- . E ... N . , "1" 1 NI - ER . & , p . ~. ~,:.:„..,;y 0 . . „; , A.FIVOCATE 0 . , . RE S ~. T R A 1 . . Prolluyterlaa Banner' Vol. Vl' 1f o. 51. presbyterial.. Advoeatel Vol. XX" Me" 40.1 DAVID MeKINNEY, Editor and Proprietor. , TERNI3.-IN ADVANCE. Pet% God's Praise. Moses, thou man of G,,d, what hest thou done, 'That thy pure words should be divorced from praise? ;Samuel, what halt thou taught, that we should • Ann To mingle with our songs in public lays? The son of Jessie sings a sacred song; So does Isaiah sweep the sounding lyre; Who hath required that I should choose but one, And seal the other's glowing lips of fire ? Why must I shun to 'sing what Daniel says? Must I repentant Jonah treat with scorn? When Jeremiah pours his mournful lays, Shall I not with him mourn the*Church forlorn? Are angel anthems dangerous fire to burn Upon God'e altar in the Church below? Songs that are heard in heaven before the throne, May we not sing them upon pain of woe ? Praise him on strings, and pipes, and with the sound Of harp and organ swell the sacred song ; All people praise the Lord the earth around, With heart, and sold, and instrument, and tongue. R.L. For the Presbyterian Banner and Advocate. God Works by Xeans. The language of God. to his people is now, as of old : The Lord is with you while ye be with him; and if ye seek him, he will be found of you; but if ye forsake him, he will forsake you. Who, that has been a careful and inter ested observer of the dealings of the Lord with the Church, since the commencement of the present great revival, hes not felt that there has been a literal fulfillment of this Promise and threatening? Has any church been without special man ifestations of God's presence ? .That church did not set itself to seek earnestly the out pouring of the Spirit. Perhaps some mem bers cf it startled from indifference at hear ing what God was doing in other places, have uttered a few prayers for similar hies. sings, but not with the persevering importu nity of that faith which realizes the greatness of the blessing sought, and gives not up till it comes. Some churches that have been revived, are relapsing into a cold or lukewarm state. Is the Lord's hand shortened,*that it cannot save, or his ear heavy, that it cannot hear? In these churches there watt a wrestling with God in prayer, an earnest seeking of him in ordinances; but when the Lord said, Open your mouth wide and I will fill it, the hun gering was gone. Chrittians, satisfied with blessings already received, looked not for more and greater. From fields White - for the harvest a few sheaves were gathered in, and they seemed to think the work done. What I the work done, while crowds are thronging the way to destruction, and Satan' laboring. with ceaseless vigilance to regain lost ground ! See the results of listless in activity on the part of God's people. Those young disciples, just gathered in from the world, copying the example, and unaided by the ptayers and efforts of those longer in the Christian race, have failed to take that high and holy stand in religion which the honor of Christ's cause' demands. That prayer•meeting where late, rich blessings were called down, has been given up. In the sanctuary, where all was solemn atten tion how great the change Thu Christian brother, down whose cheek was seen flowing the tear of penitence for sin, or of joy for returning wanderers, now slumbers in his pew. That poor sinner, who sat solemn and thoughtful while the calls and threatenings of God's Word were proclaimed, amid the de scending influences of the Spirit, now with wandering eye or careless smile, shows he feels no more: The threatening is fulfilled: If you foreake me; I will forsake you. In some places the Lord is still sought and found. Joyful tidings reach our ears, of glorious manifestations of God's presence where his people have not grown weary of calling upon him. What he is doing in these places he is waiting to do in others. Fearful is the weight of guilt, which must rest on every church, and every professing Christian, who "comes not up to the help of the Lord against the mighty." Let not any timid Christian shrink from the service of God, from a sense of weakness or unworthi ness. God can, and does carry on his work through the instrumentality of those who have "no ny'ght," S.M. for the Preebytorlan Banner and Advocate. Strong Language. Ma. EDITOR :—lt is certainly one of the peculiarities of our progressive age, that its language is most intense. The commonest idea is faintly expressed .In double superla tives, while the simple positive is insipid. It is amusing to read the leaders of our journals, and see m how molehills swell to mountains • under the magic wand of . the writer's pen. The least error of an op ponent becomes a most flagrant crime, and groat crimes—of which indeed the political and commercial world afford a large supply —Cannot be described. In the match be tween strong language and great crimes, the latter comes out very many lengths ahead, and chiefly because the former exhausts its strength at the first leap. In trade, however, the habit of strong language leads sometimes to mistakes which are anything but pleasant. A few years ago, - having occasion for some paper, I sent an order to a respectable firm in your city for a ream of " good foolscap." The paper was soon forwarded; but to my eyes it seemed wretchedly bad, uneven, discolored, rough, utterly unfit for mi purpose. Along with the parcel, how ever, came .en advertisement of the firm, from which I learned that they had good, fine, supe r Titre, extra, doubts. extra, with a multitude of satin, hot, and double finishes, surfaces, &c. The mistake was, that I consid ered good as meaning good; they used it to denote the lowest and worst possible grade. Having recently begun to keep houSb, I sent for my first sack of flour to a mill re juiciog in the epithet of " Diamond French Burr," with the direction to get good; but when it was delivered.at the kitchen, it was instantly condemned. Taking