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For Friends' Intelligencer.

There is much said at the present time, in reference to man's progression in spiritual things, and many are confidently inculcating the doctrine, that each succeeding age is capable of arriving at a higher state of perfection than the preceding one. While this appears to be true of temporal things; while there seems to be scarcely an end to the inventive powers of man, let us carefully consider how far it is true in relation to man's spiritual life; is it not the acme of the Christian's hopes and aspirations to become like unto the blessed Jesus? In what then did his perfection consist, but in being obedient at all times and under all circumstances to his Father's will?

Then to me it appears that the progress for for which we should look, is from the state of innocence in which we were created, to that Christ-like obedience to, and firm reliance on our Heavenly Father's will. There is also another progress, which consists in returning from our fallen, sinful situation, to the childlike innocence in which we were ushered into the world; and which only constitutes the preparatory step for the progression first alluded to.

We find man in the beginning was placed in a state of innocence, having come from the hand of his Creator pure and unsullied, and was therefore pronounced good. He was endowed with various faculties and propensities, which he was required to keep in their proper order, and under subjection; for the accomplishment of which he was endowed with reason; but while he was allowed to partake of the fruit of these trees which he was qualified to dress and keep in order, he was forbidden to partake of the tree of knowledge of good and evil, thus clearly indicating to him that he must be dependent immediately upon his Heavenly Father for this knowledge, and that therefore in the government of the dispositions which were given him he must look to divine wisdom for counsel. But by not continuing in this dependant state, he suffered the tempter, or the lust and appetites of the animal, to reason with him, and hence partook of the forbidden fruit, and was therefore cast out of the garden, or state of innocence, into a state of spiritual darkness, or sin.

Now these animal dispositions are given us to prove and try us; they constitute the trees of the garden which we are required to keep and dress, and in the keeping and dressing of which we are enabled to progress from a state of innocence to a state of virtue, which is known as we overcome all that lie in the way hindering our progress to perfection. But if we suffer these to overcome us, we are then, like our first parents, cast out of the garden, and experience the horrors of remorse, and we then find there is no other way of regaining access to the garden, but through suffering, and a deep heart-felt repent

ance and contrition of soul; and when we thus surrender our own wills, we become again prepared to progress in the highway of holiness, which to me is the only progression the Christian knows. Then as we are concerned to daily, yes hourly, walk in this progressive path, it will throw an influence around us, which, as those who become influenced are concerned to move in the same direction, will widen and widen and be conducive to the progress of truth in the earth. It must be wholly an individual work; man may form associations in order to further the cause of truth, but the efforts of such associations will be futile, unless each individual is concerned for himself to progress in the highway of holiness; and as this becomes his chief concern, he will be anxious only as his Master commands; he will not be contriving how or where his influence will most be felt, but will wait in humility until his Master goes before and points out the way; then he feels he can walk with safety, and will exert an influence for good on those with whom he comes in contact. JOHN J. CORNELL. Mendon, 5th mo., 1857.

For Friends' lntelligencer.

AFFABILITY.

What a sweet word, what a volume of meaning is comprised in it. Let us reflect upon it, and its bearings upon daily life everywhere, in every department; how much of the dregs of bitterness would be prevented by exercising it. The Apostle understood it when he said, "be kind, be courteous;" it is amiability refined by action, manifesting a due regard for the welfare of all God's children; it invites attention by giving it, it elicits kindness by extending it.

When the keen hand of adversity is laid upon a fellow being, it lightens the load of oppression by drawing nearer than before, and offering to share in the calamities flesh and blood are heir to, at least by reminding the suf ferer that disappointment is the common lot of mankind, falling alike upon the righteous and the wicked; that the choicest blessings which descend from our beneficent Father are oftțimes clothed in a mantle of disguise, that he doth not willingly afflict, or grieve the children of men; that in removing earthly comforts, the great object is to prepare for the reception of heavenly good. Sometimes, perhaps, the decay and suffering of our outward garments, or earthly tabernacle, may rouse the mind's energies, "to seek a building of God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens," remembering the promise, they that seek shall find. There is no situation in life where this heaven-like quality may not profitably be called into requisition, bringing with it high bencdictions, its benign influence assists in nerving with fortitude to bear up manfully under difficulties; a calm and gentle salutation falls upon the ear of the grief-stricken,

as dew upon the opening flower, reviving the wasting energies, restoring again their power by calling them into action.

