1 REV. DAVID M'KINNEY, Editor and Proprietor. BEV• T. N. 1 1 .1' KINNEY, ASSOCIATZ EDITOR. IrEf2llll,S IN ADVANCE. " Be strong, beloved, fear thou not, Stand fast in thine appointed lot, , And thou shalt victor be l When in temptation's evil day, Our feet aro wandering from the way, O lead ne to the Rook I Speak, Lord, and bid our hearts be strong, Say when the hosts of Satan throng, " Fear not, my little Book I" " Fear not," it is the Master's word, . His mighty arm with strength shall gird, The weakest of his flock; Believer! rest in this sedate, The Lord's foundation stsndeth sure, Though earth's foundations rook Tor the Presbyterian Banner. "God is Surely 'with us." Thus exclaims the zealous delegate of the Ihristian Commission, as he goes forth ply to his work, marking the result of his tr B . For he often gathers 'immediate `, to cheer his heart and urge him on d. All soldiers love sympathy. This know they will readily find in those ;gates, fresh from social life. An indi tal dressed in the garb of a citizen, be 's at once an object of marked atten in the army. To behold such, awakens ,cr thoughts of home in the heart of a rugged son of Mars. Thus, whether preach in camps, forts, hospitals, prism or barracks, we have an audience with .ts responsive to the most powerful emotions—sympathy. The very sight our costume and the sound of our voice ill the joys of bygone years, when, with int, wife, child or friend, they repaired ,he house of God, taking sweet counsel cher. They are in sympathy, too, with work. They know we come to do good to their bodies and their souls. We with clothing And medicine for the and truth and salvation for the other; ,g all gratuitously, without money and lout price. These and other oircum ;es give him who preaches the Gospel ie army a most potent hold upon the and conscience of his audience. This fallow-ground broken up and made for the heavenly seed. Nay, often do iee the fountains of the great deep in up also, as is manifest in the tears sighs and humble looks visible in the 3 of these veterans as they stand massed .round us, listening to the tender love isus for sinful men, .ch an assembly at night presents quite Jdd and rather a grotesque appearance ;he eye unfamiliar with such scenes. It Autumnal or Winter eve—calm,but and cool. Recently, the spot where are met was a dense forest. A thousand .men have—clipped it • clear or mire* , 'b, bush and tree l High stumps stand all over the vast area as the only memo of a vaniphed wilderness I Hundreds Igo fires shoot flames to heaven, ilium he almost limitless expanse of canvas . with a dim, lurid light. Drums beating, bugles tooting, bands are play and soldiers talking and singing ! The le camp, for miles around, thunders seeming confusion. But come on— mind ; nine out of ten of the soldiers io accustomed to all this, that they seem ler to see nor to hear it. • Take your l by this big log fire. Now lift up voice like a trumpet. Say, 4 g Come, ,rs, let me tell you of Jesus. Can't ig, 'Rook of ages cleft for me'?" commence ; others join in; soon oth -ke and lend their voices; then more, pro, and more, Got a fine audience 'iree, four, five hundred. How they . all around 1 What a sea of faces, all with the glare of the central flame of the men are tall, others short ; are fat, others spare; some are offi others privates; some saints, all sin- What a John Rogers-family-appear they do make, standing thus densely ; this burning pile I But, no; these tot the fires of Smithfield; nor are we ;yrs to be burned, but ministers— ,hers. Go on, then, with the sermon. it a regiment is "present before God, Kir all things that are commanded thee id" to speak. It is the blessed Goo of Jesus Christ these bronzed defenders our liberties wish to hear; not philoso nor politics, nor theories of human mnment; nor fancy flights of visions ; nor anecdotes ; nor essays of fustian; doctrinal abstractions; nor denomina . peculiarities. No; nothing of this or character. But preach unto them the remission of sins; Jesus ) and Resurrection; Jesus, the wisdom of and the power of God to every one believeth. Preach just such a sermon Rev. W. J. Hambleton, of Greenfield, s., did, a few evenings since, and it it fail to do good. Let not the novel the Beene excite or confuse you. Re dr, there are many wise and highly ired minds in your audience. Be ami d; be eloquent; be original and inter ig "SS possible; speak up, and out, so san hear; and by all means strive to in nin interest as you proceed. If you not, some who come to hear you at first ugh curiosity, will go away grumbling, is dry—dry I" This will prevent srs from coming, and decrease the at mice " the next round." It is much difficult to "hold an audience" in than in the church. Some, there who would be effective in the latter; al make miserable failures in the for= . It is of no manner of use to commis ministers slow of speech, or feeble in e, as preaching delegates to the camp. is of the front. I have seen such fail .1 in the crowded tent. How can they heard amid the incessant roar all around etimaters swearing, mules braying, axe . chopping, drums rattling, rolls calling, .h a commingling of other noises that are - melee* hettude unlnttwn VOL. XII. NO. 19. Do not misunderstand this remark. It is not hinted that such men should not be commissioned at all. No; preaching is only one feature of the delegate's work. Good social talkers are much needed. Be sides, the distribution of books, tracts, papers, Testaments, medicines, clothing, &0., .requires a strong