New Series, 01. Jtoicat llnsljgtoiait. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1867. WHAT OF THE NIGHT? At this time last year, it was our privi lege to chronicle An extraordinary number of revivals in every branch Of the Ghurch and in every section of the country, North and West. Each week’s 1 issue went forth freighted with glad tidings; each paper was like the messenger, whose very feet upon the mountains were beautiful with the peace and salvation which he published to the rejoicing Church. Hundreds and ; thousands of strong' men, of fathers and mothers, of the respecta ble and influential, of young men and of maidens, gave themselves in public cove nant to the Lord. It Was about the first of I March, we think, that this remarkable move- Iment reached a height, which, perhaps, was Inot at any subsequent period surpassed, but itvliich seems to have been maintained for some weeks. During the month of March, Swc estimated the number of conversions at ijjwenty-five thousand. And good judges ®ronounced the work, in many respects, treater than that of 1858. It was univer sally conceded that the material brought Into the churches was of an unusually valua ble character, the converting influences having reached the older and maturer per sons, to a degree unknown to this genera tion. As the interest was very slow to decline, and as revival intelligence, sometimes of the most stirring character, continued, from time to time, to gladden the heart and to encour age the praying and hoping ones, it was but natural to expect, in the season now passing, a renewal of the wonderful scenes of the previous year. This expectation has not, as yet, been fulfilled. We have had no such marvellous demonstrations of the Spirit, as at this time, last year, were electrifiying the people of God in the region around Phila delphia, in Towanda, Williamsport, Corning, Elmira, and other places to the North and West of us. It must be confessed that there is nothing in the spiritual condition of the churches generally, which calls for congratu lation or rejoicing. Yet wo ai’e equally convinced that there is no cause for discouragement. Wo must remember that the country has been pass ing through a political excitement as great as any experienced since 1860. The ques tion has been forced upon us at the North, whether, after conquering secession and sla very, we would exchange places with the vanquished, and allow them to govern and to ruin the country we had saved. Consid ering that the solution of this greatest of political questions is still incomplete, we cannot wonder that there has been some distraction of mind, and some hinderance to the free course of Gospel truth. And the Holy Spirit has by no means withdrawn his special influences altogether from the chur ches. His glorious workings in places like Mendham and Belvidere, N. J., Oberlin, 0., Freeport and Neoga, 111., Wabash College and other institutions of learning; in that ■hitherto barren, yot important, field, the ■Pacific Coast; and on missionary ground, ■in Mr. Jessup’s Seminary at Beirut, in Shan- Itung province, China, and among the villa- Iges of Kolapoor, show that we are living to iday in true revival times. Those are notor- Idinary operations of the Spirit. They show jus the heavens surcharged with spiritual in jflnonces. They re-assure us that its win jdows need but be opened, when a blessing ■will be poured, out beyond our capacity to ■receive it. Brethron and churches may be discour aged here and there; special causes may in terfere with the prosperity of a church in special eases; but the general principle must bo maintained and insisted upon, that this is an era of grace, that we are to expect Pen tecostal visitations of the Spirit, that a Bteady tide of pure revival influences is to rise and flow like a river of God through the churehes —a river of saving influences, widening and deepening in all its course, and pouring its waters into the dead seas of the impurity, godlessness, and unbelief, ■until they are healed. It is by no means too late to see great re vivals this season. Some of our most re narkable and encouraging news came long iftcr this period last year. Times and sea ions must not rule too absolutely our ar- iv, Nq; 9. rangements for extending’the Gospel among men who are dying every day. With some denominations, a, whole month is set apart to special religious services at this very time in the.year ; why.may not our churches, es pecially in large, cities,take advantage of the impression made by these observances in the community, and throw open their doors, also, with believing prayers to God for, a blessing ? One thing we have noticed: pastors who are accustomed to look and to laboivfor revival as part of the Regular ex pedience of their churches, express no feel ings of discouragement, but the contrary, as, to the present, state of things,in their churches.. Some who had great ingatherings last ..year,, roport hopeful indications and conversions, now. . , Courage, brethren! Plough and so w the seed in hope, in humility, and in prayer, and God will give the increase. THE LONDON WORKINGMEN IN CONFER ENCE WITH THE CLERGY. On Monday, the, 21st of January, a con ference of. rare character was held in the London Coffee-house. Three hundred per r sons were present, including representative men from the different trades, and. political leaders of the workingmen, with such men as Thomas Hughes, and Arthur Kinnalird, members of Parliament; Mr. Peter Bayne, Dean