. DAVID M'KINNEY, Editor and Proprietor. I. N. VIONNEV, AsNoutkre EDITOR. F:RIVIS IN ADVANCE. $1.40 qigr, is raritra ov Tttß OITIVat 2.00 • Dati.s. as, ty, will semi by mail seventy outnbets, Nti DI.LAR. thirty-three numbers. iondin ix us TWENTY subscribers and upwards, will • ontltled to a paper without charge. le should be prompt, a little before the year expires ,meats by sate hands, or by mall. li totters to REV. DAVID M'KINNEY, Pittsburgh, Pa. The Evening Hymn. BY THOMAS MILLER, UAERKT•MAKER How many days with mute adieu, Have gone down yon untrodden skyl And still it looks as clear and blue As when it first was hung on high. The rolling sun, the frowning cloud That drew the lightning in its rear, The thunder trampling deep and loud Have left no footmark there. The village bells with silver chime, Come softened by the distant shore; Though I have heard them many a time, They never sung so sweet before. A silence rests upon the hill, A listening awe pervades the air; The very flowers are shut and still, And bowed as if in prayer. And in this bushed and breathless close, O'er earth, and air, and sky, and sea, That still low voice in silence goes, Which speaks alone, Great God, of Thee. The whispering leaves, the far-off brook, The linnet's warble, fainter grown, The hive-bound bee, the lonely hook— All these their Maker own. Ilow shine the starry hosts °flight, Gazing on earth with golden eyes, Bright guardians of the blue-browed night! What are ye in your native skies? I know not—neither can I know- Nor on what leader ye attend; Nor whence ye come, or whither go, Or what your aim or end. I know they must be holy things That from a roof so sacred shine, Where sounds the beat of angel wings, And footsteps'echo all divine. Their mysteries .1 never sought., Nor hearkened to what science tells, For oh 1 in childhood I was taught That God amidst them dwells. • The darkening woods, the falling trees, The grasshopper's last feeble sound, The flower just wakened by the breeze, All leave the stillness more profound. The twilight. takes a deeper shade, The dusky pathways blacker grow, And silence reigns in glen and shade— All, all is mute below. And other eves as sweet as this Will close upon as oalm a day, And, sinking down the deep abyss, Will, like the last, be swept away, Until eternity is gained, That boundless sea without a shore That without time forever reigned, And will when time's no more. Now nature sinks in soft repose, A living semblance of the grave, The dew steals noiseless on the rose, The boughs have almost ceased to wave; The silent sky, the sleeping earth, Tree, mountain, stream, the humble sod, All tell from whom they bad their birth, An cry, "Behold a God!" For the Preebyterlan Banner. " what Can I. Do?" NO. 1. 10' A pastor often meets with intelligent ' pious members—more especially in the ogle department of his congregation— to seem tremblingly alive to a sense of , ir personal responsibilities in view of world's great and urgent necessities. after another comes to him for advice direction, and with choked utterance . tearful eye, asks, " What can I do?" has struck me that a few brief articles itten in reply to this question might do wd, and although feeling myself incom ,ent, I have determined to undertake the t is important, at the outset, to have a Tot apprehension of the subject of in .ry. Feeling, and purposing, and plan '', all underlie and are essential to doing. der sensibilities are not only calculated lighten our estimate of character but the mainspring or the soul, by which lowers are kept in motion. To be des of these, therefore, must render us , and sluggish. Who does not . gaze ,h admiration upon the first, and turn with disgust from the second person brought to view in the following lines "I had knelt And wept with Mary at the tree Where Jesus suffered—l had felt The warm blood rushing to my brow, At the stern buffet of the Jew— Had seen the Son of Glory bow And bleed for sins he never knew— And I had wept. I thought that all Must feel like mei And then there came A stranger bright and beautiful, With steps of grace and eye of flame, And tone and look most sweetly bent To make her presence eloquent; 0, then I looked for tears. We stood Before the scene on Calvary— I saw the piercing spear—the blood— The gall—the wreath of agony— I saw his quivering lips in prayer— , Father forgive them '—all was there. I turned in bitterness of soul And spoke of Jesus. I had thought Her feelings would refuse control, For woman's heart I knew was fraught With gushing sympathies. She gazed A moment on it. carelessly, And coldly curled her,lip and praised The high priest's garment • What constitutes the difference between wo characters ? The one has feel le other has none. Now this na isibility is essential to a life• of so lid yet it is not what we mean by tying and planning also are at once , orthy and indispenaible to the ac ihment of good in the world. it firm determination and wisely-ad ;dames, but little will ever be ef- Activity, to be successful, must mordance with well formed and fully designs, and if we are incapable ing these it is scarcely worth our ask, " What can Ido ?" But still ig and planning are not doing. nquiry leads us a step farther, and know how our affections, will, and auding, may be brought into play performance of practical good in rld ? Let me illustrate. Jesus has I the house of Martha and her sis ,ry. While the former is serving, :er is lookinc , thoughtfully and af ately upon her Lord. Her quick !ads the lines upon the otherwise "ul features of the " man of sorrows," nfound emotions of sympathy well ter gentle, loving breast. But what do ? A benevolent heart is full of )vices. Her plan is laid. It is cus while the guests recline at table, for tut to pass round, behind and wash —From an old Scrap-Book IP' . . ~,,, !..