i HORACE GREELEY. , 'om the Northern Jlfnn7,;,, f a . ; lm , Ui" n.uyim, , uere U a story to the effect that Mr. Seward e described Horace Greeley as a great man, full of genius and power that if he had com-,-ou sense he would be dangerous. The errant s ndencta of Mr. Greeley's mind have been so tnarkably illustrated during the past five or ; years, that Mr. Seward's epigram has i'nt. A great man and a great fool, com oed in one person, certainly presents an in Mgruous picture, which has the effect of mcature; and perhaps it is proper, in de nting Mr. Greeley, to adopt the mild euphe ism of "a great child." The coniunction of AUish. (not child-like) qualities with ereat ental capacity is the key to his character, iv is singular that, in the numerous bio aphles whloh have been published, this has never been expressed. Kvery reader of American newspapers Las n, at intervals, ridiculous caricatures of . Greeley burlesoues of the kind to which J- public men are subjected, and which pos- some degree of humor or appoaiteness. i caricaturist aims to bring out the leading 'its of the man; in excess, it is true, but the Vience is not successful unless it is readily Vi generally recognized as significant. The Matures of Horace Greeley invariably repre it him as an overgrown child. His callow I pncity or look and manner at once strike - irust as peculiar to himself. Physically, these characteristics are verv ilpable. There is the looseness of the bony mctuse which belongs to immaturity. The -n is naiiby, like a child's. The features k the strong outline of manliness. The eye soft and wavering, and has none of that andatorr energy which fires the look of ma- irity. The gait is loose and shambling a lmg alone, instead of a deliberate progress. jf suoh a body be typical of the miud which nuDits it, and its motions correspondent, we oiy readily understand how easily such a man i J jpi become tne viotim or his own ponde ojity, and merely stagger along the road of bought, according as one faculty or another mporarily moved him by its activity. In ut, the human being is far more of a machine ya most are willing to admit. Nor is it ,'ijugh to say the body affeots the mind. It i its purpose to represent the indwelling soul. fn have to learn of each other through the wdy: they also judge by the body. As Sweden : org expresses it, there is a "correspondence" between the two. : Horace Greeley grew up rapidly to nearly , ix feet in height, at an early age This hasty Irowth of the skeleton left the orcanio develop- fenperainent, and of large brain, his mental Vsivity served to still further exhaust his ere of vitality, and thereby retard physical hiturity. There is some analogy between this npetuous growth of his body and the opera- ns or his mind, lie generalizes and theo aes, freely and largely, but is very slow in ling out the practical details or a plan. lie celetonizes, but never completes. Now, the jrganio development of a man is that which 'ires him both his passive and active powers 5-mdurande as well as strength. Greeley's betvishness, nervousness, cowardice, are due h efly to his immaturity. His nerves never a , proper masculine covering. When a Y eleven, he was thrown into an acrony ' Vor liv the delusion that he saw a wolfs 1 liming in the dars by the roadside, and ' Wed two crirls to escort him home. He Jot bear the sight of blood; consequently liked hunting, and stopped his ears 'khers fired the guns, inability to control the bodily impulses fled to its desires as well as its fears, its ykQ.Tva a well as iia paiiia. xilo iucuiai Alio, veed, usually absorbed his attention, often litter foreetfulness of physical wants; but, a the appetites were given rein, they would a the bit in their teeth at once, and run hj with propriety. Both in childhood and Idult years, Mr. Greeley is described as eat . with the voracity of a famished man. .Vhen there is no work pressing him he sleeps ith equal facillity, and regardless of time or olace. In fine, the physical lite of Mr. Greeley 's characterized by the twin faults of ohildish patience of pain and childish eagerness lor atification. The only reason he is not more sual is because the body, with him, is a igt hard naaen, ana rareiy turned oui 10 A. His earlv limner lor omiaisu 100a, ana his tjir advocacy of it, is consistent with his own ihtsioal immaturity. Of laU years, and indeed r)811 HIS lllc, 5Aocyi vvrv vi uueo jvaio opun i boarding-house kept on the plan of Syl--ster Graham the apostle of bran bread -Mr. Greeley has eaten more or less meat. t'ita mature years he has prouaoiy ieit, Uneed of it, and learned to like it. But J858 he wrote that it wa3 "still his iterate judgment that in the temperate U torrid zones, where a great abun- le and variety of vegetable food is easily Aired, a diet which includes no flesh meat i jfeferable. If I were to live leisurely, as I uoild choose, I would say, Give me the best uctions or grains, or mats, with aoun- ice of milk, cream, etc., and let me never see animal flesh presented for human Not having time nor means to make a orld for myself, I try to accommodate my '.-ii.it a ta the world that is. and eat meat. jhich is often the best food within reaoh." a that time, Mr. Greeley was forty-seven 'irs of age, and weighed one hundred and 'ty-four pounds. Since then, he has had I'years of comparatively light work, less L and good living, and must weigh at least J. hundred. His personal appearance justi fi the opinion expressed by him in 1658, that with light daily tasks, little responsibility, id an active out-door life, I think I might .tain the physical proportions and oleaginous tundity of an alderman." The mental life of Mr. Greeley is not unlike physical. There is the same complete ijtorption in the occupation of the moment, tbame childish disregard of circumstances, a RRine intolerance of whatever is unplea- nt His mind does not work calmly and mslderately, but very passionately and in ntlT. IIe fastens on his own view of a .:.,' nira i blood-sucker. You cannot tear ' d from it till he has sucked all the life oir"' " 6 ina iaup w u "-""- ,Ir that others have thought truly as well a Uaelf though he had called them "fools, .rs " and "villains," lor seemng . 'II.: it r. a n . i . 1 f 1 -i .a n . I f k;9 views. Jiven nis uenevoienoe par kes somewhat of the same selfishness. 11 , it is painful to refuse. For . .i i i '. . t.i. iioort. i-mi 1,1 not restrain its care- lifts to whomsoever oame, regardless of i,-ia f the case. He could not bear ,prup. - - . ffl fravfl f , d . Bight Of BUnenug. y? P in m rid of it ,siuerwyi iar f lvinr . ataucht mm iunu o Vmultiplied the number of beggars, It was J w, JphiB almsgiving had been incited Pencil by considerate kindliness for the tt 2 by impatience of the feelings h the sieht of want awakened. In a word, .m Childish benevolence, which the man ifoutrew. Ope day (before the war) THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPHPHILADELPHIA. SATURDAY, and told her tale of distress. lie threw her five dollars a gift liberal enough, truly, to rid the room at once of the applicant. But the npgress was so astounded and so grateful that she fell upon her knees, and began to call down blessings innumerable on the giver's head. This pained Mr. Greeley even more than Ler story, and he hastily silenced her. "Now, don't,'f said he, in his whining tone; "don't do that. Get up, and go 'way !" In his theology, also, Mr. Greeley illus trates his illogical way of disregarding un pleasant facts when they disagree with his sentimental theories. He denies a hell, on the ground of God's beneficence. But transi ent pain is no more reconcilable with that idea than eternal misery, nor is the misery of the individual for the sake of the race logically consistent with it. If Mr. Greeley is able to argue suffering out of eternity because it is unpleasant to him, why not also out of this world, for the same reason ? It would appear, indeed, that physical, mental, and moral qualities alike unfit Mr. Greeley for dealing with practical life. He wilfully absorbs himself in what pleases him, and insists upon Bhutting out everything else from his vision. Especially does he shrink from the idea of violence, in connection with any reform in the individual, or in society. Ardent and persistent as he has been in advo cating many a good cause, the proposition to use firce never came from him. He would never have made the mistake of St. Peter, and cut off an ear. He has none of that masculine, mature, and energetic Chris tianity which the author of "licoe Homo" describes as "not the emasculate sentimental thing it is sometimes represented to be." "War," he adds," for example, and capi tal punishment, are frequently denounced as unchristian, because they involve circum stances of horror; aud when the ardent cham pions of some great cause have declared that they would persevere, although it should be necessary to lay waste a continent, and exter minate a nation, the resolution is stigmatized as shocking and unchristian. Shocking it may be, but not therefore unchristian. The enthu siasm of humanity does indeed destroy a great deal of hatred, but it creates as much more. Selfish hatred is indeed charmed away, but a not less fiery passion takes its place." And the writer goes on to say that even the spirit which inspired the Crusaders and others, zealous to do violence for what they believed to be the cause of religion, was not unchristian. "At any rate, the ostensible object of such horrors was Christian, and the indignation which professedly prompts them is alao Chris tian, and the assumption they involve that agonies of pain, and blood shed in rivers, are less evils than the soul spotted and bewildered with sin, is most Christian." It is obvious that a character so childish, and a mind so self-absorbed as Mr. Greeley's, must have been more or less the sport of cir cumstances. The superficial observer may start at this, and ask whether Mr. Greeley is not, then, an exemplar of what man can do in spite of unfavorable surroundings f Not re markably so. Constitutional qualities, good and bad, havemakehimwhatheis; circumstances, pretty much alone, have determined what he was to think, say, and do. He has drifted quite passively on the current of events. Born in Amherst, N. H., in 1811, of parents who were bankrupt before he was ten years old, Mr. Greeley had, in all, but forty-five months instruction in a poor district school. But his large brain and active temperament attracted him irresistibly to books. Endowed with a remarkable memory, and a good gfft of language, he early became a great talker as well as reader. Wherever he went, for years, he was the town euoyclopedia of general, and especially of political informa tion. But, until he came to New York, in August, 1831, his range of literature was necessarily very limited. Then, for years, he was subjected to the stress of poverty, and the anxieties of unsuccessful business enterprises. The New Yorker was started in March, 1834, and Mr. Wreeley edited that diligently, in connection with other literary and political labors, till it was merged with the Tribune, in 1841. It was during this active and exciting period of his life that the transcendental movement arose in New England. In September, 1836', Messrs. Emer son, Hedge, Francis, and two others met at the house of George Ripley, in Boston, and formed the Transcendental Club, which afterwards was joined by Brownson, Parker, Frothingham, Channing, and other young and ardent thinkers. Such a movement iu thought as this, aided and inspired by the grim utter ances of Carlyle in England, and the transla tions of German philosophy then becoming current, would easily attract and absorb a mind like Greeley's. The visionary and ideal is the land in which all delight to dwell. To a mind so impatient as Greeley's, this dream land was a heavenly resort, where a new At lantis could be built up at leisure; where man, in imagination at least, could become perfect, life happy, and everything finally JJivine. After the Tribune began its career, Dana, Ripley, Margaret Fuller, and other dis ciples of the Transcendental School, and graduates of the Brook Farm, were attracted to it. Between 18-15 and 1840, all those named became editorially connected with it; and, in 1842, Albert Brisbane began his series of articles in advocacy of Fourierism. That was a period of great activity and earnestness of thought among the young men oithia country. There was a breaking ujrf old systems, and a seeking after new ones, a period given up to the spirit of iconoelasm, a too hasty and wholesale discarding of the old. It was weloome work for the young, the sanguine, and the inexperienced. Such was Mr. Greeley; and into all the new reve lations of that day, spiritualism included, he entered with the zeal of a would-be re former, and the confidence that appertains to ignorance. He was, in fact, the passive as well as active instrument, through whom these new things obtained a hearing. Perhaps no other man would have had patience with the towering pretensions of the various isms which aired themselves in the columns of the Tribune. Few other men, in control of such a journal, could bo found so ignorant as to bear with the effusions of our young and llery reformers. But these subjects, in those days, occupied rhoftbjpubUottention .JhijXr. not offend the Southern people by discassing slavery. "Are they not better satisfied," he wrote, "with my letting Abolition alone, than though I struggled officiously to make myself known as their defender? Enlighten me." Mr. Greeley's whole course, indeed, then and since, indicates that passive yielding, on the Bide of hia Bentiments and feelings, which may be expected from a childish character. He does not illustrate, in any Instance, that intuition of truth and right which marks the man of strong conscience, and which is bo esaential in a leader of publio opinion. Both men and circumstances have warped his judgment whenever they have appealed to his feelings. In 1833, he wrote, in behalf of a friend, an article in defense of lotteries, which were then imperilled in his State, by the excitement upon the suicide of a young man who had lost his all in them. "This," said Mr. Greeley, "only proved that the young man was a per son of weak character, and had nothing to do with the question whether the State ought to license lotteries." He seems lately to have discovered that it is not quite safe to assume, on this subject, at least, that the mass of men have strong characters. Mr. Greeley drifted into political life as pas sively as into his other occupations. In 1833 a weekly political paper, published at Albany, needed an editor, and he was selected, on account of the extensive knowledge of political statistics which he had exhibited in the New Yorlir. Ilia course at first was a moderate one, but his feelings soon made him a zealous politician and a warm partisan, as was shown in the "Log Cabin" campaign in 1840-41, and subsequently in the Tribune. The habitue's of the Tribune office, on election nights, do not need to be reminded of the enthusiastio and peculiar yells with which Greeley was wont to welcome favorable returns, nor the Tar tarean imprecations which were showered by him with equal zest upon news of defeat. Ilia ardent devotion to Clay is well known; and bow he Dung himself out of the Philadelphia Convention in 1848, in unrestrainable rage when Taylor was nominated, instead of hia favorite. Ilia homage to "Harry Clay" was that which a childish and immature nature pays involuntarily to one which is eminently masculine, mature, and strong. It is not needful to review a political career so well and widely known as that of Mr. Gree ley. Nor is it necessary to dwell upon the events of the recent war, which developed his characteristic weaknesses in so glariug a light. A few quotations will show how dangerous a person he would have been for a leader, in emergencies which called for masculine cou rage and manly endurance, and how weak a staff we should have leaned upon had he been our main reliance. The writer of these lines remembers, as all other patriots who then chanced to reside in the South well remember, the dismay with which we read such words as these, in the Tribune of Novem ber 9. 18U0: "If the cotton States shall become satis fied that they can do better out of the UnioH than in it, we insist on letting them go in peace." And this of November 26, 1SC0: f'lf the cotton States unitedly and earnestly wish to withdraw peacefully from the Union, we think they should and would be allowed to do so. Any attempt to compel them by force to remain would be contrary to the principles enunciated in the immortal Declara tion of Independence, contrary to the funda mental principles on which human liberty is based." And this of December 17, I860: "If it (the Declaration) justified the seces sion from the British empire of three millions of colonists in 1776, we do not see why it should not justify the secession of five mil lions of Southrons from the Union in 1851." And this February 23, 18G1: "Whenever it shall be clear that the great body of the Southern people have become con clusively alienated from the. Union, and anxious to escape from it, we will do our best to for ward their views." After the great uprising had demonstrated how deeply and utterly the common sense and manhood of the American people repudiated this cowardly twaddle, Mr. Greeley illustrated his insincere special pleading, by insisting than he meant to include the blacks aa well as the whitea when he referred to the "great body of the Southern people, ' ' as though he ever supposed they would or could have have any voice in determining the question of secession. This is a characteristic habit of his, to thrust his head into the sand like the ostrich, blind to the nakedness which ia palpable to every body else. During the war the same timidity displayed itself. Mr. Greeley had no more confidence in the courage and persistence of the loyal peo ple than he had in his own. His nervous un easiness and dread of failure, and constitu tional horror at the sight of blood, developed themselves in such paragraphs as this, of Janu ary TZ, isoa: 'If three months more of earnest lighting shall not serve to make a serious impression on the Rebels, lt us bow to our des tiny and make the best attainable peace." And again, June 17, 1803:- "If the Rebels are indeed our masters, let them show it, and let us own it." .ven the victories of Vicksburg and Gettys burg did not encourage Mr. Greeley. In July, 1804, he informed Mr. Lincoln that "our bleeding, bankrupt, almost dying country longs lor peace, shudders at the prospect of fresh conscriptions, of further wholesale de vastation, of new rivers of human blood;" and he begged the President to treat with the Rebels, even at the risk of recognizing them. These facts, together with recent eccentrici ties of conduct, show that Mr. Greeley's mind, even in ita maturity, is too much the play thing of his feelings, and that those feelings are very unsafe and unreliable guides. Perhaps no juster criterion can be found by which to judge Horace Greeley than the ex ample of Benjamin Franklin. Their circum stances and manner of life were remarkably similar. Both were led providentially to posi tions of great prominence and influence. It is the constitutional qualities of the two men which have given them so different a character and reputation. With no more advantages than Greeley, Franklin became easily the suave habitue" of the royal saloon. He was re lied upen as the safe counsellor of statesmen. In the midst of revolution he never lost hia calmness nor his courage. He was universally recognized as pre-eminently possessed of com mon sense. Withal, his mind was capacious and philosophical. He never lost sight of facts. His theories were not visionary. His plans were always praotical. In what respect does Mr. Greeley furnish a parallel to his ad mitted wisdom? Rather in what great quality does he not present a strong contrast? Frank lin was one of the fathers of the Republic; Greeley, one of its most timorous children. Another parallel may be drawn; ior Air. U.u, as he did to Taylor in 148. Lincoln wished to conciliate the Rebels, but only on the basis of liberty and justice for all. Greeley would conciliate them with $400,000,000, prof fered with the palsied band of fear. When the assassin's act had Bent Lincoln to hia im mortality, all hia eccentricities but served, upon that sanguine background, to bring out in stronger light the saintly goodness of the man. In the early part of the war, Mr. Greeley de scribed his own experience as a conciliator as follows: "I tried more than twenty-five years ago to persuade the slaveholders that their Bybtein was unjust and pernicious, and their reply was an attempt to persuade me off a dock into thirty-feet water, which I was barely able with help to prevent. Long after that I tried to persuade another slaveholder (son of a life-long negro-trader, and now him self a Rebel General) that he had made an unfair proposition in Congress, and he replied by attempting to persuade a hole into the top of my skull, and my brains out through that hole. That is all my personal experience on the subject; but I have very often been assured (no doubt truly) that if I should ever go South, and attempt there to persuade people that slavery was wrong, I should very soon have the breath of life per suAdedoutof my body." Now suppose, after all this and still later experience of the temper and spirit which slavery and Reliellion have fostered, Mr. Greeley should also fall by the hand of an assassin, would his fate arouse the commiseration which was extended to Booth's illustrious victim, would he receive the same apotheosis? Would not the verdict be: He obstinately shut hia eyes to facts; he tamely substituted tolerance of crime for Justice. His experience taught him nothing. He was a burned child that would still play with the fire. He brought upon himself merited punishment for his tem porizing and vacillation. Mr. Greeley's excellence as an editor ia in disputable. His ready memory and varied knowledge fit him admirably for that vonatiou. In a good cause his logio ia very effective; in a bad cause his special pleading is ingenious. Let his antagonist beware how he uses wea pons that may be turned upon himself. When James Watson Webb undertook to ridicule Greeley's shabby attire, he was silenced by the retort that the dress which he found so ridiculous was not nearly so singular as that he would himself have worn but for the clemency of Governor Seward. When Mordecai M. Noah depreciated the negro as belonging to an inferior race, which had no rights that white men were bound to respect, Mr. Greeley's stinging and conclusive answer was, that a man belonging to a nationality which for centuries had been outlawed in every Christian nation, should be the last one to ex cite prejudices on account of race or color. Nor is it fitting to deny the greatness of Horace Greeley's heart. There is too much enthusiasm there for what he believes to be right, too ready a willingness to battle, against any odds, for whatever he deems a humani tarian object, to permit any lover of maukind to withhold his respect and affection for the man. Were hia head as cool as hia heart ia warm, hia judgment aa sound aa hia aims are noble, he would not have made the mistakes which prove him to be an unfit leader in the path of progress he so devotedly loves. The above exceedingly clever, but some what prejudiced article, bears Internal evi dence of being the composition of the Hon. James W. Wall, of Burlington, N. J., some time United States Senator from that State. The following estimate of Mr. Greeley's life and character, written by the Hon. James M. Scovel, of Camden, N. J., ia presented to the public as an offset to the partial strictures of the ex-Senator. It is written from an entirely different standpoint, and, we think, with more justice and a truer appreciation of the great "philosopher of the Tribune." Ed. Tele ORAr-H. HORACE GREELEY: WHAT IIB IS, AND WHAT THE COUNTRY OWE3 HIM, The Northern Zlonthhi and N. J. Zlaqazine devotes nine pages of its August number to an article (whose author, contrary to the rule which obtains with, this magazine, writea under the rose) which, in no kindly spirit, pictures the peculiarities of the really genial, gentle, and many-sided philosopher of the Tribune. The sting of the sketch, like the poison of some serpents, ia the tail of it. Thia new Nominis ktat Umbra says: "Were his head as cool as hia heart is warm, his judgment aa sound as his aims are noble, he would not have made the mistakes which prove him to be an unfit leader in the path of progress he so devotedly loves." Now it is safe to say, and it can be said with perfect truthfulness, that a critic who begina his article with an encomium on William U. Seward, as the writer in the New Jersey Maga zine does, ia apt to end it with a sneer at the muscular morality, the veracity and courage the pluck which have already made Horace Greeley's name more widely known than that of any other public man since the death of Abraham Lincoln. It is not fashionable now to stone the pro phets. Young America only snubs them. With unbecoming audacity the Northern Monthly critic intimates that because Mr. Greeley had made mistakes he ia not fit to be a leader. Now God made Horace Greeley a leader of the people, and whom God haa joined together let no man put asunder. Mr. Greeley ia essentially a man of convic tions, and ninety-nine times in a hundred his convictions are right; and woe to the luckless wight or the much-venturing knight who takes up a lance to defend meanness, or enters the lista to uphold injustice 1 He, the con servative apologist of human selfishness or rapacity, is apt to go down, 'Rider and horse In one red burial blent." Even Wendell rhillips, who cannot be accused of any present tenderness for Horace Greeley, never hesitated to say that, during the war, the Tribune was the white plume of Navarre, always in the forefront of the fight for the right. If the reader of thia can see any sense in the question of Nominis Stat Umbra "It Gree ley should also fall by the hand of an assassin, would his fate arouse the commiseration which was extended to Booth's illustrious victim; and would he receive the same apotheo sis ?" the writer of this cannot. The parallel ia not a fair one. Abraham Lincoln and no man will more reverently bow than we do before hia gentle, noble, and beautiful nature was a better politician than Horace Greeley; but Greeley is to-day as true to the great, simple, and sublime doctrines of republicanism as Abra-,. of the many sides to his wonderful character. After the writer of thia was eleoted a delegate to the Baltimore Convention, he saw Mr. Lin coln in the White House. He was in one of hia brightest moods, and in his Inimitable way (and his most astonishing trait waa his clair voyant insight, his keen comprehension of the character of our prominent men) Mr. Liuooln sketched the position of every prominent United States Senator on the question of the reuomination of the President. And to the no small surprise of the writer; Mr. Lincoln produced a half sheet of paper, upon which he had made an exact calculation that he was then only short of a nomination AUGUST 10, 18G7. twenty votes. As the result proved, his cal culation was accurate, for the Fubsequent elec tion or delegates only confirmed his statements. And he did not hesitate to say, ir beaten by anybody, he thought Grant ought to do it. To lie beaten bv McClellau he never considered in the range of possibilities. Our self-sufficient criuo thinks Horace Greeley, according to Seward, "a great man, so full of genius aud power that if he had common sense he would be dangerous." Well, we had thought when the Seward-Johnson reactionary convention was planned, at which one Doolittle was floor manager, that the philosopher of the .Tribune was a little dangerous I Still, we may" be mis taken. But if our recollection ia accurate, the first man to expose the dangerous character of that coalition which trifled with, while it pan dered to the South, only to bind the North to the chnriot-wheels of a policy which was ani mated only by selfishness, and had no aim but power, the first man who really led the people acainst the imperial power of 1 'residential patronage was Horace Greeley. And yet and yet our shadow ol a Shade, whose inspiration comes not from the friends but from the ene mies of the country, thinks Horace Greeley, if lie had common sense, "would be dangerous 1" Oh, sensible, magnanimous, and self-appreciative criticism I Oh, "the pity of it, Iago," that the world Should grope in darkness so long, ignorant of thy identity, hiding still under the shadow of thy own impersonality I While Lmted Mates senators were busy with their little feara about collectors and assessors, Horace Oreeley waa the first and bravest man to expose the base and wicked meanness which Eoutht toiud in new, and stronger, and more lasting bonds, 4,000,000 of the helpless, and yield them blind, bleeding, and hopeless, after 200 years of bondajie. to their masters, whose tenderest mercy breathed cruelty, oppression, and crime. "Common sense 1 ' If we are not mistaken Horace Greeley has that rare common sense which sees, in the poet's laneuace. that the "individual withers, but the State ia more and more;" that any one man's aspirations and personal aims are nothing less than the dust in the balance as compared with the cood of the millions the striving to make them hap pier for our having lived in the world. There is wisdom, as well as wit, in Garrlck's pro logue, which says that serious reflection on the evils in the world insensibly leads a man towards religion or politics, else he runs mad! Mr. Greeley is remarkable for his intel lectual conscientiousness. Many men are morallu honest; few men have intellectual in tegrity. Mr. Seward said New York had no leader after the Constitutional amendment became part of the Congressional plan of re construction. iNew i ork found a leader, and when, by almost unanimous consent, the Sena tor ship was accorded to him, with the popular and tacit understanding that Horace Greeley would give up hall hia platform, "universal amnesty," he not only refused the moral j bribe, but grimly refused even to be silent on that question. Show me another example I Be lost the Senatorial purple, but he gained in the hearts of the people; for if a man plants himself indomitably on the right, the great world will sooner or later swing around to him. Horace Greeley has made Presidents and unmade them. His Tribune has made half our public men "great," but he, unselfifah, never "giving up to party what was meant for mankind," haa gone steadily onward, scarcely ever being in office, if we may except his half a term in Congreas, and his election as delegate at large to the Constitutional Convention of New York. No man has ever said more bitter things, or true, against Andrew Johnson than the philo sopher of the 2"n'6un,and yet Andrew Johnson sends his name to the Senate as Minister to Austria, knowing well that he cannot swerve him a hair's breadth from the line of principle. Mr. Greeley is not without personal vanity, and not without ambition. Who is ? What a manly ring has his letter dissolving the old partnership of Seward, Weed, and Greeley I Self-respect could no longer permit t9 the servant of suoh a man as Thurlow Weed. He said so, and it was a noble thing to say it when he did and as he did. The writer to whom we have so often referred, not because f the merit of the article, but because of Mr. Greeley's unselfish devotion to principle, de manded that some OBe, of his own free will and accord, should make some answer, how ever imperfect and fragmentary, to the animus of the magazine sketch. The writer thinks Mr. Greeley "a great man and a great fool, or, to adopt a mild euphemism, a great child." (JS'cw Jersey Magazine.) Napoleon's definition of a great man was that man who did great things. And the de feat alone of the Seward-Johnson plan of restoration, backed, as it was pretended to be, by the great name of Abraham Lincoln, stamps Mr. Greeley's name with greatness forever, and his fame will grow brighter and brighter as he nears the perfect day. It is the heart that makes the soldier; and all philosophy teaches us that the intellect, when true to the line, acts through the sensibilities. We can count on the fingers of either hand the publio men in America whom power never warped. Horace Greeley, to his eternal honor be it said, ia one of the five righteous, and, like Abou Ben Adhem, his "name leads all the rest." If we made exceptions, they would be in favor of Stevens and Sumner, Garrisou aud Phillips. Horace Greeley never abandons a principle he never went back on a friend. That he is not undertood he well knows, and has said so when addressing his friends aa "narrow minded blockheads," who meant to serve the country but did not know how. And the aot for which he has been most severely censured was done from the loftiest and purest motives, and after consultation with the great men in whom we all trust, but who have not yet been generous enough to share the blame which the populace are ready always, upon the slightest provocation, to shower upon their prophets, crying one day "IIoBanna t" and the next day preparing the crucifiion. Aomtnis Stat Umbra is mistaken when he fays Horace Greeley's character ia a conjunc tion of "childish (not childlike) qualities with great mental capacity." It ia true he has wonderful simplicity of character. lie does not like to obey, nor does he desire lQ cprrni3T!ilwJJUuii himself in being But simplicity is jiua ower which ia not e timid sentlmen- ;ih. i 1:9 for Jorld lis. Right well he a for ita meanness Will never a moment stop. To see whloh don may be in the fault, i But will shout for the dog on top." Not so H. G. Ue is as true as steel no timid foe, no suspicious friend. Ilia sensibili ties, his sympathies, alive and healthy, keep him ia accord with the needs of plaintive hu manity; for he is great in sympathy, "which is the condition of insight, the root of tolerance, and the seal of culture." But we must put a period to this necessarily imperfect tribute of sincere friendship to a noble nature. Walter Scott. In dying, said to Lockhart, "Be good, my dear." Thia was the sum of earthly wisdom. Horace Greeley ia a good man; a great man; an honest man. GROCERIES, ETC. BUT IF YOU WANT GOOD TFA, GO TO Wll-nON's old-established Tea Warehouse, No. 1M CH JJ-N UT Htrwt. w I liBO N'S OOt.ONO. DOLLAR TEA PURB w ILSON'S DOLLAR TEA-FINE YOUNG moN. WILSON'S DOLLAR TEA-GIVES UNI verHHl nullRtiiellon. w ILSON'S J A PAN. DOLLAR TEA-PUKH ILSON'S DOLLAR TEA-RICH AND FRA grunt. w ILSON'S I. ken lu DOLLAR TEA EVERYBOD1 SMOKED AND SPICED SALBlOff, rlBT Or THE 6KA8ON. 1, K C. ROBERTS, id Fine Groceries, Corner EIJlVKTH and VINE Bta, lUJrp JAPANESE POWCIIOKG TEA, .THE y IN EST QUALITY IMPORTED. Emperor and other One chop OOLONOS, New crop TUNO HYBON and OUNPOWDEI and genuine C1ICLAN TEA. for sale by the package or retail, at JAM 8 B. WEBBfl, I Ml Corner WALNUT and EIGHTH Bt. MILLINERY, TRIMMINGS, ETC. yjOURNIHJ MILLINERY. ALWAYS ON HAND A LAAGE ASSORTMENT OJT MOUIiNING BONNETS, AT MO. tt04 WALNUT STREET. 8Z7 6m MAD' LIE KEOCH. WANTS. JOOK AGENTS IN LUCK AT LAST. The crisis la panned. The boor ban come to lift the VPll of Becresy which has hltberioeuveloiled the inner history of the grent civil war, and tins la doue by otter lLg lo the public General L. C. Baker' "HISTORY OF THE SECRET SERVICE." For thrilling Interest this book transcends all the romances ol a ihotisandty ears, aud conclusively prevM that "truth la stranger than llctlon." Agents are clearing from i0O to 1300 per month, which we can prove to any doubting applicant. A. few more can obtain agencies In territory yet unooca pled. Address P. OARRETT A CO NO. 70S CHENNVT STREET, 7 2tf PHILADELPHIA. HOOP SKIRTS. aoo HOOP SKIRTS, "OWN MAKE." 628 KJJiJ HOPKINS' I. affords ns much pleasure to announce to one numerous patrons and the publio, that In conae quenceifa slight decline In Hoop Skirt material, together with our Increased facilities for manufaty luring, and a strict adherence to BUYING and bKLLING for CABH, we aie enabled to oiler all ouc JUSTLY CKLFKKATKD HOOP SKIRTS at Rifi DUCKD PKICKB. And our Skirts will always, a heretoiore, be found in every respect more destrabUa, and really cheaper than any single or double spring Hoop Skirt In the market, while oar assortment li unequalled. A Iho, constantly receiving from New Tork and th Eastern States full line ol low priced Skirts, at very low prices; among which is a lot of Plain Skirts at the following rates; 16 springs, 66c.; 20 springs, 65c; M springs, 76c.; So springs, 85c.; 86 springs, 86c.; and i springs, im skirts made to order, altered, and repaired, whole sale and retail, at the Philadelphia Hoop Skirt Em porium, No. 61 AUCH. Street, below Seventh. 10 8rnrp WILLIAM T. HOPKINB. HARDWARE, CUTLERY, ETC. gTANDBMDGE, BARB. & CO., IMPOETEES OF AND DEALERS IH FOREIGN AND .AMERICAN HARDWARE. MO. 1891 9f ARfiEf SlBtET, Offeri or sale a large stock of Hardware and Cutlery, TOGETHER WITH , lOOO KEGS .NAILS AT REDUCED PRICES. 17 thjto PKH'KH H.h.l)lItlM:iil 11 CUTLERY. A Ann HRnrlmcnr DAPTwm TAMLK cutlery, razokh. RAZOR STROPS, LADIES' SCIS- 8HEARS.ETC. ' " L. V. HKLMOLD'S Cutlery Store, No. 136 South TENTH Street, U Three doors above Walnut SHIPPING jFJv TI1K STEAMSHIP 'CiTT OF ijI WASHINGTON." of thelnman I.lno bil uoiu Pier 4j.Jn.oiiU River, at Moon, on WEDNESDAY, AUGUST H, Por Liverpool calling at Qneenstown. Currency 1BS,"ie 'r8t Caoiu 111'1; Sleerage, $30 JOHN G. DALE, Agent. B8 6t No 4HIUKBNU1 stieet, Pnlla. ffft . S1EAM 10 LIVERPOOL-CALL- ,ntk ni. Ing at yueenstown. The Iniuan Line. buiiiiiK nexMl-weekly.carryiiig the United States Mail. RETURN TICKETS TO PaIus A N D B ACEU E JLRsi CLASS, JM GOLD. ' 'ir CITY OP BALTIMORE ....Saturdav, August 10 CITY OF WASHINGTON ......Wednesday Aufust li CITY OK LONDON Saturday! Aufust 17 CITY OP PARIS..... . Saturday, August 24 E'l N A -...Wednesday, Aunust ! ANTW URP Saturday, August 81 Aud each succeeding Saturday and Wedneadav m. noon, from Pier No. 4d North River. ' 1 RATES OK PAHSAUIC By the mail steamer sailing every Saturday. Payable In Gold. First Cabin. ...........l lo To London nr. Steerage,. To London., To Pans... , 12.1 Passage by the Wednesday Stoamersr-F&rt'olbitt llu; steerage. HO. Payable In U. B. Currency. irTlffTHsJ i-assengers also rorwarded to Havre, Hamburg. Bra men. etc., at moderate rates. uql1 olm Steerage passage from Liverpool or Qneenstown t4h currency. Tickets can be bought here by persona Sending for their lrleuds. ' v"ou- lor further Information apply at the ComDanv Oflice. JOHNTi. DALE, Agent. S 7 1 or KO. 411 CHESN UT St.. Philadelphia. tPfZs THE PIIILAUKLPIIIA AWn 2kA5 SOUTHERN MAIL bTEAMHIP COM PAN Y 't REGULAR LINE WM-' 'OM SAVANNAH, A. WYOMING, 8(Xi tons. Captain Jacob Teal The steamship TONAWANDA will leave for the 'iov( port on Saturday, August 17, at I o'ulouk A. M from second wharf below Spruce street. ' Through passage tickets .old and freight taken fcw 11 points In connection with the Georgia Central RiISl road. WILLIAM L JAMES, General AgentT . ,D v. No. 814 S. Delaware avenue. AgenU at BavanDah, Hunter A Gammeli. 4 GARDNER & FLEMING, OOAOII MAKERS, HO. 814 KOUT1I FIFTH STREET. New and Second-hand Carriages for sale. Par tlrularattetiMdo paid to repairing. 6 808m Q L A T E MANTEL S. 8LATE MANTELS are unsurpassed tor Durability Beauty, trength, and Cheapness. slate MANTELB, and Slate Work Qeneraji made to order, wcuerm J. B. IIIME8 A CO., . ' I Utm Hoi &12t aud 1128 CHESNUT Sin; )o wouiau cuiuo