EV. DAVID M'ICINNEY, Editor and Proprietor. REV. I. N. )I"IiINNEY, ASSOCIATE: EDITOR. TERMS IN ADVANCE. BY )lain.. c: , iogly or in Oh I, $1.50 llM.lvrago Sr VlTliElt or ',UK OITIER 2.00 'or Two DOLLAB s, wo will send by mall seventy numbers,. her OITS DOLLAR, thirty-three numbers. ',niters mending us TWENTY subscribers and upwards, wilt thereby entitled to a paper without charge. tenewelashould be prompt. a little before the year expires end payments by safe hands, or by mail. tired all letters to REV. DAVID M'KINNEY, Pittsburgh, Pa. [selected.] low to Live. - lie liveth long 'who livoth well ! MI other life Is short and vain. ]lo liveth longest who aan iell Of living most for heavenly gain lie liveth long who llveth welt 1 Alf else is being flung away; liveth longest who can tell (r true things truly done each day. Vasto not thy being ; hack to Him Who freely gave it, freely give; Ise is that being but a dream: '1" is but to be, and not to live. Be wise and use thy wisdom well; Who wisely speaks, must live it too; le is the wisest who oan tell Dew first he lived, then spoke, the true. Be what thou seemest! live thy creed 1 , ~ fluid up to earth the torah Divine: .: ' k Be what thou prayest to be made ; Let the great Master's steps be thine: :., , 4. ' Fill up each hour with what will last.; v . Buy up the moments as they go; , z" The life above, when this is past, ~, ~ la the ripe fruit of life below. . . Sow truth, if thou the true wouldst reap ; Who sows the false shall reap the vain; '.., Erect and sound thy conscience keep; i' ,. ' ', from hollow words and deeds refrain. ,t• i ' •,•,' Sow love, and taste its fruitage pure ; ''' • Sow peace, and reap its harvest bright ; ~,,..,. sow sunbeams on the rock and moor, And find a harvest-home of light. H. BONAR. —..... THE TEMPERANCE CAUSE. The following report was read before the Society of Religious Inquiry, of th_ e West il, .l ttt • ern Theological Seminary. In view of the increasing evil of in ‘ 'temperance, the Society deemed it worthy of a wider circulation, and unanimously re '',c quested a copy for publication. i ...„.•, it is now given to the public, with the arnet prayer that it may arouse an interest .'" n this momentous au* .t. JAMES T. PATTERSON, L. M. BELDEN, M ; : D. L. DICKEY. Publishing Committee. t -- ..' EP( )RT ON THE PROGRESS OF .; . TH E TEMPERANCE CAUSE. - .v. . . Nearly three thousand years ago the '... %West a men, guided, too, by inspiration, mined this memorable passage : ~„ ~-• " Wine is a mocker, strong drink is ra iing, and whosoever is deceived thereby is i:.;•, p l ot le 18e." I,k_ - , ~ t .: . . Although every year, since that time, Nr'-'ip. as added its testim .ny to the truth of this I .' declaration, the world has not yet practically .learned the great lesson. The voice of warning is just as much needed to-day, as it was in the days ef .Solomon. Your committee, appointed to detail the ~. " Progress of the Temperance Cause," is ...,:i . / - deeply impressed with the conviction that r: 4 " : " , 'lts task would be more appropriately de scribed as a detail of the "Progress of the Atcmperance Cause." in : ` In considering the subject,reference ' to our own land, two fields of interest pre -sent themselves : First—The country at large. ' ' Second—The army. . ' The condition of the cause in the first of `these fields is, perhaps, very nearly de ecribed by the following letter, from the Secretary of the Young Men's Christian Association of Philadelphia, if we substi tute for city the word country : " I have to state, and I do it with pro found regret, that the high vantage ground occupied by the temperance Cause in our city and vicinity, only a few years ago, has been disgracefully surrendered. Our tem perance organizations, without an exception, have either been disbanded or reduced to a state of wretched inefficiency. The good - cause, as a distinct enterprise, has been for ' some time ignored by both the press and the pulpit, with a very few exceptions, while the masses of the people regard it with !perfect indifference. The consequence is Ithat drunkenness abounds, and tippling is ; fearfully on the increase, and that, too, among all classes, including professors of religion and former abettors of the tempe rance reform. In brief, the present con dition of the temperance cause in and near .Philadelphia is deplorable." A plain record of facts will show how far such a statement is applicable to the whole country. The great arteries of the nation are its ' laws. The ohs acter of their pulsations gives no uncertain idnication of the state of public opinion. What then is the charac ter and efficiency of these laws, so far as they relate to the subject before us ? In the great temperance discussions which occurred some ten or twelve years ago, it ', was fully established that, since two-thirds of the pauperism and crime, one-half the insanity, and an untold amount of personal ' and domestic misery resulted from the traf fic in intoxicating liquors, this traffic ought . to be prohibited by law. As the result, a law prohibiting it was enacted in all the New-England States, and in the State of :New-York. The happiest results, for a time followed the enactment of these laws. Jails and poor-houses were deserted, and many families of drunkards were raised ' :: from want, degradation and wretyhedgess to plenty, respectability and social happi . ness. Six months after the law was passo in Connecticut, Gov. Dutton said that he had not seen a single drunkard in the streets. A paper of that State thus speaks of its condition to-day ig Now what are the rumsellers doing in this State ? They are disobeying our pro hibitory law, and seeking, in some of the meanest possible ways, to evade or override it. They defy the State, resist;its anthority and treat with contempt its prohibitions. In 185 there was not an open grog-shop in the State. How is it now 7 Visit Nor wich, New-London, Bridgeport, Hartford, New-Haven, and all the large manufactur ing villages in the State, and see the num ber and boldness of the rumsellers. The laws are good, but the people have not the pluck' to enforce them, and the rumsellers have their own way." In Massachusetts it is just as bad. The city of Boston absolutely refuses to enforce the prohibitory law, and in consequence pays more money to drag twenty-five thong- . , ..