aCiTTERIBOrIItt. LETTER FROM SYRIA. SHEMLAII. MOTINT LEBBANON,. NEAR BEIRUT, SYRIA, July 19, 1866. EDITOR OF AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN: —The burning heats of the plain have driven me to the mountain for a few days, and I must fulfil my promise to write a few lines to you. "Burning heats," I have said, and yet the mercu ry has not risen above eighty-six de grees in the shade this summer. It is eighty-six degrees by day and eighty degrees by night. Bat this heat is so uniform and wearing that it is debilitat ing to a Western constitution, and we are thankful that a horseback ride of three hours will bring us to a cool moun tain height 2000 feet above the sea. From this village you look down upon the plain and the city below, and far out to the blue Mediterranean. " Yon will love Mount Lebanon," said the lament ed Dr. De Forest to me in 1855, during the first interview I had with him; and no one can live in Syria without loving Lebanon. Its scenery is beautiful be yond description. It is safe and quiet when the great plains North, East and South are infested with the restlesa and villainous Bedouin. You can travel over it without a guard and alone from One end of the range to the other. It is a health-retreat in the summer sea son, and its cool nights, and sparkling cold water, and crystal atmosphere in vigorate the body and revive the spirits of one wilting and wearied under the toils of the plain. There is no finer climate in the world than just this part of Syria. Yon may winter in Beirut, with the mercury ranging from thirty-eight degrees to sixty-five degrees, and' when the sum mer begins, remove a few miles up the mountain range to one of these quiet villages, where the mercury stands at from sixty-nine degrees to seventy-five degrees the whole summer through. Invalids are beginning to learn the fa vorable effect of this climate on the health, and the Paris physicians ex pressed their amazement at its effects in ,a recent case, which they bad little hope would be relieved by Paux or Naples. We have great reason for gratitude this year in our entire exemption, thus far, from the scourge of the cholera. One year ago it was desolating Syria. Now there is not a case, as far as I can learn, nearer than the vicinity of Mo sul on the Tigris, and there it is not raging as it did last year. Our Sabbath congregations in Beirut are very large, but it is not an easy task to preach two Arabic sermons in this hot weather, and the afternoon service has been dispensed with for the rest of the summer. Although the mercury does not rise above eighty-six degrees, the heat is oppressive, and more than one service on the Sabbath is not profit able. The need of a new church edifice in Beirut is more and more apparent every day, and next week we are to break ground for its erection, although sufficient funds are not yet secured. The native congregation will give one thousand dollars, the American Board one thousand and the site, and the English and American residents in Bei rut fifteen hundred, the Kirk of Scot land two thousand, and the cost of the edifice will be ten thousand dollars. A strong building, capable of holding five bundred persons, and built in the plain est manner, cannot be built for less than ten ,thousand dollars. The girls' school building is nearly finished. Some important details will require to be omitted for want of funds, but we hope to have it ready for use by the first of October. • The annual examination of the school was held three weeks since. About sixty girls were examined during three days, in three languages, and in twenty. two different branches. The promptness and accuracy of the replies would have done credit to the pupils of any school ,in America. In Biblical History and Chronelogy, and in a knowledge of the Messianic prophe cies, I doubt whether any female small nary in any land would surpass it. AddresSes were made at the close by , several native gentlemen, and by Dr- Thomson and Rev. Mr. Bird ; and Dr. T. stated that he knew of no school in America where so great progress had been made in the past few years as in this. The Government official Arabic journal in Beirut pronounced the exami nation the best examination of a girls' school, ever held in Syria. A large congregation of the friends and relatives of the pupils and teachers of other schools was present, and gavo good at tjntion throughout. Not the least benefit of a boarding-school like this, in a great city like Beirut, is the ,infltienee upon the parents and the community at large. When it was first instituted, the teachers, who are all native Syrians, were harassed, night and day, by the interference and complaints of the par ents, and at the public