7 ^f\ T* A '» _}P^^^ V 0^. .■> ^■"■nK V ^^^ *^r-* y V-2^' -^o' v"-% •«i.. 1> - * • O- V»9 V ^^^"^. '• ip-r^^ V --*.^^' r • 4 o^ • ^ >.o' ^0 >. **'^* .^^ <^,. ♦•To* A' •-•' <*'^ V ••V^^ 'cv 5v:'^^^*;*°'' v*^"^'*.*^^' "- A°^ GARRISON IN HEAVEN. A BREAM. BY WILLIAM DENTON, Author op '* Our Planet," "The Soul of Things," "Is Darwin Right?" etc. WELLESLEY, MASS.: DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY. 1884. GAEEISOI^ 11^ HEAYEIsr. A DREAM. There are few persons in the United vStates who have not heard of freedom's champion, William Lloyd Garri- son. The slaveholder heard of him, and trembled with rage as he cursed him ; while the negro waiter behind his chair secretly blessed him. Every orthodox minister in the laud knew of him, and nearly all of them banned him ; for, said they, " He disturbs the church ; " while the poli- ticiaus with loud oaths denounced him as a disturber of the State. Wliatever disturbed humanity, Garrison wished to disturb ; and whatever he believed would assist humanity he was ready to help. The God, the Bible, and the Constitution that upheld slavery, were idols to him which it was the duty of a true man to dethrone, though all Christendom was on its knees before them. Claimed now by Christians as a true believer, because they think his life will add lustre to their waning cause, he had as little faith in the divinity of the Bible as had Thomas Paine : yet the man probably never lived who was more thoroughly and practically religious ; and, compared with him, Jesus the Jewish reformer was narrow and sellish. Jesus was a Jew ; and a Jew to him was a God's favor- ite, to be specially cared for. "Go not into the way of the Gentiles," is his command when he sends out hia 6 GARRISON TN HEAVEN. disciples to preach. Even the Samaritans were apparently too heretical to be the objects of his bountj^ ; and he says, " Into any city of the Samaritans enter ye not." Garri- son's benevolence knew no boundaries : color and creed were alike unnoticed by him when he saw the man in bonds behind them. Jesus was continually anxious that people should believe on him. In substance this is the burden of his cry, "Heaven is his who believes on me; and hell is for him who rejects me." Garrison seemed to lose all sense of himself in his zeal for the bondman. " Think what you please of me, but let the slave go free." This represents the spirit of his whole public life. Jesus found slavery in Judaea, and, as far as we can tell, never said a word directly in opposition to it : Garrison never felt free while a slave was bound, and gave his life for their welfare. He was as much higher than Jesus as the steeples are higher than the churches. New England, to the slave, had a better climate than Florida, because his iiome was in it ; and Boston is sacred forever, because here he lived and worked. With his earthly career all are familiar: it is of his career since he left the earth that I wish more particularly to treat. I am a great dreamer. I cannot sleep, even for a moment, without dreaming ; and, although my dreams are generally composed of incongruous and unmeaning stuff, some of them are, I think, worthy of notice. Of this character is the one I am going to tell you. In my dream I stood by the bedside of the dying Gar- lison, and watched his spirit as it ebbed and flowed, like the pulsing tide, in its efforts to free itself from the no longer needed body ; and saw the smile of satisfaction, alternating with a look of regret, as he felt the freedom of his new existence, and saw the sorrow of the survivors, A DREAM. 7 Miiny were the objects of interest that detained him in Boston, and near his dearest friends. He attended the funeral, and heard the eloquent oration of Phillips ; and, having learned to move with readiness at will, he visited the South, and left his blessing in many a negro's hut. In Kansas he looked with interest upon the dusky South- em emigrants, who, in pursuit of their full liberty as citi- zens, had braved the fury of the northern storms. I followed him to Hayti, to England, to Liberia, and then to Cuba, and saw him rejoice as he beheld the promise of a free world. At length his spirit, by superior attraction, was drawn up, up, till heaven in its transcendent beauty appeared before him ; its mansions towering like lofty mountain- peaks of inconceivable height, their crystal windows reflect- ing light as though they were setting suns. He seemed in no hurry to enter, but stood and admired the shining towers and glittering domes, the polished jasper wall stretching away till it seemed but a line, the rainbow-hued foundations of precious stones, but, most of all, the mag- nificent gates, two hundred and sixty-four feet high, and each made of a single pearl, ^ that shone with all the colors and all the brightness of a gorgeous sunset sky. At last I saw him apply for admission where sat Peter with the key at his girdle. " What is thy name? " asked Peter. " William Lloyd Garrison," said he in a manly way. *'I have heard of thee," said Peter; "and, if thou hadst applied but yesterda}', there would have been no admittance for thee. But we have just received advices from the Methodist preachers' meeting in Boston, and read the laudatory resolutions passed in thy honor, and 1 Eev xxi. 17-21. 