& PeHBONAIj Pkeedon. 100 pie in any new Hue is indeed n critical poriod for the sowing of freedom must go before the reaping of its fruits. Finally it may be urgetl that the adop tion of universal freedom the abolishing of nil artificial restraints and society regu lationswould destroy all order and in troduce a state of chaos. With the pros, cnt civilization this must be admitted, but in the future a happier state is wailing and already its early light is dawning upon the world. Society is founded upou a harmony of views. In the past, this liar, mony was secured by force. Tastes, man ners and institutions, naturally antagonis tic and repelling, were drawn together and crowded into one compact mass by pressure from without. Such a society must bo temporary, lor the pressure weak ened or drawn into other channels, the mass Hies in pieces by its own rcpellant forces. This has been the history of the past, one society established only that from its ruins another might spring. The society of the future is to based upon an other principle. Harmony will prevail, but from a different cause. A unity will be secured, but it will be the unity of free doin not of force. Each relation having established itself under freedom, will be permanent, and every interest will be a bond holding every other in security. " Take, freedom, take thy radiant round, When dlinm'd, revive, when loBt, return, Till not a shrine through earth be found, On which thy glories shall not bum." A. W. Field. PERSONAL FREEDOM. Mankind must yet be free. Free, not merely in the seuso of our hundred years old Constitution and Declaration of Indc. pendence, but free from these unfeoling fetters which bind a man to party: nd these rags that Bmell of the gloomy pris sou chambers of creed must drop, drop from the soul and leave him responsible to himself alone. To man there is but one occasion for praise, that he knows that he lives, and that he has the power to ay "lam." Tins given, nnu tor the rest mun must praise or blame himself. But the question comes, Why this knowing ego? Why this willing self? Thus we concede that back of all is purpose pure, high, divine whose origin was in the very beginning, dwelling with the abso lute itself, and through this mighty tele phone of time sending a whisper to all fu ture ages. But what is the end of purpose? All men will say perfection. And truly for the route to perfection is the stairway of all art, all science, all hope, and in the thought all knowledge entrenches itself and "hold the fort" against the inroads of ignoraice and superstition. This ascent to perfection is the ladder that Jacob saw whereon one could rise round by round, and on which the angels ascended and descended. The ladder is still standing but now.a-days it stands alone, for the angels have left it and mau must make his own way upward". Few rise high. And what is their means of ascent? We would answer, it is the bone and sinew affected by the wholesome diet of culture. Religion is conduct, and conduct is three fourths o life, says Matthew Arnold. But if you ask what is is the base of conduct, we answer culture. True, we have stolen the fruit of life from the orchard of the gods, but we have concealed it beneath the fig-leaves of fashion, where it has heated and decayed, while the world has been starving, aye dying for culture But what are the means of culture ? Even the babes and blind men will cry out, rev. elation, revelation ! But wise men will say reason. For that revelation which comes from the hand of an interpreter is no revelation. It bears the stamp of soc ondhaudeduess, and is like packed mack erel and salmon that huvo lost nine-tenths of their sweetness in the brine. True rev elation comes straight to the heart. It strikes the consciousness of all men alike and lias but ons meaning. And that rev elation upon which men nan reason is no revelation, but must at last give place to reason. Hence reason io our only means 3 s&a K&2!Kft2