The American Presbyterian. (Philadelphia) 1856-1869, August 02, 1860, Image 1

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    GENESEE:' , ,EV:ANGELISYH t . WIhde 1'X..0;.,742,.:
04)
, ~.,
ozit2,
TRH UNKNOWN WORDD•
(FROD; DOBICLL'a
Oh 1 by what 01ml:tiering light . We *low
That unknown world We're hastening to!
God bath locked up the meths page,
And curtained darkness round , tbe stage.
•
We talk °nearest, we talk of bell, ' • • ••••
But what they mean no •tonglie , oan tell.!
Heaven is the realm where angels. are,
•
And bell the chaos of derspaiT i ui
•
But what .these awful words litip}y. -•;; ;
None of us know befiim yre , cl)o: ~•
Whethor d i e Win or tot, **mist
Take tikanucoeeding world on trust.
,
• lihrift Mei the soul, perhaps 'tie-gone , •
Ten th'ocsand leagues beyond the aunt
Or tidos tin thousand more thrice told, '
Brtretr frAikerrtarly is eciicit,
But eh! nototiots they give, , '• •
Nor tell us how, or where they Jive,
Though conscious while with,us below;
How much themselves desired to knevr.
As If botind up with eoletnn ihte
To keep this•emet of their state,
To tell their joys or
,paina,to nen°,
That man mafilie by 64th gone.
••• • , .
*ell, let our Sovereign, if ,1;e Ple,Ketyri, I
•
Look up his mnrvellous dOtirees; •
Why should we wish Him to reveal: —4.. , ,`
Whatito thinks proper to oonoeta?
;- •
v
It le enough, that we boiler.,
Heaven's brighter far than we conceive, •
And obi may Goil our eoulif prepare
To meet in blies, and praise di* tbee
Sovvaiiivtatvc
• LETTIDR 'FROM IIEWBURGH••
/. Newburgh on the Hudson; My Ottii,,-IEIBO.
-. 'Whatever may be said of other snots; Nekvburgh
. . .
is a • glorious lookout place ' u p on mountain.. and,
geed! For,' often aa•l have vieitedthiaittpcit, the
inalerirtio river • and wondrous &aline of hills nit'
the cFpostife side present thetnselveSi Its. hew-and
,
fresh. as •ever, and like the old an whose eye wad,
WA- dimmed by age, they lookup and folk& with tifil
same Time,: of striking and pleasing ., the sensea of
the belielder. Northward, the river opens , broadlh ,
yet; blitilifhtitr W 4 grand; below, ;it. narrows,- and
b ' ends„.cempletely hiding its stream. inedertbe 'West]
I'ililA, ff*lkihncia, and yielding, a ; glowing .putlinn.
of ,thei Itilly range, with vast isolated : masses ; ciAi
greed and brown foliage, running , steeply tiowitil
tuAll dipping in the water, - • • • •
. %We, magical beauty of the eppctsite range' is
, ...
ornatett i t it part by being br4en, into numecnne.,
swelling hills ) " havthg each its r g9'4, 6 4; POW.
and intesjacent aropekaad hollews,, reeturifig . , tue
sun at different% angles , and reflect light and.
shade with qv'
„varlatipe. of esilgo; .whilst, the
Sleeting clondsihroW dnwn. 'nob
. pagaingahadowit
as give the beauty of the - paziormns, joined with
the exquisite changes of, the.. dissolving view,
qly r
end, what adds larto thie t beliuty,ia the warm
ffifGetahi,v°9 l 4r••a Atillftio-Irt4Wi d i t fOle
the setting sun,..ae Asik c pexte rate and ielive
every opening, tinfieg F it, tigth a, glowing, golden,
russet-brown,., **then the river is ever f;lled
with moving, elAgend whether the eye is, best
pleased with tbe t ..tiny row-boat, or the sail, the.
ulAlloila'#44o49ter; the tug, the-hatge, the pro
pellor i esretitikeete l hy night and •by'day„ at alit
honkieefit pit leinfed;-whilet not long , out of , the.
sap" totplink., : thit*dering sounds., and the shrill:,
whistle,,oll the. long trainsi, passenger or freight, - ,
t3l , ing along the very margin,_ and in. places •seeni-• ,
....,, ••I . ..
ingly ozol. she. trery sands of the shore beyOutil :THttil c ititStilliii. ; ittlitlifil Ittir qtitz.
At noott-thminimating Calliope. of the Armenia • •••:. tm , p,: t: :•,. ~2_, , , -,
,••
• ,
causes the eam,to prick up t the delightful sound:, biliF n o'f' Pie'..ineii tiotieettlile events in . . the
aeoompatlying,Ae movement, of the two great 'reilktdifteiidieinents• in Ifelatid•,iii . aigreafA.n-'
black.pipe, just, projecting above the house-tops, Iniversary Union Prayer Meeifitg tha' wialteld
an d, darting rapidly past the town -belo'w;. , whilst ;on' the- A af''lnlYitiihe - it•CiYitlitolerile tier
nt the, plat bedtime hour, with the moon at times dens" Of . • - •iselfeet: - +l'llei spa t ial`deeikn of the
~,
silveripgAe -stream, you ,may hear the mysterious
,ingetiiitent eetelirakiii" n solemn awl end
,be
plashing of .the great night boats, and, see the
_ o4 7 ll: iiiki nc i ie anniversary e t si 6. e g f .ii 3
lights Apefilog upon the waters, and the green) , ,liiiiiniti: awn ng of 1.859:. The Bann e r' l ot
or blue', or red . signal-lenterni oa,r,ried aloft. as; - 71/Etteriffreis thatthe nnmletit present eifieeded'
lifigese' Meeting coe'' - i;hY -
steanaer3fter steatuer, l crowded with hilarious We l , •tbfkrtltonslind, the
moves northward,, forming another channel for kind ever held in Belfast. ThefiVereglitheied
the ever flowing and swelling stream Of interior from* all parts . of 'the country; Of'all,ages'a 'd
travel and business. ' - claises. ' ' '' • s. • - ' -
• • ' • ••-t.i,
'..Nor is Newburgh dependent on its riverond ;
the, meeting whichWei:helt) y allytheA
hills alone for its attractions; the number of pri7 Voyarßjetanic Clardens *ea one *bie,li-wi 1 iet
vats grounds, , concealed by beautiful 'hedges, but. 'AMA' liefergettetil, ei their' forAiie: eirOdiitilitices
made public.. by reason of, open gates,,tiobly y. eulti-, : under which it..Wailield.or for ibe!nitii&iitivlke
vated and aderned, . will. exc i te th e , etranger's... att. , onded% and. toolkpart in the, prefeedingtB2..:lt . ,i
-4 - was, an event which, comp,letelysefuted. thelzttea',.
admiratioti . in every part of the town through sertion reiterated by .perione inimical, tft the.
whit% he mily•etitill.'' . .ln one enolosure,a natural
,ReviV movement,' ' mOvement, the bitere'st, in it bad .
deprestion bee beeitettltivated'into beautiful died ant—that-NV .' niireliansing - ebbiliticiff
rated wallftty)*Ated'byia rustic arch, e.Mbeliished' :at pcifittiar..exciteingilt,vhieli 'Beige& , unikilfe
with ponds andletit, and made cool end some& ' r o it ° i r gis i n r,, es f;. 4. 4l l Bl l: 4 l l* th Etea ti ii -efte alic ;ti t
tered, though just within' the public sid 'U -wli k:il Y7 .; iiee ti nliii • trnsient, Os.' ine'eahritis %Ilicit Ty c oo-iced
oldoverhanging trees of eh estattri* eitni•Wi t it; Whit Mich . .' n' statittlea as thie'reqnfredno
in g willow. Following the. WIE likk•tillsW . • ii:,.refettittion :ittinoritgr - Ibbiel*bd ' Were conversant
you will be led te an inviini:iiiik.Uft4:fikilt 'wilbttlie reat•natcnte:•e,the.,nnpriitiedented spin
and furnished with seats; wiiilkifilffe.,;tetainf; !ritual. i,v! ll 6lceitingliii. •ViiAllii Oct-whatever may
•,• • -
e t , • . .i, i •;,. 7 :have, been the intentioe ortbins. who .cirenlated
wrought with pebblesiandfill34 lb,
.., e ir ta ',,it,'lts,i.eitnfts Were not extensively mis
the hospitablefiliSTA,3oithi t tke liiitiff . • ehitriona. '.The iiiiiibiitilitidn'of yesteriiiy was
In adjoining ifibiliflifo.;tin&is , ititit•itill , bitglit a :proof that , thelarekteliieli•Gcid cOnitnimead
hedge, and bordered bylleasaut Wall* ilitlie' latt%Yeariiiiiiinltiflttlet;Anadiaa:dtientinirtiv grow. ,
f oun d fl owers i m fine ve,„Oetiee,•efl t,
• ;_ing, fructifying , and permaneet impressionnpon
rk.
