42 STEPPES AND DESEETS. 



the rivers, carefully efface with their hands the traces of their timid 

 footsteps. Thus man, in the lowest stage of almost animal rudeness, 

 as well as amidst the apparent brilliancy of our higher cultivation, 

 prepares for himself and his fellow men, increased toil and danger. 

 The traveller, wandering over the wide globe by sea and land, as 

 well as the historic inquirer searching the records of past ages, finds 

 everywhere the uniform and saddening spectacle of man at variance 

 with man. 



He, therefore, who, amidst the unreconciled discord of nations, 

 seeks for intellectual calm, gladly turns to contemplate the silent life 

 of vegetation, and the hidden activities of forces and powers ope- 

 rating in the sanctuaries of nature; or, obedient to the inborn im- 

 pulse which for thousands of years has glowed in the human breast, 

 gazes upwards in meditative contemplation on those celestial orbs, 

 which are ever pursuing in undisturbed harmony their ancient and 

 unchanging course. 





