INAUGURAL ADDRESS „ OF PRESIDENT YEOMAN S, ^^C CiasslUlljr? Book_ D ADDRESS DELIVERED IN EASTON, PA. AUGUST 18, 1811. ON THE OCCASION OV THE AUTHOR'S INAUGURATION AS PRESIDENT OF LA FAYETTE COLLEGE. BY JOHN W. YJEOMANS. [published by the board of trustees.] EASTON: T. M. D. FORSMAN, PRINTER. 1841, .5" The ceremony of inducting into office the Rev. John W. Yeomasts, A. M. as President, and the Rev. Charles W. Nassau, A. M. as Vice President of La Fayette College, took place in the Presbyterian Church, in Easton, Pa., on the 18th day of August, A. D. 1841, in the presence of the Board of Trustees, the Faculty, and a large audience ; on which occasion the accompanying intro- ductory remarks were made by James M. Porter, Esq., President of the Board of Trustees, to the President and Vice President, and the Inaugural Address was delivered by Mr. Yeomans ; and the whole is now published in pursuance of the unanimous request of the Board of Trustees. By Transfer- V i 6 1 32b INTRODUCTORY REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES, Gentlemen : — The Board of Trustees of La Fayette College have selected you to fill the offices of President and Vice President of the Institution. In making the selections they were guided, as they believed, by a just estimate of the qualifications you possessed for those stations, and the more intimate acquain- tance which they have since been enabled to form with you, has fully satisfied them that they have not been disappointed in their expectations. The learned and valuable citizen under whose charge the institution commenced its operations, and who presided over it for ten years, has been removed to another sphere of action, where, we have every reason to hope, his labors in the cause of sound morals, sound religion, and sound education, will be crowned with abundant success. He has left among us the savor of a good name, and to his indefatigable and untiring industry, in a great measure, is the institution indebted for the success which has attended her infant efforts. We believe that the times are propitious to the great work of education which we have in charge. The cause is steadily and rapidly progressing. The school master is emphatically abroad in our land. Public attention is fully alive to the sub- ject, and its course can never be arrested. It never retrogrades among a virtuous and energetic people. Our own good Commonwealth has done much for the ad- vancement of this cause ; but she has never reaped the measure of praise which is her due, for her efforts to educate and enlighten her citizens. The venerable and philanthropic law-giver who founded our Commonwealth and gave it his name, in the preface to his frame of government made in 1682, says: "Govern- ments, like clocks, go from the motion men give them, and as goveinments are made and moved by men, so by them are they ruined too. Let men be good, and the government can- not be bad ; if it be ill, they will cure it. But if men be bad, let government be never so good, they will endeavor to warp and spoil it to their turn. That, therefore, which makes a good government must keep it, viz : men of wisdom and vir- tue, qualities that, as they descend not with worldly inheritan- ces, mu£t be carefully propagated by a virtuous education of youth, for which after ages will owe more to the care and prudence of founders and the successive magistracy, than to their parents for their private patrimonies." And in the frame of government itself, he enjoins that the provincial council shall divide itself into four distinct and proper committees. — One of which shall be "A Committee of Manners, Educa- tion, and Arts, that all wicked and scandalous living may be prevented, and that youth may be successfully trained up in virtue and useful knowledge and arts." During the proprietary government, much was done to aid private enterprize and benevolence in the establishment as well of schools for the education of the poor, as for affor- ding the means of higher education to the citizens generally. Our constitutions have all contained strong injunctions on this subject, and our statute book is full of laws to carry them out, and making appropriations to academies in each county for preparing youth for the higher branches of learning. — Common schools have also been established, and in part, sus- tained from the public Treasury, wherever the districts are willing to accept them, and to the credit of our citizens be it said, that they have been generally accepted. Pennsylvania has now an University and seven Colleges in successful operation, and some twelve hundred of her sons pursuing a collegiate course. So that we have now the sys- tem in operation from the primary school up to the highest grade of scholastic instruction. To your care is committed that part of the work pertain- ing to La Fayette College, an institution originating in private enterprize, devoted to virtuous education, and sustained, to a considerable extent, by the bounty of the Legislature of the Commonwealth. In the full faith that this trust has been well placed in your hands, we commit these youth to your care and that of your associates, in an humble reliance upon Divine Providence for its blessing upon your labors, and in the hope that you may be enabled, in the great day, to produce many crowns as the evidences of your fidelity. ADDRESS. The occasion on which we are here assembled, has arisen from the progress of education in our country. It is a cheering indication that one of the purposes for which this nation has been reared, is in the way of accomplishment. The pre-eminent fitness of our social and civil organization to produce the growth and multiply the benefits of knowledge, warrants the agreeable persuasion, that