earropoittutt. DANIEL'S TRIAL AND YICTORY. BY.BET. B. E. ADAMS, D.D "Wherefore King Darius signed the writing . and the decree, that whosoever in the kMgdom shall ask a petition of any God or man for thirty days, save of the king himself, he shall be cast into the den of lions." Now is an immortal soul brought to its severest test. Now is it to be de cided whether this captive Hebrew, Daniel, is really great and good. To himself is the proof to be given, - either of grandest triumph or of saddest failure. He is to ascertain, with -perfect assur ance by actual trial, whether his faith is really in God, whether he is above or below circumstance, whether hence forth he shall go on in the development of a noble manhood, of a glorious re ligion, or take a desperate step down ward over a precipice which he can never reascend. And to his accusers, ifs king, and to his "distant nation, and to the kingdom whose, power he had • swayed—indeed, to all generations through which the current of his history shall run, is he to demonstrate either the .strength or feebleness of his piety, , and give an example that shall either shame r Ander illu,strious the faith of the 7,k9rch.Ll , tiscow te-be decided whether '4here is in sis soul a principle -:that; 'fills aifu cannot crush, that power cannot - secure, that• malignity cannot alarm, that 'all theforces of evil cannot wrench irromsteaclfastness. Whether the heart ol , apoor mortal can hang upon heaven, and,''like a; sacred censer, send the in „C'effse of its faith” o God, from the tem *eats °and the whirlwinds that sweep through this poisoned:air. skiftpese thitt,,lionrs are often passipg, ns,my readers, in which, though there is no terrible demonstration of trial, no stern decree coming athwart! the. pith' of f diftY,!_no gathering of the. -elements about - us, • no appliance of courtly terrors, no force of public senti ment to drive ne" from the right, we,, fyineless il feel: the power of conflict-' Ingl , Wtive l s;and 'in the silence of. our Ombra, or,the deeper silence of. our hex s, "6111164 h the process which 'decides Zither for 'or against our piety, our virtue, our happiness, our salvation: In the wise, hittlnscrutable ordering of R k rovidence, elcen. s now may the heaviest weight of your, probation, rest on your character 1 Even now may some one of you be baliCaing;in your conscience the influence which shall land you in hell, or leave you high and far upon the oshomfotlieaven I And so the decisiou, lig 4 Dillifel,* ; his resolution, his courage, hisT achievement of right, may come . in to turn the scale of your life for eternitri ,wheii , Dardel'knew that-the writ • aalitipwas, signed; he, went-into hie house, "inChiti :WindOW 4 hilitg open - in his cham-- ber toward Jerusalem, he kneeled upon. Ids - knees three times a day and ,prayed - , and gave.. thanke•;before his. God as he did afore - time."' "' - The pietY'of :the prophet was not a sudden outburst; not the product of cir-, .cumstatices., •It did not noir, , for the first time, blaze forth like a meteor whose -dlight, 3 f es:ip l a moment from, the sky.. 'But it is a, permanent, a habitual thing. It is the daily_ life of - the man founded in, conviction, and lect'hy blear, , subduing. views of I- Mid and duty. We:find that in the outset of his life in' 'the, palace, he put himself under. the most rigid'inoral discipline. .HeAzotild not defile himself by partaidag, ofrthe food provided for ~,him by the• r kiug, because it was con klf4,ted with idolatry' He cast himself upon the care of his. God for,health,,arid 'Dr existence. And all.through his course ..,tdthis hour of 'his great trial, he was ittuhained by singleness of purpose in ..the „service of ;his Creator. ~He had learned how to trust, how to pray, ho'W to live. indeed in wisdom and in science, and suPerior even.inhis Youth tdtbose . about him in all that gives dis , tinctibn and position, in, all that . qualifiew one for secular duties, be was more dis tinguislied for . hiS4dety. When, there fore, thiar,- great hour. ,of :his:' affliction came, it did note overtake him too sti* - ,denly or 7i too ;.powerfully ; for his resis tance. - Aud it is"b`rily - in harniofiy with his wholelliCe rthat