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Show 162 TUE UD"EI\TY DELL· II. hast Thou been to me, 0 Friend beloved ! So As I have gaze d up on thy daily course, Alike by thi.S wor ld's fear or love unmoved, How have I marvc 11 e d at its gentle force. Th cheerful constancy ba s been the source Whenyc e Hope and H e alin g flowed ; before thy face Sorrow an d Want have smiled, and even Remorse beard thy tale of God's forgiving graco. HaNs o thought of stati.o n, co1 o r' cl ime ' or creed, h ked thy noble thought or generous deed, E~c• R Like God's, thy love enclosed tho Human ace. 0 bo 1. \ mm. o, by thy example taught, Reso I ves 1' 0r h"Ighcr effort, holier thought, As Offering meet upon thy Grave to place. Weymouth, Mass. 1'AUPERISM A:-l"D Sf,AVEJtY. 1G3 }Pauperism anh .51uucr!!. liY 0. ll. l ' ROTUINOHAll, OrrANOE of opinion implies change of heart. Modes of thought only reveal moral dispositions. A man cannot see right, judge right, or reason rigltt, until l10 has come to feel right. Hence to alter the chn.rnctcr of a person's argument, you must convert his soul. This truth has been painfully illustruted in Anti-Slavery experience. Arguments have been repeatedly met and answered, beaten down, annihilated, and yet their shapes are seen stalking abroad among us, as composedly and complacently as if their title to existence had |