i ER SE a ena Five DoLuars A YRAR, NEW SERIES —_ ——-——— Tus Datty EXAMINER 4 issued every evening, by The Examiner Publishing Go. From their office, corner of Water and Great George Strcvets, Charlottetown, Viince Edward Island. RaTES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, - ° ‘ $2 50 Three Vi mths, - : . 1 26 Unt ‘I nth, . . : 0 00 *- Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. ALMANAG FOR OCTOBER, 1883. MOCN 8 CHANGES, New Moon Ist day, lh, 41.8m., a. m. First Quarter, 9th day, 6h. 7.lm., a. m, Full Moon, 16th day, 2h. 32.9m., a, m. Last quarter 22nd day, 7h. 6.1m., p. m. “ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, - z - senemmecsinnee ~ —_— - . a tne ae seep. quvcneagieinseintcint oa a oSeemeneen- <a a ee CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY. 0€ HALIFAX & LONDON. THE w ALIPAX Ateam Navigation Company, (LIMITED) | will despatch the First Class Steamer OU LEE,” weather, etc., permitting, from London to Halifax, About 9th October, _ loading in Millwall Docks. Importers may now cable their shipping orders, and in all shipments of over 10 tons, the Company will deduct price of message from the freight. i The ‘‘Juliet” will sail from Halifax, to Church Directory, Charlottetown. Sr Pavu's (Church of Eagland) —Queen Square—Morning and Evening Service, SULLIVAN & MAGHEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, | NOTARIES PUBLIC, &e. OF FICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. Assistant Minister. Sr, Perer’s (Church of England)—Rochford Square—Sunday Services— $ a. m., LT a m., aud 7 p.m. Daily Services—Matine —9 a.m. Evensong--5 p. m., except Friday evenings, at 7.30 p. m. George W. Hodgson, Priest Incumbent, ' ttt min thant inline ceenesitinty ait oa having to advise the Public, may speak free.’’—Evxiriwes. every Sunday at Il a. m. and7p. m. | Sunday Sckool at 2.30 p. m:, Rev. David | FitzGerald, Rector; Rey. Chas. ©’ Meara, | a ae Ss TOBER 13, 1883, nied betapeice he aman 5 a The Classics in Education. i ' A PAPFK READ BEFOKE THE EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTE BY PROFESSOR CAVEN. Within the last thirty years, two notable attempts have been made to drive the Greek and Latin authors from th» position a-signed to them, through a long lapse of centuries, in the world’s educational . sys- Rey, ,tems., The leaders.of the earliest of these atiacks were men imbued with deep religious sentiments, and zealously alive to the spiritual interests of Christian students. They did not object to the study of the languages of Greece and Rome; on the contrary they admiited their para- mount exccllence in every plan of higher education. But their sense of propriety ‘was shocked to see groups of Christian youths frequenting the springs of Pagan literature, and assiduously quaffing their tainted waters. The plan proposed by these scrupulous men consisted in substi- tuting excerpts from the writings of the Greek and Latin fathers in lieu of the orators and historians of Greece and Rome and in exchanging the poetry of Virgil, Horace, Ovid and Tibullus forearly Christian writers and humanists of the Middle Ages. - a an a ng ee ie all Dax ov wunal Sum Se (Moon) figh | Daya yi?“ er Ss rises |sets | rises | water |len’h, 1] Monday 6 45 35) 6 610 40 About 25th October. 2) Tuesd 4 5' 33) 7 V7) 21! 3) Wednesday ” 31, 8 1@lLl 53 This is a gplendid oppartupijy of shipping +) Thursday 8| 29 9 14) morn goods to Paris, Bordeaux, and all parts of 5 Friday 9 27/10 11] 0 26) France, as the French import duties are not 6)Saturday 10, 25/11 5,1 2} exigible on shipments made by Direct 7|Sunday 12) 24|11 56/ 1 40.11 36 Steamers. 8| Monday 13 22 aft 43 . aa Apply to Cicero Brown, Havre; Westcott 9 Tuesday 15 20, 1 26) 3 18! & Lawrence, 9 Fenchurch street, London; C. 10; Wednesday | 16 18) 3 5) 4 28, Dwyer & Co., Pictou; W. H. Shanks, Char- ae tH + > 40} ° 7 lottetown, P. E. L, or to 2! Friday t ; 4 4 13 Saturday 20, 12] 3 43! 