we find• him hale, •erect, strong, confident, knowing whither, tb r tftrol, to', cl,e, how to. peet the stupendous emergency. Ahd his eXpe., • irience. ;teaches us :that it is only by, habitual Uselof our =weapons that we can, parry and smite down the adversary. It ishy previdus,surveys d knowledge -of . .thengyolord that we are ,at home On when the great battle is • waged.., Daniel; when he kneW that : the decree was signed pursued the ,same daily: ' course. of piety as before. Had be not known , it, his habitual devotion had oc casioned, no remark. But he did .know it, and , knew all that it signified ; , knew how the matter would terminate ;,knew, that the decree would 'be put =in force 4 knew that -his enemies would succeed ; .'!,that the king must yield against his convictions,, against his affection for and' .confidence in him, his honored subject; and knowing all this, foreseeing • his im mediate .and „certain exposure to the hinger`and rage of. lions, he moped in thmsame path of; duty, without os tentation, withcitiVichange of manner, without .fear.' was above. The force-of his religioh, his faith in God,' allorelim to and thrOiigh the ordeal. Like 43. deep, • clear, majestic current, the purpose.i of his .soul.flowed onward, little heeding the obstructiorr that had . fallen into it; scarcely deigning'even a,ripple token of resistance. He went into his THE AMERICAN PRESBItERIAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1865. house, and repaired to his chamber, where he was wont to pray and praise, and with - his windows as they were be fore, open toward Jerusalem, whither his eye and his heart turned in his exile, did he kneel down in affectionate, hum ble worship. Although primate of a mighty realm, his house be consecrated to God. He opened not his doors to political schemers, nor did he invite to his mansion crowds of flatterers, nor, fill his halls with the fascinations of beauty and art, nor con secrate his domestie life to wine and lust; but he had a - chamber for devotion, whither he found time, because he had a heart, often to repair for communion with heaven, for devout meditation and holy thought. How many are there now, who, under such a pressure of duties to the State, with such' cares and claims on their time, and such throngs of appli cants for favor or for service, with lines of interest . and responiibility running through a mighty empire, and reaching to distant courts, would think themselves able, or in any way obliged thus to re member their moral obligations ? How many would spend one season of devo tion •in, the secret chamber ? How many would not altogether abanden'both pub lie and private worship,' and excuse themselves on the ground• of other claims, which could• riot be set aside? The trial is now heavy on the servant of :God. Ho* easy :might it - ‘seem to suspend his usual:petition for thirty days, that -the king, who really "loved him, and desired to favor him, might not be oblig ed to execute thedecree ! Did he not owe this sacrifice to-his patron and friend? Ought he not to so far sympathize /with the royal ,heart the ,dilemma;: into which the wily presidents had brought him? Moreover; can he not, pray with the same acceptance insilence, and with - - out the outward ' -formality ? not God : accept the .pions breathings of his heart? Whatever questions we may imagine for him r there is .no .evidence' that they entered:his thoughts: He had a principle. He worshipped God accord inrto own conviction•and- the-,Di vine,appointment. Tliat was - Ms law, 'and by which eferfAiolVer 'of - his nature gravitatekleavenward. ,4nd he would as, soon have expected to see Jbe _earth break from the „solar attraction, as to , have allowed himself to turn aside from duty because htimii,n law interposed. Not that he despisell governments—he was loyaletn the person.and the author ity of the king.