At the age of six yt-j
j^htfUl it wiLl te to go up to that Heaven ana see '
nev<ir clies "
:ns>^
^'^^?N
NOV 28 19
THE
/^
/
PERSIAI FLO AVER:
MEMOIR
JUDITH GRANT PERKINS
OF
OROOMIAK, PERSIA.
"the flowePw fadeth." Isaiah 40: 7.
BOSTON:
JOHN P. JEWETT AND COMPANY
CLEVELAND, OHIO :
JEWETT, PROCTOR AND WORTHINGTON.
LOXDOX : LOW AND COMPANY.
1853.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1853, by
JOHN P. JE\7ETT AND COMPANY,
in the Clerk's office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.
CAMBRIDGE :
ALLEN AND FABNHAM, PRINTERS.
EEMINGTON STREET.
PREFACE
The young stranger, to whom the kind reader is intro-
duced in this brief Memoir, -will, it is humbly beheved,
awaken more than a passing interest, both from the many
natural and acquired traits of loveliness which she possessed,
and from the circumstances of her birth and residence, as
well as her sudden and sorely lamented death, in a far off
missionary land.
The beautiful " Persian Flower " indeed soon faded ; but
it was spared long enough, not only to shed a sweet and
lasting fragrance upon the dear circle of missionary and
numerous other friends among whom it was graciously per-
mitted to blossom, but also to unfold those richer beauties,
which shall bloom, we trust, in immortal verdure, on the
" banks of the river of life."
That little Judith, as she will often be designated, (though
at her death, she had nearly attained the stature and matu-
rity of womanhood,) was, in the strongest sense, a very re-
markable character, will not be urged. Nor is it believed,
that the light of her youthful example and loveliness would
VI PREFACE.
have been in any sense more sacred and valuable, had she
possessed more precocious and unattainable endowments.
But that she was a highly gifted and very amiable, as well as
dearly beloved, child, will, I think, abundantly appear from
the following narrative. Indeed, as is there suggested, Ju-
dith was rather remarkable for the beauty and symmetry of
her entire character, than for the striking development of
any one trait, or any dazzling peculiarity.
And as this fair " flower " may have owed something of its
sweetness to the mild and sunny skies of the balmy East,
which gave it existence — a land to which the lines of Bishop
Heber would not be unaptly applied,
" Where every prospect pleases.
And only man is vile,"
so will its loss, from the family and peculiar circle, from
which it was so suddenly snatched away, awaken a deeper
and more melancholy interest. Under any circumstances,
we deeply mourn the premature " nippings of those bright
blossoms ; " but the heart can but be touched with a more
tender sorrow, when the breach is made in the family and cir-
cle of missionaries, exiled from the society and congeniaHties
of home and kindred, and subject to the vicissitudes and
trials of a residence among a foreign people and in a distant
clime.
And as none have perhaps been more fondly cherished,
than the few cultivated, exemplary, and pious children of
missionaries, who have been providentially allowed to share
the fellowship and hospitalities of the churches, so no class, it
PREFACE. Vll
is believed, will be counted more deserving of prayerful re-
gard and of sacred remembrance, than these precious exotics,
reared as they are, amid the corruptions of surrounding un-
godliness and depravity. And it is in no small degree with
the hope of contributing to a better acquaintance, and a
more lively sympathy with these dear offspring of the ser-
vants of the churches, that this sketch, interesting peculiarly,
as it will perhaps be, to the circle of missionary acquaint-
ances and the numerous friends of our beloved and deeply
stricken brother and sister, so often previously bereaved, is
given to the public.
There is another consideration, which will give peculiar
interest to the following sketch. It is the memoir of a mis-
sionary child ; and as such, gives a glimpse into the interior
of missionary life. The family hearth, the private and social
endearments, and the every day pursuits and concerns of the
missionary's home, with which there is a strong and almost
universal desire to become acquainted, are here presented,
as they cannot well be in the records of general missionary
labors, as they appear in our periodicals ; or in the memoirs
of the more public services of adult missionaries.
It is believed, also, that the numerous notes of condolence,
addressed to the bereaved parents, which are introduced
towards the close of the volume, will be read with deep in-
terest-, as illustrating, in an incidental but affecting manner,
the fraternal relations and fellowship existing among mis-
sionaries of the same and of different missions.
It is proper to add, what will doubtless occur to those
familiar with the productions of the respected father of the
Vlll PREFACE.
deceased, that a large proportion of tlie matter has been pre-'
pared by him. The labor of the writer of this preface has
been trifling indeed ; and he •would only remark in conclu-
sion, that whatever aid he may have furnished, has been most
heartily and spontaneously given, as he cannot doubt will
also be, the tribute of interest and sympathy felt by the
kind reader.
It only remains that we briefly state the history of the lar-
ger portrait which accompanies this memoir. The parents
had no likeness of the dear child at the time of her death, the
rude state of the fine arts, in the land of their missionary so-
journ, rendering it difficult to obtain such mementos. In
their anguish, after the death of their greatly beloved daugh-
ter, with not even the solace of a likeness of her, one of their
associates applied to H. A. Churchill, Esq*, a very talented
young Englishman, who had visited Judith's home about a
month before her death, as secretary of the British Commis-
sion, under Colonel Williams, for settling the boundary be-
tween Turkey and Persia ; who was known to be a remarka-
bly skilful artist, and was now at Constantinople, thirteen
hundred miles distant from Oroomiah. Four months had
elapsed, after Mr. Churchill's very brief acquaintance with
Judith, when the application that he should attempt to fur-
nish a likeness of her, reached him. Notwithstanding the
difficulties of the undertaking, he kindly and promptly ap-
plied himself to the task ; how modestly, his own language in
the letter accompanying the likeness may best tell : " I have
tried to bring together my faint ideas of poor Miss Judith's
features, and I herewith forward to you a sketch, which, ac-
PREFACE. ix
cording to the members of the two commissions, [the British
and the Russian,] looks very much like the poor girl. You
conceive that it is a very difficult thing ; and if you, -who
have seen more of her, find that the sketch does not in reality
resemble her, you will naturally excuse me."
While the portrait, taken under such peculiar disadvan-
tages, bore a strong general resemblance to the original,
it had some points of dissunilarity, more easily detected, of
course, from recollection, by those long and famiharly ac-
quainted with Judith, than by a stranger. In these circum-
stances, Mr. Stoddard, one of her parents' associates, applied
his skilful hand, (before unpractised on portraits,) and made
some slight modifications in Mr. Churchill's picture, the re-
sult of which was so successful, that even the Nestorians, who
were acquainted with Judith, would instantly weep when
that picture met their eyes, though uninformed that it was
intended as the portrait of the loved departed one, except by
the likeness itself
A Missionary Associate of Judith's Parents.
Oroomiah^ Persia., Jan. 1853.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
INFANCY, AND VISIT TO AMERICA.
Judith's paternal Grandmother — Quiet Infancy — Land Journey —
Friends at Erzroom — Voyage — Fondness for Sea Life — Arrival
in America — Kind Reception — Her maternal Grandfather, 1
CHAPTER n.
RETURN TO PERSIA.
Parting Avith Friends — Her desire to go to her Eastern Home —
Entertaimnent on the Passage — An-ival at SmjTna — Attachment
to Miss Fisk — Arrival at Constantinople — Land Journey — Arrival
at Oroomiah — Mount Seir — Attachment to the Children of the
Mission, ....... 11
CHAPTER m.
HER EDUCATION AND READING.
Learning the Alphabet — Interest in Scripture Narratives — Early
Religious Impressions — Death of a Sister — Prayerfulness — Eager-
ness for Knowledge — Reading large Books — Affected by particular
XU CONTENTS.
Books — Memoir of Margaret Davidson — Love of Nature — Uncle
Tom's Cabin — Deep interest in " Little Eva," . . 21
CHAPTER IV.
APTNESS, TACT, AND CAPABILITY.
Studying alone — The Seraphine — Literest in Botanj- — Desire to
become a Teacher — Acquisition of the Syriac Language — Sharing
in Domestic Cares — Attending the Nestorian Female Seminary —
Desire for a School — Notes to Miss Harris, and one from Miss H.
— A bereaved School — Anticipation of attending Mount Holyoke
Seminary — Her first Note — Elding on a Saddle, . . 36
CHAPTER V.
HER COERESPONDENCE.
Ease and Maturity of her Stj-le — Note from Mrs. Coan — Notes to
Mrs. Coan — The Gawar Station — Her Last Note, . 53
CHAPTER VI.
HER SOCIAL CHARACTER.
Intercourse Avith the Children and Families of the Mission — Visits
from European Gentlemen and Travellers — Chevaher Khanikoff —
The English and Russian Commissioners for settling the Boundary
— Missionary Visitors — Letter from Anna Sandreczki — Judith's
Reply — Her AflFection for absent Relatives and Friends — Her Gra-
titude for Tokens of Remembrance ^- Reminiscences of her by Mr.
Rhea, 71
CHAPTER VIL
RELIGIOUS INFLUENCES, AND INTEREST.
Notes addressed to her on her Birthdays — Notes from Mi*. Rhea to
the Children of the Mission — Her Sabbath School — Committing
CONTENTS. XIU
Hymns — Juvenile Missionary' Concert — Desire to become a Mis-
sionary — Interest and efforts in tlie Missionary Work — Nestorian
Female Seminary — Interest in her departed Brothers and Sisters —
"The Infant's Call" — Love for the Saviour — The last Night of
her last Year — Her last Pencillings, ... 86
CHAPTER Vm.
JUDITH'S LAST JOURNEY.
Her size and appearance at that time — Objects of the Journey —
Her desire to undertake it — First Stage — Stop at Gavalan — Her
appearance there — Night passed at Khoy — Attacked of Cholera —
The last hour's Ride — Sickness — Inhospitality of the Mohamme-
dan Villagers — Her Calmness, . . - . 108
CHAPTER IX.
PKOGRESS OF THE DISEASE, AND DEATH.
Medicines ineflfectual — Looking to Chi-ist — View of the Saviour —
Her composure — Request to be buried by her Sister — Henry's Dis-
tress — Clearness and activity of her Mind — Collapse — Spasms —
Dreary aspect around — Her Submission and Resignation — Affec-
tion for her Parents — Her Prayer — Recollection of her little Tree
— Sj-mptoms of wandering — Request to hear passages of Scripture
and Hymns repeated — Restlessness — Recognition of Henry —
Peaceful exit, ...... 121
CHAPTER X.
RETURN AND FUNERAL.
Henry's Remarks — Recollection of Dr. and Mi's. Grant — Prepar-
ing the Coi-pse for the return — Parley with the Muleteer — Leaving
the Village — Meeting the Russian Commissioner — Reminiscences
of Judith on the Road — Her remark to Heniy, the Sabbath Evening
XIV CONTENTS.
before her Death — Note from her Father to his Associates — Beach-
ing Gavalan — An-ival of the Intelligence of her Sickness and Death
at Seir — Funeral Services — Sorrow of the Nestorians — Hpnn at
the Grave, 134
CHAPTER XL
A DESOLATE HOME.
Dependence of the Parents and Henry on Judith — Grateful Sympa-
thy— The last Hymn she committed to Memory — Henry's Dream
— Judith's Intelligence and Maturity — The silent Seraphine —
Bereavement felt by the Children and Families of the Mission —
Caty Cochran's Remark — Sound of the Seraphine revived, 147
CHAPTER XH.
NOTES OF CONDOLENCE.
Notes from Missionary Associates of Judith's Parents — Notes from
Enghsh Gentlemen— From Col. WiUiams— From the Messrs.
Stevens — From Mr. Rassam — Note from Mr. Rhea of Gawar —
Note from a Nestorian Deacon — A Nestorian namesake of Judith
— Recollections of her death gi-ateful — Sympathy of the Moham-
medans — Of Prince Malek Kasem Meerza and others, . 155
CHAPTER Xm.
NOTES OF CONDOLENCE CONTINUED.
Notes from Members of other Missions — From Mr. and Mrs. Peabody,
Erzroom — From Mr. Powers, Trebizond — From Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight — From Mr. Schauffler — From Mr. HamUn — From Mr.
Benjamin — From Mr. Calhoun, of SjTia — From Mr. Schneider, of
Aintab — From Mr. Wilhams, Mosul — Remains of Nineveh —
The "Communion of Saints" illustrated in Missionary Sympa-
thy,
174
CONTENTS. XV
CHAPTER XIV.
CONCLUSION.
Reminiscences of Judith by a Nestorian Girl — Note firom Mr. Stod-
dard, written near the place of Judith's Death — Letter from Mr.
Stoddard to Dr. Anderson — Second Note from Mr. Stevens —
Note from Mrs. Crane on her arrival at Oroomiah — Note and
Stanzas from Mrs. Breath — Concluding Remarks— Poetry by Dr.
Bethune, ....... 204
M E M 0 I E .
CHAPTER I.
INFANCY, AND VISIT TO AMERICA.
Judith Grant Perkins, the subject of this
memoir, was a very lovely Persian flower. She
was the daughter and fourth child of Rev. J.
Perkins, D. D., and IVIrs. C. B. Perkins, the first
missionaries to the Nestorian Christians, and
was born at Oroomiah, Persia, August 8th,
1840. She united in her name the name of
her revered paternal grandmother and that of
Mrs. Grant, of precious memory, who died at
Oroomiah one year and a half before her birth.
About four years before her death, a plate
from that grandmother's coffin was sent to her
missionary son in Persia, bearing this inscrip-
tion, — " Judith Perkins, died January 5th,,
1848, aged 78 ; " and under it were three beau-
1
2 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
tiful stanzas from the sweet and gifted pen of
Mrs. Sigourney, in her handwriting, and with
her signature ; also a lock of the departed pil-
grim's hair. These tenderly interesting memen-
toes were sent in a neat frame, which was hung
in the parlor of little Judith's home, where it still
hangs, and where her eye often rested fondly and
thoughtfully upon it.
As a passing notice of that very excellent
grandmother, and introductory to the record of
the child who bore her name and shared her
^affection, we here introduce those three stanzas
just as they were forwarded.
ON THE BEATH OF ]\IRS JUMTH PERKINS.
" The pilgrim's piith was long and lone,
And snows were o'er her temples strewn,
Yet still, with courage, firm and high,
And meekness in her heaA^en-raised eye,
Her coiirsc she kept, unmarked by feai'.
The thought of home, her soul to cheer.
That promis'd home, among the blest,
Where all the weary hearted rest.
" Though seeds of hallow'd love were sown.
Along the pathAvay now so lone.
And tendrils from their roots had sprung.
That closely round her bosom clung.
Content to break those cherish'd ties.
And listening for the call to rise.
She oft inquir'd with prayerful sigh,
* How far from home, Oh Lord, am I ? '
JTIDITH G. PERKINS. 3
" Life's last faint steps were travel-wore,
And pangs of sharp disease she bore,
For night and day, with tyi'ant chain,
The spoiler made each breath a pain ;
But on the sky, as earth withdrew.
Her home's fair turrets brighter gi'ew,
While faith the lingering strife sustain'd,
Until its glorious gate she gain'd."
Little Judith was the only " tendril " from
Persian soil which that grand parent was ever
permitted to behold on earth. Several others in
that far-off land had been nipped in the bud by
the chills of death, and transplanted to the celes-
tial paradise. But with the most yearning ten-
derness did the aged saint often embrace this
one, as if in the concentration of her love for
them all, during a short portion of the little stran-
ger's sojourn in America; and most devoutly
did she often implore for that tenderly beloved
grandchild the blessings of a covenant-keeping
God.
We have called Judith a very lovely Persian
flower. She was such, emphatically, through-
out her short life. The kind missionary sister,*
who first dressed the infant, struck with her
peculiar loveliness and sweet quiet, with a fond
kiss, said at that time, " She means that we
shall all love her ; " a remark as prophetic of her
* Mrs. J. Stocking.
4 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
subsequent life and character, as it was descrip-
tive of her appearance on the day of her birth.
She was a remarkably quiet child during the
period of her infancy ; yet happy, active, and
playful, to an extent equally remarkable, greatly
interesting all who saw her, whether of the
members and families of the mission, or of the
Nestorians.
Little Judith had not completed one year of
her life, when the seriously impaired health of
her mother compelled her parents to leave their
home and their work, and seek a change, by a
visit to America. Brief records of the infant's
journey and voyage are found in the volume,
published by her father, during that visit, entitled
" A Residence of Eight Years in Persia." Of
the land journey, he says, " there was a humble
individual in our travelling company, whom I
have not yet formally introduced, and to whom,
as well as to the reader, I perhaps owe an apo-
logy. Little Judith, our only surviving child,
was eleven months old, when we left Oroomiah.
She rode in a pannier, or deep basket, suspend-
ed by the side of a horse, and balanced by one
of a similar form and dimensions, on the oppo-
site side. In the latter, we carried a few light
articles, which we needed during our ride, and
which were thus readily accessible. No addi-
tional horse was required for the infant, as our
JUDITH G. PERKINS. #
servant rode -apon the same to keep the baskets
adjusted to the pack-saddle. The one in which
the child rode was partially lined with a wool
cushion, and had a seat of the same fixed near
the bottom, with a stick across in front to con-
fine her in her place, while it allowed her to
recline sufficiently to sleep. She sometimes
remonstrated against being taken from her warm
bed, early in the morning, and shut up in her
moving prison ; but she would soon become
quiet, and usually fall asleep, as we moved on,
being lulled by the gentle motion of the horse
and the music of the bells ; or, if these did not
suffice, by the shrill lullaby of the kind Nesto-
rian servant. In a few instances the horse fell,
with his precious charge half under him ; but
providentially the child was unharmed and
unfrightened, and with the rest of us safely
survived the journey, though performed amid
the famine, pestilence, and sword." *
This extract sufficiently illustrates the man-
ner in which the infant traveller performed the
journey of between six and seven hundred miles,
over the rugged and sublime mountains of
ancient Pontus and Armenia. Wherever her
parents met friends, few and far between, on
that long and lonely journey, their infant daugh-
* Residence of Eight Years in Persia, page 477.
ter was an object of attention and admiration.
A gentleman* at Erzroom, who had kindly
entertained those missionaries a few weeks on
their first adventurous journey to Persia many
years before, when he was the only civilized
resident in that remote Turkish town, now met
the mother for the first time after that acquaint-
ance ; and at the sight of her, so changed from
the bloom of youth and health, to the wan,
emaciated appearance of a feeble invalid, his
mind suddenly filled with the recollection of her
manifold sicknesses, sufferings, and bereave-
ments, during the intervening period, which
deeply affected him ; yet at that tender mo-
ment, as his eye rested on her infant, he could
not help remarking, " you have a very fine child
there." And the solitary missionary sister,f
then residing at Erzroom, in the fulness of her
joy in welcoming the parents, on their arrival,
in like manner could not suppress the exclama-
tion, as little Judith met her gaze, " Why ! have
all the children you have lost been'as lovely and
interesting as this one ? " Such expressions
were painfully interesting to her parents, raising
in their minds the apprehension that the lovely
flower might soon be transplanted, as all their
other children had been, to a more congenial
clime.
* P. Zohrab, Esq. t Mrs. Jackson.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 7
The record of little Judith's voyage to Amer-
ica is thus given in the "Residence of Eight
Years in Persia," from which we have above
quoted the notice of her land journey. " While
this change from the tedium and perils of our
long voyage to the freedom of the shore, the
greeting of friends after om* long absence, and
the tender delights of reaching America, were
grateful to us beyond description, I must except
one of our number. Judith, who was thnteen
months old when we left Smyrna, earned an
eulogium on the ocean as well as on the land,
having thrived wonderfully during the whole of
our long rough passage, [of one hundred and nine
days,] and seeming to enjoy life at sea far more
than anywhere else. She began to walk the
day we embarked, and soon became able to run
about the deck with a nimbleness that put to
blush her fellow passengers, and almost vied
with the practised sailors ; and she became so
fond of the deck, that we found it extremely
difficult to quiet her in the cabin during her
waking hours, and were obliged to allow her a
free range above, even when the vessel wa&
lying to in gales, if it did not actually storm..
"Without any milk on the passage, and living
only on ordinary passengers' fare, she grew
rapidly, and was contented and happy to the
8 THE PERSIAN ELOWER; OR
last, to an extent that astonished all on
board." *
It may be added that the infant was weaned
without milk, and with the least conceivable
trouble, during the early part of the passage.
Her ceaseless activity and playfulness soon won
the heart of the kind and social captain,f who
made her his little companion much of the time.
In his plain, sailor style, he one day said, play-
fully, to the parents, " Judy ought to be a hoy^^
and then she would rough it to some purpose,
and traverse the whole world."
The sudden transfer, on reaching New York,
from the long and irksome imprisonment on
shipboard to an elegant parlor of a hotel, so
welcome to the parents, was at last pathetically
deplored by the infant voyager, who, taking her
stand in the centre of the room, and surveying
in turn each strange and imposing object around
her, at length met her own little form in the
great mirror, and burst into audible weeping.
But little Judith soon found too many kind
friends in America, even among strangers, to
allow her long to pine for sea life. It would
detain us too long to attempt to mention all or
a tithe of the acquaintances which she soon
^ Residence of Eight Years in Persia, page 491.
t Captain Haven, of Philadelphia.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 9
made, or the attachments she soon formed
among those she had never before seen ; or to
recount the tender kindness which she, as well
as her parents, experienced at their hands. She
soon won a large place in the hearts of all her
relatives who saw her, the survivors among
whom, we doubt not, bitterly wept, w^hen the
tidings of her early death reached them.
She spent most of the tim.e, during her thir-
teen months' sojourn in America, in company
with her mother, with her maternal grand pa-
rents, in Middlebury, Vermont. To those grand
parents, she became very tenderly attached ; and
of her grandpapa, in particular, the late excel-
lent Dr. William Bass, who found more time
than other members of the family to caress and
play with her, she seemed ever to retain a re-
membrance, though but two and a half years
old when she left him. Often riding on his
shoulder to the cupboard, to take a piece of
sugar from the bowl with her own tiny fingers,
was one of the incidents which she ever after-
ward associated with him. That fond grand-
papa must also have little Judith sit by his side,
on her low cricket, while the Bible was read at
family worship, and kneel by him, when he
carried the family fervently and devoutly to the
throne of grace. Often did his speaking eye
glance upon the little one, as she thus sat by his
10 THE PERSIAN FLOWER.
side, and most earnestly did he commend her to
Israel's Shepherd, at the mercy seat. Her seri-
ous, attentive demeanor, at worship, even then,
deeply interested and impressed him, and some-
times pronrpted from him a remark in regard to
it. Her father once replied to such a remark,
" I am very glad, sir, that you find so much to
interest you, in our little daughter." " O, I think
she is a remarkable child," rejoined the venera-
ble man, his voice choking, and the tears trick-
ling down his cheeks. " Children's children are
the crown of old men ; and the glory of children
are their fathers."
CHAPTER 11.
JUDITH'S KETURN TO PERSIA.
It was with tenderest fondness and many-
tears, that her numerous relatives and other
friends pressed little Judith, for the last time, to
their bosoms, and gave her the last kiss, on the
eve of her return to Persia. Those parting
scenes made a strong impression on the little
one. But the inquhy had sometimes come
from Persia, during that year, to her parents,
from their beloved associates in the field, " When
shall we see little Judith's sweet face again ? "
She had also been told of a playmate, about her
own age, far beyond the ocean, who longed to
welcome her to her Eastern birthplace ; and her
little heart thus became interested and set on
going to that distant home. To the oft repeat-
ed inquiry, both in America and on the way,
" "Where are you going, Judith ? " she accord-
ingly replied, " I am going to Persia, to see
Waller Holladay." It was with pleasure, there-
fore, and without one painful regret, that she
now parted with friends in the land of her kin-
dred.
12 THE PERSIAN flower; OR
Her appearance was peculiarly interesting,
when she re embarked. It is thus touchingly
described by Miss Fisk, in writing to a kind
friend * of Judith, soon after her death. " God
has taken from us one, who first met my eye,
having her little hand held by yours, and being
blessed by your kind heart. This was more
than nine years ago, and when a frail bark was
about to be loosed from its moorings, and to bear
a lonely band of missionaries to far off Persia.
The little one you so fondly pressed to your
bosom on that dreary March day had not then
seen three summer's suns. The first short year
of her life was passed beneath Persia's lovely
skies ; and then she was borne to our father-
land, to bloom there for a short time, and to win
the love of grand parents, uncles, aunts, and
cousins, and hundreds more. But when you
gave her that fond parting blessing, her young
heart was turned to her eastern home ; and I
remember with what delight she pointed you to
the land where her earliest playmate dwelt, and
said she would soon be there. Not the mother,
with restored health, nor the father, with his
faithful message to the churches given, now
returning to their loved, chosen home ; nor we,
who for the first time turned our faces to this
=* Mrs. William Reed of Marblehead, Mass.
JUDITH G. PERKIXS. 13
fair land, were more happy to feel that the
winds and the waves were bearing us on their
way, than was this little one, whose voyage of
life is now ended."
Little Judith contributed much to the life and
enjoyment of each passing day among all on
board, during the monotony of the voyage to
Smyrna. The large company embraced, be-
sides her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stoddard, IVIr.
and Mrs. E. E. Bliss, (of Trebizond,) Miss
Myers, (now Mrs. Wright,) Miss Fisk, and Mar
Yohannan. She was now interested in almost
every thing that interested the missionary pas-
sengers. If they, at the hour of sunset, or any
other time, looked abroad upon the face of the
mighty deep, musing in silence on its vast-
ness — the apt emblem of eternity — or in social
relaxation watched near their vessel for fishes,
she too must be lifted up for the same purpose,
and never tired of the employment.
When they, to pass usefully the hours of the
day, read together in the cabin or on deck, she
must be with them, if not to listen to the read-
ing, at least to scan the pictures in some of the
books thus read. Her particular favorite was
Hitchcock's Geology, which was one of the
books read in course by the party, and to
which she became so much attached, that she
was at length inclined to appropriate it as her
14
hook^ hardly being able to loan it to others long
enough for the hour's daily reading. It is of
course not wonderful for a child to admire pic-
tures ; but the attachment of little Judith to
that book was very peculiar and striking to
those who observed it ; and the names and forms
of some of the minerals described in it, becoming
thus familiar to her, made so strong an impres-
sion on her mind, that collecting stones, about
her home, for her papa's cabinet, on reaching
Persia, was one of her earliest and most agree-
able pastimes. Often did she enter his study
with her little apron stored with pebbles, and
with the inquiry, " papa, are not these nice
stones ? "
So also, when the missionaries raised the spy-
glass, to view the distant passing ship, or survey
the strange shores which they approached, she
too must ever take her turn, in looking at the same
objects. And not the smiling Azore islands —
the first outlines of sable Africa, or Old Spain —
the towering rock of Gibraltar, or its sister pillar
of Hercules — the smoke of burning Etna — nor
a single cape or island of classic Greece, was of-
tener or more eagerly, (though of course more in-
telligently,) gazed upon by them, than by this
infant voyager.
On reaching Smyrna, as the anchor struck the
bottom of the harbor, Judith, still only a little
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 15
more than two and a half years old, leaped up
from the deck and clapped her little hands, so
lively was her sympathy with her parents and the
other missionary passengers, in their joy that
they had reached Asia, and so fully alive was
she, to whatever interested them.
She slept with Miss Fisk during the voyage.
This kind friend took particular care of Judith,
in the feeble health of her mother, both on the
ocean and on the land journey ; and how little
burdensome or irksome to her was the charge,
may be inferred from her statement, that the
child waked her but in one instance, during the
whole rough passage. .In this early acquaintance
with ]\Iiss Fisk, Judith contracted an attachment
and regard for her, which she ever afterward ar-
dently cherished, and which exerted much influ-
ence on her character. A trifling incident which
then occuiTcd, will illustrate the strength of that
attachment, as well as the grateful disposition of
the child. Observing a small mole on Miss Fisk's
face, in her strong desire to be " like aunt Fide-
lia " in all things, she requested, and repeatedly
importuned, that a " spot," as she called it, might
be made on her own face, and tried various little
expedients to produce one herself.
We may not linger at the different mission sta-
tions on the way, and enter with little Judith into
the joys of the new acquaintances, which she
16 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
made at each stopping place, or the reminiscences
cherished of her there ; but must hasten onward
to her Persian home.
The swift steamer bore the missionary band
more quickly than " the wings of the wind " from
Smyrna to Constantinople. And the matchless
splendors of the great city of Constantine, as
viewed in approaching it from the sea of Mar-
mora and on entering the spacious harbor — its
lofty minarets — massive and shining mosques —
gilded palaces — and innumerable other imposing
objects, found so interested an admirer in Judith,
who pronounced them all churches^ that not the
early hour, nor the inclement air of the bleak
morning of their arrival, could confine her in the
cabin, after the passengers began to sally forth,
at early dawn, for observation.
On board another swift steamer, after a stay
of three weeks at the Turkish capital, the mis-
sionary party glided up the smiling Bosphorus,
and over the frowning Euxine, to Trebizond,
where the little traveller's pannier, or deep bas-
ket, had found a safe keeping during her visit to
America, with the good missionary then residing
there, Mr. Johnston ; and there she resumed her
seat in it, for the long land journey.
She was by no means an uninterested observer
on the land, as the missionary pilgrims traversed
the sublime mountains, the beautiful valleys, and
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 17
the vast plains — crossed the ancient river Araxes,
and the more venerable Euphrates, or encamped
hard by the base of Mount Ararat, on their way
to Persia. The frequent and almost intermina-
ble caravans, moving in file, with measured step
and jingling bells, which they met on the road,
also afforded high entertainment for Judith.
When inclined, she would sleep as she rode, so
that, on halting, unlike the rest of the company,
dismounting from their saddles, often much fa-
tigued at the close of a ride of thirty or forty
miles, she was never tired, and would run and
play about the tent during the remainder of the
day.
Arrived, at last, at her long sought Persian
home, little Judith seemed to share fully with the
rest, in the general feelings of joy and thanksgiv-
ing. Instead of resuming their residence in the
city of Oroomiah, her birthplace, her parents now
removed to the health-retreat of the mission, on
account of the still feeble health of the mother.
This health-retreat is situated six miles south by
west of the city, on a gentle declivity of Mount
Seir, at a Nestorian village of the same name,
which, in Persian, signifies mount recreation. It
is thus designated, on account of the agreeable
attractions which it presents to vast numbers
who resort to it for that purpose, from the city
and villages below, particularly in the season of
2
IS THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
spring. This retreat is about a thousand feet
above the city afid plain ; but the ascent to it is
so gradual, that it is very easily and pleasantly
accessible.
The air is very salubrious on this mountain
declivity ; and a large spring of fine water, which
bursts from the ground just above the mission
premises, contributes to the healthfulness of that
residence hardly less than the pure air itself.
Magnificent views of splendid natural scenery
stretch from it to the distance of fifty, seventy,
and a hundred or more miles, in all directions,
except on the west, where the beautiful grassy
Mount Seir, an isolated spur of the lofty Koord-
ish ranges farther back, towers majestically, yet
very gracefully, about two thousand feet still
above the mission premises, and three thousand
above the level of the plain.
