^ ':■'■)/■ THE DAILY COUNSELLOR. BY MRS. L. H. SIGOURNEY 'Thy testi-OQoniea are my deligdt and ray cocrNSELLORS." The Psalmibt. ■-'^■'- cd7> EC OND EDITION. HARTFOED: BROWl^ Ai^D GROSS, PUBLISHERS 1859. -^ )-• ' * > .J ' I f^^ T6 a«^^' Entered accoi^ding to Act. of Congress, in the year 1858, "by BROWN AlTD GROSS, In tlie Cieri's OtSce o^ the District Couvt of the United States for the District of Connecticut R. H. HOBBS, STEREOTYPER AND ELECTROTYPER, WILLIAMS AND WILEY, PRINTERS, HARTFORD, CONN. yllllcl The treasures of God's Holy Word are revealed in its minutest portions. "One verse from the Psalms," said Luther, "is sufficient for the meditation of a day, and who- ever finds, at the close of that day, that he has possessed himself of its sense and spirit, may consider the time well- spent." On this principle, the present volume has been constructed. Its simple parodies or amplifications of the sacred precept selected for daily use throughout the year, may aid it in adhering to the retentive powers. A gentleman, far ad- vanced in years, being asked what course he had pursued to preserve his memory unimpaired, replied, " I have eveiy day, committed to her care a feiv lines of poetry." The ensuing pages have no exclusive reference to any peculiar period of life. They seek alike the friendship of youth, maturity, and age. It Avill be readily seen, that they are less adapted to consecutive perusal, than to stated communion, according to their allotted portions, with serious, or solitary thought. To this methodical and familiar intercourse they aspire, more than to any meed of iv PREFACE. literary ambition. Should their lyrical echoes of divine truth fail in conferring intellectual benefit, may they still be permitted to linger with no unhallowed influence in the temple of the soul. L. H. S. Hartford, Conk., SejJtembei^ 1st, 1858. €0ttttni^ JANUARY. January. 1 .Genesis, i : 14. II Genesis, i: 1. Ill Genesis, xlvii : 8. IV EccLEsiATEs, ix : 10. V Herrews, ix: 27. VI Genesis, v: 22. VII John, xii : 26. VIII Job, xxii : 21. IX 1st Corinthians, lii : 11. X Nahum, i: 7. XI , Luke, xxii: 19. XII 1st Corinthians, iii : 16. XIII Revelation, iii : IS. XIV Ephesians, v: 8. XV Ecclesi ASTEs, vi : 12. XVI Isaiah, xxxiii : 6. XVII Hebrews, xi : 7. XVIII Psalms, iv : 4. XIX Isaiah, Ivi : 7. XX Romans, xiii : 8. XXI Mark, vii : 37. XXII IsT Thessalonians, i : 3. XXIII Revelation, xxii: 1. XXIV Revelation, ii ; 28. XXV Matthew^, xiii : 39. XXVI Genesis, xi : 4. XXVII Isaiah, 1: 10. XXVIII John, xxi : 22. January. XXIX Hebrews, xi : 34. XXX Mark, vi : 6. XXXI Job, xiii : 15. PEBRUARY. February. I Hebrews, xiii : 16 ir Mark, x : 53. Ill Ecclesiasticus, iii : 12. IV Obadiah, i : 5. V Hebrews, ii : 7. VI. Proverbs, xxiv : 10. VII :..LuKE,ii: 7. VIII. Isaiah, xxiii: 4. IX 1st Samuel, xxvi : 12. X Hebrews, vii : 25. XI John, xix : 41. XII 1st Peter, ii : 21. XIII 2nd PETER,i: 19. XIV Ecclesi ASTE3, iv: 9. XV John, xv: 12. XVI Ruth, i : 14. XVII. 1st John, iii: 13. XVIII. Hebrews, iv: 15. XIX Psalms, xcvii : 2. XX. 1st Peter, i: 12. XXI Isaiah, xxvi: 3. XXII Psalms, xxxvii : 37. XXIII Jeremiah, xlviii : 5 V VI CONTEXTS. February. XXIV EccLEsiASTicus, ii : 9. XXV Luke, is: 32. XXVI MiCAH, vi : 8. XXVII Isaiah, xxiii : 18. XXVIII EccLEsiASTicus, vii : 27. XXIX Jeremiah, xxxvi : 22. ITAECH. March. I Song of Solomon, ii : 11. II Proverbs, viii : 17. Ill Proverbs, xxx : 28. IV John, xv : 2. V HEBREves, iv: 1. VI Genesis, xix : 17. VII Luke, v : 28. Vtll CoLOssiANs, ii : 7. IX Psalms, lix : 16. X James, iv: 1. XI Matthew, vi : 19. XII Acts, xxvii: 14. XIII Phillippians, i : 20. XIV Psalms, cxii : 9. XV John, xi v : 27. XVI Psalms, xxiii : 4. XVII Colossi ANs, iii : 15. XVIII 2nd Peter, i: 19. XIX Proverbs, xviii : 10. XX Psalms, Ixxvi: 10. XXT Isaiah, xxxii : 20. XXII Matthew, vi : 34. XXIII John, xviii : 38. XXIV John, vii : 34. XXV Matthew, xv: 14. XXVI Deuteronomy, xxxiii : 27» XXVII Psalms, Ixii : 7. XXVIII Exodus, xvi : 29. XXIX Jeremiah, xxii : 10. XXX Jeremiah, xlii : 3. XXXI IsT Corinthians, ii : 16. APEIL. April. I Psalms, xxx : 5. II Psalms, xiv: 1. Ill Psalms, cxxvii : 3. IV 1st John, iii : 2. V Mark, vi : 48. VI Leviticus, x : 3. VII James, v : 13. VIII Hebrews, ix : 28. IX Luke, xxiii : 34. X Psalms, v : 3. XI Romans, xiv : 7. XII Hebrews, i: 14. XIII Luke, xxiii : 42. XIV Deuteronomy, xvi : 1. XV Nahum, i : 3. XVI Luke, xi : 2. XVII Psalms, cxlviii : 10. XVIII Mark, xiv : 11. XIX 1st Corinthians, xiii : 13. XX 1st Samuel, xvi : 7. XXI Colossi ANs, ii : 22. XXn Job, xiv : 7 XXIII Acts, xxvii : 24. XXIV John, xix : 30. XXV Hebrews, xii : 2. XXVI Psalms, xxii : 21. XXVII Zachariah, xiii : 5. XXVIII Psalms, viii : 2. XXIX Psalms, Ixv: 1. XXX Acts, xx : 35. MAT. May. I Psalms, cxlvii : 8. II Revelation, xix : 10. Ill Genesis, i : 3. IV Ecclesiastes, xi : 6. V Psalms, xxxi : 15. VI Psalms, cxviii : 24. CONTENTS. Vll May. Vir Psalms, xli : 3, VIII 2nd Ki ngs, vi : 17. IX Matthew, vi : 12. X Proverbs, iv : 13. XI P3ALMS,Cxlv: ]0. XII Psalms, cxxvi : 6. XIII PsalmS; cxxvi : 6. XIV Matthew, xix : 20. XV Psalms, lix : 16. XVI 1st Corinthians, xv : 51. XVII Isaiah, xliii : 2. XVIII Matthew, xxii : 12. XIX Matthew, xiv : 31. XX EccLEsiASTEs, iv : 2. XXI Mark, ix : 24. XXII xMark, ix: 24. XXIII Matthew, xxvi : 39. XXIV Psalms, Ixxxii : 3. XXV Psalms, v : 3. XXVI 2nd Corinthians, iv : G. XXVII Psalms, cxlix : 4. XXVIIL. . Jeremiah, xvii : 6. XXIX Psalms, Ixxxiv : 10. XXX Ephesians, v; 20. XXXI Job, xxi.c . 18. June. I Psalms, xxiii : 1. II Psalms, xxxvii : 4. Ill Matthew, xx : 3. IV EcCLESIASTES, ill : 11. V Judges, viii ; 4. VI Luke, xxiv : 5. VII Genesis, xxxi : 49. VIII Mark, iv : 39. IX Psalms, cxviii : 8. X Psalms, cxlii : 4. XI Habakkuk, iii : 18. XII Zechariah, V : 9. June. XIII Ezekiel, xii : 7. XIV Job, xxxii : 27. XV Deuteronomy, xxxiv : 6. XVI 2nd Esdras, ii : 19. X Vll Mark, ii : 27. XVIII Proverbs, xvi : 18. XIX 1st Thessalonians, v: 16. XX John, viii : 11. XXI Isaiah, xxxii : 2. XXII Isaiah, lix : 5. XXIII Isaiah, xlviii : 21. XXIV Song of Solomon, iv : 5. XXV Proverbs, xxii : 1 XXVI Nahum, ii : 2. XX VII Proverbs, xvi : 2 XXVIII Proverbs, xii : 3. XXIX Lamentations, i : 2. XXX Isaiah, xxviii : 12. JULY. July. I Mark, i ; 1. II Mark, v : 39 III Psalms, cxxxvi : 25. IV Deuteronomy, xi : 12. V Deuteronomy, xv : 11. VI EccLEsiASTEs, iii : 1. VII Proverbs, xxvii : 1. VIII •. ....Mark, vii: 11. IX Matthew, xxvii : 58, 60. X Psalms, cxix : 105. XI 2nd Samuel, xii : 23. XII Proverbs, xxii : 22. XIII Isaiah, xxxv : 10. XIV John, vli : 53. XV James, iv : 11. XVI 1st Kings, xvi : 22. XVII Matthew, iv : 8. XVIII Psalms, v : 3 XIX John, v: 4 Vlll cox TEXTS, July. XX Psalms, cxxxi : 2. XXI John, xvi : 33. XXII 2xD Corinthians, iv : 17. XXIII Revelatiox, xiv : 13. XXIV 2nd Corinthians, vi : 2. XXV EccLEsiASTEs, iii : 15. XXVI JoB,ix : 12. XXVII John, vi : 20. XXVIII James, i : 27. XXIX jNIatthew, xxvi : 41. XXX Proverbs, i : 24. XXXI Acts, xxvi : 28. AUGUST. August. 1 3d of John, 4. II Isaiah, xv : 7. Ill John, xx : 16. IV Mark, iv : 3. V Isaiah, Ivii : 2. VI Psalms, Ixv: 2. VII 1st Corinthians, iii : 11. VIII Jon, XXV : 5. IX Mark, v: 39. X Mark, vi : 22. XI Psalms, Ixviii : 9. XII Galatians, vi : 1. XIII 2nd Samuel, xxiv : 14. XIV Proverbs, xvii : 17. XV Psalms, cxix : 92. XVI Matthew, vi : 10. XVII Hebrews, ii : 15. XV^III Wisdom of Solomon, x : 7. XIX Mark, x : 13. XX Matthew, xiv: 25. XXI Ephesians, iii : 19. XXII Genesis, ix: 13. XXIIl Matthew, vi: 20. XXIV Isaiah, Ixi : 3. XXV Proverbs, xxiii : 23. August XXVI Colo SSI A Ns, iii : 1. XXVII Psalms, cxxx : 6. XXVIII Genesis, i: 2. XXIX Psalms, xcii : 2. XXX 1st Kings, xx : 40. XXXI Jeremiah, viii : 20. SEPTEMBER. September. I Isaiah, xl : 11. II. John, iv : 23. Ill Lamentations, iii : 23. IV John, xiv : 8. V . . . Job, xxxvii : 16. VI Isaiah, viii : 17. VII Luke, xii : 20. VIII CoLossiANS, ii : 10. IX Job, xlii : 10. X 1st Kings, xviii : 27. 3ZI liT Chronicles, xiii : 12. XII Genesis, xxiv : CS. XIII Mu:ah, ii: 10. XIV Matthew, xxvi : 5G. XV Mark, ix : 33. XVI Genesis, xxii : 5. XVII IsT Corinthians, vii : 31. XVIII Proverbs, xiii : 15 XIX Mark, i: 32 XX Revelation, xxi : 16. XXI 1st Peter, i : 23 XXII 1st Timothy, vi : 6. XXIII : Matthew, xi : 29 XXIV 2nd Corinthians, xiii : 5. XXV' Isaiah, vii : 4. XXVI Psalms, xxv : 5. XXVII MALA(Hi,iii : 6. XXVIII Hebrews, xi : 14. XXIX John, xiv: 28. XXX Revelation, iv: 1. C O X T E N T S , IX OCTOBER. October. I Proverbs, xxviii : 20. 11 Deuteronomy, xxxii : 11. Ill Psalms, xix : 4. IV Romans, i : 16. V 1st Thessaloni ans, iv : 18. VI Mark, xv : 46. VII Matthew, xxiii : 13. VIII Psalms, viii : 4. IX Psalms, xxxix : 5. X Hebrews, xi : 4. XI Exodus, xvi : 7. XII Psalms, cvi ; 24. XIIl Proverbs, xxii : G. XIV Revelation, xiv : 5. XV Exodus, iii : 2. XVI Psalms, iv : 4. XVII Genesis, viii : 7. XVIII ZECHARiAH,viii: 13. XIX.'. HebkewSj xi : 1. XX Ecclesiastes, ii : 26. XXI Romans, xiv : 19. XXII Mark, ix : 50. XXIII Job, iii : 17. XXIV Ijt 'I'hessalonians, iv : 13. XXV Hose A, vi : 4. XXVI 2nd Kings, iv: 26. XXVII Daniel, v : 25. XXVIII Mark, xvi : 15. XXIX Psalms, cxix : 13>). XXX James, iv : 13. XXXI Revelation, xiv : 2. NOVEMBER. November. ^ Song of Solomon, ii : 13. I^ John, ix : 1. m Isaiah, xxi : 12. IV Psalms, cii : 24. V Luke, xxiii : 12. November. VI Luke, xxiv : 29. VII Luke, xv : 18. VIII Ezekiel, vii : 16. IX John, xi : 35. X Jeremiah, xlix : 11. XI Isaiah, liv : 5. XII Isaiah, Ivi : 5. XIII Proverbs, xvi: 31. XIV. REVEI.ATION, xi : 12. XV Song of Solomon, viii : G. XVI Habakkuk, ii : 20. XVII Hebrews, i : 11, XVIII Habakkuk, iii: 2. XIX John, xiv : 27. XX Psalms, xxxvii : 25. XXI Isaiah, xi : 9. XXII Psalms, cxv : 17. XXIII Luke, xvii : 5. XXIV Psalms, cxxxix : 7. XXV Psalms, cxix : 55. XXVI 1st Corinthians, viii : 1. XXVII Zechariah, i : 5. XXVIII 1st Thessalonians, iii : 13. XXIX Song of Solomon, vii : 13. XXX John, i : 42. DECEMBER. December. I Job, xxxvii : 10. II Numbers, xxiii : 10. Ill 1st Corinthians, xiii : 12. IV Revelation, xiv. 13. V Psalms, i : 3. VI Habakkuk, iii : 17,18. VII. James, v : 11. VIII Jeremiah, vi : 4. IX Psalms, Ixxii : 16. X Hebrews, xi : 10. Xr Psalms, cxxx : G. XII Philippians, iv : 4. CONTEXTS. December. XIII 2nd Peter, iii : 11. XIV Mark, iv : 28. XV Psalms, cxix : 54. XVI 1st Thessalomaxs, v : 16. XVII IsT Thessalonians, iv : 14. XVIII. Jeremiah, viii : 7. XIX Genesis, v : 27. XX Daxtel, xii : 12. XXI JoH?r, is: 4. XXII Isaiah, Iviii : 13. December. XXIII Revelation, vii : 17. XXIV Mattheay, X : 8. XXV Matthew, ii : 9. XXVI Psalms, cxxx : 1. XXVII Mark, i ; 16. 17. XXVIII , Jonah, ii : 7. XXIX Galatians, iv: 10. XXX. .' Luke, xviii : 37. XXXI Psalms, xc : 12. illg €!i!3iiiitt^«Il0f JANUAEY I. " For sijns and for seasons, for days and for years.*' Genesis, i : 14. Gift of Tintiring Goodness, briglit, beautiful Kew Year ! We take th.y wintry hand in ours, with smile of grateful cheer, We hail, we bid thee welcome, in glad and festive lays ; Thou com'st to us, o'er many a grave, to our Preserver, praise! We ask not where thy footsteps tend, His wisdom is our guide. We ask not what thy casket holds, He will o'er all preside. So, wheresoe'er thou leadest on, still trustfully we'll tread. Whether our untried path shall be with thorns or flowers o'erspread ; If 'tis our lot to walk with thee, until thy journey close, Or thine to lay us down at last, in undisturbed repose, We may not know, we will not ask, the present is our care. With all its duties, all its joys, its love and toil and prayer. Help us to cast aside the weights that clog the spirit's force, Eorget the things that are behind, and upward speed our course. Make us readier at hfe's lesson, make us readier for its end, And fitter for that an 2fel -train to which the blest ascend. 2 14 DAILY COUXSELLOE. JANUARY 11. "In the beginning, God created the heavens nnd the earth." Genesis, i: 1. GrOD spake, — and startled chaos fled With ancient night away, "The slumbering elements arose, Obedient to His sway. The kingly Sun came forth in state, The stars their courses wove. And, like a timid bride, the Moon Look'd from her bower of love. Fair Eden spread its cultured bound, While through its stainless green Man, and his dear companion walk'd, Sole rulers of the scene. So, thus in the beginning rose This universal frame. Glad Nature singing hymns of praise To her Creator's name. Oh ! Maker of the earth and skies, Remember me I pray. This dying form, — this living soul, — And cast them not away. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 15 JANUARY III. "l]ovv old art thou 7 " Genesis, xlvii : 8. "How old art tliou?" — Man measuretli time By things tliat fall away and die, By sickled fields of Autumn's prime, Summer's lost bloom or Winter's sky. Age from his s]3an its luster takes, The cheek resigns its roseate glow. The form its grace, the hair its hue. The brow its beauty ; — let them go. But the true heart can ne'er grow old. Its eye is bright, tho' youth be fled, Its ear is never dull to sound. Its lip can speak, when speech is dead. By prayer, by alms, by written page, By planted words of holy trust, It quickeneth love from age to age, It liveth, when the form is dust. So count thou not thine age b}^ tears, Or smiles of Fortune's fickle ray, Nor say how old thou art in years. Of waste and folly and decay. But ever, with a steadfast eye On Him from whom thy life proceeds, ISTotch thou its seasons on the soul. And tell its calendar by deeds. 16 DAILY COUXSELLOE. JANUARY IV. "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with tliy might." EccLEsiASTES, ix : 10. Do wliat tb.011 liast to do, While thou hast eyes to see, While thou hast ears to hear the word That wisdom speaks to thee, While thou hast feet to walk, While thou hast voice to pray, While thou hast Eeason's guiding lamp To understand thy way. Do what thou hast to do, And not to others leave. They may thy wishes overrule, Thy motives misconceive. Thy purposes contest, Thy plans with envy view ; Now, while the life-tide heaves thy breast, Do what thou hast to do. Do what thou hast to do. Before the night of gloom. That swiftly wraps the sons of men In darkness and the tomb ; For though th}' course ma}^ lead O'er flowrets bright with dew. There yawns thy cold, drear, silent bed, Do what thou hast to do. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 17 JANUARY V. "It Is appointed unto men once to die." Hebre-ws, ix : 27. To die! To die!— 'Tis but to cLange our place In this great Universe, and Grod is there : To take such form of being as He wills, And what He wills is wisdom rob'd in love. 'Tis but to cling to the dear Saviour's hand, And tread, like Peter, the dark, whelming wave, That sweeps away all rootless things of earth. But once to die ! — Last lesson in time's book, Grird thee, weak soul ! the trial-pang is brief, And Faith can triumph o'er its mystery. To die! To die!— 'Tis but to lay aside What we have long'd to leave, this pain-girt flesh, In which the fires of desolation work, And smolder from our birth. 'Tis but to shut These eyes, and bask in light that hath no cloud,. To lay this seal'd ear 'neath the moldering clod And hear the song of Heaven forevermore. B 2* 18 DAILY COUNSELLOR. JANUARY VI. "Enoch walked with God." Genesis, v: 22. "Walk witli the Lord at morn, When every scene is fair, While opening bnds the bonghs adorn. And fragrance fills the air ; Before the rosy dawn, awake, And in thy being's pride, Thy first young blush of beauty, make Omnipotence thy guide. Walk with the Lord at noon. When fervid suns are high. And Pleasure, with her treacherous boon, Allureth manhood's eye, Then, with the diamond shield of prayer. Thy soul's opposers meet. And crush the thorns of sin and care That pierce the pilgrim's feet. Walk with the Lord at eve. When twilight dews descend. And Nature seems a shroud to weave. As for some smitten friend : DAILY COUXSELLOR. 19 While slow tlie lonely moments glide On mournful wing away, Press closer, closer to His side, His arm shall be thy stay. Even shouldst thou linger here Till midnight spreads its pall, And Age laments with bosom drear Its buried earthly all. Thy withered eyes a signal bright Beyond the grave shall see, For He who maketh darkness light. Thy Grod, shall walk with thee. JANUARY YII. , "Where T am, there shall also my servant be." John, xii : 26. The Fathers ! — I remember them Within the House of Prayer, Their thoughtful eye, devoutly bright. And almond blossoms woven white Amid their scattered hair. 20 DAILY COUXSELLOE. In all their dignity of age Metliinks I see tb.em now, Prone to reprove tlie rasli and yain, A fearless justice written plain Upon each, reverend brow. The Fathers ! — I remember them, Those statesmen grave and bold, On whose true breasts their Country's weal, Engraven as a signet seal. Was valued more than gold. Most beau.tiful it was to me. Fast by their side to tread, Still listening with observance meet, Or gathering, seated at their feet, The pearls their wisdom shed. The ancient Fathers ! — Where are they ? At board and hearth-stone fair,. Beneath their favorite elm trees' shade, The sounding beach, the dewy glade, We search, — they are not there. Where are they ? — Answer not, thou grave ! Brief will thy durance prove. They are not thine, — for well we know With Him they liv'd and serv'd below, They are at home, — above. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 21 JANUARY YIII. 'Acquaint now thyself with Him, and be at peace." Job, xxii : 21. Acquaint thyself with God, If thou would'st read aright The book of nature, ever spread Before thee, day and night ; If thou would'st fully learn The wonders there displayed. Enshrine its Author in thy heart. And love what He hath made. So shall the warbling grove. The surge with mountain swell, The Banian on the Indian sands,. The Lily in its dell, Yea, every winged seed That quickeneth 'neath the sod. Teach heavenly wisdom, if thy soul Acquaint itself with Grod. There are who gather wealth From many a storied page, That tendeth but to wrinkling care, Nor warms the frost of age. But thou, with lowly mind. Intent on sacred lore, Acquaint thyself with God, and be At peace forevermore. 22 DAILY COUKSELLOE, JANUARY IX. " Other foundation can no man lay, than that is laid." T. Corinthians, iii : 11. Build'st tliou on wealtL.? — Its wing is ever spread, Its dazzled votaries to elude and foil ! On Science ? Lo ! the lofty sage hath fled, Like the pale lamp that lit his midnight toil, Forgotten as the flower that decked the vernal soil. Build'st thou on love ? — The trusting heart it cheers, While youth and hope entwine their garlands gay. Yet hath it still an heritage of tears : Build'st thou on fame ? The dancing meteor's ray Glides not on swifter wing to deeper night away. Why on such sands thy spirit's temple rear ? How shall its base the wrecking billows shun? Go, seek the Eternal Eock, with humble fear, And on the tablet of each setting sun Grave, with a diamond pen, some deed of duty done. Young, art thou ? — Then the words of wisdom weigh ; Mature ? — The gathering ills of life beware ; Aged ? — Oh ! make His changeless arm thy stay. Who saves the weakest suppliant from despair. And bids the midnight tomb a robe of glory wear. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 23 JANUARY X. •^He knoweth them that trust in Him." Nahum, i : 7. God of tlie unfathom'd, unresisted deep, We trust in Thee, and know in whom we trust. God of the solemn stars, that tread so true The path by Thee appointed, every one, From the slight asteroid to the far orb That lists the watch-word, or the music-march Of neighboring planets round their monarch suns, Circling in glorious order, — lead our souls. From system unto system, up to Thee : That when unbodied, from this lower world Alone they launch, they may not lose the clue Guiding from sun to sun, thro' boundless space, The stranger-atom, to its place with Thee. JANUARY XL "This do in remembrance of me." Luke, xxii: 19. Come, listening spirit, come ! Good angels guide thy way, A Saviour bids thee to his feast. The gracious call obey. 24 DAILY COUNSELLOR. No more the cold gray stone His sepulcher doth seal, 'Tis roU'd away, — and He is risen, — He stoops our wounds to heal. Come, waiting spirit, come ! His hallowed board is spread. Turn from the false delights of earth And take the living bread, And in its strength divine. Pass on thy pilgrim way, Make Him thy pole-star thro' the night, Thy sunbeam all the day, Gruarding with faithful heart The promise of his love, That those who share his feast below, Shall be his guests above. JANUARY XII "Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God, niid that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you ?" I. Corinthians, iii : 16. Know ye not what dwelleth in you ? Where your warmest wishes tend ? When the love-tide swelleth in you O'er some dear, returning friend. And his fond embrace you share. Know 3'e not, if joy be there? DAILY COUNSELLOR. 25 Know ye not, if Grod's own spirit A new life to you liatli brought ? Know ye not, if ye inherit What the world hath never taught ? "Whether clouds of mental night Have from darkness chang'd to light? Father! by Thy wisdom teach us, Bid all mists of doubt depart, If we grope in error, reach us With a sunbeam of the heart, Set our souls from bondage free. Make them temple-shrines for Thee. JANUARY XIII. " I counsel thee to buy of me gold, tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich." Revklation, iii : 18. Time doth glide to Beauty's bower, With a thief's intent and a monarch's power. The frosted tress, and the faded rose. And the furrow'd brow, his deeds disclose, From the sparkling eye its diamond ray, And the lip its ruby, he beareth away. But a casket there is, which he views in vain. With an eagle glance and a miser's pain. He gazes long at its golden key,- — Spoiler, away ! i t may not be, 'Tis the wealth of the soul and bound for that shore Where thou and thy wrecks shall be known no more. 26 DAILY COUNSELLOR. JANUARY XIV. *' Walk as children of light." Ephesians, V : 8. There is a liglit that sliineth From God's own book divine, And meets the lowly, searching soul At ever}^ blessed line ; It warns where foes and dangers In fearful ambush lie, It lamp-like shows where sins and snares Elude the traveler's eye, It guideth o'er the desert, When earthly leaders fail, It guideth o'er the surging sea, When clouds and blasts prevail, It guideth to the ark of Christ, It giveth day for night. To those who in obedience walk As children of the light. There is a beam that breaketh O'er western hills afar. And holdeth forth a crescent pure, Like holy, watchful star, Eefiected from the seraph's wing Around the throne that soar. Reflected from the snowy robes Of loved ones gone before. It cheers the heart that weepeth Beside the burial sod, It meets the lifted eye that turns In contrite prayer to God, DAILY COUNSELLOE.. 27 It waxeth brighter as this world Fades from the pilgrim's sight. Then with a glorious gladness walk As children of the light. JANUAKY XV. " Who can tell a man, what shall be after him under the Sun 1 " ECCLESIASTES, Vl : 12. If there were any who could tell that tale, Why need he wish to hear ? Hath he not known Enough of folly, vanity, and wrong. Enough of baffled trust, and fleeting joy, To cast their memory willingly away, With his clay vesture in the quiet tomb ? " WTiat shall be after him f " Why the same things That were before him, — vanquished purposes, Unsatisfying honors, empty fame, Eond treasures that took wing and fled away. Knowledge that sow'd with toil, and reap'd but wind. And Hope that struck its anchor in the rock Which bides the latest storm. 28 DAILY COUNSELLOR. The present time Is what concerns thee, Pilgrim ! Not an hour But hath its sky-reporting agencies, Its faculties for good, its risk of sin, Its chance for merc3^ and its call for prayer. The Present, lighted by the thoughtful Past, — Let that suffice. The Future is with God. JANUARY XVI. "The fear of the Lord is his treasure." Isaiah, xxxiii : 6. What is man's treasure? Hoarded gold, Begirt with fears and cares? Houses, and merchandise, and lands? They pass to stranger heirs. Ships? With their snowy pinions spread, They proudly leave the shore; But, smitten by the wrecking gale, They sink to rise no more. Fashion? The butterfly was gay, Ere in the frost it fell. Beauty and strength? The fever's breath Their straw-like trust can tell DAILY COUNSELLOR. 29 Fame? On the fickle lip it dies. Friendship? Alas, the cheat. Love ? Like the dove's soft wing it comes, And glides away as fleet. Power? Of the crownless kings inquire, Who died with none to weep. A name in history? Who shall read, Or who the memory keep? Yet when the strong archangel's voice Time's funeral shall proclaim, And earth and skies, like blackened scroll. Parch in the doomsday flame, With the true soul to heaven allied, One treasure shall endure. For God's most holy fear hath made That priceless treasure sure. JANUARY XVII. "Noah became Iieir of the righteousness which is by fiiith." Hebrews, xi : 7. Thou hast believed and triumphed; Thou hast seen God's truth made manifest, though all around Withstood or doubted ; thou did 'st trust serene, And when a sinful, skeptic world was drowned, 3* 30 DAILY COUXSELLOK. In tliy lone vessel, brave tlie seas and skies, Ilolding thy helmless way o'er Ocean's breast, And then, in glorious majesty arise The rainbow round thee, and the storm at rest. Youchsafe us strength, Oh Father! so to keep Our steadfast course o'er Time's tempestuous sea, And when the deluge- waters o'er us sweep, Whelming our earthly hopes — ^repose on Thee, Until we joyous hail, — all perils o'er, The peace-branch and the dove from Heaven's approach- ing shore. JANUARY XVIII. " Commune with your own heart, on your bed and be still." Psalms, iv: 4. Rest! weary thought, awhile, By care and labor tost, For thy freshest plumes are soil'd with dust And the fountain hath fail'd of thy fondest trust, And thy pilgrim-staff is lost. Come, hope! with flagging wing, Like the Ark-dove turn again, O'er a trackless waste th}^ flight hath sped, Thou hast .sought the living among the dead, 'Tis fit thy search were vain. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 31 Thou stricken heart, return ! What was tliy chastening rod? The faithless prop, or the shaft of guile? The ice-cold glance, or the treacherous smile? Go ! speak of thy wounds to God. Turn, sad and musing soul ! This hallow'd hour was given To gird thee anew for the race of life. And to cheer a clime of change and strife With a gleam of the peace of heaven. JANUARY XIX. *' I will make them joyful in my House of Prnyer." Isaiah, Ivi : 7. Come, broken hearts, — and bring your woes Unto the House of Prayer, The Heavenly Healer waits for those Who spread their sorrows there. Though every secret pang you feel To Him is fully known. He fain would have His children kneel Confiding at His Throne. Had ye a cherished hope that shed Its blighted blossoms wide? A treasure on the winds that fled? A joy that drooped and died? 82 DAILY COUNSELLOR. And knew ye not, that earth and dust Would thus the soul forsake? Else from this vanity of trust, Your Saviour's cross to take. For Him your noblest powers employ, To Him confess your care, So shall you learn what holy joy Comes from the Hour of Prayer. JANUARY' XX. "Owe no man anj- thing, but to love one another." BoMANs, xiii : 8. "Owe no man any thing.'''' Why should we wish To keep what is not ours? What right have we Unto the usufruct of others' toil, UnrecomjDensed ? 'Twere better to forego All luxur}^, all circumstance of wealth, Palatial mansion, or patrician robe, Than have the secret curses of the poor. And, with the fraud-spot on the soul, go forth Unto the clear Eye of the Perfect Judge. '•'•Owe no man any thing ^ except to love^ The debt of holy love hath no remorse: It bringeth blessedness. For God is love, And he who dwells in love doth dwell with Him! DAILY COUNSELLOK. 83 — Take freely of the fountain that our Lord Open'd on earth, — "peace and good- will to man." Love's debt is never fully paid, till Heaven Unlocks the exchequer of unrusting gold; But he who loveth all whom Grod hath made Hath foretaste of the bliss that ne'er shall end. JANUARY XXL "He hath done nil things well." Mark, vii : 37. Dost see the cherished hope depart, That budded full and fair ? Thy hoarded heritage of joy, Like bubble, break in air ? Oh Brother 1 'tis a land of change, Wherein we mortals dwell, But He who casts our lot is wise. He hath done all things well. Dost stand beside the silent mound, Where thy heart's idol lies, Who wakes no more thy hand to clasp^ Kor heed, thy bursting sighs ? Oh Sister ! Heaven reclaims its loan ! Look up ! thine anguish quell. The Saviour of thy soul is kind. He hath done all things well. 84 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Dost feel tlie life witMn tliee fade ? The senses strive in vain ? Strange snows tliy wasted locks invade, And age thy limbs enchain ? Oh Christian friends ! let no regret The approaching transit tell, Look unto him who conquered Death, He haih done all things well. JANUARY XXII. '•Remembering your labor of love and patience of hope." 1st Thessalonians, i : 3 "Sing me a song," said the little girl, As she sate on her mother's knee, " For it makes me glad when you sweetly smile. And softly sing to me." " Tell me a tale," said the rosy boy. As he stood by his mother's side, But she turned away to the cradle-bed A¥here her waking infant cried. "Wait my darlings," she tenderly said. And kissed the babe as it clung to her breast. So the little ones quietly bow'd the head. For they felt that their mother's time was best ; And the heavenly seed of patience fell Into their hearts, and rooted well. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 85 At the door, an aged man appeared, His locks were silvery white, And the lady rose when she saw her sire With* a smile of loving light, She drew for him the great arm-chair. And with voice like music clear, Pour'd a gentle tide of cheering thought Into his deafen'd ear, Till he forgot that his blood was cold, And talked with glee as in times of old. So the children learn'd, as from lustrous page, The holy text of respect for age, And the blessing of God is the fruit, 'tis said. Of reverence paid to the hoary head. JANUARY XXIII. "A pure river of water of life, clear as crystal." Revelation, xxii : 1. Give me to drink thereof. Amid my toil and pain. For those who freely taste that stream Shall never thirst again Give me to bathe therein. That so my soul may be Cleans'd from all sin. Oh God, and :made A temple meet for thee. S6 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Give me to share tlie fruits Of tlie life-tree that grows Upon its borders, and whose leaves Do heal the nations' woes. Give me to launch mj bark Upon its crystal tide, And anchor where its fountain springs, The Eternal Throne beside. JANUAEY XXIV. " I will give him the morning-star." Revelation, ii : 28. The morning-star of peace, That thro' the misty dawn, Looks forth with golden eye O'er mountain, hill, and lawn, Through lingering clouds, confus'd and dim, Like warriors' power, — I'll give it him, His shall it be The morning-star of hope, — It gleams with diamond spark, It gilds its own blest sphere. Though all the world be dark. Though its proud throngs in tumult live. That star of hope, — to him I'll give. His shall it be. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 37 The morning-star of love, That lifts its perfect ray, When the believer goes From time to endless day, When to these skies, his eye grows dim In Death's eclipse, — I'll give it him. His shall it be. JANUARY XXV. "The reapers are the angels." Matthew, xiii : 39. Haste, ere the gathered shades Fall on thee from the tomb where none may work, And throw a shelter o'er the orphan head. Cheer the sad mourner, light the heathen soul, And justify thy Maker's husbandry; So that His angels, who go forth to reap Earth's ripened harvest for the judgment day, Put not the sickle in with grief, to find The tares for burning overtop the wheat. 4 38 DAILY COUNSELLOE. JANUARY XXVI. " Let us make us a Name, lest we be scattered abroad." Genesis, xi : 4. Make to thyself a name, Not with the breath of clay, Which, like the broken, hollow reed, Doth sigh itself away ; Not with the fame that vaunts The tvrant on his throne, And hurls its stigma on the soul That God vouchsafes to own. Make to thyself a name. Not such as wealth can weave, W hose warp is but a thread of gold, That dazzles to deceive; Not with the tints of love Form out its letters fair. That scroll within thy hand shall fade Like him who placed it there. I ■ Make to thyself a name. Not in the sculptured aisle, The marble oft betrays its trust, t Like Egypt's lofty pile ; But ask of him who quelled Of death, the victor-strife. So write it on the blood-bought page • Of everlasting life. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 39 JANUARY XXVII. "Who is among you that fenreth the Lord, thnt oheyeth the voice of his servant, thnt walketh in darkness, and hath no light ? Let hiin. trust in the name of the Lord, and stay upon his God." Isaiah, 1 : 10. Aet tliou a Christian ? TliougL. tliy cot Be rude, and poverty tliy lot, A wealth is thine which earth denies, A treasure boundless as the skies. Gold and the diamond fade with shame Before thy casket's deathless flame. Heir of high Heaven ! how canst thou sigh For gilded dross and vanity ? Art thou a Christian ? doomed to roam ' « Far from thy friends and native home ? O'er trackless wilds uncheered to go, With none to share an exile's woe ? Where'er thou find'st a Father's care, Thy country and thy home are there. How canst thou then a stranger be, Surrounded by His family ? Art thou a Christian ? mid the strife Of years mature, and burdened life ? Thy heaven-born faith its shield shall spread, To guard thee in the hour of dread. Thorns 'neath thy bleeding feet may spring, Unkindness strike its scorpion sting, Yet in thy soul a beacon light Shall guide thy pilgrim steps aright. And balm from God's own fountain flow To heal the wounds of earthly woe. 40 DAILY COUNSELLOR. JANUARY XXVIII. " What is that to thee ?— follow thou me." John, xxi : 22. Doth dark despondence seize thy mind When adverse winds prevail, As thougli the guardian care of heaven In faithfulness could fail ? Fear'st thou the want of earthly good ? God will provide, The ark of promise is his own, His hand shall guide. Doth vain philosophy intrude, By pride and error bred ? Do doubt, and unbelief, and pain In her chill footsteps tread? Throng they around the cross of Christ That hope to dim ? What has thy faith to do with these ? Follow thou him. That voice which once to Peter spake The grave rebuke, divine. And bore repentance to his soul, A message hath for thine : — "What is this brief and pageant world. Spirit, to thee ? High heir of everlasting life, Follow thou me." DAILY COUNSELLOR. 41 JANUARY XXIX. ' " Out of weakness, were made strong." Hebrews, xi : 34. Oh ! girt witli peril, and but feebly arm'd, Too often by the glozing tempter cbarm'd, In blindness led to roam where serpents glide, And miss tbe beckoning of an angel-guide. Doomed at thine Eden-gate a sword to see. Precluding entrance to thy hope and thee. Cling to the Cross ! it hath a power divine, Though Sinai's thunders roll and lightnings shine. Cling to the Cross ! thy Saviour's pattern heed, And make thy life a comment on thy creed. JANUARY XXX. " He went round about the villages, teaching." Mark, vi : 6. Green were thy vales, fair Palestine, And clear thy streamlets flow, Where the Eedeemer's sacred feet Went traveling long ago. Far from the city's gorgeous streets, He turned with musing thought, And to the villages went forth. And by the wayside taught. He taught the peasant at the plough. The beggar on the road ; In tangled wild, b}^ flood or field, . The seed of heaven he sowed. 4* 42 DAILY COUNSELLOR. He taiiglit tliem where tlie fig-tree bougtis In luscious fragrance wave, And when amid the sterile heath, The wondrous food he gave. So may we, Lord, with patient hand, Thy blessed precepts spread, And strew o'er every heathen strand The gospel's living bread. And grant us, 'mid our mission toils. To hear thy cheering voice. And, like Judea's villagers, Behold thee, and rejoice ! JANUARY XXXI. "Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him." Job, xiii : 15. Question not God, frail Creature of the Dust ! Make no conditions where thy lot shall be, Ask thou no pledge of Him. Be still, and trust ! Trust and be joyful, for his love is free: Pass on in faith, where'er He bids thee go. Gird thee with truth, in sunlight or in shade. Uproot the weed of self, and meekly sow Sweet seeds of love, for all His hand hath made. Build not on rituals, — make His will thy text. All shall be well with thee, in this life or the next. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 45 FEBRUARY I. "To do good and to communicate, forget not." Hebrews, xiii : 16. . " What crone art thou wlio wak'st tlie tempest's rage, Head white witli snows, and forehead grooved with age ? Whose frosty breath upon thy lip congeals ? Whose torpid heart no warm emotion feels?" Then Winter answered with a tone severe, "A king am I o'er Nature's ravaged sphere, I quell the freedom of her wandering streams. Her. warblers' music, and her summer dreams, I wreck her garlands with unpitying eye, — Yet some there are, who all my power defy, Who hail my scepter with serene delight. With cheerful music cheat the halting night. With storied page, or kindly welcomed guest. Or smile of love that thrills the exulting breast. But thou who seemest so much to dread my sway. List to a spell that turns its gloom away ; — Seek out the cells where pain and penury bend. Where through wide chasms the drifting snows descend. Where the sick father in despondence sighs. The famished mother hears her infant's cries. Or sees her children from the blast retreat. With shivering forms, and cold, uncovered feet. And if from scenes like these the thought should rise To imitate the mercy of the skies. 46 DAILY COUNSELLOR With serapli zeal tliy liberal alms bestow, And scatter blessings o'er tbe patli of woe : For deeds like these shall soften Winter's sting, And change its ices to the glow of Spring." FEBRUARY 11. '' Thy faith hath njade thee whole." Mark, x : 5'i. Sightless, and sorrowful, and scorn'd, Begging beside the way, O'erlook'd in Pleasure's giddy dance. Or by some scanty dole, perchance, Eemembered, day by day, Oh, poor blind man ! a gem was thine, Which they who pass'd thee by, Discovered not, — ^for closely hid Thy tattered garments' fold amid. It mock'd the worldling's eye. Faith in the Son of God was thine. That ray of quenchless light, Faith in His power, who bow'd so low To tents of clay, and forms of woe, Faith that is turned to sight. But who the speechless joy may tell That overwhelm'd thy soul. When sweet as music's heavenly swell. Those accents of approval fell, " Thy faith hath made thee whole." DAILY COUNSELLOR. 47 FEBRUARY III. *' Grieve not thy father as long as he liveth." EccLEsiASTicus, iii : 12. Ah ! grieve him not, wliose silver hairs Thin o'er his wasted temples stray, Grieve not thy sire, when time impairs The glory of his manhood's sway. His tottering steps with reverence aid, Bind his wan brow with honor's wreath. And let his deafened ear be made The harp where filial love shall breathe. "What though his pausing mind partake The evils of its house of clay, Though wearied, blinded memory break The casket where her treasures lay, Still with prompt arm his burdens bear, Bring heavenly balm his wounds to heal. And with affection's watchful care. The error, that thou mark'st, conceal. Know'st thou how oft those powerless arms Have clasped thee to his shielding breast, When infant woes, or childish harms, Thy weak, unguarded soul distrest? Know'st thou, how oft his accents strove Thine uninstructed mind to aid ? How oft a parent's prayer of love, Hath pierced dense midnight's darkest shade ? 48 DAILY COUXSELLOE. Grieve not tTiy father, till he die, Lest, when he sleeps in earth's cold breast, The record of his latest sigh Should prove a dagger to thy rest. For if this holiest debt of love Forgotten or despised should be, He whom thou call'st thy Sire above, Will bend a Judge's frown on thee. FEBRUARY lY. "If thieves came to thee, if robbers by night, would they not have stolen till they had enough 1" Obadiah, 5. Protection through the night Of silence dark and deep, When lies the strong man like the babe, Helpless, in arms of sleep ; Protection through the night, When roams the secret foe. The robber prowling for his prey. And arm'd for murderous blow ; Thou hast vouchsafed us, Lord, Our guardian Friend above, Thou of the never-slumbering eye, The ever-watchful love. Let our first waking thoughts In gratitude adore, And be our renovated powers Thy servants evermore. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 49^^ FEBRUARY V. "A little lower than the angels." Hebrews, ii: 7. "Not yet, witli harps tliat never tire "We tread our devious ways, But with the harmony of soul That hourly whispers praise^ Not yet, with wings that night and day Jehovah's work fulfill. But with these willing hands and feet Intend to do His will, Kot yet, with smiles that never know A change from sorrow's sphere, Not yet with eyes that never show The darkening of a tear, But in the same paternal school, We both, instruction find. They the first class, — the angel grade, — And we a step behind. A "little lower" now, but soon Beside them, hand in hand. We, of their "goodly company" Before the throne shall stand. 50 DAILY COUNSELLOE. FEBRUARY VI. 'If thou faint in the day of adversity, thy strength is small." Proverbs, xxiv ; 10 Clouds that o'er tlie noon-tide sweep, Storms that vex the billowy deep, Blights that blast the cherish'd bower, Frosts that nip the opening flower. Shafts that fright the tuneful grove, Frowns that chill the glance of love. If they meet thee, faint thou not, Such must mark the pilgrim's lot. From the cloud the sun shall break, Ocean sleep like peaceful lake. Spring recall with magic tread What the frost-king left for dead. Warbling birds their nests resume. Flickering love its smile relume. Small the strength that faints in grief At adversity so brief. FEBRUARY VII. "No room for them in the inn." LvKE, ii: 7. Thou who on earth did'st find, Ko room in Bethlehem's inn. Say, can'st Thou deign thy home to make In these, our hearts of sin ? DAILY COUNSELLOR. 51 Too narrow are tTiey? Break Of bigotry the fence, And cast the idols out, and drive The money-changers thence. Are they too wintry? Strike The flint with steel divine, Kindling a flame of holy love To comfort and refine. Are they too dark, my Lord? The lamp of knowledge light. And bid it through their windows stream With radiance pure and bright: So, though thine infant head, Wrapped in its veil of clay, Found only in a manger rude A pillow where to lay, Now o'er a ransomed host Exalted high to reign. Come, — Saviour, — to our hearts and dwell With all thine angel train. FEBRUARY VIII. " The sea hath spoken." Isaiah, xxiii : 4. Lift up thy thunder- voice, thou solemn sea ! I fain would be a pupil of thy lore. Earth speaks of man. Her castellated tower. Palace, and obelisk, and pyramid, All tell of man. 52 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Yea, even the changeful sky, Of richest garniture, the purple robe For morning, and the noon-day tissued dress Of blue and silver, and the evening garb, Spangled with stars, or broider'd by the moon, Do sometimes seem (may Heaven forgive the thought,) Like a fair woman in her coquetry. . But thou dost speak alone of God,— thou sea ! Thou wonder-working, mortal-mocking sea ; Teach me of Him, whose name is on thy lip, And hid in thy deep heart. I bow me down, "Wooing thy billows in their fearful play, And when dense darkness shades their crested heads, Kneel in my utter nothingness to Him Who counts thy congregated world of waves But as a noteless dew-drop. FEBRUARY IX. "A deep sleep from the Lord was fallen upon them." 1st Samuel, xxvi: 12, They fell asleep. The weary heat And burden of the day Oppress'd them, and their failing feet Have halted by the way. Some, in the hallowed place of graves, Some, where the prairies spread, And some, in ocean's coral caves, Have found a dreamless bed. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 53 While otliers, 'mid tlie Arctic pines, And over drifting snows, Or where the sunny tropic shines. Share undisturbed repose. Let grief forego her hopeless cares, Nor in despondence weep, A holy hush should sure be theirs Whom God hath laid to sleep. FEBRUARY X. "He is able also to save them to the uttermost.'' Hebrews, vii : 25. The uttermost^ — upon the skirts Of the far host of life. Who share not, on the heights of power Its glory, or its strife ; They bear the burden and the toil, Kor banner lift, nor plume, Yet there's an Eye that marks them all Amid their rayless gloom. The uttermost^ — the last in sin, The lost, whom men condemn. And banish from the realm of hope. He careth even for them ; He listeneth at their prison-grate For prayer, or contrite sigh. He knocketh long, he knocketh late. Even where is no reply. 5* 54 DAILY COUNSELLOR. The uttermost^ — ^till life recedes, Even to the latest sand Of time's most frail and brittle glass, He still doth waiting stand ; He bendeth o'er the dying man Till the glazed eye is dim, He saveth to the uttermost, / That all may trust in Him. FEBKUARY XL " In the gnrden a new sepulcher." John, xix : 41. MouEN not ye, whose babe hath found Purer skies, and firmer ground. Flowers of bright, perennial hue, Free from thorns, and fresh with dew. Founts that tempests never stir, Grardens without sepulcher. Mourn not ye, whose babe hath sped. From this region of the dead. To yon blessed cherub band. Golden lute and glorious land. Where no tempter's sinful art Clouds the brow, or stains the heart. Knowledge in that clime doth grow Free from weeds of pride and woe, Peace, whose olive never fades, Love, undimmed by sorrow's shades, Joy, which mortals may not share,— Mourn not ye^ luhose habe is there. DAILY COUNSELLOE, 55 PEBRUARY XIL " Leaving us an example, — that ye should follow His steps." 1st Peter, ii : 21 He taught as with His heavenward eye, His holy smile of guiding ray, Sweet parable and precept high, To choose the strait and narrow way He went before, — the path He chose Was that which lowliest pilgrims tread, A patient brotherhood with those Who had not where to lay the head. He crush'd within their dark retreat The thorns of tyranny and pride, While 'neath His bare and bleeding feet Ambition's trampled laurel died. To mournful Olivet He turned. His temples bathed in midnight dew. And gazing stars astonish'd burn'd The meekness of their Lord to view. He walk'd upon the raging deep Where vengeful passions foam and toss. And bade their wildest billows creep, As vassals, round the blood-stain' d Cross. So teach us, Lord! in faith to live. In hope to toil, — in love to bear, — Nor like the bold disciple strive. Without Thine aid, the wave to dare ; 66 DAILY COUNSELLOE. So guide us o'er this treaclierous sTiore, Where quicksands hide, and surges break, That all our earthly wanderings o'er, Thy fold we reach, thy rest partake. FEBRUARY XIII. " Until the day dawn, and the day-star arise in your hearts." 2nd Peter, i : 19. Oh, dawn of blessed light. That through the shades of night, With radiance pale, Com'st like a white-robed guest, To eye and brow and breast, We bid thee hail. l^ot as to orbs made blind. That gaze, but may not find Thy cheering beam, To us, from tower and tree, Thy tender tracery Doth gently gleam. Not as to those who grope, Devoid of heaven's high hope, In Pagan night. Thou visitest our land. For a dear, pierced Hand Hath given it light. Dim dawn, with tresses gray, How soon thou fad'st away, — DAILY COUNSELLOR. 67 Opening the gate Through which, in glory born, Eides forth the sceptered morn,. In royal state. Sweet gift from Him above, Whose unforgetful love Doth never sleep : Unto His name be praise, While changeful nights and days Their order keep. FEBRUARY XIY. "Two are better than one." EccLESiASTES, iv: 9. This transient life, the poets say, At best, is but a wintry day : Yet when two hearts with courage true Unite to dare its tempests through, And catch the sunbeams as they flow, With added warmth, each beam shall glow, For hallow'd love its light shall lend When clouds grow dark, or rains descend. Yea, more, — if with combin'd intent On Bethlehem's star their eyes are bent. If by the chart a Saviour gave Their course they steer o'er rock and wave, Unscath'd they'll ride the billow's foam, His smile their strength, — His Heaven their home. ^8 DAILY COUNSELLOE. FEBRUARY XV. "This is my commandment, that ye love one another." John, xv : 12. We keep the old commandment, "eye for eye, And tooth for tooth," striving with sleepless zeal To pluck the mote from out our brother's creed, Till charity's neglected plant doth need The water-drop and die. We watch and weigh The doctrine, till the blessed spirit 'scapes. And in the measuring of our cummin-seeds Forget the shining of that star of love Which never sets. Yea, even the heathen tribes, Who from our mission-zeal, 'mid chaos dark, First heard the ^'' fiat-lux ^^ — and joyous come Like Lazarus from his grave, — bewildered ask What guide to follow, for they see the men They took for angels, seek the banner'd field For Paul, or for Apollos, warring there. Till they forget that they are one in Christ. Dear Saviour, grave on our obedient hearts Thy new commaudment, — that its simple clue Guiding us safely through life's labyrinth, May reach Heaven's gate. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 59 PEBRUAEY XVI. " Ruth clave unto her." Ruth, i : 14. "Where tliou goest, I will go," Thus the Moabitess said, "Where thou dwellest, I will dwell, Where thou lodgest, rest my head. Where thou diest, I will die, Where thou mak'st thy grave, wilt lie." Sweetly stole those filial words O'er the widow'd mother's heart, Giving strength her griefs to bear, Power from cherish'd scenes to part; Not an exile now to roam, Light should cheer her childless home. Blessed Love of Gratitude! Not by blinded instinct led, Not on selfish gain intent. Not by fickle dew-drops fed ; Man may fail thy worth to tell. Angels comprehend thee well. Blessed Love of Gratitude ! With thy fair array of graces. Welcomed shalt thou be. above, Where the seraphs veil their faces; Where they cry with one accord. Holy ! Holy ! is the Lord. 60 DAILY COUNSELLOR. FEBRUARY XYII. "Marvel not my brethren, if the world hate you." 1st John, iii: 13. Say, what avails it him, whose conrse Is upward like the unresting flame, Though shafts of malice spend their force Against the texture of his fame ; Or what avails the taunt of sin That falsehood o'er his deeds may roll. If truth's pure diamond dwell within The crystal casket of his soul; Or what avails the scowl of hate To pitying, Nature's pilgrim -guest, For whom approving seraphs wait. In bowers of everlasting rest. Yet must he daily strive to keep Uncaus'd, the world's condemning frown. Nor let its memory rankle deep. But firmly, kindly, live it down. And following still that Glorious Friend, For whom the crown of thorns was wove, To evil, — gentleness extend. And conquer enmity by love. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 61 FEBRUARY XVIII. •'Touched with the feeling of our infirmities." Hebrews, 4: 15. Yon stranger see, — wlio lonely roves, An exile from tlie land lie loves, Oh Thou [ who here on earth didst tread Without a home to lay thy head. And only 'neath one cottage shade, In Bethany, wert welcome made. Speak peace, where deep despondence sighs. And point to mansions in the skies. The mourner droops, — with heaving breast, Low, where his buried idols rest, — Dear Saviour ! who didst meekly shed The tear of grief o'er friendship's bed. And with the sorrowing sisters share The balm of sympathy and prayer. Look downward, — let thy mercy flow, And deign to soothe the pang of woe. The death-struck, on his couch of pain, Finds every earthly solace vain. The eye is glaz'd, — the spirit faint, Eemember, Lord 1 thy suffering saint. Thou who didst tread the shadowy vale, Mid fearful shapes, and horrors pale. Infuse thy strength when nature dies, And to thy presence bid him rise. 6 62 DAILY COUNSELLOR. FEBRUAEY XIX. "Clouds and darkness are roundabout Him: — righteousness and judgment are the habita- tion of His throne." Psalms, xcvii : 2. My God, I would not doubt Tliy wisdom or tliy grace, Although the clouds may sometimes vail The brightness of thy face. I would not dread the hand That doth my life control, Even if the instruments are sharp That search and try the soul. I would not shrink to yield The treasure or the friend, That with infinitude of love Thou didst vouchsafe to lend. I would not dare resist Thy counsels or thy sway, Beggar, and borrower on thine earth, And soon to pass away. I would not e'er forsake The strength that can not fail, A poor, blind wanderer of the dust, An atom on the gale. I would not plant my hope Where all things change and die ; But, anchored on thy word of truth, Look upward to the sky. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 63 PEBRUAEY XX. "Which things the Angels desire to look into." 1st Peter, i: 12. Angels, great in power and might, Dwellers in a realm of liglit, Lost in wonder, bend to see Jesus in humility, Eobed in clay, and manger-born To a life of woe and scorn. But on man, wlio spurns the Cross, Counts a Saviour's love as dross. Bushes madly toward the tomb, Reckless of a sinner's doom. With more deep and sad amaze, Fixes their ethereal gaze, Than on Calvary's flinty head. Though its terrors woke the dead. FEBRUARY XXI. "Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee." Isaiah, xxvi : 3. The rains descended, and the floods My soul's foundations tried. While one by one each cherished hope Like waning rush-lights died, 64 DAILY COUNSELLOR. And, lone and desolate, I heard The elemental din; Yet light amid the darkness broke, — A sunbeam shone within. Out on the crested surge I rode, When the great sea arose, And challeno-ed with its thunder-crv The stormy winds as foes; Then barks were wrecked, and men went down Beneath the billowy brine, But, in that tempest of despair, The sunbeam still was mine, The stay on Ood^ — I'll hold it fast, In peril and in pain. Until that glorious Sun arise That ne'er shall set again. Oh when, by death's grim phantom led I tread the shadowy vale, Still may that perfect peace be mine. Though flesh and heart should fail. FEBRUARY XXII. "Mark the perfect man nml beluld the u]iri^ht." Psalms, xxxvii: 37. "Weep for the smitten bud that falls Untimely from the stem. And ne'er in fond affection's eye Must glass its glowing gem, Kor in its folded bosom know The joy that noontide suns bestow. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 65 Weep for the reprobate, who steals Unhonor'cl to the dust, Life's highest purpose unachiev'd, And scorn'd its holiest trust, — Yes, weep for him who stain'd the scroll And mock'd the Giver of his soul. But as for him, whose mortal span Completes its perfect round. His gifts well-used, — his length of days With hallow'd luster crown'd, ISTo tears for him, — he gains the bliss Of more exalted spheres than this: No tears, — save what the heart of love For its own loss must weep, But yield his fame to History's hand For unborn time to keep ; Lift high the page, that earth shall see What Heaven can give, and man may be. FEBRUARY XXIII. "Continual weeping shall go up." Jeremiah, xlviii : 5. Age, — wan with sorrow, bows him down, Strong manhood learns to weep, A tear is on the infant's cheek, Even 'mid its cradle-sleep ; 6* QQ DAILY COUKSELLOK. Grief ever weepeth, — 'tis her wont, Like an o'erflowing tide, Love, in tlie boasted triumpli-lionr A woman's heart doth hide ; Hope weepeth, — to the treacherous sands She gave her anchor's trust, Joy weepeth, — for her garlands fade And withering fall to dust ; Ambition weepeth, — ^laurel-crown'd, No other world he knows To conquer with insatiate pride, He weepeth as he goes. Oh Thou, who from the angel-choirs Dost bend thy gracious ear. And listen to the blended sound Of prayer and dropping tear. Have pity on this weeping globe As on its course it strays, Have pity on its mourning race And turn their tears to praise. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 67 FEBRUARY XXIV. " Ye that fear the Lord, — hope for good." ECCLESIASTICUS, Hi 9. Do the clouds around tliee gather, Making dark thy solitude? Each one hath an inward shining, Each one hath a silver lining, Hope for good ! Hath thy trusted friend deceived thee, Who in sunshine near thee stood? Christ hath borne that woe before thee, Let His patient love restore thee, Hope for good ! Doth the child thy bosom nourish' d. Leave thee to Misfortune's flood? All unpitying see thee languish ? Still, amid that keenest anguish, Hope for good. Should all cherish'd props forsake thee While earth's tempests threaten rude Heir of an immortal nature Looking to the true Creator, Hope for good. 68 DAILY COUNSELLOR. FEBRUARY XXY. "When they were awake, they saw His glory." Luke, ix : 32. Heavy tliey were with sleep, The chosen three, that day. Who to the lonely mountain-steep Went np with Christ, to pray. But when their eyes unseal'd, And the deep trance was o'er, An overshadowing cloud reveal'd Glory unseen before. Lord ! — ^loose the chains that bind, In tyranny of night, Our earth-bow'd, overladen minds Erom faith's entrancing light. And when pale Death shall break This fleshly Nature's ties. Bid us to thy full glory wake, And in thine image rise. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 69 FEBRUARY XXVI. "What cloth the Lord require of thee, but to dojustly, and to love mercy, and to wulk hum- bly with thy God 1 " Micah, vi : 8. Do justly : 'tis tliy God's command, The mandate of tliy King, Be prompt in rendering dues to all, And let no fraud-spot, great or small. Unto thy conscience cling. Love mercy : thou who need'st its aid Through all this mortal strife. Whose highest thought, whose purest deed Must still divine forbearance need. Love that which is thy life. Walk humbly : thou so soon to sleep Beneath the noteless sod. For how can dust and ashes dare The panoply of pride to wear ! Walk humbly with thy God. FEBRUARY XXYII. " Her merchandise and her hire shall be holiness to the Lord ; — it shall not be treasured, nor laid up" ' Isaiah, xxiii: 18. Heakken", hearken, — man of care, Toiling for thine unknown heir, Gaining with a wearied breast. Many wrinkles, little rest. 70 DAILY COUNSELLOE. Hast thou sons? — ^instruction lend How to make their Grod their friend, Hast thou daughters? — teach the bliss Of a better world than this. Strive not thus to leave behind Wealth that may their spirits blind. Hearken, hoarder ! — soon to part From the gold that rules the heart. Other feet must tread thy lands. Keys be turn'd by stranger hands, Why shouldst thou thy soul deny Thanks that light the tearful eye? Ere stern Death his debt shall take, Kectify thy long mistake. Strew thy treasures where they yield Eich reward in heavenly field. Hearken, Christian, who would still Fain obey thy Master's will, If thy merchandise and hire Kindle Penury's winter fire. Break the bread to hunger's child, Pour a light o'er pagan wild, If until thine eye grow dim, They be holiness to Him, And His love inspire thy breast, All thou hast on earth, is blest. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 71 FEBRUARY XXYIII. " Forget not the sorrows of thy Mother." EccLEsiASTicus, vii : 27. Know'st thou what those sorrows were, Borne in secret, day and night, Taxing every burdened nerve, Ere thine eyes beheld the light? Know'st thou what unuttered dread, Anguish even unto death. Pangs of agony untold, Won to earth thy first-born breath.? Know'st thou how her heart went forth, Watching o'er thy cradle-bed. When a thousand infant ills Drew in ambush round thy head? Know'st thou what a weight of woe All her inmost spirit bow'd When for thee her wailing prayer Pierc'd dense midnight's darkest cloud; When for all thy faults she sought Pardon from the God of love. And a mansion for thy soul Mid the realms of bliss above? If thou know'st them not, — beware, Lest indifference or disdain. With unfilial word or deed, Eecompense her toil and pain ; 72 DAILY COUK-SELLOR. Lest tliat God who marks thy path, Holds thee ever in His sight, Should with pain of righteous wrath Such ingratitude requite. FEBRUARY XXIX. *' A fire on the hearth." Jeremiah, xxxvi: 22. "A FIEE on the hearth." In his palace of state. The son of Josiah, with majesty sate, And proudly the crown of Judea. he bore, But a Monarch was there, an Usurper of yore. Grey Winter, with scepter of adamant made, And his tax on the king, as the peasant, he laid. "A fire on the hearth." In this cold clime of ours. Where there's ice in the fountain and frost on the flowers. And a chill in the heart of the worldling, if woe. Or Penury invoke what his wealth might bestow, A warmth for the soul, in our prayers we should claim. And the breath of God's spirit to kindle the flame. ''A fire on the hearth." Let it burn till we die, A pure christian love should the fuel supply. Let its embers glow on, to enlighten their gloom Who mourn for our loss, when we sleep in the tomb, — When we sleep in the tomb and our spirits attain The realm where no Winter hath license to reign. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 75 MAECH I. " For Lo !— the Winter is pnst." Song of Solomon, ii: 11. Strike tlie glad harp with joyous cheer, The long-expected Spring is here ! And see ! — cold snows descend no more, The frost-king flies, his reign is o'er. Bright streams, so long in chains congeal'd, Rush singing down o'er vale and field, While here and there, warm rocks about, The first-born violets venture out. The jay, his blue wing spreads elate, The red-breast answereth to her mate. While many a bird from climes more blest, Returns to build its northern nest And bid the forest arch prolong The sweetness of their varied song. Heart! — is there winter in thy strain? Do lingering frosts thy warmth enchain ? Break silence! — ^breathe melodious lays! Awake thine eloquence of praise To Him who quickeneth Nature's breath And warns thee from the sleep of death. 76 DAILY COUXSELLOK. MARCH II. "Those that seek me early, shall find me." Proverbs, viii: 17. Hail young disciple ! — wlio with early feet From tlie broad pathway of the world hast fled, And listening to thy Lord with reverence meet, In due obedience bow'd thy gentle head. How beautiful to heed that Heavenl}^ Friend, In the first freshness of thy budding prime. Before the clouds grow dark, the rains descend. Or o'er thy bright locks steal the frosts of time: So, from all tempters that infest the fold, May His protecting favor hold thee free. Safe from all ills, till life's brief hour be told. Sweet, trusting spirit, may He shelter thee. Till to that radiant sky 'tis thine to soar Where storms shall bliofht the rose, and toss the bark no more. MARCH III. 'The Spider taketli hold witli her hands, and is in kings' palaces." Proverbs, .\xx : 28. See ! with what untiring skill What an energy of will. All unaided, all forlorn, Housewife's hate, and beauty's scorn. How the Spider builds her bower High in halls of regal power. DAILY COUNSELLOE. Is the mansion of tliy care Made by wealth and taste so fair, By Misfortune's fearful sway, Laid in dust? or reft away? Yield no thought to blank despair; Firm in faith, and strong in prayer, Rise ! — the ruin to repair. For the Spider, homeless made. Hunted from each loved retreat. Not dejected, not afraid. Toiling thro' the gloomiest shade, Grathereth vigor from defeat : Child of Reason! — deign to see What an insect teacheth thee. MARCH IV. 'Every branch that beareth fruit, He purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit." John, xv : 2. Oh, — ^if I am a branch Of the blest Saviour's vine. And on His quickening love depend For life and fruit divine. Let me not start nor shrink In wild, despairing grief, Though the sharp pruning-knife remove The too redundant leaf, 7* 78 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Or the unsiglitly shoot Unsparing shred away, Or lop the excrescent wood, that tends To weakness and decay: The lacerating steel The unerring Hand doth wield, And to its ministry severe In tearful trust I yield. MARCH V. "Let us therefore fear, lest a promise being left us of entering into His rest, any of you should seem to come short of it." Hebrews, iv • 7 Pause, thinking brain ! pause, throbbing heart ! Pause, overladen breast ! Turn to the window of the Ark, That peaceful rides the surges dark, There is thy rest. Behold, that casement openeth wide To hail the entering guest, A pierced Hand is stretching there. Soul ! — fold thy wearied wing, and share The promised rest. Long hast thou roamed the deluge wide. Unsheltered and unblest, — Hark ! Hark ! the Master calleth thee, Obey His gracious voice, and be Ever at rest. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 79 MAECH VI. " Look not behind thee ; neither stay thou in all the plain." Genesis, xix: 17. Look not beHnd ! youv'e broke tlie cliaiii That bound to folly and despair; Press onward to tlie glorions land, Nor falter till you enter there. Look not behind ! unnumbered snares Are for the loitering Christian spread, False hopes, strong habits, wild desires. And ruin's pitfalls dark and dread. Look not behind ! a blighting curse Was hers who paus'd at Sodom's bound, She, lingering, loved those haunts of sin, And fearful retribution found. Look not behind ! 'tis Satan's lure To tempt you to his realm again ; The guiding angel bids you haste, And tarry not in all the plain. Escape for life! the flames of wrath Are reddening on the winged wind, See Zoar's sacred refuge nigh. Escape for life ! — look not behind ! 80 DAILY COUNSELLOR. MARCH VII. "He left all, — rose up, — and followed him." I Luke, v : 28. Left all, — ^the business of his life, Long habit's wreathed chain, The earnest gathering-in of gold, The close pursuit of gain. And love of money, — prone to sway, And sweep all other loves away. Rose up, — was there no early friend To stay the new career? The impulsive loyalty to mock? Or at the madness sneer Of following One, with servile tread, Who had not where to lay His head ? Left all, — rose up, — and followed Him! With an undoubting love, The meek, the lowly, the divine, Whose kingdom was above : Thus may we do, 0, Master dear, When thine awakening call we hear. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 81 MARCH VIII. 'Rooted and built up in Him, and stablished in the faith." CoLossiANs, ii : 7. Heed no blast that blowetli, Thougli it rock the tree, Heed no stream that floweth, Torrent though it be, Fear no cloud that thunders O'er the concave din. Rest thee in His strength and merit, Who forsakes no trusting spirit, Eooted and built up in Him. Heed no wind of doctrine, Toward the haven steer. Guided by the pole-star. Though the proudest veer. Make Grod's Book thy pilot. O'er the billowy brine, Let no varying chart deceive thee. Let no erring leader grieve thee, Stablish'd in the faith divine. MARCH IX. *• I will sing aloud of thy mercy in the morning. " Psalms, lix : 16. How sweet to meet the morning rays As first from Heaven they dart. Or in the quiet walk to hold Communion with the heart. 82 DAILY COUNSELLOE. Inquire from whence its clierisli'd hopes? Erom whence its anxious care? What stirs the fountain of its joys Or wakes its deepest prayer? Remind it of the Bounteous Hand That still its life sustains, And bids the crimson tide of health Flow thro' the bounding veins, And as the dews on pinions white From vale and thicket rise, Incite its powers o'er earth to soar, And seek their native skies, And as the birds in raptured song Respond from spray to spray, Attune its own spontaneous harp, And praise the God of Day. MARCH X. 'From whence come wars and fighting?" James, iv: 1. "FlGHTiXGS and luarsf I would not dip for these My pencil in description's sanguine stream, And strive to catch their fearful lineaments. Even if I might. Their brazen- throated sound, Their shock discordant, and fierce revelry DAILY COUNSELLOR. 83 I would not fashion to my honsehold lyre, Even if I could. There are, who may behold Grod's image marr'd, and call it glorious strife, Or godlike victory. There are who love The trumpet's clangor, with the dire response Of shriek and groan. But unto me it seems There is no need of such appliances To shorten life's frail span, and that Death does His own dread work so faithfully, that man Need help him not. Why, even in time of peace, The dance of pleasure and the flush of health, He smiteth victims oft enough to please The hater of his kind. The longest lease That earth's brief tenant holds, his fourscore years,, Even without wars and fightings, are but short To do the work of an Eternity. MARCH XI. "Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth." Matthew, vi : 19. Say, is it meet for man. Oh, Lord, Who dwells in tents of clay, To plant his trust amid the sands That waves may wash away ? Or twine his love round broken reeds, Or with the thankless thorn. Or cast it on the frozen waste Of falsehood and of scorn? 84 DAILY COUXSELLOK. Or gather gold in secret heaps, Insatiate still for more, To prove tlie ruin of his heirs. Or swell a stranger's store? No ! Thou hast bade him, while on earth This fleeting life is lent. In whatsoever state he is, Therewith to be content. Place trust and love supreme on Thee, To Thee confide His care, — And lay his treasure up above, And find a mansion there. MARCH XIl. "There arose a tempestuous wind called Euroclydon." Acts, xxvii : 14. Thundering 'mid created things Thou dost crush the forest-kings With the shadow of thy wings. Thou dost vex the seething main, Kend the noble ship in twain. Heeding not the cry of pain, — ■ Euroclydon. Thou hast reft me as a tree. Thou hast lash'd me like the sea, Thou hast had thy will of me. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 85 Where the whelming breakers roar Bade me strew my bosom's store, All is gone, — what wouldst thou more ? Euroclydon. I am looking to the sky, Where no cloud may ever lie, Where no tempest passeth by ; I am looking for a home, Where no flower shall shed its bloom, Where thou mayst not dare to come, Euroclydon. MAKCH XIII " Christ sliull be magnified in my body, — whether it be by life or by death." Philippians, i : 20. Theough all our pilgrim wanderings. Through all our fleeting years We'll magnify the Saviour In sunshine or in tears ; The poverty, the sorrow He suffered for our sakes. The blessed intercession He for our pardon makes ; For all his boundless mercies His grace we'll magnify. His Name shall be our anchor Whether we live or die.. 86 DAILY COUNSELLOK. And when this brief connection "With mortal life is o'er, And nnreturning voyagers We leave its changeful shore, "When to these skies and mountains Our closing eyes grow dim, We'll magnify the Saviour And fearless go to Him. MARCH XIV. "He hath dispersed, He hath given to the poor: His righteousness endureth forever." Psalms, cxii : 9. Give to the poor thy bread, Clothe the nncover'd form, Throw shelter o'er the homeless head. That shrinks before the storm : So shall the prayers that grateful rise Win blessings for thee from the skies. Build thee a mansion fair. Bid artists deck the walls. With competition's ceaseless care, Pour luxury through its halls : The stranger there shall banners wave, And feast, when thou art in thy grave. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 87 Hoard riches for thine heirs, Swell high the expected tide, And see them disappoint thy cares By indolence and pride ; Yea, die unwept, — while bent on pelf, Each grasps the shekels for himself Disperse thine alms abroad, Wide as the winds shall bring Unto thine ears the cry of want. Or plaint of suffering : So shall great gain accrue to thee. When Heaven's dread books shall opened be. MARCH XV. ''Not as the world giveth, give I unto you." John, xiv : 27. The world hath been our lover. And flattering words it spoke ; But, mid its wreath of roses. It hid an iron yoke The world hath been our master, And heavy toils it laid. Tasks without intermission, Unblessed, and unrepaid. 88 DAILY COUNSELLOR. The world liath kept our treasure But, wlien we sought its hold, The rust was on our silver, And the robber had our gold. So now our love and service, And holiest trust we give Unto that dear Eedeemer, Who died that we might live. MAECH XVI. " I will fear no evil, — for Thou art with me.'* Psalms, xxiii: 4. Doth sadness in thy soul abide ? Resume the smile of cheer, And be Jehovah's will thine own : The light that shines around the throne Shall make his purpose clear. ISTaught is an evil, though it lay Thy dearest idol low. Until, contending with the dart, Thy proud and unsubmissive heart Decides to make it so. Count naught an evil while the breast From self-reproach is free, Count naught an evil, save the sin That, coiling dark thy soul within, Doth hide God's face from thee. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 89 MARCH XXII. " Be ye thankful." CotossiANS, iii: 15, 0, BE ye thankful, wMle ye breatlie This wondrous vital air, And pitch your tent upon the earth That God hath made so fair, And rest upon His glorious hope A heavenly home to share. O, be ye thankful for the love Like dew around you shed, That when you slumber, sets a watch Of angels round the bed. And when you wake, with constant care Doth in your pathway tread. Lord, make us thankful, for too oft, By fleeting sorrows bowed. In the dark pall of discontent Our ingrate souls we shroud : Lend us thy sunbeam, till we reach The sky without a cloud. 8* 90 DAILY COUNSELLOR. MARCH XVIII. "Light that shineth in a dark place." 2nd Peter, i : 19. The niglit drew on, thro' paths unknown The weary traveler toil'd alone, Now climb'd the rocky steep with pain, Now plunging crossed the marshy plain, Or grop'd thro"* trackless forests dread. Where brambles spring and pitfalls spread ; At length, thro' clouds that barr'd his way, Look'd forth the Moon, with silver ray. And loud he sang, in grateful love, '^Whafs dark below, is light abovey The Grave, that never yet hath said ''^ Enough ^''^ was with my heart's blood fed, And as I turned with bitter throe From its insatiate brink to go, I marvel' d why a Hand Divine Should smite that last, lone hope of mine : Yet once, as holy twilight wove Its shadowy vail o'er field and grove, I heard a voice, — the voice of Love, — '"''What^s dark below, is light above^ DAILY COUKSELLOE. 91 MARCH XIX. "The Name of the Lord is a strong tower; the righteous runneth into it, and is safe." Proverbs, xviii: 10. Who knoweth of Ms safety, Lord, Who, in this house of clay, Doth bide the buffet of the storm, The footstep of decay ? Whose life by fleeting air is fed, Whose thread-like nerves do thrill At every sympathy with pain. At every thought of ill ? Who knoweth of his safety. Lord, Who o'er the crumbling verge Of fearful floods, with blinded eye. His slippery course doth urge ? Who, while he dreams to pluck the flowers. May on a serpent tread. And, in the glory of his prime, Be numbered with the dead ? He knoweth. Lord ! whose soul doth rest On Thine eternal might. The anchor of whose hope is sure. Though earth eludes his sight. Who, when the hoarded joys of time All like a vision fly. Can from this falling tent of flesh Pass to an home on high. 92 DAILY COUNSELLOR. / MAECH XX. " Surely the wrath of man shall praise Thee ; — the remainder of wrath shalt thou restrain." Psalms, Ixxvi : 10. God of tlie chainless winds, that wildly wreck The moaning forest, and the ancient oak Eend like a sapling spray, or sweep the sand O'er the lost caravan, that trod, with pride Of tinkling bells, and camel's arching necks, The burning desert, — a dense host at morn ; At eve, a bubble on the trackless waste, God of the winds ! canst thou not rule the heart, And gather back its passions, when thou wilt, Bidding them, "jjeace, he still P^ God of the waves, That toss and mock the mightiest argosy. As the gay zephyr frets the thistle-down. Until the sternest leader's heart doth melt Because of trouble, thou who call'st them back From their rough challenge to the muffled sky, And bidd'st them harmless kiss an infant's feet. That gathereth silver shells, canst thou not curb The tumult of the nations, the hot wrath Of warring kings, who like the babe must die, Vaunting this day in armor, and the next, Unshrouded, slumbering on the battle-field ? DAILY COUNSELLOK. 93 MARCH XXI. " Blessed are ye that sow beside all waters." ISA.1AH, xxxii: 20. Sow, early by tlie waters, Before advancing day Comes in its arrogance of power To bear your hopes away, Before the quickly-rooted weeds, Tliat ask no culture's toil. Spring up, and with their mushroom growth Usurp the yielding soil. Sow, with a tireless labor. Because the world is strong To set in dark array the plants Of violence and wrong. Thorns hath it too, and brambles, And tares that mock the trust, And Sodom's apples only fiU'd With bitterness and dust. Seed sowers ! ye are blessed, A glorious right ye hold, A kingly power the immortal soul Like plastic wax to mold, Come forth, before the sparkle Of the first dews are dry, A.nd train for Heaven's angelic bowers, That which can never die. 94 DAILY COUXSELLOR. MARCH XXII. " Sufficient unto tlie day is the evil thereof." Matthew, vi : 34. Each moment hath its task, Each hour, its lot of care, Nor heavier burden will He lay, Who sends them forth and guides their way, Than their slight wing can bear. Then why should skeptic man Obstruct their buoyant flight ? Forestall misfortune's raven tone, And with a burden not their own Oppress their new-born might ? Incite no cloud to throw Its shadow o'er thy walls, Nor waste thine energies in air, Nor hold dark dalliance with despair, When Heaven to gladness calls. Why should forebodings vex The current of thy dajs ? And visioned ills the future wrong? And discords mar thy spirit-song, When God demandeth praise ? In every time of woe He knows we are but dust. He well remembereth all our frame, Our secret pangs His pity claim. Then trusty my brother, trust. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 95 MARCH XXIII. " What is truth 1 " John, xviii : 38. "What is truth? ^^ — inquired the Eoman, But he glided swift away, Lest, perchance, the heavenly answer Might rebuke him with its ray. Like a lamb before the shearers Mute amid that fearful strife. Patient stood the meek Eedeemer He who was the truth and life. Falsehood held its way and triumph'd, Hatred roll'd its flashing eye. Vacillating Pilate yielded To the clamor, — " Crucify ! " Deign to teach us, dearest Saviour, Doubting mid our daily task. Doubting where our duty guides us, Be not silent when we ask, Dnped by shadows and illusions. Groping on through age and youth, Thou who art our light and leader Deign to tell us what is truth. 96 DAILY COUNSELLOE. MARCH XXIV. " Ye shall seek me, and shall not find me." John, vii : 34. Yet a little while, my friends, And beside the quiet fountain, Where the cherish' d willow bends, Where the thicket shades the monntain, Where the vernal violets start, Where the summer- vine is breathing, By the fireside of the heart, While the wintry snows are wreathing. By the sea''s resounding shore Where your love so oft would bind me, Listing to the billow's roar, Ye may seek, but shall not find me. Yet a little while, my foes, And your lynx-like care is over, Haughty eyes that scann'd my woes, Watch'd my wanderings to discover. Ears, that to my words gave heed Still, their simple purport veiling. Lips that darkened every deed, Magnified each fault and failure, Syren smile and falsehood's kiss Shall no longer grieve or blind me. One lone victim ye will miss, — Ye shall seek, but shall not find me. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 97 MARCH XXV. " Let them alone." Matthew, xv : 14. "What was thy sentence, dearest Lord? What was thy stern, denouncing word On mocking scribe and pharisee, Whose rootless goodness troubled thee ? Methinks I hear that solemn tone As of some far-off billow's moan, ^^ Let them ahney And could the doom of scourge, or scar. Famine, or pestilence, or war, Or any other dreaded thing From which the ransom'd soul may spring Unhurt above, be half so dread, As those few words the Saviour said? ^^Let them alone,^^ Oh ! try us in Thy furnace-fires. And purify our base desires. Strike down, — strike deep, — enshroud in woe Whate're we call our own, below, If thou but wield the Chastener's rod, But say not unto us, Oh Glod I ^^Let them alone.^'' 9 98 DAILY COUNSELLOR. ' MARCH XXVI. "Underneath ore the Everlasting Arms." Deuteronomy, xxxiii : 27. Like shadows flitting o'er the wall, Our helpless race appear, Birth, growth, and death await them all, The sigh, the smile, the tear. Disease and Pain keep watch to slay, For so it was of yore, The loved and trusted may betray As they have done before. Still, on we press, o'er vale and steep, 'Keath sunbeam, storm, or blast, The cradle gives ou.r earliest sleep, The cofiin-shroud our last. Yet though the wildest tempests moan, If, -'mid their wrath severe, A Father's Arm is round us thrown, Say, what have we to fear? "Why boast ye of your riches proud, Or of your honors bright ? See, swifter than the changeful cloud, They fade and take their flight. Why droop ye thus, when joys decay? When props are overthrown ? What have ye, in this house of clay, That ye may call your own ? DAILY COUNSELLOR. 