have been? Rather let me say, what a glorious being is he now! Seven years there have - been more and better than seventy times seven thousand years on earth. I know it. God help me to admit that it is better far, for him, for me, for all, that he should have spent them there than here. For what attainments must that soul have made that for these seven years past has been pursuing the career of heavenly study the mysteries of celestial learning and celestial love! I do not know whether he prefers to be with seraphs or cherubim: the former are said to love and the latter to know the more. I think that he wanders with both, and finds congenial spirits in John and Paul. He has been seven years with them, and with the Saviour who took him to his arms from ours. Now he must be far advanced in knowledge and in holiness. With such companions, such instructors, how wise and good he must be! If he should come back to us, he could find no company with whom he would be at home. Within the last year, one whom he revered and loved, his aged grandsire, has gone to heaven. The child has welcomed him there: taken him by the hand, and led him to fountains of living waters, and charmed his ear with heavenly melodies, and become his teacher in the things of the kingdom. It must be brighter and sweeter now for both, that they can sit together in heavenly places, and speak of the wonders of earth and heaven, as they now appear to their opened eyes. Sixty years were between them when they were here together: there the child had seven years the start of his grandsire, and leads him upward to the sources of Infinite wisdom and love. I should be glad to see them there. I should have been glad to see them when they met in the streets of the New Jerusalem! to have heard the cry of joy from the child, as he flew into the patriarch's bosom, and hung on his breast, and kissed his brow with glory crowned. Well, we shall all be there soon. Thank God for that. A few more days of darkness and the morning cometh, the morning of eternal day. "Then let our songs abound, And every tear be dry; We 're marching through Immanuel's ground, This shall be the last time that we will keep the anniversary of our child's release from earth with mourning. Thanks be unto God who giveth us the victory over death; not our own death only, for that is one of the least of trials; but over the death of those we love; causing us to triumph in tribulation; so that we can say, The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord. REV. SAMUEL IRENÆUS PRIME. THE MOURNING MOTHER. О! WHO shall tell what fearful pangs Her wasted form is bending; Bereaved one! I may not chide Thy tears and bitter sobbing, - BISHOP DOANE. ON THE DEATH OF A SON, I NEVER trusted to have lived With trembling hand I vainly tried Yes, I am sad and weary now; Is earlier blessed than mine; W. B. O. PEABODY. THE LITTLE COFFIN. 'T was a tiny, rosewood thing, Waiting, empty - ah! for whom? Ah! what bitter tears shall stain |