At this delightful health residence, the depart-
ment of translation and other labors in preparing
matter for the press of the mission, is principally
conducted by Judith's father, though the printing
itself is done in the city, under the supervision
of Mr. Breath. Here, too, the Nestorian male
seminary is situated, which is under the care of
Messrs. Stoddard and Cochran, who also reside
at Seir. And hither the families of the mission,
living in the city, often resort temporarily, espe-
cially in the heat and sickliness of summer, for the
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 19
preservation of their health, or its restoration
when impaired. This was JudithU Persian home.
Being the tallest and the eldest but one, at the
time of her return to Persia, of the juvenile band
in the mission, she immediately led the van in
their play. She soon ardently loved all those
children, and her affection was ever warmly re-
ciprocated by them. As she grew older, she
would exercise an almost maternal care over the
smaller ones, treating them with the utmost ten-
derness, and seeming to feel that they were her
peculiar charge. , She was always delighted with
the privilege of assisting their mammas, in taking
care of them at their homes, and her ability, as
well as her readiness to do this, is seldom equalled
in one of her years.
Her attachment to the missionary children was
enduring as well as ardent. Her grief was al-
most inconsolable, when, several years after her
return to Persia, she heard of the death of the
first Mrs. Stoddard, who died of cholera, at Tre-
bizond, in 1848, not only in her deep sense of the
loss sustained by all the mission, in the removal
of that estimable friend, but because, as she said,
she should " never again see little Harriet and
Sarah." She lived to welcome Harriet back to
Oroomiah, with a joy long and fondly anticipa-
ted, and stronger than can well be conceived;
but by an inscrutable providence, as we shall at
20 THE PERSIAN FLOWER.
length see, she was never more permitted to greet
little Sarah, (whom she had known only as an
infant,) though in the most lively expectation of
enjoying that pleasure in the course of a very few
days, being on her way to meet her when she
died.
CHAPTER III.
HER EDUCATION, AXD READING.
Judith commenced learning the alphabet, with
her loved grandpapa in America, who, it hardly
need be stated, took gi-eat delight in teaching
her, as she would run to him with the separate
letters on small cards, when called for by name.
During the first year after her return to Persia,
Miss Myers, (now Mrs. Wright,) resided wdth
her parents, and the little one slept wdth her.
Her affectionate heart soon clung fondly to that
kind friend, who assisted her mamma in teaching
her, in beginning to read and spell. Her aptness
in imitating, and her strong desire to emulate
those whom she loved, appeared often in this
connection, in her care to sleep straight, that she
might be as tall as " aunt Kate." And it is per-
haps not too much to suppose, that something of
the remarkably erect and graceful form which
marked her growth, may be owing to her childish
efforts, at that time, to attain the height of one
whom she so much admired.
At an early period, Judith became exceedingly
22 THE PERSIAN FLOWER j OR
interested in listening to Scripture narratives,
and equally so in reading the Bible, when she be-
came able herself to read. There being no school
for the children of the mission, her education
naturally devolved on her mamma, who faithfully
instructed her in her various studies, and espe-
cially in the Holy Scriptures, in which employ-
ment both daughter and mother found unspeak-
able pleasure. The Bible was a book of absorb-
ing interest to her, and she seldom tired of study-
ing it.
She early manifested much tender religious
interest, in connection with the study of the
Scriptures. She has been known to weep, long
and convulsively, in reading the narrative of
Christ's betrayal and crucifixion, and she could
hardly be quieted on such occasions.
Judith was more or less interested — in some
instances very deeply so — in each successive re-
vival among the Nestorians, the first of which
occurred when she was only six years old. And
her interest was much increased, in one case, by
the death of a little brother, and in another case,
by the death of a little sister, which occurred in
seasons of revival. Two of her notes, to her kind
friend. Miss Fisk, written when she was eight
years old, and among her earliest attempts at
correspondence, are here introduced, as referring
to the death of that little sister.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 23
" Thursday, Jan. 25t7i, 1849.
"My dear Miss Fisk, — The Lord has in-
deed come very near to us, in taking our darling
sister. We all loved her very much ; but the
Lord has seen it best to take her to himself.
" Please give my mother's love, and my own,
to Mrs. Stocking, and Miss Rice, and the chil-
dren.
" Your affectionate friend,
" Judith."
" My dear Miss Fisk, — You asked me to
write you again, and so I now write. I was very
glad to receive your kind note of Saturday eve-
ninsf. It is true that I loved sister Fidelia most
dearly, but I hope that I did not love her too
much. You inqaired, if I love the Saviour, and
hate sin. I hope I do ; but we ought not to have
false hopes about such things as these.
" My dear mother, and brother Henry Marty n,
and myself, all send love to Mrs. Stocking, Miss
Rice, and the children.
" Your affectionate friend,
" Judith."
To this last note, Judith's mother added the
follov/ing postscript :
" My dear Miss Fisk, — Judith wishes mam-
24 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
ma to add a postscript to the note, which she has
written you to-day. Poor Judith ; she seems to
be in deep waters about her soul. She says, " O
how I wish I could see Miss Fisk, to-night! " I
tell her, the work must be with her and God
alone ; that she must repent of all her sins and
give herself to the Saviour. She seems much cast
down, and is, I think, under strong conviction of
sin. You will all rernember this dear child in
your prayers. I hope she may now seek in ear-
nest the salvation of her soul.
" Yours truly,
" C. B. P."
Judith often prayed wdth the pious old Nesto-
rian nurse, who lived in the family, and with
other Nestorian females, with deep fervor, par-
ticularly in seasons of revival ; and she was fre-
quently found instructing and exhorting them on
the subject of their salvation. She was from in-
fancy a prayerful child, though much more so in
seasons of special religious interest than at other
times. Writing to a missionary sister, in regard
to another one who was dangerously ill, when
the child was three and a half years old, her
mother says, " little Judith prays to God, every
day, with her mamma, that He ' would make
dear aunt Stoddai-d well again, and that little
Harriet may not be left without any mamma to
JUDITH G. PERKIXS. 25
take care of her.' " She was accustomed, from
early childhood, to lead in prayer by her mother's
side, every morning and evening. Though she
was ordinarily one of the most lively and playful
of children, there was still always a deep religious
vein in her feelings, which increased with her
age. For several years, she often took her little
brother, Henry Marty n, away to pray with her,,
and other children of the mission occasionally, as-
she had opportunity. Soon after her death,,
Henry one day artlessly said, " Judith often used)
to tell me about Jesus Christ's dying on the cross-
for sinners, and try to make me understand it,,
when I was a very little boy."
Judith's eagerness for knowledge, from her
earliest childhood, was remarkable. Though the
Bible was unspeakably interesting to her, and
the book of books in her estimation, it was by no-
means the only book which she early loved to
read. No penalty was so severe to her, as to be
required, for any reason, to abstain from reading..
And probably few children of her years have readl
so many books, or retained so much of what they
read, as this missionary child. She not only de--
voured all the small books, as " Peep of Day,"
" Line upon Line," etc. and juvenile biographies,
as " Nathan Dickerman," " Mary Lothrop," and
scores of others, that she could find, but she
would also eagerly grapple with large books, as.
26 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
the two quarto volumes of the History of Mis-
sions, by Choules — Bingham's Sandwich Isl-
ands, Layard's Nineveh and its Remains, Lynch's
Expedition to the Jordan and the Dead Sea, and
many others of similar size, when she was only
nine or ten years old. A member of the mission
has the impression, that she read Mr. Bingham's
volume of more than six hundred large octavo
pages — reading it only as a pastime — in twelve
or fifteen days. He then questioned her in re-
gard to it, and found her familiar with its con-
tents. Her parents remarked, at the time, that
their esteemed friend's book could not have had
more hearty admirers in America, than it had in
little Judith.
Most of the numerous periodicals, sent to the
station, found in her, for several years before her
•death, as constant and interested a reader, as in
any adult member of the mission. With the pa-
triotism and eloquence of Kossuth — the fugitive
slave law — the usurpation of the " Prince Pres-
ident," and other passing topics of the day, she
•was as familiar as most of her seniors.
Her memory was so retentive, that she seldom
forgot what she read. She could quote the Bi-
ble with great fluency and correctness, and rea-
•dily give an outline of other books, which she
had perused. She had thus always an appro-
jpriate anecdote, or illustration, from her reading,
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 27
for almost every subject introduced at table or
elsewhere.
Growing up in the venerable land of the
" Medes and Persians," whose customs, like their
ancient laws, " change not," and where almost
every incident, and indeed almost the entire rou-
tine of every day life, is a fresh and luminous ex-
position of the Bible, she early contracted the
habit of minutely observing these vivid illustra-
tions of Scripture scenes and allusions, and took
great pleasure in tracing them out, even in her
play. A short time before her death, for instance,
at a moment of recreation with a playmate, she
placed a small stone upon another, and seated
on either side, they turned it in the manner of
" two women grinding " at the oriental hand mill.
A lady who had just joined the mission, happen-
ing to observe them, and Judith thinking that she
did not comprehend the play, instantly said, in
explanation, " two women shall be grinding at
the mill; the one shall be taken and the other
left." The incident saddened the missionary
sister at the time, naturally suggesting, that one
of the two dear children might ere long "be
taken," an apprehension very soon to be sorrow-
fully realized.
While Judith's general interest in reading, and
in the acquisition of knowledge, was such as we
have stated, there were particular books which
28 THE PERSIAN PLOWER ; OR
she read, that made a peculiarly deep and lasting
impression on her mind and heart. One such
book was the Memoir of Mary Lothrop, which
her mother read to her before she could herself
read, though she must stand at her elbow, hold
the book with one hand, and point to the line
with a finger of the other.
Another book which very deeply and more per-
manently affected her, was the Memoir of Mar-
garet Davidson, which she read with her mother
when about nine years old. As some of the
readers of this biography may not be familiar
with that memoir, and as it made so strong and
enduring an impression on Judith, we here intro-
duce a brief notice of the subject of it, from the
graphic and truthful pen of the lamented Prof.
B. B. Edwards, D. D. " On the 25th November,
1838, a young lady died at Ballstown, in the
State of New York, in the sixteenth year of her
age. She seemed hardly to be a creature of
earth, but to have wandered here by accident,
from some more blessed region than ours. There
were about her a grace, a strange purity — a sunny
brightness — which were not so much geyiius^ as
mind in its freed state. We have never heard
or read of one of human mould, who was more
perfectly divested of the grossness which apper-
tains to our condition here. Yet she possessed
all the innocent feelings of humanity. Never
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 29
did one pass a blither childhood. She had not a
particle of that acid melancholy which is some-
times allied to genius.
" The first sentence which breaks from the lips
of the unreflecting reader, on rising from the con-
templation of her brief career, is, that such a gift
is not to be coveted. We should shrink from
having ought to do with one so etherial. We
look with fear and trembling on a flower which
shows its delicate petal in February. Give us
the hardy plant that can endure the early frost
and summer heat. Intrust us with the intellect
which has some alliance with earth, — some fit-
ness to its stern necessities.
" Others in perusing this volume, [the memoir
of Margaret,] will give us a homily on the impru-
dence of parents and teachers. Her premature
death, they say, is a warning which should not
be neglected. It shows the imminent hazard of
stimulating the susceptible faculties to an intem-
perate and fatal growth.
' But we are glad she lived thus long,
And glad that she has gone to rest.'
Her course was ordered in perfect wisdom.
May she not have done that which the longest
career of usefulness, as it is commonly termed,
fails to do ? May she not have had a sublimer
errand than others have? May not her brief
30 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
sojourn throw some light on the mystery of our
nature ? We gain a vivid idea of a human soul.
The thick veil is for a moment lifted up. She
had the light and airy movement of a winged
spirit. We seem to be gazing on the delicate
structure of a seraph ; and yet she had the yearn-
ing sympathy of a child of earth." *
It is not strange that the memoir of such a
young lady, by the pen of Washington Irving,
from materials furnished by the gifted mother,
should have taken a strong hold on the interest
and feelings of one possessing the mind and tem-
perament of little Judith. We would not com-
pare the cast or compass of her intellect with
that of the soaring, ethereal Margaret Davidson •
but it was fully competent to feel the transcend-
ent power and charms of the character of that
rare mortal, even through the medium of a
memoir. Particularly did Judith's sympathies
flow forth with hers, in her ardent admiration of
the beauties and sublimities of nature. This
missionary child was eminently a child of nature,
which appeared in her every motion. If she
walked abroad, over the hills around her home,
she must always run and leap^ in unison with the
sporting lambs, or gurgling cascades. She must
* Address delivered at the fourth anniversary of the Mount
Holyoke Female Seminary, July 29th, 1841.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 31
dip and drink water right from the sparkling
fount of the crystal spring ; bathe her head in the
cool stream below, and "spatter" briskly there
with her playmates. She passionately loved to
bask in the genial sun, and inhale the pure fresh
air, under the open sky, unencumbered by veil,
hood, or bonnet. This general love of nature,
which was strongly innate in her, was very per-
ceptibly quickened by the perusal of that memoir.
From that time, the starry heavens, so bright
and glorious in Persia, presented new attractions
to Judith. In this land of ancient " star-gazers,"
and from the clearness of its atmosphere, of all
others naturally the most favorable to the culti-
vation of the sublime science of astronomy, and
where a member * of the Nestorian mission has
solved the long disputed problem of Jupiter's
moons being visible to the naked eye, she often
lingered on the flat roof of her home, sometimes
alone, and sometimes with her mother or little
brother, till the last glimmering of twilight had
long disappeared, fondly surveying " the hosts of
heaven," many of .which she could call by name ;
her thoughts most vividly associating with them,
the majesty and glory of their great creator..
And the vast panorama of beauty, grandeur,,
and sublimity of the terrestrial scenery, that al—
* Eev. David T. Stoddard.
32
ways met her eye, from her mountain home, — the
city directly below — the great plain beyond, and
on either hand, dotted with almost countless ver-
dant and smiling villages — and the placid lake,
bounding the plain, and like an extended mirror,
reflecting the effulgence of the brilliant Persian
sun — and, farther still, the towering ranges of
mountains, rising in the blue distance and blend-
ing with the sky, — this whole scene, rarely sur-
passed or equalled in the wide world, now pos-
sessed new charms in her view, and she daily
gazed on it with unutterable emotions of enjoy-
ment.
From this time, too, she listened with new
interest to "the fowls of heaven," "which sing
among the branches." In this Eastern land,
where all nature is peculiarly instinct with life,
and almost every department of it presents a
-strikingly luxuriant development ; the birds are
remarkable for the richness and beauty of their
plumage, and the fulness and sweetness of their
inotes. A few species of these winged songsters
< congregate regularly, in immense numbers, at
(early morn and at twilight, in the clusters of
-.trees around Judith's home, and mofet melo-
diously warble forth their choral matins and
vespers, besides more irregular chants at all hours
of the day. In her they ever found an enrap-
tured listener and admirer, but particularly after
! her perusal of the memoir in question.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 33
And from this time, also, her love of flowers,
which had always been quite strong, was greatly-
increased. Her little flower-garden was now
more carefully cultivated ; and the whole moun-
tain around her home — itself in spring like one
immense flower-garden, smiling in bright colors
and redolent with sweet fragrance, where a thou-
sand hives of bees annually revel and amass their
luscious stores — now presented new charms, and
more strongly than ever tempted her forth in fre-
quent rambles, for specimens to press for preser-
vation. About this time, she prepared a collec-
tion of pressed flowers and sent them to a cousin,
in America.
Another immediate effect of her reading that
memoir, was a quickened taste and relish for
poetry, — the portions of Margaret's poetry, con-
tained in the memoir, having deeply interested
her. Mrs. Sigourney, who had sent several small
volumes of her writings to Judith and her parents^
now became her favorite author. She read and
re-read those books with her mother, as also
other poetry, with most engrossing and ever in-
creasing interest.
One of the last books which Judith read in
course — and read aloud to her mother — was
" Uncle Tom's Cabin," kindly sent to her father
by a friend in America — one of the gentlemanly
publishers — a short time before her death. It la
3
34 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
certainly not strange, that the whole of that won-
derful book broke up the deep fountains of her
feeling soul. But little Eva was the character in
it, which most deeply interested Judith. Indeed,
her heart seemed like melted wax, while reading
that thrilling sketch, and to receive from it, as
from a seal, a full and perfect impression. She
longed to be like Eva, and to be with her. And
as Providence ordered, it would almost seem, that
that seraphic character was presented to her, just
at that time, as a beckoning angel, to invite her
to her celestial home. The congeniality of
Judith's spirit and character with Eva's, was
more than imaginary, and obvious to the general
observer. Mr. Stevens, British consul in Persia,
while reading " Uncle Tom's Cabin," lent to him
by Judith's father a short time after her death —
and in his own language, reading it " with greater
interest and more pain " than he ever read any
other book — remarked as follows : " A wonder-
fully interesting character is that Evangelina.
There was a great deal in her that strongly re-
minds me of poor Judith."
The perusal of that affecting sketch exerted a
very salutary influence on Judith's mind, in turn-
ing her thoughts vividly toward the subject of
death and heaven, as presented in Eva's history.
And of all the myriads who have wept over that
sketch, few probably have more fully sympathized
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 35
with the spirit of the following admired stanzas
by Whittier, than could the youthful subject of
this memoir.
" Dry tears for holy Era ;
With the blessed angels leave her.
Of the fonn so sweet and fair.
Give to earth the tender care.
For the golden locks of Eva,
Let the sunny south land give her
Flower pillow of repose.
Orange bloom and budding rose.
" All is light and peace with Eva ;
There the darkness cometh never ;
Tears are wiped and fetters fall.
And the Lord is all in all.
Weep no more for happy Eva ;
Wrong and sin no more shall grieve her ;
Care and pain and weariness
Lost in love so measureless.
" Gentle Eva — loving Eva —
Child confessor — true believer ;
Listener at the Saviour's knee,
* Suffer such to come to me.*
O for faith like thine, sweet Eva ;
Lighting all the solemn river.
And the blessing of the poor.
Wafting to the heavenly shore."
CHAPTER IV.
HER APTNESS, AND CAPABILITY.
Judith's education, it shonld be borne in mind,
was conducted by her mother ahiaost entirely
alone^ without any of the incitements of the
school-room and class-mates, to awaken and sus-
tain an interest in her studies. Few indeed are
the children, who would have progressed as she
did, in such circumstances. She was kindly
taught, a few weeks, with other children of the
mission, by Misses Fisk and Rice, in connection
with the Nestorian girls of their seminary ; and
a few weeks more, in two instances, by Mrs.
Coan. "With these exceptions, she was instructed
solitarily by her mamma, until two months before
her death. Yet she was never listless in learning
or reciting her lessons ; but ever engaged in them,
with an interest, enthusiasm, and success, which
often alike surprised and chided her teacher, who,
while the task of instructing her was a very de-
lightful one, was sometimes so much occupied
with domestic cares, that she found it difficult to
redeem the time which her beloved pupil required
and richly deserved.
THE PERSIAN FLOWER. 37
Judith's aptness and capability in study, were
equally conspicuous in other things. When she
was ten years old, her father received a seraphine,
which was sent to him as a present, by a kind
friend * in America, to be kept and used in his
family, for the special benefit of the male semi-
nary. At her tender age, she soon commenced
using the instrument, and with a rapidity that
astonished all who witnessed her progress, she
became able, in a short time, to play beautifully
at religious worship, with fewer hours of instruc-
tion from her early friend, Mrs. Wright, than she
was herself years old. And many evenings have
the forty pupils of the male seminary assembled,
in a large room at her home, to sing the songs of
Zion, led on by her as by a little seraph, playing
charmingly on that sweet instrument. The
evenings, thus spent, were seasons of high enjoy-
ment to her, not only as a lover of music, but
from the delight which she felt, in imparting grati-
fication and improvement to those young Nesto-
rians, who were to become teachers and preachers
among their people.
The twilight of Sabbath evening, which she
divided between the instrument and walking on
the terrace, was her favorite season for using the
seraphine in sacred music. In concert with her
* Luke Sweetser, Esq., of Amherst, Mass.
38
parents and little brother, several sweet hymns
were played and sung by her, at that hallowed
hour. Her last piece, on the last Sabbath even-
ing of her life — and indeed the last piece that
she ever played — was the following familiar
hymn : —
" Jerusalem, my glorious home,
Name ever dear to me ;
When shall my labors hare an end,
In joy and peace in thee 1
" O when, thou city of my God,
Shall I thy courts ascend.
Where congregations ne'er break up.
And sabbaths have no end 1
" There happier bowers than Eden's bloom ;
No sin nor sorrow know.
Blest seats ! through rude and stormy scenes
I onward press to you.
" Why should I shrink at pain or woe 1
Or feel at death dismay ?
I've Canaan's goodly land in view.
And realms of endless day."
Those were very happy Sabbath hours to
Judith, here on earth, but were doubtless the pre-
lude to infinitely happier ones, now enjoyed by
her in heaven.
Her proficiency, in learning to play on the
seraphine, almost uninstructed, is but an illustra-
tion of her tact and success, in accomplishing
JUDITH G. PERKIXS. 39
almost any thing to which she turned her atten-
tion, and in which she was interested. During
the last spring of her life, Mrs. Stoddard kindly
gave her, and some of her playmates, a few les-
sons in botany^ to which she had never before at-
tended. She eagerly engaged in this study. It
opened a new and delightful range to her
thoughts, leading her systematically into new
mysteries of nature, (of which, in its various
departments, as we have stated, she was a very
ardent admirer,) and through nature up to
nature's God. Mrs. Stoddard's lessons were
daily and minutely repeated by Judith to her
mamma, with characteristic accuracy and enthu-
siasm.
About a year before her death, she read a little
book, entitled "Jane Hudson," which awakened
in her a desire and an ambition to become a
" school teacher," or rather, quickened that desire,
which had long existed in her bosom. And she
embraced the earliest opportunity, afterward, of
a visit of Mrs. Stocking and her children, a few
days on Mount Seir, to gather her playmates,
several hours a day, in the capacity of a school,
her ideas of which she had received from the
Nestorian Female Seminary. Day after day,
the children assembled and spent a few hours in
study and recitation, under Judith's tuition, with
perfect order, stillness, and propriety. On the
40 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
last day of the visit, the parents were invited by
her to an examination. They attended, and were
exceedingly gratified and entertained, by the ex-
hibition of those children — even to declamation
by the little boys — for which they had prepared
themselves the few previous days, under the
superintendence of their juvenile teacher between
ten and eleven years old. To the inquiry ad-
dressed to her little brother, since her death,
" How did Judith keep her scholars in such
order ? " he replied, " She used to tell them, that,
if they were good children, she would pin a cer-
tificate of their good behaviour on their shoul-
ders, to wear home."
The modern Syriac language, which Judith
spoke with much fluency, she learned to read
without the assistance of any regular teacher,
and apparently almost wholly unaided. Her
desire to read " The Rays of Light," the monthly
Nestorian periodical, as also to be able to teach
Nestorian females, seemed to be the particular
motive that prompted her thus to learn to read
i;hat language.
Her aptness and maturity were also con-
ispicuous, in the cares of the family. In the fee-
ble health of her mother, she shared largely in
those cares, and in some instances, they devolved
■on Judith for days at a time. In the absence of
other help, a few months before her death, she
JUDITH G. PERKIXS. 41
made the bread for the family, several weeks in
succession. Her success, in domestic cares and
labors, were equalled only by the interest and
delight with which she engaged in them.
On this general subject, jMr. Cochran, who
resides in the same yard with Judith's parents,
bears the following testimony. " Having had
daily opportunities, for several years, of observing
her womanly desire to make herself useful in
every sphere, and having habitually witnessed
her untiring and very welcome offices of kind-
ness, in my own family, both by day and by
night, in times of sickness, — and her very
matronly superintendence of my little children,
and fruitful devices to contribute to their amuse-
ment and happiness, — her prompt attendance in
leading them to the Sabbath school, and her in-
variable eagerness to accompany them to their
home, in adjoining apartments to her own, and
to their nursery, to consummate the labors of her
self-assumed charge, after an evening meeting or
a social interview. I feel that too much can
hardly be said, in deserved praise of the skill of
her youthful hands,^ or the benevolence and kind-
ness of her heart."
While studying in connection with the Nesto-
rian Female Seminary, a short time, as already
mentioned, Judith was kindly boarded by JVIr.
and Mrs. Coan, of Gawar, who then resided in
42 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
the city of Oroomiah. Mr. Coan thus speaks of
her, ill a letter to her parents, after her death.
" We take a melancholy pleasure in recalling the
time when Judith was a member of our family
at Oroomiah, the few weeks she attended the
school of Misses Fisk and Kice. Although then
but ten years old, she had a womanly bearing
and dignity, w^hich are not often found in those
of riper years. Her care for Henry, who took his
dinners with us, but went home at night, was
truly motherly. Her anxiety lest she should give
us trouble, and her desire to render herself useful,
showed a thoughtfulness and regard for the com-
fort of others, of which many would-be-polite
know little.
" While with us, she was very diligent in her
studies, often begging us to remain up a little
longer, evenings, than we thought best for her.
" During our short acquaintance with her at
that time, I was surprised and delighted to find
her mind, young as she was, stored with so much
and so varied reading. But her improvement in
mind and manners, and in general intelligence,
appeared very striking in my visit to you last
spring, after an absence of six months in Gawar ;
and her quiet, subdued, yet cheerful spirit, her
apparent interest and delight in spiritual conver-
sation, and her tenderness and concern for her
soul, manifested in a short conversation I then
JUDITH G. PERKIX3. 43
had with her, led me to hope, that gi'ace had be-
gun a good work in her heart, and I trust that
her Saviour was even then sanctifying her for
himself, and preparing her for the great change
which awaited her.
" But why should I dwell on the many pleas-
ing traits of your beloved Judith ? You know
them all ; and yet I may not be deprived of the
privilege of expressing to you my condolence,
and assuring you that we too loved Judith, and
with you feel her loss."
Successful as Judith had been in prosecuting
her studies alone^ under her mother's instruction,
with the brief exceptions we have mentioned, it
had long been her ardent desire to enjoy the pri-
vileges of a school; and her young heart leaped
with ecstasy, in the definite and near prospect of
welcoming a teacher, when she heard that Miss
Harris had been designated to instruct the child-
ren of the mission, in connection with other mis-
sionary labors. The following notes, addressed
by Judith to Miss Harris, while on her way to
Oroomiah, will show the interest of the child on
this subject.
" Oroomiah, Oct. IGtJi, 1851.
" My dear Miss Harris, — I am very happy
to have the opportunity of addressing one, whom
I hope soon to call, teacher. We are all very
44 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
happy to learn, that we shall so soon have a
teacher. We once had a little school, taught by-
Mrs. Coan, in the school-room where we hope to
spend so many happy hours with you. Our
present teacher is mamma.
" Mamma and papa and brother Henry unite
with me in much love to you. Please accept
this from your affectionate friend,
"Judith G. Perkins."
The foregoing note reached Miss Harris at
Smyrna. The following is her reply to it and to
other notes which she received from the children
at Oroomiah. It was written, as will be per-
ceived, after her arrival at Constantinople.
" Constantinople, March 1st, 1852.
" My dear Judith, Harriet, Lucy, Jerusha,
William, and all the children of Oroomiah, —
Your kind notes of October were received a few
days since. You can imagine the joy they gave
me, after my long passage. I soon felt that I
was almost acquainted with you, and that I
should soon feel at home in Oroomiah; for I
trust, that before many months, I shall be with
you.
" Until I can cross the mountains, I am to re-
main in Bebek, and teach the children of the fam-
ilies here. They had expected me to have been
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 45
with them all winter ; but my winter has been
spent upon the ocean, and I did not arrive at
Constantinople until almost spring. But now
that I am no longer to be carried forward by-
wind and tide, I hope there will be no disappoint-
ment about my reaching Oroomiah.
" I am not only interested in those who are to
be my pupils, but in the account of your school-
room, etc. I am now teaching in quite a small
room, and for this reason, not able to receive
several English scholars who wish to come. In
Pera and Bebek together, there are now twenty-
two missionary children ; but it is seldom that
they can all be in school at the same time. Mrs.
Hinsdale has a very pleasant school in Pera.
And before I came here, Mrs. Shauffler taught
her four boys, and Miss Lovell the girls in Be-
bek.
" While I remain here, I shall be happy to hear
from you ; and when the snow shall have melted
from the mountains, I hope to be with you, to
receive the welcome you so kindly offer me. Till
then, may God bless you and me, and I pray
you accept much love,
" From your affectionate friend,
" Martha A. Harris."
The following is a second note from Judith to
Miss Harris.
46 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
" OroomiaJi, April SOtJi, 1852.
" My dear Miss Harris, — I thank you very
much for your kind and welcome note. It seems
as though I coukl hardly realize, that you are at
Constantinople, so near us, and that so soon, we
are to have the pleasure of welcoming you to our
Persian home.
" When I last wrote you, there were but thir-
teen children in the mission, besides the three
who came here to be educated ; but now, as Dr.
Wright has a little son about three months old,
John Henry, there are fourteen, and the other
three make seventeen. Only eleven are old
enough to go to school.
" Mrs. Stoddard has a class in botany. We
think it a very pleasant study. There are some
very pretty flowers that grow wild here. We
also have a Sabbath school. Mrs. Stoddard is
our teacher. We enjoy it very much. We also
meet together once in two months, (as we are
not able to get together oftener,) for a mission-
ary meeting. Mr. Breath, (who meets with the
children at their missionary concert,) is treasurer.
We intend to send our money to Bootan^ and
support a missionary there.
" Mamma sends her love to you. Please ac-
cept this, with much love,
" From your affectionate young friend,
"Judith G. Perkins."
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 47
When Miss Harris approached Oroomiah, Ju-
dith's long cherished desire, to go a few days'
journey and meet her, was strongly revived, and
was gratified by the kindness of Mr. and Mrs.
Stoddard, who went to Khoy, to help and cheer
that missionary sister over the wearisomeness and
loneliness of the way, and took Judith with them.
The children's teacher finally reached her des-
tination, on the 2nd of July, 1852, and Judith's
cup of joy seemed full. With unspeakable grati-
fication, she attended the long anticipated school
seven weeks, and then her place in it was sud-
denly vacated forever.
The grief of that teacher, occasioned by the
death of her eldest pupil, so soon after she reached
the field, — the pupil with whose name her future
labors had been intimately associated in her
mind, in America, and on her long and weary
way to Persia, may be better conceived than de-
scribed. It is not strange, that she pathetically
said, as the tears coursed rapidly down her
cheeks, the day after Judith's funeral, "it now
seems to me as though my work was done."
But besides her dnect labors for the Nesto-
rians, there are many other children in the mis-
sion, who, though younger, will, if spared, soon
reach Judith's age, and now equally need that
teacher's laborious care ; and the youngest will
erelong swell the number of her precious, im-
48 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
portant, and responsible charge. She can still
aid the feeble and toil-worn missionary mothers,
encouraging their hearts and strengthening their
hands; and relieve the burdened missionary
fathers, enabling them to give themselves more
fully " to the ministry of the word," and render-
ing them more cheerful, contented, and efficient
in their labors, than when borne down with care
and solicitude for their children, without a school,
and may probably thus protract, by many years,
the period of their missionary service. She can
contribute to rear more sweet " Persian flowers,"
to bloom and shed forth their blessed fragrance,
and aid essentially in the evangelization of this
benighted land, as did young Judith, by the grace
of God and through her mother's instruction.