8 7! JOSEPH WOOD i4 Sunday ’ 21 10; 4 17} 8 57\11 04 Secretary 9) ’ 15| Monday - tsaeoe | 6) Bedford Row, Halifax, 16 Tuesday ee | «=| Halifax, Oct. 4, 1893 17, Wed nesday +6 5 ¢ abst 2 ee 18 Thursday 27 3 5 ae 19| Friday 25| 1/7 Salaft4o] | P, E. ISLAND eat 31'4 58] 9 87] 2 19|10 40 21 Sunday ' 3h ; 22|Monda 33} 56/11 113 9 St N g { (; y aMonday | $3) Sout ie DUCA «NAVIZatlOn Udy, 24'Wednesday | 35! 53] 0 7| 5 42 25' Thursday 37; 52) 1 8] 6 52 i 26| Friday 33} 50) 2 10) 7 49| 27|Saturday | 40 48| 3 10 8 a a) 2318 41| 6 2 Sentey 45! 5 10! 9 49) ie a ; : , 29) Monday oS - a STEAMERS ST, LAWRENCE AND 30 Tuesday 44] 446 910 23 : ty 2 : . 31|Wednesday '6 46] 42 7 71050! | PRINCESS OF WALES. ee ———— Prince Biward island nAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO ‘ ia sanei ao OY NOVA SCOTIA. ay On :"; Leave Charlottetown for Pictou Landing SL MMER ARRANGEMENT, |. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and — Saturday mornings, a' 7 o'clock, connecting 1) there with the Train for Halifax. Returning to To take effect on the 24th May, 1883. Charlottetown on Monday, Wednesday Friday — ——= =] and Saturday, about 2 p. m., on arrival of Train from Halifax, TRAINS OUTWARD. Leave Pictou Landing for Georgetown on (READ DOWN.) Thursday, on arrival of train at 2 p.m. a ie Leave Georgetown for Pictou Landing every Friday morning, at 5 a.m, SUMMER ARRANGEMENT, Commencing Wednesday, 16th May,1883, STATIONS, | EXPRESS, | MIXED. MIXED, inte NEW BRUNSWICK. CANADA AND THE Ch’town ..|Dp 6.45am)Dp 9.20 am! Dp 4.15p: UNITED STATES. Royalty Jc! ** 7.00 **; ** 9.55 “1 4.35 « : B Wiltsh’s * 7.25 “" “0, “62 * Leave Summerside every day (Sunday Hunter R’r| ** 7.45 ** , “411.06 * ‘© 5.40 ** |excepted) on arriva: of Train from Char- Bradalba’e | ** 8.10 ‘* | *11.46 “ ; “* 6.16 “ |lottetown, connecting at Shediac with Co’ty Line.| ** 8.15 ** | “11.56 “| * 6.30 “ | Trains for each of the above-named places ; Freetown | “ 8.26 “| “12.12pm; “ 6.45 “* | and at St. John, with steamers of the Interna- Keusingt’n ‘* 8.40 “| 12,37 “ a 7.08 ** | tional Company and Railway for Portland and s ‘side A* §.05 ** 'Ar 1.15 ** Ar 7.45 “ Boston, Also leaye Charlottetown for Sum- a Dp 9.25 “ |Dp 1.45 ** ? merside every Monday morning at 1 o'clock. Miscouche | ** 9.40 «| ** 4. Returning, leave Shediac every day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train from bt. John, tor Summerside, connecting there with Train for Charlottetown. Also leave Sum- merside for Charlottetowa every Saturday evening, about 5 o’clock, By order, : F. W. HALES, Charlottetown, May 15, 1883. Secretary, seach — BOSTON STEAMERS, a ] I Wellingt’n} ** 9.59 ‘* | ** 2. Port Hill. .' ‘*10.28 **; ** 3. Vleary...| “ALG * 17 6 Bloomtield | ‘11.38 ‘* | ** 5. Albertea,,, ‘‘12.03pm! ‘* 6.20 * Tignich... Arl2.40 ‘| Ch’town .. Dp 4.00pm) Dp 7.00am Royalty Jc! ** 4.15 “ ONE ocies |} $* 4.27 ** Bedford. ..| ** 4.40 “ Mt. Stew’t| ‘* 5.15 ** Morell....} ‘* 5.44 ** Si. Peter’s.| ‘* 6.04 **: Bear River! * 6.39 *} “Li.11 ‘| Souris ..../Ar7.10 “ | Arl2.00m Mt. Stew’t Dp 5.15pm ' Dp 9, 10am Cardigan,.| ** 6.11 ** | “10.33 “* Jeorget’n,.|Ar 6.30 “ |Arl1.00 “ TRAINS INWARD. {READ UP.) be ~ st eal Sef + oS STEAMERS: Carrell, 879 tons, Capt. Brown, Worcester, 885 tons, Capt. Blankenship STATIONS, | EXPRESS. MIXED, MIXED, | siicpiecoiad ies 3h’town ..| Ar 8.00 pm| Ar 3.45 pm} Arl0. 15am PASSENGERS will find this the Cheapest and most pleasant trip to Boston. Accommo- dations on both steamers are splendid. CARVELL BROS., Royalty Je|Dp 7.45 ‘* |Dp3.21 “Dp 9.55 * N \Wiltsh’e| * 7.11 “| “ 2.25 “| “* 9.04 “ Hunter R’r| “ 7.00 “ ; “* 2.08 ‘| “* 848 “ Bradalba’e | ** 6.36 *' | ** Pts i rer i siaila Oo'ty Line. ** 6.30 | “1.17 “| “ 7.57 *" | -\ WE of the above FIRST-CLASS STEAM- Freetown..| « 6,19 ** 1 ** LOL «| $ 7-42 * O RS will leave Kensingt'n} ‘* 6.04 ‘*| ‘12.37 ‘* 7.20 Summ’ side eh acai “1 6.45 “ Ar5.15 “|Arll.30am| =” h lotteta f B t Miscouche Dp5.00 ‘ |Dp 31.04** fF arid p Wh or 08 Ol Wellingt’n| “ 4.42 ‘| “10.35 “ Port Hill, .| * 4.13 “| 9.43 “ EVERY O’Leary...| ** 3.22 “ | “ .* . Bloomftield| ‘* 3.05 ‘* | ** 7. : ' ities a sé 2.38 ‘. se 7.15 “e THURSDAY AFTERKOON, AT5 P. M. Tignish...