It turns the keen edge of asperity into accents of soothing tenderness, and moulds the fierceness of the lion, into the gentleness of the lamb. It partakes of that power that "makes the rough smooth, the crooked straight, brings mountains low, and exalts vallies."

S. H.

FRIENDS' INTELLIGENCER.
PHILADELPHIA, SIXTH MONTH 20, 1857.

We publish some remarks in the present number from Harper's Magazine, descriptive of the present state of American Society, which we think are worthy of consideration. The artificial style of living, with some of the causes which tend to our deterioration as a people are here portrayed, and it requires constant watchfulness and the exercise of Christian firmness, lest we are betrayed by the customs which surround us into an abandonment of that simplicity which experience has proved to be most conducive to happiness. A cheerful home, under right influences, where every member of the household is willing to make some personal sacrifices for the good of others, is the best school for the right training of young people, and where parents. conscientiously desire to discharge their responsible duties in such a home, they may reasonably hope that their children will become useful members of civil and religious society, but not otherwise.

MARRIED, On the 11th inst., according to the order of Frien 18, GEORGE A. POPE, of Baltimore, to HANNAH L. daughter of Richard K. Betts of this city.

According to the order of Friends, on 5th day the 11th inst., at the house of Chalkley Lippincott, Clover-vale farm, Glo. county, N. J., ASA ENGLE, to BEULAH LIPPINCOTT, both of said county.

DIED, At his residence in Cattawissa, 5th mo. 20th, 1857, BENJAMIN SHARPLESS, aged 92 years 9 mo. 21 days. He for many years filled the station of elder and overseer, in Roaring Creek Monthly Meeting.

After a short illness, on the 2nd of 5th mo., 1857, ELIZABETH G., eldest daughter of Andrew A. and Eliza Skidmore, members of Oswego Mo. Meeting state of New York, in the 24th year of her age.-She was ever a kind, loving daughter and affectionate sister; her sweet, cheering presence will be deeply missed in the household band and in the social circles where she was wont to mingle. During her illness she gave consoling evidence that her soul was prepared for the change into that "better life" that cometh beyond the grave. May we so live, that when the blest messenger shall call, and the "silver chord" be loosed, we like her may be found also waiting, and pass peacefully

through death's valley, and at last anchor safely on
that "Haven of Rest" prepared for the ransomed and

redeemed to dwell in.
6th mo.,
Sth 1857.

M. T.

DIED,-Suddenly, on 5th day the 23rd of Fourth mo., last, SAMUEL FOULKE, in the 42nd year of his age.

He was a member and overseer of Friend's meeting
at Norristown, (a branch of Gwynedd Monthly Meet-
ing). In all the relations of life, civil, religious and
domestic, few can be found who were more careful to
fulfil every duty faithfully. His sudden demise has
occasioned a sensation of sorrow and deep mourning.

He was favored with a healthy, and vigorous con-
stitution, and was extensively engaged in business,
yet like Samuel of old, when he felt a call of religious
duty, he appeared to say within himself "speak Lord
for thy servant heareth."-On the day above mention-
ed, he attended his Preparative meeting at Plymouth,
and after meeting was over, remained in the house for
some time conversing with his aged father, to whom he
was strongly attached, and of whom he was about to
take, though unconsciously, his final leave. On his
way home he received an apoplectic shock, which
yielded not to the remedies applied, but terminated his
earthly existence in a few hours. He was interred in
Friends' burial ground at Plymouth on Second day fol-
lowing; the funeral was large, and solemn testimonies
were borne by ministering Friends in attendance. One
of these in the course of her communication observed
"The last act of his
that it was remarkable, that
life was worship, that he had gone where men meet
and women assemble together to worship the God of
their fathers, who in the counsel of his infinite wisdom
saw meet to accept his offering, and to take him to
himself in those blissful abodes where the wicked
cease from troubling, and where the weary are at
ments and trials of this probationary state.
left a bereaved widow, near relatives, and numerous

