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';'):',a,,, , v- , ---- ; , -;.-4-..',- r:.. . ~ - ,___--.., ,---_-_ v. -- ,, q : ,7 f - - .._-,72, ... .=- .'f '-' . r&N .,. .* -: ' A . 7 ,41 4 11 /F i lL r : I .=.--- W - • 4 ..„...... ____ ___„ tf.,... : , .. : .,„ 1 . __,,,, _,- , -.. . ~...... ..„ ~. ~.., v .. - • --- . , -...,_. •.• - _ - - . -- ' - '-ame,-,:-' _,'---,---.--,,,, tt --YITC-Tt, ' 0 , / t...!, ~,... ~. • , ; ~, .-'ol;. , ' t „r • :; . •:',...Z.,,:„,..• r :, 11, 7 . 1 , ,, .-- L-44 - . ...A .. .Q . . 3 k ; . - .` .r• - • - ,- .._ , ffi ...---.____ A 3 --._,.._ .7 --- - S - _ ,- -f, ;:',---:. --t.t- .4 , ..-... t 7;-1 __..--- - A,- ;": 7 -.-4•,:,..,,,f. --- q - Z , P . • • A. IL. Itlitlol, Editor & Proprietor, VOL. 62. BACCALAUREATE ADDRESS DELIVERED JUNE 22, 1862 BY PROP. W. C.:WILSON GENTLEMEN.-1 our career thus far has been one of preparation merely. You have been rehearsing the parts you are to act• in the great Drama of Life. That preparation, as far as we are conce.ned, is now over. Your rehearsel is ended : the hour fur the perhirmanee is at hand and the audience awaits your appearance upon the stage. In the brief' space then that remains, while we are waiting be hind the scenes for the overture to end, and the curtain to rise, let us take the last opportunity for a little friendly coun sel together. ..this breaks the last link that binds us together officially. What ever may have been the short-comings of the past, on either side, it is now too late to repair them. You must suffer the loss of wasted opportunities, while we regret the want of greater fiirthfulucss to our trust. But do not think our interest in you will end with our official relation.— Our daily association has begotten a per sonal interest in each one of you, which cannot end here. When the scene opens and you go upon the stage to act, we shall go quietly down into the audience as spectators. But not disinterested ones. If any of you. through negligence, or shameless blundering, should provoke the hisses of the audience, we shall feel ashanvd - of you. When your holiest and earnest effirts to succeed are met with cold indifference we shall sympathize with you, but urge you to renewed per severance, that in the end must win ap proval. But when yOu have honorably earned the applause of the world, we shall feel proud of' you—proud that you bear, our mark, and that we have had share in shaping-tlie- character the world admires. Gentlemen—l ant hero tomi7lit to speak plainly to yore. fly position, tts well as your own iucila i nt, en iik s tur to that privilege. And while I shall re spect the sanctity or this day, and the place where I stand, I shall not allow any merely con veatin real restrictions to trammel my utterance of what I coneeive to he the truth. I aut not—herc to stiroulam your ani . iition. or 11Ther your vanity.— For my part I do either the ambition or Ili , . vanity of yming MOH leaving college ne,d , much pt lilting. As a general thin : : their ain't i•-• already too high for the wei,,,ht "r th:•ir metal, or tic force of the chance they carry. I would rather rcstrain hrtiun ;red mods ri,te you! ;Pm, until you have tested the s'rongth and d..ttliiined the range of your powers. If you would make your shot tell, aim at an ,Wjee , yon know to be within your reach. ,If you aim at-the-sun, you surely not hit your mark, and tray miss everything be low it, Do not fancy that the woi Id is standim; wait:trig, ear in h^ to rnalic its prufut ost bow as you ;;o out from these walls, or that your diploma is to be an open sesame, that will unlock every door to place and power. The great world is too busy with its own important questions to be disturbed, even by the entrance of thirteen Bachelors of Arts, flourishing their sheep-skins in its face. You will . soon find, in whatever department of life you enter, abler and better men than yourselves, who have never been to col- The world is not sn easily imposed on after all IE generally recognizes real merit wherever it finds it. It will inex orably demand what you can do, not, where you graduated. And be assured it will not honor your parchment., until you have shown that you can do wore with it. than other men without it. It will soon put you into its inevitable cru cible, and test how much of you is pure metal arid how touch base it is only the noble metal dial es mated, while while the alloy goes for nothing, so you, whatever pretence you may wake, will soon he valued only for what is noble and pure in you. You may pass current for a time, but you will soon be branded as a base counterfeit, if you have not the true ring and shine. I must here protest against. the popular doctrine that "a man may be whatever he wills to be." It has been so constant ly and persistently inculcated into the minds of tte children in our schools, and proclaimed by blating demagogues from the stump to gaping crowds of children of larger growth, that we see its perni cious effects in the almost universal dia. content of our people with their lot, Not satisfied to fill well the station in which providence has placed them, they aro conqantly striving to be something else, which God never intended they should be; and failingin their 'efforts to rise, as they term they become soured and envious of those whop they fancy have been more favored' than themselves. I would have you remember, gentlemen, that the characters you are to.represent in this Life•Drania before you,lave been - selected toriyou by the Great- Manager who has arriniged it fur the stage•of the world. These are the elnuacters , you.wili act the best. Take them and be content — with them. Try to learn thonand stick to them: Do not ape what, you are not fit for, because you may have an idea that it is more respectable than your own part. God ,has put you down fur comedy or even farce play it truthfully, and you will win your share of applause,. but do not Itt,J tempt tragedy. You will on - get hisses for your pains if yon