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AN AUTUMN REVERIE.

AMONG the golden corn I lay,
A bright and sunny Autumn day,
And gentle breezes o'er me stole,
Earth's fragrance wafting to my soul,
And music caught my raptured ears,
Sweet as the singing of the spheres,
Which poets heard in ancient time,
Ring out their symphonies sublime!
And from afar the village bells,
Came pealing o'er the upland swells,
By distance softened and subdued,
To suit my still and pensive mood;
And pleasant dreams then came to me,
Of what this glorious world might be,
If man to man were just and true,
Resolved and brave the just to do.
Then ceased the awful daily strife,
The poor must wage for bread of life;
And honest toil won honest bread,
And life in hope and joy was led;
For sunny children laughed with glee,
Round-faced, and ruddy, blythe and free;
No longer hunger tamed them down,
To ragged starvelings of the Town.

Birmingham.

The fetid dens had passed away,
Where breathes and rots the human elay
Of him whose strength has ceased to be
of use to Mammon's devotee;

And in their stead before me rose
Fair dwelling-places, goodly rows;
Each house a neat and cleanly home,
That would not force its lord to roam.

And knowledge now was free to all;
The parting slave, and peasant thrall
Had learned the cause of all their woes,
And in their native manhood rose,
Demanding simply leave to be

What God had made them,-men and free.
Victorious they; and all the earth
Was gladden'd with a second birth.

Then far and wide the welkin rung,
With joyous shout, and heart-felt song;
And stalwart men and women fair,
In laughing troops assembled there.
I saw the wild and merry dance,

The happy face, and sparkling glance.—
Then rose from this my reverie,

To work for what this world shall be!
JOHN ALFRED LANGFORD.

Sons of the living Babylon,

A SUMMER INVITATION.

Who work for scanty bread,

'Midst grandeur, misery, wealth, and want, The dying and the dead;

Nature, with all her sylvan throng,
Now bids you come away

To meadows, groves, and shady lanes,
Blooming in bright array.

Ye daughters wan and woe-begone,
With toiling and un-rest;
Who have nor hearth-born hopes, nor joys
To soothe the sorrowing breast;
Come, lay the constant needle by,-
Plied with embittered tears,
Drink new life from the perfumed breeze,
Ere summer disappears.
Though labour-doomed for others' gain,
A prey to haggard care;
Though poverty and ceaseless toil

Have blighted hopes once fair;-
Forget those miseries awhile,

Lift up your drooping heads, Come to the banquet meet for all, Which bounteous Nature spreads. Sheffield.

No scourging pestilence is here,
No fetid, gloomy cells;

No tempting palaces of vice,
No peace destroying hells;
But leafy coverts, gushing rills,
Mountains of azure hue;

Uplands of odour-breathing flowers,
And vallies bathed in dew.

The blackbird and the speckled thrush,
In concert wild and sweet,
Pour forth their heaven-taught melodies
From many a loved retreat:
And not a simple flower that blooms,
A merry bird that sings,
But bids you welcome to the haunts

Whence rapturous pleasure springs!
The mighty courser, winged with fire,
Which, belching, sweeps the air,
Shall waft you rapidly as thought
To prospects bright and fair.
Then come each struggling toiler, come,
Whose bosom hope still warms,
Health waits to greet you with her smiles,
And Nature with her charms.
J. W. KING.

GENIUS. They say of poets, that they must be born such; so must mathematicians, so must great generals, and so must lawyers, and so indeed, must great men of all denominations, or it is not possible that they should excel; but with whatever faculties we are born, and to whatever studies our genius may direct us, studies they still must be. Nature gives a bias to respective pursuits; and this strong propensity is what we mean by genius. Milton did not write his Paradise Lost; nor Homer his Iliad; nor Newton his Principia, without immense labour.— Cowper.

CRITICALEXEGESIS OF GOSPEL HISTORY,

ON THE BASIS OF STRAUSS's 'LEBEN JESU.'

A SERIES OF EIGHT DISCOURSES; DELIVERED AT THE LITERARY INSTITUTION, JOHN STREET, TOTTENHAM COURT ROAD, AND AT THE HALL OF SCIENCE, CITY ROAD, ON SUNDAY EVENINGS, DURING THE WINTERS OF 1848-9, AND 1819-50.

