DIED . . . Miss Anna
Jones
by Henry D. Thoreau
Died:
In this town, on the 12th inst. Miss Anna Jones, aged 86.
When a fellow being departs for the land of
spirits, whether that spirit take its flight from a hovel or a
palace, we would fain know what was its demeanor in life—what of
beautiful it lived.
We are happy to state, upon
testimony of those who knew her best, that the subject of this
notice was an upright and exemplary woman, that her amiableness and
benevolence were such as to win all hearts, and, to her praise be it
spoken, that during a long life, she was never known to speak ill of
any one. After a youth passed amid scenes of turmoil and war, she
has lingered thus long amongst us a bright sample of the
Revolutionary woman. She was as it were, a connecting link between
the past and the present—a precious relic of days which the man
and patriot would not willingly forget.
The religious sentiment was strongly
developed in her. Of her last years it may truly be said, that they
were passed in the society of the apostles and prophets; she lived
as in their presence; their teachings were meat and drink to her.
Poverty was her lot, but she possessed those virtues without which
the rich are but poor. As her life had been, so was her death.
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A
Note on the Text:
-
1st
published in the Yeoman's Gazette [Concord, Massachusetts
(25 November 1837) p. 3]
-
Source:
Yeoman's Gazette [Concord, Massachusetts (25 November
1837) p. 3]
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