BY J. A. HALL. A SERMON Suggested by the Death of Webster, DELIVERED BY THE REV. CHARLES WADSWORTH, In the Arch Street Presbyterian Church, ON SUNDAY EVENING, OCT. 81ST. [Published By Request.] I , THERE IS A TIME TO DIE."- ECCLESIASTES, 111. 12. You will have already anticipated our reasons for the selection of our text. He that would "rightly divide the Word of Truth," will seek in the volume of Reve lations parallelisms to the present peculiar utterances of creation and providence.— Indeed, God's written and unwritten Rev elations are never to be read seperately, neither can be understood rightly alone— mutually they confirm and illustrate one another. Ncw, the utterance of our text is just now as well the peculiar utterance of God's special providence. Since I last stood in this sanctuary that providence 'has rendered us a nation of mourners— a great light has been extin guished—a mighty mind has been called away: The great statesman and orator of our land and generation has passed in sol emn glory to his grave—and the nation mourns as in sackcloth over the noblest and first born of her sons. And it were a mutilation of God's solemn oracles were we to pass such a providence by without sol emn consideration. Do not mistake us though—it is with the simpler and more personal, and not the wider and sublimer lessons of this death we are just now to concern ourselves. We are not here •in this holy place to utter words of praise of him whose eloquent tongue has failed— whose mighty intellect has passed away forever. indeed, Eulogy has mistaken her province and her powers when she takes for her theme the name of the departed. His loftiest eulogy is in that profound regret which the sad tidings of his death have caused throughout tho length and breadth of the land. Nor are we here the more to advert to this death in its aspect on the political prospects and interests of our country. Such discussion were unsuited alike to our province and our powers. Po liticians come not to the pulpit for instruc tion in statesmanship—and the religious teacher has a nobler occupation than any lectureship on the principles of governments' and constitutions. We are here to con template death in its teachings to ourselves. For us, higher than all political bearings, has this providence a personal, and pressing significance. God hash stricken him in all the glory of, his eloquence and intellect-- not merely that his grave should be to us a nation's Mecca shrine—decked with our garlands and wet with our tears--but that a voice of earnest exhortation should come up from its depths in the mighty and re sistless eloquence of death. He died to warn us—he died to preach solemnly unto us of the mortal, and immortality. He died to make proclamation for our God of the insignificance of the glories of time, and the boundless splendors of eternity. He died to send unto every soul, more mighti ly than in all the pomp of his matchless living eloquence, a demonstration of the vanity of the things that are around Ifs, and the magnificence of the realities that rise just before us. He died to cry start lingly in our every car words a thousand times uttered, but never methinks before more eloquent in there touching and im pressive sadness —.There is a time lo die" —"There is a time to die !" I. This simply is our text then. Let us ponder it—desultorily and briefly— ,, There is a time to die!" If you will examine the context carefully, we think you will ex perience great wonder. The royal preach er is discoursing on the fitness el special times for special transactions; and the won derful thing about it is, that, of.all the il lustrations he adduces, our text should be at once the most apparently truthful, and the least considered. Who questions ei ther iu his credenda or in his practice that '‘there is a time to speak !' a time to build !"— ,, a time to laugh !"—and "a time to dance !" All this we believe—all this we act as if we believed—and yet who of us all acts as if ho believed the truth of the more apparent and appalling utter enee—“There is a time to die ?" I say the most apparently truthful. 0, what need of preaching on such a point? It seems the one great utterance of universal nature. The lulling leaf—the fading flow er—the setting sun—the revolving year— the tolling bell—the open grave;--these, then, are the syllables wherein God utters his great orae.es. And it is as if the great anthem of nature were attuned into rquiew, and the entire — universe took up the wild utterance and cried in the heating of the great human audience—ever and only— .. There is aurae to die !' And the secret of our strange insensibility to a truth so loudly uttered, lies, perhaps even deeper than our unwillingness to dwell upon it. It arises from the instinctive feeling of the human heart, that death unto our race is nn - tinobot HUNTINGDON, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1852. die! Of man primitive and unfallen our text had not been true. Death is not the natural issue of life's