•• .• •••:_tboulial3,ooo allta„)?4ol4okUDder,the influence
• with the bright little,,,averhena and the , ini esti;
`Of•the :"EittlY.' iti't:,• 'endlbat, altliongli the Ant.-
, dahlia. Most agreeable , b, 'll, l wWlOn'the $ l.OOllOB ,vitirdltraiiiilbit ' ?one' df Pilate' and•nervoiiii ex
formerly.. -ownedqy thn.•=lato;il4444:4lolidelgritt 4 tonl,,,ettt.J.Ro',C9,o l ol._ ,
_!l"threltrltelic,period of the
greatly advanced in adornmerib a4O-441tnifii.l..11y- eiletal , ave-'nfew!.ovif:fteeptiffnal,"ttie "Mile
the llteseut 'owner, where year its:y . o . o4r ! . .l2tl,4ol'.'isrlitili:iworkkngotii.vigore i, nein and Wfili
• • ;gasman, inicrtusrited tee cent as , atr.aay,•pxe-.
several'. items of beautiful lawnOiltkililitakti ' .i4 O - I ,' i t • 1,1 1 , ',Whi t t, e ;i et : I t s i, •—• g i iont9f
* : ; 11t e ts' ' ---..- t- .1 .i, 4 1 7 -.1.". e l / 4 .91 . 14
• • 4 • •
trees. ofinna? y "kinds, through *i"tralk .. tht apirrt:itl ywra - Mel er• pp - indeed , 1816V/fir
glanims .up and down.. from belotrtT-0 ' ' 'aliflble.ibi l ltenbr4offieilitliift. 4° . ' -%! - •:. ,•• .
film thegmcie ( tien Abet the best wayitn.fititeifte 'Who'. iiiireat' l4l ", irOitt:Ou•Petlierate.ti,7 ,
,i a tg was held antler etrounl4thmfta as auspieio,
.1
latert:lst•ton.s*tr , the ground with whitowelbmio
~ its moetartlentpromoi 4;min)d have desired% -
mixed, witb *lrate red ; top) The ctover , tpriekto .ipb e ylegher x ,,4lo,,t4l4.lilp . ia?Atr ileepOitnt: Vt:
reeves the inattetl.roole , end dies out, leaving: the 'ungenicil.see.442,44 -..:•iiii.. * r.i . :2 4 t*ittPtirs'..Jrti,
tender grass to fi ll the surface) which by , requent . wa s peenlierier , ,wneltitirlifees-anot see%
cuttings becomes soft.aptliwalvety as a rich mantle. - :fug
_aunsbiner. nei!oil 4 ,l4o eltr, rttriir : iipttiety, .
sent, the temperatArAt'vpthwjaimospbere bein g "
A. haus:lsom e , green-bailee! ilk prepared . far flowers;
although at this- season] itlis•'-oroPt . 3r•-,aihilat!!r. about equal to th.ta,e l finekm4nAtty,;.,
tie breeze "Odin 'f•rligt4 - ..we5ti,er, 1 14.0.4.0 .
large and noble looking itraficT o ' . ' n"efi with scarcely aft'otie iilth'endi : fratleAti'elbaves of .
climbing and clustering vines of nAkto e rens :Vei • the °sturdy: alma 4n zAgat•fillttrient4 7 preialled , frOM :
riaties already purpling into ripeness/Alit/ 1 ;other : 1111 01 11 , 1 01 1 - 4vatilitg;;*t• fevered 'the , n,qtill-
At- . b day heat, Tluk•skYtWitg,likerspread•with'Kelottdict
clusters acquiring that brigla i leetintr,iy..orta.
but was.tiit no,thoze.threaterting.; and•manyipt tbi.
hue that makes them appear aliengly;fitt%fet••tbe* ties , .-ladiei--Partruilatarlpi-t-witte*ere•nisttekatte'
mouth; outside, fruits of all Itiude, andriowirt4 iiif potitpUne *On, viaikl,tnltba*otiudeenal.therturil .
;are variety and% richest culture adorn the fgkeeintlei ilimA•siven•Atui
and delight the eye ;, here and there, also, mul*,,l'ert,P=i4,l"/: ie:-.Of a day diet might• bet elied
. tolep, i- tt.. kul t:?iietVof kbn :t ' t ler
chain, are met with,' and bark huts are .ereSild . ; • t i t le yo teticee.: l , • ; ; ; X.heft:Thrdet t e i f f:e • ineyLiartt
one of them about to be entered; by ate oldl3lll-tet ptiterifeitti,lbrabberiee wallti,l.orna-;
worn pilgrim,leapieg•ou his staff, shaped implain, : inieiipi r ruids; 'apti•;,fkilvithixurianee. , ---.Preselited
: ter, or coarse stone l On these grounds is idilitt;4ooBb.lrul sOc'el'ltiim''w t a's in 641631 -renbamled'
ta h ;lb: . 1 1.,--vilnin• - tt itecaaneiltvidtbre -of...toying , lifer iiii
seen a , (rin i n t r i ee ki ng , gro,y, steno. 1ati...q0. , .u,- , r --- 1 01. ' ; ev itiftiarii ; ' • •d I •
, lu.sithOrOuluttAtt .
.. t a.consi erab elsouren•
would seam, only , .today ont,tuttneyf urtQp,.. cor i
' of, gt,taotion 4,6:-...00104-,ol‘.te the greiWthajaL
the miumpay,,ibothin the queeretone•ontting;.:the irity.the.,..erie-:stirikiteting, point ~o f.•interest; wes
..
firm. joining, and the close. 44 - pert:get ointib
is more complete than is e, isiligiseed • in any
sacred or social arehi4otors.'';Nor is
.this .a soli
tary instance. of needless ouila.for ; direefly west
of these premises, the gimp:l;4;3'ot : another on the
east front are bounded by 'a j heavy *pa wall Rf
neat workmansbip, protected, ei in fendat:times,
by, little hollow towers, with lookout opeUibgs;
whirsta.Preseive tho aspect: of ,the ,medieval; age,
'a stone lOdp is built in Normsn'StitiWith hi h
portcullis; ready to drop upon the' beae.aria: yelp"
the ereitif some hapless knight, as 114riidtm,in
spurring from the castle of 'old I"...l9Sglmisl
ltesides, Oe.dwellings adsl,groundd within the,
boretfili,liMits,. innumerable villas crown .every.
sightly spot, extending for miles up and dowaiths,
river, embracing the Awning of Headley i . i pear l
the town . ; and of PalUe...,giv.Wqe*/
1;0 ty
‘ toldleFirAd 1 ..4.0k .
The air 44,M9kt1rs,7 7 ;eitd
ing er.eitement of,.the.Skiding scenery, opera.
haalthfUlly-on.tb, .4044tive,sYsteP),ukakiOgl
mo4lpleasitig summer residence;, 'whilst in, adv.;
tidn.Ad hospitehke private, dwellings, and the tieWik hotel,'theP4welton Hmtse,..situated north,:
wsrd l amifmcpishell with every comfort, and ostak
veuieoee,.ooss it s , doors at a moderate.:pricejor . .
the
, accommedittion. of visitors, . ; piece, is,
abundantly•fgrnislied with,elmrches f orpkhie r h . no,
less than five or six are of the•Presbyteriaslamily,
and. mostly furnished with pastors..: The. 'etlAce,
used, by tl,ie nongregation,.Alpploy i .41;4
not .only the finest looking 94114"dii1R;14,46,4*;.7
bet of its style to quite an fulli*Art.„.ol:lo
.being;,Of Norman-Gothic, with a :steeple WWOI4. Of;
stone. !pie. building ie:fully otwatpictby,,wqr,- .!
shippers, Sled th e church is ,presid4 Alter; hy an.
ene*opastor. •,. , , .
AmuSgithe , noticeable localitiewcfNewleargh id
the 014, bead, quarters of Washington i south of.
ths towel hut; ; , ' The Stone. lianas:.
hasobeen delti4predetVed, and is. made the depo- .
i3itory of rsliOkof. the 1145oluttitm, and of our later,
*t rs, 74/114 the. gounk composed 4.a sloping,
surface of several acres t rupping, towards, the river .
and yielding a gloriouu,lieltisigt .sides; forme's
.
beantiful areafor- gartgildEddfil,patliotio meetings,:.
IpLthe getit?re arken, thelistos t of the, slope;. , talk'
11N-staff unfolds, the>national. stares and stripes,,
whilst ittits. foot-are Wanted a few,pioces of brass.
cannon, originally French or English, wh,ic, lawtei
made' to tweak when. military noise , * Deeded , to
zPr l e! , s our outior!al-joY4
t•. t
• Ctarthei 17. th of. Juan; the anniversary of. tbo
ahohcr thie greowwas made-the
theatre of an imposing and gratifying ocourrenoe
Ih was) Ilbe inatigeration . :of -a -mouument, placed
otes4the• remaine bf. thalami - 1111,4e ;last member
' Washington': eaif ,'{lards ; .6liards„ who: • 'krt
ebmpoweidtin the protecting folds. of the • flair be
tqlltnee4l and: defended: i 4 Perilous - times,: who.
