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diff --git a/39129.txt b/39129.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c7ca160 --- /dev/null +++ b/39129.txt @@ -0,0 +1,12820 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Optimist's Good Morning, by Florence +Hobart Perin + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: The Optimist's Good Morning + + +Author: Florence Hobart Perin + + + +Release Date: March 13, 2012 [eBook #39129] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OPTIMIST'S GOOD MORNING*** + + +E-text prepared by Larry B. Harrison, Julia Neufeld, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images +generously made available by the Google Books Library Project +(http://books.google.com) + + + +Note: Images of the original pages are available through + Internet Archive. See + http://books.google.com/books?id=VsgVAAAAYAAJ&oe=UTF-8 + + + + + +THE OPTIMIST'S GOOD MORNING + +Compiled by + +FLORENCE HOBART PERIN + + + + + + + +Boston +Little, Brown, and Company +1911 + +Copyright, 1907, +By Little, Brown, and Company. + +All rights reserved + +Printers +S. J. Parkhill & Co., Boston, U. S. A. + + + + + TO + My Mother and father + + + + +Acknowledgments + + +The compiler desires to make her grateful acknowledgments to the +publishers and authors who have so generously given their permission to +use selections from their copyrighted publications. She is especially +indebted to Dodd, Mead & Co., Houghton, Mifflin & Co., The Century Co., +The Outlook Co., Small, Maynard & Co., McClure, Phillips & Co., for +extracts from "The Simple Life" by Charles Wagner and from "The Angelus" +by Edwin Markham; G. P. Putnam's Sons for selections from "Christus +Victor" by Henry Nehemiah Dodge; to Doubleday, Page & Co. for extracts +from "The Story of My Life" by Helen Keller, copyright 1902, 1903; also +for selections from "Afterwhiles," copyright 1887, "Riley Farm Rhymes," +copyright 1885, "Riley Songs o' Cheer," copyright 1883, "Pipes o' Pan," +copyright 1888, used by special permission of the publishers, The +Bobbs-Merrill Co., to Charles Scribner's Sons for selections from +"Fisherman's Luck," "The Lost Word," "Little Rivers," "The Story of the +Psalms," "The Toiling of Felix and Other Poems," by Henry Van Dyke, and +a selection from "El Dorado" by Robert Louis Stevenson. + + + + +Preface + + +Once family devotions were general, now they are rare. There are reasons +for the change. One reason is that the simplicity of the old family life +is gone. It is not easy to get all the members of the family together at +any one time in the day. A part of this is due to less leisure now than +formerly. Men must catch trains in the morning. In the evening they are +distracted by manifold social engagements. + +Yet the need of spiritual adjustment is ever the same. Rapid transit, +the telephone, the telegraph, do not take the place of God. Indeed the +more rapid pace involved in these modern pace-makers, renders the more +necessary some pause in the day for prayer, some upward look, when for a +moment the soul may find an open way between itself and God. But how and +when? Why not the breakfast table? Surely one or two minutes may be +spared. Thirty seconds of silence, then the reading of a noble sentiment +from some one who has been thinking for us,--another pause,--and a few +words of prayer, framed by some one with more leisure than we have, but +who puts us in the mood of prayer and so starts us right upon the duties +of the day,--this will bring the needed readjustment. + +Such is the plan and purpose of this little book. It is made for busy +men and women, who _need_ to begin the day with God. The quotations for +each day are brief, but they are gleaned from the great Masters of +thought. The prayers are from devout men of all the denominations. + +As the title will have suggested, both quotations and prayers are +generally in the spirit of a truly optimistic faith. However life may +look in the middle of the night, it is a good thing to start out to do +the work of the day with hope and courage. I shall be glad if I can feel +that this little book has helped some busy people to begin the day in +this spirit. I shall be particularly glad if I can feel that it has +helped a little to keep the candles lighted on the family altar. + + FLORENCE HOBART PERIN. + + + + +List of Authors of Selections + + + Abbott, Lyman, 234, 296. + + Albee, John, 348. + + Alden, Marion, 263. + + Ambrosius, Johanna, 254. + + Ames, Charles G., 51, 68. + + Amiel, Henri-Frederic, 305, 340, 350. + + Anonymous, 16, 33, 52, 91, 93, 129, 181, 198, 213, 268, 354. + + Arnold, Edwin, 39. + + Arnold, George, 249. + + Aughey, 315. + + Aurelius, Marcus, 216. + + + Babcock, Maltbie Davenport, 279. + + Baldwin, Mary, 72. + + Banks, G. L., 135. + + Bashford, H. H., 9. + + Beecher, Henry Ward, 120, 141, 144, 192, 317, 333. + + Bisbee, Frederick A., 248. + + Bolton, Sarah Knowles, 211. + + Boyd, A. H. K., 78. + + Bridges, Madeline S., 304. + + Brooke, Stopford A., 27, 115, 289. + + Brooks, Phillips, 17, 24, 36, 75, 137, 212, 235, 240, 264, 271, + 288, 362. + + Brown, Alice, 218. + + Brown, Anna Robertson, 51. + + Browning, Elizabeth Barrett, 29, 104, 148, 232, 331. + + Browning, Robert, 28, 64, 69, 79, 90, 109, 130, 179, 201, 221, 243. + + Bryant, William Cullen, 249, 338. + + Bulkeley, Benjamin R., 347. + + Burton, Richard, 59. + + + Carlisle, J. H., 220. + + Carlyle, Thomas, 37, 61, 85, 107, 164, 183, 209, 219, 269, 331. + + Carman, Bliss, 156. + + Carpenter, Edward, 147. + + Carruth, William H., 252. + + Cary, Alice, 123, 138, 366. + + Chadwick, John White, 134. + + Child, Lydia Maria, 364. + + Clarke, James Freeman, 267. + + Cleaves, Charles P., 214. + + Coates, Florence E., 189. + + Coleridge, Hartley, 245. + + Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 217. + + Collyer, Robert, 77, 287. + + Confucius, 191. + + Coolidge, Susan, 150, 157, 207, 339. + + Cowper, William, 335. + + Cox, Francis Augustus, 276. + + Craig, Dinah Mulock, 143. + + Crashaw, Richard, 151. + + + Danforth, Abbie E., 357. + + Davis, Ozora Stearns, 82. + + DeVere, Aubrey, 71. + + Dix, William F., 261. + + Dodge, Henry Nehemiah, 49, 300, 371, 372. + + Donaldson, Alfred L., 244. + + Dowd, Emma C., 169. + + Drummond, Henry, 91, 203, 323. + + Dunbar, Paul Laurence, 88, 186, 256. + + + Earle, Mabel, 278. + + Eliot, George, 48, 241. + + Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 19, 42, 57, 87, 108, 124, 127, 151, 158, 185, + 210, 228, 271, 281, 344. + + Epictetus, 56, 284. + + + Faunce, W. H. P., 153. + + Fiske, John, 11. + + Ford, Mary Hanaford, 8. + + Foss, Sam Walter, 99, 341. + + Fox, George, 104. + + Franklin, Benjamin, 158. + + + Gannett, William C., 116, 132, 239, 302. + + Garland, Hamlin A., 196. + + Gilder, Richard Watson, 168, 367. + + Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, 4, 146. + + Goethe, 360. + + Gordon, Anna A., 247. + + Gotthold, 23. + + Gray, John, 378. + + Green, J. R., 199. + + Grover, Edwin Osgood, 155. + + + Hale, Edward Everett, 65, 188, 219, 280, 281. + + Harraden, Beatrice, 80. + + Hart, Estelle M., 337. + + Havergal, Frances Ridley, 282. + + Hawkes, Clarence, 97. + + Hay, John, 67. + + Hoar, George F., 83. + + Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 29, 55, 172, 188, 253, 286, 297, 311, 352. + + Homer, 341. + + Hopkins, Ellice, 265. + + Hovey, Richard, 292. + + Hughes, Thomas, 194. + + Humboldt, Alexander von, 306. + + Hunt, Leigh, 143. + + Huntington, Bishop, 70. + + Huxley, Thomas Henry, 202. + + Hyde, William DeWitt, 118. + + + Ibsen, Henrik, 312. + + Ingelow, Jean, 221, 327. + + + Jackson, J. S., 7. + + James, Henry, Sr., 165. + + Johnson, Samuel, 66. + + Jones, T. Edgar, 224. + + + Karr, Alphonse, 264. + + Keats, John, 295. + + Keller, Helen, 93, 128, 145. + + King, T. Starr, 275. + + Kingsley, Charles, 85. + + Kiser, S. E., 318. + + Klingle, George, 106. + + + Larcom, Lucy, 32, 161. + + Leonard, Priscilla, 60, 299, 312, 329, 336. + + Livermore, Mary A., 119. + + Longfellow, Henry W., 30, 52, 162, 308. + + Lowell, James Russell, 54, 92, 174, 242, 291. + + Luther, Martin, 43. + + + Mabie, Hamilton W., 173. + + MacDonald, George, 159, 177, 179, 200, 272, 326, 374. + + Maeterlinck, 170, 193. + + Marius, 35. + + Markham, Edwin, 14, 257. + + Markwell, Mary, 126. + + Martin, Theodore, 96. + + Mason, Caroline Atwater, 152. + + Massey, Gerald, 66. + + Meredith, Owen, 89. + + Merriam, George S., 112. + + Miller, James Russell, 293. + + Milton, John, 62, 125, 136, 262, 307. + + Montaigne, 69. + + Moodie, William, 44, 178, 195, 226, 237. + + Moore, Henry Hoyt, 238. + + Moore, Thomas, 229, 309. + + Moxom, Philip S., 149. + + Murray, Ada Foster, 246. + + + O'Reilly, John Boyle, 314. + + + Parker, Theodore, 34. + + Partridge, William Ordway, 18. + + Payne, J. Howard, 361. + + Peabody, Francis G., 332, 334. + + Perin, George L., 3, 12, 153, 163, 176, 215, 290, 322, 368, 379. + + Perry, Carlotta, 231. + + Perry, Nora, 101. + + Plutarch, 298. + + Procter, Adelaide A., 10. + + Procter, Bryan Waller, 166. + + Pullman, James M., 21, 56, 225. + + + Rankin, Isaac Ogden, 25. + + Ravenscroft, James, 255. + + Realf, Richard, 223. + + Reimer, Edward F., 227. + + Rexford, Eben E., 94. + + Richter, 285. + + Riley, James Whitcomb, 182, 230, 266, 283, 310. + + Robertson, Frederick W., 250. + + Rollins, Alice Wellington, 26. + + Roosevelt, Theodore, 65, 74, 197. + + Rosetti, Christina, 171. + + Ruskin, John, 23, 58, 83, 139, 190, 206. + + Russell, Bessie L., 259. + + + Sangster, Margaret, 117, 205. + + Savage, Minot J., 47. + + Schiller, 363. + + Scollard, Clinton, 84. + + Scott, Walter, 235. + + Shafer, Sara Andrew, 184, 260. + + Shakespeare, 38, 107, 113, 258, 345, 351. + + Shelley, 100, 111. + + Shipman, George W., 277. + + Sill, Edward Rowland, 98, 274. + + Smiles, Samuel, 236, 320. + + Smyth, Julian K., 73. + + Spofford, Harriet P., 101. + + Spurgeon, 197. + + Stanton, Frank L., 160, 343. + + St. Bernard, 269. + + Stebbins, Horatio, 280. + + Stedman, Edmund Clarence, 95. + + Stevenson, Robert Louis, 180, 353. + + Stoddard, Richard H., 45. + + Story, William Wetmore, 6, 321. + + Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 230. + + Swinburne, Algernon Charles, 53, 167. + + Swing, David, 46. + + Symonds, John Addington, 175, 346. + + + Taylor, Bayard, 240, 321. + + Taylor, Jeremy E., 59. + + Tennyson, Alfred, 232, 326. + + Thaxter, Celia, 95. + + Tholuck, 357. + + Thompson, Maurice, 110. + + Thoreau, Henry David, 50, 335. + + Townsend, Mary Ashley, 81. + + Trowbridge, Robertson, 273. + + + Urmy, Clarence, 268. + + + Van Dyke, Henry, 142, 154, 294, 313, 324, 328, 355, 365, 377. + + Vinci, Leonardo da, 74. + + + Wagner, Charles, 20, 63, 114, 204, 356. + + Waterman, Nixon, 173. + + Whitman, Walt, 22, 40, 102, 270, 349, 358. + + Whitney, Mrs. A. D. T., 31, 86, 122, 127, 147, 167, 298, 301, 303, 348. + + Whittier, John Greenleaf, 15, 41, 103, 140, 289, 359, 376. + + Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, 5, 13, 87, 121, 222, 231, 325. + + Willard, Frances E., 105. + + Wordsworth, William, 76, 131, 251, 319. + + Wright, Mary Frances, 233. + + + + +List of Authors of Prayers + + + Adams, J. Coleman, 119. + + Albion, James F., 91. + + Alcott, A. N., 299. + + Allen, James F., 265. + + Amee, E. McP., 264. + + Ames, Charles Gordon, 6. + + Anderson, Thomas D., 132. + + Annas, J. W., 253. + + Atwood, Isaac M., 34. + + Atwood, John Murray, 36. + + Ayers, Samuel Gilbert, 121. + + + Babcock, William G., 10. + + Backus, Wilson M., 139. + + Badger, George H., 271. + + Barker, J. H., 107. + + Barney, Edward M., 74. + + Bartlett, A. Eugene, 11. + + Batchelor, George, 108. + + Bates, Lewis P., 226. + + Beane, Samuel C., 236. + + Benton, Herbert E., 272. + + Berle, Adolph A., 319. + + Betts, Frederick W., 70, 181, 317. + + Billings, Charles T., 316. + + Bisbee, Frederick A., 27. + + Bissell, Flint M., 79. + + Blake, Edwin Alonzo, 228. + + Blanchard, Henry, 24. + + Bliss, Charles B., 206. + + Brandow, Melvin, 287. + + Brett, Francis W., 182. + + Brigham, L. Ward, 20. + + Brodie, James Fairbairn, 320. + + Bronson, Dillon, 9. + + Brown, Howard N., 354. + + Brown, William Channing, 106. + + Buckshorn, Louis H., 191. + + Burch, Ernest W., 312. + + Burleigh, W. H., 118. + + Burr, Everett D., 136. + + Bush, R. Perry, 82. + + Bushnell, Samuel C., 37. + + Bygrave, Hilary, 212. + + + Canfield, Harry L., 39. + + Carter, John Wesley, 48. + + Cary, Phoebe, 274. + + Chapin, Eben H., 323. + + Chapman, Edward M., 30. + + Charlton, J. E., 341. + + Chase, J. Frank, 237. + + Cheney, George H., 192. + + Church, Augustus B., 99. + + Clark, C. C., 144. + + Clark, DeWitt S., 257. + + Clark, Francis E., 38. + + Clark, Hobart, 218. + + Clarke, William N., 258. + + Clayton, Francis Treadway, 302. + + Coddington, Isaac P., 190. + + Coleman, Albert J., 353. + + Collier, Frank W., 174. + + Conklin, Abram, 19. + + Conklin, Charles, 361. + + Conner, Ralph E., 211. + + Coons, Leroy W., 68. + + Cooper, Joseph, 84. + + Cooper, J. Francis, 310. + + Corby, James D., 280. + + Couden, Henry N., 26. + + Crandall, Lathan A., 202. + + Crane, Cephas B., 60. + + Crane, Frank, 337. + + Crooker, Florence Kollock, 98. + + Crooker, Joseph H., 23. + + Crooker, Orin Edson, 163. + + Cuckson, John, 123. + + Curnick, E. T., 93. + + Cushman, Henry Irving, 94. + + + Danforth, Abbie E., 105. + + Davis, Charles Edward, 260. + + Davidson, John M., 289. + + Day, Edward, 62. + + Day, John, 78. + + Dean, George B., 267. + + DeNormandie, James, 125. + + Dick, Samuel M., 333. + + Dight, Alexander, 290. + + Dillingham, Fred A., 41. + + Dodge, J. Smith, 340. + + Dodson, George R., 197. + + Dole, Charles F., 157. + + Dole, Walter, 339. + + Downey, Edward C., 365. + + + Earle, A. Gertrude, 104. + + East, Charles R., 324. + + Eddy, William B., 49. + + Eichler, M. M., 195. + + + Faunce, W. H. P., 307. + + Fish, William H., 263. + + Fischer, Theodore A., 17. + + Fisher, C. E., 67. + + Fisk, Richmond, 159. + + Fleischer, Charles, 360. + + Forbes, John P., 142. + + Forbes, Roger S., 161. + + Fortier, George F., 77. + + Foster, Augustine N., 154. + + Fraser, Donald, 284. + + Freeman, L. A., 255. + + Frick, Philip L., 348. + + Frothingham, Paul Revere, 169. + + Full, William, 300. + + Fulton, J. W., 282. + + + Galbraith, John, 220. + + Gannett, William C, 373. + + Gaskin, William E., 251. + + Gerrish, George Mayo, 75. + + Gibbs, William E, 168. + + Gifford, O. P., 209. + + Gooding, Alfred, 245. + + Gould, William H., 146. + + Grant, Elihu, 238. + + Grant, Eugene M., 288. + + Graves, Herbert H., 242. + + Gray, Francis A., 111. + + Greene, L. L., 131. + + Greene, Ransom A., 355. + + Greene, Samuel H., 328. + + Grier, Albert C., 269. + + Grose, Arthur W., 311. + + Gunnison, Almon, 4, 47. + + Guth, William W., 216. + + + Hale, Edward Everett, 55, 92, 120, 304, 345. + + Hall, Frank Oliver, 278. + + Hammatt, Albert, 232. + + Hammond, L. H., 244. + + Hamilton, Franklin, 322. + + Hatch, William H. P., 318. + + Hawkins, J. E., 279. + + Haynes, Myron W., 58. + + Healy, Walter, 100. + + Helms, E. J., 343. + + Henry, Carl F., 248. + + Hiller, Charles C. P., 336. + + Hitchcock, Albert Wellman, 64. + + Hodge, Dwight M., 81. + + Hodges, George, 356. + + Holden, C. W., 29. + + Holden, James Harry, 204. + + Holmes, C. K., 281. + + Holt, Frank M., 71. + + Horne, Ralph Edwin, 103. + + Horner, Thomas J., 329. + + Horton, Edward A., 115. + + Howe, George M., 346. + + Hoyt, Wayland, 54. + + Huntley, George E., 325. + + Hyde, William DeWitt, 351. + + + Illman, Thomas W., 247. + + + Jennings, B. L., 88. + + Johnson, L. P., 335. + + Johonnot, Rodney F., 252. + + Jones, Effie McCollum, 31. + + + Kellerman, Robert S., 194. + + Kent, George W., 147. + + Kidner, Reuben, 43. + + Kimball, John, 42. + + King, Henry M., 57. + + Knickerbocker, Charles A., 5. + + + Lacount, J. Edwin, 350. + + Lee, John Clarence, 175. + + Leonard, Charles H., 170. + + Levy, Maurice A., 155. + + Locke, Calvin S., 277. + + Longbrake, George Runyon, 327. + + Lord, Augustus Mendon, 40. + + Lund, Charles E., 178. + + Lutterman, E. W., 308. + + + MacLennan, A. K., 275. + + Main, William H., 14. + + Martin, T. C., 160. + + Martineau, James, 56, 217, 321, 334. + + Marshall, Perry, 189. + + Marvin, Reginold K., 114. + + Masseck, Frank Lincoln, 112. + + McCollester, Lee S., 221. + + McCollester, S. H., 18. + + McGlaughlin, William H., 332. + + McKenzie, Alexander, 12. + + McKinney, Luther F., 210. + + Mead, I. J., 143. + + Meyer, John F., 349. + + Milburn, U. S., 113. + + Mitchell, Stanford, 179. + + Moore, Henrietta G., 110. + + Morgan, William S., 25. + + Morrison, William H., 117. + + Mudge, James, 223. + + Myers, Cortland, 344. + + + Nash, C. Ellwood, 188, 362, 371, 372, 377. + + Nash, Charles P., 148. + + Nash, Henry S., 21. + + Northrop, Cyrus, 296. + + Norton, Stephen A., 359. + + + Opdale, Nellie Mann, 243. + + Osgood, Edmund Q. S., 101. + + Owen, George W., 28. + + + Parker, Joseph, 59, 214, 219. + + Parker, Theodore, 53, 97, 109, 135, 193, 230, 239, 249. + + Parkhurst, Charles, 63. + + Patterson, A. J., 364. + + Pattison, Harold, 225. + + Payne, Thomas B., 133. + + Payson, James M., 222. + + Peloubet, F. N., 331. + + Pember, Elmer F., 134. + + Penniman, George Wallace, 129. + + Perin, Florence H., 375. + + Perin, George L., 3, 22, 35, 46, 80, 90, 96, 102, 116, 124, 153, + 153, 172, 185, 196, 215, 234, 250, 270, 286, 297, 306, 330, + 342, 352, 366, 368, 376, 378. + + Perkins, Frederick W., 229. + + Perkins, O. Howard, 66. + + Perkins, Warren S., 164. + + Perrin, Willard T., 276. + + Perry, Edward A., 61. + + Petty, Charles E., 85. + + Polk, Robert T., 224. + + Potter, Wilburn D., 83. + + Potter, William F., 150. + + Potterton, Thomas Edward, 165. + + Powers, LeGrand, 73. + + Preble, Edgar W., 72. + + Priest, Frederick C., 208. + + Puffer, Charles H., 357. + + Putnam, Alfred P., 162. + + + Randall, J. O., 198. + + Reardon, John B., 140. + + Rexford, E. L., 16, 128, 233. + + Rice, Charles F., 256. + + Rice, Clarence E., 173. + + Rice, Frank S., 87. + + Richardson, W. G., 314. + + Roblin, Stephen H., 183. + + Rose, Henry R., 303. + + Rowley, Francis H., 13. + + Rugg, Henry W., 126. + + + Safford, Oscar F., 65. + + Sage, Nathaniel S., 32. + + Sallaway, James, 293. + + Sargent, Frank D., 347. + + Scott, Alva Roy, 44, 141. + + Scott, O. W., 186. + + Scrivener, George S., 268. + + Selleck, Willard C., 227. + + Shaw, Annette J., 231. + + Shaw, Avery A., 45. + + Shields, Albert B., 309. + + Shinn, Q. H., 149. + + Snippen, Rush R., 201. + + Simons, Minot O., 138. + + Skene, George, 315. + + Slicer, Thomas R., 166. + + Small, E. E., 203. + + Smiley, Edmund L., 266. + + Smiley, George M., 295. + + Smith, Thomas W., 283. + + Stephan, J. W., 76. + + Straub, Jacob, 177. + + Studley, Elliott F., 261. + + Sweetser, Edwin C., 151. + + + Taylor, Frederick A., 254. + + Taylor, Henry B., 69. + + Tenney, Charles R., 294, 313, 326, 363, 367, 379. + + Thayer, George A., 199. + + Thompson, J. Frank, 51. + + Tillinghast, Alan R., 86. + + Tillinghast, James D., 358. + + Tomlinson, Charles W., 33. + + Tomlinson, Vincent E., 205. + + Towne, Edward C., 291. + + Tupper, Kerr Boyce, 95. + + Tuttle, Walter A., 213. + + + Vail, Charles H., 246. + + Varney, Charles E., 292. + + Vossema, Hendrick, 235. + + + Wallace, O. C. S., 50. + + Ward, Merrill C., 262. + + Ward, W. I., 127. + + Warner, E. M., 187. + + Weatherly, Arthur L., 200. + + Weil, Fred Alban, 338. + + Wendte, Charles W., 156. + + Wentworth, Margaret, 259. + + West, Julius P., 145. + + Weston, Costello, 207. + + Wheeler, C. H., 8. + + Wheeler, F. H., 89. + + Whippen, Frank W., 7. + + Whitaker, George, 15. + + White, Albert C., 167. + + Whitney, Elbert W., 301. + + Williams, Leon O., 298. + + Willson, Andrew, 122. + + Wilson, John M., 171. + + Wilson, Lewis G., 180. + + Wood, W. A., 130. + + Wright, Arthur, 184. + + Wright, James Edward, 176. + + Wright, M. Emory, 273. + + + Yantis, Arnold S., 52. + + Young, George H., 240, 285. + + Young, Joshua, 158, 241, 305. + + + + +The Optimist's Good Morning + +January 1 + + _Throughout the year, why not keep sweet? No frown ever made a + heart glad; no complaint ever made a dark day bright; no bitter + word ever lightened a burden or made a rough road smooth; no + grumbling ever introduced sunshine into a home. What the world + needs is the resolute step, the look of cheer, the smiling + countenance, and the kindly word. Keep sweet!_ + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + +God of the years, our Heavenly Father, whatever the message of the old +year may have been, whether of darkness or light, joy or sorrow,--we +stand this morning waiting expectantly and confidently for some message +with glad tidings. May we therefore enter upon the New Year in the mood +of hope and good cheer,--brushing from our faces every sign of care, let +us go forth into the New Year with the spirit of a child who puts his +hand into the hand of a Father to be led into a field where the flowers +blossom and the birds sing. Not for to-day only do we pray for sweetness +and light, but let us be glad and happy every day. Thou art with us +today,--Thou wilt be with us through all the journey of the year. May +our own daily gladness be born of the conviction that Thou art always +near. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +January 2 + + _To keep my health! + To do my work! + To live! + To see to it I grow and gain and give! + Never to look behind me for an hour! + To wait in weakness and to walk in power + But always fronting forward to the light, + Always, and always facing toward the right. + Robbed, starved, defeated, fallen, wide astray-- + On, with what strength I have! + Back to the way!_ + + CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN. + +With this new day, O God, let some new strength be mine, to walk in +patience, the way appointed for me. Let me be strong to battle with the +ills that shall beset me, to toil with faith and honest heart, to keep +myself untainted and make my life helpful to my fellowmen. Help me to be +forgetful of myself, but thoughtful to do no evil to any man. Thy hand +is strong and mine is weak. I need Thy guidance, let Thy strength be +mine, that though I stumble I may not fall nor fail. And when the day is +done, may happy memories be mine. Amen. + + ALMON GUNNISON. + + +January 3 + + _Build on resolve, and not upon regret, + The structure of Thy future. Do not grope + Among the shadows of old sins, but let + Thine own soul's light shine on the path of hope + And dissipate the darkness. Waste no tears + Upon the blotted record of lost years, + But turn the leaf, and smile, oh, smile, to see + The fair white pages that remain to thee._ + + ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. + +O Thou All-persuasive God, who dost speak within the souls of men in +language which the heart interprets as its own! enlarge our trust in +that better self which beckons us, that we may be led out of the +lingering darkness of regret, out of the shadow of embittered memory +into the brightness of a new resolve where we may see Thy face. Smile +upon us in the smiling day; in the joy of strength renewed, and +opportunity reborn; in the beauty of the promise each hour whispers to +us as it passes by. So fill us with Thyself that each new day shall mean +new life led by the glory of those hopes which do not fade at evening. +Amen. + + CHARLES A. KNICKERBOCKER. + + +January 4 + + _We of our age are part, and every thrill that wakes + The tremulous air of Life its motion in us makes._ + + _The imitative mass mere empty echo gives + As walls and rocks return the sound that they receive._ + + _But as the bell, that high in some cathedral swings, + Stirred by whatever thrill, with its own music rings,_ + + _So finer souls give forth, to each vibrating tone + Impinging on their life, a music of their own._ + + W. W. STORY. + +O living and loving One, brighter than the morning and fairer than the +day, from Thee we come, to Thee we turn, who art more than Father and +Mother to us all. Our times are in Thy hand. Thou, who hast set the sun +and stars in the sky, hast appointed our place and part in this human +world. May Thy light lead and Thy love win us into the harmonies of law +and grace, that we may become responsive to every touch of nature, every +whisper of truth, every appeal of humanity. So prepare us to serve our +generation in the spirit of Him who has taught us to do Thy will on +earth as it is done in heaven. Amen. + + CHARLES G. AMES. + + +January 5 + + _All such as worked for love, not wages--some + Who, painting for a perfect tint did drain + Their hearts, or some to save their country slain, + Or many who for truth braved martyrdom, + Or more who, in what common days may come, + Have toiled in hope, beyond the hope of gain, + Of doing something well,--all such would fain + Speak thus: These gifts more free than flowers from + The earth are given. Good world, if to our need + Ye offer bread and shelt'ring roof unsought, + As guests our thanks we give, but not for greed, + As if our gifts were bartered for and bought; + And if, perchance, good world, ye offer nought, + Ah, well, that were of life the lesser meed._ + + J. S. JACKSON. + +Father in Heaven, we thank Thee, as we enter upon another day, for +strength with which to work. We thank Thee for our tasks; for our +opportunities to work for Thee and for those we love, we thank Thee. May +we know the joy, when night shall come, of having accomplished something +worthy. Help us to see in that satisfaction a part of our pay. Make each +of us faithful in his place; and help the humblest worker to understand +that consecration and not rank is the all-important thing. Above all, +may we not forget that living is giving, and may our desire either for +rest or gain keep us from no helpful act. May we follow Him who came to +minister, and live as sons and daughters of God. Amen. + + FRANK W. WHIPPEN. + + +January 6 + + _The sculptor moulds his clay with reverent hand, + That clay thro' which his fancy flashes free-- + Quick with an answer to his soul's demand, + And pliant to his fingers' minstrelsy! + Could ever bronze or marble so respond + In wordless echo of the being's will? + Naught but the clay, as to a rapture fond + Could he with fire of genius thus infill! + And so the common people are the clay, + Swift moulded by Divine Deific hand, + Until transfigured, in the glorious day, + The statue of humanity shall stand! + It knows no tinsel crown, this masterpiece. + But all the sovereignty of God's release!_ + + MARY HANAFORD FORD. + +Heavenly Father, we are of Thy plain common people: we feel ourselves of +very little worth. For what can we do of ourselves? But, if Thou wilt +graciously use us, shaping us to Thine ends as the potter his clay, it +may be that we shall serve some worthy purpose. We therefore yield +ourselves to Thee, and beg Thee to use us this day. Make us pliant to +Thy purposes, make us a help to someone who needs us today. So take us +into partnership with Thyself, and so may this day be a day of delight, +and our plain common lives be made rich with the Glory of service. Amen. + + C. H. WHEELER. + + +January 7 + + _And I, too, sing the song of all creation, + A brave sky and a glad wind blowing by, + A clear trail and an hour for meditation, + A long day and the joy to make it fly, + A hard task and the muscle to achieve it, + A fierce noon and a well-contented gloom, + A good strife and no great regret to leave it, + A still night--and the far red lights of home._ + + H. H. BASHFORD. + +Almighty God, we thank Thee that Thou art our Father, and that Thou +lovest us as though Thou hadst no other children; we adore Thee for the +beautiful world in which Thou hast placed us; for trees and birds and +flowers and sky, for friends and music and books and all the ten +thousand mercies which crown our lives. We thank Thee too, for hard +tasks and severe disciplines, for everything that is intended to make us +strong and brave and true. Thou art the Lord of the day and of the night +also. Give us grace to trust Thee and to believe in Thy motherly +solicitude at all times. May Thy goodness lead us to repentance and to +joyous unselfish living and may we so improve our opportunities for +service that we shall make others think of Him who went about doing good +and trusted in His Father with a perfect trust. Amen. + + DILLON BRONSON. + + +January 8 + + _Have we not all, amid life's petty strife, + Some pure ideal of a noble life + That once seemed possible? Did we not hear + The flutter of its wings and feel it near, + And just within our reach? It was. And yet + We lost it in this daily jar and fret. + But still our place is kept and it will wait, + Ready for us to fill it, soon or late. + No star is ever lost we once have seen: + We always may be what we might have been._ + + ADELAIDE A. PROCTER. + +O Thou, whose goodness is new to us every morning and fresh every +evening, we bless Thee for Thy patient and unforgetting care of all of +us. Though we transgress Thy beneficent laws and frequently lose sight +of our cherished ideals, our hunger and thirst for righteousness never +dies, for we partake of Thy Divine Nature. O that we might always be +animated with Thy spirit of disinterested Love. We thank Thee this day +for the inspiration of light and joy of our gifted poets and pray that +we may meet the daily trials of life with a sweet and courageous spirit, +remembering that "no star we have ever seen will cease to shine." Amen. + + WILLIAM G. BABCOCK. + + +January 9 + + _The future is lighted for us with the radiant colors of hope. + Strife and sorrow shall disappear. Peace and love shall reign + supreme. The dream of poets, the lesson of priest and prophet, the + inspiration of the great musician, is confirmed in the light of + modern knowledge; and, as we gird ourselves for the work of life, + we may look forward to the time when in the truest sense the + kingdoms of this world shall become the kingdom of Christ, and He + shall reign forever and ever, King of Kings, and Lord of Lords._ + + JOHN FISKE. + +All-wise and all-loving Father, we invoke Thy aid at the opening of a +glad, new day. For the past we thank Thee, remembering that each day +yielded its blessings. We rejoice that the victories of yesterday are +the promise of larger successes today. Whenever during the day, we shall +be conscious of our littleness, give us at that moment the vision of our +possible largeness. Teach us, however tumultuous be the outward +conditions, to maintain the inward calm. Today may Thy love work its +miracle upon our pain and pleasure. So through faithful, hopeful work +may we find Thy kingdom nearer at this day's close. Amen. + + A. EUGENE BARTLETT. + + +January 10 + + _Blessings on the man who smiles! I do not mean the man who smiles + for effect, nor the one who smiles when the world smiles. I mean + the man whose smile is born of an inner radiance, the man who + smiles when the clouds lower, when fortune frowns, when the tides + are adverse. Such a man not only makes a new world for himself, but + he multiplies himself an hundred fold in the strength and courage + of other men._ + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + +Blessed art Thou, O Lord, our Father in heaven and on the earth! Give to +us of Thy blessedness that all this day we may rejoice in Thee. Incline +our hearts to see Thy goodness and wisdom. Make the gladness of our +hearts constant that it may illumine our presence, so that those who +walk with us may walk in Thy light and give Thee thanks. Make Thy joy +our strength, whether expressed in storm or sunshine, that we may +consent to Thy will cheerfully. We ask these and all gifts in the name +of Him who would have His joy abide in us, that our joy may be +fulfilled. Amen. + + ALEXANDER MCKENZIE. + + +January 11 + + _Talk happiness! The world is sad enough, + Without your woes. No path is wholly rough; + Look for the places that are smooth and clear + And speak of those who rest the weary ear + Of earth, so hurt by one continuous strain + Of human discontent and grief and pain._ + + _Talk health! The dreary, never changing tale + Of mortal maladies is worn and stale. + You cannot charm or interest or please, + By harping on that minor chord, disease. + Say you are well, or all is well with you, + And God shall hear your words and make them true._ + + ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. + +Heavenly Father, by whose mercy we are permitted to greet another day, +we offer Thee this morning our grateful praise for all the blessings of +this life. We take from Thee with thankful heart the gift of health, +conscious that we shall never know how rich the gift until we lose it. +Now, while it is ours, may we use it with abounding joy for the good of +those we may meet this day. To be able to bring light where there is +darkness, hope where there is despair, comfort where there is sorrow, +and so to be the children of our Father which is in Heaven, for this we +pray, with the pardon of our sins, in Jesus' name. Amen. + + FRANCIS H. ROWLEY. + + +January 12 + + _The crest and crowning of all good, + Life's final star, is Brotherhood; + For it will bring again to Earth + Her long-lost Poesy and Mirth; + Will send new light on every face, + A kingly power upon the race, + And till it comes, we men are slaves, + And travel downward to the dust of graves. + Come clear the way, then, clear the way; + Blind creeds and kings have had their day, + Our hope is in the aftermath-- + Our hope is in heroic men, + Star-led to build the world again. + To this event the ages ran; + Make way for Brotherhood--make way for Man._ + + EDWIN MARKHAM. + +O Lord, make us like Thee. There can be no greater ambition, no loftier +desire, no holier purpose, for Thou holdest the secret of Brotherhood. +Like Thee, the only begotten of the Father, the essence of love, the joy +of angels, the hope of the world,--make us like Thee, O Christ. Let Thy +light be our light; thy service our joy; Thy peace our inheritance. +Touch our lips that we may say no unkind word; touch our hearts that we +may feel no wrong desires. May our living be for the world's good, our +acts precious helps to Thy kingdom, our all consecrated to Thy blessed +service. May we be satisfied when we awake with Thy likeness. Amen. + + WILLIAM H. MAIN. + + +January 13 + + _If there be some weaker one, + Give me strength to help him on; + If a blinder soul there be, + Let me guide him nearer Thee. + Make my mortal dreams come true + With the work I fain would do; + Clothe with life the weak intent, + Let me be the thing I meant; + Let me find in Thine employ + Peace that dearer is than joy!_ + + JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER. + +Heavenly Father! We humbly beseech Thee to breathe upon us Thy Holy +Spirit, that we may be Thy true disciples, that we may be quick to see +our brother's need, and quicker to relieve it. If he has lost his way, +may we be aided to show it to him clearly. May we see our brother in the +Master's "prodigal," and find in every needy soul our sphere of service. +Forgive our weak excuses, and make the flickering embers burn to fervent +heat, that the ideal Thou hast given in Thy Word may command every power +of our lives. For Jesus' sake, Amen. + + GEORGE WHITAKER. + + +January 14 + + _A German allegory tells of two little girls. They had been playing + together in a strange garden, and soon one ran in to her mother + full of disappointment. "The garden's a sad place, mother." "Why, + my child?" "I've been all around, and every rose-tree has cruel, + long thorns upon it!" Then the second child came in breathless. "O + Mother, the garden's a beautiful place!" "How so, my child?" "Why, + I've been all around, and every thorn-bush has lovely roses growing + on it!" And the mother wondered at the difference in the two + children._ + + ANONYMOUS. + +Divine Spirit and Soul of this day! We rejoice in its accomplished and +its prophetic beauty and wealth which even our undisciplined hearts and +minds may readily perceive, but may we increase the joy of its +activities and its whole divine meaning by a deeper appreciation of its +ministry to the disciplined life we bear. If there shall be fortunes in +its passing which we would not choose, if there shall be encountered any +experiences we would shun, may we remember that our reverses only +emphasize our successes, that our sorrows intensify our joys, that even +the humiliation and shame of the "far country" add divine meaning to the +Father's House where wait the sandals and robes and rings for the +comfort and beauty that are yet to be. May we learn that the thorn +protects the rose, that the flaming sword turning in all directions +protects the Tree of Life in every Eden of the world. May we remember +that every great and good fortune of life is guarded by a seeming +hostility which bears in its soul the secret of a lasting benevolence +appointed for our own good. Amen. + + E. L. REXFORD. + + +January 15 + + _We are haunted by an ideal life, and it is because we have within + us the beginning and the possibility of it. God is our continual + incitement because we are His children. So the ideal life is in our + blood and never will be still. We feel the thing we ought to be + beating beneath the thing we are. Every time we see a man who has + attained our ideal a little more fully than we have it wakens our + languid blood and fills us with new longings._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +O God, we thank Thee each morning for ideals which appeal to us with +such persistence that we have no peace unless we pursue them. Even in +our seeming indifference we are ill at ease, because Thy voice calling +to us disturbs our fancied content. We are not satisfied with ourselves +nor with our attainments. "We shall be satisfied only when we wake in +Thy likeness." Weary though we often are in our service yet we thank +Thee that Thou relentlessly pursuest us with even greater and higher +demands. Help us in our onward and upward plodding. Revive our failing +spirits. Lead us ever on. Help us to realize that "in our patience we +shall win our souls." We pray as followers of Jesus Christ. Amen. + + THEODORE A. FISCHER. + + +January 16 + + _O Singer of today, this glorious hour + Is all for you and me--what shall it give + To us, and ask of fate--what splendid power + In brain and hand, what glorious right to live + Among our fellows and to war with sin? + What quickening of the pulse as we aspire + To claim our right, and risk earth's joys to win, + To conquer self, and force it through the fire! + Give us this force, dear God, and evermore + Give us a deepening love of all our fellowmen; + Give us new insight--courage to explore + With all the tenderness of human ken + The lowliest heart that beats in human kind, + Its glory and its soul to seek and find!_ + + WILLIAM ORDWAY PARTRIDGE. + +O Soul of all souls! Baptize us afresh this morning into the lustral +waters that we may devoutly thank Thee that Thou art and that Thou dost +clearly reveal Thyself to Christian souls through Thy Son, as the Father +of the great brotherhood of mankind. So wait upon us that we shall go +forth to this day's duties resolved upon so living as to render the +morning glad, the noon redolent with merciful activity, and the evening +full of praise. Thus quickened and enlarged the night will afford rest +and recuperation fitting us to welcome the morrow, still hoping, loving, +progressing, obedient to the sainted call, "Up higher," being +incessantly recompensed with the coveted refrain, "Well done." Amen. + + S. H. MCCOLLESTER. + + +January 17 + + _There is one topic peremptorily forbidden to all well-bred, to all + rational mortals, namely, their distempers. If you have not slept + or if you have slept, or if you have headache, or sciatica, or + leprosy or thunder stroke, I beseech you, by all angels, to hold + your peace, and not pollute the morning, to which all the + housemates bring serene and pleasant thoughts, by corruption and + groans._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + +Our Father, when we remember the multitude of Thy mercies our hearts are +filled with peace and praise and we are ashamed to murmur and complain. +Turn our thoughts toward the love and joy that this day holds for us; +its opportunities, its privileges and victories. Let the morning light +dispel the shadows on our faces and the fears in our hearts. Thou hast +glorified us and will glorify us again. Help us to be grateful for the +rose that smiles amidst the thorns and the light that ever shines behind +the clouds. Grant that the spirit of trust may prevail in us and send us +on our way with power to conquer. Amen. + + ABRAM CONKLIN. + + +January 18 + + _Simplicity is a state of mind. It dwells in the main intention of + our lives. A man is simple when his chief care is the wish to be + what he ought to be, that is, honestly and naturally human. And + this is neither so easy nor so impossible as one might think. At + bottom it consists in putting our acts and aspirations in + accordance with the law of our being, and consequently with the + Eternal Intention which willed that we should be at all. Let a + flower be a flower, a swallow a swallow, a rock a rock, and let a + man be a man, and not a fox, a hare, a hog, or a bird of prey; this + is the sum of the whole matter._ + + CHARLES WAGNER. + +Dear Heavenly Father, we rejoice in the awakening of body and soul to +new activities. We thank Thee for the gift of divinity in the soul and +for opportunity to give it expression. We would be true to ourselves, +knowing we can thus alone be true to Thee. O God, hush the voice of evil +passion. Quicken every noble aspiration. Grant the vision of Thy holy +love that Thy image within us may remain clear in the turmoil of our +life. We pray Thee stir the heart and mind that both may grow up to the +full stature of man as it was in Jesus, our Saviour. Amen. + + L. WARD BRIGHAM. + + +January 19 + + _God has put the keys to His kingdom into your own hands. Your + intelligence is a key, your affection is a key, your conscience is + a key. With these keys you are to unlock the great doors of life, + and gain access to its heavenly treasures._ + + JAMES M. PULLMAN. + +Master of life, as Thou hast opened our eyes to see the sun, open the +eyes of our hearts to see the splendor of Thy law. And even as Thou dost +bring to birth, through the marriage of our eye and the sun, all the +beauty of this visible world, so through the union between our hearts +and Thy holy will, create a world rejoicing in the beauty of truth and +justice and peace. Lead us this day deeper into the mystery of Thy life +and our life and make us interpreters of life to our fellows, through +Him who by His death opened for us the book of life, Jesus Christ our +Lord. Amen. + + HENRY S. NASH. + + +January 20 + + _A noiseless, patient spider, + I mark'd how on a little promontory it stood isolated, + Mark'd how to explore the vacant, vast surrounding, + It launch'd forth filament, filament, filament, out of itself, + Ever unreeling them, ever tirelessly speeding them._ + + _And you, O my soul, where you stand, + Surrounded, detached, in measureless oceans of space, + Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing, seeking the spheres to + connect them, + Till the bridge you will need be form'd, till the ductile anchor hold, + Till the gossamer threads you fling catch somewhere O my soul._ + + WALT WHITMAN. + +Thou Infinite Spirit, we are glad of all human relationships. We are +thankful for all companionship with nature. We rejoice in the fellowship +with books, yet like the child who grows tired with every plaything and +every childish task and lonely for a mother's love, we look to Thee with +an infinite longing. In our effort to solve the problems of life, we +throw our web of life hither and thither, but it will not hold. Only +when at last we have thrown the thread of faith to Thee, shall the +ductile anchor hold. Our Heavenly Father, as we go forth into this day, +may we not leave Thee for any dream or phantom, but may we walk with +Thee all day long, and find in Thee the answer to every longing and the +solution of every problem. Though we may not see, we may trust and wait. +Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +January 21 + + _Do not think of your faults, still less of others' faults; in + every person who comes near you, look for what is good and strong; + honor that; rejoice in it; and as you can, try to imitate it; and + your faults will drop off like dead leaves when their time comes._ + + RUSKIN. + + _With a clear sky, a bright sun, and a gentle breeze, you will have + friends in plenty; but let fortune frown, and the firmament be + overcast, and then your friends will prove like the strings of the + lute, of which you will tighten ten before you find one that will + bear the stretch and keep the pitch._ + + GOTTHOLD. + +Dear Father, may the new day bring some fresh and inspiring thought of +Thyself. May it give some tender communion with the universe, kindling +into beauty as Thy smile shines through. May we make and keep a few dear +friends. May some good book enrich the passing hours. May love flow +through all acts, and the star of hope shine in all shadows. And +trusting Thee supremely, may we humbly do our best that good may abound +on earth. Amen. + + JOSEPH H. CROOKER. + + +January 22 + + _The power of mere activity is often overrated. It is not what the + best men do, but what they are, that constitutes their truest + benefaction to their fellowmen. The things that men do get their + value, after all, from the way in which they are able to show the + existence of character which can comfort and help mankind.... It is + the lives, like the stars, which simply pour down on us the calm + light of their bright and faithful being, up to which we look and + out of which we gather the deepest calm and courage._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +Thou knowest, dear Father, how often we wish to do many things which are +beyond our power. Help us to believe that Thou dost accept the wish when +we cannot do the deed. But we thank Thee that we can do some things, +though they are not large nor many. We know that as we grow in faith, in +patience, in courage, in love, we radiate light and peace and power to +those who are around us. As we begin a new day, we are uplifted by the +thought that we have been called into being because Thou desirest the +love of children, and because we are to co-work with Thee by loving and +serving all whom we can reach. Always, we believe, art Thou ready to +help us. Always art Thou brooding over us to draw us nearer to Thee, and +to give us light and strength to be fellow-workers with Thee. In this +new day, may we speak some word and do some work which shall please Thee +and give us joy as we shall lie down to sleep. Amen. + + HENRY BLANCHARD. + + +January 23 + + _We pride ourselves, in weighing worth and merit, + Too much in virtues that we but inherit. + Some punctual grandsire makes us hate delay + And we are proud to keep our oath and day. + But our ancestral follies and abuses + We still indulge in, and make for them excuses. + Let him be proud, dared man be proud at all, + Who stands where all his fathers used to fall, + Holding their virtues fast and passing on + Still higher good through his own victories won._ + + ISAAC OGDEN RANKIN. + +This morning, the sun shines by his own inherent worth. The clouds often +intercept his influence but he shines back of them and finds a way +through the slightest cleft to tip them with glory. He always reveals +himself--his inner self--and makes all purer and more beautiful. May we +so shine! The world needs the divinity there is in us. We are a part of +Thee. Thou art our deeper self. The Nazarean prophet relied entirely +upon his inner life and found ancient good uncouth. Whatever clouds +intercept our influence, teach us to reveal what conscience dictates, +what intuition illumines, what reason shows, to purify our time, and all +unrighteousness, wrong thinking and useless and hurtful custom. To this +end, give us purity, courage, and nobility. Amen. + + WILLIAM S. MORGAN. + + +January 24 + + _My faith begins where your religion ends,-- + In service to mankind. This single thread + Is given to guide us through the maze of life. + You start at one end, I the other; you, + With eyes fixed only upon God, begin + With lofty faith, and, seeking but to know + And do His will who guides the universe, + You find the slender and mysterious thread + Leads down to earth, with God's divine command + To help your fellowmen; but this to me + Is something strangely vague. I see alone + The fellowmen, the suffering fellowmen. + Yet, with a cup of water in my hand + For all who thirst, who knows but I one day, + Following faithfully the slender thread, + May reach its other end, and kneel at last + With you in heaven at the feet of God?_ + + ALICE WELLINGTON ROLLINS. + +Our Father in heaven, author of life and light, justice and mercy, +liberty and love, we hail with joy and gratitude this new born day, +token of Thy presence, good will and continued care. Help us with high +ideals, pure thoughts and noble endeavors to hallow Thy name, trusting +where we cannot prove, proving where we cannot trust, by a willing +service to our fellowmen, ever advancing by faith, by works, with a +strong heart, a firm step, a generous hand, a sunny smile, and a +cheering voice, until we all come into the measure of the stature of the +fulness of Christ; and Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. +Amen. + + HENRY N. COUDEN. + + +January 25 + + _If you would have sunlight in your home, see that you have work in + it: that you work yourself and set others to work. Nothing makes + moroseness and heavy-heartedness in a house so fast as idleness. + The very children gloom and sulk if they are left with nothing to + do. Every day there is the light of something conquered in the eyes + of those who work. In such a house, if there be also the good + temper of love, sunshine never ceases. For in it the great law of + humanity is obeyed, a law which is also God's law. For what said + Christ, "My Father worketh hitherto and I work." Sunlight comes + with work._ + + STOPFORD A. BROOKE. + +O Thou, who art the source of light and life, we pause in Thy presence +at the opening of the day, that in the light of thy countenance we may +see ourselves as we are and as we ought to be, and receive the +inspiration to consecrated effort and worthy achievement. We thank Thee +that Thou hast done so much for us and yet left so much for us to do. +May we think how important are these lives we are going to live today; +that no matter how small we are, this universe in all its majesty can +never be complete without our effort, and Thou, Almighty God, art +waiting with infinite patience for us to do our part. Thus shall our +work, however humble, be glorified by a Godlike temper and a Christlike +faith. Amen. + + FREDERICK A. BISBEE. + + +January 26 + + _All that is, at all, + Lasts ever, past recall: + Earth changes, but thy soul and God stand sure; + What entered into thee, + That was, is and shall be._ + + * * * * * + + _He fixed thee 'mid this dance + Of plastic circumstance, + This Present, thou, forsooth, wouldst fain arrest; + Machinery just meant + To give thy soul its bent, + Try thee, and turn thee forth, sufficiently impressed._ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + +We thank Thee, O Father, for the yet unwrought possibilities of this +day. Show us Thy purpose; or, if it please Thee, withhold the entire +plan, yet may our faith claim a divine sanction for each hour's work as +a part of the fulfilment of Thy purpose. We pray for strength and +patience to have our souls rightly impressed by the cares, the joys, and +disappointments of life. Make the things of the body only incidental to +us. Save us from all but the best things. Give us the happiness of +harmony with Thee. Wilt Thou grant these things through the power of Thy +spirit, and in the name of Thy perfect Son, the vision of whom +transforms our lives. Amen. + + GEORGE W. OWEN. + + +January 27 + + _Beloved, let us love so well, + Our work shall still be better for our love + And still our love be sweeter for our work._ + + ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING. + + _If your name is to live at all, it is so much more to have it live + in people's hearts than only in their brains! I don't know that + one's eyes fill with tears when he thinks of the famous inventor of + logarithms, but a song of Burns or a hymn of Charles Wesley goes + straight to your heart and you can't help loving both of them, the + sinner as well as the saint._ + + OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. + +Our Father, who art in heaven, help us to hold Thee in our hearts this +day, that we may live for Thee, from the love of Thee. Forgive us that +we have not always a thankful spirit. Strengthen our wills to do good +work, as in Thy sight, with clean hands and heart. Help us now as we +pray, and flood the morning with the sunshine of Thy face, that we may +be glad all the day long, and bring other lives into the brightness of +Thy light. Save us from a partial mind, that we may love all Thy little +ones with the same love of Him who said "Of such is the Kingdom of +Heaven." Amen. + + C. W. HOLDEN. + + +January 28 + + _All thoughts of ill; all evil deeds. + That have their root in thoughts of ill; + Whatever hinders or impedes + The noble action of the will;-- + All these must first be trampled down + Beneath our feet if we would gain + In the bright fields of fair renown + The right of eminent domain. + We have not wings, we cannot soar; + But we have feet to scale and climb + By slow degrees, by more and more, + The cloudy summits of our time._ + + HENRY W. LONGFELLOW. + +We bless Thee, Lord, for the new day and for the new chance which it +offers to our wayward lives. Forgive the evil in them, and make the good +efficient. Let the tides of Thy spirit bring to us cleansing, +refreshment and power. In the day's business may we be brave, cheerful +and considerate. Grant us a clear vision of the path of honor and the +will to choose it at whatever cost. We wait upon Thee for renewal of our +strength; for uplift as on eagle's wings; for unwearied running upon Thy +larger errands, if Thou shalt ordain us to such high employ; but most of +all, for grace to walk life's common ways without fainting. So at +evening wilt Thou send Thy peace. Amen. + + EDWARD M. CHAPMAN. + + +January 29 + + _Don't you touch the edge of the great gladness that is in the + world, now and then, in spite of your own little single worries? + Well, that's what God means; and the worry is the interruption. He + never means that.... If you are glad for one minute in the day, + that is His minute; the minute He means, and works for._ + + MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. + +Dear Father, Thou hast made us fit for joy. Help us today to grasp our +birthright of gladness. For those things which must be borne in sorrow +give us submission. Let us taste the salt tonic of our tears and feel +the strength born of struggle and the peace wrested from trial. Make us +glad that friendly hands meet our own; that kindness is always sweet and +sympathy divine. Teach us to lay hold on the radiance of each hour, that +the morning bow of promise may become our evening glory and prophesy +another glad new day. As children find content and joy by looking into +their father's face so we turn to Thee. Amen. + + EFFIE MCCOLLUM JONES. + + +January 30 + + _Still must I climb if I would rest; + The bird soars upward to his nest; + The young leaf on the tree-top high + Cradles itself within the sky._ + + _I cannot in the valley stay: + The great horizons stretch away; + The very cliffs that wall me round + Are ladders unto higher ground._ + + _I am not glad till I have known + Life that can lift me from mine own; + A loftier level must be won. + A mightier strength to lean upon._ + + LUCY LARCOM. + +Heavenly Father, as the bird that soars first looks upward, we turn our +souls to Thee, seeking inspiration that in the duties of today we may +live to the full height of the faculties Thou hast given. Help us to +know what is right and to follow it day by day continually. Grant that +our toils this day may be acts of service as sacramental as our prayer. +In our weakness, grant us of Thy strength that we may pass from glory to +glory till we are transformed at last into the perfect image of Thy +spirit. And when our work on earth is ended, when the clods of the +valley are sweet to our weary frame, take us home to Thyself. Amen. + + NATHANIEL S. SAGE. + + +January 31 + + _Only a frown! Yet it pressed a sting + Into the day which had been so glad; + The red rose turned to a scentless thing: + The bird-song ceased with discordant ring; + And a heart was heavy and sad._ + + _Only a smile! yet it cast a spell + Over the sky which had been so gray; + The rain made music wherever it fell; + The wind sang the song of the marriage-bell; + And a heart was light and gay._ + + ANONYMOUS. + +With our tribute of praise, O Father, we would begin this day; this day, +which, with all its bounties, is Thy gift. Prepare us, we beseech Thee, +for the experiences of the hours as they open before us. Gratefully +remembering that we are Thy children, may our duties weigh with such +sacredness upon our hearts that we may shun the evil way as unworthy +those so richly endowed and blest. Write, we pray Thee, Thy law within +us; and may our love of Thee make it so easy and so joyous to obey that +we shall continually grow into the likeness of Him whose mission it is +to fill the world with blessedness and peace. Amen. + + CHARLES W. TOMLINSON. + + +February 1 + + _Father, I will not ask for wealth or fame, + Though once they would have joyed my carnal sense. + I shudder not to bear a hated name, + Wanting all wealth, myself my sole defence. + But give me, Lord, eyes to behold the truth; + A seeing sense that knows the eternal right; + A heart with pity filled, and gentlest ruth; + A manly faith that makes all darkness light; + Give me the power to labor for mankind; + Make me the mouth of such as cannot speak; + Eyes let me be to groping man and blind; + A conscience to the base; and to the weak + Let me be hands and feet; and to the foolish, mind; + And lead still farther on such as Thy Kingdom seek._ + + THEODORE PARKER. + +Heavenly Father, we speak to Thee this morning out of a sense of rest +and trust. We would begin the day with Thee and keep in Thy company to +its close. Whether we work or pray, wilt Thou rule our spirits? +Conscious in this moment of freedom, that we shall soon be pressed and +absorbed by our own cares, we pray, Father, that we may keep in mind the +privilege and joy of bearing each other's burdens and so fulfilling the +law of Christ. Nor ever permit us to fall away from perfect faith in Thy +purpose. Work in us and through us to usher in the morning when Truth +shall spring out of the earth and Righteousness shall come down from +heaven. Amen. + + ISAAC M. ATWOOD. + + +February 2 + + _As when good news is come to one in grief, straightway he + forgetteth his former grief, and no longer attendeth to anything + except the good news which he hath heard, so do ye, also! having + received a renewal of your soul through the beholding of these good + things. Put on therefore gladness that hath always favor before + God, and is acceptable unto Him, and delight thyself in it; for + every man that is glad doeth the things that are good, and thinketh + good thoughts, despising grief._ + + MARIUS THE EPICUREAN. + +O Lord, we know there are a thousand reasons why we should be glad. We +cannot always forget our sorrows and our failures; there are manifold +sources of temporary vexation and annoyance and harassing care, but in +the face of Thine overmastering Providence and Love we cannot long be +vexed nor sad. If tears have dimmed our eyes let us brush away the +tears. If troubles and cares have burdened our hearts let us rise +triumphant over them all and for this day be glad; and in our gladness +let us find our strength. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +February 3 + + _Do not dare to be so absorbed in your own life, so wrapped up in + listening to the sound of your own hurrying wheels, that all this + vast pathetic music, made up of the mingled joy and sorrow of your + fellowmen, shall not find out your heart and claim it and make you + rejoice to give yourself for them.... Be sure that ambition and + charity will both grow mean unless they are both inspired and + exalted by religion. Energy, love, and faith,--these make the + perfect man._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +O Thou who art not far from any one of us, but art the Source and +Sustainer of our life, gratefully do we acknowledge the Mercy that has +given us this new day with its certain opportunity for living the glad, +true life. Directed by Thee, may this be for us a day of progress. May +its duties be performed with alacrity and cheerfulness, its lessons +learned with humility, its temptations met with resolute will, its +crosses with patient hope. We thank Thee for the life of the Master who +has shown us that if we would live Thy divine life, ours must be one of +continual service and constant progression. If, tried by the seeming +drudgery of duties daily repeated, we long for the end of our labors or +dream of an idle heaven, O forgive our weakness, and help us trustingly +to obey Thy voice as it whispers, "Up and on, this is not thy rest." +Thus let the day close on hours well spent, and Thy joy and peace fill +our hearts. Amen. + + JOHN MURRAY ATWOOD. + + +February 4 + + _Who art thou that complainest of thy life of toil? Complain not. + Look up, my wearied brother; see thy fellow-workmen there, in God's + eternity; surviving there, they alone surviving; sacred band of the + Immortals, celestial body-guard of the empire of mankind. To thee, + Heaven, though severe, is as that Spartan mother, saying while she + gave her son his shield, "With it, my son, or upon it." Thou too + shalt return home in honor; to thy far distant Home, in honor; + doubt it not,--if in the battle thou keep thy shield! Thou, in the + Eternities, and deepest death-kingdoms, art not an alien; thou + everywhere art a denizen. Complain not._ + + THOMAS CARLYLE. + +O Thou God of goodness and grace, who dost turn Thy smiling countenance +upon the upturned faces of Thy children, help us to find in the light of +another day the continued proof of Thy fatherly care and tender mercy. +Since Thou art so well disposed towards us, give us courage to attempt +anything which the duties of this day require, remembering that Thou +canst not ask anything beyond our strength, or withhold from us the +blessing of Thy Divine approval. Living under Thy smile help us to be +strong and calm and confident, delighting Thy heart by our faith in Thee +and our love for our fellowmen. Amen. + + SAMUEL C. BUSHNELL. + + +February 5 + + _This goodly frame, the earth, seems to me a sterile promontory; + this most excellent canopy, the air, look you, this brave + o'er-hanging firmament, this majestical roof fretted with golden + fire, why, it appears no other thing to me than a foul and + pestilent congregation of vapors. What a piece of work is a man! + how noble in reason! how infinite in faculty! in form and moving + how express and admirable! in action how like an angel! in + apprehension how like a god!_ + + SHAKESPEARE. + +Our Father in Heaven, we pray Thee that this may be a bright and happy +day in each of our lives. May there be sunshine in our hearts because +they are attuned to Thine. Going about our daily tasks, Thy spirit +within us, may we make our little portion of the earth not a sterile +promontory but a rich garden abounding in the fruits of the spirit, and +may we, by Thy grace, be enabled to dispel some of the pestilent vapors +of wordliness and doubt. In all things, may we remember our divine +parentage and conform our lives more and more to the pattern shown us by +Thy dear Son, Jesus Christ, in whose name we pray. Amen. + + FRANCIS E. CLARK. + + +February 6 + + _There was a merchant once, who on the way + Meeting one fatherless and lamed, did stay + To draw the thorn which pricked his foot, and passed; + And 'twas forgot; and the man died at last. + But in a dream the Prince of Khojand spies + That man again, walking in Paradise. + Walking and talking in that blessed land, + And what he said the prince could understand; + For he said this, plucking the heavenly posies; + "Wonderful! One thorn made me many roses!"_ + + EDWIN ARNOLD. + +Dear Father in Heaven, with our life refreshed and renewed by sleep, we +would face the duties of the day with strong hope and a ready courage. +Forbid that these shall in any degree be diminished by any difficulty or +perplexity that may arise. We pray for wisdom and love. Grant us that +interest in others that shall impel us to help those who are in need. +And may our desire to minister move us not only to dress the wounds of +those whom the thorns have injured, but to clear the paths, along which +men must pass, of those conditions and influences which inevitably maim +and blight. May we serve Thee faithfully and with gladness this day! +Amen. + + HARRY L. CANFIELD. + + +February 7 + + _Quicksand years that whirl me I know not whither, + Your schemes, politics fail, lines give way, substances mock and + elude me, + Only the theme I sing, the great and strong-possess'd soul, eludes not, + One's self must never give way--that is the final substance--that out + of all is sure, + Out of politics, triumphs, battles, life, what at last finally remains? + When shows break up what but One's self is sure?_ + + WALT WHITMAN. + +O Thou, who beholdest all the souls of men, in our vision of another new +day, help us to see as Thou seest; to be conscious not of our own need +and desert alone, but also of the deserts and needs of all those with +whom we have to do; shaping our prayer and directing the effort that +follows after all true prayer in accordance with this wider outlook. O +Thou, who fashionest the hearts of all, who observest all their works, +we would strengthen and purify our hearts that they may be fitted to be +fashioned by Thee to noble ends, and set to some good service; and we +would do our daily work as in the sight of one who knows and loves all +honest, thorough workers, great or humble, wise or simple. Amen. + + AUGUSTUS MENDON LORD. + + +February 8 + + _Truth should be the first lesson of the child and the last + aspiration of Manhood; for it has been well said that the inquiry + of truth, which is the love-making of it, the knowledge of truth, + which is the presence of it, and the belief of truth, which is the + enjoying of it, is the sovereign good of human nature._ + + _We search the world for truth; we cull + The good, the pure, the beautiful, + From graven stone and written scroll, + From all old flower-fields of the soul._ + + JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER. + +Our Heavenly Father, we acknowledge Thee as the Author and Giver of all +truth. We bless Thee that Thou hast attuned our souls to its music, and +that when with conscious life we touch its strings covering the universe +we feel harmony with the Divine. We thank Thee for the truths of our +sonship in Thee and for the assurances of Thy Fatherhood. We bless Thee +for Jesus who was the truth made life, and who is our daily guide to its +blessings. We thank Thee for the truth of immortality, with its +encouragement to eager life today and its assurances of endless joyful +tomorrows. Make us seekers of truth, lovers of truth and examples of +truth as it is in Jesus our Savior. Amen. + + FRED A. DILLINGHAM. + + +February 9 + + _All things are engaged in writing their history. The planet, the + pebble, goes attended by its shadow. The rolling rock leaves its + scratches on the mountain; the river, its channel in the soil; the + animal, its bones in the stratum; the fern and leaf, their modest + epitaph in the coal. The falling drop makes its sculpture in the + sand or the stone. Not a foot steps into the snow or along the + ground, but prints, in characters more or less lasting, a map of + its march. Every act of the man inscribes itself in the memory of + his fellows, and in his own manners and face. The air is full of + sounds, the sky of tokens, the ground is all memoranda and + signatures, and every object covered over with hints which speak to + the intelligent._ + + _Ralph Waldo Emerson._ + +Our Father, who art in Heaven and in every manifestation of living +nature, we turn our thoughts to Thee with the rising of each new sun. We +hear Thy voice in the singing of every summer bird. We realize Thy +presence in the shifting shadows of the clouds. In the arching blue +above us we realize something of the depth and breadth of the love that +arches over the horizon of our life and stretches like the radiant bow +of promise from the green hills of childhood to the sombre mountains of +old age. We beseech Thee to give us thoughts so beautiful and ennobling +that even amid the sods and clods of life's daily drudgery we can always +face the morning light of some new hope which comes like the old song +sung in the new land. Amen. + + JOHN KIMBALL. + + +February 10 + + _First, when I feel that I am become cold and indisposed to prayer, + by reason of other business and thoughts, I take my psalter and run + into my chamber, or, if day and season serve, into the church to + the multitude, and begin to repeat to myself--just as children + used--the ten commandments, the creed, and, according as I have + time, some sayings of Christ or of Paul, or some Psalms. Therefore + it is well to let prayer be the first employment in the early + morning, and the last in the evening. Avoid diligently those false + and deceptive thoughts which say, Wait a little, I will pray an + hour hence; I must first perform this or that. For with such + thoughts a man quits prayer for business that lays hold of and + entangles him, so that he comes not to pray the whole day long._ + + MARTIN LUTHER. + +O Lord, our Heavenly Father, who keepest covenant and loving kindness +with Thy servants, who walk humbly with Thee, and who hast been +attentive to the prayers of our fathers when they lifted up their hearts +and their hands to Thee, teach us to pray, and to love to pray. Visit us +in the night season and before the morning watch. Touch our spirits with +the flame of Thy Spirit, before the day's business lays hold upon us and +entangles us, through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. + + REUBEN KIDNER. + + +February 11 + + _In one of Dean Stanley's sermons to children, preached at + Westminster Abbey, he told the following story: "There was a little + girl living with her grandfather. She was a good child, but he was + not a very good man; and one day, when the little child came back + from school, he had put in writing over the bed, 'God is nowhere,' + for he did not believe in the good God, and he tried to make the + little child believe the same. What did the little girl do? She had + no eyes to see, no ears to hear, what her grandfather tried to + teach her. She was very small. She could only read words of one + syllable at a time; she rose above the bad meaning which he tried + to put in her mind; she rose, as we all ought to rise, above the + temptation of our time; she rose into a higher and better world; + she rose because her little mind could not do otherwise, and she + read the words, not 'God is nowhere,' but 'God is now here.' That + is what we all should strive to do. Out of words which have no + sense or which have bad sense, our eyes, our minds, ought to be + able to read a better sense."_ + + WILLIAM MOODIE. + +O Thou, Invisible Presence, there can be no place where Thou art not. +Thou, our Father, art in heaven and on earth and everywhere. Thou art in +the order of the rock, the beauty of the flower, the light of the sun +and stars, and goodness in the human soul. Teach us to be conscious of +Thy nearness to us, and so may we never be afraid. In the light of Thy +countenance, may we see duty and truth, and recognize more easily the +good in one another. Amen. + + ALVA ROY SCOTT. + + +February 12 + + ABRAHAM LINCOLN BORN 1809 + + _Chosen for large designs, he had the art + Of winning with his humour, and he went + Straight to his mark, which was the human heart; + Wise, too, for what he could not break he bent._ + + _Upon his back a more than Atlas-load-- + The burden of the Commonwealth was laid; + He stooped, and rose up to it, though the road + Shot suddenly downwards, not a whit dismayed._ + + _Hold, warriors, counsellors, kings! all now give place + To this dear benefactor of the race._ + + RICHARD H. STODDARD. + +Almighty Father, we thank Thee today for the gracious memory of Thy +servant who lived and died for the sake of a free and united nation. We +thank Thee more that we have his life inwrought into the very fabric of +the life of the nation. We had in him "a hiding place from the wind and +a covert from the tempest, a river of water in a dry place and the +shadow of a great rock in a weary land." We gratefully join in praise +with the thousands who found help and cheer in the shadow of his +strength. And now we humbly beseech Thee, help us in some small way this +day to be a helper to the helpless, a friend to the needy, sunshine to +those whose day will be gray and gloomy, the shadow of a great rock to +those who are buffeted by the world's storms. Thus shall we prove our +gratitude to Thee for the gift of Thy servant whom we honor today, and +thus shall we honor Thee. We ask and offer all in the name of Thy Son +Jesus Christ. Amen. + + AVERY A. SHAW. + + +February 13 + + _Let us learn to be content with what we have. Let us get rid of + our false estimates, set up all the higher ideals--a quiet home; + vines of our own planting; a few books full of the inspiration of a + genius; a few friends worthy of being loved, and able to love us in + return; a hundred innocent pleasures that bring no pain or remorse; + a devotion to the right that will never swerve; a simple religion + empty of all bigotry, full of trust and hope and love--and to such + a philosophy this world will give up all the empty joy it has._ + + DAVID SWING. + +Thou gracious Spirit of Life, our Father, at the beginning of this new +day we wait for a moment before Thee with uncovered heads and with +reverent spirits; Thou knowest us through and through, whatever man may +think of us Thou knowest just what we are. In Thy sight we need not +pretend; we need not make believe, we need only be simple and genuine +and brave and earnest. We need be glad in the possession of what we +have. Help us this day to rightly value that which is good and honest. +Let us for this day at least, put away all vanity and give ourselves +unreservedly to Thy service and the love of our fellow men. To this high +end, may we have the sweet companionship of Jesus. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +February 14 + + _We go through life as some tourists go through Europe,--so anxious + to see the next sight, the next cathedral, the next picture, the + next mountain peak, that we never stop to fill our sense with the + beauty of the present one. Along all our pathways sweet flowers are + blossoming, if we will only stop to pluck them and smell their + fragrance. In every meadow, birds are warbling, calling to their + mates, and soaring into the blue, if we will only stop our + grumbling long enough to hear them._ + + MINOT J. SAVAGE. + +Give us, O God, the vision to see the way where duty lies and strength +to walk in it, to ever keep the forward look and never to lose heart +today because of the stumblings and fallings in the yesterdays that are +forever gone. Let us remember that we are in Thy hands and we are +faithless to Thee and to ourselves if knowingly we fail to do Thy work. +Though we cannot see Thee, we now see our fellow men and we shall best +serve Thee if, in love and patience, we help our fellows. Amen. + + ALMON GUNNISON. + + +February 15 + + _May I reach + That purest Heaven--be to other souls + The cup of strength in some great agony, + Enkindle generous ardor, feed pure love, + Beget the smiles that have no cruelty, + Be that sweet presence of a good diffused, + And in diffusion ever more intense! + So shall I join the choir invisible, + Whose music is the gladness of the world._ + + GEORGE ELIOT. + +Our heavenly Father, we bless Thee for the gift of another day with all +its opportunities for service. And we pray that our hearts may respond +in sympathy with the heartbeats of those who love and toil and suffer +around us today. May we learn to make their joys and sorrows our own. Do +not let our unfeeling hands strike the heart-strings of others harshly, +nor allow our feet to go crushing roses of love, without thought. Help +us, we pray Thee, to walk tenderly and reverently among our fellow men. +May their hopes and noble endeavors ring within us the prayer bells of +the soul. Make us thus to grow large and tender and noble through our +helpful ministries. Amen. + + JOHN WESLEY CARTER. + + +February 16 + + _Ah, love and love alone at last will solve + All the vast, threatening questions that distract + Mankind; that fellow-men in strife array, + And the whole world with fierce contentions rend. + Still keep your idle millions under arms-- + Fed on the hard-earned substance of the poor-- + Still watch each other with keen jealousy, + Still slaughter thousands on the field of war, + Or strive with statesman's craft to arbitrate; + Thread the sly mazes of diplomacy, + Try communistic cures for every ill, + And when all fails at last, for lack of love, + Try love--the mightiest of them all--and win!_ + + HENRY NEHEMIAH DODGE. + +God of the light,--within, without, who hast lifted the curtain of night +from our abodes, perfect now Thy blessing unto us, and take the veil +from all our hearts, and make clear to us Thy holy presence. Filled with +the everlasting light, may we look on each other, and on our work here +below, and on the strifes and conditions of humanity, with a love and +hope that are not of this world. May Faith, Hope and Love abide with +us--and may we realize that the greatest of these is Love. Hasten Thou +the time when by love alone Thy kingdom shall come, and Thy will be done +on earth as it is in heaven. Amen. + + WILLIAM B. EDDY. + + +February 17 + + _If the day and night are such that you greet them with joy, and + life emits a fragrance like flowers and sweet-scented herbs, is + more starry, more immortal,--that is your success. All nature is + your congratulation and you have cause momentarily to bless + yourself._ + + HENRY DAVID THOREAU. + +Father, I have found Thy gift of life, a sweet and beautiful thing. It +has known cloud and rain, but these have nourished it, and the darkness +has sheltered it. It has felt driving storms, but these have +strengthened it. It has known sunshine too. And now every day is a +transfiguration and every night a benediction. Let thanksgiving be my +prayer. What I need Thou wilt give. My hands Thou wilt touch with the +soft petals of Thy flowers; and the arms of Thy strong care shall be +about me. By the voices of brooks and rivers and winds and birds and +little children Thou wilt speak to me, and in the deeper silences I +shall hear Thy still small voice. Father, I thank Thee. Amen. + + O. C. S. WALLACE. + + +February 18 + + _Let us not care too much for what happens: Let us not leave our + peace of mind at the mercy of events._ + + CHARLES G. AMES. + + _Let us lay hold of the happiness of today. Do we not go through + life blindly, thinking that some fair tomorrow will bring us the + gift we miss today?... Know thou, my heart, if thou art not happy + today, thou shalt never be happy._ + + ANNA ROBERTSON BROWN. + +We thank Thee, our Father, that the Satisfaction of righteousness is +present as well as future. Help us, we beseech Thee, to live this day so +that earth shall seem like heaven. In the proof of our adequacy to the +demands of duty may we find a delight that shall more than compensate us +for any pleasure or profit surrendered for its sake. May the sense of +Thine approval sanctify our joys and comfort our sorrows. May we win +love by deserving it, and find happiness in bestowing it. Through +obedience to Thy will may we add strength and spiritual beauty to our +own character and carry into the evening shadows the sweet assurance +that other lives have been enriched by our kind words and helpful deeds. +We ask it as Thy children. Amen. + + J. FRANK THOMPSON. + + +February 19 + + _'Tis always morning somewhere, and above + The awakening continents from shore to shore. + Somewhere the birds are singing evermore._ + + HENRY W. LONGFELLOW. + + _The inconveniences and the petty annoyances, the pains and the + sorrows, do we ever forget them? Indeed, no; we grumble and groan + continually. The blue sky and the sunshine, the everyday mercies + and the wonderful blessings that we accept as a matter of course, + do we remember to rejoice because of them? Only too seldom. On this + one day, do let us be sincerely and expressedly thankful._ + + ANONYMOUS. + +Our Father, we rejoice to believe that Thy love is the eternal sun which +knows no eclipse and that in its pure shining, we Thy children can go +forward with brave hearts and radiant hopes, assured that Thy wisdom +hath left nothing unfinished and that "Thy goodness faileth never." We +greet this new day with newness of joy in Thy Fatherhood as our personal +right, and with ascending ideals of a service whose gracious light shall +kindle other souls into a larger hopefulness and a deeper tenderness. We +would fill this day with all sunny thoughts, with all cheering words and +with all generous deeds, and thus the more effectually bring the divine +light into the human and make clearer the outlines of a heaven on earth. +Amen. + + ARNOLD S. YANTIS. + + +February 20 + + _No blast of air or fire of sun + Puts out the light whereby we run + With girdled loins our lamplit race, + And each from each takes heart of grace + And spirit till his turn be done, + And light of face from each man's face + In whom the light of trust is one; + Since only souls that keep their place + By their own light, and watch things roll, + And stand, have light for any soul._ + + ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE. + +O Thou, Who coverest Thyself with light as with a garment, even the true +light which lighteth every man coming into the world, shine Thou in us, +putting to flight all the powers of darkness, and guilt of sin, and +selfishness. Shine also through us to any that live in the shadow; and +so fill us with Thy radiant Spirit, that we may be a lamp unto a +neighbor's feet and a light unto his path. And when this day is done may +every face we have met be the brighter for our meeting, and every heart +braver with new joy and cheer and grace and strength. For in Thee O +Lord, is life, and Thy life is the light of men. Amen. + +THEODORE PARKER. + + +February 21 + + _The longer on this earth we live + And weigh the various qualities of men + The more we feel the high, stern-featured beauty + Of plain devotedness to duty, + Steadfast and still, nor paid with mortal praise, + But finding amplest recompense + For life's ungarlanded expense + In work done squarely and unwasted days._ + + JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. + +Our dear Heavenly Father, we would greet Thee as this morning greets us. +We thank Thee for the daily duty; that, amid this wondrous world, Thou +hast set somewhat for our doing. May we appreciate the honor. May we not +grudge our best, even in the humblest tasks, since Thou appointest them. +Strengthen us, we beseech Thee, if sometimes the heart fails, and the +tired hands get laggard. Show us how the lowliest service becomes +loftiest if done with the glorifying motive of pleasing Thee. Make us +this day blithe in duty. When our heads find pillow may Thy peace enfold +us; forgive our failures; and, for Jesus' sake, may we never cease +endeavor. Amen. + + WAYLAND HOYT. + + +February 22 + +GEORGE WASHINGTON. BORN 1732. + + _Welcome to the day returning, + Dearer still as ages flow, + While the torch of faith is burning, + Long as Freedom's altars glow! + See the hero whom it gave us + Slumbering on a mother's breast; + For the arm he stretched to save us, + Be its morn forever blest._ + + OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. + +Father of life, we thank Thee that Thou hast been with the Fathers; that +Thou hast been with him whose birth this day we celebrate. Thou wert +willing to speak to them, and they were willing to hear Thee and answer +Thee, "Lo, here am I; send me." We thank Thee that the memory of this +great man has come down to us; of him who was first in war, first in +peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen; and we ask Thee that +Thou wilt be with our countrymen today; that Thou wilt teach us Thy law, +that we may walk in Thy ways; that this may be that happy nation whose +God is the Lord. In all time of our trial, if we have sought Thee we +have found Thee,--in all time of our success Thou hast won for us our +victories,--Thou hast been with our counsellors. Father, today, +tomorrow, and in days to come, in our memories and in our hopes be with +us still, Our Father, Who art in Heaven. Amen. + + EDWARD EVERETT HALE. + + +February 23 + + _If you always remember that in all you do in soul or body God + stands by as a witness, in all your prayers and your actions you + will not err; and you shall have God dwelling with you._ + + EPICTETUS. + + _Faith acts on our souls as a moral tonic; it takes the fret and + fever out of our lives; it gives the appetite and desire for noble + living; it removes despondency; it gives energy, courage, hope, + patience, and persistence; and in its highest manifestations it + makes our lives a blending of power, sweetness, and peace._ + + JAMES M. PULLMAN. + +Father of spirits! We yield ourselves to Thee. We will be afraid of +neither sorrow nor death in a world where many saintly souls have +sanctified them by a divine patience, and amid a Providence wherein no +evil thing can dwell. Clinging unto Thee, we shall not perish with the +fashion of this world that passeth away. As sparks falling on the river, +so shall the glories of our strength go out. But the graces of the holy +soul shall be as the brightness of the firmament, and as the stars +forever and ever. In Thee, O Lord, is our undying trust. Amen. + + JAMES MARTINEAU. + + +February 24 + + _Be of good cheer, brave spirit; steadfastly serve that low whisper + thou hast served; for know, God hath a select family of sons now + scattered wide thro' earth, and each alone, who are thy spiritual + kindred, and each one by constant service to that inward law, is + weaving the sublime proportions of a true monarch's soul. Beauty + and strength, the riches of a spotless memory, the eloquence of + truth, the wisdom got by searching of a clear and loving eye that + seeth as God seeth. These are their gifts, and time, who keeps + God's word, brings on the day to seal the marriage of these minds + with thine, thy everlasting lovers._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + +O Thou, who makest the outgoings of the morning and evening to rejoice, +help us to welcome this new day as Thy gift, to take up its duties with +courage, and to follow the light which Thou shalt give. Conscious of the +meaning and purpose of life, undismayed by the failures of past days, +and ever remembering that Thy strength is made perfect in human +weakness, may we consecrate ourselves anew to the glad service of life, +knowing that in so doing we enter into fellowship with all who have been +workers together with Thee, and into increasing likeness of soul to Thy +holy Son. May the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us, and may life +become stronger and sweeter and richer, until at last we receive through +grace the "well done!" of the Master. Amen. + + HENRY M. KING. + + +February 25 + + _There is no music in a rest, but there is the making of music in + it. In our whole life melody, the music is broken off here and + there by "rests," and we foolishly think we have come to the end of + time. God sends a time of forced leisure--sickness, disappointed + plans, frustrated efforts--and makes a sudden pause in the choral + hymn of our lives, and we lament that our voices must be silent, + and our part missing in the music which ever goes up to the ear of + the Creator. How does the musician read the rest? See him beat time + with unvarying count and catch up the next note true and steady, as + if no breaking place had come in between. Not without design does + God write the music of our lives. But be it ours to learn the time, + and not be dismayed at the "rests." They are not to be slurred + over, nor to be omitted, nor to destroy the melody, nor to change + the key-note. If we look up, God Himself will beat the time for us. + With the eye on Him we shall strike the next note full and clear._ + + JOHN RUSKIN. + +O God, help us to trust where we cannot see, and to feel that life is +not necessarily a failure because we are shut out from its activities. +Grant us in sickness such visions and such communion with Thee that +disease of the body shall be transformed into a healer of the soul; and, +as the crushed rose the sweeter fragrance emits, so may our sorrows +chasten and refine us. + +O Heavenly Father, grant that all our sickness and pain and +disappointment may so sweeten our dispositions, purify our character and +strengthen our souls that we shall bring heaven's sunlight into the +lives of all whom we meet. Amen. + + MYRON W. HAYNES. + + +February 26 + + _Love is the greatest thing that God can give us, for Himself is + love; and it is the greatest thing we can give to God, for it will + also give ourselves, and carry with it all that is ours._ + + JEREMY TAYLOR. + + _High thoughts and noble in all lands + Help me, my soul is fed by such; + But ah, the touch of lips and hands, + The human touch! + Warm, vital, close, life's symbols dear, + These need I most and now and here._ + + RICHARD BURTON. + +Our Father in Heaven, we bless Thee this morning for all Thy care and +love; Thou hast made our houses homes, sweet, quiet dwelling-places. We +thank Thee for sleep, for communion with one another in all holy and +tender speech. We thank Thee for all our hopes; the worlds are nearer +than we thought, heaven's fragrance attempers the winds of earth, we +almost hear the upper song: may we listen for it, may our souls delight +in sweet anticipations of immortal fellowship, and may we come out of +these high reveries determined to work more, suffer more patiently, to +accept every discipline more willingly, and to do all our little day's +work as men whose citizenship is in heaven. Amen. + + JOSEPH PARKER. + + +February 27 + + _Flame of the spirit, and dust of the earth,-- + This is the making of man, + This is his problem of birth; + Born to all holiness, born to all crime, + Heir of both worlds, on the long slope of time + Climbing the path of God's plan; + Dust of the earth in his error and fear, + Weakness and malice and lust; + Yet, quivering up from the dust, + Flame of the spirit, unleaping and clear, + Yearning to God, since from God is its birth-- + This is man's portion, to shape as he can, + Flame of the spirit, and dust of the earth-- + This is the making of man._ + + PRISCILLA LEONARD. + +O God, Thou art the Father of our spirits, but our spirits have come to +us through ways of flesh. We are both spiritual and carnal. Our spirits +seek Thee evermore, but our flesh turns away from Thee and strives to +drag us down. Between our best and our worst is bitter conflict. Help us +to the discovery that all that lives is in like conflict, and that there +can be no virtue and no glory except in overcoming. Make us see that the +spirit is stronger than the flesh because it is of God, and that in the +obedience and inspiration of Jesus, Thy Son and our Brother, we may at +last be enthroned with Him. Amen. + + CEPHAS B. CRANE. + + +February 28 + + _Neither let mistakes nor wrong directions, of which every man, in + his studies and elsewhere, falls into many, discourage you. There + is precious instruction to be got by finding we were wrong. Let a + man try faithfully, manfully, to be right; he will grow daily more + and more right. It is at bottom the condition on which all men have + to cultivate themselves._ + + THOMAS CARLYLE. + +Almighty God, our heavenly Father,--in Thine own loving way Thou dost +bless us when we do the right; when we fall into mistakes so teach us by +Thy judgments that we become wise unto salvation. Help Thy children to +recognize their proneness to blunder, that they learn to walk +circumspectly. When we fall into the wrong, grant that we lie prone not +long but arise undismayed to greater effort. Bring to bear upon us the +influences of the Holy Spirit, that we strive earnestly and devoutly to +be right at the centre of our being; that rightness be the fabric of our +life. To Thee be all glory evermore. Amen. + + EDWARD A. PERRY. + + +February 29 + + _Henceforth I learn that to obey is best, + And love with fear the only God, to walk + As in His presence, ever to observe + His providence, and on Him sole depend, + Merciful over all His works, with good + Still overcoming evil, and by small + Accomplishing great things--by things deemed weak + Subverting worldly strong, and worldly wise + By simply meek, that suffering for Truth's sake + Is fortitude to highest victory, + And to the faithful death the gate of life-- + Taught this by His example whom I now + Acknowledge my Redeemer ever blest._ + + JOHN MILTON. + +O Thou Eternal One before whom from day to day we walk and on whom we +ever depend, help us to-day to love whatever is good and beautiful and +to follow obediently the behests of Thy Spirit. May we overcome evil +with good; and may we accomplish whatever tasks the hours as they pass +demand of us, whether small or great, with such strength as may be +vouchsafed us and with a wisdom begotten of meekness. If we must suffer +for truth's sake may we manifest such humility and fortitude as shall be +conducive to the highest success. Open for us hourly the gates of life, +as those who endeavor to be faithful to their high calling. These favors +we ask in the name of Him who redeems our lives from all evil and crowns +us daily with His loving kindness. Amen. + + EDWARD DAY. + + +March 1 + + _All the strength of the world and all its beauty, all true joy, + everything that consoles, that feeds hope, or throws a ray of light + along our dark paths, everything that makes us see across our poor + lives a splendid goal and a boundless future, comes to us from + people of simplicity, those who have made another object of their + desires than the passing satisfaction of selfishness and vanity, + and have understood that the art of living is to know how to give + one's life._ + + CHARLES WAGNER. + +Heavenly Father, help us to be like Thyself, as manifested in the person +of Jesus Christ, Thy Son! It was His will to do the will of His Father +by living and dying for others. Teach us so to live. Help us to learn by +positive personal experience that supremest joy comes only "in +ministering unto others." Teach us what Jesus meant when He said: "I am +among you as he that serveth." Plant deeply within us His passion for a +life of service. May our morning hours be gladdened and inspired by this +divine purpose. Let Thy holy will be done in us this day. Amen. + + CHARLES PARKHURST. + + + March 2 + + _The year's at the spring + And day's at the morn; + Morning's at seven; + The hill-side's dew-pearled; + The lark's on the wing; + The snail's on the thorn; + God's in His heaven-- + All's right with the world!_ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + +Father in Heaven, refreshed and heartened by the night, we begin again +with Thee the high adventure of our life. Add to the beauty of the world +about us a finer spiritual beauty in our souls. Save us from our own +undoing. If our thoughts are dark, shine in upon them with Thy glory; if +they be bright, make them to light the pathway of another. Have us +wholesomely to forget ourselves, in the joy of Thy good world, the +promise of our imperfection and the trust in God that maketh not afraid. +And when the duties of the day are done, dismiss us, Thy well-meaning +children, with a quiet mind to rest. Amen. + + ALBERT WELLMAN HITCHCOCK. + + + March 3 + + _We will do something worth doing--that is the resolution for you + and me._ + + EDWARD EVERETT HALE. + + _We admire the man who embodies victorious efforts, the man who + never wrongs his neighbor, who is prompt to help a friend, but who + has those virile qualities necessary to win in the stern strife of + actual life._ + + THEODORE ROOSEVELT. + +Father of Lights in whom is no darkness at all, and in whose light we +see light, help us to clearly see and never forget that only right deeds +are worthy of a child of Thine. May we in no moment forget that to yield +to the wrong is to bring upon us Thy just condemnation and sow for us a +sure reaping of sorrowful repentance. By doing the things we know to be +right and worth doing, the things worthy of our true selves and of our +Father and of our Master whose we are, may this day, through us, yield +some benefit to other children of Thine, and bring to us the sweet +reward of Thine approval. Amen. + + OSCAR F. SAFFORD. + + +March 4 + + _It is worth a thousand pounds a year to have the habit of looking + on the bright side of things._ + + SAMUEL JOHNSON. + + _Not by appointment do we meet delight and joy; + They wait not our expectancy; + But round some corner in the street of life, + They, on a sudden, greet us with a smile._ + + GERALD MASSEY. + +Our Father, at the beginning of a new day, refreshed by the night's +rest, we turn to Thee for strength for the day's task. We know not what +the hours hold for us, but this we do know, that come what may, Thou +wilt go with us to bless, to cheer; we shall not walk or work alone. As +we faithfully and cheerfully perform our work, conscious of Thy +presence, there will come joys and smiles unexpected and unsought. This +is Thy way of teaching us faithfulness and endurance. May we soon learn, +that if we would make the day happy and worth while, we must not seek +our own pleasure and good, but that of our brethren. May we so live that +when the night shadows are again upon us, there shall be no cause for +shame or regret. In the Master's spirit! Amen. + + O. HOWARD PERKINS. + + +March 5 + + _Not in dumb resignation we lift our hands on high; + Not like the nerveless fatalist, content to do and die. + Our faith springs, like the eagle's, who soars to meet the sun, + And cries exulting unto Thee, "Oh, Lord, Thy will be done."_ + + _Thy will! It bids the weak be strong; it bids the strong be just; + No lips to fawn, no hand to beg, no brow to seek the dust, + Wherever man oppresses men beneath the liberal sun, + O Lord, be there, Thine arm made bare, Thy righteous will be done._ + + JOHN HAY. + +It is with the beautiful assurance of Thy love and kindness, our Father, +that we draw nigh unto Thee. It is Faith that seems to give us wings by +which we rise above the darkness, into Thy Presence of light and love. +We feel our divine relationship to Thee, so that we lift up our hands to +Thee, as the child to the parent. We are content to do Thy will, because +we know then just what it is to love Thee. Our Master taught us this +great lesson by His own faith in Thee. To do Thy will means strength to +the weak, hope to the hopeless. To the sorrowing there can be seen, +beyond the tear, the rainbow of Thy promise. Thus, as we realize our +sonship will we work to make all men feel their own power, and all +become one in Thy great love. May Thy Kingdom come and Thy will be done, +in Christ our Lord. Amen. + + C. E. FISHER. + + +March 6 + + _If you are my friend you cannot be indifferent to my faults of + character, any more than you can be indifferent to my sickness or + suffering. But, if you care to help me cure these faults, please + let them alone! Please make much of my good qualities if you can + discover any. And especially bless me with the encouraging sight of + a better man than myself, and cheer me with a high example. I know + that there are times when a sharp or gentle rebuke is in order, and + that "faithful are the wounds of a friend." But the wiser doctors + have lost their faith in blood-letting; and they know that clumsy + surgery kills more than it cures._ + + CHARLES G. AMES. + +In our prayer, our Heavenly Father, we desire to be consciously grateful +for the opportunities this new day affords us of being helpful to each +other. The inspiration so to act comes from Thee. Thou art the constant +and never-failing Helper of Thy children. May we be mindful of the fact +that our noblest service to another may not be an alms, but a look of +encouragement, a word of cheer. Enable us to be not too sensible of +others' faults and failings. Assist us to see and magnify the good in +other lives. To this end may we be to others such examples in conduct +and character as we would have them be to us. We offer and ask all in +the spirit of Jesus. Amen. + + LEROY W. COONS. + + +March 7 + + _The mariner of old said to Neptune in a great tempest, "O God! + Thou mayest save me if Thou wilt, and if Thou wilt Thou mayest + destroy me, but whether or no, I will steer my rudder true."_ + + MONTAIGNE. + + _I go to prove my soul + I see my way as birds their trackless way. + I shall arrive! what time, what circuit first, + I ask not; but unless God send His hail + Or blinding fire-balls, sleet or stifling snow, + In some time, His good time, I shall arrive; + He guides me and the bird. In His good time!_ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + +Once more we face the day that can be dreadful only to our poor sight +and trembling faith. For Thou hast made flame and pain, the hurricane +and quaking earth to be Thy ministers of grace. Shall trust depart when +shadows fall? Thou art "in the shadow keeping watch above Thine own." As +truly in severity as in gentleness, Thou art the All-Loving and +All-Wise. Shall we fear to go anywhere? Lord, Thou art everywhere! +Defend us only from the blindness and fear of ignorance and sin. Draw us +nearer to Thee, this day, by any means in Thy good pleasure, so that at +last, truly knowing Thy way, we shall rise above the worst that +circumstances may do into joy unspeakable and peace unbroken. In the +name of Him made perfect through suffering. Amen. + + HENRY B. TAYLOR. + + +March 8 + + _We complain of the slow, dull life we are forced to lead, of our + humble sphere of action, of our low position in the scale of + society, of our having no room to make ourselves known, of our + wasted energies, of our years of patience. So do we say that we + have no Father who is directing our life, so do we say that God has + forgotten us, so do we boldly judge what life is best for us, and + so by our complaining do we lose the use and profit of the quiet + years._ + + BISHOP HUNTINGTON. + +Infinite and Holy One, by the tender mercies of Thy great love show us +this day the true life that is hid in Thee. Feed us with Thy spirit that +we hunger not. Make us strong and merciful in Thee. Help us to be +simple, brave, and true. Give us to speak and live the truth. Make us +content with life while ever dreaming of the more perfect day. Fix our +lives in a great and brave integrity. Humble us in our pride, lift us +from our despondency. Keep our hearts pure and our lips from speaking +guile. Send us forth in perfect faith that here and now our lives may be +patterned after that of Jesus without loss of influence over men. Make +us not ashamed to be good and forgiving and gentle in all our ways. +Amen. + + FREDERICK W. BETTE. + + +March 9 + + _Count each affliction, whether light or grave, + God's messenger sent down to thee; do thou + With courtesy receive him; rise and bow; + And, ere his shadow pass thy threshold, crave + Permission first his heavenly foot to lave._ + + * * * * * + + _Grief should be + Like joy, majestic, equable, sedate, + Confirming, cleansing, raising, making free. + Strong to consume small troubles; to commend + Great thoughts, grave thoughts, thoughts lasting to the end._ + + AUBREY DEVERE. + +Our Father, we would learn to trust Thy love, to live so that Thy grace +shall have in us its perfect work. Not the easy thing is what we ask, +but strength for duty. Give us the confidence that Thou art by our side. +Let Thy strong touch be felt, Thy blessed presence seen. In all the +turmoil that rages within, without, grant us Thy peace. In childish +helplessness, grant us the Father's help. To grow like Jesus is our +heart's desire. All things that Thy great heart permits or sends, we +would receive with gratitude, that so our wills and lives may be in +harmony with Thine. And so day by day may something of the Saviour's +glory shine through us and bless and brighten other lives in need. Amen. + + FRANK M. HOLT. + + +March 10 + + _Dawn and its silence draw a silver sigh + Far in the east where early shadows lie + All flocked and folded like soft peaceful sheep. + The spirit of the spring stirs in its sleep, + Breathes into life a misty floating sheen; + The willows dreamy drip of constant green; + Exultant beats a bird-heart o'er a nest, + Where dim, vague stirrings 'neath the tiny breast + Spell fresh the miracle of motherhood. + Ah, how the world is young! ah, how 'tis good! + To feel the new life flutter mystic wing; + Like to a lark to feel one's soul upspring, + Transpierce the very limit of the sky, + And toss its challenge to Eternity!_ + + MARY BALDWIN. + +O God, our heavenly Father, make our hearts exultant, as the earth in +the spring morning, with the radiance of Thy Presence. Fill them with +the joy and hopefulness of eternal youth, and cause them to be uplifted +in gratitude and thankfulness to Thee. We have seen earthly faces so +beaming with the light of love that we never shall forget them. We have +spoken names that are so endeared to us that they will linger in our +memory as long as we live. So, O Father, may it be with Thy face and Thy +name. May Thy face beaming upon us as the sun of righteousness win our +love to holiness and virtue, making us fruitful of good works, and Thy +name be so woven in our affections that we shall cherish and hallow it +forever. Amen. + + EDGAR W. PREBLE. + + +March 11 + + _You must be serving something, some one, that needs your help in + order to really appreciate the Divine care. It may be the parents' + care of their children; the teacher and her scholars; the + charity-worker and the poor, the friendless, the benighted; it may + be friend helping friend--in some way the life of loving service + must be there as something out of which God can help us think of + and value the care which infinite love bestows upon us._ + + JULIAN K. SMYTH. + +Heavenly Father, with the opening of a new day we thank Thee for father +love and mother love, for love of patriot and philanthropist, and for +the love which that has called into being in our own hearts. Through +this love and the service of mutual helpfulness to which we have been +led thereby, Thou openest our eyes to behold the world pervaded and +overruled by a spirit of infinite goodness, society resting upon mutual +services, and through that service mankind rising to a nobler and +diviner civilization. Help us to be mindful of this heavenly vision, and +so make our feet swift to run and our hands eager to work in the service +of righteousness and mutual helpfulness. We ask in His name, who loving +us, has taught us the divinity of service. Amen. + + LEGRAND POWERS. + + +March 12 + + _Far better is it to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs + even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor + spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the + gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat._ + + THEODORE ROOSEVELT. + + _But only he whose judgment never strays + Beyond the threshold of the right, learns this-- + Not always is it good to have one's wish; + What seemeth sweet full oft to bitter turns; + Fulfilled desire hath made mine eyes to weep. + Therefore, O reader of these lines, if thou + Would'st virtuous be, and held by others dear + Will ever for the power to do aright._ + + LEONARDO DA VINCI. + +God of the morning light, with the dawn of another day we come to Thee +with prayer for help in the steadfastness of our manifold duties. The +cares that oppress us, the burdens we carry, the obligations that fall +upon us, are too much for our little strength without Thy help. That +help we crave from Thee, the only source of all-availing strength. Let +us not be dismayed by the powers of this world or busy ourselves in vain +ambitions seeking the praise of men, but may we seek that Divine +approval which is of more worth than all the favors of earth. Make us +brave and strong to follow in the way of Thine appointment, and grant +that we may so sincerely feel and act in the busy times of this day that +when the evening comes no wasted hours may be laid to our charge. Amen. + + EDWARD M. BARNEY. + + +March 13 + + _You are in God's world; you are God's child. Those things you + cannot change; the only peace and rest and happiness for you is to + accept them and rejoice in them. When God speaks to you, you must + not believe that it is the wind blowing or the torrent falling from + the hill. You must know that it is God. You must gather up the + whole power of meeting Him. You must be thankful that life is great + and not little. You must listen as if listening were your life. And + then, then only can come peace. All other sounds will be caught up + into the prevailing richness of that voice of God. The lost + proportions will be perfectly restored. Discord will cease; harmony + will be complete._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +Almighty God! We thank Thee for the peace and comfort of the night; for +the new day and all the hope and peace and promise that it brings to us. +Help us that with glad faces and joyous hearts we may take up its every +privilege and duty, doing, in the spirit of the Master every good and +helpful thing our hands find to do. And when the evening shall have come +may we look back on a day of plenty, service, and peace, retiring to our +rest with songs in our hearts and thanksgiving on our lips because Thy +blessings have been on this, as on all other days new every morning and +fresh every evening. Amen. + + GEORGE MAYO GERRISH. + + +March 14 + + _It is the first mild day of March: + Each minute sweeter than before, + The red-breast sings from the tall larch + That stands beside our door._ + + _There is a blessing in the air, + Which seems a sense of joy to yield, + To the bare trees and mountain bare, + And grass in the green field._ + + WILLIAM WORDSWORTH. + +Our Father, we wake each morning refreshed and thankful for the joy of +living; for the air we breathe, the things we see, the sounds of +nature's sweetest harmonies and all the beauty which surrounds our +earthly life. May the wonders of the earth speak to us in witness of Thy +love. Let springing-grass and opening flower remind us of the new life +which is ours through the resurrection of our Lord. His blessing like +the light of the sun runs everywhere, carrying with it morning and hope, +springtime and gladness. The joy is in the song of the birds, the murmur +of the waters, the children's laughter and the song of happy hearts. +Attune our hearts to notes of praise and make us glad upon the earth +until Thou bringest us to perfect and unshadowed joys where we shall see +Thee as Thou art and be like Thee. Amen. + + J. W. STEPHAN. + + +March 15 + + _As to equality and inequality, all the beauty and glory of life + come from inequalities. If we were all Beethovens or Shakespeares + or marvelous in any one direction, life would be unbearable. Who + shall tell me if an Easter lily is the equal of a rose, or if + either is equal to an oak or a pine? The question of equality is + out of the court. The one thing we need to do is to cultivate the + finest and sweetest things in us; and then, whether we are one of + the California big trees or the violet in a valley, we shall help + on the beauty and glory of the earth._ + + ROBERT COLLYER. + +Our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for the manifold beauties of Thy +universe, the revelations of Thyself to Thy children. For those large +wonders which stir men's minds and rouse their souls to awe, we thank +Thee, but not less for the little things of life, filling their places +well, and showing daily to the seeing eye that without them Thy universe +could not be complete. Help us to grasp the lesson that they teach. If +Thou hast given to us the great place, we thank Thee, but we thank Thee +not less for the homely task, the humble duty, for it is all necessary +to Thy plan. Help us, day by day, with stronger purpose, larger +consecration, to fill our place, to do Thy will, in His name. Amen. + + GEORGE F. FORTIER. + + +March 16 + + _There must be a way of taking worry rightly, so that it shall do + us good and not harm. Worry, rightly taken, should train to + quietness, humility, patience, gentleness, sympathy. It ought not + to eventuate (though it naturally does) in making others suffer + because we are uncomfortable; in making us a source of painful + worry to others because we are worried ourselves._ + + A. H. K. BOYD. + +Father of Love, Thy blessing it is which gives us another day. Help us +to put before its cares the spirit that will banish care, to find in its +beginning the power that will make labors happy and its ending sweet, +and so to open our hearts to Thy light that no gloom of night shall +linger round our way. If heaviness there be in ours or others' lives may +every wholesome cheer make it less sore. If remembered faults and +follies quench a better hope, send Thy patience and Thy will to be our +courage and fresh resolve. Through all the noisy world may the secret +music of Thy law swell in our breasts and every step keep time with its +glorious march. Amen. + + JOHN DAY. + + +March 17 + + _Therefore to whom turn I but to Thee, the ineffable Name? + Builder and maker, Thou, of houses not made with hands! + What, have fear of change from Thee who art ever the same! + Doubt that Thy power can fill the heart that Thy power expands! + There shall never be one lost good! What was, shall live as before; + The evil is null, is nought, is silence implying sound; + What was good, shall be good, with, for evil, so much good more; + On the earth the broken arcs; in the heaven, a perfect round._ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + +We thank Thee, O God, that each morning brings us fresh assurance of Thy +wisdom and goodness--that the days have taught us to believe in Thee and +to trust Thee as our perfect Friend. We are glad that we can face the +day in the faith that Thou art sufficient to the needs of the day--to +all the needs of all Thy children. In this trust, we beseech Thee, make +us more and more to rejoice in life and its high privileges. Help us to +go on our way with gladness and peace in our hearts--to worship Thee +hourly by honest work, by faithful service, by kind words, by helpful +deeds, and so, to find life good by doing something to make it good. +Amen. + + FLINT M. BISSELL. + + +March 18 + + _"If I were you," she said, "I should not worry. Just make up your + mind to do better when you get another chance. One can't do more + than that. That is what I shall think of: that God will give each + of us another chance, and that each one of us will take it and do + better--I and you and everyone. So there is no need to fret over + failure, when one hopes one may be allowed to redeem that failure + later on. Besides which life is very hard. Why, we ourselves + recognize that. If there be a God, some intelligence greater than + human intelligence, He will understand better than ourselves that + life is very hard and difficult, and He will be astonished not + because we are not better, but because we are not worse. At least, + that would be my notion of a God. I should not worry if I were you. + Just make up your mind to do better if you get the chance and be + content with that."_ + + BEATRICE HARRADEN. + +O Lord, how often we have failed--how weak and frail we are--we have +groped and stumbled along the pathway of life and have been defeated +over and over again. Yet in the light of Thy providence and Thy love in +spite of all defeats, we take heart and face the day with hope. In Thine +economy no failure is ever final--we rejoice that Thou openest before us +another opportunity. Let us be brave and earnest to seize the +opportunities of these passing hours. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +March 19 + + _To every life there comes a time supreme: + One day, one night, one morning, or one noon, + One freighted hour--one moment opportune, + One rift through which sublime fulfilments gleam; + One time when fate goes tiding with the stream, + One Once in balance 'twixt Too Late, Too Soon-- + And ready for the passing instant's boon + That shall in favor tip the wavering beam. + Ah! happy he who, knowing how to wait, + Knows also how to watch and how to stand + On life's broad deck alert, and at the prow, + To seize the happy moment big with fate + From Opportunity's extended hand + When the great clock of Destiny strikes Now!_ + + MARY ASHLEY TOWNSEND. + +Our heavenly Father! Thou art the Author of all our days, and all our +times and seasons are hid in the unfolding mystery of Thy Thought and +Purpose. It is not given to us to know what a day or an hour may bring +forth, but the opportune moments come, ways are opened before us to +larger life and usefulness and privilege and duty. May we, by +faithfulness, and watchfulness, and the readiness of those on duty, be +prepared for each divinely offered opportunity. Surrounded by blessings, +may we live to bless. Ministered unto, may we minister. Grateful to +Thee, may we show our gratitude by service. In Thy name, Amen. + + DWIGHT M. HODGE. + + +March 20 + + _Put out of your thought the past whatever it may be; let go even + the future with its golden dream and its high ideal; and + concentrate your soul in this burning, present moment. For the man + who is true to the present is true to his best; and the soul that + wins the ground immediately before it, makes life a triumph._ + + OZORA STEARNS DAVIS. + +Almighty Giver of every good, we come to Thee amid the joys of a new +morning, with its new blessings and opportunities. We would dedicate +this day to Thy service. We would forget the past and waste not our time +in idle dreaming of to-morrow, but with consecrated zeal we would apply +ourselves to the tasks Thou hast appointed us for this present hour. Thy +hand is ever opened to let down the tokens of Thy love. May all that is +best within us rise up in answer, and may we be dedicated anew to our +upbuilding in righteousness and the fulfilment of our duties to one +another. May we this day follow the footsteps of the Christ and prove +ourselves His faithful disciples! Amen. + + R. PERRY BUSH. + + +March 21 + + _I believe that today is better than yesterday, and that tomorrow + will be better than today._ + + GEORGE F. HOAR. + + _Make yourselves nests of pleasant thoughts, bright fancies, + faithful sayings; treasure-houses of precious and restful thoughts, + which care cannot disturb nor poverty take away from you,--houses + built without hands for your souls to live in._ + + JOHN RUSKIN. + +Dear Father in heaven, around Thy name cluster the most sacred and holy +affections. Thy name, indeed, is above every name infinite in love, and +awakening in each heart a sense of filial gratitude. At this morning +hour, therefore, we are mindful of the tie that binds us to Thee, that +provides a nesting-place for pleasant and restful thoughts, that makes +duty less irksome, home-love more tender, sacrifice more willing, and +character more noble. In this spirit we pray Thee, O Father, send us +forth to the labor which awaits us, only to realize, under Thy +Providence, that this is the best day of our life, and full of assurance +and rejoicing for a still better tomorrow. In the light of faith, hope +and love do we ask and offer all. Amen. + + WILBURN D. POTTER. + + +March 22 + + _Scarce tangible may be the first glad sign, + Yet how it shakes us with a vernal thrill! + The voice of the south wind behind the hill; + Or an elusive bird-note faint and fine; + A flush at dawn along the wan sky-line; + A lyrical exuberance in the rill; + A something working its mysterious will + Both in majestic hole and tenuous vine!_ + + _It is the vernal spirit. In the earth + It throbs and pulses; quickens in the air; + And permeates all nature thro' and thro'. + In the expectant poignancy of birth + What raptures, what rare ecstasies we share-- + Old,--ah, how old!--and yet forever new!