And breathe their rapture in sweet song. To such Of beauty and of joy,--such strains as float At even-tide, those sweet-hued crowns shone forth; Such as is infant innocency's smile, Upon the radiant face write the soul's joy ;— They chaunted joyous songs, or hymn'd the praise To strains as soft as music of a dream, When, 'neath a willow tree, some babbling brook More beautiful and more glorious things than these There be in heaven: glories ineffable, And rapturing beauties, which the earth-bound soul May thought the heaven-joys picture;-for there were Eternal and unwithering,-Seraph forms New light, new bliss ;-and there were meeting friends Hailing his first-born, by untimely death Snatch'd from his fond embrace ;-and lovers there And thus these realms to them were twice a heaven; But pure and stainless, upon which no cloud To such delicious realms the just retired GOD'S GARDEN. Translated from the German of Arndt, by DORA GREENWELL. "These are thy wonders, Lord of Love! To make us see we are but flowers that glide; Thou hast a garden for us, where to bide. * * * * * Oh! that I once past changing were * * Fast in God's Paradise, where no flower can wither!" EARTH is a garden fair, GEORGE HERBERT. Where sweetest flowerets blend, Our Lord himself with care Its happy blooms will tend; With patient love and true, He watcheth o'er his flowers, With sunshine, and with dew. The sweetest floweret there, That must with thorns abide, Droop-when the storm-wind blows. The flower that God holds dear, The nighest unto love, Sheds many a blessing here Known but to Him above; Its name is Meekness there, On Earth the violet sweet Breathes fragrant at our feet, And knows not she is fair ! Faith is the third sweet flower, It gives its odorous bloom, Unto a joyless hour, When all beside is gloom; Thus, on the gale of night The Cereus sheds its soul, When clear from Pole to Pole The golden stars shine bright. Sweet Hope! thou art no less God's gentle child and dear, What floweret may express Thy gracious presence here? Thy likeness we may trace, When the pale Snowdrops bring Words from the coming Spring, Whose bright and cheerful eye Gleams fair through sun and shower, In fearless Constancy ; The image thine to bring Of steadfast love whose power Keeps for each changeful hour Some bloom unwithering! And Thou that lookest down, As with an Angel's mien, With white resplendent crown, The Garden's peerless QueenPure Lily! on thy smile Undimm'd by earthly stain, The likeness doth remain Of spirits free from guile. weet Sunday Bells, ye summon round And many a tale your burden tells Sweet Sunday Bells, your pleading sound Whose heart to your old music swells ; your chime-sweet Sunday Bells. ERE on my A CHILD'S EVENING PRAYER. 'he following simple and beautiful lines were composed by the great t S. T. COLERIDGE, for the use of his daugbter when a child. A y little ingenuity will be sufficient to make such alterations as may necessary to suit the prayer to the circumstances of every fireside. bed limbs I lay, .preserve my brothers both Amen. |