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that they would gladly employ him if that gentleman should decline their overture, he resolved to see him at once, and ascertain his intention from his own lips. He set out, therefore, immediately, on foot again, for Fincastle, with only a solitary nine-pence in his pocket, and having obtained Mr. Logan's answer to the trustees, declining their invitation for himself, and recommending him to their favor, he returned with it to Prince Edward, to claim their promise; and was immediately appointed a tutor of the college, according to his wish.

His appearance at this time, (as I am told by a gentleman who says he remembers it perfectly,) was not very promising. It was toward the end of the fall vacation, about the last of October, of the year 1796, when he was hardly nineteen years of age. He was tall and slender in his person, just recovered from a sickness which had left him pale and sallow; rather awkward in his carriage, and very shabby in his dress. His only coat had been fairly worn out in the service, and seemed to beg loudly for another, which he was yet unable to purchase. Add to this, he was anxious and troubled, it appears, about a small debt which he had contracted in Lexington, while he was a student in the academy there, and which he had not yet been able to satisfy.' pp. 11, 12.

It was during his residence as a tutor at Hampden Sydney College, that his acquaintance was formed with the Rev. Dr. Alexander, then president of that institution, and now one of the professors at Princeton; and from that time an intimacy was cemented between them, which continued ever afterwards, and which seems to have been a source of much mutual satisfaction. Having fulfilled, for some two or three years, the duties of a tutor in the college, young Rice retired from that office in the year 1799, and took charge of a small school again in a private family. One year he spent in this manner. He then commenced the study of medicine, with a view to its being his future profession for life. In the autumn of the same year, however, as he was about to go to Philadelphia, to attend the medical lectures there, the trustees of Hampden Sydney College invited him again to become a tutor in that institution; and he was at length induced to give up his plan of going to Philadelphia, and to accept the invitation. On what slight incidents does the entire direction of one's life often depend! It was here, while acting under this change in his previous purpose to go to Philadelphia and qualify himself to become a physician, that he was led to review his former plan of life, and to abandon it for the sacred ministry. For this responsible office he now began to prepare himself, chiefly under the direction. and assistance of Dr. Alexander, of Hampden Sydney College. In September, 1803, the Presbytery of Hanover, after due examination, gave him a license to preach the gospel. One year after this, he received ordination at the hands of the same body, and was settled over a congregation in the vicinity of the college, to whom he had been previously preaching since the time of his

receiving license. During this time, he continued to retain his connection with the college; still officiating as tutor, and preaching to his congregation at the same time. But he soon found, that he could not attend to the duties of both these offices, and accordingly ceased to instruct in the college, and gave up his connection with it. In 1806, the first attempt was made to lay a foundation for a theological seminary, in connection with the college, by collecting some funds for a library, and to aid indigent pious students; and Mr. Rice was appointed to solicit the requisite funds for these purposes. He entered at once and warmly into the design; and until his valuable life closed, he was the most active and efficient individual in founding and building up what is now the Union Theological Seminary, in Prince Edward county, Virginia. In 1812, he received his "call" to take charge of a new congregation at Richmond, the metropolis of his native state. His pastoral relation to the people of his previous charge having been duly dissolved, he accepted the call, and soon removed to that city, to enter upon the duties of his new location. Here he found, of course, an arduous task committed to his hands. A congregation was to be collected; the first Presbyterian congregation was gathered in that place. A house of worship was to be erected, and funds procured for that purpose. Every thing, in short, was to be done. His labors, it is easy to see, must have been arduous. But he triumphed over all difficulties, and succeeded in building up a large and respectable church and congregation, by his energy, his talents as a preacher, and the power of his piety. In July, 1815, we find him undertaking new labor, and issuing the first number of a weekly religious newspaper, called the Christian Monitor, the first periodical of the kind ever printed in Richmond. The year following, 1816, he was present, as a delegate from the Virginia Bible Society, at the meeting of gentlemen from various parts of the country, which assembled at New-York, to organize our National Bible Society, and took a warm interest in that event. In the beginning of 1818, he was engaged in originating another and larger religious periodical, entitled the Virginia Evangelical and Literary Magazine, an octavo pamphlet of forty-eight pages, to be issued every month at Richmond. In May of the following year he was delegated to attend the General Assembly, and was elected moderator of that body. In the course of the same year, we find him conceiving the project of forming a closer union between the Presbyterian church of Scotland and the Presbyterian church in this country. To see what could be done on this subject, August, 1819, he addressed a long and friendly communication to the Rev. Thomas Chalmers, D. D., of Glasgow, the object of which was, to learn his views in relation to the expediency of attempting to establish a regular and friendly correspondence between the church VOL. VIII.

of Scotland and the Presbyterians of the United States,—an idea which, upon a larger scale, has since begun to be carried into execution, by the interchange of visits from delegates mutually appointed on both sides of the Atlantic, by several different denominations of christians,-a measure from which we anticipate the happiest results. In 1820, having attended the meeting of the American Bible Society, he returned to Philadelphia, and was again an active member of that body, and preached the annual sermon at the opening of the session. During this tour, he also visited Washington, and preached in the national capitol on sabbath morning. Respecting this service, he has made the following memorandum: "The hall [of representatives] is certainly the finest church that I ever preached in; but, between you and me, I think that I have preached, before now, to audiences quite as intelligent as the one I had here. This, I suppose, would be heresy in Washington, but it will be truth in Richmond." In 1822, we find him again attending the General Assembly, as a delegate from the Presbytery of which he was a member, and from thence, going on to the General Associations of Connecticut and Massachusetts, and paying a friendly visit to the professors at Andover. In September, of the same year, he was elected president of Nassau Hall College at Princeton, and in the following November, he was appointed by the trustees of Hampden Sydney College, a professor in that Institution. The appointment from Princeton, honorable to him as it was, he, after mature deliberation, felt it his duty to decline, and with a noble disinterestedness, characteristic of him, accepted the appointment to the professorship of divinity in the college of his own state. The active duties of the pastoral office he now, of course, resigned, (although he seems still to have retained, nominally, his pastoral relation to his people in Richmond,) and took another journey to New-York, Boston, Andover, &c. principally for the benefit of his health, and to collect funds for the seminary now placed under his care. On his return from this tour, he removed his family from Richmond to Prince Edward, and entered upon the duties of his professorship in form, being regularly installed into his new office on the 1st day of January, 1824. He now had leisure to devote himself more entirely and exclusively to his favorite object of building up, in the institution over which he had been placed, a southern theological seminary, whose influence should be felt, not only in Virginia, but in the states farther south and south-west. But to accomplish this object, so dear to his heart, he had an immense amount of toil, and care, and discouragement, to encounter. the spring and summer of 1827, he again visited Philadelphia, New-York, Albany, and other northern cities, and was quite successful in procuring aid for his seminary,—from thirty-five to forty

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thousand dollars being the avails of his visit. In March, 1830, he thus writes to a friend in New-York: "The progress of our seminary is good; we have this winter thirty-five students; and a very fine spirit of piety among them. The number of our friends, and the influence of our institution, are growing. I do not think the liberality of New-York ever did a better thing than when it gave us a professorship." About this time he commenced publishing, in the Southern Religious Telegraph, a paper printed at Richmond, a series of letters addressed to the ex-president Madison, the object of which was, "to show that our politicians and patriots, should favor the progress of the christian religion among the people, on account of its happy influence on all the interests of our country." In the spring of 1830, he again attended the religious anniversaries in New-York, and went up the river as far as Albany. This was his last journey to the north. During the ensuing summer, he continued his letters to Mr. Madison, and was also employed in preparing his part of the memoir of James B. Taylor, (since published, and read by many with great profit,)—an engagement, however, which he did not live to complete. He also sent, in the following spring, an overture to the General Assembly, respecting a proposed plan of action, for the Presbyterian church in this country, on the subject of foreign missions, which plan has since been substantially adopted by that body, whether advantageously, or not, for the cause of missions, remains yet to be seen. We hope that it will do well. His health, which had previously, and for some time, been feeble, had now sunk very low, and his valuable life was, in fact, fast drawing to a close. He lived only to the following September, (1831.) His mind was calm and happy, in view of the approaching king of terrors. His last words were, "mercy is triumphant," and he fell asleep; death, the last enemy, was conquered!

Having given, from the book before us, the foregoing brief account of the most important incidents in the life of Dr. Rice, we now proceed to draw out and place before our readers some of the more prominent traits of his character. His most characteristic and peculiar excellence was his warm-hearted piety. This it is, which breathes forth every where in his correspondence; which is evinced in his various plans for doing good; which gives him such a power over the minds of others, in turning their thoughts to consolatory topics in affliction; which reconciles him to disappointment in his own case, when his plans do not work as favorably as he had expected; and which enables him to persevere in his undertakings in cases where, but for his ardent piety, he must have been discouraged and abandoned the enterprize. There was in his heart a deep fountain of happiness, fed perpetually by the hidden spirit of regard for his Maker's will, which kept his mind

from sinking under discouragements, and which led him on with untiring step, through all the difficulties of his way. His piety was of a calm, rational, elevated, cheerful cast: it was so, because it sprung from a heart, which, in every trouble, was accustomed to look directly to God for help, and to rely upon his promises in the darkest hours. This is a source of support and consolation, which, to any man who truly embraces it, will never fail, under any disheartening circumstances through which he may be called to pass. This, in the beautiful language of the bible, is the anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast, and which entereth into that within the veil. Now, if we have rightly read the character of Dr. Rice, and understood the finer feelings of his soul, this was the cast of his piety it was pre-eminently of a sweet, cheerful, happy stamp. And any analysis of his character, which leaves this fact out of view, and attempts to account for, at least, many things in his life, by a reference to the ordinary principles of human conduct, will present but a very partial and imperfect delineation of this excellent man. His views, respecting the great essentials of the gospel, (or those common principles of revealed religion, upon which all evangelical christians, of every denomination, can ineet and harmonize,) were of a large and truly catholic stamp. Hence the ardor with which he entered into the plan of the American Bible Society, and assisted in the formation of that noble institution. Hence, too, his friendly, and affectionate correspondence with clergymen at the north, whose views on some points, connected with the organization and government of the church, were known to differ from his His confidential friends and correspondents were not only to be found among such men as the professors at Princeton, but also among the professors at Andover; Congregationalists, no less than Presbyterians, were numbered among his most intimate bosom friends, from whom he was accustomed to seek counsel in difficulty, and to whom his heart was ever open, and ready to unburthen all its hopes and its fears, on any great subjects of interest to the church which came before him. We love to see this trait of character in any man: it is, wherever found, to our apprehension, a delightful exhibition of the true and proper spirit of christianity. Especially is it grateful to see it in men occupying conspicuous stations in the church and in the community. Most welcome of all is it, to find this spirit characterizing the professors in our theological institutions, to whom is committed the training of the rising ministry in this land, and upon whom, of course, there devolves such an overwhelming burden of responsibility. There are, undoubtedly, truths in religion which are essential; truths, without holding to which, no man can be a real christian; and these truths, moreover, possess very great importance,-an importance, indeed, equal to that of christianity itself; because, when these truths are

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