_ + + CLINTON SCOLLARD. + +O God, how good Thou art! All Thy works praise Thee. The world is filled +with Thy glory. This dawning Springtime brings Thee very near every +responsive heart. Thou art the fountain of life. We see Thee in bursting +bud and incipient bloom. We hear Thee in the rapture of birds and in the +new-found gladness of sun-kissed rivulets. May we, the children of Thy +love, be new born into a deeper spirituality,--a richer life! May the +beauty of the Spirit breathing through our hearts call forth the latent +goodness that slumbers there! Speak through us the music of Thy love. +Perfume us with the odors of Thy heavenly grace, and may we walk this +day in tune with Thee! Amen. + + JOSEPH COOPER. + + +March 23 + + _Work is the grand cure of all the maladies and miseries that ever + beset mankind--honest work, which you intend getting done._ + + THOMAS CARLYLE. + + _Thank God every morning when you get up that you have something to + do which must be done whether you like it or not. Being forced to + work and forced to do your best will breed in you temperance, + self-control, diligence, strength of will, content and a hundred + virtues which the idle will never know._ + + CHARLES KINGSLEY. + +Kind Father and Friend, Thy presence has watched over us all our days +and has been a comfort in all our labors. We thank Thee for Thy +unwearied watching over us. May we at the dawn of this new day, come to +our tasks with thanks in our hearts and a song on our lips. May all +life's stern duties and its perplexities get grace and beauty from our +hallowed thoughts and sanctified resolves. We would ask that Thy free +spirit be with us this day to give us hope and joy in our several tasks. +May the sweet peace of mind of those who learn to labor and to wait +crown all our efforts. Dear Father, forgive our failures and keep us +ever Thine. Amen. + + CHARLES E. PETTY. + + +March 24 + + _Ah, the mis-takings and the mis-leavings; and all the ignorant + beginning, when we can only lay up things for late wisdom to repent + of!_ + + _Nothing really bad can ever happen.... I've meant right,--and I + mean right now. I'll do the best I can, and the Lord will take care + of everybody._ + + MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. + +Lord, Thou comest to us with light and life, forgive us for coming to +Thee as aliens and beggars; daily Thou art our refuge and strength, and +this should subtract our fear and multiply our confidence, comfort and +consecration. Our needs are Thy opportunity; we have more sunshine than +we can use, more love than we can repay and more revelation than we can +translate. O may this satisfy us early and strengthen us through all our +days. Alone we are very weak, but we are never alone; all of life is a +company affair, for Thou art with us; help us to be as truly Thy +children as Thou art our Father and Mother. Through our thinking, +working and waiting may men see Thee and glorify Thee. O teach us to +abide ever in Thy love, and help us to work some helpful miracle by the +gates of need, and to see the rainbow of prophecy through earth's tears +and over its years. Amen. + + ALAN R. TILLINGHAST. + + +March 25 + + _'Tis the fine souls who serve us, and not what is called fine + society._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + + _We find what we look for in the world. I have always been looking + for the nobler qualities in human beings, and I have always found + them. There are great souls all along the highway of life, and + there are great qualities even in the people who seem common and + weak to us ordinarily._ + + ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. + +Gracious Father, we thank Thee for the power Thou hast given us to labor +for our own and others' advancement and happiness. As we begin this new +day we trust in Thy bounty and would draw on Thy strength to sustain us +in our toil. We thank Thee for the brave souls in every walk of life who +have set us an example worthy to be followed. Many have been or are +notable in the world for their fortitude, honor and achievements; many +others have been known to us but have been unheralded by men, and from +all these we have ourselves been made more capable and faithful. By Thy +grace may we be aided in emulating the good we see in others, and be +able to make the world a little brighter because of Thy gift to us of +this day. Amen. + + FRANK S. RICE. + + +March 26 + + _An old, worn Harp that had been played + Till all its strings were loose and frayed, + Joy, Hate, and Fear, each one, assayed + To play. But each in turn had found + No sweet responsiveness of sound._ + + _Then Love the Master-player came + With heaving breast and eyes aflame; + The Harp he took all undismayed, + Smote on its strings, still strange to song, + And brought forth music sweet and strong._ + + PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR. + +Heavenly Father, I pray Thee that Thou wilt help me to love to-day. Thou +art Love and if Thou shalt fill my life there will be no room for hate +and no room for fear, for "Perfect Love casteth out fear." As the Master +stilled the waves in Galilee, so speak Thou peace to my soul, and bid +all discord cease, that my whole life may be in tune with heaven, and +may be one happy song. Love alone can bring harmony out of discord, love +out of hate, trust out of fear, and music out of a worn-out, or a long +unused or misused life. So let Love control the whole of my life for +Jesus' sake. Amen. + + B. L. JENNINGS. + + +March 27 + + _No stream from its source + Flows seaward, how lonely soever its course, + But some land is gladdened. No star ever rose + Or set without influence somewhere. Who knows + What earth needs from earth's lowliest creature? No life + Can be pure in its purpose and strong in its strife, + And all life not be purer and stronger thereby._ + + OWEN MEREDITH. + +If I am this day to touch other lives helpfully so that they may be +gladdened and strengthened for truer and nobler living, I shall need, my +Father, not only a clear perception of myself in relation to that to +which Thou dost call me, but also a clear vision of the Christ who would +be felt through me, not only the impulse of a strong purpose but also +the endowment of power by Thy spirit of power. That this may be, do Thou +test my purpose by that of Thy son and fashion my life by His teaching, +keeping my heart open always toward Thee. Amen. + + F. H. WHEELER. + + +March 28 + + _I but open my eyes,--and perfection, no more and no less, + In the kind I imagined, full-fronts me, and God is seen God, + In the star, in the stone, in the flesh, in the soul and the clod. + And thus looking within and around me, I ever renew + (With that stoop of the soul which in bending upraises it too) + The submission of man's nothing-perfect to God's all-complete, + And by each new obeisance in spirit, I climb to His feet._ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + +Thou Infinite Spirit, we cannot understand Thee, yet we feel Thy +presence within us and about us. We cannot unravel the mystery of Thy +life, not even of our own lives, yet we feel ourselves linked as by +chains of steel to Thyself. We are poor and ignorant and little and +finite; Thou art great and strong and infinite, yet we cling to the +thought that we are Thy children. Even in Thine infinity Thou stoopest +to listen to us. Thou carest for us, lovest us. O Thou Father of our +Souls, may we cling to Thee to-day and every day. We do not ask Thee to +explain Thyself, but we do ask that in storm and sunshine, in adversity +and in prosperity, and in every emergency we may keep our anchorage to +Thee unbroken, and feel Thy presence with us. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +March 29 + + _I wonder why it is that we are not all kinder to each other than + we are. How much the world needs it! How easily it is done!_ + + HENRY DRUMMOND. + + _Let us awaken to the divine privilege of sharing the heartaches of + our friends; of the meaning of good fellowship; of that + independence of spirit that does not imitate; of courage and pride + that can endure adversity with dignity, and without fear._ + + ANONYMOUS. + +Our Heavenly Father, help us through this new day to allow the impulses +of our hearts to have fullest play. Help us to help each other, Lord, +and of whatever grace or influence we have to bless and uplift our +fellowmen to give generously and gladly. Help us scatter sunshine along +our pathway, to speak the cheering word to discouraged hearts and to +lend the helping hand to feeble or halting ones along the way. May we +find our greatest happiness following in the footsteps of our Master, +humbly serving our neighbor's needs, and doing good even at every +wayside opportunity. Amen. + + JAMES F. ALBION. + + +March 30 + + _Once to every man and nation comes the moment to decide, + In the strife of Truth with Falsehood, for the good or evil side; + Some great cause, God's new Messiah, offering each the bloom or blight, + Parts the goats upon the left hand, and the sheep upon the right, + And the choice goes by forever 'twixt that darkness and that light._ + + JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. + +Almighty Father, we are before Thee, asking for strength this day, that +for today's duty we may have the help of Thy Infinite wisdom, as we know +we have Thy love, Our Father with His Children. Father, help us to look +to Thee for strength and wisdom in every moment of doubt. We are not +afraid, because we can come to Thee for counsel, and companionship. We +can come to Thee for everything, and we find everything if we seek for +it with all our heart and soul and strength. So today, Father, be with +us to show each one of us here, the youngest or the oldest, the weakest +or the strongest, what is the duty next his hand today, that we may +enter into that work and go about our Father's business. Go with us and +be with us as with Thine own children. Amen. + + EDWARD EVERETT HALE. + + +March 31 + + _I long to accomplish great and noble tasks, but it is my duty and + joy to accomplish humble tasks as though they were great and + noble._ + + HELEN KELLER. + + _It is a fine notion of life to liken it to the loom. God puts on + the warp in those circumstances in which we find ourselves, and + which we cannot change. The woof is wrought by the shuttle of + everyday life. It is made of very homely threads sometimes, common + duties, unpromising and unwelcome tasks. But whoever tries to do + each day's work in the spirit of patient loyalty to God is weaving + the texture whose other side is fairer than the one he sees._ + + ANONYMOUS. + +Our Father in heaven, grant that we may be "faithful in that which is +least," leaving to Thy will whether we have the opportunity of being +"faithful in much." May we understand that the value of our service is +not so much in what we do as the spirit in which we do it. Help us to +remember that no service is common in Thy sight, if it is done for Thy +glory and the betterment of humanity; that in blessing others, we +ourselves are blessed; that life is mostly made up of little things, but +a character which is perfected by Thy grace and humble service is not a +little thing, but a jewel to shine in Thy crown forever. Amen. + + E. T. CURNICK. + + +April 1 + + _April is here! + There's a song in the maple, thrilling and new; + There's a flash of wings of heaven's own hue; + There's a veil of green on the nearer hills; + There's a burst of rapture in woodland rills; + There are stars in the meadow dropped here and there; + There's a breath of arbutus in the air; + There's a dash of rain, as if flung in jest; + There's an arch of color spanning the west; + April is here!_ + + EBEN E. REXFORD. + +O God, ever-living and ever-acting, all Thy works praise Thee, and Thy +saints bless Thee! We rejoice that Thou art bringing in this new +springtime, and art preparing to pour out Thy summer glory and bounty in +garden and field and wood, that Thy children may be richly blessed. As +Thou art working mightily in nature today so wilt Thou work in us, Thy +children, that the blessed fruits of the Spirit may appear in all that +we think and do and are? And may the spontaneous spring song of the +woods find its counterpart in the perpetual gladness of our souls sunk +deep in the love of Christ! Amen. + + HENRY IRVING CUSHMAN. + + +April 2 + + _The sweetest sound our whole year round + 'Tis the first robin of the spring! + The song of the full orchard choir, + Is not so fine a thing._ + + EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN. + + _The grass comes, the flower laughs where lately lay the snow, + O'er the breezy hill top hoarsely calls the crow, + By the flowing river the alder catkins swing + And the sweet song sparrow cries, "Spring, it is Spring!"_ + + CELIA THAXTER. + +Accept from a heart of gratitude, O God, thanksgiving and praises for +the glad anticipation of the coming days of spring. May the awakening of +nature, this living garment in which Thou hast robed Thy mysterious +loveliness, be to each of Thy children symbol of the new life which +comes to those who put their trust in the risen Christ and of the higher +life beyond where shadows are no more and light and gladness bless an +eternity of joy. O, Thou Father of lights, make every hour of this +opening day rich and radiant with Thy effulgent presence through Jesus +Christ. Amen. + + KERR BOYCE TUPPER. + + +April 3 + + _Within my earthly temple there's a crowd; + There's one of us that's humble, one that's proud, + There's one that's broken-hearted for his sins, + There's one that unrepentant sits and grins; + There's one that loves his neighbor as himself, + And one that cares for naught but fame and pelf. + From much corroding care I should be free + If I could once determine which is me._ + + THEODORE MARTIN. + +Our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for our multiform life. Thou hast +made us a little lower than the angels and hast crowned us with glory +and honor, yet how little we know ourselves! We go astray; we fall from +our high estate; like the moth we flutter around the blaze that burns +us. When we would do good, evil is present with us. Yet through all +complexity of thought and feeling, of passion and appetite, through all +our wanderings and all our sins we thank Thee that there shines clearly +the light of our own Divinity. We are Thy children. Help us, we pray +Thee, to know ourselves at our best. May we not be betrayed in this +day's journey by any siren voice. Let us go forth to the tasks of the +day with the consciousness that until the evening shadows fall Thou wilt +be with us. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +April 4 + + _If we but knew the secret of that power + That opes the bud in early days of spring, + If we but knew what makes the robin sing + His wondrous song just at the matin hour, + If we but knew the priceless boon and dower + Of human life when man is truly king. + If we but understood the little thing + That vexes us just at the present hour, + If we but knew--ah, well, 'tis vain to sigh + And speculate on things beyond our ken! + We know that earth is fair and life is sweet, + And something tells us that we cannot die. + And if we live and love the good, ah! then + We face to face with truth some day must meet._ + + CLARENCE HAWKES. + +O Lord, we thank Thee for a day so sweet and fair as this, when the +trees lift up their hands in a psalm of gratitude to Thee, and every +little flower that opens its cup and every wandering bird seem filled by +Thy spirit, and grateful to Thee. We thank Thee for all thine +handwritings of revelation on the walls of the world, on the heavens +above us and the ground beneath, and all the testimonies recorded there +of Thy presence, Thy power, Thy justice, and Thy love. Amen. + + THEODORE PARKER. + + +April 5 + + _Yet we must give the children leave to use + Our garden tools, though they spoil tool and plant + In learning. So the Master may not scorn + Our awkwardness, as with these bungling hands + We try to unroot the ill, and plant with good + Life's barren soil: the child is learning use. + Perhaps the angels even are forbid + To laugh at us, or may not care to laugh, + With kind eyes pitying our little hurts._ + + EDWARD ROWLAND SILL. + +Our Father: Thou knowest how unskilled are these hands and hearts of +ours. Thou knowest how much that we do, think, and speak often tends to +retard the progress of that which we would promote. Give us, then, this +day that wisdom which is from above, that no touch of our hand may mar +the beauty of one of Thy creations: no thought nor word wrong one of Thy +creatures. Help us to know that we are workers with God, and in this +knowledge may we strive for that excellence of service that shall hasten +the coming of that kingdom of peace, joy and righteousness which is life +eternal. Amen. + + FLORENCE KOLLOCK CROOKER. + + +April 6 + + _Plant flowers in the soul's front yard, + Set out new shade and blossom trees, + An' let the soul once froze an' hard, + Sprout crocuses of new idees._ + + _Yes, clean yer house, an' clean yer shed, + An' clean yer barn in ev'ry part; + But brush the cobwebs from yer head, + An' sweep the snow banks from yer heart._ + + SAM WALTER FOSS. + +Gracious Father, help us gratefully to begin this day with Thee. We +expect the day to bring its accustomed routine of cares and duties, and +its round of petty irritations, but we confidently believe that Thou +wilt help us in all our experiences. Let this morning's freshness, hope +and vigor be ours through the whole day. Help us to put faith in the +place of fear that all our efforts may be crowned with the success of +helpfulness. May we go blithely about our business with kind words and +cheerful faces that our day's work may be our day's worship. Amen. + + AUGUSTUS B. CHURCH. + + +April 7 + + _Ye seek for happiness--alas the day! + Ye find it not in luxury nor in gold, + Not in the fame nor in the envied sway, + For which O willing slaves to custom old, + Severe taskmistress, ye your hearts have sold. + Ye seek for peace, and, when ye die, to dream + No evil dreams; all mortal things are cold + And senseless then; if aught survive, I deem + It must be love and joy, for they immortal seem._ + + SHELLEY. + +O Thou Eternal God who hast given us life, help us to love Thy will and +to walk in Thy way this day. If flowers chance to grow beside our path +we would pluck them, but most of all would we rejoice in Thee alone, +knowing that in Thy will is perfect peace. Fill our souls with Thy joy +and strengthen us in the spirit of self-forgetfulness to spill it out +into the lives of others. Give us hearts "roomy, radiant, and full of +laughter," learned of "Jesus Christ, whom not having seen we love; on +whom though now we see Him not, yet believing, we rejoice greatly with +joy unspeakable and full of glory, receiving the end of our faith, even +the salvation of our souls." Amen. + + WALTER HEALY. + + +April 8 + + _A gush of bird song, a patter of dew, + A cloud and a rainbow's warning, + Suddenly sunshine and perfect blue-- + An April day in the morning._ + + HARRIET P. SPOFFORD. + + _There is something in the air + That's new and sweet and rare-- + There's something too that's new, + In the color of the blue + That's in the morning sky, + Before the sun is high._ + + NORA PERRY. + +Infinite and Holy One, be with us in the beauty of this new day. May the +dewy sweetness of the dawn Thou hast given to us be regarded as a token +of Thy love for Thy children. As an atmosphere of joy and peace may be +the thought of Thy consolation and Thy care. The delicate tints of Thy +sky arching over us may we compare to the blue of a constancy that is +divine, and which is freely shown to even the humblest and more erring +of Thy flock. Bless us and guide us on our pilgrim way, and inspire our +hearts and our hands to perform well their daily task. In His name do we +ask it. Amen. + + EDMUND Q. S. OSGOOD. + + +April 9 + + _As I have walked in Alabama my morning walk, + I have seen where the she-bird--the mocking-bird sat on her nest + in the briers hatching her brood, + I have seen the he-bird also, + I have paused to hear him near at hand inflating his throat and joyfully + singing, + And while I paused it came to me that what he really sang for was not + there only, + Nor for his mate nor for himself only, nor + All sent back by the echoes, + But subtle, clandestine, away beyond, + A charge transmitted and gift occult for those being born._ + + WALT WHITMAN. + +Thou great Spirit of Life, Our Father, in heaven, and in the earth, with +what myriad voices dost Thou speak to us, sometimes with the voice of +thunder and sometimes with the voice of bird. Even the rocks and hills +have their language. With every manifold voice Thou tellest us that we +do not live nor work for a day only. The song and the word and the work +of today have larger relations. They pass over into other days. We pray +this morning that the thoughts we think, the words we speak, and the +work we do may be so true that they may be fit for another day. So may +we begin _now_ to realize the meaning of Eternal Life. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +April 10 + + _If the stream had no quiet eddying place, could we so admire its + cascade over the rocks? Were there no clouds, could we so hail the + sky shining through them in its still calm purity?_ + + _The night is mother of the Day + The Winter of the Spring, + And ever upon old Decay + The greenest mosses cling. + Behind the cloud the starlight lurks, + Through showers the sunbeams fall: + For God, who loveth all His works, + Has left His Hope with all!_ + + JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER. + +Our Father, with childhood's glowing morning face we would turn to Thee +and be conscious that the brightness of life comes only to those upon +whom the sun of righteousness shines with clear light. Full of trust, +full of joy, we turn our faces towards the light and take up the labors +of life with entire confidence in the Divine care and guidance that +blesses the open vision, the faithful hand and the loving heart. We +would follow our Master, feeling that we could choose no better way, and +content if we be not called to suffer more than He in His life of +service and sacrifice, while our hearts praise the giver of spiritual +things with unceasing happy songs. Amen. + + RALPH EDWIN HORNE. + + +April 11 + + _Oh, the little birds sang east, and the little birds sang west, + And I smiled to think God's greatness flowed around our incompleteness,-- + Round our restlessness, his nest._ + + ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING. + + _And I saw that there was an Ocean of Darkness and Death; but an + infinite Ocean of Light and Love flowed over the Ocean of Darkness; + and in that I saw the infinite Love of God._ + + GEORGE FOX. + +Father of Light, in whom is no darkness at all, to Thee we lift our +longing eyes again. Shine away the darkness of our minds by the light of +Thy presence. Complete our incompleteness. Bring us out of our +restlessness into Thy rest. We thank Thee for our daily gifts,--bread to +feed the body, strength to sustain the soul, light to guide the feet. +Help us to put away the mistakes of the past, remembering them only with +the penitence that shall cause Thee to remember them no more. Help us +all through this day to know ourselves surrounded by Thine Infinite +Love. Amen. + + A. GERTRUDE EARLE. + + +April 12 + + _Just as you now play a piece without the music and do not think + what notes you strike, though once you picked them out by slow and + patient toil, so, if you begin of set purpose, you will learn the + law of kindness in utterance so perfectly that it will be second + nature to you and make more music in your heart than all the songs + the sweetest voice has ever sung._ + + FRANCIS E. WILLARD. + +Father, we rejoice and will be glad all the day that Thou hast made it +possible for us and all Thy children to learn the sweet song of true +life and that Thou dost give us so many opportunities for its practice. +O Lord, give us patience and kindness toward our fellowmen and trust in +Thee, so that whether the lessons be easy or hard we may take them +cheerfully, believing that Thou dost give us only that which is best. +Grant that we may be earnest and faithful until our souls can sing the +highest, purest and sweetest notes, until we are in harmony with All +Good. Amen. + + ABBIE E. DANFORTH. + + +April 13 + + _So many little faults we find: + We see them, for not blind + Is love--we see them; but if you and I + Remember them, perhaps, some by and by + They will not be + Faults then, grave faults to you and me, + But just odd ways, mistakes, or even less-- + Remembrances to bless._ + + GEORGE KLINGLE. + +Our dear Father in Heaven: for this day help us to be good. All through +the long night Thou hast watched over us. Under Thy wing have we been +sheltered as the chickens under the wing of the mother. Now that light +has come we will help Thee to keep this world sweet and bright and +clean. Help us to be true to this our promise; we resolve to be patient, +steadfast, cheerful, kindly, sturdy, and good. Our Father, we need Thee. +We want to walk in Thy way. Help us, for we are Thy children. Amen. + + WILLIAM CHANNING BROWN. + + +April 14 + + _The man without a purpose is like a ship without a rudder; a waif, + a nothing, no man. Have a purpose in life, if it is only to kill + and divide and sell oxen well, but have a purpose; and having it, + throw such strength of mind and muscle into your work as God has + given you._ + + THOMAS CARLYLE. + + _Neither a borrower nor a lender be; + For loan oft loses both itself and friend, + And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry. + This above all: to thine own self be true + And it must follow, as the night the day, + Thou canst not then be false to any man._ + + SHAKESPEARE. + +Almighty God, at the commencement of this day's work may we look on +high, and measure everything we are about to do by the scale of +eternity. Keep us from all littleness; may we not be turned aside by +things that are insignificant and unworthy. Help us, we beseech Thee, to +make the glory of our life commensurate with the splendors of our +privileges. May we live life in a great spirit, realizing that there is +no duty so simple, no position so humble, but that we may show forth the +grandeur of trust, and obedience toward Thee. May the great and holy +purpose we cherish find its expression as we cooperate with the divine +purpose. Amen. + + J. H. BARKER. + + +April 15 + + _'Twas one of those charmed days + When the genius of God doth flow, + The wind may alter twenty ways, + A tempest cannot blow; + It may blow north, it still is warm; + Or south, it still is clear; + Or east, it smells like a clover farm; + Or west, no thunder fear._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + +Father of Lights, from whom cometh every good and perfect gift, we thank +Thee for the morning and for the sunshine. We rejoice in the light, but +when it is hidden from us, we are thankful that in the upper air above +our clouded morning it still fills Thy heavens. Thou gavest us good +things while we slept, and now, refreshed by Thy Spirit, may we go forth +to our appointed tasks with cheerful obedience and joyful expectation. +If trial and trouble await us, or if, in the heat of the day the burden +seems too great, may we still be comforted, because we put our trust in +Thee. Amen. + + GEORGE BATCHELOR. + + +April 16 + + _But spring-wind, like a dancing psaltress, passes + Over its breast, to waken it, rare verdure + Buds tenderly upon rough banks between + The withered tree-roots and the cracks of frost, + Like a smile striving with a wrinkled face; + The grass grows bright, the boughs are swol'n with blooms + Like chrysalids impatient for the air, + The shining dors are busy, beetles run + Along the furrows; ants make their ado; + Above, birds fly in merry flocks, the lark + Soars up and up, shivering for very joy; + Afar the ocean sleeps; white fishing gulls + Flit where the sand is purple with its tribe + Of nested limpits; savage creatures seek + Their loves in wood and plain--and God renews + His ancient rapture._ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + +O Lord, who givest to mankind liberally, and upbraidest not, we thank +Thee for the blessings Thou bestowest from day to day. We thank Thee for +this material world, now clad in its garment of Northern beauty, for the +great sun which all day pours down his light upon the waiting and the +grateful world, and for the earth underneath our feet. We bless Thee for +the grass, bread for the cattle, its harvest of use spread everywhere, +and for the various beauty which here and there spangles all useful +things which Thine eye looks down upon. May we use this world of matter +to build up the being that we are to a nobler stature of strength and of +beauty. Amen. + + THEODORE PARKER. + + +April 17 + + _O brothers all! come near + And hear + A bird's + Melodious dreaming set to words, and flung + The spring's new leaves and tender buds among, + For very joy of life, and hope, and love + In a world made broad enough + For all God's creatures to be merry in, + With joyous clash and din, + And yet too small + For any greed at all! + Lo! deep and sure + Is cut this truth in heaven's book of gold: + Out of one mother in the garden old + Were born the rich and poor._ + + MAURICE THOMPSON. + +Our Father, may we begin this day with a song in our hearts,--a song as +rich and full and free as the bird sings at the earliest dawning of the +sun's light,--a song so attuned with infinite life and hope and love +that it must be sung. Thou giver of abundance unto the rich and poor +alike, help our souls to mount unto the highest reaches of living +thoughts and generous deeds, that we may give unto others as Thou +givest. Unfettered by unholy passions and freed from the spirit of +greed, may we feel the unity of the bonds of a universal brotherhood, +and be just and true, honest, and helpful in all our dealings with all +men this day. Amen. + + HENRIETTA G. MOORE. + + +April 18 + + _O spring, of hope and love and youth and gladness + Wing-winged emblem! Brightest, best and fairest! + Whence comest thou when with dark Winter's sadness + The tears that fade in sunny smiles thou sharest? + Sister of Joy! thou art the child who wearest + Thy mother's dying smile, tender and sweet: + Thy mother Autumn, for whose grave thou bearest + Fresh flowers, and beams like flowers, + Disturbing not the leaves which are her winding-sheet._ + + SHELLEY. + +God unchanging, and still the creator of the seasons, we look up to +Thee, as the springtide works out the miracle of the resurrection from +the sleeping forms of the past season, in confidence and in trust that +ever Thou wilt bless us with a nobler, holier, sweeter, more wholesome +life, as the seasons come and go. The resources of trusting hearts are +always reinforced and reinvigorated by contact with Thy life, Thy power, +Thy goodness and Thy love. Out of the winter of our discontent, we enter +the springtime of love, that leads us forward in confidence through the +glad summer of growth to the soul's fruition and the place of rest and +peace in our Father's Home beneath Thine everlasting Love. Amen. + + FRANCIS A. GRAY. + + +April 19 + + _One sound always comes to the ear that is open; it is the steady + drum-beat of Duty. No music in it, perhaps,--only a dry rub-a-dub. + Ah, but that steady beat marks the time for the whole orchestra of + earth and heaven! It says to you: "Do your work,--do the duty + nearest you!" Keep step to that drum-beat, and the dullest march is + taking you home._ + + GEORGE S. MERRIAM. + +O Thou great impelling Spirit, whom we see manifest in all the world, as +we open our eyes to the light of another morning, may we be as +responsive to Thy influence as the sun and the flowers which brighten +our way. May we be very sensitive to Thy promptings as we go about our +day's work. May we be very quick to do the things Thou wouldst have us +do. May we give ourselves to Thy service without reserve. When again the +night shades draw about us, may our hearts be filled with deepest +gratitude for all the experiences of the day, and, deep within, may our +spirits be conscious of Thy approving benediction, "Well done, good and +faithful servant; enter Thou into the joy of Thy Lord." Amen. + + FRANK LINCOLN MASSECK. + + +April 20 + + _Thyself and thy belongings + Are not thine own so proper as to waste + Thyself upon thy virtues, they on thee. + Heaven doth with us as we with torches do + Not light them for themselves; for if our virtues + Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike + As if we had them not. Spirits are not finely touched + But to fine issues, nor Nature never lends + The smallest scruple of her excellence + But like a thrifty goddess, she determines + Herself the glory of a creditor, + Both thanks and use._ + + SHAKESPEARE. + +Father, with faith and confidence in Thee we begin the day's duties, +with a blithe song upon our lips, expressing the melody of our souls, +thanking Thee for opportunities for work, and thought and love. We ask +not for more blessings but to be more worthy of those we have, using and +not abusing them. May our minds be open to Thy truth, and hearts to Thy +love, and when received may we be almoners of both to the waiting world. +May we keep by giving Thy love abundantly, and grow through the glory of +self-sacrifice. Give us the heart, O God, to sanctify our work and to +lift it above drudgery into the divinest service, and give us strength +to perform it. Amen. + + U. S. MILBURN. + + +April 21 + + _A man is simple where his chief care is the wish to be what he + ought to be; that is honestly and naturally human. We may compare + existence to raw material. What it is matters less than what it is + made of; as the value of a work of art lies in the flowering of a + workman's skill. True life is possible in social conditions the + most diverse and with natural gifts the most unequal. It is not + fortune or personal advantage, but our training them to account, + that constitutes the value of life. Fame adds no more than does + length of days; quality is the thing._ + + CHARLES WAGNER. + +Heavenly Father, our eyes are ever toward Thee. We do not pray for the +things of the world. Teach us to walk in Thy truth. Though our days be +few, may our lives be hopeful and cheerful. Though our bodies be frail, +may we be invincible in spirit. All Thy children are immortal, but it is +for us to attain the eternal life. May we know Thee through Jesus. Then +days and hours and minutes will disappear in the liberty and glory and +peace of the life eternal. Then poverty of worldly goods will be +forgotten in the riches of the Spirit. Then the cares of the world that +now is will be lost in the joy of the life that is to be. Amen. + + REIGNOLD K. MARVIN. + + +April 22 + + _A little sun, a little rain, + A soft wind blowing from the west-- + And woods and fields are sweet again + And warmth within the mountain's breast._ + + _So simple is the earth we tread, + So quick with love and life her frame, + Ten thousand years have dawned and fled. + And still her magic is the same._ + + STOPFORD A. BROOKE. + +Gracious God, we thank Thee for the gift of sight whereby we behold the +marvels of the outer world. But greater is our gratitude for the inner +sight, the power to see things as they ought to be. If we but look deep +enough, we find Thy central laws ever at the heart of all life. With +such insight, apparent confusion shall not bewilder us, life's cares +shall not harden us, the world's show cannot dazzle us. Give us, we pray +Thee, unceasing ability to wonder and admire, which brings perpetual +youth; to hope, to believe, to trust; to rest content in working with +Thee, the Eternal One, Lord of the seasons, this is our heart's desire. +Amen. + + EDWARD A. HORTON. + + +April 23 + + _"What is the secret of your life?" asked Mrs. Browning of Charles + Kingsley; "tell me, that I may make mine beautiful too." He + replied, "I had a friend." Somewhere in her "Middlemarch," George + Eliot puts it well: "There are natures in which, if they love us, + we are conscious of having a sort of baptism and consecration; they + bind us over to rectitude and purity by their pure belief about us; + and our sins become the worst kind of sacrilege, which tears down + the invisible altar of trust."_ + + WILLIAM C. GANNETT. + +Our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for all the sweet and sacred +influences of life. Music comes with its invisible fingers to weave a +magic charm around our souls;--the home with its love is ours,--but we +thank Thee to-day for the sweet and saving influence of friendship,--for +the counsel and fellowship of those who are wise and good and faithful +to us. We would not walk alone--we would find strength in the strength +of others, and faith in other's faith. Let us cherish such fellowships +and give back to those, who love us, love again. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +April 24 + + _Live in the sunshine, don't live in the gloom, + Carry some gladness the world to illume. + Live in the brightness, and take this to heart; + The world will seem gayer if you'll do your part. + Live on the housetop, not down in the cell; + Open air Christians live nobly and well. + Live where the joys are, and, scorning defeat, + Have a good-morrow for all whom you meet. + Live as a victor, and triumphing go + Through this queer world, beating down every foe. + Live in the sunshine, God meant it for you! + Live as the robins, and sing the day through._ + + MARGARET SANGSTER. + +O God, our heavenly Father, Thou who givest us the sunshine of this new +day, Thou who art the God of life and light, we ask Thy help and Thy +strength as we again go out to our separate duties and cares. Help us to +fill this day with good deeds, to give cheer and comfort to all we meet. +May our lips be clean. May our hearts be pure. And when the even time +comes, may it find us conscious that we have put no cloud upon the day, +that we have walked through its hours true disciples of the Master who +went about doing good. Amen. + + WILLIAM H. MORRISON. + + +April 25 + + _To weigh the material in the scales of the personal, and measure + life by the standard of love; to prize health as contagious + happiness, wealth as potential service, reputation as latent + influence, learning for the light it can shed, power for the help + it can give, station for the good it can do--to choose in each case + what is best on the whole, and accept cheerfully incidental evils + involved; to put my whole self into all that I do, and indulge no + single desire at the expense of myself as a whole; to crowd out + fear by devotion to duty, and see present and future as one; to + treat others as I would be treated, and myself as I would my best + friend; and to recognize God's coming kingdom in every institution + and person that helps men to love one another._ + + WILLIAM DEWITT HYDE. + + For the dear love that kept us through the night, + And gave our senses to sleep's gentle sway, + For the new miracle of dawning light, + Flushing the east with prophecies of day, + We thank Thee, O, our God! + + For the fresh life that through our being flows, + With its full tide to strengthen and to bless, + For calm, sweet thoughts, upspringing from repose, + To bear to Thee their song of thankfulness, + We praise Thee, O, our God! + + Thou knowest our needs, Thy fulness will supply + Our blindness--let Thy hand still lead us on, + Till, visited by the dayspring from on high, + Our prayer, one only, "Let Thy will be done," + We breathe to Thee, O, God! + Amen. + + W. H. BURLEIGH. + + +April 26 + + Is it not possible, then, that the hindrances which arrest our + progress, and the obstacles that lie broadly in our path, are the + divinest agents of help which our Creator could give us? The + painful struggles to overcome and remove them develop in us + strength, courage, self-reliance, and heroism. They are the hammer + and chisel that release the statue from the imprisoning + marble,--the plow and the harrow that break up the soil, and mellow + it for the reception of the seed that shall yield an abundant + harvest. Perfection lies that way. + + MARY A. LIVERMORE. + +We seek Thy face anew this day, O our Father, and ask Thee that Thou +wilt help us to live our lives in constant communion with Thee. Let us +see Thee at every turn in the way. Let us find Thy hand in all our +duties, all our meditations, all our intercourse with men, all our +doings and all our deeds. Help us to make Thee our counsellor every +hour. Help us to undertake nought without Thy blessings, to finish +nought without Thy benediction. Morning and evening may we turn in +prayer to Thy throne. At every meal may we seek Thy grace and give Thee +thanks. So may we find the blessing of them that abide in Thy house. +Amen. + + J. COLEMAN ADAMS. + + +April 27 + + _I think the sweetest thought, the very central idea, of the + revelation of the character of God to me, is this: that He does + everything out of His supreme will. There is no one thing that I + can say with more heartiness, or that has in it more echoes of joy, + than "Thy will be done." If anything works righteousness in me or + in you, it is God. The nature of God is fruitful in generosity. He + is so good that He loves to do good, and loves to make men good, + and loves to make them happy by making them good. He loves to be + patient with them, and to wait for them, and to pour benevolence + upon them, because that is His nature._ + + HENRY WARD BEECHER. + +Father, we thank Thee for the blessing. We know what are our privileges, +we know what are our duties, and we are before Thee again to consecrate +this day in all its glory and beauty to Thee, the Father of perfect +Love. Thou wilt be with us as we strive to be with Thee. Thou wilt make +us strong when we are weak. Thou wilt make us see where we are in +darkness. Thou wilt send us forth on Thine infinite mission to the +world. Boys or girls, men or women, here we are, the living children of +the living God, sent forward by Thee to proclaim it that all may be one +as Christ Jesus with Thee and Thou with Him, that this world may be +perfected into one, that men may know that Thou art Father and what the +Father has given us to do, that each one of us may lift up what has +fallen down, that each one may open the eyes that are blind and the ears +that are deaf, that each one of us may proclaim the gospel of Thy +perfect love. This is our prayer and our hope, in Christ Jesus. Amen. + + EDWARD EVERETT HALE. + + +April 28 + + _With every rising of the sun, + Think of your life as just begun._ + + _The past has shrived and buried deep, + All yesterdays; there let them sleep._ + + _Nor seek to summon back one ghost + Of that innumerable host._ + + _Concern yourself with but today. + Woo it, and teach it to obey_ + + _Your will and wish. Since time began + Today has been the friend of man;_ + + _But in his blindness and his sorrow, + He looks to yesterday and tomorrow._ + + _You, and today! a soul sublime, + And the great pregnant hour of time,_ + + _With God himself to bind the twain! + Go forth, I say, attain, attain!_ + + ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. + +Infinitely wise and loving Father, our minds and hearts reach out to +Thee in this morning hour thankful that the rest of the night has +prepared us for the work of the new day, and that the light brings the +call to service. The past cannot be recalled, but today is ours. I and +today, with God and in the Spirit of Jesus! Priceless privilege! Grant +us, O Father, to use it for Thee, for humanity and "In His name." Amen. + + SAMUEL GILBERT AYERS. + + +April 29 + + _Life is full of new beginnings. Some change may come, something is + sure to come, to close one chapter and begin another. Life is + planned just so, ... that there should be a break from former link + and habit, often from imperfection and mistake, and a clear, clean + start for the fulfilment of the best one has grown to, even in + desire, unhampered by the poorest one has ever happened to be, or + to get credit for._ + + MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. + +O, Thou who dwellest in the light, help Thy children this morning to see +the light of Thy truth and feel the warmth of Thy love. We thank Thee +for the open doors of opportunity for helpful service; for the +exhibition of kindness and for growth in the kingdom of Heaven. May we +clearly see the way to the Eternal life and have strength to walk +therein. May we so welcome Thy truth that we shall be free from error +and sin. May Thy wisdom so guide our energies that we shall reach after +greater perfection. May the evening of this day find us more in harmony +with God than we now are. And may the evening of life find us rich in +the treasures of heaven. Amen. + + ANDREW WILLSON. + + +April 30 + + _True worth is in being, not seeming; + In doing each day that goes by, + Some little good--not in the dreaming + Of great things to do by and by, + For whatever men say in blindness, + And spite of the fancies of youth, + There's nothing so kingly as kindness, + And nothing so royal as truth._ + + _We get back our mete as we measure: + We cannot do wrong and feel right; + Nor can we give pain and gain pleasure, + For justice avenges each slight. + The air for the wing of the sparrow, + The bush for the robin and wren, + But always the path that is narrow + And straight for the children of men._ + + ALICE CARY. + +Almighty Father, who with every morning dost give us a new day and with +each day some fresh duty, mercifully equip us for every task that awaits +us! Give us eyes to see, and hearts to love the truth and right, and the +disposition that makes every duty a delight, and the doing of good to +others a sacred privilege. Save us this day from angry passions and low +desires. Forgive us when we are selfish; recall us when we go astray; +save us from wronging ourselves by thinking ill of others, and in all +places and to all people give us the mind which was in Christ Jesus. +Amen. + + JOHN CUCKSON. + + +May 1 + + _To the Woods:--Whoso goeth in your paths readeth the same cheerful + lesson, whether he be a young child or a hundred years old, comes + he in good fortune or in bad, ye say the same things, and from age + to age. Ever the needles of the pine grow and fall, the acorns on + the oak, the maples redden in autumn and at all times of the year + the ground pine and the pyrola bud and root under foot. What is + called fortune and what is called time by men, ye know them not. + Men have not language to describe one moment of your life._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + +Thou God of Nature and of the human heart, we thank Thee for our human +relations, but we thank Thee also for our kinship with the birds. We +thank Thee for that instinct which makes us to sympathize with the +mating of the bird lovers and for that music of the heart which makes us +to love the song of the birds. We pray this morning for a life so simple +and natural that we shall be able to enter into sympathetic relations +with everything that lives--the flowers of the garden, and the +field--the bees that sip the flowers' honey, and the bird that makes her +nest among the trees. If Thou speakest to men in the glory of the +heavens, Thou speakest also in the manifold voices of all Thy loving +creatures. May our ears be trained to hear Thee when Thou speakest thus. +Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +May 2 + + _Hail bounteous May, that doth inspire + Mirth and youth, and warm desire; + Woods and groves are of thy dressing, + Hill and dale doth boast thy blessing, + Thus we salute thee with our early song, + And welcome thee and wish thee long._ + + JOHN MILTON. + +Almighty and All-loving Father, who dost make all the earth to rejoice +in the brightness of returning springtime, fill our hearts with like joy +and renewal. Graciously awaken in us the life that the cold or care or +trouble or sorrow of the world often has caused to fade and go out. As +our eyes behold all this outward beauty and glory, give unto us that +spiritual vision by which we behold the beauty and glory of divine +things. Then when the springtime of our life passes with the summer and +the summer ripens into the autumn, and our work is done, may we bring +unto Thee the harvest of spiritual riches. Amen. + + JAMES DENORMANDIE. + + +May 3 + + _Success! It is won by a patient endeavor, + Energy's fire, and the flame-glow of Will; + By grasping the chance with a "Now, now or never!" + Urging on, on! while the laggard stands still._ + + _Success! It is facing life's trials, undaunted; + Fighting the present--forgetting the past: + By trusting to Fate, though for years she has taunted, + And bearing Time's scars; facing front, to the last!_ + + _Success! Would you win it and wear its bright token? + Smile and step out to the drummer's light lilt; + Fight on till the last inch of sword-blade is broken. + Then do not say die. Fight on with the hilt!_ + + MARY MARKWELL. + +We thank Thee, Our Father, that Thou hast enriched our being with those +faculties which prompt to noble endeavor. We rejoice in our power, +guided by Thy free Spirit, both to overcome evil and to do good. Help +us, dear Father, to recognize the great incentives of conscience and of +duty, assured that in cheerful conformity thereto we shall find the +sweetest zest of life. Increase our faith in Thee, O Lord. Enable us +more clearly to realize that in the end truth and right will gain the +victory. Thus may we be inspired to live brave, true and wholesome +lives. May we fight the good fight of faith and win the crown of life +promised to all those who follow the conquering Christ. In His name. +Amen. + + HENRY W. RUGG. + + +May 4 + + _The green grass is bowing; + The morning wind is in it; + 'Tis a tune worth the knowing, + Though it change every minute. + 'Tis a tune of the Spring; + Every year plays it over._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + + _God does not send strange flowers every year. + When the spring winds blow o'er the pleasant places + The same dear things lift up the same fair faces. + The violet is here._ + + MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. + +O God, Father Almighty, who bringest light out of darkness and at whose +word night yields to day, we offer Thee glad worship and praise. We +thank Thee for Thy gifts which are beautiful and good; for flowers which +renew old friendships and awaken new affections; for songs in which +voices of all yesterdays sound through today's melodies; for rich +memories of the past; for the joy of living now; for the hope of better +days; for new expressions of abiding truth and fresh breathings of +eternal love; for courage to do right and for confidence in +righteousness. May we this day, mindful of earthly duty and of heavenly +promise, humbly follow Him "who went about doing good" and "gave Himself +a ransom for many." Amen. + + W. I. WARD. + + +May 5 + + _Bishop Brooks taught me no special creed or dogma; but he + impressed upon my mind two great ideas--the fatherhood of God and + the brotherhood of man, and made me feel that these truths underlie + all creeds and forms of worship. God is love, God is our Father, we + are His children; therefore the darkest clouds will break, and + though right be worsted, wrong shall not triumph. He said: "There + is one universal religion, Helen--the religion of love. Love your + Heavenly Father with your whole heart and soul, love every child of + God as much as ever you can, and remember that the possibilities of + good are greater than the possibilities of evil; and you have the + key to Heaven."_ + + HELEN KELLER. + +Infinite Spirit! We shall not look upon Thee as a friend looketh upon +the face of his friend, but may we learn to see Thee in every form of +life and beauty and service here in this great world of Nature and of +Man. May we discover Thee in the midst of common things and then they +shall no more be common, but all things shall be sacred and divine. May +we see Thy face in all human faces, clasp Thy hand in all human hands, +and when we have walked with a friend, or talked with those we love, may +it be as a walk with Thee and a communion with Thee. May we not think of +Thee as afar off but always near, making all things holy. May we realize +that it is a diviner thing to serve the lowly who need our help than to +praise the Infinite who needeth not. May the sense of Thy presence in +all things be the inspiration and interpretation of all days for us. +Amen. + + E. L. REXFORD. + + +May 6 + + _The brown, brown woods of March + Are the green, green woods of May, + And they lift their arms with a freer swing + And shake out their pennons gay. + And the brown, dead world of March, + Is the living world of today; + Life throbs and flushes and flashes out + In the color and fragrance of May._ + + ANONYMOUS. + +Infinite Spirit of the winter and the summer and of the night and the +morning, Thou hast watched over and guarded, during its winter sleep and +rest, this earth which Thou hast made, and which Thou hast made for a +purpose--to be beautiful and fruitful in its season, to be a humble and +obedient servant of Thy will of goodness. And now, as the woods of May +are radiant in the beauty of springtime, and ready to do Thy will; so as +we wake to the opportunity of this new day, may we rejoice in the +privilege of living to Thee and doing Thy will in the glad service of +lives lived as the Master lived. Amen. + + GEORGE WALLACE PENNIMAN. + + +May 7 + + _One who never turned his back, but marched breast forward, + Never doubted clouds would break, + Never dreamed, though right were worsted,--wrong would triumph, + Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better, + Sleep to wake._ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + +Our Father, in the heaven, we thank Thee for the birth of a new day. May +we be full of gladness during its golden hours, may our hearts be +tranquil with God's peace. A day is a part of Thy eternity. Thou hast +set us in the battle, Thou art watching us in the fight; Thou art +training us by well-accepted controversy. May nothing of Thy purpose be +lost because of the blinding details of the conflict. Strengthen our +hearts to do the work of this day. Help us to be as grateful as we are +dependent upon God. Inspire our whole life; help us quickly to learn why +we are here, what we are to do while here, and the path that leads home +when the work-day is over. In the name of the Christ! Amen. + + W. A. WOOD. + + +May 8 + + _Then sing, ye birds, sing, sing a joyous song! + And let the young lambs bound + As to the tabor's sound! + We in thought will join your throng, + Ye that pipe and ye that play, + Ye that through your hearts today + Feel the gladness of the May!_ + + WILLIAM WORDSWORTH. + +God of the morning, Father of the Soul, we bless Thee for the light, for +it is pleasant to behold the world made beautiful by the King of day, +and sweet with the melody of the song of bird, and cheerful with the +promise of hope in the swelling buds of spring. We join with Thy +faithful ones in ascriptions of praise to Thee for the depth of the +riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God. Help us to look upon +our every faculty of soul, and power of body, as gifts from Thee, to be +used for the advancement of love, truth and beauty, in our own hearts, +and in the world. Give us Thine own help to bear every burden +cheerfully, to stand erect before every responsibility, and if in our +efforts to do much good for this day we seem to fail, may we look to +Jesus and learn of Him that in a conscience void of offence there is no +such thing as failure. Help us to strive with the evil of the world and +sin not, that at the close of the day we may look back and say, we have +kept ourselves unspotted from the world. Amen. + + L. L. GREENE. + + +May 9 + + _Fairer grows the earth each morning + To the eyes that watch aright; + Every dew-drop sparkles warning + Of a miracle in sight; + Of some unexpected glory + Waiting in the old and plain; + Poet's dream nor traveller's story + Words such wonders as remain._ + + WILLIAM C. GANNETT. + +O Thou, who makest things seen and temporal quiver and flash with Thine +own informing spirit, so illumine our pathways that the Luz where we +meet our duties may become the Bethel where we meet our God. As Thou +dost clothe the lily with beauty and inspire the bird with song help us +to grow into the beauty of holiness, and to know the joy of Thy +salvation. Whatever our past, open our eyes this day to some better +thing which Thou hast always in reserve. Teach us what hinders our +attainment and help us burst through the barrier. Make us so conscious +of Thy indwelling spirit that we may yield to its gracious impellings +toward righteousness and peace and joy. Amen. + + THOMAS D. ANDERSON. + + +May 10 + + _Listen to the exhortation of the dawn!_ + + _Look to this day! + For it is life, the very life of life. + In its brief course lie all the + Varieties and realities of your existence; + The bliss of growth, + The glory of action, + The splendor of beauty: + For yesterday is but a dream, + And tomorrow is only a vision, + But to-day well-lived makes + Every yesterday a dream of happiness, + And every tomorrow a vision of hope. + Look well, therefore to this day!