Leaves of Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 319 pages of information about Leaves of Life.

Leaves of Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 319 pages of information about Leaves of Life.

    —­Thomas Addison.

    For with thee is the fountain of life: 
    In thy light shall we see light.

    —­Psalm 36. 9.

My Father, I would pray that my sense of gloom may not be more than thy grace.  May the glorious light of thy love break through my disheartened soul, and reveal the sincerity of thy promises, that I may be happy in thy care.  Amen.

OCTOBER THIRD

Robert Barclay died 1690.

George Bancroft born 1800.

William Morris died 1896.

    Come hither, lads, and harken,
      For a tale there is to tell
    Of the wonderful days a-coming,
      When all shall be better than well.

    Come, then, let us cast off fooling,
      And put by ease and rest,
    For the cause alone is worthy
      Till the good days bring the best.

    —­William Morris.

    Man’s life is but a working day
      Whose tasks are set aright;
    A time to work, a time to pray,
      And then a quiet night. 
    And then, please God, a quiet night
    Where palms are green and robes are white;
    A long-drawn breath, a balm for sorrow,
    And all things lovely on the morrow.

    —­Christina G. Rossetti.

    And the ransomed of Jehovah shall return, and come with singing unto
    Zion; and everlasting joy shall be upon their heads.

    —­Isaiah 61. 11.

Heavenly Father, help me to see that before the night thou hadst planned the morning, and that thou hast never sent the night without the hope of the morning.  Before I rest in the night may I be ready for the morning.  Amen.

OCTOBER FOURTH

Francis of Assisi died 1226.

Edmund Malone born 1741.

Francois Guizot born 1787.

Jean Francois Millet born 1814.

Rutherford B. Hayes, Ohio, nineteenth President
United States, born 1822.

M.E.  Braddon born 1837.

We ought to rise day by day with a certain zest, a clear intention, a design to make the most of every hour; not to let the busy hours shoulder each other or tread on each other’s heels, but to force every action to give up its strength and sweetness.  There is work to be done, and there are empty hours to be filled as well....  But, most of all, there must be something to quicken, enliven, practice the soul.

    —­Arthur C. Benson.

    Men’s souls ought to be left to see clearly; not jaundiced, blinded,
    twisted all awry, by revenge, moral abhorrence, and the like.

    —­Thomas Carlyle.

    But there is a spirit in man,
    And the breath of the Almighty giveth them understanding.

    —­Job 32. 8.

Spirit of life, I pray that thou wilt continually live within me.  May my days be spent neither in waste nor idleness, but planned to use, with the best that is given me.  Amen.

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Project Gutenberg
Leaves of Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.