,-. ; ~ ,'.,, , ,, , ,,1 , ;,:,.,_., , _, ; , , ,, . , ~ ' • . ..-, ''?'-.• . . IP . II *far ... . B 7 ROSZP,,r2 WHITE MIDIDLETOII.] Office of the Star .54 Danner: ehatnbersburg Sired, a few doors West of the Court•lfouse. CONDITIONS : 1. The STAB & REPUBLICA?! BANN ET! is pub lished at TWO DOLLARS per annum (or Vol ume of 52 numl?ers,) payable half-yearly in ad vance: or TWO'UOLLAItS & FIFTY CENTS if not paid until after the expiration of the year. 11. No subscription will be received fur a shorter period than eix months; nor will the paper be dis continued until all arrenrages are paid, unless at the option of the Editor. A failure to notify a dis continuance will be considered n new engagement, and the paper forwarded accordingly. 111. AnvanTtssmENTS not exceeding a square, will be inserted Tuner times for $l, and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion—the number of in sertions to be marked, or they will be published till forbid and charged accordingly ; longer ones in the same proportion. A reasonable deduction will be made to those who advertise by the year. IV. All Letters and Communications addressed tothe_Etlitor by mail must he post-paid, or they willnot be attended to. ADVERTISEMENTS BRANDRETWS PILLS. FR ESII supply of the above Pine has jus OA been received by Dr. J. GILBERT, Agent. March 27, IS3. if-52 VALUABLE TAN-YARD PROPERTY FOR SALE. THE Subscribers offer for sale that valu• able TAN:YARD PROPERTY, sit• tinted in Gettysburg, fronting along the Bal timore turnpike,and recently owned by SAM UEL S. FORNEY. This property consists of a good two Story Brick DWELLING •U. 0 I • •k•.- with a never, failing pump of:good water at the door, complete milk bonito and other ne cessary buildings. WIVE T AOl-YARD conlists of brick shedding. with a complete . .Wrying. shop, fronting the •main sfreet, a two story Brick Beam-house, sixty-seven Vats of all descriptions, (eight of which are in the Beam house,) with a never-failing stream of water. There is also a good Barn with a threshing floor 16 by 26 feet, a wag, on shed and corn crib attached, and in ever) way calculated for an extensive business. They would also observe that a considera hie part of the purchase money triight remain in the hands of the purchaser. For further particulars, enquire of DAVID S. FORNEY, of Carlisle, Pa., JACOB FonNstr,of Hanover, York Co. Pa., or SAMUEL S. FORNEY, now residing on the property. Possession ca be given immediately if desired. DAVID S. FORNEY, JACOB FORNEY. February 20,1839. HERNIA, OR RUPTURE, 'Cured Permanently! fI Y A TRUSS invented by H. CHASE M. D., consisting not only of very great improvements in the Truss of Mr. STAGNER and Dr. Hoop, hut of a series of Instruments adopted to all the varieties of the disease. It has been examined and ap• proved by the gentlemen composing the commit. tee of the Philadelphia Medical Society,eppointed to investigate the merits of the varmus instru. merits now before the public for tbielcetitment of Hernia and those designed to effeqt radical cures in this Disease. , REFERENCES-ITEBER CITASE,M. D., having applied to the undersigned for the privilege of ma. king reference to them in testimony of his im. provoment in the form of Trusses and the con• struction of instruments designed to produce the greatest possible security In the detention of Her. nia in its several forme; and the most promising chance of radical cure in this disease. We have no hesitation in permitting the required reforon. ces. Tho subject has engaged the attention of the Philadelphia Medical Society, and the report of the Special Committee of that body appotnted-on the occasion la alike favorable to the claims of the, Instrumont,and the honorable and silkily profits. island course of ilio inventor. Roynall Coates, M. D. Chairman of the Committee 411 LifLirestigation. .tnuel Jackson, M. D. Professor of the Institute of Medicine, in the University of Pentssylvania and Clinical Lectures to the Philadelphia linspital,Block. ley Wm. Gibson, M. D. Professor of Surgery in the University of Pennsylvania arid Clinical Surgery in the Philadelphia Hospital, Hinckley. Thomas Harris, M. D. Surgeon U. S. Navy, and one of the Surgeons to the Pennsylvania Hospital. Henry Bond, M. D. Secretary to the Philadelphia College of Physicians. T. S. Bryant, M. D. Surgeon of the U. S. Army. S. G. Morton, M. D. Corresponding Secretary to the Academy of Natural Sciences. 'George M'Clellan, M. D. Professor of Surgery in the Jefferson Medical College. Phil'a. ,William Rush, M. D. Physician to the Penney!. Taoist Hospital. G. W. Pennock, M. D:Physician to the Pennsyl vania Hospital. Joseph Hartshorne, M. D. Philadelphia. John Eberle, M. 1). Professor, Theory and Practice of Physic, Medical College, Ohio. A. G. Smith, M. D. Professor of Surgery in the Illrrdieril College, Ohio. IV. Porker, M. D. Professor of Anatomy and Sur -gery, Berkshire Medical College, Mass. It H. Childs, M. 1). Professor Practice of Medi cines, Berkshire Aledieni College, Mass. Thomas Johnston, M. D. Professor of Anatomy and Surgery, Richmond, Medical College, Va . . W m Ashmead, M. D. one of the Committee ofln vestigatiou. ileac Parish, M. D. one of the Committee of In vestigation. 