the flour back myself, in a pet, I told the " marched. prince" of a miller, that it was bad. He very coolly:, said they did not keep that grade; that be had supposed I wanted, a better article but he sent the kind I oink for; and taking me in, I found there were three different superfines, with several dis tinct extras. Determined thig time to have the best, I took the highest grade, " Prime double extra superfine pearl," if I remem ber; yet it proved no better than I have often, when a boy, carried home across the bank of a horse, from a country mill, before they made millstones out of diamonds. But this vice makes the most pitiful fig ure, and does the most harm, in the bands of religious men. Having picked'up a re ligious periodical, recently, I noticed an account of the destruction of a village by a tornado, in which the writer, with the evident' intention of being strong, commences, "On the 30th of May last, a storm fiend ,(this ie the right. name,) burst on the village of E—." Fiend, I believe, is used to de note a demon of the most savage and unruly , kind, and no'one can fail to notice the em phasis, so delicately given, by seeming to reflect, and adding the conviction that it was the right word. He proceeds to show that it behaved in a most savage manner. "Seven were killed outright, . and ten or twelve have died since." It must haV s e been a most frantic devil, indeed, to kill so many outright, besides mortally wounding so many more; perhaps it had been drunk, and was just recovering, which I notice puts the human subject into about the fiercest mood. But we confess to being pained. Here is an agent for a benevolent Society, in aping the silly vice of an irreligious press, talkieg like a heathen, and in recording a providence of the most awful kind, which should ,have sobered all who heard of it, and • caused them to stand devout and thoughtful in the presence of Him who holds the winds in his fist, leaving us without a hint that the writer believes there is a God at all. We are made to feel as if the Persian doctrine of a malignant being be yond. the control of the good God, were revived, and that this Ahriman was loose in the riot of his hate. Is such a manner of writing consistent with religion ? We never have a feeling of safety in listening to the strange works of judgment abroad in the land, unless there is a recognition of that God whose wisdom,, love and power num bers our hairs, and cares for the sparrows. A. Tor thePreabyterlatk Banner and Advocate. Camp-Meeting and Perfectionism. SATURDAY, August. 280.858, Da. MOKINNEY :—The usual annual Capap-Meeting of the Methodist Episcopal brethren, held on Low's oamp.ground, some thirty miles from Baltimore, has just been brought to a close. It will be remembered that this meeting is held. in the vicinity of a large Presbyterian community, formerly get tled by Scotch and Scotch-Irish Presbyte rians., These people, as a general thing, hold tothe good old Bible faith of their an t:meters, and partake largely of the fraternal feeling exhibited, in our cities, at the present time, by the different denominations toward each other. 'To show this kindly feeling, many of them have been 'in the habit of at tending the camp-meeting one day during its session, and by a tacit understanding, Tuesday has been selected as the day of the Presbyterian attendance—this being the day on which communion is administered, and hence fewer of those present who come as mere pleasure seekers. Among others, I, being in the vicinity, attended. In the morning a .sermon was preached from 1. Thee. v : 23—" And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly : and I pray God your whole spirit, and soul, and body, be pre served blameless unto the. coming of our Lord Jesus Christ." The afternoon sermon was from Mark : 47—" Jesus, thou son of David, have mercy on me." With the latter sermon I was pleased., It was a sermon to which all could - subscribe, and by which all who heard should be ben efited. The first speaker, however, in my opinion, committed a great mistake, and a mistake, I am quite sure, he will not have the opportunity of,committing in the pres ence of so many of the same Presbyterian friends, for some time to come. M_y reasons will appear in the Sequel. The speaker's theme was, "entire sanctification in this life." He commenced by stating that it was possible he should not be able to go through 'with 'the services, as' his feelings were what he would like, them to be at the end of the sermon; thus creating the expee. tation of a warm, hehrt.felt discourse. From this, however, he, proceeded to give some exegesis of the text, stating that wholly, (oloteleis, from olos, the whole, and. telos, the end,) meant every part, and that spirit, soul, and body, included all that the most pee found Psycologist could claim, as belonging to man. Then, after a few remarks on en tire sanctification in this life, he proceeded to attack, in a covert manner, those who deny, it ; attempting to show that their prayers were inconsistent and contradictory, charging the good old Scottish Divine, Thomas Chalmers, with advancing old hea then philosophy, (meaning Gnosticism,) &e. Never have I listened to worse logic, from a man whose style bespoke some intei. lectual attainment. I shall not attempt, however, a farther synopsis of the discourse, as what I have given will show its drift. The whole sermon I have merely called a mistake, because he bad a right in a human point of view, to preach on a controverted point, if he chose; and had an equal right to choose the very day when Presbyterians were in the habit of being present, to preach it. And in selecting his point, too, be had a right- to select one which is regarded as most.fearful in its consequences, tending to make poor sinful man self-righteous—mak ing him believe that he can be more holy than Adam in the garden of Eden. Surely Presbyterians will be less likely, hereafter, to go and take their children where they will be liable to meet with such "mistakes,' to have