Stanley, Rev. Newman Hall, Rev. F. D. Maurice, Rev. Mr. Binney, Rev. Drs. Raleigh and Edmond, Canon Miller, and others. For seven hours a free and friendly conference between these parties was kept up, with a view to reach some of the causes which hinder workingmen from attendance upon Christian worship. About twenty genuine workingmen spoke, including a cabi net-maker, three engineers, a tailor, a plas terer, a porter, a carpenter, and so on. Con trary to the .express stipulations of the call, one or two of these speakers assailed the doctrines taught in the pulpit and the char acter of the Scriptures themselves. Allusion was also made to the Scientific Lectures of the infidel Professor Huxley to the; working men of London, as furnishing a valuable counteractive to the low pleasures by which the work-people are lured to destruction. The great complaint urged, was a want of sympathy between the clergy and the work ing people. Ministers, said Mr. Paterson, a cabinet-maker, decline to interest themselves in the social questions of the day so impor tant t>> the workingman. The same thing, substantially, was said by Mr. John Bates, engineer; another engineer said that minis ters should sympathize with trades’ unions and political associations. Mr. Bebbington, the porter, said ministers were seldom seen in the homes of the poor; Mr. Thomas, a car penter, complained that clergymen held themselves so much aloof from the working men. Other reasons assigned were the strong objections of the workingmen to the Estab lished Church; the usurpation and injustice involved in State support; the.enormous wealth enjoyed by some of the prelates while their curates were starving; and the gross corruption practiced in the assignment of livings. Others, again, charged on the clergy indifference or opposition to the tem perance reformation, so essential to the com fort and purity of the workingmen, or com plained of the absence of discipline and pre valence of grevious inconsistencies among Church members; some excused the over worked" poor for their non-attendanec at Church on the ground that they required the Sabbath as a day of rest and recreation, but Mr. Bebbington, the porter, complained that many employers compelled their men to work on that day; sensibly enough he condemned the running of Sunday steamers and Sunday conveyances, and said no man had a right to rob another of his Sunday, even though it was to take his fellows into the country to breathe a purer air. Rev. Newman Hall and Rev. Dr. Miller responded very fully to the objections; but the most notable and encouraging feature of the meeting was the stand taken by the po litical leaders, Mr. Edmond Beales and Mr. George Potter. Of these men, the Weekly Review says:— “It would be difficult to name two men who are regarded with more hatred and ap prehension by the specially respectable, re ligious, and conservative classes in England, than ill'. Edmond Beales and Mr. George Potter. The one is regarded as the fire brand of political, the other of social, revo lution. On Monday they both spoke, and PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, the burden of their speeches was to urge and implo.ra workingmen to give ear to the mes sage of the Gospel and attend the public worship of God.’' Mr. Totter made the most practical sug gestion brought out by the meeting; namely, “ that the. ministers in the Established Church and the [Nonconformist chapels name a 'Sunday evening during the next month, and let it go through the metropolis that to the workingmen alone a sermon would be preached. - Let' it be called the working man’s sermon,'and ; tpe workingmen would come and jiear.” Mr. Potter’s concluding words,are full of practical, Christian wisdom and put the whole question of reform in its true evangelical aspect. How encouraging to all Christian wbrkers for the masses, arc such sentiments, from the mouth of'one of a class so generally suspected of anti-Chris tian sympathies, and in fact so often found laboring to instil Into the minds of the working people sentiments of hostility to the Church and to Christian, institutions. Some of our American demagogues may ponder them with.profit. Here they are . “ Whatever might be the causes for the alienation which they had met to consider, as one faithful to himself arid to his class, he must say, ‘ Workingmen) the truth is pro claimed, the Gospel is preached, and no ex cuse can free you from the responsibility of attending to it.’ (Applause.) As one who had done much for their social and political elevation, his heart’s desire for them was that they should go more to places of wor ship,, and should think more: of the Gospel which taught them that they had a, soul- to save, and that whatever might be done for them peciiriiarily, morally, politically, )and socially, was utterly useless unless they laid hold of salvation and eternal life. ,'• (Loud applause”) .... ,\ , . Thp‘frankness of this mprieni'ent is well adapted to win the confidence,of the class to whom it was addressed. It puts the whole matter of religion in'a ne w aspect to them when their own opinions are asked by its appointed ministers. It is part of that great series of measures by which the Churph in modern times is re-establishing her primi tive character of sympathy with, and adapt edness to, all men, including all the various branches of Home Missionary effort. In countries like England, whero the Church is burdened by alliance with the State, and is seen by the poor in the light