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<h2> HIS LIFE AND ACHIEVEMENTS </h2>
<h3> By Robert Shackleton </h3>
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<h2> I. THE STORY OF THE SWORD </h2>
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<p>I SHALL write of a remarkable man, an interesting man, a man of power, of
initiative, of will, of persistence; a man who plans vastly and who
realizes his plans; a man who not only does things himself, but who, even
more important than that, is the constant inspiration of others. I shall
write of Russell H. Conwell.</p>
<p>As a farmer's boy he was the leader of the boys of the rocky region that
was his home; as a school-teacher he won devotion; as a newspaper
correspondent he gained fame; as a soldier in the Civil War he rose to
important rank; as a lawyer he developed a large practice; as an author he
wrote books that reached a mighty total of sales. He left the law for the
ministry and is the active head of a great church that he raised from
nothingness. He is the most popular lecturer in the world and yearly
speaks to many thousands. He is, so to speak, the discoverer of "Acres of
Diamonds," through which thousands of men and women have achieved success
out of failure. He is the head of two hospitals, one of them founded by
himself, that have cared for a host of patients, both the poor and the
rich, irrespective of race or creed. He is the founder and head of a
university that has already had tens of thousands of students. His home is
in Philadelphia; but he is known in every corner of every state in the
Union, and everywhere he has hosts of friends. All of his life he has
helped and inspired others.</p>
<p>Quite by chance, and only yesterday, literally yesterday and by chance,
and with no thought at the moment of Conwell although he had been much in
my mind for some time past, I picked up a thin little book of description
by William Dean Howells, and, turning the pages of a chapter on Lexington,
old Lexington of the Revolution, written, so Howells had set down, in
1882, I noticed, after he had written of the town itself, and of the
long-past fight there, and of the present-day aspect, that he mentioned
the church life of the place and remarked on the striking advances made by
the Baptists, who had lately, as he expressed it, been reconstituted out
of very perishing fragments and made strong and flourishing, under the
ministrations of a lay preacher, formerly a colonel in the Union army. And
it was only a few days before I chanced upon this description that Dr.
Conwell, the former colonel and former lay preacher, had told me of his
experiences in that little old Revolutionary town.</p>
<p>Howells went on to say that, so he was told, the colonel's success was
principally due to his making the church attractive to young people.
Howells says no more of him; apparently he did not go to hear him; and one
wonders if he has ever associated that lay preacher of Lexington with the
famous Russell H. Conwell of these recent years!</p>
<p>"Attractive to young people." Yes, one can recognize that to-day, just as
it was recognized in Lexington. And it may be added that he at the same
time attracts older people, too! In this, indeed, lies his power. He makes
his church interesting, his sermons interesting, his lectures interesting.
He is himself interesting! Because of his being interesting, he gains
attention. The attention gained, he inspires.</p>
<p>Biography is more than dates. Dates, after all, are but mile-stones along
the road of life. And the most important fact of Conwell's life is that he
lived to be eighty-two, working sixteen hours every day for the good of
his fellow-men. He was born on February 15, 1843—born of poor
parents, in a low-roofed cottage in the eastern Berkshires, in
Massachusetts.</p>
<p>"I was born in this room," he said to me, simply, as we sat together
recently <SPAN href="#linknote-3" name="linknoteref-3" id="linknoteref-3"><small>3</small></SPAN>
in front of the old fireplace in the principal room of the little cottage;
for he has bought back the rocky farm of his father, and has retained and
restored the little old home. "I was born in this room. It was bedroom and
kitchen. It was poverty." And his voice sank with a kind of grimness into
silence.</p>
<p>Then he spoke a little of the struggles of those long-past years; and we
went out on the porch, as the evening shadows fell, and looked out over
the valley and stream and hills of his youth, and he told of his
grandmother, and of a young Marylander who had come to the region on a
visit; it was a tale of the impetuous love of those two, of rash marriage,
of the interference of parents, of the fierce rivalry of another suitor,
of an attack on the Marylander's life, of passionate hastiness, of
unforgivable words, of separation, of lifelong sorrow. "Why does
grandmother cry so often?" he remembers asking when he was a little boy.
And he was told that it was for the husband of her youth.</p>
<p>We went back into the little house, and he showed me the room in which he
first saw John Brown. "I came down early one morning, and saw a huge,
hairy man sprawled upon the bed there—and I was frightened," he
says.</p>
<p>But John Brown did not long frighten him! For he was much at their house
after that, and was so friendly with Russell and his brother that there
was no chance for awe; and it gives a curious side-light on the character
of the stern abolitionist that he actually, with infinite patience, taught
the old horse of the Conwells to go home alone with the wagon after
leaving the boys at school, a mile or more away, and at school-closing
time to trot gently off for them without a driver when merely faced in
that direction and told to go! Conwell remembers how John Brown, in
training it, used patiently to walk beside the horse, and control its
going and its turnings, until it was quite ready to go and turn entirely
by itself.</p>
<p>The Conwell house was a station on the Underground Railway, and Russell
Conwell remembers, when a lad, seeing the escaping slaves that his father
had driven across country and temporarily hidden. "Those were heroic
days," he says, quietly. "And once in a while my father let me go with
him. They were wonderful night drives—the cowering slaves, the
darkness of the road, the caution and the silence and dread of it all."
