80 



MOO&jS'S liU&AL HEW-YOIiK 



MARCH 5, 



LIGHT. 

 Uafcbrlfttanvlll 





■ 



Plata Talks to American Women.--No. 5. 



.,,- ira Hunk relative to 

 sending young children tn the public schools, when 



the] o ■ aquellj m led ■■' hon o Oi o 



1,1 III.' i- I ■ 1 I . r HllllLllM.il llllll IIIJIII - Cdlllirieilll'lll 



111 H lin-li IlieV Ul I , ).-■ f ■ ■ 1 . "I"' oil. ll, I'l ill I' 



latid n a, broaUiing fat ' t BTerj da] no 



:|l|,|.. (,h. II I.M.I I ". It'll''- l'> tl"' l'\llill'' 



■ ■ 



discipline M ih" aiponic "i phyaiaal health. A 



large iii'ij'iiHi ul Hi. ■-■■ win. undertake the nutriic- 



tn.li i.t children shamefully ignoinul of I he 



■■ Inn . and of the relal ■ 



h, t,». i-n i. -I. mm n. m. i M.iin iiii'ii' .in- n bo 



know mi I. I'll, i il hi ill in- Hi i hi roil for In mis 



in close, hoi iohool compelling, under 



nrora ponoltioe, an Intonee application to books 



which thev in !■ ii I in... i iv In 'I U incompetent to render 



1 1 i, mm lei- ilini mi manj children 



1 ,.,■,- 1,, m,. i. ,-,!,.„ ,1. ii :. <lt i Him- multitudes ul",. \ru.M. 

 niter "ponding ii ill./ IiIIm. ii ,,l II,, I >• — t H'.ii- 



III HlMII III ,'- III Dim I I I' l.sliollld Clllelllpoll 



Iho ,n i, m. basinosi ■! lift with but a jot of that 



kllOVvll'lleC "llH'll Ol.V IIIIM.1.1 ll.lVC ilf.JllirCll llll. Il-t 



mora rational mnnagomonl 



To in. I those parents, 1 1 imi, who Hi I nk best In itc 



l ..(.' I| ■ M .,, V III,,. Illlll lllli'lltl.lll III .Ml.'l'l III.' 



<.,iii< ■ 1 1 ul Hun children tor the firat few yean, 



. , m mil cii.li nvnr to throw out some 



iiioi. which moj be uaeful. W e a ill ■ 



il will require much rare and labor, if faithfully 



pell.illlll ll , lull 11 lllll 1 ' plo.lsMll tllsk (ul II 



i in, Him i Mi., H I., ii- -i- In' untold ing and dcvelop- 



ul Im i , I' i.i iiiini !.■ w.itch it-, growth in 



knowledge, ai i ■■ ■ • I ro obild again, In 



ii .tniik* ul Hi. (bunt ol wiednml By mingling 



wiih them i" nil nu" ], ni>iii", lour intimate and 



delightlnl w ill i. ■ ' -M-i'ii them, 



hoiv thoroughly "in h.r prseepta and example be- 

 ,,,„,, tmpnaeodupao Ibolrmlnd* hawlittlelikelj 



ii mi ii.. , i.. m ■' ii fro mi Hi. 'in (then ia after yean 

 ii i rj Ibi than to leave the pnrcn- 



Inl [,,,,1 lit ,i (■!< .IMIIlt Iniliii', mi, I.t II,.- liiillitul 



im in« ■■ "I im .1.1. mmIIiit, I,,. ii could il tic ]n,-- 



-il,l,' t till ii Child should not crow up bciintit'iil, mi 



■'■I -i I I 



,::,,--. is Iimth 

 wiMi imi-I in n mil hi ul .-..}',.. i in--. ino[-,il anil mental, 

 mi Hvo.peiliup-, lone those rvaclly ill ike, so ilml no 



"H. | i r culture will be DxaoUy adapted lotwo 



individual- I:,, iv hi ,,t I im i- -h.iuhl it ii. I, 'i. -I. ui.l her 

 own child, else shr will !,,■ illy prepared to direct 



in iiiuM.i i 'i i ,.' ■>■,,■ I.,-.. ,,i' riiictiology boa shed 



. human iiiiinl. 

 nml offers ii ii'ia iii,nl.il,l,- hi, in-.ul' im 

 ii child'* initiir.il un'iil .1 endowments, and it would 



111- Well ll I'l.M . ! llip Hid thus 



pnfiei . ■! h. i . i ul' i in iho*, -lie must learn and 

 iirolii \>\ evpeneiu ,' iiml ubservation. 



