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There I was, mother and father to him, and I couldn't say four words of that prayer to save my life! He waited and waited for me to begin, as his mother always had; and the big children were waiting; and when I took him in my lap and kissed him, I called heaven to witness that my life should change from that hour. So it did, and I have been trying hard to lead a sober, honest life. God helping me, no one shall call me "Whisky Bill" again.

Every night little Ned climbs up into my lap and says, "Goodnight, pa-good-night everybody in the world-good-night ma up in heaven" and I believe she knows and will stand by methere just as she always did here, and I know I'll hold out to the end.

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We are "Freemen !" "Independent!"
"We can stop just when we choose!"
Then let's drink, nor be so fearful,
Nor mind we have a soul to lose.

Drink-for see our wives stand weeping,
And our infants cry for bread:
In the grave they'll soon be sleeping;
Soon be numbered with the dead.

Drink-for hoary sires entreat us

To resign the fatal cup:

Drink-nor heed a mother's anguish:
Drink and drink damnation up!

Drink-for see the gallows becks us,
And the prison opens wide;

And shame stands with arms extended,
To destroy our hopes and pride.

Drink for while we quaff destruction,
Others feel the poison too;

Yes, the darts that wound our bosoms,
Also pierce our loved ones through.

Oh, what pleasures greet the drunkard!
What blissful scenes to him extend!
Therefore drink, nor be so fearful!
Drink-nor heed the drunkard's end!

DON'T GO IN.

MRS. KIDDER.

T is lighted, we know, like a palace,

IT

That fair, gilded temple of sin;

It has signs on the walls; let us read them: "The best of wine, brandy, and gin." (As if human stomachs could need them!) My son, oh, my son, don't go in.

Though it giveth its beautiful color,

Though it gleams in the cup like a rose, Though it seeks like a serpent to charm you, And glitters and glimmers and glows,

Like the bright, wily serpent 'twill harm you And rob you of earthly repose.

It will tarnish your glorious manhood
And sow the vile seeds of disgrace.
Then, why deal with this terrible danger?
Why enter this crime-haunted place?
Much better to pass it a stranger
Than God's whole image deface.

Much better to gird on the armor

To fight life's great battle and win,
Than to lay down your all on the altar
That burns in this temple of sin.
So, strike for the right and not falter—
My son, oh, my son, don't go in.

THE GIN FIEND.

CHARLES MACKAY.

HE Gin Fiend cast his eyes abroad

THE

And looked o'er all the land;

And numbered his myriad worshipers
With his bird-like, long right hand.
He took his place in the teeming street
And watched the people go,

Around and about, with a buzz and a shout,

Forever to and fro.

"And it's hip!" said the Gin Fiend, "hip, hurrah!

For the multitude I see

Who offer themselves in sacrifice

And die for the love of me."

There watched a woman by the hearth

With sullen face and thin;

She uttered words of scorn and hate
To one that staggered in.

Long had she watched, and when he came
His thoughts were bent on blood;

He could not brook her taunting look,

And he slew her where she stood.

"And it's hip!" said the Gin Fiend, "hip, hurrah! My right good friend is he;

He hath slain his wife, he hath given his life,
And all for the love of me."

And every day in the crowded way
He takes his fearful stand,

And numbers his myriad worshipers
With his bird-like, long right hand;
And every day the weak and strong,
Widows and maids and wives,

Blood warm, blood cold, young men and old,
Offer the Fiend their lives.

"And it's hip!" he says, "hip, hip, hurrah!

For the multitudes I see

That sell their souls for the burning drink,
And die for the love of me!"

RUM AND RUIN.

SUSIE M. BEST.

ERE'S a sentence to remember,
Be it April or December,

Be it any kind of weather

Rum and Ruin march together.

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