arm rather than a ready tongue; and most men who have the first, can very often speak sword in season to the thankful donee, that may be as an apple of gold in a picture of silver. Thus laymen often make most valuable delegates—high ly useful to and respected by the soldiers. The good such do, I know to be great. And in this connexion, justice demands that honorable mention be made by me of the valued services rendered the Commis sion by such excellent, energetic, cheerful, Christian gentlemen as Mr. James Mc- Laughlin, of Florence, Pa.; Mr. James M. Howe, of Lowell, Mass.; Mr. Daniel Keely, of Chester Co., Pa.; and Mr. J. H. Smiley, of N. Y. These and other good laymen did more, in my humble opinion, for carrying out the grand object for which they were commissioned, .than some ,of us ministers. Valued indeed were their suggestions, and unwearied and efficient their exertions. Many, many things, far better than cups of cold water, did they give to the needy sol dier during their six weeks' labor. How opportune such strong arms as theirs, when tents are to be struck or pitched, or the wounded to be borne on stretchers to am bulances, oars, or hospitals. The writer himself was snatched up by the giant grip of one of- these good men, when -ready to fall down with fatigue, and pitched into a huge mule wagon, where he had the luxury of a fifteen miles' ride, over many rods of " corduroy," perched on the end of a whis key barrel I His benefactor was on another by his side, cheerful as ".Patience on a monument "—encouraging him not to com plain, hut bear all like a man ! And, now, it he ever reads this he will- remember these things—that dust, that hard tack, and those " plants," barrels and mules ; and it is hoped, also, his fellow-sufferer, The Close Communion question, I have read with interest and profit the able articles by " Cyprian," in review of Dr. Pressly on close communion. lam not seeking a share in the controversy; for " Cyprian" will be able to take care of him .l self. It may not, however, be amiss to furnish your readers an example of the , simple means by which the truth sometimes reaches the minds of good and great men, 4 and effects an entire revolution in their • views and praotices. The celebrated Dr. John M. Mason, at one time, was a close communionist. On one occasion, at the close of a service pre paratory to the 'celebration of the Lord's Supper, he had been distributing tokens of admission to the Lord's table. After the congregation had retired, he perceived a young woman at the lower end of an aisle, reclining on a pew in a pensive attitude. As he approached her, she said, "Sir, I am afraid I have done wroth;." " Why, what have you done ?" " I went up with the communicants, and received a token, but am not a member of your church; and I could not be at, rest till I spoke to you about it." "To what Church to you be. : long ?" "To the Dutch Church ; and if you wish it, I can satisfy: you of my char ! actor• and- -standing .there." " But what made you come for a token _without men- I tioning the matter before 7" ".1 had not an opportunity, as I did not know in time that communion was to be next Lord's day. I am very sorry if I have done wrong; but I expect to leave the pity on Tuesday, and to be absent I cannot tell how long, in a i part of the country where I shall have no opportunity of communing, and I wished once more, before I went away, to join with Christians in showing forth my Saviour's ; death." Dr. Mason consulted a moment with the church officers who were still Ipresent, and it was thought most expedient not to grant the request. He communica ted this answer as-gently as possible to the ; modest petitioner. She said not another word.; but with one band giving back the token, and with the other putting up her kerchief to her eyes, she turned away, struggling with her anguish, and the tears streaming down her cheeks. How did his heart smite him! = He went home exclaim ing to himself, "Can this-be right? Is it possible that such is the law of the Re deemer's house ?" It quickened his in quires; his inquiries strengthened' hie doubts, and terminated in the conviction that, it was altogether wrong. For the Presbyterian Banner. A Grievous Sin, " As I sat this evening reflecting on my perfect health, and the enjoyment of every blessing, my base ingratitude for not• loving and praising God, struck me very much. Thousands starving, thousands sick and for saken, thousands groaning under the devil's bondage, and I here unthankful !" Thus spake one. who was more than ordinarily faithful in.his Master's cause, and yet, his ingratitude was great. Ours is much great er. We do' not reflect upon it as we ought. Many have perfect health all their , days I flow seldom do they really thank God for the blessing ! They may say they are thankful for health, but how seldom do they feel truly thankful l Is not the want of gratitude for health a great sin ? Ask the suffering-invalid, who seldom has a moment of relief from pain, or one who has just re covered from severe illness. Let us remem ber that health is a gift from God. We may think our health is the result of a strong constitution. Who gave us that constitution ? Perhaps we inherted it from our parents. Who caused us to be the off spring of healthy parents? Let us not for get that health, as well as every other good gift, cometh down from the Father of lights. Let us love and praise God for health and other temporal blessings. Let us compare our condition with that of others less favored—with those 'from whom God has in his sovereign mercy, seen fit, to, make us to differ. We are not to com pare ourselves with those who are less happy than we l in order that we--may be content -with our lot in consequence of our superiority—far from it: we are to com pare our lot with theirs that we may be thankful for our mercies, and may sympa thize with those -to whom similar mercies I have been denied. " Thousands starving, t thousands sick and forsaken, thousands grading wider the devil% Waage, and I citi '''' I • +.... ft . ''''''''..altitt,tr Hitts:ti./.4ti - ..ertii.,,. ...