'I'ln' nii'ii, otu .i, I, moi ii and religious 



1m.iii.Ii, ..i M.liiM.iiinii iiM so blended in practice, 



i treatingthem 



...iih-w Imi in , mm.I.ii .,'i ■!.. i 1i.mil- 1 1 more prominence 



riven. I'.n ,l -I, M ■,,..,. ■ 



foundntion upon which nil others mn-t be built. 



It ia a trite, though none the lose just observe- 

 i,.. H, tii it education ownmenoea in infancy; per- 



i In embryo. Be this 

 linn, the intuit of ihtvi if being educated when 

 nur»ir,g at its mother'* breast-hen 



... to ipt todii 



, t.t dravT aside 

 ■ 



month* in which 

 ii- half-formed 

 bow each new derelop- 

 irnd and «p- 

 ..- how each 

 I.i upon *ud 



i ; > & thine thoughta 



- of explona- 

 liut we may 

 ' veil of (be 



1 ^SMCtllUT. 



.». per- 



i to il» inDutoee upon the moral character 

 child! liow can U»e child, bmaiug in tta 

 * exami.lr for a model of what i» ngbl. be 

 believe thai a courae of 



i.-.l thalUUnoi hi 



BwmnchofaalutMftnfln- 



■ 

 ■■. 



ider jour iuDnriKi- would > »'i hi»vc them iimia- 

 ble and loring— bo amiable and loring 



t-il ibeni it 11 wrong to be pntahnwte, let 

 your own calm and e<iuahle manner mid loroa to 

 vour prreeeptiri lotehlDg. And «<■■ 

 baamtShO the govenim.nl ..f the ;i 

 lnilr»ymm.'r 1[ If a child's 



■ 



■ 'Hi . 11,1'V Will 



To expect the 



1,1 in euth a cbnracter, i* 



.. whirlwind. 



Xhe imrir'.". i * the most im- 



irioni lo prbieh the attentlan of a mother cun be 



.ln,.|e,l Wlirn DUl lirsl pfeTAttoWK placed ill 



Gorden of Uden, Ibi-* was the condition upon 



rre Ii, lie illlfiTved to reininn there , 



and when they failed lo endure Ihl (e-t, a Qamlng 



.mi 1 1,1 1 iiiein ."-mm s tiii be ttveoffife; oowhen 



the paradise of hrnne Ibi- piinciplc is not ob- 

 served, Ibe child. «//-exiled, is barred from the 

 of happinra, wanders aivny from the fold of 

 parental love, and become*, too often, as did the 

 nh,i|)|iy f'jin, n "fugitive and vngobond in the 



Mrth." 



Doea come mother, impressed with a scdsc of 

 maternal responsibility, inquire, "How shall I 



n- I , mi Child ■! etieeiliil iiinl rc.idy iihedi 



Mi. 1 he 1, go to vHii closet and ask your 



1 1 in -]..- 1> the \ illume of Inspiration and read 



promise: "If imv man lack ivjmI.hii let him 



of linn, who gnelh to all men liberal I V anil 



upbraideth nnl, ami il -hull In- given him." (Jo 



draw from the fount whence ihc wu-cst Imveohlaiii- 



therr \\w\ profound wisdom ! (in there ami mi 

 nnii-lih imbue your own soul with the love of 

 n, Ihal il *liall hfi-nine a ilit ine huloarniiml von, 



vilu.-e Inighiiiesi voir children shall love to 

 bask! W shall you have reason to hope that il 

 sbull not long be a diflicnlt thing for your little 

 ,-. I,, Mil, mil ibi'ir will to Hint of one iii whose 

 e OOd favor UlOJ only me happy, aud whom 

 ■ 1 mn-t rccogniio ns worthy of their young 



:lot even the Licit religious csiimplc on the pnrt 

 Hie mother, if unsupported by judgment and 

 iidcncc— if such a thing be possible— may fail of 

 luring ibe objicl desired. The parent must, 



ii Im l.egmmiig. I mill Hie reins of government 



■toady. There must be iiniled with the gentleness 



■, the firmness nf authority. The mother's 



ust be law, and tbnt law must be supported 



by penally. In -.nine ruse-, where a child's aflec- 



is i.-ry slioiig, iind ils sympathies active, it 



be a sufficient penally that the mother appear 



,1, |.,. . .1 ;i,i, I grieved , but in oilier cases il slill 



-T ,.1.1. II, ul the "rodwHl givevvis- 



bard thing for a tender-hearted 

 ■ . obliged i" re lort to corporeal punish- 



■nt, Imi il would seem that tlnie are butfew cases 

 ■j.ensed Willi; 



