E. g &amitg eirtte. THE SCULPTOR AND HIS CHILD, " Come in, my little girl," the sculptor said, Opening his studio door at early morn. The sunrise glow was on her curly head, As eagerly she crossed the flower-decked lawn. Holding the corners of her apron tight In dimpled fingers, with a sunny, smile, She showed it furl of buds and blossoms bright, Rose, jasmine, lily, in one fragrant pile. "Enter, my child," he said. Her little feet Paused on the threshold;' and her earnest eyes Gazed on his secret work of love complete, Wits childlike pleasure and most sweet sur prise. It was a mild, majestic, graceful form, With outspread hands. The rosy sunrise light Flushed the pure cheek with life-like tints and warm, And crowned the n forehead with a halo bright. With reverent mien the little one drew near, And looked up in the face so calm and sweet; Quick to her eyes there sprang the sudden tear, Her blossoms dropped upon the statue's feet. A deeper feeling than that glad surprise Bent low and reverently that fair young head; At last she raised those tearful, earnest eves— " Our dear Lord Jesus Christ!" she softly said. Her father pressed her to his raptured heart ! " Master I" he cried, " no further praise I ask ; My child hath kn ONVII and named Thee who Thou art, _ Thus Thou dust crown and own my humble task 1" A thousand hearts that face divine has thrilled With its serene and most majestic grace; Unnumbered thoughts with loving reverence filled Since child and father saw Christ face.to face. In the cathedral's hushed and solemn gloom. That sculptured form shines still divinely sweet; And when the lilies and the roses bloom, , The children strew them at its marble feet. —Hours at Home. RALPH NORTON. A STORY OF QUEEN MARY'S TIME One summer evening, many years ago, a weary foot traveller was toiling slowly up a steep, dusty road, in the southern part of England. In one hand he grasped a stout oaken staff, the companion of many a long mile; in the other he bore small bundle, tied up in a handkerchief. At length he reached' the summit of the hill he had been climbing, and saw far below, nestling amid the trees, the white houses of the little village which he called his home. With joyful steps he now pressed onward, and just as he reached the en trance of the long, straggling village street, a little boy ran forward with a shout of joy, and clasped his father's hand. • "Bless thee, my little one," said the wayfarer, fondly stroking•the child's shining hair; "wast looking out for father ?" "That was I," answered the child, laughing, " and so was mother. See, yonder she stands in the doorway, with baby Guy in her arms." "Now, thanks to Our. Blessed Lady 1" said the wife devoutly, as he reached the door, " you have returned safe." Another little one now pressed for ward to share his father's caresses, and even baby Guy laughed For joy as he sprang into the traveller's outstretched arms. "Where is Hubert ?" asked the fa ther, glancing around the 'room in search of his eldest born. " He will be here anon," answered the mother. " I sent him to do an er rand. But how have you prospered, Harry ?" " Well," he answered, "I sold all the goods brought frctm home. See," and untying a corner of the bundle he disclosed a handful of silver coin. "But here," he proceeded, taking out a small, dark volume, and laying it on the table, "here is what, is worth to me mote than all that silver." " What is it ?" said his wife, e,urious ly, as she . turned over the leaves. " wot nothing of book-learning as thou knowest." • "It is the. blessed • Evangile, the Holy Scriptures." . • "Now Saint Agnes forefend 1" said the good wife, piously crossing herself, "not the Bible in the vulgar tongue?" " Even so. What hast thou against the good book ?" "Thou knowest that no longer ago than last WhitSiuitide, Father Eustace warned us against it as a cursed book, and told us that those who read it would go down swift sib destruction." " But knowest thou," said her hus band, with a look of triumph, " that our. good. King Henry path ordered that this book be chained to the read in.g-desk in every, parish church in England, so that Whosoever will may come and read'? I pray thee, which be the wiser,' Father Eustace or' the king ?" Unable to answer this, his wife de manded: "But how came you by the book "In this wise. Four nights agone, I was, strolling idly though .London streets', when I saw, a dim light in the crypt of st. Paul's cathedral. I had never seen the place, so, moved by, c,U riosity, I groped my way down the steep, dark staircase, and soon found myself in a long, vaulted -room. At the upper end three or four candles glimmere,d faintly roundthe reading desk, where were grouped many tening; to one who read to them the words of life. I thought I could' have" listened all night, for never had I heard such wonderful words ; but at length the reader closed the book. Seeing me linger after the others