1 .T GIIEENSBOIIOUGII, N. C, FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 30, 1838. NEW SERIES, VOL. II NO 9. it ti 4" 'I' Fom f Ac Portland Ttqnser ft. TO AN LSTEMl'KUATE HUSBAND. Oh, do not loucu tne tempting glusd, oU lUU:;t 1.0L vTlilk it up 'i Uu.t iict!JuU.ifc eup. iMK Jliry, on your uuleU cheek, our eiiiiken, giatay eye They wuru you wiUi a riojcelctss voice, Thin, you uiufct turn ui tlie. Why v ill you irut the c ucl smiles OtVucli u treuch roue loc WhM lie is iitumg ut your heart A deep uud deadly blow. You know the tears I've sbed for you, And uiubt I weep m vaiu J Will you not love your little ones, Vour wilij ttud Ihuic again 1 You need not tear niy censure now ; I will pot name the pntt But always meet you with a grille, . And love you to the hist. Should otiicro greet you with a frown, Ur coiu iy pass you by . There etiil w one lone, faithful heart On which you may rely. Our little bubes bhall share our joy, ijurt bieesed we ehalllbe;. Oil, ltcur , let nie hear you bay, 1 f!ai und w ;11 be free. LOSS OF LIFE 11Y WAR. Only a bhwII Jrt ol lho victims in war perish Ly the cannon- and the aword. In Fi .ucl , ilu- mortality !uiong soldiers, geu irdlv hi vouth or middle life, was iound to be" even in -pc-cc marly twice as great a :iuioiig galley -laves ! In a titne of war ibev live an an -uvcrage aloUl iiiti:C 'car; ' UUJ even in peace their life is pfotaWy s 1 1 o iT c 7 c d fi 1 U: e noT' t w e ii Ty " ytnrra i ton r c.xpoMircs, hardshis and diseases olten sweep them away like dew before, the sun, in some eaics one half, in the others three fouiths, in another still nearly nine liu.v it destro.a ev n peaceful inhabi tants! In the war of 175(5, there were in one instance no 1- ss than twenty contigu ous villages left without man or beast. An ey -witness of the French butcheries 1,1 I'oriuil savs, "the ditches along the lllie oi I.I ti4..d. u i:.:.. w.ri ii. :r mulch were Olteu inciam .utt.d and copulated blood as the ri. ail bodies of peasant, ... t:K- d.'-, w. r' lying there. ..;. ,i : li'ul- n iked infants, of wit, touud.. b-utunearul I ui ilu r.std, transfixed with to i' " inn rr r i 1 1 b.i. in wou-i.t-i; and m one instance 1 SI, ,,. I, ,ul.it:t sti.II sticking in its nec : Look r.t 'the havoc oi single battles al A'l -i' rl:'., -JO.OtM); at Dresden, 30,OUU ; at Val.-rloo 40,vimi ; at Lylau, 00,000; at Uurodmu, 0,000 still wurse ut ancient timc-M, :it I'ss-is, 110,000; at Arbela,300, M in Ol.o bittlu of t'a-'s ir Ulio.OOO ; and in another iOvl.OOO of the enemy alnc ; tn the siege of J. rusalein more than a million; and in th.t of ancient Troy not 1. ss iha.i two millions In the .Russian CMmi..igi""tliere perished in SIX month more than liajfa million, and during twr Ive s of the rernt wars hi Lurop'e no Ie?s years than .r),s()t),0t)O fNNThe army of Aerxes, pryh diiv c d Hi le more lllilii 'il.in'ii.inru, v.r. . ilia:, two miis, to a b'vv ihou- Mind; 'nhizUmi butclnrin tlie nisirici of II. i .id l,0')0,iHiO, and iKwo cities with their d- pemb ncies, 1,70,000 ; and th. i lunese biVtorians' 'assure us tibl do nmr ihe Lis! iweiitv ueveii year of hi. ii, he massacred' an average of half a j iiiillioii everv vear, anu.i.u teen years.no l'.-.s than eighteen millions; .?t,r)0(MKMi in. forty one years by a single luntl I ! tin ciati w;ir yiicrilired l.r),0tM,- 000-Ml-io-e -of the welve Ciesirs 30,000 0(10 ; t1-.os of the Crus:ules, -lOfHIOPOO, thw of th- S.uaeetis and lb" Tiijcks, 60, thUtfKW' C rtcti ; - ttKe' of iitt Tjsttn'rs 0-, 000,000. Dr. Dick i. ckons tho sum total of its v'.cii.ii-, s!ee slainat no less than fourteen thuusand Miltiurt, eighteen iimos as many a all tliepopulation now on the globe; and Uiirkconjectures the number to have bvcMfiirtyJite thousiritl millions Tlieinrlderital losses of war are from thnixfp live times as great' as its direct ex peny; s ; md y t its slups, and fort i fie ttions ; und arms, ami their engines ofdeath and devastaiiwii; ebsi an . incredible amount of IllOliey. " ......... Tlie exp -nseH of a. single . war ship in nc.iiiiil i rvu'e arc- niore "thaii one thousand, dollars dnj, and'rherc are in CMisten dom betvee:i ivvo My ihreC thousand siich t-'iijis. England lavished' upon Ixrd Wel lington, for only six years' Services, near lv S5. 