oitlTUAKV.The mind (hat sppret iates (lie value of a departed friend, relative, husband, or fife, Iwnv-ecer so {nmitul it may he, W-oniet Mntltel „frt*m those jiangs of sorrow naturally attendant thereon, from an assurance of the fact that this Iriend in gone froth virtue to reward—from earth to I leaven,—particularly when tl»e testimony is felt Iy the individual himself—end thatdelivered to the surrounding friend* just bn theeve of the happy fpiiit’t flight to the realm* of eternal bliss and happiness; “Thy will bo done.O lioril.”I hese remarks have been elicited on account of the death of Mrs. Sarah Wolt;wwari,contort of Henry W Woodward, of IIrother-Um, Anne-Arundel county, who departed this lile December rHih, 1833, in the 31 at year ofher age—leaving an iilllicted husband and onechild, to mourn her change. Iluvmg endured a painful indisposition for two years, which site bore with great Christian fortitude—during w hich time, she was attended with all the care it was jiossil le to give to a sick individual— nevertheless, her disease baffled the unremit-1ting attention of her physu im and friends,—her hojies were rested upon the promises of thelaird, ami in Him she trussed, during tlie last stages of her painful illness, and died in the triumph of faith.—Job saith, “All the days of my appointed time, will I wait, till my changecome;” and thus did our friend,—though desirous to five with her If tends, w ho associated [with her in this world, yet, w hen it was announced to her the! i e-tor,it ion was hopeless, die was “ready to be offered up;*' and ec inc ed to nil who called to see hi?r that she w as going to the place pieparetl, “not with lands, but eternal, in the heavens, for the finally faithful;” and invited ea« h, individually, who called lo see h«r, to try and meet her in ilcavcri. I).I'D