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14. The tree stood again in loveliness; she was dressed in more than her former beauty; she was very fair; joy smiled around her on every side. The birds flew back to her bosom. They sang on every branch a hymn to the angel of the leaves.

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A-BIDE', remain with thee.

HEMANS.

2 COME'-LY (kum'-ly), suitable; beautiful. 5 UN-SUL'-LIED, not sullied; not sainted. ZEPH'-YR (zef'-er), the west wind; any 6 PRO-FAN'ED, polluted; defiled. 7 CROWN'D, adorned with leaves.

soft, mild breeze.

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That fell ever fast and faster,

Then faltered to silence again."

J. RUSSELL LOWELL. Ballad of the Singing Leaves.

4. There are no objects in nature more familiar to us than the leaves of trees; there are none upon which most persons look with greater interest and delight, and none around which cluster a greater variety of pleasing associations.3 In the different stages of their growth and decay they are often

referred to as emblems of the life of man; their freshness in spring aptly denoting the season of youth and hope, and their autumnal hues admonishing of the approaching winter of old age, when, life's pleasures and enjoyments being over, man is often forced to say,

"I have lived long enough; my way of life

Is fall'n into the sere5 and yellow leaf."

5. The writings of all ages abound in poetical imagery drawn from the vegetable world; and where vegetation is the most abundant, it has exerted the greatest influence upon the literature of the people.

"In Eastern lands they talk in flowers,

And they tell in a garden their loves and cares;
Each blossom that blooms in their garden bowers,

On its leaves a mystic language bears."-PERCIVAL.

6. The "flowers of spring," the "green fields," the "ripened fruit," the "decaying herbage," whether they teem with cheering or with saddening associations, are things that memory ever loves to dwell upon. How natural was it that the poet, in describing Falstaff's dying moments, should paint even the hoary profligate, in his spirit wanderings, as "babbling of green fields." And how touchingly does Cardinal Wolsey, from the similitude1o of a plant, portray the vicissi tudes11 of human life:

7.

"This is the state of man: To-day he puts forth
The tender leaves of hope, to-morrow blossoms,
And bears his blushing honors thick upon him;
The third day comes a frost, a killing frost;
And when he thinks, good, easy man, full surely
His greatness is a ripening-nips his root,

And then he falls, as I do."

8. The sacred writers draw some of their most beautiful

What more appropriate life can be given than "We are like grass which

imagery from the same sources. pictures of the brevity12 of human these: "We all do fade as a leaf." groweth up; in the morning it flourisheth; in the evening it is cut down, and withereth." The righteous are declared to be "like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season," and "whose leaf also shall not

wither;" while the ungodly are compared to "an oak whose leaf fadeth, and a garden that hath no water."

9. Solomon, speaking in the person of the coming Savior, says, "I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys.” The Savior himself spoke of the righteous as the wheat, and of the wicked as the tares; and he likened11 the kingdom of heaven to a grain of mustard-seed, which, from the smallest beginning, "becometh a tree, so that the birds of the air come and lodge in the branches thereof." He also taught of the coming of his kingdom from the parable of the fig-tree; and we are told that in the New Jerusalem was the "tree of life, whose leaves were for the healing of the nations."

10. Flowers speak a varied language, and reach the heart not only in its seasons of joy, but in its hours of sadness also. Nothing can more forcibly remind us of joys forever fled than the pale, perishing flowers of autumn:

"Pale flowers! pale perishing flowers!

Ye're types of precious things;

Types of these bitter moments,
That flit, like life's enjoyments,
On rapid, rapid wings:

Last hours with parting dear ones

(That Time the fastest spends), Last tears in silence shed,

Last words half uttered,

Last looks of dying friends."

C. B. SOUTHEY.

11. We can hardly conceive of any more natural associa tion of ideas than that which makes a rosebud the emblem of infant loveliness; a full-blown rose the type13 of blooming womanhood; and which likens11 extreme old age to the “last leaf” of autumn, which has survived all its kindred, and now, with the approaching blasts of winter, trembles to its fall. As a fitting illustration of the latter of these emblems, we introduce the following gem from a favorite American poet.

"THEIR COUNSEL," their own secrets. As'-PEN, a species of poplar.

3 As So-CI-A-TIONS, connected ideas; or, such a connection of ideas that one naturally suggests or calls up others; as when the leaves of spring remind us of the sea-10 son of youth, of youthful hopes, etc.

4 EM-BLEMS, pictures or representations. 5 SERE, dry; withered.

one thing represents another, etc.; as thelast leaf" may represent old age.

7 LIT-ER-A-TURE, writings; books, etc.
8 Mys'-TIC, hidden; secret.

9 PROF'-LI-GATE, a man abandoned to vice.
SI-MIL'-I-TUDE, likeness; resemblance.
11 VI-CIS'-SI-TUDES, changes.
12 BREV'-I-TY, shortness.

13 TYPE, that which represents something
[else.

6 IM'-AGE-RY, lively descriptions, in which 14 LIK'-ENS, compares.

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