examinations they were noisy and uncontrollable. This year they were quiet, and listened patiently throughout the three days. Many of them, who are members of the various religious sects, learned more of Gospel truth than they , would otherwise have learned throughout the year. The progress of the Lord's work in Syria is a steady growth. Men do not of ten move in masses here. The Gospel leaven sinks into individual hearts, and thence spreads, gradually, through the villages and communities. The sale of the Arabic Scriptures continues, and where GI-od'A Word enters it gives light. A few years ago, a young mountaineer from the village of Ain Zehalteh went on a marauding excursion with his fel low-villagers. Among the spoils was an Arabic Bible, which fell to his lot. He read it, believed it, embraced the truth, preached it to others, and a few weeks since we had a special ecclesi astical gathering in that village and or ganized an Evangelical Church of about a dozen members, and ordained this young man named ICaleel as its first pas tor. The church in Hums has grown up within a few years, and has an able and devotedly pious native pastor. It is a city of 2500 inhabitants, and in the centre of a large and opening district. They have no church edifice, and though strong in numbers, they are all very poor, and cannot build or buy an edifice large enough to accommodate them. We are just preparing a statement to lay be fore the American Board, in ,order to se cure the necessary funds. Building is quite expensive there, as all the stone and lime have to be brought several miles, the city being built on an alluvial plain. Three thousand dollars would build them a large and substantial edi fice, and give Protestantism a permanent center in all the borders of Hamath. The system of building large and expen sive edifices for native congregations, above their tastes and habits, is not a good one. But in this case, it is neces sary to expend three thousand dollars to give this people the plainest kind of a building which will accommodate them. They are poor. There is not a man in the Protestant community there who is worth a thousand dollars, and the ma jority are day laborers, barely earning their bread. But they come in crowds to hear the, Gospel, and are paying a portion of their pastor's salary. There is no Church Erection Fund to call upon, unless the American Board shall give a few hundred dollars. There are no strong central churches,• such as you have in Philadelphia, whose private mu nificence can rear churches as with a magic wand, in the needy and growing suburbs and outposts. Protestantism is surrounded by ene mies here on every side. Its adherents, though, increasing in numbers, are poor. While it would be wrong to erect for them expensive structures, it is- not wrong to aid them in providing them a decent house of worship in the most economical manner possible. This whole question of providing. suitable church edifices in the mission field, is one of the most difficult the foreign missionary is called upon to decide. The ground taken by the Ame rican Board of Missions in requesting the American Churches not to contribute to private appeals for the erection of church buildings in foreign lauds, is wise and necessary. But the Board is not opposed to the 'erection of such buildings, and has acted with -the greatest liberality in giving . aid where it can be done legitimately and safely. It is important that such aid go through the Board itself. The annual examination of the Pre paratory Department of the Syrian Pro testant College is now in progress. The boys, one hundred and twelve in num ber, are being examined four hours a day for two weeks in this hot weather. The Board of Managers of the College have just had a meeting and elected Medical Professors. The political state of Syria is as usual. Yusef Keram, the Maronite Rebel in Northern Lebanon, is' keeping up a private guerrilla warfare on the Turkish troops, who have thus far tried in vain to arrest him. The Turks are going back to the old system of farming out the collection of taxes to the highest bidder, and the poor people begin to groan under the new exactions and out rages. The. Moslem population of Syria: are now in a state of bitter hostility to the Sultan, and curse him openly in the streets. The taxation is becoming in tolerable. In any other country such a state of things would produce a revolu tion. Yours, truly, H. H. JESSUP. FROM THE COUNTRY. BY HEY ` R. E. ADAMS, D.D Once more in the country, and the hot pavements and glimmering walls and sweltering sewer.s of the great city are remembered as a feverish and suffo cating dream of the past. At this dis tance, it seems strange. that hundreds of