Dew ; reets.:where -owe; irk aucientitiines. •he ,eleed ,
night& wakef . ul sentinel, sod- ma • : tirbleet
;nods ittrciert &nit - ' l "
ni 004 e
irere my reflectionecoelr bilVeTt's spectator
bitherbmponiesiofithatidlitry- should
f 4
ever • Nitcl . foita her musical'aZ toiching voice,
suph, vim an odeagion whilst my. muse is
silentomine :wanner; spirit • is. florebi .challenged
tuspeelle the old •lifs:gtuirdintaU , who now lies
ie. der6;s,wherey erits. he-watched' that precious'
life of Waslsingtm 'on Whibh: avinttch, depended I
.
liktmlin4aht-d* tlferwhiph:tbe,ineeting was
ebn i teiked=thuileficeltbristing, in a'scileinn, 4'
propriate, and- tistifal 'manner, the ann.fftreiuy.
of the religiOnt awakening of thi **lean • •
The , arrangemeuti'-for - conducting
~tlie Prl)--
eeedings, "Mai were under f,,11e contra of a
comnrittee,L. : .,wern exceedingly judietaiie,' Oa
Worked adinieubly: .. A lirge priinber Of 'ClntitY;
men-of lea&ua d , :ohitilationt, an titiolityilien i
-=-*.-,EI. ttna..o ihaF l / 4 4,Iiiiiidnit!hh‘ r ithtllfr, 1
Haltaidge, , 0 ''. gullible; -the. • con s iliit, *Mee-
~.4aine Sed:histhry are now:so . iridelj4ifoinfin
.eonaexion with . the Revival.' in 'his;7lilltigliblif--:
heed—were appointed to , officiate - Upon .the'
platform; and the duty assigned Cireach; Whey '
• tiler, of - addressing, the audience,' reading' the'
. psalms selected to besung, or , othring up prayer,
,was definitelyeet.pukin a•- printed •programme.
',-..-- ...1 , -,z,.,,.., r The' abjectis . .of the-ponyers were
eepiiide , 4 . l teetE,choeeek—timellk'as "For _ a great
OntpothingotlilodhilliOly. Spirit;'"•.for," the tin-.
_converted,peearityr.for 1 4 the Jews;"-.for.!'the
' 4l '" l " l6 l l 4,l 2 Vitusild'i N AW il t.lierlAtnetrete. ,
,iiirrbi , Ifeatrelariftifliy4mxililh iiii.3%4610e-in. ;
Thee ;'''.ioul:lthk.,'Sick and .Dyinge , .go. -t. ..The
'time for- - epealting, singing, and • prayer, was
limiteditrientiiiinntes. . This arrangement,wei
indispentable;lrom the number- of• perione'to:
be engaged, and , in ordel;that. the services-
'might not be a hnecesiarily prolasged. .It had:
been found from •ex perienee:4lintttiveh. thi;Matt;
powerful voice could be.but jurfierfently heard ,
' on the extreme verge of. a great:croid , assem=
bled on the, Ittwe.infrOnt; of 4 the patilion ;•sarict •
for this reisori,-and., also yeeause-itAvavhighlY'
probable that even this attentive area would'
~..contain but ,a proportion of - the, multitude in
'attendance, the committee selected itationefor .
'devotional exercises ,• in other . parts of' the,
grounds, to the number of twenty. All th e cei . .
z . • With - one or two exceptions,„were,.ocecipied:and•
- kW(t.nutlei:dusjatiffiais,ces, e‘ffieciaillilthnse *here'
Wg0t . `0 6 ,41,0 3 7 tor• r ftkii eu iie Or. 130.0: BY**.
..a4frqient, qficifoiiistrefit..o6iiitregatii?Wit
stUAOikeAltiemselye‘e 4 iidOai Pregii*Voter i''
the BO: 15113inieti: IN; stilt.l,ons . ):W q e. to
off with much Jgglimnt,.,being,suffmientTyfar
apart to prevent ponfiud i on',dtiring - :the, 'lett*
from tbe Mingling, of voiee,s., Ear; station
a: su perintendent, and tbisteeded yfir:moeki4,
the - preserilition - 'of forder.
. a 4 '` ....• 4 -
Tht,seevicee nod 'iddresses at all tia4atiam
wo,i.e . ,499 l 3!. l PlPl'l e t_Laivep,af., Well as TirAotlS6l.ilS
4 *
c li f it WO' : • : 11 *W r .. e a e Y er111 7 9 044it
*l
**)llg, dgVili * Xlll4ol ., C:CIIiZONOn 0 fAik - f t t. -
iof which ,OCcuirean a., group *here,. '.. ~
• .:VV - IH 9'll . ili*, of (41a - 000,•-was s. ealling,
: : 'Oritk regard to ; the numbers o were pre,-,
seat' in. Am, klardjts, we ..have re onto know,.
itfrom i ,lpedfitrcivertillie faets, th ;it .exceede . .
thirty, thousand. The meeting 0
~ a,c, thus cep- •
:amenably larger than that of last - year, and the
giiiatest •ever held in Belfast for airy purpose , : .
..e'rrery ccinarderable proportion of those.teho •
Were preilent:atl enjoyed the advaatages of ttia !
• spirit-stirring. ,and \ memorable occasion were
from . country .toNna and districts, hating- ar.:
'reed by epeeist trains - kitidltpr9yido toe thei4
akoMmedatiott by. the dfrectefiliof ; :.t,he .verioes.
lines of railway , cennecedyl'ithl3Olfaet..
_Net, a•
'.feW..of those will?: *,tlJad to 40111t.Ankong these.
rare excursion parties•reside at longdistiticee,
in the Counties of Antrim, poem, • - ..4rnneP;
Derry, and. TYroPe;l: tknd4lleY-IWAgiti-PMlllOitTzi
pried '- •,.*3l mj 18 . 0, )* 11 4'itid9 ‘ l .-jfillieP.
{ their , ::,, h 4!....-Afien,,,,oentAwnf.penve.ttieguieit. ~,
. - i • ;fr:. '...,... ,140MiteeperWit
. ~. .
land, ii s bad come specially to svitaess 4,the
procee - nite., l i xoin• eleve,n o'clock until • two,
the rotittejeadhlg to .the scene of ilke,-,aeion
striitioiWbriiiii - and' aPaelOnn as t.,tivi 'Ate, .liferfi
thronged ,iviliii4erstine; Most of theini - oPte'o .
respectablizagpbkranee,•proeeeding to' the , Ctar-•
dens, whileAC•emnibesses and Janntingtears
followed one' atiothei ds fast eisithe, fires could:
be set 'down: The assemblage was lea -cen
ideid'Aci. Persons belonging to' th'e" vi 3 Oriking.
• classes than. that of 1859, being' composed ; to
, an extent which was very obseevable, of the
'middle orders. We are not aware that any of
, the mills or other large ma-ntifeetiliiii in the
town, or vicinity stopped working lo4llowlbe
. bands to be present- at the meetiege., but. ma ny;. .
emPloyers of smaller nnnibere of operatives,enn
aiderately gave theta liberty'fipr the day, awl
of-elate whe;displayed this' praiseworthy 4Plitt;
were.aomeiello• hid: never favbredithe Itetiedi
' Cause. TThymeetkog. :et- thd „
caused; th4 it tlesal. i iulti . T„of chirgymeß.
I fast, and the :nmority'ortliei3p,:w4l2,.:.askrinic-,
of Aific'optilfaii cithr elergyllow 'rata
iin Alia.l3liilho daring tifo wit* .or • te e ilke
proceedisgaulSoltir_,
their families. Is "filiritgewt he,,
who had fousd,admisEd,op..were exless sif the
other sex—a fact which w!m i "the sub*t of gs
i neral remark: •.
.pinfiiivlittgl..*ldiegt of visitors
, Game to the •Vaidenir ant u . stations pre
' Tieusly appointed..for:Abein74shltprecession
order, singing, approprlate—lihes..,- , Of; these
tbe grea ter
..
AniOnctsam ,wa particularly notiged t tgai
think belon'gliik'Xd the leetr;. cle'S and
'tbe'Rev...Eftigh HiehnielvdinigreiittiOinirliitiii at
-
ME! earlier iofirt theft; rPipecal
the thurehee; in: Plraise and , prayer.-
One most, grathing, feature of the.sus:Om
; was noticed most.by i who gave attention tps34,
• matters, to the'cre4l,t' of 'the committee, 4,44 also
to - that of -the' iliimense asseinhiag6:!.alinty, •
the- perfect ...,ortleri. • decoraml., and , : abs'
eveilthingagiproaehing to confusiohrAchk%*
:isted . wheTeveF divotionalAxerolomtesa-kolliip"
y ebildictb4L.and, indeed, iti every l pari of"*.
grotii6'd9. like Itti3titibe'at tgp
Idiot% tbet.-viAreilif prahie and prayek . 4iLir
eseenOng• •from ....tw.enty. separate' :vomitne . •
onueoe,sommmet end aNident; • and a ferkor ,
' 1 44.1.4P' . ;14r4Y/4 , erTaded addressee of
Which ishowecl them- to be: ani
.inestodlittha, Spiiit whose work they were ad
- TiOlthiff: • '
• !Phi: number of. aged persons, male and fa--
-411a,:dmiutry, who swelled the con
conse,r, was yerk t retwkable. These, maul
festri, were rOcholiday visitors, and took but a
--very linliteitilitareat z ikjge picturesque scenery
.atoond'thelit.J..(Th'ey - 'Eight have been observed
reclining! :under , the, shade of trees, on . tha fresh
) sward/alto:sr as•eciuvenient to the 'variods eta,
UO00;394 0 0 An144 , 11Y - , with clasped hand , spsd.
