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at Cluain Eidhnech in the present Queen's | fragment of the Liber Hymnorum already county, in the year 798. The collection con- spoken of, and which is a work of great imtains, besides, the Festology of Cathal M'Guire, portance to the ecclesiastical history of Irea work only known by name to the Irish land; and besides these the collection contains scholars of the present day; and it includes several important pieces relating to Irish histhe autograph of the first volume of the Annals tory of which no copies are known to exist of the Four Masters. There is also a copy or elsewhere.

WILLIAM ARCHER BUTLER.

BORN 1814- DIED 1848.

[The Rev. William Archer Butler was born | being smaller than his former one. He still at Annerville, near Clonmel, county Tipperary, in 1814. He came of an ancient and respectable family. When old enough he was sent to the endowed school at Clonmel, where he gained a high place in classic and scientific studies. In 1829 he entered the Dublin University, and the pages of the Dublin University Magazine soon brought before the world many of his well-known and brilliant poems, essays, sketches, and reviews. A number of these poems had existed in embryo in the mind of the boy in the days when he wandered through the delightful scenery of Garnavilla, on the banks of the Suir, to which his parents had removed shortly after his birth; and "constant allusions to his early home," writes his biographer, "are scattered through his poetry." As to his prose works, the same authority says, "It would be hard to point to compositions which exhibit greater variety of power in a single mind than the Analysis of the Philosophy of Berkeley, the Articles on Sismondi, on Whewell's History of the Inductive Sciences, and on Oxford and Berlin Theology.

In 1835 he was elected president of the College Historical Society. Two addresses delivered by him in this capacity are models of eloquence and power. About the time at which, in the ordinary course, he would have quitted the university, a professorship of moral philosophy was founded by Dr. Lloyd, and Mr. Butler was elected to the new chair. He shortly afterwards entered the ministry, and was presented by the board of Trinity College to the rectory of Clonehoska, in the county of Donegal and diocese of Derry. In 1842 Mr. Butler was promoted to the rectory of Raymoghy, in the diocese of Raphoe, also in Donegal, a more valuable living, though involving less onerous duties, the new parish

continued to discharge the duties of his pro-
fessorship, and to study closely during his
leisure hours; but these occupations formed
almost the only relaxations from the duties
connected with the claims of his sacred office.
These were attended to as faithfully as ever.
He, however, records a visit made in 1844 to
the Rev. P. Graves, curate of Windermere,
which seems to have been a sunny spot in the
life of the studious professor, for here he met
kindred spirits in the poet Wordsworth, Sir
William Hamilton, and Archdeacon Hare. In
1845 were published his first letters On Mr.
Newman's Theory of Development. In 1846
his parish was visited with all the horrors of
the Irish famine. Mr. Butler threw aside all
literary work, and devoted himself heart and
soul to the relief of the suffering people. The
system of trying to change the religion while
relieving the distress of the afflicted people
was strongly condemned by Mr. Butler, and
in a letter dated February 10th, 1847, to the
editor of the Dublin Evening Mail, he dis-
plays a spirit of wisdom and toleration too
rarely observed :-"It is not," he says, “with-
out fear and trembling I should at any time
receive into the Church a convert from any
of the forms of Christianity outside it, whom
I had known to be sincerely devoted ac-
cording to the measure of his light.
You have unsettled all a man's habitual con-
victions-are you prepared to labour night
and day to replace them with others as effec-
tive over the heart and life? If not, you have
done him an irreparable wrong. Motives to
righteousness, low, mixed, uncertain as they
may be, are greatly better than none; and
there can be no doubt that he who has lost so
many he once possessed, requires constant,
earnest, indefatigable exertion on the part of
the teacher who undertakes to supply their

place." These are brave words, and do the | That pilgrimed by; and, as I list, they take writer honour. A form, a being-such as deep repose Begets a reverie, almost a dream.

In 1848 Professor Butler was appointed to preach at an ordination in the church of Dun

That low monotonous murmur of sweet sound,
Unheard at noon, but creeping out at even!

That language known but to the delicate daughters
Of Tethys, the bright Naiads. All around

The thrilling tones gush forth to silent heaven. "We come," they sweetly sang, "we come from roving,

The long still summer day, 'mid banks of flowers,
Through meads of waving emerald, groves,

boe on Trinity Sunday. He appeared to be in I heard, I read the language of the waters— his usual health, but on returning home on the Friday following he was prostrated by fever, and died on Wednesday, the 5th of July, of that year. His loss was mourned by all classes and denominations of his parishioners. A series of his sermons, with a memoir, was published by the Rev. Thomas Woodward in 1849. Letters on the Development of Christian Doctrine in 1850, A Reply to Cardinal Wiseman in 1854, and Lectures on the History of Ancient Philosophy, edited, with notes, by W. H. Thompson in 1856. His poems have not yet been collected, but are to be found scattered through the pages of Blackwood and the University Magazine. It is said that in the latter publication alone there appeared, during his university career, enough poetry and essays, critical, historical, and miscellaneous, to fill several volumes.]

