Vol. VI, No, .41.-= r Whole No. 300. Nottrg. (For the American Presbyterian.) " Speak to the earth and it shall teach thee :—Who knoweth not in all these that , :the hand of the Lord hath wrought this? Jon zit. 8, 9.'1 Divan's beauty in the morning's dawn, When dew-drops deck the verdant lawn, And gladly falls the sun's first beam On mountain, valley, hill and stream. There's beauty in the Western sky When gorgeous clouds are rolling by. When fades the soft and summer light Before the dark approach of night. There's beauty in the midnight hour, When deepest gloom would round us lover; Were not yon moon and silvery star All brightly gleaming from afar. Time, on its swiftly flying wings, No scene, no season to us brings, That doth not in each aspect wear The garb of all that's bright and fair. Thus let me still in all my ways Declare my glorious Saviour's praised Let every look, and act, and thought Show forth the work .whioh he bath , wrought: A work so fair, though but begun— A soul set free, its race to run, Till, in the kingdoni Of His-grace, It finds its hoped-for restintplace. APRIL, 1862. • OUR FOREIGN LETTER. .Bible Circulation in India—Murder of Mis sionaries-=Madagascar and Radama Progress in Italy—Human Instrumental ities too much Exacted—Ratazzi Pio Nono and hia Rebellious Children—France. and Protestantism-Death of. Austria's Tyranni—lhnument to alluin--English Parliament—Education and Church Rates —Free Church--- Stirling Tract; Enter, prise—Prayer for Ainerica l etc. THE EAST. SlNen I last wrote, cheering tidings have reached us from the. East, well calculated to invigorate the faith, and hope, and love of all who are longing to see the saints of the Most High possessing the kingdom over all the earth. Bible circulation has been steadily increasing in India—the Bombay Presidency —for several years. The last report on the subject says, there " is no doubt that a larger number of copies of the Word of God has been circulated in ,the Presidency this year than for several, years pasf." As _closely allied with this, I may: mention that a tran slation of the Old and NeW Testament Scrip tures in the Gujarati hakbeen com . pleted, and is now in circulation in that missionary' pro vince, iheraa markeliOhimige4s takinglArheftY unfaVorable to: easte•dignity, which, as Spur geon said of a minister he described, might "die of, dignity." One missionary says in a letter lately received,. "inany,of the lighest caste sit with the' lowest in the third class railway carriages," which, I think, is more than some of the pro-slavery Americans would do with the poor men whose misfortune it is to have a blaok•skin. If the idols 'of India are to• be, dethroned and . demolished, it shall surely belly the instrumentality of the Bible, as Dagon fell before the ark of God. There fore all Christians should rejoice to hear of increased' Bible circulation, and should, -61 - God speed to the noble and beneVolent cause in a practical way. The intelligence from China is of a min• gled character—painful and pleasing. The Rev. Dr. Parker, and the'Rev. J. H. Holmes, both Amefiean missionaries, have been ,mur derail:by a party of rebels in the district of Shantung. It may be—we hope it shall be —though it is dark avenue to a bright fu ture, that their blood shall eloquently and successfully preaoh the Gospel for which they " fighting fell." Under the righteous reign of our enthroned Redeemer, who orders the -destinies of a universe whose kings are only ministers of His, the old traditional policy has been discarded as a bad servant, and ,a new policy adopted, under the leadership of Prince'Kung, whose political views are-said to be very liberal and enlightened, for-China. His accession to power seems very providen tial, for the settlement of Dr. Lockhart in .Pekin, where he (Dr. L.) reports his prospects to be discouraging. The bloody Ranavalona, Queen of Mada gascar, and an enemy of all good, has ceased from - troubling Israel. She has gone, shall . X say ? drunk with, the blood of the saints to the judgment seat; and her son, and succes sor on the throne, Radama 11, as inaugura ted a liberal reign, by opening the prison doors and setting the captives free, by strik ing the fetters from the, enslaved, and recall ing the persecuted refugee to his peaceful home, and by granting Europeans access to his kingdom, which was almost as churlish as