the night;
And th C dawn shall grow in splendor
·
To the fullness ol the day
,vhcn th e hand s of greed surrender,
.\\' hat from l_ il lh t y lore away.
o
Vain th e veiling :rnd disguising
Of th e edls wh ich exist,
For n~w systems are uprising
From the wreckage and the mi s t;
And the mills of God arc slowly
Surely grinding out their grist, .
,vhilc th e laws of right and justice
I Iol<l and eve rmor e persist ,
For the land to all was givenIt bciongs to you and me;
'Ti s a law of earth and h eaven
n roken now from sea to Sl'a.
Let monopoly be driven
'
1'i-rom · th e fortress of the free;
And let liberty bid welcome
To th e govcr11111 e nt to be,
Ella W/,et/er Wilco.l'.
' They have scorntUllY, 11auu;u - . '
' the p\a·ce Battenburg, and h~ ts ~ow at
'the head of a movement which ~1ms to
\ .
the church and the ,workmgm~.n \ ; .
, b nng
: into closer sympat h y. D r. Batten IS
\ residerit of the Constitutional Ame,nd-,
I ~ent Association of Iowa and_ . vice~
.
1 .
'd
:pres1 en t o f the Des Moines .C1t1zens 1
,
' A ccnri~.tion . Denominationally he IS a· I
TO
LABO
T1111t-" John Brown's Bo<ly.
· · -H. IV, Haw/us,
THE GOVERNMENT TO
I town.-
HYMN
♦
:/
•
Whnt I• this the· •ound and rumor? What Is thi
Like tho wind In hollow valleys when the storm
Like the rolllnl( on of ocea n in the eventide of fl,
· ·
•Tia tho people mnrchipg on!
. \¥hither go they, nnd whence came tney? · Wha
·
ye tel11
. · ..
·
In whnt country nre they dwellinl!' 'twixt th e gat,
Aro they mine or thine !or money I Will they sc
· ,
Still the rumor's marching on!
Cn~nus-Hark I the rolling ol the thun,
Lo I the sun, ancl lo! thcreu nd
.lllseth love and hope and wou
And the host comes marc hin g
Glory, Glory Hallelujah I
Forth they came from grief nod torment: on they
.
nnd mirth j ·
All the wide worlil Is their dwelling, every co rn,
Buy them, sell thenl, !or thy service: ' l'ry the ba
.
. worth.
.
.. ..
For the davs nre marching on!
Thcao nre they who build thy houses, weave t'
wheat
·
Smooth the· rulirgcd, fill the b a rren , turn the bitt,
All (or thee this dny and ever. What reward !or
•..
Till the host comes marching on!-(
Mony a hundred years pas se d over have they la!
Never . tldlnt(1 reache,t their sorrow, nc\.er hope
Now at ~n,t they've heard and hear it, and the
wind,
,
And their feet arc marching' on,
.
On we march then, we. th e workers. an,t the run
h the l,Jendcr1 imund o( triumph and dcli vcr:t ncc
(l'or the hope of every. creature Is the banner that
And the world is marching on,-C111
r
�~·-; ...., .• _ • ,;--
•
I
\•\.
;Ii.' The ' 1ng all \~ ,have ~~r lwhat Is In them, 'I C'
talned there · ii.re ma ·
ver ut- even great, among th
ter, fo1· who have had no <
plrlt In their abllltle~.
He sald that · It hi
<)e, the
~
doctrine lnYestlgatlon that 94
ld the Ive school children
dieted to alcoholic .
y says 77 percent ot the c
crln1e, not addicted to a\co
hey all He would abolish a a
human there oo.n be a perm
cterlted class and a permanE
re Is a
for the
1
i:,fi~t
t
I
bY ,say~
at such
or said:
thait his
ever· or:uld con-
c\"i,fJr~~
i
l
t house
ould be
o barter
1st."
dlty has
a m ·an's
environhe said
r alone,
tihUB tesronment.
children
re taken
rlronment
8
Il
1
o~k h~~
he slums
"tHE MAN AT
Topic ot° Prof
$;
Vigorous ·, Wes
Ford Hall, Sun,
' Another· vigoroc
Prof Swmuel Zane
Is to be the Ford
row evening, .taklr
Man at t.he Botto:
1
trlevably
ronment. '
nI
e •spealrnr
present
Included
rrelatlng
( to men
{h, '
gnt'•
"
ea,
ightl
CREATIO~.
HYMN TO LABOR.
,e,
allow-
. The spacious firmament on high,
T1111t-" John Drow n's Body!'
I1
With all the blue ethereal sky, _
What II thl1 tho 1ound and rumQrl 'What is this that all men hear?
I.Ike tho wind in hollow •alleys when the storm is 1lrawing near,
I.Ike the rolllnic on ol ocean in the eventide of lea,?
'TII the (lCOple marching on I
· ··
-- · · · · -- •·
\Vhlther 1ro they, and whence came tney? ·•\\"hat _
ar~• these of whom
1 :
.
y•tellt
·
. '
·
. .'
·
• ·,
•
In whot country arc thev dwelllnir 'twixt the gates of heaven and hell!
AH they mine or th hie lor nloheyl \Viii they serve a 1111•~ter well? ,,· J
Stlll thc runlor'1 marching on I'
.
.
- .. .
ower
,wer,
wA-ts.
·
l
·
•
· , ·. , :
C11011.u1-Hark I the rolling of the thunder I
\
1
••
Lt
I
1·
'
'
Nner \ldlnl'• reached their 1orrow, ne,er hope their toil might ti11d
N- 11 latl th•1'0 hurd and hc11r it, 1111d the cry comes down 1hc
"hid.
·
.
