Scotland. No more let youth the Sabbath-day profane,- Oh! what a harvest to our view is this! "To praise the Lord, - from whom all blessings flow!" CHRIST, THE BELIEVER'S ALL. When my soul in gross darkness was closely shut up, Now, I hope, since by grace I am light in the Lord, When ambition inflames the proud heart after fame, My highest ambition is Jesus to gain, And enjoy him thro' time without end. When the gaudy and gay, for the glitter of shew, I'll rejoice, tho' in sorrow my life should be spent, What dangers and troubles do many endure, I'll risk all I have, yea my life I'll forego, The profane may reproach me as long as I live, When laid on the bed of affliction and death, But affliction prepares me for pleasures to come, When conquer'd by death, and consign'd to the grave, My bones rest in hope, while my soul wings its way Where, with angels and saints, all embosom'd in bliss, Till the voice of Jehovah burst open the grave, Then embody'd again, and in glory complete, Where, with all the redeem'd, Christ, my life, I will praise, Printed by G. AULD, Greville Stree', London ADJUTOR. TO THE EVANGELICAL MAGAZINE FOR THE YEAR 1807. MEMOIR THE LATE MISS LOUISA COOKE*. MISS LOUISA COOKE was the youngest daughter of Mrs. Cooke, of Bristol, widow of the late Mr. Isaac Cooke, of that city. She was born April 1, 1781; and died September 5, 1807, aged twenty-six years. This amiable young person was educated in the nurture and admonition of the Lord: but the æra from which her religious course is to be dated, is the month of April 1799, when attacked by a putrid fever, which seemed likely to terminate in her death. During this illness it pleased God to reveal his Son in her. Being then on a visit in London, she expressed a great anxiety to sce her honoured mother. When she arrived, the crisis of her disorder was past, and she had begun to recover. Her health gradually returned; and in the course of three weeks she was able to travel, by easy stages, to Bristol. There she made a covenant with her adored Lord to be entirely his; which engagement she scaled at the Lord's Table. The means of grace were from this time greatly blessed to her soul; and she would often speak of them with rapture. Six months after her first attack she had another, which again threatened her life. It however pleased God to raise her up a second time, from what was expected to prove her death-bed. For five succeeding years her constitution continued in a weak and delicate state; but she grew in grace, and in the knowledge of her Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. In the month of April, 1805, she was seized with a nervous fever, which confined her for some days to her bed; and as her health was not speedily re-established, she went in the following June to Dawlish, under the hope that the sea-air might prove a restorative; but the great and wise Disposer of all events had This Memoir was communicated to us some weeks ago, before it appeared in any other perio lical publication; but could not be earlier inserted in this Work; and even now, we are obliged considerably to abridge it. 4 E XV. determined otherwise; and a low chronic fever kept her in a state of constant debility, and rendered her, in her own apprehension, a pilgrim and a stranger upon earth. From this period she lived chiefly in retirement, either in reading the sacred volume on her knees, or in pouring out her soul in prayer to God. While thus employed, she was not unfrequently indulged with visits from her gracious Lord; and sometimes felt herself to be surrounded, as it were, by his glorious presence. In public ordinances, where her attendance was constant, she felt great enlargement of heart. To the solicitations of her friends, who, on account of her increasing debility often endeavoured to dissuade her from going to church, her constant reply was," While I have strength to attend the house of God, ought I to absent myself?" On the 5th of April, 1807, she partook of the Lord's Supper at St. James's Church; where, on the Lord's Day, she usually attended. While at the table, she became so enfeebled as to be unable to pray. On her return into her pew, she was overwhelmed with sorrow, at the recollection of having risen from her knees without breathing out her soul into her Saviour's bosom. The agony which she felt, produced strong convulsions. On being asked, if she were ill, she answered, that her head throbbed violently with pain; "but," added, "if it be the will of my dear and gracious Saviour to vouchsafe a continuance of his presence, I think I could support any corporeal pain which he may see fit to lay on me. I would rather suffer the tortures to which the martyrs were exposed, than be deprived of communion with my God! But be the issue what it may, am I not washed, am I not sanctified, am I not justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God? Oh, yes; if I had a million of tongues, I could not praise and adore his name as I ought to do, for having excited in my soul strong desires after himself! I did delight in his Commandinents while I was in health. Had I not known Him then, but had gone to Him for succour only now in the time of my distress, I might be apprehensive lest he should laugh at my calamity, and mock now that my fear cometh :"but, blessed be his holy name, I am relieved from these anxieties, and from every harrassing thought, because I know that I stand complete in Him! Therefore, though he slay me, yet will I trust in Him!" After some hesitation, occasioned by her anxiety to act in all things conformably to the will of God, she was induced, by the persuasions of her friends, to try the effect of another journey to the sca-side; and on the 13th of April set off for Weymouth. On the road she often expressed her satisfaction on refleeting, that her dear mother and other Christian friends were praying for her: but her satisfaction rose far higher when she added, "The great Intercessor is always pleading for me at the throne of grace!". While travelling, she repeated from memory many of the Psalms, |