| ‘* 2.00 we «* 6.00 “ Ch’town ../Arl0.00am Ar 7.00 pm Royalty Jc Dp 9 45 * 6.37 ** York.....! * 9.33 **. ** 6.20 * Bedford... | «* 9,20 *! ** 6.00 ** Mt. Stew’t! ** 8.55 **| “ 5.20 * Morell....| “* 8.16 **| “* 4.15 ** AGENTS. > Fetes) | Lae al oman Ch’town, May 17, 1883.--pat her sj @ar iver ee 3 ‘ ‘ J ‘ Souris oui” : 6,50 “| ** 2.00 ilies a N - Mt. Stew't|Dp8 55 ‘* )Dp 5.20pm OLD BO S. Cardigan ..| ‘¢ 7.49 ‘| ** 3.27 * ee ee IGHEST PRICE paid for old bones, in JAMES CULEMAN, large ne delivered at John Superintendent. Newson’s Furniture Factory. e . Office; Charlottetown, May 21, 1883.) JOHN NEWSON, mew (ei. pres ier vam jr 6) Ch’town, Aug. [7,—om Barristers & Attorns js-at-Law, SOLICITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, OFFICES : geform Club Committee Rooms, Opposite Post Office, Charlottetown, P. E, Island, Merchantr’ Bank of Halifax Building, Sum- | merside, P, E. Island. i MONEY TO LOAN, on good security, at moderate wterest. Nei McLeop. Nov, 24, '82.—pres her L. ARTHUR & CO., GHN HERAL Commission Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. W. A. 0. Morsox. | ————— = Gas Money to Loan, W. W. Suntivan, Q. C. | Casstea B. Macnxie, | Rev. W. B. King, Assistant Curate. Jan. 16, ’83. St. Dwwnsran’s CarBEDRAL.— Low Mass GEORGE TWEEDY ae Renty at Sa. * High geese j . a m.; Vespers at 3p. m. ass at ” . 7.30 a. m. throughout Bihan First Meruopist ( nurcah—Prince Street— | ATTORNEY ie AT 2 LA Service and Sermon Sunday’s at 10.30 a. m., and 6.30 p. m. Sunday Schoo] at 2| a i Day Services—Tuesday and se ursdays at 7.30 p, m. Rev, John’ Notary Public, &. | Burwash, AM, Pastor. ‘S$xconp MerHopIst CHURCH—Prince Street— | sila ae mn i Service and Sermon on Sunday at 10,30 oQEETCR Wert Sie of une tee Cha] AI 6.50pm, Sanday Choa Inly 25. 1833 ‘hy “kd 6 =e Pp. m. Week day service on Wednesday | vlly <0, 1950.— dy Wkly Om cane Rev. J. W. Wadman, A. M., | j astor. MicLEOD & MORSON Sr. James’ Councu—(Presby terian)—Pownal Street.—Service and Sermon every Sun- day atlla,m.and6.30p.m. Sabbath : " School and Bible aus at 230 p. m. o ied P — ms ee ee Weekly Service in the Lecture Hall on dain ae red b th . 7 “she _ ld Wednesday evenings, at 7.45 p. m. Rev. | ee aa ,, wSae . ‘Gr pubs Kenneth McLennan, Pastor. /no more be the pure language of Greece or Zi Cuvrcu—( Presbyterian ) — Richmond Rome, than the dialects of Cornwall or Street.—Service and Sermon every Sun- Lancashire would be the English of Addison ~ » alla. m. and 6.30p.m. Sunday Or of Milton. The grievence was at best BO) at 2.30 p.m. Rev. John MeL. | sentimental one, and the danger eaid to d, Pastor. threaten morals from a _— studious By ogee javuKen—cor. Prince and Fitzrcy perusal of pagan literature was cer- ~ *'} —Services and Sermon every Sun-jtainly exaggerated. Works from the \/ @ ae 1) a. m., and 6,30 o’clock p.m) pens of Christian men - and women, ~ Sunday Schoo] at2.30 p,m. Week day, written in tongues that involve no laber at ' services—Monday at8 p, m.; and Fri- 'tranelation are far better calculated to inflict ad at 8 p. m. Rev. E, Whitman, 'more lasting injuries on morality than all _ Pastor. . _|the Pagan literature ever published. It is Bistge Curistians—Prince Street—Service 'in, dadte ' debatable: wiatake = ovat exalt and Sermon every Sunday morning at 10.90 a. m. and 6.30 p. m. Sunday | Ve are so zealously anyious for the benight- S ‘oo, ;ed heathen far away in his unexplored Pastor ee cee ee ee wilderness, that we forget the native Peayer Meeting in Y. M.C. A. every Sun- j heathens that are prowling about our own day afte: noon at 4 o'clock. | nore. ; baserries or Curist meet in New Church! The second body of assailants, who still House, every Sunday at 10.30 a. m. and from time to time renew their attack, are 6.30 p.m. Elders presiding. /more radical in their views than the first, | The one contemplated a change; the other aims at accomplishing a revolution. A mod- ified method of existence would lave con- tented the first; an absolute. eentence of ——————— —$— NEW GOODS. Classical studies, they say, should be driven Kggs and Produce a Specialty. | April 26, 1883.—wkly tt INSURANCE -CPPIGB.-.