„ , ciiu s . . _., . . ,_ r . .i. "Vi'''• , _ . ,T 7-,. .. . . , ~ . rtS I ' .. „ et i, an, , + 4' __„/ . ~.--.1 VOL. XII, NO. 10. and of her inhabitants down to the gutter than to educate the twenty•five thousand children of her public schools. In short, .in all the States in which the "Maine Law" was enacted, it has either been repealed or stands a dead letter upon the statute hook. Let us consider, in the next place, how those laws are obeyed which prohibit the selling of intoxicating drinks without li cense. Go to the City of Washington, and you will find, under the very shadow of the nation's repository of power,two thousand one hundred rum-shops, one thousand five hun dred of which are selling liquor in defiance of law. Nor is this to be wondered at when we remember that members of Congress, to say nothing of moral principle, can so far forget the dignity of their station as to be found in their seats too drunk to stand or speak when a matter is before them of no less importance than the expulsion of a United States Senator for treason. Go to the great commercial emporium of the na tion, and you will find six thousand liquor selling establishments, five thousand of which, protected by a powerful organize tioa which includes many men or wealth and standing, are selling their liquor in disregard oelaw. Resulting from this are seventy thousand arrests yearly, while eight hundred women are to-day confined for drunkenness in the cities of New-York and Brooklyn. Go to the city of Buffalo and vicinity, and find three thousand five hun dred grogeries, only thirty-six of which are licensed. Go to almost any of the cities of our land and find essentially the same re cord, and then judge bow far public` senti ment is falling behind even our imperfect legislation. A few more facts of interest may be stated : In 1850 the organization of the " Sons of Temperance " numbered two. hundred and forty-five thousand; now 'it numbers fifty-five thousand. At a late meeting of the Genernl Asso ciation of Massachusetts, Rev. George Trask, of Fitch'burg,presented the following statements : " Brethren, the temperance cause declines We have evidence sad and conclusive. " First—ln thirty-eve reports just read on Religion and Morals, in ehurcl;Les and States, near and remote, seven refer to the cause as declining, and the rest do not give 'the great evil of the age' a passing notice. Ominous silence. " Second—Temperance Societies of the old-fashioned type arc dead, we fe-r, beyond restoration. "Third—The new Societies are not ade quate to the purpose. " Fourth—Prohibitory laws fail to be ex ecuted. They sleep upon the statute book. -" Fifth—Temperance lecturers are scarce and poorly supported. , " Sixth—Pulpits are for the most part silent. " Seventh—lntemperance, in manifold forms, is gaining on our towns. and cities. Evidence of this stares us in the face. "Eighth—When our armies return, this evil will be immensely augmented. " Ninth—Unless the evil is averted, it, may, in ten years, be confessedly a greater curse: than the rebellion. One may ruin a government ) the other ruins nuti." , In the narrative of the State of Religion, by the General Assembly of the Presbyte-‘ rian Church, which met at Philadelphia is the following testimony "About eighty Presbyterial narratives, representing nearly all the Synods, have come into the hands of the Assembly's Committee... A 'careful perusal of them brings to view several facts of great im portance. The first is of a gloomy charac ter. The darkest clouds which God's judg ments bring over the land are full of bles sings as well as sorrow ; for they pour down fertilizing floods even while the lightnings from them blast and rive. But the black ness to which we now refer, is the smoke of the pit, diffusing, wherever• it is spread, curses without blessings, death without life. And it is now spreading (as we mourn to learn) everywhere over our land to the very thresholds of our churches, and into the sanctuaries of our homes. "Need we say it is the curse of Intemper ance, which, after having been driven back, is making head again through our borders East and West, North and South. " And now it is for us, as a General As sembly, in t .is our message to the churches, to unite the lamentations, warnings and calls of a hundred Presbyteries into a trum pet blast summoning the whole church to war against a foe often defeated, often pros trated, but which will only by annihilation, die." In connexion with this evidence of the extensive and increasing use of spirituous liquors, it ought to be remembered that these liquors are far more destructive in their effects than formerly, on account of their being so seldom pure. The larger part of them are nothing but compounds of poisonous drugs. A premitqa was offered, in Columbus for any kind of liquor free from any foreign mixture, and none was found. On exami nation it was found that of the many hun dreds of liquor selling establishments in Cincinnati only a very, few of them con tained any pure liquor of any kind. Let us also remember . that, one by one, the great standard bearers who. have in former, years so nobly fought the battles of Temperance, are falling. Among those lately gone may be mentioned