_ + + _Such is the salutation of the dawn._ + + FROM THE SANSKRIT. + +Dear God, in Thy loving kindness, Thou hast brought us to the opening of +another day; from darkness to light, from sleep to wakefulness, from +rest to labor. We thank Thee for its opening glory and its coming +opportunities; but above all, for the new strength we feel within +ourselves to do its work and live its life. As radiant dawn climbs to +full-orbed day and glides to setting sun, may we come to this day's +close with the consciousness that we have lived a little closer to the +great heart of the Eternal in every thought, word and deed, that we have +woven into the texture of our lives, and gently as twilight enfolds the +fruitful earth, shall "peace that passeth understanding" enfold our +souls. Amen. + + THOMAS B. PAYNE. + + +May 11 + + _As the insect from the rock + Takes the color of its wing; + As the boulder from the shock + Of the ocean's rhythmic swing + Makes itself a perfect form, + Learns a calmer front to raise; + As the shell, enameled warm + With the prism's mystic rays, + Praises wind and wave that make + All its chambers fair and strong; + As the mighty poets take + Grief and pain to build their song; + Even so for every soul, + Whatsoe'er its lot may be-- + Building, as the heavens roll, + Something large and strong and free-- + Things that hurt and things that mar + Shape the man for perfect praise; + Shock and strain and ruin are + Friendlier than the smiling days._ + + JOHN WHITE CHADWICK. + +Dear Father, as the light of this morning follows the darkness of the +night, may we devoutly believe that the light of Thy love shall dispel +all darkness and bring us into the morning of eternal peace. May we +learn each day that our trials and sorrows are but stepping-stones in +Thy divine economy, to bring us up into the clearer atmosphere of +heavenly thought and life. Help us to live closer to Jesus, to +understand how even He was made glorious through suffering, and ever +learn to conquer in His name. Amen. + + ELMER F. PEMBER. + + +May 12 + + _I live for those that love me + For those that know me true, + For the heaven that smiles above me, + And waits my coming, too; + For the cause that lacks assistance, + For the wrongs that need resistance, + For the future in the distance, + For the good that I can do._ + + G. L. BANKS. + +Father, we bless Thee for such as love us and those whom we love in the +varying forms of affection, thanking Thee for the sacramental cup of joy +in which Thou givest the wine of life to all of Thy children, humble or +high. We thank thee for that love which setteth the solitary in families +at the beginning, and then reaches wide arms all around, and will not +stay its hold till it joins all nations and kindreds and tongues and +people into one great family of love. We bless Thee for the noble men +and women whose generous heart has lit the altar fire of philanthropy in +many a dark and else benighted place. We thank Thee for the unbidden +faith which springs up in our hearts, impelling us to trust Thee and +love Thee and keep every commandment of Thine, and that while we know +not what a day shall bring forth, we are sure of everlasting life. Amen. + + THEODORE PARKER. + + +May 13 + + _Gladness of morning-- + To hear the lark begin his flight, + And singing, startle the dull Night + From his watch-tower in the skies, + Till the dappled Dawn doth rise; + Then to come in spite of sorrow, + And at my window bid good-morrow + Through the sweetbrier, or the vine, + Or the twisted eglantine._ + + JOHN MILTON. + +O Thou, in whose light we see light, who hast lifted the shadows of +night from our dwellings, complete now in our behalf Thy ministry of +light, we beseech Thee, and let the day star arise in our hearts. Make +clear Thy face unto us. Rise with Thy morning upon our souls. May the +light which envelops us throughout the day be the radiance of Thy +presence. May our eyes behold only what Thou revealest and our lives be +warmed with the glow of Thy love. O, that we may be new-born like the +day and live a new life in Thy mercies which are new every morning; that +our love may rise fresh as the dawn and our obedience be as sure as the +path of the law. Let no shadow from the past dim the joy of Thy +presence. Scatter the darkness of sense and self within us. As the +morning reveals, interprets and fulfils the beauties of a world which +was wrapped in night, may the mystery of our lives unfold, our latent +forces be summoned to service, and our hearts find fulness of joy +because we live in Thee. Amen. + + EVERETT D. BURR. + + +May 14 + + _It may be truly said that no man does any work perfectly who does + not enjoy his work. Joy in one's work is the consummate tool + without which the work may be done indeed, but without its finest + perfectness. Men who do their work without enjoying it are like men + carving statues with hatchets. A man who does his work with + thorough enjoyment of it is like an artist who holds an exquisite + tool which is almost as obedient to him as his own hand, and almost + works intelligently with him._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +O Heavenly Father, we thank Thee that Thou hast placed us where we are +and hast given us the work we have to do. We would not seek far and wide +for some better place or more honourable task. We pray today for the +spirit that shall make us glad in our common toil. We need not to fly +away to find enjoyment; we have only to feel that in the duties of this +day we are in partnership with Thee,--then shall we be happy that Thou +hast called us to so divine a fellowship. Make us strong and earnest and +brave--that when the evening shadows fall we shall not look regretfully +back because we have been unfaithful,--but that we may be satisfied and +happy in the memory that we have been serving with Thee. Amen. + + ANONYMOUS. + + +May 15 + + _I love the flowers that come about with spring, + And whether they be scarlet, white or blue, + It mattereth to me not anything, + For when I see them full of sun and dew, + My heart doth get so full with its delight, + I know not blue from red, nor red from white._ + + ALICE CARY. + +Father Divine, we remember Thee at the beginning of another day, and the +obedience to Thy laws of life which Thou dost require. About us is Thy +beautiful world, thrilling with new life. We would that our lives today +may be likewise beautiful, restrained from sin against body and spirit. +As there is now in the earth, so there is always in human souls a +springtide ready to burst forth into beautiful living. In our hearts +there is always the stirring energy of a spiritual spring that needs but +the warmth of Thy heavenly sunshine. Let that warmth now stream into our +hearts that our lives today may show forth Thy praise. Amen. + + MINOT O. SIMONS. + + +May 16 + + Violet: "_Well, but surely at least one ought to be afraid of + displeasing God; and one's desire to please Him should be one's + first motive._" + + Lecturer: "_He never would be pleased with us, if it were, my dear. + When a father sends his son out into the world--suppose as an + apprentice--fancy the boy's coming home at night, and saying, + 'Father, I could have robbed the till to-day; but I didn't because + I thought you wouldn't like it.' Do you think the father would be + particularly pleased?" (Violet is silent). "He would answer, would + he not, if he were wise and good, 'My boy, though you had no + father, you must not rob tills.' And nothing is ever done so as + really to please our Great Father, unless we would also have done + it, though we had had no Father to know of it._" + + JOHN RUSKIN. + +Father of Life, Thy children raise their thoughts in prayer to Thee at +the dawning of each day. Their prayer asserts love, trust and conformity +to Thy will. May the spirit of prayer abide with us the day through, +that we may be dutiful and worthy. The moral law is Thy way of life, may +we make it our way by intelligent obedience. To know Thee aright and to +find our joy in Thy life is to have fullness of being through purity and +strength. O Father, may we be as those who broaden and deepen and purify +life by word and deed that none may suffer loss through us, but find aid +to reach the perfect life in Thee. Amen. + + WILSON M. BACKUS. + + +May 17 + + _Through the harsh noises of our day + A low sweet prelude finds its way: + Through clouds of doubt and creeds of fear + A light is breaking, calm and clear._ + + _Henceforth my heart shall sigh no more + For olden time and holier shore: + God's love and blessing, then and there + Are now and here and everywhere._ + + JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER. + +Our Father, as we enter upon the duties of this new day, incline our +minds and hearts unto Thee. May we feel, amid its harsh noises, the +assurance of Thy love and care. If doubt or fear assail us may we turn +unto Thee who art the source of life, love and light, and find calm and +peace. We would forget the things behind and make the most of the +present. We rejoice that today is better than yesterday and that +tomorrow will be better than today. Thou art here now, as Thou art +everywhere always, to bless us with Thy love and care. Direct us through +the hours of this day and may its close find us better children of +Thine. Amen. + + JOHN B. REARDON. + + +May 18 + + _The sun does not shine for a few trees and flowers, but for the + wide world's joy. The lonely pine of the mountain top waves its + sombre boughs, and cries, "Thou art my sun!" And the little meadow + violet lifts its cup of blue, and whispers with its perfumed + breath, "Thou art my sun!" And the grain in a thousand fields + rustles in the wind, and makes answer, "Thou art my sun!" So God + sits, effulgent, in heaven, not for a favored few, but for the + universe of life; and there is no creature so poor or so low that + he may not look up with child-like confidence, and say, "My Father, + Thou art mine!"_ + + HENRY WARD BEECHER. + +O God, the Eternal Source of all life, we rejoice that there are no +bounds to Thy love. We thank Thee that Thou givest us all things richly +to enjoy. May we learn that Thy bounties are for all human beings. Make +the hearts of men eager that the ignorant, the lowly, the poor, the +wayward, may come into the full estate of knowing that they are children +of God. Let them in no way be denied the joy of unfolding the divinity +within them. Lead us all into those fields of labor where we can be our +best selves and develop our lives by what we do to meet the growing +demands of truth and love and goodness. Wherever the morning breaks and +the sunshine falls upon human faces, may its cheer make homes happy and +true, men and women good, and little children joyous. Amen. + + ALVA ROY SCOTT. + + +May 19 + + _Hear the Master's risen word! + Delving spades have set it free, + Wake! the world has need of thee, + Rise and let thy voice be heard, + Like a fountain disinterred, + Upward springing, singing, sparkling; + Through the doubtful shadows darkling; + Till the clouds of pain and rage + Brooding o'er the toiling age, + As with rifts of light are stirred + By the music of the Word; + Gospel for the heavy-laden, answer to the labourer's cry; + "Raise the stone, and thou shalt find Me: cleave the wood, and there + am I."_ + + HENRY VAN DYKE. + +God of light and strength and beauty, for this day we thank Thee. The +morning hours come to us freighted with messages of gladness. Thou, our +Father, art refreshing our spirits, and home seems dearer, love more +sacred and the way of duty clearer before our waiting feet. We thank +Thee for life as it is given us, day by day. Help us to fill it with +honest, cheerful, fruitful service. May we realize and rejoice in the +nobility of labor, and may we learn how it is that a child of Thine, +standing in his own place, giving himself to the tasks of the hour, +imparts strength and courage to his fellow-worker, and helps the world +forward in the path of righteousness and peace. So may Thy will be done +in and through us. Amen. + + JOHN P. FORBES. + + +May 20 + + _O the green things growing, the green things growing + The faint sweet smell of the green things growing! + I should like to live, whether I smile or grieve, + Just to watch the happy life of my green things growing._ + + DINAH MULOCK CRAIG. + + _Not all these sweets, these sounds, this vernal blaze, + Is but one joy, express'd a thousand ways; + And honey from the flowers, and song of birds, + Are from the poet's pen, his overflowing words._ + + LEIGH HUNT. + +O Thou who art the Creator of life in every form in which it is +expressed in the earth, we thank Thee for the grass and the flowers, the +trees and the shrubs, the music of the streams and the melody of the +birds. As nature is ever vocal with Thy praise, so may our hearts be +attuned to deepest joy that we are a part of Thy creation and made +capable of constant exultation in the beauty and the beneficence of Thy +purpose therein displayed. In this spirit may we rejoice and be glad in +this new day which Thou hast made for us. Amen. + + I. J. MEAD. + + +May 21 + + _As one familiar with the sonatas and the symphonies of Beethoven, + while passing along the street in summer, gets, from out of the + open window, a snatch of a song or a piece that is being played, + catching a strain here and another there--and says to himself, "Ah, + that is Beethoven. I recognize that: it is from such and such a + movement of the Pastoral" or whatever it may be;--so men in life + catch strains of God in the mother's disinterested and self-denying + love, in the lover's glow, in the little child's innocent + affections. Where did this thing come from? No plant ever brought + out such fruit as this?_ + + HENRY WARD BEECHER. + +Father of all and giver of every good thing, to Thee we pray; to Thee we +look for light, for truth, for beauty. In the travail of thought may +there come only the highest and best good. Where there is division we +ask for unity; where there is confusion we ask for serenity; where there +is discord, we ask for harmony. May divergent paths lead to the larger +way of widening vision, distinctive service, unstinted love. Hasten the +day when Thy purpose shall be accomplished in us, and when that which is +now imperfect shall become the perfected whole. Grant to us wisdom to +pursue noble ends with intelligent zeal, and patient effort, and in a +charitable and hopeful spirit. Amen. + + C. C. CLARK. + + +May 22 + + _It is very interesting to watch a plant grow, it is like taking + part in creation. When all outside is cold and white, when the + little children of the woodland are gone to their nurseries in the + warm earth and the empty nests on the bare trees filled with snow, + my window-garden glows and smiles, making summer within while it is + winter without. It is wonderful to see flowers bloom in the midst + of a snow-storm! I have felt a bud "shyly doff her green hood and + blossom with a silken burst of sound," while the icy fingers of the + snow beat against the window panes. What secret power, I wonder, + caused this blossoming miracle? What mysterious force guided the + seedling from the dark earth up to the light, through leaf and stem + and bud, to glorious fulfilment in the perfect flower? Who could + have dreamed that such beauty lurked in the dark earth, was latent + in the tiny seed we planted? Beautiful flower, you have taught me + to see a little way into the hidden heart of things. Now I + understand that the darkness everywhere may hold possibilities + better than even my hopes._ + + HELEN KELLER. + +Grant us, O God, this day, vitality of brain and heart, to lay hold on +the ordinary events and experiences of life, and transmute them into +beautiful and permanent values for ourselves and others. May we have +courage, love and faithfulness, to conquer adversities and fulfil our +duties. And should the winter of discontent and disappointment beat +without against our souls, even so may Thy Kingdom come. Amen. + + JULIUS P. WEST. + + +May 23 + + _Brother--there is no payment in the world! + We work and pour our labor at the feet + Of those who are around us and to come. + We live and take our living at the hands + Of those who are around us and have been. + No one is paid. No person can have more + Than he can hold. And none can do beyond + The power that's in him. To each child that's born + Belongs as much of all our human good + As he can take and use to make him strong._ + + _And from each man, debtor to all the world, + Is due the fullest fruit of all his powers, + His whole life's labor, proudly rendered up, + Not as return--can moments pay an age? + But as the simple duty of a man. + Can he do less--receiving everything?_ + + CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN. + +O, Thou Most Bountiful Giver! We thank Thee this morning for all the +conveniences and comforts, the stored knowledge and acquired wisdom, the +inspirations and encouragements of our daily life. Truly others have +lived as Thy children and labored as Thy servants, by mind and hand and +heart, and we are wondrously permitted to enter into the fruits of their +labours. Grant unto us this day, O Father, so to strive and so to live +that some other life may be cheered and blessed by the spirit and by the +fruit of our day's service. May our thoughts and words and deeds somehow +express our gratitude for the blessings which we are constantly +receiving. Amen. + + WILLIAM H. GOULD. + + +May 24 + + _What a wonderful thing it is to meet a man or woman whose manners + are instantly open and free--opening up a direct road between him + or her and yourself!_ + + EDWARD CARPENTER. + + _There is a world in us that God keeps to himself, except when He + calls some few souls, with special errand for us, to receive a + glimpse. It is full of life, and growths, and wonders, that are to + be developed and revealed. We ourselves know not what we shall be; + but He knows that we shall be like Him.... It is the world of the + spiritual microscope._ + + MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. + +Our Father and Mother God,--we have cried for Thee as little children +cry for parental love to wait upon their wants, and, like babes that +cry, we have looked for Thee in nothing else. We would be now Thy sons +and daughters of a larger growth, who learn to find Thee in a more +complete and blessed fellowship of service and sacrifice with Thee, of +united thought and will with Thine, of such living as shares in Thy +perfect and eternal life. Help us so to be and so to live that even in +ourselves we may get glimpses of Thine infinite good will and +faithfulness, and show in our human lives, that God is in His world and +all is well. Amen. + + GEORGE W. KENT. + + +May 25 + + _What are we set on earth for? Say to toil: + Nor to seek to leave the tending of thy vines, + For all the heat of the day, till it declines, + And death's mild curfew shall from work assoil. + God did anoint thee with His odorous oil + To wrestle, not to reign; and he assigns + All thy tears over, like pure crystallines, + For younger fellow-workers of the soil + To wear for amulets. So others shall + Take patience, labor, to their heart and hand, + From thy hand, and thy heart, and thy brave cheer, + And God's grace fructify through thee to all. + The least flower with a brimming cup may stand, + And share its dewdrop with another near._ + + ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING. + +Our Father In Heaven, we devoutly thank Thee for that ceaseless and +refreshing tide of blessing that, from the reservoir of Thine +exhaustless goodness, flows into our hearts and lives. And we further +thank Thee that among the choicest of those blessings, is the one of +being, not merely the receptacles of this inflow, but also co-workers +with Thee, and with Thy Son, our Saviour, Jesus Christ, in carrying +forward to successful issue Thy beneficent purposes of grace and +salvation. Grant us, we beseech Thee, day by day, such an infusion of +Thy Holy Spirit as shall fittingly equip us for the gladsome and +effective discharge of the duties of this divine relation, and its +exalted privileges. All of which grant for Thy mercy's sake. Amen. + + CHARLES P. NASH. + + +May 26 + + _The deepest secret of life is love. Without love there is no + enthusiasm, and without ideals there is no enthusiasm. We freeze + our hearts by selfishness, and stifle them by sordidness. We fix + our eyes upon the little field circumscribed by our day's + activities and ends. With no wide-reaching affection and no + uplifting ideal, we make of our life a treadmill and of our duty an + unwelcome drudgery. We disclaim the highest endowment of the soul + and deny our sonship to God. Narrow faiths and narrow hopes put + fetters on the spirit, and small affections keep small the heart._ + + PHILIP S. MOXOM. + +Our Father, every morning is a fresh witness of Thy loving kindness. +When we sleep the vigils of Thy love are round about us. At the +threshold of this new day, may it please Thee to inspire us with lofty +aims, so that we may rise out of our selfish selves into conscious +kinship with Thee. Help us to know the mystery of love, how limitless +and all-conquering it is. Animated by its sweet law, may we go out into +this great, needy world with hearts to sympathize and words to cheer and +hands to minister. Then we shall know the divine sweetness of our +Christian faith, the joy of Christlike living; we shall know that love +is the fulfilling of the law. Amen. + + Q. H. SHINN. + + +May 27 + + _Every day is a fresh beginning, + Every morn is the world made new. + You who are weary of sorrow and sinning, + Here is a beautiful hope for you, + A hope for me and a hope for you._ + + _Every day is a fresh beginning; + Listen, my soul, to the glad refrain, + And, spite of old sorrow and older sinning, + And puzzles forecasted and possible pain, + Take heart with the day, and begin again._ + + SUSAN COOLIDGE. + +O Thou, who makest all things new, we are glad each day is not only a +new day but one unlike any before it. Everything breathes freshness and +newness of life; a new heaven is over our heads, a new earth beneath our +feet. We know this day will be full of new opportunities for work, new +scenes for pleasure, new chances to make better our lives. If yesterday +was not all we could wish, if there were failures in duty, or loss of +faith in ourselves, and Thy great love, may this be filled with larger +faith, greater hope, complete love. May we so take heart in this quiet +morning hour, that we may be brave and faithful all the day, so that in +spite of old sorrows and older sins, the memory of which may now and +then shadow our way, we may find ourselves when the evening shall come, +nearer heaven in heart and life, and more worthy to be called Thy +children. Amen. + + WILLIAM F. POTTER. + + +May 28 + + _O friend, never strike sail to a fear! Come into port greatly, or + sail with God the seas.... He has not learned the lesson of life + who does not every day surmount a fear._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + + _There is no storm but this + Of your own cowardice + That braves you out; + You are the storm that mocks + Yourself; you are the rocks + Of your own doubt; + Besides this fear of danger there's no danger here + And he that here fears danger does deserve his fear._ + + RICHARD CRASHAW. + +Thou knowest, O Lord, the weakness of our human nature, and how prone we +are not only to shrink from the difficulties and to tremble at the +dangers which lie in our way, but to allow imaginary difficulties and +dangers to hinder us from living as Thy children should. Help us, we +pray Thee, to be free from all such fear today. Be Thou our refuge from +whatsoever may threaten us, either without or within. Deliver us from +faint-heartedness and enable us to stand fast in the glorious liberty of +those who fear nothing but to offend against Thee and to wrong their own +immortal souls. We ask it as disciples of Christ. Amen. + + EDWIN C. SWEETSER. + + +May 29 + + _Whichever way the wind doth blow, + Some heart is glad to have it so; + Then blow it east or blow it west, + The wind that blows, that wind is best._ + + _My little craft sails not alone: + A thousand fleets from every zone + Are out upon a thousand seas; + And what for me were favoring breeze + Might dash another, with the shock + Of doom, upon some hidden rock. + And so I do not dare to pray + For winds to waft me on my way, + But leave it to a Higher Will + To stay or speed me; trusting still + That all is well, and sure that He + Who launched my bark will sail with me + Through storm and calm, and will not fail, + Whatever breezes may prevail, + To land me, every peril past, + Within His sheltering heaven at last._ + + CAROLINE ATWATER MASON. + +O Lord let us know that we do not sail life's seas alone. Thou art the +God of the storms. Thou goest with us whithersoever we go. Grant us, our +Heavenly Father, that we may not suffer shipwreck of our faith. Grant us +that the voyage of our lives may be prosperous, and that at last, +whether soon or late we shall find some harbor of rest and peace. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +May 30 + + _Our Memorial Day celebrations will be but a hypocritical + play-acting unless they shall remind us of the cause and the country + for which our brave soldiers gave their lives. It is not enough for + us to recall their names and sing their praises. We must love the + country they loved and in our turn be ready to do the hero's part._ + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + _But what is it to love one's country? Is it to carry a banner in a + procession? Is it to shout as we see the flag? Is it to fling + bunting from the tops of the buildings, and send off sky-rockets in + the evenings? Vastly deeper than that is love of country, deeper + than any soldier's uniform, deeper than any pictures of battleships + with which we adorn our walls._ + + W. H. P. FAUNCE. + +God of the Nations, we thank Thee today for every heroic deed of every +heroic soul. We rejoice that in every hour of real emergency there have +ever been men who were ready to die for their country. O Lord, may the +memory of their sacrifice ever remain to us and to the children of +coming generations a sacred heritage. Yet, O Lord, let us not be +satisfied to glorify their deeds with a memory. Let us do them the +higher honor of consecrating our lives to the service of the country +they loved. So shall we, in the honor we render them find the title to +our honor. Thus in _our_ land and in _our_ time may Thy Kingdom come and +Thy will be done. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +May 31 + + _To be glad of life because it gives you the chance to love and to + work and to play and to look up at the stars; to be satisfied with + your possessions, but not contented with yourself until you have + made the best of them; to despise nothing in the world except + falsehood and meanness, and to fear nothing except cowardice; to be + governed by your admirations rather than your dislikes; to covet + nothing that is your neighbor's except his kindness of heart and + gentleness of manners; to think seldom of your enemies, often of + your friends, and every day of Christ; and to spend as much time as + you can, with body and with spirit in God's out-of-doors--these are + little guide-posts on the footpath to peace._ + + HENRY VAN DYKE. + +O Thou God of peace and of love. How shall we come to Thee? How shall we +share Thy strength and know Thy life? Let us commune with Thy gracious +spirit and so learn Thy way. How beautiful the vision which prayer +unfolds to us when we worship in spirit and truth! We see the virtues +which ennoble and sanctify other lives. Sweet and tender patience +appears and in her light ruffled and distorted tempers are subdued and +clothed in their right mind. Faith is seen and as irresolution and doubt +take their flight, confident trust and cherished conviction appear in +magnetic power. So, O Lord, would we read the signs which other lives +present. So would we strengthen our own aspirations and make real the +vision. So, O Father, would we find Thy peace. Amen. + + AUGUSTINE N. FOSTER. + + +June 1 + + _A season for simple living with the kindly sun and the blue sky, + days of keen delight in little things, of joyous questing after + beauty, days for the making of true friends by being a true friend + to others, days when we may enlarge our little lives by excursions + to strange places, by friendly association, by the companionship of + great thoughts, days that may teach us to live nobly, to work + joyously, to play harder, to do our labor better. So should each + June bring us indeed a golden summer._ + + EDWIN OSGOOD GROVER. + +Heavenly Father, Thou givest all good things. We thank Thee for life and +hope and cheer. In gratitude we consecrate this day to blessing Thy +children, and so to serving Thee who hast said, "Inasmuch as ye have +done it unto these, ye have done it unto Me." Teach us the gladness of a +life responsive to Thy messages through Nature. Grant us the joy of +making friends by being friendly with our fellow men. Whatsoever we may +do, at work or at play, may it be in the spirit of the Saviour. We begin +this day with Thee. By its ministries may our comrades be helped and our +lives together be made nobler, stronger, and well-pleasing in Thy sight. +Amen. + + MAURICE A. LEVY. + + +June 2 + + _Over the shoulders and slopes of the dune, + I saw the white daisies go down to the sea, + A host in the sunshine, an army in June, + The people God sends us to set our hearts free._ + + _The bobolinks rallied them up from the dell, + The orioles whistled them out of the wood, + And all of their singing was "Earth, it is well," + And all of their dancing was, "Life, Thou art good!"_ + + BLISS CARMAN. + +O Thou, who art the Father of Light and Love, from whom cometh down +every good and perfect gift, we thank Thee for this new born day, which +Thou sendest us, for the splendor of Thy presence in the sunlit sky +above us and the blossoming earth beneath; for spring-time flowers that +border our paths with loveliness and happy bird song, lifting our hearts +to responsive joy and praise. We thank Thee for life and health, for +home and friends, for opportunities and duties, for temptations and +trials, yea, for the very sorrows and bereavements which bring us to +ourselves in penitence, to others in sympathy, and to Thee in faith and +adoration. Thy will be done! Thy kingdom come! Amen. + + CHARLES W. WENDTE. + + +June 3 + + _One small life in God's great plan, + How futile it seems as the ages roll, + Do what it may, or strive how it can, + To alter the sweep of the infinite whole! + A single stitch in an endless web, + A drop in the ocean's flow and ebb! + But the pattern is rent where the stitch is lost, + Or marred where the tangled threads have crossed; + And each life that fails of its true intent + Mars the perfect plan that its Maker meant._ + + SUSAN COOLIDGE. + +O Thou, the heavenly Father, in whom we live and move, whose life-giving +spirit is ever around us like the air we breathe,--we lift our thoughts +to Thee in reverence and gladness at the coming of the new day. We are +glad for the quiet hours of the night, while the stars shine over us. +May we be ready now, with willing and obedient hearts, for the work, the +cares, the joys and the friendly converse of the day. We know how small +our lives are; may we share the thoughts of Thy infinite mind, may Thy +power and beauty, Thy justice and goodness possess us. May our feeble +wills be strong to carry the current of the one Good Will that sways the +universe. Amen. + + CHARLES F. DOLE. + + +June 4 + + _I have lived, sir, a long time; and the longer I live, the more + convincing proofs I see of this truth, that God governs in the + affairs of men._ + + BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. + + _All I have seen teaches me to trust the Creator for all I have not + seen. Whatever it be which the great Providence prepares for us, it + must be something large and generous; and in the great style of His + works. The future must be up to the style of our faculties, of + memory, of hope, of imagination, of reason._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + +O Thou, who in Thy greatness holds the planets on their way, and in Thy +providence guides the sparrow's flight, and in Thy tenderness marks the +sparrow's fall, may we not be blind to Thy foot-prints in the events of +every day, but see them guiding our way and feel more and more Thy love. +Father, we ask not for great things, but we ask Thee to help us in the +little needs and longings that fill our every day, to be the strength of +our every endeavor, that in our daily walk, we may feel that the earth +is warm with life and joy, that the air is full of strength, that there +comes to us from every side some message, sweet and tender, if only we +can be patient, trustful, believing that all things work together for +good to them who seek to do Thy will Amen. + + JOSHUA YOUNG. + + +June 5 + + _And do not fear to hope. Can poet's brain + More than the Father's heart rich good invent? + Each time we smell the autumn's dying scent, + We know the primrose time will come again; + Not more we hope, nor less would soothe our pain. + Be bounteous in our faith, for not misspent + Is confidence unto the Father lent: + Thy need is sown and rooted for his rain, + His thoughts are as thine own; nor are his ways + Other than thine, but by their loftier sense + Of beauty infinite and love intense. + Work on! One day, beyond all thought of praise + A sunny joy will crown thee with its rays; + Nor other than thy need, thy recompense._ + + GEORGE MACDONALD. + +Our Father, in the gratitude of loved and loving children we thank Thee +for life and all the faith and hope and love Thy goodness has awakened +in our souls. For the splendors of the world and the greater splendor of +the mind radiant with Thy love, we bow in rapture and adoration. +Overwhelmed at times by the mysteries and vicissitudes of life, we will +trust Thy will to lead us out of darkness into the light of Thine +informing spirit of truth and wisdom. Conscious of our weakness and +needs, we rejoice that strength and supply are assured to us in the +permanence of Thy Fatherhood. Lead us more and ever more to realize that +in Thee we live and move and have our being. Amen. + + RICHMOND FISK. + + +June 6 + + _When a feller goes a-huntin' for a rose + He shouldn't be a-thinkin' of the thorn; + He must woo it, he must win it-- + Where his heart beats he must pin it + An' breathe the breath that's in it + Every morn!_ + + _When a feller goes a-huntin' for a rose + He shouldn't see the thorn beneath its breast, + But for all its thorny foes. + Red and reckless,--one poor rose + Is sweet enough, God knows, + For the best._ + + FRANK L. STANTON. + +O Lord, our God, so great is our life we may find that for which we +look,--the good or the bad. Send us into this day with eyes searching for +the good. Beholding it may we admire it and admiring it we shall become +like it changed into the same image from character to character by the +Spirit. May we be more concerned to do right than not to do wrong. Save us +from a humility that is weakness and give us largeness of life without +pride. May we want nothing so much as opportunity,--opportunity to be, to +do, to suffer. May we not strive for bigness but for fitness and may our +reception of the Christ be our forgiveness and our salvation for His name's +sake. Amen. + + T. C. MARTIN. + + +June 7 + + _The beauty of work depends upon the way we meet it,--whether we + arm ourselves each morning to attack it as an enemy that must be + vanquished before night comes, or whether we open our eyes with the + sunrise to welcome it as an approaching friend who will keep us + delightful company all day, and who will make us feel at evening, + that the day was well worth its fatigues._ + + LUCY LARCOM. + +Our Heavenly Father, Thou givest us light for the hours of labor and +darkness for the hours of slumber. We toil and then we rest. We sleep +and then we arise, to perform the tasks which await us. Convince us, O +God, that the life which Thou hast given us to live is more than working +that we may rest, and resting that we may work. Persuade us that it is +for some great and good end. Help us to understand that even as we live +in Thee so Thou dost fulfil Thine eternal purposes in and through us. +Teach us that our smallest effort is important to Thee. So may we dread +no duty. So may every moment of every day be precious in our sight. +Amen. + + ROGER S. FORBES. + + +June 8 + + _And those who heard the Singers three + Disputed which the best might be; + For still their music seemed to start + Discordant echoes in each heart._ + + _But the great Master said, "I see + No best in kind, but in degree; + I gave a various gift to each, + To charm, to strengthen, and to teach._ + + _"These are the three great chords of might, + And he whose ear is tuned aright, + Will hear no discord in the three, + But the most perfect harmony."_ + + HENRY W. LONGFELLOW. + +O God, our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for all Thy mercies new every +morning, and fresh every evening, but especially we bless Thee that Thou +callest us to Thy service and kingdom by Jesus Christ, our Lord, and +hast vouchsafed to each of us some gracious gift whereby we may +accomplish Thy holy will concerning us. Grant that we may so improve and +use that pearl of price as to enhance greatly the welfare of Thy +children. Help each to see the good in all, and all to see the good in +each, that all may strive together in sinless and sweet accord for the +common weal and thus for the glory of Thy name, and so hasten the happy +day when all souls shall be one, as prayed the Saviour of the world. +Amen. + + ALFRED P. PUTNAM. + + +June 9 + + _Men talk sometimes as if the passage of a ship through the sea or + a bird through the air is a fit symbol of man's passage through + this world. I do not think so. A better symbol would be the passage + of a plough through the soil leaving a furrow behind. What does the + furrow include? All the memory of every beautiful picture and + landscape you have ever seen. It includes the memory of every + experience, every sweet association, every tie of love, whether of + father, mother, wife or children. All these, whether living or + dead, speak to you. They have a voice, a language that you will + understand._ + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + +We thank Thee, O God, for the many influences past and present which +have had a share in the moulding of our lives and characters toward a +larger usefulness and a more perfect realization of the Christian ideal. +We thank Thee for the mother's love which watched over us through years +of helplessness; for the father's love which made provision for our +wants, for the human sympathy which has everywhere blessed and +strengthened us and made life brighter; for the friends of youth and age +who have helped us to better things. Grant, O God, that a memory of +these blessings may abide with us so long as life may last, and that as +we have been helped by others to walk the way of life we may not forget +to extend a helping hand to those who may need our comfort and our +sympathy. + + ORIN EDSON CROOKER. + + +June 10 + + _It is not to taste sweet things, but to do noble and true things, + and vindicate himself under God's heaven, as a God-made man, that + the poorest son of Adam dimly longs. This dim longing for what is + noble and true, the still small voice which calls to one + imperatively in moments of temptation, is the safeguard which, if + hearkened to, not only protects one in severe trials of manliness + and womanliness, but also incites to the formation of a fine + character, without which all acquisitions, all graces and + accomplishments, all talents and all learning, are but as sounding + brass and a tinkling cymbal._ + + THOMAS CARLYLE. + +Almighty God, our heavenly Father, in grateful recognition of Thy love +and watchful care, we thank Thee for the repose of the night and the +promise of the day. Our desire is to do Thy will, and we ask for the +guidance and inspiration of Thy spirit. Enable us to perform faithfully +all the work that Thou hast given us to do. Grant us a sufficiency of +Thy grace to treat all our fellowmen as children of Thine, and when +night comes may we have the blessed assurance that through the +experiences of this day we have become a little more like Thine own +glorious self in love and holiness. We ask it in the name of Jesus, our +example, and Saviour. Amen. + + WARREN S. PERKINS. + + +June 11 + + _Now it is June, and the secret is told; + Flashed from the buttercup's glory of gold; + Hummed in the bumblebee's gladness, and sung + New from each bough where a bird's nest is swung; + Breathed from the clover-beds, when the winds pass; + Chirped in small psalms, through the aisles of the grass._ + + HENRY JAMES, SR. + +Dear Father, in the morning hour of this new day, we thank Thee for the +glorious revelation of Thyself in the open Book of Nature. May we love +the beautiful and therein love Thee, with a true and abiding affection. +Grant unto us the understanding that it is only as we have the spirit of +the beautiful in our lives that we can appreciate the beautiful without +us. So may we value this life, which is from Thee, as a means of +attaining a larger usefulness and for realizing that goodness which is +ever heavenly. In simply trying to be nobler, more unselfish, like unto +Christ, we pray, that we may learn how good is life. Amen. + + THOMAS EDWARD POTTERTON. + + +June 12 + + _Methinks I love all common things, + The common air, the common flower, + The dear, kind, common thought that springs + From hearts that have no other dower, + No other wealth, no other power, + Save love; and will not that repay + For all else fortune tears away?_ + + BRYAN WALLER PROCTER. + +We thank God for the beauty of the world. We thank God that it is good +to be alive. We thank God for the joy that joins us to Thy world in +gladness, and makes it seem to be the open book of Thy graciousness and +tenderness and compassion. We thank Thee also for the ministry of those +days that were not bright, but that were full of comfort, even in their +darkness, into which God came shrouded, only to reveal Himself more +clearly as the light. We thank Thee for the intervening by the hand of +love and tenderness that is human, so that our best nature was called +out for love's sake, and all the lower forces of our lives led in the +leash of that sweet attraction. We thank God for everything for which +our life is better, and pray Thee to help us to use Thy mercies to turn +them into strength, not the strength of praise alone, but the strength +of service also. Amen. + + THOMAS R. SLICER. + + +June 13 + + _A creed is a rod, + And a crown is of night; + But this thing is God, + To be man with thy might, + To grow straight in the strength of thy spirit, and live out thy life + as the light._ + + ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE. + + _Life is fuller and sweeter for every fulness and sweetness that we + take knowledge of. And to him that hath, cannot help being given + from everything._ + + MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. + +Infinite Love and Beauty, who stirrest in the tiniest seed that breaks +its earthly shell to greet the light and warmth of thy beneficence and +round its life in blade and flower and ripened fruit,--awake in us, we +pray, that we may burst the casements of our dead selves and live to +bear the fruits of completed lives. Be love alone our creed and service +our crown; and in the sweetness and light of these twin ministers draw +Thou us on, until having taken full knowledge of the fulness and +sweetness of our Lord the Christ, we shall have measured in our +spiritual stature, His perfect manliness and strength. Thus shall we +have indeed and to us shall be given from everything. Amen. + + ALBERT C. WHITE. + + +June 14 + + _He fails who climbs to power and place + Up the pathway of disgrace. + He fails not who makes truth his cause, + Nor bends to win the crowd's applause. + He fails not, he who stakes his all + Upon the right and dares to fall. + What though the living bless or blame, + For him the long success of fame!_ + + RICHARD WATSON GILDER. + +Our Heavenly Father, help us when we fail to see and know the truth and +its blessed influence for good. Help us to combat bravely the evil in +the world and to look to Thee for encouragement and success. Help us, if +we fail, to regain our footing and to reach the higher because of the +effort which Thy love prompts. We gratefully accept the power which Thy +wisdom gives and thank Thee for the opportunity to use its strength. Be +Thou our guide and we shall fear no failure, nor overestimate the worth +of success. So shall we "rejoice in the Lord always,"--in failure +because of Thy help and in success because of Thine approval. In the +name of Jesus Christ our Lord and Redeemer. Amen. + + WILLIAM E. GIBBS. + + +June 15 + + _A singer sang a song of tears, + And the great world heard and wept + For the song of the sorrows of fleeting years, + And the hopes which the dead past kept: + And souls in anguish their burdens bore, + And the world was sadder than ever before._ + + _A singer sang a song of cheer, + And the great world listened and smiled, + For he sang of the love of a Father dear + And the trust of a little child; + And souls that before had forgotten to pray, + Looked up and went singing along the way._ + + EMMA C. DOWD. + +Almighty God, our heavenly Father, our trust is evermore in Thee, and we +would keep that trust as a song within our hearts, which may cheer and +bless and strengthen us. When the night is dark and the day is dreary +may that song be with us, and when cares oppress and sorrows meet us, +may our prayers still rise to Thee, for Thou art the God of our lives. +Let not the day's discouragements depress us, nor its failures find us +weak or helpless, nor its trials leave a stain upon our souls. But +because we have Thy song of love within our hearts may we march to +heavenly music, and ever go upon our way rejoicing. Amen. + + PAUL REVERE FROTHINGHAM. + + +June 16 + + _It is only the sincerity of human feeling that abides. As for a + thought, we know not, it may be deceptive; but the love, wherewith + we have loved it, will surely return to our soul; nor can a single + drop of its clearness or strength be abstracted by error. Of that + perfect ideal that each of us strives to build up in himself, the + sum total of all our thoughts will help only to model the outline; + but the elements that go to construct it, and keep it alive, are + the purified passion, unselfishness, loyalty, wherein these + thoughts have had being._ + + MAETERLINCK. + +O God, our Heavenly Father, help us to take up the cares of this day +with an unselfish heart, and in loyalty to what is right and good. Keep +us in right relation to those with whom our lot is cast, in sympathy +with the unanxious joy of the world and with the deeper life which is +its source. We desire to enter into the thought and the love of the most +hopeful souls, that, in all the needful pauses of the day, we may find +cheer, incentive, and the ampler rest: through Jesus Christ, our Lord. +Amen. + + CHARLES H. LEONARD. + + +June 17 + + _"Does the road wind up-hill all the way?" + "Yes, to the very end!" + "Will the day's journey take the whole long day?" + "From morn to night, my friend!"_ + + _"But is there for the night a resting-place?" + "A roof for all when the dark hours begin." + "May not the darkness hide it from my face?" + "You cannot miss that inn."_ + + _"Shall I meet other wayfarers at night?" + "Those who have gone before." + "Then must I knock or call when just in sight?" + "They will not keep you standing at that door."_ + + _"Shall I find comfort, travel-sore and weak?" + "Of labor you shall find the sum." + "Will there be beds for me and all who seek?" + "Yea,--beds for all who come!"_ + + CHRISTINA ROSSETTI. + +Our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for this new day. May it be an open +door to faithful service. Open our eyes that we may see all vexations, +distresses, and toil as angels in disguise sent to strengthen and fulfil +us, to prepare us for larger blessings at our journey's end. As the blue +sky of Thy loving kindness is broader and more enduring than the clouds +that sometimes hide it, so teach us to trust Thine unfailing love that +overarches and outlasts all weariness and pain. When life and strength +fail us here, may we find them transformed and glorious in the city of +God hereafter. Be Thou our shield and our reward now and forever. Amen. + + JOHN M. WILSON. + + +June 18 + + _Those homelier wildflowers, which we call weeds; yellow japanned + buttercups and star-disked dandelions, lying in the grass, like + sparks that have leaped from the kindling sun of summer; the + profuse daisy-like flower which whitens the fields, to the great + disgust of liberal shepherds, yet seems fair to loving eyes, with + its button-like mound of gold set round with milk-white rays; the + tall-stemmed succory, setting its pale blue flowers aflame one + after another; the red and white clovers; the broad, flat leaves of + the plantain,--"the white man's foot," as the Indians called + it;--those common growths which fling themselves to be crushed + under our feet and our wheels, making themselves so cheap in this + perpetual martyrdom that we forget, each of them is a ray of the + divine beauty._ + + OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. + +Our Heavenly Father, however poor and mean and commonplace our lives may +seem to be, in our better moments we think of ourselves as Thy children. +We may have failed sometimes but we shall not utterly fail. In Thy +sight, nothing is common or worthless. No life shall be cast as rubbish +to the void. However commonplace our tasks may seem, let us feel +ourselves in partnership with God, and go forth to the duties of the day +with high hope and sense of dignity. So shalt Thou make even our little +lives of some real service to the world. We pray to Thee in the spirit +of Him, who though the humblest of all, was yet Master of all. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +June 19 + + _There's a real grace of character in forgetting the things which + disturb the harmony of life._ + + HAMILTON W. MABIE. + + Touch your lips with gladness and go singing on your way, + Smiles will strangely lighten every duty; + Just a little word of cheer may span a sky of gray + With hope's own heaven-tinted bow of beauty. + Wear a pleasant face wherein shall shine a joyful heart, + As shines the sun, the happy fields adorning; + To every care-beclouded life some ray of light impart, + And touch your lips with gladness every morning. + + NIXON WATERMAN. + +O Thou who art from everlasting to everlasting, Our God and Father, we +flee unto Thee as the One who is able to save us from all foes within +and without. We confess our weakness and our many grievous faults, and +beseech Thee to touch us by Thy Spirit, that with penitent and lowly +hearts we may seek Thee as our everlasting Friend and Helper. Be patient +yet a while with our shortcomings and frowardness. Suffer us yet a +little that Thine infinite grace and compassion may arouse us from our +spiritual slumber unto the glorious life of obedience and love. In this +new day we would be made to feel Thy presence and the light and joy and +peace, which Thou dost promise to all who diligently seek Thee through +Jesus Christ Our Lord. Amen. + + CLARENCE E. RICE. + + +June 20 + + _Now is the high tide of the year, + And whatever of life hath ebbed away + Comes flooding back with a ripply cheer, + Into every bare inlet and creek and bay; + Now the heart is so full that a drop overfills it, + We are happy now because God wills it._ + + JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. + +Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty! early in the morning we approach +unto Thee. The whole round of creation is burdened with the exuberance +of Thy life, and everywhere is hallowed ground. We come with unshod +feet. The sun, mighty minister of Thy great goodness, flooding the world +with light and piercing all things with his fiery arrows, calls back to +life the sleeping earth, and assures us that we are partakers of Thy +light and Thy love and Thy life. O most glorious God! may these Thy +mercies, fresh every morning, be with us through the day to strengthen +us to do Thy will, we ask in the name of Him who came that we may have +life and have it abundantly. Amen. + + FRANK W. COLLIER. + + +June 21 + + _Man hath much need of courage; and need to brace + His spiritual nerve in solitude; + Self-trusting, self-sustained, and self-imbued; + Seeking God in his own heart's secret place. + To perfect self, and in that self embrace + The triune essence of truth, beauty, and good; + This is fulfilment, this beatitude + Throned high above base fears and hopes more base. + What shall it profit us, if, gaining all + The privilege of priest-made paradise, + We lose therewith our self which is the soul? + And wherefore should we shrink from even the fall, + If haply we should fail with steadfast eyes + Fixed only on so bright, so pure a goal?_ + + JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS. + +Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for the gift of a new day, for the tasks +which it brings, and for the strength with which we rise to its +requirements. Help us, through all this day, to remember Thee. Thou art +our strength, our guide, our inspiration. Fill us with the courage born +of faith. Let us feel that, seeking to do right, we shall be moved and +aided by an unseen Power. In all our experiences this day, help us to +speak the truth, to be loyal to friendship, to be steadfast in +principle, to fight the good fight and to keep the faith. Bless our +endeavors to give heart and hope to other souls; and grant them the +presence of Thy loving spirit. Amen. + + JOHN CLARENCE LEE. + + +June 22 + + _Let a man start out at breakneck speed in the morning, pushing and + driving and hurrying as if it were a matter of life and death to + accomplish a given task before noon, and he will generally end by + working himself into a fever of anxiety and harassing care before + night, and the man who, under any pretext whatsoever, whether for + the sake of wealth or learning or pleasure, has pursued this mad, + rushing, whirling method of life for fifteen or twenty years, will + find himself thoroughly disqualified for the normal enjoyment of + life thenceforward to the end of his days._ + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + +Most gracious God! Thou who hast sustained us through the night watches, +and who now openest to us the day, with its promise of good and +opportunity for service, we still depend upon that heavenly faithfulness +which never fails. We look to Thee for the quickening of our best +powers. We would be laborers together with Thee to-day, not as driven to +irksome tasks, but as honored with a welcome privilege. Whether we plant +or water may we do it faithfully, and then trust Thee for the desired +increase. May it please Thee to quiet our anxieties, to lay to rest our +unworthy fears, and to assure us of Thine over-ruling providence; and +thus through all our toiling may we enjoy large measures of the peace +that passeth understanding. Amen. + + JAMES EDWARD WRIGHT. + + +June 23 + + _I do not say you can make yourself merry and happy when you are in + a physical condition which is contrary to such mental condition, + but by practice and effort you can learn to withdraw from it, + refusing to allow your judgments and actions to be ruled by it. + "What does that matter?" you will learn to say. "It is enough for + me to know that the sun does shine, and that this is only a weary + fog that is round about me for a moment. I shall come out into the + light beyond presently." This is faith,--faith in God, who is + Light._ + + GEORGE MACDONALD. + +Our Father, residing in the light incomprehensible and who art seeing +and providing all good for Thine immortal household, when mid investing +clouds we shall hail Thy presence, transforming weakness into perfect +strength and sighs and groans into joy and swelling songs, above all the +many rightful subjects of Christian petition, we pray that Thou wilt +always press us near to Thee to feel Thy loving heart-beats and dwell in +the light in which is no darkness at all. We pray not to be spared any +of our full part of the burdens needful to this day, but to be given the +measure of grace to maintain unfaltering steps. Behold with compassion +the errors that befall us as we, too, compassionate others. Amen. + + JACOB STRAUB. + + +June 24 + + _We are all perhaps familiar with the story of the little + housemaid, who, when she was asked why she thought she had become a + Christian, replied, after a little hesitation, "Because I sweep + under the mats." A very poor reason at first sight, and only + significant from the fact of the master-motive underlying the fact + itself. A child's reasoning--but did not quaint old Herbert employ + the same fine logic when he sang:_ + + _"Who sweeps a room as for Thy laws. + Makes that and the action fine!"_ + + WILLIAM MOODIE. + +Dear Lord of Life and Light, at the dawn of another day we rise to thank +Thee for Thy watchful care, imparting strength and vitality during the +closed hours of the night. Thy gift of eternal life is ours by Thy +creatorship and love, and we would pray that in no way during this +coming day shall we dishonor our birthright by evil thought or action. +Help us to aspire to hold fast and develop Thy holy characteristics, +normal to us and made active by our wills. We thank Thee for the goal +revealed to us as our destiny, the spirit displayed by our Master, Jesus +Christ, and like Him may we lean on Thee daily for the strengthening of +our faith and the maturing of our plans. Amen. + + CHARLES E. LUND. + + +June 25 + + _They are tired of what is old, + We will give it voices new; + For the half hath not been told + Of the beautiful and true._ + + GEORGE MACDONALD. + + _The common problem, yours, mine, everyone's, + Is not to fancy what were fair in life + Provided it could be--but finding first + What may be, than find how to make it fair + Up to our means, a very different thing._ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + +Thou Infinite Heart! our hearts go out after Thee, not for past, not for +future, not for what was, though dear, not for what may be, though in +vision precious,--not these the burden of our prayer. Our hearts crave +peace, comfort with what is. May we confide in Thee so utterly that the +old pain is eased, the anxious foreboding is dispelled, self-will merged +in divine will, self-direction yielding to divine leading. Lo! our +prayer is answered in the making and we are helped. Amen. + + STANFORD MITCHELL. + + +June 26 + + _Today is your day and mine, the only day we have, the day in which + we play our part. What our part may signify in the great whole, we + may not understand, but we are here to play it, and now is our + time. This we know, it is a part of action, not of whining. It is a + part of love, not cynicism. It is for us to express love in terms + of human helpfulness. This we know, for we have learned from sad + experience that any other course of life leads toward weakness and + misery._ + + DAVID STARR JORDAN. + +Our Father, Author alike of the morning light and Guardian through the +darkness and shadow of the night, grant us the right spirit as we go +forth to the unknown experiences of this day. We would not look eagerly +for our own comfort and happiness, but would find them as Thy free gift +while we are employed in giving comfort and happiness to others. +Illuminate our lives with happy thoughts, cheerful words and blessed +hopes, that we may go forth with no purpose but to do Thy will, and +seeking no reward more glorious, than Thine approval whispered into +loving and attentive hearts, in Thy name. Amen. + + LEWIS G. WILSON. + + +June 27 + + _A Persian fable says: "One day + A wanderer found a lump of clay, + So redolent of sweet perfume + Its odors scented all the room. + "What art thou?" was his quick demand; + "Art thou some gem from Samarcand, + Or spikenard in this rude disguise, + Or other costly merchandise?" + "Nay, I am but a lump of clay." + "Then whence this wondrous perfume--say?" + "Friend, if the secret I disclose, + I have been dwelling with the rose," + Sweet parable! and will not those + Who love to dwell with Sharon's Rose, + Distil sweet odors all around, + Though low and mean themselves are found? + Dear Lord, abide with us, that we + May draw our perfume fresh from thee._ + + ANONYMOUS. + +Our Father, which art in heaven,--we thank Thee for the memory of those +who lived in Thy spirit and labored in Thy love. The fragrance of their +lives abides with us. We thank Thee for the prophets of great +hopes,--for those who have seen the invisible, and have searched +patiently for the city of their God. We bless those who by their pure +hearts and unselfish lives have revealed unto us our greater selves. +Help us to learn of them the way of life. Help us to live in such +thoughts and deeds as made them truly great. Keep our hearts so pure +to-day, our vision of the Master life so clear, that our path, before +and after us, shall be as the light of day. Amen. + + FREDERICK W. BETTS. + + +June 28 + + _Tell you what I like the best; + 'Long about knee-deep in June, + 'Bout the time the strawberries melts + On the vine,--some afternoon + Like to jes' git out and rest, + And not work at nothing else._ + + _Orchard's where I'd ruther be-- + Needn't fence it in for me! + Jes' the whole sky overhead, + And the whole airth underneath._ + + JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY. + +Help us, O Thou who art the Lord of life, that we may this morning +praise Thee for the beauty of the world and for the joyful privilege of +wandering in the green fields and by the sparkling brooks, and of +resting tired body and weary limb beneath the sweet orchard shade, +gazing with gladdened eyes at the blue canopy above, all forgetful of +the toil and din of the far off city. O may our hearts this day be in +tune with nature and in harmony with Thyself; and as we contemplate Thy +works this and every day may our hearts go out in loving and practical +sympathy toward those whose lives are spent within the narrow confines +of sunless courts. Hear us for the Saviour's sake. Amen. + + FRANCIS W. BRETT. + + +June 29 + + _Give us, O give us the man who sings at his work. Be his + occupation what it may, he is equal to any of those who follow the + same pursuit in silent sullenness. He will do more in the same + time--he will do it better--he will persevere longer. One is + scarcely sensible of fatigue while he marches to music. The very + stars are said to make harmony as they revolve in their spheres. + Wondrous is the strength of cheerfulness, although past calculation + its power of endurance. Efforts to be permanently useful, must be + uniformly joyous--a spirit all sunshine, graceful from very + gladness, beautiful because bright._ + + THOMAS CARLYLE. + +Almighty God, we turn to Thee in adoration and praise as we pause upon +the threshold of this new day. Grant, we pray Thee, that a song be in +our hearts as we go about the duties of the passing hours. Whatever our +experiences, whether of joy or sorrow, may we truly value the truthful +spirit. If Thou callest us to bear burdens or to stand upon the mountain +top of exultant achievement may we not forget to sing of Thee. Yea, O +God, we would be ever of the company of trusting souls, for such are +near to Thee. And when earthly days are past and the life of the freed +spirit is over, grant that our lives may blend in full accord with the +music of love, in sunshine of joy, in the beauty of holiness. We praise +Thee now and ever. Amen. + + STEPHEN H. ROBLIN. + + +June 30 + + _Full-leafed in pride of deepest green, + The earth in the sunshine basks serene, + Where linden blossoms crowded cling, + A thousand bees are murmuring. + As showers drift from the freshened land + With a seven-barred bow is the rain-cloud spanned. + The wild rose yields her subtlest scents + Where hay cocks pitch their fragrant tents. + The longest day's too brief for June, + The night too short for such a moon!