of odious pri vilege, such movements are even more ne cessary than' with us. But both here and there, there cannot be a more important •work done than to convince the thronging mechanics, artisans, and laborers, particu larly of our great cities, of the necessity of a hearty acceptance of the truths and per- formance of “the duties of the Christian re ligion, to their true elevation. And the worst enemy of the working classes is the man who is endeavoring to prejudice them against the ministers, ordinances, and insti tutions of Christianity. THE PLAN OF CONGRESS. At length Congress has produced its plan for the reconstruction of . the late rebellious States and submitted it to the veto of the President. It is to be commended on many accounts, —on nearly every account. It repu diates the entire plan and policy of the. Presi dent, and undoes all he has summarily and arbitrarily done in the work of reconstruc tion. It puts the rebel states under military control, returning to the status that pre vailed immediately upon the surrender of General Lee. It destroys at a blow the enor mity and scandal of rebel rule over territory conquered by loyal arms. It re-establishes the fact that the rebellion in the interest of slavery was a total, disastrous, irreparable failure. It puts loyal men, white and black once more under protection of the flag and the army of the country. / The flag which has been folded away and draped in mourn ing, and hidden in forgotten corners, since the death of Lincoln, is once more unfurled; its folds floating and flapping on the breeze, sing again their glorious song of freedom, .and shine once more on Southern fields, the emblem of victorious nationality, the pledge of a new era of justice anij equal rights to all. The eminently righteous doctrine that men have lifted parricidal hands against the very existence of their country, have neither the right nor the fitness to partake in its government, is made fundamental to the proposed restoration of the States to a civil position. Only loyal men'will be' admitted to the privileges of citizenship and of office holding, at least in the first' formation of the FEBRUARY 28; 1867. new governments,- —a provision far in ad vance of the pending Constitutional Amend ment. And the right of suffrage is given to all loyal men, white on black. , 7 There is but.one grave defect, and that we fear, unless remedied, will nullify the whole arrangement- —its - execution is in the hands of the President. We scarcely know what the Thirty-ninth Congress does mean by in trusting* its scheme to the hands.of the Pre sident, unless it be to furnish a last argu ment for the removal of the present incum bent, and the substitution of a true man in his place. ,■ The meeting of these Committees, first apart,-and then jointly, was held in- Hew York City last week as announced. Our own and the joint Committee’s meeting was held in the study of Madison. Square Church. Ten members of each Committee were in attendance. , Bey. George E. \Vlswell, D.D., was elected a member of our Committee in place, of. Dr, Brainerd. The details of the business transacted'are not, we suppose, de signed for publication at present, but. no harm can possibly result from the announce ment, that,during the two days through the greater part of which the, joint meeting extended, no- jarring word was uttered, al though every member gave free utterance to his opinions, and that , .the impression made by the conferences was, favorable to the result contemplated in: the formation of the Committees. ... U [ , .In the staid' old' city, of ! Georgetown the experiment of impartial sriffirage has its-first trial pi Monday. There is a poetic “fitness about its taking place 'in the District “of Columbia, and especially under the eye of him who vetoed the bill which places the ballot in the hands of the freedmen. Before this reaches your readers the telegraph will have informed them of the result, and the fact will be demonstrated that those who have wielded the bayonet are worthy of carrying the ballot. The conservative candidate is the'present Mayor, who has filled the office for'twenty years, and considers that he has a life-patent of it. He is a violent negro hater/and but a few years ago carried on a large traffic in human flesh. The candidates on the equal suffrage ticket are all young, active business men, and have been led by principle to lend their names to the cause at the risk of social and business ostracises. More than two-fifths of the registered voters are colored men: We will not attempt to predict the result. Whatever it ; may be, we are confident' that it will not verify the closing prediction of the message which ve toed the suffrage bill “that the all-embra cing extension of impartial suffrage would end in its destruction.” ' Washington’s birthday was marked by no uncommon event in the city which he founded, and which is honored with his name. Congress was so hard pressed with work that it could not pay even the poor respect of an adjournment to the day. The strangers that now fill the city to overflow ing made an excursion to Mt. Vernon, and swelled the crowd at the President’s last reception in the evening. These occasions have been too often described to bear recital by this pen,, though a few reflections may not be uninteresting. As we joined the throng pressing for entrance, we had an op portunity of ruminating over what we saw. The Executive Mansion is no palace like the Tuilleries, St. James or the Escurial. Many