Che Present. "IT is something to learn to live in the present: to feel, that the present duty, pleasure, circumstance, is alone good and wonderful; we say, if we were only differently placed, life would be so interesting; if we were in such or such a position, then should we be intellectual, or amiable, or useful: or if this or that event should happen to us, then should we be elated and happy. It is all a mistake. That very event, or position, if possessed by us, would look just as little extraordinary as that we are now in: situations not our own, lie before us like a landscape view: every part, however mean in detail, goes to contribute to the effect of the whole, and shares in its ideal character: but we cannot see the picture of which we ourselves form a part. We do not know, that the day, the hour, the employment, the incident, before which we, in our own persons stand, and that looks perhaps so worn and dusty, is in reality an inexhaustable well of truth, could we but wipe from our eyes the blinding dust of familiarity. For life to cease to be poor and common-place, and become intrinsically rich and wonderful, we must realise, that if it is as a whole, the gift of God, then all the parts must so be; if relation to parents, friends, society, are of divine appointment, then every thing flowing out of this relation, intercourse and influence, are of divine appointment. How grand and mystic then, is this every-day life! It is inlaid with divinity, as black oak inlaid with gold: and David utters a literal fact when he speaks of his "down-sitting and uprising," as encompassed by God. FRIENDS may have the same tastes, but different talents. Che Synagogue. "BUT even unto this day, when Moses is read, the veil is upon their heart: nevertheless when it shall turn to the Lord, the veil shall be taken away." ST. PAUL. I SAW them in their synagogue, as in their ancient day; Sheds mingled with the hues of day, a lustre nothing bright; tinge, And dimly gilds the Pharisees' phylacteries and fringe! The two leaved doors slide slow apart, before the eastern screen, But be forever rent in twain, like that before the ark. For yet the tenfold film shall fall, Oh Judah! from thy sight, WM. CROSSWell. Co Liagara. FROM LINES WRITTEN AT THE FIRST VIEW OF THE FALLS, AUG. 13, 1838, BY J. S. BUCKINGHAM. HAIL! monarch of the world of floods, whose majesty and might, No fleets can stop thy progress, no armies bid thee stay- Thy diadem an emerald green, of the clearest, purest hue, dew; While tresses of the brightest pearls float o'er thine ample sheet, And the rainbow lays its gorgeous gems in tribute at thy feet. And whether, on thy forest banks, the Indian of the wood, Accept, Oh thou Supremely Great! Oh Infinite! Oh, God! The humble homage that my soul in gratitude would pay To Thee! whose shield has guarded me in all my wandering way. For if the ocean be as nought in the hollow of thine hand, To NIAGARA. If Niagara's flood seem great to us who humbly bow, 263 But tho' thy power is far more vast than finite man can scan, For him the seas, the lakes, the streams, supply his homely need. Around, on high, or far, or near, the universal whole Proclaims thy glory, as the orbs in their fixed courses roll; Ir is easy to produce sentiments which will fall harmoniously on the ear, and charm the sense, without benefitting the heart or understanding. It is not difficult to repeat axioms of virtue with mathematical precision and undoubted accuracy: but to unite axioms of goodness to beauty of language, and novelty of expression to give invitations to virtue, in originality of thought, and loveliness of language-Oh, this is a talent which good men must desire for its usefulness. TRUTH is a gem which need not be enchased-which, faultless and cloudless, may be held up to the pure bright light on any side, in any direction, and will everywhere display the same purity and soundness and beauty. A Memorial of Mary Dyer. ONE OF THE EARLY WORTHIES AND MARTYRS IN THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS.-BY BERNARD BARTON. WE too have had our martyrs. Such wert thou, In the world's eye, of far more wide renown. Yet the same spirit grac'd thy fameless end, Which shone in Latimer and his compeers; Manhood's warm reverence, childhood's guileless tears. Well did they win them: may they keep them long! Heroic martyr of a sect despis'd! Thy name and memory to my heart are dear Thy Christian worth demands no poet's lay, Yet seems it like a sacred debt to give The brief memorial thou mayst well supply; |