The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 09, July, 1858 by Various
page 11 of 292 (03%)
page 11 of 292 (03%)
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Gaudentia rests. Sweet spirit of two years
and three months. Here is a gravestone with the single word VIATOR; here one that tells only that Mary placed it for her daughter; here one that tells of the light of the house,--[Greek: To phos thaes Oikias]. Nor is it only in these domestic and intimate inscriptions that the habitual temper and feeling of the Christians is shown, but even still more in those that were placed over the graves of such members of the household of faith as had made public profession of their belief, and shared in the sufferings of their Lord. There is no parade of words on the gravestones of the martyrs. Their death needed no other record than the little jar of blood placed in the mortar, and the fewest words were enough where this was present. Here is an inscription in the rudest letters from a martyr's grave:-- SABATIVS BENEMERENTI QVI VIXIT ANNOS XL To the well-deserving Sabatias, who lived forty years. And here another:-- PROSPERO INNOCENTI ANIMAE IN PACE. To Prosperus, innocent soul, in peace. And here a third, to a child who had died as one of the Innocents:-- |
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