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Helen M. (Helen Mar) Johnson

THE OLD MAN.

The old man’s cheek was wet with tears,
  And his wrinkled brow was pale,
As after a lapse of many years
  He stood in his native vale.

The warblers sang in the leafy bough,
  And the earth was robed in green;
But the old man’s heart beat sadly now
  While he gazed on the lovely scene.

The stream ran clear to the distant sea,
  The same as he saw it last;
And sitting beneath an old elm tree,
  He thought of days in the past.

He thought how he climbed the verdant hill,
  Or roved through the forest wild,
Or traced to its source the rippling rill,
  A gay and careless child.

And as he thought of the happy throng
  That around him used to crowd
With the ringing laugh and the joyous song,
  The old man wept aloud.

For well he knew they would meet no more
  On the dreary shores of time,—­
But he looked away to a brighter shore,
  He looked to a deathless clime.

That moment a young and merry group
  Came bounding across the lea,
With rosy cheek, with ball and with hoop
  They came to the old elm tree.

They paused awhile in their noisy play
  To gaze on the aged man,
While he wiped his falling tears away
  And in trembling tones began: 

“I would not cloud for the world your joy,
  Or have you less happy for me—­
For I have been like yourselves a boy
  Though I’m now the wreck you see.

“But let the words of wisdom and truth
  In your memories be enrolled,—­
And in the days of your sunny youth
  Be kind to the poor and old!”

The children wept as they heard him speak,
  And forgetful of their play
They wiped the tears from his furrowed cheek,
  And they smoothed his locks of gray.

He laid his hand with a tender air
  By turns on each youthful head,
Then lifting his faded eyes in prayer,
  “God bless you!” the old man said.

And the boys were blest:—­for the angels flung
  Around them their wings of gold;
So ever they do when the gay and young
  Are kind to the poor and old.

THE FADING AND THE UNFADING.

Once more the beautiful Spring has returned, and from my window I can behold the delightful places where I have so often roamed in childhood light-hearted and happy.  But the lovely Spring brings no longer the same emotions as of yore.  Oh no! for “a change has come over the spirit of my dream.”  Earth has lost its charms, and although I love the beauties of nature even better than before, still they cannot satisfy,—­they are doomed to fade, and my soul yearns for those beautiful heavenly bowers which shall never wither; where God himself reigns in person and “chases night away.”  But, although I sigh for such things, am I prepared for them?  Should I be ready at this moment to enter the paradise of God?  Ah, my heart, why shouldest thou hesitate thus to return an answer?  God is still able and willing to save, and though I have wandered so far from Him, if with an humble and penitent soul I confess my sins he is willing and able to forgive me.—­June 4,1853.

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Canadian Wild Flowers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.

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