10 - These instruments must bo used by a Sur. goon versed in the Amitu.ny of Hernia, the prin ciples of Surgory,end the manner of treating the different varieties adds disease. They are adap ted to all ages, to both sexes, and are worn with. out interruption to the ordinary avocations of the patient. 0:7 - DR. DAVID GILBERT having been appointed Agent for Adams Comity,is prepared to apply the above instruments.— He may-bafound at his Office, in Baltimore Strect, a few doors above the Post Office. Gettysburg, Jan. 23 1 1838. 3m-43 TUE GARLAND. sweetest flower' cnrich'd, From various gardens cull'il with care.' A GEM OF OLD ENGLISH POETRY Shall I, wasting in despair, Die because another's fair? Or make pale my cheeks with care, 'Cause another's rosy are ? Be she fairer than the day, Or the flowery meads in May, If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be ? Should my heart be griev'd or pin'd 'Cause I see a woman kind, Or a well-disposed nature, Joined with a lovely feature? He ►be meeker, kinder than Turtle dove or pelican, If she be not so to me, What care I how kind she be ? Shall a woman's rirlue move Me to perish for her love ; Or her well-deservings known, Make me quite forget my own? He she with that goodness blest, W 'itch may gain her name of best, If she be nct so to me, What care I how good she be? 'Cause her fortune seems 100 high, Shall I play the fool and die ? Those that bear a noble mind, IVliere they want of riches find, Think what with them they would do, That without them dare to woo; And, unless that mind I see, What care I though great she be? Great or good, or kind or fair, I will ne'er the more despair; If she love me, this believe, I will die ere she shall grieve ; If she slight mo when I woo, I can scorn and let her go ; For if she be not for me, What care I for whom she be? vales Mat2WKIW-M?fo FOR THE GETTYRDDRGH STAR AND BANNER Mn. MIDIILETON:—It is but seldom that I ven ture to thrust my opinions on our citizens through the public prints, and I am only tempted to indite this communication through the peculiar filizfcr of the times for the reception of,as I conceive,the in disputable truths which it contains. For ample testimony in its behalf lot the community speak. To assert that this community deserves the title of immoral, would, from its established character far anal Vaed.r. AO, was unfounded. And to assert that it was com posed of citizens addicted to all the vim? which "flesh is heir to," and a compound of all that is wicked and profane as is exhibited by the state of feeling existing in neighboring regions, would, if the (ormer assertion be slanderous, be villainous in the extreme. And to assert that we are intempe rate sots, and winebibbers, would cause the heavi est vengeance of our civil authorities to be visited on the heads of those who would thus boldly at tempt to defame the good name of our worthy citi zens. To the reputation of each of these we can bear our most hearty testimony—but to the latter, it is the object of this communication to direct the at tention of your readers. That the citizens of Adams County have the character of "temperance people" in all the neigh boring counties, hos been repeatedly proven, and not only so, but it is termed a "temperance coun ty." Our Borough consequently, takes part of this good character to herself, and is honored not a little in comparison with York, Harrisburg and Lancaster by the position she has thus attained in the temperance reformation. This character has doubtless been obtained, and the conclusions dedu cible therefrom founded on newspaper statements. Thus, we annually hold a county convention, by which a certain number of societies are reported as existing in the county—to these a certain num ber of members is attached—making an aggregate of more than one thousand members, and out of this statement we ascertain that three of these so cieties exist in our Borough, and that about five hundred members are attached to them. Who would not be constrained to believe that we are occupying a most enviable post and sustaining a More enviable character in this works But what are the facts. A scenery in real life will aptly serve for illustration. One of these societies is working its way slowly, but steadily through our numerous winebibbers, taking up one and another, as they become the more convinced that it is the only ono that is calculated, by the strictness of its requisitions, to produce the desired effect. A se- cond has long lived amongst us; and stands now as an old and venerated oak, which once, by its towering height, and wide spreading branches, invited the weary. worn out traveller to a scat be neath its shade, there to enjoy