CD.rropintbnut. °UR LONDON LETTER. LoNnorr, April, 1866 VISIT TO SCOTLAND. MY Dram Sia:—" Oar own corres pondent" has been in Scotland since he Mast wrote to you. I told you in my `last letter that the Free Church of Scotland had agreed to give aleneral collection through all their churches for the promOtion of PresbytOinn'Chttrch Extension in England. That collection %was made on the lest, Sabbath of the month of March. We sent down del:m -41es to preach in all the more important 'congregations of the large towns in :Scotland. We held public meetings in lEdinburgh, in Glasgow, and in Aber deen, 'which were attended by large and mil' • 1-‘ ------ -tWenty — deputies - ctrerm......., le We had ?labors were spread over two or three -Sabbaths. Ir. is of the very greatest Amportance thit we bad thus an,oppin , -- Unity of fully stating our• case to a large part of the religious , community ;of Scotland. I have not. yet - heard the cash result; but it will doubtless reach to some thousands of pounds, which we will make to go a very far way. Whilst in Scotland I had the opportu-. mitt of being present at 'a meeting of 444 THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON UNION." This Committee is composed of kur com mittees appointed respectively by the 'Free Church, the United Presbyterian - Church, the Reformed Presbyterian .9hurch, and the Presbyterian Church of England. Each of these committees sits and prepares matters for the Joint . Committee, which meets from time time, to dim:lasi-anti consolidate, and prepare it final report 9 fit their'respective chateThes. 1 - Tbe meeting to which! I refer, and it which 1 4 . was present, was held on Wednesday, March Vint. It was ",tell attended. •It asiembhitlin the Free Church OfficeS,-aluAilding gewly erected close by the Free Church College*and Assembly Hall, - on what is called "'The: Yound," an eminence which overlooks the deep valley which ;divides the new town of Edinburgh from the old. The apartment in which we met was every way worthy the men and the /occasion. It is a noble and lofty hall, fitted up: in ache finest taste, and most elegant style. 'l. large window behind the chairmarris filled with" stained glass, and loOking .-,down on us from the painted, panes were the fathers and founders of the Church of Presbyterian Scotland—there were Knox and Melville, Dr. Andrew Thom son, and Chalmers, and Welsh, and Cun ningham, men of might and majesty, who seemed to smile silent approval on their mot unworthy successors . It was a goodly sight to see all that was holiest, and best, and ablest of the Presbyterianism of Scotland, and ,of .England, gathered together beneath the -shadow of the mighty dead. There was Candlish, and Guthrie, and Dr. .James Hamilton ; there was Dr. Mar ehall, the Moderator of the United Pres lyterian Church; and Dr. Goold, editor of Dr. Owen's works ; there was Dr. Andrew. Thomson, and Dr. Buchanan, of Glasgow ; there was Sir Harry Mon erieffiworthy and there was• the, able:it theologian cif our, tikes, Cairlisii Beriifck, land - silraost every man ormark in the four churches. Mr. Robert Buchanan, of Glasgow, took the chair, supported on the right by Dr: Marshall, on the left by Dr. Candlish. He opened the business with the reading , of the word and praise, and then he called on Dr. Thomas Guthrie to engage in prayer. It• was a choice privilege to have joined in that comprehensive pray er; so •full of the spirit of brotherly love. The deep, fall tones of Dr. Guthrie's `Voice reach, move, and 'melt all hearts. I never heard anywhere a voice of such power; it melts one to tears. I need not go s into the discussion that followed. Suffice it' to say that - though there was considerable difference of opinion, it was, no other sort of differ deli may be =seen any day in any meeting of Presbytery, Synod, or Assem- bly. It was no difference of one com mittee against another committee. It was man against man, and, by .a little iliscussion, arriving at a harmonious conclusion. It was right pleasant to see two or three Free ChurChmen and two or three United Presbyterians agreeing AS against a , similar amalgamation of -opposites;:and the discussion left it in delibly fixed 'on the mind of an all but in- active spectator, as I was, that there could be no possible difficulty in union . between men who agreed in so much and differed in sio little. It was pleasant, too, to note an act of prompt courtesy and brotherly love in Dr. Buchanan. After the meeting had progressed a little, Dr. James Hamilton, of London, entered, when Dr: Buchanan, taking , notice of the !act in a short and