390 torreopondena. OPEN AIR MLETINGS. BY EDWARD PAYSON lIAMXOND In the history of the church, religious services beneath the canopy of heaven are no new thing. The Bible is full of examples of gatherings for religious purposes in the open air. What a sub lime spectacle was presented at the foot of Mount Sinai, when hundreds of thousands were gathered_ at the 'giving of tholaw,when "there were thunderings and lightnings, and a thick cloud upon the mount,.so that all the people that were in the camp trembled;" whore "Mount Sinai was altogether on a smoke, because the Lord descended upon it in fire ; and the smoke thereof ascended as the smoke of a furnace, and the whole mount smoked greatly;" when " all the people saw the thunderings and the lightnings and the mountain smoking, and removed and stood afar off, and said unto Moses, speak thou with us, and we will hear ; but let not God speak with us, lest we die." Again, what a grand sight was pre sented at Mount Carmel, when Ahab, in compliance with the command of Elijah, gathered " all Israel unto Mount Carmel, and the prophets of Baal four hundred, and the prophets of the groves. four hundred;" when Elijah "came unto all the people and said, How long halt ye between two opinions ? if the Lord bo God „follow him ; but if Baal, then follow him." How must the so lemnity have deepened when "the fire of the Lord fell and eonSumed the burnt offering, and the wood, and the stones, and the dust, 'and licked np the water that was in the trench!" No wonder that " when all the people saw it they fell on their faces, saying: The Lord he is the God; the Lord ho is the God!" 'One of the most interesting accounts in the Bible of a great mass meeting in the opon air is recorded in the eighth chapter of,Nebegdeh) "AO all the people gathered themselves together as one man into the street that was before the water gato. And they spake unto Ezra, the scribe, to bring the book of the law of Moses, which the Lord had commanded to Israel." It is probable the court of the temple was not built as. large as in Solomon's time, and thus " all the people" gathered into the spa cious broad" street that was before the water gate." Only at the door of the temple could the regularly appointed saerifice be offered, but the law of God could be proclaimed, his name invoked in prayer, and his praises sung as well is. one place as in another. it appears that when Ezra was thus .invited to expound the word, "he bi;ought the law before the people, bOth of men and women, and all that could hoar with the understanding.".- doubt there were among the great audience little children, even as many as "could hear with underAtacding." Some of those who had invited Ezra to address the people, built a largo platform, from which the spealiers could be seen and heard; for "it is written" that " Ezra the scribe stood upon a pulpit of wood which they had made for the.pultose;" or as it reads in the original, which 'they had made for the word"—for the preaching of the word. Those who had the management of this great gathering wished.to do all in thek. power. to make tho speaker's words effective. No doubt there were some .good men who thought .such proCeedings most unbecoming to thoselvhose sacred duty called theni to the' porforniance of the holy ordinances of the temple.., But, ilovertheless i the blessing of the Lord rutted upon theirlabors. the: meeting continued the first ilajr," from. the morning until midday," Tara needed assistants, and these were labto Wanting, for "beside him stood" nix _ on, his 404, hand and seven on his left It 'appeirg alsb that the andienbe was so litrg,e that all the ipeople could not hear from one speaker's 'stand, and Iscsithirtemit:pre:aoeTs and "41e LeVites" , at a little distance " caused the, People' to . understand, the : law."