;r verent 'a~ the.aerviees.of the day„and
• oftek ''finartdr:lnknying that the :Lord's work..
!;Mighif lie' 'eolith:wed 'and extentett acme of
:the ,venerable •men *tom we thaei •utiticad; afe
thkrs....o the-IFOOytetian OhuiChit's 41:itr.re
aiPects-Aho.proportioSapf the different,religisr
..,,Rropo.
.dee.owitritiotia Who composed the meeting, the
grett,'majority, were, as might have been ex
!muted,' Prnsbyte ri ns: • The next• cohsiderabl9
in niiMbevWere the various Methodist4bodies.•;
Thrimertisesr continued sptne. four 'botirB; l
libtp;ttlievast throng iluietlp retired, the `beat
.'efoieddilba;ing been observed throughout
itrupeedings:
J• • •
itIfSSIONARIES ABROAD.-A correspondent of
' one of the secular journali of New. York; speaking
of %he American missionaries in China; says:--
g4Mer all, say what -we• may of our navy r our con
sul+) and-ministers, and * our. merchants and. profes
• sional men who represent us in, foreign llnds--and
im 'proud 'to say' they Aitt not suffer when corn
pared " th • thole •Of any' othir • natibeL-Yet the
'..trifestoand bylar the-Vest:types , of - AnieriCati
li4tion in this,land•ure•those pious,-educated; and;
Idevioted men who represent the different religions
‘l"denorninations of our country as missionaries;"
.. -, .
. '
.. : .
~.„L: .
''' e • • ..• ••• • ' ••••
...••••••••.• -..
•4• „A
, ... . •
. .
. . •
. •.
...:
•MI .....
.'
- 4
• .. .
' tr. / • : ,' • .
, .., .
. ~ ..., ..... ',
•. , . .... •
• . ...... . .
TT • - ci iTT
Gt... •
.• •. .
-.- A••,.... - , u. oi 2, 18 . .
4)DAY,
• - . — PAterol6.
iv a
The followipg ;day, 4 l
into the , iroOn3:- . .
"Ic'elinann's wike,'' a
'her child to the sehool l
.disposed person. She-1
course lad deeply affe&,
gretWd that her lutitlnt
Stie asked - me whether
would be so kind as Nit
tunity of saying a good;
"Is not that the • *Pi
e.tutelLr"
, "The same.".
;4 Fiarliedher 'PO
`> intently as . if the ptl
'-4qraity likely," said
&i:ncit think. a•single
*moped •heraorphe
for word,
, Ajt* .port
my. fiiiigg Tar' a.
obt Thy. eyds to th`e.gi
".There, now," said
vt. work 'already ; you
n n.."
In tho afternoon I
.weaver, and, fouml '
wife was not in the, b,
: furnished, but-clean
;vo4 l :4 o 449iteil.hipi
bad.,eftmit 41 , .!
-fitig.os inclination , '
`sport as ta-bad-rettirnet
ed .with his - ;werk, and.
si t lenes. ksteod fo't
to,the monotonous
syeafuted , upon the we'
Maintained ',unbroken
Asibuli , sf,- my' PreSencd•
Uituttjaria - k; as. that
,shd :asked:
bismork,
.nia answers. -, stop
bat,so soma.as he uttel
-Sono clank ; once:-
Heaven l"
begin a seriousrmopv ,
this?" At length
V. 4317 134111.4 c.
iXeiit el toper
Larloit.- . :6otilvasi . ,
lAsOlisititrint.even lira
ati4J- dio;otily. :very ;Or ,
The weaver was
infitired for his sill
the stablexitVtbe -
to intrOduee44 co;
_
hoping ga s
S.oripture :
little •of Abnbam
and seemed 'to'. take
either. a:he: ;did;iti 1b
time litew ft,tmk:tki
. . .
-I , came bowie:GOO:0
turning from . his -walk,
my keki upon my he
I gave him - la faith:
%,iiiro,otiVersathia with:
:hoW,-..liltades,E44ntrol
iin.3 l . - Atigkiifling '
spiNv'lqlll
tive o then passed his.
smiled, .• -... .
.. . . ~.. s,: .. .
. • ":1 7 .ioir Spored. youi§elf , nOt4rotibliii , the*,: tifr'aliciir
ilik. '' 4 •• -• . -
thie . man the4oy tev,hiaiithy . . ,. ••;• , r... q ,. •.,,. : - • •:. •i,,
"Such ii,.t, • least-was-. isy ituffililboithtnitiocir
interview - !' , ; ... - .:? .4. -7' i s •." i .:.• ..
. 1
•
"You conlanetlittv.Oprooo4tfyeitreelf abetter
; one. , But.l:Catfiipt. refolit - .6.oU , ‘;roFleitibEtcne oh
,aeivation.." ..:. ...:.:......!.'';iiirf: . ..-fti'‘W.'...;'''" . '; •..
*.. ." And th4.4'f,44„ c :.:i:;,.a. i....4-., : , - 1.04?...:-
'.." T 13 it, goii4**4o-40. 1 w . ..::: .} : . 4 sjoick. b,
very ro.SPol l .l",#:*.tOk* iah 6644.o#
at,:'!-_ . :;* , ..ki- :,,, ';:, ...a i .i: •
.i,* ritt Vi e.., . •
.? .
. . • . ‘1 1 . 641 40174047 , 1; 431 1 1144ftbcli:!: . • '._...-: .. •
l• ' .IV.h.y, :AO *llFlFror 'lii*eitiffltrhge"vitt I
4,iiiiro.li •l '.I '. • irei t4atypirJesiia
if4.tH 4 0.....;*! .0 *.,. -... ."'?"' Ithilv.oo )4l d' hole'
•1 0 .ebbil 3 watirlik 4 trg#1• 44 . 2
'lt* :. 'iT.Sti? had you
el ,
iitrattiol*!•frikok;to:flitttl.rl 6 :e' v.f ,-::,--,. '. - ..-' ..
t ,
' . 3. -kBirdh:waB al4O my, iiitaitithVlS'. 4 3 ,1*Yil it(
ikl764 , *l4cttilmitif ilith*fthki:/€444ilfqn`o?!
" frFlTif 14iittlai , 0 4 144 1 0 -.L4'ibii' ,4 §Wiroliti'Di;
4 --
6 0 3 jusylou >rxfs sies- ."' :a6Clitab."titat;thel - calf_ ilk*.
Ilmitiefftf , ,rekiiideik.44 ( ~., : itletahle 4itel.!' ' Bit;
ultlitiAi t t:ltkitl - : „ einieoibrod niI;t1Ohle1; .
.... , 41tidt.OVI* . offe - ;'.... - Ged t, - . u . tbe . rsitibir.olstotitt . 'Ori.
the:'oovii, of Egypt? • I , ati : sovinoeci that4Ourkey
joice iri: and:resit youi l4llastuliontfeffiiiirthielitlo:
sessions' tharii these 1" , ;'.. -.1 :•-t.";'•.:?I'll's -' , .-.0 4 :e..ti.;::r..2:
" D.onhthii4P or teal* . ‘"lil 4o * . gratio l iti t alf
the treasures . of wisdom a'. '. linoxiioo. 4 ' 4 ,*-2}kr•
"Do you; .indeed . p"lllitlt§"tl l64- A*V-.
asked' m . y. iiireli4.: seii,. .i . y." .- j'Aillikk pi : ' iel
.n3444..lintsWeri ofr....tlie- tic ..- . tia. 4 44loi.j.iftivill• Ilifik,
ircri?•• :Atlf+oo - tiatifitv. ; t*Foil4ibiliiiitiltaiii.
- not . aslanms 4 rt . ' • '. - ,-,,:•l'‘4' : . - - * ;. ...-"* . j .. T''' . '''' . : :7 ! .. . ' ... i i4 !
:,.. I ugderiiiio - 01.r., 1"; ... k:otilitiiiiVitilibiligt'
'..liian:' . -Ote I ';it - 11 -L iriii.Al
, blitiiiit.: -s '.'`. l tit o *l4 cootie iai , lii;iviiiiiiii r ,
fOitli i . . - : . ; ;144; fkati. 'etigilit 1tiit t 0,‘,614;: ,. .,
.itoic.; :,, ,.o.'t ihrk - desitlif • .?•..*l'tti t if&V! iiii'd lit
: 7 c4toi*'''.;o;',.riiiki iii - at -4014 ThiAte; 1 4 161: e 4 ;
4
~„,,...6,...,,,,0iiikie . ktik6:oliitiatiCieffieft:
••:',6oftirilVtt.*.:-: f , .tlte• - iiitgrii ;l 4o44Vllo4. ;
°tm:,iteeiitilfitiitei)i .. : $34-iitiii lit•OillYI 4 % :. it: kill: .
otreiiWititlitricliiiiikdri! We hti.. ; ;aidetA*,-, rfcW7,
4ill:llooliiiiiiitieVii:.f '. iOn's tile i i ii.oini.:ll,r ,
i z e*. i . c . l6 V - sixaix.Oreili . - W. : 605404 he i t
litiiir'ibetiiie.* - ttiftifel ..- 4.oo'4'ir.iiidihsiiie!'
iitirtlieithie' - iii, '
.40 :Ia . ~,,,,,,os„.