• - ..-::44- • ..:. : t - :- - - ' ' • . ' Z D Tor the Presbyterian Banner W. G. M. PITTSBURGH, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1864, here unthankful 1" Among all our sins of omisaion, there is probably no greater sin that that of ingratitude. MEMORY. EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE, Retrospects of 1868—The Death-Roll—Peers, Bar onets and Commoners—Eminent Persons Deceased —Death and Burial of Thackeray—His Writings and Style—The Political Sky—Forebodings— Taxation—Watch-Night Services—Care for Lon don Poor—Protestant Deaconesses—Their Au thority and Work—Fresh Discussions as to .Bur ial Service—Supplemental Notices of Lincoln shire—Phrases—Proverbs and Omens. January 2d, 1864. RETROSPECTS of 1863, occupying many columns and marked by great literary abil ity, have been specially the character of the last days of the dying year. To England it has been one of internal quiet and re markable prosperity. The revenue returns indicate greater amounts than evon did the year 1861, which had exceeded any former period. A good harvest has powerfully stimulated trade, and , while money has been at a high rate of interest within the last month, speoie has again flowed back to the Bank of England, and the -former facilities for trade are fast returning. When money is very cheap, "bubble" companies start up, and sanguine speculations which are sure to come to grief, are indulged in. In such cases a rise in the rate of discount checks these schemes, and frequently ex tinguishes them. Thus real good is done, because much evil is prevented. The death•roll of the pant year comprises a long and melancholy catalogue. The "upper.ten thousand" have been thinned to an unusual extent. Thirty peers have died, including the well-known Marquis of Landsorne (" a fine old English gentle man, all of the olden time"); Lord Lynd hurst, the Ex-Chancellor and orator, who died an humble. Christian, owing his con version to a Bible woman; the Archbishop of Dublin (Whately) ; Lord Seaton, one of tbe Waterloo remnants; Lord Clyde, the General, son of a Glasgow carpenter; the Duke of Hamilton, who married the Prin cess of Baden, a Papist, and spent most of his time in Paris, and died suddenly from the effects of a fall; the Marquis of Nor manby, a Liberal in his youth, but in his closing days the confidante and advocate of the dethroned. Italian princes; the Earl of Charlernont, eighty-nine years old, son of the famous leader of the Irish Volunteers in 1782 ; and the Earl of Elgin, the la mented Governor-General of India. Among the thirty-five deceased baronets, two names are memorable : Sir Culling Eardley, so long the Chairman of the Brit igh organization of the Evangelical Al liance; and Sir James Outrun, the unsel fish and noble soldier, the "Bayard of India." Of members of the. House of Commons, the late Sir Cornwall Lewis, Minister at War; the Right Hon. E. El lice, a man of great talent and sagacity; and William Cabett, for two years Lord Mayor of London, and full of goodness, rising from an bumble station—deserve special record. Besides the Archbishop of Dublin, the Bishops of Gibraltar and Quebec have died during the year. Among artists, Augus tus Egg, of the .Royal Academy, as also Professor Cockerell and J. D. Harding, to gether with Mr. Gilbert, the founder of the Joint Stock Banking system'a large portion of _his, fortune left to his niece, the wife of the well-known Evangelist; the Rev. Denham Smith, of Dublin. Other names present themselves : Dr. MeCaul, a London Rector and a Hebrew scholar; Dr. Raffles, of Liverpool ; Dr. A. Reed, the founder of many Orphan and Idiot Asy lums; the Rev. F. W. Faber, son of the well-known clergyman who wrote on prophetic subjects—the son, one of the ad vanced Tractarians, going over to Rome, and dying at the head of the ‘i Brompton Oratory," London. THE DEATH OF THAOKERAY, probably, with the exception of Dickens, the ablest literateur of the age, has added to the dark catalogue of the ravages of death. He was a wit and a satirist. He was the ene my of "snobs " and "shams." He spared no rank, and in his " Four Georges," he revealed the sins and weaknesses of sover eigns with a terrible fidelity, and sneered in his own -fashion ' and with a healthy vigor struck at the alleged " Divinity that doth hedge a King." Under the exterior of sternness and satire, he had, .however, a sensitive and tender heart. He .was great ly beloved by an inner circle that knew him best. He was taken away suddenly. He was a few years ago at death's door, but was restored. He was liable to occasional at tacks of nausea and sickness. One of these came upon him last week. His ser vant wished to sit up with him. He de clined this; was heard moving about his room during the night, but in the morning he was discovered with placid countenance lying dead in his bed. Apoplexy—" effu sion on the brain "—seemed to have been the cause. He was only fifty-two years