_ + + SARA ANDREW SHAFER. + +We thank Thee, our Father, for the wonderful world in which we live; for +the glory of the heavens; for the beauty of the earth; for the bright +morning following the star-crowned night; for the song of birds, the hum +of bees, the fragrance of flowers, and the laughter of children, for the +industry of men and women, for all Thy gifts of love. As again the +lengthening shadows creep across our pathway, may we redouble our +energies that no labor of love may be left undone. So fill us with Thy +presence, so lead us by Thy Spirit this day, that in our homes we may be +patient, in our occupations sweet, in our social relations brotherly, in +all things Christlike, for Jesus' sake. Amen. + + ARTHUR WRIGHT. + + +July 1 + + _Let me go where'er I will + I hear a sky-born music still: + It sounds from all things old, + It sounds from all things young, + From all that's fair, from all that's foul, + Peals out a cheerful song._ + + _It is not only in the rose, + It is not only in the bird, + Not only where the rainbow glows, + Nor in the song of woman heard, + But in the darkest, meanest things + There alway, alway something sings._ + + _'Tis not in the high stars alone, + Nor in the cups of budding flowers, + Nor in the redbreast's mellow tone, + Nor in the bow that smiles in showers, + But in the mud and scum of things + There alway, alway something sings._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + +Dear Father in heaven, we thank Thee for all the sweet voices of the +world, not only for the harmonies of the great masters of song but for +the sweet voice of the mother as she sings her song of love, for the +bird in the spring time. We thank Thee for the music in the prattle of +children, and the kindly word spoken everywhere. The world is full of +music if only we have music in our own hearts. We pray, as we set forth +again this morning, for spirits in tune with all that is sweet and good. +Wherever we go this day, let the world sing to us and make us glad. +Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +July 2 + + _A little bird with plumage brown, + Beside my window flutters down, + A moment chirps its little strain, + Then taps upon my window-pane. + And chirps again, and hops along, + To call my notice to its song; + But I work on, nor heed its lay, + Till, in neglect, it flies away._ + + _So birds of peace and hope and love + Come fluttering earthward from above, + To settle on life's window-sills, + And ease our load of earthly ills; + But we, in traffic's rush and din + Too deep engaged to let them in, + With deadened heart and sense plod on, + Nor know our loss till they are gone._ + + PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR. + +My voice shalt Thou hear in the morning, O Lord, in the morning will I +direct my prayer unto Thee, and will look up; and looking up, may we not +fail to realize that, amid the turmoil of this outward life, Thou art +ever present to give peace and rest in the inner life. Should we fail to +recognize that presence we shall lose the comfort which Thou art ever +ready to bestow, and must ourselves bear burdens which Thou wouldst +gladly bear for us or take from us. Thou knowest our frame and +rememberest that we are dust. Open our spiritual vision to behold that +Divine resources are subject to our daily prayer. In the name of Jesus, +the Christ. Amen. + + O. W. SCOTT. + + +July 3 + + _Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of + Heaven. + + Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. Blessed are + the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God. + + Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you, and + shall say all manner of evil against you falsely for my sake._ + + MATTHEW v. 3, 8, 11. + +O God, our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee that Thou dost overrule our +weakness, failure and sins to the accomplishment of Thy divine plan for +us. We recall with pleasure our successes in the past year, and if we +have failed, wilt Thou show us where and when and teach us the way of +amendment. We thank Thee for our Hope and Faith which have come to us +from the Bible. Here, on every page and in every biography, have we +learned of Christ Jesus, the Way, the Truth and the Life. We thank Thee +that through Him our sins are forgiven, and we have learned to know +Thee, O blessed Father, which knowledge is eternal life. May we walk +with Him, moment by moment in a life of loving service to all mankind, +during all the remaining days of our life. Amen. + + E. M. WARNER. + + +July 4 + + _One flag, one land, one heart, one hand, + One nation, evermore!_ + + OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. + + _And for your country, boy, and for that flag, never dream a dream + but of serving her, though the service carry you through a thousand + hells! No matter what happens to you--no matter who flatters or + abuses you--never look at another flag, never let a night pass but + you pray God to bless that flag._ + + EDWARD EVERETT HALE. + +Thine, O God, is the kingdom. And blessed is the nation whose God is the +Lord. We believe that Thy hand has been in the founding and the fortunes +of this land. We do homage to it for its ideals, its principles, its +glorious company of apostles of truth, its noble army of martyrs for +liberty and humanity; we love and cherish it as our home and our shrine; +but we hallow it, we stand in awe of it, as the scene of Thy special +activity, the instrument of Thy holy purposes. May its vision not pass; +may the clouds that hang over it be dispersed by the clear shining of +the sun of righteousness and peace; may the dream of freedom with +fraternity be realized here, even here, upon these shores, that Thy +saving health may be known among all nations. Amen. + + C. ELLWOOD NASH. + + +July 5 + + _Far up the crag, 'twixt sea and sky, + Where winds tempestuous, blowing by, + Leave giant boulders swept and bare; + Where forked lightnings fitful flare, + And petrels sound their stormy cry._ + + _A dainty bluebell, sweet and shy, + Lifted its head complacently, + As guarded by the tenderest care, + Far up the crag._ + + _And now, whenever fear draws nigh, + In thought I stand 'twixt sea and sky, + And, as of old in my despair, + I bless the Power that set it there-- + That tiny thing with courage high, + Far up the crag!_ + + FLORENCE E. COATES. + +Eternal Presence, may we now speak to Thee? or, consciously within Thy +presence, should our lips be still? Art Thou the Infinite Mercy, and +shall we say, be merciful? Shall we persuade the love that can not once +withhold itself? We would not ask, were prayer to change established +law. But, we will open here our hearts, and so receive the blessedness +that seeks us and has sought us,--sought us as the sunlight sought us +early,--seeks us as the raindrops seek us in the storm. Not more canst +Thou withhold the goodness from us. We wait receptively, unbarring all +our rust-hinged doors to welcome the true favors that now find us. In +sweet trust, asking or unasking, we abide ever in Thee. Amen. + + PERRY MARSHALL. + + +July 6 + + _God is a kind Father. He sets us all in the places where he wishes + us to be employed, and that employment is truly "our Father's + business." He chooses work for every creature which will be + delightful to them, if they do it simply and humbly. He gives us + always strength enough and sense enough for what He wants us to do; + if we either tire ourselves or puzzle ourselves, it is our own + fault. And we may always be sure, whatever we are doing, that we + cannot be pleasing Him if we are not happy ourselves._ + + JOHN RUSKIN. + +Father Divine, Thou art indeed kind. Thine are the ways of kindness, of +wisdom, and of love,--the ways of pleasantness and the paths of peace. +In simple and humble spirit as becometh Thy children, may we walk with +Thee accomplishing the work to which Thou dost call us. Our work is Thy +work, our business the Father's business; the business of justice, mercy +and truth. When loyal and true, we are what we are, and do what we do by +Thy grace. So help us to honor Thee in all the duties of life,--"Not +slothful in business,--fervent in spirit,"--pleasing Thee and therefore +happy ourselves. Amen. + + ISAAC P. CODDINGTON. + + +July 7 + + _Threefold is the form of Space: + Length, with ever restless motion, + Seeks eternity's wide ocean; + Breadth with boundless sway extends; + Depth to unknown realms descends._ + + _All as types to thee are given; + Thou must onward strive for heaven, + Never still or weary be, + Wouldst thou perfect glory see; + Far must thy researches go + Wouldst thou learn the world to know; + Thou must tempt the dark abyss + Wouldst thou prove what Being is._ + + _Naught but firmness gains the prize,-- + Naught but fulness makes us wise,-- + Buried deep, truth ever lies!_ + + PROVERBS OF CONFUCIUS. + +Our Heavenly Father, help us this day to make good our privilege to feel +and think of Thee as we do. Help us this day to make ourselves part of +our brotherhood, and our brotherhood part of Thee. We know not what the +day hath in store for us, but we pray Thee to help us have in store for +it our better heart, our better hands. Send Thy holy spirit into our +life to calm and to strengthen; that we may be steadfast and true; that +we may give and be forgiven. Bless all Thy children this day, and may +our labor end as it began, in Thee, with Thee, for Thee. Amen. + + LOUIS H. BUCKSHORN. + + +July 8 + + _O Impatient Ones! Do the leaves say nothing to you as they murmur + to-day? They are not fashioned this spring, but months ago; and the + summer just begun will fashion others for another year. At the + bottom of every leaf-stem is a cradle, and in it is an infant germ; + and the winds will rock it, and the birds will sing to it all + summer long, and next season it will unfold. So God is working for + you and carrying forward to the perfect development all the + processes of our lives._ + + HENRY WARD BEECHER. + +O Eternal Father, giver of all spiritual grace, we thank Thee for Thy +presence in our hearts. May we realize that Thou hast the best possible +plan for every human life. Help us to be patient and joyful in the +consciousness that Thou art carrying forward Thy blessed work in us. Thy +love, O Lord, is equal to Thy wisdom, and Thou wilt always do what is +best for us. May Thy holy will be our delight, so that we may each trust +in Thee at all times and cheerfully say, Thy will, O Lord, not mine, be +done. Thou who dost care for the birds and the lilies art ever mindful +of us, Thy children. Deliver us from worry and may Thy peace guard our +hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen. + + GEORGE H. CHENEY. + + +July 9 + + _Let us hope that one day all mankind will be happy and wise; and + though this day never should dawn to have hoped for it cannot be + wrong. And in any event, it is helpful to speak of happiness to + those who are sad, that thus at least they may learn what it is + that happiness means. They are ever inclined to regard it as + something beyond them, extraordinary, out of their reach. But if + all who may count themselves happy were to tell, very simply, what + it was that brought happiness to them, the others would see that + between sorrow and joy the difference is but as between a gladsome, + enlightened acceptance of life and a hostile gloomy submission; + between a large and harmonious conception of life, and one that is + stubborn and narrow._ + + MAETERLINCK. + +O Lord, we thank Thee for the special providence which is over +everything which Thou hast created, and wherein Thou residest with all +Thine infinite perfections. We thank Thee that Thou carest for us all, +that in our day of joy we know it is Thou who fillest our cup, by giving +us the faculties which make it run over at the brim. We thank Thee that +Thou art with us in our days of hardship and of calamity, that when our +own heart cries out against us, Thou art greater than our heart, and, +understanding all things, blessest us in secret ways; and when we are +cast down and go stooping and feeble, with hungering eyes and a failing +heart, that Thou still art with us, and leadest us from strength to +strength and blessest us continually. Amen. + + THEODORE PARKER. + + +July 10 + + _Were any of us really disappointed or melancholy in a hayfield? + Did we ever lie fairly back on a haycock and look up into the blue + sky, and listen to the merry sounds, the whetting of scythes and + the laughing prattle of women and children, and think evil thoughts + of the world or our brethren? Not we! Or, if we have so done we + ought to be ashamed of ourselves, and deserve never again to be out + of town during hay-harvest._ + + THOMAS HUGHES. + +Dear Heavenly Father, we devoutly thank Thee for the beautiful open face +of Nature shining upon us; for the splendor of the fields where the +birds wing their merry flight; for the breath of the flowers and the +grass beneath the scythe, like the odor of incense; and most of all, for +the merry shouts of women and children and men in the meadow, in the +heyday of happiness, as they fill their souls with the freedom of the +children of God, and live in the open where no evil breath can come. +Grant that we may live spiritually forever in the fragrant hayfields of +life, where the birds sing and the children shout, and where no covering +or roof can ever shut out the sunshine of life's eternal bliss. Amen. + + ROBERT S. KELLERMAN. + + +July 11 + + _A story is told of a king who went into his garden one morning and + found everything withering and dying. He asked an oak that stood + near the gate what the trouble was. He found that it was sick of + life and determined to die, because it was not tall and beautiful + like the pine. The pine was out of heart because it could not bear + grapes like the vine; the vine was going to throw its life away, + because it could not stand erect and have as fine fruit as the + pomegranate; and so on throughout the garden. Coming to the + heart'sease, the king found its bright face uplifted, as full of + cheerfulness as ever. Said the king, "Well, heart'sease, I am glad + to find one brave little flower in this general discouragement and + dying. You don't seem one bit disheartened." "No, your majesty. I + know I am of small account; but I concluded you wanted a + heart'sease when you planted me. If you had wanted an oak, or a + pine, or a vine, or a pomegranate, you would have set one out. So I + am bound to be the best heart'sease that ever I can."_ + + WILLIAM MOODIE. + +Like the wise King of old, I pray Thee, gracious Lord, give unto me +wisdom. May Thy Pillar of Light guide my footsteps so that I go not +astray in the wilderness of sin and selfish ambition. Help me to acquire +a pure heart and a contented spirit. Amidst all the vicissitudes of +fortune, let faith induce me to say, "Whatever God doeth is well." Amen. + + M. M. EICHLER. + + +July 12 + + _What shall I do to be just? + What shall I do for the gain + Of the world--for its sadness? + Teach me, O seers that I trust! + Chart me the difficult main + Leading out of my sorrow and madness, + Preach me the purging of pain._ + + _Shall I wrench from my finger the ring + To cast to the tramp at my door? + Shall I tear off each luminous thing + To drop in the palm of the poor? + What shall I do to be just? + Teach me, O Ye in the light, + Whom the poor and the rich alike trust; + My heart is aflame to be right._ + + HAMLIN A. GARLAND. + +Infinite Spirit, Thou seest us just as we are. In Thy sight there can be +no make-believe; we need not seek to offer Thee as a penance for our +sins some cheap alms to the poor, for Thy favor cannot be bought. We +pray simply that we may be just,--that we may be true. If we have +wronged anyone, help us to right the wrong. If we have been false to +ourselves or false to our neighbors, O Lord, make us true,--we seek no +easy admission to a far-off heaven, we seek Thy presence here and now, +today, by the only pathway open, the pathway of righteousness and truth. +That we may enter this pathway, grant us we pray Thee the illumination +of Thy Holy Spirit. Amen. + +GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +July 13 + + _The law of worthy life is fundamentally the law of strife. It is + only through labor, painful effort, by grim energy and resolute + courage, that we move on to better things._ + + THEODORE ROOSEVELT. + + _If we would please God we must watch every stroke and touch upon + the canvas of our lives; we may not think we can lay it on with a + trowel and yet succeed. We ought to live as miniature painters + work, for they watch every line and tint._ + + SPURGEON. + +As we begin this new day, O our Father, may such energy and vigor, such +strength and courage, such faith and hope be ours that the problems and +tasks awaiting us may be boldly and gladly met as challenges to our +powers. May that abundant life be in us which shall make our +difficulties a tonic, and the struggle to achieve high aims a joy. May +we be resourceful, equal to life, adequate to every situation, able to +stand this universe,--men who can. May we count it a privilege to live, +to have a vision of life's possibilities, and to have the fellowship of +so many good men and women by the way. Amen. + + GEORGE R. DODSON. + + +July 14 + + _With place, with gold, with power--oh, ask me not + With these my little hour of life to blot. + A little hour indeed! and I would fain + Its moments spend in what is worth its pain. + What traveler would faint through troublous lands + To gather only what must leave his hands + The moment that he takes his homeward ship? + Earth's goods and gauds give every man the slip; + But wealth of thought and richer wealth of love, + Must pass for coin in any world above. + The good to others done while here I strive + Is all at last that shall my dying shrive; + And, setting sail, my slight self-conquest's store + Is all my freight if I shall come to shore._ + + ANONYMOUS. + +O Father, God! The span of our influence is both near and far; may it +also be direct and strong. Thou hast planted mighty virtue and +unquenchable love in our hearts. Love knows the secret of imparting +virtue's value to all the wretchedness in life. So, we beseech Thee, +direct our hearts to altitudes of holiness and set our feet in the +highways of helpfulness. May the charm of gentleness be in every service +to-day, and may the tone of tenderness carry love's message over all +barriers to the hearts that need. Thus would we keep our confidence with +Thee and bind ourselves more profitably to our fellows. So shall Thy +great name be honored among men. Amen. + + J. O. RANDALL. + + +July 15 + + _What seems to grow fairer to me as life goes by, is the love and + peace and tenderness of it. Not its wit and cleverness and grandeur + of knowledge, but just the laughter of little children, and the + friendship of friends, and the cosy talk of the fireside, and the + sight of flowers and the sound of music._ + + J. R. GREEN. + +Now that Thou givest us the light of a new day, grant that it carry with +it the brightness of hope and courage for whatsoever the day may offer. +Always behind the clouds is the shining that never fails; always beyond +the labor which irks us is the joy of attainment. Open our eyes that we +may see the best which shall be in the day; its love of friends, its +sights of beauty, its music, its wisdom such as no day before could +possess, its voices of the Spirit awaiting the listening ear, its tears +of compassion and sympathy. Give us our daily bread such as shall feed +the heart and enrich the mind and grant us forgiveness when we are blind +to the common treasures of this Thy world. Amen. + + GEORGE A. THAYER. + + +July 16 + + _Methought that in a solemn church I stood. + Its marble acres, worn with knees and feet, + Lay spread from door to door, from street to street. + Midway the form hung high upon the rood + Of Him who gave His life to be our good; + Beyond, priests flitted, bowed, and murmured meet + Among the candles shining still and sweet. + Men came and went, and worshipped as they could; + And still their dust a woman with her broom, + Bowed to her work, kept sweeping to the door. + Then saw I slow through all the pillared gloom + Across the church a silent figure come. + "Daughter," it said, "Thou sweepest well my floor!" + "It is the Lord!" I cried, and saw no more._ + + GEORGE MACDONALD. + +Our Father, who art ever with us, help us this day so to reveal Thee +through our common tasks, our relations with one another, in our homes +and at our work, that men may know and love Thee better. This is Thy +most beautiful world. May we not mar its glory by our selfishness, but +by the gentleness and sweetness of our lives make it more beautiful. May +we this day not add to another's burden of care or pain. But may we by +our words and deeds sweeten and brighten and strengthen the lives of +those whom we meet. For Thy goodness and mercy to us, for the +opportunity of service, for love and sympathy, we thank Thee and pray +that our devotion to Thy truth may reveal the thankfulness of our +hearts. Amen. + + ARTHUR L. WHEATHERLY. + + +July 17 + + _For I, a man, with men am linked, + And not a brute with brutes; no gain + That I experience must remain + Unshared; but should my best endeavor + To share it, fail--subsisteth ever + God's care above, and I exult + That God, by God's own ways occult, + May--doth, I will believe--bring back + All wanderers to a single track._ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + +Father of all souls in all worlds, our best friend forever, in Thy good +keeping we cannot wander beyond Thy loving care. We thank Thee for life, +for the fair world we live in, enriched by Thy countless benefits, for +the glad tidings of Thy fatherly love that never fails, for the +brotherhood that binds together all Thy children, and for the immortal +hope that beckons us up and on. By faithful living may we make life +divine, and by brotherly service show Thee our gratitude and love. May +the gospel of Jesus prevail in all hearts, speedily bring all wanderers +home, draw our souls heavenward, and prepare us for higher and larger +realms of service, where we shall forever live to Thy glory. Amen. + + RUSH R. SHIPPEN. + + +July 18 + + _That man has a liberal education who has been so trained in youth + that his body is the ready servant of his will, and does with ease + and pleasure the work that it is capable of; whose intellect is a + clear logic engine, ready to spin the gossamer as well as forge the + anchors of the mind--one full of life and fire but whose passions + are trained to come to heel by a rigorous will; the servant of a + tender conscience; who has learned to love beauty, to hate vileness + and to respect others as himself; such a one is in harmony with + nature; they will get on together._ + + THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY. + +Our Father, we would face this day in conscious companionship with Thee. +Give us to know Thy will, to do Thy work. Help us to interpret aright +Thy constant revelation of love in nature and in the experiences of +life. Give us strength so to will and so to act that we may make this +day rich in the joy that comes from helpful living. May divine impulse +find quick expression in righteous deed. In Thine unresting effort to +make this world Thine own may we join with glad hearts. Rejoicing in Thy +love, strong in the consciousness of Thy presence, may we go to our +day's work with unwavering purpose to do Thy will. Amen. + + LATHAN A. CRANDALL. + + +July 19 + + _A lily grows mysteriously, pushing up its solid weight of stem and + leaf in the teeth of gravity. Shaped into beauty by secret and + invisible fingers, the flower develops we know not how. But we do + not wonder at it. Every day the thing is done; it is Nature, it is + God. We are spiritual enough at least to understand that. But when + the soul rises slowly above the world, pushing up its delicate + virtues in the teeth of sin, shaping itself mysteriously into the + image of Christ, we deny that the power is not of man. A strong + will, we say, a high ideal, the reward of virtue, Christian + influence--these will account for it. Spiritual character is merely + the product of anxious work, self-command, and self-denial. We + allow, that is to say, a miracle to the lily, but none to the man. + The lily may grow; the man must fret and toil and spin._ + + HENRY DRUMMOND. + +This morning, our God, we need Thee! Give us Thyself afresh in the holy +inspiration of heart warmth and burning love, that today we may have +power from above while we walk and toil with things and folks of earth. +May we be the vase to hold the blossoming beauty of Thy unfolding. So +may that beauty which Thou givest unfold in acts which we are led to +perform, and the holiness of this day set fast character drawn from +Thee. Thus may we all who are Thy children gladden the earth with +unfolding beauty and kindness and shut out the things that are earthy. +Amen. + + E. E. SMALL. + + +July 20 + + _The more simply you live, the more secure is your future; you are + less at the mercy of surprises and reverses. An illness or a period + of idleness does not suffice to dispossess you; a change of + position, even considerable, does not put you to confusion. Having + simple needs, you find it less painful to accustom yourself to the + hazards of fortune. You remain a man, though you lose your office + or your income, because the foundation on which your life rests is + not your table, your cellar, your horses, your goods and chattels, + or your money. In adversity you will not act like a nursling + deprived of its bottle and rattle. Stronger, better armed for the + struggle, presenting like those with shaven heads, less advantage + to the hands of your enemy, you will also be of more profit to your + neighbor._ + + CHARLES WAGNER. + +O Thou who art ever the same, with the growing light of a new day, we +would again take Thy name upon our lips; and again invite the dear +consciousness of Thy presence. We do not know what this day may yield +us. It may bring disaster; perhaps cherished hopes must be surrendered; +plans may miscarry, clouds may gather, and storms may rage, but we will +not be unmanned. We will not surrender our hold upon Thee. May we thus +be enabled to meet disaster with courage, and unlooked for joy with the +poise of humility. Guard our goings-out and our comings-in, and lead us +into the beauteous paths of ripe content. Amen. + + JAMES HARRY HOLDEN. + + +July 21 + + _Love wore a suit of hodden gray + And toiled within the fields all day._ + + _Love wielded pick and carried pack + And bent to heavy loads the back._ + + _Though meagre fed and sorely lashed, + The only wage Love ever asked,_ + + _A child's wan face to kiss at night, + A woman's smile by candle light._ + + MARGARET SANGSTER. + +Our Father in Heaven, we thank Thee for love. How rich a gift it has +been to us, and how exhaustless. It has been the source of all other +gifts. We thank Thee for the brightness and gladness with which love +invests the sunny day, and more for the patience and hope which it +inspires when the sky is overcast and the way grows weary. In joy or +sorrow we can ask nothing better than that it be our constant guest. We +thank Thee for home life which offers us every hour its opportunity to +give and to receive love. May it be to us the symbol of Thy great +household which Thy love pervades. And as we thus think of it may our +home life grow to us more holy and divine and Thy love for all Thy +children more personal and tender until Thy kingdom come and Thy will be +done on earth as it is in heaven. Amen. + + VINCENT E. TOMLINSON. + + +July 22 + + _The entire object of true education is to make people not merely + do the right things, but enjoy the right things--not merely + industrious, but to love industry--not merely learned, but to love + knowledge--not merely pure, but to love purity--not merely just, + but to hunger and thirst after justice._ + + JOHN RUSKIN. + +O Father, fill us with Thy love today, with love for Thee, and love for +the morning light and all Thy glory. Fill us with love for the work that +Thou dost give us to do, with love for the truth that Thou dost reveal +to us and with love for the ideals of purity and righteousness that Thou +dost set before us. May we have love for all Thy children. Make us +realize that they are all our brothers and sisters. Make us strive to +have Thy will done in their lives. Make us eager to have them know Thee. +Amen. + + CHARLES B. BLISS. + + +July 23 + + _If you were toiling up a weary hill, + Bearing a load beyond your strength to bear. + Straining each nerve untiringly and still + Stumbling and losing foothold here and there + And each one passing by would do so much + As give one upward lift and go his way, + Would not the slight reiterated touch + Of help and kindness lighten all the day?_ + + _If you were breasting a keen wind which tossed + And buffeted and chilled you as you strove, + Till baffled and bewildered quite, you lost + The power to see the way, and aim and move, + And one, if only for a moment's space, + Gave you a shelter from the bitter blast, + Would you not find it easier to face + The storm again when the brief rest was past?_ + + SUSAN COOLIDGE. + +Our Father, as we thank Thee for the friendly service and sympathy that +bless and strengthen our daily lives, we pray that our gratitude may +move us to give a like service and sympathy as freely as we receive. In +the day to whose beginning Thou hast brought us, let our hearts and +hands be ready to meet the needs of those with whom we come in touch. So +influence our wayward wills that we shall not walk in selfish ways, nor +forget the ties that bind us to one another, and to Thee. Keep us +conscious of our birthright as Thy children, that our acts and aims may +be filial and fraternal and loyal to Jesus Christ Our Lord. Amen. + + COSTELLO WESTON. + + +July 24 + + _It matters little where I was born, + Whether my parents were rich or poor, + Whether they shrank from the cold world's scorn + Or walked in the pride of wealth secure; + But whether I live an honest man, + And hold my integrity firm in my clutch, + I tell you brother, plain as I am, + It matters much._ + + FROM THE SWEDISH. + + Dear Father in Heaven, good Giver of all, + For birth in a land fair and free, + For parents with pluck, if not the best luck, + Who toiled and who suffered for me. + Who never knew fear, though the scorners were near, + Whom circumstance filled not with pride, + I thank Thee! These gifts, more than all on the lists, + Have mattered with me, and abide. + + While striving and struggling my manhood to build, + To live like Thine own perfect Son, + I find on Earth's face not just one single place + Where such work so well can be done + As in the fair land which from Thy gracious hand + Comes to me a home to enjoy, + Where man, who should grow, may all liberty know + In seeking the soul's high employ. + + Amen. + + FREDERICK C. PRIEST. + + +July 25 + + _Don't object that your duties are so insignificant; they are to be + reckoned of infinite significance, and alone important to you. Were + it but the more perfect regulation of your apartments, the sorting + away of your clothes and trinkets, the arranging of your + papers,--"Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy + might," and all thy worth and constancy. Much more, if your duties + are of evidently higher, wider scope; if you have brothers, + sisters, a father, a mother, weigh earnestly what claim does lie + upon you on behalf of each, and consider it as the one thing + needful, to pay them more and more honestly and nobly what you owe. + What matter how miserable one is if one can do that? That is the + sure and steady disconnection and extinction of whatsoever miseries + one has in this world._ + + THOMAS CARLYLE. + +Creator of things, Father of Spirits, standing at the dawn of a new day +we seek Thy blessing. We know not what awaits us, Thou knowest, grant us +guidance! Help us to see all our duties in the light of Thy countenance. +Thou hast made the little and the large, help us to see our duties in +their relation to Thy plans. Whatsoever we do, help us to do all to Thy +glory. Help us to sweep our floors as to Thy laws, right our rooms as a +part of Thy universe, care for our clothes as gifts from Thee. Help us +to see Thee in the souls Thou hast sent into the world, to treat them as +thinking-thoughts of Thine, expressions of Thy life. May we owe no man +anything but to love, may the sun never set on an unpaid bill. For Thy +name's sake. Amen. + + O. P. GIFFORD. + + +July 26 + + _Write it on your heart that every day is the best day in the year. + No man has learned anything rightly until he knows that every day + is doomsday. Today is a king in disguise. Today always looks mean + to the thoughtless, in the face of an uniform experience that all + good and great and happy actions are made up precisely of these + blank todays. Let us not be so deceived, let us unmask the king as + he passes._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + +Our Father, we thank Thee for this morning that ushers in the only day +of which we have promise. Whether it proves to be a day of sunshine or +of clouds,--of joy or of sorrow,--may we live it with thankfulness, with +perfect confidence that Thou wilt always give us that which is for our +own good. Help us to spend this day in doing well what our hands find to +do; may our souls breathe the spirit of love and helpfulness to all, and +may we have abundantly the influence of Thy divine spirit to keep us +pure. Amen. + + LUTHER F. MCKINNEY. + + +July 27 + + _I like the man who faces what he must + With heart triumphant and a step of cheer; + Who fights the daily battle without fear; + Sees his hopes fail, yet keeps unfaltering trust + That God is God; that somehow, true and just, + His plans work out for mortals; not a tear + Is shed when fortune, which the world holds dear, + Falls from his grasp; better, with love, a crust + Than living in dishonor; envies not, + Nor loses faith in man; but does his best, + Nor even murmurs at his humbler lot; + But with a smile and words of hope, gives zest + To every toiler; he alone is great + Who by a life heroic conquers fate._ + + SARAH KNOWLES BOLTON. + +Gracious Father, last night we laid ourselves down in peace to sleep, +but it was Thou who madest us to dwell in safety, and when we awoke this +morning we found ourselves still with Thee. Thy loving favor was keeping +faithful watch and ward while we slumbered. We thank Thee for Thy kindly +care of our lives during the darkness and danger of the night. Confident +of Thy continued presence and armed with Thy unfailing strength, we +would go forth to meet the duties and delights of the new day. God with +us, we will overcome every temptation, endure every trial, bear every +burden, and improve every opportunity of character-building and +service-rendering, in the trustful and courageous spirit of Jesus Christ +our Lord. Amen. + + RALPH E. CONNER. + + +July 28 + + _How large a part of our Godward life is travelled, not by clear + landmarks seen far off in the promised land, but as travellers + climb a mountain peak, by putting footstep after footstep, slowly + and patiently, into the prints which someone going before us, with + keener sight, with stronger nerves, tied to us by the cord of + saintly sympathy, has planted deep into the pathless snow of the + bleak distance that stretches up between humanity and God.... So we + ascend by one another. We live by one another's blessings._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +Our Father, we thank Thee for the light of a new day. May a new spirit +and new courage come to our hearts. We thank Thee for all those who by +patient toil and self-forgetting effort have made life as sweet and +precious to us as it is. If we can no longer hear the voices nor see the +faces of those we love or have reason to revere, may we be able to see +their foot-prints and to take the way they trod, though that way seem +steep and hard. May we be assured that the upward way leads to the +expanding view and brings us to the splendor of the setting sun or of +the still more glorious dawn. Amen. + + HILARY BYGRAVE. + + +July 29 + + _A prince went into the vineyard to examine it. He came to a peach + tree, and said, "What are you doing for me?" The tree said, "In the + spring I give my blossoms and fill the air with fragrance, and on + my boughs hangs the fruit which men will gather and carry into the + palace for you." "Well done!" said the prince. To the chestnut he + said, "What are you doing?" "I am making nests for the birds, and + shelter cattle with my leaves and spreading branches." And the + prince said, "Well done!" Then he went down to the meadow and asked + the grass what it was doing. "We are giving our lives for others, + for your sheep and cattle that they may be nourished." And the + prince said, "Well done!" Last of all he asked the tiny daisy what + it was doing, and the daisy said, "Nothing, nothing. I cannot make + a nesting-place for the birds, and I cannot give shelter for the + cattle, and I cannot send fruit into the palace, and I cannot even + give food for the sheep and cows,--they do not want me in the + meadow. All I can do is to be the best little daisy I can be." And + the prince bent down and kissed the daisy, and said, "There is none + better than thou."_ + + ANONYMOUS. + +Help us, O Father, not to wait for the great opportunities which may +never come. Help us to do with faithfulness the duties which lie close +at hand. In our homes this day and wherever we may be--at school or on +the street or at our work--fill our hearts with the spirit of Christ and +let that spirit speak in every word which passes our lips and shine from +our faces and work with our hands. Amen. + + WALTER A. TUTTLE. + + +July 30 + + _I will be glad all day for this cool draught + And the clear drops I dash upon my brow; + For the fresh glint of sunlight on the tree + And the bird singing on the bough._ + + _I will be glad for that stored strength of life + Which lasts the day because the spirit wills; + For the live air that wings from far and breathes + The vigor of the everlasting hills._ + + _What scope of toil, what loss or what reward, + I do not know. It is enough that now + I pledge the day's good cheer with this cool draught + And the drops dashed upon my brow._ + + CHARLES P. CLEAVES. + +Our Father, we are nursed in Thine arms, we are rested in the heart of +Jesus, so that we know no more the emptiness of earth and the poverty of +time, for our citizenship is in heaven, already do we walk the streets +of gold. Out of the highest rapture may we come to do earth's plainest +work, earth's hardest toil, with patient hearts and willing hands, +knowing that death can be but for a moment, that all things are meant, +in the sovereignty of God to give themselves up to the rule of life. +Thus may Thy children be loyal citizens, patient workers, honest +merchantmen, wise parents. Be with all men who trust Thee; melt the +mountains before their coming, and open the gates of difficulty ere they +reach them, and give them to feel that the greatness of Thy mercy is the +proof of its divinity. Amen. + + JOSEPH PARKER. + + +July 31 + + _For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor + principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to + come._ + + _Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to + separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our + Lord._ + + ROMANS viii. 38-39. + + _These verses seem to me to express completely the remedial power + of God's love. In this rough and tumble world of ours, of hard + conditions, of disasters many, of untold misery, there are + temptations enough for men to lose faith in God's love. It is well + now and then to have an outburst of faith like this with the + assurance that nothing can ever separate any child of God from the + divine compassion and the divine care._ + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + +Our Heavenly Father, it is good for us to believe that through all +storms and all darkness and all sickness and all infirmity, even through +death itself, Thy love abides. As we enter upon this day, we know not +whither we shall go, but we thank Thee for the assurance that we may not +go away from Thee. Thou followest us with Thy care and wrappest us +around with Thy love, as with a garment. In all that we do today may we +know that Thou seest us, and if our way be steep, may we be sure that +Thou lovest us. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +August 1 + + _Begin the morning by saying to thyself, I shall meet this day with + the busybody, the ungrateful, the arrogant, deceitful, envious, + unsocial. All these things happen to them by reason of their + ignorance of what is good and evil. But I who have seen the nature + of the good that it is beautiful, and of the bad that it is ugly, + can neither be injured by any of them--for no one can fix on me + what is ugly--nor can I be angry with my neighbor, nor hate him. We + are made for cooperation; to act against one another, that is + contrary to nature; and it is acting against one another to be + vexed and turn away._ + + MARCUS AURELIUS. + +Eternal Spirit of Love, teach us the power of love. Help us to learn +that love is supreme, and hence envieth not, nor vaunteth itself, nor +seeketh its own, but suffereth long and is kind. We, who in Jesus of +Nazareth have seen the glory of Thy likeness and experienced the +sweetness of Thy love, desire like Him to reveal Thee in our lives, to +be loving and gentle, sincere and generous, to cooperate with friend and +stranger in all that is good, to live so that they can work with us for +the advancement of everything righteous. Fill us, therefore, with Thy +spirit, and send us forth today in Thy service. Amen. + + WILLIAM W. GUTH. + + +August 2 + + _"God!" let the torrents, like a shout of nations, + Answer! and let the ice-plain echo, "God!" + "God!" sing, ye meadow streams, with gladsome voice + Ye pine groves, with your soft and soul-like sounds! + And they, too have a voice, yon piles of snow, + And in their perilous fall shall thunder, "God!"_ + + _Ye living flowers that skirt the eternal frost! + Ye wild goats sporting round the eagle's nest! + Ye eagles, playmates of the mountain storm! + Ye lightnings, the dread arrows of the clouds! + Ye signs and wonders of the elements! + Utter forth "God!" and fill the hills with praise!_ + + SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE. + +Heavenly Father, how long have Thy servants thirsted after Thee--Thou +spring of everlasting life! In this land of our home the meditations of +ages surround us, and through the treasured thoughts of the wise in many +generations we are lifted into a light beyond the solitary soul. +Countless are Thy witnesses, Eternal God! the stars without number are +but a little part of them; and the prayers and aspirings of every heart +of man can never cease to speak Thee. Humbled and blind amid Thy +manifold glories, may we find rest in the simplicity of Christ, and be +among the pure in heart who alone can see Thee. Amen. + + JAMES MARTINEAU. + + +August 3 + + _O God, my master God, look down and see + If I am making what Thou wouldst of me. + Fain might I lift my hands up in the air + From the defiant passion of my prayer; + Yet here they grope on this cold altar stone, + Graving the words I think I should make known. + Mine eyes are Thine. Yea, let me not forget, + Lest with unstaunched tears I leave them wet, + Dimming their faithful power, till they not see + Some small, plain task that might be done for Thee. + My feet, that ache for paths of flowery bloom, + Halt steadfast in the straitness of this room. + Though they may never be on errands sent, + Here shall they stay, and wait Thy full content. + And my poor heart, that doth so crave for peace, + Shall beat until Thou bid its beating cease. + So, Thou dear master God, look down and see + Whether I do Thy bidding heedfully._ + + ALICE BROWN. + +O God, our Heavenly Father, from whom cometh to us again this gift of +life, may we be able to use as Thou wouldst have us the fresh revelation +and energy of each morning hour. May we be helped to see more clearly +that task with all its blessings, which Thou placest within our reach +today. Freshen our souls anew with the coming sunlight and quicken our +will that we may perceive and fulfil our present duty gladly, eagerly, +successfully, however humble in the spirit of those who remember that if +done for Thy sake and beneath Thy laws even servile labors shine. Amen. + + HOBART CLARK. + + +August 4 + + _We thank Thee for all that Thou hast made, and that Thou hast + called it Good! We thank Thee! We enter into Thy work, and go about + Thy business._ + + EDWARD EVERETT HALE. + + _O, it is great, and there is no other greatness. To make some work + of God's creation a little fruitfuller, better, more worthy of God; + to make some human hearts a little wiser, manfuller, happier,--more + blessed, less accursed,--it is a work for God._ + + THOMAS CARLYLE. + +Heavenly Father, we would begin the day with noble purpose; may we scorn +all meanness, and lift up our heads unto the Lord as men who have a +great expectation. Our hope is in a living God; Thou wilt not allow our +life to wander into darkness; if for a small moment we are forsaken, we +shall be gathered with ineffable and everlasting mercies. In the +confidence of Thy presence, in the assurance of Thy sustaining grace, we +look steadfastly to heaven, and then we look hopefully to earth, and we +know that, having begun the day with prayer and praise and pious +expectancy, its hours shall all be gladdened and its even-tide shall be +a benediction. Guide us with Thine eyes; sustain us by Thy mighty power; +keep us this day without sin. Amen. + + JOSEPH PARKER. + + +August 5 + + _The scenery around your house may be monotonous, without a + mountain or sea or lake or hill; but an upward look at the clear + sky will put you in instant communication with infinite beauty and + majesty. No spot on earth is common or barren over which the skies + bend in solemn silence. No human life need be barren or common + which is connected by the great network of moral law with any other + being._ + + J. H. CARLISLE. + +Our God and Father, the author of beauty, the rewarder of all them that +seek Thee, we, Thy children, come to Thee at the opening of this new +day. May we have hearts so pure that we shall see Thee; minds so open +that we shall talk with Thee; and lives so true that we shall reveal +Thee. Let toil become to us as a sacrament. Reveal to us the beauty of +life as well as of holiness and help us to live with upturned faces, so +that we may catch the glory of Thy presence, and reflect it to all +around us. May we walk with Thee, thinking Thy thoughts, having Thy +visions of beauty and of life. When life's evening shall come gather us +in Thine arms of love to be with Thee in the home which Thou hast +prepared for us and hast beautified with earth's fairest treasures +through Jesus Christ, Our Lord. Amen. + + JOHN GALBRAITH. + + +August 6 + + _How good is man's life, the mere living! How fit to employ + All the heart and the soul and the senses forever in joy!_ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + + _I am glad to think + I am not bound to make the world go right; + But only to discover and to do, + With cheerful heart, the work that God appoints. + I will trust in Him, + That He can hold His own; and I will take + His will, above the work He sendeth me, + to be my chiefest good._ + + JEAN INGELOW. + +Our Heavenly Father, all Thy works prove Thy goodness; the world Thou +givest us is good; the powers with which Thou dost endow us are adapted +to deeds of goodness. We know full well that we do evil as well as good. +Some of our days close in sadness.... At the beginning of this day we +pledge ourselves to try harder than ever to do something good, to make +somebody happy, to keep our minds filled with pure thoughts, to set our +ambitions on worthy objects; and we pray that Thou who art "the Power +not ourselves that makes for righteousness" shalt work with us that +through our effort and Thy help the day shall end in joy and peace. +Amen. + + LEE S. MCCOLLESTER. + + +August 7 + + _Our lives are songs; God writes the words, + And we set them to music at pleasure; + And the song grows glad, or sweet, or sad, + As we choose to fashion the measure. + We must write the music, whatever the song, + Whatever its rhyme or metre; + And if it is sad, we can make it glad, + Or, if sweet, we can make it sweeter._ + + ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. + +We thank Thee, O God, that Thou hast made us responsive to all the +beauty and gladness about us, and that we may make our lives one grand, +sweet song. We know there is much that may spoil the song. But we thank +Thee, that if we follow the great Leader, we can change all discordant +notes into harmony. Help us through Him to tune our lives into accord +with Thine. Especially may we live in peace with each other. Make us +strong to return good for evil, to meet irritability with patience, +unkindness with gentleness and harsh words with quiet speech. So may our +lives "be filled with music, and the cares that infest the day, shall +fold their tents like the Arabs, and as silently steal away." Amen. + + JAMES M. PAYSON. + + +August 8 + + _Back of the canvas that throbs the painter is hinted and hidden, + Into the statue that breathes the soul of the sculptor is bidden, + Under the joy that is felt lie the infinite issues of feeling; + Crowning the glory revealed is the glory that crowns the revealing. + Great are the symbols of being, but that which is symbolled is greater; + Vast the create and beheld, but vaster the inward creator._ + + RICHARD REALF. + +Thou, Lord, who hast created us surely for good and not evil, for Thou +art good and doest good, wilt go with us through all the day. Help us to +keep in mind Thy presence, that we may walk before Thee and be perfect, +that we may walk with Thee and be pleasing to Thee, that we may walk +after Thee, humbly, reverently. May we prize the glories that come with +the hours, not suffering them to make us conceited or self-centered, or +unduly independent, but utilize them as means to make us more fully a +part of Thee. Give us this day complete victory over each temptation as +it arrives, and may we feel when night falls that we have acquitted +ourselves well in the campaign, and done what we could to make, not only +ourselves, but the world around us, better. Amen. + + JAMES MUDGE. + + +August 9 + + _Each night is followed by its day, + Each storm by fairer weather, + While all the works of nature sing + Their songs of joy together. + Then learn, O heart, their songs of hope! + Cease, soul, thy thankless sorrow; + For though the clouds be dark today, + The sun will shine tomorrow._ + + T. EDGAR JONES. + +Father of light! Who causeth light to shine out of darkness and maketh +day to follow the night; we thank Thee for Thy loving care that has +brought us from the slumber and rest of night to behold the light of a +new day. May we rejoice in it, and cheerfully enter upon its duties and +experiences. May the grace of Thy presence make our sunshine, that we +may walk in the light of heaven, breathe its atmosphere and engage in +its service; doing Thy will in the service of one another and in the +service of love, truth and goodness. May the light of faith, hope, and +love shining within us, dispel all darkness and sorrow from our lives, +that light which shines so lustrously from the life of Jesus Christ our +Lord. Amen. + + ROBERT T. POLK. + + +August 10 + + _Never say, "It is nobody's business but my own what I do with my + life." It is not true. Your life is put into your bands as a trust, + for many others besides yourself. If you use it well, it will make + many others happy; if you abuse it, you will harm many others + besides yourself._ + + JAMES M. PULLMAN. + +Almighty Father, whom, though we have not seen, we love, we know not +what this day may bring forth but we know that it shall be for good as +our trust is in Thee. We look up and adore Thee, and we believe and love +and obey. Throughout all the hours of this day may we be "diligent in +business, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord." We believe in the +victory of good over evil, of light over darkness; help us to bear our +part courageously in the battle. Be merciful to us and make us merciful +to one another. May we be numbered with those who are pure in heart, and +see God in the humblest service to the humblest people. We beseech Thee +to answer according to Thy love not only these prayers which we utter +with our lips but also the silent prayers of our heart. Amen. + + HAROLD PATTISON. + + +August 11 + + _Prince Florimel and Prince Carimel were twin brothers, the sons of + a king, and no one could tell which of the two ought to succeed to + the throne, for they were both exactly the same age. So one day + they went to a wise magician, and asked him which of them ought to + be king after their father's death. "He who is most worthy," said + the magician. "But how shall we find out who is most worthy?" "He + who possesses the magic flower that grows in the enchanted forest + shall be found most worthy," he answered. So the two brothers + travelled through the enchanted forest until they found the magic + flower; but it grew in such a dangerous place that Carimel would + not attempt to reach it. Florimel, however, clambered down the + rocks and plucked the flower; and when he had got it, what do you + think he did with it? Why, he gave it to his brother, for the name + of that magic flower was Unselfishness._ + + WILLIAM MOODIE. + +Our Father, with thankful hearts for all Thy goodness to us in the +past,--we seek Thy Holy Spirit's guidance for the day before us. Help us +to live not for self alone, but for the good of all with whom we mingle. +May the needy, suffering, and struggling ones all about us gather +strength because of our devotion to Thee. So inspire us to forget +ourselves, that we may the better remember our Master, and the +privileges and duties of a life's service to Thy children. Wilt Thou +not, Infinite One, thus help us, this day, and in all the days to come, +to live to Thy glory! Amen. + + LEWIS P. BATES. + + +August 12 + + _To do something for someone else; to love the unlovely; to give a + hand to the unattractive; to speak to the uncongenial; to make + friends with the poor and folks of lowly degree; to find a niche in + the church of the Lord, and to do something out of sheer love for + Him; to determine in His house to have His mind; to plan to win at + least one for the Master; to aim to redeem past time that is lost; + to will to let one's light shine; to cut off practices that are + sinful and costly; to add the beauty of holiness--this is to make + one's life a thing of beauty and this is to grow in grace, for + growing in grace is simply copying the beautiful life of the + altogether lovely One._ + + EDWARD F. REIMER. + +Infinite Father, we rejoice that it is possible for us to be workers +together with Thee by giving our sympathy, love and help to Thy needy +children. As Thou hast honored us by appointing us to such a gracious +ministry, may we seek to honor Thee in return by trying to do Thy +blessed will. In all lowly and gentle ways, may we do what we can to +bind up the broken-hearted, to relieve the distressed, to strengthen the +weak. Let none who suffer look to us in vain for some manifestation of +the Christ-like Spirit. May we so meet and treat the sad, the lonely, +the tempted, that they shall take knowledge of us that we have been with +Jesus. So may His heavenly teaching bear sweet fruit in our conduct and +characters, and so may the Kingdom which He came to establish grow apace +in the world. In His name. Amen. + + WILLARD C. SELLECK. + + +August 13 + + _Let me feel that I am to be a lover. I am to see to it that the + world is better for me, and to find my reward in the act. Love + would put a new face on this weary old world in which we dwell as + pagans and enemies too long; and it would warm the heart to see how + fast the vain diplomacy of statesmen, the impotence of armies and + navies and lines of defence, would be superseded by this unarmed + child. This great, overgrown, dead Christendom of ours still keeps + alive at least the name of a lover of mankind. But one day all men + will be lovers: and every calamity will be dissolved in the + universal sunshine._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + +What manner of love hast Thou bestowed upon us, dear Lord, that we +should be called Thy children! As Thou hast loved us, so teach us each +to love the world. This day someone will go forth to business on land or +sea burdened with heavy cares: some father disheartened and discouraged +will take up the trials of yesterday wondering what the end will +be--some mother dismayed with her lot will cry "How long?" Help us, O +Lord to minister to them in word or look, in prayer or gift. As the sun +shall this day bring light and life to this old earth causing it to +yield its highest purpose, so grant that Thy love may give through us a +new inspiration to all mankind. Hasten the time when all shall love Thee +as Thou hast loved the world. Then will each love the other. Then will +the sword and the spear be molten into the plowshare and the pruning +hook, and the desert shall bud and blossom as the rose. Amen. + + EDWIN ALONZO BLAKE. + + +August 14 + + _Thou art, O God, the life and light + Of all this wondrous world we see; + Its glow by day, its smile by night, + Are but reflections caught from thee. + Where'er we turn, thy glories shine, + And all things fair and bright are thine._ + + THOMAS MOORE. + +Almighty God, our Heavenly Father, who hast safely brought us to the +beginning of this day, defend us in the same with Thy mighty power. +Grant that this day we fall into no sin. Create in us a clean heart and +renew a right spirit within us. Open our eyes that this day may be a +fresh disclosure of Thyself, the Unseen Presence; endow us with Thy +strength that, in joy and pain, it may lead us into Thy house not made +with hands, eternal in the heavens. Enable us so to use the things of +the world that while they abide we may not lose Thy presence, and when +they pass we may not stand alone. So shall the spirit of Christ inflame +us. Amen. + + FREDERICK W. PERKINS. + + +August 15 + + _It ain't no use to grumble and complain, + It's just as cheap and easy to rejoice; + When God sorts out the weather and sends rain, + Why, rain's my choice._ + + JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY. + + _When you get into a tight place, and everything goes against you, + till it seems as if you could not hold on a minute longer, never + give up then, for that's just the place and time that the tide will + turn._ + + HARRIET BEECHER STOWE. + +Father, we pray Thee that in every emergency of our lives we may be +faithful to the duty which the day demands, and with reverent spirits +acquit us like men, doing what should be done, bearing what must be +borne, and so growing greater from our toil and our sufferings, till we +transfigure ourselves into noble images of humanity, which are blameless +within and beautiful without, and acceptable to Thy spirit. So may Thy +kingdom come and Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven; for Thine +is the kingdom and the power and the glory, the dominion and honor +forever and ever. Amen. + + THEODORE PARKER. + + +August 16 + + _It was only a glad "Good Morning" + As she passed along the way; + But it spread the morning's glory + Over the livelong day._ + + CARLOTTA PERRY. + + _Smile upon the troubled pilgrims + Whom you pass and meet; + Frowns are thorns, and smiles are blossoms, + Oft to weary feet. + Do not make the way seem harder + By a sullen face; + Smile a little, smile a little, + Brighten up the place._ + + ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. + +Father, in this morning hour, we would look into Thy face and feel the +sweetness of that transforming influence which is forever baptizing Thy +world with light and gladness, adding beauty to beauty and glory to +glory. Baptize us anew, with this all-pervading spirit and send us out +into this day's work to meet its varied experiences with trusting hearts +and smiling faces. May we each send forth a brightening, gladdening +influence to cheer and strengthen and uplift every weary, troubled +pilgrim whom we meet on this day's journey. So may it be ours to enter +into closer and diviner fellowship with Thee, our Father, whose greatest +joy is to impart joy and blessing to Thy waiting children. Amen. + + ANNETTE J. SHAW. + + +August 17 + + _There are nettles everywhere, + But smooth green grasses are more common still; + The blue of heaven is larger than the cloud._ + + ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING. + + _Flower in the crannied wall, + I pluck you out of the crannies;-- + Hold you here, root and all, in my hand, + Little flower--but if I could understand + What you are, root and all, and all in all, + I should know what God and man is._ + + ALFRED TENNYSON. + +O Thou, Who hast gemmed the heavens with round, revolving worlds, the +earth with beauty and the coronet of our minds with royal faculties, we +do not know what "the little flower is, root and all, and all in all" +and yet, dear Lord, through the clear and the convincing revelation of +Thy dear Son; through the divine image which Thou hast implanted within +us; through the mighty and the persuasive witness from experience, we do +feel and believe that Thou art the great creator, preserver and +benefactor; That Thou hast called us to do a noble, a specific work; +that we ought not to neglect the gift that is in us; to this end wilt +Thou help us to be pure, brave, faithful and strong, that we may fight +the good fight, and win the crown of righteousness. Amen. + + ALBERT HAMMATT. + + +August 18 + + _O ye, so far above me on the Height, + I cannot hear your voices as ye stand + Facing the vast, invisible to me. + But I can see your gestures of delight, + And something guess of that wide, glorious sea, + The glimmering isles of that enchanted land, + The winds which from that ocean freshly blow. + And so your Vision lifts me toward the Height, + Although ye have forgot me far below._ + + _But you, my brother, you, my near of kin, + Who some few steps above me on the steep + Look smiling back to cheer me ever on, + Who lend a hand as I the chasm leap, + And stay your haste that I the crag may win, + Thinking it scorn for Strength to climb alone; + You with your morning song when sings the lark, + You, with unflagging purpose at high noon, + And quiet-hearted trust when comes the dark,-- + To you I owe it that I climb at all._ + + MARY FRANCES WRIGHT. + +Spirit of the Infinite Life! We praise Thee that our visions of the +Divinest rise far beyond the borders of our known and familiar fields, +that the resources of our unwearied life are in those mysterious regions +that we have not explored. And yet we rejoice that the shadows of these +holy visions fall across our common ways, reporting thus from the +Infinite and the unknown the possibilities of greater fortunes yet to +be. In this life of Thee may we dwell, seeing Thee in the life about us +and evermore seeking to lead the life toward those high places that are +always waiting the coming of those who aspire toward Thee. Amen. + + E. L. REXFORD. + + +August 19 + + _The flowers got into a debate one morning as to which of them was + the flower of God: and the rose said: "I am the flower of God, for + I am the fairest and the most perfect in beauty and variety of form + and delicacy of fragrance of all the flowers." And the crocus said: + "No, you are not the flower of God. Why, I was blooming long before + you bloomed. I am the primitive flower; I am the first one." And + the lily of the valley said modestly: "I am small, but I am white; + perhaps I am the flower of God." And the trailing arbutus said: + "Before any of you came forth I was blooming under the leaves and + under the snow. Am I not the flower of God?" And all the flowers + cried out: "No, you are no flower at all; you are a come-outer." + And then God's wind, blowing on the garden, brought this message to + them: "Little flowers, do you not know that every flower that + answers God's spring call, and comes out of the cold, dark earth, + and lifts its head above the sod and blooms forth, catching the + sunlight from God and flinging it back to men, taking the sweet + south wind from God and giving it back to others in sweet and + blessed fragrance--do you not know they are all God's flowers?"