given to virtue; how much to the forgetfulness of virtue; and what hath been our happiness and what our want of happiness resulting therefrom.-This is the only solemn employment remaining to me, and to every man, when the multos et felices annos greet us in vain; when "the evil days come," and "the years draw nigh," that we shall say, I have no pleasure in them;" and when, though the ties of affection still bind us to this world, our hopes, through the merits of a crucified Redeemer, are silently journeying onward to another and a better. JAMQUE VALE. HALVERGATE VICARAGE, THE END. SLOMAN, Printer, King-Street, Yarmouth. |