their minds infused with a doctrine which they regard as unsafe, as very dan gerous.. N.G.K. Eternity. Know you what Eternity is ? It is a shoreles ocean, a boundless desert, a fathom less abyss. It is time, but time again be come niotionleis as before the creation. It endures, and it does not endure. It moves on, yet it moves not. And the damned strive in vain to measure it. And a lam entable voice is heard from hour to hour crying, What time, Oh ! what time is it now ! And the voice of another unhappy wretch groans, It is Eternity,—The Priest and Ifuguenot. "ONE THING IS NEEDFUL :" "ONE THING HAVE I 14ESIRED OF THE LORD:" "THIS ONE THING I DO." IRDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, ISSS. PUBLICATION OFFICE, GAZETTE BUILDING, FIFTH 'STREET, ABOVE SMITHFIELD, PITTSBURGH, PA. .1 From - our London Correspondent. The Two Great Events—Cherbourg and Louis Na poleon—The Good Sense of Victoria—The ,Lead ing Objects of the Emperor—The Paris Press— Imaginary Conversations and He. Punch—Two Nembers of Parliament at Cherbourg—Their Impressions—The troy at the Atlantic Cable Suc cess—What the "Times" says—The Future of the Telegraph—The Indian " Religious" Ques tion—Deputation to Lord.Stanley—His Charac- ter—His Peculiar VistosHindoo Temple Sap pore—Broken Vows—lleasons for Hope—The Confessional in Etoland, The Queen in Prussia —Sweden and Toleration—Postscript. LONDON, August 13th, 1858. The Two GREAT EVENTS of the last fortnight continue to excite deep interest. The opening of the Cherbourg military docks, with the presence of two Sovereigns, and one of these the Queen of England, (against whose kingdom Cherbourg was de signed by the first Napoleon, as a..menace,) is a very remarkable incident in modern history. It showed admirable 'good sense in Queen Victoria, that she gracefully ac cepted the Emperor's invitation., She might have shown "sulk," or suspicion; but no ! she went with open hand and trustful heart, and the effect on public feeling and opinion all over Europe undoubtedly is favorable to the interests of international peace. The Times still growls and is angry at the expense of a channel fleet which Cher bourg renders necessary. But there has been a virulence in its articles which is un worthy of it, and which seems to arise from secret allegiance to Palmerston,. and an in tention to. make the present Cabinet nn comfortable. It is true that Napoleon is a despot, but it is his interest to keep peace with England, and at the same time to flat ter the vanity and love of "glory" in his army and navy, as well as among the people at large. Both these objects I believe he has sought to unite in the Cherbourg affair. He would be a very Judas, infamous to all time, were he to belie the loving words he used in the presence of the Queen, at the banquet of his own Admiral's ship. Her husband, the Prince Consort, says of the alliance, that "it is 'the basis of mutual prosperity, and the blessing of Heaven will not be wanting to it." The Emperor's feelings are, I think, best expressed in his speech at the •inauguration of the statue of Napoleon 1., on which .the Pays makes the following remarks in the sense of a commentary. I aubjoid to it the remarks of two other papers: Never, at any other period, did there exist such excellent prospects for peace as at the present day. Our national pride is completely satisfied. When we were suffering from the recollections of two invasions, and from the treaties which were their consequence, France naturally sought for an opportunity of avenging these disasters and mis fortunes, and looked impatiently on peace; it is for this reason that a war policy—in spite of the interests which it menaced—was almost 'popular for thirty years. The Crimean war, the treaty of Paris, which gloriously brought it to a close, avenged the treaties of 1815. -Under the reign of Napoleon lIL, France resumed her national rank and influence in Europe ; she feels herself as strong and as respected as when ruled by Louis XIV. and Napoleon I.; moreover, she enjoys greater calm than in those days of gigantic strug gles. •The Debags has the following : We gladly welcome these words of peace and justice, for we believe that they correctly repre sent the real signification of the fetes which have , been brought to a close at Cherbourg. And now let us hear the Pays : This speech, which has been received with gen uine enthusiasm in France, will be equally well received on the other side of the Channel, where it will consolidate the work commenced by the in-,. terview of the two Sovereigns. Ace >rding to the testimony of unprejudiced eye-witnesses, the atti tude of the Englishmen who had collected in the port and town of Cherbourg, proved that a rapid' reaction had led the most irritated minds to return to a correct appreciation of the Imperial policy. and conseqently to the sentiment of admiration always excited by moderation united with strength. With the development of our power, our alliance will become more valuable, while the chances of war will disappear. It is also certain that the knowledge of our strength will render us more indulgent toward the capricious csnadnot of our allies, and will diminish national preju dices. • Our witty Mr. Punch puts the following ideal, yet characteristic, words,- into the lips of Rothschild, the Jew, Gilpin, the Quaker, and Warren, the Author, who is so strongly opposed to the admission of the Jews, and . is a Conservat:ye : Baron Rothschild, M. P., was next introduced to the Emperor by Mr. Disraeli and Lord John Russell. He said with a slight Hebrew accent:— May it pleashe your Majesty. It gives me great pleashure to come here as one of the Houshe of Commons. For ten years I could not get so much as my noshe inehide the Houshe, although I car ried a leetle Lord on my back up to the very,door every election (here he winked at Lord John.) but be ushed to ehlip in like a weashle, and make a leetle fuach about my shtanding outsbide, and then he ushed to drop the shubject. Howhever, am in, now, though they threaten to draw my teeth, and nail my earsh to the bar, if I go near the Lordsh. •Vell—vell—vee'll ghee, when the time comsh. Now for bushineesh—if there is peace betwixt England and France I vill back both your Wash—but if there's war, I shall back Mr.'John Bull's and my leetle hoosh over here in Paris will do yoursh. So we vill tind the shtakes on both . shides—Ra! Hal Ha! Mr. Gilpin, M. P., then stepped forward and said :—Louis Napoleon, if thee will put away these. irrational guns, and knock down tht;se ex pensive fortifications, thee wilt do more for civili zation than thy blood-thirsty predeoestior of the same name. I ask thee as a sensible man, and a man of business, how can nations be expected to attend to their shops, when they know there is a powder mill in.the cellar? Why should not thee and Victoria Guelph disband the armies of both countries? Let the A division of Police be left with her, and a similar number of the Garde Muniolpale with thee. Let three fourpenny steamers constitute our joint fleet, and— [Here the Emperor walked away exclaiming, " Il est You, it est fou," but his retreat, was cut off by Samuel Warren, IVI. P., D. C. L., and Q. C., who first knookiva his forehead against the pavement, and then throwing himself into an attitude, said: Sire, That Hebrew who addressed you is our disgrace; he has already,, unahristianised the }louse of Commons, and will. sho - rtly Judaise the Peers. The Quaker is a wretched schismatic, and orackbrained sectarian. Trial by jury, liberty of the press, and our English literature—including The Lily and the Bee, and Ten Thousand a Year -- e our real bulwarks; bulwarks stronger than yoUr walls, more resistless than your cannon. No man in our free country need despair: I my self, though hitherto I have been very ill-used, hope some day for a Judgeship, or to be made Attorney General, or— Lord Derby could stand this no longer, and shouted sternly, "Lie down, Sir l" on which Saniuel bowed, and collapsed. Mr. Tite, M. P. (the celebrated architect) wanted to ask the Emperor a question about the seine and its purification. He was one of the Committee, who had patriotically thrust their noses into every sewer discharging into the Thames. Drums, and flags, and guns, were toys --verTgood for emblematic ornaments on build ings of a military character, but 'otherwise mis- , chievous. He thought, if he were permitted, that be could make a good job of the Seine; the state of the Thames was disgraceful— Alderman Bloggs, M. 11, here broke in, in a great state of excitement: Sire, it's beautiful! Le Thames est tres deuce— Mr. Tile. Sit down, air, and don't intorrul.t me. Except the Royal Exchange, there is not a monument in the City' which— [Here the Emperor hinte that time was run ning short. Mr. Moline, M. P. and Q. .. - however, insisted 1 on being heard, and began r 'th that impressive and condensed oratory wb h . so distinguishes him Sire. Myself and the per honorable and learned gentlemen who, in - oar Constitutional House and High Court f Parliament, St. tephen's, Parliament. Stree , in the City and i p,. Liberty of Westminster, sit "the same ' side of, that Constitutional Flntse an 'Oldriaiiill'dkaihn ilar to those of the noble for e round me= The Emperor. I can't s and'lhis. (To Her M—y, aside.) Dia done,' adame; qu' est quo ass hommes la!' Her M----y. Ce sent deaTerbyites, dei Radi. cals, - et un Juif. . ', ; ~' '' ,-. [Mr. Wilson, M. P., rose With' the intention of delivering a lecture to pie 'Emperor 'on the fundamental principle.Sor political economy, but, he was received with such a shout of "Who's your Hatter?" eat he sat down in despair. . ~. • (LA • • I , , , eaten.) Alderman Bloggs has be had UP before the Juge de Paiz, for being dr k and disorderly. Bernal Osborne has sung comic songs with immense effect, after the Im aerial Banquet, ac cnmpanied by the celebrated ivier on the Horn. H. t. H. the Prince Consortdies not appear to relish. them, but botletheir jesties are in Icon vulsions of laughter. Lord B ugham is embrac ing Monsieur Dufin, and ha - solemnly adopted France as his country. ' ' The Pera has just hoisted 'goals of distress. No more champagne can be p cured in the neigh borhood. It is feared that thgememberis on board have mutinied. We have theIMPRESiDINS Or A. VISITOR to Cherbourg, in the spec ; h of Mr. Lyrid an say, a member of Parli li ent for North Shields. In refereni3e to : tlie French ships of war at Cherbourg, he considers (he is a shipowner, and qualifiedto speak,) that . they are very inferior to thii English vessels of war. The sailors, also* e'regards as in ferior. He spoke thus : . ' . ifThrough the courtesy of t e•• admiral of the French fleet, to whom I take this opportunity of returning my thanks,' we were permitted to in spect the dockyards and arsenals, and other places. When 'we entered that great arsenal I was impressed with the immet etrength of the place. I now wish to draw a mparison between the arsenal of Cherbourg and our largest dock yard. Keyham, the new dockyard adjoining Devonport,.will occupy an area. of ,seventy- two acres. It has two basins, with an area of six acres each, three large dry docks, and.it has the usual number of storehouses. and workshops of various kinds. Now mark the °entreat with Cherbourg. It occupies an area of two. hundred and twenty acres, three timea, larger than our largest dockyard will be, when Pomplete. It has three basins, one with an area of fifteen acres, another of sixteen 'acres, and inether of twenty' acres, being five times the water,- space of Key hare, with thirty feet depth at low -water. Al wig the quay walls of these basins, twenty-five of the largest line of battle ships could be moored. In connexion with the yard is a railway to Paris and the whole interior of France. Down that line of railway, the opening of which formed part of the fetes, could be hurled is a day's time, the armies of France. One hundred thousand men could embark on the railway, and when once brought down, could be marched