famitg POEM RECITED BY MR. LINCOLN. To the Editors of the N. y. Evening Post:7— I have been urged by several friends to send you the enclosed poem, written down by myself from Mr. Lincoln!s lips, and although it, may :not be new to all your readers, the - events of the last week give it now a peculiar interest. The circumstances under which this copy was written are these:—l was with the Presi dent alone one evening in hi ro s om during the time I was painting my large pic ' ture at the White House last year. He presently threw aside his pen and papers, and. began to talk to me of Shakespeare. He sent little "Tad," his son, to the library to bring a copy of the plaYsTancYthenlettri tede'several'of fivo rite passages, showing genuine appreciation , of the-great-poet: " Relapsiniiiitb"a sadder strain, he laid thp.book aside, and leaning back in his chair, said • "There is'a poem which has been a great favorite with me for years, which was first shown to me when a young ,man by, a friend, -and Which I afterwards •saw'.and 'at from a . newspaper and learned by heart. I woild," lie continued, "'give a great deal to knbly who * 'wrote it, biat I have never been able to-ascer tain.'3 ; Then half closing his eyes, he repeated to me the lines which I enclohe to you. Gretitly pleased and interested, I:told him I would like, if ever an opportunity occurred, to -write them down from his' lips. He said he would some time try to give them to me. A few days, afterwards he asked me to ac company him to the temporary studio of Mr. Swayne, the sculptor, who was making a bust of him at the Treasury Department._ While he was sitting for the bust I was suddenly reminded of the poem, and said to him that then would - be a good time to dictate it to me. He com plied, and sitting upon some books at his feet, as nearly 'as I can remember, I wrote the lines ;down, one by one, from his lips. With great regard, very truly yours, B. F. CARPENTER. OH WHY SHOULD THE SPIRIT OF MORTAL BE PROUD? Oh, why should the spirit of-mortal be proud? Like a swift, fleeting meteor, a fast-flying cloud, A flash of the lightning, a break of the wave, lie passeth from life to his'rest in the grave. The leaves of the oak andthe'willow shall fade; Be scattered around 'and together be laid; And the young and the old, and the low and " the high, Shall moulder,to dust and together shall lie. The infant a mother attended and loved The ; mother that infant's affection who proved; The hniband that mother audinfantwho,blessed, Each, all, are away to their dwellings - of Rest. The' hand - of the king that the sceptre hath The' brow the prieet. th: worn • Are hidden an. oat in rt The peasant,,ivhose lot sow and to reap ; The herdsman, who climbed with his goats up the steep ; The beggar who wandered lu search of his bread, . , • Have faded away like the grass that we tread. So.the multitude goes, like the flower or the weed That withers away to let others succeed ; So the multitude comes, even those we behold, To.repeat every tale that has often been told. For we are the same that our fathers have been; We see'the same sights that our. fathers have seen— We drink the same stream and view the same And run the same course our fathers have run. The thoughts Ite are thinking our fathers would think ; From the death we .are shrinking our fathers would shrink ; To the life we are clingint they also would cling; But it speeds for us all, like a bird on the wing• • They loved, but the-story we cannot unfold ; They scorned, but the heart of the haughty is cold; They grieved, but no. wail from their slumber will come ; They joyed, butthe tongue of their gladness is dumb. They died, ay 1- they died ; we things that are now, That walk on the turf that lies over their brow, And make in their dwellings transient abode, Meet the things that they met on their, pilgrim age road. Yea! hope, and despondency, pleasure and pain, We mingle together in sunshine and rain And the smile and. the, tear, the . song and the Still follow each other, like surge upon surge 'Tis the wink of an eye, 'tis the draft of a breath ; From the blossom of health to the paleness of death, • From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud— Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud? THE COVENANTER'S MARRIAGE DAX. (CONCLUDED.) Mark, with great difficulty, rose up and knelt down as'he was ordered. He had no words 'to say to his bride; nor almost did he look at her, so full was