-. 1.: -- -. - . #:-Oipits9..it; illtblist ADDRESS S. W. TEWXSIIVRY, Esq., Of Lathroz, Ai a Subbath'•&hooi Festival, held lah - 6122:t.etnrreb, Brooklyn, Pa., Sept. 1,1858. ' • [Published by request I . T ' LADIES, AND - GENTLEDEN.TIIO s present occasion is highly interesting and suggestive. Within:these hallowed 'shades, we have as -sembled; upon this lovely morning, to engage in the exercises ola Sabbath School Celebra tion. Before me, composing the various .delegations, are the young, the middle-aged, and the old, that have left behind them their amusements and their cares, for the purpose of coming 'hither to participateirobe.festivi. ties of the:day., . An exhibition like this, affords the contem plative mind food:for prOfltable,meditatio.n. Inlecikingover•the - assembly, I see displayed 'the physical changes of man, incident to his pilgrimage front ..the,..cradle. to -the grave. Bowed .- fortnN furrowedlrows,_and hoary locks,' Warn ns of life's decline, . and convey . the : admonition, that our fathers and Mothers swill soon psis away ' and the places''that now know them, know-them no more forever." As venerable age furnishes its leisons, so may we derive instruciion from the contem, plation of manhood is its prime. ' At - this period, the victor in • life's we - o'4re ; flushed with success, burdened with bettors, panting for renown; proudly surveys the arena where- on was displayed his valor ; and instead of hanging.his weapons upon the ivall,and yield ing to the allurements-of pleastire, or' repose, shouts ''EXCELSIOR ravel dashes on to achieve other and still more glotious conquests. . But if-the consideration. of old ,age, and manhood's priane, is edifying and instructive, no less so'must be the study Of, man in. his youth, or adolescencii. This I.,ritiLts me di seedy to my subject ;. for in accordance, with armngerneiat I propose to offer a few remarks upon the suliect of education in general, but more part:milady in, reference to the proper intellectual, nioral, and pltysiCal culture of vouth: -- I begin; then, by . remarking that: every child; as is well known, comes into the world endowed with ti'mind of a siren cakeity. Thii'mind, though .a unit, is, neYerthele-s, composed of manypfferent faculties, each of: which- performs someimportant office in the mental economy ; and as the subsequent career of any individual is intima , elv associ ated With the s5-stematic, harmonious, and complete development of all the . powers of the soul, it is highly necessary that correct views of edricatiOn by. entertained - by teach ets, parents, and guardiau..- -All know that the first impressions the and -of - a child re ceives, are more lasing than those made at a later period, afer the intellect becomes, 9S it were, indurated by I;itbit, and its power in a measure distranteti s by the excitements and absorbing concerns of life : Hence we dis cover the value of surround - Me children with • influences favorable for'slievelopirient of their Mental" energies, anT 7 establishing over them a salutary disCiptine bused on a . just conception of the pants. iin - .1 capacity, the: • vearniegs and destine of immortal souls/ That portion of the mind 'culla:icing memory, ideality; the perceptive and reflective :facel : ties, should early receive the attention of skillful educators, who 'should seek, not •so much to infuse a large nrnourtt of ideas and . uninteresting facts into the pupils! minds, 'as . to train them . how to think—how •to pursue, a line of cons ecutive reasoning. -:Tliis induc tive mode of insA action - which, you ale a ware, is fast becoifiing truiversal, iu the-opini on of . enlightened and . progressive Minds, tendsJimoye to the annealing,invigorating and normal cultivation . of the.intellect than all other systems of instruction, abroad in the land. -In former. times, 7 :-atid indeed, to a great extent, jt is so at the preserit:day-pu pils were too much made the.. passive - recip ients of knowledge ;—their minds, crowded with other people's thought s,were-uninitiated in the art, of ratiocination. Steffan", the mind, is not educating :it ; and though,"by.so. doing, the memory -may be imptored,yet this :Would not seem-to afford good reason for a dopting the, "pouring in" system.' Indeed, memory, is, by no means, the only faculty, of the mind requiring Stimulation., The'dog-- ma of!a