Japan .used to be. „Education and com merce are to be encouraged, and religious toleration secured, so thatthe natives friendly to Christianity, are beginning : , to breathe more freely, and to emerge: item a forced obscurity . A. Protestant minister from Mauritius, with an interpreter and twenty marmites, native porters, two Amish. Priests, and four sisters of charity, have arrived in the capitol. Pro bably ere this, Mr. Ellis, aniither Protestant, has reached the island. What are these among so many? Surely protestants who, for yearsl have been looking to Madagascar with weeping eyes, shall not be slow to go in to possess the land, and sow the wheat, so that the emissaries of Rome shall find their unwearying propagandism for once outdone. Let Christians remember to pray that Rada ma 11, who has , begun so well may not be hindered, but guided of God to the knowledge of the truth which is the - basis of all sound Ebert-y r and the most powerful ally. of any goverianent. • THE CONTINENT. The amazing progress made for a time in the liberation of Italy from a dark despotism that devoured its own children as fast as theymere born, and the consolidation of the new Italian kingdom under good Victor Emmanuel, has been Checked. Many months have passed, and very few visible'advantages have been gained. No dottbt , there may have been—perhaps I should.say, there , has been —a strong under-current of progress, undis covered by the most clear-headed and keen sighted politicians of the day. -Why the Lines. surface check ? is a question for the thought ful. I shall attempt to reply, only by asking another question. • May it not be the doing of the Lord to 'foam' us against Unduly. ele vating Creature instrumentalities, and to , bring more prominently before the public mind the fact that the battle is -not man's; but God's ? We praise a.-Garibaldi, extol a Cavouri arid eulogize - a.Ricasoli- ' when we should, magnify the name. of the Lord, who has but to stand aloof fora moment, and the whole machinery of any movement is at a stand-still—in a dead lock. Here I cannot help turning aside, and asking, is Gird ac knowledged and honored. as he should be, by the Northerns, in the present American civil - war, which appears as unreasonable and ab-• surd, on the part of those who made the quar rel, as if the right and left sides;of a man should commence a campaign that must end where it began, not in, the destruction of both, but in the peace-breaker submitting, or being subdued, and gonsenting to act in har mony with the other side, and under the , same head ? Is not too much expected from President, and Secretary, and General, and army, and too little from Goa.? Tice sinews of Fear are worth very little without the G-011 of battles. To return from this digression: Ricasoli, the genuine and tried friend, of re ligious liberty, has resigned, and Ratazzi has succeeded him in the- administration. The policy of the present administration is pro nounced to be 'procrastination. This does not look ; and the hopes of the friends of Italy buil). not so brightly since the change. They should, however, brighten 4 - the thought that ifmay be with Ricasoli, as it was with Cavour,Who, after his resignation was shortly appointed. again. It is highly pro bable that this change of ministry is just one of the empiricism of statesmanship which abound in the history of even the oldest, go vernments. It should never be lost sight of by the true, friends of Italy, that "God often works by means which Apisear to us inade quate while in His band they are .64Pcient. -Therefore, we have i nb fear for the issue of Italian struggle, no matter who the may be, so.long at these Words are in the Bibre, the Lord reignetk. The enemies of the temporal power of the Pope are becoming more numerous every day, and they' hate it with a cruel hatred. SeVenty priests and monks lately signed a protest against it What dutiful conduct—the children literally -rising up against the-father ! - There is - every reason to believe, Pio Norio' Could get his brigands to serve these seventy traitors, ,as Jehu served the sons of Ahab,, he would make old St. Peter's ring with a 'ire /hum, as the reigning Pontiff did, when' he heard of the bloody scenes of St. Bartholomew's day . . There was a frightfutexplosion in the Freneh Senate some weeks ago, occasioned by a speech of Prince Napoleonani the