his soul of her image, and of holy grief for the desolation in which she wo ald be left by his death. The dewy breath of her gentle and pure kisses was yet in his heart, and the happy sighs of maidenly tenderness were now to be changed into groans of incurable despair. Therefore it, was that he said nothing"as he knelt down ; but his pallid lips moved in prayer, and she heard her name indistinctly uttered between those of God and Christ. Christian Lindsay had been betroth ed. to him for several- years, and no thing but the fear of some terrible evil like this had kept them so long sepa rate.. Dreadful, therefore, as this hour was, their souls were not wholly un prepared for it, although there is al ways a miserable difference between reality and mere imagination. She now recalled to her mind, in one com prehensive thought, their years of in nocent and youthful affection ; and then the holy words so lately uttered by the old man,in that retired .place, alas I called by too vain .a name, " The Queen Fairy's Parlor." The tears began now to flow—they both wept ; for this night was Mark Kerr's head to lie, not on her bosom, but in the grave, or unburied on the ground. In that agony, what signified to her all the insulting, hideous, and inhuman language of - the ,licentious murderer? They fell off her' Soul without a stain ) , like polluted water off the phiriaa-cre'of some fair sea-bird. And as she looked on her husband 'upon his knees awaiting his doom—him, the temper ate, the merciful, thegentle, and the; just—and then upon those wrathful, raging, fiery-eYed, and bloody-minded Mien, are they,r. thought her fainting heart, of the same kind? are they framed by one God? and has Christ -alike died for-them all? She lifted up her, eyes, full of prayers, for ° one moment, -to heaven, and then, with a cold shudder of de sertion, turned upon her husband kneeling, with a white-fixed counten- Aimee, and half dead already with the loss of blood. A dreadful silence had succeeded to that' tumult; and she difrily saw a niunber Of men'drawn: up -together. without moving, and• their determined eyes held -fast upon their victim. " Think, my lady; that it is Hugh Gemmel's ghost that cominands you now," said a deep hoarse voice,, "-no mercy cl;id the holypen of the mountains Show to . him When they smashed 'his. skull with large stones from the channel of the Yarrow. Now for revenge? The soldiers presented their mus kets, the word was given, and they ,fired. At that momentl Christian Lindsay had ru,slied forward ' and flung herselfedown ou her knees beside• her husband, -and they both, fell,, and stretched themselves out =Rally wounded upon the grass. During all this scene, 'Marion Scott, 'the bridesmaid, a girl of fifteen, had been. lying affrighted among the brackens within' a handfed yards of the murder. The agony of grief now got the better of the .agony of fear, and, leaping up from her concealment, she rushed into the midst of the•sol diers, and kneeling, down beside her dear Christian Lindsay, lifted up her head, and shaded the hair from her forehead. " Oh, Christian ! your eyes are opening.--do you hear me—do you hear me speaking?" "Yes, I hear a ivoice—iS it:- yours, , Mark ?—sspnak again ?" Oh, Christian! it is only my voice—poor ,Marion's." " Is- Mark • 2—l 91 , And t:hprp tra% lieaid the deep gasping sohi.that were rending the child's heari.. Her, eyed, too, opened more widely, 'andStily as they were, they 'saw, indeed, close - 1:y her the huddled-up, mangled, and blocidy body of her husband. The soldiers stood like so . many beasts of prey, who had gorged their fill of blood; their rage was abated, and they - offered no violence to the affectionate child„as ste continued to sit before them, with the head of Chris tian Lindsay in. her lap, watering it with tears, and moaning so as to touch, at least, some even of their hardened hearts: When blood is shed it soons begins to appear a fearful .sight to the shedders, and the hand soon begins to tremble that has let out human - life. 1 Cruelty cannot sustain itself in. the presence of that rueful color, and re morse sees -it reddening into a more ghastly hue. Some, of the soldiers turned away in silence, or with a half suppressed oath ; others strayed off among the trees, and sat down too-e -ther, and none would now have touch ed the head of pretty little Marion. The man whom they had shot de served death—so they. said .to one another--and` he had OA it ; but the