=I II MEI M itEAD.ed IH,;H FRAZIER EDITORS. 1.)O c 4. CoNo. .• ; I.* he Republican. \ THE TREE OF FREEDOM. Air Bonny POOn• 'How firm the trle of frCedom stands, 'Tway planted by 'Almighty hands, Near where the crystal waters flow 'Where you'ay stind;:ind.see lt-Grow Bash :t; fi tn rm ash 'sOiks of old • It can't be Inm or ever sold, I'omver pleading freedom's cause And still Condemning hogustan.s. A' -Hoar go to Glenwood; o'er the hills Itiot'. half a inile above - %lust east Your eye, and you can see tree that bears sweet Liberiy. 0, No. doughface north, nor sunthclu brvexe Unh ott)P, the ItnagFess or the trees, Xoriiteelc the gittrililinn,bl;tst the Aleut sthat•mwlngs'ittnn freedotris holy root, J:tufria!t's do their hest • 'And Bully Brooks And all the rest ; • • •They :s r j 've tOpt 'Komi branches, but you ere • • • They . nerr etih desti the tree.. , 144 '011,4 Bneltauan run hi, race ; • • . . Like PiOee hell end Win disgrae.): • -'j Tlis..fOur vex; will soon roll 'rand-, Then,satri s subjects must be hound. • • . ;Then lie Whos r 'e right it is shall . reign, comp:lon - pc res • tord again, • 'And Kansas ficeed :from Bogus laws, ; And free fronklaiirs the Sheriff's paw's. • Speed—H))eed the time 0 1,9n1 We'p•V:ay, nen..Lnet shall be done awn)., • • • And freooinr(' -fg.l ilron shore toiidiore, And Negro bondage be no ruace.! . 4 verses. • Clifford t!krarrs Pa.. Mini :— i - • ~ i . i 5i t ., 1 4... s tii si l , [ l s . .• , ...." I: ' . • • =--.-: -:. • .--- .- i[- - r- .!------:- - - i - ..- , -:---- ---t -..LETTErt,;IIoIi. .REV..H.: IL JESSUP. , t ~ , zzAKE ,zL z - E.SIOENEV::, NIT. LEEANON, / : , , . • 1, i August •21s1, 185 E . , 1 f : , 5 . ~ IfT aria Firni,E.: 7 4 eonelnded- the first , section of my journal o.f this joit , rney, this mbrning, as sve l wl . .. , re leaving the collars Lebanon on.our tray to Dartlhee: ~,,I think that I iharii . omitted to state t!iatply observa . •.. - . , • tions when tunowt.'. the cedars, fully 'Firmed my f t 'eit''n . - . • previous opinion ; Iv nat the cedars , ere so nu o:erbus along the tnal I from Dunta are 'Of the same species A ith the a Icietit." cedars of theti-*d," as the rombton people call them. I would abo Add that the • old• , monk who live r ; among the trees sizmOntbs of the scar, is. quite a gln ner, tuld shot .two tii ..l„. i.ls: Tor us. yes- - •erd-tv n hick! w tad havb stuffed and 4444-ritiry ed, but - j ' f " l ' 1, 0 - " , i' , ? • I 11; : 11 no arseitic with rztt;, and our sibi.AOf salt was c,,,„t9r; 1 flouted-to allo l it'' it - use for such a Lttiltesr, so I simply cut 0111 the o.lv - s ~ w hich I mi:l pres. - erve. - :\ After leaving - the. etklars We.. took the road leading ...41ire'cily - tip the ltt 'unt r itin to theSrAtir East:. At first, .t the ascent was.'gr. i dual: Irthen became tramc steep,' .. :z I , - • and; the road trinclit:in. zigzag course along the mouns • taitt4tde, at timesriant ng rocks, at tithes an' a loose r', sandy sod R . 'W'lletf ahmkt twenty minutes from the . -• valleT, RecanSe nOnt 14 . latie pat ty of Mountaineere I - -- • i lao and womien cr) ltit'seback, on their way'to a wed iii-ng, nh \ itber,tWy . Werf,. taking the Ludy. • They were: resting under the 1 !' shadow of a zroa . t rock,' and as: . we 'approached, the men all broSe, bowed, and fled a - ialate for the 'Sigridra; 131 u. . L 3 -00. Our lipri,i43 and •. richs we - re sraneiOtatlfri‘Atterted -in-t:i` irle'l.tei..io i i • ;; r•q .- I- ' • ' '' • ' .' '' check them, and:we thanked them fur the slute,:and : 1 . l',' I - irt•hed them' o, necompany its, puttiagthe bride nezt.... to firs. Lons: •:-ts :We jOurneyed On,-- Some of •the I : Pleb came to us and asked. a bu'eksh&esh, iztasin'itelt i at they 14 fired 4' snSte for mi. We-asked tlierea- 1 roan( their requett., ! bey said it w,as the custom in I chic country. lre.rep ed that if is 710 f our- crtom, •::1 'id if tin . - 1 1 • 1i......t. ---_:.,!_r_. -- :.• , lirreak er . , their custinn oreours. This seemed to set . We: heard nothing chore about • js.e pc.ople are inveterate 'beggars. 1,../e44 , llfre„ch - (present)bn all bands, vcittintenf • tic it to• diet isery war pOsiihle, and then at;lt an In:blushing boldnet , s Which is ridiculous: We have now fetich dt. T;ehanon: . To the North there any ey could tiler could- we bre tit:the-matter; ani hpeksheesh. Th 4 You hear the wor Rind' men Fill tiftett eotnmodv you in present for it witl assexatious as it etl, the sUttnnit of 11 arr tuo or three, hither than the p tii! ridge. the teat head of the 'water liOlcu upon the ee upon ia7in mountain ranceg. tke gieat Pea grealt rounded swelling annunits I lint i'liere w stand, but' e are ;On e r-slieci, or as 4:\ le Arabs say, "ta .spouts," and \we gaze Westward dars,at our feet a ad:- d . ark green s, rugged entre, and- undulating •hiell retreat and descend to*ard 6' s - - 1 .It,. i . . rAFtwarti yOu look dir -11 upon the Garden of Sy-lief I ', mon.endthe Holy Land, l't_S the only water we saw ilia Eimeesplain betwi Lebanon and anti Lan in this long hot ride. • 4 When shall we 'reach...Baal which is; not less than fifty miles, long, • and Varies I, bee '" was a question aFt ed . again. and; again, and from five to fifteen miles in width.: Front th i s hd.ott i yet it. seemed far, faraway on the hazy plain: . • itseemszsgectly,- level, like a vast carpeted fioor, 1, For some time I have been watching the whirl winds . And the Fquare fields,!-Without aftMec, distinguished 1 whicl) sire Crossing 140 plain in every slirection— fiTiOn eaell otheronly hvithe variety of colors,' give it Some of -them are-spiral, 'some cylindrical, conical, A chequered! appeara44 -.which- is quitsJP ensinv__ i shaped like a wine glasS or an hour glass, and others Tat wheat iii All likirvdetvlil, leaving a dull yellow . col. I seem to be twisted into a•thou.stind grOtesqUe shapes: 9"!..riany-Of the fields •; seem to iie liewlY . Plou,glied, I -One passed in advance of us and gave tbe mules an . while there ; are numdreus bright \ green torn-fields I immersion in sand, and another'of great power went, one of which, in vijry midst of the plain Must con- !WI IL'illlg thiiough the llialbee r threshing floers,carrying tale at lert.looo.lacres t : ..Beyond • this plain to the of wheat ar.d., t chaff together in Indismibable conch: F4t. is noti-tehei iin [ioiver than Lebanon, arid fed- .eion. -The Ilstalbec. wheat is. famous 'throughout Mt. leg away in ;the distit4e . into a dith outline, and ter 'Lebanon, and persons arc bete from many of the. ! ! talented toward the . 80 !atir by the . :te.ner.ible . erect of mountain Villages, purchasing wheat and barley : We %It. Bermoa which .iiil- Cos; almost veiled by alight - are-now mitering the city, of town of Baalbcc. -: One like ha ze . - ;I he I 1 4 v d c di n mirth, the a i r . was S o .. cannot refrain-from eacpreasioas of .astonishment at clear illative con d 8441ifttti401)jects with the great. the vast extent - of the rUinti,. 'The old ! walls, flute est ; distincthess, Thilire . 'was 'no ' haziness ,. no blue seVenty-fLte to one hundred fect,ln height, of three shading, in the - • tani,Llandscupe.- But now it is an 1 different ages and styles of architecture, nre.of ceio aut!lmnal sky. latilli eljeCtf iiethrl StightlyaSellr- . Petn l ProPertion .41 a 'sib •-' • •• -'• ; nd e sunlight i : very trying to the eyes:, Bei. ' The length of the great ruin cannot be less than Tltlth our feet, bclowl the . highest ridge of Lebanon 800 feet, arid its width corresponds: high above all, toward the - Eas - West, the tObere r i.'isanother loWer -ran ge ofutw, 'ai you approach the city front the lkortli -. 'l ti lOng hills. thieltlyrpovercd withforest trees, chief-. the 'turnout= columns, six- in- 'number, their !gracciul il* the oak !) walnut, arid arber. vitae, (sitoiliir to that ,Corinthian capitalssupporting the immense cornices' Which groii So ' 1 ) 4-. „ J a un n y iii ! t1 ' ' utN : iagamFalls,) and . , which although -massive and, heavy, Reins at SO great f rortlitig wood e ougit for-All 'Syria for inany'ymrs - to. a height, (the columns being rfar ly 10feet bigh) to - e°."?,e- . .Rood 4 :ea, frinu here te . Tripolioe the. be floating in the air- As - we . enter thceity gate, the ~. a! ' l , u . untain village and to yonder interesting spot, far walls ire-icon:posed of old columns, cornices, pieces ; ! yon the east . in aide. of theplain, now but indie- ren • tablature,. fluted. carved, grooved, and bey, tinetly , seett atuo tiie-gme i g .... n shade tr ees, the spot '} ail laid together Compactly, but ixi.great ecitifusion.,- ' re are - itbPil t i to'. lAt, .the famOuS ifellop . olis or Be — el- I These .fragrOxito of themselies :are .!rnaderful,'., but . l!ec. naalbec i SeetAiiiiiite near . to one standing on i i Produce littlimpreasion upon the mind in thapres di e sunurti_ t;;_of as we are iztvelin w4" h nuat,.; yet it is . aerylong day, and 1 ence of the Magnifieent pile of ruins in the immediate , - . our whole fatally, baggage *ld i fOreground. We- rode .on 'around the great Temple, 1 liotige, we could' of hake alon g g stage at onec t hind I -looking for aplace for our . ten , t . , but all .iras . iffti dusty' .. !i iL ne . la o d_ed t ,..W e e . s 'e . 6 r-, d ll 40 tWorkt, abOut six liours ! ! , land hot, that We at letgth .took a imety , vtew of the tt i . tic ra, ,t! spend t e nigh , If Baalbec 1 , beautiful Bastern side of thelluins, and Trent Aip the. r 4.: not tiO nea '''. ' ahould thi \ tiklkis It ostinter- 1 valleY'abOve Basibec about two miles, - where, atlbe aft"‘ itPoi, 1; T . ara three interesting features I - fountain leted:on a beautitl . . level 4744i / island, me 4 ; b(mt t be : 0 111' C't! H i hi. Vtotiaiiend it . te the ettertion pitched tint' tent tinder s. sliiideef - a: Weeping' .411.: crall trayelere On it us:but seldSnl- viAtcd ' • . • Elle first ph6 . ltt, " l# , -- - . *. -11 l 10w, within a few feet era huge. stream -afelair . .eold• _ . „ er- a larg e.andbeauntul lake. nith- r\oter; pet a fei rodi fir:n ant t,a ar ; guti .e f , t l..i l i_ . a ' i ,ei t e, l ~a l le . 7,- surrounded : . by ispou t ,. w l lo ' se r i, um iront.. arch 6 surro ' • und - ing th wintian . '' di the • l ooo ndlY . se end large feu tit . gush • -- • -• '•" • . added * ' . fromn os 00- errstai fountaini -Ineturesineness Mille quiet . . % euladel t all mountain side,sending% stream beauty of the Scene. -Rem wieipee itolesn ' aSi-te . -mot • twenty feet -' ~ • • . _ . i 4, e , :„.. . ;... 13 ,.. _ . 17, ,, itil i. 74 f ., footdee ,„. p .,! Co , astin, tly into . min , and siyead the - Sidibatkas • Feilm tea • - el • po . othei end ...,, i 4/rut, 77 ctcp ‘‘o elterm iv! raine •• of.',plat.ie. That--level broad -i . alkt - - - which . "•fr do e ttrit ., tO . ..•• " - - . , . . • . . , . . . . . • . , - 7 "7 . " -•—• ' 7— . .. . ... • • • _ . . . , . .. . . . . , .: ' ‘-• . , . •, . • _. . • „. . - . . , . • . Q .... ....) , - •. . . ..- , . . • 4 l' ..; . - . . • . . t : .11. . . • - • :.: ''-............ ' i.. . . . g -. .t ,: ' ;,,,,...... 1 .'.., . -- ..• • ..:............., , . tit .• • • .n t . . ~.,. , _,.. . ' .., ' .. 1 • 1 . - . . ' . . . .. . . . ' . .... . . . . . . . .. . . i . . . .. -, .. • . . ._ . • . • , • . .... . . . . . . , . . . . , • . . _ . . , . . .. . . . • , . .... . . . . • • . . 1 . • • , : . . , . _ . ... . • . . • . ~ . . . . . .: . •. t. . • r . . ' . . . . . . A ',' • , ~ . . . - . , . . . , ' . . . • --- • ' - - - ' . . , . . . . .- --,- ------ ------ an old temple of Venus, covering a quadrangular the cite Of Baalbec froth our encamptitetit is green and 300 feet lo length by 240 feet in width, in the center fresh, 'and the great Walnut trees, the corn-fields now lof which, 'on an elevated platform, are broken . - . . limns , pedestals cornices; frieies, strewn together in.... • otte-13ackto America, yet those six dark colutons in •'a confuied Ore,. evidently thrown . own by an earth , " , liistince rising ahove the trees and the walls, dis- . .. quake insome remote age. There aresevcralsto lled the vision' ankconstantly remittd•one that this .of immense size, and the sty)e of s c ulpture s Syria, and Baalbee, and here lived.-.the Saracens, carve4wcrk is of a rude ehatteter, though the giih;':'• ..and the Ilomans,..and the builders of the old temple ral style of the temple was evldently of a finished coundatiOns, far back in the past, Perhaps in the days model. I . Some of the cornltes Were encrusted with 'it - of Solomon, perhaps before his day. • crystallization of the carbonate of lime, and I detach , I hace.spent this evening in, meditation and con ed several fragments with my hammer. In the dell ' versation'With L. i C.- about this wonderful city of above the 'ruie, the rocks were covered with a dark, the past, this one of the "seven Wonders of theworld," green.mass so'exquisitlY beautiful, , ,,thnt I hare Bath- ,and we have been lost in profound . admiration and . . tired alarge - quantity to send, to my sistey for mantel ornaments. We have Pitched °tn tent near the shore of the 'lake,- though the effluvia from this stagnant ' water is certhinly not, very faiarable for health. The ground is damp, but there seems to Deno other place,' andwe hope for the best. : Immenie herds of cattle,`, gohtlg and sheep are grazing in the - valley, . and now' as the sun goes down, the herdsmen ald sltePheldi . ;' taineinkading :their flodts ;and lberds - to places of salety, on account of the pieat ninnhei: of- rild.beasts who tome forth from 'their dens night and seek. .their; prey in the darkness.:, s'un• ha now gone —a cold wind is blowing,' down from the heights of Lebanon, and we have secured Or tent against :!!‘' ingress of the damp night : air.' 1a old ltinher has just upon us , called , and invitedfu:s . to go Mound to theop- ..) posite shOre-otithelqke.and hunt thewild boar, which . comesdoWo at nigh to drink, .and lulls an easy piey to thq. rlall of man.w bear the wild piercing gutter al voice of the. &tls on the mountains, and . . a j;:cicaloot very far . ty is crying like a lost child, with a:piteous moat' and . prolonged . wail, at which : the Sheep and . golit-; crowd closer together in their littls enclosures; and the sleepless watChmen fire their gum; at intervals to warn the wild beats to keep did' distance.- After reading our , daily. portion of Scrip ture, tve commend ikurselveS anlf . you to that Watelanan _who never slumbers or slettps, Fatn.iv, l 85(. This nu:lilting I gave a Man aioout six - hits for a little collectio &coins bear ing the. name of one of the Roman Emperors. They were'found ,amonk, the ruins' of the !letriple. We rested plee,antly Without Molestation and were great ly refreshed. The night air'wzis very ciefid and brae- --• .i n .., . At half past seven we left Yemounee, :crossed di? : narrow 'v;tlley the white pebbly I‘;ettelt of the lake, and journeyed along over the undulating range of; woMed : hills whit - At lie itettvecti Lt banor. and the .plain of the Doecaci. Our tome lay along an old Ro man.roadondSaveral of the milestones were lying by the roadside, though, the. character once cut On their so: faeirere quite effaced. Some of the people be lieve that this lake Yemounee is the source of the river AtitudS on the other (western) side of Lebanon. A more probable belief is that it is the source of the: Leontes,,whielt fl.;:tws •• southtvurd, passing 'Mt. nermon and truing westward to the sea, south of Sidon.— • As we rode thrbugh the forest, the. Untie:teens brought I to us branches of a tree called ahi a species of oak, tue leans of 5-I.ielt were covered with a white inern,i . ation of stsgar, which diey' . 'told us to eat by dissole ;' in.- it from the surTtee of the leaf on the tongue. It aS certainly very pleasant to the taste, hut its chief interest consisted* in the.fact that - it'r.anie in Arabic • . is nen, So-similar to the word manna, a to sums-, as it has to ninny travellers, the Probability' that the 'supply of mail= to the eh ildreaof israel may have been Itya miraculouslinercase of this or some similar d4osit on the leavieStolshrObs or vetetables. This is mere conjertitre, Inn the similarity: iii the name:s, and theSSWeet pleasant taste lead one IOU:ally toward such a 'eolich4Jrn • After about three hours and ; half, - ave reached the plain; mi , erable dry dusty village stands on the herder of the plain, to Which the people bringoll their water a' distance of about three iniles. _Thresh- . ing floors abounded on every side, and - the breeie brought the chaff into our faces in a way which was: enything but agreeable. ,_...., ....,,ght .tun. 4 bee, and it still' a "eons as far way as :alien it first / dame in 'sight. • Tar away on the eastern side of the plain, just tinder Auti-Lebanan is a green spot in the yellOw sand, accruing like alow long grove surmount , '4.1 he a dim dark object, which as we approach re-. r ' oli - es itself into a vast pile of-solid walls 'crowned by !six beautiful Corinthian columns supporting an airy c.ornice.. This was before tat. 'for tree long hours as t i the feet of our animals beat time on the,yie . in„sand, - - - - --.A. mi impatient- del-- 'and tlieturning sun made us impatient_ f iii • - e,passed field after field plain aftcr plain , qit !seemed,- some of them newly ploughed, :.some afford ' ing.scantyl•pasturage" to, flocks and herds, and some sere and yello*withrthe stubble oftrlicat and barley. One little , singgish stream; which seemed hesitating, between going Northward. in' the Orontes to ROMA and Antioch, or Southward in theLeontes to Mt. Ifer- ES ave lOW been foi two boors "Ggi - 62REDorpi] niu - D manTra maanigu gLawEinu i'PTSD .Jcd 0 5)9 _1 3c, Taw . e "even at the slight impressions left upon,our minds . by the hasty view of ,this afternoon: . To-morrow we ,hope . to spend a day:amid the ruiipt, and at eve I will 'cntinue the account. Sasritner, Aro ma `2..ld.—A day leng to be remem bered. twent down early this timehing to Baalbec, taking misers and pencils..,enough: to keep me busy all day. : ;,After finding a boy to hold my. umbrella, I co:immure,' II sketching, and continued Until about one o'clock. ';..k verbal th:‘scriptitin, Without drawings, is always unsatisfitctory, and when my sketches are fill et:tout I will append ; suitable desMiptious and send . them to yon. As yon enter the ruins from the South EaSt, you : have directly in fiont the is lofty columns etanding Om a high I,:• ,, :ive wall; almost in the center Of e quadrangular enclosuFe. Ai your .right. is the famous - Temple of the i•litfic; with :its walls all! standing, ;and the immense marble columns which'. once surrOunded it On every-side in'a stately colonntde, partly in idace, but the greater 'portion 'thrown down by earthquakes into confused heaps, their. immense . fragment, reminding elle of t e rust piles of saw-logs which- you sometinies see along, the cliffs of the Deli ! aWare, a‘Vaiting the approach of Spring. You pause and .Wonder at thestcwondtuful columns. - Nearly.sevs) Mt feet hi diameter mid seventy feet high, divided in ,! - . ,I tp . threo divisions, and yet matched sti perfectly Ot leven at this late day it is difficult' to sec the joint. 1 Each one seems an.enumental cchmm, worthy of i = self to stand alone and -receive. the admit alien of 'th 't . .orld. one'of these columns tins Ulm against . t 4 1 temple, wall, and now stands leaning upon it , Other's 11u/cc fillets, and the et!ift.?llt. Which united them is so . strong-that they have broken asunder in a new place leaViag the artificial onion 'still Perfect 'There are I nearly twenty columns of the Tent'ple of the Sun still i I .. - gandingi & they are partially and feebly suggestive of 1 its former magnificence. The gateway of the Temple, ! built with the:inost profuse ornamentation known:to., I the Cot iniltian style ofat-chitceture, is oneofthe goat; I oflhnilbee. Tha arch above is hotizontal, and the . 1 massive Stmm which once stretched ftomiide to side i has }metr Insilteit in two places by an emtluitiake, and I ( iIA r oI: 0 t fragment has fallen Nitiout lice feet, ulMi'e 1 itmoiv hang; suspended as if by magic;adding.a kind Of awe in the sense Of pmfonnd _admiration awakened,. by the effect of this niart - clioui; door-wan .- and the' Irichly adorned interior 11 11 iell it discloses tofln4iew: • I .1 5 hate.unt time 'now to Speak More minutely of I theinins.Y. The belong to three dhtinet aces. The 1 Ipaip.ire; fetindttleas to th.: :ige of 5....61ace1, (as I be ficre,) tlse colt:lilts r.o.d Tt ~ir i t, cf the Sun to the time 1 of tile rimuans, :irml tlm m Hitt rs .find, .S:• , es, chapels:ma walls to the afte,ot the'Smneens. - In. i2.nd_ehronicles I VII 7 6. 1.13 ..,alli that Solotnon'bnilt Pewitqfh, a city wbe'se name very Much resembles Ilaclbee. Some re -1 gird Tiaal;lee as the 44 Mouse; of the forest of Luba non,4 in Whiehrthere were " costly ; stones and great stones, stones of ton :cubits, anti stones of eight cu- . bite." Ptrl;art - you will'a.-k if there are any stone:: lof this enormoas size. I answer that a slone S feet by AO feet would serer small iu the South West wall of the temple. There are three stones etid to end in : this wall, which together measure abon't (m a) 0,1,e . Itiindred and ninety feet in length by about' fifteen t feet in thickness. There is another stone in . the (mar: I ry about a file distant, measurinz•sixtv-nine feet and two inches in length ; and about fon' teem feet in breadth and thickness: . co immense are' these stones, that 1 the people here ;all believe that they •were'cast in : i moulds erected on the spot, a tradition which is dis- 1 i. proVed by : one blow of a genlogical hammer, which ; ;shows a style of marble which)S too similar to the 1 cliffs of Anti-Lebanon to admit 'cif the lc:ast doubt:as i to its origin. The quarry too and that imtnense stone! lying ready -for removal, speak volumes.- ' • , : I. :, I will here panne awhile in my jeurnel. The wrath-.. ier is quite .Warm, and I am - weary with five hours ton.. 1 stant sketching. - We-have crystal water, fine water-. - Melons,' gotta milk,Arai, brend,eggs,and on our graseY Plano, we hope to spend this evening and to-mot'row. l in quiet and peace. Little Mary has bot4te the Joni , .ney well, and we arc all improving in health. .The! .meditntions and impregions Racing themselves in pp- i i on one's mind at tie close of a week at the Cedars' and Ilnalbee, are too Turfed for description. Alterl I ' visiting two; uch places, I feel a kind of .satiefitetoryi i fullness, so to speak, that will !cadmic, for the press ent at least, - tcrbe content with a •quict' life, and asti ilong as I live to study,and labor in this dark land,-lIM ‘ memmy of these inspiring scenes will be Asa 'ray of 1 sunlight to tir soul. - Daalbee is'a m:,• - nificeitt:Te.mi pie in ruins, lit almost every human heart in-this land is a more sublime ruin of a more ntapificent t - temple, even-of a temple made for th 4. indw e lling of tht. l- Itoly Spirit. . Your affectimunk son, • ;. --; lIENny 111-Innis Jr.s_scr. !' f Baal- . 1.14)W TO ;U 13 We were about to start, I says the captain move to an elesat cd position 4ibove the ; All it was in. teresting to see how quickly. and completely the:inward : thought or purpose - alters the out ward man. Ile gave it quick glance to every part of the Ship. • Ile east his eye over the multitude COming on hoard the ship, among Whom ..Was ',the ilmericart embassador to Eng land,,who, if the captain may I,'e said to em body - the may be said with .equal truth to eMbody in hislifikial person ,a, nation's right . andlOiler. Ile a.iw theAinsbands and wives, the Mothers and children intrusted to his cafe; and his . slender •lcrm, - as he. gave the ordeis for our (rep - arm:l , N Eeetned at once to grow more erieet and firm ; the mnseles of his face swelled; his dark -eye, glowed with anew fire ; and his whole person expanded . and beautified ittclf by the power of inward ¬ion. - tbave often noticed. this interest ing phenotnenon ; and have come to,the con clusion; if man Or woman either, • wishes to realise the. frill power of personal, bdauty,:it Must be by 'cherishing nOblehopei and par , poses--by wing something to di?, and some, to five for, Which 'it worthy. of . humanity and which, by expanding the eapaeiti es of the. sOul, gives eXliansit,tti and symmetry - to - the body_ whic contains okiior:Uphour.. SixotTLA Pnzsoum:ll—ln a rec'ent bat, loon ascension fruity Philadelphia, by Mr. Oodard, I,lfr was accompanied by Several ex. eursionims. 14neofthe: - peculiarities' o&the. .ri