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LESSON XLVI.

SPELL AND DEFINE-1. AUCTIONEER, one who exposes goods for sale to the highest bidder. 2. RELIC, that which remains. 3. Antique', old; old-fashioned. 4. PA TRI ARCH'AL, belonging to the age of the fathers. 5. LONGEVITY, length of life. 6. DESPOTISM, arbitrary gov-. ernment. 7. SAN'ITY, Soundness of mind. 8. MONITOR, one who admonishes of fault or duty. 9. PLUMAGE, feathers; here means, gaudy ornaments. 10. DESECRATED, profaned. 11. DEGENERATE, having declined from natural excellence. 12. ANNALS, history related in the exact order of time.

ANOTHER OLD CLOCK.

At

BOSTON REGISTER. 1. THE clock which for many years hung in the interior of the "old brick" meeting-house, in this city, after various fortunes, lately fell into the hands of the auctioneer. the time of the sale, the auctioneer actually delivered the following speech, which we have been permitted to publish. We venture to affirm that a more appropriate and witty speech never fell from the lips of the most celebrated orators at vendues.

2. "Here is a relic of the early days of our country's annals, a remnant saved; antique of its kind, and venerable for every association connected with its history,-the old church clock,-bearing a mark of patriarchal longevity in the date, that speaks it one hundred and eighteen years of age. Yet, while it has ticked and struck off the thousands and tens of thousands, who have looked on its calm face, into eternity, it is still in good time, and going! going!

3. "Though its existence was begun in the land of kings, moved by the spirit of our pious fathers, it followed them to the land of pilgrims, and was consecrated to serve in the house of God, whom they came hither to worship as the children of his kingdom, and not as spiritual slaves to earthly despotism. This sober, ever-going clock came over in the days of caution and sanity. It came when a seavoyage was a serious thing, and religion a serious thing, and a church clock a serious thing. It counted the moments while the minister of God was preaching, and his hearers listening, of eternity. It echoed his text, Take heed how ye

hear.'

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4. "Then was there real clock-work and order in men's minds and principles. Vanity did not then stare this venerable monitor in the face, and study the while how to display

its plumage. Avarice did not dare, under its measured 'click, to be planning in the temple how to lay up goods for many years. Nor was pride then puffed up by the breath of its own nostrils, while this minute-hand was showing its duration cut shorter at the beat of every pulse.

5. "Now, who will suffer this venerable memento of those days to be desecrated? Who will not wish to possess himself of it as a relic of the age of simplicity and godly sincerity? Look at its aged but unwrinkled face. It is calm, for it has not to answer for the sermons it has heard. Look at it, ye degenerate sons of New England! Do ye not seem to see the shade go back on the dial-plate to the days of your fathers, and to hear the voices of those aged servants of God, who went from their preaching to their reward? I would speak more, but the hour is come. To whom shall it be sold ?"

QUESTIONS.-1. What was exposed for sale by the auctioneer? 2. What did he say of its age? 3. When did it come over the sea? 4. What had been its employment? 5. What was then the character of men?

What inflection has going, second verse? What are the two Rules for inflections at questions? How should the last line in the second verse be read?

LESSON XLVII.

SPELL AND DEFINE-1. STERN, severe; difficult of access. 2. GIANT like a giant,-very large. 3. MOORED, made fast in a station. 4. AISLES, narrow passages in a forest; walks in a church. 5. HOARY, gray, 6. ANTHEM, a sacred song.

LANDING OF THE PILGRIM FATHERS

MRS. HEMANS.

1. THE breaking waves dashed high
On a stern and rock-bound coast,

And the woods, against a stormy sky,
Their giant branches tost;

And the heavy night hung dark

The hills and waters o'er,

When a band of exiles moored their bark

On the wild New England shore.

2. Not as the conqueror comes,

They, the true-hearted, came,

Not with the roll of the stirring drums,
And the trumpet that sounds of fame;

Not as the flying come,

In silence and in fear;

They shook the depths of the desert's gloom,
With their hymns of lofty cheer.

3. Amidst the storm they sang,

And the stars heard and the sea;

And the sounding aisles of the dim woods rang
To the anthem of the free.

The ocean-eagle soared

From his nest by the white wave's foam,
And the rocking pines of the forest roared,—
This was their welcome home!

4. There were men with hoary hair,
Amidst that pilgrim-band:

Why had they come to wither there,
Away from their childhood's land?
There was woman's fearless eye,

Lit by her deep love's truth;
There was manhood's brow serenely high,
And the fiery heart of youth.

5. What sought they thus afàr?
Bright jewels of the mine?

The wealth of séas? the spoils of wár ?

They sought a faith's pure shrine.

Aye, call it holy ground,

The soil where first they trod:

They left unstained what there they found,—
FREEDOM TO WORSHIP GOD.

