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wish to speak of some of the innumerable advantages which the people of a hemisphere would realize by using a common coinage and enjoying with each other the freest trade imaginable, and how rich might be the constitutional provision made for the public instruction of youth destined to be citizens of America-indeed, for instruction which would greatly help to make the people of a continent homogeneous, and to imbue youth, in the best sense of the word, with American principles. One could wish to especially picture the happy working in all parts of a continent of a wonderfully well contrived-a sublimely beneficent-mechanism of self-government;-but suffice it to say, that the world will, when such a republic is established, see with admiration one of the grandest achievements of American statesmanship.

It may again be asked, Is it possible for American citizens to elaborate a practicable plan by which the blessing of school instruction will be secured to the youth of every part of a vast empire? This is a question upon the solution of which, it is highly probable, depends the destiny of the dearest interests of civil liberty in the new world. Happily, it is believed that this question can be answered in the affirmative. Yes, the present generation of Americans can, as far as it is possible for mortals to ensure blessings to their posterity, secure the happiness and well-being of the unnumbered millions of people who are to live on the western hemisphere. Let a wisely worded provision be incorporated into the Constitution of the United States, making it the specific duty of the national government to duly cherish the interests of learning in all the States and Territories beneath the American flag. Let the people in all parts of America take an intelligent and patriotic interest in seeing to it that the national and State governments and the humblest

school districts shall, in the years to come, co-operate in happy harmony in cherishing,-each in its respective sphere, the cause of true learning in the western hemisphere. In short, let all well-wishers of their country take something of the same praiseworthy interest in the education of youth as did Thomas Jefferson, and republican institutions may be expected to realize, even more than they do at the present day, a grand ideal of a noble destiny.

THE END.

A

INDEX.

Abolition, 217, 218, 224, 243, 266,
269, 271

Adams, C. F., 135; John, 12, 16, 24,
42, 171, 183, 346, 358; John Q.,

242

Africa, 366

Agriculture, study of, 195

Boulton, Matthew, 58

Books, forbidden, 14; on government,
for N. E., 166
Boutwell, 97

Botany, study of, 199
Brazier, 147

Breckenridge, Gen., 42, 124, 129
Bright, John, 294, 333
Bulls, 7, 137

Alabama, illiteracy in, 302; slave law, Bureau of Education, 31

299

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Burgoyne, 10

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Chicago, 333

China, 313, 339, 366
Chiriqui Lagoon, 290
Cholera, 159

Church and State, in Spain, 28, 29;
alliance of, 107, 137, 176
Cincinnati, 333; society, 108
Civil, liberty, I, 173; defined, 162;
service, 85; abuses foreseen by
Jefferson, 338

Clarkson, 222

Clay, 5, 21

Clayton-Bulwer treaty, 293

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Coles, 253, 260, 278, 294, 301, 311
Colet, 139, 141, 199

Columbia College, 46, 173, 184

Columbus, 102, 366

Education, Bureau of, 31; secretary
for, 31; primary, 67; not to be
left to private effort, 113; of poor
in Ken., 119; and duties on luxu-
ries, 164; in slave States, 296 et
seq., a State duty, 312; compulsory,
348

Commission of Inquiry, 5; on Site for Educational, advantages of American

University,
Confucius, 340

40

Congress, 77, 80, 84, 92; library, 336
Conspiracy, 90

Constitutional provisions for educa-
tion, 350, 353, 355, 356, 363, 368,
371, 374, 379

statesmen, 45; amendment to Con-
Electricity, 69, 75, 77, 81, 96,154, 159
stitution, 374, 375
Eliot, Pres., 138
Elgin, Earl of, 87
Ellsworth, Miss, 80
Engineers, 104, 112, 194

Continental Congress, enactment on English Bible, 9

schools, 248

Convocation against heretics, 141

Copernicus, 154

Coray, 15

Cornell, Ezra, 82

Corporations, secular and religious, 85

Cortez, 31, 32

Cotten-gin, 96

Coxe, Tench, 290

Cuba, 220; annexation, 375, 376
Curtis, G. W., 280

Czatoryski, Adam, 29

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English, language, 363; professors,
203

Erasmus, 140

Europe, languages, in, 365

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Geologists, 155

Georgia, slave law, 297; illiteracy in,
303, 304

Germany, emperor of, 19; indebted
to Jefferson, 3
Giles, 210

German language, 138

Gillespie, 274
Gilmer, 120

Girls, reading a qualification for citizen-
ship for, 344

Gladstone, 132, 333

J

Glasgow, 54

Graham, Mme., 17

Jacobins, 18
Jay, 13, 168, 218, 243

Grammar school in Albemarle Co., 37 Jefferson, on education and civil lib-

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Ideal university, 131

Illiteracy, Guizot on, 33; in Italy, 89;
in Mass., 347; in United States in
1870-1880, 307; in United States,
361

Illiterate nations, 35, 346

Index expurgatorius, Spanish, 14
India, 365

Indians, and English language, 367;
in need of obligatory education, 367;
policy towards, 368, 369
Inquisition, 13, 14, 161

Inventions, 53, 68; money value of,
95, 99

Italian language, 130, 138
Iturbide, 25

erty, 12; to A. von Humboldt, 3;
on New Spain, 4, 7, 8; sketch of
Kosciuszko, 10; to Kosciuszko on
priestcraft in New Spain, 12; to
John Adams on slave trade, 16; to
Lafayette on constitution for France,
21, 22; to Lafayette on bigotry and
self-government, 23; to John Adams
on passive submission to kings and
priests, 25; to Lafayette on free
press, 28; to De Onis on education
as qualification for citizenship, 29;
requests Dupont de Nemours to pre-
pare a plan for national education,
30; enlightenment the true basis for
government, 31; ignorance and free-
dom incompatible, 35; signs bills for
appropriations for universities and
schools, 37; generosity to Central
College, 38; to Virginia Legislature
urging appropriations for the uni-
versity, 38, 39; rector of the uni-
versity, 41; urges the founding of a
university in Washington, 44; his
report on site for State university,
48; on advantages of well directed
education, 105; on the importance
of the sciences, 107; to Wythe on
ignorance and superstition, 113; on
the men needed for a republic, 114;
on primary schools, 124; his coad-
jutors in founding the university,
125; his hopes resting on the cause
of learning, 127; on Cabell's re-
tirement, 129; his fears for the
university, 129; his self-sacrificing
labors for the university, 131; on
broadening the basis of educational
establishments, 132; on electives,
133; on Greek and Latin, 134, 147;
to Brazier on the same, 147; on
mathematics, 149; on sciences, in
his Sixth Message, 156; interest in
chemistry, 157; on study of science
of government, 160; opposition to
public debts, 165; his interest in
study of history, 174 et seq.; to John
Adams on courses of study, 183;
consults T. Cooper on plan for uni-

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