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UNIVERSITY OF N.C. AT CHAPEL HILL 
 
 00022094485 
 
THE 
 
 CHILDREN 
 
 OF 
 
 THE BIBLE: 
 
 AS EXAMPLES, AND AS WARNINGS. 
 
 By Frances M. Caulkins. 
 
 PUBLISHED BY THE 
 
 AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY 
 
 150 NASSAU-STREET, NEW-YORK 
 
Digitized by the Internet Archive 
 
 in 2012 with funding from 
 
 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 
 
 http://www.archive.org/details/childrenofbibleaOOcaul 
 
CONTE N T 
 
 1. Ishmael, 5 
 
 2. Moses, g 
 
 3. Samuel, 12 
 
 4. Obadiah, j^ 
 
 5. The Forty-two Wicked Children of Bethel, 17 
 
 6. Naamatfs Little Maid, 21 
 
 7. Joash, 24, 
 
 8. Josiah, 28 
 
 9. Jeremiah 
 
 31 
 
 10. Daniel and his Three Companions, 35 
 
 11. Jesus Christ, ..... ... 38 
 
 12. TAe Daughter of J aims, . . . 42 
 
 13. L#£/e Children brought to Christ, . . 44 
 
 14. Children of the Temple, 46 
 
 15. John the Baptist, 49 
 
 16. Timothy, ... 51 
 
AND ISHMAEL 
 
THE 
 
 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE 
 
 i. 
 
 INFLUENCE OF PRAYER. 
 " God hath heard the voice of the lad where he is." — Gen. 21 ; 17. 
 
 Behold, on Paran's desert plain 
 
 A mother and her child, 
 From morn till night, in toil and pain, 
 
 Are wandering o'er the wild. 
 
 With weary footsteps, to and fro 
 They seek some green retreat ; 
 
 Some healing dew, or fountain's flow, 
 To cool their burning feet. 
 
 But through those wastes no rivers run, 
 
 No rains refresh the land, 
 No groves relieve the fiery sun, 
 
 No herb the dazzling sand. 
 
CHILDREN OF THE BIELE. 
 
 ,f Oh, mother ! lay me down to rest 
 
 "Beneath these bushes low, 
 v I faint with heat, I die with thirst, 
 
 "No farther can I go." 
 
 Thus spake the boy — beneath the shade 
 
 She plac'd him with a sigh, 
 Then beat her throbbing breast and said, 
 
 " / cannot see him die /" 
 
 A bow-shot's distance, where his moans 
 
 Reach' d not her shrinking ear, 
 She sat, and mingled tears with groans, 
 
 And call'd on Heaven to hear. 
 
 Alone the son of Abraham lay — 
 
 Not so — for God was there : 
 He mov'd the dying child to pray, 
 
 And heard his feeble prayer. 
 
 Young Ishmael cried, and God, from heaven, 
 
 Look'd down upon his grief,* 
 Cool waters to the sands were given — 
 
 He drank and found relief. 
 
ISHMAEL. 
 
 Oh, come ! and from this story learn 
 God hears when children pray; 
 
 He stoops from heaven with kind concern 
 To know what they would say. 
 
 Come, then, before your Savior King 
 Spread all your joys and woes ; 
 
 To him your humble offerings bring, 
 And on his love repose. 
 
 Like Ishmael, pray ; but, child, beware ! 
 
 And ever strive to be, 
 As years increase, in faith and prayer, 
 
 A better man than he. 
 
 Like Ishmael, pray; but from the truth 
 
 Oh not, like him, depart ! 
 Give to the Lord that bless'd your youth 
 
 Through all your life, your heart. 
 
CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 RESISTING TEMPTATION. 
 
 " And the daughter of Pharaoh came down to wash herself 
 at the river ; and her maidens walked along by the river's side ; 
 and when she saw the ark among the flags she sent the maid 
 to fetch it. And when she had opened it she saw the child: 
 and behold the babe wept." — Exodus, 2 : 5, 6. 
 
 '* By faith Moses, when he was come to years, refused to be 
 called the son of Pharaoh's daughter ; choosing rather to suffer 
 affliction with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures 
 of sin for a season." — Hebrews, 11 : 24, 25. 
 
 A princess and her maidens gay- 
 Were bathing in the Nile one day : 
 Just where the tall flags meet the tide, 
 A willowy basket they descried. 
 
 That little ark a mother's love 
 
 Of twisted osiers neatly wove ; 
 
 And many a prayer and pious thought* 
 
 She breath'd, while at her task she wrought 
 
 11 * And with a prayer did every osier weave." — H. More* 
 
THE FINDING OF MOSES 
 
MOSES. 9 
 
 Without, within, 'twas lin'd and seaPd, 
 That mother's priceless gem to shield 
 From sun, and wind, and rushing wave, 
 And Nile's voracious god* to save. 
 
 The princess from the river drew 
 The ark — aside the covering threw : 
 Behold! a Hebrew babe appears, 
 A living babe, bedew'd -with tears. 
 
 Compassion touch'd the lady's breast; 
 She hush'd his infant fears to rest, 
 Call'd him her son, gave him a name, 
 And Egypt's heir the boy became. 
 
 Son of a princess ! — on the child 
 A court, with all its splendor, smil'd — 
 A court corrupt — a king and throne 
 Sustain'd by gods of wood and stone. 
 
 From Israel's faith, to Egypt's sin, 
 These idols sure the child will win ! 
 Example will his youth betray, 
 To walk in pleasure's dangerous way ! 
 
 * The ancient Egyptians worshipped the crocodile as a 
 river-god. 
 
30 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 Mark with what ease, what skill divine, 
 High Heaven works out its fix'd design: 
 A faithful nurse the princess sought — 
 Quick was the child's own mother brought. 
 
 From her he learn'd, in youth's first spring, 
 The wonders wrought by Israel's King ; 
 Learn'd to deplore his brethren's woes, 
 And scorn the honors of their foes. 
 
 With purpose firm, in manhood's prime 
 He left the gilded halls of crime ; 
 Power, wealth and honors all laid down, 
 Nor stopp'd to catch the falling crown. 
 
