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[Ill.u.s.tration: Come Unto Me.]
"Will you not come to Jesus now?" I entreated. "He is waiting, pleading with you! Here is salvation, full, free, and eternal; help, guidance, and blessing,--all for nothing! without money and without price."
DID YOU EVER THINK?
Did you ever think what this world would be If Christ hadn't come to save it?
His hands and feet were nailed to the tree, And his precious life--he gave it.
But countless hearts would break with grief, At the hopeless life they were given, If G.o.d had not sent the world relief, If Jesus had stayed in heaven.
Did you ever think what this world would be With never a life hereafter?
Despair in the faces of all we'd see, And sobbing instead of laughter.
In vain is beauty, and flowers' bloom, To remove the heart's dejection, Since all would drift to a yawning tomb, With never a resurrection.
Did you ever think what this world would be.
How weary of all endeavor, If the dead unnumbered, in land and sea, Would just sleep on forever?
Only a pall over hill and plain!
And the brightest hours are dreary, Where the heart is sad, and hopes are vain, And life is sad and weary.
Did you ever think what this world would be If Christ had stayed in heaven,-- No home in bliss, no soul set free, No life, or sins forgiven?
But he came with a heart of tenderest love, And now from on high he sees us, And mercy comes from the throne on high; Thank G.o.d for the gift of Jesus!
BREAD UPON THE WATERS
"Ah! Jacob, now you see how all your hopes are gone. Here we are worn out with age--all our children removed from us by the hand of death, and ere long we must be the inmates of the poorhouse. Where now is all the bread you have cast upon the waters?"
The old, white-haired man looked up at his wife. He was, indeed, bent down with years, and age sat tremblingly upon him. Jacob Manfred had been a comparatively wealthy man, and while fortune had smiled upon him he had ever been among the first to lend a listening ear and a helping hand to the call of distress. But now misfortune was his. Of his four boys not one was left. Sickness and failing strength found him with but little, and had left him penniless. An oppressive embargo upon the s.h.i.+pping business had been the first weight upon his head, and other misfortunes came in painful succession. Jacob and his wife were all alone, and gaunt poverty looked them coldly in the face.
"Don't repine, Susan," said the old man. "True we are poor, but we are not yet forsaken."
"Not forsaken, Jacob? Who is there to help us now?"
Jacob Manfred raised his trembling finger toward heaven.
"Ah! Jacob, I know G.o.d is our friend, but we should have friends here.
Look back and see how many you have befriended in days long past. You cast your bread upon the waters with a free hand, but it has not returned to you."
"Hush, Susan, you forget what you say. To be sure I may have hoped that some kind hand of earth would lift me from the cold depths of utter want; but I do not expect it as a reward for anything I may have done. If I have helped the unfortunate in days gone by, I have had my full reward in knowing that I have done my duty to my fellows. Oh! of all the kind deeds I have done to my suffering fellows, I would not for gold have one of them blotted from my memory. Ah! my fond wife, 'tis the memory of the good done in life that makes old age happy.
Even now, I can hear again the warm thanks of those whom I have befriended, and again I can see their smiles."
"Yes, Jacob," returned the wife, in a lower tone, "I know you have been good, and in your memory you can be happy; but, alas! there is a present upon which we must look--there is a reality upon which we must dwell. We must beg for food or starve!"
The old man started, and a deep mark of pain was drawn across his features.
"_Beg!_" he replied, with a quick shudder. "No, Susan, we are--"
He hesitated, and a big tear rolled down his furrowed cheek.
"We are what, Jacob?"
"We are going to the poorhouse!"
"O G.o.d! I thought so!" fell from the poor wife's lips, as she covered her face with her hands. "I have thought so, and I have tried to school myself to the thought; but my poor heart will not bear it!"
"Do not give up," softly urged the old man, laying his hand upon her arm. "It makes but little difference to us now. We have not long to remain on earth, and let us not wear out our last days in useless repinings. Come, come."
"But when--when--shall we go?"
"Now--to-day."
"Then G.o.d have mercy on us!"
"He will," murmured Jacob.
That old couple sat for a while in silence. When they were aroused from their painful thoughts it was by the stopping of a wagon in front of the door. A man entered the room where they sat. He was the keeper of the poorhouse.
"Come, Mr. Manfred," he said, "the selectmen have managed to crowd you into the poorhouse. The wagon is at the door, and you can get ready as soon as possible."
Jacob Manfred had not calculated the strength he should need for this ordeal. There was a coldness in the very tone and manner of the man who had come for him that went like an ice-bolt to his heart, and with a deep groan he sank back in his seat.
"Come, be in a hurry," impatiently urged the keeper.
At that moment a heavy covered carriage drove up to the door.
"Is this the house of Jacob Manfred?"
This question was asked by a man who entered from the carriage. He was a kind-looking man, about forty years of age.
"That is my name," said Jacob.
"Then they told me truly," uttered the new-comer. "Are you from the almshouse?" he continued, turning toward the keeper.
"Yes."
"Then you may return. Jacob Manfred goes to no poorhouse while I live."
The keeper gazed inquisitively into the face of the stranger, and left the house.
"Don't you remember me?" exclaimed the new-comer, grasping the old man by the hand.
"I can not call you to my memory now."
"Do you remember Lucius Williams?"
"Williams?" repeated Jacob, starting up and gazing earnestly into the stranger's face. "Yes, Jacob Manfred--Lucius Williams, that little boy whom, thirty years ago, you saved from the house of correction; that poor boy whom you kindly took from the bonds of the law, and placed on board your own vessels."