do—and deserved ly. Do not attempt to ploy a. star-pare when you were i„,titentled only for a kook actor. Remember there are but few star• parts,. and but few were ever intended to play-them. It takes all sorts of oharacterr to complete thin Worjd-Dratna, iuid some body must act them. other :words, 1 . btilieve that every man w 719 mails on pur pose, that every man has his place in .the - world,••and that-he was •Inado spedialbr fun that place. It ,is only . by earnestly fillips than plaCe that.he fulfills his- ,dustin3 and answers s theend for. which Gott area ted hirm Confusion and:disappointment only glee froicaour efforto.to got into some other place than the one for which we were intended. The range of our choice ii. limited by the character and the facultiea God has given us, and the circumstances by which he has surrounded us, and which have modified that character and devel oped those faculties. Each man is crea ted with certain possibilities which deter mine the direction he must go and the height to which lie may rise. We n!e I not therefore remain in doubt as to our duty. Our path lies so plainly marked out. fur us, that it is easy for us to fi nd it if we choose. Our work is so near us, that we need not seek long for it, if we have willing hearts and willing hands to do , •'No man IN born Into the world whose work Is not born with Mtn, there Is alwa3s And tools to work withal, for those who will." The same power that Created you and rained you for your work, has brought hat work to you, Do not go out of your way to seek for something grand and imposing to do, but take up . at once the simplest and plainest duty that lies before yuu, and you will not gu wrong Do not stand waiting for signs and won ders to reveal to icu what God would have you do, but listen to the voices within you and around you calling you to your work. Trust those voicesand have faith in hum ble things; then God will seek you, and light and strength be given toyou as'your path opens wider an,. higher before your advancing footsteps. I believe God calls men to humble duties as well as great ones—for to hint all duty is equally great ; and woe be,,rinfertim who disre gards that call. We arc willing to recog nize this ca/1 to the Ministry, then why not to the other pursuits of life? is preaching the Gospel the only duty that. God recognizes ? It is because we wait fbr God to manifest himself in the light ning and the tlmoder that we fail to hear his voice in our own hearts and in file in dications of cumstances about us, and thus go :1 4- 4ray, groping . our way blindly! and stumbling nn through life in darkness and doubt. No man ever accomplished flinch who had not this idea of a voc,ition, who did not feel that he was called of God to do that. VPIIII All great men have had faith in their Destiny. But each one of, us, however humble his, position, has a Destiny. Then why not have faifirin it:? For it is only by sub mitting ourselves to this great. Day; of Nticessi ty that encircles the world—by 'yielding our dills to the ever flowing tide of (;od's Providence that we are fu accom plish the great put pude of ' our lives. fly opposing and fi:Ating against it' we must be overwhelmed and crushed. Try then, 6,•ei that you have a.r.wat' live tip to it. Try to feel and believe that God intended you for 'something when lie made you, and recognize the true digni'y of your,position_ as essential parts of the -great plan of his . Providence: Yet, while I would have you recognize the true dignity of your calling and urge I yeu to energy and perseverance in the, pursuit of it, I would still have you rise: above it. Remember that you are to live! by it, not for it, that it is a means to your! highest life, not its end. Your manhood' is more than any vocation—even the high-, est and holiest. Alaster your profession, but do riot let it master you. Do not al 'Ow the greedy desire for wealth or fame, or position, or power, to reduce you to that most dreary and helpless of all forms of slavery, slavery to your business Many men acquire these at a most fear ful sacrifice of the finer and better feel ings of their souls. And it is tits perni cious example of such men that makes our common life so mean and prosaic, by teaching us that power and influence is to be reached only by crushing out of our , lives all the poetry and beauty thfr aod, has put into them, and reducing all our ideas to the low standard of hard, sordid fact. It is high time that these "erni-: trendy practical" Gradgrinds, that 'we have worshipped so long, should be de throned and a higher style of manhood: elevated to their place. The facts of our every day life arc / hard enough, and its. drudgery mean and dirty enough, we all know, and God knows; and, for that rea.; ‘.s in cui son, he has created. a higher and better world into which he would lift us. This world of ideas, this region of poetry and romance, is as much God's world as this lower one of material fact on which it rests. It was made for your enjoyment. Rise into it, then, and live 10 it : "For It bath in it a higher end Than fact; It Is the possible, compared With what is merely positive, and glves To the conceptive soup an inner world, A. higher, ampler Heaven, than that wherein The nations sun themselves." Do not shut up the higher and brighter chambers of your intellect, as some peo ple do with their houses, and live only in the lowest and meanest; but throw open the windows of your souls and let in all the genial influences that are everywhere about-you, so that you nay - live - the • full and complete life that God intended for you. If; in search of nourishment, you must send your roots deep down. into the substratum of hard facts and everyday, drudgery, that underlies the life of each any' of us,let it only be that you may grow and expand upward and outward into the broad air and sunlight of Heaven. If tlod has sent you' into the world, each with a separate character, as distinct individuals and not in masses, will he,noi hold each one of you to a strict account for the individuality he has given you?. diull* ynu.then, in the name of Heav• en, to iiee to it, that you preserve your dis. tiuotihnd separate personality, that you re et the influences that would rob you of andhreduce all men to a dead level of uaifohnity Do not allow it to bo fused into the common maks., Do not barter ii away foi. political aistinction, , for wealth ior social position, br even as. many do for cho sake of peace. • G mud it,us a saoreo ,crust. Society ie..cier on the watch te iteal it away from you:: • Withlts custom, Ind Its twain, it would cut yoii, all oing me lengtlt, to lit lie Procrustean Fwd.—. Your soot and piir' party. would;; out yo t , dl' at tho'rooo,' and tio youcup - bundJet• •hat'innst Nutt . 11gainnt•ach other', arm agaiust them for !suppo4: But. let thy, WAIMSZ, 'source of your life be from within, not from without. Act out fully and freely, according to its own law, the character hod has given you. Do not let soeiei'y with its conventionalities and its proper ties, train and prune it until all that is natural and beautiful in it is clipped away. Your freedom of thought and action is too dear to be given up to sect or party. We have plenty of men in masses sheaves of men—who have no power to stand alone, but must be propped against each other for support: and very good and proper people many of them are, the world needs men who can stand by themselves, who grow by their own roots, who don't need to be propped up, but who, like the stiardylcak, can withstand the wind and defy the storm 'Most that is hest and noblesk;in life is individual and characteristic; it cannot be subject ed to external restrictions; it must and will be a law unto itself. Let each one then think his own free thoughts, and I show in his outer the purest and best of his inner life. Lot each one think himself an act of aod, His mind a thought, his life a breath of God, And let each one try by great thoughts and good deeds, To snow the most of /leaven he bath In him." But are you ready to pay the price of your freedom of thought and action?— Fur be assured, even if it is your birth right, you will not be allowed to enjoy it without a struggle. And, it is a strange fact, that in this country where we boast so much of our personal freedom, society has even less toleration than in any other, for the'iMiividuality that resists or defies its leveling influences. Free from the burdensome restraints of Government, we submit our necks . to the more oppressive yoke of Public Opinion. We move about in constant dread of each other, and dare not call our souls our own for fear of that meanest of all tyrants, "They'll say." You must have stout hearts if you would stand up against the Opposition and ridi cule of your clique, your sect or your party, and dare to live your own life, and think your own thoughts, subject. alone to God and your own conscience. And let ine warn you that the most effective weapon, that will be used in this warfare upon your individuality, is ritlit tile. Ihe fiercest denunciation or the most violent persecution may arouse every energy of our souls in opposition, but ridicule is so keen and insinuating, that it seeks out the tender spots. and finds its way through the joints of the closest mail, in which we_ may encase ourselves. Many men there are who would face any danger in defence of their rights, but who would give up everything, even manhood itself, to the sneers of the community in which they. live. We all knew how much less it hurts 'to be abused than to be laughed at. The Hery staple of wit and sarcasm are the individual peculiarities that break over any of the rules laid down by the social oracles for the formation of character and the regulation of deportment. But where 'is the Una man that is not peculiar? The earnest, great-souled [pan, who feels that he has au object in life and ha's his own self-respect and approval, cannot always be'stopping to inquire what the gossips of his town or neighborhood may say of him. Nor need he'eare; for it does not hurt a man with a back-bone to be com pelled to stand alone, or to be sent to Coventry occasionally in vindication of his right to think and act for himself If you would lead public opinion, you I must be able to defy it when you feel it to be wrong, and show that you arc able to live without its approval. You will never get the mastery of it by being its slave. The weather•eock follows the wind, but does not direct it. It is the man who stands by his convictions of truth and duty through scorn and perse cution, whom at last the world delights to honor. They are the favorite heroes of the earth, who have remained faithful to the great truths God has revealed to them in trust for the masses who are not yet prepared to receive them, and who stone and crucify the messengers that are sent unto them. The instincts of mankind, though slow and erratic, are sure to come right at last, and the real benefactors of the race will sootier or later be recognized "For Humanity swoops onward: whero to-day the martyr stands, On tho morrow crouches Judas with the eilVer In Lie hands; Far in trent tho cross 'stands ready, and the crackling faggots burn, While the hooting mob of yesterday in silent awe ro• turn, To gloan up the scattered ashes Into lllst.ory's golden urn. Then to side with Truth le noblo, whop we share her wretched crust, Ere her cause Wing lams and prolle, , abd, 'lie prosperous .to be just: Then It is the bravo van chooses, while the coward stands aside, Doubting In lthi slued spirit, till his Lord Iq eruelfled,, And the multitude make virtue of the faith they had But, gentlemen, there is danger that, our, efforts to preserye our individuality may carry us into • intolerablo egotism, and . cut us off from a healthy sympathy with the age and the society in which we live. Independence -may, and- often does-, do• generate into perverseness. There are many men, who from an inordinate desire - to appear to think for themselves, are always in=opposition—always on the other side of every question. Such people are the pests of society, not its heroes, ho‘w ever , they may covet the crown of mar ty'rdom. jteally, gentleinen, you will meet.wiiii obstacles enotigh in the straight for Ward course of your life, without turn ing aside to knock ydur heads against every. post and pillar along side Don't be running an insane at`every windmill you come across,. Ellen theie are_ ahead of 3;du, , plenty of real flesh and blcod enemies to try your mettle. 