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deepest mysteries of our religion) that very same breath of Heaven, which cements the lakes into a crystal pavement, cleaves the oaks, as it were, with invisible wedges; "breaks in pieces the "northern iron and the steel," even while it builds a bridge of icy rock over the seas.

The air is all serenity. Refined by the nitrous particles, it affords the most distinct views and extensive prospects. The seeds of infection are killed, and the pestilence destroyed, even in em. bryo. So the cold of affliction tends to mortify our corruptions and subdue our vicious habits.The crowding atmosphere constringes our bodies and braces our nerves. The spirits are buoyant, and sally briskly on the execution of their office. In the summer months such an unclouded sky, and so bright a sun, would have melted us with heat, and softened us into supineness: we should have been ready to throw our limbs under the spreading beech, and to lie at ease by the murBut now none loiters in his muring brook. path, none is seen with folded arms; all is in motion, all is activity. Choice, prompted by the weather, supplies the spur of necessity. Thus the rugged school of misfortune often trains up the mind to a vigorous exertion of its faculties: the bleak climate of adversity often inspirits us with a manly resolution, when a soft and downy affluence, perhaps, would have relaxed all the generous springs of the soul, and have left it enervated with pleasure, or dissolved in indolence.

"Cold cometh out of the north." The winds, having swept those deserts of snow, arm themselves with millions of frozen particles, and make

Job. xxxviii, 30. The waters are hid, locked up from the cattle's lips, and secured from the fisher's net, as wells were wont to be closed with a ponderous and impenetrable And not only lakes and rivers, but the surface of the great deep, with its restless and uncontrollable surges, is taken captive T by the frost, and bound in shining fetters.

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a fierce descent upon our isle. Under black and scowling clouds, they drive, dreadfully whizzing, through the darkened air. They growl around our houses, assault our doors, and, eager for en trance, fasten on our windows. Walls can scarce restrain them, bars are unable to exclude them; through every cranny they force their way. Ice is on their wings, they scatter agues through the land, and winter, all winter, rages as they go. Their breath is as a searing-iron to the little verdure left in the plains; vastly more pernicious to the tender plants than the sharpest knife; they kill their branches, and wound the very root. Let not the corn venture to peep too freely from the entrenchment of the furrow; let not the fruitbearing blossoms dare to come abroad from their lodgment in the bark, lest these murderous blasts intercept and seize the unwary strangers, and de stroy the hopes of the advancing year.

O, 'tis severely cold! Who is so hardy as not to shrink at this excessively pinching weather? See! every face is pale: even the blooming cheeks contract a gelid hue, and the teeth hardly forbear chattering.-Ye that sit easy and joyous, amidst your commodious apartments, solacing yourselves in the diffusive warmth of your fire, be mindful of your brethren, in the cheerless tenement of poverty. Their shattered panes are open to the piercing winds; a tattered garment scarcely covers 4 their shivering flesh; while a few faint and dying embers, on the squalid hearth, rather mock their wishes, than warm their limbs.-While the generous juices of Oporto sparkle in your glasses; or

This, I suppose, is the meaning of that figurative expression, used by the prophet Habakkuk; who, speak ing of the Chaldeans invading Judea, says-Their faces, et the incursions they make, shall sup up, shall swallow gree dily, shall devour utterly, the inhabitants of the country and their valuable effects; as the keen, corroding blasts of the east wind, destroy every green thing in the field. Hab. i. 9.

the streams, beautifully tinged and deliciously flavoured with the Chinese leaf, smoke in the elegant porcelain, O remember, that many of your fellow-creatures, amidst all the rigour of these inclement skies, are emaciated with sickness, benumbed with age, and pining with hunger. Let "their loins bless you," for comfortable clothing. Restore them with medicine, regale them with food, and baffle the raging year. So may you never know any of their distresses, but only by the hearing of the ear, the seeing of the eye, or the feeling of a tender commiseration !-Methinks the bitter blustering winds plead for the poor indigents. May they breathe pity into your breasts, while they blow hardships into their huts!-Observe those blue flames and ruddy coals in your chimney; quickened by the cold, they look more lively and glow more strongly. Silent, but seasonable admonition to the gay circle, that chat and smile around them! Thus may your hearts, at such a juncture of need, kindle into a peculiar benevolence! Detain not your superfluous piles of wood; let them hasten to the relief of the starving family: bid them expire in many a willing blaze, to mitigate the severity of the season, and cheer the bleak abodes of want. So shall they ascend, mingled with thanksgivings to God, and ardent prayers for your welfare-ascend, more grateful to .Heaven than columns of the most costly incense.