 On Horeb's mount, in Jethro's tent, 
 Long years of peaceful toil he spent, 
 Hallowing the throng of daily cares 
 With holy thoughts and heavenly prayers. 
 
 A shepherd's staff and seat of stone 
 Outweigh'd the sceptre and the throne. 
 With conscience pure, and soul serene, 
 No roof is low, no station mean. 
 
MOSES. 11 
 
 Behold a pattern, bright and high, 
 To fire the youthful christian's eye ! 
 Go, mark it well ! then ask within, 
 " Have I this holy dread of sin'? 
 
 " No golden bribes, no courtly pride 
 " Could lure this heavenly youth aside J 
 c< From scenes of guilty pomp he fled, 
 M In peace the lonely hills to tread. 
 
 M How in his place should I have done 1 
 "As Pharaoh's, or as Jethro's son! 
 " Embrac'd temptation's gilded bait, 
 " Or shar'd the exile's bitter fate 1 
 
 " E'en now I hear the still small voice 
 
 " That whispers, Make the Lord your choice ! 
 
 " E'en now the God that Moses saw, 
 
 " Strives from the world my heart to draw. 
 
 " Oh Thou, whose grace when asked is given 
 " To lift the soul from earth to heaven, 
 "Lead me where living waters flow 
 M And let me with thy lilies grow!" 
 
12 CHILDREN OF THE EIBLE. 
 
 III. 
 
 SAJflUEJL. 
 
 EAELY PIETY. 
 
 * And the child Samuel grew, and was in favor with the 
 Lord and also with men." — 1 Samuel, 2 : 26. 
 
 " Samuel ministered before the Lord, being a child, girded 
 with a linen ephod." — Verse 18. 
 
 On shady hills the violet's flower 
 
 Gives out a sweet perfume ; 
 And roses in a lady's bower 
 
 Are lovely in their bloom. 
 
 The lily on the water lies, 
 
 The sunflower decks the land ; 
 
 These all look upward to the skies, 
 And own their Maker's hand. 
 
 But, oh! what bud, what blossom fair, 
 With childhood's charms can vie, 
 
 When in the gentle voice of prayer 
 It lifts its heart on high 1 
 
SAMUEL PRESENTED TO ELI. 
 
SAMUEL. 13 
 
 In Shiloh once a harmless child 
 
 In priestly garments stood, 
 And serv'd, with spirit undefil'd, 
 
 The altar of his God. 
 
 It was a pleasant sight, to view 
 
 How earnestly he sought, 
 With all his heart and soul, to do 
 
 What reverend Eli taught. 
 
 At early dawn, when birds rejoice, 
 
 Like them, he hail'd the sky ; 
 At night, when birds are hush'd, his voice 
 
 Breath'd softer praise on high. 
 
 God bless'd him, and he daily grew 
 . More holy, yet more mild ', 
 A faithful priest, a prophet true, 
 While yet in years a child. 
 
 Beside the ark he flourish'd fair, 
 
 Like a green olive-tree. 
 Oh, who young Samuel's name can hear, 
 
 Nor wish like him to be ! 
 
 Then early make the Lord your choice, 
 
 And in his work delight ; 
 The children that obey his voice 
 
 Are jewels in his sight. 
 
14 CHILDREN OF THE EIBLE. 
 
 IV. 
 
 OE&&1&I1. 
 
 EARLY PIETY THE BEST PREPARATION FOR 
 USEFULNESS. 
 
 " I, thy servant, fear the Lord from my youth."— 1 King?, IS : 12. 
 
 The fear of God, my child, 
 
 Is but another name 
 For love, for worship undenTd, 
 
 For pure religion's flame. 
 
 This holy, loving fear, 
 
 Young Obadiah knew ; 
 God's awful voice he bow'd to hear, 
 
 And paid obedience due. 
 
 He serv'd an impious king, 
 And liv'd with men of blood : 
 
 God's word was a forbidden thing — 
 'Twas dangerous to be good. 
 
OBADUH lb 
 
 Yet still this pious youth 
 
 Pursued the heavenly way, 
 And clung the closer to the truth 
 
 When others went astray. 
 
 What penman can record 
 
 Than this, a higher praise — 
 " For^ /, thy servant, fear the Lord, 
 
 " E } en from my earliest days" 
 
 * 
 See how this morning dew 
 
 Enrich'd and bless'd his heart, 
 
 With courage firm and purpose true 
 
 To act a champion's part ! 
 
 When Ahab's impious queen* 
 
 Gave out her dire command. 
 And slaughter's ruthless sword was seen 
 
 To glitter o'er the land ; 
 
 Then forth he stepp'd to save, 
 And stood the poor man's friend ; 
 
 Nor fear'd his sovereign's wrath to brave, 
 God's worship to defend. 
 
 * 1 Kings, 18 : 4. 
 
16 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 Quick was his heart to feel, 
 As swift his hands to aid; 
 
 A hundred saints his timely zeal 
 To sheltering groves convey' d. 
 
 No fear his spirit awed 
 In that disastrous hour ; 
 
 He hid them till the raging sword 
 Had lost its deadly power. 
 
 There in the clefts of rock, 
 In caverns wild and dread, 
 
 His lib'ral hand the exil'd flock 
 With daily bounty fed. 
 
 Thus was this Hebrew lord 
 A shield in days of strife, 
 
 By early faith and love, prepar'd 
 To lead a useful life. 
 
 Fear God— -fear God in youth. 
 Then from your guarded heart 
 
 The buckler of eternal truth 
 Shall turn temptation's dart. 
 
WICKED CHILDREN OF BETHEL. 17 
 
 THE 42 WICKED CMIEltHEW 
 OF BE THEE. 
 
 SINFUL LANGUAGE DISPLEASING TO GOD. 
 
 " And he went up from thence unto Bethel ; and as he was 
 going up by the way, there came forth little children out of 
 the city, and mocked him, and said unto him^ Go up, thou bald 
 head ! Go up, thou bald head ! And he turned back, and looked 
 on them, and cursed them in the name of the Lord. And there 
 came forth two she-bears out of the wood, and tare forty and 
 two children of them."— 2 Kings, 2 : 23, 24. 
 