rest." Thus dear Samuel is set free from the beset

friends to mourn his loss.

He has

F.

When we follow to the grave in the bloom of youth,
those who in the last moments have given undoubted
evidence of their hope in a glorious immortality, thus
impressively inviting those around them, without dis-
tinction of sect or color to be prepared to meet them
where partings are unknown, it is an encouragement
and consolation to survivors, and helps to sustain them
under these deeply afflictive bereavements.

DIED, On the 1st of 3rd mo., 1857, J. CLARKE
WHARTON, aged 20 years, son of Lewis M. and Mary
W. Wharton, of Bristol, Bucks County, Pa.

On the 21st of 2nd mo., last, he spoke much to his
brother of the goodness of the Lord, exhorting him to
faithfulness to every known duty, to be watchful and
prayerful, lest he be overcome with temptation; to be
diligent in business and fervent in spirit serving the
Lord. At another time he remarked to some of his
friends how good the Saviour had been to him; there
were many names as to religion, but they that feared
God and worked righteousness would be accepted of
him, as there was but one Lord, one faith, one baptism.

On another occasion he said, "what a beautiful day,
so clear and bright! I think I must get up once more
How I wish the
to look upon the works of nature.
flowers were in bloom, they are so beautiful, so sweet,
yet how emblematical of decay, of all things passing
away, but it is not the season for them and I am content.
Who beholding the beauties of earth can doubt the ex-
istence of a God? There must be a supreme being
over all, to place us amidst such beauty to enjoy it.
All, all must acknowledge him. I have a Saviour to
guide me. If I have one desire to live, it is for my
mother, to throw around her declining years a few
comforts. I would were it the will of God to show my
gratitude to her in this way, but I know she will

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never want. My mother has always been so kind to me, particularly in this my last illness, waiting upon me untiringly, without a murmur. Without her love, her influence, life would indeed be a blank. No one can too highly prize a mother's love-always loving, always forgiving. Perhaps she too readily forgave my faults. But oh, a mother's love cannot be too deeply appreciated.

If it be his will to call me home, I am willing to

say not my will, but thine be done."

Thus closed the life of this young man, beautifully exemplifying the wonderful dealings and operations of Almighty wisdom in the soul of man, in so much, that some of his friends remarked, they had witnessed happy death beds, but never stich a perfectly blissful

one as his,

Bensalem, 6th mo. 6th, 1857.

For Friends' Intelligencer.

P.

LINES ON THE DEATH OF SAMUEL FOULKE.
Oh! why dost thou, Almighty God,
By death's unsparing hand,
Remove from out this lower world
Unto a brighter land,

The ones whose mission here below
Seems scarce to have begun,
While the aged and the desolate

Are left to pine alone?

We would not dare arraign thy laws,
So truly just and right,
Nor vainly seek to know the cause
Concealed from mortal sight;
But when, as in a case like this,

Thy solemn warnings come,
And man in all his joy and strength,
Is hurried to the tomb;

When all he dearest earthly ties
Have suddenly been riven,
A husband, brother, son and friend,
To death's embrace been given;
When those we love the truest, best,
Have been removed from us;
We can but pause amid such scenes,
And ask, why is it thus?
Perchance thou dost in mercy take
Those purer spirits home,

To lure us to the Father's house,

From which we're wont to roam;
And grant'st to us, thy wayward ones,
A longer sojourn here,

The better to prepare us for

A brighter happier sphere.