_ + + LYMAN ABBOTT. + +Our Heavenly Father, in Thy sight, there are no nations, there is no +north and no south, no east and no west; there is no black and no white; +Jew and Gentile, bond and free,--all are Thine. O, Lord, give us so much +breadth of sympathy that we shall be able to understand at least dimly +the universality of Thy love. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +August 20 + + _Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife! + To all the sensual world proclaim + One crowded hour of glorious life + Is worth an age without a name._ + + WALTER SCOTT. + + _Do not pray for easy lives. Pray to be stronger men. Do not pray + for tasks equal to your powers. Pray for powers equal to your + tasks. Then the doing of your work shall be no miracle. But you + shall be a miracle. Every day you shall wonder at yourself, at the + richness of life which has come to you by the grace of God._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +Our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for the rest of the night and the joy +and beauty of the morning. This day we accept as a loving tribute of Thy +Love to Thy children. May we not mar it by unhallowed thoughts, unkind, +hasty and regretful speech and shameful and evil deeds. May ours be the +illumination which comes from moral and spiritual conquest. May we feel +the ties that bind us tenderly to Thee and to one another; and work for +that large human brotherhood, which holds in its strong embrace even the +most distant and isolated member of the human family. May we go forth to +our work with a deep and abiding faith in the power of good over evil +and willing to do our share in the building up of Thy kingdom of love +and righteousness, peace and good will here upon earth. Amen. + + HENDRIK VOSSEMA. + + +August 21 + + _We learn wisdom from failure much more than from success, often + discover what will do by finding out what will not do, and probably + he who never made a mistake never made a discovery. Horne Tooke + used to say of his studies in intellectual philosophy that he had + become all the better acquainted with the country through having + had the good luck sometimes to lose his way._ + + SAMUEL SMILES. + +Our Father, in the strength of our nightly rest and daily bread we go +forth to whatever needs us or awaits us. Nothing from Thee is too +difficult for us to attempt; nothing too grievous for us to bear. Teach +us how priceless is Thy gift of life, how close we are to the fountain +of strength, how sure of success is every effort to bring good to pass. +Reverently and believingly would we hearken to Thee in our inmost souls. +Let not our failures dishearten us, or the delay of results cause chill +of doubt or fear. May our presence have strength and peace for others, +and our lives proclaim that Thou livest and art good to all. In the name +of Christ we lift our prayer. Amen. + + SAMUEL C. BEANE. + + +August 22 + + _At Bannockburn Lord Randolph Murray was being sorely pressed by a + large body of cavalry. Sir James Douglas got leave from Bruce to go + to his aid, but just as he came up he found the English in + disorder, and many horses galloping away with empty saddles. + "Halt!" he cried to his men; "These brave men have already repulsed + the enemy; let us not diminish their glory by seeking to share + it."_ + + WILLIAM MOODIE. + +O God of Hosts! On many a field of battle wilt Thy soldiers fight this +day. Help them to be brave and true. Give them a glorious victory. Help +us who watch to give them full credit for their valor. May we not +diminish by seeking to share their glory. May we not render their deeds +commonplace by insisting that "It is so easy, so natural, for them to be +good," implying that their struggle has not been hard or that their +victories had not been what ours have proven to be. Help us, O Lord, +with valor to fight our own battles and run our own race and with +gratitude to be glad in others' victories. Amen. + + J. FRANK CHASE. + + +August 23 + + _The bee that sips her sweets from flowers fair, + Flying on careless wing now here, now there, + With azure skies above, green sward below, + And soft south wind to bear her to and fro, + Might seem the soul of self-devoted ease, + Her life a draught of nectar without lees. + Not so! Her prime is full of strenuous deed + That shames our own in generous meed + Of work for other's good. Long summer days + She builds her golden house, with guerdons stays + Her Queen, uprears her young, and stores her food-- + Then sudden shuns her wealth, her home, her brood, + And seeks new haven on an unknown sea, + Leaving her life-work to posterity._ + + HENRY HOYT MOORE. + +Gracious Father in heaven, and all about me, Thy gentleness doth ever +tend to make life greater and richer. Thy providence is so wholesomely +good, I would fain be completely at home in it. Thou art very gracious. +Help me to be as gracious in my way as Thou art in Thy wonderful way. +When I acknowledge that Thou art good and wise, there comes a joyous +freedom to my spirit that makes life a sweet pleasure. I desire ever to +work in the fulness of this faith without grudging, without suspecting, +an open, glad and fruitful service. Oh, help me then to love my fellows +more, and Thee sincerely! Amen. + + ELIHU GRANT. + + +August 24 + + _Drudgery is the gray angel of success.... Look at the leaders in + the professions, the solid men in business, the master-workmen who + begin as poor boys and end by building a town to house their + factory-hands, they are drudges of the single aim.... "One thing I + do."... Mr. Maydole, the hammer-maker of Central New York, was an + artist: "Yes," he said, "I have made hammers for twenty-eight + years." "Well, then you ought to be able to make a pretty good + hammer by this time." "No, sir," was the answer, "I never made a + pretty good hammer--I make the best hammer made in the United + States."_ + + WILLIAM C. GANNETT. + +O Lord, we remember our daily duties before Thee, the hard toil which +Thou givest us in our manifold and various avocations, and we pray Thee +that there may be in us such a confidence in our nature, such earnest +obedience to Thee, we reverencing all Thy qualities and keeping Thy +commands, that we shall serve Thee every day, making our life one great +act of holiness unto Thee. May our continuous industry be so squared by +the golden rule that it shall nicely fit with the interests of all with +whom we have to do, and so by our handicraft all mankind shall be +blessed. Amen. + + THEODORE PARKER. + + +August 25 + + _His larger life ye cannot miss + In gladly, nobly using this._ + + BAYARD TAYLOR. + + _There are saints enough if we only know how to find + them--sainthoods of the fireside and of the market place. They wear + no glory round their heads; they do their duties in the strength of + God; they have their martyrdoms and win their palms, and though + they get into no calendars, they leave a benediction and a force + behind them on the earth when they go up to heaven._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +Our Father, in Whose life are our lives, help us to use all things nobly +and so find joy in Thee. We thank Thee for faithful souls who in +humblest station have reflected Thy life and have worked for blessing. +In Thy strength they have sought to build Thy kingdom, and though they +have had no glory of men they yet have wrought for Thee and have won +place in Thy heart. Because they have aided the world and others have +entered into their labors their good work shall remain and its quiet +influence shall be a benediction. Though they have lived obscure lives +and have filled obscure places they have been precious in Thy sight and +are numbered with Thy saints. May we, like them, eternally serve Thee. +Amen. + + GEORGE H. YOUNG. + + +August 26 + + _We can't choose happiness either for ourselves or for another; we + can't tell where that will lie. We can only choose whether we will + indulge ourselves in the present moment, or whether we will + renounce that for the sake of obeying the divine voice within + us,--for the sake of being true to all the motives that sanctify + our lives. I know this belief is hard; it has slipped away from me + again and again; but I have felt that if I let it go forever, I + should have no light through the darkness of this life._ + + GEORGE ELIOT. + +O God, Thou knowest the hours in which we desire Thee. Thou knowest that +Thou hast made us to love truth and to walk in the light and when we are +unjust, unkind, unloving, then we are not true to ourselves,--then we +forget that we are living souls and that Thou art our Father. Let us not +draw nigh to Thee with our lips while our hearts are far from Thee, but, +knowing how dependent and frail we are, may we feel that it is a good +and helpful thing to draw nigh unto Thee by faith and prayer,--and to +take thought of that Infinite Love which holds us all in its arms of +strength and mercy. Lift up our minds today, warm our affections, and +deepen within us the feeling of reverence, of gratitude, and guide all +the longings of our hearts aright. Amen. + + JOSHUA YOUNG. + + +August 27 + + _Life may be given in many ways, + And loyalty to truth be sealed + As bravely in the closet as the field, + So bountiful is fate; + But then to stand beside her, + When craven churls deride her, + To front a lie in arms and not to yield, + This shows, methinks, God's plan + And measure of a stalwart man, + Limbed like the old heroic breeds, + Who stands self-poised on manhood's solid earth, + Not forced to frame excuses for his birth, + Fed from within with all the strength he needs._ + + JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. + +Heavenly Father, in this new day may we recognize a new opportunity for +seeking Thy purpose in us; to become stronger children of Thine, and +worthier followers of Thy Son. Whatever be our trial give us courage to +stand without compromise, for that which we believe to be true; give us +grace to rise superior to praise or blame, timidity or self-interest; to +be loyal to the best in us, and be ever ready to protest against wrong +and injustice. Help us to know ourselves as temples of Thine; to know +that the essential principal in us is not dust, but God; to rise to that +dignity of sonship that compels one to choose the right and say: "Here I +stand, I cannot do otherwise." In His name. Amen. + + HERBERT H. GRAVES. + + +August 28 + + _All we have willed or hoped or dreamed of good, shall exist; + Not its semblance, but itself; no beauty, nor good, nor power + Whose voice has gone forth, but each survives for the melodist, + When eternity affirms the conception of an hour. + The high that proved too high, the heroic for earth too hard, + The passion that left the ground to lose itself in the sky, + Are music sent up to God by the lover and the bard; + Enough that he heard it once: we shall hear it by and by._ + + ROBERT BROWNING. + +O God, our heavenly Father! we come before Thee at this morning hour, +thanking Thee for Thy loving care, that has protected us through the +night, and for the blessed sleep, that has brought refreshment to our +bodies and minds. We are grateful, O Father, for this new day, rich in +hope and promise and opportunity, and we pray that, as its hours pass, +we may be kept very near to Thee, that the "Words of our mouth and the +meditations of our heart, may be acceptable in Thy sight," that when the +day is done, and we come to Thee at its close, we need in no wise to be +ashamed. Amen. + + NELLIE MANN OPDALE. + + +August 29 + + _How often does the chopper of some stone, + While toiling at his task of heave and shock, + Find in the heart-space of a severed rock + The impress of some fern that once had grown, + Full of aspiring life and color-tone, + Deep in the forest where the shadows flock, + Till, caught within the adamantine block, + It lay for ages hidden and unknown! + So many a beauteous thought blooms in the mind + But unexpressed, droops down into the soul + And lies unuttered in the silence there + Until some opener of the soul shall find + The fern-like fossilled dream, complete and whole, + And marvel at its beauty past compare._ + + ALFRED L. DONALDSON. + + O mighty Potter, to whose steadfast eyes + A thousand years lie open as one day, + Thy patient hand set firm on life's great wheel + This heavy, shapeless clay. + + Rough and imperfect, yet it owns Thy touch; + Spare not, nor stay, the pressure of Thine hand; + Make known Thy power; and soon, or late, let love + Perfect what love hath planned! + Amen. + + L. H. HAMMOND. + + +August 30 + + _The dark green summer, with its massive hues, + Fades into Autumn's tincture manifold; + A gorgeous garniture of fire and gold + The high slope of the ferny hill indues. + The mists of morn in slumbering layers diffuse + O'er glimmering rock, smooth lake, and spiked array + Of hedgerow thorns a unity of gray. + All things appear their tangible form to lose + In ghostly vastness. But anon the gloom + Melts, as the sun puts off his muddy veil. + And now the birds their twittering songs resume, + All summer silent in the leafy dale. + In spring they piped of love on every tree, + But now they sing the song of memory._ + + HARTLEY COLERIDGE. + +Ever blessed Father, in Whose pleasant world we are glad to awake again, +looking forward to a happy and useful day, we beseech Thy loving +guidance through these hours. May we look abroad with gratitude and love +upon this beautiful earth, doubly beautiful in the waning summer time, +when a new splendor comes across the hills, and Thou dost reveal +Thyself, as of old, in the burning bush. Grant that we may look through +nature up to nature's God. Grant that the mists of doubt and uncertainty +which often hide Thee from us may be dispersed in the sunlight of a +happy faith, and that the heart, so often sad and silent, may once more +lift its cheerful song to Thee. Amen. + + ALFRED GOODING. + + +August 31 + + _No rare creative inspirations throng + My quiet spirit, silent, sad and lone; + No Sapphic flame hath on its altar shone; + No music to my nature doth belong. + Thou art the sunlight, I am Memnon's stone, + Thou art the zephyr, I give back its song; + The harp Aeolian can do no wrong + To the soft airs which wake an answering tone: + Upon my soul, Oh, then breathe tenderly; + Subdue the discord, still the jarring strain; + So may the harp-strings yield but melody. + If notes discordant give thy keen ear pain, + Set the fine chords again to harmony; + Let but sweet echoes of thyself remain._ + + ADA FOSTER MURRAY. + +O Thou Who art the source of all that is and the giver of all that makes +life blessed, we thank Thee that Thy providence abides through every +change and that Thou dost cheer the loneliest lot with the comfort of +Thy presence. Thou hast been with us in times past and now on this last +day of the summer months, we would thank Thee for the blessings of the +closing season and ask for the continuance of Thy unfailing care and the +enrichment of our souls with the gifts of Thy Spirit. Bring us into +harmony with all that is pure and good, and enable us to walk in the +light of Thy favor and in the paths of Thy commandments. Amen. + + CHARLES H. VAIL. + + +September 1 + + _'Neath harvest moon the stricken summer lies + Still smiling bravely in her brightest bloom, + Her heart yet holds no hint of gloom, + No trace of sadness in her sunlit eyes. + We love thee, Summer, child of Paradise-- + A myriad host announce thy coming doom + Chanting the requiem of thy wintry tomb, + While lovingly look down the tender skies; + A holy hush is in the hazy air + As in thy radiant beauty thou dost sleep! + Nature, arrayed in rainbow colors fair, + Is strong of heart her vigil long to keep: + We know the secret thou dost seek to tell,-- + Thou art immortal, Summer, fare thee well._ + + ANNA A. GORDON. + +Heavenly Father, behind all changes dost Thou lurk in eternal constancy. +Never lingering, each good of life gives place to the better Thou hast +in store, and in glory and gladness resigns to that which comes after. +From the good that is, may we learn to pass cheerfully to the better +that is to be,--from the cool morning and sunny noon to the purple +gloaming and the star-lit night, from the tender spring and glowing +summer to the golden autumn and snow-pure winter, from the sweet life +that now is to that fulness of realization whose sweeter splendors eye +hath not seen nor the heart of man conceived. We place our hands in +Thine and would walk with Thee in holiest trust and serenest peace. +Amen. + + THOMAS W. ILLMAN. + + +September 2 + + _"I will be happy all the day + Let come what may." + 'Twas early morning when the word was said, + And like a journey 'cross a weary plain + There stretched the hours, but I was comforted + As heart and voice sung o'er the sweet refrain, + "I will be happy all the day + Let come what may."_ + + _"I will make hope and only hope + My horoscope." + The sombre, brooding clouds of discontent + Oppress one's spirit like a throbbing pain; + One frets and moans in one's environment, + But with a look ahead I sing again, + "I will make hope and only hope + My horoscope."_ + + FREDERICK A. BISBEE. + +Yea, Lord, we thank Thee that we may hope and be happy all the day for +Omnipotence is our Father and our changeless Friend, and we have naught +to fear. We are glad of life and thank Thee for all that makes it heroic +or beautiful or sweet. We rejoice in our home, in our dear ones, and in +the precious human loves that reflect the love divine. Pardon our sins, +we pray Thee, and work out Thy purposes in us. May we work and hope on +and be glad in Thee filling this day so full of useful employ that when +the night shall come, we shall lie down to sleep upon Thy loving +children like tired but happy children, and so find rest and refreshment +for another day with men and Thee. Amen. + + CARL F. HENRY. + + +September 3 + + _There's a dance of leaves in that aspen bower, + There's a titter of winds in that beechen tree, + There's a smile on the fruit, and a smile on the flower, + And a laugh from the brook that runs to the sea._ + + WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. + + _O sweet September! thy first breezes bring + The dry leaf's rustle and the squirrel's laughter, + The cool, fresh air, whence health and vigor spring + And promise of exceeding joy hereafter._ + + GEORGE ARNOLD. + +O Lord, we thank Thee for the spring, which brought her handsome +promise, for the gorgeous preparation which the summer made in his manly +strength, and we bless Thee for the months of autumn, whose sober beauty +now is cast on every hill and every tree. We thank Thee for the harvests +which the toil and the thought of man have gathered already from the +surface of the ground, or digged from its bosom. We bless Thee for the +other harvests still growing beneath the earth, or hanging abundant +beauties in the autumnal sun from many a tree, all over our blessed +Northern land. Amen. + + THEODORE PARKER. + + +September 4 + + _Do right, and God's recompense to you will be the power to do more + right. Give, and God's reward to you will be the spirit of giving + more: blessed spirit, for it is the Spirit of God Himself, whose + Life is the blessedness of giving. Love, and God will pay you with + the capacity of more love; for love is Heaven, love is God within + you._ + + FREDERICK W. ROBERTSON. + +O Lord, we thank Thee for Thy manifold gifts unto the children of men. +Thou givest life and all the sustenance of life. Thou givest our fair +and beautiful world. Thou givest us the power of hope and faith and +thought. From Thine own giving may we learn that it is more blessed to +give than to receive. Teach us, O Lord, to give more freely and more +gladly, and may we learn how our own life, and joy and growth are +involved in the spirit in which we give and serve. In all our giving and +all our serving may we keep before us the vision of the Master who gave +Himself that we might live. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +September 5 + + _Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting: + The soul that rises with us, our life's star, + Hath had elsewhere its setting, + And cometh from afar. + Not in entire forgetfulness, + And not in utter nakedness, + But trailing clouds of glory, do we come + From God who is our home: + Heaven lies about us in our infancy, + At length the man perceives it die away + And fade into the light of common day._ + + WILLIAM WORDSWORTH. + +O Eternal God, Who art without beginning of days or end of years, from +Whom cometh all our life; pardon, we beseech Thee, the sins of Thy +children, wherein we have darkened Thine own image within us. Let not +our light die away amid the common toil and daily care, but so glorify +our life with Thy spirit, that we may gladly present both souls and +bodies to Thy service an acceptable sacrifice, and, learning to love +Thee above all things, may be approved in Thy sight as true disciples of +Thy Son Jesus Christ. Amen. + + WILLIAM E. GASKIN. + + +September 6 + + _A haze on the far horizon, + The infinite tender sky, + The ripe, rich tint of the corn-fields, + And the wild geese sailing high, + And all over upland and lowland + The charm of the goldenrod-- + Some of us call it Autumn, + And others call it God._ + + WILLIAM H. CARRUTH. + +Once more, O God, Thou partest the curtains of night to bless us with a +new day. In its dawning Thou revealest Thyself to us anew. Fresh +beauties break upon our vision; new evidences of Thy goodness appear; +new joys rise in our hearts. We thank Thee for the harvest of corn that +feeds our bodies and the harvest of beauty that feeds our souls; for the +blue of the distant hills and the wide stretch of meadow and prairie; +for golden flower and flying bird; for the nearness of Thy presence in +the brooding haze; for the thoughts unutterable that rise within us. In +thankfulness may we go forth to our daily tasks and live in +consciousness of Thy eternal presence and love. Amen. + + RODNEY F. JOHONNOT. + + +September 7 + + _I come under your windows, some fine morning, and play you one of + my adagio movements, and some of you say,--This is good, play us so + always. But, dear friends, if I did not change the stop sometimes, + the machine would wear out in one part and rust in another. How + easily this or that tune flows! you say, there must be no end of + such melodies in him. I will open the poor machine for you one + moment, and you shall look. Every note marks where a spur of steel + has been driven in. It is easy to grind out the song, but to plant + these bristling points which make it was the painful task of time._ + + OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. + +We thank Thee, Father, for Thy love which, like the morning light, fails +not to greet us at each opening day. While its radiant beams light up +the pathway from our hearts to Thine, we come, with eager steps, for +morning worship and for praise. Take Thou, we pray, the hand +outstretched out to Thee and lead us safely through another day. Grant +us the strength to do our very best and leave results with Thee. We do +not ask for ease, but victory; not for the praise of men, but for the +blessing of our God upon our heaven-appointed task. Grant us the joy +supreme of knowing, when the sun has set, that we have left undone no +duty to our God or fellowman. Amen. + + J. W. ANNAS. + + +September 8 + + _Admit into thy silent breast + The notes of but one bird + And instantly thy soul will join + In jubilant accord._ + + _The perfume of a single flow'r + Inhale like breath of God, + And in the garden of thy heart + A thousand buds will nod._ + + _Toward one star in heaven's expanse + Direct thy spirit's fight, + And thou wilt have in the wide world, + My child, enough delight._ + + JOHANNA AMBROSIUS. + +Our Father In Heaven, as Thou turnest the earth once more toward the +light to give us another day may we not forget that all things come of +Thee. Thou givest us this beautiful earth, adorned with a thousand +varied beauties, crowded with opportunities and possibilities, for our +home. Day and night, sunshine and the rain, labor and trial, joy and +victory, all are from Thy hand. Whatever the circumstances of our life, +whatever our labor and place, help us to remember that life is a school +in which to learn, an arena where we may fight and win. May we gain +wisdom and strength to win the victory which is life eternal, and in +finding that may we find peace and content in Thee. Amen. + + FREDERICK A. TAYLOR. + + +September 9 + + _Give me the gospel of the fields and woods-- + The sermons written in the book of books; + The sweet communion of the things of earth + Fresh with the warm baptism of the sun. + Give me the offertory of bud and bloom, + The perfect caroling of happy birds. + Give me the creed of one of God's fair days + Wrought in the beauty of its loveliness; + And then, the benediction of the stars, + His eloquent ministers of the night._ + + JAMES RAVENSCROFT. + +Heavenly Father, we praise Thee for the breaking day, the singing birds, +the dew in the meadows, the fragrance of the flowers, ascending like +old-time incense from Jewish altar, the sun gilding the hill-tops, the +veiled stars, the gliding river, mirroring in its depths, sedge and tree +and overhanging sky. Thou hast ordained that we nestle in the bosom of +nature and feel the touch of God. Pour strength into our beings from +bird and flower, and Thy spirit which moves in them, that our youth may +be renewed like the eagle's. So shall the memories of earth enrich our +heaven. We praise and supplicate in the name of Jesus. Amen. + + L. A. FREEMAN. + + +September 10 + + _Just whistle a bit if the day be dark + And the sky be overcast: + If mute be the voice of the piping lark, + Why, pipe your own small blast._ + + _And it's wonderful how o'er the gray sky-track, + The truant warbler comes stealing back. + But why need he come? for your soul's at rest, + And the song in the heart,--ah, that is best._ + + PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR. + +Our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for the assurance that all things +work together for good to them that love Thee. Help us to live this day +in joyous faith in that promise. May we realize that behind all clouds +the sun still shines, and that the Father's wisdom never errs, and his +love never fails. Give us courage for this day's conflicts, grace for +its trials, and strength for its duties. Guide our feet in the way of +Thy commandments and fill our souls with the joy of Thy presence. May +our lives no less than our lips praise Thee. Amen. + + CHARLES F. RICE. + + +September 11 + + _For each true deed is worship; it is prayer, + And carries its own answer unaware. + Yes, they whose feet upon good errands run + Are friends of God, with Michael of the sun; + Yes, each accomplished service of the day + Paves for the feet of God a lordlier way. + The souls that love and labor through all wrong, + They clasp His hand and make the Circle strong; + They lay the deep foundation stone by stone, + And build into Eternity God's throne!_ + + EDWIN MARKHAM. + +Our Heavenly Father, we, Thy children, turn to Thee in gratitude and +hope for this new day of opportunity. May our high calling in Christ +Jesus loom large before our eyes. Deliver us, we humbly beseech Thee, +from making ourselves and our concerns chief in thought and effort. May +we find our lives in saving those whose sky is dark, whose burdens are +heavy, and whose faith is perishing. With zest, as do the angels, when +we hear Thy Spirit's voice, may we turn and obey. To let these hours of +service prove to us, not only that Thou art, but that Thou art the +rewarder of them that diligently seek Thee. Through Jesus Christ, our +Lord. Amen. + + DEWITT S. CLARK. + + +September 12 + + _Good name, in man or woman, dear my lord, + Is the immediate jewel of their souls. + Who steals my purse, steals trash; 'tis something, nothing; + 'Twas mine, 'tis his, and has been slave to thousands; + But he that filches from me my good name, + Robs me of that which not enriches him, + And makes me poor indeed._ + + SHAKESPEARE. + +God of all righteousness and charity, breathe upon me the spirit of +thine own charity and righteousness, that I may deal worthily with the +good name of every human being with whom I have to do. Help me, that I +may bring no injury to the fair fame of any. May the law of kindness be +in my lips, and the spirit of helpful justice in my heart. Inspire me to +come, whenever I ought, to the rescue of the slandered, that I may +deliver them into the liberty of human fellowship. And not to me alone, +O God, but to all men, teach this divine lesson of fair judgment and +sweet help, that they may live together as children in thy gracious +family. Amen. + + WILLIAM N. CLARKE. + + +September 13 + + _I searched for love in heart of city's hum; + I searched for love upon the shining sand + Of ocean beach; and then on towering cliffs I sung + A pleading song that love unto my heart might come; + But love came not._ + + _I searched for love no more, but labored sore + To ease those hearts whom sorrow'd touched before, + Faint hope that in sweet work I'd surely find + Some compensation for a fate unkind-- + When, lo! love came._ + + BESSIE L. RUSSELL. + + For love and life and light and breath and ease, + For work, success and hope, for power to please, + For conscience clear, for faith without alloy, + For common share in common human joy, + I thank Thee, gracious God! + + For loneliness and shadow, sickness, care, + For failure, doubt, remorse, death, and despair, + For sleepless nights, for aching heart and brain, + For common share in common human pain, + I thank Thee, gracious God! Amen. + + MARGARET WENTWORTH. + + +September 14 + + _In fallow fields the goldenrod + And purple asters beck and nod. + The milkweed launches fairy boats; + In tangled silver the cobweb floats. + Pervasive odors of ripening vine, + Fill the air like a luscious wine. + The gentian blooms on the browning waste; + With coral chains is the alder laced. + The blackbirds gather, and wheel and fly, + The swallows twitter a low "Goodbye!"_ + + SARA ANDREW SHAFER. + +Father in Heaven, we love Thee, we cannot help it. Thy blessings around +us on every side tell us of Thy love. Our love leaps involuntarily from +our hearts responsive to these numberless delights. We thank Thee for +the rich harvests that burden the fields, for the acres of beauty that +reach over hill and through meadow, for the stars that make cheerful the +night. Help us to bless Thee when the storms come to disappoint and +destroy. May we realize that the tempest comes from the Good Father, +that He has sent it, a great blessing in disguise. Great Father, help us +to know and feel that everything coming from Thee is good. So may Thy +Kingdom come to Thy children of earth. Amen. + + CHARLES EDWARD DAVIS. + + +September 15 + + _Once, out of all the anguish and the sorrow of my heart, + I wrote a song, and put my pent-up passion in its art. + And the great world never heeded this soulful human groan, + For it bore a burden infinitely heavy of its own._ + + _Once, out of all the happiness and joy within my breast, + I made a little song and blithely sent it on its quest. + And the great world, with its infinitely many joys, divine, + Still had room and instant welcome for this little song of mine._ + + WILLIAM F. DIX. + +O God, I thank Thee that Thou hast numbered me with the children of the +day. O Immanuel, make Thy Presence to be a sun within me this day. May I +dispel clouds or reveal the rainbows ever half-hidden in robes of mists. +May I melt snows and bring spring-time freshets of joy. May I shed light +that shall turn groans into songs. May I shine on till I shall stand +before the Great White Throne that is encompassed with an unbroken +rainbow, and take up the angelic music among that starry host of souls +who have found the true "music of the spheres," and are: + + "Forever singing as they shine, + 'The hand that made us is divine.'" + Amen. + + ELLIOTT F. STUDLEY. + + +September 16 + + _All is best, though we oft doubt + What the unsearchable dispose + Of highest wisdom brings about, + And ever best found in the close. + Oft He seems to hide His face, + But unexpectedly returns, + And to his faithful champion hath in place + Bore witness gloriously._ + + JOHN MILTON. + +Our Father, we have ever dwelt in Thee, though sometimes we have +forgotten it. While our eyes slept, it may be that to our spirit's sight +a ladder was set up on the earth and the top of it reached to heaven, +and on it Thy angels were ascending and descending to help us. Now +again, O Father, comes to us from Thy hand of love the food and the +tasks of a new day. Help us then to put away the error from which we +fled or should have fled yesterday. This morning let us set up the stone +of our Bethel that through the day we may be reminded in all we do, that +Thou art in this place with us. Whether we see Thee or not, let us take +courage and make this a day nearer Thee. Fill us with Jesus' own large +sympathies for others, with Jesus' purpose to seek and to serve the +right, and especially grant us Jesus' complete trust in Thy perfect +goodness. In His name, we ask it. Amen. + + MERRILL C. WARD. + + +September 17 + + _As far as earth is from the sky, + So Love is high. + Where Alpine lakes their vigils keep + Is Love more deep._ + + _In Nature there no boundaries are + That tell how far Love goes; + Love's measure, as each countless star, + God knows._ + + * * * * * + + _One only thing we know: Love comes to stay; + Though God's to give, it is not even His + To take away._ + + MARIAN ALDEN. + +O God, our Heavenly Father, we recognize our dependence upon Thee for +the bounties of Thy never-failing Providence, and as we enter upon this +new day to which Thou has safely brought us, we ask Thy help that we may +receive it as a gift from Thee and may consecrate ourselves more +perfectly in the least things as well as in the greatest, to Thy +service. Help us to be faithful to all the duties and responsibilities +of our lot. Deliver us from all useless discontent, all idle doubts and +foolish fears. In all our dealings may we be simple and sincere. +Strengthen us to do at every moment that which we feel to be right and +good in Thy sight, and through loyal obedience to Thy will may we rise +into a clearer vision of the things that belong to Thy heavenly kingdom. +Amen. + + WILLIAM H. FISH. + + +September 18 + + _Some people are always grumbling because roses have thorns. I am + thankful that thorns have roses._ + + ALPHONSE KARR. + + _There are those who want to get away from all their past; who if + they could, would fain begin all over again. Their life seems one + long failure. But you must learn, you must let God teach you, that + the only way to get rid of your past is to get a future out of it._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +Our Heavenly Father, the remembrance of Thee fills life with all that is +most beautiful and bright. Our deepest sorrows, our most bitter +experiences come when we forget Thee. No life can be a failure which +strives to do Thy will. Sorrow may come to us, but just as an artist may +darken a flower, in painting, before retouching it to make its color all +the brighter, so we know that Thou, who givest color to the flowers, may +for a season permit sorrow to darken our lives; but Thou art only in the +midst of Thy work. At Thy retouch, life becomes the more beautiful. Help +us to pray, not simply, "Lord, remember me," for it is not possible for +Thee to forget Thy children; we pray "assist us to be always mindful of +Thee." Amen. + + E. MCP. AMEE. + + +September 19 + + _The sooner we read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest a little + Eastern apothegm of Howard Hinton's the better: Two balls were + together in a box, a gold and a gilt ball. The gilt ball was + carefully done up in tissue paper, and securely wedged into one + corner; but the gold ball was loose, and went rolling about with + every movement of the box. "Oh, please, do take care of yourself!" + said the gilt ball, peeping out apprehensively from the folds of + the tissue paper. "Why, where's the harm?" answered the gold ball, + as it took a fresh lurch to an opposite corner. "Oh, how can you?" + cried the other; "you'll rub it off." "Rub what off?" asked the + gold ball.... The gold won't rub off.... Only the gingerbread + gilt._ + + ELLICE HOPKINS. + +Heavenly Father, we hear the loving call of this new day and on the +wings of the morning we would speed to the work and worship of the +beautiful hours Thou hast given us. We thank Thee that Thou hast made us +for the hurry of the market place as well as for the quiet of the home. +May our own lives be brightened by contact with our fellowmen. May the +pure gold of the Spirit of Christ be ours in purity of personal thought, +in the benediction of words of strength and sweetness and in the varied +service we may render our neighbors in the name of Jesus our Lord and +Saviour. Amen. + + JAMES F. ALLEN. + + +September 20 + + _O heart of mine, we shouldn't worry so! + What we've missed of calm we couldn't have, you know! + What we've met of stormy pain, + And of sorrow's driving rain, + We can better meet again, + If it blow!_ + + _For we know, not every morrow can be sad; + So, forgetting all the sorrow + We have had, + Let us fold away our fears, + And put by our childish tears, + And through all the coming years, + Just be glad._ + + JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY. + +Heavenly Father, Thy very name fills our hearts with confidence and +peace. For we know that out of Thy Fatherly goodness all earthly +providences are bestowed and administered for our good. So, for our +unwilling submission, when Thou hast led us into hard and thorny +pathways, we ask Thy generous forgiveness; and for our ingratitude when +pleasure and prosperity have attended us, we entreat Thy tender +patience. As Thou hast commanded us to rejoice in Thy salvation, may our +hearts be filled with gladness to-day; and, as Thou hast counselled us +that when we lack wisdom, we may ask of Thee, we beseech Thee to bestow +upon us now and evermore the wisdom of cheerfulness and joy. In the name +of Jesus, Amen. + + EDMUND L. SMILEY. + + +September 21 + + _We all shrink, like cowards, from new duties, new + responsibilities. We do not venture to go out of the beaten track + of our daily life. Close to us, on each side of the road, are those + whom we might help or save with one good action, one kind word. But + we are afraid. We say: "I am not prepared; I am not ready; I have + not time; I am not qualified; find some better person; send some + one else." Perhaps we have only one talent, and, therefore, instead + of using it, we hide it, and when the Master comes we shall meet + him with the old answer: "I was afraid, and went and hid thy talent + in the earth. Lo! there thou hast that is thine."_ + + JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE. + +From the base sin of selfishness, O Lord, deliver us. Teach us by Thy +life of ministry and sacrifice for others that the more fully and +willingly we lose ourselves in service for our fellowmen, the more +surely we shall find ourselves in Thee. As we go forth this day in paths +that Thou hast prepared for us, help us to so forget ourselves in acts +of kindness and words of comfort that each one whom our lives may touch, +may become thereby a happier, purer, stronger soul. Take Thou the care +of these lives of ours, while, with Thee, in busy streets and crowded +shops where greed is grasping and sin is lurking, we shall try to care +for souls of others, who need the help that we might give. Then, at the +eventide today or on the morrow, it will be our joy like Thine to find +ourselves again in hearts made happy, in lives inspired, in souls +redeemed. Amen. + + GEORGE B. DEAN. + + +September 22 + + _Before God's footstool to confess + A poor soul knelt and bowed his head, + "I failed!" he wailed. The Master said, + "Thou didst thy best--that is success!"_ + + ANONYMOUS. + + _Straight from the Mighty Bow, this truth is driven: + "They fail, and they alone, who have not striven." + Fly far, O shaft of light, all doubt redeeming, + Rouse men from dull despair and idle dreaming. + High Heaven's Evangel be, gospel God-given; + They fail, and they alone, who have not striven._ + + CLARENCE URMY. + +We thank Thee, O God, for the light that reveals to us the divine +estimate of life, that lifts the veil of mystery from struggle and +sacrifice and enables us to interpret their meaning as elements of +successful living. We praise Thee for the truth that assures us that we +are in this world to win, to overcome, to be more than conquerors. We +pray that we may be too busy to dream and too brave to doubt. Strengthen +us for life's conflict, help us to carry our burdens cheerfully, fight +courageously, strive lawfully, that we may be worthy to be counted among +those who shall receive the crown of righteousness and hear at last the +"Well done" of the Master. Amen. + + GEORGE S. SCRIVENER. + + +September 23 + + _Be diligent and faithful, patient and hopeful, one and all of you; + and may we all know, at all times, that verily the Eternal rules + above us, and that nothing finally wrong has happened or can + happen._ + + THOMAS CARLYLE. + + _If you entered the workshop of a blacksmith, you would not dare to + find fault with his bellows, anvils and hammers. If you had not the + skill of a workman, but the consideration of a man, what would you + say? "It is not without cause the bellows are placed there; the + artificer knew, though I do not know, the reason." You would not + dare to find fault with the blacksmith in his shop, and do you dare + to find fault with God in His world?_ + + ST. BERNARD. + +We thank Thee, O loving Father, that we are not alone in the universe +with longing for the higher life. There are a thousand revelations of +Thee in our fellowmen. And when we cannot find Thee, for blindness, in +nature or in ourselves, we can see Thee revealed in the lives heroic +that surround us. In the abstract Thou art hard to find; in the lives of +men Thou art always visible. We thank Thee that there is a contagion of +rightness and that love is a vital seed that fills the world with its +kind. We are fearful of love sometimes, fearing to waste it on a +loveless world. Help us to see that every atom we give becomes an ocean +to ourselves. Amen. + + ALBERT C. GRIER. + + +September 24 + + _To be at all--what is better than that? + I think if there were nothing more developed, the clam in its callous + shell in the sand were august enough + I am not in any callous shell; + I am cased with supple conductors, all over + They take every object by the hand, and lead it within me; + They are thousands, each one with his entry to himself; + They are always watching with their little eyes, from my head to my feet; + One no more than a point lets in and out of me such bliss and magnitude, + I think I could lift the girder of the house away if it lay between me + and whatever I wanted._ + + WALT WHITMAN. + +Our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for all the delicate beauty as well +as for the rugged strength of these bodies in which Thou hast set us to +live. But more wonderful than the habitation of the soul is the soul +itself. Thou hast made us a little lower than the angels, Thou hast +crowned us with glory and honor, and we join reverently in the words of +the great poet-prophet who said of man--"In action how like an angel, in +apprehension how like a God!" O Lord, we thank Thee for this great +thought of our own life. Yet let us not be vain nor proud. We pray +rather that we may be inspired to live so earnestly and so nobly that we +shall prove our title now to all that we have dreamed as our natural +birthright. So shall we feel ourselves to-day sons and daughters of God. +Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +September 25 + + _I do believe the common man's task is the hardest. The hero has + the hero's aspiration that lifts him to his labor. All great duties + are easier than the little ones, though they cost far more blood + and agony._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + + _Thus man is made equal to every event. He can face danger for the + right. A poor, tender, painful body, he can run into flame or + bullets or pestilence, with duty for his guide.... I am not afraid + of accident as long as I am in my place.... Every man's task is his + life-preserver. The conviction that his work is dear to God and + cannot be spared, defends him._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + +O Thou Who art the giver of every good and perfect gift, help us better +to understand the measure of Thy giving; that we count not those +blessings only which make life smooth and easy and of tame comfort but +the things that make life resolute and hearty, and that put to test the +vigor of our souls, that give us chance to prove our high nobility and +unfaltering courage; the things that build for the soul's fine substance +of eternal worth--these are Thy blessings, too, for which we thank Thee. +Give us entrance into Thine eternal living through strong activity and +zest of life; that manhood have its eager challenge and womanhood its +glowing opportunity to assert themselves as winning joy through +bafflement and Thy strong peace that passeth not away, through steadfast +consecration to high service. Amen. + + GEORGE H. BADGER. + + +September 26 + + _If I can put one touch of a rosy sunset into the life of any man, + or woman I shall feel that I have worked with God. He is in no + haste; and if I do what I may in earnest I need not worry if I do + no great work. Let God make His sunsets; I will mottle my little + cloud. To help the growth of a thought that struggles toward the + light, to brush with gentle hand the earth stain from the white of + one snowdrop--such be my ambition._ + + GEORGE MACDONALD. + +Help us, our Father, to know that we have here at hand all that we need +to make this day what it ought to be; that we need not look afar, but in +the duty of this present moment, in the opportunity to learn, to serve +and thus to grow, which the morning offers, is all that is necessary to +make this day sound and serviceable; in such a day we shall find +enduring joy and from it Thou, the Giver of all days, wilt derive +satisfaction, since it will do its full share in fulfilling Thy purpose. +And may we see that if we make our todays what they should be Thou wilt +take care of the tomorrows. Amen. + + HERBERT E. BENTON. + + +September 27 + + _My neighbor hath a little field, + Small store of wine its presses yield, + And truly but a slender hoard + Its harvest brings for barn or board. + Yet tho' a hundred fields are mine, + Fertile with olive, corn and wine; + Tho' Autumn piles my garners high, + Still for that little field I sigh. + For ah! methinks no otherwhere + Is any field so good and fair. + Small tho' it be, 'tis better far + Than all my fruitful vineyards are, + Amid whose plenty sad I pine-- + "Ah, would the little field were mine!" + Large knowledge void of peace and rest, + And wealth with pining care possest-- + These by my fertile lands are meant. + That little field is called Content._ + + ROBERTSON TROWBRIDGE. + +Heavenly Father, as prayed Thy servant of old, so we this morning repeat +"Give us neither poverty nor riches." Help us this day, in whatsoever +state we are, therewith to be content. May no complaining word proceed +out of our mouths. Above all may no murmuring thought lodge within us. +So shall we rest in peace with Thee, and God, even our God, shall bless +us. Yet, O Lord, forbid that we should remain satisfied with any +portion, which our best effort, with Thine assistance, can improve. Then +shall we grow in grace and more and more approach the stature of true +men and women, in Christ Jesus. Amen. + + M. EMORY WRIGHT. + + +September 28 + + _Forenoon and afternoon and night--Forenoon + And afternoon and night,--Forenoon, and--what? + The empty song repeats itself. No more? + Yea, that is life. Make this forenoon sublime, + This afternoon a psalm, this night a prayer, + And time is conquered, and thy crown is won._ + + EDWARD ROWLAND SILL. + + Help me, O Lord, if I shall see + Times when I walk from hope apart, + Till all my days but seem to be + The troubled week-days of the heart. + + Help me to find, in seasons past, + The hours that have been good or fair, + And bid remembrance hold them fast, + To keep me wholly from despair. + + Help me to look behind, before, + To make my past and future form + A bow of promise, meeting o'er + The darkness of my day of storm. + Amen. + + PHOEBE CARY. + + +September 29 + + _The iris-pillar suggested the burning bush on Horeb. In Moses' + time, nature, in the regard of science, was a mere bush, a single + shrub. Now it has grown, through the researches of the intellect, + to a tree. The universe is a mighty tree; and the great truth for + us to connect with the majestic science of these days, and to keep + vivid by a religious imagination, is, that from the roots of its + mystery to the silver-leaved boughs of the firmament, it is + continually filled with God, and yet unconsumed._ + + T. STARR KING. + +Almighty God, our Heavenly Father, who in all ages has been revealing +Thyself to men as a God of righteousness and love, we approach Thy +throne of grace this morning confessing our unworthiness and pleading +Thy forgiving love. While humbling ourselves before Thee because of the +consciousness of our unworthiness, we yet approach Thee, our Father, +with filial trust and confidence, yea, with gladness of heart and holy +boldness in the all-prevailing name of Jesus Christ our Lord. We bless +Thee for Thy watchful care over us amid all the dangers, temptations and +difficulties of the past. Truly Thou hast been with us, and although Thy +people have often been surrounded by fire, the bush has not been +consumed. In the future as in the past, be Thou our God and Guide and +finally bring us into Thine everlasting Kingdom, through Jesus Christ +our Lord. Amen. + + A. K. MACLENNAN. + + +September 30 + + _Would you like to hear what sort of questions the school-boys had + to answer eighteen centuries ago? Very well; you shall. A rabbi, + who lived nearly twenty years before Christ was born, set his + pupils thinking by asking them, "What is the best thing for a man + to possess?" One of them replied, "A kind nature;" another, "A good + companion;" another, "A good neighbor." But one of them, named + Eleazer, said, "A good heart." "I like your answer best, Eleazer," + said the master, "for it includes all the rest."_ + + FRANCIS AUGUSTUS COX. + +Our Father in heaven, we are happy to believe that Thou dost wish us to +have the best. Thou dost teach us that the best possession we can have +is a good heart, for out of the heart are the issues of life. Thou art +the searcher of hearts,--if our hearts are hard Thou canst give us +hearts of flesh, if they are sinful Thou canst create clean hearts +within us. Even if they are desperately wicked Thou canst make them new. +Grant us, therefore, Thy Holy Spirit we humbly beseech Thee, that our +hearts may be pure and good. Thus may we ever possess the best possible +treasure, and thus may we perfectly love Thee and worthily magnify Thy +holy name. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. + + WILLARD T. PERRIN. + + +October 1 + + _Month of fruits and falling leaves, + Under thy opalescent skies + The vagrant summer idly lies, + While coming Autumn deftly weaves + Rare tints for tall ungarnered sheaves + Of goldenrod, kissing the eyes + Of purple asters as she dyes + The vine that swings beneath the eaves._ + + _And all the bending hedgerows seem + A Joseph's coat of colors. Hues + That shame the rainbow's royal arch + Set all the harvest fields a-gleam + With beauty, fresh with fragrant dews + To crown the season's onward march._ + + GEORGE W. SHIPMAN. + +Author and Giver of every good and perfect gift whose infinite presence +and power underlie all growth and life and activity, Who revealest +Thyself in the varied forms of beauty which come so rapidly in the +revolving year, in the green grass and blossoming roses and lilies and +refreshing, fast-succeeding fruits, we thank Thee that Thou art now +crowning the year with Thy goodness and inviting us to gather in from +tree, garden, field, forest, mine, what will feed, clothe, protect us +during the wintry season given us, free from arduous labors, to find +enjoyment in books, music and social intercourse. These blessings remind +us to present to Thee the fruits of the spirit, love, joy, peace, long +suffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, meekness, temperance. Amen. + + CALVIN S. LOCKE. + + +October 2 + + _One answered, on the day when Christ went by, + "Lord, I am rich; pause not for such as I. + My work, my home, my strength, my frugal store, + The sun and rain--what need have I of more? + Go to the sinful who have need of Thee, + Go to the poor, but tarry not for me. + What is there Thou should'st do for such as I?" + And He went by._ + + _Long years thereafter, by a palace door, + The footstep of the Master paused once more + From whence the old voice answered piteously,-- + "Lord, I am poor, my house unfit for Thee; + Nor peace nor pleasures bless my princely board, + Nor love nor health; what could I give Thee, Lord? + Lord, I am poor, unworthy, stained with sin,--" + Yet He went in._ + + MABEL EARLE. + +We who are poor in spirit, turn to Thee who art the giver of every good +and perfect gift, to hold out our empty hands and pray that Thou wilt +make us rich. During the past days and years we have been out in Thy +world striving for more things and then more things and yet more things, +forgetful of the fact that a man's life consisteth not in the abundance +of the things which he possesseth. Now, realizing the poverty of our +real lives, we ask Thee to bestow upon us those eternal riches which +pertain to the human soul and possessing which we shall have treasure in +that heaven within where moth and rust do not corrupt nor thieves break +through and steal. So shall we be rich indeed. Amen. + + FRANK OLIVER HALL. + + +October 3 + + _Be strong! + We are not here to play, to dream, to drift. + We have hard work to do, and loads to lift. + Shun not the struggle; face it. 'Tis God's gift._ + + _Be strong! + Say not the days are evil,--who's to blame? + And fold the hands and acquiesce--O shame! + Stand up, speak out, and bravely, in God's name._ + + _Be strong! + It matters not how deep intrenched the wrong, + How hard the battle goes, the day how long, + Faint not, fight on! Tomorrow comes the song._ + + MALTBIE DAVENPORT BABCOCK. + +O our Father, we thank Thee for this new morning. Truly the light is +sweet and a pleasant thing it is for the eyes to behold the same. Lift +Thou upon us the light of Thy countenance and bid us go in peace. So +shall we begin the day aright. With gentle skill Thou dost deal with us. +Thou art not careless with us or hasty or impatient. Help us to be +strong in Thee. May we be able to cast out of our lives everything that +would grieve Thee and harm us. With a loving spirit may we serve Thee +this day. May we be rooted and grounded in love. However hard the battle +may go give us courage and confidence to believe that through Christ, +strengthening us, we can do all things required of us. Lord, increase +our faith. Amen. + + J. E. HAWKINS. + + +October 4 + + _Nobody proves God's being. But, suddenly, one sees God is here. + One speaks and God answers. Thereafter all is sure._ + + EDWARD EVERETT HALE. + + _There is nothing that so persuades us of the great realities of + moral and spiritual being as the man in whom God is manifest, the + type of our human nature at its best, and the indorsement of the + sublime faith that God in humanity is the supreme revelation of + Himself!