that gallant son of the sea, so instrumental in procuring the abolition of the liquor ration in the navy, the lately admired and loved, but now lamented, " Admiral Foote." There may, be mentioned also the man who long ago raised a laugh in a ministe rial meeting, by reporting the then strange idea that the total disuse of spirituous liquors would cure drunkenness—who after wards thrilled the whole country by his six sermons on.the Sin of Intemperance, and who still later, carried to the legislature of Massachusetts a paper five hundred feet long, covered with the signatures of peti tioners for the "Maine Law "—the man whose very name was a tower ofstrength— the venerable Lyman Beecher, D.D. As such laborers fall, others must rise up to take their places. It is no time to sit down in idleness. The sky is still black with the angry tempest. Many a storm-beaten wanderer must yet be res cued, sheltered, warmed and fed, ere the unveiled . sun pours his tide of beauty across he jewelled, landscape, and the bright bpi gf . promise smiles upon us from the vanishing cloud. We turn to consider the condition of the Temperance cause in our Army. PITTSBURGH, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1863, WHOLE NO. 582 The country experienced one severe I shock, when thousands of her sons were suddenly called from the peaceful pursuits of industry, to drive back with the strong arm of power those enemies who were bat tering at the very gates of her Capital. Another shock, no less important ',in its results and perhaps scarcely less violent or dangerous, remains to . be met when the army recoils upon the country. It remains to be seen, whether our soldiers have virtue enough to exchange, like the Ironsides of Cromwell, without disturbance, the im plements of war for the implements of hus bandry. The war of the . American Revolution sent a torrent of drunkenness over the land. The war of 1812 was a fearful demoralizer. Thousands died never reached by cannon or sword, and thousands more returned to their homes with health, and character ru ined by the rum rations with which they had been daily furnished. In the Mexican War, General Scott estimated that fifty per cent. of the deaths were from intemper ance, and hundreds upon hundreds more returned home worthless and. cast away, from the same cause. An inquiry into the condition of the Temperance cause in our own army, must then be, to the :philanthropist, an inquiry of the deepest interest. Here we find some Wags encouraging, and some things discouraging. It is encour aging that whiskey rations have not, in orninary cases, been allowed to the private soldier. They were dealt out, it is true, for a, time, in the swamps of the Chickahom iny, and perhaps were thought a necessity; but the result taught the country a lesson. Of the thirty thousand men who lie in nn monurnented graves in those dismal swamps, ten thousand, it is estimated, were laid there by the whiskey rations. These rations were abandoned. As a con sequence, one may travel for weeks within the army lines, and scarcely see a single. private soldier drunk". Yet still, when he sees the eagerness with which a whiskey ration is received when it is dealt out (as it sometimes is,) and how few refuse it— when he reflects upon the amount of drink ing among soldiers outside of the army lines, he cannot but feel a conviction that the lack, of drunkenness within the lines, in a painfully large number of cases, arises rather from a lack of opportunity than a lack of desire. The following extracts give, no doubt, a correct view of the case. The first.is from a letter published in the New-York Ob server; from the pen - of J. M. Stevenson, Secretary of the American Tract Society, who has bad extensive opportunities for observation in our Western Army : " In speaking of the Western Army, I am painfully convinced , that, notwithstand ing all that is doing, the tendency of our men ie rapidly, fearfully downward. Such blatant, incessant, and ingenuous profanity as I heard in travelling from Louisville, Ky., to Winchester, Tenn.—some 150 miles—l had never before imagined possi ble. This profanity is accompanied with obscene jests and snatches of ribald songs, most disgusting; while intsmperance of all grades, from the merely excited' and gar rulous, to the most besotted, prevails. When in , camp and on duty, no such scenes are witnessed. The regulations of the ser vice will not permit it; but in travelling, going hoine on furlough, or return ing; when lying about hospitals to be admitted, or after a dis Charge ; when tem fmarily released from any cause from mili tary discipline, then it is that these vices show themselves so shamelessly." • A second extract is from a. letter of Rev. Mr. Stewart, an excellent Chaplain in the Army of the Potomac " Did Christian, loyal, country-loving citizens know of the unblushing drunken ness among so many officers in the army, and, the seeming danger of all being en gulphed in a common drunken ruin, they would with united, sleepless importunity, besiege Congress, the. President, Secretary of War, Commander-in-Chief, Quartermas ter General, &c., to unite in .closing up at once, each and every official flood-gate , through which such immense quantities of bad whiskey flow into the army.. " 'Bat how,' some one may ask, ' is so large an amount of intoxicating drink ob tained as to create such an amount of drunkenness ? Did not Congress, some years since, abolish whiskey in the army.?' Perhaps so; yet certain it is that, by some authority, whiskey rations are occasionally issued to every soldier. And whiskey without stint is at all times officially fur nished to commissioned officers. By an army regulation, commissioned officers can purchase from the Brigade Commisgtiry, by personal application