woman's death was accidental, and 1 they were not to blame because she had run upon their fire. So, before the smell and. smoke of the gun-powder had been carried away by the passing breeze from that place of murder, all were silent, and could hardly bear to look one another in the, face. Their work had been lamenta ble indeed. For now they began to I see that these murdered people were truly bridegroom and bride. She was lying there dressed with her modest white bridal garments and white rib bons now streaked . with many streams of blood from mortal wounds. So, too, was she who was supporting her head. It plain that a bridal party had been this very day,' and that their hands had prepared for a - happy and affectionate newly-wedded pair that bloody bed, and asleep from which there was to be no awaking at the voice of morn. They stood looking appalled on the' bodies, while, on the wild flowers around them, which the stain of blood had not reached, loudly and. cheefully were murmuring the mountain bees. . Christian Lindsay was not quite dead, and she at last lifted herself up .a little way out of Marion's lap,, and then falling down with her arms over her husband's neck, uttered a few in distinct words of prayer, and expired. Marion Scott had never seen death before, and it was' now presented to her in its most ghastly and fearful shape. Every horror she had ever heard talked of in the hiding-places of her father and .relations was now re alized before her eyes, and, for any thing she knew, it was now her turn to die. Had she dreamed in her sleep of such a trial, her soul would have died within her, and she would have convulsively shrieked aloud on her bed. But the pale, placid, happy looking face of dead Christian Lindsay, whom she had loved as an elder sister, and who had always been so good to her from the time she was a little child, inspired her now with utter fearless ness, and she could have knelt down to be shot by the soldiers without one quiekened pulsation at her heart,. But now 'the soldiers were -willing to leave epth of.the grave. THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN , THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1865. the bloody green, and their leader told Marion she might go her ways' , and bring her friends to take care of the dead bodies. No re,-he , 'Sgid, Iwould hurt her. And soOn4ft,, ,er -the party disappeared. . Marion reit:tamed for a while beside the dead. Their wounds bled not now. But she brought water from the' -little -spring-2and--washed-Lthera Altile•-- cently, and left not a single stain upon - ftl --1 eithero err faces. She disturbed as little as possible the position in winch they lay, nor removed Christiatis arm from her husband's neck. She' lifted one o'f 'the ''arlith - 'ilp lot 67-18.61aent- to L . Wipe away_a spot, of blk down again itself, and nit Dining all this'time IX light 'was giving ,a ; deep purple • heather, andd — as up her eyes'td heaven golden West the last - re] .All..the`wild. was silent was; there but that of, the And the darkening sti' Marion's young, soul wi superstition, as she oo] bodies, then UP to - the and . over the' glimmei th‘ solitary glen. The poor girl was hal, deepening hush, and' the g.a darkness. Yet theaspirits of til had so tenderly loved would zg i her; they had gone tO heavei. she find heart to leave them / together ? Yes; there - wis she thought, to molest the' raven inhabited this gil .but; the dews would tow she she went to the- nearest ; and told her father i t -friends of the murder., Before the moon ha4isen, party that on. the inirning present at the mairrage, hay bled 'on the hillside before ing whe - re Mark rr and 'Lindsay were now lifted e vr lifted up on a heather-couch, and lying still as , in the/ grave. , The and matrons who had bee] happy scene in the Queen T blots, or hride's favors, we; iheit-bieasts. The old m, come fioni.his cave, and not years had he wept till now ; was a'case even for the tears 'religious man of fourscore. To watch by the dead all to wait for some days till i be coffined for burial, was thought of in such times That would have been to s; living foolishly for the soldiers had gone. 