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any part of the world. Indeed, we have gotten all the light of Christendom, and we need no more. We have enough; we are wealthy in sacred knowledge. We may spend long lives in making ourselves masters of that vast treasure of sacred wisdom which holy men of great light have attained. May I comprehend with all saints the height and depth of this knowledge! May my God possess me of this treasure, and I am content. All this knowledge, to the greatest extent of the human limit, has been gotten and acquired over and over again and again. Like other science, to every generation it seems new, while it is only possessing the knowledge similar to our predecessors'.

Moreover, charity, union, and benevolence are peculiarly ornamental in the ministerial order. Let us cherish these amiable graces in ourselves and others. Let us be faithful. And the nearer we come to the solemn moment when we must render our account to God the Judge, the more may we be quickened and animated in the ministry; and think no labor, no assiduity too great, nothing too much to be done for the salvation of precious and immortal souls; nothing too much for the cause and kingdom of Him who hath loved us to the death. May you, holy brethren, "be strong in the grace which is in our Lord Jesus Christ." May the work, the pleasure of the Lord, prosper in your hands. May you be honored of Jesus to turn many to righteousness. And when the Chief Shepherd shall appear, may you receive a crown of glory which fadeth not away. Amen.

TO THE ASSEMBLY AT LARGE:

And now, my fellow-citizens of this independent republic, my fellow-Christians of every order and denomination in this assembly, and all you that fear God and hear me this day, give audience.

The Most High planted our fathers, a small handful, in this Jeshimon, and lo! we, their posterity, have arisen up to three millions of people. Our ears have heard, and our fathers have told us, the marvellous things God did for them; but our eyes have seen far more marvellous things done for us, whereof we are glad and rejoice this day. Should our ancestors look down from the high abodes of Paradise into this assembly, and attend to the things which we have been this day commemorating, methinks they might catch a sensation of joy at beholding the reign, the triumph, of liberty on earth. Hitherto has “ our bow abode in strength, and our arms been made strong by the hands of the mighty God of Jacob." And while, amidst the festivity of this Anniversary Election, we congratulate one another and our country upon the cessation of hostilities, and that, having fought the good fight, our warfare is ended, let us not fail to look through providence up to the God of providence, and give glory to God the Lord of Hosts, the God of our fathers, whom "let us serve with a perfect heart and a willing mind." Let us cultivate and cherish the virtues of the divine as well as civil life, bearing in mind that we are all hastening to that period wherein all the glories of this world will be swallowed up and lost in the glories of immortality. Be it our great ambition, our incessant endeavor, to act our parts worthily on the stage of life, as looking for and hastening to the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. May we be prepared for the solemnities of a far more august assembly than the most splendid assembly on earth. We are ardently pursuing this world's riches, honors, powers, pleasures; let us possess them, and then know that they are nothing, nothing, nothing. They serve a temporary gratification, evanish,

a Deut. x. 22.1

1 See p. 211, note 1.- ED.

and are no more. But we cannot be dissuaded from the pursuit. Death, however, kindly ends it. Let us think that we have two worlds to live for, proportion our attention to their respective interests, and we shall be happy forever. We shall then be prepared to shine in the assembly of the just, at the right hand of the Sovereign of Life. How glorious to bear a part in the triumphs of virtue, the triumphs of the Redeemer, in the last day of the great and general assembly of the universe! How glorious to make a part of that infinitely honored and dignified body which, clothed with the Redeemer's righteousness and walking in white robes, shall be led by the Messiah through the shining ranks of archangels, seraphims, and the innumerable hosts of the whole assembled universe, up to the throne of God; and, being presented to and received by the triune Jehovah, shall be seated with Jesus in his throne at the summit of the universe, to the conspicuous view and for the eternal contemplation of the whole intellectual world, as an everlasting monument of sovereign grace! "to the intent that now unto the principalities and powers in the heavenly places might be known by the church the manifold wisdom of God, according to the eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord:" to whom be glory in the church through the never-ending succession of eternal ages. AMEN.

a

a Eph. iii. 10, 11.

