Round a younger sister who deserves no blame; As though like innocence she now would claim, Absolved by a pure God! And, near her, sighs The father who refused to speak her name: Her penitence is written in her eyes - rise? THE MARTYR. Carlyle. NoT yet, not yet the martyr dies. He sees His triumph on its way. He hears the crash Of the loud thunder round his enemies, And dim, through tears of blood, he sees it dash His dwelling and its idols. Joy to him! The Lord -the Lord hath spoken from the sky! The loftier glories on his eyeballs swim! He hears the trumpet of Eternity Calling his spirit home - a clarion voice on high! Yet, yet one moment linger! Who are they Shadows with golden crowns and sounding lyres, And the white royal robes, are issuing out, And beckon upwards through the wreathing fires, The blazing pathway compassing about, With radiant heads unveiled, and anthems joyful shout! He sees, he hears! upon his dying gaze, Forth from the throng one bright-haired angel near Stoops his red pinion through the mantling blaze : It is the heaven-triumphing wanderer! "I come we meet again!" - the martyr cries, And smiles of deathless glory round him play : Then on that flaming cross he bows - and dies! His ashes eddy on the sinking day, While through the roaring oak his spirit wings its way! Grenville Mellen. A CHRISTIAN IS THE HIGHEST STYLE OF MAN. "Homo sum, humani nihil a me alienum puto !" A NOBLE thought! and worthy to awake, "I am a man! and therefore to my heart And, truly, in such bond of brotherhood, But while I pay my homage to his soul, I can but feel-a Christian, by his faith, Is he a follower of The Crucified The Nazarene - who died that all might live? In that one bond of union is implied More than the Roman creed could ever give. That would but link, by human sympathy, Than proud philosophy had power to scan. There needs no more to knit in closest thrall, This, of itself, has a more hallowing leaven Than human sympathy can e'er confer, Because its loftier hopes are linked with heaven, And God's own word is its interpreter: Then chide me not, if, yielding homage due Higher - as opening up a loftier line; Barton. ON A LATE LOSS. "He shall not float upon his watery bier THE breath of air that stirs the harp's soft string, The first mild beam of morning's glorious sun, So Science whispered in thy charméd ear, shore Where storms are hushed - where tempests never rage Where angry skies and blackening seas no more John G. C. Brainard. |