Necessity ov Development. 103 capable of doing much good in the cause of Immunity. Then if we possess these qualifies, may wr let them shine out be fore the world, that our hands may not be stained with the blood of a fallen race. Look in yonder orchard. Just admire that beautiful tree loaded with delicious fruit. Here is the large, plump and fair apple which you long to taste as soon as the eye falls upon it. There is another, which presents u far different aspect. It is small, knotty and badly formed. Once tins bid as fair to be large and fine as the other. The bud and blossom were there, but from some unforsecn cause it was, as it were, nipped in the bud, and bihold the re-ult; one beautiful and longed for, the other withered and despised. Again, pick up an ear of corn. It pre sents a tine appearance, yet it is somewhat defective. Here you find a grain missing; thera, one partly developed, and so on. But as the grain of corn stands related to the car; as the apple to the tree; so we stand related to the world. Yet, while the apple, or grain of corn, which corres ponds to the mortal body, may not be iul ly developed, and for which nature must answer, yet, for the developing of the no bler part of man, the great elevating prin ciple, we, standing as we do amidst the intelligence of the univcrsc,are, to a great extent, individually responsible. This is a duty which we owe to our Maker, lias not he who holds the waters in His con trol a perfect right to expect fruit from the nlantinu of His own hands? And arc wc not under the most solemn obligation to requite the care of an indulgent parent ? For a moment, let 3our attentiou becen. tcred upon the little cloud as it ascends from the peaceful bosom of yonder ocean. See it as it nears its destination, larger, larger, still larger, it grows, carrying the visible effects of a guiding hand, and soon the voice of (he Almighty is heard to speak out in thunder tones, giving the sig nal of an approachiug storm. Shortly, this messenger of the heavens is seen to begin its work. It sweeps along, giving drink to the parched earth, in obedience to the Providence that guides it. Being developed, and its' mission accomplished, it passes by, leaving the world and its in habitants rejoicing on account of its re cent visit. Ought we not, then, to be wil ling to go where the unseen Hand shall lead us. Wc see the stars, those gems of evening, sparkling in the ethereal vault of heaven's own blue, each keeping its ap pointed place in the gorgeous ante-cham her of the Almighty, speaking in unmis takable terms of the harmony of his hand iwork. Each star, according to its size and brilliancy, throws light on all sides. Just so with men. And as the only way our true and intrinsic value can be known is by the development of our ni'-iitnl as well as physical powers, then it l.ccomes our duty to develop, so far as possible, in orber that our mission may be accom plished, and that we may, to some extent, liquidate this debt which wc owe to our selves, to our fellow men, and to our God. As the inlluence of a faithful mother lingers with the child long after her last sun has set, as the water is carried far from the fountain head, so that which shall emanate from this central spark of intelligence shall not only shed its efful gent and beauty-beaming rays to-day, but shall hover over the future as a lamp to the feet and a light to the pth of poster ity. But it is a law of gravitation that the river cwn never rise higher than its srurcc. This is a principle that always holds good, and it comes to us here with more than usual interest as being particu larly applicable to our theme. Of what can you conceive which has a higher source than the mind, which has been plunged down, as it were, from its high and lofty estate, and given this mortal clay for its habitation, only to be fitted for a glorious beyond. Then, if this is the case, it is capable of rising to a very high degree of perfection, and the higher the order, and the more cultivated the intel lect, the more nearly it confonns to the demands of its giver. IffjWWttwB