The Home Mission | Page 2

T.S. Arthur
Home Mission" will not be fruitless.
Though no annual reports of what it has accomplished are made, its
silent and unobtrusive work, we trust, will be none the less effectual.

THE HOME MISSION.
A VISION OF CONSOLATION.

THE tempest of grief which, for a time, had raged so wildly in the heart
of Mrs. Freeland, exhausted by its own violence, sobbed itself away,
and the stricken mother passed into the land of dreams.
To the afflicted, sleep comes with a double blessing--rest is given to the
wearied body and to the grieving spirit. Often, very often, the Angel of
Consolation bends to the dreaming ear, and whispers words of hope
and comfort that from no living lips had yet found utterance.
And it was so now with the sleeping mother. A few hours only had

passed since she stood looking down, for the last time, on the fair face
of her youngest born. Over his bright, blue eyes, into whose heavenly
depths she had so loved to gaze, the pale lids had closed for ever. Still
lingered around his lips the smile left there by the angels, as, with a kiss
of love, they received his parting spirit. In the curling masses of his rich,
golden hair, the shadows nestled away, as of old, while his tiny fingers
held a few white blossoms, as with a living grasp. Was it death or sleep?
So like a sleeping child the sweet boy lay, that it seemed every moment
as if his lips would unclose, his eyes open to the light, and his voice
come to the listening ear with its tones of music.
If to the mother had come this illusion, it remained not long. Wild with
grief, she turned away as the sweet face she had so loved to gaze upon
was hidden from her straining eyes for ever.
Hidden from her eyes, did we say? Only hidden from her natural eyes.
Still he was before the eyes of her spirit in all his living beauty. But, to
her natural affections, he was lost--even as he had faded from before
her natural eyes; and, in the agony of bereavement, it seemed that her
heart would break. Back to her darkened chamber she went. Her nearest
and dearest friends gathered around, seeking lovingly to sustain her in
her great affliction; but she refused to be comforted.
At length, as at first said, the tempest of grief, which, for a time, raged
so violently in the heart of Mrs. Freeland, sobbed itself away, and the
stricken mother passed into the land of dreams.
For the most part, dreams are fantastic. Yet they are not always so. In
states of deep sorrow or strong trial, when the heart turns from the
natural world, hopeless of aid or consolation, truth often comes in
dreams and similitudes.
The mother found herself in the company of two beautiful maidens, in
the very flower of youth; and as she gazed earnestly into their faces,
which seemed transparent from an inward celestial light, she saw
expectation therein--loving expectation. They stood beneath the eastern
portico of a pleasant dwelling, around which stately trees--the branches
vocal with the song of feathered minstrels--lifted their green tops far up

into the crystal air. Flowers of a thousand hues and sweet odours were
woven into forms and figures of exquisite beauty upon the carpet of
living green spread over the teeming earth, while groups of little
children sported one with another, and mingled their happy voices with
the melody of birds.
Yet, amid all this external joy and beauty, the hand of grief still lay
upon the mother's heart; and when she looked upon the sportive infants
around her, she sighed for her own babe. Even as she sighed, one of the
maidens turned to her and said, while her whole countenance was lit up
with a glow of delight--
"It has come. A new babe is born unto heaven."
And, as she spoke, she gathered her arms quickly to her bosom, and the
wondering mother saw lying thereon her own child. The other maiden
was already bending over the infant--already had she greeted its
coming with a kiss of love. Quickly both retired within the dwelling,
and the bereaved mother went with them, eager to receive the babe she
had lost.
"Oh, my child! my child!" she said. "Give me my child."
And ere the words had died upon her lips, the maiden who had received
the babe gave it into her arms, when she clasped it with a wild delight,
and rained tears of gladness upon its face.
For a time, the two maidens looked upon the mother in silence, and in
their bright countenances love and pity were blended. At length, one of
them said to her, (and she smiled
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