This underground route, he remembers, was from Philadelphia to New Haven,
thence to Springfield, where Conwell's father would take his charge, and
onward to Bellows Falls and Canada.</p>
<p>Conwell tells, too, of meeting Frederick Douglass, the colored orator, in
that little cottage in the hills. "'I never saw my father,' Douglass said
one day—his father was a white man—'and I remember little of
my mother except that once she tried to keep an overseer from whipping me,
and the lash cut across her own face, and her blood fell over me.'</p>
<p>"When John Brown was captured," Conwell went on, "my father tried to sell
this place to get a little money to send to help his defense. But he
couldn't sell it, and on the day of the execution we knelt solemnly here,
from eleven to twelve, just praying, praying in silence for the passing
soul of John Brown. And as we prayed we knew that others were also
praying, for a church-bell tolled during that entire hour, and its awesome
boom went sadly sounding over these hills."</p>
<p>Conwell believes that his real life dates from a happening of the time of
the Civil War—a happening that still looms vivid and intense before
him, and which undoubtedly did deepen and strengthen his strong and deep
nature. Yet the real Conwell was always essentially the same. Neighborhood
tradition still tells of his bravery as a boy and a youth, of his reckless
coasting, his skill as a swimmer and his saving of lives, his strength and
endurance, his plunging out into the darkness of a wild winter night to
save a neighbor's cattle. His soldiers came home with tales of his
devotion to them, and of how he shared his rations and his blankets and
bravely risked his life; of how he crept off into a swamp, at imminent
peril, to rescue one of his men lost or mired there. The present Conwell
was always Conwell; in fact, he may be traced through his ancestry, too,
for in him are the sturdy virtues, the bravery, the grim determination,
the practicality, of his father; and romanticism, that comes from his
grandmother; and the dreamy qualities of his mother, who, practical and
hardworking New England woman that she was, was at the same time
influenced by an almost startling mysticism.</p>
<p>And Conwell himself is a dreamer: first of all he is a dreamer; it is the
most important fact in regard to him! It is because he is a dreamer and
visualizes his dreams that he can plan the great things that to other men
would seem impossibilities; and then his intensely practical side his
intense efficiency, his power, his skill, his patience, his fine
earnestness, his mastery over others, develop his dreams into realities.
He dreams dreams and sees visions—but his visions are never
visionary and his dreams become facts.</p>
<p>The rocky hills which meant a dogged struggle for very existence, the
fugitive slaves, John Brown—what a school for youth! And the literal
school was a tiny one-room school-house where young Conwell came under the
care of a teacher who realized the boy's unusual capabilities and was able
to give him broad and unusual help. Then a wise country preacher also
recognized the unusual, and urged the parents to give still more
education, whereupon supreme effort was made and young Russell was sent to
Wilbraham Academy. He likes to tell of his life there, and of the
hardships, of which he makes light; and of the joy with which week-end
pies and cakes were received from home!</p>
<p>He tells of how he went out on the roads selling books from house to
house, and of how eagerly he devoured the contents of the sample books
that he carried. "They were a foundation of learning for me," he says,
soberly. "And they gave me a broad idea of the world."</p>
<p>He went to Yale in 1860, but the outbreak of the war interfered with
college, and he enlisted in 1861. But he was only eighteen, and his father
objected, and he went back to Yale. But next year he again enlisted, and
men of his Berkshire neighborhood, likewise enlisting, insisted that he be
their captain; and Governor Andrews, appealed to, consented to commission
the nineteen-year-old youth who was so evidently a natural leader; and the
men gave freely of their scant money to get for him a sword, all gay and
splendid with gilt, and upon the sword was the declaration in stately
Latin that, "True friendship is eternal."</p>
<p>And with that sword is associated the most vivid, the most momentous
experience of Russell Conwell's life.</p>
<p>That sword hangs at the head of Conwell's bed in his home in Philadelphia.