thousands can live_ through all the, year, breathing air from which • the life isl-gone, walking upon streets where -the smallest tuft of grass is,a forbidden growth, look ing up to the open heayens from be tween, brick walls that diiide the fairest sky into stripe and pitches of blue, sleeping at night with the tramp of feet and the clatter of hoofs and the dron ing sound of car-wheels within hearing through all the weary hours. And yet I, myself, a week ago, --had become so mach habituated to the choking atmos phere of midsummer in -the city, as to think lightly of the returning opportu nity to look again upon the green fields and the grand old woods ; to listen to the music of running brOoks and the rain pattering upon the cottage roof and the fluttering leaves; and to see the dome of the sky frescoed with the pomp of clouds, and the glory of noon, and the emblazonry of stars, and resting visibly in every direction, upon its waving, hori zon of eternal hills. In the city, we are always looking for changes and improvements. Here, it is THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30. 1866. a joy to find that what was perfect be fore has not been marred by man's at tempts to make it better. The brook runs before the cottage door as it ran a year ago, shining as brightly with its silvery cascades in the morning sun, and singing, like a summer shower, with the same slumberous voice through all the night. The natural hedge of alders and ivy and virgin-bower hides the moss-covered wall; the seven old maples stretch forth their wrinkled and patri archal arms in benediction over all that come and go; the delicate leaves of the locust shiver and rubtle in the gentle wind ; the birds build their nests un scared in the low shrubbery beside the . most frequented path ; the rustic seats upon the knarled roots of the old trees invite to pass a dreamy hour in watch ing the play of shadows and sunshine in the waving branches above ; the hy draulic prisoner pounds day and night in his watery dungeon at the foot of the grassy slope. In the distance, north ward and southward, the whole valley is loaded with exuberant vegetation ; here and there are seen white farm houses islanded in an ocean of verdure ; the bordering heights'- are all browned with green woods ; and on the after noons of these bright days, fleeciy clouds wander in white flocks along the moun tain sides, "shepherded by the gentle wind." All these are as they were, and being so, are beautiful exceedingly, above all the splendors of pictured galleries and architectural streets and squares in the great city. And nothing can bitter re store the jaded mind to its heath ul tone, and brace the weary nerves witik renew ed vigor, after 'ten months of toil and study in the city, than to come f4th and look on the green world of flowers and foliage and springing grass, as GO cre ates it anew every year. When the Divine Teacher wits ex hausted with his work in the crfrded synagogue and the stifling streets of Ca pernaum, he stole away to refresh him self in. the grassy, solitudes of Bashan, or among the neighboring hills of Gali lee. .And he had just come forth from such retirement when he delivered the sermon on. the Mount, and where he wrought the mighty miracle of feeding thousands in the desert. He came up to Bethany from the retired places be yond Jordon, when he raised Lamarns from the dead. He spent two dsys and nights of rest in that quiet mountain village, during the swift and hurried week of his passion ; and it was by such repose that he prepared himself'for the torture and provocation of his trial and the final agony of the * cross. For the most part, the great Workers, who have astonished the world with their unconquerable energy in action, have understood well the art of repoie. When that art is lost, work' becontes impossible, the mind is no longer its own master, and madness or death must follow the want of rest. Convictions of duty become excited and inflamed by continued effort and sacrifice in the great conflicts of life. To keep such convictions alive and controlling, and yet free from morbid and fanatical ex cess, is no easy task. And yet it must needs be done by those who would prove safe guides to others, or would choose a safe path for themselves, in the hot and hasty work of revolution and reform. Few attain such high self-command as to be able to rest in the midst of toil and conflict. It is necessary for most, it is wiser for all, to retire at times and leave the great battle of life to go on without them. It is a strange and pitiable delusion of some noble and hard-working spirits, that they think they can never safely leave the post of active service, and retire apart and rest