long processes—it is their interruption ? Death is an appoint= ment ! a dread infliction ! a tremendous curse! The body, with its bright eye and noble brow, was not made to lie down with the feeding worm in the unpitying grave. The soul, with its strong clingings to life's cherished things, was not made to be driven forth from its shattered tenement a disro bed and disembodied wanderer to eternity ! Death is not the natural transition of a soul in its ascent to immortality. It is the , dread result of sin—it is the direful curse of God—it is the fruit of that forbidden tree which man dared to touch. ‘4.9 time to die !" And what is death ! I said it was not the natural issue of life's long processes; and herein lies its terribleness. The prophet's exodus to glory with whirl wind and fire was not terrible; but death is terrible—God meant it to be terrible. It is the severance of tender ties—it is the hushing of beloved accents—it is the 'nigh ty stop on all life's big and busy energies —it is the awful shadow on the bright eye —it is the wild farewell on the beloved lip —it is the appalling loneliness in the de serted home and the broken heart—it is the immense pang wherewith the heartstrings break—it is the earthquake shaking wild ly to the dust the clay dwelling—it is the giant spring of the immortal guest from its shattered house the untravelled realms that spread through eternity. Death! Death! Alas, great monster ! It breaks the heart —it desolates the home—it makes the child motherless—it makes the patent childless—it hushes forever the eloquent tongue, and Twitches the earthly light of the mighty intellect. Yea, it tears the world away—it ends protection—it casts the beloved form to the unpitying grave— it summons the undying soul to the pomps of the judgement. And it is unnatural— it is terrible—to die ! 11. "..4 time to die !—A set thne—An appointed time--to every one of us a/ poin ted—we do not know it--but God knows it. In his awful book is it written that in such a year, in such a month, on such a day, in an hour—you—you—that man—that maiden —that child--you--you--shall die! And escape is impossible. As well might you stop yonder sun, or roll back the tides of a resistless ocean. We are prisoners awai ting the order for execution. Since we came to this house an hour of the reprieve is wasted. Since the sun arose a day near er hath come the last agony. You may be on the very verge of dath, A thousand human beings are dying this moment.— E very breath you breathe is a human death knell. This sky is the canopy of a great death chamber. This earth is a cavernous and mighty sepulchre. And our times are appointed!--our days are numbered! For a set time and an appointed, is--" The• time to die !" 111. "There is a tone to die !" For whom? Oh, for all of us--for you to die, and for me. Difficult I know it is to real ize this—most difficult to impress it on the living conscience. I can believe that oth ers are mortal. I can believe that you are mortal. I can believe that the dearest ones ou earth will lie cold, and shrouded, and coffincd in the grave. But, alas, I can scarcely bring it home to my own heart that death will come to me—that this hand 1 1 will soon be pulseless--this voice soon be hushed forever--this heart beat no inure— this forehead be pressed down by the cof fin lid and the cold, dark earth. But yet sure as God liveth, it comes—death comesl - , -to us all ! Youth, beloved youth, you will die ere the Spring brightens. Aged, man—you whose hoary head is a crown of glory in our midst--a few more days, and those gray locks will be put away form that forehead fur the mourners to look upon.-- Dear child, you will lie in a little coffin, cold, senseless, silent as the dead Man.-Mall in your noble stature and unbent strength—that flashing eye will fade—that 'nighty heart will break. 011, I see it !--, A darkened chamber—friends gathering si lently and sadly—beloved forms pressing to the beds:de—a pale face—a convulsed frame work. Oh, I hear it--the wild farewell —the breath drawn gaspingly—the broken hearted sobbing of the mother, of husband, of wife, of child. Oh, I see it !--the shroud--the coffin—the bier—the funeral train—the open grave ! But whose? do you ask—whose? alas, yours!—and yours!--and yours. Oh, my God! what, what is life I A cloud, a vapor, a dream that vanishoth --a tale that is told--a walk blindfold amid open graves and on the brink of great pro , climes. Think of it--oh, think of I appointed time to die !" In yonder pris on there lies a man appointed to execution. All appeals for executive clemency have been vain. On such a day, in such a month, he dies. Oh, if he could come and stand in this place, bow he would preach to you, How think ye time seenzs to him. How terrible these morning and evening bolls '1 that *measure his being ! How awful the slow movement of sunbeams along the dun geon walls ! How wild each hourly strokd on the great time keeper. How every that creeps through that gloomy cell— seems the footfall, the