to promote and enjoy a sound, thorough, and universal educa- tion, is among the higher purposes for which this nation lives. The occasion claims a statement of the true and fundamental principles on which education, in this and every other country, ought to be conducted. We speak and hear on this subject as citizens of the United States of America, and as citizens of the world. The occasion shall suggest our theme. It is not a mere opportunity for leisurely and sentimental excursions in the fields of literature. It is not a time for the gorgeous display of literary treasures. We are assembled to consult upon the vast and sacred interests of the human mind. And the exer- cise, although, as an inaugural solemnity, it be only a ceremony, entitles this intelligent auditory to a new and prudent impulse in the cause of education. To impart such an impulse shall be the object of my present effort; and if, by the statements of truth, the reasonings of sound philosophy, and the appeals of religion, I shall avail in any measure to enlarge the views and enliven the zeal of my fellow-citizens ( 6 ) in regard to this wide field of human labour, I shall neither spend my own strength for naught, nor waste the time and disappoint the expectations of my audience. It were superfluous to discuss, before such an assembly as this, the importance of education to the character, usefulness and happiness of individuals ; or its vital connexion with the real greatness of a nation. Little could be said on these branches of the subject, which has not been long since fully dis- cussed and settled by the intelligent citizens of this country, and adopted as an item of their certain knowledge. I therefore omit these matters of so frequent discourse, and raise here the serious and fundamental question — Whether education, in rela- tion to this life, be rather a means to an end, than the end itself? The end of man's existence, in the common phrase, is happiness. But the proverb which represents happiness as the distinct aim of all human action, involves the whole theory of intelligent and moral life in difficulty. On the threshold, we are always met by the inquiry — What is happiness ? And until this question shall be settled, men must be presumed, in their search after happiness, to pursue they know not what. The present life of man is a progress of existence ; a process of formation for a fixed and unchanging state. The final cause of his being does not respect himself. Although his life answers himself some invaluable purposes, it is not for those purposes that the life was given. Though he justly counts his life a blessing, it is not for the sake of the blessedness that he is caused to live. The purposes of his ex- istence respect the Creator. " Thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure they are and were created." And if, in consulting his own pleasure, the Creator has made happiness only incidental to his work, will he not account it a departure from his ( 7 ) plan, to hold up man's enjoyment as the object of his being? It seems better philosophy to say, that man was made for his Maker's pleasure ; that he does his Maker's pleasure by the right operations of a moral intelligence ; and that to encourage and facilitate those right operations of a moral intelligence, there is subjoined to the rational and moral nature, the susceptibility of happiness in the operations them- selves, and in their results. It is therefore worthy of serious inquiry, whether this axiom of our philoso- phy be true, that the faculties of our nature are formed for the sake of the happiness attending or following their operation. The all-comprehensive relation of man, is his relation to the Creator ; and it is when we begin rather with his duty than with his happiness, that we seem to reach the most satisfac- tory solution of the problem of his being. That a man is most happy in or after doing certain things, shows that he was formed to do those things ; that rather by doing the things than by the pleasure of doing them, the end of his being, as to those doings, is attained ; and that the Creator is ultimately glori- fied rather by the deeds than by the happiness. The happiness may be, in his esteem, only as a tint of the beauty displayed by the perfect developement of virtue in the deeds. Suppose, then, we here begin : Man's highest en- joyment in a given course, points out that course as his bounden duty. Since he finds the purest and liveliest pleasure in the exercise of right affections, and the doing of right deeds, it follows that although he might never know a verbal precept enforcing the obligation, he might feel himself bound by the law of his nature, to keep the affections and do the works of love. Now, among the phenomena of human nature, there is no plainer fact, than that the mind of man enjoys a state of cultivation; and that the highest degree of such enjoyment is not only suitable, but ( 8 ) eminently conducive to the perfection of the soul. This fact is undeniable; and equally undeniable is this doctrine which it teaches : That every human mind ought, in this life, to have the highest attainable cultivation. And the right order of pursuit is rather the perfection by means of the enjoyment, than the enjoyment by means of the perfection. It is not a philosophical account of virtue, to sup- pose that a man does right, for the pleasure of doing right. It vitiates virtue so to represent it. It does not faithfully describe the order of the agent's own mental exercises. He does right from a sense of right ; and his pleasure proves that his feelings agree with his obligations. To suppose the man does right for pleasure only, admits the suspicion that, if he could, with equal pleasure, he