old. He is greatly mourned. His funeral, three days ago at Kensal Green, was attended by many hundreds, and his grave was sur rounded by-the most eminent literary men of the day, including Dickens, Russell, Mahew, as well as by the foremost artists, such as Millais, Frith, Teniel, and Leech. Thackeray did homage to Christianity in a way that was not done by the popular authors of the last century, and his works are free from that taint—caught from a corrupt age—of impiety, which as a leprosy had infected literature from the days of the Second Charles. His English was-so ad mirable that to him it has been observed, the language of Dr. Johnson in reference to Addison and the Spectator is emphatically applicable, that whoevermould gain a mas tery of the English tongue, "let him, give his days and nights" to Thackeray. The tributes paid by the press to Thackeray l / 4 memory are themselves noble specimens of eloquent and earnest writing. THE STATE OF THE CONTINENT gives rise to dark forebodings for 1864. The following, from , the correspondent of the Daily Telegraph at Paris, is sufficiently suggestive : "That the address . of Kossuth is really issued by the ex-Governor of Hungary is, I think, not to be doubted, as it first ap peared in a paper established or at least carried on by the Hungarian emigrants in Milan, with whom Kossuth is in constant communication. It is asserted, too, by Hungarian residents in Paris, who know the feeling of the country, that, in spite of his exile, Kossuth still preserves that won derful ascendancy over his countrymen which produced the revolution of 1848 ; andtui we may well credit the reports that 'retiCh ifs to` effifot fliet the algrm Vi- enna is very great, and is increased by warlike attitude of the "natural allies" ' of Hungary on the banks of the Mincio. The French papers to-day speak of great agita tion in Styria, and the whole of the South ern possessions of Austria. I can only add a fact, not known I think to any one out of those provinces, and that is that large quantities of ex-Claribaldians are, and have been for the last few weeks wandering, ev idently with a purpose, through Bosnia, Servia, Transylvania, and WallaChia, in which last State the alarm was so great that a proprietor who employs spine 1,800 per sons in working a speculation , at the foot of the Carpathians, was summoned before the authorities of Bucharest, and accused of plotting against the State becatise he had put his laborars into a kind of uniform. Judging from the present state of Europe, from Schleswig to Silistria, the corning Spring should bring one great carnival of nationality. "'The Constitutionel, in the meantinie, improves the occasion. ggali, there is but one salvation now—that is, is Congress—and Louis Napoleon is its proph et. Let the nations assemble and be thank ful. 4 We may say that, since the speech of the 6th of November, not a day, not an hour, has passed without- proving, with ever-increasing clearness, the urgent neces sity of a :European Congress.'" The Daily Hews says that Napoleon's present policy is to keep up the hopes of two great parties in France, viz.: the party of peace and economy, and the party for adjourning all such peaceful terms. It adds: "Every one feels that if Napoleon 111., at his years, allows the present questions which agitate Europe, especially the Polish one, to sink into the previous settlement, he can never afterwards with any consist ency - take up the war-policy for which he has let pass the critical hour and the golden opportunity. With him it is now, or never. And if it be so with hitn it must be so with France, whose military power and passion he may be said to represent, to concentrate and to command, in a manner which no future ruler can hope to do. The Emperor is in his grand climacteric, political as well as physical. If he passes - it in peace, Eu rope may breathe, and the Bourse mount up, like a barometer in the month , of July. But it remains to be seen whether the men who seized France by the throat twelve years ago can relax their hold, and let her take a long, full breath of peace. Force, unrestrained by liberty or law, has its re sponsibilities as inexorable as fate. And all history teaches that violent beginnings are apt to have violent ends." The French Emperor's .New. Years , reply to the address of the diplomatic) corps is pacific in its character, but who shall pre dict the issues even of this year ? TAXATION being now a great fact in the United States, it may interest your readers to read the following enumeration of luxu rious objects taxed, and of the pecuniary results : • " T.„, AXES UPON ENJOYMENTS.L—IIi the financial year ending with March, 1863, tax was paid upon 843,285 of the dogs of Great. Britain; the'arnount paid was 205,7851: More than this number of dogs travelled by railway in the course of the year— that is, counting as one every journey of a dog. Tax was paid in the year upon 571,189 horses, the amount Teaching 381,6411.; of this sum 179,2951. was for 170,757 horses used for riding and for drawing taxable carriages, 71,4211: for 136,041 horses used by farmers, clergymen and surgeons; 100,5971. for 191,613 horses used in trade:; and 33,3281.