whisper, the shad ow of that dread thing, Death ! And yet is ho nearer to death surely than we Why where is Death--away yonder? Nay, sirs, he is here--here—sitting in these seats— walking through these aisles—his shadow falls between speaker and hearer -Death is here! Where is eternity—years away Nay, here—just behind the curtain. Hark ! this little' knock sounds through--death and in eternity are here. We sometimes picture life as a great path, leading to a precipice. But this is not true; it is a nar row path, right along a precipice. ! The verge crumbles now! The awful abyss yawns at your feet just nnw ! Oh my God ! write it on our hearts-- send from the grave of the glorious dead a voice to bring the mighty truth in thunder on our slumber ing souls=-There is a time to die! There is a time to die ! IV. ~. /1 time to die!"—.fl fitting time —An appropriate time. And here let me turn a moment from these simple and personal moralities to consider this truth in regard to the departed great man whop our land mourns. At first thought it may be we question the wisdom of this dispen sation. Admitting that as an evolution of 1 Divine providence every man .dies at the very time when, all things considered, it is best that lie should die—yet here, at least, we feel the heart rising up the cry—that surely this was uo fitting time for the buri al of our great statesman. We have seen one mighty man, and an other mighty man taken from us; and now the very last of our mighty men, and the noblest and mightiest of them all, has fal len away from the midst of us. And who is to fill their places—where find we cham pions of like girth and stature to stand forth for our land in the hours of of her I sure coining trials. Alas, alas! the pro phet's mantel falls on no fellow of pro phecy—and our cry in despondency and fear is—"My Father, my Father—the chariot of Israel and the horsemen there of." Nor is this an unfounded desponden cy. Great statesmen are the bulwarks of free nations. ' and a nation that know as little as we how to value and to repay the gifts and the consecration of great states manship, deserves never again from our God such gifts and such consecration.— Nay more than this—it has been observed. in all time that when Providence is about to work vengeance on any people, the in fliction is bigun in taking away row her places of rule her ablest men: and then, of wise counsels, public affairs fall into confusim and result in disaster. Nor is this the result of observation only—it is the express oracle of Revelation as well— for thus saith Jehovah, "Behold the Lord, the Lord of Hosts doth take away the mighty men, and the men of war, the judge, and the prophet and the prudent, and the ancient, the captain of fifty, and the honorable man, and the counsellor, and the cunning artificer, and the eloquent orator. And following fast on this remo val of her bulwarks comes the curse impo tent governors and foolish counsellors, and ruthless anarchy." For the oracle adds —"I will give children to be their prin ces, and babes shall rule over them; and the people shall be oppressed every ono by another, and every one by his neigh bor, the child shall behave himself proud ' ly agait.st the ancient, and the base against the honorable." Alas, alas! my hearers, when we look forth on the stormy seas, over which in tremendous national progress we are rush ing with such startling and terrible veloci ty, and know what seamanship is needed, we look up from this great shadow of death, with hands clasped in despondency, crying in the track of the ascending chariot— "My Father—my Father." And yet, mourning as we do for our great loss, we mourn not as those without hope. Though the Moses whose rod was for the dividing of the sea bath gone up to Pisgah, yet blessed be God, His ark is yet in our midst for the rolling back of the Jordan. Our trust in the Lord who made heaven and earth, that as an eagle bearteh her young, we shall be borne still upward and onward on the wings of His all-sustaining provi dence. And with this hope over in regard of our land, we can see how, for her no blest champion, the present was— ,, The time to die." Ho died as a candidate for our great national office, in the hour of our great national election—and methinks the glorious shadow of his death falling on the nation that is mingling in the strife—and the smaller mon that• await its great issue —will be subduing and sanctifying. He died, too, when his geatest work was ao complished, and the fretted chord of our national brotherhood had grown strong again by the twining of his self-sacrificing and heroin consecration. And surely, in the shadow of such a death, this saved na tion will rise us in its strength, and tram ple into dust that foul and frenzied fans. ticism that would sever again with its rep-' tile tooth a cord strengthened' by the very heart strings of those mighty men, who, together, that it might be immortal, have enri eliArt Ay, it is well that the funeral train of a giant is borne through a weeping land, with its colossal shadow and its overwhel ming eloquence, in an hour like this.