THE BRADFORD REPORTER. O€ MLUR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. A.: Thursday Morning, June 7, 1860. Stlttltb sbi. NO NIGHT IN HEAVEN. „ r THOMAS BAFFLES, P-P-, LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND. ~ Vm i there .shall be no night there."-REV. xxi. 5. No night shall be in heaven—no gathering gloom, Shall o'er that glorious landscape ever come. No tears shall fall in sadness o'er those flowers That breathe their fragrance through celestial bowers. No ni"ht shall be in heaven—no dreadful hour Of mental darkness, or the tempter's power. V tos- those skies no envious cloud shall roll, To dhn the sunlight of the enraptured soul. No night shall be in heaven. Forbid to sleep, These eves no more their mournful vigils keep : Their fountains dried— tlieir tears all wiped away ; They gaze uuthizzkd on eternal day. No night shall he iu heaven-no sorrow's reign- No secret anguish—no corporal pain No shivering limbs —no burning fever there No soul's eclipse—no winter of despair. No night shall he in heaven—but endless noon : No fast declining sun or waning moon : Hut there the Lamb shall yield perpetual light, 'Mid pastures green, and waters ever bright. No night sbali he in heaven—no darkened room, No bed of death or silence of the tomb ; But breezes ever fresh with love and truth, Shall brace the frame with an immortal youth. No night -hull he in heaven ! But night is here— The night of sorrow—and the night of fear, i mouru the ills that now my steps attend, And ,-hri.ik from others that may yet impend So night shall be in heaven 1 Oh, had I faith To rest in what the faithful Witness safth— TL.it faith should make these hideous phantoms flee. And leave no night, hencefort i, on earth to me. §flcf tc it Calt. [From the Atlantic Monthly.] CI KG IT M STANCE. She kail remained, during all that day, with a sick neighbor,—those eastern wilds of Maine iu that epoch frequently making neighbors ami miles synonymous,—and so busy had she been with care and sympathy that she dfd not nt first observe the approaching night. But finally the level rays, reddening the snow, threw their gleam upon the wall, and, hastily donning clonk and hood, she bade her friends farewell and sallied forth on her return.— Home lay some three miles distant, across a copse, a meadow, and a piece of woods, —the woods being a fringe ou the skirts of the for ests that stretch far away into the North.— That home was one of a dozen log-houses ly ing a few furlongs apart from each other, with tlieir half-cleared demesnes separating them-at the rear from a wilderness untrodden save by sicalthy native or deadly panther tribes. She was in a nowise exalted frame of spirit, —oh the contrary, rather depressed by the />■;//. she bad witnessed and the fatigue she had endured ; but in certain temperaments such a condition throws open the mental pore-, so to ?peuk, and renders one receptive of every influ ence. Through the little copse she walked slowly, with her cloak folded about her, ling ering to imbibe the sense of shelter, the sunset filtered in purple through the mi.it of woven spray and twig, the companionship of growth nut sufficiently dense to baud against her the sweet home feeling of a young and tender win try wood. It was therefore just on the edge o! evening that she emerged from the place and began to cross the meadow-land. At one hand lay the forest to which her path wound ; at the other the evening star hung over a tide ot failing orange that slowly slipped down the eirth's broad side to sadden other hemispheres with sweet regret. Walking rapidly now, and with her eyes wide-open, she distinctly saw in the air before her what was not there a mo ment ago, a winding-sheet,—cold, white, and ghastly, waved by the likeness of four wan hinds,- that ro£e with a long inflation nnd fell iii rigid folds, with a voice, shaping itself from the hollowness above, spectral and mel ancholy, sighed,—" The Lord have mercy on the people 1" Three times the sheet with its corpse-covering outline waved beneath the pale hands, and the voice, awful in its solemn and mysterious depth, sighed, " The Lord have mercy on the people 1" Then all was gone, the place was clear again, the gray sky was obstructed by no deathly blot ; she looked ' about her, shook her shoulders decidedly, and pulling.on her hood, went forward once more. She might have been a little frightened by such au apparition, if she had led a life of ess reality than frontier settlers are apt to ead ; but dealing with hard fact does not en gender a flimsy habit of mind,and this woman -a as too sincere and earnest in her character, and too happy in her situation, to be thrown y antagonism merely upon superstitious fan cms ami chimeras 0 f the second sight. She did not even believe herself subject to halluci nuii.jut smiled simply, a little vexed that ter thought could have framed such a glam tll !"in the day s occurrences, and not sorry to Lit the bough of the warder of the woods n enter and disappear in their sombre path, i k J? 6 , i , ' ma ginative, she would have iln" 1 ' . 1 Qt rst ste P '"l° a region whose th-'it s ',? 1 Al i' " " ot v ' s ' on ary ; but I Suppose won't l ' e a cb " d a t home bah !' !?"! lUcr . lbat propensity in the most she went i ' i n ff* ow an( l then she came to off A' i W |