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Tin: BAPTIST BANNER.
BY JAS. N. ELLS Y CO.
VOL. IV.
She
DEVOTED TO RELIGION AND LITERATURE,
Ib published every Saturday, at Atlanta, Georgia, at the
subscription price of three dollars per year.
JAMES N. ELLS & CO.,
Proprietors.
Jas. N. Ells. S. D. Niles. A. K. Seago.
Steam Press of Franklin Printing House —J. J. Toon A Co.
MISCELLANY.
Little Gerty.
A STORY FOR THE NEW YEAR
It wr s only a small rent in the white
apron, but poor Gerty was sadly frightened.
Her mother had been very angry when she
tore her cloak at school, and threatened to
punish her if anything of the kind occurred
again. So now, with fear and -trembling,
the child kept one hand carefully over the
rent, while her head was busy studying
how she could best explain the accident to
her mother. Presently, however, for some
service, both hands were required, and then,
notwithstanding Gerty’s precautions, sharp
eyes spied the tiny triangular tear, and a
voice no milder than the eyes pronounced
“ Careless child.”
Then followed an awful pause, while the
iron woman, standing there in her inflexible
sternness, eyed t he shrinking child, who was
struggling hard to keep down the rising
tears. Iler mother would be still m >re dis
pleased if she cried, so she fought bravely
against it, but before she could speak the
decree came.
“Go directly to your room. You need
not come down again to night.”
“ But, mother ”
“Not one word, Gertrude.”
And the child crept silently up stairs to
her own apartment.
The chamber was chilly and dark, but
Gertrude cared nothing for this. Better
both cold and darkness, than the frowning,
freezing presence she had just left. But her
punishment had been unmerited, and feeling
this most bitterly, the sensitive nature re
belled against the injustice. So now she
threw herself upon the low bed, wetting
its pillows with her tears, while the little
chafing, sorrowing spirit found vent in con
vulsive. sobs and choking words.
“1 wasn’t to blame. Tom was passing
with wood, and he tore. it. \V hy couldn’t
mother let me toll her just, that? She
doesn’t love me—nobody loves me now.—
O, why did God make my own mamma
die ?
Ah, why, poor child? Other sobbing
voices than yours, all over this weeping
world, and through all ages, have sent up
that same, weary cry to the throne of God.
Piercing the cloud and the darkness, it has
reached the ear of the Eternal, and one day,
you and 1 and they will know why, hut not
now here.
It was a beautiful home. The soft light
lay upon the rich carpets and velvet cush
ions, and upon the walls were hung costly
pictures —pictures, gazing at which you
seemed standing far away upon the vine clad
hills of Italy, and pictures of faces whose
dark eyes haunted your dreams for days.—
Here you saw an exquisite statuette, and
there an antique vase,and everywheresome
thing to study or admire. Yonder, through
partly-opened doors, you had a glimpse of
a well-filled conservatory, and the air was
heavy with the perfumes of tropical plants.
Yes, it was a beautiful home, and she bad
loved it, the low-voiced, gentle woman who
had come hither as a bride, and who, only
two years, had been borne out from it to a
longer and darker abode.
Six months had passed since the second
marriage. The present Mrs. Allen was a
model woman —at least, so her fnewds said,
and so she thought. A woman who did |
everything systematically, and who gave
thanks daily that she was not as other wo-1
men were, or subject to like failings with {
them. If that ingredient, termed tender- '
ness, had ever formed one of the component I
parts of her nature, she mint have done away
with it years ago, and now stood a woman
no more susceptible to gentle influences
than is an iceberg of the Northern sea to
the warming influences of the stars. She
placed the whole game of life according to
a code of laws, every article of which was
as unalterable as a decree of the Medes and
Persians. Nobody ever knew Mrs. Allen
to be lute to dinner. She never said can’t
tor cannot, or made use of any other abbre
viated English. She never put on her gloves
in the street, or omitted her daily exercise.
In slant, she was the feminine embodiment
of So all the world looked at Ger-
ty. and said. “How fortunate a child has so
excellent a step-mother.” Fortunate ’ —
Certainly. Wasn’t her hair always parted
exactly m the middle and brushed so smooth
Iv back ? Wasn’t her hat always put on
with the most rectangular propriety, and
tied in an even bow ? Didn t she always
sit with her hands folded so like a lady,
while other mothers’ daughters were romp
ing about and trailing their hats by the
ribbons through the dust ’ Os course she
did. The care which she had from her
mother was so wonderful. Yes, but my
good friend, if your child ask bread, w ill
you give her a stone 1 And if she plead
A BEBWMMJS &K» iMSSABI £®WB3PAS > EB.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, JANUARY 10, 1863.
for your love, do you imagine that any
amount of attention to her physical needs
can satisfy a soul framed of God to feed
upon kind looks and fond words?
God pity the woman whose heart the
wear and tear of life have indurated, until
they have left there no soft spot for a lov
ing nature to impress itself upon ; and God
pity the child whose earnest, craving spirit
comes in contact with such a woman only ,
to be frozen by her influence.
This was the New Year’s eve, and Gerty,
from her solitary room, could hear the re ,
peated closing of the great hall-door, each |
time announcing a new arrival; for Mrs.
Allen received company to-night, and a gay
company it was. ;
“ Where is Gerty?” asked the father. ;
I thought best for her to retire at her ;
usual hour,” was the reply, and the busy .
host thought no more of his child.
Meanwhile, the little one had cried until
the fountains were dry, and the feverish ,
cheeks were sore; so she curled herself up ,
by the low window, and looked out into i
the night. Away up in the dark-blue Heav
en shine the thousand stars, while the snow
is white and glistening upon the lawn and
meadow, and afar on the outlying kills.
Gerty remembers the starry nights of long
ago, when there was some one. to fold gen
tle arms about her, and whisperingly lavish
on her a thousand pct names ; and bitterly,
how bitterly God knows, the young heart'
feels that she has no one to love her. Papa
is kind, but he is away so much, and then,
since this new mother came, he doesn’t no
tice her as much as he once did.
Suddenly the child starts up from her old
seat, and with parted lips and dilated eyes,
stands listening. The sound of music comes
up from below, and amid all the artistic ad
ditions and variations, her ear detects the
notes of an old and familiar refrain. It is
the same sweet evening song, her mother’s
lullaby. She used to sing it in the purple
twi light, with Gerty’s golden head nestling
in her bosom, ami now, with this gentle,
gliding measure, those far oft nights come :
floating back to her on their starry wings,
and she sees her own mother once more.— I
She stands before her, with her drooping!
head and her long fair hair. Ge. ty hears |
her low, sweet voice keeping time with the
music; she stretches out her arms towards
her—but the music has ceased, and her
mother, beckoning with her hand, whispers,
“ Come, my child,” and then vanishes silent
ly into starlight.
Gerty waited but an instant. Her moth
er had said “come,” and she would go. — l
So, noiselessly as a spirit, she glided down
the broad stair-case, and flitted past the
open doors of the parlor. Out into the :
clear, cold night, her hair streaming behind i
her and her feet scarcely touching the frozen
ground, on past the great houses and over
the lonely ways, never halting or turning
until under the dark old pines, she reached
a snow-covered grave.
Here it was. This was poor mamma’s
home now ; here they had brought her on |
that sad, snow falling day, ami left her' —;
left, her all alone, with her closed eyes and
her folded hands; and here she, her little l
girl, would come and stay with her always..
No feeling of fear entered the child’s
heart now. She clasped and kissed the
cold, white head-stone, and its coldness and
whiteness only reminded her more of the!
pale brow, which they bad lifted her to kiss >
just two years before. The, night was bit
ter cold, but Gerty knew it not. What
though the little feet were freezing—she'
' felt it not, she was so happy. There was a
i glorious light in the sky and all over the I
hills. The pines above and around her
murmured and whispered, and she thought,
they were singing to her mother’s cradle
song. Ami so repeating to herself the lit
tle prayer which always came after the'
I song, the child felt a delicious drowsiness!
steal over her, and dreaming of Heaven,
| and her mother, she fell asleep.
Poor Gerty ! Heaven and her mother
! were no longer a dream, when they carried'
j her little lifeless figure home next morning,!
I ami silently laid it in her own room, still
, wearing the little torn apron.
Who are not Speculators ?—ls a ques
tion that might well be asked at this time.
An incident occurred in this city which well
illustrates the fact. A clergyman called at
ih stare a few days since, wishing to pur
chase an overcoat. A tine one was shown
; him at the price of for.y dollars. The
j merchant received a considerable lecture or.
. extortion, and the would be purchaser was
I about leaving. He turned to the merchant
land inquired if he would purchase some
■jeans, and offered them at five dollars per
»; yard- The merchant then reminded him J
-I that the price of the coat in the cheapest
I times was thirty dollars, and that he had'
j added only 25 per cent, on his articles,
i while the lecturer on extortion was asking
I four hundred per cent, on his. The Shep
j herd of the Flock was glad to drop the
, subject of extortion.
[.Vacua Messenger.
* -
* The love of children is like the love of
- flowers —sweet and budding flowers—holy
and innocent; and the man who is fond of
1 them cannot be the possessor of a brutal or
1 bad heart.
HIS BANNER OVER US IS LOVE.
A ggeautiful Utile Story.
A few years since, in coming down the
North river, I was seated in the cabin of the
magnificent steamer Isaac Newton, in conver
sation with some friends. It was becoming
late in the evening, and one alt another,
seeking repose from the cares and toils of
the day, made preparations to retire to their
berths. Some pulling oil their boots and
coats, laid themselves down to rest; others,
in the attempt to make it seem as much like
home as possible, threw off more of their
clothing—each one a.s their comfort or ap
prehension of danger dictated.
1 had noticed on the deck a fine looking
boy, about six years of age, following around
a man, evidently his father, whose appear
ance indicated him to be a foreigner, prob
ably a German, a man of medium height
and respectable dress. The child was unu
sually fair and fine looking, lUmdsomely
featured, with an affectionate expression and
countenance, and from under hj»s German
cap fell chestnut hair, in thick clustering
curls.
After walking about in the cabin for a
time, the father and son stopped in a few
feet of where we were seated, and began
preparation for going to bed. I watched
them. The father adjusted and arranged
the bed the child was to occupy, which was
an upper berth, while the little fellow was
undressing himself. Having finished this,
his father tied a handkerchief around his
head, to protect his curls, which looked as
if the sunlight from his happy heart always
rested there. This done, I looked for him
to seek his resting place, but instead of
this, he quietly kneeled down upon the floor,
put his little hands together so beautifully,
child like, and simple, resting his arms on
the lower berth, against .vhich he knelt to
begm his prayer.
The father sat down by his side and wait
ed the conclusion. It was, for a child, a
long prayer, but well understood. I could
hear the murmuring of his sweet voice, but
could not distinguish the words he spoke.
There were men around it—Christian men,
retiring to rest without prayers ; or if pray
ling at all, a kind of mental desire for pro
Itection, without sufficient courage or piety
j to kneel down in a steamboat cabin, and be
! fore strangers, acknowledge the goodness of
God, or ask His protecting love.
This was the training of some mother.
Where was she now ? How many times
had her kind hand been laid on those sunny
locks, as she had taught him to lisp his
prayer?
A beautiful sight it was, that child at
prayer in the midst of the busy, thought
less throng. He alone of this wordly mul
titude, draws nigh to heaven. I thank that
| parental love that taught him to whisper
his evening prayer, whether dead or living,
whether far oil’or nigh. I could scarce re
frain from weeping then, nor can 1 now, as
I see again that sweet child, in the crowded
I tumult of a steamboat’s cabin, bending in
| devotion before his Maker.
But a little while before, 1 saw a crowd
iof admiring listeners gathering about a
'company of Italian singers in the upper sa
! loon, a mother and her two sons, with voice
land harp and violin, but no one cared for
. the child at prayer.
When the little bov had finished his even
\ ing devotion, he arose and kissed the father
I most affectionately, who put him into bis
berth to rest for the night. I felt a strong
desire to speak to them, but deterred it till
! morning. When morning came, the con
tusion of landing prevented me from seeing
them again : but if ever 1 meet the boy in
his happy youth, I’ll thank him for the in
fluence and example of that night’s devo
. tion, and bless the name of the mother that
taught him.
Scarcely any passing incident of my life
ever made a deeper impression upon my
I mind. I went to my room and thanked God
I that I had witnessed it, and tor its influence
on my heart. Who prays on a steam boat?
Who teach their children to pray even at
! home ?
A l aiihitil fl'reacher.
The following discourse was delivered
by the Rev. James Axley, a renowned
Methodist preacher of East Tennessee. It
is related by Hugh L. White, for many
yearsa distinguished judge in that State, and
! afterwards a conspicuous member in the
Senate of the United States.
It had been noised abroad that Mr.
Axley would preach on the morning of the
following Sabbath. The famous divin' was
a great favorite ; with none more so than :
with Judge YVhite. At the appointed hour,
I the judge, in company with a large emigre-!
gat ion, was in attendance.
The services were begun by another
preacher, at the close of whose address Mr.
Axley rose, and stood silently surveying
the cvnuregation. All were hushed in ex
pectation. Every eye was riveted on him.
He then began :
“Mv friends, it is a very painful, but
a very nee ssary duty, fora Minister of the
gospel to reprove vice, misconduct, and sin,
w herever found: and be assured I will not
I’ shrink from the duty on this occasion.
“And now,’’ continued the speaker,
f pointing with his long finger, “that sandy
' haired man, sitting yonder by the door,
I who got up and went out while the brother
was preaching, and staid out so long; who
got his boots full of mud, and came in and
stamped the mud off at the door, making
such a noise that nobody could hear the
preacher;—that man thinks 1 mean him.
“No wonder that he thinks so. It is
a disgrace to the State that he should have
grown up here and have no better manners.
Now, my friend, I advise you to go home,
and learn how to behave yourself before
you again come to the house of prayer. —
But I do not mean him.
“And now,” pointing again to his mark,
“that little girl about the middle of the
floor—l should judge her to be about
sixteen years old—with flowers inside of
her bonnet; she that was giggling and
laughing and chattering all the time the
brother was speaking; —she thinks I mean
her.
“And she ought to think so. I am
sorry for any parents who have brought up
a girl to her age without teaching her to
behave modestly and properly ; they are
to be pitied. Little girl, you have disgra
ced your parents as well as yourself. But
1 do not mean her.
“And now, that man on the bench in
the corner, who is looking up as bright as
if he had never been asleep in his life, and
never expected to be, but vho was nodding
and bowing and snoring all through the ser
mon ; —that man thinks 1 mean him.
“And, indeed, he may well think so.—
My friend, the house of God is not intend
ed fora place of sleeping. When you want
to take a nap, go home, take off your clothes,
and go to bed ; there is the place to sleep,
not in church. But Ido not mean him.”
And thus he went on, fixing his dark
eye on each offender, till he had pointed out
nearly every man, woman, and child who
had, in any respect, deviated from strict
propriety, ending each reproof with “1 do
not mean him,” or “I do not mean her.”
Judge White, sitting on the front bench,
just in face of the preacher, was all the
time enjoying the fun wonderfully. He
laughed, he rubbed his hands, he chewed his :
tobacco with the greatest vigor. As each
new offender was brought up, he chewed
more and more violently, till the floor be
fore him became a puddle.
“ Now,” said the preacher, drawing him-!
self up with a reserve look, “I suppose I
you want to know whom 1 do mean. I
mean,” said he, pointing his finger as true
as a needle to the pole, “ I mean that filthy
tobacco-chewer, sitting on the end of the
front, seat. Look at those puddles on the .
floor ! A toad would be poisoned in them ;
and think of the sisters’dresses being drag
ged through such pollution !”
Judge White’s laughter was checked
as suddenly as if a thunderboldt had fallen.
Every eye in the congregation was instant-1
I v fastened on him. lie has averreu that he :
never afterwards dared to chew tobacco ini
church.
Almost Home.
Almost home! shouts the merry school j
boy,as he bounds along the shady lane)
where his mother is, eager to pour into her|
attentive ear a history of all that has hap.
pened during this his first day at school.—
How hard it seemed to be confined inside
those dreary walls, when, without, the glad
sunshine was smiling on tree and flower,
and the merry birds were flitting joyously
from branch to branch, carolling sweetly
their songs of praise. He has counted ma
ny times the long, long hours which stretch
ed away between him and home. But
they have all passed now, and he is hasten
ing homewards, impatient to receive the:
words of fond approval which he knows!
will be gladly given him as a reward for'
good behaviour duringall that long, tedious,
day. Will ever accents of praise sound so
sweetly to him in future years ? Fame may
l wreathe her coronet ol brilliant flowers
around his brow—the applause of multi 1
tudes may daily greet his ear but never .
will aught bring to his heart that feeling of!
setisfaction which the approving smiles of
| his mother now cause.
i Almost home! and the long absent one
| wends her way slowly along the familiar
: paths of her childhood home. How much .
I the same everything seems as wh< n,a light
. hearted, care-free child, she bounded along
those flowery ways, or carefully concealed
herself beneath that closu ring vine, whose
branches, trailing so low, formed a perfect!
screen from the merry group whoso eager
ly sought her retreat. And she lingers a
moment in that sweet spot near the cairn
! lake, in whose clear depths the tall trees,
I which surround it on every side, are so beau
! tifully mirrored. How many happy hours ~
! she has passed beneath the spreading hranch
| es of this oak, when girlhood’s first hopes
were strong and the future seemed encircled \
by a golden halo of love and joy. Tears*
well slowly up to her eyes, as she feels that!
all those bright dreams of the future have >
proved to be but misty shad >ws of joys
never realized ; that life is no dream, but a
■I stern reality. But, as she moves onward,
.' and soon catches a glimpse of the old home
stead, as it peeps forth from the clustering
' trees which so faithfully guard it, every
.' other emotion is superceded by that of
■ earnest thankfulness, that, after years of
, toil, she is to rest once more beneath the
• old roof-tree of home.
TERMS — Three Dollars a-year.
Almost home! and the step of the weary
laborer gains elasticity, and his eye bright
ens, as he discerns, through the gathering
twilight, the dim outline of his cottage
home. It is Saturday night. All the long
week he has labored faithfully, and it is
ith a careful, grateful heart that he ap
proaches his pleasant home. He knows
that the merry band of children within that
home is impatiently waiting to welcome,
with shouts of joy and twining arms, their
father’s return. He knows that the calm,
earnest eye of his wife 'will beam with a
deeper joy, and those lips, which never ut
tered an unkind word, be wreathed with
smiles of welcome. He sees, in the light
of the ruddy blaze, the tea-table neatly
spread, and the loved ones eagerly listening
for their father’s step. No wonder that,
lured on by all these pleasant visions, he
forgets his weariness ; and soon “Father’s
coming !” greets his ear—he is at home.
Almost home! shouts the sailor, as the
shores of his native land rise to his view.
But he turns aside to brush a tear from his
eye, for in that moment of joy rises, unbid
den, the thought that in the long years of
his absence, changes have come. Perhaps
that kind father, or loving mother, who so
wisely counselled, or so fondly blessed him,
when, for the first time, he went forth from
the sacred influences of home, has gone to
the land of the departed. It may be that
the manly brother, who was his companion
in every boyish sport, and whom he loved
so well, or the cherished sister, whose affec
tionate heart never suffered her to forget
her absent brother in morning and evening
supplication at the throneof Our Father, has
gone to the spirit-land. All these thoughts
pass through the mind of the long-absent
one as he rapidly nears the destined haven ;
and he longs, yet dreads, to cross the thres
hold of th .t dearest place on earth.
Almost home! These words sounded
faintly yet joyously from the pale lips of a
fair young girl, upon whose brow rested
the cold hand of Death. “Young, loving,
and beloved ;” does it not seem hard for one
so blessed in life to turn away from the cup
ere half its contents are quaffed ? Far away
from the bedside of the suffering one, fath
l er and mother, brothers and sisters, think,
1 with warm affection, of their distant child
and sister, and anticipate, with earnest hope
fulness, the time when they shall welcome
her to the warm hearthstones of home;
dreaming not that her pale hand is already
clasped within the icy fingers of the angel
of Death, who is leading her slowly, yet
surely, down the dark valley ; no, not dark,
for the radiance of the crown her Saviour
extends lights up the way she is treading.
I Many germs sparkle in that crown, for her
i life, though short, has not been useless.—
I Many a sorrowing one has blessed her for
! her ever-ready sympathy—many an erring
i one for the loving counsel she gave, and the
i purity of the life she lived—many suffering
lone for the aid her hands have rendered. —
i But those azure eyes are closed forever now
i—the tones of that, sweet voice are hushed
! —the pule hands will never be clasped in
I friendly greeting again. She is at home !
The king angel of Death has merciful ly ta
ken her to her Saviour’s arms, ere sorrow
had dimmed her eye or care had marked
her brow.
Tlw Sabbath.
The eve of another Sabbath is approach
ing—welcome harbinger of a peaceful to
morrow —when the aching head may rest,
and the weary hand lay aside its accustom
ed toil, and the thoughts and heart turn to
I Him, who bade “all that are weary and
heavy laden to come to Him and He would
! give them rest ” Sad is the idea that so
! many of His creatures omit to avail tin m
-1 selves of this blessed imitation; and sad-
I der still, that, after six days spent in the
pursuit of liirne and fortune, they eith. i
I neglect or give up grudgingly fl e se\emh
| to Ilis service, iu a hose har'd are tiie i.si-ues
which may give, or withhold both; and sad
der even than this, that when thr plotting
brain and the busy hand are laid low by
sickness, the idols for which they have toil
ed so long seem to mock them by assu
ming their real value. YY hen Death ap
proaches, w ho that has thus wasted his exist
enc even though he may have reach' d the
j highest point of his ambition—ispreparedto
meet it? YV’dl the King of Terrors assume
a more kindly aspect to him on this ac
count? YVill the \alley’ of the dark shad
ow of death seem a ray less dark because
he enters it covered with honor, and fame,
and wealth ? No. Better far that his ar
mor for that battle should be studded o’er
with holy thoughts and noble deeds of char
ity, than be thickly covered with the great
est gift earth has to bestow. YY hcn the
last, hour comes, well may he exclaim,
with the haughty Queen of old, “ Millions
of money for an inch of time.” How dif
ferent from such is the death-bed of one
who, while he has neglected no earthly du
ty, has kept in mind the fact that we are
hare but for a short time to prepare our
selves for eternity ! When the call comes to
render his account —though the spirit may
falter and the heart grow sick at parting
’ fr< m the loved of earth —yet he is sustain
’ ed by the consoling promise of Hirn, that,
the struggle once over, all will be at peace
beyond. No broken Sabbaths rise up to
NO. 8.