— But be this as it may, sure we are that in regard to the great statesman himself= so far as the full measure of his earthly glory was concerned—the hour of his sum mons to the immortal was—" The time to die!" If such a mat must die at all, let him die as he did. We thank God on his be half, that the tumult of the coming conflict will fall only on his grave. Had he pass ed through that election a living man, yet a defeated man, then upon the depths of that mighty heart the bitter sense of a land's ungratefulness would have fallen as a great shadow. lied he passed through it in triumph to the high place of the na tion, it could have added nothing to his honor; and his tomb will be more glorious in all future time, that official distinction dared not mar with its tinsel the evoriast ing sculptures of his own great fame. Ah, the only fitting procession of such a man, through these paltry feuds of partizanship, was the bier borne so gloriously to his ma jestic grave. He died, moreover, as he wished to die--gazing on a scene his own devotion had helped to realize, and his elo quence to paint. "Gazing not on the broken and dishon ored fragments of a once glorious Union— on States discovered, discordant, belliger ent—on a land rent with civil feuds, and drenched, it may be, 'in fraternal blood— , but beholding with their last feeble and lingering glance, rather the gorgeous en sign of a republic known and honored throughout the earth—still full high ad vanced—its arms and trophies streaming in all their original lustre—not a single star obscured—bearing as its motto every where, spread all over in characters of liv ing light—blazing on all its ample folds, as' they float over the sea and over the land, and on every wind under the liple heav ens—that sentiment dear unto every A merican heart— Liberty and Union—now and forever—one and inseparable.''' Ah me, what bath earthly life to offer for a death like this! What are the poor lustres that brighten for a short time the abodes of official placemen—to the great light that shall abide serene and forever on his glorious grave! Verily, our heavenly Father dealt tenderly with his migthty man-child—for, it was—" His time to die!" V. But let us pass from all this again to the plying our simple and personal mor alities. Unto us all, well the fitting. time, to die, is, when God's great pur poses shall be the answered by our putting off the mortal: and this only known to God —we know it not, nor can know it. What can happen to us at any time, may hap pen to us now. Death may come to us in manhood—it may come to us in childhood - come to us in bright and happy youth: and as we know nut what is the al.- pointed time, the appropriate ;into should be absolutely alwap._ Oh for wisdom on this point like child ren of this world! You depart on a jour ney. You say to your servant, ou such a week I shall return. And how that ser vant watches—to every hellring, and eve ry roll of wheels. Your house is kept ready—all your usual comforts prepared —your servant expects you! So shall it be with Death! Watch! for you know not its hour. A constant expectancy is the only proper state-- "Leaves have their time to fall," And dowers to wither at the north wind's breath, And stars to set—But all, Thou last all seasons for thine own, oh Death! Dena's, time—“ The time to die"—is —when? Now! And we should never be found in places unsuited to his coming. And, alas! toll me how Death would look in atl his skeleton and ghastly terrors sit ting in the dress circle of a theatre!--min gling with the gay dressed dancers of a ball-room! Two professing Christians stood by the door of a fashionable theatre, when one of them proposed to go in and witness the ap. pearanee of a celebrated actor. The oth , or refused. The friend urged; but his re solute' refusal was in these reasonable wordi: "Suppose I should go in there, be called away to eternity, and doming up to the gate of Heaven, it should be asked, 'whence COlllO you, my brother,' oh, I should be ashamed to answer." Go no where wore you would not dare to die! That is the rule. It is well enough to die in life's common business. In the dark day of Connecticut, in 1780, the peo ple all thought the day of judgment had come. The House of Representative in Hartford adjourned. The . Council propo se& to adjourn also,- but Col. Davenport objected. Said he—" Mr. Speaker, the day of judgment is either coming or it is not. If it be not, then there is no need of our being alarmed. If it be coming, I for one choose to be found doing my duty." Ile was a wise old Purit — au: I Cad-as lief die in a workshop or eountinroom, or a social circle, as in a prayer-rooni or a nulnit. lint then it must be a godly work, , (4}7i shop—an honest counting-room—a social circle not gathered in a dancing parlor. The brother of the great statesman we mourn full dead in a crowded court-room, in the midst of an important trial which lie