But Judith's vacant seat in that school, will
never be forgotten, nor unmourned, by either
teacher or pupils. They now often give utter-
ance to their feelings of bereavement, by singing,
within the saddened walls of their pleasant
school-room, which is situated on the terrace,
where Judith used daily to walk, and play,
and meditate, and admire the " handiworks " of
God, the sweet hymn, of which the following
stanzas are a part : —
" Death has been here and borne away,
A sister from our side ;
Just in the morning of her day,
As young as we, she died.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. ^
" "We cannot tell who next may ftill.
Beneath the chastening rod ;
One must be first, but let us all
Prepare to meet our God."
Next to Judith's strong desire for a school at
Oroomiah, was her fond anticipation of one day
becoming a member of the Mount Holyoke Fe-
male Seminary, in America. This was the sum-
mit of her aspirations, in regard to her education.
She had, for several years, regularly read the'
journals sent from that seminary to its mission-
ary graduates ; and she earnestly longed to en-
joy the privileges of that school of revivals, and
other good things, from which her kind friends.
Miss Fisk, Miss Rice, and Mrs. Stoddard had
come, and from which one of her cousins often
wrote her, during the last two years of her life,
urging her to come to America, and dwell with
her kindred. Her perusal of the memoir of Miss
Lyon, the illustrious founder of that Seminary,
finally gave intense effect to all her previous
longings on the subject.
The desire of being ready to enter Mount Hol-
yoke Seminary, at the prescribed age, enhanced
her zeal in her studies, even when she was quite
small. As illustrating this point, and the inter-
est always taken in her proficiency by Miss Fisk,.
and especially in her religious welfare, the fol-
lowing note from that friend, acknowledging the
4
'W THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
first note, ever written by Judith, is here in-
serted.
" Clti/, Oct. 27 tJi, 1848.
" My dear Judith, — I was very glad to re-
^ueive your little note yesterday. I think that you
did very well for the first time. I will keep your
note, so as to tell you, when you are grown up,
how old you were, when you began to write let-
ters. 1 think that you will be able to write your
grandpapa pretty soon. Do you not think that
he would be very much pleased to receive a let-
ter from you ? I am sure that he would.
"I hope that you love to study as well as
write. How many pages have you learned in
your arithmetic ? Learn as fast as you can, so
•as to be ready to go to Mount Holyoke when
you are sixteen. Perhaps your papa and mam-
ma will read to you about Miss "Washburn, who
•died there last summer. I remember her very
well. She was but a little larger than you are
now, when I came from America with you and
our other good friends. I hope you will love the
Saviour as she did.
" Thank little Fidelia and Mary for their
kisses, and give them some very sweet ones from
aunt Fidelia. My love also to your papa and
mamma. I shall always be very glad to hear
from you. Much love to yourself from your af-
fectionate friend,
"Fidelia Fisk."
JUDITH G. PERKINS. '51
The following is Judith's note above-men-
tioned, which, as being hex firsts is here inserted.
" Seir, Oct. 2Mli, 1848.
"Dear Miss Fisk, — As you said I might
write you letters, I now make my first attempt.
We are all very well. Father and mother send
love to you. Yours truly,
"Judith."
" P. S. Mary and Fidelia both send love and
kisses to aunt Fidelia. J."
As a source of high enjoyment and of health,
as well as of improvement, and indicative of her
tact and capability, we should not omit to men-
tion Judith's riding on a saddle ; there having,
until recently, been no wheel carriages in Oroo-
miah. From the age of five years until ten, she
was accustomed to ride on a white donkey, of
the kind common in the south of Persia, which
was gentle, and easily managed by a child.
During the last two years of her life, she rode an
equally gentle pony, presented to her by an Eng-
lish gentleman,* which she greatly prized and
admired. The friend who presented him to her,
died suddenly at Tehran, a few months before
her death.
* Dr. P. Casolani.
52 THE PERSIAN FLOWER.
Judith was exceedingly fond of riding, in
which she soon became very expert, and even
heroic. On one long journey, in particular, when
but ten years old, in company with her parents
and Mr. and Mrs. Coan, she courageously and
successfully crossed some of the most rugged
and sublime mountain ranges of Koordistan, on
her careful donkey. This early exercise on a
saddle contributed to impart a vigor and inde-
pendence to her mind, as well as strength to her
body, which hardly any thing else could have
done.
The journey with Mr. and Mrs. Stoddard, al-
ready mentioned, was performed on her favorite
pony ; and in no instance did she ever seem to
enjoy riding more than on that journey, which
she often mentioned afterward, as one of the
happiest weeks of her life. The journey on
which she died, yet to be described, was per-
formed, and with great enjoyment, on the same
gentle animal. As he was led home desolate,
after being suddenly bereft of his youthful rider
on the road, a member of the mission remarked,
" the donor and the owner are now both gone."
CHAPTER V.
CORRESPONDENCE.
It is of course not to be expected, that a child,
who died at the age of twelve years, would leave
behind her an extensive correspondence, to illus-
trate her character and attainments. A consid-
erable portion of Judith's notes and letters, and
those prepared with the most care, and probably
the most interesting, as indicating her religious
feelings, are on the other side of the globe, scat-
tered among her relatives and friends, — too far
away to be recovered for this purpose. Enough,
however, are introduced, to serve as specimens
of the ease and maturity of her style. These
were always very striking, in her conversation.
It is recollected, that a member of the mission,
while one day observing her at play with her lit-
tle brother, when she was five years old, suddenly
burst into laughter, assigning as the reason, that
he was " so much amused, with the aged expres-
sions of that child, even in her play."
Something of the maturity of her language
may, indeed, have been owing to her circum-
54 THE PERSIAN FLOWER: OR
stances, early associating mostly with her parents
and their fellow laborers, and removed from the
general society of children ; but not all ; for she
was peculiar, in this respect, among the mission-
ary children ; and her maturity was as marked
in the topics and ideas, as in the style, of her
conversation.
During the last few months of her life, there
was a mission station in Gawar, an extensive
and beautiful valley, or elevated plain, among
the lofty mountains of Koordistan, about seventy
miles west of Oroomiah. Mrs. Coan, the only fe-
male missionary who resided at that new station,
during the first year after it was commenced,
kindly numbered Judith among her regular and
familiar correspondents, primarily for the gratifi-
cation and improvement of the child. We now
introduce a note from Mrs. Coan ; and several
follow from Judith to her, in the order of their
date, which are interesting not so much of course
for the intrinsic importance of their contents, as
being the artless, unstudied effusions of her own
mind.
" Gawar, April 12th, 1852.
"My dear Judith, — My note to you must
necessarily be short, as I have but little time,
and I cannot write late at night. "We rise quite
early, half-past five, (though perhaps you in
. JUDITH G. PERKINS. 55
Orooiniah will not call it early,) and I retire as
early as ten.
" I am very glad our letters interest you so
much. I am sure it is a great pleasure to us to
write, when we have something to communicate,
which is not so often as I could wish.
" You seem to have very pleasant times, and
to be enjoying yourselves very much, and I am
very glad it is so. I hope you are also improv-
ing your opportunities for usefulness ; for even a
little girl like you may be useful in many re-
spects ; if in no other, by setting a good example
before all whom she meets. Being the eldest of
the children, all naturally look to you for a pat-
tern ; and I hope it is such as you will not be
ashamed of, at some future day.
" You are often reminded that time is short.
I suppose that Iwaz * little thought he had so few
days to live, when he returned to the seminary,
after vacation. So we know not the day nor the
hour, when we may be called to lie down and
die. O let us strive to be ready, whenever it
may be !
" Much love to Henry and for yourself. I re-
main your affectionate friend,
" S. P. COAN."
* A member of the male seminary, who died at Seir.
§6 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
From Judith to Mrs. Coan.
« Oroomiah, Dec. 9th, 1851.
*' My dear Mrs. Coan, — As Mr. Stocking and
Mr. Stoddard are leaving to-morrow for Gawar,
I take the opportunity to write you a short note.
We have missed you and your family, (including
Mr. Rhea,) very much, since you went to Ga-
war, especially on thanksgiving day. We chil-
dren, as usual, counted all that were seated in
our parlor, and found four missing. Mr. Stod-
dard preached the sermon, and Mrs. Stoddard
prepared the thanksgiving supper. Three hymns
were sung, and I played the tunes on the sera-
phine. They were Ortonville, Balerma, and Ol-
mutz.
" Henry and myself go on regularly with our
studies ; I also practise daily on the seraphine,
and am learning to sing a little. I led the sing-
ing at our last children's monthly concert. I
;must now close. With sincerest love to Mr.
vCoan, Mr. Rhea, and Alexander,
" Believe me most truly yours,
" Judith."
" Oroomiah, Jan. 1st, 1852.
"My dear Mrs. Coan, — I wish you all a
Ihappy new year. As Dr. Wright and Mr.
IBreath intend visiting Gawar, I take my pen
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 57
with great pleasure, to answer your kind note.
I am very sorry to hear, that you have the face
ache, and hope that you will soon get over it.
In your note, you ask how many hours a day I
practise on the seraphine. I think about an
hour and a half. You also ask, what we study.
I study Parley's Universal History — Arithme-
tic— Geography — and Speller and Definer; also
Grammar. Henry studies Arithmetic, Geogra-
phy, Spelling, and Reading. I am very happy
to hear that Alexander is getting on so well in
his studies.
" We have heard that Miss Harris has left
America.
" Mamma sends her love to you. Her head
aches, this morning, or she would write you.
" Please give my sincerest love to Mr. Coan,
Mr. Rhea, and Alexander, and accept this hastily
written note (as I have not time to copy it).
" From your affectionate friend,
"Judith G. Perkins."
" Oroomiah, Feb. 2d, 1852.
" Dear Mrs. Coan, — I thank you very much
for your kind note, and my only apology for not
answering it, by the last messenger, is, that I had
no time, being Henry's amanuensis, in writing to
Alexander, and it being late in the evening when
I commenced.
58 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
" To day I read your journal through, and was
very glad to know how you pass your days at
your mountain home. How much surprised
you must have been, to hear that Mr. Breath had
come. I was very glad to hear that you could
get out at all, even on a hand sled. I hope you
enjoyed your ride. While Mr. Breath was gone
to Gawar, I stayed with Mrs. Breath. She was
rather anxious about him. Papa told her, he
hoped that she was not sorry he had gone. She
said, ' I shall not be, after he returns.'
" I hope I shall be able to write to Mr. Rhea.
Please give my love to him — also to Mr. Coan
and. Alexander — accepting a large share for
yourself.
" From your affectionate friend,
^'Judith G. Perkins."
To appreciate some of the allusions in the
preceding note, the reader should be informed,
that the elevated district of Gawar, hemmed in
on all sides by the lofty Koordish mountains, is
subject to terrible storms of snow during its long
winter. It is significantly called by the natives,
" the sjioiv treasuryy The entire fall of snow on
the plain, during the first winter's residence of
the missionaries there, which was pronounced
by the Nestorians an uncommonly mild season,
was about eighteen feet, there being from seven
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 59^
to nine feet on level, for a considerable period.
Hence the difficulty of IVIi's. Coan's getting out
for exercise.
The high range of mountains, which separates
Gawar from Oroomiah, is usually rendered im-
passable, several months of the year, for any
beast of burden ; and footmen, who travel with
broad moccasins, or on wicker snow-shoes, are
often in imminent peril, and sometimes perish,
in storms or blows that suddenly overtake them,
in crossing that mountain. Dr. Wright accom-
panied Mr. Breath on his way to Gawar, to the
top of that high range, and there turned back,
finding the travelling so difficult, that ihe journey
would require a longer period than he could be
absent from his family. Mr. Breath proceeded
alone, and hence the solicitude respecting him,
referred to in the foregoing note.
Mrs. Breath thus speaks of Judith's stay with
her, during her husband's absence. " Dear Ju-
dith's allusion to her visit with me, in the note of
February 2d to Mrs. Coan, calls many tender re-
collections of her to my mind. She was so
womanly — so pleasant a companion! Our
evenings were delightfully spent, in reading
poetry, which she so highly enjoyed. On Sab-
bath evening, she proposed reciting such hymns
as we could from memory. At my request, hers
were sung. It was a happy hour to us both."
60 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
" Oroomiah, Feb. 2Gth, 1852.
Dear Mrs. Co an, — I thank you very much
for the kind advice your note contained. I esteem
it a great favor, that you, with all your labors and
cares, should write me, when you have so many
other correspondents. I am sorry to hear that
you have not been able to ride out on your sled,
but am glad you can get out at all.
'• Last Friday, we went down to the city in
our sleigh. When we went down, it was pretty
good going ; but in coming up, there was so
much bare ground, that papa said, he really
thought it was the last sleigh -ride we should take,
this winter. Yesterday, we went down to the
city and found Caty Wright sick with a high
fever.
" Poor Hosmer,* who has long been very ill,
lies apparently at the point of death.
" To-morrow, the pupils of the male seminary
have a vacation ; and after four weeks, the girls
will have one.
" Will you be so kind as to give my love to
Mr. Rhea. As the messenger goes to-morrow
morning, I fear that I shall not have time to ac-
knowledge his note to the children, by this oppor-
tunity.
* A pious Nestorian woman, in the village of Seir.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 61
" Please give my love to ]\Ir. Coan and Alex-
ander, accepting much for yourself.
" From your affectionate young friend,
"Judith."
•It is proper to state, that the vehicle, dignified
by the title of sleigh, in the above note, Avould
hardly bear that epithet in America. It was a
rude sled, constructed by Judith's father, for the
double purpose of amusing his children and giv-
ing them exercise in winter. Yet, it was the
nearest to the sleigh species, of any thing they had
ever seen.
" Oroomiah, March IStJi, 1852.
" Dear Mrs. Coan, — The reason I did not
answer your other note by the first messenger
was, that I was not feeling well at the time. The
next Saturday after the messenger left, I was
taken sick ; on Sunday I had a high fever, all
day, and took medicine ; on Monday, I sat up a
little ; on Tuesday, I was some better, but did
nothing all that week.
" Perhaps you would like to know how my
time is occupied. We usually finish prayers and
breakfast, about eight o'clock. From that time
till half-past nine, I help mamma. I study from
that time till after twelve. From then till two
o'clock, I have stepping-about work, dinner, etc.,
62 THE PERSIAN flower; or
etc. From two o'clock till three, I sew or knit.
At three, I go on the roof to wallc. At four, I
sometimes play on the seraphine, or write. At
five, we have tea. At six, I play on the seraphine
an hour. At seven, mamma reads to us an hour,
and I knit. I then read half an hour, and then
comes my bed time.
Sabbath * before last was so stormy, that none
of the ladies or children came up from the city to
meeting ; but Mr. Breath thought that the chil-
dren here had better have their missionary meet-
ing, though there were only five, as we had not
had one for two months, and would not, perhaps,
be able to get together for some time to come.
We sung the 581st hymn [Church Psalmody] be-
ginning with the verse,
' Now in the heat of youthful blood,
Remember your Creator, God ;
Before the months come hastening on,
When you shall say, my joys are gone.'
Though we are so few, we raised one tomon, two
sahib JwranSy and one shcihi; [about two dollars
and a half].
" Please give my love to Mr. Coan, Mr. Rhea,
Sanem, and Alexander.
" From your aftectionate friend,
"Judith G. Perkins."
* Being communion Sabbath, when the mission are usually
all together.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 63
" Oroomiali, April Sd, 1852.
" Dear Mrs. Coan, — Yesterday afternoon
papa came down stairs, saying the Gawar mail
had come ; and each one asked, ' have I got a
letter ? ' Henry was reciting his lesson in arith-
metic, and was very impatient till he had finished
it, that he might open his note. We are very
much delighted when we receive letters from
Gawar, especially your Journal, which I always
read.
" Yesterday, we were invited to Mr. Stoddard's
to tea. In the evening, we all played, ' Button,
button, who 's got the button ? ' Once, when
Mr. Stoddard was judge, thinking that it was
mi/ forfeit, he said, ' she must say half the mul-
tiplication table ; ' so mamma had to say it.
" A young man in the seminary, named Iioaz^
died on the last day of March. His disease was
typhus * fever, and none of the ladies saw him
during his sickness.
" It is, as you see by the date, the 3d of April,
and the mountain has been covered with flowers ;
still, we have had a heavy snow-storm, and sleet,
all day. I wonder what the weather is in Gawar!
" My time for writing is up, and I must close,
* So fatally infectious, that it was not deemed expedient for
any to visit Ms room, except those who were needed to take care
of him.
64
with love to Mr. Rhea, Mr. Coan, Sanem, and
Alexander and yourself.
" From your affectionate friend,
"Judith G. Perkins."
The foregoing note suggests a point that may
not readily occur to the youthful reader, namely,
that missionaries, in a benighted land, amid the
manifold temptations and exposures that sur-
round their children, must be their companions
in their little amusements, more than might be
necessary in America, where children can be more
safely trusted out of the sight of their parents.
" Oroomiah, April 19th, 1852.
" Dear Mrs. Coan, — Your welcome letters
reached us on Friday night, and as Saturday is
rather a busy day with me, I deferred writing
until now ; and as I hear the messenger leaves
to-morrow morning, my note must be short.
" I heard, by one of the letters, that Shabas
has concluded to remain with you. I was very
happy to hear it ; for if he had left you, and you
had had all the work to do, besides teaching-, I
am afraid you would have been sick.
" Ansep [the Nestorian nurse] has gone to the
feast, and has not yet returned. In her absence,
I have made all the bread, and washed and
wiped all the dishes.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 65
" This morning, we all took a very pleasant ride
to Sheikh hill. Perhaps some of you have seen
it, and I will not describe it. Mamma sends
love, but is too tired to write.
" I must close, with love to you and all.
" From your affectionate friend,
"Judith G. Perkins."
The faithful old Nestorian nurse, Ansep, refer-
red to above, had long resided in the family, and
become most devotedly attached to the children,
especially to Judith. Being now in poor health,
she remained with her friends several weeks,
when she visited them at the Nestorian festival
of Easter. Since Judith's death, she states, with
many tears, among other recollections of her, that
the kind and thoughtful child charged her, on
leaving, not to hasten back, nor come until she
should be recruited and quite well ; as she her-
self was able, and desired to do much of the work
in the family, during her absence.
Judith's father and little brother visited the
missionaries in Gawar, as early in the spring as
the mighty barrier of snow would allow them to
cross the high range of mountains, already men-
tioned. They reached the new station, some of
the way through two and three feet of snow, on
the first day of May. Their visit is referred to
5
66 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
in the note which follows. Mr. Coan returned
with them to Orooniiah, on business.
" Oroomiah, May 15th, 1852.
*'Dear Mrs. Coan, — I intended to acknowl-
edge your kind note by Kallash, but as I was
somewhat expecting Mr. Coan, papa, and Henry,
at that time, I thought I would wait and send a
note by Mr. C.
" Sabbath before last being the first Sabbath
of the month, we had our missionary meeting.
I think we raised one tomon, six sahib korans, and
five shdhis [about three dollars and a half]. Some
one said, that we raised more than they did at
Geog Tapa, this time.
" I presume that Henry has told you all about
our botany class, so I will not recapitulate, — but
perhaps he has not told you about our Sabbath
school. The school is opened by singing, — then
Mrs. Stoddard prays, we next say our hymns,
and then our Bible lessons. We are now study-
ing the life of Christ. For every perfect lesson,
we are marked four.
" Yesterday I saw an anecdote in one of the
papers, which is quite amusing. Henry wished
me to write it down for you to tell to Alexander.
A lady. Miss Mix, was trying to teach a little
child. She had got him clean through the alpha-
bet, and ba, be, bi, etc., and now had put him
JUDITH G. PERKINS.
6f'
into syllables of la-dy^ etc. ; and was trying to
make him understand the meaning of syllables.
In order to interest him, she said, ' you love pies,
don't you ? ' ' Yes ma'am.' ' Apple and pie,
put together, make what? ' ' Apple-pie.' ' By a
like rule, la and dy^ make lady. You under-
stand ? ' * Yes ma'am.' ' Mince a7id pie, spell
what, then ? ' ' Mince-pie.' ' Well I pumpkin and
pie ? ' ' Pumpkin-pie.' ' Then what does la-dy
spell ? ' ' Custard jtie^ said he, with a yell of
delight.
" Mr. Coan spent last Sabbath at our house.
We enjoyed his visit very much. When Henry
came home, he had a great deal to tell us. He
described your house to us. I hope the ground
will soon be dry enough for you to live in tents ;
though I am not sure you will be much more
comfortably situated.
" I was somewhat disappointed, in your not
coming down with Mr. Coan, but hope you will
come soon.
" Henry told me that you rode once on my
pony, while he was in Gawar. I hope you
enjoyed your ride.
" My note is rather longer than I intended it
to be, — so I must close, with love to Mr. Rhea,
Sanem, and Alexander, and hoping that you will
accept much for yourself.
" From your young friend,
"Judith G. Perkins.'
68 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
The house of the missionaries in Gawar, men-
tioned in the foregoing note, was a rude mud
hovel, which would not be deemed fit for a stable
in America. They were subjected to extreme
annoyance from smoke and vermin, and great
exposure from dampness, during their winter
residence in that hovel.
" OroomiaJi, Jime 18th, 1852.
" Dear Mrs. Coan, — Please accept many
thanks for your kind note ; and though it is ac-
knowledged so late in the day, I hope you will
excuse it, as it is very warm, these days. I can
hardly do any thing, most of the time, but sew
and knit and practise on the seraphine. I must
not forget to tell you, that a little while since, the
music books, which Mrs. Wright sent for, reached
us safely.
" Last Monday, a Russian gentleman arrived
at the city. He came up to Seir, on Tuesday
morning, to breakfast, and stayed with us until the
next morning. His name is KhanikofF. He has
been on the top of Mount Ararat. His tent re-
mained two days between the two Ararats. He
makes great Ararat to be about seventeen thou-
sand feet high. When on the top, he and his
party kindled a fire, and it sunk in the snow.
" We have cherries now. They are very fine.
I wish you could have some. Why will you not
come down and make us a visit ?
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 09
" We hope, next Monday, (if we can obtain
horses,) to go to Gavalan ; so I must stop and
finish some mending, on my dress and stockings,
or I fear I shall not get them done. The stock-
ings which you gave me, last year, were a little
too large, but they do very well, this summer.
" I cannot give you Henry's description of
your house now, but will try to do so next time.
" Please give much love to Mr. Coan, Mr.
Ehea, and Alexander.
" Your affectionate friend,
" Judith G. Perkins."
The visit to Gavalan, above referred to, was
made principally for the benefit of Judith's health
and that of her mamma. Mr. Stocking's family
were spending a few months at that village,
which is about forty miles distant from the city
of Oroomiah, as a health retreat.
With these notes to Mrs. Coan, we insert the
following one to Miss Rice, which possesses a
melancholy interest, as being the last that Judith
ever wrote, — at least, the last that has been re-
covered. Miss Rice was spending the summer
in Mr. Stocking's family, at Gavalan.
" Oroomiah, Aug. lliJi, 1852.
" My dear Miss Rice, — Please accept my
thanks for the very pretty seraphine-stool, which
7P THE PERSIAN FLOWER.
you were so kind as to give me, on my twelfth
birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Stocking reached here
late on Monday evening. They are with us at
tea, to-night, and hope to retm*n to-morrow, so I
must hasten.
" We all enjoy our school very much. Yester-
day, a box came from America, containing some
things for our school, and a telegraph model for
Mr. Stoddard.
" Please give my love to Miss Fisk, and accept
thanks and much love for yourself.
" From your affectionate friend,
"Judith G. Perkins."
CHAPTER VI.
HER SOCIAL TRAITS.
Few are more social^ in their disposition and
character, than was Judith. She was ever ex-
ceedingly delighted to receive visits from the
children of the mission, even the youngest, and
to visit them at their homes. The " little dinner,"
or humble collation on a cricket, surrounded by
the young group on the carpet of the earth floor,
was the height of her entertainment ; on such
occasions, a blessing usually being implored, at
the commencement of the juvenile meal. She
was very active, prompt, and skilful, in furnish-
ing agreeable plays for the lively children, which
is a problem, not always of easy solution, in the
quiet retirement of a missionary's home.
Though an equal companion with the smallest
child, Judith was not less interested, in listening
to the conversation of the gentlemen and ladies-
of the mission, in their social intercourse. In-
deed, she was singularly qualified, for one of her
years, to enjoy their society and participate in
their conversation.
72 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
The occasional visits which the mission re-
ceived from travellers, and other European gen-
tlemen, were very deeply interesting events to
her. Such visits, in the remoteness of the mis-
sion station at Oroomiah, are few and far be-
tween ; and in proportion to their infrequency,
are they welcome to the missionary exile, whether
parent or child. Judith always retained the most
vivid impressions of every such individual who
visited the station, and seemed studious to im-
prove the opportunities, thus presented, to obtain
new information and add to her attainments ;
and no visitor to Oroomiah would soon forget
that missionary child.
The visit of the distinguished Russian scholar
and traveller, Chevalier KhanikofF, mentioned in
one of her notes to Mrs. Coan, is such an in-
stance. He is one of the Russian Emperor's
counsellors of State, at present stationed at Tif-
lis ; a gentleman whose exalted official rank,
.and vast and varied acquisitions as a profound
Oriental and scientific scholar, can hardly be
^surpassed by the amenity of his manners, the
modesty of his demeanor — emphatically, the
modesty of genius, — and the kindness of his
heart.
During his visit of a day at Mount Seir, the
parlor of Judith's home was extensively arrayed
with his barometers, thermometers, etc. ; and so
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 73
engrossed was he, in making and recording ob-
servations— watching his instruments with the
alertness of a vigilant sentinel at his post, that
he was necessarily obliged somewhat to curtail
his social intercourse, though by no means unso-
cial in character. Some member of the mission
playfully remarked, on this subject, that ladies
must not expect to command a large share of the
time and attention of such a savant. In allusion
to that remark, Judith said to her mother, " Why,
I think he is a very interesting man." Her char-
acteristic discrimination saw so much to admire,
in the ardent devotee to the cause of science,
that she was exceedingly eager to catch every
word that fell from his lips ; and to her mamma,
who was more or less occupied with domestic
cares, she would say, " Come, let us hasten and
finish our work, and not lose what he says."
She was especially interested in his graphic
account of his ascent of Mount Ararat, which he
made in August, 1850. With inexpressible de-
light, she listened to his statement of the almost
inconceivably magnificent views he enjoyed,
when standing on the summit of the sacred
mountain, according to his careful measurement
16,935 feet above the level of the ocean ; how his
eye roved away, from that lofty, hallowed obser-
vatory, to an immense distance in all directions —
to the great Caucasian range on the north ; to
74 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
the Erzroom mountains, two hundred miles dis-
tant, on the west — over the central Koordish
mountains on the south, and the regions about
the Caspian on the east. And lively indeed was
her sympathy with the feeling he expressed, that
the deepest impression made on his mind, by
any thing on the venerable mountain, was, that
of the aioful^ unbroken silence that perpetually
reigns there I
In this connection, it is proper that we record
Chevalier KhanikofF's kind sympathy with Ju-
dith's bereaved parents. In writing to Mr. Stod-
dard, after the death of his youthful admirer, he
says, " I beg you to have the goodness to present
my kind regards to Mi', and Mrs. Perkins, and
say to them how much I have shared in the sad
and unexpected loss that has befallen them."
The last visit of this kind, which the missiona-
ries at Oroomiah received, before Judith's death,
was that of the English and Russian commis-
sioners, in settling the boundary between Turkey
and Persia, who, in the progress of their sur-
veys, spent a few days at Mount Seir, a short
time previous to that melancholy event. With
the estimable Colonel Williams and Colonel
TcherikofT at the head of those commissions, and
some ten or twelve very intelligent, accomplished,
and amiable gentlemen associated with them,
the whole party was a very select one, and would
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 75
have been such in any land. They were in two
instances the guests of the missionaries, where
they rendered themselves exceedingly agreeable
and entertaining; while they, in turn, seemed
equally to prize the privilege of social intercourse
with the families of the mission, especially after
living three years in tents, far removed from the
civilized world, on the rugged and desert bound-
ary.
Mr. Loftus, the geologist of the party, came
fresh from several very interesting Scripture lo-
calities — from the ruins of " Shushan the pal-
ace ; " and the tomb of the prophet Daniel ; and
j5:om the supposed " Ur of the Chaldees," the
.early home of the patriarch Abraham, at which
places he had made many important discoveries.
He had with him a great number of very striking
impressions and copies of inscriptions and sculp-
tures, from those remains, which he kindly ex-
hibited to the families of the mission, to their
unspeakable gratification.
Judith had more than once read Layard's
" Nineveh and its Remains," and often inspected
specimens collected by her father on the venera-
ble site of the prophet Jonah's home, and studied
the subject with an interest and intelligence, that
had prepared her fully to appreciate such an en-
tertainment. Her enjoyment of the visit of these
gentlemen was quite indescribable. The only
76 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
abatement to it seemed to be, her apprehension,
that her size and appearance, so much above her
years, might not be sufficiently guarded by the
mantle of modesty — an apprehension, however,
which was felt by no one so much as by herself.
Mr. Stevens, the British consul at Tabreez,
and his brother, are also among the estimable
and agreeable visitors at Oroomiah, whom Ju-
dith remembered with much interest.
Of the missionaries of other fields, whose visits
and acquaintance she had enjoyed, were the ven-
erable Dr. Glen, translator of the Bible into Per-
sian ; Messrs. Stern, and Stern ch us, of the mis-
sion to the Jews at Bagdad ; Mr. Marsh, of Mo-
sul; Rev. John Bowen, a delegate of the Eng-
lish Church Missionary Society ; and Mr. San-
dreczki, of the same society, who is stationed at
Jerusalem. To the last-named friend, who passed
several weeks at Judith's home, in feeble health,
she became strongly attached, and after his visit,
corresponded with his little daughter, who was
about her own age. We here insert a note from
Anna Sandreczki, and after it, Judith's reply.
^^ Bonja, (near Smyrna,) Aitg. 13///,, 1851.
" Miss Judith G. Perkins :
"My dear friend, — Your loving letter gave
me great pleasure. It is a long time since dear
father came from his journey. He has told us
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 77
many things of you, and how much kindness
you have shown him. I would be very happy to
become acquainted with you and your little
friends.
" Our dear father has often had the fever, since
he came from the journey ; bht I hope the Lord
will soon deliver him from this evil.
" The nice books that you sent us, gave us
great pleasure. My sister and I v/ill be glad if
the trifles we send you, are acceptable, as marks
of our sincere love. For you, the larger sewing-
box; and for your brother, one of the pocket-
books, with the paint box ; for dear little sister
Stocking, the other sewing-box ; for her brother,
the second pocket-book. We should like to send
you something nicer, but you will not measm-e
our love by this. We shall soon go to Jerusalem.
Yesterday the news came from London.
" Give my respects, and my sister's, to your
dear parents, and all the ladies and gentlemen of
the mission ; love to your dear brother and all
the other children, whom we love, like you, with-
out knowing them.
" I remain yom* affectionate friend and sister,
" Anna Sandreczki."
78 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
From Judith to Anna.
« Oroomiali, Feb. 27 tJi, 1852.
" My dear Friend, — Your precious note gave
me great pleasure ; and I hope you will accept
my sincerest thanks for the sweet, pretty present
which you and your sister so kindly sent me. I
intend it to stand on the centre-table, in the par-
lor, and when I look at it, I shall think of you,
dear Anna, whom though I have not seen I yet
love.
