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THE CHRISTIAN WARFARE.

Mr. Editor-The following lines are so striking, and so appropriate to every one that would "live godly in Christ Jesus," whether minister or layman, that I enclose them for the pages of the "Presbyterian Magazine," in the hope that, as they speak so stirringly of duty, danger, privilege, and reward, they may leave salutary impressions on the minds and hearts of many of your readers.

THE CHRISTIAN WARFARE.

Soldier, go-but not to claim

Mouldering spoils of earth-born treasure;

Not to build a vaunting name,

Not to dwell in tents of pleasure.

Dream not that the way is smooth;

Hope not that the thorns are roses;

Turn no wishful eye of youth,
Where the sunny beam reposes;

Thou hast sterner work to do,
Hosts to cut thy passage through;
Close behind thee, gulfs are burning-
Forward!-there is no returning!

Soldier, rest-but not for thee

Spreads the world her downy pillow;
On the rock thy couch must be,

While around thee chafes the billow:
Thine must be a watchful sleep,

Wearier than another's waking;

Such a charge as thou dost keep
Brooks no moment of forsaking.
Sleep as on the battle-field,

Girded-grasping sword and shield:
Foes thou canst not name or number,
Steal upon thy broken slumber!

Soldier, rise the war is done :

Lo! the hosts of hell are flying,
"Twas thy Lord the battle won;

Jesus vanquished them by dying.
Pass the stream-before thee lies

All the conquered land of glory;
Hark! what songs of rapture rise!
These proclaim the victor's story.

Soldier, lay thy weapons down;

Quit the sword, and take the crown:]
Triumph!-all thy foes are banished,
Death is slain, and earth has vanished.

KOSSUTH, LIBERTY, AND PROTESTANTISM.

WE unite with true-hearted American citizens in welcoming the noble Magyar to our shores. Louis Kossuth is the representative of Liberty of injured Liberty in the continent of despots-and of Protestantism-injured Protestantism in the realms of anti-Christ. All hail to the champion of political and religious freedom!

There are three or four points connected with the political history of Hungary, which may be profitably recalled at the present time.

1. A long series of wars has been maintained by Hungary against Austria, in defence of its own constitutional monarchy. The house of Hapsburg has for the last three centuries made aggressions upon Hungarian liberty. Its encroachments have been artful and persevering, until at length it wielded an influence in the Diet, hostile to Hungarian prosperity, and subversive of constitutional power.

2. During the last twenty-five years, some of the leading men of Hungary have been attempting measures of reform; and the crisis of this contest was reached in 1848, under the influence of the talents, eloquence, and zeal of LOUIS KOSSUTH. This gentleman was born in 1804, at Monok, in the upper part of Hungary. He early showed an interest in public affairs, commenced the practice of the law, attended the meetings of the Diet, and skilfully reported its proceedings. His zeal for liberal principles cost him three years' imprisonment by Austria; but he returned from captivity with a heart more inflamed with the love of liberty, and more hostile to Hapsburg dominion. He soon became the leader in the Hungarian struggle, and gave shape to the legislation which ended in the Revolution. The Diet of 1847-8, of which he was the master spirit, announced officially the following programme:

"We hold it our duty, openly and clearly to point out the principal questions, whose prompt solution we believe necessary for the good of the country. 1. The equal distribution of the public burdens.

2. Participation of the non-nobles, of the inhabitants of the royal cities, and of the districts, in legislative and municipal rights.

3. Equality before the law.

4. The abolition of the urbarial dues, with indemnity to the landed proprietors.

5. Security given to credit and property by the abolition of the imperial dues. We shall strenuously labour to call into life all that can tend to the material and intellectual development of the country. We shall endeavour to give to popular education, that powerful engine of national development, such a direction as shall form able and patriotic citizens, that the people may, by this means, likewise attain to personal independence."

General Klapka, in his memoirs of the war which ensued, thus describes the aims and measures of the reformers:

"All the energies of the true patriots were directed to a measure which they had long advocated, but in which they had been uniformly foiled by the intrigues of the Vienna Cabinet, viz: to the liberation of the peasantry from feudal bur

dens; to the legal equality of all; and the right of every citizen to acquire and to hold landed property.

"In the Parliament of 1847, before the outbreak of the great European Revolution the Hungarian peasantry were emancipated and relieved from all urbarial burdens."

These laws were passed by the Diet in March, 1848, and obtained the reluctant sanction of the Emperor on April 11th. Thus were the measures of constitutional reform triumphantly successful through the influence of Louis Kossuth.*

3. The stirring news of the French revolution having reached Vienna at this period, the Emperor was compelled to issue a manifesto on March 4th, 1848, making large concessions to popular rights. The Sclavonic races in Hungary seem to have preferred Austrian rule, under a government of their own, to a continued union with the Hungarian Diet, which was under the influence of the Magyars. This hostility of the races led to the invasion of Hungary by the Croats under Jellachich; and Austria insidiously promoted the contest, if it did not originate it,† for the purpose of recovering the rights already conceded to Hungary. Austria soon became involved in the war, taking sides with the Croats and other Sclaves against the Magyars; but the latter gained victory after victory over both Croats and Austrians, and in the spring of 1849 drove the invaders from their soil. In April the independence of Hungary was declared, and LOUIS KOSSUTH, the master spirit of constitutional reform, as well as of the military campaign, was Governor of the kingdom.

4. On the 1st of May, 1849, so thoroughly had the Hungarians beaten Austria, that the Imperial edict announced that an appeal for aid had been made to Russia, and that the Czar "had readily

The historian Alison says, "by unanimous votes of both houses, the Diet not only established perfect equality of civil rights and public burdens amongst all classes, denominations, and races in Hungary and its provinces, and perfect toleration for every form of religious worship, but, with a generosity perhaps unparalleled in the history of nations, and which must extort the admiration even of those who may question the wisdom of the measure, the nobles of Hungary abolished their own right to exact either labour or produce in return for the lands held by urbarial tenure, and thus transferred to the peasants the absolute ownership, free and for ever, of nearly half the cultivated land in the kingdom, reserving to the original proprietors of the soil such compensation as the Government might award from the public funds of Hungary. More than five hundred thousand peasant families were thus invested with the absolute ownership of from thirty to sixty acres of land each, or about twenty millions of acres amongst them. The elective franchise was extended to every man possessed of capital or property to the value of thirty pounds, or an annual income of ten pounds-to every man who has received a diploma from a university, and to every artizan who employs an apprentice. With the concurrence of both countries, Hungary and Transylvania were united, and their Diets, hitherto separate, were incorporated. The number of representatives which Croatia was to send to the Diet was increased from three to eighteen, while the internal institutions of that province remained unchanged, and Hungary undertook to compensate the proprietors for the lands surrendered to the peasants, to an extent greatly exceeding the proportion of that burden which would fall upon the public funds of the province. The complaints of the Croats, that the Magyars desired to impose their own language upon the Sclavonic population, were considered, and every reasonable ground of complaint removed. Corresponding advantages were extended to the other Sclavonic tribes, and the fundamental Jaws of the kingdom, except in so far as they were modified by these acts, remained un

changed.

Kossuth says that "one of the chief political manœuvres of Metternich was ever and ever to oppress one nation by another." 3

VOL. II.-No. 1.

granted it to a most satisfactory extent." The physical power of this terrible ally soon overbore the Hungarian armies; and on the 11th of August Kossuth resigned his office, and on the 13th Görgey surrendered to the Russians. Thus fell Hungary, amidst the light and civilization of the nineteenth century.

5. The sequel to this brief sketch (relating to Kossuth,) is soon told. He was obliged to fly for refuge to Turkey, whose Sultan magnanimously refused to deliver him up to his blood-thirsty enemies. He was, however, detained in captivity. His eminent services in the cause of civil liberty enlisted the sympathies of the people of the United States towards him, as a prisoner of war, and the following resolutions were adopted by the American Congress: *

Whereas, the people of the United States sincerely sympathize with the Hungarian exiles, Kossuth and his associates, and fully appreciate the magnanimous conduct of the Turkish Government in receiving and treating these noble exiles with kindness and hospitality; and, whereas, it is the wish of the Sultan to permit them to leave his dominions, Therefore,

Resolved, by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America, in Congress assembled, That the President of the United States be, and he hereby is requested to authorize the employment of some one of the public vessels, which may be now cruising in the Mediterranean, to receive and carry to the United States the said Louis Kossuth and his associates in captivity.

Our Government, being notified by the Sultan that Kossuth would be set at liberty on the first of September, sent the steam-frigate Mississippi to bear the illustrious Magyar to more genial shores.

Kossuth reached England on the 23d of October. His arrival created a profound sensation. His speeches at different places have been received with great applause, and have obtained an extensive circulation through the press, both in England and in this country. A perusal of his speeches produces the conviction that Kossuth is a man of gifted intellect, of a warm, sympathizing heart, enlightened in his general views of men and things, endowed with no ordinary power of impressing his opinions upon others, and possessing a sagacity, common sense and tact, which assist in forming a completeness of character suited to his position.*

The following extracts from his addresses in England may be interesting to the general reader.

"It is a glorious position the English race holds-almost the only one that is free-it is the only one, the freedom of which has neither to fear the changes of time, nor the ambition of man, provided it keeps to its institutions-provided that the public spirit of the people continues to safe guard that which is best for the exigences of the time, and that their manly resolution never fails to meet those exigences in time. (Cheers.) This watchfulness and resolution being the chief guarantee of your country's greatness and happiness, I take for the most consoling hope to oppressed humanity; for I have the most firm conviction that the freedom and greatness of England are in intimate connection with the destinies and liberty of Europe. It is not without reason that my native land and all other oppressed nations look up to your example, as to the elder brother to whom the Almighty has not in vain imparted the spirit to guide

These resolutions passed the Senate on the 26th of February, 1851, and the House of Representatives on the 30th of March.

the tide of human destiny. There is one thing that is a prominent feature in your race-a result of no small importance in our struggles-that the sentiments of this race are spreading over the world, and that it is not the least of the glories you call your own, that the people of England appear to be resolved to take the lead in the new direction of the public opinion of the world, out of which the highest blessings will flow. The generous sympathy of the people of England, for my bleeding, struggling, down-trodden, but not broken, native land (loud cheers), is one, but not the only one manifestation, by which England shows she is ready to accept this glorious role of the elder brother of humanity. (Cheers.) This country, though it has not to fear any direct attacks on its own liberty, still knows that its welfare and prosperity, founded as they are on the continued development of your genius and industry, cannot be entirely independent of the condition of other nations. The people of England know that in neither social nor political respects can it be indifferent whether Europe be free, or groaning under Russia and her satellites; the people of England are conscious of their glorious position-it knows that, while it conserves its freedom, it cannot grant the privilege to Russo-Austrian despots to dispose of the fate of Europe, but must have its weight in the balance of the destinies of Europe, or England would no more be a European power. (Loud cheers.)"

"God has awarded two blessings to those whom he has elected: bliss in Heaven and freedom on earth. (Cheers.) May you all, may your nation be blessed by both these blessings. No man, aware of the value of his destiny, can live satisfied without freedom; but he to whom God has granted freedom, he has got all, if he has got the mind and the will to use his freedom for the development of his happiness with so consistent an exertion as the English people do. This is the basis upon which England has grown a paradise on earth, on which the eye and the heart rest with joy, and which must strengthen the desire in every foreigner to become likewise free, and, by becoming such, to be endowed with the possibility of converting other parts of the world into a paradise such as England is. (Applause.) During all my life I had but one leading idealiberty. It was the aim of my life-the aim of my existence to secure its blessings to my people, though I knew these blessings but instinctively. Now that I behold England, I see how liberty ennobles men and beautifies nature. (Applause.)"

"Even Jesuitism, which in latter times has again begun to raise its head, is employed in support of Russia. We are in the neighborhood of a great country, which, unfortunately, does not enjoy the fruits of sorrowful times and great sufferings. The Jesuit party in France threaten that country with the Cossacks. Even here, in this glorious country, a question connected with this not long ago was agitated, as well in public opinion as in parliament. I know what is convenient to myself and due to you. I will not enter into that question. I will only state one curious coincidence-I am a Protestant. (Applause.) I am a Protestant, not only by birth, but by conviction. I am a humble member of a nation, the majority of which is composed of Catholics, and it is not the least glory of my nation that in all times we have fought and bled for religious liberty-Catholics as devotedly as Protestants. The rights and freedom of the Protestants were always strongly opposed by the house of Hapsburg. That house has always in history been closely united with the spirit of Jesuitism; but the freedom of Protestantism had been established by treaties gained by the swords of victorious Hungary. Scarcely had Russia restored the house of Hapsburg, by putting its foot on the neck of Hungary, when the first act of that house was to spill noble blood by the hands of the hangman; and its second was to destroy the rights of the Protestant religion in Hungary. The kings of Hungary, in former times, were always anxious not to allow any meddling of the court of Rome in the temporal affairs of the Catholic Church, and a glorious king, Mathias Corvinus, a Hungarian by birth, once used these words to the Pope:- Your Holiness must remember that we bear two crosses on our ensign, and we will make our crosses pikes before we allow you to mix

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