had passed, away, he asked ::-- " (Dost thou, too, love the blessed book ?" " cOh I good sir,' I answered, ' I would give all I have in the world to possess that book.' , . " ' Thou canst read, then ?' he asked. " I answered, ' Yes. " Then,' said he, smiling, though books be not over plenteous, thou needst not -pay such -a price for a vol ume of the Scriptures. lam a dealer in books, and if thou wilt follow me to my shop, I Can sell thee one if thou art minded to buy.' "I gladly assented, and for ten silver pieces I obtained the holy book. Nay," he went on, smiling, "thou need not look so horrified at the price, Margery. If thou only knewest what a comfort it has been to me already, thou, wouldst not grudge it. Often, in my weary journey from London, I have stopped by the roadside under the shadow of the trees ; then its sweet words have refreshed me, and I have gone on merry and gladsome." " Father," asked little Ralph, who had been quietly listening, " will you not read to us some of the words from the wonderful book ?" " Not now, for I am weary and faint. After supper, if you be good children, I will read to you." The simple meal was soon over, and after the wooden dishes had been cleared away from the rude table, the father seated himself while the others clustered round. Hubert, his mother's darling, was close by her- side ; Ralph stood at the father's knee, encircled by his arm ; and little Geoffrey, bringing his low stool, knelt beside the table. The father commenced with the story of the angels appearing to the Shepherds who watched their flocks by night, - and read on throu g h several chapters of Luke's Gospel. " 0 ! father, what beautiful stories!" exclainaed little Ralph. " Will you note give me the = book when I am grown up, if I learn how to read"?" "Plenty of time for that, I trow," answered the father, laughing. "You are full young to, talk of learning to read. But now, methinks, it is time such little folk as you w6re safely housed in bed ; little Geoffrey, I see, is almost asleep even now." Long after the children were quietly sleeping, good Master NortOn and his wife lingered, talking over the words which had just been read. 'Dame Nor ton, like many a one in. those troubled times, clung ,t9,:the old „religion, and to all her husbarni's earnest words an swered only, "It may be true. I see nothing wrong in the words you have read ; but if the old religion was good enough for our fathers, why is it not good enough for us ? Bethink you, too," she added, with tears in her eyes, " what will become of you if the king should turn again ? It is not long since many of the Gospelers were binned for reading this very book." "It cannot be wrong," he answered, ] quietly, "to read God's blessed word. With His help I mean to do right, and I will trust in His love to take care of me, whatever may. befall." Several .years passed quietly away, years of almost unbroken prosperity and happiness to good. Master Norton's family. Hubert, who had now grown to be a tall, slender stripling of twenty-two, was more than ever his mother's pride and joy ; but he alone, of all the chil dren' cared not for., the sacred book which his father read nightly to the family. This was partly owing to his love for his mother, who still clung to the old faith, and partly to his gentle, timid nature; for Father Eustace, whom he greatly feared,, had secretly threatened him with the most awful curses, on soul and body, if he ever dared touch'the holy volume. Ralph, on' 'the contrary, 'who was now a 'fine, manly youth of eighteen, laughed merrily at all theithreats Hof Father. Eustace, declaring .he would read what books he listedpif all the priests in Christendom said him nay. One sultry . evening in August, Mas ter Norton returned from a 'journey to London, much More weary than usual. Early the next morning, Hilbert, who slept in the loft, was awakened by his Mother calling : "Hubert, haste thee to Dame Ursula, the' "wise woman, and bid' her come hither quickly; thy father is grievously fever-stricken !" A few days passed away, and it be came manifest that the herbs and de coe,tions Dre.pared by the wise ,woman, joined to Dame Margery's loving care, were all in vain. Master Norton was dying. It was a beautiful day in September; all the • quiet valley where the little village lay seemed as if rejoicing' in the golden sunshine; but within one humble cottage there were hearts al most _breaking with sorrow, as they stood around the rude bed on which Master Norton lay, almost unconscious. Suddenly, rousing . himself, he turned to his eldest son, saying.; "Come hither, Hubert. Thou past_ ever been a good and loving — son; na'' d:od reward thee for it. I charge thee to cherish and protect thy mother. Thou wilt now be her chief stay and support. "Come hither, Ralph.' The youth knelt by the bedside, and burying his face in the coverlet, gave way to a burst of yassionate grief. "Nay, said