„ ~ .• ~, „._ s6la./Itirtt Ir+ 4-.. VOL. XI., NO. 15. and wipe their feet. She will be that ser vant. Quickly does she pass from one to another, perforniing the menial office. At last• she comes to Jesus. With more than usual tenderness and care his feet are cleansed from the dust of travel. Her tears are bathing them ; her flowing tresses are veiling and wiping them, and her precious ointment is poured upon them. These gen tle influences stealthily and• silently ap plied to his sacred feet (where the . nervous sensibilities are most exquisite,) send streams of consolation through his weary frame until his countenance, but now so marred and sad, beams with a holy radi ence of delight. Her gentle acts com pleted what her sympathy suggested and her wisdom planned. And such value did her Lord attach to these affectionate min istrations, that wherever his Gospel is preached the story of " that Marys whieli anointed him with ointment and wiped his feet with her hairs," is told. Let us learn to feel, purpose, act like her. Take another illustration. Mary has failed to conceal her actions. No sooner is the box opened than the fragrance of the ointment escapes and fills the room. And now not only curious but reproving looks are fixed ppon her, and harsh words of re buke pierce her ear. Jesus loved Mary. He at once forms a plan of relief'. Wise as a serpant, and harmless as a dove, be turns the thoughts of the guests from the manifestations of tender attachment on the part of Mary, to the secret purpose of God in the matter. She had given him the warm tokens of her love, but God had em ployed her to anoint him for the tomb. By holding up to view this latter purpose, he spreads a veil over her actions and even takes occasion to speak of them in terms of highest approbation, while he sharply rebukes her accusers : "Let her alone ; against the day of my burying hath she kept this." • Thus did our great Example teach us not only to feel, and mature plans but, by put ting these in execution, perform worthy and beneficent acts. PASTOR. EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE. Dertwshire—Contrasts—Dlaress—Lord Shaftsbury and .Vr. Wilks—Archbishop Hughes and England —The Young Men's Association and Pro-North ern Sympathy—List of Exeter Hall Lectures and Lecturers—Mr. Glaisher, the yEronaut—His Les sons for Young Men—Dr. Livingstone and Cen tral Africa—Bishop Mackenzie and his Successor —Meeting at St. James' Hall—Firearms and the Gospel—Scene at Oxford—Bishop Coleneo and his Heresy—Retains his .Position—Coming Trial —Bishop of Capetown and High Churchmen— The " Organ" of the New School—Deprecation and Appeal—Shall the Church Become a Sect 7 PostsCript. FROM DERBYSHIRE I dispatch this let ter, after a visit to a part of Northampton shire also, and especially a fresh visit to Kettering, and the tracing (as I did for merly with regard to Andrew Fuller,) of the life and labors of the excellent Toiler, whose memory has been embalmed in Robert Hall's work. To this I may here al ter refer. Trade lan,guishes in Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire. But' they have iron, coal, and -agricultural resources which keep multittudes' employed. One is struck with the well-to-do, florid aspect, and- vigorous. health •of both farmers and laborers. LANCASHIRE is in deeper distress than ever, and yet with God's blessing on the noble exertions now made, I trust that the Famine fever will be averted, and none be allowed to starve. Lord Shaftesbury has been speaking nobly on this theme, as fol lows : " The entertainments at the London Polytechnic on Wednesday evenings were for the benefit of the distressed Lancashire operatives. Earl Shaftesbury took the chair, and made a brief speech on the ne cessity and duty of assisting the operatives in their present sad condition. There were now from 300,000 to 400,000 persons out of employment, and in a short time their number would be nearer 600,000. These were heads of families, so that the number dependent on charity would be 1,500,00 D or 2,000,000 persons. Many of them were receiving parochial relief, but rather than accept it, others had submitted to the se verest privations. He was sure his aud ience would sympathise with the efforts these men had made to preserve their in dependence. (Cheers.) Many of them had accumulated considerable sums in the Savings, but these earnings had now dis appeared. They had borne their suffdrings in the most admirable manner. From long personal experience of these people, he could testify that they were of an extreme ly generous, affectionate, and grateful die position. (Cheers.) They wished to give work for the assistance they received. Be fore they could get aid they had been com pelled to break stones, or to do other work for which they were ill-suited on account of their previous occupation. He did not blame the parish authorities, but he thought it was very hard upon such men to have to compete with navvies in a kind of work which was only suited to the latter. He knew it had been said that those on the spot, mill-owners and others, had not prop erly done their duty. He knew that this was true with regard to soine'of them ;' but it was also true that others - had set noble examples of generosity and self-denial. He hoped that, although