gracefal utterance, vacated the chair, that Dr. Hamilton mighi, take possession of it, which he did _amid the applause of all present. _IMPORTANT PROPOSAL 1 - You know that one of the rocks ahead has been the question of a British or a Scottish Church. Some of all sections of the Church contend earnestly for a British Church to comprehend all the Presbyterian (non•established) of the three kingdoms ; others would exclude the Irish portion only; and yet ethers, and they by far the most numerous, say "we cannot think of going one jot beyond Scotland." At the meeting to which I refer, a proposition was tabled by Dr. Marshall, of the United Presby terian Church, which seemed to meet with all but universal and cordial ap proval the moment it was stated. It was to the following effect :—.First, Let that portion of the U. P. Church in Eng land be dissevered from the part in Scot land. Second, Let there he union in Scotland between the three Churches, the Free, the U. P., and the Ref. Presb., on a suitable basis. Third, Let there be union between the English Presbyterian Church and that portion of the U. P. Church which is in England. Fourth, Let the two Churches so formed be united thus far only : let membership, discipline, &c., be common to, both. Let there be one common board to , deal with all the mis sions and missionaries of all the Churches. Let,the Church irt,Scetland charge itself with helping lorward with men and means the Home ; Missions of the Churth in England. Let there be a given number ; of men, chosen each J r • • • e, and frOm each Church to sit, ._„1 I.e ) erat the other. vote in the Supremar ra 5 01, i n + 44 .„.. , %-a conference each five • yearictie fdlnat and arrange all mat- tern of detail that may need reformation or adjustment. These are the general propositions. The paper was,' tabled, not discussed ; but it called forth the warm approval of all who heard it, as a remarkable out gate for what seemed an insuperable difficulty:. In,my opinion,,thereis still a, difficulty:= It lies in thia, that the ;United Presbyterian brethren in, England might not agree with these proposition's. They love Mother -Church at home; they look forward to their annual visit to her Synod as the eupieme,event of ,the year ;• and many of their better men_ look for ward to the daY'when they may happen to be chosen moderator of their Supreme, Court as the crowning event• of their life. It' may be that, with s a union, our Church here would o :110 SO, large and respectable thatAo be , closen .moderator of it •may= soon become as - great an ,honor as , in the other ; for with union we should number,upwards of two hundred churches, and. might soon double that number With the help of Scatland---but it is a painful thing to break rudely= in on the cherished dreams of the ambition of a long life Mine. We shall soon see what the results of these conferences are to be; the Synods and Assemblies meet shortly, and then the' mind of the re spective churches will be more clearly brought out. GREAT CHANGES AND MOVEMENTS IN SCOT- Scotland is greatly changed since I first-knew it. All things are'effervescing there,' in the ecclesiastical world, with a singular force. When I knew it, fifteen years ago, it/was the most conservative of all countries, ecclesiastically. Now, all is in " movement." Organs are erecting everywhere ; hymn-books are taking the place of the time-honored Psalms ; dissatisfaction with the confes sion of faith, with subscription to creeds of all sorts ; a desire to render the wor ship of God externally more " attract ive"—these and other modern notions have gained vast ground and stability since I left the country. I found, too, some of the older ministers not disposed to put forth very much energy to stay the movement party. One old minister said to me, -" Sir; the pot is boiling fast ; but it is Christ himself that is stirring the fire; Tet it..alone-J-'-he will bring purity out of it, in his own good time and way." Instead of union, I should not be very greatly surprised to see more disruptions tlere. CASE. OF DR. MILROD After all the noise that was made in Glasgow about Dr. McLeod and his fa mous speech ~on the Sabbath, the end has been a puff of smoke. The Estab lished presbytery'of Glasgow met, and after various speeches and motions, with closed doors, the result was a whitewash of Dr. McLeod, and the dismissing' of the whole vith some " grave con , sure ;"- and this, too, after that reverened gentleman had repeatedthe substance of his speech and reasserted all • his worst parts: It may be enough to say that 'the course pursued by the Presbytery