January 4. Mark the perfect man, and behold the upright; for the end of that man is peace. Ps. xxxvii. 37. SHALL HALL we make no account of the slackened but surer pace, the dignity, the calm, which make old age what God intended it should be, a sublime halt between a conquered world and eternity? I collect myself, O my God! at the close of life, as at the close of day, and bring to Thee my thoughts and my love. The last thoughts of a heart that loves Thee are like those last, deepest, ruddiest rays of the setting sun. Thou hast willed, Ō my God! that life should be beautiful even to the end. Make me to grow and keep my green, and climb like the plant which lifts its head to Thee for the last time before it drops its seed and dies. MADAME SWETCHINE. We bless Thee, gracious God, for birth, We bless Thee for the gate of death, - We bless Thee for the heart to feel, And for the eye to see; For faith that reaches over time, Oh, softly fades this life of ours, FROM THE ROUND TABLE. January 5. In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment; but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee, saith the Lord thy Redeemer. ISA. liv. 8. TRANGELY do some people talk of " getting over STRAN " a great sorrow,overleaping it, passing it by, thrusting it into oblivion. Not so. No one ever does that, at least no nature which can be touched by the feeling of grief at all. The only way is to pass through the ocean of affliction solemnly, slowly, with humility and faith, as the Israelites passed through the sea. Then its very waves of misery will divide and become to us a wall on the right side and on the left, until the gulf narrows and narrows before our eyes, and we land safe on the opposite shore. DINAH MULOCH CRAIK. SORROW PAST. THE shadow has gone by; My days are warm with quiet, sunny life, Thy love is manifest; I thank Thee Thou hast led me from the strife. I know that toil and pain That many shadows on my life must fall ; Such quiet cannot last; And yet I thank Thee it has come at all. When darkness falls at length, I shall have gathered strength From these sweet days of pleasantness and calm; When sweetest lights depart, I may, through all, lift up my voice in psalm. Now, with no care or fear, Because my hands were not reached out in vain, May I from out my calm Reach humbly out some balm, Some peace, some light, to others in their pain. And when at last I sleep, May others come and reap The harvest planted here by these weak hands; I pray it thus may be. Show me my field; I wait for Thy commands. January 6. Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you; not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.- JOHN xiv. 27. Now OW I want you to think that in life troubles will come, which seem as if they never would pass away. The night and the storm look as if they would last forever, but the calm and the morning cannot be stayed; the storm in its very nature is transient. The effort of nature, as that of the human heart, ever is to return to its repose, for God is Peace. GEORGE MACDONALD. THE PEACE OF GOD. WE ask for peace, O Lord! Thy children ask Thy peace; Not what the world calls rest, That toil and care should cease, That through bright, sunny hours And tranquil night should fade In smiling day, It is not for such peace that we would pray. We ask for peace, O Lord! Yet not to stand secure, Girt round with iron pride, Crushing the gentle strings That human hearts should know, Untouched by others' joy Or others' woe; Thou, O dear Lord, wilt never teach us so. We ask Thy peace, O Lord! Through storm and fear and strife, To light and guide us on, Through a long, struggling life; To lean on Thee entranced, In calm and perfect rest; Give us that peace, O Lord, Divine and blest, Thou keepest for those hearts who love Thee best. ADELAIDE A. PROCTER. January 7. Thou wilt show me the path of life; in Thy presence is fulness of joy; at Thy right hand there are pleasures forevermore. Ps. xvi. 11. HERE is an eventide in the day, an the THE hour when sun retires and the shadows fall, and when Nature assumes the appearance of soberness and silence. It is an hour from which everywhere the thoughtless fly, as peopled only in their imaginations with images of gloom; it is the hour, on the other hand, which in every age the wise have loved, as bringing with it sentiments and affections more valuable than all the splendors of the day. Its first impression is to still all the turbulence of thought or passion which the day may have brought forth. We follow with our eye the descending sun; we listen to the decaying sounds of labor and of toil; and when all the fields are silent around us, we feel a kindred stillness to breathe upon our souls, and to calm them from the agitations of society. From this first impression there is a second which naturally follows it: in the day we are living with men; in the eventide we begin to live with Nature; we see the world withdrawn from us, the shades of night darken over the habitations of men, and we feel ourselves alone. It is an hour fitted, as it would seem, by Him who made us, to still, but with gentle hand, the throb of every unruly passion, and, while it veils for a time the world that misleads us, to awaken in our hearts those legitimate affections which the heat of the day may have dissolved. In the moments when earth is overshadowed, heaven opens to our eyes the radiance of a sublimer being; our hearts follow the successive splendors of the scene; and while we forget for a time the obscurity of earthly concerns, we feel that there are "yet greater things than these." A. ALISON, 1757-1839. BETWEEN THE LIGHTS. A LITTLE pause in life, while daylight lingers And soft gray shadows veil the aching eyes. Old perfumes wander back from fields of clover Draw near, as if they lived among us yet. Old voices call me, through the dusk returning; And then I ask, with vain and troubled yearning, Must the old joys be evermore withholden? Even their memory keeps me pure and true; And yet, from out Jerusalem the Golden God speaketh, saying, "I make all things new." "Father," I cry, "the old must still be nearer, Stifle my love, or give me back the past! Peace, peace! the Lord of earth and heaven knoweth Out of His throne no stream of Lethe floweth, |