99 What boots it, tliougli ye weeping bend Along your pilgrim- way, If toward tliat cloudless home ye tend Where tears are wiped away ? Then shrink not thus from ills and pains,, For though the world be drear, The Everlasting Arm sustains. And what have ye to fear ? MARCH XXVII. " In God is my salvation and my glory, the rock of my strength and my refuge is in God." Psalms, Ixii : 7. Who giveth salvation, when warfare is o'er? When the breath goeth forth and returneth no more ? And where is the glory, when death and decay Have swept in stern triumph their victim away ? What rock hath the pilgrim, when noontide is high, And the sands of the desert are scorching and dry ? What refuge, when night all untented draws near. And the roar of the lion sounds deep on his ear? Then the voice of the trustful replied from the sod, "The Eock of my strength and my refuge is God." 100 DAILY cou:n"selloe. MARCH XXYIII. " See, for thnt the Lord hath given you the Sabbath." Exodus, xvi : 29. The -world is full of toil, It bids tlie traveler roam, It binds the laborer to tlie soil, Tlie student to his home, The beasts of burden sigh, O'erladen and opprest, The Sabbath lifts its banner high, And gives the weary rest. The world is full of care, The hao-o'ard brow is wrouo-ht CO o In furrows as of fix'd despair, And check'd the heavenward thought ; But with indignant grace The Sabbath's chastening tone, Drives money-changers from the place Which God doth call his own. The world is full of gTief, Sorrows o'er sorrows roll. And the fair hope that brings relief Doth sometimes pierce the soul. The Sabbath's peaceful bound Bears Mercy's holy seal, A balm of Gilead for the wound That man is weak to heal. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 101 The world is full of sin, A dangerous flood it rolls, The unwary to its breast to win,. And whelm unstable souls; The Sabbath's beacon tells Of reefs and wrecks below, And warns, tho' gay the billow swells,. Beneath are death and woe. There is a world, where none With fruitless labor sigh, Where care awakes no lingering groan, And grief no agony. Where sin with fatal arts Hath never forg'd her chains. But deep-enthron'd in angel hearts. One endless Sabbath reigns. I MARCH XXIX. '' Weep ye nut for the dead, neither bemoan him." Jeremiah, xxii : 10. Is it not strange, that we who have such cause For tears within ourselves, our wants, our sins,. Our faithlessness in duty, have sach call For frequent tears of sympathy with pain, And woe of others, yet a space so brief. That we leave much undone, and go our way, Ne'er to return ; is it not passing strange. That we should drain the fountains of our grief, And take such portions of our fleeting span To weep for those in glory, from whose eyes All tears are wip'd forever ? 9* 102 DAILY COUNSELLOR. "What if once We were so liappy as to clasp tlieir hands, And hear their household voice, and call them friends, Kindred, or lovers ? — Shall we mourn for this. Our glory, our felicity, our joy ? And what if He who saw them ripened first. Took them before us ? Shall we grieve for this ? No. Eather with a clear and sunny eye Let us walk on to meet them, full of hope. The joy of God our strength. MARCH XXX. "That the Lord thj' God may show us the way wherein we muy walk, and the thing that we may do." Jerkmiah, xlii : 3. Temptations throng our com-se. And thousands go astray ; Smooth are the roads that lead to death, How shall we choose our way ? Sloth may enchain the hand, Clouds settle o'er the brain, Kor have we always light to make Our Christian duty plain. Lord, every secret thought Is open to thy view. Show us the path wherein to walk, The thing that we must do. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 103 MARCH XXXI. " We have the mind of Christ." 1st Corinthians, ii : 16. "The mind of GhristJ^ tlie lowly thouglit, The care, tlie lost to save, The love for childhood's trusting smile. The zeal for truth, the scorn for guile. The tear at friendship's grave, Pity and pardon for the frail, For pain, the healing care. The silent lip to wrath and spite, "Fee vobis'''' for the hypocrite, For enmity, the prayer. O pilgrim ! look upon thy life, . Where'er its course may glide, And see if His example sway, Thine inward soul, thine outward way, A pattern and a guide ; And see if through its daily change, Where woe or sickness pined, Or burdening toils the hours employ. Or in the exulting tide of joy There dwells the Christlike mind. DAILY COUISrSELLOR. 107 APRIL I. "Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning." Psalms, xxx : 6. Spring goetli forth and weepetli, in the path Left desolate by Winter: — doth she fear Some ebulHtion of his tyrant wrath That from her downcast eyelids drops the tear? Oh Queen of unborn flowers ! shrink not to take Thy rightful scepter o'er a subject clime, Why should a lot of royalty awake The wrinkle and the thorn before their time ? Be firm and hopeful ! for the winged smile Shall kiss the crystal dew-drop from thy cheek, And in thy foot-prints, spring with gentlest wile, The loyal primrose, and the violet meek, And countless plants shall don their mantles green; And balmy skies, with mild, propitious ray. Shall bid their winged heralds bless the queen, Who joins a tender heart to regal sway: So, go thou forth with tears ! — thy precious seed Sowing in lowly trust, for Joy shall crown the deed. 108 DAILY COUNSELLOK. TAPRIL II. " The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God." Psalms, xiv: 1. '' Ko God! No God,^^ — the simplest flower That on the wild is found, Shrinks as it drinks its cup of dew, And trembles at the sound, "No God!" astonished Echo cries From out her cavern hoar, And every wandering bird that flies, Eeproves the Atheist lore. The solemn forest lifts its head, The Almighty to proclaim, The brooklet on its crystal urn Doth leap to grave his name How swells the deep and vengeful sea Along his billowy track, And red Vesuvius opes his mouth To hurl the falsehood back. The palm-tree, with its princely crest, The cocoa's leafy shade, The bread-fruit bending to its lord. In yon far-island glade, The winged seeds that, borne by winds, The roving sparrows feed. The melon on the desert sands. Confute the scorner's creed. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 109 ''No God !" — witla indignation high. The fervent sun is stirred, And the pale moon turns paler still At such an impious word, While from their burning thrones the stars Look down with angry eye, That thus a worm of dust should rnock Eternal majesty. APRIL III. ' "Lo! children are an heritage of the Lord." Psalms, cxxvii : 3. What bringeth a joy o'er thy pallid mien, More deep than the prime of thy youth had seen? What kindleth a beam in thy thoughtful eye Like the vestal flame from a purer sky? Sweet were her tones, as the wind-harp free, " The smile of the babe that is born to we." What maketh thy home with its noiseless shade More dear than the haunts where thy beauty strayed? Than the dance where thy form was the zephyr's wing? Than the crowded hall, or the. charmed ring? Than the flatterer's wile, with its syren strain? " The voice of the babe that with care I train J'' What lendeth the landscape a brighter hue? A clearer spark to the diamond dew? 10 110 DAILY COUNSELLOR. What giveth the song of the bird its zest, As straw by straw it doth build its nest? What sweeteneth the flowers on their budding stalks? " The hiss of the child hy my side that walks' What quickeneth thy prayer when it seeks the Throne With a fervor it never before had known? What girdeth thy life in its daily scope For the labor of love, and the patience of hope? The freedom from self, and the high intent? " The soul of the child that my God hath lent^ APEIL IV. " We shall see Him as He is."* 1st John, iii : 2. "Shall see Him as He isT'^ Whom shalt thou see? That blessed Friend, who for our sakes did bear Scourge, persecution, and the blood-stain'd cross, That we the mansions of the just might share? ^^ Shall see Him as He 2s/" What shalt thou see? Hands stretch'd to raise thee to a pardoning breast. And lips o'erflowing with the music-strain, — "Come, good and faithful! enter to thy rest?" Say, will this win thee from thy cherish'd joys? The loving partner of thy youthful days? The pleasant home? the first-born boy, who woke ' A warmth that lingered in thy deathful gaze? * The last words of u young mi)tlier, whispered with a radiant smile. DAILY COUNSELLOR. m The fair, fair girl? the merry, dove-eyed babe, That ill its nurse's arms unconscious leaps, Kor dreams what treasure rifled from its arms. Beneath the church-yard's sacred shadow sleeps? Speak, angel, — answer ! But, alas, how vain To put such questions to the blest above. Who, safe from ills of earth, no tear, no stain, Are wrapp'd in Heaven's refulgent robe of love. Thou, who hast seen Him as He is, — inspire Our wandering feet in wisdom's paths to go, And with one echo from thy golden lyre. Lure the sad mourners from their depths of woe. APRIL V. "Toiling in rowing." Mark, vi : 48. Toiling in rowing I Wind and tide Our wearied bark oppose, As oft, with seams that open wide. Upon her course she goes. And we have taken nothing yet. Though still the watch we keep, Nor fail to cast our empty net Into the faithless deep. Toiling in rowing ! Dearest Lord We faint amid the strife. But thou canst vanquish with a word The stormy surge of life. 112 DAILY COUNSELLOR. And wlien Thou meet'st us on tlie sea Witli liand outstretched to aid, Oil ! grant us strength, to cling to Thee, And not to be afraid. APRIL YI. " And Aaron held his peace." Leviticus, x: 3. Two impious censers flaming high Grieam'd out on Israel's startled eye, While vengeful skies, with lightning red, Cleft o'er the rash offenders' head ; Then lo, with scorched and livid mien. Two corpses, wreathed in smoke were seen, And bending low, with anguish torn, The high-priest mourned his dead first-born. But when retired from every eye, He gave the reins to memory, Ah I who might tell a father's pain. O'er rebel sons untimely slain I Yes, they whose infant forms he reared, For whom he watched and prayed and feared, Whose glance in manhood's beauty proud So lately awed the admiring crowd, Now, filled with arrogance and pride Beneath their Maker's hand had died. DAILY COUNSELLOR, 113 And in that act of sin, became A mass of aslies, — 'mixed with flame. Yet, unrepining at the stroke, He bade each murmur cease, Even while stern grief his spirit broke, Silent he bore Jehovah's yoke, And meekly held his peace. APRIL TIL "Is any merry ? — Let him sing Psalms." James, v: 13. SiKa at your work, — 't will lighten The labors of the day, Sing at your work, — 't will brighten The darkness of the way. Sing at your work, — though sorrow Its lengthen' d shade may cast, Joy cometh on the morrow, — A sunbeam cheers the blast. To pain a brief dominion Is o'er the spirit given, — But music nerves the pinion That bears it up to heaven. 10*^ 114 DAILY COUNSELLOR. APRIL VIII. Unto them that look for Him, shall He appear the second time, — without sin, unto salvation." Hebrews, ix : 26. Night forsakes lier ebon seat, Gathered mists in volumes fleet, Dawn upon the mountains grey Trembles with prelusive raj, Till the lifted gate of morn Purples where the day is born, And that glorious orb doth rise. Eye of earth, ^nd sea, and skies. Thus, 'mid shade's of ancient time. Patriarchs gazed with faith sublime, Seers invoked the promised light. Prophets sought its vision bright. Till on Bethlehem's blessed glade Burst the beam that ne'er shall fade, And the raptured matin song Swelled from Heaven's resplendent throng. Saviour, come ! Our spirits wait, Enter, with Thy regal state, If our darkening sins prevail, If our dawn of hope be pale. Wake that star, whose asjDcct sweet Led the sages to Thy feet. Wake that sun, whose holy ray Brightens to Eternal Day. DAILY COUKSELLOR. 115 APRIL IX. "Father forgive them : for they know not what they do." Luke, xxiii : 34. ' "They know not what they do," — who stray In paths of guilt and woe, And heedless shun the narrow way Where Christ commands to go. Who to the vanities of time, Which like the shadows fly. Debase the energies sublime. Of that which can not die. "They know not what they do," — who spurn The Holy Spirit's breath. Which warns them in its love, to turn From everlasting death. Who from their guardian angel's care With heedless haste have fled, Unarm'd with penitence and prayer Against the day of dread. '■'•Father^ forgivej'' Our countless sins Stand forth in dark array. Yet for thy boundless mercy's sake Turn not thy face away, But by our dear Redeemer's prayer. Breath' d forth in mortal pain. Grant, while our lips its language bear. Our souls its grace may gain. 116 • DAILY COUXSELLOR, APRIL X. 'In the morning will I direct my prayer unto Thee, and will look up." Psalms, v : 3. • Before the portal of tlie east In golden glory breaks, Before the voice of slumbering man Its varied echo makes, Before the lily of the field Unseals its cradled eye. Before the pinions of the lark Unfold in melody, My heart awaking tn.rns to Thee, In whom is all her trnst, Who breathed this mystic power of thought Into a frame of dust. Oh, at this sweetly sacred hour, From all intrusions free. Smile, Lord, upon the waiting soul, And draw her near to thee. APRIL XL "For none of us liveth to himself." Romans, xiv: 7. ''Not to myself," said the daisy. With its petals bright and frail, " Not to myself," said the violet. Breathing perfume on the gale, DAILY COUKSELLOE. 117 "^Not to myself," said the robin, As it flew from tree to tree, Making each listener happy With its gushing melody, "Not to myself," said the streamlet, While the ozier on its banks And the creeping fringe of grass-blades Breathed out their earnest thanks, "Kot to myself," said the thunder Of the deep and surging sea. With the bark upon its bosom. And the kingly argosy, " i Making highway for the nations. From the tropic to the pole. And knitting climes together. And binding soul to soul. Man ! hast thou learned the lesson Creation strives to teach. Thus with her pointing finger. Thus with her varied speech? Is there not many a blessing, With heaven-prevailing tone. That leaves strong echo in the heart, " Kot for thyself alone?" 118 DAILY COUNSELLOR. APRIL XII. "Are ihey not nil ministering spirits?" Hebrews, i: 14. Winged Creatures ! are ye nigli To our dim mortality ? Mark ye, if we smile or weep? Glide ye round our pillowed sleep ? "Wlierefore dotli our earnest eye Fail your hovering forms to spy? "Wherefore doth our listening ear Fail your whisper'd word to hear? When with sympathetic zeal Others joys and woes we feel, When with self-forgetful care We their burdens love to bear, Shield the lonely orphan's head, Give him sheltering home and bread, Do ye not our course approve? Share we not your work of love? When of heavenl}^ Love we speak With warm heart and glowing cheek, Dark and untamed spirits teach, Luxury of hallo w'd speech, Frail and fallen brethren aiding, Not condemning, not upbraiding. Learn we not some note to raise Of your symphony of praise? DAILY COUNSELLOK. HQ Ye upon my Lord did wait, Wondering at His low estate, When witli sorrow like despair All our sin and sliame He bare, When His friends in slumber deep, Fail'd their one hour's watch to keep. Ye beheld Him kneel and pray, Ye the blood drops kiss'd away. Oh ! when we, to error prone Dash our foot against a stone, Halt upon our rock-strewn way. Feel this earthly house decay. Pause beside that valley dread Which no foot with ours may tread, Near us, in our anguish be. Strengthen our Gethsemane. APRIL XIII. "Lord, Remember me." Luke, xxiii: 42. I AM not worthy that the Power Who touched stern Sinai's brow with flame. Who rules wild Ocean's stormiest hour, And calls each star, from nightly bower, Forth by its name, — I am not worthy He should deign A thought on one so frail and vain, A broken leaf that rides the blast, A weed upon the waters cast, Yet venture still to bend the knee, And pray, "0 Lord, remember me!" 120 DAILY COUNSELLOR. For in tliis life of snares and woes, Wliere oft, witli unregarded sigh, Meek Virtue like an exile goes, And wlien the latest tear oe'rflows The closing eye, When snmmon'd from this earthly show Alone, to worlds nnseen we go, Where shall we turn? on whom depend Eor solace, Almighty Friend, Unless in faith we cry to thee, "Remember, Lord I Eemember me." APRIL XIY. " Observe the month of Abib." Deuteronomy, ivi i 1. Oh, Paschal-feast I which all the tribes Of ancient Israel kept, In memory of that fearful time When tyrant Egypt wept. And the destroying Angel's eye In glorious goodness pass'd them by. Methinks I see each household train In solemn reverence stand, With girded loins, and sandal'd feet, And pilgi'im-staff in hand, As those constrain'd afar to tread And break in haste the unleavened bread. DAILY COUKSELLOK. 121 How oft amid our festive scenes The ghost of Memory steals, And o'er their most exulting hours A saddening tint reveals, And bitter herbs infusion throw, In all our sparkling cups below. We keep our passovers on earth Like travelers d^ily bound Each passing moment as it flies To hear the warning soimd. An unseen country to exploi-e And journey to return no more. APRIL XY. "The Lord hath His way in the whirlwind, iind in the storm." Nahum, i: 3. "Winds vex'd the billows^ till in whelming wrath They smote the shore, and with the ancient rocks Chode in their bitterness. Wild tumult spread, And the white-crested waves each other met. As though from sudden force of rage or grief, The Deep grew hoary. Far, the sheeted spray Drove landward, drenching the astonish'd vales, Where it ne'er swept before, and the torn trees Writhing amid dissever'd branches, shed Their leafy honors, with salt, dripping tears, Like Rachel weeping o'er her children lost. 122 DAILY COUXSELLOK. — Then witli lier holy eye, the Moon look'd down Like tutelary spirit, prone to soothe The elements of discord. All in vain ! For on they strove, tenacious of their space Of brief misrule. So, with a mournful brow She hid behind the veil of Heaven again, "While in each chasm and subterranean cell. The pent sea thunder'd, with a vengefid voice, Troubling the listeners. God be with the bark That at the mercy of this pitiless storm Confronts the mountain- surge. God give his strength To the poor mariner, and to the hearts That sleepless agonize for friends who dare The seething Ocean, in a night like this. APRIL XYI. " Our Father ! who urt in Heaven." Luke, xi : 2. Father ! we have seen Thee walking At the hush of dawning day. As amid the quiet garden Wrapp'd in Eden flowers we lay. All the hopes of earth to cheer us, Sang like spring-birds, sweet and clear, But Thy glorious footstep near us, Swelled the joy to rapture's tear. DAILY COUNSELL-OE. 123 Father! we have heard Thy whisper Mid our spirit's inmost tent, And its curtains all were shaken At the wondrous thrill it sent, For the desert-sands were dreary, And the stars withheld their flame, And our pilgrim feet were weary Till that blest protection came. Father ! since Thy voice doth guide us. Since Thy presence still is nigh. Let us, whatsoe'er betide us, Onward press, with heavenward eye; What avails it, though our evening Darken like the storm-tossed sea. If our soul, 'mid all its changes Turn with filial trust to Thee. APRIL XVII. 'Beasts and all cattle, creeping things and flying fowl." Psalms, cxlviii : 10. Eegaed the patient ox, Eegard the laboring steed, The trusty dog, the peaceful flock That in thy pastures feed ; Their simple wants supply. Protection kind bestow. And turn away the tyrant-hand, That seeks to work their woe. 124 DAILY COUNSELLOR. For in tliose liumble hearts Do mute affections flame, And faithful virtues that might put More selfish man to shame. Yea, even yon abject race. The creeping things of earth. Since God hath made them by His power. Scorn not their reptile birth, Draw back the crushing foot That threats their span of gloom, IS'or lightly quench the spark of life Thou never canst relume. That mystic spark of life ! Respect its lowliest form. For in the great Creator's sight Thou art thyself a worm. APRIL XVIII. "They promised to give him money." Mark, xiv: 11. They promised money, and he mus 'd Upon the tempter's tone. Until the sin at first abhorr'd, Had all familiar grown. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 125 They promised money, and lie gazed Upon the glittering bait, And cast his shuddering conscience in, To make an even weight, They promised money, so he broke The last most sacred tie, And sold the Master whom he served, In cruel pangs to die. Oh ! thou betrayer with a kiss, What will thy money buy, When thou a caitiff corse shalt hang Between the earth and sky? Will money bribe the Eighteous Judge ? Will money pay thy cost? Strong Satan's prison-gates unbar? Or save a soul that's lost? APRIL XIX. "Now abideth Faith, Hope, Charity, these three, but the greatest of these is Charity." 1st Corinthians, xiii : 13. / When along our pilgrim- way - Fears deter, or doubts betray, When by darken'd vale and stream Wild illusive meteors srleam, 11* 126 DAILY COUNSELLOE. And the maze where thousands go, Tempts to mirth, bnt ends in woe, Faith ! — uphold ns, lest we stray, Guide us in our Saviour's way. If the gardens we have drest, Storms despoil, or weeds infest. If the idols of our trust, Fade and fall and turn to dust, If the lips that charm'd our ear Holder in their grave-cloth drear, Hope ! — console us when we sigh, With thine ever-upward eye. When, with failing flesh and heart, For a world unknown we part. Struggling 'mid the fatal strife. At the broken gate of life, Charity ! — Thou greatest ! — speed To our souls in utmost need. Charity ! — Almighty Love ! Bear us in thine arms above. APRIL XX. "The Lord lookeih on the Iieart." 1st Samuel, xvi : 7. When in thy temple, Lord of hosts, With prayerful lip we bow, If every vain and wayward thought Were written on our brow. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 127 And if the searcMng eye of man Might eacli emotion see, And every motive all unveiled, As clearly read by Thee, How would the most familiar friend From his companion start, And neighbor scan the neighbor's face With terror in his heart. Yea, many whom a flattering world Applauds as just and true, Might to the rocks and mountains turn To shield them from its view. But Thou to whose omniscient Eye Our every thought on earth Hath stood uncurtained and revealed, E'en from our day of birth^ How great must thy forbearance be ! How measureless and vast The power of that atoning love Which pardoneth us at last ! APRIL XXL "Which all are to perish with the using." CoLossiANs, ii : 22. The sparkling eye that rul'd the heart Hath lost its magic beam, And in the socket, heavily, Like waning lamp doth gleam. 128 DAILY COUXSELLOR. The wearied ear remits its toil, Eejects tlie music strain, And with the follj of the world, IsTo longer loads the brain. The hand, that with untiring deeds, Did mark the days of old, Now trembleth in its feeble grasp The water-cup to hold. The foot, no more o'er hill and dale Doth keep its vigorous way. But on the cushioned sofa rests, A prisoner, day by day. Even Memory, with a wrinkled brow, Is faltering o'er the page On which she registered her gains From infancy to age. And Fancy faileth in her skill O'er fairy-land to soar. And sadly folds a broken wing. To ride the blast no more. But the sweet spirit's love to man, In Grod its fearless trust. Its zeal to keep a Saviour's law. These fade not into dust. These perish not with use, but grow. Like beaten gold, more bright, — The deathless children of the skies That heavenward take their flight. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 129 APRIL XXII. " For there is hope of a tree, if it be cut down, that it will sprout again, and that the tender branch thereof will not cease." Job, xiv: 7. Ye come in beauty fortli, green Trees ! Ye boast a second bloom, Thougli at jour feet, bj deathful dart The rose and lily of the heart "Were smitten to the tomb. I saw ye, when ye bared your boughs Before the wintry storm, But now ye flaunt in vestments gay. While many a mourner weeps this day The lost and lovely form. Then the trees answer'd, as the breeze Their harp-strings woke to sound, *'Kind Nature's ministers are we. With fragrant balm of sympathy To heal affliction's wound: Yea, more than this. To Faith we say Thus shall the dead arise. And those who sleep in Jesus, burst With joy their prison of the dust I For glory in the skies.' 130 DAILY COUIS'SELLOE. * APRIL XXIII. "Lo, God hath given thee all them that sail with thee." Acts, xxvii : 24. Father ! wlio o'er Time's boisterous tide, A precious bark art steering, Mother! wlio anxious at his side, Each distant storm art hearing, Bind ye the promise to your breast, Thus by the angel spoken? Believe ye that your circle blest Shall gain the port unbroken? Wide sever'd o'er their voyage course, Some idol child ye cherish, 'Mid stranger-seas and billows hoarse, Far from your side may perish, Still trust ye o'er these waves of care To meet in God's communion, And be your life one sleepless prayer To gain that glorious luiion. When stranded on the latest rock. Life's flickering watch-light burneth. And lonely toward that bourne je go. From whence no guest returneth, Then may each bark your love hath launch'd. Gliding with sail unriven, Send forth a seraph soul, to form A "family in heaven." DAILY COUNSELLOR. 131 APKIL XXIV. " It is finished." ^. John, xix : 30. The harp of prophecy was husli'd, Strange tones its mnsic drown, For angel-choirs to Bethlehem's vales With songs of peace came down, And Christ to Calvary went forth, Wearing his thorny crown. Asunder clave the rifted rocks, The quaking earth did wail, Thick darkness came at noon-day upj The shrinking snn to veil, And from the moldering charnel-honse, Stalked forth the tenants pale. ^'-'^ Tis finished P'' cried the Son of God, And yielded up the ghost, '■'■'' Tis finished !^^ echoed far and wide The bright, celestial coast. And man, the sinner, shouted high Amid the ransom'd host. 132 DAILY COUNSELLOR. APRIL XXV. " Looking unto Jesus." Hebrews, xii: 2. Lonely hearted ! — sunk in sorrow, Whom no words of pitj cheer, Unto whom each opening morrow, Still is desolate and drear, Hath the tomb thine idols hidden ? Did the trusted leave thy side ? Were thy fond affections chidden Till each clasping tendril died ? Did thy chosen props deceive thee ? Was thy strong reliance spnrn'd ? Or did stern indifference grieve thee When thy sonl for balm-drops yearn'd ? Look to Jesns, lonely hearted, He thy secret sigh hath heard, He, the scorn'd, — denied, — deserted, By the indebted and endear'd. What, though all the world forsake thee, If His favor on thee shine, He to his embrace will take thee, With a sympathy divine; So shall all earth's tribulation. All its solitude of pain. Minister to thy salvation, Work thine everlasting gain. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 133 APRIL XXYI. " Save me from the Lion's mouth." Psalms, xxii: 21. Shall the form tlie Almiglity molded^ For tlie creature of His care, Shall the spirit He enfolded In such casket, frail and rare, Stain the beauty He imparted Through an appetite of shame? Leave affection broken-hearted. Mourning o'er a tarnished name? Oh ! forbid it, Thou who givest Armor to the tempted soul. Thou, who in Thy glory livest While eternal ages roll ; Through this brief and dark probation,, Keep us from such evil free. Be our Kefuge and Salvation, Till we find a home with Thee. 12 134 DAILY COUNSELLOR. APRIL XXVII. " I am an husbandman." Zachariah, xiii : 5. 'TiS better Earth's fair gifts to take, Of fruits, and corn, and hay, Than in her cold, unwilling arms 'Mid all the pomp of war's alarms Her slanghter'd sons to lay. Better the food of man to win From her consenting mold. Than fiercely, with a miser's zest, Eansack and rend her shrinking breast For glittering stones, or gold. Yes, better that on lowliest tomb The simple phrase appears, — "/am an husbandman^'''' than claim From History's scroll, a despot's name. And rear, though nations call it fame^ A cenota|)h of tears. APRIL XXYIII. " Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings." Psalms, viii: 2. Father of our every blessing. Thou, for whose unceasing care, Heaven and earth are praise addressing Hear thy little children's prayer. DAILY COUNSELLOE. I35 Wisdom witli our stature grant us, Goodness for eacli growing year, Nor let folly's wiles encliant us From our duty's sacred sphere. Father ! may we all inherit The dear Saviour's lowly mind. His serene and loving spirit. Ever truthful, ever kind : So, when life with us is ending, When the pulse forsakes the breast, Shall our happy souls ascending With thy holy angels rest. APRIL XXIX. "Praise waiteth for Thee, Oh God, in Zion " Psalms, Ixv: 1. Thanks for the Sabbath's holy ray ! Which like a chain of gold doth bind More closely to the angel-train. Each lowly and obedient mind. While in their Father's House they meet. Their prayers and praises to repeat. 136 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Thanks for the Gospel's blessed voice ! That lamp from sin and woe to save, Which guides ns through the maze of life And bids the darkness of the grave Glow with a light that can not die, The rainbow of Eternity. Thanks for our lengthen'd span of time, While many a younger one hath fled Like rose-bud, fading ere its prime : Oh Thou ! who from the voiceless dead Repriev'st us still, accept our praise, And write Thy wisdom on our days. APRIL XXX. " Remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said, it is more blessed to give than to receive." Acts, xx: 35. "To give, or to receive, which is most blessed?" Make trial. Friend, if thou dost doubt the word Of Him who spake as man ne'er spake before : — Begin to-day. Do any quake with cold ? Bid the bright fire light up his dreary hut ; DisjDerse thy garments, ere the moth invade; Be tender to the sick ; unfold the page Of knowledge to the uninstructed mind ; Enter the prison, with a voice of cheer ; Lend to the fallen one thy helping hand, DAILY COUNSELLOE. 137 And add no blame; lead the poor wanderer back; Seat tbe lone exile at tby clieerful board ; Be courteous to thy foe ; embrace thy friend ; In thine own home, speak the sweet words of love ; Make the poor house-dog happy; let the ant And every harmless insect pass unscathed In their Great Maker's name; with no barb'd hook, Distress the finny people of the flood ; Nor for thy sport the callow nest bereave, Stifling the song in blood ; draw back the hand That shakes the sharp lash o'er the laboring beast; Eemove the stone that bars the traveler's way ; Make the bare desert blossom ; in each nook Of vacant ground, plant the fruit-bearing tree : Dost ask, for whom ? No matter. God doth know. Learn this first lesson of humanity Daily and well, and thou, perhaps, may'st need ISTo study of the second, for thou'lt know The secret of our pilgrim happiness On earth. The unexacting sympathy That like the rain of Heaven falls sweet on all Doth feed immortal flowers. 12* DAILY COUNSELLOE. 141 MAY I. "Who maketh grass to grow upon the mountains." Psalms, cxlvii: 8. Come forth ! come forth ! at the dewy morn, Come forth to the groves, mid the scented thorn ; There's a rushing of wings through the vernal skj, A gleaming of plumes, like the rainbow's dye. There are gushes of melody, wildly stirred, A chant of love for the brooding bird. And a warbled chorus from tree and spray, Hail to thee. May ! Come, twine a wreath of the earliest green. With cowslip buds and the violet sheen. The daisy is up mid the tufted grass. The king-cup nods as we gliding pass. The fox-glove exults on the hillock's side. And the hyacinth kindles the garden's pride. And their petals thrill, as they whispering say, Hail to thee. May ! List, — ^list to that sound, like the lute's faint sigh. From the shaded dells where the mosses lie ; '' The florist sought, with the spring's first ray. Where his tulip-bulbs and his lilies lay. Yet no man cared for our nameless bed. Where the frost-chain bound us so dark and dread. But He, who rules where the seraphs wait. He remembered us all in our low estate. He quickened our hearts mid the desolate sod, Praise to our God ! " 142 DAILY COUNSELLOE. MAY II. " I fell at his feet to worship him, and he said unto me, — See thou do it not: worship God." Revelation, xix : 10. "Whom did I worsliip in my youtli ? The beautiful, tlie brave, The good, the wise, the just, the kind, - I was their willing slave ; Yet, one by one, to me they spake, We are your fellow- worms, Your brethren, for a Saviour's sake, But not celestial forms ; Yes, one by one, their voice I heard, Even from the burial-sod, — " Eenounce all idols made of clay, And worship only God." MAY III. 'Let there be light." Genesis, i : 3. Light for the drearv vales Of ice-bound Labrador, Where the frost-king breathes on the slippery sails, Till the mariner wakes no more ; Lift high the lamp that never fails, O'er that dark and sterile shore. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 143 Light for the forest child ! An outcast thougli lie be, From the haunts where the sun of his childhood smiled, And the country of the free ; Pour the hope of heaven o'er his desert wild. For what hope on earth has he ? Light on the Hindoo shed ! On the maddening idol train, The flame of the suttee is dire and red, And the fakir faints with pain, And the dying moan on their cheerless bed, By the Granges laved in vain. Light for the Persian sky I The Sophis' wisdom fades, And the pearls of Ormus are poor to buy Armor when death invades. Hark ! hark ! 'tis the Christian teacher's sigh From Ararat's mournful shades. Light for the Burman vales I For the islands of the sea ! For the coast where the slave-ship fills her sails With sighs of agony, And her kidnapped babes the mother wails 'Neath the lone banana tree I Light for the ancient race Exiled from Zion's rest I Homeless they roam from place to place. Benighted and oppressed, They shudder at Sinai's fearful base. Guide them to Calvary's breast. 144 DAILY COUXSELLOE MAY IV. "In the morning, sow thy seed." EccLKSiASTES, xi : 6. When the dews are fresh, and cool, In the morning, sow thy seed. While the bright- wing'd birds of hope Mix their music with the deed, Not at noon, when suns are high And the tares nsnrp the soil, Lest the thistle and the thorn Mar the promise of thy toil : JSTot at evening, when the wain Homeward to the garner goes, And the lengthening shadows fall, And' the reaper seeks repose ; All too late the sowers care While the harvest joys proceed. Parent ! with the dews of prayer, In the morning, sow thy seed. MAY V. "Jly times nre in Thy Hand." Psalms, xxxi: 15. There is a time of birth, The wailing infant's cry, The mother's vearninsr kiss, t/ CD I The strong, unspoken bliss Of young paternity. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 145 There is a time of sport, For merry childhood's train, The gambol and the glee, The blossom on life's tree. That Cometh not again. There is a time of hope, "When youth's affections twine, Mid pleasure's rosy light, Around the fair and bright. Like tendrils of the vine. Oh when Death's sable cloud This scroll of life shall blot, Euler of Sea and Land, My times are in Thy Hand, Forsake me not. MAY VI. "This is the day which the Lord huth made ; — we will rejoice and be glad in it." Psalms, cxviii : 24. Sweet day of rest, — begin ! The week hath had its way, With care and strife and folly's din. And scarce a pause to pray. The week its league hath kept In Mammon's mine to moil, Full wearily its votaries slept, And early rose to toil. ^ 13 146 DAILY COUNSELLOK. At morn, the sowers went Tlieir earthly seed to cast, And some upon the winds were spent To reap the winds at last. With many a sharp regret. And hope that vainly bnrned, 'Mid the stern tasks the World hath set, Have we its lessons learned. The week hath had its fill Of service and of speech, Six days and nights it ruled at will. But one, it shall not reach : We see its dawning gem Grieam o'er the mountain's breast. Kneeling, we kiss its garment's hem, All hail ! sweet Day of rest ! MAY VII. "The Lord will strengthen him upon tiie bed of languishing. Thou wilt make all his bed in his sickness." Psalms, xli : 3. When sickness chains the frame And dims the tearful eye. When tossing in the grasp of pain On sleepless couch I lie. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 147 Thou, who the untold pang did'st bear Of Calvary's torturing tree, Protect mj spirit from despair, Oh Lord, remember me. Eemove the rooted tares That in my bosom spring And threat the tender plants of hope With their enyenom'd sting, Nor let of suffering and of sin, My double burden be, As healer of my soul come in, Oh Lord, remember me. The measure of my days, IIow long I have to live. Is known to Thee, — my strength sustain! For man no help can give, Proportion'd to my pressing need, Let thy compassions be. Have pity on a bruised reed, O Lord, remember me. If far from friends and home Thou will'st that I should die, Make Thou thine holy will mine own, And strength and peace supply, A smitten, yet a trusting soul, Unto Thy feet I flee. And though the darkest billows roll, O Lord, remember me. 148 DAILY COUNSELLOK. MAY YIII. "Lord. I pray Thee, open his eyes, tliat he may see." 2nd Kings, vi : J7 Thou, wlio at tlie prophet's crj, When the Syrian host was nigh To his servant's eye reveal'd Sights from grosser sense concealed, All the hill-top cover'd high, With angelic company, Oh ! to ns, when |}ain or strife, Frowning, hedge the path of life. Deign with mercy's beam to show, Seraph-bands that round ns glow, Heavenly hosts, a shining train, 'Till onr strength revives again, And we dread no mortal foe, Shielded and encompass'd so. When, dejected and alone. In the honr of grief we moan. Comes there not a rushing sigh Of mysterious sympathy. Like their breath, who erst have trod With us, o'er this thorny sod? Father ! whose unresting prayer Propp'd us 'mid our daily care, Mother ! long by sickness bent, Yet with symjoathy unspent. Sister ! Brother ! ever dear. Sharing with us, smile and tear, DAILY COUKSELLOR. 149 Friend ! wlio sate at day's decline, Clasping close our liand in thine, Babe ! who 'neath the spoiler's sting, Cradle chang'd for cherub's wing, Flit ye not, as shadows glide, Grathering fondly to our side? All unseen, for us ye feel. All unseen, our wounds ye heal, Pouring in your spirit-balm. Girding us with angel-arm. Though your features veil'd must be By this cloud- wrought canopy, Though your voice we may not hear. Well we know, you hover near. When in death's dark trance we lie,. Earth receding from our eye, Sad affection's whisper'd word Falling on our ear unheard. Maker of our fainting frame I From whose breath this being came, Wilt thou to our swimming sight Show these ministers of light? Who with snowy pinions spread Waiting for the righteous dead, Bear him through the trackless sky. Where his Saviour's mansions lie, Where, each mortal conflict o'er, He shall need their aid no more. 150 DAILY cou:n"selloe. MAY IX. "Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors." Matthev?, vi : 12. Oh, harden not tliy heart, my Son ! To liuman guilt and woe, For we are sinners every one. And doubtless should be all undone, Did God no mercy show : The boon of pitying kindness share Even with thy bitterest foe, So shalt thou, in thy fervent prayer, To heaven, the great petition dare, Forgive the debt I owe. MAY X. "Take fast hold of instruction, let her not go, keep her, for slie is thj- life." Proverbs, iv: 13. Now, while the buds of hope and jo} On their green stems unfold, Bow to Instruction's voice, and seek For wisdom, more than gold; DAILY COUNSELLOR. 151 Enjoy the flowers that by thy side In life's bright pathway glow, And bid the incense of their pride Back to the Author flow ; And so, the rugged thorns control That round thy footsteps cling, That Christ's sweet spirit in thy soul. May neutralize their sting ; Then shall feir Hope's unsullied wreath. For thee its tints prolong, And earth's frail harp the prelude breathe To heaven's unending song. MAY XI. "All thy works shall praise thee, Oh Lord ! and thy saints shall bless thee." Psalms, cxlv : 10. The first-born rose of vernal prime That opes its bosom rare, In gentle sighs of fragrant breath Awakes its morning prayer : The summer-bird on raptured wing. That cleaves the vaulted sky. Doth to the great Creator pour Its gushing minstrelsy : 152 DAILY COUNSELLOE. Eicli Autumn, with, her fruitful hoard, Her harvests ripening fair, The golden sheaf, and loaded wain, Doth praise the Giver's care : Even Winter in his Sabbath rest Adores the King of might, And every snow flake speaks of Him W ho robes the earth in white. ^ Thou art his servant, mj soul, By birth, by choice, by vow, ; By bounties of each rolling year, — 1 Prove thy allegiance now : Yea, prove it as each passing day ' Unfolds its pinions fleet. 