himself expeditiously, and with the most buoyant spirits, hurried forth to attend to his necessary affairs, and to make his arrangements to go to the city. I shall record his subsequent adventures and successes, in another and concluding number. THE HURON WIDOW'S FAREWELL. 'Ir a Huron woman dream thrice of her deceased husband, she believes that he requires her preence in the 'land of souls,' and immediately obeys the summons by a voluntary death, commonly putting a period to her existence by a dose of poison.' OLD NEW-YORK MAGAZINE. We have met! we have met! - I have seen him now, We have met in the beautiful 'land of dreams,' And he rov'd with me there by the still blue streams, Than hath ever yet beamed on my waking eye. In the beautiful land of dreams we met, Farewell! fare ye well! I have heard his call And fare thee well, also, my warrior's son; We are parting for ever, unconscious one; Art clasp'd to a parent's bosom now; Thou wilt sport on my grave at eve, nor know That the heart which most loved thee, lies mould'ring below. Thou hast tortures to bear, a proud fame to be won, And to thee, oh my sire! must another bring Farewell to thee, father! I know that thou, Yet my smile at thy waking must cheer thee no more, Yet lament not, my mother! our souls shall greet But farewell! - for I hear the rejoicing sounds I have heard his call Newport, (Rhode-Island,) July, 1838. THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. ITS MORAL AND SOCIAL INFLUENCE ON AMERICA, AND THE WORLD AT LARGE. 3. S. C. BY J. R. TYSON, ESQ. The state of Europe, at the period of the American Revolution, is too well known to require elucidation. On the continent, despotism was personified in the sovereigns, and servitude in the people. Political writers declaimed about liberty in the abstract, but popular equality was not supposed to constitute a part of rational freedom. Religion, over all Europe, wore the frowning aspect of intolerance. That atrocity, known as the African slave-trade, received the countenance and favor of princes. Papal supremacy was sought to be perpetuated in Spain and Portugal, by the cruel tyranny of the Inquisition. The doctrines of jurisprudence were perplexed by the subtlety of feudal dialectics; and the very forms of legal proceeding, embarrassed by conflicting authorities, or confounded by opposing principles, were more intricate and complicaWager of Battel,' ted than the ultimate question to be decided. that barbarous remnant of a barbarous age, famous at least as the parent of modern duelling, was permitted to deform the boasted system of English law. Europe presented, in her penal codes, a spectacle of cruelty, only equalled by the remorseless spirit in which they were administered. ، Morality and virtue could scarcely flourish in a soil so unpropitious to their vegetation. France, during the reigns of Louis the Fourteenth and Fifteenth, presented the lowest condition of moral feeling which can characterize a nation at large. In the eloquent language of Sir James Mackintosh, a great part of that period was • the consummation of whatever was afflicting and degrading in the history of the human race.' 'On the recollection of such scenes,' says he, 'I blush as a scholar for the prostitution of letters; as a man, I blush for the patience of humanity.' But Europe had something to expect from a country upon which she had bestowed all the benignant influences of her genius, refinement, and knowledge. The world had something to hope from the recognition of a new principle, on a new theatre. It might naturally be expected that human nature, incited by more powerful motives of action, surrounded by new objects, and less shackled by the restraints and prejudices of older systems of society, would exhibit itself in more interesting and striking aspects than before. Let us then briefly examine how these expectations have been fulfilled, and what contribution has been made in payment of the debt, which, as a nation, we owe to the common cause of science and humanity. The experiment of self-government, that is, the competency of man to govern himself, was the great problem which we solemnly engaged, in the eyes of all Europe and the world, to solve. We assumed this task in adopting a form of government which Montesquieu and other speculative philosophers had denounced as impracticable, in a large community. History presented no instance of success in a republic, and no example whatever, upon the basis of representation. In the democracies of Greece, the people were not numerous, and the territories were small. They assembled in a plain, and performed those acts of legislation, which, in larger and more populous districts, could only have been accomplished through the agency cy of representatives. The government of the United States, therefore, presents the example of a political structure, which in its extent and machinery, is wholly new. It is daring enough to challenge a prototype in the long history of ages. In an age of paganism or ignorance, without the aids of the press, and the enlightening influence of Christianity, such an effort would have proved more visionary than the Eutopia of Plato. But with these auxiliaries, happiness, prosperity, and enterprise, moral advancement and intellectual vigor, have been the results. It has quickened mind into action, in every department of life. It has given to it the wholesome direction of a more ardent pursuit after new and beneficial truths. It has turned the attention of the human mind from the busy idleness of a vain erudition, into channels more conducive to sound science, and the exaltation of the human race. Let us mark the course of this principle, in its onward movement, and trace its diffusive and beautiful career in this country and abroad. Religious freedom was too intimately blended with political liberty, to be overlooked in the category of human rights. A free-born conscience demanded that religion should be purified from the taint of intolerance, and that no man should be excluded from office, nor rest under civil disability, on account of his religious belief. The principles of Coddington, Williams, Lord Baltimore, and Penn, were at once engrafted into the constitution of the government established at the revolution. They found in their adopted trunk a soil prepared for their reception. They sent forth their heaven-directed branches high into the air; offering to the bereaved and outcast sectary, of every creed, a shade and security from the heats of persecution. What but these have removed the legal burthens of the Jews in Maryland, and the Catholics in North Carolina? What but these were the means of proclaiming Catholic emancipation in Great Britain; and exciting in that kingdom the recent though unsuccessful attempt in behalf of the Jews? What but these have proclaimed religious freedom in the kingdom of Denmark, and the cantons of Switzerland? And what but these are sundering the fetters imposed by bigotry and superstition in other parts of Europe ? From the recognition of political and religious liberty, as the proper attribute of man, it might be inferred that the destruction of legal servitude would follow. But that burthen, which was imposed by Elizabeth, has not been removed in the age of Victoria. Though the acclaim of ' universal emancipation,' which burst from these shores, has resounded in the dull ears of despotic Austria, and penetrated to distant India, the anomaly of existing bondage is exhibited under the freest form of government, and amidst the contagion of the most liberal ideas, which prevail upon earth. Aside from other considerations, it offers to the philosophic mind a subject for reflection, under the weight of which Philosophy herself must stagger. It shows at least how hard it is, by the mere potency of an abstract doctrine, however aided by policy and humanity, to break down the prejudices which have been nursed by time, and strengthened by interest. Though the early and signal effort of colonial Pennsylvania to abolish the slave trade in 1712, and that of South Carolina in 1760, were frustrated by the cupidity of the British merchants, yet the effect of the great idea adopted at the revolution, was soon afterward felt. The slave trade was carried on in England with unexampled rapacity, and under the protecting guardianship of her laws, at a time when Pennsylvania abolished servitude itself. In surveying the progressive effects of the doctrines of the revolution, let it not be forgotten, that in eleven years after that epoch, was formed a memorable association, by whose benevolent instrumentality the African slave trade was uprooted in Great Britain. Notwithstanding the power of this combination, and the determined vigor by which it was animated - an union composed of the friends of freedom and humanity in America and Europe-it eluded their pursuit, and resisted their perseverance, for a period of twenty years! Such a truth conveys a mortifying but impressive lesson. How great must have been the tenacity of interest, how dull the insensibility of habit, to require a period of twenty years to abolish a traffic, which is now, by the united voice of civilized states, denounced as inhuman, and punished as piratical! The natural aliment of that freedom which the national independence secured, is intelligence among the people. Knowledge is not merely the parent of liberty, but constituting an element of its nature, is as essential to its existence as the air is to animal life. The child of mental light, each new idea must impart to it nourishment and strength; and its growth must be in exact proportion to the inlets of science. If science be erroneous or impure, so must that essence be diseased or healthy, which depends upon it for vitality and nurture. Perhaps no country can present a population more intelligent and informed than the United States. No longer confined to the professed scholar, or the cloistered clerk, knowledge is distributed over the community with the undistinguishing profusion of the breath of heaven: 'Her handmaid, Art, now all our wilds explores, 220 The sources of this mental cultivation may be found in the munificence of the public provisions for schools, and in the cheapness and multiplicity of newspapers and useful books. The common mind has thus been improved and enlarged, to an extent to which it is vain to seek a parallel in any other nation of the globe. Those curious topics of bootless inquiry which do not contribute to the practical benefit or moral exaltation of man, have employed but a superficial attention. The powers of America have been exerted in the formation of good citizens; in stimulating industry; in arresting the progress of vice and crime; in bringing into closer affinity places which nature had widely separated by distance; and in extending the boundaries of social and moral science. Let us leave to the dreaming fanaticism of French philosophy those sublimated visions of speculation, so fruitful of commotion, anarchy, and misrule. In the poetical language of Denham, may 'Our streams of knowledge flow, To fill their banks, but not to overthrow.' This general diffusion of knowledge, this propensity of America for what is subservient to a practical use, has had an important effect upon the mind of Europe. It has turned the attention of the learned from the pedantry of their pursuits to the ultimate end of science; it has incited inquiry among the people; led to the dissemination of books and periodicals, suited to the popular wants; and introduced a more just appreciation of the benefits of knowledge. These are effecting a change upon the intellectual face of Europe, which shall prepare it for those bolder reaches and higher ascensions, which the spirit of freedom and christianity cannot fail to inspire. 'These shall restore the light by nature given, And, like Prometheus, bring the fire from heaven.' These are undermining the censorship of Spain and Italy; these have produced the fermentation which is so observable in the national minds of Austria and all Germany; and it is these which have had such wonderful effects upon the popular tendencies of England, Ireland, and France. The government adopted at the national era, was founded upon the supposed virtue of man. This virtue was to be cultivated less The by seminaries of learning, than the predominance of moral and religious feelings over the baser proclivities of human nature. government implied a connection between morals and politics; an union of the philanthropist and statesman in the same person; a dominion of the higher impulses of the heart, and the purer results of the intellect, over the sensual and animal instincts. Hence we find associations of benevolent persons, with a view to guard against vice and crime, and to promote a higher standard of social morality. I do not here refer, singly, to any one of the objects which these associations have in view; but the purpose to which they have contributed, in the melioration and refinement of man. Every philanthropic effort that is made, every peaceful act that is done, for the regeneration of man, lifts him in the scale of improvement, and advances him to that state in which moral force shall triumph over that which is physical and animal. |