the cooling breeze, and be lulled into slumbers by the rustling of its leaves, and the zephyrs sweeping thro' its boughs. But now, it stands shattered by the lightnings of heaven, deserted and decayed, no longer to he ad mired nor to invite beneath its protection, from a scorching heat or the driving storm. The twig which but lately sprung from its root has grown up to the lofty tree, under whose shelter,they who fly from t!to storm have but to turn the eye and witness the wreck of all that was once inviting and protecting, but stands the tottering monument of its former greatness—an obstacle in the way of tho more perfect growth of its superior offhpring. May its former greatness he gratefully remembered, mt. mny it soon crumble into its kindred dust, no longer to cumber the ground on which it stands.— A third, and by no means the least important, is the Young Men's Society. It too was a twig rear ed from the ancient oak, more noble than its . sire. But alas! the electric fire which caused the des truction of its illustrious progenitor passed to its veins and disturbed the flowing' of its vital fluids! It had sprung . up too near the old trunk, and the' roared by careful, and experienced hands, must in evitably suffer from its more comely rival sprout ing from the end, even the extremity of the ancient "I WISH NO OTHER HERALD, NO OTHER SPEAKER OF MY LIVING ACTIONS, TO KEEP MINE HONOR PROM CORRUPTION. --SITARS emtwwzaziwbrattat s zpa. trwaaabutiw E , auazaam s/0 aoamcb OF THADDEUS STEVENS, ESQ. In favor of the Bill to establish a School of Arts in the City of Philadelphia, and to endow the Colleges and Academics of Pcnnsylmzia.— Dehrered in the House of Representatives, at Harrisburg, March 10, 1838. Mn. SPEAKER, It requires a good deal of courage, or rather insensibility,to address the House in an afternoon session of a sunny day. Yet, although the reasons in Favor of this bill have been well and ably urged, and although the objections have been rather insinuated and hinted at, than urged, vet I cannot help fearing that there is more hos tility to the bill than it merits. I consider most worthy the serious and candid consid eration of this House, of any which has yet been brought before it. One which, in my udgment, more nearly concerns our honor, and the interest of t h is great Commonwealth, than any that can be brought before it. I think it is generally admitted that with. in the last few years, Pennsylvania has ac. quired more honor by her legislation upon the subject of Education, than she had ever done before; and I cannot help believing, that under whose auspices that legisla. tion took place, will be gratefully remem bered in after times; and that the name of the Governor, who, fortunately, I admit, for the honor and interests of Pennsylvania,gave place to the present firm, intelligent,and in. dependent Executive,;. when the faults and follies of his party politics shall have been forgotten, will stand out prominently and honorably upon the records of Tiine, as a root. It stands now almost paralized--still retain ing that beauty of foliage which it assumed on its first putting forth. Hero and there you observe the autumnal hues—some of its leaves are droop ing and colourless; others yellowed by storms; others have fallen to moulder and decay, while some appropriating all the remaining nourishment aro apparently healthful. All it needs is to be •'digged about the roots" to be put into thy hands of those interested in its welfare, in order that it may ho pruned and saved from the axe of the woodsman. Why not save it, that it may ho more useful than over! 'Why not protect it from the hands of its destroyers? •To the rescue, then, Young Men I Do your duty; and show to those who wish anxiously for its speedy dissolution, that they may he freed from those obligations from which they would fain per suade themselves they are released; that the pledge of your Society is still in all its primitive force and vigor; and that you are eager and prepared to stand by and enforce it, either to honor or disgrace. March 8, 1838. REFORM. VOLT•IRE AND LA MOTTE.-0110 day Voltaire when a young man of about twenty four read to La Motte, who had a prodigious memory,a tragedy which he had written. La Motto listened with the greatest possible attention to the end. ,1 - . Your tragedy is excellent," said he, "and I dare answer beforehand for its success. Only one thing vexes me; you have allowed yourself to borrow, as I can prove to you, from the second scene of the fourth act." Voltaire defended himself as well as lie could against the charge. "I say nothing," an swered La Motte, "which I cannot support,and to prove it I shall recite this same scene,which pleased me so much when I first read it that I got it by .heart, and not a word of it has escaped me." Ac cordingly he repeated the whole without hesitation and with as much animation as if he had compos ed it himself. All present at the reading of the piece looked at euch other and did not know wha to think. The author was utterly confounded. After enjoying his embarrassment for a short time —"Make yourself easy,eir, said I.a Mottc the scene is entirely your own, as much your own as all the rest, but it struck me as so beautiful and touching, that could not resist the pleasure of committing it to memory." Forgive a man, even as often as he sins against you, who is of so nervous a temperament as to 11C thrown off his guard at every untoward incident; but hold no terms of friendship with him who will deliberately do a dishonorable action. BEAUTIFCL COMPA lIIHON.