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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Church of England Magazine - Volume 10,
+No. 263, January 9, 1841, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Church of England Magazine - Volume 10, No. 263, January 9, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 27, 2010 [EBook #31430]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHURCH OF ENGLAND MAGAZINE, JAN 9, 1841 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Bryan Ness, Sam W. and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
+produced from scanned images of public domain material
+from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ CHURCH OF ENGLAND MAGAZINE.
+
+
+ UNDER THE
+ SUPERINTENDENCE
+ OF
+ CLERGYMEN
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ OF THE UNITED
+ CHURCH OF ENGLAND
+ AND
+ IRELAND.
+
+
+ "HER FOUNDATIONS ARE UPON THE HOLY HILLS."
+
+
+ Vol. X. No. 263.
+ JANUARY 9, 1841.
+ Price 1½_d._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ THE CHRISTIAN'S OBLIGATION TO SEEK THE SPIRITUAL BENEFIT
+ OF OTHERS 17
+
+ SACRED PHILOSOPHY.--CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE NATURAL THEOLOGY
+ OF THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM 19
+
+ THE SECURITY OF GOD'S PEOPLE: A SERMON 25
+
+ THE GLORY OF THE SAVIOUR'S TRANSFIGURATION 29
+
+ THE CABINET 31
+
+ POETRY.--LAYS OF PALESTINE 32
+
+ MISCELLANEOUS 32
+
+
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN'S OBLIGATION TO SEEK THE SPIRITUAL BENEFIT OF OTHERS.
+
+By the Rev. Thomas Bissland, M.A.,
+ _Rector of Hartley Maudytt, Hants._
+
+
+There are some hearts little, if at all, impressed by the solemn
+requirements of the Almighty; so dead, in fact, to everything which
+relates not to the objects of time and sense, that they are unaffected
+by the scenes of vice and of the misery which is its consequence,
+every where presented to their notice. It is not until the mind is
+under the gracious influence of the Spirit of God, that men feel any
+anxiety to stop the torrent of evil, and endeavour to become the
+humble instruments of converting the sinner and saving his soul. Many,
+in fact, who feel deeply interested in their neighbours' temporal
+comforts and prosperity, feel little anxious to supply their spiritual
+wants; and to this may be traced the opposition which is not
+unfrequently made, even by professing Christians, to institutions
+which have a direct tendency to improve the moral and spiritual
+condition of the human race.
+
+Now there are many reasons which induce a truly converted man to
+labour for the spiritual benefit of others. First, there is the
+dishonour which men, in an unconverted state, cast upon God. This
+feeling operated on the mind of the psalmist, when he exclaimed (Ps.
+cxix. 53), "Horror hath taken hold of me, because of the wicked who
+forsake thy law." For when men forsake God's law, they declare that
+they are little impressed with a sense of the divine majesty and
+infinite goodness of the Almighty; that they are not anxious to know
+his will; that his threatenings alarm them not; that his promises in
+no way affect their hearts; that, in fact, they are not desirous of
+that favour which rests upon those only who walk in the path of his
+commandments. The psalmist's zeal and jealousy for the glory of God
+were fully manifested by his anxiety to erect a house, in some
+respects suitable for the divine worship; by his earnest expressions,
+that the divine glory should be made known throughout the world, as
+when he exclaims "Tell it out among the heathen, that the Lord
+reigneth;" and this holy desire rendered every action, by which there
+was the most slight appearance of dishonour being cast upon Jehovah,
+abominable in his sight. When he reflected on his own departure from
+the law of his God, on those acts which had caused the enemies of the
+truth to blaspheme, he was indeed filled with horror. The language
+uttered, when from the depths he supplicated the divine forgiveness,
+powerfully demonstrates the agony of his soul--convinces us that his
+repentance was sincere, and that he was anxious that in every action
+of his life he might for the future glorify that Being whose gracious
+hand had conducted him through his earthly pilgrimage--whose favour
+had raised him to the throne of Israel--the light of whose countenance
+had cheered him in many a dark and dreary hour--and whose comforts had
+refreshed his soul, when in the multitude of the thoughts within him
+he became dispirited and perplexed. The first and great commandment
+is, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart." The
+psalmist loved God, and on this account he was desirous that he should
+be had in reverence of all his intelligent creatures. He loved God;
+he was seized with horror when he beheld myriads uninfluenced by this
+principle, living in disobedience to this first commandment.
+
+Sin is too often viewed by us merely with respect to its baneful
+influence on the happiness of society. It is condemned by us, and it
+is punished by us, not so much as it is the transgression of the law
+of God, as it has a tendency to produce evil in the world. And hence
+there are many offenders in God's sight who by their conduct cast
+dishonour upon his name, who yet maintain a fair and respectable
+character when weighed in the world's balance, nay, even are regarded
+with reverence and esteem. We punish the murderer, the thief, the
+robber, the perjured person. It is right that we should do so. The
+welfare of society demands it. But do we punish the man who lives in
+adultery, in drunkenness, in sensuality? Do we punish the man who is a
+swearer, a gambler, a blasphemer, who habitually neglects the
+sanctuary of the Lord, and does his own pleasure on the sabbath-day?
+Human laws take no cognizance of these crimes. They are, however, as
+dishonourable to God as others which are punished by man. They are
+quite as detrimental to man's best interests; and fearful must be the
+account rendered for their commission before that equitable tribunal,
+where the children of men must answer for all their offences against
+the majesty of heaven.
+
+But there is a second reason why the true Christian will labour for
+the conversion of others, namely, the reflection that the sinner is
+ensuring his own destruction while he is at enmity against God; and
+this induced Jeremiah to exclaim (ix. 1), "O that my head were waters,
+and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for
+the slain of the daughter of my people." How strong is the
+expression--"_the slain_." The prophet knew full well the misery of
+transgressing God's law. Tremendous, indeed, is the reflection, that
+the path of sin inevitably leads to the regions of darkness--those
+regions where there is "weeping and gnashing of teeth," where "their
+worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched." Whence is it, then,
+that, without any apparent concern, we behold myriads of immortal
+creatures fast hastening to these regions of destruction? Whence is it
+that there is so much apathy, lukewarmness, and indifference to a
+brother's eternal welfare. Is it not too often, perhaps, that there is
+a latent scepticism which induces us to disbelieve the solemn
+declaration of the Omnipotent--even when he swears by himself--that
+every jot and tittle of his threatenings shall be accomplished? Surely
+were it not for some such spirit, we should never rest satisfied with
+the feeble efforts we may have made to lead the sinner back to his
+offended God; we should esteem no sacrifice too great, whether of
+time, or influence, or money, or talent, which could in any way
+promote a brother's spiritual welfare. But we are too apt to forget,
+if not to disbelieve, the solemn declarations of the bible; and
+forgetfulness to all practical results is as pernicious as downright
+infidelity. The man who forgets God is as little influenced by his law
+as the fool, who in his heart says there is no God at all. Now, this
+forgetfulness paralyzes our energies, damps our zeal, checks our
+benevolence. We do not consider that sinners are heaping up wrath
+against the day of wrath; and, though they may now enjoy an unhallowed
+prosperity, and now in an unbridled licentiousness derive happiness
+from the indulgence of fleshly lusts, yet that these war against the
+soul, against its present peace, and its ultimate felicity, and that
+ruin and destruction inevitably await them. Were our spirit that of
+the psalmist, or that of the prophet referred to, our feelings would
+be more lively, our endeavours to promote the good of mankind be more
+energetic. Looking not every one to his own, but on his brothers'
+good, we should be anxious to direct their feet into the way of peace.
+
+How beautifully was this spirit manifested by St. Paul, when he
+exhorted the converts of Philippi to be followers of himself--"For
+many walk," says he, "of whom I have told you often, and now tell you
+even weeping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ; whose
+end is destruction, whose God is their belly, and whose glory is in
+their shame; who mind earthly things." The apostle, indeed, appears to
+have been influenced by the same anxiety as the psalmist and the
+prophet; for the glory of the Redeemer, as well as the eternal welfare
+of their souls, was dear to his heart, and he could not refrain from
+weeping when he viewed the dishonour cast upon his adorable Lord by
+these enemies of his cross; when he beheld them following divers lusts
+and pleasures, even boasting of their recklessness of God's judgments;
+and when he carried his thoughts forward to that day when the terrors
+of the Lord would fall on all the children of disobedience, or those
+who neglected the great salvation. This spirit is, in fact, no bad
+test whereby we may try the state of our hearts and affections. If we
+are really desirous for the advancement of God's glory, and deeply
+interested in the welfare of our fellow-creatures, our feelings will
+be very similar to those of the holy men of God referred to. We shall
+not view, without the very deepest concern, that inattention which is
+everywhere paid to the solemn requirements of the Almighty; we shall
+at least make the attempt to stop the sinner in his career of guilt
+and folly, that his soul may be saved from destruction in the day of
+the Lord.
+
+Melancholy is the reflection, indeed, that neither God's invitations
+on the one hand, nor his threatenings on the other, appear to affect
+their hearts; they are neither constrained by love nor fear. "Wide is
+the gate, and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction, and many
+there be that go in thereat."
+
+There was one that wept over the rebellion of man, and one infinitely
+greater than David, or Jeremiah, or St. Paul--and that one was the
+ever-adorable Saviour; who, beholding the guilty race of man
+altogether gone out of the way, descended from the mansions of glory,
+became a partaker of human impurity, and opened through his blood a
+new and living way, whereby the guilty sinner might return in peace to
+his God. How touching the description of the evangelist--"And when he
+came near, he beheld the city and wept over it, saying, If thou hadst
+known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things which belong
+unto thy peace, but now they are hid from thine eyes." Jesus wept at
+the grave of Lazarus, for Lazarus was his friend; he sympathised
+deeply with Martha and Mary, for he loved them as he did their
+brother; but far more bitter were the tears he shed, when he reflected
+on the waywardness of that people whom he would have gathered to
+himself; the guilt of that city which had killed the prophets; when he
+thought of those days of divine vengeance, when its enemies should
+cast a trench about it, and compass it round, and keep it in on every
+side, and should lay it even with the ground, and its children within
+it. And did not this feeling operate when, even amidst the agonies of
+a crucifixion, his mind rested on the sufferings of others, and not on
+his own? "Daughters of Jerusalem! weep not for me, but weep for
+yourselves and for your children." And shall we not, in this as in
+every other respect, seek to imitate our adorable Lord? Shall we not
+feel deeply interested in the spiritual welfare of our fellow-men? If
+we do not, it is, alas! a fearful, a decisive proof, that the flame of
+holy love, of devoted zeal, has not been kindled in our bosom; that we
+do not feel the importance of that salvation which is offered us so
+freely in the gospel; that we are not duly impressed with a dread of
+that woe unspeakable, that shall be the portion of those whose souls
+shall be for ever lost.
+
+
+
+
+SACRED PHILOSOPHY.
+
+CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE NATURAL THEOLOGY OF THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM.
+
+By Robert Dickson, M.D., F.L.S.
+
+No. XI. Pt. 1.
+
+ "Lo! the oak that hath so long a nourishing
+ From the time that it 'ginneth first to spring,
+ And hath so long a life, as we may see,
+ Yet at the last wasted is the tree."
+
+ CHAUCER.
+
+
+While the actions which lead to the various effects on the external
+appearance of a tree, described in the former paper, are going on,
+many important changes occur in the internal parts, producing
+alterations not less admirable, whether in respect of the tree itself,
+or of the ends to which it may be rendered subservient. The base of an
+exogenous tree is not merely widened by the superposition of annual
+layers of wood over the first shoot, by which it gains greater
+mechanical power to support the extending head of wide-spreading
+branches, but the central portion is, in most cases, progressively
+rendered more and more solid by the deposition in it of various
+secretions prepared by the leaves, and transmitted from them through
+the medullary rays into this part as their ultimate resting-place.
+
+The fibres descending from the developing buds on the stem, and
+passing between the plates of cellular tissue, which constitute the
+medullary rays, and the cells of which have a horizontal direction,
+are but the basis of the vegetable fabric. The stem of an exogenous
+plant has been compared to a piece of linen, of which the weft is
+composed of cellular tissue, and the warp of fibrous and vascular
+tissue--crossing each other. Now, after the portion is once formed,
+which is woven every year by the wondrous machinery set to work for
+this purpose, it receives no fresh texture, yet each fibre remains a
+conducting tube to transmit the sap upwards, or, in the course of
+time, becomes charged with various principles, prepared, as already
+stated, by the leaves, and returned to the central part by that
+apparatus or system of canals for their transit inwards, the medullary
+rays, and at last are obstructed, so that no passage of fluid is
+effected through the inner layers of wood. But for every layer that is
+thus blocked up, a new one, which will continue pervious, is formed
+exterior to those already existing, so that a constant provision is
+made for carrying on the vital processes; to accomplish which, a free
+channel from the points of the roots to the surface of the leaves is
+absolutely necessary. The outer strata, produced by a tree of
+considerable age, are observed to be thinner than those formed at an
+earlier period, and become successively thinner and thinner, so that
+ultimately, if accident should not have previously caused it, the
+death of the tree is inevitable. The portions which are obstructed
+constitute the _duramen_ or heartwood, the pervious portion the
+_alburnum_ or sapwood. The original tissue is colourless; but
+according to the nature of the secretions deposited in it, the
+heartwood is either of a deeper colour, sometimes party-coloured, or
+at least of a much greater specific gravity than the sapwood. The
+removal of the juices by any solvent restores the wood to its
+primitive hue, and renders it again light. The difference of weight of
+a cubic foot of wood depends not merely on the different quantity of
+vegetable tissue compressed into a given space, in the first
+construction of the tree, but also on the quantity and quality of the
+secretions ultimately lodged in it. The same species of tree will
+present a difference in this respect, according to the country or
+situation where it grew, and also according to the character of the
+seasons during the time it flourished. According to the nature of the
+tree, if placed in favourable circumstances in reference to soil and
+weather, it invariably prepares and lodges in the stem those
+principles which it was designed to elaborate--the oak preparing
+tannin--the sugar-maple preparing its saccharine juice. That the
+primary object of these was some advantage to the tree itself can
+scarcely be doubted, but the secondary applications of which they are
+capable, give reason to suppose that these also were contemplated in
+their formation. The consideration of the means by which they are
+formed, and the direct consequences of their formation on the air, by
+abstracting certain elements from it, and supplying others, belong to
+the subject of leaves; it is the object of the present paper to view
+them as formed, and to show their amazing utility.
+
+The mechanical properties of the stems of trees, both exogenous and
+endogenous, render them extremely serviceable to mankind. The uses to
+which a single species of plant may be put are numerous and important,
+of which the reed (arundo phragmites) is an example, for after the
+root has assisted in binding and consolidating the soil, the stem is
+susceptible of the most varied applications[A].
+
+In a low state of civilization the palm, or a palm-like grass,
+supplies all that man requires; of the former of which, the _Mauritia
+flexuosa_, or sago-palm of the Oronooko, and still more the _cocos
+nucifera_, or cocoa-nut palm; and of the latter, the bamboo (_bambusa
+arundinacea_, and other species) are proofs. The bamboo suffices for
+all the needs of the humbler Chinese; even their paper, as well as
+their abodes, are made of it; and from the materials furnished by the
+cocoa-nut tree, not merely food, as shall be afterwards noticed, but
+larger and more elegant houses, with all their appurtenances, are
+constructed at Goa and other places. The obligations of the Guaraons
+to the _Mauritia flexuosa_ cannot be expressed[B]. In proportion as
+man rises in civilization, the importance of timber becomes greater,
+being a material for which no adequate substitute can be found. It
+combines lightness with strength, elasticity with firmness, and
+possesses in many instances a durability rivalling, or even
+surpassing, that of the rocks yielded to us by the solid substance of
+the globe. The adaptation of timber to the numerous wants of civil
+life is too familiar to require exposition; but in addition to all the
+ends it serves in these points, we have an interesting view presented
+to us in considering what a vast quantity of timber is required for
+the construction of our shipping, from the countless boats and small
+craft employed in our coasting trade up to the larger ships, which are
+so many floating towns or communities. These conduce to the
+accomplishment of objects of the most momentous nature. Were it not
+for our shipping we should still be in the condition described by the
+Romans, as Britons cut off from the rest of the world.--But by their
+means we now visit without restraint,
+
+ "Earth's farthest verge, and ocean's wildest shore,"[C]
+
+and though, in times past, they have been too often used as engines
+fraught with destruction, directed by man against his fellow man, let
+us hope that they may be required in future only to convey in amicable
+interchange the produce of one country to another, or to bear to his
+destination the missionary bent on extending the blessings of that
+religion whose spirit is "peace on earth, good will among the children
+of men[D]."
+
+As a means of supplying fuel, without which man must remain constantly
+in the savage state, wood is of inestimable value. In the process of
+combustion, the elements of the trees enter into new combinations,
+evolving both light and heat, which at once maintain life and render
+it a state of enjoyment and usefulness. For this purpose in Britain,
+we chiefly employ fossil fuel, stored up in the secret places of the
+earth, and, therefore, we attach less importance to recent wood; but
+other parts of the world are not so favourably situated, and to the
+inhabitants of these places fresh, or but lately felled, wood is
+necessary for their existence. Even in France, though partially
+possessed of coal, it is estimated that the quantity of wood employed
+to supply heat, whether for comfort, cooking, or in manufactures which
+require a high temperature, amounts to seven-tenths of the entire
+consumption. The superiority of wood fuel, whether fossil or recent,
+over every other material resorted to with a like intention, shall be
+shown in a subsequent part of this paper. I therefore pass on at
+present to demonstrate the utility of vegetable substances in
+affording the means of subsistence to man and animals.
+
+In the observations I am about to make, it is impossible to avoid
+anticipating some of the remarks which belong to the subject of fruits
+and seeds as articles of food, since the same principles of nutriment
+are found in the stems of certain plants as are deposited in the
+fruits or seeds of others.
+
+Though man is omnivorous, and can subsist either on animal or
+vegetable food--an arrangement which fits him to dwell in any part of
+the habitable globe,--yet he is subject, with regard to the actual
+material of his diet, in a remarkable manner, to the influence of
+climate, since a particular kind of aliment, which is very appropriate
+in one country is improper in another; thus, as we advance from the
+equator towards the poles, the necessity for animal food becomes
+greater, till, in the very north, it is the sole article of
+subsistence. Animal food, from containing nitrogen, is more
+stimulating, and, therefore, less suitable for hot climates, where, on
+the contrary, saccharine, mucilaginous, and starchy materials are
+preferred; hence, in the zone of the tropics, we find produced in
+abundance rice, maize, millet, sago, salep, arrowroot, potatoes, the
+bread-fruit, banana, and other watery, or mucilaginous fruits.
+Quitting this zone, we enter that which produces wheat, and here,
+where the temperature is lower, providence has united with the starch
+of this grain a peculiar principle (gluten), possessing all the
+properties of animal matter, and yielding nitrogen and ammonia in its
+decomposition[E]. Thus, by a gradual and almost insensible transition,
+nature furnishes to man the food which is most appropriate for him in
+each region. In the subtropical zone vegetable diet is still
+preferred, but, in chemical constitution, the favourite articles
+approximate animal substances. This holds also in the temperate zone,
+not only in respect of wheat, but also in the chesnut, which is almost
+the sole means of subsistence in some of the mountainous regions of
+France, Italy, and Spain, though, instead of the gluten of wheat, this
+seed contains albumen, the relation of which to animal food is even
+closer than that of gluten. In reviewing the geographical distribution
+of the cereal grains[F], we find that starch nearly pure is produced
+in the greatest abundance in the hottest parts of the world,
+particularly in rice and maize; it becomes associated in the
+subtropical regions with an equivalent for animal food; and in still
+colder regions, where wheat fails, oats and barley take its place.
+These, though possessed of less gluten than wheat, are, nevertheless,
+more heating, and, therefore, better calculated for northern
+latitudes. The inhabitants of Scotland and Lapland, with their oaten
+and barley or rye bread, are thus as thoroughly provided with the best
+food, as the Hindoo with his rice or Indian corn[G].
+
+It would be impossible to enumerate the plants which furnish starch in
+large proportion, but a few may be given as illustrative of the above
+positions. The chemical analysis of those proximate principles of
+plants which are mere combinations of water with carbon
+(hydro-carbonates or hydrates of carbon) has been already given, but
+must here be repeated:--
+
+ 100 parts consist of
+ | Water. | Carbon.
+ Gum (pure gum-arabic) | 58.6 | 41.4
+ Sugar (pure crystallized) | 57.15 | 42.85
+ Starch | 56.00 | 44.00
+ Lignin | 50.00 | 50.00
+
+These are so many mutually convertible products, of which gum may be
+looked upon as the basis; indeed gum is that organizable product which
+exists most universally in the proper juices of plants. "There are
+some instances in which sugar appears to be the first organic compound
+formed by the combination of the external elements, as when abundantly
+existing in the ascending sap of trees--the maple, for example. Starch
+may be considered as little else than gum divided into minute
+portions, each of which is enclosed in a membraneous cell (and
+containing some incidental particles, which, when starch is burnt,
+leave about .23 per cent. of residuum, consisting entirely of
+phosphates); and, in this state, it appears to answer very important
+ends in the vegetable economy. It is remarked by Decandolle, that,
+'while gum itself may be considered the nutrient principle of
+vegetation, diffused freely through the structure of the plant, and
+constantly in action, starch is apparently the same substance, stored
+up in such a manner as not to be readily soluble in the circulating
+fluids,' thus forming a reservoir of nutritious matter, which is to be
+consumed, like the fat of animals (which it closely resembles in
+structure), in supporting the plant at particular periods[H]."
+
+This view explains the fact of starch being found accumulated in
+amazing quantity in some plants, more particularly at certain periods
+of their existence, as in the cases I am now to cite. The fertility of
+some palm-trees is very great, and to furnish nutriment to the
+flowers, fruit, and seeds, an enormous supply of starch is needed;
+accordingly, in these we find the stem a complete storehouse of this
+essential principle. Thus the several palms and palm-like plants,
+which yield sago, such as the _sagus Rumphii_, _cycas circinalis_, _C.
+revoluta_, _corypha umbraculifera_, _caryota urens_, and _phoenix
+farinifera_--trees which are mostly confined within the tropics, at
+the moment when the spadices or sheaths containing the bunches of
+flowers are visible but not unfolded, furnish an immense portion of
+the food of the natives. The _sagus Rumphii_, which abounds in the
+islands of the Indian Archipelago, and though one of the humblest of
+the palm tribe, seldom exceeding thirty feet in height, is yet, except
+the gomuto, the thickest and largest, alone yields a quantity of
+nutritious matter far exceeding that of all other cultivated plants,
+inasmuch as a tree in its fifteenth year produces 600 lbs. of sago,
+which word, in the language of the Papuas, signifies _bread_, being
+the staple food of the islanders. To obtain it, the tree must be cut
+down, and the stem divided into pieces, from which the flour is beaten
+and washed out[I]. After being cut down, the vegetative power still
+remains in the root, which again forms a trunk, and this proceeds
+through its different stages, until it is again subjected to the axe,
+and made to yield its alimentary contents for the service of man. Nor
+is the extraordinary productiveness of a single tree the only point
+worthy of notice, for, being endogenous plants, devoid of branches, an
+unusual number of them can grow in a small space. Mr. Craufurd
+calculates that an English acre could contain four hundred and
+thirty-five sago trees, which would yield one hundred and twenty
+thousand five hundred pounds avoirdupois of starch, being at the rate
+of more than eight thousand pounds yearly. Besides the farina or meal,
+every tree cut down furnishes, in its terminal bud, a luxury which is
+as much prized as that of the _areca oleracea_, or cabbage palm of the
+West Indies, and which is eaten either raw as a salad, or cooked.
+Further, the leaves afford so excellent a material for covering
+houses, that even in those hot and humid parts of the world, where
+decomposition goes on so rapidly, it does not require to be renewed
+oftener than once in seven years.
+
+The _Mauritia flexuosa_, or fan palm of the Oronooco, is of still
+greater utility to the natives of South America. It is a social palm,
+abounding in the marshes, and having a geographical range of very vast
+extent. The whole northern portion of South America, east of the
+Cordilleras, appears to be possessed of this gorgeous palm; from the
+mouth of the Oronooco to the river Amazon, and through the whole of
+Guiana, through Surinam and the northern part of Brazil, and in very
+various places along the river Amazon, even to its source on the
+eastern declivity of the Cordilleras, this palm is found, constituting
+forests of greater or less extent. Its smooth grey stem rising often
+100 feet, forms groups that, in the northern part of Brazil, resemble
+the pallisades of some gigantic fortress. The produce of these lofty
+cylinders is very great, not merely of sago, which is procured only
+when the process of flowering is about to occur, but many trees being
+cut down before this event, a juice is obtained from them, which
+forms, by fermentation, a sweet wine; while those that flower, after
+which no good sago can be got, furnish an extraordinary quantity of
+fruit, hanging in bunches many feet in length, which is as agreeable
+as ripe apples, the taste of which it resembles. The other products of
+this tree are numerous[J].
+
+It would lead beyond just limits, were we to notice in detail, the
+plants which yield starch suitable for food, only after undergoing a
+process of art, by which an acrid principle is driven off, and a
+bland, wholesome substance remains behind. Such is the Janipha (or
+Jatropha) Manihot, which yields the Mandiocca, Tapioca, or Cassava, an
+article not only of great consumption in, but also of considerable
+export from, Brazil (see Spix and Martius' Travels, and Lib. of Enter.
+Knowledge, Vegt. Sub. Food of Man, p. 152), which, when raw, is
+poisonous both to man and cattle, though it becomes safe and agreeable
+by the application of heat. So likewise the large tubers of several
+_Arums_, such as _A. Macrorhizon_, _A. Colocasia_, _Caladium acre_,
+and which are cultivated with great care in tropical and subtropical
+countries, particularly in the Sandwich and South Sea islands. All of
+these excite inflammation and swelling of the mouth and tongue, even
+to the danger of suffocation, but which are disarmed of their
+virulence, and converted into an article of daily consumption, by
+fire. Even yams and sweet potatoes, which are naturally mild, are less
+articles of consumption in the south sea islands, than the Tarro, as
+these tubers of the _arums_ are designated.
+
+I omit all other plants to fix attention on the potatoe, which is not
+only the source of the purest starch of all, but has many interesting
+points connected with its history and habitudes, peculiarly connected
+with my subject. No plant has contributed more to banish those famines
+which were formerly of so frequent occurrence in Europe, and all the
+dire train of suffering and disease consequent upon them. Yet did it,
+in many instances, require royal edicts to induce some nations to
+cultivate what is now regarded as one of the prime blessings of
+Providence, from nearly one end of the earth to the other; the potatoe
+being raised from Hammerfest, in Lapland, lat. 71° north, through all
+Europe, the plains of India, in China, Japan, the south-sea islands,
+New Holland, even to New Zealand. What renders it so peculiarly
+valuable is, that in the seasons when the corn crop fails, that of
+potatoes is generally more abundant; thus furnishing a substitute for
+the other, which proves defective from atmospheric conditions, which
+have little influence over the potatoe, placed as it is underground,
+and secure against extremes of temperature. The potatoe is not a root,
+as commonly supposed, but an underground collection of buds, having a
+quantity of starch accumulated around them, for their nourishment when
+they begin to grow. The quantity of starch varies greatly with the
+kind of potatoe cultivated, the mode of cultivation, the time of
+setting, and above all, with the season of the year when the analysis
+is made. Potatoes in general, afford from one-fifth to one-seventh
+their weight of dry starch[K]; besides some other nutritive materials.
+The quantity of starch seems to be at its maximum in the winter months;
+as 100 pounds of potatoes yield in August about 10 lbs., in October
+nearly 15 lbs., in November to March 17 lbs., in April 13¾ lbs., and
+in May 10 lbs. Nor is the quantity of starch alone diminished in
+spring, but the nitrogen which belongs to some of the other nutritive
+principles, likewise suffers a deduction; as fresh, not dried
+potatoes, contain 0.0037 per cent. of azote, while potatoes ten months
+old contain only 0.0028, causing a sensible difference in their power
+of imparting nourishment. The starch is withdrawn from the tubers of
+the potatoe, precisely in the same way that it is transferred from the
+root, stem, or seeds of other plants, for the service of the young
+shoot; but the mode in which it is accomplished is but of recent
+discovery, and constitutes one of the most beautiful instances of
+design which the whole vegetable kingdom can unfold; "that man's
+scepticism must be incurable who does not perceive, and acknowledge,
+that the means now to be detailed were created for the express
+accomplishment of the ends[L]."
+
+Starch has been described above as consisting of a multitude of little
+cells or vesicles, having an envelope, insoluble in water, formed of a
+kind of organized membrane, and containing within it a substance which
+is soluble in water, termed amidin. This soluble material is the
+nutritive element on which the young shoot, proceeding from every eye
+or bud of the potatoes, is to subsist, till it has developed roots,
+and unfolded its leaves to prepare additional alimentary substance.
+But if this soluble material be enclosed in an insoluble membrane, how
+are the contents to be made available for the growth of the plant? It
+is true, indeed, that water of the temperature of 160° Fahr. can
+rupture this tegument, as occurs in the process of boiling potatoes;
+but the water diffused through the earth in the neighbourhood of the
+growing tuber, never reaches such a height. How then is the difficulty
+obviated? This is effected by a secretion called _diastase_ which is
+found in the tubers in the immediate vicinity of the eyes or buds. "It
+is stored up in that situation for the purpose of being conveyed, by
+the vessels connected with the bud, into the substance of the tuber,
+when the demand for nutrition is occasioned by the development of the
+shoot. It is probable that the secretion of _diastase_ takes place in
+every instance in which starch previously deposited is to be
+re-absorbed[M]." It is not to be found before grains or tubers begin
+to sprout, yet, "such is its energy, that one part of it is sufficient
+to render soluble the interior portion of two thousand parts of
+starch, and to convert it into sugar[N]." Strong as is the analogy
+between starch and gum, yet _diastase_ does not convert gum into
+sugar; the one being as completely soluble as the other, its
+intervention is clearly unnecessary. Neither does it act on sugar. It
+is found, and exerts its powers, only where it is required. Nor does
+it come into play one moment before the necessity for it occurs. While
+the potatoe is in its state of winter repose, and no vegetative
+process going on, the elements of which the _diastase_ is formed, are
+equally quiescent, but no sooner does the season recur when an
+augmented temperature rouses the slumbering energy of the tuber, than
+this potent principle exhibits its efficacy, and changes the insoluble
+starch into the nutritious sugar. Who, that can read, or reading
+reflect and ponder on these things, but must conclude that the laws
+which regulate the whole actions were impressed upon their subjects by
+a Creator infinite in design, in wisdom, and in power? If such insight
+into his doings are permitted to us now, what may we not hope for when
+we no longer "see as through a glass darkly[O]?"
+
+The insolubility of the starch in cold water, affords a convenient
+means of separating the flour from the other materials, by which it
+may be abstracted from the tubers when in the greatest abundance, and
+be preserved unchanged for the use of man. This is done by simply
+rasping down the potatoes over a seirce, and passing a current of
+water over the raspings. The water passes through the seirce milky
+from the starch suspended in it. The starch is allowed to fall to the
+bottom, and is two or three times washed with pure water; it is then
+allowed to dry[P]. If this process be followed in the winter months,
+when the quantity of starch is greatest, the result is, a sixth
+portion of the weight of the potatoes employed, in a condition fit not
+only for immediate use, but capable of preservation for years. "To
+those who live solely, or even principally, on potatoes, it must be of
+immense importance to have the nutritious part preserved when in its
+greatest perfection, instead of leaving it exposed to injury,
+decomposition, or decay[Q]."
+
+It is unnecessary to enlarge upon the sources of starch and its
+obvious utility to mankind. Previous to its being consumed by the
+plant in which it is amassed, it is by various means, but chiefly by
+diastase, transformed into sugar. Following this natural transition, I
+shall next consider sugar as an article of diet. In temperate
+climates, sugar is regarded as a luxury, one indeed which is nearly
+indispensable, but in tropical countries it is a universal article of
+subsistence, partly as real sugar, and partly, and more generally, as
+it occurs in the cane. It is inconceivable what enormous quantities of
+the sugar-cane is consumed in this way; vast ship-loads arrive daily
+in the market at Manilla, and in Rio Janiero; in the Sandwich Islands
+and other places, every child is seen going about with a portion of
+sugar-cane in the hand. It has been called "the most perfect
+alimentary substance in nature," and the results, in the appearance of
+the negroes, during the cane-harvest, notwithstanding the increased
+severe toils of that season, seem to confirm the statement. They
+almost invariably become plump, and sleek, and scarcely take any other
+food while the harvest lasts; even the sickly revive, and often
+recover their health.
+
+The chief source of sugar is large grass (_saccharum officinarum_), of
+which there are several varieties, differing essentially in
+productiveness, but the best of which is the Otaheita cane, the stem
+of which is higher, thicker, and more succulent than the Creole cane,
+and which yields not only one-third more of juice than the Creolian
+cane on the same space of land; but from the thickness of its stem,
+and the tenacity of its ligneous fibres, it furnishes much more fuel.
+One variety was known in India, in China, and all the islands of the
+Pacific ocean, from the most remote antiquity; it was planted in
+Persia, in Chorasan, as early as the fifth century of our era, in
+order to obtain from it solid sugar. The Arabs carried this reed--so
+useful to the inhabitants of hot and temperate countries--to the
+shores of the Mediterranean. In 1306, its cultivation was yet unknown
+in Sicily, but was already common in the island of Cyprus, at Rhodes,
+and in the Morea. A hundred years after it enriched Calabria, Sicily,
+and the coasts of Spain. From Sicily the Infant Henry transplanted the
+cane to Madeira; and from Madeira it passed to the Canary islands. It
+was thence transplanted to St. Domingo, in 1513, and has since spread
+to the continent of South America, and to the West Indies, whence the
+chief supply for Europe is obtained.
+
+The vast circuit which it has described in these successive
+transplantations attest the sense which mankind had of the benefits it
+bestowed in its course. The introduction of the Otaheita cane is
+another proof of the obligations which modern times are under to
+navigation, as we owe this plant to the voyages of Bougainville, Cook,
+and Bligh[R].
+
+The sugar-cane requires for its perfection, a temperature of
+considerable elevation, and succeeds best where the mean temperature
+is 24° or 25° (of the centigrade thermometer), yet it will prosper,
+though with less produce, where it only reaches 19° or 20°
+(centigrade). Its cultivation extends from the verge of the ocean,
+where the canes are often washed by the waves[S], to localities on the
+mountains 3,000 feet above the sea; and even in the extensive plains
+of Mexico and Colombia, where, from the reflection of the sun's rays
+the heat is greatly increased, to 4,000, 5,000, 6,000, though the mean
+temperature of the city of Mexico be only 17° (centigrade), yet sugar
+is procured at 6,600 feet.
+
+The fertility and productiveness of the sugar-cane is immense, second
+only to the sago-palms. "The first sugar-canes planted with care on a
+virgin soil, yield a harvest during twenty to twenty-five years, after
+which they must be replanted every three years." In the island of
+Cuba, instances are known of a sugar-plantation existing for
+forty-five years. To procure new plants, the tedious process of sowing
+seeds is not necessary. The practice is followed of taking cuttings,
+and the stools, or scions, which spring from the joints (_nodi_) of
+the old plant, are fit to be separated in fourteen days; these, in the
+course of a year, are so well grown that they may be cut down, and
+submitted to the sugar-mill. An English acre under culture for sugar,
+in Java, yields 1285 pounds avoirdupois of refined sugar, and the
+produce at Cuba is nearly the same.
+
+Let not the thought arise, on the perusal of these statements, that
+the gifts of Providence are distributed with partiality, as nothing
+could be more unfounded. Independent of the destruction of the
+plantations which tropical hurricanes so often occasion, an insect of
+the locust kind, more particularly in the East Indies, produces such
+fearful devastation as to realize the scene described by the prophet
+Joel--"A fire devoureth before them, and behind them a flame burneth:
+the land is as the garden of Eden before them, and behind them a
+desolate wilderness; yea, and nothing shall escape them[T]." From such
+visitations, northern latitudes are generally exempt, and the constant
+struggle which man has had to maintain with the elements and a
+churlish soil, has so whetted his faculties as to render the return
+for his labour not only more certain, but even more abundant[U].
+
+As if to shew that "the earth full of the riches of the Lord," in
+parts of the world where the low temperature is an obstacle to the
+profitable cultivation of the sugar-cane, a substitute is found for it
+in the _acer saccharinum_, or sugar-maple, which presents the great
+peculiarity of the ascending sap being charged with sugar to such a
+degree as to be then fit for the manufacture of this valuable
+substance. There results from this circumstance a most important
+advantage to the inhabitants of the northern regions, where this tree
+grows, that the juice is extracted early in spring, a time when the
+rigour of the season condemns the labourer to inactivity. Besides, the
+sugar-maple grows spontaneously, and requires no care, till it is fit
+for tapping; and when deprived of its juice, and incapable of yielding
+more sugar, its wood is applicable to a far greater number and variety
+of uses than the bruised cane, since as fuel the maple is most
+valuable; and its ashes yield, from their richness in the alkaline
+principle, four-fifths of the potash exported to Europe from Boston
+and New York. The timber of the sugar-maple is also highly prized,
+both for common and ornamental purposes--as the beautiful bird's-eye
+maple is obtained from this tree.