-• He recognized all the statutes of the realm, as, in their govern mental relations, appointed of God ; he respected the immutability of the decrees which went forth with' the royal seal upon them, 'and he would - have been the litailnanin the realm to question, or con trovert, or disobey an edict of Darius. But there was.another King to whom he owed supreme allegiance—the law of his God was hie first and last` dependence '83:01 appeal. A.'id t Dailnel6iew He also knew that Daniel was not by his devotion to - the GO of Abra ham, violating any of me rAghls,,itor in vading any interest of his realm. Daniel knew that the, kingilicl o gtot, expect him to surrender his ,Teligion---Alid not feel that he did wrong by continuing hik habituatprayer, even after thepromulga licak- of thedecree. • - - t Ms* allegianee", therefore, to the mor tar-' king :Was not impaired; but rendered mere valuable by that loftier devotion to the iiiiiddrtal. His mind had not been, it could not be perverted and warped by, questions of policy and eitiediency. He felt the majesty of the higher law, and every sentiment of his heart, every con viction of his .re . itson,,e,very_al;fecticni, :.his, nature,,weut fo:r,th powerfully, in, obe dience thereto. , . He could say,l love my, -king. I love the nation over 'which he has set me. They shall have the service of, my tal ents, of my life. But I love my -God supremely; and them the - more for As. sake,--sq much, that lor their' ultimate hafipinesi, as*well for niy'own 'conscience, obef the Ruler of the heavens,. and„if it Must 'be - so; fall beneath the cruel, the extorted`decree of my sovereign:: And,se hl3,twls true to his ifaith—and they: doomed , him, to the lions—and• he spent the dreary night,inAheir den ; and the envious officers ,exulted o endthe Was wakeful and , tearful; and Ged watched over his faithful. saint; and in the " early 'rnorn the king came to. the den and called for Daniel , and answer came back, c. o"king, live• forever I" -And they rejoiced together; and blessed - the God of salvatiOn andlhe prophet- With taken from" the den nnhadeted'; and his accusers were plunged into it and per ished, and Daniel was Cialted yet more; while the king, convinced of the majesty' Band` yof Jehairall,-34ade ai other de= tree, and ,wrote to people of every tribe and la,Oguage - in his broad ern pire, sajthig,—" Peace be multiplied unto you. il , make ; a decree,that, every, dominion of MY kingdommen tremble and/e)34 before the God , of, Daniel : for He is A theli*ing d-od'and i hleadtati ' -for ever, and. His kingdom, that which shall not be destroyed, and ilis,dominionshall be even unto- the end. He deliveretia and rescueth, and Ile. - -worketh signs and wenders in heaven and in earth, ,who k hath delivered Daniel from the power of the lions.". " So this Daniel prpspered in the "reign of Darius and; in. the . - reizn of Cyrus the Persian." It is best for a man to be upright in all things. Often.in these days of wicked gain, We hear men say :--" It is impos iihleto lige honestly. -. •Such is the •com -plication of business; such - the state of politics, that a man must` be' utterly cast aside or do as others do.l Now this plea is not only unchristian, it is un manly. It is the very thing that helps to perpetuate the evil. and forth and be a Daniel ! Suffer for \your upright ness, if need be, and you shl II not only gain, the approbation •of you own con science, but you shall beginaiprocess of reformation, and see your, accusers and oppressros beneath your feet! The world needs at this hour just that, stern integrity which would die rather/that* wrong ; which tosses all gains land` distinctions to the winds when they com in the way of duty; which pressea dopride and passion, and marcheipn in e sublime , path of the godly. . . i I ' Many organizations ,p.x.ts in these days. Men form societies and associa tions)l for almost every branch f moral and secular enterprise—and thi is well enough, provided thoSe ,who mit them do not lose their 'individual se se• of duty, and their personal action n the mass—and so all waste their: ti e and talents in' mere organism, and., /souse when they ought to act, enjo their I, tl, sodalities when they ought to ibe broad in their mission of love., A l it •f any organization is needed just ao , it is one composed of upright me and women, fora the -purpose of putting a stop to theft and plunder i high life I To form a society which :,w uld• banish every member found to hay embezzled from the public,treasury; or our private di employers, from