"r"'"'"'"r_ anntr atilt A.bboratt. PITTSBURGH, AUGUST t /858. Tignakso 6 i .ludo, iiMl/14,iiiieips or in ChM. $1.5151 or, dollvorod at resldoneso of Subeeri• bows, 111.75. See IPraapeetuat Tkilad F i ala . RRNEVITAI.,II elaeual awasseet. a lattic eakße phi ions apiaries tkaill we was Rake Mall wereageweats fora Rudy supply. TRIM RED WRAPPER e kaßleateetthat wa dloarkk.44 - 4044;04a. koweveeoa eke *milt •1 Williego this Oval 'should bo weafited. we kepi maw Orland* yap. attliket, ifergetwa RICI/VIVANOS4I.--Send payment by .*f. bande. when convenient. Or, used by nediy witb ailnialarY cern. end troubling nobody witicar knowledge or what you' ore &clam Per a WWI SILESEITUSI4 sand a Draft...) largo notoli. nor oneorrwo papersomend Sold or sunk!. endow iPO 11 0411 tigNANOII. lend pos tag e stoup,/ or better etilli, mad for atore, payers' say sit air See inety entlibers, or al row Thirtysitlenn. sulabesib °IRMO" all &otters and Coanneunicatioin tO:11141nr. iPlittsburgb. *bitrityivrancraiwirr.—The Librarian, Mr Cilbaieon,.acknowledgaa the following con. tributiong to. the Board of Co'portage Slate lick congregation, Allegheny Preebytiry, $3B 48, Freeport Gong., Allegheny - Preali, $8,68. ' ' PRE/36M BENS& -OD our first page, we give - the article noticed meet week; re speoting:lliberia and the French Etnigration efforM:' tt_ is hard for a feeble State to get ju4iect at the hands of , one most power ful, when the/interests of the latterare con: muted. iPkesident , Benson probably did all bele'efild'io; or dared attempt, in the case. =MO Texas. A letterfrout Texas, under date' of July I2th, says : Recently there were fotir members 'aiderto the Milford church on, examination. We have bad no extensive revivalm ofwrelition in the bounds of our' Presbytery; (Onntral Texas,) since I have been ionieetedivitl it , ewe hs e're ye v ason to think the standard of piety among the Membere-iaigood. , We have here a weekly prayer4teeting, well attended, and a flour. ishing Sabbath School" , , Christians , ' take Ain interest in the whole , Country; land'xejoice to know that the work of the Lord advances- , ;seed pint be sown: before it caubFing ‘ fruit, and, in many cases, years revnlve before a large harvest:is col.. lected. Ilut r always, there are the smeller results, more npeedy, which rejoice the hus. bandtrutn,An4 enable him to 'labor , ip hope. Boy. Dr. McLean. We 'are glid-to learn' that the Rev. Dr., McLean,lite 'President Lafayette pol lege, Pennsylvania, is now it) far convales cent that he expects to leave 'for Louden' in the couramoLtermer.three , daysi.preparatory= to his early return to America. Dr. Me- Lean visited t Edinbuikthforpaps,purpose tikell'lnt,inis - be General As sembly °file Free Church, and his deeply interesting addressee in the Amenably con. owning the revival of religion in America, must he Irish in•n the rememhranee of our . readers: 'Thineaddiesse,s. were delivered upon the only hio liecnisions on which - the state of his health permitted the exertion,• for almost tramediately on his arrival in Ed inburgh; Dr. Meiean was attacked with vio lent Inflammatory rheumatism in his right hand and• Wrist,' from - which, although' en joying the benefitiof the beat 'medical skill in Edinburgh, he hasinffered"sentely until within therbet ten , 'days On Sabbath last Dr. McLesio 'was- solar recovered ' as to be able to 'preach for Dr. Brcice 'tlie atter noon ; linden Monday evening he addressed the Union raja" meeting in a Most hetwea; sive and touching manner.' Edinburgh' (Scotland) Witnem. Th. Indiana eonvektion. A short itinie, ago, we .gave i brief but favoralill'untiee of this 'highly interesting meeting of: ministe a and elders. . ' ,The friendly intercourse ,of Presbyterians, and • United, ,PreThyteriens, is ~to _he eipected,. from their similarity in doctrinal sentiments, and their partaking of kindred' spirit. ; " We meek :figret that Some brother did not. give us a condensed; statement; for the benefit of distant readers; The extended report, tio. onpying a'whole page in the Indians'incle- P endi n t tilekNitY inform all the churches : in the .regio4 represented.' We Inow . give the nerolutielashlidopted, on the occasion: They may both guide and encourage others in the.lrolding Otaimilirrineetings: . Resoleedi.:That "With joy 'and thank ful nowt° .Gedihn pretint' encouraging aspect ofaffairs' in the , religions world, in the conversion of the revival` religion in theheartecof 'God's 