! -"-And the -, r people stood in, the .place,'( zie- running fro* one stand` - to :the - 441her "Great sOlenantfr mutt •have prevailed, for, during the invocation, ' 4 ( all thu !people bowed their heads anC4icirehipped- the Lord with their fabegi to the grOuncr." And a& the reading and e x pounding of WO word : continued, it isstated teat II all the people , wept." It does not appear to have been mere sympathy for it is declared 'that- ‘‘ all - . _the: people wept iplien, , they , heardthe,wards of the law." The sight 'of this weeping congrega tion at this' point •moved !the heart of Nehemiah, who began to !speak 'words of comfort He Was too wise ,•, pan, doubtless,:to“ , Nade, peace, *hen then% Wits: -i nod peacct” Mpg likely he •made piiinkhe bfpaidon through Shiloh, of w hom the ' qen., ch. xlix. And so those 'words, "The joy of the Lord is your strength," brought peace and comfort. The occa sion of their joy did not arise from their having the fat to eat and the sweet to drink, but " they made great mirth because they had understood the words that were declared unto them." Had some visitor from a distince dropped in upon them at thi l s joyful stage of the meeting, he might have felt justified to carry back word to his people that such out-door meetings were devoid of all solemnity and only pro ductive of levity .and kindied Ezra was evidently one of those who could say "Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord we persuade men," and yet his preaching did not frighten away the people, for " day by day" the people gathered together, and Ezra "read in the book of the law of God." "And there was very great gladness." Had such words been written then, many, no doubt, would have joined in singing: The Lord has pardoned all my sin, That's — the news, I feel the witness now within, That's the news, And since he took my sins away, • ii.nd taught me how to watch and pray, I'm happy now from day to day : That's the news ; that's the news ! Christ's sermon on the seems to have been heard by ''the multitude" as well as by " his disciples," for at the ctose it is stated that "when Jesus had ended these sayings, the people were astonished at his doctrine." Though he was so faithful a lawgiver, his alarming words of reproof ;dirt not ",drive' the crowds away, for we read, that" when Ho was come down from the mountain, great multitudes followed Him." ,His preaching on this, occasion, like Ezra's, only drew the people the closer to. Him. Our blessed Saliiour was not ashamed to speak to the people•in the open air. Matthew Henry says, " W bile the scribes and pharisees had Moses' chair to sit in, with all the ease, honor and state that might be, and there corrupted the law; our Lord Jesus, the great Teacher of truth, finds no, better a pul pit than a mountain can afford—not one of the holy mountains of Zion, but a common mountain; by which Christ would teach that it is the will of God that men should pray and preach, eve rywhere, anywhere—provided it be'de] cent and convenient." - Again we see Jesus preaching . in the open air by the' "sea side, and great multitudes were gathered ogether, unto Him so that He went into a. ship and the whole multitude stood on the: shore." (Mat. slit) He loved to epeak to the masses wherever He could find them. Though often " the PharaSees and Scribes murmured, saying, this man receiy:qth sinners and;; eateth with -them," Ho could say " I come not to call the right eous, but sinners to repentance." • In reading., the book of Acts, ono can but notice how eager the apostlSs , ever were to seize upon every=favorable. op portunity to . hold` Christ. - ' Novi thanks bo unto God who always csusetla us to triumph in Christ, and maketll manifest the savor of his knowledge by us in . every place," " They went forth and preached everywhere," ':the Lord Working with them, and confirm ing tho word," and being workers , to-; gether with Him." No - Wonder ;that a continuous awaking