• for horses of all these classes not exceeding 13 hands. Duty amounting to 6,4221. was paid also upon 1,668 racehorses. The tax upon car riages (other than hackney and stage car riages) produced 350,0831.; it was paid upon 269,443 carriages. The sum of 209,- 8961. was ,paid as tax for keeping servant:4; the taxable servants were 245,380 in num ber; 939 persons paid tax tor using hair powder, the duty amounting to 1,103/. ; and 48,995 persons paid 60,0861. for using armorial bearings. All these taxes are confined to Great Britain, and unknown . in Ireland. The produce of all is , increasing, except in the instance of hair powder. The produce of the duty on gold and silver plate is declining; last year it brought only 67,354/. The tax paid on cards and dice fell to 9,2691., but may recover under the new mode of taxation. Gime certifi cates and licenses produced but 128,4451." WATCH-NIGHT SERVICES have been held both in London and in the country. For merly these services were chiefly confined to the Wesleyan body; latterly they have extended even so far as to embrace some Episcopalians. A popular clergyman, Mr. Bellett—who however is considered more of an elocutionist or an actor than distin. guished by that eloqiience which has its mo tive power in a heart filled with earnestness —had a Watch-night service on. Thursday night last. THE Pooß of London are receiving spe cial attention now, and a new. order of Protestant female laborers is making itself useful. I refer to the. Deaconesses' Institu tion, whose Second A.nniversary was recent ly held. The Bishop of London, who pre sided, said he was glad to find that the work of women was henceforth to be carried on in an organized, form; it was so in the Primitive Church, and our Lord himself was "ministered .to" by women. It hid been objected that the idea of a Deaconess es' Institution originated from Germany and Lutheranism, but this circumstance was in its favor, for was not Germany the cradle of the Reformation, and was not Luther the Apostle of the Reformed faith ? Suppose the idea had been taken from Rome, it was not therefore to be rejected if it were good; for the Sisters of Charity had done a great work, and taught a lesson by which the Church of England had received benefit. The work was not entirely new in the Dio cese, for the direction of the nursing de partment of two. London Hospitals had been for some time past under the care of Sister hoods. He was therefore glad to hear that in addition to these two institutions, the nursing at the Great Northern Hospital was under the charge of this Institution, and hoped that the day was past, •when our hospital nurses were a by-word in conse quence of their inefficiency. There are now thirty Deaconesses and six candidatee, all working earnestly in three parishes, visiting the poor, nursing the • sick, and taking charge of the Girls' and Infants' School. Tan BURIAL SERVICE , question is still 1- flitdid. A vibdr at "'nifty riffraff ib read the service over the body of a drunken man who was killed in a fight. The Arch bishop virtually condemns the clergyman. He remarks: "The language of the burial service is that of hope, and not of assur ance, and the refusal to use that service im plies to common minds that there is no hope for the person so marked out. A clergyman is not justified even in the case of a man who dies in a state of intoxica tion in passing a judgment so terrible, nor upon any view of church. discipline ought its functions commence after death ; and if ,a pastor has not admonished, rebuked, and exhorted the parishioner during his life for .his soul's health on the subject of his be setting sin, he would seem to be precluded froin using the terms of excommunication against him after his death, when they can no longer serve as a warning." Surely such languaae as this is little better than casuistry, and is alike calculated to outrage the conscientious convictions of godly cler gyinen, as well as to rebuke him whom God approves as faithful to truth, duty, and morality. What an awful effect has such an indiscriminate use of the service on the wicked survivors of wicked men I Some how they think it is "all right" with him. It weighs with them very much as do prayers for the dead amonc , Romanists. In . the same number of the Times ap pears' a letter from the Dean of Drom ore, suggesting alterations and defining them; accompanied with great force of ar gument; and an appeal to that elass ot per sons . (one class of three) who hold that the Service has no definite or specific reference to the salvation of the departed. Instead or thanking God for having "taken unto himself the soul of this our dear brother," Dean Bagot would have it " Forasmuch as it hath pleased God to take out ot this sin ful world the soul of our brother here de parted ;" and, again, instead of thanking God for his deliverance from the burden of the flesh, it would be, " We give thee hear ty thanks for all thy servants departed this life in thy faith and fear." The revival of discipline is called for by an Ultra-Church Party, is e., the use of "ex communication" on pain of non-repentance of gross sins. But in a State Church this is ridiculous and impracticable. Dr. Cot ton, Bishop of Calcutta, suggests that the presebt Burial Service should be read only over communicants, and that a different form should be used for others. SUPPLEMENTAL GLEANINGS in my re cent tour in Lincolnshire, and of a Philo logical character, are as follows : The following are peculiar words among the Peasantry, and their interpretation : Randy—For rendezvous. Rannish—Giddy, wild. R,auming—Shouting, speaking loud in the ear of another. Richling—The smallest in a brood or lit er of animals. Sad—Applied to bread, heavy and not properly leavened. Sap-sk.ull—A weak, foolish person. Scrat—To live hardily . ; "we just floret