0416, so obvions from a variety but Sipe daily in tbeiineresteaiTinoreised ahead epee upon' ~ meetings for , 'sada 'prayer,, and the increase of-brotherly love- 1 -411er charac teristics of thoresent dayv , Resolved, That regaid God, by the present indiCailoins of 'his providence, as calling fondly upon 'the churches for zeal, eaergy,:aitiviti o oaerifiee, and, self-de nial, in building up the close of God at, home, and extending the boundaries of the Redeemer's kingilom. Res/ved, That ire , recommend the esteb lishment of union prayer -me etings where it can he done without the, violation of icon soientiouS dokrictions: Resole:dr:That we deplore the greai want of brotherly 104, k a t hu prevailed - in, times that are pait,lniii eirtiestl 7 recommend the cultivation of brotherly love and = mutual forbearance, and Ibe !esroidance of every ' thing that would sow diocord *met g brethren,- or alienation among those whO aka nuit e -d 'i n the maintenanop,of tthe ' , greet 4100triaes of our holy reggion. Resolved, That That we recommend,ithe ten, elders, and laityrof&the= oburobesubera represented, to spend one ,houraxeerSatie: day evening, Irom nine to ten o' olc`oTst in wrestling with ,tiockin prayerlor the' reviial , of religion in their own 'heartsoind in 'the. world. Wounurnii We` hive during the sittings . , of this Convention, `been highly gratified, and, we trust, 'iplici4idified by our communion andiell4inilifil with brethren Of, different denominaticilikireelising'-ti some extent how gait and , it is ffit brethren - to dielluetaiii unity; there fore, Itesoleed, ThaC Ociiventien be held in the Prrebytetiatt eibutehl,l3qte-, Vag on the Int Wedeeede") , Chatob l efiteAt t at 2 ceoktak P. 11.." 52 At present, it is Awr, rather' than Liters ., tura, properly so callid, which ,engages the regards of our London public. These twain, however, are steadfast allies, if not blood relations, and therefore I feel J am' hardly stepping out of my Way, if I begin by asking your literary readers to come with me to gaze on the most recent productions of Art. Of Art it has been said. that ct it belongs to man only. In Art there is no divided era pire." So sings Schiller.: In diligent toil, thy master is the bee: In craft mechanical, the worm that creeps Through. earth its dexterous way, may tutor thee; In knowledge (could'st thou fathom all its depths, ) All to the Seraph are already known: But ihine. 0 Man, is Art—thipe, wholly and alone !" This time twelve months, London taste and fashion precipitated itself on Manches ter, which, in spite`of utilitarian calicoes and fustian', has among its merchant princes real lovers of art and learning. The "Art Treasure" Exhibition of . the united King. 401 n, in 1857, will - live in many hearts in many lands, long after it has been broken up, as, alas l it has been. The Ceuntless treasures of our old mansions and of our newer palatial houses, there, were gloriously concentrated, as the cynosure of the world's admiration :and• history, theology false and true, the visions of the poet minds of the past and of "tile Present, all received magnifi cent and appropriate illustratioa. And therefore, when I betake myself to the Ex hibition of the Royal. Academy of Arts, for 1858, and linger a while, first in the dark Sculpture Rom!, and then pass through the five apartmentewhichreentain modern Paint ings, in , oil and grater colors, I confess to the feeling : " Oh, what a falling off is here I" On the other side of the wall indeed, behind .the Sculpture Gallery, is the real bona Ns 4cNational•Gallery," 'free to the masses, and where, hung on rather dingy walls, and in 'rooms not , worthy.of them, look dawn on the ',:irorking men and their families in unehang ing glory, some of the noblest and best pin. tures Of ancient and Modern Masters, in the world. Bet the " Exhibition" is an An nual affair, and. it powerfully contributes to a cultivated taste for Art, among the upper and middle classes. No artist is allowed to , exhibit more than eight different works— Honorary. Exhititors are limited to one. Those actually' ,exhibited, must first have heen approved of by the Council, and there is a " Hinging Committee," 'which often , puts the novitiate artists' pictures in such an ob scure place, or such a bad light, that he is Other so irate as to have a sudden penchant forhanging the Comutittee,,or so despondent as; but for thinking better.of it, of hanging himself ! MEI Quarterly Review of Art, Science, and Literate, e. NUMBER IV. [7IOK . 