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that merry air :- "Bob-o'-link! bob-o'-link! spink, spank, spink! Nobody knows, but my mate and I, where our nest and our nestlings lie. Chee, chee, chee! chink!"

Summer wanes; the children are grown ; fun and frolic no more he knows; Robert of Lincoln's a humdrum crone ; off he flies, and we sing as he goes :-"Bob-o'-link! bob-o'-link! spink, spank, spink! When you can pipe that merry old strain, Robert of Lincoln, come back again! Chee, chee, chee! chink!"

The Creed of the Bells.

(Verse printed as Prose.)

How sweet the chime of Sabbath bells !-Each one its Creed in music tells, in tones that float upon the air as soft as song, as pure as prayer! And I will put in simple rhyme the language of each golden chime: my happy heart with rapture swells, responsive to the bells-sweet bells!

"In deeds of love, excel! excel!" chimed out, from ivied towers, a bell; "Oh! heed the Church-not based on sands,— emblem of one not built with hands: its forms and sacred rites revere ! Come worship here! Come worship here! In rituals and faith excel !"-chimed out the "Episcopalian" bell!

"Oh! heed the ancient landmarks well!" in solemn tones exclaimed a bell. "No progress made by mortal man can change the just eternal plan with GOD there can be nothing new; ignore the false, embrace the true, while all is well!—is well! -is well!"-pealed out the "Presbyterian" bell!

"Ye purifying waters, swell!" in mellow tones rang out a bell. Though trust alone in Christ can save, man must be plunged beneath the wave, to show the world unfaltering faith in what the sacred Scripture saith: oh, swell! ye rising waters, swell!"-pealed out the clear-toned "Baptist" bell.

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"Not faith alone, but works as well, must test the soul ! said a soft bell. "Come here, and cast aside your load; and work your way along the road, with faith in God, and faith in man, and hope in Christ-where hope began: do well! do well! do well! do well!"-rang out the friendly "Quaker" bell.

"Farewell! farewell! base world farewell!" in touching tones exclaimed a bell. "Life is a boon to mortals given, to

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fit the soul for bliss in heaven; do not invoke the avenging rod; come here, and learn the way to God! Say to the world, 'Farewell! farewell!'"-pealed forth the solemn "Cloister" bell! “To all, the truth we tell! we tell!" shouted, in ecstacies, a bell. Come, all ye weary wanderers, see! our LORD has made salvation free! repent, believe, have faith !—and then be saved, and praise the Lord! Amen! Salvation's free, we tell ! we tell!"-shouted the "Methodistic " bell!

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"In after-life there is no hell!" in raptures rang a hopeful bell. "Look up to heaven this holy day, where angels wait to lead the way there are no fires, no fiends, to blight the future life: be just and right: No hell! no hell! no hell! no hell!" rang out the "Universalist " bell!

"The Pilgrim Fathers heeded well my cheerful voice," pealed forth a bell. "No fetters here, to clog the soul: no arbitrary forms control the free heart and progressive mind, that leave the dusky past behind. Speed well! speed well! speed well! speed well !"—pealed out the "Independent" bell!

"No rigid creeds to doom to hell!" in solemn joy rang out a bell. "Great men have stamped their fervent zeal upon all hearts, which truly feel that loyalty to God will be the fealty that makes men free! God's praise alone still tell! still tell!" rang out the "Unitarian " bell!

"All hail, ye saints in heaven that dwell close by the Cross!" exclaimed a bell. "Lean o'er the battlements of bliss, and dei_n to bless a world like this: let mortals kneel before this shrine -adore the water and the wine! All hail, ye saints! the chorus swell!"—-chimed out the grand old "Catholic" bell!

"Ye workers all, who toil so well to save the race!" said a sweet bell, "with varied badge, and banner, come,—each brave heart beating like a drum; be royal men of noble deeds, for love is holier than creeds; in faith, hope, charity, excel !" -sang forth each creed-rang forth each bell!

The Old Schoolmaster.