AMERICAN SOCIETY.

A prominent and general defect in the domestic society of our country, is the excessive devotion to business, which is so marked a characteristic of our habits. Although this evil is chiefly the result of circumstances, acting with peculiar influence is probably more pernicious, at least force on the enterprising men of the day, yet its in its present effects, than any other cause that is operating on our social life. A fair portion of every man's time is justly due to his wife and children; and if it is denied them, there is no compensation for the robbery. They suffer a moral privation for which he can not atone by splendid success in making money. Let him not think that the hours sacred to domestic inhonorable labor, will not avenge themselves on struction and enjoyment, if spent in honest and him and his household. No matter how pure the motive may be, the consequences will not be averted. Love has its duties that must be discharged; and of all love, married love is most acutely sensitive to its obligations. It is not an affection that may be left to its own spontaneous growth, but one to be watched and nurtured with daily care and kindly solicitude. To keep alive the beautiful and truthful simplicity of early feeling; to perpetuate and deepen the delicate glow of romance that then overspread the scenes of existence; to interchange those thoughts and sympathies which makes the life of one the property and inspiration of the other; to be kindred in tastes, tempers, and pursuits; and to be so vitally united as to render marriage the natural expression of a common nature and destiny-this is surely a great and divine task, that demands no mean skill, no chance art, and for which time and occasion and circumstances are

to be held in rigid reserve. Married people are too apt to forget that each other's character and happiness are a constant trust, requiring no small wisdom in its management. They are to be more than a mutual help and comfort, for Provi dence means them to educate each other, and, by the agency of a common tie and common interest, penetrating every faculty and sentiment, to form their nature in harmony with its social purposes. Such a work as this-the highest and holiest that can engage man and womanis certainly not to be accomplished in the refuse bits and shreds of time that are usually left after business has exhausted mind and muscles. But this is the current style of our life. The merLancaster County Normal School, Millersville, Pa., chant, the lawyer, the speculator, eats up the

Then let us patiently await

The trials we must bear,

And seek to well improve the life

Thou dost in mercy spare.

That when thy summons calls us hence,
We joyfully may hear;

And meet within a world of bliss

Those cherished friends so dear.

5th mo. 17th, 1857.

L. W. S.

husband, and the skeleton of his former self is all that remains to the wife and the household. Is The sainted dead, these are our treasures, it any wonder that domestic infidelity is increaschangeless and shining treasures. Let us looking among us? Is it any wonder that misery hopefully. Not lost, but gone before. Lost is creeping into so many of our homes, and laying only like stars of the morning, that have faded its black shadows around the table and the fireinto the light of a brighter heaven. Lost to side? There can scarcely be a doubt that our the earth, but not to us. women, as a whole, are degenerating. And our

married women head the list in extravagance, folly, and other evils. This too, when we have more to make us contented and happy than any other people. We apprehend that the cause of this social deterioration is not occult and mysterious. It is patent to all eyes. Our civilization is founded too much on the basis of business, instead of resting, where God has placed it, on the life and love of the household. If our women were made happier at home, they would not be so prone to seek false and pernicious excitements abroad. If their husbands did not neglect them so shamefully, they would seldom show that morbid passion, now spreading among them, for gratifications that are wretched substitutes for the blessedness of the domestic circle. It is easy to purchase success in business at too dear a price. If men will barter away a pair of good eyes, a sound nervous system, a healthy digestion, and the opportunities for recreation and improvement for a few extra thousand dollars, they are less shrewd than they are in other commercial transactions. But there are some other items in this scale of profit and loss. Your prosperous man frequently trades off his wife and children. Some of the Eastern nations buy their wives; but we often sell ours, and pocket the profits. And when the successful man has amassed a fortune, what sort of a home has he for its enjoyment? The statuary that he puts there rebukes the mock-life around it; and the pictures on the walls, that ought to be significant emblems of the joy and brightness of his family, only suggest the dreams that his youth indulged. Men ought to know that while Home is not a hard master, or an inexorable tyrant, it is yet a divine authority, whose laws are not to be trampled down with impunity. It will not let the offender escape. It accepts no pleas in abatement, and forgives no mistakes. Errors of judgment are held to a strict accountability, as well as vices of conduct. Too many of our men ignore this sanctity of home-law. Their fit title is a business-sex. Kind and affectionate they may be, but not in a wise and proper way. Wives and children need something besides good sentiments and full purses. They want attention, counsel, sympathy, heartsuccor and heart support. Denied these gracious offices on the part of husband and father, what else can be expected but disorder and distress at home?