and when it heeomoa doci iry, "chasten thy son 



while there is hope, and let tint iby soul spare for 

 bis crying;" "correct him and be shall give thee 

 ■St— yea. be shall give delight unto thy soul;" 

 but remember, that "a child lei I lo buuself bringetb 

 In- mother to shame." Hut let the child be made 

 reel that eTeninthocorreotion.youare manifest- 



^ y our par en tal love mingle I ne tears of tender - 

 -, vv itb the strokes Of the rod, and they will bare 

 llr effect. The child's heart is not of adamaul, 



nt il sliMiild not melt in the locus of the intense 

 and united rays of a mother's h.ve and displeasure. 

 The principle of obedience .nice established, 

 ml respect will ii.ilunilly follow, if the parents 

 am til 1 11 that dignily of moral and intellectual 

 which every parent i//"»W .it rive lo acipiire 



CIVILIZATION. 



. Bjttst-enow n ed iuii>— 



Pmn 



■1..11. 



Like 



An.l 



-. it,,' nirlmii- Of morning HB» 



!l„ n.i'D.,! Kiiiml.-ti;.- invilingljflon, 



Ver, 



Improvtrinenlniiil ['f.-itre" tlleirlir.norm»in 

 it 111} rind liner* or ImJultry reign— 



Leai (, and UbertrdwcO, 



1 irulh mtsty fBlschood* diapo 



aT « rippled and anna li U>< wn'i [orau b« 



r,„,„r, tOUiOglorlOUi 





' ll.vl 



A HOPE '■RESTORATIVE." 



-What a great puff 



Hiiii.e oret M'l.ir ' 1 .t 1 ■ - . and 



Why il.nii von mil m,Imm ,i pumieea, an niv igorator, 

 it rolointive I, ir I In- de, ul, and laded, and dying 



hopes Hint lie thickly clustered in liueless, rayless 

 de-pair, buried in the unseen grave of the broken 

 heart* Are there no chemical conibinalioua — is 

 there no art — no discovery whereby the joyless 

 b.'.irl Mm be restored lu hope and happiness '— 

 \\ In 111,- we nil turning gray — 





of life? Is* 



Among men it may often be I 

 work — too clou© application to 



vhy arc the women gray-headed, In 



W'hut 



1 much 



the 



,i. 1 pi 1 than vou tb 



yond the reach of eitcrnal dyes and 



10 are wlievving, and barrying. un.l 



d living lb rough llns world— who hove homes, and 



M>- n, but know il not — the next 



ii ..I,,, ■, we - look at your wife long 



it lull,. 1 bet hnir is black, it blue, or 



ik nt her face - you can tell whether 



niiig 1 bo lik-blood from 



' n. and -topaiid 



t,.r there is or ia not 



Stad] ber temperament. Possibly 



lenUon on your part may do wonder* 



It yon would luv, bei 



ratlin the bl ■ " ■ v.. nth, make her 



you will be repaid 



, . and the 



good, cod then v., H 1 ,n tb 



Sloolv. n.nv, vcr.il im.-. and the 



brat she draw, near. 

 rhieh *he has eardcaaly ud 



:■-.'■■ 



1 refer should 

 been recorded there. 

 Much ho« been writleo on the subject t 

 the part of the motl 



w ben it is cousidercd in I 



■ 



.iiniilil 



if not, 

 be, that almost any husband would leap into the 

 »ea or rash into a Laming editire to rescue a per- 



■ iiveuienceor 



happiness of a wife in MOM BUadl mitter, Uie ncg- 



would be unobserrtd. i» a more elo- 



i: ; r 





:£iz 



■bright 



tvaUe'. 



HMII 







nili-liirl.i-.l, 





















1-, , n 



Bowl 



■ pralrleim 



frogr 



and all 





V.ry f 



Irbon 



land, lull It 



' Iielr.o 



..'..I, 

















■ 



'1 'J 





















a light 













^ ileptli, of 







Iilur. 