has met with the warm,,,approval of The Edinburgh Scotsman. That news paper bas long been known and noted for its decided enmity, to all evangelism, to all that is peculiarly sacred or Scot tish ; it is, in fact, as Hugh Miller once said to me, in a joke, " It , is wrongly named," said he, "it should have been called the Irishman ;" but at all events, the Scotsman thinks the Glasgow Pres bytery has 'done well in setting Dr. McLeod free. Last week there was a long debate in the Free Presbytery of Edinburgh, on an overture introduced by Dr. Candlish for the purpose of adding twenty-five new hymns to the Paraphrases presently sung in our churches. ' After a keen de bate? Dr. Candlish carried the transmis sion of, his ,overture to- the Assembly by the narrow majority of 25 to - 20. I ex pect, the subject will be.warmly debated in the next Assembly. „ CARLYLE EXTEMPORE Edinburgh is all astir jatnow. Mr. Thomas Carlyle has just been there ata monster meeting of the University, to be installed as Lord Rector. 'Seldom has Edinburgh seen' each a crowd as was that day gathered to greet the great writer and' thinker of modern times. He spoke extempore. I am very sorry for this. I think; it a great pity he had not written his address and, read it; for he writes better than he speaks. In speaking he is constantly led into all sorts of digressions, and often goes off finally into a siding from which he never returns to the main line. He spoke an hour and a half, and was listened to THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, MAY 3. 1866 with intense eagerness by a dense mass of people congregated in the main ball, the largest in Edinburgh. I am sorry to say his health is far from good. I bad a long walk with him a week oNtwo before be left for Scotland; and he was complaining much. He is dyspeptic, as is the wont of most literary men. All the papers have full reports of his speech, with leaders on the man and his works. I hardly think the address was worthy of him. It was not up to his; mark. I have often beard him discourse more .ably and more eloquently by far with . "' no other auditor but my own solitary self. He is, beyond all doubt, the most, able and fluent talker to , whom I ever lis tened:;. and how he does kindle up as be goes on flashing and corrnscating in all directions! HARD-WOBKING BISHOPS ArinAtenai4.ool4.-T.0 3 12 4 4 3 .4 _hag aside from ill health. After pr eac hi ng St. Paul's, he fainted away, and was con sidered, for some days in a critical state of health. He has now so far recovered as to be able to be brought down to the drawing-room ; but it is thought he can be able to perform no duty for months to come. The work of a Bishop, in a diocese so large as his, is very hard and constant. And in the season," which is., now in fall flood, it is more difficult still; as the calls of fashion are very many and constant. A man - pays dearly for the wealth and honor of such a post. The opening of his daily 'letters, alone, and the directions for answering them, occupy him many-hours daily. A friend once told me he traveled, in a railway carriage with a fat, full, ecclesiastical looking man, who, so soon as he entered the carriage, fitted up a " sort of extem pore traveling writing-desk before him, took a huge ; bundle of letters, selected first one and then another from the heap to which .he wrote replies,' :sealed, stamped, and laid them aside. Before they. yeached the close of the journey, he had finished off about a dozen in , this way, some short and some long., ,which be coolly put into a pciet-box when he reached the station. He asked SR official who that was—" Sir," said the man, "that is the 'Bishop of Oxford." 'Yes, the Bishop of Oxford is, perhaps, one of the hardest wrought men in all/Eng land. • I • The Church of England gets rap idly 'worse. One, of the most emi nent of her ministers in this West End said to me, the other day, " There is a great, a very great number of our clergy who want now only to acknowledge the Pope as their spiritual head, to be com plete and perfect Papists." In the week that past—" Easter Week," as they call it, they have been taking full swing; incense, altar lights; elevation and ado ration of the Host, full Popish vestments, are now quite common every-where. And Parliament will not interfere. They are busily engaged in discussing and guar• reling over a Reform • Bill, and leaving the ancient landmarks to be swept away. And Keble, too, John lieble; the poet of the party, the author of the Christian, - Year, has 'gone' to htif He is mourned by a very large circle of true friends ; and yet I