anks or c rperstions. Let those men of . style and pretension, whose extravagance is fed- Ity robbery, by violation of confidence, ''owned from society t. Let.their car de tile . ites be answered by " Otherwise. nived." Let thetibe dropped frourp Wm!. If the law canna Put them in' 'riscin, let public sentiment take charg of them, and be sure to place them were .they shall not corrupt our children-nor have 1 occasion to congratulate themlves that theY hive not lost their respe ability ! If we can't correct them, let s banish them from our dwellings andolir hearts. j "We are growing too lenient towards crime in this age arid - country. `#re 'are 41.shing our tolerance to , sic -,unwise degrees that the •national life i elf is in danger. - ' - '• ' \ If a man would become pe , anently 1 great and influential, he ,mu ; ; be much with God. Daniel did .no gather an artily' to resist the king and reiolutionize 'the realm, )1 - e_;did ' not .have to assemble the, wise ni ,to take. counsel, to devise Plans, to • rk skill li. , fully upon the mind of king d people Ile was in the right way befo . - Ttkiire Was need of no. change in 1 Olity or, principle. He remained with oii and . I ti went to his daily work! :-; A kio sublime' is such a character, suck an a ribute ! Calm as a su9n.ex. mornin r stern as w the bro of•Cagnel; and const tas the courses of the .planets, he bad Within him the might and the majesty ; & Gpd I All Assyria could not cruel:it-him. He ' ,wasflod's hero, to conqier by suffering— type of him who. descended into the den of evil and waged war with fiat:* liot_lo. with principalities and ..powers—c — if - di made . a show 'of them openlyi, nailing them to ihe cross ! Go ye and • serve God as Daniel served linLyl,Put on strength in the'chamber of prayer. • Get. Divine, thoughts into :your . inind,' and Divinejove into•yeur heart—then meet, and.win, and conquer the world. There n il mist first be sorrow, then 'oy ; first war with sin, then victory in holiness; first the weight of agony, -.the the, weight of glory; first the church militant, ttufn the church millenial ; first 'the ' crown of thorns, then the royaltyof Paradise 1 MR. WARNER'S LETTERS sON AECON STRUCTION.' • NO. I'V. REV. AND P_Eakii, :—As everybody Federal .Constitution guaren-, tees to:each State of the .Union " republican form of government." Of course, in passing upOithe new or gaitismi, of the South l the President (if the jnrisdiction of review be., his will take care that they be of-this character.: He has indeed advise&the'freedmen that. their adMiesien to full citizenship de-: pend.s upon the, ustice okthe States they live-in; ; but ,he has not told them, and •I trust is -not prepared to tell them, that he will not do what he lawfully may; to, bring that "justice" to, a right, 'decisiou.. '" A republican form , of governinent;". then, what is-it ? • ThetirrObledlssbeelf a good deal agitated of late, but as far es I have seen, „without result. IV:riceme: only to.remind us of the old preverb,- that men'are, apt to knovr leist of what• they are most familiar with • sd'hard itto turn the.sye home upon itself. The term,_iepnblic has; I think, two: meanings in combination :—one ancimit;r general, etymological'; he other, techni-,' cal and Modern. Let uiponder tfien • The ancient meaning of the termie , simply that of its etywon, , rea publica which may be rendered s public 'concern --that is, concern of the,PeOple at larip ; in contradistinctiou from monarchy or one-man government ; ;from oligarchy, & government of a , few ; from-aristocracy, or the government of-a large but yet lira-, ited portion of society, under the notion of-their being aristoi, the best of the peo ple, and entitled, consequently, to lord it over them. Our English word; conimont wealth, is a very fair equivalent ; for common means public, and the original, Saxon for wealth is weal, which signi fies well-being. Nor is it strange that a polity sacred to the well-being of an en tire community, should have deriv:ed a name from the benevolence of its object. By an easy metonymy, frequent,'" ill 'all languages, the notorious object of a thing is often taken for the thing itself—the end for the means. Well, sir, the