temporal power of the Pope. The Prince boldly de clared that the Roman- question should be settled without delay ; and insisted on with drawing,the. Trench„tramps from,. Voine im— mediately, and, leaving -the Italians to do their own business. He produced documents at least two hundred years old, to prove that the temporal power of the Popes has been deplorable. He, however, would guarantee. the financial and spiritual independence of his Holiness. The speech produced - a per fect hurricane of angry confusion in the Se nate-house, and called forth, some highly seasoned replies, in defence of the assailed and asperied dogma which is to the Bishop otßome what a wife is said to be to her hue ..band—his better half.. Protestantisin has increased amazingly in France during the last half century—in creased extensively—in breadth and numbers —and intensively in vigor and power. In a recent article from the pen of Dr. F. IVlonod, it is shown that in 1807 ,there were but three pastors of the Reformed Church in Paris, and bnt two places of worship; in each of which there was but one sermon every Lord's day. What is the 'state of Matters 'there now ? There are forty-eight pastors of different de nominations, thirty-one" places of worship, and eighty-three' sermons weekly, with about fifty prayer meetings • and thirty Sabbath schools. As %to , the whole of France;=ln 1807-there were five hundred and fifty-one :pastors in the Reformed Church, and four hundred and. eighty' in the Lutheran.' These were located in many parts that are not now French territory, 'so that in the calculation we may not repkon on more than four hun dred and fifty pastors in all, of these two de nominations, settled in France proper. In 1861 the numbers were—of the Reformed. Church, six hundred and fiftY-three pastors ; of the' Lutheran, four hundred and five. In 1818 they had one Protestant religious jour nal ; now they have twenty-one, such, not in cluding those which come from other coun tries. At the thought of these numbers, which are so many vouchers for substantial progress, we may exclaim, What hath God wrought? Austria, hussia, 'Greece; tarkeY,l-o landand- Hungary are said to be 'in: en unsettled state, as if their foundationa were shaking. Anstria has, at last; granted religious liberty in her borders, and proclaimed that creed shall not be a qualification or disqualification, for office:' Wehave a saying in :Ulster, 'which is applied ,to a miser who may have unac countably given a donation. to a friend in need, or to a religions object, that he has not Zang to Zive. Withont exposing myself to the charge of being superstitious, I think -I may say, this last deed Hof Austria is - an un failing premonition of the death of her hoary tyranny at no distant day. My heart's desire andprayer is, that it may be eo. The state of religion in Sweden is greatly im proved. The fruit of the awakening is abid ing. The ministry is becoming more ell cient, and discipline is restored—the Sali bith is better obseried, and new Tract So cieties have been fou.nd. The "Ice Palace," as the State Church has been called, is be ginning to look like a warm and comfortable house,. in which. living lawn_.enjoy them: selves, while they worship God in Spirit and in truth. It had been spoken" of at the last meeting of the Evangelical Alliance, in Geneva", that a monument should be erected to Calviw in 1864—=the three hundredth' Tear after his death. An earnest appeal comes from the living historian of the Reformation, for world wide support in carrying out the, suggestion. It is a noble object, and one which should be generously subscribed to by all who love with all their heart the glorious 'doctrines Calvin held and taught. D'Aubigne, and those who act with him in geneva,.propose to build " a hall for public meetings, and for PHILADELPHIA, TAU the preaching ,of the Gospel to the lower orders. This is a much more sensible styla of monument thin a statue of the great -Re former, or anything of that kind, and one to which the Christian public will more liberally subscribe. ". TilE UNITED xm.GDom. . The meeting of Parliament, this year, has been characterized by the introduction of several very important bills, or motions rela tive to important bills. The' Revised Code of Education for-England will most probably pass both Houses, and it is predicted by its Supporters that it will confer