2
kiT 841 , cOliilOriAiii#6B *;;'intse4i 41;61r On'
:hand . ';'ottie4liaiiiii'. '''n . i.if
__ -i recl to' be,
tin - fin spia..t . ' 3110 .. stlid, iiilidrifilitifiy . . .gld
tidiii.rwrill'iliiiiiilVd' thinit,':'.lhilittig' . recoveil
ilierOltittlla*Vienc• - If '' . ' - ii- iiiitilliYffit• anabittice,
tkiiiit'aik*.Waiihn . ' ' ' 'it titedleid*Poierii4tio . 4:
a oil'evii'aterifi'fAilia: 6 2 l"fikteiitiMti!iegalll4.
Wbrlt itratr. iiiiiiiiii# ii 4 7..tiiiTeiehOlii;,l4lWe
met . ,ol4l#; ; fir whit ' 'tim e . 110er'aft*iiiiii€OV
Chita' Ottirkbe a iiinght; tkey . j)i66liiiiiilit.ii,Vriiii . k:
*h*.fiktiritla stmi44 . d Were reioler Iltri •• .''.
. , • • •• -
" ;:g ll 9 l o79ffeill'aOlea .0. 1 444 , r . ' 3 ,5::: N ob,.
/
T'. 1 %.) 3 0.. dirAiles, . 11 /.4tAiit, l o ..•:, . - - - Ok:
I 4be' it poi#4.. 4:10i,..14.1146'04a1 1 i.iii.:,::
,tics,h,!
1. cowl d . etiailji. lieve . ..iiven..lfi t tßAC - di4j - , e.aktvifs.
what .gpcid *oil:lilt haififene. A to,..is:';' ''. lam:
Of ii4 .- Mieji . ,'%iiiliiiiylitiflitil ' lit.•ogtiiOltii'Of
ti
! . .Myt:liO•i , ertylF It .wii-Xicillflivalit'of?ffiggibliofge
, .
.tittainitre:noti,.elthotigh•rokiAepiitaionhirffillx
• _versitg..:44,been.far,mo*bilillieo.‘;
.1 j. '...,;...;:;:,..,
!•$.14 1 .44 1 1ii! . .5aid. he; is % 1;11
,8.14.ted , tO•reply,
egyotOuive.'done but little for the ToOkzeaTer :
the webs of 'Syria: ands the cowaV.Egylit Will**
be of much u s e to . hini; But d 6 Yott - ifitii***S'y i
yott.hnve•given . him A little'? • Ilifcatittelcru liave
yotirself . received .so little: He Wholhas:,reCelired'•
much, "gives liberally. • • ItyOtt: had the LOrdJestis
dwelling in:yoUr :lrearti;' , yout•vrould have' .ofleired
the - . same heavetak< tent4t4o'the•pciot 'leaver:"
"Ah ! *opld• indeed: atit:l'hadlilml" 'I ear
nestly exclaimed : . ' - ''''. .... ' - .
"That Ido not do ~ continued my uncle;
"but one . thing is
.laclsing in
,you;-ypu would
rather.not receive ktm. as, a if.rec ) gifi, ..and this is
the.,louli, wit): ,j.i,k.iibii#li.tho ,Saviour..
.04.4 A, be.
stewed: lle is .4 . 00 of pr* - „'aipd te:be.lrad,pn,
no othe r ,tero.; $144 ;Ill . & . 1 1 4/9t•ifit PF44,91 , of :
434- in the wilderness, iiP . 4 - ; B 4,4 i erverM Ora, kr
absilllte' filled,,'..litif yOcretheit:A iy • 2110unt44.1";
my ftioo,. it must be brenglit;•l3)4;'tind,bgeoina.4
.v4o 7;:kl. f t r'e. .:4.l4`;'i eice ;Pf:.#9o;;;ltigql l l,4 * *9#
ricer, ca n "flow ' 10,0 it,---41;tit'Uhspeakab e gift,
- - 1
VISPITgIir
Douro. GOD.
IP) our 1 11.06 1 4 came
Ilionght
Sadao - to 'be a weft.'
that yesterday's
her, anck . that she•. re:
{ad= not > heard' it also.
ttionsht the minister
i "aid , take the pipet
"to)hilo."
'who walks with .
- •
ty in -church, liltening
•x• had. been alinoat ouf,
the disconhe had
4 . t0.pe l alnanst void
had,gartiou-
Oiefi; and-I
length; "yo4-halrp
gcimnabdiate)y':atid
to- -the*ino• Pt the
.lijit;il&k: His
viOti oirdes foiry •Frobriy.
; - -thought it-as
, by her,tlasira that
rald.Alial:ern,a4oßg-.
.piri tual : thi nen 84
I,latatioir s he proceed
tlite to ..JQ9kon
'o4ottilikt,qing
:he - shattabi .with
weaver)
firipa*ntly upooa.:
-felt at letigtlt 'Aka
,pur,ppse tovolthigh
various. r. ligslavns-,i'A
le save. tciet,laco
ile tie.l6:3; l episakipg i
Sew liorde; , ,the ;tire
. P .11elpf
. I ever. be •abl.p-
Aff
4 - e- 4 0 1 0 1411 #
g wOavipi, V'
clackl„eliok-T,l4eitf•
ittyltlis;<<3n Da•
geekkfrrriectio.he
ixtpleoplli
.
14.06...gubJed‘ , -
-,tol(VAoshe was
Vitaditti.Okoccadittli",
3 4 16 4 3 4 . eitara4V
:ink.; Oh.: Wm !veil!
vai Altew
9opek*DkrOaeallit
-4.8 mu'olVittep*-ia;
*is
MY-•lStkir.. 4 l' o ! l l 6
me'mopdily re. ii
• •
Javerp:ona
the ocprivt• Phonic*.
or.***lring him.
,"*. Aid
whioh is better than all the linen of DEiElltiBolllllii or
the choicest of the royal Pharaoh's cattle t . '!.:..,,
• After this conversation with my uncle-.;m.
mained for a long time silent and .tlOnglfil.'
"TIM mountain must become a valley!"
words rmwmfed constantly in my ears. .I , feli'plin;
fully„conselous.of the infinitely .superiar spiritual.
attsipments of my ,uncle and tba,4,,besidS
. his;
litboys,,my attempts at evangelism were,but as the.
ftiftif.dropPings of tie:eaves, gear& the clear, pel
laai fibaring..or .a jpetentlial.. stream. My. heart .
•stwrie : stUbbtrrnly and lthpapiiiiittlY:..agaitrst the
fziendlyprickles; bag fetiOwiltbstandirig, that
with.all my wistimiitami:Aitriiiiv,
tiggiti and as rpiiA recei
b ve t.,l;t:eiift,ol
... . . .
• , :43110141111.10.• •
- •
••
• T h o mas , •S
•it re ;OT
land,in 1711,170n4hT
ih•
46n •at Chris e, tlB5-: 1301 1 .:
g,
oo 0: .
began! Jiii . :•114717.158,. just -istii•Veitaiiiftk.-ihti...--1.•
moval to. the i.netr4olis..
.setne.....be.**6l#4o'
were thretwu up
He hid' heeii frequently ihAti)d te..die"tier,pertfea
giveii oby . Boiiits
acing of religious conversation; ..! • •
On ones.hclioce,staion Scott inveighed
costliness and
. luaurioushoss of - the Vittuclti.prepered •
.
for the compa ny, which he thought were very much
out of place• considering - the purpose for• which
the_ d ihocr , beep__ given. , This_ epeph.,..gave
offenectinit:•the invit ations .ceased } ' to include' his
nanie! , '-The entertainer of that,partiehili :
• vitAti44m,Oficiethore.ohly.iand theAse.4 . lefose.Atim, •
it*ly eMI selelh:4pfer-.1. 44eg.,:tikfi •
• this unfOrtenate - Airlde;
the iitiOcati4 .: -ftinii Rii3pii4l
ckeb hiadb
• fa. L**ißg ., , - 11* . effered.:
thAF. I IO/,1,9
• filingiecT,CPAturiio., 4 014 4i0n.
to this he Wittt,'W
irlititl 4 ltY be large,
• titthilittibitti-1g,004 0it 7 ,a;910, $30 7 , 000 • to .
,:P4;000:,--.. : -.0.riginally only a hundred of the , weekly
:-.i!}0 313 ...Qr5.fer4 Pre? ;41i00,i40 pr ogress
of , thO t w o rk , the publishes Rgreed. to
73 > f ad f a , ~tud forty ., but, one hundred'
itd!Vjaeblih o.ttr • miere ac> matt leaned; the — Jaet
111$0.f6tiiiiktAiii . *ithoett'enpensei. **O.