right on board the ships of war. These ships could sail at any time of the tide. Now. there is something very striking in this; and I said, What can it all mean ) the connecting a line of railway 'with this mighty ar senal? This large army could be embarked on I board vessels which in cis hours could carry them to the shores of England. But when I looked at ,their ships in the bay and compared them with 1 our own, I said you may bring your mighty arm ies to your dockyards, but before you can get them across to England, you must command the Channel, and must have a different collection of ships. I went on hoard the Bretagne, and in com pany with Sir Charles Napier, I examined minute- - I. ly her details.. It struck me as a very magnificent. ship. I afterwards went on board the Royal Al bert, which is not so large, being of a smaller elites. I said the Bretagne may be a very fine ship; but, even if they were both manned • by French seamen, I should prefer being on board the Royal Albert, which would soon sink the French ship. Bat When I looked at the Royal Albert, manned with British tars, I did not think it would be loug in making short work of the Bretagne. (Loud applause.) When I , further, looked at one of the most.magnificent sights, I witnessed between three hundred and four hundred of the most beautiful yachts, belonging to Eng lish gentlemen, manned by between three ' thou sand and four thousand of England's finest sail ors, and to the other magnificent shim* moored in that harbor belonging to large companies ; and when I looked at the commanders of these vessels, and felt that these gentlemen could fight and man their ships as well as their sailors (loud applause) ; and when I looked at the energy of our people, I said, " Well, well, we have nothing to fear from 'France, even with her mighty dockyard and stu pendous areenal so close to us." (Cheers.) Mr. Roebuck ; M. P., at the same meet ing, gave his impressions also : I saw there a mighty armament, and I saw there countless guns upon innumerable foils, but I saw no industry. (Hear, hear.) It was a sham from beginning to end. There was no life in it. They might be powerful for defence ; ; they were nothing for aggression ; and as far as defence went they were nothing for us, for we did not in tend to attack them. (Laughter.) . But let them attack, and they will find the difference. .So the sea-sick landsman thought., (laughter) and the sailor verified the statement. (Applause.) He went there and moved about the deck, as if the deck were in motion ; I, with my head upon my pillow, thinking when we should arrive at Cher bourg. We did arrive at last; and when we came there I found my Mond walking upon the deck, crossing his arms, with furled brow, looking. at those mighty forces. His heart seemed quite in his month. I said, "Lindsay, what have you seen ?" " Oh," he says, " I have seen something that is terribly astounding to me." I saw him next morning after he-had gone to the Royal Al bert, and then the man's heart seemed to be in the right place. (A laugh.) He was no longer afraid. I, as a poor landeman, thought what are .these preparations to do? There is a mighty force of forts, but they are a set of poor ships. Even my landsman's eye discovered that, and I think my learned friend, Mr. Lindsay, would say the same. They were poor ships. And then I saw scattered over that mighty basin the flag of England , upon every masthead; and, as he has said, the yachts men there were from five thousand to seven thou sand men. Bat I went on shore, and what did I see there? Why, I saw men in pegtop trousers, thattput me very much in mind of Cochin China fowl. (Load laughter.) And , I saw priests and women there, and very ugly women, too. (Re newed laughter.) Well then, I said to myself, is there a man among them who dare say-his soul is his awn ? I had a man next door to me who said, take care what you are about—the French Colo nels are looking after you; you are not in England, now. I said I knew that perfectly well, but still I will speak out what 1. think, and I did it; I did it eat my own risk. But I was not in England. Recollect there is a great differenee between being able to say that your soul itgiour own and not daring to speak out what ydirthink, and I . will never believe until I see it—and I do not think I ahalt see it—while I am in this world, that such an intelligent, free.bdrn, free-hearted, strong-armed, and - hard-fisted race of men will succumb to any terror. (Hear, hear.) My honorable friend ob jects to politics, and so I won't speak a word of them. When I say that, understand it - is a Par liamentary phrase, and I may say something not-' withstanding. But this I will say, that England has been insulte4,. England's Parliament vindi cated her, and "we have had the Cherbourg fetes to make up for it. I am perfectly willing to sc. knowledge all that, but with my honorable friend, I cannot help thinking and feeling that there is something behind. What is all this for ? If I go to the town of Liverpool I see dook after dock full of merchantmen. I spa them come from all parts of the world and float into that basin, laden to the very brim with the world's produce. That is England. But there I ea* nothing. Sir, I saw a solitary ninety-gun ship -ready to he launched on a Sun day, (hear, hear,) and that was France. Depend upon it that we are here not to be alarmed by any thing that my friend has seen while we have insti tutions like the present. (Hear, hear.) And now I come to the moral of my tale. Depend upon it thatwhilucu;have stalwarkarms,os you havc..sitiViitking heads you need not fear any , desi)Tnhat'ilif affords, let him come from France or Naples. (Cheers.) The free soil . ,of England, washed by a free ocean that is around ts, guarded by our sailors, is free: against the world in arms. Mr. Roebuck considers that the welcome proffered to the Queen and her people, on this great occasion, was intended to oblit erate all irritated feeling arising from the insulting language of the French