great benefits upon the'youth of England. A new system of National Education for Scotland is to be proposed by the Lord Advocate on an early day. The voluntaries are mustering Tor, a Church. Rates' campaign ; and a Mi. Whalley has risen up to take the place of the 'indefati gable Spooner on the Maynooth Grant, While Sir Hugh Cairns has brought 'in anew bill' on Marriages in Ireland, which, if it become a law, will prevent Romish priests from cele brating clandestine marriages, and remove certain grievances ,that, - at present, press on several of the smaller Protestant com munions. Some of the Irish Roman Ca tholic members took exception to a portion of the Queen's Speech, which referred to the general prosperity of her Majesty's` subjects, The said Irish orators rung the changes on the (fabricated) Irish famine I wrote of in a former letter. Sir Robert Peel dashed to atoms-the atrocious misrepresentations of `the objectors to the Queen's Speech. In his ad dress he described a late repeal meeting in bublin as composed of " manikin traitors who were determined to rival, the cabbage garden heroes of ,1848." A member of the House, the O'bonoghue who occupied the chair at that meeting,' felt insulted by this language r and sent Sir Robert a challenge to a duel, a short rand easy method` of - - settling Aisputes, happily almost unknown.noW.- For, this breach of the rules ,o the House„ the' would-be-duelist _clumsily,aporogized, roher, t4n take .free lodging& in the Tower .for Like the Gunpowder plot this Pauline , plot was. blown up before it did anyharm. Guy Fawkes was taken with the match in: his hand, and hence the rage of the disappointed puppet who danced a&-tbe crafty priests pull ed the String. - Oelierns has got few sops of late, and yet he growls .not more loudly than *hen they came , ciery day. The following statistics concerning the Free .Church of. Scotland may_not be uninteresting ;to your.readers. She has 800,places,of wor- ship, 565 manses, and 620-schools. Besides these she hag places of Worship, manses and schools erected by private individuals, at a cost of X 50,000- She has 3 colleges, and an Assembly hall. The total cost'of her huild ingB is estimated at X 1,422,364. Her yearly income is X 264,000, of which £38,000 go to Verily 'the Lord has prospered' missions. her way. it j~l bnilding for the Stirling Tract. Enterprise, at an outlay of £5OOO. It is, fourteen years since he publishe.d-..-first,--tract on -" The Sabbath," and now the thirty-third million oftracts; on various subjects,,ls issuing from the press. At present, the Baitisklifessenger has a circulation of 100,000 copies monthly. None should deiplie the day= of Milan things," who. knows anything_of the origin and, deVelOpMellt Of the Stisling•Tract Enter prise. _ _ - Gospel work goes on in London, without any relaxation, and results reported are most cheering—particularly this which ap plies to many Christians in both this country and Scotland—" no 'Dian has a right to be -idle." 0, that all believers felt this more, and actedunder it more ! Then the power of God's fellow workers on earth would. be in creased- to an indefinite • extent. Reader, what art thou doing for thy fellowmen ?. Ad vise and, see what answer thou art - prepared to give, in presence of the Lord. If uncon verted, thou art doing nothing for Him. - To continue where and as thou art, is to work thy way to hell. Turn, turn, and serve the Lord with all'thy heart, and so thou shaltbe happy here and hereafter. • The recent intelligence from_America con cerning the important victory gained by the North, was " long looked for come at last," and it made many hearts rejoice: Surely the South has been fatally wounded by this blow, and, cannot hold out much longer, except it be like the Hydra, HercUles'slew with his clUb —gain two heads for every one cut off. Many• Christians in these, lands are, crying unto. God night_ and day to bring the heart rending war to an end speedily, and to-es tablish a sweet and permanent peace in which all anirnosities shall be forgotten, all wrongs forgiven, and all breaches heale4se that - the United States shall rise to the dignity and duty of their position, as great Christian. nation, in the evangelization of the world now lying in, wickedness..' DISCEDE, )1108ikTOR. Tun excavations at the buried _citiek of Pompeii,, Herculaneum, Tozzerol and Capua