suppose his poetry has done as much to- feed and foster this Popish movement as any single cause that could be named. Vale. Yours ever, PHILADELPHOS. [This article has been accidentally mislaid and deferred.] The work of the Holy Spirit still con tinues in this community. The interest is not only kept up but increasing. Re ligion is the common subject of conver sation, even on the street. A gentle man came to the city to buy goods, but found it difficult to carry out his pur pose, for he said nearly eveiy. , One was talking about religion. The owner of 11 distillery, who was stopping at .a bete* declared that this was the, work of the Spirit, and he wished that his own soul might. receive a blessing. Crowded audiences still fill the hall where services are held. Last Sabbath evening the exercises were peculiarly solemn and impressive, and at the close of the meeting nearly five hundred persons rose for prayer. The hearts of Christians in Peoria have been greatly encouraged by the work Of grace in the neighboring town of Pekin, Illinois, ten miles from here. -On Friday last, about fifty Christians and young converts accompanied Mr. Ham mond to that place. He could only stay long enough to hold three meetings, and many were fearful that very little good would result from so short a period of labor ; but God wondeKfullyldes i sed the effort. At first the prospects were very discouraging ; -the children's meeting in the afternoon was not a very large one, bat in the inquity-meeting it was found that quite a large number had been led by the Spirit to feel their own sinful ness, and were anxiously inquiring the ;way of life. In the evening the hall, which was quite a large one, was filled to overflowing; and those present tes tified that seldom had they seen such a solemn assembly, such an intensely in -terested audience. At the morning meeting next day, about one hundred and fifty declared that they had found the Saviour. Those who went there fearful of the results, came home rejoic ing because of the great things God had wrought, and with faith greatly strength ened thereby, asking still greater , bless ings for Peoria. Some of the leading men Id Pekin expressed great interest in thticonver sion of Judge Gale, Mr. O'Brien, and others who were well known in that THE AWAKENING IN PEORIA. city. They could scarcely believe the eport, .and wished to bear it from their 'wn lips ; then they said they would be ;onvinced of its reality. After Mr. lammond's return several of these gen tNnan went to Pekin and told what the Lohad done for them. On their re turn y reported the good work still A eting was held here last night for m only. The hall was filled, and the sting accomplished much, especi ally, ong those who for want of room and c iher reasons had never attended bat. Christians visited the saloons and kops . and Conapelled men to come in; yet rcl•e than all it was the Holy Spirit that , rew together that multitude of meDiver a thousand,'representing all nla: and professions'. -1,. number of in men, who have heretofore de-, n laid, tided upon their morality, despising I - • due blood of Jesus; have been brought to see that their own righteousness is as nothing, but only the righteousness of Jesus will avail with God: - Strong wills are being ',broken, and proud hearts humbled,; new cases of interest are oc curring almost every day. Mr. Hammond leaves on Friday for Springfield, Illinois. We trust,' how ever, that the Spirit of God will not leave as, but. that the : labors of hiS, faithful servant 'may bring forth fruits after his d'epaitnre. ' J. LETTERS ON RECONSTRUCTION, NCO. IX. DEAR Sin:—Turning.from the Presi dent, who has policy without jurisdic tion, and following the subject Into Con gress, I find with concern, that at the end of a four-montirs' consultation', abounding in jurisdiction as they do, they have , as yet no policy definitely matured. With some dozen of law-projects before them, mostly right _in general purpose, but each preferred. by a few, the strength of the body seems swamped in a little sea of small antagonisms. Why should it be so? Why should noble-minded men .