QUESTIONS.. Describe the waves, the woods, and the night, when the pilgrim fathers reached the New England shore. 2. How did they not come? 3. What is said of their music? 4. Of the ocean-eagle? 5. What different ones were in this band? 6. What did they seek? 7. Where did the pilgrim fathers first land? 8. What did they leave to their posterity?

Why a falling inflection at afar, fifth verse? Why rising at the other questions in that verse? What difficulty in giving a distinct articulation in the last line but one, second verse? What exercise is sometimes calculated to secure a distinct articulation? (Les. II. 7.) Where, in the last verse, occur rhetorical pauses? What two lines in the last verse should be read in a lower tone of voice than the rest? Do the lines of this poetry contain an equal number of syllables?

LESSON XLVIII.

SPELL AND DEFINE-1. NARCIS'SUS, a flower, otherwise called the daffodil. 2. STRAND, shore of the sea. 3. MYSTIC, having some secret meaning; obscure. 4. MAIN, the ocean. 5. SUPERVAL, higher; heav enly. 6. WHELMING, covering as with water. 7. IRE, anger. 8. ExPUNGE, blot out; hence. to destroy one's self. 9. VIE, to contend; t strive. 10. FRANTIC, mad; wild; raving. 11. CHIDES, rebukes.

RUDBARI AND HASSAN.

WOODS.

[Translated from the German Version of a Persian Poem written in the thirteenth century.]

1. In ancient days, as the old stories run,
Strange hap befell a father and his son.
Rudbari was an old sea-faring man,
And loved the rough paths of the ocean;

And Hassan was his child,-a boy as bright

As the keen moon, gleaming in the vault of night,

Rose-red his cheek, narcissus-like his eye,

And his form might well with the slender cypress vie.
Godly Rudbari was, and just, and true,

And Hassan pure as a drop of early dew.
Now, because Rudbari loved his only child,

He resolved to take him o'er the waters wild.

2. The ship is on the strand,-friends, brothers, parents, there
Take the last leave with mingled tears and prayer.
The sailor calls, the fair breeze chides delay,
The sails are spread, and all are under way.
But when the ship, like a strong-shot arrow, flew,
And the well-known shore was fading from the view,
Hassan spake, as he gazed upon the land,

Such mystic words as none could understand :-
"On this troubled wave in vain we seek for rest.

Who builds his house on the sea, or his palace on its breast?
Let me but reach yon fixed and steadfast shore,
And the bounding wave shall never tempt me more."

3. Then Rudbari spoke :-" And does my brave boy fear The ocean's face to see, and his thundering voice to hear? He will love, when home returned at last,

To tell, in his native cot, of dangers past.'

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Then Hassan said :-"Think not thy brave boy fears, When he sees the ocean's face, or his voice of thunder hears;

But on these waters I may not abide;
Hold me not back; I will not be denied."
Rudbari now wept o'er his wildered child:

"What mean these looks, and words so strangely wild ? Dearer, my boy, to me than all the gain

That I've earned from the bounteous bosom of the main !
Nor heaven, nor earth, could yield one joy to me,
Could I not, Hassan, share that joy with thee."

4. But Hassan soon in his wondering words, betrayed
The cause of the mystic air that round him played:
Soon as I saw these deep, wide waters roll,

A light from the INFINITE broke in upon my soul !" "Thy words, my child, but ill become thy age,

And would better suit the mouth of some star-gazing sage." Thy words, my father, can not turn away

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Mine eye, now fixed on that supernal day.

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5. "Dost thou not, Hassan, lay these dreams aside,
I'll plunge thee headlong in the whelming tide."
"Do this, Rudbari, only not in ire,

'Tis all I ask, and all I can desire.
For on the bosom of this rolling flood,
Slumbers an awful mystery of Good;

And he may solve it, who will self expunge,
And in the depths of boundless being plunge."

6. He spake, and plunged, and as quickly sunk beneath,
As the flying snow-flake melts on a summer heath.
A moment Rudbari stood, as fixedly bound

As the pearl is by the shell that clasps it round.
Then he followed his Hassan with a frantic leap;
And they slumber both on the bottom of the deep!

QUESTIONS.-1. What was Rudbari's occupation? 2. Where did he wish to take his son? 3. Who uttered the last four lines of the second verse? 4. Did Hassan fear the sea? 5. What did his father threaten to do? 6. What did Hassan say and do? 7. What did Rudbari do? 8. What is said of them in the last line?

What pause occurs near the middle of each line in this poetry? What are the poetic pauses? (Les. XII. Rem. 6.) Should the sentences, uttered by the father and the son, be read in the same tone of voice? Which should be read in the higher pitch? (Les. X. 4.) What inflection do friends, brothers, parents. take in the first line, second verse? Why is Infinite, printed in capitals, fourth line, fourth verse? What inflection at hear, third verse? How should the last line of this lesson be read? (Les. III. 3.)

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