are going,on with renewed vigor, under the stimulus - of an appropriation of money feit the purpose from theitalian Govetnment.Alere tofore Naples hid the,work under its exclu sive care and control, •At Pompeii new fres coes have been discovered, and there is an 'inscription on the Wall of what was probably a workshop of some kind, as follows s "Otiosis Mc locus non est. Discede, Ilforator." This May: be , translated , " This place is noS for 'the lazy. Loafer depart." This inscription is as good-for industrial- establishments, of mo dern times, as it was for , those of ancient Pompeii. Its discovery is interesting from the fact that it shows that human nature was the kame eighteen centuries ago in Italy, as it is now in America ; that there were lazy folks and loafers - who would intrude into workshops and waste the time or divert the attention of the workmeni- and that it became necessary to put up inscriptions, giving a:ge neral warning to all such to depart.—Eve. Pardon is God's familY blessing and the peculiar mercy of his choicest darling ; he hands out other things to wicked men, but he deals out this only to his children. Everyconversion of a'great sinner is a new copy of God's love; it is a repeated procla mation of the transcendency of his grace. THOUGHTS are the words of the wind. (comuuma ANnorapp%llENEFlTtir OF OUR NA TIONAL TRTAO: WE do well to nerve our t'o r rtitude for the endurance of our afilictions i lby reflecting on the happy results of them..ti...Vcotnpensation that shall correspond with site magnitude of our present domestic and p*blic trials, must be great indeed. I need not, attempt tulle - pia them. I will only endesivor to reconcile us to them by glancing at slime of the bene fits which _we may hopeful* anticipate as their sanctified effects. 1. A revived and lasting - recognition of the Divine control over our d;stiny. .In ohr exaltation we were, ai a tation, forgetting God, and ignoring his goverinnent of hulnan affairs. We were idolizing our proud, tower ing - Union, and failing to :give :glory- to God, ,the once acknowledged. ant* of our distin znished--blessings. We wertOlitrishing an almost atheistical indely.., s - ' , ~ We evidently needed 'jug,. `such an- inter ruption to our deterkirating bus we have experienced, to bring-us rto-our moral senses. We had to bodriven to an extremity of per plexity and distress, where God could have a fit opportunity of reasserting ;his supre macy to advantage. , 1 ) , Now we trust that the &pendetice which our rulers and representativiii have 'been Con strained to publicly and . _ solemnly acknow ledge, will continue to MN felt and humbly confessed, to the honor of otO justly offended yet merciful Sovereign. - , .., -.- This change a christianna t tion must realize td be an incalculable be:nefif. 2. We shall undoabiedlY have a better i, appreoiation of our civil goVilirnment and pay more faithful attention to i administration in consequence of this ten' e` struggle - We`had so long enjoyed thout Interrup tion and without much etWe, our precious l ill _birthright, that . w.-e li :li zed its value. .Threatened destrned . ~,,,npneseary—to awaken sS4S9. 9f its w4 l l, . - *to make the people &soaves what they k eso frequently i expressed of late, that o urs s tic best gcv ' erninent on earth. '.' _ '?; :We shall now prize ourtitutions more lighly, as we shall be all ed to expend so tic inh 'treasure and- . billodifo their.preserva tion. A great national dobgto be borne and liquidated by the Citizens, may give a very hbalthy exercise. lt Anan.Prove to be the burden of wings with. xhick i to rise. ;had not. befqre; a snfficient, personal pecuniary interest ;in -politipal concerns to induce due attention to thenit. Our govern- Ment seemed , alinOst Self-sustaining—a kind of automaton, which" requiretinct our special 1 • contributions and supervision to sepport and regulate its movements, aii i .d,ive`fiact become extremelyeareless about.;thetihonesty4ndin tegrity of_ the'men whd, went_ entrusted. with its -administration. - By< isdering ;corrupt office-seekers to handle t affairs of state , welia44teler.t ge - cf-retifit - Ambitious, designing men, Wilk were aiming only at selfaggrandizement, hail been allow : . ed to hold responsibleiand lucrative offices without the fear of being' called to a' strict account:for their delinquencies and fronds: .Now we shall