BY THOMAS COOPER,

Author of "The Purgatory of Suicides."

VII.-THE RESURRECTION AND ASCENSION.
(Continued from last number.)

THE Four Evangelists unanimously state that the first news of the grave of Jesus being opened and empty on the second morning after his burial, came to the disciples by the mouth of women; but in all the more particular circumstances they diverge from each other; and notwithstanding the volumes-one might almost say, libraries-which have been written to 'harmonise' their accounts, they are unharmonised still. Strauss presents so compact a statement of these divergencies, that I cannot do better than quote him :—

"Leaving behind the difference which is connected with the divergencies in the history of the burial, as to the objects of the women in resorting to the grave, namely, that according to the two intermediate evangelists they intended to embalm the body of Jesus, according to the two others merely to pay a visit to the grave,- -we find, first, a very complicated divergency relative to the number of the women who made the visit. Luke merely speaks indefinitely of many women; not alone whom he describes (ch. xxiii. v. 25) as having come with Jesus from Galilce, and of whom he mentions by name Mary Magdalene, Joanna, and Mary the mother of James, but also certain others with them (ch. xxiv. v. 1). Mark names merely three women; two of those whom Luke also names, but as the third, Salome instead of Joanna (ch. xvi. v. 1). Matthew does not name this third woman, respecting whom the two intermediate evangelists differ, but merely the two Marys, concerning whom they agree (ch. xxviii. v. 1). Lastly, John has only one of these-Mary Magdalene (ch. xx. v. 1.)

The time at which the women go to the grave is likewise not named with uniformity; for even if the words of Matthew, In the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, make no difference-still the addition of Mark at the rising of the sun, are in contradiction with the expressions, when it was yet dark, in John, and very early in the morning, in Luke.-In relation to the circumstances in which the women first saw the grave there may appear to be a difference, at least between Matthew and the three other evangelists. According to the latter, as they approach and look towards the grave, they see that the stone has already been rolled away by an unknown hand: whereas the narrative of the first evangelist has appeared to many to imply that the women themselves beheld the stone rolled away by an angel. Manifold are the divergencies as to what the women further saw and learned at the grave. According to Luke they enter into the grave, find that the body of Jesus is not there, and are hence in perplexity, until they see standing by them two men in shining garments, who announce to them his resurrection, In Mark, who also makes them enter into the grave, they see only one young man in a long white garment, not standing, but sitting on the right side, who gives them the same intelligence. In Matthew they receive this information before they enter into the grave, from the angel, who after rolling away the stone had sat upon it. Lastly, according to John, Mary Magdalene, as soon as she sees the stone taken away, and without witnessing any angelic appearance, runs back into the city.

"Moreover, the relation in which the disciples of Jesus are placed with respect to the first news of the resurrection is a different one in the different gospels. According to Mark, the women, out of fear, tell no one of the angelic appearance which they have beheld; according to John, Mary Magdalene has nothing more to say to John and Peter, to whom she hasters from the grave, than that Jesus is taken away; according to Luke, the women report the appearance to the disciples in general, and not merely to two of them; while, according to Matthew, as they were in the act of hastening to the disciples, Jesus himself met them, and they were able to communicate this also to the disciples. In the two first

gospels nothing is said of one of the disciples himself going to the grave on hearing th port of the women; according to Luke, Peter went thither, found it empty and t wondering; and, from Luke (24 chap. 24 v.) it appears that other disciples besides ka went thither in a similar manner: according to the fourth gospel Peter was accompanied in John, who on this occasion was convinced of the resurrection of Jesus. Luke says du Peter made his visit to the sepulchre after he had already been informed by the winn the angelic appearance; but in the fourth gospel the two disciples go to the grave bein Mary Magdalene can have told them of such an appearance; it was only when she had ceeded a second time to the grave with the two disciples, and when they had returned again, that stooping into the sepulchre she saw, according to this gospel, two qastir à white, sitting, the one at the head and the other at the feet, where the body of Jesus ka lain, by whom she was asked, why she wept? and on turning round she beheld Jesus hinself; a particular of which there is a fragmentary notice in Mark (16 chap. 9 v.) with to additional remark, that she communicated this news to his former companions."