or by written order, for their own use, at government prices, what ever provisions may be on hand -after ra tions are furnished . the private soldiers. A Brigade Commissary would hear 1 ss com plaint from officers for lack of bread, meat, coffee and sugar,' than of whiskey. It must always be . on hand. Our Brigade Commissaries have thus hecome extensive retail whiskey establishments; all fur nished by the government. A barrel often issued by the canteen—about three pints at fifty cents—just as fast as the Commissary's clerk can measure it." It will be, seen by this letter, that in keeping liquor from the army,An exception has been made where precisely, last of all, should it ever have been made. Whiskey is still allowed in 14 private stores of officers; with what results, let the follow ing facts testify. Maj. Gen. Howard says: "I did not drink at College, I did not drink at West Point; but after I came into the United States service, I found that it was a social habit in the army, and I myself fell into it. I drank whiskey and offered it to others. While stationed in Florida, I offered whis key to an officer and he decined. I urged. He. drank. A. short time after, I attended him when his brain was reeling with de liriumrand I made up my mind that it was wrong; that I never would do it again, and I have not. Ido not keep it in my quar ters, in my . tent. Ido not offer it to any officer, to any man, and I will not. I know that this is a very hard position to put a man in, and especially any young officer - but I can say from my own experience that it will pay him to do it." After the memorable victories of last July, when thanksgivings to God were ascending from thousands of firesides, and doubtless, too, from the grateful heart of many a waskworn soldier, a Colonel com manding a military post issued this order— not written, but privately circulated : " Great victories are achieved. We have occasion to rejoice; therefore, every. man not drunk before two o'clock will be put into the guard-house." That night a soldier was found asleep on picket, drunk. He had nev er before been drunk. He had never been in the guard-house, and did not wish to be. The pride of the soldier had prevailed over the strength of moral principle in that sad victim of official cruelty. A delegate of the Christian Commission bad occasion to leave for a few hours the hospital with which he was, for the time, connected. As an engagement was immi nent, he left open, in the amputating room, a small box containing bottles of brandy. On his return, although no action had ta ken place, three i:ro four bottles of brandy were missing. Themit morning the re port was current that a certain" clique" of surgeons had been having a " spree," and that, too, at a time when they knew not what hour the bleeding forms of their mangled countrymen might need their most careful attention. It was not hard to con jecture where their liquor came from, nor for that delegate' of ,fhe Christian Commis-, sion to learn ever after to keep hiw stores_ guarded by lock an4,4F. L ey, A man who has lorta 'much to' do with forts and eampS, and knows whereof he affirms, deeply pained that the subject of Temperance was namore referred to in our great Anniversaries, writes as follows : " I have known an ordinance officer whose duty it was to bring ammunition, lie drunk under the fence, and a regiment stand helpless and receive the fire of the: enemy for more than an hour, killing in._ their tracks over two, hundred as brave, loyal, and patriolic.,:naen as the nation has. summoned into this dreadful Conflict; and when they could sand the murderous fire no longer, they &ill Only to he fired into again and lose tile.hundred and ninety more by the fire of our own men to stop their flight. I know of a drunken surgeon who, after amputating in a bungling man ner, the limb of a beautiful, brave boy, of nineteen, left it bleeding to go across the street to get a drink, and, returning mad dened and intoxicated, kicked the breath out of the body of the poor soldier with a double-soled cavalry boot, because he did not walk out of the room on the bleeding stump when ordered to do so. I have known officers of nearly all grades, dis missed fdr being drunk on duty"; I have known them die in the streets of delirium tremens; I have known five chaplains in the army who became drunkards and were dismissed ; and-,yet,with a single excep tion, no allusion was made to drunkenness at any of the Anniversary meetings!' There is good authority for believing ,that the General commanding in one of the great movements of the Army of the . Po tomac, was, during a portion of the time at least, under the influence of liquor. Whether this had any thing to do with the disappointing issue of the battle or not, it was certainly no consolation to the friends of those ten thousand Dien who fell wound ed or, dead on the field, to reflect that the man who led them there, with all his ac knowledged military prowess, was a known_ rum-drinker. , t • Surely it is time that the Wee,ol,cin-in dignant nation was raised to rebuke the drunkenness of its military ogcers. We make such statements as hav'e_been made, with the profoundest regret that the necessity for them exists. We _rejoice in the thought that not all our soldiers and officers are such as have been here referred to. We rejoice to believe that there ate in our armies as sober, brave, and noble men as ever marched to the battle-field— too sober, bravd, and noble indeed to be led by drunken commanders. To, them, we look for the salvation of the country. We rejoice to believe that there are as sober, brave, and noble officers as any man ought to desire—too sober, brave, and noble to be reduced to the sad necessity of an official association with drunken companions. In the midst of such facts as we have stated, two more come to us like blooming flowers in the desert waste. let. A Tem perance organization has, during the past' Summer, been formed at Convalescent Camp, near Washington City, starting with more than two hundred members. 