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placing my lips close to hers, whispered: Mother, dear mother, won't you kiss me?"

4. Her lips were very cold, and when she put her hand upon my cheek, and laid my head on her bosom, I felt a cold shuddering pass all through me. My father carried me from the room; but he could not speak. After they put me in bed, I lay a long while thinking; I feared my mother would, indeed, die; for her cheek felt cold, as my little sister's did when she died, and they carried her little body away where I never saw it again. But I soon fell asleep.

5. In the morning I rushed to my mother's room, with a strange dread of evil to come upon me. It was just as I feared. A white linen covered her straight, cold form. I removed it from her face: her eyes were closed, and her cheeks were hard and cold. But my mother's dear, dear smile was there, or my heart would have broken.

6. In an instant, all the little faults, for which she had so often reproved me, rushed upon my mind. I longed to tell her how good I would always be, if she would but stay with me. I longed to tell her how, in all time to come, her words would be a law to me. I would be all that she had wished me to be. ·

7. I was a passionate, headstrong boy; and never did this frame of temper come upon me, but I seemed to see her mild, tearful eyes full upon me, just as she used to look in life; and when I strove for the mastery over my passions, her smile seemed to cheer my heart, and I was happy.

8. My whole character underwent a change, even from the moment of her death. Her spirit seemed to be always with me, to aid the good and root out the evil that was in me. I felt it would grieve her gentle spirit to see me err, and I could not, would not, do so.

9. I was the child of her affection. I knew she had

prayed and wept over me; and that even on the threshold of the grave, her anxiety for my welfare had caused her spirit to linger, that she might pray once more for me. I never forgot my mother's last kiss. It was with me in sorrow; it was with me in joy; it was with me in moments of evil, like a perpetual good.

QUESTIONS.-1. What was the age of the person represented in this piece? 2. What, when his mother died? 3. What did he say of himself when a child? 4. Had he ever grieved his mother? 5. What did he say of his faults, after his mother's death? 6. What did he desire to tell her? 7. How ought you to treat your mother, in order to avoid the reproaches of your own conscience?

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1. "Dear mother, here's the very place

Where little John was found,
The water covering up his face,

His feet upon the ground.
Now won't you tell me all about
The death of little John'?

And how the woman sent him out
Long after sun was down'?
And tell me all about the wrong,

And that will make the story long."

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2. I took the child upon my knee, Beside the lake so clear;

For there the tale of misery

Young Edward begged to hear.
He looked into my very eyes,
With sad and earnest face,

And caught his breath with wild surprise,
And turned to mark the place

Where perished, years agone, the child
Alone, beneath the waters wild.

3. "A weakly orphan boy was John,
A barefoot, stinted child,

Whose work-day task was never done,
Who wept when others smiled.
Around his home the trees were high,
Down to the water's brink,
And almost hid the pleasant sky,

Where wild deer came to drink."

(") "And did they come, the pretty deer'? And did they drink the water here'?”

4. Cried Edward, with a wondering eye: "Now, mother, tell to me,

Was John about as large as I'?

Pray tell, how big was he'?"
"He was an older boy than you,

And stouter every way;
For, water from the well he drew,

And hard he worked all day.
But then poor John was sharp and thin,
With sun-burnt hair and sun-burnt skin.

5. "His mother used to spin and weave;
From farm to farm she went;

And, though it made her much to grieve,
She John to service sent.

He lived with one, a woman stern,
Of hard and cruel ways;

And he must bring her wood to burn,
From forest and highways;

And then, at night, on cold, hard bed,
He laid his little, aching head.

6. "The weary boy had toiled all day
With heavy spade and hoe;
His mistress met him on the way,
And bade him quickly go

And bring her home some sticks of wood,
For she would bake and brew;

When he returned, she'd give him food;
For she had much to do.

And then she charged him not to stay,
Nor loiter long upon the way.

7. "He went; but scarce his toil-worn feet Could crawl along the wood,

He was so spent with work and heat,

And faint for lack of food.

He bent his aching, little back

To bear the weight along,
And staggered then upon the track;

For John was never strong.
His eyesight, too, began to fail,

And he grew giddy, faint, and pale.

8. "The load was small, quite small, 'tis true, But John could bring no more;

The woman in a rage it threw,—

She stamped upon the floor.

(f.) 'No supper you shall have to-night;
So go along to bed,

You good-for-nothing, ugly fright,
You little stupid-head!'"'

Said Edward: "I would never go;
She wouldn't dare to serve me so!"

9. "The moon-beams fell upon the child
As, weeping, there he lay;

And gusty winds were sweeping wild
Along the forest way,

When up rose John, at dead of night;
For he would see his mother;

She loved her child, although he might
Be nothing to another.

That narrow creek he forded o'er,—
'Tis nearer than around the shore.

10. "But here the shore is rough, you see;
The bank is high and steep;

And John, who climbed on hands and knee,
His footing could not keep.

He backward fell, all, all alone;

Too weak was he to rise;

pl.) And no one heard his dying moan,
Or closed his dying eyes.

How still he slept! And grief and pain
Could never come to him again.

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