Having viewed the divergencies in the narratives collectively, as this l presented by Strauss, let us ponder awhile on the consistency of esc narrative separately.

Matthew is so indistinct as to leave us in doubt whether he means that, 'Mary Magdalene and the other Mary,' beheld the earthquake, the angu descend from heaven, roll back the stone and sit upon it; and the keepen, for fear of the angel, shake, and become as dead men. If he means the they did behold these circumstances, our wonder arises at the though that the women did not become 'as dead' as well as the keepers; but or surprise is still greater that so striking a series of circumstances is unknown to the other Evangelists. Could they have failed to narrate it, if it were known to them? 1f Matthew does not mean so much,—but merely intends to convey that the women found the angel sitting on the stone, and that the more striking circumstances took place before their arrival at the sepulchre, then, where is the witness for the earthquake, &c ? -for we have already seen that Matthew's peculiar story about the watch and their report to the Sanhedrim is incredible. Lastly, after the angel has announced the resurrection of Jesus to the women, he charges them to go quickly and tell it to the disciples, with the direction that they shall see Jesus in Galilee; but before they can reach the disciples, Jesus appears to them himself, and repeats the direction! Yet there was no need of this repetition, no need of the instant appearance of the risen Christ to confirm their faith, for they were departing 'quickly' from the tomb, with 'fear and great joy. Who does not perceive that the legend has grown in wonder, here? First, the angel has been seen, and said so and so; but afterwards, as credence in the marvellous grows, it is set down that Jesus himself appeared.

Mark, when examined by himself, has also his inconsistencies. His three women, ('Salome' being added to the two mentioned by Matthew) come wondering who shall roll them away the stone,' but find it already rolled away. They see no one sitting upon it, but on entering into the sepulchre they see a young man sitting on the right side, clothed in a long white garment.' This young man, although Mark never calls him 'an angel is evidently the same traditional being described with more of the marvellous by Matthew, for he addresses the women almost in the exact words of that supernatural personage. The women go out quickly, and flee-but there is no relation of Jesus meeting them, as in Matthew. Mark's inconsistency is afterwards strikingly displayed. As if smitten with an afterthought, or feeling it necessary to make his narrative square with some other report which he had heard or read, he adds, 'Now when Jesus was

isen early the first day of the week, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene, te. Yet he had already said of the three women, of whom Mary Magdaene was one, Very early in the morning the first day of the week, they came unto the sepulchre at the rising of the sun!'

Luke gives proof of the easy growth of the marvellous: the young man as grown into two men in 'shining garments,' with him. He adds to his relation of what was seen by the women, that Then Peter arose, and ran into the sepulchre, &c.,' a point of his narrative we must especially compare with that of his successor.

John opens with the statement which had evidently reached the ears or eyes of Mark, when he corrected himself, or attempted to do so-namely, that Mary Magdalene came early the first day of the week, 'when it was yet dark,' unto the sepulchre. But if Mark had willed to correct himself entirely by John, he ought to have crossed out the relation about the three women-for John knows nothing about it. Some critics, indeed, seize Mary Magdalene's words (John, 20 ch. 2v.) "we know not where they have laid him," as proof that she had been accompanied by other women; but if it be so, why does not John say so?-and again how comes Mark to correct himself into a mistake? Whether alone or accompanied, Mary Magdalene runs from the sepulchre, according to John, without seeing any thing more than that the stone was taken away. Yet she tells Peter and the other disciple whom Jesus loved,' that Jesus was taken away out of the sepulchre. The difference between the Third and Fourth Gospels becomes now remarkable. Luke introduces Peter alone, who, he says, (24 ch. 12, v.) 'ran unto the sepulchre; and stooping down he beheld the linen clothes laid by themselves, and departed, wondering in himself at that which was to come to pass.' Not so John: according to him, (20 chap. vv. 3 to 8.)

