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SERMON XX.

ON WINTER, AS THE SEASON OF SOCIAL

AMUSEMENT.

PSALM 1xxxiv. 5, 6.

"Blessed are the men, who going through the vale of misery, use it for a well; and the pools are filled with water."

THE words of the text contain, in their moral view, one of the most beautiful allusions which is to be found even in the sacred poetry of the Psalmist. They allude to that similitude, so natural to an eastern imagination, of the course of hu

man life to a journey through the sandy desert; and they represent the scenes of joy and amusement with which life is interspersed," as the green vales of the "desert, in which water springs," and where the weary traveller may find a temporary repose. But they represent still more beautifully, in their moral view, what is the duty of that traveller ;—not to linger around these fountains of ease and joy, but to use them only as for a well, to revive his exhausted strength,-to invigorate his purposed resolutions, and to send him forward " renewed in his mind," on his great journey to the promised land.

I am led, my brethren, to this application of the beautiful allusion in the text, by the circumstances of the time in which we meet. While the annual season of education and business has begun, there has, at the same time, still more lately, be

gun among us the annual season of pleasure and amusement. The young, the gay, and the opulent, are now preparing to enliven the winter of our year with artificial joys, and are looking forward to days of social mirth, and innocent festivity. It is a moment which a benevolent mind cannot look to without a kind of melancholy interest. Even in the midst of his sympathy with the mirth of the innocent and the young, his heart will be sad with the memory of former days;when he remembers those, now lost to fame, to honour, and to happiness, who once entered life with hearts as gay, and minds as innocent ;-and when he thinks, that, in the bright circle of those he sees, there will, too surely, be some, whom this season of gaiety will lead to error and to folly, and who will live one day to curse their fatal entrance upon that scene which now they think prodigal only of joy and

happiness. It is under this impression that I now wish to submit to the young of our congregation some very simple observations; and ere they advance upon the road even of innocent amusement, to lay before them some of the dangers which await the inordinate love of it.

1. It were unjust and ungrateful to conceive that the amusements of life are altogether forbidden by its beneficent Author. They serve, on the contrary, important purposes in the economy of human life, and are destined to produce important effects, both upon our happiness and character. They are, in the first place, in the language of the Psalmist, "the wells "of the desert;" the kind resting-places in which toil may relax, in which the weary spirit may recover its tone, and where the desponding mind may reassume its strength and its hopes.-They are, in another view, of some importance

to the dignity of individual character. In every thing we call amusement, there is generally some display of taste and of imagination, some elevation of the mind from mere animal indolence, or the baseness of sensual desire. Even in the scenes of relaxation, therefore, they have a tendency to preserve the dignity of human character, and to fill up the vacant and unguarded hours of life with occupations innocent at least, if not virtuous. But their principal effect, perhaps, is upon the social character of man. Whenever amusement is sought, it is in the society of our brethren; and whenever it is found, it is in our sympathy with the happiness of those around us. It bespeaks the disposition of benevolence, and it creates it. When men assemble, accordingly, for the purpose of general happiness or joy, they exhibit, to the thoughtful eye, one of the most pleasing

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