 Who would not sleep on Jacob's stone, 
 Might Jacob's dream to him be given 1* 
 
 The Lord stood on his burning throne, 
 And angels throng'd the way to heaven. 
 
 With trembling awe he rose and stood, 
 An altar rais'd, and worshipp'd these : 
 
 And call'd it Bethel — House of God, 
 
 The gate of heaven — the house of prayer. 
 
 In later times, a city spread 
 
 Its shade around that hallow'd stone j 
 
 But there no heavenly vision led 
 The spirit upward to the throne. 
 
 * Genesis, 28 : 10-20. 
 Gh. of Bible. 2 
 
18 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 An idol god — old Egypt's sin — 
 Usurps the altar, claims the vow ; 
 
 Insulting scoffers raise their din, 
 And Bethel* is Beth- A verijf, flow, 
 
 See, on his lonely way afar, 
 
 Elisha comes, belov'd of God ! 
 His thoughts are with the fiery car, 
 
 Where his translated master rode. 
 
 Canst thou not see him as he went 
 
 Heaven-mov'd — his reverend head laid bare 1 
 
 Now upward turned, with look intent, 
 Now downward, as if bow'd in prayer ] 
 
 Where is the city's sacred band, 
 
 That should this heavenly veteran greet ] 
 
 The guardians of a grateful land, 
 
 Why come they not his steps to meet] 
 
 Do they not know his mission seal'd 
 By gifts and powers deriv'd from God 1 
 
 That he the unwholesome waters heal'd,}: 
 And dry through Jordan's channel trod \ 
 
 Alas! his just reproof they dread, 
 
 And fain would bar him from their gate , 
 
 The children of the place are bred 
 The prophet and his God to hate. 
 
 * Bethel, House of God. f Beth-Aven, House of Vanity. 
 X 2 Kings, chap. 2. 
 
WICKED CHILDREN OF EETHEL. 19 
 
 And see, a rude and boisterous throng, 
 
 The offspring of a godless race, 
 Pour forth with insults loud and long, 
 
 And mock the good man to his face. 
 
 Fiercely they come, and loud they cry 5 
 
 With shouts and taunts around him crowd : 
 
 "Up! up! (they say) ascend on high! 
 
 " Come, bald head ! mount the fiery cloud !" 
 
 So boldly did this impious crew 
 
 Jehovah's honor' d priest assail: 
 "Elijah gone! (they cry) Go too! 
 
 "And we will then believe the tale." 
 
 Awhile the patient prophet heard 
 
 Their mockeries, and despis'd the shame : 
 
 But quick the fire within him stirr'd, 
 
 When scorn washeap'd on God's great name. 
 
 He turn'd, he look'd, by heaven inspir'd, 
 
 Fierce judgments on their heads denounc'd j 
 
 And with prophetic knowledge fir'd, 
 Sternly th' approaching wo announc'd. 
 
 Onward he goes ; — the judgment comes ! 
 E'en while he spake, a mighty roar 
 
 Breathes outward from the forest glooms- 
 Near, nearer — louder than before. 
 
20 CHILDREN OF THE E1BLE 
 
 And mid the throng, with mighty force, 
 Two savage beasts leap forth to war ; 
 
 Blood, rage and havoc mark their course, 
 They bruise, rend, wound and scatter far. 
 
 Oh then, what terrible alarm ! 
 
 What pain those bleeding bosoms fill ! 
 The God they mock'd but lifts his arm, 
 
 And savage beasts perform his will. 
 
 Thus was this impious throng chastis'd ; 
 
 Through them their guilty parents warrrd 
 God will not have his word despis'd, 
 
 His prophets or his wonders scorn' d ! 
 
 Tremble, ye children, when ye read 
 
 How God o'erthrew these scoffers bold ; 
 
 Be pure in word, be kind in deed, 
 Revere the good, respect the old. 
 
 For know, that, e'en in childhood, sin 
 Meets with an awful frown from heaven. 
 
 Strive, children ! strive, the race to win ; 
 Repent, believe, and be forgiven. 
 
NAAMAN's LITTLE MAID. 21 
 
 VI 
 
 JV*&*AJir^ijr>s jlittle Main. 
 
 CHILDREN MAY BECOME EMINENTLY USEFUL 
 
 " The Syrians had gone out by companies, and had brought 
 away captive out of the land of Israel a little maid ; and she 
 waited on Naaman's wife. And she said unto her mistress, 
 would God my lord were with the prophet that is in Samaria ! 
 for he would recover him of his leprosy." — 2 Kings, 5 : 23. 
 
 Come round me, my children, and list 'while I tell 
 What in Syria once a great captain befel. 
 He was valiant, but sav'd by a tender child's aid, 
 A man of great might, by a weak, captive maid. 
 
 The man was Naaman, a chief in command, 
 The sword of the king and the shield of the land. 
 His country ^o oft he had freed from the foe, 
 He was honor'd and lov'd by the high and the low. 
 
22 
 
 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 The maid was a child, from her dear native land 
 Carried far, far away, by a Syrian band ; 
 To the wife of the captain, so gallant and brave, 
 The little maid now is a captive and slave. 
 
 Yet the child still remember'd the God of her youth ; 
 She talk'd of his glory, his love and his truth : 
 She told what the priests of Jehovah had taught, 
 The power of true faith, and the wonders it wrought. 
 
 The chief so renown'd for his conquests abroad, 
 At home found his life but a wearisome load ; 
 A leper ! a leper ! — that one heavy blow 
 All wealth, and distinction, and glory laid low! 
 
 Then the young maid of Israel came forward, and said 
 " I know of a man who my master could aid ; 
 " "Would God that my lord would but go to the same ! 
 w He lives in Samaria — Elisha his name. 
 
 " Faith, holiness, prayer, are the good man's sole arts ; 
 "Yet he cures the diseas'd, and he sees into hearts.* 
 " 'Tis Jehovah's great prophet — would God that my lord 
 K Would but go to his door, and be heal'd by a word !" 
 