—TIic Boston Pearl says:—Until the hoart of woman is capable of settling firmly and exclusively on one object, her love is like a May shower, which makes rainbows, but fills no cisterns! THE HORSE'S Morro.—The following is a pretty good translation of the old German inottoTor "Up bill indulge me—down the steep descent Spare,and don't urge me when my strength is spen Impel me briskly over the level earth, But in the stable don't forget my worth! The original German reads thus:— Berg hiunuf, übertreib' mien nicht, Berg hinab, übereil' mich nicht, A of dem Ebencn, schen' mich nicht, In dem Stall, vergise mich Agroivisuirm ABSENCE OF M I ND.—A remarkable dog, belonging to a young gen. tletnan on Chartres street, called upon his master's Dulctnea last Sunday morning,gal !anted her to church, carried her psalm book for her, and deported himself in so gentle. manly a manlier, that neither lady nor dog knew the ditFerence till the sexton stopped him on the threshold of the sanctuary. HARD Hrrivras.—“lf I were so unluc ky," said an officer, "as to have a stupid son, I would certainly, by all means, make him a parson." A clergyman who. was in the company, calmly replied, "you think differ ently, sir, from your father." EDUCATION SPEECH as the most important proposition,and one great benefactor of the human race, for his hold, manly, and persevering efforts in favor of Education. I trust I may say thus much in justice, without the imputation of flattery. That gentleman's political sun has set for ever. Power, patronage, and official favor. will never again, to any great extent,be dis pensed by him. Now flatterers and syco phants,would rather shun and reproach,than approach and applaud him. But I trust that political prejudice and party rancor will never be permitted to do permanent injustice to meritorious actions. For it should he remembered that the life of public men is a life ofcalurnny and misery. When, therefore, they have retired, let their good deeds bo inscribed on tables of brass, and over their errors be thrown the mantle' s of oblivion. But great end creditable as have hitherto 'teen the efforts of Pennsyl. verde in the cause of Education, I trust she is riot yet exhausted, but while she is only in the vigor of youth in her physical strength she has net yet attained the maturity of man hood, much less the decrepitude of old age, in her mental energies. But that this legis. !attire, and many future deliberative bodies here. will go on acquiring increasing lustre, by their efferts in favor of useful knowledge. The degree of civilization and intellectual cuhvation of every nation on earth,inny be ascertained, and accurately estimated, by the amount of encouragenutut which they give,not by individual contributions,for these only show private liberality, hot by perms. neat laws to common schools and common education, and to the higher branches of knowledge. Nor does it seem possible to separate the higher from the lower brunches efeducation, without injuring, if not pareliz ing the prosperity of both. They are as mutually dependant and necessary to each other's existence and prosperity, as are the ocean and the streams by which it is suppli• ed. For while the ocean supplies the quick ening principle of the springs, they in turn pour their united tribute to the common re servoir—thus mutually replenishing each other. So colleges, and academies, furnish and propogate the seeds of knowledge for common schools; and they transfer their most thrifty plants to these more carefully and more highly cultivated gardens of know ledge. I am aware that there are many honest, highly respectable, and somewhat intelligent gentlemen here, and elsewhere, who, while they fully appreciate, and frank ly acknowledge the advantages of common schools,doubt or deny the utility of the higher branches of learning. Mr. Speaker, this subject demands care ful examination, and candid argument, and in that spirit I trust we shall inset it. And I believe_ that e_ littl e careful and candid re !flee i inn. ats, gantliainnn.thra In all theirobjections,t bey err. They object that colleges are schools for the rich, and not for the poor—that classical learning is useless in the common walks oflife—that it is soon forgotten—that it tends to produce idleness by promoting pride and vanity; this is the argument of one