(the majority), be pertinacious about forms, when in substance so well agreed? I am afraid none of their proposed forms is quite the thing; for things ex actly right are' apt conciliate the ap • - probation of all. May it not be doubted whether the best order of business has been followed, to secure the largest unanimity ? Were a council , of physicians called upon a case of physical disease, I fancy their first step would be one of diagnostic scrutiny, to find out the true nature and character of the malady to be dealt with; after which hey could jaardly fail to agree upon something proper to be done. Our case is, indeed, political, bat yet a case of disease. Oar public order has been shattered by an earthquake. Not simply traitors, but traitor States of the Union have made war upon us, becom ing national enemies, if ever there were such. And now that they are conquer ed, and their slaves liberated, how is OUT' system to be readjusted so as to be safe against the recurrence of past evils? The President would take the rebels habil just as they are, " unhouselled, unan nealed." He tells us they have not been enemies at all, nor anything worse, fia grante Bello though it were, than friends in disguise. Do Congress agree with him ? Some of them do, of course; some do not; some hold directly opposite opin ions; some are undecided. Would it not haye been well to try, by friendly discussion, to wilt down these differences into as large a consistency of views as might be, touching the legal conse quences of the war; and the existing re lations of the parties that were involved init? Had the conclusion been thus arrived at, that the rebel States are actually selMegraded to the rank of mere terri tchries, (the honesttruth, in Any judgment) what , a world of trouble it 'Would have saved us in resolving specifically what ,to do with them. It is• fashionable, I know, to 'talk of wishing to get them _back intd Federal-fellowship as speedily as possible ; as if this were called for by the people, which Ido not believe. At any rate, I am not in the fashion : I pre fer delay, as both safer and pleasanter. Yes, sir, and .1 would like to see put upon them for a season the wholesome harness ' of a territorial organization, to serve as a harness of discipline, till they shall learn anew the proper style and manners of State rank. It is bad enough to have been betrayed once; let us not be in haste for a repetition. Unfortunately, (for so it strikes me) Congress, waiving all preliminary ques tions, have One directly forward to the gOal of ultimate redonstruction ; balking sadly, however, in the approach, as we have seen. Two things press heavily on their at tention: one, the impenitent disaffection of the South, which the President's "whitewash" refuses to conceal ; the other, the • precarious condition of the Freedmen. If the rights of the Freed men can, be thoroughly secured, there will be a loyal majority everywhere, and possibly a sufficient counterpoise against the virulent disloyalty of most of the whites, till time shall tame them into better, principles. As well on this ac count as from obvious duty to the colored people, the effectual guardianship of these colored people is, perhaps, the grand de sideratum. To adjust the form of such a guardianship is, therefore, the main scope of the various plans of reconstruc tion that have beedbiought forward. • Now, sir, I am but a private citizen, and my,opinion is of no public import ance; yet, with all deference to the many wise, able, and good men in the National Legislature, I shall use the re publican liberty of saying what I think. And first, I think the law-projects of reconstruction now before Congress are too many of them in the form of Consti tutional amendments. I agree with Mr. Sumner, that no such amendment is needful to the purpose in hand, though perhaps desirable. In the next place, so far as those pro jects bear ostensibly upon the franchise of elections, I regard them as both im politic and wrong. We cannot hope to meddle successfully with that great branch of State-rights sovereignty; and every indication of a desire to do so, will only-weaken our cause with the people. Thirdly, I regard the projects in ques tion as unnecessarily prolix and verbose, With a too formal scaffolding of " where as" recitals. There is, of course, a great difference among them in this respect; but none of them has seemed to me as terse and simple as could be wished. Let us go straight to the mark, and -let our measures stand or fall by their, awn merits,;, without a profusion of verbal apologies in their very structure, calcu lated rather to excite suspicion that to obviate objections. A good deal has been said about Sen ator Stewart's scheme in particular, and in favor of it. Among other things; I believe he vonches* for the President's concurrence ; an argument Ido not feel the force of at all. Like the too great literary volume of the scheme itself, it is rather a circumstance of distrust, consid ering what has lately happened. No, sir, I do - not like the thing. I would not have Congress stoop