01)0,000. In twenty years from 171)7, f-he expended an average of $1,14,11 cf rv dav mart than a million of dollars ( '! "nr. fn nlnnt arid in one. hundred .n4,- f. - . ,1M fm.jr 1( s than finr jhillions to more than four tltnuul millions of dollars. She spent in our revolutionary war about ftoiR,ww,- " , (inn ; t'i,iv' aiul the wars 'of Christcudom, during twei.iv.two years from 1793, cost ban fr their support, besides many times morr irifirntr-i.r.if fnsCT nr-irlv tfr7'io-..: f- mind millii.iiH of dollars'.' six .. I II . J S.', . OrCJ'ull ilillCS " - es rrrrrch rs ut -th,Y ( cim in the world ft tt Ost Jfliiiik how much good might be ; cry. ,'!;nr n p.rre. Vvtuld'not taKe'10.- UU0,00U, a year; the expenses of a com mon education for all the ehilldren on the globe, would not exceed -JoO,0(')6,000 a v ear, nor those for the higher branches, 150,000,000, ministers of tlie Gosp 1, with an average salar. of $500 dollars eacli couid be furnished one to every thousand souls loi 400,000,080, in all, $SS10,000, 000; while ihe bare interest at six percent, on the war expenses of Christendom for only twenty-two years, would bring an an nual income ol $900,000,000; ninety mill ions more than would be requisite to sup port the institutions of learning and the Cnristian religion for the whole world ! Did you ever inquire how much we had spent for war i In eighteen years from 1810, a period of peace, we paid for war purposes nearly $-100,000,000, and less than one-sixth of that sum for the peace ful operations of Government. In forty one years from 1701, our entire expenses amounted to more than $842,000,000, of which only a little more than $37,000,000, one twenty-third part of the whole were for civil officers. The war system cost us, in one way and another,-not less than $00, 000,000 a year even in peace ; an average ofuiore than 137,000 every day! All the expanses and losses of war to our n,i tiou siuets the beginning of our RevoJuiien ary struggle must be more than firo thou sand millions of dollars! the v;ry intt real upon which, amounting at six per ceni. to $120,000,000 a year, would more th. in defray all our necessary expenses of edu cation, religion, and Ciovcrnuient, without the trar system ! Who pay all ibis ? Wh endure all th other evils of war T Who crm, if they w ul, put an end to this fell d. stroyqr ? t'h, Hoyif. And will -they not do it .' L ' them all resolve to Auce il c.eae, and i . cease . AVy. iMiA ire Wsarer. , IMVORTANCE OF UMUN.Vfr. Unison 1 submit to you, uy fe flow -citizens theso ccWsid(sriuioTiS, iii "Tull eoididence thai the gootl tenst', winch has so olteu imrke'i yoQ'if:oa7iiri'UriSdw thcui, their da weight and effect j and that you will never sillier difficulties, however formidable in apjM.ar.inee, or however fashionable ihe t r ior on which they m;iy be founded, lo drive von into the gUioiny and perilous scenes, into which the advocate for disun ion euid conduct you. H' arkeii not to the uniiatiiral voice, w Incli lulls you I. n ihe jieopb.- of America, knit together, a they aie, by so mariy cords oi all' ctun, can no lougcr live together as members oi tb samw .-family ; can no- longer continue the mutual guardians of their mutual haji piti. -s ; Can no longer be fellow-citizens of o n1 great,. resi-et..ble mid llonn-ihing eni- pi re 11 arkeii not to the vok ', which petulantly tells you, that th. form of gov eronaent recommended for vour -adoption is a novelty in the political world; that ii has never yet had a place in the theories of the wildest projectors ; that it rashly at tempts whit it is impossible to accomplish. No, my countrymen j shut your ears against this unhallowed language. Shut your hearts !mst the poison which it conveys; the kindred Mood, which (tow in the veins oi Ameripan citizens, the mingled hlooil. which tlirv have sh d in defence of tln ir sacred rigiils, consecrate their unionajad excite hornn at tin; id a of their beroinrliiu aliens, riv.ils, enemies. And if noVeln. are to be shunned, htdieve ne , fie inn alarming of all novelties, the nost wild ol al L. projex ts, ..the most rah of al I rtte-mjit , is mat of rending us in pieces, in order to preserve our liberties ana promote our hayrpim s. Bttt w;hy is the experiment anexfchrfcJf riffli'hlle.:ro"brmcrt,--iiTrtTr.-' because it my comp' ise- what is-in w ! Is it nr)t, thn glory of the people of Ami n ea, that, .whilst they have -paid a t.ceni regard to th(! opinions of former times and other nations, they have npt sufl' -r- d . bri!Kt'veiieratio:i for antKpiity, fotcustojw. 