name republic, thus ap propriated to denote a free, popular, com mon-weal government, became at once historical ; and it passed from . age to age, through twenty centuries or more, without the slightest change of sense, _down• even to our " Declaration of Inde pendence," which was essentially an adoption of the principles it stood for. The general nature of the thing was uni versally understood. Everybody knew, at least, that it meant a government es tal3lished for the people at large, one and all, as ,equals.. The early examples of this polity were democratic ; that is, they were adminis tered by the people in person. Agents were employed, but not political agents. The great secret of dividing the sover eignty into 'parts, and delegating •one part for administrative purposes, while the rest is held in electoral and visits torial supremacy by the general mais of citizens, was not for Greek or Roman to discover. They were doomed to strug gle ion in democratic confusion, striving after the benefits of republican polity by , means that.could only give them glimpses of the good they sought, and with a cer tainty of crushed hopes in the end It remained for our American fathers to devise 'a working' system suited. ade• quately to the design. They thought a scheme of administration by representa live, vents, under, due popular .Tapervi dim, and control, would answer, better than democracy. Experience has shown that they were right. Our governments, general and particular, all attest the happy wisdom. of the, eonception. Like other great discoveries, political repre sentation, now that it is known, seems but a simple , matter. I 'believe, hovi ever, thatin importance to the welfare of mankind, the proudest triumphs of Science do not siirpass it A.nd thisosir, is our Modern technical addition to the long established general. impoft orthe term; republic:= It takes the place of the old teChnical demodracy, and is now the grand distinctionof Our system. The:two methods (such, I may call them) are- popular and free ; both regard all - nien as r ?-hy Oure equal ," but in details of worliiiii,imachinery for accom plishing their --aim, they differ exceed ingly. - American citizens do not con dnottpair public affairs . by direct vote, as the,Anen of Atherdonce did, but by the. :agency of representative functionaries, :who • di? the business ' , for thorn upon trust I conclude - therefore, that wheieas an .Athenian would lave, understood. the, phrase " republican form of government", to mean a geyerdment of and fdr the; people at large, personally adttinistered, by themselves; ,on the other hand, in our day and to us j the meaning is, a gov 2 ernment of and for the people at large, 'Clp2.2:nistered by dgents popularly' chqsen for the _purpose. :v And just as he, would have added to' the general notion of a icivernment the special ore of a democratic administration, so must we ,add to that notion, not his miserable qnillet of mob-management, but instead of it our' own masterpiece of techaical polity, the representatixe',,sy,stenr. In a word ; ," a form of, governateat,'!,,to,te Jfrepublioan" within the polity-pledgelof the Ponstitution, must be apeople's got - .• vernnient .representing all,,and . gdn - tinzs tered fo r r all by popularly phosen-agents. Will it , be donhted) whether - the first part _Of-this definition is,inater 'Of :form, ae as of prineiple ? A goiernment is an orgnniFnliop., ;• - A . State government is an mOmization. of tbe people of a State. Can the form be 801)0.1100 „froWts subject matter'? Does not, cligarAiY .diffpr in form , from ails- Ancracy And yet the difference lies :solely in.the; proportions of: the people comprehended in them respectively. • Moreover the gharanty Of the Consti tution ,is given to the people, and,of course to the whole of thern,lassuring them' 1.11 a republican organization ; and how • - g ;can such an assurance be made good by an. organization that shall leave half of them. out ? • =. I say the :guaranty is , 'given to the people, • becanse,thelienple are the parties 'to the ,charter compaci, as. its own ring declare; and because it would be ab "surd to suppose •a form of -'government assured to - forms of government 