2d. Eight hundred Sabbath Schools have, dur ing the war, sent as many thousand tem perance tracts to as many thousand soldiers. These tracts, : we believe, were published by the " American Temperance Union," a no ble organization which still bears aloft its banner of= light in the midst of the sur rounding darkness. We thus' close our view of the Temperance. Cause: in our own land. In Great Britain the cause is advancing with a good degree of interest. More than a million children - are in her Bands of Hope. A committee on the san itary condition of the army in India, bas reported in favor of the disuse of liquor in that army. Strenuous exertions are being made to secure, from Parliament, a prohi bition of liquor-selling on the Sabbath day., There is a vast number of petitioners who have asked the government to yield the suppression of the liquor traffic to two thirds of the tax-payers in any district or borough who , shall ask for it. Iu short, the great work seems to be going ou with good success. Nations, too, which we have been accus tomed to regard as heathen, are teaching us lessons. The queen of" Madagascar, since the assassination of the late King, on account of crimes committed throbgh the results of drinking, holds her throne on the express condition that she shall never taste intoxicating drinks, the only instance perhaps where such a prohibition is embodied in-a constitution. The Supreme Court of Hawaii, in an able politiqal document, have sustained the prohibitory law which the rumsellers were attempting to over-ride. The Emperor of China, in answer to a petition 'praying him to legalise the sale of liquor in , his kingdom, replied that " noth ing would induce him to derive a revenue from the vice and miseries of his people." Such. is a general view of the present condition. of the Temperance Cense; so far as,we are able to judge, from, the facts in our* os,session. We close with a short statement of the yearly results of intemperance in our own country, that we may not forget in their isolation, their reality. They are taken from the Maine Temperance journa/: " Carefully-compliled statistics show, that by intemperance in the United States, 60,000 lives are annually destroyed; 100,000 men and women are sent to prison; 20,000 chil dren are sent to the poor house; 800 mur ders are committed; 400 suicides; 200,000 children are made orphans.; 200,000,000 dollars, are eipended!' This is the written history, but behind the curtain, there is an unwritten history of more painful interest even than that which is written. The hours of agony en dured by gray-haired fathers mourning over the early ruin of their wayward chil dren—the sighs which carefully con cealed from public view, burst in hidden places from the breaking hearts of anguish stricken wives and mothers—the tears that fall from the eyes of weeping children, keenly alive to their parents' deep degrada tion—those biting serpents, which, like the undying worm, gnaw the very heart-strings of the chained victim himself; all these things, though carefully registered in the records of eternity, are unrecorded in the books of time. We mast wait the revela tions of the final day to fully understand them. Meanwhile let our prayers and earnest endeavors be given to arrest these evils—to' turn back that tide•Of destruction which• sweeps like a living flood all over the land, bearing on its turbid waves the blast ed hopes of wrecked individuals families communities and we.had alniost , said nations. Let us regardllibilihje.et ivith all that depth ofinter . est which it ought to obtain from the peculiar circumstances in which as a people we are placed. The eyes of a wait ing world are fixed in anxious expectancy upon us. No unimportant link in the long chain of eternal order we stand. Weighty responsibilitiercrowd thick around us. A sacred legacy has been intrusted . to our care. God himself has laid upon us the solemn duty of preserving the virtue as well as the unity of a great nation. With us it rests to determine how we shall meet these weighty responsibilities; how we shall guard this sacred legacy; how we shall fulfil this solemn duty. With us to- determine whether that "Star of Em pire" which, rising in the East, has as cended with such brightening glory to its mid-day throne, shall go on, gathering in creasing lustre, •and blessing the whole world with its glorious light; or suddenly eclipsed, shall go down amid clouds and darkness, and tempest, and leave us in last ing night. H. V. NOTES, Chairman of Committee. Western Theo. Seminary .Nov. 2, 1863. The author of the above Report desires to express• his indebtedness to Rev. John Marsh, D.D., who kindly, furnished valua ble numbers of his excellent temperance Journal, from whichlhe facts contained in the Report were, to alarge extent, obtained. 