would as readily do wrong as right. But this would violate his nature in more respects than one ; and the argument from happiness, although a natural and strong, may not be the chief, persuasive to well-doing. Apply this prin- ciple to the subject of intellectual improvement. That the ways of mental cultivation are pleasant, is one of the proofs that all men ought to walk therein. And we are now to commend, not the pleasure, but the obligation. In persuading men to seek know- ledge for the happiness of knowledge, we must first prove to them that the way of knowledge is the only way to the highest happiness; and to prove this to ignorant people is not an easy work. But from the pleasure which every man, at times enjoys in his better mental exercises, he may infer the fitness and the design of his intellectual powers not only for such exercises, but for better still ; and from that inference to the duty of improving the understand- ing, the transition is natural and short. The best exercise of the intellect is a part of the proper em- ployment of man,, and the certain pleasure of this employment, proves it to be one which every man is formed to follow. ( 9 ) It is matter of common observation, that mental cultivation is sought rather for the sake of its inci- dental and remote advantages, than for its own sake, as an acquisition of the mind. It is the errour of our country, perhaps of our age, that education is re- garded as a means of wealth or of power. The re^ wards of professional service invite to the pursuit of so much education as is indispensable to the chosen occupation ; and for these emoluments the requisite number of youth are found to improve the offered facilities for the needful education. But in what esteem do they hold the improvement of the mind itself? Perhaps ambitious, they wish to be educated for pre-eminence. Perhaps avaricious, they covet learning as a means of gain. Perhaps indolent, they choose to get a living, as some express it, rather by learning, than by work. Or they have ample means for expensive preparation to shine in the sphere of superiour refinement, and they count a de- cent education becoming to their rank, and conducive to their destined social elevation. Take from the number of our scholars all who seek education from motives of ambition, covetousness, indolence or pride, and the remainder, we fear, would be small. If the friends of education conduct their praise- worthy efforts, with exclusive regard for other ends besides the character and condition of the educated minds, they will be liable, from defects in their plans and aims, to leave their education defective in its accomplishment. Our popular theory on this sub- ject, ought to be carefully revised. And although correct principles might not find, in the present state of our country, a ready and perfect application, they always claim a prominent place in the system we propose and recommend. Suppose it to be true that public sentiment, or the character, or any cir- cumstances of our people, resist the plan of educa- tion which the true philosophy would recommend ; yet let our theory be right ; and if we educate but 2 ( io ) in part, let our work be imperfect only in extent; and let our partial education be to a complete one, strictly as a part to the whole. Let us begin our course in a right direction; and then, when the breeze of circumstances favours, it will quicken our progress towards the desired haven. While, therefore, I propose to state the theory of education suggested by the constitution of the mind, and commended by the common sense and expe- rience of mankind ; and while I shall not be sus- pected of extravagant expectations respecting its immediate adoption, I will not conceal my hope that a propitious change is at hand. The present state of our country favours the correction of some practical errours, the inconvenience of which is be- ginning to be felt. It is one of the plainest and most simple truths pertaining to the nature of the mind, that cultivation is demanded by its constitution. We judge thus, because rational exercises are, to all minds, a plea- sure ; because they are so irrespective of either immediate or remote results, and because the mind spontaneously exercises itself upon the objects of its knowledge in the best manner admitted by its degree of cultivation. Intellectual exercise has a pleasantness in itself, which is a quality or property of the exercise, and not separable from it in the view of the mind. The understanding has a constant propensity to action without other motive than the action itself. As the healthy muscular system often moves by what seems an intrinsic property of its life, and not by any consideration of results, so the mind rejoices in its appropriate activity; and the more, for the greater expansion, harmony, clearness and strength of its operations. It delights in an easy and wide command of knowledge ; in seeing things as they are, in their inherent properties, and their mutual relations ; in forming its judgment with truth, and maintaining an intelligent confidence in its own justness of conception and reasoning. The supposition that the mind always contem- plates some result of its own improvement, distinct from the improved state of its own exercises, dero- gates from the dignity of intellect, and imputes to its operations a sordidness unwwthy of its nature. The great charm of the mental exercises, whether of thought or of feeling, is what may be called their disinterestedness. Observe a person in conversa- tion. If he proceeds with evident pleasure from social affection, if his words and thoughts appear like the overflowings of lively and happy feeling, he appears in a proper and amiable character. But suspect him of