'Already extet,4l. But ,even if this, absurdity were en actedtthe, people personally would Astill be the ultimate 'objects, of 'tbe _pledge tde inanigeTs'Of the imsree . tire, State goiernment.a ..must be deemed 4ifeapable receivingiit.otherwise than In every ', point OFview therefore the ,people. are the doneen of the pledge ii - the 'people:atlarge and indiscriminately: Yirtire slaves an exc e ption in their tirriel .If ' so, it.was because . ey were slaves, and• not because they were: col ored ncken. As slaves (though=not under 'that name) they were indeed the sabje4te of a special arrangement of compromiee. But that arrangement was ,itself excep tional, and:against the general: policy' of the Constitution. ' Of course it must be , taken strictly,- and cannot be enlarged by construction, to the prejudice of freemen. Colored freemen, even then, were quite beyond its reach. And as all > are now free, the special arrangement as to Wives has bucome effete. The better opinion is, however, that the old thraldoms of the South were never such in fair political account. The Constitution did not recognize them. It knew of "persons held to service," but of human chattels it was profoundly riorant.c- So that alavea, , as between them and the general Government, were always citizens. Bat whether so or not, they are citi ze- zens now ; let this suffice. They belong now unmistakably to what is called the people—that great body of political com mons whom it is the province of repulb lican institutions to care for in a policy of universal justice and equality. Their rights are the same precisely as those of their late masters. They owe the same allegiance, are amenable to the same - - . laws, bear public burdens by the Bathe rule of apportionment, and have an infi nitely better record of past conduct. Who can ,chink of"reviving, under any modification, the wrongs they itave here-. tofore. suffered ? My friend, one thing is certain : let us lay it, to heart : NO PLAN OF GOVERNMENT FOR THE LATELY REBELLIOUS STATES CAN BE" REPUELIdAN THAT IS FOR WHITES ONLY. ' And •I want the President to understand this. Should •he ,' demur, I *ant Congress to instruct= him on the: snbjeet. Irthe last resort, I want the patriotic masses everywhere to take up the proposition, and to. proclaim it in a .voide:Aihich none bnt , the dead ..shall fail to hear and respect. - What, sir are we to measure out political estates by rules of moonshine disetithinationll by accidentaldifferences of or . of blood-lineage? Sup- • pose LOnisiana were t 6 framelam organi zation, making over all power to the French—division - of her..people, leaving Yankees;. Spaniards,- negroes, . under political.,disfranchisement ; could it be THE 'YEAR-DAY THEORY. regarded as republican ?—andnof rather Mn. Enrroa :—Having observed in an aristocracy - 421, Suppo !your , paper, a few weeks since, a state want 1 the se franchise Georgiaof election,' (and .of ffi ment that a certain reviewer was labor were to say, " we " course the oces , of. , Government,) con- ing to overthrow the "year-day theory e fined.t k e Our men of red hair i and blue of prophecy, as it is called; and a hope eyes?? although but af, fraction of the expressed that that "baseless theory would be exploded," I was led to examine whole community ; n would that be earer that point a little; and should like it, if to the mark, or farther off?. I know not you will allow me, to state the result of how fertile their climate is in red hair and: blue_ eyes, but _"I suppose my inquiries it could 1 ' his I find that the time appointed for t hardly muster enough•for an , aristocracy, prosperity of Anti 'chriiitian powers is ands of too 'many for an oligarchy. designated in three ways: " time, times, Suppose, in- fine; that in South Caro- and a half," (or three years and a haf t ) •line; where the blacks and whites are "forty and two months, " and " a thdu aboutlequal, the latter should, resolve to sand two hundred and sixty days r compensate their< late loss of civil lord- these all, reckoning in the Jewish way, ship by assuming ay lordship of political 'thirty days to a month, come to the -supremacy, ,torthe -exclusion and; relative i same number of days Now these digs -prostration of the other moiety ofothe I either mean literal days, or some "other citizens.; the usurpation being fotinded, period. •But they certainly cannot inean not upon any reason of intellectual, literal days,‘as they are used by Daniel moral, or educational superiority, but just and John to measure the duration of uPon u*t_ioluior .14T0Rn_4 1 . 