Excerpt from Life and Thought: Or Cherished Memorials of the Late Julia A. Parker DysonTo keep alive the memory of the gifted and the good, we must not suffer private feeling to become the sole depositary. We are forced to yield, what exclusiveness would prompt to retain; what the tenderness and delicacy of a fond affection would gladly appropriate to itself. But the reection of excellence falls gratefully on the universal eye, and stirs to healthy action the universal heart. Com mon humanity asks every aid that can be given. Intellect grows strong by every proof of its supe riority; virtue more lovely by repeated exempli fication. We are bound to the good by the con tinued proofs of excellence they exhibit while living; but death gives increased value to the treasures they bequeathe. These may not be claimed as private right, - to humanity, to the world, they belong henceforth.
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