awhile." Judging by the feelings and anxieties of some great and good men, we should wonder how the world got along before they came into it, and what will become of the world when they leave it. It must be admitted, however, that this 4 , country living" is not very quick ening to mind or conscience for the time being, to one who has been accustomed to the fervid life of the city. Here, no daily papers are thurst under doors before breakfast, and no cries of startling news are heard in the streets before we rise in tho morning. The railway station is . half a mile off, and by going down there we can get a paper when the train passes at eight o'clock in the morn ing. But after two or three calls upon the newsboy passing in the early train, we become content to wait and let the world keep its news until the mail, comes, to the house, at four in the afternoon. Then, the daily tale of crime and acci dent, of passion and policy, of strug gling parties and conflicting opinions, is already old. We read it as we read history, to pass judgment upon its prin cipal actors, not to share their conflicts or responsibilities. The whole week passes, and no beggar calls at the door ; no charitable enter prise solicits our subscription ; no sick or poor. or afflicted ,are, heard of to be visited; no public meeting invites atten dance ; no plaiv *for general instruction or beneficence are to, be discussed or executed; no committee men are to be met or consulted ; nobody is to be rea soned or persuaded into giving or doing anything; no excuses are to be made for refusal or failure, for nothing is asked and , nothing attempted. Surely one must have reasons of his own, if his mind and heart and conscience keep up a healthful activity when shut off so completely from the calls which stir us up to action every day in the city. And if nothing else were gained by such retirement, it would at least help one= to understand how-, mach his- labors-and gifts for the good of others in the city are due to the fact that there he is beset with calls, and opportunities for useful ness are thrust upon him every cay. I do not see how country people could keep up their interest in the great enter prises of Christian work and charity, if it were not for the weekly visits of city newspapers and the ceaseless labors of country pastors. If I were to keep this cottage home for a whole year, with no neighbor within half a mile, and no re ligions newspaper during the week, and if the-good , minister at the village failed to call forth my thoughts and sympathies to the great world on Sunday, I am afraid that in the end I should feel little interest in the prayer—" Thy kingdom come." Indeed, there is little danger of over-estimating the degree to which, the patriotism, the public spirit, the Chris tian liberality of country people, are due to their well-informed and hard-work ing ministers. Every Sabbath service, suitably conducted, in the humblest village In the land, awakens desires, hopes and sympathies, that encompass the whole earth and the whole family of man. BROOK'S VALE, CONN. , August 16, 1866. ftiittatio Caine. AN ADDITION TO OITA COMMITTEE'S Gthixrr. England Two Hundred Years Ago. By E. H. Gillett. Author of John Huss and His Times. Philadelphia: Pres byterian Publication ComMittee. 16m0., pp. 353. In every sense a good book. Super intendents, librarians and parents in the tedious search for a truly wholesome, solid, and yet sufficiently attractive work, for the young, may be gratified here in finding one specimen, at least, of what they want. Dr. Gillett has taken a period of English history of the deepest interest to the Church of Christ, espe cially in this country—the time of the " Act of Uniformity," 1662, and has described its leading events and charac ters in a most graphic, impressive, and truthful way. He - has woven with the historic warp, a very slight woof of fic tion, which is not sufficient to obscure the, great facts, and which but helps to illustrate the great principles which he would commend. All the Puritan leaders are introduced to us, but the interest centres in a character not at all familiarly known, yet well deserving to be—Joseph Alleine. Around him the story revolves. We follow him from his early career, as a lay preacher to the heathen of England, to his persecu tion and imprisonment at Ilchester, and his subsequent death. It is freshly and tersely written. It will: bold the attention without difficulty of children of twelve and perhaps younger. • Its descriptions of historical scenes and personages_ are vivid, its groupings of events artistic ; altogether, it is a most creditable addition to the valuable list of our Committee. The illustrations are numerous and highly creditable. MELVILLE. Battle Pieces and Aspects of the War. By Herman „Melville. New York: Harper & Brothers. 