Man of peace that he is, and minister of peace, that symbol of war has for
over half a century been of infinite importance to him.</p>
<p>He told me the story as we stood together before that sword. And as he
told the story, speaking with quiet repression, but seeing it all and
living it all just as vividly as if it had occurred but yesterday, "That
sword has meant so much to me," he murmured; and then he began the tale:</p>
<p>"A boy up there in the Berkshires, a neighbor's son, was John Ring; I call
him a boy, for we all called him a boy, and we looked upon him as a boy,
for he was under-sized and under-developed—so much so that he could
not enlist.</p>
<p>"But for some reason he was devoted to me, and he not only wanted to
enlist, but he also wanted to be in the artillery company of which I was
captain; and I could only take him along as my servant. I didn't want a
servant, but it was the only way to take poor little Johnnie Ring.</p>
<p>"Johnnie was deeply religious, and would read the Bible every evening
before turning in. In those days I was an atheist, or at least thought I
was, and I used to laugh at Ring, and after a while he took to reading the
Bible outside the tent on account of my laughing at him! But he did not
stop reading it, and his faithfulness to me remained unchanged.</p>
<p>"The scabbard of the sword was too glittering for the regulations"—the
ghost of a smile hovered on Conwell's lips—"and I could not wear it,
and could only wear a plain one for service and keep this hanging in my
tent on the tent-pole. John Ring used to handle it adoringly, and kept it
polished to brilliancy.—It's dull enough these many years," he
added, somberly. "To Ring it represented not only his captain, but the
very glory and pomp of war.</p>
<p>"One day the Confederates suddenly stormed our position near New Berne and
swept through the camp, driving our entire force before them; and all,
including my company, retreated hurriedly across the river, setting fire
to a long wooden bridge as we went over. It soon blazed up furiously,
making a barrier that the Confederates could not pass.</p>
<p>"But, unknown to everybody, and unnoticed, John Ring had dashed back to my
tent. I think he was able to make his way back because he just looked like
a mere boy; but however that was, he got past the Confederates into my
tent and took down, from where it was hanging on the tent-pole, my bright,
gold-scabbarded sword.</p>
<p>"John Ring seized the sword that had long been so precious to him. He
dodged here and there, and actually managed to gain the bridge just as it
was beginning to blaze. He started across. The flames were every moment
getting fiercer, the smoke denser, and now and then, as he crawled and
staggered on, he leaned for a few seconds far over the edge of the bridge
in an effort to get air. Both sides saw him; both sides watched his
terrible progress, even while firing was fiercely kept up from each side
of the river. And then a Confederate officer—he was one of General
Pickett's officers—ran to the water's edge and waved a white
handkerchief and the firing ceased.</p>
<p>"'Tell that boy to come back here!' he cried. 'Tell him to come back here
and we will let him go free!'</p>
<p>"He called this out just as Ring was about to enter upon the worst part of
the bridge—the covered part, where there were top and bottom and
sides of blazing wood. The roar of the flames was so close to Ring that he
could not hear the calls from either side of the river, and he pushed
desperately on and disappeared in the covered part.</p>
<p>"There was dead silence except for the crackling of the fire. Not a man
cried out. All waited in hopeless expectancy. And then came a mighty yell
from Northerner and Southerner alike, for Johnnie came crawling out of the
end of the covered way—he had actually passed through that frightful
place—and his clothes were ablaze, and he toppled over and fell into
shallow water; and in a few moments he was dragged out, unconscious, and
hurried to a hospital.</p>
<p>"He lingered for a day or so, still unconscious, and then came to himself
and smiled a little as he found that the sword for which he had given his
life had been left beside him. He took it in his arms. He hugged it to his
breast. He gave a few words of final message for me. And that was all."</p>
<p>Conwell's voice had gone thrillingly low as he neared the end, for it was
all so very, very vivid to him, and his eyes had grown tender and his lips
more strong and firm. And he fell silent, thinking of that long-ago
happening, and though he looked down upon the thronging traffic of Broad
Street, it was clear that he did not see it, and that if the rumbling
hubbub of sound meant anything to him it was the rumbling of the guns of
the distant past. When he spoke again it was with a still tenser tone of
feeling.</p>
<p>"When I stood beside the body of John Ring and realized that he had died
for love of me, I made a vow that has formed my life. I vowed that from
that moment I would live not only my own life, but that I would also live
the life of John Ring. And from that moment I have worked sixteen hours
every day—eight for John Ring's work and eight hours for my own."</p>
<p>A curious note had come into his voice, as of one who had run the race and
neared the goal, fought the good fight and neared the end.</p>
<p>"Every morning when I rise I look at this sword, or if I am away from home
I think of the sword, and vow anew that another day shall see sixteen
hours of work from me." And when one comes to know Russell Conwell one
realizes that never did a man work more hard and constantly.</p>
<p>"It was through John Ring and his giving his life through devotion to me
that I became a Christian," he went on. "This did not come about
immediately, but it came before the war was over, and it came through
faithful Johnnie Ring."</p>
<p>There is a little lonely cemetery in the Berkshires, a tiny burying-ground
on a wind-swept hill, a few miles from Conwell's old home. In this
isolated burying-ground bushes and vines and grass grow in profusion, and
a few trees cast a gentle shade; and tree-clad hills go billowing off for
miles and miles in wild and lonely beauty. And in that lonely little
graveyard I found the plain stone that marks the resting-place of John
Ring.</p>
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