folloWed:: their What a glorious scene that must have, been at Jerusalem when, thonsandg uponthousands hung upon Peter'ls c iipsl For eight Aays the disciples had con tinued witk. ,: one ~accord in prayer," waiting for the fulfillment of "the.prona-. ise -, of • ihe Fither"." Iwonder then• that, in, a few days after this great open air meeting, the inspired'record tells us that " many of them which heat(' the word believed, and the number - of the men was' abontfive thousand." The account in:AotP . iisit of the Open air preachin&at the " Gate of the. Tem pie" is full of interest and. instruction. A pobr cripple had been h.ealed, " and as the lathe man, which was healed, held Teter and John, all the peOple ran together unto' them ain. the porch., that '118 1 :called SolorhoiCs; greatly wondering." When Peter saw.it he at once seized on thC. opportunity• to , preach . Christ to the ""gathering crowd. He turns their thoughts away from _man Ito the libra; Jesus; and in a few awments when °nee their 'attentioirislzedihe holdrAbliteA.' them wiih:liaving ")iii led the Irnefof Info," and exhorts then]. to refAittad' be converted . that their ;sins 'May 'le blotted out "Howbeit many of. them which heard the 'word . believed.' If as recorded Itom. frWh`atSo ever- things were _written aforetime; were written for our,..learning," then should we not lay to heart these scrip tural leSi r ons on open air'Preitiitiing Po not these Bible eamples more which might be adduced, forma` argument in favor of more ,systematical: and energetic effort in behalf of 'the nu= excavated masses ? Each of us; hovirever •humble, can do , sometthing to 'spread. the. light of. tbe gospel ; among the-`dark, places, of ;the earth, and though We'llaiik not be able 7J meniciainwitivivaua: Y, DECEMBER 8, 1564. . to assist in gathering the neglected within sound of the gospel, we can at least pray for them. The light is ever silent.; Most silent of all heavenly silences ; Not even the darkness stiller, nor so, still,: Too swift for sound 'or 'speech it rushes on Right through the yielding skies, a Massive flood. Of multitudinous beams : an endless,sea, That flows but ebbs not, breaking , on the shore . Of this dark earthovith never ceasing wave, Yet in its swiftest flowpor fullestlspring tide, Giving less sound than does one falling blos- SODS, Which the May breeze lays lightly, on the sward. Such let my life be here; • Not marked by noise but by success alone ; Not known by bustle but by useful deeds; Quiet and gentle, clear and fair as light: Yet full of its all-penetrating power, Its silent but resistless influence ; Wasting no needless sound, yet ever working Hour after hour upon a needy world ' ' HORATIIIS 1301f41R, D. D. BROWNING'S DEATH OF ST• JOHN, Unbelief is the height of folly and perversity. It is the rejection of a treasure of light and love without which man must perish, and which he has but too little time to put to good use in his brief life. The dying evangelist thus continues to speak : I say, the acknowledgment of God in Christ Accepted by thy reason, solves, for thee All questions in the earth.and out of it; And so far has advanced thee to'be:wise Would'st thou unprove tAis, to .reprove the proved ? - • In. life's mere minyte, with power to use that • proof, Leave - knowledge . and reverno• how it sprung.? Thou hast it ; use it and forthtoith or die ! • If man Were not pressed by great practical necessities, if - he had not a - burdened conscience. to be relieved; if sin were not everywhere in t; e world ; if we had nothing to do but peculate, or dream, or romance; if the condition of our fellow-men zero, not one of such suffering as to :demand; the,deal of all the Wicherns, the, Bosts, the liedners, the Muellers, and the organized efforts of all the churches and •missionary and tract and Bible societies in the world increased a hundred fold, then we