his father, "look up, THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1866 Ralph; thou hast still a Father in heaven. Bring hither the holy book. Then placing it in the hands of the boy, he Said, " Thou hast ever loved this book. I give it thee as thou hast desired, and I charge thee 'be faithful unto the end. Count not thy life dear unto thee, but, if need be, yield it up' joyfully for the truth's sake ; and may .God, thine own God, help thee." The two younger boys now came forward to receive their dying father's blessing, and so the night fell around the group by the bedside. • The morning dawned;: 'but not to all. Before the first gray light over spread the eastern sky, Master Norton had entered the pearly gates of the New Jerusalem. "As the mother, so the daughter." Kind parent, have you ever thought of this ? And have you endeavored to conduct the affairs of your family circle accordingly, so that the good in fluence of the home circle might be brought to bear on the social interests of your youthful family, gl•owing up around you ? These are momentous questions to the parent of the present generation, when there is so much wickedness in , the world. Let fus, in this humble way, strive to advise Christian parents, with a view to the bringing up and nurture of thfiir off spring with which God, in his iiLfinite mercy and goodness, has blessed!them. Every day should be commenced and closed with family devotion—the reading of the Scriptures and the of fering up of a prayer—and on this ser vice every one of the family should be required to attend; for, unless you make it open and free to all—members of yo l ui'lmmediate household and do mestics—You throw away that influ ence which, once lost, can never be re aained. Never think of sitting down to your meals with your family,. with out returning thanks, to the Glver of every bounty for the gifts spread be fore you:' ThiS, too, goes hand in hand with family devotions, and will soon show its influence in after years, if not now. Make your homes pleasant for your children at all times, and, especially, when at that age when they are mould ing their characters for their future life. How many young men have been ruined' for life in this way ; and, when asked the reasen, invariably re ply, "My home has no attr i actions for me. My father beats me, and my mother is always fmdi t x ault and scolding me- I would • her spend my time in the street among .my fellows, than be the butiiand?.':r of my parents, from Whom I shoi.:(.l receive nothing but kindness." And there are many young women also on the down ward road to ruin, whose career is to be attributed to the evil influences and unattractiveness of the family cir cle. Remember, you are rearing im mortal souls, and just as you faithful" , act your part in the family, and train up your children in the way they should go, so will you receive your re ward for the part thus performed. May God give all parents grace to act well their part toward the,-young intrusted to their care, so that the good seed sown in youth may spring up and bring forth good fruit in man and womanhood.—German Reformed Messenger. "'CAN GOD SEE .ME WHEN MY EYE It was the question, of a. iittle girl who had thought to deceive her mother about some_ trifling matter ; but the mother understood the 4 ild perfectly:; and, as she talked seriously to, her of the sin of untruthfulneSs,she, said, me in the eyes, my child. Tell me just how it happened. I shall know if you are true." " Can you see wicked stories in •rri eyes, mamma?" - " When you tell them tome, I can;" answered the mother ;• and, the little one, still unsubdued,pressed. two,fat fingers upon her, closed„lids, and said, "Now you can't see.any wicked story, mamma." She who looked on thought it - very bright and cunning in tlfe little , girl to do so; but the mother,Tooking-at the future of her child, ad realizing the wilfulness-of • her- nature" even iii. this trifling act, was saddened. • "I, cannot see your .eyes now, my dear ; but God can She spoke very slowly and seriously.; and the .child's eyes were lifted at, once_.toward, ;the blue sky, as she asked, in L .a low tone "Can God see me - when my eyes are ;hut, manila?"' 7 f`Yes, Ply dear; Re, sees you, always, in the day or ,night.; you cannot hide yourself from Him : He knows, when you tell a falshood, even if,you whisper it so low as not to hear your own voice. God reads your heart, and He is angry when you try to hide anything from mamma." " Is. He angry now F "If you have a wicked story in your heart, He is." . " Look mamma • see my eyes now. I did tell a wicked story, mamma; I'm sorry." And the quivering lip and tearful eye told that now the heart was reached, the willful spirit conquered. I hope none of the readers of this paper ever forget that God sees them at all times; that, although they may be able for a time to deceive their pa rents, never for a moment can they (TO BE CONCLUDED.) HOME INFLUENCE, ARE SHUT ?" 