'But no doubt would, return, the funeral. Therefore it wa; proposed than agreed to in souls of them all, that the and his bride should be that very night in the clot they had that morning 1 A bier was soon formed tree boughs; and their I looking up to heaven, no moonlight, they were bol sobbing silence, up the hi along the glens, till the together in the low buri. the head of St. Mary's L( was dug for them there, not their own burial place. Kerr's father and moth( .church -yard of Melrose, rents of Christian Lim that of Bothwell, near beautiful Clyde. The grave was half heather, and. gently w€ down together, even a: found lying on the gret. shealing, into that mournf , old man afterwards said over them, but with the li sitting down on the grav( grave-stones, they spoke of the dead. They had, cut off in their youthfh many happy days and ,‘ theirs; their affection fi had been a solace to poverty, and persecution. have been a perplexing who had not faith in holiness s and mercy. mourned now together resigned to His dispe' soon all eyes were drif silence they all quitted t and then the funeral few hours ago had bei one, dissolved among alens l and rocks, and lel b and Christian Lindsay rest. A NATURAL Co_ Archbishop Whately ing to elicit a candidat( market. value of labor, to .demand and supp. baffled, the prelate put this simple form : ' your village two shoes: sufficient employment to live tolerably, and would follow if a third up in the same yin; would follow, sir ?" sai "why, a fight, to be s. GOD'S PROMIOS the Lord hath things ; only, l them be in his ol%v for us to set au Creator of time, s: only in the term Rutherford. WE TWO. We own no houses, no lots; no lands No dainty viands for us are sPread, By sweat of our brows and toWof our hands We earn the pittancp that buys our bread And yet we , live in a grander state,naires • Sunbeam and I—than he 190 dine off silver and golden Plate, With liveried lacqueys behind the chairs. . - t e h a ve no riches in houses or stocks ~Nolaank=books show our-balance-to , drawl 'Yet we carry a safe-ITey that unloclis More treasure than Crmsus E ver saw._ : We wear no velvet nor satin fine, -We dress-in-a very homely Ivah But ah what luminousjustres shine AbOut Sanbeam'a, g lycols and my hodden gray en fa 4 , 0 , 0 0r), it is verr M y ji r ' ~1;,;,-,atoi-d*Irt,iier (We do not ride, -We are. ik-'r re from the other side We are bolten - 0f: the to 'h We arer t ut for this we do not'Cire'3 i tio ae y,, we ,pass along, 4 and I and you cannot see, Sin so ' • . = , • w ..#._, what tall and beautiful throngs -; 1 ,-elgi we have for company.. - -.-- . • 6 parpi no dulcimer, no guitar,. .srealis into music at Sunbeam's touch, ,iit'do not think that our evenings are ,tor Without, their music; there is no such In-the concerthalls, where-the,palpitiint air In musical hillOws floats and swims, Our lives are as psalms and'ourforeheads wear A calm, lithe peal of beautiful hymns. 1 lie the cloud weather obscures our skies, And some days darken with drops of rain, We have but to look in each other's eyes, And all is balmy and bright again. Ah, ours is the alchemy that transmutes ' The drugs to elixir—tlie dross to gold, And-so we live on Hesperian. fruits, Sunbeam and I, and never grow old. Never grow- old, but we live in peace, And love our fellows and envy none, And our hearts are glad at the large increase Of plentiful virtues under the sun. . And the days pass on with their thoughtful tread, • . And:the Shadows lengthen toward the west, But the,,wiane of our, young _years brings no dread Tnbr i e r r their hariest of quiet rest. Suribea ' s hair will be streaked with gray, And thine will furrow my darling's brow, But 'Levier can Time's hand steal away, Th'e ender halo that clasps it now. So w' dwell in wonderful opulence, W' h it nothing-to hurt us.or.upbraid, Andjmy life trembles with reverence, Mid Sunbeam's•spirit is-not rifitaid. _ 1 . -- , = Clarence Butler. - ' a ti .... A lab . so "I'd give a hundred dollars to fee ..t.dislip-tailci4ll-.LI-.6- m an of thirt • years • • „, . . revive Scenes occurring in his native village] five years after. 