some had neg lected their duty, those - whom he addressed would not on that account withhold their contributions. The Gospel loudly called on them to assist - those who had been v.is ited with an overwhelming calamity. He hoped that peace might be soon restored, but, of course, no one could say when that result would be accomplished. God might soon withdraw his chastening hand, but the famine might last for many months. He had lately laid the case of the Lancashire people before his own agricultural laborers, and he was glad to say that one hundred and fifty had at once offered to contribute the small sums they could spare." MR. WASHINGTON WILIII3 has been lec turing on the American war, to the follow ing effect: " Yesterday evening Mr. Washington Wilks deliiered, at the hall of the Literary Institute, Newington causeway, a lecture on the American war. Mr. Dunn presided; and the room was crowded. The lecturer began by remarking that in all wars there must be a balance of right on one side, and that it was the duty of onlookers to ascertain on which side that' balance lay, in order that they might afford it their moral support. With regard - to the Amer ican contest, he thought it was not difficult to discover with which side England ought to sympathise. The conflict had been described as a collision of races, and there was some truth in that description. The South had been described as the aristo cratic race asserting its privileges against the democratic tendencies of the North ; but Englishmen would not on account at such a description refuse their sympathies to the latter. The aristocracy in question was, however, note one so much of race as of property—of property in human beings. From the foundation of the Union; and, indeed i from the settlement of the Ameri can Continent these differences had been , visible, and they had at length broken out into irrepressible conflict. The questiOn, being strictly that of limitation or exten sion of slavery, did not admit of any com promise. One side or the other would have to give way, and he asked did Eng land desire that the North should subjugate the South, or that the SOlith should sulijn _gate• the North.? The lecturer contended at great length that these were the issues,. and that justice and: humanity, were alike interested in the suppression of the system -which had led to the war. The audience entirely sympathised with the sentiments enunciated by. Mr. Wilks,' to whom*unati imous and-enthusiastic vote of thanks was awarded." • ARCHBISHOP HUGHES, I perceive, has been asserting and publishing that every body in this country, speaks with no greater respect of the American people, than if they were inhabitants of some savage islands. It may suit this Papal ecclesiastic to he for the good of " the Church," alias "the Mother of Harlots," and it is quite natural that he should seek to, stir up ha tred against a people whose 'Prime Minis ter so steadily and earnestly, together with Earl Russel advocates the cause of "Italy for the Italians," and consequently of the overthrow of the temporal power of . the Papacy. But fresh tokens are being given by the representatives of the great middle " Class Christian body, that it is true to the instincts of freedom, and that it wishes well; and interprets aright, the President's emancipation proclamation and policy. Thus; within the last week, Mr.. W. G. Langdon, late cotton manufacturer of Glasgow, delivered in the 'Hill of the Young's Men's Christian Association, Lon don, a lecture on the . American question and the cotton famine. He argued that slavery had caused both the war and the cotton famine. Re then described the social condition of the South, showing the de moralizing influence of slavery. Educa tion and mechanical skill, he said, were on the side of the. North, and it would be sue cessful in the struggle. The rebellion had been utterly unjust, and he expresSed great surprise that Mr. Gladstone bad vir tually, given it his support. He eulogized the emancipation policy of the President. After other remarks, and some addresses from young men present, a resolution ap proving of Mr. Lincoln's emancipation' policy was adopted; and unanimously agreed to. The resolution also asserted that cap italists ought to look for cotton to any quarter of the world, where it could be obtained. November 28, 1 862 - TIM YOITNG:IMENfs -61LISTPAN' ASSO CIATION'S Annual Course of Lectures, •by eminent persons, is now being weekly de livered in Exeter Hall. The following the Gonne for the present ' Winter : " Scientific Experiments in Balloons, with Illustrations," by James Glaisher, Esq., Fellow of the Royal Society; " The Pur poses of Being," by Rev. Richard Roberts, a Wesleyan Minister; "A. Sound Mind," by Rev. J. Hamilton, D.D.; " Defaulters," by Rev H. Stowell Brown ;" "Italy and her Rulers," by Rev. W. Mact:all, M.A. Then comes a Christmas meeting, simply marked, " Rev. William Brock, and Rev. Newman Hall, LL.8.," implying that these two gentlemen will say , something—no doubt seasonable and weighty—to the as sembled thousands. Next after the year, the list proceeds as follows :—" High Farm ing; Using the World as not Abusing it," by Rev. Wm. Arnott, of Glasgow; "John Howe, sod the Times of the Puritans," by Rev. Robert Machra.y, M.A.; " Bishop Burnet, the English Revolution, and Prot estant Settlement, 1692-1752, by Rev. A. S. Farrar, M.A ; and last of all, on Feb ruary 10th, comes the Annual Meeting to be addressed by Rev. Hugh Stowell, M.A., of Manchester, and. the Rev. the President of the Wesleyan Conference. Mr. Welsher, who delivered the first lecture, gave most interesting particulars of his extraordinary experiments as an a3ronant in the higher regions of the at mosphere, and impressively set before the young men the cause, under God, of his success in this kind of scientific experi ment, as being indornitable resolution, fixed purpose, and stern perseverence. Some months ago I had the pleasure of describ ing to your readers the results of his ob servations, after that he and his intrepid companion had ascerrded and passed through banks of clouds into a region almost intol erable, as to the difficulty of breathing, and the all but, entire paralysis of the ac tion of the heart.