might with sortie show of reason. devote the. " mere minute" of life to improving and reproving what is already suffi ciently proved, and is, so indispensable to man's welfare as the Gospel. Such is the fair and doiibtless designed ference from the *cirds of-the poet. The morbidness 'of this speculatite craving is further exposed by the Evan'- gelist. It arises not from of proof , 'but' from very abundance. This,• lie shows as follows : For I say, this is death and the - sele death-, , Whena man's,loss comes to him from his gain Darkness_lcom light, from knowledge igno ranee, And lack of fove fiom love made manifest; A lamp's death when, replete With oil, chokes ; . • , A stomach!s when, surcharged with feed, i starves. - • With ignorance was. surety of a,cure. The simiilicity of the .uninstrugted favdrable td" just ithpres siOns of the truth than 'the subtlety, of the morn cultivated.' The maxi under his.. early impressions' of ( . aive in contemplating the,. NiTorks of nu,thre, inquires "of the might c l unceale'd" he= hindthese appear,auceTeceivesa satis factory (answer ; -in the written word An intelligent Will originatea.,and goi(- erns - 111'.-1 " thd hhennirig Go,d. p-reated the Heavens artd'thi3 earth." This is answer enou.b. But wheh he fin* mi g ht still radon - Mei:night, Yet aiksjiSinee night *fiat use of, wilt?" "one source of misfit, he;,,bein iJ - • r Aith.a man's mill anil,a man's might; To:feaeli In little 116 - M the two ebmbind large,--- • Taat man heethrlied''rouid, on himself and stands,. f Nji".hich the peurse nathre,is, , - Admirable description of the wither= ing, -cripplingr self destroying Course_ of the - tinhelioVing Specula-ter I Who are .SO engrossed 'l.n' -self inspection and so indifferent '"te the .- grege ' land pressing,. facts of human Ckikeneii as he and his class ?:,1 And yet,. the - most; conclusive amsWerto his qiieslipiiirgs •is i so teat . that. it should have . anticipated -them— in - the complete structure of his' own being! • So ;with' the grander and dearer . _ subject of divine .love. ' A si &pie' 12i-find ~ . „ not mazed and disordered by the - enb= iletie - s . iif'iin-idle and selfish '4ll-..,it,lsking .;; , ir. ,if.-.behindiethe% Will and the,"Might in naufti' the're `belove as real,'As . they, : ~rests ;F r ith cgmf , ortn . .the assurances of "the yfilitexi- word It fit ' - db ais LOv&' ix'' , ; B t u ;w '' Ytle,MAiini,fitihei,Mpg ,Aliii,j,i love :11{is ilEirisone; r i‘Sinde'sVelilove is everywhere, 'Aild;:sine,e; ourselves .eahrlciVe and would be .-loved, . i "ir,e ourselves make•ilni 1O•ve, 'and Christ ,was •.-. i not"— . - -. ::, . i -'1 thz h , ' : , I How'Shall ye helpAbiltilian: who knowis'hiuil , self - . :.; - ..i- , ---1 . . r,. ; % Tha lio t -rnust leve'ind4Vrould be loved again; Yet, 6 wning,his very oivii:leyk,l:44 provith:fliarist,-- itejecteth Christ thiouyr throuvery risect of Him i' , ~ Itte lamp o'erswims with oil, - the stiOnaaeli Voaded:_so-ih' initiurei, iiiil t - tit:timan!s soul dies.. L Sti • ' presiinglas perverse objections;; though`somewhat - changing his-ground,, the' unbelieVer - 'compares' John s•• Gospel and" the. whole story of .divine love.. to that of Prometheus 'and the gift' of fire' to 'men. . - , , ;,„ : .t.: , .1: _ 5, . :, This fact is in the fable, cry the wise, • •--. Mortals obtained the boon,, much is fact, Though tire be speit iriild produced on earth. THE EVANGELIST. THIRD PAPER. John's " tale" is like the Titan's ; mor tals have the general elevating influence of the Gospel undoubtedly, but it was produced on earth, and the evangelistS have veiled the truth in fabulous state ments. The Evangelist answers that men by thus arguing of - the Gospel forget The very 'primal thesis, plainest law, : —Man is not God, but hath God's end to serve: A master to obey, a course to'talce, Somewhat to.cast off, somewhat to become. If all that the