-com (ueen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, Lancashire Insurance Company CAPITAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptly and equitably. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Agents. Office—South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Sept. 15, 1882. CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED. R. O’DWYER, Commission and General Merchant, FOR SALE OF P, &. 1. PRODUCE. 289, WATER STREET, St. John’s, Newfoundland. In connection with the above ig Capt. English. who is well khaown in P. E. Island, who will take special charge of all consign- ments, and will also attend to the chartering of vessels for the carrying trade of P. E. 1, N. B.—Parties wishing io procure good Labrador Herring would do well to consult R. O'Dwyer. Sept. ll, 1883,—3i tawkwkly, STANDARD LIF@ ASSURANCE C0. T the 57th Annual General Meeting of the Standard Life Assurance Company, held at Edinburgh on Tuesday, the 24th of April, 1883, the following results for the year ended 15th November, 1883, were re- ported :— 3,038 new proposals for life as- surance were received the year for $ 9,754,085 38 2,561 proposals were accepted, assuring 7,239,048 13 The total existing assurances in force at 15th November, 1882, amounted to (Of which $7,753,031.15 was reassured with other offices) The claims by death which arose‘during theyear amount- ed, including bonus addi- tions, to The annual revenue amounted at 15th November, 1882, to The invested funds at same date amounted to Being an increase Juring she year of $6,936,302 91 2,462,226 59 4,267,546 00 29,503,416 00 1,062,648 35 JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown. THOALAS KERR, . inspector of ies. Ch tows, Auguit 3; ’ OCTOBER, 1883. from seats of learning, as their tendency is to absorb energies which would be more usefully expended on other pursuits. It Li t St haem indeed to be a fear with some, that al’ O6S 06 ‘young men preparing for the struggles of life, if introduced to classical studies, would follow the evil example of that Grecian youth, who was sent to fill his pitcher at the fountain, but neglected his task, and idled away his time, plucking the wild flowers that grew on his way. It is gratifying to the patrons of solid , earning to know that the individuals who 10 per cent. Cheaper speak and write thus, are in no ways formid- able, either in numbers or ability. I may, perhaps, best illustrate the spirit and drift of this band-of antagonists, by relating to you an old and well known fable. Once upon a time a fox prowling about in search of plunder, fell unexpectedly into a trap. The situation involved a loss of life or a loss of tail. Reynard, with a wis- dom born of necessity, preserved his life, and jeft his brush in the iron fangs of the Personally Selected unrelenting trap. With his life no longer >in jeopardy, our hero had leisure to esti- mate the cost he had paid for it. There was no concealing the fact—his fair propor- tions were sadly marred. His structure had by his accident come to a somewhat abrupt finish. Symmetry was in fact des- troyed—but what remedy was there! His cunning could suggest only one. He might perauade the great family of foxes to adopt the fashion of dispensing with tails, and so NEW Silks, EVER OFFERED, Mantles, Shawls, Cashmeres, Dress Plaids, Gloves, ee FULLY THAN LAST SEASON. Corsets, Skirts, Ribbons, Flowers, sTrocs IN THE BEsT Laces, ENGLISH HOUSES Millinery, an Mr. PATON. Feathers, Ornaments, ar cover up his misfortune. Big with the E idea, he forthwith called a meeting of the Buttons, THE foxes. Long before the hour for commenc- ing the proceedings, as the gentlemen of Ulster VERY BEST Y ALUE the press are wont to chronicle such events, 2 hall was filled _ meme oe | on illess hero rose to address the thronge Cloths, OBTAINABLE ve ; - assembly. He expatiated upon the ease Skirts and freedom he had enjoyed, since the loss ? of his tail. His egility, he averred, was T Guaranteed Our Customers greatly enhanced, and his fleetness much rimmings, improved. He regarded the secident which Fringes bia ana deprived him of his tail, as a 5 ORE: et ’ position of the Gods, to teach the race o : Dont Bu foxes how to better their conditions. Why, Winceys, y he exclaimed, should such ‘. a oN appendage be longer tolerated by the foxes Mourning Pee This was am age eben, cenepent oe to make way for utility. Tails may have been Goods, Inspect our Goods. regarded as both ornamental and useful in the half-lit ages in which our remote Crapes, ae ‘ancestors moved; but modern enlighten- ment discards such trammels, and insists Cotton, ALWAYS CHEAP. upon perfect freedom of action. Off then with your useless appendages and enjoy a Flannels, op ay freedom of which your ancestors knew nothing. A grave and elderly fox whose Tickings, Wholesale spirit of daring and adventure had been proved in a hundred hen roosts, with Warps, —AND— Spartan brevity, thus replied to the harrangue:—‘‘I am of opinion, my friend, Teas, eté. Retail ! tbat you would .never have thought of asking us to relinquish our tails, if you still had possession of yourown, or could by any means recover it.” It is exactly thus with the great bulk of those who cry out against the study of the classics. Their tastes or their talents have never given them the slightest mastery over the magnificent literatures of these ancient times, Ail that they remember is the irksome toil with grammars and dictionaries. It bred disgust and boyish prejudices have hardened mto manly antipathies, while they themselves are surprised that anyone should deem clasvical studies productive of any good whatever. They have no tail of their own, and would fain matilate everyone who has, The preposterous selfishness of such reason: ing is its best refutation, But that I may not appear semmarily to dismiss these opponents without granting WA. WEEAS & OO,, SIGN OF THE LION. GRAIN BAGS. LO,OOS 2& 3 Bushel Bags, JUST RECEIVED, LUWEST PRICES TO FARM*RS AND SHIPPERS. ss den 5 WEEKS & CO. ; you. é ea i banishment will alone satisfy the second. fee fs thiere in’ oe ——— Sryetk Copims Two CKNTS VOL. I3—-NO: 124 ja dead language! they ask. The occupation of students: engaged in such studies, they say, resembles that of the tamivhed doge which Byron’s Alp beheld’ gorging them- selves on the dead beneath the walls of Coriith.. It isa favorite position and one they seem to deem impregnable tu: charac- terise ;the Latin as a dead language, Yet had our oppcnents exerted themselves to acquire aceuracy, they would have found a territory lying between the esstern sphrs of the Carpathians and the waters of the Euxine, whose inhabitants in their speech still give unmistakeable evidences of their origin and perpetuate in the valley of the Daunbe the same grand old language that has made the Tiber immortal. Again there lives in Reme at the present hour a ruler whose subjects speak every langeage and dialect of a language known throughout the universe, Unbroken com- munication is kept up with these widely spread races, and the acts and decisions which regulate discipline and invigorate government are couched in that same language, in which the Roman Senate con- veyed its instructions to the Consul in command of ita legions in Pontus, or to the Governor who exercised its autherity on the remote shores of Britain. Again, when some years ago there as- sembled in the great Church of St. Peter’s at Rome, over eight bundred prelates from every nook and corner of the universe, the questions brought before them were all dis- cussed in that same language in which Cicero and Hortensius carried on their de- bates centuries ago; on the other side of the Tiber, below the Capitel. Nay more, shorthand writers took down the specches oi the different orators with the same ac- curacy that a reporter of the Times or Tele- graph would reproduce a speech of Glad- stone or of Bright. A language which ex- hibits such an amount of vitality as this, can never surely with any prospriety be called a dead languege. Further it would be an easy task for any- one moderately well versed in Latin to make his way, by its aid alone through Europe, and enjoy during his journey the pleasures of refined and learned soci