8 GARRISON IN HEAVEN. thou art admitted.'* And, turning to an angel who stood near, he said, — "Guide, show him the place, and give him any infor- mation that he may desire." Not a word said Garrison. He seemed overpowered by a sense of the peculiarity of his situation, and was dis- posed, I thought, for a time to let matters take their own course. Accompanied by the guide, he now moved through tho gold-paved streets of the city of God. He looked up at the mansions, story above story, till, as his eyes ascended to the fifteen-hundred-mile heights,^ I could see they were strained by the effort, and he said, — ' ' How the people ever climb to those upper stories 1 cannot imagine : it is as much as I can do to look up there." " We have ready means for ascending," said the guide, *' as you will see by and by." On they went, part of the way along the banks of the River of Life, of whose water Garrison drank most heartily ; and then he ate of the fruit of the Tree of Life, which grew on its banks, and this he seemed to relish. And I noticed, that, as fast as the fruit was picked, new fruit made its appearance upon the branches. At times they walked as an ordinary man would walk : at other times, when they wished to move rapidly, impelled by will, they went with a velocity that could outspeed the wind, — through extended streets and splendid avenues, across beautiful parks, past magnificent temples, meeting and passing on the way millions of persons, into whose • " And the city licth foursquare, and the length is as large as the breadth : and he measured the city with the reed, twelve thousand furlongs. The length and tho breudlh and the heiglit of it are equul." — Rev. xxi. 16. A DREAM. 9 faces Giirrison looked with what I thought to be consider- able anxiety. At last they came near the heart of the city, to the shore of the beautiful lake, which the guide called the Sea of Glass. But I found that the light reflected from the mirror-like bosom of this sea was pain- ful to eyes unaccustomed to its peculiarities. Here were vessels that seemed to be made of pearl, constantly going out across the sea, and returning, without sails, or any visible propelling power, yet moving with very great velocity. They stepped into one, and in less than an hour they were on the farther side. Here Garrison found himself before the throne of God, though still at a dis- tance of several miles. It was some time before his eyes could become accustomed to the excessive light ; for il was more brilliant than a hundred aggregated suns. Music such as mortal ears have never heard made the air delicious for the spirit to breathe. It overcame Gar- rison, so that he had to sit down for a while to recover his captive senses. From where they sat no man could see with distinctness what was immediately around the throne ; but Garrison was delighted to find that his eyes were telescopic, and he could see very near to it four strange beasts,^ that no scientist might name. One of them was like a lion , another resembled a calf ; the body of a third was as beastly as any, but he had the face of a man ; and the fourth was like an eagle. They had each three pairs of wmgs, which they used as fans ; and, what was strangest of all, they were full of eyes before and behind. With voices more shrill than the steam-whistle of a locomotive, they cried out every few minutes in concert, '' Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is tc come." ^ » Rev. iv. 6. « Rev. iv. 8. 