'hide anything from God. He never shuts His eyes upon our sins; although, if we repent, He akivays forgives. God is perfectly just and holy ; and, while we may well tremble at His anger, we may remember always that " God is love." RUMIZAM - lOVE. A darling litte infant; . Was playing on the floor; -When-suddenly a sunbeam . • ,Came through the open door ; And i striking the' carpet; It made a golden dot ; The7darlingtiiby saw it, And crept up to the spot. His little face was heaming With a smile of perfect joy, As if an angel's presence Had filled the little boy; And Withihis tiny finger, As in a fairy dream, He touched the dot of sunshine, And followed no the beam. He looked up to his mother, - To share his infant bliss ; Then stooped and gave the sunbeam A pure, sweet baby kiss. 0 Lord, our'Heavenly Father,' In the fulness of my joy, I pray that childlike feeling May never leave the boy. But in the days of trial, 'When sin' aflures the youth, " - Send out ( Thy Light" to guide him, The sunbeams of Thy Truth. And may this' heart be ever To Thee an open door, Through which Thy truths, as sunbeams, Make joy upon life's floor. PRACTICAL JOKES. Boys often ink it a very smart thing to get one of their number into a temporary difficulty, thereby causing an embarrassment of behavior which greatly excites their mirth and ridi cule, though often the poor boy who is the victim finds, like the frogs in the fable, that, although it is sport to them; it is death to him'; in other words, being the butt of =his fellows wounds his feelings and makes him truly wretched, while the enjoyment that arises, from the, suffering of an other is indeed fleeting, pleasure. . , Two years ago, the ,writer of this article' attended a pie,-,nic, where the children were ranged around tables and Waited upon by kind ladies, who furnished them with an abundance of good': things. All seemed happy and contented except one little boy, who, sad ,and silent, stood apart from the rest. "He has been forgotten," I thought, and -drew the attention of the lady, nearest me to the, child. " There is a little boy who looks wistfully at the cakes - and pies," I said, " but he seems to be eating nothing." "Why, do you not know that he cannot eat?" the lady asked, in evi ,dent surprise; and then she told rue hid sad,story.. Here it is.: Two, boys were playing, together in the back yard of a dwelling where one of them lived. They had every thing to make their lives pleasant— friends, fortune, health, and no future was brighter than theirs. As they ran through the yard, one of them stopped for a, momeßt before a vat of dark, clear liquid, and asked his play mate what it was. "I know," was the reply; taste it." "Is it good?" "Yes real good. taste, it" The little fellow put his mouth down and took one swallow of the liquid. • It was strong lye, and it shrank the merdbranes of his throat and destroyed his palate; and from that day to this he has :never eaten of solid fwd. Bread, broth, or sugar and, water is all the nourishment his feeble life receiries. The story is true. It was a cruel, joke, and the boy that perpetrated it will bitterly repent it, for it wilt yet probably cost a human life. • - Some boys were playing on a frozen pond that had several spots of weak ice. One of the boys tied. his skates together and :whirled them: to, the cen tre,of one of them, where he, left them lying. 4i 4ust he said to ,a boy near, ." tillJOe Burke comes down, and we'll have some fail." Joeivas a small, poorly-dresSed boy, ivhb suffered. Mt &At the hands ofhis elder andl more knowing When he came to the pond, the boy to whom the skates belonged was sit ting on the•ice, looking: quite forlorn. ":If ; I only had my skates,J l ll go home,", he,was saying. "llfay_be you will just run over . and getthern, Joe, like a good_ fellO 'there they are," pointing to the sot. Joe, who was possessed of an ac,comnaodating spirit, ran briskly to get them, and, as the other'boy ha,d planned -and foreseen; broke through the ice, than was only strong enough to bear.the , skates, and got ,a thorough wetting. ~ T here was great laughter,at his rueful face as he scrambled out, but he was poor, and had no clothes to exchange forhis wet , •• 09 3 - The col and 4 dampness struck into his feeble frame, and he died in leis than a month—of typhus fever, the Physicians said; but the drenciling "for fun" sowed the seeds. • I have related' two practical jokes, :with the 'results. They were not so very funny, after all.:. Even if they had not ended ,so fatally, you have only, to, imagine what your feelings would be in such , positions, and avoid an amusement that has for' its founda tion even the temporary unhappiness of a fellow-being.' 'There are a thou sand sports that involve no peril or suffering. Embrace them all, to the entire exclusion of such questionable pleasureaas practical jokes.