gentleman here,and of many elsewhere. It may be true, that unendowed Colleges are accessible only to the rich; but that shows the necessity of endowing them, and thus opening their doors to the meritorious poor. Extend public aid to these institutions, and thus reduce the rate of tuition: in short, render learning cheap and honourable, and lie who has genius, no matter how poor he may be, will find the means of improving it. It can hardly be seriously contended, that liberal education is useless to man in any con; dition of life. So long as the only object of our earthly existence is happiness, enlarged knowledge must be useful to every intellec tual being, high or low, rich or poor—un less you consider happiness as consisting in the mere vulgar gratification of the animal appetites and passions; Then indeed that man, like the brute, is happiest who has the most flesh and blood, the strongest sinews, and the stoutest stomach. It may be true, and probably is, that the mere literal and verbal part of classic education is soon for. gotten, especially in this country, where so few inherit sufficient wealth to raise them above the necessity of constantly following some business to provide for themselves and dependent families: but the impressions which it makes—the noble principles which it inspires, can never bo erased from the mind. Besides, it tends to develope the mental faculties and give them u strength, solidity and energy, which they could never otherwise acquire. Just as you see work men build a massive and high arch over a wooden frame, without which they never could have reared and united it —yet when it is united and becomes dry, it not only re turns its shape, but is capable of sustaining almost any amount of superadded useful weight, although the wooden frame work is rotted away or removed. Never was there a grosser or more injuri ous error than to suppose that (earning be gets pride.. Ignorance is the parent of pride and disgusting vanity; he only has censur- able pride, who has ton little knowledge to know that he is himselfa fool. But he who has long and arduously labored up the hill of science, and then found himself but standing upon the threshhold of her temple—who, af- ter a toilsome, and perhaps successful ex amination of the worksof nature and of art, discovers that lie has scarcely yet entered upon the confines of the inimitable works of an omnicient artist, will surely find nothing in his own weak, blind insignificance, to flatter pride - or foster vanity. ft is tile Mit. erate, ignorant, senseless, witless, coxcomb that struts and fumes, proud perhaps of his ignoranee,himself, his baubles, and his folly. Sir, I trust I need add nothing more to show the advantages of a liberal education. I believe that the proposed permanent mode of providing for the higher institutions of learning,is more useful to Hui cause ofscience. and more economical to the State, than the present uncertain mode or appropriations by the legislature. In times of high prosperity these institutions can maintain themselves; but when the country is overtaken by seasons ofadversity, which are inseparable from all communities, and more frequently befall Re. publics than any other Nations,because their freedom of thought, action,and speculations, renders their course of policy and laws less stable and certain than in more despotic gov ernments—these institutions are obliged to impose increased burthens upon their dimin ished number of students, or suspend opera. tions. Men of good talents an .I high acquire ments can with difficulty he found to embark their fortunes upon such uncertain founda tions; those, especially, whose daily bread depends upon their daily labour, are entirely excluded; and thus these institutions lose the cervices of the most learned and industrious teachers. For it will be admittedahat those who have obtained their diplomas in defiance of poverty are more likely to be industrious and learned than their wealthy class-mates. It seems to me that true economy would be consulted by making appropriat ions small, but permanent. The present sum proposed is so sinall.as almost to make a Pennsylva nian blush to find it opposed. The thirty or forty thousand dollars, which is asked for all these institutions is a ldss sum than you appropriate annually to keep in repair a sin gle section of your canals, to be disbursed and expended by a single agent. Though we have appropriated less in all, to Colleges and Academies, than single institutions of other States are worth, yet some of our in stitutions have received in money and lands, I believe 50, or 8100,000; and being thus full of funds for a while, they flourished in luxury, if not in idleness,and neglected what was necessary for their future prosperity and preservation. But if the same amount had been sparingly, but permanently appro. printed—combining the aid of Government with their own industry and economy, these institutions would have been perfectly pre pared to meet the adversity of the times.