ru . . Worn;. 3 V ' added to the consumption of a your would produce a famine i it nearly every country in the world, and the cessation of labor for tlve years would leave the world in bankruptcy and want. Industrial labor is the only safe Kgrarian law of society ; it is ever elevating the lower classes and re ducing the idle; it fixes a period to all monopolies, and places salutary checks upon them in partial and limited opera tion Labor then becomes a universal dm ty; to reject or neglect which is incontro vertible evidence of imbecility. Mine, I)e Slael once answered a gentleman call cr, who found her surrounded by proof sheets, music, musical inslru.ncnts and the like, and who said, "How is it possible to attend to all these at once?" "Oh, these are not what I am proud of, any lady can do these, but what I do value myself for is that I have no less than seventeen diller ent trades by any one of which I could earn my living by my hands, if neces sary." How much more honorable is such i boast than that of a great many young mie.) who are proud of their ignorance of the simplest household duties, ami who in unfortunate emergencies would be obliged to go hungry in the midst of plen ty for tin; want of requisite knowledge. So marked are the evil effects of idleness, that many saying1- illustrating its injur iousness have been promulgated, ami their authenticity so fully established that they will continue through lime, always con hidered the quintessence of wisdom. Among the ninny, we notice "Idleness is the burial of the living num." "idle men are the devil's playfellows." "An idle mind is the devil's workshop." "A want of occupation is not rest," "A mind quite vacant is a mind ds- tressed." On the other hand we find such as these: "Business is the salt of life." "Constant occupation prevents temptation." "The Lord helps those who help them selves." As a means of achievement it stands alone. "What is your secret?" asked a lady of Turner, the distinguished artist. He replied, "I have no secret, madam, but hard work." Says Dr. Arnold, "The difference between one man and another is not so niu.'li talent as energy." "Noth ing," says II -ynolds, is denied well direc ted labor, and nothing is to be obtained without it." "Excellence in any depart ment," says Johnson, "can now be oh taiued by the labor of a lifetime, but is not to be purchased at a lesser price." Sa3's Sidney Smith, "There is but one method, and that is hard labor; and a man who will not pa that price for dis tinction had better at once dedicate him self to the pursuit of the fox." "Step by step," reads the French proverb, "one goes very far." "Nothing," sas Mirabcau, "is impossible to the man who can will. This is the only law of success." "Have you ever entered a cottage, ever travelled on a coach, ever talked with a peasant in the field, or loitered with a mechanic at the loom," asked Sir Edward Bulwer Lyt. ton, "and not found that each .had a talent you bad not, knew something you knew not ? The most useless creature who yawns in her parlor or who idles in nigs beneath a tropical sun, has no excuse for want of intellect. What men want i.-, not talent but purpose, not the power to achieve, but the will to labor." Work is of all tilings the mnt honora ble, and perhaps the great bane of the world is that it is not so considered. It was honorable in the putriarehual ages it was honorable in the pure ages of Greece and Homo. But in the feudal ages, by associating labor with the en slaved condition of vassals and the want of occupation with the independence of tyrant lords, a leaven of false aristocracy was infused into Europe, and has reached the New World. Hut the prejudice is an aspersion upon Divine Providence, hurtful to its victims, and disastrous in its effects.