on." Sorouge, (to) : —To crowd, to squeeze. Sheriged--An appearance in the sky de actjiig. rain. Shout (a) —A boat, scout Gonna, sehuyt. Slack-tracely—Slovenly, loose, idle. Slape-faced A smooth-faced, oily tongued man. Sneak—The latch of a door, (the same as in Scotland.) Sowle—To seize by the. ears. Tew (to)----To fatigue, "Do n't tew your self." Tod-28 pounds of wool by statute of 12 Charles c.. 82 (1686). ` Here I may add, that the Lincolnshire sheep produce the longest wool of any in the world, and that selling now at two shil lings per pound, the profit is very great. On an average, three sheep produce " "of wool. Sometimes one fleece will weigh 14 pounds. Proverbs and proverbial sayings, phrases, comparisons,. superstitions, omens, customs, &c., all receive illustration in the " His tory of Boston." Some are peculiar to the district of the fens, as for example : " A Penman's dary "—three score geese and a pelt (a sheep.skin formerly used as an outward garment). " It thickens in tie clear"—alluding to the sky or atmosphere. Others run, thus "It's worth a Jew's eye." "It caps old Oliver, and he capped Long Crown—it beats Oliver Cromwell, and he beat the Cavaliers, called Long—Crown be cause of the shape of their hats." Spoken of magpies: " One for sorrow, two for mirth, three for a wedding, and our for a death." There is an unusual freedom from super stition in the neighborhood of Boston. Puritanism' largely helped to sweep it away. Romanism has disappeared almost entirely. There are some traces of it as to omens. Thus it is a bad omen to put on the left ehoe : first; the wicks of candles denote sometimes the coming of strangers, and there are also seen imaginary ' winding sheets " in the candles. A sudden shivering is said to denote that some one is walking over your future grave. It is lueky to see the first lamb of the season with his head toward you. It is, unlucky to hurt a robin-redbreast or a wren. - And so an old rhyme makes them sacred birds. Then there are omens respecting the weather : "Evening red, and morning grey, Are sure signs of a fme day." A mackerel sky foretells rain. If a oat wash over her ear, it is a sign of fine weather. There are superstitions, such as that the belief that Satan goes a mitting on ,Holy- Rood day; that the failure of the crop of ash-kidneys portends a death in the Royal family; that a ; person cannot die in a bed which contains pigeon feathers ; the belief in the existence of a person called the Wandering Jew; and that one person has power over another with an evil eye to " overlook" or blight and afflict with ea lamities. There has been a tradition at Barton or Humber, that the devil appeared to persons there in the shape of a ragged colt, called " tatter boal"—probably de rived from the Danish mythology. These are specimens of the folk-lore of which traces also are to be found in &tot land and the North of Ireland. J.W. Hold Up' Jens. A painter once, on finishing a magnifi cent picture, called his artist-friends around him to regard it, and express their judg raelit Otioairning The one in w'h4ii WHOLE NO. 691 taste the author most confided, came last to view the work. " Tell me truly, brother," said the painter, " what do you think is the best point in my picture?' "0, brother, it is all beautiful, but that chancel! That is a perfect master-piece—a gem I" With a sorrowful heart the artist took his brush and dashed it over the toil of many a weary day, and turning to his friends, said, "0, brothers, if there is anything in my piece more beautiful than the Master's face, that I. have sought to put there, let it be gone I" Thus, brethren in Christ, dear teachers in the Sabbath School, if, in your instruc tions, anything seems to stand out more prominent and more beautiful than the glory of Jesus—forget it all, dash it out. If in your labors as a teacher anything seems to reflect more loveliness, or excite more admiration or desire, than Jesus, however beautiful the work may seem, blot it out. Let Jesus be all and in all. Hold him up to your own soul. Hold him up, to your scholars, and your work shall be judged perfect in its beauty, and you shall not fail of your reward.-- 7 /ecaph Wells. Far the Presbyterian Banner Letters to Bible-Men and Patriots. The Rise and Progress of Slavery—The Opinions of Eminent men before and after the Revolutionary War—The Ac tion of States—The Action of the Pres byteridn Church against Slavery. GENTLEMEN :—The rise and progress of the slavery of Africans is nOta a matter of interest to us all, whether we think it right or wrong. That it has been different in its origin, in its character, and in the au thority that instituted it, from any slavery sanctioned by the sacred Scriptures, I shall endeavor to show in the future. The Portuguese were the first Europeans that commenced the African slave trade. By ediztA from five of the Popes of Rome it was authorized : Ist by Martin V. in 1430; 2d, by Eugene IV., in 1438; 3d, by Nicholas V., in 1454; 4th, by Calixtus 111., in 1458; and sth, by Sextus IV., in 1484. " The spirit of cupidity and lust of power led the Vicars of Anti-Christ, each in their turn, to fulminate their edicts wherein, in the true spirit 'of their prede cessor Hildebrand, (Gregory V 11.,) they claimed dominion over the earth. They blasphemously asserted the right of lord ship over the persons of the newly-discov ered Africans, and granted to the sovereigns of Portugal permission to reduce them to slavery. Under the insidious pretence that they sought the welfare of those wretched