- DR. LrvnicisToNE has been lately heard of, and his name is once more before the public. First of all, it is known to some, at least, of your readers, that the first Bishop sent out to Central Africa, Dr. Mackenzie, of a Scottish family, died of fever, some months aqe, together with one of his devoted followers, Livingstone be ing his pioneer and guide. They found the slave trade going on, and the slave traders much irritated against them. On' one occasion the Bishop's party were from panic, in real peril of their lives, led to use firearms. After this, the Bishop's party turned back, and-in a sickly region, Bishop Mackenzie sickened and died. A second African Bishop is about to be sent out by the African Missionary Society, sup ported by the Universities of Oxford, Cam- bridge, and Durham. His name is Rev. • Mr. Touzer. PITTSBURGH, SATURDAY, DEC EMBER 27, 1862. I was present last week at a meeting in Saint James' Hall, convened by the Episco palians of the Christian - Knoiledge and British Propagation Societies, to bear ad dresses fr .m the Bishop of Oxford and from the Bishop elect. The latter is a man in the prime of life, and • speaks flu ently and well. I wasrglad• to hear noth ing about " priesthood," and a good deal about " the Gospel for Africa." In the course of his address' he deprecated any resort to force or firearms in intercourse with the natives, and said that his business and object, with his companions, would be to live the religion of peace before the eyes of the native Africans. Of .warlike- Bishops you know one' in the person of Major General Polk. When not long ago an attack was made by the Governor of Borneo, upon the savage and cruel pirates there, the Bishop of Bor neo joined in the expedition and wrote home to his friends the" effective use he had mane . of his revolver I Very indis creet wag the " friend" who published such a letter; and' expression to the feel ings awakened by the conduct of the mar tial Bishop was give 4 by Poctor Jereinie, an eminent professor at Cairibr•idge Uni versity, when speaking on behalf of the African Mission. • Bishop Colenzo's work on the Penta teuch, has given great joy to the infidelsal the land. It is iadeed " toe halt" that this man should remain in'the Offiee- which he abuses . to propagate ,viev4 which ..he must finer , are totally* PPOB4; to that de - , cided ,recognition which is given by the ChurA of England' to the fem., bookii Of Moseg,'lda' portion 3 f the Canonical Wri tings. It is a painful evidenbe of the dar- - ing character of modern speculation and skepticism-- - the reactiojef l the traitorous . attempt made by Rit •Ohtehltien to set up again the"tyranny of `t . t :priesthood over -the land—that ColepOleorifidtnrin :his arithmetical theology, actually inainuateic that•when.our Lord quotes;-from or refers to Moses as an inspired writer, it was a proof of hislimited : knowledge ; in plain - English, his ignorance which` he supposes Was iradhally removed" as his human 'soul grew in: wisdom. a We , know, that to. Rim. the Spirit was given, the Spirit,„ " not , by measure.", And in point of fact, • it was afterbis res urrection, that 'he Solemnly endorsed tlie ( -, Pentatetch--:-.wheu• " at-Moses • and all the prophets- he 'expounded unto' them the things concerning ; himself." As the Af -' orangt-l a b.o says,: "The confi dence,of millions in the inspiration of the Old •Testament is new imperilled. For, although, the Bishop at first sight seein'a only to correct some arithmetical errors, and to strengthen Whatit probable; by the removal of ,whitt ' Contiitaii r etiiry.. and impossible: yet the logical consequence of the position which he-has taken up,_, must in many instances prove deitrixotive • of the whole Jewish system, and conse quently of the Christian "systein, which is its antitype—together with much of the. New Testament, inchnling the Epistle to the HebreWs. The Bishop ,is already car- ried further than he is aware of. -From the position he has .taken up, to a .sweep ing denial of the types and sacrifices of the law, of the predictions of the Prophets, of the Incarnation of Christ' of his miracles his Church, and his Sacraments, is a short: er interval than those who hue not stud ied the Christian system in all its relations can possibly realize; Thus 'he has yen:. tured on a terrible task single-handed, with a very limited critical apparatus, with out a great stock of preViously acquired the ological learning' (emphatically true !) and without 'prescribing to himself the limits within which he will confine his investigations. Nor bas he adopted any safegnards to prevent, him from drifting along the Steam of irresponsible Ration ahem done to the Ota, abyss of.unbelief which has already swallowed up the ablest minds of Germany, and threatens to ab sorb some of our divines, also." By far the ablest and best review that I