_ + + HORATIO STEBBINS. + +Blessed Father, as the morning light has triumphed in its struggle to +overcome darkness, so Thou dost gently but irresistibly call us from +slumber to the glories and duties of the new day. May we be strong in +the sweet assurance that the unfolding hours are full of blessing +because Thou art caring for us. Help us to do Thy will by enabling us to +minister to those around us. May the words of our mouth and the industry +of our hands reveal Thy guiding love. Enable us to order our ways by the +habit of trust that we have learned through Thy constancy. Wilt Thou +disappoint our fears, steady our hearts, and show us the way of +obedience, peace and service that we may realize the good through the +day and rejoice in it, as disciples of Christ. Amen. + + JAMES D. CORBY. + + +October 5 + + _Thou knowest not what argument + Thy life to thy neighbor's creed hath lent; + All are needed by each one; + Nothing is good or fair alone._ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + + _Men will not be content to live every man for himself, nor to die + every man for himself. In work, in art, in study, in trade--in all + life, indeed, the children of God, called by a Saviour's voice, + will wish to live in the common cause. They will live for the + common wealth,--this is the modern phrase. They will bear each + other's burdens,--this is the phrase of Paul. They will live in the + life of love. And it will prove true as it was promised, that all + things are added to the community which thus seeks the Kingdom of + God and His Righteousness._ + + EDWARD EVERETT HALE. + +Eternal God, who dost still create the light, and make the morning and +the evening of our days, by Thy light we look to Thee. In Thy light we +worship Thee. Gird us with strength to work with Thee to bring Thy +Kingdom in. May we lose and find ourselves again in the larger whole of +life by ministering to others' needs; by bearing others' burdens; by +sharing their joys and tears and the common fruits of toil, thus making +our life and faith in Thee become their own. Let Thy work appear unto +Thy servants, and establish Thou the work of our hands upon us; yea, the +work of our hands establish Thou it; and let Thy beauty and Thy glory be +upon us forever and ever. Amen. + + C. E. HOLMES. + + +October 6 + + _Master, to do great work for Thee, my hand + Is far too weak! Thou givest what may suit, + Some little chips to cut with care minute, + Or tint, or grave, or polish. Others stand + Before their quarried marble, fair and grand, + And make a life-work of the grand design + Which Thou hast traced; or, many-skilled, combine + To build vast temples, gloriously planned. + Yet take the tiny stones which I have wrought + Just one by one, as they were given by Thee, + Not knowing what came next in Thy wise thought. + Let each stone by Thy master-hand of grace + Form the mosaic as Thou wilt for me + And in Thy temple-pavement give it place._ + + FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL. + +Father, we are shortsighted and weak, and hence cannot do our best work +without Thine aid. We rejoice in the privileges and opportunities of +this day. Thou hast counted us worthy to work for Thee. Thou canst use +our loaves and fishes, but dost require us to bring thus our little all +for Thy blessing. We are inspired with hope to make our consecration to +Thee. Make this a day of glorious service. Guide us in our thoughts and +work. Glorify Thyself in our life. And wherever the close of this day +may find us may it be with the feeling that we have done our best by Thy +blessing and help. Amen. + + J. W. FULTON. + + +October 7 + + _"Whatever the weather may be," says he-- + "Whatever the weather may be, + It's the songs ye sing, an' the smiles ye wear, + That's a-making the sun shine everywhere; + An' the world of gloom is a world of glee, + Wid the bird in the bush, an' the bud in the tree + An' the fruit on the stim o' the bough," says he, + "Whatever the weather may be," says he-- + "Whatever the weather may be!"_ + + JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY. + +O Father of Lights, with whom can be no variation, neither shadow that +is cast by turning, help us today so to trust Thee that our joy may be +unclouded. Thy love is unchanging in its radiance and warmth. Therefore +let it glow in me and through me light someone who may be in darkness. O +strong Son of God, who art the same, yesterday, today, yea, and forever, +enable us, we beseech Thee, to be brave and cheery as though Thyself +wast in the darkest hours as in the brightest. Teach us that the storm +and trial is just our opportunity to shine. Cleanse us of all +disobedience and darkness. Be our constant Comforter. Let others see +that it is Christ within us. Amen. + + THOMAS W. SMITH. + + +October 8 + + _Look up to God, and say, "Make use of me for the future as Thou + wilt. I am of the same mind; I am equal with Thee. I refuse nothing + which seems good to Thee. Lead me whither Thou wilt. Clothe me in + whatever dress Thou wilt. Is it Thy will that I should be in a + public or private condition; dwell here, or be banished; be poor or + rich? Under all these circumstances I will make Thy defence to men. + I will show what the nature of everything is."_ + + EPICTETUS. + +Merciful Father, we begin this day, knowing not what the end may be, +with thoughts of Thee and Thy loving kindness. May this be to us a day +of joy, a day upon which we can look back and say we have been blessed +by Thee. We pray for that spirit that enabled others to labor in the +cause of love and righteousness, and while we may not be able to +accomplish all the good we have set our hearts upon, may the thought +that our lives and our labors have not been in vain, inspire us and +others with courage to continue the work of helping and blessing our +fellowmen. Amen. + + DONALD FRASER. + + +October 9 + + _Men deny the Divine Existence with as little feeling as the most + assert it. Even in our true systems we go on collecting mere words, + playmarks and medals, as the misers do coins; and not till late do + we transmute the words into feelings, the coins into enjoyments. A + man may for twenty years believe the immortality of the soul; in + the one-and-twentieth, in some great moment, he for the first time + discovers with amazement the rich meaning of this belief, and the + warmth of this naphtha-well._ + + RICHTER. + +O Thou Who slumberest not, nor sleepest, in the dawn of this new day we +look trustingly to Thee. While the night has been enfolding us, Thy +loving care has held us in the everlasting arms. May this day be for us +a fresh consecration. May we be ennobled in Thee. May we share Thy life +in things small or great. However humble our lives--however emptied our +experience of that which wins the plaudits of men, may we manifest Thee. +By us may Thy Kingdom come and Thy will be done. Amen. + + GEORGE H. YOUNG. + + +October 10 + + _Thou wilt not hold in scorn the child who dares + Look up to Thee, the Father,--dares to ask + More than Thy wisdom answers. From Thy hand + The worlds were cast; yet every leaflet claims + From that same hand its little shining sphere + Of star-lit dew; thine image, the great sun, + Girt with his mantle of tempestuous flame, + Glares in mid-heaven; but to his noontide blaze + The slender violet lifts its lidless eye, + And from his splendor steals its fairest hue, + Its sweetest perfume from the scorching fire._ + + OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. + +Thou great Spirit of life and power, we do not shrink in terror before +Thee, but come to Thee in trust and love. Though we cannot fathom the +mystery of Thy life nor measure the might of Thy power, yet we have +learned to call Thee Father; and even as the violet lifts its face to +the noonday sun to find the secret of its life, so we lift our faces to +Thee, to find the secret of our lives. Thou answerest us with +tenderness. Thou speakest to us in love. Fresh from sleep, we put our +hands in Thine to be led forth to the duties of the day. May we go forth +with that confidence and hope, which are born of trust in Thee, our +Father. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +October 11 + + _Now believe me, God hides some ideal in every human soul. Some + time in our life we feel a trembling, fearful longing to do some + good thing. Life finds its noblest spring of excellence in this + hidden impulse to do our best. There is a time when we are not + content to be such merchants or doctors or lawyers as we see on the + dead level or below it. The woman longs to glorify her womanhood as + sister, wife or mother. Here is God,--God standing silently at the + door all day long,--God whispering to the soul that to be pure and + true is to succeed in life and that whatever we get short of that + will burn up like stubble, though the whole world try to save it._ + + ROBERT COLLYER. + +God of all power and might, come into our lives with Thy might and Thy +power. Awaken us from that slumber of death-in-life which easily and +sweetly steals through the door, and, like some new Delilah, binds the +strong will within. Come, come as the fresh morning sun, to drive away +the mist of our sloth and indecision. Come, enter; and bring with Thee +the upstirring power and the wide radiance of the life divine. Come, +enter, and abide! When Thou art absent, though life be easy, it doth not +satisfy us; but when Thou art present, though life be hard, it doth also +content us. O God of all power and might, come Thou into our lives with +Thy might and Thy power. Amen. + + MELVIN BRANDOW. + + +October 12 + + _If you really want to help your fellowmen, you must not merely + have in you what would do them good if they should take it from + you, but you must be such a man that they can take it from you. The + snow must melt upon the mountain and come down in a spring torrent, + before its richness can make the valley rich. And yet in every age + there are cold, hard, unsympathetic wise men standing up aloof, + like snow banks on the hill tops, conscious of the locked up + fertility in them and wondering that their wisdom does not save the + world._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +O Thou, who hast kept us safely during the unconsciousness of our +slumbering hours and brought us refreshed to this morning light, prepare +us for the duties of this day by filling us with the assurance that we +are Thine, and that Thou lovest us. Help us to be more like Thee, to +love Thee more and serve Thee better. May we manifest our love to Thee +by our willingness to be of service to our fellowmen. Make us +warm-hearted and true, helpful and kind, reflecting Thy love and doing +Thy will. We are glad to live in this beautiful world. And we pray that +we may be faithful co-laborers with Jesus Christ, in bringing light, +love and joy to all lives. Amen. + + EUGENE M. GRANT. + + +October 13 + + _A few more smiles of silent sympathy, a few more tender words, a + little more restraint in temper, may make all the difference + between happiness and half-happiness to those I live with._ + + STOPFORD A. BROOKE. + + _Others shall sing the song, + Others shall right the wrong, + Finish what I begin, + And all I fail to win, + What matter, I or they, + Mine or another's day, + So the right word be said, + And life the sweeter made?_ + + JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER. + +Father, so little of the world in which we live is Thy world, so much +our world, the petty, dwarfed world of our own small vision, that we +lose heart and fail to do our share. Help us to see that, as in the +densest swamps the sweetest flowers grow, so, even in our darkest hours, +we still may be sweet at heart, saying the word, doing the deed, giving +the sympathy, that will make the world sing and blossom. If there are +times when pain and darkness obscure our vision of Thee, help us to look +on to the sunset of our day, when the black pall is transfigured at the +touch of Thy glory,--when sorrow and failure transcended by gentleness +are our beauty and salvation. Amen. + + JOHN M. DAVIDSON. + + +October 14 + + _There is not a man in the world who is not saved by hope every day + of his life. Rob one of hope and you have robbed him of his power. + Nothing may so quickly unnerve a man and render him helpless as to + take hope out of his heart. What is poverty? What is sickness? What + is disaster? What are daily burdens? What signifies the desertion + of friends, what of death itself so long as a man can hope? The man + who hopes will brush every difficulty out of the way. He will put + aside every suggestion of failure. Take hope out of a man's heart + and you have taken all. Put hope into a man's heart and you have + given all._ + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + +We thank Thee, O God, for the light of another morning, for the +privilege of entering upon another day. We shall meet with those who do +not understand life nor the world in which we live. It is to them only a +place to bear burdens, to toil, to endure. Give us, O Father, +understanding minds and hearts. Teach us to know that life is a great +opportunity, that Thy plans for each one are very broad, that the world +is full of open doors; and inspired by this knowledge may no despondent +soul cross our path without being helped and made to feel that every +life through the love of God and the guidance of God may be made +sublime. Amen. + + ALEXANDER DIGHT. + + +October 15 + + _Ho! for the bending sheaves, + Ho! for the crimson leaves + Flaming in splendor! + Season of ripened gold, + Plenty in crib and fold, + Skies with a depth untold + Liquid and tender._ + + JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. + +Source Infinite and Eternal of Light and Life; Creator of being flowing +on forever; Minister far and wide of unspeakable bounty; Through whose +power rise the riches of Nature; From whose abundance descend all gifts +to man; Soul of our souls and safeguard of the world; To whom all +Intelligence looks through every dawn; And by whose support the heart of +man is stayed; Let there be to our steps paths of brightness; to our +lives laws of justice, kindness, and trust, that we may abound in doing +good and by grace, mercy, and truth duly shown, may obtain grateful +remembrance evermore. Amen. + + EDWARD C. TOWNE. + + +October 16 + + _There is something in the autumn that is native to my blood + Touch of manner, hint of mood; + And my heart is like a rhyme, + With the yellow and the purple and the crimson keeping time._ + + _The scarlet of the maples can shake me like a cry + Of bugles going by. + And my lonely spirit thrills + To see the frosty asters like a smoke upon the hills._ + + RICHARD HOVEY. + +O Father, my heart is lonely till I feel Thy spirit near, and then the +glory of the season brings a message to my soul. Help me now to see Thy +master hand in the great beauty of the world. May my soul that feels the +glad riot of color know that he who gives such beauty and bounty has for +me far richer blessings in the great fields of the future. May this day, +begun with Nature's rhythm be set with the music of holy purpose and +noble service. And may the music sound not alone for me, but for others +that we together may march forward in the spirit of Him who loved the +lilies of the field and the fowls of the air. Amen. + + CHARLES E. VARNEY. + + +October 17 + + _Thousands of years ago a leaf fell on the soft clay, and seemed to + be lost. But last summer a geologist in his ramblings broke off a + piece of rock with his hammer, and there lay the image of the leaf, + with every line and every vein and all the delicate tracery + preserved in the stone through those centuries. So the words we + speak and the things we do today may seem to be lost, but in the + great final revealing the smallest of them will appear._ + + JAMES RUSSELL MILLER. + +Our Father we thank Thee for the light of this new day. Tenderly Thou +hast withdrawn the curtain of the night and shown us the beauties and +glories of Nature, reminding us of Thine own blessed verdict in the dawn +of creation, "Behold they are very good." Good indeed, is it to live in +such a world, and we thank Thee for our being. We ask this morning, dear +Lord, not for the perishing things of earth, but for continued power and +disposition to enjoy Thee and Thy works, for a faith that never wavers +and a hope that never grows dim, for such a portion of this world's +goods as the wise may enjoy without harm and the righteous hold without +wrong. Amen. + + JAMES SALLAWAY. + + +October 18 + + _Nay, I wrong you, little flower, + Reading mournful mood of mine + In your looks, that give no sign + Of a spirit dark and cheerless: + You possess the heavenly power + That rejoices in the hour, + Glad, contented, free and fearless,-- + Lifts a sunny face to heaven + When a sunny day is given; + Makes a summer of its own, + Blooming late and all alone._ + + HENRY VAN DYKE. + +We thank Thee, O Father, that, to those who obey the command of Jesus to +consider them, the flowers become prophets of God and preachers of +righteousness. We thank Thee for the worship which They render Thee, so +pure, so brave, so glad, and so acceptable. They may not hinder Thee and +Thou dost work Thy perfect will in them; O give us the wisdom and the +grace to make Thee welcome to our hearts until in us also Thou shalt +work Thy perfect will. So may we find our true use and felicity, and +render unto Thee the praise that is Thy due. And this we ask through +Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. + + CHARLES R. TENNEY. + + +October 19 + + _Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness! + Close bosom friend of the maturing sun; + Conspiring with Him how to load and bless + With fruit the vines that round the thatch-eaves run; + To bend with apples the moss'd cottage trees, + And fill all fruit with ripeness to the core; + To swell the gourd, and plump the hazel-shells + With a sweet kernel; to set to budding more + And still more later flowers for the bees, + Until they think warm days will never cease, + For summer has o'er brimmed their clammy cells._ + + JOHN KEATS. + +Our dear Heavenly Father, Thou hast ever been wooing us by a thousand +influences and voices to Thyself and our souls are ever restless till +they rest in Thy love. The voices of nature everywhere speak to us of +Thy goodness and Thy power and all verdure and blossom and fruitage is +but the answer of the inanimate world to Thy call of life. Shall we do +less than these, O God, when upon us Thou hast stamped Thine own image +and made our being the house beautiful for Thine indwelling! We are Thy +disciples indeed if we bear much fruit and have love one for the other. +Mould us, fashion us, mature us, dear Lord, till the angels, watching at +the gates and on the towers, say we look like Thee. And this we ask in +Jesus' name. Amen. + + GEORGE M. SMILEY. + + +October 20 + + _I pluck an acorn from the greensward, and hold it to my ear and + this is what it says to me: "By and by the birds will come and nest + in me. By and by I will furnish shade for the cattle. By and by I + will provide warmth for the home in the pleasant fire. By and by I + will be shelter from the storm to those who have gone under the + roof. By and by I will be the strong ribs of the great vessel, and + the tempest will beat against me in vain, while I carry men across + the Atlantic." "O foolish little acorn, wilt thou be all this?" I + ask. And the acorn answers, "Yes, God and I."_ + + LYMAN ABBOTT. + +Almighty God, we believe that Thou art present and controlling in all +the operations of Nature. Not a sparrow falls to the ground without Thy +notice. All life is of Thy giving. Plants, animals, and worlds alike are +governed by Thy laws. We realize in some measure Thy Omnipotence. We +should fear to draw near to Thee if Thou hadst not revealed Thyself to +us in Jesus Christ as a God of love. Thou, O God, art love. We believe +that Thou wilt give to all Thy children eternal life. As from the acorn +comes the oak, clothed in royal beauty, seemingly life from death, so +from what seems death shall our immortal spirits rise to dwell forever +with Thee. We adore Thee, O God. We love Thee for Thy goodness and Thy +love shown to us. Be gracious unto us and bless us for our Saviour's +sake. Amen. + + CYRUS NORTHROP. + + +October 21 + + _I suppose every day of earth, with its hundred thousand deaths and + something more of births,--with its loves and hates, its triumphs + and defeats, its pangs and blisses, has more of humanity in it than + all the books that were ever written, put together. I believe the + flowers growing at this moment send up more fragrance to heaven + than was ever exhaled from all the essences ever distilled._ + + OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. + +Our Heavenly Father, Thou art in all nature and in all human history. If +we really know our world and our fellowmen and ourselves, we shall know +Thee. As we enter upon the work of this new day, we pray that we may +feel Thy presence with us. Thou art never far away from us; we cannot +get away from our world, and we cannot fly from ourselves. Thou art with +Thy world and Thou art with Thy children. We ask not so much for Thy +presence, as for the consciousness of Thy presence. May we learn to know +Thee in the world about us and in the secret places of our own hearts. +Then shall all life be fragrant and beautiful and this day somewhat +divine. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +October 22 + + _The best thing to take people out of their own worries, is to go + to work and find out how other folk's worries are getting on._ + + MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. + + _Socrates thought that if all our misfortunes were laid in one + common heap, whence every one must take an equal portion, most + persons would be content to take their own and depart._ + + PLUTARCH. + +Our Father in Heaven, the light of this new day is the light of Thy +countenance, therefore we rejoice. In Thy sunshine our souls find +strength for the burdens Thou dost give, and even through Thy shadows we +reach the peace which passeth understanding. Yet Thou art comfort to us +that we may comfort the troubled and the distressed with the comfort +wherewith we ourselves are comforted. Set Thou our feet in the paths of +service. Make us, we pray Thee, glad ministers of Thy mercy, and in +binding up the wounds of others may we have balm for our own. By this +day, may we grow in patience and power, and in the knowledge of Thy +love. Amen. + + LEON O. WILLIAMS. + + +October 23 + + _Life has a thousand pages--love and scorn, + Hope and adventure, poverty and sin, + Despair and glory, loneliness forlorn, + Age, sorrow, exile, all are writ therein--; + And on each page, however stern or sad, + Are words which gleam upon the crabbed scroll, + Revealing words, that make our spirits glad, + And well are worth the study of the soul. + We may not lightly shrink from any leaf, + For on it may be writ the word we need. + God turns the page--whatever joy or grief + He opens for us, let us wisely read._ + + PRISCILLA LEONARD. + +Fill our souls with Thy light, O God, that we may ever hope. Give us the +poise of endless progress. Make our souls free and joyous as the bird's +wing. Give us the courage of our convictions in all places, under all +conditions. Make us brave. Take away all forms of fear, whether of man, +of nature, or of Thee, and make us feel that each is our mighty friend, +but Thou supreme over all, faithful each moment to our being, in ten +thousand sweet, true, tender, life-giving, life-sustaining ministries. +Teach us to look for Thee everywhere, and to see Thy order, and Thy +beauty, facing all things Heavenward. May our ideals be perfect +holiness, perfect strength, perfect love, perfect service. Make our +faith great in the higher estate, where our faculties, only dawning +here, shall rise in a glorious morning of the soul. Amen. + + A. N. ALCOTT. + + +October 24 + + _Suppose a kindly word of mine + Could lift the clouds and bring sunshine; + Am I my brother's keeper?_ + + _Suppose the weary worker toils, + For scanty pittance delves and moils; + Am I my brother's keeper?_ + + _Suppose in penury and fear + My neighbor see the wolf draw near; + Am I my brother's keeper?_ + + * * * * * + + _Perhaps--who knows?--perhaps I'm not! + Self-centred soul! hast thou forgot + The marvel of our common lot, + The mystic tie that binds us all + Who dwell on this terrestrial ball, + Stupendous hope of time and song, + The bourne for which the ages long? + How hard our hearts must seem to Thee, + Exhaustless Fount of Charity!_ + + HENRY NEHEMIAH DODGE. + +We thank Thee, our Father, for the light of a new day and for its +opportunities of service for Thee and Thy great Cause. We rejoice that +Thou dost not only set duty clearly before us, but also dost grant power +to perform it. May we realize not only that we are "our brother's +keeper," and that our lives are helpful or harmful every day, but may we +be increasingly grateful that we may every day by Thy grace be +fellow-helpers and workers together with God. Amen. + + WILLIAM FULL. + + +October 25 + + _It is of no use to dispute about the Indian Summer. I never found + two people who could agree as to the time when it ought to be here, + or upon a month and day when it should be decidedly too late to + look for it. It keeps coming. For my part, I think we get it now + and then, little by little, as "the Kingdom" comes. That every + soft, warm, mellow, hazy, golden day, like each fair, fragrant + life, is a part and out-crop of it; though weeks of gale and frost, + or ages of cruel worldliness and miserable sin may lie between._ + + MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. + +Vouchsafe Thy blessing, O Heavenly Father, upon this morning service of +thanksgiving and prayer. We thank Thee that each year Thou sendest +seed-time and harvest, to us Thy children. For the beauty and bounty of +the Autumn, for all Thy material gifts, for friends and home, and for +our precious Christian faith, we are deeply grateful to Thee. Give us +the attentive mind, the receptive heart, that we may see Thy providence +and love in every event of life. Banish fear and doubt from our minds. +Guard us from all temptations. May the Spirit of Christ abide in our +hearts, and enable us to glorify Thee in all our works and lives. In its +power and glory may Thy Kingdom come, and remain upon the earth forever. +Amen. + + ELBERT W. WHITNEY. + + +October 26 + + _Pleasant smiles, gentle tones, cheery greetings, tempers sweet + under a headache or a business care or the children's noise; the + ready bubbling over of thoughtfulness for one another, and the + habits of smiling, greeting, forbearing, thinking in these ways; it + is these above all else which makes one's home "a building of God; + a house not made with hands," these that we hear in the song of + "Home, Sweet Home."_ + + WILLIAM C. GANNETT. + +Almighty Father, the light of another day breaks in upon our lives, to +reveal to us unfinished tasks and unsought duties. The sorrows and joys +of the coming day are hidden from our sight, enswathed in the folded +hours of toil. But Thou knowest all our heedless ways and tempers that +chafe from impatience; Thou seest the measure of our needs and dost +consider our desires. Give unto us the consciousness of Thine +everlasting arms about us. And then when the shadows lengthen and the +twilight hushes the hum of toil, our spirits shall know no weariness and +bear no stain. Give ear unto this our morning prayer, O Thou Light of +Light. Amen. + + FRANCIS TREADWAY CLAYTON. + + +October 27 + + _How can people help loving things, when they are full of life + magnetism, that even a finger touch gets the thrill of?_ + + _It is not the sunshine, or any other tangible why, that accounts + for the pleasantness of old house corners. It is the pureness and + the pleasantness that have clustered there; the very walls have + drunk these in._ + + MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. + +Our Heavenly Father, wilt Thou keep our home life bright and sweet? +Guard our lips from harsh words, our lives from shame. If quarrels +arise, help us to be the first to forgive and forget. In the hour of +temptation may we say no, because of a father's splendid honor, and a +mother's pure face! In the time of trial or seeming defeat may we be +brave and of good cheer! Teach us that home is made dear, not by its +furnishings, but by the memories and inspirations of the hours we spent +under its roof with those who loved us and were always tender and true! +Bind us together in the bonds of love and peace, and keep us always +united and a happy family. Amen. + + HENRY R. ROSE. + + +October 28 + + _There are loyal hearts, there are spirits brave, + There are souls that are pure and true; + Then give to the world the best you have, + And the best shall come back to you._ + + _Give love, and love to your heart will flow, + A strength in your utmost need; + Have faith, and a score of hearts will show + Their faith in your word and deed._ + + _For life is the mirror of king and slave, + 'Tis just what you are and do; + Then give to the world the best you have, + And the best will come back to you._ + + MADELINE S. BRIDGES. + +Almighty Father, we come to Thee for a Father's blessing, that this day +we may go about Thy work and enter into Thy business, alive in Thy +spirit and strong in Thy strength. We ask this for ourselves, each of +us, that we may be knit to each other as brothers with brothers, to bear +each other's burdens. We ask it most of all for home, that in home-life +there always may be joy and peace and love, each seeking another's good, +brothers and sisters with sisters and brothers, fathers and mothers with +their children, that home may be the place of Thy holy spirit and the +home of joy. Today we would come and go as Thy messengers, in our own +lives welcoming the Father, who is with us seeking Thy strength and +asking for Thy good will. Bless us today with Thy blessing. Amen. + + _Edward Everett Hale._ + + +October 29 + + _We are never more discontented with others than when we are + discontented with ourselves. The consciousness of wrongdoing makes + us irritable, and our heart in its cunning quarrels with what is + outside it, in order that it may deafen the clamor within._ + + _In the conduct of life, habits count for more than maxims, because + habit is a living maxim, become flesh and instinct. To reform one's + maxims is nothing; it is but to change the title of the book. To + learn new habits is everything, for it is to reach the substance of + life. Life is but a tissue of habits._ + + HENRI-FREDERIC AMIEL. + +Our Heavenly Father, we pray that our daily life may take on that +dignity and calmness and tranquillity which are the possession of those +who truly and inwardly trust and confide in the eternal Goodness, who +believe that our days are ordered by a Higher Power, and that through +all there runs a thread,--a chain of Infinite Love, binding us all to +Thee and to one common universal good and blessedness. In this faith, +keep us, O Holy Father, and, filled with love to Thee and to our +neighbor, may we pursue our way and do our work, anxious only to have +Thee in all our thoughts. In Thy name, Amen. + + JOSHUA YOUNG. + + +October 30 + + _Thus pass away the generations of men!--thus perish the records of + the glory of nations! Yet, when every emanation of the human mind + has faded, when in the storms of time the monuments of man's + creative art are scattered to the dust, an ever new life springs + from the bosom of the earth. Unceasingly prolific Nature unfolds + her germs, regardless though sinful man, ever at war with himself, + tramples beneath his foot the ripening fruit!_ + + ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT. + +Infinite Spirit, Thou buildest the monuments of Thy power in the rocks +of the mountains, but Thou buildest the monuments of Thy love in the +hearts of men. When the bodies and the works of men have perished the +rocks will abide and the trees will bear their fruit. But when the rocks +have crumbled the souls of men will abide. If that which is seen is +temporal, we thank Thee O Lord, that the unseen is eternal. We are awed +by the majesty of the seas and the mountains. But we are inspired by the +immortality of the soul. Heavenly Father, may we live today as if made +for eternity. So may our lives be dignified and glorified. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +October 31 + + _God doth not need + Either man's work, or His own gifts, who best + Bear His mild yoke, they serve Him best; His state + Is kingly; thousands at His bidding speed + And post o'er land and ocean without rest:-- + They also serve who only stand and wait._ + + JOHN MILTON. + +O God, who didst give to Thy servant light in his blindness and music in +the heart, grant that I may this day be swift to run on all errands of +mercy and truth, or patient to wait Thy will, if so Thou commandest. +Make me as unswerving as are the stars above me, as trustful as the +birds who sing at dawn, and fear not what the day may bring. May I be +strong to resist all evil, and cleave to that which is good. May I be +conscious that in the loneliest hour Thou art near, and in the most +solitary place there is the communion of saints. May Thy power flow +through human weakness, and may all the trials and testings of life lead +me constantly to the Rock that is higher than I. So may Thy will be done +in my life as it is in heaven. Amen. + + W. H. P. FAUNCE. + + +November 1 + + _I saw the long line of the vacant shore + The sea-weed and the shells upon the sand, + And the brown rocks left bare on every hand, + As if the ebbing tide would flow no more, + Then heard I, more distinctly than before, + The ocean breathe and its great breast expand, + And hurrying came on the defenceless land + The insurgent waters with tumultuous roar. + All thought and feeling and desire, I said, + Love, laughter, and the exultant joy of song + Have ebbed from me forever! Suddenly o'er me + They swept again from their deep ocean bed + And in a tumult of delight, and strong + As youth, and beautiful as youth, upbore me._ + + HENRY W. LONGFELLOW. + +We give Thee hearty thanks, most Holy Father that Thou hast not +delivered up our souls to the emptiness and longing of despair. In Thy +mercy and wisdom hast Thou ordained that we may taste ever afresh the +deepest joys of life and ever anew feel the thrill of its loftiest +inspirations. Like the sea is our life for its largeness; like the sea +in its ebbs and flows. O Father of Life, flood our souls this day with a +tide from the ocean of Thine own love lifting our lives to highest +service and bliss. And Thine shall be all the honor and praise. Amen. + + E. W. LUTTERMAN. + + +November 2 + + _The bird, let loose in Eastern skies, + When hastening fondly home, + Ne'er stoops to earth her wing, nor flies + Where idle warblers roam. + But high she shoots through air and light + Above all low delay, + Where nothing earthly bounds her flight, + Nor shadow dims her way._ + + _So grant me, God, from every care, + And stain of passion free, + Aloft, through Virtue's purer air, + To hold my course to Thee! + No sin to cloud--no lure to stay + My soul, as home she springs;-- + Thy sunshine on her joyful way, + Thy freedom in her wings!_ + + THOMAS MOORE. + +O God, who art both life and truth, the Author of our being and the +light which lighteneth all, the source of our soul's life, and the goal +towards which we strive, as cleaves the lark at dawn the heavenly blue, +so may our souls be freed from sense, whose music siren-like would seek +to draw us from our flight to Thee. As that same bird rejoices in the +morning light, and sounds its note of praise, so may our souls be tuned +to heavenly symphonies, and may the sunshine of Thy love, resplendent in +secure omnipotence, give glad assurance to our hearts, nor cease to +guide our way, until we reach that central orb, our soul's true home, +and find eternal rest in Thee. Amen. + + ALBERT B. SHIELDS. + + +November 3 + + _There is ever a song somewhere, my dear; + There is ever a something sings alway: + There's the song of the lark when the skies are clear + And the song of the thrush when the skies are gray, + The sunshine showers across the grain, + And the bluebird trills in the orchard tree; + And in and out, when the eaves drip rain, + The swallows art twittering ceaselessly._ + + _There is ever a song somewhere, my dear, + Be the skies above or dark or fair, + There is ever a song that our hearts may hear-- + There is ever a song somewhere, my dear-- + There is ever a song somewhere!_ + + JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY. + +O God, the Giver of all harmony and joy, before whom the morning stars +sang together, by Whom the voice of the sparrow is heard, we thank Thee +that we may serve Thee with gladness and come before Thy presence with +singing. Put Thy new song into our mouths and help us to render the +acceptable praises of the upright and pure in heart. Help us to love all +Thy creatures and to delight in the songs Thou hast taught them. +Especially enable us to bless our brother men, to hush their sighing and +swell their singing, to strengthen the chorus of joy and praise with +which Thou hast ordained the world shall be filled. We ask with +confidence because we know Thy love. Amen. + + J. FRANCIS COOPER. + + +November 4 + + _The snow has capped yon distant hill, + At morn the running brook was still, + From driven herds the clouds that rise + Are like the smoke of sacrifice; + Ere long the frozen sod shall mark + The ploughshare, changed to stubborn rock. + The brawling stream shall soon be done-- + Sing, little bird! the frosts have come._ + + OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. + +Almighty God, our Heavenly Father, Thou art the giver of all good gifts, +and all that comes from Thy hand is good. May we accept Thy providences. +In the dreary days of winter as in the pleasant summer season, Thy +mercies are new every morning and fresh every evening. Even when our +hearts are chilled with grief and disappointment and failure, we would +still put our trust in the eternal goodness. Help us, O God, to be truly +grateful for everything that comes to us. In the winter of the soul may +we learn the lessons of patience and resignation. Thus, with faith +triumphant and with hearts full of gladness may we sing our songs of +praise to Thy holy name forever and forever. Amen. + + ARTHUR W. GROSE. + + +November 5 + + _It is will alone that matters! + Will alone that mars or makes, + Will, that no distraction scatters, + And that no resistance breaks._ + + HENRIK IBSEN. + + _No man can choose what coming hours may bring + To him of need, of joy, of suffering; + But what his soul shall bring unto each hour + To meet its challenge--this is in his power._ + + PRISCILLA LEONARD. + +Infinite God, Who perceivest the destinies of worlds and of men; Who +bringest to pass all that we enjoy, and Who permittest all that we +suffer; may I this day be enabled to recognize Thy Fatherly goodness, in +the morning mists, even as in the noonday brightness! Should sorrow +becloud my pathway, should disappointment make its keen thrusts, should +temptation lay its attractive coils, may my soul be made aware of Thy +consoling presence, enjoy the compensations of Thy grace, assert the +potency of the wisdom from above! And mayest Thou reveal Thyself! So may +be fanned to a flame the divine spark in my heart, whereby all are made +partakers of the victory with and through our Lord, Jesus Christ. Amen. + + ERNEST W. BURCH. + + +November 6 + + _"Yes," she answered, lifting her eyes to his face; "I, too, have + felt it, Hermas, this burden, this need, this unsatisfied longing. + I think I know what it means. It is gratitude;--the language of the + heart, the music of happiness. There is no perfect joy without + gratitude. But we have never learned it, and the want of it + troubles us. It is like being dumb with a heart full of love. We + must find the word for it, and say it together. Then we shall be + perfectly joined in perfect joy."_ + + HENRY VAN DYKE. + +Almighty God, forbid that we shall ever be satisfied with the rich gifts +of Thy land, or until the gifts have brought us, appreciative, humble, +grateful, to Thee, the giver of them all. Help us to see that this is +their high office, disregarding which the noblest of them becomes a +stumbling block, accepting which the humblest of them becomes a means of +grace and of surpassing gladness. Move us, then, to such acceptance of +Thy favors as shall bring us to Thee rejoicing, that we may need less +the experiences which shall bring us to Thee weeping. And hallow all our +human loves by lifting us to a common sense and acknowledgment of Thy +transcendent love, as shown especially in Jesus Christ. Amen. + + CHARLES R. TENNEY. + + +November 7 + + _"What is the real good?" + I asked, in musing mood. + "Order," said the court; + "Knowledge," said the school, + "Truth," said the wise man, + "Pleasure," said the fool, + "Love," said the maiden, + "Beauty," said the page, + "Freedom," said the dreamer, + "Home," said the sage; + "Fame," said the soldier, + "Equity," said the seer. + Spake my heart full sadly-- + "The answer is not here." + Then within my bosom + Softly this I heard: + "Each heart holds the secret; + Kindness is the word."_ + + JOHN BOYLE O'REILLY. + +Oh, Father, we are in a world of wonder and of bountiful promise. We +scarcely know which to choose. Of all life's quests we would seek the +highest and best. Thou art a Lord gracious and kind. Grace is but +another name for kindness. It is this which is pronounced as a +benediction Sabbath after Sabbath, and for which we lift up our faces +morning after morning, to receive. Crown us with Thy loving kindness and +tender mercies. But not for ourselves alone! As we meet the weary and +heavy burdened in life, inspire us to show them the kindness of our God. +As freely as we have received, so freely may we impart. Amen. + + W. G. RICHARDSON. + + +November 8 + + _What a blessed thing it is that we can forget! Today's troubles + look large, but a week hence they will be forgotten and buried out + of sight. Says one writer, "If you should keep a book and daily put + down the things that worry you, and see what becomes of them, it + would be a benefit to you." The art of forgetting is a blessed art, + but the art of overlooking is quite as important._ + + AUGHEY. + +Lord, we know not the path our feet must walk today; yet we are not +anxious. "Thy word will be a lamp to our feet," and what we need to know +Thou wilt reveal just when we need to know it. Help us not to forget +that we are under our Father's care; that He knoweth our frame, that He +will not unduly burden us; that He will not "suffer us to be tempted +beyond that which we are able to bear;" that He will make "all things +work together for good to them that love Him." So may this day be one of +peace to us, and through us may some troubled heart find rest. Amen. + + GEORGE SKENE + + +November 9 + + _Learn to laugh. A good laugh is better than medicine. Learn to + tell a story. A well told story is as welcome as a sunbeam in a + sick room. Learn to keep your own troubles to yourself. The world + is too busy to care for your ills and sorrows. Learn to do + something for others. Even if you are a bedridden invalid there is + always something that you can do to make others happier, and that + is the surest way to attain happiness for yourself._ + + THE BEACON. + +Father of all mankind, may the spirit of cheer mark this new day. May +the smile of Thy benediction rest upon us, and give courage to meet the +duty and bear the burden. Help us each moment to know something of the +highest joy of serving Thee. May that joy never be absent from our pain. +May it consecrate every pleasure. May it lift us nearer the stature of +the Christ, that the light of our life may shed its beams on the pathway +of other lives,--a light in their darkness, an assurance of sympathy in +affliction, an inspiration to do and endure. So may all gladly go to +their appointed duty, one with Thee, even as Christ, whose followers we +aim to be. Amen. + + CHARLES T. BILLINGS. + + +November 10 + + _Take whatever is good in man, and argue that God is not only that, + but infinitely better than that. In fashioning your conception of + God, make it as resplendent in justice, as august in truth, as + noble and pure in love, as radiant and wondrous in pity, as + enduring as you please. Never be afraid that you will overdraw the + divine character. God is never better in your thought or + imagination than He is in Himself._ + + HENRY WARD BEECHER. + +Almighty God, we thank Thee for the great thoughts and high hopes which +lie deep in human hearts. We thank Thee for the visions of the perfect +life which lead us ever toward the light. We long to follow those who +lead the way to Thee. By faith and love may we be bound to them. As +voices of Thy spirit may they be to us. Bless us this day with hunger +for righteousness. Feed us with the bread of life. Endow us with high +hopes and determined wills, that we may be faithful. Amen. + + FREDERICK W. BETTS. + + +November 11 + + _There was a man who smiled + Because the day was bright; + Because he slept at night; + Because God gave him sight + To gaze upon his child! + Because his little one + Could leap and laugh and run; + Because the distant sun + Smiled on the earth, he smiled._ + + _He toiled and still was glad + Because the air was free; + Because he loved, and she + That claimed his love and he + Shared all the joys they had! + Because the grasses grew; + Because the sweet wind blew; + Because that he could hew + And hammer he was glad._ + + S. E. KISER. + +O Lord, who dost bountifully provide for us the necessities and comforts +of life, and makest us glad in the enjoyment of the same; grant, we +beseech Thee, that we may so use these, Thy gifts, that in all our +blessings we find Thee to be the source and author of all our +happiness--of our health and prosperity, of our joys and hopes, and of +the holy relations of friends and family; lest, resting content in that +which is less, we fail to attain to that which is greatest--truly to +know Thee and to love Thee, which is the very end of our being and the +consummation of all bliss; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. + + WILLIAM H. P. HATCH. + + +November 12 + + _I have seen + A curious child, who dwelt upon a tract + Of inland ground, applying to his ear + The convolutions of a smooth-lipped shell; + To which, in silence hushed, his very soul + Listened intensely; and his countenance soon + Brightened with joy; for from within were heard + Murmurings, whereby the monitor expressed + Mysterious union with its native sea: + Even such a shell the universe itself + Is to the ear of Faith; and there are times, + I doubt not, when to you it doth impart + Authentic tidings of invisible things; + Of ebb and flow, and ever-during power; + And central peace, subsisting at the heart + Of endless agitation._ + + WILLIAM WORDSWORTH. + +Father of Lights, with whom can be no variation or shadow that is cast +by turning, give to me the joy of the love that endures as seeing Him +who is invisible; that where Thy speaking voice is, there may be my +listening ear; that above the waste and clamor of the tasks that exhaust +me in bodily strength, there may be supplied a power of will to do the +right and a fellowship with all righteous men everywhere. Help me to +remember that Life consists not in the abundance of the things I +possess. Let my faith see through doubt, endure through temptation and +privation, and cleave steadfastly to God, remembering that Love +believing is Love triumphing. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. + + ADOLPH A. BERLE. + + +November 13 + + _When Jeremy Taylor had lost all--when his house had been plundered + and his family driven out of doors, and all his worldly estate had + been sequestered--he could still write thus: "I am fallen into the + hands of publicans and sequesterers, and they have taken all from + me. What now? Let me look about me. They have left me the sun and + moon, a loving wife and many friends to pity me, and some to + relieve me; and I can still discourse, and, unless I list, they + have not taken away my merry countenance and my cheerful spirit and + a good conscience; they have still left me the providence of God, + and all the promises of the Gospel, and my religion, and my hopes + of heaven, and my charity to them, too; and still I sleep and + digest, I eat and drink, I read and meditate--and he that hath so + many causes of joy and so great, is very much in love with sorrow + and peevishness, who leaves all these pleasures, and chooses to sit + down upon his little handful of thorns."_ + + SAMUEL SMILES. + +Father of all mercies, Who Thyself art more to us than the utmost of Thy +gifts; we thank Thee for those blessings of our life which come like the +manna fresh every morning and pass with the passing day. Still more we +thank Thee for the blessings which abide, like a pillar of cloud by day +and fire by night, witness of Thine own presence ever continuing with +us. Give us grace and wisdom so to receive the ministries of this new +day, that by means of them we may enter more fully into the Divine +friendship and the everlasting habitations. Whatever may fail us, grant +us such hold upon Thyself as shall be the having of all things, through +Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. + + JAMES FAIRBAIRN BRODIE. + + +November 14 + + _Native goodness is unconscious, asks not to be recognized; + But its baser affectation is a thing to be despised. + Only when the man is loyal to himself shall he be prized._ + + * * * * * + + _If I live the life He gave me, God will turn it to His use._ + + BAYARD TAYLOR. + + _Live not without a friend! the Alpine rock must own + Its mossy grace or else be nothing but a stone._ + + _Live not without a God! however low or high, + In every house should be a window to the sky._ + + WILLIAM WETMORE STORY. + +Eternal God, who hast neither dawn nor evening, yet sendest us alternate +mercies of the darkness and the day; there is no light but Thine, +without, within. As Thou liftest the curtain of night from our abodes, +take also the veil from our hearts. Rise with Thy morning upon our +souls: quicken all our labor and our prayer: and though all else +declines, let the noontide of Thy grace and peace remain. May we walk, +while it is yet day, in the steps of Him who, with fewest hours, +finished Thy divinest work. Amen. + + JAMES MARTINEAU. + + +November 15 + + _I found it difficult the other night to cross a muddy street + because of the deep shadow cast by my own body which stood between + the electric light and the walk over which I was crossing. Not a + little of the time, I fear, do we stand in our own spiritual light, + making our own pathway black with ugly shadows cast by our own + personality, while the light flashes all around us. If you would + avoid the shadows walk toward the electric light in the heavens and + let its beams fall in your face._ + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + +Our pathway, Heavenly Father, is dark and lone. Sad and sinister +suggestions born in our own hearts blind our souls and stay our steps. +But with Thee there is no night. Light is Thy shadow. Unto Thee, +therefore, we would turn in the sweet surrender of the spirit. In our +darkness which leadeth unto death show us the way. Walking by Thy +guidance, intent upon Thy will, may we rest with unforgetting memory +upon Thy sevenfold promise of life. Give us the gift of the morning +star. With Thee by our side may this new day bring us a new vision of +duty, a larger girding for life, the nobler hope, the truth that makes +men free. And unto Thee be thanks, praise and glory. + + Amen. + + FRANKLIN HAMILTON. + + +November 16 + + _The first principle of Christianity is to forget one's self. When + Wilberforce was straining every energy to get his bill for the + emancipation of slaves passed, a lady once said to him, "Mr. + Wilberforce, I'm afraid you are so busy about those slaves that you + are neglecting your own soul." "True, madam," he said; "I had quite + forgotten that I have one." That remark contains one of the deepest + truths of Christianity._ + + HENRY DRUMMOND. + +O Lord, give us the mind of the Master! We would look on our fellow +creatures as he looked on them. We would be free from all taint of envy, +jealousy, and sin. We would have his single eye and his hearing ear. We +know that Thou art in man, for it is Thy spirit which quickens within +him every pure thought and moves to every unselfish deed. Give us a due +sense of humility and appreciation that we may enter into the secret +thought and understand the sincere purpose of all the toilers of this +present world! Thus would we abide forever with the saints, the seers, +and the singers, of all climes and ages! + Amen. + + EBEN H. CHAPIN. + + +November 17 + + _Do we not know that more than half our trouble is borrowed? Just + suppose that we could get rid of all unnecessary and previous + terror; just suppose that we could be sure of final victory in + every conflict, and final emergence out of every shadow into + brighter day; how our hearts would be lightened! How much more + bravely we should work and fight and march forward! This is the + courage to which we are entitled and which we may find in the + thought that God is with us everywhere._ + + HENRY VAN DYKE. + +O Gracious and Infinite Presence, Thou art the peace that dwells in the +shade of night and the brightness and hope of this new day. We are +gratefully conscious of the loving strength that stands ever ready to +help. The call of the day's work is in our ears and the courage manfully +to labor is in our hearts. Strengthen us, Father, when weariness of toil +dissolves our noble resolutions; calm us when petty vexations distract +from our holy purposes. May midday find us refreshed by Thy grace and +eventide solaced by Thy benediction. And now as we go forth to duty let +our hearts know no terror but the fear of wrong-doing and our minds no +anxiety but the earnest desire to toil fruitfully. Grant that we may see +beneath life's busy activities the great good Thou art working out among +men and to this end learn to labor and to wait. Amen. + + CHARLES R. EAST. + + +November 18 + + _There is no thing we cannot overcome. + Say not thy evil instinct is inherited, + Or that some trait inborn makes thy whole life forlorn, + And calls down punishment that is not merited. + Back of thy parents and grandparents lies + The Great Eternal Will. That, too, is thine + Inheritance, strong, beautiful, divine, + Sure lever of success, for him who tries. + Pry up thy faults with this great lever, Will, + However deeply bedded in propensity, + However firmly set, I tell thee firmer yet + Is that strange power that comes from truth's immensity!_ + + ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. + +O Eternal Goodness, help us now, as another morning dawns, to readjust +ourselves to Thy purpose of blessing. We believe that the most certain, +significant and permanent fact of the universe is that Thou art our +Father. Thus we are the heirs of Thy sufficient grace. There is no curse +of ancestry for him who knows Thee as His parent. There is no weakness +of the flesh for him who, through touch with Thee, becomes strong in the +spirit. Help us all through this day to deny the chain of every earthly +folly and sin, to stand erect and free as becometh children of the +Infinite. So, finding and using the wisdom of our Master, who, most of +all men, gained success, may we overcome the world. Amen. + + GEORGE E. HUNTLEY. + + +November 19 + + _All things seem rushing straight into the dark-- + But the dark still is God._ + + GEORGE MACDONALD. + + _Love is and was my king and lord, + And will be, tho' as yet I keep + Within the court on earth, and sleep + Encompass'd by his faithful guard,_ + + _And here at times a sentinel + Who moves about from place to place, + And whispers to the worlds of space, + In the deep night, that all is well._ + + ALFRED TENNYSON. + +O God, our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee that Thou hast led us into +this new day. We thank Thee also, that, though its experiences are +untried and its issues involved in uncertainty, we are unafraid, full +indeed of glad expectation, because we know Thee as our King and Lord. +Help us in obedience and love to keep close to Thee, so that, if ever +quick darkness shall come upon us, we may still be undisturbed because +of Thy presence, to whom the darkness and the light are both alike. This +we ask in the name of Him who loved us and gave Himself for us. Amen. + + CHARLES R. TENNEY. + + +November 20 + + _Let thy day be to thy night + A letter of good tidings. Let thy praise + Go up as birds go up, that when they wake + Shake off the dew and soar; so take joy home + And make a place in thy heart for her, + And give her time to grow and cherish her; + Then will she come and oft will sing to thee + When thou art working in the furrows; ay, + Or weeding in the sacred hour of dawn. + It is a comely fashion to be glad-- + Joy is the grace we say to God._ + + JEAN INGELOW. + +Our Father, we thank Thee for the blessings of night. In this new +morning hour, we pray for stout hearts and strong to meet the day's +work. May we go forth with a song on our lips and the joy of renewed +youth in our souls. Amid the tumults of the day enable us to hear Thy +becalming voice. Then, though in dreariest labor, we shall have glad +hearts, though pressed by dullest cares, we shall keep uncrushed hopes, +though distracted by earth's din, we shall hear heaven's music. Abide +with us, Benign Spirit. Inspire us to do our duty, and to learn that +therein, alone, may true joy be found. Amen. + + GEORGE RUNYON LONGBRAKE. + + +November 21 + + _The weather-prophet tells us of an approaching storm. It comes + according to the programme. We admire the accuracy of the + prediction, and congratulate ourselves that we have such a good + meteorological service. But when, perchance, a bright crystalline + piece of weather arrives instead of the foretold tempest, do we not + feel a secret sense of pleasure which goes beyond our mere comfort + in the sunshine? The whole affair is not as easy as a sum in simple + addition, after all,--at least not with our present knowledge. It + is a good joke on the Weather Bureau. "Aha, Old Probabilities!" we + say, "You don't know it all yet; there are still some chances to be + taken!"