"Peter therefore went forth, and that other disciple, and came to the sepulchre. So they ran both together; and the other disciple did outrun Peter and came first to the sepulchre. And he stooping down, saw the linen clothes lying; yet went he not in. Then cometh Simon Peter following him, and went into the sepulchre, and seeth the linen clothes lie, and the napkin, that was about his head, not lying with the linen clothes, but wrapped together in a place by itself. Then went in also that other disciple, which came first to the sepulchre, and he saw, and believed.”

(To be continued in next number.)

1

THE PHILOSOPHY OF DEATH.

BY RICHARD OTLEY.

Cowards die many times before their deaths;
The valiant never taste of death but once.
Of all the wonders that I yet have heard,

It seems to me most strange that men should fear:
Seeing that death, a necessary end,

Will come when it will come.

Shakspere's Julius Cæsar.

WHY should man fear that which he cannot know? So long as man lives he is not in death; if he be immortal, death is being born into new life; and in this new life he does not, cannot, suffer death, for still living, he cannot know death; and, if mortal only, he will be as he was before birth. Besides, the arrangements of universal animated nature are such, that one generation must of necessity give place to its successor. This, therefore, being of the necessity of nature, there can be nothing more to fear in dying than in being

born; the one is the unconscious commencement of being, and the other, the termination of man's conscious existence, at least, so far as man has experience and knowledge. What, then, can there be to fear in death? Life, so long as it is accompanied with enjoyment and happiness, is desired and desirable; hence man hopes for its continuance. But often sickness, and the infirmities of old age, change the hope of life into the desire of death. The fear of death does not, therefore, seem natural to man. A strong and almost irresistible love of life is implanted in the nature of man, and is indispensable for the preservation of his organic existence; but this is not the fear of death, it is the love of life. Whence, then, spring those rumours of the fear of death? Let us endeavour to trace them to their origin, and to dispel them by the light of reason and truth.

The love of life is indispensable to man's being. It is the hope anchor which retains him in the ocean of existence, in the midst of the sunshine, calms, and storms, which surround him. He also shuns pain, and desires pleasure. These feelings, passions, and propensities, have been seized upon by those who profess to be man's instructors, and his pliant nature has been wrought to their designs and his own wretchedness. These effects are, however, for the most part artificial, as is every invention or system which originates entirely with man. Any passion, feeling, or propensity, may be cultured to excess; and excess is either mental or corporeal deformity. Where fear predominates, there is cowardice; where bravery is in excess, there is brutality. Fear has been the great instrument in governing, or rather mis-governing, mankind; but its dominion is fast passing away. Sound intelligence will dispel gloomy forebodings; and, amongst these, will be the unuatural fear of death. The regions of darkness have been conjured into an unreal existence, and by the magical powers of an un healthy imagination, have been peopled with spectres, ghosts, and demons, which nowhere exist, but in the trembling souls of intoxicated fanatics. Yet, even with all these supernatural agencies at work, men have risen superior to any fear of the future; for it is only reasonable to conclude, arguing from analogy, that the same economy which governs this world governs all time and space; and, therefore, there is nothing in the universe to fear.

Who, then, are the men who have not feared to die? And who are the men who should stand in fear of death? Whole nations of men have not feared death; nay, have even subdued that love of life so strongly implanted in the human heart, that they have esteemed it a less evil to die than to live in dishonour, or in the endurance of suffering that made life not desirable. The phrase "to live," implies enjoyment; or, at least, a preponderance of happiness over suffering. Thus, the value of life may be fixed, as that of any other possession; although it is that which gives value to every other. The Spartans, a republican people of ancient Greece, were trained to despise pain, and commenced battle with feelings which elevated them above the fear to die. The Romans, when they fought against the Macedonians under King Perseus, when they could not, for some time, at least, break up the terrible phalanx, voluntarily flung themselves upon the enemy's spears, in the hope of reaching him with their swords, and fearlessly met their inevitable fate. In modern times, the Mahomedans have devoted themselves to death, in obedience to a fanatic or an impostor, or to a religion founded upon and upheld by error. The Hindoos, fired by a false and delusive enthusiasm, have sacrificed life as if it had been a gift unwor

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