have seen of this new work, is that which appeared last week in the Patriot, the or gan of the Congregationalists, and evi dently written by- a first class Hebrew scholar. It appears that the Patriot had reviewed Dr. Colenzo's work on the Ro mans, in -such a candid spirit, although 'ex posing its errors, that he himielf wrote a letter acknowledging this. But now the reviewer has no mercy upon him,: and after a crushing exposure of his< figures and cal culations, partly by comparison of different passages, and pertly by Hebrew criticism and conclusions founded thereon, he winds up by an expression of horrors of him as Christ's " hlasphemer" when daring to Biggest his ignorance when speaking of Moses and the Flood as realities, and by declaring, that .common honesty demands that he should at once give up his position in the Church of England. That position he seems determined to re tain on grounds which satisfy his own strangely constituted, and speaking :in an infidel sense, his own . fanatical tendencies. He warns young men• to look well ere they sign Articles, and seems to think it as his cross to remain where he-is as, the Ahem - pion of what _the Daily . Telegraph, this week calls "free comicience." It is to be regretted that it is the High' Church Bishop of Capetovin wh is about to prosecute Colenzo in the Ecclesiastical .Courts. The Te/egraph,.of course, as the organ of the New School of free thinkers affectsaects to suppose that the Church'of Eng land is rushing on her ruin by prosecu tions. The walls'of diseipliee it niookar at and wishes them thrown, down ; the sign, log of Articles with all, solemnity, it con dorms on the part of men who plead a free conscience." " Who will warn the Church," it cries. " What Ganialiel learned' and of repute among her many doctors; will rise with the old wise advise, If this Counsel,' &c" It then attacks the Bishop of Salisbury, (the bellicose Shepherd of Salisbury Plain,) for, having patched up his broken weapens, and for his fresh institution of a suit against Dr. Rowland Williams. It says that " for the sake of the English Church, more than on any other account," it trusts, " that not even a constructive triumph may be the bitter future reserved for her," and so turn the Church into a sect, by driving out " the few earnest and learned men in her bosom." That is impudent enough to say that Williams, Jowett, Wilson, and Coins°, with a dozen of others constitute " the few, earnest and learned men " of the Church 'of England. It appeals thus to the Church's pride as a National Church, as being " an asylum of national belief'," and it declares that Dissenters, " her piti less rivals," will soon say, " Abdicate your place of pride; you can no longer pretend to embrace a wider sphere, of opinion' h'eu each of us. Now, then, you having deserted' your traditions; your revenues, your rights, your privileges of State support are in our eyes thereby forever forfeited." A large - class of young men will, alas! be led on toward w precipice by Colenie,' and his companions. At all events, thin new controversy within the English Church, coupled with 'the feebleness and coward ice of the Evangelical party, as shown in this Bicentenary year, when they virtually cast dishonor on the dust of their legiti mate prellecesSors—mid likewise from the genii -Papal leaven still working --I—' has a powerful tendency to break up the Church of England. Nor will the young men of Cambridge and Oxford all be ready to rec ognize the doctrine—which is, after all, true enough, in the sense in which he uses it, and in the sense of consistency, princi ple and favor—that the Church of England is a club. And so, of any .club, or any such association, .though not compelling any one to become a member, or remain a member, yet requires every *ember, while he continues there, td conVirwith its regu lations." A " Presbyter-Anglicantie" of the New. School, says "If the Archbishop be right, then 'the ChUrch'profeSsing to be National, is a n:tere .sect Unduly - retaining priviteges to which sheis not' entitled, and wealth of which: she is despoiling. the nation. * * * I do, not believethat the ,Church of Eng-. land is, or ever has beep, a sect'; and if she becomes one, her Weis settled." On the "fstli of December Dr. Lushinfil ton President Of thwOourt of Arches, will coinmence .the o hearinglif arguments on :the " amended, AttrgettP brottght, against „Dr. itewiand the Ice!. ,1404 1 11- i'en , 40 thNviidra L lit ' - hi PanasrA;'the, Sing e and the people are still in antagonism. Seivile: addresses have 'beeniptesented to him froin various quarters i signed,,by-a, few: an address to, the Deputipaof the Lower Hope is being signed. ~by tens of thou Sands, in alone. .". Prussia, according the census of 1801; Contains a civil population of 18,- 222,79950u15,•and amilitary;population 268,517,- including the wivesiand daughters of 'soldiers--,—making a total of .18,491,316 Benis. There, are 11,29g,276 Protestants, of wham 184,187 are in the army; 1 ; 202 niembers , of , the •49-reek Church; of- whom• Six . are :soldiers ;.13',716 Anabaptists, of whom eight- are soldiers ; 16,233 Dissen-, tern, of whom sixty-three ,are .soldiers;, 254,78 t of whom, 1,328. are in the army ( Thegreat prePonderance, of 'Protes tants among the military, is owing to the fact that out ofinearly 8,000 officers in the active army i there : are only a'few thousand Roman Catholics. In the military schools, out of 1,300 pupils , there are only from 60 to 70 - Romanifita. TxE ITALIAN PARLIAMENT has been for nearly a week discassing