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agency of thin stockings, light clothing, late hours, and many other similar requirements of fashion, which time would fail me to specify.

6. Nor is this all. The resident of the city not always enjoys the fresh products of the country, though he be ever so willing to pay for them. He must often be content with stale fruits, stale vegetables, stale butter, stale milk, stale every thing; while the happy farmer partakes of all these things in their freshness and purity. May we not, sir, in view of these and other kindred advantages connected with a residence in the country, may we not ask your decision in our favor?

QUESTIONS.-1. What does the 3d speaker propose to do? 2. What is his first argument? 3. What, the second? 4. What, the third?

What rule for the rising inflection on favor, last word of the 6th paragraph? Where is the passage found, quoted in the 1st paragraph!

LESSON CXXIX.

SPELL AND DEFINE.-1. AP PEAL', refer to; apply to. 2. DES TITUTION, absolute want. 3. DOLE FUL, sad; sorrowful. 4. CAT A LOGUE, list. 5. CAP'TION, heading. 6. Nur' SANCE, any thing which annoys. 7. UN RE LENT' ING, not yielding to pity; inflexible. 8. FA TAL I TY, decree of fate; destiny. 9. LIB' ER AL IZE, to free from narrow views or prejudices. 10. VIR U LENCE, malignancy; poison11. AL LE VI ATE, to make light; mitigate. 12. To'

ous energy.
ro CA LO, entirely.

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Which is preferable, city or country life?

FOURTH Ꮪ Ꮲ Ꭼ Ꭺ Ꮶ Ꭼ Ꭱ.

1. MR. PRESIDENT:-From the observations of the gentleman who has just taken his seat, one might, without an appeal to facts, naturally infer, that all good is confined to the country, and all evil centered in the city. In the life of a citizen, he finds a sort of Si

berian destitution; so that whether he walks, or talks, or studies, or eats, or drinks, or exercises, he is equally the victim of tyrannical custom.

2. Well, sir, to this doleful catalogue of imaginary ills, which must surely be regarded as the offspring of a distempered fancy, I can only append that old, familiar caption of certain newspaper paragraphs :-"Important, if true."

3. Why, sir, who ever heard, till this hour, that study was a thing to be done to the best advantage "out in the country"? There only, it seems, we can get clear of noise and nuisance enough to enable us to think; as if people of studious habits, living in the city, were obliged by some unrelenting fatality to choose for a study just that spot in a town, where most "do congregate" carts, wagons, stages, and wheelbarrows, and where the din and clatter of commercial transactions are the most unceasing, and the most annoying; or, as if all parts of a city, and at all times of the day, were equally and hopelessly given up to clamor, uproar, and confusion.

Where

4. Talk about opportunities for study? can they be better, where can they be as good as in the city? Here are capital schools, capital teachers, capital apparatus, capital libraries, capital courses of lectures, capital chances for literary conversation; in fact, capital chances for every thing that can enlarge, store, train, and liberalize the mind.

5. But the gentleman dreads the vicious associations of the city. If that argument had any strength, it ought to drive him quite out of the world; for vicious people are, by no means, peculiar to cities. It ought, at least, to render him a hermit,-to force him into the most absolute asceticism; for nothing can be more obvious than that vicious people are not the peculiar heritage and burden of cities.

6. Evil thrives, with more or less vigor and virulence, everywhere. We can not run entirely away from it, though we need not, and should not run heedlessly or designedly into it. Our positive duty is to oppose

it, whether in ourselves or in others. "R sist the devil," says the apostle James, "and he will lee from you.' Surely, this Scriptural instruction differs toto cælo from that which counsels us not to resist, but to run. 7. The truth is, Mr. President, there is often a positive advantage in being near to the wicked and the degraded, provided we have the heart to seek to do them good. Christ himself affords, by his practice in this regard, as in all others, the best possible example. He was found among the wicked, the outcast, the wretched saying in answer to the question, "Why eateth your master with publicans and sinners?" They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick." By following this divine example, sir, we may derive the highest benefit to ourselves, while we are seeking to alleviate the woes of others.

8. The spirit of true Christianity is no anchoretic spirit. It goes out among men, because evil is among men, and seeks, like its blessed Founder, "to save that which is lost." That wicked men, in numbers, dwell in cities, is therefore no argument to induce good men to flee to the country. It is rather a reason to make them court that trial of virtue, by which they may become at once the teachers and the taught in the ways and the works of God.

Well might the poet sing :

"Thy praise, O Charity! thy labors most

Divine; thy sympathy with sighs, and tears,

And groans; thy great, thy god-like wish to heal
All misery, all fortune's wounds, and make
The soul of every living thing rejoice."

QUESTIONS.-1. What does the 4th speaker think might be in. ferred from the preceding speech? 2. What is meant by Siberian destitution? Ans. Such as exists in the barren regions of Siberia! 3. What does he say of his opponent's doleful catalogue of evils! 4. How does he answer the argument, that the country is more favorable to study? 5. How does he answer that respecting the vicious associations of the city? 6. For what purpose does he quote the passage: "Resist the devil," &c.? 7. How does he show that there is often an advantage in being near the wicked?

LESSON CXXX.

SPELL AND DEFINE.-1. IN GEN' U OUS, candid; sincere. 2. IN GE NI OUS, skillful; artful; cunning. 3. TRAN QUIL, peaceful; quiet. 4. CON COM' I TANTS, accompaniments. 5. TAUNT' ING LY, mockingly. 6. LoG' 10, reasoning. 7. SPEO I MEN, example. 8. IN VEST' I GA TION, a searching or tracing out. 9. IN VAL ID ATE, to weaken; deprive of force. 10. CON TRIV' ANCE, invention. 11. SIM U LA' TION, the act of feigning. 12. DIS SIM U LA' TION, concealment; act of dissembling. 13 AL LI ANCE, any union or connection of interests. 14. MusTACHE', (mus tash',) long hair on the upper lip. 15. DIS SI PA' TION, dissolute, irregular course of life. 16. CON VEN' TION AL, arising out of custom. 17. MAM' MON, riches; wealth; or, the god of riches.

DEBATE. (CONTINUED.)

Which is preferable, city or country life?

FIFTH SPEAKER.

1. MR. PRESIDENT:-If I wished to give a distinct notion of the difference in signification, between the words ingenious and ingenuous, I think I might safely say that, in this discussion, thus far, the arguments for the country have been ingenuous, while the answers to them have been ingenious.

2. The country, says the first speaker, in substance, abounds in scenes and objects fitted to awaken admiration, and turn the thoughts of men toward their Creator. It differs from the city, in being the natural, instead of the artificial dwelling-place of man, and is, therefore, better adapted to the development of his mental and moral character.

3. Now, this is a plain and ingenuous statement of truth: powerful, indeed, but only powerful, because it is true. But how is it answered? "O," says the next speaker, "that's all fancy! Men soon become indifferent to the impressions of external grandeur. These things may be fitted to excite sublime sentiments and holy affections, but they seldom do; for men are apt to pass them by unheeded."

4. Then the whole argument is dismissed with a fine flourish of words about people walking among the Alps, as they would among common hills, and riding

on the waves of the Ocean as thoughtlessly as they would on the gently-ruffled surface of a tranquil lake. In all this, the real point, on which the argument was obviously meant to turn, viz.: the comparative influence of city and country scenes and objects on man's moral nature, is quite overlooked. Now, sir, this may be considered ingenious; but it is far from being ingenuous.

5. Again; it was argued that the quiet and seclusion of rural life, afforded better opportunities for study and reflection than can be realized in the city; where there must be much of bustle and uproar,—the necessary concomitants of trade and commerce. In reply to this, we are rather tauntingly told, that people in the city, who are inclined to study, do not, for that purpose, seek those parts of the town most beset with the noise of carts, and the clamor of commerce.

6. And, as if to draw the mind entirely from the point in debate, that is, from a simple comparison of advantages, where both places are admitted to have, at least, some claims to the thing in dispute, we are boastfully reminded, that in cities there are capital schools, capital lectures, and capital every thing! Surely, sir, this is somewhat ingenious in the logic; but is it candid? Is it ingenuous?

way

of

7. It was further argued, that the country is comparatively free from the vicious associations that are always collected in large cities; and forthwith a gentleman tells us that evil exists everywhere, and then quotes Scripture to show, what nobody denies, viz.: that we must "resist the devil." This is another specimen of logical ingenuity; but it wants the very life and soul of logic, that is, the open and ingenuous spirit, that befits the investigation of truth.

8. Such, sir, is the reasoning, which has here been employed, in the attempt to invalidate the claims of the country to superior regard, as a place of residence. Vain attempt! "God made the country," some one has well observed, "but man made the city;" and there is here, as in all things else, the same measureless

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