— They could have given a certain living to their Professors, and they could have been assured that their situations were perma nent. This would add much to the cause of science, and equally, I trust every gentle. man here will think,to the glory of the State. These institutions being permanent and pros perous would reduce the price of education, and thus enable the aspiring sons of the poor man to become equally learned with the rich. Then should we no longer see the strug gling genius, of the humble, obstructed, and as now, stopped midway in the paths of science; but we should see them reaching the farthest goal of their noblest ambition. Then, the Laurel wreath would no longer be the purchase or gold, but the toward of , honest merit! Then the yeomanry of our country would shine forthon their grandeur, the proudest ornament of the nation! In these national workshops of science.t he gem of the peasant would be polished, till it out shone the jewel of the Prince! I am aware that the too great increase of the number of Colleges is feared by some. I have no such apprehension. With a pop. elation increasing as fast as ours is—with a soil and a territory capable of supporting ten millions of inhabitants; with free schools to plant the seeds and the desire of knowledge in every mind; with discriminating parents to encourage and select those anxious and best fitted for scientific acquirements, there is little danger that we shall have too many institutions for the education of our youth. Why, sir, I trust and believe that the time is but just ahead, when our most barren mountains, now without inhabitants, shall swarm with a useful and industrious popula tion, digging and converting into individual and national wealth, the vast treasures now hurried beneath their surface. Then, the farmers of the valleys—those who are now called upon to aid in the cause of science and of arts, will be no longer dependant on a foreign market for the disposal of their produce; it will all b' wanted to feed those inhabitants of the mountains, who are, and must be, employed in disemboweling the earth of its treasures. With such a teem ing population and such riches,t here is little danger that we shall have too many schools, but rather, that we shall scarcely findinsti. tutions enough to cultivate the youthful mind. But if there were danger, I think this is well calculated to cure the evil. That spirit of economy, 1 will not say parsimony, which usually governs legislatures, would tend to restrain their multiplication. Every institution that is hereafter chartered,would be entitled to receive the annuity fixed by this law. That would prevent the incorpo ration of any unnecessary ones. Now any charter can be procured at first without any appropriation; but this may be continued till they are sufficiently multiplied to control the Legislature and procure lavish appropria tions to the danger of exhausting the treasu ry, if not of breaking in upon the common school fund itself. I hope this House will see that a 'permanent method of making ap propriations, is more useful to science, and • more economical than the present mode— surely it would be, more .honourable to our law givers, to deem such a subject as this worthy ofa permanent place upon our statute books, than leave it as it now is, with a cold constitutional recommendation to the way ward care Of fugitive legislation. I cannot help fearing from what we have heard from the gentleman from Venango, as to the inutility of learning, that there is in this community too great and growing an inclination, to undervalue classical know. ledge. If we foster this disposition,is there not danger that in some future revolution of the condition oldie world,the light ofscience will be entirely extinguished? When the Barbarians made war, not only upon Rome but upon all learning, wbat, and who re. [VOL. 8 SerVeAliiiiiartir, and sciences,and knowlettg of antiquity from utter oblivion? Not contcoi mon Ethools, and gentlemen of common ed.::,l ucatici, useful as they are. During. tlitt long and gloomy period of the dark agent, they were preserved and fostered,and finally restoredbY liberally educated priests, ante' learned monks; and if they did no other goiitt;; ! ii, we owe the existence of science, as it now... is, to them. This light of knowledge. easily extinguished, and so hard and tediciarr4 to be rekindled, that it ought to be es care: :`: fully guardedinight and day,as was ever the .