.thoasis . cteffivOttitika ut,6l,o.o4 o werpgimkitivq:
o `all thi.ptirchaters of the' •- .. toreilotts - :pttiite l thA
i 70. 11 ,1 . 111 e'n 1.;9 1 ; 1 4t4u1 1 9.t - t ....: * I
When'tie AsOftei4Ctensethele UT flak.. I
ed, We'
, = tfOritelfifto ed4anee.iiitmraotrey.*let:.'
• fi9*;.2o,ooiircra,ltsll l l9i4i-Wirie%4o.9Ptcretitiei
copy tifhiiise44;oo.;
I
' . ;iiitlOciislti c iOA' , it . 4.4l3 - ir:44eliftiWcrin'tfiii:orali
tit ) titiliP.OfkAC# 36) 4o ol #9*4
l her it;Ap,: , ..imoot Atte,
fakilit h eY4dieiicia•Afttr.:;Boecif.lltirviii . .o6Y.i:l4.
.444:4iPi'ditiir
nflice:•OhriSheti,.diziqiitgivtieo..sclitelf:414
itentihdtr rikeiftitnct: .•Mrl'Stiost.
bought
Ora* the"tttWt.•AlVtrelilicr.
4 t t g.*3;‘
liiiiao.6o9-,.4 3 4o44l l oftarrift*S44. l flll9ktki ,
HO.0??1P.io • 141.1: Pet*.ivrkil .-00,..10010P164: into tiro
wits a great.
;#o,noyatiee; .kept
p3O 4f; 'yet`
I .. to:lhtkiedVantage of 41:16.retnintetitaryilihicit was
: improved'. and exteadtd. by the author, and after. a
While,'. rinted on his own ageount,'„the
. 6cookaellers
having assured him . tgat wey:.
..•g6 it did, and it preigigd: tO•retinlinirsh
I..Vicitis • .lotses,.. rintiiithetitidibethit'eipen sea Win'
I • nearly ss,ooo3ilectri , tifitil , a 'wave Of the don:liner:
dial-.world rolledioverAhtibark and threatened -to
on gulf.hoth.,Cot*entaiter d C,oVr.ptetor.. .The.
•
price of . ,paper and ;cost of
dfiii4l.if . j• the
at C'Sti.ditiO•iiitOtilifeciafaiAtltitt*i.loliv;
uftiat 'sale' illiti4hilleteilitiorl
This ••oconpied . the, I **,fe l ni4soz-,.togina.-
rn.-1 1 ;kobb9 8,914ibq - 90wiitiitiNtilli4.-,ppt.90..
viho t m,pe ,eui:iunair'eT •the , o4:isdsOnzba'Ak , tay.
lktortit4el46"_ *V 'hbigfe, italt,iiii lii k hiCAfont
; fitaftfiiilillt &dr ireiltildiii4liallAiellifillitecsi* . '
Wiiiiiditlirdeadad* . ,ithiAnitikalli'linseorySiits
A11.0 . ,...in , fiver- of Mr.-4,o4ijil li ,thp,iujurkstide rise
ye triosted ,Ar, s.wApipidikiiiisiiitilvet4o,9oo
bttliidliaud,.. tea Wakirstontsrtia;4iiiklieisfexed
...it tEe . diit9eri."ViitrifiiiWeilivtli . fi htfoltbieie
litppote.crlt have ' ekkiiild,4l,Yinh still oeciiPieff :
...I.he•tocarrsellbre shelien*singiiiiinstance tufhel
.ii**.4ft.eig,14A46 14 :•1,49] ) . is. f. ..;P this dis
104.8..i'lieN41trPAZIOt:alti‘f404*.A70g"117
Etquiiiest-nge;Vdit he ,inatnreylegari to y earn
16Wiltd,liCi44-14141VAtiitiitiniiirtii6i4 iiiiij
' . lgiltifigitit t ile - 4,4ti.iio*S4iyliiiiiole'skiiibir-;
. ' it*: _ .
_...* ViiiiiiiiigetirbenevOksat . of ' li 'SA he.
1 * , K -. 00,,.„ . 4t.i:i9g.: 1 1 12 ..j‘41 1 ,40g*.1 9 -4w friPnda z t9
r. , - '-1 ylo„f#,:f4pppgiki.., t kiltilhenlogical works.
1 ;IV,: 1- .te.Ost. ! 4?1:t ethe!opiiktnentiriwaa'
t ri
4 '. MAK6V V P, , 14 : 44 - ' if6n. Atin t i A CliOree
iq aftiilt;i4i,
)
060.40040 4 Inlitx&ieruppiteds. :This...result was.
l'lrAlT9gt"f-sTne:4ifiltuat49.4lFisitudex about
Alt 00,bekides a consiastaksjsun .4* 43 books,
mifi..4. l 4 l *:'‘cilini .§550 'a i sl e a-4sasgiti WM . itiistol
104'70 6 1 and oriliri for irn,,, ' .oe&eiliies'of his
*twit& - In a trery`shOist reneived nearly
limo in donatibos,4l4llarg§ orders for his books,
• leaving him better l off:tleSn. >he ever had been in
;his life,,„ .., .. . :•• . • •
~
'The'iiiiiininrili lifiiii"undergobe in the preps=
:ration of the-613m4eiltsitil4ii's iiroffigiens: ' ft
was• necessary' to;constat othevanthrirs vatensiVelY; ;
.to compos t , ; to.. weigh;•• to adopt or reject their 1
, A)PilA9' 3 '! ,o P sgVA!:', l PTIOPIPI O4 9 CiPPIrPrS49 I
• and on particular passages; to examine the original
11 Amignei of Scriptiire; the Hebrew 'and the Oreeli,
!,botisidealliii . labor' Of ' conimitting his condi:46l*U
1 iwilting, .antikrediaing and . copying' fOv thsrpYess:
II :3 • All men, .who are, required. to •furoish a certain .
Amount of thought periodically, come up to the
:task at one time or aoottier . with - orilheilty . and
. nffering, :- film' editor, , and Oolimajferapt. ei.
• 'ample, often .do. their wor.k.witb an oohing : 4)ll:T.,
The inexorable dimintiorniiiiitteiset,;the u eipikoiht;
meet. 113 ust:' be' fillmi; ' I . thevarlilleene. moat , not`he'
disappiointed: Thus 'with' burl confined:tater:- Eler
MAO Manuberilttluusttbills.ftiished 'weekly., wiee...
.ther he.was well, or i 11... There mtiet.laile waiting:
for ' tliii. fivored monstents - Of ‘ the angina% ":4: 08 1
offal Ild blithe; .60 •di UChlee t hlsiie; if lit 4the' nO . f. 1
the must even trudge iity elVerilin lin& dillq;wilik - 1
he could not, like: ' - -
~= ;.,: - din
•°Q:~aiilldte~or•'ttie~il~ ,
Fly; o'er.' thes,bentliabaurh , *dfikim along:therstaitr."'
On at least ,;:me:oeekgichisthe'istjr tottnitireliuMUL:
script reached 'hitewafter hil!had. Tatired ,, foe. the'
night, and he bed
to supply the d'emandT t onhe 'printer. "On the'.
whole, he retriailta; ekitut ; belieire feW
pereiis would hlte4finitid'ooirtige.land 9 phitiiitteity'
to struggle thrtnigivalb the •diffniulties;of tan vatit .
an ondertrdtime;„ In Whioh most oPus,Wilkeuliky L
concur. " Courage, and pertina4t, I I ,t
wordy in alb sense in which he uses tfi z eingrand
to hitiowhtitwobldteekkonivlhdiquirOaliditt 61-.4
work.: ,
c .: e.
riffilffill
• "4" • • • 1?'•
ie Amvam, am to Tease a alike . t a
Ailairstan d: With "fliad'irr what'dir eBtidn' he Will,
mpkt: necessarily,. his back utionthalf .ofotha
world.
RE*: - •
MIME
J.• •
PAPAL
. . . . ...
.Tllr4 - GENIE _AN") PA ,C H U RCHES.
The rommins vrticle, translated from a late num
' bei of the Star of the East, a Greek newspaper pub
-- 'Milk' In lithedis, presents an outline of the 'chief
1 diffaition betitinen . the Bonilla 'and the Greek
•;,:"...:a: .( ostearstinsu the AS*prenuwytt:-Ihe7eop
c l ir erPolotd,Ch.goh, hOlds that. the Pipt i s the
on lead, iyr ile Cjiiireh; the 'inceessoit . nf the
: '..ttPaitliti - Plitai; lead the Vicar of Chiiit tiirearth,
Inaitiitit refitlielivbil and 'bell, to thiti what
...iieVlT;he.4loBo-1)f, binds on earth shall be loosed
7. or46,kitidjp: kiliylm;- -thus; he is, regarded as infal
,:dikkii.. and his
.14eirpti,,upon disputed, pointa,bas
.nicita" authority bind the testimony of the Italy
APiiiiiigialleibielvl t is. ' : ,
.; - - 1 ' ireeVrttilik , Cliurch, on the contrary; maintains'
: 411tutibritib did not leave any _special vicar on
nartkp:but i that all bishops are representatives,
~.. *ll4 t i rope is only a simple bishop.
