EDWARD ISLAND ADVERTISER. _.3 [No. 346'- CHARLOTTETOWN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1844. w ' a t . ' ' if. t t 2211! 1. 2 . _, Sured by society, then shunned, then despised, and. How different from this are all other vices. Injurious mind is, in a great degree dependent upon the bbdy, and PECULIARITIES 0F INTEMPERANCE AS A VICE finally abhorred; Just according 'to the progressive to society in the first instance, as well as in the last, sel- especially those functions of the body with which ner— . ' . ‘ — I 5mg9§ by which he has become less capable of urider- fish in their owu nature, and avowedly abhorred, they vous sensation is most intimately connected. In a state (By 1135, Imus.) standing what is right, and controlling his own incliiia- no sooner appear in their naked form, than a check is of nervous disorder, the powers of perception, judgment ' ' I If the Physician,“ takin char 6 ofa" imam 'Sh H “oil‘s.” What: ‘5 WVPNg- ‘ put upon them by the united voice of society._ The thief and decision, are so .far deranged, that even conscience- ' . Sim I ,6“) lo hims 1?, 1g , E I . ,l on ( , Is anot er striking feature in the character of in- its not welcomed into the bosom of kind families after he ceases to exercise it Just and lawful influence, and ideas py p y e in aying o'wn rti es for me pye- temperance as a Vice, that it commences not only under has been known to steal a little. The miser, whose eVil sare conceived, and actions performed,_nnder a total m-. seriatign off perfect health, It. is eVident that his advice the sanction of the low, but under that of what is called propensities are, next to iniemperance, the 'most insidi- capacity for clearly distinguishing right from ‘wrong. * I" v :would eo but little serVice in the removal ofaiiy eXIst- the best society ; not only under the sanction of the ous in their nature, is spurned and hated before his fail- lnebriatiou, from the effect it produces upon the sto— iug disease under which his patient might be labouring. world, but under that of religious professors, who believe ing has become a vine. And so it is with all who sin in mach and the brain, has a more instantaneous influence ' His rules might be excellent, his theory correct; but themselves called out of darkness into light. It begins [other ways. They are acknowledged to be dangerous upon the nervous system, and consequently upon the how would such a patient benefit by either? His maladylWllli the first welcome which kind and Christian friendslas companions, and hilarious as citizens, in the com- mind, than any other disease. There are,ofcoiirse, de‘« . would require the application ofsome direct and prac'ti- assemble ‘to give to a young immortal being, just ush- l mencenieiit oftheir guilt. It is only by denying a know-grees oftliis influence, beginning first with the slightly cal remedy, before he could be in a situation to take ad. ered into a state of probation, by which it is to be fitted ‘iledge of their actual conduct, that they are supported ‘lpleasurable sensation which some persons experience vantage of any method, however excellent, for the pre- for eternity ; and it extends through all the most social and couiiteuanced even bytheir friends. So/ai‘ as they are after drinking a single glass of wine, and extending to starvation of perfect health. and cheering, as well as through many of the most last- acknmolgdged to be guiltv, they are condemned, though v the last and fatal draught of the poor outcast from res- .It» isthus yvith the moral as well as the physical mala- ing and sacred associations we form on earth ; until at having sinned but a little,- while the victim of inteiii- pectable society. It is often asked, why does not the . dies ofmankind. It would be a comparatively easy and last, when the tie is broken, and the grave receives our perance alone carries with him the sanction of society driiiikard stop? and he is sometimes most severely~ v pleasant task to lay down rules for the preservation of lost and loved, the solemn scene is closed, and the lone after the commencement of his career; nay, he blamed for taking too much, by those who take only a sobriety, order, and happiness, provided they had never Incurner’s heart is soothed, by‘the commencement ofiin~ drifiks of the very same bowl with the religious profes- little less. But how should he stop, wlimiliis mind has been_iiiterrupted; but when evil habits have once gaiii- temperance. , - sor until he has lost the power to refrain. lost its healthy tone in consequence of the particular ed the ascendancy, and the moral harmony ofsociety has I say the commencement, for who can tell at what The victim of intemperance may have originally sat state ofhis body ?