'I; was near the kingdom then; if, seemed as ;if only a small matter kept me from be coming a Christian." " *hat stood in your way?" in quid his sister, who, on a visit to her ' brother's city honae, was telling him of the changes taking place among his former friends. "Well, it was a small matter, as I said. I was just starting in business with Ralph Turner, you know. We had engaged our store here; and were to come down on such a day to. open business.' When the day , came I didn't feel like .going to the City. Re ligion seemed very important; I wished to possess it. But Ralph couldn't go without me. I finally thought. I would attend to business then, and take a more favorable time to secure religion. But I have neve,r, seen the day since when I was so near being a Christian, and I'm afraid I never shall." What hinders you now?" said the relative, kindly. "Your business is tablished and prosperous; you ac knowledge the. importance of attend ing to the salvation of your soul; rely you can never expect a better time than this." I know it—l know it; but the trouble is now that I don't . feel like it. give a hundred dollars if I did." " Seek for the feeling you Want; give yourself no rest until you are once more convinced of sin and anxious to be reconciled to God. Take time for thought, for the Bible, for prayer." Time! that is just what . I haien.'t command," interrupted the brother. Business is very hurrying just now; 'ye stayed from the office too long tready. Good morning." Twenty years passed rapidly away. le pious sister had just gone to her ,ng home, and the man of fifty, still venitent, stood tearfully beside her ew-made grave. - A neighbor was ;fling him of her happy death, of the weet peace, and holy joy which..made er last' earthly hours radiant with ‘e glories of heaven. _ - I would give a thousand dollars ,r such a hope -as-she 41-ad," -was - tire arnest-letitted answer. If you die the death of a Christian, ou must live a Christian life," re ;died the friend. "You haive surely 'orved the world long enough. Begin oow to serve the Lord. You are rich, know ; you can count your income >y thousands; now just stop your ager chase after wealth, and 'strive to nter in at the straight gate.' When will_ ou ever have a better time?" " I don't know, I don't know," re lioined the rich worldling. "I never ;(,as so busy in my life. You say culy, I am laying up money by thou &rids ; but since my partner died I i t in hurried almost to death. I seem have no time for any thing." "And yet, my friend, your time, all :f it has been gilen you for this chief id—to glorify God. What right ye you to appropriate it as you are -4 How will you account to the of this, and 'every perfect gift?' excuse your neglect and inclif ;e? These are serious questions; you consider them." 'hey are serious indeed, and will but_ one answer, I know. But .to have- tied my own hands, m powerless to help myself. Thii "BUYING RELIGION." business tract is a deep groove, ,and 'These girls lived hundreds ,of milPt straight ahead; there is no such thing irOm 'eadh other, and yet yolf will see as getting out of it. I could - not stop they were somewhat alike. the engine now Without losing all I've When she heard hundreds ,of little , . gqt. But I am "l reallynot so , indifferent as Children„, weeping for their sins, she You think. wish I was a sags,' "I WAS DETERMINED I WOULD Christian ; and, as , I said at the begin- NOT CRY. WHAT A PROUD, PROUD' fling of our. talk, I'd give a thousand HEM I HAD." What a picture she dollars this minute to be one. But itgives ! Ivour yeart, my dear young is time' for the ears; mustl see; and r friend, like hers? hasten tack to the city. Come-t and But you see she gives us another see Me,_ will ion, ?" picture, before she gets through. She Thirty years more, and an old . man says, of fourscore lay upon his death-bed. Many a revivtlpfTeligion had waked A...,, : ro `I I LOVE TO WORK: FOR JESUS NOW, A T,,1. Q.ll;Etl2STiO.S'icoii.t „ in his breast - a passing inerest, but _ _ _ When I first attended Tour meetings I left-him:stip-I/Ablest. Seasons of pro- went mit of *brie' q"u'ii4ty. : - . L4eii ci i tri Ati - y'o u. vjdential discipline had visited him. Made a. great many 'cry for their sins, but I Wife ,and- children, had, preceded him was determined- that.l-would -not cry. O. to the- grave. - Each of these success what a proud, mud heart „I had. -1 , have • - .- • . attended all the meetings very 'r tar. 1. sive warmngs had been more or less u m ' ' hymns. Whenever . . co not sing the sweet recognized" - ss:the call of aeave,n to I would commence to sing, my. voice would prepare to meet his God. He had often falter and tears would come into my eyes, and -" wished" 'he - was' Chrigtiart ' had felt I always stopped when - 1. came .to the chorus ' that he would willingly' - g.i.ii- a ha th .nd- I love Jes . us, y'es - I do"-:-. liecau.