—Christian Times. THE BETTER LAND. TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN A father and mother lived with their two children on a rough island in the midst of the sea, where they had been thrown by a shipwreck. Roots and herbs served them for food,, a spring of water was their drink, and. a cave their dwelling. - The. children could no longer re member how they came upon the island. They knew nothing of the firm land,.and bread, and milk ; fruit,' and whatever else there is still more precious, were to them things un-' known. - There landed on the island one "day, in a little ship, four negroes. The parents were very glad, and hoped now to be saved from their suffering. But the , little ship was too small to carry them all over to the continent together, and the father wished to risk the passage first. The mother and children wept when he entered the frail, wooden vessel, and the four black men were about to take him away. But he said, "Do not weep. Over there it is better, and you will all come soon." When the little ship came again and took away the mother, the chil dren wept still more. . But she also said, "Do not weep. In the better land we shall see each other again." At last the little ship 'came to bring away the two children. They were very much afraid of the black men, and the frightful sea over which they must pass. And so yin fear and tremb ling, they neared the land. , But how glad they were when they saw their - parents standing on the shore—when they reached to them their hands;and led them into shadows of high palm trees, and on the blos soming_turf gave them, milk, honey and delcious fruits. " How foolish was our fear," said the children ; " we should not have been afraid, but glad, when the black men came to bring us away into the better land." ." Dear children," said the father, " our passage from that desert _island to this beautiful land has for us a still higher meaning. There is before us all a longer journey, but into a far more beautiful land. The whole earth upon which we live is like an island ; this glorious land for us only a faint image of heaven. The passage thither, over the stormy sea, is death, that little ship, the bier on which, some day, the men will carry us away. But When the hour comes, as it sometime will; when I, your mother, or you, must go, then do not be afraid. Death is, fort the good, only a passage into the better land."—Little Corporal. THE TRUE GENTLEMAN. The following sketch is called the portrait of a true gentleman, found in an old Manor House in Gloucester shire, written and framed, and hung over the mantlepiece of a tapestried sitting room::-- " The true , gentleman is God's ser vant, and the world's master, and his own man - virtue is his business, study his recreation, contentment his rest, and happiness his reward ; God is his father, the Church is. , his mother, the saints his brethren, all that need his friends ; devotion is his chaplain, chas tity his chamberlain ; sobriety his butler, temperance his cook, hospitali ty his. housekeeper, Providence his steward, charity his treasurer, piety his mistress of the house, and discre tion his porter, to let in or out as most fit. This is his whole family, made up of virtue, and he is the true master of the house. He is necessita ted= to take the world on his way to heaven ; but he walks through it as fast as he can, and all his business by the way is to make himself and others happy. Take him in two words—a man and a Christian." WORDS FITLY SPOKEN. Those who are , called, to visit the sick need especially to be able to speak fitting...words. The visit of a ,Christian. Minister or friend who has this gift, is often like the coming of a sunbeam. It diffuses both light and warmth. - The late Dr. Stoughton, on one oc casion, visited a lady who was gradu ally sinking under a pulmonary-dis- Pase... On entering her roomy he, greet ed. her with_ his peculiarly bright smile, and asked:— " ttow are you feeling to-day ,?" "Weak-0, so very weak !" was the reply, in a sad, almost desponding -tone. He' looked at her pale, sad face, with an increasing sweetness in his smile; And repeated with his own marked.emphasis : " When I am weak,. then I am strong ; Grace is my shield, and Christ my song." The words ~came like sweet, music from heaven to the poor fainting heart. Her countenance lighted up with a gladness that never left it in life, and shone from it even in death. The late Rev: W. H. Krause, of Dublin, was visiting a lady in a simi lar state,'” weak-0, so very weak , '" She told.him that she had been very much troubled in mind that day, because in meditation and prayer she had found it impossible to govern her thoughts, and kept merely going over the same things again and again. "Well, my dear friend," was his prompt reply, " there is provision in the Gospel for that, too. Our Lord Jesus Christ, when His soul was exceed ing sorrowful unto death, three times prayed and spoke the same words." This reasonable application of Scrip ture was a source of great comfort to her. Her trouble was gone, and a sweet, peace took its place. Those who can speak such fitting words at the bedside of the sick and. the dying, will always be hailed with gladness as sons of consolation. The gift is one, of incalculable worth, as the suffering children of God have often found. It is one of those " best gifts" which it were well to covet earnestly,lndloseeEwith special int portunity, from the Head of the Church, for the sake' of His weak and suffer ing members.