12m0., pp. 272. Much like Milton's image of sin, thii book, by the author of certain volup tuous and corrupting novels, begins with many fair and well-constructed patriotic verses, but ends in a prose supplement which might have served for the Ad dress of the late Convention of sham Unionists, which met two weeks ago in our city. Mr. Melville has come out as the poet-advocate of the new party, and is putting into verse the lessons of such eminent patriots and pure-minded men as Thurlow Weed, H. J. Raymond, and Andrew. Johnson. He probably expects a Consulship on some of the South Sea Islands not yet reached by missionary influence, as a reward. Mr. Melville's poetry is readable, often elegant, sometimes almost Brown ing-like in ingenuity, though never hope lessly intricate in thought ; it is an ad dition to our lyrics of the war. But there is an affectation of neutrality about the book as a whole, a want of moral earnestness and conviction, that detracts from its value. It is neither good poetry nor good' politics It is an attempt to combine pure art with very impure political designs, 'and it must' fairly be written dOwn a failure. The people will never give 'it a place by the firm trumpet tones of Boker, although the poetry in and of itself may, in many re spects, be just as meritorious. Wsrmv.—Asiatic Cholera: A Treatise on its Origin, Pathology, Treatment and Cure, By E. Whitney, M.. D., and A. B. Whit ney, A. M. M. D. 18mo. pp. 214. New York: M. W. Dodd. For sale in Phila,del phis by Smith & English. This book is the result of investiga tions, and the collectiop of facts and arguments from a great variety of sour ces, originally made and presented in aid of the discussions on the subject, daring the past eight months. The most emi nent and reliable authorities for nearly half a century, including the late reports' from India, have been earefallyexamined, and such late discoveries, facts, and argu ments collected, as seem to throw light on the subject, or in any degree to indi cate or direct to a general principle of practice. The book is written for the profession, and they are of course the best judges of the rationality of the con clusions drawn. THE HIDDEN SIN. With numerous Illus trations. . New York : Harper & Brothers. Bvo., pp. 189. A work of fiction, belonging in the soled list' of the Messrs. Harper. PERIODICALS AND PAMPHLETS. , _ETzTE,SE_COND * ANNUAL-11E1101M of the American Tract Society. Presented at Boston, May 30, 1866. Boston : The American Tract Society. THE EDINBURGH REvrzw, July, 1866. American Edition. Republication of the London, Edinburgh, North British, and Westminster Quarterly Reviews.—Con tents : Mahomet ; Weather Forecasts and Storm Warnings; Annals of the Hugue nots ; Mill's Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy; Baker's Explora tion of the Albert Nyanza • The American Navy in the Late War; Precious Stones; Charles Lamb; The State of Europe. New York : The Leonard Scott Publishing Company. For Sale by W. B. Zieber, Philadelphia. EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT. Boston : Ticknor & Fields.—The number for August 25th has the following Table of Contents : Silcote of Silcotes, by Henry Kingsley, Chaps. V.—IX. ; Bathing with an Em peror ; The Story •of a Burglary ; The Theory of Flirtation; Choosing a House; The Atlantic Telegraph; Foreign Notes; The Snndew; Les Noyades. The readers of this periodical will notice with satisfac tion the announcement that, with the num ber for September Ist, it will be enlarged from 32 to 40 pages—an indication of popu larity and prosperity. The counductors propose hereafter to introduce as a feature Serial Stories, selecting only those of a first-class character, and of readable quality; and also to continue to present the most readable, interesting, and valuable stories, essays, sketches, and poems, from the for eign journals and periodicals. Translations from the French periodicals will form a regular and important feature. A most thrilling story from the French of Edmond About, will be given in September. HOURS AT Hasa, September, 1865. Edited by J. M. Sherwood.—Contents : The Fossil Remains of Vermont, by J. W. Phelps; Forests, by Prof. M. Schele de Vere; The Little Preacher- ' Porphyrion, by Alfred B. Street; The Harmonies of Nature; Whose Fault is it ? by Mrs. Prof. S. S. Robbins; Jane Gurley's Story, by Miss E. Stuart Phelps; Froude's History of England, by Prof. Noah Porter; Forever and For Evermore, by Miss Helen Brown ; The Faithful Star, by the late Miss Mary Harvey Gill; Recollections of Hannah More, by Mrs. S. C. Hall, (England); Stu dent Life in Germany, No. 2, by Qr. M. Towle, U. S. Consul at Nante; De Rebus &iris; No. 4, by Donald G. Mitchell, ("1k Marvel"); A Theft for Life, by Miss S. J. Pritchard; Unforgotten; Patriotic Record of Bowdoin College, by J. H. Thompson ' • What is the German's Fatherland ? by Prof. W. Wells, (Union College); The Lost Cause, by the Editor; Books of the Month. New York : Charles Scribner & Co. THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY, September, 1866.