the policy of Rataiii and • his supporters. A. letter of Count Clavour, written in 1859, and speak ing ,confidentially to a -friend, complained bitterly of the secret intricrues and enmity of the very men (save La Marmara and another) who are now in power, and who have been truCkling to the French Empe ror. He -has waxed, insolent of late., and the dispatch= ofhis new Foreign Minister, Drouyn De L'Huys, is keenly resented by the Italian people and Parliament. AUSTRIA is taking counsel of " the net tle danger," and has reduced her proposed war budget by no less than six millions of florins: It shaadd to this, justice to Hun gary and and a commercial treaty with. England,and low-duties, she will im mensely develop her. magnificent resources, and become rich and prosperous. An am nesty for. pant Offinees`has heen - proclatmed in Hunoiry ' but unless the brave nation have their full rights restored, sullen and passive resistance will be still, maintained. Any concessions made hitherto are not real. POLAND still bleeds, and yet struggles, - resists, and adds crime and murder to her efforts to be free. Not long since the Chief Director of the secret Police, at War saw, was found dead on the stairs of his own, house, pierced by many wounds. Within a few weeks after ' his subordinate, a Pole; and a traitor to his country, was found hanging in his own bed-rootn, with a label on his breast, with the word " TttAr 'TOE," to indicate the cause of his de struction. The, Grand. Duke Nicholas is making concessions, and offers something like an Independent Legislature. But meanwhile he lives in fear of losing his life,- for attempting which one has already been executed. Russia altogether is pass ing through the throes of a terrible crisis. She hai never, financially and commer cially, recovered from the effect of the Crimean war; and this, succeeded by the emancipation of the Serfs, the discontent of the Nobles, the revolutionary spirit of the rising' generation, including students and senior officers of the army, sadly op presses the resources of the Empire, and affects the haPpiness of the Czar. P S.—Gaiotting' prevails to a frightful extent Londoh, and the crime is gen erally' committed by Ticket-of-leave men. The whole system of relaxation of the term of penal servitude; is now eagerly con detnne&by the press. Sir Joshua Je,bb, who is at, the' bead -of Prison Inspection, 'defends` the system. The Timis is fierce; and the Daily Tile§raph, calls the garotters " Jebb's Own." A number of mad hare perished by the fall of the Hatrunerimith Viaduct. An' explosion of gas' in the Wallsend coal mine, near Sunderland has destroyed sixteen Men and lads. The Prince of Wales' =marriage` to the Princess Alexandra of Denmark, will take place in April 'next. The New Zealand Chiefs have forwarded an address of condolence to"the Queen, on the death of Prinde'Albert. It is thor oughly poetic and touchingly affectionate in tone. Lord Palitterstoii has been- elected Lord Rector of the University of Glasgow, and Mr. Gladstone to a similar honor at Edin burgh—both victorious over Tory candi dates. Two of our Tory papers now appear to have . been subsidized some years ago by the French Qoirernment. The exposure comes out in a suit brought in our Law Courts agairuitCount Persigny, then Ambassador here. Perhaps a little Southern gold greases the palms of the present writers in the Morning Herald' and the Standard, each admirers of Southern chivalry and haters of the North. Such papers as these do not command circulation. Cold weather having set in, the mortal ity of Louden is greatly increased , but there is no epidemic disease. Several livei have been lost by persons falling into the Thames during the fogs of the earlier part of November. Au'ludez`to'Hateit:ein4' ue tes'lttibeen published, with 30;000'referenoes. It is of great value to the searchers after' the " curiosities of literature." The, American Col. Ward, who.was in the`military service of the Chinese Inipe rial Government, died of a wound received in a battle - with:the' Taepiiiks: WHOLE NO. 535 Let me now conclude by commending to all students and ex-Professors the following newest specimen of " Horse Latin." Here is the recipe to, keep a horse all right : " Brushes, !et curricumbus ad libitum ; el bow greaset quantum sufficus; blanketus first-ratus ; Animal warmus; fodderus, never soy-die-tus,. butfinealus et oa.tus; exeroises on 'compromises. The effect will be— costes shinus, - lappetatui virOlfiitus, muscu laritus two-fortyitus."'' • Releeted.y ' l llelp,'Lord or we Perish P' Breithp *EBBE.. *hen thrimgh the torn sail the' teinpest- streaming, When o'er the dark ware the red lightning is gleaming, Nor hope lends a ray the poor ,seaman to cherish, We ify to our 'Lot.4IT or ire perish!" Oh Jesus! ono 0,5'4 on the , breast the 1 • irkilollo-4401144NftbeeliStrif'iriePtift pillow,, Now, Veited in , glory;:the:marinereherish i `.; Who ories, in .his danger—g• Help, ; Lord L or, we, perish 1 ." . „ . Aitd- oh, when :the whirtivindi of passion is. . . ra g in g , When 'hell in our heart ,Its. wild - warfare is waging. Arise thy strength, thy redeemed to cherish, Rebuke the 'desCroyer-:-.“ Heli, Lord I or we perish !" ilitindeurlf the Bible--Interesting Teitlinony, ever`' tried it, yon'rniist haie been struck with the' few solid thoughts, the few suggestive ideas which survive the perusal of , the most brilliant, of, h3ffnart books. Few of them can stand three re"air ings ; and Of the inemorabilia ithicfC:You had-marked in your first reading, oii're= verting to them, you find that; manr:of those were not so striking, or weighty, or original/Us you thought. But the Word of GoTis solid; it will stand a thousand readirgs; and the man who has gone over it' the. mist frequently and carefully, is the surest: of finding' new wonders': there.