Colonels. But the A.TLADITIO CABLE SUCCESS most opportunely comes - at the same moment with Frdneh jubilaticins at Cherbourg. While three thousand cannon were firing a salute from ship and"fort in honor (and half menace?) to Queen Victoria, an English steamer was steering through the crowded shipping for the Queen's yacht, to convey to her the glorious tidings that England and, American were one, The whole English visitors soon learnt the news, and Sovereign and subjects rejoiced together. " A new page of policy, 17 says the Gates, "has been opened. British statesmen will soon be made to feel that they have ranch to learn and much to forget. The two great nations of the earth, which upholds the principles of political and personal free dom as the condition of their existence, have been at length united in a bond from which they could not extricate themselves if they would. The slender galvanic cur rent which flashed with the speed of light ning beneath the waters of the Atlantic, and informed the signal man at Valentia that his colleague was speaking with him from the other aide of the great ocean, was more than an answer to the roaring ,of the CherbOurg guns, had they filled the air with a ten=fold' din." - It is calculated that 'about twenty-four thousand miles of cable would place England in communication with upwards of forty colonies, settlements, and dependencies, 'sit uated twenty thousand miles apart, in the Eastern and Western hemispheres. The mere shipping telegrams would be of incal culable importance, while the political tele grams would bq of infinite value to the Im-- penal and Colonial Governments. Millions of money would be saved every year by knowing the state of home, colonial, and American markets. It is hardly possible to conceive ruinous gambling speculations in cotton at New Orleans and Liverpool, when both would be in daily communication. In truth, the tendency of the telegraph to pro mote moderate and fair trading, and to dis courage dishonesty and fraud, is one of its most delightful features. The crowning glory of it, however:, is that it places America and England in closest alliance, and Prepares the way for the more rapid spread of the principles of freedom, righteousness, and truth. We live in an age of wonders. We live "fast" in our times. One year now produces greater changes morally and politically, than did a decade, or even half a century, in the days, of our fathers. All things are hasten ing to the grand and magnificent completion of Him who is excellent alike in counsel and in working,. and whose tabernacle shall yet be with men. The INDIAN QUESTION in - its religious • aspects, is receiving increasing attention, and bids fair, unless the Government abjure Ellenborough's " wicked neutrality" tem, to test the strength of the Cabinet within the next twelve months. A Depu tation. waited upon . Lord Stanley last week, and presented to him a memorial of a most important -character. It pointed out that the "neutrality" which hitherto has been the law of action in Indian policy, had been repeatedly violated, by change in Hindoo or Mohammedan laws, arid the forbidding of practices which, though opposed to the com mon rights of humanity, were part and par cel of religious institutions and usages. So it has been as to suttee, marriage of widows, rights of property, and inheritance secured to persons who changed their religion. Then, 'again, neutrality had been violated by the unfair treatment of Chrietianitiand its professors. Lord Stanley was therefore. urged that the forthcoming proclamation to the people ,of India should confine itself to the statement that no force or fraud should be used to" spread Christianity; that all should enjoy - religious liberty and toleration in the observance of their respective beliefs, so far as these observances do not infringe the civil and social rigbts of others. Lord Stanley, in a certain sense, may be said to be one of the most dangerous men of the day. He is a philanthropist, a -lover of justice, a friend of the masses at home, and of nationalities abroad. He is of pure mor ale and blameless life. His talents and pow ers of statesmanship are of the first order. -He is frank, but firm; courteous, yet un yielding, if not convinced. It seems ¶dox to affirm that lie is a dangerous man, but I speak the sentiments of multitudes when I say such is the case, because he gives no ev idence, either in hie doings or in his utter ances, of being under Divine teaching, or of having any sympathies with that Evangel- ism, without which philanthropy in, senti ment, is powerless in fact, and without which even patriotism is impotent to regenerate society at home. His ignorance displayed itself lamentably, when he talked.of eternal principles of justice which were independ mat, of, or rather antecedent to, any of the existing forms of belief. Justice and mercy were the offspring of TRUTH, and ever must be so; and well did Henry Venn, the Sec retary of the Church Missionary Society, and William Arthur, the. Secretary of the Wesleyan Foreign Missions, assert, that "'those principles did not prevail in any country.ibere the Christian religion had not been diffused." The Record thus pointedly refers to the tendency to prevent Immix OFFICERS giv. ing private aid to Christian schools and mis sions : Hitherto it has been deemed sufficient that the servants of the Government shall not use their official power or influence in such a manner as to aid Christian Missions. But it has never been deemed either -necessary or right to fetter their action as private individuals by countenancing Christian Schools or Christian Missions. Under the neutrality li/calculated by Sir George Clerk, and adopted by Lord Stanley, we may now ex pect that the servants of -the Government will be required in future to test their, neutrality'by treat ing Christianity as one of those forms of belief which is only to be recognized in private. In other words, the servant of the Government may, believe on Christ in his heart, but he