11.V.N. EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE, yisit to Ireland—Easy of Access—Railway Facil iliac—Dub/in and London—Amusing Contrasts— Donkey-cart and heathentesoms tern:nu—Cullen and a Revolution—War.with the National Board—The Male Rornish Population and Popay—Encouraging Contrasts—Revived - Protestantism—Episcopal Clergy—Their ability and Usefulness—Their Influence in England— Irish Church' Afissions—A Challenge--Presbyte rianism in Dublin—Presbyterian Moderator -and Ministers at St. Patrick's—Whateley:s Funeral • His Succesior Canon Stanley Clerical Alarm—New _Presbyterian Periodical—Mission to Romanists—Ragged Schools—The Threatened "Invasion." NE WRY, Oct. 24, 1863. FROM IRELAND I now address you. I had not been in, this country for several years, and Dublin, the capital, I had not visited since 1859. The Wilily and speed with which one can leave London, and cross the Channel, are wonderfully increased as compared - with former days; and once ar rived in Dublin, you find the termini of three separate Railways which convey pas sengers to Cork in the South, Galway in the West, and to Belfast, Londonderry, and Sligo—thus . opening up to. the tourist, or the commercial traveller, 'every part of the land. Dublin, after the multitudinous rush and roar of the great metropolis, seems a quiet city. But it has great charms for a stranger. You feel yourself to be among a new people, and among an other, race than the pure Anglo-Saxon. The Celtic face, tongue, and fun, also sa lute you immediately as you climb up to a side seat of the Irish jaunting car, while Pat, partly in blarney and compliments to yourself, and in screams, and whoops (with the whip also duly used) to his horse, pre sents a striking antithesis to, the sombre and silent cab-driver of London. And then in the streets what a com mingling of ranks—the highestl and the lowest—and what odd assortments, so to speak, of men and thilfgs I Here is a don key cart in (that finest of all the streets, and which has perhaps no equal in some respects in London itself,) Sackville Street. The cart is loaded with turf, and perhaps there is a bundle of hether besoms on the top. And on the side-walks there are still to be seen specimens of the true Irish beg gar., male and female ; their rags and patch er, also, exceeding all description, and the tatterdemallion hat (well. ventilated by holes,) unkempt hair, and shoeless feet, to gether with the occasional old blue cloak covering the head of the women—all unique. Here, also, you feel that Protest antism is not exactly at home, or racy of the soil." Priests of different orders ;•Jes uits, Christian Brothers, &0., meet and pass you. You see, also, old women seated on the steps of the great Romish Cathedral in Marlborough, - With little baskets con taining pictures of the. saints, prayer-books, , and also long strings of beads, sufficient in number to: carry the devotee through the whole roll of the; Saints -of the: Romish Calendar. And going up the steps you see printed appeals to the " faithful" on be half .of the" Society of this Holy Child hood of Jesus," instituted for the conver sion of children in China—one means of ensuring their salvation being the provi ding and sending out of priests who will, by the waters of baptism—surreptitionsly ap plied if necessary—send those of them who are dying, direct to Paradise. inside, while as a heretic you have forgotted to dip your finger in the aspersoriunt, filled with holy water," and. to sign your fore head with the, sign of the cross, you see a number of men and women, very seedy and shabby in dress, and kneeling and " saying their prayers," while the great building is " gloomy " and not'' grand," and roof and pillars are dirty. Even the altar decora tions are shabby. In fact filth and tawdri ness.belong to Popery in every land where it reigns," - and to the " cleanliness" which is " next to godliness," it has a particular aversion. Stern is the resistance, and bitter is the feeling of hate toward Protestantism in Dublin; and throughout Ireland generally. The late Archbishop Murray was meek, gentle, and conciliatory; the present Arch bishop Cullen is the incarnation of -Ultra montanism and bigotry. He never rested, after his aceession i , till-he had broken up all the intercourse of kindly feeling be tween parties previously existing. Ile as saulted the National Board of Education, as to their publications on the Evidences of Christianity, and also Scriptural selec tions, the former of which was written by Doctor Whately himself, the latter by the late Rev. Dr. Carlisle, (Presbyterian,) and both had been endorsed by Dr. Murray. Cullen declared war against any attempt to argue from miracles, &-c., for the Inspira tion of the Bible. It was contrary to " the Church," and its mode of endorsing the Canonical Scriptures, i. e., they are so, be cause the Church settled the. Canon long ago, and they are inspired because the Church declares that they are The Jesuits have now full scope in Ire land, and England also—although by the Act passed for the Emancipation of the Roman Catholics in 1829, they were abso lutely forbidden to enter the kingdom. The Oratoriums, the Fathers' of• Christian Doctrine, and, other orders)lhave been brought by Dr. Cullen and theipther ops,into every Alioqese; by iew schools, by ".Retreats," and by great open-air-gather ings, with vehement appeals' to the people, and by seperate Confessionals of their ow'n, they have in seme , places- almost overrun and overborne the ordinary parish priests. Nevertheless the latter being " married to the Church," and from the fervor of an esprit de corps, that makes them willing to be anything or nothing, if so the Church holds her ground, and repels the heretidal aggrcssion—are ever ready, and willing to make the sacrifices demanded of them. The men among the Roman Catholics Of Ireland are much more Rornanish and big oted than the male population of any other country in Europe. They thus differ wide ly from those of France, Italy, and Ger . many, who in a large measure are nothing better than infidels. The women in Ire land are generally " voteons," that is, devo tees, and very zealous for their Church. A political fast and its recollections, helps this feeling largely among the female peas antry, and the priesthood find amongst them, confiding followers. ' Contrasts of an encouraging kind are not wanting in Ireland. There is a revived Protestantism of an Evangelical type, more extended than