and barbarous tribes, and desired the con version of their souls, they accorded plen ary permission to plunder and destroy them ad libitum." The following are extracts from some of those bulls or edicts: " To take any of the Guineans, or other negroes, by force or by barter ;" "to reduce their persona to perpetual slavery, or to destroy them from the earth ;" " to appropriate the kingdoms, goods and possessions of all in fidels or heathen in Africa, or wherever foUnd." These fragments of history are derived from "Bower's History of the Popes," "Hallam's Middle Ages," " Gib bon's Decline and Fall," " Bishop En gland's Letters," &c. According to the liberty given' - by the pretended lords of the earth, Antonio Gon zales, a Portuguese captain, landed on the coast of Africa and carried away negro boys, whom he sold in the South of Spain. Atter that, it-soon became customary for captains of vessels of the same nation to bring away cargoes of negroes, which they obtained chiefly by traffic. The Spaniards were the next people to become parties with the Portuguese in this infamous traffic. After the discovery of America, in 1492, the Spaniards introduced negroes from Africa into some of the'West India Islands. Other nations afterwards founding colonies in America, began to join in the same ne farious business. The first recognition of the slave trade by the English Government was in 1562, in the reign of Queen Eliza beth. --A Dutch ship brought the first ne groes into Virginia in 1620. Afterwards, English, French, as well as those of all other nations, engaged in the horrid busi ness and, carrying glittering, tempting ar ticles to the African coast, the tribes en gaged in bloody wars to capture each other, for the slave marts established on the coast. Of the cruelties of this traffic, and the horrors of the middle passage on the high 'seas, it is not now my intention to write. Before the rising of the Colonies for independence, good men in this and the mother country rose up against the traf f ic, uttering solemn protests, and pre senting the astounding facts in the face of the British Government. Richard Baxter, Bishop Warburton, John Wesley, Dr, Adam Smith, and many distinguished statesmen, opposed it as a great sin against humanity. The Quakers in America and in England petitioned for the arrest. of the slave trade. In 1772 the House of Bur gesses of. Virginia presented a petition to the King, beseeching him to permit the check of that "inhuman and impolitic com merce, the slave trade." As will appear from " Jefferson's Cor respondence, in the first draught that be made of the " Declaration of Indepen dence," he uses the following language in refrence to the King of England " He has waged civil war against human nature itself, violating its most sacred rights of life and liberty, in the persona of a distant people, who never offended him; capti vating and carrying them into slavery in another hemisphere, or to incur a miserable death in their transportation thither. This piratical warfare, the opprobium of infidel powers, is the warfare of the Christian King f Great Britain; determined to keep open a market where MEN should be bought and sold, he prostituted his nega tive for suppressing every legislative at tempt to prohibit or restrain this execrable commerce." ' Though these words, and more of the same tendency, were stricken out of the adopted Deolaration, it is mani fest that there must have been others be sides Mr. Jefferson who held the same views, or he would not have incorporated them in the first draught. The number of slaves at the Declaration of Independence has been computed to be half a million, chiefly in the Southern States; and-that you may know the state of public sentiment, and the action of the • different States during the confederation of the United States and afterwards, I briefly recite facts. Delaware, by her State Con stitution, declared against any more slaves being brought in "from any part of the world." The Massachusetts Bill of Rights, which included, the phrase "all men are born free aria egad,' " was held by the ,Supreme Mart of that tats,_ id mote THE PRESBYTERIAN BANNER Publication Office : GdZETTB BUILDINGS, 84 Ftera Sr., Prneensa, PA PHILADELPHIA, SOUTH-WEST Coe. or 7rm AND OREATROT. ADVERTISEMENTS: TERMS IN AD TAN CZ A Square, (8 lines or less,) ono insertion, $1.00; each sub. 'regnant Insertion, 60 cents; each line beyond eight, 6 onto. A Square per quarter, $5.00; each Hue additional, 40 co. A RsooolloN made to advertisers by theyear. BUSINESS NOTICES of Tarr lino or less, RIM; each odditional line, 10 cents. REV. DAVID PPRINNEY. PROPRIETOR AND PUBLISHER. queues, to prohibit slavery." A similar clause led to a similar decision in New- Hampshire. The Pennsylvania Assembly in 1780 " forbade the further introduction of slaves, and gave freedom to all persons thereafter born in that State." In 1784 laws similar to those of Pennsylvania were enacted in Connecticut and Rhode Island. The Virginia Assembly in 1778 prohibited the further introduction of slaves, and re pealed for ten years the statute prohibiting emancipation, " during which period pri vate emanoipations were numerous." Mary land followed the footsteps of Virginia in both these particulars. New-York and New-Jersey prohibited the further intro duction of slaves into these States; but did not declare general emancipation until many years afterwards. North Carolina in 1786 declared " the introduction of slaves into the State to be of evil conse quence and highly