THE EVEN-SONG OF THE STREAMS.

Lo! couch'd within an odorous vale, where May
Had smiled the tears of April into flowers,

I was alone in thought one sunny even:
Mine eye was wandering in the cloudlets gray,
Mass'd into wreaths above the golden bowers,
Where slept the sun in the far western heaven.

I was alone, and watch'd the glittering threads,
So deftly woven upon the purple woof

By severing clouds, as parting into lines
Of slender light, their broken brilliance spreads
Thin floating fragments on the blue-arched roof,
And each, a waving banner, streams and shines.

A mountain lay below the sun, its blue
Veil'd in a robe of luminous mist, and seeming
To melt into the radiant skies above;

A broken turret near, and the rich hue
Of faded sunlight through its window gleaming,
Fainting to tremulous slumber on a grove.

But evening grew more pale. Her zoneless hair
Wound in dim dusky tresses round the skies,

And dews like heavenly love, with unseen fall,
Came showering. Insect forms swarm on the air,
To dazzle with their tangling play mine eyes,
That dropped and closed,-and mystery bo-
somed all !

Unsleeping thus—yet dreamingly awake—
Fancies came wooing me, and gently rose

To the soft sistering music of a stream

and woods.

Ours were delights: the lilies, mild and loving,
Bent o'er us their o'er-arching bells - those

bowers

For fays hung floating on our bubbling floods. "We come and whence? At early morn we sprung,

Like free-born mountaineers, from rugged hills,
Where bursts our rock-ribbed fountain. We

have sped

Through many a quiet vale, and there have sung
The murmuring descant of the playful rills,

To thank the winds for the sweet scent they
shed!

"Our sapphire floods were tinctured by the skies With their first burst of blushes, as we broke

At morn upon a meadow. Not a voice Rose from the solemn earth as ruby dyes

Swam like a glory round us, and awoke

The trance of heaven, and bade the world rejoice.

"Enwreath'd in mists, the perfumed breath of

morn,

Our infancy of waters freshly bright

Cleft the hush'd fields, warbling a matin wild; While beaming from the kindled heavens, and borne On clouds instinct with many-coloured light,

The Spirit of nature heard the strain, and smiled!

"Heaven's flushing east, its western wilds as pale As is the wan cheek of deserted love,

Its changeful clouds, its changeless deeps of
blue,

Lay glass'd within us when that misty veil
Evanished, disenshrouding field and grove,
Left us, a mirror of each heavenly hue,

"An echo of Heaven's loveliest tints! But lo!
The spell that bound us broke; in foaming leap
Our sheeted waters rush'd; our silvery vest
Of light o'erhung the cliffs, our gorgeous bower
Arch'd them at mid-fall,-till below the steep

The maniac waves sunk murmuring into rest.

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"The imaged sun floats proudly on our breast,
Ever beside each wanderer, though there be
Many to tread our path of turf and flowers:
A thousand sparkling orbs for one imprest
On us, for ours is the bright mimicry

Of Nature, changing with her changeful hours.
"And thus we have a world, a lovely world,
A softened picture of the upper sphere

Sunk in our crystal depths and glassy caves; And every cloud beneath the heavens unfurled, And every shadowy tint they wear, sleeps here, Here in this voiceless kingdom of the waves. "On to the ocean! ever, ever on!

Our banded waters, hurrying to the deep,

Lift to the winds a song of wilder strife;
And white plumes glittering in to-morrow's sun,
Shall crest our waves when starting out of sleep
For the glad tumult of their ocean-life.
"On to the ocean! through the midnight chill,
Beneath the glowing stars, by woodlands dim,
A silvery wreath of beauty shall we twine.
Thus may our course-ceaseless-unwearied still-
Pure-blessing as it flows-aye shadow him

Our sources who unlock'd with hand divine!"
The soft and golden Eve had glided through
Her portals in the west, and night came round.
The glamour ceased, and nothing met mine
eye

But waters, waters dyed in deepening blue-
Nothing mine ear, but a low bubbling sound,
Mingled with mine-and the faint night-
wind's-sigh.

HENRY COOKE, D.D., LL.D.

BORN 1788-DIED 1868.