—-when he ceases to be capable of been destroyed, there must be a corrective employed to draught, what portion of a draught, what drop—for it down to the same cheering draught' as the religious man. distinguishing betwixt good and evil, and cares not for check what is eVil, before any incentive can sufficiently must really come to this—who can say, then, at what He may have been his friend. But it so happens that any consequences that may come upon him? How operate promoting what is good. drop ofthe potent cup sobriety ceases and intemperance his constitution of‘body is different. With him the tran-. should he stop? It is a mockery of common sense, and ‘ 3? Although the exceeding sinfulncss of sin precludes all begins? The inteniperate man himself cannot tell, for sition pointoccurs at an earlier period than with the other. an insult to common feeling, to snpposc that of himself, if; iideaof there'being in the Divine sight any degree or it has justly been Observed, that, “instead offeeling that He passes this without being aware of his danger, and and unaided, he should have the power'to do ‘so. At, modification iii the nature of sin itself; yet with regard he is taking too much, his only impression is, that he his mastery over himselfis lost. What horror then seizes that Critical moment he has not even the wish to stop, , to Parlear Vices: “S'ihey come under human Observau has not had enough.” Who then shall warn him? Even the religious man, not against himself for having parta- So far from it, his inclination is on the opposue side, tion, there are certain points ofdistinction, which de. if he were in a condition to listen to renioiistrance, who ken with his friend, but against that friend for having and the whole force of‘his animal nature, with an excess ‘ ,maiid particular attention, and require appropriate treat- should be his judge? If it be perfectly innocent, nay gone too far. Had he begun with him to commit a lit- of bodily appetite,'8l'e increasing 0“ the Side Of 6"”; in merit, as we see by the variety of regulations instituted right, in the first instance, to partake of this beverage, tle theft, or to tell a slight falsehoOd, and his friend had the same proportion that his mental capabilities, ‘his 'f'or the well-being of society, and the Stillgreater variety say to the extent of two thousand drops; if all sorts of gone too far, he would have blamed himself for the re- conscience, and his power ofself-mastery, are’becoming ‘of systems of moral discipline brought into exercise for persons, up to the'highest scale of religious scrupulosity, maiiider of his life for being necessary to the downfall weaker on the side of good. _ ' v the purpose of controuliug the eVilteiidencies ofour com- take this quantity, and more, and deem it right to take ofthat friend; but here he starts back. considers himself, And.ihis is the man of whom the world Judges no men 'nature. it, even to double or treble it as occasion may demand, and is considered by others, as perfectly innocent; while hardly, because he has passed unconsciously the for- None who have ever been truly awakened to a sense it must be strong evidence that quantity, as regards a few his friend, who has committed nothing but a little more hidden hue—because he has never been able to ascer- oftheall-sufiicient power ofreligious influence upon the thousand drops, can be ofliitle consequence. Still there ofthe very same act, is Shumicd as degraded, and de‘ tam exactly where it was—and, most probably, because, human heart, will be liable to suppose, that any innile or is, there must be, a precise point at which mankind ought nounccd as guilty. . _ from some natural constitution ofbody, the same draught system or moral discipiine,~simply as such, can be effec~ to stop, or why is the unanimous voice of society lifted The voice ofsociety is most injurious and unfair with which was safely drunk by another, was one of fearful tual in its operation upon the life and character, so as, up against the internperate? But why, above