stood up to advocate. And yet, written, in the midst of a scone so exciting, they found on the desk he had just quitted a prayer, written in a spirit of humility, and fervent piety, and devotion to his God, pel' 7 haps never excelled. And such a death was as glorious as Moses' on the heights of Pisgah, in the great presence of God. Oh go uo where unprepared to die! Oh, go no where, whore death would appal you! This, this is the law of true wisdom. God, send the lesson into every heart from the voiceless tongue of one once so match lessly eloquent—" There is a time to die!" VI. "There is a time to die!" ".1 time," i. o. "one time," i. e. "only one time." We can dio but orico, and we ought to die well—nobly—gloriously. It is the end of all life's great enterprises and activities, and they ought to end majesti cally. In all other matters mistakes may be rectified—an unsuccessful experiment may be repeated —a oral-adjusted enter prise remedied; but hero mistakes are rc mediless. The whole of time! the whole of eternity! heaven! hell! the soul! all! all staked upon one single chance of the ter rific game! If we could die twice, mis takes might be rectified. The unbeliever, the sceptic, the scoffer, might test his Iprinciples in a dying strife, and if they failed him, come back and change them.— But with only One time to die, we ought to die well—nobly—gloriously. And who dies well? Brethren, learn we here a les son from the deathbed of the departed. I am not here to eulogize the character of the dead. To say thatO he had not great faults, were to say that he was not hu- I man. But to say that the blessed Bible was the most familiar book of his scholar ship, and that the breath of prayer was his daily sacrifice—and that his last words were of a trust in a crucified 4114 e emer— to say this, if we could say no more, were to fling a moral glory round this great man's death, in the light of which the min ced and paraded scepticism of the pigmy and emasculated statesmanship he has left behind, seems as a reptile in the golden flush of the day-spring. But be our opinion of his religious char acter what it may, we would have you re mark here a great fact--that of enquiries about his dying moments, this has been on all hands the most earnest—men making no pretence to religion, enquiring first of all if he died as a christian. Public journals, filled daily with stale ribaldry upon reli gion, parade it—in italics and capitals—cis the most important point in the sad record: --That his last words to his last breath was spent in prayer for forgiveness through. Christ Jesus, and in the utterance of an assured reliance on the staff and rod of the Groat Shepherd! And what learn you from all this? Why, that, spite of the world's neglect of religion—yea, spite of the world's scorn of religion—there yet exists in every man's heart a consciousness that true re ligion can alone dispel the gloom of the grave, and prepare the soul for its up spring to immortality. Sh, no man dies well, save overshadow ed by the Divine wings and resting on the great sacrifice of the Redeemer. Aud if our great statesman died well, it was nut because he reposed amid his beautiful home, watched by trustful eyes and loving hearts. It was not that he died in the full possession of the powers of his mighty in tellect, and the glory of his great, majes tic patience. It was not that he died in the loftiest height of his great fame, amid the roused pulses in the heart of a great nation beating as the heart of one man, in prayer for his deliverance. No, sirs—no, sirs. It was only because he walked through the valley of deep shadows lean ing on the Shepherd, "that rod--that stall" --they comforting him. Oh, that God wonld send it back eloquently from those sealed lips—. 4 time—one time—only one tine to dif! VII. ‘ , ./1 time to die!" i. e..-2 time on ly to die--to do nothing else but to die!-- A time not to make preparation for the monster, but to meet him! When the summons comes, there is no advantage for preparation. Alas! if there be one mad ness mightier than another, it is the pro crastination to a dying hour of the soul's life work. The gathering unto the sad hours of a sick chamber, and the pressing upon a poor, convulsed framework, and a spirit weakened and tempest test, all the momentous interests that take hold on eternity. Alas, religion is not a spasm of excited feeling: a tettriftwilying eye; a prayer on a dying lip. No sirs, no sirs. Religion is a journey!—who ever heiird of - a man starting forth on u journey when death. struck? Religion is a warfare!--wbo ever road of a dying warrior bracing ou mail over a winding sheet in a nation's champion ship? Religion is a race course!---whu ever heard c a dying man leaping from his death chamber to compete with strong men Air a gloiious chaplet? No, no, believe “the .time to die" is no time VOL. 17, NO. 47. for preparation. The impenitent death bed is a good place for sorrow—it will convict, it will arouse, it will alarm; it will fill the oyes with tears, the lips with prayer, the heart with terible agony; but terror is not love; terror is not trust in God;. terror is not sating faith in Christ! Oh, believe me, believe me, ye will want an attained religion in the dying hour. The chamber will be • dark; ye will want the burning I,lght 7 -the lip will be parched; ye will want the living svater 7 the tempest in the sea will be dashing the poor bark into ship wreck; ye will want the Almighty Master to walk the billows and to still the storms. Oh, speak to us, our Father in heaven, in the last utterance of the dying; tell us how "That Rod, That Rod,"—"That Staff, That Staff," are the only support of th• death struck--" That is what they want— that is what they want," ,. _ _ Oh tell us, by all the wandering thoughts and wild agonies of the dying strife; tell us if, when death struck, man cab prepare well for death; tell us if the last Sickness be not ever and only "a time to die!" "There is a lime to die." Oh that God would give inn power to plead with you all earnestly in behalf of a truth like. this. If there be a time to "speak," we, get ready for it; if there be a thee to "build," we get ready for it; if there bo a time even to "dance," alas, some of us get ready for it. And why, oh why, in re spect of the mightiest only of all these in terests, should we be so iegardless?--Be loved Christian disciples let me plead with you. We, oven we, ;ire not ready to die --God knows we are not. There are beau tiful and blessed things in heaven--crowja, that we are scarcely fitted to wear; throllp, that we are scarcely Steed to ascend; so cial circles, that we are scarcely fitted to enter; hallelujahs, that we are scarcely fit• ted to sing. Are we doing our duty to ourselvers? 11 hat say our family altarti,-; . our closets--our social prayer circles?-- What record is there written in the great book of God? Oh, God bath placed us in this world to win great spoil for eternity. From the sands by the stream of time ye can gather brighter treasure than they dig from the golden streams of the south. Oh foolish heart! To slumber thus when the treasure is washed away end the dark night cometh! Yes, and more. .tiro we doing our dnty to others? Fathers ' moth ers, Sunday school teachers, Christian" men, in the midst of a dying world, is your great work accomplished? Are ye ready to part with all below and go home to glo ry? Aud yet those beloved ones are dy ing creatures. They may die suddenly-- they must die soon, Live with them then as with the dying. Go get some great, ar tist to paint those dear forms stretched upon a death bed—those beloved features convulsed in the death agony; and Lang the picture in your home circle, and right above your class in the Sunday school, and lit shall be unto you as a preaching spirit iu all the resistless eloquence of love and death, crying earnestly and ever, "There is v time to die"--"There is a time to cie!" "There hearer, i tt s m. a er t, im penitentO.ohu'rmlyitiart: vmheo where, where is) your conscience--the wisdom and wariness of your immortal mind—that ye will not be roused to the consideration Of a truth' so terrible. That dying hour will come.— You have no time, you say, to become re ligious: "have me excused," you say, "go thy way for this time: oh do not !alit about death. ' do not uncover the grave; let me enjoy life while it hats; I cannot attend to your call now." But, beloved, death will be attended to--he will not have you ex cused. The mighty and the noble die. Oh, speak front the dust, thou departed, and tell us if there be any power iu earthly love, in earthly glory, in the tearful watch ings of professional sagacity, in the tuigbEj eryings of a whole land, pleading earnestly to save thee--if there be any rower in them all to turn back 'death from his awful path way. Nay, sirs, death will not have you excused—you cannot put him off—he comes burouce---he never calls again. Yes, and lie is coming; his hour is near; the fever which heralds him may be already flashing in the eye ; bounding in the bosoms. "7'he time to die" is near. You will soon make your last bargain, finish your last earthly business; join in your last party of pleas ure.' you will part with every friend; you will bid adieu to bibles, and Sabbaths, and sanctuaries. Oh, it is coming—the last sickness; the sad farewell of wife, and child, and parent, and yo'ung cOmpabien.-- It is commg---the glazing eye, the WI& spasm of agony, the grave, the judgiudit, the long, long eternity---coming---coining! Lay your hand upon your' heart---mark itnt boundisg pulse well. Each one is but a stroke on the great bell of your prison house--a footfall; Sad and sure, of death, the Feat monster.", "P/ere is a time to die." And *Mild to God this were all of it; but, alas, alas, have ye not read, have ye not heard, bath it not been told you, how a'aitiner's hope , less death bed is a deatltinfilying Think of it, oh think of it; dying agonies prolong ed for ever! Body, an& spvit, and soul, Concluded on foirth page.