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THE LIFE OF John Buncle, Eſq CONTAINING Various OBSERVATIONS and REFLECTIONS, Made in ſeveral Parts of the WORLD, AND Many Extraordinary RELATIONS.

[...].— [...].&c.

Arr. Epict. L. III. C. 22. Enchirid. C. 23.

VOL. II.

LONDON: Printed for J. JOHNSON and B. DAVENPORT, at the Globe in Pater-Noſter Row. MDCCLXVI.

ADVERTISEMENT.

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IN a book publiſhed in the year 1756, I related the principal tranſactions of my life, from my entrance into the univerſity to the day of my marriage, in the year 1725; and endeavoured, by the way, to entertain my Readers with a variety of notions and remarks.

I now proceed to tell the remainder of my ſtory, and to lay before the Public ſome more of my obſervations and hints: This ſecond volume is chiefly a further vindication of myſelf; and the obſervations I add on ſubjects and matters of various kinds, are ſuch reflections as reſulted from the reaſon and nature of things, and were formed by a judgment free, and unbiaſſed by [iv]any authority. My own apology is the principal thing, interſperſed with real characters of ſeveral ſorts; and the additions to it, are as many ſolid, natural, and delicate adventitious things as came in my way. This is my book. I write with modeſty, and I purpoſe to do good. I imagine then, that all Critics (except the Critical Reviewers) will wink at the blemiſhes of a laudable writing. Scholars and men of ſenſe (who are above malevolence and the ſupercilious temper,) can bear deformities in a long work, and juſtly lay them on the imperfection of human nature. They know it is incapable of faultleſs productions.

FELICES.

CONTENTS.

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N. B. What refers to the Notes is diſtinguiſhed thus ().

  • 1 THE author's apology for the married ſtate — Page 1
  • 2 The hiſtory of Orlando and Belinda, rectified from a miſtake in the Tatler Page 2
  • 3 The author's apology for the married ſtate continued — Page 11
  • 4 The author's manner of living at Orton-lodge — Page 14
  • 5 Deſcription of Glencrow water-falls, and of the great age and ſize of carp and tench in a fenny water near Orton-lodge Page 15
  • 6 Farther account of uncommonly large carp and tench — Page 16
  • 7 (1 Deſcription of the black cock, the moor cock, and the cock of the woods) Page 17
  • 8 The author loſes his wife Charlotte, his friend Tom Flemming, and others Page 18
  • 9 A reflexion on death — Page 19
  • 10 The author departs from Orton-lodge, to try his fortune once more — Page 24
  • 11 Finds a delightful ſpot among the fells of Weſtmoreland — Page 25
  • 12 His deſcription of Baſil groves, the ſeat of Charles Henley, Eſq and of the library and ſkeleton there — Page 25
  • 13 His deſcription of John Henley, Eſq Page 32
  • 14 His deſcription of Miſs Statia Henley, and his converſation with John Henley, Eſq Page 33
  • [] 15 The author's account of himſelf to John Henley, Eſq — Page 35
  • 16 Mr. Henley's reply to his ſtory, and commendation of him for his ſentiments in religious matters. — Page 37
  • 17 The hiſtory of Charles Henley, Eſq and of his beautiful daughter Statia Page 38
  • 18 J. Henley, Eſq offers his grand-daughter (Miſs Statia) in marriage to the author Page 40
  • 19 The author's reply on that occaſion Page 41
  • 20 His ſtay and manner of living at Baſil-grove.—The death of Mr. Henley, and Miſs Statia's behaviour thereupon Page 42
  • 21 Converſation between him and Miſs Henley on the ſubject of matrimony — Page 44
  • 22 (2. The author's reflexions on celibacy and marriage) — Page 48
  • 23 Miſs Henley's anſwer to the author's remarks in favour of marriage — Page 49
  • 24 The author marries Miſs Statia Henley Page 51
  • 25 They repair to Orton-lodge.—Statia dies there — — Page 52
  • 26 The author leaves Orton-lodge, and ſets out for Harrogate ſpaw.—Deſcription of the romantic country over which he travelled Page 53
  • 27 Deſcription of a ſociety of proteſtant married friars in Weſtmoreland, and of the regularity of their lives — Page 54
  • 28 Some thoughts on the inſtitution of married regulars, exploding the doctrine of celibacy — Page 56
  • 29 The author's farther account of the married regulars he met with among the fells of []Weſtmoreland, with their form of morning prayer — Page 60
  • 30 Their prayer for night — Page 65
  • 31 The author's obſervation on the prayers of thoſe recluſes, and their account of their belief, which is unitarian — Page 67
  • 32 A reflection on true and falſe religion Page 71
  • 33 Thoughts exploding the invocation of ſaints Page 79
  • 34 (3. A ſhort account of the councils, and of the ſeveral editors and editions of them) Page 79
  • 35 Some further remarks on the doctrine of the invocation of ſaints, ſhewing the abſurdity of papiſts therein — Page 91
  • 36 The author leaves the religious in Weſtmoreland, and proceeds on his journey to Harrogate.—Miſſes his way Page 98
  • 37 Deſcription of a little country ſeat in the northern extremity of Stanmore, and of a ſleeping parlour in a grove — Page 101
  • 38 Where the author paſſes the night Page 102
  • 39 Receives the next day ſome account of Miſs Antonia Cranmer, a beautiful young lady of great fortune, miſtreſs of that houſe Page 103
  • 40 The author reſolves, if poſſible, to get her. —His manner of living for ſeveral days in the cottage of a poor fiſherman, in expectation of the return of the beautiful Antonia from Cumberland — Page 104
  • 41 Deſcription of a charming little country ſeat, where a ſolitary gentleman lived Page 105
  • 42 Some account of this gentleman, Doric Watſon, who had been bred a catholic []in France, and became a proteſtant hermit in England, with the motives for his converſion — Page 106
  • 43 The hermit's obſervations on Cardinal Bellarmine's notes of the church, ſhewing them not to be at all applicable to the church of Rome — Page 107
  • 44 (7. An abſtract of Dr. Chandler's obſervations on Bellarmine's ſixth note of the church — Page 109
  • 45 Remarks on the Abbé Le Blanc, and on his letters on the Engliſh nation, with ſome ſtrictures on Voltaire, and a defence of the Engliſh reformation — Page 115
  • 46 (9. Some account of the character and writings of Monſ. Bouhier, preſident of the French academy) — Page 118
  • 47 The marriage of prieſts defended, and ſhewn to have been the primitive doctrine of the church — Page 126
  • 48 The beginning of the author's acquaintance with Miſs Antonia Cranmer, and how it ended in a marriage — Page 134
  • 49 (10. Some remarks on the abſurdity of tranſubſtantiation) — Page 134
  • 50 The author buries his wife Antonia, and haſtens to Harrogate to diſſipate his grief.—His reaſon for not mentioning his children by his many wives Page 137
  • 51 Deſcription of Harrogate; of it's wells, and of the company there, with their manner of living; the nature and quality of theſe waters, for what diſorders fitteſt, and the ſame of ſeveral other mineral waters — — Page 139
  • [] 52 The author meets at Harrogate ſix gentlemen of his acquaintance from Dublin Page 146
  • 53 Their characters — Page 147
  • 54 The hiſtory of the unfortunate Miſs Hunt Page 156
  • 55 The picture of Miſs Hunt, and her unhappy end — Page 157
  • 56 The author falls in love with Miſs Spence Page 162
  • 57 An apology for the author's marrying ſo often Page 163
  • 58 Miſs Spence's reply to his addreſſes Page 167
  • 59 The author removes to Oldfield ſpaw, on account of an indiſpoſition occaſioned by a night's hard drinking, and his reflections on hard drinking — Page 171
  • 60 Deſcription of Oldfield ſpaw, with an account of it's water — Page 173
  • 61 An obſervation on our people of fortune going to other countries to drink mineral waters — Page 174
  • 62 An account of Moffat wells, and of the virtues of theſe waters — Page 174
  • 63 The author ſets out from Oldfield ſpaw for Knareſborough, but arrives at another place.—A morning thought on the riſing ſun — Page 178
  • 64 Deſcription of a beautiful ſpot and charming country ſeat, in the weſt riding of Yorkſhire — Page 180
  • 65 An account of two wonderful figures which played on the German flute — Page 181
  • 66 The hiſtory of Miſs Wolfe, who had known the author in Ireland, and recollects him Page 182
  • [] 67 An account of Oliver Wincup, Eſq with whom the author accidentally becomes acquainted — Page 184
  • 68 And goes with him to his ſeat, called Woodceſter-houſe — Page 185
  • 69 The manner of living at Woodceſter Page 186
  • 70 An account of a company of ſtrolling players at Woodceſter — Page 187
  • 71 The author leaves Woodceſter, and rides to a lone ſilent place, called Laſco Page 189
  • 72 The hiſtory of two rich beauties, immured in a lone-houſe, in a wood near Laſco Page 190
  • 73 Character of their guardian, Jeremiah Cock, an old lawyer — Page 191
  • 74 The author gets acquainted with him, and dines at his houſe — Page 194
  • 75 Deſcription of old Cock the lawyer Page 196
  • 76 The author finds means to propoſe to the ladies to carry them off — Page 198
  • 77 They agree to it, and he carries them off Page 199
  • 78 Is puzzled how to diſpoſe of them Page 202
  • 79 Carries them to Orton-lodge — Page 205
  • 80 The author's departure from Orton-lodge, where he leaves his two young heireſſes: miſſes his way a ſecond time; deſcription of the country — Page 210
  • 81 Deſcription of Mrs. Thurloe's ſeat in Weſtmoreland — Page 213
  • 82 An account of the two Miſs Thurloes Page 214
  • 83 Account of a Carthuſian monaſtery in Richmondſhire — Page 216
  • 84 Reaſons for reading the works of the Rabbies, fictitious and extravagant as they are — Page 217
  • [] 85 (11. An account of the Talmuds — Page 225
  • 86 An account of Knareſborough and it's waters.—The fall and death of Gaveſton Page 225
  • 87 Deſcription of the dropping well near Knareſborough — Page 227
  • 88 Obſervations on petrifying waters — Page 228
  • 89 (12. Etymology of the word Poſtilla) Page 231
  • 90 An account of Wardrew ſulphur-water, and a deſcription of Wardrew in Northumberland — Page 232
  • 91 The hiſtory of Claudius Hobart, a recluſe Page 233
  • 92 Who gives the author a manuſcript, intitled, The Rule of Reaſon, with a few thoughts on religion — Page 236
  • 93 Specimens of this tract, viz. Diſcourſe on the rule of reaſon — Page 237
  • 94 Account of revelation — Page 240
  • 95 Of the myſteries, Trinity, and ſacrifice of the croſs — Page 243
  • 96 Defence of the Socinians — Page 246
  • 97 An account of Socinus — Page 255
  • 98 The author returns to Harrogate, and from thence goes to Cleator in Weſtmoreland, to wait upon Miſs Spence — Page 259
  • 99 (13. An excellent morning and evening prayer, with obſervations thereon) Page 260
  • 100 The author's reception by Miſs Spence Page 261
  • 101 Manner in which he paſſed the evening at Cleator the firſt night he was there Page 264
  • 102 Converſation between the author and Miſs Spence's uncle, a clergyman, relating to the revolution, and excluſion of James II. Page 270
  • [] 103 A deſcription of Cleator — Page 277
  • 104 Character of Miſs Maria Spence Page 278
  • 105 A reflection on the education of women Page 281
  • 106 The author's departure from Cleator to London, in company with Miſs Spence Page 282
  • 107 A diſcourſe on fluxions, between Miſs Spence and the author — Page 284
  • 108 An account of Martin Murdoch, Miſs Maria Spence's preceptor in the mathematics, and his method of inſtructing her Page 290
  • The author's marriage with Miſs Spence Page 300
  • 109 Her death, and the author's behaviour thereupon — Page 301
  • 110 (14. Some account of the philoſopher Cleanthes) — Page 301
  • 111 The caſe of a lady (the author's wife) in a fever, and an account of four phyſicians who attended her — Page 303
  • 112 Moral thoughts; written by Miſs Spence, viz.
    • Of Morality — Page 311
    • Of Religion — Page 316
    • Of Reaſon and Truth — Page 318
    • Of Integrity — Page 319
    • Of Prieſt-craft in the tranſmiſſion of moveables, from the dead to the living Page 321
    • Of the Athanaſian creed — Page 324
    • Of Faith — Page 326
    • Avoidings.—The offices of a chriſtian Page 330
    • The meaning of John, chap. vi. v. 44.
    • Of Baptiſms in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — Page 332
    • [] Of Chriſtian idolatry.—Churchiſms and creeds — Page 333
  • 113 An account of Richmond the beau, and old Ribble the chymiſt — Page 334
  • 114 The picture of beau Richmond — Page 337
  • 115 The picture of a temperate man born with a conſumption — Page 338
  • 116 A hiſtory of metals.—What phlogiſton is, Page 340
    • What ſemi-metals are.—The nature and compoſition of antimony; what butter of antimony is — Page 341
    • Liver of antimony.—How antimony ſeparates gold from other metals — Page 342
    • The excellence of antimonial wine Page 343
    • The nature of biſmuth — Page 344
    • An extraordinary ſympathetic ink Page 345
    • Of zinc.—Of the nature of regulus of arſenic — Page 347
    • The characters of gold — Page 348
    • The wonderful ductility of gold — Page 353
  • 117 Mr. Ribble's concluſion, containing his thoughts and advice concerning riches Page 358
  • 118 A charming vale and country houſe in Nottinghamſhire, the ſeat of Mr. Monckton Page 362
  • 119 Character of Mr. Monckton — Page 363
  • 120 The author baits at a lone inn, where arrives the beautiful Miſs Turner of Skalſmore vale — Page 368
  • 121 The picture of Miſs Turner — Page 369
  • 122 The author's addreſs to Miſs Turner Page 370
  • 123 Miſs Turner's anſwer to the author, and their marriage — Page 371
  • [] 124 The unfortunate death of Miſs Turner, the author's fifth wife — Page 375
  • 125 (15. Some account of the temple of Jupiter Ammon) — ibid
  • 126 (16. The ſtory of Homonaea and Atimetus; and the epitaph of Homonaea at large) Page 377
  • 127 The picture and character of Curl the bookſeller — Page 382
  • 128 The picture of Carola Bennet — Page 384
  • 129 Hiſtory of Miſs Bennet — Page 386
  • 130 A deſcription of a London convent, and an adventure there — Page 387
  • 131 The hiſtory of Miſs Bennet continued Page 390
  • 132 A reflexion on hypocrites — Page 392
  • 133 The Rev. Mr. Tench's converſation with Miſs Bennet, in relation to religion, and her converſion — Page 395
  • 134 A reflexion on the converſion of Miſs Bennet — Page 400
  • 135 Two Iriſh gentlemen carry the author to a gaming-table, where he loſes all his fortune — Page 402
  • 136 Curl's ſcheme for the author to carry off an heireſs, which he does effectually, and by what means — Page 404
  • 137 The picture of Miſs Dunk — Page 409
  • 138 Suppoſed death of Miſs Dunk, and her burial by the author — Page 412
  • 139 A winter night-ſcene on the mountains of Weſtmoreland — Page 413
  • 140 The author arrives at Dr. Stainvil's houſe, and is introduced to the doctor and company — Page 414
  • 141 Surpriſing ſtory of Mrs. Stainvil, who []proves to be the lately buried Miſs Dunk Page 415
  • 142 A reflexion on Miſs Dunk's marrying Dr. Stainvil — Page 410
  • 143 The author's departure from Dr. Stainvirl's houſe — Page 421
  • 144 Some obſervations on Mrs. Stainvil's coming to life again, after being taken out of the grave — Page 422
  • 145 The legend on the monument of Homonaea tranſlated into Engliſh — Page 424
  • 146 (17. Strictures on the Rev. Mr. Collier's tranſlation of the mythological picture of Cebes, and another promiſed) — Page 428
  • 147 (18. Anecdote of the great Prince of Condé) Page 429
  • 148 The author puts up at an inn, where he is informed of an old acquaintance of his, Dr. Fitzgibbons, who lived hard by Page 431
  • 149 Is moſt graciouſly received by the doctor, and why — Page 432
  • 150 The picture of Miſs Julia Fitzgibbons — Page 437
  • 151 The author marries Miſs Fitzgibbons, his ſeventh wife — Page 439
  • 152 And ſtudies phyſic in a private manner, by which a gentleman, with the purchaſe of a diploma, may turn out doctor, as well as if he went to Padua, to hear Morganni. —The method of ſtudy deſcribed, with ſome account of the beſt writers, and beſt editions of their works — Page 440
  • 153 (20. Anecdote concerning the great anatomiſt Veſalius) — Page 448
  • 154 A tranſlation of the Table of Cebes, compared []with the Rev. Mr. Collier's tranſlation of the ſame — Page 453
  • 155 (21. A remark on the Table of Cebes) Page 476
  • 156 The unfortunate death of the author's wife Julia — Page 479
  • 157 His reflexion on that loſs — Page 482
  • 158 His thoughts on wives and whores Page 483
  • 159 The author returns to Orton-lodge, in hopes of finding the two heireſſes he had left there — Page 485
  • 160 But finds only a letter of thanks for his civilities, and no indication of the place they were gone to — Page 486
  • 161 The hiſtory of the beautiful and excellent Leonora, and of the barbarous treatment ſhe met with from an Iriſh villain whom ſhe had married — Page 488
  • 162 A reflexion on popery — Page 492
  • 163 (23. An addreſs to the proteſtant ladies of Great-Britain, warning them againſt the dangers of popery, and of popiſh huſbands) — Page 493
  • 164 A remark on the unfortunate Leonora Page 498
  • 165 The tenth ſatire of Juvenal, tranſlated into Engliſh verſe — Page 499
  • 166 (24. Biſhop Burnet's opinion of the excellence of this ſatire, and the author's conſequent reflexions) — Page 510
  • 167 The author viſits again Dr. Stainvil and his lady — Page 513
  • 168 Diſcourſe between Dr. Stainvil and the author, concerning the manner in which the Spaniſh fly acts on the human body when applied in bliſters — Page 514
  • [] 169 Dr. Stainvil's ſudden death by an apoplexy; cauſe of apoplexies; and a reflexion on death — Page 516
  • 170 Short examination of the ſentiments of Wollaſton, Burnet, Caleb Fleming, Dr. Edmund Law, and Biſhop Sherlock, concerning the ſtate of departed ſouls Page 518
  • 171 The character of Dr. Stainvil — Page 520
  • 172 (25 and 26. Encomium of Dr. Law, and character of Biſhop Sherlock and Biſhop Hoadley, with ſome account of their writings) — Page 520
  • 173 The author's remarks on the ſleeping and the conſcious ſchemes, concerning departed ſouls — Page 522
  • 174 Mrs. Stainvil's behaviour on the death of her huſband.—The author marries her, and they ſet out for Ireland to pay a viſit to his father — Page 523
  • 175 The author finds his father become as ſtrict an unitarian as himſelf — Page 524
  • 176 Death of the author's father.—The author returns to England with his wife Page 525
  • 177 The author's wife dies, and he goes to ſea as captain of a little ſhip of his own; ſails to the South-ſeas, China, and very many other places, returns to Europe, after having ſpent nine years in travelling, and promiſes an account of his obſervations in a future work — Page 526
  • 178 (27 and 28. Remarks on Dr. Cheyne, and on Mr. William Law, the nonjuror, father of our methodiſts, and diſciple of the famous Jacob Behmen) — Page 528
  • [] 179 The author purchaſes a little villa near London, and retires thither to indulge his contemplative diſpoſition — Page 529
  • 180 His praiſe of our king and preſent miniſtry Page 530

ERRATA.

PAGE 8. l. 29. read ſhared. I remember. p. 16. l. 16. after then add they. p. 46. l. 11. for bare read bear. p. 53. l. 17. of the marginal notes, for dedica read dediée. p. 80. l. 23. for 1742 read 1472. p. 82. l. 9. for Regulieres read Reguliers. p. 82. l. 23. dele the comma after John, and place it after firſt. p. 83. l. 18. for Meux read Meaux. p. 85. l. 10. for Marcien read Marcian. p. 96. l. 20. for patrum read patrem. p. 102. l. 17. for lit read lits. p. 118. l. 26. after avoir add pour, and l. 29. for varron read Varron. p. 199. l. 6. for it read them. p. 208. l. 7. for mere read perfect. p. 217. l. 7. for St. Benet read St. Bruno. p. 220. l. 13. for keeping read keep. p. 238. l. 22. for reſentments read ſenſations. p. 265. l. 21. for 230 read 240. p. 343. l. 27. for laſts read leaſts. p. 344. l. 17. for purges read purge. p. 354. l. 29. after cover add the. p. 355. l. 3. for is read are. p. 380. l. 5. for quit read qui, and for mens read m'en. p. 386. l. 28. for mere read perfect. p. 517. l. 24. for teterrimi read teterrima. p. 527. l. 23. for was read were.

THE LIFE OF John Buncle, Eſq
PART II.

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SECTION I.

Felices homines! quos ſtricto foedere jungit,
Et ſocios natura facit! ſic cura levatur!
Sic augentur opes! ſic mutua gaudia creſcunt!
Thompſon's Tuphlo-pero-gamia *.

That is,

Go, happy pair! in ſtricteſt bonds ally'd!
Whom nature joins, and can, alone, divide:
'Tis thus, their riches, and their joys increaſe,
Their cares grow lighter, and they ſmile in peace.

An apology for the married ſtate.§. 1. WHEN I conſider how happy I have been in the married ſtate, and in a ſucceſſion of ſeven wives, never had one uneaſy hour; that even a Paradiſe, without an Eve, would [2]have been a wilderneſs to me; that the woods, the groves, the walks, the proſpects, the flowers, the fruits, the day, the night, all would have wanted a reliſh, without that dear, delightful companion, a wife; it amazes me to hear many ſenſible people ſpeak with abhorrence of matrimony, and inſiſt upon it, that wedlock produces ſo many troubles, even where the pair have affection, and ſorrows ſo very great, when they have no love for each other, or begin to fail in the kind and obliging offices, that it is contrary to reaſon to contract, if we have a juſt regard to peace and ſatisfaction of mind, and would avoid, as much as poſſible, the woes and bewailings of this turbid period. If you have acquired the divine habits, marriage may unhinge them. It often forces even the pious into immoralities. True, unhappy are many a wedded pair: years of calamity this engagement has produced to thouſands of mortals: it has made the moſt pious divines become very cruel, as I could relate: it has cauſed the moſt generous, ſenſible men, to murder the women they adored before they were their wives.

The Hiſtory of Orlando and Bellinda.

§. 2. This ſtory has been told before by the Tatler, in his 172d paper; but as he has [3]related only by hear ſay, and was miſtaken in ſeveral particulars, the account I give of this extraordinary affair, may be grateful to the reader.

When I was a little boy in Dublin, between ſeven and eight, Mr. Euſtace and his Lady lived next door to my father, in Smithfield, and the two families were intimate. Being a lively prating thing, Mrs. Euſtace was fond of me, and by tarts and fruit, encouraged me to run into her parlour as often as I could. This made me well acquainted in the houſe; and, as I was a remarker ſo early in my life, I had an opportunity of making the following obſervations.

Orlando Euſtace was a tall, thin, ſtrong man, well made, and a very genteel perſon. His face was pale, and marked with the ſmall-pox: his features were good, and yet there was ſomething fierce in his look, even when he was not diſpleaſed. He had ſenſe and learning, and, with a large fortune, was a generous man; but paſſionate to an amazing degree, for his underſtanding; and a trifle would throw him into a rage. He had been humoured in every thing from his cradle, on account of his fine eſtate; from his infancy to his manhood, had been continually flattered, and in every thing obeyed. This made him opinionated and proud, obſtinate, [4]and incapable of bearing the leaſt contradiction.

Bellinda Coot, his Lady, with whom he had been paſſionately in love, was as fine a figure as could be ſeen among the daughters of men. Her perſon was charming; her face was beautiful, and had a ſweetneſs in it that was pleaſing to look at. Her vivacity was great, and her underſtanding extraordinary; but ſhe had a ſatirical wit, and a vanity, which made her delight in ſhewing the weakneſs of other minds, and the clearneſs of her own conception. She was too good, however, to have the leaſt malice in ſuch procedure. It was human weakneſs, and a deſire to make her neighbours wiſer. Unfortunately for her, ſhe was married to a man, who, of all men in the world, was the unfitteſt ſubject for her quick fancy to act on.

But, notwithſtanding this, Euſtace and Bellinda were, for the moſt of their time, very fond. As ſhe was formed in a prodigality of nature, to ſhew mankind a finiſhed compoſition, and had wit and charms enough to fire the dulleſt and moſt inſenſible heart; a man of Orlando's taſte for the ſex, could not be without an inflamed heart, when ſo near the tranſporting object of deſire. She was his delight for almoſt a year, the dear ſupport of his life. He ſeemed to value her [5]eſteem, her reſpect, her love; and endeavoured to merit them by the virtues which fortify love: and therefore, when by his being ſhort, poſitive, and unreaſonable in his dictates, as was too often his wont; and on her being intemperate in the ſtrong ſentiments her imagination produced upon the occaſion, which was too frequently the caſe; when they ſeemed to forget the Apoſtle's advice for a while, that ye love one another with a pure heart, fervently; 1 Pet. i. 22. and had ſtrifes and debates, which ſhewed, for the time they laſted, that they were far from being perfect and entire, wanting nothing; then would her throwing her face into ſmiles, with ſome tender expreſſion, prove a reconciling method at once. Till the fatal night, this always had a power to ſoften pain, to eaſe and calm the raging man.

But poor at beſt is the condition of human life here below; and, when to weak and imperfect faculties, we add inconſiſtencies, and do not act up to the eternal law of reaſon, and of God; when love of fame, curioſity, reſentment, or any of our particular propenſities; when humour, vanity, or any of our inferior powers, are permitted to act againſt juſtice and veracity, and inſtead of reflecting on the reaſon of the thing, or the right of the caſe, that by the influence this has on the mind, we may be conſtituted [6]virtuous, and attached to truth; we go down with the current of the paſſions, and let bent and humour determine us, in oppoſition to what is decent and fit: if in a ſtate ſo unfriendly as this is, to the heavenly and divine life, where folly and vice are for ever ſtriving to introduce diſorder into our frame, and it is difficult indeed, to preſerve, in any degree, an integrity of character, and peace within: — if, in ſuch a ſituation, inſtead of labouring to deſtroy all the ſeeds of envy, pride, ill-will, and impatience, and endeavouring to eſtabliſh and maintain a due inward oeconomy and harmony, by paying a perpetual regard to truth, that is, to the real circumſtances and relation of things in which we ſtand, — to the practice of reaſon in its juſt extent, according to the capacities and natures of every being; we do, on the contrary, diſregard the moral faculty, and become a mere ſyſtem of paſſions and affections, without any thing at the head of them to govern them; — what then can be expected, but deficiency and deformity, degeneracy and guilty practice? This was the caſe of Euſtace and Bellinda. Paſſion and own-will were ſo near and intimate to him, that he ſeemed to live under a deliberate reſolution not to be governed by reaſon. He would wink at the light he had, ſtruggle to evade conviction, and make his mind a chaos and a hell. Bellinda, at the [7]ſame time, was too quick, too vain, and too often forgot to take into her idea of a good character, a continual ſubordination of the lower powers of our nature to the faculty of reaſon. This produced the following ſcene.

Maria (ſiſter to Bellinda) returned one evening with a five-guinea fan ſhe had bought that afternoon, and was tedious in praiſing ſome Indian figures that were painted in it. Mrs. Euſtace, who had a taſte for pictures, ſaid, the colours were fine, but the images ridiculous and deſpicable; and her ſiſter muſt certainly be a little Indian-mad, or her fondneſs for every thing from that ſide of the globe could not be ſo exceſſive and extravagant as it always appeared to be.

To this Maria replied with ſome heat, and Euſtace very peremptorily inſiſted upon it, that ſhe was right. With poſitiveneſs and paſſion, he magnified the beauties of the figures in the fan, and with violence reflected ſo ſeverely on the good judgment Bellinda, upon all occaſions, pretended to, (as he expreſſed it) that at laſt, her imagination was fired, and, with too much eagerneſs, ſhe not only ridiculed the opinion of her ſiſter, in reſpect of ſuch things, but ſpoke with too much warmth againſt the deſpotic tempers of ſelf-ſufficient huſbands.