seeking any thing not embraced in the exercise itself, and coldly consulting a benefit distinct and remote from the present employment, and you regard him with displeasure. Disjoin the motive from the exercise, and you take away the beauty of the scene. The social formalities move by constraint, and the chillness of a heartless me- chanism pervades the whole. Unless the social in- tercourse of men is prompted and pervaded by the social affections, it offends. The spontaneous im- pulse, immediate, without calculations of remote advantage; the speaking of the mouth, not from the frigid suggestions of reason, but from the abundance of a heart chastened and regulated by reason ; — these are the properties of all social exercises, which are regarded as true, lovely, and of good report. Let the intellectual exercises be judged by the same rule. All minds are susceptible of cultivation, and all minds rejoice most in their best exercises. The alternative now before us is, that the mind be educated either from regard for the state of cultiva- tion, or from regard to a derivative benefit. Sup- pose we adopt the latter, and let the object of edu- cation be wealth. Nature herself teaches the doctrine of our Saviour, that a man's life consisteth notin the abundance of the things that he possesseth. ( 12) Material treasures in themselves, as an object of affection, can afford the mind no satisfaction. Affec- tion placed on worldly goods is misplaced, and per- verted. The man with such an affection is miserable. Miser is his name. And while the strongest pro- pensity of the mind is towards the treasures of this world, it reveals its incongruity with the mental constitution. Man was formed to use these treasures, but not to love them supremely. They are not the good to which the intellectual powers of man are to be subservient; but they are a part of the means of obtaining the chief good of the mind. It is no more manifest that man was not formed to breathe pure oxygen, than that he was not formed to seek worldly gain, honour, or pleasure, as the end of mental im- provement The perverted affection fixed on such an object, disturbs the harmony of the mental ex- ercises, makes the pursuit of improvement irksome, misleads the mind's activity, and often defeats its own ends. There is a kind of desire for these things belonging to man's nature. He has proper and important occasion to use them. They are intended to promote some inferiour ends of his existence. But that natural desire for them, which will prompt him to secure them in due measure, and by proper means, is the only affection for them, consistent with the dignity and happiness of the man. To make these the end of mental cultivation, deprives the mind of its dignity, and overlooks the prime and pure motive of all just efforts for education. Since knowledge and cultivation are agreeable to the mind, we judge, that such degree of know- ledge as will afford most pleasure, is the nearest to the mind's perfection of intelligence; and that such state of cultivation as will render the exercise of conception, reason, and taste most agreeable to the nature of things, and to our own feelings, is the near- est to a perfect state of mental discipline. The mind begins its existence in an infancy analo- ( 13 ) gous to the infancy of the body. It is created in a rudimental state. Its powers are to be drawn forth and trained by a treatment suited to their nature. Its capacities, its susceptibilities, its character, in- tellectual and moral, are developed by degrees. And this, so far as we know, is a law of all earthly life. The body in its growth must have nourishment, its proper exercise, medicines for its diseases, and due protection against violence; and as for its train- ing, who justifies any other education for the body than that which tends to what is regarded as bodily perfection ? The mind is formed by a process analogous to that of the formation of the body. None of its powers are perfect at first ; but by nourishment, exercise, remedies for its disorders, and protection from injury, it must reach its perfec- tion. This is the work of education. The human soul begins its life under a process of education, which is in some form to continue through the term of its earthly being. What then is the work of education ? This ques- tion relates to the whole life of the mind in the present and the future state ; and brings before us the chief points with which we are now concerned. In relation to the nature and objects of education, for the purposes of the present life, the views of men are governed by the leading passion. If wealth be the man's chief earthly good, the acquisition of wealth will be, in his view, the end for which he will educate either himself or his children ; and the education he selects will be just such, in kind and degree, as will, in his judgment, render his occupa- tion most lucrative. It is plain to all observers of the course of things in our country, that the cause of education is extensively controlled by a regard for riches. The education selected for the majority is that which will cost least and gain most. As to the kind : Is the person destined to live by (14) agriculture ? The kind of education for him is sup- posed to be such as will most aid his tilling of the ground and getting most money for his products. He must be, soul and body, a farmer. The standard of his mind's perfection is adjusted to his temporal occupation. The benefits of education to his other relations, are forgotten in the absorbing qualifications of the farmer. The knowledge and discipline which would fit him for any other sphere, would be superflu- ous. The brief term of the business portion of his life, and the kind of business which is