- I felt . at I was telling an untruth._ I went.tothe some sum from his rapidly increasing meetings regular for two weeks, and there wealth to buy the "Pearl of great was no change. I kept wondering what kept price ;" but to give up his heart-, which ;no e un fr : ji gie b n ei d u s g 'cL C i hgristtoi le. s ali Pa an W d V:: tgi was set on riches, to -sacrifice a por- me it was so easy. n ßut one of the ministers tion of the time which the pursuit . of came to me and asked me if there was not `that object demanded, to plee God first something that I did not want . to 'give up, and the world last in his estimation and I found out that I wanted to love 'my mother better than Jesus and I told'-him - so. and - endeavors, this he had never done But he told me that I would love her all the —never tried to do. more if I found Jesus. And so one morning, ' And now le must give up the world, you came and spoke'to me so kindly, an though that was his all. Eighty years prayed with me ; and while you werepraying I resolved that I wouldffive u everything to everythin to had made him rich in heaps of shining become the follower of Him I love. And it ore; half a million stood at his credit seemedas if I could hear Him saying,. `:`_Come in, the bank; his blooded horses and unto me,,all ye that labor and-are heavy shining carriage 'were the envy of laden 2 and I will give you rest." And I be .= Have It was then and there that I found. Jesus. many a gazer; his house and conser- When I went home from the meeting, some vatories were models of taste and thing occurred that had always beftre throWn luxury • but he was a poor old man, me into a great passion, and then. I prayed without hope and without God. that Jesus would help me ; and he did help - - • - and'l felt so ”--- h happier than when I Now that he was on the brink of the grave, how clearly he saw what he had done. 0 that he could be set back fifty or sixty years and again be free to choose the wa y of life. Especially how did, he long for that golden mo ment,when truth seemed so, clear and vital, duty so easy, heaven so near • and how "bitter his regrets that he had . pushed them all aside with -' _the wain. delusion of that "more cc--31--"-uort-Terd; And now it was -too late. T rE73iig — t" -- riEa,son 'WAS still on its throne, and conscience and memory faithful, his heart was ha dened. He must reap what he had sown. But, 0, the terror and anguish which overwhelmed his departing spirit. How could he go into eternity without sal vation ? The faithful minister of the gospel, whom his nurse had sent for, tried even then to lead his despairing soul to Him who did not reject the dying thief. But no emotion of love and trust arose in his dark heart ; his only and last expression being, "0, if I could., I'd give a hundred thousand dollars to die -a aristian."--American Maim-ger. tly Pitt &Ito. F AMILIAR TALKS WITH THE CHIL DREN, IV, BY REV. EDWARD PAYSON ILUAMOND THE THREE THOUGHTLESS GIRLS. They went to church andSa,.bbath school, but after all they never thought much about, what they heard. It all seemed just to go in one ear and out the other. They read the Bible a little an a l Went to 'meetings because others did, but if they -had lived in' India, they .would have likely been among the children who bowed before the ugly-looking idols. Each - of-these girls has painted two pictures of herself. The three first, pictbres shoW you what they were when they carelesSly rejected Jesus, and the last three show you what they are, now that' they hope they have come to Jesus, and been made what the Bible calls "new creatures." You will see what I mean when you read these interesting letters. - Children's hearts are painted with pen and ink sometimes, on a sheet of paper. That's the way these pictures were sent to me. I wonder if your heart was all paint : ed on paper l , how it' would look. Would you like to have all your' friends see it ? If it is not a "new heart," the Bible says it "is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked:" .Perhaps you don't believe it, but it is none the less true. When these three girls were careless, they no doubt thought they were .pretty good. This girl, whose letter you will read first, says " I LAUGHED AT THEM, AND TOLD THEM I HAD ALL THE RELIGION I WANTED." But after she became a Christian she gives a different picture of herself, when she says "THEY LAUGITF.D AT ME, BUT I DID NOT CARE, FOR I HAD MADE 11/1" Mir MIND TO WORK FOR JESUS." When you first came here some of my friends asked me to Sttend the meetings, and I laughed at them and told them that 'I had all the religion that I wanted. After you had been