To reverence and obey (ſhe ſaid) was not required by any obligation, when men were [8]unreaſonable, and paid no regard to a wife's domeſtic and perſonal felicity; nor would ſhe give up her underſtanding to his weak determination, ſince cuſtom cannot confer an authority which nature has denied: It cannot licenſe a huſband to be unjuſt, nor give right to treat her as a ſlave. If this was to be the caſe in matrimony, and women were to ſuffer under conjugal vexations, as ſhe did, by his ſenſeleſs arguments every day, they had better bear the reproach and ſolitude of antiquated virginity, and be treated as the refuſe of the world, in the character of old maids.

This too lively, though juſt ſpeech, enraged Euſtace to the laſt degree, and from a fury, he ſunk in a few minutes into a total ſullen ſilence, and ſat for half an hour, while I ſtayed, cruelly determining, I ſuppoſe, her ſad doom. Bellinda ſoon ſaw ſhe had gone too far, and did all that could be done to recover him from the fit he was in. She ſmiled, cried, aſked pardon; but 'twas all in vain. Every charm had loſt its power, and he ſeemed no longer man. When this beauty ſtood weeping by his chair, and ſaid, My love, forgive me, as it was in rallery only I ſpoke, and let our pleaſures and pains be hereafter honeſtly ſhared; I remember the tears burſt from my eyes, and in that condition I went away. It was frightful to look at Euſtace, [9]as he ſhook, ſtarted, and wildly ſtared; and the diſtreſs his Lady appeared in, was enough to make the moſt ſtony heart bleed: it was a diſmal ſcene.

This happened at nine at night, and at ten Orlando withdrew to bed, without ſpeaking one word, as I was informed. Soon after he lay down, he pretended to be faſt aſleep, and his wife rejoicing to find him ſo, as ſhe believed, in hopes that nature's ſoft nurſe would lull the active inſtruments of motion, and calm the raging operations of his mind: ſhe reſigned herſelf to ſlumbers, and thought to aboliſh for that night every diſagreeable ſenſation of pain: but no ſooner did this furious man find that his charming wife was really aſleep, than he plunged a dagger into her breaſt. The monſter repeated the ſtrokes, while ſhe had life to ſpeak to him, in the tendereſt manner, and conjured him, in regard to his own happineſs, to let her live, and not ſink himſelf into perdition here and hereafter, by her death. In vain ſhe prayed; he gave her a thouſand wounds, and I ſaw her the next morning a bloody, mangled corpſe, in the great houſe in Smithfield, which ſtood at a diſtance from the ſtreet, with a wall before it, and an avenue of high trees up to the door; and not in the country, as the Tatler ſays.

[10] Euſtace fled, when he thought ſhe was expiring, (though ſhe lived for an hour after, to relate the caſe to her maid, who heard her groan, and came into her room) and went from Dublin to a little lodge he had in the country, about twenty miles from town. The magiſtrates, in a ſhort time, had information where he was; and one John Manſel, a conſtable, a bold and ſtrong man, undertook, for a reward, to apprehend him. To this purpoſe, he ſet out immediately, with a caſe of piſtols, and a hanger, and lurked ſeveral days and nights in the fields, before he could find an opportunity of coming at him; for Euſtace lived by himſelf in the houſe, well ſecured by ſtrong doors and bars, and only went out now and then, to an ale-houſe, the maſter of which was his friend. Near it, at laſt, about break of day, Manſel chanced to find him, and, upon his refuſing to be made a priſoner, and cocking a piſtol to ſhoot the officer of juſtice, both their piſtols were diſcharged at once, and they both dropt down dead men. Euſtace was ſhot in the heart, and the conſtable in the brain. They were both brought to Dublin on one of the little low-back'd cars there uſed; and I was one of the boys that followed the car, from the beginning of James-ſtreet, the out-ſide of the city, all thro' the town. Euſtace's head hung dangling [11]near the ground, with his face upwards, and his torn bloody breaſt bare; and of all the faces of the dead I have ſeen, none ever looked like his. There was an anxiety, a rage, a horror, and a deſpair to be ſeen in it, that no pencil could expreſs.

The apology for the married ſtate continued.§. 3. Thus fell Euſtace in the 29th year of his age, and by his hand his virtuous, beautiful, and ingenious wife: and what are we to learn from thence? is it, that on ſuch accounts, we ought to dread wedlock, and never be concerned with a wife; No, ſurely; but to be from thence convinced, that it is neceſſary, in order to a happy marriage, to bring the will to the obedience of reaſon, and acquire an equanimity in the general tenour of life. Of all things in this world, moral dominion, or the empire over ourſelves, is not only the moſt glorious, as reaſon is the ſuperior nature of man, but the moſt valuable, in reſpect of real human happineſs. A conformity to reaſon, or good ſenſe, and to the inclination of our neighbours, with very little money, may produce great and laſting felicity; but without this ſubſervience to our own reaſon, complaiſance to company, and ſoftneſs and benevolence to all around us, the greateſt miſery does frequently ſprout from the largeſt ſtock of fortunes.

[12] It was by ungoverned paſſions, that Euſtace murdered his wife and died himſelf, the moſt miſerable and wretched of all human beings. He might have been the happieſt of mortals, if he had conformed to the dictates of reaſon, and ſoftened his paſſions, as well for his own eaſe, as in compliance to a creature formed with a mind of a quite different make from his own. There is a ſort of ſex in ſouls; and, excluſive of that love and patience which our religion requires, every couple ſhould remember, that there are things which grow out of their very natures, that are pardonable, when conſidered as ſuch. Let them not, therefore, be ſpying out faults, nor find a ſatisfaction in reproaching; but let them examine to what conſequences their ideas tend, and reſolve to ceaſe from cheriſhing them, when they lead to contention and miſchief. Let them both endeavour to amend what is wrong in each other, and act as becomes their character, in practiſing the ſocial duties of married perſons, which are ſo frequently and ſtrongly inculcated by revelation and natural reaſon; and then, inſtead of matrimony's being a burthen, and hanging a weight upon our very beings, there will be no appearance of evil in it, but harmony and joy will ſhed unmixed felicities on them: they will live in no low degree of beatitude in the ſuburbs of heaven.

[13] This was my caſe: wedlock to me became the greateſt bleſſing; a ſcene of the moſt refined friendſhip, and a condition to which nothing can be added to complete the ſum of human felicity. So I found the holy and ſublime relation, and in the wilds of Weſtmoreland, enjoyed a happineſs as great as human nature is capable of, on this planet. Senſible to all the ties of ſocial truth and honour, my partner and I lived in perfect felicity, on the products of our ſolitary farm. The amiable diſpoſitions of her mind, chearfulneſs, good nature, diſcretion, and diligence, gave a perpetual dignity and luſtre to the grace and lovelineſs of her perſon; and as I did all that love and fidelity could do, by practiſing every rule of caution, prudence, and juſtice, to prevent variance, ſoften cares, and preſerve affection undiminiſhed, the harmony of our ſtate was unmixed and divine. Since the primitive inſtitution of the relation, it never exiſted in a more delightful manner. Devoted to each other's heart, we deſired no other happineſs in this world, than to paſs life away together in the ſolitude we were in. We lived, hoped, and feared but for each other; and made it our daily ſtudy to be what revealed religion preſcribes, and the concurrent voice of nature requires, in the ſacred tie. Do ſo likewiſe, ye mortals, who intend to marry, and ye may, like us, be [14]happy. As the inſtincts and paſſions were wiſely and kindly given us, to ſubſerve many purpoſes of our preſent ſtate, let them have their proper, ſubaltern ſhare of action; but let reaſon ever have the ſovereignty, (the divine law of reaſon and truth) and be, as it were, ſail and wind to the veſſel of life.

Our manner of living at Orion-Lodge.§. 4. Two years, almoſt, this fine ſcene laſted, and during that period, the buſineſs and diverſions of our lone retreat appeared ſo various and pleaſing, that it was not poſſible to think a hundred years ſo ſpent, in the leaſt degree dull and tedious. Excluſive of books and gardening, and the improvement of the farm, we had, during the ſine ſeaſon, a thouſand charming amuſements on the mountains, and in the glens and vallies of that ſweet ſilent place. Whole days we would ſpend in fiſhing, and dine in ſome cool grot by the water-ſide, or under an aged tree, on the margin of ſome beautiful ſtream. We generally uſed the fly and rod; but, if in haſte, had recourſe to one of the little water-falls, and, by fixing a net under one of them, would take a dozen or two of very large trouts, in a few minutes time.

By a little water-fall, I mean one of thoſe that are formed by ſome ſmall river, which tumbles there in various places, from rock to rock, about four feet each fall, and makes a [15]moſt beautiful view from top to bottom of a fall. There are many of theſe falling waters among the vaſt mountains of Weſtmoreland. I have ſeen them likewiſe in the Highlands of Scotland.

Glencrow water-falls.At Glencrow, half way between Dumbarton and Inverary, there are ſome very fine ones, and juſt by them one Campbell keeps a poor inn. There we were entertained with water and whiſky, oat-cakes, milk, butter, and trouts he took by the net, at one of the little falls of a river that deſcends a prodigious mountain near his lone houſe, and forms, like what we have at Orton-Lodge, a moſt beautiful ſcene. Several happy days I paſſed at this place, with a dear creature, who is now a ſaint in heaven.

The great age and ſize of carp and tench, in a fenny water near Orton-Lodge.At other times we had the diverſion of taking as much carp and tench as we pleaſed, in a large, ſtanding, fenny water, that lies about two miles from the lodge, in a glen, and always found the fiſh of this water of an enormous ſize, three feet long, though the general length of fiſh of this ſpecies is eleven inches in our ponds: this vaſt bigneſs muſt be owing to the great age of theſe fiſh; I may ſuppoſe, at leaſt, an hundred years; for it is certain, that in garden-ponds, which have, for experiment's ſake, been left undiſturbed for many years, the carp and tench [16]have been found alive, and grown to a ſurprizing bigneſs.

The ſtate of carp and tench put into a pond by a gentleman of my acquaintance.A gentleman, my near relation, who lived to a very long age, put ſome fiſh of theſe ſpecies into a pond, the day that Colonel Ewer, at the head of ſeven other officers, preſented to the Commons that fatal remonſtrance, which in fact took off the head of Charles, that is, November 20, 1648; and in the year 1727, ſeventy-nine years after, on his return to that ſeat, he found them all alive, and near two feet and a half in length. This demonſtrates that fiſh may live to a very great age. It likewiſe proves that they continue to grow till they are an hundred years old, and then are the fineſt eating.

Another of our amuſements, during the ſummer's bright day, was the pointer and gun, for the black cock, the moor cock, and the cock of the wood, which are in great plenty on thoſe vaſt hills. Charlotte was fond of this ſport, and would walk with me for hours, to ſee me knock down the game; till, late in the evening, we would wander over the fells, and then return to our clean, peaceful, little houſe, to ſup as elegantly on our birds(1), as the great could [17]do, and with a harmony and unmixed joy they are for ever ſtrangers to. After ſupper, over ſome little nectared-bowl, we ſweetly chatted, till it was bed-time; or I played on my flute, and Charlotte divinely ſung. It was a happy life; all the riches and honours of the world cannot produce ſuch ſcenes of bliſs as we experienced in a cottage, in the [18]Wilds of Weſtmoreland. Even the winter, which is ever boiſterous and extreme cold in that part of the world, was no ſeverity to us. As we had moſt excellent proviſions of every kind in abundance, and plenty of firing from the ancient woods, which cover many of thoſe high hills; and two men ſervants, and two maids, to do whatever tended to being and to well-being, to ſupply our wants, and to complete our happineſs. — This ſoftened the hard rough ſcene, and the roaring waters, and the howling winds, appeared pleaſing ſounds. In ſhort, every ſeaſon, and all our hours, were quite charming, and full of delight. Good Tom Fleming, our friend, did likewiſe enhance our felicity, by coming once or twice a week to ſee us, and ſtaying ſometimes two or three days. In the ſummer time, we alſo went now and then to viſit him; and, if one was inclined to melancholy, yet it was impoſſible to be dull while he was by. His humour, and his ſongs, over a bowl of punch, were enough to charm the moſt ſplenetic, and make even rancour throw its face into ſmiles.

The death of Charlotte, my friend Tom Fleming, and others. 1727. aetat, 24.§. 5. Two years, as I have ſaid, this fine ſcene laſted; and during that ſoft, tranſporting period, I was the happieſt man on earth. But in came Death, when we leaſt expected him, ſnatched my charming partner [19]from me, and melted all my happineſs into air, into thin air. A fever, in a few days, ſnapt off the thread of her life, and made me the child of affliction, when I had not a thought of the mourner. Language cannot paint the diſtreſs this calamity reduced me to; nor give an idea of what I ſuffered, when I ſaw her eyes ſwimming in death, and the throws of her departing ſpirit. Bleſt as ſhe was, in the exerciſe of every virtue that adorns a woman, how inconſolable muſt her huſband be! and, to add to my diſtreſs, by the ſame fever fell my friend Tom Fleming, who came the day before my wife ſickened to ſee us. One of my lads likewiſe died, and the two ſervant maids. They all lay dead around me, and I ſat like one inanimate by the corps of Charlotte, till Fryer Fleming, (the brother of Tom,) brought coffins and buried them all. Thus did felicity vaniſh from my ſight, and I remained like a traveller in Greenland, who had loſt the ſun.

A reflexion on death.§. 6. O eloquent, juſt, and mighty death! (ſays Raleigh) It is thou alone puts wiſdom into the human heart, and ſuddenly makes man to know himſelf. It is death that makes the conquenor aſhamed of his fame, and wiſh he had rather ſtolen out of the world, than purchaſed the report of his actions, [20]by rapine, oppreſſion, and cruelty; by giving in ſpoil the innocent and labouring ſoul to the idle and inſolent; by emptying the cities of the world of their ancient inhabitants, and filling them again with ſo many; and ſo variable ſorts of ſorrows. It is death tells the proud and inſolent, that they are but objects, and humbles them at the inſtant; makes them cry, complain, and repent; yea, even to hate their former happineſs. It is death takes the account of the rich, and proves him a beggar, a naked beggar, which hath intereſt in nothing but the gravel which fills his mouth. It is death holds a glaſs before the eyes of the moſt beautiful, and makes them ſee therein their deformity and rottenneſs; and they acknowledge it.

Whom none could adviſe, thou haſt perſuaded: what none have dared, thou haſt done: and whom all the world hath flattered, thou only haſt caſt out of the world, and deſpiſed. Thou haſt drawn together all the far-ſtretched greatneſs, all the pride, cruelty, and ambition, of man; all the powerful charms of beauty; and covered it all over with theſe two narrow words, Hic jacet.

Nor is this all, mighty death! It is thou that leadeſt to the reſurrection of the dead; the diſſolution of the world; the judgment day; and the eternal ſtate of men. It is [21]thou that finiſhes the trial of men, and ſeals their characters, for happineſs or miſery for ever.

Be thou then, death, our morning and evening meditation: let us learn from thee the vanity of all human things; and that it is the moſt amazing folly, to melt away time, and miſ-apply talents, as the generality of reaſonable beings do: that we were not made men, thinking, rational beings, capable of the nobleſt contemplations, to ſpend all our thoughts and time in ſenſe and pleaſure, in dreſſing, feeding, and ſporting; or, in purchaſes, building and planting; but to prepare for a dying hour; that, when at the call of God, we go out of the body, not knowing whither we go, we may, like Abraham, travel by faith, and truſt to the conduct of the Lord of all countries. Since we muſt die, and thy power, O death, we ſee, is uncontrolable: ſince to the duſt we muſt return, and take our trial at the bar of Almighty God, as intelligent and free agents; (for under moral government, and God is a perfectly wiſe and righteous governor, the wickedneſs of the wicked will be upon him, and the righteouſneſs of the righteous will be upon him;) — ſince we muſt be numbered with the dead, and our circumſtances and condition indicate a future judgment, ſurely we ought to remove our chief concern from this world [22]to the other, and transfer our principal regard to the immortal ſpirit; that in the hour of agony, a virtuous mind, purity of conſcience, and good actions, may procure us the favour of God, and the guidance of his good ſpirit to the manſions of the bleſſed, where new pleaſures are for ever ſpringing up, and the happineſs of the heavenly inhabitants is perpetually increaſing. This is the one thing needful. Death demonſtrates, that this world of darkneſs and error, changes and chances, is not worth fixing our heart on. To ſecure our paſſage into the regions of perfect and eternal day, ſhould be the employment of immortal mortals.

§. 7. Thus did I reflect as I ſat among the dead, with my eyes faſtened on the breathleſs corps of Charlotte, and I wiſhed, if it was poſſible, to have leave to depart, and in the hoſpitable grave, lie down from toil and pain, to take my laſt repoſe; for I knew not what to do, nor where to go. I was not qualified for the world; nor had I a friend, or even an acquaintance in it, that I knew where to find. But in vain I prayed; it was otherwiſe decreed: I muſt go on, or continue a ſolitary in the wild I was in. The latter it was not poſſible for me to do, in the ſtate of mind I was in; overwhelmed with ſorrow, and without a companion of [23]any kind; and therefore, I muſt of neceſſity go to ſome other place. I ſold all the living things I had to Fryar Fleming, and locked up my doors. My furniture, linen, clothes, books, liquors, and ſome ſalt proviſions, inſtruments of various kinds, and ſuch like things, I left in their ſeveral places. There was no one to take them, or probability that any one would come there to diſturb them; and perhaps, ſome time or other, the fates might bring me back again to the lone place. Though it was then a deſolate, ſilent habitation, a ſtriking memento of the vanity and precarious exiſtence of all human good things; yet it was poſſible, that hearty friendſhip, feſtivity, and ſocial life, might once more be ſeen there. The force and operation of caſualties did wonders every day, and time might give me even a reliſh for the ſolitude in a few years more. Thus did I ſettle affairs in that remote place; and, taking leave of my friend, the fryar, with my lad O Finn, rode off.

SECTION II.

[24]
Collect thy powers divine, and then drive off
That evil thing call'd fear, that ſlaviſh fiend.
Let hope, let joy, thy boſom inmates be,
Through life ſtill cheriſh'd, and in death held faſt.
A gracious God, loud-ſpeaking to thy heart,
Through all his works, this truth inculcates ſtill,
Nature's thy nurſe, and providence thy friend.
Integrity, with fearleſs heart, ride on:
Undaunted tread the various path through life.
Day Thoughts.

Auguſt 4. 1727. The author's departure from Orton-Lodge, to try his fortune once more.§. 1. THE ſun was riſing, when we mounted our horſes, and I again went out to try my fortune in the world; not like the Chevalier of La Mancha, in hopes of conquering a kingdom, or marrying ſome great Princeſs; but to ſee if I could find another good country girl for a wife, and get a little more money; as they were the only two things united, that could ſecure me from melancholy, and confer real happineſs. To this purpoſe, as the day was extremely fine, and Finn had ſomething cold, and a couple of bottles at the end of his valife, I gave my horſe the rein, and let him take what way his fancy choſe. For ſome time, he gently trotted the path he had often gone, and over many a mountain made [25]his road: but at laſt, he brought me to a place I was quite a ſtranger to, and made a full ſtop at a deep and rapid water, which ran by the bottom of a very high hill I had not been up before. Over this river I made him go, though it was far from being ſafe, and in an hour's ride from that flood, came to a fine rural ſcene.

A delightful ſpot of earth among the fells of Weſtmoreland.§. 2. It was paſture-ground, of a large extent, and in many places covered with groves of trees, of various kinds; walnuts, cheſnuts, and oaks; the poplar, the planetree, the mulberry, and maple. There was likewiſe the Phoenician cedar, the larix, the large-leafed laurel, and the cytiſſus of Virgil. In the middle of this place were the ruins of an old ſeat, over-run with ſhrubby plants; the Virginia creeper, the box-thorn, the jeſſamine, the honey-ſuckle, the periwinkle, the birdweed, the ivy, and the climber; and near the door was a flowing ſpring of water, which formed a beautiful ſtream, and babbled to the river we came from. Charming ſcene! ſo ſilent, ſweet, and pretty, that I was highly pleaſed with the diſcovery.

A deſcription of Baſil Groves, the ſeat of Charles Henley, Eſq§. 3. On the margin of the brook, under a mulberry tree, I dined, on ſomething which Finn produced from his wallet, tongue [26]and ham, and potted black cock; and having drank a pint of cyder, ſet out again, to try what land lay right onwards. In an hour, we came to a large and dangerous watery moor, which we croſſed over with great difficulty, and then arrived at a range of mountains, through which there was a narrow paſs, wet and ſtony, a long and tedious ride, which ended on the border of a fine country: at four in the afternoon, we arrived on the confines of a plain, about a hundred acres, which was ſtrewed with various flowers of the earth's natural produce, that rendered the glebe delightful to behold, and was ſurrounded with groves. The place had all the charms that verdure, foreſt, and vale, can give a country. In the centre of this ground was a handſome ſquare building, and behind it a large and beautiful garden, which had a low, thick, holly-hedge, that encompaſſed it. As the door of this houſe was not locked, but opened by a ſilver ſpring turner, I went in, and found it was one fine ſpacious room, filled on every ſide with books, bound in an extraordinary manner. Globes, teleſcopes, and other inſtruments of various kinds, were placed on ſtands, and there were two fine writingtables, one at each end of the library, which had paper, ink, and pens. In the middle of the room there was a readingdeſk, [27]which had a ſhort inſcription, and on it leaned the ſkeleton of a man. The legend ſaid,—This ſkeleton was once Charles Henley, Eſq

Amazed I ſtood, looking on theſe things, and wondered much at the figure of the bones, tack'd together with wires; once, to be ſure, the maſter of this grand collection of books and manuſcripts, and this fine room, ſo ſweetly ſituated in the centre of diſtant groves: this ſkeleton had a ſtriking effect on my mind; and the more ſo, as it held a ſcroll of parchment, on which was beautifully written in the court-hand, (to appear more remarkable, I ſuppoſe) the following lines:

"Fellow-mortal, whoever thou art, whom the fates ſhall conduct into this chamber, remember, that before many years are paſſed, thou muſt be laid in the bed of corruption, in the dark caverns of death, among the lifeleſs duſt, and rotten bones of others, and from the grave proceed to the general reſurrection of all. To new life and vigour thou wilt moſt certainly be raiſed, to be brought to a great account. Naked and defenceleſs thou muſt ſtand before the awful tribunal of the great God, and from him receive a final ſentence, which ſhall determine and fix thee in an eternal ſtate of happineſs or miſery.

[28] What an alarm ſhould this be! Ponder, my fellow-mortal; and remember, God now commandeth men every where to repent, becauſe he hath appointed a day, in which he will judge the world in righteouſneſs, by that man, whom he hath ordained; whereof he hath given aſſurance unto all men, in that he hath raiſed him from the dead.— Judge the world!judgment! — the very found is ſolemn. Should it not deaden ſome part, at leaſt, of your concern for things temporal, and quicken your care and induſtry for the future life; — ought it not to make us condemn, before the dying hour, our vanity, and devotedneſs to bodily things, and make us employ the greateſt part of our time in the acquiſition of wiſdom, and an improvement in virtue, that when we appear at the ſeſſions of righteouſneſs, a ſacred knowledge, a heavenly piety, and an angelic goodneſs, may ſecure us from eternal puniſhment, and entitle us to a glorious eternity? Since a future judgment is moſt certainly the caſe, and the conſequence eternal damnation or ſalvation, how contemptible a thing is a long buſy life, ſpent in raking through the mire of trade and buſineſs, in purſuit of riches and a large eſtate; or in ſweating up the ſteep hill of ambition, after fame and ambition; or in living and dreſſing as if we were all body, and ſent into [29]time for no other purpoſe, than to adorn like idols, gratify like brutes, and waſte life in ſenſuality and vanity:—how contemptible and unreaſonable is this kind of exiſtence for beings, who were created to no other end, than to be partakers of a divine life with God, and ſing hallelujahs to all eternity; to ſeparate the creature from error, fiction, impurity, and corruption, and acquire that purity and holineſs, which alone can ſee God. Away then with a worldly heart: away with all thoſe follies, which engage us like fools and madmen; and let the principal thing be, to follow the ſteps of our great maſter, by patience and reſignation, by a charity and contempt of the world; and by keeping a conſcience void of offence, amidſt the changes and chances of this mortal life; that at his ſecond coming, to judge the world, we may be found acceptable in his ſight.

What a ſcene muſt this ſecond coming be! I ſaw, (ſays an apoſtle) a great white throne, and him that ſat on it; from whoſe face the earth and the heavens fled away, and there was no place found for them; and I ſaw the dead ſmall and great ſtand before God; and the books were opened, and the dead were judged out of thoſe things which were written in the books: and the ſea gave up her dead, and death and hell delivered [30]up their dead which were in them, and they were judged every man, according to their works. The ſecret wickedneſs of men will be brought to light; and concealed piety and perſecuted virtue be acknowledged and honoured. While innocence and piety are ſet at the right hand of the judge, and the righteous ſhall ſhine forth as the ſun in the kingdom of their father for ever and ever, ſhame and confuſion muſt ſit upon the faces of the ſinner and the ungodly. Damnation will ſtand before the brethren in iniquity, and when the intolerable ſentence is executed, what inexpreſſible agonies will they fall into? what amazement and exceſſes of horror muſt ſeize upon them?

Ponder then, in time, fellow-mortal, and chuſe to be good, rather than to be great: prefer your baptiſmal vows to the pomps and vanities of this world; and value the ſecret whiſpers of a good conſcience more than the noiſe of popular applauſe.

Since you muſt appear before the judgment-ſeat of Chriſt; that every one may receive the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad, let it be your work from morning till night, to keep Jeſus in your hearts; and long for nothing, deſire nothing, hope for nothing, but to have all that is within you changed into the ſpirit and temper of the holy [31]Jeſus. Wherever you go, whatever you do, do all in imitation of his temper and inclination; and look upon all as nothing, but that which exerciſes and increaſes the ſpirit and life of Chriſt in your ſouls.—Let this be your Chriſtianity, your church, and your religion, and the judgment-day will be a charming ſcene. If in this world, the will of the creature, as an offspring of the divine will, wills and works with the will of God, and labours, without ceaſing, to come as near as mortals can, to the purity and perfection of the divine nature; then will the day of the Lord be a day of great joy, and with unutterable pleaſure, you ſhall hear that tremendous voice: Awake, ye dead, and come to judgment. In tranſports, and full of honour and glory, the wiſe and righteous, will hear the happy ſentence, Come, ye bleſſed of my father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world."

This, and the ſkeleton, aſtoniſhed me not a little; and my wonder at the whole increaſed, as I could find no human creature living, nor diſcover any houſe or cottage for an inhabitant. This I though exceeded all the ſtrange things I had ſeen in this wonderful country. But perhaps, (it occured at laſt,) there might be a manſion in the woods before me, or ſomewhere in the groves on either ſide; and therefore, leaving the library, [32]after I had ſpent an hour in it, I walked onwards, and came to a wood, which had private walks cut through it, and ſtrewed with ſand. They ſhewed only light enough to diſtinguiſh the blaze of day from evening ſhade, and had feats diſperſed, to ſit and liſten to the chorus of the birds, which added to the pleaſures of the ſoft ſilent place. For about three hundred yards the walk I was in extended, and then terminated in meadows, which formed an oval of twenty acres, ſurrounded by groves, like the large plain I came from. Exactly in the middle of theſe fields, part of which were turned into gardens, there ſtood a very handſome ſtone houſe, and not far from the door of it, a fountain played. On either ſide of the water was a garden-chair, of a very extraordinary make, curious and beautiful; and each of them ſtood under an ever-green oak, the broad leaved Ilex, a charming ſhade.

A deſcription of John Henley, Eſq§. 4. In one of theſe chairs ſat an ancient gentleman, a venerable man, whoſe hair was white as ſilver, and his countenance had dignity and goodneſs. His dreſs and manner ſhewed him to be a perſon of fortune and diſtinction, and by a ſervant in waiting, it appeared, he was Lord of the ſeigneurie I was arrived at. He was tall and graceful, and had not the leaſt ſtoop, tho' [33]he wanted but a year of an hundred. I could not but admire the fine old gentleman.