' )
, ,
'
'
•
The unwearied sun, from day to day,
~c~ lli, ., f~~a~or~s power displny,
And_publishes to every land
'lli;C Work of an a lmighty hand .
,'.nd nightly lo the lis tC1ling earth
Repeat~ the story of her birth;
.1~ .~]!f}},ar~
~
Whil ~
_
that ~~und her l>urn,
J\'1d ~11 ,h~. planets, ~n lheir turn,
Confirm the tiding s, as they roll,
And spiead .t/>~ _
truth from po le
t?
pole,
,vhat though in· ~~lcmn silence all
.
)(aa·r a hundred ynn ' pu,ed over have they labored deaf and blind
.• '
I
,I
worth.
· -.- ,
, "
Pot the,1lay1 '11re mhchlng on I'
Thtn ■JI \ht)' who build ·thy houses, weave_thy raiment, win -ll~y
wheat
·
.
Smooth I.he rvirred,'1111 the barren, lurn the bitter .into sweet;
All for 1he11hhd1y '"'t ever, Wh11t reward lor them is meet?
. ~ . 11 lh• ho11 co111e1 marching on !-C1101ws.
1
•
Soon ~st-~~. ~~~nin~. s_hades prevail,
The,moO~ takes UB. the wondrous talt·,
, )
1/
Loi the sun, an'd lo! thereunder,
lli11elh love nnd hope and woudcr,
·· And the host comes marching on,
:
Glory, Glory Hallelujah I
- :1
' ,.
.
Porth they came from grief and torment: on they wend toward hrnllh
,
ancf mirth; • ·
·
.
All the wide world 11 their dwelling, every corner ol the •~ith,
·
Dur them, aoll them, lor thy service : <rry the barg'llin what 'tis . I '
A1~d spangled heavens, a s1Jining· (rame,
Their great original proc~aim.
And lhtlr feel arc marchlntr on,
On we ma,ch th•n• we, thC workers, and the rumor that ye hear
II the bl 1ndtd ,ound ol triumph und deliveran ce drawing near;
l'or tlll hope nf every crcalure 11 the bai111er that we bear,
·
And lhl world 11 marching on ,-C11onus ,
·
- William Aforris ,
~·l ove round this dark terrestrial ball!
What though no real yoic~ nor sound
.1\mid their radi:u\t o·rbs be found!
In reason's ear they' all rejoice,
And utter forth a glorious voice;
, Forever singing, as they shine,
The hand that made us is divine ,
- Jos,p!, Addiso1J-1712,
, PROD' SAMO
I
Dr Batten was
. about 60 years 3
·early education a·,
going thenc ~ to t
seminary, Then f .
tury he filled Ba1
llolphlo. .and New
. was · for· more tlu
of th<:> leading- B:
co.g;: ~~-ten Is r
co11st1tutlonal amc
Iowa .l\nd vice 1
Moines' · Cltlzem
•
Molne,s being no"
has recently gone
fes sors of Des M
several books th
that called '"rlH
perhaps the me
gresslve.
'.rhe musical pre
will · be su-op\lell b
Burt,' a girted yo
by Miss Beatrice
- - -- -.- - ·
�January 8-B1s110P LAWRENCE, whom
we all heard so gladly last year,
"\Viii
speak on " · hat Religion Can Do For
w
a JVIan."
This is a Cooper Unioh topic
that always draws a large crowd aml
suggests many very interesting questions
from the audi~nce after the address has
been given.
We are fortunate to secure
for its treatmeht so broad, so kindly and
so spiritual a man. as ·the episcopal bisl:op
of Massachusetts.
I-re·
I
rs t~
!all 1
;;::i
! K~
, Shi
Cov
1
Mer
·s at.
,I
,er, 'J
, Ro,
hari
h, o·
I
idea
,g
January 15-We have another bishop,
as it happens, CHARLES ·w1LLIA111s, who·
comes all the way from Detroit, Mich.,
to give us his views on " TVealth- Prod'uctive, Predato1J' and Parasitic."
The Amert'can Jllfagazine, in a recent
sketch, spoke of Bishop Williams as
the "most unconventional man who ever
filled an episcopal chair." We certainly
do not know any other man in his po~ition
who labors tirelessly to advance the doctrines of Henry George.
til
PROGRAM FOR JANUARY 15.
enin' ·
>ciat!
: d is
nd t'.
1•
e sul
2.
that
,as j
vanr.
i:; I(
3.
4.
·eezy
~d ti
l1011-.
Miss HELEN TuFTs, Violinist.
Miss LAURA ARCHANBAULT, Accompanist.
' ' Souvenir " .
D idla
"L'Abeille"
Schubert
HYlllN' "To Labor."
"Thais"
Massenet
"Zortzico ;, . ·
Sarasate
ADDRESS, "Wealth - Productive, Predatory and ParasiJ:ic ','
1
-Bishop Williams . .
Hv111N, "The Government to Be."
QUESTIONS FRQ;\I THE FLOOR,
11 fit
ing .
lS W
·j
A
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, car. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
1
Doors opeh at 7 o'clock
i
~•s
l
l
1·
'I
1
!
!
Il
- - - - - -- --'-----,-me ·piace· .oattenourg, ana he IS "
novi af ·r~ ---'-~
th'e head of a movement which aims to
I?ring the church ;ind the ,workingm'.1n
mto closer sympathy. Dr. Batten is
. presiderit of the Constitutional Amends .
!ment Association of Iowa . and" vfoe-'
!president of the Des Moines Citizens' .
· '. Association. Denominationally he is a
1~-aptist, having occupied fdr the past
·,T:~·-- - -
I
,,•
'
,
rl
••
•,:
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0253
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program 1/1-1/15/1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Bishop Lawrence, Charles Williams
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures