Summary: of the library is serving in that quarter with the regiment, he must, if he have any regard for his character as a Chris- tian, perform its rites: thus the often- repeated assurance of the Bishop of Calcutta, and the advocates of the Missionary Society, that provision would be made, present- ly determines itself into a mere verbal asser- tion. ‘To the deep regret of every unpreju- diced person in Arracan, there was no public means of spiritual consolation for its mili- tary or civil servants; and though, in official reports by the chaplain he is always re- ported as healthy and well, yet medical men pronounce it the most insalubrious of all the climates in India, not excepting even Ceylon. It is an indispensable duty, there- fore, that some spiritual guide should set- tle in Arracan, the most ready means of en- abling him to do so being the support of its military personel._Patapscoe, Sandoway, Ramree, and Cheduba, are the quarters which should be provided with such a guide,—quiet peaceful men—ready labourers in the gardens of the faith—whose piety, zeal, and humility should shine conspicuous amid the devastation of war, and tliction of lution.