to yield his body a livelihood, determine the studies for the improve- ment of his mind. The employment which is to occupy the working portion of each four and twenty hours, in the working days of the week, during the working season of the year, fixes the land-marks of his intellectual course. The pretext of a provident and lucrative industry devours the substance of his resources, and leaves for his hours, days and months of leisure for mental improvement, only the crumbs which fall from the table of his avarice. Hence, as to the branches of learning: To read, and write, and cypher to the rule of three, are indispensable accomplishments, even for the farmer. The importance of these branches is thought to be self-evident. Yet, if I mistake not, it needs a little argument to prove it; and that little argument is precisely the same which recommends all the branches of a complete education. These accom- plishments are called indispensable, and in a high sense they are so. But why ? The mere ability to write one's name, or to read the signature of one's neighbour, or to write or read a note of hand, no more promotes the art of sowing or of reaping well, than the ability to produce a piece of elegant lite- rature. The art of reading news and advertise- ments no more helps the strength and skill of the farmer, than the free command of the literary stores of all the languages. Why then are these arts ( 15 ) indispensable ? The secret is, they are convenient ; and that for purposes not embraced in farming itself* but pertaining to sundry relations of the man. Then, how can it be shown that the farmer would not find his convenience in understanding botany, and mine- ralogy, and geology, and chemistry. It is a very plausible presumption, that one who has so much to do with seeds, and plants, and earthy compositions and decompositions, would find such knowledge especially convenient. It is not so easy,, as some may imagine, to designate just that kind of education which the argument from convenience, would re- commend for a farmer, short of a general discipline in all the sciences. As to the degree: What shall be the measure? By what shall we determine how much knowledge or mental discipline of any kind, shall serve the necessities or the convenience of a given occupation? How extensive a knowledge of language, or of the intellectual discipline acquired by studying language., might serve a man in obtaining the most perfect knowledge of his art ? How much is the least that will make him as intelligent in the means, methods and results of his industry, as he might be? How much mathematical science is the most that a far- mer can employ with pleasure and profit in his occupation ? How little philosophy is the least he can do with, and how much is the most he can profitably use ? Point out the bounds of the prac- tical utility of education to the industry of man ; for until these bounds are clearly shown, it is presump- tuous and perilous to measure our intellectual necessities by what seem to be the calls of the tem- poral occupation. For the mere purposes of money-getting, then, the kind or degree of education short of the highest, and applicable with advantage to a given occupation, cannot be clearly defined. The saving, even in dollars and cents, by limiting the mental cultivation? ( 16) is too uncertain to be our guide in the solemn work of training the rational and moral powers of man. And from our different temporal pursuits themselves, we have this argument against the prevalent depres- sion of the standard of education. But the education of the human mind, for only the present life, has to do with yet higher things than these. The body is not the man. The life of the body is not the life of the man. The com- fort and perfection of the body may be fully provid- ed for, and yet the man may fail of the chief earthly end of his being. Or the body may live in com- parative privation, and yet the chief ends of life, as to this world itself, may be accomplished. Think of the exalted nature of mind; its capacities, its susceptibilities, and its certain destiny; and how can we doubt that the chief part of its design, is to be sought in the cultivation and exercise of its own powers? The higher pleasures of man's earthly life, flow in the channels of clear and well directed thought. This principle shines in onr nature like a beam of light. The sound mind enjoys thought. Exercise is its pleasure ; and the degree of the pleas- ure is as the degree of mental cultivation and intel- ligence. Let men be educated in the habit of clear and just thought, then furnish them with knowledge, and their happiness will largely spring from their own intellectual exercises. To say nothing here of the results, either temporal or everlasting, of this mental employment ; if the workings of a disciplined and enlightened understanding are delightful, ought not those workings themselves, to be provided for by education? Ought they not to be the object of education? Is not their blissfulness the internal evidence, that the mind was formed for such opera- tions, and that it can accomplish, by no others, the end of its existence? And this is an object worthy of the mind. Is it not worthy of a rational and moral nature, to prepare to enjoy itself; to be hap- ( 17 ) py at home ; to find occupation with its own resour- ces; to make its own intelligence and reason, a river of life to its feelings? And whatever ends of its existence, out of itself, may arise from its rela- tions to either its maker or its fellow-creatures, — will not those ends be, in all respects, best fulfilled, by means of its own best states and exercises? Such facts amount to a virtual demonstration, and the only one possible, from the constitution