Deſcription of Statia Henley, the granddaughter of John Henley, Eſq§. 5. On the ſame chair, next to him, ſat a young Lady, who was at this time juſt turned of twenty, and had ſuch diffuſive charms as ſoon new fired my heart, and gave my ſoul a ſoftneſs even beyond what it had felt before. She was a little taller than the middle ſize, and had a face that was perfectly beautiful. Her eyes were extremely fine; full, black, ſparkling; and her converſation was as charming as her perſon; both eaſy, unconſtrained, and ſprightly.

A converſation between John Henley, Eſq and the author.§. 6. When I came near two ſuch perſonages, I bowed low to the ground, and aſked pardon for intruding into their fine retirement. But the ſtars had led me, a wanderer, to this delightful ſolitude, without the leaſt idea of there being ſuch a place in our iſland, and as their malignant rays had forced me to offend, without intending it, I hoped they would pardon my breaking in upon them.

To this the old Gentleman replied. You have not offended, Sir, I aſſure you, but are welcome to the Groves of Baſil. It gives me pleaſure to ſee you here; for it is very ſeldom we are favoured with any one's company, [34]It is hard to diſcover or make out a road to this place, as we are ſurrounded almoſt by impaſſable mountains, and a very dangerous moraſs: Nor can I conceive how you found the way here without a guide, or ventured to travel this country, as there are no towns in this part of the county. There muſt be ſomething very extraordinary in your caſe, and as you mentioned your being a wanderer, I ſhould be glad to hear the cauſe of your journeying in this uninhabited region. But firſt (Mr. Henley ſaid) as it is now near eight at night, and you muſt want refreſhment, having met with no inn the whole day, we will go in to ſupper. He then aroſe, and brought me to an elegant parlour, where a table was ſoon covered with the beſt cold things, and we immediately ſat down. Every eatable was excellent, and the wine and other liquors in perfection. Miſs Henley ſat at the head of the table, her grandfather over-againſt her, and placed me at her right hand between them both. The young lady behaved in a very eaſy genteel manner; and the old gentleman, with freedom, chearfulneſs, and good manners. 'Till nine this ſcene laſted, and then Mr. Henley again requeſted I would oblige him with an account of my travels in that part of the world. This I ſaid I would do in the beſt manner I could, and while he leaned back in his eaſy chair, [35]and the beautiful Statia faſtened her glorious eyes upon me, I went on in the following words.

A ſummary of the author's hiſtory, from the beginning of his 17th year till his arrival at the groves of Baſil in 1727, in the 25th year of his age.§. 7. I am an Engliſhman, Sir, but have paſſed the greateſt part of my life in Ireland, and from the weſtern extremity of it I came. My father is one of the rich men in that kingdom, and was, for many years, the tendereſt and moſt generous parent that ever ſon was bleſſed with. He ſpared no coſt on my education, and gave me leave to draw upon him, while I reſided in the univerſity of Dublin five years, for what I pleaſed. Extravagant as I was in ſeveral articles, he never ſet any bounds to my demands, nor aſked me what I did with the large ſums I had yearly from him. My happineſs was his felicity, and the glory of his life to have me appear to the greateſt advantage, and in the moſt reſpected character, that money can gain a man.

But at laſt, he married his ſervant maid, an artful cruel woman, who obtained by her wit and charms ſo great an aſcendant over him, that he abandoned me, to raiſe a young nephew this ſtepmother had, to what ſplendor and power ſhe pleaſed. He had every thing he could name that money could procure, and was abſolute maſter of the houſe and land. Not a ſhilling at this time could [36]I get, nor obtain the leaſt thing I aſked for, and becauſe I refuſed to become preceptor to this young man, and had made ſome alteration in my religion, (having renounced that creed, which was compoſed, nobody knows by whom, and introduced into the church in the darkeſt ages of popiſh ignorance; a ſymbol, which ſtrongly participates of the true nature and ſpirit of popery, in thoſe ſevere denunciations of God's wrath, which it pours ſo plentifully forth againſt all thoſe whoſe heads are not turned to believe it), my father was ſo enraged that he would not even admit me to his table any longer, but bid me be gone. My mother-in-law likewiſe for ever abuſed me, and her nephew, the lad, inſulted me when I came in his way.

Being thus compelled to withdraw, I ſet ſail for England as ſoon as it was in my power, and arrived in Cumberland by the force of a ſtorm. I proceeded from thence to the mountains of Stanemore, to look for a gentleman, my friend, who lived among thoſe hills; and as I journeyed over them, and miſſed him, I chanced to meet with a fine northern girl, and a habitation to my purpoſe. I married her, and for almoſt two years paſt was the happieſt of the human race, till the ſable curtain fell between us, and the angel of death tranſlated her glorious ſoul to the fields of paradiſe. Not able to bear the place of our reſidence, after I had [37]loſt my heart's fond idol, I left the charming ſpot and manſion, where unmixed felicity had been for ſome time my portion, and I was travelling on towards London, to ſee what is ordained there in reſerve for me; when by accident I loſt my way, and the fates conducted me to the Groves of Baſil. Curioſity led me into the library I found in the plain, without this wood, from whence, in ſearch for ſome human creatures, I proceeded to the fountain, where I had the pleaſure of ſeeing you, Sir, and this young lady. This is a ſummary of my paſt life; what is before me heaven only knows. My fortune I truſt with the Preſerver of men, and the Father of ſpirits. One thing I am certain of by obſervation, few as the days of the years of my pilgrimage have been, that the emptineſs, and unſatisfying nature of this world's enjoyments, are enough to prevent my having any fondneſs to ſtay in this region of darkneſs and ſorrow. I ſhall never leap over the bars of life, let what will happen: but the ſooner I have leave to depart, I ſhall think it the better for me.

The old gentleman's reply to the ſtory.§. 8. The old gentleman ſeemed ſurprized at my ſtory, and after ſome moments ſilence, when I had done, he ſaid, Your meaſure, Sir, is hard, and as it was, in part, for declaring againſt a falſe religion at your years, you pleaſe me ſo much, that if [38]you will give me leave, I will be your friend, and as a ſubaltern providence, recompence your loſs as to fortune in this world. In what manner you ſhall know to-morrow, when we breakfaſt at eight. It is now time to finiſh our bottle, that we may, according to our cuſtom, betimes retire.

The hiſtory of Ch. Henley, Eſq and his beautiful daughter Statia.At the time appointed I met the old gentleman in the parlour, and juſt as we had done ſaluting each other, Statia entered, bright and charming as Aurora. She was in a rich dreſs, and her bright victorious eyes flaſhed a celeſtial fire. She made our tea, and gave me ſome of her coffee. She aſked me a few civil queſtions, and ſaid two or three good things on the beauties of the morning, and the charms of the country. She left us the moment we had done breakfaſt, and then the old gentleman addreſſed himſelf to me in the following words.

I do not forget the promiſe I made you, but muſt firſt relate the hiſtory of my family. I do it with the more pleaſure, as I find you are of our religion, and I cannot help having a regard for you, on your daring to throw up a fortune for truth; for bravely daring to renounce thoſe ſyſtems, which have an outward orthodox roundneſs given to them by their eloquent defenders, and within are mere corruption and apoſtacy.

[39] The ſkeleton you ſaw in the library was once my ſon, Charles Henley, a moſt extraordinary man. He had great abilities, and underſtood every thing a mortal is capable of knowing, of things human and divine.— When he was in his nineteenth year, I took him to France and other countries, to ſee the world, and, on our return to England, married him into a noble family, to a very valuable young woman, of a large fortune, and by her he had the young lady you ſaw ſitting on the chair near the table by me. This ſon I loſt, three years after his marriage, and with him all reliſh for the world: and being naturally inclined to retirement and a ſpeculative life, never ſtirred ſince from this country-houſe. Here my ſon devoted himſelf entirely to ſtudy, and amuſed himſelf with inſtructing his beloved Statia, the young lady you have ſeen. At his death he conſigned her to my care; and as her underſtanding is very great, and her diſpoſition ſweet and charming, I have not only taken great pains in educating her, but have been delighted with my employment. Young as ſhe is,Aug. 14, 1727. but in the ſecond month of her one and twentieth year, ſhe not only knows more than women of diſtinction generally do, but would be the admiration of learned men, if her knowledge in languages, mathematics, and philoſophy, were known to them: and as her father taught her muſic [40]and painting, perhaps there is not a young woman of finer accompliſhments in the kingdom.

Her father died towards the end of the year 1723, in the 39th year of his age, when ſhe was not quite ſixteen, and, by his will, left her ten thouſand pounds, and Baſil-Houſe and eſtate; but ſhe is not to inherit it, or marry, 'till ſhe is two and twenty. This was her father's will. As to the ſkeleton in the library, it was my ſon's expreſs order it ſhould be ſo, and that the figure ſhould not be removed from the place it ſtands in, while the library remained in that room; but continue a ſolemn memorial in his family, to perpetuate his memory, and be a memento mori to the living.

Old Mr. Henley offers me his granddaughter in marriage.§. 10. This is the hiſtory of Baſil Groves, and the late owner of this ſeat, and his daughter Statia. We live a happy, religious life here, and enjoy every bleſſing that can be deſired in this lower hemiſphere. But as I am not very far from a hundred years, having paſſed that ninety-two which Sir William Temple ſays, he never knew any one he was acquainted with arrive at, I muſt be on the brink of the grave, and expect every day to drop into it. What may become of Statia, then, gives me ſome trouble to think; as all her relations, except myſelf, are in the other world. To ſpend [41]her life here in this ſolitude, as ſeems to be her inclination, is not proper; and to go into the world by herſelf, when I am dead, without knowing any mortal in it, may involve her in troubles and diſtreſſes. Hear then, my ſon, what I propoſe to you. You are a young man, but ſerious. You have got ſome wiſdom in the ſchool of affliction, and you have no averſion to matrimony, as you have juſt buried, you ſay, a glorious woman, your wife. If you will ſtay with us here, till Statia is two and twenty, and in that time render yourſelf agreeable to her, I promiſe you, ſhe ſhall be yours the day ſhe enters the three and twentieth year of her age, and you ſhall have with her fortune all that I am owner of, which is no ſmall ſum. What do you ſay to this propoſal?

My reply.§. 11. Sir, I replied, you do me vaſt honour, much more I am ſure than my merits can pretend to. I am infinitely obliged to you, and muſt be blind and inſenſible, if I refuſed ſuch a woman as Miſs Henley, were ſhe far from being the fortune ſhe is: But I have not vanity enough to imagine, I can gain her affections; eſpecially in my circumſtances; and to get her by your authority, or power of diſpoſing of her, is what I cannot think of. I will ſtay however, a few months here, ſince you ſo generouſly invite [42]me, and let Miſs Henley know, I will be her humble ſervant, if ſhe will allow me the honour of bearing that title. This made the old gentleman laugh, and he took me by the hand, ſaying, This is right. Come, let us go and take a walk before dinner.

My reſidence at Baſil Groves for ſeven months, and manner of living.§. 12. There I paſſed the winter, and part of the ſpring, and lived in a delightful manner. The mornings I generally ſpent in the library, reading, or writing extracts from ſome curious MSS. or ſcarce books; and in the afternoons Miſs Henley and I walked in the lawns and woods, or ſat down to cards. She was a fine creature indeed in body and ſoul, had a beautiful underſtanding, and charmed me to a high degree. Her converſation was rational and eaſy, without the leaſt affectation from the books ſhe had read; and ſhe would enliven it ſometimes by ſinging, in which kind of muſic ſhe was as great a miſtreſs as I have heard. As to her heart, I found it was to be gained; but an accident happened that put a ſtop to the amour.

The death. of old Mr. Henley, and Statia's behaviour thereupon.§. 13. In the beginning of March, the old gentleman, the excellent Mr. Henley, Statia's grandfather and guardian, and my great friend, died, and by his death a great alteration enſued in my affair. I thought [43]to have had Miſs Henley immediately, as there was no one to plead her father's will againſt the marriage, and intended to ſend O Finn for Fryar Fleming; but when Statia ſaw herſelf her own miſtreſs, without any ſuperior, or controul, and in poſſeſſion of large fortunes, money, and an eſtate, that ſhe might do as ſhe pleaſed; this had an effect on her mind, and made a change. She told me, when I addreſſed myſelf to her, after her grandfather was interred, that what ſhe intended to do, in obedience to him, had he lived, ſhe thought required very ſerious conſideration now ſhe was left to herſelf: That, excluſive of this, her inclination really was for a ſingle life; and had it been otherwiſe, yet it was not proper, ſince her guardian was dead, that I ſhould live with her till the time limited by her father's will for her to marry was come; but that, as ſhe had too good an opinion of me, to imagine her fortune was what chiefly urged my application, and muſt own ſhe had a regard for me, ſhe would be glad to hear from me ſometimes, if I could think her worth remembring, after I had left the Groves of Baſil. This ſhe ſaid with great ſeriouſneſs, and ſeemed by her manner to forbid my urging the thing any further.

[44] My reply to Miſs Henley: being an apology for matrimony, as it is by the goſpel made a memorial of the covenant of grace.§. 14. I aſſured her, however, that time only could wear out her charming image from my mind, and that I had reaſon to fear, ſhe would long remain the torment of my heart. She had a right to be ſure to diſmiſs me from her ſervice; but in reſpect of her inclination to live a ſingle life, I begged leave to obſerve, that it was certainly quite wrong, and what ſhe could not anſwer to the wiſe and bountiful Father of the Univerſe, as ſhe was a Chriſtian, and by being ſo, muſt believe, that baptiſm was a memorial of the covenant of grace.

The Catholics, and the Viſion-mongers of the proteſtant ſide, (the Rev. Mr. Wm. Law, and others of his row) may magnify the excellence of celibacy as high as they pleaſe, and work it into chriſtian perfection, by ſounding words and eloquent pens; but moſt ſurely, revelation was directly againſt them, and required the faithful to produce in a regular way.

Conſider, illuſtrious Statia, that when the Moſt High gave the Abrahamic covenant in theſe words, I will be a God unto thee, and to thy ſeed after thee, and in thy ſeed ſhall all the families, or nations of the earth be bleſſed; which includes an intereſt in God, as a God, father and friend for ever, and a ſhare in all the bleſſings wherewith the Meſſiah, in the goſpel, hath inriched the world; theſe ineſtimable [45]bleſſings and promiſes of life and favour, were deſigned by the divine munificence for riſing generations of mankind; and it was moſt certainly intended, not only that they ſhould be received with the higheſt gratitude and duty, but that they ſhould be ſtrongly inculcated upon the thoughts of ſucceeding generations, by an inſtituted ſign or memorial, to the end of the world.

Circumciſion was the firſt appointed token or memorial, and at the ſame time, an inſtruction in that moral rectitude to which the grace of God obliges: and when the New Teſtament ſucceeded the Law, then was the covenant intereſt of infants, or their right to the covenant of grace, to be confirmed by the token or ſign called baptiſm; that action being appointed to give the expected riſing generation an intereſt in the love of God, the grace of Chriſt, and the fellowſhip of the Holy Spirit, that is, in all covenant bleſſings. But what becomes of this great charter of heaven, if chriſtian women, out of an idle notion of perfection, will reſolve to lead ſingle lives, and thereby hinder riſing generations from ſharing in the honours and privileges of the church of Jeſus Chriſt. Millions of the faithful muſt thereby be deprived of the token inſtituted by God to convey to them thoſe covenant bleſſings, which his love and goodneſs deſigned for the riſing generations of his people. Have a care then [46]what you do, illuſtrious Statia, in this particular. It muſt be a great crime to hinder the regular propagation of a ſpecies, which God hath declared to be under his particular inſpection and bleſſing, and by circumciſion and baptiſm, hath made the ſpecial object of divine attention and care. Away then with all thoughts of a virgin life, whatever becomes of me. As God hath appointed matrimony and baptiſm, let it be your pious endeavour to bare ſons and daughters, that may be related to God, their Father; to Jeſus, their Redeemer, and firſt born in the family; and to all the excellent, who are to enjoy, through him, the bleſſings of the glorious world above. Marry, then, illuſtrious Statia, marry, and let the bleſſing of Abraham come upon us gentiles. Oppoſe not the goſpel covenant; that covenant which was made with that patriarch; but mind the comfortable promiſes; I will circumciſe thy heart, and the heart of thy ſeed. I will pour out my ſpirit upon thy ſeed, and my bleſſing upon thine offspring. The ſeed of the righteous is bleſſed. They are the ſeed of the bleſſed of the Lord, and their offspring with them. Such is the magna charta of our exiſtence and future happineſs; and as infants deſcending from Abraham, in the line of election, to the end of the world, have as good a right and claim as we to the bleſſings of this covenant, [47]and immenſe promiſe, I will be a God unto thee, and to thy ſeed after thee, in their generations; it muſt be a great crime, to deprive children of this intailed, heavenly inheritance, by our reſolving to live in a ſtate of virginity. In my opinion, it is a ſin greater than murder. What is murder, but forcing one from his poſt againſt the will of providence; and if the virgin hinders a being or beings from coming on the poſt, againſt the will of providence, muſt ſhe not be culpable; and muſt ſhe not be doubly criminal, if the being or beings ſhe hinders from coming on the ſtage, or into this firſt ſtate, were to be a part of the perpetual generations, who have a right to the inheritance, the bleſſing, and were to be heirs according to the promiſe made to Abraham? Ponder, illuſtrious Statia, on the important point. Conſider what it is to die a maid, when you may, in a regular way, pruduce heirs to that ineſtimable bleſſing of life and favour, which the munificence of the Moſt High was pleaſed freely to beſtow, and which the great Chriſtian mediator, agent, and negociator, republiſhed, confirmed, and ſealed with his blood. Marry then in regard to the goſpel, and let it be the fine employment of your life, to open gradually the treaſures of revelation to the underſtandings of the little chriſtians you produce.

[48] This I am ſure your holy religion requires from you: and if from the ſacred oracles we turn to the book of nature, is it not in this volume written, that there muſt be a malignity in the hearts of thoſe mortals, who can remain unconcerned at the deſtruction and extirpation of the reſt of mankind; and who want even ſo much good will as is requiſite to propagate a creature, (in a regular and hallowed way) tho' they received their own being from the meer benevolence of their divine Maſter? What do you ſay, illuſtrious Statia? Shall it be a ſucceſſion, as you are an upright Chriſtian? And may I hope to have the high honour of ſharing in the mutual ſatisfaction that muſt attend the diſcharge of ſo momentous a duty?(2)

[49] Miſs Henley's anſwer.§. 15. All the ſmiles ſat on the face of Statia, while I was haranguing in this devout manner, and her countenance became [50]a conſtellation of wonders. When I had done, this beauty ſaid, I thank you, Sir, for the information you have given me. I am [51]a Chriſtian. There is no malignity in my heart. You have altered my way of thinking, and I now declare for a ſucceſſion. — Let Father Flemming be ſent for, and without waiting for my being two and twenty, or minding my father's will, as there's no one to oblige me to it, I will give you my hand. Charming news! I diſpatched my lad for the Fryar. The prieſt arrived the next day, and at night we were married. Three days after, we ſet out for [52] Orton Lodge, at my wife's requeſt, as ſhe longed to ſee the place. For two years more I reſided there; it being more agreeable to Statia than the improved Groves of Baſil. We lived there in as much happineſs as it is poſſible to have in this lower hemiſphere, and much in the ſame manner as I did with Charlotte my firſt wife. Statia had all the good qualities and perfections which rendered Charlotte ſo dear and valuable to me; like her ſhe ſtudied to increaſe the delights of every day, and by art, good humour, and love, rendered the married ſtate ſuch a ſyſtem of joys as might incline one to wiſh it could laſt a thouſand years: But it was too ſublime and deſirable to have a long exiſtence here. Statia was taken ill, of the ſmall-pox, the morning we intended to return to Baſil-Groves; ſhe died the 7th day, and I laid her by Charlotte's ſide. Thus did I become again a mourner. I ſat with my eyes ſhut for three days: But at laſt, called for my horſe, to try what air, exerciſe, and a variety of objects, could do.

SECTION III.

[53]
'Twas when the faithful herald of the day,
The village-cock crows loud with trumpet ſhrill,
The warbling lark ſoars high, and morning grey
Lifts her glad forehead o'er the cloud-wrapt hill:
Nature's wild muſic fills the vocal vale;
The bleating flocks that bite the dewy ground;
The lowing herds that graze the woodland dale,
And cavern'd echo, ſwell the chearful ſound.

April 1, 1729, we leave Orton Lodge again, and ſet out for Harrigate Spaw. A deſcription of the country we rid over. Aetat. 27.§. 1. VERY early, as ſoon as I could ſee day, the firſt of April, 1729, I left Orton-Lodge, and went to Baſil-Groves, to order matters there. From thence I ſet out for Harrigate, to amuſe myſelf in that agreeable place; but I did not go the way I came to Mr. Henley's houſe. To avoid the dangerous moraſs I had paſſed, at the hazard of my life, we went over a wilder and more romantic country than I had before ſeen. We had higher mountains to aſcend than I had ever paſſed before; and ſome vallies ſo very deep to ride through, that they ſeemed as it were deſcents to hell. The patriarch Bermudez, in journeying over Abyſſinia, never travelled in more frightful GlinsRelation de l'Ambaſſade, dedica a Don Sebaſtien, roy de Portugal. And yet, we often came to plains and vales which had all the charms a paradiſe could have. Such is the nature of this country.

[54] Through theſe ſcenes, an amazing mixture of the terrible and the beautiful, we proceeded from five in the morning till one in the afternoon, when we arrived at a vaſt water-fall, which deſcended from a precipice near two hundred yards high, into a deep lake, that emptied itſelf into a ſwallow fifty yards from the catadure or fall, and went I ſuppoſe to the abyſs. The land from this head-long river, for half a mile in length and breadth, till it ended at vaſt mountains again, was a fine piece of ground, beautifully flowered with various perennials, the acanthus, the aconus, the adonis or pheaſant's eye, the purple biſtorta, the blue borago, the yellow bupthalmum, the white cacalia, the blue campanula, and the ſweet-ſmelling caſſia, the pretty double daiſy, the crimſon dianthus, the white dictamnus, the red fruximella, and many other wild flowers. They make the green valley look charming; and as here and there ſtood two or three ever-green trees, the cypreſs, the larix, the balm of Gilead, and the Swediſh juniper, the whole ſpot has a fine and delightful effect. On my arrival here, I was at a loſs which way to turn.

The inhabitants of this fine valley, a ſociety of married friars.§. 2. I could not however be long in ſuſpenſe how to proceed, as I ſaw near the water-fall a pretty thatched manſion, and [...] [55]inhabitants in it. I found they were a religious ſociety of married people, ten friars and their ten wives, who had agreed to retire to this ſtill retreat, and form a holy houſe on the plan of the famous Ivon, the diſciple of Labadie, ſo celebrated on account of his connection with Mrs. Schurman, and his many fanatical writings.See my 1ſt volume, p. 347. where you will find a particular account of Labadie and Ivon. A book called the Marriage Chretien, written by this Ivon, was their directory, and from it they formed a proteſtant La Trappe; with this difference from the Catholic religious men, that the friars of the reformed monaſtery were to have wives in their convent; the better to enable them to obtain Chriſtian perfection in the religious life. Theſe Regulars, men and women, were a moſt induſtrious people, never idle; but between their hours of prayer always at work: the men were employed in a garden of ten acres, to provide vegetables and fruit, on which they chiefly lived; or in cutting down old trees, and fitting them for their fire: and the women were knitting, ſpinning, or twiſting what they had ſpun into thread, which they ſold for three ſhillings a pound: they were all together in a large, handſome room: they ſat quite ſilent, kept their eyes on their work, and ſeemed more attentive to ſome inward meditations, than to any thing that appeared, or paſſed by them. They looked [56]as if they were contented and happy. They were all extremely handſome, and quite clean: their linen fine and white: their gowns a black ſtuff. The women dined at one table: the men at another; but all ſat in the ſame room. The whole houſe was in bed by ten, and up by four in the morning, winter and ſummer. What they ſaid at their table I could not hear, as they ſpoke low and little, and were at a diſtance from me, in a large apartment: but the converſation of the men, at table, was very agreeable, rational and improving. I obſerved they had a great many children, and kept four women-ſervants to attend them, and do the work of the houſe. The whole pleaſed me very greatly. I thought it a happy inſtitution.

Some thoughts on the inſtitution of married regulars.§. 3. As to the marriage of the friars in this cloyſtral houſe, their founder, Ivon, in my opinion, was quite right in this notion. Chaſte junction cannot have the leaſt imperfection in it, as it is the appointment of God, and the inclination to a coit is ſo ſtrongly impreſſed on the machine by the author of it; and ſince it is quite pure and perfect; ſince it was wiſely intended as the only beſt expedient to keep man for ever innocent, it muſt certainly be much better for a regular or retreating prieſt, to have a lawful, [57]female companion with him; and ſo the woman, who chuſes a convent, and diſlikes the faſhions of the world, to have her good and lawful monk every night in her arms; to love and procreate legally, when they have performed all the holy offices of the day; and then, from love and holy generation, return again to prayer, and all the heavenly duties of the cloyſtered life; than to live, againſt the inſtitution of nature and providence, a burning, tortured nun, and a burning, tortured friar; locked up in walls they can never paſs, and under the government of ſome old, croſs, impotent ſuperior. There is ſome ſenſe in ſuch a marriage chretien in a convent. Ivon's convent is well enough. A cloyſter may do upon his plan, with the dear creature by ones ſide, after the daily labours of the monk are over. It had been better, if that infallible man, the Pope, had come into this ſcheme. How comfortable has Ivon made it to the human race, who renounce the dreſs and pageantry, and all the vanities of time. Their days are ſpent in piety and uſefulneſs; and at night, after the completorium, they lie down together in the moſt heavenly charity, and according to the firſt great hail, endeavour to increaſe and multiply. This is a divine life. I am for a cloyſter on theſe terms. It pleaſed me ſo much [58]to ſee theſe monks march off with their ſmiling partners, after the laſt pſalm, that I could not help wiſhing for a charmer there, that I might commence the Married Regular, and add to the ſtock of children in this holy houſe. It is really a fine thing to monk it on this plan. It is a divine inſtitution: gentle and generous, uſeful and pious.

On the contrary, how cruel is the Roman church, to make perfection conſiſt in celibacy, and cauſe ſo many millions of men and women to live at an eternal diſtance from each other, without the leaſt regard to the given points of contact! How unfriendly to ſociety! This is abuſing chriſtianity, and perverting it to the moſt pernicious purpoſes; under a pretence of raiſing piety, by giving more time and leiſure for devotion. For it never can be pious either in deſign or practice, to cancel any moral obligation, or to make void any command of God: and as to prayer, it may go along with every other duty, and be performed in every ſtate. All ſtates have their intermiſſions; and if it ſhould be otherwiſe ſometimes, I can then, while diſcharging any duty, or performing any office, pray as well in my heart, O God be merciful to me a ſinner, and bleſs me with the bleſſing of thy grace and providence, as if I was proſtrate before an altar. What Martha was reproved [59]for, was on account of her being too Yolicitous about the things of this life. Where this is not the caſe, buſineſs and the world are far from being a hindrance to piety. God is as really glorified in the diſcharge of relative duties, as in the diſcharge of thoſe which more immediately relate to himſelf. He is in truth more actively glorified by our diſcharging well the relative duties, and we thereby may become more extenſively uſeful in the church and in the world, may be more public bleſſings, than it is poſſible to be in a ſingle pious ſtate. In ſhort, this one thing, celibacy, (were there nothing elſe) the making the unmarried ſtate a more holy ſtate than marriage, ſhews the prodigious nonſenſe and impiety of the Church of Rome, and is reaſon enough to flee that communion, if we had no other reaſons for proteſting againſt it. The tenet is ſo ſuperſtitious and dangerous, that it may well be eſteemed a doctrine of thoſe devils, who are the ſeducers and deſtroyers of mankind: but it is (ſays Wallace Diſſertation on the numbers of mankind.) ſuitable to the views and deſigns of a church, which has diſcovered ſuch an enormous ambition, and made ſuch havock of the human race, in order to raiſe, eſtabliſh, and preſerve an uſurped and tyrannical power.

[60] A further account of the Married Regulars I met with among the fells of Weſtmoreland.§. 4. But as to the Married Regulars I have mentioned; they were very glad to ſee me, and entertained me with great civility and goodneſs. I lived a week with them, and was not only well fed with vegetables and puddings on their lean days, Wedneſdays and Fridays, and with plain meat, and good malt drink, on the other days; but was greatly delighted with their manner and piety, their ſenſe and knowledge. I will give my pious readers a ſample of their prayers, as I imagine it may be to edification. Theſe friars officiate in their turns, changing every day; and the morning and evening prayers of one of them were in the words following. I took them off in my ſhorthand.

A Prayer for Morning.

ALMIGHTY and everlaſting God, the creator and preſerver of all things, our law-giver, ſaviour, and judge, we adore thee the author of our beings, and the father of our ſpirits. We preſent ourſelves, our acknowledgments, and our homage, at the foot of thy throne, and yield thee the thanks of the moſt grateful hearts for all the inſtances of thy favour which we have experienced. We thank thee for ever, O Lord God Almighty, for all thy mercies and bleſſings [61]vouchſafed us; for defending us the paſt night from evil, and for that kind proviſion which thou haſt made for our comfortable ſubſiſtence in this world.

But above all, moſt glorious Eternal, adored be thy goodneſs, for repeating and reinforcing the laws and the religion of thy creation, by ſupernatural revelation, and for giving us that reaſon of mind, which unites us to thee, and makes us implore thy communications of righteouſneſs, to create us again unto good works in Chriſt Jeſus.

We confeſs, O Lord, that we have done violence to our principles, and alienated ourſelves from the natural uſe we were fitted for: we have revolted from thee into a ſtate of ſin, and by the operation of ſenſe and paſſion, have been moved to ſuch practices as are exorbitant and irregular: but we are heartily ſorry for all our miſdoings: to thee in Chriſt we now make our addreſs, and beſeech thee to inform our underſtandings, and refine our ſpirits, that we may reform our lives by repentance, redeem our time by righteouſneſs, and live as the glorious goſpel of thy Son requires. Let the divine ſpirit aſſiſt and enable us to over-rule, conduct, and employ, the ſubordinate and inferior powers, in the exerciſe of virtue, and the ſervice of our creator, and as far as the imperfections of our preſent ſtate will admit, [62]help us ſo to live by the meaſures and laws of heaven, that we may have the humility and meekneſs, the mortification and ſelf-denial of the holy Jeſus, his love of thee, his deſire of doing thy will, and ſeeking only thy honour. Let us not come covered before thee under a form of godlineſs, a cloke of creeds, obſervances and inſtitutions of religion; but with that inward ſalvation and vital ſanctity, which renounces the ſpirit, wiſdom, and honours of this world, dethrones ſelf-love and pride, ſubdues ſenſuality and covetouſneſs, and opens a kingdom of heaven within by the ſpirit of God. O let thy Chriſt be our Saviour in this world; and before we die, make us fit to live for ever with thee in the regions of purity and perfection.

Since it is the peculiar privilege of our nature, through thy mercy and goodneſs, that we are made for an eternal entertainment in thoſe glorious manſions, where the bleſſed ſociety of ſaints and angels ſhall keep an everlaſting ſabbath, and adore and glorify thee for ever, let thy inſpiring ſpirit raiſe our apprehenſions and deſires above all things that are here below, and alienate our minds from the cuſtoms and principles of this mad, degenerate, and apoſtate world: mind us of the ſhortneſs and uncertainty of time, of the boundleſs duration, and the vaſt importance [63]of eternity, and ſo enable us to imitate the example of the holy Jeſus in this world, that we may hereafter aſcend, with the greateſt ardor of divine love, to thoſe realms of holineſs, where our hearts will be filled with raptures of gladneſs and joy, and we ſhall remain in the higheſt glory for ever and ever.

We live, O Lord, in reconciliation and friendſhip, in love and good will, with thy whole creation, with every thing that derives from thee, holds of thee, is owned by thee; and under the power of this affection, we pray for all mankind; that they may be partakers of all the bleſſings which we enjoy or want, and that we may all be happy in the world to come, and glorify thee together in eternity. To this end bring all the human race to the knowledge of thy glorious goſpel, and let its influence transform them into the likeneſs of Chriſt.

But eſpecially, we pray for all who ſuffer for truth and righteouſneſs ſake, and beſeech thee to proſper thoſe that love thee. Defend, O Lord, the juſt rights and liberties of mankind, and reſcue thy religion from the corruptions which have been introduced upon it, by length of time, and by decay of piety. Infatuate the counſels, and fruſtrate the endeavours of the prieſts of Rome, and againſt all the deſigns of thoſe, who are enemies to [64]the purity of the goſpel, and ſubſtitute human inventions in the place of revealed religion; proſper the pious labours of thoſe who teach mankind to worſhip one, eternal and omnipreſent being; in whoſe underſtanding, there is the perfection of wiſdom; in whoſe will, there is the perfection of goodneſs; in whoſe actions, there is the perfection of power; a God without cauſe, the great creator, benefactor, and ſaviour of men:—And that the duty of man is to obey, in thought, word, and deed, the precepts of godlineſs and righteouſneſs, without regard to pleaſure, gain, or honour; to pain, loſs, or diſgrace; diligently imitating the life of the holy Jeſus, and ſtedfaſtly confiding in his mediation.

In the laſt place, O Lord God. Almighty, we beſeech thee to continue us under thy protection, guidance, and bleſſing this day, as the followers and diſciples of thy Chriſt, through whom we recommend our ſouls and our bodies into thy hands, and according to the doctrine of his religion, ſay, Our Father, &c.

In this manner, did theſe pious Ivonites begin their every day; and when the ſun was ſet, and they had finiſhed their ſupper, they worſhipped God again in theſe words.

A Prayer for Night.

[65]

MOST bleſſed, glorious, and holy Lord God Almighty, who art from everlaſting to everlaſting, God over all, magnified and adored for ever! we, thy unworthy creatures, humble our ſouls in thy preſence, and confeſs ourſelves miſerable ſinners. We acknowledge our miſcarriages and faults, and condemn ourſelves for having done amiſs. We deprecate thy juſt offence and diſpleaſure. We cry thee mercy. We aſk thee pardon: and as we are quite ſenſible of our weakneſs and inability, and know thou loveſt the ſouls of men, when they turn and repent, we beſeech thee to give us true repentance, and endue us with the grace of thy ſanctifying ſpirit, that we may be delivered from the bondage and ſlavery of iniquity, and have the law of the ſpirit of life which is in Chriſt Jeſus. Upon thee our God, we call for that help which is never wanting, and beſeech thee to give us thy heavenly aſſiſtance, that we may recover our reaſonable nature, refine our ſpirits by goodneſs, and purify ourſelves even as the Lord Jeſus is pure. O thou Father of Lights, and the God of all comforts, inform our underſtandings with truth, and give us one ray of that divine wiſdom which ſitteth on the right hand of thy throne. O let us be always under thy communication [66]and influence, and enable us, through the recommendation of thy Son, our mediator and redeemer, to lay aſide all paſſion, prejudice, and vice, to receive thy truth in the love of it, and to ſerve thee with ingenuity of mind, and freedom of ſpirit: that we may paſs through a religious life to a bleſſed immortality, and come to that eternal reſt, where we ſhall behold thy face in righteouſneſs, and adore and bleſs thee to eternity, for our ſalvation through him who hath redeemed us by his blood.

We praiſe and magnify thy goodneſs, O Lord God Almighty, for our maintenance and preſervation; by thy conſtant providence over us, and we beſeech thee to take us into thy ſpecial care and protection this night. Defend us from all the powers of darkneſs, and from evil men and evil things, and raiſe us in health and ſafety. Do thou, moſt great and good God, protect us and bleſs us this night, and when we awake in the morning, let our hearts be with thee, and thy hand with us. And the ſame mercies we beg for all mankind; that thy goodneſs and power may preſerve them, and thy direction and influence ſecure their eternal ſalvation, through Jeſus Chriſt our Lord, by whom thou haſt taught us to call upon thee as our Father, &c.

[67] An obſervation on the prayers of the Ivon recluſes.§. 5. By the way, I cannot help obſerving, that theſe diſciples of Ivon are much reformed in reſpect of what his cloyſtered followers were in his time. It appears from Ivon's books, that he was as great a viſionary and tritheiſt as his maſter Labadie, or any of our modern myſtics now are. But theſe Regulars I found among the Fells, tho' on Ivon's plan, are as rational Chriſtians as ever adorned the religion of our Maſter by a purity of faith. You ſee by their prayers, that their devotions are quite reaſonable and calm. There is no rant, nor words without meaning: no feeling inſtead of ſeeing the truth; nor expectation of covenant mercy on the belief of a point repugnant not only to the reaſon and nature of things, but to the plain repeated declarations of God in the Chriſtian religion. Their prayer is a calm addreſs to the great Maker, Governor, and Benefactor of the univerſe; and honour and obedience to Chriſt as Mediator, according to the will and appointment of God the Father.

An anſwer to a queſtion I aſked one of theſe Ivonites.§. 6. Upon my aſking one of theſe gentlemen, how they came to differ ſo much from Ivon, their founder, and ceaſe to be the patrons of viſion, and an implicit incomprehenſible faith? He told me, they had read all the books on both ſides of the queſtion, that had been written of late years, and [68]could not reſiſt the force of the evidence in favour of reaſon and the divine unity. They ſaw it go againſt mechanical impulſe, and ſtrong perſuaſion without grounds, and therefore, they diſmiſſed Ivon's notions of believing without ideas, as they became ſenſible it was the ſame thing as ſeeing without light or objects. Without dealing any longer in a miſt of words, or ſhewing themſelves orthodox, by empty, inſignificant ſounds, they reſolved, that the object of their worſhip, for the time to come, ſhould be, that one ſupreme ſelf-exiſtent being, of abſolute, infinite perfection, who is the firſt cauſe of all things, and whoſe numerical identity and infinite perfections are demonſtrable from certain principles of reaſon, antecedent to any peculiar revelation;—and confeſſed that the bleſſing, with which Jeſus Chriſt was ſent by God to bleſs the world, conſiſts in turning men from their iniquities. They now perceived what the creed-makers, and Ivon, their founder, could not ſee, to wit, that it is againſt the ſacred texts, to aſcribe to Each Perſon of Three the nature and all eſſential attributes and properties of the One only true God, and yet make the Three the One true God only, when conſidered conjunctly; for if Each has all poſſible perfections and attributes, then Each muſt be the ſame true God as if and when conjoined; and of conſequence, [69]there muſt then be Three One true Gods, or One Three true Gods; Three One Supreme Beings, or One Three Supreme Beings, ſince to each of the three muſt be aſcribed (as the orthodox ſay) any thing and every thing, that is moſt peculiar and appropriated to the divine nature, without any difference. In ſhort, by conjobbling matters of faith in this manner, they ſaw, we had three diſtinct ſelfs, or intelligent agents, equal in power and all poſſible perfections, agreeing in one common eſſence, one ſort of ſpecies, (like a ſupreme magiſtracy of diſtinct perſons, acting by a joint exerciſe of the ſame power) and ſo the three are one, not by a numerical but ſpecific identity; three Omnipotents and one Almighty, in a collective ſenſe. This, (continued this gentleman) on ſearching the ſcriptures, we found was far from being the truth of the caſe. We diſcovered, upon a fair examination, and laying aſide our old prejudices, that there was nothing like this in the New Teſtament. It appeared to us to be the confuſed talk of weak heads. In the Bible we got a juſt idea of One Eternal Cauſe, God the Father, almighty, all-wiſe, unchangeable, infinite; and are there taught how to worſhip and ſerve him. The greateſt care is there taken to guard againſt the ill effects of imagination and ſuperſtition; and in [70]the plaineſt language, we are ordered to pray to this bleſſed and only potentate, the King of kings, and Lord of lords, who only, (or alone) hath immortality; and this in imitation of Jeſus, who in the morning very early went out into a ſolitary place, and there prayed Mark i. 35.. Who diſmiſſing his diſciples departed into a mountain to pray Mark vi. 46.. And he continued all night in prayer to GOD Luke vi. 12.: We are ordered to glorify and bleſs this only wiſe God for ever Rom. xvi. 27.. Bleſſed be the God and Father of our Lord Jeſus Chriſt 2 Cor. i. 3.. To God and our Father be glory for ever Phil. iv. 20..—And to love him truly by keeping the commandments. Cui Jeſus ſic reſpondit: primum omnium praeceptorum eſt:Mark xii. 29, 30, 31. audi Iſraelita. Dominus Deus veſter dominus unus eſt. Itaque dominum Deum tuum toto corde, toto animo, tota mente, totiſque viribus amato. Hoc primum eſt praeceptum. Hear, O Iſrael, the Lord our God is one Lord. And thou ſhalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy ſoul, and with all thy ſtrength. This is the firſt Commandment.

Et voicy le ſecond. Vous aimerez voſtre prochain comme vous même. And the ſecond is like the firſt. Hunc ſimile eſt alterum, alterum ut teipſum amato. His majus aliud praeceptum nullum eſt. Thou ſhalt love thy neighbour as thyſelf. There is none other commandment greater than theſe.

[71] To ſay it;—we became fully ſatisfied, that the ſupreme God and Governor of the world, who exiſts by a prior neceſſity, and therefore muſt be one, a perfect moral agent, and poſſeſſed of all moral perfections, is the ſole object of religious worſhip: that Jeſus Chriſt was a temporary miniſter, with a legatarian power, to publiſh and declare the ſpiritual laws of this Great God: and that it is incumbent on mankind to yield a perfect obedience to theſe ſpiritual laws of this Supreme Being: that is, the duty of all, to make the object propoſed by Chriſt, his God and our God, his Father and our Father, the ſole object of faith; and to expect happineſs or ſalvation, on the term of being turned from all our inquities. This ſeemed a matter worthy of the Son of God's appearing in the world. Every thing elſe muſt be enthuſiaſm and uſurpation.

A reflection on true and falſe religion.§. 7. Here the Ivoniſt had done, and I was greatly pleaſed with his ſenſe and piety. What a heavenly Chriſtianity ſhould we profeſs (I ſaid) if the notions of our modern enthuſiaſts were as conſiſtent with Chriſt's great deſign and profeſſion! We ſhould then ſet up the Kingdom of God among men, and be diligent and active in promoting the laws of that kingdom. We ſhould then believe, like Jeſus Chriſt and his apoſtles, that [72]there is but One God, the Father Almighty. There is no one good (ſo commonly called) but one, that is God; or only the one God Mark x. 18.. Nullus eſt bonus niſi unus Deus. Caſtalio. (And Cant. MS. Clem. Alex. adds, — My Father who is in Heaven.) This is life eternal, to acknowledge thee, O Father, to be the only true GOD John xvii. throughout.. It is one God who will juſtify Rom. iii. 30.. We know that there is none other Gods but one. For to us there is one GOD the Father 1 Cor. viii. 4.6.. There is one GOD and Father of all, who is over all, and through all, and in you all Eph. iv. 6.. And we ſhould confeſs one Mediator,—the man Chriſt Jeſus. 2 Tim. ii. 5. We ſhould be conſiſtent, and not throw off thoſe principles upon which chriſtianity was founded, and alone could be firſt built. We ſhould invite men into our religion, by repreſenting to them the perfection of that primary law of God, reaſon or natural religion; by declaring the plainneſs and clearneſs of it to all attentive and well-diſpoſed minds; and then ſhew them how worthy it was of the Supreme Governor to give ſuch creatures as he has made us the goſpel: that by the religion of favour, he has, with glory to himſelf, diſplayed his paternal regard for us, by doing much more than what is ſtrictly neceſſary for our eternal good. God, on a principle of love, ſends his Chriſt, to adviſe us and awaken us to a ſenſe of our danger in paſſing through this world, in caſe (which [73]he ſaw would be the thing) we ſhould not conſtantly attend to the light we might ſtrike out ourſelves with ſome trouble. He calls us in an extraordinary manner to forſake vice and idolatry, and practiſe the whole ſyſtem of morality. We might expect, that a good God, would once at leaſt, interpoſe by ſuch an extraordinary method as revelation, to turn and incline his reaſonable creatures, to the ſtudy and practice of the religion of nature. This was acting like the Father of the Univerſe, conſidering the negligence and corruption of the bulk of mankind. The reaſon he gave us, the law of nature, was giving us all that was abſolutely neceſſary. The goſpel was an addition of what is excellently uſeful. What, my beloved, (might a rational divine ſay) can be more paternal, and worthy of the almighty Creator, than to reveal plainly the motive of a judgment to come, in order to ſecure all obedience to the religion of nature? Reaſon may, to be ſure, be ſufficient to ſhew men their duty, and to encourage their performance of it with the aſſurance of obtaining a reward, if they would duly attend to its dictates, and ſuffer them to have their due effect upon them: it may guide mankind to virtue, and happineſs conſequent to it, as God muſt be a rewarder of all thoſe who diligently ſeek him, and was enough to bring them to the knowledge, and [74]engage them in the practice of true religion and righteouſneſs, if they had not ſhut their eyes to its light, and wilfully rejected the rule written in their hearts. But as this was what mankind really did, and now do; as errors and impieties, owing to an undue uſe or neglect of reaſon, became univerſal; (juſt as the caſe of Chriſtians is, by diſregarding the New Teſtament); and reaſon, through men's faults, was rendered ineffectual, though ſtill ſufficient, (which juſtifies both the wiſdom and goodneſs of God, in leaving man for ſo many ages to his natural will, and ſo great a part of the globe to this day with no other light than the law of nature); and reaſon, I ſay, was rendered ineffectual, tho' ſtill ſufficient to teach men to worſhip God with pious hearts and ſincere affections, and to do his will by the practice of moral duties; to expect his favour for their good deeds, and his condemnation of their evil works; then was revelation a more powerful means of promoting true religion and godlineſs. The goſpel is a more effectual light. It is a clearer and more powerful guide: a brighter motive and ſtronger obligation to univerſal obedience than reaſon can with certainty propoſe. And therefore, though there was not a neceſſity for God to give a new rule in vindication of his providence, and in order to render men accountable to him for their actions; yet the [75]divine goodneſs was pleaſed to enforce the principles of reaſon and morality more powerfully by an expreſs ſanction of future rewards and puniſhments, and by the goſpel reſtore religious worſhip to the original uncorrupted rational ſervice of the Deity. This diſplays his paternal regard to his children, with glory to himſelf. Love was the moving principle of his ſending Chriſt into the world, to reform the corruptions of reaſon, to reſtore it to its purity, and moſt effectually to promote the practice of the rules of it. The goſpel-revelation conſidered in this manner appears to be the pure effect of the divine goodneſs. It is a conduct accompanied with the greateſt propriety and glory.

If this repreſentation of Chriſtianity was as much the doctrine of the church as it is of the Ivonites I have mentioned, we might then, with hopes of ſucceſs, call upon the rational infidels to come in. They could hardly refuſe the invitation, when we told them, our religion was the eternal law of reaſon and of God reſtored, with a few excellently uſeful additions: that the goſpel makes the very religion of nature, a main part of what it requires, and ſubmits all that it reveals to the teſt of the law of reaſon: that the ſplendor of God's original light, the light of nature, and the revelation of Jeſus, are the ſame; both made to deliver mankind [76]from evils and madneſs of ſuperſtition, and make their religion worthy of God, and worthy of men; to enable them, by the voice of reaſon in conjunction with the words of the goſpel, to know and worſhip One God, the Maker, the Governor, the Judge, of the world; and to practiſe all that is good and praiſe-worthy: that we may be bleſſed as we turn from iniquity to virtue; and by entring cordially into the ſpirit of the meritorious example or exemplary merits of Chriſt, be determined dead to ſin, and alive to righteouſneſs: in ſhort, my brethren, in the ſuffering and death of Jeſus, his patient, pious and meek, his benevolent and compaſſionate behaviour, under the moſt ſhocking inſult, indignity, and torture, we have what we could not learn from the religion of nature, a deportment that well deſerves both our admiration and imitation. We learn from the perfect example of Jeſus, recommended in his goſpel, to bear patiently illuſage, and to deſire the welfare of our moſt unreaſonable and malicious enemies. This is improving by religion to the beſt purpoſe; and as we reſemble the Son of God, the man Chriſt Jeſus, in patience, piety, and benevolence, we become the approved children of the Moſt High, who is kind and good to the unthankful and to the evil. In this view of the goſpel, all is fine, reaſonable, [77]and heavenly. The gentile can have nothing to object. We have the religion of nature in its original perfection, in the doctrine of the New Teſtament, enforced by pains and pleaſures everlaſting; and we learn from the death of the Mediator, not only an unprecedented patience, in bearing our ſins in his own body on the tree; but the divine compaſſion and piety with which he bore them. We have in this the nobleſt example to follow, whenever called to ſuffer for welldoing, or for righteouſneſs-ſake; and by the imitation, we manifeſt ſuch a command of temper and ſpirit, as can only be the reſult of the greateſt piety and virtue. This added to keeping the commandments muſt render men the bleſſed of the Father, and entitle them to the kingdom prepared for the wife, the honeſt, and the excellent.

But, alas! inſtead of giving ſuch an account of chriſtianity, the cry of the doctors is, for the moſt part, Diſcard reaſon, and proſtrate your underſtanding before the adorable myſteries. Inſtead of a Supreme Independent Firſt Cauſe of all things to believe in and worſhip, they give Three true Gods in number, Three infinite independent Beings, to be called One, as agreeing in one common abſtract eſſence, or ſpecies; as all mankind are one, in one common rational nature, or abſtract idea of humanity. Amazing account! [78]A triune no infidel or gentile of ſenſe will ever worſhip.

Inſtead of fixing ſalvation or moral rectitude, and our preferring the will of God, as delineated in the words of the goſpel, before all other conſiderations, we are told of an innocent, meritorious, propitiating blood, ſpilt by wicked hands, and ſo made an acceptable ſacrifice, to a Being who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity. This, we are aſſured, ſatisfies all the demands of the law. Here is infinite ſatisfaction:—and moſt certainly, I add, a cool indifference as to perſonal rectitude. When ſuch a faith or credulity becomes the principal pillar of truſt and dependance, then mere reliance on ſuch ſatisfaction to divine juſtice, may be a ſtupifying opiate, and make many remiſs in the labours of a penitential piety, and that exact rectitude of mind and life, which even reaſon requires, to render us acceptable to the Deity. Many an appetite and paſſion are indulged under this ſubterfuge; and with little fervency or zeal for good works, men expect to partake of the heavenly joys, by truſting to the merits of their Saviour, in their laſt will and teſtament. Deplorable caſe! Alas! how has Chriſtianity ſuffered by its doctors! The infidel laughs at it as thus preached. It becomes a by-word, and a hiſſing to them that paſs by.

[79] Some remarks on a paſſage in Binius; and a few thoughts in relation to the invocation of ſaints.§. 8. As to the library of my friends, the Ivonites, it was far from being a grand one, but I ſaw many curious books in it which had not come in my way before. From them I made ſeveral extracts, and to gratify my reader's curioſity a little, I will here favour him with one of them.

The firſt book I chanced to open in this library, was the ſecond volume of Severin Bini's edition of the Councils,(3) [79](edit. Paris, 1630) and over-againſt a very remarkable paſſage from Cyril, (p. 548) I found ſeveral written leaves, bound up in the volume, and theſe leaves referred to by an aſteriſk. The paſſage I call remarkable, is part [80]of a homily pronounced by the Alexandrian Patriarch before the council of Epheſus on St. John's day, in a church dedicated to his [81]names. In rehearſing his diſcourſe to the Holy Fathers, the Saint cites Heb. i. 6. and then addreſſes himſelfe to the apoſtle.

[82] [...]. — "When he [83]bringeth in the firſt-begotten into the world, he ſaith, Let all the angels of God worſhip him." [...], &c.—O bleſſed [84] John the Evangeliſt, explain this myſtery: Who is this firſt-begotten—how came he into the world? Myſterium hoc aperi, effare [85]etiam nunc, qui voces habes immortales. Reſera nobis puteum vitae. Da, ut nunc quoque de ſalutis fontibus hauriamus.

[86] This paſſage of Cyril I have heard ſeveral learned Roman Catholic gentlemen call a prayer, and affirm it was a proof of the Father's [87]Invocation of ſaints, in the beginning of the 5th century; for St. Cyril ſucceeded his uncle Theophilus in the ſee of Alexandria, [88]October 16, 412. But to this it may be anſwered,—

1. That Binius, though a zealous pleader for the catholic cauſe, (as the monks of Rome miſcall it) was of another opinion, for he takes no notice of this paſſage in his notes (in calce part. 3, Concil, Epheſini, tom. 2. p. 665, &c.) and moſt certainly, he would not have failed to urge it, if he had conſidered it as a prayer, and believed it did prove the invocation of ſaints.

[89] 2. Nor does Bellarmine, in his treatiſe de ſanctorum beatitudine, Henricus Vicus, de ſanctorum invocatione, Gabriel Vaſquez, de adoratione, or Gregorius de Valentia, de oratione, make uſe of this paſſage of Cyril, tho' they do, ex profeſſo, and datâ, diligently quote all the councils and fathers they can, to prove invocation of ſaints.

3. As rhetorical apoſtrophes, or proſopopaeias, are uſual in all authors, ſacred or civil, this may be one in Cyril, and it ſeems very plain from the paſſage, that it was intended for no more. It appears to be a rhetorical figure, and not a prayer; ſuch a figure as the Greek fathers were wont very frequently to uſe in their orations and poems.

Cyril intending, as appears by the ſequel, to anſwer his own queſtion with a paſſage in St. John's goſpel, makes a long rhetorical apoſtrophe to the apoſtle, as if he were there preſent, then adds, Annon dicentem audimus, [...]? But do we not hear him ſaying? Or, as Binius has the reading, [...], let us hear what St. John ſaith, audiamus itaque dicentem, as if they had heard John giving his anſwer, and then concludes with the firſt verſe of the firſt chapter of his goſpel, [...], &c. In the beginning was the word, &c.

It is therefore very plain, that this paſſage of Cyril is only a part of his homily or ſermon, [90]and that in a rhetorical manner, he quotes a text from a goſpel written by John about 330 years before, in anſwer to his own queſtion, who the word was? For Cyril to pray to John to tell them what he had told them long before, were ſenſeleſs and ridiculous; but to deſire the apoſtle to do it in a rhetorical apoſtrophe, was allowable. It amounts to no more than the figurative expreſſion in our liturgy, Hear what comfortable words our Saviour ſaith. Hear what St. Paul ſaith.

But if Cyril did in this paſſage truly pray to St. John, that could be no argument for popiſh invocation of ſaints; for, if an hundred fathers in the beginning of the fourth century, had preached up, and practiſed invocation of ſaints, yet that could not make it lawful and right, ſince we are taught by the ſcriptures to direct our prayers neither to ſaint no angel, but to God only, and in the name and mediation of Jeſus Chriſt only. We are not only poſitively ordered by the apoſtles to make all our addreſſes and prayers ot God only, and by the mediation and interceſſion of Jeſus Chriſt; but are told, that God is omniſcient, and ſo able to hear all our prayers; — all-ſufficient, and therefore able to ſupply all our neceſſities; —and that his mercies in Jeſus Chriſt are infinite. This makes our way ſure in this particular.

[91] On the contrary, the papiſts have no precept to pray to ſaints; nor any promiſe that they ſhall be heard; nor any practice of the primitive church, for 300 years after Chriſt, to encourage them; and therefore, ſuch popiſh invocation is a novel, groundleſs, and impious error.

Some remarks on the doctrine of invocation of ſaints.We are told by St. Peter, (Acts v. 31.) that God had exalted the Lord Jeſus Chriſt to be a Prince and Saviour, that is, an interceſſor.— By St. Paul, (Heb. vii. 25.) that Chriſt is able to ſave to the uttermoſt all that come to God by him, ſeeing he ever liveth to make interceſſion for them; (chap. ix. 24.) that he is gone to haven (for this very end) to appear in the preſence of God for us: (1 Tim. ii.5.) that there is not other mediator betwixt God and men but the man Chriſt Jeſus, that is, whoſe prerogative it is to intercede for ſinners to the Divine Majeſty; being an honour and dignity God hath exalted him unto, after his ſufferings, and as a reward thereof:—Thus are we informed by the divine oracles, and yet, notwithſtanding this, to make prayers and ſupplications to the Virgin Mary, and a thouſand other ſaints, for aid or help; and to have by their merit and interceſſion, the giſts and graces they pray for conferred upon them;—this is a doctrine of ſuch dangerous conſequence, as it is a depriving of Chriſt Jeſus of that grand dignity and prerogative [92]he is now in heaven exalted to, as much as in men lies, that I ſhould have admired how it ever came to be embraced by ſuch as profeſs chriſtianity, had not the ſpirit of God foretold (1 Tim. iv. 4.) that ſome ſhould depart from the faith, giving heed to ſeducing ſpirits, (that is, ſeducing men) and doctrines of devils, that is to ſay, doctrines concerning demons, or ſouls of famous men departed this life; which the heathens called demons; and to whom they gave the worſhip of prayer or invocation, as interceſſors or inferior divinities. This prophecy hinders my wondering at the thing: but then I muſt call ſuch modern invocation gentiliſm chriſtianized; a deplorable corruption.