"ir iii-enilile Ii 









nt.. 



Aslnt 



meaer 



the pale An 



s flrstn 



vt Iliel 



"ghl 



Very 1 



Ir l« out 



land, but b 



w and is 



the lha 



iRht 



Ilml , 



elvili7 



linn but] 



tinny wr 



„..|,r- 





SAVED! SAVED! 



Trehk is a world of joy shut up in that Uttlo 



old, saved ' liow- Tunny a dawn of rich and golden 

 beauty for the soul has it ushered in, after gloomy 

 s of deferred hope and anxious watching! 

 It is always ti sweet word to hear — a sweeter 

 word to speak. So full of happy music wheu the 

 Iter it — so full of happier meaniuy when the 

 feels it. The voice never breathes il, but the 

 face becomes radiant with joy, and the eye sparkles 

 with delight. Every chord of the heart vibrates 



It ha 



, ln-i 



of 



Him 



mingled experience of sorrow and joy of many n 

 soul. Few there are who have not utlered il In 

 more or less of fullness of its meaning; few, 

 through whose soul it lias not sent a thrill of de- 

 light, filling il (ho full for utterUOO, Sound it out 

 in the stillness of night, and some aching heart 

 will take ,t up, and tend it joyfully back again 

 through the gloom and darkness. Whisper it ever 

 mi softly, and there will be some soul that cannot 



.on iiM;lf for very joy. It is the avenue 



iln-i.ngh .t Inch the soul breathes out its overflow- 

 ing gratitude. Its whole expression is that of 

 thankfulness. 



Saved! and from what? Ah! from a life of 

 nii-eiv, of crime, of degradation, of shame, of iufa 

 my, and from death. If yon have known, kiud 

 reader, what it is to have had the dear object of 

 your heart's best ufl'ectious, snatched from any of 

 thane calamities, you have found no word that 

 could so fitly express the out -gushing thankfulness 

 of your heort, as that little word, saved. 



Il is a glorious evening in mid-ocean. The 

 slais, peejiiug ijnietly nut from their blue homes, 

 All the whole heavens with glory, and glimmer and 

 dance on the blue waves urouod. There is splen- 

 dor above, around, aud beneath. An ocean stunn- 

 er, freighted u uh human souls, is moving grace- 

 fully and steadily toward borne. The posseugers 

 are all on deck, admiring the beauty and loveliness 

 of the evening, The uir is vocal with happy tones 

 of the speakers, and loud peals of joyous laughter 

 ring out above ll,e nnl",,, ol the WOTta Suddenly 

 a loud scream i- I,. ,n,l. .ui.l M'-' cry so terrible at 

 se,i, •■ then is a child owboord," >' i 



mi i- confualon, while every mother 



b looking for ber darling child. Bui there is one 



■ ■ anol iiml her'a, Bkr child ia oror- 



, ills wildly on nil to save her child. 



Will do one .-..v.- b«i I Bn ifl ■-- thought u ■ ob- 

 ject sinl.es the waves, uud soon the -'■ 



: il.e slruggler. 



,.,, deck, aiuid the thanks 



di -eribe th 



i it . , win (i the face of herdi 



.. ju,1 she hear- the breath 



"in a watery 



mailer the oo 



upon, the more intensely affectionate 



Ti>e i, 



r I,- 1« 





vd. and alln,, e waa one ot 



; pKthor, Mother, Brother 

 1 

 felt lha BkSDC 



. 



home, where n a can minister to ibeir wants, and 

 otoe the pmn mid anguiafaof their departure, is a 

 i , unfiil ilfimst begraad 

 durance; bttl 



■ 



W« : 



t Someqniel 



. m on rrBtherod ah ml ■■ 



talking t' :o full' .■! ''■■■ i"t , 'i .'Mi i. ■■■ 



oppued, and we are .limped in the nrms of our lost 

 We have learned the meaning of that word. 



a iu>t reached i 

 tnible railroad dlaa i i ! a 

 ig we bade pood-b 



nving i 



the idol of mn 



Qon ' is he numbered 



among the victims'' Who shall know the anguish 

 our heart as we hurry to the seen,' ot di-.i -'■■■. 