0133 LONDON CORNISPoirDNNT:] LONDON, July ifjssB. Some one has said that to our datop cli mate, our leaden or weeping skies, both Literature and Theology are largely indebted. Many a tome in the old Puritan times pro gressed in learning and solidity, as the stu dent had all temptations removed to wander by babbling brooks aid over green fields, by the advent of NoVember's rains, by the frosts of cold January and February, or by those biting East winds of March and April, which make 'a " Winter in' the lap of Spring." And thus, I suppose, we are to imagine our English authors to have been busy since November last, but Comparatively idle now. Or if they are busy, Still they are only like the bees autism Hytnettus, gathering fresh honey ti:om thelowering head for fu ture stores. May it.be the bee and the honey, without the sting of the malignant wit, or the venom of infidel scorn `I The Royal Academy of Arts in London is an Asiooiated"Body, with its "flonoriry Members," itq " Academicism " its " Acad. entioian -Engravers," its " Profeesdrs " - of Painting, Sculpture,Architecture and Per speeitivii; " Associates," (a lower , degree, than tre Aeademicians,) and Associate Engravers." Its Honorary_membership in cludes the Bishop of Oxford, whose duties " Chaplain" are limited ''to "'saying of grace", it the Academy dinners; and Lord Macaulay, the Historians;; Earl Stanhope, (late Lord Mabon,) an eminent Antiquary; and - Sir George Staunton, an other patron of Art, who acts as SeeretifY for Piaui& Correspondence Aram% the leadeinieistia, tke names of Bally,, Gibson, Macdowell, and Westmacott, as great Scalp. this; and of Cooper, Watson Gordon, Les- Landseer, Mulready, Mediae, Pickers. gill, Stanfield, Roberta, and Smirke, will he familiar to the American . puhlio. And right gloriously do some of these great men come ant int this year's Exhibition, *bile younger and list; kixiiin artists have Pre- .seated growing claims—seme of them coin mending claims—to admiration and emi nence. Roberts. is great in the interior of churches; Stanfield', 'the eminent scene painter,' gives, in his own style, " Coblentz and Ehrenbreitetein from the Moselle " - the 'original of which, once men , at sunset's : liour—as I can teatify—lingirs long on the ,memory of Abe imagination,' and Ithe heart. Your own' Longfe l low finds an artist in Gale, to depict "The sorrowful .days of Evingeline l " El-Sorge Harvey, of Edin burgh, (well known for other fine pictures :identified with the ."11illing times " of Seotland,) has 'a " ' Sabbath'in the Glen," in which Dr:Guthrie is the open-air preach, er and Lord Panmure Scottish ladies and Highland peasants, are the hearers. Thio is fine picture, sure to be engraved and widely known. 4 " The Huguenot Conventicle Suppressed," limns the days of Louis XVI: and the : ,101gg011aded; and " Flora Macdonaldifare well to Charles' Ediards," reminds Us of a woman's ,noblest qualities and endurance, devoted 04 cause and-a man whose success would lave been a aurae to itainkind. Sir E. landoeSlis in delicate health I beliave and therifire, besides his glorious picture of "-Deer Stalking," " Highland Nurses," alder" Landseer, (his bro. titer)) presenting olouple of does and 11, WieUitain 4was, : lumina us forcibly-4d THE PRESBYTERIAN BANNER AND ADVOCATE. powerfully of the great Master of Sbottish animal painting, himself. There are; here portraits in 'plenty, hut many of them having merely a local or con. ventional interest. There aie exceptions, such as in , the likeness of Sheridan Knowles, or that of Professor Simpson, of Edinburgh There are also pictures painted by. Rqyal " Command," such as 14 The Investiture of Napoleon M..with the Order of the Bath," in the grouping of, which, the: ItanAtnme , Eugenie -is , frrotniitentOttil obriehow one' does, not like to see such a true and good woman as Victoria putting the star of the Order on the breast of a man who has'blood on his hands, and I fear alsO has the heart of a roue. "The Coronation of William the Con . " queror," presents a scene most striking, when the Normans, mistaking the loud shouts of The English and French' for hostile tumult, fire the English houses nearest West minster Abbey... William, though alarmed and left almost alone, refuses to postpone the celebration, and " holds the crown of England in Lis grip, as though no mortal hind sbonld ever wrest it from him." Rumor