Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 304 pages of information about Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing.

Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 304 pages of information about Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing.
entirely obliterate the forms so well remembered.  I passed from room to room, now pausing to recall an incident, and now hurrying on under a sense of pain at seeing a place, hallowed in my thoughts by the tenderest associations of my life, thus abandoned to the gnawing tooth of decay, and destined to certain and speedy destruction.  When I came to my mother’s room, emotion grew too powerful, and a gush of tears relieved the oppressive weight that lay upon my bosom.  There I lingered long, with a kind of mournful pleasure in this scene of my days of innocence, and lived over years of the bygone times.

At last I turned with sad feelings from a spot which memory had held sacred for twenty years; but which, in its change, could be sacred no longer.  Material things are called substantial; but it is not so.  Change and decay are ever at work upon them; they are unsubstantial.  A real substance is the mind, with its thoughts and affections.  Forms built there do not decay.  How perfectly had I retained in memory the home of my childhood!  Not a leaf had withered, not a flower had faded; nothing had fallen under the scythe of time.  The greenness and perfection of all were as the mind had received them twenty years before.  But the material things themselves had, in that brief space, passed almost wholly away.  Yes; it is in the mind that we must seek for real substance.

Slowly and sadly I turned from the hallowed place, and went back towards the village inn.  No interest for anything in Brookdale remained, and no surprise was created at the almost total obliteration of the old landmarks apparent on every hand.  My purpose was to leave the place by the early stage that morning, and seek to forget that I had ever returned to the home of my childhood.

My way was past the old village church where, Sabbath after Sabbath, for nearly fifteen years, I had met with the worshippers; and as I drew nearer and nearer the sacred place, I was more and more impressed with the fact that, if change had been working busily all around, his hand had spared the holy edifice.  That change had been there was plainly to be seen, but he had lingered only a moment, laying his hand gently, as he paused, on the ancient pile.  New and tenderer feelings came over me.  I could not pass the village church, and so I entered it once more, although it was yet too early for the worshippers to assemble.  How familiar all!  A year seemed not to have intervened since I had stood beneath that roof.  The deep, arched windows, the antique pulpit and chancel, the old gallery and organ, the lofty roof, but most of all the broad tablet above the pulpit, and the words “Reverence my Sanctuary:  I am the Lord,” were as familiar as the face of a dear friend.  There was change all around, but no change here in the house of God.

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Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.