. Von'aiefng ' tie • Procession of the
i s,
. • .. .
40 14 4111Kinlalitg*.10).de ..thittelhe.goly. Spirit
, PATPeti4IO:IPII from the YetheriAnit.eleo from
the §,94.- , ( The:.Greek dhurett p on the.
.pth . er,hani ,
maintain the Holy onbiKol
tliOVt4hit.".• -' . ; ... . k . ..
• • in: , Colneknititg - the , Unteavenod , ffricill;. AM
p4e;:igioino of "the Bivad only to..tlie.,.:Laityl ; r:t ••...
A
• . ; , i ..j.p the celebTatip,o of ttle,copii9pipti r ttlif..Paind
. ..IChurcia uses' unleavened hread; aod permiii the
• iai!,y.to partake smly of this; the, GreeirCliiiiiih
uses leavened` bread; ana''givtia to the coostatnii , "
oanterboth the bread-and thn:widifkietttembritton
of:tche death.of Christi ' . ~.., -,.,,',,,,,:.-,,,,:- ~•;- .:
; . .tr, • • Concerping,toe.....Resc . o., and
• ritigatoria,l Fire. • • ..•
The Papal Church Vela, thfi. j ii 'tlie fu'tur'e'
461.1d' there - are thtee .nenditimit t'• of
eternal happiness for the .righteous.;. .2: Thai? of
Sternal ,punishment for the *eked, And the
.
Penitent ; intermediete. : siste'foi .i.hatzutols
of ihOie Who haie repented; ; libt not in . time to
sh'o i i t heir rePentattelf•tiltie.piesent life lifgeed
• Tait dotillithhi lit - fitilled• the fire of
• Purgatory?. or:the ,fire which , 5b .a tinie,
purifies ,soulsfrom .thedefilemeo.t sir' ' ' . and .thus
pcepafea, them 0. . „puler, into
of
In other.
iveida k cenaiiiiiik is' One of temporary' pnnish,..
eiri;.• *feted :by 'the - Lord . . upon the snide of
• - Wae 'Who lupe repented before death, but have
• i.ioVitime o , ,,perforiu: good works, and limitedito a:
certain duratron, at the end of which he. permits
' *hem to enter • into everlasting mansions. 'l'he
art elr Olititah;' nit! the other . &nick holds Jilt
there are
,conditions; that of those Wha
: 41 . 064'4 , 4d' Witiof these who will he Priniehedt
400111::$regeid:t:i tliOse who haie repented', bit
.
1 . 101 . 14 te'p'erform . good
- - .on'tinitestir4 . tittlielgiterveritrtoffof.deithi the
forgheeix st
':ilfe - ^iPelieili : Ohtent'of confession; add 'that
intiiiiruothi r eg' tor their 0 -after.' Oat;
; ...The4e`piaitt, defedoei . of
• • : elfttrOtc sikt'thakthesefeeliOi.rejeiirtheerignie;
'f.P'netheY . tinicce
torthe-Pri - eatiqM'e* that they ma gay fiit , ilin`
• dend , ,i and eptbrmrffia sea, and atiake Opplietationsf
to- Godl, anti 'o4.:itluni.leri liMuirf-of
':the , depart!zitil. vnileit" sihtilleti :that thet-liellefe
f their ti(olllllt'a.risitl tOtiteAtsand . : phit:they-easi
•
the e - -ineeds'' bider ilitinotrditioit;.:tliat
ier them holy; •Pdeishiheiit, end' lot ;y.
iiito hasven3:lo:itt is the:Bam( iT4h
• toritil4e 7 ,
keilidias'ilteiri4tindifad4lifftlre:l4P4lll43l4o
nr;
:V... Jointer. iherebabereliof •
7011giti1 impoSes . the 'condition of
•,
celibacy' en. liar - 0144i:4 I.lk the Greek • Church
leavittftlrectuAlooiWa umerie'd or . 6ri ahtetr
rigid;Vv, ! deed , , - -at - - the' ptegent, time, so far ae
*loin . .free Greece; license is given•
be: ordained 4t priesti . unless he is'
1 . - - .11 • . •
• Arr. erni.ng the-mice!' Granainiagiii,..iti.
Churches and in • Private' Houses. . 4. •
•• The Papal Church, as it is well knoWti, use irk'
churches and in private houie.s, graveeand Molten
images of Christ, of .the ViNin; and of the'mirits
. r. awk:angels ;; the Greek Church uses only piethres.
7 . VII • Conderning. the' Huly-:.•,.3eriptures. •
IllreWspel Church' net only . hinders thediStri- .
t• 'Outran Of - the .Holy •Seriptnres.9mong the peophs, , -
bet also punishes' those. who theM, - - in the
Stateis:64lA Churobilini Naples; a'tni insAustria,'.
With.inipiisentrient, and' other eiviFpenaltieliV.end .
other kingdoms, wherelt cenntit use ihe.tiini:
sword, it uses Spiritual weaponslO:Ohe on 4
The Greek:Olitirdb.7 liOiveve4s 6l k 43 4. 6 .oP•
. ilkpeopleLto..read..tlys f l44.:seriptaoooWai:
, self - dlStittit*: - spiiVAIWA t
teriv- isq,rne tlrit therd l WeiiS Seine bositkamte.
::..ctiotsjotordiodri, h ave deolin Mn' 44'0'40. •
09:1`,APPAPailk 4 .4•1',.. • resPee . ttilci:4lii
• .abbaecii, bat the 42eaR. - Gypelc.Clio4 is i&
:: Wei'. * .
- , *tie 240'i *6117 ittt • •
4gAtid•there'shilf.he
woulA jou kWh , 41164 1 1 fa?
in my Faber's , horle;- in the' tangle& propaiedlbt
ate - there. lam *here I would; be t -. wtiere , I;
' long and „often ,wisbed to y tte,,nß.louger op a stoOsiy
rk d'q
sea, hit in safe domegjiiirAoi.,, My working.
lty:sowing`time
. is done, and I am reapiO.•
. o.:P'11 - YloSi'is as the' jay
'of harvest. • Wthilitlt - Ulpid*Totr it is 'with the?
'I- am. made 'perfeet . bOinetvi;: grace is•swalloived
' 'up, in ,gloryi .# The top-stone of the building is
i brought foith. Would . youlipoir what I am doing?
I see He l ie; !Ott as through a
glasS• darlity; hitt facie' to' face; ina the Sight' isr
tranaformitig, it' makes me liko I- am •in the
- sweet enjoyment of my. :blessed Redeemer, my
;iri e fid, m y Husband, whom niy soul loveth ; and
'teas Willing'to part with all. I
~atii`•h'ere,
here, myself at the spring-4111 d
: .heavenly pleasures' and joys. unutterable, and',
''tlicreYord, Weep not, for me. • • "
r tow ,here, keeping a perpetual Sabbath; and
what that, is, judge hy yinlr short Sabbath.. 1 am
heie,'Sietag' hallelujahs incesantly to who
. sits upon the throne, and rest nbeclaiiiiienisl4
from'. praising Him. Would ymilinoW'
pan)! I keep? Blessed company; lettet than:this ,
b •on earth. Here ,are ho,ly_angple,. and the
spirits of juseMen . niade perfee.t. J. am set dowo
t~iitfi`'Abtahaln; `I the kitigilorn .
"Jof , aul end:Teter
Md.:oll4le 'saints; 4na (fere r nibee
...,witti.riwiny,ol , .my Ott acquaintance§ that'lffaSted
aaa.ipprayy~ed with, who. wont., hither, before. me.
will you keirir,fini . loog lide is to con-,
?ti, rlandiktierii3teiliith'cii, a ertiwn
: /of glory that fades not - \Aftei millicuis and
.of ages, it-will he as frisk as it.is movir
and, therefore, weep not for: me. •
• • 44 ..9R0Va1ri."
Take thoisibtlor your life, ghat ye shall eat or
52.5":
Thi.4 " tAire bo thought,' is'vertainly an bidet !
quote .translitionl, in our' present'English, of 'the
Greek .original. The words;scein to exclude 'atid
4.414tur just for"ward•looking care which'be-•
10* mauyand•. diffecencets„liiin from the beat4s,
live only in the present• and most English
.'eritiCs . hi've lamented the inadvertence of 'our au
,:thorizod varsibt; WhiCh' in" bidding 'lli 4( tikes n'o
thought;':': for the 'necessariesfoF , life, prescribes to
tts 17411 i .18 : ? impraotioabletirt itself and would be 'a
•
breach o f Christian duty, even were it; possible.
Bitt`the aiinoinadvertencehere. Wheuour trans
lation was made, "take no thought" Was a perfeet:
ly correct - rendering of. the original. .".Thought"`
was then constantly used as an equivalent to anxiety
49.—Whole No. 214.
or solicitous care, as let us witness this passage from
Baeofi:—" Harris, an alderman in London, was
put to trouble, and diettivith thought and anxiety,
before his business came to an end." Or, still
better, this from one of the "Somers Tracts:" (its
date is that of the reign of Queen Elizabeth,) "In
five hundred years only two Queens have died in
child-birth ; Queen Catherine. Parr died rather of
"thought." A better example than either of these
is that occurring, in Sbakspeare's Julius Caesar,
(" take thought and die for. Caesar,") where "to
take thought" i 8 to taks a matter so seriously that
dsith enifilesi
THE DEATH OP VHARIES GOODYEAR.