1 By deeds of love, by thoughts of prayer [ By strains of worship sweet : 1 Make this brief life a song of praise 1 W here^er thy lot may be. And learn the language here below t Of heaven's eternity. i V i MAY XII. "He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed." Psalms, cxxvi : 6. The rooted seed o'erpowered the thorn. The weed, the worm, the blight. While the fresh leaf and vigorous corn Successive, cheered the sight : 1 DAILY COUNSELLOR. 153 Wlaat gave so soon the harvest-pride, To life's unfolding years ? The Heavenly Husbandman replied, The seed was steeped in tears. MAY XIII. "He shall doubtless come ag-uin with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him." Psalms, cxxvi : 6 Bear precious seed, and go Forth to thy work of toil, Where'er the unerring Master's hand Shall designate the soil. Perchance in native clime. Perchance beyond the sea, Where'er his wisdom marks the field, That is the place for thee. Though labor mark the path. And grief thy heart assail, Gro fearless forth, and trust in Him Whose promise can not fail. Sow precious seed, in hope ■ Its blessed fruits to see In God's own good, appointed time, That is the time for thee. 154 DAILY COUNSELLOR. ISTor doubt the contrite tear That dews the furrowed claj, Shall multiply the ripened sheaves ' At the great harvest day. MAY XIY. "What lack I yet 7" Matthew, xix: 20. "What lack I yet ?" Oh blinded heart, Buoy'd up by thoughtless pride, Unconscious of thine own desert. And borne on folly's tide. Thou lackest much, couldst thou but see How Heaven's just E}' e regardeth thee, " What lack I yet?" Thy foes can say. And wiser 'twere to heed The thorns they, plant beside thy way Than flattery's hollow reed ; One wakes perchance, to watch and weep. The other lures to dangerous sleep. " What lack I yet ?" Oh, Judge Divine, Low at Thy feet I fall. Poor, needy Creature ! prone to sin And destitute of all That might commend my soul to Thee Save helplessness and misery. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 155 MAY XV. "I will sing aloud of thy mercy in the morning." Psalms, lix : 16. How sweet to meet the vernal rays, Wlien fresli from Heaven tliey dart, And while retreating Winter cold Unchains the prisoned flower, to hold Communion with the heart. To ask it whence its fondest hopes, Its deepest cares proceed, What wakes the cherish'd fount of joj. What chosen theme its prayers employ. Or stir its pitying deed, Eemind it of the bounteous Hand That still its life sustains, And bids the crimson tide of health With all its superflux of wealth Flow through the bounding veins. And as the mists on pinions white. From vale and thicket rise. Innate its powers o'er eartli to soar. And with enkindling warmth adore The Ruler of the skies. Even as the birds from spray to spray Responsive carols sing. Bid it attune its inward lyre And with Creation's hymn conspire To praise Creation's king. 156 DAILY COUXSELLOE. vMAY XVI. "We shall all be chiingetl." 1st Corinthians, xv : 51. Oh speak of Deatli, But as the passage from one pleasant room Unto another, in our Father's House : A higher and a better, so we trust. — And if that way seem dark, what matters it ? Faith hath a lamp to light it, and we hold Fast bj His hand, who is " the truth and life " While thro' the vista, sigh the soft, sweet tones, Of those who went before us, — " Hail ! all hail, Come dear ones, — clasp our hands and part no more. MAY XYII. "When thou pnssest through the waters, I will be with thee." Isaiah, xliii : 2. Old Ocean hath a fearful path Across his heaving breast The might of beauty, and of wrath Is on his briny crest. Yet tho' his hoarsest thunders roll Go forth, devoid of care. The precious promise in thy soul That God is with thee there. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 157 Storms on tlie deep ! — The clouds grow dark, The mocking winds arise, Fierce billows threat the trembling bark. And rock to surge replies, Thou hast a fortress, trusting soul. Thou hast a shield of prayer, A God, whose word the waves control, Is He not with thee, there ? And when, once more, thy native land In outline dimly sweet, Shall as a beckoning Angel stand Thy watchful eye to greet. And when thy welcom'd feet shall tread Thy home, like Eden fair, Joy's grateful garland round thy head, May Grod be with thee there. MAY XVIII. "How earnest thou in hither, — not having a wedding garment 1 " Matthew, xxii: 12, Grant me a wedding garment. My Saviour and my King, As to Thy Sacramental board My trembling vows I bring ! Oh ! if I have a passport Here, with Thy saints to press, And break the bread, and taste the cup That Thou on earth didst bless, 14 158 DAILY COUNSELLOR. And if I have a promise O'er tliis frail flesli to rise, And sliare a glorious banquet, spread Eternal in tlie skies, Wliere past is every sorrow, And foiled the spoiler's sting, Grant me the wedding garment, now, My Saviour and my King. MAY m. "Jesus said, wherefore didst thou doubt ?" ^Jatthew, xiv : 31. What have I with doubt to do? Is my Saviour strong to save? Hath he crush'd the spoiler's sting? Snatch'd the victory from the grave? Saith He, in his Holy Word, "Whoso Cometh unto me. Shall in no wise be cast out?" Is His 2:)romise true as free? Is the fitness He requireth. Earnestly to seek His face. Feel our need,^ — repent our folly, And receive the boundless grace? DAILY COUNSELLOE. 159 Shall we tlien distrust Plis goodness? Shall we disobey His voice? Sliun the light, and walk in darkness When He bids us to rejoice? Shall we bow in heathen sorrow Mourning all our journey through? Fearing, murmuring, disbelieving? What have we with dou.bt to do? MAY XX. "Wherefore I praised the dead, which are already dead^ more than the living, which are yet alive " EccLESiASTES, iv : 2. They dread no storms that lower, JSTo perish'd joys bewail, They pluck no thorn-clad flower Nor drink of streams that fail, There is no tear-drop in their eye, No change upon their brow, Their placid bosom heaves no sigh. Though all earth's idols bow. Who are so greatly blest ? From whom hath sorrow fled? Who share such deep, unbroken rest Where all things toil ? The dead ! The holy dead. Why weep ye so Above yon sable bier? Thrice blessed ! they have done with woe, The living claim the tear. 160 DAILY COUNSELLOK. Go to tiieir sleeping bowers, Deck their low couch of clay ^ With earliest spring's soft-breathing flowers: And when they fade away, Think of the amaranthine wreath, The garlands never dim. And tell me, why thou fly'st from death, Or hid'st thy friends from him. We dream, — but they awake; Dread visions mar our rest; Through thorns and snares our way we take. And yet we mourn the blest ! For spirits round the Eternal Throne, How vain the tears we shed, They are the living, — they alone Whom thus we call the dead ! MAY XXI. "Lord, I believe." Mark, ix: 24. "Lord, I believe!" the father cried. His suffering child who brought. And movVl by agonizing love, Eestoring mercy sought. And still, the urgency of prayer Blent with his tide of grief. And tremblino; tears bcdew'd the words " Lord, help my unbelief! " DAILY COUNSELLOR. 161 Then, with that contrite cry for aid Which from the spirit burst, The faith was born, which casts away All self-reliant trust, Which resteth not in cold assent, Or reason's lifeless form. But meekly bears a Saviour's cross, In sunshine, or in storm. And, tho' the clouds of mystery frown Around this darken' d vale, Still waits, and walks, and works by love, The faith that can not fail. MAY XXII. " Help thou mine unbelief." Mark, ix: 24. When musing where are lifeless laid The idols of our trust. Close sealed in death's sepulchral shade, And moldering into dust, Yet hearing they shall rise afresh From their consuming bed. And every bone be clothed with flesh On which the worms had fed, If still beside the tomb we bend, In desolating grief. And deeply mourn the buried friend, Lord, help our unbelief. 14* 162 DAILY COUXSELLOE. When on our sins, from clay to day, With trembling fear we look, And know that every evil thought Hath record in Thy book, And feel our ingrate hearts each hour Thy love and precepts spurn, And to the false delights of earth With treacherous ardor turn. Yet hear Thee offer heaven to those Who are of sinners chief, — 'Mid all our wanderings, all our woes, Lord, help our unbelief. MAY XXllI. 'Nevertheless, not as I will, but as Thou wilt." Matthew, xxvi : 39. Thou lovest well thine own blind way, Poor heart of sin, and pain ! Though frail thy purpose of a day. And all thy wisdom vain. Thou shrinkest from the fires that cross Th}^ temper, and thy joy. And purge away the blackening dross That would thy gold alloy, Thou trembl-est at the blasts that sweep Thine airy castles down. Though there in wealth and pride to sleep Might be to lose thy crown, DAILY COUNSELLOK. 163 Thou at the piercing thorn dost start, The yoke revolting bear, Unmindful that affliction's dart Doth mark a Father's care: Oh! rather His unerring test With filial prayer endure. Believing that His will is best, And every promise sure. MAY XXIY. " Defend the poor nnd fatlierless." Psalms, Ixxxii : 3. Many a gift doth Love bestow, On the sons of want and woe. As with pity by her side, O'er the earth her footsteps glide, Yet she seems amid her care. Most an angel's form to wear. When she bends in meekness low O'er the lonely orphan's woe. Heaven-born Charity doth take Many a form, for Jesus' sake. O'er the mountain and the wave. Wide she speeds to heal and save ; But the hearts that feel her power And within their own sweet bower Deign to bless the orphan's lot, Shall not be by Grod forgot. 154 DAILY COUNSELLOR. MAY XXY. " My voice shalt Thou hear in the morning." Psalms, v : 3. I Praise to onr Fatlier, God, Witli tlie first dawning ligbt, WIlo watcliM drew his angel-guard Around us tlirougli the night, And while so many die, Or lost in anguish, weep. Or on the couch of suffering lie, Gave us His blessed sleejD. "With every leaf that springs Fresh from the nightly shower, "With every bird that waking sings Amid its nested bower. May our heart-prompted strain Harmoniously ascend, Until through Christ's dear love we gain The life that hath no end. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 165 MAY XXYI. "God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness." 2nd Corinthians, iv : 6. Midnight on tlie stormy ocean I Tumult mid the blast and wave Every shrieking shroud in motion None to succor, none to save, Every star in terror hiding, Every refuge wrapped in gloom, And a slender plank dividing From the drear and watery tomb. Still, oh Lord, thy mercy liveth. Thy compassion answereth prayer. And Thy blest remembrance giveth Solace mid that deep despair. Midnight, and the time of weeping! Wild the tides of anguish roll. Pain and grief like sentries keeping Gruard above the prostrate soul. Sympathy is weak to aid it, Earthly comforters are vain. Only he, the God who made it, Can its agony restrain : Then his love, with strong dominion, And his truth's resistless sway. Like an angel's radiant pinion, Turneth darkness into day. 166 DAILY COUNSELLOE. MAY XXVII. " He will beautify the meek with salvation." Psalms, cxlix : 4. Whom will our Father beautify? Those whom the world call great, Who, clad in silk and purple, boast Their pomp of high estate ? Whom will our Father beautify? The young, the fair, the brave? A garland on their brow they bear That withers at the grave : But with approval of the skies That language fails to speak, He deigns to robe the lowly soul, And beautify the meek. MAY XXVIII. "He shall be like the heath in the desert, and shall not see when good cometh." Jeremiah, xvii: 6 There falls a bless'd rain on the desolate scene. The long- withered herbage is healthful and green, ISTew verdure replaces the bramble and thorn. In dry, sterile regions fresh fountains are born, The murmur of streamlets rejoices the ear, Wake, heath of the desert, — salvation is near. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 167 There breathes a soft wind o'er the bones of the slain, It hath clothed them with flesh, thej are living again, Like the host of the Lord, in bright armor they stand. Their banners float out, at His word of command, The wilderness smiles on their gorgeous array. Wake, heath of the desert, and welcome their way. There sweeps a black cloud o'er the blue of the sky, Hoarse thunders are threatening, the tempest draws nigh. The chariot of Grod rolleth on in its ire. The mountains are humbled, the vallies aspire. Hark! — the scorner, the slumberer, their folly deplore. Wake, heath of the desert, ere time be no more. MAY XXIX. "A day in Thy courts is better tiian a thousand." Psalms, Ixxxiv : 10. Hail ! consecrated spot. Here would I choose my lot Of Sabbath praise. Until his icv hand, Who cuts this mortal band, Shall close my days. Oh! holy men of prayer Let me your worship share, Until I see Yon hosts in glorious light. Yon angels robed in white, A goodly company, 168 DAILY COUNSELLOE, Until my raptured ear Eternal songs slaall hear With harpings blest, And in the Church above, "Whose ritual is love, Find perfect rest. MAY XXX "Giving thanks always, for all things." ErHKSiAXS, v: 20. Lord of the bird, and the green leaf, that pour Their vernal matin forth in bud, and song. Dost thou not claim from the frail, human heart The same fresh incense, oft withheld too long? Dost thou not bid, when the wild storm is past. That it should yield to Thee, with tearful trust, Each cherish'd tendril smitten by the blast. Each riven blossom humbled in the dust? And firm in cheerful and confiding hope, Admit the wisdom that it fails to see. And from its sackcloth and its ashes raise A strain of prayerful melody to Thee, Offering with equal faith and equal praise The sunbeam, or the cloud that marks its fleeting days? DAILY COUNSELLOR. 169 MAY XXXI. "Then I said, I shall die in my nest." Job, xxix : 18. Die in tliy nest? How know'st.tliou? Who liatli given Promise like this? Did the stern Arclier make Such reservation? Will he keep the pledge? His office is to smite, and not to hold Parley with any one of woman born. Die in thy nest? Why, from thy wandering course O'er vale, or ocean, to a stranger clime, Or even thy daily range among the flowers, Who told thee that thou shouldst return again? Thy nest? Some have come home and found no nest. Bough wreck'd by winds, tree broken, birdlings gone, Forest uprooted, and the very name Forgotten, that was once a household song. Death hath a swift wing, that overmastereth thine. And reaps austerely, where he ne'er hath strewn. So, trust not, brother, a reprieve from him. But with a victor's eye, above his power. Leave when and where to God, and be content. 15 DAILY COUNSELLOR. 173 JUNE I. « The Lord is my Shepherd." Psalms, xxlii: 1. "Who is thy Shepherd, sportive Lamb? Mid the bright vernal scene, Dipping thy foot in the waters still, And gamboling wide at thine own sweet will Over the pastures green? Frosts will come, fountains fail. Drifted snows load the vale; Lamb! when wintry tempests roll Who will shield thee from the cold? Christ is the Shepherd of thy soul. Come to his fold. Who is thy Shepherd, wandering Sheep ? Love, with his ardent eye? Wealth, leaning on a wand of gold? Power, in his palace, sternly cold? Fame, with the clarion-cry? Love changes, Wealth cheats, Power falters, Fame fleets. O'er summer skies, wild tempests roll, The gauds of earth grow dim; Christ is the Shepherd of thy soul. Follow thou Him. 15* 174 DAILY COUNSELLOR. JUNE II. " Delight thyself also in the Lord, and He shall give thee the desires of thine heart." Psalms, xxxvii : 4. Daughter, tlie book divine To wliicli we turn for aid, Wlien prosperous skies unclouded shine, Or dark-wing'd storms invade, Is ever open to thine eye, Imprint it on thy soul, And wisdom that can never die Shall thy young thoughts control. Sweetest, the cheek of bloom, Alas ! how soon 'twill wear The clay-cold coloring of the tomb ; Then, while thine own is fair. Low at His feet imploring fall. Who loves the humble mind, TVhose glorious promise is, that all Who early seek, shall find. Come, ere thy hand hath wove The first fresh wreaths of Spring, Come, ere a worn and withered love Is all thou hast to bring, Eemcmber ihj Creator's power. While life from care is free, And when the days of darkness lower, He will remember thee. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 175 Yes, give tliy heart to Him, While budding hope is green, And when thy mother's eye is dim To every earthly scene. When this fond arm that circles thee, Must chill and powerless lie, Our parting tear the pledge shall be Of union in the sky. JUNE in. "Idle in the market-plnce " Matthew, xx: 3. Idle in the r}%arhet-place ! Poor day -laborer, can this be? Who thy daily bread shall earn? Who thy wages give to thee ? Idle in the marhet-place ! When the wearied reapers bend, Wrestling with the bearded wheat. And the harvest soon will end? When the ripened field is wide, And the morning flies apace, How, contented, canst thou stand Idle in the market-place? 15* 176 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Listen to the toiling ant: " Work," slie murmuretli, " and be wise ; " ''Work," the unresting waters say; "Work," the fruitful earth replies. Nature in a thousand forms Gives thee counsel, not in vain; Heaven, that highest teacher, cries, " TForZ;," and thj salvation gain. JUNE lY. "He hath made even' thing beautiful in his time." EccLEsiASTES, iii: 11. Oh, God ! how beautiful is Earth, In sunbeam or in shade : Her forests with their waving arch; Her flowers that gem the glade; Her hillocks white with fleecy flocks; Her fields w^ith grain that glow; Her sparkling streamlets, deep and broad. That through the valleys flow; Her crested waves that clasp the shore, And lift their anthem loud; Her mountains, with their solemn brows, That woo the yielding cloud. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 177 Oh, God ! liow beautiful is Life, That Thou dost lend its here, So cheered with hopes that line the cloud, And joys that gem the tear; With cradle-hymns of mothers young, And tread of youthful feet, That scarce in their elastic bound Bow down the grass-flowers sweet; With brightness round the pilgrim's staff. Who at the setting sun Beholds the golden gate thrown wide. And all his work well done. But if this Earth, which changes mar, This life, to death that leads. Are made so beautiful by Him, From whom all good proceeds. How glorious must that region be Where all the pure and blest, From every fear and sorrow free, Attain unbroken rest. JUNE V. " And Gideon came to Jordon, and passed over, he, and the three liundred men that weTe with him, faint, yet pursuing." Judges, yjii,: 4. Of the crystal streamlet taste. Warriors, in your eager haste, Here refresh your wearied line, Ere in battle-strife ye join. 178 DAILY COUNSELLOE. Some upon tlie verdant strand, Scoop the water with their hand, Others, on their knees supine. For a deeper draught inchne. But their chieftain standing bj, Mark'd them with an eagle-eye, And his heaving bosom lir'd, As he spake the doom inspir'd. "By the few who scoop'd the wave. Shall our Grod, his Israel save, On, ye chosen, on with me, Yours the toil, the victory." Small the band, yet on they prest, Heaven's own courage in their breast, And the strong and haughty foe. Covering all the vale below. At their onset bold and hio-h. At their trumpet's fearful cry Prince, and chariot, turn'd and fled, Helpless in that hour of dread. Soldiers of a glorious head. While this leagur'd earth ye tread, Lightly taste of pleasure's wave. Bow not down like passion's slave, Lest, while others watchful stand, Ye forget the promis'd land. And thy Leader's voice decree Joy to them and shame to thee. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 179 JUNE VI. "Why seek ye the living, among the dead?" Luke, xxiv: 5. Ye lock tlie vault, ye bar the tomb, And to tlieir keeping drear Commit the precious treasure, borne Upon the sable bier, But that which made your idol dear, The essence so refined, , That woke the sigh, the smile, the tear, The Soulj ye may not bind. Again ye come, — the hoarded gem O'er which ye rear'd with care The marble arch, the fretted shrine. The sculptur'd column rare. Where is it? lo! what fearful change! The flesh hath mock'd your trust, The bone its fellow bone forsook, And moldering turn'd to dust. Thus o'er the close-seal'd tomb, where erst The Lord of glory slept. The Eoman soldiers, still, and stern. Their sleepless vigil kept. Dawn came, the affrighted watchmen quail'd The buried form had fled. And griev'd affection vainly sought The living 'mid the dead. 180 DAILY COUXSELLOK. JUNE VII. " The Lord watch between me and thee, when we are absent one from another." Genesis, xxxi : 49. Not of the boisterous sea, Kot of the temj^est's power, Not of the long and wearj way, Speak at this sacred hour. Not of the pirate's steel, God of the traveler, hear! And from our parting cup of love Wring out these dregs of fear. Art thou a God at home. Where the bright fireside smiles, And not abroad upon the wave, 'Mid danger's darkest wiles? What though the eyes so dear To distant regions turn, Their tender language in our hearts Like vestal fire shall burn: What though the tones belov'd Eespond not to our pain, We'll keep their music in the soul Until we meet again. Farewell! we're travelers all, With one blest goal in view, One rest, one everlasting home Sweet friends, a sweet adieu I DAILY COUNSELLOR. 181 JUNE VIII. " Peace, — be still." Mark, iv : 39. A STORM upon Judea's lake ! Thunder amid the Mils ! Winds and waves to warfare wake ! The ship with water fills ! *' Master! Master! carest Thou not That we perish ? " Look ! Behold I Clouds no more the welkin blot, Baffled are the surges bold, For in energy of will He hath risen from his sleep, He hath said unto the deep. Peace ! Be still. A tempest in the soul ! O'er swelling billows tost. The passions rage and roll, Alas ! the helm is lost ! '' Master! Master! wilt Thou see Shipwreck, and withhold thy care? Let thy foes triumphant be ? Leave the erring to despair?" Lo, — His deeds His word fulfill. For He breaks their tyrant sway. And His heavenly accents say. Peace ! Be still ! 16 182 DAILY COUNSELLOK. JUNE IX. "It is better to trust in the Lord, than to put confidence in man." Psalms, cxviii: 8. Put confidence in man, And thou, percliance, maj'st know The shelter of the driven leaf When whelming whirlwinds blow, The sympathy that gleams From the cold, frosted eye When double-minded friendship lays Its Protean vestment by. Put confidence in man. And thou, perchance, wilt see The riven tendrils of the vine Symbolical of thee. While on the withering buds That in thy heart were bred The foot of Love, to Hatred turn'd, All pitiless shall tread. Put confidence in man. And thou, perchance, shalt feel How keen ingratitude may edge The insidious traitor's steel, And while thy spirit shrinks Astonish'd and afraid. Oh ! put thy confidence in God, And never be dismpj:'d. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 188 JUNE X. " I looked on my right hand, and beheld, but there was no man that would know me." Psalms, cxlii: 5. "Ko man would know thee !" Why was this, King of the Ijre, on Salem's height? Had sorrow so thy visage marr'd? Or changeful friendship dimm'd their sight? They knew thee well on Israel's throne, When humbled foe and captive quail' d. But in thy flight from rebel power Their Shimei-memories strangely fail'd. They knew thee well, in flattery 's hour. And prais'd thee loud with loyal lips. But mid Adullam's dreary cave Their fond affections found eclipse. Yet not to thee alone, oh, king. Is such forgetfulness coufin'd For still do ebbing fortunes bring Effaced impressions o'er th« mind. But thou didst know what Friend was thine, When earth's deceptive props forsook. And deeply grave that truth divine. Our lesson in thy holy book ; So, should it be our lot to learn How love declines, as fortunes wane, May we, like thee, confiding turn Where none shall ever trust in vain. I IStt DAILY COUNSELLOR. JUNE XL "I will joy in the God of niy salvatiou." Habakkuk, iii : 18. Salvation is my tlieme, High, praise my blest employ, Sadness is treason, in His realm Whose spirit calls to joy. Nature obeys His voice, Her fountains freely flow, The leaping streamlets wake the flowers, Eejoicing as they go. Even insect-life is glad. Birds spread the raptur'd wing, The lambkins in green pastures play, The whitening harvests sing. Then why should deathless mind Mourn o'er its earthly span ? Sorrow and silence mar the lot God meteth out to man. Three teachers seek his love. Their precepts form his creed, Meek Joy, and true Humility To heavenly Wisdom lead : And yet three other guides Are to the pilgrim given. Firm Faith, and clear-eyed Hope, lead on To Charity, and Heaven. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 185 JUNE XII. " There came out two women, and the wind was in their wings." Zechariah, V : 9. O'er realms of Fancy broad and bright, Where wild romance beld sway, Like butterflies, 'mid countless flowers They took their devious way, ISTow high, now low, disdaining all Eeality of things. Above this work-day world they flew, "The wind was in their wings." Where glittering tides of fashion roll, And gorgeous barges ride, Whose silken pennons court the gale, In revelry and pride. Where useful industry is scorn'd, And syren pleasure sings. Without a helm their sails they spread, " The wind was in their wings." But Fancy show'd a different phase, Coquettish in her mood, And all becalmed the barges lay, On Luxury's ebbing flood, And Wealth withdrew the golden spoil To which its votary clings, And those gay creatures droop'd, — ^no more "The wind was in their winsrs." 16* 186 DAILY COUNSELLOR. So, since this life is not a farce Where painted puppets play, "We fain would act an useful part With firmness, day by day, Kor falter when an adverse shade Dark disappointment flings, Even though the prosperous winds withhold Their impulse from our win^s. JUNE XIII. " Ask now the beasts, and they shall teach thee, — and the fowls of the air, and they shall tell thee." Job, xii: 7. The wild bee o'er the prairie Sought honey for her hive, The stream came singing from the rock As though it were alive, While the solemn mountain frowning Beheld its devious wayj , And like a Mentor, old and stern, Reproved the thoughtless play. The crimson oriole flaunted Like lover through the glade, And paid gay homage to the flowers In beauty's garb array'd ; But lightly there before him The humming-bird would rove. While bud and bell with rapture thrilled To meet his kiss of love. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 187 The beetle and the butterfly Met on their glittering track, The snail moved onward, slow and sure, His house upon his back ; And life to all was beautiful. As, like the jeweled ray, They gleamed in Nature's joyance sweet On that bright summer's day. Oh, frail and winged creatures ! That perish in an hour, Methinks ye are our teachers. Mid all our pomp and power. Mid all our vaunt of learning. Mid all our pride of sway. Be pitiful, and teach us Before ye pass away. How to be simply happy Amid a world so fair, And in the confidence of trust Accept our Father's care. JUNE XIV. "They have laid their swords under their heads." EzEKiEL, xxxii: 27. Under their heads they have laid their swords. Who turn'd the nations pale. With the threat and boast of their banner' d host, And their masses of moving mail. 188 DAILY COUKSELLOE. At their stern command mov'd tlie warrior band, The soldier struck his tent, And with stifled sigh from his home to die The youthful conscript went, They stirr'd the sleep of the desert deep With trumpet and battle-cry, Scattering men's bones mid the sands and stones To bleach 'neath a wintry sky. The wave of their hand was the law of the land Where their conquering legions swept, Like the voice of a god was their tyrant nod, Yet they slumber in dust, unwept. Under their swords they have laid their heads, They shall trouble the earth no more, They molder away, like the coarsest clay Of the serf that their livery wore, No vine they bade, with its clustering shade, O'er the quiet hillocks spread. But they ravaged the plain with its ripening grain That the poor man's children fed. They led the fire over tower and spire And village in rural pride, They drench' d the soil with the blood of toil Till it shrank from the loathed tide. They have gone, they are fled, like a dream they have sjDed, They have acted their gorgeous part. They have left a name on the tomb of fame. And a curse in the living heart. DAILY COUXSELLOE. 189 JUNE XV. ' "No man knoweth of his sepulcher unto this day." Deuteronomy, xxxiv : 6. Lawg-iver of tlie Hebrews ! — wlio didst stand On Sinai's summit, face to face witli Grod, And thence descending, all majestic bear Tlie sacred tablets, by His finger traced, A glory on thy brow, that kept aloof The awe-struck people, — is thy hallow'd tomb Un visited, unchronicled, unknown ? How many an eye amid the shaded dells And clustering terebinths of Moab, sought That place of rest, in vain. 'Twas not for man To find the angel-buried. Age on age Swept by in long procession, and went down. And men of doubtful name, superbly rear'd High towering obelisk and monument For their own sculptur'd ef&gies, but still None knoweth of thy sepulcher. 'Tis well,— What if they did ? 'Twere nothing unto thee, And unto them, but little. Thou hast left Thine epitaph in deeds, that all may read, And words of wisdom, in the Book Divine. So teach us, Spirit of all G-race, to hold The casket for our clay of small account. But bid our living Memory, clad in robes Of truth and goodness, walk its daily round Among mankind, and point their souls to Thee. 190 DAILY COUNSELLOR. JUNE XVI. 'Mountains, whereon grow roses and lilies, whereby I will fill thy children with joy." 2nd Esdras, ii: 19. When thou walkest in the fields, Father ! with thy listening son, Point him where the mountain's head Hath its towering grandeur won, Where the lofty groves aspire, Where the solemn forests nod, And upon their living arch Eaise his plastic mind to Grod. When thou walkest by the way, Mother ! with thy little one. Where the sweet, wild roses grow, Where the uncultured lilies run, Show her how their colors grow, How their baby -blossoms start. Till their fragrance and their bloom Touch the rapture of her heart. Tell her then, that He who spread All these beauties in His love. Seeks His children thus to train For a higher bliss above. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 191 JUNE XYII. " The Sabbath wns mtide for mim." Mark, ii : 27. Assist us, Lord, this sacred morn Wliich Thou hast made so fair, On wings of holy thought to rise, Where saints and angels are, We may not in our feeble speech Describe their blest employ, Nor with these darken'd eyes descry Their plenitude of joy. We only know, in love they dwell. In day that hath no night, We know Thy glory is their praise, Thy service their delight, And may we, with obedient care So frame our lives below. And so, to all whom thou hast made Such christian kindness show, That as our earthly Sabbaths here Glide by on rapid wing, Each one may fit us more and more, Amid their choir to sing. 192 DAILY COUls'SELLOE, JUNE XYIII. "Pride goeth before destruction, and a hnughty spirit before a fall." Proverbs, xvi : 18. Peide, take tliy fated cup, — the insidious world Hatli drugg'd it for tliee, tho' lier brow was bright, Yea, while her lip with promis'd bliss is curl'd She ofttime mingieth wine with aconite : Athens of old, her sentenced victim bade After his hemlock draught, to walk about Until his limbs grew weary, and he made His last repose. So shall thy date run out ; But yet repine not. Thou hast had thy will. Life's pomp and gaud, its tinsel and its plume, Didst thou not choose of these to take thy fill, Scorning the humble who, 'mid blight or bloom, Kept on their narrow path by rock and thorn, And meekly bow'd the knee unto the manger-born ? JUNE XIX. " Rejoice evermore." 1st Thessalonians, V : 16. Eejoice, true follower of our Lord, If not in earthly gain, Eequited love, exulting power. Or fashion's gaudy train, DAILY COUNSELLOR. 193 Yet, in the work of prayer and praise, In faith that never dies, The patient, nndelusive hope That builds above the skies. And when the solemn Angel comes, That silent, loving guide. Who opes the spirit-gate that leads To our Eedeemer's side, Lay thy cold hand without a fear On his dark wing, and soar. Where saints and seraphs round the Throne Eejoice for evermore. JUNE XX. "Jesus said, — Neither do 1 condemn thee: go and sin no more," John, viii: 11 Yes ! look to Heaven. Earth scorns to lend Eefuge, or ray thy steps to guide ; Bids pity with suspicion blend, And slander check compassion's tide. We will not ask, what thorn hath found Admittance to thy bosom fair. If love hath dealt a traitor's wound. Or hopeless folly woke despair : 194 DAILY COUNSELLOR. We only say, tliat sinless clime, To which is raised thy timid eye, Hath pardon for the deepest crime. Though erring man that doom deny : "We only say, the prayerfal breast. The gushing tear of contrite pain. Have power to ope that portal blest, Where vaunting pride must toil in vain. JUNE XXL "The shadow of a great rock in a weary land." Isaiah, xxxii : 2. High noon at summer, and the solstice burns Unmitigated, with a tropic heat. To curtain'd nest the songless warbler turns, The pastured herds to shrinking brooks retreat, The parch'd earth cracks, the red-brow'd farmer throws His hoe upon the corn-hills where he wrought, And 'neath the elm tree seeks an hour's repose Or from his canteen quaffs the home-brew'd draught. But thou, oh thirsting heart of man, still flying To broken cisterns for relief uufound. Yet on the flattery of the world relying That with its spear-point aims a deadly wound. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 195 Hide in tlie shadow of that Eock of trust, Jehovali's ISTame ! — wMch stands when all beside is dnst. JUNE XXII. " They weave the spider's web." TsAiAH, lix: 5. They toil by day, tliey toil by night, Stay not for weariness or storm, And from their vital being draw The filmy threads their web that form, They cast it wide from spray to spray, On spoil intent, to wisdom blind. And sacrifice for glittering store The welfare of the immortal mind. But sudden, as a touch destroys The spider's web, enwrought with care. And leaves its tapestry to float In shapeless tatters on the air. So shall their hope, who build on earth. And fear not Grod, like visions fly When fortune waves her fickle wand Or death each work of man shall try. Oh grant us grace, our God and King, Not on the spider's web to trust. But rear the columns of our faith Above this realm of change and dust. 196 DAILY COUjS'SELLOR. JUNE XXIII. "They thirsted not, when he led them through the desert." Isaiah, xlviii : 21. \ "When wandering long, 'mid lone and parcHng sands The tribes of Israel took their exil'd way, Whence fonnd they water for their numerous bands, Their thirst to slake, their fainting life to stay ? For them He clave the rock, He burst the cloud. Bade guards of angels shield their peril'd lot, Even though to other gods the knee they bow'd, And oft their debt of gratitude forgot. There are, who on this pilgrimage of time Where arid wastes in long succession lie, Keep ever in their souls the silver chime Of a fresh fountain's gushing melody : That fountain is of God, it can not fail. But cheers their heavenward course, through all life's desert vale. JUNE XXIV. •'Until the day break, and the shndows flee uway." Song of Solomon, iv: 6. We have laid thee dawn, our darling, on pillow dark and cold. And Winter in his frosty shroud thy cherish'd form must fold, DAILY COUNSELLOE, 197 But Spring shall haste with fairy foot the broken turf to tread And bid her earliest violets weave their broidery round thy bed, Grlad Summer shall remember thee with all her wealth of bloom, And Autumn strew his berries red around thy vine-clad tomb. So here, while Nature's richest gifts adorn thy burial clay. Wait, dearest, till the day shall break and the shadows flee away. 'Tis lonely here, my precious one, tho' many dwell around. In costly cells of marble white, or cloistered neath the ground, Yet none unseal the stony eye, none heave the rigid breast. Or stretch the icy hand to greet the coming of a guest ; But the archangel's trumpet-cry shall raise that slumbering throng. And from their beds the saints arise, to swell salvation's song. So, in the firm and glorious hope of that rejoicing day, Eest peaceful, till the morn shall break and the shadows flee away. 17* 198 DAILY COUKSELLOR. JUNE XXY. "Loving favor, rather than silver nnd gold." Proverbs, xxii: 1. Take back jour gold, and give me love, The earnest smile, The heart- voice that can conquer pain, And care beguile. Take back jour silver, whence it came, It leads to strife ; A woman's nature feeds on love. Love is its life. Take back jour silver, and jour gold, Their gain is loss ; But bring me love, for love is heaven, And thej are dross. JUNE XXVI. " The emptiers have emptied them out, and marred tlieir vine-hranches." Nahum, ii : 2. A CHILD was wildlj weeping While rosj morning sped, She came to feed her cherished bird, That cherished bird was dead. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 19^ Yes, there it lay recumbent, Shut eye and open beak, In vain she smoothed its ruffled plumes, And pressed them to her cheek. Alas, poor sobbing mourner, Slight cause to us it seems For such a whelming grief to flow In agonizing streams, Yet as we journey onward. With added strength to bear The withering of the gourds that cheer Our pilgrimage of care, Oft from our walls suspended, And bathed in sorrow's tide. Is counted many an empty cage Where our hearts' birdlings died. JUNE XXVII. "The Lord weighelh the spirits." Proverbs, xvi : 2. Man weigheth gold, — each fragment slight, Each atom of its glittering dust, He, in the well-pois'd balance lays. And marks with unforsjetful trust. 200 DAILY COUKSELLOR. Man weighetli words, — the fleeting breath That's coin'd within this mortal frame, May waken anger unto death, Or kindle love's exulting flame. God weigheth spirits. Oh ! beware, Ye who in guile your sins enshroud, There is a Hand ye can not scape, A sun-ray rends the thickest cloud; And when the gold the rust shall eat, The tongue be silent in the tomb. The motives of the secret soul Grive verdict in the day of doom. JUNE XXVIII. "The root of the righteous shall not be moved." Proverbs, xii: 3. A TEMPEST 'mid the grove! "Wild are the sounds of woe, The kingly tree that tower'd so long, Is crush'd amid the noteless throng. The crown of power lies low. Out bursts the raging flame ! In whirhng eddies toss'd, From costly roof to roof it springs, Distruction on its reddening wings, The pride of wealth is lost. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 201 "Wide o'er the sea of time Floats on tlie blast of fame, In dust, the sliatter'd column shines, And lo! the pyramid declines To tell its founder's name. There's peril in the earth, There's peril on the wave. But he, who hath his root in truth. And heavenward turns thro' age and youth, A God of truth shall save. JUNE XXIX. "Tears are on her cheeks." Lamentations, i: 2. When infant innocence is grieved, And hath not power to say. In words, the import of its pain. What giveth utterance way ? When tides of unexpected joy Like mountain billows came. What tells the rapture of the heart. Though speech itself is dumb ? When pent within a secret cell The agony of grief, Upheaving, threats the springs of life, What lends the soul relief? 202 DAILY COUKSELLOE. Wlien Folly to Contrition turns And seeks a Saviour's love, "WTiat flows in crystal from the eye. Awakening lyres above? 'Twas Mercy's Angel gave the boon To pilgrim wanderers here, And when she shed it o'er their brow Call'd the pure gem, — a tear. JUNE XXX. "This is the rest, wherewith ye may cause the weary to rest, and this is the refreshing." Isaiah, xsviii: 12. Wheee is the rest, my Lord? Where the refreshing, in this wilderness? Toils press, cares cluster, disappointments vex, Tried Friendship cheats our trust, Love fleets away, Cold or forgetfal, and pale Memory strives To hide her tear- wet scroll. Famish'd and faint, Apples of Sodom mock our eager taste, The parching sands are hot beneath our feet, The fountains fail, Where is the rest, my Lord? Then answer'd He who sigh'd at Nazareth, Stretching his pierced hands, — "Come unto me, And I will give you rest." DAILY COUNSELLOR. 