at any former period. The Church of England in Ireland furnishes an abler and more effective staff of clergy for popular usefulness, than those who go forth from the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. The Irish clergy have, as a rule, fluency, readiness, imaginativeness, and special adaptation for preaching and teaching. They do not read as a rule; and when they do, they do not give an Essay, dry and dull, instead of a lively ser mon. A truly converted and earnest Irish man—say a native of Dublin, or of the Midland and Southern counties, with an accent by no means vulgar r and by far pref erable, in my estimate, to that of the Scot tish preacher—standing up in his pulpit, with a small pocket Bible in laiS hand, and with natural ease and the eloquence of true earnestness addressing the people, is the man for doing God's work: Hence it is also, that this class of clergy, introduced, as they have been; largely into . Eng,land, always, fill the churches. They know also how to speak from the platform; how to make the children of the Sunday and day schools to loVe them; how to make visits to the cottages of the poor and to the bedsides of the dying—not like their High Church, Oxford, brethren, administering the Sacra ment as a passport to heaven, and (as I lately heard one of them call it,) "the sin pardoning ordinance," but directing their faith to the unseen yet living Saviour, the victor over death and the grave. The Irish Church Missions, connected with the Established Church are still doing a good work in the West of Ireland. They are less demonstrative and probably are more circumscribed in Dublin itself, than at the period of my former visit to this country. Nevertheless, as Paddy likes a " shindy," and " wigs on the green," even in a theo logical sense, controversy still wages antag onistic war in Ireland, and Popery gives from its altars occasionally, blow bar blow, and anathema for anathema. Presbyterianism in the capital of Ire land, as well as in the South and West, has wonderfully increased in numbers and effi ciency, within the last twenty years. In the first place, the ministers are more nu merous, and are in general very able and effective preachers, as well as indefatigable workers and visitors. P.esides this, true piety has greatly increased among the office-bediers and members of churches, and missionary zeal abounds as to the outlying and io.norant Protestant population, many of whom had been neglected, and in the midst of Popish Sabbath-breaking and un godliness, were fast passing away, into Popery and recklessness. Scottish immi grant farmers also, settling in Ireland, in crease the force and power of Presbyterian ism, and give opportunities for the setting up of lighthouses, so to speak, which shed their rays wide and far over the dark and stormy waters of superstition, and warn away from the rocks and quicksands of vice as well as error. • Hitherto, Presbyterianism was also con fined to Ulster; now it is, becoming More national. In the capital and its neighbor hood there are flourishing congregations, and new churches have either been built or are now being erected. Among the lat ter is a beautiful structure now rising in one of the best sites in Dublin, near to the Rotunda. The site alone cost. X.6,p00. The building is being erected and comple ted by, Mr. Findlater, a Presbyterian Scotchinan- of great wealth, who for many years has been settled in Dublin. Within its - walls the Rev. Dr. Kirkpatrick, and his devoted and able colleague,.the Rev. John Hall, are jointly to minister, At Kingston and Rathemines, are able young ministers, and at Usher's Quay, the Rev. J. I. BlaCk, who is an alumnus of Trinity College and a native of Dublin, has, as a young preach er, attracted a large congregation by his eloquence. The funeral of Archbishop Wbately, last week, was very large, and attended by many notabilities of the Church, the Law, the Medical profession, as also by the Lord Lieutenant, the Earl of Carlisle. It so happened that a number of Northern Pres byterian ministers were in' the metropolis, on special business, with the. Moderator at their head. They resolved, out of respect for the memory of the Archbishop,' to ask for an assigned place in the funeral cortege. It was at once accorded to them. And so, in gown and bands, five, and twenty of them were intermingled with the Episcopal clergy, and occupied stalls in the Cathedral - as the'funeral service was being read,, and when the cofftwof Whately was lowered ME PRESBYTERIAN BANNER Publication Office : GAZETTE BUILDINGS, SI Flrnt " Purssimeni, fulLeDuntre, SountoPstrz Colt. Or nu AND Owora (PI ADVERTISEMENTS. .1 1 ,NA•MS IN ADVANCE. A Square, (8 lines or leas t ) one insertion, 60 cents; each subsequent insertion, 40 cents; each line beyond eight, 5 els A Square per quarter, $4.00; each lino additional, ra canto A Rnoticrion made to advertisers by the year. 13 IS 4 1 NESS NOTICES of TEN lines or less, $l.OO each ad .lithma' line, 19 centa. REV. DAVID ISPKINNEV, PROPRIETOR ARA Punusgzx into thp vaults of St. Patrick's Cathedral. Some of the High Church clergy were vexed at the presence of the Presbyterians, and one was heard saying, "This is intol erable." Nevertheless they went on in a kindly spirit, and there is no reason to be lieve that it was not generally recipro cated. The successor of Dr. IVhately—who is be to be ? That has been a question of eager debate, and a subject of guesses and conjectures ever since his death. There can scarcely be said to be a Puseyite party among the Irish clergy, although there is a little band of exclusives, such as. Dean Woodward and others, who prate about " Apostolical succession," rave against Presbyterians asefi schismatics." But while up to a comparatively recent period, there was