action for our own.

Nor ought another point be overlooked. Society has now so much machinery in it, that we are readily betrayed into a substitution of its We have good schools; we pay them well; and forsooth, the obligation of the parent to educate his child is discharged by committing him to the teacher. We can buy books for wife and children. Here, too, are the morning papers and the monthly magazines. They can do our talking. Sabbath

A

schools come in opportunely, to relieve us of
moral and religious culture. Money can hire a
nurse for the boys and girls. Money can buy
the news, and all other intelligence. Money
can secure all kinds of agents on whom parental
responsibility may be shifted. Our whole social
system is crowded with these proxies. Such
instruments are invaluable so long as they are
used as mere aids to the parent. But every
observer knows that in a vast many cases they
are not employed as adjuncts to parental effort.
And this is, perhaps, the most serious evil of
modern society; viz., the excessive reliance on
outside machinery to do the work of home.
few years since, when the world was not quite so
much blessed with gifted people, who could be
harnessed in your traces, it was customary for
parents to do their own work. Their minds
were in active and constant contact with their
children; their talents were exerted in the do-
mestic circle; their knowledge was at the service
of the family, and their delight was to comment
on useful maxims, illustrate great truths, give
wholesome advice, and inspire laudable ambi-
tion. All of us are aware what a falling off
there is in this particular. Household talk, as
once known, is becoming rarer every day.
Children are taught abroad how to be men and
women; and not only are there manners formed
by professional teachers of behaviour, but the
principles which are to guide them in after life,
are often left to the capricious instructions of
such as have no vital interest in the matter.
What a contravention this of the divine plan!
External aids may be wisely invoked to assist in
the proper development of childhood and youth,
but the essential sentiments of character, as well
as most of what constitutes the true growth of
intellect, must be communicated through home-
agency alone. The fruits of this false method
of training are already startling enough to awaken
anxiety. Young America is a product of the
outside world, where the heart is stimulated
before its time, and the imagination is captivated
ere reason and common sense have acquired their
first lessons in the realities of human experience.
Nature sheathes the young flower beneath the
hardy covering of the bud, and opens it slowly
to the air and light. Modern education is in
hot haste to strip off the protections of the sen-
sibilities, and expose them to the excitements
that kindle fever in the blood.

Aside from these evils, there are other pernicious influences at work in our domestic society that threaten us with injury. One accustomed to observe the characteristics of the day, must have often noticed what a growing indis position there is among our women to submit to the care and duty of housekeeping, and how eager they are to throw them off. Time was, when a home of your own was an object ardently desired, and hearts pledged to each other looked