10 GARRISON IN HEAVEN. Next to the beasts sat twenty-four elders, clothed in white, with crowns of gold upon their heads ; and next to them were one hundred and forty-four thousand men, whom the guide called virgin-shakers, "for," said he, " they never defiled themselves with women." ^ Outside of that circle were "ten thousand times ten thousand " angels, all in white ; who, when the beasts had ceased, sang, and plaj^ed upon golden ha^^ps, and made most melodious music, that could be heard a hundred miles away. Above the throne was a gorgeous rainbow ; ^ yet noth- ing could be seen to produce it, and at this Garrison won- dered. The guide, however, remarked that it was but a trifle, and that he would see infinitely more wonderful things before he had gone the round of the Celestial City. From the throne proceeded at times vivid flashes of light- ning and heaven-shaking thunders,^ that made even the harps tremble in the hands of the players ; and then dense clouds of smoke, so that the throne looked for a while like a volcano. I heard Garrison ask the meaning of this ; and he was told that this occurred when He who sat upon the throne was particularly angry, ' ' and is not a very unusual occurrence, either," the guide added. "But does he sit upon the throne all the time?" in- quired Garrison : " if he does, I think he may be excused for being occasionally out of humor." " Oh, no ! " was the reply. " Do you see those seven lamps before the throne ? ' ' "I do," said William. "Well, those are the seven spirits of God. Seven, Vou know, is a sacred number. God rested on the seventh day : there are seven churches and seven golden candle- ^ Rev. xiv. 4. 2 Rev. iv. 3. s Ilov. iv. 5. A DREAM. 11 sticks. You road in the Bible of the seven angeis, seven seals, seven plagues, seven vials ; and all these are emblematic of the seven spirits of God, who take turns in sitting upon the throne and representing him, each one occupying the throne for about four hours at a time. Otherwise, not even a God could stand the continual music of the ascended saints, and the prayers of the unascended saints, forever rismg." "Well, William, what do you think of the place?" inquired the guide after a pause. "It is very beautiful," said Garrison; "there is no denying that. And the music, too, is very fine, though I dislike those beastl}" noises ; but I do not see a single familiar face, and the most of those that I do see are far from being interesting. We have met millions since we started, and I haye peered into every countenance ; but except a few Boston divines, who — excuse me — are, I think, little credit to the place, I have not seen a face that I ever saw before. These magnificent l^uildings, and golden streets, and crowns and harps, may be all very well ; but it will take something more than these to make heaven for me." "Oh! you will make new acquaintances, and be verj much at home by and by," I heard the guide sa,y. "Here, take this harp, and join in the song of the re- deemed." " 1 would give a thousand harps for the sight of a friendly face," said Garrison ; and I marked the discon- solate look that clouded his noble countenance. " What friends had j^ou? " asked the guide. "Well, George Thompson, who left us a little while ago. Where is he ? " l3 GARRISON IX HEAVEN. ''1 think I know whom you mean," was the reply. *' He was a Spmtualist, was he not? " "He was," answered Garrison. "I know him," the guide continued; "once a true believer. But he became a pestilent heretic, a companion of infidels, and this is no place for such as he." "Where is he, then?" inquired Garrison. "There are but two places for departed spirits," was Uie answer. "He believed not in the Lord Jesus as a divine Saviour ; and he has gone with those that believe and love a lie, and where the fire is never quenched." "George Thompson in hell?" exclaimed Garrison. " Then I am certainly in the wrong place." Sadder than ever grew his face ; and he said, " I wish you would show me where Theodore Parker's mansion is." "Theodore Parker has no mansion here," said the guide. "I remember his name well. We had prayers from the saints of Boston, that came up like a cloud, for God to stop his mouth, to put a hook in his jaws, and cut short his career ; and as soon as he appeared, which was not long, we hurried him off." " Where? tell me where ! " Garrison excitedly said. "To hell, of course," replied the guide. When Garrison heard this, his patience was exhausted, and he said, "I wish, then, you would hurry me there 100 ; for I would rather be in hell with Parker than in heaven with any of the company I have seen yet. ' ' " Hush, hush ! " said the guide. " You will feel very differently after a while. I had some sucli feelings when I first came to this place, and found that my wife and more than half my children were in hell : but I have become perfectly reconciled to it ; it is the natural effec* of the climate of this place." A DREAM. 