 ,1 look among the dend. to see if be is thei,- 

 err crushed and hlc-dini; face we imagine to be 

 I, Our looking is in vnin. At length, in our 

 ary search, we find him torn and bleeding, but 

 ing, breathing, still ; and the physician say* lie 

 not much injured, and will soon be able to rise 

 again. Our jo v then is i,.,, full fin nUernnce, and we 

 y say, laved ' UTtd ' I 



;ourt room is crowded, while the only sou 



poor mother is on (rial for murder. Shs 



lie is innocent — innocent ns when a babe 



lie drew his life from her own bosom, riot thev 



try him do not know it. With what intense 



jtj she watches every countenance of those 



?e men into whose hands are committed the 



of her only sou. The pleaders have ended, 



ibe judge has summed up, and the jury are alone. 



The hours lengthen into days ils the mother awaits 



the decision. The jury return. The verdict is 



i— no? guilty? He is tartd, cries the mother 



v overflowing joy of her heart. Saved, my 



never much of significance these scenes have 



lo tin- vv.n.l, we shall never know all ils 



ing this side eternity. We may have felt its 



r when our brother was saved from a life or 



e, or from death; bill we shall never know 



niich it means, until on the green slopes of the 



■of Life, watching and waiting for the loved 



WC left behind, we are pcrmitlcd to welcome 



amid the aonga "I Angela, and the joyous 



sluHits of the redeemed, to the ceaseless joys of 



heaven. Saved, w.- -Ji.il I -diout it throughout all etei - 



Saved, it will echo through the high arches 



»vcn, louder and louder slill, as the years roll 



Saved from sin, from misery, from dealh, and 



peace ; safe in heaven, 



.■Ml ii 



way a 





■, with an evcrlasling salvi 

 shall we know the glorious import of those 

 words that first brought joy lo our souls— lit that 

 ?<,<.th on th. Lordjmti Christ shall be raved. 

 Etoeheater, N. T , 1800, S. A. K. 



A BEAUTIFUL PEHOKATION. 



I'rof, 



el.. Mow 



rln iIIhil: passage: 



" Li-lit traverses -pine nt the rate of twelve mil- 

 lion miles a minute, yet Hie light from the nearest 

 star requires ten years lo reach the earth, and 



lli l-el,. ll'- '■.-!' -,.m|"- lit, -.lie, I ,-r.irs two tlinusiind 



three hundred limes Author distant. The great 

 telescope of Lord Hosse pursued these creations of 

 Iind slill deeper into space, and having resolved 

 the iiebuheof Ibe .Milky Way into stars, discovered 



other cystoma of itnn beantlfoJ diamond points, 

 glittering through the black darkness beyond. — 



\\ ben lie beheld this nniamig abyss— when he saw 

 !!,,-.■ -v -te ill s scattered profusely throughout spine 

 — when he reflected upon tb.-n immense distances, 

 I ben- i-i in m- magnitude, 1 the countless mil- 

 lions of worlds that belonged to them, it seemed to 

 bl m us I hi nigh the wild .ii en n i i.i' the German poet 



"(J, id culled II 





o the vestibule of 





thee the glory 



who stood about hla thrt 



strip bin, of his 





j hi- angel: 



>cs 'if flesh ; eleanse his 

 breath intu bis nostrils 

 touch not his human heart— the heart that fears, 

 and hopes, and trembles.' A moment, and i 

 done, and the man stood ready for his unk 

 voyage. Under the guidance of a mighty angel. 

 with sound of flying pinions, they sped away 

 thc battlements of heaven. Some time oi 

 mighty angel's wings tbey fled through Subaras of 

 darkness, wilderness of dealh. At length fr 

 distance not counted save in the arithmetic of 

 heaven— light beamed upon them — a sleepy 

 as seen through a hazy cloud. They sped 

 their terrible spaed to meet the light; the light 



tv Mil I, ---mi - j ..... J e;ime Im iinel iI.mi.i In ar 



the blazing of suns around them — a moment 

 wheeling of planets; then came longcterniti 



tw ibgbt ; then again on the right hand end tin 

 i last the 



•I'Hi.l is there 



t ahone n 



'-' ;' h - 1 - 



And from the glittering stars th 

 there came o choral shout — 'End there is none I*— 

 ■End there is nine:-' demanded the angel again; 

 ■ and is it this thai awes thy soul? I answer, end 

 there is none to the universe of God! Lo, also, 

 there is no beginning I* " 



[LiBDVBSa or CaAnAcTEii.— riardueas is a want 

 ni minute attention to the reelings of others; it 



I,,. dignity or a carelessness 

 of mil, i ntig pain, but fro 



little ihhlga bj 



I ! a bard , 



think, 

 • peak ill of your 

 children, or your country; aud 

 .. gi e-alest good humor and volubility, 

 and with a total inattention tu yoni 



the mark of his 

 hoof upon yoni bi 



MY MOTHER'S BIBLE. 