3 --U, iit.a..-ii,es_s of I that pluiecuting -power into whose hands .so/ar light absorbed, 'Vitae more reflected! ' , the'isaints should be delivered. To ,Well, sir, allowing the node - stv ' 4ef I terpret them as literal days, would vio 'this, (and r modesty abounds in Sou t h late the truth of 'history, as well as the Carolina,) the question again nomes,np, symbolical' character of the prophecy; would it answer the notion of a common ~. -for the saints were actually persecuted weal, government ?—a _.-government 61 ./ by the 'Papal " horn" for a much longer and for the people at large ?—a 'republic? period than 12,60‘days. Moreover, the Sir, df,it could. bp ,deemed anything woman representing the Church' was better than aristoeracy—,rank, rancid "nourished in the wilderness"? during the eristeeraeY=3, see,not wherein. , rteP but ; this cou ld same perzod of day•s _ Aicanism- never exalts one class of pita- haveno counterpart in-histarfif we take ZeltB atzove, another. Even w en eornima h-- I nl a ------ these air literal days. The same remark were slaves, it was not republicanism, may be made respecting -the " two wit nesses aristocracy under;that name tha t ._ ' nesses" who prophetryinsickelothduring kept-them the 49l Y, ll „bY*9°Pirfglf P a fe ra the same period, probably repiesbriting 11 P-aa dd S nni a ant * ' t - • the. trueLohurch. , Hence, tneithei the I repeat, therefoie„And u implore .., the tads -of history, nor vie nature g' p el i s aw 'and , right. ; _ feeling of the prOpheey, Will i allow us to interpret them country to consider;-what Lsay,that,ll9 i, ___ s literal days. ' , ,ufs l S4referring organization 18 .1)r _ . ,, ° ".„ . ' What 'periods, then, do they repie be law f ul ' ander - 14 ' PP 4b Y eit iO e • °J the _ sent i'• , Onr 1-bnlY 4 way is .torgoqojthe great charter. 1 - ~ Scriptures, and lot themrinterpret them- So long as the esolored men were in selv es Now es Now we know that. on one oc civil bandage,liolitical , rights' ivere; of easion,. the Prophet Ezekiel was ordered course 'Oen* thein Political rights -- 1 b :Di inedirection to reresent in car ve Aainly for .the ;protection of .t rig . fain , symbolical,. actions, 'by a certain ..thai are civil. Bat now that civil bon 1 p dage is ist. se end, the freodmen,onght ' number dur of ing w Kish the days,Gd would s o ame w num d be s r e ' n o li f surely to be 'clothed with the legitimate y ears du r ing certain ich astisements on Mel josh. armor af their ne.W.COndition. Ta-w-tnt. - Here we find /that God has aetuidly it, is to be exposed to all manner o f vbhosen to represent ti year - by a :day, wrongs andll.dignitiei from th e preferred • , .and therefore we may reasonably infer and ruling older; that is, the whites. that he might ,do so again. Besides They will be mercilessly domineered_ , this, David =has 'done just this thing in over. No man can doubt it. Let um i another part °fails prophecy. "Seventy provide 'against the evil. In 'anci ent weeks are determined upon thy people," Rome, proud, as she was, a -e7ile Y . etc. Were these literal weeks or days mi slave took ground at once Wo one pretends it. But more distinctly ?- among the people in full citizenship; met wit) "them in the comitial assemblages - still eillnow therefore and .unders tand, . voted with them there, and was & PQ, 13 ,4" ' ndment to restore and to *did -Jera cal cape ual among them to all possible in tents: -Why eiliotily conceded ?ld wegrudge what Rome Salem, unto Messiah the Prince, shall be seven weeks and threescore and two so ful ~ , weeks." Eler,e we are..compelled bighe The fight of -suffrage is all we hare 1 facts to understand these .a a, weeks, of occasion , to claim for the liberated ne yeare; but a week is seri:l3l , days, and groesi, for it is the only' right (w host, .therefore. each dtay in these weeks repro however,' in itself) t hat, ' c ontin u e s to be a , year , , _., . 