0r1wT'-TOrnt;ti''tHMHMfitT''the ig"MTOfs of their own good sense, the knowledge of their own situation, and the Tpssoiis of their own ( xperience ? To this intMi.lv spirii, posterity will he indebted for the posses sion, and the 'world for the example, ol the numerous innbvationa displayed on the Americaii theatre, in favour of private rights and public happiness. Had no im portant step been taken by ihe I- aders o! the revolution, for "which a pr cdent conl.1 not be discover d ; hid no goyirntnen !qeii est ibiisln (I, of which an exact mud. I did not present itself, the peopb of th': United Slates might, at I his moment, have been numbered among the melancholy vic tims of misguided counci Is ; must at best have been laboring under th weight of some of those forms, which Have crushed ihe liberties of the rest of mankind. Hap pily for Amend, happily, we trust, for trie whole Human race, thry pursued a new and more noble course. Thev accomplished a w t ltlUhj4l Ori rj ll'nl m--lhiA-4fa- 1', 1 f I . . k 'I'k-t w m. , 1V lialS Ol numan socieiy. hik y learcu lau- rics of government, which have no molcl on the face -of the globe. They formed the design of a great eonfederac-y which U is incumbent on their B iccessors to improve and jjerpetuatc. If thair. works hctray im- PCiJcctions, wc wonder aLthe tewiicss ol , If nr ..nS ihftol in fh.TF,r n Uieiti. it mn " "" " im ic of flic untonr this was the work most dillk cult tobc cxrcutctl ; this is the work which cQLLventipn,.aufLii is tlut ac-OX-wljuchsiiL.. nfe now to' tic-liberate and dvcidc. EXTRACTS FROM DR. BEECUEIi'S DISCOURSE TO THE MECHANICS OF CINCINNATI. I refuMtiber the time when there was no such thing as infidelity ojMJiily advocated in the land. It was imported from France during the revolutumaiy struggle. After I hat the first public assault that was made upon the Bible Wai by Thomas Paine, in his " Age of Reason." When it caihe, it went like an electric shock through the land, and for a time shook the confidence of manyespecially of young men. An era of diacussiou followed ami of revivals of religion, and after while the tide of infidelity began to ebb, so that after a time, it scarcely apoared, and was no longer ostentatiously displayed in high places. Men no longer coveted the uaiue of In fidel, as indicative of courage, knowledge, and talent. Since then, the epidemic has revived, and haa ertciidcd to a class of m m not usually affected by it, a clasp among the most useful, and usually not the least virtuous of the cprainunity the laboring class. iiy circulation of tracts, irid by contin ued declamation, the Apostles of Infidel ity have turned their footsteps to this large class of the human family, well knowing iIm! if thty could mcceed m perverting the young' mechanics of ihe land, a host would be arrayed against Chrlliranity. There is some dillic.ulty in meeting infir L iny on this ground, for its effort is to im press the minds of its votaries with a preju lic against religion and its ministers, as . mbiiig lo ihtm bad motives, stigmatising !,) ir character, and holding thnn up as conspirators against the intellect, the lib-i-rtv ani the happiness of mankind. It is inic that the nin isteiii of the Lord Jesus 1 "bust, during the revolutionary struggle, were the apostles "of. liberty and preach-' of; aW evc ;s true thit the great multitude of the pi ous were on their knees night and day, 0 raving' for they ffeeddin, tn(lcpcn(lcnce,,atid Inpruness ot our beloved land. But the jens ration that know tBtalfdi goric'-oCi i..:, -and that which has succeeded is not J i . i e r i . : . , f I'oorized ol tne inmietico oi cnnstianin ,n t i aelneveineiit of our viotoriee and th. blishiueii! of our institutions. 'J'fi popular uns ttlemehl of the opin-.i.-i o! v oting men, do s tint of course nn so malignant prejndtco agtinsi chnsti ui.lv, hut .objections are obtruded upo.i ih.