impolitic." South Carolina and Georgia did not follow these examples. On the 73th of July, 1787, an ordinance was unanimously adopted, part of which was, " There shall be neither slavery nor involuntary servitude in the said territory, otherwise than in the punishment of crimes, whertof the parties shall be duly convicted." This was by the last Conti nental Congress, in regard to the territory North-west of the Ohio, and all the States concurred. During this period, Patrick Henry, the great Virginia orator, said in regard to slavery, " I will not, I cannot justify it I believe a time will come when an oppor tunity will be offered to abolish this lamentable evil." George Washington avowed to all his correspondents, " that it was among his first wishes to see some plan adopted by which slavery maybe abolished." ❑ 1785 he complained in a letter to Lafay tte, that some petitions for the abolition of lavery, presented to the Virginia Legisla .ure, could scarcely obtain a hearing." fhomas Jefferson denounced the system as ,‘ a perpetual exercise of the most unre nitting despotism on the one part,. and legrading submission on the other." In the Convention at Philadelelia in 1787, that formed the Constitution of the United States, Mr. Mason, of Virginia, , aid, "Every master of slaves is born a Jetty tyrant. They bring the judgment of ipaven on a country." 4 In 1796, Mr. St. George Tucker, Law Professor in William and Mary College, Virginia, published a treatise entitled " Proposal for the General Abolition of Slavery," dedicated "to the General As sembly of the people of Virginia." In 1797, Mr. Pinckney, in the Legislature of Maryland, maintained, "by the eternal irinciples of justice, no man in the State kas a right to hold. his slave a single hour." • n 1803, Mr. John Randolph, from a com eittee ou the subject, reported, that "the irohibition of slavery by the ordinance of 1.787 was wisely calculated to promote the "sappiness and prosperity of the North weatern States, and to give strength and enmity to that extensive frontier." All he preceding gentlemen were. from the southern States, and to their opinions •gitinst slavery might be added those of ,ther distinguished Southern intbn, such as Wythe, Pendleton, Chief Justice Marshall, I.,owndes, Poinsett and Clay. President ,donroe and Mr. Crawford, and Calhoun, were fpr the Missouri Compromise. It is now proclaimed by the chiefs of the 'lonfederate States, that the idea; preva ,ent when the Constitution of the United .states was adopted are fundamentally vrong, and that their government "RESTS : IPON EXACTLY THE OPPOSITE IDEAS." `elle injustice and abomination of their peculiar institution " has made them de ;enerate sons of noble forefathers. But during the period when statesmen in he South were speaking against slavery, :southern men in the Church were not si 'eat. I shall give extracts from the Pres ',)yterian branch of it. The General As vembly of 1795 assured "all the churches under their care, that they view with the deepest concern, any vestiges of slavery which may exist in our country. At the meeting of the Assembly in 1815, com posed in part of Southern men, as the pre vious one was, we find the following state ment in their action : " The General Assembly have repeatedly declared their cordial approbation of those principles of civil liberty which appear to be recognized by the Federal and State governments of these United States. They have expressed their regret that the slavery of the Afri cans, and of their descendants, still con tinues in so many places, and even among those within the pale of the Church." At the meeting of the General Assembly in 1818, a still longer deelaration was unani mously adopted, including the Southern delegates. The first sentence reads thus : We consider, the voluntary enslaving of one portion of the human race by another, as a' gross violation of the most precious and sacred rights of human nature • as ut terly inconsistent with the law of God, which requires us to love our neighbor as ourselves, and as totally irreconcilable with the spirit and principles of the Gospel of Christ, which enjoin that all things what soever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them'" The Synod of Kentucky, as late as 1835, published an address to their " brethren," full of argument against the sin of slavery, drawn from the Bible and the nature of the system, and making a powerful appeal for emancipation. From this I may quote, if permitted to address you on duty, as taught in the Scriptures. It will be my purpose,.in my next, to give a short historical view of the particu tar causes of our national troubles, as pro duced by the North and South. I am, as before, your COUNTRYMAN. Eternity has no gray hairs. The flowers fade, the heart withers, man grows old and dies; the world lies down in the sepulchre of ages; but time writes no wrinkles on eternity. Eternity ! Stupendous thought! The ever-present, unborn, undecaying and undying—the endless chain composing the life of God—the golden thread, entwining the destinies of the universe. Earth has its beauties, but time shrouds them for the grave; its honors are but the sunshine of an hour • its palaces, they are but the gild ed sepulchre; its pleasures, they are but as bursting bubbles. Not so in the untried bonnie. In the dwelling of the Almighty oan come no footsteps of decay. Its way will know no darkening—eternal splendor forbids the approach of night. Trouble is often the lever in God's haa4 to 'tilde IA up tai briar3ll.