Before the stars are in the sky And so it sleeps in dewy night And children, when they go to bed, Should fold their hands in prayer, And place themselves, and all they love, In God's almighty care. Then they may sleep secure and still, Through hours of darksome night, LITTLE PINK. ON a swinging little shelf Were some pretty little books; That the darling little elf, Whose they were, Was the careful little girl, In a little chest of drawers, In good order could be found,— And she laid her bonnet by, When she hasten'd home from school; And she was resolved to try, School or home, How to prove the saying true,"Order in all things you do." When she put away her shawl, She could shut her smiling eyes, See her books;-how clean they are! There's a marker, made to show Are a certain sign to me She's as tidy as a pink! Clean and neat, and gentle too; If you take her actions through, Just the same, I know, you'll think. A WALK IN SPRING. I'm very glad the spring is come-the sun shines out so bright, The little birds upon the trees are singing for delight. The young grass looks so fresh and green, the lambkins sport and play, And I can skip and run about as merrily as they. с I like to see the daisy and the buttercups once more, The primrose and the cowslip too, and every pretty. flower; I like to see the butterfly fluttering her painted wing, And all things seem just like myself, so pleased to see the spring. The fishes in the little brook are jumping up on high, The lark is singing sweetly as she mounts into the sky; The rooks are building up their nests upon the great tall tree, And everything's as busy and as happy as can be. There's not a cloud upon the sky, there's nothing dark or sad; I jump, and scarce know what to do, I feel so very glad. God must be very good indeed, who made each pretty thing: I'm sure we ought to love Him much for bringing back the spring. THE COTTAGER TO HER INFANT. THE days are cold, the nights are long, |