 * 2 Kings, 5:26; 6 : 12 ; S: 11,12. 
 
23 
 
 Thus did the young maid in her exile proclaim 
 Elisha's high honor, Jehovah's great name. 
 Though so young, and a servant, she sought to do good : 
 She was true to her master and true to her God. 
 
 Nor did the great chieftain despise her request, 
 In his chariot he hastes to the country so blest ; 
 At the prophet's high word in the Jordan he laves, 
 And fresh as a child he came forth from the waves. 
 
 Nor only the flesh did that washing redeem, 
 
 He left his idolatry too in the stream : 
 
 He retum'd to the prophet with praise on his tongue, 
 
 And God — the true God, Israel's God, was his song. 
 
 Such good was accomplished by one little maid ; 
 Such honor the Lord on a young captive laid ! 
 Come, rouse thee, my child ! Is there nothing that you 
 For our God or the welfare of others can do ? 
 
24 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 VII. 
 
 J O Jl & JBT. 
 
 "let him that thinketh he standeth, take 
 heed lest he fall." 
 
 2 Kings, chap. 12.— 2 Chron. chapp. 22, 23, 24. 
 
 A spotted robe and bloody crown 
 
 Fierce Athaliah wore ; 
 For she her kindred had cut down, 
 
 And bath'd her hands in gore. 
 
 First Arab hordes,* then Jehu's blade 
 Great David's house o'erthrew : 
 
 This cruel queen, with treason's aid, 
 The feeble remnant slew. 
 
 One scion of the royal oak 
 
 Alone escap'd the foe ; 
 The sole survivor of the stroke 
 
 That laid his kindred low. 
 
 * Chron. 22:1,8. 
 
JOASH. 25 
 
 In love's fond arms the boy was sav'd 
 
 Amid the tumult wild ; 
 His pious aunt the danger brav'd, 
 
 And hid the helpless child. 
 
 Safe from the vengeance of the queen, 
 
 Concealed by heavenly aid, 
 Six years the nurse and child, unseen, 
 
 Dwelt in the temple's shade. 
 
 There liv'd within those chambers fair 
 
 A priest of high renown, 
 Who rear'd this child with jealous care, 
 
 And train'd him for the crown. 
 
 Thus hid in faith, thus watch'd by love, 
 
 Thus fed on heavenly dew, 
 Sweet mercy's child, the temple's dove, 
 
 The youthful Joash grew. 
 
 The faithful aunt and priest fulfill'*} 
 
 Their duty to the youth ; 
 Like honey, from their lips distill'd 
 
 The words of grace and truth. 
 And when this proud, revengeful queen 
 
 And Baal's priests were slain, 
 They plac'd him on his father's throne 
 
 And taught him how to reign. 
 
26 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 While liv'd the priest, his guiding hand 
 
 The young man led aright ; 
 He worshipp'd God, and rul'd the land 
 
 With wisdom, grace and might. 
 
 But when some six-score years had roll'd* 
 
 Above his guardian's head, 
 And with the kings and chiefs of old 
 
 The reverend priest was laid, 
 
 Young princes round their sovereign's feci 
 
 Ensnaring pleasures spread, 
 He listen'd to their flatteries sweet, 
 
 And follow'd where they led. 
 
 They led him into courses vain, 
 To scorn the wise and good — 
 
 Despise the law of God, and stain 
 His courts with righteous blood.f 
 
 Apostate then the king became. 
 
 He left his earlier love, 
 And rear'd on hills his sin and shame, 
 
 The idol and the grove. 
 
 * " Jehoiada was born in the reign of Solomon, and had lived 
 through six successive reigns, besides Athaliah's usurpation " 
 
 | 2 Chronicles, 24 : 20. 
 
JOASH. 27 
 
 Nor was this foul revolt unseen, 
 
 Unnoticed in the sky ; 
 No veil a single act can screen 
 
 From God's all-seeing eye. 
 
 Domestic treason, war's loud blast, 
 Their terrors round him spread ; 
 
 Disease came next — the sword at last 
 Despatch'd him in his bed. 
 
 His bones rest in no honor'd tomb,* 
 
 His fame no mourners sing j 
 So heavy was the righteous doom 
 
 That crush'd this faithless king ! 
 
 Go, read his story, and beware 
 
 Of error's dangerous way : 
 Is good seed. sown 1 — take watchful care 
 
 Lest it be snatch'd away. 
 
 Turn thou from every glittering gem, 
 
 And look to heaven for light ; 
 For soon will youth's fine gold grow dim, 
 
 If not by faith kept bright. 
 
28 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 VIII. 
 
 J-&SIJ1II. 
 
 ZEAL IN THE SERVICE OF GOD REVERENCE FOB 
 
 THE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 2 Chronicles, chapp. 34, 35. 
 
 King Joash in his life displays 
 
 A bold backslider's wreck j 
 Such beacon-lights the Scriptures raise 
 
 The wanderer's course to check 
 
 Not for such end Josiah's name 
 Lives in the heavenly scroll ; 
 
 His light is an enlivening flame 
 That heals and guides the soul. 
 
 Son of an impious king, and cast 
 On dangerous times and dark — 
 
 An orphan on life's stormy blast, 
 How 'scap'd his little bark % 
 
 A sovereign too!- — his childish brow 
 
 Displays a glittering crown; 
 Before him cringing courtiers bow, 
 
 And armies fear his frown ! 
 
JOSIAH. 29 
 
 Say ! is there hope of him '( How free, 
 
 How rich is grace divine ! 
 This seed springs up a glorious tree, 
 
 To shade Judea's vine. 
 
 While yet a child, his earnest mind 
 
 For David's God inquir'd ; 
 He sought, nor was he slow to find 
 
 The Friend his heart desir'd. 
 
 The groves that monarchs, vain and wild, 
 Had rear'd on Judah's heights j 
 
 Hills, vales, by idol gods defil'd, 
 He cleans'd with hallow'd rites. 
 