a private citizen lives in its' superior. Nor is it a credit to the nation as the residence of its Chief Magistrate. But when the na tional debt is paid perhaps we’ll have a bet ter one. Our pride as an American is always touched when we think of it as being mo deled after the residence of an Irish Duke. If the British had burned the walls in 1814, as well as the inside, we might now have a White House distinctively American. The huge portico where we are swayed to and fro by the surging crowd, is of the Grecian order, of which our public buildings have no less than twelve, —a circumstance which has called forth the criticism of foreigners. But the porch seems almost hallowed when we look at the “historic window” beneath it, where the form of our martyred President was so often seen, and from which he spoke so many words of encouragement and fulfil ing prophecy to a nation in its darkest hours. THE RE-UNION COMMITTEES. OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. Genesee Evangelist, iSTo. 1084. While considering one of these, we are whirled by this current of humanity through the : door and into the broad hall, where the Marine Band in its gay uniform is discours ing “ most eloquent music.” The doorkeepers continually command the crowd to keep back; but it is like Canute’s mandate to the ocean. We are carried ir resistibly forward through the long lines of policemen to the blue-room, where the Presi dent stands with TJ. S. Marshall Goding on one side, and the self-constituted poet-lau reatCj B. B. French, (who will soon surren der his fat office as Commissioner of Public B uildings), on the'other side. Each one comes before the President in the height of perspiration; which accounts for the impos sibility of distinguishing the original color of his', glove which has been clasped by a thousand people during the past hour. We could not congratulate him on the success of his policy, as some took occasion to do, but as we scanned his countenance and contras ted it with our recollection of it one year previous, when he made his Niagara leap into the arms of the copperheads, we thought the lines'of care were deeper, and the linea ments of dogged willfulness more developed. No clue could be gained from it as to the disposition he would make of the Reconstruc tion Bill then in h'ispoeket. Oneof hisorga ns assures him it would be a “most uncomfor table thing” to have it remain there, while another notifies him that he cannot approve it without making himself “a military des pot over ten states of the South.” So his only alternative is to veto it, —which is ex pected; While searching in vain for some feature in 'his countenance-on which our eyes could' rest With pleasure, we were reminded Of-an incident which transpired in the old Hall of Representatives a short time ago. lady, with the two daughters of a friend, were viewing the statuary there collected, When they came to the marble busts of Lincoln and Johnson. “Now Clara and Nellie,” said she to the young girls, “ study these two faces carefully. Imagine yourselves in trouble, and away from friends. To which of these would you flee for counsel and support, arid in which, if in either, could you confidingly trust?” Several moments were allowed them for examination; and when asked for their decision they both in stantly replied, “ This one,” pointing to the bust of President Lincoln, “He would be a father to us.” A nation has done the same. When they were informed that the busts represented Lincoln and Johnson respec tively, they expressed much innocent sur prise, as they had been taught to believe that all evil dwelt in the former, while the essence of all good abode in the latter. But we have wandered to the other end of “ the avenue.” Bet us return to the White House. Mrs. Johnson comes from her seclusion for the second time, and assists in the reception. She is plainly attired and receives with unaffected modesty. To her, more than to any human being, the Presi dent owes his present elevation. She taught him the alphabet, and while she lives, our greatest hope of his reform lies in her. Her countenance indicates abundant good-sense, and great perseverance, and were it not for her invalid body she would do the honors of the Executive mansion second to no one. We left the Reception easier than we en tered. It is like office-holding, difficult to got in, but easy to : slip out. In the Name of the Prophet—Pigs!— Our brethren in Southern Ohio must pre pare for trying times in that region, as that powerful educational agency, Antioch Col lege, is to use up their orthodoxy in shoft order. The Boston Christian Register says: “In the region about Antioch you meet the Yankee influence from the Western Re serve of Ohio, the slaveholders emigrated from Virginia and Kentucky, and the ener getic Seotch-Irish from Western Pennsylva nia. This last people is cursed by a the ology drawn from the lowest cant.of narrow Presbyterianism. Here is a grand ganglion of the forces of our American humanity. If our foremost Mew England culture will but grasp it, endow it with life and keep in sympathy with it, its influence on this and the next generation will be without limit. Neglect it, and the consequences be on your own souls. We have the college with all the machinery, it [Liberal Christianity?] only lacks force, more vital power.” Maj. Gen. O. O. Howard lectures’to-night at National Hall, on the Ereedmen, before the Social, Civil and Statistical Associa tion (colored) of Philadelphia.