to a conven tion with rebels, though the President desire it. Mr. Stewart's scheme is vir tually such a convention ;- it virtually says to the disloyal States, " if you will make the blacks equal to the whites, we will do as much for yob, by making you equal with ourselves, and uncondition ally so.'i The measure would be rather a treaty than a law. This is one 'objec tion., And the terms of the proposed treaty is another. I want conditions; or at least ,this one condition, that in all questions of , idlegiance in time to come, Federal allegiancebe held paramount. If a qualification of this nature were ad ded to the test oath, it might suffice ;' though it would be safer in the Cciristi tution ; for the copperheads, should they come again into power, would, of course, repeal the test oath. . As regards the Freedmen, we have law enough already—fundamental law. And first, the Constitutional provision for, republican forms of government in all the States of the Union. What this provision requires, is and can be no secret. We know, from the etymological meaning of the word republic, and from the long continued historical application of it that it means a goVernment for:the equal benefit of a whole community with out distinction of classes ; and we know, from the origin and progress of our own republican institutions, that in our mod ern conception of this style of polity, it must be administered by the people for whose benefit it is intended, through re presentative agents of their common choice, and not simply , of the choice of a preferred class or classes among them. Such is our grand axiom of political lib erty and-manhood. For a time, by an unwilling and deplorable compromise, there was an exception to the rule, in our practice ; but it exists - no longer; and henceforward let Us be consistent, as well as just. - Now, sir, I should like to see a con current resolution of Congress, declaring their understanding of the Constitution in this all-important point. would have it in the fewest possible words ; and 1 would let the. South know . at once, that they will be expected so to model their local •politics as to conform to it, honestly, by way of necessary prepara tion for their return to Union privileges. This would content me. It covers the whole ground. The colored people would be then in full possession of this self government principle, and that would afford protection to their civil rights— the only adequate protection. It is the proper office of political rights to take care of those that are civil. There is another part of the Constitu tion under which the same end might be very fairly reached. I mean the late amendment, which in effect, if not in terms, (for I do not remember the language) raises the freedmen unreserv edly to citizenship. They were citizens in fact before. Chancellor Kent's defi nition of the word is, free inhabitants, born within the United States, or natu ralized under the laws of Congress." (2 Comm., 258.) They were citizens, then, by the two attributes of American birth and freedom. Of which latter quality the new amendment is record evidence. By-the-by, is it not curious that one of President Johnson's objections to the " Civil Rights" bill was, that it declares the freedmen citizens? He had himself compelled the Southern Legislatures to adopt the amendment securing their citizenship ; but when Congress Offered him a statute to make the security practical, he was greatly shocked I Citizenship, sir, is a result of jural re lationship to the Constitution and Gov ernment ofthe country. And there are three ways of acquiring it: by birth, by naturaliiation, and by - territorial acces sion. I know of none besides. Which again reminds me of the Presi dent, and of his feeling of unhappiness lest the citizen-making rights of the States should be interfered with. The States! and pray, how do they make citizens? Not surely by annexing foreign territories to the national do main, and not by naturalization. How then ? By having citizens born to them Alas, citizenship by birth is also na tional, and not local ; for go where he will throughout the land, the birth right citizen is at home everywhere— no State can claim him in special pro perty ; none can refuse to receive him. I hope Mr. Johnson will be comforted by these considerations. At any rate, the freedmen are citizens, and such in absolute phrase. For words of popular endowment are always to be taken largely, liberally. It is ,a -law principal. The ancient Greeks• , . had several grades of citizenship; only- one of which embraced the privilege. There are two or three in