and course of nature, that the highest attainable degree of knowledge and discipline is due, by the law of nature, to every human mind. Let us turn, however, to other considerations per- taining to the present life. The relations of every man are manifold ; and no one of these relations can be a just gauge of his education. The farmer is not a farmer only. The mechanic is more than a mechanic. And the interest of his temporal occu- pation alone demands, in his economy of life, only an inferiour regard. That farmer is the head of a family, and to feed and clothe the members of his family, is the least he has to do as their head. He must nourish and train their minds ; and to do this, he must understand their nature and their interests; the relations as well of the mind as of the body. That farmer is a member of a social community, to which he owes the issues of a cultivated understand- ing and a pure heart; to whose improvement he ought to be a perpetual contributor, and to which, if he would receive freely from it, he must freely give. That farmer is a member of the civil society; whose government he is bound to understand, uphold and obey; whose interests are, in a measure, com- mitted to his care ; for whose well-being he is, in his degree, responsible, and whose destiny he in part controls. Of the man's earthly relations, these are the highest ; and in them reside the strongest of the temporal motives for his complete education. When is that man furnished for the temporal pur- 3 ( 18) poses of his life ? Is it when he is qualified to till the ground, to ply his mechanical art, to buy and to sell ? Be it so, that the different occupations of men require different kinds and degrees of education. Have not all these persons a common circle of re- lations? The common labourer may need less knowledge of a particular kind, to work his simple tool, and to earn his daily wages, than the lawyer to manage his causes, the divine to teach the doctrines and enforce the duties of religion, or the statesman to appoint and execute the forms of wise legislation. But as the head of a family, the builder of a house- hold, a constituent of the social community, a citizen of a free country, and a supporter of popular govern- ment, he requires intelligence and cultivation equal with those of the statesman or the divine. Here every man should be a statesman in wisdom as he is in responsibility. He has personal concern with the government of his country. The most profound and vital questions of state are to be decided indirectly by his vote, and on his influence over the councils of the nation, depend the security and the value of his own capital and industry. Shall such a man be ed- ucated only for the farm, the shop, or the counter ? Intrusted with his own welfare, social, political and religious; and unavoidably concerned with the wel- fere of his fellow-citizens ; a citizen of a nation whose interests are implicated in the policy of every nation on the globe, and whose prosperity depends on the Intelligence and virtue of all the people; a director of a government formed and modified by the people themselves; shall he be educated with no regard whatever to these great affairs ? Between his pri- vate pursuits and his public relations, there is indeed an immense inequality of importance; and our solemn question is, whether it be in the mould of his private pursuits or of his public relations that his understand- ing shall be cast. Against these reasonings as against all true and ( 19 ) legitimate arguments for the reformation of mankind, we have the objection of practical difficulty. There Is the stubbornness of intractable understandings to which our theory yields no indulgence. There is the costliness of education compared with the means of the majority. There is the immeasurable dispropor- tion between the powers of ignorance to be subdued and the supposect powers of knowledge to conquer. There is the seeming mutual repugnance between sundry manual employments and the tastes of culti- vated minds. These difficulties, and others of their kindred, are formidable ; they will discourage and retard improvement which they may not finally pre- vent. But they dwindle before the consideration, that most intellectual intractability stands in a pre- judice fostered by prevalent ignorance, and want of mental cultivation themselves ; that the costliness of a commodity is commonly as its rareness, and not in- directly a result of it; that in well-concerted and resolute expeditions of knowledge against ignorance, one chases a thousand, and two put ten thousand to flight; and that necessity may always be trusted to reconcile the highest cultivation of mind, to the low- est useful employment, — even if such reconciliation were not an effect of true mental refinement itself! We are not required to distrust our arguments for education, on account of their looking towards mea- sures now impracticable, and towards results beyond all present expectation. Our obligations contem- plate not such undertakings alone as are immediate- ly practicable. We are accountable for the begin- nings of good enterprizes to be finished by our suc- cessors; and if we establish principles which are true, and unchangeable, we may discharge our duty, al- though it should be the work of other, nay, of all coming generations, to carry those principles out. We may assert, therefore, with the greatest assu- rance, that the principle of educating a man for only his temporal station, requires nothing less than that ( 20 ) every individual should be educated well; that all should be disciplined to clear, logical, and habitual thought ; that the relish for intellectual occupation should be awakened in every mind ; and that all