[Henry Cooke, leader of the Ulster Presby- | after-life was considerably influenced by them. terians and a great platform and pulpit orator, was born at Grillagh, near Maghera, county Londonderry, 11th May, 1788. His father was a farmer, and, like most men of his class in that province, he was sensible, sturdy, and self-reliant. His mother, who was remarkable for her decision of character, owed her descent to a Scotch family who settled in Ireland during the plantation of Ulster, and her retentive memory was stored with legends and stories of Border raids and struggles of her forefathers in Scotland in defence of their faith, and later, of their sufferings during the rebellions and party feuds in their adopted land. The boy eagerly drank in these tales, and no doubt his | give light, but admitted free ventilation as

His first school, little better than a hedgeschool, stood about a mile distant from his father's house, and here under the hazel rod of Mr. Joseph Pollock, a tall, lanky Scotchman, young Cooke drank in his earliest lessons; and so great was his aptitude even at that early age, that his master, who had no mean opinion of his own genius, declared if the boy lived he would one day rival, if not excel, himself. Dr. Cooke describes a classical school he attended when some years older, conducted by a Mr. Frank Glass. The room had two windowframes but no glass, one of them was stuffed with sods; but the other not only served to

VOL. III.

54

well as occasionally the rain and snow. They had stones for seats, for which they ultimately substituted slabs of oak from the neighbouring bog, and by a penny subscription they procured the aid of a glazier. "We thus became wonderfully content," writes the doctor, "for we had the best master and the most comfortable school-house in all the country." He passed through the disturbance of the memorable year '98, and although many of the Presbyterians of Ulster were disaffected, his family remained on the side of the government. During that year, as he himself has told us, for weeks together he never slept in his father's house, as all families supposed to be well affected to England were watched and marked. One night when the family ventured to go to bed they were roused, and hurrying out, half clothed, they saw five houses in flames in different directions. "It was then and thus," writes the doctor, "I learned my political principles." The storm, however, passed over, and Dr. Cooke's family escaped all pecuniary loss. At fourteen he became a student in the Glasgow University.

After completing his university course Henry Cooke was licensed to preach as a Presbyterian minister, and in 1808 he began his career as pastor of the congregation of Duneane, near Randalstown. His first charge proved unsatisfactory alike to his congregation and to himself. Accustomed to a tamer and less intellectual style of pastor, the people received Cooke's eloquence with coldness, and styled his energy methodistical; while as to Cooke himself, he naturally found a post uncomfortable whose income amounted to the magnificent sum of about twenty-five pounds a year. After trying it for two years he resigned his appointment, and for a time he resided at Kells as tutor in the family of Mr. Brown. But his light could not long be hidden, and on the 22 January, 1810, he was appointed minister of Donegore, near Templepatrick, where he found a more appreciative congregation. At this period he preached strongly against Socinianism, and a bitter struggle for years with the many members and ministers of the Presbyterian Church who had embraced the doctrine was the result. But Dr. Cooke never flinched, and in the end, mainly owing to his firm purpose and unassailable reasoning, the Unitarians withdrew from the Presbyterian body and formed a synod and government of their own. In 1813 Dr. Cooke married Miss Ellen Mann of Toome.

course had not been so complete as he could desire, he spent two years at the Glasgow University, where he studied moral philosophy, natural history, and medical science; and in 1817, to still further complete his training, he, with the permission of his presbytery, entered Trinity College, Dublin. While here he resumed his study of medicine and walked the hospitals. He also found time for ecclesiastical labour, and not only in Dublin, but in Carlow and Stratford, his preaching was so highly successful that the synod of Munster unanimously agreed to return Dr. Cooke thanks for his mission work amongst them. In 1818 the reverend gentleman accepted the pastorship of Killyleagh, near Strangford Lough. This was one of the earliest Scotch settlements in Ulster. The lord of the manor was Archibald Hamilton Rowan, the patriot, and his son Captain Sidney Hamilton Rowan was a friend and admirer of Dr. Cooke.

In 1829 his friends built a magnificent church in May Street, Belfast, and Dr. Cooke accepted a call from the congregation. Men of all sects and parties flocked to May Street, drawn by the fame of the preacher. In 1829 the degree of D.D. was conferred upon him by the Jefferson College in the United States as a tribute of the esteem felt by his American brethren, and in recognition of his zealous earnestness in the promotion of evangelical truth. As a Conservative in principle he opposed O'Connell's policy, and challenged him to a political controversy. O'Connell refused on the ground that he did not come as an antagonist to Presbyterians; but on the contrary he wished to serve them. Unfortunately O'Connell was betrayed into expressions personally offensive to the doctor, and thus deeply offended the Presbyterians of Belfast. An antirepeal meeting was organized, and largely attended by the nobility and gentry of Belfast and the neighbourhood. On this occasion Dr. Cooke made one of his most eloquent speeches. In recognition of his services in opposition to repeal his friends presented him with £2000.