Gosperbrings is already in man and his circumstances, if he is self-sufficient; if divine love, like the Titan's fire, an' 'earthly production, • then, man is god, "First, lAA and, best, things." How the unbeliever deifies . himself -in. rejecting , God, is post effec tively shown in the, following, lines , M.Sn' takes-that title now if he believes • Might can exist with neither will nor love, In'God's case—what he names now Nature's 'While in himself he recognizes love No less than might and will: and rightly takes. Since if man_ prove the sole existent thing Where these'cornbine, whatever their degree, However weak 'the might or will or love, So they be found there, put in evidence,— He is as surely higher in the scale Than any might with neither love nor will, As life, apparent in the poorest midge, -When-the faint dust-speck flits, ye guess its wing, . Is marvellous beyond- dead Atlas' self : I- give such to the midgefor testing-place ! Thus, man proves blest and highest—God, in fine, And thus' the victory leads but to defeat, • The - gain to loss, best rise to the worst fall, Hisdife becotnes impossible, which is death. : Mau must know his place—he is neither'God, as the unbelieving idealist wotild Make hint, mor - beast, as theun believing materialist would , 'make him. We recognize the only grounds of "real progress *hen we admit this position , - of.man • , vihereas 2 ' if we insist upon itt - . that all lasiorical communications' of religious.truth stand, on, no bett6r fottn . dation than the, story of,,P.romethens arid the myths of-the early Greeks, ve confess .ourselves chained to one spot, incapable of progress, either gods or— Übthift4 " Acknowledging himself to be mere man,. by . , such confession, says the poet Straight he falls Into man's place, a thing nor• God or , beast, Made to know that, he can know and not More: Lower than God who knows all , and . can all, Higher than beasts whieh'khew and can so far At each betties lirait,-perfect-to an end, Nor conscious that c.they .know,, nor . craving = more • - While man 'knows partly but conceives beside, -Creep&ever on from fancies to the fact, A.nd in;this striving,,this conyerting air Into a solid he may grasp and, use, . Finds progress, roan'b distinctive mark alone, Not God's, and not the beasts': God'is, they : are, Atfin part,l,Fis and,wholly hopes to be, Such ' pro gress could nii , More'attend hi's soul Were all it struggles after.found at Ord -Arid`giresses changed to knewledge abiolute, l'hananotion wait his:bo*, were all else Than it the sOlicretirtli,on every side, , Where now througli'dpsee he moves Trorn rest' Man, therefore, thus conditioned, mast expect He could not, what he knows now, know at first: - What he considers that lie knows' to-day, ~ -Come to-tooriow,he will fie l dniisknown,' Getting increase of: no - 18164e, smce'he learns 13ecauee Whiehisi fo be a man,. .„„‘„ Set to instruct himselt by hie,past self.. ----We* must surely expect something, sr:eat:Fr,' .nearer the ::truth, than those early efforts of the religious, nature, called myths. ...We mast expect progress even wit,hiu, the Revelation. If men stu‘biiornlyellngto, , the imperfect , -paet4o(loaud,attenwts of, unenlightened reason, or • even to those .of n earlier; =divine econdmy, to the exclusion . of the, Vetter light:and •perfect: plans of the G-olitiel;they Must perish. The pattern' on the Monnt subsists no more,,. Seemed awhile, then returned to notbingness skit copies, Moses strove - to make thereby, Serve still and arereplaced as tim..requires 13Y,'thes , e, Make hewest veiielKyeach the type ! ffre demur, flat§ judgment ofryour l head f • Nevei.to,readi th ek• mltim ap? , _angels: law ) I.4jiligingeyery is stinct of the soul . Thero where law, life; jer,,'i_lilPetge are Tine ii- w 4)-! This closes the.Voet's argument. in. the mouth of the eva,ngelist., Space, 17i11.not allOw.us to givethe argu - ment of another personage he• intro duces at the close of or` to add' a few-general ---remarks with -,W10.4 we elfallicenclucle our-criticism. WEBTEEN: COLLEGE SOCIETY. ': the. tweiity-firit Annual Hooting of the §ocieti.jotAidieg • Western Colleges, ,was held: fn ,the - Begoed , PieShyterian church in-,Newark,.s., the:Afth and 15Ch.ult.