INDEX.

ABERDEEN UNIVERSITY, honors to Dr. ALLSTON, Washington, 461.

Mayhew, 46.

ADAMS, Charles Francis,

ADAMS, John, on Church of England,
xxx.; and Thomas Hollis, xxxii.; on
character of Dr. Mayhew, 44; on the
"molasses act," 112; account of the
council chamber, 113, 153; on the
stamp-act riot, 132; on sermons of
Dr. Chauncy and Dr. Mayhew, 134;
address to George III., vi.; reply of
George III. to, 149; on Duché's prayer,
219; of the Massachusetts council, 266;
on education, 337; on rebellion, 75,
251, 445; ambassador, 454; declaration
of independence, 554; "armed neu-
trality," 457; the future, 465; Austria,
465.

AMBOY, N. J., Lord Sterling at, 217.
AMERICA and England, unity of, iii., iv.,
vi., 116, 130–134, 143, 184, 185, 229, 230,
247, 265, 433, 455.
AMERICA, commerce of, monopolized
by England, 107, 111, 116; its course,
127; source of England's wealth, 127;
how affected by the Revolution, 136,
185, 189, 204, 206, 222; value of, 230;
increase of, 336; Hamilton's influence
on, 427; statistics of, 428-432; Dr.
Stiles's predictions of, fulfilled, 463;
first voyage to Canton, 463.
"AMERICA, the Book of," 115-117.
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS AND
SCIENCES, its establishment suggested
by Rev. Mr. Payson, 408.

ADAMS, John Q., on the American AMERICAN ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY, V.,
Revolution, xxix.

ADAMS, Samuel, clerk of House of Rep-
resentatives, 155, 173; rep. Boston, 182;
committees of correspondence, 191;
committee for relief of poor of Boston,
199; delegate to Congress at Philadel-
phia, 219, 251; governor of Massachu-
setts, 221; "The Adams," 221, 453;
Dec. Ind., 454.

ADAMS, Rev. Z., preaches to the min-
ute-men, xxxvii.

AFRICAN TRADE, "iniquitous," 431.
AGASSIZ, Louis, 164.

"ALBANY PLAN OF UNION," 126.

ALEXANDRIA, Va., generosity of, 198.

ALFRED, King, 334.

408.

AMERICAN ARMY, artillery of, 221; pat-
riotic, 327, 442; suffering of, 327; its
successes and defeats, 442-445.
"AMERICAN ASSOCIATION" of Con-
gress, 214.
AMERICAN COLONIES, poverty of, 123,
124, 127, 184; "not afraid of poverty,
but cisdain slavery," 193, 222, 224;
union of, 215, 255, 264, 327, 347, 445.
AMERICAN REVOLUTION, 463, 464.
AMERICAN STATISTICAL ASSOCIATION,
459.

AMHERST COLLEGE, 514.

AMPHICTYONIC COUNCIL, 422, 458.

ANARCHY, 206, 251, 253.

ALLEN, Rev. Dr. William, 180, 358, 479, ANDROS, Sir Edmund, 175—177.

492.

ALLIBONE, S. Austin, account of Hol-
lis, xxxii.; Critical Dictionary cited,
235, 461; his account of Alex. Hamil-
ton, 427, 490.

ANN, Cape, xx., 225.

APTHORP, Rev. Mr., "missionary," etc.,

100.

ARKWRIGHT, of England, 432.

"ARMED NEUTRALITY," the, 446, 457.

ARNOLD, S. G., "History of Rhode
Island," 306.

ASSISTANCE, writs of, 112, 113.

AUSTIN, Benj., 265, 351, 388.

Canada, 216, 217; excluded from par-
liament, xx.; "no bishop, no king,"
103.

BLACKSTONE'S "COMMENTARIES" in
America, xxvii.

BABSON, J. J., History of Gloucester, BLACKSMITHS, convention of, 194.

447.

BACKUS, Rev. Isaac, 182, 298, 299.
BACON, Lord, 334, 416, 424.
BACON, Rev. Dr. Leonard, 477.
BAILEY, Rev. Jacob, "missionary,"
etc., 100.

BAKER, Samuel, 351, 388.
BALTIMORE, patriotism of, 198; second
American voyage to Canton, 464.
BANCA, Florida, "armed neutrality,"
458.

BANCROFT, George, History of United

States, 131, 132, 138, 235, 459, 461.
BAPTISTS, the, 182, 218, 299.
"BARCLAY'S APOLOGY," Xxx.
BARLOW, Aaron, 253.

BARLOW, Joel, notice of, 486.
BARNARD, Henry, 461.
BARNSTABLE COUNTY, Mass., revolu-
tionary spirit of, 252.

BARRE, Col. Isaac, "sons of liberty,"
131; portrait of, 132; eulogized, 138;
his prophesy, 198.

BARRY, J. S., History of Massachusetts,
331, 358.

BARTLETT, Josiah, Dec. Ind., 454.

BOLLAN, tory letters, 167.
"BOOK OF SPORTS," 90.

Books on government in New England,
xxxiv.

BOSTON, England, tribute to John Cot-

ton, xxi.; name of, xxii.

BOSTON, N. E., chh. of, xx.; lawyers,
xxvii.; resists revenue laws, 112, 152;
council chamber, 113; stamp act,
120; poverty of, 124, 198; taxes, 126;
pictures of Barré and Conway, 132;
"massacre," 153; resolves, 154, 199, 218,
229; slavery, 182; assisted by "all the
colonies," 199; "Thursday lecture,"
188; "committee of correspondence,"
191; town meetings, 192; "port-bill,"
192, 198, 201, 213-221, 263; poor of, 221;
effects of Gen. Gage's treachery, 230,
248; evacuated, 265, 310; seamen of,
306; besieged, 325; foreign trade, 429;
first American voyage to Canton, 463.
BOWDOIN, 101; James, 156; councillor,
199, 265, 388; in congress, 251; Stiles,
453.

BOWDOIN COLLEGE, 101, 514.
BOWERS, J., of the council, 156.

BARTLETT, Rev. Wm. S., memoir of BOYLE, Robert, 489.

Bailey, 100.

BATH and Wells, See of, x., xvi.
BEADLE, William, deist, suicide, 502.
BELCHER, Gov., picture of, 154.
BELKNAP, Rev. Dr., 125.
BERKELEY, Dean, 408, 409.
BERNARD, Governor, 114; thanksgiving
proclamation, 1766, character of, 117;
his administration, 151–153, 180; tory
partisan, 165; his letters, 167, 179.
BEVERLEY, first cotton-mill at, 336.
BIBLE, the, political text-book, xix.,
262; "resolve" of Congress to import
20,000 copies, 327, 375; remarks on by
Dr. Stiles, 462; by Mr. Geo. P. Marsh,
462; Bible Societies, 462; Austria, 464.
BIGELOW, Timothy, 194.

BISHOPS, "no real danger" of them in
America, xxx.; Dr. Mayhew's opin-
ion of them, 71; plotting, 110, 192; in

BRADBURY, John, councillor, 156.

BRADFORD, Gamaliel, councillor, 156.
BRADFORD'S LIFE OF MAYHEW, 88,
103.

BRADSHAW, the tyrannicide, 97.
BRADSTREET, Simon, agent to England,
xxii.; portrait of, 154.
BRATTLE, Wm., councillor, 156,
BRAXTON, Carter, Dec. Ind., 454.
BRIDGEWATER, Mass., 358.
BRIGGS, Nath. patriot, 253.
BRISTOL-COUNTY COURTS interrupted
in 1774, 252.
BRITISH ARMY in Boston, 152, 165, 189;
effect of, 190, 199, 230; appeal to, 220;
the first to shed blood, 223, 229, 441;
at Concord, 236, 237; at Saratoga, 346,
347; at Bunker Hill, 441; successes
and defeats of, 443, 444.
BRITONS jealous of their liberties, 94.

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