The closing day of school had come; and although he had waited in impatience

for the end, it was with a lump in his throat that he sat behind the desk

and ruler for the last time and looked out on the gleeful faces of the

children. No more toil and trouble between them and him from this time on; a

dismissal, and as far as he was concerned the scattering of the huddled

lambkins to the wide pastures and long cold mountain sides of the world. He

had grown so fond of them and he had grown so used to teach them by talking

to them, that his speech overflowed. But it had been his unbroken wont to

keep his troubles out of the schoolroom; and although the thought never left

him of the other parting to be faced that day, he spoke out bravely and

cheerily, with a smile: "This is the last day of school, and you know that to-morrow I am going away

and may never come back. Whether I do or not, I shall never teach again, so

that I am now saying good-bye to you for life.

"What I wish to impress upon you once more is the kind of men and women your

fathers and mothers were and the kind of men and women you must become to be

worthy of them. I am not speaking so much to those of you whose parents have

not been long in Kentucky as to those whose parents were the first to fight

for the land until it was safe for others to follow and share it. Let me

tell you that nothing like that was ever done before in all this world. And

if, as I sit here, I can't help seeing that this one of you has no father

and this one no mother and this one neither father nor mother and that

almost none of you have both, still I cannot help saying, You ought to be

happy children! not that you have lost your parents, but that you have had

such parents to lose and to remember!

"All of you are still too young to know fully what they have done and how

the whole world will some day speak of them. Still, you can understand some

things. For nowadays, when you go to your homes at night, you can lie down

and sleep without fear or danger.

"And in the mornings your fathers go off to the fields to their work, your

mothers go off to theirs, you go off to yours, feeling sure that you will

all come together at night again. Some of you can remember when this was not

so. Your father would put his arms around you in the morning and you would

never see him again; your mother kissed you, and waved her hand to you as

she went out of the gate; and you never knew what became of her afterwards.




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