is not wanting , here, especially in one drawing by Gray, enamelled'" after Wilkie," the subject-- tleeoh'd, and Duncan pray'd, Ha, ha. the , wooing o' t, Meg was deaf asAnsa Craig, Ha, ha, the wooirig, o' t.' Only two other pictures shall I allude to, omitting for want of space, notices of the Sculpture Romn,,altogether—the first a per fert marvel of *beauty and expression " The Wheat field," by Leonel, so natural, that yen are ready to grasp those golden ears, ripe for the sickle, and long to sit yon der among the sheaves in the light of the setting sun, .or to stroll ,onward - to the die tent woodland through yonder pathway, right through the corn. The secpnd, is "The Derby Day," by Frith, the best inn tation of llogarth's best style, that modern, Art has produced, mirroring, in 'the most grotesque and graphic way, the "grand stand" and its occupants, the thimble rigger and his victims, and all the follies of a sea son Which seems to drive London out of itself, (for it is half empty, ) and out of its propriety, - -"The Derby day." I was greatly gratified, bY a visit paid this, sveok to the SOUTH KENSINGTON MUSEUM. It stands on an estate punhased by the Gov. eminent, and is about .to be supplemented by a new and extensive building, It owesits existence mainly to the Great Exhibition of 1851, which led to au extension of the School ef Design into the present Science and Art Department. A nucleus of a per:. ,manent Museum of works of art was formed and deposited at Marlborough House, (for inerly the residence of Queen Adelaide,) and now forum part of the various collections exhibited at Kensington. It is in fact a De-1 partment of Government, and its epecial alt jeots are--1. To train male and female teachers to give instruction in Art, to cer. tify them when qualified, and to make them annual fixed payments, varying according to; their acquirements, 2. To aid and assist Committees in the provinces, desirous of estabiishing Schools of Art. 3. To hold public inspections and examinations, and to award, medals and prizes. 4 To collect to. gether ,works of art, pictures, &c., in the central museum, and books and engravings from the Library. ' 5. To circulate among the Schools of Art, objects from the Museum, and books and engravings from the Library. The stimulus thus given to artistic talent has been very great. It acts all over the Kingdom. The provincial Schools of Art number sixty eight. The number of per sons under Art Instruction were, by last re. turn, thirty-one thousand four hundred and forty.five. Only, four years ago, the number was but three thousand two hundred and ninety six. The improvements in Orna. mental Art are strikingly illustrated by an exhibition of articles, consisting , of Carvings in all materials, Furniture, Decorations, Metal Workings of all kinds, Jewelry and Goldsmithe Work, Pottery, Glass, and all kinds of Decorative Woven Fabrics. There is also open, now—and with this department I was greatly Pleased—The An nual Exhibition Of the Prize Works of Stu dents (male and female,) of • Art of the United Kingdom. - - The education of National taste &ft, is an ohjeat not unworthy of an age like the present. Models and plaster casts Trom an - dent sculpture; specimens' of architecture in the Greek and Roman styles; Speciniens of. carving, terracotta work, `gliall painting, enamels, 'pettery and porcelain, arms, and armor; also extanples of ancient illumina. tion, drawings, engravings, Am., present themseives, on entrance, to, the spectator, and form "The Museum of Othamental Art Then come "The EducationalCone°- . tons, f) containing Apparatus, Diagrams, and Books, of which last there is a library for reference, of eight thousani volumes. In this department are objects of household economy, collections of Botanical specimens, as also of Mineralogy and Geology, and models of extinct animals. There is also a magnificent collection of maps from Ger many, France, America, and England. There is, in front of the maps, the Astrono mer Royal's full sized model of the Frank Circle of the Greenwich Observatory.. The last division in the Xducational Museum is allotted to Mechanics, including : hydraulics, , pneumatics, hydrostatics, &o. " The Commissioners of Patents' Mu seum," consists of a selection of Patents, varying from 1787 to the present day. The object is to illustrate the progress of invert dons. Those of the progress of the steam engine are the roost complete. The