- The Senn.Mr was preached by Dr. 01 eaLveland;* " of WeH . ,- littilj gall] usetts. T'h'e Reppit read by t¢e Secretary, ~.,41'he, „ dplibz?rations 9f ,„ the directors were continued ); ,during„ the 'JAY iirria , 13:i4ilag Tuesday. Tbe past year . has been one of great interesf,'2ana . . • portance . iu - the - operations. of thia So •=riqv ciety. 'have $60,6151i; . '4 a, plop tut than i.kebeen - ''realized in 'anly l forrner , year. proportion this , slam has: been 'siie'Cia,lly'Ceritribilied bylthe par tieultirlrfetidiS of seiveral..6fthe colleges' tb f eciiiiiiletetheir EndoWrnent yVicli'the successful accomplishment of the effort' tO ondov the ;Older basil., Lions" that hivit i bOen'tlie obj , ..ots of,its _part. -of the' former work'of the Society; is 00Mpleted• It itilAtilow turn its thoughts and e.r , ortions more 'Bariii36ll37- towards the future.: Tile new Stites anclVerritories must provided' fori and with the return of 'peace large portions Of the South where literary Institutions have hitherto languished "under` the blighting influence of slavery, will' call loudly for just such 'aid. as . this Society was formed to secure = How can this work be most zoisely prosecuted Q Sow can the strength of Congregationalists and .Presbyterians be most fully developed and harmoniously concentrated for the performance of their portion of the work ? These qaestions now engage the at tention of the officers of the College Society and' they are commended to. the thoughtful consideration of the readers 'Of this paper, i‘nd of ministers and Christians generally in connection with the two denominations that have hith erto co-operated through this society in the work of aiding Collegiate Educa tion. . - HOME MISSIONS On applications received from the churches they serve, the following minis ters were commissioned by the Presby terian Comniittee of Home Missions at theirlast meeting,twenty-eight of whom were under commission last year: Rey. P. S. Davies, Birmingham, Pa. " L. P. Webber, Austin, Nevada. • " Moses Robinson, Point Pleasant and vicinity,'lowa. John M. Brown, Minonk, 111., Presby terial Mis-ionary. T. Hempstead, Fairbury, 111. W. Jones, lowa Falls and Steamboat Rock, lowa. H. L. Stanley, Lyons, lowa. G. D; H. - Hebard, lowa City; lowa. • " ,A. Heizer, Winterset, lowa. - " " T. B. Jervis, - Burr Oak, Mich. • " .• Timothy Morgan, Gentryville and vi ,cinity,,Mo., Presbyterial Missionary. " James, W, Stark`; Berlin, Wis. ;"1 E.' Thonwsoti, Hartford, 0., " J';Calins,'Somers, N, Y. " L. l ll..:Booth,.Seyinour, Ind. • P. Griffin, Carleton, N. Y. " Louis F.- Laine, Canisteo, N. Y. " James A. Laurie, Lowville and Arling , .ton, Wis. " • A. C. Bishop, Warrensburg, N. Y. .. " W. B. Evans, Granite` Church; Md. - Jai' M. Alexander; San Leandro, CaL • S. H. Clark, Baraboo, Wis. '-; L. W. ijunlap,LLa Grange, Mo. • " F..-M. Dimtnick, Omaha City, Ne braska. , Saml. - NewberrY,Cotiricil Hill, lowa. W It Palmer Attica Ind., • Chas. S. Le Dde, Hastings,'"Minn. " E. Long, Hublersburgh and Spring ' - Mills, Pa. - • . W. Adams, Brooklyn, Pa.