 Down Baal fell, with all his train : 
 
 The carv'd and molten ore 
 In fragments strew'd the graves of men 
 
 Who worshipp'd it before. 
 
 Rais'd from decay, the temple fair 
 
 Sheds light and truth around ; 
 Shine all her gates, and praise and prayer 
 
 Through all her courts resound. 
 
 Oh happy king ! his worth, his praise 
 Thus doth high heaven record : 
 
 " With all his heart, through all his days 
 " He folio v'd God, the Lord !" 
 
30 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 When to his house the parchment scroll 
 
 Of prophecy was Drought, 
 How earnest was his heavenly soul 
 
 To learn what God had taught 
 
 As Shaphan read, with holy awe 
 The youthful monarch heard — 
 
 Mourn'd o'er the violated law, 
 And trembled at the word. 
 
 Lowly he bow'd, and humbly pray'd ; 
 
 God from his throne replied, 
 And from a heart so tender bade 
 
 His judgments turn aside. 
 
 With anxious haste the king's command 
 
 Bade every trumpet sound, 
 To spread before the assembled land 
 
 The Book that had been found. 
 
 'Tis ever thus : — the warmth and light 
 Men feel, they love to spread ; 
 
 When hearts with heavenly hopes are bright, 
 The rays around they shed. 
 
 Then if you feel the Scripture's worth, 
 
 Go, aid its high design ; 
 Speed, speed the Bible round the earth, 
 
 Spread wide the Book divine. 
 
JEREMIAH. 31 
 
 IX 
 
 JTUM]£JWI«1M. 
 
 PIETY PERSECUTED IN THIS LIFE THE REWARD 
 
 HEREAFTER. 
 
 " Then said I, Ah Lord God ! I cannot speak, for I am a 
 child ! But the Lord said unto me, Say not, I am a child : for 
 thou shalt go to all that I shall send thee, and whatsoever I 
 shall command thee thou shalt speak.'' — Jeremiah, 1 : 6, 7. 
 
 Great good Josiah wrought — his hand 
 
 A righteous sceptre sway'd ; 
 Yet not alone he toil'd or plann'd j 
 See by his side a prophet stand, 
 
 To give him heavenly aid. 
 
 The breath of God had early stirr'd 
 
 A boy of priestly race \ 
 And now came down the Almighty word, 
 To hail him prophet of the Lord, 
 
 And bid him take his p!nce. 
 
3«2 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 Sad was the youthful priest's reply, 
 
 For he was full of fears : 
 "Ah Lord! I cannot strive nor cry — 
 " Ah Lord ! I cannot speak, for I 
 
 M Am in my childish years !" 
 
 " Let not thy childhood cause thy fear," 
 
 The Eternal Voice replied j 
 " For thou shalt speak, and men shall hear 
 " To all the nations far and near, 
 
 M Go spread my message wide." 
 
 Then touch'd his lips the heavenly flame 
 
 And gave him powers sublime j 
 Dreams, visions, judgments to proclaim, 
 A.nd strains of never-dying fame, 
 To breathe through every clime. 
 
 5Toung king, and younger priest — a sight 
 
 For angels to admire ; 
 With equal zeal for truth and right, 
 One wields the sword of justice bright, 
 
 And one the sounding lyre. 
 
 Mature they grew, and struggled long 
 
 Against the rushing tide ; 
 But crime was like a giant strong, 
 And Egypt with her warlike throng 
 
 Spread havoc far and wide. 
 
JEREMIAH. 33 
 
 Josiah fell ; tears gush'd like rain 
 
 O'er his untimely end j 
 Deep was the tender prophet's pain, 
 And sadly sweet the plaintive strain 
 
 That mourn'd his slaughter'd friend.* 
 
 Not always in this vale of tears 
 
 Hath virtue its reward ; 
 The prophet liv'd a life of fears, 
 In grief he number'd all his years, 
 
 His heart was sorrow's chord. 
 
 But still in dungeons dark and deep 
 
 God kept him from despair j 
 Though anguish was too keen to weep, 
 Though cold and hunger banish'd sleep, 
 
 He still found strength in prayer. 
 
 When in the dust great David's throne 
 
 A lonely ruin lay ; 
 When Salem, all with weeds o'ergrown, 
 Mourn'd o'er her sons, to climes unknown 
 
 Borne by their foes away — 
 
 * 2 Chronicles, 35 : 24, 25. 
 Ch. of Bible. 3 
 
34* CHILDREN OF THE EIELE. 
 
 Oh then how plaintive were his tones F 
 
 How deep the prophet's wo ! 
 O'er Zion's consecrated stones 
 Sighs, tears hurst forth — reproaches, groans, 
 
 And lamentations low. 
 
 Yet from those cherish' d ruins torn, 
 
 An exile forth he goes ; 
 To Egypt's coast unwilling borne, 
 His country's wreck afar to mourn 
 
 With ever-flowing woes. 
 
 But in his heavenly office still 
 
 He spends his daily breath ; 
 Reproves, exhorts with fervent zeal, 
 Till stamp' d with heaven's approving seal, 
 
 A martyr's bloody death.* 
 
 Thus Jeremiah wept and bled, 
 
 As through this world he pass'd — 
 Thus are the saints through trials led, 
 With foes they meet, on thorns they tread, 
 But win a crown at last. 
 
 * Jeremiah, died in Egypt, whither he was carried against 
 his wishes by a body of his countrymen who migrated to that 
 kingdom. Ancient writers inform us that he was stoned to 
 death by the Jews, while uttering prophetic denunciations 
 against their sins. 
 
DANIEL AND HIS THREE COMPANIONS 35 
 
 X. 
 
 JD^LJYIEE J3:JTIt SKIS THREE 
 
 ADVANTAGES OF EARLY DILIGENCE, TEMPERANCE 
 AND SELF-DENIAL. 
 
 * Daniel, Chapp. 1 and 3. 
 
 Four youths liv'd in the Assyrian court, 
 
 Not in Assyria born — 
 A captive band, by conquerors brought 
 
 From Zion's wastes forlorn. 
 Three were of Judah's royal race, 
 
 And all endow'd with heavenly grace. 
 