England, with alike discrimination as to popular suf frage. Even in England, citizenship, without words of qualification, means al ways the highest degree of general politi cal endowment.. And that it means no less in this country, may lie affirmed for the additional and unanswerable reason, that here, Ar citizens are all of a class, with no acknowledged "difference of legal grades among them. , Well, sir, what follows?, Not that all, citizens may vote at our elections, for we have testa of fair and well grounded discrimination by whiCh to determine who are fit for the electoral trust. No, sir, but it follows that every citizen is entitled to , vote, whose charac ter find circumstances' will bear the ap idication, of those tests of electoral fit ness and competency. Now the freedmen are citizens, abso lutely such, and the• white "men of the Smith are nothing more. The franchise ought therefore to be dealt out to both races by a common rale, and Congress have an unquestionable right to say it must be so. Still, I think it wont(' be better for them to act under the other clause, the republican polity clause'of the Consti tution. A measure of respect is due to popular prejudices, and the less we seem to bear upon the franchise of election, the less reaction will oppose our pro gress. Upon the whole, my ; essentials of re construction are .but two 1. A provision (by Constitutional amendment, if possible), making Federal 'allegiance paramount; and . 2. A declarative announcement' that the State Governments of the South must in future be of and for the whole people, without distinction of classes, and administered by agents popularly chosen as their representatives, The test-oath of uninterrupted loyalty should of course be perpetuated_ as re gards all Federal offices of mucl import ance. Once a rebel, always a rebel, in my estimate of character. I can forgive treason, but I caa never venture into political fraternity with traitors. I am, dear sir, etc., H. W. WARNER. AN EXAMPLE; DEAR. BROTHER MEARS :—There is in Northern Illinois a Minister of Jesus whose 'manner' of life and labor may be made quite instructive. Be it premised that he has, already passed by three years the allotted three score and ten of human life, that he has no regular charge, and that what be does is done volun tarily and freely. The record of a part of one, of his recent missionary excursions was as follows :—Leaving home at daylight on Friday morning he traveled about forty miles by railroad; then: he walked in the coarse of the day twelve miles, visiting five families. On Saturday he walked seven miles, and visited seven families. On Sunday he rode on horse back four miles, walked three miles, visited . three families, and preached twice. And this was done in extreme cold weather in the last of March. Does not such a story rebuke the laziness and luxury of many younger men in the ministry and the Church ? .E. Y. PUTTING OFF REPENTENCE. A hermit (so runs the fable) was con ducted by an angel into,a wood, where he saw an old man cutting down boughs to make up a burden. When it was large, he tied it up, and attempted to lift it on his shoulders and carry it away; but finding it very heavy, he laid it down again, cut more wood and heaped it on, and then tried again to carry it off. This he repeated several times, always adding something to the load, after trying in vain to raise it from the ground. In the meantime, the hermit, astonished at the old man's folly, desired the angel to explain what this meant. " You behold,", said he, "in the foolish old man, an exact representation of those who, being made sensible of the bur den of their sins, resolve' to repent, but soon grow weary, and instead of lessening their burden, increase it every day. At each trial they find the task heavier than before, and so put it off a little longer, in vain hoping that they will by-and-by be more able to accomplish it. Thus they go on adding to their load, till it grows too heavy to be borne; and,then, in despair of God's mercy, and with their sins unrepent ed of, they, lie down and die. Turn again, my son, and behold the end of the old man whom thou rawest heaping up a load. of boughs." The hermit looked, and saw him in vain attempting to remove the pile, which was now accumulated far beyond his strength to raise. His feeble limbs tot tered; the poor remains of his strength were fast ebbing away. After a convulsive attempt to lift the pile, he fell down and expired. BEAUTIFUL was the reply of a venerable Inan to the question, whether he was still in the land of the living :—“No, but I am almost there."