205 JULY I. "The beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ." Mark, i : 1. Good news to all, of every clime, Good news of wealth untold. Of gems Golconda's mine that shame, The diamond and the ruby's flame, The crystal and the gold. Good news ! Glad tidings ! so the strain In Heaven's own descant ran When angel throngs announced His birth, Who brought the Gospel down to earth A gift to fallen man. Lo ! its beginning is with life That in the cradle lies, With the baptismal dew that falls, With the sweet Mother,, when she calls Her nursling to the skies. Its alphabet is holy fear^ Pure love, without alloy^ Its finished lore is at His feet^ Where all his true disciples meet To share their Master's joy, 18 206 DAILY COUNSELLOR, JULY II. "The damsel is not dead." Mark, v : 39. There's mourning 'neatb. the Euler's dome, His little daughter dies, Twelve years the sunbeam of his home, Shrouded, and cold she lies, In her white hand a broken bud. Her brow, bright tresses veil. While o'er her snowy couch is strew'd Judea"'s lily pale. Who entereth where the weepers moan. With such a godlike tread? Who uttereth in that wondrous tone, "The damsel is not dead?" Not dead ! Even in that house of woe Contemptuous doubt is born, And hissing laughter eddies low, In pharisaic scorn. "Talitha cumi!" — up she rose, To Christ, her hand she gives, On her pure cheek, rich crimson glows, Euler ! thy daughter lives. There is no death, Saviour dear! To those who trust Thy name. Only a passport to that sphere From whence Thy glories came ; DAILY COUNSELLOR. 207 'Tis true, thej vamsh. from our sight, They yield this mortal breath. And find among the sons of light, Transition, but not death. JULY III. "Who giveth food to all flesh : for His mercy endureth forever." Psalms, cxxxvi; 25. Gop giveth to the helpless babe, The Mother's nurturing care. And still the man in strength unbow'd, The warrior stern, the Monarch proud. To Him, for food repair. The Camel, on the desert sands. The herd, to pastures led, The Lion, roaming o'er the wold. The Lamb, that strayeth from the fold, Are by His bounty fed. The wandering denizens of air. The Eaven's clamorous brood, The Eagle, high in wind-rock'd bower. The moping Owl, in ruin'd tower, From Him receive their food. The Whale, that like an island spreads Amid the seething main. And all the nameless tribes that keep Their mystic chambers in the deep Seek not to Him in vain. 208 DAILY COUXSELLOR. The insects on their gauzy wing, Tlie Ephemeron in its lot, The Beetle on its droning course. The Cricket, with its chirpings hoarse, Are not by Him forgot. Yea, even the groveling reptile race That crawl to secret lair, In Nature's ample storehouse find A sustenance for them design'd, By His unslumbering care. Throughout this wide and teeming earth, In mountain, vale, or grove, Thro' ocean-depths, 'neath forest-shade, He feedeth all His hand hath made, How boundless is His love. JULY IV. " A Land which the Lord thy God careth for." Deuteronomy, xi: 12. Oh beautiful and glorious I Thou dost ^vrap The robe of liberty around thy breast. And as a matron watch thy little ones Who from their cradle seek the village school, Bearing the baptism on their infant brow Of christian faith, and knowledge, like the bud That at the bursting of its sheath, inhales Heaven's dew, and thither turns. DAILY COUXSELLOR. 209 There is thy strength, In thy young children and in those who lead Their souls to righteousness. The mother's prayer, With her sweet lisper ere it goes to rest, The faithful teacher 'mid a plastic group, The classic halls, the hamlet's slender spire ; From whence, as from the solemn, gothic fane That crowns the city's pomp, ascendeth sweet Jehovah's praise, — these are thy strength, my Land ! These thy true glory. JULY Y. "Open thine hand wide, unto thy poor brother." Deuteronomy, XV : 11. Oh red-brow'd Brother ! mark'd by woe. Still roaming with the hunter-bow Thy little ones to feed. In prairie wide, or forest bare We pitying mark thy lot of care, And gifts with willing hand would bear To help thine hour of need : We see thee launch thy bark canoe. O'er streams that first thy father's knew, Of old, the rulers here. But mournful is thy downcast eye, Oh, red-brow'd brother look on high. And through the clouds that veil thy sky. Turn to our Saviour dear. 18* 210 DAILY COUNSELLOR. JULY YI. "To every thing there is a season." EccLESiASTEs, iii: 1. I SAW a rosy maiden, At dawn of vernal day, "Who sang " how beautiful is life! " And so she went her way. I saw a thoughtful matron, Her children round her knee, " This life of tender care is sweet," She meekly said to me. I saw an aged woman, Her hair was silvery white, "I see a better life than this," And vanished from our sight. The maid, the mother, and the eld. Though all unlike to see. Were the same pilgrim, pressing on To reach Eternity: And in her secret heart was hid A germ of holy love. That gave to every passing hour A beauty from above. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 211 JULY YII. " Boast not thyself of to-morrow, for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth." Proverbs, xxvii : 1. Live well to-day^ a spirit cries To-day be just, to-day be wise; Does any loitering idler tell Another day will do as well? "Now is the time, tlie accepted time," Speaks audibly a page sublime. Another creed is heard to say Wait till a more convenient day. Ask of the Eoman, pale with feai While judgment thundered in his ear Who to the warning voice would say "I'll hear thee on a future day," Ask him if time confirmed the claim Or that good season ever came. Ask of the stream, or torrent hoarse, To linger in their wonted course, Ask of the bird to stay its flight. Bid the pale moon prolong the night. And listen to their answering tone A future day is not our own. And is it thine ? Eepel the cheat, Eesist the smooth, the dire deceit, Lest while thou dream st of long delay Thine hour of action pass away. Thy prospects fade, thy joys be o'er. Thy time of hope return no more. 212 DAILY COU^'SELLOR. JULY VIII. "Corban." Mark, vii: 11. A GIFT unto tliy God ! A gift! — wliat shall it be? What canst thou render to the Power Who giveth all to thee? yield Him thy hands, to work With zeal and patience meek, Thy feet, to walk His righteous ways, Thy tongue, His words to speak, Thy wealth, His cause to aid. Thy friends, when He shall call, Thy will, to be transform'd to His, Thy heart, thy soul, thine all. Offer without delay Whate'er thou hast to bring, So soon thyself to pass away On time's returnless wing; For these brief gifts of thine, This life that fleets away. With an eternity of bliss He can at last repay. t)j DAILY COUNSELLOR. 213 JULY IX. " He went to Pilate, and begged the body of Jesus, and laid it in his own new tomb." Matthew, xxvii : 58, 60. He slept within another's tomb, He, whom astonished angels saw From Heaven's high majesty descend, And bow to take a mortal law. Another's tomb! Oh restless Pride, That on through life man's heart doth stir, Canst thou no humbling lesson learn At Joseph's rock-hewn sepulcher? For what avails thy restless search, Thy watchful care from sun to sun, Thy pomp of epitaph and arch, Save but to see thyself outdone? Turn where the Turk his cypress rears. To P^re la Chaise, with garlands strown, And each, Necropolis shall boast Some monument to shame thine own, Some column of a loftier heighth, Some architrave of bolder art. Some sculptur'd form of living grace, ^ To speak more strongly to the heart.. Man bargaineth for so much bronze. For so much marble o'er his head, Eegardless of the deeds that keep His memory from oblivion's dead,, 214 DAILY COUNSELLOE. What if liis noteless clay should rest Uncliromclecl in stranger-ground, Or 'neath the heavy ocean sleep Till the last Angel's trump shall sound? Let atom unto atom fleet, On blast, or stream, or riven sod, The record of the life alone Hath power or permanence with God. So render back thy dust to dust, Ashes to ashes, dew'd with prayer; Restore each element its part. The earth, the water, and the air ; To each its own. The soul to God! Be wise for that which can not die, And by a stainless life engrave Fit tablet for Eternity. JULY X. " Thy Word is a lump unto my feet.'- Psalms, cxix : 105. The story of the sky The story of the earth The story of tlie wondrous soul And its immortal birth, The story of His love Wlio to redeem it came, The story of His lowly life His cross of pain and shame, DAILY COUNSELLOR. 215 And of the conquered Grave, The Spoiler's broken sting, The saints that with the angel-host The song of glory sing. The story of the way That leads to worlds on high, Is in this Holy Book of Grod, Oh ! guide me till I die. JULY XL "I shall go to him, but he shall not return to me." 2nd Samuel, xii: 23. The beautiful, the gone-before ! Whose infancy of love Came like a messenger from God, To lead our thoughts above; Whose tiny hand made burdens light, Whose smile extinguished care. The pressure of whose velvet lip Made rayless midnight fair. The beautiful, the gone-before! Who woke love's deathless flame, The echo of whose step could make All other music tame : 216 DAILY COUKSELLOK. Upon whose youthful arm we lean'd, ( Forgive us, Lord,) with pride, Into whose eye we look'd for joy, K all was dark beside. The gone-before, the beautiful ! We must not wildly sigh, Although the life-blood of the soul Is oozing through the eye, But take heaven's discipline in love, And meekly bow the head. Even tho' the hearth and heart are lone, And earthly hope be dead. The gone-before, the beautiful I List ! List ! their words we hear ; "Waste not your time for us to mourn, Whose meeting is so near, Even now, the rustling of our wings, Doth swell the zephyr's voice, Upon our glittering robes ye tread. Look upward and rejoice." JULY XII. " Rob not the poor." Proverbs, xxii: 22. Of the fullness of thy hoard. Of the surplus of thy board, Of the garments warm and fair Which the fretting moth might tear. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 217 More tlian these, of alms tliat be Self-denial unto tliee, Eob not the poor. Of the sympathies, whose power Gird the soul in sorrow's hour, Arm with energy to bear Pallid sickness, pining care, Such as lift the downcast eye, Such as gold can never buy, Eob not the poor. Of those kindly words that cheer Sinking heart, or deafen'd ear. Of the radiant smiles that throw Sunlight o'er the path of woe. Thou, whose feet would faithful tread "Where the pitying Saviour led, Eob not the poor. JULY XIII. " And tlie ransomed of the Lord shull return, and come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy uj)on their heads." Isaiah, xxxv: 10. There is a joy that lights the eye When beauty, youth, and strength are past, When all our earthly pleasures fly, Like leaves before the wintry blast. 19 218 DAILY COU^^SELLOR. There is a joy that checks the throng Of ranklmg care, and sorrow's shock, That strikes its anchor deep and strong In Heaven's imperishable rock. Grant me this joy, and when my soul Her farewell to the world shall sigh, Thouo'h unknown seas beneath me roll, And lift their deathful billows high, Then when my frail and fainting sight To this receding world is dim, The luster of my Saviour's light Shall brightly mark m.j way to Him. JULY XIY. " And every man went unto liis own house." John, vii : 53. The king unto his palace proud Eeturneth from the throne. The noble to his castle hoar, The peasant to his cottage door. The monk to cloister lone. The soldier hasteth to his camp. The sailor dares the deeps, The traveler spreads his tent at night That flecks the forest green with white, And 'neath its shelter sleeps. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 219 The Grreenland hunter scoops a cell Beneath incumbent snows, The son of Afric to his kraal, The Indian to his wigwam frail With cane-like roof-tree goes. The eagle knows his eyried cliff, The lion loves his lair, The beaver builds his lodge of rest. Foxes have holes, and birds their nest. Where dwell the houseless ? Where ? There is a mansion free to all. Whence none are turned awaj. Even those who ne'er had home before, Are welcome through its unlock'd door To enter in, and stay. ISTo fee of gold the lodgers pay. In that sequester'd bower ; But '^ dust to dust," on forehead white, Doth give each applicant the right Of mastership and power. No gorgeous robes the inmates wear, No paintings deck the wall. It hath no revelry by night, 'No casement fair with taper'd light, No downy couch, or hearth-stone bright, Yet, 'tis the home for all. 220 DAILY COUNSELLOR. JULY XV. " Speak not evil." James, iv: 11, Speak well of all : 'twill be a medicine Unto thine own frail heart. Think well of all: ISTor let thy friendship at the foibles start That appertain to our humanity, True Love hath in itself the principle Of patience unto death. Be pitiful Unto the fallen, nor bid the scourging tongue Lay bare thy neighbor's faults, that shrinking bide In secresy, — perchance, with penitence. Speak lenient words, and soften righteous blame; So, on thy soul shall dwell no slander-spot When it goes forth to judgment. JULY XVL "So Tibni died, niid Omri reigned." 1st Kinos, xvi : ^. The high-toned boy rebell'd at rule, And wildly wish'd at home and school For that good time, so gi^and and free, When he should his own master be. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 221 The years roll'd on, he struck his tent, And forth to seek his fortune went; But piercing thorns his way enclos'd, And iron tasks the world imposed, With tireless toil his sinews tried, And oft the just reward denied, Till he in bitterness exclaimed, Though Tibni died^ yet Omri reigned. By pleasure's wiles the youth was led, And health declined, and honor fled, Till in the frenzy of despair, He rose and broke the syren's snare. But next, with nature sear'd and cold, His manhood bow'd to lust of gold. While sleepless care and fraudful art Wore out in spots the wearied heart. Still trampling down with madness blind All generous feeling for his kind ; At each career was Conscience pain'd, If Tibni died^ or Omri reigned. So when we quell with contrite woe Some sin that kept our spirits low, Permit us not, Oh Grod of grace, To take another in its place, And, changing but the idol's name. Still yield to vanity and shame, Even like the land that swept away In fields of blood, a tyrant's sway. Yet took, by maddening folly led, Another despot in his stead, ISTor wisdom from its sorrows gain'd For Tibni died, but Omri reiqrid. 19* ^ 222 DAILY COUXSELLOE. JULY XVII. " All the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them." Matthew, iv: f What was tliat glory? smoke and flame, A meteor lost in air, Dark pyramids, witliont a name. Old thrones without an heir. The echo of a warring host, A nation's trinmph-cry. Through the long corridors of time Lost, like an infant's sigh, Proud tombs, whose undecypher'd scroll ~No hoary legend kept. Are these the kingdoms of the earth. O'er which Ambition wept? But He, who spread their specious wile Before the pure in heart, Promis'd what was not his to give, With base deceiver's art ; And should he linger near us still. For who may dare to say. How strong he is, how frail are we, Poor habitants of clay. Yes, should he test us one by one. Here, in our household sphere. As erst for forty days and nights, He tried our Master dear. DAILY COUKSELLOR. 223 Oh, Tempter, hence! from mountain high, From fair, forbidden tree. And from the temple's pinnacle. Go hence, and leave us free. JULY XVIII. "In the morning wiil I direct my prayer unto Thee, and will look up." Psalms, v: 3. Before the portal of the east Its golden glory takes, Before the voice of slumbering man Its varied echo makes, Before the lily of the field Unseals its cradled eye Before the pinions of the lark Unfold in melody, My heart awaking, turns to Him In whom is all her trust. Who breath'd this mystic power of thought Into a frame of dust: Oh ! at this sweetly sacred hour. From earth's intrusion free. Smile, Lord ! upon the waiting soul And draw her near to Thee. 22-i DAILY COUNSELLOR. JULY XIX. "An angel went down, at a certain season into ttie pool, and troubled the waters." John, v: 4. Full flow'd Bethesda's mantling pool, Wliile forth 'from liall and bower, Throng'd^tlie sad trains of wan disease, To test its healing power ; ' Yet wrapp'd in deep repose it laj, Tho' many an earnest eye For its first infant ripple watch'd With pain's impatient sigh. What moves it? Man of science, say! When not a zephyr strays; Astrologer ! what planet meets Thy searching, skeptic gaze? The Angel of the Waters, see ! Enrobed in might and love. Who o'er Bethesda's bosom bids The healing spirit move. Oh ! if the fever of the sonl. The palsy of the brain, Shonld smite us, Father ! till we find All earthly helpers vain. Send forth thy Gospel's blessed stream, That holy health can give, And bid thine Angel stir the wave, That we may bathe and live. DAILY COUKSELLOR. 225 JULY XX. "Asa child that is weaned." Psalms, cxxxi: 2. I HAVE had delight in toys, Childisli pastimes, youthful joys, Chasing meteors o'er the lea Seeking pearls in pleasure's sea, Dancing when the harp-strings thrill'd, Singing as a glad heart will'd, Building castles in the air, Grasping love, and finding care, Hoarding treasures here and there Treasures pleasant to the sight. Flowers and fruits, and jewels bright. What are they? or what am I, That I should repine or sigh. If God take them all away? What am I, or what are they? Fleeting bubbles, fragile clay. Weaned babe, on mother's knee, Can'st not thou, ou.r teacher be? Saying, in thy meek repose Though thy lips no language knows, Soul-subdued, with smile benign, ^'iTot my will be done, but thine." 226 DAILY COUNSELLOK. JULY XXI. "In the world, ye shall have tribulation, but be of good cheer." John, xvi : 33. Must there be shade-spots in our pilgrimage ? Our Father wills it so. The piercing thorn Lurks in the rose-cups which we cull and wear N'ext to our heart. What matters it? The pang, The cloud are transient ; but the hope that springs From their stern ministry, the faith that looks O'er these dim skies, gives treasures that the world Can never take away. Our Saviour knew Its whole of tribulation. Said he not That in the meekness of the heaven-arm'd breast, Was power to overcome ? The shallow rills Fed by the dew-drops of terrestrial good Must shrink and vanish. Thou thyself dost fleet As the light shadow. Other hands shall pluck Thy cherish'd flowrets, and a race unknown Eeap the ripe fruits of all thy sleepless toil. And thank thee not. Another, at thy board Shall be installed, and by thy winter hearth A stranger sit, while thou no more shalt claim Note or remembrance. Shall this mushroom life Wake tears of bitterness? DAILY COUNSELLOR. 227 Go ask of God To sliield tliy heart, even as tTie stripling youth, Who, with the simplest weapons of the brook, The vaunting giant slew. Be thy step firm, And thy demeanor like some angel guest, Patient of earth, yet for high heaven prepar'd. JULY XXII. "For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory." 2nd Corinthians, iv: 17. There's mourning 'mid the boughs, High in the forest fair. The widow'd linnet wails her spouse, Caught in the fowler's snare, While the forsaken nest Laments with shriller woe. The mother robin's brooding breast Pierced by the archer's bow. There's mourning in the floods, For what the barbed hook. And the wide-spread, unpitying net, In tyrant anger took. And for the dire harpoon Which the vex'd wave doth stain, And in strong agony transfix The monarch of the main. 228 DAILY COUNSELLOE. There's mourning in tlie field, The grass that fell to-day, Eeluctant to the scythe did yield Its fragrant soul away. But the reaper in his path. How little doth he heed The expiring of the wounded swathe, That at his feet doth bleed. The maiden as she goes Among the flowers at morn Eecks not the weeping of the rose That from its buds is torn ; There's mourning all around. In ocean, earth, and air. The seeds of sorrow sow the ground. And blossom every where. Shall man revolt to bear The tax that nature lays? Or with a murmuring spirit share The ills that cloud his days? When he, alone, of all Creation's mourning train Hath hope these fleeting ills may work His everlasting gain ? DAILY COUIsrSELLOE. 229 JULY XXIII. "Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord." Revelation, xiv : 13. We go the way their steps liave trod, From, love's forsaken bowers, Their simple shroud, their narrow house. Their lowly bed are ours, But in those mansions of the soul Where tear was never shed. Doubt not there yet is room for us, For so the Saviour said. Oh could we cheerfully to God Yield back the friends He gave, Or with such tear as Jesus shed Bedew their peaceful grave. How pure from the Kefiner's Hand The spirit's gold would rise, And Faith from transient sorrow gain New fitness for the skies. JULY XXIY. " Now is the accepted time." 2nd Corinthians, vi : 2. "!N"ow," is the voice that Kature breathes To those her lore who. heed. The changeful cloud, the fleeting beam, The fading rose, the unresting stream. Confirm her warnin2^ creed. 20 230 DAILY COU^'SELLOR. ^^NoWj^^ is tlie word that Wisdom writes On palace, hall, and bower ; The buried past from hope is free, The future, — what is that to thee ? Improve the present hour. "iVbw;," saith the Spirit from on high, ^^NoWj^^ saith a Page sublime, To-morrow hath its load of cares, To-morrow's hand no promise bears Of the accepted time. "iVbi^," though another morn may rise In purple and in gold, Thine eye made dim by failing breath, And shrouded in the dust of death. May not its light behold. "JVbt(7," — not to-morrow, — oh, my soul, Obey thy Maker's call Lest darkly on the scroll of fate Stand forth the fearful doom, — ioo late, And thou be reft of all. JULY XXV. " God requiretli that wliich is past." EccLESiASTEs, iii: 15. The Past ! It answereth not our call. Its shadowy reign is o'er, See ! like a folded mist it hangs O'er dim oblivion's shore: DAILY COUNSELLOE. 231 The dream of cMldbood's distant day, Light words from youth that fell, The deeds and thoughts of riper years. Who can their number tell ? The Present^ like an eagle's wing Doth from our vision fleet, The Future^ with its shadowy form Our grasp may never meet, But with the great, mysterious Past Portentous records are. Oh ! spread thy conscience to thy Judge, In penitence and prayer. JULY XXVI. "Behold, He tuketh tivyay, who can hinder Him V Job, ix: 12. Oh Lord, in singleness of trust Unto thy feet I flee. Behold my helpers all are dust. May I not cling to Thee ? The love that in my bosom grew And with my being twined, Now, like a thistle meets the view And wounds my shrinking mind. The joy that in my heart was stored And kept my pathway bright. With blighted leaf like Jonah's gourd Hath perished in a night. 232 DAILY COUNSELLOR. All these were loans, and surely thou Wilt never do me wrong, And should not I submissive bow Who had their use so long? And consecrate the u.nbidden tear That from my eyelid strays, And bid it in its fountain-sphere, Bear tribute to thy praise ? JULY XXYII. "It is I: be not afraid." John, vi : 20. Friend, in every woe and care, Hearer of that inmost prayer. Which at dawn of morning gray, Ere the shadows fleet away. All unclothed by language steals. And before Thy footstool kneels, Friend Eternal, Friend Divine, Be our warmest praises Thine. O'er this world's tempestuous tide. Be our pole-star and our guide. Though the surges wild and dark Thundering threat the lonely bark, Tho' the tempest wake in dread, Tho' the wrecks are round us spread, Let Thy promise be our aid, " It is I : be not afraid." DAILY COUNSELLOR. 288 When this clay with shuddering start From the soul is call'd to part, Yield the quickening breath of God, And become a lifeless clod, Let Thine arm of strength be near, Let Thy voice the conflict cheer, Thro' the darkened valley's shade, " It is I : be not afraid." JULY XXVIIL "Unspotted from the world." James, i : 27. Unspotted though the clouds Oft o'er our landscape spread And on the sparkling and the bright An inky shadow shed ; Unspotted where the touch Of many a hand defiles, And where the foul and frequent snare The unwary foot beguiles ; Unspotted, through the faith With holy fervor fraught, That daily in the fount of prayer Doth cleanse both deed and thought : So, grant us strength, dear Lord, Despite the Tempter's art, Unspotted from the world, to rise, Amid the pure in heart. 20* 234 DAILY COUNSELLOR. JULY XXIX. "The spirit, indeed, is willing, — bnt tiie flesh is weak." Matthew, xxvi : 41. Flesh is not weak, when pleasure calls, When appetite asserts its right, Gray through the mazy dance it treads, The viol strikes, the banquet spreads, ISTor flags while turning day to night. Flesh is not weak, when Passion moves, When Love or Anger fire the eye. When toward the goal Ambition springs, When War unfurls his banner'd wings, And trumpets shriek the battle-cry. When is it weak ? When Duty points To self-denial's humbling task, When Folly weaves the syren-song. When Wisdom makes the sermon long, Or for its gold, the needy ask ; When is it weak ? When round its path A snare of sin the Tempter wreaths. It tampers, when it ought to cry ^''Get thee hehind me," — and the sigh Of base capitulation breathes. Up, willing spirit ! Eule the flesh. Make the weak servant heed thee well. Watch with thy Lord, thro' sorrow's hour. So shalt thou by His quickening power Together rise with Him to dwell. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 285 JULY XXX. " T have called and ye refused, — I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded." Proverbs, i : 24. To gain the friendship of the world, How vain the ceaseless strife; We sow the sand, we grasp the wind. We waste the life of life. Perchance some giddy height we gain, Some gilded treasure show. The footing fails, the shadow 'scapes, We sink in deeper woe. Yet, bafiied, still the toil we try. The eager chase renew. Even though the portals of the grave Yawn on our startled view. But Thou, whose pitying mercy's tide Is like the unfathom'd sea, Thy love was waiting for our souls. Til at would not turn to Thee; Thy hand was stretch'd, Thy voice was heard. Thy fold was open wide. Ah ! who the straying sheep can save That shuns its Shepherd-Guide. 286 DAILY COUXSELLOR. JULY XXXI. " Almost thou persiiadest.'" Acts, xxvi : 28. "Al]^iost," tlion Jewisli prince! wliat words are these, Almost persuaded f Hadst thou but exchanged Almost^ for altogether^ — cast away Trappings and royal purple, for his chain Who reason'd thus before thee, drawn his faith Into thy soul, even with the blood-red spear Of martyrdom, eternal were thy gain. Oh, Friends ! who linger, tho' the still, small voice Stirs in your dormant conscience, who would fain, Like King Agrippa, be convinc'd, yet turn Back to the world awhile, and give your sins A little longer scope, — beware ! beware ! Lest that dread ahiost shut you out of Heaven. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 239 AUGUST I. "I have no greater joy than to hear that my children walk in truth." 3rd John, 4. When kneeling round a Saviour's board Fair forms, and brows beloved I see, Who once tlie patlis of love explored And scann'd the hallowed page with, me, When now, from each uplifted face Beam tranquil trust, and peace benign, And in each eje Heaven's hope I trace The tear of joj suffuses mine. Father ! I bless thy ceaseless care That now its richest gift hath shed, Oh, guide their steps through every snare From every danger shield their head; From dangerous error's dire control. From pride, from change, from darkness free Preserve each timorous, trusting soul That like the Ark-Dove turns to Thee. Unite us, where no ill can harm. Unite us, where no fate can sever. Where nau.ght but holiness doth charm, And all that charms shall live forever. 240 DAILY COUNSELLOR. AUGUST II. "The brook of the willows." Isaiah, xv : 7. With a pleasant, murmuring noise Glides the brooklet of our joys, Sparkling in the sunbeam sheen, Fring'd with flowers and fleck'd with green; Yet its beauteous banks along Here and there, with fibers strong. Still the tree of weeping droopeth, And to kiss its waters stoopeth. Liberal Spring the current swells, Brimming o'er in crystal wells. Sultry Summer checks its flow, — Brooks decrease, but willows grow. AUGUST III. " Jesus saith unto her, Mary! " John, xx : 16. "What was the name, that first of all, My blessed Saviour spoke, When rising from the realm of death The tyrant's sway he broke? Oh ! sweetest of all earthly names Mary! methinks I hear, In the pure baptism of His voice, That cadence meet my ear. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 241 And Tinto wliom did He at first Announce His power to save, That resurrection which made sure Our conquest o'er the grave? To the disciples fed so long On heavenly manna free? To Eoman guard? To haughty scribe? To boastful Pharisee? Ko, to the lowly hearts that watch'd Tho' every star had paled, To woman's love that stood the test When loftier manhood fail'd : Oh, Sex deem'd weak ! be well-content, Nor strive for fatile fame. Thus honor'd by the Son of God, No higher glory claim. AUGUST IV. " Behold I there went out a sower to sow." Mark, iv : 3. Wilt sow your heart-seeds here? Earth hath too poor a soil. Her roaming, wayside birds of prey Oft snatch the quicken'd germs away, And disappoint your toil. 242 DAILY COUl^SELLOR. Even slioulcl thej spring to birth, Perchance, with ruthless haste. The summer-dronght might parch their bloom, Or earlj frost their buds entomb. Or worms their life-blood waste. But there's a cloudless clinie. Beneath whose genial skies No blight the florist's trust betrays, No garner'd fruitage e'er decays. No plant of promise dies; It hath no piercing thorn. It hath no poisonous snare. No storms the harvest-hopes destroy Or choke with sobs the reaper's joy, Sow ye your heart-seeds there. AUGUST V, "He shall enter into peace, they shall rest in their beds, each one walking in his uprightness." Isaiah, Ivii: 3. The laboring man who toils Unmoved by cold or heat, Doth wearied seek his nightly couch And find its slumber sweet, "While they, whom idle years Of luxury impair. Toss on the reckless couch, or meet The dream of terror there. DAILY COUN"SELLOIl. 243 The rich, man moves in pomp, To him the world is dear, And every treasure twists a tie, To bind him stronger here : But he whose purest gold Is in the conscience stored, Is richer at the hour of death, Than with the miser's hoard. When this short day of life, With all its work is done, The faithful servant of his Grod Doth hail the setting sun ; But they who waste their breath. Dread the accusing tomb, And the time-killer flies from death, As from a murderer's doom. So give us. Lord, to find, When earth shall pass away. That Sabbath-evening of the mind. Which crowns a well-spent day. That entering to thy rest. Where toils and cares are o'er. We, with the myriads of the bless'd, May praise Thee evermore. 24A DAILY COUXSELLOR. AUGUST VI. ''Oh Thou that hearest prayer." I Psalms, Ixv : 3. I Oh Thou, that liearest prayer ! ; Upon Tlij love and care ; My soul relies, I What rock hath she beside. If sorrows roll their tide ? i What refuge Y^here to hide, I When storms arise ? Oh Thou, that hearest prayer ! 1 Grant me life's ills to bear, Patient in trust, ' Grrant me Thy truth to see, Grrant me Thy Spirit free, Till my last sleep shall be LoY^ in the dust. AUGUST YII. '• Other foundation c:in no man iny ihnn th:it is kid, whicli is Jesus Christ." l3T Corinthians, iii: ]1. Build'st thou on wealth? its wings are ever spread Its dazzled votaries to elude and foil ; On science? lo! the lofty sage hath fled, Like the pale lamp that lit his midnight toil, Forgotten as the flower that deck'd the vernal soil. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 245 Build'st thou on love? the trusting heart it cheers While youth and hope entwine their garlands gay, Yet hath it still an heritage of tears: Build'st thou on fame? the dancing meteor's ray Glides not on swifter wing, to deeper night away. Why, on such sands, thy spirifs temple rear? How shall its base the wrecking billows shun ? Go, seek the Eternal Rock, with humble fear. And on the tablet of each setting sun Grave, with a diamond pen, some deed of duty done. Young art thou? then the words of wisdom weigh. Mature? the gathering ills of life beware. Aged? 0, make His mighty arm thy stay Who saves the weakest suppliant from despair, ■ And bids the darken'd tomb a robe of glory wear. AUGUST 7111. " Yea, the stars are not pure in His sight." Job, XXV : 5. Why tremble thus, ye fixed stars? Ye who abide so near The Fountain of Unfailing Light, Say, what have ye^o fear? 246 DAILY COUNSELLOK. And the Stars answered, "We wlio dwell Nearest tlie Source of Day, Best know its pnrity, and dread To lose or sliame its ray," Oh, Father I while our star of life Holds on its wandering con.rse. Permit no darkening mists of earth To shade its guiding source, And when no more its twinkling orb Thro' weeping clouds shall peer, Grant it all uneclipsed to span ■ The Everlasting Year. AUGUST IX. 'Not, fiend, — but sleepeth." Mark, v: 39. KoT cleadf A marble seal is prest Where the bright glance did part, A weight is on the pulseless breast, Thick ice around the heart, ISTo more she wakes with gTeeting smile, Glad voice and buoyant tread. But yet ye calmly say the while She sleeps^ she is not dead. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 247 Ko; No. The mind wliose heaven-born thought No earthly chain could bind, The holy heart divinely fraught With love to all mankind, The humble soul whose changeless trust Was with its God on high, They soar above the sleeping dust, For they can never die. AUGUST X. "The king said unto the damsel, — 'Ask of me whatsoever thou wilt, and I will give it thee.' " Mark, vi : 22. Herod had sworn. The dancer had her way.. Light heels, and lighter words. What follow'd next ? The prompting of a vengeful woman's spite. A lurid lamp within the dungeon-cell, An executioner, with visage grim. And as the whirlwind rends the lofty oak, Falls the beheaded prophet. It would seem The king was sorry, but for his oath's sake, And from a craven fear of those who sate With him at meat, he would not say her nay. False pride I mistaken honor 1 Through their sway The might of wickedness was dominant. And malice triumphed. 248 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Friend ! if tliou hast made A vow of rashness, go, absolve tlijself, Beseech forgiveness, seek release of him Who holds the unwary promise. Hear his voice, Israel's wise monarch, and decline to be Another's surety, lest thou, plunge with him In ruin irretrievable. 'Twere sad. If sudden rashness of a thoughtless tongue Should trouble and perplex our fellow-men, Uphold the wrong, sow discord, hide the truth, Or hurt the soul. 'Twere better to be taught Even by king Herod in his vanity Than compromise our peace, and sanction guilt, And suffer loss, for sound of empty words. AUGUST XL "Thou, O God, didst send a plentiful rain, Avhereby tliou didst confirm thine inheritance when it was weary." Psalms, Ixviii : 9. ' I MARKED at morn, the thirsty earth By lingering drouglit oppressed. Like sick man in his fever heat, With parching brow and breast, But evening brought a cheering sound Of music o'er the pane, Tlie voice of heavenly showers, that said,— Oh ! blessed, blessed Rain ! DAILY COUNSELLOE. 249 The pale and suffocating plants Tliat bowed themselves to die, Imbibed the pnre, reprieving drops Sweet gift of a pitying sky, The fern and heath upon the rock, And the daisy on the plain. Each whispered to their new-born buds. Oh ! blessed, blessed Eain ! The herds that o'er the wasted fields Roamed with dejected eye, To find their verdant pasture brown, Their crystal brooklet dry, Bejoiced within the mantling pool To stand refreshed again, Each inflmt ripple leaping high To meet the blessed Rain. The farmer sees his crisping corn Whose tassels swept the ground, Uplift once more a stately head With hopeful beauty crowned. While the idly lingering water-wheel, Where the miller ground his grain, Turns gaily round with a dashing sound, At the touch of the blessed Rain. Lord 1 if our drooping souls too long Should close -their upward wing. And the adhesive dust of earth All darkly round them cling. Send thou such showers of quickening grace That the angelic train Shall to our grateful shout respond, Oh ! blessed, blessed Rain ! 250 DAILY COUNSELLOR, AUGUST XII. "Considering thyself, — lest thou also be tempted." Gallatians, vi: 1. Scorn not tlie sinner, thou "whose heart In purpose pure is garnered strong, Claims penitence with thee no part ? Doth pride to mortal man belong ? By all thy follies unforgiven. Were thou at Death's dark hour accused, Even thou, might at the gate of Heaven In terror knock, and be refused. AUGUST XIII. "And David said, Let us fall now into the hand of the Lord, for his mercies are great,— and let me not fall into the hand of man." 2nd Samuel, xxiv: 14. Man hath a voice severe, His neighbor's faults to blame, A wakeful eye, a listening ear To note his brother's shame. He with sus|)icion's glance The curtain'd breast doth read, And raise the accusing balance high. To weigh the doubtful deed. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 251 Oil ! Thou, whose sleepless eye Doth note each secret path, For mercy to Thy throne, we fly, From man's condemning wrath. Thou, who dost dimness mark In Heaven's resplendent way. And folly in that angel host Who serve Thee night and day, How fearless should our trust In Thy compassion be, "When from our brother of the dust We dare appeal to Thee. AUGUST XIY. A friend loveth at nil times." Proverbs, xvii : 17. I SAW the youngling moon look meekly forth. While the hoarse floods prolong'd their vesper hymn. Touching the forehead of a far, gray isle With silver radiance, delicately dim, But arching high, in majesty and wrath. And closer shutting o'er her gentle head. Portending evil for her future path, A sable cloud, its gathering blackness spread ; 252 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Yet still, adherent to the infant queen, Fast by her side, with cheek serenely pale, A tender, lonely, pure-ej^ed star was seen, Like Abdiel faithful, tho' all else should fail : And hark ! that voice upon the summer air, — Who hath one constant friend, the darkest cloud may dare. AUGUST XV. "Unless thy law hud been my delight, I should liuve perished in my nffliction." Psalms, cxix : 92. Had not thy righteous law been my delight When friends forsook, and earthlj^ comforts fled, And cruel foes displayed their envious spite, Most surely I had sunk among the dead. And cold oblivion's dew had rested on m}^ head. Yet still I live, oh let my praise arise To Him, who clothed with majesty and might And seated in His temple of the skies Sends gifts to man, with peace and life and light. But thou my soul art weak, and sinful in His sight. Oh ! lead me from those paths with error fraught, Whose snares, too oft, my heedless steps betide, Eestrain the hasty speech and roving thought, And fear of feeble man, and causeless pride, And all the secret ills that in my heart abide. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 253 AUGUST XVI. "Thy will be done." Matthew, vi : 10. The Mother trembled with excess of joy Over her first-born babe. The new delight Spread a fresh vernal greenness o'er her heart Remembering not her anguish, like the snows That on the winter's skirts had fled away. A few bright mornings dawn'd, and lo ! a frost, And coldly by the fountain of her hope Lay a dead blossom. Agony intense Convuls'd her woman's nature^ to its depths. But when at length 'mid chastening tears she spake. And said Thy will he done^ there came a peace That the world's proudest plenitude gives not, And the afflicted soul found rest in God. AUGUST XVII. "And deliver them who, through feiir of deuth,, were oil their lifefime subject to bondnge." Hebrews, ii : 15. Afeaid to die ! afraid to sleep In earth, our mother's tranquil breast. Where snares and troubles vex no more, And all the weary are at rest ? 22 254 DAILY COUNSELLOK. Afraid to die ! afraid to take His liand who trod tlie sliadowy vale, And leads us on to pastures green, And living streams that never fail ? Afraid to die ! afraid to bear The pang that but a moment tries, And o'er the sway of pain and care, Ascend to mansions in the skies ? Afraid to die ! afraid to meet The guardian bands who watchful wait. And spread their radiant pinions wide To bear us through salvation's gate ? « Afraid to die ! prefer to be A stranger in these courts below, A pilgrim, when the lights of home Bright through our Father's windows glow ? Afraid to die ! ah ! what avails. Whether by sickness, storm, or fire. The ethereal essence finds its place. And rises to the Eternal Sire. Afraid to die ! O grant us grace. Thou who didst dare the spoiler's strife. Calmly to meet his cold embrace, And soar to everlasting life. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 255 AUGUST XVIII. "A standing pillar of salt, is the monument of an unbelieving soul." Wisdom of Solomon, x: 7. Impassive and unfertile, A monnment of pain, The mark of disobedience And obdurate disdain, A fixture in the desert Immoveable and dread, A warning to the living, A beacon 'mid the dead, A hankerer after Sodom Where fiery billows roll. Yet still unfit for Zoar, Is the unbelieving soul. AUGUST XIX. And He took them up in His arms, put His hands on them, and blessed them." Mark, X : 16. Childeen" by our Lord were honored. When on this poor earth he staid ; Fondly he embraced and blessed them, Though a frowning throng forbade. To his side a child he summoned. Placed him in the midst, and told Those that simple guide to follow, Who God's kingdom would behold. 256 DAILY COUNSELLOK. Still his Gospel honors children, Bids them in its armies move, ' And their little rills of bounty Swell the ocean of its love ; Bids them strive with zealous pity For the desolate and sad, Till the dark and desert places Are for them exceeding glad. AUGUST XX. ' In the fourth watch of the niglit, Jesus went unto them, walking on the sea." Matthew, xiv: 25 When on a dangerous shore, Quicksands, and breakers roar, Who walks the billows o'er ? List! "It is I." Though at the midnight dark. Storms toss thy lonely bark, What saith the Pilot?— Hark! 'Be of good cheer." Though earth and ocean quake. Though every prop should break, Though every friend forsake, "Be not afraid." Have not a thought of fear. Shed no repining tear, Christ unto Thee is near, Christ is thine all. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 257 AUGUST XXI. "To know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge." Efhksians, ill: 19. How can we know wliat passeth tliongTit ? How measure tliat wliicli hath no end? How solve the mystery divine That angels fail to comprehend? Yet, Saviour, though this wondrous love That bowed to bleed for fallen man, In all its magnitude and de|)th. Our futile reason fail to scan, Still may we with this boundless theme Kneel, and in gratitude adore And taste salvation's living stream And thirst, and droop, and doubt no more. AUGUST XXII. " I do set mj' bow in the cloud." Genesis, ix: 13. The Sun drew near his setting, robed in gold, But on the Patriarch, ere from prayer he rose, A sudden cloud had wept, and rain-drops lay Amid his silver hairs. Then burst an arch Of glorious brilliance forth, spanning the skies, Heaven's amnesty to desolated earth. Oh Signet-ring ! with which the Almighty seal'd His treaty with the remnant of the race That shrank before Him, let thy brilliant hues Grrave on our souls His unforafetful love. I 22* ^ 258 DAILY COUNSELLOE. Sublime Instructor, who four thousand years Hast ne'er withheld thy lesson, but unfurl' d, When shower and sunbeam bade, thy radiant scroll, Oft 'mid the summer's day, I musing gaze Thro' my lone casement to be taught of thee. Born of the smile and tear-drop, hast thou not Affinity with man ? — for such would seem His elements and pilgrimage below. Like thine, his span of strength and beauty fades, Although its columns rest on endless truth, And boundless mercy. Deluge floods may come, The everlasting fountains burst their bounds. The exploring dove without a leaf return. And earth depart. What then? Be still, my soul ! Enter thine ark. God's promise can not fail. And surely, as yon rainbow stamps the cloud. His truth, thine Ararat, shall shelter thee. AUGUST XXIII. " Lay up for yourselves treasures in Heaven." Matthew, vi: 20. I HAD a garment rare, A robe of cost; I hoarded it with care From sun and dust and air, Lo ! the moth hath marr'd it sore. It charms the sight no more, 'Tislost! 'Tislost! I liad a ring of price, A wedge of gold; But to tlieir secret bed The cancerous. rust hath sped, It hath made a fatal sweep, It hath eaten broad and deep, Look! Look! Behold! I had a precious gem, A jewel rare; Close in mj bosom's core That talisman I bore. How did the robber's eye ^J W^ ^f W^ espy ? Tis gone! 'Tis gone! Alas! poor rifled heart. Burdened with care, List to the blessed word Of thine ascended Lord : Heaven hath a casket sure. Where treasures age endure. Lay thine up — there! AUGUST XXIV. "Beauty for ashes, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness," Isaiah, Ixi : 3. LoED of the bird, and the green leaf, that pour Their vernal matin forth, in bud, and song, Dost thou not claim from the frail, human heart The same fresh incense, oft withheld too long? 260 DAILY COUNSELLOR, Dost tliou not bid, when tlie wild storm is past, That it should yield to Thee, with tearful trust, Each cherish'd tendril smitten by the blast. Each riven "blossom humbled to the dust? And firm in cheerful and confiding hope, Admit the wisdom that it fails to see. And from its sackcloth and its ashes raise A strain of prayerful melody to Thee ? Offering with equal faith and equal praise The sunbeam, or the cloud that marks its fleeting days? AUGUST XXV. "Buy the truth, and sell it not." Proverbs, xxiii : 23. Pour the jewels from thy hoard. In their richest casket stored, Gems, from Learning's mine profound. Diamonds from Golconda's bound, "Wreaths by radiant Beaut}^ wove. Buds of Hope, and flowers of Love, Pour them lavish o'er the spot, — Buy the truth, and sell it not. What would pay thee for its loss? Gold without it is but dross. Love, a shadow light and vain. Knowledge, mockerj^ and pain ; Kaught its absence might supply, Naught in earth, or sea, or sky, Kaught in palace or in cot, — Buv the trutlj, and sell it not. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 261 AUGUST XXVI. " If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are fromahove, where Christ sittetL on the right hand of God." ^ Colossians, iii : 1. If with the Lord jour hope doth rest, With Christ who reigns above, Loose from its bonds the captive breast, And heavenward point its love. Yes, heavenward. Ye're of holy birth, Bid your affections soar Above the vain delights of earth, Which fade, to bloom no more. Seek ye some pure and thornless rose ? Some friend with changeless eye ? Some fount whence living water flows ? Gro, seek those things on high. Thither bid Hope a pilgrim go. And Faith her mansion rear, Even while amid this world of woe Ye shed the stranger's tear: If folly tempts, or sin allures, Be deaf to all their art, So shall eternal life be yours When time's brief years depart. 262 DAILY COUNSELLOE. AUGUST XXVII. " They that watch for the morning." Psalms, cxxx : 6. Ye tell the watcher, seated long Beside the couch of pain, "Behold the night away hath roU'd, And brilliant through her gate of gold Aurora comes again." Ye tell the sea-boy as he treads The deck with weary eye, Musing amid his night-watch drear On home's low porch, and brothers dear, "Look up! the morn is nigh." / And to the parting friend who feels The unutter'd sorrow swell. Sweet words of blessed hope ye say To gird him on his pilgrim- way. And smile a kind farewell. So, unto Him, who pale with pain, Life's latest vigil takes, Speak holy thoughts of faith and cheer Nor daunt the soul with moan and tear That earth's last mooring breaks : 1 J Cry not, "Come back, come back to us," With selfish grief and dread. But firmly hold the fixiling hand, Until it grasp the angcl-band, N"or weep till breath hath fled. DAILY COUNSELLOB. 263 AUGUST XXVIII. " The earth was without form, and void and darkness was upon the deep, and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters." Genesis, i : 2. When at creation's morning-lioTir, Before tlie kingly Sun Assum'd His place, or ISTiglit's pale Queen Her regency begun, Before tlie earliest, infant star Its sacred urn employ'd, Then moved the Spirit of the Lord Amid that formless void. So, when the sway of sin is broke Within the human heart. And 'mid that elemental war Contrition's waters start, Ere Faith, the guiding star hath risen, Or Hope, with moonlight ray, Or christian Charity transform'd, The darkness into dav, Breathe, Holy Spirit, on the flood Of penitential woe, And bid the chaos of despair With light and beauty glow. 264 DAILY COUJSTSELLOE. AUGUST XXIX. " It is a good thing to show forth Thy faithfulness every night." Psalms, xcii: 2. Lord, the shades of night surround us, Homeward come tlij wandering sheep, Throw Thy sheltering arm around us. Safe from every danger keep, Poor and needy. Oh protect us, while we sleep. Praise we bring for every blessing. O'er us, like the dew-drops shed. May we, thy rich grace possessing. Rest in peace the weary head. Holy Angels! Pold your pinions round our bed. When this day of life is ended. When its hopes and fears are o'er. By a Saviour's love befriended Guide us to the heavenly shore. Oh receive us. Where the light shall fade no more. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 265 AUGUST XXX. " And OS thy servant was busy, here unci there, he wns gone." J ST Kings, xx : 40. Gone ! Wlio was gone ? The Hoi j Paraclete, Who knocks so gently at the human heart, Entreating it to turn from sin and live. He waited, and was griev'd, and went away. Ah ! who can tell if He will e'er return. Yes, busy here and there, 'mid trifling things. Plantings and prunings, merchandise and gain The sale of oxen, or the care of gold. Things I call'd duties, busied here and there, I let the solace of my soul depart, The Comforter, the blessed Paraclete, — Alas ! who knows if He will e'er return. AUGUST XXXI. " The harvest is past, the summer is ended, and we are not saved." Jeremiah, viil : 20. The sickle was resting, its labors were done, And the reapers had gone ere the set of the sun, They had gone by the side of the slow-rolling wain That pour'd in the garner its burden of grain, And a moan swell'd the wing of the breeze as it waved, " The harvest is over, and we are not saved." 23 266 DAILY COUNSELLOR. The gems of tlie garden, wlien frost cliills tlie air, To tlie cells of the green-house for safety repair, And the florist exults as he sees them expand 'J^eath the beams of the snn and the showers from his hand, But hark ! to a cry where the field-flowers had waved "The summer is ended, and we are not saved." Oh human souls ! in your course below, Chasing butterflies to and fro, Toying with 23hantoms night and day, "While time's little hour-glass is wasting away, Beware of that voice ! like a maniac it raved. The Harvest! The Summer! and we are not savedP DAILY COUNSELLOE. 269 SEPTEMBER I. "He shall gather the lambs with his arm." Isaiah, xl : 11 I WAS a straying slieep, I wandered from my guide, Along tlie broad and flowery road, My lambkin by my side. A warning call I heard, "Come back to me," it said, I knew it was my Shepherd's voice. But turn'd away my head. Among the giddy throng I sported far and wide. By the green margin of the brooks, My lambkin by my side. Dark clouds obscu.red the sky, I stood alone that day, I knew it was the Shepherd's hand That took my lamb away. He took it to His fold, My eyes with tears were dim. Then, through the darkness and the storm, I rose and followed Him. 23* 270 DAILY COUXSELLOE. The steep and narrow way, With humbled heart I took, I knew it was the path He went, The path that I forsook ; Yes, still I'll climb and pray, Till this short life is o'er. And strive to find my folded lamb, And never wander more. SEPTEMBER II. " The Father seeketh such to worship Him." John, iv : 23. I SAW her entering to the Honse of God, A hnmble woman, clad in homely guise, And in her steps two little daughters trod Heeding her movements with attentive eyes, East by the chancel-rail they sate, or stood, No pew was theirs, — and where she knelt they knelt, Shaping themselves, as well as childhood could. By the devotion that her bosom felt ; What didst thou ask, meek suppliant, in thy jDrayer, Amid the tides of wealth that round thee flow? Strength for a lot of labor and of care ? Christ's sweet compassion in thine hour of woe? Look up, for tho' thy faith with clouds be dim, God notes the lowly soul : its worship pleaseth Him. DAILY COUKSELLOK. 271 SEPTEMBER III. "His mercies are new every morning." Lamentations, iii : 23. Oh Thou, wlio bounteous to their need, Dost all earth's thronging pilgrims feed, Dost bid for them, in every clime, The pregnant harvest know its time. The flocks in verdant pastures dwell, The corn aspire, the olive swell. Fain would we bless the sleepless Eye, That doth our hourly wants descry. Thou pour'st us from the nested grove. The minstrel melody of love. Thou giv'st us of the fruitage fair That summer's ardent suns prepare, Of honey from the rock that flows. And of the perfume of the rose, And of the breeze whose balm repairs The sick'ning waste of earth-born cares. And though, perchance, the ingrate knee Bends not in praise nor prayer to thee, Though Sin that stole with traitor-sway Even Peter's loyalty away, May strongly weave its sevenfold snare, And bring dejection and despair; *— Yet not the morn with cheering eye More duly lights the expecting sky, JNTor surer speeds on pinion light, Each measured moment's trackless flight. Than comes thy mercy's kind embrace To feeble man's forgetful race. 272 DAILY COUXSELLOR. SEPTEMBER IV. 'Show us the Father." John, xiv: 8. Have ye not seen Him, when throiigli parted snows AYake the first kindlings of the vernal green? When 'neath its modest veil the arbutus blows, And the pure snow-drop bursts its folded screen ? When the wild rose, that asks no florist's care, Unfoldeth its rich leaves, have ye not seen Him there ? Have ye not seen Him, when the infant's eye, Through its bright sapphire-windows shows the mind? When in the trembling of the tear or sigh. Floats forth that essence, trembling and refined ? Saw 3^e not Him, the author of our trust. Who breathed the breath of life into a frame of dust ? Amid the stillness of the Sabbath morn, When vexing cares in tranquil slumber rest, When in the heart the holy thought is born, And Heaven's high impulse warms the waiting breast. Have ye not felt Him, while your kindling prayer Swelled out in tones of praise, announcing God was there ? Show us the Father! If ye fail to trace His chariot where the stars majestic roll, His pencil 'mid earth's loveliness and grace, His presence in the Sabbath of the soul, How can you see Him till the day of dread. When to assembled woi'lds the book of doom is read ? DAILY COUNSELLOR. 273 SEPTEMBER V. "Dost thou know the balancings of the clouds'?" Job, xxxvii: 16. Oh, meditorial ministry of clouds, Tempering tlie red rajs of the ruling Sun, How beauteous and beneficent ye are. With what a glorious pomp, ye sentinel His western gate, in gorgeous robes array'd, To pay observance to his high estate. Ocean, who gloateth o'er his secret hoard, "Well knows what revenue froni you accrues To his exchequer, and with shout of waves Welcomes the rushing rivers that ye send With fuller tribute to his heaving breast. Earth too, ye bless, and from your store-house pour Treasures of rain and weight of harvest-gold, Swelling to wilder leaps the dwindled stream That throws its crystal o'er the mountain steep, Gladdening the shrunk moss on the ruin'd tower. And the brown fern amid the Bernese Alps, And the deep penury of plants that creep Up through the desert-sands. We bless ye, Clouds ! And by your lore instructed, fain would keep The path of duty, wheresoe'er it tend, Nor in its highest agencies o'erlook The humblest promptings of sweet charity. 274 DAILY GOUjS'SELLOR. SEPTEMBER YI. " Wait upon the Lord, that liideth his face." Isaiah, viii : 17 Where'ek thy earthly lot is cast, Whate'er its duties prove, To toil 'neath penury's piercing bla^t, Or share the cell of love., Or 'mid the pomp of wealth to live, Or wield of power the rod. Still as a faithful servant strive To wait alone on Grod. Should disa]Dpointment's blighting sway Destroy of jo}^ the bloom. Till one by one thy joys decay In darkness and the tomb. Should Heaven its cheering smile withhold From thy disastrous fate. And foes arise like billows bold. Still on Jehovah wait. When timid dawn her couch forsakes, Or noon-day splendors glide, Or eve her curtain'd pillow takes. While watchful steps^ preside. Or midnio'ht drives the thi^ong;s of care Far from her ebon throne. Unwearied in thy fervent prayer Wait thou on God alone. DAILY COUNSELLOE. ' 275 But sliould He still conceal his face Till flesli and spirit fail, And bid thee darkly run the race Of Time's receding vale, With what a doubly glorious ray His smile will light the sky Where ransom'd souls rejoicing lay Their robes of mourning by. SEPTEMBER VII. " Whose shall those tliing-s be, that thou hust j)rovi(3ed 1 " LuKEjXii: 20. Thou hast a fair domain, Most proud and princely halls, And richly on" the crystal pane, Through bowering foliage fresh with rain. The golden sunbeam falls ; Green vine-leaves o'er tliy grotto meet In soft and fragrant gloom. What form shall fill thy favorite seat When thou art in the tomb ? The wealth of every age Thou hast concentered here. The ancient tome, the classic page The wit, the poet, and the sage All at thy call appear; But studious brain and vigorous breast To palsying Death must yield, Whose eye shall on those volumes rest When thine in dust is seal'd ? 276 * DAILY COUKSELLOR. Thou lov'st tlie burnish'd gold, The silver from the mine, The diamond glittering pure and cold, And hoards, perchance, of gems untold, Do in thy coffers shine ; But when affection's heart shall weep A few brief tears for thee, And thou on turf-clad pillow sleep. Whose shall those treasures be ? Yet if thy love to God, sincere By love to man was shown. By pity's deed, contrition's tear. Faith in a Saviour's merits dear, Forgetful of thine own ; If thou hast in time's casket laid Such treasures rich and free, Beyond cold death's oblivious shade. Look ! they shall go with thee. SEPTEMBER VIII. "Complete in Him." CoLossiANS, ii : 10. What is complete ? The mighty oak That seems to mock at time, And while the race of man decay. Still higher rears, with broader sway Its canopy sublime. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 277 What is complete ? The wondrous ship That from the oak doth spring, And wisely steer'd o'er adverse tides, Majestic toward its haven guides, As tho' 'twere Ocean's king. As the firm tree that meets the storm Unscathed in heart and limb, As the strong ship its course controls, Tho' wild the opposing billow rolls, So may the Saviour of our souls Pind us complete in Him. SEPTEMBER IX. "The Lord turned the captivity of Job, when he prayed for his friends." Job, xlii : 10. While on this pilgrimage we go. O'er valley, rock, and thorn, Where sometimes wrecking tempests blow Or flowers our path ad,orn, If down the crumbling verge of hope We plunge 'mid whelming cares. Uphold uS with your prayers, sweet friends, Uphold us with your prayers. 24 278 DAILY COUNSELLOR. So sliall you, in the trying hour Of your extremest need, Feel innate courage from the source Whence all good things proceed, And like the stricken man of Uz, Find 'neath the gloomiest shade His "own captivity was turn'd When for his friends he pray'd." SEPTEMBER X. "Perndventure he sleepeth, and must be avvtiked." IsT Kings, xviii: 27. My dull heart slept. Its panoply was off. The festal hour had lulled it, and the dew, Swept from the flowers of brief prosperity, Fell like an opiate on it. The world's star Was dominant. And so it coldly slept, Even in the house of God. The wakeful ear. That trusty sentinel, essayed in vain To rouse its lethargy. The organ poured Such full, exulting melod}^, so claimed From all the living, one pure hjmm of praise. That rapture's flush burned on the brightened cheek. Still on the secret altar of the heart 'No incense flowed. Sweet music sued in vain At that sealed portal. Eloquence sprang forth, From the blest teacher's lips, and in strong bands DAILY COUNSELLOE. 279 Led cliained attention, yet tlie affections lay In their dead trance. But lowly prayer knelt down Breathing her meek voice into mercy's ear, Through His dear name, who bonght the forfeit soul With His own blood. Firm faith's unearthly glance. And hope, bright- winged, and saintly charity. Sustained the thrilling cadence, while it bore The sinner to his Grod. Then woke the heart, And from its trembling fountain poured the tear. Which penitence required, and humbly sought That Sabbath blessing which it else had lost. ■ So prayer prevailed, when music, child of Heaven, And hallowed eloquence, like sounding brass. And tinkling cymbal, smote the dreaming sou] In vain. SEPTEMBER XL "How shall I hung the Ark of God home'?" ]sT Chronicles, xiii: 12. TuEN thee to thine own broad waters, Labor in thy native earth. Call salvation's sons and daughters From the clime that gave thee birth, Here are souls by sin benighted, Here are evils to be slain, Virtues in their budding blighted, Spirits bound in error's chain. 280 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Kaise the Gospel's glorious streamer "Where our western forests wave, Followers of the blest Eedeemer Serve Him 'mid jour fathers' graves. SEPTEMBER XII. "Isaac Avent out to meditate, at tlie eventide." Genesis, xxiv : 63. Gray Twilight's shade to me is dear More than the blushing day, Or noontide plenitude of light, Or sober certainty of night, Or moon with silver ray. For then, at scepter'd Memory's call. Long buried years awake. And tread in charmed circles back With music, o'er a flowery track Their ancient seats to take ; And parted friends, of whom we say In beds of clay they rest, Bend meekly down from glory's sphere. And with their angel smile or tear Allure us to be blest. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 281 SEPTEMBER XIII. "This is not your Rest." MicAH, ii : 10. When Heaven's "unerring pencil writes on every pilgrim's breast, Its passjDort to Time's changeful shore, "Lo, this is not your rest,'' Why build ye towers, ye fleeting ones ? why bowers of fragrance rear? As if the self-deceiving soul might find its Eden here. In vain! in vain! wild storms will rise and o'er your fabrics sweep, Yet when loud thunders wake the wave, and deep replies to deep. When in your path, Hope's broken prism doth shed its parting ray, Spring up and fix your tearful eye on undeclining day. If like an ice-bolt to the heart, frail Friendship's altered eye Admits those rosy wreaths are dead, it promis'd should not die, Lift, lift to an Eternal Friend, the agonizing prayer. For souls that put their trust in Him shall never know despair. If Fancy, she who bids young thought its freshest incense bring, By stern reality rebuk'd, should fold her stricken wing, 24* 282 DAILY COUXSELLOE. There is a brigliter, broader realm tlian sire has yet reveal'd, From flesh-girt man's exploring eye, and anxious ear con- cealed. Earth is Death's palace : to his court he summons great and small, The crown'd, the homeless, and the slave, are but his min- ions all ; We turn us shrinking from the truth, his close pursuit we But falter on the grave's dark brink and lay us down to die. SEPTEMBER XIY. " Then, all the disciples forsook him, find fled." Matthew, swi : 56. Fled ? And from whom ? The Man of woe Who at Gethsemane had felt, Such pangs as bade the blood-drops flow And the crushed heart with anguish melt? They who were gathered round his board, Partook his love, beheld his power. Saw the sick healed, the dead restored. Failed they to watch one fearful hour? DAILY COUNSELLOR. 283 All fled f Yet where was lie wlio laid His liead upon' that sacred breast, Bj Friendship's holy ardor made A cherished, an illustrious guest ? He too, who walked with Christ the wave, When the mad sea confessed his sway. And strangely sealed her gaping grave, Med these forgetfully away ? Yes, all forsook their Master's side When foes and dangers clustered round. And when in bitterness he cried 'Mid the dread garden's awful bound ; Yet firm and faithful near him stood The host of Heaven, a guardian train, Deploring man's ingratitude, And wondering at his Saviour's pain. Oh ye ! whose hearts in secret bleed, O'er transient hope, like morning dew, O'er friendship faithless in your need. Or love to all its vows untrue, Who shrink from persecution's rod Or slander's fang, or treachery's tone, Turn meekly to the Son of God, And in His grief forget your own. 284 DAILY COUNSELLOR. SEPTEMBER XV. " He took a child, and set him in the midst." Mark, ix: 36. He set liim in tlie midst, that Jewish child, With his clear lustrous eye, and raven hair, A simple wonder on his timid brow," Yet by the Saviour's side content to stand If he might only see that holy smile, And hear the Yoice Divine. The little child Still standeth in our midst. A blessed love, Casting out self, he bringeth in his hand To the young mother, and she so may use The ministry of this new principle, That all her cares, yea, all her pains shall work A fitness in her trusting soul for Heaven. Oh gentle Childhood ! by a Saviour made The Pattern and Exemplar unto those Who through this treacherous world would come to Him, Sweet blossom of our being ! be our guide, That 'mid the fever and the dust of time, Wildered, and heavy shod, and sad at heart, And travel- worn, we may not lose at last Thy guileless model of the pure in heart, Who shall see God. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 285 SEPTEMBER XVI. "Abide ye here, and I will go yonder and worship." Genesis, xxii: 5. I WAEN the worldly cares away That seek to rule the brain, And thus enforce their tyrant sway Of vanity and pain, I say to all that earth-born race, Abide ye here, below, To worship in yon Holy Place, My feet this day shall go, And I must wrap the robe of prayer Around a lowly breast. And thus the wedding-garment wear That sanctifies the guest. And with the cheerfulness of hope That from God's promise springs Bear my oft-drooping spirit up, As on an eagle's wings. So, shall these Sabbath hours that roll. In duties calm and blest, With seraph-finger point the soul To Heaven's eternal rest. SEPTEMBER XXII. "The fiishion of tin's world passeth nway." 1st Corinthians, vii : 31. A ROSE upon her mossy stem, Fair queen of Flora's gay domain, All graceful wore her diadem, The brightest 'mid the brilliant train ; But evening came, with frosty breath, And, ere the qu.ick return of day, Her beauties, in the blight of death, Had pass'd away. I saw, when morning gemmed the sky, A fair young creature gaily rove. Her moving lip was melody. Her varying smile the charm of love ; At eve I came, but on her bed She drooped, with forehead pale as clay, "What dost thou here?" she faintly said, "Passing away." I looked on manhood's towering form Like some tall oak when tempests blow. That scorns the fury of the storm And strongly strikes its root below; Again I looked, — with idiot cower His vacant eyes' unmeaning ray • Told how the mind of godlike power May pass away. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 287 earth! no better wealth hast thou? No balsam for the heart that bleeds? Fade all thy blossoms on their bough? Fail all thy props like bruised reeds? The soul replied, " My hopes are wreath'd Around the bowers of changeless day, Where angel tones have never breath'd, 'Passing away.'" SEPTEMBER XXIII. " Tlie way of transgressors is hard." Proverbs, xiii : 15. In vain the heart that goes astray, From virtue's seraph-guarded way, May hope that feelings just and free, Meek peace, or firm integrity, Or innocence with snowy vest. Will condescend to be its guest. As soon within the viper's cell. Might pure and white-winged spirits dwell. As soon the flame of quenchless gleam Grlow in the chill and turbid stream : For by strong links a secret chain Connects our wanderings with our pain, And Heaven ordains it thus, to show That bands of vice are bonds of woe. 288 DAILY COUXSELLOR, SEPTEMBER XIX. "At even, when the sun did set, they brought unto him all that were diseased." Mark, i : 32. Judea's summer-clay went down, And lo ! from ^ale and plain Around tlie heavenly Healer throng'd A sick and sorrowing train, Tlie pallid brow, the hectic cheek, The cripple bow'd with care, And he whose soul dark demons lash'd To foaming rage were there. He raised his hand, the lame man leap'd, The blind forgot their woe, And with a startling rapture gaz'd On Nature's glorious show. Up from his bed of torpor rose The paralytic pale, While the loath'd leper dar^d once more His fellow-man to hail. The lunatic's distorted brow. With smiles of love o'erspread, Rejoic'd the household band that long Had trembled at his tread. The mother to her idiot boy The name of Jesus taught. Who thus with sudden touch impell'd The chaos of his thought DAILY COUNSELLOE. 289 Yes, all tliat sad, imploring train He healed, ere evening fell, And speechless joy was born that night In many a lonely cell. Ere evening fell f Oh ye, who find The chills of age descend. And with the luster of your locks The almond blossoms blend. Haste, ere the darkening shades of night Have every hope bereaved, l^or leave the safety of the soul Unstudied, unachieved. SEPTEMBER XX. "The City lieth four-square." Revelations, xxi: 16. Symmeteical, and of proportions vast, Magnificent, and robed in glorious light, Like gold and jasper through a crystal stone, Was that Celestial City seen of old By him of Patmos, and with pen sublime Sketch' d on a page inspired. We may not soar Like him, on wing of mystery and might ; Yet searching at the threshold, hope to find Symbol or tablet, such as wisdom gives. She bids us build our christian character 25 290 DAILY COUNSELLOR. On tlie same model, firm, consistent, strong, Eour-square, cemented well in every part, Tke mind, tlie heart, tlie conscience, and the soul. Knowledge, and truth, and love, and fear of Grod: A solid edifice, whose topmost stone Heaven's grace shall crown. SEPTEMBER XXI. 'See that ye love one another, with a pure heart, ferventlj-." 1st Peter, i: 23. Love marks the born of God, Love moves the seraph-train. Love is the key -tone of the song That fills the heavenly plain. Kindle it here on earth And let its fervor glow Toward Him who is its purest Source 'Mid all His works below. It bindeth to His Throne With strong, electric chain. How can ye be shut out of Heaven If Love within you reign? DAILY COUNSELLOR. 291 SEPTEMBER XXII. "Godliness with contentment is great gain." 1st Timothy, vi: 6. Think'st tliou the steed that restless roves O'er rocks and mountains, fields and groves, With wild, unbridled bound, Finds fresher pasture than the bee, On thymy bank, or vernal tree. Intent to store her industry, "Within her waxen round ? Think'st thou the fountain forc'd to turn Thro' marble vase, or sculptur'd urn, Affords a sweeter draught. Than that which in its native sphere. Perennial, undisturb'd, and clear, Flows, the lone traveler's thirst to cheer. And wake his grateful thought? Think'st thou the man whose mansions hold The worldling's pomp and miser's gold, Obtains a richer prize, Than he who in his cot at rest, Finds heavenly peace, a willing guest, And bears the promise in his breast Of treasure in the skies? 292 DAILY COUNSELLOE. SEPTEMBER XXIII. "Ye shall find rest unto your souls." Matthew, xi : 29. Eest, in this world of toil ? Wliere still from sun to sun Tlie busy hand its work pursues, Yet finds it never done ? Rest^ where the weary foot Its tread-mill labor plies ? Rest^ for the plodding, thinking brain. Whence needful slumber flies ? Restj for the bleeding heart. On thousand spear-points toss'd, Whose plants of healing and of hope Feel oft untimely frost ? Rest^ while Diseases watch To snatch this fleeting breath ? Rest^ on this slippery verge of time That crumbles into death ? Yes, there is rest even here For the immortal soul That in humility and love Doth yield to Grod's control, DAILY COUNSELLOR. 298 That coming unto Him For conrage to endure, Sliall find in every time of need, His blessed promise sure. SEPTEMBER XXIV. ''Examine yourselves." 2nd Corinthians, xiii: 5. Seek not of man witli light applause to pay The priceless guerdon of a well-spent day, Wait not for him to weigh the generous deed, But spread the scroll, and bid thy Conscience read. Then as each hour her strict review sustains Of all its motives, energies, or gains, Regard that Judging Power with earnest eye Who scans so sternly as the thoughts pass by. And if She smile, receive the rapturous meed And thank the Author of each upright deed. Yield with sweet prayer to slumber's gentle sway, For He shall guard the night, who deign'd to bless the day. 25* 294 DAILY COUNSELLOE. SEPTEMBER XXV. "Take heed, — and be quiet." Isaiah, vii ; 4, Hearken, Oh king of Jiidali, 'mid tlij fear ! War, and its tidings vex liim. Syria comes, "Confederate with Ephraim, — 'gainst his reahii, Brother and foe join hands, intent to waste The house of David. See, his heart is mov'd, And that of all his people, as the trees Bend in the forest 'neath a mighty wind. Enwrapp'd in majesty of sonl serene, Comes forth the eloquent seer. Lo, there he stands Just by the conduit of the upper pool. To meet the troubled monarch, and recount The message of the Lord. "Hearken, — he cries Unto king Ahaz, "Fear not, — yet take heed, — And be thou quiet." Blessed words are these, Of guidance to the wanderer on his course, In every age. Not with a soul supine. Drifting along in careless jollity, ISTor yet with arrogance or lassitude. Oh, christian pilgTim, hold th}^ way on earth, But ever with bright lamp and girded loins, Of sin, of folly, and their snares take heed, Take earnest heed. Yet, when thy best is done. Still, be thou quiet, for Jehovah reigns. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 295 SEPTEMBER XXVI. " On thee do I wait all the day." Psalms, xxv: 5. See, dawn amid tlie mountains Unfold her pinions gray, While in Aurora's cradle Awakes the new-born day ; A gift of boundless mercy. Our upward course to aid. To where there shall be night no more, Nor twilight's gathering shade. Grird on the christian armor That bright as gold doth glow, For wheresoe'er the day shall lead 'Twill brighten as we go ; Even should a storm portentous Enwrap the sky in woe, Say, "the Sun shines above the cloud. And soon will shine below." If from thy forehead falleth Some wreath by fancy wove, Some leaflet of ambition Or budding rose of love, ■ Eeign the borrowed treasure Which never was thine own. Without a murmur in thy heart. Or one repining tone. 296 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Sliould deeper sorrow meet thee, Eor lo I it comes to all, And "Mene, Mene, Tekel," write, Upon thy palace- wall, Or in the guarded nnrsery Where thy soul's jewels rest, Blame not a Father's discipline, He knoweth what is best. If solemn Death shonld warn thee Before this closing day, Bid sweet farewell to things of earth, And calmly pass away; Yea, smile with angel triumph The parting friend to cheer. Thou hast the pass-word of Heaven's gate. Go forth without a fear. SEPTEMBER XXVII. " I change not." Malachi, iii: G. Man chano^eth : his deliohtful morn A transient glory lends. His temples take the tint of time, And o'er his staff he bends ; Hope casts the garland from her brow. Her torches cease to burn. And beauty spreads a parting wing, lN"ot to return. DAILY COUlSrSELLOR. 297 Power, o'er a broken scepter weeps, Far from Ms throne he flies, The princely heir doth pine for bread, Or in a hovel dies ; Love hath its pain, as well as smile, Even like an April day, And when triumphant in its wile, ■ Hastes quick away. Earth changes too, as round and round Her glowing axle turns. Her mountains sink, her mole-hills rise Her heart volcanic burns ; But God, her Maker, He who reigns O'er all creation's range, Is firm, immoveable, serene, He can not change. SEPTEMBER XXYIII. "For they that soy such things, declare plainly that they seek a country." Hebrews, xi : 14. I HEAR the rising tempest moan, My failing limbs have weary grown; The flowers are shut, the streams are dried. The arid sands spread drear and wide. The night-dews fall, the winds are high. How far from home, Lord, am I ? 298 DAILY COUXSELLOK. I would not come with hoards of gold, With glittering gems or cumbrous mold, Kor dim mj sight with gather'd dust Of empty fame or earthly trust. But hourly ask, as lone I roam. How far from home ? how far from home ? Not far ! not far ! the way is dark. Fair hope hath quench'd her glow-worm s|)ark ; The trees are dead beneath whose shade My youth reclined, ihy childhood play'd ; Eed lightning streaks the troubled sky, How far from home, my God, am I ? Oh, find me in that home a place Beneath the footstool of thy grace, Though sometimes on the husks I fed, And turn'd me from the children's bread. Still bid thine angel-harps resound, The dead doth live, the lost is found. Reach forth thy hand with pitying care, And guide me through the latest snare ; Methinks, even now, in bursting beams, The radiance from thy casement streams, No more I shed the jDilgrim tear, I hear thy voice, my home is near. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 299 SEPTEMBER XXIX. "If ye loved me, ye would rejoice, because I said, I go unto the Father." St. John, xiv: 28. Smile on the dying friend, Uplift the tuneful hymn, Gird him with words of prayerful trust When the fixed eye grows dim, Control the bitter pang, The gushing tear restrain, Nor cast thy selfish grief on him Who strives with mortal pain. Why should thy wailing cry The ascending saint detain ? Keen anguish on the brow it loved Might the glad spirit chain: Why wouldst thou on the verge Of this distressful state. Hold back the traveler to the skies, For whom the angels wait? But when the rescued soul Hath winged its wondrous way. When the keen thrilling nerves no more Disturb the peaceful clay, Release thy struggling tears. So long in durance kept. Let nature's grief-swollen current flow, Remembering, Jesus wept. 800 DAILY COUXSELLOK. SEPTEMBER XXX. "I looked, and behold, a door was opened in heaven." Revelations, iv : 1. It seemed not as a dream, and yet I stood Beside Heaven's gate. Its mighty valves were loosed, And upward, from earth's tribulation, came A soul, whose passport, signed in Calvary's blood. Prevailed. Around the golden threshold's verge I saw the dazzling of celestial wings. Thronging to welcome it. The towering form Of an archangel bore it company Up to God's throne. Soft on my ear their tones, Serenely wafted by ambrosial gales. Fell like rich music. "Wherefore didst thou pass Weeping along thy pilgrimage? inquired The sinless seraph ?" "Thorns beset my path. I sought and found not. I obtained and mourned. I loved and lost. Ingratitude and Hate Did whet their serpent-tooth upon my fame. My wealth took wing. I planted seeds of bliss, And sorrow blossomed." But the risen from earth Faltered to mark that high archangel's glance, Darken with strong surprise, as though it asked, "Had thy felicity no deeper root, Thou sky-born soul, for whom the Son of God Bowed to be crucified?" DAILY COUKSELLOE. 301 So wlien I saw, Or dreamed I saw, that even in Heaven might dwell Eeproof and penitence, I prayed to look Ever upon that flood of light which gilds Each morning with its mercy, and whose beams Are brightened every moment, and to bear God's discipline with gladness ; — ^that no tear For trials lost be shed beyond the grave. 26 DAILY COUNSELLOE. 805 OCTOBER I. " He that maketh haste to be rich, shall not be innocent." Proverbs, xxviii: 20. Why ? King of Israel, wli j ? This span of time Whicla Grod did give to buy Eternity, Man selletli imto gold, and is a slave. The sweet affections of his heart grow stern, And when the poor complain, he will not hear. He maketh haste and casteth overboard Whate'er impedes his voyage to the realm Where rich men dwell, — all rest of Sabbath hours, All hesitance of honesty, perchance Doth plunge his honor in an inky pool. And gain the fraud-blot that is never cleans'd. Yea, he deviseth evil for his heirs. Chaining their purposes of industry. And making them a mark for tempters' wiles, Or knaves to shoot at. These are reasons why That they who madly hasten to be rich. Shall not be innocent. ' So, when I heard Such words from Solomon, I raised my heart In praise to Grod, that he had kept me safe From wildering torrents of prosperity. 26* ►06 DAILY COUNSELLOR. OCTOBER II. "As an eagle stirreth up her nest, fluttereth over her young, spreadeth abroad her wings, taketh and beareth them on her wings." Deuteronomy, xxxii : 11. 