here two or three, weeks, I thought I would go for the fun of it. It was the after noon that Mr. Rains -started for home. I liked the meeting pretty well, so I thou ht I would stay to inquiry -meeting. Mr. trains came and asked me if I loved Jesus, and I told him I did not know. Pretty soon a little girl, smaller than myself, came and talked with me and prayed for ; and when I saw all of. my little friends cuming to Jesus, I thought it time for me.to think about it my self. But the worst came after I went home. Some there laughed at me, and asked me if I had got religion, and said they knew that it would not last, long, But I did not care what they said. I had made up my mind to work for4eius, andl Was going to do it. I have k.ept on„doing and _Lam going to_ keep on doing it. • • me ; - felt so much bad given away to my foolish temper. Some times I commence to look at myself, and I get discouraged ; but 1 know it is Satan tempting me. And then I look td Jeans and all doubts go away, and it seems as if '-I can hear Jesus cheering me on. I love , to work for Jesits noio, and I Zote all Christians now; and-I love poor sinners, too. - ' • Oh, what a sad picture is this last letter! In a city where many chit then__ ayta--snung -- wirire were 'seeking e dear Saviour and _hundreds find- mg him very precious, at that solemn time;this girl says . : "I CAME TO irkIFT.GS AT FIRST FOR FIIN." What a thoughtless, careless 'girl she Must have been ! But when she gave herself up to Him, who died on the cruel tree for her, she found a great change come over her sometimes, perhaps she hardly knew herself. How different her heart looks when, she says, "I HAVE NOW MADE UP MY MIND THAT I WILL NOT SERyE SATAN, BUT CHRIST." I wish you could say the same. Can you? came--to—suar- t i fun and to see my friends, but one dayl feltirvery badly in the z meeting, and thought that I would stay to the.inquiry-meeting, and see if dui - Mould make me feel anybetter. I staid, 'and a very dear friend of mine came and 'asked, me if I was a;Christian. I told her no, and then she talked, to me very kindly, but still 'I "did' not feel any better. I had done something versiwrong, and could not stop committing that...sin until I told my parents, and then I felt better. That morn ing I gave my heart to Christ and made up my, mind, that I would serve him.. I believe he has forgiven my sins, but then I have so many doubts, and at one time I was' empted to believe there was no God, hell, or heaven ancl prayer was_ at , that time -a treasure. I have said several times that I would give up, `but have now made - up my mind that I will not serve Satan but Christ. I hope, nay dear young friends, you not .day. down this paper, till you resolve, with, God's help, to " serve Christ." Think of all he has done for you t Do you wonder, that :these three girls love Him, and are willing to be laughed at, if need' be, rather than deny Him ? Just such a change will come over you if you will come to. Jesns in the same way, as I hope, these girls did. Read the 19tIr chapter of John, and I think the tears will run down your cheeks, as you think of Christ's suffer ings for you, and therr with all yoar heart say, • "But drops of grief can ne'er repay, The debt of love I owe; Here Lord, I give myself away, 'Tis all that I can do." RAILROAD PIETY. While riding, a few days since, on a railroad, a serious accident happened to the engine, which might easily have resulted! in great injury to the whale train = and • loss of life to the passen gers. As the crowd gathered around .to look at the wreck, one, of thew exclaimed, " That's just the ! ,luck of this road. On any other that. acci dent would have cost two or three cars, and ten or a dozen -passen gers' liVes. , Just the luck of this road ; 'never hurts' its passengers."' The next day, mentioning the accident: to a friend, and r,ppeating the - remark, he told us that he could say something better about it than that. -" That train," said he, " has a consistent and praying christian engineer, fireman, and conductor. I have had, some happy evenings with them myself_ They used to meet, and perhaps may yet, every morning in the upper room of the repair shop for prayer.' A railroad train,- with its three chief operators -daily in prayer for God's care and his blessing on their work "The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy coming in." Be Aim of that.care, and they may trust fuck that - , please.--Sower. • -