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Show M ' I I j i JOSEPH NICHOLSON. B jjs J j , Very sorrowful was the death of Joseph Nich- B ' , ,J i olson. Not for him for he has been suffering and B;J ' j i wasting away for years. For months the last B , , f . thing he saw as ho fell asleep was the spectre B ' $ I' of death by his bedside, it was first to appear to B (! $ I' him when he awakened, and so to him the final Bj i ! 1 ! , ii summons came as a final opiate to give him rest. B ' j Sl But to tlloso who are left and wll In 1Ife were B j jj ! near to him, to them is the sorrow. It is more B j I than an ordinary bereavement. They not only B ? li ! grieve for one who was loving and true always, ibut there is a still more poignant sorrow, for all through youth and early manhoon, even after tho disease that caused his death had seized upon, him, Joseph Nicholson gave clear evidence of possessing pos-sessing a genius which only needed steadying i and expanding to enable him to write his earthly i name on that high scroll which gives immortal luster to names written thereon. Day by day his ' mind gave off more flashes and as they increased in number, the light from them was whiter and clearer, tho promise of their final fruition grew , more and more certain of lofty fulfillment. He I was an artist born and to grasp anything high ' i In art or literature was to him like finding somo-' somo-' thing not new, but as something he had always known. Then when his physical frame began to B jj ' Ijjl! ; waste away the clearer the genius of his soul B j ' . H shone out, and hence we say his death, though ft J m I expected, came freighted with inexpressible sor- B ' OSJu row. God comfort tho mourners, God rest the soul B F that has fled. |