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would not use a family trunk, but took a large cedar chest of her own to pack the clothes in.

While they were busily occupied with these preparations, Jane received a note from her aunt, saying, that she advised her to secure some small articles which would never be missed some of "the spoons, table-linen, her mother's ivory work-box," &c., &c. The note concluded-" As I have undertaken the charge of you for the present, it is but right you should take my advice. There is no doubt my brother's creditors have cheated him a hundred-fold the amount of these things; for, poor man! with all his faults, he was so generous, any body could take him in; besides, though these things might help to pay the expense I must be at in keeping you, they will be a mere nothing divided among so many creditors. I should be the last, child, to advise to any thing unlawful."

"Poor woman!" said Mary, to whom Jane had handed the note, and then checking the expression of her disgust at what to her upright mind seemed plain dishonesty-she merely added, "we'll keep on the sure side, Jane; clean hands make light hearts."

The next morning arrived, and Mary arose before the dawn, in order to remove Jane early, and save her the pain of witnessing the preparations for the vendue. Jane understood her kind friend's design, and silently acquiesced in it, for she had too much good sense to expose herself to any unnecessary suffering. But when every thing was in readiness, and the moment of departure arrived, she shrunk back from Mary's offered arm, and sinking into a chair, yielded involuntarily to the torrent of her feelings. She looked around upon the room and its furniture as if they were her friends.

It has been said by one, who well understands the myste

ries of feeling, that objects which are silent every where else, have a voice in the home of our childhood. Jane looked for the last time at the bed, where she had often sported about her mother, and rejoiced in her tender caresses-at the curtains, stamped with illustrations of the Jewish history, which had often employed and wearied her ingenuity in comprehending their similitudes-at the footstool on which she had sat beside her mother-and the old family clock,

"Whose stroke 'twas heaven to hear,

When soft it spoke a promised pleasure near."

Her eye turned to the glass, which now sent back her woebegone image, and she thought of the time, but a little while. past, when elated with that "promised pleasure near," she had there surveyed her form arrayed in her prettiest dress,now, the rainbow tints had faded into the dark cloud.

She rose and walked to the open window, about which she had trained a beautiful honey-suckle. The sun had just risen, and the dew-drops on its leaves sparkled in his rays. Oh, Mary!" said she, "even my honey-suckle seems to weep for me."

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A robin had built its nest on the vine; and often as she sat watching her sleeping mother, she had been cheered with its sprightly note, and maternal care of its young. She looked to the nest-the birds had flown;-"They too," she exclaimed, "have gone from our home."

"No, Jane," replied Mary; "they have been provided with another home; and He who careth for them, will care much more for you."

Mary might have quoted (but she was not addicted to any profane works) the beautiful language of a native poet

"He who from zone to zone

Guides through the boundless sky their certain flight,

In the long way that you must trace alone,

Will guide your steps aright."

"We shall not," she said, "be at your aunt's in time for breakfast; here, tie on your hat, you will need all your strength and courage, and you must not waste any on flowers

and birds."

Jane obeyed the wise admonition of her friend; and with faltering steps, and without allowing herself time to look again at any thing, hastily passed through the little courtyard in front of their house.

The morning was clear and bright; and stimulated by the pure air, and nerved by the counsels Mary suggested as they walked along, Jane entered her new home with a manner that indicated the struggle of her self-respect with her timidity.

Perhaps her timidity, appealing to Mrs. Wilson's love of authority, produced a softer feeling than she had before shown to Jane; or perhaps (for scarcely any nature is quite hardened), the forlornness of the child awakened a transient sentiment of compassion,-she took her hand, and told her she was welcome. The children stared at her, as if they had never seen her before, but Jane's down-cast eye, a little clouded by the gathering tears, saved her from feeling the gaze of their vulgar curiosity.

Jane, in entering the family of Mrs. Wilson, was introduced to as new a scene as if she had been transported to a foreign country.

Mrs. Wilson's character might have been originally cast in the same mould with Mr. Elton's, but circumstances had given it a different modification. She had married early in

life a man, who, not having energy enough for the exercise of authority, was weak and vain, tenacious of the semblance, and easily cozened by the shadow, while his wife retained the substance. Mrs. Wilson, without having the pride of her nature at all subdued, became artful and trickish; she was sordid and ostentatious; a careful fellow-worker with her husband in the acquisition of their property, she secured to herself all the power and reputation of its outlay. Whenever a contribution was levied for an Education or Tract Society, for Foreign Missions, the Cherokees, or Osages,-Mrs. Wilson accompanied her donation, which on the whole was quite handsome, with a remark, that what she did give, she gave with a willing heart; that women could not command much money, for it was the duty of wives to submit themselves to their husbands. After Mrs. Wilson became sole mistress of her estate, the simple and credulous, who remembered her professions, wondered her gifts were not enlarged with her liberty. But Mrs. Wilson would say that the widow was the prey of the wicked, and that her duty to her children prevented her indulging her generous feelings towards those pious objects which lay nearest her heart.

Mrs. Wilson had fancied herself one of the subjects of an awakening at an early period of her life; had passed through the ordeal of a church-examination with great credit, having depicted in glowing colors the opposition of her natural heart to the decrees, and her subsequent joy in the doctrine of election. She thus assumed the form of godliness without feeling its power. We fear that in those times of excitement, during which many pass from indifference to holiness, and many are converted from sin to righteousness, there are also many who, like Mrs. Wilson, delude themselves and others. with vain forms of words, and professions of faith

Mrs. Wilson was often heard to denounce those who insisted on the necessity of good works, as Pharisees;-she was thankful, she said, that she should not presume to appear before her Judge with any of the "filthy rags of her own righteousness;"-it would be easy getting to heaven if the work in any way depended on ourselves;-any body could "deal justly, love mercy, and walk humbly." How easy it is, we leave to those to determine who have sought to adjust their lives by this divine rule.

Mrs. Wilson rejected the name of the Pharisee; but the proud, oppressive, bitter spirit of the Jewish bigot was manifest in the complacency with which she regarded her own faith, and the illiberality she cherished towards every person, of every denomination, who did not believe what she believed, and act according to her rule of right. As might be expected, her family was regulated according to "the letter," but the "spirit that giveth life," was not there. (Religion was the ostensible object of every domestic arrangement; but you might look in vain for the peace and good will which a voice from heaven proclaimed to be the objects of the mission of our Lord./

Mrs. Wilson's children produced such fruits as might be expected from her culture. The timid among them had recourse to constant evasion, and to the meanest artifices to hide the violation of laws which they hated; and the bolder were engaged in a continual conflict with the mother, in which rebellion often trampled on authority.

Jane had been gently led in the bands of love. She had been taught even more by the example than the precepts of her mother.

She had seen her mother bear with meekness the asperity

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