• sacred fire by,the vestal virgins. But ought we not to look beyond the pre sent moment,.and inquire into the effect ,' which the arts and sciences are to have up. ~ on the posthumous glory of our coantry?7— Nations, like individuals, sport but a brief scene upon this stage of action, and then; ` pass away into the oblivion of their own norance,or into that immortality which their civilization and intellectual cultivation have provided for them. Little as we think of ik cow, such will, perhaps, at no distant day, be the fate of this nation. And who does not desire his country to live in the memory of posterity ? Does any gentleman think that we shall not, like all other nations, feel the frost of time, and crumble to decay? As surely as we can judge of the future from the past, the day will come when even civilization will leave us, and travel onward perhaps to some yet undiscovered country,- . or, having made the circle of the habitable globe, return, reoccupy, and refurbish he ancient but now deserted habitations; when perhaps, as an act of retributive justice, thi fair soil shall be retrod by the foot of thn barbarian, from which he has been, is being, and I fear will continue to be expelled by Christain treachery, and robbery, and mur. der. When your richest and proudest cities, though now gladdened and enlivened with' the commerce of every clime, shall be like , ancient Tyre,or modern Venice; when your / vast system of Improvements, which is now annually covered with the richest produc tions of the fairest land and happiest people on earth, shall be forgotten; when your Canals shall be obliterated ditches, and your Iron Railroads, which, for utility, put to blush the proudest inventions of antiquity, shall be less known and less used than are now the Flaminian or Appian ways of Rome; when these rich, fertile, lovely vallies, now literally flowing with milk and honey f shall be like the deserted plains of Palestine! Is there any gentleman who thinks this an idle vision of fancy? Need I remind you o the trite, but eloquent example of Troy whose very name, and the names of th mighty men who did such deeds of valor round and within her beleagured walk, would now be unknown if they had not been given to fame by the learning of tho Grecian Bard. Her very site was a frequent and - a fit theme of antiquarian argument. If this allusion should be unintelligible the opponents of this bill—if the writings Homer should chance to be Greek to the —I pray them to consult their Biblical in formation, of which, I suppose, they would all be ashamed to be ignorant, and ask,what is now the condition of the once proud, pop ulous, and powerful capitol of Edom, whose armed warriors were the terror of surround ing nations? Till within a few years, for ten centuriv,its very location was unknown to the civilized world, notwithstanding its former grandeur. It is true that discoveries have been lately made, that show us perma nent evidences of her fo rmer greatness, that I fear we shall not leave behind us. You may now behold her houses, and palaces, and temples, and theatres, and tombs, more magnificent than the dwellings of many na tions, cut with immense labor and ingenious art from the solid rock; there, to be sure, they may ever be seen, until, perhaps, the solid granite shall become fluid in the boil ing crucible of the Almighty! It is true she is still surrounded by her rock-built ram parts; but they have not passed away with her population, only because they are the work of the Eternal Architect. But where are the descendants of those who once ren dered vocal those halls, and palaces, and temples, and theatres? Nought remains of ' them, but their empty tombs—no human voice now breaks the silence of that desola. tion! The owl literally dwells In the house of the rich man, and the dragon'reigns in the palace of princes! Viewing such as the doomed fate of Nations, whedeesnot - X: desire to be able to look down thirklimgr4o4!, desolating gulph of time, and amidstdee truction, behold his own country forev r';a.,.. flourishing like the green and flowery mite in the midst of a barren desert? Can any '' one be insensible to these motives? Is there 4 a gentleman within these walls?—ls thert4,P:: a human being any where,whose tabernacle of clay islohabited by a living soul,that does not anxiously desire to see the fair fame and noble deeds of his native land, instead ofbe- ing blotted and blurred by Bcetian ignorance, recorded in letters of living light, by the bright pen of the historic muse? • I am comparatively a stranger among you , —horn in another, in a distant state—no • parent or kindred of mine did, does, or pro. bably ever will dwell within your borders. 7 I have none of those strong cords to bind me to your honor and your interest—yet, if there is any one thing on earth which f ar. / dently desire above all others, it is to see j . Pennsylvania standing up in her intellectual, as she confessedly does in her physical re. • • sources—high above all. her confederated' rivals! How shameful, then, would it be,' for these her native sons to feel lease, when the dust of their ancestors is mingled with her soil—their friends and relatives enjoy her present prosPerity—and their deecoM. ants, for long ages to corns, will partake or her happiness or misery, her glory, or bear infamy! • • " , e, How are we to secure for our country t „ VPI