13 *'God forbid that I should ever become reconciled to any sucli thing!" and as Garrison said this, he knit liis brows, and I could see a stern resolve springing up in his benevolent soul. Then turning to the guide, he said, '• I wish I could have a talk with my old friend Henry C. Wright, who was a hero in the antislavery cause when Christian ministers were cowards, almost to a man. He must be here." " There is no Henry C. "Wright in this place," the guide replied. "Henry C. Wright was an infidel. He once wrote a pamphlet against the Bible. He was a de- spiser of the blood of the everlasting covenant, a wicked reviler of Jehovah ; and his portion is with the unbe- lievers." "Henry C. "Wright and Parker and Thompson all in hell!" cried Garrison. "Let me go there too. I can never be happy in this place while they are in misery : that is impossible." "I then saw — for in my dream I could read his thoughts — that he was thinking who there could . be in heaven that he would care to see ; and his mind at last rested upon "Washington. " I had no great affection for him when on earth," he said to himself ; " but it ser ms to me now that a sight of his calm face, and a few words exchanged with him, would really do me good. Where is Washington?" he inquired. " We have several persons of that name here," was the answer. "Which of them is it about whom you in- quire?" "George Washington, the first President of the United States," was Garrison's reply. "Heaven would hardly be heaven to Americans, if he were absent." "We recognize no earthly boundaries here," the guide 14 GA-RPvISON TN PTEAYEN. said, " and we have DO special sj-mpathy with republics George Washington has gone where the rebels go." [Gai« rison shuddered.] '' Do you not know that ' the powers that be are ordained of God,' and he that ' resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God : and they that re- sist shall receive to themselves damnation ' ? ^ Washington resisted that power, and he has his reward. We have had one rebellion in heaven,^ and we do not want another.. Besides that, Washington was at heart as great an unbe- liover as Voltaire. His craft availed him on the earth., but'here it is powerless.'* *'I suppose, then," said Garrison, "that Jefferson. Adams, Franklin, and Thomas Paine, those grand Revo lutionary heroes, are all there with Washington too." "Certainly!" and the guide smiled as he said it "What would be the use of hell, if such men as thes(» were not put there? They were all infidels, openly or a. heart, and trampled upon God's divine word ; and now they reap as they sowed. If you would like to see those men you have been talking about, I can show them to you." And he took him to one side of the city, where there waa a magnificent silver stairway, extending to the top of the city wall. The wall was about a quarter of a mile broad, and on the outer edge was a sort of balcony from which could be obtained a magnificent prospect of hell. Here many of the saints were walking, and enjo^^ing the view. ■' Whenever any one becomes at all dissatisfied with our place," said the guide, " we bring him up here, and give him a sight of the other place, which Is gf^nerally all that is needed to make him perfectly content." By this time they had arrived at the very brink, and Garrison with protruding eyes was staring into the in- ' Rom. xiii. 1, 2. A DREAM. Ifi fcrnal pit. It was a sight to chill the soul. It appeared like an iiLmense volcanic crater, over whose boiling sur- face hovered blue flames, and smoke ascended continually. To an earthly eye, no being the size of a man could b( discerned ; but angel eyes could distinguish the forms of the lost as they sank and rose in what appeared like a boiling caldron ; while the wail of the damned, loudei than the roar of a tornado, made even the wall of heaver* tremble to its foundation. '' Look closely," said the guide, " and you will see some of the men of whom you have been inquiring;" and ir my dream it seemed as if my sight and hearing were keer as an angel's, and I could discern Thompson, Parker, and Wright, Jefferson, Paine, and Franklin, as with imploring faces they looked up from that fiery sea of agony, and J heard the words, — " How long, O Lord ! how long? " Then arose a sound, hollow and penetrating, that echoec from the caverns of the damned, and it said, — ' ' Forever and forever : my eternal wrath is the fuel, and the fire can never be quenched." Louder rose the wail of the lost, so that it made even the guide shudder, and he wished to go. But Garrison stood as if rooted to the spot, with staring eyes looking into the den of woe. And to my horror, as I looked also, I saw Agassiz and Humboldt : there was no mistaking their well-marked countenances. Garrison did not seem to know Humboldt ; but with Agassiz he was well ac- quainted. '• Good