Single Voice. Home! Home.—thy glad wave hath a tone of greeting, Thy path is by my home: Even now my children count the hours, till meeting. O ransomed ones, I come! Chorus. Go, tell the seas that chain shall bind thee never ; Sing through the hills that thou art free for ever; LESSON CLI. The Isles of Greece.-BYRON. THE isles of Greece! the isles of Greece! Eternal summer gilds them yet; ; The Scian and the Teian muse, The mountains look on Marathon, And, musing there an hour alone, I dreamed that Greece might still be free; For, standing on the Persians' grave, A king sat on the rocky brow, And men in nations;—all were his! And where are they? and where art thou, My country? On thy voiceless shore The heroic lay is tuneless now; The heroic bosom beats no more; And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine? 'Tis something, in the dearth of fame, For Greeks, a blush-for Greece, a tear. Must we but weep o'er days more blessed? What, silent still? and silent all? And answer, "Let one living head, But one, arise,-we come! we come!" 'Tis but the living who are dumb. In vain, in vain: strike other chords; And shed the blood of Scio's vine : Hark! rising to the ignoble call- You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet- The nobler and the manlier one? Trust not for freedom to the Franks- Place me on Sunium's marbled steep, LESSON CLII. Liberty to Athens.-J. G. PERCIVAL. THE flag of freedom floats once more Pours down its light around those towers, And once again the Greeks arise, As in their country's noblest hours; Their swords are girt in virtue's cause, Oh! may she keep her equal laws, While man shall live, and time shall be. The pride of all her shrines went down ; Her helm by many a sword was cleft: Where grew the palm, the cypress rose, And sounds redemption to the Greeks. It is the classic jubilee Their servile years have rolled away; LESSON CLIII. The moral Principles of the Bible of universal Application. -WAYLAND. We possess taste, which is gratified by our progress in the knowledge of the qualities and relations of things, which delights in the beautiful, and glories in the vast; and, also, a conscience, which is susceptible of affections peculiar to itself, upon the doing of right, or the commission of wrong; and these affections, so far as his history has been traced, have more to do than any other with the happiness or misery of man. Taking these facts for granted, it is not difficult to foretell what sort of intellectual and moral exhibitions will be most widely disseminated, transforming the human character and directing the human will. It is upon the supposition, that we may thus judge what will, in a particular manner, affect the human mind, that the whole science both of criticism and rhetoric is founded. I have said that taste is gratified by progress in knowledge of the qualities and relations of things, or by striking exhibitions of what is commonly called relative beauty. Hence the pleasure with which we contemplate a theorem of widely extended application in the sciences, or an invention of important utility in the arts. Now, it is found that the material universe has been so created, as admirably to harmonize with this principle of our nature. The laws of matter are few, and comparatively simple; but their relations are multiplied even to infinity. The law of gravitation may be easily explained to an ordinary man, or even to an intelligent child. But who can trace one half of its relations to things solid and fluid, things animate and inanimate? to the very form of society itself? to this system, other systems? in fine, to the mighty masses of this material universe? The mind delights to carry out such a principle to its ramified illustrations; and hence it cherishes, as its peculiar treasure, a knowledge of these principles themselves. Thus was it, that the discovery of such a law gave the name of Newton to immortality; reduced to harmony the once apparently discordant movements of our planetary system; taught us to predict the events of coming ages, and to explain what was before hidden, froin the creation of the world. Now he, who will take the trouble to examine, will perceive, in the gospel of Jesus Christ, a system of ultimate truths in morals, in a very striking manner analogous to these elementary laws of physics. In themselves, they are few, simple, and easily to be understood. Their relations, however, as in |