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Helen M. (Helen Mar) Johnson

“Then on his child a father smiled,
  And fondly me caressed;
When sorrow came, or bitter pain,
  I leaned upon his breast;
He’d kiss my cheek, and kindly speak
  In soft and soothing tone;
Oh, what a strange and dreary change—­
  For then I had a home!

“When evening gray shut out the day,
  Beside my mother’s knee,
With simple air I breathed the prayer
  That mother taught to me;
Then laid me down, not on the ground,
  Not on this cold, damp stone;
But on my bed, love made instead,—­
  For then I had a home!

“The livelong day I spent in play
  Around our peaceful cot,
Or plucked the flowers from blooming bowers,
  And to my mother brought. 
Then bliss and joy without alloy,
  And love around me shone;
Then hope could rest within my breast—­
  For then I had a home!

“My father died, and by his side
  My darling mother sleeps;
And now their child in anguish wild
  Wanders around and weeps! 
The pleasant cot my father bought
  A stranger calls his own;
With tearful face I left the place,
  For it was not my home!

“No home have I, no shelter nigh,
  And none my grief to share;
But I’ve a Friend, to him I’ll bend,
  And he will grant my prayer. 
He’ll lend an ear for he can hear,
  Though high his mighty throne;
My steps he’ll guide, and he’ll provide
  The orphan with a home!

“Dark grows the sky, my lips are dry,
  And cold my aching brow;
Is this a dream?—­for, lo!  I seem
  To see my mother now! 
Faint grows my breath, the arm’s of death
  Are surely round me thrown;
Oh, what a light breaks on my sight! 
  There, there’s the orphan’s home!”

With smiling face in death’s embrace
  The orphan calmly slept;
He heard no more the tempest’s roar;
  No more the orphan wept. 
No longer pain might rack his brain,
  No longer might he roam,
The dearly loved he’d met above,
  And found with them a home!

SENTENTIOUS PARAGRAPHS.

Rest, but few can comprehend the word.  At morn I speak it, but at midnight most, and then ’tis music!  Oh, the thought of rest—­of perfect freedom, from distress and pain—­of health, of vigor in each nerve and limb.  The thought inspires, consoles, and makes me pray for fear I shall lose the blessing.  Grant me, O God, a patient heart; and may my will be so conformed to thine, that I may wait thy own good pleasure, whatsoever it be.

There are moments when Calvary overshadows Mount Sinai; when the blessed words, “It is finished,” swell long and loud above the roar of thunder and the sound of trumpets; when the Cross conceals the Tables of stone bearing the holy law of the Almighty, and then I can boldly reply to the upbraidings of Conscience, “There is now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus.”

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Canadian Wild Flowers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.

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