Between the mysteries of death and life Thou standest, loving, guiding,—not explaining; We ask, and Thou art silent-yet we gaze, And our charmed hearts forget their drear complaining! No crushing fate-no stony destiny ! O God revealed in Christ, we rest in Thee ! The many waves of thought, the mighty tides, The ground-swell that rolls up from other lands, Whose echo dashes on life's wave-worn strands,- MRS. H. B. STOWE.-Adap. TRUST IN GOD AND DO THE RIGHT. Courage, brother! do not stumble, Though thy path is dark as night; Trust in God and do the right. And its ending out of sight; Trust in God and do the right. Perish all that fears the light; Trust in God and do the right. Trust no “ leaders” in the fight; Trust in God and do the right. Fiends can look like angels bright: Trust in God and do the right. Some will flatter, some will slight; Trust in God and do the right. For true peace and inward light; TRUST IN GOD AND DO THE RIGHT. Be every faith established, Lord ! in truth. Adapted from FESTUS. THE SEVEN ANGELS OF THE LYRE. Knowest thou not the wondrous lyre? Its strings extend from earth to heaven, Sits at the key-note evermore; Not sad, as if a pang she bore, A rainbow is her diadem, And on her breast she wears a gem Unfading flowers her brow adorn, And from her smile a ray is born The fourth, with eyes of earnest ken, Surveys the boundless universe; While her ecstatic lips rehearse The fifth is robed in spotless white; And from the beating of her heart, Such heavenly coruscations start, The sixth inhales perpetual Morn: For, through the bright Infinitude, She sees, beyond the present Good, The Better destined to be born :Her name is Aspiration; ever She sings the might of Will, the beauty of Endeavour. Crown and completion of the seven Rapt Adoration sits alone; She wakes the Lyre's divinest tone, Know'st thou that lyre? If through thy soul The immortal music never ran, Immortal spirit, hear and soar ! The angels wave their golden wings, And strike the seven celestial strings, Anonymous. THE TIME FOR PRAYER. Lift up thy thoughts on high; Morn is the time for prayer! And in the noontide hour, And He will give thee rest: Noon is the time for prayer ! When the bright sun hath set,-, Then let thy prayer arise Eve is the time for prayer ! And when the stars come forth, To pure bright dreams of heaven,- Night is the time for prayer! When is the time for prayer?, Thy thoughts should heavenward flee. Anonymous. THE RULE OF LIFE. Happiness is not what we are to look for. Our place is to be true to the best which we know, to seek that and do that; and if by “virtue its own reward” be meant that the good man cares only to continue good, desiring nothing more, then it is true and noble. But if virtue be valued because it is politic, because in pursuit of it will be found most enjoyment and fewest sufferings, then it is not noble any more, and it is turning the truth of God into a lie. Let us do right, and whether happiness or unhappiness come, it is no very great matter. If it come, life will be sweet; if it do not come, life will be bitter-and yet to be borne. On such a theory alone is the government of this world intelligibly just. The well-being of our souls depends only on what we are, and nobleness of character is nothing else but steady love of good, and steady scorn of evil. The government of the world is a problem while the desire of selfish enjoyment survives; and when justice is not done according to such standard, self-loving men will still ask, why? and find no answer. Only to those who have the heart to say, we can do without that, it is not what we ask or desire, is there no secret. Man will have what he deserves, and will find what is really best for him, exactly as he honestly seeks for it. Happiness may fly away, pleasure pall or cease to be obtainable, wealth decay, friends fail or prove unkind, and fame turn to infamy; but the power to serve God never fails, and the love of him is never rejected. Most of us, at one time or other of our lives, have known something of that only pure love in which no self is left remaining. We have loved as children, we have loved as lovers; some of us have learned to love a cause, a faith, a country; and what love would that he which existed only with a prudent view to after interests. Surely, there is a love which exults in the power of self-abandonment, and can glory in the privilege of suffering for what is good. “Que mon nom soit flétri pourvu que la France soit libre,” said Danton; and those wild patriots who had trampled into scorn the faith in an immortal life-in which they would be rewarded for what they were suffering, went to their graves as beds, for the dream of a people's liberty. Shall we, who would be thought reasonable men, love the living God with less heart than these poor men loved their phantom? Justice is done; the balance is not deranged. It only seems deranged, as long as we have not learned to serve without looking for recompense.-Westminster Review. THE GOOD GREAT MAN. Beings there are in the vast tide |