" In your note, you speak of going to Jerusa-
lem. I suppose you are now there. It seems
as though one could hardly realize, that it is the
same city where David, ' the sweet singer of Is-
rael,' reigned ; and where king Solomon built
that beautiful temple ; and above all, where the
Saviour spilt his precious blood for sinners.
Will you please write and tell me how that an-
cient city looks now ?
" Since your dear father was here, many
changes have taken place in our mission. Mr.
and Mrs. Stoddard, with their little daughter,
Harriet, and Mr. Rhea, have reached us in safety.
A mission station has been established in Ga-
war, a mountain district. Mr. and Mrs. Coan,
and Mr. Rhea are residing there. There have
been additions also to the children of our mission,
since your father was here. Mrs. Cochran has
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 79
a little girl, named Caroline, and Mrs. Stocking
has a little son, named Ezra, and Mrs. Wright
has a little son, [not then named].
" My note is becoming rather long, and I must
close, with love to your dear parents, and your
dear sister and brothers, begging you to accept a
large share for yourself, from
" Your affectionate friend,
"Judith G. Perkins."
Judith's strongly social disposition was strik-
ingly manifest, in the seclusion of her missionary
home, in the feelings which she cherished to-
wards her relatives in America. She loved her
grand parents, uncles, aunts, and cousins, with an
ardor, and often conversed respecting them, with
a vividness and fervor, that could hardly have
been surpassed, had she gi-own up among them.
She deeply sorrowed, whenever she heard of the
sickness of any of those relatives, and heartily
mourned for those of them who died. On her
parents' receiving intelligence of the dangerous
illness of her grandpapa, she burst into tears, and
sobbing said, " Oh, I fear I shall never see my
dear grandpapa again." She generally cherished
the hope, as has been stated, that she should,
some day, go to America, to see her kindred ;
and the thought of failing to see that peculiarly
loved one, deeply distressed her affectionate
80 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
heart. That grand parent died, a year and a half
before her death, and doubtless welcomed that
youthful object of his fond love on earth to the
Saviour's presence in heaven.
The little tokens which were, from time to
time, sent to Judith, by her relatives in America,
were received with very affecting expressions of
gratitude, and preserved with nicest care. But
her interest in the absent and the distant, was by
no means limited to her relatives, though cher-
ished so strongly towards them. Many other
kind friends in America had shown an interest
in her, and sent her good books, and other pre-
cious tokens. The names of such friends, though
personally unknown to her, became household
words with Judith, and though often repeated by
her, it was almost as often with the tear of love
and gratitude starting in her eye. As an illus-
tration of this point, we may mention a single
case, quoting again from the letter of Miss Fisk
to Mrs. Reed. " I need not tell you what flower,
in our happy circle, has withered on earth, to
bloom, as we trust, in heaven ; nor what family
circle is clothed in deepest mourning. I seem
to hear you say, has my own dear Judith been re-
moved from earth ? Yes, my friend, that dear
child whom you loved, and who so tenderly loved
you, as an unknown, yet well known, friend, has
gone from us. Around us are the tokens of
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 81
your interest in her ; but her sweet voice echoes
not back the lively gratitude which she ever felt
toward you. That little box of play-blocks, your
first gift, and still unbroken in number, with each
remembrance, down to the sweet dress in which
we lately saw her robed, are still with the be-
reaved mother, and will not soon cease to call
forth the grateful tear from bleeding hearts."
The gratitude cherished by her towards Mrs.
Reed, as mentioned in this extract, is only an in-
stance of what she felt and expressed toward all
her unknown friends and benefactors in America.
Judith's love for the members and families of
the mission, and especially for the children,
seemed to know no limits. To the parents, she
looked up with a tender, affectionate, and confid-
ing regard, surpassed only by that toward her
own father and mother ; and their little ones, all
younger than herself, after Mr. Holladay's family
left the field, she loved and cherished, as though
all were her brothers and sisters. And it is hardly
necessary to state, that her own tender, confiding
feelings ever met a warm response, in the bosoms
of all those missionary parents and children.
Said Mr. Stoddard to her father, when the latter
was about starting with his family, to meet the
reinforcement from America, having in charge
little Sarah Stoddard, "I feel an unspeakable
relief, by this arrangement, in regard to my child,
6
:82 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
•and especially, as she will be with Judith, on the
road."
A beautiful infant daughter of Mr. Cochran,
'born just a week to an hour after the mournful
■event of Judith's death, bears the name of Judith
Perkins.
As referring to some of the traits of her char-
acter, presented in this and the preceding chap-
ters, we here insert a letter, containing reminis-
cences of Judith, addressed to her father by Mi'.
Rhea, of Gawar, some time after her death.
" With melancholy delight, I call up reminis-
cences of a brief but very happy acquaintance
with your beloved Judith. I well remember
when I first met her, surrounded by a group of
her young companions, moving among them like
a tender guardian spirit, inventing for them
youthful sports, settling their petty difficulties,
and diffusing a spirit of peace and joy, through-
out the happy circle.
" On further acquaintance, I saw that this
spirit of tender superintendence and guardian-
ship, over her little missionary brothers and sis-
ters, was a distinctive trait in her lovely char-
acter.
" During the few months spent at Seir, being
frequently a guest under your hospitable roof, it
was my privilege to become quite intimate with
Judith. Her uniformly gentle, happy, and social
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 83
spirit, her uncommon musical talent, the skill
and taste of her youthful performances, her rapid
progress and ardent enthusiasm, could not fail to
enlist at once the lively interest of a stranger.
How sweet were those hours, when, led by Ju-
dith, with her much loved seraphine, we sung
the songs of Zion! They were ever welcome
and joyful, and their zest was not a little en-
hanced, to see with what fervor of spirit and
whole souled earnestness, she animated every
strain. Judith will not sing with us here again.
She will not come to us, but we shall go to her.
The 'new song' she has learned before us, and
she may yet, in joyous strains, again lead our
voices, when we stand with her around the throne
of God, and for the first time join in the melody
of heaven.
" I love to think with what delight and char-
acteristic energy Judith welcomed the suggestion
of a missionary association^ among the ciiildren
of the mission. Her young heart could not con-
tain its ardor ; but she felt that she must impart
it to her young companions ; and the first Mon-
day of the next month witnessed the assembly of
the happy children, their eyes intently gazing
upon the map, picturing the dark homes of the
poor heathen, and their little hands grasping the
coin, earned by their own self-denial, to scatter
over those dark regions the beams of light and
84
life and joy. Judith loved, from her heart, those
little missionary gatherings. She loved to give
that whose cost she felt; and we fondly hope,
that those youthful expressions of tender sympa-
thy for the perishing nations were pledges of a
life, had she lived, one day to be wholly conse-
crated to their eternal welfare.
" An absence of ten months again brought me
to Judith's home. A marked change had passed
over her. Her form had grown tall and slender,
her mind had made rapid advances in knowledge,
and, under the moulding influences of the Divine
Spirit, we hope she was rapidly preparing for the
rest of heaven.
" I was delighted and surprised, as she mod-
estly referred to her reading and studies during
the past year, showing me several large volumes
which she had read, and relating from them, in
language unusually chaste and select, for one of
her tender years, incidents which showed that
she read, not to beguile the passing hour, but to
enrich her mind with stores of abiding wealth.
One who then saw her ruddy cheek, and light,
elastic step, would have little thought that the
silver cord would so soon be loosed. Ah, how
soon and how gently was it loosed, and her fet-
tered spirit freed, to bask in the joyous light of
heaven ! Thus soon did the night come, and cast
its dark mantle over the sweet joys and felicities
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 85
of our earthly intercourse ! Thus soon did the
morning of an eternal, blissful day dawn on Ju-
dith's glad spirit, and leave us in tears to travel
the few remaining stages of this weary pilgrim-
age, until for us too, if faithful, ' the day will
break, and the shadows flee away.' "
CHAPTER VII.
AND INTEREST.
That Judith was, all her life, under strong re-
ligious influence, need hardly be stated, when it
is recollected that she grew up in a Christian
mission. In addition to the care of her parents,
and especially of her mother, on whom, in the
ever pressing missionary avocations of the father,
her moral as well as intellectual training prima-
rily devolved, she had enjoyed the prayers, the
solicitude, and in some cases, the personal relig-
ious conversations and exhortations of her pa-
rents' associates ; though doubtless to a less ex-
tent, than if it had been apprehended by any,
that she was so soon to be removed beyond the
reach of their exertions.
As illustrations of the kind interest of those
missionary associates, in Judith's salvation, we
here insert two notes addressed to her by Miss
Fisk and Miss Rice, on two of her birthdays.
The first one, from Miss Fisk, was addressed to
her on her eighth birthday.
THE PERSIAN FLOWER. 87
" Oroomiah, Aug. StJi, 1848.
" My dear Judith, — It is not convenient for
me to accept your kind invitation to spend your
birthday with you ; but I shall often think of
you, and hope that you may have a very pleas-
ant time with your friends. While at home, I
will ask God to bless you, and make you one of
his own little children^ before another birthday
comes. I am sure that you do not think you are
too young to begin to love the Saviour. Is not
eight years long enough to live in sin? Then
will you not give all the rest of your years, be
they few or many, to Him who loves little chil-
dren better than their fathers and mothers can
love them?
" With this, you will find two little hair-bands,
which I wish you to accept as a token of the
pleasure I have felt, in seeing you try to please
your mamma, in using such bands.
" My kindest love to your papa and mamma,
and Henry, and many a kiss to your sweet little
sister.
" Yours in love,
"Fidelia Fisk."
The following note from Miss Kice was ad~
dressed to Judith on her eleventh birthday. It
possesses peculiar interest, as having been foundj.
after her death, in the basket she used to hang;
88 THE PERSiAJf flower; or
on her saddle when she rode, with the appear-
ance of having been often perused.
" Gawar, Awj. Sth, 1851.
" My dear Judith, — I have just been writing
Mrs. Breath, and the date reminds me, that this
is your birthday. I will indulge my inclination
to write you a few words. I hope this will be a
happy day to you, and that this year, which you
have now commenced, may be the happiest one
of your life. Do you know the sure way to be
happy ? I long to have you know how sweet it
is to be at peace with God, and how blessed it
is to have the Lord Jesus for the guide of your
youth, and the guide of your life, and your guide
to glory at last. How many times has He sent
the Spirit to you, inviting you to seek a home in
heaven ! Will you not heed those gentle whis-
perings ? Will you not look at your heart, and
see how much you need just such a Saviour
as Christ, to make it clean ? Will you not pray,
^ Create within me a clean heart ? ' Is hall hope
lo hear from you, when the messenger returns.
" Your true friend,
"M. S. Rice."
The following is Judith's note, in reply to Miss
Rice.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 89
" Oroomkih, Aug. lotJi, 1851.
" Dear Friend and Teacher, — I am very
much obliged to you, for the little note which
you was so kind as to write me on my birth-
day. I think I must tell you something of the
entertainment we had on that day. In the after-
noon, there was no school. At dinner, we had
company. All were here, except Dr. Wright,
who was at the city. We took tea at Mr. Stod-
dard's, and spent the evening there.
" We have a very pleasant school, [taught a
few weeks by Mrs. Coan]. Maps hang all
around the room. W^e all have desks except
Alexander, and there is a dunce-block which
stands under the teacher's table.
" Mrs. Cochran has been very sick, but is now
better. Sickness and death are always at hand.
I desire that in this, my new year, I may be a
good girl, and be prepared for death.
" Accept this from your affectionate pupil,
"Judith G. Perkins.'^
Letters from Mr. Rhea, of Gawar, to the child-
ren of the mission at Oroomiah, had also deeply
interested Judith. The following is one of those
letters.
''Memikan, Gawar, Feb. Uth, 1852.
" To Judith and all the Children :
" My dear Young Friends, — It is now getting
90 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
late, (Saturday evening). I have written a good
deal, to-day, to my older friends at Oroomiah,
and I thought I could not let the messenger
leave, on Monday morning, without a line to my
little friends, of whom I love to think, and for
whom I love to pray.
<' I would like to have you all come up to
Gawar, very much. I think you would be pleased
to look over this beautiful plain, and upon these
great mountains, all covered with snow. The
wolves howl very much, some nights. They
come quite near, sometimes ; but you would not
be frightened while staying in the house. I
think you would like to see the little girls come
into Mrs. Coan's room, so clean and nice ; I
mean their faces ; for they are poor little girls,
and have not fine clothes ; and their mothers will
not wash their coarse ones.
" I think, too, you would like to go into the
Dickana, (the elevated part of the stable,) and
see the little boys, reading in their testaments.
Each one has a little sack for his book, and before
he comes to school, washes his hands very clean ;
and some of them have as many as two or three
thumb papers, so that their fingers do not touch
the leaf of the book at all.
" Sometimes little Joseph and Jenga and
Khamis come and sit down on the floor, by my
stove. I love to have them come and talk with
me. They have all learned the Lord's prayer
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 9'!
very well; and Joseph says, that he and his
brother Khamis repeat it, every morning when
they rise, and every evening when they lie down.
Joseph says, too, ' we do n't revile now, since we
come to school and learn to read. Our mother
reviles, but we tell her not to revile ; that it is
wrong.' They are the sons of a widow, — their
father having died several years ago. They are
very poor, but are very pretty little boys, and are
learning very fast. Would you not like to teach
such little boys and girls? I hope that, some
day, this may be your pleasant work. Would it
not be delightful to you, to meet one little boy
or girl in heaven, who should say to you, ' you
taught me to read the word of God ; you told
me about Jesus ? '
" May God bless each one of you, my dear
little friends. May you all be like lambs, in the
flock of Jesus — gentle, and kind, and harmless;
and may you all be very happy in your homes,
in your studies, and in your little plays and
sports with each other. A kiss to each of you
— and a sweet sleep to-night, and a happy Sab-
bath day on the morrow.
" Ever your friend,
" S. A. Rhea."
To .Terusha Stocking, one of .Tndith's little
companions, the same kind friend of the children
92
wrote, about the same time, as follows : " Sup-
pose you had a great and good friend, and that
every time you entered his room, he would smile
upon you and embrace you in his arms ; and if
there was a tear in your eye, wipe it away ; or if
your heart was swelling with grief, soothe and
comfort you ; or if sick, would watch, day and
night, without weariness, at your bed-side, giving
you healing medicines. Suppose that his words
were always kind and gentle, and that whenever
you saw him, he would ask you if there was
any thing you would like to have, and would look
upon you with such winning love, as would make
you ask him for what you wished.
" Oh, if there was such a wonderful friend,
would you not love to look upon his face, to rest
upon his bosom, to hear his gentle words, to sit
with him, to walk and talk with him ; and would
you not go very often to his room, and put your
hand in his, and ask him to be your dear father,
and friend, and guide ? Oh, I know you would.
"But there is such a great and kind friend.
Yes, you already know who he is; Jesus, the
good Shepherd, so gentle, that He is called a
Lamb ; so strong, that He is called a Lion ; and
so loving, that He is called the ' altogether lovely.'
"'But where shall you find him?' perhaps
yon will ask. Why, there is no place that you
can go where he is not. Only fall upon your
knees, and He will be by your side.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. »9
" It was a long time before I found this dear
Friend ; and at last I learned, that wherever I
went, He went with me ; and that I could not
take a step if He was not by my side ; and that
His kind hand had given me every good thing
that I had. Then I was sorry that I had never
taken notice of Him, when He had always been
so near. I hope that you will not grieve Him by
such treatment, and that you will go to Him and
tell Him that you wish to love Him as long as
you live."
In some of her notes which w^e have inserted,
Judith mentions her Sabbath school. She was
very deeply interested in this Sabbath school,
which was under the care of Mrs. Stoddard.
The exercises consisted of a psalm, committed
and recited in the language of Scripture, by each
pupil, and a hymn by each one, after which a
parable, or some other passage of the New Tes-
tament, was read by the children in turn and
explained by the teacher, each child being ques-
tioned on the meaning. " The Child's Hymn
Book," published by the American Tract Society,
was the one from which the pupils usually
selected their hymns. Judith's copy, presented
to her by Miss Rice, and doubly prized by her
for the giver's sake, has a great many of the
hymns pencilled at the top, by Mrs. Stoddard,
with the child's initial, and a number indicating
94 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
that it was perfectly recited. This book is among
the many and affecting memorials of the departed
one, that now meet the eyes of the bereaved
parents, to solace their stricken hearts, as well as
remind them of their loss. Her fondness for
hymns led her often to commit two for the Sab-
bath school, instead of one as required for her
regular lesson.
Of her attendance at Sabbath school, Mrs.
Stoddard thus speaks : " Judith was ever per-
fectly consistent in her deportment. Once' or
twice, she was induced to smile, by the levity of
one of her companions ; but soon the blushing
face and silent tear told her sorrow. Her lessons
were always w^ell prepared, and the interest she
ever manifested made it a pleasure to teach her.
Her influence in the school was very happy on
the other pupils, as a model, inciting them to cor-
rect conduct and perfect recitations."
She was accustomed to recite her lessons, once
or more, to her mother, before going to Sabbath
school, and she often repeated many of the hymns
afterward, in the family, and with an intensity
of interest and emotion, that beamed most im-
pressively from her beautiful eye, and irradiated
her whole countenance with an almost unearthly
fervor. One hymn, which is remembered by her
parents as often thus repeated, is the following :
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 95
" Little travellers, Zion-ward,
Each one entering into rest,
In the kingdom of your Lord,
In the mansions of the blest ;
There to welcome, Jesus waits,
Gives the ci'owns liis followers win ;
Lift your heads, ye golden gates !
Let the little travellers in !
" "Who are they, whose little feet.
Pacing life's dark journey through,
Now have reach'd that heavenly seat.
They had ever kept in view ?
* I, from Greenland's frozen strand ; *
*I, from India's sultiy plain;''
' I, from Afric's barren sand ; '
'I, from islands of the main/
" ' All our earthly journey past.
Every tear and pain gone by,
Here together met at last.
At the portal of the sky.
Each the welcome, " come," awaits,
Conquerors over death and sin.'
Lift your heads, ye golden gates !
Let the little travellers in."
The juvenile missionary concert at Oroomiali
has also been mentioned. This too was a mat-
ter in which Judith was very deeply interested.
It was commenced by Mr. Rhea, and continued
by Mr. Breath after Mr. Rhea removed to Gawar.
The money, contributed by the children, is de-
voted to the support of a Nestorian missionary
to Bootan, a mountain district about three hun-
96 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
dred miles west of Oroomiah, on the ancient
river Tigris, where the poor, scattered Nestorians
are as sheep without a shepherd. Judith felt a
very lively concern in the welfare of those Nes-
torians. She was not only willing, but happy to
deny herself of as many table comforts as her
parents would allow her to dispense with, as also
to perform any domestic tasks assigned, to save
money for the missionary concert, and thus aid
in sending them the gospel.
Deacon Gewergis, the "mountain evangelist"
of Tergaver, who preaches in the nearer moun-
tain districts, frequently visited Judith's home, to
report his tours to her father, who had the par-
ticular direction of his labors. The good man's
visits were always hailed with joy by Judith.
Being supported by the avails of the Nestorian
monthly concert at Seir, to which she edso con-
tributed, he was familiarly called by her, " our
missionary." His placid smile and benignant
countenance, and his " glad tidings," could be
greeted with no more hearty welcome by any
member of the mission, than they were by that
missionary child. To cheer the w^ay-worn, inde-
fatigable evangelist's heart, and remind him of
his promised rest in heaven, she was ever de-
lighted to entertain him, a few minutes, during
each visit, with a sweet piece or two of music
on the seraphine.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 97
It hardly need be said, that this mountain mis-
sionary was very deeply afflicted by her death.
Silence, and suppressed sobs, were the only ex-
pression he could give to his feelings, for a long
time, on visiting her saddened home, in the first
instance, after that event, to tender his sympathy
to the bereaved parents.
Judith's interest in the cause of missions, was
of early growth. When quite a small child, she
often spoke of becoming a missionary^ and was
then particularly interested in China, as a pro-
spective field of labor. And to the last, she al-
ways seemed to assume, that she should be a
missionary somewhere, if her life were spared.
Reading the memoirs of female missionaries, as
the memoir of Harriet Newell, and that of Mrs.
Dwight and Mrs. Grant, and of Mrs. Van Lennep,
and others, served to quicken that desire, and
strengthen that impression ; and her circum-
stances on missionary ground, naturally kept the
subject fresh before her mind. She said to some
of the older Nestorian girls of the seminary, the
last time she ever saw them, and only four days
before her death, " I hope, after I return from
Erzroom, to study very hard, and afterward go
to America, and attend school awhile there, and
then return and be a missionary here; or, I
would prefer to go and labor where there are no
missionaries."
7
98 THE PERSIAN FLO^VER ; OR
In an important sense, Judith had long been a
missionary helper. She ever manifested a very
deep interest in all the departments of the good
work among the Nestorians, and sought to aid
in its progress in every way in her power. She
•had sat patiently many an hour, and assisted her
father in adjusting the verses of the translation
of the Bible according to the English version ;
reading the latter verse by verse ; and she sel-
dom seemed happier than when aiding him in
that great work, which she longed to see accom-
plished. During the last year of her life, she as-
sisted her mother in teaching a few Nestorian
females connected with the Sabbath school, and
.eagerly engaged in the loved employment.
The female seminary was the department of
the labors of the mission, in which she seemed
to feel the deepest interest. She often visited it,
and sometimes pursued her studies, a few days,
in connection with it, lodging with her kind
friends. Miss Fisk and Miss Rice, and being
taugkt by them. She was always familiar with
the names of the thirty or forty pupils, and in
most cases, with their character and standing;
and she ever heartily rejoiced in their progress
and improvement. None could feel greater de-
light than she did, in marking the striking and
happy change in them, from the ignorant, listless,
and ragged girls, — their mouths " full of cursing
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 99
and bitterness " — as taken from their homes, to
the intelligent and refined young ladies, and
many of them devotedly pious, under the divine
blessing on a few years of arduous missionary
toil expended upon them. She had sometimes
expressed a desire to become qualified to teach
in that favored seminary.
Judith was in turn ardently loved and admired
by those Nestorian girls. Many of them emu-
lated her example and repeated her words with
most affectionate deference. Their grief, on
hearing the tidings of her death, was almost in-
consolable. In the language of Miss Fisk, " no
event has ever so deeply affected them as Ju-
dith's death."
Let not the friends of the sacred cause in
America suppose that funds, expended on such
missionary daughters, are lost to that cause. No
mortal, except those who were thus favored, can
conceive the comfort, solace, and support, which
she afforded, for many years, to her toil-worn
parents, aside from her active exertions to relieve
and aid them in their domestic cares and mis-
sionary labors.
Among the religious influences, which strongly
affected Judith's feelings and character, should
be mentioned the removal by death of three of
her brothers and her two sisters. In bereave-
ments, as in all the economy of Divine Provi-
100 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
dence, rich and precious mercies are mingled
with severe trials. In the painful experience of
not a few parents, it has doubtless been found,
that the sore "chastening" of parting with their
offspring, for the present " not joyous but griev-
ous," has not only worked in them " the peacea-
ble fruits of righteousness," but has also been
the means of spiritual blessing to their surviving
children,
Judith was accustomed to think and speak of
her departed brothers and sisters as living in
heaven. She remembered and noticed their re-
turning birthdays, kept their respective ages,
and cherished a lively hope and expectation of
dwelling forever with them, when she should die.
Such an anticipation, long and fondly, and even
earnestly cherished, could not fail deeply to
strengthen her interest in eternal things.
Among the reminiscences of those dear de-
parted ones, which interested her, was a sweet
piece of poetry, written by a kind missionary
brother, on the death of the second infant child
whom her parents laid in the grave, in the form
of a dialogue, between that brother and an infant
sister gone before him. Judith often read that
piece of poetry ; and as an interesting memento
of her, in regard to her love for those deceased
brothers and sisters, and her desire to be with
them in heaven, we here introduce it entire.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 101
» To the Rev. J. and Mrs. C. B. Perkins, the
following lines are affectionately inscribed by
their sympathizing missionary brother,
J. L. Merrick.
Talreez, July 2Sth, 1839.
THE INFANT'S CALL.
Brother cherub, come away !
' Tis thy sister spirit calls ; —
Join our blissful, bright array,
"Where the sweetest glory falls.
Around tlie Saviour's blessed throne.
Who for us infants did atone.
Beauteous angel, let me stay,
In affection's tender arms ;
What should tempt me now to stray ?
Strangers fill me with alarms.
O, dost thou know a parent's love.
And all the filial joys I prove ?
Brother, brother, dost thou know.
Who it is that calleth thee ?
Thy own sister, spared all woe,
By going home in infancy !
Tliy parents are my parents too,
And loves were ours, as now with you.
Lovely spirit, can it be.
Thou so beautiful and bright,
Art akin the least to me,
Filled with pleasure and afiright 1
102 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
Perfection seeming half divine,
Beams awful thro' those smiles of thine.
Darling brother, do not fear,
Gentler than a mother's care.
Free from every sigh and tear,
Is the kindness you shall share.
And all that in me now you see.
Soon, soon, dear brother, thou shalt be.
Angel, what will brother say.
When he finds that I am gone !
Who will cheer him day by day ;
Meet him smiling as the morn ?
Ah, why should he be left alone,
And I removed to worlds unknown !
Lovely brother, do not call
Me an angel, with awed tone ;
I 'm thy sister, loving all
Thy fond heart proclaims its own.
You need not love our dear ones less,
For sharing heavenly happiness.
Lovely sister, is it true 1
In our circle then remain ;
We will share our joys with you ;
You shall lead our blooming train.
How happy then we all shall be,
Sweet seraph sister, here with thee.
Well I know the silken ties.
Twining round your little band ;
And the tide of sympathies.
Flowing full on every hand.
But, know, the golden chains above.
Are infinite, eternal love !
JUDITH G. PERKINS. lOS
Dost thou know how near our birth 1
Five * baptized, one blessed hour !
Let us bloom awhile on earth,
Twining in affection's bower.
O why should such a beauteous wreath,
So soon be maiTcd by rathless death ?
Dearest brother, I was there.
With an infant angel band.
Hymning, in the hallowed air,
Him who baptism did command.
Come ! we '11 oft return and see,
The dear ones now detaining thee.
Dearest sister, much inclined,
Still I cling to those below.
Where my heart has fondly twined ;
Other worlds I little know.
You must be very happy there ;
Erelong may we your glory share.
Brother, lift thine eyes above !
Seest thou Him in smiles divine ?
Image of eternal love ;
0 how sweet his glories shine !
Behold, he comes, what raptures swell,
At thy approach, Immanuel !
Sister, bear me on thy wing ;
Let us meet him in the skies !
Look ! I 'm like thee ! How they sing ;
Louder, sweeter, as they rise !
Hail ! 0 my Saviour and my Lord !
By infant hosts untold adored."
* Five infant children, in the Nestorian mission, whose births-
occun-ed within a few weeks of each other, were baptized together..
104 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
Judith's little sister, Fidelia, the last of the two
infants whom she herself followed to the grave,
died three and a half years before her own death.
She most ardently loved that sister, and had taken
inexpressible pleasure in tending and caressing
her; and the separation made a much more
vivid impression on her mind, than the death of
those of whom she had only heard, and of the one
who died when she was quite small; but it also
gave a reality and an interest to them all, in her
mind, which she had never felt before. From
that time, she was more than ever in the habit of
thinking and speaking of her five brothers and
sisters in heaven, as a united group, which she
and her parents and little brother still on earth,
were at no distant period to join. And many a
time, in the quiet of the evening hour, and under
the mild glories of a Persian sky, she has gone
with her parents, or with her brother Henry, to
Fidelia's grave, in a Nestorian cemetery, on a
beautiful hill, a few rods from her home, and
there thought and spoken tenderly of that loved
iband, in the world of bliss, and longed to be with
them.
For several years she had been exceedingly
anxious to go to Tabreez, a city one hundred and
forty miles distant from Oroomiah, which was
the first residence of her parents in Persia, main-
ly, so far as she was concerned, to visit the grave
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 105
of her sister Charlotte, their first-born. That long
and fondly anticipated privilege she never en-
joyed ; but she had often visited the little graves
of her three brothers in the city of Oroomiah,
and shed the tear of affection over them.
But of all subjects and objects, interesting to
Judith, the Saviour was the one that most ten-
derly affected her young heart. She was ordi-
narily very buoyant, lively, and playful, to the
close of her life ; but this theme, when mentioned,
would ever touch and engross her feelings, and
call them off from all other things. She was
never encouraged by her parents, or others, pub-
licly to profess religion, or confidently to indulge
the hope of being a Christian ; but her whole ap-
pearance, during the last few months of her life,
was such as strongly to warrant that hope for her ;
and had she lived, she would probably soon have
become a visible member of Christ's flock. An
earlier and more definite direction of her thoughts
to such a profession, might doubtless have con-
tributed more rapidly to develop and mature her
religious feelings and character. Her mother,
who ever cultivated an intimate acquaintance
with her feelings, has generally thought, that she
gave quite satisfactory evidence of piety, from
early childhood.
Many interesting incidents come to the remem-
brance of Judith's parents, since her death, which
106 THE PEKSIAN FLOWER! OR
occurred during the last few months of her life,
and which are now recalled as indicating the
strong current of her thoughts toward heaven.
On the last night of her last year, for instance,
she proposed to her mother to close the retiring
year and commence the new, in prayer, after the
manner of a Methodist watch-meeting. This
was devoutly done, one petition offered being,
that " the coming year might be the best year of
her life."
We will not linger to multiply such incidents,
but may remark in general, that her peculiarly
subdued, lovely spirit and demeanor, during those
last months, observed by others as well as by her
parents, and the deep interest which she mani-
fested in the religious exercises of reading the
Scriptures and prayer, with her mother, especially
so during that period ; and most of all, her won-
derfully interesting appearance on her death-bed,
yet to be described, all point to an inward, pro-
gressive work of preparation for her last conflict,
of which none were perhaps fully aware, till it
was strikingly and delightfully developed in the
trying ordeal.
In looking over her books and papers, a short
time after her death, her parents found on her
slate, on which she was accustomed to write
notes for copying, the following lines : " O that
I were a Christian ! How happy I should be !
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 107
How happy my dear mother would be! And
would it not be pleasing to God ? Whi/ am I not
one?^^ This pencilling had no date, but was
probably written not long before the commence-
ment of the journey on which she died ; and these
were perhaps the last sentences she ever wrote.
He who will not break the bruised reed, nor
quench the smoking flax, had, we doubt not, re-
garded her earnest desire here expressed, (though
by no means now felt for the first time,) to be a
lamb of His flock, and adopted her among the
chosen of his fold. Her change, as in all cases
of conversion, was of course instantaneous ; but
its precise date she may not have been able to
specify ; and its outward development, as is often
the case, especially in one of so lovely a temper-
ament and character by nature, was gradual, like
the rising light.
CHAPTER VIII.
JUDITH'S LAST JOURNEY.
In the foregoing pages, we have often spoken
of the subject of this memoir, as little Judith.
Liability to a mistaken impression, in regard to
her size, from the use of that term, should per-
haps again be mentioned, though forestalled in
the preface. She was large of her age. Though
but a little more than twelve years old, she had
reached the height of about five feet, being nearly
as tall as several of the ladies of the mission.
She was of a delicate form, and regular and very
comely features, united with singular ease, grace,
and gentle dignity of manners ; her whole per-
son and appearance being that of remarkable
symmetry and maturity, which were the true
index of her mind and heart and entire charac-
ter.