—National Baptist. DEATHS CY LITTLE CHILDREN, • Around the throne of God in Heaven Thousands of children stand ; Children whose sins are all forgiven— A holy, happy band, Singing, glory—glory— Glory be to God on high P' Blessed be God for the teachings of the death of little children ! Their ministry is accomplished ; and how often is it one of reconciliation be tween an impenitent parent and a ne-, glected Saviour! The vacant place at the table which was once filled by the child ; the unoccupied crib in the chamber; the picture-books, well worn by those dear little hands ; the multi tude of objects daily coming into sight, which were either the- possessions of the absent one, or in some way con nected with it,—are mutely, but most eloquently, pleading with the father and the mother who are left behind, to begin to walk in that path, if they are not already in it, which shall lead them where the family will be uplifted once more and forever. How Many might be found who date their= first religious impressions from the death-bed of "our little girl," or ." our: , little boy ?" That father, whose thoughts and cares have been limited to this brief life, awakes from his worldliness as he wakes up through tears to see the pearly gates open for the admission of one of his idolized Children. That mother,' whose anxieties for the future of her offspring have been confined to the vain things of time and sense, is taught at last, by the removal of her loved babe from her sight, that there is a world for which preparation is of infinitely greater importance than this—a better country, even a heavenly. Thus is she taught a lesson which could have been impressed only upon a bleeding heart. The child of her love is safe— " Gone to God ! Be still my heart—what could a mother's prayer In all the wildest ecstacies of hope, Ask for its darling like the bliss of heaven .•• • The households are many of which it may be said—One is in heaven. Be reaved father, bereaved mother, is a child of yours there, and are you on the way.thither? Listen to the Divine voice which has spoken to you so tenderly and in so much mercy, and commit yourself and your all to Him who has already taken one of your treasures to himself. " There, in the Shepherd's bosom, White as the drifted snow, is the little lamb that we missed one morn From the household flock below." —Author of " Home:Thrusts." LITTLE WALTER On a quiet Sa.l4th evening in May, in a Southern Ay, a . family were gathered in a pleasant parlor. In his mother's lap.sat a little boy, four years old, with long golden hair and bright blue eyes. ' He had been listening to Bible-stories, and singing his favorite hymns. After a short silence, his mo ther said, "Walter, what will you do first when you get to heaven?" He - raised his Tdark blue eyes to her face, and replied, " I will make a bow to God." - A few weeks passed away, and where was thiA little boy.? We did not hear his merry laugh, or the patter of his little feet in the halls and on the stairs. In the nursery his toys were scattered about as before ; but ; we did not see him playing with them. In a darkened chamber he lay, bearing a painful sickness so patiently, that his mother thought his spirit then bowed to God ; and when all was over, and that lovely -little form- lay cold and still -in-the coffin,• it Comforted her to think.that, with tenithousand times ten thousand angels, little Walter was "bowing to d od i Children at Home. "MY' BOY DRUNK!" "Drunk I --my boy drunk!" and tears started from the tribther's eyes, and she bent her 'bead in unutterable sorrow. In that mordent; 'the visions of a useful anithonorable career were destroyed ; .and roue of_ worthlessness, if not absolute dishonor, presented itself. Well did: she knot• that intem perance ;walks hind in hand with poverty, shame, 'and death; and her mother-heart was pierced as with a sharp-pointed'steel. Ah, young man! - if:the holy feeling of love for her who bore you is not dead within you, shun that which , :gives her pain ; adhere to that which gives her joy. If she is with you on earth, she does not, can not desire to see her son a drunkard; if she is with her. Father in heaven, shun that course of life which shuts the gates of heaven against you, and debars you from her society forever. The drunkard cannot inherit the king dom of God.