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nefactors of mankind. Here warlike nations have extended their borders, and erected kingdoms, which appeared in great splendor for a time, to serve the purposes of God's providence, and then vanished away like a fiery meteor of the night. Here have busy men, by fraud and violence, obtained large possessions, which soon changed their owners, and raised magnificent buildings, which are fallen into the dust. Thus do all the works of men upon earth pass away, while the earth itself, which is the work of God, and is innocent of all the evil that is done upon it, standeth sure, and his building suffereth no decay.

This is the earth which I would now propose to your consideration: the natural his tory is very different from its political; and, I trust, we shall find it both an agreeable and an edifying subject.

Writers, who have given us descriptions of the natural world, have divided it into three grand departments, or kingdoms, of plants, animals, and minerals. Of plants and animals I have treated in two former discourses; and I shall proceed now to the consideration of the earth and its minerals; in which we shall every where see the most evident proofs of the wisdom and goodness of God, and by which

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the truth of his revelation will be illustrated and confirmed.

. I shall enter into no curious theories: nor will there be any occasion for it. The great outlines of nature are fittest for all the purposes of christian edification, The plainest things, and such as are best understood by every capacity, are generally the most wonderful, and the most improving to the mind that meditates upon them. Where there is much curiosity and difficulty, there is fres quently less profit.

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The words of the text relate the generation or birth of what is called the Earth; that immense body of land and water, which human writers call the terraqueous globe: from which we learn, that, as the dry land did not appear till the waters were gathered together, the land was formed under water. The wis dom of this mode of formation is evident; although the progress of it must be above our comprehension. For in water all the materials of the earth were easily moved; and by ineans of water, solution, separation, association and subsidence are manifestly promoted; and accordingly, by those who dig into the earth, its solid materials are found to be duly sorted, and have the appearance of a sediment,

which had once floated in water, and afterwards settled out of it. And if the strata of the earth in mountains are not now parallel to the horizon, but often very oblique, and sometimes nearly perpendicular, yet the construction of such masses shews that they had settled in a regular form, and were brought by some force afterwards to their present situa tion.

As the earth appears to have been formed under the waters, it is as manifest, to every attentive observer, that the waters did once retire from the whole surface of the earth. When we compare small things with great, we find, that as the land and the channels of rivers are worn into precipices, pits, and winding furrows, by the departure of occasional inundations, so the surface of the earth, upon a scale proportionably larger, doth every where present to the sight the effect of descending waters. From the tops of the highest mountains, it is furrowed with channels; which, meeting others in their descent, grow wider and deeper, and wind about, as water doth in its progress, till they fall into the bed of some river, or lead us down to the sea, into which they retired when they subsided from the land.

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From this retiring of the water, we derive the inequality of the earth's surface and to that inequality we owe the generation of springs and rivers, the feeding of metallic ores and minerals in the fissures of the earth, and the regular draining off of waters, with an uninterrupted course, toward the sea. And to the great water-courses of the earth we owe most of those prospects which delight the eye. The waters, which once covered the earth, having forced their way down to the sea, left a way open for other waters ever after, over the whole face of the earth. Let the stream start from the higher grounds, and it will no where be detained till it falls into the ocean; which is a wonderful provision of divine providence, though not commonly attended to; and how it could have been brought to pass by any other mode of formation but that related in the Scripture, doth not appear. elegant serpentine disposition of vallies, occasioned by the descent of water, constitutes the chief beauty of our prospects. Where the soil is soft and moveable, these cavities are easy and gradual, and the bottoms are rich with the vegetable matter which has been washed off from the higher grounds. But in lands of an harder texture, rocks are under

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mined and overthrown; frightful precipices are formed by their fractures; and the vallies are rough with stones and rubbish. Yet we are no losers: for here the lines of nature are bolder. Where the face of a country is abrupt and irregular, it becomes sublime and magnificent; as a building in ruins makes a better picture, and is a fitter subject for a painter than where it has a flat and regular face. new building, which is the production of human art, hath a littleness about it, from the -uniformity of its lines; but when time and the elements have done their work upon it, it approaches nearer to the grandeur of nature.

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The sea, considered in itself, with the periodical motion of its tides, and its occasional commotions by winds and storms, gives us a stupendous idea of the power and greatness of God, who hath this raging element so much under his command, that he is represented to us as holding the seas and waters of the world in the hollow of his hand. Nor is his goodness less evident than his power: for the agitation of the sea, by the daily reciprocations of the tides, contributes to the purity and wholesomeness of the air; the labour of man is assisted by the advance and retreat of the waters through tracts of inland country. The

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