-in ami cavils are insitiuitcd of thvmosl fallacious kind which they know not how to answer. Sneers are hurled at religion, w'lneb, likr armwsr inflict poison with the stroke, and create too often a deadly wound w hich they know not how lo heal, It has therefore long been my desire, to M id access if possible to the earn and the ,i. arts of this interesting and important cl iss of my fellow citizens, who have not hcc; ss to the er Khmer s of revelation, nor the time nor the means for an extensive investigation. I have submitted to your consideration in my firm lecture, the evidence of (iotFs being, and of his character, in my siHjond, . x plained the nature and object of Histe ereera.id their consistency with free agen c y a n d account a bi 1 1 ty . V o now come to the subject of a revc 1 ition'lrom (od to man. ( If (iod made a moral government, frei ui.t accoutitable, we shall naturally eijiect i o fi id -somewhere the precepts and sane; nuns of that government as the means -ot scenrmg 10 man hrs indinual a.id ociat well-being. And if we cannot discover it iii the constitution of things by the lighi of nature, wmust iook lor itlrom above. Xuw U is c vjch?ntxto ttre sitghtest impecf tjou, (hat man was not irade to be guided and govt rued by his instincts; appetites mid pasmns t a -animals are. For while these guide animals safely to the end of Hieir being, the instincts, and appetites ol nan, if Jeft lo themselves, would soon be tvm'Tmn; ;Matr "was rnadw "for Vtfrsvtuy high nUove hat of the lower animals, for w hich neither instinct nor reason alofic can qualify him, and which is securfjd only by the supervision of the revealed govcfiiinenl of God, without winch, every where, the result has been ignorance and debasement, rdespotism AUd anarchy. ; Bu where shall such guidance and cl? v atingVfliicrtces be fou.id ? Noit't of hu Mian origin hatf ever h en found onJcrarili siidicirnt for' h.e perfection ofJotfr nature, and', fur that rvationjwd; happiness of vv fiTch ''Evidently iliiaSis capably To cul tivate a few has always in every nation been easy ' ' N 'Egypt advanced in civilizaiion with b;cr massy yf.Tmids reared to the sky. But While her kings and nobles Were rolling tu splendor, her degraded millions toiled their life out for the little rice which was nec essary to sustain oppressed nature. Millions wasted thr.d.iys, unpaid and uwpitirrfin her liafrjeeoj': in- 4ay mg -of those vast piles of folly, and monuments of oppression. The nobles-f specimens of ancient arcbitcct.ure, whose stupendous ru ins excite our wonder, are but the memo rials of an iron handed " despotism, which crushed the nations that built them. A terrific gravitation to the earth, of mind and body, has marked the history W man- when abandoned to hiiman- prc&er- vation alone. And no tight of nature, no meit n.is tiqcii apje topia nun risct : m ji' is the matter T Has the past history of the world been such aa might be anticipated from the un prvertd wisdom and goodness of God f No. It haa been a, history of ignorance, and dcttjiotism, and pollution, and debasc uieut. Tho whole croation has groaned, and travailed togcjlber in pain until now. Six thousand years have rolled away, and have inscribed on every page of their mel ancholy history the insufficiency of the light of nature, and tho necessity of a rev elation, to secure the present and future well-being of man. A book has come down to us which chums to be from God, sent to us in com passion, for the illumination and salvation of our race. This book contains the pre dictions of a coming day, when the sad history of our world shall be reversed, and the long dreary night terminate in a day of " Glory to God in the highest, on earth peace and good will to man !" The truth of this claim, as contained in tho Bible, christians believe,-and skeptics doubt. A principal cause of doubt, is the al ledged sufficiency of the light of nature to secure the well-being of man for time and eternity. And, doubtless, if the light of nature be sufficient, and a revelation is su perfluous, then none has been given. For though God is almighty, he is not wont to. abound in vast superfluous effects. By the light of nature are understood that knowledge of God, and of the menus of our present and future happiness, which may be learned from his works ; and the necessity of a revelation includes not only siM'h information as could be obtained only from (od, but a more definite knowledge J concerning things dimly seen, attended with more powerful sanctions, and includ ing the im,jis of their preservation and universal extension, and jirac'tical efficacy in the actual reformation and elevation -of mif Tatr ; "Wdln "t ficiency of the light of nature7 arid the ne cessity of a revelation are manifest. I. Tlie light of nature has never been sufficient to' maintain the evidence of God's P-T(Vg'' ilei.ce of the most general and debasing " i i idolairv. The heavenly bodies, and men, and dev ils, and enimsls, n;id reptiles gods of wood and stone, have been worshipped ; and thy eonstitin tits of this worship have been lust and blood. The temple a brotbef i slaughter-house, and a sink of pollution. The"! are the dirk shades which every w here environ Christianity, an4 th 'gloomy scenes which lie in amhuh to rush upon m wh' her g-nardian roleclidn re-abartf doucd. I cannot go into,fhc horrid statistics of Idolatry.