God ! " said he to the guide, " what had Agassiz done, that he should be there? Heaven cannot afford to lose such a man as he." "He is not there so much on account of what he had 16 G VKEISON LN HEAVEIT. done," the guide replied, "as on account of what he had left undone. Such men as Agassiz are too proud of their scientific attainments to humble themselves, and become beggars at the foot of the cross. Agassiz not only failed to accept the only terms by which a sinner can be saved, but he also denied the existence of Adam ; and he who does that, denies the necessity of the Saviour, and turn?i his back upon the only friend a man can have between earth and hell. Science is, next to Satan, the deadly foe of heaven ; and where that flourishes revivals languish, and- scoffers abound." As they stood talking, lo ! I saw that some one in hell had recognized Garrison's face ; and quickly the news was conveyed from one to another, till the sunshine of hope rolled back the clouds of darkness from the face of the infernal pit, and I heard the lost souls say to one another, " If Garrison is in heaven, there is hope for us yet." "Is there no way," said Garrison, as they retraced their steps, " by which these poor souls can be saved? I would willingly give m^^self to save them." " Such feelings as yours are manifest in some when they first come here, before they have become thoroughly imbued with a heavenly spirit," I heard the guide say. "No: there is no Saviour for the lost. Hell's night is followed by no day, and its sky knows no star. Him against whom heaven's gates are closed, they are closed forever." Garrison was silent for some time ; but at last he said, "Tell me who is in heaven: perhaps I maybe able to find some old acquaintance yet." " Well," said the guide, " Abram is here." " I am glad to hear you say that," said Garrison ; and bis face was light with joy for the first time since he had A DEEAIsr. 17 eutered the place. "I am glad to hear that ; for, of all the Presidents of the United States, the one I should like best to see is Abram Lincoln." '' Abram Lincoln!" said the guide: "that is not the man at all. There is no Abram Lincoln here. I mean Abraham, the father of the faithful, and the friend of God." " What? " exclaimed Garrison : " you don't mean that slaveholding and slave-breeding old sinner, who turned his wife Hagar into the wilderness to perish? " " Certainly I do. But that is not a proper way to speak of the ancient patriarch." "But Abraham Lincoln was an infinitely better man than he." ' ' I dare say, ' ' was the guide's answer. ' ' But admission to heaven depends upon fitness, not upon goodness. He that believeth is saved, not he that doeth. You may remember a beautiful couplet that the saints below some- times sing : — ' All the fitness He requireth Is to feel your need of Him.' And another : * Lay your deadly doing down, Down at Jesus' feet.' There are persons here whose relationship the Devil would blush to acknowledge, but who, by faith in Jesus at the last hour, nay, the last moment, have been dipped in the blood-cleansing fountain, and obtained an entrance through the pearly gates. » Isaac and Jacob are here, Moses and Samson, Samuel and David, Solomon and Jehu, Constan- tine the Great and Henry the P^ighth, Calvin who mur- T8 GARRISON^ IN HEAVEN. dered Servetiis, Bloody Mary who burnt the Protestants^ and equally Bloody Elizabeth who burnt the Catliolics„ Tliey were admitted, not because their lives were patternji of perfection, but because they exercised saving faith in a Redeemer to come, or One who had come and prepared mansions for all who should trust in him to the utmost." "If those only come to heaven," said Garrison, " who have saving faith in Jesus, your company must be ver;;* small, compared with the mass of mankind. Are thesui all that are allowed to enter heaven ? ' ' "Certainly not," replied the guide: " you forget ! al! the babies come to heaven." " Oh, the babies !" said Garrison. " I had not though of them." "Yes: all the babies are in heaven," continued thi guide. " They never sinned away their day of grace ; they never chose the broad road to ruin ; and Jesus washeo away the original sin which they had contracted from Adam, their federal head. Thanks be to God, in his un- speakable mercy, all babies, even the children of hereticy and the worst of sinners, are admitted to heaven." But Garrison did not seem to join in this thanksgiving : he was in deep thought. " But where are their mothers ? " said he. " Well, some of them are here, — perhaps two or three out of a thousand." " Where are the rest? " inquired Garrison. " To tell 3^ou the truth,'' was the answer, " they are in that pit we were looking at a while ago." " The poor babies ! " I heard Garrison say in a tone of pity. "Oh well!" said the guide, " our God takes care of the little ones." A DREA]SI. 19 *' Yes," said Garrison. "But God is a He; only a father : no one can care for a little one like its motber. But you certainly have others in heaven. I see many grown persons here with very childish ways, but they are not babies." "Oh, I know whom you mean!'