+
+"The sugar-maple begins a little north of Lake St. John, in Canada,
+near 48° of north lat., which, in the rigour of its winter,
+corresponds to 68° of Europe. It is nowhere more abundant than between
+46° and 43° of north lat., which space comprises Canada, New
+Brunswick, Nova Scotia, the states of Vermont and New Hampshire, and
+the district of Maine. Farther south, it is common only in Genessee,
+in the state of New York, and in the upper parts of Pennsylvania. It
+is estimated by Dr. Rush, that in the northern part of these two
+states, there are 10,000,000 acres which produce these trees in the
+proportion of thirty to an acre. The process of making maple-sugar is
+commonly begun in February, or in the beginning of March, while the
+cold continues intense, and the ground is still covered with snow. The
+sap begins to be in motion at this season, two months before the
+general revival of vegetation. The sap continues to flow for six
+weeks; after which it becomes less abundant, less rich in saccharine
+matter, and sometimes even incapable of crystallization. In this case
+it is consumed in the state of molasses; or exposed for three or four
+days to the sun, when it is converted into vinegar by the acetous
+fermentation: a kind of beer is also made of it. The amount of sugar
+produced by each tree in a year varies from different causes. The
+yearly product varies from 2 lbs. to 4 lbs. for each tree[V]." The sap
+is most abundant from young trees, but less charged with sugar. The
+average produce is five per cent. of sugar. The richer the sap is in
+saccharine matter, it is so much the more profitable to extract it, as
+in such a case it is nearly pure from all mucilaginous matter, or free
+acid, and may be consolidated by the action of cold alone by merely
+freezing it, thus rendering boiling unnecessary.
+
+Sugar exists in many other plants, such as the beet-root, from which
+it is extracted; and also the stem of the maize, or Indian corn, is
+charged with an extraordinary quantity of sugar, and it may either be
+brought to the state of a honey-like sugar, or the juice pressed out
+of the stalk, and fermented, forming the _pulque de mahio_, or _pulque
+de Flaolli_, in Mexico[W].
+
+Gum has been already stated to be the basis of all the other
+organizable products, and it is found not only in almost all plants,
+but in nearly all parts of them. In a pure or nearly isolated state,
+it exists chiefly in the inner bark of vascular and especially
+exogenous trees, and is preserved in the interior with the greatest
+care: its escape externally results either from disease, as in the
+case of plum and cherry-trees, from the puncture of insects, cracks in
+the bark, or by artificial incisions. The death of the tree soon
+follows the loss of this important juice, and thousands of trees of
+the genus acacia are annually sacrificed in different parts of Africa
+to procure the gum-arabic of commerce. It is only in a few genera and
+tribes of trees, that it exists in so concentrated a state as to
+assume the solid form on exposure to the air, but in some of these the
+quantity is amazing. Hot countries are the chief abodes of such trees.
+Thus, besides the immense quantity obtained from the acacias, the
+_anacardium occidentale_ (cashew-nut tree) in America, has furnished
+from a single tree a mass weighing forty-two pounds. Gum is mawkish,
+insipid, and generally unpalatable, yet highly nutritive; and the
+Africans, during the harvest of gum at Senegal, live entirely upon it,
+eight ounces being the daily allowance for each man. In general they
+become plump on this fare; and such should be the result, if the
+calculation be correct, which assigns as great nutritive power to four
+ounces of gum as to one pound of bread. This concentration of
+nourishment renders gum a peculiarly suitable food for lengthened
+journeys through the deserts, as it occupies small compass, and a
+little suffices to stay the cravings of hunger. Thus, upwards of a
+thousand persons may occupy more than two months in a journey from
+Abyssinia to Cairo without any other kind of food[X]. Its bland,
+demulcent properties fit it to correct the acrimony of the secretions
+formed under the influence of a tropical sun and torrid air, with a
+scanty and irregular supply of water. Plants, likewise, are preserved
+in a vegetative and living state, mid sandy and arid wastes, by the
+quantity of gum stored up in them. Hence succulent plants, such as
+cacti and others, may be found in the steppes and sandy plains of
+South America, verdant and healthy, though no rain may fall to convey
+fresh sap into them for months, or even a year. In the form of
+mucilage, _i. e._, gum in a state of solution, it is found in a very
+large number of plants, and thus contributes to the maintenance of man
+and animals. In these it is generally associated with some other
+principles, which render it either more palatable or more easily
+digested. A very large number of our esculent vegetables owe their
+nutritive properties to the gummy matters with which they abound, and
+the favour with which they are regarded to the other matters united
+with it. Those which have a bitter principle are very excellent, when
+this is in small proportion; and as, in most of them, the gummy matter
+is prepared first, requiring for its formation only a moderate degree
+of light and heat, while the bitter, or other principle, is added at a
+later period, under the influence of stronger light; such plants, when
+young, are tender and agreeable; nay, even very poisonous plants, when
+very young, are wholesome and pleasant, which, at a more advanced
+season, are virose and disagreeable. Thus, the peasantry of France and
+Piedmont eat the young crowfoots (ranunculus) and poppies, after
+boiling them, and find them safe and nourishing. The same result
+follows exclusion of light, as in the process of blanching, by which
+means celery, sea-kale, and other vegetables, are rendered esculent,
+which in the wild state are poisonous or repulsive. In northern
+latitudes, the light being intense for a short time only, many plants
+are used there which, in the southern, are dangerous or destructive,
+such as hemlock and monkshood. A moderate degree of bitterness is a
+very useful accompaniment of the gum, which alone is cloying and even
+oppressive to the stomach. The presence of a bitter principle in many
+lichens promotes their digestion, and thus even the tough and leathery
+ones, called tripe of the rocks, can be eaten, and sustain life amid
+great privations and sufferings. The rein-deer moss (_cludonia
+rangiferina_) is another lichen of great utility: it is not much
+employed as human food, but it is the main support of the rein-deer
+for a great portion of the year, and thus renders Lapland a fit abode
+for man.
+
+A peculiar modification of gum constitutes _pectine_ or vegetable
+jelly; and this occurs in fruits, such as the orange, currant, and
+gooseberry, &c., also in many of the algae or sea-weeds, which are, or
+ought to be, much employed as a delicate article of nourishment. The
+edible swallow's nest, so greatly esteemed by the Chinese, is an alga,
+gathered by the birds. The Ceylon moss (_Gigartina lichenoides_), and
+the carrageen or Irish moss (_Chondrus crispus_), with many others,
+might be made to contribute largely to the subsistence of man. Not
+merely earth, from its fruitful bosom, but the vast ocean, offer their
+rich produce to nourish and sustain the only intelligent occupant of
+the globe, who should ever remember the declaration of the psalmist,
+"O Lord! how manifold are thy works! in wisdom hast thou made them
+all: the earth is full of thy riches; so is the great and wide sea!"
+(Ps. civ.)
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[A] The Greeks used to say that reeds had contributed to subjugate a
+people, by furnishing arrows; to soften their manner, by the charm of
+music; and to develop their intelligence, by offering them the
+instruments proper for the formation of letters.--_Humboldt's Personal
+Narrative._
+
+"The reed presents itself as an object of peculiar veneration, when we
+reflect that it formed the earliest instrument by which human ideas,
+and all the charms of literature and science were communicated, and
+which has handed down to us the light of religion and the glow of
+genius from the remotest ages."--_Drummond's First Steps to Botany._
+
+[B] "The Guaraons, a free and independent people, dispersed in the
+Delta of the Oronooko, owe their independence to the nature of their
+country; for it is well known that, in order to raise their abodes
+above the surface of the waters, at the period of the great
+inundations, they support them on the cut trunks of the mangrove tree,
+and of the _Mauritia flexuosa_."--_Humboldt, Personal Narrative_,
+vol. iii. p. 277. The same people make bread of the medullary flour of
+this palm, which it yields in great abundance, if cut down just before
+going to flower.--_Ibid._, vol. iii. p. 278. To these circumstances
+Thomson alludes:--
+
+ "Wide o'er his isles the branching Oronooque
+ Rolls a brown deluge, and the native driven
+ To dwell aloft on life-sufficing trees,
+ At once his home, his robe, his food, his arms."
+
+[C] The connection of navigation with the progress of civilization is
+most intimate, as may be understood from the following passage:--
+
+"Among the circumstances which have contributed to retard the progress
+of civilization in Africa, one of the most important and influential
+is the compact and undivided form of the African continent, and the
+natural barriers which render access to the greater regions of the
+interior so remarkably difficult. It has been observed by Professor
+Ritter, that the civilization of countries is greatly influenced by
+their geographical forms, and by the relation which their interior
+spaces bear to the extent of coast. While all Asia is five times as
+large as Europe, and Africa more than three times as large, the
+littoral margins of these larger continents bear no similar proportion
+to their respective areas. Asia has seven thousand seven hundred
+geographical miles of coast; Europe four thousand three hundred, and
+Africa only three thousand five hundred. To every thirty-seven square
+miles of continent in Europe, there is one mile of coast; in Africa,
+only one mile of coast to one hundred and fifty square miles of
+continent. Therefore the relative extension of coast is four times as
+great in Europe as in Africa. Asia is in the middle between these two
+extremes. To every one hundred and five square miles, it has one mile
+of coast. The calculation of geographical spaces occupied by different
+parts of the two last-mentioned continents, is still more striking.
+The ramifications of Asia, excluded from the continental trapezium,
+make about one hundred and fifty-five thousand square miles of that
+whole quarter, or about one-fifth part. The ramifications of the
+continental triangle of Europe form one-third part of the whole, or
+even more. In Asia the stock is much greater in proportion to the
+branches, and thence the more highly advanced culture of the branches
+has remained, for the most part, excluded from the interior spaces. In
+Europe, on the other hand, from the different relation of its spaces,
+the condition of the external parts had much greater influence on that
+of the interior. Hence the higher culture of Greece and Italy
+penetrated more easily into the interior, and gave to the whole
+continent one harmonious character of civilization, while Asia
+contains many separate regions which may be compared, individually, to
+Europe, and each of which could receive only its peculiar kind of
+culture from its own branches. Africa, deficient in these endowments
+of nature, and wanting both separating gulfs, and inland seas, could
+obtain no share in the expansion of that fruitful tree, which, having
+driven its roots deeply in the heart of Asia, spread its branches and
+blossoms over the western and southern tracts of the same continent,
+and expanded its crown over Europe. In Egypt alone it possessed a
+river-system, so formed as to favor the development of similar
+productions. Die Erdkunde von Aslen, von Carl Ritter. 2. Band.
+Einleitung. §24, 25. Berlin, 1832."--_Pritchard, Researches into the
+Physical History of Mankind. Third Edit._ Vol. ii., p. 354.
+
+[D] "Was it not for the manifestation of this brighter era, and the
+realization of its promised blessings, that all else which preceded it
+was overruled by divine Providence, as subservient and preparatory?
+All things being now ready, there began to spring up in the bosom of
+the British churches, a wide and simultaneous sense of the solemn
+responsibility under which they had been laid by the events of
+Providence, to avail themselves of so favorable an opening for the
+diffusion of the gospel throughout the eastern world. Men, qualified
+to undertake the high commission, must be sent across the ocean--and
+have not the toils, and perils, and successes, of Vasco de Gama, and
+other navigators, opened up a safe and easy passage? That their
+labours might pervade the country, and strike a deep and permanent
+root into the soil, they must be delivered from the caprices of savage
+tyranny, and the ebullitions of heathen rage; and have not our Clives
+and our Wellingtons wrested the rod of power from every wilful despot;
+and our Hastings and our Wellesleys thrown the broad shield of British
+justice and British protection alike over all? In order that they
+might the more effectually adapt their communications to the
+peculiarities of the people, they must become acquainted with the
+learned language of the country, and through it, with the real and
+original sources of all the prevailing opinions and observances,
+sacred and civil. And have not our Joneses and our Colebrookes
+unfolded the whole, to prove subservient to the cause of the Christian
+philanthropist? In this way have our navigators, our warriors, our
+statesmen, and our literati, been unconsciously employed, under an
+over-ruling Providence, as so many pioneers, to prepare the way for
+our Swartzes, our Buchanans, our Martins, and our Careys."--_Duff's
+India and India Missions._
+
+[E] The relative proportions of starch and gluten in rice, wheat, and
+other seeds, not only confirm the views respecting design, in
+determining their geographical distribution, but merit notice, as
+influencing their nutritive qualities, and fitness or unfitness as
+food in different countries.
+
+ -----------------------------+---------+--------
+ | Starch. | Gluten.
+ +---------+--------
+ Wheat, according to Proust | 74.5 | 12.5
+ ---- -- Vogel | 68.0 | 24.0
+ Winter wheat -- Davy | 77.0 | 19.0
+ Spring wheat | 70.0 | 24.0
+ Spelt -- Vogel | 74.0 | 22.0
+ Barley -- Davy | 79.0 | 6.0
+ Rye -- Do. | 61.0 | 5.0
+ Oats -- Do. | 59.0 | 6.0
+ Rice Carolina -- Vogel | 85.07 | 3.60
+ Maize -- Bizio | 80.92 | 0.
+ Tartarian buckwheat | 52.29 | 10.47
+ -----------------------------+---------+--------
+
+Not only do the relative proportions of starch and gluten vary in the
+same seed when grown in different countries, but even when grown in
+the same country, according to the kind of manure put on the soil, a
+point of great importance to agriculturists, when known and attended
+to.
+
+[F] See "Church of England Magazine," vol. vii. p. 52-3-4.
+
+[G] "I have been informed by Sir Joseph Banks, that the Derbyshire
+miners, in winter, prefer oat-cakes to wheaten bread, finding that
+this kind of nourishment enables them to support their strength and
+perform their labour better. In summer they say oat-cake heats them,
+and they then consume the finest wheaten bread they can
+procure."--_Sir H. Dacy's Agricultural Chemistry, 5th edit., p. 143._
+
+The propriety and advantage of this practice is established by the
+recent investigations of Boussingault, who found that oats contain
+more than double the quantity of nitrogen which exists in any of the
+other cereal grains.--_See Annales de Chimie et de Physique, tom.
+lxvii. p. 408-21._
+
+[H] Carpenter's "General and Comparative Physiology," p. 272 and Dr.
+Prout's "Bridgewater Treatise," book iii.
+
+[I] See Forrest's "Voyage to the Moluccas;" Craufurd's "Indian
+Archipelago, or Library of Entertaining Knowledge, Vegetable
+Substances, Food of Man," p. 171.
+
+[J] "In the season of inundations, these clumps of the _Mauritia_,
+with their leaves in the form of a fan, have the appearance of a
+forest rising from the bosom of the waters. The navigator in
+proceeding along the channel of the delta of the Oronooco at night,
+sees with surprize the summits of the palm-trees illuminated by large
+fires. These are the habitations of the Guaraons (see Sir W. Raleigh's
+Brevis Descript. Guianæ, 1594, tab. 4), which are suspended from the
+trunks of trees. These tribes hang up mats in the air, which they fill
+with earth, and kindle on a layer of moist clay the fire necessary for
+their household wants. They have owed their liberty and their
+political independence for ages, to the quaking and swampy soil which
+they pass over in the time of drought, and on which they alone know
+how to walk in security to their solitude in the delta of the
+Oronooco, to their abodes on the trees, where religious enthusiasm
+will probably never lead any American Stylites (_see_ Mosheim's Church
+History). This tree, the tree of life of the missionaries, not only
+affords the Guaraons a safe dwelling during the risings of the
+Oronooco, but its shelly fruit, its farinaceous pith, its juice,
+abounding in saccharine matter, and the fibres of its leaves, furnish
+them with food, wine, and thread proper for making cords and weaving
+hammocks. It is curious to observe in the lowest degree of human
+civilization, the existence of a whole tribe depending on one single
+species of palm-tree, similar to those insects which feed on one and
+the same flower, or on one and the same part of a plant."--_Humboldt,
+Person. Narrative_, vol. v. p. 728.
+
+[K] Davy's Agricultural Chemistry, p. 133.--According to Mr. Knight
+the best potatoes, such as the Irish apple, possess much greater
+specific gravity than the inferior sorts, and this variety yields
+nearly 20 per cent. of starch; while five pounds of the variety called
+Captain Hart, yields 12 ounces of starch, and the Moulton White nearly
+as much, the Purple Red give only 8½, the Ox Noble 8¼. There is much
+more profit in cultivating the former than the latter sorts; but even
+the best kinds degenerate, and new sorts must be procured, as if to
+stimulate the ingenuity of man, by preventing his enjoying the gifts
+of God, without constant exertion, and observation of the laws which
+the Creator has impressed upon his productions. See the Observations
+of Thomas Andrew Knight, and the experiments now making by Mr. Maund,
+of Bromsgrove.
+
+[L] Duncan. Sacred Philosophy of the Seasons.
+
+[M] Carpenter's Physiology.
+
+[N] Thomson's Chemistry of Organic Bodies: Vegetables, p. 667.
+
+[O] Vere magna et longe pulcherrima sunt etiam illa profundissimâ
+sapientiâ hic exstructa opera tua, O Jehovah! quæ non nisi bene
+armatis nostris oculis patent! Qualia autem erunt denique illa, quæ
+sublato hoc speculo, remotâ mortalitatis caligine daturus es tuis Te
+vere sincero Pectore colentibus? Eheu qualia! Hedwig.
+
+[P] Thomson's Chemistry. Vegetables, p. 630.
+
+[Q] On the Culture and Uses of Potatoes, by sir John Sinclair, bart.
+This is a subject becoming every year of greater moment, and attention
+to it a national benefit. The reduction of bulk alone, facilitating
+the transport from one place to another, is an essential gain. The
+produce, from a certain number of acres of this valuable esculent, may
+be greatly augmented by planting the potatoes whole, at a great
+distance between each, and hoeing freely between them--_See Knight's
+Papers in Horticultural Transactions, and Payen et Chevalier, Traité
+de la Pomme de Terre. Paris, 1826, p. 17._
+
+[R] Humboldt. Personal Narrative, vol. iv. p. 84.
+
+[S] "Among the plants cultivated by man, the sugar-cane, the plantain
+(_musa_), the mammee-apple (_mammea_), and alligator-pear-tree
+(_laurus persea_) alone have the property of the cocoa-nut-tree, that
+of being watered alike with fresh and salt water. This circumstance is
+favorable to their migrations; and if the sugar-cane of the shore
+yield a syrup that is a little brackish, it is believed at the same
+time to be better fitted for the distillation of spirit, than the
+juice produced from the canes of the interior."--_Humboldt._
+
+[T] "The quantity of these insects is incredible to all who have not
+themselves witnessed their astonishing numbers; the whole earth is
+covered with them for the space of several leagues. The noise they
+make in browsing on the trees and herbage may be heard at a great
+distance, and resembles that of an army in secret. The Tartars
+themselves are a less destructive enemy than these little animals. One
+would imagine that fire had followed their progress. Wherever their
+myriads spread, the verdure of the country disappears; trees and
+plants stripped of their leaves and reduced to their naked boughs and
+stems cause the dreary image of winter to succeed in an instant to the
+rich scenery of spring. When these clouds of locusts take their
+flight, to surmount any obstacles, or to traverse more rapidly a
+desert soil, the heavens may literally be said to be obscured by
+them."
+
+[U] "As the native of a northern country, little favoured by nature, I
+shall observe that the Marche of Brandebourg, for the most part sandy,
+nourishes, under an administration favourable to the progress of
+agricultural industry, on a surface only one-third that of Cuba, a
+population nearly double."--_Humboldt, P. N._, vol. vii. p. 156.
+
+[V] Loudon's Arboretum Britannicum, vol. i., p. 412.
+
+[W] For an interesting account of sugar, see Humboldt, Nova Genera et
+Species Plantarum, vol. i., p. 243.
+
+[X] Haselquist's Voyage.
+
+
+
+
+THE SECURITY OF GOD'S PEOPLE:
+
+A SERMON,
+
+By the Venerable C. J. Hoare, M.A.,
+ _Archdeacon and Prebendary of Winchester._
+
+Romans viii. 28.
+
+ "And we know that all things work together for good to
+ them that love God."
+
+
+Amongst the observations most frequently heard in the world, is that
+made on the undeserved prosperity of the wicked, and the many
+seemingly uncalled-for trials of the righteous. Experience will indeed
+tell us, that neither of these opposite conditions is uninterrupted;
+neither is it all sunshine in the most prosperous worldly lot; nor is
+it all gloom--far from it--in the Christian's portion on earth.
+Experience will also go further, and will abundantly prove the saying
+of the wise man, that "the prosperity of fools shall destroy them."
+Such success has a tendency first to deceive, then to corrupt, and
+lastly to betray men into utter destruction. But the text will lead us
+still further; it will teach us, that the trials of the righteous
+preserve them--yea, work for good; and that "all things," and,
+therefore, even the greatest trials, "work together for good to them
+that love God."
+
+The text represents them as workmen. They work together for good;
+they are constantly at work for that purpose, whether as instruments
+in God's hands, or as in a degree self-moving for that end; they are
+constructing as it were a building, or they are laying a foundation;
+and that which they lay--that which all things befalling a Christian
+are ever laying for him--is a ground for his substantial, necessary,
+and eternal benefit. "We know that all things work together for good
+to them that love God."
+
+This, then, it will be, with God's blessing, my humble endeavour to
+show in the following discourse: first, premising the sense of the
+word "good," in all just and reasonable acceptation; next, showing
+more fully how all things may be thus said to "work for good to them
+that love God;" finally, pointing out some of the many things which
+will be found by experience to work in this very manner.
+
+I. The term "_good_," it must be said in the first place, is very
+different, both in the language of the bible and in the estimation of
+the truly wise, from what it usually represents in the language and
+opinion of the world. The bible teaches us to view all things in their
+consequences, and in their real and essential nature. View things in
+their consequences, in their final end and issue, if you would view
+them at all justly or wisely. Ease, and health, and worldly wealth,
+and success may be good, just as the plentiful feast is good, provided
+a man has temperance and soundness of constitution properly to partake
+of it; but, if he is likely to indulge to a surfeit, or if every
+morsel is food to some mortal disorder, and every cup adds strength to
+a fever that is raging in his veins, no one in reason would call such
+an entertainment good to such a man. And just so with the good things
+of this present life: the Christian does not unreasonably deny that
+prosperity is pleasing, health desirable, friends and relations deeply
+attaching to us, and the smiles of social endearment or public favour
+greatly captivating; but neither does he, like the world, consider
+them to be necessarily all they seem to be, good to all persons, and
+under all circumstances; he does not forget that earthly and bodily
+good is just what it becomes in the use of it; that many times the use
+can hardly be separated from the abuse; that lawful things, when
+unlawfully or idolatrously used, are just as evil as unlawful
+ones--nay, rather, that for a few comparatively who have perished from
+a hardened course of forbidden pleasure, multitudes have been for ever
+lost by allowed indulgences. Till he sees, then, the application made,
+and the resulting consequences of any worldly boon, he does not call
+the possessor happy, nor the possession good, nor very eagerly or
+supremely does he desire it either for himself or others.
+
+But, again, the things _really and essentially good_ in their very
+nature and inseparable qualities are those which, in the estimation of
+the mere world, are held in no account whatsoever. What the bible
+chiefly esteems, and the world wholly neglects, are spiritual
+blessings,--the good things of the soul of man, "the precious things
+of heaven, even of the everlasting hills." Those precious things, the
+goodwill of him who is the great I AM--the peace of God which passeth
+all understanding--the luxury of promoting the good of man and the
+glory of God;--still more, the pardon of sin, through faith in the
+atonement of Jesus Christ--a gradual advancement in true holiness--a
+growing fitness and longing desire for the future blessedness of the
+saints, and a final admission and "abundant entrance into the
+everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour," the "inheritance
+incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not away;"--these are truly
+to the world but as a dream, a fancy, a cunningly-devised fable; but,
+to the mind of the Christian, stand for everything truly and
+substantially good. They are in all his plans first and foremost, and
+nearest and dearest to his heart. They are as necessary to him in his
+calculation and account of human happiness, as profit and pleasure are
+to his neighbours around. "Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor the
+heart conceived, the things which God hath prepared for them that love
+him." But God hath revealed to _him_ by his Spirit, these very things,
+as his chief good, his measure of all true happiness. Wealth may be
+good, health still better, kindly affections and attached friends the
+best of earthly boons; but the favour of God, the acquisition of his
+image, the means of grace, and the hope of glory, are to him sovereign
+and above all. While many ask, amidst the increase of their corn, and
+wine, and oil, "Who will show us any good?" he exclaims, "Lord, lift
+thou up the light of thy countenance upon me"--"in thy presence is the
+fulness of joy; at thy right hand are pleasures for evermore." He
+weighs well the nature, and "remembers the end" of all that is called
+good, and so "does not amiss."
+
+II. For, secondly, he finds that, while we so do, and so consider,
+"all things work together for good to _those that love God_." There
+is, first, on the mind of the Christian that secret influence in the
+very disposition of love to God, which will _of itself_ turn to good
+every thing that comes from the God whom we love, and the Saviour on
+whom we fully and implicitly rely. And there is, secondly, a full
+disposition on the part of _our heavenly Father_ so to order and
+direct every event which befals his loving and attached children, as
+shall be found at last to have answered the ends of sovereign wisdom
+and divine mercy.
+
+In the first instance, the tendency, _on our own part_, of love to the
+great and good God will be this, namely, to turn all that befals us to
+an instrument of good. As, in the healthy body, food of very different
+descriptions may yet all turn to nourishment, and minister to health
+and bodily strength; so, in the healthy mind, purified and
+strengthened by the grace of God's Holy Spirit, every thing that meets
+it is converted to its advantage, and adds in some way to its
+improvement and its happiness. There is ever a colour cast upon
+outward circumstances from the complexion of the inward soul. The vain
+man, on his part, the ambitious, the sensual, the gainful, well know
+how to turn all to the advancement of their sinful objects; and no
+less does the good man turn all to the enlargement of his goodness,
+and the lover of his God to the increase and exercise of that love.
+Viewing every thing in the glass, or by the lamp of God's word, he
+ingeniously, so to speak, finds in every thing a reason for loving and
+fearing, serving and obeying God. Every event works for his good,
+because he is resolved it shall do so; and every result satisfies,
+pleases, rejoices him, because he is persuaded it ought to do so.
+Loving God, he has a confidence that he is beloved of God; and then,
+feeling himself in a world made by God, and proceeding forward under
+his guidance and permission, he never will believe that any thing
+falls out in it but what is intended to make him both good and happy.
+Happy then he will be, if God intends he should be so; and holy he
+will be encouraged to become, under the consciousness that God intends
+his holiness.
+
+Dispositions like these will indeed work for their possessor even upon
+the hardest materials, and will, by the very force of a new and
+spiritual nature, convert all into "servants to righteousness unto
+holiness." Faith will be a hand, bringing together the events of life
+and the framer and guide of all life and all existence; and the result
+will be a solemn and heart-satisfying conviction, that "all things
+work together for good to them that love God."
+
+Nor, next, will such a faith prove to be groundless; for surely there
+is a _power engaged_, there is a pledge in the gospel, a sure word of
+promise, and even of covenant, that all things shall be ours;--"All
+are yours, and ye are Christ's, and Christ is God's." The trial of our
+faith lies indeed very much upon this one point. Can we, for a moment,
+believe that God permits all the disorder and confusion which appears
+to us in the world--the prosperity of wickedness, the trials and
+adversity of the righteous, in order to raise a doubt on our minds
+whether he be not absent all the while--whether he bears or not any
+share in the world he created, or in all those moving causes that owe
+their activity and life to himself alone? God is surely present; he is
+powerfully operating; he is the supreme controller, and the almighty
+director; he is fully aware of those adverse appearances, and is no
+less deeply engaged in the final issue of all events, to render them
+consistent with the ends of justice and mercy, than as if we saw him
+at work with our bodily eyes: or, as if we then could fully know the
+mind of the Lord, or be his counsellors to instruct him.
+
+The expressions of scripture are too strong, and too agreeable to the
+very nature of God and of his works, to make us doubt for a moment of
+his providential care and unceasing watchfulness. "He is not far from
+every one of us; for in him we live, and move, and have our being." To
+the true disciple saith Christ himself, "The very hairs of your head
+are all numbered;" and yet more strongly, "If a man love me, he will
+keep my words; and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him,
+and make our abode with him." Promises, these, which have been ever
+realized in the history of the saints in all ages who have walked with
+God--Enoch, Noah, Abraham, and the patriarch Jacob--none more tried
+than he--yet we read _his_ testimony to "the God, which fed me all my
+life-long unto this day; the angel which redeemed me from all evil."
+
+Keeping in view the notion of what is truly good for this state of
+trial, and for the soul as well as for the body, there is no time and
+no extent to which we shall not find the promise sure, and the
+fulfilment exact, where God is pledged for the supply of his servants
+that trust in him: his eye is ever open, his ear ever attentive unto
+them. The petition he denies is able to operate as powerfully and as
+favourably on their behalf as that which he grants; merciful alike in
+the gift which he bestows and which he withholds, and wise alike in
+the evil which he permits, and which he restrains.
+
+There is nothing more important to the believer's faith, than to
+apprehend that there is no uncertainty, nothing imperfect or weak in
+the dispensations of God, as they respect the final issue of the
+Christian's trials. Either God is wholly absent and forgetful of his
+daily wants, or else he is wholly and for ever at work on his behalf.
+If he were wholly absent, well might his servants doubt that, after
+all their endeavours to that end, they should be able to turn to good
+all the events of this mortal life. If _he_ do not temper the trials
+of his servants, how in truth shall they overcome them? If _he_ do not
+controul their enemies, how shall they ever escape them? Figure to
+yourself any place, or time, or circumstance, where God is not, or
+where he _can_ be spared from the concerns of his people, either
+temporal or spiritual: but, if none can be imagined or assigned, then
+is it but justly and essentially true, that, by his especial order and
+his immediate appointment, "all things work together for good to them
+that love God."
+
+III. But we may proceed, lastly, to show, in a practical manner, _some
+of those very things_ which shall thus work together for good. Take
+the most unpromising and most unfavourable case, for instance, that of
+_great prosperity_. None will deny it to be a case of many others the
+most trying to the graces of the true Christian. Yet even shall the
+temptations arising from worldly honours and successes, to a man armed
+with the love of God, work together for good. Graces rarely exercised
+in exalted stations, shall be found to shine the more conspicuously in
+his instance. The grace of humility, and tenderness of spirit, shall
+be the more eminently illustrated in that station, where, too often,
+there is only pride and hardness of heart. If he be found, in a sober,
+self-denying spirit, setting little value on those things so commonly
+called good amongst mankind--using this world without abusing
+it--shall not the grace of God be more abundantly magnified? When not
+overcome, as Agar feared he might be, saying, "lest I be full, and
+say, who is the Lord?"--but rather, when led by fulness to more
+gratitude, and by a lofty station to deeper humility, and to a more
+lowly submission to God, and meekness to man--how will he by such
+prosperity as this testify to the reality of Christian principles: how
+will he, in giving freely where he has freely received, esteeming even
+his highest gains as loss for Christ's sake, and returning upon others
+all that mercy which has been exercised towards himself, prove that
+_he_ has not received the grace of God in vain; but that even
+prosperity has "worked together for good to them that love God."
+
+Or, suppose the case of _deep adversity_--suppose the Christian
+stripped, like Job, of great honours and possessions at a single
+stroke; betrayed and sold like Joseph, even by brethren, into bondage
+and exile; or lying like Lazarus at the gate of the rich man, diseased
+in body, and suing for the crumbs from off his table; or suppose him,
+as St. Paul himself, in peril of foes, and even doubtful of friends;
+in weariness and painfulness oft, in hunger and thirst, in cold and
+nakedness. These last were exactly the circumstances under which the
+very text was indited by the apostle himself: he saw, what you may
+see, that trials like these, when tempered by the presence of the God
+he loved, were good, not, I would say, in proportion to their weight,
+but according to the patience which they exercised, the faith they
+strengthened, the experience of divine support they afforded, the hope
+they brightened, the crown they were preparing; yea, the exceeding and
+eternal weight of glory which they must eventually be working out. The
+apostle had "heard of the patience of Job," and had "seen the end of
+the Lord, that the Lord is very pitiful, and of tender mercy." The
+trials of Joseph had even led that servant of God, by degrees of
+painful progress, to the honour of a prince, and a chain of gold. The
+"evil things" of Lazarus--good they might have been called--had led
+him to still higher honours, and had prepared him to be carried by
+angels into Abraham's bosom. Every individual circumstance of this
+nature, as it passed in review before the apostle in the text, had led
+irresistibly to the conclusion he so strongly expresses. Could he
+distrust the same arm, disbelieve the same promises; or rather saying
+with David--"Our fathers trusted in thee, and were delivered," would
+he not add--I will trust as they did; I will be "in subjection to the
+Father of spirits, and live?" Let me feel only the "profit, that I may
+be partaker of his holiness;" and then, "though no affliction for the
+present is joyous, but grievous," it shall surely hereafter yield the
+peaceable fruit of true righteousness; and "all things," adversity
+itself, "shall work together for _my_ good."
+
+_Temptation_, verily, shall be among the "things working together for
+good to them that love God." Such indeed is our state of trial upon
+earth, that every successive arrival at our doors comes to us in some
+shape or other of temptation to sin. But take the strongest and most
+pressing incitements to the corruptions of the heart, and the evil of
+our nature. Even of _these_ must it not be said, that the temptation,
+and the tempter himself, may be turned into a worker for good, when
+that promise is brought forward, and brought home to the heart, "God
+is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above what ye are
+able, but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye
+may be able to bear it?" Another apostle had a like meaning when he
+said, "My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers
+temptations." Every enemy opposed to the Christian warrior affords
+him fresh opportunity for a sure victory in the strength of Christ.
+Every obstacle in his path is that which faith regards as a trial
+prepared for his soul; but hope and joy carry him over, to the glory
+of his sovereign Upholder. In evil company, which he seeks not, his
+courage is honourably put to the test, and abides it; amidst a world
+of licentiousness and excess, which he desires not to approach, he
+still trusts, through grace, that he shall not be found wanting. In a
+season of provocation his meekness is tried, and it prevails; and in
+the moment of fear, and the threats of alarm, "his heart standeth
+fast, trusting in the Lord;" "nay, in all these things he is more than
+conqueror through him that loved him."
+
+If his very _sins_ are in one sense his shame, and the source of his
+bitter tears and saddest recollections, still those tears and
+recollections shall prove among the workers for his good, if they lead
+him more closely to the throne of mercy, and to the fountain of
+eternal strength. If any experiences of past weakness make him more
+watchful, sober, and diligent for the future--if they direct him to
+the vulnerable points in his armour, to the "sin that easily besets
+him"--if, in the very moment of his conscious frailty and
+heart-overwhelming struggle, he is enabled to exclaim, "Rejoice not
+over me, O mine enemy; though I fall I shall arise; though I sit in
+darkness the Lord shall be a light unto me:" then shall he know that
+"_all things_ work together for good to them that love God."
+
+I conclude with a single word of remark on the expression in the text,
+"We _know_ that all things work together for good." It expresses the
+_personal experience_ of the Christian. It answers to a similar
+expression of the same apostle to the Philippians--"I know that this
+shall turn to my salvation through your prayer, and the supply of the
+spirit of Jesus Christ." But to whom is this knowledge vouchsafed? To
+whom is it a safe and a sure conviction--an "earnest expectation and
+hope," so "that in nothing we shall be ashamed?" Truly, to those only
+who "_love God_"--to those who are "the called according to his
+purpose." His purpose is our sanctification, and that we should be
+"conformed to the image of his Son." To such truly, to such only does
+that blessing apply, so frequently indeed, and but too rashly,
+appropriated by many others, "All is for the best."
+
+Let the careless rather tremble, those as yet not effectually called
+into the gospel vineyard, at such an appropriation of the text. To
+them it may be only a savour of death unto death, a deadly security, a
+hope that "_maketh_ ashamed, because the love of God is _not_ yet shed
+abroad in their hearts."
+
+Gain rather in prayer, in secret meditation and much retirement from
+the presence and the love of this world, the true love of God which is
+in Christ Jesus our Lord. Then being first transformed yourself, you
+will be enabled, by a divine power, to transform everything around
+you; you will receive all things as from the hand of the Father whom
+you love, the Benefactor and Friend whom you wish and aim to serve.
+Your willing and noble obedience to him will render, then, prosperity
+a new advantage to you by awakening your gratitude, and adversity a
+blessing, by exercising and perfecting your patience. You will have a
+fence around you, an armour of divine temper to fortify you in the
+presence of every temptation, and to turn the very weapons of your
+adversaries into your own instruments of victory, the trophies of your
+triumph. Sin will have its struggles within you, but will not gain
+dominion over you, while every deviation from God's righteous will is
+mourned in secret, and restored through grace; and while it brings you
+the more urgently and constantly to the foot of the cross, where hung
+the Saviour whom you love, whose favour and forgiveness you implore;
+and you shall be enabled to close the volume of your experience in the
+concluding words of the chapter, and with the apostle himself: "Who
+shall separate us from the love of Christ?... I am persuaded, that
+neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers,
+nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any
+other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God
+which is Christ Jesus our Lord."
+
+
+
+
+THE GLORY OF THE SAVIOUR'S TRANSFIGURATION.[Y]
+
+ "And was transfigured before them, and his face did
+ shine as the sun, and his raiment was white as the
+ light."
+
+
+There never existed in this world a person in whose life there was a
+greater variety of incident than in the life of Jesus. He passed
+through scenes of the most peculiar and diversified description, to
+which we can find no parallel in the history of man, the effect of
+which no ordinary mind could have borne. These were, in general,
+connected with that lowliness and debasement to which he submitted for
+the benefit of our sinful race; but occasionally, as at his birth, his
+baptism, and transfiguration, there burst forth some bright rays of
+glory from behind the dark cloud of his humanity, which proved his
+possession of a nature that was divine.