0 . I withheld from them., They are, -free to , The •same thing is seen in another hear arms, to .reside and. go where they part of , Revelations for, in, the, ninth please, to sue out their habeas cu runs liif . _chapter the, Turkish, angels are said to need be,i to demand the • 'f erviees , °F ~be: Tmepered.l4o: slay the third cl ime,' of re'agistrates and courts, to p etition or m o u th . ring ~" an. hour and a day6and a redress of grievances , to Veal; wri f te, month ,andaa( year." NowimekcJl &his publish , wfatever whitemen may.. And as ..a day for L a year, audit WAS AdriSed yet' they are gravely told, ,they must not irfthe history of that, power, as pay' be vote—that _js, must have no pr l , seen in. ,By Newton And __father share in,th_e governMpu of the co,untry - I . h And the pretended reason is,they re, a : Onathe prophecies ; , bat,,teke it a - literallypand it becomesfahsurd. . too ignorantl some of there, too vicious. I think, thereforeittliat ~.there,- is a There would be foreeln his if it were • -' • , i show strong serzpturalkusesiorinterpoitingathe urged,consistently. _,But facts that 1260, 1290, and 1335 days as reproAent it, is •not., Observe the eagerness with lug so many years; that while felpwing which we. - rush- -to make: citizens of tife , , prophetsthemselves tve ),it and on fQFPiguers, before they have learnt the impiegitable gronn t il • and that teoiirist first letter of our. institutional alphabet, 1, -••:, ~.., ~,. o 2 , T•., entry with beripture style, they can be and while their characters are utterly inte l ipi nv ete.d in 'no other way Mr:l'. I unknown.'• An this manner the poor ' ES'AIOINES; Ais;l;Sept. 20; 1865. " houses, the prisons,•theyenitentiaries of- _ Euriipe are yearly robbed of their proper inhabitants to make voters of in free America! Yes, to make voters of—pre cisely and specifically that. And yet it is attempted there, in free America, to keep four millions of colored natives, as I may say, , unnotyro/ized--in other- words, only half-eitizens, and beneath the voting privilege"; because, forsooth, some of them are not as , vii t us' and none knowing, as • thermight be 1 - ' -The city -of New Yorkkcis now goy- sated by foreign voters; 'of whom a large majority are unlettered papiats,_ from everybody knotvs where. Alas, :Ali' doomed city ! I believe the Pr;: . otegli negroes of Virginia could detail tor ker a voting Opulation 'more intelligent, more virtuous, every way superior. But, sir; I waive all .this. There is another angwerlto the objection it com bats. The danger, whatever it be, of opening the polls to colored voters at the South, may be readily - qhviated by put , ting the suffrage under prudent limits tions, as was universally dene there in the early State .constitutions. Take Whit test you will—ability to read and write„ or a modicum of property ;, only let it be applied to all colors and races, so that , this sysibth shall be truly republican. This will sift the voting thithig;, 163 d -if the blacks have more chaff among them than the whites, be it : throw out she chaff wherever you find it; but do'thia by a just, a uniform rulp. And - so the btighear of this objection vanishes:'" F. :May God inspire the President Nigh wisdom for the duties of People say he is pardoning all the 'rebels, and Will' 'never cross their -purpose' of renewed injustice towards the Colored race. I cannot, will not believelits If their viewsof government-forms' eaVfin*- republican; President Johnson is 'hot tilid than to shrink from saying so at proper time. .ft must be said, and that decisively. Very truly yours, Aw anaox:- 7 The most COMMon !error of ;men' and women, is that of looking fot hap piness somewhere outside of useful work. _lt has never - yet .been found, when thus sought -and never will be , While: the world stands; and the sooner this truth is learn .Ed the better for every one. -If You_dhubt thßpiopositicin,,gl T ae e around among your 'friends and: acquitinfitikees, and mark those 'Who appear to . Fia;le the most enjoYiWi t t ia life. Are - they idlers, and pleasure= kern 'or 'earnest weikkeirar- We knoWiliiintyour answer will be,' ° H. W. WARNER