Now the winds cease: having brought their load, they are dismissed from service. They have wafted an immense cargo of clouds, which empty themselves in snow. At first a few scattered shreds come wandering down the saddened sky. This slight skirmish is succeeded by a general onset. The flakes, large, and numerous, and thick wavering, descend: they dim the air, and hasten the approach of night. Through all the night is softest silence, and with a continual flow this fleecy shower falls. In the morning, when we

awake, what a surprising change appears!-Is this the same world? Here is no diversity of colour: I can hardly distinguish the trees from the hills on which they grow. Which are the meadows, and which the plains? Where are the green pastures, and where the fallow lands? All things lie blended in bright confusion; so bright, that it heightens the splendor of day, and even dazzles the organs of sight. The lawn is not so fair as this snowy mantle, which invests the fields; and even the lily, was the lily to appear, would look tarnished in its presence. I can think of but one thing which excels or equals the glittering robe of winter. Is any person desirous to know my meaning? he may find it explained in that admirable hymn composed by the Royal Penitent. Is any desirous to possess this matchless ornament? he will find it offered to his acceptance in every page of the gospel.

See! (for the eye cannot satisfy itself without viewing again and again the curious, the delicate scene)-see! how the hedges are habited, like spotless vestals! The houses are roofed with uniformity and lustre; the meadows are covered with a carpet of the finest erminet; the groves bow beneath the lovely burden; and all, all below, is one wide, immense, shining waste of white.-By deep snows and heavy rains God sealeth up the hand of every man and for this purpose, adds our sacred Philosopher, that all men may know his work. He confines them within their doors, and puts a stop to their secular business, that they may consider

Can any thing be whiter than snow? David; if God be pleased to wash me from my blood of Christ, I shall be even whiter than snow. See page 292.

Yes, saith sins in the Psal. li. 7.

This animal is milk-white. As for those black spots which we generally see in linings of ermine, they are added by the farrier, in order to diversify the appearance, or heighten the beauty, of the native colour.

# Job xxxvii. 7.

the things which belong to their spiritual welfare; that, having a vacation from their ordinary employ, they may observe the works of his power, and be come acquainted with the mysteries of his grace. And worthy, worthy of all observation, are the works of the great Creator: they are prodigiously various, and perfectly amazing. How pliant and ductile is nature under his forming hand! At his command the self-same substance assumes the most different shapes, and is transformed into an endless multiplicity of figures. If He ordains, the water is moulded into hail, and discharged upon the earth like a volley of shot; or it is consolidated into ice, and defends the rivers, " as it "were with a breastplate." At the bare intimation of his will the very same element is scattered in hoar frost, like a sprinkling of the most attenuated ashes! or is spread over the surface of the ground in these couches of swelling and flaky down.

The snow, however it may carry the appearance of cold, affords a warm garment for the corn, screens it from nipping frosts, and cherisheth its infant growth. It will abide for awhile to exert a protecting care, and exercise a fostering influ ence then, touched by the sun, or thawed by a softening gale, the furry vesture melts into genial moisture, sinks deep into the soil, and saturates its pores with the dissolving nitre; replenishing the glebe with those principles of vegetative life, which will open into the bloom of spring, and ripen into the fruits of autumn.-Beautiful emblem this, and comfortable representation of the divine word, both in the successful and advantageous issue of its operation! As the rain cometh down, and the snowa from Heaven, and returneth not thither, but watereth the earth, and maketh it bring forth and bud, that it may give seed to the sower, and bread to the eater: so shall my word be, that geeth forth out of my mouth; it $

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