* said the 2:uide. " Those are the imbeciles, idiots, and persons generall}^ of weak intellect. They never had intelligence enough to reject the Saviour, or to deny the Lord that bought them. and hence they are all here, of every nation and of all time ; and you may therefore well imagine that idiots con- stitute a large proportion of our population." ' ' It looks like that, ' ' said Garrison. ' * And now I think of it, you must have some murderers," he added. " I have seen several persons that look to me as if they must have been very vicious characters on earth." " That is true," the guide replied. " We have a large proportion of murderers, in fact, nearly all the men and fvomen that have been hung for murder in Christian lands. JTou know, when men are condemned to die, and all hope of earthly aid is gone, they naturally tui'n to the Friend of sinners, who can wash the vilest clean. They receive an application to their souls of the blood of Him who was hung for them ; and thus, when the rope is placed around their necks, and the platform falls, they swing into the arms of the Savioui', who has said that whosoever cometh to him he will in no wise cast out." " Yes," said Gamson. " I have heard of being ' jerked to Jesus ; ' but I never expected to see so many who had gone through the operation. It seems to me, after all, that you have very few here except those who are not worth damning." I thought the guide would certainly resent this : but he 20 GARKISON IN HEAVEN. bit his lip, and blandly replied, " It must be confessed that intellectual men, in the pride of their mental attain- ments, generally discard the simple ])lan of salvation, which is accepted readily by babes in knowledge, and those from whom all earthly hope has fled." By this time they had arrived within a few miles of the throne ; and I saw in my dream that the guide conducted him through the innumerable company, past the hundred, and forty-four thoitsand, the elders, and the beasts, first providing him with a shade for his eyes, so that he could bear the dazzling glory that rayed from the throne. Back of the throne was a large tube with a trumpet-shaped mouth, immediately beneath the ear of Jehovah. " You will find something there that will interest you,*' shouted the guide as he pointed to it, and indicated that. Garrison should stand nearer to the mouth of the tube. At first it was like listening to the howl of a tempest. " AVhat can that be? " asked Garrison. " It is a more confused noise than that of all the performers and the beasts together." "That," replied the guide, "is the prayer-tube, by which all the prayers of the world are conducted to heaven, ■ — from the scream of a new-born babe in Christ to the bawling of a hoary revivalist." I could see that Garrison was most intently listening ; but it was long before he could distinguish any thing. At length, jast as we distinguish in a band the music of any particular instrument, so I perceived that Garrison was able to distinguish the various petitions as they came up. There were prayers for rain, and prayers for fine weather, from the same district. The Roman Catholics were pray- ing for money to build colleges, and establish schools ; and Protestants, for money to send missionariefi among the A DREAM. 21 Catholics, to turn them from the error of their ways. " O Lord, save thy ancient people the Jews, and lead them to see that Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life," carae up from a pious Christian ; and, from a Jewish rabbi, " O Lord, Jehovah, God of our fathers, turn thou the hearts of Christians back to thee, and show them the wickedness of walking after the impostor of Galilee." The cries of temperance people came up, " No rum ; " and the cries of thirsty drunkards, "More whiskey." Ambitious officers were calling for war ; and the voices of the benevolent could be heard imploring for peace. Old maids were pray- ing for husbands, husbands for tlie death of their terma- gant wives, and wives, in their turn, for the conversion of their drunken, tobacco-fuddled husbands. " Moderate the weather, O God, I beseech thee," prayed a broken-hearted