43—1850. | 
some of 20 and 50 and 70 and — and so on, up which 
a man with improving means might rise. And then 
in I need n 
t 
bot to the To of tħe moral an 
ave | 
is 
e en this objection amoun 
Iden of a d i 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
sensibilities, which, as they are the result of edueation, 
they do not poss say, misery may be none the 
it is unfelt; and he who is the most | 
£ 
8 
st advocate on their beh 
I have not time to 
and 
eir existence, — 
best, p * are guided 
to — may be a good 
m well aware that emigrate as 
numbers will increase just up to that > at which — 
standa 
cases, stop and think h how our conduct 
influences whole masses of people. And i 
erica or Australia paa — — do here 
s in our library works d t 
e; giving accounts of the value of 
pment in each, and the cost of travel- | 
we may, our 
la 
enge 
by which b he may 1 his 
mind of man 
dormant powers of which he is possessed. 
. rs 2 I have mid „to-night should enable an 
to see that there is ible for — 
way upwar — to por 
t should induce any one 
mise h 
iis mt to and nerve his resolution to o h! 
i 1 
p 
. And the education w e adv — ar eat — 
683 
ok the parts, 154 in their 5 i, anet tity. Baim bricks 
had not urn rly, o 
politician can erect ou 
se pieces t of 
them the perfect areh-— Arm, testa, and elegant—to whieh 
a well r 
—— nium 
do 
. — 
. | us — But let us not think that it i is to be th 
suceessive experie: 
Like all other growths, the mee wit be Pere Sere me by 
the continual a dition of atoms, and the man who — 
speechifyers. 
ind just as each of us improves, that all of us im- 
and so on; and i strongly advise you to 
close 
to 
I believe, in which neighbours can benefit or another, 
that is 
them they will be but little benefited. 
wa 
the most influential way of all, as 
lence | 
If b by — — 
cation of children we could only implant the aim at a as in 
ess] 
t.I have said should strengthen in any who | o 
have the means the desire to encourage those who 
ey would ——— so as to attain them. And it 
aà - 
there by intoxicating n Well then, — supposing 
that instea d of being thr rown into the sea , it had been 
depend upen h: that it is by their own eee is) im 
ut of —— wn exertions—that the 
— i — improved the — 
— l by any one else. And w 
see true — 
should man e, this will appear. 
jme t | pauper 
of an intelligent economy by the kape — is likely 
to work an amazing improvemen reumstanees. 
— this 1 must not enlarge. I hope for an 3 
r 
pate = societies and savings’ banks, 
I cannot avoid saying a word or two on the 
importance of right school educati =g 
is 
to 
our — — 
e 
talki 
just this—that — the step we have just success. 
fully — ll, in the very act of laborious 
* 
ed, you must 2 ame no one but yourself. Accept, 
, the offer of mental improvement or ae you 
get it; and give —— i i r you 
— It is in the — of individual effort, — 8 
self improvement, that we 
8 of a apni 
ge 
laid at the door of those who would preserv 
in their wretchedness. If, lat 
y are | lence, with — 
must lock for the men 
will riso, in the scale of excellence and happiness. 
That is the great lesson for each one 3 
mind. Our 1 on the one d 
ions to society on t — Our companionships and 
ur friendships, distract our attention from the 3 oe 
our innate | se lfishness makes us apt to forget the o 
—what a 
‘genso, he is solitary among me n, beyond all — aim 
epending on himself alone, ae, or falling for ever, 
according to his own will and conduct, with no posat 
bility of help, from friends or 2 or those who 
w surround him, and now o near. And he 
must also 1 vag wd, * of a 1 of persons, 
bound toge ong thies, on whom 
mutual in —— is not ely a positie, but an unavoid- 
able — $- $ 2. y whi these 
an influence, rises o 
f its members. Personal — amn and social 
relationships! the way to the two is 
labour after 9 for the. the sake of "being 
useful. 22 declare * — whether h 
gen bourer, w to life with “4 
ought ay for himself, — no 2. but — the attain- 
t of comfort and station, and respect for — 
0 
only by disinterested and unselfish behaviour —as 
found, who regained his wealth when he prayed for ` 
his friends, 
nom elee ectors, and exclude our intelligent workmen from 
* €e P. Ti i An p 
whic! 