must not by any overt not, confess Christ before the heathen. With regard to Ilan SUPItORT qr Hippo° Tziotas,.so Veniiire to all Ohrist : ian pea "le r I grie,ii)43 , a East-India Uoiciilainy, nor yet the G-overn -pante, in India or at home, have shown any signs of withdrawing it. The active in terferenee of our officers in collecting and dispensing the revenues, is now disallowed. But it is held that it would' be "'a breach of faith" to take away grants'for idol worship, inasmuch 'as they rest upon treaties. It is admitted, in regard to one grant, made in 1805, when the Mahratta country was occu pied, that it was made by the English' being " anxious to conciliate the inhabitants of the newly subjugated province." It appears, also, that the "Bombay Cofer eine of Missionaries" had presented a me morial, entreating the withdrawal of grants for the support of idol wciship, including bands of consecrated" women of a licen• tious character, but that the prayer of this memorial was rejected alike by the COM. pany and the . Governor of Bombay. The question of the faith of treaties admits of much casuistry in such a qriestion as this. But the animus it is, which gives 'grief and causes alarm to a Christian mind. The fu ture of India is now in the- balances.of polit ical partied, and few indeed of our lending statesmen are thoroughly alive to what we owe to India and to God. It would seem as if the Faet•Day vows and confessions of last year were beginning ,to be " repented of." Still there are various matters which give comfort and hope. . Ist. No Government can afford to despise, however it , may diaike the political influ. epee exercised by the Evangelical bodies of the Empire.. 2dl, Sir John Lawrence is coming Tome to form a part of the new Indian Council. He will never, I trust, 'be ashamed of - his Lo_rd, nor of, his past open countenance of Christian missions and schools. • 3d. Several godly men are nominated among the new Counselors, including Sir H. Rawlimo; and Mr. Eastiirick. 4th. As John Wesley said, as he lifted up his arm on a dying bed, "The best of all is, God is with us." In, spite of opposi tion greater than the present, the _cause of its Missions struck deep its roots in Indian soil. The tree cannot be uprooted now. THE CONFESSIONAL has come before the public once more, in connexion with the permission given by a country clergyman to the notorious Mr. Poole, of St. Baxnabas, (sus pended by the Bishop of London,) to preach in his church. The Bishop of Chiches ter has written'a very sharp rebuke to the offending ll:enter', and most earnestly depre cates the introduction of the Confessional into the English Church. It is pretty cer tain; howeverohat the evil is spreading. It must do so, wherever the other dogmas of Traetarianism are received. One clergy mawdately stood up at an Evangelical meet . ; ing in the country, sand declared his sym pathy with Mr. Poole, and said he attributed the superior virtue of the female peasantry in Ireland to the influence of the Confes sional ! That the Irish are a pure peasantry, is undoubted ; but Bernanism, with its filthy Deus-taught priests, may not claim the-honor of it. The Confessional bad a very good illustration the other day, when a Protestant mistress asked her Irish servant, "What do you tell your priest at Confession 1"' Answer: "The lies I ttell,•and the' things I takes, ma'am' -- THE QUEEN las gone on a loving visit to her daughter the Princess Frederic, at Pots dani,. near Berlin: She left Gravesend a few days ago, amid , great popular enthusiasm. THE GOVERNMENT OE SWEDEN has res Taxed its severe sentence of banishment against certain women who , had become con verts to Romanism. They are now perinitted to remain in the country. The Frendh Prot estant pastors, and the English Evangelical Alliance, forwarded remonstrances. The Up - dyers and the Papists have made the most of this matter. But they will not _cease to be persecutors always. Persecution is con trary to the genius of Protestantism—it is of the very essence of Popery. At Feinan ,do Po, there is a complete emigration of the Protestants, seeking elsewhere " freedom to worship God." J.W. P. S.—A Free Church Missionary to the Jews, Mr. Schwartz, who was a few weeks ago in London, was stabbed the other day, while ascending his pulpit stairs, by the fan atical son of a Jewish Rabbi. Ris life is not in danger. Sir Colin Campbell is now, Peer- 7 -Lord Clyde, of Clydesdale—and Skr John Law rence is made a Baronet. ' • Harvest is being very fast gathered in—a fortnight earlier than usual. A Reviving Spirit. • 'Ought we not to expect—are we not authorized to expect—some richer - effusions, some more wonderful manifestations, some more convincing demonstrations of the Spirit's power than we have been accustomed to witness or receive ? Is this Divine Agent confined, and - ought our expectations to be confined to routine, formality, and fixed or der and measure ? Should we not look for times of refreshing, days of power, intima l tions of the coming millennial glory , ? Ate not these awakenings the very things we have prayed for, longed for, waited- foe? Are they not the subject of inspired pro phecy ? Are they notsivert to support our faith in Divine. rediction, and animate our languid h4es of the coming glory of the millennial age, when a nation shall be born, in a day ? And are there no hopeful signs of such an awakening amongst'us? Do we not see a cloud, though no bigger than man's hand, rising out of the lies, the neePi dons portent of a coming rain ? What means this universal stir about • the, working classes? This breaking down ofihe Seniors, of ecclesiastical formalities ? This starting up of lay evangelists in the North Lin d, of clerical irregularities in tile' South ?' This i opening of our abbey churches anal oath,- Philadelphia, 111 South Tenth Street, below Chestnut By Nail, or at the Nice, 11.50 per Year, 7t SEE PROSPECTUS. Deh'vered in the City, 1.7 ' 4 WHOLE NO. 811 drals . for the preaching of the Word of God to the masses? This