'TwAS noontide, and the eagle bird On steady wing, and slow, With ardent eye and heaving breast Allured her yonng below. "While they, with pinions feebly spread, In narrow circles vied, Until with nobler courage filled They ventured near her side. Then mounting still, in spiral course, With strength sublime they flew, And soaring toward the king of da}^ Were lost in ether blue. And as I watch'd their upward course There rose a quicken'd praj^-er For those who hold the immortal soul Within their gnardian care. Oh, Christian mother, never cease Beside the cradle nest, At every waking morn to point To regions of the blest. And still, with undeclining zeal. Embalm each evening hour, As steals the dew-di^op to the heart Of the unfolding flower, DAILY OOUXSELLOR. 807 Nor shrink above yon cloud- wrapp'd hills To lead thy nursling's way, Lest the young eaglets' heavenward flight Keprove thine own delay. OCTOBER III. " In them hath lie set a tnbernacle for the Sun." Psalms, xix: 4. Bright Clouds ! Ye are gathering one by one, Ye are sweeping in pomp round the dying sun, With crimson banner, and golden pall, Like a host to their chieftain's funeral ; Perchance ye tread to that hallowed spot, With a muffled dirge, though we hear it not. But methinks ye tower with a lordlier crest, And a richer robe as he sinks to rest ; Not thus, in the day of his pride and wrath, Did ye dare to press on his glorious path. At his noontide glance ye have quaked with fear. And hastened to hide in your misty sphere. Do you say he is deadf Ye exult in vain. With your rainbow tints and your swelling train : He shall rise again with his strong, bright ray. He shall reign with power when you fade away. When you darkly cower in your vapory hall. Fruitless, and naked, and noteless all. 803 DAILY COU^^SELLOK. The Soul ! the Soul ! with its eye of fire, Thus, thus shall it soar when its foes expire, It shall spread its wing o'er the ills that pained. The evils that shadowed, the sins that stained. It shall dwell where no rushing cloud hath sway. And the pageants of earth shall have melted away. OCTOBER IV. "I am not ashamed of tlie Gosjiel of Christ." Romans, i : 16. No, not ashamed ! How should we be Of that which is our glory ? Of that which draws the line between Christian and heathen story ? Destroys the idol and the rites That plunge mankind in madness. And gilds the midnight of the grave With hope's exulting gladness? Uplifts the mourner, ere he sinks In unavailing sorrow. And bids him from the life to come Consoling balm to borrow ? Ashamed of Thee ? Our blessed Lord ! The thought is profanation, What should we do without Thine aid In death and desolation? DAILY COU'NSELLOR. 809 All ! whither turn, if when the flames Of judgment glow around us, Thou with the words, '"'' Ilmow ye notj'' Shouldst ever more confound us ? OCTOBER V. "Wherefore, comfort one anotlier, with these words." 1st Thessalonians, IV : 18. Yon pilgrim see, in vestments gray, Whose bleeding feet bedew the way, O'er arid sands, with want opprest. Who toiling, knows no place of rest : Mourn ye, because the long-sought shrine He clasps in ecstacy divine, And lays his load of sin and gloom Repentant on a Saviour's tomb ? ■ Behold, yon ship, with wrecking form, Her proud masts quivering to the storm, Eude winds and waves, with headlong force, Impel her on her dangerous course. The pallid crew their hope resign. And powerless view the surging brine : Mourn ye because the tempest dies, And in the haven moored she lies ? • Emerging from the field of strife Where slaughter'd thousands waste their life, Yon warrior see, with gushing veins. Who scarce his frantic steed restrains ; 810 DAILY COUNSELLOR. The deatli-mist swims before Ms eyes As toward the well-known spot he flies, ' Where every fond affection lies. Monrn ye, because to home restor'd, Woman's white arms enwrap her lord, And tears and smiles, with varying grace. Fleet o'er his chernb children's face ? Yet on his path of toil and woe. The pilgrim from his shrine mnst go, The ship amid -the billows strain, The warrior seek the war again : But he, whose form to death has bow'd. Whose spirit cleaves the ethereal cloud, From him hath change and sorrow fled. Why mourn ye, then, the righteous dead ? OCTOBER \'L " He rolled a stone unto the door of the sepulcber." Mark, xv: 46. What if he did ? The massy stone, that taxed His utmost strength to heave, and seem'd to seal The sepulcher securely, — look ! behold ! The Angel's finger touch'd it, and it moved Light as the wing of gossamer away. He roll'd the stone, and deemed his work was done. So, still it is with man. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 811 He thinks to guard His eartUj treasures well. He turns the key Upon his garner'd knowledge, gain'd with toil, But Memory picks the lock and glides away; And when he cometh, lo ! a rifled cell, Strew'd o'er with glittering fragments, and the walls Hung with the mocking spider's tapestry. He saith to Love, ^^ Stay JiereP^ and it is gone. And where's the wealth he nightly gloated o'er. Like some cold Alpine cliff, hoarding the snows It well might give to swell the trickling streams, Yet have enough ? We can not tell you where. Perchance the flames, or wrecking billows may. EoU ye no stone against the Christian's faith Ye who exult in ridicule and pride; For though ye call it dead, behold it lives. Though buried it shall rise. Death and the Grave Yanquish it not. Tho' an infuriate throng Crush it in blood, like Stephen shall it see Heaven open'd, and the Saviour whom it loves Standing at Grod's right hand. 812 DAILY COUNSELLOR. OCTOBER VII. "Woe unto you." Matthew, xxiii : 13. V(E vohis^^ ye wlio fail to read The name that shines where'er you tread, The Alpha of oiir infant creed The Omega of the sainted dead, That glows where'er the pencil'd flowers Their tablet in the desert show, Where'er the mountain's rocky towers Frown darkly on the vale below : Where roll the wondrous orbs on high In glorious order, strong and faii^, In every letter of the sky That midnight writes, behold 'tis there, .'Tis grav'd on Ocean's furrow'd brow And on the shell that gems his shore, And where the solemn forests bow, Yoe vobis^^ ye, who scorn the lore. Yoe vohis^ all who trust on earth, Who lean on reeds that pierce the breast, Who toss the bubble-cup of mirth, Or grasp ambition's storm-wreathed crest, Who early rise, and late take rest, In Mammon's mine, the care-worn slave, Who find each phantom-race unblest, Yet shrink reluctant from the grave. * "Woe unto you. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 813 OCTOBER VIII. " What is man, that thou art mindful of him ? and the son of man, that thou visitest him "? " Psalms, viii: 4. "When on yon vaulted heavens I look, That noblest page in Nature's book, Where moons their changeful courses hold. And stars ride forth on cars of gold. Lord, what is man, that from above Thou deign'st to visit him with love. And Irindly place him just below The angel-guards that round thee glow? Thou giv'st-him power to rule the train That glide within the unfathomed main. And those that spread the radiant wing And 'mid the fields of ether sing, And those that roam the varied earth. Of gentle kind, or savage birth. Yet what is he, frail child of clay, "Who boasts o'er fleeting earth the sway, Himself the being of a da}^? ^till like the rapid shuttle's flight Eeceding from the gazer's sight, That Thou, whom myriad hosts obey, Around Thy Throne above, Should'st thus regard his noteless way, And visit him with love? 27 81-i DAILY COUXSELLOR. OCTOBER IX. " My diij's are as a hand breadth." Psalms, xxxix: 5. ScAECE a moment have we liere, For the sigh, the smile, the tear, For the pL^nting of our joys. For the gilding of onr toys, For the rearing deep and wide, Mansions of our power and pride, Yet our busy thoughts devise. Yet our roving steps pursue, Yisions tho' our dazzled eyes Grow bewildered with the view. Brittle hour-glass of a day, How we shake its sands away, How our hand-breadth span we waste, In the madness of our haste, AYitli the dancing of the earth. With its follies and its mirth ; Children are we here, of Time ISTor that future life can see, "Where Eternity sublime Must our awful Parent be. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 315 OCTOBER X. *' Being dead, yet spenketh." Hkbrew's, xi : 4. Oh, spirits of the viewless dead, If nauglit within this sphere of pain May hope to lure your backward tread To earth's fond intercourse again, Bend down, and teach us not to mourn. Unfold the radiant wing, and show How at one rush the nerves were torn. That bind so close to things below. Press on the soften'd heart, how brief Is its own stay 'mid faded flowers, And raise it from the withering grief That fain would waste its number'd hours. Still, spirits of the viewless dead. That erst with us held converse dear, Bright o'er our souls Heaven's sunbeam shed, And gently quell the bursting tear. 816 DAILY COUNSELLOE. OCTOBER XL " In the morning, then, ye shall see the glory of the Lord." Exodus, xvi : 7. Oh, fill thyself witli beauty, and be glad, Thon, wlio dost see God walking every wliere Among tlie cedar- to23S and on the mists That herald the sun-rising. Cloud on cloud Sweep o'er the concave, like an an gel -host To do His bidding. Thro' their cloven ranks Looks forth the faint blue of the firmament. Trembling and unassured. The saci^ed sjjires Go boldly up to meet it. Here and there, The cross that crowns them, Avins a holy ray That shuns the world below. 'Neath quiet roofs Still sleep the people. Heaven be with you all. Brethren and sisters, offspring of one Sire, Li whose great love, we live and move and hold This hopefid being. Ere the morn shall rise To bathe in glory every mountain-top, ' He keepeth watch o'er all. The new-born babe That hath no power to stretch its hand, is strong In His protection. Consecrate to Him The waking thought, and let it clearly bear His image walking with us through the day So Earth shall be as Eden. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 317 OCTOBER XII. ''They despised tlie Pleasniit Land." Psalms, cvi : 24. The adventurous vessel, whose sails unfurl'd To pierce the veil of this Western World, Joy'd as it near'd that unknown shore At the floating plants that the billows bore : Even thus may we trace on the sea of time Branches and wreaths from an unseen clime, A fragrance that flows from a glorious strand, Despise not the breath of the Pleasant Land. Birds of bright plumage and tuneful note Hover' d around the explorer's boat, With greetings fair, and a truthful test, That their perils were o'er and their labor blest : So, breaks on the soul as its haven draws near. The song of the angels in melody clear: Oh ! list to the strains of that white-wina^'d band, Despise not the voice of the Pleasant Land. OCTOBER XIII. "When he is old, he will nut depart from it." Proverbs, xxii : G. Make bright the hearth where children throng Li innocence and glee, With smiles of love, the caroled song, The spirit's harmony, 21* 318 DAILY COUNSELLOR. The healtliful sports the cheek that flush, The mother's fond caress, 'Not let the stateliest father blush His merry boy to bless. For far aclown the vale of life When he his lot shall bear, That hallowed gleam shall cheer the strife And gild the clouds of care. If midnight storms and breakers roar, Its treasured spell shall be A lighthouse 'mid the wrecking shore, The star of memory. Shall warn him, when the syren's wiles His faltering feet entice ; Make bright the hearth where childhood smiles. And guard the man from vice OCTOBER XIV. " In their moutli was found no guile." Revelation, xiv: 5. Forth, as the buds of Spring they come. Around our hearts they twine, With all their growing, winning charms, Like tendrils of the vine, Yet oft, while in their cloudless joy They feel the morning ray. And feed upon the dews of love, They fleet like dews away. DAILY COUN"SELLOE. 319 Soft lisping tones were on their lip, Affliction's tenderest wile, The earnest wish, the cherished name, But not the words of guile. So, all unharmed by falsehood's snares That haunt our earthly race. Before the great white Throne they stand And see our Father's face, And in His temple, day and night Do serve him, void of fear. Oh ! let the memory of their bliss Stay the repining tear. OCTOBER XV. 'The bush burned, and was not consumed." Exodus, iii : 2. Burning, yet not consumed. Oh brilliant Tree! Hath Frost thy veins with fires of fever fed ? Or hectic mark'd thee for its ministry? The blood of martyrdom is on thy head And mournful garb, methinks, would suit thee best; Yet dost thou choose to flaunt in rich array. More than when Spring thy budding beauties drest. Or all thy pamper'd leaves at Summer's day Each with a pearl-drop hoarded daintily Did to the idle breeze exulting boast Its wealth would last forever. Grorgeous Tree ! Proud of thy beauty 'mid the admiring host, Lo ! winter's poverty is at thy door "While thou dost lavish charms that shall return no more. 820 DAILY COUNSELLOR. OCTOBER XVI. "Commcne with your own heart, upon your bed." Psalms, iv: 4. I SAW tlie curtains faintly gleam At midniglit, round my bed, As in tliat still and wakeful liour Unto my lieart, I said, "When will tliat time of rest arrive Whicli God hatli promised ? For, day by da}^, with toil and care 'Mid countless foes we strive, Or swept by tempests, scarcely keep The sj)ark of hope alive, Ah ! when will that appointed time Of tranquil rest arrive ? " Then through my startled heart, methought. There came an answering tone, As if some blessed Angel spake From his celestial Throne, "God's every task is beautifal, Make thou His will, thine own." DAILY COUN-SELLOE. 321 OCTOBER XVII. "And he sent forth a mven, which went to and fro." Genesis, viii: 7. Oh Eaven of the Deluge ! wliose lone wing O'er the wild surge that whelm'cl a buried world, Swept on in weariness, and found no rest, The Dove, thy gentle compeer hath gone back, Folding her white wing in the Ark of Peace, Eeturn thyself! But the black-pinion'd bird, With drooping head kept on, tho' naught appear'd Save one, great shoreless Sea. Oh soul of Man ! How long wilt thou with restless search explore The sullen billows of this tossing world, And find no place of rest? Alas ! how long Shall that dark Eaven be thy prototype? See, at the open window of the Ark Stretcheth a Hand to greet thee. Haste! Eeturn! And Christ shall give thee rest. 822 DAILY COUNSELLOE. OCTOBER XVIII. " Fear not: but let your hands be strong." Zechariah, viii : 13. Comes there a time, when fortune's gale Your spreading sail no longer swells ? Comes there a time, when self-distrust Your energy of action quells? Comes there a time, of toil and care Unpitied, and enduring long? Still at your post, where duty calls • Fear not, but let your hands be strong. Comes there a time, when pride bears rule. When truth and justice seem to sleep? When wealth and arrogance and power Their tyrant course exulting keep? Comes there a time, when foes oppose, Eevile the truth, uphold the wrong ? With eye on Him who saves the soul, Fear not, but let your hands be strong. OCTOBER XIX. '* Faith is the substance of things hoped for." Hebrews, xi : 1. Hope's soft petals love the beam That cheer'd them into birth, Pleasure seeks a glittering stream Bright, oozing from the earth, DAILY COUNSELLOK. 323 Knowledge yields Ws lofty fruit * To those wlio climb with toil, But Heaven's pure plant strikes deepest root Where tears have dewed the soil. Hope with flowerets strews the blast When adverse winds arise, Pleasure's garlands wither fast Before inclement skies. Knowledge often mocks pursuit Involved in mazy shade. But heaven-born Faith yields richer fruit When other harvests fade. OCTOBER XX. ' For God giveth to a man that is good in His sight, wisdom, and knowledge, and joy." EccLEsiASTEs, ii : 26. The joy of wealth ! 'tis built on pride, Yet they who win can tell. Of quicksands 'neath the golden tide. Of heights whence thousands fell. Of dangers in some baneful clime, Or on the treacherous wave, That waste of health the balmy prime. Or ope the untimely grave. 824 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Tlie joj of knowledge ! Ask the sage, Who o'er the midnight oil His vigil holds, from youth to age, — The worth of all his toil. Perchance disease his strength impairs, Or memory leaves her throne ; Haste ! ask the price of all his cares. Alas ! the treasure's gone. \ The joy of Heaven ! 'Tis sought with prayers. With deeds that shun the view, VV ith penitential tears and cares That worldlings never knew, And on the souls who here below God's righteous will obey, Shall He that priceless gift bestow 1 f i 1 Which none can take away. OCTOBER XXL "Follow after the things which nmke for peace." Romans, xiv: 19. Check at their fountain-head, O Lord ! the streams of strife, Nor let misguided man rejoice To take his brother's life. Strike off the pomp and pride. That deck the deeds of war. And in their gorgeous mantle hide The blood-stained conqueror. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 325 Bid every fire-side, press The gospel's peaceful claims, ISTor let a christian nation bless, What its meek Master blames. So shall the seeds of hate Be strangled in their birth, And Peace, the angel of thy love, Eule o'er enfranchised earth. OCTOBER XXII. "Have peace, one with another." Mark, ix : 50. Thus spake the Master, calling to his side The listening twelve. But on each brow there lurk'd A heaving subsidence of turbid thought, As some spent billow leaveth darken'd dregs Of sea- weed on the shore. Among themselves They had disputed with unholy warmth, And an unwonted bitterness of words, Who should be greatest. Secretly they deem'd The strife was kept, when One who read the heart Was ever near them. ■ Then he took a child, A little child, and set him in their midst. That, from his meekness and humility They might receive reproof. The gentle eyes Of that selected model, with sweet gaze Turn'd wonderingly upon Him, as he said. Of such, Heaven's kingdom was. 28 32*6 DAILY COUNSELLOR. The Yoice Divine Mov'd by the "beauty of that living text, Made eomment to the heart, earnest yet grave, Even to sadness,, as a Teacher mourns To find the pupils whom he lov'd and led. Fail in the first and simplest rudiment Of all their knowledge. Fierce Ambition's j)ain. The pride of place, the pharisaic boast "Stand by, for I am holier than thou," He with resistless eloquence set forth. As inconsistent with their creed, and press'd The elemental precept of his faith. The essential test of true discipleship, Of self displaced, and charity begun, '"'' Have peace among yourselves^ OCTOBER XXIII. "There the wicked cease from troubling, and there tiie weary he at rest." Job, iii : 17. "We mourn for those who toil. The wretch who ploughs the main, The slave who helpless tills the soil Beneath the stripe and chain. For those who in the world's hard race O'erwearied and unblest, A host of gliding phantoms chase; Why mourn for those who rest? DAILY COUNSELLOE. 827 We mourn for those who sin, Bound in the tempter's snare, Whom syren pleasure beckoneth in To prisons of despair. Whose hearts by whirlwind passions torn, Are wreck'd on folly's shore ; But why with futile sorrow mourn For those who sin no more? We mourn for those who weep, Whom stern afflictions bend. Despairing o'er the lowly sleep Of lover or of friend; But they, who Jordan's swelling breast No more are call'd to stem. Who in the eternal haven rest, We render thanks for them ? OCTOBER XXIV. " Sorrow not, even as others which have no hope." 1st Thessalonians, iv: 13. Can we forget the buds that wove Bright garlands round our tent ? The links that from our chain of love By death's stern grasp were rent ? The smiles that round our peaceful hall Beam'd like the morning ray? The tones that answer'd to our call In music, where are they ? 828 DAILY COUXSELLOE. We call tliem lost^ but Thou, our Grod, Slialt guard tlieir peaceful sleep, And in Thy casket of the sod, The rich deposit keep, And bid the grave each atom tell Thou to its charge hast given, And raise our "sown in tears" to swell The harvest-song of Heaven. OCTOBER XXV. "As the enrly dew, it goeth away." HosEA, vi: 4. I SATV a drop of morning dew Like crystal gem serene. Bright sparkling on a verdant bough. All fresh in summer green. The rising Sun exhaled the tear, And drank it, as it shone, A sudden tempest cleft the bough, It trembled and was gone. Was not that dew-drop like the bloom And glory of our span ? And yonder reft and blighted bough Like the frail hope of man ? DAILY COUJsrSELLOE. 829 OCTOBER XXVI. "Is it well with the child ? And she answered, It is well." 2nd Kings, iv : 26. " Is it well with tlie child? " And she answered, '"Tis well." But I gazed on the mother who spake, For the tremnlons tear as it sprang from its cell Bade a doubt in my bosom awake, And I marked how the bloom from her features had fled, So late in their loveliness rare, And the hue of the watcher that bends o'er the dead Was gathering in pensiveness there. " Is it well with the child ? " And she answered, " 'Tis well." I remembered its beauty and grace, When the tones of its laughter did tunefully swell, In affections delighted embrace. And through their long fringe as it rose from its sleep. Its eyes beamed a rapturous ray, Then I wondered that silence should settle so deep O'er the home of a being so gay. "Is it well with the child?" And she said, "It is well." • "It hath tasted of sickness and pain. Of the pang, and the groan, and the gasp it might tell, It never will suffer again; In dreams, as an angel, it stands by my side, In the garments of glory and love. And I hear its glad lays to the Saviour who died, 'Mid the choir of the blessed above." 28* 330 DAILY COUXSELLOK. OCTOBER XXVII. " Mene, Mene, Tekel." Daniee, V : 25. Turn ye and look on ancient Babylon, The glory of Chalclea's excellence. Where is thy golden throne^ thou queen of earth ? Thy heaven-defying walls, thy molten gates. Thy towering terraces of trees and flowers, Thy river-god Euphrates, thy gay priests. Effeminate kings, astrologers with eyes Sealed to the stars ? Methinks even now I trace What struck Belshazzar 'mid his revels pale. The mystic fingers of a severed hand Inscribing 3ferie on thy moldering dust. Ask ye for Tyre, for populous Nineveh, For temple-crowned Jerusalem, for Thebes, The hundred gated, or for Carthage proud ? Go ! ask the winnowing winds that waste the chaff Of human glory. Ask ye, who engraved TeJcel upon Pompeii's princely halls. When dust and ashes quenched their revelry ? The hand that graves it on thy own frail frame. Thy palaces of pleasure, domes of pride, And bowers of hope. The pen of judging Heaven Writes " Mene, Mene, Tekel," on all joys That have their root in earth. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 831 OCTOBER XXVIII. 'Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every creature." Mark, xvi: 15. Onwaed ! onward ! men of Heaven, Rear the GospeFs banner higli ; Rest not till its light is given, Star of every pagan sky; Bear it where the pilgrim stranger Faints 'neath Asia's vertic ray ; Bid the red-browed forest ranger Hail it ere he fleets away. Where the arctic ocean thunders, Where the tropics fiercely glow, Broadly spread its page of wonders. Brightly bid its radiance flow. India marks its luster, stealing. Shivering Greenland loves its rays, Afric, 'mid her deserts kneeling. Lifts the mingled strain of praise. Rude in speech, or grim in feature, Dark in spirit though they be. Show that light to every creature, Prince or vassal, bond or free ; Lo ! they haste to every nation^ Host on host the ranks supply, Onward ! Christ is your salvation, And your death is victory ! 832 DAILY COUXSELLOE. OCTOBER XXIX. "The entrance of Thy words giveth liglit." Psalms, cxix: 130. Here, in this world of ours Frost settletli on the bowers, Dark o'er the sleeted jDane Stealeth the wintry rain, Mist curtaineth the streams, Dimly our pathway gleams As in a land of dreams. Give light, Lord. Night broodeth o'er the vines, Night sigheth 'mid the pines. Night in the valleys deep. Night on the mountain steep, Night on the billows' crest. Night in the human breast, "\Yith sorrow and unrest. Lord ! give us light. OCTOBER XXX "For what is your life? It is even a vapor that nppenreth for a little time, and then vanish- eth away." James, iv: 14 Graceful dew-drop, sparkling bright, On the fair magnolia's height. Do the admiring grass-blades eye Thy jDatrician regency? DAILY COUNSELLOR. 833 Or art tlioii with envy scann'd, By tlie "andeck'd, Lintitled band ? Lo ! wliile yet our question siglis, Quencli'd, that- orb of brilliance lies. Sucli is man, the crown that wears, Such is man, the palm that bears, O'er his fellows, for an hour, Yaunting in the guise of power, As the vapor's fleecy fold Takes a transient tint of gold, Then, in dark oblivion's shade Like the noteless dew-drop laid. OCTOBER XXXL "I heard tlie voice of harpers, harping with their harps." Revelation, xiv: 2. Wilt listen to the heart ? It hath a voice That the world heeds not, an inwoven mesh Of hidden harp-strings. If thou'lt silent walk Down the sad pathways of humanity. Thy soul may hear, on every passing breeze. The sigh of such as have no comforter. The song of joy, as from a grass-bird's nest. The moan of hope, or dissonance of grief, Till feeling in thyself the quickening tide Of sympathy for all whom God hath made. Thou lovest the Hand that rules these harmonies. So listen, that the monotone of self May die away, and with Creation's song Of many parts, thine own sweet praise ascend. Until thou join the harpers round the Throne. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 337 NOVEMBER I. "Arise, and come nway." Song of Solomon, ii : 13. The vines are withered, my love, That erst we taught to tower. And in a mesh of fragrance wove Aroimd our summer bower. The ivy on the ancient wall Doth in its budding fade, The stream is dry, whose gentle fall A lulling murmur made. The tangled weeds have choked the flowers, The trees, so lately bright, In all the pomp of summer hours Eeveal a blackening blight. There is a sigh upon the gale That doth the willow sway, A murmur from the blossoms pale, "Arise, and come away." So, when this life in clouds shall hide Its garland bright and brief. And every promise of its pride Eeveal the frosted leaf, May the undying soul attain That heritage sublime Where comes no pang of parting pain, ISTor change of hoary time. 29 838 DAILY COUXSELLOR. NOVEMBER II. "As Jesus passed bj-, he saw a man tliat was blind from his birth." John, ix : 1. Born blind ! Born blind ! He knew not what lie lost, When the great Sun went np the empurpled east, Kindling to gladness all the mountain-tops, Or night's fair Queen gave every quivering leaf A coronet of silver. Kindred face. Mother and sister, with his childish hand He oft had felt, exjDloring how the smile Eounded each angle with a dimpling grace. And wondering why the love-kiss lent the lips Such symmetry. But now, with lapse of years Both curiosity and hope lay dead, In their cold, cof&n'd cell. And so he stretch'd His poor, thin hand, to take such alms as they Who, idly basking in Creation's bliss, Saw fit to cast him. There he sate and begg'd Beside the Temple-porch. He ne'er beheld That glory of his Kation, gorgeous dome And pinnacle, that touch'd the blue serene, Altar, and arch, and shadowing cherubim. And massy doors on golden hinges turniug; But still his Jewish heart leap'd high to hear The chanting of the people and the priesls, When, with loud clang of instruments, they gave Glad praise to Zion's God. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 389 Born blind ! Born blind ! And in that dark to die. He sate and begg'd, Nor knew tliat by his side a Healer stood. A Yoice Divine ! The horny eye-balls moved, The pale lids quivered ! Light in torrents flow'd, And by the raptnre of that ray, he learn'd The unimagined loss of many years. Bright noontide in a dazzling balance weigh'd, The horror of that darkness which had clung Shroudlike around him from his cradle-hour, Uncomprehended, till that contrast came, Dissolving all his soul in grateful joy. Jesus of ISTazareth went on his way. He cared not for the shouting of the crowd. Hail, and Hozanna, what were they to Him Who in the might of goodness, meekly trod The dusty pathways of Jerusalem ? NOVEMBER III. "The morning cometh, and also the night." Isaiah, xxi : 12. Hope hath its dawning, and its cloud, Love hath its cradle, and its shroud, Joy hath its blossom, and decay, G-rief 's night of weeping fades away. The pillow bathed in tears grows dry, And morning greets the mourner's eye. 840 DAILY COUXSELLOE. Life liatli a time to smile and grieve, Youth is its morn, and age its eve ; Call not tlie gathering shades unblest, Sweet pause for memory and for rest. But welcome twilight meek and pale, And when dark evening draws its veil. Light up the lamps with right good will, . Heap fuel, if your veins are chill. Bid holy faith be firm and bold. Cling to the love that ne'er grows old, That warms thro' life the heaven-taught guest. And makes its night and morning blest. NOVEMBER IV. "In tlie midst of niy duys." PsiALMs, cii : 24. The tree was in flushing with blossom and promise, The tree was in bearing with beauty and fruit. And sweet birds of song, 'mid its branches were nesting. And streams of affection flow'd fresh round its root. ISTo tempest, or cloud the horizon was threatening. Yet a shaft like the lightning in secresy sped, The quick vital tide at its fount was arrested. In the midst of its daj^s, it lay smitten and dead. Oh ! wide was the chasm of that deep desolation. And bitter their grief 'neath its shadow who grew, No more 'neath that shelter with gladness to gather. Or drink from its green leaves the crystalline dew. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 341 But a voice 'mid tlie weeping witli sorrow descended, The voice of the Saviour in pity and love, "Your tree hath not perished, its date was immortal. The crown of its joy blooms unfading above." NOVEMBER V. "The same clay, Pilute nnd Herod were made friends together; for before, .they were at enmity between themselves." Luke, xxiii : 12. What made them friends? They, who so long had been Inimical, with haughty frown, or glance Averted, if they chanced to meet, and words Of bitter hatred when they were apart: What made them friends ? That which too often binds Bad hearts together, earnestness in wrong. Congenial purpose of iniquity. Coincidence in crime. There's many a league Thus made in modern times, for secret fraud, And fellowship in ill, a twisted cord. Or blacken' d cable, by which two may draw Stronger in Satan's yoke. But when the work Of darkness that cemented them is done. They fall asunder, strait like smoking flax: — Af&nity in evil doth not skill To forge those links of steel that bind the soul Firmly through every change. 29* 842 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Oh Lord, our strength ! Grant that our friendship in this world may be A double power for good, an added warmth Of holy sympathy, an arm to aid Over rough places in our pilgrim-path, An eye to trace behind each gathering cloud Its silver lining, and a voice to speak Thy words of love, until we come to Thee. NOVEMBER VI. "Abide with us, for it is toward evening, and tiie day is far spent." LuKii, xxiv : 29. The bright and blooming morn of youth Hath faded from the sky. And the fresh garlands of our hope. Are withered, sere, and dry. Oh Thou ! whose being hath no end, Whose years can ne'er decay, Whose strength and wisdom are our trust, Abide with us, we pray. Behold the noonday sun of life Sinks toward its western bound, And fast the leng-thening shadows draw In heavier gloom around. And all the glow-worm lamps are dead That, kindling round our way. Gave fickle promises of joy. Abide with us, we pray. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 343 Dim eve steals on, and many a friend Our early patli who blessed, "Wrapped in the cerements of the tomb Have laid them down to rest; But Thou, the everlasting Friend, Whose Spirit's glorious ray. Illumes the dreary vale of death, Abide with us, we pray. NOVEMBER VII. "I will arise, and go to my Father." • St. Luke, xv : 18. Hast thou no Father's House Beyond this pilgrim scene. That thus on Earth's delusive^ props Thy bleeding breast doth lean ? Yet not the parents' care Who, for their infant sigh, When absence shuts it from their arms. Or sickness dims its eye. Transcends the love divine, The welcome full and free. With which the gracious Sire of Heaven Will stretch His arms to thee. When thou with contrite tear Shalt wait within His walls, Imploring but the broken bread That from His table falls. 3-14 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Ko more His mansion sliun, No more distrust His grace, Rise from the orphanage of earth, And meet His blest embrace. NOYEMBER VIII. 'They shall be on the mountains, like doves of the valleys, all of them mourning." EzEKiKL, vii : 16 Dove of the Yale ! what dost thou here ? O'er the bare mountains wandering lone. Bleak, stranger-skies above thee spread, And cliffs on cliffs around thee thrown. Wandering and mourning, far awaj, From genial clime, and lover dear, Thy thrilling wail at evening's close, And morning's earliest dawn, I hear. Ah homeless exile ! dost thou know Through ether's trackless fields the way To the green valley, where thy nest Hung trembling on the curtain'd spray ? Hark ! to the mountain's hollow moan, Dark, threatening clouds a storm prepare. Fly to the A.rk tliat rides tlie wave And find unchanging shelter there. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 845 NOYEMBER IX. Jesus wept." John, xi: 35. Why weep ye, wlien tlie weary go to rest ? When sickness ceasetli from its bitter sighing? Why mourn ye at the burial of the just With hopeless woe, the Comforter denying? For the disciples whom their Lord made free When o'er the tyrant grave, He won the victory? Why count it evil, when affliction's dart Hath had its perfect work ? when sorrow's rod Leaves its sore smiting ? when the pure in heart Eise in their saintly righteousness to God, Those who have walk'd with Wisdom's heavenly train. And in their inmost souls believed that death was gain ? Yet is there weeping, when a just man falls. When a loved friend the cup of parting drinks. When a true watchman faints on Zion's walls, Or 'mid his flock a faithful shepherd sinks. And 'mid the living waters where he fed The tender, trusting lambs, doth slumber with the dead. Our tears are pearls, by griev'd affection shed, Drawn from the heart's deep fount with shuddering pain. Yet Faith can string them on a silver thread, And wear them till an angel's wreath she gain. For Piety hath in her bosom kept, And on her forehead graved their sanction, ''''Jesus wepC 346 DAILY COUNSELLOR. NOVEMBER X. "Leave thy fatherless children, I will |)reserve them alive." .Ieremiah, xlix: 11. They said she was alone. But when I turn'd To look upon her, in her arms there lay A tender blossom of humanity New-born and beautiful. Methought the babe Did bear the features of its buried sire, And at the moaning of its timid voice. And faint, appealing smile, the stricken heart Eose in its broken n ess, and took the joy That pays maternal care. And then I thank'd The Father of our Mercies, who doth watch The widow'd heart so tenderlj^, and prop The form he smiteth, and infuse some drops Of balm of Gilead in the cup of grief, That none may sink beneath his sharp rebuke, But walk in patience, and in chastened hope, On to the land which hath no need that pain Should be the teacher of its habitants. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 347 NOVEMBER XI. "Thy Maker is thy Husband." Isaiah, liv: 5. Art tliou the bride of God ? Let no encroacliing care Disturb the current of thy thought Or mar the espousal-prayer ; If other lords have held Dominion o'er thy heart, Eise, in the sanctity of truth, And bid them all depart. If thou wouldst please Him well. Whose favor is thy life, Pat on the robe of lowliness, And shun the words of strife, Submit thyself to Him Not doubting, not afraid. And with an angel's smile regard All whom His hand hath made. Be thy first thought, His name. At morning's earliest rays. And when the Night its. curtain draws Thy latest word, His praise ; Eest on His arm, till Death Prepare the burial-sod. Oh Widow! in thy lone estate Be thou the bride of ,Grod. 848 DAILY COUNSELLOE. NOVEMBER XII. "Unto them will I give in my house, and within my walls, a place and a name, better than of sons and of daughters." , Isaiah, Ivi : 5 Mother of kings ! witli wliat a lofty port Among tlie nobles of tlie realm stie reigned And drank tlie incense of a venal court, As tkongli her brow a changeless crown sustained. Mother of heroes I what a thrill of pride Ean through her bosom, when their fame was won ; Such was her joy, who cradled at her side Our "pater patri^," glorious Washington! Bu.t thou, meek and saintly one, whose tear In childless sorrow dews the burial-sod, Far higher honor waits thy woe severe, — ■ Mother of angels! stay thy soul on God. NOYEMBER XIII. "The hoary head is a crown of glory, if it be found in the way of righteousness." Proverbs, xvi : 31. Give honor to the hoar}^ head In ways of wisdom found. Bright, circling rays of glory bend, And with its locks of silver blend, Encircling it around. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 849 Give lionor to tlie faitliful dead, And full of reverence, bring Unfading memories from the dust. Their love to man, their loyal trust In their Anointed King. Give praise to God, from whom proceeds Each gift and purpose high. Strength to the servant true and pnre, Strength to the aged to endure, Strength to the saint, to die. Give praise to God, with whom do dwell, In heavenly peace and rest. The souls of those who serv'd him here, With humble faith, with holy fear. Then soar'd above the cloud and tear. To be forever blest. NOVEMBER XIV. "They heard ii great voice from Heaven, saying, Come up hither." Revelation, xi: 12. Ye have a land of mist and shade. Where specters roam at will. Dense clouds your mountain-cliffs pervade. And damps your valleys chill; But ne'er has midnight's wing of woe Eclipsed our changeless ray, "Come hither," if ye seek to know The bliss of perfect day. 30 350 DAILY COUNSELLOE. Doubt, like the Bolian-upas, spreads A blight where'er ye tread, And Hope, a wailing mourner, sheds The tear o'er harvests dead ; With us, no traitorous foe assails Where love her home would make ; In Heaven, the welcome never fails, "Come," and that warmth partake. Time revels 'mid your boasted joys, Death dims your brightest rose. And sin your bower of peace destroys, Where will ye find repose ? Ye're weary in your pilgrim-race, Sharp thorns your path infest, "Come hither," rise to our embrace, And Christ shall give you rest. 'Twas thus, methought, at twilight hour The angel's lay came down, Like dews upon the drooping flower, When droughts of summer frown ; How richly o'er the ambient air Swelled out that music free ! Oh, when the jDangs of death I bear. Sing ye that song to me. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 351 NOVEMBER XV. " As a seal upon thine heurt." Song of Solomon, viii : G. Have hearts tlieir seals ? Yes, and tlieir tablets too. Where Memory writetli with her diamond pen, And Hope and Fancy at their own gay will Draw pencil-sketches, and illusive Love Throws shade and sunbeam. And those mystic leaves Have power to bring the tides of parted joy Back o'er the soul again, call friendship's voice From time's mute sepulcher, and wake the 'pulse Of age and sorrow to a thrill of joy. But the quick ear, thro' which the secret thought Came gliding to its cell, the window'd eye From whence the ethereal essence glancing forth, Held fellowship with clay, say, who could form Such wondrous compact of incongruous things, And stamp it with His likeness, save the Hand That struck from chaos, light ? And when it breaks The heart's last seal, and maketh manifest All secrecies, all mysteries, — perchance, Some motive which amid the mists of earth Was wrongly read, shall at Heaven's call come forth As a rich strain of music, sweetly wrought Into the chorus of that Angel Hymn Which hath no dissonance. 852 DAILY COUNSELLOR. NOVEMBER XYI. "The Lord is in his holy temple ; let all the Earth keep silence before him." Habakkuk, ii : 20. The Lord is on his lioly tlirone, He sits in kingly state; Let those who for his favor seek, In humble silence wait. Your sorrows to His eye are known, Yonr secret motives clear, It needeth not the pomp of words. To claim his listening ear. Doth Death thy bosom's cell invade? Yield np thy flower of grass ; Swells the world's wrathful billow high ? Bow down, and let it pass. Press not thy purpose on thy God, Urge not thine erring will, Nor dictate to the Eternal mind, IsTor doubt thy Maker's skill. True prayer is not the noisy sound That clamorous lips repeat. But the deep silence of a soul That clasps its Father's feet. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 353 NOVEMBER XVII. "They shall perish, but Thou reinainest,'" Hebrews, i: 11. What shall perish ? Plants that flourish, Flowerets fresh with dewy tears, Eeeds that murmuring brooklets nourish. Oaks that brave a thousand years. What shall perish ? Thrones shall crumble, Centuries wreck the proudest walls. And the musing traveler stumble O'er the C^sars' ruin'd halls. What shall perish ? In their courses Stars shall fall, and earth decay. And old Ocean's mightest forces Like a bubble fleet away. What shall perish ? Beauty's blossom Cradled in affection's arms, Clasp' d to love's protecting bosom, Bright and sweet and full of charms. Breathing fragrance o'er the hovel Where the poor and suffering sigh. Teaching smiles to those that grovel With an angel's ministry; w 30* S&4: 1 DAILY COU^'SELLOE. Grief beside its pillow mournetli, Frienclsliip's tear bedews tbe sod, As tbe dust to dust returneth And the spirit soars to God. God tlie Eternal ! He remaineth Tlio^ stern Death all else infold, He the pure in heart sustain eth 1 Till His glory they behold. NOVEMBER XVIII. " Id wrath, remember mercy." Habakkuk, iii : 2. Sat ye ''tis Mercy that doth rend Of hope the healthful root ? The visitation of a friend • That blights affection's fruit ? Yes, Mercy. Not that erring love VV hich man to man extends, But His high discipline above V\^ho pain with wisdom blends. Beyond the cloud, the pang, the tomb Of this terrestrial clod, 1 W here trees of glory ever bloom Fast by the fount of God, i Ye, in the books of heaven may read I "With seraph-students blest, How sorrow's sternest teachings lead : To bowers of endless rest. DAILY COUNSELLOK. S65 NOVEMBER XIX. '' Peace I leave with you." John, xiv : 27. "Peace" was tlie song tlie angels sang, When Jesus sought this vale of tears, And sweet that heavenly prelude rang, To calm the wondering shepherds' fears : " War'' is the word that man hath spoke, Convulsed by passions dark and dread, And vengeance bound a lawless yoke Even where the Gospel's banner spread. ^' Peace'' was the prayer the Saviour breathed When from our world his steps withdrew. The gift He to his friends bequeathed With Calvary and the cross in view: And ye whose souls have felt his love, Gruard day and night this rich bequest, The watch- word of the host above, The passport to their realm of rest. 356 DAILY COUNSELLOR. NOVEMBER XX. "I have been young, and now am old." Psalms, xxxvii : 25. The sapling-twig our cliildliood idly bent Maketh broad shadow, and the forest-king That arched majestic o'er onr school-day sports Moldereth, to sprout no more. The little babe We as a plaything dandled, of whose frame We spake, perchance, as most exceeding frail, Doth nurse his children's children on his knee. Brethren and sisters, from our grasp have fled Like bubbles on the pool, and we are left With life's long lessons furrowed on our brow. Yet the true heart that hath its trust in Heaven, Seeing its treasured things unfold their wing And thither soar, pursues their upward flight, And poising higher o'er this vale of tears, Weaves from its varying tones, a song of praise. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 357 NOVEMBER XXI. " For the earth shall be full of tlie knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea." Isaiah, xi : 9. Wight wraps tlie realm where Jesus woke, 'No guiding-star the Magi see, And heavy hangs Oppression's yoke. Where first the Gospel said "Z)e free^ And where the harps of angels bore High message to the shepherd throng, "Good will and peace" are heard no more, To murmur Bethlehem's vales along. Swart India, with her idol j;rain. Bends low, by Ganges' worshiped tide, Or drowns the Suttee's shriek of pain. With thundering gong and pagan pride. On Persia's hills the Sophis grope. Dark Burmah greets Salvation's ray, E'en jealous China's door of hope Unbars to give the Gospel way. Old Ocean, with his isles, awakes. Cold Greenland feels mysterious flame, And humbled Afric wondering takes On her sad lips a Saviour's name. 858 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Their steps the forest children stay, Bound to Oblivion's voiceless shore, And lift their red brows to the day, Which from the opening skies doth pour. Oh ! aid with prayer that holy light "Which from eternal death can save. And bid Christ's heralds speed their flight, Ere millions find a hopeless, grave. Still in the forming hour of youth. Combine with Education's sway Those seeds of heaven-implanted truth, Whose fruit can never know decay. Kneel while unsullied joy doth glow Eesplendent on the blooming cheek, And for the climes of heathen woe, A blest Eedeemer's pity seek. Blend sweetly with the classic page The love of Heaven, sublime and fair ; " So Beauty's brow, when dimmed with age, The luster of the soul shall w^ear. NOVEMBER XXII. The dead praise not the Lord." Psalms, cxv: 17. Deep dwellers 'mid those cells profound Where dreamless slumbers reign, "No lingering sigh, or grateful sound Breathe in your drear domain. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 359 But ye, upon whose living eye Creation's glory breaks, Wiien Memory opes the window'd sky Or Eve her scepter takes, To whose quick ear, a thrilling strain Of harmony doth rise, From warbling grove, or pine-clad plain W hile Echo's voice replies, Whose buoyant footsteps wander o'er Fresh Summer's blooming fields. Where glad hands cull the golden store That lavish Autumn yields, - Praise ye the Giver of your breath 1 The Author of your joy. ^ Even till the rigid hand of death Time's fragile harp destroy. Till rising where immortal lyres i Are to your keeping given, Ye find that ye on earth have learn'd The melodies of heaven. L 1 360 DAILY COUNSELLOR. NOVEMBER XXIII. " Lord ! increase our faith.'' L.UKE, xvii: 5. Peayer is the dew of faith, Its rain-drop, night and day, That guards its vital power from death When cherish'd hopes decay, And keeps it 'mid this changeful scene A bright, perennial evergreen. Grood works, of faith the fruit, Should ripen year by year, Of health and soundness at the root An evidence sincere ; Dear Saviour ! grant Thy blessing free And make our faith, no barren tree. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 361 NOVEMBER XXIY. " Whitlier shall I flee from Thy presence." Psalms, cxxxix : 7. Take morning's wing, and fly from zone to zone, To earth's remotest pole, and ere old Time Can shift one figure on his dial-plate, Haste to the frigid Thule of mankind. Where the scant life-drop freezes. Or go down To Ocean's secret caverns 'mid the throng Of monsters without number, which no foot Of man hath visited, and yet returned To walk among the living. Or the shroud Of midnight wrap around thee, dense and deep. Bidding thy spirit slumber. Hop'st thou thus To 'scape the Almighty, to whose piercing eye Morn's robe and midnight's vestments are the same? Spirit of truth ! why should we seek to hide Motive or deed from thee ? why strive to walk In a vain show before our fellow-men ? Since at the same dread audit each must stand. And with a sun-ray read his brother's breast While his own thoughts are weighed? Search thou my soul 1 And if aught evil lurks securely there. Like Achan's stolen hoard, command it thence, And hold me up in singleness of heart, And simple, child -like confidence in Thee, Till time shall close his labyrinth and ope Eternity's broad gate. 31 362 DAILY COUNSELLOR. nove:^iber XXV, *'I have remembered Thy nsime, O Lord 1 in the night." Psalms, cxix: 55. Midnight on the stormy ocean, Tumult of tlie blast and wave, Every shrieking shroud in motion, None to hearken, none to save, Every star in terror hiding, ' Every refuge wrapp'd in gloom, And a slender plank dividing From a drear and watery tomb ; Still, Oh Lord! Thy mercy liveth. Still Thy goodness answereth prayer, And Thy blest remembrance giveth Solac-e in that deep despair. Midnight, and the time of weeping ! Wild the tides of ano-uish roll, Pain and woe like sentries keeping Watch above the prostrate soul, Sympathy is weak to aid it, Earthly comforters are vain, Only He, the God who made it, Can its agony restrain ; Then His love with strong dominion, And His truth's resistless sway, Like an angePs radiant pinion Turneth darkness into day. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 863 NOVEMBER XXYI. "Knowledge puffetli up, but charity edifieth." 1st Corinthians, viii: 1. Spirit of Love, that o'er the soul of man Dost brood, as light from formless chaos rose, Let us not waste the glory of our span Li idle dalliance with our secret foes, ISTor let us harbor an embittered heart Beneath the Grospel and its garb of peace, Cheating ou.rselves of that celestial part For which the songs of seraphs never cease To praise the Holy One ; nor weakly blind. Puff our inflated pride with windy lore Of fame, and see the unfed, undying mind Shrivel with famine : for all hoarded lore Of earthly knowledge is but emptiness Unless thy breath divine doth purify and bless. NOVEMBER XXVII. "The Prophets, do they live for ever?" Zechariah, i : 5. Where are the Fathers? they who chose 'Mid these green vales, their peaceful lot ? Here, where their favorite streamlet flows, We call them, but they answer not. S64: DAILY COUNSELLOR. Where are the Fathers ? Tell us where, By -wintry fire-side, sparkling clear, At household board, in house of prayer, We seek them, but they are not here. Where are the Prophets ? Gone to rest. Yon hallow'd church-yard points us where, Yon swelling mounds in verdure drest, Yon silent tomb-stones sadly fair. Where are the Prophets ? Eisen to God ! Those faithfal laborers for the skies, Oh ! may we keep the path they trod, And join, in Heaven, earth's broken ties. NOVEMBER XXVIII. "The coming of our Lord Jesus Christ." 1st Thessalonians, iii: 18. Advenire ! * Advenire ! So the prophets sang of old. Some, 'mid shadowy twilight groping, Snatching thence their visions bold. Some like rapt Isaiah gaining Snatches of a morn of gold. * Coming. DAILY COUKSELLOR. 365 Advenire! Advenire! So we say though Christ hath come, Taken here on earth a portion Of its lowHness and gloom, And his wondrous mission finished On the cross and at the tomb. Advenire! Advenire! Still with fervent hearts we pray For the clearer light that shineth Onward to the Perfect Day, A.nd a stronger faith to guide us Saviour, in thy steps alway. Advenire! Advenire! Make thy fuller purpose known, More conform us, life and spirit. To the pattern Thou hast shown, Till with all Thy flock we gather Bound the footstool of Thy Throne. NOVEMBER XXIX. "At our gates are all manner of pleasant fruits." Song of Solomon, vii: 13. Oh genial Autumn, in thy grave with tears As when a good man dies, we lay thee down. Covering thee with the verdure thou hast spared, Pale sods and lingering flowers. 31* S66 DAILY COUKSELLOK. Thou didst not trust Tliy purposed goodness to another's hand But raised the reaper to his harvest-song, Gladden'd the gleaner's heart, and o'er the board Of the poor peasant 230ur'd such fruits as made His pining children happy. May our course, Most bounteous Autumn, like thine own be found ; Not weakly trusting to a future race To execute our plans of charity When we are gone, and cheating our own souls Of the sweet bliss of pure philanthropy, But marking every day with kindly deeds Pass gently to an honor'd tomb, like thee, 'Mid the green memories of unnumbered hearts. s NOVEMBER XXX. " And lie brought him to Jesus." John, i : 42. Upon his brother's neck he fell, And tender words he said Such as in life's fair morn were breathed Upon their cradle-bed, "When lip to lip, and hand in hand, They dream'd in slumber's pleasant land. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 867 Oil blessed Andrew ! first of all The Master's call to heed, And first to his disciples' band An ardent soul to lead ; Fraternal Love, with heaven-born thought First to the Cross, a convert brought. And if there's one of kindred blood Still to our Saviour cold, We'll strive by that impulsive spell To draw them to His fold, For Love's the light that wakes the dim, And Love, the hand that leads to Him. But are not all on earth who dwell, By One Creator made ? By the same bounteous care sustain'd ? And bound to Death's dark shade ? Yet urg'd to seek, ere Time be past. For One Great Father's home at last ? Then should we look on all our race With kind, fraternal eye, And bid our christian brotherhood Incite to sympathy. Effort, and earnest prayer, that all, May hear and heed Salvation's call. DAILY COUNSELLOK. '871 DECEMBER I. "By the breath of God, frost is given, and the breadth of the waters is straitened." Job, xxxvii : 10. See, o'er jon liillocks' icy lieads Steals the first winter-morning's line, And wreathing smoke aspiring spreads In cnrling yolnmes, light and blue. Oh, Giver of our fleeting days, The changeful year is full of Thee, Each varying season speaks Thy praise, And so, with ardent hearts should we. Fallen are the flowers that deck'd our path, The birds of summer-song are fled. And 'neath the dreary tempest's wrath The groves lie desolate and dead ; Yet, when these charms so bright and frail Must droop and wither and decay. Say, is there naught to countervail The good the Spoiler takes away ? Is there no joy to light the eye Though beauty, youth, and health are past, And all their boasted treasures fly Like leaves before the wrecking blast ? Yes, there's a joy that rules the throng Of chilling cares and sorrow's shock. That strikes an anchor deep and strong In Heaven's imperishable rock. 872 DAILY COUKSELLOE. Grant me tliis joy, and when my soul Her farewell to tlie world shall sigh, When unknown seas around me roll And toss their thundering billows high, When to yon snow-clad hills afar. To all earth's change these eyes grow dim, The luster of my Saviour's star Shall clearly guide my way to Him. DECEMBER 11. "Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his." \ Numbers, xxiii: 10. I LOOKED ujDon the righteous man And saw his parting breath Without a struggle or a sigh Yield peacefully to death, There was no anguish on his brow ISTo terror in his eye, The Tyrant sped a fearful dart But lost the victory. I looked upon the righteous man And heard a fervent prayer Which rose above that breathless clay To soothe the mourner's care. And felt how priceless was the gift He to his dear ones gave, The sainted memory of the just, A wealth beyond the grave. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 373 I looked upon the righteous man, And all our earthly trust Its pleasure, vanity, or power Seem'd lighter than the dust. Compared with his eternal gain, A home above the sky : Oh grant us Lord, his life to live That we his death may die. DECEMBER III. " Now see we through a glass darkly, — but then, face to face." 1st Corinthians, xiii : 12. Might we but view the shore Of this dim world, as from Heaven's realm it gleams. How should we blame the tear unduly shed. And tax the rootless joy. How should we see The grave-mounds where we wept, sown thick with flowers. Such as seraphic bosoms wear, — the cliff Where wild ambition strove, with storm-clouds crown'd. Wealth's jewel'd casket, poverty, — perchance. His prayer who knew not where to lay his head A heritage of glory. Each desire Fed to fruition, sows it not the seeds Of sickness in the soul ? Prosperity Is often but another name for pride, While our keen disappointments are the germ Of that humility which enter eth Heaven, Finding itself at home. The things we mourn Work our eternal gain. 32 874 DAILY COUNSELLOE. So let our joys Be tremulous as tlie mimosa's leaf, And each affliction witli a serious smile Be welcomed in, at the heart's open door, Even as the Patriarch met his muffled guests And found them ano^els. DECEMBEE IV. " They rest from their labors." Revelation, xiv: 13. The wreck-strewn Sea doth gladly rest From tempests wildly sweeping, The tired Earth hides in Winter's breast From toil of Summer-reaping, The stream by rocky foes unvex'd In crystal ice-bed slumbers, And sweetly dreams the wearied vine Bow'd low with clustering numbers, But sweeter the repose of man From labor and from weeping, When pain and prejudice and pride . No more stern watch are keeping. Where sounds of strife in music end Where light in darkness shineth, Where cares and fears and griefs are o'er, And Sin, its power resigneth. DAILY COUKSELLOR. 375 DECEMBER V. " His leaf, ulso, shall not wither." Psalms, i : 3. The rose-leaves all are scattered, They float npon the blast, Ye may not gather them again, Ye may not hold them fast, The lily withers by the stream. Or in the garden-glade, ' It had its time to smile and charm, The time hath come to fade. But there's a changeless beauty That bideth storm and frost. And clings to Winter's hoary crown When the forest-g]ory's lost. It gathers richer brilliance As earthly flowers decay, The rose and lily of the soul. They can not fade away. DECEMBER VL " Although the fig-tree shall not blossom, neither fruit be in the vine, the labor of the olive fail and the fields yield no meat, the flocks be cut off from the foW, and there be no herd in the stall. Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation." Habakkuk, fii: IT, 18. Though the fruitage, ripening fair, Wither and deceive our care. Though upon the blighting gale Each untimely cluster fail, 76 DAILY COUXSELLOE. Thoiigli tlie farrows we have sown Yield but tliankless weeds alone, Harvest-hopes in sadness flee, We will still rejoice in Thee. Thousfh the lambs our crook hath led, And 'mid greenest pastures fed, Stiffen'd in their fold should lie. In their stall the herd should die, 'Alid all poverty and loss, Grold of promise turn'd to dross. Bending low the prayerful knee. We will find our joy in Thee. When around our pilgrim-path Time shall steal in wintry wrath, When our fountains disappear. When our vines are brown and sere, When our props of love and trust Tremble and return to dust. Though wild blasts lay bare the tree, Sweetly will we rest on Thee. EECE^IBER VIl. "The Lord is very iiitiful, tind of tender mercy." James, v: 11. Give comfort to me. Lord, For earthly joys decay. And all the columns of my trust Recede and melt away, DAILY COUNSELLOE. 377 And every fount of love Bj wHch I erst would dream Has vanisli'd 'mid tlie arid sands, Like fickle summer-stream, And every precious tree Of friendship's cherisli'd shade, Is 'neath the woodman's sweeping axe In utter ruin laid. Give comfort, Lord, because My lonely heart is weak, And for the solace and the smile Of sympathy doth seek, Have pity, Lord, because Thy mercy hath no bound. And as my darkened day may need. So let my strength be found. DECEMBER YIII " The day goeth away, the shndows of the evening are stretched out." Jeremiah, vi : 4. The day is gone. Eecall its fleeting hours And ask of each, what good it hath achiev'd, What fault permitted. Then, ere sleep enchain The drowsy powers, call to its prayerful cell Thy solitary soul. 32* 878. DAILY COUNSELLOR. Bid Love's light liarp Keep silence, and the busy hand of Hope Eest 'mid its woven rose-buds, and pale Grrief, With locks dishevel'd o'er her shoulders thrown, Stay at the entrance. These are of the earth. The pilgrim as he nears the Holy Land Tires of the caravan, whose tinkling bells So long resounded o'er his desert way. Talk with the parted day. Oh musing soul, And Him who gave it, till the light of faith Kindle within, that erst on Moses' brow Descending from the llame-touch'd mount, reveal'd With whom he held communion. DECEMBER 11. "A linndf'ul of corn." Psalms, Ixxii : 16. Scatter the corn o'er broken ground, When suns and dews are free. And ere a few brief moons are told. Look ! what the change shall be, The lofty stalk, the tassel'd crown. The sheaves like gold that glow. And bread for man, and food for beast. Up from those kernels grow. DAILY COUNSELLOE. 379 Scatter good thouglits on pages pure, With prayer and humble trust, And though they fail to germinate Till thou art laid in dust, Yet may it be thy lot to meet. When earth away hath fled. Glad souls before the Saviour's seat Who on their fruits have fed. DECEMBER X. " He looked for a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God." Hebrews, xi: lO- Look, to that glorious state, A birthright pure and free, Kor tremble at the temple-gate. Which openeth wide for thee. Look, to those cloudless plains Where flowers perennial spring, And learn the never-dying strains That white-rob'd seraphs sing. Hark ! hark I the watchman calls ! To yon blest city's height, Which hath foundations, and whose walls Its Maker decks with light. 380 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Up, to the Tree of Life, Kor longer weakly cling To haunts of vanity and strife Where fierce temptations sting. Up, to thy kindred dear. Who beckon from the skies. Who wander'd once in darkness here, But urge thee now to rise. Dread not the Spoiler's power To chill the vital flame. But 'mid the darkening clouds that lower Thy higher being claim : For this, thy fleeting breath With all its hopes was given, Rise, snatch the victory from death, And take the bliss of Heaven. DECEMBER XI. "My soul waiteth for tlie Lord, more tlmn they thut watch for the morning." Psalms, cxxx: 6. Who watch for morn ? The sufferer's eye That sleepless marks the hours go by, The exhausted nurse, before whose sight Long shadows steal and day seems night, The sailor-bo}^, his watch who keeps On lonely deck, 'mid surging deeps. DAILY COUKSELLOK. 381 And thinks, perchance, with weary tread, Of home, and brothers warm in bed, Fast by whose side he nsed to rest, Lov'd fledgelings in the parent nest. Yes, — these rejoice, when far away The dawn steals on, with mantle gray, And all impearl'd with dew-drops sheen Aurora's sandals print the green. Yet more than sick man's feeble wail. Or worn-out nurse, with watching pale. Or mournful mariner at sea, Waiteth my soul, Oh Lord, for Thee, For health, for hope, for needful rest. Oh ! make it by Thy presence blest. DECEMBER XII. " Rejoice in the Lord always ; and again I say, Rejoice." Phillippians, iv: 4. Be joyful, when the light Of youth is on thy bowers. The fleeting spring-tide of thy race Thy lodge among the flowers. Be joyful 'mid the toils On life mature that wait. The high meridian of thy day. The summer of thy state. 882 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Be joyful when tlie tints Of Antumn change the scene And walk amid the fallen leaves With countenance serene. Be joyful, even when age Shall cast its chilling snow, And through the naked branches bid The stars more brightly glow. Even, when time's finish'd year Shall to the grave descend, Eejoice in Him who gives a life That nevermore shall end. DECEMBER XIII. "Seeing then thai all these tilings shall be dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye to be 1'^ 2nd Peter, iii : 11. All things to be dissolved ? The links that bind Ruler to ruled, the iron bonds of law Consolidated by each passing age. Shall there like childrens' bubbles float away? The vast cathedral, where the emmet man Hath piled his stone on stone and fallen and died, Race after race, while still its heavenward bulk Cemented rose, casting on all around A solemn shadow, shall that leave no trace ? DAILY COUNSELLOK. 383 The solid rock, that hath borne up the weight Of Himalay, or Andes, since the horn- That flying chaos freed the struggling earth, Yet stagger'd not nor flinch'd, shall that dispart In noteless atoms ? Yonder arch of blue, Whose mighty pillars thro' unfathomed deeps Strike their strong base as tho' they mock'd at time, The crystal orbit of the sphered stars, The silver palace of the queenly Moon, The throne and chariot of the King of Day, Shall all dissolve? What then can man secure ? The diamond armor of a holy life, The asbestos of the soul. These can not burn. DECEMBER XIY, " First the blade, then the ear, after that, the full corn in the ear." Mark, iv : There springs a shoot of tender green. Up in the furrowed soil, Just where the faithful plow hath been, To mark the vernal toil. And though no blossom proudly spread Doth lure the florist's eye, It gathereth to its lowly head The dew-drop from the sky, 384 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Wliile shrouded in its bosom's fold Like cradled infant dear, There sleeps an embryo slieaf of gold, For ripening suns to rear. But they who glide on blissful wing Amid unfading bowers, Who do the bidding of their King In brighter realms than ours, ' They, with undimm'd, imerring eye, The priceless worth survey, Of those close-hidden germs that lie Involved in noteless clay, They bid us watch the quickened sod, Eefreshed by genial rain. And for the garner of our God Each plant immortal train. DECEMBER XV. "Songs in the liouse of my pilgrimage." Psalms, cxix : 54. Kame me the birds that dare to sing "When wintry tempests blow. When ruffian winds wild challenge fling, And ices to the streamlet cling, And check its merry flow. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 385 The Eobin, witla liis kindling breast ? Tlie Thrush, musician rare ? The Martin, bold and shrill of note ? The Blackbird with his tireless throat. Sing thej, when trees are bare ? No, 'No ; their favorite haunts are lone, Their warbling measures still, They all are gone, they might not stay To meet stern Winter's iron sway. Say, what their place can fill ? Upon their radiant plumes we muse Beside our wintry hearth, While dreary snows their banners toss. What can console us for the loss Of melody and mirth ? The unselfish deed, the gentle word, The smile that lights the eye. The pitying hand to want and pain True Friendship ne'er invoked in vain, Pure Love, that can not die ; These build a green bower in the heart Though every branch is riven, These have no winter in their breast. But gladly from a lowly nest Strike the soul's key-tone, sweet and blest. And sing like birds of Heaven. 33 386 DAILY COLTNSELLOK. DECEMBER XYI. " Rejoice evermore." 1st Thessalonians, v: 36. Be glad, mj brother, when the flower Unfolds its honied cnp for thee, And birds amid the vernal bower Stir every leaf with minstrelsy; Be glad, when storms of Antumn roll, When tyrant Winter lifts his rod, And in the silence of the soul Give praise to God. Be glad, when Hope around thee glows ; Even 'mid adversity or care Pour sympathy on others' woes, And find a strengthening solace there : Should clouds of sorrow shade thy cot, And make the cheering landscape sad, Look on another's happier lot. And be thou glad. Be glad, when youth illumes the scene, When years mature their burdens bear, When thoughtful age with eye serene, Twines almond-blossoms in thy hair. Brother, be glad ; without a fear Take life's last Angel by the hand, Thy herald to yon brighter sphere. The Better Land. DAILY COUKSELLOE. 887 DECEMBER XVII. " Them, also, that sleep in Jesus." 1st Thessalonians, iv : 14. How rest the saints in Christ, who sleep Far from the tempter's power? While for their loss the mourners weep, In lonely hall and bower ? They rest, unvexed by wildering dreams Of mortal care and woe, Nor wake to taste the bitter streams That through these valleys flow. They rest as rests the planted seed Within its wintry tomb. With hope from all its cerements freed, To rise in glorious bloom. They sleep as sleeps the wearied child Upon its mother's breast, 'Not foe, nor fear, nor tumult wild, * Invade their peaceful rest. Then why with grief, from year to year, Their blessed lot deplore. And shed the unavailing tear For those who weep no more? Ah, rather in their footsteps tread, With quickened zeal and prayer, And live as lived the holy dead. That ye their rest may share. 888 DAILY COUKSELLOR. DECEMBEE XVIII. "Yea, the stork in the heaven knoweth her appointed time." Jeremiah, viii: 7. See the stork laborious tending Onward througli the vaulted sky, 'ISTeatli those aged pinions bending That had taught his own to fij Still his parents' burden bearing, Patient o'er the trackless way, Eondly for their comfort caring, Never wearied night or day. Father, when thy head is hoary, When thine eye is dim with shade, Will it be my pride and glory Thy declining steps to aid ? Mother, when thy spirits languish. When thy strength and j^outh are spent, Shall I seek to sooth thine anguish Thou, who o'er my cradle bent ? Ever tireless, kind and tender. Shall I watch lest they are grieved ? And the same affections render That I once from them received ? Blessed lesson, gentle teacher, May it not be lost on me. Lest a simple winged creature Should my just reprover be. DAILY COUNSELLOK. 889 DECEMBER XIX. " All the days of Methuselah were nine hundred sixty and nine years, and he died." Genesis, v : 27. Akd was tills all ? He died! He wlio beheld The slow unfolding of centurial years, And shook that burden off unharm'd that turns Our temples white, and in his freshness stood While firm oaks molder'd, hath he left no trace, Save this one line, he died! What mighty plans Might in that time-defying bosom spring, And wear their harvest diadem, while we In the poor hour-glass of our seventy years Scarce see the bud of a few plants of hope Ere we are laid beside them, dust to dust. Oh, gay flower-gatherers on this crumbling brink Howe'er amid thick bowers ye hide, and think To let the pale king pass, it will be said Of you, as of earth's oldest man, — he died! Add to your epitaph, — he lived to God. DECEMBER XX. Blessed is He that waiteth." Daniel, xii : 12. Drawing near the western gate, Wait, my brother, bravely wait. Death, that ends this mortal strife, Doth he not accomplish life ? 33* 890 DAILY COUNSELLOE. On tliy soul its armor brace, Look liim fearless in the face, All his boasted power defy, Meet him with unclonded eye, As the messenger who brings Passport from the King of kings. Drawing near the western gate, Wait, my sister, calmly wait, Through all clianges, dark or bright, Mercy kept thee in its sight. Tempered wisely every blast. Will it cast thee off at last ? Comes that form, who silent led Many a loved one to the dead ? Put thy hand in his, and see What deliverance waits for thee. DECEMBER XXI. "The night cometh, when no mnn can work." John, ix : 4. Feom us, if every fleetiDg hour Improvement's boon doth ask. The Shortest Day may surely claim Its own j)eculiar task, The Shortest Day^ — let Morning's eye Its sacred rule repeat. And Evening's thoughtful ministry Enforce the lesson sweet, DAILY COUNSELLOR. 391 Patient to render good to all Within our bounded sphere, The gentle word, the active deed, The sympathizing tear, Uplift the heart to Him who gives Our path with hope to shine, Grladly receive each cup of joy Or tranquilly resign ; For duties such as these shall bear 'Mid all our cares and fears The soul above the flight of time, With all its measured years. DECEMBER XXII. " Call the Sabbath a delight." Isaiah, Iviii : 13. To meet its earliest ray with praise, For mercies rich and great, To muse in holy silence on Our everlasting state, To talk with those who o'er the flood Of Death have gone before, And deeper plant within our soul The heaven-lit smile they wore, To bare the heart to Him who brings Pure water from the rock, And join within His temple-gates The worship of his flock, 892 DAILY COUNSELLOR. The vanity and burdening care Of earth aside to lay, That like the robe of Nessus burns The life of life away, With breath of solitary thought To fan Devotion's flames. This is their privilege, who yield To Ood the day He claims. DECEMBER XXIII. "■God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes." Revelation, vii : 17. The mother's kiss consoles the babe That weeps in helpless grief, And for the troubles of the child Brings smiles of sweet relief, Yet still those quickly banish'd tears Are like the April rain, Beneath the polish'd lids they swell, And back they come again. The friend beside his sorrowing friend With sympathy sincere. Divides the pang, returns the sigh, And stays the bitter tear. Yet o'er the fountain of the heart That soothing spell is vain, A new affliction stirs its depths And forth they gush again. DAILY COUKSELLOE. 393 Tho' Love and Frienclsliip's hallowed force May quell tlie tides of woe, Eacli passing hour retains the power To bid its surges flow, But they who take a blessed flight Above those realms of pain, Whose tears the hand of God hath dried, Shall never weep again. DECEMBEK XXIV. " Freely ye liave received, freely give." Matthew, x: 8. Give prayers ; the evening hath begun ; Be earlier than the rising sun ; Eem ember those who feel the rod, Eemember those who know not God ; His hand can boundless blessings give : Breathe prayers ; through them the soul shall live. Give alms : the needy sink with pain. The orphans mourn, the crushed complain. Give freely : hoarded gold is curst, A prey to robbers and to rust, Christ, through his poor, a claim doth make; Give gladly, for thy Saviour's sake. Give books: they live when thou art dead, Light on the darkened mind they shed, Good seed they sow, from age to age. Through all this mortal pilgrimage. They nurse the germs of holy trust, They wake untired when we are dust. 394 DAILY COUNSELLOR. Give smiles, to clieer tlie little cliilcl, . A stranger on this tliorny wild, — It bringeth. love, its guard to be, It, helpless, asketli love from thee. Howe'er by fortune's gifts nnblest, Give smiles to childhood's guileless breast. Give words, kind words, to those who err ; Eemorse doth need a comforter. Thongh in temptation's wiles they fall, Condemn not, — we are sinners all : With the sweet charity of speech, Give words that heal, and words that teach. Give thought, give energy, to themes That perish not like baseless dreams. Hark ! from the islands of the sea. The missionary cries to thee, To aid him on a heathen soil, Give thought, give energy, give toil. DECEMBER XXV. "Lol the stnr which they saw in the cast, went before them, till it cnme and stood over where the young cliild was." Matthew, ii: 9. Why did it leave its ancient sphere, Yon sentinel on high ? That at creation's morning swell'd The anthem of the sky ? DAILY COUNSELLOK. 395 "Why paus'd it on its new career Ere the far goal was won ? As erst the sun and moon stood still, On awe-struck Ajalon. Why turn'd it thus with earnest beam Toward humbled Palestine, Where Bethlehem of Judea spread Its narrow, noteless line ? The searching eye of man survey'd In that sequestered vale, A manger-bed, a helpless babe, A mother, pure and pale, But thou, with glance serene, didst scan, Through all this strange disguise, Him, who the Eternal counsels shared, The ruler of the skies. Though wondering angels might not read The secrets of His will, Thou, watcher at the Grate of Heaven, Didst homage, and wert still. S'^Q DAILY COUNSELLOR. DECEMBEK XXVI. " Out of the depths." Psalms, cxxx : 1. Whom would you cTioose, as comforter in grief? To sit beside you, wlien the heart gave way ? Those who have never wept? A single tear From a poor menial's eye, hath more of balm Than all their pomp of verbiage. I'm afraid Of those who never mourned. I know not how To meet their unbowed natures. Nurs'd in pride. And puff'd with wine and perfume of the world. What reck they of the agony of souls "Salted with fire?" 'No doubt the friends of Job, Sleek and well-favor'd, failed to comprehend His plunge from princely wealth to poverty, The silence of a home that had no child. The loathed sickness creeping o'er the frame. The wifely tempting, the intense despair. That mastering patience, forc'd liis bitter groan Out of the deptlis. Hence they selected themes Inapposite, swelling the sufferer's woe. Till God from out the whirlwind, answered them. Sorrow that rends and wrings the human heart Ripeneth its sympathies. May not this be One reason for its discipline from Him Who is so pitiful ? that we may learn Better to soothe and serve our stricken race Amid the nameless ills that all partake ? DAILY COUNSELLOE. 8^7 DECEMBER XXVII. " As he walked by the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon, and Andrew his brother, casting a net, for they were fishers, — and said, ' Come ye after me.' " Mark, i : 16 17 Paeents, musing in your homes, Know ye what your sons have done? What a treasure they have found ? What an honor they have won ? Not Judea's pontiff crown, Not the tyrant Eoman's meed, Not the glittering spoil of gold. Those were fleeting gains indeed. While with toil their net they spread Thoughtful by the billowy tide, Girded with their fisher's coat, Jesus call'd them to his side, Call'd them, first of all the band. Who should touch the world with flame, He, who came the lost to save, Call'd them, and they trustful came. When this earth shall pass away. When its sun is lost in shade, May it then of us be said, Jesus call'd and they obey'd. 34 898 DAILY COUNSELLOR. DECEMBER XXVIII. " When my soul fainted within me, I remembered the Lord." Jonah, ii: 7. Alone I sate, by the waning lamp, 'Micl the lull of the tempest's strife, At the fading hour of the dying year, And the fading time of life, And I thought of the hearts that had ceased to beat Where my love was once garner'd strong. And I counted" the friends who had gone to the dead, A mute, and a mournful throng ; Their's were the hands that were clasp'd with mine AYhen existence was new and fair, Their's were the arms upon which I lean'd, In the burdening years of care : And my soul had fainted beneath its load, For the ej'es with tears were dim, Had it not remember'd the Lord our Roclr, And strengthen'd itself in Him. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 399 DECEMBER XXIX. "Ye observe dnys, and months, and times, and years." Galatians, iv: 10. He glidetli slow away, The Old Year, lone and grey, Kind and good. He hatli given us all lie had. He would fain have made us glad. If he could. To the ages that are past, On the wild and wintry blast He hath sped. And they utter as they fly, ^^ Praise! jpraise^^ to God on high. Like an angel's solemn cry From the dead. He brought us merry cheer, Brought us blessings rich and dear, And his hand If it robed our joys in gloom Pointed upward o'er the tomb. Where the flowers in fadeless bloom Ever stand. « But our years, both new and old, Will be number'd soon, and told, And the lamp in socket cold Cease to burn. 400 DAILY COUXSELLOK. Yet witli faith that quells despair, Still, in every woe and care, Unto Him tliat heareth prayer, Let us turn. DECEMBER XXX. "They told him that Jesus of Naznreth passeth by." Luke, xviii : 37. Watcher, untired by tlie bed of pain, While the stars sweep on with their midnight train, Stifling the tear for thy loved one's sake, Holding thy breath lest her sleep should break, In the loneliest hour there's a helper nigh, Jesus of ]N"azareth passeth by. Stranger, afar from thy Native Land Whom no one takes with a brother's hand, Table and hearth-stone are glowing free. Casements are sparkling, but not for thee : There is one who can tell of a home on high, Jesus of Kazareth passeth by. Sad one, in secret bending low, A dart in thy breast that the world may not know. Striving the favor of God to win, His seal of pardon for days of sin, Press on, press on, with thy prayerful crj', Jesus of Nazareth passeth by. DAILY COUNSELLOR. 401 Mourner, who turn'st to tlie clinrcli-yard lone Scanning the lines on yon marble stone, Plucking the weeds from thy childrens' bed Planting the myrtle and rose instead. Raise from their pillow thy tearful eye, Jesus of Nazareth passeth by. Fading One, with the hectic streak, In thy veins of fire and thy wasted cheek, Fear'st thou the shade of the darkened vale ? Look to the Friend who can never fail ; lie hath trod it himself. He will hear thy sigh, Jesus of Nazareth passeth by. DECEMBER XXXI. '' So teacli us to nuinl)erour dayi." Psalms, xc: 12. Thou dying Year ! Thou dying Year ! I watch thy parting pang. Draw the broad curtain round thy head, And o'er thy pillow hang : Without, the wintry frost is keen, The pale moon dons her mantle sheen. Within, the waning lamp burns drear. And thy deep gasping wounds my ear. 34* 402 DAILY COUNSELLOE. Thine lioiir hath come, the midnight-bell Sounds from yon tower its mournful knell, Kind, cherish'd friend, farewell ! farewell ! One sigh, one moan, and all is o'er, Save dim Oblivion's phantom-shore. Yet still thy tender memories twine With the strong roots of hope and fear. And that recording scroll of thine Must bear, where myriad souls appear, Deep witness to the Judge's ear. Nay, frown not thus, to Him I Hy, Who holds the keys of earth and sky, And never to His ear, in vain, Was breathed the contrite sinner's cry. So haste thee to thy shadowy train, For I will trust Him till I die. OCT "4 19^5 Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process. Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide Treatment Date: Oct. 2009 PreservationTechnologies A WORLD LEADER IN COLLECTIONS PRESERVATION 111 Thomson Park Drive Cranberry Township, PA 16066 (724) 779-2111