Of her appearance when she started on her
last journey, Mrs. Stoddard writes as follows:
" Her womanly bearing on the day she left us,
was remarked by many. In her kind atten-
tions to her mother, her care for her brother, and
cc xwrrve years.
THE PERSIAN FLOWER. 109
her farewells to her little companions, one would
not have recognized the girl of only twelve years.
Methinks I see her now, as she went with light
footsteps to this room and that, looked into this
bag, or opened that trunk, to be sure that every
thing was placed as her mother had directed;
then I hear her sweet voice, speaking of her
bright anticipations of her journey, the pleasure
she would receive from meeting new friends ; and
see the sparkle of her eye, as one scene after
another came before her imagination. Then,
after the tearful 'good by,' how nimbly she
glided into the carriage, to ride to the city, pre-
paratory to mounting her pony, over which she
had more command than many of twice her
years."
A member of the mission remarked, after her
death, that "had Judith known, when she left
her home and started on her last journey, that
she should never return, her whole appearance
could not have been more interesting, or more
grateful to the recollection of those from whom
she then parted."
The last affecting scenes of Judith's short life,
which we now approach, we shall give mainly
from the touching letter of Miss Fisk to Mrs.
Reed, already quoted, and from a concise memo-
randum from the pen of her father, sometimes,
for convenience, combining passages from the
110
two, which refer to the same subject. Miss Fisk
says : " It would have been a great comfort to all
our circle, if this loved one hajd died with us, and
we have been permitted to ease one sorrow, when
the pangs of death took hold upon her. It would
have been a sweet privilege to us, to have caught
the last accents that quivered on those lips, and
standing beside the swelling stream, seen her, as
it were, pass over, and join the happy ones, calling
' Sister spirit, come away.' But this might not
be. As if it were not enough for the little pil-
grim, that she had twice crossed the wide waters?
been borne once and again over the rugged moun-
tains of Armenia, and stood on the dizzy heights
of Koordistan, she must leave us, and die in a
strange place. The tender parents and loved
brother were by that dying bed ; but no mission-
ary brother or sister might whisper to the afflicted
ones, ' Jesus is a present help.' Ah, why must
it have been so ? When we think of it, we can
only feel, that the Saviour would show to this
dear brother and sister, that His love and His
grace were sufficient, in walking through the
fiery furnace.
" You will ask, what called these friends from
the circle who love them here ? The approach
of Mr. and Mrs. Crane, and little Sarah Stoddard
made it necessary that some one should go to
Erzroom, and help them on their way. Provi-
JUDITH G. PERKINS. Ill
dence seemed to point to Mr. Perkins as the one
to go. He at first shrank from it; nor did we
wonder, when we recollected how many toilsome,
not to say perilous, journeys, he had performed.
Mrs. Perkins's health had for some time been
very poor, and we had all felt, that a change in
her case was strongly called for. We hoped that
a journey to Erzroom might benefit her, and
it was recommended to Mr. Perkins, by our
whole mission, that he should take his family
with him. .Judith and Henry were particularly
happy, in the anticipation of the journey. They
thought of meeting little Sarah Stoddard, from
whom they had been separated by so painful a
providence ; and Judith exceedingly longed to
look on old Ararat's snow capped summit, and to
feel that she was near the spot where righteous
Noah once dwelt. Dear child ; she saw the good-
ly mountain from afar ; and then, as we believe,
went up to the sacred hills of light, to be forever
with the Holy patriarch.
" A few days before the time fixed for leaving,
Mrs. Perkins became very unwell; and the
parents were full of doubts, in regard to leaving
their home. Judith nursed her mamma most
tenderly, and begged her not to relinquish the
idea of going, saying that she could and would
relieve her of all care. Her feelings greatly helped
her parents to feel happy in undertaking the
journey."
112 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
The commencement of the journey, we give
in the language of the memorandum of Judith's
father.
" On Monday, the 30th of August, 1852, I
started with my beloved family, to meet Mr. and
Mrs. Crane and little Sarah Stoddard, at Erzroom.
I had felt a great reluctance to undertake the
journey, having often been over the long and
weary road, and being very desirous that the
printing of the Old Testament should not again
be interrupted. The prevalence of cholera at
Oroomiah during the summer, from which we
had been graciously preserved at our health re-
treat, had also created in my mind a mysterious
misgiving at the idea of separating myself, or
seeing any other one separated, at such a time,
from the society of our missionary circle, not
knowing what a day might bring forth. That
feeling, which I sometimes chided in myself as
a weakness, I was nevertheless quite unable to
banish. But when the mission finally appointed
me to go, as no other member seemed to find it
practicable to do so, and with the understanding
that I should take my family for the benefit of
Mrs. Perkins's health, I was reconciled to the
arrangement, and even enjoyed the prospect of
the journey, experiencing a peculiar relief, in sur-
rendering my own judgment and preference to
the general decision.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 113
" Mrs. Perkins and our children rode to the city
with Mr. Stoddard, in the carriage. Accom-
panied a short distance out of the city, by Messrs.
Wright, Breath, and Cochran, on horseback, we
proceeded, and reached the bridg-e, three hours
distant, just at dark, all of us having greatly en-
joyed the horseback ride over the charming plain.
There we passed a comfortable night, and start-
ing with the dawn,
" Aug. Slst, we reached Gavalan between nine
and ten o'clock, a. m. Mr. Stocking met us a
few miles out of the village, with his waggon,
and took in Mrs. Perkins and the children. We
passed a most delightful and refreshing day at
Gavalan, in the bosom of our kind friends there,
and completed some arrangements for the jour-
ney."
Of the travellers' stop at Gavalan, Miss Fisk
says, " I was at the time with Mr. Stocking's
family, and it was to us a most delightful privi-
lege to have them spend most of Tuesday and
the following night with us. We spoke of the
pleasure the visit had given us, on the succeeding
days ; but we little thought, nay, we thought not
at all, that it was our last visit with Judith, till
we should commune with her in 'heavenly
places.' We were all deeply interested in the
dear girl. She was lively and happy ; and yet
she seemed to us to have a kind of chastened
8
114 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
joy, and a peculiar sweetness. For every little
kindness she was very grateful ; and I remem-
ber, just before she left us, she asked me in a
whisper, ' Do you think that I have ever thanked
Mrs. Stocking as I ought, for her kindness to me,
when I was here last summer ? ' When I told
her I thought she had, she said, ' I am very glad
if I have; but if you are not sure, I want to do
it before I go away.' In every thing, she seemed
peculiarly thoughtful and tender of others ; and
her short stay with us confirmed us in the im-
pression, that the last few months had wrought
a great change in her.
" Our dear friends left Gavalan, "Wednesday
morning, September 1st, a happy family, and
with the prospect of a pleasant journey. We
heard nothing from them till Sabbath evening.
Then a letter was handed to us, which, when
opened, almost overwhelmed us. It was a pen-
cilled one, written from Zorava^ a Mohammedan
village about one third of the way from Oroo-
miah to Erzroom, on the afternoon of September
3d, and contained these sad words : ' I write you
in deep waters. Our precious Judith is just
gone of cholera. She w^as taken about one o'clock
to day, within three or four miles of this place.
I can say no more. The precious, dying one is
in my arms. Pray send to the city, and come
and meet us. Farewell. J. Perkins.' I will
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 115
not stop to tell you of our feelings, but return to
our dear pilgrim friends, now indeed in ' deep
waters.' "
We here turn from Miss Fisk's letter to the
father's memorandum, as being more full.
" Sept. 1st, We left our dear friends at Gava-
lan, near nine o'clock, a. m. Mr. Stocking again
carried Mrs. Perkins, Judith, and Henry, a few
miles, in his waggon, to help them on their way,
that they might thus be gradually initiated to
long stages on their saddles. Our ride over the
high mountain, between the province of Oroo-
miah and Salmas, was delightful. Judith was
greatly interested in the charms of the wild and
rural scenery, and the beauties of every object of
nature. The stage of about thirty miles was
performed with gi-eat ease and comfort to the
whole party. At Yavshanly, where we stopped
on the plain of Salmas, not far from the north-
west corner of the lake, we had a nice place for
our tent, on a green meadow near shade trees,
and were in every respect most comfortable, dur-
ing the afternoon and night.
" We started the next morning, September 2d,
a little after dawn. We halted to rest, a few
moments, on the top of the mountain which sep-
arates the plain of Salmas from that of Khoy-
Judith ran up a hill-side, to obtain a last view of
the lake, precisely where the late Mrs. Stoddard
116 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
lingered, about four years before, for the same
purpose, the last time she ever saw it, and only
about a month before she died of cholera at Tre-
bizond. Every object on the way seemed to
possess the deepest interest to Judith, even the
bare, sterile mountains ; and her enjoyment
seemed inexpressible. The isolated mountain of
salt on the one hand, and the tomb of the Mo-
bammedan saints, perched on a lofty eminence,
-on the other, were among the things that en-
gaged her attention, in turn, and beguiled the
sameness of the long and weary ride.
" I often inquired, on the road, whether there
'was dioJera at Khoy, and was as often strongly
•assured there was none ; and being informed,
that the arrangement, requiring passports, at the
boundary, would henceforth be rigorously en-
forced, I took the route by the town, to obtain
such papers. We reached Khoy about midday,
fifter a ride of more than thirty miles, and passed
around to the Erzroom gate, where we sat down
a half hour under an umbrella, just without the
walls, till our tent was pitched. We passed the
afternoon very agreeably, the only annoyance we
experienced, arising from the crowds that flocked
around us to gratify their curiosity. At evening,
persons came to us requesting medicine for chol-
era, which startled us, as it assured us that the
disease was there."
JUDITH G. PERKIXS. 117
We here return to Miss Fisk's letter. " They
saw that they were breathing pestilential air, and
were where, perhaps, many were falling. There
was no alternative, however, but to spend the
night. They committed themselves to Israel's
Keeper, and lay down to rest. A broad, hot
plain was before them ; and anxious to avoid
the heat, they arose very early the next morning.
They had worship, at which Judith repeated
from memory the 54th Psalm, the same which
she had recited at Sabbath school, on the pre-
vious Sabbath ; and after taking a cup of coffee,
they commenced their ride at three o'clock. The
bright moon was several hours above the hori-
zon ; and the slight haze of the cholera atmos-
phere, mingling with its mild rays, shed a peculiar
softness over the charming scenes always pre-
sented on the beautiful plain of Khoy, giving to
them an almost unearthly hue. All seemed well,
and Judith enjoyed that morning's ride exceed-
ingly, as she had all her journey. She looked
with peculiar delight on the morning star, and
on the rising sun, now rising on her for the last
time ; or rather, before another morning, to be
swallowed up in the brighter rays of the ' sun of
righteousness,' and she to go where she may for^
ever gaze on ' the bright and morning star ' of*
the seed of David. As I tell you of the events
of the day and night that followed, you wilH
118 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
thank our God anew, that he hides the future
from his children.
" After crossing the plain of Khoy, a lofty-
mountain lay before them, which is crossed by a
gradual ascent of ten miles. When about half
way up the mountain, they halted for breakfast,
it being about an hour after sunrise. On the
top of this mountain, they had a view of the
summit of Mount Ararat, a hundred miles dis-
tant. Judith was filled with ecstasy at the
longed for sight, and would have left it reluc-
tantly, but for the hope of enjoying a nearer view
in due time. She seemed to her parents to be
very well, and in unusually good spirits. She
dismounted with the others, to walk down the
steep descent, for some distance. Now in sight
of the sacred mountain, her joy was so great, that
she must run and leap, and was the first down.
As the others came up with her, she smilingly
said, ' Mamma, did you see me run ? ' She and
Henry had sung together on the road, and if
perchance a flower nestled in autumnal shades,
it shared her loving look, as did each object of
nature on that last morning.
" After descending the other side of the moun-
tain, which is much less than the ascent on this
;side, the little company stopped again for some
jefreshment. On every face sat a happy smile,
and all wished that the friends left behind could
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 119
know how well and happy they were. Dear
friends! They little knew what sad messages
they would be called upon to send us, in a few
hours more ! They had proceeded but a few
miles from this last resting place, when Judith
spoke of not being well; and her pale face
showed more plainly than her words expressed,
that she was a sufferer. Vomiting and purging
followed, which led her parents to feel very anx-
ious in regard to her; and they would have
stopped at once, but their tent had gone forward.
They could not rest under the burning sun, and
there was no water near. They were therefore
obliged to proceed three or four miles farther, to
the village of Zorava. Their anguish, as they
trod that weary way, may be imagined, but not
described. Judith grew sicker and sicker, and
the symptoms of that fearful disease, the cholera^
more and more marked. It was with difficulty
that she reached the tent ; and as she was lifted
from her horse, in a state of great exhaustion,
will you wonder, that the parents almost sunk,
under the sad prospect before them, in the lonely,
inhospitable village of Zorava ? Can you realize
the sorrow of your and our friends, on that day,
far away from their loved home, and with scarce
a comfort for a sick and dying one ? These were
bitter hours to them, and rendered doubly so, by
the unkind Mohammedan villagers, who would
120 THE PERSIAN FLOWER.
not allow a morsel of bread to be sold to the
faithful Nestorians who accompanied the family,
nor even barley, for their tired, hungry horses.
And more ; when the limbs of our dear Judith
were cold, and even stiffening under the power
of the deadly disease, they would not sell one
stick of wood to warm water for her ; but once
and again ordered the heart-stricken travellers to
leave the village with their dying child. May the
rejected Saviour forgive those followers of the
false prophet ; for they knew not what they did !
" The bitter cup was closely pressed to the
lips of our friends, on that afternoon ; but its in-
gredients were not all wormwood and gall. He,
who tasted sorrow for us, was there, and the sick
one was calm as a summer's evening. She had
not a fear in regard to the result ; not one com-
plaining exclamation to make. During the whole
afternoon, she was perfectly conscious, her mind
clear, and working with more than its wonted
vivacity and energy ; while her countenance,
beaming with rays divine, lighted that lonely
tent."
CHAPTER IX.
PKOGRESS OF THE DISEASE, AND DEATH.
We now return to the father's memorandum,
for a more particular account of the progress of
Judith's disease, and her feelings in the near
prospect of death. He says : " On arriving at the
tent, my anxiety was intense, which Judith must
have perceived, but she was not at all agitated
by it, and only remarked quietly, ' I wish Dr.
"Wright was here.' As soon as possible, I opened
our medicines, and gave her laudanum ; but she
very soon vomited. We gave her camphor,
which was also thrown off; and there were fre-
quent purgings. No doubt could remain, as to
the nature of the disease. The word, cholera^
had not been mentioned in her hearing; but Ju-
dith now meekly inquired, ' Papa, do you think
it is cholera ? ' She was, however, still perfectly
calm and composed, though aware of my appre-
hensions, having evidently been prepared for this
trying hour, by the grace of God.
" The disease moved on, like a giant, with
irresistible force. The frequent and abundant
122 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
doses of camphor and soda, which we admmis-
tered, produced not the slightest perceptible ef-
fect, and the vomiting, in some instances, much
distressed her.
" Soon after reaching the tent, I requested Ju-
dith to fix her eye and her heart right on the
cross of Christ, and keep them there ; to which
she replied, calmly and firmly, ' I will try, papa.'
I frequently repeated the same direction, and re-
ceived the same reply. With her eyes often
closed, she was obviously thus engaged ; while
I, in my solicitude and anguish, could not sup-
press audible, ejaculatory prayer, a good deal of
the time.
" After administering laudanum twice, in my
haste I set down the very small vial containing
it, among other things in our deranged tent, and
could never afterwards find it, though I searched
the tent over and over, with an anxiety amount-
ing almost to distraction. In the absence of
laudanum, I administered all the paregoric which
we had on hand, which doubtless did as well as
laudanum would have done; but in those cir-
cumstances, I could hardly forgive myself for not
having kept the laudanum bottle in my hand.
" Mrs. Perkins, who had never before wit-
nessed a case of cholera, and was at first not so
sure as I, that sach was the disease, tried to quiet
my feelings, for some time, till she too saw un-
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 123
mistakable signs of the awful reality. We con-
tinued to administer camphor, and soda water,
the latter being very grateful as a drink to the
dear sufferer, who was parching of thirst.
" By this time, our two Nestorian attendants,
and the Mohammedan muleteer, were gazing into
our tent, with surprise and deep concern. The
disease still rapidly advancing, like a strong man
armed, I despaired of its being arrested, and di-
rected Hormezd, (one of the Nestorian attend-
ants,) to try to find a messenger for Oroomiah.
He found a man who promised to go, and with
Judith in my arms, I scratched the line which I
afterwards forwarded. Mrs. Perkins said to Ju-
dith, ' We are going to send home ; would you
like to see Dr. Wright?' 'O what joy!' was
her expressive reply. But the villagers, in their
fright at the cholera, suddenly brought so near
them, now interposed, and forbade any one going
as our messenger.
" All this time, Judith maintained perfect
calmness, and enjoyed peculiar clearness of
mind, as she did indeed throughout, evidently
leaning on more than a mortal arm. Once when
I asked her, ' Dear Judith, is Jesus precious to
you V ' O yes,' she replied ; ' I have just had a
view of Him ; O how lovely I ' What a balm
was that reply to our writhing hearts ! At an-
other time, I inquired, ' Dear Judith, have you a
124
desire to get well ? ' She replied, ' O, yes, papa
if it be God's will.' ' Why, dear Judith ? ' I in
quired. ' That I may do good,' she answered
* And if it is His will to take you now to Him
self, are you not satisfied ? ' I inquired. ' O yes
papa; His will be done,' was her reply.
" Once she broke the silence by saying, ' If I
die, mamma, you will bury me by the side of
Fidelia, will you not ? ' ' O yes, dear Judith,'
was the answer. Our great distance — one hun-
dred and forty miles — from home, naturally
raised the inquiry in her mind, whether she could
be carried on horseback and buried by the loved
one of her departed brothers and sisters, who had
last died.
" About this time, Henry, who from sadness
had been long outside, came into the tent in
great anguish, and exclaimed, ' O Judith, my
dear sister, I am afraid yon will die ; you look
as though you would die. O dear sister Judith,
what shall I do?' crying convulsively. Judith
gazed on him earnestly, and with yearning ten-
derness, but without agitation. Her mamma in-
quired, 'Dear Judith, what do you wish to say
to Henry?' 'O that he may be a Christian;
and a good boy, and mind his parents in every
thing ; and stand up straight ; ' was her reply.
The last-named point had been repeatedly men-
tioned in her hearing, when in health. Her ref-
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 125
erence to it, naturally suggests, how the smallest
matters of conduct assume an importance, in the
light of an opening eternity.
" All this time, the vomiting and purging were
going on, though at less frequent intervals ; her
pulse had now nearly disappeared ; and her eyes
were fast sinking back in their sockets. As eve-
ning came on, and a light was brought into our
tent, O how did those dark circles, around her
bright eyes, contrasting so vividly with her pal-
lid, sunken features, like dark lialos encircling
bright stars in the sky, point us to the fearful re-
sult as near at hand ! Her mind was now very
clear, and very quick in its operations. Her eyes
were unnaturally bright, now turned intently on
us, and anon raised upward. To every inquiry
which we made, she returned a prompt reply,
deliberately and distinctly uttered, like the clear
echo from a sepulchre. Perfectly conscious and
composed, there was, at the same time, some-
thing very peculiar and striking in her appear-
ance ; the vivacity and elasticity of a spirit,
ready to break away from its earthly fetters, all
plumed for its upward flight. Indeed, it almost
seemed as though an angel had found its way
into that lonely tent, clad in the hues of a de-
parting mortal.
126 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
' Her home was far, 0 far away ;
The clear light in her eyes,
Had nought to do with earthly day ;
' Twas kindled from the skies.'
" The subject of a messenger was again intro-
duced, and an arrangement finally made. for one
to go immediateljj^ though, as it afterwards ap-
peared, he lingered in the village until morning.
" I often repeated the direction, as I have said,
' Dear Judith, keep your eyes and your heart
right on the cross of Christ ; let nothing divert
you from it ; and beseech Him to prepare you
for His glory, whether it be in life or in death.'
' I will try to do so, papa,' was her usual reply.
" Collapse had now fully settled upon her, and
the disease was much less active. But erelong
she exclaimed, ' Oh, mamma, what ails my
limb ? ' How did that inquiry pierce through
our hearts, recognizing it, as we immediately
did, as referring to a spasm I Exhausted our-
selves, we called in the Nestorian attendants to
rub her lower limbs, which were now much
cramped, and they were soon relieved by the
friction. We also managed to kindle a fire, of
some dry weeds, (the frightened, cruel villagers
refusing to sell us wood,) and heated a stone,
which we kept at her feet. The night air was
cold in that high region, though the sun, during
the day, had been very hot, and every aspect
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 127
around us was most dreary, except as we looked
upward. To add to the gloom, a bear, or a wild
boar, (the darkness prevented determining which,)
sallied down from the neighbouring mountains,
and prowled around our tent. Our muleteer
proposed to fire on him, but I had notice of his
design in time to prevent it.
" Almost crushed with anxiety, I stepped out
for a moment, while the Nestorians were rubbing
her lower limbs, and Hormezd embraced the op-
portunity of my absence, as we afterwards
learned, to inquire, ' Judith, where do you feel
distressed ? ' She replied, ' Oh, don 't ask me
that ; it is God's will ; let His will be done.'
The attendants were both exceedingly impressed
with her sweet submission and resignation, and
with tearful eyes, they said, on their return to
Oroomiah, 'we never saw any thing like it.'
" Being now free from pain, excepting when a
spasm seized her limbs, she conceived that there
might be a favorable change, and once inquired,
' Papa, do you not think there is a reaction ? ' 'I
fear not, my dear,' I replied ; ' look right to Jesus,
and nowhere else ; He is the physician for soul
and body.' ' I will try, papa ; 1 do ; I can trust
in Him ; ' was her reply.
" Her affection for her parents seemed to
strengthen, as life waned. ' Sit close to me,' she
would say to us, * and keep your arms over me.'
128 THE PERSIAN flower; or
" Once the silence was broken by her saying,
' Papa, you will take care of my little tree^ won't
you ? ' ' Yes, dear Judith ; where is it ? ' I re-
plied. 'In the front yard,' she answered. In the
rush of her thoughts to her dear but now far off
home, they thus lighted, for a moment, on her
favorite little tree, as one of the loved objects
there ; but this, and her request to be buried by the
side of her sister Fidelia, were all the earthly re-
quests that she made, if indeed the latter can be
thus designated. Her soul seemed too much
swallowed up in the Saviour, and the bright pros-
pects before her, to think much of earthly things.
" About this time, her papa and mamma
kneeled over her and prayed in succession. She
remained silent a few moments after we closed ;
and then, without any suggestion from us, uttered
the following short prayer, slowly and distinctly,
and evidently from the depths of her soul — ' O
Lord, accept me ; if it be thy will, make me well
again ; if not, oh let me not murmur.' We re-
sponded an audible amen.
" The active form of the disease now having
ceased, she lay, some of the time, in a kind of
slumber, though she was probably not asleep.
Once, as her mamma was feeling her cold hand
in vain for any sign of pulse, and despairing, said,
* Oh must we then part with her ? ' she promptly
and distinctly replied, ' Oh no ; I am not going
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 129
now. She said this obviously to comfort her
distressed mother. In this semi-slumber, there
was occasionally a symptom of wandering. I
now inquired of her, ' Do you not think you will
die, dear Judith ? ' ' Oh no ; not now,' she re-
plied ; ' I have just seen an angel, who told me
that he had been sent for me ; but that I am al-
lowed to stay a little longer ; oh, I feel so com-
fortable I know I shall get well.'
" The anxious hours rolled on, while we still
sought in vain for any indication of returning
pulse, or symptom of the 'reaction' for which she
had inquired ; and her feet, hands, and face were
becoming deadly cold. For the most part, how-
ever, she continued rational, and promptly replied
to our questions, in a clear voice and collected
manner. Once, observing me feel long and care-
fully for her pulse, she inquired, ' Is there no hope ? '
I replied, ' the saying is, " there is always hope
while there is life," but I see very little.' She
still manifested no fear nor agitation. An occa-
sional spasm in her lower limbs was now her
only suffering, and that was soon relieved by the
prompt rubbing of the kind Nestorians.
" At length, when we had remained silent a
few moments, she said, ' Papa, do repeat some-
thing.' I repeated the 23d Psalm, ' The Lord is
my shepherd,' etc. ; and then inquired, ' Did you
understand me, dear Judith ? Is it precious ? '
9
130 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
' O yes,' she replied ; ' O how precious.' I then
repeated the verse of the hymn,
' Jesus can make a dying bed,
Feel soft as downy pillows are ;
While on his breast I lean my head,
And breathe my life out sweetly there.*
I also repeated verses of other hymns, all which
;seemed to afford her great satisfaction and com-
fort.
" By and by, restlessness ensued, with occa-
sional wandering. She mentioned Mr. and Mrs.
Cochran, as though near her, and asked, ' Why
;has Mr. Cochran left so soon V She also asked,
' Has Dr. Wright come ? ' She remarked, about
this time, when I was speaking to her, ' I cannot
now hear with this left ear ; ' and soon after-
ward, ' Why, is this ear going to be deaf ? ' She
often asked, ' Papa and mamma, are you near
me ? ' (the light being dim, and perhaps her sight
also failing) ; ' Keep close to me ; O what a com-
fort it is to have you by me.'
" At length she said, ' Papa, I think I have
pleurisy ; I feel a pain in my side. Dr. Wright
once gave me a Seidlitz, when I had pleurisy ;
won't you, mamma?' Her mamma prepared
and gave her a soda poivder, which the dear child
called Seidlitz, and repeated, on drinking it, ' O
how refreshing. Twice afterward, she requested
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 131
Seidlitz, and took a tumbler of soda in her own
hands and drank it, with hearty expressions of
satisfaction and gratitude ; vividly reminding us
of her high enjoyment of every comfort on this
journey, and her gratitude for it; and indeed on
the whole journey of life. Far enough from
being tired of life, she had ardently loved and
exquisitely enjoyed its every blessing, as a hea-
venly Father's gift.
" We knew that the pain in her side, which she
had mentioned, was the token of rapidly ap-
proaching death — the loosening- of the silver cord.
Her breathing now became labored; her voice
husky ; and her articulation very difficult. After
some time, she said, ' Papa, please raise me up.'
This was her last audible expression. I raised
her up, and her mamma now waked Henry and
called him to her. The poor child had spent his
tears, and now stood, trembling and silent, before
his dying sister. I said to Henry, ' Kiss your dear
sister, ask her to forgive you, and say, farewell.'
Henry did so ; and with a sweet smile, she nod-
ded her forgiveness and farewell. I then request-
ed Henry to promise his sister, that he would
try to be a good boy, and do in all things as she
had requested him. He did so; and she again
nodded her hearty satisfaction, an angelic serenity
beaming from her lighted countenance. This
was her last recognition. Breathing shorter and
132 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
shorter, for fifteen or twenty minutes, she gently-
slept, as we believe, in Jesus, at three o'clock,
A. M., on the 4th of September, 1852, aged twelve
years and twenty-six days.
" There was not a gasp, nor struggle, nor groan,
nor the distortion of a feature, in the dying scene ;
a termination of the loved one's course, very com-
forting to the riven hearts of her parents, as had
been the remarkable clearness and activity of her
mind, and equally so, her calmness, composure,
resignation, and firm trust in her Saviour, and
the absence of all signs of fear, during her very
brief but violent sickness. Eternity never ap-
peared to us so near as at the moment of her
exit ; its curtain seemed lifted up before us. Nor
had death ever appeared to us so disrobed of its
terrors. Its Jordan was but a rill, that might be
crossed by a single step. Never before had we
witnessed so striking a comment on the beauti-
ful hymn :
* Sweet is the scene, when Christians die ;
When holy souls retire to rest ;
How mildly beams the closing eye ;
How gently heaves th' expiring breast !
* So fades a summer cloud away ;
So sinks the gale when storms arc o'er ;
So gently shuts the eye of day;
So dies a wave along the shore.
JUDITH Q. PERKK^S. 133
' Triumphant smiles the victor's brow,
Fanned by some guardian angel's wing ;
O Grave ! where is thy vict'ry now,
And where, 0 death, where is thy sting ? '
" Thus suddenly passed our sweet Juditii
away! We sat and wept over her a few
minutes, the Nestorian attendants most tenderly
weeping with us ; and I then led the sorrowing
group, still retaining the same position, to the
mercy-seat, in the Syriac language, that the Nes-
torians might unite with us in the prayer. I
afterward directed them to retire and sleep, while
we closed our loved one's eyes, and then lay
down by her side, not to sleep, but to weep, to
pray, and to praise."
CHAPTER X.
RETURN AND FUNERAL.
We continue the memorandum. " In the
morning we rose, much exhausted by the affect-
ing scenes through which we had passed, and
had a cup of coffee prepared to strengthen our
prostrated bodies. As we were drinking it, by
the side of Judith's lifeless remains, Henry burst
into tears and said, ' Oh, I wish this were the
time when Christ was on earth, to raise the
dead ! " and after a few sobs, he added, " O that
we had not left our dear home; then perhaps
Judith would not have died ! '
* She slept upon the shroud, on her white bed,
Amid the weepers. There was none to say,
Taliiha Cumi ; or uplift the head,
That in its flood of silken ti-esses lay
Scarcely dishevelled ; with so slight pain
The dark-robed angel waved his fearful rod,
And from the beauteous clay that knew no stain,
Drew forth the pure in heart to see her God.'
" As I walked a few moments around our tent,
soliloquising in bitterness of spirit, — ' What has
THE PERSIAN FLOWER. 135
come iipon us ? ' etc., I observed that the tent
was pitched precisely on the spot where I had
pitched our tent for a night seventeen years be-
fore, with the lamented Dr. and Mrs. Grant, and
Mr. Merrick, our first missionary fellow-laborers,
when I was conducting them to Persia from
Erzroom, whither I had been to meet them.
The thought of two of those friends, long since
arrived in glory, as having perhaps welcomed
thither the spirit of our darling Judith, who bore
the name of one of them, and whom we had just
given back to the Saviour, on the spot where,
long ago, I kneeled in prayer with those mission-
ary pilgrims, threw a double sacredness around
the place where I stood, and sweetened my cup
of anguish.
" Though well nigh crushed, we had sorrowful
duties still to perform. After seeking help from
above, the mother, with her own hand, clipped a
few of those ' silken tresses,' to keep herself, and
send to far off friends. And then with her own;
hands she washed the corpse, and dressed her
own child for the grave. As no coffin could be
obtained, the loved one was sewed in a strong,
oriental felt, of the size and form of a bed-quilt,
and placed upon her bed. In the absence of
other means and other aid, Hormezd, with his
dirk, cut two willow sticks from the margin of
the brook, and sewed them upon the sides of the
136
bed, to which the dear form was lashed, and then
bound to the back of the faithful horse.
