ram netrl, c The Bible. Prom Philip Barrett's New .7tvirdie; . fiThe'. D u x Rim Mater, and other Stories., 'T is a fountain ever bursting, Whence the weary may obtain Water for the soul' that 's'thirsting, And shall never thirst'again. is s lamp for ever Miming, Syntrikone never. dying light, Sinners, from Their etTors turning, Are direeted through the night. , 'Tiers term of ilobeet treasure, linden virrtbe purest ore ; ' l Anditivonttints without measure, ir °wawa never well explore. is a eliart that never fails you, 'MAI the Lord to'rean has 'liven, And though rudest storms assail you, Yetsuiatitiou saie to Heaven.: 'T is alreeWhcise finite unfailing, Cheer 'and stay the fainting soul,. And .whose leaves the nations healing, &atter joy from pole to polei 'T is a pearl of price exceeding All the gems in ocean found; `To its precepts ever lioiening, its truth/ maytrabdutrui: • I=MM===l -Alkotaitok of New England. Life. NUMBER ViL , The Beechii• I:anjilyr-Rev. Lyman ,Beecher-- Loubars in „Boston—N;to School Views—Rode?, onTeviperance—Failure al Cincinnati—Mrs. Harriet' Beecher Stotoe—Suceess of 4 , Uncle Tons"—"Bred.."Dreaded=- 4, Sunny Memoir - al"— Minitter's Wooing."—Miss Catharine E. alias Nisi Kate Beeeher—Her.Teaching--Ber Books— By her last; a New .Clawfication of the Race Demanded--The _Male Beechers Reserved. It may be well maid that I have under taken a great titsk—" Hie labor;, 4pc opus est." hiked it is; and Wetter* to say in a single article what might well require volumes; and to do up the work in such short older, is the moat difficult part of the labor tp,ber pprformed. But, I will-try.; Rev. Lyman lisienhertD, D.,.sias'born a Connecticut Yankee. He was . possessed by nature of a vigorous constitution, Which was strengthened and rendered more firm by manual` labOr in early life. He came to our city of Boston somewhere about 1825; perhaps a little earlier. Unitarianism had been rampant [some twenty five years. Its advocates hid said all the hard 'things, and all the ridiculoue things, that could be maid against the old established, doctrines, of the Bible. They had — reviled Luther and Calvin, with all the leading ,men of the Reformation, and represented the sentimenta 'of the " Pilgrim Fatifers" sus anything but what they were—as anything but lovely. Beeplie,r was never "sound' in the faith ;fl I mean, as a Calvinist. He never held, believed, or, preached all the truths in the "Assembly's , Catechism." He was Nets Schaal to the hub, on the sinner's ability., Bat' on the neitessiiy . of Regenera tion; the Aionetnent, the :Personality and office of theSoly'Spirit, Perseireialide of the Saints, and the Trinity, he *sil wound, and upon theme points he attacked the loose, semi-infidel views of the whole class of Nothingarisns, wbo congregated under the banner of Unitarianism, and whose belief consisted chiefly in a systematic arrangement of negatives; or in a ,denial of sill *hicks the Church had ever-Maintained. Dr. Beecher was ndapted to - this work.' He poises - aide wit,waayersa tile, and quick ; talked,' 'without writing ; and in such languag,e as to ,be readily understood. He was a very useful man, at this period, in Boston. He was the fret minister who preached and,published a aeries of lectures in Boston . againit Intemperance. He -was daring in dealing with open and, flagrant sits; and, up to the >time that Luther Tappan donated twetity`thousind dollar:SAO Lane Seminaiy, at Cincinnati, Ohio; frovided that Doctor Beeaber would remove there and take charge of that Seminary, be did good in the metropolis of Nei England. He was reviled for a his temperance lectures, by drunkards calling their liquor "Beecher's , Beeeher's good, hoWever, was 'assails mingled with some evil in his want of Or thodoxy on-some= points:" Bet when he removed to Ohio, his influence and popu larity soon began to wane. He found him ! self in a different theological latitude from that of New England,; and he was first not matched only, but defeated by Dr. Wilson, of. Cincinnati. From:that time to the present, he has been on the wane'; and; after his return to Boston, now ten or a dozen years, his mind' has , been verging toward second childhood.'- He still lives, at a very advanced age, with mare bodily than mental vigor,, and at our 'list aceOunt of him, was, with hie., son, Henry Ward Beecher, ilk Brooklyn,New York.' Dr. B:-has heen , aaidlo more brains Wan any other clergyman in- Niar England." Be this is it may, be winiatf active, - stirring ,man, full .of energy - `sod perseveranCe. He;.Witislike Married, and it scarcely need be said, bats raised up a numerous family. He would halm made a politician of the Cromwellian or Van' Buren School, had he - devoted his '!powers to State matters. I believe he was a good maw; and I wish I rould.say as much of his chil dren., Commeheing with his children ; as the customs of society , seem to demand that the lactie,clikould be served first; the sadie ,line of cortrteay shill be pursued in noticing Dr: B.'s family. . Mrellarrier; Beecher *Stotie, then; tist claims attention. , ' : This lady lowers, head:arid -Shoulders, aboveoher- husband, "'lmpeller Stowe. If all men-and all -women • were like •the - Wife and hi:Annain this' (stile, one might alinost be the . aide Will& the Ifni: . tensile take - tin all Bible truth, namely, the negative, respecting the Apostolic deciari: tion, "the man is the head of the woman." But; happily or unhappily,'Sna ire 'id all men nor all women. Thetirettpublic- - daure'MtriStolfeWil the publishing of "Uncle- Tom's Cabin." The circulation of this boOk was a very re. markibitione., No Tenon could have pre dicted such a run for it; or have been able to account for it, after it. had iiiken place, unites he could see the "power bekind the throni." I. mean John P. Jewett, the publisher, behind Mrs. H. B .StQile, the writer, (if, indeed, she were the writer, but which, it is rather supposed, took the whole family of Beechen) This actin publisher had been at work