Grecian - sage that, " snore memory, mere 'triind," is an, expliided theorem.. It - frequently happens, that'petsons gifted with retentive merucryihave poor judgment, the lack of which greatly impairs their usefulness; if it does'not absolutely disqualify - them for the high and responsible duties of life. Let it be. remembered, ;that - ability to attquire - knowledge is not, theLonly . eViclence of intel lectual greatness." The child that early ex hibite skill in memorizing,is not sure of being_ i geniis ;,-instances to the contrary often oc-. cur., tut while other-faculties of the. intellect hare's just Claim - upon the 2feeeptor's atten tion; the cultivation of the reasoning powers • shouldreceive his unremitting care. Train children to think closely and . they • will 'be -come. intelligent, sagacious, noble-minded men endwomao ; not addle-brained dandies, nor hysterical, novel-teading,lezy devotees of fashion—a reproach to their sex, mete drones in society, despised by the industrious, ,and serving no Useful purpose whatever. . • Slaves can never be made of thinking. men. 'true, destx:rtisiii 'may shackle the limbs, but not the-soul ! ~ That no tyrants . chain Can bind-Hgo-dungeonhold—nci bayonet enter ! ' Aipark of Divinity , * created for immortality, it bids..defiance to the oppressor's power ; and . though Oebody, it animates may Wither and . quiverin agony upon the rack: -the battle field, orlat.,the stake, yet conscious of its destiny, exulting in .its freed r,, it rises superior to - the, anguish of the. t nteut, and unconquered, undismayed, wi lehrjas of triumph—with exultation of Soy, it closes its earthly. career, .and takes its flight ter the ' mansions of bliss I- : • . ' . Again' . An : All individual; whose reasoning . !amities have been nioperly 'disciplined, is -lees apt to._ embrace error than one' whose education is deficient in this-particular. Our _everyday experience confirms the verity-of this declaration. • . . - lr. .- - , _ . Further:. many of our youtfr ' people are -so much absorbed - in the • tmsl3P and-to as alarming eitent=pernicious literature of the day; so much engaged in tritlitg miusetheos, and,-worshipping at fashion's s_brin4ithat they can afford no time to devote to the cultiva. tioo of the 'bunt highest energies ; no time for laying in a stock of splid attainments so in. dispeusible for their fuitire usefulness. and success. This state of things is truly deploi- - , _ • K. WE :MET OURSELVES TO No PARTY' THAT DOES able; and .can be corrected only by a proper education ofthe young ;•by teaching them to love scientific truths more than fiction curbing their wayward fancies ;, gradually! Accustoming their strebgthenieg v powers to grapple with difilculties,untll a hebit is fermi.; ed of patient,. systematic, and thorouh iii, vestigation; Streit a habit once contracted; will "grow, with their growth, and strengthen with their strength," until a taste for the fruits of philosophibal research, and whatever in literature is pure and msthetical, will become . so firmly' established as to exert. over them an influence- that will enable them to with stand the solicitations of Vice and . maintain amid the most trying circumstances, a requi site degree of fortitude and composure. Since life is astern reality,should notlhe ethicatio of youth be conducted with especial reference to this ' fact? The reply of Agesilaus, al; Spartan g, when asked what he thouht most proper't'or boys tolearni should no tbel forgotten.. Indeed, in the education.of child ren, ive might, learn many profitable lessons. from the records of antiquity. I reipeetfully submit that it is the duty or, every young man whatever maY behis pecu e Mary cirounistances, er social pesition, to no -quire some useful trade, or profession. Life is full of changes.. The rich of to-day, are poor to-morrow ; and the young would dol well to•Riepare for 'all the vicissitudes that,l attend us on our earthly pilgrimage.. .', Too, every young lady, however -rarious, her attainments in ether respects, shouldi familiarize herself with the whole routine! of what the Roman :matrons celled , "res do e ; tizeslica"--dornestic affairs. Unless she do this, her-education is,incomplete ; she is un-.! qualified for engaging in the business of life,`:) and-rendering eheerful and pleasant her own'; home, should she be fortunate enough to cure one, It may be an unpalatable truth, : : but—to the shame of both sexes the it said— very many of the young, who ought to know - I better, take far more pains to adorn their per sons, to create a sensation by an . attractive; exhibit .. of dress-moods, galvanized jewelry, .1 and French-paste'brilliants, than to lay upiu i memory's store-hous3 a 'magazine of know- ' ledge for ,subsequent use. The present is :I denominated a utilitarian age, and, we are; called a practical people. , This is rnauifestly true; but the way in which malty of the young are being educated, or -rather mis . educated,woeld seem to contradict the vaunt- 1 ing asgveration. We have too Much of parlor, and too little kitchen culture ; too many genteel rowdies and too few good farmers and mechanics ;. to much Superficial ity, and too little I,'utiianic integrity and common sense; too much fawning at the feet of opulence, and not enough sympathy for the poor; too much sham-politeness,and too little, heart-felt courtesy ; too much time spent in frivolous pyisuits, and not enough dovoted to life's practicalities; too much - interfering with other- people's business, and eeelectiec no, . own. on i tor' a return of those motel old Macs of primitive simplicity, • when 6 honesty, sobriety, and virtue, controled the action of men, more than they do. at the present day En epeou-opirlions everywhere prevail; and the-e can be corrected in no other way than b: diffusing intelligence among the people, —paying strict regard to the educatiotrof the young. Bet the intellect orellildren should not be cultivated reeaell+e-s of their moral suscepti bilities- That this has been too often Sone, the history of the, world b l ears melancholy testimony. li.nowledge is truly a mighty . power—a power that ; uncontroled by priu ciples of morality, unsubservient to the holier impulses of the.soul, is probe to overthrow the barriers, erected by the usages of enlight ened society = trample ,law and' order in the I dust—oppose the claims of Christianity, and t o feckless of consequences, rush madly onward, ; . - intent only on the accomplishment of its un hallowed desigas! - The pages of history— t sacred 'and proifatie—ancient and modern, -abound with examples touching 'the fact in question. Behcild an Alexander„at the head of his Unconquerable legion,sweeping through. the East likea.demori of i•crath, razing city after city into the :dust; butchering' been,. tombs of unoffending intedeteere, - and -con signing to hopeless bondage multitudes more; desolating whole provinces with fire and sword, and carrying the terror of his arms to the remotest bei ndaries of the civilized world!! Here is present d:a Man endowed by nature with extraordinary - intellectual part* which were developed y.a thorough and systematic course of instr etion. But, unfortunately - , born a prince, exposed,, from childhood, to corrupting intlueoces of a dissolute court;— ' gratified in all his desires, no wOnder his mo _ rid sensibilities beaame...deprared ; and in stead of.having been servicable to mankind,_ Ibe is re.vealedto, us gas a monster of ericked• , Lness, a scourge to his race. From the career of this blood-thirsty conqueroeend other per sonages of similar character,. we learn a use , ful lesson. We discover how necessary it is i for the ultimate good, not only of each indie %ideal, but for ..the universal brotherhood of; man, that the moral faculties, the humanizing, i l .,and refining suSceplibilities of the soul receive. their due propciqiOn of culture and develop ; ment conjointly" With the education of the I intellect. Loo- over community,' and•yor( will find indivi ualepossessing a considerable , fupd 1 of intel l igence—perhaps enterprising 'arid suecesful ip business; but with morals de l plorably lax. I SUch - persons, though they ~mair be treated. with civility by-the upright; ' rarely receive their coufidence,--nerer their. esteem. There is between virtue and ',vice ; purity and impurity, such are antagonism. that for these elements to - 'assimilate - would'. rbe utterly impossible., A man void of moral' principle may' truly, be compared toe red= clerks* shirr et s.ell—tossed rudely about by: ; every wave thatsrolls, and every wind that blows. Vice, conscious of its • hideousness and deformity, endeavors to , screen itself from observation. Virtue, relying upon Wo ifs intrin- . sic 'rth, 'Courts no disguise, or concealment,: but . displays I itself .openly to view. The former is cowardly and deceitful, : the latter . magnanimonsjand true, The reward of vir4 toe, is presept enjoyment, and prospectiv4 felicity beyond tbe grave. The votaries of sin, wretehed,.deaded,and abandoned,knovi . atle of the delights experienced by the culi . toted in mind . and pure in . heart ; conse quentlYthey will reap, while:in this. "World; naught cave a harvest of misery, and find un= - timely graves, leaving behind them no "sunny neurones,"—no estinples worthy of imitet; tion. ', Mankind admire_ _heroic "achievements whether -of intellectual or physical prowess, But there is a heroism 'no loss. entitled to our ontroit; cs , usqueljanna Cotuttir, admiration because it manifestis itself in a silent, unostontiave manner. I allude to that moral courage which enables a man to do that he thinks is right ; regardless ,Of the seofrs, and jeers, and railery of the world. This eletnent of matt% nature cii . ostitittes the true hero; and oh ! that each of - us Might exereise,more of it, and fear lett,wltrit our companionstould say of us, were we to adopt Certain mica' for the , government of bur lives f• " since morality And Christianity, as revealed to us by. the Wont of Inspiration,, are intimately_associated with the ,happiness, prosperity, and glory of our country, it is of Ottil importance that -the rising generation, which mast speedily become the custodians of the liberties, - both Civil and era eujoy, be taught the : moral responsibilities devolving upon them. There is no disguis ing the fact, that . morals,. public and pd. vete, are becoming- alarmlingly depraved all over cn. land. The journals of the day,their columns teeming-with recitals of awful and disgusting crimes, herald forth to the world this. melancholy truth. But how, I inquire, are we to arrest the fearful torrent ollorman depravity that is rolling throughout the length and breath Of our union,- threatening to en gulf in its stygian waves every vestige of that morality and patrivistn which forms the only Cement that binds these individual and sovereign States in one harihonious confedera tion,- except by educating our youth morally es well as intellectual) Obviously this con summation can Le- se'cured iu no other way; and secured it must be, or, I fear, our Re public has seen its palm'e t days! And what American citizen,in whose bosom glows a spark of that patriotic zeal that nerved a Warren-and a Washington fur the contest, does net 'shudder as he contemplates the frightful consequences that would intvitably ensue, not only to us, bat to every land, and .people, and tongue under the whole heavens, should our Union become dissolved. Shall we, by a criminal unconcern, allow the fair edifice of otir constitutional liberty to crumble in the dust, and have it said of us tit posteri ty, as involved in all the horrors of anarchy and fratricidal war, they drag after them the galling chain of slavery, "you knew your duty, but you did it not! you folded your arms in oblivious repose, while the foe was sapping the temple of freedom ; and we, I*, the unfortunate victims of your neglect, InOt linger out. a wretched existence,, and transmit to our children the same execrable boon Forbid it, my friends 1 forbid it ye spirits that watch over the destinies of this "land of the free, and the home of the brave!" The only safe guarantee for the _perpetuity of our institutions, faulty. though they may be., in consequence of the imperfection of human natu re,is manifestly in. tU intelligence and virtue of the people. The permanency of our government depends, not more upon : the masses ; for, as we have - - endeavored to show,splendid talents unsanctified by the re straining and harmonizing, jtitluences of a spotless morality, are often made subservient to the worst of purposes.' Through the wis dom of its founders, the plan of our govern: melt is - such,that the avenues to civic.prefer ment.are open to all, whether high or low - , rich or poor. Patricial and- . Plebeian have nu place in the magna elearta of our...liber ties ; but. no man should be invested with the law-making, or lain-administering power, whose conduct, is not regulated try precepts .uf Divine truth. It is a shame and reproach to us, as a people, that such an atinosphere of moral pollution surrounds, and:even pervades our halls of legislation. Since the habits : and manners of those - standing in high places are apt to he copied by the inJltitude, the corruption'and venality of legislators, and others in authority, exert a ballful influence upon society at large. In view 'orthis fact alone, who does not feel to exclaim withlef- , ferson, "I tremble for my country, when 1 re member that God is jast r Whatever is wrong should be abolished ; but mankind can rarely be made to do right by coercion. There appearsto be, ...I"cilic.us princiolo chat urges us to resist any means employed' by others to force us into a Compliance with their wishes. The correc tion of evil and abuses, whether social or political, local or, national, can be effectually accomplished only by the influence of reveal ed Ch:lstianity, whose cardinal principles should early be instiller] into every youthful mind. You are doubtless familiar With the language of Washington in relation to this matter. Says this great andsgoed :man, "Of all the dispositions and habits that lead to political prosperity, religion and 'morality are inlispmlible supports. A noble precept this—one viouthy to 'be recorded in golden characters, ih every household throughout our land." Children should be tanglit, that meekness, gentleness, truth, forgiveness, compassion,an'd •love, are the most pcweiful weapons for the . conflict of life. True. it is, that "life is a war fare ;" and- I' hazard the assertion, that our foes'can be oftener vanquished by "the soft answer that turneth away' wrath," than by any other means. ' • As parents desire the welfare of their off spring, they should exercise over them the strictest , superviliance,—firmly. yet gently suppressing- every undue manifestations of the passions, which, if allowed to control the intellect in youth,will be apt to do so in after years, when habits have become confirmed. The seeds of good and evil- are planted in every mind. Both varieties will germinate ; and it requires a skillful hand to foster the - I growth of the one, and restrain the . inherent proclivities of the other. This work of moral culture, so gs.sehtial to the exaltation and stability of our national character, demands the serious consideration of all. No education -is complete without it; no station in tits it would not • dignify and ! adorn. The unperverted aspirations of man's I .fiature • requi s reit ;. timidly felicity' prompts it; Revelation enforces it. Who, then, will not lend their influence in pronioting this, the best good of fallen humanity I—Who so cold and misanthropic, so indifferent to the welfare of others, so deaf to mercy's cry, that will fold their hands and sit quietly down, when all around them, perhaps in the bosom of their own families,_=are immortal souls, draped iii the habilimehts of moral deprivis ty -; mildewiOg for Want of spiritual light: and beat; lost to all emotions of self-respect ; tormented with the agonizing consciousness of their - forlorn condition, and dashing win toad career,., to. end, perhaps, in irretrievable . ruin 1 Friends of humanity ! - probationers for NOT CARRY THE FLAG -AND KEEP MI! TO TRU MUSIC OF. Vale UNION." , • _ 'a, Ctafshg, _Boning, October 7, 1858 eteinity ! I entreatyou to pau and consider what you are, what the relations •• u Sustain to the world, what he responsibilitieadevolv ing upon you. Foreiery talent misiiinpr- - ed, evw v ddty nndi.lharged,yottwilf be held amenable. As etlightened 'as guardians of our natimal Falladium,as and tenplers of youth, leeched you to . in- ' dustry,llto watchfidriess, to. virtue, and to patriotism. Let yotr light shine, not with It fitful gleam, but kisreacy, benign radiance. Grapple with error, it'd eV° the monster no quarter: Beard ignirame th its den ; and drive superstition to its gloomy' lair. Hold no parley with vice; hug virtue to your bos oms. Be resolute to,do mid to dare., Give truth a,cordial welcome ,falsehood Seek not FOlr•Uhirifitqlijej,._!-15..• JO all' for toe honor of your country. rod_your God. 'Pre serve, under all circumstines, your self-com mand, and self res - pect. - Stifle not the-"still small voice" of coneciene. Do right at al! tiMes ; do good as you have opportunity, and you will lead peaceful ,ad happy lives; be honored Had respected ;