The million-peopled city
Garwood, John
1853
Future Hopes.
Let us look forward to the last great day. "All the outward tinsel which distinguishes man from man will then have vanished, and the only distinction be that which is real and inward and unchangeable. That will still remain. What if then, among the company of the saved, we should see a band gathered from the Irish in London? No longer clothed in rags-for they shall be arrayed in the spotless garment of the Redeemer's righteousness, having washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. No more to live in the dark back-room on which the day | |
317 | never shines, but to dwell for ever in palaces of light beneath the broad beams of Christ, the Sun of Heaven. Never again despised and trampled on,-but the peers of angels, and kings and priests unto God. 'They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more,' and instead of the dark alleys in which they now live, where nothing meets the eye but blackened walls and smoky chimneys-they shall gaze with rapture on the golden streets of the New Jerusalem, and drink of its living fountains. And when from the whole of that vast multitude which encircles the throne, there ascends one united song of praise and thanksgiving, and men of every nation and people and tongue are sweeping their golden harps-those who in this London have never had the heart to touch the harp of their own , shall then be found among the harpers, thanking God for having snatched them out of Babylon, and swelling the chorus-' Glory be to Him that sitteth on the throne and to the Lamb.'" [1] |
318 | Wertheim and Macintosh, 24, Paternoster row, London. ERRATA. Page 94, line 2, for " 265," read " 256." ,, 167, ,, 15, for " James II.," read " Charles II." ,, 213, ,, 5, for " foreigner," read "foreigners." |
Footnotes: [1] Garratt's " Irish in London." |