ri'i " T -. cv No. 10. Tide of Battlk. 340 r.A X. ui startled at the roar of battle, and beaten down by the hand of tyranny. But the tide of battle ever changes. Alexander turned back only when his men refused to follow him farther. Charles XII met with a severe repulse at the battle of Pul towa, and Napoleon on his retui n from Russia was the herald of his own defeat Then while the people may have at one time indulged in the brilliant hope of vic tory, yet at another they have been com pelled to grope in the unwarrantable depths of despondency. Hence the necess ity of straining every nerve and bringing every muscle into active play upon the side of right. The loyal army battling for the right will come oil triumphant, for in right there is might, which is invincible. Seeming defeats may for the time being blast our hopes, yet victory will be the glorious consumation of a well spent life. While nations tremble at the approach of exasperated foes, yet this is a less cause of fear and trembling than the individu al encounters when the enemy of his soul approaches the inner battle ground. Within the heart there is an unseen battle field where the impulse of right and wrong are struggling for the mastery. As the battle Held of human carnage enlists the sympathies of the nation, so the but tle field of the inner man ought to enlist all the powers of the human soul to pros trate and eliminate the impulse of wrong, and gain the victory for the impulse of right. But how are we to do this. Bring into resignation that will which a faisce ing Creator has given us as a necessary provision for battling against the evil im pulses of our nature. Man has been pro vided with tho necessary requisite for de ciding between right and wrong, and then, nothing lacking, the will, for executing what he knows to be right, has been be stowed. As the destiny of nations, kingdoms and empires depends upon the tide of battle where thousands of individuals are concerned, so the destiny of a human soul depends upon the tide of battle where the impulses of a single heart arc concerned. In the absence of a due exercise of will power the impulse of wrong is (according to the tendency of man's nature) apt to gain the ascendency over the impulse of right. Then as one victory opens the way for another, the impulse of wrong gains a second battle more e'isily than the first. So gaining little by little the evil impulse soon gains undisputed possession of the human heart for the workings of nature's basest metal. The world contains as many of these battle-fields as it does representatives of the human voice. How few consider these scenes of silent strife as important as those which in comparison, although of great magnitude and show to the natu ral eye, yet in the results are of utter in significance. In one case the destiny of mortality hangs on the result; in the oth er, immortality. Nations and men have fought nobly for an existance, yctofttimes have fallen on the very threshold of victo ry. As Richard Montgomery, (raising his strong right arm against the tyranny and oppression of the parent stale, struggling in the defense of freedom,) and the battle was lost, so often does the individual, weak and v.vary, give way to the evil im pulses of his nature, when one more ef fort would insure victor'. In revolution ary times; when our country was brought to the very verge of ruin ; when from a succession of defeats the last faint glim mering of hope of success had almost faded in the distance, then it was that men be gan to doubt the expediency of longer rej sistaucc. The army became despondent, and the 'identity of the American nation bade fair to be obliterated forever. But while in this emergency, driven almost to desperation, Washington with his baud of valiant soldiers reversed the tide of battle by the wonderful and brilliant attack up on the foe at the battle of Trenton. Greatly astonished were the loyal troops when they awoke to find themselves utter, ly routed by a mere handful of the prov incials. They had been taken unawares.