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FROM CHANGE TO THE UNCHANGING

"Slow move the feet amid life's lengthening shadows."

(An old country home.)

M. Farmingham. Uplands of God, 145

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(What a hopeful man might wish said at his grave.) LOOKING UNTO GOD

"I look to thee in every need."

A GERMAN TRUST SONG

Poems, 351

S. Longfellow.

Rev. H. & T. Book, 624
Lampertus.

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Sursum Corda, 93

"Just as God leads me I would go."

TRUST AND SUBMISSION

Andrews Norton.

WHEN?

"My God, I thank thee."

Rev. H. & T. Book, 724
Susan Coolidge.

"If I were told that I must die to-morrow."
Schaff & Gilman, 19. Sunshine in the Soul, II., 140

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"All things that are on earth shall wholly pass away."

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Bryant.

Poems, 149
Tennyson.

Quiet Hours, II., 193

GOD'S PRESENCE THE SOURCE OF ALL JOY
"O Friend of souls, 'tis well with me.'

FLIGHT OF THE SPIRIT

Dessler.

Quiet Hours, II., 150

Mrs. Hemans.

"Whither, oh, whither wilt thou wing thy way?"

Quiet Hours, II., 188

I MOVE INTO THE LIGHT

Anonymous.

Palace of the King, 101

"Out of the shadows that shroud the soul."

LENT, NOT LOST

.

Anonymous.

"All is not lost that's passed beyond our keeping."

NO MORE

"No more, on earth no more."

Palace of the King, 123

Mrs. Gaskell.

Memory and Hope, 105

"WHILE THEE I SEEK, PROTECTING POWER." H. M. Williams.

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GOD KNOWETH BEST.

"He took them from me, one by one."

(Trustful through many afflictions.) "AT NOONTIDE CAME A VOICE." . (A woman in prime of life.)

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Poems, 147

C. T. Brooks.

Poems, 152

F. H. Marr.

Chamber of Peace, 114

Dora Greenwell. Sursum Corda, 273

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THE SOUL'S PARTING

Dora Greenwell.

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Sursum Corda, 275

J. W. Chadwick.

"She sat within life's Banquet Hall at noon.

DEATH AND SPRING

“My noble friend is dead.” MEMORIAE POSITUM. (In part.)

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Why make we moan?"

"Though he lived and died among us.'

A KNIGHT-ERRANT (Truth's Warrior.) FOLLEN. (In part.)

A LAMENT

66

Poems, 131
Lowell.

Poems, 381

A. A. Procter.

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Oh, while life's solemn mystery glooms."

"The circle is broken, one seat is forsaken."

JOSEPH STURGE. (In part.)

Poems, 18
Whittier.

Poems, 96
Whittier.

Poems, 135

Whittier.

"Thanks for the good man's beautiful example."

THE BLESSED LIFE

"O blessed life! the heart at rest."

IN MEMORIAM

Poems, 238 W. T. Mason.

Rev. H. & T. Book, 233
Gerald Massey.

66 Why should we weep when 'tis so well with him?"
A Tale of Eternity, etc., 135

DEATH OF A CHRISTIAN

Mrs. Hemans. Rev. H. & T. Book, 715 Milman. Book of Praise, 322 John Dryden.

"Calm on the bosom of thy God."
"BROTHER, THOU ART GONE BEFORE US."
A HAPPY DEATH

"As precious gums are not for lasting fire."
Quiet Hours, II., 163. Book of Praise, 169

SAFE

Alice Cary.

"Ah, she was not an angel to adore."

"HOW BLEST THE RIGHTEOUS WHEN HE DIES."

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"GO TO THE GRAVE IN ALL THY GLORIOUS PRIME."

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DECORATION

T. W. Higginson.

(For a woman heroic in suffering.) RESTING IN HOPE

"Mid the flower-wreathed tombs I stand."
Scribner's Monthly, June, 1874. Putnam, 483

H. Bonar.

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"Rest for the toiling hand."

BEAR OUT THE DEAD

Rev. H. & T. Book, 702
Haven.

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Sursum Corda, 279

"AH, WELL! SHE HAD HER WILL."

(For one who suffered secretly, and was misunderstood.) ON HIS BLINDNESS

(For one blind.)

Milton.

"THOU KNOWest, Lord, thE WEARINESS AND SORROW."

FROM "MIRIAM."

Jane Borthwick. Sursum Corda, 30

Whittier.

"Wherever through the ages rise the altars of self-sacrifice."

"GOING HOME."

Poems, 342 Anonymous.

Uplands of God, 53

"Heimgang!' So the German people."

(For a German family.)
THE SWEET SURPRISE. (In part.)

Anonymous.

"Down to the borders of the silent land."

(For one who lingered.)

Uplands of God, 69

THE E'EN BRINGS A' HAME.

Anonymous.

"Upon the hills the wind is sharp and cold."

Shadow of the Rock, 68

Anonymous.

GONE HOME

66

Gone home! She lingers here no longer."

The Changed Cross, 211

CALLED ASIDE

Anonymous.

"Called aside, - from the glad working of thy busy life."

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Palace of the King, 94.

"If I could only lay me down to rest."

Anonymous.

Palace of the King, 130

F. P. Cobbe.

"God draws a cloud over each gleaming morn."

Unity Hymns and Chorals, 148

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"For wast not thou, too, going forth alone."

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"Where ceaseless Spring her garland twines."

(One dying away from home.)

Whittier.

Poems, 392

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