My heart is full of love,-Oh! Death, 3. But love and hope enchanted twain, LESSON 56. DEFINITIONS. Gám-bol, to leap, to frisk, to play. Myr-i-ad, an immense number. Hoár-y, white with frost or age, gray. What kind of word is beautiful? From what is it derived? How many words can you think of that are derived from beauty? What word is the opposite of beautiful? Happy? Merry? Glorious? Liberty? Mountain? Forest? Interminable? Countless? How many polysyllables in this lesson? The World. 1. How beautiful the world is! The green earth covered with flowers,—the trees laden with rich blossom,-the blue sky, and the bright water, and the golden sunshine. The world is indeed beautiful, and He who made it must be beautiful. 2. It is a happy world!-Hark! how the merry birds sing; and the young lambs, see! how they gambol on the hill side. Even the trees wave, and the brooks ripple in gladness. Yon eagle!-Ah! how joyously he soars up to the glorious heavens, the bird of liberty, the bird of America. 3. "His throne is on the mountain top, His fields-the boundless air; - 4. And hoary peaks that proudly prop "He rises like a thing of light The mid-way sun is clear and bright- 5. It is happy-I see it, and hear it all about me; nay, I feel it-here, in the glow, the eloquent glow of my own heart. He who made it must be happy. 6. It is a great world. Look off to the mighty ocean when the storm is upon it;-to the huge mountain when the thunder and the lightning play over it;-to the vast forest-the interminable waste;--the sun, the moon, and the myriads of fair stars, countless as the sands upon the sea-shore. 7. It is a great, a magnificent world,-and He who made it,—--Oh! He is the perfection of all loveliness, all goodness, all greatness, all gloriousness. The Mother with her child, waiting the return of her Husband from Sea.-MISS JEWSBURY. 1. Away!-but not to gather flowers, Or chase the wandering bee; Less fair were now the loveliest bowers, 2. Than the blue gleam of the sea: My Child-'tis not a sea-bird's wing, "The sea-bird would not hither speed, Its master does not fear the gale, 3. "My lovely child!-my sunny-haired! 4. It holds no treasure in its breast, "It brings no pearls for thee or me, It bears affection un-be-guiled, Aye, shout, and clap thine hand! 1. LESSON 58. A Mother's story of the Death of her Child. "They buried my child at the close of day, And the ripples that caught the parting ray, 2. 3. 4. 5. They laid him to rest in his little grave, "The tones that were poured from the funeral bell, On the ear with sad'-den-ing sound they fell, "There hung on the breeze a smothering groan, As we left my sweet infant there alone "My darling! my darling!-thou art at rest, Yet thy lovely image dwells in my breast, LESSON 59. DEFINITIONS. Pén-e-trated, went into. Sur-round-ed, inclosed. Déad-ly, sure to kill. Pr'i-ming, the powder put into the pan of a gun to fire it off. Tóm-a-hawk, an Indian hatchet. Ven'ge-ful, eager to repay offence. Front-iér, the border of a settlement. E-lú-ded, escaped. Wig-wam, an Indian hut. En-coún-ter, to attack. Prów-ess, bravery. E-mérged, appeared. Britch, the lower part of a gun. What kind of word is sea-shore? What is the opposite of built? Hostile? Feared? Out-run? Cunning? Cautiously? Harmlessly? Score? Unmolested? Powerful? Giant? Cruel? Terror? Prowess? Pursuit? Overwhelming? Foul? Frequent? Quench? Steadiness? Dexterity? Chamberlain and Paugus. 1. One of the first settlers of New Hampshire was a man by the name of Chám-ber-lain. He moved from the thick set-tled towns near the sea shore, and pén-etra-ted into the wilderness of that state, far from any sét-tle-ment or dwel-ling of the whites. 2. Here he built himself a cabin,-and though surround-ed by hos-tile Indians, and fáv-en-ous beasts of prey, he feared no danger and felt no harm. The roof of his hut was hung about with the flesh of the bear, and he lay at night on the fur of the cát-a-mount and pánther. 3. He was tall,-higher than the tallest Indian;— strong-four of them with their tóm-a-hawks were no match for him with his heavy hatchet. He was swift of foot, he could outrún the moose in full trot. Artful and cunning-he en-trapped the Indian in his ambush, and sur-passed him in tráv-er-sing the path-less wilds. 4. The Indians passed cáu-tious-ly and harm-less-ly by the dwél-ling of Chamberlain;—and a score of them would lie still when they watched in ambush, and suffer him to go on un-mo-lést-ed, lest their rifles might miss his body, and bring him in venge'-ance upon them;— for he valued them as lightly as did Samp-son the men of As-ke-lon.* * See Judges, 14th chapter and 19th verse. |