+
+It may have a good effect in strengthening our gratitude for the
+Saviour's mercy, to remember that every complexion of circumstance was
+freely and voluntarily submitted to, not merely for his own
+satisfaction or benefit, but principally for the good of man. Jesus
+never lost sight of his representative character. He always remembered
+those whose cause he had espoused: and, whether he was led by the
+Spirit into the wilderness, to be tempted of the devil--or into the
+garden of Gethsemane, to sustain his more fierce and violent
+assaults--or to the mountain, to put on for a season the habiliments
+of light and glory--his chief object and desire was to effect the
+redemption, and to revive the hopes of weak and fallen man.
+
+We are now supplied by the Holy Spirit with a very brief account of
+the transfiguration itself. Before, however, we make any remark upon
+this description, or refer, as we desire to do, to the uses which this
+transaction was intended to serve, we must direct our attention for a
+few moments to the important preparation which the Saviour made for
+it. And here there are, perhaps, many who may be disposed to ask, had
+there not been sufficient preparation already? had not the Saviour
+endured much physical fatigue in accomplishing the wearisome ascent of
+the mountain? and had not the time, the place, and the spectators,
+been carefully selected by himself? Let it however be remembered, that
+in addition to all this, there was a necessary and absolutely
+indispensable preliminary, not to be omitted even by the Son of God,
+and that was prayer. It is said, by St. Luke, in the twenty-ninth
+verse of his ninth chapter, that "as he prayed, the fashion of his
+countenance was altered, and his raiment was white and glistering."
+Let us learn from this, that not all the labour, mental or physical,
+which we can possibly exert, can ever bring us into the enjoyment of
+one momentary smile of God's countenance, if we neglect prayer. We may
+diligently peruse the records of redeeming mercy which the sacred page
+of scripture contains; we may place ourselves under the pastoral care
+of some faithful and devoted minister of Jesus; we may enjoy the high
+advantage of intercourse and communion with many spiritually-minded
+followers of the Saviour; yet, after all, we shall find no benefit
+from these distinguished privileges if we neglect to pray. How many
+Christians there are, who often wish they had a Luther for their
+minister, because they feel dissatisfied with their spiritual progress
+under him to whose charge they may have been entrusted by the great
+Head of the church! And yet the cause of this may be traced to their
+own want of constant and of earnest prayer. Prayer is the key that
+unlocks the holy place where Jesus meets his people at the mercy-seat,
+to dispense the gifts which have been purchased by his precious blood.
+And when the united petitions of ministers and people ascend in an
+unceasing stream of sacred incense to a throne of grace, blessings may
+be expected to descend in rich abundance on the church.
+
+But perhaps it may be considered that we have digressed from our
+subject. We return, then, to the circumstance which more immediately
+claims our attention. We are informed that Jesus was praying when he
+was transfigured; nay, it is remarkable that St. Luke represents his
+special object of ascending the mountain to have been in order to
+devote himself to this sacred engagement. "It came to pass about an
+eight days after these sayings, he took Peter, and John, and James,
+and went up into a mountain to pray." Prayer was as much the Saviour's
+duty, as it is the duty of any of his people. He had been expressly
+commanded by his Father to ask of him to give him the heathen for his
+inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for his possession.
+All his works, whilst he was tabernacling in the flesh, were
+accompanied with prayer; and his present exaltation at the right hand
+of his heavenly Father, instead of suspending, rather imparts a more
+sublime intensity of fervour to his petitions. In vain had he shed his
+blood without this; for his prayers are as essential for the salvation
+of sinners, as his sufferings on the cross for their redemption; and
+therefore the apostle, in the twenty-fifth verse of the seventh
+chapter of the epistle to the Hebrews, connects the unlimited ability
+of Jesus to save, not only with his having offered himself as a
+sacrifice, but also with his ever living to make intercession for us.
+O! how welcome and delightful must be the accents of supplication to
+the ears of the Lord God of Sabaoth, when he withholds blessings, even
+from his well-beloved Son, until he ask for them! And how necessary is
+prayer, when Jesus cannot obtain blessings without it! There is a
+reserve manifested by the Holy Spirit in this, as in other instances,
+as to the contents of our Saviour's petitions. Most probably they had
+some reference to that splendid scene in his earthly history, into
+which he was about to enter. We may imagine him to have addressed his
+heavenly Father in language somewhat similar to that which he employed
+when he was about to devote himself as a spotless victim on the cross:
+"Father, the hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy Son also may
+glorify thee. Father, I will that they also whom thou hast given me be
+with me where I am, that they may behold my glory which thou hast
+given me: for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world."
+
+But we must pass on to the description which is given of the
+transfiguration of Jesus. "His face did shine as the sun, and his
+raiment was white as the light." On this we can say but little, for no
+imagination can conceive, nor can words express the exact nature of
+that splendid scene which is here so slightly glanced at. The Holy
+Spirit has employed the most concise mode of description in order to
+restrain our fancy within proper limits. We are, therefore, altogether
+incompetent to expatiate on a subject so sublime, for we know nothing,
+beyond what is written, of the glory which is associated with
+spiritual bodies. When Paul was led to speak of a state of future
+enjoyment, he could only express himself in the language of
+conjecture, and say, "I reckon that the sufferings of this present
+time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be
+revealed in us." And when, on another occasion, he was anxious to
+comfort the church by a description of the resurrection-body into
+which the Saviour shall change the vile bodies of his people, he could
+only describe it by the use of words which merely implied a direct
+contrast between what we now are and what we shall be. Our present
+bodies are earthly, natural, mortal, and corruptible; our resurrection
+bodies shall be celestial, spiritual, immortal, incorruptible: but
+these latter expressions are only negations of the former; as to any
+positive apprehension of the nature of glorified bodies, "it doth not
+yet appear what we shall be." And there is much wisdom in this
+reserve: there is enough told us upon the subject to encourage us to
+persevere in our endeavours to attain to the joy that is set before
+us, but not as much as would, in the meantime, render us too much
+discontented with our present state.
+
+We must, however, carefully note that the Holy Spirit, in so far
+describing the Saviour's transfiguration, has given a literal account
+of a real transaction. There is no cunningly-devised fable here. There
+was nothing visionary in the exhibition itself; there is nothing
+fanciful in the description of it. Jesus was actually metamorphosed;
+"his face did shine as the sun, and his raiment was white as the
+light," and, as on all ordinary occasions in the days of his flesh he
+was God manifest in the nature of man, so, during the continuance of
+this splendid scene, he exhibited his human nature manifested in and
+encompassed by the brightness and glory of his Godhead.
+
+But it may be profitable to inquire into some of the uses of this
+great transaction, for such an occurrence could not have taken place
+without some important object. It was intended to prepare the Saviour
+for his approaching sufferings; to shew the interest which heaven
+took in his sacrifice; to be a source of strength and comfort to the
+church, by giving a type and specimen of that high degree of glory to
+which the nature of man is destined to be exalted in consequence of
+the Saviour's dying love. But the leading object of this event was to
+give a representation of his second coming in majesty at the last day.
+It is not by any gratuitous assumption that we maintain this, but on
+the sure ground of strong scriptural testimony. We find St. Matthew
+representing the Saviour as promising some of his disciples that they
+should not taste of death till they saw him "coming in his kingdom;"
+and in the parallel passage in the ninth chapter of St. Mark, he is
+represented as saying that there were some standing with him who
+should not see death until they had seen the kingdom of God "come with
+power." Now the apostle Peter combines the substance of these two
+declarations, in a manner which distinctly shews that he considered
+them as having a reference to the future advent of the Redeemer. "We
+have not followed cunningly-devised fables, when we made known unto
+you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ;" and he speaks of
+"majesty," "honour," and "glory," which are the appendages of a
+kingdom, and are to be the characteristics of the second advent of
+Jesus, in contrast with the meanness, poverty, and degradation of his
+first appearance in our world. Those, therefore, who say that the
+transfiguration had a typical reference either to the effusion of the
+Spirit on the day of pentecost, or to the destruction of Jerusalem,
+are greatly in error. It was meant to be a specimen and earnest of our
+Lord's appearance hereafter in glory, when he shall come to be admired
+in all them that believe, and to establish his everlasting kingdom of
+righteousness and peace in the earth. The use of a type is to arrest
+and embody in a kind of visible indication the prominent features of
+its antitype; and, accordingly, if we examine the leading
+circumstances of the transfiguration, we shall find such a resemblance
+between it and the second coming of our Saviour, as will clearly
+establish such a relationship between these two events. Jesus appeared
+in literal human nature on the mountain; so shall he come again, as
+the Son of man, possessing the same nature with his people; for the
+apostles were informed when he ascended, that the very same Jesus who
+had been taken up from them into heaven should even so come in like
+manner as they had seen him ascend into heaven. He appeared in glory,
+and not in humility; such as he shall descend hereafter, when he shall
+come with all his holy angels and sit upon the throne of his glory. As
+he was visible on the mountain, so, when he shall come again, every
+eye shall see him, and they also which pierced him; and all kindreds
+of the earth shall wail because of him. As he was encompassed by a
+cloud on the summit of Tabor, so shall he come hereafter in the clouds
+of heaven, with power and great glory. As he stood in majesty upon the
+mountain, so according to the declaration of the prophet, his feet
+shall stand, when he comes again, upon the mount of Olives. And as
+Moses and Elias appeared in glory with the Saviour, so shall he bring
+his people with him on his return to our world, for, when Christ who
+is our life shall appear, then shall we also appear with him in glory.
+
+Such we believe to have been the great primary object of this
+interesting event. How full of consolation and encouragement must it
+appear in this important view to every believer who is still
+struggling with the infirmities and trials of his earthly pilgrimage.
+It directs the attention of such to the crown of righteousness that
+awaits him, and says, "Be ye stedfast, immoveable, always abounding in
+the work of the Lord; forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in
+vain in the Lord."
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[Y] From a scriptural small work, with the style and spirit of which
+we are much pleased, "The Transfiguration," an exposition of Matt.
+xvii. i. 8, by the rev. Daniel Bagot, B.D., minister of St. James'
+chapel, Edinburgh, and chaplain to the right hon. the earl of
+Kilmorry. Edinburgh, Johnstone: London, Whittaker, Nisbet: Dublin,
+Curry, jun., Robertson.
+
+
+
+
+THE CABINET.
+
+
+NO SALVATION WITHOUT AN ATONEMENT.--But let me turn your attention to
+the sad effect which a denial of the Saviour's Deity has upon the
+prospects of man for eternity. It is a truth written, as with a
+sunbeam, upon every page of scripture, that man is by nature a fallen,
+a guilty, a condemned creature, obnoxious to the righteous judgment of
+God. We are told, that "the heart is deceitful above all things, and
+desperately wicked;"--that "all have sinned, and come short of the
+glory of God:" Jehovah himself is represented as looking down from
+heaven upon the children of men, to investigate their characters with
+that omniscient ken by which he explores the utmost boundaries of the
+illimitable universe, and pronouncing this solemn verdict--"There is
+none righteous; no, not one:" and the apostle Paul, when reminding the
+Ephesian church of their past unregenerate condition, says that they
+were "children of wrath, even as others." If man, then, be in a guilty
+and condemned state by nature, it is an awful and important question,
+how shall he obtain pardon and justification with God, on account of
+his past transgressions? and how shall his sinful and unholy nature be
+sanctified and prepared for admission into the realms of everlasting
+glory? Can personal repentance, on the part of the sinner, obliterate
+the crime of which he has been guilty, so as to reinstate him into the
+condition of a sinless and unfallen being? Unquestionably not. For
+whatever act has been performed by God, or angels, or by man, must
+remain for ever written upon the pages of eternity, never to be
+erased; and, therefore, no subsequent repentance on the sinner's part,
+no tears of sorrow or contrition, can ever blot out his past
+transgressions; nor even could the united tears of angels erase the
+record of those offences for which man is brought in guilty before
+God! Can, then, subsequent obedience achieve the work of the sinner's
+justification? This, alas! will prove as ineffectual as repentance;
+for though we should render to God a perfect obedience for the
+remainder of our lives, still the sin we have committed is sufficient
+to procure our conviction and condemnation; for the wages of sin is
+death! Shall we, then, have recourse to the abstract mercy of God, as
+the foundation upon which to rest our hope of pardon? This is the
+Unitarian's plea: "I believe," he says, "that God is merciful; and I
+repose in his kindness, and trust he will have compassion on me."
+Alas, my friends! it was bad enough that Mr. Porter should have
+yesterday adopted the algebraic principle of neutralizing one text of
+scripture by another; but to carry up this principle to a
+contemplation of the character of God, and to bring it into collision
+with the attributes of Jehovah, and thus to set his mercy against his
+justice--his compassion against his truth--his grace against his
+holiness, and thereby to neutralize and annihilate one class of
+attributes by another, is a guilt that is direful, blasphemous, and
+indescribable.--_From speech of the Rev. Daniel Bagot, at the Belfast
+Unitarian [Socinian] discussion._
+
+
+
+
+POETRY.
+
+
+LAYS OF PALESTINE.
+
+No. IX.
+
+(_For the Church of England Magazine._)
+
+By T. G. Nicholas.
+
+ "She hath given up the ghost; her sun is gone down while
+ it was yet day."--Jer. xv. 9.
+
+ "Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts, cause thy face to
+ shine, and we shall be saved."--Ps. lxxx. 19.
+
+
+ 'Tis eventide; the golden tints are dying
+ Along the horizon's glowing verge away;
+ Far in the groves the nightingale is sighing
+ Her requiem to the last receding ray;
+ And still thou holdest thy appointed way.
+ But Salem's light is quench'd.--Majestic sun!
+ Her beauteous flock hath wandered far astray,
+ Led by their guides the path of life to shun;
+ Her orb hath sunk ere yet his wonted course was run.
+
+ In ages past all glorious was thy land,
+ And lovely were thy borders, Palestine!
+ The heavens were wont to shed their influence bland
+ On all those mountains and those vales of thine;
+ For o'er thy coasts resplendent then did shine
+ The light of God's approving countenance,
+ With rapturous glow of blessedness divine;
+ And, 'neath the radiance of that mighty glance,
+ Bask'd the wide-scatter'd isles o'er ocean's blue expanse.
+
+ But there survives a tinge of glory yet
+ O'er all thy pastures and thy heights of green,
+ Which, though the lustre of thy day hath set,
+ Tells of the joy and splendour which hath been:
+ So some proud ruin, 'mid the desert seen
+ By traveller, halting on his path awhile,
+ Declares how once beneath the light serene
+ Of brief prosperity's unclouded smile,
+ Uprose in grandeur there some vast imperial pile.
+
+ O Thou, who through the wilderness of old
+ Thy people to their promis'd rest did'st bring,
+ Hasten the days by prophet-bards foretold,
+ When roses shall again be blossoming
+ In Sharon, and Siloa's cooling spring
+ Shall murmur freshly at the noon-tide hour;
+ And shepherds oft in Achor's vale shall sing[Z]
+ The mysteries of that redeeming power
+ Which hath their ashes chang'd for beauty's sunniest bower.[AA]
+
+ Thou had'st a plant of thy peculiar choice
+ A fruitful vine from Egypt's servile shore
+ Thou mad'st it in the smile of heav'n rejoice;
+ But the ripe clusters which awhile it bore
+ Now purple on the verdant hills no more,
+ The wild-boar hath upon its branches trod;
+ Yet once again thy choicest influence pour,
+ Transplant it from this dim terrestrial sod,
+ To adorn with deathless bloom the paradise of God.
+
+ _Wadh. Coll. Oxon._
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Z] Isaiah xv. 10.
+
+[AA] Isaiah lxi. 3.
+
+
+
+
+MISCELLANEOUS.
+
+
+INFLUENCE OF RELIGION ON A STATE.--Religious faith is necessarily and
+unavoidably political in its influence and bearings, and eminently so.
+Christians are generally well informed--and knowledge is power. They
+have there in Christian countries, as citizens and subjects, directly
+and indirectly, a large share of influence in the state. In most
+Christian states, if not in all--for a state could hardly be called
+Christian, if it were not so--Christianity is made a party of common
+law, and, when occasion demands, is recognised as such by the judicial
+tribunals. It is eminently so in Great Britain; it is so in America;
+and generally throughout Europe. It is also, to a great extent,
+established by constitutional law, and thus incorporated with the
+political fabric, furnishing occasion for an extended code of special
+statutes. The great principles of Christianity pervade the frame of
+society, and its morals are made the standard. The second table of the
+decalogue is adopted throughout as indispensable to the well-being of
+the state; and a thousand forms of legislation are attempted to secure
+the ends of the great and comprehensive Christian precept--"Thou shalt
+love thy neighbour as thyself." More especially is it deemed the
+highest perfection of civilized life and manners, in the code of
+conventional politeness, to exemplify this latter divine injunction.
+Otherwise life would be much less comfortable--hardly tolerable.--_A
+Voice from America to England._
+
+DUTY OF SUBJECTS.--We ought not only to look at the queen's duty, but
+recollect also what is our own; for the prosperity of a nation
+consists, not only in having a religious governor, but also an
+obedient people. The events which have passed before our eyes during
+the few last years, may serve, I think, to convince us of the truth of
+such an inference. Can we look back on the loss of human lives, the
+almost paralyzing alarm excited by the threats of an infuriated
+populace, and the absolute destruction of property which took place
+during the riots in the city of Bristol, and not see that all those
+calamities sprung out of a want of obedience to the existing
+authorities? Nor was that the only occurrence of the kind which has
+taken place. What repeated acts of incendiarism have we as a nation
+suffered from, as well as from the still more recent riots which have
+arisen in our south-western and other counties? and may we not ask,
+whence have those scenes of strife, discontent, and tumult, sprang,
+but from the cause I have already referred to?--want of subjection and
+obedience to the government of our kingdom. What were the scenes of
+misery and horror which broke out from time to time, when internal
+wars and insurrections so greatly depopulated our land? Cast your eye
+up and down our country, and view the still remaining barrows--those
+unsculptured, unlettered monuments, which cover the slain of our
+people--and ask, are these Britons slain in their own land, a
+Christian land, a land where (to remind you of the present privileges
+of her constitution) we have a national established church, of sound
+scriptural and protestant faith, and a preached gospel?[AB]
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[AB] From "The Liturgy of the Church of England, Catechetically
+explained, for the use of children, by Mrs. S. Maddock. 3 vols.
+London: Houlston and Co." These volumes seem well adapted to explain
+to those for whose use they have been published--the liturgy of our
+church. The catechetical form in which the subject is treated, rather,
+however, detracts from their value, and should the authoress be called
+on for a new edition, we should advise her to publish in a different
+form.
+
+
+London: Published by JAMES BURNS, 17 Portman Street, Portman Square;
+W. EDWARDS, 12 Ave-Maria Lane, St. Paul's; and to be procured, by
+order, of all Booksellers in Town and Country.
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ JOSEPH ROGERSON, 24 NORFOLK STREET, STRAND, LONDON.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+The masthead in the original referred to Vol. IX., although this issue
+is in fact part of Vol. X. of this publication. This has been
+corrected.
+
+A table of contents has been added for the convenience of the reader.
+
+Minor punctuation errors have been repaired.
+
+Archaic spelling is preserved as printed. Please note that both
+Oronooco and Oronooko appear in the text as variable spellings.
+
+The following typographic errors have been fixed:
+
+ Page 20--servicable amended to serviceable--"... both
+ exogenous and endogenous, render them extremely
+ serviceable to mankind."
+
+ Page 21--organisable amended to organizable, for
+ consistency--"... indeed gum is that organizable product
+ which exists most universally ..."
+
+ Page 23--productivenes amended to productiveness--"...
+ of which there are several varieties, differing
+ essentially in productiveness, ..."
+
+ Page 23, fourth footnote--Hedwiz amended to
+ Hedwig--"Eheu qualia! Hedwig."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Church of England Magazine -
+Volume 10, No. 263, January 9, 1841, by Various
+
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Church of England Magazine, Vol. 10 No. 263, January 9, 1841, by Various.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Church of England Magazine - Volume 10,
+No. 263, January 9, 1841, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Church of England Magazine - Volume 10, No. 263, January 9, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 27, 2010 [EBook #31430]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHURCH OF ENGLAND MAGAZINE, JAN 9, 1841 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Bryan Ness, Sam W. and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
+produced from scanned images of public domain material
+from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<h1 class="padtop padbase"><span class="xsmlfont">THE</span><br />
+CHURCH OF ENGLAND MAGAZINE.</h1>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="100%" summary="Decorative masthead">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdc smlfont">UNDER THE<br /><br />
+SUPERINTENDENCE<br /><br />
+OF<br /><br />
+CLERGYMEN<br /></td>
+ <td class="tdc"><img src="images/masthead.png" width="300" height="269" alt="Decorative image" /></td>
+ <td class="tdc smlfont">OF THE UNITED<br /><br />
+CHURCH OF ENGLAND<br /><br />
+AND<br /><br />
+IRELAND.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdc padtop padbase" colspan="3"><small>&ldquo;HER FOUNDATIONS ARE UPON THE HOLY HILLS.&rdquo;</small></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl smcap dbt dbb">Vol. X. No. 263.</td>
+ <td class="tdc dbt dbb">JANUARY 9, 1841.</td>
+ <td class="tdr dbt dbb"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1&frac12;<i>d.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="padtop">CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of contents">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">THE CHRISTIAN&rsquo;S OBLIGATION TO SEEK THE SPIRITUAL BENEFIT OF OTHERS</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#obligation">17</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">SACRED PHILOSOPHY.&mdash;CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE NATURAL THEOLOGY OF THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#philosophy">19</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">THE SECURITY OF GOD&rsquo;S PEOPLE: A SERMON</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#sermon">25</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">THE GLORY OF THE SAVIOUR&rsquo;S TRANSFIGURATION</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#glory">29</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">THE CABINET</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#cabinet">31</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">POETRY.&mdash;LAYS OF PALESTINE</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#poetry">32</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">MISCELLANEOUS</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#miscellaneous">32</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>17]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2 class="padtop"><a name="obligation" id="obligation"></a>THE CHRISTIAN&rsquo;S OBLIGATION TO SEEK
+THE SPIRITUAL BENEFIT OF OTHERS.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By the Rev. Thomas Bissland, M.A.</span>,<br />
+<i>Rector of Hartley Maudytt, Hants.</i></p>
+
+
+<p>There are some hearts little, if at all, impressed
+by the solemn requirements of the
+Almighty; so dead, in fact, to everything
+which relates not to the objects of time and
+sense, that they are unaffected by the scenes
+of vice and of the misery which is its consequence,
+every where presented to their notice.
+It is not until the mind is under the gracious
+influence of the Spirit of God, that men feel
+any anxiety to stop the torrent of evil, and
+endeavour to become the humble instruments
+of converting the sinner and saving his soul.
+Many, in fact, who feel deeply interested in
+their neighbours&rsquo; temporal comforts and prosperity,
+feel little anxious to supply their
+spiritual wants; and to this may be traced
+the opposition which is not unfrequently
+made, even by professing Christians, to institutions
+which have a direct tendency to improve
+the moral and spiritual condition of
+the human race.</p>
+
+<p>Now there are many reasons which induce
+a truly converted man to labour for the
+spiritual benefit of others. First, there is
+the dishonour which men, in an unconverted
+state, cast upon God. This feeling operated
+on the mind of the psalmist, when he exclaimed
+(Ps. cxix. 53), &ldquo;Horror hath taken
+hold of me, because of the wicked who forsake
+thy law.&rdquo; For when men forsake God&rsquo;s
+law, they declare that they are little impressed
+with a sense of the divine majesty
+and infinite goodness of the Almighty; that
+they are not anxious to know his will; that
+his threatenings alarm them not; that his
+promises in no way affect their hearts; that,
+in fact, they are not desirous of that favour
+which rests upon those only who walk in the
+path of his commandments. The psalmist&rsquo;s
+zeal and jealousy for the glory of God were
+fully manifested by his anxiety to erect a
+house, in some respects suitable for the divine
+worship; by his earnest expressions, that the
+divine glory should be made known throughout
+the world, as when he exclaims &ldquo;Tell
+it out among the heathen, that the Lord
+reigneth;&rdquo; and this holy desire rendered every
+action, by which there was the most slight
+appearance of dishonour being cast upon
+Jehovah, abominable in his sight. When
+he reflected on his own departure from the
+law of his God, on those acts which had
+caused the enemies of the truth to blaspheme,
+he was indeed filled with horror. The
+language uttered, when from the depths he
+supplicated the divine forgiveness, powerfully
+demonstrates the agony of his soul&mdash;convinces
+us that his repentance was sincere, and that
+he was anxious that in every action of his
+life he might for the future glorify that
+Being whose gracious hand had conducted
+him through his earthly pilgrimage&mdash;whose
+favour had raised him to the throne of Israel&mdash;the
+light of whose countenance had cheered
+him in many a dark and dreary hour&mdash;and
+whose comforts had refreshed his soul, when
+in the multitude of the thoughts within him
+he became dispirited and perplexed. The
+first and great commandment is, &ldquo;Thou shalt
+love the Lord thy God with all thy heart.&rdquo;
+The psalmist loved God, and on this account
+he was desirous that he should be had in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>18]</a></span>
+reverence of all his intelligent creatures. He
+loved God; he was seized with horror
+when he beheld myriads uninfluenced by this
+principle, living in disobedience to this first
+commandment.</p>
+
+<p>Sin is too often viewed by us merely with
+respect to its baneful influence on the happiness
+of society. It is condemned by us, and
+it is punished by us, not so much as it is the
+transgression of the law of God, as it has a
+tendency to produce evil in the world. And
+hence there are many offenders in God&rsquo;s
+sight who by their conduct cast dishonour
+upon his name, who yet maintain a fair and
+respectable character when weighed in the
+world&rsquo;s balance, nay, even are regarded with
+reverence and esteem. We punish the
+murderer, the thief, the robber, the perjured
+person. It is right that we should do so.
+The welfare of society demands it. But do
+we punish the man who lives in adultery, in
+drunkenness, in sensuality? Do we punish
+the man who is a swearer, a gambler, a
+blasphemer, who habitually neglects the sanctuary
+of the Lord, and does his own pleasure
+on the sabbath-day? Human laws take no
+cognizance of these crimes. They are, however,
+as dishonourable to God as others
+which are punished by man. They are quite
+as detrimental to man&rsquo;s best interests; and
+fearful must be the account rendered for their
+commission before that equitable tribunal,
+where the children of men must answer for all
+their offences against the majesty of heaven.</p>
+
+<p>But there is a second reason why the true
+Christian will labour for the conversion of
+others, namely, the reflection that the sinner
+is ensuring his own destruction while he is at
+enmity against God; and this induced Jeremiah
+to exclaim (ix. 1), &ldquo;O that my head
+were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears,
+that I might weep day and night for the slain
+of the daughter of my people.&rdquo; How strong
+is the expression&mdash;&ldquo;<em>the slain</em>.&rdquo; The prophet
+knew full well the misery of transgressing
+God&rsquo;s law. Tremendous, indeed, is the
+reflection, that the path of sin inevitably
+leads to the regions of darkness&mdash;those
+regions where there is &ldquo;weeping and gnashing
+of teeth,&rdquo; where &ldquo;their worm dieth not,
+and the fire is not quenched.&rdquo; Whence is
+it, then, that, without any apparent concern,
+we behold myriads of immortal creatures fast
+hastening to these regions of destruction?
+Whence is it that there is so much apathy,
+lukewarmness, and indifference to a brother&rsquo;s
+eternal welfare. Is it not too often, perhaps,
+that there is a latent scepticism which induces
+us to disbelieve the solemn declaration
+of the Omnipotent&mdash;even when he swears
+by himself&mdash;that every jot and tittle of
+his threatenings shall be accomplished?
+Surely were it not for some such spirit, we
+should never rest satisfied with the feeble
+efforts we may have made to lead the sinner
+back to his offended God; we should esteem
+no sacrifice too great, whether of time, or
+influence, or money, or talent, which could
+in any way promote a brother&rsquo;s spiritual
+welfare. But we are too apt to forget, if not
+to disbelieve, the solemn declarations of the
+bible; and forgetfulness to all practical
+results is as pernicious as downright infidelity.
+The man who forgets God is as little
+influenced by his law as the fool, who in his
+heart says there is no God at all. Now, this
+forgetfulness paralyzes our energies, damps
+our zeal, checks our benevolence. We do not
+consider that sinners are heaping up wrath
+against the day of wrath; and, though they
+may now enjoy an unhallowed prosperity, and
+now in an unbridled licentiousness derive
+happiness from the indulgence of fleshly lusts,
+yet that these war against the soul, against
+its present peace, and its ultimate felicity,
+and that ruin and destruction inevitably
+await them. Were our spirit that of the
+psalmist, or that of the prophet referred to,
+our feelings would be more lively, our endeavours
+to promote the good of mankind be
+more energetic. Looking not every one to
+his own, but on his brothers&rsquo; good, we should
+be anxious to direct their feet into the way of
+peace.</p>
+
+<p>How beautifully was this spirit manifested
+by St. Paul, when he exhorted the converts
+of Philippi to be followers of himself&mdash;&ldquo;For
+many walk,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;of whom I have told
+you often, and now tell you even weeping,
+that they are the enemies of the cross of
+Christ; whose end is destruction, whose God
+is their belly, and whose glory is in their
+shame; who mind earthly things.&rdquo; The
+apostle, indeed, appears to have been influenced
+by the same anxiety as the psalmist
+and the prophet; for the glory of the Redeemer,
+as well as the eternal welfare of
+their souls, was dear to his heart, and he
+could not refrain from weeping when
+he viewed the dishonour cast upon his
+adorable Lord by these enemies of his cross;
+when he beheld them following divers lusts
+and pleasures, even boasting of their recklessness
+of God&rsquo;s judgments; and when he carried
+his thoughts forward to that day when the
+terrors of the Lord would fall on all the
+children of disobedience, or those who neglected
+the great salvation. This spirit is, in
+fact, no bad test whereby we may try the
+state of our hearts and affections. If we are
+really desirous for the advancement of God&rsquo;s
+glory, and deeply interested in the welfare of
+our fellow-creatures, our feelings will be
+very similar to those of the holy men of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>19]</a></span>
+God referred to. We shall not view, without
+the very deepest concern, that inattention
+which is everywhere paid to the solemn
+requirements of the Almighty; we shall at
+least make the attempt to stop the sinner in
+his career of guilt and folly, that his soul
+may be saved from destruction in the day of
+the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>Melancholy is the reflection, indeed, that
+neither God&rsquo;s invitations on the one hand, nor
+his threatenings on the other, appear to affect
+their hearts; they are neither constrained by
+love nor fear. &ldquo;Wide is the gate, and broad
+is the way that leadeth to destruction, and
+many there be that go in thereat.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There was one that wept over the rebellion
+of man, and one infinitely greater than David,
+or Jeremiah, or St. Paul&mdash;and that one was
+the ever-adorable Saviour; who, beholding
+the guilty race of man altogether gone out
+of the way, descended from the mansions of
+glory, became a partaker of human impurity,
+and opened through his blood a new and
+living way, whereby the guilty sinner might
+return in peace to his God. How touching
+the description of the evangelist&mdash;&ldquo;And
+when he came near, he beheld the city and
+wept over it, saying, If thou hadst known,
+even thou, at least in this thy day, the things
+which belong unto thy peace, but now they
+are hid from thine eyes.&rdquo; Jesus wept at the
+grave of Lazarus, for Lazarus was his friend;
+he sympathised deeply with Martha and
+Mary, for he loved them as he did their brother;
+but far more bitter were the tears he shed,
+when he reflected on the waywardness of
+that people whom he would have gathered
+to himself; the guilt of that city which had
+killed the prophets; when he thought of
+those days of divine vengeance, when its
+enemies should cast a trench about it, and
+compass it round, and keep it in on every
+side, and should lay it even with the ground,
+and its children within it. And did not this
+feeling operate when, even amidst the agonies
+of a crucifixion, his mind rested on the
+sufferings of others, and not on his own?
+&ldquo;Daughters of Jerusalem! weep not for me,
+but weep for yourselves and for your children.&rdquo;
+And shall we not, in this as in every other
+respect, seek to imitate our adorable Lord?
+Shall we not feel deeply interested in the
+spiritual welfare of our fellow-men? If we
+do not, it is, alas! a fearful, a decisive proof,
+that the flame of holy love, of devoted zeal,
+has not been kindled in our bosom; that
+we do not feel the importance of that salvation
+which is offered us so freely in the
+gospel; that we are not duly impressed
+with a dread of that woe unspeakable, that
+shall be the portion of those whose souls shall
+be for ever lost.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="philosophy" id="philosophy"></a>Sacred Philosophy.</h2>
+
+<h3>CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE NATURAL THEOLOGY OF
+THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM.</h3>
+
+<p class="center smcap">By Robert Dickson, M.D., F.L.S.</p>
+
+<p class="center smcap">No. XI. Pt. 1.</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Lo! the oak that hath so long a nourishing<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From the time that it &rsquo;ginneth first to spring,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And hath so long a life, as we may see,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet at the last wasted is the tree.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+<span class="credit smcap">Chaucer.<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>While the actions which lead to the various effects
+on the external appearance of a tree, described in the
+former paper, are going on, many important changes
+occur in the internal parts, producing alterations not
+less admirable, whether in respect of the tree itself,
+or of the ends to which it may be rendered subservient.
+The base of an exogenous tree is not merely
+widened by the superposition of annual layers of
+wood over the first shoot, by which it gains greater
+mechanical power to support the extending head of
+wide-spreading branches, but the central portion is,
+in most cases, progressively rendered more and more
+solid by the deposition in it of various secretions prepared
+by the leaves, and transmitted from them
+through the medullary rays into this part as their ultimate
+resting-place.</p>
+
+<p>The fibres descending from the developing buds on
+the stem, and passing between the plates of cellular
+tissue, which constitute the medullary rays, and the
+cells of which have a horizontal direction, are but the
+basis of the vegetable fabric. The stem of an exogenous
+plant has been compared to a piece of linen, of
+which the weft is composed of cellular tissue, and
+the warp of fibrous and vascular tissue&mdash;crossing each
+other. Now, after the portion is once formed, which
+is woven every year by the wondrous machinery set
+to work for this purpose, it receives no fresh texture,
+yet each fibre remains a conducting tube to transmit
+the sap upwards, or, in the course of time, becomes
+charged with various principles, prepared, as already
+stated, by the leaves, and returned to the central part
+by that apparatus or system of canals for their transit
+inwards, the medullary rays, and at last are obstructed,
+so that no passage of fluid is effected through
+the inner layers of wood. But for every layer that is
+thus blocked up, a new one, which will continue pervious,
+is formed exterior to those already existing, so
+that a constant provision is made for carrying on the
+vital processes; to accomplish which, a free channel
+from the points of the roots to the surface of the leaves
+is absolutely necessary. The outer strata, produced by
+a tree of considerable age, are observed to be thinner
+than those formed at an earlier period, and become successively
+thinner and thinner, so that ultimately, if accident
+should not have previously caused it, the death
+of the tree is inevitable. The portions which are obstructed
+constitute the <i>duramen</i> or heartwood, the
+pervious portion the <i>alburnum</i> or sapwood. The original
+tissue is colourless; but according to the nature
+of the secretions deposited in it, the heartwood is
+either of a deeper colour, sometimes party-coloured,
+or at least of a much greater specific gravity than the
+sapwood. The removal of the juices by any solvent
+restores the wood to its primitive hue, and renders it
+again light. The difference of weight of a cubic foot
+of wood depends not merely on the different quantity
+of vegetable tissue compressed into a given space, in
+the first construction of the tree, but also on the quantity
+and quality of the secretions ultimately lodged in
+it. The same species of tree will present a difference
+in this respect, according to the country or situation
+where it grew, and also according to the character of
+the seasons during the time it flourished. According
+to the nature of the tree, if placed in favourable circumstances
+in reference to soil and weather, it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>20]</a></span>
+invariably prepares and lodges in the stem those principles
+which it was designed to elaborate&mdash;the oak preparing
+tannin&mdash;the sugar-maple preparing its saccharine
+juice. That the primary object of these was some
+advantage to the tree itself can scarcely be doubted,
+but the secondary applications of which they are capable,
+give reason to suppose that these also were contemplated
+in their formation. The consideration of
+the means by which they are formed, and the direct
+consequences of their formation on the air, by abstracting
+certain elements from it, and supplying
+others, belong to the subject of leaves; it is the object
+of the present paper to view them as formed, and to
+show their amazing utility.</p>
+
+<p>The mechanical properties of the stems of trees,
+both exogenous and endogenous, render them extremely
+serviceable to mankind. The uses to which a
+single species of plant may be put are numerous and
+important, of which the reed (arundo phragmites) is
+an example, for after the root has assisted in binding
+and consolidating the soil, the stem is susceptible of
+the most varied applications<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>In a low state of civilization the palm, or a palm-like
+grass, supplies all that man requires; of the former
+of which, the <i>Mauritia flexuosa</i>, or sago-palm of
+the Oronooko, and still more the <i>cocos nucifera</i>, or
+cocoa-nut palm; and of the latter, the bamboo (<i>bambusa
+arundinacea</i>, and other species) are proofs. The
+bamboo suffices for all the needs of the humbler
+Chinese; even their paper, as well as their abodes, are
+made of it; and from the materials furnished by the
+cocoa-nut tree, not merely food, as shall be afterwards
+noticed, but larger and more elegant houses, with all
+their appurtenances, are constructed at Goa and other
+places. The obligations of the Guaraons to the <i>Mauritia
+flexuosa</i> cannot be expressed<a name="FNanchor_B_2" id="FNanchor_B_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a>. In proportion
+as man rises in civilization, the importance of timber
+becomes greater, being a material for which no adequate
+substitute can be found. It combines lightness
+with strength, elasticity with firmness, and possesses
+in many instances a durability rivalling, or even surpassing,
+that of the rocks yielded to us by the solid
+substance of the globe. The adaptation of timber to
+the numerous wants of civil life is too familiar to require
+exposition; but in addition to all the ends it
+serves in these points, we have an interesting view
+presented to us in considering what a vast quantity of
+timber is required for the construction of our shipping,
+from the countless boats and small craft employed in
+our coasting trade up to the larger ships, which are
+so many floating towns or communities. These conduce
+to the accomplishment of objects of the most
+momentous nature. Were it not for our shipping we
+should still be in the condition described by the Romans,
+as Britons cut off from the rest of the world.&mdash;But
+by their means we now visit without restraint,</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Earth&rsquo;s farthest verge, and ocean&rsquo;s wildest shore,&rdquo;<a name="FNanchor_C_3" id="FNanchor_C_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a><br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>and though, in times past, they have been too often
+used as engines fraught with destruction, directed by
+man against his fellow man, let us hope that they may
+be required in future only to convey in amicable interchange
+the produce of one country to another,
+or to bear to his destination the missionary bent on
+extending the blessings of that religion whose spirit is
+&ldquo;peace on earth, good will among the children of
+men<a name="FNanchor_D_4" id="FNanchor_D_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_D_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As a means of supplying fuel, without which man
+must remain constantly in the savage state, wood is
+of inestimable value. In the process of combustion,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>21]</a></span>
+the elements of the trees enter into new combinations,
+evolving both light and heat, which at once maintain
+life and render it a state of enjoyment and usefulness.
