Ther Sun. JUNE 15, 1924 Wea 



I The choir sans: selections from th» Thirty- 

 Ninth and Ninetieth Psalms, and, in order, 

 followed the lesson taken out of the Fif- 

 teenth Chapter of the First Epistle of St. 

 Paul to tho Corinthians : "For All the Saints 

 "Who From Their Labors Rest." "Hark, 

 Hark My Soiil, Angello Songs are Swell- 

 ing." 



Among those attending the services were 

 Dr. Charles TV. Eliot, president emeritus 

 of Harvard University. Interment was in 



I Alt A ,ili,,i~n ..>-.- * 



FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1924 



Alexander Pope, 



Painter and Naturalist 



By Dallas Lore Sharp 



The dogs and horses do not know that 

 Alexander Pope Is dead, nor do the wild 

 birds of our Hingham Sanctuary, nor tbf 

 oaged wild animals of the Franklin Zo<* 

 Yet ho was their great friend. But theif 

 know the living only, while we sometimes 

 know only the dead. Death, however, can 

 discover nothing to us In this singularly 

 simple and great man, except the extent of 

 our love and loss. He lived in the open, 

 He was unwlthholding, and as frank as a 

 child and as free. He lived zestfully^ 

 holding nothing of life in reserve, giving 

 wholly and without stint. Neither moth 

 nor rust could corrupt him, nor Time, the 

 thief, steal from him, for he gave Time 

 constantly all he had. Few men that I 

 have known enjoyeC life as much as he, or 

 gave hack to life so much of joy out of all 

 that ho received. 