— Rev. James Hamilton,. When commenced tny duties of pro fessor of ,theolegy, ,I feared that the fre quency. afth which I should have to pass over the same portfons of Scripture would abate the interest, in my 'mind in reading them; ,btit after : more than...fifty years iof 'study, it is my e.xperience that with' every, class my interest increases;".—Pro/: Leonard Woods. . I have always found IIT my scientific studies, that when-I could get the; Ilibleto say anything upon the subject, it afforded me a firm platform to stand, upob, and another round_ in the ladder_ by which. I could, safely ascend.—Lieut. Maury. I have for many years made, it a practice to read throug,h the Bible once a year. My custom is to read four or five chapters every =mor-ning -immediatelY after -rising from my bed: It employs about an hour of my time, and seems to me the, most suitable manner of beginning the day. In what light soever we regard the Bible, whether with reference to revelation, to history, or to morality, it is an invaluable and inexhaustible mine of knowledge and virtue.—John, Quincy Adams. _I can easily conceive why the Bible was one of the four volumes which always lay on Byron's table; and it would be easy to fill a lecture with the testimonies, written or unwritten, which painters, sculptors, ora tors and poets,. have rendered to the most thought-suggesting book in the world.-- Hamilton. From the time that,•at.my mother's feet, or on my father's knee, I first learned to lisp verses from the Sacred Writings, they have been my daily study and vigilant con teniplation. If there be anything in my style or thoughts to be commended, the credit is due to my kind parents in instill ing into my mind an early love of the Scrip tures.—Daniel Webster. I am of opinion that the Bible contains more true sensibility, more exquisite beau ty, more pure morality, more important history, and finer strains of poetry and elo quence' than can be collected from all other books,. in whatever a g e or language they may be written—Sir WM. Jones J. W I will hazard the assartion that no man ever did, or ever will become, truly elo quent without being a constant reader of the Bible, and an admirer,.of the purity and sublimity of its language.--Fisher Ames. I rest in the Bible as . phe only, book in . which is found true eloquence and wisdom. Miraiidula. There is no book like the' Bible fbr celient learning, wisdom and use.—Sir Matthew Hale. No writers, from thuinvention of letters to' the present time, are equal to the pen theii of the books of' the Old and New Testa . . . . . meets, in true.excellenee, utility and dig ... nity.--iii. David Hartley. Every word and syllable of the 'Bible, ought to be admired; it not only cannot be enough admired, but it'cannot be too much admired.--Boileau. The Bible is a matchless volume ; it is impossible we eau study, it too much, or es teem it too highly.---Boyle. We account the Scriptures of God to be the most sublime philosophy.-Bir Isaac Newton. There are no songs comparable to the songs of Zion ; no, orations equal those, of the prophet; and no polities like those which the Scriptures teach.--/Ifilton. I must confess to you that the majesty of the Scriptures astonishes me; the holi ness of the evangelists speaks to my heart, and has such strong and striking characters of truth, and is, moreover, so perfectly in imitable, that if it had been the invention of men, the inventors would be greater than the greatest heroes.--Rosseau. Most wondrous beok bright candle of the'Lord I Star of , eternity . ! the onlystar , By which the bark of man could navigate The sea of life, and gain the coast of bliss Seoniely ; only star Which roia on time; And,en,ite dark and i troubled.billown still, As generation, drifting swiftly by, ` Snceeeded generation, threw a'ray Of heaven's own light, and to , • the• hiliwof God, The everlasting hills, pointed the sinner's eye. —Pollak. 0 come! let 118 walk in the light of the Lord As it beams from the page of his life-giving 'T laint suiriireVit not sitiiiy ThE PRESBYTERIAN BANNER Publication Office : GAZSTTB BUILDINGS, 84 FErrri Sr., Preroacrnos, Pa PUILIDELPFUId, Sour/I- Wm Con. OP 7ris vro Clawerdiro ADVERTISEMENTS. TERM 8 IN ADVANON. A thottm, (8 limn or lees,) ono innerrion, 80 cents I met Subsequent intention, 40 coats ; each line beyond alsWdlird A. &Mum per quarter, T 4.00; each lirte addlUanal• A REDUCTION made to advertisers by the year. BUSINESS NOTIOZB of Tau Huss or less, $l.OO each . ad dittoes' line, 10 cents. REV. DAVID lITRIDTNEY 4 PILOPEIDTOIL AND .PVILIDDIEN. While we follow the path that's illumined by its ray, That , path by the prophets and patriarchs trod, Still bright with the steps of the chosen of God. W. H. Burleigh. The Ilan of Principle. Truth and right are divine. They were before the world. was, having_ survived the decay of earth's, mightiest,, erupitea, and i , will reign over the - hbundlese i ftiture:, is God-like, because he can comptehdrid these unchangeable principles, and govern his •actions, by them. : .. ;Amid the deep gloom of ignorance through which humanity has toiled hitherto, history amply proves that man has ever understood, as' now, the val ue of Truth, and the,obligationeAtcatier and the, fact that jthese are - -geperally and wilfully