widow, " or my little ones will perish, fori have no money to buy fuel." — " Give us a cold, bitter winter," came up from many a colliery district, " that coal may rise in price, the miners be well paid, ,and our families saved from want." — " Give us dry weather, that I may save my tobacco," prayed a Connecticut farmer: "it is all that I have to depend upon for the support of my family." — " God blast the tobacco, wherever it grows," cried an iconoclastic reformer, "and let this devil's weed go to the only lit place for it, where the smoke ascendeth forever." One prayer in a million or so received some attention ; but the rest passed off like extra steam from the safety-valve of a locomotive. As they stood there, "God give us G rant for President," came out in thunder-tones; "he alone can save us from anarchy, and a worse than French revo hition ; " and then, " God save us from a third term ; for it means death to our republic, an aristocracy, like that of England, feeding on the vitals of the nation, and a 22 GAERISON IN HEAVEN". peasantry, like that of Ireland, forever on the verge of famine." — " Make bare thine arm, O Lord ! " ''That," said Garrison, " must be from some Methodist prayer-meeting ; for most of the Methodists seem to think that God is a kind of big, burly brother, who will fight their battles if they can only induce him to strip for tlie encounter." ''Come down, O God, and get thyself a great name." When this came out, Garrison could not help smiling, and the guide laughed outright. " Now, where do you suppose that comes from? " asked the guide. And, without waiting for a reply, he said, " I will show you ; " and touching Garrison's eyes, they fol- lowed a line, which in my dream mine also followed, down to earth, that led to the speaker, who was in a small meet- ing-house in a Kansas village. ' ' The idea of our God going down there to get a great name ! " said the guide with an ill-disguised sneer. They now walked about very near the throne, looking at the singers and players, and examining the instruments. "Who is that red- faced old man," inquired Garrison, " with a crown on his head, and a long white beard, who plays on an exceedingly tall harp, with a great deal of spirit and admirable skill? " I was not surprised to hear the reply. " That is King David. He may well be a good player : he was not a poor performer when he came here, and he has been playing over since, — now nearly three thousand years." Near him was a brawny fellow, realizing my idea of a giant, who was beating an enormous drum. He wore for a breastpin a large golden jaw-bone ; and, what was still more remarkable, the drumsticks were also in the shape of jaw-bones, and with these he was lustily beating time A DREAM. 23 to the imisic of the " sweet singer of Israel." This I found was Samson, who did more with a jaw-bone than any other man could have done with a Winchester rifle. In the same neighborhood were Rahab the harlot, who allowed the people of her city to be butchered, and never gave a word of warning ; Jael, the wife of Heber the Kenite, who with hammer and nail smote the confidinsr Sisera ; Judith, who cut off the head of Holof ernes ; Bath- sheba the adulteress ; and the much married Solomon, he:r son. These were in fact, I learned, among the chie/ aristocracy of the celestial circles. " Well," said Garrison, in a more cheerful tone than ]( had heard before since he entered, " if I am going te below." Eventually he secured a room in the south-east corner of heaven, as near to hell as he could possibly get. ""1 cannot imagine why you should fancy this," was the remark of the guide as soon as tliey got in. "-'It is really the least comfortable room in the whole place, and when your windows are open, and the wind l>lows this way, you will wish yourself somewhere else. But every saint to his liking ! " And away went the guide. As soon as he was fairly out of hearing, I said, — "Garrison!" laying at the same time my hand upon his shoulder. He instantly turned, and exclaimed, — " What ! Denton, you here? " And, seizing my hand, he said, " I am glad to see you : 1 want your help." " Help for what? " I asked. "I will show you," he said. "I find we are needed here vastly more than on earth. I am going to start an underground railroad, and run in ever}^ soul from that infernal pit, and you must help me. We must empty Hell, and reform Heaven — and we will do it.'* 54 W « 30^ "TV '. _jynK V *-./ • %.^" .*■ ^^'* ^o'^ ^^. **^rr:* .^^^ ^q,. 't:?^o* ,o ^^ v-V ^.••^'. )'^ *i*°' .S^r .-'J^, « ■• . . * A <> *'T •* >^ .•l°.«. •1°^ r..* ,0 •^^o< • »0 ,0 '^c o*. -.; 4" %^ J^ .*--"' '^/^