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the malady, filled our minds with
anxiety, and she herself began to en-
tertain the hope that her Saviour
was about to call her to himself.
On the <date>2 </date>of this month, she quo-
ted the well known lines of <persname>C. Wes-
ley</persname>: _ "O could I catch a smile from thee
And drop into eternity."

She said she should be glad to go
to him if it were his pleasure. In reply
to a remark made on the loss which
we should feel if she were removed
from us, she disclaimed all idea of
worthiness in herself; her short-com
ings she said, were many, and she
had nothing to trust to but our Sa-
viour's merits. On the following day
though very weak so that she had not
spoken all the morning, she rallied
a little when <persname>Br. Edwards</persname> called in
the afternoon, and uttered a few
broken sentences, the purport of
which was, that she longed to go
home soon to be with the Lord.
                                                The