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Wednesday 31 July 2019

Beauty and truth



One indication of the significance of the significance of William Dana Orcutt's 1950 book Mary Baker Eddy and Her Books may be deduced from a review by Alice Dixon Bond in the Boston Sunday Herald and subsequently reprinted in the April 7, 1951 edition of the Christian Science Sentinel, available at Christian Science Reading Rooms worldwide

The review notes that Orcutt's book is '[o]ne of the most distinctive, and distinguished, biographies of the year...by one of the world's great makers of books as well as a renowned author...' She continues: 


During [his 18-year association with her], Mr. Orcutt came to know at first hand the rare quality and the genuine greatness of Mary Baker Eddy, and in this book he has made the lay reader, as well as the Christian Scientist, realize both her essential humanness and her extraordinary ability...


It was Mrs. Eddy who answered her youthful publisher's earnest desire to leave printing and devote himself "to something in which there is beauty" with the quiet truth which was to remain with him always: "If a man has beauty in himself," she said, "he can put beauty into anything." ...


Beauty...is in this book; beauty—and truth. Mr. Orcutt brings facts to bear on the many false stories which have grown up about Mrs. Eddy's work, has untangled crossed lines, and makes us understand as nothing else has done the woman back of the mission— her humanity and her dedication.


Writing a few years later, a student of Christian Science pointed out a lesson gleaned from Orcutt's book. Louise Wheatley Cook Hovnanian’s article, ‘The Sun Never Sets’, appeared in the December 11, 1954 Christian Science Sentinel:


...something very interesting appears in a book, which may be found in Christian Science Reading Rooms, entitled "Mary Baker Eddy and Her Books," by William Dana Orcutt. On pages 86 and 87, the author tells of an interview he had with Mrs. Eddy at Concord some ten years after his first visit there.


He was impressed with the fact that few changes had been made in the room which was her study, but especially was he impressed with the lack of change in our Leader herself. He writes: "When she entered the room, just as she had done on that first visit of mine, she seemed just as she had always seemed: the same bright smile of welcome, the same penetrating, assessing eyes, the same alertness of manner, the same clear, musical voice, the same physical vigor I had always remembered—yet the ten years that had been added to the history of the world had added the same number of years to this slight little woman—years of conflict and triumph, years of disappointment and gratification, years of consecration and of arduous labor, years of achievement and accomplishment—and had left no visible mark. Mrs. Eddy was eighty years old at the time."


Orcutt's recognition and declaration of beauty and truth are inspiring, in a world where these qualities sometimes seem to be overshadowed or overlooked.


Julie Swannell

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