He sat at his desk at the close of day, for he felt the weight of his many years.—

His form was bent and his hair was grey, and his eyes were dim with the falling tears.

The school was out and his task was done, and the house seemed now so strangely still,

As the red beam of the setting sun stole silently over the window-sill,

Stole silently into the twilight gloom, and the deepening shadows fell athwart

The vacant seats and the vacant room, and the vacant place in the old man's heart

For his school had been all in all to him, who had no wife, child, land, nor gold;

But his frame was weak, and his eyes were dim, and the fiat was issued at last-" Too old."

IIe bowed his head on his trembling hands a moment, as one might bend to pray;

"Too old!" they say, and the school demands a wiser and younger head to-day.

"Too old too old!" these men forget it was I who guided their tender years;

Their hearts were hard, and they pitied not my trembling lips and my falling tears.

"Too old! too old!" it was all they said; I looked in their faces one by one,

But they turned away, and my heart was lead: "Dear Lord, it is hard, but Thy will be done."

The night stole on and a blacker gloom was over the vacant benches cast;

The master sat in the silent room, but his mind was back in the days long past.

And he smiled as his kindly glances fell on the well beloved faces there

John, Rob, and Will, and laughing Nell, and blue-eyed Bess, with golden hair,

And Tom, and Charley, and Ben, and Paul, who stood at the head of the spelling class

All in their places-and yet they all were lying under the graveyard grass.

Thus all night long, till the morning came, and the darkness folded her robe of gloom,

And the sun looked in with his eye of flame, on the vacant

seats of the silent room,

And the wind stole over the window-sill, and swept through

the aisles in a merry rout;

But the face of the master was white and still-his work was finished, his school was out.

A Character.

So noble that he cannot see

He stands in aught above the rest,
But does his greatness easily,

And mounts his scaffold with a jest:

Not vaunting any daily death,

Because he scorns the thing that dies,

And not in love with any breath

That might proclaim him grand or wise.

Not much concerned with schemes that show
The counterchange of weak with strong,

But never passing by a woe,

Nor sitting still to watch a wrong.

Of all hearts careful save his own :
Most tender when he suffers most;
Wont, if a foe must be o'erthrown,

To count, but never grudge the cost.
Sharp insight, severing with a glance
Greater from less, from substance shade;
Faith, in gross darkness, of mischance
Unable to be much afraid;

Out-looking eyes that seek and scan,
Ready to love what they behold;
Quick reverence for his brother man ;
Quick sense where gilding is not gold.

Such impulse of his self-control,
It seems a voluntary grace,
The careless grandeur of a soul

That holds no mirror to his face.

True sympathy, a light that grows

And broadens like the summer morn's,
And hope that trusts before it knows,
Being out of tune with all the scorns.
On-moving, temperately intent

On radiant ends by means as bright,
And never cautious, but content

With all the bitter fruits of right.
Under this shade the tired may lie,
Worn with the greatness of their way;
Under this shield the brave may die,
Aware that they have won the day.

For such a leader lifts his times
Out of the limits of the night,

And, falling grandly, while he climbs,
Falls with his face toward the height.

Only a Wee Bit Bairn.

Only a wee bit bairn, but 'tis bitterly hard to miss

The tread of her toddling feet, the balm of her loving kiss,

The

grasp of her gentle hand, the touch of her soft, warm cheek; Blue eyes beaming with love, that the young tongue could not speak.

They say she has gone before us, where little children go,

To dwell in a garden of lilies, in garments white as snow.
But we envy the angels our treasure, and wish her back once

more,

Her small, sweet face at the window, her laugh at the open door.

Only a wee bit bairn, with soft, blue, bonny eyes;
Ready to dance with fun, or laugh with the light of surprise ;
Hands ever ready for mischief, mouth ever ready for glee,
Voice like a cherub-at least so it seemed to her mother and me.
Seraphs have given her welcome, coaxed her to enter the fold,
Where lambs that are missed on earth are gathered and lovingly
told.

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