At this period his labours seemed to increase. He not only took an active part in the great ecclesiastical conflict which led to the formation of the Free Church of Scotland, but attended the House of Lords on the Presbyterian Marriage Bill. For years he had devoted all his spare time to the preparation of an Analytical Concordance of Scripture. In 1841 the work was complete, and he took it to London for publication, but the hotel in In 1815, with the conviction that his academic which he was residing was burned down, and

his manuscript, the result of seven years of toil, destroyed. "He had no copy, and he never found time to resume his task." For some years he devoted two hours in the mornings-from four to six-to the editing, with notes and introductions, a new edition of Brown's Family Bible.

veneration of his congregation. The Life and Times of Dr. Cooke, by J. L. Porter, D.D., LL.D., appeared in 1871. It leaves nothing to be desired, and not only paints the inner life of this great man, his motives and incentives, but gives an eloquent and deeply interesting picture of the times in which he lived.]

DR. COOKE AND SLAVERY.

Dr. Cooke was elected president of the Assembly's College, Belfast, in 1853. To the last he preserved his wondrous energy. Late or early he was found at his post, in the pulpit, in the lecture-hall, or on the platform. In 1865 another tribute of esteem was presented him in the shape of an illuminated volume, containing the names and addresses of sub-parative merits of Voluntaryism and State scribers, and a cheque for sixteen hundred guineas.

[In the course of a discussion on the com

endowment, Mr. McIlwaine, an American clergyman, had objected to some allusions by Dr. Cooke to the negro slavery question in the United States. This is the reply:-]

"My American friend has called my allusion to slavery ungenerous; and let him call it so if he will; but in Ireland men are accustomed to say, Be just before you be generous. My observation was just, for it was a thoroughgoing application of the great Franklin's principle. But my observation was not merely just; it was generous, too. I am one of those who have always thanked Providence for American Independence. England and America under one government would have unbalanced the freedom of the world. America, no doubt, like England, has her faults; but, like England, with all her faults, I love her still.' But, if ever it be my lot, as I wish it may one day be, to visit America, I shall devote myself exclusively to my religious duties, and I shall keep studiously aloof from all her political parties. I shall neither spout on her platforms as a Federalist nor as an anti-Federalist. I shall admire her Jacksons and her Clays, but refuse to be either Jack

His last attempt at public speaking was at the Hillsborough Protestant Demonstration in 1867; but though his intellect still remained clear, his physical power was gone; and, as in the case of the last speech in the House of Commons by his old antagonist O'Connell, the once powerful voice had sunk to an inaudible whisper. On the 5th of May in the same year he bade farewell to his congregation. The scene was most affecting, and the solemn service of that day left a deep impression on many hearts. Still holding by the political convictions of his life, he published an address to the Protestant electors of Ireland previous to the general election, in which, differing from many of his colleagues in the Presbyterian ministry, he denounced the proposed disestablishment of the Irish Church. On the 30th of June, 1868, the death of Mrs. Cooke, his companion of fifty-five years, gave him a severe stroke, from which he never rallied, and on the following 13th December he peacefully breathed his last. His funeral, a public one, will be long remembered. Students, professors, the clergy of all denomina-sonite or Clayite. I shall visit her as a citizen tions, Dr. Doran the Roman Catholic bishop, the corporation of Belfast, and representatives from every municipality in Ulster, formed a portion of the procession, two miles in length. The Primate of Ireland, the bishop of the diocese, and many members of parliament acted as pall-bearers. The houses along the route were covered with mourning drapery. His remains rest in the Malone Cemetery outside Belfast, and a tombstone erected by his daughters marks the spot. A statue in bronze was erected to his memory, and in his own church a portal of the Corinthian order of white Italian marble and polished Aberdeen granite stands as a memorial to the love and

of the world, and return without having iden-
tified myself with any of her local individuali-
ties. It was generous, therefore, when I gave
a lesson to American ministers, and admon-
ished them to avoid galling their neighbours.
Let American ministers come to Europe, to
give and receive the helps of mutual faith;
and not, like our present worthy visitant, to
commingle their voices with the shout of the
Radical, or the crash of agitation.
.. Why,
after having, accidentally or purposely, iden-
tified himself with agitators and Radicals in a
public meeting, and joined to denounce some
of the long-cherished institutions of the land—
why does he exclaim against all reference to

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