distegar i cled; is suf f icient evidendb, that Jus is ina fallen, wretched, and erring bondition. fruit Sod. Let no iiiin trust to the gentletiess;the genetbafti, eititlievideining • goodwill of Intl • lieart;fisithePhopee that *hey ,ftleitiPiiin ifirebT , .Iy - 'bear .hinr - threugh,,the temptatiope:Ot this Norhl. perilous passage to the true beginning ,of life, where , even the best' natures need' `continually be reminded of their weakness and to .find their only seeurityin.steadily—referring all their thoughts, • acts and affections to the ultimaie end of their being; yet where, imperfect as we are, there is no obstacle too mighty,: no temptation too strong to the truly humble in heart, who, distrusting' themselves, seek to be sustained only, by that holy Being who is life and power, and, who, in his love and mercy, has promised` to give to those that ask. Ihity of Visiting the Aged. "I - Bolen:tidy charge you," said a venera ble " to reniember the aged mein berl'of 4.11. e Chureh. The duty Of visiting" the aged and infirm members.of the °birch of Christ is not peculiar to ministers only.. -The members of: Christ's, body sympathise one with another, audit is fitting= tinier ativn'tbat the young'shoUrd_cdatribw 'to - the happiness of the aged. • Ivied-rare. * to receive attention from the young; .they; are pleased to know_tbat they., are not -for gotten ; they. rejoice to know.that there are those who 'are active' in that eanse they love so well." UnlessFe are watchful, we shall neglect this duty. yy:, do not meet, them in the course, of buiiress; they are not seen in the streets; perhaps they are not even 'in the house of God. In their . retirement they-are easily forgotten. We must make an effort ;; to bear them in, mind. The friends, ot„their youth have gone, and left them - lone . pilgrims in this vale or tears. Solitnile, decaying 'vigor of mind as well as body, commend them to our sympathy. Let us remember =the aged, let us cheer their lonely, hours by friendly visits; let its tell them what is doing for Christ i ,in his dhurch ; let us talk with them about that better world which, they are soon to enter: • We they find the performance of this .duty profitable tv eourselve,s. "We pled secure their prayers , .; and who can tell how great will be the effect upon our usefulness ? The performance of this duty is most ac ceptable to the Saviotir. He regards all the kindness shown to his childrep as shown to himself. We know how he felt toward his aged followers. What can be more pleasing to him than that we should entertain similar feelings toward them, and express those feelings by appropriate ac tions? What action will receive a surer reward'? The True Test of Piety If we would wish to discover whether there were any particles of steel in a large quantity of rubbish, it would not be the wisest way to search for them, and especially in the dark, but to hold a large and effica cious magnet over it. And this, if it be there, is the way to discover true religion in our souls. The truths and promises of God .are, to .a principle of religion in the mind, that which the magnet is to the steel.. If there be any in us, the proper exhibition of the Gospel will ordinarily draw it forth. If it be a matter of doubt with you whether you be truly, converted, far be it from me to endeavor to persuade you that you are so. Your doubts may be well founded, for aught I can tell, and,supposing , they should beso the door of mercy is stilt open. If you have: obtained- mercy,, the, same way is open for your obtaiiiing it again; and if not, there is no reason why you should not obtain it now. The• Gospel supper is provided; ,all< thinganraready and the. King's servants. a.re commissioned to persuade; and as; it were compel them to cOmein, If you accept this'"invitation, all are yours. I ask not whetherbe Willing' to be saved in God's wag in order to deter. - - m ine your right to .ancept-spiritnal:blessinge —the message sent to you_ in the qqapeL _ determines this- - --but _in order to ascertain your interest in them. - If you cOrdiallY be lieve the Gospel, you have the' of eternal life. If its blessingsnuit your .ded sires, they are all year own. If, for -exam ple, it t does not offend, you, but accords with your very heart to sue for mercy as , the chief of sinners; if yen. be willing to occu py that place which the Gospel assigns you, which is the ,dust, and to , ascribe to Jesus' that which God has assigned tohim, "pow er and riches ,and wisdom, and strength and. honor and glory and blessing;" if you can tinreluctantly give up all claim to life on' the footing of your own worthiness and de sire nothing so much as to be found • in Christ, not having your own righteousness; if the salvation you seek be a deliverance from the dominion of sin, as swell as from its damning power; finally, if the heaven you desire be that which the Scriptures re veal, a state of pure, and holy enjoyment, there can be no, just cause to doubt your interest in these things.— Rey. Andrew Fuller. About Life. If it is well for a man to live at all, he should endeaVor to avoid all those' influ ences which detract from the beatity harmony of Inman existence..: In'!otheil wor44,i 44 ot4d a _make'toast ! , ,pi: and apt, a4ow Aiterlf,,te,hcAsttlefld l out.,,, noyed, or 6efotbided by ailytkpg.,, 1 / 4 shoulctfuliy being with his own soul, and shaving great OkietV .- will for all mankind. Life, then, will have a beautiful significapoe to him; its,curgeak will be deep and tlow.sently,o,s---in all the beauties of the worlifiefacited: