COlir illicr l ita . i'.sstiglcrim New Series, Vol. VI, NO. Junn AWeir 15j al) G 9 Strictly in Advance $2.50, Otherwise 23. 1 Postage 20ots, to be paid where delivered. f —Many readers follow with deep interest the . course of our foreign correspondents. In the letter of "B. B. C." on the next page, a brief account of the celebrated Fourth of July ser mon of Dean Stanley in Westminster Abbey, will be found, the remarkable words in which the preacher alluded to earlier and existing re lations between England and Ainerica 'being very fully reported. We have 'other letters from the same pen, but we fear the necessity for rest from duties which have already overtasked hand and arm, will much diminish their number here after. We shall also hear ; frequently'we hope, from " S. C. P." among the objects of religions interest in the heart of Europe. —We are again 'called upon to mourn with the family of the deceased publisher of our paper- - the late Mr. James' B. Rodgers. His second daughter, Annie D. Rodgers, was drowned with two young companionawhile bathing on Wednes day of last week at Atlantic City. The tide had turned, and there was a very Strong undertow at the time, by which they were swept beyond their depth. The absence of life-boats, buoys and safe-guards of every description rendered it , im possible to come to their rescue, although frantic efforts were made by her cousin, Mr. James Smyth. The bodies of the: three were washed ashore in the afternoon, and interred on Satur day last, Mr. Stout's in the morning, Miss Hun ter's and Miss Rodgers' at Mount Moriah Ceme tery in tire afternoon. A greatly afflicted house hold, and, therefore,4re trust a greatly beloved one, has lost a bright, cheery face and a -happy, hopeful young life from its fatally circle—a cir cle which had been so recently broken by the same dread messenger. THE . CURE OF GRIEF. Cant thou minister to a mind dismedt—Macbeth. The first need of this, suffering world is. the re. moval of its ills; the second and , equally pressing and more immediate necessity is for consolation ' in sorrow. It is demanded of every agency that professes to benefit man, whether. it can. aural* griefs. A gospel whiclt , doet not Icing comfort is no gospel. The preacher wholas no medicine for the ills and sorrows of the people has missed' his ;calling ; he is sent, if sent at all, to bind up the broken in heart, and he mustdo it or confess himself a failure. This busy, over-excited, highly expectant, grasping age, brings along the .tide of its grand_ successes a multitude.of miserable wrecks. The greater ventures of to.day: are followed by thee deeper disasters. The long and high tension of the nerves is followed by the piofounder depress sion, the incurable prostration of the whole sys-. tem of mind and body. Ropes dint have feasted upon vast panoramas of wealth and. prosperity give place to total eclipses.cif despair. The mis erable victims of their over-wrought desires and ambitions are driven by the reaction to insanity and to suicide. -Of the- alarming increase of this latter crime, every day's report of the current news gives overwhelming proof. It shows how muob, need there is-in our day of the consolations of the gospel. It is the conclusive argument against unbelief in every shape, that it-cannot befriend man when. he most needs a friend. . It' , can amuse and in terest us with its ingenious: questions. It can amaze us with its grand concatenated -systems of thought. It can fascinate us with world 7 making, and confound us with doubts, perplexities. and possibilities. But in those hours that come upon every man, when no human solaee.can soothe his agonised and broken heart, when he is called to meet in person the dark problems of his destiny,. then it is found that unbelief,. so -far .from fur nishing a ray of comfort, is- often the- keenest pang in his sorrows. It is those • sorrows them selves that teach men to believe. .Whilt in-in explicable monstrous freak of natures what. a 'lust incurable fracture' in. the - Cosmos: is - one single broken heart : one case of incurable hu man sorrow 1 That the great mass of men were formed to mourn , hopelessly,—this is the teach ing, or at least the result to , which a general. skepticism must lead us. This is the result which must follow the general spread bf the materialis.: tic, positive, godless science of to-day. Positivism and suicide zuust inevitably becuiue saber. Scientific men may sneer-at-the-idea of sub-. jeoting their theories.tc auy such . test -as their relation to the - por rp w of Man. But man mite ever cherish'the inuipiciocilljet the 'seierce; whioh denies to him an. overru4i kruvidaaaa, 4 pray er-hearing God, and ..a...-Chrithug... - Oonsokaor, is wrong somewhere ;Lis *pail -.fah e '-foundations, however imposing' and ' well proportioned the structure. The cry nrihiAttnivi Qom fort is as legitimate as the t ,t'hlist of ti”.!').. l 4man mind for knowledge. Preach comfort to the sorrowing, then. Bring out the rich stores of the Gospel; pour balm upon the wounded ; link the individual sorrow with the gracious plan of the supremely wise and good Good. Show how the sublime and manly virtue' of 'endurance is cultivated by sor- rows how Life is not. an idle ore, But. iron dug from central gloom And heated hot with , burning fears, And dipped in hishing baths of tears And battered with the shocks-of doom, To shape, and ,use. • Show how the worthlessness of all things merely earthly mu. 4 be learned, ,and the affections ennobled and purified, and set upon worthy and spiritual ends, by just such experiences,; how finally, our light affliction-, which is but for a moment, wollcs out for us. a far. more exceeding and (Aetna' Weight of glory, , „ . The history of the Republic has been . a - his tory of unobserved and Peaceable revolutions. None of-these has been more important than that which has taken place in regard to the possession of political power. In colonial days and in the years which followed the Revolution, the elective franchiSe,- in most of the States, was vested not in the whole people; Vat in a class of them, = the native-born• owners of property. Suffrage was 'a privilege, something secured to a class of -men by class legislation. These were men, as a whole, of some social weight and dignity,—mett who had " given hostages; to society' . ' and who - had much to lose by any ill-considered changes'or measures. Their social position gave a weight and dignity to political life, and the offices• of the. State were coveted. as honorable and, conferred as rewards .of such merit as society was ,competent to under; stand. While this state .of things . lasted, 'suf frage was a privilege in the secondary Sense of the word also, it was a desirable thing,—prized by those who had it, longed' for by those who had it not. Suffrage as a right was the watchword of the great revolution introduced by Jefferson and.the old Deinocracy. It is a proof of the revolution ary power of ideas that that revolntion.snaceeded without a bloody struggle. The elective-frau.' chise passed out of the hands of political mono polists by their own act, Ind 'was transferredfrom the many to the all. Every citizen was to have a voice in the•. management of,.the:state, that. voice being Tegirded.asfof divine right. The consent of the governed Well tole thebasis of all national? administration,-4—in. the long run the governedyand the Overnots were to be identical. The-will of the whole people waxtobe expressed in every national, act, and the 'public servants were to hold themselves as the servants'of the whole people. ' • „ • ' The theory is.beautiful, and right enough;. as all political theories are, for-a millennial vi , para.. disaical state, bat wrong,.._ as all theories are, for' the present state' of -society:• We do not say that the system is not ,muoh.su perior to that which had gonelefore, or that it would be desirable to restore the old ":property = qtutlifications" which the. Democracy wiped:out of the State -constitutions and Slaws. But we..do say that it has its own peculiar dangers, and that, while it aims -higher thaw any previous theoryi it may Mi. Its great danger is that in ceasing to; be a privilege in the first. sense of theWOrd (thee right of a olaas or caste) it may also cease:to fie a privilege in the second sense (something prized.): Low pricing;" says •old Thomas Fuller, "makes low prizing."' Democracy may , lead to decay of what the - Fathers of the Republic called "rib. lie spirit." a ' * • Take' our Own city for instance. Do the - more . eancatea wealthier - els:46s :fake - the Fame in terest in public affairs as hi the tinie:OfTrankliri" and Robert Morris? Are theilas zealous in the Management of political macliinery Are they as forward in the exercise of political rights ? .Arii they as eager to secure political 'offi ce? Those who know much of this,---the nioat aristocratic . . of American cities,—kno;i that' it is d ner so: S'onte bear the names of our itorcinial and ,revolutiOnary statesmen and leaders, never Voted' • ;iii their lives. Very few of them would' be with the'possession of a State or municipal offiCe. And if matters are not so bad with the more purely mercantile - class, they are' worse 'than they ought to be Politics take time ; Oct fellOw:c:itizen of Ben: #rinklin needs - to be is.4ighf that is money." The gle,:at race after ' riches leaves "them-no leisure -for More' the Most - el:Ter:. ficial acquaintance with'local`politibs. ``'lf 'they turn out on election' aY,iiiien'anf great issue is at stake; and waste an our , m wat ig at e ,polls, they feel that they ' ha ve` done 'more than their duty. If they know any' particular ditifs`td - be a scoundrel, they will 'hive the bide: yendence and will take the trodble tio"scratch ' " =MEM PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1869. PRMLEGE-RIGHT-'-Dlint him off the ticket. Yet • they will not take. the trouble to secure the nomination cif:o6od men. Reputation mu - eh -belies our intelligent citizens ' or wealth and - prinniple, if one tenth! of _theni ever saw ;the inside 'of a primary meeting: How• fevinf their ever serve as Negates ie tiotbrions.* Allele holding city' office iti*ould not piesi. lf a good' number their do fall into the hands'rof scoundrels what matter? They will -*f u s , o f course; but then'any individual's loss by rob-' beiy is leas than the loss'of his time that it'ivontd take t:o prevent We are falling from . grace in this-matter. The administration of civiliffairs is very from reflecting the collective intelligence and integrity 'of ' the coMmitnity, and ' no:- . Coin= munity has More of eitherlhan it needif ifik• their management. _ The cure Must be sufrage as a duty. ' We need to have the great truth of political stewardship and :responsibiliti pressed-'home upoii 'Ve • - need to feel More and:mere that every`talent that; the Master `"has placed'in our hands 'Mist be ac counted forat the Master's coming. He will be a true' social refornier who Shall burn 'into' the careless and' pre-eecupieil souls and tiiinciences‘ of this 'people the truth that the exercise Of every' political funotion is-a ditty before God, for which they wilf.as surely be held' " responsible as for their honesty Of dealing 'and purity of life,—and that cafeleisness and recklessness in these matters will sewthe-. seeds of - a. terrible harvestrihich their 'childrmi will reap in sorrow. Thiy.seenis• to be the next political duty before the Churches, and one in which they can all unite,iisinvoliing no partizan or contested issue. Ifithe public, conscience is not to be 'debauched by political'] corruption, if the resources of our 'cities; States,.' our country, are not to be -reektessly squandered; if we are not to be herried• on "to' disaster, dissension, and social convttleidit, we must be rid of the fastidiousness: and the greed, of gain which are making bad citizens of 'Macy of the most responsible of our people. Wei must pass from conceptions of political 2n:ryht to con - victione of political duty. - - . *lt is said, indeed that .the time holding the primary meetings is actually fixed with, a view of finding; inost of oar wealthy and intelligent citizens out.of .tonti. l - , : A RIM- THROUGH NEW . ENGLINRI=L. ' 1 If the tourist of limited opportunities wishes ' to crowd as much•of Sight-seeing with as wide - a variety as possible into the time at his ceinmarid,. let him tarn to New England,--that very limited corner of our national territory, which might lie swallowed up - without materially altering °fir g,eo graphical'or territorial importance, but which is of-'suite' commanding importance` in every ether poititorview. Its charmin'g and Widely varied scenery 4 Fits teeming --ficipulation j its thriving towns and villaits- White - church spires its endless industries; its hall:kink 'memories of iniffal ai d'revolutionairfinses; 'the echoes or poe-• try and of elOquelice*hieli seem to linger among its hills Ots pre-eminence in literature, in edtical lion, in theological -development; in , patriotic lie.' votion ;its tawerfnl maternal Chains upon multif tudes of its son% scattered in every part of the country, combine- to make 'it the most r'eniuneral: tive of all regions tOthe'seekers , of entertainment, who are afflicted with-the twO American diseases, euritogity and :haste.' ' • It: 11 / 4 1 1 8 ` .241 this wise that we Made our " run " tbroUghfcrar of `the'six. states - Called . New Eng land.' The grandest of all modes of conveyanee going out of lie* York City 'are the new Fill litVer Sound heite;Which, after being owned" by two leis prOsperOui 'Partiee, are now in the handi of Fib a, Jr, the more great thariginjd Railroad Manager of the -metropolis. ' The grand wharf Irani - which these Vessels,start:is eoMplitely coy ered by air inimense frabeirork of timber; eased' in 'corrugated iron and supplied with vast lifting and sliding doorways:' Everi thing is kept in scrupulous neatness and erder. - Atthe j garkgwiy . plank, which - daintilY'OarPetridTand it various ' peas all over the:Vessel:Stand the offie!drir of the vessel; all in ' eldgint uaiform of 'blue cloth, with gold lace ornaments and badges; all gentlemanly fitie-looking men, pretty much inch as Mr:'Fiske mii , ht - have draWn from behind the chief desks of I • his banking and railroad offices. But the diinen' 'pions and splendor of the vessel itself soon corn , mend all your attention. Four hundred feet long-,lefity -fiftrfeet 'MA With proportionate breadth, her'great timbers yard run'tiing froni stem' to "Stern, :and frOni lower to upper decks ;`lier 'five - decks, four of thet acceraible to . passengers; two -of them furnis hed in . the 'ilehest style is saloons,, and running 'the Whole vast length of theveise that-trindreds of p a seens gers scarcely jostle one' nother ; the upper se loon dick finishediWtbe centre in balcony style',, looking doin upon, the' second, - 'and all richly earired, gilded, fteseoed, ciiipbted, - und hung:with chandeliers-thatllazed with gold and ciystal; a band, both' of brass and stringed iristiuments, playing, at intervals until bedtime--such were spme of s tbeinimediate attractions of , this great Riede of ava- architecture. But when one at down at themindows, kindly arrangedto;aid the inspection, sand watched the movements 'of- the enormous - engines,: sew the pondernita -piston:, rod comedown twelve good, feet . at a etroke, took in the vast diameter of the cylinder, which. e after,: wards learned. to bit:one humlred .and ten inches ; when nne saw the movements , of a ,fOrce equal to a• ll the horses ofya good sized ciottnty,, tiventreight 'hundred, plying-to and fro an' quietly almost as the- 4oCking of the4-Iniadle, and propelling our withits wheels of thirty , eight and a half . s3etcin . diameter, 4it the rate of eighteen miles all hour, i almost without a , tinmor, one.felt -a luxury of speechless Wonder,' which 'must - be felt,-not de scribed. One. million two hundred thousand dollars, we.were told, had been spent lin•the con struction of each of these .vessele=the-‘ 4 Bristol" _ and the " Providence."-, ~Mr. Fiske, Jr„ it is said, had them for ,two.--thirds •of that vast sum, 'and mow makes them pay,_ which "former owners _ did not do. We watched the shores _of the Sound, listened to music, savir.the aurora that was so.beautiful at AVorcester,, but did. not- see the meteor that shoti upwards in the sky , of Philadelphia, beheld the silver pathway, fit , for thewhining feet of an! gels ? made by the mootr,ert, the placid waters, heard, the gurgle and rash of , the- :waves around the good steamer's keel, watched the starry lighti, someflashing, some steady, .somewhite, , ioniered, that marked the; harbors of Connecticut and Long Island, andut: cast; when the music had ceased; andthe lights grew dim, , and quiet settling low on the great vessel, we went to,our rest, rather to dream _thaik_to sleep. _ _ BOSTON. We were 'disappointed in our first view of the fez& insernUe of Boston, it was se 'mach flatter, and so mach less picteresque than we T had app , posed._; fAdd'` Banker—how' can : they call it Hill "1' it does not deserve the 'term' al much' as oar " Greed Hill:" There's , as n monitnietit; it is true, brit it had not the advantage of much of a . foiunkat 'And - 'there was Tim d'fft intym imagining ow t e site could` aietad - military ;raker: . The crpokedneis' and tnirrewneaTOrthe streets of Bonton emharrassed as 'but little; 'We asked almostno questions, and iveivere never near in beinglost. It is'Our es tablished policy never to stir far in 'strange city without procuring a portable Map; arid_ get : : Ling the position of main points and streets clear: ly in Then ti little variety is really 'lean' enibtirrassing thin such fo — nnd in our . ' City, and . in parts of ,-Chicago'ead New Oar' neat effort is to react wine high from which - the plan of the `whole city can he'comPreliended, and the map verified. Pront'the top of thenew City Halt . a vast - strut). tare of graiiite,westidied the very reinnrlcable'l paiiiitarna of Beaton, and 'Boaton Harbor, guide unlike any other seaport town, we are disposed to . believe, 'in the civiiczed world' The many islands andnlinest4slank the - Centre'lifFhieli'i we stand tiai be the reason whgit is called I " the hub'?"-- t he bays spakling, fir Within the outer line'of wharveseruillispping and building ; the numerous'` railroads ink' long 'bridles ; this great evidences of commercial activity erOwding on every hand, " the, fortifications, the, nail yard,' the Monninent, the 'Olit State Seam . with its dome, made an entirely new sort of p icture in the ga ll er y &ll:l6min% Descending froM this'favors.- ble look: out; we threaded our way along the narrow streets, by crooked, dirty, busyCornhill, indeom ing down to State street, 'we gratified one of. the deepest, old4it and nibeiniered of our wishes - : we pat out feet in the Piaiiiiinilding,—very much in the ; style of our 'veberated pile on „Chestniit ct lled .FaniaiTHall; a snlistantial - hriek Stractureiwithont ornament, about as large as an o rdinary Quaker - meeting' honee, nearly all the space occupied` with - the open auditorium, the only seats' being in the' Toim of steps on tlO - 1 sides, on the platforto r and in` the galleries above: '1 No grandeur but that Of :heretic purpose,- nursed, and iniolved upon here-; no beauty but that of the voicelees,-Aavisiblei'gioribtil past The`young man in the office in front;ivraw startled' bi"our inquiry as l tu exace'lecality of the lafassacre - " It seemed liker''n ' totally new' idea tO keete r`of Fa neuil Halrof to day. He was`-qtrite - iinable toenlighten mg& haire'‘a iffiest going ^witli dim'-to' the' shit 'of -Peon's Tratty Tree, if he should come to Philadelphia to retort our question :So we will 'eay no more' —•• Farevrell -1.0 Boston I.' 'Not' i few friends who. deserved usistiasettrixily our 'attention, and- not a few objecti: of iaterest in - and around -"the huh," which - wean& rewirdedi'-out Genesee Evangelist, No. 1215. J Home & Foreign Miss. $2.00. ( Address :-1334 Chestnut Street. visits, were reluctantly neglected. A walk in Washifigion and Tremont streets, a few steps through the Common, whose grass was fresh and bright 'cornpired with our own, a look at the great five 'or six story hotel, with half-a dozen 'stares' and workshops in die first story, which was receding bodily from the piiveinnt, under the o r f a score or, two of screws, a pretty confident hope that not enough removals of that sort' intlid - itecur before our next visit to prevent oar' recognizing and enjoying the city ;—and then' another railroad depot, purchase of tickets, choosing of seats; ''comparing our Philadelphia withAhe'Boston-time--the latter about twelve minutes'aheadand we were off for New Hamp- AtONADNOC. - Have ion ever really:formed the acquaintance of - natural object, and felt an attach ment to it; as a . neW, actual sentiment springing Up in your bosoni ?- We 'did, on this journey to Heene; if you have ever taken the ride, we need not pronounce the talismanic word—Monadnoc 'hat- Which'w.as'a' mere name on the atlas before, a meaning , and' a. spell in it, now, like the name -- of the • dear one to the lover's heart. "What is that ?" we said, as a solitary eminence, with gracefully curving outlines, and proportions to arrest the eye, swept grandly into view. Monailnoc," was . tha'reply. We heard it with a thrill, and fastenealand feasted our eyes on the sight. &ion•foresta and embankments, stretch ing' a Oat-distance, barred the view. "It will heihnhriwe by the time these obstruc iiona are passed:"` An opening appeared; we peeted . donbtfully. But faithful Monadnoc was there, as - rand and sweet as ever. New ob structions- lined the road as we rushed swiftly 'en: 2 - "Now,- certainly," we said, "he will be gone." The light again shone; two mountains now'seernedtobe at Our Bide . We gazed, rubbed quetyee, -looked - again ;it was Monadnoe. He had not 'changed; it was merely our changed point or view. Again we sped along ; other ob lents came in- light : miles-passed; we had al !nose forgotten our royal friend; when, raising -qui eyes for alizement,there he stood apparently r i l ight . befole us; lifting.his magnificent and beau tftft3.ll;l4* like the Sphinx, and seeming to ask of his 'being, his origin 4iiklparposa; - aniOng the works of God. ArriVed at the beutiful town of Keene, nestled among green hills, and its broad streets bowered with graceful trees, we fOund the lofty Monad• noci fookirig doVrn over the eliding hills, like the the place; though eighteen miles away. As we jonitteted southward again to wards-the valley of the Connecticut, looking out upon - "the le'fblianti s and beholding a mountain peakdominating the' beautiful scenery, we hesi "tatingly ingai re name. " Monadnoe !" was the - reply. And finailY, when we stood in the everlini,.on the top-of 'Mount Holyoke, remem beiiiig with affection' out new acquaintance, we dettlattilil, Very doubtfully it is true, yet as the first ' thing " we cared 'to `know: " Can you see Voiludnec froth this point?" And we felt a friendshiv for Holyoke, at the prilnipt`reply : " Ofi ryea; there it is," and the :scenery `became at once less strange, when the noft outlines orthe mountain, four times as high tis-'HOTybkeifwhere 'we — stood, were seen, sixty hie; - miles -atvay, -resting peacefully above the summits of the 'nearer and humbler range of hills . on'the north.' ' ' • ' loiong our musings upon this evei-present phenoinebon;;eame thelthought of the persistent piesence - of one grand character in human his torythe Incarnate Word. Like a great moun tain, He cannot be banished from the world's 'Unbelief tries to remove or to hide "efforts are only like bushes and em bankments that furnish but transient obstruc iiiins.-- If you-stay-down in the cutting which You - liave dug, to be sure you "will not see the glorious sight; but it is there with all its power to_quicken and delight yon. Come out of- your 'artifibi&ilepressiouir and look and live. The tneillciP progress claim that they have whirled Inantind*st the old, and worn-out doctrines of tliteGospel. If these doctrines were bat such molehills'as bureau reason constructs, they might ana - divonldsooll , earry us beyond and out of their sigkt, astronomy, in ahemistr3r end geology, I they ; arephat .. kging L ihe point of view, and leaving one the - on, v _ a nted eminence of their science, eyeridaY: The verities, of the Gospel look down in'cluitgelem 'sublimity upon -the shifting scene of• human bpinion.,,,Xen.cannot glide past them, swiftly . as they.may,ge. They cannot get the histoneal Christ, with his 'marvellous birth, iniracles„ death, resurrection and apirituarhifigdolkoit 'of the landscape of the world's history; out of the registry of its , unim— peachable - facts; It is there, in spite of their theories, which demand its removal, And which. reveal their frailtyand their fine-spun, ingenious. nellanixiii4, - Aike mist -melting and breakieg_ shay harmlessly at thelliountain's. side.