ty. Philosophy and Theology in the continental universities of Europe are taught in Latin. The business of the classes is conducted in the same tongue, and if the language be seldom rigidly classical, it must always be at least grammatical. No one could possi- bly enter the Halls of these Lostitutions, and listen to the ahimated debates carried on by students and professors with a vigor and fluency that would excite wonder, and come away with the idea that Latin was dead. Look for.a moment at three great European langueges—the Italian, the French, and the Spanish—are these not beund. to the Latin by most intimate ties of kindred? The veriést tyro in languages may discover the close relationship while casting his eye over a printed page of each. So may you have observed sisters in every individual feature apparently dissimilar, yet the ex- pression, or if I may say it the atmosphere which lies over all, reveals a resemblance, which we recognise at once as dcrived from the parents. It is that species of resemb- lance, which little Paul Dombey, when dying recognised between his si:ter Florence and the lady who stood on the shore of that mysterious sea to welcome his boat, as it passed from between the green banks of the river on to the ocean, To what extent the classical element prevails in our own Enylish tongue may be gathered from the following rough estimate. “The greater part of the abstract terms in English, and words relating to religion. law, science and literature, are of Latin or Greek origin. Most words of three or more syllables are of classical origin, and a very large number of those of two syllables, the exceptions being mostly words formed by English suffixes from monosyllabic roots. Many monosyllabic words even are derived from Latin and Greek, the greater part having come to us through French,” I think I have said enough to show yon, ladies and gentlemen, that the classics so far from being dead or even torpid are still like sturdy trunks on which are engrafted the most vigorous languages of Europe, and from which they still draw a robust strength. Notwithstanding all this, how- ever, you will often ear men, who are re- garded for the moat part as enjoying a fair share of common seuse, regretting the years they spent in the study of the classics as so muny years wasted. They will tell you in mournful numbers and with rueful countenances, that after spending a weary amount of time on the study of Greek and Latin, they now find themselves unable to construe an ordinary Latin sentence, or name with certainty the letters of the Greek alphabet. Therefore they conclude all our labor has been in vain. Lam very much inclined to think that the man who reasons thus ought to be classed with those who believe in the witty Frenchman’s definition of gratitude, as a lively anticipation of favors to come. Because a man’s knowledge of Greek and Latin has not been to him an immediate and direct source of wealth, that therefore classical studies have in his case been il! spent time, is a proposition betray- ing not only rank ingratitude but a “great deal of oe bad logic. In develop- ing and training the human mind, modern authorities recognize two great agents langnage and mathematics By means of these the mind is developed, nurtured and enlarged. Itis in fact trained so that the pursuits of science, philosophy, literature and divinity can be its occupations if so required. Surely no one will say that the studies which fit a youth for these lofty pursuits will unfit him for the ordinary business of life. His mathematics and his classics have taught him how to apply his talents with advantage—he has learned to learn all he does learn accurately and with precision, and thus equipped he enters upon the battle of life. Is it to be sup- | posed, that the talents, with which that young man successfully wrestled with the ‘difficulties that beset him in his mathe- ' matical and classical studies, will not enable thems a earn T shall, lay some of their him to eae with comparative eae the onttiniad un fortrth pole. 5 & OT NT NE Ree AOE TRESS! MNES ee ere eee