Left to Ourselves; or, John Headley's Promise.
me for you by post!" said Minnie as Mrs. Head
it, and weighing it, and smelling it-doing ev
" said Minnie shyly, "and I believe J
their mother, smiling, while she se
" observed Hugh, looking up from
curiosity, and I will see who can tell me
hat it is, mothe
and their father had gone off to his business, Mrs. Headl
," said
she can undo it," laughed Hugh
y," said John, "or we couldn't w
earer. As she spoke the paper fell open, and t
rs. Headley placed her hand over them, taking up o
book," s
readin
their astonishment there was nothi
ugh. "It would not be much tr
o learn that black page,
me read the outside, moth
his mother, still show
out," said Alice, who was looking on wit
the next leaf, and t
ugh; "is this difficu
and answered. "Not so hard as the
gnes, with a tender li
med Alice; "and I be
h; "for I suppose you do not m
ow lovely it looks! Is this
, "that is the easiest pag
told us the meaning of the last
you of, dears?" she asked, i
lindness," "being lost,"
. Headley; "but
er?" asked Agnes
opeless night,' 'discomfort,' 'blindness,' 'being lost'
John hastily, "the red is
n take the black sin away. But that can; yes, the bl
y," said Hugh,
feel that we are utterly black a
mot
out all remembrance of the sin. The Lamb of
tiful!" s
ned to the next
lood has cleansed
now," said Min
nk the white reminds us of two or three
ought to be?"
ure He is," ans
and made them white in the blood of the Lamb,
introduces us to our final p
" said
," sai
hat one page which cost Him His life's blood. Now, dear children, repeat over
ed-Whit
ords as their mother turned
Righteousn
earnestness which impressed her young hearers, "May all of you fly from the f
ing long and lovingly at her little treasure, as
whole story on each page,
us one," answered Minni
l next Sunday,