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Shackell, Arrowsmith, and Hodges, Johnson's-court, Fleet-street.

THE LAST MAN.

CHAPTER I.

HEAR you not the rushing sound of the coming tempest? Do you not behold the clouds open, and destruction lurid and dire pour down on the blasted earth? See you not the thunderbolt fall, and are deafened by the shout of heaven that follows its descent ? Feel you not the earth quake and open with agonizing groans, while the air is pregnant with shrieks and wailings,-all announcing the last days of man?

VOL. III.

No! none of these things accompanied our fall! The balmy air of spring, breathed from nature's ambrosial home, invested the lovely carth, which wakened as a young mother about to lead forth in pride her beauteous offspring to meet their sire who had been long absent. The buds decked the trees, the flowers adorned the land: the dark branches, swollen with seascnable juices, expanded into leaves, and the variegated foliage of spring, bending and singing in the breeze, rejoiced in the genial warmth of the unclouded empyrean: the brooks flowed murmuring, the sea was waveless, and the promontories that over-hung it were reflected in the placid waters; birds awoke in the woods, while abundant food for man and beast sprung up from the dark ground. Where was pain and evil? Not in the calm air or weltering ocean; not in the woods or fertile fields, nor among the birds that made the woods resonant with song, nor the animals that in the midst of plenty basked in the sunshine. Our enemy,

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