—Contents : The Surgeon's Assist ant; On Translating the Divina Commedia ; Woman's Work in the Middle Ages; Pas sages from Hawthorne's Note-books, IX.; University Reform ; The Voice ; Life As surance; A Distinguished Character; The Bobolinks; Griffith Gaunt, or, Jealousy, X ; The Chimney-Corner for 1866, IX ; An Italian Rain Storm; Incidents of the. Portla.n4 Fire; My Little Boy; Lake Champlain; Yesterday; The Johnson Par ty; Reviews and Literary Notices; Recent American Publications. Boston : Ticknor & Fields. Philada.: A. Winch, T. B. Pe terson & Bro. LITTELL'S LIVING AGE, No. 1159. August 18. Littell, Son & Co., Boston.— Contents : The Relation of Art to Nature ; Sir Brook Fossbrooke, Part XIV. ; Cob bett's Political Works ; To Esther, No. 11. ; The Minister Painter ; Miss Rossetti's Poems ; The War in Europe and its Con sequences; The Policy of France in the New Position; True " Moderation" in Prussia; and a variety of shorter articles in prose and poetry. A tempting bill, and one which doh not deceive in the perform ance. GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK. September, 1866. Louis A. Godey, Philadelphia. Twenty-one Embellishments, including pat terns and fashion plates, and an extensive table of contents. The Home Department has a particularly fine engraving and ground plan for a country residence. ARTHUR'S HOME MAGAZINE. Septem ber, 1866. T. S. Arthur & Co., Philadel phia. Six Illustrations, including a fine steel-plate engraving and fashion plates ; a piece •of musie, and the usual variety of articles. OUR YOUNG FOLKS, for September.— Boston : Ticknor & Fields. LITERARY INTELLIGENCE. NEW PEaroprcALs.—The American Nu mismatic and Archeological Society have recently begun the publication of a bulletin called the American JournaVof Numis matics. It is an eight-page, double-column octavo, with a cover, published monthly, and is devoted entirely to the description and cataloguing of coins,- and to the jour nals of the diferent numismatic societies. There is hardly enough matter in Ameri can numismatics to fill even a journal of this size. If more space were devoted to the archaeology of the country, which is a great field for explorers, the journal would be greatly increased in value. Otte of the best and most thorough papers recently written on American archeology is the essay by Prof. ,O. Q. Marsh,, F. G. S, in the July number of the "Anterican Journal of Science," on the exploration of one of the ancient mounds at Newark, Ohio. PROGRESS.-It is one of the signs of the increase of travel, and the rapidity of inter course between nations, that - a guide-book for China should be published, a region that four or five years ago, was as inaccessible as the North Pole, or the sources of the Nile. The first Chinese " Murray" appears in the shape of a neat pamphlet of about seventy pages, entitled " Notes for Tourists in the North of China, by N. B. Dennys," and is published by Messrs. A. Shortrede & Co. of Hon g Kong. The pamphlet contains very full clescriptions of Tientsin, Pekin, and the surrounding country, with valuable notes on the productions, objects of curi osity, publio buildings, etc., of the capital of China, besides itineraries, from Pekin to the Mongolian frontier and the passes of the , Great Wall. Mr. Dennya has resided for two or three years at Pekin as an officer in the British consular service, and has had the best of opportunities-for familiarizing hire_ self with the peculiarities of the Province of Chih-li. His work is a very useful vade. meow,tra, and is illustrated with several ser viceable plans of Pekin arid of the rout be tween that city and the sea. "THE FINE ARTS QUARTERLY REVIEW," London, which unfortunately died out, after a brief but meritorious career, has been revived under the editorship of Mr. Wood waid, the Queen's librarian. The articles are, as formerly, signed, and cover a broad variety of' topics. The writers are now chiefly men who do not belong to the reap istic school. The illustrations, which a re very profuse, are the best point 'of the magazine. Those hi the first number of the new series are Jehan Fencquet's "Cor onation of the Virgin" (in gold and colors) ; Reynold's portrait of himself, from the pi e . tare in Mr. Stuart's possession; Raphael's cartoons of " Christ's Charge to Peter" and " The Beautiful Crate ;" Flandrin's " Christ and St. John," the Pitti " Ecce Homo," Perugino's "Ascension," together with some minor works, initial letters, and the like. CENSORSHIP IN RUSSIA.