'Within certain limits, the opinions of society, and even its foibles and its prejudices, must be. respected ; nor is u proper compliance with its legitimate requirements keen iistent with a manly dignity or a- true independence -Of Character. It is int.: portant'as far as possible, to keep, in har 'teeny with your surrodudings. .To bene fit the age. in which you live, it 113 neoes- • TSS% #APOH A T GEROM. CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1862. sary to understand its spirit. You must and peril, nursed by those stern men not be too far behind it, nor too - clir ahead "with Empires in their brains." It was of it to be in sympathy with,?.it.:. But this idea, abstraction though it were, that while you live in sympathy'!with the vdrove the colonies into the Revolution. present, let your eyes be turnet4toWards And, in the midst of the hard necessities the future to read its promises:',: . Try at of that struggle, it became crystallized least to understand your own age , and the ; forever in the Declaration of Indepen next, if you would contribute to'-the pro- :dence. This was the corner stone on green ,of your race. .. (which our fathers founded our Govern- There ., is too much tendency in men of i wont. And, from the breadth and depth scholarly tastes and habits to sliOnk from 'of the foundation they laid, let us learn contact with the busy rush of lifri around ' the height and glorious beauty of the fah them, and turn back to the quiet of the ' rie they intended should, spring heaven classic. but dead Past, until they lose all , I ward from it. They did the work well to sympathy with their own times . Tho which God called them, but they left Past has its true uses, and stititald 'have, the structure incomplete, so that each sue its proper share in all our culture: As Iceeding age might add its share to its ris each geological period has furtt,ished its : ing grandeur. ' Let us see to it then, that own forms of animal and vegetable life, ; while we preserve unharmed the broad which have become fossilized and pre- ; foundation of the Temple of our liberty, served in its strata, so each age fur- ' the part we are to build on it shall con nishes its own peculiar forms of uhought, I tribute something to the beauty and per which become embodied in its own litera- I fection of the design of the. great Archi ture. And as each geological formation 1 tect who planned it. furnishes its contribution of material for It *as by a fatal coincidence, though the new strata now forming, wlr;h must but an application of the universal law, be worked over and rearranged . bilfore It by which light and shadow, good and can furnish nourishment to the bbsy life evil, health and disease are mingled in the that swarms on its surface and must one lot of nations as well as individuals, that day be buried in its bosom ; . so the I while the stern old Puritans were strug. thought of each past age, while it fur- gling with untold hardships to plant the niches its share of material for the col- principle of freedom on the barren rocks ture erf the present, must be reformed and of Massachusetts, the avarice of the moth infused with a new spirit before it can or country Was forcing the curse of sla beconie the true food for the intellectual very on the rich and-fertile soil of Virgin life of to-day. ie. The colonists, to their everlasting . Truth t eternal, h ,ut h. ell:Rmeo honor, and to the shame of England be it : ,_ with oodles. chan g e Is fitted to thebour, I said, protested against it. And, when tier mirror is turned forward t.O redeot compelled to accept the fact, they repudi- The promise oftbo future, not the pastY ated the principle it involved. But it Gentlemen—You enter upon the active was tolerated, until at length it grew so duties of lire 'in the midst of events that profitable and powerful that it demanded demand your best energies to - grapple recognition, not as an evil to be endured, with and understand them. You assume but as a positive good to he protected and the responsibilities of manhood when it perpetuated, and called on us to acknowb is worth something to be an American citi- edge its principle— the right of property zen, when we are taking such a stride in man—as the corner stone of our ite onward towards our destiny, as makes the peblican institutions. nations stand agh , st and shakes old sys- The most curious' page of our history toms and old ideas as with a thunder-fit, will be that, which records the growth The timid conservative may stand shod- and develo_perneet °him Slave Power— dcring and see nothing but confusion and Future generations will read with amaze 'disaster in flie heaving, of the ,Clements went, how from mere toleration and en -11 that is shivering inti fragments the old durance, it went on expanding and layer of thought and habit in which he strengthening, advancing - in social, ccele had become embedded, instead of 'the siastical and political influence, while we, breaking up of the fountains of the great the .American people, whose mission, it r deep that prepares .the world ler the , in. was to represent a civilization based on the coming of a new era with new ideas and freedom of man and the dignity of labor, higher forms of life ; the kindfahearted absorbed in money-getting and office ' philanthropist intty_be shocked eV:the des- seeking, believing that the Chief end of °lotions of war, at the shedding If frater- an American citizen was to get rich, and nal blood, the agonies of the sulbrying - and the one great object for which the Amer the lamentations of the bcreavedh.p.tl/t us ican government was gotten up was to remember that this is a strugglsTAr el.ist-..enable the stupid to got office and the once =that these are the throere4whieb,A shrewd to get eontraets,,_went.-step by step nation's greatness is horn. I.'iaaa,ilie.,,brr- down the ladder of compromise - and con. ginning every Step in the progritS.4 of the OBssion,"Yielding one point after another, race has been attended by commotion, and until at last we - had almost reached the has been through blood endure. These point of giving up - everything, and the have been God's-chosen instriltnenti, ter- slave power dictated the rules of society, rible as they are. For while whole na- the discipline of the church, the platforms tions inove onward, what cares he if,a' of the parties, the decisions of the -courts, few be crushed 1 There sometimes cores and the policy of the government. Ii is 1 a period in a nation's history when the not necessary here to recount each step of crust of tradition and habit that encloses the slirny'path, down which we crawled its expanding powers, .becomes so'..thick to the very bottom. History will record ' and hard that only the sturdy blowS of them but too plainly. the sword can break the tough chrysalis hut, not satisfied with having compelled and give room to the growing life within. the Supreme Court to declare that the There are times when a people's life be- constirution extended slavery 'into every comes so barren, so selfish and besotted foot of the national domain, nor with that the thunders of war are necessary to having forced the Executive to proclaim rouse it from its degradation. There are to the world that our constitution was the times when bullets are more needed than tool of slavery, instead of the charter of ballots, when cannon balls are better col- freedom, it demanded that the American tivators of a nation's soil than plough- people should sanction the same doctrine shares and its richest fertilizer is the blood at the ballot box. '-', at last the issue Of its best and bravest citizens. was fairly presented—though the great liad we not reached such a point in Democratic party had to be broken to' our career 'l Let us look at the events pieces in order to get it presented—"vote that lie back of this war and-read, if' we to nationalize Slavery, or we break up the I can, its inclining and its uses. Look at I government." There was no mistaking our position in history and in the light of it. The petty politicians attempted to ,' all the upward struggles of the race be- . befog it, but the people understood it in 1 hind us, and all its aspirations reaching I spite of Qua pettituggers—and oligarchs,', far out before us, read the prophecies of who wade it, understood it. But, in this the future and learn the Destioy to which issue was involved another, not so much God has called us as a people. When we how we should vote, but whether we look at the point of time at which-- we were to vote as our consciences dictated, or have been called into existence as.a eta-, as oirr masters commanded—whether, in Lion, with all the experience of history to a word} we were to be men or spaniels. guide us ; at the grand theatre on which To the credit of human nature be it said, we have been placed to -play our rule; this last kick-did straighten up our spi and at the great race now forming from uul columns, and we stood erect and voted the best blood of all the nations flowing as we pleased; and we pleised to vote into it to play that role, can we doubt that slavery was sectional, while freedom that ours was intended to be the Star- was national; that slavery was but the part in the world's history 7—that we disease of the body politic, while free were intended to represent . themost ad- dom was the living principle of the na vanced step of human progress-not on- Lion. ly the greatest material developement, But the sorriest spectacle of all this but the highest ideas of Government and disgraceful exhibition was; yet to come. the rights of man ? Yes Iwe were put; The conspirators, true to their promise,- here by God to represent the principles went boldly to work to break up the goy of universal liberty—the right pf.man by eminent, they had controlled so long.— virtue of his manhood alone and his re. They proceeded deliberately to empty the sponsibility to God, to be free. It was. treasury, to rob-the- arsenals and to steal' devotion to this great idea that:drove the the forts, while we, frightened at the storm Old Pilgrims to face the fierce December we had raised by the display of a little blasts on the bleak coasts of New England. than liness, went humbly down into' the ' It-was to- found a--new-Empire -on :this dirt again, to bog them to mako peace and broad Imsis, they braved the dangers of come back. Look at the spectacle:— the deep and the terrors of the wilderness. There we stood in the facer of the nations, There was Heroism over _whieh_we. are in the face of heaven, dickering and bar never weary of Singing-pwawand• pro= gaining with traitors, 'who openly defied nouneing eulogies.. There were mien who the government, with thieves in posses were born for, n purpose; who, felt:they sion of the stolen property of the ;nation, had- a mission and braved danger and offering again to oompromisortnd give up death to fulfill it. True, theyhad' much everything they asked, drivelling about' that was angular and ungraceful in -their reconstruction, that would revepe the manners and, hard -and unlovely in their decision 'of the ballet-box .and . restore characters, and have furnished ample them to the power they had so wantonly material for the- amusement of 'five and prostituted! Telt tae, had we not reached witlitlgs ever since ; true, oe,t_ did de- ,a-point where something more than wordy rive great spiritual' edification from .the was needed to rouse us?,,where war, with nasal tone in which they ,droned their all its carnage , was not the worst calamity psalms and 'drawled their Bennet:mond con- that could-befal us? The insane folly of trived somehow to squeeze a great amount the traitors themselves, saved us from this of eonsolation - Autof - the hardesktheelogy last and .deopeat - hunailiatien: The - first and ,the most -uripronenriceahlaehristtan blow, that struck down the old flag, was names, and, believed- they, did tog's' kit- the eignal'for“sneh am_ awakening us the. vice byhinginglQuakors and - JUrning world never - saw. . At'the first tlminder of witches. Yet, in spite of 'all:, , tliat they the rebel claitidif,"tito slumbering patriot- were Goes'. chesen depositories: fon..thel ism of-the nation, shaking - Xom frorrid groat-truths .for which the Tiaticine'of the- nightmare that , brooded over 'it, and old' world , were not proriared :: -They breaking, loose from the shackles of party; were ;nenoahead of their time, and .when : the dams of b us iness 'and tliti endear,' the old World; proved too' narrow for their Mots' of: home; sprang fuli.armed to the broad principle, they bOldtrateered their rescue of the government; and wo,,were bark across the deep in - search-of ,a, new redeemed I 'History does not record such world where It might find i•ciotn. Hero la recur cation of ii prostrato,und -demoral: We idea greW and Strengthened amid want . 'zed nt).tionality. - - Whore "is ;your patch-, work of compromise now? The winds have carried away its shreds ; it is to be libped beyond the reach of any future patcher, who may attempt to stitch its rags together again. The contest between these two antago. nistie eleMents for social and political supremacy, carried on for years by argu ments, denunciations and political in trigue, has grown fiercer and bolder, as the diverging interests and aims of each have become more clearly and sharply de fined, until at last they have met face to face on the battle-field ; where the struggle between antagonistic principles and op posing systems, when they become iden tified with the ambition and selfish in terests of men, must , always end. This fierce conflict is now to settle forever the question of supremacy. The sword is to decide whether this great government is to be controlled by the American people fla- the spread of democratic institutions, or whether it is to be but an instrument to sustain, extend and perpetuate an effete civilization—an aristocracy based only on property in human flesh. But the final result can not be doubtful. It has not been left to the decision%f chance; for in all great and decisive contests be tween the Old and the New, between Barbarism and Civilization, between Sla-' very and Freedom, 0 od,somehow or other, always manages to put the heaviest can non on the right side. One fact we now see e!early, however blind to it we 'were before: It is, that slavery has never been loyal to our free government. And why should it be?— It is but a disease, and what interest could it have in the healthy growth and de- velopment of the system, but that it • inig: , t live by sucking the life blood of the nation? It has always accomplished its purposes by a threat to dissolve the Limon-and break up the Government; thus, by a mean appeal to our patriotism, as well as our ICON, inducing us to yield our convictions of right and duty. For years we have yielded and compromised to save the Union from these traitorous threats, until new we are fighting the same traitors to accomplish the sain; end—to preserve the integrity of the government. And we are purchasing at it a fearful cost of blood and treasure. But, God will not cheat us in this bargain, as we have cheated ourselves in all the bargains we have made with the hideous monster now clutching at the throat of the nation. Life and money are cheaper commodities in the market than principle, and we are only paying God's price, high as it is, fur what we have basely bartered away in the past. And eve may be thankful if we, can cancel the debts of the past and secure our national inte c o;r ity — Tor - ihe:•_ tore with die thousands of liver> and the hundreds of millions of dollars we are .now. _ paying. It will ..be _cheap. at even that price In all probability, gentlemen, you will I not be culled upon to share either the dangers or the glory of this war, but its results will be your inheritance. The magnitude Of these results cannot be ful ly estimated yet Some of them however, aro manifest. The stern necessities of the war have settled, practically and for ever, many of the old questions concern- I ing the principles as well as the policy of I the government; but it will bequeath to' the future many both new arid old which • centuries will out settle. The itiot, prom inent and troublesome of all these will; still be, as it ever has been, this inevita..! We question of slavery, which is now forced upon us in a new phase and with! new complications This is pre-eurinently t our question. It is the Sphinx's riddle' to us, which we must answer or die. It begun with our history, and I fear it will !only end with it. The seeds of the dis ease were planted in our system at the same time that the life principle of liberty was infused into it. Through neglect and indifference it has remained until it has become chronic, and can be rooted out only with our lilb. We have seen how it has progressed advancing stealthily I step by step until it seized upon the vitals of the nation. It may be that the lie. reit: remedies now being applied may save the national life and drive the disease to the extremities, where it will be less dangerous. There it will remain to vex us while we exist, and it may be to servo as the instrument of our destruction, when we have lived out the time allotted to us. Slavery will undoubted ly be crippled by this rebellion, but it will not be killed. Its powerlo control the Go. vernment is certainly gone forever, but.it - will still remain as a. root of bitterness ; as 'rho dead fly in our pot of ointment. The destiny of the black race, whether servile or free; rs bound up with ours Like the Old ' Man of the sea it will cling to us and we cannot shake it off. We must make up our minds to carry it to the end of our career. The negro qiieettoii cannot be settled once fur sll and laidraway ont- of our sight ; but it willT ever return to plague us. We can ' not run away from it, for it inevitably meets us wherever we turn. However disagreable it may be, it must be met. Let us then en deavor to look at it calmly arid deal with it wisely and prudently as i ~e linportance de mands. ' tut this war will bear -other fruits. It will leave 'us the most Powerful government on the globe, with every energy of the nation. moral.. intellectual, and industrial - aroused, and quickened to the highest pitch of inten• sity. The national heart will bedt with a' stronger pulsation, sending out its groat life Currents with a. quicker rush, while our con ception of the grandeur of our mission us a people, will be wider and _clearer. than ever beforis. The experience of years, his been compressed into months. The hand that marks the movement _on the dial of our pro gross%as gone forward a century by this mighty impulse. - You, gentlemen, go out into life with this, great - Odra activity rushing madly'past - you ' You must quicken your step and nerve every energy if you would' keep up with it YOU must not, if yeti iliciithflitiecoesi;dopend on the slow mimics by,Which 'ethers in slower times have won.success. You .must boldly strike out- a new course for yourselves.— You must assume (loan,- that. your Prode. cessers knew nothing of. Old- things have passed f ps And ,we are. in the midst of the 'new. As American Scholars you, art called upon to contribute all of your .tal ones and ;your culture to the - solution o. the new problems that now are presented to wt.'. It will not do to trust entirely to the orrperieneo of the pastjur light to guide et a• per annum la advance t $2 00 if not paid in advam our sterol into the opening future. Let us rather turn our eyes to where the morning light is breaking over mountain tops before us, and follow its guidance into the rising glories of the brighter day that awaits us. It will not do for us to recount the heroism of our Pilgrim Fathers, or pile monuments to deeds of our Revolutionary- sires, as -if that would save us. Nor will it suffice to shout hosannas to the heroes who are sus taining the national honor on the bloody fields of to-day. Their valor saved us from the perils that threatened months sgo. It is for ni to meet the Lew responsibilities that press upon us now, and face boldly the new dangers that threaten in the future. "New oneaslons teach now duties: Time makes an cient good uncouth: They mUst upward still and onward, who would keep abreast of truth I Im, before ❑a gleam her camp-fires; we ounelvee moat Pilgrims be, Launch our Mayflower, and steer boldly through the winter sea, Nor attempt the Future's portal with the Past's blood rliNted key BALTIMORE LOCK HOSPITAL. ESTABLISHED, AS A REFUGE FROM QUACKERY THE ONLY PLACE WHERE A CUBE CAN BE OBTAINED. no . JOIINSTON has discovered the lymost certain, speedy and only effectual remedy In tht world fir all private diseases, weakness of the bark or limbo, strictures. affections of the kidneys and blad der, Involuntary diih , harges, impotency, uenentl debili ty, nervousness, dyspepsy, languor, low spirits. confw. RWII of ideas, palpitation of tho heart, timidity, teem• blings, dinaties4 of sight or giddiness, disease of the head, thrdst;'hosa or Skin, affections of thelfelle, stomach or bowels—those terrible disorders arising from the eni I tary habits of youth—those seoret and solitary practices more fatal to thtiir victims than the snug of Cyrens,to the Mariners of Ulysses, blighting their most brilliant hopes ur anticipations, rendering marriage. &c., impussible. YOUNG MEN Egpscialty. who have become the victims of solitary vice, that dreadful and desteuetlee habit which annu ally sweeps to on untimely gray . e thousaifila of Young Men of the moot excited talents and brilliant intellect, who might otherwise but,, entranced listening Senates with the thunders of eloquence or walled toccatas.) , the living lyre, may call with full confidence. DIEARECIA6II Married persons, nr young men contemplating mar riage. being aware of physical weakness, organic debil ity, detormitins..ke., speedily cured. Ile who places himself mailer tie care of Dr. J. may religiously confide In his honor as a gentleman, and confidently rely upon his skill as's physician. ORGANIC ViriCANNESS Immediately cured. and full vigor restored. This ale. tressing affection—which renders life miserable and marriage Impossible—la the penalty paid by the victims or Improper indulgences. Young persona are too apt to commit excesses from not being aware of the dreadful consequences that may ensue Now, who that under. stands the subject will pretend to deny that the power of procreation is lost sooner by those limiting Into im proper habits than by the pi udent 1 Besides being de. prived the pleasures of .healthy offspring, the most serious and destructive aym_ptopas to_leal_hody and mind arise. The syStern boon - ties deranged, the physi cal and mental functlons_weakenea, loss of procreative power. nervous irritability, dyspepsia, palpitation of the heart, Indigestion, - konsti tutional debility, a want. leg of the frame. cough, consumption, decay and death. OFICE NO 7 SOUTII ra,Eproacic splamr.w. Left hand side going from Baltimore street, a few doors from the corner. Fall not to observe name nod number Letters must he paid and contain a stnmp. The Doc tor',. -Diploma.: hang in his office. A CVIIEI W.AMBANTED IN TWO DRYS• No Mercury or Nauseous Druint.