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The stalk that's most replenished,
Doth bow the most its modest head.
Thus, deep Humility we find
The mark of every master-mind;
The highest-gifted lowliest bends,
And merit meekest condescends,
And shuns the fame that fools adore,-
That puff that bids a feather soar.

V.

BENEFITS OF ADVERSITY.

Neither do

A smooth sea never made a skillful mariner. uninterrupted prosperity and success qualify man for usefulness or happiness. The storms of adversity, like the storms of the ocean, rouse the faculties and excite the invention, prudence, skill, and fortitude of the voyager.

If

you

VI.

OUR MOUNTAIN HOMES.

MRS. S. R. A. BARNES,

Why turn we to our mountain homes
With more than filial feeling?
"Tis here that Freedom's altars rise,
And Freedom's sons are kneeling!
Why sigh we not for softer climes?
Why cling to that which bore us?
'Tis here we tread on Freedom's soil,
With Freedom's sunshine o'er us!

VII.

MAKE A BEGINNING.

do not begin, you will never come to the end. The

first weed pulled up in the garden, the first seed set in the

ground, the first dollar put in the savings-bank, and the first mile traveled on a journey, are all important things; they make a beginning, and thereby give a hope, a promise, a pledge, an assurance that you are in earnest in what you have undertaken. How many a poor, idle, erring, hesitating outcast is now creeping his way through the world, who might have held up his head and prospered, if, instead of putting off his resolutions of amendment and industry, he had only made a beginning!

VIII.

INFLUENCE.

1. Drop follows drop, and swells
With rain the sweeping river;
Word follows word, and tells

A truth that lives forever.

GEORGE W. BUNGAY.

2. Flake follows flake, like sprites
Whose wings the winds dissever;
Thought follows thought, and lights
The realm of mind forever.

3. Beam follows beam to cheer,

The cloud a bolt might shiver;
Throb follows throb, and fear
Gives place to joy forever.

4. The drop, the flake, the beam,
Teach us a lesson ever;

The word, the thought, the dream,
Impress the soul forever.

IX.

PLEASURE IN ACQUIRING KNOWLEDGE.
CAROLINE F. Orne.

1. Note the ecstatic joy of the student, who has labored long over a problem or proposition, but finally comes to a logical conclusion; who has struggled with the misty dark-` ness of his own mind, for a clear view of some difficult subject, until the clouds, one after another, have dispersed, and he beholds, with his mental vision, in bright and glorious light, the conception for which he labored. Think you he would exchange his joys for the pleasures of sense'? It is of a higher and more ennobling character, and not to be bartered for paltry wealth.

2. What dignity and self-respect invest the man of thought! His very looks bespeak of mind. He is approached with deference, as a being of higher order in the scale of intelligence,-as one who has a right to command and be obeyed. For what moves mind, but mind? A strong intellect, coming in contact with one of less energy, will as naturally move it, as superior physical strength will overcome the weaker.

X.

WHAT IS FAME?

What is glory? What is fame'?
The echo of a long-lost name';
A breath', an idle hour's brief talk`;
The shadow of an arrant naught';
A flower that blossoms for a day',
Dying next morrow';

A stream that hurries on its way,
Singing of sorrow';

MOTHERWELL..

A fortune that to lose were gain';

A word of praise, perchance of blame';
The wreck of a time-bandied name',
Ay, this is glory!—this is fame` !

XI.

CULTIVATED INTELLECT.

Ah! well do we all know the worth of intelligence, the power of knowledge, and the beauty and glory of wisdom. It is educated manhood that wakes up the sleeping soil, covers the earth with good, that gathers in the golden harvest, that clothes the naked, that feeds the hungry. It is the cultivated mind that applies the strength of the ox and the fleetness of the horse; that bridges the river, that turns to use the flying winds, that makes the lightning its swift messenger, that makes beautiful palaces of dull clay, that rouses the dead ore to active life, that covers the sea with ships, and the land with mighty engines of wealth. It is the developed intellect that flies through the upper air, that mingles with the stars, that follows the moon in her course, that overtakes the constellations in their orbits, that weighs the sun, that measures the distance to the polar star. It is the enlightened soul that worships God.

XII.

GOD'S WORKS ATTEST HIS GREATNESS.

1. There's not a leaf within the bower

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There's not a bird upon the tree;
There's not a dew-drop on the flower,
But bears the impress, Lord, of Thee.

MRS. OPIE.

2. Thy hand the varied leaf designed,

And gave the bird its thrilling tone;
Thy power the dewdrop's tints combined,

Till like the diamond's blaze they shone.

3. Yes, dewdrops, leaves, and buds, and all
The smallest, like the greatest things,-
The sea's vast space, the earth's wide ball,
Alike proclaim Thee King of kings.

4. But man alone to bounteous Heaven,
Thanksgiving's conscious strains can raise ;
To favored man alone 'tis given
To join the angelic choir in praise!

LESSON LXXVII.

MO NOT' O NOUS, dull; uniform.
HAR POON', barbed spear.
A&' I TA TED, disturbed.

RE VER' BER ATES, rebounds; reëchoes.
WRITHE$, twists, or turns in agony.
CON TOR' TION$, twistings; writhings.
VE LOC' I TY, swiftness.
IG NITES', takes fire.

FRICTION, rubbing together.
COILS, winds into a ring.

PRO JECT ED, thrown out or forward.
Vo CIF' ER A TED, shouted.
IN FURI A TED, enraged.
UN RE LENT' ING, unfeeling.
CON VUL' SION$, violent spasms.
REN COUNTER, fight; conflict.

CAPTURE OF THE WHALE.

1. LET the reader suppose himself on the deck of a Southeaman, cruising in the North Pacific ocean. Не He may be musing over some past event, the ship may be sailing gently along over the smooth ocean, every thing around solemnly still, with the sun pouring its intense rays with dazzling

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