ieh t o the 
th | landowner to the f a i capitalist to the labourer | 
the manufacturer to esman a 
es, 1 
9 
only ‘the . were 
classes stand e another— 
e consumer 
— — —— the great 
upon a right 
I admit t the great importance ot. hol idin ing a and 
1 remember our n erection and act so 
ct, an respect 
preserve our 
different ited a a and let us — orn 9 
whether 
and it take - paps — 
Ay — r patrioti country, or 
thropy towards all akeh y us n do all in our 
wer to recognise nise and to'stren engthen the sympathies 
and mutual interests, that are at the foundation of that 
social — — =a 8 A 
.* our 
1 would do awayan: much as possibie wiih those: 
distinctions b 
ty, they have so little 
power for good, M S. 
ishly — of one another. 2 should be glad if 
our law- makers were more in the hands mea the | 
8 —— this country than than it is. I would in this 
t destroying, or rather at 
2. 
differences and elass in 
terests, where national — 
I believe that elass 
ot being educated ; they being as 
into a a path, om urged along A ‘for that is all ti the ire 
means, as t who go to school ; but the path they are 
travelling — to poverty here, and misery hereafter. 
respect, already, i 
wealth or — power, or Archlag Ee cleo that is — 
ee pA aim 
—— — . — whieh gives wt ue to class by 
— — AND THE HOMESTEAD. 
estead. As we proceed thither 
re x machine power. 
of machinery to a human pra 
E should have a tendene 
h | hands y, that the steam engine should accom- 
1 f effect by a 
9 amount o minimum ex- 
penditure of power. 
e we 
It is the right edueation of the mind, and of the affec- 
tions, that is the desirable thing. | temporary about them, but in proportion to the wort are in the poe aa and there you s 
h re la living i me parts of this of their immortal part. But let no one think that w sans excell of mechanism fall — 
country, aud of Ireland, whose . is almost settling the relations of the different classes i n society | —specimens of workmanship such as — me- 
entirely one of the heir mi are a blank will put everything ight. Government may be chanic alone a e = ae you see going on 
Oh! what a pitifully vegetative life they wad, related to subjects, taxers to the taxed, those who make | corn threshing, ing, Beans je litting, Oats 
are surrounded by glorious sights and pleasant sounds | the laws to those who obey them, capitalists be | bruising, Barley grinding, sacks AEA — eutting, &. 
iN everything around them; but they know it net. All related to labourers, masters to servants, with absolu s was anticipated, you ee the hand pro- 
the tfully numerous abundant sow ice, and yet ety may tumble to pieces, and fitably employed, not a — nA — there 
Pleasure which a God of mercy has placed us in the anarchy ult out of it all, as it has done wi no h 0 is point; ; lately, a gentleman 
midst of, are shut = — res ng eyes, the ot; | monarchies, and „ and republics, enough before | who on an infertile heath has ake ubtedly arth at 
having ears, the ey h Every intelligent man now. The millennium of happiness for whieh we look, least four blades of Grass to grow where bu 
deplores their condition ; — they do not perceive it will not be the creation of politicians, whatever t „ has recorded that his bailiff, who lived © ae 
th And if any one tha t is an answer | in ent, whether a reform bill or a e „ by which | farm before this sort of machinery introduced, told 
to my whole complaint ; if any one sa t use they expect to aceomplish it — ion used to 6d. change out of 21, for a week’s 
the people are sleeping quietly, tho hey are in t f l that ev to be put right. | labour on that v arm ; may now justly 
midst of g ould not be awakened; Masons know this e ` — Se: e, as ; has ufer this gen sel a 6d. returned 
if any one says that 1 have not deseribed their condi- well said, may be tu „and brick laid 1 to | four times that sum, paid fer a week’s 
tion, so much as the ieh would be quent | brick most perfee tly, — — of the parts may be ow, ns pointed out, the us 
eould be i absolutely correct, t remove the centering and of the true or highest ox order of mechanieal movement cies 
misery whi nsequen 
— civeumstanees, if they mposed upon 
for that I am supposing them to be possessed of the 
ye 
arch hall tumble. The fault wasnotin the relations 
the prime cause of the efficiency and celerity of th 
— EIE TE 