_ + + HENRY VAN DYKE. + +Our Heavenly Father, Thou hast covered us with the darkness and we have +slept under the shadow of Thy care. Thou hast opened for us again the +gates of the morning, and refreshed, we rise to praise Thee. The memory +of mercies past inspires our hope for today. Reveal Thyself to us by Thy +spirit and through Thy word; make nature to minister to us in the +heavens above and the fields below; let every experience lead us toward +Thyself. Help us to see Thy face in those about us, and honor Thee in +loving, helpful ministry to them. Bring to us today a fresh and larger +sense of Thy presence, forgiveness, and care, and so the assurance that +all things are working together for our good. In the name of Jesus +Christ our Saviour. Amen. + + SAMUEL H. GREENE. + + +November 22 + + "_I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills._" + + PSALM cxxi. 1. + + _Peace is the message of the hills, + A peace that broods + Upon their mighty heads, and fills + Their forest solitudes; + The leaping mountain waterfalls, + As each unto the other calls, + Blend in a murmuring noise + Whose silver rushing music stills + The pretty play of human moods, + And bids the calmed soul rejoice + In the deep secrets of the woods, + The majesty of Nature's voice._ + + PRISCILLA LEONARD. + +Dear God and Father of us all, Who maketh Thy sun to rise out of the sea +and tintest the hills with the rosy promise of the day, we look up when +we awake and seeing the light upon the mountains know that the day is +coming to fill the world with beauty and glory. With thankful hearts we +praise Thee, and pray that to us may be granted that loftiness of +nature, that stability of character, that repose of mind and heart and +life that is prefigured to us in the natural world. Grant that we may +each become mediums of Thy love and hope to all who may chance to look +up to us for guidance along the shores of life's tempestuous ocean. May +the spirit of the Eternal find such expression in us and through us, +this day, that all who come within the radiance of our joy may come into +the consciousness of the joy of the Eternal. Amen. + + THOMAS J. HORNER. + + +November 23 + + _And he said unto me, O Daniel, a man greatly beloved, understand + the words that I speak unto thee, and stand upright: for unto thee + am I now sent, and when he had spoken this word unto me, I stood + trembling. Then said he unto me, Fear not, Daniel, for from the + first day that thou didst set thy heart to understand and to + chasten thyself before thy God, thy words were heard, and I am come + for thy words.... Then there came again and touched me one like the + appearance of a man and he strengthened me and said, O man, greatly + beloved, fear not: peace be unto thee, be strong, yea, be strong._ + + BOOK OF DANIEL. + +Our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee that Thou art not far from us at any +time. We have only to look up reverently and to our imagination Thou art +standing near. We have only to wait in the darkness of the night to feel +Thy presence with us. We have only to listen at any time to hear Thy +voice. Thou deignest to stop and speak to us when we are in trouble, to +guide our footsteps when we have lost our way, to renew our courage when +we have become disheartened. O Lord, speak to us this day, saying to us, +as unto him of old, "Peace be unto thee, be strong, yea, be strong." +Amen. + + George L. Perin. + + +November 24 + + _Let star-wheels and angel-wings, with their holy winnowings, + Keep beside you all the way: + Lest in passion you should dash, with a blind and heavy crash. + Up against the thick-bossed shield of God's judgment in the field._ + + ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING. + + _Be diligent and faithful, patient and hopeful, one and all of you; + and may we all know, at all times, that verily the Eternal rules + above us, and that nothing finally wrong has happened or can + happen._ + + THOMAS CARLYLE. + +Almighty God, our Father in heaven, the giver of every good and perfect +gift, teach us, we pray Thee, how to do Thy will on earth as it is done +in heaven, as the goal of our lives. Send down exceeding, abundantly +above all that we can ask or think, the blessed influences of Thy Holy +Spirit, to transform each heart and all the world into the kingdom of +heaven. Give us the Morning Star of Hope. Feed us from the Tree of Life. +Teach us Thy redeeming love. Grant that we may have some part with Thee +in the redemption of the world, and be permitted to join with the whole +glad earth in the chorus, "Blessing and honor and glory and power be +unto Him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb forever and +ever." Amen. + + F. N. PELOUBET. + + +November 25 + + _What is the crown of the whole of life lived faithfully here? It + is not a crown of gold or gems in another life; it is simply more + life; a broader use of power, a healthier capacity, a larger + usefulness. You are faithful unto death, through the + misapprehensions and imperfections and absence of appreciation or + gratitude in this preparatory world, and then there is offered to + you inevitably and legitimately the crown of a larger, more + serviceable, more effective life._ + + FRANCIS G. PEABODY. + +To Thee, O Author of our lives, we speak thanksgiving and gratitude for +Thy gifts of love and trust. Help us to bring them into full exercise +this day. By them may we know the experience of burdens made light and +yokes made easy. With them, let us realize that we are effective workers +with Thee. Because of them, show us how all our tasks are transformed to +divine endeavors. Through them, set free all other of our highest +impulses. So, O God, shall we know the fulness of life, we and all our +loved ones. So shall we see doubt change to faith and blindness to +vision. So shall our influence through word and work be the ministry of +hope and of joy to any disconsolate, and to any who are a weak guide to +the source of strength. For newness of life, for all the fruits of the +spirit, whereby the heart is ever young and in joyous companionship with +the Christ, for all this we pray now and ever. Amen. + + WILLIAM H. MCGLAUCHLIN. + + +November 26 + + _The child frightened in his play runs to seek his mother. She + takes him upon her lap and presses his head to her bosom; and with + tenderest words of love, she looks down upon him and smooths his + hair and kisses his cheek, and wipes away his tears. Then, in a low + and gentle voice, she sings some sweet descant, some lullaby of + love; and the fear fades out from his face, and a smile of + satisfaction plays over it, and at length his eyes close, and he + sleeps in the deep depths and delights of peace. God Almighty is + the mother and the soul is the tired child; and He folds it in His + arms and dispels its fears, and lulls it to repose, saying "Sleep, + my darling, sleep! It is I who watch thee."_ + + HENRY WARD BEECHER. + +Blessed Master! we thank Thee that every tired and weary child may find +rest in the bosom of the Father. Each morning brings with it new cares, +new duties, new privileges, new responsibilities; for all these, we need +Thy protecting care, and pray for Thy divine guidance. When wearied and +burdened with the cares of daily life, wilt Thou help us to flee to Thee +as the frightened child flees to the loving mother; and wilt Thou +encircle us with Thine arms of love, and whisper in our ears words of +comfort and cheer and of forgiveness. Teach us to trust Thee in the +morning, to walk with Thee through the day, and to commit our ways to +Thee at all times. Amen. + + SAMUEL M. DICK. + + +November 27 + + _Certainly there never was a busier life than that of Jesus,--His + whole great mission bounded by three hurried years. Yet in the + morning He says to His friends: "Let us come apart and rest + awhile;" and again when the evening is come He is in the mountain + apart, alone. That is the place of worship in a world of work. It + is not a refuge from duty, or a shirking of it; it is the renewal + of power to meet one's duty and do it. The work of life is not to + be well done with a hot, feverish, overwhelmed, and burdened mind; + it is to be well done with a mind calmed and fortified by moments + of withdrawal; and it is to be best done by one who from time to + time pulls himself up in his eager life and permits God to speak to + his soul._ + + FRANCIS G. PEABODY. + +O Spirit of grace, who withholdest Thy blessing from none, take from us +the tediousness and anxiety of a selfish mind, the unfruitfulness of +cold affections, the weakness of an inconstant will. With the simplicity +of a great purpose, the quiet of a meek temper, and the power of a +well-ordered soul, may we pass through the toils and watches of our +pilgrimage; grateful for all that may render the burden of duty light; +and even in strong trouble rejoicing to be deemed worthy of the severer +service of Thy will. Amen. + + JAMES MARTINEAU. + + +November 28 + + _God gives to every man + The virtue, temper, understanding, taste, + That lifts him into life, and lets him fall + Just in the niche he was ordain'd to fill._ + + WILLIAM COWPER. + + _Did you ever hear of a man who had striven all his life faithfully + and singly toward an object, and in no measure obtained it? If a + man constantly aspires, is he not elevated? Did ever a man try + heroism, magnanimity, truth, sincerity, and find that there was no + advantage in them--that it was a vain endeavor?_ + + HENRY DAVID THOREAU. + +Holy Father, help us to be thankful that no life is beneath Thy notice. +If a sparrow cannot fall without Thee, how much more is Thine eye fixed +upon Thy child. Teach us, O Lord, that there is a divine purpose in each +life. But may we not try to choose this without Thee. Show us how to +wait upon Thee in holy silence till Thou dost make it known to us. O +Master, say to us: "As the Father hath sent me into the world even so +have I sent you." When we have found at the Cross our little mission, O +sustain us and help us to keep it steadily in view--let us share Thy +holy enthusiasm when Thou didst say: "My meat is to do the will of Him +that sent me and to finish His work." O Father, when we are depressed +whisper to us: "Your labor is not in vain in the Lord." May our mission +transform us into the likeness of Jesus, and may we say with Him at +evening: "I have glorified Thee on the earth; I have finished the work +Thou gavest me to do." Amen. + + L. P. JOHNSON. + + +November 29 + + _Though wrong may win, its victory is brief, + The tides of good at first no passage find; + Each surge breaks, shattered, on the sullen reef,-- + Yet still the infinite ocean comes behind._ + + _The road of Right has neither turn nor bend, + It stretches straight unto the highest goal; + Hard, long, and lonely?--yes, yet never soul + Can lose its way thereon, nor miss the end._ + + PRISCILLA LEONARD. + +We thank Thee, Heavenly Father, that awaking, we are conscious that Thou +art near. Walk with us, through the untried path of this day's duty and +service. We rejoice that Thou art in Thy world. Within its striving is +Thy calm. Around its restlessness is Thy rest. Thy purpose fashions its +achievements; Thy love shapes its future. Help us to see it with clearer +vision, to hold it fast with firmer faith. When wrong seems to triumph, +may we know that it is already perishing, and hold hard by truth and +love and faith. Give us grace to spend this day as becometh children of +God in honor, in courtesy, in sympathy, in confident trust. When the way +seems long and lonely, straight and steep, help us to sing as we march +forward, since Thou art with us, Who hast said, "I will never leave thee +nor forsake thee." Amen. + + CHARLES C. P. HILLER. + + +November 30 + + _She was a droll little figure of a girl with a quaint old face, + that showed too early the lines of care and work, and her clothing + betokened a poverty-stricken home. Evidently not much of brightness + had touched her life, but her face always lightened up when she + mentioned her school or her teacher. "Why is it that you love your + teacher so well?" she was asked one day. Her eyes shone and her + lips smiled happily as she replied, "Because she's glad to me!" + What a tribute was that! What an evidence was that of a happy heart + that radiated its gladness! If we cannot bring other offerings of + much value to the children and the poor among us, how blessed are + we if we can bring gladness!_ + + ESTELLE M. HART. + +Almighty God, teach us how to be glad. Put some gladness into our +hearts. Show us where gladness is hidden in our little world about us, +so that we may find it and use it. Give us the wisdom of Jesus, who, +although a Man of Sorrows, yet spake ever of His joy and His peace. We +feel that the secret of things must be gladness, that somehow there is a +covered joy even in what we call our sufferings. Let us find that. Keep +our hearts pure of the soiling of evil desire, for we know that no +gladness can come from the muddy fountains of sin. Let our hands be busy +at some good part of the world's work, for we know that idleness never +went hand in hand with joy. Let our minds be open to acknowledge, love +and obey the truth, for we feel that truth alone can satisfy our hearts. +And let us feel to-day the duty of gladness we owe to our +fellow-creatures. Let us give to them what we would receive from Thee. +Amen. + + FRANK CRANE. + + +December 1 + + _But winter has yet brighter scenes--he boasts + Splendors beyond what gorgeous Summer knows; + Or Autumn with his many fruits, and woods + All flushed with many hues, come when the rains + Have glazed the snow and clothed the trees with ice, + The incrusted surface shall upbear thy steps, + And the broad arching portals of the grove + Welcome thy entering._ + + WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. + +Our Father, we know that Thou wilt commune with us if only we truly seek +Thee; Thou art the Infinite Consciousness and Thou dost include within +Thyself our finite consciousness. We have our life in Thy life. This +morning we would be mindful of Thy presence. The northern groves with +snow-laden, bended branches bid us enter and worship. Thou dost send +forth the rays of Thy sun and touch them aglow with the reflected beauty +of the snow-flake. Thou hast also created us. The flake reflects the +sun, and may we reflect Thee, through living righteously. Help us to do +the right and to forego the wrong. Amen. + + FRED ALBAN WEIL. + + +December 2 + + _"A commonplace life," we say, and we sigh; + But why should we sigh as we say? + The commonplace sun in the commonplace sky + Makes up the commonplace day. + The moon and the stars are commonplace things, + And the flower that blooms and the bird that sings, + But dark were the world and sad our lot + If the flowers failed and the sun shone not; + And God, who studies each separate soul + Out of commonplace lives makes His beautiful whole._ + + SUSAN COOLIDGE. + +Our Infinite Father, we open our hearts to Thee, for where Thou art +heaven is. As the morning sun gives light and life to Earth, so Thou +givest light and life and joy to us. We say Good-morning to Thee, and as +we listen Thy Good-morning comes to us. As it comes we glow and expand +like the opening flower. May this glowing spirit of love be in all we +say and do and think this day, and still continue through all days to +come. When we are vexed and weary with trials and labor, make us to +remember this morning glow of Thy Love that it may renew rest and peace +within us. Help us, O our Father, to enter the beauty of this day and +this life by claiming our heritage as "children of light" and going +forth to fulfil the common duties of the day as "children of God." Amen. + + WALTER DOLE. + + +December 3 + + _No matter! so long as the world is the work of eternal goodness, + and so long as conscience has not deceived us. To give happiness + and to do good, there is our only law, our anchor of salvation, our + beacon light, our reason for existing. All religions may crumble + away; so long as this survives we have still an ideal, and life is + worth living. Nothing can lessen the dignity and value of humanity + so long as the religion of love, of unselfishness and devotion + endures; and none can destroy the altars of this faith for us so + long as we feel ourselves still capable of love._ + + HENRI-FREDERIC AMIEL. + +Our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for a night of peaceful rest, and we +are glad to begin a new day with full assurance of Thy loving care. We +hope for pleasant ways and large success, but Thy wisdom is better than +our wishes and if it is appointed us to meet difficulties or +temptations, we pray for strength to sustain a manly warfare. We have +faith that whatever our condition Thou wilt still provide a way by which +lofty purpose and resolute endeavor may use the circumstances of our +life for a nearer approach to Thee and for service to our fellowmen. To +this end be then the light of our way and the strength of our life, +through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. + + J. SMITH DODGE. + + +December 4 + + _He was a friend to man, and lived in a house by the side of the + road._ + + HOMER. + + _There are hermit souls that live withdrawn + In the peace of their self-content; + There are souls, like stars, that dwell apart, + In a fellow-less firmament; + There are pioneer souls that blaze their paths + Where highways never ran:-- + But let me live by the side of the road + And be a friend to man._ + + _Let me live in a house by the side of the road. + Where the race of men go by-- + The men who are good and the men who are bad, + As good and as bad as I. + I would not sit in the scorner's seat, + Or hurl the cynic's ban:-- + Let me live in a house by the side of the road + And be a friend to man._ + + SAM WALTER FOSS. + +Our Father in Heaven, we come with thanksgiving for the light of another +day and all the blessings which it brings from Thee. May the precious +moments before us be filled with activity. Forgive us if we have been +remiss in seizing our opportunities and so lead us this day that if we +shall be called to Thee, the sweet voice of the Master may greet us +with, "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my +brethren, ye have done it unto Me." In Jesus' name. Amen. + + J. E. CHARLTON. + + +December 5 + + _One old lady kept a sighing; + Said she wasn't young, + Didn't look as sweet's she used to, + Times were all unstrung; + Troubles doubled aches, and favors + Went a flying past, + Wrinkles stung like thorns, and eyesight + Kept a failing fast._ + + _One old lady kept a saying + Life was like the spring, + Brighter blossoms always coming, + Birds around to sing; + Troubles came--and went; she let 'em, + Didn't count the throng. + Thanked the Lord 'most every morning + She'd been young so long!_ + + JESSIE M. SHAW. + +Our Heavenly Father, wilt Thou forgive us for the sighs and tears and +frowns and doubts of yesterday? Especially wilt Thou forgive us for all +that was little and petty and mean? May we begin again today with larger +vision, higher hope and nobler ambition. May there be no sighs for lost +beauty, no grief over faded youth and no lamentation over lost fortune. +Thankful and glad for what we have, may we find our joy in using it for +some high end. So may we conserve the youth of the heart and the light +of the soul. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +December 6 + + _There is never a sky of winter + To the heart that sings alway; + Never a night but hath stars to light, + And dreams of a rosy day._ + + _The world is ever a garden + Red with the bloom of May; + And never a stormy morning + To the heart that sings alway!_ + + FRANK L. STANTON. + +O Thou who art the Love, the Light, and the Life in whom is no discord, +no darkness, no disease nor death; but who art ever radiating sympathy, +vision and health; we give Thee hearty thanks for the consciousness of +Thy abiding presence when we possess a humble and contrite spirit. May +we ever remember that nothing but our own selfishness, pride, and +forgetfulness can break this constant communion with Thee. Open our +hearts just now for the inflow of the divine Love in order that we may +pass it on to others today. Open our eyes today that we may see Thee +everywhere striving against selfishness in the lives of all men. Fill us +with Thy Life today in order that there may go out to others a heavenly +harmony, a song, a symphony, that will dispel discord, darkness and +disease; that will overcome evil with good. Amen. + + E. J. HELMS. + + +December 7 + + _As the bird trims her to the gale, + I trim myself to the storm of time, + I man the rudder, reef the sail, + Obey the voice at eve obeyed at prime; + "Lowly faithful, banish fear, + Right onward drive unharmed; + The port, well worth the cruise, is near, + And every wave is charmed."_ + + RALPH WALDO EMERSON. + +Heavenly Father, keep our faces in the light and upward. Make us +courageous in the storm. Help us to consecrate all our powers against +the contrary winds and listen for the loving voice of Him who walks the +rough waves and comes toward our frail barks. May we never be afraid; +may we know peace and rest and trust. O Saviour, help us to know the +reality of Thy love and friendship, and hear Thee say in the darkest +hour, "All is well." May no storm be too severe, no burden too heavy, no +task too hard. So let us believe and live. Amen. + + CORTLAND MYERS. + + +December 8 + + _Love thyself last: cherish those hearts that hate thee, + Corruption wins not more than honesty. + Still in thy right hand carry gentle peace, + To silence envious tongues. Be just, and fear not: + Let all the ends thou aim'st at be thy country's, + Thy God's, and truth's; then if thou fall'st, O Cromwell, + Thou fall'st a blessed martyr!_ + + SHAKESPEARE. + +Father Almighty, we do trust in Thee, and we ask Thee for everything. +Thou art pleased to give us everything. Thou dost give us the light by +which we see. Thou dost give us this air which we breathe and with which +we speak. Best of all, Thou hast shown us that we are one family of Thy +children, alive in Thy life and strong in Thy strength. Thou dost give +us the water that we drink and the food that we eat. Everything is Thine +while it is ours. Now, Father, we are here to consecrate these gifts to +Thy service, to come and go indeed as Thy children; when we speak, to +speak the word that Thou shalt teach; when we act, to do the thing that +Thou wouldst. Moreover, inspire us with Thine holy spirit, that we may +so come and go in our Father's service, and for the coming of Thy +kingdom in this world, that all men may be one, and may bear one +another's burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ. Amen. + + EDWARD EVERETT HALE. + + +December 9 + + _Each soul, alone unto herself, must bear + The heartache out of which man wins despair + Or hope according to his faculty. + Nathless one thing is certain; who hath known + Truth, beauty, goodness, shining in their sphere, + Shall not be lost through any lesser lure. + On black tempestuous waves he may be thrown; + Yet to the right port shall he surely steer, + And God Himself shall make his doing pure._ + + JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS. + +O God, with the dawn we would lift our grateful hearts to Thee! We know +not what Thou hast in store for us this new day, but we rejoice that we +are in Thy thought, and that we cannot pass beyond the reach of Thy +love. Helpless and weak, we pray for courage to be undaunted by the +uncertainties of life, and that we may meet all its duties with a firm +and tranquil mind. Grant that we may be helpful to all with whom we come +in contact and forbid that we should judge others hastily or +uncharitably. May our minds and hearts be open to the truth, that we may +know and do Thy gracious will. Guided and guarded by Thee, may the day +be full of peace, purity and power. Amen. + + GEORGE M. HOWE. + + +December 10 + + _There was never a song that was sung by thee, + But a sweeter one was meant to be. + There was never a deed that was grandly done, + But a greater was meant by some earnest one. + For the sweetest voice can never impart + The song that trembles within the heart._ + + _And the brain and the hand can never quite do + The thing that the soul has fondly in view. + And hence are the tears and the burdens of pain, + For the shining goals are never to gain + But enough that a God can hear and see + The song and the deed that were meant to be._ + + BENJAMIN R. BULKELEY. + +Almighty God, our Heavenly Father, who hast illumined the morning with +the brightness of Thy life, we rejoice in the potency of the influence +that brings us into communion with Thee. For the blessed revelation of +Thyself, for life and all things that nourish it, for the earth and the +fulness thereof, for daily comforts and mercies and for the Light that +lighteth every man who cometh into the world, we give Thee thanks. We +thank Thee too for the songs that we have sung and for the better songs +that are in our hearts. We thank Thee for every noble deed and also for +the dreams of nobler deeds that men have cherished. O Lord, bless our +work and fill us with aspiration for nobler service. Bless the poor, the +sick, and those that mourn. Hear this our prayer and answer our petition +through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. + + FRANK D. SARGENT. + + +December 11 + + _Love the spot where you are, and the friends God has given you and + be sure to expect everything good of them._ + + JOHN ALBEE. + + _When do we lift each other up? Must we gain a height first or can + we reach up our feebleness together to the Hands that do offer us a + mighty help from on high? Near doing, and near living, and near + loving; these life-particles make the great heaven, as the little + polarized atoms of light, all magnetized one way, make the great + blue in which the stars burn forever._ + + MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. + +No discontent could harass us if we had a deeper faith in Thee and a +broader love for those about us. We praise Thee, therefore, that we may +be rooted and grounded in Christ. And that our little lives may glorify +Him by bringing forth abundant fruit. Thou dost give us the holy +privilege of being co-laborers with Thee in the salvation of needy +humanity. Around us are the countless opportunities for ennobling and +gladdening the lives of those whose courage burns low, or who have never +known the transforming companionship of Christ. We would not forget that +we are debtors to Thee and to that great Host whose love and service has +inspired us. May we be not selfish takers only, but generous givers. May +there be less gloom, fewer shackles, less guilt in the world because we +are mastered by the spirit of Christ. Amen. + + PHILIP L. FRICK. + + +December 12 + + _Have you learned lessons only of those who admired you, and were + tender with you, and stood aside for you?_ + + _Have you not learned great lessons from those who reject you, and + brace themselves against you? or who treat you with contempt, or + dispute the passage with you?_ + + WALT WHITMAN. + +Help us, O God, always to be hopeful; teach us what it means to hope in +Thee, and may we experience the truth of the promise which says: "He +will strengthen your heart that hopes in Him;" but help us not to +indulge in too fond hopes nor to be too easily elated by future dreams. +May we see life clearly as it is and be ready to accept courageously +whatsoever Thou sendest us. Help us to accept all our joys as Thy +blessings; all our duties as Thy commands, and our sorrows as of Thine +appointment, and help us to believe that Thou wilt turn even that which +seems to harm us, into everlasting good and everlasting joy. Amen. + + JOHN F. MEYER. + + +December 13 + + _Life should be a giving birth to the soul, the development of a + higher mode of reality. The animal must be humanized: flesh must be + made spirit; physiological activity must be transmuted into + intellect and conscience, into reason, justice, and generosity, as + the torch is transmuted into light and warmth. The blind, greedy, + selfish nature of man must put on beauty and nobleness. This + heavenly alchemy is what justifies our presence on the earth; it is + our mission and our glory._ + + HENRI-FREDERIC AMIEL. + +Our Father, this world is Thy world, and this day is Thy renewed gift of +opportunity to learn life's lesson more perfectly. We need clearer +insight into Thy designs, that we may loathe every form of selfishness, +and love devotion. Give us to know the Christ more intimately, and in +the strength of His apprehended presence help us to employ this day in +practising the holy principles He taught. Assist us this morning to +have, and throughout this day to keep, such an attitude of glad +co-operation with Him, that work shall be shot through and through with +joy in anticipation of its glorious result. So may this day be to us a +time of real soul expansion; a wooing and a winning of that which is +highest, even a purer, noble character. Amen. + + J. EDWIN LACOUNT. + + +December 14 + + _'Tis the mind that makes the body rich, + And as the sun breaks through the darkest clouds, + So honor peereth in the meanest habit. + What, is the jay more precious than the lark, + Because his feathers are more beautiful? + Or is the adder better than the eel, + Because his painted skin contents the eye?_ + + SHAKESPEARE. + +In this world of mingled good and evil, amid the ceaseless struggle of +the better with the worse, grant unto us our Father, the cheerful +assurance that we are enlisted in the service of the good, bound for the +better, and destined for the best. Reveal to us each day some task that +we can do for Thee, some chance to bear with Christ the burden of +another, some call to take the side of the right against the wrong. Help +us to conquer hardship by patience, despair by hope, fear by courage, +and hate by love; and may we find the peace, the power, the glory of Thy +perfect will and Thy great kingdom reflected and reproduced in our +hearts and lives. Amen. + + WILLIAM DEWITT HYDE. + + +December 15 + + _Call him not old, whose visionary brain + Holds o'er the past its undivided reign, + For him in vain the envious seasons roll + Who bears eternal summer in his soul. + If yet the minstrel's song, the poet's lay, + Spring with her birds, or children at their play, + Or maiden's smile, or heavenly dream of art, + Stir the few life-drops creeping round his heart, + Turn to the record where his years are told,-- + Count his gray hairs,--they cannot make him old!_ + + OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. + +Thou infinite Spirit of Life, in Thy sight, there is no old age. The +step may grow feeble, the hair may whiten, the eye may grow dim, but +each human soul is still Thy child. We gather about the tables of earth, +families of children, some older, some younger, but all young in Thy +sight. We pause for a moment this morning to pray for the spirit of +youth. Let us cherish the power of hoping and of believing. Let us have +that fine quality of the child life which keeps it facing the future +with glad expectancy. Let us not give over our toils till we must. Let +us not relinquish our interest in life till the evening shadows fall, +and even at the last, let us lie down like the child who sleeps with his +hand in the hand of his mother. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +December 16 + + _O toiling bands of mortals! O unwearied feet, travelling we know + not whither! Soon, soon, it seems to you, you must come forth on + some conspicuous hilltop, and but a little way further, against the + setting sun, descry the spires of El Dorado. Little do ye know your + own blessedness; for to travel hopefully is a better thing than to + arrive, and the true success is to labor._ + + ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. + +Our Father, we thank Thee for the work that Thou givest us to do; for +its joy, for its zest, even for its very task and weariness. We would +interpret our labor by the highest good it brings us; through our brave +and cheerful doing Thy heaven of peace is found. We thank Thee for our +diviner hopes, and for the Spirit that would complete them. They light +our days with gladness, and set our feet in large places, and though the +higher hill-tops seem far away, yet meeting our duties faithfully, we do +see them, and looking back we find the places of our departure lying far +below. O blessed tasks! O blessed hopes! That lead us ever to our +Father's love. Amen. + + ALBERT J. COLEMAN. + + +December 17 + + _God speaks to hearts of men in many ways: + Some the red banner of the rising sun, + Spread o'er the snow-clad hills, has taught his praise. + Some the sweet silence when the day is done; + Some, after loveless lives, at length have won + His word in children's hearts and children's gaze; + And some have found him where low rafters ring + To greet the hand that helps, the heart that cheers; + And some in prayer, and some in perfecting + Of watchful toil through unrewarding years; + And some not less are his, who vainly sought + His voice, and with his silence have been taught,-- + Who bore his chains who bade them to be bound, + And at the end in finding not have found._ + + ANONYMOUS. + +O God, all voices of the earth are Thine, even when there is no speech +or language, Thy messages have many ways to reach the listening heart. +Give us this day to hear at least some whisper of Thy grace. If it may +be, open our minds and attune our spirits to receive more than we could +hitherto interpret of the assurances sent to us by elevated goodness and +love. So let us be defended this day against wrong, and do our work in +joy and peace through the knowledge that Thou art with us, our friend +and helper even unto the end. Amen. + + HOWARD N. BROWN. + + +December 18 + + _Did you ever see a schoolboy tumble on the ice without stooping + immediately to re-buckle the strap of his skates? And would not + Ignotus have painted a masterpiece if he could have found good + brushes and a proper canvas? Life's shortcomings would be bitter + indeed if we could not find excuses for them outside of ourselves. + And as for life's successes--well, it is certainly wholesome to + remember how many of them are due to a fortunate position and the + proper tools._ + + HENRY VAN DYKE. + +Our Father, God, help us to begin this new day with the right spirit in +our hearts,--the spirit of love toward Thee and our fellowmen. Help us +to begin the day if possible without mistake. If, in our human weakness +we find that we have not succeeded, that we have erred or gone astray, +help us not to despair, not to be discouraged; help us to know and to +seek and to love the right. Help us never to forget what we owe to Thee, +to our friends, and the beautiful world Thou hast given us. Daily bread +we have, opportunities open, like books on every hand. Greater than all +life's bitter is its sweet. Ever ready is the Master to bless; ever +ready is the spirit to comfort Thy children look up and praise the +Father eternal. Amen. + + RANSOM A. GREENE. + + +December 19 + + _I love Thee, O Son of Man! for Thy strength and Thy sweetness, for + Thy simplicity, Thy courage, Thine infinite tenderness, for Thy + glance which strengthens and pardons us, quickens us and lifts us + up; for all that Thou hast brought us of consolation, of peace and + of warmth of heart. Abide Thou with us! Teach us to see the divine + spark imprisoned in every stone of the highway._ + + CHARLES WAGNER. + +O Lord, our Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for all Thy manifold mercies +to us, for all Thy constant care and watchfulness over us from the +beginning of our lives to this day, for the revelations of Thy presence +in the world about us, in the shining sky, in the earth beneath our +feet, and in the faces of our friends. Bless us, O Lord, this day, with +health and strength and a good courage, and grant that we may show our +gratitude for all Thy goodness not only with our lips but in our lives, +through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. + + GEORGE HODGES. + + +December 20 + + _In every "Oh my Father!" + Slumbers deep a "Here, my child."_ + + THOLUCK. + + _This world, with its wonderful creations, its beauties, and + mysteries may lead a child up to the father's throne, if his heart + and mind are open to it. Fill the heart with goodness and there is + no place for badness. Fill the soul with heaven, and there is no + hell. And this delightful time will come when "God is all and in + all."_ + + ABBIE E. DANFORTH. + +Our Father, who art in heaven; we know that Thou hast been good to us. +We thank Thee for the daily witnesses of Thy love. And we would walk +worthily before Thee. But we are weak. Help us, O Father to see clearly +what Thou would'st have us do! Give us strength. Fill us with Thy +spirit, that all the way we may be pure and patient. Help us to walk +aright. In the name of Jesus Christ. Amen. + + CHARLES H. PUFFER. + + +December 21 + + _Grand is the seen, the light, to me--grand are the sky and stars, + Grand is the earth, and grand are lasting time and space, + And grand their laws, so multiform, puzzling, evolutionary; + But grander far the unseen soul of me, comprehending, endowing all those, + Lighting the light, the sky and stars, delving the earth, sailing + the sea, + (What were all those, indeed, without thee, unseen soul? of what amount + without Thee?) + More evolutionary, vast, puzzling, O my soul! + More multiform far--more lasting Thou than they._ + + WALT WHITMAN. + +O Thou, our Heavenly Father, in spirit we reach out to Thy great spirit. +Quicken within us visions of what things we may do this day, with Thee +at hand, Thy love abounding. Give us vision that we may rise to the +opportunities of our daily task. Let Thy holy spirit bear witness to the +reality of our dreams and aspirations, that we may look not idly upon +our opportunities, but rather that each new opportunity shall challenge +us to nobler effort. O keep us this day full of faith in ourselves and +Thee, each obedient to our vision, until full purposed, winning Thine +approval, we shall accomplish the thing for which Thou sendest us, and +Thine be the glory. Amen. + + JAMES D. TILLINGHAST. + + +December 22 + + _I see the wrong that round me lies, + I feel the guilt within, + With groan and travail cries + I hear the world confess its sin._ + + _Within the maddening maze of things, + And tossed by storm and flood, + To one fixed stake my spirit clings: + I know that God is good._ + + _I know not where his islands lift + Their fronded palms in air; + I only know I cannot drift + Beyond His love and care._ + + JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER. + +O Thou, without whose care a sparrow does not fall, who through the +pathless sky dost guide the bird seeking its distant nest, Thy trusting +children are safe in Thy dear love. We know not the way before us, but +Thou dost know; our feet may stumble in rough paths, but Thou wilt hold +us up. Glad in this confidence, may we begin the day with song and +finish it, whatever may befall us, in the calm assurance that all things +work for good. Give us patience in perplexity, hope amid our fears, and +faith to trust Thy holy will as best. Thus walking in Thy love may we +reach home at last to see our Saviour's face. Amen. + + STEPHEN A. NORTON. + + +December 23 + + _Wouldst make thy life go fair and square? + Thou must not for the past feel care; + Whatever thy loss, thou must not mourn; + Must ever act as if new-born. + What each day wants of thee, that ask; + What each day tells thee, that make thy task; + With pride thine own performance viewing, + With heart to admire another's doing; + Above all, hate no human being, + And all the future leave to the All-Seeing._ + + GOETHE. + +Dear Father, grateful for another new-born day, myself new-born, I greet +Thee! Yesterday and all other yesterdays are in Thy keeping. _This day +is mine!_ For the failures of the past I care not, nor do I mourn the +losses of the days gone by. _Today I am new-born!_ Indeed, aspiring to +Thy comprehensive wisdom, I may see my past and my present as one, and +out of that past I may select--even from failures and losses--such +experiences and lessons as will help me live the present--at least this +one day which is mine!--more nobly, more fully, more usefully, more +beautifully. May I, knowing myself to be Thy Child, respect myself as a +creative spirit able to look upon its own work and to say: "Behold, it +is good!" And above all, I pray: that, to-day and always, I may grow in +grace and loving-kindness,--hating no one, but feeling, thinking, +speaking, acting with good will towards all Thy creatures! _This day is +mine!_ The future I leave to Thee, All-Seeing Father! but feel myself +Thy open-eyed and confident child. Amen. + + CHARLES FLEISCHER. + + +December 24 + + _'Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam, + Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home; + A charm from the skies seems to hallow us there, + Which sought through the world is ne'er met with elsewhere._ + + _An exile from home splendor dazzles in vain, + Oh give me my lowly thatched cottage again; + The birds singing gaily, that came at my call, + Give me them, and that peace of mind dearer than all._ + + J. HOWARD PAYNE. + +O God, our Heavenly Father, we thank thee for the blessings of home; for +the shelter, safety, and hallowed associations of our domestic +habitation; for the sympathy and helpfulness of family relationship. +Help us we pray thee to make ours an ideal household, bright with +cheerfulness, an exemplification of Christian faith and hope. May the +happiness of all be the object of each. To that end help us to be +patient toward one another, kind and forgiving. May we realize by many +beatific experiences that it is better to give than to receive, better +to serve than to be served. May we be disposed, as occasion may arise, +to share, for a season, the comfort and inspiration of our home with +those who are homeless. We thank Thee for the bright assurance that +beyond the fading scenes and transitory experiences of this life, there +is, awaiting us, an eternal abiding place in "a continuing city" whose +maker and builder is God, where there shall be no more parting, and +where the shadows of our present life shall forever flee away. Amen. + + CHARLES CONKLIN. + + +December 25 + + _That ever-vivid scene of Bethlehem.... A father, a mother, and a + child are there. No religion which began like that could ever lose + its character. The first unit of human life, the soul, is there, in + the new-born personality of the childhood. But the second unit of + human life, the family, is just as truly there in the familiar + relation of husband and wife and the sacred, eternal mystery of + motherhood._ + + PHILLIPS BROOKS. + +"Glory to God in the highest, and on earth Peace." We take up the angel +symphony and give it new breath, this gladsome day of days. Thou who +didst send Thy Son in the likeness of a little child, that by His life +of increase in love and beauty and wisdom and power He might give us +courage to begin as children the obedience that alone leads at last to +the measure of the stature of His fulness, accept our unutterable +gratitude for all that gift. And oh, may He be born in us and formed in +us, the hope of glory, that so we may share His peace, His victory, His +exaltation, His union with Thee. Amen. + + C. ELLWOOD NASH. + + +December 26 + + Two are the pathways by which mankind can to virtue mount upward; + If thou shouldst find the one barr'd, open the other will lie. + 'Tis by exertion the Happy obtain her, the Suffering by patience, + Blest is the man whose kind fate guides him along upon both! + + SCHILLER. + +O Thou who hast kept us safely during the unconsciousness of our +slumbering hours, and brought us refreshed to this morning light, +prepare us for the duties of this day by filling us with the assurance +that we are Thine, and that Thou lovest us. Help us to be more like +Thee, to love Thee more and serve Thee better. May we manifest our love +to Thee by our willingness to be of service to our fellowmen. Make us +warm-hearted and true, helpful and kind, reflecting Thy love and doing +Thy will. We are glad to live in this beautiful world. And we pray that +we may be faithful co-laborers with Jesus Christ, in being light, love +and joy to all lives. Amen. + + CHARLES R. TENNEY. + + +December 27 + + _Stronger, and more frequently, comes the temptation to stop + singing, and let discord do its own wild work. But blessed are they + that endure to the end,--singing patiently and sweetly, till all + join in with loving acquiescence, and universal harmony prevails, + without forcing into submission the free discord of a single + voice._ + + _This is the hardest and the bravest task which a true soul has to + perform amid the clashing elements of time. But once has it been + done perfectly unto the end; and that voice--so clear in its + meekness--is heard above all the din of a tumultuous world: one + after another chimes in with its patient sweetness; and, through + infinite discords, the listening soul can perceive that the great + tune is slowly coming into harmony._ + + LYDIA MARIA CHILD. + +Our Father, who art in heaven! We thank Thee that we are permitted to +see the light, engage in the duties and enter into the experiences of +this new day. We thank Thee for the order and harmony of this wonderful +universe; that every force and law and being supports and balances every +other force, law and being; that every life contributes to or may +contribute to the welfare of every other life, and we pray, that each +one of us may come into such relations with Thee, the great harmonizing +soul of things, as to add our little note to the full anthem of +perpetual and adorable praise. In Christ's dear name, we ask and offer +all. Amen. + + A. J. PATTERSON. + + +December 28 + + _It is said that a friend once asked the great composer, Haydn, why + his church music was always so full of gladness. He answered, "I + cannot make it otherwise; I write according to the thoughts I feel; + when I think upon my God, my heart is so full of joy that the notes + dance and leap from my pen; and since God has given me a cheerful + heart, it will be pardoned me that I serve Him with a cheerful + spirit."_ + + _Pardoned? Nay, it will be praised and rewarded. For God looks with + approval and man turns with gratitude to everyone who shows by a + cheerful life that religion is a blessing for this world and the + next._ + + HENRY VAN DYKE. + +Our Father in Heaven, we awake this morning with a sense of thankfulness +for the beauty and glory of Thy creation. We praise Thee that as Thy +children we can be conscious of the kingdom of heaven always about us. +So we pray for that attitude of mind and spirit of soul that will unlock +for us the divine life. Help us to be conscious of Thee in all the +varied experiences of this day. If it shall be a day of burdens, give us +strength to play our part uncomplainingly, if a day of joy to accept it +with true gratitude; and when the shades of night shall call us to our +rest, may our memory of the day bring us peace. Amen. + + EDWARD C. DOWNEY. + + +December 29 + + _Ah, don't be sorrowful, darling, + And don't be sorrowful, pray; + Taking the year together, my dear, + There isn't more night than day._ + + _'Tis rainy weather, my darling; + Time's waves they heavily run; + But taking the year together, my dear, + There isn't more cloud than sun._ + + ALICE CARY. + +We thank Thee, heavenly Father, for the days just as they come. Nor +would we measure the sunshine against the storm as if to test Thy +goodness by some petty form of bookkeeping. Thou presidest over all our +days, and whatever may be the face of nature we trust Thy love. Let us +go forth today, not in critical mood nor despondent mood but in the mood +of high Christian faith, anxious, not to test Thy providence, but ready +to do our own part, taking care to hold our cup of blessing open-side +up; so shall it catch the manna when it falls. Then shall each passing +day be full of blessing. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +December 30 + + _Fades the rose; the year grows old; + The tale is told; + Youth doth depart-- + Only stays the heart._ + + _Ah, no! if stays the heart, + Youth can ne'er depart, + Nor the sweet tale be told-- + Never the rose fade, nor the year grow old._ + + RICHARD WATSON GILDER. + +Dear Father, we thank Thee for the year now coming to its close, and for +all that has blessed us in it. Help us to keep the good wherewith it has +done us good in lasting memory. By the flight of time which its passing +emphasizes move us to earnestness in the labors committed to our hands. +Beyond this help us that we may be undisturbed, remembering that Thou +art our dwelling place, and that we are the children of Thy love and the +sharers of Thy everlastingness. So may we keep the vision of youth, the +vision to which endings are but beginnings, the good leading to the +better, and the best forever more. May Thy blessing be upon all whom we +love and should pray for in this and every day, in Jesus' name. Amen. + + CHARLES R. TENNEY. + + +December 31 + + _Be not afraid, dear friend. What of sickness! What of sorrow! What + of failure! What of misfortune! What of death! Is not this God's + world? Are not you God's child? Go forth into the New Year with + brave heart. When fortune smiles, smile with her. When fortune + frowns, smile the more, and trust in God._ + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + +Our Heavenly Father, we stand upon the utmost verge of the old year. +Forgetting the things that are behind, we stand with our faces looking +earnestly into the future. We do not despise the past, we do not forget +its manifold blessings. We do not forget that Thou hast been with us in +the old year; for all this we would be grateful. With clear vision and +earnestness of purpose, we would stand looking into the future +expectantly, ready for its duties and its responsibilities; yet not +ostentatiously nor with over-confidence, for we know our own +infirmities, our own weaknesses. We would enter upon the New Year with +confidence, not because of our own strength, but because of Thy living +presence. Thou art always with us, Thou art pouring out Thy spirit upon +us. O Lord, let us believe in Thee, and believing, let us have a heart +for any fate. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +Services for Special Days + + _Good Friday_ + _Easter_ + _Thanksgiving Day_ + _Birth of a Baby_ + _Child's Birthday_ + _Father's Birthday_ + _Mother's Birthday_ + _General Birthday_ + + +Good Friday + + _Why dost thou glare so fierce + O Death, as thou wouldst pierce, + With thine uplifted dart, + My sinking heart?_ + + _Yet though men fear thee so + Wherever thou dost go, + And tremble at thy feet, + Thou art a cheat!_ + + _Though men thy pity crave, + Though naught from thee can save, + Thy Master rules above, + Thou servest Love._ + + HENRY NEHEMIAH DODGE. + +O Thou, who didst not spare Thine own Son, but didst deliver Him up for +us all, we cannot ask Thee to withhold us from our Gethsemane nor even +from our Calvary. But when Thou callest us to go down into the gloom or +up to the cross, remember, O God, that we are dust. Might we so dwell +with Thee in Thy secret place, as to abide under Thy shadow! There, +sheltered and unafraid, we should sustain the rod as eager for its +chastening stroke, praying only for wisdom to learn its lesson and +acquire its discipline. With the picture of the crucified Savior before +us, we only cry this day as He taught us, Thy will be done. Amen. + + C. ELLWOOD NASH. + + +Easter + + _See, in that rock-hewn garden sepulchre, + The Holy One of God, despised and slain, + With nail-torn hands and feet, and spear-pierced side, + His gentle brow by mocking thorns defaced; + See where He lies, obedient unto death. + Into that pallid face the glow of life + Begins to steal, while silent and in awe + The heavenly watchers stand. Now they with haste + Unwind the scented wrappings from His form + That fill the place with rich aromas rare, + Perfume of spicery and sweet spikenard's breath + Lingering since Love her alabastron broke, + And with her tresses wiped these tear-bathed feet. + And then, their joyful faces all aglow + Like flashing sunbeams, quickly by a touch + They roll away the stone with jarring shock, + As if an earthquake passed, and sitting there + Behold their Lord go forth, Death's Conqueror!_ + + HENRY NEHEMIAH DODGE. + +O Thou Eternal One, who gatherest our fleeting moments into Thy +permanence, when we draw close to Thee the terrors of change and +vicissitude pass away, and a sense of the stability and security of all +that is good brings us peace. We rejoice to know through Thy gospel that +"life is ever lord of death." "Thou didst not suffer Thy Holy One to see +corruption," and we trust that because He lives we shall live also. O +grant that, believing in Him, we may not see death save as a door to +more abounding life, and so realize our privilege daily to be risen with +Him in the newness and power of an endless life. Amen. + + C. ELLWOOD NASH. + + +Thanksgiving + + _Make a joyful noise unto the Lord, all ye lands._ + + _Serve the Lord with gladness: come before His presence with + singing._ + + _Know ye that the Lord He is God; it is He that hath made us, and + not we ourselves; we are His people, and the sheep of His pasture._ + + _Enter into His gates with thanksgiving, and into His courts with + praise: be thankful unto Him, and bless His name._ + + _For the Lord is good; His mercy is everlasting; and His truth + endureth to all generations._ + + PSALM 100. + +For days of health, for nights of quiet sleep; for seasons of bounty and +of beauty, for all earth's contributions to our need through this past +year: Good Lord, we thank Thee. For our country's shelter; for our +homes; for the joy of faces, and the joy of hearts that love: for the +power of great examples; for holy ones who lead us in the ways of life +and love: for our powers of growth; for longings to be better and do +more; for Ideals that ever rise above our real: for opportunities well +used; for opportunities unused, and even those misused: Good Lord, we +humbly thank Thee! For our temptations, and for any victory over sins +that close beset us; for the gladness that abides with loyalty and the +peace of the return: for the blessedness of service and the power to fit +ourselves to others' needs: for our necessities to work; for burdens, +pain, and disappointments, means of growth; for sorrow; for death: for +all that brings us nearer to each other, nearer to ourselves, near to +Thee; for Life: We thank Thee, O our Father! + + WILLIAM C. GANNETT. + + +Birth of a Baby + + _Where did you come from, baby dear? + Out of the everywhere into the here._ + + _Where did you get your eyes so blue? + Out of the sky as I came through._ + + _What makes the light in them sparkle and spin? + Some of the starry spikes left in._ + + _Where did you get that little tear? + I found it waiting when I got here._ + + _What makes your forehead so smooth and high? + A soft hand stroked it as I went by._ + + _What makes your cheek like a warm white rose? + Something better than anyone knows._ + + _Whence that three-cornered smile of bliss? + Three angels gave me at once a kiss._ + + _Where did you get those arms and hands? + Love made itself into hooks and bands._ + + _Feet, whence did you come, you darling things? + From the same box as the cherub's wings._ + + _How did they all just come to be you? + God thought about me, and so I grew._ + + _But how did you come to us, you dear? + God thought of You, and so I am here._ + + GEORGE MACDONALD + +Fresh from the Gates of Heaven, our Father, this dear child has come, +opening in our hearts springs of new and deeper affection. We thank Thee +for this life whose coming has filled our lives with sunshine. Teach us +how to live that we may guide it aright, so that as the years pass more +and more sunlight shall be radiated. Even as Thine angels kissed the +sweet rosebud lips and left a smile thereon, so may we kiss away the +tears of life. Heavenly Father, we consecrate this child to Thy service. +We pray that the ears may learn to listen for Thy voice, speaking in +truth and purity. May the tiny hands be ever ready to do a service of +love and may the feet be swift to do Thy bidding. Tenderly guide this +precious child, for it needs Thy guidance, and safely guard it through +all the years, lest it go astray. This we ask in the name of Him who +took little children in His arms and blessed them, saying--"Suffer +little children to come unto me, and forbid them not, for of such is the +kingdom of Heaven." Amen. + + FLORENCE H. PERIN. + + +A Child's Birthday + + _A dreary place would be this earth, + Were there no little people in it: + The song of life would lose its mirth, + Were there no children to begin it:_ + + _No little forms, like buds to grow, + And make the admiring heart surrender: + No little hands on breast and brow, + To keep the thrilling love-chords tender._ + + _The sterner souls would grow more stern, + Unfeeling nature more inhuman, + And man to stoic coldness turn, + And woman would be less than woman._ + + _Life's song, indeed, would lose its charm, + Were there no babies to begin it; + A doleful place this world would be, + Were there no little people in it._ + + JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER. + +Our dear Heavenly Father, Thou lookest upon us all as Thy +children,--whether our hair be flaxen or brown or white with age. We +thank Thee today for the children of our own household, for our +children, and all the children, and especially do we thank Thee for the +one whose birthday we celebrate here to-day. May Thy blessing be upon +him (her), may the skies be bright over his (her) head,--may the birds +sing to him (her). May the flowers blossom around his (her) pathway. +Thro' all the journey of this life let him (her) have the guidance of +Thy Father hand. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +A Father's Birthday + + _The boy enjoyed this kind of a father at the time, and later he + came to understand, with a grateful heart, that there is no richer + inheritance in all the treasury of unearned blessings. For, after + all, the love, the patience, the kindly wisdom of a grown man who + can enter into the perplexities and turbulent impulses of a boy's + heart, and give him cheerful companionship, and lead him on by free + and joyful ways to know and choose the things that are pure and + lovely and of good report, make as fair an image as we can find of + that loving, patient Wisdom which must be above us all if any good + is to come out of our childish race._ + + HENRY VAN DYKE. + +By Thy very name, our Father, Thou hast ennobled and sanctified the +office of parenthood and attracted to it our respect and love. Thou hast +commanded us to honor father and mother, that our days may be +lengthened. Assured thus of Thy approval, O God, we call upon Thee to +hallow our joy and gratitude on this anniversary day. We thank Thee for +him whom we honor as "Father in the flesh" and pray Thee to grant him +yet many days with health and strength to minister and to be ministered +unto, to grow in grace and in favor with God and man, and to taste the +sweet tributes of love and the rewards of good deeds finely done. Amen. + + C. ELLWOOD NASH. + + +A Mother's Birthday + + _Blessings on the hand of woman! + Angels guard her strength and grace; + In the cottage, palace, hovel,-- + O! no matter where the place. + Would that never storms assailed it, + Rainbows ever gently curled; + For the hand that rocks the cradle + Is the hand that rules the world._ + + _Blessings on the hand of woman! + Fathers, sons and daughters cry; + And the sacred song is mingled + With the worship in the sky,-- + Mingles where no tempest darkens, + Rainbows evermore are curled; + For the hand that rocks the cradle + Is the hand that rules the world._ + + JOHN GRAY. + +Heavenly Father, Thou plantest anew Thine own love in the hearts of Thy +children and so multipliest Thyself on the earth. We thank Thee today +for the manifold incarnation of Thyself in the hearts of all true +mothers. We have known the magic charm of mother love and it relates us +anew to Thee. Here we celebrate the birthday of one who has honored us +and blessed us by a sacred ministry. We thank Thee, our Father, for all +the sweet memories of the past, for all the joy of the present relation +with her, and for the hope that these sacred associations may long +continue. Wilt Thou bless her whose birthday we honor here. Crown her +with long life and happy days and the sweet consciousness of having +ministered in love. Amen. + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + + +General Birthday + + _Birthdays, what are they? One will say they are mileposts on the + highway of life, marking the distance already traveled and + suggesting what yet remains of the journey. Another looking into + the deeper meaning of the years will suggest that they are memorial + tablets recording the service of a passing life. But no matter + under what figure you think of them, the coming into this world of + a human life with all the magic powers of thought and love and + faith and service is a thing of such transcendent moment, as to + make it well worth while to mark the passing of the years._ + + GEORGE L. PERIN. + +Father of all, it is Thou who hast made us and given us all things +richly to enjoy; we thank Thee, therefore, for the birthday to which we +have come. We thank Thee for the physical life, and all that makes it +glad; for the power of intellect, and all the wealth it feeds upon; for +love, and all the forms of love which answer to it; for faith which +looks on Thee and heaven; for service, the exercise and opportunity of +every gift and grace. Help us to be faithful that our felicity may be +secure in Thee, and that we may ever recall the day of our birth with +rejoicing. This we ask in Jesus' name. Amen. + + CHARLES R. TENNEY. + + + + + * * * * * + + + + +Transcriber's note: + +Minor typographical errors and inconsistencies have been corrected +without comment. Unmatched quotation marks were left as they were +in the original. + +page 76, March 14: "And grass in the green fields" changed to "field". + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OPTIMIST'S GOOD MORNING*** + + +******* This file should be named 39129.txt or 39129.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/9/1/2/39129 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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