=Dr. aohnsten.mem. her of the Royal College of tStirgeons,Londtmolradaato from one of the most eminent Colleges in the United Statof, and the.greattlepart of whom life has been spent In the hospitals of London, Paris, Philadelphia and elsewhere, has effected some of the must astonishing cureslliatvmro aver known; many troublcuiwitliving. log In tho bead and ears when asleep, great nervous. nem, being alarmed at sudden sounds, bashfulness, with frequent blushing, attended som••times with do rangemout of mind, were cured !immediately. FIr 7 c ' MIMMPV 7 VG Dr. T. addresses all those who have Injured themselves by improper indulgence and solitary habits, which ruin both body and mind, unfitting them for either bus nese, study, society or marriage. These are some of the sad and melancholy effects produced by early habits of youth, via: Weakness of the bock end limbs. pains in the head. dimness of sight, loss of consenter power, palpitation of the heart, dyspap sy, nervous irritability, derangement of the digestive functions, ireneral debility, symptoms of ^onsureption. Mcsrataar—The fearful effects on the mind are much to be dreaded—loss of memory; confusion of ideas, de pression of spirits, evil forebodings, aversion to society, self distrust, love of solitude, timidity, ito., aro some of the evils produced.. Thousands of persons of all ages can now judge what is the cause of their declining health, losing their vig or, becoming weak, mje, nervous and emaciated, having a singular ni,:earain*dabout the eyes, cough and symp toms of conaumptiOn. YOUNG MEN. Who have injiakffit thomselres by a certain practice indulged In wI eiialone, a habit frequently learned from nail companions, or at &tool, the effects of which aro nightly felt, even when asleep, and if not cured renders marriage Impossible. and destroys both mind and body, should apply immediately. What s pity that a young man, the hops of his coun try, the darling of his parents, should be itnatcted from all prospects and enjoymentx of life, by the consequence of deviating from the path of nature and Indulging in n certain secret habit. Such persons must before ocin tomotting IVIARIII.A.GIO - that a sound mind aed body are the most ye. cessary requisites to prothote connubial - happinesa.— I udeed, without those, the journey through life becomes a weary pilgrimage; the prospect hourly darkens to the' view: the mind becomes shadowed with despair and filled with the melancholy reflection that the happiness of another becomes blighted.wittrou .113. DISEASE OF IVItPRUIRENCE. When thn misguided and imprudent votary of plea. sure finds that ho hut imbibed the seeds of this painful disease, It too often happens that an ill timed sense of Mimeo, or dread of discovery, deters hun from applying to those who, from education and respectability. ran alone befilend him, delaying till the constitutional symptoms of this horrid disease make their dppoarancel such as ulcerated sore thmat, diseased nose, nocturne, Tains in the bead and limbs, dimness of sight, deafness, bodes on the ailn boom and arms, blotches ou the head. face and extremities, progressing with frightful rapidity, till at last the palate of the Month or the bones of the nose fall In, and the victim of thin a wful disease becomes a horrid object of commiseration, till t'z , death puts a 4 peried to his dreadful sufferintis, by send log him to • that Undiscovered Country from whence no traveller returns." It is a melancholy fart that thousands fall yirtims to this terrible disease, owing to the unskillfulness of nnrant pretenders, who i -by the use of that deadly poi. son, Slaroury, ruin the constitution and make the re• shine of Mull: tenable. • • STRATI/GERA • Trust not your lives, or health, to the care of the many unlearned and worthless pretenders, destitute of knowledge, name nr character, who copy Dr. Johnhton's a ivertisentents, or style themselves, in the nowspapora, regularly educated physicians, incapable of curing, they keep you trifling month after month taking thalr filthy and poisonous compounds, or es lenges the smallest feo can bo obtained, and in despair, leave you with ruined health to sigh over your galling disappointment. • Dr. Johnston Is the only Phyeician advertising. Ills credentials or diplomas always bang In his office. Ills remedies or treatment are unknown to all others, prepared from a life spout in the great hospitals OrEn. rope, the Ambit'. the country end a more ostensive prlrsto practice than any other physician In the world.' ' ' INDORSEM ENT OP TILE PRESS. The many thousands Ctlreti at this , Institntion - year after year, and the nunterous important Surgical Ope- . rations performed by Dr. Johnston, witnessed bithe reporters of the "Sun", "Clipper," and naan# other , papers, notices of which have appeared again and again before the public, beside& his standing as a gentleman of character and responsibility, is &sufficient guarantee to the afflicted. • • SKIN DISEASES SPEEDILY ctiaPitx Persons writing Should be particular in directing their lotion to this Institution, In the 'fallowing man ner: 'JOHN M. JOHNSTON, M. D.. 0 ithe-BalituioniiLok Hospltalplaltintore, Md.' May 2, 11162...-Iy—,, • . • ' ' ' NEW.SPRING GOODS. . . . •■ ',I elegantB rng_g P P, b po itAniewann'dorocivpiarig a o la t rg t o o , altens r e r,, xi a tc ; l: u y.eall tho - sittontion of uty:.old' alondtfoand ousto• were, and all In viint of handsocatt and sibotkgbode. PArtlenlera In next %rooks paper. I..Virill yull,akcheap ne - anr-store In the Gomel. • • . • . 11.1 . 8. 001.1,t1Y tryitcto t '.... 'April 4; 16(12. f'.' . . .. , 140048, 141110 ES o 13/A.IIDIbRIS . :, - ;'. • ei thi Ogilby'soheav„ Calla reeelveLl nn assortment os onadtes, 1 11 1 11sSeei-jihil C rens Gaiters. Boots* Shoes -0 the best 'lisisllty and•hamisome'styles. April 4, Ina% . . , • R UFUS E. StIA.PLEir, Attoiney Ett 'Lew. Oarlisle•Pn. Attends to securing and lectang enldlers' PAY,. Bounties and Pensions, std nishos Infunnntion - eintire rtioretcw • ilavotor Street, opposite Bents's stcrx!.•••••• - • • Dec:27, lard • ••,.. • ' NO 27