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darkness and fears, that she wished for nothing more, and that she was going to be with her Saviour. She said that she had no ecstacies, but that her mind was composed and quiet. "I believe all that is written in the word of God, and upon the strength of this faith, I am going into eternity." Sublime and glorious words!

Two years and four months ago, she had embarked from Boston as a missionary. How much she left behind! How short her missionary life, how great the disappointment at the early interruption of her work by death! destroyest the hope of man!" And yet

"THOU

"Sept. 22. In the afternoon, she said to me with much earnestness, When you write to my friends after all is over, one thing I wish you would make prominent. It is, that I feel satisfied with the course I have taken, and that all has been ordered by God.' [Meaning in her becoming a missionary.] I have no disposition to boast of my labors; but I feel that I have not left my friends and my country in vain. I never have regretted having done so, nor do I now. This is my dying testimony.' p. 358.

866

Tell my friends, I would not for all the world lay my remains any where but here, on missionary ground.' After a good many remarks, showing the brightness of her views of spiritual things, some of which could be but indistinctly heard, she exclaimed, What a goodly company of ancestors shall I meet there! Yes, and the holy angels, and the Son of God! Oh, the Almighty God! You know nothing of his glorious majesty. I cannot express it; but I wanted to speak of it, that you may think that yourselves are nothing. I have thought too much of myself. In this sickness I have thought it too important that my ease and wants should be consulted. We all think that we are of more importance than we are. Beware of pride.'"

"We sung that beautiful hymn of Doddridge on the eternal Sabbath, commencing,

Thine earthly Sabbaths, Lord, we love.'

"To my surprise, her voice, which she had so long been unable to use for singing, was occasionally heard mingling with ours. Her face beamed with a smile of ecstasy; and so intense was the feeling expressed in her whole aspect, that we stopped after the first verse, lest she should even expire while drinking the cup of joy we had presented to her. But she said to us, 'Go on;' and though all were bathed in tears, and hardly able to articulate, we proceeded. I was sitting with her hand in mine. While singing the second verse, she pressed it, and turned to me at the same time such a heavenly smile as stopped my utterance. Before we reached the end, she raised both her hands above her head, and gave vent to her feelings in tears of pleasure, and almost in shouting. After prayer, she said, I have had a little glimpse of what I am going to see. It was but a glimpse, and perhaps it was imagination. But it seemed a glorious sight."" p. 360, 1.

In the account of her last moments, we have an interesting fact.

"Involuntary groans were occasionally uttered in her convulsions. These, as we were listening to them with painful sympathy, once to our surprise melted away into musical notes; and for a moment our ears were charmed with the full, clear tones of the sweetest melody. No words were articulated, and she was evidently unconscious of every thing about her. It seemed as if her soul was already joining in the songs of heaven, while it was yet so connected with the body as to command its unconscious sympathy."-p. 364.

We can never forget the effect of this incident upon our minds when we first heard it read. We cannot remember any incident in the dying scene of any individual so peculiar and striking. We have been accustomed to consider the last moments of Mr. Evarts, taking into view his natural temperament, as more remarkable than those of any other departed friend whom we have ever known. One of his exclamations was, "O! the face of God!" Perhaps this was only anticipation; it may have been vision. But the incident just referred to in the last moments of Mrs. Smith, is certainly very striking. Those musical sounds were wonderful. They remind one of those which are said to have come from Memnon's statue at sunrise. They were the accidental notes of the harp, when one is removing the sirings. The swan's last song is sweetest; so was it with this "bird" when fleeing "to her mountain." The passage last quoted from the memoir will, we doubt not, long be remembered by all who read the book.

* *

"Not long after, she again opened her eyes in a state of consciousness. A smile of perfect happiness lighted up her emaciated features. She looked deliberately around upon different objects in the room, and then fixed upon me a look of the tenderest affection. * Her frequent pravers that the Saviour would meet her in the dark valley, have already been mentioned. By her smile, she undoubtedly intended to assure us, that she had found him. Words she could not utter to express what she felt. Life continued to struggle with its last enemy, until twenty minutes before eight o'clock; when her affectionate heart gradually ceased to beat, and her soul took its final departure to be forever with the Lord." p. 364.

She died Sept. 30, 1836, in the 34th year of her age, having been a missionary about two years and four months.

SECOND SERIES, NO. III. VOL. I.

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On receiving the intelligence of her death, the American Consul put his flag at half mast, as did all the American vessels in the harbor, eight or ten in number. The ladies at Smyrna contrary to the immemorial custom of the place, followed the remains to the grave. Her grave was the first in a new cemetery, prepared by the English and American residents. At the request of Mr. Smith, the funeral service of the Church of England was read, by the Rev. Mr. Lewis.

The memoir closes with a most interesting chapter by Rev. Mr. Smith on some of the traits of missionary character, and the habits of this lamented servant of Christ; to which is added an appropriate monody by her friend, Mrs. L. H. Sigourney, beginning,—

"So,-Syria hath thy dust,-thou who wert born Amid my own wild hillocks.".

