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Story
June 25, 1889
Daily Independent
Elko, Elko County, Nevada
What is this article about?
An advisory piece urging families to provide elderly parents with warmth, comfort, and respect, preventing them from feeling like burdensome pensioners, and emphasizing gentle care even in difficult cases as a reciprocal duty.
OCR Quality
98%
Excellent
Full Text
OLD FOLKS AT HOME.
See to It That They Receive the Best of Every Thing.
If you are so fortunate as to have the "old people" in the house, see to it that they have the warmest and sunniest corner and a goodly portion of the best that can be afforded of comfort, convenience and beauty; that aged blood may be kept warm and cheerful; that failing limbs may have restful repose and that the dim eyes that have watched over you and yours through so many toilsome years may see around them the ever-present evidences of faithful and grateful care.
There is nothing in the world more pathetic than the meek, timorous, shrinking ways of certain old people we have all seen them-who have given up their old home into younger hands and subsided into some out-of-the-way corner of it, to sit by fireside and table henceforth as if they were mere pensioners--afraid of "making trouble," afraid of "being in the way," afraid of accepting the half that is their due, and going down to their graves with a pitiful, deprecating air, as if constantly apologizing for staying so long. There is no scorn too deep and sharp for the sons and daughters who will accept this attitude on the part of those to whom they owe so much.
Sometimes, to be sure, people grow old with a bad grace. They become embittered by misfortune or affliction, are peevish and unreasonable under the goading of ill-health. All the more do they appeal to great gentleness and faithfulness. Let it be borne in mind that we, too, are hastening on toward the sunset of life, and that it is possible that we may ripen into very uncomfortable old people, to demand much more of patience and devotion than we, as children, yield.-Woman's World.
See to It That They Receive the Best of Every Thing.
If you are so fortunate as to have the "old people" in the house, see to it that they have the warmest and sunniest corner and a goodly portion of the best that can be afforded of comfort, convenience and beauty; that aged blood may be kept warm and cheerful; that failing limbs may have restful repose and that the dim eyes that have watched over you and yours through so many toilsome years may see around them the ever-present evidences of faithful and grateful care.
There is nothing in the world more pathetic than the meek, timorous, shrinking ways of certain old people we have all seen them-who have given up their old home into younger hands and subsided into some out-of-the-way corner of it, to sit by fireside and table henceforth as if they were mere pensioners--afraid of "making trouble," afraid of "being in the way," afraid of accepting the half that is their due, and going down to their graves with a pitiful, deprecating air, as if constantly apologizing for staying so long. There is no scorn too deep and sharp for the sons and daughters who will accept this attitude on the part of those to whom they owe so much.
Sometimes, to be sure, people grow old with a bad grace. They become embittered by misfortune or affliction, are peevish and unreasonable under the goading of ill-health. All the more do they appeal to great gentleness and faithfulness. Let it be borne in mind that we, too, are hastening on toward the sunset of life, and that it is possible that we may ripen into very uncomfortable old people, to demand much more of patience and devotion than we, as children, yield.-Woman's World.
What sub-type of article is it?
Family Drama
What themes does it cover?
Filial Piety
Family
Moral Virtue
What keywords are associated?
Elderly Care
Filial Piety
Family Duty
Old Parents
Grateful Care
Story Details
Story Details
Advice to provide elderly parents with the best comforts and care, ensuring they do not feel like burdens, and to treat them with gentleness even if they are difficult, as a moral duty.