" A long parley, most trying in such circum-
stances, must now be held by me, with our Mo-
hammedan muleteer, to induce him to return
with us. A part of his horses and mules had
gone on to Erzroom in another caravan ; and a far
more serious obstacle urged by him, was, his ap-
prehension lest he, and perhaps all of us, should
be mobbed, or even murdered, by outraged Mo-
hammedans on the road, should he be seen car-
rying the corpse of an injixlel (Christian,) to say
nothing of the violence he would thus do to his
own feelings as a good mussulmdn. An arrange-
ment with the muleteer, who was exorbitant in
proportion as our necessity and dependence
seemed pressing, being finally concluded, we
commenced our mournful return about ten
o'clock A. M., the cruel, panic-struck villagers of
Zorava still calling on us to ' depart quickly,' and
we feeling thankful that we were permitted to
leave the place without being stoned.
" An hour after starting, we met Colonel
' TcherikofF, the Russian commissioner in settling
the boundary between Turkey and Persia, and
his secretary, who had visited us a few weeks
before, at Oroomiah. They were astounded and
deeply affected by the sorrowful tidings, and by
the sight of us followed by the lifeless remains
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 137
of our dear daughter, whom they had so recently
seen in the bloom of health. They urgently re-
quested to be permitted to do any thing in their
power to aid and relieve us. We could only
desire them to convey the intelligence to our
friend, Colonel Williams, now two days beyond,
who was looking out for our approach to his
camp, on our way to Erzroom."
We now turn from the memorandum, to the
letter of Miss Fisk, for an account of the return
of this mourning family to their home. She
says: "Retracing the steps of the previous day,
required in them no ordinary resignation and
Christian fortitude. As they remembered how
the dear departed one had then cheered them on
their way, and now looked on all that was mor-
tal of her, borne in solemn silence after them,
they exclaimed in anguish of spirit, ' What hath a
day brought forth ! ' That sad and weary ride
was as naturally as gratefully relieved, by remi-
niscences of dear Judith ; the religious ones being
of course the most interesting. Among such,
Henry artlessly said, ' Last Sabbath evening, the
evening before we left home, as we were walking
on the roof, dear Judith said to me, " Henry, per-
haps I shall die on this journey ; and how de-
lightful it will be, to go up to that heaven, and
see God who never dies." ' On the day previous
to that Sabbath, she had also remarked to little
138 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
Harriet Stoddard, with affectionate solemnity,
* Perhaps I shall die on this journey.' On opening
her basket, which was hung on her saddle when
she rode, and observing among the books which
she had put up for the way, 'the Memoir of
"Wilberforce Richmond,' Henry said, ' About five
Sabbath evenings ago, Judith read to me on the
roof, about the death of Wilberforce Richmond.'
Her mamma could also call up many peculiarly
sweet seasons of religious conversation and pray-
er, which she had recently held with the departed
one, all of which were most comforting to their
desolate hearts, as strengthening them in the
confidence, that she now rested in the Saviour's
bosom.
" The little band of mourners reached the
beautiful gardens of Pera — a large village on
the plain of Khoy, about sunset. They had
passed those gardens at dawn, on the preceding
day, and Judith's young heart had been filled
with delight in observing them. Here they re-
mained till midnight, and then came on their
sorrowful way, feeling compelled to travel on the
Sabbath, on account of the corpse, in that hot
region, as also to avoid unnecessary observation,
by remaining long at one place.
" As they rode on, they often gave audible ex-
pression to their grief At such times, little
Henry, who followed his parents on the white
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 139
donkey formerly rode by his sister, would call out
to them, ' Do n't cry ; it is no matter if Judith
has gone to heaven ; that is a better place ; ' but
the little comforter's own heart would break, the
next moment, and weeping most bitterly, he
would say, ' Who will walk with me on the roof
now? Who will sing with me? Who will
play for me on the seraphine ? Who will help
me get my lessons ? '
" With such sad reflections the afflicted ones
were borne on their long, hot, and weary way,
and reached Yavshanly, a village in Salmas,
about midday. On the way, the horse, bearing
the corpse, in one instance slipped, in the sidling
path, on the very brink of a turbid stream, and
fell; and in his struggles, all but plunged down
the bank, before the precious charge could be
dislodged from his back. It was a moment of
deepened agony, to hearts already bleeding at
every pore.
" The murky cholera atmosphere struck them
as terrible, both on the plain of Khoy and of
Salmas, where the disease was raging fearfully ;
and they were doubtless in imminent peril, while
again passing through that atmosphere.
" They were now within a few hours of Gava-
lan ; but as yet we knew nothing of the scenes
through which they had passed, their messenger
not reaching us till Sabbath evening."
140 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
We interrupt the narrative of Miss Fisk a
moment at this point, to introduce a note written
at Yavshanly, by the bereaved father, to his
missionary associates, and forwarded to Mr.
Stocking.
" Yavshanly (Salmas), SabhatJi, Sept. 5th, 1852.
"To ALL THE Brethren and Sisters, — "We
have just reached this village, on our return with
the lifeless remains of our dearest, sweetest
Judith. She died of cholera^ at Zorava, at three
o'clock, yesterday morning. I trust a line for-
warded by a messenger from that place, a little
before her death, has prepared you for the intel-
ligence of this terrible stroke.
" I cannot now attempt to describe the pro-
gress of the destroyer, which resulted in her death
in about fifteen hours after the first symptom of
disease. Up to the time of the attack, she had
been one of the happiest of mortals, all the way
on the road, and had travelled with great ease
and almost no weariness, often remarking, ' I am
not tired at all ; how easily I ride ! '
" I need not attempt to portray to you
the afternoon and night of agony^ which we
passed at the lonely Mohammedan village of
Zorava — while the king of terrors was tearing
from our arms the earthly idol of our hearts. I
have said agon?/; but it was the agony of parental
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 141
hearts. The loved one removed was perfectly
calm, and perfectly conscious, till nearly the last,
often commending her soul to Christ in silent
prayer, and once in an audible prayer, uttered
from the depths of her soul, which seemed to be
illumined and prepared for the awful moment,
by light and strength from on high.
" Nor need I say that our hearts are riven and
crushed ; but we would have them bleed, till
Jesus shall heal the wounds He has inflicted.
To grace we owe it, to tell you that we have
been wonderfully supported and comforted, in a
situation more heart-rending than often falls to
the lot of mortals.
" I cannot enlarge now. "We propose to start
wdth the rising moon, and shall, with God's help,
be in Gavalan early in the morning. Be kind
enough to send this sheet right along, by a foot-
man or otherwise, to the city. If Mrs. Perkins
and Henry could be carried from Gavalan in the
waggon, it would be a great relief. I have no
occasion, I arn sure, to bespeak your prayers in
our behalf.
" Most affectionately yours,
«J. Perkins."
Miss Fisk's narrative of their return continues
thus from the point where we left it in Salmas.
" Mr. Stocldng went early the next morning to
142 THE PERSIAN flower; or
meet them, and a few hom's brought our stricken
friends to us. We longed to comfort their
wounded spirits ; but when we looked at them,
in their grief, a voice seemed to say, ' a time to
be silent.' The remains of our precious Judith
were laid in the deep shades of Mar Yohannan's
garden, till evening, when they were borne from
us in sweet silence ; for even the Mohammedan
muleteer, after all his misgivings at first seemed
now to feel that he was bearing precious dust to
its last resting-place. His remaining apprehen-
sions, if he had them, would of course also lead
him to prefer the stillness of night for the com-
pletion of the journey."
The arrival of the intelligence of Judith's sick-
ness and death at her home, is thus described in
a note to her father, by Dr. Wright, to whom it
was first communicated : " We can never forget
the morning of the 6th of September, when the
announcement of dear Judith's death was first
made to us. The day had just begun to dawn.
I was in a sound sleep. Bekky^ the nurse of our
little boy, came to the door of our bed-room, and
called ' Sahib,' [Sir] ; I half waked, and she said
in Syriac, ' Judith is dead ! ' It seemed like a
dream. Half bewildered, I rose up in bed and
asked, ' What is it ? ' ' Has anybody come ? '
«Is there a letter?' She replied, ' Pera,' (Mr.
Stoddard's servant), * says so.' I told her to call
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 143
him. She went out, and soon returned with your
note, written on Friday, at four o'clock, p. m. I
took it to the window, and by the faint light of
breaking day, was just able to read, ' We are in
deep waters. Our precious Judith is just gone of
cholera.'^ It would be vain to attempt to describe
the emotions of Mrs. Wright and myself, at this
moment. The tears flowed freely. ' Can it be ? '
' Can it be? ' we asked. I looked again at the
note, and marked the words, 'the dying one.'
Hope revived. She may still live. ' While there is
life there is hope.' I at once prepared to hasten
to you, and with Mr. Stoddard, Mr. Cochran, and
Miss Harris, started for Gavalan. We were hourly
looking for another messenger. When about six
miles from the city, we saw a footman coming
at a rapid speed. On meeting us, he stopped
and took from his girdle your letter from Yav-
shanly. I dismounted, took the letter, opened it
with a trembling hand, and read it aloud. Our
hopes were all dashed to the ground. The dear
one was no more. There by the roadside we
stopped and wept. We rode on toward Gavalan
with sad hearts. ' The Lord hath done it,' we
thought, and were still.
" Monday night, as Bekky (the Nestorian nurse)
was undressing our little Caty, the child, crying
convulsively, said in Syriac, ' That beautiful, that
wise, that loving girl, is dead I ' ''
144 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
Mrs. Stoddard, referring to the same subject,
as also to the arrival of the corpse at Seir, as
contrasted with Judith's departure from her home
one week before, says : " Very different was the
scene on that spot, from that of the previous
Monday. Now none but sorrowing, anxious
countenances were to be met; for tidings had
come, that our dear young friend w^as prostrated
with cholera. We did not then know that the
fearful disease had finished its work ; and in the
midst of our anxiety, a hope of better tidings
would often arise. But at evening, our first
fears were confirmed.
" I cannot describe our feelings, when, on the
morning of Tuesday, we saw the lifeless remains
approaching our dwelling. The tears and sob-
bings of our children and of the natives, were
heart-rending. We could only look upward and
say, ' Our Father doeth all things well.' ' What
we know not now, we shall know hereafter.' ' In
wisdom hast thou done it' "
Miss Fisk continues : " The brethren from Seir
met our friends at Gavalan, and accompanied
them, the next morning, on their way to their
lonely dwelling. They reached their home in
the afternoon, to be surrounded by a large circle
of weeping friends, afflicted in their affliction.
The funeral services, which were held soon after-
ward, were conducted by Dr. Wright at the house
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 145
in English, and by Mr. Stocking at the grave, in
Syriac ; and before the setting sun, the dear child
was laid on our gi'een hillside at Seir, and by
the side of her darling sister, where she had re-
quested to be buried. At the gi-ave, one of the
Nestorians who had accompanied the family, by
request, artlessly told the assembled villagers the
aftecting scenes which he had witnessed. All
were bathed in tears ; for all felt that they had
lost a friend. In all the families of the village,
she had taken a deep interest ; and several of the
middle aged women had been taught by her in
the Sabbath school. Indeed, she had greatly
endeared herself to all the scores and hundreds
of Nestorians who knew her, and was a univer-
sal favorite among that people. Said a Nestorian
of a distant village, on hearing of her death,
' there was none like her ; so beautiful, so wise,
so pious. She would pray like an angel.'
" The grief expressed by the Nestorians, as-
sembled at her funeral, as they stood by her open
grave, was most affecting ; and it was a melting-
sight to all, to see the parents and little Henry,
worn out with the fatigue of their long and rapid
journey, and with their sorrow, sink down upon
Fidelia's grave, and there watch the committing
to the dust of their darling Judith."
The services w^ere closed on that hallowed
spot, by singing in Syriac, a translation of the
10
146 THE PERSIAN FLOWER.
following beautiful hymn, which had been a fa-
vorite with the departed one, and was one of the
last pieces which she played on the seraphine.
The Nestorians joined in the singing.
" Sister, thou wast mild and lovely,
Gentle as the summer breeze ;
Pleasant as the air of evening.
When it floats among the trees.
" Peaceful be thy silent slumber.
Peaceful in the gi*ave so low ;
Thou no more wilt join our number ;
Thou no more our songs shalt know.
" Dearest sister, thou hast left us ;
Here thy loss we deeply feel ;
But ' tis God that hath bereft us ;
He can all our sorrows heal.
■*' Yet again we hope to meet thee,
AVhen the day of life is fled ;
Then in heaven, with joy, to greet thee ;
Where no farewell tear is shed."
This hymn was printed soon afterward, in the
" Kays of Light," the Nestorian monthly period-
ical, as appropriate to the memory of Judith ;
and a biographical sketch of her was published
in the same number.
CHAPTER XL
A DESOLATE HOME.
We continue the narrative by Miss Fisk.
" The burial being over, the stricken family re-
turned to their desolate dwelling, to feel anew
the breach made in their household. The dear
departed one had long been the light and life of
that dwelling. The feeble mother leaned on her
precious daughter. When sickness invaded her
almost worn-out frame, Judith was ever by her
side, to nurse — and that most tenderly — the
suffering one. Did she ask for society ? It was
found in this dear child, whose amiability and
intelligence made her a pleasing companion to
all, and especially, a solace to that mother, on
whom so many bereaving strokes had fallen.
Did household cares press ? This mature child,
of twelve years, would kindly say, * O mammsi,
let me take all the care ; I cannot see you sink ;
for my life is bound up in yours.'
" Did a devoted father ask a little repose, when
borne down with missionary labors ? It was
148 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
always found in Judith. That sweet eye, which
I am sure you will remember, ever met papa
with a smile, and with something interesting in
her reading, or with a sweet piece of music. By
her side, cares were forgotten, and he returned to
his study or other labors, with new interest, and
thankful for the roses strown in his path.
" Few brothers depend on a sister, as did
Henry on Judith ; and I feel for him, as I never
felt for any child, in his loneliness. It is a com-
fort to us to know, that thousands in our native
land will sympathize with all these bereaved
ones, and tenderly pray for them, when they
shall hear what God has done."
We turn once more to the father's memoran-
dum, in regard to the point here presented by
Miss Fisk. He says : " My pen refuses to tell
the desolation of our home, with dear Judith
gone. But God has inflicted the dreadful blow,
and we would bow silently and submissively un-
der it. No preceding bereavement, and hardly
the removal of all those of our children who died
in infancy, fell upon us with the weight and se-
verity of dear Judith's death. So fair, so mature,
so intelligent, and so amiable, she was, in the
eyes of fond parents at least, one of the loveliest
of beings ; and arrived at such an age, she had
become as our right hand, as well as the joy of
our hearts.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 149
" It was inexpressibly grateful to us, when the
funeral services were over, to yield ourselves up
to the kind sympathy of our beloved missionary
friends, after all our terrible anxiety, fatigue, and
exposure. They kept us at their tables, till the
morning of the third day after our return ; for
we shrank from approaching our own loved
board, with that affecting breach staring us in
our faces, and but a single olive plant remaining.
" When we finally took our places at our own
family altar, for the first time after our return, as
we opened our hymn books, Henry pointed us
to the 495th hymn, Church Psalmody, and said,
'that is the hymn which Judith selected, and
committed and recited at Sabbath school, the last
Sabbath she was here ; ' and it is the one which
we sung at family worship, that Sabbath morn-
ing. This is the hymn.
' Time is winging us away,
To our eternal home ;
Life is but a winter's day,
A journey to the tomb.
Youth and vigor soon will flee ;
Blooming beauty lose its charms ;
All that's mortal soon shall be
Inclosed in death's cold arms.
' Time is winging us away,
To our eternal home ;
Life is but a winter's day,
A journey to the tomb.
150 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
But the Christian shall enjoy,
Health and beauty soon above ;
Far beyond the Avorld's alloy.
Secure in Jesus' love.'
" This incident cheered our desolation ; for it
furnished fresh evidence, that the current of Ju-
dith's thoughts had of late run strongly on such
subjects.
" Poor little Henry Martyn was comforted by
his dreams. He said to his parents, some time
after her death, ' I often dream of Judith.' And
to their inquiry, ' What do you dream ? ' he re-
plied, 'that she comes down from heaven and
talks with me.' And to the farther inquiry,
' What does she say to you ? ' he artlessly an-
swered, ' when I once asked her, " is heaven a
better place than this ? " she said, " O yes, a great
deal better ; " we were walking together near
the gate, and when I looked around, she was
gone.' "
Here taking leave of the father's memoran-
dum, we return once more to the interesting let-
ter of Miss Fisk, already so often quoted. Pro-
ceeding from the point where we left it, she says,
" A great and most unexpected breach has been
made, not only in the family, but in our little
circle. Judith had passed the dangerous period
of childhood, and though delicate, we felt that in
her mountain home, she had a fair prospect of
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 151
growing up ; and indeed, having almost reached
her mother's height, she seemed to us to stand
on the very verge of womanhood. All looked on
her with peculiar interest, as the oldest of the
missionary children ; and the little flock now feel,
that their eldest sister has gone, and are ready to
exclaim, with little Caty Cochran, only three
years old, ' I want to die, and go to heaven and be
with Judith.^
" You know that Judith's education had been
conducted almost wholly, by the unwearied
efforts of her mother ; and that mother had been
most richly repaid, for each hour's care, by her
eagerness to learn, her rapid improvement, and
her tender gratitude. Few at twelve years of
age, in any circumstances, possess the general
intelligence that was Judith's ; and her interest
and proficiency, in the study of the Bible, were
remarkable. To teach her, was a great pleasure
to any one. And as we think of what she was,
in this and other respects, we only awake more
deeply to our loss.
" Little Henry alluded, on his sorrowful way
homeward, to the seraphine. This was the gift
of a kind friend in America, and it was a great
comfort to dear Judith, as well as to others, in
their solitude here. She quickly learned to play
on it most sweetly, though she had but very little
152 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
instruction in the use of the instrument. As I
write you from Judith's once cheerful home, the
now silent seraphine, and a thousand pleasant
reminiscences stealing over me, make me feel,
that I stand on sacred ground.
" The bereaved parents are wonderfully sup-
ported, in their sore trial, though the wounds
fond nature feels can never be healed. You will
weep jvith us, when you hear the sad tidings,
and we know that you will remember in your
prayers, our afflicted circle, and especially the
stricken parents, who had before given back to
the Saviour five precious little ones ; and that
brother, who may never again answer to a sis-
ter's gentle call. Though crushed beneath this
stroke, they can sweetly say with the departed
one, ' Let the Lord's will be done.' The expe-
rience of that dying bed was such as greatly to
console them ; and more precious, if possible, is
the remembrance of her life, and especially of
the last few months of it, in which she seemed so
rapidly ripening for the rest into which she has
entered. It was not fond parents alone that
saw and felt this ; others who loved the precious
one had felt, that she was indeed a lamb of Je-
sus, and wondered not that such sweet consola-
tions were imparted to her, in a dying hour, un-
der so sudden and fearful a summons. She had
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 153
loved the Saviour in the bloom of health, and
He would not forget her when passing through
the dark way that led to Him. We think of her
as blessed — supremely blessed^ and not even the
parent would call her back ; and yet there are
hearts which almost feel what little Caty Coch-
ran expressed, ' / ivant to die, and go to heaven
and be with Judith.^ "
The first time that the notes of the " silent
seraphine " were revived, after her death, at Ju-
dith's desolate home, by her beloved teacher, the
following beautiful hymn was sung, and often
afterward, as a solace to the bereaved parents.
It is here inserted, as the form in which their
feelings, in the hours of their deep but sanctified
grief, have found frequent and grateful expres-
sion.
" Thou art gone to the grave ; but we will not deplore thee ;
Though sorrow and darkness encompass the tomb ;
The Saviour hath pass'd through its portals before thee,
And the lamp of his love is thy guide through the gloom.
" Thou art gone to the grave : we no longer behold thee,
Nor tread the rough paths of the world by thy side ;
But the wide arms of mercy are spread to enfold thee ;
And sinners may hope, since the Saviour hath died.
" Thou art gone to the grave ; and its mansion forsaking
Perchance thy Aveak spirit in doubt linger'd long ;
But the sunshine of heaven beam'd bright on thy waking.
And the sound thou didst hear was the seraphim's song.
154 THE PERSIAN FLOWER.
*' Thou art gone to the grave ; but we Avill not deplore thee,
Since God was thy Ransom, thy Guardian, and Guide ;
He gave thee. He took thee ; and He will restore thee.
And death has no sting, since the Saviour hath died."
CHAPTER XII.
NOTES OF CONDOLENCE.
The remaining pages of this memoir are mainly
occupied with familiar notes of condolence,
received by Judith's parents, from missionary
friends and others, while on their way to their
desolate home, and soon after reaching it. They
are interesting, as showing the estimation in
which Judith was held, as also for the deep and
tender sympathy which they breathe, and the
rich variety of appropriate words of consolation,
addressed to the stricken mourners, which they
contain.
Though penned with not the most distant
idea of any public use being made of them, we
trust that the authors of these notes will excuse
their preservation, in the humble casket in w^hich
the precious memory of dear Judith is embalmed,
whose early and lamented death was the occasion
of them.
156
From Rev. Wm. R. Stocking.
" Gavalan, Sabbath Evening, Sept. 5th, 1852.
"My dear Brother, — Oar hearts are filled
with grief, at the sad intelligence contained in
your note of the 3d, which reached us a few
moments since. "We would fain hope that the
precious child may have been spared, though
brought so low. May the God of all consolation,
and our gracious Saviour, be near to you and
sister Perkins, and your other child, in this time
of deep affliction. I would hasten to you imme-
diately, if it was thought possible for me to pro-
ceed with my eyes, which are bound up, on
account of a severe attack of ophthalmy.
"Joseph [a brother of Mar Yohannan,] and
another man, start immediately to meet you, and
in the course of five hours, your letter will be
at Seir, and some one there will doubtless come
on without delay. I hope I may be able to start
in the morning, but from my severe pain, last
night, I fear a night ride, in the present state of
my eyes.
" Yours with deepest sympathy and most
heart-felt prayers,
" W. R. Stocking."
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 157
From Miss F. Fisk.
" Gavalan, Sahhath Evening, 5 1-2 P. M.
"Dear afflicted Brother and Sister, — I
write you a line, not only to express my own
sympathy for you, but that of us all. Your mes-
senger reached us half an hour ago, and a man
has been gone some fifteen minutes, on his way
to the city. Mr. Stocking longs to fly to you,
and so do I ; but Mr. S. has had a hard day with
his eyes, and dares not undertake to go in the
night. I trust that we shall be able to leave in
the morning.
" The intelligence from you came just as we
were assembled for our evening Sabbath school,
and many here wept with us. We feel almost
overcome by the shock, and how much more
must you. A Father has done it, which will
comfort, but cannot heal your bleeding hearts.
We will pray for you, and beseech our Saviour
to sustain you ; but when I think of the great-
ness of your affliction, I find that words are few.
Precious friends ! We have all shared your sym-
pathy in days that are past, and tve feel most
tenderly for you in this day of your sorrow. [May
it be that the dear child lives ? Our hearts cling
to the possibility ; but with you, the sad reality
may have taken away your last hope. Must it
be so ? The Lord has done right. That must
158 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
set each thought to rest. O may He comfort
you, dear brother and sister, and little Henry too.
We shall wait in inexpressible anxiety till the
next tidings come. The precious Saviour be
with you. He alone can know your feelings, if
dear Judith has been taken from you.
" Yours in sorrow,
" Fidelia Fisk."
From Rev. J. G. Cochran.
" My dear Brother and Sister, — I can only
say, that my heart bleeds with yours, in the over-
whelming intelligence that has this moment
reached us. Ours is a circle of weeping and
deeply stricken hearts ; but what must be your
distress and agony of soul ! Your darling daugh-
ter — your beloved Judith riven from your em-
brace, and that, on your lonely, comfortless
journey! What could be more piercing to your
heart, and trying to your faith ? Vain is the help
of man. The Lord reigns, and shall not the
Judge of all the earth do right ? It is He that
wounds, and it is He alone who can heal. I
need not commend you, as your only source of
consolation and support, to the riches of His
boundless grace and infinite love.
" I am summoned to make preparations for
some of us to go and meet you, and trust I shall
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 159
find it practicable to go myself, and have only-
time to add the assurance of my heart-felt sym-
pathies, and fervent prayers that a God of love
may bind up your bleeding hearts.
" Most truly yours,
"J. G. Cochran."
From Mrs. D. P. Cochran.
"My dear Mr. and Mrs. Perkins, — I feel
that I can hardly write. My heart is almost
bursting, from the heavy, heavy tidings just now
come. May God have mercy on you, and suc-
cor you, in this hour of deep affliction. Would
that some of us could have been near you, and
softened by our sympathy the dreadful blow.
Nothing has occurred since I have been in Persia,
and I may say, in my whole life, that has so
taken hold of my sympathies, and made me feel
that our only refuge is in God. Judith^ dear child,
was dear to all our hearts. She loved our chil-
dren, and was as an elder sister to them.
" May your only remaining child be spared,
and be brought safely back to us. We long to
see you all safe back. Miss Hams goes to meet
you, and were it possible, I would go a part of
the way. We feel that we are one, and would
crave the place of mourners together.
" Yours most affectionately,
« D. P. Cochran."
160 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
From Rev. D. T. Stoddard, after the parents'
return.
" My dear Brother, — My heart is full. My
thoughts, at early morning and late at night, go
out to you in the most tender sympathy. If I
do not talk with you much about the painful
scenes through which you have passed, it is be-
cause I know not what to say. No words are
adequate to express the emotions of the heart,
at such a time. May God be a comforter to you
both, and bind up your desolate hearts, and give
you his sweet presence, in your otherwise deso-
late home. May you realize, to the full, the
meaning of the promises, and say ' It is the Lord ;
let Him do what seemeth Him good.' As one
tie after another is severed, which binds you to
earth, may heaven seem nearer and more attrac-
tive. There our best friends have gone. There
Jesus is. There too we shall soon arrive. Let
us live more for heaven. Let us be dead, and
our lives hid with Christ in God ; so that when
He, who is our life, shall appear, we also may
appear with Him in glory.
" Affectionately your sympathizing brother in
Christ,
" D. T. Stoddard."
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 161
From the mission.
" Seir, Aug. 8th, 1852.
" Dear Brother, — The following action was
taken by the mission to-day, namely, ' Whereas
it has pleased our Heavenly Father, to remove
from our circle, the last week, by cholera, Judith
G. Perkins, while accompanying her parents to
Erzroom, to meet Mr. and Mrs. Crane, under
circumstances of very peculiar aggravation,
" ' Resolved, That we tender to our beloved and
deeply afflicted brother and sister our tenderest
sympathy.'
" As secretary of the mission, I was expected
to communicate the above action to you ; and in
doing so, I will only say, that language fails to
express the sympathy we all feel for you andi
your dear wife, in your sore bereavement.
" Affectionately your brother,
« A. H. Wright,
" Secretary of the Mission.''^
The notes which immediately follow, are from
English gentlemen, who are very kind friends of
the missionaries, and who had visited Oroomiah,
and were personally acquainted with Judith as
well as her parents.
The first note is from Colonel Williams, who
has been repeatedly mentioned in the foregoing
11
162 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
pages of this memoir. He was, at the time of
her death, near the base of Mount Ararat, about
midway between Oroomiah and Erzroom, just
closing his arduous labors of many years, in sur-
veying and settling the boundary between Tur-
key and Persia. He had heard of the contem-
plated journey of the family to Erzroom, and
fondly anticipated seeing them on the way. In
a note to Judith's father, dated August 27th,
1852, he playfully said, " I hope we may
meet on the road ; we willgive you a royal sa-
lute." Little did he then think, that within one
short week from that time, dear Judith would die
so near him, — within about two days' ride of his
camp — and that he should so soon be called in
providence to address a letter of condolence to
her heart-stricken parents. Colonel Williams
heard of the melancholy event almost imme-
diately, through his colleague. Colonel Tcheri-
kofF, the Russian commissioner, who, as it has
been stated, met the bereaved family, soon after
they started on their return towards their home.
From Colonel W. F. Williams, R. A.
^^Near Mount Ararat, Sept. Sth, 1852.
"My dear Mr. Perkins, — I have written
fully to-day on your affairs, to Mr. Coan of Ga-
war. These few lines are to convey to you the
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 163
sincere expressions of grief and condolence, on
the part of myself and the gentlemen of the com-
mission, on the lamented death of your daugh-
ter, whose very amiable character has been the
theme of our conversation, since we had the
pleasure of visiting at Seir mountain.
" Beyond the expression of our grief, it would
be ill-timed to offer you any others. We feel
sure that your mind, and that of Mrs. Perkins,
are infinitely better stored than ours, with those
reflections — those sure and certain hopes, which
lead to resignation under such a dreadful blow,
inflicted by the unerring wisdom of God. We
therefore abstain from any such intrusion, but
nevertheless, with a fervent hope, that you and
Mrs. Perkins, to whom all join in kindest regards,
will be supported under your sudden and de-
plorable loss.
" Believe me yours always faithfully,
" W. F. Williams."
From R. W. Stevens, Esquire, British consul
at Tabreez, Persia, a long tried and faithful
friend of the mission.
« Tabreez, Sept. 17th, 1852.
" My bear Sir, — It was with deepest and
most heart-felt grief, that we received, a few days
ago, from Colonel Williams, the melancholy in-
IM THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
telligence of the death of our dear friend, Miss
Perkins ; and I hasten to offer you the expression
of our condolence, and to assure you, that we
sincerely sympathize with you and Mrs. Perkins,
on the premature removal, from this world, of a
person so promising, and possessing so many
rare qualities, to make her loss a matter of deep
regret to yourselves, and to all who had the good
fortune to know her.
" May an all-wise providence, in inflicting on
you so severe a blow, spare your remaining son
to you ; and that he may grow up a pride and a
blessing to his parents, is the prayer of,
" My dear Sir, yours very faithfully,
"R. W. Stevens."
From George Alexander Stevens, Esquire, a
brother of the consul.
« Oct. nth, 1852.
" My dear Sir, — "With the deepest regret, we
learn, from Colonel Williams, the severe loss
which it has pleased the Almighty to inflict on
your family ; and I beg to be allowed to offer
my heart-felt condolence, on the sad and mourn-
ful event. It is one of those decrees of provi-
dence, against which we may not murmur, and
under which we must bear up with patience and
fortitude.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 165
" May the Almighty grant,* to our departed
friend, an everlasting abode in his heavenly king-
dom ; and may we all live in hopes of enjoying
such an access to it, as the one who has been so
suddenly summoned away from us.
" Pray offer my condolence to your kind lady,
and believe me, my dear sir,
" Yours, very sincerely,
" Geo. Alex. Stevens."
From C. A. Rassam, Esquire, British consul
at Mosul.
^' Mosul, Dec.AtJi, 1852.
" My dear Sir, — Your kind letter of the 17th
ultimo is before me, and you have my best
thanks for forwarding both the letters and cases
to Mr. Brant of Erzroom, and ere this I hope
they have reached Constantinople, where Colo-
nel Williams is now residing. The potatoes we
also received in safety, nearly threq weeks ago.
" I am truly sorry to hear, that the cholera is
raging so fearfully in Tabreez, but more espe-
cially do we both condole with Mrs. Perkins and
yourself, for the severe loss you have sustained,
in the death of your affectionate daughter. I
* This estimable friend of the missionaries is a member of the
Roman Catholic Church, which will explain the form of his kind
expression of sympathy.
166 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
can well conceive, that the frequent wounds
which you have received are now opened afresh ;
but Christ can pour into those wounds oil and
wine, and be your Comforter. God in his infi-
nite mercy grant, that you may both experience
the consolation of the Holy Spirit, and be able
to say with pious Job, ' The Lord gave, and the
Lord hath taken away ; blessed be the name of
the Lord.'