* - - " J. Brownlee ; Baldwin. City„ Black Jack, Palmyra and-" Prairie City,Ran " .Q .D. W. White, Clinton, lowa. " C. W. Wallace, Coshocton "0. , D. H. Abbey;' , Apalachin, - N. Y. '"'"Mr. Widdermeyer, Nauvoo andAppa . t nOdse, • J. L. Freach,, Bantam and Batavia, Ohio. R. - G. McCarthy, Manchester, Mich- " -P. Bevan, Mt. Vernon ; Mt. Lebanon, • - Greenville, Ipd. • ". J:Jenkine, ButteinutNalley, Minn: " `George . :T. Evekeet, Au , Sable Forks, N., Y.; " John S. Craig, Presbyterial, Mission Tenn. A R. Freeman; Brooklyn,' N. Y. . CANDID VIEWS FROM • AOROSS THE •• 'iST....LAW.RENQE. - The Montiaal'Witne&s, a. paper Which, in - its -beating towards our troubles,has from the first'bPeinSoin4-and gene ' 'roils, publishes - -the following '...comniuni catkin frijol' it Canadian on."; The Right 'erithe Rights( and of ' Iterrei g nbrelesl. • "Even in those countries which every foreigner, , may freelyirlenter,, the ~sov,er-, _eignAs,supposed• to, allow him. access .only.dupon this tacitconditaon,thist he be .subject to, the laws;,- -I mean theigene ral laws made to maintain g ood :order, and.:which,have,no relation to the title ,of citizen. ,or of subjey ls of,the State: The publioiafpty, the-„rlgijts of the ,nation,: and, of theT.P.rovince,AnzineOlirily`require. ,this::condition,j and thetforeigneetiteitly -submits to it as soon ,as he enters the country,,aa, hp cannot presnuip, : ,he has. access•Aponlanyother , Book 2, cap.; 8, By„the Extradition i lreati;it' is pro- Ylded that we shalt, upon.requisition in ;due form, deliver up to ,justice all per .sons who being charge,d with the crimes of -or assault ~with intent to commit murder, or piracy,'or arson, or robbery,.&c., &c. • • Now, let us suppose the case of thirty -persons, Canadians, making a raid into thaneighboring.tate, and robbing the( banks o,f (..ne of, their towns, murdering :one. or; more.. of their citizens, firing loaded ;: pistols : at 'the peaceful: tants, and stealing their horses to escape it.'be• pretended thb.t under • i the fiktraditiee!Tleaty, , , t we ,not, be:itlOUEld ,tordeliver 'the p?..jus tip r 13utrif our- ei-tixeus woulKl-_111010le:0 be surrendered to justicte,,:isi nhi; true that-foreigners- are subject tVtite''same • •i'.; • '°er easea *here the tarrithry of one i3,a;,ion is invaded from the country of anotfidr, whetici'er the invading'. force pe - ,c,PyripoSed' of ,:the 'refugees of 'the: &intik* in c Vii:cled, or of 'the-stilipats,,,e.f: th'e - iither eoentry, , Or':of ••bah; /the . - gov-i ernireetitkif. the, invaded`- country.;has, a right to be satisfieCthat.the country,, ;fi-om which-"the invasion ; has come ,has neither by sufferance nor recpPtiOn 'knowing,y aided er ; ahetted it. S e must purgo, herserf, of both. therie'cliarge'4 otherwise if the caase,be feebeeliesti he,.: geverPgrrantedin iQiskt, 04invitded countryis a reorOsinglierown wrongs' • by entering the territory and - •destroy_'.: ; of' "mar - therein.. shelter 1 7 3 }t B iti t s il t eo h' p r. a ' nii ' d - jn a 1:134;j8. found ba the A ttiericatosiriore, sequence ww.smied-ithe steaMer " Caro_ line" lying in. American waters, and burned her. - In 1826 the mustering and equipment of Portuguese rebels on the Spanish authorities was considered - by Great .Britain as a casus frederis. She accor dingly sent troops to assist the Portu gtiese. We'are now'to decide whether we shall follow the golden rule of doing -unto others, as, we would be done by The raiders, whether Confederate sol diets or tiot, have committed an offenc, agaio - at h nation' witli whom we are a, peace. When they crossed the frontie, into Canada they-:ceased to be soldiers and became subject to tl3e laws of He, Majesty. Under the broad folds of tht Union Jack they could rest securely ID long as they respected the . laws of the protecting power. They knew full wel that it was unlawful to violate the neu trality which We are bound to main tain. Thinking men seen this St. Alban raid a well laid scheme to embroil t t with our neighbors, and create a dive sion in favor of the Southern cause Desperate men resort to desperate means. Is it wise or noble for us t risk a war for such a cause ? If we at to have war let it be for some grea principle—for a purpose other than t be made a cat's-paw for the creation c a power fotlnded upon the declaratio that slavery is a divine institution. FREDERICK