a great majority of the Irish clergy Evangelidals,' and probably the greater number are so still, there is a growing party, though still small, of the Arnold, Whately,, and semi-Negative school. Dr. Whately, while he had written ably against "Rothish- errors," as being " founded in human nature," yet disliked and discour aged' controversy viva, voce with Roman ists. He had also low views of the Sab bath, and it is more than probable that he did not trace it to a Creation and Resurrec tion (double) authority and origin, but to the authority of the Church appointing it as a Festival, and by no means recognizing it as a "whole day to be spent" as the -West minster Divines, and, I doubt not, the Puri tan Episcopal clergy of the eighteenth, aid the Reformers of the sixteenth centuries, regarded it. NEOLocticAL TENDENCIES in Ireland are certainly less extended and less marked than they are in England. But a diode, has been given to the whole Evangeli cal Protestantism of the country, by the ap parently authentic intelligence that Canon Stanley, Regius Professor at Oxford, chap lain to the Prince of Wales, accompanying the latter last year to the Holy Land and the East, had been offered the post of Arch bishop of Dublin. I have ere now repeatedly referred to his unsound semi-rationalist views. Not long since, 1 gave a sketch of a sermon which I hear him deliver in the Chapel Royal, Whitehall,on what is called in ecclesiastical language, "Trinity Sun day," in which he made the belief in the Trinity the only test of a true Church; spoke indirectly, yet plainly enough, to oue initiated in the controversy, about many things as to the mere question of members, (evidently referring to Colenso's works) and virtually recognizing the Church of Rome and the corrupt Eastern churches as true churches of Christ—purgatory, Mari oltary, and transubstantiation being quite unnoticed, thus rendering them synagogues of Satan ; as they really are. This is the man who wants subscription to the Articles and Prayer Book to be ut terly abolished; not to quiet the consciences of the Evangelical, and open the door to Dissenters, but because he wishes to make it possible for semi-skeptics, and men like himself, who do not believe in a steal atone plent or the judicial character of God, or in quilt and the eternity of punishment, to enter in without impediment, and reach, it may be, the highest position in the Church. Amiable, learned, earnest, accomplished and sincere, Dr. Stanley is; but to make him an Archbishop would be a grand mistake, and already raises a cry of deprecation, anger, and astonishment , in Ireland. One of the Church papers which came out first in an elaborate eulogy, was so inundated on the day of its publieation, by remonstrances, that ne.xt morning it cried peccavi, and joined in the protest. I am sorry to say that the Bishop of London is to be blamed for the " uncertain sound" he has given for some time past, and for his virtual endorSement of Canon Stanley, by employing him as one of his examining chaplains. It was in conse quence of articles from Stanley and Kings ley, (both Arnoldites in their views) in the pages of Good Words, and the errors sub tiley introduced in them, and exposed by -the Record newspaper, that Dr. Norman l‘lcLeed, of Glasgow, as editor of Good Words, was much blamed for admitting any thing from their pens. They write fur him . no longer. ' " THE EVANGELICAL - WITNESS AND PRESBYTERIAN REVIEW," is the title of a new periodical published in Dublin, and edited by the Rev. John Hall. His own papers, in the number for October, which lies before me, are most valuable, and sug gestive. He has many able volunteer as sistants, including pious medical men and others ; and I trust that this excellent maga zine will have a wide circulation. A YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIA TION, in connexion with the Presbyterian churches is in a flourishing condition, and there is a News Room and Class Room in Sackville street, affording facilities of Chris tian intercourse. There is a goodly num ber of praying people in Dublin, and the late meeting of the Evangelical Alliance served to intensify that Protestant unity which had previously existed to a consider able extent. THE REV. HAMILTON MAGEE conflicts a Roman Catholic Mission, with great tact and earnestness, and not without decided results. Be also looks after "lapsed Pres byterians" in Dublin, and gathers them once more into the fold. THE . RAGGED SCHOOLS for adult males and females, are still carried on with vigor, by Miss Whaetley, daughter of the late Archbishop. My decided impression is, that the Irish Establishment, with all its faults of constitution and administration, including the misapplication of its revenues in*many instances, is much more useful in proportion, to its strength and the numbers .to whom it has access, than is the English Establishment in England proper. Taking the Presbyterians into our calculation, there is a standing garrison in the old Celtic land of 1,100,000 Protestants. Out of these spring forth ever. and anon fresh champions' into the arena, to fight the bat tles of the faith r and to extend the conquests of the Redeemer. " FEEIVIANS we hear of as being a band leagued together in the United States, sworn when opportunity offers,-to invade - reland, andto drive the Saxon from the soil, and avenge ould Ireland's wrongs. Well, if they come, they will find a scant welcome, a warm reception', a "short shrift," and a speedy expulsion,. captivity'or death. Irish men though the " Feernans " maybe, there .are .not ; five priests in Ireland who mould countenance them. ) the 11,000 constabulary, trained. to.. .arms, ,would be more than suf. fiBent'to scatter' thorn - lite 'eliaff: Mitchell has - no sympathy hero. J. W.