ONE adequate support For the calamities of mortal life Soul of our souls, and safeguard of the world! How beautiful this dome of sky; And vast the hills, in fluctuation fixed At thy command, how awful! Be mute who will, who can, Yet I will praise thee with impassioned voice; My lips that may forget thee in the crowd Reared for thy presence; therefore am I bound Religion I consider as a chain, of which God is the first link, and which reaches to eternity: without this tie everything is dissolved and overthrown. Men are creatures only deserving of contempt, the universe is not worth our attention, for it is neither the sun nor the earth which makes its merit, but the glory of being a part of the Supreme being. Ganganelli. THE Lord ought to be regarded as the only life, or living being, because he alone properly lives, and all other beings and things live only by virtue of what they receive from him. All derived life then manifestly demonstrates its divine source, and is in some connection with it, more or less remote. Clowes. By doing well, charity-the good of faithis perfected; but it is only by suffering well, that celestial love-the good of innocence and love-is perfected. Hence it behoved the Lord himself to be "made perfect through suffering." Thus did God provide himself a lamb for a burnt-offering. It is well to suffer with sub B mission; better to suffer with resignation; better still with patience; but, best of all, with cheerfulness. This becomes possible when the conviction becomes sufficiently established in the whole mind, that "God is love;" and that even the very hairs of our head are all numbered. What can be more cheering than the thought that God is love; and who can be otherwise than cheerful, when this thought irradiates even the distant parts of the mental earth? Intellectual Repository. THE quality of mercy is not strain'd; Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings; It is enthroned in the hearts of kings, And earthly power doth then show likest God's Shakspear. LET not any one say he cannot govern his passions, nor hinder them from breaking out and carrying him into actions; for what he can do before a prince or a great man from a worldly motive, he can do when alone or in the presence of God from a religious motive, if he will. Locke. FOR while we love An inward day that never, never sets, Glares round the soul and mocks the closing eyelids. THE world's a wilderness of woe, T. S. Coleridge. Descends a sweet engaging form, Where bright celestial ages rule, The gate of Paradise restored, Her voice the watching cherub hears, James Montgomery. Good minds are ever apt to forget benefits, but a grateful heart is equally tenacious to remember them. It is the indelible register of every act that is dismissed from the memory of the benefactor. Mrs. Radcliffe. A WHOLE world of pleasure is perpetually streaming into us through the eye, to whose sensations the green livery of nature has been rendered peculiarly grateful and refreshing. This little organ, like the vases of Pelides, is never filled, although perpetually replenished; and we pass from the contemplation of natural beauties to the study of artificial ones,-from the everchanging landscape, heavens and sea, to the endless succession of buildings, statues, paintings, as if the day was too short for its enjoyments. When the bodily eye is shut, the mental vision is opened, and the same sights are again presented to us, heightened to the exquisite of ideal perfection. What a succession of pleasant tattoos are perpetually beating upon the tiny drum of the ear, from the syren mouth of beauty, 66 Warbling immortal verse and Tuscan air," or the rich harmonies of "Song and cymbal, cithern, harp and lute," "in many a band of linked sweetness long drawn out," to the symphonius concert of the birds, the music of the winds, "the murmuring woodlands, the resounding shore," |