Ponder then, ye Catholics, in time, and think not to excuſe yourſelves by arguing from the command Chriſtians have here on earth to require each others prayers to God for them:—For, we have no command to ſupplicate any in heaven but only God. (Matt. vi. 8.) We have no reaſonable aſſurance that the ſaints in heaven do hear our prayers, and of conſequence have not the ſame reaſons to requeſt their prayers to God for us that we have to requeſt the prayers of ſaints on earth: nor is this all: our prayers to each other in this life are only chriſtian requeſts to recommend our conditions to God: offices only of kindneſs: no acts of religious worſhip.

[93] When St. Paul was on earth, had any one on bended knees, with hands and eyes lifted up to heaven, in time of public prayer, and amidſt the ſolemn prayers to God, beſeeched him for aid and help, and for the conference of gifts and graces, he would have rent his cloathes, and ſaid, Why do ye theſe things? and can we ſuppoſe, that now in heaven, the apoſtle is leſs careful to preſerve entire God's prerogative.

Beſide, there is a great deal of difference betwixt St. Paul's ſaying, Brethren, pray for us, or our requeſting the prayers of the faithful here on earth for us, and praying to ſaints in heaven, as practiſed in the Roman church. Our's, are only wiſhes and requeſts; their's, ſolemn prayers on bended knees, made in the places and proper ſeaſons of divine worſhip, and joined with the prayers they make to God. They uſe the ſame poſtures and expreſſions of devotions they uſe to God himſelf. They pray to them for help and aid, and make them joint-petitioners with Chriſt; relying on their merits as the merits of Chriſt.

In ſum, in the tabernacle of this world, we are to requeſt the prayers of every good chriſtian for us: but in the tabernacle of heaven, we are to call on none but Him in whom we believe. As in the outward court of the Jewiſh tabernacle, every prieſt was permitted to officiate, to receive and preſent the devotions [94]of the people to the divine majeſty; but in the holy place, within the vail, none but the high-prieſt was to do any office or ſervice: even ſo in the tabernacle of this world, every chriſtian being a prieſt to God, has this honour conferred upon him; but in the holy of holies, in heaven, none but Chriſt, our high-prieſt, is to officiate. He only is there to appear in the preſence of God for us. It is his prerogative alone to receive our prayers, and preſent them to the divine majeſty. As none but the high-prieſt was to offer incenſe in the holy of holies, ſo none in heaven but Chriſt our high-prieſt is to offer our prayers to God his father. He alone is that angel to whom much incenſe was given, that he ſhould offer it with the prayers of all ſaints, upon the golden altar that was before the throne. (Rev. viii. 3.) Which alludes to the altar that was before the mercy-ſeat, on which the high-prieſt only was to offer incenſe.

But the catholic may ſay perhaps, that as on earth, men do not preſently run to kings to preſent their requeſts, but obtain his favours by the mediation of courtiers and favourites; even ſo, it is fitting we have recourſe to ſaints, who are favourites in heaven, that we may obtain acceſs to God, and have our ſuits accepted of him. Thus have I heard ſome learned men of the church of Rome argue. They ſhould conſider, however, in the firſt [95]place, that if an earthly prince had declared he would have no ſollicitor but his ſon, and that all favours and royal graces ſhould come to his ſubjects through his hands, and by means of his mediation; ſuch ſubjects could deſerve no favour, if they make their application to other favourites, contrary to their prince's command.—In the next place, if the ſollicitor, the ſon, was out of the queſtion, and no ſuch one had been declared by the king, yet as we petition earthly princes by ſuch as enjoy their preſence, becauſe they cannot give audience to all their ſubjects, nor do they know the worthy; but God is omnipreſent, his ears always open, and his head bowed down to the prayers of his people; is no reſpecter of perſons, but gives a like acceſs to the beggar as to the prince, and promiſes to caſt out none that make their application to him; it follows of conſequence, that we ought to addreſs ourſelves immediately to God, and aſk from him. If an earthly prince ſhould thus invite his ſubjects to petition him for the ſupply of their wants, I ſhould account the man no better than a fool or a madman, who would apply himſelf to any of the king's favourites.

The concluſion is; O thou that heareſt prayer, unto thee ſhall all fleſh come. (Pſ. lxv. 2.) Since God, who is infinite in mercy, omnipreſent, and omnipotent in wiſdom and action, admits every man to the throne of [96]grace, bids him aſk in the name of Jeſus Chriſt, and promiſes, whatever we aſk in his Son's name, he will do it.—Since the practice of praying to ſaints is injurious to Chriſt, and doth manifeſtly rob him of his royal prerogative, which is to be the one, and only mediator betwixt God and man; for in this office, he hath no ſharers or partners, according to the ſcripture account: As God is but one, and there is no other; ſo the mediator (by the appointment of God) is but one, and there is, there can be no other (4)— And ſince, excluſive of theſe unalterable things, the Roman doctors cannot be certain, that ſaints in heaven hear the requeſts of ſuppliants on earth, or know whether our prayers are fit to be accepted of God (5); let us reject that unlawful practice, the invocation of ſaints, [97]and pray for pardon and grace (as the goſpel directs) to God the judge of all, through Jeſus Chriſt the mediator of the new covenant.

This do, and thou ſhalt live.

N. B. Who was the author of theſe good remarks, theſe friars could not tell me; as they were in the book when they bought it. If I miſtake not, they are an abſtract from a letter of Biſhop Barlow to Mr. Evelyn, with ſeveral additions. I have not Biſhop Barlow's works by me; but I think I have ſeen ſomething to this purpoſe, written by this prelate about one hundred years ago.

SECTION III.

[98]
Say why was man ſo eminently rais'd
Amid the vaſt creation; why ordain'd
Through life and death to dart his piercing eye,
With thoughts beyond the limits of his frame;
But that th' omnipotent might ſend him forth
In ſight of mortal and immortal powers,
As on a boundleſs theatre, to run
The great career of juſtice; to exalt
His gen'rous aim to all diviner deeds;
To ſhake each partial purpoſe from his breaſt;
And thro' the miſts of paſſion and of ſenſe,
And thro' the toſſing tide of chance and pain,
To hold his courſe unfault' ring, while the voice
Of truth and virtue, up the ſteep aſcent
Of nature, calls him to his high reward,
Th' applauding ſmile of heav'n? Elſe wherefore burns
In mortal boſoms this unquenched hope,
That breathes from day to day ſublimer things,
And mocks poſſeſſion? Wherefore darts the mind
With ſuch reſiſtleſs ardor to embrace
Majeſtic forms; impatient to be free,
Spurning the groſs controul of wilful might;
Proud of the ſtrong contention of her toils;
Proud to be daring?

April 8, 1729, we leave the religious, and proceed in the journey.§. 1. THE eighth of April, 1729, I bid the Ivonites adieu, and by their directions walked up a very ſteep and ſtony mountain, which took me two hours, and then arrived at what I had often ſeen before in this part of the world, a great lake, the [99]water of which was black as ink to look at as it ſtood, though very bright in a cup, and muſt be owing, as I ſuppoſe, to its deſcending to the abyſs: by the ſide of this water, under the ſhade of oak-trees, many hundred years old, we rid for an hour, on even ground, and then came to a deſcent ſo very dangerous and dark, through a wood on the mountain's ſide, that we could hardly creep it down on our feet, nor our horſes keep their legs as we led them to the bottom. This declivity was more than a mile, and ended in a narrow lane between a range of precipices that almoſt met at top. This paſs was knee-deep in water, from a ſpring in the bottom of the mountain we had come down, which ran through it, and ſo very ſtony, that it took us three hours to walk the horſes to the end of it, though it was not more than two miles: but at laſt we came to a fine plain, over which we rid for an hour and a half, and arrived at a wood, which ſeemed very large, and ſtood between two very high unpaſſable hills. In this foreſt was our way, and the road ſo dark, and obſtructed by the branches of trees, that it was diſmal and uneaſy to go. On however we went for a long time, and about the middle of it came to a circular opening of about four acres, in which four very narrow roads met; that we had travelled, another before us, and one on [100]each hand. The way ſtrait on we were cautioned by my friends not to go, as it was a terrible ride; but whether to turn to the right or left, we had forgot. I thought to the right; but my lad was poſitive, he remembered the directions was to take the lefthand road. This cauſed a ſtop for ſome time, and as I was a little fatigued, I thought it beſt while we pauſed to dine. Finn brought immediately ſome meat, bread, and a bottle of cyder, from his valiſe, and under a great oak I ſat down, while our horſes fed on the green. One hour we reſted, and then went on again, to the left, as O Finn adviſed. For ſeveral hours we rid, or rather, our horſes walked, till we got out of the wood, and then arrived at the bottom of a ſteep mountain; one ſide of which is in the northern extremity of Weſtmoreland, and the other in the north end of Stanemore-Richmondſhire. This vaſt hill we aſcended, and came down the other ſide of the fell into a plain, which extends ſouth-eaſt for near half a mile to the river Teeſe, that divides the north end of Stanemore from Biſhoprick, or the county of Durham. Yorkſhire here ends in an obtuſe angle, between two mountains, and the angle, for a quarter of a mile, is filled with that beautiful tall ever-green tree, the broadleaved alaternus, intermixed here and there in a charming manner, with the fir tree, [101]the Norway ſpruce, and the balm of Gilead. It is as fine a grove as can in any part of the world be ſeen.

A deſcription of a little country ſeat, in the northern extremity of Stanemore.§. 2. Juſt at the entrance of it, by the ſide of a plentiful ſpring, which runs into the Teeſe, there ſtood the prettieſt little houſe I had ever beheld, and over it crept the pretty rock-roſe, the caſſine, the ſea-green coromilla, and other ever-green ſhrubs. Before the houſe, was a large garden, ſeven or eight acres of land, under fruit-trees, and vegetables of every kind; very beautifully laid out; and watered in a charming manner by the ſtream that murmured a thouſand ways from the ſpring by the houſe-door. I have not ſeen a ſweeter thing. It appeared ſo beautiful and uſeful, ſo ſtill and delightful a place, ſo judiciouſly cultivated, and happily diſpoſed, that I could not help wiſhing to be acquainted with the owner of ſuch a lodge.

A deſcription of a ſleeping parlour in a grove.§. 3. As there was no other fence to this fine ſpot of ground but a ditch like a ha to keep cattle out, I leaped into the gardens, and roamed about for ſome time, to look at the curious things. I then went up to the houſe, in hopes of ſeeing a human creature either high or low. I knocked at the door, but no one could I find, though the manſion did not look like an uninhabited place. I [102]then ſauntered into the grove behind, and in a winding way of three hundred yards, that had been cut through the perennial wood, and was made between banks of ſpringing flowers, beautiful exotics, and various aromatic ſhrubs, crept on till I arrived at a ſleeping parlour, which ſtood in the middle of a circular acre of ground, and was ſurrounded and ſhaded with a beautiful grove; the larix, the phoenician cedar, and the upright ſavin. There was a little falling water near the door, that was pleaſing to look at, and charmed the ear. Entring this room, I found the walls painted by ſome maſterly hand, in baſkets of flowers, and the fineſt rural ſcenes. Two handſome couches were on either ſide the chamber, and between theſe lits de repos was as curious a table for wood and workmanſhip as could be ſeen. Pretty ſtools ſtood near it, and one arm-chair. It was a ſweet filent place, and in every reſpect, far beyond the ſleeping parlour in the gardens at Stow. (6)

Paſs'd the night in the ſleeping parlour in the wood.§. 4. On one of the couches, as it was then evening, and I knew not what to do, I threw myſelf down, and very ſoon fell faſt aſleep. I lay the whole night without waking, and as ſoon as I could perceive any day, went to ſee what was become of Finn and [103]the horſes. The beaſts I found feeding on very good graſs in the green; and my lad ſtill ſnoaring under a great tree: but he was ſoon on his legs, and gave me the following account.

Finn's ſtory.§. 5. About an hour after my departure from him, he ſaw a poor man paſs over the plain, who had come down the mountain we deſcended, and was going to croſs the Teeſe in a ſmall ſkiff of his own, in order to go to his cottage on the other ſide in Biſhoprick: that he lived by fiſhing and fowling, and ſold what he got by land and water to the quality and gentlefolk, twenty miles round him. And on aſking who lived in the houſe before us, on the ſkirts of the grove, he ſaid, it belonged to a young lady of great fortune, Miſs Antonia Cranmer, whoſe father had been dead about a year, (died in the houſe I ſaw): that ſhe was the greateſt beauty in the world, and only nineteen, and for one ſo young, wiſe to an aſtoniſhing degree: that ſhe lived moſtly at this ſeat, with her couſin, Agnes Vane, who was almoſt as handſome as ſhe: that Miſs Cranmer had no reliſh for the world, being uſed to ſtill life, and ſeldom ſtirred from home, but to viſit an old lady, her aunt, who lived in Cumberland: that ſhe was at preſent there, [104]about twenty miles off, and would ſoon return: that ſhe kept four young gentlewomen (who had no fortunes) to attend her and Miſs Vane; two old men ſervants, a gardner, and a cook; and two boys: that whenever ſhe went from her houſe, ſhe took her whole family with her, and left every place locked up as I faw. Finn's account ſurpriſed me. It ſet me a thinking if it was poſſible to get this charming girl. I pauſed with my finger in my mouth for a few minutes, and then bid him ſaddle the horſes.

The author's manner of living for ſeveral days, in the cottage of a poor fiſherman in Biſheprick.§. 6. As ſoon as it was poſſible, I went over the river to the fiſherman's houſe, determining there to wait, till I could ſee the beautiful Antonia, and her fair kinſwoman, another Agnes de Caſtro, to be ſure. My curioſity could not paſs two ſuch glorious objects without any acquaintance with them.

The poor fiſherman gave me a bed very readily for money, as he had one to ſpare for a traveller, and he provided for me every thing I could deſire. He brought bread and ale from a village a few miles diſtant, and I had plenty of fiſh and wild-fowl for my table. Every afternoon I croſſed the water, went to the ſleeping parlour, and there waited for the charming Antonia.— Twenty days I went backwards and forwards, [105]but the beauties in that time did not return. Still however I reſolved to wait; and, to amuſe myſelf till they came, went a little way off to ſee an extraordinary man.

A deſcription of a charming little country ſeat, where a ſolitary gentleman lived.§. 7. While I reſided in this cottage, Chriſtopher informed me, that about three miles from his habitation, there lived, in a wild and beautiful glin, a gentleman well worth my knowing, not only on account of his pretty lodge, and lone manner of ſpending his time, but as he was a very extraordinary man. This was enough to excite my curioſity, and as ſoon as it was light, the firſt of May, I went to look for this ſolitary. I found him in a vale, romantic indeed, among vaſt rocks, ill-ſhaped and rude, and ſurrounded with trees, as venerable as the foreſt of Fontainbleau. His little houſe ſtood on the margin of a fountain, and was encompaſſed with copſes of different trees and greens. The pine, the oak, the aſh, the cheſnut tree, cypreſſes, and the acaſia, diverſified the ground, and the negligent rural air of the whole ſpot, had charms that could always pleaſe. Variety and agreeableneſs were every where to be ſeen. Here was an harbour of ſhrubs, with odoriferous flowers: and there, a copſe of trees was crowned with the enamel of a meadow. [106]There was a collection of the moſt beautiful vegetables in one part; and in another, an aſſembly of ever-greens, to form a perpetual ſpring. Pan had an altar of green turf, under the ſhade of elms and limes: and a water-nymph ſtood by the ſpring of a murmuring ſtream. The whole was a fine imitation of nature; ſimple and rural to a charming degree.

The hiſtory of Dorict Watſon, the hermit.§. 8. Here lived Dorick Watſon, an Engliſh gentleman, who had been bred a catholic in France, and there married a ſiſter of the famous Abbé le Blanc. But on returning to his own country, being inclined by good ſenſe and curioſity, to ſee what the proteſtants had to ſay in defence of their reformation, he read the beſt books he could get on the ſubject, and ſoon perceived, that Luther, Melancthon, Calvin, Zuinglius, Bucer, and other miniſters of Chriſt, had ſaid more againſt the Romiſh religion than the pretended catholics had been able to give a ſolid anſwer to. He ſaw, that barbarity, policy, and ſophiſtry, were the main props of popery; and that, in doctrine and practice, it was one of the greateſt viſible enemies that Chriſt has in the world. He found that even Bellarmine's notes of his church were ſo far from being a clear and neceſſary proof that the church of Rome is [107]the body of Chriſt, or true church, that they proved it to be the Great Babylon, or that great enemy of God's church, which the apoſtles deſcribe.

The hermit's obſervations on Bellarmine's notes of the church.He ſaw, in the firſt place, that there has not been, ſince the writing of the New Teſtament, any empire, but that of the church of Rome, ſo univerſal for 1260 years together, as to have all that dwell upon earth, peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and tongues, to worſhip it; which is St. John's deſcription of the new power that prevailed on the inhabitants of the earth to receive his idolatrous conſtitutions, and yield obedience to his tyrannical authority. And all that dwell on the earth ſhall worſhip him, except thoſe who are enrolled in the regiſters, as heirs of eternal life, according to the promiſes of the mediator of acceptance and bleſſing. (Rev. xiii. 8.) The waters which thou ſaweſt, where the whore ſitteth, are peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and tongues. (Rev. xvii. 15.) Bellarmine's Univerſality then is directly againſt him.

The Cardinal's ſecond note, (continued Dorick) is antiquity, and his third a perpetual and uninterrupted duration. But on examination, I could find no ruling power, except Rome papal, ſo ancient, as to have the blood of prophets, and ſaints, and of all that [108]were ſlain upon earth, of that kind for that ſpace of time, to be found in it. (Rev. xviii. 24.) And what Rule but papal Rome had ever ſo long a duration upon ſeven hills, ſo as to anſwer the whole length of the time of the Saracen and Turkiſh empires.

The Cardinal's fourth note is amplitude, and it is moſt certain, that never had any other church ſuch a multitude and variety of believers, as to have all nations drink of the wine of her fornication, and to gain a blaſphemous power over all kindreds, and tongues, and nations.

The fifth note is the Succeſſion of its biſhops; and the ſixth, Agreement with the doctrine of the antient church: Now it is moſt true, that none but Rome was ever ſo eminently conſpicuous for ſo long a time for the ſucceſſion of its biſhops under one ſupreme patriarch, as to be the living image of all the civil dignities of the empire, where it was under one ſupreme church-head exerciſing all the power of the civil head: nor did ever any enemy of God's church act for ſo long a time like the red dragon in its bloody laws againſt the followers of the lamb: and yet ſo far agree with the primitive church in fundamental doctrines, as to anſwer the character of a falſe prophet with the horns of the lamb, that is, Chriſt, but ſpeaking like the red [109]dragon to his followers, as the church of Rome has done.(7)

[109] The ſeventh note of Bellarmine's holy Roman catholic church, is the Union of the members [110]among themſelves, and with the head: And ſure it is, that no where elſe but in Rome papal, has there been ſuch an union of [111]head and members for that length of time, as to apply the one mind of the ten kings for their agreement together, to give their power, and ſtrength, and their whole kingdoms to the beaſt.

[112] The eighth note produced by Cardinal Bellarmine, is Sanctity; and Watſon ſaw it fairly proved by the proteſtant writers, that no church but Rome did ever appear ſo long together with ſuch a medley of ſanctity, in ſome doctrines, and outward appearances of a ſtrict holineſs of life, joined with the moſt abominable doctrines, and practices, to qualify it for the horns of the lamb, and the ſpeech of the dragon for the idolatrous and cruel commands of the image; or, for having the form of godlineſs in the latter times, and yet denying the power thereof.

In ſhort, Dorick not only found, on a careful enquiry, that the ſyſtem of the church of Rome was error and turpitude, abomination, gain, and cruelty,—and her great deſign the very reverſe of the goſpel revelation, which came down from heaven to prepare men, by the practice of univerſal holineſs and virtue, for eternal life; but likewiſe, that even her Cardinal's notes prove, this church cannot be, in any ſenſe, the true church of Chriſt; and Bellarmine was perfectly infatuated to make choice of ſuch things for the marks of his church, as make it the very picture of Babylon the Great. He reſolved then to come out of Rome. He determined to forſake a church, which had altered the inſtitutions of Chriſt, and is therefore guilty of hereſy as well as ſchiſm.

[113] This change in religion gave Dorick the higheſt ſatisfaction, (as he told me) and it was doubled by his being able to convert his beloved Adelaide from popery to the church of Chriſt. But this joy had ſoon after ſome mitigation, by loſing one of the moſt agreeable women in the world. Death robbed him of his heart's fond idol, and by that ſtroke he was ſo wounded, that he could not heal himſelf for a long time. He became the real mourner. He kept the reaſons of his anguiſh continually before him, and was more intent upon ſpending his ſpirits, than his ſorrows. He grew fond of ſolitude and ſilence, that he might indulge his paſſion, and provoke the emotion of that grief that was ready to devour him. In ſhort, he retreated to the ſilent place I found him in, which was a part of his own eſtate, and turned hermit. He built the little villa I ſaw by the water-ſide, and formed the ground into the natural garden I beheld. Le Blanc mentions it in his letters, as an extraordinary thing, and very juſtly prefers it to the laboured and expenſive Gardens at Chiſwick, the work of the late Lord Burlington, Here Watſon laid in every thing he had a mind for, and filled his cloſet with books. He amuſed and kept himſelf healthy by working in his garden, and when he had done abroad, went in to read. His principal ſtudy was the contemplation [114]of the beſt learning, which is the true chriſtian; and from that he went to know what the Greeks and Romans have reſolved and taught. In ſome things, I found he was a learned agreeable man, and wondered greatly at his whim in turning hermit. I ſaid a great deal againſt it, as we ſat over a bottle of claret; told him he might employ his time and talents more uſefully in the world, by mixing and converſing with his fellow creatures, and by a mutual participation and conveyance of the common bleſſings of nature and providence; and as he was not forty yet, adviſed him to go over the Teeſe, and make his addreſſes to Miſs Cranmer or Miſs Vane, both of them being moſt glorious girls, as I was told, and capable of adding greatly to the delights of philoſophy. You have not ſeen two finer creatures, ſoul and body, than they are, if I have been rightly informed; and I think, it would be a nobler and more religious act to get one of them with child, in the ſtate of holy wedlock, than to write the beſt book that was ever printed. For my own part, I had rather marry, and double-rib one of theſe dear creatures, than die with the character of a father of the deſarts. But in vain did I remonſtrate to this anchoret. Contemplation was become his Venus, from the hour he loſt [115]his Adelaide; and he had lived ſo very happy in his lone ſtate for ſeven years paſt, that he could not think of hazarding felicity by a change of life. He had all he deſired. If at any time, and thing was wanting, Chriſtopher the fiſherman, who came to ſee him once or twice a week, very quickly got him whatever he required. This was Watſon's anſwer to my advice, and ſeeing it was to no purpoſe to ſay any more, I wiſhed my hermit health, and bid him adieu.

A few remarks relating to the Abbé Le Blanc, and his letters.§. 9. Having, in the preceding article, mentioned the famous Abbé le Blanc, I think I ought to ſay ſomething of him in this place, by adding a few remarks in relation to this extraordinary man. He was in England in the year 1735, and writ two volumes of letters in octavo, which were tranſlated into Engliſh, and printed for Brindley in 1747. In this account of England, the French monk pretends to deſcribe the natural and political conſtitution of our country, and the temper and manners of the nation; but, as is evident from his epiſtles, knew nothing at all of any of them.

Voltaire, however, (that wonderful compound of a man, half infidel, half papiſt; who ſeems to have no regard for chriſtianity, and yet compliments popery, at the expence [116]of his underſtandingVoltaire's words are,—And notwithſtanding all the troubles and infamy which the church of Rome has had to encounter, ſhe has always preſerved a greater decency and gravity in her worſhip than any of the other churches; and has given proofs, that when in a ſtate of freedom, and under due regulations, ſhe was formed to give leſſons to all others.—Is not this facing the world, and contradicting truth with a bold front? Decency and gravity in the church of Rome! The licentious whore. And formed to give leſſons! Leſſons, Voltaire!—Is not her wiſdom, in every article of it, earthly, ſenſual, deviliſh;—and her zeal, that bitter, fierce, and cruel thing, which for ever produces confuſion and every evil work? With a juſt abhorrence, and a manly indignation, we muſt look upon this myſtery of iniquity, and never let that horror decay, which is neceſſary to guard us againſt the groſs corruptions of the Roman church; the idolatry of her worſhip,—the abſurdity and impiety of her doctrines,—the tyranny and cruelty of her principles and practices. Theſe are her leſſons, Voltaire; and you ought to aſk the world pardon for daring to recommend a church, whoſe ſchemes and pieties bid defiance to reaſon, and are inconſiſtent with the whole tenor of revelation. This is the more incumbent on you, as you ſay you are a philoſopher, and let us know in more places than one in your writings, that by that word, you mean a man who believes nothing at all of any revelation.; who writes the hiſtory of England with a partiality and malevolence almoſt as great as Smollet's, and pretends to deſcribe the Britannic conſtitution, though it is plain from what he ſays, that he has not one true idea of the primary inſtitutions of it, but taking this nation to be juſt ſuch another kingdom of ſlaves as his own [117]country, rails at the Revolution, and like all the Jacobite dunces, prates againſt the placing the Prince of Orange on the throne, and the eſtabliſhment of the ſucceſſion in the preſent proteſtant heirs; though moſt certain it be, that theſe things were the natural fruit and effect of our incomparable conſtitution, and are de jure:—In ſhort, that Zoilus and plagiary,—that carping ſuperficial critic, (as a good judge calls him); who abuſes the Engliſh nation in his letters, and denies Shakeſpear almoſt every dramatic excellence; though in his Mahomet, he pilfers from Macbeth almoſt every capital ſcene: (Shakeſpear, who furniſhes out more elegant, pleaſing, and intereſting entertainment, in his plays, than all the other dramatic writers, antient and modern, have been able to do; and, without obſerving any one unity but that of character, for ever diverts and inſtructs, by the variety of his incidents, the propriety of his ſentiments, the luxuriancy of his fancy, and the purity and ſtrength of his dialogue): Voltaire, I ſay, ſpeaking of this Abbé le Blanc, wiſhes he had travelled through all the world, and wrote on all nations, for it becomes only a wiſe man to travel and write. Had I always ſuch cordials, I would not complain any more of my ills. I ſupport life, when I ſuffer. I enjoy it, when I read you. This [118]is Voltaire's account of the Abbé. How true and juſt it is, we ſhall ſee in a few obſervations on what this reverend man ſays of our religion and clergy.

Some obſervations on the Abbé Le Blanc's fifty-eighth letter to the Preſident Bouhier, in which he miſrepreſents and blackens the reformation of England, and abuſes the Engliſh clergy.The ſubſtance of what this French monk reports, vol. II. from p. 64 to p. 75, in his letter to the Preſident Bouhier, (9) [118] is this:

1. That Cranmer, and the other doctors, who introduced the reformation into England, were downright enthuſiaſts, and compaſſed their deſigns by being ſeconded by thoſe, who were animated by a ſpirit of irreligion, and by a greedy deſire of ſeizing the poſſeſſions of the monks. It was the deſire of a change eſtabliſhed the reformation. The new doctors [119]ſeduced the people, and the people having miſtaken darkneſs for light, quitted the road of truth, to walk in the ways of error.

2. As to morals, that this boaſted reformation produced no change in that reſpect; for the people are not purer than they were in former times, and the eccleſiaſtics are deſpiſed and hated for the badneſs of their lives. The biſhops ſacrifice every thing to their ambition; and the clergy of the ſecond rank have no reſpect for their office. They ſpend the whole day in public places in ſmoaking and drinking, and are remarkable for drunkenneſs, ſo diſhonourable to eccleſiaſtics. Their [120]talk is the moſt diſſolute, and the vice that degrades theſe profeſſors, ſets a bad example to ſober people, and makes them the jeſt of libertines.

3. The only remarkable change produced by the reformation was the marriage of prieſts; and, excluſive of this being againſt the deciſions of the catholic church, it is contrary to ſound policy and experience. The marriage of prieſts diminiſhes the reſpect we ſhould have for them. The miſconduct of a woman makes the clergyman fall into contempt. The lewdneſs of the daughter makes the prieſt, her father, the object of the moſt indecent jeſts; and for the moſt part, the daughters of the clergy turn whores after the death of their father; who, while living, ſpent more of his income in maintaining himſelf and children in pleaſure and luxury, than in works of charity. He lived profuſely, and dies poor.

Beſide, if the Engliſh clergy were the greateſt and moſt excellent men, yet a great man in the eyes of the world, loſes of the reſpect which is due to him, in proportion as he has any thing in common with the reſt of mankind. A Madam Newton, and a Madam Fontenelle, would injure the illuſtrious men whoſe name they bore. Nor is this all. Thoſe who by their diſpoſition cannot fix that ſecret [121]inclination, which induces us to love, on one perſon, are more humane and charitable than others. The unmarried eccleſiaſtics are more animated with that charitable ſpirit their function requires, as they have no worldly affections to divert it. People very rarely (as Lord Bacon ſays) employ themſelves in watering plants, when they want water themſelves. —In ſhort, the Engliſh divines are the worſt of men, and there is hardly any religion in England.—Thus does this French Abbé revile the Engliſh reformation and divines. He miſrepreſents the whole nation, and with a falſhood and outrage peculiar to popery and maſs-prieſts, that is, to devils and the moſt execrable religion, ſcreams againſt the pure religion of the goſpel, and diſhoneſtly blackens ſome of the fineſt characters that ever adorned human nature. So very virulent is this reverend French papiſt againſt the clergy of England, that he is even poſitive there is not a divine in the nation knows how to behave like a gentleman.

In anſwer to the firſt article of impeachment, I obſerve, that it is ſo far from being true, that Cranmer, and the other Engliſh divines, our reformers, were enthuſiaſts, and compaſſed their deſigns by the aſſiſtance of thoſe who were animated by a ſpirit of irreligion, and by a greedy deſire of ſeizing the poſſeſſion of [122]the monks, (as this maſs-prieſt aſſerts); that it is moſt certain, on the contrary, Cranmer, and the other reformers, were wiſe and upright chriſtians, who, from a good underſtanding of religion, oppoſed the falſe pretenſions of the church of Rome. They ſaw that popery was contrary to the true genius of chriſtianity; its ſpirit inſolent and cruel; and its worſhip, not only a jumble of the moſt ridiculous fopperies and extravagancies, borrowed from heathen cuſtoms and ſuperſtitions; but the impureſt that ever appeared in the world: that the deſigns of popiſh Rome were contrary to all the principles of humanity; its doctrines abominable and ſinful; and its offices curſed and diabolical: it was evident, I ſay, to the conception of theſe great men, (I mean Cranmer, and the other Engliſh reformers) that the Romiſh church was treacherous and inhuman, blood-thirſty and antichriſtian; that her devotions were horrible and impious; her miniſters falſe prophets and liars, covered and decked with the livery of Chriſt, but in every thing acting contrary to the ſalvation wrought by Jeſus; and therefore theſe wiſe and excellent reformers renounced popery, and bravely declared for that religion, which promotes the good of all mankind, and inſpires men to worſhip the Father only in ſpirit and in truth. They threw off the cloak and garments of antichriſt: they gloriouſly ſeparated [123]from him, and joined together in purity and ſimplicity, to pleaſe the Lord Jehovah. There was no enthuſiaſm in the caſe, (as Le Blanc, the maſs-prieſt, has the front to ſay) but, when the light of the goſpel was obſcured, and darkneſs had overſpread the earth; when ignorance and ſuperſtition univerſally prevailed, and the immoralities of the Church of Rome were made to paſs for chriſtianity in the world; then did theſe reformers call the people out of Rome, and preach to them the eſſential truths of the faith. They called them from an idolatrous religion, and all its train of direful effects; from that ſin of the firſt rank, which ſtrikes at the being of a God, and raviſhes from him the greateſt honour that is due to him from his creature, man; they called them from the horrible ſervice of the maſs, from their addreſſes to angels and ſaints, and their worſhip of images; to the inward knowledge of one true God, and the worſhip due to him only; to the ſanctification and honour, which is due to him above all things, and above every name; to the living hope in God through Chriſt; to regeneration, and inward renovation by faith, hope, and charity; to a holy converſation, and a faithful performance of all the commandments; to true repentance, perſeverance to the end, and life eternal. To theſe truths, (not to be found in the religion [124]of our travelling maſs-prieſt) did the great, the glorious Engliſh reformers call mankind. They laboured to eſtabliſh them in every thing tending to a pure faith, and good life. In this, there is not, there cannot be any enthuſiaſm.

And as to their being aſſiſted by thoſe who were animated by a ſpirit of irreligion, and by a greedy deſire of ſeizing the poſſeſſions of the monks, it does not appear to be the truth of the caſe. Suppoſing there were ſuch irreligious men, the aſſiſtance the reformers had from any great men in Henry the eighth's time, when the abbeys were deſtroyed, was ſo very little, that malice only could mention it as an objection to the reformation. Popery, in that monarch's reign, was ſtill the eſtabliſhed religion of England, and both ſides blame this king's perſecutions. If papiſts were put to death for denying the ſupremacy of Harry, proteſtants were no leſs ſufferers, for oppoſing the adoration of the hoſt, and other religious impieties. And after the ſhort reign of his ſon, Edward the ſixth, what aſſiſtance had the reformers under bloody Mary? Did ſhe not do all that infernal popery could ſuggeſt, to deſtroy Cranmer, his brethren, and their reformation? And did not they, without any other aſſiſtance than what they received from the ſpirit of God, continue to vindicate the truth as it is in [125]Jeſus, and teach the pure doctrines of the goſpel, in oppoſition to the frauds and vile inventions of papal Rome. Without minding the indignities, the torments, and the cruel death prepared for them, the brave honeſt men went on with their heavenly work, and till, the flames made them ſilent, endeavoured to deſtroy the Romiſh artifices and immoralities, and to ſpread the pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father. They were zealous, with the truth of religion on their ſide, and laboured to convert, out of a pure and friendly regard to the eternal welfare of mankind. They did the work, by the bleſſing of God, and therefore the malicious Le Blanc, the maſs-prieſt, reviles and blackens them.

What he ſays of uſurpation, in reſpect of church lands, does not deſerve any notice. The reforming clergy were not the actors in that ſcene. It was the king and his council. And as the Pope had ſhewed them the way, by granting bulls for the diſſolution of the leſſer monaſteries, they thought, ſince the Pope's power was taken away by a general conſent of the nation, the king, the church, and the people concurring, they might, with as little ſacrilege, diſſolve the reſt. The king and parliament (ſays Biſhop Burnet) could not diſcern the difference between greater and leſſer as to the point of ſacrilege. And although [126]ſome uſes might ceaſe by the doctrines of the reformation, as maſſes for ſouls departed, and monks to pray the dead out of purgatory; yet there were others to employ the church lands about, as ſome of them were in founding new biſhopricks. And if in this caſe, the reformers had been guilty of ſome wilful errors, that could be no crime of the reformation. The culpable muſt anſwer it. For the ſatisfaction of conſcience about the reformation, there can be but three queſtions fairly propoſed. Was there ſufficient cauſe for it? Was there ſufficient authority? And whether the proceedings of our reformation were juſtifiable by the rule of ſcripture, and the ancient church? Upon theſe points we ought to join iſſue, and I am ſure the concluſion muſt be in the affirmative.

As to Le Blanc's ſecond obſervation in relation to the marriage of prieſts, which our reformation he ſays produced, it may be anſwered, that the doctrine of a prieſt's marriage being unlawful, was borrowed by the church of Rome from the antient heretics; eſpecially from the Manichees, who allowed marriage to their hearers, as the church of Rome doth to laymen; but forbad it to their elect, as that church doth to her prieſts. St. Auguſtin charges the Manichees wth this error. Hic non dubito vos eſſe clamaturos invidiamque [127]factures, caſtitatem perfectam vos vehementer commendare atque laudare, non tamen nuptias prohibere; quandoquidem auditores veſtri quorum apud vos ſecundus eſt gradus ducere atque habere non prohibentur uxores. De moribus manichaeorum, Lib. 2. c. 18.

The firſt pope we read of that condemned the marriage of prieſts, was Syricius, the Roman, A. D. 384—398. And upon this account, I wonder Baronius had not a regard to his memory: but it has been the misfortune of his holineſs ſince his death to fall under the diſpleaſure of the Cardinal to that degree, that he has ſtruck him out of his catalogue of his Romiſh ſaints. He does not tell us for what reaſon. Perhaps it was becauſe this pope rather diſſuaded prieſts from marriage than peremptorily forbad it, as appears by his letters. (Syr. epiſt. 1. & 4. apud Binium.)

The next pope, who diſtinguiſhed himſelf againſt the marriage of prieſts, was the ſon of Bald-head, count of Burgundy, (whoſe granddaughter was conſort to Lewis the 6th, king of France); I mean the celebrated Guy, archbiſhop of Vienne, who ſucceeded Gelaſius, A. D. 1119, and had for ſucceſſor in the year 1124, Lambert of Bononia, commonly called Honorius the ſecond. Calixtus the ſecond, pope and prince of Burgundy, was the firſt [128]who abſolutely forbad prieſts marriage, and in caſe they were married, commanded them to be ſeparated. (Grat. diſt. 27. c. 8.) This was in the beginning of the twelfth century. And towards the end of it, A. D. 1198, the renowned ſon of Count Traſimund, I mean Innocent the third, the ever memorable Cardinal Lotharius, pronounced all the marriages of prieſts null. And afterwards came on the council of Trent, A. D. 1545—1563, which anathematizes thoſe who ſay ſuch marriages are valid. (Seſſ. 24. can. 9.)

But one would think, that God ſufficiently declared his approbation of ſuch marriages, in that the whole world hath by his appointment been twice peopled by two married prieſts; firſt by Adam, ſecondly by Noah. And we are ſure, the holy ſcripture tells us, That marriage is honourable in all; (Heb. xiii. 4) and places it among the qualifications of a biſhop, That he be the huſband of one wife, having faithful children. (Tit. i. 6.) This, ſaith St. Chryſoſtom, the apoſtle preſcribed to this end, that he might ſtop the mouths of hereticks, who reproached marriage; declaring thereby that marriage is no unclean thing, but ſo honourable, that a married man may be exalted to the ſacred throne of a biſhop. (Chryſoſt. hom. 2. in c. 1. ad tit.) What do you ſay to this, Le Blanc? I fancy you never read this homily [129]of Chryſoſtome. — And well might this ſaint think it not unbecoming a biſhop to marry, when our Lord thought it not unbecoming an apoſtle, no not the prince of the apoſtles (as the Romaniſts will have him), for it is without doubt, that St. Peter was married; in that the ſcripture makes mention of his wife's mother. (Matt. viii. 14.) And Clemens of Alexandria tells us, that it was certainly reported, that when he ſaw his wiſe led to death, he rejoiced; and having exhorted her and comforted her, he called her by her name, and bid her remember the Lord. (Clemens Alex. Stromat. l. 7. p. 736. lut. 1629.) And that he was not only married, but begat children, the ſame Clemens in another place affirms, (Stromat. l. 3. p. 448.) Yea that St. Philip and St. Jude were alſo married, and had children, Euſebius is witneſs. (Euſeb. eccleſ. hiſt. l. 3. c. 20—31.) And in like manner we find, that many of the primitive biſhops were married. Charemon biſhop of Nilus, St. Spiridion, St. Gregory Nazianzen, St. Gregory Nyſſen, St. Hilary, and many more, were married men.

Nor can it be ſaid, that they took wives while they were laymen, and after they took upon them the ſacred miniſtry, were ſeparated from them; ſince the canons, commonly called the apoſtles, did prohibit either biſhop, prieſt, or deacon, to put away his wife upon [130]pretence of religion. (See canon 5.) And if any ſuch ſhall abſtain from marriage, as in itſelf abominable, command that he be corrected, or depoſed, and caſt out of the church. (Canon 50.)

Now ſuppoſing theſe canons notwithſtanding all that Whiſton has ſaid) were not made by them whoſe name they bear, yet they are allowed by all to be of much greater antiquity than the firſt Nicene council. And when in that council it was moved, that biſhops and prieſts, deacons and ſub-deacons, might not cohabit with their wives, which they had taken before ordination, the motion was preſently daſhed by the famous Paphnutius, who was himſelf a ſingle perſon. (Socrat. eccles. hiſt. l. 1. c. 11.) Yea a long time after this council, we meet with many popes, who were ſons of biſhops and prieſts.

Pope Theodorus, Silverius, and Gelaſius I. were the ſons of biſhops: pope Boniface I. Felix II. and Agapetus II. were the ſons of prieſts. (Gratian. diſt. 56. c. 2.) and that we may not think this ſtrange, Gratian himſelf informs us, that the marriage of prieſts was in thoſe days lawful in the Latin church. (Diſt. 56. c. 12.)

Nor is this doctrine to be rejected only as contrary to ſcripture, and to primitive and apoſtolical practice, but becauſe of the abominable fruits produced in the church of [131] Rome by it. For when the clergy might not have wives, (which God allowed), inſtead of them they took whores; and that wickedneſs ſo far prevailed in the church, that the Cardinal of Cambray informs us, (De reform. eccleſ.) many clergymen were not aſhamed publickly, in the face of the world, to keep concubines. And the gloſs upon Gratian ſays, A prieſt may not be depoſed for ſimple fornication, becauſe there are few prieſts to be found without that fault. This made Pius the ſecond ſay, that though prieſts were by the weſtern church forbid to marry for good reaſon, yet there was ſtronger reaſon to reſtore marriage to them again. (Hiſt. Council Trent. l. 7. p. 680.) And many in that council, were ſo ſenſible of this, that they alledged the great ſcandal given by incontinent prieſts, and that there was want of continent perſons fit to exerciſe the miniſtry. (Paoli, p. 679. &c.) The Emperor and the Duke of Bavaria did therefore require, that the marriage of prieſts might be granted. (Paoli, p. 680. &c.) And many biſhops deſired that married perſons might be promoted to holy orders; but this requeſt was not granted, becauſe, as the fathers obſerved, if the clergy once come to be married, they will no longer depend on the Pope, but on their prince.

[132] To conclude this article, (and I ſhall do it in the words of a great man, a prelate of the church of England, now living); To make war againſt the very Being of their ſpecies, they, (the Romiſh prieſts) devote themſelves to a ſingle life, in blaſphemous oppoſition to that firſt great command and bleſſing, increaſe and multiply.

As to Le Blanc's third obſervation, relating to the immoralities and bad behaviour of the Engliſh clergy; I anſwer, if there are ſeveral bad men among ſo large a body as the proteſtant divines are, which is not ſtrange, as it is the common caſe of all ſocieties, yet the majority of them, orthodox and other dox, are as worthy men as can be found among the human race. I am very ſure my acquaintance among them has been much larger than Le Blanc's could poſſibly be; and I can affirm from my own knowledge, that there are very many of this order of men, not only as fine gentlemen as I have ever converſed with; but, a clergy holy in heart; ſuperior to pride, to anger, to fooliſh deſires; who walk as Chriſt alſo walked, and by their example and doctrine, labour to make the people what the goſpel requires they ſhould be; that is, pious and uſeful, pure and honeſt, meek and charitable; to walk by faith, and not by ſight; and ſo paſs through things temporal, that they may be ſure of obtaining [133]the things eternal. This I can ſay of many Engliſh divines of my acquaintance: and I may add, that this teſtimony from me, who am not over-fond of the clergy, (as the main of the chriſtianity of too many of them lies in their opinion; decked with a few outward obſervances, ſays Mr. Weſley very truly, in his letter to Biſhop Warburton) and only upon occaſion, endeavour now to do them juſtice, is certainly of more weight in their favour, than the calumny and abuſe of a furious bigot and maſs-prieſt, can be to make the world have as bad an opinion of them, as popery, and its wretched emiſſaries, would have the public entertain. Conſider this then when you read Le Blanc's letters.

On the other hand, I have had a very large and intimate acquaintance with maſs-prieſts in my time, in many parts of the world; and, a few excellent ones excepted, I can affirm, that more wicked and more worthleſs men than theſe Romiſh monks, I have never ſeen. If adultery, fornication, drunkenneſs, and ſwearing, are crimes, then the greateſt criminals I could name in theſe reſpects, are Roman-catholic prieſts. Let this aſſertion of mine be ſet over-againſt the character the Ahbé Le Blanc gives the Engliſh proteſtant miniſters. Conſider all I have ſaid, when you read this maſs-prieſt's fifty-eighth letter, and then judge of our reformation [134]and clergy.(10) [134]—But it is time to return to the cottage of Chriſtopher the fiſherman, and ſee what happened to Antonia and Agneſs.

The beginning of my acquaintance with Miſs Cranmer, and how it ended in a marriage.§. 10. When I came back to the poor man's cottage, he told me the ladies were come home, and as he had given Miſs Cranmer ſome account of me, as a traveller who had journeyed into that remote corner of the world, in ſearch of antiquities and curioſities, he did not think this lady would be averſe to ſeeing me and hearing me too, if I contrived any plauſible pretence to throw myſelf in her way.

[135] Immediately then I croſſed the water, went up to the houſe, and as I ſaw her and the fair Agneſs, her couſin, walking in the garden, near the ha, leaped it over immediately, broad as it was, and with my hat in my hand, made her a low bow, began an apology for preſuming to introduce myſelf to her preſence in ſuch a manner, and concluded with my being in love with her charming character, before I had the honour and happineſs of ſeeing her. What a condition then muſt I be in, when a heaven-born maid, like her, appeared! Strange pleaſures filled my ſoul, unlooſed my tongue, [136]and my firſt talk could not be any thing but love. A deal I ſaid on the ſubject, not worth repeating to the reader; and the iſſue of the matter was, that I became ſo well acquainted with this innocent beauty, that, on taking my leave, I had an invitation to breakfaſt with her the next morning. I was there by eight, and really and truly quite charmed with her. She was pretty as it was poſſible for fleſh and blood to be, had a beautiful underſtanding; and as ſhe had very little notion of men, having ſeen very few, except the two old ſervants who lived with her, ſhe had not a notion of any danger that could come from converſing freely with a man ſhe knew nothing of, and who might be an enemy in diſguiſe.

After breakfaſt, I offered to go, but ſhe aſked me to ſtay and dine; and to ſum up the matter, I did dine, ſup, and breakfaſt with her every day, for a month, till my good prieſt, Friar Fleming, arrived, on a letter I had ſent him, and we were married before the end of ſix weeks. We loved to exceſs, and did enhance human happineſs to a high degree. She was good as an angel; and for two years we lived in unſpeakable felicity. For the greateſt part of that time, we were at Orton-Lodge, as ſhe liked the wild place. There ſhe likewiſe died of the ſmall-pox, in the firſt month of the [137]third year, and left me the moſt diſconſolate of men. Four days I ſat with my eyes ſhut, on account of this loſs, and then left the Lodge once more, to live if I could, ſince my religion ordered me ſo to do, and ſee what I was next to meet with in the world. As grief ſat powerfully on my ſpirits, and if not diſlodged, would have drank them all up very ſoon, I reſolved to haſten to Harrogate, and in the feſtivities of that place forget my departed partner as ſoon as I could. I laid my Antonia by my Charlotte and my Statia, and then rode off. What happened at the Wells, and all the obſervations I made there, and thereabout, the reader will find in my fifth ſection.

N. B. As I mention nothing of any children by ſo many wives, ſome readers may perhaps wonder at this, and therefore, to give a general anſwer, once for all, I think it ſufficient to obſerve, that I had a great many, to carry on the ſucceſſion; but as they never were concerned in any extraordinary affairs, nor ever did any remarkable things, that I heard of; — only riſe and breakfaſt, read and ſaunter, drink and eat, it would not be fair, in my opinion, to make any one pay for their hiſtory.

SECTION V.

[138]
As once, ('twas in Aſtraea's reign)
The vernal powers renew'd their train,
It happened that immortal Love
Was ranging thro' the ſpheres above,
And downward hither caſt his eye
The year's returning pomp to ſpy;
He ſaw the radiant God of day
Lead round the globe the roſy May;
The fragrant airs and genial hours
Were ſhedding round him dews and flow'rs;
Before his wheels Aurora paſt,
And Heſper's golden lamp was laſt.
But, faireſt of the blooming throng,
When HEALTH majeſtic mov'd along,
All gay with ſmiles, to ſee below
The joys which from her preſence flow,
While earth inliven'd hears her voice,
And fields, and flocks, and ſwains rejoice;
Then mighty Love her charms confeſs'd,
And ſoon his vows inclin'd her breaſt;
And known from that auſpicious morn,
The pleaſing CHEARFULNESS was born.
Thou, CHEARFULNESS, by heav'n deſign'd
To rule the pulſe, that moves the mind,
Whatever fretful paſſion ſprings,
Whatever chance or nature brings
To ſtrain the tuneful poize within,
And diſarrange the ſweet machine,
Thou, Goddeſs, with a maſter-hand,
Doſt each attemper'd key command,
Refine the ſoft, and ſwell the ſtrong,
'Till all is concord, all is ſong.

The author goes to Harrogate.§. 1. IN the year 1731, I arrived at Harrogate, in the Weſt-riding of Yorkſhire, in order to amuſe my mind with the [139]diverſions and company of the place.An account of the place, the wells, and company. It is a ſmall ſtraggling village on a heath, two miles from Knareſborough, which is thirteen miles from York, and 175 from London. The ſulphur wells are three, on the north ſide of the town, about 500 yards eaſt of the bog. They riſe out of a little dry hill. The ſecond is a yard from the firſt, and the third is five yards and a half from the ſecond. The water riſes into ſtone-baſons, which are each incloſed in a ſmall neat building of ſtone and lime a yard ſquare on the inſides, and two yards high, covered over with thick flagſtones laid ſhelving.

The ſoil out of which theſe ſprings riſe is, firſt, corn-mould, then a marle lime-ſtone, and a ſtratum of plaiſter: the lime-ſtone is ſo abraded by the ſalt in the water, that when dried, it ſwims: and where the water ſtagnates between the baſons and the brook, the earth is ink black, and has a dry white ſcum, which ſmells like ſulphur, and burns with a blue flame. The water does likewiſe throw up much candied ſea ſalts, that is, ſalts to which ſulphur adheres, and the pigeons reſort from all parts to pick them up. In moiſt or rainy weather, theſe waters ſend forth a ſtrong ſmell at a diſtance, and before rain, they bubble up with an impetuous force; yet neither rain nor drought increaſes or decreaſes the ſprings.

[140] From the large quantities of fine flower of brimſtone which theſe waters throw off, it is plain, that ſulphur is the principal thing in them; but experiment likewiſe proves, that beſides ſulphur, the ſtinking well has vitriol, nitre, copper, and ſalt: Theſe lie in ſolutis principiis in earth from which the water comes, and may be ſeparated by operation: ſome, I know, deny there is any copper in theſe waters; but they do not conſider that the glittering glebes of a gold colour found here, can be nothing elſe than glebes gilt with copper.

As to the diſeaſes wherein this ſtrong ſulphur-water is proper, it is good for every thing, except a conſumption. For this I recommend the Scarborough purging-chalybeate above all waters. But if, reader, you have obſtructions in your liver and other viſcera, and are tormented with vicious humours in your inteſtines; if your bowels are full of worms, the aſcarides, or the broad round worm, or the worms called the dog and the wolf, from their likeneſs to theſe animals; or if, from a venereal cauſe, (the malady of many a prieſt and layman) you have an ulcer in the anus, or in the neck of your bladder, go to Harrogate; drink the ſtinking-water, live temperate, and you will be cured. For the ſcurvy, that univerſal diſeaſe, it is better than all other medicines. It is excellent in the [141]jaundice, though of many years ſtanding. It cures the aſthma, the ſcotomia, and palſy, and in many other deplorable caſes gives wonderful relief. Whatever ails you, (the conſumption excepted) fly to Harrogate, and the water will do you good, if your hour be not come: and if you are well, the waters will promote long life, and make you the more able to dance with the ladies.

Four pints of water are enough for a patient, to be taken from half an hour to two hours after ſun -riſing, upon an empty ſtomach. You ſhould take ſome preparatory medicine; and walk drinking the waters to warm the body a little, and make the paſſage the eaſier. Some people I have known drink their doſe in bed, and it does well enough: but exerciſe and the thin open air do better, and contribute not a little to the patient's recovery: and there is no finer freſher air in England than at this place.

In ſhort, theſe wells are the ſtrongeſt ſulphur-water in Great-Britain, and, from the ſuperior ſtrength of the impregnating ſulphur, it does not loſe but retain the ſulphureous ſmell, even when expoſed to a ſcalding, and almoſt a violent heat; and, in diſtilling it, when three pints had been taken off from a gallon of it, the laſt was as ſtrong as the firſt, and ſtunk intolerably.

[142] Make haſte then to Harrogate, if you are ſick, and have money, and in all probability you will find the waters efficacious, unleſs thy diſtemper be a conſumption, or in its nature incurable, which is the caſe of many, as death is the common fate of mankind.

Some advice to the drinkers of Harrogate waters.§. 2. But when you are there, let me adviſe you to exerciſe as much as you can bear, without fatiguing yourſelf,—and in the next place, to be regular in meats and drinks, and as temperate as poſſible. Without theſe things, you will loſe the benefit of the waters. No good can be expected, if men will indulge during a courſe of drinking the ſpaw, and be not only exceſſive in quantity, but indiſcreet as to the quality, of meats and liquors.

Some obſervations on ſpaw-waters, and advice to the drinkers in a mineral courſe.I have known ſome worn-out hard drinkers come to the Wells for relief, and at the ſame time increaſe by intemperance what they had contracted by the ſame meaſure. I have likewiſe ſeen ſome in a diabetes drink white wine; in a cachexy, ale; in the ſtone and gravel, claret. I have known a man in a dropſy, eat nothing but cooling, inſipid, mucilaginous foods, and drink malt-drink plentifully:—a man in a jaundice, eat nothing but fleſh meat and claret:—in a ſcurvy, prefer the pungent, ſaline diet:—in obſtinate obſtructions, and a chronic hyppo, feed on [143]thickning, hardning, and drying meats:— and in a hectic, vomiting, and ſpitting of blood, chuſe only ſuch things as increaſe the blood's momentum and velocity. I have known ſome gentlemen, who ſat up late, never exerciſed, could not eat a dinner, and therefore would indulge in a fleſh ſupper. — All theſe, and many other irregularities, have I known expect ſurpriſing effects from the waters, and when they received no benefit, ſay, there were no ſanative principles in them. Unreaſonable, unhappy men! Be temperate: regular: exerciſe: keep the paſſions within bounds: and you may expect very aſtoniſhing cures; provided your bodies are not become irreparable, and no longer tenantable: that your juices are not to the laſt degree glutinous and acrimonious: that the corroſiveneſs of your blood is not bringing on mortifications; —nor inflammations, filling, dilating, and breaking your veſſels into ſuppuration and putrefactions. Then, live how you will, the waters can be of no uſe. You muſt pay the debt of nature by an incurable diſeaſe. Neither mineral waters, nor phyſic, can create and enliven new bodies, or make and adapt particular members to the old. But if you are only hurt a little, and the diſeaſe is curable, the waters will certainly be efficacious, and recover you, if you uſe moderate [144]exerciſe (riding eſpecially) and diverſion, a ſtrict regularity, and great temperance.

Concluſion of the author's advice.O temperance! Divine temperance! Thou art the ſupport of the other virtues, the preſerver and reſtorer of health, and the protracter of life! Thou art the maintainer of the dignity and liberty of rational beings, from the wretched inhuman ſlavery of ſenſuality, taſte, cuſtom, and examples; and the brightner of the underſtanding and memory! Thou art the ſweetner of life and all its comforts, the companion of reaſon, and guard of the paſſions! Thou art the bountiful rewarder of thy admirers and followers: thine enemies praiſe thee: and thy friends with rapturous pleaſure raiſe up a panegyric in thy praiſe.

O hunger, hunger, immortal hunger! Thou art the bleſſing of the poor, the regale of the temperate rich, and the delicious guſt of the plaineſt morſel. Curſed is the man that has turned thee out of doors, and at whoſe table thou art a ſtranger! Yea, thrice curſed is he, who always thirſts, and hungers no more!