- I have- not time, and were 1 to do so, it wotibf only be to pile pollution iioii pollution, and blood upon blood. But hat ha the light of nature done to re ferae this condition of the Pagan World ? Nothing! And yet it is h tiled as the rising of a new sun upon the christian world. To dispel its darkness wash away its potUi tionj aiid em iticipate i's e nslaved deiotees of superstition, andelevate the priest-ridden mullitud s to intelligence and virtue. But on what page of history are such triumphs of nature's light recorded? In Pag.ii. iiatio'i-, is there no priesthood there1. no priest-ridden people. Tho priests of the pngti w orship areMiinltitudinotu. But it is not part of their object to enlighten, but rather lo darken the humm mind, that i hey may reap the harvest of duplicity. Get rid of prtest-crft ! It is Christianity with her ministry, and institutions, which kt eps oif those birds of night which fill the p igaii w orld- with far and trembling; and restrains those floods of pollution,, which otherwise would . . . i in mi imi" rivn 1 1 1 i i i 1 1 r i n m iirirtvi i ric l r itir. i . 1 1 i - . Al r--. ..... v I u bid wave. 2. In the absence of the Christian RnvC laiiou, no just and cheering conceptions of the providential government of God havo prevailed. Events have been ascribed fo chance, or to fate an iinmiitable certainty in the na ture of thiiigs, or to oHisious of two ron Hicling divinities or to myriads of local tiods, inhabrttng as their empire, earth, air and sett, polluting the world by their cor mpi 'x unple, idd agitating it with., their i "Uila:it quarrels. 3. tin the absence of the Bible, a dark uncertainty has prevailed resecting the immortality .of the soul in the future state. Thu Greeks and the Romans had their Kly-J si an fields, where the spirits of their ty rtoad assembler! to talk over the ol tune ; and their lartarus, a purushinont fpr the vulgar wicked'. But tho whole system Was rejected by the intelligent as the fictionof poe.ts, and the device of priests and IcgielatortT-ttes-pised by the inventors, and countenanced .ouly-furg4in aaijLpopular- restraint. WheUi- cr the soul wero immortal or not, men of the most powerful minds and extensive ro scarcliand jintieut thought, could not tell, but believed and hoped -and forced with that uncertainty which attends always opin ions of whose truth there exist no means of becoming sure. ; 4; 1 ue light ot naturedios ncvCT devcl- oped and maintained an accurate auilv uni- Und in close alliance .wtthi christian insti versal system of raorals. Ftu-tions. 4 .,: S pcrience h tootslow;, ; and 'tht' obliquities of out a pure and comprehensive chart of uni versal duty. On the contrary, though a common ne cessity hst compelled the world in self defence to stigmatise some actions as wrong, scarcely a vice carl be aimed, which has not in pagan lands been sanctioned as an act of religion, or enrolled among the vir tues Pride, falsehood, theft, murder, and the most debasing in. purities, and the most un natural crimes, have been sanctioned. The best men in Pagan history, were with few if any exceptions, men who in christian lands would be regatded as stained by practices of flagrant immorality. And yet they shone as lights amid the despair and darkness around them, add as examples of purity amid the mass of deeper pollution by which they were environed. Beyond the pale of the christian revel ation, the life and tho comfort of man is in light estimation aud are sported with as tho means of luxurious gratification. The gladiatorial shows the treatment of women, the abandonment of infants by their parents, and parents ky their children the treatment of slaves and the con tempt and oppression of the common peo ple by the rich and learned, are illustra tions of this position. 