+For this purpose in Britain, we chiefly employ fossil
+fuel, stored up in the secret places of the earth, and,
+therefore, we attach less importance to recent wood;
+but other parts of the world are not so favourably
+situated, and to the inhabitants of these places fresh,
+or but lately felled, wood is necessary for their existence.
+Even in France, though partially possessed of
+coal, it is estimated that the quantity of wood employed
+to supply heat, whether for comfort, cooking,
+or in manufactures which require a high temperature,
+amounts to seven-tenths of the entire consumption.
+The superiority of wood fuel, whether fossil or recent,
+over every other material resorted to with a like intention,
+shall be shown in a subsequent part of this
+paper. I therefore pass on at present to demonstrate
+the utility of vegetable substances in affording the
+means of subsistence to man and animals.</p>
+
+<p>In the observations I am about to make, it is impossible
+to avoid anticipating some of the remarks
+which belong to the subject of fruits and seeds as
+articles of food, since the same principles of nutriment
+are found in the stems of certain plants as are deposited
+in the fruits or seeds of others.</p>
+
+<p>Though man is omnivorous, and can subsist either
+on animal or vegetable food&mdash;an arrangement which
+fits him to dwell in any part of the habitable globe,&mdash;yet
+he is subject, with regard to the actual material
+of his diet, in a remarkable manner, to the influence
+of climate, since a particular kind of aliment, which
+is very appropriate in one country is improper in another;
+thus, as we advance from the equator towards
+the poles, the necessity for animal food becomes
+greater, till, in the very north, it is the sole article of
+subsistence. Animal food, from containing nitrogen,
+is more stimulating, and, therefore, less suitable for
+hot climates, where, on the contrary, saccharine, mucilaginous,
+and starchy materials are preferred;
+hence, in the zone of the tropics, we find produced in
+abundance rice, maize, millet, sago, salep, arrowroot,
+potatoes, the bread-fruit, banana, and other watery,
+or mucilaginous fruits. Quitting this zone, we enter
+that which produces wheat, and here, where the temperature
+is lower, providence has united with the
+starch of this grain a peculiar principle (gluten), possessing
+all the properties of animal matter, and yielding
+nitrogen and ammonia in its decomposition<a name="FNanchor_E_5" id="FNanchor_E_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_E_5" class="fnanchor">[E]</a>.
+Thus, by a gradual and almost insensible transition,
+nature furnishes to man the food which is most appropriate
+for him in each region. In the subtropical zone
+vegetable diet is still preferred, but, in chemical constitution,
+the favourite articles approximate animal
+substances. This holds also in the temperate zone,
+not only in respect of wheat, but also in the chesnut,
+which is almost the sole means of subsistence in some
+of the mountainous regions of France, Italy, and
+Spain, though, instead of the gluten of wheat, this
+seed contains albumen, the relation of which to animal
+food is even closer than that of gluten. In reviewing
+the geographical distribution of the cereal grains<a name="FNanchor_F_6" id="FNanchor_F_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_F_6" class="fnanchor">[F]</a>,
+we find that starch nearly pure is produced in the
+greatest abundance in the hottest parts of the world,
+particularly in rice and maize; it becomes associated
+in the subtropical regions with an equivalent for
+animal food; and in still colder regions, where wheat
+fails, oats and barley take its place. These, though
+possessed of less gluten than wheat, are, nevertheless,
+more heating, and, therefore, better calculated for
+northern latitudes. The inhabitants of Scotland and
+Lapland, with their oaten and barley or rye bread,
+are thus as thoroughly provided with the best food,
+as the Hindoo with his rice or Indian corn<a name="FNanchor_G_7" id="FNanchor_G_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_G_7" class="fnanchor">[G]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>It would be impossible to enumerate the plants
+which furnish starch in large proportion, but a few
+may be given as illustrative of the above positions.
+The chemical analysis of those proximate principles
+of plants which are mere combinations of water with
+carbon (hydro-carbonates or hydrates of carbon) has
+been already given, but must here be repeated:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Water and carbon combinations">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdc" colspan="2">100 parts consist of&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdc bl">Water.</td>
+ <td class="tdc bl">Carbon.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Gum (pure gum-arabic)</td>
+ <td class="tdc bl">58.6&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdc bl">41.4&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Sugar (pure crystallized)</td>
+ <td class="tdc bl">57.15</td>
+ <td class="tdc bl">42.85</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Starch</td>
+ <td class="tdc bl">56.00</td>
+ <td class="tdc bl">44.00</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Lignin</td>
+ <td class="tdc bl">50.00</td>
+ <td class="tdc bl">50.00</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>These are so many mutually convertible products, of
+which gum may be looked upon as the basis; indeed
+gum is that organizable product which exists most
+universally in the proper juices of plants. &ldquo;There
+are some instances in which sugar appears to be the
+first organic compound formed by the combination of
+the external elements, as when abundantly existing
+in the ascending sap of trees&mdash;the maple, for example.
+Starch may be considered as little else than gum
+divided into minute portions, each of which is enclosed
+in a membraneous cell (and containing some
+incidental particles, which, when starch is burnt,
+leave about .23 per cent. of residuum, consisting entirely
+of phosphates); and, in this state, it appears to
+answer very important ends in the vegetable economy.
+It is remarked by Decandolle, that, &lsquo;while gum itself
+may be considered the nutrient principle of vegetation,
+diffused freely through the structure of the plant,
+and constantly in action, starch is apparently the
+same substance, stored up in such a manner as not to
+be readily soluble in the circulating fluids,&rsquo; thus forming
+a reservoir of nutritious matter, which is to be
+consumed, like the fat of animals (which it closely
+resembles in structure), in supporting the plant at
+particular periods<a name="FNanchor_H_8" id="FNanchor_H_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_H_8" class="fnanchor">[H]</a>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This view explains the fact of starch being found
+accumulated in amazing quantity in some plants,
+more particularly at certain periods of their existence,
+as in the cases I am now to cite. The fertility of
+some palm-trees is very great, and to furnish nutriment
+to the flowers, fruit, and seeds, an enormous
+supply of starch is needed; accordingly, in these we
+find the stem a complete storehouse of this essential
+principle. Thus the several palms and palm-like
+plants, which yield sago, such as the <i>sagus Rumphii</i>,
+<i>cycas circinalis</i>, <i>C. revoluta</i>, <i>corypha umbraculifera</i>,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>22]</a></span>
+<i>caryota urens</i>, and <i>ph&oelig;nix farinifera</i>&mdash;trees which
+are mostly confined within the tropics, at the moment
+when the spadices or sheaths containing the bunches
+of flowers are visible but not unfolded, furnish an immense
+portion of the food of the natives. The <i>sagus
+Rumphii</i>, which abounds in the islands of the Indian
+Archipelago, and though one of the humblest of the
+palm tribe, seldom exceeding thirty feet in height, is
+yet, except the gomuto, the thickest and largest,
+alone yields a quantity of nutritious matter far exceeding
+that of all other cultivated plants, inasmuch
+as a tree in its fifteenth year produces 600 lbs. of
+sago, which word, in the language of the Papuas, signifies
+<em>bread</em>, being the staple food of the islanders.
+To obtain it, the tree must be cut down, and the stem
+divided into pieces, from which the flour is beaten
+and washed out<a name="FNanchor_I_9" id="FNanchor_I_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_I_9" class="fnanchor">[I]</a>. After being cut down, the vegetative
+power still remains in the root, which again
+forms a trunk, and this proceeds through its different
+stages, until it is again subjected to the axe, and
+made to yield its alimentary contents for the service of
+man. Nor is the extraordinary productiveness of
+a single tree the only point worthy of notice, for,
+being endogenous plants, devoid of branches, an unusual
+number of them can grow in a small space.
+Mr. Craufurd calculates that an English acre could
+contain four hundred and thirty-five sago trees, which
+would yield one hundred and twenty thousand five
+hundred pounds avoirdupois of starch, being at the
+rate of more than eight thousand pounds yearly.
+Besides the farina or meal, every tree cut down furnishes,
+in its terminal bud, a luxury which is as much
+prized as that of the <i>areca oleracea</i>, or cabbage palm
+of the West Indies, and which is eaten either raw as a
+salad, or cooked. Further, the leaves afford so excellent
+a material for covering houses, that even in those
+hot and humid parts of the world, where decomposition
+goes on so rapidly, it does not require to be renewed
+oftener than once in seven years.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Mauritia flexuosa</i>, or fan palm of the Oronooco,
+is of still greater utility to the natives of South
+America. It is a social palm, abounding in the
+marshes, and having a geographical range of very vast
+extent. The whole northern portion of South America,
+east of the Cordilleras, appears to be possessed
+of this gorgeous palm; from the mouth of the Oronooco
+to the river Amazon, and through the whole of
+Guiana, through Surinam and the northern part of
+Brazil, and in very various places along the river
+Amazon, even to its source on the eastern declivity of
+the Cordilleras, this palm is found, constituting
+forests of greater or less extent. Its smooth grey
+stem rising often 100 feet, forms groups that, in the
+northern part of Brazil, resemble the pallisades of
+some gigantic fortress. The produce of these lofty
+cylinders is very great, not merely of sago, which is
+procured only when the process of flowering is about
+to occur, but many trees being cut down before this
+event, a juice is obtained from them, which forms, by
+fermentation, a sweet wine; while those that flower,
+after which no good sago can be got, furnish an extraordinary
+quantity of fruit, hanging in bunches many
+feet in length, which is as agreeable as ripe apples,
+the taste of which it resembles. The other products
+of this tree are numerous<a name="FNanchor_J_10" id="FNanchor_J_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_J_10" class="fnanchor">[J]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>It would lead beyond just limits, were we to notice in
+detail, the plants which yield starch suitable for food,
+only after undergoing a process of art, by which an
+acrid principle is driven off, and a bland, wholesome
+substance remains behind. Such is the Janipha (or
+Jatropha) Manihot, which yields the Mandiocca, Tapioca,
+or Cassava, an article not only of great consumption
+in, but also of considerable export from,
+Brazil (see Spix and Martius&rsquo; Travels, and Lib. of
+Enter. Knowledge, Vegt. Sub. Food of Man, p. 152),
+which, when raw, is poisonous both to man and cattle,
+though it becomes safe and agreeable by the application
+of heat. So likewise the large tubers of
+several <i>Arums</i>, such as <i>A. Macrorhizon</i>, <i>A. Colocasia</i>,
+<i>Caladium acre</i>, and which are cultivated with great
+care in tropical and subtropical countries, particularly
+in the Sandwich and South Sea islands. All of these
+excite inflammation and swelling of the mouth and
+tongue, even to the danger of suffocation, but which
+are disarmed of their virulence, and converted into an
+article of daily consumption, by fire. Even yams
+and sweet potatoes, which are naturally mild, are
+less articles of consumption in the south sea islands,
+than the Tarro, as these tubers of the <i>arums</i> are designated.</p>
+
+<p>I omit all other plants to fix attention on the potatoe,
+which is not only the source of the purest starch
+of all, but has many interesting points connected with
+its history and habitudes, peculiarly connected with
+my subject. No plant has contributed more to banish
+those famines which were formerly of so frequent occurrence
+in Europe, and all the dire train of suffering
+and disease consequent upon them. Yet did it, in
+many instances, require royal edicts to induce some
+nations to cultivate what is now regarded as one of
+the prime blessings of Providence, from nearly one
+end of the earth to the other; the potatoe being raised
+from Hammerfest, in Lapland, lat. 71&deg; north, through
+all Europe, the plains of India, in China, Japan, the
+south-sea islands, New Holland, even to New Zealand.
+What renders it so peculiarly valuable is, that
+in the seasons when the corn crop fails, that of potatoes
+is generally more abundant; thus furnishing a
+substitute for the other, which proves defective from
+atmospheric conditions, which have little influence
+over the potatoe, placed as it is underground, and secure
+against extremes of temperature. The potatoe
+is not a root, as commonly supposed, but an underground
+collection of buds, having a quantity of starch
+accumulated around them, for their nourishment when
+they begin to grow. The quantity of starch varies
+greatly with the kind of potatoe cultivated, the mode
+of cultivation, the time of setting, and above all, with
+the season of the year when the analysis is made. Potatoes
+in general, afford from one-fifth to one-seventh
+their weight of dry starch<a name="FNanchor_K_11" id="FNanchor_K_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_K_11" class="fnanchor">[K]</a>; besides some other
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>23]</a></span>
+nutritive materials. The quantity of starch seems to
+be at its maximum in the winter months; as 100
+pounds of potatoes yield in August about 10 lbs., in
+October nearly 15 lbs., in November to March 17 lbs.,
+in April 13&frac34; lbs., and in May 10 lbs. Nor is the quantity
+of starch alone diminished in spring, but the nitrogen
+which belongs to some of the other nutritive
+principles, likewise suffers a deduction; as fresh, not
+dried potatoes, contain 0.0037 per cent. of azote, while
+potatoes ten months old contain only 0.0028, causing
+a sensible difference in their power of imparting nourishment.
+The starch is withdrawn from the tubers
+of the potatoe, precisely in the same way that it is
+transferred from the root, stem, or seeds of other
+plants, for the service of the young shoot; but the
+mode in which it is accomplished is but of recent discovery,
+and constitutes one of the most beautiful instances
+of design which the whole vegetable kingdom
+can unfold; &ldquo;that man&rsquo;s scepticism must be incurable
+who does not perceive, and acknowledge, that the
+means now to be detailed were created for the express
+accomplishment of the ends<a name="FNanchor_L_12" id="FNanchor_L_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_L_12" class="fnanchor">[L]</a>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Starch has been described above as consisting of a
+multitude of little cells or vesicles, having an envelope,
+insoluble in water, formed of a kind of organized
+membrane, and containing within it a substance
+which is soluble in water, termed amidin.
+This soluble material is the nutritive element on
+which the young shoot, proceeding from every
+eye or bud of the potatoes, is to subsist, till it
+has developed roots, and unfolded its leaves to
+prepare additional alimentary substance. But if
+this soluble material be enclosed in an insoluble
+membrane, how are the contents to be made available
+for the growth of the plant? It is true, indeed, that
+water of the temperature of 160&deg; Fahr. can rupture
+this tegument, as occurs in the process of boiling potatoes;
+but the water diffused through the earth in
+the neighbourhood of the growing tuber, never reaches
+such a height. How then is the difficulty obviated?
+This is effected by a secretion called <i>diastase</i> which
+is found in the tubers in the immediate vicinity of
+the eyes or buds. &ldquo;It is stored up in that situation
+for the purpose of being conveyed, by the vessels
+connected with the bud, into the substance of the
+tuber, when the demand for nutrition is occasioned by
+the development of the shoot. It is probable that the
+secretion of <i>diastase</i> takes place in every instance in
+which starch previously deposited is to be re-absorbed<a name="FNanchor_M_13" id="FNanchor_M_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_M_13" class="fnanchor">[M]</a>.&rdquo;
+It is not to be found before grains or tubers
+begin to sprout, yet, &ldquo;such is its energy, that one part
+of it is sufficient to render soluble the interior portion
+of two thousand parts of starch, and to convert it into
+sugar<a name="FNanchor_N_14" id="FNanchor_N_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_N_14" class="fnanchor">[N]</a>.&rdquo; Strong as is the analogy between starch and
+gum, yet <i>diastase</i> does not convert gum into sugar;
+the one being as completely soluble as the other, its
+intervention is clearly unnecessary. Neither does it
+act on sugar. It is found, and exerts its powers, only
+where it is required. Nor does it come into play one
+moment before the necessity for it occurs. While the
+potatoe is in its state of winter repose, and no vegetative
+process going on, the elements of which the
+<i>diastase</i> is formed, are equally quiescent, but no sooner
+does the season recur when an augmented temperature
+rouses the slumbering energy of the tuber, than
+this potent principle exhibits its efficacy, and changes
+the insoluble starch into the nutritious sugar. Who,
+that can read, or reading reflect and ponder on these
+things, but must conclude that the laws which regulate
+the whole actions were impressed upon their subjects
+by a Creator infinite in design, in wisdom, and
+in power? If such insight into his doings are permitted
+to us now, what may we not hope for when
+we no longer &ldquo;see as through a glass darkly<a name="FNanchor_O_15" id="FNanchor_O_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_O_15" class="fnanchor">[O]</a>?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The insolubility of the starch in cold water, affords
+a convenient means of separating the flour from the
+other materials, by which it may be abstracted from
+the tubers when in the greatest abundance, and be
+preserved unchanged for the use of man. This is
+done by simply rasping down the potatoes over a
+seirce, and passing a current of water over the raspings.
+The water passes through the seirce milky from
+the starch suspended in it. The starch is allowed to
+fall to the bottom, and is two or three times washed
+with pure water; it is then allowed to dry<a name="FNanchor_P_16" id="FNanchor_P_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_P_16" class="fnanchor">[P]</a>. If this
+process be followed in the winter months, when the
+quantity of starch is greatest, the result is, a sixth
+portion of the weight of the potatoes employed, in a
+condition fit not only for immediate use, but capable
+of preservation for years. &ldquo;To those who live solely,
+or even principally, on potatoes, it must be of immense
+importance to have the nutritious part preserved
+when in its greatest perfection, instead of
+leaving it exposed to injury, decomposition, or
+decay<a name="FNanchor_Q_17" id="FNanchor_Q_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_Q_17" class="fnanchor">[Q]</a>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It is unnecessary to enlarge upon the sources of
+starch and its obvious utility to mankind. Previous
+to its being consumed by the plant in which it is
+amassed, it is by various means, but chiefly by diastase,
+transformed into sugar. Following this natural
+transition, I shall next consider sugar as an article of
+diet. In temperate climates, sugar is regarded as a
+luxury, one indeed which is nearly indispensable, but
+in tropical countries it is a universal article of subsistence,
+partly as real sugar, and partly, and more
+generally, as it occurs in the cane. It is inconceivable
+what enormous quantities of the sugar-cane is
+consumed in this way; vast ship-loads arrive daily in
+the market at Manilla, and in Rio Janiero; in the
+Sandwich Islands and other places, every child is seen
+going about with a portion of sugar-cane in the hand.
+It has been called &ldquo;the most perfect alimentary
+substance in nature,&rdquo; and the results, in the appearance
+of the negroes, during the cane-harvest, notwithstanding
+the increased severe toils of that season,
+seem to confirm the statement. They almost invariably
+become plump, and sleek, and scarcely take
+any other food while the harvest lasts; even the
+sickly revive, and often recover their health.</p>
+
+<p>The chief source of sugar is large grass (<i>saccharum
+officinarum</i>), of which there are several varieties,
+differing essentially in productiveness, but the best of
+which is the Otaheita cane, the stem of which is
+higher, thicker, and more succulent than the Creole
+cane, and which yields not only one-third more of
+juice than the Creolian cane on the same space of
+land; but from the thickness of its stem, and the
+tenacity of its ligneous fibres, it furnishes much more
+fuel. One variety was known in India, in China, and
+all the islands of the Pacific ocean, from the most
+remote antiquity; it was planted in Persia, in Chorasan,
+as early as the fifth century of our era, in order
+to obtain from it solid sugar. The Arabs carried this
+reed&mdash;so useful to the inhabitants of hot and temperate
+countries&mdash;to the shores of the Mediterranean. In
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>24]</a></span>
+1306, its cultivation was yet unknown in Sicily, but
+was already common in the island of Cyprus, at
+Rhodes, and in the Morea. A hundred years after it
+enriched Calabria, Sicily, and the coasts of Spain.
+From Sicily the Infant Henry transplanted the cane
+to Madeira; and from Madeira it passed to the
+Canary islands. It was thence transplanted to St.
+Domingo, in 1513, and has since spread to the continent
+of South America, and to the West Indies,
+whence the chief supply for Europe is obtained.</p>
+
+<p>The vast circuit which it has described in these
+successive transplantations attest the sense which
+mankind had of the benefits it bestowed in its course.
+The introduction of the Otaheita cane is another
+proof of the obligations which modern times are
+under to navigation, as we owe this plant to the
+voyages of Bougainville, Cook, and Bligh<a name="FNanchor_R_18" id="FNanchor_R_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_R_18" class="fnanchor">[R]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>The sugar-cane requires for its perfection, a temperature
+of considerable elevation, and succeeds best
+where the mean temperature is 24&deg; or 25&deg; (of the
+centigrade thermometer), yet it will prosper, though
+with less produce, where it only reaches 19&deg; or 20&deg;
+(centigrade). Its cultivation extends from the verge
+of the ocean, where the canes are often washed by
+the waves<a name="FNanchor_S_19" id="FNanchor_S_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_S_19" class="fnanchor">[S]</a>, to localities on the mountains 3,000 feet
+above the sea; and even in the extensive plains of
+Mexico and Colombia, where, from the reflection of
+the sun&rsquo;s rays the heat is greatly increased, to 4,000,
+5,000, 6,000, though the mean temperature of the
+city of Mexico be only 17&deg; (centigrade), yet sugar is
+procured at 6,600 feet.</p>
+
+<p>The fertility and productiveness of the sugar-cane
+is immense, second only to the sago-palms. &ldquo;The
+first sugar-canes planted with care on a virgin soil,
+yield a harvest during twenty to twenty-five years,
+after which they must be replanted every three
+years.&rdquo; In the island of Cuba, instances are known
+of a sugar-plantation existing for forty-five years. To
+procure new plants, the tedious process of sowing
+seeds is not necessary. The practice is followed of
+taking cuttings, and the stools, or scions, which
+spring from the joints (<i>nodi</i>) of the old plant, are
+fit to be separated in fourteen days; these, in the
+course of a year, are so well grown that they may be
+cut down, and submitted to the sugar-mill. An
+English acre under culture for sugar, in Java,
+yields 1285 pounds avoirdupois of refined sugar, and
+the produce at Cuba is nearly the same.</p>
+
+<p>Let not the thought arise, on the perusal of these
+statements, that the gifts of Providence are distributed
+with partiality, as nothing could be more unfounded.
+Independent of the destruction of the
+plantations which tropical hurricanes so often occasion,
+an insect of the locust kind, more particularly
+in the East Indies, produces such fearful devastation
+as to realize the scene described by the prophet Joel&mdash;&ldquo;A
+fire devoureth before them, and behind them a
+flame burneth: the land is as the garden of Eden
+before them, and behind them a desolate wilderness;
+yea, and nothing shall escape them<a name="FNanchor_T_20" id="FNanchor_T_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_T_20" class="fnanchor">[T]</a>.&rdquo; From such visitations,
+northern latitudes are generally exempt, and
+the constant struggle which man has had to maintain
+with the elements and a churlish soil, has so
+whetted his faculties as to render the return for his
+labour not only more certain, but even more abundant<a name="FNanchor_U_21" id="FNanchor_U_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_U_21" class="fnanchor">[U]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>As if to shew that &ldquo;the earth full of the riches
+of the Lord,&rdquo; in parts of the world where the low
+temperature is an obstacle to the profitable cultivation
+of the sugar-cane, a substitute is found for it in
+the <i>acer saccharinum</i>, or sugar-maple, which presents
+the great peculiarity of the ascending sap being
+charged with sugar to such a degree as to be then fit
+for the manufacture of this valuable substance. There
+results from this circumstance a most important advantage
+to the inhabitants of the northern regions,
+where this tree grows, that the juice is extracted early
+in spring, a time when the rigour of the season condemns
+the labourer to inactivity. Besides, the sugar-maple
+grows spontaneously, and requires no care, till
+it is fit for tapping; and when deprived of its juice,
+and incapable of yielding more sugar, its wood is
+applicable to a far greater number and variety of
+uses than the bruised cane, since as fuel the maple
+is most valuable; and its ashes yield, from their
+richness in the alkaline principle, four-fifths of the
+potash exported to Europe from Boston and New
+York. The timber of the sugar-maple is also highly
+prized, both for common and ornamental purposes&mdash;as
+the beautiful bird&rsquo;s-eye maple is obtained from
+this tree.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The sugar-maple begins a little north of Lake St.
+John, in Canada, near 48&deg; of north lat., which, in the
+rigour of its winter, corresponds to 68&deg; of Europe.
+It is nowhere more abundant than between 46&deg; and
+43&deg; of north lat., which space comprises Canada, New
+Brunswick, Nova Scotia, the states of Vermont and
+New Hampshire, and the district of Maine. Farther
+south, it is common only in Genessee, in the state of
+New York, and in the upper parts of Pennsylvania.
+It is estimated by Dr. Rush, that in the northern part
+of these two states, there are 10,000,000 acres which
+produce these trees in the proportion of thirty to an
+acre. The process of making maple-sugar is commonly
+begun in February, or in the beginning of
+March, while the cold continues intense, and the
+ground is still covered with snow. The sap begins to
+be in motion at this season, two months before the
+general revival of vegetation. The sap continues to
+flow for six weeks; after which it becomes less abundant,
+less rich in saccharine matter, and sometimes
+even incapable of crystallization. In this case it is
+consumed in the state of molasses; or exposed for
+three or four days to the sun, when it is converted
+into vinegar by the acetous fermentation: a kind of
+beer is also made of it. The amount of sugar produced
+by each tree in a year varies from different
+causes. The yearly product varies from 2 lbs. to 4 lbs.
+for each tree<a name="FNanchor_V_22" id="FNanchor_V_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_V_22" class="fnanchor">[V]</a>.&rdquo; The sap is most abundant from
+young trees, but less charged with sugar. The average
+produce is five per cent. of sugar. The richer the sap
+is in saccharine matter, it is so much the more profitable
+to extract it, as in such a case it is nearly pure
+from all mucilaginous matter, or free acid, and may
+be consolidated by the action of cold alone by merely
+freezing it, thus rendering boiling unnecessary.</p>
+
+<p>Sugar exists in many other plants, such as the
+beet-root, from which it is extracted; and also the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>25]</a></span>
+stem of the maize, or Indian corn, is charged with an
+extraordinary quantity of sugar, and it may either be
+brought to the state of a honey-like sugar, or the
+juice pressed out of the stalk, and fermented, forming
+the <i>pulque de mahio</i>, or <i>pulque de Flaolli</i>, in Mexico<a name="FNanchor_W_23" id="FNanchor_W_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_W_23" class="fnanchor">[W]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Gum has been already stated to be the basis of all
+the other organizable products, and it is found not only
+in almost all plants, but in nearly all parts of them.
+In a pure or nearly isolated state, it exists chiefly in
+the inner bark of vascular and especially exogenous
+trees, and is preserved in the interior with the greatest
+care: its escape externally results either from disease,
+as in the case of plum and cherry-trees, from
+the puncture of insects, cracks in the bark, or by artificial
+incisions. The death of the tree soon follows
+the loss of this important juice, and thousands of
+trees of the genus acacia are annually sacrificed in
+different parts of Africa to procure the gum-arabic of
+commerce. It is only in a few genera and tribes of
+trees, that it exists in so concentrated a state as to
+assume the solid form on exposure to the air, but in
+some of these the quantity is amazing. Hot countries
+are the chief abodes of such trees. Thus, besides the
+immense quantity obtained from the acacias, the <i>anacardium
+occidentale</i> (cashew-nut tree) in America,
+has furnished from a single tree a mass weighing
+forty-two pounds. Gum is mawkish, insipid, and
+generally unpalatable, yet highly nutritive; and the
+Africans, during the harvest of gum at Senegal, live
+entirely upon it, eight ounces being the daily allowance
+for each man. In general they become plump
+on this fare; and such should be the result, if the calculation
+be correct, which assigns as great nutritive
+power to four ounces of gum as to one pound of
+bread. This concentration of nourishment renders
+gum a peculiarly suitable food for lengthened journeys
+through the deserts, as it occupies small compass,
+and a little suffices to stay the cravings of
+hunger. Thus, upwards of a thousand persons may
+occupy more than two months in a journey from
+Abyssinia to Cairo without any other kind of food<a name="FNanchor_X_24" id="FNanchor_X_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_X_24" class="fnanchor">[X]</a>.
+Its bland, demulcent properties fit it to correct the
+acrimony of the secretions formed under the influence
+of a tropical sun and torrid air, with a scanty and
+irregular supply of water. Plants, likewise, are preserved
+in a vegetative and living state, mid sandy and
+arid wastes, by the quantity of gum stored up in
+them. Hence succulent plants, such as cacti and
+others, may be found in the steppes and sandy plains
+of South America, verdant and healthy, though no
+rain may fall to convey fresh sap into them for
+months, or even a year. In the form of mucilage,
+<i>i. e.</i>, gum in a state of solution, it is found in a very
+large number of plants, and thus contributes to the
+maintenance of man and animals. In these it is
+generally associated with some other principles,
+which render it either more palatable or more easily
+digested. A very large number of our esculent vegetables
+owe their nutritive properties to the gummy
+matters with which they abound, and the favour with
+which they are regarded to the other matters united
+with it. Those which have a bitter principle are
+very excellent, when this is in small proportion; and
+as, in most of them, the gummy matter is prepared
+first, requiring for its formation only a moderate degree
+of light and heat, while the bitter, or other principle,
+is added at a later period, under the influence
+of stronger light; such plants, when young, are tender
+and agreeable; nay, even very poisonous plants,
+when very young, are wholesome and pleasant, which,
+at a more advanced season, are virose and disagreeable.
+Thus, the peasantry of France and Piedmont
+eat the young crowfoots (ranunculus) and
+poppies, after boiling them, and find them safe and
+nourishing. The same result follows exclusion of
+light, as in the process of blanching, by which means
+celery, sea-kale, and other vegetables, are rendered
+esculent, which in the wild state are poisonous or
+repulsive. In northern latitudes, the light being intense
+for a short time only, many plants are used
+there which, in the southern, are dangerous or destructive,
+such as hemlock and monkshood. A moderate
+degree of bitterness is a very useful accompaniment
+of the gum, which alone is cloying and
+even oppressive to the stomach. The presence of a
+bitter principle in many lichens promotes their digestion,
+and thus even the tough and leathery ones,
+called tripe of the rocks, can be eaten, and sustain
+life amid great privations and sufferings. The rein-deer
+moss (<i>cludonia rangiferina</i>) is another lichen of
+great utility: it is not much employed as human
+food, but it is the main support of the rein-deer for a
+great portion of the year, and thus renders Lapland a
+fit abode for man.</p>
+
+<p>A peculiar modification of gum constitutes <i>pectine</i>
+or vegetable jelly; and this occurs in fruits, such as
+the orange, currant, and gooseberry, &amp;c., also in
+many of the algae or sea-weeds, which are, or ought
+to be, much employed as a delicate article of nourishment.
+The edible swallow&rsquo;s nest, so greatly esteemed
+by the Chinese, is an alga, gathered by the
+birds. The Ceylon moss (<i>Gigartina lichenoides</i>),
+and the carrageen or Irish moss (<i>Chondrus crispus</i>),
+with many others, might be made to contribute
+largely to the subsistence of man. Not merely earth,
+from its fruitful bosom, but the vast ocean, offer their
+rich produce to nourish and sustain the only intelligent
+occupant of the globe, who should ever remember the
+declaration of the psalmist, &ldquo;O Lord! how manifold
+are thy works! in wisdom hast thou made them all:
+the earth is full of thy riches; so is the great and
+wide sea!&rdquo; (Ps. civ.)</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a>
+The Greeks used to say that reeds had contributed to subjugate
+a people, by furnishing arrows; to soften their manner,
+by the charm of music; and to develop their intelligence, by
+offering them the instruments proper for the formation of letters.&mdash;<i>Humboldt&rsquo;s
+Personal Narrative.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The reed presents itself as an object of peculiar veneration,
+when we reflect that it formed the earliest instrument by which
+human ideas, and all the charms of literature and science were
+communicated, and which has handed down to us the light of
+religion and the glow of genius from the remotest ages.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Drummond&rsquo;s
+First Steps to Botany.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_B_2" id="Footnote_B_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></a>
+&ldquo;The Guaraons, a free and independent people, dispersed
+in the Delta of the Oronooko, owe their independence to the
+nature of their country; for it is well known that, in order to
+raise their abodes above the surface of the waters, at the period
+of the great inundations, they support them on the cut trunks
+of the mangrove tree, and of the <i>Mauritia flexuosa</i>.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Humboldt,
+Personal Narrative</i>, vol. iii. p. 277. The same people
+make bread of the medullary flour of this palm, which it yields
+in great abundance, if cut down just before going to flower.&mdash;<i>Ibid.</i>,
+vol. iii. p. 278. To these circumstances Thomson alludes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Wide o&rsquo;er his isles the branching Oronooque<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rolls a brown deluge, and the native driven<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To dwell aloft on life-sufficing trees,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">At once his home, his robe, his food, his arms.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_C_3" id="Footnote_C_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_3"><span class="label">[C]</span></a>
+The connection of navigation with the progress of civilization
+is most intimate, as may be understood from the following
+passage:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Among the circumstances which have contributed to retard
+the progress of civilization in Africa, one of the most important
+and influential is the compact and undivided form of the African
+continent, and the natural barriers which render access to the
+greater regions of the interior so remarkably difficult. It has
+been observed by Professor Ritter, that the civilization of
+countries is greatly influenced by their geographical forms, and
+by the relation which their interior spaces bear to the extent of
+coast. While all Asia is five times as large as Europe, and
+Africa more than three times as large, the littoral margins of
+these larger continents bear no similar proportion to their
+respective areas. Asia has seven thousand seven hundred geographical
+miles of coast; Europe four thousand three hundred,
+and Africa only three thousand five hundred. To every thirty-seven
+square miles of continent in Europe, there is one mile of
+coast; in Africa, only one mile of coast to one hundred and
+fifty square miles of continent. Therefore the relative extension
+of coast is four times as great in Europe as in Africa.
+Asia is in the middle between these two extremes. To every one
+hundred and five square miles, it has one mile of coast. The
+calculation of geographical spaces occupied by different parts of
+the two last-mentioned continents, is still more striking. The
+ramifications of Asia, excluded from the continental trapezium,
+make about one hundred and fifty-five thousand square miles of
+that whole quarter, or about one-fifth part. The ramifications
+of the continental triangle of Europe form one-third part of the
+whole, or even more. In Asia the stock is much greater in proportion
+to the branches, and thence the more highly advanced
+culture of the branches has remained, for the most part, excluded
+from the interior spaces. In Europe, on the other hand,
+from the different relation of its spaces, the condition of the
+external parts had much greater influence on that of the interior.
+Hence the higher culture of Greece and Italy penetrated
+more easily into the interior, and gave to the whole continent one
+harmonious character of civilization, while Asia contains many
+separate regions which may be compared, individually, to
+Europe, and each of which could receive only its peculiar kind
+of culture from its own branches. Africa, deficient in these endowments
+of nature, and wanting both separating gulfs, and
+inland seas, could obtain no share in the expansion of that
+fruitful tree, which, having driven its roots deeply in the heart
+of Asia, spread its branches and blossoms over the western and
+southern tracts of the same continent, and expanded its crown
+over Europe. In Egypt alone it possessed a river-system, so
+formed as to favor the development of similar productions.
+Die Erdkunde von Aslen, von Carl Ritter. 2. Band. Einleitung.
+&sect;24, 25. Berlin, 1832.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Pritchard, Researches into the Physical
+History of Mankind. Third Edit.</i> Vol. ii., p. 354.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_D_4" id="Footnote_D_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_D_4"><span class="label">[D]</span></a>
+&ldquo;Was it not for the manifestation of this brighter era, and
+the realization of its promised blessings, that all else which preceded
+it was overruled by divine Providence, as subservient and
+preparatory? All things being now ready, there began to spring
+up in the bosom of the British churches, a wide and simultaneous
+sense of the solemn responsibility under which they had
+been laid by the events of Providence, to avail themselves of so
+favorable an opening for the diffusion of the gospel throughout
+the eastern world. Men, qualified to undertake the high commission,
+must be sent across the ocean&mdash;and have not the toils,
+and perils, and successes, of Vasco de Gama, and other navigators,
+opened up a safe and easy passage? That their labours
+might pervade the country, and strike a deep and permanent
+root into the soil, they must be delivered from the caprices of
+savage tyranny, and the ebullitions of heathen rage; and have
+not our Clives and our Wellingtons wrested the rod of power
+from every wilful despot; and our Hastings and our Wellesleys
+thrown the broad shield of British justice and British protection
+alike over all? In order that they might the more effectually
+adapt their communications to the peculiarities of the
+people, they must become acquainted with the learned language
+of the country, and through it, with the real and original
+sources of all the prevailing opinions and observances, sacred
+and civil. And have not our Joneses and our Colebrookes unfolded
+the whole, to prove subservient to the cause of the
+Christian philanthropist? In this way have our navigators, our
+warriors, our statesmen, and our literati, been unconsciously
+employed, under an over-ruling Providence, as so many pioneers,
+to prepare the way for our Swartzes, our Buchanans, our Martins,
+and our Careys.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Duff&rsquo;s India and India Missions.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_E_5" id="Footnote_E_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_E_5"><span class="label">[E]</span></a>
+The relative proportions of starch and gluten in rice, wheat,
+and other seeds, not only confirm the views respecting design,
+in determining their geographical distribution, but merit notice,
+as influencing their nutritive qualities, and fitness or unfitness
+as food in different countries.</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Proportions of starch and gluten">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl bt" colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdc bt bl bb">Starch.</td>
+ <td class="tdc bt bl bb">Gluten.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Wheat,</td>
+ <td class="tdl">according to</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Proust</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">74.5&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">12.5&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">&mdash;&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="tdc">&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Vogel</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">68.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">24.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Winter wheat</td>
+ <td class="tdc">&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Davy</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">77.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">19.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl" colspan="3">Spring wheat</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">70.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">24.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Spelt</td>
+ <td class="tdc">&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Vogel</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">74.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">22.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Barley</td>
+ <td class="tdc">&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Davy</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">79.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">6.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Rye</td>
+ <td class="tdc">&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Do.</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">61.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">5.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Oats</td>
+ <td class="tdc">&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Do.</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">59.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">6.0&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Rice Carolina</td>
+ <td class="tdc">&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Vogel</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">85.07</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">3.60</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Maize</td>
+ <td class="tdc">&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Bizio</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">80.92</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl">0.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl bb" colspan="3">Tartarian buckwheat</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl bb">52.29</td>
+ <td class="tdr bl bb">10.47</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Not only do the relative proportions of starch and gluten
+vary in the same seed when grown in different countries, but
+even when grown in the same country, according to the kind
+of manure put on the soil, a point of great importance to agriculturists,
+when known and attended to.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_F_6" id="Footnote_F_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_F_6"><span class="label">[F]</span></a>
+See &ldquo;Church of England Magazine,&rdquo; vol. vii. p. 52-3-4.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_G_7" id="Footnote_G_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_G_7"><span class="label">[G]</span></a>
+&ldquo;I have been informed by Sir Joseph Banks, that the Derbyshire
+miners, in winter, prefer oat-cakes to wheaten bread, finding
+that this kind of nourishment enables them to support their
+strength and perform their labour better. In summer they say
+oat-cake heats them, and they then consume the finest wheaten
+bread they can procure.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Sir H. Dacy&rsquo;s Agricultural Chemistry,
+5th edit., p. 143.</i></p>
+
+<p>The propriety and advantage of this practice is established by
+the recent investigations of Boussingault, who found that oats
+contain more than double the quantity of nitrogen which exists
+in any of the other cereal grains.&mdash;<i>See Annales de Chimie et de
+Physique, tom. <span class="upr">lxvii.</span> p. 408-21.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_H_8" id="Footnote_H_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_H_8"><span class="label">[H]</span></a>
+Carpenter&rsquo;s &ldquo;General and Comparative Physiology,&rdquo; p. 272
+and Dr. Prout&rsquo;s &ldquo;Bridgewater Treatise,&rdquo; book iii.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_I_9" id="Footnote_I_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_I_9"><span class="label">[I]</span></a>
+See Forrest&rsquo;s &ldquo;Voyage to the Moluccas;&rdquo; Craufurd&rsquo;s &ldquo;Indian
+Archipelago, or Library of Entertaining Knowledge, Vegetable
+Substances, Food of Man,&rdquo; p. 171.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_J_10" id="Footnote_J_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_J_10"><span class="label">[J]</span></a>
+&ldquo;In the season of inundations, these clumps of the <i>Mauritia</i>,
+with their leaves in the form of a fan, have the appearance of a
+forest rising from the bosom of the waters. The navigator in
+proceeding along the channel of the delta of the Oronooco at
+night, sees with surprize the summits of the palm-trees illuminated
+by large fires. These are the habitations of the Guaraons
+(see Sir W. Raleigh&rsquo;s Brevis Descript. Guian&aelig;, 1594, tab. 4),
+which are suspended from the trunks of trees. These tribes
+hang up mats in the air, which they fill with earth, and
+kindle on a layer of moist clay the fire necessary for their household
+wants. They have owed their liberty and their political
+independence for ages, to the quaking and swampy soil which
+they pass over in the time of drought, and on which they alone
+know how to walk in security to their solitude in the delta of
+the Oronooco, to their abodes on the trees, where religious enthusiasm
+will probably never lead any American Stylites (<i>see</i>
+Mosheim&rsquo;s Church History). This tree, the tree of life of the
+missionaries, not only affords the Guaraons a safe dwelling during
+the risings of the Oronooco, but its shelly fruit, its farinaceous
+pith, its juice, abounding in saccharine matter, and the
+fibres of its leaves, furnish them with food, wine, and thread
+proper for making cords and weaving hammocks. It is curious to
+observe in the lowest degree of human civilization, the existence of
+a whole tribe depending on one single species of palm-tree, similar
+to those insects which feed on one and the same flower,
+or on one and the same part of a plant.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Humboldt, Person.
+Narrative</i>, vol. v. p. 728.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_K_11" id="Footnote_K_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_K_11"><span class="label">[K]</span></a>
+Davy&rsquo;s Agricultural Chemistry, p. 133.&mdash;According to Mr.
+Knight the best potatoes, such as the Irish apple, possess much
+greater specific gravity than the inferior sorts, and this variety
+yields nearly 20 per cent. of starch; while five pounds of the
+variety called Captain Hart, yields 12 ounces of starch, and the
+Moulton White nearly as much, the Purple Red give only 8&frac12;,
+the Ox Noble 8&frac14;. There is much more profit in cultivating the
+former than the latter sorts; but even the best kinds degenerate,
+and new sorts must be procured, as if to stimulate the ingenuity
+of man, by preventing his enjoying the gifts of God, without
+constant exertion, and observation of the laws which the Creator
+has impressed upon his productions. See the Observations of
+Thomas Andrew Knight, and the experiments now making by
+Mr. Maund, of Bromsgrove.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_L_12" id="Footnote_L_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_L_12"><span class="label">[L]</span></a>
+Duncan. Sacred Philosophy of the Seasons.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_M_13" id="Footnote_M_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_M_13"><span class="label">[M]</span></a>
+Carpenter&rsquo;s Physiology.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_N_14" id="Footnote_N_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_N_14"><span class="label">[N]</span></a>
+Thomson&rsquo;s Chemistry of Organic Bodies: Vegetables, p. 667.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_O_15" id="Footnote_O_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_O_15"><span class="label">[O]</span></a>
+Vere magna et longe pulcherrima sunt etiam illa profundissim&acirc;
+sapienti&acirc; hic exstructa opera tua, O Jehovah! qu&aelig; non
+nisi bene armatis nostris oculis patent! Qualia autem erunt
+denique illa, qu&aelig; sublato hoc speculo, remot&acirc; mortalitatis caligine
+daturus es tuis Te vere sincero Pectore colentibus? Eheu
+qualia! Hedwig.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_P_16" id="Footnote_P_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_P_16"><span class="label">[P]</span></a>
+Thomson&rsquo;s Chemistry. Vegetables, p. 630.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_Q_17" id="Footnote_Q_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_Q_17"><span class="label">[Q]</span></a>
+On the Culture and Uses of Potatoes, by sir John Sinclair,
+bart. This is a subject becoming every year of greater moment,
+and attention to it a national benefit. The reduction of
+bulk alone, facilitating the transport from one place to another,
+is an essential gain. The produce, from a certain number of
+acres of this valuable esculent, may be greatly augmented by
+planting the potatoes whole, at a great distance between each,
+and hoeing freely between them&mdash;<i>See Knight&rsquo;s Papers in Horticultural
+Transactions, and Payen et Chevalier, Trait&eacute; de la
+Pomme de Terre. Paris, 1826, <span class="upr">p.</span> 17.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_R_18" id="Footnote_R_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_R_18"><span class="label">[R]</span></a>
+Humboldt. Personal Narrative, vol. iv. p. 84.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_S_19" id="Footnote_S_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_S_19"><span class="label">[S]</span></a>
+&ldquo;Among the plants cultivated by man, the sugar-cane, the
+plantain (<i>musa</i>), the mammee-apple (<i>mammea</i>), and alligator-pear-tree
+(<i>laurus persea</i>) alone have the property of the
+cocoa-nut-tree, that of being watered alike with fresh and salt
+water. This circumstance is favorable to their migrations; and
+if the sugar-cane of the shore yield a syrup that is a little
+brackish, it is believed at the same time to be better fitted for
+the distillation of spirit, than the juice produced from the canes
+of the interior.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Humboldt.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_T_20" id="Footnote_T_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_T_20"><span class="label">[T]</span></a>
+&ldquo;The quantity of these insects is incredible to all who have
+not themselves witnessed their astonishing numbers; the whole
+earth is covered with them for the space of several leagues. The
+noise they make in browsing on the trees and herbage may be
+heard at a great distance, and resembles that of an army in
+secret. The Tartars themselves are a less destructive enemy
+than these little animals. One would imagine that fire had
+followed their progress. Wherever their myriads spread, the
+verdure of the country disappears; trees and plants stripped of
+their leaves and reduced to their naked boughs and stems cause
+the dreary image of winter to succeed in an instant to the rich
+scenery of spring. When these clouds of locusts take their
+flight, to surmount any obstacles, or to traverse more rapidly a
+desert soil, the heavens may literally be said to be obscured by
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_U_21" id="Footnote_U_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_U_21"><span class="label">[U]</span></a>
+&ldquo;As the native of a northern country, little favoured by
+nature, I shall observe that the Marche of Brandebourg, for the
+most part sandy, nourishes, under an administration favourable
+to the progress of agricultural industry, on a surface only one-third
+that of Cuba, a population nearly double.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Humboldt,
+P. N.</i>, vol. vii. p. 156.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_V_22" id="Footnote_V_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_V_22"><span class="label">[V]</span></a>
+Loudon&rsquo;s Arboretum Britannicum, vol. i., p. 412.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_W_23" id="Footnote_W_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_W_23"><span class="label">[W]</span></a>
+For an interesting account of sugar, see Humboldt, Nova
+Genera et Species Plantarum, vol. i., p. 243.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_X_24" id="Footnote_X_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_X_24"><span class="label">[X]</span></a>
+Haselquist&rsquo;s Voyage.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="sermon" id="sermon"></a>THE SECURITY OF GOD&rsquo;S PEOPLE:</h2>
+
+<p class="center">A Sermon,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By the Venerable C. J. Hoare, M.A.</span>,<br />
+<i>Archdeacon and Prebendary of Winchester.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center smcap"><small>Romans viii. 28.</small></p>
+
+<p class="center">&ldquo;And we know that all things work together for
+good to them that love God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p>Amongst the observations most frequently
+heard in the world, is that made on the undeserved
+prosperity of the wicked, and the
+many seemingly uncalled-for trials of the
+righteous. Experience will indeed tell us,
+that neither of these opposite conditions is uninterrupted;
+neither is it all sunshine in the
+most prosperous worldly lot; nor is it all
+gloom&mdash;far from it&mdash;in the Christian&rsquo;s portion
+on earth. Experience will also go further,
+and will abundantly prove the saying
+of the wise man, that &ldquo;the prosperity of fools
+shall destroy them.&rdquo; Such success has a
+tendency first to deceive, then to corrupt, and
+lastly to betray men into utter destruction.
+But the text will lead us still further; it will
+teach us, that the trials of the righteous preserve
+them&mdash;yea, work for good; and that
+&ldquo;all things,&rdquo; and, therefore, even the greatest
+trials, &ldquo;work together for good to them that
+love God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>26]</a></span>
+The text represents them as workmen. They
+work together for good; they are constantly
+at work for that purpose, whether as instruments
+in God&rsquo;s hands, or as in a degree self-moving
+for that end; they are constructing
+as it were a building, or they are laying a
+foundation; and that which they lay&mdash;that
+which all things befalling a Christian are
+ever laying for him&mdash;is a ground for his substantial,
+necessary, and eternal benefit. &ldquo;We
+know that all things work together for good
+to them that love God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This, then, it will be, with God&rsquo;s blessing,
+my humble endeavour to show in the following
+discourse: first, premising the sense of
+the word &ldquo;good,&rdquo; in all just and reasonable
+acceptation; next, showing more fully how
+all things may be thus said to &ldquo;work for
+good to them that love God;&rdquo; finally, pointing
+out some of the many things which will
+be found by experience to work in this very
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>I. The term &ldquo;<em>good</em>,&rdquo; it must be said in
+the first place, is very different, both in the
+language of the bible and in the estimation of
+the truly wise, from what it usually represents
+in the language and opinion of the
+world. The bible teaches us to view all
+things in their consequences, and in their real
+and essential nature. View things in their
+consequences, in their final end and issue, if
+you would view them at all justly or wisely.
+Ease, and health, and worldly wealth, and
+success may be good, just as the plentiful
+feast is good, provided a man has temperance
+and soundness of constitution properly to
+partake of it; but, if he is likely to indulge
+to a surfeit, or if every morsel is food to
+some mortal disorder, and every cup adds
+strength to a fever that is raging in his veins,
+no one in reason would call such an entertainment
+good to such a man. And just so
+with the good things of this present life: the
+Christian does not unreasonably deny that
+prosperity is pleasing, health desirable, friends
+and relations deeply attaching to us, and the
+smiles of social endearment or public favour
+greatly captivating; but neither does he, like
+the world, consider them to be necessarily
+all they seem to be, good to all persons, and
+under all circumstances; he does not forget
+that earthly and bodily good is just what it
+becomes in the use of it; that many times
+the use can hardly be separated from the
+abuse; that lawful things, when unlawfully
+or idolatrously used, are just as evil as unlawful
+ones&mdash;nay, rather, that for a few comparatively
+who have perished from a hardened
+course of forbidden pleasure, multitudes
+have been for ever lost by allowed
+indulgences. Till he sees, then, the application
+made, and the resulting consequences of
+any worldly boon, he does not call the possessor
+happy, nor the possession good, nor
+very eagerly or supremely does he desire it
+either for himself or others.</p>
+
+<p>But, again, the things <em>really and essentially
+good</em> in their very nature and inseparable
+qualities are those which, in the estimation of
+the mere world, are held in no account whatsoever.
+What the bible chiefly esteems, and
+the world wholly neglects, are spiritual blessings,&mdash;the
+good things of the soul of man,
+&ldquo;the precious things of heaven, even of the
+everlasting hills.&rdquo; Those precious things,
+the goodwill of him who is the great I AM&mdash;the
+peace of God which passeth all understanding&mdash;the
+luxury of promoting the good
+of man and the glory of God;&mdash;still more, the
+pardon of sin, through faith in the atonement
+of Jesus Christ&mdash;a gradual advancement in
+true holiness&mdash;a growing fitness and longing
+desire for the future blessedness of the saints,
+and a final admission and &ldquo;abundant entrance
+into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and
+Saviour,&rdquo; the &ldquo;inheritance incorruptible, undefiled,
+and that fadeth not away;&rdquo;&mdash;these
+are truly to the world but as a dream, a
+fancy, a cunningly-devised fable; but, to the
+mind of the Christian, stand for everything
+truly and substantially good. They are in
+all his plans first and foremost, and nearest
+and dearest to his heart. They are as necessary
+to him in his calculation and account of
+human happiness, as profit and pleasure are
+to his neighbours around. &ldquo;Eye hath not
+seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart conceived,
+the things which God hath prepared for them
+that love him.&rdquo; But God hath revealed to
+<em>him</em> by his Spirit, these very things, as his
+chief good, his measure of all true happiness.
+Wealth may be good, health still better, kindly
+affections and attached friends the best of
+earthly boons; but the favour of God, the
+acquisition of his image, the means of grace,
+and the hope of glory, are to him sovereign
+and above all. While many ask,
+amidst the increase of their corn, and wine,
+and oil, &ldquo;Who will show us any good?&rdquo;
+he exclaims, &ldquo;Lord, lift thou up the light of
+thy countenance upon me&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;in thy presence
+is the fulness of joy; at thy right hand are
+pleasures for evermore.&rdquo; He weighs well the
+nature, and &ldquo;remembers the end&rdquo; of all that
+is called good, and so &ldquo;does not amiss.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>II. For, secondly, he finds that, while we
+so do, and so consider, &ldquo;all things work together
+for good to <em>those that love God</em>.&rdquo;
+There is, first, on the mind of the Christian
+that secret influence in the very disposition of
+love to God, which will <em>of itself</em> turn to good
+every thing that comes from the God whom
+we love, and the Saviour on whom we fully
+and implicitly rely. And there is, secondly,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>27]</a></span>
+a full disposition on the part of <em>our heavenly
+Father</em> so to order and direct every event
+which befals his loving and attached children,
+as shall be found at last to have answered
+the ends of sovereign wisdom and divine
+mercy.</p>
+
+<p>In the first instance, the tendency, <em>on our
+own part</em>, of love to the great and good God
+will be this, namely, to turn all that befals us
+to an instrument of good. As, in the healthy
+body, food of very different descriptions may
+yet all turn to nourishment, and minister to
+health and bodily strength; so, in the healthy
+mind, purified and strengthened by the grace
+of God&rsquo;s Holy Spirit, every thing that meets
+it is converted to its advantage, and adds in
+some way to its improvement and its happiness.
+There is ever a colour cast upon outward
+circumstances from the complexion of the inward
+soul. The vain man, on his part, the
+ambitious, the sensual, the gainful, well
+know how to turn all to the advancement of
+their sinful objects; and no less does the good
+man turn all to the enlargement of his goodness,
+and the lover of his God to the increase
+and exercise of that love. Viewing every
+thing in the glass, or by the lamp of God&rsquo;s
+word, he ingeniously, so to speak, finds in
+every thing a reason for loving and fearing,
+serving and obeying God. Every event
+works for his good, because he is resolved
+it shall do so; and every result satisfies,
+pleases, rejoices him, because he is persuaded
+it ought to do so. Loving God, he has a
+confidence that he is beloved of God; and
+then, feeling himself in a world made by God,
+and proceeding forward under his guidance
+and permission, he never will believe that any
+thing falls out in it but what is intended to
+make him both good and happy. Happy
+then he will be, if God intends he should be
+so; and holy he will be encouraged to become,
+under the consciousness that God intends
+his holiness.</p>
+
+<p>Dispositions like these will indeed work
+for their possessor even upon the hardest
+materials, and will, by the very force of a
+new and spiritual nature, convert all into
+&ldquo;servants to righteousness unto holiness.&rdquo;
+Faith will be a hand, bringing together the
+events of life and the framer and guide of
+all life and all existence; and the result will
+be a solemn and heart-satisfying conviction,
+that &ldquo;all things work together for good
+to them that love God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Nor, next, will such a faith prove to be
+groundless; for surely there is a <em>power engaged</em>,
+there is a pledge in the gospel, a sure word of
+promise, and even of covenant, that all things
+shall be ours;&mdash;&ldquo;All are yours, and ye
+are Christ&rsquo;s, and Christ is God&rsquo;s.&rdquo; The
+trial of our faith lies indeed very much upon
+this one point. Can we, for a moment, believe
+that God permits all the disorder and
+confusion which appears to us in the world&mdash;the
+prosperity of wickedness, the trials and
+adversity of the righteous, in order to raise a
+doubt on our minds whether he be not absent
+all the while&mdash;whether he bears or not any
+share in the world he created, or in all those
+moving causes that owe their activity and
+life to himself alone? God is surely present;
+he is powerfully operating; he is the supreme
+controller, and the almighty director; he is
+fully aware of those adverse appearances,
+and is no less deeply engaged in the final
+issue of all events, to render them consistent
+with the ends of justice and mercy, than as if
+we saw him at work with our bodily eyes:
+or, as if we then could fully know the mind of
+the Lord, or be his counsellors to instruct
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The expressions of scripture are too strong,
+and too agreeable to the very nature of God and
+of his works, to make us doubt for a moment
+of his providential care and unceasing watchfulness.
+&ldquo;He is not far from every one of
+us; for in him we live, and move, and have
+our being.&rdquo; To the true disciple saith Christ
+himself, &ldquo;The very hairs of your head are all
+numbered;&rdquo; and yet more strongly, &ldquo;If a
+man love me, he will keep my words; and my
+Father will love him, and we will come unto
+him, and make our abode with him.&rdquo; Promises,
+these, which have been ever realized
+in the history of the saints in all ages who
+have walked with God&mdash;Enoch, Noah,
+Abraham, and the patriarch Jacob&mdash;none
+more tried than he&mdash;yet we read <em>his</em> testimony
+to &ldquo;the God, which fed me all my life-long
+unto this day; the angel which redeemed
+me from all evil.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Keeping in view the notion of what is
+truly good for this state of trial, and for the
+soul as well as for the body, there is no time
+and no extent to which we shall not find the
+promise sure, and the fulfilment exact, where
+God is pledged for the supply of his servants
+that trust in him: his eye is ever open, his
+ear ever attentive unto them. The petition he
+denies is able to operate as powerfully and
+as favourably on their behalf as that which
+he grants; merciful alike in the gift which he
+bestows and which he withholds, and wise
+alike in the evil which he permits, and
+which he restrains.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing more important to the believer&rsquo;s
+faith, than to apprehend that there is
+no uncertainty, nothing imperfect or weak in
+the dispensations of God, as they respect the
+final issue of the Christian&rsquo;s trials. Either
+God is wholly absent and forgetful of his
+daily wants, or else he is wholly and for ever
+at work on his behalf. If he were wholly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>28]</a></span>
+absent, well might his servants doubt that,
+after all their endeavours to that end, they
+should be able to turn to good all the events
+of this mortal life. If <em>he</em> do not temper the
+trials of his servants, how in truth shall they
+overcome them? If <em>he</em> do not controul their
+enemies, how shall they ever escape them?
+Figure to yourself any place, or time, or circumstance,
+where God is not, or where he
+<em>can</em> be spared from the concerns of his people,
+either temporal or spiritual: but, if none
+can be imagined or assigned, then is it but
+justly and essentially true, that, by his especial
+order and his immediate appointment, &ldquo;all
+things work together for good to them that
+love God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>III. But we may proceed, lastly, to show,
+in a practical manner, <em>some of those very
+things</em> which shall thus work together for
+good. Take the most unpromising and most
+unfavourable case, for instance, that of <em>great
+prosperity</em>. None will deny it to be a case of
+many others the most trying to the graces of
+the true Christian. Yet even shall the temptations
+arising from worldly honours and successes,
+to a man armed with the love of God,
+work together for good. Graces rarely exercised
+in exalted stations, shall be found to
+shine the more conspicuously in his instance.
+The grace of humility, and tenderness of spirit,
+shall be the more eminently illustrated in that
+station, where, too often, there is only pride
+and hardness of heart. If he be found, in
+a sober, self-denying spirit, setting little value
+on those things so commonly called good
+amongst mankind&mdash;using this world without
+abusing it&mdash;shall not the grace of God be
+more abundantly magnified? When not overcome,
+as Agar feared he might be, saying,
+&ldquo;lest I be full, and say, who is the Lord?&rdquo;&mdash;but
+rather, when led by fulness to more gratitude,
+and by a lofty station to deeper humility,
+and to a more lowly submission to
+God, and meekness to man&mdash;how will he by
+such prosperity as this testify to the reality of
+Christian principles: how will he, in giving
+freely where he has freely received, esteeming
+even his highest gains as loss for Christ&rsquo;s
+sake, and returning upon others all that
+mercy which has been exercised towards
+himself, prove that <em>he</em> has not received the
+grace of God in vain; but that even prosperity
+has &ldquo;worked together for good to them
+that love God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Or, suppose the case of <em>deep adversity</em>&mdash;suppose
+the Christian stripped, like Job, of
+great honours and possessions at a single
+stroke; betrayed and sold like Joseph, even
+by brethren, into bondage and exile; or
+lying like Lazarus at the gate of the rich
+man, diseased in body, and suing for the
+crumbs from off his table; or suppose him,
+as St. Paul himself, in peril of foes, and even
+doubtful of friends; in weariness and painfulness
+oft, in hunger and thirst, in cold and
+nakedness. These last were exactly the circumstances
+under which the very text was
+indited by the apostle himself: he saw, what
+you may see, that trials like these, when tempered
+by the presence of the God he loved,
+were good, not, I would say, in proportion
+to their weight, but according to the patience
+which they exercised, the faith they strengthened,
+the experience of divine support they
+afforded, the hope they brightened, the crown
+they were preparing; yea, the exceeding and
+eternal weight of glory which they must
+eventually be working out. The apostle had
+&ldquo;heard of the patience of Job,&rdquo; and had
+&ldquo;seen the end of the Lord, that the Lord is
+very pitiful, and of tender mercy.&rdquo; The
+trials of Joseph had even led that servant of
+God, by degrees of painful progress, to the
+honour of a prince, and a chain of gold. The
+&ldquo;evil things&rdquo; of Lazarus&mdash;good they might
+have been called&mdash;had led him to still higher
+honours, and had prepared him to be carried
+by angels into Abraham&rsquo;s bosom. Every
+individual circumstance of this nature, as it
+passed in review before the apostle in the
+text, had led irresistibly to the conclusion he
+so strongly expresses. Could he distrust the
+same arm, disbelieve the same promises; or
+rather saying with David&mdash;&ldquo;Our fathers
+trusted in thee, and were delivered,&rdquo; would he
+not add&mdash;I will trust as they did; I will be
+&ldquo;in subjection to the Father of spirits, and
+live?&rdquo; Let me feel only the &ldquo;profit, that I
+may be partaker of his holiness;&rdquo; and then,
+&ldquo;though no affliction for the present is joyous,
+but grievous,&rdquo; it shall surely hereafter yield
+the peaceable fruit of true righteousness; and
+&ldquo;all things,&rdquo; adversity itself, &ldquo;shall work
+together for <em>my</em> good.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><em>Temptation</em>, verily, shall be among the
+&ldquo;things working together for good to them
+that love God.&rdquo; Such indeed is our state of
+trial upon earth, that every successive arrival
+at our doors comes to us in some shape or
+other of temptation to sin. But take the
+strongest and most pressing incitements to
+the corruptions of the heart, and the evil of
+our nature. Even of <em>these</em> must it not be
+said, that the temptation, and the tempter
+himself, may be turned into a worker for
+good, when that promise is brought forward,
+and brought home to the heart, &ldquo;God is
+faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted
+above what ye are able, but will with the
+temptation also make a way to escape, that
+ye may be able to bear it?&rdquo; Another apostle
+had a like meaning when he said, &ldquo;My
+brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into
+divers temptations.&rdquo; Every enemy opposed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>29]</a></span>
+to the Christian warrior affords him fresh opportunity
+for a sure victory in the strength of
+Christ. Every obstacle in his path is that which
+faith regards as a trial prepared for his soul;
+but hope and joy carry him over, to the glory
+of his sovereign Upholder. In evil company,
+which he seeks not, his courage is honourably
+put to the test, and abides it; amidst a world
+of licentiousness and excess, which he desires
+not to approach, he still trusts, through
+grace, that he shall not be found wanting. In
+a season of provocation his meekness is tried,
+and it prevails; and in the moment of fear,
+and the threats of alarm, &ldquo;his heart standeth
+fast, trusting in the Lord;&rdquo; &ldquo;nay, in all
+these things he is more than conqueror
+through him that loved him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>If his very <em>sins</em> are in one sense his shame,
+and the source of his bitter tears and saddest
+recollections, still those tears and recollections
+shall prove among the workers for his good,
+if they lead him more closely to the throne of
+mercy, and to the fountain of eternal strength.
+If any experiences of past weakness make him
+more watchful, sober, and diligent for the
+future&mdash;if they direct him to the vulnerable
+points in his armour, to the &ldquo;sin that easily
+besets him&rdquo;&mdash;if, in the very moment of his
+conscious frailty and heart-overwhelming
+struggle, he is enabled to exclaim, &ldquo;Rejoice
+not over me, O mine enemy; though I fall
+I shall arise; though I sit in darkness the
+Lord shall be a light unto me:&rdquo; then shall
+he know that &ldquo;<em>all things</em> work together for
+good to them that love God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I conclude with a single word of remark
+on the expression in the text, &ldquo;We <em>know</em>
+that all things work together for good.&rdquo; It
+expresses the <em>personal experience</em> of the
+Christian. It answers to a similar expression
+of the same apostle to the Philippians&mdash;&ldquo;I
+know that this shall turn to my salvation
+through your prayer, and the supply of the
+spirit of Jesus Christ.&rdquo; But to whom is this
+knowledge vouchsafed? To whom is it a
+safe and a sure conviction&mdash;an &ldquo;earnest expectation
+and hope,&rdquo; so &ldquo;that in nothing we
+shall be ashamed?&rdquo; Truly, to those only who
+&ldquo;<em>love God</em>&rdquo;&mdash;to those who are &ldquo;the called
+according to his purpose.&rdquo; His purpose is our
+sanctification, and that we should be &ldquo;conformed
+to the image of his Son.&rdquo; To such truly,
+to such only does that blessing apply, so frequently
+indeed, and but too rashly, appropriated
+by many others, &ldquo;All is for the best.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Let the careless rather tremble, those as
+yet not effectually called into the gospel vineyard,
+at such an appropriation of the text.
+To them it may be only a savour of death
+unto death, a deadly security, a hope that
+&ldquo;<em>maketh</em> ashamed, because the love of God is
+<em>not</em> yet shed abroad in their hearts.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Gain rather in prayer, in secret meditation
+and much retirement from the presence and
+the love of this world, the true love of God
+which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. Then
+being first transformed yourself, you will
+be enabled, by a divine power, to transform
+everything around you; you will receive all
+things as from the hand of the Father whom
+you love, the Benefactor and Friend whom
+you wish and aim to serve. Your willing
+and noble obedience to him will render, then,
+prosperity a new advantage to you by
+awakening your gratitude, and adversity a
+blessing, by exercising and perfecting your
+patience. You will have a fence around you,
+an armour of divine temper to fortify you in
+the presence of every temptation, and to turn
+the very weapons of your adversaries into
+your own instruments of victory, the trophies
+of your triumph. Sin will have its struggles
+within you, but will not gain dominion over
+you, while every deviation from God&rsquo;s
+righteous will is mourned in secret, and restored
+through grace; and while it brings you
+the more urgently and constantly to the foot
+of the cross, where hung the Saviour whom
+you love, whose favour and forgiveness you
+implore; and you shall be enabled to close
+the volume of your experience in the concluding
+words of the chapter, and with the
+apostle himself: &ldquo;Who shall separate us
+from the love of Christ?... I am persuaded,
+that neither death, nor life, nor
+angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor
+things present, nor things to come, nor height,
+nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be
+able to separate us from the love of God
+which is Christ Jesus our Lord.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="glory" id="glory"></a>THE GLORY OF THE SAVIOUR&rsquo;S TRANSFIGURATION.<a name="FNanchor_Y_25" id="FNanchor_Y_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_Y_25" class="fnanchor">[Y]</a></h2>
+
+<div class="chapblock">
+<p>&ldquo;And was transfigured before them, and his face did shine
+as the sun, and his raiment was white as the light.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>There never existed in this world a person in whose
+life there was a greater variety of incident than in
+the life of Jesus. He passed through scenes of the
+most peculiar and diversified description, to which we
+can find no parallel in the history of man, the effect
+of which no ordinary mind could have borne. These
+were, in general, connected with that lowliness and
+debasement to which he submitted for the benefit of
+our sinful race; but occasionally, as at his birth, his
+baptism, and transfiguration, there burst forth some
+bright rays of glory from behind the dark cloud of
+his humanity, which proved his possession of a nature
+that was divine.</p>
+
+<p>It may have a good effect in strengthening our gratitude
+for the Saviour&rsquo;s mercy, to remember that every
+complexion of circumstance was freely and voluntarily
+submitted to, not merely for his own satisfaction or
+benefit, but principally for the good of man. Jesus
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>30]</a></span>
+never lost sight of his representative character. He
+always remembered those whose cause he had espoused:
+and, whether he was led by the Spirit into
+the wilderness, to be tempted of the devil&mdash;or into
+the garden of Gethsemane, to sustain his more fierce
+and violent assaults&mdash;or to the mountain, to put on
+for a season the habiliments of light and glory&mdash;his
+chief object and desire was to effect the redemption,
+and to revive the hopes of weak and fallen man.</p>
+
+<p>We are now supplied by the Holy Spirit with a
+very brief account of the transfiguration itself. Before,
+however, we make any remark upon this description,
+or refer, as we desire to do, to the uses which
+this transaction was intended to serve, we must direct
+our attention for a few moments to the important
+preparation which the Saviour made for it. And
+here there are, perhaps, many who may be disposed
+to ask, had there not been sufficient preparation already?
+had not the Saviour endured much physical
+fatigue in accomplishing the wearisome ascent of the
+mountain? and had not the time, the place, and the
+spectators, been carefully selected by himself? Let
+it however be remembered, that in addition to all this,
+there was a necessary and absolutely indispensable
+preliminary, not to be omitted even by the Son of
+God, and that was prayer. It is said, by St. Luke,
+in the twenty-ninth verse of his ninth chapter, that
+&ldquo;as he prayed, the fashion of his countenance was
+altered, and his raiment was white and glistering.&rdquo;
+Let us learn from this, that not all the labour, mental
+or physical, which we can possibly exert, can ever
+bring us into the enjoyment of one momentary smile
+of God&rsquo;s countenance, if we neglect prayer. We may
+diligently peruse the records of redeeming mercy
+which the sacred page of scripture contains; we may
+place ourselves under the pastoral care of some faithful
+and devoted minister of Jesus; we may enjoy the
+high advantage of intercourse and communion with
+many spiritually-minded followers of the Saviour;
+yet, after all, we shall find no benefit from these distinguished
+privileges if we neglect to pray. How
+many Christians there are, who often wish they had
+a Luther for their minister, because they feel dissatisfied
+with their spiritual progress under him to whose
+charge they may have been entrusted by the great
+Head of the church! And yet the cause of
+this may be traced to their own want of constant
+and of earnest prayer. Prayer is the
+key that unlocks the holy place where Jesus meets
+his people at the mercy-seat, to dispense the gifts
+which have been purchased by his precious blood.
+And when the united petitions of ministers and people
+ascend in an unceasing stream of sacred incense
+to a throne of grace, blessings may be expected to descend
+in rich abundance on the church.</p>
+
+<p>But perhaps it may be considered that we have digressed
+from our subject. We return, then, to the
+circumstance which more immediately claims our attention.
+We are informed that Jesus was praying
+when he was transfigured; nay, it is remarkable that
+St. Luke represents his special object of ascending
+the mountain to have been in order to devote himself
+to this sacred engagement. &ldquo;It came to pass about
+an eight days after these sayings, he took Peter, and
+John, and James, and went up into a mountain to
+pray.&rdquo; Prayer was as much the Saviour&rsquo;s duty, as it
+is the duty of any of his people. He had been expressly
+commanded by his Father to ask of him to
+give him the heathen for his inheritance, and the
+uttermost parts of the earth for his possession. All
+his works, whilst he was tabernacling in the flesh,
+were accompanied with prayer; and his present
+exaltation at the right hand of his heavenly Father,
+instead of suspending, rather imparts a more sublime
+intensity of fervour to his petitions. In vain had he
+shed his blood without this; for his prayers are as essential
+for the salvation of sinners, as his sufferings on
+the cross for their redemption; and therefore the
+apostle, in the twenty-fifth verse of the seventh chapter
+of the epistle to the Hebrews, connects the unlimited
+ability of Jesus to save, not only with his
+having offered himself as a sacrifice, but also with his
+ever living to make intercession for us. O! how welcome
+and delightful must be the accents of supplication
+to the ears of the Lord God of Sabaoth, when he
+withholds blessings, even from his well-beloved Son,
+until he ask for them! And how necessary is prayer,
+when Jesus cannot obtain blessings without it! There
+is a reserve manifested by the Holy Spirit in this, as
+in other instances, as to the contents of our Saviour&rsquo;s
+petitions. Most probably they had some reference to
+that splendid scene in his earthly history, into which
+he was about to enter. We may imagine him to have
+addressed his heavenly Father in language somewhat
+similar to that which he employed when he was about
+to devote himself as a spotless victim on the cross:
+&ldquo;Father, the hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy
+Son also may glorify thee. Father, I will that they
+also whom thou hast given me be with me where I
+am, that they may behold my glory which thou hast
+given me: for thou lovedst me before the foundation
+of the world.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But we must pass on to the description which is
+given of the transfiguration of Jesus. &ldquo;His face did
+shine as the sun, and his raiment was white as the
+light.&rdquo; On this we can say but little, for no imagination
+can conceive, nor can words express the exact
+nature of that splendid scene which is here so slightly
+glanced at. The Holy Spirit has employed the most
+concise mode of description in order to restrain our
+fancy within proper limits. We are, therefore, altogether
+incompetent to expatiate on a subject so
+sublime, for we know nothing, beyond what is written,
+of the glory which is associated with spiritual bodies.
+When Paul was led to speak of a state of future enjoyment,
+he could only express himself in the language
+of conjecture, and say, &ldquo;I reckon that the
+sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be
+compared with the glory that shall be revealed in
+us.&rdquo; And when, on another occasion, he was anxious
+to comfort the church by a description of the resurrection-body
+into which the Saviour shall change the
+vile bodies of his people, he could only describe it by
+the use of words which merely implied a direct contrast
+between what we now are and what we shall be.
+Our present bodies are earthly, natural, mortal, and
+corruptible; our resurrection bodies shall be celestial,
+spiritual, immortal, incorruptible: but these latter
+expressions are only negations of the former; as to
+any positive apprehension of the nature of glorified
+bodies, &ldquo;it doth not yet appear what we shall be.&rdquo;
+And there is much wisdom in this reserve: there is
+enough told us upon the subject to encourage us to
+persevere in our endeavours to attain to the joy that
+is set before us, but not as much as would, in the
+meantime, render us too much discontented with our
+present state.</p>
+
+<p>We must, however, carefully note that the Holy
+Spirit, in so far describing the Saviour&rsquo;s transfiguration,
+has given a literal account of a real transaction.
+There is no cunningly-devised fable here. There was
+nothing visionary in the exhibition itself; there is
+nothing fanciful in the description of it. Jesus was
+actually metamorphosed; &ldquo;his face did shine as the
+sun, and his raiment was white as the light,&rdquo; and, as
+on all ordinary occasions in the days of his flesh he
+was God manifest in the nature of man, so, during
+the continuance of this splendid scene, he exhibited
+his human nature manifested in and encompassed by
+the brightness and glory of his Godhead.</p>
+
+<p>But it may be profitable to inquire into some of the
+uses of this great transaction, for such an occurrence
+could not have taken place without some important
+object. It was intended to prepare the Saviour for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>31]</a></span>
+his approaching sufferings; to shew the interest
+which heaven took in his sacrifice; to be a source of
+strength and comfort to the church, by giving a type
+and specimen of that high degree of glory to which
+the nature of man is destined to be exalted in consequence
+of the Saviour&rsquo;s dying love. But the leading
+object of this event was to give a representation of
+his second coming in majesty at the last day. It is
+not by any gratuitous assumption that we maintain
+this, but on the sure ground of strong scriptural testimony.
+We find St. Matthew representing the
+Saviour as promising some of his disciples that they
+should not taste of death till they saw him &ldquo;coming
+in his kingdom;&rdquo; and in the parallel passage in the
+ninth chapter of St. Mark, he is represented as saying
+that there were some standing with him who should
+not see death until they had seen the kingdom of
+God &ldquo;come with power.&rdquo; Now the apostle Peter
+combines the substance of these two declarations, in
+a manner which distinctly shews that he considered
+them as having a reference to the future advent of the
+Redeemer. &ldquo;We have not followed cunningly-devised
+fables, when we made known unto you the power and
+coming of our Lord Jesus Christ;&rdquo; and he speaks of
+&ldquo;majesty,&rdquo; &ldquo;honour,&rdquo; and &ldquo;glory,&rdquo; which are the
+appendages of a kingdom, and are to be the characteristics
+of the second advent of Jesus, in contrast
+with the meanness, poverty, and degradation of his first
+appearance in our world. Those, therefore, who say
+that the transfiguration had a typical reference either
+to the effusion of the Spirit on the day of pentecost,
+or to the destruction of Jerusalem, are greatly in
+error. It was meant to be a specimen and earnest of
+our Lord&rsquo;s appearance hereafter in glory, when he
+shall come to be admired in all them that believe, and
+to establish his everlasting kingdom of righteousness
+and peace in the earth. The use of a type is to arrest
+and embody in a kind of visible indication the prominent
+features of its antitype; and, accordingly, if we
+examine the leading circumstances of the transfiguration,
+we shall find such a resemblance between it
+and the second coming of our Saviour, as will clearly
+establish such a relationship between these two events.
+Jesus appeared in literal human nature on the mountain;
+so shall he come again, as the Son of man,
+possessing the same nature with his people; for the
+apostles were informed when he ascended, that the
+very same Jesus who had been taken up from them
+into heaven should even so come in like manner as
+they had seen him ascend into heaven. He appeared
+in glory, and not in humility; such as he shall descend
+hereafter, when he shall come with all his holy
+angels and sit upon the throne of his glory. As he
+was visible on the mountain, so, when he shall come
+again, every eye shall see him, and they also which
+pierced him; and all kindreds of the earth shall wail
+because of him. As he was encompassed by a cloud on
+the summit of Tabor, so shall he come hereafter in
+the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory. As
+he stood in majesty upon the mountain, so according
+to the declaration of the prophet, his feet shall stand,
+when he comes again, upon the mount of Olives.
+And as Moses and Elias appeared in glory with the
+Saviour, so shall he bring his people with him on his
+return to our world, for, when Christ who is our life
+shall appear, then shall we also appear with him in glory.</p>
+
+<p>Such we believe to have been the great primary
+object of this interesting event. How full of consolation
+and encouragement must it appear in this important
+view to every believer who is still struggling
+with the infirmities and trials of his earthly pilgrimage.
+It directs the attention of such to the crown of righteousness
+that awaits him, and says, &ldquo;Be ye stedfast,
+immoveable, always abounding in the work of the
+Lord; forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not
+in vain in the Lord.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_Y_25" id="Footnote_Y_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_Y_25"><span class="label">[Y]</span></a>
+From a scriptural small work, with the style and spirit
+of which we are much pleased, &ldquo;The Transfiguration,&rdquo; an
+exposition of Matt. xvii. i. 8, by the rev. Daniel Bagot, B.D.,
+minister of St. James&rsquo; chapel, Edinburgh, and chaplain to the
+right hon. the earl of Kilmorry. Edinburgh, Johnstone: London,
+Whittaker, Nisbet: Dublin, Curry, jun., Robertson.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="cabinet" id="cabinet"></a>The Cabinet.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">No Salvation without an Atonement.</span>&mdash;But
+let me turn your attention to the sad effect
+which a denial of the Saviour&rsquo;s Deity has upon the
+prospects of man for eternity. It is a truth written,
+as with a sunbeam, upon every page of scripture, that
+man is by nature a fallen, a guilty, a condemned
+creature, obnoxious to the righteous judgment of God.
+We are told, that &ldquo;the heart is deceitful above all
+things, and desperately wicked;&rdquo;&mdash;that &ldquo;all have
+sinned, and come short of the glory of God:&rdquo; Jehovah
+himself is represented as looking down from heaven
+upon the children of men, to investigate their
+characters with that omniscient ken by which he explores
+the utmost boundaries of the illimitable universe,
+and pronouncing this solemn verdict&mdash;&ldquo;There
+is none righteous; no, not one:&rdquo; and the apostle
+Paul, when reminding the Ephesian church of their
+past unregenerate condition, says that they were
+&ldquo;children of wrath, even as others.&rdquo; If man, then,
+be in a guilty and condemned state by nature, it is
+an awful and important question, how shall he obtain
+pardon and justification with God, on account of his
+past transgressions? and how shall his sinful and
+unholy nature be sanctified and prepared for admission
+into the realms of everlasting glory? Can personal
+repentance, on the part of the sinner, obliterate
+the crime of which he has been guilty, so as to reinstate
+him into the condition of a sinless and unfallen
+being? Unquestionably not. For whatever act has
+been performed by God, or angels, or by man, must
+remain for ever written upon the pages of eternity,
+never to be erased; and, therefore, no subsequent
+repentance on the sinner&rsquo;s part, no tears of sorrow or
+contrition, can ever blot out his past transgressions;
+nor even could the united tears of angels erase the record
+of those offences for which man is brought in
+guilty before God! Can, then, subsequent obedience
+achieve the work of the sinner&rsquo;s justification? This,
+alas! will prove as ineffectual as repentance; for
+though we should render to God a perfect obedience
+for the remainder of our lives, still the sin we have
+committed is sufficient to procure our conviction and
+condemnation; for the wages of sin is death! Shall
+we, then, have recourse to the abstract mercy of God,
+as the foundation upon which to rest our hope of pardon?
+This is the Unitarian&rsquo;s plea: &ldquo;I believe,&rdquo; he
+says, &ldquo;that God is merciful; and I repose in his kindness,
+and trust he will have compassion on me.&rdquo; Alas,
+my friends! it was bad enough that Mr. Porter should
+have yesterday adopted the algebraic principle of neutralizing
+one text of scripture by another; but to
+carry up this principle to a contemplation of the character
+of God, and to bring it into collision with the
+attributes of Jehovah, and thus to set his mercy
+against his justice&mdash;his compassion against his truth&mdash;his
+grace against his holiness, and thereby to neutralize
+and annihilate one class of attributes by another,
+is a guilt that is direful, blasphemous, and indescribable.&mdash;<i>From
+speech of the Rev. Daniel Bagot,
+at the Belfast Unitarian <span class="upr">[</span>Socinian<span class="upr">]</span> discussion.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>32]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="poetry" id="poetry"></a>Poetry.</h2>
+
+
+<h3>LAYS OF PALESTINE.</h3>
+
+<p class="center">No. IX.<br />
+(<i>For the Church of England Magazine.</i>)<br />
+<span class="smcap">By T. G. Nicholas.</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapblock">
+<p>&ldquo;She hath given up the ghost; her sun is gone down while
+it was yet day.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Jer.</span> xv. 9.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts, cause thy face to
+shine, and we shall be saved.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ps.</span> lxxx. 19.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">&rsquo;Tis eventide; the golden tints are dying<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Along the horizon&rsquo;s glowing verge away;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Far in the groves the nightingale is sighing<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Her requiem to the last receding ray;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And still thou holdest thy appointed way.<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But Salem&rsquo;s light is quench&rsquo;d.&mdash;Majestic sun!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Her beauteous flock hath wandered far astray,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Led by their guides the path of life to shun;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Her orb hath sunk ere yet his wonted course was run.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">In ages past all glorious was thy land,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And lovely were thy borders, Palestine!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The heavens were wont to shed their influence bland<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">On all those mountains and those vales of thine;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">For o&rsquo;er thy coasts resplendent then did shine<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The light of God&rsquo;s approving countenance,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">With rapturous glow of blessedness divine;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And, &rsquo;neath the radiance of that mighty glance,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bask&rsquo;d the wide-scatter&rsquo;d isles o&rsquo;er ocean&rsquo;s blue expanse.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">But there survives a tinge of glory yet<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">O&rsquo;er all thy pastures and thy heights of green,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Which, though the lustre of thy day hath set,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Tells of the joy and splendour which hath been:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">So some proud ruin, &rsquo;mid the desert seen<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">By traveller, halting on his path awhile,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Declares how once beneath the light serene<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of brief prosperity&rsquo;s unclouded smile,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Uprose in grandeur there some vast imperial pile.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">O Thou, who through the wilderness of old<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Thy people to their promis&rsquo;d rest did&rsquo;st bring,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Hasten the days by prophet-bards foretold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">When roses shall again be blossoming<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">In Sharon, and Siloa&rsquo;s cooling spring<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Shall murmur freshly at the noon-tide hour;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And shepherds oft in Achor&rsquo;s vale shall sing<a name="FNanchor_Z_26" id="FNanchor_Z_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_Z_26" class="fnanchor">[Z]</a><br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The mysteries of that redeeming power<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which hath their ashes chang&rsquo;d for beauty&rsquo;s sunniest bower.<a name="FNanchor_AA_27" id="FNanchor_AA_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_AA_27" class="fnanchor">[AA]</a><br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Thou had&rsquo;st a plant of thy peculiar choice<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">A fruitful vine from Egypt&rsquo;s servile shore<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Thou mad&rsquo;st it in the smile of heav&rsquo;n rejoice;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">But the ripe clusters which awhile it bore<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Now purple on the verdant hills no more,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The wild-boar hath upon its branches trod;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Yet once again thy choicest influence pour,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Transplant it from this dim terrestrial sod,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To adorn with deathless bloom the paradise of God.<br /></span>
+<span class="credit"><i>Wadh. Coll. Oxon.</i><br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_Z_26" id="Footnote_Z_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_Z_26"><span class="label">[Z]</span></a>
+Isaiah xv. 10.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_AA_27" id="Footnote_AA_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_AA_27"><span class="label">[AA]</span></a>
+Isaiah lxi. 3.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="miscellaneous" id="miscellaneous"></a>Miscellaneous.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Influence of Religion on a State.</span>&mdash;Religious
+faith is necessarily and unavoidably political in
+its influence and bearings, and eminently so. Christians
+are generally well informed&mdash;and knowledge is
+power. They have there in Christian countries, as
+citizens and subjects, directly and indirectly, a large
+share of influence in the state. In most Christian
+states, if not in all&mdash;for a state could hardly be called
+Christian, if it were not so&mdash;Christianity is made a
+party of common law, and, when occasion demands,
+is recognised as such by the judicial tribunals. It is
+eminently so in Great Britain; it is so in America;
+and generally throughout Europe. It is also, to a
+great extent, established by constitutional law, and
+thus incorporated with the political fabric, furnishing
+occasion for an extended code of special statutes.
+The great principles of Christianity pervade the
+frame of society, and its morals are made the
+standard. The second table of the decalogue is
+adopted throughout as indispensable to the well-being
+of the state; and a thousand forms of legislation are
+attempted to secure the ends of the great and comprehensive
+Christian precept&mdash;&ldquo;Thou shalt love thy
+neighbour as thyself.&rdquo; More especially is it deemed
+the highest perfection of civilized life and manners, in
+the code of conventional politeness, to exemplify this
+latter divine injunction. Otherwise life would be
+much less comfortable&mdash;hardly tolerable.&mdash;<i>A Voice
+from America to England.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Duty of Subjects.</span>&mdash;We ought not only to
+look at the queen&rsquo;s duty, but recollect also what is
+our own; for the prosperity of a nation consists,
+not only in having a religious governor, but also
+an obedient people. The events which have passed
+before our eyes during the few last years, may
+serve, I think, to convince us of the truth of such
+an inference. Can we look back on the loss of
+human lives, the almost paralyzing alarm excited
+by the threats of an infuriated populace, and the
+absolute destruction of property which took place
+during the riots in the city of Bristol, and not see
+that all those calamities sprung out of a want of obedience
+to the existing authorities? Nor was that the
+only occurrence of the kind which has taken place.
+What repeated acts of incendiarism have we as a
+nation suffered from, as well as from the still more
+recent riots which have arisen in our south-western
+and other counties? and may we not ask, whence
+have those scenes of strife, discontent, and tumult,
+sprang, but from the cause I have already referred to?&mdash;want
+of subjection and obedience to the government
+of our kingdom. What were the scenes of misery
+and horror which broke out from time to time, when
+internal wars and insurrections so greatly depopulated
+our land? Cast your eye up and down our
+country, and view the still remaining barrows&mdash;those
+unsculptured, unlettered monuments, which cover
+the slain of our people&mdash;and ask, are these Britons
+slain in their own land, a Christian land, a land where
+(to remind you of the present privileges of her constitution)
+we have a national established church, of
+sound scriptural and protestant faith, and a preached
+gospel?<a name="FNanchor_AB_28" id="FNanchor_AB_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_AB_28" class="fnanchor">[AB]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_AB_28" id="Footnote_AB_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_AB_28"><span class="label">[AB]</span></a>
+From &ldquo;The Liturgy of the Church of England, Catechetically
+explained, for the use of children, by Mrs. S. Maddock.
+3 vols. London: Houlston and Co.&rdquo; These volumes seem well
+adapted to explain to those for whose use they have been
+published&mdash;the liturgy of our church. The catechetical form
+in which the subject is treated, rather, however, detracts from
+their value, and should the authoress be called on for a new
+edition, we should advise her to publish in a different form.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="smlfont chapblock padtop">London: Published by JAMES BURNS, 17 Portman Street,
+Portman Square; W. EDWARDS, 12 Ave-Maria Lane, St.
+Paul&rsquo;s; and to be procured, by order, of all Booksellers in Town
+and Country.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center smlfont padtop padbase"><small>PRINTED BY</small><br />
+JOSEPH ROGERSON, 24 NORFOLK STREET, STRAND, LONDON.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="bbox">
+<p><b>Transcriber's Note</b></p>
+
+<p>The masthead in the original referred to Vol. IX., although this issue
+is in fact part of Vol. X. of this publication. This has been corrected.</p>
+
+<p>A table of contents has been added for the convenience of the reader.</p>
+
+<p>Minor punctuation errors have been repaired.</p>
+
+<p>Archaic spelling is preserved as printed. Please note that Orinoco is
+spelled variously as Oronooco and Oronooko.</p>
+
+<p>The following typographic errors have been fixed:</p>
+
+<div class="amends">
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_20">20</a>&mdash;servicable amended to serviceable&mdash;"... both exogenous
+and endogenous, render them extremely serviceable to mankind."</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_21">21</a>&mdash;organisable amended to organizable, for consistency&mdash;"... indeed
+gum is that organizable product which exists most universally ..."</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_23">23</a>&mdash;productivenes amended to productiveness&mdash;"... of which there
+are several varieties, differing essentially in productiveness, ..."</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, fourth footnote&mdash;Hedwiz amended to Hedwig&mdash;"Eheu qualia! Hedwig."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Church of England Magazine -
+Volume 10, No. 263, January 9, 1841, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHURCH OF ENGLAND MAGAZINE, JAN 9, 1841 ***
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Church of England Magazine - Volume 10,
+No. 263, January 9, 1841, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Church of England Magazine - Volume 10, No. 263, January 9, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 27, 2010 [EBook #31430]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHURCH OF ENGLAND MAGAZINE, JAN 9, 1841 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Bryan Ness, Sam W. and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
+produced from scanned images of public domain material
+from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ CHURCH OF ENGLAND MAGAZINE.
+
+
+ UNDER THE
+ SUPERINTENDENCE
+ OF
+ CLERGYMEN
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ OF THE UNITED
+ CHURCH OF ENGLAND
+ AND
+ IRELAND.
+
+
+ "HER FOUNDATIONS ARE UPON THE HOLY HILLS."
+
+
+ Vol. X. No. 263.
+ JANUARY 9, 1841.
+ Price 11/2_d._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ THE CHRISTIAN'S OBLIGATION TO SEEK THE SPIRITUAL BENEFIT
+ OF OTHERS 17
+
+ SACRED PHILOSOPHY.--CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE NATURAL THEOLOGY
+ OF THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM 19
+
+ THE SECURITY OF GOD'S PEOPLE: A SERMON 25
+
+ THE GLORY OF THE SAVIOUR'S TRANSFIGURATION 29
+
+ THE CABINET 31
+
+ POETRY.--LAYS OF PALESTINE 32
+
+ MISCELLANEOUS 32
+
+
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN'S OBLIGATION TO SEEK THE SPIRITUAL BENEFIT OF OTHERS.
+
+By the Rev. Thomas Bissland, M.A.,
+ _Rector of Hartley Maudytt, Hants._
+
+
+There are some hearts little, if at all, impressed by the solemn
+requirements of the Almighty; so dead, in fact, to everything which
+relates not to the objects of time and sense, that they are unaffected
+by the scenes of vice and of the misery which is its consequence,
+every where presented to their notice. It is not until the mind is
+under the gracious influence of the Spirit of God, that men feel any
+anxiety to stop the torrent of evil, and endeavour to become the
+humble instruments of converting the sinner and saving his soul. Many,
+in fact, who feel deeply interested in their neighbours' temporal
+comforts and prosperity, feel little anxious to supply their spiritual
+wants; and to this may be traced the opposition which is not
+unfrequently made, even by professing Christians, to institutions
+which have a direct tendency to improve the moral and spiritual
+condition of the human race.
+
+Now there are many reasons which induce a truly converted man to
+labour for the spiritual benefit of others. First, there is the
+dishonour which men, in an unconverted state, cast upon God. This
+feeling operated on the mind of the psalmist, when he exclaimed (Ps.
+cxix. 53), "Horror hath taken hold of me, because of the wicked who
+forsake thy law." For when men forsake God's law, they declare that
+they are little impressed with a sense of the divine majesty and
+infinite goodness of the Almighty; that they are not anxious to know
+his will; that his threatenings alarm them not; that his promises in
+no way affect their hearts; that, in fact, they are not desirous of
+that favour which rests upon those only who walk in the path of his
+commandments. The psalmist's zeal and jealousy for the glory of God
+were fully manifested by his anxiety to erect a house, in some
+respects suitable for the divine worship; by his earnest expressions,
+that the divine glory should be made known throughout the world, as
+when he exclaims "Tell it out among the heathen, that the Lord
+reigneth;" and this holy desire rendered every action, by which there
+was the most slight appearance of dishonour being cast upon Jehovah,
+abominable in his sight. When he reflected on his own departure from
+the law of his God, on those acts which had caused the enemies of the
+truth to blaspheme, he was indeed filled with horror. The language
+uttered, when from the depths he supplicated the divine forgiveness,
+powerfully demonstrates the agony of his soul--convinces us that his
+repentance was sincere, and that he was anxious that in every action
+of his life he might for the future glorify that Being whose gracious
+hand had conducted him through his earthly pilgrimage--whose favour
+had raised him to the throne of Israel--the light of whose countenance
+had cheered him in many a dark and dreary hour--and whose comforts had
+refreshed his soul, when in the multitude of the thoughts within him
+he became dispirited and perplexed. The first and great commandment
+is, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart." The
+psalmist loved God, and on this account he was desirous that he should
+be had in reverence of all his intelligent creatures. He loved God;
+he was seized with horror when he beheld myriads uninfluenced by this
+principle, living in disobedience to this first commandment.
+
+Sin is too often viewed by us merely with respect to its baneful
+influence on the happiness of society. It is condemned by us, and it
+is punished by us, not so much as it is the transgression of the law
+of God, as it has a tendency to produce evil in the world. And hence
+there are many offenders in God's sight who by their conduct cast
+dishonour upon his name, who yet maintain a fair and respectable
+character when weighed in the world's balance, nay, even are regarded
+with reverence and esteem. We punish the murderer, the thief, the
+robber, the perjured person. It is right that we should do so. The
+welfare of society demands it. But do we punish the man who lives in
+adultery, in drunkenness, in sensuality? Do we punish the man who is a
+swearer, a gambler, a blasphemer, who habitually neglects the
+sanctuary of the Lord, and does his own pleasure on the sabbath-day?
+Human laws take no cognizance of these crimes. They are, however, as
+dishonourable to God as others which are punished by man. They are
+quite as detrimental to man's best interests; and fearful must be the
+account rendered for their commission before that equitable tribunal,
+where the children of men must answer for all their offences against
+the majesty of heaven.
+
+But there is a second reason why the true Christian will labour for
+the conversion of others, namely, the reflection that the sinner is
+ensuring his own destruction while he is at enmity against God; and
+this induced Jeremiah to exclaim (ix. 1), "O that my head were waters,
+and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for
+the slain of the daughter of my people." How strong is the
+expression--"_the slain_." The prophet knew full well the misery of
+transgressing God's law. Tremendous, indeed, is the reflection, that
+the path of sin inevitably leads to the regions of darkness--those
+regions where there is "weeping and gnashing of teeth," where "their
+worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched." Whence is it, then,
+that, without any apparent concern, we behold myriads of immortal
+creatures fast hastening to these regions of destruction? Whence is it
+that there is so much apathy, lukewarmness, and indifference to a
+brother's eternal welfare. Is it not too often, perhaps, that there is
+a latent scepticism which induces us to disbelieve the solemn
+declaration of the Omnipotent--even when he swears by himself--that
+every jot and tittle of his threatenings shall be accomplished? Surely
+were it not for some such spirit, we should never rest satisfied with
+the feeble efforts we may have made to lead the sinner back to his
+offended God; we should esteem no sacrifice too great, whether of
+time, or influence, or money, or talent, which could in any way
+promote a brother's spiritual welfare. But we are too apt to forget,
+if not to disbelieve, the solemn declarations of the bible; and
+forgetfulness to all practical results is as pernicious as downright
+infidelity. The man who forgets God is as little influenced by his law
+as the fool, who in his heart says there is no God at all. Now, this
+forgetfulness paralyzes our energies, damps our zeal, checks our
+benevolence. We do not consider that sinners are heaping up wrath
+against the day of wrath; and, though they may now enjoy an unhallowed
+prosperity, and now in an unbridled licentiousness derive happiness
+from the indulgence of fleshly lusts, yet that these war against the
+soul, against its present peace, and its ultimate felicity, and that
+ruin and destruction inevitably await them. Were our spirit that of
+the psalmist, or that of the prophet referred to, our feelings would
+be more lively, our endeavours to promote the good of mankind be more
+energetic. Looking not every one to his own, but on his brothers'
+good, we should be anxious to direct their feet into the way of peace.
+
+How beautifully was this spirit manifested by St. Paul, when he
+exhorted the converts of Philippi to be followers of himself--"For
+many walk," says he, "of whom I have told you often, and now tell you
+even weeping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ; whose
+end is destruction, whose God is their belly, and whose glory is in
+their shame; who mind earthly things." The apostle, indeed, appears to
+have been influenced by the same anxiety as the psalmist and the
+prophet; for the glory of the Redeemer, as well as the eternal welfare
+of their souls, was dear to his heart, and he could not refrain from
+weeping when he viewed the dishonour cast upon his adorable Lord by
+these enemies of his cross; when he beheld them following divers lusts
+and pleasures, even boasting of their recklessness of God's judgments;
+and when he carried his thoughts forward to that day when the terrors
+of the Lord would fall on all the children of disobedience, or those
+who neglected the great salvation. This spirit is, in fact, no bad
+test whereby we may try the state of our hearts and affections. If we
+are really desirous for the advancement of God's glory, and deeply
+interested in the welfare of our fellow-creatures, our feelings will
+be very similar to those of the holy men of God referred to. We shall
+not view, without the very deepest concern, that inattention which is
+everywhere paid to the solemn requirements of the Almighty; we shall
+at least make the attempt to stop the sinner in his career of guilt
+and folly, that his soul may be saved from destruction in the day of
+the Lord.
+
+Melancholy is the reflection, indeed, that neither God's invitations
+on the one hand, nor his threatenings on the other, appear to affect
+their hearts; they are neither constrained by love nor fear. "Wide is
+the gate, and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction, and many
+there be that go in thereat."
+
+There was one that wept over the rebellion of man, and one infinitely
+greater than David, or Jeremiah, or St. Paul--and that one was the
+ever-adorable Saviour; who, beholding the guilty race of man
+altogether gone out of the way, descended from the mansions of glory,
+became a partaker of human impurity, and opened through his blood a
+new and living way, whereby the guilty sinner might return in peace to
+his God. How touching the description of the evangelist--"And when he
+came near, he beheld the city and wept over it, saying, If thou hadst
+known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things which belong
+unto thy peace, but now they are hid from thine eyes." Jesus wept at
+the grave of Lazarus, for Lazarus was his friend; he sympathised
+deeply with Martha and Mary, for he loved them as he did their
+brother; but far more bitter were the tears he shed, when he reflected
+on the waywardness of that people whom he would have gathered to
+himself; the guilt of that city which had killed the prophets; when he
+thought of those days of divine vengeance, when its enemies should
+cast a trench about it, and compass it round, and keep it in on every
+side, and should lay it even with the ground, and its children within
+it. And did not this feeling operate when, even amidst the agonies of
+a crucifixion, his mind rested on the sufferings of others, and not on
+his own? "Daughters of Jerusalem! weep not for me, but weep for
+yourselves and for your children." And shall we not, in this as in
+every other respect, seek to imitate our adorable Lord? Shall we not
+feel deeply interested in the spiritual welfare of our fellow-men? If
+we do not, it is, alas! a fearful, a decisive proof, that the flame of
+holy love, of devoted zeal, has not been kindled in our bosom; that we
+do not feel the importance of that salvation which is offered us so
+freely in the gospel; that we are not duly impressed with a dread of
+that woe unspeakable, that shall be the portion of those whose souls
+shall be for ever lost.
+
+
+
+
+SACRED PHILOSOPHY.
+
+CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE NATURAL THEOLOGY OF THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM.
+
+By Robert Dickson, M.D., F.L.S.
+
+No. XI. Pt. 1.
+
+ "Lo! the oak that hath so long a nourishing
+ From the time that it 'ginneth first to spring,
+ And hath so long a life, as we may see,
+ Yet at the last wasted is the tree."
+
+ CHAUCER.
+
+
+While the actions which lead to the various effects on the external
+appearance of a tree, described in the former paper, are going on,
+many important changes occur in the internal parts, producing
+alterations not less admirable, whether in respect of the tree itself,
+or of the ends to which it may be rendered subservient. The base of an
+exogenous tree is not merely widened by the superposition of annual
+layers of wood over the first shoot, by which it gains greater
+mechanical power to support the extending head of wide-spreading
+branches, but the central portion is, in most cases, progressively
+rendered more and more solid by the deposition in it of various
+secretions prepared by the leaves, and transmitted from them through
+the medullary rays into this part as their ultimate resting-place.
+
+The fibres descending from the developing buds on the stem, and
+passing between the plates of cellular tissue, which constitute the
+medullary rays, and the cells of which have a horizontal direction,
+are but the basis of the vegetable fabric. The stem of an exogenous
+plant has been compared to a piece of linen, of which the weft is
+composed of cellular tissue, and the warp of fibrous and vascular
+tissue--crossing each other. Now, after the portion is once formed,
+which is woven every year by the wondrous machinery set to work for
+this purpose, it receives no fresh texture, yet each fibre remains a
+conducting tube to transmit the sap upwards, or, in the course of
+time, becomes charged with various principles, prepared, as already
+stated, by the leaves, and returned to the central part by that
+apparatus or system of canals for their transit inwards, the medullary
+rays, and at last are obstructed, so that no passage of fluid is
+effected through the inner layers of wood. But for every layer that is
+thus blocked up, a new one, which will continue pervious, is formed
+exterior to those already existing, so that a constant provision is
+made for carrying on the vital processes; to accomplish which, a free
+channel from the points of the roots to the surface of the leaves is
+absolutely necessary. The outer strata, produced by a tree of
+considerable age, are observed to be thinner than those formed at an
+earlier period, and become successively thinner and thinner, so that
+ultimately, if accident should not have previously caused it, the
+death of the tree is inevitable. The portions which are obstructed
+constitute the _duramen_ or heartwood, the pervious portion the
+_alburnum_ or sapwood. The original tissue is colourless; but
+according to the nature of the secretions deposited in it, the
+heartwood is either of a deeper colour, sometimes party-coloured, or
+at least of a much greater specific gravity than the sapwood. The
+removal of the juices by any solvent restores the wood to its
+primitive hue, and renders it again light. The difference of weight of
+a cubic foot of wood depends not merely on the different quantity of
+vegetable tissue compressed into a given space, in the first
+construction of the tree, but also on the quantity and quality of the
+secretions ultimately lodged in it. The same species of tree will
+present a difference in this respect, according to the country or
+situation where it grew, and also according to the character of the
+seasons during the time it flourished. According to the nature of the
+tree, if placed in favourable circumstances in reference to soil and
+weather, it invariably prepares and lodges in the stem those
+principles which it was designed to elaborate--the oak preparing
+tannin--the sugar-maple preparing its saccharine juice. That the
+primary object of these was some advantage to the tree itself can
+scarcely be doubted, but the secondary applications of which they are
+capable, give reason to suppose that these also were contemplated in
+their formation. The consideration of the means by which they are
+formed, and the direct consequences of their formation on the air, by
+abstracting certain elements from it, and supplying others, belong to
+the subject of leaves; it is the object of the present paper to view
+them as formed, and to show their amazing utility.
+
+The mechanical properties of the stems of trees, both exogenous and
+endogenous, render them extremely serviceable to mankind. The uses to
+which a single species of plant may be put are numerous and important,
+of which the reed (arundo phragmites) is an example, for after the
+root has assisted in binding and consolidating the soil, the stem is
+susceptible of the most varied applications[A].
+
+In a low state of civilization the palm, or a palm-like grass,
+supplies all that man requires; of the former of which, the _Mauritia
+flexuosa_, or sago-palm of the Oronooko, and still more the _cocos
+nucifera_, or cocoa-nut palm; and of the latter, the bamboo (_bambusa
+arundinacea_, and other species) are proofs. The bamboo suffices for
+all the needs of the humbler Chinese; even their paper, as well as
+their abodes, are made of it; and from the materials furnished by the
+cocoa-nut tree, not merely food, as shall be afterwards noticed, but
+larger and more elegant houses, with all their appurtenances, are
+constructed at Goa and other places. The obligations of the Guaraons
+to the _Mauritia flexuosa_ cannot be expressed[B]. In proportion as
+man rises in civilization, the importance of timber becomes greater,
+being a material for which no adequate substitute can be found. It
+combines lightness with strength, elasticity with firmness, and
+possesses in many instances a durability rivalling, or even
+surpassing, that of the rocks yielded to us by the solid substance of
+the globe. The adaptation of timber to the numerous wants of civil
+life is too familiar to require exposition; but in addition to all the
+ends it serves in these points, we have an interesting view presented
+to us in considering what a vast quantity of timber is required for
+the construction of our shipping, from the countless boats and small
+craft employed in our coasting trade up to the larger ships, which are
+so many floating towns or communities. These conduce to the
+accomplishment of objects of the most momentous nature. Were it not
+for our shipping we should still be in the condition described by the
+Romans, as Britons cut off from the rest of the world.--But by their
+means we now visit without restraint,
+
+ "Earth's farthest verge, and ocean's wildest shore,"[C]
+
+and though, in times past, they have been too often used as engines
+fraught with destruction, directed by man against his fellow man, let
+us hope that they may be required in future only to convey in amicable
+interchange the produce of one country to another, or to bear to his
+destination the missionary bent on extending the blessings of that
+religion whose spirit is "peace on earth, good will among the children
+of men[D]."
+
+As a means of supplying fuel, without which man must remain constantly
+in the savage state, wood is of inestimable value. In the process of
+combustion, the elements of the trees enter into new combinations,
+evolving both light and heat, which at once maintain life and render
+it a state of enjoyment and usefulness. For this purpose in Britain,
+we chiefly employ fossil fuel, stored up in the secret places of the
+earth, and, therefore, we attach less importance to recent wood; but
+other parts of the world are not so favourably situated, and to the
+inhabitants of these places fresh, or but lately felled, wood is
+necessary for their existence. Even in France, though partially
+possessed of coal, it is estimated that the quantity of wood employed
+to supply heat, whether for comfort, cooking, or in manufactures which
+require a high temperature, amounts to seven-tenths of the entire
+consumption. The superiority of wood fuel, whether fossil or recent,
+over every other material resorted to with a like intention, shall be
+shown in a subsequent part of this paper. I therefore pass on at
+present to demonstrate the utility of vegetable substances in
+affording the means of subsistence to man and animals.
+
+In the observations I am about to make, it is impossible to avoid
+anticipating some of the remarks which belong to the subject of fruits
+and seeds as articles of food, since the same principles of nutriment
+are found in the stems of certain plants as are deposited in the
+fruits or seeds of others.
+
+Though man is omnivorous, and can subsist either on animal or
+vegetable food--an arrangement which fits him to dwell in any part of
+the habitable globe,--yet he is subject, with regard to the actual
+material of his diet, in a remarkable manner, to the influence of
+climate, since a particular kind of aliment, which is very appropriate
+in one country is improper in another; thus, as we advance from the
+equator towards the poles, the necessity for animal food becomes
+greater, till, in the very north, it is the sole article of
+subsistence. Animal food, from containing nitrogen, is more
+stimulating, and, therefore, less suitable for hot climates, where, on
+the contrary, saccharine, mucilaginous, and starchy materials are
+preferred; hence, in the zone of the tropics, we find produced in
+abundance rice, maize, millet, sago, salep, arrowroot, potatoes, the
+bread-fruit, banana, and other watery, or mucilaginous fruits.
+Quitting this zone, we enter that which produces wheat, and here,
+where the temperature is lower, providence has united with the starch
+of this grain a peculiar principle (gluten), possessing all the
+properties of animal matter, and yielding nitrogen and ammonia in its
+decomposition[E]. Thus, by a gradual and almost insensible transition,
+nature furnishes to man the food which is most appropriate for him in
+each region. In the subtropical zone vegetable diet is still
+preferred, but, in chemical constitution, the favourite articles
+approximate animal substances. This holds also in the temperate zone,
+not only in respect of wheat, but also in the chesnut, which is almost
+the sole means of subsistence in some of the mountainous regions of
+France, Italy, and Spain, though, instead of the gluten of wheat, this
+seed contains albumen, the relation of which to animal food is even
+closer than that of gluten. In reviewing the geographical distribution
+of the cereal grains[F], we find that starch nearly pure is produced
+in the greatest abundance in the hottest parts of the world,
+particularly in rice and maize; it becomes associated in the
+subtropical regions with an equivalent for animal food; and in still
+colder regions, where wheat fails, oats and barley take its place.
+These, though possessed of less gluten than wheat, are, nevertheless,
+more heating, and, therefore, better calculated for northern
+latitudes. The inhabitants of Scotland and Lapland, with their oaten
+and barley or rye bread, are thus as thoroughly provided with the best
+food, as the Hindoo with his rice or Indian corn[G].
+
+It would be impossible to enumerate the plants which furnish starch in
+large proportion, but a few may be given as illustrative of the above
+positions. The chemical analysis of those proximate principles of
+plants which are mere combinations of water with carbon
+(hydro-carbonates or hydrates of carbon) has been already given, but
+must here be repeated:--
+
+ 100 parts consist of
+ | Water. | Carbon.
+ Gum (pure gum-arabic) | 58.6 | 41.4
+ Sugar (pure crystallized) | 57.15 | 42.85
+ Starch | 56.00 | 44.00
+ Lignin | 50.00 | 50.00
+
+These are so many mutually convertible products, of which gum may be
+looked upon as the basis; indeed gum is that organizable product which
+exists most universally in the proper juices of plants. "There are
+some instances in which sugar appears to be the first organic compound
+formed by the combination of the external elements, as when abundantly
+existing in the ascending sap of trees--the maple, for example. Starch
+may be considered as little else than gum divided into minute
+portions, each of which is enclosed in a membraneous cell (and
+containing some incidental particles, which, when starch is burnt,
+leave about .23 per cent. of residuum, consisting entirely of
+phosphates); and, in this state, it appears to answer very important
+ends in the vegetable economy. It is remarked by Decandolle, that,
+'while gum itself may be considered the nutrient principle of
+vegetation, diffused freely through the structure of the plant, and
+constantly in action, starch is apparently the same substance, stored
+up in such a manner as not to be readily soluble in the circulating
+fluids,' thus forming a reservoir of nutritious matter, which is to be
+consumed, like the fat of animals (which it closely resembles in
+structure), in supporting the plant at particular periods[H]."
+
+This view explains the fact of starch being found accumulated in
+amazing quantity in some plants, more particularly at certain periods
+of their existence, as in the cases I am now to cite. The fertility of
+some palm-trees is very great, and to furnish nutriment to the
+flowers, fruit, and seeds, an enormous supply of starch is needed;
+accordingly, in these we find the stem a complete storehouse of this
+essential principle. Thus the several palms and palm-like plants,
+which yield sago, such as the _sagus Rumphii_, _cycas circinalis_, _C.
+revoluta_, _corypha umbraculifera_, _caryota urens_, and _phoenix
+farinifera_--trees which are mostly confined within the tropics, at
+the moment when the spadices or sheaths containing the bunches of
+flowers are visible but not unfolded, furnish an immense portion of
+the food of the natives. The _sagus Rumphii_, which abounds in the
+islands of the Indian Archipelago, and though one of the humblest of
+the palm tribe, seldom exceeding thirty feet in height, is yet, except
+the gomuto, the thickest and largest, alone yields a quantity of
+nutritious matter far exceeding that of all other cultivated plants,
+inasmuch as a tree in its fifteenth year produces 600 lbs. of sago,
+which word, in the language of the Papuas, signifies _bread_, being
+the staple food of the islanders. To obtain it, the tree must be cut
+down, and the stem divided into pieces, from which the flour is beaten
+and washed out[I]. After being cut down, the vegetative power still
+remains in the root, which again forms a trunk, and this proceeds
+through its different stages, until it is again subjected to the axe,
+and made to yield its alimentary contents for the service of man. Nor
+is the extraordinary productiveness of a single tree the only point
+worthy of notice, for, being endogenous plants, devoid of branches, an
+unusual number of them can grow in a small space. Mr. Craufurd
+calculates that an English acre could contain four hundred and
+thirty-five sago trees, which would yield one hundred and twenty
+thousand five hundred pounds avoirdupois of starch, being at the rate
+of more than eight thousand pounds yearly. Besides the farina or meal,
+every tree cut down furnishes, in its terminal bud, a luxury which is
+as much prized as that of the _areca oleracea_, or cabbage palm of the
+West Indies, and which is eaten either raw as a salad, or cooked.
+Further, the leaves afford so excellent a material for covering
+houses, that even in those hot and humid parts of the world, where
+decomposition goes on so rapidly, it does not require to be renewed
+oftener than once in seven years.
+
+The _Mauritia flexuosa_, or fan palm of the Oronooco, is of still
+greater utility to the natives of South America. It is a social palm,
+abounding in the marshes, and having a geographical range of very vast
+extent. The whole northern portion of South America, east of the
+Cordilleras, appears to be possessed of this gorgeous palm; from the
+mouth of the Oronooco to the river Amazon, and through the whole of
+Guiana, through Surinam and the northern part of Brazil, and in very
+various places along the river Amazon, even to its source on the
+eastern declivity of the Cordilleras, this palm is found, constituting
+forests of greater or less extent. Its smooth grey stem rising often
+100 feet, forms groups that, in the northern part of Brazil, resemble
+the pallisades of some gigantic fortress. The produce of these lofty
+cylinders is very great, not merely of sago, which is procured only
+when the process of flowering is about to occur, but many trees being
+cut down before this event, a juice is obtained from them, which
+forms, by fermentation, a sweet wine; while those that flower, after
+which no good sago can be got, furnish an extraordinary quantity of
+fruit, hanging in bunches many feet in length, which is as agreeable
+as ripe apples, the taste of which it resembles. The other products of
+this tree are numerous[J].
+
+It would lead beyond just limits, were we to notice in detail, the
+plants which yield starch suitable for food, only after undergoing a
+process of art, by which an acrid principle is driven off, and a
+bland, wholesome substance remains behind. Such is the Janipha (or
+Jatropha) Manihot, which yields the Mandiocca, Tapioca, or Cassava, an
+article not only of great consumption in, but also of considerable
+export from, Brazil (see Spix and Martius' Travels, and Lib. of Enter.
+Knowledge, Vegt. Sub. Food of Man, p. 152), which, when raw, is
+poisonous both to man and cattle, though it becomes safe and agreeable
+by the application of heat. So likewise the large tubers of several
+_Arums_, such as _A. Macrorhizon_, _A. Colocasia_, _Caladium acre_,
+and which are cultivated with great care in tropical and subtropical
+countries, particularly in the Sandwich and South Sea islands. All of
+these excite inflammation and swelling of the mouth and tongue, even
+to the danger of suffocation, but which are disarmed of their
+virulence, and converted into an article of daily consumption, by
+fire. Even yams and sweet potatoes, which are naturally mild, are less
+articles of consumption in the south sea islands, than the Tarro, as
+these tubers of the _arums_ are designated.
+
+I omit all other plants to fix attention on the potatoe, which is not
+only the source of the purest starch of all, but has many interesting
+points connected with its history and habitudes, peculiarly connected
+with my subject. No plant has contributed more to banish those famines
+which were formerly of so frequent occurrence in Europe, and all the
+dire train of suffering and disease consequent upon them. Yet did it,
+in many instances, require royal edicts to induce some nations to
+cultivate what is now regarded as one of the prime blessings of
+Providence, from nearly one end of the earth to the other; the potatoe
+being raised from Hammerfest, in Lapland, lat. 71 deg. north, through all
+Europe, the plains of India, in China, Japan, the south-sea islands,
+New Holland, even to New Zealand. What renders it so peculiarly
+valuable is, that in the seasons when the corn crop fails, that of
+potatoes is generally more abundant; thus furnishing a substitute for
+the other, which proves defective from atmospheric conditions, which
+have little influence over the potatoe, placed as it is underground,
+and secure against extremes of temperature. The potatoe is not a root,
+as commonly supposed, but an underground collection of buds, having a
+quantity of starch accumulated around them, for their nourishment when
+they begin to grow. The quantity of starch varies greatly with the
+kind of potatoe cultivated, the mode of cultivation, the time of
+setting, and above all, with the season of the year when the analysis
+is made. Potatoes in general, afford from one-fifth to one-seventh
+their weight of dry starch[K]; besides some other nutritive materials.
+The quantity of starch seems to be at its maximum in the winter months;
+as 100 pounds of potatoes yield in August about 10 lbs., in October
+nearly 15 lbs., in November to March 17 lbs., in April 133/4 lbs., and
+in May 10 lbs. Nor is the quantity of starch alone diminished in
+spring, but the nitrogen which belongs to some of the other nutritive
+principles, likewise suffers a deduction; as fresh, not dried
+potatoes, contain 0.0037 per cent. of azote, while potatoes ten months
+old contain only 0.0028, causing a sensible difference in their power
+of imparting nourishment. The starch is withdrawn from the tubers of
+the potatoe, precisely in the same way that it is transferred from the
+root, stem, or seeds of other plants, for the service of the young
+shoot; but the mode in which it is accomplished is but of recent
+discovery, and constitutes one of the most beautiful instances of
+design which the whole vegetable kingdom can unfold; "that man's
+scepticism must be incurable who does not perceive, and acknowledge,
+that the means now to be detailed were created for the express
+accomplishment of the ends[L]."
+
+Starch has been described above as consisting of a multitude of little
+cells or vesicles, having an envelope, insoluble in water, formed of a
+kind of organized membrane, and containing within it a substance which
+is soluble in water, termed amidin. This soluble material is the
+nutritive element on which the young shoot, proceeding from every eye
+or bud of the potatoes, is to subsist, till it has developed roots,
+and unfolded its leaves to prepare additional alimentary substance.
+But if this soluble material be enclosed in an insoluble membrane, how
+are the contents to be made available for the growth of the plant? It
+is true, indeed, that water of the temperature of 160 deg. Fahr. can
+rupture this tegument, as occurs in the process of boiling potatoes;
+but the water diffused through the earth in the neighbourhood of the
+growing tuber, never reaches such a height. How then is the difficulty
+obviated? This is effected by a secretion called _diastase_ which is
+found in the tubers in the immediate vicinity of the eyes or buds. "It
+is stored up in that situation for the purpose of being conveyed, by
+the vessels connected with the bud, into the substance of the tuber,
+when the demand for nutrition is occasioned by the development of the
+shoot. It is probable that the secretion of _diastase_ takes place in
+every instance in which starch previously deposited is to be
+re-absorbed[M]." It is not to be found before grains or tubers begin
+to sprout, yet, "such is its energy, that one part of it is sufficient
+to render soluble the interior portion of two thousand parts of
+starch, and to convert it into sugar[N]." Strong as is the analogy
+between starch and gum, yet _diastase_ does not convert gum into
+sugar; the one being as completely soluble as the other, its
+intervention is clearly unnecessary. Neither does it act on sugar. It
+is found, and exerts its powers, only where it is required. Nor does
+it come into play one moment before the necessity for it occurs. While
+the potatoe is in its state of winter repose, and no vegetative
+process going on, the elements of which the _diastase_ is formed, are
+equally quiescent, but no sooner does the season recur when an
+augmented temperature rouses the slumbering energy of the tuber, than
+this potent principle exhibits its efficacy, and changes the insoluble
+starch into the nutritious sugar. Who, that can read, or reading
+reflect and ponder on these things, but must conclude that the laws
+which regulate the whole actions were impressed upon their subjects by
+a Creator infinite in design, in wisdom, and in power? If such insight
+into his doings are permitted to us now, what may we not hope for when
+we no longer "see as through a glass darkly[O]?"
+
+The insolubility of the starch in cold water, affords a convenient
+means of separating the flour from the other materials, by which it
+may be abstracted from the tubers when in the greatest abundance, and
+be preserved unchanged for the use of man. This is done by simply
+rasping down the potatoes over a seirce, and passing a current of
+water over the raspings. The water passes through the seirce milky
+from the starch suspended in it. The starch is allowed to fall to the
+bottom, and is two or three times washed with pure water; it is then
+allowed to dry[P]. If this process be followed in the winter months,
+when the quantity of starch is greatest, the result is, a sixth
+portion of the weight of the potatoes employed, in a condition fit not
+only for immediate use, but capable of preservation for years. "To
+those who live solely, or even principally, on potatoes, it must be of
+immense importance to have the nutritious part preserved when in its
+greatest perfection, instead of leaving it exposed to injury,
+decomposition, or decay[Q]."
+
+It is unnecessary to enlarge upon the sources of starch and its
+obvious utility to mankind. Previous to its being consumed by the
+plant in which it is amassed, it is by various means, but chiefly by
+diastase, transformed into sugar. Following this natural transition, I
+shall next consider sugar as an article of diet. In temperate
+climates, sugar is regarded as a luxury, one indeed which is nearly
+indispensable, but in tropical countries it is a universal article of
+subsistence, partly as real sugar, and partly, and more generally, as
+it occurs in the cane. It is inconceivable what enormous quantities of
+the sugar-cane is consumed in this way; vast ship-loads arrive daily
+in the market at Manilla, and in Rio Janiero; in the Sandwich Islands
+and other places, every child is seen going about with a portion of
+sugar-cane in the hand. It has been called "the most perfect
+alimentary substance in nature," and the results, in the appearance of
+the negroes, during the cane-harvest, notwithstanding the increased
+severe toils of that season, seem to confirm the statement. They
+almost invariably become plump, and sleek, and scarcely take any other
+food while the harvest lasts; even the sickly revive, and often
+recover their health.
+
+The chief source of sugar is large grass (_saccharum officinarum_), of
+which there are several varieties, differing essentially in
+productiveness, but the best of which is the Otaheita cane, the stem
+of which is higher, thicker, and more succulent than the Creole cane,
+and which yields not only one-third more of juice than the Creolian
+cane on the same space of land; but from the thickness of its stem,
+and the tenacity of its ligneous fibres, it furnishes much more fuel.
+One variety was known in India, in China, and all the islands of the
+Pacific ocean, from the most remote antiquity; it was planted in
+Persia, in Chorasan, as early as the fifth century of our era, in
+order to obtain from it solid sugar. The Arabs carried this reed--so
+useful to the inhabitants of hot and temperate countries--to the
+shores of the Mediterranean. In 1306, its cultivation was yet unknown
+in Sicily, but was already common in the island of Cyprus, at Rhodes,
+and in the Morea. A hundred years after it enriched Calabria, Sicily,
+and the coasts of Spain. From Sicily the Infant Henry transplanted the
+cane to Madeira; and from Madeira it passed to the Canary islands. It
+was thence transplanted to St. Domingo, in 1513, and has since spread
+to the continent of South America, and to the West Indies, whence the
+chief supply for Europe is obtained.
+
+The vast circuit which it has described in these successive
+transplantations attest the sense which mankind had of the benefits it
+bestowed in its course. The introduction of the Otaheita cane is
+another proof of the obligations which modern times are under to
+navigation, as we owe this plant to the voyages of Bougainville, Cook,
+and Bligh[R].
+
+The sugar-cane requires for its perfection, a temperature of
+considerable elevation, and succeeds best where the mean temperature
+is 24 deg. or 25 deg. (of the centigrade thermometer), yet it will
+prosper, though with less produce, where it only reaches 19 deg. or 20
+deg. (centigrade). Its cultivation extends from the verge of the ocean,
+where the canes are often washed by the waves[S], to localities on the
+mountains 3,000 feet above the sea; and even in the extensive plains
+of Mexico and Colombia, where, from the reflection of the sun's rays
+the heat is greatly increased, to 4,000, 5,000, 6,000, though the mean
+temperature of the city of Mexico be only 17 deg. (centigrade), yet sugar
+is procured at 6,600 feet.
+
+The fertility and productiveness of the sugar-cane is immense, second
+only to the sago-palms. "The first sugar-canes planted with care on a
+virgin soil, yield a harvest during twenty to twenty-five years, after
+which they must be replanted every three years." In the island of
+Cuba, instances are known of a sugar-plantation existing for
+forty-five years. To procure new plants, the tedious process of sowing
+seeds is not necessary. The practice is followed of taking cuttings,
+and the stools, or scions, which spring from the joints (_nodi_) of
+the old plant, are fit to be separated in fourteen days; these, in the
+course of a year, are so well grown that they may be cut down, and
+submitted to the sugar-mill. An English acre under culture for sugar,
+in Java, yields 1285 pounds avoirdupois of refined sugar, and the
+produce at Cuba is nearly the same.
+
+Let not the thought arise, on the perusal of these statements, that
+the gifts of Providence are distributed with partiality, as nothing
+could be more unfounded. Independent of the destruction of the
+plantations which tropical hurricanes so often occasion, an insect of
+the locust kind, more particularly in the East Indies, produces such
+fearful devastation as to realize the scene described by the prophet
+Joel--"A fire devoureth before them, and behind them a flame burneth:
+the land is as the garden of Eden before them, and behind them a
+desolate wilderness; yea, and nothing shall escape them[T]." From such
+visitations, northern latitudes are generally exempt, and the constant
+struggle which man has had to maintain with the elements and a
+churlish soil, has so whetted his faculties as to render the return
+for his labour not only more certain, but even more abundant[U].
+
+As if to shew that "the earth full of the riches of the Lord," in
+parts of the world where the low temperature is an obstacle to the
+profitable cultivation of the sugar-cane, a substitute is found for it
+in the _acer saccharinum_, or sugar-maple, which presents the great
+peculiarity of the ascending sap being charged with sugar to such a
+degree as to be then fit for the manufacture of this valuable
+substance. There results from this circumstance a most important
+advantage to the inhabitants of the northern regions, where this tree
+grows, that the juice is extracted early in spring, a time when the
+rigour of the season condemns the labourer to inactivity. Besides, the
+sugar-maple grows spontaneously, and requires no care, till it is fit
+for tapping; and when deprived of its juice, and incapable of yielding
+more sugar, its wood is applicable to a far greater number and variety
+of uses than the bruised cane, since as fuel the maple is most
+valuable; and its ashes yield, from their richness in the alkaline
+principle, four-fifths of the potash exported to Europe from Boston
+and New York. The timber of the sugar-maple is also highly prized,
+both for common and ornamental purposes--as the beautiful bird's-eye
+maple is obtained from this tree.
+
+"The sugar-maple begins a little north of Lake St. John, in Canada,
+near 48 deg. of north lat., which, in the rigour of its winter,
+corresponds to 68 deg. of Europe. It is nowhere more abundant than
+between 46 deg. and 43 deg. of north lat., which space comprises Canada,
+New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, the states of Vermont and New Hampshire, and
+the district of Maine. Farther south, it is common only in Genessee,
+in the state of New York, and in the upper parts of Pennsylvania. It
+is estimated by Dr. Rush, that in the northern part of these two
+states, there are 10,000,000 acres which produce these trees in the
+proportion of thirty to an acre. The process of making maple-sugar is
+commonly begun in February, or in the beginning of March, while the
+cold continues intense, and the ground is still covered with snow. The
+sap begins to be in motion at this season, two months before the
+general revival of vegetation. The sap continues to flow for six
+weeks; after which it becomes less abundant, less rich in saccharine
+matter, and sometimes even incapable of crystallization. In this case
+it is consumed in the state of molasses; or exposed for three or four
+days to the sun, when it is converted into vinegar by the acetous
+fermentation: a kind of beer is also made of it. The amount of sugar
+produced by each tree in a year varies from different causes. The
+yearly product varies from 2 lbs. to 4 lbs. for each tree[V]." The sap
+is most abundant from young trees, but less charged with sugar. The
+average produce is five per cent. of sugar. The richer the sap is in
+saccharine matter, it is so much the more profitable to extract it, as
+in such a case it is nearly pure from all mucilaginous matter, or free
+acid, and may be consolidated by the action of cold alone by merely
+freezing it, thus rendering boiling unnecessary.
+
+Sugar exists in many other plants, such as the beet-root, from which
+it is extracted; and also the stem of the maize, or Indian corn, is
+charged with an extraordinary quantity of sugar, and it may either be
+brought to the state of a honey-like sugar, or the juice pressed out
+of the stalk, and fermented, forming the _pulque de mahio_, or _pulque
+de Flaolli_, in Mexico[W].
+
+Gum has been already stated to be the basis of all the other
+organizable products, and it is found not only in almost all plants,
+but in nearly all parts of them. In a pure or nearly isolated state,
+it exists chiefly in the inner bark of vascular and especially
+exogenous trees, and is preserved in the interior with the greatest
+care: its escape externally results either from disease, as in the
+case of plum and cherry-trees, from the puncture of insects, cracks in
+the bark, or by artificial incisions. The death of the tree soon
+follows the loss of this important juice, and thousands of trees of
+the genus acacia are annually sacrificed in different parts of Africa
+to procure the gum-arabic of commerce. It is only in a few genera and
+tribes of trees, that it exists in so concentrated a state as to
+assume the solid form on exposure to the air, but in some of these the
+quantity is amazing. Hot countries are the chief abodes of such trees.
+Thus, besides the immense quantity obtained from the acacias, the
+_anacardium occidentale_ (cashew-nut tree) in America, has furnished
+from a single tree a mass weighing forty-two pounds. Gum is mawkish,
+insipid, and generally unpalatable, yet highly nutritive; and the
+Africans, during the harvest of gum at Senegal, live entirely upon it,
+eight ounces being the daily allowance for each man. In general they
+become plump on this fare; and such should be the result, if the
+calculation be correct, which assigns as great nutritive power to four
+ounces of gum as to one pound of bread. This concentration of
+nourishment renders gum a peculiarly suitable food for lengthened
+journeys through the deserts, as it occupies small compass, and a
+little suffices to stay the cravings of hunger. Thus, upwards of a
+thousand persons may occupy more than two months in a journey from
+Abyssinia to Cairo without any other kind of food[X]. Its bland,
+demulcent properties fit it to correct the acrimony of the secretions
+formed under the influence of a tropical sun and torrid air, with a
+scanty and irregular supply of water. Plants, likewise, are preserved
+in a vegetative and living state, mid sandy and arid wastes, by the
+quantity of gum stored up in them. Hence succulent plants, such as
+cacti and others, may be found in the steppes and sandy plains of
+South America, verdant and healthy, though no rain may fall to convey
+fresh sap into them for months, or even a year. In the form of
+mucilage, _i. e._, gum in a state of solution, it is found in a very
+large number of plants, and thus contributes to the maintenance of man
+and animals. In these it is generally associated with some other
+principles, which render it either more palatable or more easily
+digested. A very large number of our esculent vegetables owe their
+nutritive properties to the gummy matters with which they abound, and
+the favour with which they are regarded to the other matters united
+with it. Those which have a bitter principle are very excellent, when
+this is in small proportion; and as, in most of them, the gummy matter
+is prepared first, requiring for its formation only a moderate degree
+of light and heat, while the bitter, or other principle, is added at a
+later period, under the influence of stronger light; such plants, when
+young, are tender and agreeable; nay, even very poisonous plants, when
+very young, are wholesome and pleasant, which, at a more advanced
+season, are virose and disagreeable. Thus, the peasantry of France and
+Piedmont eat the young crowfoots (ranunculus) and poppies, after
+boiling them, and find them safe and nourishing. The same result
+follows exclusion of light, as in the process of blanching, by which
+means celery, sea-kale, and other vegetables, are rendered esculent,
+which in the wild state are poisonous or repulsive. In northern
+latitudes, the light being intense for a short time only, many plants
+are used there which, in the southern, are dangerous or destructive,
+such as hemlock and monkshood. A moderate degree of bitterness is a
+very useful accompaniment of the gum, which alone is cloying and even
+oppressive to the stomach. The presence of a bitter principle in many
+lichens promotes their digestion, and thus even the tough and leathery
+ones, called tripe of the rocks, can be eaten, and sustain life amid
+great privations and sufferings. The rein-deer moss (_cludonia
+rangiferina_) is another lichen of great utility: it is not much
+employed as human food, but it is the main support of the rein-deer
+for a great portion of the year, and thus renders Lapland a fit abode
+for man.
+
+A peculiar modification of gum constitutes _pectine_ or vegetable
+jelly; and this occurs in fruits, such as the orange, currant, and
+gooseberry, &c., also in many of the algae or sea-weeds, which are, or
+ought to be, much employed as a delicate article of nourishment. The
+edible swallow's nest, so greatly esteemed by the Chinese, is an alga,
+gathered by the birds. The Ceylon moss (_Gigartina lichenoides_), and
+the carrageen or Irish moss (_Chondrus crispus_), with many others,
+might be made to contribute largely to the subsistence of man. Not
+merely earth, from its fruitful bosom, but the vast ocean, offer their
+rich produce to nourish and sustain the only intelligent occupant of
+the globe, who should ever remember the declaration of the psalmist,
+"O Lord! how manifold are thy works! in wisdom hast thou made them
+all: the earth is full of thy riches; so is the great and wide sea!"
+(Ps. civ.)
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[A] The Greeks used to say that reeds had contributed to subjugate a
+people, by furnishing arrows; to soften their manner, by the charm of
+music; and to develop their intelligence, by offering them the
+instruments proper for the formation of letters.--_Humboldt's Personal
+Narrative._
+
+"The reed presents itself as an object of peculiar veneration, when we
+reflect that it formed the earliest instrument by which human ideas,
+and all the charms of literature and science were communicated, and
+which has handed down to us the light of religion and the glow of
+genius from the remotest ages."--_Drummond's First Steps to Botany._
+
+[B] "The Guaraons, a free and independent people, dispersed in the
+Delta of the Oronooko, owe their independence to the nature of their
+country; for it is well known that, in order to raise their abodes
+above the surface of the waters, at the period of the great
+inundations, they support them on the cut trunks of the mangrove tree,
+and of the _Mauritia flexuosa_."--_Humboldt, Personal Narrative_,
+vol. iii. p. 277. The same people make bread of the medullary flour of
+this palm, which it yields in great abundance, if cut down just before
+going to flower.--_Ibid._, vol. iii. p. 278. To these circumstances
+Thomson alludes:--
+
+ "Wide o'er his isles the branching Oronooque
+ Rolls a brown deluge, and the native driven
+ To dwell aloft on life-sufficing trees,
+ At once his home, his robe, his food, his arms."
+
+[C] The connection of navigation with the progress of civilization is
+most intimate, as may be understood from the following passage:--
+
+"Among the circumstances which have contributed to retard the progress
+of civilization in Africa, one of the most important and influential
+is the compact and undivided form of the African continent, and the
+natural barriers which render access to the greater regions of the
+interior so remarkably difficult. It has been observed by Professor
+Ritter, that the civilization of countries is greatly influenced by
+their geographical forms, and by the relation which their interior
+spaces bear to the extent of coast. While all Asia is five times as
+large as Europe, and Africa more than three times as large, the
+littoral margins of these larger continents bear no similar proportion
+to their respective areas. Asia has seven thousand seven hundred
+geographical miles of coast; Europe four thousand three hundred, and
+Africa only three thousand five hundred. To every thirty-seven square
+miles of continent in Europe, there is one mile of coast; in Africa,
+only one mile of coast to one hundred and fifty square miles of
+continent. Therefore the relative extension of coast is four times as
+great in Europe as in Africa. Asia is in the middle between these two
+extremes. To every one hundred and five square miles, it has one mile
+of coast. The calculation of geographical spaces occupied by different
+parts of the two last-mentioned continents, is still more striking.
+The ramifications of Asia, excluded from the continental trapezium,
+make about one hundred and fifty-five thousand square miles of that
+whole quarter, or about one-fifth part. The ramifications of the
+continental triangle of Europe form one-third part of the whole, or
+even more. In Asia the stock is much greater in proportion to the
+branches, and thence the more highly advanced culture of the branches
+has remained, for the most part, excluded from the interior spaces. In
+Europe, on the other hand, from the different relation of its spaces,
+the condition of the external parts had much greater influence on that
+of the interior. Hence the higher culture of Greece and Italy
+penetrated more easily into the interior, and gave to the whole
+continent one harmonious character of civilization, while Asia
+contains many separate regions which may be compared, individually, to
+Europe, and each of which could receive only its peculiar kind of
+culture from its own branches. Africa, deficient in these endowments
+of nature, and wanting both separating gulfs, and inland seas, could
+obtain no share in the expansion of that fruitful tree, which, having
+driven its roots deeply in the heart of Asia, spread its branches and
+blossoms over the western and southern tracts of the same continent,
+and expanded its crown over Europe. In Egypt alone it possessed a
+river-system, so formed as to favor the development of similar
+productions. Die Erdkunde von Aslen, von Carl Ritter. 2. Band.
+Einleitung. Sec.24, 25. Berlin, 1832."--_Pritchard, Researches into the
+Physical History of Mankind. Third Edit._ Vol. ii., p. 354.
+
+[D] "Was it not for the manifestation of this brighter era, and the
+realization of its promised blessings, that all else which preceded it
+was overruled by divine Providence, as subservient and preparatory?
+All things being now ready, there began to spring up in the bosom of
+the British churches, a wide and simultaneous sense of the solemn
+responsibility under which they had been laid by the events of
+Providence, to avail themselves of so favorable an opening for the
+diffusion of the gospel throughout the eastern world. Men, qualified
+to undertake the high commission, must be sent across the ocean--and
+have not the toils, and perils, and successes, of Vasco de Gama, and
+other navigators, opened up a safe and easy passage? That their
+labours might pervade the country, and strike a deep and permanent
+root into the soil, they must be delivered from the caprices of savage
+tyranny, and the ebullitions of heathen rage; and have not our Clives
+and our Wellingtons wrested the rod of power from every wilful despot;
+and our Hastings and our Wellesleys thrown the broad shield of British
+justice and British protection alike over all? In order that they
+might the more effectually adapt their communications to the
+peculiarities of the people, they must become acquainted with the
+learned language of the country, and through it, with the real and
+original sources of all the prevailing opinions and observances,
+sacred and civil. And have not our Joneses and our Colebrookes
+unfolded the whole, to prove subservient to the cause of the Christian
+philanthropist? In this way have our navigators, our warriors, our
+statesmen, and our literati, been unconsciously employed, under an
+over-ruling Providence, as so many pioneers, to prepare the way for
+our Swartzes, our Buchanans, our Martins, and our Careys."--_Duff's
+India and India Missions._
+
+[E] The relative proportions of starch and gluten in rice, wheat, and
+other seeds, not only confirm the views respecting design, in
+determining their geographical distribution, but merit notice, as
+influencing their nutritive qualities, and fitness or unfitness as
+food in different countries.
+
+ -----------------------------+---------+--------
+ | Starch. | Gluten.
+ +---------+--------
+ Wheat, according to Proust | 74.5 | 12.5
+ ---- -- Vogel | 68.0 | 24.0
+ Winter wheat -- Davy | 77.0 | 19.0
+ Spring wheat | 70.0 | 24.0
+ Spelt -- Vogel | 74.0 | 22.0
+ Barley -- Davy | 79.0 | 6.0
+ Rye -- Do. | 61.0 | 5.0
+ Oats -- Do. | 59.0 | 6.0
+ Rice Carolina -- Vogel | 85.07 | 3.60
+ Maize -- Bizio | 80.92 | 0.
+ Tartarian buckwheat | 52.29 | 10.47
+ -----------------------------+---------+--------
+
+Not only do the relative proportions of starch and gluten vary in the
+same seed when grown in different countries, but even when grown in
+the same country, according to the kind of manure put on the soil, a
+point of great importance to agriculturists, when known and attended
+to.
+
+[F] See "Church of England Magazine," vol. vii. p. 52-3-4.
+
+[G] "I have been informed by Sir Joseph Banks, that the Derbyshire
+miners, in winter, prefer oat-cakes to wheaten bread, finding that
+this kind of nourishment enables them to support their strength and
+perform their labour better. In summer they say oat-cake heats them,
+and they then consume the finest wheaten bread they can
+procure."--_Sir H. Dacy's Agricultural Chemistry, 5th edit., p. 143._
+
+The propriety and advantage of this practice is established by the
+recent investigations of Boussingault, who found that oats contain
+more than double the quantity of nitrogen which exists in any of the
+other cereal grains.--_See Annales de Chimie et de Physique, tom.
+lxvii. p. 408-21._
+
+[H] Carpenter's "General and Comparative Physiology," p. 272 and Dr.
+Prout's "Bridgewater Treatise," book iii.
+
+[I] See Forrest's "Voyage to the Moluccas;" Craufurd's "Indian
+Archipelago, or Library of Entertaining Knowledge, Vegetable
+Substances, Food of Man," p. 171.
+
+[J] "In the season of inundations, these clumps of the _Mauritia_,
+with their leaves in the form of a fan, have the appearance of a
+forest rising from the bosom of the waters. The navigator in
+proceeding along the channel of the delta of the Oronooco at night,
+sees with surprize the summits of the palm-trees illuminated by large
+fires. These are the habitations of the Guaraons (see Sir W. Raleigh's
+Brevis Descript. Guianae, 1594, tab. 4), which are suspended from the
+trunks of trees. These tribes hang up mats in the air, which they fill
+with earth, and kindle on a layer of moist clay the fire necessary for
+their household wants. They have owed their liberty and their
+political independence for ages, to the quaking and swampy soil which
+they pass over in the time of drought, and on which they alone know
+how to walk in security to their solitude in the delta of the
+Oronooco, to their abodes on the trees, where religious enthusiasm
+will probably never lead any American Stylites (_see_ Mosheim's Church
+History). This tree, the tree of life of the missionaries, not only
+affords the Guaraons a safe dwelling during the risings of the
+Oronooco, but its shelly fruit, its farinaceous pith, its juice,
+abounding in saccharine matter, and the fibres of its leaves, furnish
+them with food, wine, and thread proper for making cords and weaving
+hammocks. It is curious to observe in the lowest degree of human
+civilization, the existence of a whole tribe depending on one single
+species of palm-tree, similar to those insects which feed on one and
+the same flower, or on one and the same part of a plant."--_Humboldt,
+Person. Narrative_, vol. v. p. 728.
+
+[K] Davy's Agricultural Chemistry, p. 133.--According to Mr. Knight
+the best potatoes, such as the Irish apple, possess much greater
+specific gravity than the inferior sorts, and this variety yields
+nearly 20 per cent. of starch; while five pounds of the variety called
+Captain Hart, yields 12 ounces of starch, and the Moulton White nearly
+as much, the Purple Red give only 81/2, the Ox Noble 81/4. There is much
+more profit in cultivating the former than the latter sorts; but even
+the best kinds degenerate, and new sorts must be procured, as if to
+stimulate the ingenuity of man, by preventing his enjoying the gifts
+of God, without constant exertion, and observation of the laws which
+the Creator has impressed upon his productions. See the Observations
+of Thomas Andrew Knight, and the experiments now making by Mr. Maund,
+of Bromsgrove.
+
+[L] Duncan. Sacred Philosophy of the Seasons.
+
+[M] Carpenter's Physiology.
+
+[N] Thomson's Chemistry of Organic Bodies: Vegetables, p. 667.
+
+[O] Vere magna et longe pulcherrima sunt etiam illa profundissima
+sapientia hic exstructa opera tua, O Jehovah! quae non nisi bene
+armatis nostris oculis patent! Qualia autem erunt denique illa, quae
+sublato hoc speculo, remota mortalitatis caligine daturus es tuis Te
+vere sincero Pectore colentibus? Eheu qualia! Hedwig.
+
+[P] Thomson's Chemistry. Vegetables, p. 630.
+
+[Q] On the Culture and Uses of Potatoes, by sir John Sinclair, bart.
+This is a subject becoming every year of greater moment, and attention
+to it a national benefit. The reduction of bulk alone, facilitating
+the transport from one place to another, is an essential gain. The
+produce, from a certain number of acres of this valuable esculent, may
+be greatly augmented by planting the potatoes whole, at a great
+distance between each, and hoeing freely between them--_See Knight's
+Papers in Horticultural Transactions, and Payen et Chevalier, Traite
+de la Pomme de Terre. Paris, 1826, p. 17._
+
+[R] Humboldt. Personal Narrative, vol. iv. p. 84.
+
+[S] "Among the plants cultivated by man, the sugar-cane, the plantain
+(_musa_), the mammee-apple (_mammea_), and alligator-pear-tree
+(_laurus persea_) alone have the property of the cocoa-nut-tree, that
+of being watered alike with fresh and salt water. This circumstance is
+favorable to their migrations; and if the sugar-cane of the shore
+yield a syrup that is a little brackish, it is believed at the same
+time to be better fitted for the distillation of spirit, than the
+juice produced from the canes of the interior."--_Humboldt._
+
+[T] "The quantity of these insects is incredible to all who have not
+themselves witnessed their astonishing numbers; the whole earth is
+covered with them for the space of several leagues. The noise they
+make in browsing on the trees and herbage may be heard at a great
+distance, and resembles that of an army in secret. The Tartars
+themselves are a less destructive enemy than these little animals. One
+would imagine that fire had followed their progress. Wherever their
+myriads spread, the verdure of the country disappears; trees and
+plants stripped of their leaves and reduced to their naked boughs and
+stems cause the dreary image of winter to succeed in an instant to the
+rich scenery of spring. When these clouds of locusts take their
+flight, to surmount any obstacles, or to traverse more rapidly a
+desert soil, the heavens may literally be said to be obscured by
+them."
+
+[U] "As the native of a northern country, little favoured by nature, I
+shall observe that the Marche of Brandebourg, for the most part sandy,
+nourishes, under an administration favourable to the progress of
+agricultural industry, on a surface only one-third that of Cuba, a
+population nearly double."--_Humboldt, P. N._, vol. vii. p. 156.
+
+[V] Loudon's Arboretum Britannicum, vol. i., p. 412.
+
+[W] For an interesting account of sugar, see Humboldt, Nova Genera et
+Species Plantarum, vol. i., p. 243.
+
+[X] Haselquist's Voyage.
+
+
+
+
+THE SECURITY OF GOD'S PEOPLE:
+
+A SERMON,
+
+By the Venerable C. J. Hoare, M.A.,
+ _Archdeacon and Prebendary of Winchester._
+
+Romans viii. 28.
+
+ "And we know that all things work together for good to
+ them that love God."
+
+
+Amongst the observations most frequently heard in the world, is that
+made on the undeserved prosperity of the wicked, and the many
+seemingly uncalled-for trials of the righteous. Experience will indeed
+tell us, that neither of these opposite conditions is uninterrupted;
+neither is it all sunshine in the most prosperous worldly lot; nor is
+it all gloom--far from it--in the Christian's portion on earth.
+Experience will also go further, and will abundantly prove the saying
+of the wise man, that "the prosperity of fools shall destroy them."
+Such success has a tendency first to deceive, then to corrupt, and
+lastly to betray men into utter destruction. But the text will lead us
+still further; it will teach us, that the trials of the righteous
+preserve them--yea, work for good; and that "all things," and,
+therefore, even the greatest trials, "work together for good to them
+that love God."
+
+The text represents them as workmen. They work together for good;
+they are constantly at work for that purpose, whether as instruments
+in God's hands, or as in a degree self-moving for that end; they are
+constructing as it were a building, or they are laying a foundation;
+and that which they lay--that which all things befalling a Christian
+are ever laying for him--is a ground for his substantial, necessary,
+and eternal benefit. "We know that all things work together for good
+to them that love God."
+
+This, then, it will be, with God's blessing, my humble endeavour to
+show in the following discourse: first, premising the sense of the
+word "good," in all just and reasonable acceptation; next, showing
+more fully how all things may be thus said to "work for good to them
+that love God;" finally, pointing out some of the many things which
+will be found by experience to work in this very manner.
+
+I. The term "_good_," it must be said in the first place, is very
+different, both in the language of the bible and in the estimation of
+the truly wise, from what it usually represents in the language and
+opinion of the world. The bible teaches us to view all things in their
+consequences, and in their real and essential nature. View things in
+their consequences, in their final end and issue, if you would view
+them at all justly or wisely. Ease, and health, and worldly wealth,
+and success may be good, just as the plentiful feast is good, provided
+a man has temperance and soundness of constitution properly to partake
+of it; but, if he is likely to indulge to a surfeit, or if every
+morsel is food to some mortal disorder, and every cup adds strength to
+a fever that is raging in his veins, no one in reason would call such
+an entertainment good to such a man. And just so with the good things
+of this present life: the Christian does not unreasonably deny that
+prosperity is pleasing, health desirable, friends and relations deeply
+attaching to us, and the smiles of social endearment or public favour
+greatly captivating; but neither does he, like the world, consider
+them to be necessarily all they seem to be, good to all persons, and
+under all circumstances; he does not forget that earthly and bodily
+good is just what it becomes in the use of it; that many times the use
+can hardly be separated from the abuse; that lawful things, when
+unlawfully or idolatrously used, are just as evil as unlawful
+ones--nay, rather, that for a few comparatively who have perished from
+a hardened course of forbidden pleasure, multitudes have been for ever
+lost by allowed indulgences. Till he sees, then, the application made,
+and the resulting consequences of any worldly boon, he does not call
+the possessor happy, nor the possession good, nor very eagerly or
+supremely does he desire it either for himself or others.
+
+But, again, the things _really and essentially good_ in their very
+nature and inseparable qualities are those which, in the estimation of
+the mere world, are held in no account whatsoever. What the bible
+chiefly esteems, and the world wholly neglects, are spiritual
+blessings,--the good things of the soul of man, "the precious things
+of heaven, even of the everlasting hills." Those precious things, the
+goodwill of him who is the great I AM--the peace of God which passeth
+all understanding--the luxury of promoting the good of man and the
+glory of God;--still more, the pardon of sin, through faith in the
+atonement of Jesus Christ--a gradual advancement in true holiness--a
+growing fitness and longing desire for the future blessedness of the
+saints, and a final admission and "abundant entrance into the
+everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour," the "inheritance
+incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not away;"--these are truly
+to the world but as a dream, a fancy, a cunningly-devised fable; but,
+to the mind of the Christian, stand for everything truly and
+substantially good. They are in all his plans first and foremost, and
+nearest and dearest to his heart. They are as necessary to him in his
+calculation and account of human happiness, as profit and pleasure are
+to his neighbours around. "Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor the
+heart conceived, the things which God hath prepared for them that love
+him." But God hath revealed to _him_ by his Spirit, these very things,
+as his chief good, his measure of all true happiness. Wealth may be
+good, health still better, kindly affections and attached friends the
+best of earthly boons; but the favour of God, the acquisition of his
+image, the means of grace, and the hope of glory, are to him sovereign
+and above all. While many ask, amidst the increase of their corn, and
+wine, and oil, "Who will show us any good?" he exclaims, "Lord, lift
+thou up the light of thy countenance upon me"--"in thy presence is the
+fulness of joy; at thy right hand are pleasures for evermore." He
+weighs well the nature, and "remembers the end" of all that is called
+good, and so "does not amiss."
+
+II. For, secondly, he finds that, while we so do, and so consider,
+"all things work together for good to _those that love God_." There
+is, first, on the mind of the Christian that secret influence in the
+very disposition of love to God, which will _of itself_ turn to good
+every thing that comes from the God whom we love, and the Saviour on
+whom we fully and implicitly rely. And there is, secondly, a full
+disposition on the part of _our heavenly Father_ so to order and
+direct every event which befals his loving and attached children, as
+shall be found at last to have answered the ends of sovereign wisdom
+and divine mercy.
+
+In the first instance, the tendency, _on our own part_, of love to the
+great and good God will be this, namely, to turn all that befals us to
+an instrument of good. As, in the healthy body, food of very different
+descriptions may yet all turn to nourishment, and minister to health
+and bodily strength; so, in the healthy mind, purified and
+strengthened by the grace of God's Holy Spirit, every thing that meets
+it is converted to its advantage, and adds in some way to its
+improvement and its happiness. There is ever a colour cast upon
+outward circumstances from the complexion of the inward soul. The vain
+man, on his part, the ambitious, the sensual, the gainful, well know
+how to turn all to the advancement of their sinful objects; and no
+less does the good man turn all to the enlargement of his goodness,
+and the lover of his God to the increase and exercise of that love.
+Viewing every thing in the glass, or by the lamp of God's word, he
+ingeniously, so to speak, finds in every thing a reason for loving and
+fearing, serving and obeying God. Every event works for his good,
+because he is resolved it shall do so; and every result satisfies,
+pleases, rejoices him, because he is persuaded it ought to do so.
+Loving God, he has a confidence that he is beloved of God; and then,
+feeling himself in a world made by God, and proceeding forward under
+his guidance and permission, he never will believe that any thing
+falls out in it but what is intended to make him both good and happy.
+Happy then he will be, if God intends he should be so; and holy he
+will be encouraged to become, under the consciousness that God intends
+his holiness.
+
+Dispositions like these will indeed work for their possessor even upon
+the hardest materials, and will, by the very force of a new and
+spiritual nature, convert all into "servants to righteousness unto
+holiness." Faith will be a hand, bringing together the events of life
+and the framer and guide of all life and all existence; and the result
+will be a solemn and heart-satisfying conviction, that "all things
+work together for good to them that love God."
+
+Nor, next, will such a faith prove to be groundless; for surely there
+is a _power engaged_, there is a pledge in the gospel, a sure word of
+promise, and even of covenant, that all things shall be ours;--"All
+are yours, and ye are Christ's, and Christ is God's." The trial of our
+faith lies indeed very much upon this one point. Can we, for a moment,
+believe that God permits all the disorder and confusion which appears
+to us in the world--the prosperity of wickedness, the trials and
+adversity of the righteous, in order to raise a doubt on our minds
+whether he be not absent all the while--whether he bears or not any
+share in the world he created, or in all those moving causes that owe
+their activity and life to himself alone? God is surely present; he is
+powerfully operating; he is the supreme controller, and the almighty
+director; he is fully aware of those adverse appearances, and is no
+less deeply engaged in the final issue of all events, to render them
+consistent with the ends of justice and mercy, than as if we saw him
+at work with our bodily eyes: or, as if we then could fully know the
+mind of the Lord, or be his counsellors to instruct him.
+
+The expressions of scripture are too strong, and too agreeable to the
+very nature of God and of his works, to make us doubt for a moment of
+his providential care and unceasing watchfulness. "He is not far from
+every one of us; for in him we live, and move, and have our being." To
+the true disciple saith Christ himself, "The very hairs of your head
+are all numbered;" and yet more strongly, "If a man love me, he will
+keep my words; and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him,
+and make our abode with him." Promises, these, which have been ever
+realized in the history of the saints in all ages who have walked with
+God--Enoch, Noah, Abraham, and the patriarch Jacob--none more tried
+than he--yet we read _his_ testimony to "the God, which fed me all my
+life-long unto this day; the angel which redeemed me from all evil."
+
+Keeping in view the notion of what is truly good for this state of
+trial, and for the soul as well as for the body, there is no time and
+no extent to which we shall not find the promise sure, and the
+fulfilment exact, where God is pledged for the supply of his servants
+that trust in him: his eye is ever open, his ear ever attentive unto
+them. The petition he denies is able to operate as powerfully and as
+favourably on their behalf as that which he grants; merciful alike in
+the gift which he bestows and which he withholds, and wise alike in
+the evil which he permits, and which he restrains.
+
+There is nothing more important to the believer's faith, than to
+apprehend that there is no uncertainty, nothing imperfect or weak in
+the dispensations of God, as they respect the final issue of the
+Christian's trials. Either God is wholly absent and forgetful of his
+daily wants, or else he is wholly and for ever at work on his behalf.
+If he were wholly absent, well might his servants doubt that, after
+all their endeavours to that end, they should be able to turn to good
+all the events of this mortal life. If _he_ do not temper the trials
+of his servants, how in truth shall they overcome them? If _he_ do not
+controul their enemies, how shall they ever escape them? Figure to
+yourself any place, or time, or circumstance, where God is not, or
+where he _can_ be spared from the concerns of his people, either
+temporal or spiritual: but, if none can be imagined or assigned, then
+is it but justly and essentially true, that, by his especial order and
+his immediate appointment, "all things work together for good to them
+that love God."
+
+III. But we may proceed, lastly, to show, in a practical manner, _some
+of those very things_ which shall thus work together for good. Take
+the most unpromising and most unfavourable case, for instance, that of
+_great prosperity_. None will deny it to be a case of many others the
+most trying to the graces of the true Christian. Yet even shall the
+temptations arising from worldly honours and successes, to a man armed
+with the love of God, work together for good. Graces rarely exercised
+in exalted stations, shall be found to shine the more conspicuously in
+his instance. The grace of humility, and tenderness of spirit, shall
+be the more eminently illustrated in that station, where, too often,
+there is only pride and hardness of heart. If he be found, in a sober,
+self-denying spirit, setting little value on those things so commonly
+called good amongst mankind--using this world without abusing
+it--shall not the grace of God be more abundantly magnified? When not
+overcome, as Agar feared he might be, saying, "lest I be full, and
+say, who is the Lord?"--but rather, when led by fulness to more
+gratitude, and by a lofty station to deeper humility, and to a more
+lowly submission to God, and meekness to man--how will he by such
+prosperity as this testify to the reality of Christian principles: how
+will he, in giving freely where he has freely received, esteeming even
+his highest gains as loss for Christ's sake, and returning upon others
+all that mercy which has been exercised towards himself, prove that
+_he_ has not received the grace of God in vain; but that even
+prosperity has "worked together for good to them that love God."
+
+Or, suppose the case of _deep adversity_--suppose the Christian
+stripped, like Job, of great honours and possessions at a single
+stroke; betrayed and sold like Joseph, even by brethren, into bondage
+and exile; or lying like Lazarus at the gate of the rich man, diseased
+in body, and suing for the crumbs from off his table; or suppose him,
+as St. Paul himself, in peril of foes, and even doubtful of friends;
+in weariness and painfulness oft, in hunger and thirst, in cold and
+nakedness. These last were exactly the circumstances under which the
+very text was indited by the apostle himself: he saw, what you may
+see, that trials like these, when tempered by the presence of the God
+he loved, were good, not, I would say, in proportion to their weight,
+but according to the patience which they exercised, the faith they
+strengthened, the experience of divine support they afforded, the hope
+they brightened, the crown they were preparing; yea, the exceeding and
+eternal weight of glory which they must eventually be working out. The
+apostle had "heard of the patience of Job," and had "seen the end of
+the Lord, that the Lord is very pitiful, and of tender mercy." The
+trials of Joseph had even led that servant of God, by degrees of
+painful progress, to the honour of a prince, and a chain of gold. The
+"evil things" of Lazarus--good they might have been called--had led
+him to still higher honours, and had prepared him to be carried by
+angels into Abraham's bosom. Every individual circumstance of this
+nature, as it passed in review before the apostle in the text, had led
+irresistibly to the conclusion he so strongly expresses. Could he
+distrust the same arm, disbelieve the same promises; or rather saying
+with David--"Our fathers trusted in thee, and were delivered," would
+he not add--I will trust as they did; I will be "in subjection to the
+Father of spirits, and live?" Let me feel only the "profit, that I may
+be partaker of his holiness;" and then, "though no affliction for the
+present is joyous, but grievous," it shall surely hereafter yield the
+peaceable fruit of true righteousness; and "all things," adversity
+itself, "shall work together for _my_ good."
+
+_Temptation_, verily, shall be among the "things working together for
+good to them that love God." Such indeed is our state of trial upon
+earth, that every successive arrival at our doors comes to us in some
+shape or other of temptation to sin. But take the strongest and most
+pressing incitements to the corruptions of the heart, and the evil of
+our nature. Even of _these_ must it not be said, that the temptation,
+and the tempter himself, may be turned into a worker for good, when
+that promise is brought forward, and brought home to the heart, "God
+is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above what ye are
+able, but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye
+may be able to bear it?" Another apostle had a like meaning when he
+said, "My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers
+temptations." Every enemy opposed to the Christian warrior affords
+him fresh opportunity for a sure victory in the strength of Christ.
+Every obstacle in his path is that which faith regards as a trial
+prepared for his soul; but hope and joy carry him over, to the glory
+of his sovereign Upholder. In evil company, which he seeks not, his
+courage is honourably put to the test, and abides it; amidst a world
+of licentiousness and excess, which he desires not to approach, he
+still trusts, through grace, that he shall not be found wanting. In a
+season of provocation his meekness is tried, and it prevails; and in
+the moment of fear, and the threats of alarm, "his heart standeth
+fast, trusting in the Lord;" "nay, in all these things he is more than
+conqueror through him that loved him."
+
+If his very _sins_ are in one sense his shame, and the source of his
+bitter tears and saddest recollections, still those tears and
+recollections shall prove among the workers for his good, if they lead
+him more closely to the throne of mercy, and to the fountain of
+eternal strength. If any experiences of past weakness make him more
+watchful, sober, and diligent for the future--if they direct him to
+the vulnerable points in his armour, to the "sin that easily besets
+him"--if, in the very moment of his conscious frailty and
+heart-overwhelming struggle, he is enabled to exclaim, "Rejoice not
+over me, O mine enemy; though I fall I shall arise; though I sit in
+darkness the Lord shall be a light unto me:" then shall he know that
+"_all things_ work together for good to them that love God."
+
+I conclude with a single word of remark on the expression in the text,
+"We _know_ that all things work together for good." It expresses the
+_personal experience_ of the Christian. It answers to a similar
+expression of the same apostle to the Philippians--"I know that this
+shall turn to my salvation through your prayer, and the supply of the
+spirit of Jesus Christ." But to whom is this knowledge vouchsafed? To
+whom is it a safe and a sure conviction--an "earnest expectation and
+hope," so "that in nothing we shall be ashamed?" Truly, to those only
+who "_love God_"--to those who are "the called according to his
+purpose." His purpose is our sanctification, and that we should be
+"conformed to the image of his Son." To such truly, to such only does
+that blessing apply, so frequently indeed, and but too rashly,
+appropriated by many others, "All is for the best."
+
+Let the careless rather tremble, those as yet not effectually called
+into the gospel vineyard, at such an appropriation of the text. To
+them it may be only a savour of death unto death, a deadly security, a
+hope that "_maketh_ ashamed, because the love of God is _not_ yet shed
+abroad in their hearts."
+
+Gain rather in prayer, in secret meditation and much retirement from
+the presence and the love of this world, the true love of God which is
+in Christ Jesus our Lord. Then being first transformed yourself, you
+will be enabled, by a divine power, to transform everything around
+you; you will receive all things as from the hand of the Father whom
+you love, the Benefactor and Friend whom you wish and aim to serve.
+Your willing and noble obedience to him will render, then, prosperity
+a new advantage to you by awakening your gratitude, and adversity a
+blessing, by exercising and perfecting your patience. You will have a
+fence around you, an armour of divine temper to fortify you in the
+presence of every temptation, and to turn the very weapons of your
+adversaries into your own instruments of victory, the trophies of your
+triumph. Sin will have its struggles within you, but will not gain
+dominion over you, while every deviation from God's righteous will is
+mourned in secret, and restored through grace; and while it brings you
+the more urgently and constantly to the foot of the cross, where hung
+the Saviour whom you love, whose favour and forgiveness you implore;
+and you shall be enabled to close the volume of your experience in the
+concluding words of the chapter, and with the apostle himself: "Who
+shall separate us from the love of Christ?... I am persuaded, that
+neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers,
+nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any
+other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God
+which is Christ Jesus our Lord."
+
+
+
+
+THE GLORY OF THE SAVIOUR'S TRANSFIGURATION.[Y]
+
+ "And was transfigured before them, and his face did
+ shine as the sun, and his raiment was white as the
+ light."
+
+
+There never existed in this world a person in whose life there was a
+greater variety of incident than in the life of Jesus. He passed
+through scenes of the most peculiar and diversified description, to
+which we can find no parallel in the history of man, the effect of
+which no ordinary mind could have borne. These were, in general,
+connected with that lowliness and debasement to which he submitted for
+the benefit of our sinful race; but occasionally, as at his birth, his
+baptism, and transfiguration, there burst forth some bright rays of
+glory from behind the dark cloud of his humanity, which proved his
+possession of a nature that was divine.
+
+It may have a good effect in strengthening our gratitude for the
+Saviour's mercy, to remember that every complexion of circumstance was
+freely and voluntarily submitted to, not merely for his own
+satisfaction or benefit, but principally for the good of man. Jesus
+never lost sight of his representative character. He always remembered
+those whose cause he had espoused: and, whether he was led by the
+Spirit into the wilderness, to be tempted of the devil--or into the
+garden of Gethsemane, to sustain his more fierce and violent
+assaults--or to the mountain, to put on for a season the habiliments
+of light and glory--his chief object and desire was to effect the
+redemption, and to revive the hopes of weak and fallen man.
+
+We are now supplied by the Holy Spirit with a very brief account of
+the transfiguration itself. Before, however, we make any remark upon
+this description, or refer, as we desire to do, to the uses which this
+transaction was intended to serve, we must direct our attention for a
+few moments to the important preparation which the Saviour made for
+it. And here there are, perhaps, many who may be disposed to ask, had
+there not been sufficient preparation already? had not the Saviour
+endured much physical fatigue in accomplishing the wearisome ascent of
+the mountain? and had not the time, the place, and the spectators,
+been carefully selected by himself? Let it however be remembered, that
+in addition to all this, there was a necessary and absolutely
+indispensable preliminary, not to be omitted even by the Son of God,
+and that was prayer. It is said, by St. Luke, in the twenty-ninth
+verse of his ninth chapter, that "as he prayed, the fashion of his
+countenance was altered, and his raiment was white and glistering."
+Let us learn from this, that not all the labour, mental or physical,
+which we can possibly exert, can ever bring us into the enjoyment of
+one momentary smile of God's countenance, if we neglect prayer. We may
+diligently peruse the records of redeeming mercy which the sacred page
+of scripture contains; we may place ourselves under the pastoral care
+of some faithful and devoted minister of Jesus; we may enjoy the high
+advantage of intercourse and communion with many spiritually-minded
+followers of the Saviour; yet, after all, we shall find no benefit
+from these distinguished privileges if we neglect to pray. How many
+Christians there are, who often wish they had a Luther for their
+minister, because they feel dissatisfied with their spiritual progress
+under him to whose charge they may have been entrusted by the great
+Head of the church! And yet the cause of this may be traced to their
+own want of constant and of earnest prayer. Prayer is the key that
+unlocks the holy place where Jesus meets his people at the mercy-seat,
+to dispense the gifts which have been purchased by his precious blood.
+And when the united petitions of ministers and people ascend in an
+unceasing stream of sacred incense to a throne of grace, blessings may
+be expected to descend in rich abundance on the church.
+
+But perhaps it may be considered that we have digressed from our
+subject. We return, then, to the circumstance which more immediately
+claims our attention. We are informed that Jesus was praying when he
+was transfigured; nay, it is remarkable that St. Luke represents his
+special object of ascending the mountain to have been in order to
+devote himself to this sacred engagement. "It came to pass about an
+eight days after these sayings, he took Peter, and John, and James,
+and went up into a mountain to pray." Prayer was as much the Saviour's
+duty, as it is the duty of any of his people. He had been expressly
+commanded by his Father to ask of him to give him the heathen for his
+inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for his possession.
+All his works, whilst he was tabernacling in the flesh, were
+accompanied with prayer; and his present exaltation at the right hand
+of his heavenly Father, instead of suspending, rather imparts a more
+sublime intensity of fervour to his petitions. In vain had he shed his
+blood without this; for his prayers are as essential for the salvation
+of sinners, as his sufferings on the cross for their redemption; and
+therefore the apostle, in the twenty-fifth verse of the seventh
+chapter of the epistle to the Hebrews, connects the unlimited ability
+of Jesus to save, not only with his having offered himself as a
+sacrifice, but also with his ever living to make intercession for us.
+O! how welcome and delightful must be the accents of supplication to
+the ears of the Lord God of Sabaoth, when he withholds blessings, even
+from his well-beloved Son, until he ask for them! And how necessary is
+prayer, when Jesus cannot obtain blessings without it! There is a
+reserve manifested by the Holy Spirit in this, as in other instances,
+as to the contents of our Saviour's petitions. Most probably they had
+some reference to that splendid scene in his earthly history, into
+which he was about to enter. We may imagine him to have addressed his
+heavenly Father in language somewhat similar to that which he employed
+when he was about to devote himself as a spotless victim on the cross:
+"Father, the hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy Son also may
+glorify thee. Father, I will that they also whom thou hast given me be
+with me where I am, that they may behold my glory which thou hast
+given me: for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world."
+
+But we must pass on to the description which is given of the
+transfiguration of Jesus. "His face did shine as the sun, and his
+raiment was white as the light." On this we can say but little, for no
+imagination can conceive, nor can words express the exact nature of
+that splendid scene which is here so slightly glanced at. The Holy
+Spirit has employed the most concise mode of description in order to
+restrain our fancy within proper limits. We are, therefore, altogether
+incompetent to expatiate on a subject so sublime, for we know nothing,
+beyond what is written, of the glory which is associated with
+spiritual bodies. When Paul was led to speak of a state of future
+enjoyment, he could only express himself in the language of
+conjecture, and say, "I reckon that the sufferings of this present
+time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be
+revealed in us." And when, on another occasion, he was anxious to
+comfort the church by a description of the resurrection-body into
+which the Saviour shall change the vile bodies of his people, he could
+only describe it by the use of words which merely implied a direct
+contrast between what we now are and what we shall be. Our present
+bodies are earthly, natural, mortal, and corruptible; our resurrection
+bodies shall be celestial, spiritual, immortal, incorruptible: but
+these latter expressions are only negations of the former; as to any
+positive apprehension of the nature of glorified bodies, "it doth not
+yet appear what we shall be." And there is much wisdom in this
+reserve: there is enough told us upon the subject to encourage us to
+persevere in our endeavours to attain to the joy that is set before
+us, but not as much as would, in the meantime, render us too much
+discontented with our present state.
+
+We must, however, carefully note that the Holy Spirit, in so far
+describing the Saviour's transfiguration, has given a literal account
+of a real transaction. There is no cunningly-devised fable here. There
+was nothing visionary in the exhibition itself; there is nothing
+fanciful in the description of it. Jesus was actually metamorphosed;
+"his face did shine as the sun, and his raiment was white as the
+light," and, as on all ordinary occasions in the days of his flesh he
+was God manifest in the nature of man, so, during the continuance of
+this splendid scene, he exhibited his human nature manifested in and
+encompassed by the brightness and glory of his Godhead.
+
+But it may be profitable to inquire into some of the uses of this
+great transaction, for such an occurrence could not have taken place
+without some important object. It was intended to prepare the Saviour
+for his approaching sufferings; to shew the interest which heaven
+took in his sacrifice; to be a source of strength and comfort to the
+church, by giving a type and specimen of that high degree of glory to
+which the nature of man is destined to be exalted in consequence of
+the Saviour's dying love. But the leading object of this event was to
+give a representation of his second coming in majesty at the last day.
+It is not by any gratuitous assumption that we maintain this, but on
+the sure ground of strong scriptural testimony. We find St. Matthew
+representing the Saviour as promising some of his disciples that they
+should not taste of death till they saw him "coming in his kingdom;"
+and in the parallel passage in the ninth chapter of St. Mark, he is
+represented as saying that there were some standing with him who
+should not see death until they had seen the kingdom of God "come with
+power." Now the apostle Peter combines the substance of these two
+declarations, in a manner which distinctly shews that he considered
+them as having a reference to the future advent of the Redeemer. "We
+have not followed cunningly-devised fables, when we made known unto
+you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ;" and he speaks of
+"majesty," "honour," and "glory," which are the appendages of a
+kingdom, and are to be the characteristics of the second advent of
+Jesus, in contrast with the meanness, poverty, and degradation of his
+first appearance in our world. Those, therefore, who say that the
+transfiguration had a typical reference either to the effusion of the
+Spirit on the day of pentecost, or to the destruction of Jerusalem,
+are greatly in error. It was meant to be a specimen and earnest of our
+Lord's appearance hereafter in glory, when he shall come to be admired
+in all them that believe, and to establish his everlasting kingdom of
+righteousness and peace in the earth. The use of a type is to arrest
+and embody in a kind of visible indication the prominent features of
+its antitype; and, accordingly, if we examine the leading
+circumstances of the transfiguration, we shall find such a resemblance
+between it and the second coming of our Saviour, as will clearly
+establish such a relationship between these two events. Jesus appeared
+in literal human nature on the mountain; so shall he come again, as
+the Son of man, possessing the same nature with his people; for the
+apostles were informed when he ascended, that the very same Jesus who
+had been taken up from them into heaven should even so come in like
+manner as they had seen him ascend into heaven. He appeared in glory,
+and not in humility; such as he shall descend hereafter, when he shall
+come with all his holy angels and sit upon the throne of his glory. As
+he was visible on the mountain, so, when he shall come again, every
+eye shall see him, and they also which pierced him; and all kindreds
+of the earth shall wail because of him. As he was encompassed by a
+cloud on the summit of Tabor, so shall he come hereafter in the clouds
+of heaven, with power and great glory. As he stood in majesty upon the
+mountain, so according to the declaration of the prophet, his feet
+shall stand, when he comes again, upon the mount of Olives. And as
+Moses and Elias appeared in glory with the Saviour, so shall he bring
+his people with him on his return to our world, for, when Christ who
+is our life shall appear, then shall we also appear with him in glory.
+
+Such we believe to have been the great primary object of this
+interesting event. How full of consolation and encouragement must it
+appear in this important view to every believer who is still
+struggling with the infirmities and trials of his earthly pilgrimage.
+It directs the attention of such to the crown of righteousness that
+awaits him, and says, "Be ye stedfast, immoveable, always abounding in
+the work of the Lord; forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in
+vain in the Lord."
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[Y] From a scriptural small work, with the style and spirit of which
+we are much pleased, "The Transfiguration," an exposition of Matt.
+xvii. i. 8, by the rev. Daniel Bagot, B.D., minister of St. James'
+chapel, Edinburgh, and chaplain to the right hon. the earl of
+Kilmorry. Edinburgh, Johnstone: London, Whittaker, Nisbet: Dublin,
+Curry, jun., Robertson.
+
+
+
+
+THE CABINET.
+
+
+NO SALVATION WITHOUT AN ATONEMENT.--But let me turn your attention to
+the sad effect which a denial of the Saviour's Deity has upon the
+prospects of man for eternity. It is a truth written, as with a
+sunbeam, upon every page of scripture, that man is by nature a fallen,
+a guilty, a condemned creature, obnoxious to the righteous judgment of
+God. We are told, that "the heart is deceitful above all things, and
+desperately wicked;"--that "all have sinned, and come short of the
+glory of God:" Jehovah himself is represented as looking down from
+heaven upon the children of men, to investigate their characters with
+that omniscient ken by which he explores the utmost boundaries of the
+illimitable universe, and pronouncing this solemn verdict--"There is
+none righteous; no, not one:" and the apostle Paul, when reminding the
+Ephesian church of their past unregenerate condition, says that they
+were "children of wrath, even as others." If man, then, be in a guilty
+and condemned state by nature, it is an awful and important question,
+how shall he obtain pardon and justification with God, on account of
+his past transgressions? and how shall his sinful and unholy nature be
+sanctified and prepared for admission into the realms of everlasting
+glory? Can personal repentance, on the part of the sinner, obliterate
+the crime of which he has been guilty, so as to reinstate him into the
+condition of a sinless and unfallen being? Unquestionably not. For
+whatever act has been performed by God, or angels, or by man, must
+remain for ever written upon the pages of eternity, never to be
+erased; and, therefore, no subsequent repentance on the sinner's part,
+no tears of sorrow or contrition, can ever blot out his past
+transgressions; nor even could the united tears of angels erase the
+record of those offences for which man is brought in guilty before
+God! Can, then, subsequent obedience achieve the work of the sinner's
+justification? This, alas! will prove as ineffectual as repentance;
+for though we should render to God a perfect obedience for the
+remainder of our lives, still the sin we have committed is sufficient
+to procure our conviction and condemnation; for the wages of sin is
+death! Shall we, then, have recourse to the abstract mercy of God, as
+the foundation upon which to rest our hope of pardon? This is the
+Unitarian's plea: "I believe," he says, "that God is merciful; and I
+repose in his kindness, and trust he will have compassion on me."
+Alas, my friends! it was bad enough that Mr. Porter should have
+yesterday adopted the algebraic principle of neutralizing one text of
+scripture by another; but to carry up this principle to a
+contemplation of the character of God, and to bring it into collision
+with the attributes of Jehovah, and thus to set his mercy against his
+justice--his compassion against his truth--his grace against his
+holiness, and thereby to neutralize and annihilate one class of
+attributes by another, is a guilt that is direful, blasphemous, and
+indescribable.--_From speech of the Rev. Daniel Bagot, at the Belfast
+Unitarian [Socinian] discussion._
+
+
+
+
+POETRY.
+
+
+LAYS OF PALESTINE.
+
+No. IX.
+
+(_For the Church of England Magazine._)
+
+By T. G. Nicholas.
+
+ "She hath given up the ghost; her sun is gone down while
+ it was yet day."--Jer. xv. 9.
+
+ "Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts, cause thy face to
+ shine, and we shall be saved."--Ps. lxxx. 19.
+
+
+ 'Tis eventide; the golden tints are dying
+ Along the horizon's glowing verge away;
+ Far in the groves the nightingale is sighing
+ Her requiem to the last receding ray;
+ And still thou holdest thy appointed way.
+ But Salem's light is quench'd.--Majestic sun!
+ Her beauteous flock hath wandered far astray,
+ Led by their guides the path of life to shun;
+ Her orb hath sunk ere yet his wonted course was run.
+
+ In ages past all glorious was thy land,
+ And lovely were thy borders, Palestine!
+ The heavens were wont to shed their influence bland
+ On all those mountains and those vales of thine;
+ For o'er thy coasts resplendent then did shine
+ The light of God's approving countenance,
+ With rapturous glow of blessedness divine;
+ And, 'neath the radiance of that mighty glance,
+ Bask'd the wide-scatter'd isles o'er ocean's blue expanse.
+
+ But there survives a tinge of glory yet
+ O'er all thy pastures and thy heights of green,
+ Which, though the lustre of thy day hath set,
+ Tells of the joy and splendour which hath been:
+ So some proud ruin, 'mid the desert seen
+ By traveller, halting on his path awhile,
+ Declares how once beneath the light serene
+ Of brief prosperity's unclouded smile,
+ Uprose in grandeur there some vast imperial pile.
+
+ O Thou, who through the wilderness of old
+ Thy people to their promis'd rest did'st bring,
+ Hasten the days by prophet-bards foretold,
+ When roses shall again be blossoming
+ In Sharon, and Siloa's cooling spring
+ Shall murmur freshly at the noon-tide hour;
+ And shepherds oft in Achor's vale shall sing[Z]
+ The mysteries of that redeeming power
+ Which hath their ashes chang'd for beauty's sunniest bower.[AA]
+
+ Thou had'st a plant of thy peculiar choice
+ A fruitful vine from Egypt's servile shore
+ Thou mad'st it in the smile of heav'n rejoice;
+ But the ripe clusters which awhile it bore
+ Now purple on the verdant hills no more,
+ The wild-boar hath upon its branches trod;
+ Yet once again thy choicest influence pour,
+ Transplant it from this dim terrestrial sod,
+ To adorn with deathless bloom the paradise of God.
+
+ _Wadh. Coll. Oxon._
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Z] Isaiah xv. 10.
+
+[AA] Isaiah lxi. 3.
+
+
+
+
+MISCELLANEOUS.
+
+
+INFLUENCE OF RELIGION ON A STATE.--Religious faith is necessarily and
+unavoidably political in its influence and bearings, and eminently so.
+Christians are generally well informed--and knowledge is power. They
+have there in Christian countries, as citizens and subjects, directly
+and indirectly, a large share of influence in the state. In most
+Christian states, if not in all--for a state could hardly be called
+Christian, if it were not so--Christianity is made a party of common
+law, and, when occasion demands, is recognised as such by the judicial
+tribunals. It is eminently so in Great Britain; it is so in America;
+and generally throughout Europe. It is also, to a great extent,
+established by constitutional law, and thus incorporated with the
+political fabric, furnishing occasion for an extended code of special
+statutes. The great principles of Christianity pervade the frame of
+society, and its morals are made the standard. The second table of the
+decalogue is adopted throughout as indispensable to the well-being of
+the state; and a thousand forms of legislation are attempted to secure
+the ends of the great and comprehensive Christian precept--"Thou shalt
+love thy neighbour as thyself." More especially is it deemed the
+highest perfection of civilized life and manners, in the code of
+conventional politeness, to exemplify this latter divine injunction.
+Otherwise life would be much less comfortable--hardly tolerable.--_A
+Voice from America to England._
+
+DUTY OF SUBJECTS.--We ought not only to look at the queen's duty, but
+recollect also what is our own; for the prosperity of a nation
+consists, not only in having a religious governor, but also an
+obedient people. The events which have passed before our eyes during
+the few last years, may serve, I think, to convince us of the truth of
+such an inference. Can we look back on the loss of human lives, the
+almost paralyzing alarm excited by the threats of an infuriated
+populace, and the absolute destruction of property which took place
+during the riots in the city of Bristol, and not see that all those
+calamities sprung out of a want of obedience to the existing
+authorities? Nor was that the only occurrence of the kind which has
+taken place. What repeated acts of incendiarism have we as a nation
+suffered from, as well as from the still more recent riots which have
+arisen in our south-western and other counties? and may we not ask,
+whence have those scenes of strife, discontent, and tumult, sprang,
+but from the cause I have already referred to?--want of subjection and
+obedience to the government of our kingdom. What were the scenes of
+misery and horror which broke out from time to time, when internal
+wars and insurrections so greatly depopulated our land? Cast your eye
+up and down our country, and view the still remaining barrows--those
+unsculptured, unlettered monuments, which cover the slain of our
+people--and ask, are these Britons slain in their own land, a
+Christian land, a land where (to remind you of the present privileges
+of her constitution) we have a national established church, of sound
+scriptural and protestant faith, and a preached gospel?[AB]
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[AB] From "The Liturgy of the Church of England, Catechetically
+explained, for the use of children, by Mrs. S. Maddock. 3 vols.
+London: Houlston and Co." These volumes seem well adapted to explain
+to those for whose use they have been published--the liturgy of our
+church. The catechetical form in which the subject is treated, rather,
+however, detracts from their value, and should the authoress be called
+on for a new edition, we should advise her to publish in a different
+form.
+
+
+London: Published by JAMES BURNS, 17 Portman Street, Portman Square;
+W. EDWARDS, 12 Ave-Maria Lane, St. Paul's; and to be procured, by
+order, of all Booksellers in Town and Country.
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ JOSEPH ROGERSON, 24 NORFOLK STREET, STRAND, LONDON.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+The masthead in the original referred to Vol. IX., although this issue
+is in fact part of Vol. X. of this publication. This has been
+corrected.
+
+A table of contents has been added for the convenience of the reader.
+
+Minor punctuation errors have been repaired.
+
+Archaic spelling is preserved as printed. Please note that both
+Oronooco and Oronooko appear in the text as variable spellings.
+
+The following typographic errors have been fixed:
+
+ Page 20--servicable amended to serviceable--"... both
+ exogenous and endogenous, render them extremely
+ serviceable to mankind."
+
+ Page 21--organisable amended to organizable, for
+ consistency--"... indeed gum is that organizable product
+ which exists most universally ..."
+
+ Page 23--productivenes amended to productiveness--"...
+ of which there are several varieties, differing
+ essentially in productiveness, ..."
+
+ Page 23, fourth footnote--Hedwiz amended to
+ Hedwig--"Eheu qualia! Hedwig."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Church of England Magazine -
+Volume 10, No. 263, January 9, 1841, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHURCH OF ENGLAND MAGAZINE, JAN 9, 1841 ***
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #31430 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/31430)