And well-fed sheep and sable oxen slay: And the piled victims round the body spread." 3. Whatever may be our views of death and a future state, our feelings and sensations on the subject are influenced to a very considerable extent by association; and, unfortunately, the associations which we connect with the final resting-place of the departed have too generally been of the most gloomy, and sometimes of the most terrific description: "The grave! dread thing, Men shiver when thou'rt named: Nature, appall'd, The long extended realms and rueful wastes, By glimmering through thy low-brow'd murky vaults, Lets fall a supernumerary horror, And only serves to make thy night more irksome." 5. But are these the feelings with which we should look upon the grave? To use the words of an elegant modern writer Washington Irving-"Why should we thus seek to clothe death with unnecessary terrors, and to spread horrors around the tomb of those we love? The grave should be surrounded by every thing that might inspire tenderness and veneration for the dead, or that might win the living to virtue. It is the place, not of disgust and dismay, but of sorrow and meditation." 6. Death and the grave are solemn and awful realities; they speak with a powerful and intelligible voice to the heart of every spectator, as being the common lot of all, the gate of access to another state of existence through which all must pass. Our cemeteries, then, should bear a solemn and soothing character; they should have nothing in them savoring of fashionable prettiness, nor any far-fetched conceits or tortured allegories; they should be equally remote, in expression, from fanatical gloom and conceited affectation. 7. There are many of our country church-yards, seated deep in the recesses of venerable woods, and shut out, as it were, from the every-day world, which might furnish us models for imitation, as far as calm serenity and quiet beauty go; where the "rugged elms" and "yew-tree's shade," coupled with the "ivy-mantled tower," with which they are connected, give an air of time-honored sanctity to the scene; where no sound reaches the ear but the low murmur of the wind through the summer leaves, or the sighing of the storm through the wintry branches, realizing, if any situation could do so, the description of the poet: "There is a calm for those that weep, 8. Of the architectural adaptation of monumental structures to the solemnities and consolations of Christian burial, a writer in the North American Review makes the following excellent observations: "There is certainly no place, not even the church itself, where it is more desirable that our religion should be present to the mind than the cemetery, which must be regarded either as the end of all things, the last, melancholy, hopeless resort of perishing humanity, the sad and fearful portion of man, which is to involve body and soul alike in endless night; or, on the other hand, as the gateway of a glorious immortality, the passage to a brighter world, whose splendors beam even upon the dark chambers of the tomb. 66 9. "It is from the very brink of the grave, where rest in eternal sleep the mortal remains of those whom we have best loved, that Christianity speaks to us in its most triumphant soul-exulting words of victory over death, and of a life to come. Surely, then, all that man places over the tomb should, in a measure, speak the same language. The monuments of the burialground should remind us that this is not our final abode; they should, as far as possible, recall to us the consolations and promises of our religion. 10. But there is a style of architecture which belongs peculiarly to Christianity, and owes its existence even to this religion; whose very ornaments remind one of the joys of a life beyond the grave; whose lofty vaults and arches are crowded with the forms of prophets, and martyrs, and beatified spirits, and seem to resound with the choral hymns of angels and archangels. But peculiarly are its power and sublimity displayed in the monuments it rears over the tomb. The elevated form on which reposes the statue of the mailed knight, or the holy woman, composed into the stately rest of the grave, yet the hands folded over the breast, as if commending the spirit to God who gave it; the canopy which overhangs it; the solemn vault which rises above; the gorgeous windows, through which is poured a flood of golden light upon the abode of the dead-these are the characteristics of the architecture of Christianity, the sublime, the glorious Gothic." LESSON XII.-THE ARCHITECTURE OF NATURE. Within the sunlit forest, Our roof the bright blue sky, Where fountains flow, and wild flowers blow, We lift our hearts on high.-ELLIOTT. 1. HAVING dwelt at some length on the fading monuments of man's power, pride, ambition, and glory, and of his daily life, his religious faith, and his burial, it may be well, in closing, to direct our thoughts, in reverent contemplation, to that higher order of architecture every where seen in Nature's works, and full of expression of the power, wisdom, and goodness of the Great Architect. 2. We might speak of the mountains which He has set up as pillars, and of the overhanging dome which seems to rest on their summits; but in vain we should attempt to describe the vast creations of His handiwork which adorn this magnificent outer temple. Within its walls, however, are sanctuaries, which no "frail hands have made," and where no traces of" man's pomp or pride" are to be seen, but where the humble worshiper, in all the simplicity of childlike faith, may hold communion with his Maker. These are "the groves"-"God's first temples"-whose "venerable columns" "thy hand, our Father, reared." GOD'S FIRST TEMPLES. 3. The groves were God's first temples. Ere man learn'd To hew the shaft, and lay the architrave, 5. And spread the roof above them-ere he framed The lofty vault, to gather and roll back The sound of anthems-in the darkling wood, Amid the cool and silence, he knelt down And offer'd to the Mightiest solemn thanks Might not resist the sacred influences That, from the stilly twilight of the place, And from the gray old trunks that, high in heaven, Let me, at least, Father, Thy hand Hath rear'd these venerable columns: Thou Didst weave this verdant roof. Thou didst look down All these fair ranks of trees. They in Thy sun 6. 7. 8. Encounter; no fantastic carvings show The boast of our vain race to change the form Of Thy fair works. But Thou art here; Thou fill'st Thyself without a witness, in these shades, Of thy perfections. Grandeur, strength, and grace In all the proud old world beyond the deep, Wears the green coronal of leaves with which My heart is awed within me when I think Lo! all grow old and die; but see, again, There have been holy men who hid themselves 9. Their lives to thought and prayer, till they outlived Less aged than the hoary trees and rocks Around them; and there have been holy men But let me often to these solitudes Retire, and, in Thy presence, reassure The passions, at Thy plainer footsteps, shrink, O God! when Thou The heavens with falling thunderbolts, or fill, The swift, dark whirlwind, that uproots the woods, Its cities; who forgets not, at the sight Learn to conform the order of our lives.-BRYANT. THE PARTHENON OF ATHENS. Fair Parthenon! yet still must Fancy weep Thy gods, thy rites, a kindred fate have shared : Yet art thou honor'd in each fragment still That wasting years and barbarous hands have spared; HEMANS. Front Elevation of the Parthenon, as restored. See also p. 285. |