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themselves at the feet of Him who took our infirmities and bore our sicknesses. We plead the merits of his blood, and with many tears prayed that, through its efficacy, her sins might be blotted out, and her departing spirit admitted to his arms. We thought of the covenant, and, while our countless violations of its conditions ar rayed themselves before us, we still hoped in the grace that proposed it.

Oh, my sister, nothing beside this could have sup ported us; for in the circumstance of her illness there was almost every thing to torture the heart of love. Her delicate spirit looked forth from amidst its ruins, with an air of wildness that often bespoke estrangement from us, while constant agony was subverting the foundations of a constitution naturally weak and feeble. We felt too that her spirit was about to leave us with a thousand marks of our unfaithfulness. And, Oh! we greatly feared that this unfaithfulness might prejudice its eternal interests. Ah, my sister! you can easier conceive than I express the agonized emotions of my heart. But I have quietly submitted her to the Judge of all the earth.

New-year's morn she anticipated all the family in the "happy new-year," with her usual pleasantry, and in just two weeks we had to see her die. We committed her to the Saviour of sinners; for notwithstanding her comparatively harmless life, and early death, we know that He alone could save her from the deserts of sin. During the few hours in, which we knew her to be dying, we prayed almost incessantly by her bedside-and the many pious friends who were present, knelt with us around her dying bed, but a few moments before she expired, and, in weeping and silence, committed her to God-resigned her spirit as it was departing, to him who gave her to us.

In all our afflictions, I believe, we felt that we have a Father in Heaven, for many drops of mercy were mingled in our cup of affliction, and yet, how do the affections in which we delight to live, bring to us mementoes of our fallen, death-devoted state! Can it be that we shall live only to eternize the miseries of the minds

we love, and fain would bless ? This dispensation, I believe, has been blessed to me. It has led me to cultivate a greater spirituality of feeling, to cherish the spirit of the gospel, and to resolve to lead a life of more exemplary piety.. S. L***

The Reply will be in our next No.

POETRY.

[For the Monitor.]

Written for the first page of a Young Lady's

Common-Place Book.

MAY this Book, while it claims as it due,
In the circle of friendship to rove,

As a register faithful and true

The memorials of friendship receive;

Nor the flatterer's pen ever know,
But sincerity ever approve,
And a register faithful and true
The memorials of friendship receive.

May it serve to alleviate woe,
And, collecting fresh tokens of love,
As a register faithful and true
The memorials of friendship receive.

Let it raise the emotions of joy,
And a source of delight let it prove,
And a register faithful and true
The memorials of friendship receive.

Go! and borrow thy lustre and hue
From the radiance, that piety gives;
Go, Register, faithful and true
The memorials of friendship receive.

T. I. J.

ACCOUNT OF AN EARTHQUAKE IN CHILI,

An Extract.

On the fourth of November, 1822, the town of Copiapo, in S. Lat. 27° 10′, was visited by a severe shock, which damaged many houses; this was followed, the next day, by a much more violent earthquake, which nearly destroyed the town, and did considerable injury to the town of Coquimbo, in S. Lat. 29° 50′.

The great earthquake on the night of the 19th of November, 1822, was felt over the whole surface of the country, from the mountains to the sea, and from one extremity to the other. Its force seems to have diminished in a pretty exact proportion to its distance from Valparaiso.

Its effects are thus described by an Englishman, residing at Concon, near the mouth of the river named in the maps Rio Quillota." Concon is about fifteen miles N. N. E. of Valparaiso, as the crow flies.

"At half past ten, on the night of the 19th of November, I felt the first oscillation. I was writing at the time; starting from my chair, I paused for an instant, expecting the shock would subside, as others had done; but the falling of glasses from the sideboard, the cracking of the timbers, and the rattling of the tiles from the roof, fully apprized the whole family of their danger, and all ran out of the house. The house was violently agitated, and was falling to pieces; but freed from the apprehension of being buried in the ruins, my attention was forcibly drawn to the phenomena, which 1 endeavoured to observe as accurately as possible. Scarcely, however, was this resolution taken, and before the first shock had entirely subsided, a second and much more violent one succeeded; this was accompanied by noise, which appeared to be deep seated in the earth, perpendicularly to the spot on which we stood. The duration of this shock was about two minutes; it was succeeded by a third, also accompanied by noise, less loud than that which accompanied the preceding shock. The shock was less violent than either of the

two former shocks, and of less duration. These shocks occupied about five minutes of time. Shocks at intervals, of four or five minutes, continued for nearly an hour, after which they become less frequent during the remainder of the night, and of very different intensities, some being rather severe, and others hardly perceptible. The three principal shocks may be said to constitute the earthquake.

"At the commencement of the earthquake, the atmosphere was, as is usual at this time of the year in this country, quite free from clouds, the moon and stars shone with splendour; there was no atmospheric indication of change of any sort, either before or after the earthquake. Some persons say they saw an unusual light in the horizon to the southward, but I, who was expecting some change, and was prepared to observe any that might have occurred, saw none whatever.

"During the earthquake the ground rose and fell with great violence, and with almost inconceivable rapidity. There was certainly no undulatory motion, though many unobserving and unreflecting persons suppose this to have been the case. I had a strong suspicion at the time, since confirmed by observation of its effects, that there was a powerful horizontal motion, but as I could not perceive it as coming from any particular point, I concluded at the time that I was mistaken. The circumstances which make me now conclude there was a horizontal motion, are observations I have since made in many places, in which walls, and even houses, have been partially twisted round, and from the fissures round the roots of the largest trecs. At Quintero, ten miles to the northward of Concon, are several large palmtrees; three of these standing so as to form an equilateral triangle, lashed one another like willow rods, and beat or shook off many of their branches. The motion of these trees seems to have been horizontal and circular, since each of them cleared a space in the ground round its stem, several inches wide, and this was the case also with other large trees in different places.

"The sensation we experienced during the earth

quake, was probably the same we should have felt had we been conscious that a mine had been sprung beneath us, and was about to blow us all into the air.

"On examination next morning, at daylight, I found the earth full of fissures, some of them very small, while others were from two to three feet wide. In many places sand had been forced up, and had formed small hillocks. In the most recently formed alluvial soil near the river, water and sand had been forced up together, there being many large truncated cones of clean washed sand, each of which had a hollow in the centre, like the crater of a volcano. The same phenomenon was observed in several places; in other places, large quanti ties of soft mud had been forced up, and spread itself over the surface of the land.”

IMPORTANCE OF THE SCRIPTURES.

An Extract.

Having our minds filled with these thoughts of the primeval divinity of revealed Wisdom when she dwelt in the bosom of God, and was of his eternal self a part, long before he prepared the heavens or set a compass upon the face of the deep; revolving also how by the space of four thousand years every faculty of mute Nature did solemn obeisance to this daughter of the divine mind, whenever he pleased to commission her forth to the help of mortals; and further meditating upon the delights which she had of old with the sons of men, the height of heavenly temper to which she raised them, and the offspring of magnanimous deeds which these two the wisdom of God, and the soul of man-did engender between themselves--meditating, I say, upon these mighty topics, our soul is smitten with grief and shame to remark how, in this latter day, she hath fallen from her high estate; and fallen along with her the great and noble character of men. Or if there be still a few names, as of the Missionary MARTYN, to emulate

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