" I have just heard from Dr. Lobdell, that
your missionary friends in Gawar are in some
difficulties with the authorities. If I can be of
any service to them, I hope they will not fail to
make use of me.
*' Deacon Joseph, my brother, has just returned
from Bagdad, and expects shortly to be married.
He together with my other brothers send you
their kind remembrance. Mrs. Rassam unites
with me in much love to yourself and Mrs. Per-
kins, and your darling little Henry Martyn.
" Believe me, my dear sir, most sincerely
yours,
" C. A. Rassam."
From Rev. Samuel A. Rhea, of Gawar, on his
arrival at Oroomiah, in ill health.
" Oroomiali, Sept 25t7i, 1852.
" My dear Brother and Sister, — I reached
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 167
here yesterday evening ; and did I not feel weary
and feeble, I would gladly ride up and spend an
hour or two with you to-day.
" I would not, my beloved but deeply bereaved
friends, even by allusion, rudely touch those ten-
der chords, which I know still vibrate in the
keenest anguish ; but my attachment to dear de-
parted Judith, the many pleasant hours spent
with her, the no small share she added to ray
happiness in anticipated visits to Seir, and the
sad and deeply grieved spirit with which I now
visit it, give me the liberty to mention her name.
My own feelings will find relief, though I have
no hope that yours will. By this deeply and in-
expressibly distressing event, with all its attend-
ing circumstances, I feel that God has placed
you beyond the reach of our poor sympathies.
Our hearts may bleed with yours, but we cannot
heal the bleeding wounds. We can only sit in
submissive silence, and feel, ' it is the Lord ; '
while we attempt, in our feeble but most heart-
felt petitions, to beg for you the near presence of
our tender, sympathizing Saviour. O I know
you have already felt, and will continue to feel,
under you, the arm of His love, sustaining you
under a weight of sorrow that few are ever called
to bear.
" My heart experienced a sudden transition
from unspeakable grief to an overflowing joy,
168
when I passed from the sad announcement of
her death, to another line, which led me to be-
lieve, that your loved Judith is in heaven, a glo-
rified spirit, resting sweetly on the bosom of her
Saviour. Then I thought, ' Oh death, where is
thy sting! Oh grave, where is thy victory!*
How soon, if faithful, and we too shall be there ;
and His tender hand will wipe all tears from our
eyes !
" I hope to see you soon, and till then, believe
me to be your brother in Christ Jesus,
"S. A. Rhea."
The following note, from Deacon John Hor-
mezd, the Nestorian pastor of Geog Tapa, who
passed several years of his childhood in the fam-
ily of Judith's parents, is inserted as a specimen
of the kind sympathy, cherished and expressed
by multitudes of their Nestorian friends. The
note was written in Syriac, and is a literal trans-
lation, as will naturally be suggested by its style.
" To you, Mr. Perkins, my dear spiritual fa-
ther, who brought me up with much care, in the
hope of rearing in me a choice vine, by which
sprouts and tendrils should be planted in desert
places, that had no precious savor to sweeten
their souls, which were seasoned with the evil
customs and habits of their fathers, grown up,
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 169
like themselves, without the instruction of blessed
pious parents, and without the kind discipline of
a disciple of Christ, our dear Saviour, who, in his
tender love, made a scourge of small cords, with
which he chastised those who were trading in
the house of prayer :
" Be it known to you, that from the time of
Judith's death, of whom I used to think as a
beautiful scion and precious vine, my heart burns
with sympathy for her dear parents — strangers
in a strange land, who have left their dear native
country, to gather the scattered ones of Zion in
the region of Babylon.
" Bat it is delightful to me to think of her —
to call her to remembrance, as a flower of April,
that displays its beauty in its season, and as the
rose of May, that gives forth its sweet odor dur-
ing a pleasant month, and then its end comes,
and it discontinues that sweet odor. Such was
your dear daughter. Truly sweet was her voice,
and pleasant her conversation, and gentle her
life, and accomplished her character. Especially
did I delight much to hear her play on the sera-
phine, which her hands plied as though she were
a master, and had long practised. O how great
was my pleasure, when I used to hear her play-
ing, and listened to her sweet singing !
" I remember her well, when she was a little
170 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
child. She was very quiet, and smiling, and
happy ; not crying, and peevish, and wearisome
to her parents and nurse.
" In the last years of her life, how humble and
how peaceful was her walk ! She always showed
me great kindness, when I met her. Malek Ag-a
beg, and many others, speak of her with much
feeling — especially of her sweet music. We
trust she is in heaven.
" Your sincere friend,
"John."
Good priest Abraham, an early friend and
missionary helper of Judith's parents, evinced
his deep sympathy for them, and his heart-felt
esteem for their loved daughter removed, some
time after her death, by modestly and delicately
intimating his desire, and that of his wife, to call
their infant daughter by the cherished name of
Judith; though that name was before unused
among the Nestorians. They had selected two
names, hitherto unused among their people, from
which to choose, namely, Judith, and Jane, " the
Young Cottager," the latter from the tract bear-
ing that title, not long ago translated into the
modern Syriac. Their choice strongly inclined
to the former, in case the bereaved parents of Ju-
dith should have no objection to it; and all such
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 171
apprehensions were of course soon removed,
when those parents were apprized of their wishes
on the subject.
A son of priest Abraham was with the afflicted
family, on their sorrowful journey. He is a
pious, interesting young man, seventeen years
old, who started to accompany them to Erzroom,
on his way to Malta, to become a member of the
protestant college on that island. He, as well
as the two Nestorian attendants on the road,
was almost overcome by the affecting scenes
which they witnessed ; and so strong and mourn-
ful were the impressions which they made on his
mind, and the minds of his parents, that they
could never again bring their feelings to the trial
of his going so far from home.
But very precious and blessed as well as mel-
ancholy, is the recollection of Judith's death,
throughout the Nestorian community, as is in-
dicated not only by their deep feelings of in-
terest and sympathy expressed, but also by con-
stantly occurring incidents. The children of a
Nestorian Sabbath school, for instance, some
time after that event, having repeated the hymn,
commencing,
" How blest the rigliteoxis, when he dies," etc.,
were asked by their superintendent, whether they
had ever known such a death ; to which many
17S THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
little voices instantlyresponded, " Yes, JudWs.^^
The sweet savor of her precious memory will
long exert a hallowed influence on multitudes of
the Nestorians.
Another class in Persia — the Mohamme-
dans— were not backward in the utterance of
their tender sympathy for the stricken mourners.
From no one did the parents of Judith receive a
more hearty expression of condolence, than that
addressed to them personally, by their long tried
friend, Prince Malek Kasem Meerza, one of the
finest specimens of humanity in Persia, or any
other land, who visited Oroomiah and Mount
Seir, not long after their daughter's death.
" You are fast growing old," said he to Judith's
father, and feelingly added, " Rest assured that
our grief has been inexpressible, since we heard
of your affliction ; but it is God's doing ; His
will must be done." Many others of that class
have shown themselves equally anxious to com-
fort the sorrowing hearts and cheer the desolation
of the bereaved ones. The Mohammedan ac-
quaintances of the mission, the mass of whom
are very friendly to them, must not be judged by
the cruel inhospitality of the rude villagers of
Zorava, to whom the missionaries were strangers.
Happily human sympathy is not confined within
the limits of Christianity, either real or nominal.
" God hath made of one blood all nations of
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 173
men, for to dwell on all the face of the earth ; "
and among the grateful proofs of the truth of
this Scripture declaration, are remaining traces
of a strong and genial common sympathy in
them all, even among the most melancholy and
deplorable ruins of the fall.
CHAPTER XIII.
NOTES OF CONDOLENCE CONTINUED.
(from members of other missions.)
From Rev. J. Peabody, of Erzroom.
^^Erzroom, Sept 20tJi, 1852.
" My dear Brother Perkins, — We are
greatly distressed for you, your dear wife, and
surviving child. I do not know when we have
been so much so. We do feel, that our Heav-
enly Father has laid his hand heavily upon you,
and inflicted such a deep wound in your hearts,
that it cannot soon be healed. We most sin-
cerely sympathize with you, in the heavy stroke
with which He has seen fit to visit you, in the
removal of your dear only daughter, in circum-
stances so peculiarly trying. The Lord bind up
your broken hearts, and heal your most painful
wounds. To Him alone can we commend you,'
and this we try to do, every day. He alone can
sustain and comfort you. This you well know;
but, oh, how difficult to feel right, when over-
THE PERSIAN FLOWER. 175
whelmed with grief. Perhaps, in this very se-
vere and mysterious bereavement, you can see
nothing but clouds and darkness around the di-
vine throne. But though you may walk in dark-
ness now you shall soon see light. Truly, the
features of God's providential dealings with you
now are obscure and intricate ; but what is now
dark, shall soon be illumined ; what is now intri-
cate, shall soon be unravelled. It is true, that
now Providence frowns upon you ; but God,
behind a frowning providence, hides a smiling
face.
" That beloved daughter, we suppose, left her
mountain home in perfect health. She doubt-
less anticipated a pleasant visit at Erzroom.
We were delighted with the thought of a visit
from you, with your family. O that the shafts
of that destroying angel, that is making such
havoc in Persia, might have been warded off
from her ! O that she might have been spared
to you ! We know that she was the light of
your eyes and the joy of your hearts. But of this
we may rest assured, that our Heavenly Father
doeth all things well ; that He does not willingly
afflict the children of men ; and that what we
know not now, in regard to so trying an event,
we shall know hereafter.
" In regard to the death of dear Judith, we
have heard no particulars. Col. Williams wrote
176 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
Mr. Brant where it occurred, and the time her
distressing sickness continued; nothing more.
We feel a deep solicitude in regard to your health,
and that of Mrs. Perkins and Henry. May the
Lord preserve your lives, and the lives of all the
families connected with you.
" The Cranes will remain here, till they receive
word from Oroomiah.
" Please to present my kindest and most sym-
pathizing regards to Mrs. Perkins and Henry.
" I remain with best wishes and prayers, your
affectionate, sympathizing brother,
" J. Peabody."
From Mrs. M. L. Peabody.
^^Erzroom, Sept. 20th, 1852.
"My dear Brother and Sister, — Need I
assure you, that since we heard of your deep
affliction, you have been in our thoughts day and
night ? Our tears have flowed with yours, and
both at the family altar and in our private sup-
plications, it has been our fervent prayer, that the
balm of consolation may be poured into your
wounded hearts. O my dear friends, in this,
your sore trial, how poor would be all our at-
tempts to comfort you! But you know there
is One to whom you can go ; He has wounded
and he can heal.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 177
" As yet we know scarcely any thing of that
mournful event that snatched your darlmg Judith
from your arms. All we have heard, is through
a letter from Col. Williams to Mr. Brant. The
tenderest sympathies of all seem strongly
awakened for you, and to all of us it is a solemn
admonition of Providence. O with how slight a
tenure do we hold our dear children I How frail
are our own lives ! May this event lead us to
think more of eternity and less of time !
" Our friends, Mr. and Mrs. Crane, and little
Sarah Stoddard, are now with us. O how much
pleasure were we promising ourselves in your
society also, for a few weeks ! A sadness is cast
over all our little party.
" Do let me hear from you, my dear Mrs. Per-
kins, when you feel able to write. I am anxious
to hear the particulars of that trying scene — the
last words of your dear Judith. We trust her
sweet spirit is now in heaven. Dear sister and
brother, farewell. May the God of all consola-
tion comfort you.
" Affectionately your sister,
" M. L. Peabody."
The youthful reader may like to be told some-
thing respecting Erzroom, from which the fore-
going letters were written. It is a large Turkish
town, on a very elevated plain in Armenia, sur-
12
178 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
rounded by lofty mountains. It i.s more than
four hundred miles north-west from Oroomiah,
and about two hundred miles due west from
Mount Ararat. It is a very ancient town, near
the head waters of the western branch of the river
Euphrates, and was founded, as tradition says,
by a grandson of Noah. It is the Arz or Arze
of ancient times, and took the affix room, from
its belonging, at one period, to the Greek empire
of Room. It figures largely in Armenian history,
and was for some time the capital of that ancient
kingdom. The American Board of Missions
commenced a station there for the Armenians in
1839. Mr. and Mrs. Peabody are, at the present
time, the only missionaries at that station, where
the good work is in cheering progress.
From Rev. P. O. Powers, of Trebizond.
" Trehlzond, Sept. 2StJi, 1852.
" To Mr. and Mrs. Perkins :
" My dear Brother and Sister, — I scarcely
know whether I should intrude myself upon your
sorrows, or like the friends of Job, sit in silence
at a distance and weep. But I cannot forbear
expressing to you how deeply we have been
afflicted, by the mournful intelligence that you
have been bereaved of a beloved, an only daugh-
ter, and that under very trying circumstances.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 179
We sympathize with you most sincerely, in this
afflictive dispensation of divine Providence, and
the earnest prayer of our heart is, that He who has
wounded may make whole ; that as the sources
of earthly enjoyment dry up, you may have freer
access to the great fountain head of a purer,
richer, sweeter, more abiding and heavenly bliss.
You are not strangers to affliction. Many times
has our mother earth opened to swallow up your
beloved offspring. I trust also that you are not
strangers to the divine consolations of the gospel.
Where shall any and all of us find relief, under the
many and painful trials of this life, but in sweet
submission to the hand that smites us! That
same hand carries a healing virtue along wUh. it.
In vain do we look elsewhere for consolation.
" But you weep. So Jesus wept. He lets
us also weep. It often relieves th-'^ throbbing
heart. But it must be with such a quiet spirit
of resignation as the Saviour ^It. With what
heavenly accents did he pronounce those blessed
words, ' O my father, ..... thy will be done.'
These words he has put^to our mouth. They
become us, as well as the bleeding Saviour.
" I long to hear ^'om your own pen how the
Lord is dealing \vith you, and supporting you
under your sorrows. I long also to know some-
thing of the particulars of dear Judith's death.
Do gratify us, dear brother, so far as your feelings
180 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
may allow you. Mrs. Powers desires to unite
with me in every sentiment of grief and sympa-
thy, and also in prayers to the Father of all our
mercies in your behalf.
" With a kiss from each of us for your sur-
viving Henry Martyn, and a renewed assurance
of love and sympathy and a remembrance at the
throne of grace, I am, dear brother and sister,
" Yours very truly and affectionately,
" P. O. Powers."
Trebizond, the place from which the preceding
letter was written, is on the south-eastern shore
of the Black Sea, about one hundred and fifty
miles, north-west of Erzroom, and six hundred
miles east of Constantinople. It is the Trapezus
of ancient times, in the province of ancient Pon-
tus ; where the Greek general and historian
Xenophon, a^d his illustrious " ten thousand,^^
reached the sea, and were welcomed by their
countrymen, a Gre^k colony, on their renowned
retreat from Babyloi. after the defeat of the
younger Cyrus. The American Board of Mis-
sions commenced a station there for the Arme-
nians, in 1834. Mr. and Mi^. Powers are now
the only missionaries at that station, where they
are graciously prospered in their missionary
work.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 181
From Rev. H. G. O. Dwight, D. D., of Con-
stantinople.
" Constantinople, (Orta Keuy,) Oct. 5th, 1852.
"My dear afflicted Brother and Sister, —
I think it was nearly twelve years ago, that two
little girls sat at our table, who were nearly of
the same age, and both of whom were considered
by their parents, and might have been considered
by others, as uncommonly lovely and interesting.
More than five years since, one of these, little
Mary, was suddenly snatched away from her
parents, and removed to a better world, as we
have ever fondly hoped. The pang of sorrow,
occasioned by this sudden and unexpected sepa-
ration, is, to this day, remembered, and I may
say, freshly felt, whenever the name of that loved
one is mentioned, or her form appears before our
mental vision.
" The other dear one, your own dear Judith,
we have heard within the past week, has been
taken from you, under circumstances of uncom-
mon aggravation. It is one of those cases, in
which, at first sight, it seems as though death,
like a blood-thirsty tyrant, took pleasure not only
in choosing a shining' mark^ but just such circum-
stances as would in the highest degree harrow up
the feelings of surviving friends.
182 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
" The eye of Christian faith, however, sees the
thing far differently. The event itself, with all
the attending circumstances, whatever may be
their nature or aggravation, has happened under
the perfect and entire control, and by the wise
orderings, of our kind Heavenly Father — the
very best friend we have in all the universe. Of
course there is no mistake in the thing ; and no
cruelty and no caprice.
" O how happy must you be now, if you can
say from the bottom of your hearts, ' My Hea-
venly Father, who loves me with an infinite love,
has done all this, and done it with the distinct
end in view of promoting my highest good ! ' A
higher end He has in all His acts, namely, his
own glory ; and it would seem that in each case,
He chooses for us and ours, that kind of death
which will most glorify Him. John, 21 : 19.
Most blessed of all must you be, if you have at-
tained, by God's spirit, to that high elevation of
obedience and submission, which enables you
now to rejoice, even in the manner of your loved
one's death, because by that God was more glori-
fied than he would have been by any other.
" I am well aware, that it is a most difficult
thing to say any thing, in such circumstances,
that really meets the case ; and oftentimes, in
such deep sorrows, every thing that is offered by
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 183
way of consolation, comes so far short of meeting
the spot where most the wound is felt, that it
better never have been saicL In yom* case, how-
ever, I know from my own experience that the
mere expression of that sympathy, which all your
missionary brethren and sisters feel, and deeply
feel, for you, will operate as a soothing balm to
your wounded spirits, however impossible it may
be for them to enter into the depths of your sor-
rows.
" Yes, my dear brother and sister, be assured,
we all feel that your affliction is ours ; and O
how gladly would we do something, if we could,
to lighten the burden of your griefs. We can
only commend you to God, as we have done
again and again, with bursting hearts, and we
pray that God Himself may fill, with his own
glorious presence, that ' aching void ' in your
hearts, which has been caused by the sudden
removal of your beloved daughter.
" What a dark world would this be, without
the gospel of Christ! But O, how happy is our
lot, that we can look forward to a world of per-
fect brightness, where all the severed members of
Christ will be gathered into one, and there will
be no more separations, and no more interruption
to our joys, to all eternity ! May we and all ours
be prepared to live together in that blessed
world I
184 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
"Begging a remembrance in your prayers, I
remain, my dear brother and sister,
" Very sincerely yom's,
" H. G. O. DWIGHT."
From Mrs. M. L. Dwight.
" Constantinople, Oct. 5th, 1852.
" My dear Mrs. Perkins, — We have heard,
through Col. Williams, of the overwhelming
affliction with which you have been visited, and
I cannot refrain from expressing my deep sym-
pathy in your sorrow. I do not expect to be able
to comfort you, but I may tell you that I weep
with you, and I know from experience, that this
is soothing to the breaking heart. My heart is
drawn out to all bereaved mothers, since I have
tasted the same bitter cup, and I must sympa-
thize with them. But the circumstances of your
bereavement were so trying, that they must have
given double poignancy to your grief, and I
should expect to hear that you were overwhelmed
by the terrible blow, did I not know that the
blessed Saviour is always present with His fol-
lowers, and that His grace is sufficient for all
circumstances. To His loving kindness we con-
tinually commend you, and your dear husband ;
and I trust that you are able, even now, to sing
of mercy. O this sympathizing, tender Saviour I
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 185
How could we go through the deep waters with-
out Him ? I can only hope and pray, that He
will manifest the fulness of His love to you, and
then you will rejoice, even in this bitter sorrow.
" You have before experienced repeated be-
reavements ; but I think our love for our children
grows with their growth ; if it is so with you,
you will feel that your former afflictions were
light, when compared to this. But God has re-
vealed himself as the God of all consolation ;
and there is no sorrow so great, that He cannot
comfort. O may he comfort you !
" I have a vivid remembrance of your dear de-
parted daughter, as she was at the time you
were here ; and though, of course, time had
made a great change in her, I still think of her
as one with whom I was acquainted. She was
so near the age of our loved departed one, that
she is in a measure associated with her in my
memory.
" We all long to know more than we yet know,
of the circumstances of your dear child's depart-
ure ; we long to know more of her ; and we long
to know how you are supported, in this sore
trial.
" Please present my kind regards to Mr. Per-
kins, and assure him of my deep sympathy.
" Believe me to be, most truly, your friend and
sister,
"M. L. DWIGHT."
186 THE PERSIAN flower; or
Judith was seven years old, when she heard of
the death of little Mary Dwight, who is referred
to in the foregoing letters. She retained a vivid
remembrance of her acquaintance with that
lovely little missionary playmate, for a few days,
though she had not seen her since they were less
than three years old. The tidings of Mary's
death deeply affected her. At the time, she fer-
vently prayed that the bereaved parents might
be comforted ; and the departed one's name was
often afterward mentioned by her, with tender
and aiTectionate solemnity. How blessed the
greeting of their happy, glorified spirits, in
heaven !
From Rev. William G. Schauffler.
''BeheJc, Constantinople, Nov. 3d, 1852.
"Rev. J. Perkins, D.D.:
" Dear Brother, — We have heard of your
affliction with deep sympathy. We remembered
the child you had to give up, and endeavored to
realize how every year of growth and develop-
ment must have added to the value of her soci-
ety, and endeared her to you both, as she was
more and more becoming a companion to you,
in your family, comforts and trials, and in your
labors. But we are aware, that only actual ex-
perience, the real surrender of a child of that age,
JUDITH a. PERKINS. 187
can make us feel all the bitterness of such a cup ;
embittered still more, by the suddenness of the
event, and the desolation, as to efficient means,
advice, and assistance, in her treatment and com-
fort for her last hours.
" And has this stroke come from our blessed
Jesus ? Has he had the decision and disposal of
that case, and has he chosen, that it be just so ?
Certainly. And now, is this event a proof of His
unkindness, or unmindfalness of the weal or wo
of His children ? Or, is His undoubted kindness
a proof, that this was the very best that even He
could have done, both for the parents and the
child ? Certainly, the latter ; whatever we may
think, or however our feelings may rise, or break
down, or melt, in view of such an event.
" But you will see her again ; and I trust
there, where parting scenes and farewell tears
are unknown. Thus did Lowth write upon the
gravestone of his beloved eldest daughter, Mftria,
" At veniet felicius aevum, quum iterum tecum,
sim modo dignus. ero," * etc. ; and it will not be
long either. Our days have wings, and these
wings grow longer and mightier every day; and
soon they will bear us over into the world of
spirits, a time without time. Then earthly trou-
* " But a happier age will come, when with you again, if only
I am worthy, I shall be," etc.
188 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
bles will appear a short dream, and our pangs in
separating, a short, but very valuable prepara-
tion, for a happy and eternal reunion with all
the friends of our blessed Saviour ; and there, I
trust, all our children will be present; the chil-
dren of a covenant of peace, which will stand,
though mountains should be removed, and hills
be carried into the midst of the sea.
" We shall be glad to hear, that dear Mrs. Per-
kins has been sustained and comforted. A mo-
ther's heart is the tenderest spot of humanity.
But the consolations of the gospel, applied by
the spirit of grace, are sufficient even for that
sorest spot of our nature.
" May the Lord be with you, with the richest,
sweetest comforts within the stores of his love.
And may your spiritual children be born as the
dew of the morning for multitude, while your
dear departed child is awaiting you in glory,
where you shall come, bringing in your sheaves
with you.
" Yours most truly,
"W. G. SCHAUFFLER."
From Rev. Cyrus Hamlin.
''BeheJc, Oct. 2Sd, 1852.
"My DEAR Brother and Sister, — The in-
telligence of your affliction filled our hearts with
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 189
amazement and grief. It seemed like something
which could not be true, the circumstances so
heart-rending, the bereavement so sudden — so
unlooked for, cutting down a cherished lovely
daughter, in the fresh bloom of her years. All
hearts have been drawn toward you, with a com-
mon sympathy. All have felt like weeping with
those that weep, and at the same time, have felt
how vain is human sympathy.
" Anguish of spirit will long attend the recol-
lection of those few hours of suffering. Still, we
must stop and remember, that our Heavenly
Father did it. It formed a part of his perfectly
wise, glorious, merciful, and holy plan of govern-
ing this world, and bringing his people home to
glory. It was determined by infinite wisdom, in
all its circumstances, in every thing that was ac-
cessory and preparatory to it.
" I trust you can also feel that that short,
rough journey of a few hours ended in eternal
rest. If so, this is enough. Any thing that ends
in heaven, we will not repine. The flesh shrinks
back, and we beseech our Father to let this cup
pass from us ; but He says, ' no ; take it from
my hand and drink it.' My sweet, precious little
Mary gave me such a lesson, in her last sickness,
as will always remain in my heart, through the
changes of this dying world. I offered her a
nauseous medicine ; and having first tasted it
190 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
myself, I said, ' Now I shall have to give this by
force, every time it is administered.' She re-
jected it with pain and disgust, as I anticipated.
I looked sternly at her, and said firmly, ' My
little daughter must take it.'' She gave me a
look of momentary surprise, and then swallowed
it down, and never afterward, (although she had
to take it frequently for four days,) did she once
refuse. It almost broke my heart. She was
surrounded, two or three weeks, by prayer, and
tenderness, and medical skill, day and night;
and yet, she had as many hours of dreadful suf-
fering', probably, as Judith did. Oh! there 'is a
heaven for those we love. This thought was
my stay, when giving up the sweet child. I
doubt not it was yours. Is it not sufficient to
make us silent, submissive, joyful, and happy,
under the chastisements of our Heavenly Fa-
ther !
" Henrietta has always remembered Judith
with peculiar interest, and has felt her death
deeply. I trust she also is a child of God, and
if she should be taken from me, I should sorrow
not as those without hope. She is the image of
her sainted mother, has the same refinement and
bashfalness of character. My four daughters are
cherished treasures, but they are very insecure.
" Death has been very busy, of late, in the
missionary ranks ; Miss Whittlesey, Mrs. Mor-
JUDITH G. PERKIXS. 191
gan, Mr. Sutphen, Mary, Judith, — all within a
short time have been taken from us. Our work
is drawing toward its close, and how should we
be straightened, until it is finished !
" Give much love to Mr. and Mrs, Stoddard,
and to all your circle. Be assured, dear brother
and sister, you are constantly remembered in our
prayers, and have our deepest sympathies. The
Lord strengthen you to glorify Him in this be-
reavement.
" Your affectionate brother,
"C. Hamlin."
Not a few of the readers of this memoir will
doubtless recognize, in the " sainted mother," re-
ferred to in the preceding letter, the female mis-
sionary, who died so peacefully and triumph-
antly, in her solitary situation, surrounded only
by her stricken husband and five little daughters,
(we mean, of earthly friends^ for Jesus and the
angels were there,) on the island of Rhodes, in
November, 1851. They will also have in mind
the baptism of the " little Mary," whose death is
mentioned in this letter, in circumstances most
tender and affecting, just before that mother's
departure. " Henrietta," the eldest of the " four
daughters," still remaining, was just about Ju-
dith's age, and was one of her loved playmates,
during her short visit at Constantinople, on her
192 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
return from America to Persia, whom she ever
afterward remembered, with affectionate interest.
Frorti Rev. N. Benjamin.
" Constantinople, Nov. 23d, 1852.
«Rev. J. Perkins, D.D.:
" My dear Brother, — No ordinary circum-
stances would have prevented my writing you,
some weeks since, to assure you of our tenderest
sympathy for yourself and dear Mrs. Perkins, in
your late heavy trial. We received the first
painful intelligence, when we were in the midst
of our laborious preparations for removal to this
city. After our arrival here, on the 22d ult.,
(not the most favorable season,) I was of course
unceasingly occupied in searching for a house,
and then in moving into it, when found. Mean-
time, I have been obliged to keep the printers
supplied with copy, and look after the proofs,
uninterruptedly.
" This delay in writing you, as I have had it
in my heart to do, has permitted me first to see
your account of the painful circumstances, in
which you were called to part with the darling
of your hearts, and of the blessed consolations
with which the gracious Lord has supported you.
It was indeed a heart-rending tale, and it broke
up the fountain of our tears ; but when I came
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 193
to the close, every other feeling gave place to the
feeling of thankfulness, for so sure a hope, that
your beloved daughter has become a partaker of
a blessed immortality. Yes, truly, our every
affliction here is ' light,' when compared with her
'weight of glory,' which is already exceeding^
and will be eternal. ' Thanks be unto God, for
his unspeakable gift.'
" My dear brother, is it not a privilege to have
children in heaven ? I trust I have one there.
He died an infant, but he is wiser than all phi-
losophers and holier than all prophets and apos-
tles ever were, in this world. May it be our
happiness to join these dear ones, in the Lord^s
good time. Let us use all diligence first to fin-
ish our work.
" I feel nearer to you here than I did at Smyr-
na, and shall enjoy hearing from your mission
more frequently and more particularly, than we
have heretofore heard.
" The Lord has favored us much in our mov-
ing, the weather having been unusually fine, so
that we still dispense with fires. I still carry on
some printing at Smyrna, and hope soon to be-
gin here.
" Mrs. B. desires with me much love to Mrs.
Perkins, and to your little boy, as well as to
yourself, and in the assurance of her tenderest
13
194 THE PERSIAN FLOWER I OR
sympathy. Please remember us kindly to all
the friends at your station.
" Most truly yours,
"N. Benjamin."
Constantinople and its vicinity, from which
several of the preceding notes were written, are
doubtless well known, even to the youthful read-
er, especially to those familiar with the history of
the glorious reformation in progress among the
Armenians of Turkey. It was at the capital, that
that reformation commenced, about twenty years
ago, under the divine blessing on the labors of
Messrs. Goodell, Dwight, and Schauffler, and it
has rapidly radiated thence, in every direction,
till its light has reached and blessed here and
"there a spot, not few, nor far between, to the
remotest bounds of that great empire.
From Rev. S. H. Calhoun, of the Syrian mis-
sion, who was at Smyrna when he wrote.
'^ Smyrna, Oct. 16th, 1852.
"My dear Brother, — I have heard of your
affliction, and cannot refrain from sending you
and sister P. a word of sympathy. The event
has saddened every heart among us. The cir-
cumstances of the death of your dear child were
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 195
in the last degree distressing, so far away from
home, and medical skill, and the presence of
kindred spirits. But One was near, whose heart
is love, and whose arm is power. In that soli-
tary place. He was bending over you, and deal-
ing with you, not as aliens, but as children ; chas-
tening, yet as a parent chasteneth his own son
in whom he delighteth ; wounding, yet only to
bind up with his own band of tenderness.
" May you, my dear brother and sister, be sup-
ported in this hour of grief. May you find the
promises sweet, and be enabled to repose on
them. May you have such manifestations of
our gracious Lord, that your hearts shall rejoice.
I know that human words, at such times, are
powerless ; and yet I thought it might comfort
you to know, that your brethren in the flesh are
not unmindful of your sorrows, and bear you on
their hearts to the throne of grace.
" I am here on my way to Syria, from Con-
stantinople, where I have been spending a few
weeks, in hope of recruiting my health, which
has been considerably impaired daring the past
summer. Mrs. Calhoun would unite with me,
(were she here,) in affectionate regards to Mrs.
P. and yourself.
" Will you remember me fraternally to all
your associates.
•" Your ever affectionate brother in the Lord,
"S. H. CllLHOUN."