 They serv'd their conqueror, but his power 
 Was kindly o'er them spread, 
 
 Three years within the royal bower 
 A gentle life they led ; 
 
 Train'd up in learning's honor'd ways, 
 
 In studious peace they pass'd their days. 
 
 By Daniel's wise example led, 
 And cheer'd by grace divine, 
 
 They ate no idol's meat or bread, 
 Drank no inflaming wine. 
 
 The fruits which nature scatters wide, 
 
 And crystal streams their wants supplied. 
 
36 CHILDREN OF THE EIBLE. 
 
 A youth to careful study given, 
 To temperance and prayer, 
 
 Leads like a ladder up to heaven, 
 And fits the soul to bear 
 
 Faith's trials, persecution's blow, 
 
 And the whole load of mortal wo. 
 
 In later times the monarch made 
 
 An image proud and vain j 
 A hundred feet its lofty head 
 
 Soar'd up o'er Dura's plain. 
 The glittering gold shone far and wide, 
 A mighty monument of pride. 
 
 The rulers, judges of the realm, 
 
 Captains of all its hordes, 
 Warriors with dinted shield and helm, 
 
 And gay pacific lords, 
 All gather, shouting as they run, 
 " Great Bel ! the god of Babylon /" 
 
 Music, of every curious frame, 
 Breath'd forth its dulcet sound 
 
 In honor of the god's great name, 
 And heralds shouted round — 
 
 "Bow down! bow down to mighty Bel, 
 
 " Or in the fiery furnace dwell !" 
 
DANIEL AND IIIS THREE COMPANIONS. 37 
 
 Amid that furious pagan throng 
 
 Came not those princes three ; 
 Those youths of Zion rais'd no song, 
 
 They bent no suppliant knee : 
 Their hearts were nerv'd by faith ar>d prayer, 
 The raging of the flames to dare 
 
 Nor did their God his friends forsake, 
 
 His form was in the fire, 
 The fury of its breath to slake, 
 
 And shield them from its ire. 
 Joyful the burning floor they trod, 
 For with them walk'd the Son of God. 
 
 A wond'rous constancy they show'd, 
 
 A high heroic power ; 
 As wond'rous was the aid bestow'd 
 
 In peril's awful hour : 
 Forth from the seven times heated flame 
 Triumphant and unharm'd they came. 
 
 He, who the fiery furnace cool'd, 
 
 Can every ill destroy ; 
 Danger and death, by him o'er-rul'd, 
 
 Are chang'd to life and joy. 
 Enough : — at duty's post to stand, 
 
 And lean on his supporting hand ! 
 
38 CHILDREN OF THE BIELE. 
 
 XI. 
 
 JTESZTS CMMIST. 
 
 u And he went down with, them, and came to Nazareth, and 
 was subject unto them : and Jesus increased in wisdom and 
 ststure, and in favor with God and man." — Luke, 2 : 51, 52. 
 
 Here let us pause : — a brighter day, 
 
 A nobler prospect to survey! 
 
 The scenery of those ancient years 
 
 Rolls by, with all its kings and seers. 
 
 The wings of time have swept the world — 
 
 State after state to ruin hurl'd — 
 
 And we on fair Judea gaze, 
 
 In Caesar's time, and Herod's days. 
 
 The raptur'd mind takes loftier wing, 
 
 A holier strain with awe to sing. 
 
 Old things have vanish' d from the sight j 
 
 Behold an era, new and bright ! 
 
 The sceptre falls from Judah's hands, 
 
 The roll of prophecy expands ; 
 
 The darkness breaks, and Bethlehem's star 
 
 Shines on the nations from afar. 
 
 Hail, Light of Israel ! Light from heaven ! 
 A wond'rous child to earth is given ! 
 
JESUS CHRIST. 39 
 
 No more on mortal man we gaze, 
 To mark his deeds with blame or praise. 
 Strike all your strings, ye harps of earth ! 
 Proclaim the heavenly stranger's birth. 
 No offspring this of mortal line, 
 These lineaments are all divine. 
 
 Too oft our daring fancy tries 
 
 To be beyond the record wise ; 
 
 Careless on holy ground to tread, 
 
 And rend the veil which heaven hath spread. 
 
 Rash hand, forbear ! With awe we trace 
 
 This pattern of celestial grace. 
 
 Oh, may the Eternal Father deign 
 
 To guide the thought and bless the strain ! 
 
 Far in the north, where Galilee 
 Looks o'er her beauteous inland sea, 
 A small mean city, built of stone, 
 Sits lonely, on a mountain throne. 
 Low are its roofs, its portals mean, 
 With narrow winding streets between ; 
 And toilsome is the access there, 
 To man or mule, by road or stair. 
 
 Yet lovely are the plains around, 
 For olives, vines and figs renown'd; 
 And Tabor's, and Gilboa's height 
 Rise o'er the landscape, cloth'd in light. 
 
40 CHILDREN OF THE EIELE. 
 
 Those plains oft rang with battle's clang— 
 There Barak fought and Deborah sang ; 
 Josiah there, in contest vain, 
 Was by Egyptian archers slain. 
 
 That city mean, now holds a gem 
 Worth more than Csesar's diadem. 
 'Tis Naz'reth! that secluded place, 
 Where Jesus dwells in youthful grace, 
 By Mary's side, in Joseph's shade, 
 Content to learn a humble trade ; 
 Yet, with a mien divinely bold, 
 Sin he rebukes, in young or old. 
 
 In duty's path, from day to day, 
 The holy child pursues his way ; 
 And many a heart to wisdom leads, 
 By winning words and gentle deeds. 
 Son of the Highest ! yet he deigns 
 To share these mortal griefs and pains; 
 Intent his mission to fulfil, 
 But subject to his parents' will. 
 