We naturally ask, why this excellent and useful missionary came forth as a flower and was cut down? Recollections of similar events crowd upon our minds. We have almost wondered whether missionary labor is performed in any other part of the universe. If so, we see apparent reason in the removal of able and accomplished laborers from this field, that they may preach to other spirits the unsearchable riches of Christ. But we check such fancies. We think of our common doom, to die. No one can be too good or too useful to die. It is of little consequence, in view of our general fate, who dies first, especially as the Head of the Church has the keys of death, and consults the good of his cause when He so frequently opens the gates of death to the most devoted and useful of his servants. The corn of wheat that falls into the ground and dies, brings forth fruit. This memoir, we are persuaded, will greatly advance the missionary cause.

What a cause this is, which consumes so much treasure, calls for such sacrifices, separates earthly ties, and still, at the present moment, in view of all which it has cost, is more precious than ever to its friends! There must be something real and substantial in the object which is thus pursued. Visionary and romantic schemes are soon found out, and cease to delude their votaries. But the spirit of missions throughout Christendom is increasing in depth and strength.

Men and women, some of them the choice ones of Christian lands, are yearly baptized into this work for the dead. Times of commercial depression and disaster seem, at least in one instance, of late, to have increased the missionary fund. In the year 1837, remarkable for commercial distress, the contributions to the American Board amounted to $252,000, while in the previous year of general prosperity, they were only $176,000, being an increase of $76,000! Even sectarian divisions and separation of labor amongst its friends are swelling the amount of missionary effort; persecution in foreign lands scatters its influence only to increase it. In spite of every difficulty it holds on its way.

When we think of the heathen world groaning and travailing in pain together until now, and then consider the intention and efforts of Christians, with the help of God, to relieve them, it makes us think of the patriarch Jacob's dwelling in mourning and lamentation and woe, and Joseph's wagons standing at the door, waiting to make the mourning household partakers of the plenty of Egypt.

We are able, and, with the blessing of God, we intend, to pour into the heathen world an amount of consolation for its sorrows, joy for its sufferings, knowledge for its ignorance, cultivation and refinement for its barbarism, which, no benevolent mind can contemplate without earnest longings for its accomplishment.

Apart from the salvation of the soul, it is interesting to think what blessings we have it in our power to bestow upon the heathen and pagan world.

There is the bliss of virtuous, domestic relations, relief from bodily tortures, from human sacrifices, the establishment of humane institutions for the blind, the deaf and dumb, the sick and insane ;-of which institutions, the pagan and heathen world contains not one original example. Useful knowledge, with the pleasure which its acquisition affords, as well as the practical benefits of it, is yet to be enjoyed by entire heathen nations; and the inhabitants of pagan countries are, by the influence of Christianity, to enjoy similar blessings, which their wise men, if they had the benevolence of the Christian religion, might now in some measure impart. Geography, natural history, astronomy, mineralogy, botany, writing, engraving, painting, the various arts of locomotion, with good roads and bridges, and the

innumerable inventions of the civilized world, are ready, as soon as the heathen tribes are prepared to receive them, to break upon them, like the successive works of God upon chaos, at creation. The blessings of good laws and just government await the pagan and heathen world.

The heathen world has this advantage, that, whereas we have spent centuries in inventing useful arts, they are to receive them disencumbered of the slow processes by which we arrived at them. They are to take our conclusions for premises, and with the impatient curiosity and activity of awakened mind, push on enquiry to further results. Sublime, no doubt, will be the scenes amongst them when the human mind awakes from its sleep of ages, and goes forth like Samson to shake itself, as in ancient times. It is an honor and privilege to live at this age of the world, when we can be instruments of this renovation.

It is interesting to look not only at the communicative nature of Christianity with respect to the diffusion of knowledge, but to the probable permanency of its influences, compared with that of ancient kingdoms. Take Egypt for an example. The wisdom of the Egyptians was proverbial, yet how little has the world profited by them. They were once the people, and their wisdom died with them. The world, instead of being taught by them, sends her wise men to spell out what they thought and said, from their hieroglyphs. Concerning the knowledge which these emblems were intended to impart, "Destruction and Death say, we have heard the same thereof with our ears." We think of Champollion in a mausoleum, lying on his back, far up under the roof, sketching the mystic signs. So passes the wisdom of this world which knew not God. Will any nation which receives and retains Christianity ever become a desert, and its places of sepultured grandeur echo to the foot-fall of the solitary and adventurous traveller, searching what, or what manner of time, the indentures of its caves and ruins indicate? We believe it to be impossible. Besides, increasing intercourse will keep the various portions of the world from stagnation and decay, as the currents and tides of ocean do its own ports. Those who assist in diffusing Christianity, we believe, are doing an imperishable work.

The Christian Church appreciates these things to a great extent, but not in their full importance. Some of the com

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