196 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
The writer of the foregoing note, as is proba-
bly known to the reader, is stationed at Abieh,
on Mount Lebanon — that " goodly mountain"
of cedars, so often mentioned in the Psalms and
other parts of the Bible. There he has a semi-
nary, to train up Syrian youth, to become
preachers of salvation, in the land where the Sa-
viour labored, suflfered, and died.
From Rev. Benjamin Schneider, of Aintab.
" Aintah, Oct. 26tJi, 1852.
" My dear Brother and Sister Perkins, — I
snatch a few moments to send you a few expres-
sions of condolence, in your recent sore bereave-
ment. I have not seen Mr. Perkins's letter, or
circular, containing the particulars ; yet the bare
fact of the sudden stroke, while travelling in these
rude lands, far from the comforts and conveni-
ences of home, must indeed be a trial. I sym-
pathize with you, dear brother and sister.
Though never called to drink so bitter a cup, I
am a parent, and know well how keenly you
must feel the stroke. But He who has wounded
can also heal. As you are not mourners without
hope, there is certainly great solace in the afflic-
tion. When I hear of the death of a child, my
first query is, ' Was it probably a moral agent ? '
or, ' Did it give evidence of piety ? ' If these in-
JUDITH G. PERKINS. IW
quiries can be answered favorably, then I always
feel like speaking words of consolation to the
weeping mourners. And as you have such a
hope, I understand, respecting your dear departed
one, I w^ould remind you of the gain she has
found, in your loss. She is but gone before you,
and you may expect soon to rejoin her. O if
our children are but safe, through grace, safe
while living, and saved when dying, I feel that it
is comparatively of little moment, whether they
are with us a longer or shorter time. If they and
we are but gathered at last, into the great family
above, what matters it which go first ? How
soon we shall all follow those who have preceded
us ! They are going one after another, and
some of those we love must go before us.
" I know your hearts will bleed ; for it is not
the first bereavement. But, dear brother and
sister, remember that it is the hand of love that
has smitten ; and you will one day see, how an
event, so trying in its nature, could have been all
in mercy. The Lord be your consolation and
comfort.
" You have doubtless heard, that Mrs. Schnei-
der, and our two daughters, and two of our sons,
have gone to America, the youngest remaining
with me. They have arrived safely, and had a
blessing on the voyage. Mrs. S. found her aged
198 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
parents still living, and overjoyed to see her and
her children.
" Much love to all your missionary circle.
" Yours most truly,
"B. Schneider."
Aintab, the Turkish town from which this note
was written, is in the south-eastern part of Asia
Minor, some forty or fifty miles north of Aleppo,
in Syria. Its name, in Arabic, signifies " good
spring," and is applied to the place, on account
of the many fine springs of water in the vicinity
of the town. It is at present the scene of a re-
formation, among the Armenian inhabitants,
more rapid in its progress and interesting in its
character, than in any other part of the Armenian
field.
From Rev. W. F. Williams, of Mosul.
"Mosul, Oct. 2d, 1852.
"My dear afflicted Brother, — How sad
a budget came to our hands, by the messenger
this time ! How deeply I sympathize with you,
in this your desolating bereavement, you your-
self already know ; for you too acknowledge the
same injunction, to 'weep with those that weep,
and rejoice with those who rejoice.^
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 199
" Of the loved one departed, I know only the
name and the narrative of your ' memorandum; '
but it does not need a personal acquaintance in
order to stir up the deep fountains of sympathy.
Though in the flesh a stranger to you all, with
no idea of form or feature, figure or face, yet to
the mind's eye, you each and all are individuali-
ties, personalities, not simply fragments of aggre-
gate humanity ; and in my heart's warmth, you
each have a place. And though the shape of
room, the contour of externalities, lie indistinct
and undefined, there yet is before me a vivid pic-
ture of a family desolate, (oh what meaning that
one word carries, desolate^) a place vacant ; hearts
yearning after that they no more reach ; anguish
welling up and overflowing at sight of some re-
membrance— some object, so linked with the
absent one as to be forever and indelibly asso-
ciated.
" I see a landscape lying just before you in the
future, all sunshine and joy ; hill and dell, with
flowing glen, around which cluster all pleasant
hopes and fond anticipations ; amid which shall
gently pass life's closing labors and ending
scenes ; and lo I at its very entrance, it is over-
cast with portentous clouds, and in an instant,
there remains only desolation. That pleasant
prospect, opening into the future, is annihilated.
And yet I hear from the lowest depths of your
200 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
stricken soul, ' It is well ; ' for He hath done it
who ' doeth all things well.' This is the Chris-
tian's confidence in his God, his Father ; ' Though
He slay me, yet will I trust in Him.' The earthly
paradise is exchanged for a heavenly. That
which was so sweet to hope in the future — the
decline of life — is cheerfully resigned, the soul
borne up, sustained, nay more, is triumphant, in
the certain assurance, that it is but for a time the
vision fades, that it may reappear, purer, brighter,
eternal.
" We know in whom we have believed ; and
that He is able to keep that which we have com-
mitted unto Him, against 'the judgment of the
great day ; ' and so your loss becomes not only
her^ but your gain, because 'it worketh for you
the peaceable fruits of righteousness ; ' since ' all
things work together for good to them who love
God;' and most of all, 'these light afflictions
which endure but for a moment,' in comparison
with ' the far more exceeding and eternal weight
of glory,' to which they point our eyes.
" Thus are all things true blessings to the
Christian ; and here only is the value of human
sympathy in bereavement, in that with us it lifts
the tearful eye to the cross of Christ ; and doing
this, how precious is its kindness, how tender and
soothing its power! May He, who has given
you this effective proof of sonship, in that He
JUDITH G. PERKIXS. 201
has taken from yoa your idol, your beloved, in
that He has counted you worthy of chastisement,
in the same love spare to you your remaining
child, and gladden your hearts by permitting you
to see him eminently useful in the Master's vine-
yard, and at length gather you all — 'a whole
family in heaven.'
" With hearty sympathy and good wishes I
must close.
" Yours,
" W. F. Williams."
Mosul, from which the preceding letter was
written, is situated on the western bank of the
river Tigris, just opposite the ruins of ancient
Nineveh, whose marble palaces are now in pro-
cess of excavation under the direction of Col.
Rawlinson, and whose records, inscribed on the
vast marble tablets that line the halls of those
palaces, afford astonishly interesting confirmation
of the Holy Scriptures ; for instance, records of
the impious Sennacherib's attempted invasion of
Jerusalem, in the days of king Hezekiah. This
ancient capital of the " Assyrian empire," is now
the seat of " the Assyrian mission " of the Amer-
ican Board, to the Jacobites, and the " Chal-
deans," i. e. the Papal Nestorians.
In this chapter, we have thus accidentally per-
formed a hasty circuit, starting from Oroomiah
202
and proceeding north-west to the Black Sea,
westward to Constantinople, thence southward
to Syria, and thence back eastward to the Tigris,
to the station nearest to the Nestorian mission,
about three hundred miles distant from Judith's
home. We have introduced the notes of condo-
lence, from deeply sympathizing missionary fel-
low-laborers, on this long circuit of thousands of
miles, that were written within a few weeks, and
happened to reach her stricken parents within
three months after her death, in a country where
there is neither electro-magnetic telegraph, nor
steam, and only a monthly English mail, carried
by a horseman, to enable them to communicate
with those distant stations and with the civilized
world. Another three months would doubtless
add many to the list of these affectingly inter-
esting epistles, from brethren and sisters at the
same or still other stations. Enough, however,
have been introduced, to impress the reader with
the truth, that there is a blessed reality in "the
communion of saints," far enough from the pale
of Roman Catholic exclusion, or Puseyite as-
sumption,— that there is a cord of sympathy
and love, that binds together the hearts of be-
lievers, and especially of missionaries, whether
known or unknown personally to each other, as
sensitive as the electric wire, and infinitely more
stable, enduring, and sure ; and a cord, so far from
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 203
being limited to any single circuit like the one
here embraced, which extends to earth's extremest
bounds, wherever a child of God is found, and
upward to the heart of Christ, its centre and its
source.
Such was the cord of sympathy and interest,
by which Judith was encircled while she lived,
and such is the cord which so tenderly vibrates
for the bleeding hearts of her parents, when
touched by the tidings of her death. How
strikingly and how beautifully is the apostolic
declaration here illustrated, that if " one mem-
ber " of the Saviour's body " suffer, all the mem-
bers suffer with it."
CHAPTER XIV.
CONCLUSION.
We have mentioned the estimation in which
Judith was held by the Nestorians, and have al-
luded particularly to her interest in the Female
Seminary, and the place she occupied in the
hearts of its pupils. And it is perhaps appro-
priate, that one at least of the females of the peo-
ple among whom she was born and dwelt, for
whose salvation she longed and prayed, and, so
far as a child could do it, labored, and by whom
she was so tenderly beloved, should be allowed,
in her own way, to testify her regard for Judith,
in this memoir. The following is a letter of con-
dolence from one of the pupils of the Nestorian
Female Seminary, to the bereaved parents. The
writer is Nargis^ whose name, in the languages
of Persia, is the name of a favorite garden flow-
er, and in this instance, very aptly characterizes
the lovely, refined young lady who bears it.
Having heard of Henry's using the expression in
regard to his departed sister, ^'■she will rise againj''
Nargis worked that expression neatly on a book-
THE PERSIAN FLOWER. 205
mark for his Bible, and sent it to him with her
letter to his parents. The letter, though long, is
of too touching interest to weary the reader. It
was written in Syriac, and is translated as lite-
rally as a readable translation would bear. The
writer is a member of the senior class in the
seminary, who spent the last summer of Judith's
life in Gavalan, and was there, when her lifeless
remains passed that village on the way to their
last resting-place.
From Nargis.
" Dear Mr. and Mrs. Perkins, — For a long
time I have had it in my heart, with melancholy
thoughts and mournful pen, and paper laden
with sadness, to make known to you, how much
I have shared with you in your bitter grief and
painful sorrows ; for whom? oh, how can I men-
tion her name ! for your daughter, snatched so
suddenly from your midst ! But I have not ven-
tured to do it, and thus it has remained until
Miss Fisk encouraged me to write you.
" Although it is very painful to call to remem-
brance the lamented death of that dear friend,
who has gone to return not again, — who has
been taken from the midst of us and will appear
here no more, I still desire to write you respect-
ing her, especially, when I remember how she
206 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
used to speak of her love for her parents, and
know, that if it be that she is looking down from
heaven, she would greatly rejoice, should I write
something that would contribute, even a little, to
comfort the broken hearts of her parents w^hom
she so much loved.
" My beloved friends, Mr. and Mrs. Perkins,
perhaps you are not aware, that for the last four
years, and more, I have cherished a peculiar love
and friendship for Judith, and she for me ; and
though several months have passed since she
died, it still seems to me as though it were this
very minute. O that you knew how deep is my
grief for her, my sorrow and my sadness ! When
I look on her notes which are with me, I cannot
restrain my tears ; and when I call her to re-
membrance, I cannot keep my mind from think-
ing of her. Very often, she is, as it were, before
my eyes, entering the girls' seminary, with the
deportment of a grown up lady. I remember
with what light footsteps she would go to her
place ; and I call to mind how, on the wings of
application, she would go forward with her les-
sons ; and I forget not her reading in the first
class — how we were astonished at her learning
the Syriac language.
" Truly hard and bitter is it for me, to call to
remembrance the removal of a friend so beloved.
Yes, and it wounds my heart when I look upon
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 207
you, her parents, when you come to the city, but
Judith not with you; and when I behold her
brother, and no sister with him ; and when I see
the children of the missionaries going to school,
but Judith cometh not ; for she has finished her
studies forever. The Lord comfort your hearts,
ye afflicted parents.
"Dear missionaries from America, I have
thought, that perhaps you would like to have me
tell you some things which I have observed in
Judith. During the last year, I have not seen
her much, except occasionally ; but one thing
which I have seen in her is this ; in other years,
although Judith was very exemplary, and had
learned good habits, yet she seemed to have only
the form of Christianity ; but the past year, she
has appeared as though pictured before the eyes
of all the girls of the seminary, and a perfect
model of a Christian has been seen in her. This
was evident to us from her walk and conversa-
tion, and from her love to others, and her consis-
tent character. Blessed are the parents who
have such a daughter as she, prepared to dwell
in heaven, with the Father and the Son I
" O ye stricken parents, your sweet daughter
is before my eyes, when she came to Gavalan to
meet Miss Harris. Alas, she knew not how soon
she would sadden her ! And before my vision is
that delicate form, when she went out to walk
208 THE PERSIAN FLOWER*, OR
with the girls on the hills of Gavalan. And
when we tried to see who would first reach the
tops of those hills, that little girl, in her nimble
activity, was up as soon as the Nestorian girls.
Oh, I remember the time, when she came to go
on that journey which was so deeply to distress
her parents. I remember how rejoiced I was,
when I heard that Judith had come. After a lit-
tle time, I entered the room and saw Judith there,
and we kissed each other. We thought not that
it was our last kiss.
" The last morning, when you were to depart,
Judith rose earlier than the Nestorian girls, and
came upon the terrace just as I was getting up.
She waked the girls, saying that Miss Fisk de-
sired them to rise. I said, ' Judith, why have you
risen so early ? ' She joyously answered, ' that I
may be ready to go.' I remember, when I said
to her, ' Will you call and see us again ? ' so
wakeful was her conscience, that she recollected
her father's word and said, ' No, my papa gave
me permission to go now wherever I wish ; so I
have come to see you now.' We conversed a
little while about her going to America after
some years, and she said, '• If it may be that I
come here again, I will labor for the Nestorians,
where there are no laborers.^^ Oh, that was our
last conversation until death !
"Dear friends, that Sabbath day, when the
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 209
letter was brought to Mr. Stocking, conveying
the intelligence of her death, I little thought that
she whom I so much loved would be separated
from me all the days of my life. Oh, what an-
guish I felt on that day I With longing, I said
to myself, ' would that I were even now with Ju-
dith!' The following night seemed very long
to me ; and when I rose on the morning of Mon-
day, and it was said, ' they are coming,' in deep
distress I stood, to see if indeed Judith had died
that strange death. Suddenly, her parents en-
tered, without their daughter I How bitter was
that sight ! And now came that delicate dam-
sel, borne as the dead are borne, in company
with the attendants. O beloved parents of Ju-
dith, if my failing pen should make the attempt,
it could not express my anguish at that time !
It was so hard for me to believe that she was
really dead, that I requested Miss Fisk, that if it
were possible, we might be permitted to see her.
So we went to the tent of the dear dead one,
which was pitched without, away from the
friends, and I stood at her head and wept. It
still seemed to me that that same rosy counte-
nance was speaking to me ; and with a heavy
heart, I asked Miss Fisk, if we could not see her
face. Gently replying, she said, ' That rosy face
which you have seen, remains no longer.' Deep
anguish seized me, and I went straight away,
14
^10 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
remembering the steps over which Judith had
walked, and with difficulty could I again look in
the direction where that tent was pitched.
" Beloved friends, hearing about the village
near which you encamped, almost made me say,
let the name of the place be blotted out, which
had not in it one inerciful man^ in the time of a
stranger's death.
" But how delightful is now the remembrance
of the mountains of Ararat, when I recollect that
Judith rejoiced over them. I implore the winds
of the mountains of Ararat, to blow gently on
the last foot-tracks of beloved Judith! And I
entreat that morning star, on which Judith looked
with such delight, that its sparkling rays may
fall tenderly on her peaceful grave.
" Gone is the loved girl ! Her life is now
woven into the warp of eternity ! Her face we
shall see no more on earth !
*' True it is, that deep is your grief. Your
sorrow is like the sorrow of Jeremiah, and your
endurance like the patience of Job. May Jeho-
vah, who healed the sorrows of David, heal your
sore wounds !
" Stricken parents, bereft of your daughter,
submissive under the hand of Him for whose
sake you have come from one end of the world
to the other, I hope you will accept this hook-
mark^ for your dear only son Henry, to place in
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 211
his Bible. Please let him put it in the place
where you read together, when you assemble
around the family altar ; when you are all seated,
each in his chair, but one seat is empty ; when
you read, but her siueet voice is not heard. When
you thus kneel down, and she is not with you^ let
this book-mark remind her little brother, that
SHE WILL RISE AGAIN. Ycs, that day for which
he longed, he will behold, when the Saviour of
the lost shall raise up again his sister, with eter-
nal joy.
" Dear Mr. and Mrs. Perkins, sojourners in a
stranger land, our hearts will still go out with
yours, and our sorrow with your sorrow. Truly,
dear friends, it causes our hearts to melt, when we
think how great a distance, how many miles and
leagues, intervene between you and your loved
native country. We know that it would have
been pleasant for you to have remained there,
surrounded by loving friends. But ' I am ' will
not forget your self-denials, and your love for the
lost ; and though your children, like faded flow-
ers, lie scattered around you, the Lord Almighty
will certainly gather them from every place where
they are buried ; and He will multiply to you
children from among the Nestorians, and make
them a company of the redeemed, prepared to
dwell in heaven forever. And then you, with
your assembled family, will commence singing
212 THE PERSIAN FLOWER ; OR
the song of Moses, and the Lamb that was slain ;
and that day is near at hand.
" From your sorrowing friend,
" Nargis."
In a note from Miss Fisk to Judith's father,
which accompanied the foregoing letter, she
says, " It has been a very great gratification to
Nargis to be allowed to write you. Her love
for our dear Judith was very strong, and she
never speaks of her without tears. Her idea of
Judith's Christian character is her own, and not
in any way derived from us. Other girls feel
just as she does, and it is pleasant to see them
feel so. They do not make hers a death-bed re-
pentance ; and I feel that their testimony to her
love of Christian conversation, is very delightful
evidence that she carried a Saviour ever with her."
A few days after the return of the bereaved
family, from the fatal journey, to their desolate
home, Mr. Stoddard started for Erzroom, to meet
Mr. and Mrs. Crane, and his little daughter.
Near the place of Judith's death, he wrote the
following note to her parents.
''Near Zorava, Sept. 17 tJi, 1852.
"My afflicted Brother and Sister, — You
have scarcely been out of my mind, all day long.
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 21S
On leaving the caravanserai, this morning, to
pursue my journey, my eyes immediately fell on
the spring, where you, with Judith and Henry,
sat down to eat your breakfast, just two weeks
ago. As I wound my way up the mountain, I
thought of Judith's impatience, as she went over
the same road, to see the ' father of mountains.'
And when I reached the top, and the fatal road
lay mapped out at my feet, my heart was full,
and I could only say over and over again, ' God
comfort my dear brother and sister.'
" We descended the mountain, remembering
with what elastic step Judith descended the same
declivity. Both Hormezd and the muleteer
pointed out the rock, near which you stopped,
the last time, and took some refreshment. Af-
terwards, Hormezd spoke out suddenly, as I was
riding in advance, and said, ' Here Judith first
knew that she had the cholera.' From that place
to Zorava, is a long and weary way, and I could
imagine how anxiously your eyes traced out one
turn after another, in hope that you would soon
reach the village. I saw, as I passed, almost
with shuddering, the fatal spot where you hung
over the dying bed of Judith, and resigned her to
Him who called her from your arms. I would
have stopped at Zorava for the night, and medi-
tated and prayed on that melancholy yet now
hallowed spot ; but I remembered the cruelty of
214 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
the villagers to you, in your time of distress, and
turned hastily away.
" Be assured, dear brother and sister, you have
my constant sympathy and my earnest prayers.
I cannot comfort you myself, but I can refer you
to the true source of consolation. Go to the
Saviour, and He will wipe away your tears, and
fill you with sweet peace.
'• Yours affectionately,
"D. T. Stoddard."
At Erzroom, Mr. Stoddard, in writing to Dr.
Anderson, Secretary of the American Board of
Commissioners for Foreign Missions, alludes
thus to Judith's death. " The very affecting nar-
rative which accompanies this, will inform you,
far better than I can do, of the severe affliction
of our dear brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Per-
kins. It can hardly be read without deep emo-
tion.
" The loss of a child is always a heavy stroke ;
and no one can feel it more keenly than the mis-
sionary. Removed from father and mother, and
the pleasant associations of home and country,
he cherishes a very peculiar affection for his wife
and children, which few in other circumstances
can fully understand. Our brother and sister
have five times before consigned children to the
tomb. Their present affliction, how^ever, comes
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 215
in a new and very aggravated form. Their other
children died in infancy ; Judith, just as she was
unfolding in beauty and maturity. The others
died at their own home, where all was done for
them which the physician's skill and parental
love could suggest. The removal of Judith
from them was very different. She was far from
home, surrounded by unfeeling Mohammedans,
attacked, and in a few hours borne down, by a
fearful disease, with no physician to attend her,
and only the shelter of a damp, cold tent, to
shield her in her dying moments.
" Every thing in the external circumstances
seemed to add intensity to the cup of affliction,
to press these bereaved parents to the dust.
And yet grace — that wonderful grace which
God gives his children in time of need — has
carried them with patience and resignation
through this trial ; and so far from murmuring,
they bless God for his love to them, and to their
beloved Judith, when the waves of sorrow were
sweeping over them. Still, they cannot but feel
deeply their loss. The light of their dwelling has
been taken away ; and in the twentieth year of
their missionary life, they are left with only one
survivor from their seven children. I need not
say, that in these circumstances, they have our
tenderest sympathy and most earnest prayers."
216 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
The following note was addressed to Judith's
father, by Mr. Stevens, British consul at Ta-
breez, after reading a brief sketch giving account
of her sickness and death.
" OroomiaJi, Oct. 2dth, 1852.
" Rev. Dr. Perkins :
" My dear Sir, — I return to you the memo-
randum you were so kind as to send me, which
reached me after my arrival in Oroomiah. I
have perused it with a mixture of regret and ad-
miration — with regret for the sad loss — the ir-
reparable loss — you have experienced ; and with
admiration of the truly Christian resignation,
with which my dear departed friend submitted
to the will of the Almighty.
"I fervently pray, that when it may please
Him to call me away from this world, I may be
prepared to obey the summons, with one tenth
part of that quiet and religious submission, dis-
played by poor Judith, and w^hich it was natural
to expect, both from her own good qualities, and
from the exemplary manner in which she had
been reared by her now bereaved parents.
" I beg you will offer my respectful compli-
ments to Mrs. Perkins, and that you will believe
me, with my best wishes for you both,
"^ " Yours very sincerely,
"R. W. Stevens."
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 217
From Mrs. A. E. Crane, written the day after
her arrival at Oroomiah.
" Oroomiah, Thursday morning, Oct. 21s/, 1852.
" My dear Mrs. Perkins, — After the first
emotions of joy, on reaching our long' anticipated
field and home, our thoughts and sympathies turn
to that dear brother and sister, who had so kindly
purposed to come and accompany us hither from
Erzroom. Instead of all the happiness we might
have enjoyed, a bereavement so afflictive has
fallen not only on you, but on tis all, that we
may well mourn together the loss of your be-
loved Judith. I would endeavor, my dear sister,
to speak words of comfort and consolation, but
cannot express my feelings ; words are too cold.
Only our Saviour, who wept with those that
weep, can bind up your breaking hearts.
" We have had our feelings very tenderly
called out, within the last few days, in passing
places associated with the last hours of your
sainted daughter. O that the same grace, that
brightened and sustained her last hours, may
illumine those benighted villages ! If her death
may be the means of quickening those of us who
remain, in efforts for the good of souls, will it not
be sanctified? May it not be to the greater
glory of God our Father ? Yes ; while we
mourn, it is ' not as those who have no hope.'
218 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
' It is the Lord. Let him do what seemeth him
good.' May the presence of the Comforter be
constantly with you, my dear sister. I hope to
see you soon. With kindest regards to Mr. Per-
kins, and love to little Henry, in which Mr.
Crane unites,
" In haste, but very affectionately yours,
"A. E. Crane."
From Mrs. S. A. Breath, accompanied by the
beautiful stanzas which follow the note.
" Oroomiali, Oct. 15th, 1852.
" Mr. and Mrs. Perkins :
" Dear Brother and Sister, — I need not say,
that I deeply sympathize with you ; hard were the
heart that did not feel. But sorrow such as
yours is a sacred thing, and an awe is on my
spirit. I have felt that any attempt to express
sympathy, could but call forth the touching plaint,
* Is there any sorrow like unto my sorrow ? ' He
who kills and makes alive, alone can heal such
wounds as yours.
" The accompanying lines are intended only
for your own perusal. You will, I know, over-
look their faults, and accept them as an expres-
sion of sympathy,
" From your sister in Christ,
" S. A. Breath."
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 219
"TO MR. AND MRS. PERKINS.
" As one by one your little band
Have hastened to the spirit land,
How oft have yon been called to shed
A parent's tears o'er the early dead ;
To see the babe its eyelids close.
And fold its arms for a long repose ;
But never have you felt a blow,
Like that which laid your Judith low.
" Parental joy your hearts would wann,
To note the unfolding mind and form ;
To see a daughter's loving care,
Seeking a mother's toils to share ;
"Watching, when ill, beside her bed, —
A star's mild light on her pathway shed, —
Your toils and pains forgot the while.
Blest with the sunlight of her smile.
" How sweet in song her voice would rove ;
How soft the strains her touch would move ;
Our little circle gathered round.
Dwelt with delight upon the sound.
And caught the soul-inspiring lay.
Which bears the thoughts from earth away ;
Now the soft notes a Saviour's love repeat —
And now, triumphant strains His coming greet.
" "NYhen at the placid hour of even,
Your cares are left, to think on heaven.
Do not your spirits catch the strains
Which float along celestial plains ?
Does there not bend a listening ear.
Your absent loved one's voice to hear "?
Her touch an angel's harp can make
With melodies of heaven awake.
220 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
" Dark is your path ; yet one bright ray,
Remains to cheer you on your way ;
Torn are your hearts ; yet one fond hope
Is left to bear your spirits up.
Each day, each moment, brings moi'e near,
The time when you with joy shall hear,
Their welcome who have gone before ;
How blest to meet, and part no more."
Second note from Mrs. Breath, to Judith's
mother, and lines which accompanied the note.
"Dear Sister, — I am alone with my little
ones. You too are probably alone, but uncheered
by the smiles of infancy. 1 have been thinking
of you the more, to-day, from having read in the
Journal of Missions the account of the sickness
and death of dear Judith, with its attendant cir-
cumstances. As my mind rested on the melan-
choly theme, fancying myself in your place, my
thoughts took the turn which I have expressed
in a few lines. However poor the sympathy
friends may offer, I know that you will not under-
value it. You are willing they should tell you
they think of you and feel for you.
" Yours,
" S. A. Breath."
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 221
"TO MRS. PERKINS.
" I will not weep, — though one by one
My treasures from my side have gone.
E'er she who was my hope, my aid.
Beside my youngest babe was laid.
I shall rejoin them in the sky ;
Then why should tear-drops fill my eye ?
" I will not weep — though o'er her head
The sun its noon-tide ray may shed,
And winter's fiercest tempests rave
About my darling's lonely grave.
^Twill not disturb her sweet repose ;
And yet the tear unbidden flows.
" I will not weep — my bleeding heart,
Thy throbbing cease ! 'Twas pain to part ;
But, oh ! 'tis bliss untold to know.
That far beyond this world of woe,
I yet shall meet my Judith dear,
Where sorrow never prompts a tear.
" I will not weep — no tears shall dim
My upward gaze. My hope in Him,
Who triumphed o'er the last dread foe,
Through His free grace, no doubts shall know.
In sorrow's night, I'll wait the day.
And wipe the flowing tears away."
Our melancholy but still grateful task, we
now bring to a close. Our humble aim, which
was but honestly and briefly to portray the lovely
" Persian Flower," that has faded, — nay, rather
that has been transplanted to the garden of God,
222 THE PERSIAN FLOWER; OR
with such incidental references as grow out of
the subject and illustrate it, is fulfilled, — imper-
fectly indeed, yet, we trust, in a manner, that
may contribute to comfort the stricken mourner,
(as the task itself of preparing this brief record
has done,) and interest, and, with the Divine
blessing, benefit the general reader.
Would we look for human loveliness and
promise? We have here presented one of the
brightest and fairest samples. Would we con-
template mortal frailty ? We have here a most
impressive demonstration, that " the flower
fadeth," and that most suddenly and unexpect-
edly. Would we look away from earth to
heaven, from the present scene of change, dis-
appointment, and sorrow, to those everlasting
mansions of unalloyed joy and bliss, in reserve
for all who love God ? How afFectingly beauti-
tiful and instructive, though so deeply afflictive
to bereaved friends, was the calm and happy
passage of young Judith to that world of glory,
rapid as was that passage, and under the sudden
summons of one of the most fearful of mortal
maladies! Her remark to her little brother,
uttered less than one week before her death,
proved prophetic : " Perhaps I shall die on this
journey; and how delightful it will be to go up
to that heaven, and see God who never dies ! "
May the reader, like her, seek and obtain a
JUDITH G. PERKINS. 223
place in that " house not made with hands, eter-
nal in the heavens ; " where " there shall be no
more death ; neither sorrow ; neither crying ;
neither shall there be any more pain."
Just as we were penning the above last lines,
a package of seven volumes of the published
works of Dr. Geo. W. Bethune reached Judith's
father, sent to him as a token of fraternal re-
membrance from that kind friend. In turning
over the volume of his sweet " Lays of Love and
Faith," the charming piece, " Early lost. Early
saved," was one of the first to which we opened ;
and it struck us as so descriptive of the life and
character of Judith, that we could not forbear to
introduce it, as a most appropriate close of her
memoir.
EARLY LOST, EARLY SAVED.
By Db. Geo. W. Bethuxe.
"Within her downy cradle, there lay a little child,
And a group of hovering angels unseen upon her smiled ;
When a strife rose among them, a loving, holy strife,
Which should shed the richest blessing over the new-bom life.
One breathed upon her features, and the babe in beauty grew,
With a cheek like morning's blushes, and an eye of azure hue ;
Till every one who saw her, were thankful for the sight
Of a face so sweet and radiant, with ever fresh delight.
Another gave her accents, and a voice as musical
As a spring-bird's joyous carol, or a rippling streamet's fall ;
224 THE PERSIAN FLOWER.
Till all who heard her laughing, or her words of childish grace,
Loved as much to listen to her, as to look upon her face.
Another brought from heaven a clear and gentle mind,
And within the lovely casket the precious gem enshrined ;
Till all who knew her, wondered, that God should be so good,
As to bless, with such a spirit, a world so cold and rude.
Thus did she grow in beauty, in melody, and truth,
The budding of her childhood just opening into youth ;
And to our hearts yet dearer, eveiy moment than before.
She became, though Ave thought fondly, heart could not love
her more.
Then spake out another angel, nobler, brighter than the rest.
As with strong arm, but tender, he caught her to his breast :
" Ye have made her all too lovely for a child of mortal race,
But no shade of human sorrow shall darken o'er her face ;
" Ye have tuned to gladness only the accents of her tongue,
And no wail of human anguish shall from her lips be wning ;
Nor shall the soul that shineth so purely from within
Her form of earth-born frailty, ever know a sense of sin.
"Lulled in my faithful bosom, I will bear her far away,
Where there is no sin, nor anguish, nor sorroAv, nor decay ;
And mine a boon more glorious than all your gifts shall be —
Lo ! I crown her happy spirit with immortality ! "
Then on his heart our darling yielded up her gentle breath.
For the stronger, brighter angel, who loTcd her best, was
Death.
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