5. The light of nature has no sanction sufficient to form and sustain a pure and hnppy state of society. - The experience of the wholo world show that the constitutional advantages of virtue and evils of crime, are impotent for the formation of moral DrinciDlcs. and a pure and efficacious public sentiment agaiuatl presumptuous sins ; and human laws at li- I milted and feeble in their power torclonn the virtues on which tbq happi,H-ess of fam ilies and of cominunitiosVdicnds, cannot irer proxhrcftrd bycocrcionii;and" iarge-pev-tion of the violation of right, and 'invasion of public and domestic purity and-peace -de happiness cannojkbc restrained by human laws. These cannot reach the heart, nor :preTf!ft:; mvesfl-of --refulite-thihoiiigtiW nor pretent the conceptions of sinful de sire, mid a world prone to sin, and rush ing headlong with passion and apjHtite they can only prohibit and punish actions. And of these, only such as can bu proved in a court of justice, and not one pfcrbanly of a ihousand which war upon social sale ty and order. There is no omnipresent JKod of purity ever pursuing tho ways of transgressors, and no arm of justice from which there is no flightj and to which there is no resis tance ; and no sanctions of God's eternal government, to deter from presumptuous wickedness without which, the constitu tional penalties of crime, aud the sanctions of human lnws are but cobwebs'to the in undations of waters, or the sweeping des olatiou of fire and storm. Another defect of the light of nature is, that it has no institutions, and no authoriz ed teachers of piety and morals, for the repetition of known truths,. and the stated i nsi ruction of mankind. Suppose that we had from nature all tho Tight that revela tion could give us ; suppose that the light of nature should unrplt its broad banner athwart the sky, whereon in letters of fire -.hould be engraved every precept of the moral law : what would the result be ?- We should gaze a few tunes upon its' burn ing pige, till it became familiar, and then neglect and disregard it. We need a voice and institutions for our instruction, and repetition and enforcement line upon lino. Miracles' themselves 1 would grow stale and familiar. Even the J3ible, 8UAr tawacid. aaii is- by . miracles, Ifctt .tu itseif, would not be sufficient : its truths must be 1 1 an flu u uiu uiTpyvspVA.. repeated and impressed. According to the fw - fw. ir i imiUK imprtBWHriis want' im ii ii wi i. j . : : j .....k are effaced, unless often repeated. tKir condition requires on "order of men whose business it shall be to explain and enforce by afgntnrnt and -persuasion," oven what we know. We' need a day scFapart for a universal convocation, for trie express pur pose of receiving instruction and new im pression. This only wjjf keep up the mor al tone of society -inrikc the works of God, and the lightf nature, and the truths of revelation, arid God's eternal1 govern ment, a reality; But the light of nature provides noinstitutions for the religious and morafinstruction of mankind, h pro vides iro sabbath of rest for the body, and rnfrysliinent for the mind. It has no au fpTifity and up influence to convoke men for tho Worship of God and bid them lay aside the cares of this world for those of the soul. ' If we had, therefore, all the precepts decessaiy for our knowledge of duty, we need a revelation t provide for us a Sab bath, devoted to the sublime purpos.es of recalling lis from The toils arid passions of life, to the worship of God ; to provide in sttwrter whujihalLd talents, and energies, to the- exposrtion of the word of God, and to infuse such a spir it of general education through the great mass of society,, as shall throw open the doors of knowledge to all. It is only by such means that mankind are ever brought info tho best form of human society, and this is de'vclojwd only in 'Christian ( lands, j . i ' - - ii- .i , . -AfrfmtrratT( powers, might grasp a correct system ol rclrgion nnd morals ; their discoveries would not supersede the necessity of in struction, and they could not give ubiquity to their knowledge. Much ts said ol the attainments of the ancieni jbilo!opher8.