all, are regard to iiitemperate persons. They are classed toge- peyi‘l to luni. . . . ‘ ultimately, to Secure the salvation ofthe soul ; but as a we told that no drunkard can enter the kingdom of ther as belonging to the lowest grade of human beings, . l.heorigmal construction ofthe bodily frame has much child is carefully taughtthat truth and kindness are good, Heaven. - frequenters of vicious haunts, and perpetrators of every to do With the diseases to which we are liable through the and falsehood and cruelty evil, long before it knows aiiy- Ask this question of a hundred persons, and they will abomination. It is a melancholy truth that such for the whole of oiir_livcs. There are hereditary tendencies thing ofthe religion of the Bible ; so, in the case of eve- in all probability each give you, a different account of most part they brooms,- but it is equally true, that many, which the skill of the phystcian, the care of the patent, 3y particular vice which has been known in the world, the measurement by which they ascertain at what point if not most of them, have been thinned out from. theland the adrice ofthe friend, are. strenuously exerted to iit may fairly be. said to be better that it should be given intcmpcraiice begins; because there are all the different ranks of lionestVand of honorable men, whose principles correct. 'Iii no case or? hereditary tendencies more nip, than continued ; provided only, it cannothe over- habits and constitutions of mankind to be taken into ac- and habits were precisely the same as their own, iii the striking than in the children of inteniperate parents. It «more except by the substitution ofanothcr. It is no small count, as well as all the different degrees of potency in first instance, but whose bodily constitution, and whose ts true, the very excess, and consequeqt ruin, of. onedge- : {point gained, when an immortal being, a fellow-traveller the intoxicating draught, according to its name and powers of self-mastery, were stronger, and-who thus bap» Iteration, not untrequently tendl tolp ace certgip in 1‘; . in the‘jouriiey of life, is prevailed upon to cease to do evil quality. Of twenty persons seated at the same table, pened to remain on the safe side ofthe transnion line. duals of the next more sclrppuf‘ous y gporyt eir gufar I in any one respect. He is, at least, in a better condition and. regaliiig themselves with the same wine, it is more I vfiuld not for an instant be supposed to doubt the against the‘same lament? ) e dis, an . Brafjljiifaét!‘ i for learning to do well than while persisting in his for- than probablpl'ttrat tire t‘at’a’Ldr'op’at wlhicliintpmper’ap‘c‘e eileUaFy- of constanlt watt):fuLnifgvlfpgZi‘llter;€cag:pdvé;;= Elissa-me 60d“), conqmmon of Hugh families p mer‘course. )egins, won t not 9 in t e same g ass Witi any two 0. re igious principe; an ,a o' ‘ . t ' . . H , - -, .. ' ,Ifa child, a servant, or any one under our care, has amongst them. Who then shall decide this momentpus tions the all-sufficient power of that DiVinq assisttancg Spill: :Lalhilel‘tysyvliqlcylrl‘ :pfyhtaszl zigdgozbe$atgfirgrlgsg been accustomed to tell falsehoods, we rejoice over the question? for it is momentous, since eternal condemna- which alone can be expected in'answer to erven an '. .y _p h I, . _ T led” ’ i - ' ' ' i ‘ ' - lea tfelt ra er. I would not insmuate a doubt that to others. I‘here is int cir very na_ture,i once 6X01. , firsts tnptoms oftheir having learned to fear a he, even tion depends upon it. Let us reduce the number ofper i r ‘ p y b y f" m achinn wnm ohhatsumulus which even a very slight thmg‘f, their conduci‘ should evinced“, other indication sons, and see whether by this means the case Will be thousands have not been prevented ytlis means. "I! ' I r?‘ _ I , ~l, . a d when once ‘his ‘ ' r ‘t ' \ -' h. h t h e Oll'tD‘ too far even under the_critical circumstances al- degiee of lfliOch'dllon supp ies, n , 0“! moral Change' We do "m “35" Let hlm return m made more Clean V0 “1” SUPPOS?’ ‘ en" a. i re- g ’ -’ f . 1' all —-of want is ratified 'll increases to such a degree as to re- the evil of his wayS,_for it' is ofno use his leading a stric- persons sit down .to table to their Wine, or whatever it ready described. But 1 speak ptop etgenegrey and semble agconsmnging fire whose torment nothing can ter life in this respect, unless he becomes altogether a may be, in what is called an innocent and social way. society as it is ctillfitttuic‘dT—Qf t i'ngs asp-gay "dim a" alleviate bu: donsmm vhbauoné of {he same deadly, 5 changed character.” We do not say this, because we Out of this small number, it IS. posSible that one may [speak underthe'coiiViction,‘ that, iioéivrfis n] “:aandldm” m I know that the well-being ofsocieiy, and the good ofevery commit a deadly sin without taking more than the others. the efforts of ministers of religiop, ‘anGod zepzfochrm NEW -it is quite individual connected with him, require that he should. Yet to him it.is sni, Simply because the drop of traiisi- devoted friends to the promo-Hog o t(;:or:;l30th" [flea-n; mixingrin general socie‘y’ where and when wemay meet give “P this Panicm‘" habit: and if if" no other reawn’ tion betweep 300d and em’ {rpm 1.118 poem!“ “nst'Pu' some addmonal-efl‘mi ls l'eqmmi,emfioin destruction the With individuals of this constitutional tendenPY; for we think it sufficient that it‘should be given up for this lion of bodily frame, occurs in his glass at an earlier age necéassa’iiy, in ortfiqlr :kperfasgfis of intempemuce and even with children of the most respectable Parents it *ihat the tGildean 0f 11” 3V” is '0 coulomb-ale. and Stage than ‘i does mm the Others' “mse'three men" (lousian s “(in)me d these who from'cultivatiiig the sometimes prevails to an alarming extent. Perhaps we.’ that no vice can exist alone, but if indulged, WIlhneCeS— consequently, rise from that table, according to the opi- tie ttflii‘dl] s )eytfm“ . a ,UIlco:lsciously in the same sh down to table with twenty persons, and amongsuhem, sarily extend itself, and pollute whatever it comes lll’COU- tiion ofthe world, in a totally different moral state, for :amle ia its, are 0 owm,= ‘ is one of those to whom {he cup or which when we . m“,,v-,th1 by this means producing innumerable poison— one has been guilty of a degrading Vice, and the others ata course. _ t . tomifierence berm“ drinking, as they believe innocently, is me cup of poison ’ 0"”, (mm, frOm one deleterious morn Thus the slate of are perfectly innocent. Yet all haye done the'sarne There is ariotherwimportan pglpho‘e who are addic‘ed and ofdemh. Perhaps that one is a father’s hope, or. s°°lety is propomonately improved every “We a vicious ‘hmg' Who’ men’ I w-mlld aSk ngam’ IS- ") demde- m the “fit”? 0f'mtem'il)‘(im[dial anest mien betrins his guilty the only child of a 'widmvcd mother, or the beloved and- habit is wholly given up; afiifthis be true ofvice in such a case. Iprepeai, it cannot be the‘guilty man 'him- to any ot _e}r Vice. i: “$.05? uand an degradation be‘wlhed of a young and "listing hen", about to he, I general, how eminently is it the case with that ofintem- self, ’because that very line Iwhich constitudtes tthe mifnute 3:32:13] \yvlitlill: (mapplpsnfigl (ml: asPa Spain “Don the society come me fame, ofa family, the head of], householdwn‘d, ‘ perancef' because were is no Other, Whmh’ on (he one imnsmon heme“? a 5mm 0 mn‘menwiilln is fife,o iii? fi‘hi 1h h "arms 1 art The miser cherishes, alonglhimsef in his turn an example and a guide to others. Hist hand, is so countenanced by the customs ofthe world, and Is the. same at which he ceased to be a e 0 car y to I is- 0 t1»... .1 fl rt 1:” -a hardness a nudging, an}, , friendsd'ink Wm) him. They all panake m safe-1y, but _ I WMCh’ on the Other’ Spreads “5 baud“ influence to so tmgu‘mh' between one and the Ot‘her. ' ~ WI If “S? mii t ) dg aains' his felloiv beringS. And so within his bosom the latent elements ofdestiucttfitn M9, ' fearfill and deadly an emem' It ls‘lmposmble’ the", that ‘hls'quesnon'Shoum e‘er’ seine limes la‘ 3 ie intuit citalonue of evil which marks set on fire, and he plunges headlong into shame, and Inlempemnce is the only vice in the dark catalogue be decided, unless every one who indulges in1 thle use 1of 3]: t :igyeisoseoft degiadcd and guihy men. misery, and min. To a certain extent his mends have Inf man’s “fences agains‘ the Win and me word Of his web bgvemge “mum take me lmume to “'0” meit'“3 Tl - e ilt panifi olluted even before the vices to gone along: with him. They have even pressed and en- .Maker which directly assails the citadel of human rea- exact distance between the extremes of sobriety an} if]: hieyh ’ 'guddy H, gselves are committed. They are couragcd him to partake; but no sooner do they per- rson and by fiestroving the power to choose betwixt good tOXication, not only computed by every variety othuio \V b I?) athlc 7 tom and Obnmious m the Open Gem ceive mat he has oversmpped.a cenmn—dublous Vans}, and evil, renders ihe being whose similitude was origi- in which alcohol lS'cmitamed, but by every variety of gin y“; of; sung.“ .m (mien as may have harboured “mop, imperceptible “mit_or’ In (“her words, Em, hls nally divine. no longer a moral agent, but a mere idiot bodily sensation which he may be liable to experience. surle loc1 Yr] S t. P If"‘ desian inimical m its we”_ bodily frame has not been able ,0 susmm what they in purpose and aiiiucial in action, The man who is ha- This calculation Will bring him to one particular paint, a tioug itaalcoucepaonfip MC: .B.ut the imempemte have borne uninjured—mamthey turn from hum-and 'bhuany in’tempemte’ consequemly’ makes a vo'umary “ih‘iCh may “in lmpr'operly be called the pmm dor thanh bmetiiigb arinsfliis’sindzigsr‘iviili Ifio‘such malevolent feeling. acknowledge him no more as a companionandfl friend. :surrender of all control over his own conduct, and lives ~Slt‘ion, at which posnive eVil begins. and beY°“_ w tic l He bee?“ it mm, fie ueml without a wrong intention They are, in fact, ashamed to be seen With him. He. for the greater portion of his time deprived of that high- it is opositive sin to go.——Who, then, I ask again, sl al t a” sand {5 orl;n_qalas‘ {so Often—41w kindest ohhe loses caste amongs, them, becomes a marked man, and test attribute of man—his rational faculties. It is, how- fifth” Pom” It "mm; of ne.cess.ny .be left to the ca cu. d ’the fav urine. uest' the beloved companion of is finally left to perish, as anobyect ofdisgust and loath- ever a fut deservm" our most Serious conSiderafion’ lauons-Of‘he man Whose molmailon'm me hour Of'temp- m ,i o g i 1 him alonathe first since infl. too gross to be reclaimed, and too lfm for pity: . thaf’in— this state he more alive than under ordinary tation is not to see it, Whose desrre is to sltepdoyier itCi allbd tlyohse 37:0 :heqrfullyegcoltppfnyowever “:6 most 11"“):- Nor is it with thqse who’are cousmuuonauy “able whose pierceptions at that time are so c on e an o - o is ng .mi 5 c: . ., . , « . it impossible we should know, when . . . , . . ' ‘ i i “SSlO‘l' - - - - a no that this bodil ' tendency crusts. 'I he habit ofin- :gqiliiilftviiiiiisci: tthiiae briigullisaiiiofiefireddnlisgnriifibii to in: scured, that he could not ascertain it if he would. table felature his case, thatgiltggpggnlfieflfigr‘thm: tlfnpemnce use“. “yams in and thousands. who have - ~ ' ‘ ' . ' nerous an a ‘ ' _ . . . ~ 3mm, him how lo 3‘“, on the other he has more resiless- Here, then, we see a marked difference betWixt 1n gin Witi a no e, ge .qh and even cruel. , begun the” mmous career, Simply out of compliance . , . s and im emomy to force him into anion. temperance and every 0th? v'ice' The“, for inflame, variably ("wines rhea“, s‘elfi fthe world will I believe with the usages of society, and not a few who have d_0ne “a; h 'beeifi calculated that of persons thus degraded, is as much theft at the beginning as it is at the end; and A" ‘mPamal ° servauon 9 1 y b‘mall ifitemperatt; ‘50 under medical advice, have acquired, for certain-kinds t as h esem time eXiSting in Great Brit‘aim if a case Shoum occur in, Which were was any dOUbt support me, When Irepeat' than 18 ml 1' hden ori inall of stimulants, and sometimes for all, an habitual craving, there tagena‘sgxilggdred thousand of whom sixty then. about the act being really such. reason might immedi- are, fpr tt’he molst part,(})etl‘50(l;ls tyggnleage {overs ffthei’; which they have ultimately sacrificed every other consi- *- more a " ' ' ' ' ' ‘ ' - ld ther secia enevo out an en er 1 , _ _ . , . . . . . atel be a lied to, as unim aired nor wou any 0 , ,l . “f ' How do we know He“ m mlxmg sand die annually, the W'emhed "cums Ohms appalling of tfie faciiiiies of the mind [have srifi‘ered in the slightest fellow men, of cordial] meeting:apdhtofvthgze‘gaygpggggs dquatisigiliteqygrlmyum we are simng down ‘2) table with nice. ‘ , . . - ' .i ' "h t deed. Nei- together of congenia spirits w let I 0 - . - _ ,_ I i . . d h - - t i ' de me from the commisson Of a db ones - s. e ii diVidnal who has ust arrive att e turning pom frchi, than’ '5. the lpiggllilgirynihidlidiieird’iifhgidcfiiduffi; thegr are there any degrees of theft openly countenanch ble for a harder and les‘s feeling naturesisfiflglytyfinggi: EKTMS ’careor ,, Ohe whg has just begun ,0 suspec, his w ‘8 a 0‘ er Vices e " V i ‘ ' ’ We will— not sa They are persons vVio, .rom excesstve . - « - ' - _ , } k Iwa 5 do . . . o the" com. b the world and by religious society. . Y . , (,wn dan e, who ,5 hanouw as , ,e wea a. y , ‘ coins-elem?“ liberty to deteift adhioii‘iiim oiivers so~that tliat there afe not tricks in trade, and dishonest prac— and Pleasure, are liable to he to? "‘illfriretiinifid 23mg}: upon theixdmple ofothelisfahd looking especially to re- mlSSlOUi this alone g‘lbdues t .e r Ge . an%lpWhile till other tices which exist to the discredit ofour country and our one, and depressed by the other. f" q'e 1nd Sager“, lioious people, to see whatsanction they may give to an . they have no gafpabilitly eresliizsli cbmmencement this profession, but they are chiefly done in secret, and ack- persons tq1wdhomlfnyoymept is 300 giltzzuén'imny ofming itidulaence for which he is ever in search of an excuse? i fines are we mm t 8" ea ‘ ’ l ' ' l ’ b wrono' too wretc e to eexperieuce w _ o h with whom we . . w n nowled ed at least in the pa pit, to e _ ,.,. _ , _ ‘ t , How do we know amongst t e man), .alone only begins to be a Vice at Lhat Prfisyfe ppipfie ch;- Ano‘ier’characterisfic ofimemperance is, that it often —-to‘whoni a social hour with chosplln friends is absolute associate and “base privaw history is “mold m “5—- ithe clearness of the. mind. and i, 6 ac y according, begins in what are considered the happiest and most 50- felicity, and a wounded spirit deat 1 r been the how do vile know whose eyes may be fixed upon us, with science, begin t0 fall“: and if“? liprogresses"in in cule- cial moments ofa person’s. life. It begins when'the To such the mtoxrcating draug t iaphevzne hand it an anxiobs hope that we shall go along with phem in me ‘to the generally received opinion, by 131cm” g l a a. hospitable board is spread, and when friend meets friend; strongest temptation, because, yvhile, on e 1 re ,0" course {hey are so desirous m pursue, though they would lpabimy m the exact proPort-mr-i in, Which mema c p when the winter’s fire is blazing; When, the summer’s seemed for the moment to heighten ede P 3115“ (;\\ver still wish to pursue it without condemnation or guilt. ability and moral power are diminished. , .It .5 ,his ramble is finished; on the eve ofparting,wh’en moments the other it has, for a season equally transient,t e 9 Now inhesehyes shouu be beaming from a young and I _ ' 1 . ' i What an extraordinary measurement of gm 1 es glide away with the preciousness of hours; when,hearts ofsmoothmg ofi'the edge of every pain. h. h mm“ bo- tmsfina bean, uncnnsmous of the whole extent of the I 'for an enlightepfdsvl'orld ‘0 makes-i, .In albather effl't, warm towards each other; when broken confidence is .Agfiln, we all know the force twill-W It; cw that mp dangers, and fondly believing may safely dwells whh us! I a man’s ci‘iilpabilltyllt3 mgaimed prefiise‘y by theidlwliihy restored- when the father welcomes back his son; and dily diseases operate upon the mind , we :ghe mema! hm more especially “may beam from the fair counts! \ , he has to etect eVi , an t e power e possesses ‘ t ‘ n w sensation of erfect health is enlivening t I , l ' d , Stand temptation 1“ ‘his alone he is firm encouraged bnde fim enters her e P to the soul, I“ thlg state iiance of woman—oh, if at the same moment we conl i ‘by society, and this is while his natural powers remain ' " look upon the misery and the guilt that would ensue-to ‘ ‘ form and execute plans of which we should have I _ d _ I t er- . . . . .- nd some ofthem more dear are. interwoven we can ' I . . en the ban” thus re ardm us an thus plungmg m o P , unimpaired. No blame attacheds to him Eben. He 15 ‘1 ghgfigmgzigofilecfiom of the tempting driaught, which of been incapable under certain kinds of Sickness. 3" a g g ’ it. companion for Wise and goo men; ut no sooner , l“ . Thus the ditiou from our example, what should we say to time does his reason give Way than he is first slightly can- itself demands no borrowed sweets. T , , I I. ' when the 'oun and trusting . _ p . home" All theie, and tens of thousands of associations, faculties, and even cheering had the power of action been unimpaired. \ «in