Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 612 pages of information about Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader.

Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 612 pages of information about Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader.

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From “A Lecture:”  Philadelphia, 1840.

=_39._= THE PROSPECTS OF ART IN THE UNITED STATES.

It is well for those who have sufficient wealth, to bring among us good works of foreign or ancient masters, especially if they allow free access to them for students and copyists.  The true gems are, however, rare, and very costly.  A single masterpiece would swallow up the whole sum which even the richest of our countrymen would be willing to devote in the way of paintings.  I hope, however, soon to see the day when there shall be a fondness for making collections of works by American artists, or those resident among us.  Such collections, judiciously made, would supply the best history of the rise and progress of the arts in the United States.  They would, more than any other means, stimulate artists to a generous emulation.  They would reflect high honor upon their possessors, as men who love Art for its own sake, and are willing to serve and encourage it.  They would highly gratify the foreigner of taste who comes curious to observe the working of our institutions and our habits of life.  He does not cross the sea to find Vandykes and Murillos.  He can enjoy them at home; but he wishes to discover what the children of the West can do in following or excelling European example.  The expense of such a collection could not be very great.  A few thousands of dollars, less than is often lavished upon the French plate glass and lustres, damask hangings, and Turkey carpets of a pair of parlors (more than which few of our houses can boast), would cover their walls with good specimens of American art, and do far more credit to the taste and heart of the owner.

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=_William R. Williams,[15] 1804._= (Manual, p. 480.)

From “The Lectures on the Lord’s Prayer.”

=_40._= LEAD US NOT INTO TEMPTATION.

We are warranted in praying to be brought through, temptation, when it is not of our own seeking, but of God’s sending.  If we walk without care and without vigilance, if we acknowledge not God in our ways, and take counsel at Ekron, and not at Zion,—­leaving the Bible unread, and the closet unvisited,—­if the sanctuary and the Sabbath lose their ancient hold upon us, and we then go on frowardly in the way of our own eyes, and after the counsel of our own heart, we have reason to tremble.  A conscience quick and sensitive, under the presence of the indwelling Spirit, is like the safety-lamp of the miner, a ready witness and a mysterious guardian against the deathful damps, that unseen, but fatal, cluster around our darkling way.  To neglect prayer and watching, is to lay aside that lamp, and then, though the eye see no danger and the ear hear no warning, spiritual death may be gathering around us her invisible vapors, stored with ruin, and rife for a sudden explosion.  We are tempting God, and shall we be delivered?

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Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.