The company and manner of living at Harrogate.§. 3. As to the company at theſe wells, I found it very good, and was pleaſed with the manner of living there. In the day-time we drank the waters, walked or rid about, and lived in ſeparate parties; lodging in one [145]or other of the three inns that are on the edge of the common: but at night, the company meet at one of the public-houſes, (the inns having the benefit of the meeting in their turn), and ſup together between eight and nine o'clock on the beſt ſubſtantial things, ſuch as hot ſhoulders of mutton, rump-ſtakes, hot pigeon pies, veal-cutlets, and the like. For this ſupper, ladies and gentlemen pay eight-pence each, and after ſitting an hour, and drinking what wine, punch, and ale, every one chuſes, all who pleaſe get up to country-dances, which generally laſt till one in the morning; thoſe that dance, and thoſe who do not, drinking as they will. The ladies pay nothing for what liquor is brought in, either at ſupper or after, and it coſts the gentlemen five or ſix ſhillings a man. At one the ladies withdraw, ſome to their houſes in the neighbourhood, and ſome to their beds in the inns. The men who are temperate, do then likewiſe go to reſt.

In ſhort, of all the wells I know, Harrogate is in my opinion the moſt charming. The waters are incomparable, no air can be better: and with the greateſt civility, chearfulneſs, and good humour, there is a certain rural plainneſs and freedom mixed, which are vaſtly pleaſing. The lady of pleaſure, the well-dreſt taylor, and the gameſter, are not to be found there. Gentlemen of the [146]country, and women of birth and fortune, their wives, ſiſters, and daughters, are for the moſt part the company. There were at leaſt fourſcore ladies in the country-dances every night, while I was there, and among them many fine women.

The author meets at Harrogate ſix gentlemen of his acquaintance from Dublin.§. 4. Among the company I found at this agreeable place, were ſix Iriſh gentlemen, who had been my contemporaries in Trinity-College, Dublin, and were right glad to ſee me, as we had been Sociorums, (a word of Swift's) at the conniving-houſe at Ringsend, for many a ſummer's evening, and their regard for me was great. They thought I had been long numbered with the dead, as they could not get any account of me for ſo many years; and when they ſaw me, at their entring the public room, ſitting by a beauty, in deep diſcourſe, God-zounds, (ſays one of them,) there he is, making love to the fineſt woman in the world. Theſe gentlemen were Mr. Gollogher, Mr. Gallaſpy, Mr. Dunkley, Mr. Makins, Mr. Monaghan, and Mr. O'Keefe, deſcended from the Iriſh kings, and firſt couſin to the great O'Keefe, who was buried not long ago in Weſtminſter Abby. They were all men of large fortunes, and, Mr. Makins excepted, were as handſome, fine fellows as could be picked out in all the world. Makins was a very low, thin man, not four feet [147]high, and had but one eye, with which he ſquinted moſt ſhockingly. He wore his own hair, which was ſhort and bad, and only dreſt by his combing it himſelf in the morning, without oyl or powder. But as he was matchleſs on the fiddle, ſung well, and chated agreeably, he was a favourite with the ladies. They preferred ugly Makins (as he was called) to many very handſome men. I will here give the public the character of theſe Iriſh gentlemen, for the honour of Ireland, and as they were curioſities of the human kind.

The characters of ſix Iriſh gentlemen. O'Keefe's character.§. 5. O'Keefe was as diſtinguiſhed a character as I have ever known. He had read and thought, travelled and converſed, was a man of ſenſe, and a ſcholar. He had a greatneſs of ſoul, which ſhewed a pre-eminence of dignity, and by conduct and behaviour, the faithful interpreters of the heart, always atteſted the nobleſt and moſt generous ſentiments. He had an extreme abhorrence of meanneſs of all kinds, treachery, revenge, envy, littleneſs of mind, and ſhewed in all his actions the qualities that adorn a man.— His learning was of the genteel and uſeful kind; a ſort of agreeable knowledge, which he acquired rather from a ſound taſte and good judgment than from the books he had read. He had a right eſtimation of things, and had gathered up almoſt every thing that is amuſing or inſtructive. This rendered [148]him a maſter in the art of pleaſing: and as he had added to theſe improvements the faſhionable ornaments of life, languages and bodily exerciſes, he was the delight of all that knew him.

Character of Mr. Makins. Makins was poſſeſſed of all the excellent qualities and perfections that are within the reach of human abilities. He had received from nature the happieſt talents, and he made ſingular improvements of them by a ſucceſsful application to the moſt uſeful and moſt ornamental ſtudies. Muſic, as before obſerved, he excelled in. His intellectual faculties were fine, and, to his honour I can affirm, that he moſtly employed them, as he did his great eſtate, to the good of mankind, the advancement of morality, and the ſpread of pure theiſm, the worſhip of God our Saviour, who raiſed and ſent Chriſt to be a Redeemer. This gentleman was a zealous Unitarian, and, though but five and twenty, (when we met at Harrogate) a religious man: but his religion was without any melancholy; nor had it any thing of that ſeverity of temper, which diffuſes too often into the hearts of the religious a moroſe contempt of the world, and an antipathy to the pleaſures of it. He avoided the aſſemblies of fools, knaves, and blockheads, but was fond of good company, and condemned that doctrine which taught men to retire from human ſociety to ſeek [149]God in the horrors of ſolitude. He thought the Almighty may be beſt found among men, where his goodneſs is moſt active, and his providence moſt employed.

Character of Mr. Gallaſpy. Gallaſpy was the talleſt and ſtrongeſt man I have ever ſeen, well made, and very handſome. He had wit and abilities, ſung well, and talked with great ſweetneſs and fluency, but was ſo extremely wicked, that it were better for him, if he had been a natural fool. By his vaſt ſtrength and activity, his riches and eloquence, few things could withſtand him. He was the moſt prophane ſwearer I have known: fought every thing, whored every thing, and drank ſeven in a hand; that is, ſeven glaſſes ſo placed between the fingers of his right hand, that in drinking, the liquor fell into the next glaſſes, and thereby he drank out of the firſt glaſs ſeven glaſſes at once. This was a common thing, I find from a book in my poſſeſſion, in the reign of Charles the Second, in the madneſs that followed the reſtoration of that profligate and worthleſs prince. But this gentleman was the only man I ever ſaw who could or would attempt to do it; and he made but one gulp of whatever he drank; he did not ſwallow a fluid like other people, but if it was a quart, poured it in as from pitcher to pitcher. When he ſmoaked tobacco, he always blew two pipes at once, one at each corner of his [150]mouth, and threw the ſmoak of both out of his noſtrils. He had killed two men in duels before I left Ireland, and would have been hanged, but that it was his good fortune to be tried before a Judge, who never let any man ſuffer for killing another in this manner. (This was the late Sir John St. Leger.) He debauched all the women he could, and many whom he could not corrupt, he raviſhed. I went with him once in the ſtage-coach to Kilkenny, and ſeeing two pretty ladies paſs by in their own chariot, he ſwore in his horrible way, having drank very hard after dinner, that he would immediately ſtop them, and raviſh them: nor was it without great difficulty that I hindered him from attempting the thing; by aſſuring him I would be their protector, and he muſt paſs through my heart before he could proceed to offer them the leaſt rudeneſs. In ſum, I never ſaw his equal in impiety, eſpecially when inflamed with liquor, as he was every day of his life, though it was not in the power of wine to make him drunk, weak, or ſenſeleſs. He ſet no bounds or reſtrictions to mirth and revels. He only ſlept every third night, and that often in his cloaths in a chair, where he would ſweat ſo prodigiouſly as to be wet quite through; as wet as if come from a pond, or a pail of water had been thrown on him. While all the [151]world was at reſt, he was either drinking or dancing, ſcouring the bawdy-houſes, or riding as hard as he could drive his horſe on ſome iniquitous project. And yet, he never was ſick, nor did he ever receive any hurt or miſchief. In health, joy, and plenty, he paſſed life away, and died about a year ago at his houſe in the county of Galway, without a pang or any kind of pain. This was Jack Gallaſpy. There are however ſome things to be ſaid in his favour, and as he had more regard for me than any of his acquaintance, I ſhould be ungrateful if I did not do him all the juſtice in my power.

He was in the firſt place far from being quarrelſome, and if he fought a gentleman at the ſmall-ſword, or boxed with a porter or coachman, it was becauſe he had in ſome degree been ill uſed, or fancied that the laws of honour required him to call an equal to an account, for a tranſaction. His temper was naturally ſweet.

In the next place, he was the moſt generous of mankind. His purſe of gold was ever at his friend's ſervice: he was kind and good to his tenants: to the poor a very great benefactor. He would give more money away to the ſick and diſtreſſed in one year, than I believe many rich pious people do in ſeven. He had the bleſſings of thouſands, [152]for his charities, and, perhaps, this procured him the protection of heaven.

As to ſwearing, he thought it was only criminal, when it was falſe, or men lyed in their affirmations: and for whoring, he hoped there would be mercy, ſince men will be men while there are women. Raviſhing he did not pretend to juſtify, as the laws of his country were againſt it; but he could not think the woman was a ſufferer by it, as ſhe enjoyed without ſinning the higheſt felicity. He intended her happineſs; and her ſaying No, kept her an innocent.

How far all this can excuſe Mr. Gallaſpy, I pretend not to determine: but as I thought it proper to give the world the picture of ſo extraordinary a man, it was incumbent on me, as his friend, to ſay all I could, with truth, in his vindication.

Character of Mr. Dunkley. Dunkley had an extenſive capacity, an exquiſite taſte, and a fine genius. Beſides an erudition which denominates what we call a man of learning, he happily poſſeſſed a ſocial knowledge, which rendered him agreeable to every body. He was one of the men that are capable of touching every note. To all the variety of topics for converſation, the diverſity of occurrences and incidents, the ſeveral diſtinctions of perſons, he could adapt himſelf. He would laugh like Democritus: [153]weep like Heraclitus. He had the ſhort, pert trip of the affected; the haughty, tragic ſtalk of the ſolemn; and the free, genteel gait of the fine gentleman. He was qualified to pleaſe all taſtes, and capable of acting every part. He was grave, gay, a philoſopher, and a trifler. He had a time for all things, relative to ſociety, and his own true happineſs, but none for any thing repugnant to honour and conſcience. He was a ſurpriſing and admirable man.

Character of Mr. Monaghan. Monaghan had genius and knowledge, had read many books, but knew more of mankind. He laughed at the men who loſt among their books the elegancy of mind ſo neceſſary in civil ſociety. He had no reliſh but for nice ſtudies and fine literature, and deſpiſed too ſerious and abſtruſe ſciences. This was reckoned a fault in him by ſeveral judges: but with me it is a quere, if he was much to blame. Politeneſs is certainly preferable to dry knowledge and thorny enquiries. This gentleman's was ſuch as rendered him for ever agreeable and engaging. He was continually an improving friend, and a gay companion. In the qualities of his ſoul, he was generous without prodigality, humane without weakneſs, juſt without ſeverity, and fond without folly. He was an honeſt and charming fellow. This gentleman and Mr. Dunkley married ladies they fell in love with at [154] Harrogate Wells: Dunkley had the fair Alcmena, Miſs Cox of Northumberland; and Monaghan, Antiope with haughty charms, Miſs Pearſon of Cumberland: They lived very happy many years, and their children I hear are ſettled in Ireland.

Character of Mr. Gollogher. Gollogher was a man of learning and extraordinary abilities. He had read very hard for ſeveral years, and during that time, had collected and extracted from the beſt books more than any man I ever was acquainted with. He had four vaſt volumes of commonplace, royal paper, bound in rough calf, and had filled them with what is moſt curious and beautiful in works of literature, moſt refined in eloquent diſcourſes, moſt poignant in books of criticiſm, moſt inſtructive in hiſtory, moſt touching and affecting in news, cataſtrophes, and ſtories; and with aphoriſms, ſayings, and epigrams. A prodigious memory made all this his own, and a great judgment enabled him to reduce every thing to the moſt exact point of truth and accuracy. A rare man! Till he was five and twenty, he continued this ſtudious life, and but ſeldom went into the mixed and faſhionable circles of the world. Then, all at once, he ſold every book he had, and determined to read no more. He ſpent his every day in the beſt company of every kind; and as he had the happy talent of manner, and poſſeſſed [155]that great power which ſtrikes and awakens fancy, by giving every ſubject the new dreſs and decoration it requires; — could make the moſt common thing no longer trivial, when in his hand, and render a good thing moſt exquiſitely pleaſing; — as he told a ſtory beyond moſt men, and had, in ſhort, a univerſal means towards a univerſal ſucceſs, it was but natural that he ſhould be every where liked and wiſhed for. He charmed wherever he came. The ſpecific I have mentioned made every one fond of him. With the ladies eſpecially he was a great favourite, and more fortunate in his amours than any man I knew. Had he wanted the fine talents he was bleſt with, yet his being an extremely handſome man, and a maſter on the fiddle, could not but recommend him to the ſex. He might, if he had pleaſed, have married any one of the moſt illuſtrious and richeſt women in the kingdom. But he had an averſion to matrimony, and could not bear the thought of a wife. Love and a bottle were his taſte. He was however the moſt honourable of men in his amours, and never abandoned any woman to diſtreſs, as too many men of fortune do, when they have gratified deſire. All the diſtreſſed were ever ſharers in Mr. Gollogher's fine eſtate, and eſpecially the girls he had taken to his breaſt. He provided happily for them all, and left [156]nineteen daughters he had by ſeveral women a thouſand pounds each. This was acting with a temper worthy of a man; and to the memory of the benevolent Tom Gollogher I devote this memorandum.

Having ſaid above, that too many men of fortune abandon the girls they have ruined, I will here relate a very remarkable ſtory, in hopes it may make an impreſſion on ſome rake of fortune, if ſuch a man ſhould ever take this book in his hand.

The hiſtory of the unfortunate Miſs Hunt.§. 6. As I travelled once in the county of Kildare in Ireland, in the ſummer-time, I came into a land of flowers and bloſſoms, hills, woods, and ſhades: I ſaw upon an eminence a houſe, ſurrounded with the moſt agreeable images of rural beauties, and which appeared to be on purpoſe placed in that decorated ſpot for retirement and contemplation. It is in ſuch ſilent receſſes of life, that we can beſt enjoy the noble and felicitous ideas, which more immediately concern the attention of man, and in the cool hours of reflection, ſecreted from the fancies and follies, the buſineſs, the faction, and the pleaſures of an engaged world, thoroughly conſider the wiſdom and harmony of the works of nature, the important purpoſes of providence, and the various reaſons we have to adore that ever glorious Being, who formed us for rational [157]happineſs here, and after we have paſſed a few years on this ſphere, in a life of virtue and charity, to tranſlate us to the realms of endleſs bliſs. Happy they who have a taſte for theſe ſilent retreats, and when they pleaſe, can withdraw for a time from the world.

The picture of Miſs Hunt.The owner of this ſweet place was Mr. Charles Hunt, a gentleman of a ſmall eſtate and good ſenſe, whom I knew many years before fortune led me to his houſe. His wife was then dead, and he had but one child left, his daughter Elizabeth. The beauties of this young lady were very extraordinary. She had the fineſt eyes in the world, and ſhe looked, ſhe ſmiled, ſhe talked with ſuch diffuſive charms, as were ſufficient to fire the heart of the moroſeſt woman-hater that ever lived, and give his ſoul a ſoftneſs it never felt before. Her father took all poſſible pains to educate her mind, and had the ſucceſs to render her underſtanding a wonder, when ſhe was but twenty years old. She ſung likewiſe beyond moſt women, danced to perfection, and had every accompliſhment of ſoul and body that a man of the beſt taſte could wiſh for in a wife or a miſtreſs. She was all beauty, life, and ſoftneſs.

Mr. Hunt thought to have had great happineſs in this daughter, though it was not in his power to give her more than five hundred pounds for a fortune, and ſhe would have [158]been married to a country-gentleman in his neighbourhood of a good eſtate, had not death carried off both her father and lover in a few days, juſt as the match was agreed on. This was a ſad misfortune, and opened a door to a long train of ſorrows. For two years however after the deceaſe of her father, ſhe lived very happily with an old lady, her near relation, and was univerſally admired and reſpected. I ſaw her many times during that term, at the old lady's villa within a few miles of Dublin, and took great delight in her company. If I had not been then engaged to another, I would moſt certainly have married her.

In this way I left Eliza in Ireland, and for ſeveral years could not hear what was become of her. No one could give me any information: but, about a twelvemonth ago, as I was walking in Fleet-ſtreet, I ſaw a woman who cleaned ſhoes, and ſeemed to be an object of great diſtreſs. She was in rags and dirt beyond all I had ever ſeen of the profeſſion, and was truly ſkin and bone. Her face was almoſt a ſcull, and the only remaining expreſſion to be ſeen was deſpair and anguiſh. The object engaged my attention, not only on account of the uncommon miſery that was viſible; but, as her eyes, though ſunk, were ſtill extraordinary, and there were ſome remains of beauty to be [159]traced. I thought I had ſomewhere ſeen that face in better condition. This kept me looking at her, unnoticed, for near a quarter of an hour; and as I found ſhe turned her head from me, when ſhe ſaw me, with a kind of conſciouſneſs, as if ſhe knew me, I then aſked her name, and if ſhe had any where ſeen me before? — The tears immediately ran plentifully from her eyes, and when ſhe could ſpeak, ſhe ſaid, I am Elizabeth Hunt. —What, Mr. Hunt's daughter of Rafarlin! I replied with amazement, and a concern that brought the tears into my eyes. I called a coach immediately, and took her to the houſe of a good woman, who lodges and attends ſick people: ordered her clean cloaths, and gave the woman a charge to take the greateſt care of her, and let her want for nothing proper, till I called next day.

When I ſaw her again, ſhe was clean and whole, and ſeemed to have recovered a little, though very little, of what ſhe once was: but a more miſerable ſpectacle my eyes have not often ſeen. She told me, that ſoon after I went to England, Mr. R. a gentleman of my acquaintance of great fortune, got acquainted with her, courted her, and ſwore in the moſt ſolemn manner, by the ſupreme power, and the everlaſting goſpel, that he would be her huſband, and marry her as ſoon as a rich dying uncle had breathed his laſt, if ſhe would [160]conſent, in the mean while, to their living in ſecret as man and wife; for his uncle hated matrimony, and would not leave him his vaſt fortune, if he heard he had a wife; and he was ſure, if he was married by any of the church, ſome whiſperer would find it out, and bring it to his ear. But notwithſtanding this plauſible ſtory, and that he acted the part of the fondeſt and tendereſt man that ever lived, yet, for ſeveral months, ſhe would not comply with his propoſal. She refuſed to ſee him any more, and for ſeveral weeks he did not come in her ſight.

The fatal night however at laſt arrived, and from the Lord Mayor's ball, he prevailed on her, by repeated vows of ſincerity and truth, to come with him to his lodgings. She was undone, with child, and at the end of two months, ſhe never ſaw him more. When her relations ſaw her big belly, they turned her out of doors; her friends and acquaintance would not look at her, and ſhe was ſo deſpiſed, and aſhamed to be ſeen, that ſhe went to England with her little one. It fortunately died on the road to London, and as her five hundred pounds were going faſt by the time ſhe had been a year in the capital, ſhe accepted an offer made her by a great man to go into keeping. Three years ſhe lived with him in ſplendor, and when he died, ſhe was with ſeveral in high life, 'till [161]ſhe got a cancer in her breaſt; and after it was cut off, an incurable abſceſs appeared. This ſtruck her out of ſociety, and as ſhe grew worſe and worſe every day, what money ſhe had, and cloaths, were all gone in four years time, in the relief ſhe wanted and in ſupport. She came the fifth year to a garret and rags, and at laſt, to clean ſhoes, or periſh for want. She then uncovered the upper part of her body, which was half eaten away, ſo as to ſee into the trunk, and rendered her, in the emaciated condition ſhe was in, an object ſhocking to behold. She lived in torment, and had no kind of eaſe or peace, but in reflecting, that her miſery and diſtreſs might procure her the mercy of heaven hereafter, and in conjunction with her true repentance bring her to reſt, when ſhe had paſſed through the grave and gate of death.

Such was the caſe of that Venus of her ſex, Miſs Hunt.—When firſt I ſaw her, it was rapture to be in her company: her perſon matchleſs, and her converſation as charming as her perſon: both eaſy, unconſtrained, and beautiful to perfection.—When laſt I ſaw her, ſhe was grim as the ſkeleton, horrid, loathſome, and ſinking faſt into the grave by the laws of corruption. What a change was there! She lived but three months from the time I put her into a lodging, and died as happy a penitent as ſhe had lived an unhappy woman. I [162]gave her a decent private funeral; a hearſe, and one mourning-coach, in which I alone attended her remains to the earth; the great charnel-houſe, where all the human race muſt be depoſited. Here ends the ſtory of Miſs Hunt.

A word or two to Mr. R. who debauched Miſs Hunt.And now a word or two to the man who ruined her. Bob R. is ſtill living, the maſter of thouſands, and has thought no more of the wretched Eliza, than if her ruin and miſery were a trifle. He fancies his riches and and power will ſcreen him from the hand of juſtice, and afford him laſting ſatisfaction: but, cruel man, after this ſhort day, the preſent life, the night of death cometh, and your unrelenting ſoul muſt then appear before a judge, infinitely knowing and righteous; who is not to be impoſed upon, and cannot be biaſſed. The ſighs and groans of Eliza will then be remembred, and confound and abaſh you for your falſhood and inhumanity to this unhappy woman. In your laſt agony, her ghoſt will haunt you, and at the ſeſſions of righteouſneſs appear againſt you, execrable R. R.

The author falls in love with Miſs Spence.§. 7. But to return to Harrogate. While I was there, it was my fortune to dance with a lady, who had the head of Ariſtotle, the heart of a primitive chriſtian, and the form of Venus de medicis. This was Miſs Spence, [163]of Weſtmoreland. I was not many hours in her company, before I became moſt paſſionately in love with her. I did all I could to win her heart, and at laſt aſked her the queſtion. But before I inform my readers what the conſequence of this was, I muſt take ſome notice of what I expect from the critical reviewers. Theſe gentlemen will attempt to raiſe the laugh. Our Moraliſt, (they will ſay) has buried three wives running, and they are hardly cold in their graves, before he is dancing like a buck at the Wells, and plighting vows to a fourth girl, the beauty, Miſs Spence. An honeſt fellow, this Suarez, as Paſcal ſays of that Jeſuit, in his provincial letters.

An apology for the author's marrying ſo often.To this I reply, that I think it unreaſonable and impious to grieve immoderately for the dead. A decent and proper tribute of tears and ſorrow, humanity requires; but when that duty has been payed, we muſt remember, that to lament a dead woman is not to lament a wife. A wife muſt be a living woman. The wife we loſe by death is no more than a ſad and empty object, formed by the imagination, and to be ſtill devoted to her, is to be in love with an idea. It is a mere chimerical paſſion, as the deceaſed has no more to do with this world, than if ſhe had exiſted before the flood. As [164]we cannot reſtore what nature has deſtroyed, it is fooliſh to be faithful to affliction.—Nor is this all. If the woman we marry has the ſeven qualifications which every man would wiſh to find in a wife, beauty, diſcretion, ſweetneſs of temper, a ſprightly wit, fertility, wealth, and noble extraction, yet death's ſnatching ſo amiable a wife from our arms can be no reaſon for accuſing fate of cruelty, that is, providence of injuſtice; nor can it authoriſe us to ſink into inſenſibility, and neglect the duty and buſineſs of life. This wife was born to die, and we receive her under the condition of mortality. She is lent but for a term, the limits of which we are not made acquainted with; and when this term is expired, there can be no injuſtice in taking her back: nor are we to indulge the tranſports of grief to diſtraction, but ſhould look out for another with the ſeven qualifications, as it is not good for man to be alone, and as he is by the Abrahamic covenant bound to carry on the ſucceſſion, in a regular way, if it be in his power.—Nor is this all; if the woman adorned with every natural and acquired excellence is tranſlated from this gloomy planet to ſome better world, to be a ſharer of the divine favour, in that peaceful and happy ſtate which God hath prepared for the virtuous and faithful, muſt it not be ſenſeleſs [165-166]for me to indulge melancholy and continue a mourner on her account, while ſhe is breathing the balmy air of paradiſe, enjoying pure and radiant viſion, and beyond deſcription happy?

In the next place, as I had forfeited my father's favour and eſtate, for the ſake of chriſtian-deiſm, and had nothing but my own honeſt induſtry to ſecure me daily bread, it was neceſſary for me to lay hold of every opportunity to improve my fortune, and of conſequence do my beſt to gain the heart of the firſt rich young woman who came in my way, after I had buried a wife. It was not fit for me to ſit ſnivelling for months, becauſe my wife died before me, which was, at leaſt, as probable, as that ſhe ſhould be the ſurvivor; but inſtead of ſolemn affliction, and the inconſolable part, for an event I foreſaw, it was incumbent on me, after a little decent mourning, to conſecrate myſelf to virtue and good fortune united in the form of a woman. Whenever ſhe appeared, it was my buſineſs to get her if I could. This made me ſometimes a dancer at the Wells, in the days of my youth.

Miſs Spence's reply to my addreſſes.§. 8. As to Miſs Spence, ſhe was not cruel, but told me at laſt, after I had tired her with my addreſſes and petitions, that ſhe would conſider my caſe, and give me [167-168]an anſwer, when I called at her houſe in Weſtmoreland, to which ſhe was then going: at preſent however, to tell me the truth, ſhe had very little inclination to change her condition: ſhe was as happy as ſhe could wiſh to be, and ſhe had obſerved, that many ladies of her acquaintance had been made unhappy by becoming wives. The huſband generally proves a very different man from the courtier, and it is luck indeed, if a young woman, by marrying, is not undone—During the mollia tempora fandi, as the poet calls it, the man may charm, when, like the god of eloquence, he pleads, and every word is ſoft as flakes of falling ſnow; but when the man is pleaſed to take off the maſk, and play the domeſtic hero; Gods! What miſeries have I ſeen in families enſue! If this were my caſe, I ſhould run ſtark mad.

Miſs Spence's mentioning the memorable line from Virgil, ſurpriſed me not a little, as ſhe never gave the leaſt hint before, (though we had converſed then a fortnight) of her having any notion of the Latin tongue, and I looked at her with a raiſed admiration, before I replied in the following manner.— What you ſay, Miſs Spence, is true. But this is far from being the caſe of all gentlemen. If there be ſomething ſtronger than virtue in too many of them, ſomething that maſters and ſubdues it; a paſſion, or paſſions, rebellious and lawleſs, which makes [169]them neglect ſome, high relations, and take the throne from God and reaſon; gaming, drinking, keeping; yet there are very many exceptions, I am ſure. I know ſeveral, who have an equal affection to goodneſs, and were my acquaintance in the world larger than it is, I believe I could name a large number, who would not prefer indulgence to virtue, or reſign her for any conſideration. There are men, madam, and young men, who allow a partial regard to rectitude is inconſiſtent and abſurd, and are ſenſible, it is not certain, that there is abſolutely nothing at all in the evidences of religion: that if there was but even a chance for obtaining bleſſings of ineſtimable worth, yet a chance for eternal bliſs is worth ſecuring, by acting as the ſpotleſs holineſs of the Deity requires from us, and the reaſon and fitneſs of things makes neceſſary, in reſpect of every kind of relation and neighbour. This is the caſe of many men. They are not ſo generally bad as you ſeem to think.

On the other hand, I would aſk, if there are no unhappy marriages by the faults of women? Are all the married ladies conſiſtently and thoroughly good, that is, effectually ſo? Do they all yield themſelves intirely and univerſally to the government of conſcience, ſubdue every thing to it, and conquer every adverſe paſſion and inclination? Has reaſon always [170]ways the ſovereignty, and nothing wrong to be ſeen? Are truth, piety, and goodneſs, the ſettled prevailing regard in the hearts and lives of all the married ladies you know? Have you heard of no unhappy marriages by the paſſions and vices of women, as well as by the faults of men? I am afraid there are too many wives as ſubject to ill habits as the men can be. It is poſſible to name not a few ladies who find their virtuous exerciſes, the duties of piety, and the various offices of love and goodneſs, as diſtaſteful and irkſome to them as they can be to a libertine or a cruel man. I could tell ſome ſad ſtories to this purpoſe: but all I ſhall ſay more is, that there are faults on both ſides, and that it is not only the ladies run a hazard of being ruined by marrying. I am ſure, there are as many men of fortune miſerable by the manners and conduct of their wives, as you can name ladies who are ſufferers by the temper and practice of their huſbands. This is the truth of the caſe, and the buſineſs is, in order to avoid the miſeries we both have ſeen among married people, to reſolve to act well and wiſely. This is the thing to be ſure, Miſs Spence replied. This will prevent faults on either ſide. Such a courſe as virtue and piety require muſt have a continued tendency to render life a ſcene of the greateſt happineſs; and it may gain infinitely hereafter.—Call upon me [171]then at Cleator as ſoon as you can, (Miſs Spence concluded, with her face in ſmiles) and we will talk over this affair again. Thus we chatted as we dined together in private, and early the next morning Miſs Spence left the Wells.