 Hast thou thy sorrows 1 so had he ; 
 Thy trials'? He was never free. 
 Art poor, or sick, or houseless 1 know, 
 Like thine was once the Savior's wo. 
 Contempt, wrongs, insults dost thou meet ! 
 With such his life was all replete ; 
 
JESUS CHRIST. 41 
 
 And yet his spirit, pure and mild, 
 No passion fir'd, no sin beguil'd. 
 
 Art thou a student 1 Learn of Him 
 With diligence thy lamp to trim. 
 Art call'd to labor % Cheerful go j 
 Thy Master trod that path below. 
 Thou canst with no temptation meet, 
 But hath been spread around his feet. 
 Once having been a child, he knows 
 And pities childhood's cares and woes. 
 
 By pleasures lur'd, or trials vex'd ; 
 When conscience is with doubt perplex' 
 Which path to choose, or which to shun, 
 Think what the Savior would have done ! 
 Oft ask your heart — is this the way 
 That Jesus liv'd from day to day 1 
 Make his example, pure and bright, 
 A lamp to guide your steps aright 
 
 But oh, forget not while you scan 
 His life, that he was more than man. 
 Salvation's King ! his birth unfurl'd 
 Hope's banner o'er a ruin'd world 
 A spotless priest, a pattern fair, 
 A sacrifice, our sins to bear. 
 In acts of love he spent his days — 
 A deeper love his death displays. 
 
42 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 XII. 
 THE n&UGMTEH OF J*ZIMU$. 
 
 GRATITUDE TO THE SAVIOR. 
 Luke, 8 : 49-66. 
 
 " Eise, maiden ! rise !" Thus Jesus spake. 
 A kindling blush begins to break 
 
 Upon the damsel's cheek ; 
 Her eyes their living lustre take, 
 
 Her lips prepare to speak. 
 
 Death that had newly clasp'd his chain, 
 Amaz'd, beholds it snapt in twain j 
 
 His victim rent away j 
 A mightier King disputes his reign, 
 
 And robs him of his prey. 
 
 The child rose up at Christ's command, 
 And wondering, saw those features bland, 
 
 Those high immortal charms : 
 What heavenly voice, what powerful hand, 
 
 Her mortal foe disarms ! 
 
THE DAUGHTER OF JAIRtJS. 43 
 
 The pulse of life resumes its play, 
 Her limbs once more the will obey — 
 
 The parents clasp their child. 
 Fond on her mother's breast she lay, 
 And cheerful spoke, and smil'd. 
 
 Yet soon she turns her eyes, to meet 
 That form, with Godlike grace replete, 
 
 Where power and goodness shine j 
 She worships lowly at his feet. 
 
 And owns his skill divine. 
 
 Would not that maid ungrateful prove, 
 [[ e'er her bosom ceas'd to love 
 
 That kind and heavenly Friend ] 
 How fearful, should her spirit rove, 
 
 And perish at the end ! 
 
 Yet did this little maiden find 
 A Savior more divinely kind 
 
 Than smiles on us from heaven ] 
 What have we — life, or sense, or mind — 
 
 Not by his bounty given 1 
 
 If she her grateful heart should give 
 To Him whose mercy bade her live, 
 
 Hath he no claim on you, 
 Who from his daily grace receive 
 
 A life each morning new ! 
 
44 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 XIII 
 
 JLITT&E CJBOULMBMEJir HHOUGHT 
 
 TO CMHIST. 
 
 11 And they brought young children to him, that he should 
 touch them : and his disciples rebuked those that brought 
 them. But when Jesus saw it, he was much displeased, and 
 said unto them, Suffer the little children to come unto me and 
 forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven. And he 
 took them up in his arms, put his hands vpov them and blessed 
 them."— Mark, 10 : 13, 14, 16. 
 
 To the arms of the merciful !?^ r ior 
 
 Young children were brought to he blest : 
 He look'd on the parent with favor, 
 
 And press'd the young child to Ms breast. 
 How happy was each tender blossom 
 
 The Savior's rich blessing to share ! 
 How pleasant to see on his bosom 
 
 The infant so dove-like and fair ! 
 
CHRIST BLESSING- CHILDREN. 
 
LITTLE CHILDREN BROUGHT TO CHRIST. 45 
 
 " Oh ! suffer the young to come hither, 
 
 w Their Savior and friend to behold ! 
 11 Oh bring me the bud, e'er it wither — 
 
 " The heart, ere 'tis blighted and cold !" 
 These words, with their promise so precious, 
 
 Still sound like a harmony sweet ; 
 Allur'd by a message so gracious, 
 
 Dear Savior, we come to thy feet. 
 
 Receive thou our spirits while tender, 
 . And teach every thought to submit ; 
 To thee a whole life may we render, 
 
 And lay a young heart at thy feet. 
 We have sinn'd, but thy grace can make holy ; 
 
 Are weak, but thy power is divine — 
 Oh save us from vice and from folly, 
 
 And make us eternally thine ! 
 
46 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE- 
 
 XIV. 
 
 CHILDREN OF THE TJSJJTPJLE. 
 
 MORE CONVERSIONS TO BE EXPECTED AMONG THE 
 YOUNG THAN THE OLD. 
 
 " And when the chief priests and scribes saw the wonderful 
 things that he did, and the children crying in the temple, and 
 saying, Hosanna to the Son of David ; they were sore dis- 
 pleased, and said unto him, Hearest thou what these say ? And 
 Jesus saith unto them, Yea : have ye never read, Out of the 
 mouth of babes and sucklings thou hast perfected praise?" — 
 Matthew, 21 : 15, 16. 
 
 Through Salem, as the Savior pass'd, 
 Their robes the crowd before him cast, 
 
 And wav'd their palms on high ; 
 Young children, too, with loud acclaim, 
 Around the Friend of children came, 
 And join'd the exulting cry. 
 
 While priests and rulers heard with scorn, 
 His praise, on these weak voices borne, 
 
 Fill'd all the temple's space ; 
 Thus shall it be from age to age, 
 The young shall all their powers engage 
 
 To spread his wond'rous grace. 
 
CHILDREN OF THE TEMPLE. 47 
 
 Though men of learning and renown 
 Refuse to own the kingly crown 
 
 That girds his radiant brows ; 
 Their murmurs shall be scatter'd wide, 
 Or lost beneath the rushing tide 
 
 Of youthful songs and vows. 
 