DOUGLASS ON EMANC PATION IN MARYLAND. Mr. Douglass, by especial invitation spoke in Baltimore on Friday etrenin of last week. In announcing his pu pose to do so, at Rochester, on t, Sunday evening previous,- he spo thus jubilantly "What a wonderful chatrige a fe short years have wrought I I le Maryland a slave, I return to her freeman ! I left her a slave State, return to find her clothed in her no garments of Liberty and 'Justice, a fr State! My life has had two'crises—t, day on which I left _Maryland, and 1, day on which I return. L. expect have a good old fashioned visit, for have not been there for a long time. may meet my old master there, who I have not seen for many years. beard he was living only a short ti, ago, and he will be there, for he is the right side. I made a coritert of hi years ago ! Ile was a very good in with a high sense of .hotior, and I ha no malice to overcome in going ba among those former slaveholders, fo used. to think, that we were all parts one great social system, only we w: at the bottom and they at the top ! the shackles were around our ankl they were also on ,their necks. 7 Common Council and city authorit have promised to be present at the ne meeting in Baltimore. I shall be gl to see tfiem. I shall return to th with freedom in my band, and point her free Constitution, and as the ohi branch was a sign -that the waters th 6 flood were retiring; so will the fr dona which I shall find there be a s , that the billows of slavery are roll back to •leave the law blooming ag in- the purer air of Liberty and Justit. Mr. Douglass lectured in Washin ,,, on Thursday evening, ,reputing Baltinip l ie effort; which was on " Mission of 'die War." On this occa, - a presentation was made' , to Col. B man organizer:of the negro regime of iliaryland. Mr. Doi - 3glasa'was to have paid a v to Talbot county On Saturday, to see old master, Capt. Auld, who is D eighty-sevon years old, and, such of kind.red :as the late internal sla tracle had toC consigned to south plantations. His brother Perry, wir he deeply loved, is somewhere in South.;`-A. mumber .of of;: white citiz called‘ on Mr. Douglass on Friday. ,MEMORABLE • DATES. An old man; Was sittiPg in his rt one Sabbatlyafternoon.t - His Bible *before- him, opened, at the blank slhe before the title-page, up/ 4 , which is written some dates, of days and ye , He was so alisorbed in c,entempla , of: he did itot 'notice the trance of a tteighbOr, wlib asked What he - "eOtr . l.d' riead with such tense interdSCrwhere'lie‘only saw a dates. •Tai•old man replied : "Ne bor, ,, could you but know what t dates stand for you would not be onger "surprised." These were dates of, all the p%incipal occurrence the old, man's life. _lle.pointed with finger, to, one after tfie „ether. "I' .is the date of my hirth,:,.of my chris ing, -of my enlisting, my inarria,ge," .so on till at last he came to the da• the day, lytien.,#te jaord_,.had effects called, him,, and s sauce which he known himself to lie - aAtild of Goti inheritor, of t* , , 4in gi loro of ho' And then he exeladord;.;.l Oh the ( I, ofthe,riches, hoth. i g,t i thimiadom an. l knowlidgo . , 4§4- hp - w unsearch are his judgmenta,.And4iis way 6 ;finding ont,l'-! Oduld & tit ousiblif Ytriees raise, j Alllonsand..tcaigu r es employ, hflart wM.ild pour, itself in praise , In ttian•ifulliUzi arid:joy ass And:attii-itkiliapPY songs should be .: • . Hem. ,w 4-0,1; /.14 . 0,9 4 4d:4 - as done for 77.9'47T:,-;:4dvQcate. aT - HAVP riotnewhgre _read (perhar Hebrew tradition)" thatof the two or' t . o f a er spirits-the; of arta the' Angels of Knoivfedge--tbe 'missed the - start they ban lest ., wanderedtheough the darj., one by, one to heaven but the lighted ,on- by theiz - ovemlurid "sadd.,‘.! Wherever we go,there is hear and deeper andlower • deseenduu!• their,Aape ,and the;ir,, , nature, formed and obseeite,.the- bottoui&' closed. aroniA