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قراءة كتاب Recollections of a Long Life: An Autobiography

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Recollections of a Long Life: An Autobiography

Recollections of a Long Life: An Autobiography

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Project Gutenberg's Recollections of a Long Life, by Theodore Ledyard Cuyler

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Title: Recollections of a Long Life An Autobiography

Author: Theodore Ledyard Cuyler

Release Date: June 8, 2004 [EBook #12549]

Language: English

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RECOLLECTIONS OF A LONG LIFE ***

Produced by PG Distributed Proofreaders. Produced from images provided by the Million Book Project.

[Illustration: THEODORE LEDYARD CUYLER]

RECOLLECTIONS OF A LONG LIFE
AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY

BY THEODORE LEDYARD CUYLER, D.D., LL.D. Author of "God's Light on Dark
Clouds," "Heart Life," Etc.

1902.

CONTENTS

I
BOYHOOD AND COLLEGE LIFE
II

GREAT BRITAIN SIXTY YEARS AGO Wordsworth—Dickens—The Land of Burns, etc.

III

GREAT BRITAIN SIXTY YEARS AGO (Continued) Carlyle—Mrs. Baillie—The Young Queen—Napoleon

IV

HYMN-WRITERS I HAVE KNOWN Montgomery—Bonar—Bowring—Palmer and others.

V
THE TEMPERANCE REFORM AND MY CO-WORKERS
VI
WORK IN THE PULPIT
VII
EXPERIENCE IN REVIVALS
VIII
AUTHORSHIP
IX

SOME FAMOUS PEOPLE ABROAD Gladstone—Dr. Brown—Dean Stanley—Shaftesbury, etc.

X

SOME FAMOUS PEOPLE AT HOME Irving—Whittier—Webster—Greeley, etc.

XI
THE CIVIL WAR AND ABRAHAM LINCOLN
XII
PASTORAL WORK
XIII

SOME FAMOUS PREACHERS IN BRITAIN Binney—Hamilton—Guthrie—Hall—Spurgeon—Duff and others.

XIV

SOME FAMOUS AMERICAN PREACHERS The Alexanders—Dr. Tyng—Dr. Cox—Dr. Adams —Dr. Storrs—Mr. Beecher, Mr. Finney and Dr. B.M. Palmer.

XV

SUMMERING AT SARATOGA AND MOHONK Bishop Haven—Dr. Schaff—President McCook.

XVI
A RETROSPECT
XVII

A RETROSPECT (Continued)

XVIII
HOME LIFE
XIX
LIFE AT HOME AND FRIENDS ABROAD
XX

THE JOYS OF THE CHRISTIAN MINISTRY A Valedictory Discourse Delivered to the Lafayette Avenue Church, April 6, 1890.

ILLUSTRATIONS.
THEODORE LEDYARD CUYLER
DR. CUYLER WHEN PASTOR OF THE MARKET ST. CHURCH
DR CUYLER AT 50
LAFAYETTE AVENUE CHURCH
DR. CUYLER AT 80

RECOLLECTIONS OF A LONG LIFE

CHAPTER I

MY BOYHOOD AND COLLEGE LIFE

Washington Irving has somewhere said that it is a happy thing to have been born near some noble mountain or attractive river or lake, which should be a landmark through all the journey of life, and to which we could tether our memory. I have always been thankful that the place of my nativity was the beautiful village of Aurora, on the shores of the Cayuga Lake in Western New York. My great-grandfather, General Benjamin Ledyard, was one of its first settlers, and came there in 1794. He was a native of New London County, Ct., a nephew of Col. William Ledyard, the heroic martyr of Fort Griswold, and the cousin of John Ledyard, the celebrated traveller, whose biography was written by Jared Sparks. When General Ledyard came to Aurora some of the Cayuga tribe of Indians were still lingering along the lakeside, and an Indian chief said to my great-grandfather, "General Ledyard, I see that your daughters are very pretty squaws." The eldest of these comely daughters, Mary Forman Ledyard, was married to my grandfather, Glen Cuyler, who was the principal lawyer of the village, and their eldest son was my father, Benjamin Ledyard Cuyler. He became a student of Hamilton College, excelled in elocution, and was a room-mate of the Hon. Gerrit Smith, afterward eminent as the champion of anti-slavery. On a certain Sabbath, the student just home from college was called upon to read a sermon in the village church of Aurora, in the absence of the pastor, and his handsome visage and graceful delivery won the admiration of a young lady of sixteen, who was on a visit to Aurora. Three years afterward they were married. My mother, Louisa Frances Morrell, was a native of Morristown, New Jersey; and her ancestors were among the founders of that beautiful town. Her maternal great-grandfather was the Rev. Dr. Timothy Johnes, the pastor of the Presbyterian Church, who administered the sacrament of the Lord's Supper to General Washington. Her paternal great-grandfather was the Rev. Azariah Horton, pastor of a church near Morristown, and an intimate friend of the great President Edwards. The early settlers of Aurora were people of culture and refinement; and the village is now widely known as the site of Wells College, among whose graduates is the popular wife of ex-President Cleveland.

In the days of my childhood the march of modern improvements had hardly begun. There was a small steamboat plying on the Cayuga Lake. There was not a single railway in the whole State. When I went away to school in New Jersey, at the age of thirteen, the tedious journey by the stagecoach required three days and two nights; every letter from home cost eighteen cents for postage; and the youngsters pored over Webster's spelling-books and Morse's geography by tallow candles; for no gas lamps had been dreamed of and the wood fires were covered, in most houses, by nine o'clock on a winter evening. There was plain living then, but not a little high thinking. If books were not so superabundant as in these days, they were more thoroughly appreciated and digested.

My father, who was just winning a brilliant position at the Cayuga County Bar, died in June, 1826, at the early age of twenty-eight, when I was but four and one-half years old. The only distinct recollections that I have of him are his leading me to school in the morning, and that he once punished me for using a profane word that I had heard from some rough boys. That wholesome bit of discipline kept me from ever breaking the Third Commandment again. After his death, I passed entirely into the care of one of the best mothers that God ever gave to an only son. She was more to me than school, pastor or church, or

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