Ur father read tl.h holr hook 



AFFLICTIONS. 



In their light we can see what hv art! Profess- 

 ing to believe that Qon orders all things wiiply 

 and well, and praying "Thy will be done," yet, 

 whose heart does not, for the moment at least, se- 

 cretly rise in opposition to Him, when ho sees 

 death invading his dwelling to remove his most 

 cherished friend and support? l>o we ever think 

 what that emotion of opposition . 

 Nolhiug less Hum ive would not have His will to bp 

 done! It is bringing .Ikiiov.h to the bar oT our 



hearts, and pint icing judgment against His 



decrees! It is lhal lurking enmity of Smi th.it 

 would actually dethrone (Ion if it had the power! 

 It speaks in unmistakable language whal the hu- 

 man heart Ut It proves that we nre /alien, de- 

 praved — aliens to (Ion by nature and practice I — 

 Does any one doubt this opposition of his heart, 

 cheerfully 



■ Let I. 



i be i 



.,,'lelll, 



take heed lost be fall." ,\ -ingle, sudden, stun 

 hi- blow would uudeeciTe him, if he was not ut- 

 terly oblivious to bis own emotional exercises.— 

 Has another grace that enables him, after the mo- 

 ment, to be reconciled ? Know that that is not 

 yn<ir ruit'ire, but Gnu's >jift, and be grateful end 

 be humble in view ofit. " 



Uut what is it to he truly reouifihJ to an ajjlic- 

 tionf A great deal that passes under that name 

 is spurious. It is of a kind which leads us to feel, 

 and even tb say, " well, it can't be helped, I suppose 

 it is all righl, let us return again to our business, 

 or to our pleasure" — precisely the submission of 

 the culprit on the scaffold. And this is just as 

 high ns ihc unaided heart can gel. It cannot as- 

 platform one inch. It is not to 

 ly higher, nor any more comfort- 



ccud above Hi 



ing philosophy in 

 expression — it cat, 



i- lha 



lied ii 



i that "nffliotioi 

 ither doth tro 



hOptd, Only the spirit of 

 higher level. That will 

 is come not forth of the 



spn 



Of 



afflict willingly, nor 

 grieve the children of men, but for Ibeir profit, 

 that tbey may be partakers of his holiness," — that 

 his dealings and dispensations, bow dark soever 

 they may appear to the natural eye, ure not vtndia- 

 Mm judfirunU, but the aflbotlonate chastening of 



a father's baud to wean us from those baser ob- 

 Is which our natures inevitably tend. 





Such a 





a of truth, will n 



iiess and Irouble. and to Mu 

 smita tit. Any thing short of t 

 worth, and might its wall ba throw 





i of little 



>es not incline the 

 soul in this direction, is not of the Spirit's inter- 

 pretation, hut is of the same nature with that 

 which leads a now lionized public apeaker, nlr 

 the guise of a lecturer ou foreign travel, to poison 

 the public mind ivnb his own mini. : 

 by declaring, againsl the testimony of Scripture, 

 and Calvary itself, thai no man is created "totally 

 bad.'' • 



(tin r'uin.r.' -The gospel bringa man into a 



moat nil, male and en.le.iung relation with the 



Creator. It teaches us to WOl hip Him, nol as the 



Absolute Being, indi i Lanl tod n gerdleae ol ll" 



creatures, or as the Unchangeable, w itbdrawn from 

 all connection with a transitory world, but as a 

 Father who feels a tender interest u. 

 children, and hears their prayers and mun.-ie'' to 

 Liightos uayn viu> beautifully : 



Oh! the Unspeakable pritileg.: !„ bate llni, l.,r 

 II mercies, and 



theQodoI ,.ll comfort. Ooaot think be oaa that 



out a bleeding soul thai cornea to Him. and refuse 



to take, and to bind up. "'^ hwl, a broken heart 



-, Ui> band, 



indoDtrsWbll"'" 1 '' '» utl '"' ri v 



l totfa ii. giri ' k> t»i -"■'' i» not infinitely 



, Nil. 



- bni ii 



. that ■, 



■ 



21SZ 