" i knoir well that it ii written in the Book of Genesis
that God created all things in six days.and rested, on the
seventh;, but for all dist, God did not create these things
to leave them idle; therefore each performs its duty ac
cording to the commandment it received from God."
. r ' " . " Itirasraili-PaLissi. •
. .
s.
We are called ,ripcipj . th alifoniele. lie ecease,
diking the past' -Wiedl4 .4 bf 3 ffiliiiii,lili Se genius,
whose patient-lebbr, Whede . :liialck',ilia& pritatiots
haye.placed.himigoremost its the. litit r .of American
inventors., Igr. : Chsiyhas Goodyear siied in this city
Oil the lit nitiiiik after a protracted illness. The
nib:6of this great inventor has been familiar to
the'. public for many years; yet few out of the
circle 'of his immediate friends have known the
story of a life so-full' of the strangest, vicissitudes,
ennobling by such a self-sacrificing and . n ever-tiring
diVotinn• to one'dhject, lia saddened - by so many
sotrirlit that •it donciiis like, a romance as well as a
reality`_" ..He lived, itiaeed i io . see his bright dreams
realized ;. -he ; lived to, see the .almost worthless gum
With which the, savages of Central Africa smeared
their bodies a s a, protection from insects, become
a stap l e` of abliniserce, 'digit:lying for its transport
shilidid.eVery dea; giving. employment to thotisands
of Workmen and Millions of Capital, and entering
into„,thetirts, the sciences, the daily uses, and the
meehinical industry of the bighest civilized life.
The roan who accomplished all this has lived
with Ont PtirpoSe. or in vain. Yet it is impossible
• to give • any consplete , idea of the Priee:paid for
these great results—the long toil, the Suffering so
cheerfully endured, the:privations : which-none but
a sot .of, genius, iliving ou his dreams ) could have
broil*. the.-f'ailtirea,..the 'dif.,Ainointirismi, the snor
ti&iiitidii'addlfAdksirtiilicli darilkdt list do late
that; it WasCnolonger iiiitiVAtiljny, for.
..Tsl.ooo. e tti king piii o t.;tiCv.oodyeargs :Cha
racter Was his sunny and
,cheertatdieposition... He
ilia it life of Constsnit strughle,:'.Ge..Wis involved .
:in long and painfni laWsiiite With. thiWilio p irated
.
his inventions; he was neceisarily brought . in 'col
lision with mere' Conbected with him or.
opposed. whim in : business; •• many lost,money by
the cOnnection . ; but such.was the impression made
by thiS simple-minded;iSmi , ,,euthissiastie' drearder
that, at the
. hottr'St'itt4.lo t 4l*,.. le had • no enemy
living:: 'Hie . geneitsiey,'h '
~.. l kiit
ed 'iffection
dait
ate nature,. his eatnestnes6.7 ..ifathnsitiam made
him friends everywhere,.anOksilvas fortunate, far
beyond the usual lot of :mdpkerteiting neither
: hatred or envy . : or,ifialiCe..... '....-...,•• !. .
, e presittitiWilitiClieitoiy'Orthis eventfullife'
W TW: ilVlAmidepiiblic in some turd foniud mode by
the. friends of -hisfamily,,and. we:will not attempt
loAsUji•trace the progress of his inventions. It
ins . in,lB34.that Mr. Goodyear, turned .his atten
. tio.ii" fo - the manufacture of India-tubber. There
; . ivii' - ' . iin3let.driYaboutr, this tropical gum which gave
ii intr./Inge charm in his iinaginatior. It wasnot an
article of cook. erce i but appeared from time to time
dilly 1113.* raKei , ' riosity hi:ought froinforeign . lands.
Offelilitk - '. 4 , :: IpaZatit - Vept! . - ..*nmode of its
thanufaeture' ii profouud secret. ' IV Whe found . only
Stilletthetnitii in Simi of theititiatot;ln the gloomy
la t iVampeof..the tineiplotoil Amazon or the jungles
'Of Asikand.Africa.., Its ; nature was las mysterious
'is its origin ; the,eliMists who.. examined it Were
baffled in their atfenriesto iniike it of pfactical use.
Ingenionaidecn, Ofdidaiiiiitionie, had attempted
'o*litit . theitpiiy,!-but . all' had failed: That it•
leas , of:' in in the arts, to supply a
ithonaitsid - 444tipf ;civilized .life, was obvious to
all; but, th4*elAtic - lum kept its own. mysterious
'secret and there vliisit6, eine .tO the. discovery.
Te'diiie6Ver tliiiai6tBi; and solve` the ptibicni
became the dreinn ofOlistl'l6fGoociyear'ilifei. . The
difficulties and failures•whitilvie eneduirtered• only
made it. more: deg to
. him...He allied aid, from
•.., . • . . . .. • .
men of of snienceihtit tricydisconntiod him; - his as
,i*Jlius iii6a4o iiicpyieali ifilpair ; hii
'friends' Orib 9 iffeil another left:l6li, litit be . ,oirly
'clung the alosetto` hit cheri s hed 'fifth; .• IV obi of
1 the conteataik.. , which pirates of. his: indention
Istou,S* .te,,filifluim of his rightN, the iediwaslialf
'Witllkiivin' from the' life ot. the inventor, and a few
.:41361111etf the pii. ! iiiiiee'i- iihiehlie endured . were
-g140 4 : . Heilitiatiii‘eddi extreme penury that his
ishdtwas sold froth under him; he was's° poor that
i',:f,*as ,, said...he could not' buy an ounce of tea on .
.. .crellit: In the. dead of winter there was no food
4.11/13.hOttie and no .fUel . for 'Are. This was not
he etitigg'hi' Of e - fiii% MOntlis . "olY, 'but it was the
iSicity - Or lairsi;fiirlit Witeikit -dntll . 1844; after; ten
i' , Yeit#l of . toil, thattirei perfected :in& patented•lrie
I, i discovcry, : His labor ;
,brisrper, didlipt.iicase, and
1 'eVen •te,tliehour of hfs.,dettt.h.lielvaa deveted to
:tliefa\erite pursuit if uPo w hich he ia4i - stea the
4iii iiiinige iiiins' Which he reeeiiedlioric his . pitentS.
Hierlife was subject' . itillti istiangost , vicissitudes.
..11eiwent. from- a. poor debtors' ptison: to a- palace
in ; Paris:,
..The : man who was Ito.,•'object . of cold
contempt iii: an eliseure village, on account of his
poisetty, teciiiierthe Grand Creek:of:the . Legion
of Ifinnor:frcini 'the EinieroeNhpdleCn is' a reward
Of his genius. Icr: Estroie as well - as Anierica his
name was honored and his merits appreciated, but
to the, hour of °his:death lc was the same matis- .
siastio and patient inventor. We have plaCed at
the head of this article a beautiful sentence of
Palissy, the potter; Which should ha 'the Motto for
every. true inventor. Chitrles Goodyear has been:
well,
_called; the American galissy,-, and, tohia .: lant
hour be acted, on the prineiple f that G .. od did not
create hits' to leave . him Idle: ' ' - .
THE GREAT STONES OF BAALBEK.
• A correeibonslent of the, Rochester Democrat
and American thus !rites :
Pcom nalifaien a We . weiit. to Baalbek - , and
passed the way therciniita in' of PURI, the
prilicipthisiureit orthe 'Aban a. As we saw:the
cleat: hroadLraihing stream that gushed forth .
all At. puce from its,moantain cave,, and thought
how. ; thati.saTt.wafer was the secret of all the
wegiliegriek! thittieireireled,Damaicus, we were
readY , itd'eet t O the-oxeliiiitation or Nasals!), the
Syrian, PAre . :nbt!Albata acid' Pharpar, rivers
of Daniasensibettef-than,all the waters of Is
rael?" .The
_ij,Ft. j eYren!,ng we saw the six great
coldnine Oflbel'einPla of the. Sun at Baalbek
against the White bfliblitiOn,just as the'san
himself. ) in the west. No Roniasi
ruin;. noVeliett tile temples . of Aintate CM at all
comparein-pure magnificence of outline or or
inament with these splendid relics of imperial
greatness. ( The great stones of 'the. founda
.iogpla'nted, perhaps, originally to sustain a
fOr the worshifrof Phcmiician Baal; have
•servtid to bear temples to bbth Greek and• R
oman gods. Surviving all changes of times , and
religions, 010 , still remain, while• they that
placed theth where they are, are lonk forgotten.
Surely there were giants in those days: Di
mensions give but little idea of magnitude to
Most, people, yet you - may be interested and
surprised: to know that three of these great
stones- each measure upwards of sixty-three
feet in length, and thirteen feet in breadth and
-height. One Is lost in wonder as he looks at
them, and:may well say of the ruins of Baalbek
that "they are remains of the boldest plan ever
attempted in architecture."
Matt. Henry.