Up Carmel’s wood-clad height an aged prophet
slowly creeps,
And sadly drags his weary limbs o’er rocks and
mossgrown steeps.
He bows himself upon the earth, “his face between
his knees,”
And thus he to his servant speaks, beneath the lofty
trees.
“Go further up this craggy steep, and seaward
look, I pray—”
His faithful servant goes, and strains his vision
towards that way,
But says “there’s nothing.”—“Go
sev’n times,” the prophet says “for
me,—”
And on the seventh time, behold! arising from the
sea,
A little cloud, as ’twere, no bigger than a
human hand,—
But swiftly, darkly spreading o’er the parched,
thirsty land,
It widely displays its threatening armies thro’
the sky,
Its lurid lightnings flash in forked streaks upon
the eye.
Like countless fiery serpents thro’ the troubled
air,
Whilst loud the roaring thunder bursts amid the flaming
glare;
And rage the winds, uprooting mountain oaks before
the view,—
Refreshing show’rs descend, and quick the fainting
earth renew.
Scarcely could Israel’s monarch in his chariot
reach his court,
Ere nature’s pent up elements broke forth in
airy sport,
And to earth (which for three long years had known
nor rain nor dew,)
The long desired drops, their welcome downward course
pursue.
Once more Samaria’s people gladly tune their
harps and sing
The praises of Jehovah, God, the everlasting King:—
Once more, the voice of gladness sounds where naught
but anguish dwelt;
There, once again, the gush of rapture, absent long,
is felt!
MRS. ALICE COALE SIMPERS.
Mrs. Alice Coale Simpers was born in the old brick mansion known as “Traveler’s Repose,” a short distance south of Harrisville, in the Sixth district of Cecil county, on the first day of December, 1843.
The Coale family of which Mrs. Simpers is a member, trace their descent from Sir Philip Blodgett, a distinguished Englishman, who settled in Baltimore shortly after its foundation, and are related to the Matthews, Worthingtons, Jewetts, and other leading families of Harford county. On her mother’s side she is related to the Jacksons, Puseys, and other well-known Friends of Chester county, Pennsylvania, and Wilmington, Delaware.
Mrs. Simpers’ early education was received at Waring’s Friends’ School, near the village of Colora, which was kept up by a few families of Friends in the neighborhood. She also attended the State Normal School in Baltimore, and qualified herself for teaching in the public schools of the State, in which she taught for about ten years in Cecil county, and also in Dorchester county. She also taught school in the State of Illinois with great acceptability and success.