No God-Who fixed the solid ground Who all things to perfection brought Go ask the fool, of impious thought, THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD. "The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God." Go out beneath the arched heavens, at night, and say if you can, There is no God!" Pronounce that dreadful blasphemy, and each star above you will reproach the unbroken darkness of your intellect; every voice that floats upon the night winds will bewail your utter hopelessness and folly. Is there no God? Who, then, unrolled the blue scroll, and threw upon its high frontispiece the legible gleamings of immortality? Who fashioned this green. earth, with its perpetual rolling waters, and its wide expanse of islands and of main? Who settled the foundations of the mountains? Who paved the heavens with clouds, and attuned, amid the clamor of storms, the voice of thunders, and unchained the lightnings that flash in their gloom? Who gave to the eagle a safe cyrie where the tempests dwell, and beat the strongest, and to the dove a tranquil abode amid the forests that echo to the minstrelsy of her moan? Who made THEE, O man! with thy perfected elegance of intellect and form? Who made the light pleasant to thee, and the darkness a covering, and a herald to the first gorgeous flashes of the morning? There is a God. All nature declares it in a language too plain to be misapprehended. The great truth is too legibly written over the face of the whole creation to be easily mistaken. Thou canst behold it in the tender blade just starting from the earth in the early spring, or in the sturdy oak that has withstood the blasts of fourscore winters. The purling rivulet, meandering through downy meads and verdant glens, and Niagara's tremendous torrent, leaping over its awful chasm, and rolling in majesty its broad sheet of waters onward to the ocean, unite in proclaiming "THERE IS A GOD." 'Tis heard in the whispering breeze and in the howling storm; in the deep-toned thunder, and in the earthquake's shock; 'tis declared to us when the tempest lowers,— when the hurricane sweeps over the land,-when the winds moan around our dwellings, and die in sullen murmurs on the plain, when the heavens, overcast with blackness, ever and anon are illuminated by the lightning's glare. Nor is the truth less solemnly impressed on our minds in the universal bush and calm repose of nature, when all is still as the soft breathings of an infant's slumber. The vast ocean, when its broad expanse is whitened with foam, and when its heaving waves roll mountain on mountain high, or when the dark blue of heaven's vault is reflected with beauty on its smooth and tranquil bosom, confirms the declaration. The twinkling star, shedding its flickering rays so far above the reach of human ken, and the glorious sun in the heavens,-all-all declare, there is a universal FIRST CAUSE. And Man, the proud lord of creation, so fearfully and wonderfully made,-cach joint in its corresponding socket, each muscle, tendon, and artery, performing their allotted functions with all the precision of the most perfect mechanism,-and, surpassing all, possessed of a soul capable of enjoying the most exquisite pleasure, or of enduring the most excruciating pain, which is endowed with immortal capacities, and is destined to live onward through the endless ages of eternity,-these all unite in one general proclamation of the eternal truth.-there is a Being, infinite in wisdom, who reigns over all, undivided and supreme, the Fountain of all life, Source of all light, from whom all blessings flow, and in whom all happiness centres. ARTEMUS WARD VISITS THE SHAKERS. C. F. BROWN. "MR. SHAKER," sed I, "you see before you a Babe in the Woods, so to speak, and he axes a shelter of you.” "Yay," sed the Shaker, and he led the way into the house, another bein sent to put my horse and wagon un der kiver. A solum female, lookin somewhat like a last year's bean-pole stuck into a long meal-bag, cum in and axed me was I athirst and did I hunger? To which I asserted, "A few." She went orf, and I endeavored to open a conversation with the old man. "Elder, I spect," sed I. "Yay," he said. "Health's good, I reckon?" "Yay." "What's the wages of a Elder, when he understands his bizness-or do you devote your sarvices gratooitous?" Yay." "Storm nigh, sir?" "Yay." "If the storm continues there'll be a mess underfoot, bay?” "If I may be so bold, kind sir, wnat's the price of that pecooler kind of wesket you wear, includin trimmins?" "Yay." "I pawsed a minit, and then, thinkin I'd be faseshus with him and see how that would go, I slapt him on the shoulder, burst into a hearty larf, and told him that as a yayer he had no living ekel. He jumped up as if bilin water had been squirted into his ears, groaned, rolled his eyes up tords the realin and sed: "You're a man of sin!" He then walked out of the room. Directly thar cum in two young Shakeresses, as putty and slick lookin galls as I ever met. It is troo they was drest in meal-bags like the old one I'd met previsly, and their shiny, silky hair was hid from sight by long, white caps, such as I spose female gosts wear; but their eyes sparkled like diamonds, their cheeks was like roses, and they was charmin enuff to make a man throw stuns at his grandmother, if they axed him to. They commenst clearing away the dishes, casting shy glances at me all the time. I got excited. I forgot Betsey Jane in my rapter, and sez I, 'My pretty dears, how air you?” "We air well," they solumly sed. "Where is the old man?" said I, in a soft voice. I mean that gay and festive cuss who calls me a man of sin. Should'nt wonder if his name was'nt Uriah." 'He has retired." 66 'Wall, my pretty dears," sez I, "let's have some fun. What say?" Let's play puss in the corner. "Air you a Shaker, sir?" they asked. "Wall, my pretty dears, I haven't arrayed my proud form in a long weskit yet, but if they wus all like you perhaps I'd jine 'em. As it is, I am willing to be Shaker protemporary." They was full of fun. I seed that at fust, only they was a little skeery. I tawt 'em puss in the corner, and sich like plase, and we had a nice time, keepin quiet of course, When we broke up, so that the old man should'nt hear. sez I: "My pretty dears,,ear I go, you have no object lans have you? to a innersent kiss at partin?" "Yay," they said, and I-yayed." DEATH OF AN INEBRIATE. RAISE me up gently-there- Oh! give a breath of the pure, cold air; I am going so fast But no one will care how soon I am cold They will hurry me under the damp, dark mould, And "only a pauper," they'll say as they pass, Bring water I pray; I drank nothing else in my childhood's day- How it leaped on the shore! Oh! why did I drink from the poisoned bowl What a wretch I have been! None but God knoweth how great is my sin; Have you 'mong you a book— The book that tells of the "prodigal son?" I shall trust and hope to behold his throne. I am going-good bye! No one loves me down here--I hope that on high By the great crystal sea She loved me till death, so true was her heart- Some youth from despair and a vile drunkard's grave. THE VISION OF IMMORTALITY.-W. C. BRYANT. I WHо essayed to sing, in earlier days, The Thanatopsis and The Hymn to Death, Yet once again, ol! man, come forth and view Enter the silent groves, or pierce again |