—Two of the chief Russian reviews, the "Covremenik" (Contemporary) and " Russkoe Slovo" (Russian Word,) have recently been sus pended after the proper number of warn ings. The ground of their suspension was their continued publication of articles having a tendency subversive of law and social order, and their antagonism to re ligion and good morals. A CHICKEN SENT HOME TO ROOST.— Ticknor & Field's Every Saturday Night has the following :—We find the following paragraph in the columns of a London newspaper: "The new generation of American poets do not mean, it would appear, to be con fined in the old metrical grooves. Our rhymesters must surely assume the well known attitude of the British lion—put their tails between their legs and howl with anguish—when they read the follow ing, from 'Drift, and other Poems, by George Arnold,' just published in Bos ton : BEER." " ' Here • With my beer I sit While golden moments flit Alas! They pass Unheeded by : And, as they fly, I, Being dry, Sit, idly sipping here My beer.' " The British lion is altogether too sensi tive and hasty. The quaint measure (of " Beer") which so offends him is none of Mr. Arnold's invention, but rather a study of one of England's choicest lyrical poets —Robert Herrick. We commend the " Hesperides" of that delicious old gentle man to the British lion's consideration. REPLY TO RENAN.----SOOn after the publication of M. Renan's late work, "Les Apotres," the walls of Paris were covered with large posters announcing the publication of a work in answer to. the author. The title of the book refuting the author of " Les Apotres" is " Christ Crucified, by Ernest Renan." THE RELIGIOUS NEWSPAPER, I was spending a day, not long since, in a pleasant farm-house, which was fitted up with a taste and neatness not always found in such homes. The farmer sat down in the parlor, and conversed with ease and intelligence on various topics of inter est in the religious and literary world— showing a perfect familiarity with what was doing in the great world outside the bounds of his little farm. He was a man of only common education, yet his infor mation was far more extended than is cus tomary in the people of his calling. The secret of his superiority became very appa rent in the course of the conversation. He was frequently referring to some remark or paragraph in his religious newspaper which bore upon the subject upon which we were speaking—sometimes taking up a recent number, which was just at hand, and read ing a few lines. One could not listen to him without obtaining valuable information and food for after thought. An excellent religious newspaper was the educator that made this farmer so much superior to those whose lands lie upon either side of him, and who were content to jog on year after year, in the same dull round of monotonous duties, without a thought of anything beyond them. He had taken this paper many years, and what was more important still, he read it every week thoroughly and carefully. Cat off from much society, he had a little world of his own in the pleasant family sitting-room, where he experienced 'the most delightful intellectual enjoyment. What a blessing that religious newspaper was to him, and wnat a blessing such a paper is in every circle where it is intro duced. You cannot do a greater kindness to any family than to send such a messen ger of good things into its fbld fifty-two times a year. I wonder that newspapers are not oftener • presented as New Year's gifts to our friends • for certainly there can be none which yields such large returns of profit and happiness for so small an out lay.—S. S. Times. FALSE RELIGIONS. All the *false religions that have ever desolated the earth are sparks from the collision of these two hard opposites: God's hate of sin and man's love of it. As they strike in the varied evolutions of life, strange fires flash from the point of con tact—fires that consume costly and cruel sacrifices. In Christ only may this sore derangement be healed. It is when sin is forgiven that a sinner can hate it. Thee is he on God's side. The two are agreed, and " He is our peace" who bath taken away sin by one sacrifice. Instead of hating God for his holiness, the forgiven man instinctively loathes the evil of his owe heart, and looks with longing for the day when all things in it shall be made n ew. Such is the blessed fruit of pardon, when. it comes to a sinner through the bloodof Christ.—Arnot's Laws from Reaven f OY Life on Earth.