entrance of the Gospel into places of trade and amusement? This gradual removal of the distinction between things sacred and secular? When the sa cred are not becoming secular, but -they sec ular sacred. And especially this miniature representation of the American revivals in I) some parts of our , own country? ,f" ~:us not be desponding"; but hopeful. The ' ce of this revival in , America comes .414 . country, and to every Christian, as the Mid night`crfor old, aßehold, the Bridegroom Cometh P' `A A neir era is struggling in' the birth) Obrist-b3 'moving ttii re organise the 1 / 2 iiiildir J":21: - ,..Tant4, Wail Be Like Christ Unquestionably, the moral imag of Jesus, even if regarded mae- nothing more than an idea-, is the noblest and deareettposseision of Humanity; a thing eurely for which's man might be willing to - Jive or die. For this idea is the noblest to which, in religion or in morale, the mind of man has ever attained. It is the crown and glory)* the 'race; it is the holy place in' which 04 moral conecious nese- may find refuge fromfthe'noirtiption of every•daylife. The man who would know ingly stain-or becloud this idea, would be a blasphemer against the majesty of the divine ly begotten human spirit, in its fairest and purest manifestation. Even if we were to regard the image of Jeans as an inVention, we should have to confess it to be the stibliniest fiction that the mind of man has ever con ceived. We should have to, own that, as a romance, -it far transcends every common experience, and that in its world-transfOrm ing power it had proved itself more mighty and more efficacious than the whole range of actual facts, of whose reality history gives us unquestionable evidence. . But just be cause it does so transcend alike all the ro lnance and all the reality in. the world be sides, it is impossible for us to regard it as a fiction; just because it is so deeply and in dissolubly interwoven with the whole devel opment of •the human race, and because, more particularly, the origin of the Chrbtian Faith, in its peculiar features, would be ut terly inexplicable if it be net true, we must of necessity view it as historical and real.— Dr. O. Ullmann's " Sinkssness of Jesus an Evidence for Christianity." Working Christiano. Learn to be working . Christians. "Be ye doers of the Word, and not hearers only, deceiving your own selves!' It is very striking to see the usefulness of many Chris tians. Are there none of yon. who know what it is to be selfish in yOur Christianity Yon have. seen a' selfish. child go into a secret place to enjoy some delicious morsel midis disturbed by his companions. So it is with soma Christians. They feed upon Christ and forgiveness •, but it is alone and all for themselves. Are there not some of you who can enjoy being a Christian, while your dear est friend is not; and yet you will not speak to him? See, here -you have got work to. do. When Christ found you, he said, "Go, work in my vineyard!' What were you hired for, if it was not to spread salvation ? What blessed for ? 0, my Christian friends, how IMO you live as though you were the servants of Christ I This is not like a good servant. How many things you hive to do for yourself, how few for Christ *rind his people This is not like a servant.—Ak- , Cheline. The Baptism' of Fire. Suppose we saw an army sitting down be fore a granite fort, and they told us that they intended to batter it down, we might MAL:them, " How ?" They, paint to can non•ball Well, but there is no powder in that;' is bu t , no more =than half a hundred, or perhaps a hundred weight; if all the men , in the army hurled it against the f ff t they would make no impression. Tli4. say; " No; but look at the cannon." Well, but there is no powder in that. A child may ride upon it, whir& may perch in its month—it is a -machine,;and nothing more.. " tut, look at the powder." Well, there is no. power in that, a child may spill it, a sparrow may peek it. Yet this power less powder and powerless ball are put in the Powerless cannon; one spark of fire enters it, and then, in the -twinkling of -an eye, that powder is a' flash of lightning, and that can non-ball is a thunderbolt, which smites as if it had been sent from heaven. So it is with our Church machinery of this day 7 -we have all the instruments necessary for pulling. down strongholds, and oh, for the baptism of fire I—Rev. W. Arthur. Memory. Overburden not thy memory to make so faithful-a servant a slave. Remember Atlas was weary. Have as much reason as a cataell to rise when thou haat thy full load. Memorh.like a' purse • if it he' O'er filirthat it cannot shut, all will . drop out of it. Take heed of a gluttonous curiosity to feed on many.things, lest the greediness , of the ap.. petite of thy memory spoil the ,digestion there Of. Spoil not thy memory with thine own jealoug, nor make it bad bfilispecting it. How sena thou find that -true' which thou -wilt not trust? Marsha thy notions into a handsome method: One will carry twice more weight, trused and packed up in bundles, thin when it lies untowardly flapping about hisshonlders.—.Fuller. Usefal Maxima, Begin life with the least show -and the least expense possihle : you may at pleasure increase both; you cannot easily diminish them. Do not think your -estate your own while any man can call upon you for money and you cannot ..pay; therefore begin with timorous parsimony. Let it be your first care not , to be in any, man's debt. Resolve not to be poor—whatever. you have, spend less. poverty ,is a great, enemy to human happiness; -it rn'ttfljaiY destroys liberty, and makes, some vifilica impracticable and oth ers.extreurely difficult. Baranwanoz.—,Bo , of en.as •thowz szein. barest thy dunes . withont griefs, so. often thou Tepeatest thole sinnea for not grietsing ; he thattwill not mourn for the vein which .he lath done, gives earnest' or the evil he means. to doe. Nothing, can. anwrage , that firoorbialk/airmee thath made, bttt. only that water: which repentance bath drawn.— Quarles. • . •