to the quiet companionship of its walls as the consummation of earthly bliss. A wife without a home was scarcely considered a wife at all. Our old-fashioned fathers and mothers reasoned, that if two loving souls united themselves in the bands of matrimony, a home was essential to rivet those bands firmly and closely around them. The honeymoon over, thither they went, and beneath their own roof found a genial occupancy for their time in the responsibilties of their daily tasks. And they were true to nature in the act; for married life demands, with the force of an instinct, a home for itself. Nor can we see how the completeness of marriage can ever be realized-how its full measure of joy can be attained, how its sacrifices can be nobly made, and its patient, soothing inspiring vocation be fulfilled-except in such a home. Is there nothing in having a table, a fireside, a pleasant porch, shady walks, cheerful flowers, that you can call your own? The commonest article of furniture │ borrows new associations if it has a place in your own dwelling; and chairs, carpets, curtains, draw a charm from the walls that shut you in from the world. Man and wife are never perfectly themselves any where else, nor can they ever learn to depend on each other-to think, plan, talk, labor, and suffer for mutual benefit-unless they are thus separated from outside connections, and dedicated to each other's service and joy. Boarding houses were once for young single gentlemen and bachelors. Good days were those, when they lived in easy content, fearing no evil. But the advancing wave of civilization has inundated them, and they have betaken themselves to club-houses for security against noisy Irish nurses and brawling babies. See, too, the great hotels. Is all the world on a furlough from home, that these huge establishments are needed to accommodate them? The stranger is soon let into the secret. Taking the hint from the size of a Southern plantation or a Western prairie farm, the cunning architect puts a good slice of the continent into walls, passages, chambers, and parlors; and as you wander through these winding ways, you indulge a childish wonder how the laybrinths of Egypt and the catacombs of Rome have suddenly reappeared on this remote hemisphere. But it's a new world! Indeed it is-new in more senses than one-and this is among the things that make good its boastful title. Now the idea of converting such a place into a family home is a more ridiculous problem then ever alchemy proposed. You may eat drink, sleep, wear fine clothes, and promenade fine rooms in it, but you can not graft a domestic idea on it. Compared with home, the atmosphere, scenery, habits, are as different as the poles are from the tropics. You might as well exhaust your ingenuity on perpetual motion, as waste it here in efforts to enjoy a home.

Our summing-up must be short. The heart of our country lives in its homes, and after all the eloquent things we say about republican rights, the final test of institutions is in the domestic character of the people. The world is an enjoyable place just so far as we can render it tributary to our homes; and freedom is a blessing exactly up to the measure that we improve its privileges in forming ourselves after the divine ideal of noble men and women. Side by side stand the Altar of Liberty and the Altar of Home; and if Christianity has lighted their flames, let us never forget that it is from those flames, burning heavenward with steady strength of warmth and lustre, that Providence brings the fiery swords which arm us for our highest achievements and our grandest victories.

BAYARD TAYLOR IN NORTHERN EUROPE.
(Continued from page 205.)

Our road was well beaten, but narrow, and we had great difficulty in passing the many hay and wood teams which met us, on account of the depth of the loose snow on either side. We had several violent overturns at such times, one of which occasioned us the loss of our beloved pipe-a loss which rendered Braisted disconsolate for the rest of the day. We had but one between us, and the bereavement was not slight. Soon after leaving Haparanda, we passed a small white obelisk, with the words "Russian Frontier" upon it. The town of Torneaa, across the frozen river, looked really imposing, with the sharp roof and tall spire of its old-church rising above the line of low, red buildings. Campbell, I remember, says,

"Cold as the rocks on Torneo's hoary brow,"

with the same disregard of geography which makes him grow palm trees along the Susquehanna river. There was Torneaa; but I looked in vain for the "hoary brow." Not a hill within sight, nor a rock within a circuit of ten miles, but one unvarying level, like the western shore of the Adriatic, formed by the deposits of the rivers and the retrocession of the sea.

Our road led up to the left bank of the river, both sides of which were studded with neat little villages. The country was well cleared and cultivated, and appeared so populous and flourishing that I could scarcely realize in what part of the world we were. The sun set at a quarter past 1, but for two hours the whole southern heaven was superb in its hues of rose and orange. The sheepskin lent us by our landlady kept our feet warm, and we only felt the cold in our faces; my nose, especially, which, having lost a coat of skin, was very fresh and tender, requiring unusual care. At 3 o'clock, when we reached Kuckula, the first station, the northern sky was one broad flush of the purest violet, melting into lilac at the zenith, where it met the fiery skirts of sunset.

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