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fully with his injunctions. If he is our Father, let us do him better honour, and if he is our Master, let us serve him with a more constant fear. Our sorrow for our transgressions, if it is of any value, will stimulate our efforts to amend our lives; and the conviction of past inactivity and unprofitableness, if it is deep and strong, will give form and energy to our consequent resolutions.

And let us not linger, and delay, and look out for a more convenient season, as if we knew the measure of our days, and held time and opportunity in our own hands. The experience of every day, casualty in every shape, death on our right hand and on our left, should teach us a better wisdom. We aggravate our guilt exceedingly, by this foolish procrastination. Could we live the longest life of man, we should have little time enough to finish our task; but here we are without knowledge, and without security. The commencement of another year we may never see.

If we were to lie down in the dust, and in the sleep of death, without a hope of ever waking again, we might indeed, with some show of reason, take our own ways, and defy their consequences. But we shall wake again, and wake to a life whose awards and destinies will depend on the manner in which we have spent the years of our probation, whether they have been many, or whether they have been few.

While we have time, let us employ it as we ought, for time is succeeded by eternity. Let every following year, while years are continued to us, be more full of good, and more free from evil, than the last; for they must soon be numbered; and then we go to meet our Judge.

Rules for long Life.

THE following energetic lines are by Thomas Randolph, a poet who wrote with considerable reputation near the beginning of the seventeenth century.

Take thou no care how to defer thy death,
And give more respite to this mortal breath.
Would'st thou live long? the only means are these,

'Bove Galen's diet, or Hippocrates'.

Strive to live well; tread in the upright ways;
And rather count thy actions than thy days.
Then thou hast lived enough amongst us here,
For every day well spent I count a year.
Live well; and then, how soon soe'er thou die,
Thou art of age to claim eternity.

But he that outlives Nestor, and

appears

T'have past the date of grave Methuselah's years, If he his life to sloth and sin doth give,

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Eastport Unitarian Book Society.

SOCIETIES for the publication and distribution of books and tracts, inculcating a rational faith, and a consistent morality, have, within a short period, been formed in many of our congregations. We are glad to find that our brethren of Eastport, in the state of Maine, have lately entered into an association of this nature. They prove by so doing, that they are convinced of the truth, excellence, and importance of the views which they have embraced, and that they are engaged in earnest in making them more generally known

and received. We sincerely applaud their zeal, and wish them success.

The society is formed on the same principles with that in Baltimore; and the preamble to their articles of association exhibits the same objects and views. It is called the Eastport Unitarian Society for the Distribution of Books. Its officers for the present year are, Jonathan D. Weston, President; Frederick Hobbs, Secretary and Treasurer; Rev. Charles Robinson, Librarian; J. K. Chadbourne, N. F. Deering, H. T. Emerry, John Woodman, Robert Parker, Managers.

When it is considered what great facilities an association of this kind must possess, in the purchase, the publishing, and the distribution of proper books and pamphlets; when we think how effectual it renders a small pecuniary contribution, and what advantages it enjoys from mutual consultation, and mutual encouragement, we are led to hope that Unitarian Book Societies will become general among us.

New Publications in Calcutta.

From the Christian Register.

A Harmony of the Gospels, in Bengalee, has been proposed by Mr. Yates. Five parts out of six had been published, and part of the sixth printed at Calcutta, in October, 1821.

An English translation of a pamphlet of considerable size, against the prevailing system of Hindoo Idolatry, has been printed at the Baptist Mission Press, in Calcutta, at the expense of a Hindoo gentleman. This work was originally written in Bengalee, by a native Hindoo, of considerable talent, who is since dead.

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In the course of a recent journey, I happened to overhear a conversation which took place on the deck of a steam-boat, respecting the belief of unitarians. Some time afterwards, I committed as much of it as I could remember, to writing; and I now send it to you, with the hope that it may prove of some utility, in the pages of the Miscellany. The speakers on the orthodox side, however, are not to be understood as representing the strength of the orthodox arguments; for a learned trinitarian would have managed the cause in a far abler manner. But it will be immediately perceived that they speak as thousands speak, who, without really knowing any thing of Unitarianism, or even of their own doctrines, are constantly pressing forward into a controversy, which they are not able to maintain, and urging objections, and texts of Scripture, which have been, times without number, answered and explained. They are to be considered as expressing the common prejudices and ignorance of the orthodox, and not

their subtlety and learning. But as even the misrepresentations of prejudice and ignorance may appear formidable to some, who are unprepared to detect them, and as it is well to answer repeatedly what is repeatedly brought forward, I think the replies of my friend the unitarian may be of value.

The conversation was commenced by an elderly gentleman, who had been engaged in reading a tract entitled, "What is Religion?" Having finished it, he laid it down, and turning to the person who had handed it to him, addressed him in the following words.

Eld. Gent. I see that this tract was published by a society in New York. I hear there is a socinian church built there lately, but that they are all young men who are connected with it. This Socinianism is quite a new doctrine-some new fancy for young minds.

Unit. The society to which you allude, Sir, disavow the name of Socinians. This is a term which implies, that they believe as Socinus believed; that they take Socinus, a fallible man, as a guide in matters of faith. But, on the contrary, they profess to have no guide or master but Christ, and no creed but the Bible. It is not generous or charitable to fasten on any society a name which they deny.

Eld. Gent. If not Socinian, then, pray what are they?

Unit. They call themselves unitarian Christians, as they believe in ONE GOD in one person, and worship one Being, and are thus distinguished from other Christians, who believe in what they themselves denominate a "triune God," or a God in three persons, cach of whom, under different names, they worship as

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