por traits of eminent engineers and Mechanics "adorn the wills. I look With reverence upon many of these.great men, whom God had raised= up' toSpeed on hie beneficent de signs in - connexion with the grand scheme of Redemption. There is also "Models of Beildinge," in which Wren's ,first design for St. Peas Cethedrel, (different from the present, and the enforced alteration of which, it is said, drew tears from him,) is an object most suggestive. I shall simply name "The Collection of Animal Products," "The Food , Museum," and• the - 44 Arabitec tural Museum," and pass on into the cele brated ." Gallery of British Fine Art," eon taining two hundred and thirty-four oil paintings, and many sketches, drawings, and etchings, all the works of British artists. The - Whole of these were , preelintedby Mr. Sheepshanks; an enthusiastic and generous patron of Att. Here you see seine of Wil kie's, Landeeer's, M already's, and Turner's choicest and earliest pictures. " Studies " for some of the pictures, containing sketches of figures, or as in. Wilkie's painting of the library in the breakfatit parlor, in his "Let ter of Introduction," are very curious. The visitors to the Kensington. Museum, in less.- thin ten 'months, amounted to four ; hundred and , thirty nine thousand nine bun• dred and ninety seven. The various Metro politan Museums and exhibitions in London, Dublin, and Edinburgh, (besides that at Konsingtok) were last , year visited by five hundrl! and fifty-three thousand eight hundred and fifty three persons- A " Circu lating Art Museum," has been sent to six .large towns, and thirty six thousand and twenty.four •persons have consulted it. I have trespassed, pelhaps, too far on the 'space which I' have been wont in these quarterly notices to give to literature. But I have done it deliberately, because I'think that not to Literature only, but to Art and Science also, should attention be directed I might add much more on these two last subject's but refrain for the present. What I hive Fit together with some trouble and pains, will suffiaiently prove that rapid ad vance is being made in both. I may add that in the • Kensington Museum is now placed the famous Soulage's Collection, which was the cynOsure of all eyes in the 'Manchester Exhibition of 1857. Among lintmoPorm lately deceased, are Moxon, of London, and Whyte, of Edin burgh. - Morton was the companion of Cule ridge, Lamb, Iberia, aud Rogers; a poet of no mean order, a refined and accom plished man, and a pnblisher of many works of taste and excellence. Mr. Whyte grew rich by book selling, anti his bequests proved that he regarded his gains as consecrated things. Amongst them were 45,000 for the building, and £2,000 for the endowao tit of a Free Church at Congate Head; £1 500 for die foundation of bursaries in the New : College, Edinburgh, and a like sum for the benefit of native converts in India. The recent lists of NEW PEBLICIA'TIONS, inalude Christmas' Preachers and Preach ing ; Translations of the. Gospels in Syriac; Caird's Sermons ; The Gospel by St. Matthew, in 'Anglo, Saxon and Northam- Wan ; Confessions of a Catholic Priest; Dale's Clergyman's Legal Eland Botk, (a zit cessity for a State Clergy;) the First Soles of Poniatowksi's Antique Gems; Browns's North West Postage, and Search for Franklin ; , and several books of Travels. A curious book, Wykoirs "New Yorker in the Foieign Office; '. relates' how the au , thor, an American, was employed by Pahnerston on secret diplomatic ser vice on the Continent, and bow his services were afterwards dispensed with The author thinks himself wronged, bui his revelations, while giving some insight into the mysteries of .diplomacy, seem .to involve :a Violation of confidence such as is not usual in these days. The 'plea doubtless is injustice done, and valeat quantum. Some people say, perhaps truly, that diplomacy is tie cause of all national wars and complications. It is hard to be a statesman, DanieLlike and up right, tr., to coin a word, uncrooked,) and to keep the hadds unstained. Among recent French publications of interest, will be found a History of the First Three Centuries of the Christian Church, by M Pressense, Editor , of the Revue Chretieunore. It is, interesting to know that the upper classes in Bessie are getting sick of French novels, and eagerly peruse the translations of Dickens' wotks. In fact Dickens is very popular in Russia—more so by far than ; Thackeray ; and whatever