 " Come, let us all with joy repair 
 
 " To God's own house of praise and prayer," 
 
 They cry with one accord : 
 How loudly sweet the songs they frame ! 
 " Hosanna to our Savior's name, 
 
 " The anointed King and Lord 1" 
 
 May all our children, Lord ! be thine, 
 The earliest dew, the tenderest vine, 
 
 Their incense waft above. 
 Bring in a harvest of the young, 
 To fill thy realms, and swell the song 
 
 Of free, redeeming love. 
 
 PART SECOND. [Missionary.] 
 
 Once on thy hills, Palestine ! 
 Hosannas to the King Divine 
 
 A band of children sung : 
 " He comes !" their infant voices cry, 
 " Hosanna to our God on high !" 
 
 Through all the temple rung. 
 
48 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 But now no Savior guides that band ; 
 The children of the Holy Land 
 
 No gentle Shepherd know ; 
 Taught from their infancy to raise 
 The voice to false Mohammed's praise, 
 
 Vain worship they bestow. 
 
 More favor'd on this happy shore, 
 Here let the lively anthem soar 
 
 From every youthful tongue : 
 Praise to the God who reigns above 
 Be all our theme ; and praise and love 
 
 The burden of our song. 
 
 Yet mindful of those children still, 
 We turn our eyes to Zion's hill, 
 
 And breathe a mournful strain ; 
 Oh, God of promise ! speak once more, 
 And span that long-forsaken shore 
 
 With mercy's bow again — 
 
 Break from above, thou golden flame ! 
 And eastward, whence at first ye came, 
 
 Return, ye lights of heaven ! 
 The guiding Star leads o'er the sea, 
 And soon the Book of Life shall he 
 
 Back to the Giver given. 
 
JOHN THE BArTIST. 49 
 
 XV. 
 JTOMJV TUB n*&£»Tl&?: 
 
 SOLITARY MEDITATION FAVORABLE TO PIETY. 
 
 11 And the child grew and waxed strong m spirit, and was in 
 the deserts till the day of his showing unlo Israel." — Luke, 
 1 : SO. 
 
 A holy child e'en from his birth, 
 
 Was Zachariah's son ; 
 Remote from youthful sports and mirth 
 
 His early race was run. 
 
 In lonely haunts he liv'd — and there 
 He walk'd and talk'd with God : 
 
 In silent thought, or vocal prayer, 
 The wilderness he trod. 
 
 The bird that sings, the stream that flows, 
 
 Led his young mind above ; 
 No verdant tree, nor opening rose, 
 
 But spoke of heavenly love. 
 
 The beasts that wild through deserts roam, 
 
 Supplied his garments rude ; 
 The locust and the flowing comb 
 
 Were all his choice of food. 
 
 Ch. of Bible. 4 
 
5C CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 He studied much, he pray'd for might, 
 He sought God's will to know ; 
 
 And waited but for heavenly light 
 A martyr's zeal to show. 
 
 Thus gathering strength from day to day, 
 
 And waxing warm in heart, 
 Unknown he liv'd, till call'd away 
 
 To act a higher part. 
 
 Then as a preacher stern and bold, 
 
 He burst on Israel's sight ; 
 The Day-spring he, whose dawn foretold 
 
 The Sun's up-rising light. 
 
 This blest example, round our feet 
 Spreads wide its golden rays, 
 
 And clothes in accents low and sweet, 
 The lesson it conveys. 
 
 In forests wild, or deserts lone, 
 Oh, fix your thoughts above ! 
 
 God oft in solitude makes known 
 The secret of his love. 
 
 A life retir'd, a serious mind 
 
 To meditation given, 
 Prepares the soul to bless mankind, 
 
 Or soar to God in heaven. 
 
TIMOTHY. 51 
 
 XVI. 
 TIJMOTMW. 
 
 EARLY ACQUAINTANCE WITH THE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 " When I call to remembrance the unfeigned faith that is in 
 thee, which dwelt first in thy grandmother Lois, and thy mo- 
 ther Eunice ; and I am persuaded in thee also.'' — 2 Tim. 1 : 5. 
 
 " And that from a child thou hast known the Holy Scrip- 
 cures." — 3 : 15. 
 
 Happy the child whose opening mind 
 To wisdom's charge is given ; 
 
 Whose earliest thoughts by teachings kind, 
 Are gently led to heaven ! 
 
 How rich the blessing that descends 
 
 From faithful parents, pious friends! 
 
 The faith that aged Lois knew, 
 
 That heavenly Eunice felt, 
 On their young son its lustre threw, 
 
 And in his bosom dwelt. 
 To him an early shield was given, 
 Won by parental prayer from heaven. 
 
 The penman on his sacred page 
 
 Portrays a picture rare ; 
 A student of a tender age 
 
 With grave and serious air. 
 
52 CHILDREN OF THE BIBLE. 
 
 The holy parchment in his hand, 
 He reads, and seeks to understand. 
 
 'Twas by the Scriptures' heavenly aid 
 
 So early he was seal'd ] 
 In faith's whole armor well-array'd, 
 
 And furnish' d for the field. 
 A messenger of God's great name, 
 The faithful student soon became. 
 
 The holy Paul receiv'd the youth, 
 
 And lov'd him as a friend ; 
 He travell'd much, proclaim'd the truth. 
 
 Unwearied to the end ; 
 And many a glorious harvest gain'd 
 Of souls from sin and death unchain'd. 
 
 What made young Timothy so wise 1 
 
 Know ye the precious root 
 That spread its branches to the skies, 
 
 And bore such golden fruit 1 
 It was the page of heavenly truth 
 He lov'd to read so well in youth. 
 
 Through mighty faith this heavenly scroll 
 
 Unseals the sinner's eyes ; 
 Unfolding glories round him roll, 
 
 Immortal prospects rise ; 
 Time fades away, the earth retires, 
 To heaven his ardent soul aspires. 
 
 THE END. 
 
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