should have the means of knowledge within their reach, and feel the proper motives to improve them. But the great argument for education is drawn from the life to come. There is strong probability that the intellectual character of the human soul in the world to come, will be forever affected by the education here. For, first, the necessity of education is not a result of the fall of man from righteousness ; and is not re- moved by the spiritual renovation. It is not because the race of man is a fallen race, that every individual is born in infancy, and comes to his perfection by de- gress. Nor does any moral change in this world su- persede education for any of the purposes for which education is ever required. The infancy of under- standing is entirely compatible with moral purity. The mind needs aid in its developement, not on ac- count of its moral infirmity, but from the dependence of its nature. The necessity of education belongs to man as a human being, not as a sinful one ; and what- ever be the spiritual process of clothing the mind with the heavenly perfection, it cannot be supposed to involve a miraculous preparation of the intellectu- al powers for their most harmonious and effectual operation hereafter. No hint of such a change ap- pears in the scriptures, nor in any known conditions of the heavenly blessedness. And, secondly, the revealed connexion between the present and the future state of the mind, strengthens the probability that the different degrees of intellectual discipline in this life create everlast- ing distinctions of mental character. We have a suggestion on this point from contrast- ing, in a single particular, the mind with the body. The body betrays a nature incompatible with im- (21 ) mortality. Its present phenomena raise frequent and perplexing questions, concerning the true theory of its future state. They so disagree with our notions of the future life, that with respect to the everlast- ing condition of the body, they surround us with difficulties,, insurmountable except by the supposi- tion of some essential preliminary change. The grades of earthly perfection in the body, are no approximation towards an immortal constitution. But this material organization, before it can reach a changeless, indestructible state, must be re-formed. It must be sown a natural body, it must be raised a spiritual body. The system of corporeal agencies and susceptibilities, in the human constitution, is to be transformed and modified, to correspond with any scriptural and philosophical intimations of the future state. But the mind suggests its immortality by its very constitution and operations here. It needs no change to fit it for an endless being. Its present nature and organization raise no difficulties in our theory of its future life. It is as fit for existence in a spiritual world, as in a natural. For even, here, a large and most important portion of its exercises, have no connexion with matter as their source or support. And its imperfections themselves, so far as they con- sist in a limitation of its powers, are not only adapted, but destined, to exist forever. Now, that all human understandings will be placed, in the future life, on the same level of power and excellence, we ought not to take for granted. — Analogy favours the opinion, that the results of in- tellectual discipline are everlasting. And while we follow that only guide in this matter, we may observe, that no analogy will help us to obliterate from our views of the future state, the most familiar intellect- ual distinctions. The different orders of created understanding, will never be assimilated to each ©ther. The angel and the man will never be con- (22) founded. If any point in the doctrine of our immor- tality is settled, it is that man will forever be man; that the general laws of mind, which govern our experience here, will prevail in our experience here- after; and hence, that one human intellect will for- ever differ from another human intellect in glory. And what intellectual distinctions can be more confidently expected to exist forever among men, than those which result from education in this pre- paratory state ? What distinctions are worthier of everlasting preservation than they? There is the superiour self-command., and the expansive and har- monious movement of the intellectual powers ac- quired by rigorous discipline; there is the capacity of perceiving and enjoying the remoter relations of things, of higher views of the beauty and sublimity of mind, and especially of the intellectual and moral glory of God. Shall all such noble fruits of mental industry here, be merged in undistinguishable uni- formity of character hereafter ? We dare not assert it ; but rather presume, that along the course of the mind's unending progress, will run the traces of the earthly discipline, to graduate the intellectual glory of the soul, and fix its place in the ranks of light and power. It contravenes no revealed law of the divine administration, to suppose that the degrees of intel- lectual perfection among the spirits of just men, made perfect, will depend upon education here ; and that only to him that hath a disciplined under- standing, will be given the everlasting benefits of it. Indeed, this view seems so agreeable to some notable rules of future retribution, that it can scarcely be regarded otherwise than as just and true. We cer- tainly know one respect in which the future state of the mind is determined by the discipline of the present life. There are forever distinguished among the heavenly throng, those who come out of great tribulation, and whose peculiar experience here, ( 23 ) worketh for them a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. It is the discipline