- -iSujiposc they did attain all the wisdom und virtue that is usenbed to them ; there were but a few of the in in an age ; and what could three, or four, or twenty schoolmas ters, in a generation, do to educate the co jde of the Uuited States T Suppose all the mathematics of his day had been confined to Newtou ; what would have become of the science in the generation succeeding him, when he had gone off the stage ? It will not do- to talk of Socrates or Plato, two or three dim stars that two or thrco thousand years ago shone with a greater brightness than the world around them, on ly because that world lay in such total darkness. These philosophical teachers stood upon an eminence, and around them might cluster a few, while all the rest of mankind remained in the valley of tho shadow of death. But the Christian reli gion provides teachers for the great body of mankind, and it is the only rtUgion that docs. If we read history thJTact stands out on every page. Even nthe great and civilized Roman Empire the most jiolish cd and wealthy at one time on earth, no one thought of sucii a thing as education the despised and oppressed people, whom toey sneeriugry called the " iguobile vul gus." It was not sujiposod that artizans, mechanics, agriculturists and sailors composing now that immense body of use ful and respected citizens could be im- jtoved in their tnoralsatid elevated m their characters, by acquiring knowledge and by coinprenenamg general iruins. iiiey wero utterly left out of the question, and were looked upon almost as ot a different race, from the highborn and wealthy patrician. They were cousigned over to to the ignor ance alidade basement of ' atTiirstructuf,' ii ni carcd-for human nature and pliilosophtrs and satirists spoke of them and ridiciiKd them as goilc 1 It did not come within the campass of their thought to carry the influ-ticc''oi'leartmig'"-in vast multitude, the heaving sea of liuman iicings that rolled in brutal ignorance and slavery beneath them. But what has Christianity done f It has done what such a religion as Christianity alone could do" tor the great muss ol society. It has thrown liglu abroad from the lliiono to the cottage, il has taken the tour cor. nurs of society and litied, it uj together. It has laid low the inouitiains and raised high the values. It has exalted humanity tfbtii its lowest depths of slavery aiid igno ranee, and is filling the earth with know ledge and virtue. It has bid the djipress ed go tree, and it has taught the haughty monarch that he is but a man, and that his meanest subject is a man. It bus united all ihu lieatts of us true followers in one iyi iirim in niilj.piir.... I - .-., fc. . . .......... g iu. iuo v...vi'i., iui vaiins villain; i pu. lion and elevation. i am not unacquainted with the flipjwfnt assertion ot skeptical iniilds, that Utwjcan do by his omnipotence wiittt he pfyases, and reelaun and save as well wruiout as' with an atonement ; can makeimpossible possible, wrong rignt, folly vvrsc, and con iMiiictioii consisient. y. it men are m.tchincs, tioulitless they can be governed by omuijioiuiice aa muciiiues. itut il they are treeagents, und made for moral governmentand reward und punish ineiit accordlinj Lu Lheir d(;SUnie4 ; . ... might as wellassume the JossibiIity of de sert in the cjtffjs of heaven wheeled by Um uipoieiicem lliear circuits, us in minds jrov- erued itresiBlibly by ihusaiiu. Omiiijoiciico. good story is roiated of President unipnrcj, ol Amherst College. Ouo uioiiiing, betore recitations, some of tho students lastcued a live goose in tho Pres. iduut's chair. When tho President Puier ed the room, and discovered tho new oc. ciipaut of Ms scat, "luriied oil liis lietl coolly observing, " gehtleinen 1 perceive, you have a coinetenl instructor, and I will therefore leave you to your studies !" Mr, Ilitldle'M Letter. TO THE HON. JOHN QUI NT Y ADAMS, W.VSIll.VOTO.N. My Dear Sim: 1 projiosc tp say a few words on the question whether the banks should resume sjiecic payments ui May next. I do ibis because iny iiositwu seems to justify, if not require it. For nineteen years 1 have been connected with ihe in stitution which caused the last resumption, and during. all that period, my cljorts have been directed to secure 'to the country fho benefits of a sound currency, and to banish frotrf CiTculation '.'every thing but the jre- clous metals and notes always convertible into them. I think that no ether currency. return to t-at the first moment it can bo done permanently. Fortius purpose the institution to which I fcoioiig has inada great efforts. Since fhe susijenmon m May lust it has bought and added tp its vaults nearly $,OtH),Otio in gold and silver, aftd now, with acajntal of t'lirty-five millions, its notes in circulalion.arc six iniU'ion.-", wM-l-,U-!ti-I&6'. JLftSf. . Py.i.ng niore than half a million to the -'Government .-of the U, it has eight' or ten millions of fuiuLi. i Eu rope. . Our principles, thtreforc, iuclinti a"