May 12, a remove to Oldfield-Spaw, for a week, on account of an indiſpoſition.§. 9. Miſs Spence being gone from Harrogate, and finding myfelf very ill from having drank too hard the preceding night, I mounted my horſe, and rid to Oldfield-Spaw, a few miles off, as I had heard an extraordinary account of its uſefulneſs after a debauch. There is not ſo much as a little ale-houſe there to reſt at, and for ſix days I lodged at the cottage of a poor labouring man, to which my informer directed me. I lived on ſuch plain fare as he had for himſelf. Bread and roots, and milk and water, were my chief ſupport; and for the time, I was as happy as I could wiſh.

A reflection at ſolitary Oldfield-Spaw, after a night's hard drinking.O nature! nature! would man be ſatisfied with thee, and follow thy wife dictates, he would conſtantly enjoy that true pleaſure, which advances his real happineſs, and very rarely be tormented with thoſe evils, which obſtruct and deſtroy it: but, alas! inſtead of liſtening to the voice of reaſon, keeping the mind free of paſſions, and living as temperance and diſcretion direct, the man of pleaſure will have all the gratifications of ſenſe to as high a pitch, as an imagination and fortune [172]devoted to them can raiſe them, and diſeaſes and calamities are the conſequence. Fears and anxieties and diſappointments are often the attendants; and too frequently the ruin of health and eſtate, of reputation and honour, and the laſting wound of remorſe in reflexion, follow. This is generally the caſe of the voluptuary. Dreadful Caſe! He runs the courſe of pleaſure firſt, and then the courſe of produced evils ſucceed. He paſſes from pleaſure to a ſtate of pain, and the pleaſure paſt gives a double ſenſe of that pain. We ought then ſurely, as reaſonable beings, to confine our pleaſure within the bounds of juſt and right.

A deſcription of Oldfield-Spaw.§. 10. As to the place called Oldfield-Spaw, it is ſeven miles from Harrogate, and four from Rippon, lies on a riſing ground, between two high hills, near an old abbey, about five yards from a running ſtream, and in a moſt romantic delightful ſituation, which reſembles Matlock in Derbyſhire, (ten miles beyond Derby in the Peak) ſo very much, that one might almoſt take it for the ſame place, if conveyed there in a long deep ſleep. The ſame kind of charms and various beauties are every where to be ſeen; rocks and mountains, groves and vallies, tender ſhrubs and purling currents, at once ſurprize and pleaſe the wandering eye.

[173] An account of Oldfield-Spaw-water.As to the mineral water at Oldfield-Spaw, it is an impetuous ſpring, that throws out a vaſt quantity of water, and is always of the ſame height, neither affected by rain or drought. It is bright and ſparkling, and when poured into a glaſs, riſes up in rows like ſtrings of little beads. It has an uncommon taſte, quite different from all other mineral waters that ever came in my way; but it is not diſagreeable. What impregnates it I know not. Dr. Rutty I ſuppoſe never heard of this water, for it is not in his valuable quarto lately publiſhed; and Dr. Short, in his excellent hiſtory of mineral waters, (2 volumes 4 to. London, 1734) ſays little more than that there is a medicinal ſpring there. What I found upon trial is, that two quarts of it, ſwallowed as faſt as I could drink it in a morning, vomits to great advantage; and that four quarts of it, drank by degrees, at intervals, works off by ſiêge or ſtool, and urine, in a very beneficial manner. I was apprehenſive of a high fever from my night's hard drinking at Harrogate, (which I could not avoid) and the Oldfield-water, operating as related, carried off the bad ſymptoms, and reſtored me to ſanity in two day's time. This is all I can ſay of this fine water. It is very little in reſpect of what it deſerves to have ſaid of it.

[174] An obſervation on our people of fortune going to other countries to drink mineral waters.§. 11. By the way, it is to me a matter of great admiration, that ſo many of our rich and noble not only endure the fatigues and hazards of ſailing and travelling to remote countries, but waſte their money, to drink ſpaw-waters abroad, when they can have as good of every kind in England, by fiding a few miles to the moſt delightful places in the world, in ſummer time. Our own country has healing waters equal to the beſt in France, Italy, and Weſtphalia. Harrogate-water, in particular, has all the virtues of the famous baths of Aponus, within a mile of Padua in Italy, and is in every reſpect exactly alike. See the analyſis of Aponus-water by Fallopius and Baccius, and the analyſis of the Engliſh ſulphur-ſpaw by Dr. Rutty. It is injuſtice then to our country to viſit foreign nations upon this account.—Moffat-waters likewiſe are as good as any in all the world.

Of Moffat-Wells.N. B. Moffat is a village in Annandale, 35 miles S.W. of Edinburgh. The mineral waters called Moffat-waters, lie at the diſtance of a long mile northward from the village, and are 36 miles from Edinburgh. The ſprings are ſituated on the declivity of a hill, and on the brow of a precipice, with high mountains at a diſtance, and almoſt on every ſide of them. The hill is the ſecond from Hartfield, adjoining the higheſt hill in Scotland.

[175] A vein of ſpar runs for ſeveral miles on this range of hills, and forms the bottom and lower ſides of the wells. It is a greyiſh ſpar, having poliſhed and ſhining ſurfaces of regular figures, interſperſed with glittering particles of a golden colour, which are very copious and large.

There are two medicinal ſprings or wells, which are ſeparated from one another by a ſmall rock: the higher well lies with its mouth ſouth eaſt. 'Tis of an irregular ſquare figure, and is about a foot and a half deep. The lower well is ſurrounded with naked rocks: it forms a ſmall arch of a circle. Its depth is four foot and a half, and by a moderate computation, the two ſprings yield 40 loads of water in 24 hours, each load containing 64 or 68 Scotch pints; a Scotch pint is two Engliſh quarts.—The higher ſhallow well is uſed for bathing, as it is not capable of being kept ſo clean as the lower well, on account of the ſhallowneſs and the looſeneſs of its parts.

Theſe waters are ſtrongly ſulphureous, and reſemble the ſcourings of a foul gun, or rotten eggs, or a weak ſolution of ſal polychreſtum, or hepar ſulphuris. The colour of the water ſomewhat milky or bluiſh.

N. B. The ſoil on every ſide of the wells is thin, and the hills rocky, only juſt below the wells there is a ſmall moſs, cauſed by the falling of water from the hill above it.

[176] Virtues of theſe waters.Great is the medicinal virtue of theſe waters, in relieving, inwardly, cholics, pains in the ſtomach, griping of the guts, bilious and nephritic colics; nervous and hyſteric colics; the gravel, by carrying off the quantities of ſand, (but does not diſſolve the ſlimy gravel) clearing the urinary paſſages in a wonderful manner; in curing iſchuries, and ulcerated kidneys; the gout, the palſy, obſtructions of the menſes, old gleets, and barrenneſs: it is a ſovereign remedy in rheumatic and ſcorbutic pains, even when the limbs are monſtrouſly ſwelled, uſeleſs, and covered with ſcales.—Outwardly, ulcers, tumors, itch, St. Anthony's fire, and king's evil.

The waters are uſed by bathing and drinking: to drink in the morning three chopins, ſix pints or a Scotch quart, four Engliſh quarts, at moſt: between the hours of ſix and eleven. After dinner to drink gradually.

Medicines commonly uſed during the drinking of the waters are, an emetic or two at firſt, and a few cathartic doſes. The doſes ſal Glauberi and polychreſtum: ſyrup of buckthorn, and ſulphur, is uſed along with the water.

But the cathartic preſcription moſt in uſe, which was given by an eminent phyſician, for a general recipe, to be taken by all who ſhould at any time uſe the water, is, pills that are a compoſition of gambozia, reſin of [177]jalop, aloes, and ſcammony: theſe to all intents are a ſtrong hydragogue.

The large vein of ſpar three feet thick, runs in one direction for ſix miles to the wells, and croſſes obliquely the rivulet at the bottom of the precipice, and aſcends the hill on the oppoſite ſide. Small veins of the ſame ſpar which appears on the precipices, are on the ſide of the rivulet, and ſix ſmall guſhes of water of the mineral kind proceed from them. The rocks and ſtones about the tops of the wells, and in other parts of the hill and precipices, differ not from common ſtones, no more than the water of the ſmall ſprings in the neighbourhood with the common water.

The virtue of this water was diſcovered by Miſs Whiteford, daughter of Biſhop Whiteford, in 1632. She was married in 1633. She had been abroad, and all over England, drinking mineral waters for the recovery of her health, but found little benefit, till by accident ſhe taſted theſe waters in her neighbourhood, and finding they reſembled thoſe ſhe had uſed elſewhere, made a trial of them, and was cured of all her diſorders.

Upon this ſhe recommended the uſe of them to others, and employed workmen to clear the ground about the ſprings, (their overflowing having made a ſmall moraſs) that the poor and the rich might come, [178]and make uſe of a medicine, which nature had ſo bounteouſly offered to them.

The author leaves Oldfield-Spaw, and ſets out for Knareſborough, but arrives at another place, May 19, 1731.§. 12. The 19th of May, at that hour, when a fine day-break offers the moſt magnificent ſight to the eyes of men, (though few who have eyes will deign to view it,) I mounted my horſe again, and intended to breakfaſt at Knareſhorough, in order to my being at Harrogate by dinner time, with my friends again; but the land I went over was ſo inchantingly romantic, and the morning ſo extremely beautiful, that I had a mind to ſee more of the country, and let my horſe trot on where he pleaſed. For a couple of hours, he went ſlowly over the hills as his inclination directed him, and I was delightfully entertained with the various fine ſcenes, till I arrived at a ſweet pretty country ſeat.

A morning thought on the riſing ſun.The riſing ſun, which I had directly before me, ſtruck me very ſtrongly, in the fine ſituation I was in for obſerving it, with the power and wiſdom of the author of nature, and gave me ſuch a charming degree of evidence for the deity, that I could not but offer up, in ſilence, on the altar of my heart, praiſe and adoration to that ſovereign and univerſal mind, who produced this glorious creature, as the bright image of his benignity, and makes it travel unweariedly round; not only to illuſtrate ſucceſſively the oppoſite ſides [179]of this globe, and thereby enliven the animal world, ſupport the vegetable, and ripen and prepare matter for all the purpoſes of life and vegetation; but, to enlighten and cheer ſurrounding worlds, by a perpetual diffuſion of bounties, to diſpel darkneſs and ſorrow, and like the preſence of the deity, infuſe ſecret raviſhment into the heart. This cannot be the production of chance. It muſt be the work of an infinitely wiſe and good Being. The nature, ſituation, and motion of this ſun, bring the Deity even within the reach of the methods of ſenſe aſſiſted by reaſon, and ſhews ſuch conſtant operations of his power and goodneſs, that it is impoſſible to conſider the preſent diſpoſition of the ſyſtem, without being full of a ſenſe of love and gratitude to the almighty creator; — the Parent of Being and of Beauty! By this returning miniſter of his beneficence, all things are recalled into life, from corruption and decay; and by its, and all the other heavenly motions, the whole frame of nature is ſtill kept in repair. His name then alone is excellent, and his glory above the earth and heaven. It becomes the whole ſyſtem of rationals to ſay, Hallelujah.

SECTION VI.

[180]
Come, CHEARFULNESS, triumphant Fair,
Shine thro' the painful cloud of care.
O ſweet of language, mild of mien,
O virtue's friend, and pleaſure's queen!
Fair guardian of domeſtic life,
Beſt baniſher of home-bred ſtrife;
Nor ſullen lip, nor taunting eye
Deform the ſcene where thou art by:
No ſick'ning huſband damns the hour,
That bound his joys to female power;
No pining mother weeps the cares,
That parents waſte on hopeleſs heirs:
Th' officious daughters pleas'd attend;
The brother riſes to the friend:
By thee our board with flowers is crown'd,
By thee with ſongs our walks reſound;
By thee the ſprightly mornings ſhine,
And evening hours in peace decline.

May 19, 1731. A deſcription of a beautiful ſpot of ground, and a ſweet pretty country ſeat in the weſt-riding of Yorkſhire.§. 1. WHILE I was thinking in this manner of the ſun, and the author of it, I came into a ſilent unfrequented glade, that was finely adorned with ſtreams and trees. Nature there ſeemed to be lulled into a kind of pleaſing repoſe, and conſpired as it were to ſoften a ſpeculative genius into ſolid and awful contemplations. The woods, the meadows, and the water, formed the moſt delightful ſcenes, and the charms of diſtant proſpects multiplied as I travelled on: but at laſt I came to a ſeat which had all the [181]beauties that proportion, regularity, and convenience, can give a thing. The pretty manſion was ſituated in the midſt of meadows, and ſurrounded with gardens, trees, and various ſhades. A fountain played to a great height before the door, and fell into a circular reſervoir of water, that had foreign wildfowl ſwimming on its ſurface. The whole was very fine.

Here I walked for ſome time, and after roaming about, went up to the houſe, to admire the beauties of the thing. I found the windows open, and could ſee ſeveral ladies in one of the apartments. How to gain admittance was the queſtion, and I began to contrive many ways; but while I was buſied in this kind of ſpeculation, a genteel footman came up to me, and let me know, his lady ſent him to inform me I might walk in and look at the houſe, if I pleaſed. So in I went, and paſſed through ſeveral grand rooms all finely furniſhed, and filled with paintings of great price. In one of thoſe chambers the ſervant left me, and told me, he would wait upon me again in a little time. This ſurprized me, and my aſtoniſhment was doubled, when I had remained alone for almoſt an hour.An account of two wonderful figures, which played on the German flute. No footman returned: nor culd I hear the ſound of any feet. But I was charmingly entertained all the while. In the apartment I was left in, were two figures, dreſſed like a [182]ſhepherd and ſhepherdeſs, which amazed me very much. They ſat on a rich couch, in a gay alcove, and both played on the German flute. They moved their heads, their arms, their eyes, their fingers, and ſeemed to look with a conſciouſneſs at each other, while they breathed, at my entring the room, that fine piece of muſic, the maſquerade minuet; and afterwards, ſeveral excellent pieces. I thought at firſt, they were living creatures; but on examination, finding they were only wood, my admiration increaſed, and became exceeding great, when I ſaw, by ſhutting their mouths, and ſtopping their fingers, that the muſic did not proceed from an organ within the figures. It was an extraordinary piece of clock-work, invented and made by one John Nixon, a poor man.

The hiſtory of Miſs Wolf.§. 2. At length however, a door was opened, and a lady entred, who was vaſtly pretty, and richly dreſt beyond what I had ever ſeen. She had diamonds enough for a queen. I was amazed at the ſight of her, and wondered ſtill more, when, after being honoured with a low courteſy, on my bowing to her, ſhe aſked me in Iriſh, how I did, and how long I had been in England. My ſurprize was ſo great I could not ſpeak, and upon this, ſhe ſaid, in the ſame language, I ſee, Sir, you have no remembrance of me. [183]You cannot recollect the leaſt idea of me. You have quite forgot young Imoinda, of the county of Gallway in Ireland; who was your partner in country dances, when you paſſed the Chriſtmas of the year 1715, at her father's houſe. What (I ſaid) Miſs Wolf of Balineſkay? O my Imoinda! And ſnatching her to my arms, I almoſt ſtifled her with kiſſes. I was ſo glad to ſee her again, and in the ſituation ſhe appeared in, that I could not help expreſſing my joys in that tumultuous manner, and hoped ſhe would excuſe her Valentine, as I then remembred I had had that honour when we were both very young.

This lady, who was good humour itſelf in fleſh and blood, was ſo far from being angry at this ſtrange flight of mine, that ſhe only laughed exceſſively at the oddneſs of the thing; but ſome ladies who came into the apartment with her ſeemed frightened, and at a loſs what to think, 'till ſhe cleared up the affair to them, by letting them know who I was, and how near her father and mine lived to each other in the country of Ireland. She was indeed extremely glad to ſee me, and from her heart bid me welcome to Clankford. Our meeting was a vaſt ſurprize to both of us. She thought I had been in the Elyſian fields, as ſhe had heard nothing of me for ſeveral years: and I little imagined, I ſhould ever find her in [184] England, in the rich condition ſhe was in. She aſked me by what deſtiny I was brought to Yorkſhire; and in return for my ſhort ſtory, gave me an account of herſelf at large. Till the bell rung for dinner, we ſat talking together, and then went down to as elegant a one as I had ever ſeen. There were twelve at table, ſix young ladies, all very handſome, and ſix gentlemen. Good humour preſided, and in a rational delightful chearfulneſs, we paſſed ſome hours away. After coffee, we went to cards, and from them to country dances, as two of the footmen played well on the fiddle. The charming Imoinda was my partner, and as they all did the dances extremely well, we were as happy a little ſet as ever footed it to country meaſure. Two weeks I paſſed in this fine felicity. Then we all ſeparated, and went different ways. What became of Miſs Wolf after this — the extraordinary events of her life — and the ſtories of the five ladies with her, — I ſhall relate in the ſecond volume of my Memoirs of ſeveral Ladies of Great Britain. Four of them were Mrs. Cheſlin, Mrs. Fanſhaw, Mrs. Chadley, and Mrs. Biſſel; the fifth was Miſs Farmor; all mentioned in the Preface to the firſt volume of my Memoirs aforeſaid.May 25, 1731. An account of Oliver Wincup, Eſq

§. 3. A fortnight, as ſaid, I ſtayed with Miſs Wolf, that was; but, at the time I am [185]ſpeaking of, the relict of Sir Loghlin Fitzgibbons, an old Iriſh knight, who was immenſely rich, and married her when he was creeping upon all-fours, with ſnow on his head, and froſt in his bones, that he might lie by a naked beauty, and gaze at that awful ſpot he had no power to enjoy. I did intend, on leaving this lady, to be at Knareſborough at night; but the fates, for a while, took me another way. At the inn where I dined, I became acquainted with a gentleman much of my own age, who was an ingenious agreeable man. This was Oliver Wincup, Eſq who had lately married Miſs Horner of Northumberland, a fine young creature, and a great fortune. This gentleman, by his good humour, and ſeveral good ſongs, pleaſed me ſo much, that I drank more than I intended, and was eaſily prevailed on to go with him, in the evening, to Woodceſter, the name of his ſeat; which was but ten miles from the houſe we had dined at. We came in juſt as they were going to tea. There was a great deal of company, at leaſt a dozen ladies, beſides half a ſcore gentlemen, and all of them as gay and engaging as the beſt-bred young mortals could be.

A deſcription of Woodceſter Houſe.§. 4. The vill here was very odd, but a charming pretty thing. The houſe conſiſted [186]of ſeveral ground rooms, (ten I think) detached from one another, and ſeparated by trees and banks of flowers. They were intirely of wood, but finely put together, and all diſpoſed with the greateſt ſymmetry and beauty. They were very handſome without ſide, and the inſide furniſhed and adorned with the fineſt things the owner could get for money. Eaſy hills, little vallies, and pretty groves, ſurrounded the ſweet retreat, and the vallies were watered with clear ſtreams. The whole had a fine appearance. The varied ſcenes for ever pleaſed.

The manner of living at Woodceſter.§. 5. At this delightful place I ſtayed ten days, and was very happy indeed. We drank, we laughed, we danced, we ſung, and chatted; and when that was done, 'twas night. But country dances were the chief diverſion; and I had a partner, who was not only a wonder in face and perſon, (divinely pretty) but did wonders in every motion. This was Miſs Veyſſiere of Cumberland: the dear creature! Reader, when I was a young fellow, there were few could equal me in dancing. The famous Paddy Murphy, an Iriſh member of the houſe of commons, commonly called the Little Beau, well known at Lucas's coffee-houſe, Dublin: (He danced one night, in 1734, that I was at the caſtle, before the late Duke of Dorſet [187]and his Ducheſs, at their grace's requeſt:) this gentleman, and Langham, the miller, who danced every night at the renowned Stretch's puppet-ſhew, before the curtain was drawn up, were both deſervedly admired for their performance in the hornpipe; yet were nothing to me in this particular: but Miſs Veyſſiere out-did me far: her ſteps were infinite, and ſhe did them with that amazing agility, that ſhe ſeemed like a dancing angel in the air. Eight nights we footed it together, and all the company ſaid, we were born for each other. She did charm me, and I ſhould have aſked her the queſtion, to try her temper, if Wincup had not told me, her father intended to ſacrifice her to a man old enough to be her grandfather, for the ſake of a great jointure; and in a week or two ſhe was to dance the reel of Bogee with an old monk.— Poor Miſs Veyſſiere! I ſaid; What connexion can there be between the hoary churl and you,

While ſide by ſide the bluſhing maid
Shrinks from his viſage, half afraid?

I do not wiſh you may feather him, but may you bury him very quickly, and be happy.

An account of a company of ſtroling players at Woodceſter.§. 6. Another of our diverſions at Woodceſter, was a little company of ſingers and dancers Mr. Wincup had hired, to perform [188]in a ſylvan theatre he had in his gardens. Theſe people did the mime, the dance, the ſong, extremely well. There was among them one Miſs Hinxworth, a charming young creature, who excelled in every thing; but in ſinging eſpecially, had no equal I believe in the world. She was a gentleman's daughter, and had been carried off by one O Regan, an Iriſhman, and dancing-maſter, the head of this company. He was the moſt active fellow upon earth, and the beſt harlequin I have ever ſeen. Every evening we had ſomething or other extraordinary from theſe performers. He gave us two pieces which ſo nearly reſembled the two favourite entertainments called Harlequin Sorcerer, and the Genii, (tho' in ſeveral particulars better) that I cannot help thinking Mr. Rich owed his Harlequin Sorcerer to O Regan: and that the Genii of Drury-Lane was the invention of this Iriſhman.

You know, reader, that in the firſt ſcene of Harlequin Sorcerer, there is a group of witches at their orgies in a wilderneſs by moon-light, and that harlequin comes riding in the air between two witches, upon a long pole: Here O Regan did what was never attempted at Covent-Garden houſe, and what no other man in the world I believe did ever do. As the witches danced round and round, hand in hand, as ſwift as they could move, [189] O Regan leaped upon the ſhoulder of one of them, and for near a quarter of an hour, jumped the contrary way as faſt as they went, round all their ſhoulders. This was a fine piece of activity. I think it much more wonderful, than to keep at the top of the outwheel of a water-mill, by jumping there, as it goes with the greateſt rapidity round. This Mun. Hawley, An account of Mr. Hawley of Loch-Gur. of Loch-Gur in the county of Tipperary, could do. He was a charming fellow in body and mind, and fell unfortunately in the 22d year of his age. In a plain field, by a trip of his horſe, he came down, and fractured his ſkull. He did not think he was hurt: but at night as ſoon as he began to eat, it came up. A ſurgeon was ſent for to look at his head. It was cracked in ſeveral places, and he died the next day. He and I were near friends.

June 1, 1731. The author leaves Woodceſter, and rides to a lone ſilent place called Laſco.§. 7. The firſt of June, 1731, at five in the morning, I took my leave of honeſt Wincup, as chearful and worthy a fellow as ever lived, and ſet out for Knareſborough; but loſt my way, went quite wrong, and in three hours time, came to a little blind alehouſe, the ſign of the Cat and Bagpipe, in a lone ſilent place. The maſter of this ſmall inn was one Tom Clancy, brother to the well-known Martin Clancy in Dublin. He [190]came to England to try his fortune, as he told me, and married an old woman, who kept this public-houſe, the ſign of the Cat, to which Tom added the Bagpipe. As he had been a waiter at his brother's houſe, he remembred to have ſeen me often there, and was rejoiced at my arrival at the Cat and Bagpipe. He got me a good ſupper of trouts, fine ale, and a ſquib of punch, and after he had done talking of all the gallant fellows that uſed to reſort to his brother Martin's, ſuch as the heroes of Trinity-college, Dublin, Captain Maccan of the county of Kerry, and many more, he let me go to ſleep.

The hiſtory of the two beauties in the wood.§. 8. The next morning, betimes, I was up, and walked into a wood adjoining to Clancy's houſe. I ſauntered on for about an hour eaſily enough, but at laſt came to a part of the foreſt that was almoſt impenetrable. Curioſity incited me to ſtruggle onwards, if poſſible, that I might ſee what country was before me, or if any houſe was to be found in this gloomy place: this coſt me a couple of hours, much toil, and many ſcratches; but at length, I arrived at the edge of a barren moor, and beyond it, about a quarter of a mile off, ſaw another wood. Proud to be daring, on I went, and ſoon came to the wood in view, which I found [191]cut into walks, and arrived at a circular ſpace ſurrounded with a foreſt, that was above a hundred yards every way. In the center of this was a houſe, encloſed within a very broad deep mote, full of water, and the banks on the inſide, all round, were ſo thick planted with trees, that there was no ſeeing any thing of the manſion but the roof and the chimnies. Over the water was one narrow drawbridge, lifted up, and a ſtrong door on the garden ſide of the mote. Round I walked ſeveral times, but no ſoul could I ſee: not the leaſt noiſe could I hear; nor was there a cottage any where in view. I wondered much at the whole; and if I had had my lad O Finn with me, and my pole, I would moſt certainly have attempted to leap the foſs, broad as it was, and if it was poſſible, have known who were the occupants of this ſtrange place. But as nothing could be done, nor any information be had, I returned again to the Cat and Bagpipe.

Character of Mr. Jeremiah Cock, an old lawyer.It was ten by the time I got back, and at breakfaſt I told Clancy, my landlord, where I had been, and aſked him if he knew who lived in that wonderful place. His name (he replied) is Cock, an old lawyer and limb of the devil, and the moſt hideous man to behold that is upon the face of the earth. Every thing that is bad and ſhocking is in his [192]compound: he is to outward appearance a monſter: and within, the miſer, the oppreſſor, the villain. He is deſpiſed and abhorred, but ſo immenſely rich, that he can do any thing, and no one is able to contend with him. I could relate, ſays Tom, a thouſand inſtances of his injuſtice and cruelty; but one alone is ſufficient to render his memory for ever curſed. Two gentlemen of fortune, who had employed him ſeveral years in their affairs, and had a good opinion of him, on account of a canted uprightneſs and ſeeming piety, left him ſole guardian of a daughter each of them had, and the management of fifty thouſand pounds a-piece, the fortune of theſe girls, with power to do as he pleaſed, without being ſubject to any controul, 'till they are of age. Theſe ladies, as fine creatures as ever the eye of man beheld, he has had now a year in confinement in that priſon you ſaw in the wood; and while he lives, will keep them there to be ſure, on account of the hundred thouſand pounds, or till he diſpoſe of them to his own advantage, ſome way or other. He intends them, it is ſaid, for two ugly nephews he has, who are now at ſchool, about fourteen years old, and for this purpoſe, or ſome other as bad, never ſuffers them to ſtir out of the garden ſurrounded by the mote, nor lets any human creature viſit [193]them. They are greatly to be pitied, but bear the ſevere uſage wonderfully well. One of them, Miſs Martha Tilſton, is in her twentieth year; and the other, Miſs Alithea Llanſoy, in her nineteenth. They are girls of great ſenſe, and would, if any kind of opportunity offered, make a brave attempt to eſcape: but that ſeems impoſſible. They are not only ſo ſtrictly confined, and he for ever at home with them, except he rides a few miles; but are attended continually in the garden, when they walk, by a ſervant who is well paid, and devoted to the old man her maſter. This makes them think their ſtate is fixed for life, and to get rid of melancholy, they read, and practice muſic. They both play on the fiddle, and do it extremely fine.

Here Clancy had done, and I was much more ſurprized at his relation than at the place of their reſidence which I had ſeen. I became very thoughtful, and continued for ſome time with my eyes fixed on the table, while I revolved the caſe of theſe unfortunate young ladies. But is all this true? (at laſt I ſaid): Or only report? How did you get ſuch particular information?—I will tell you, Tom anſwered. Old Cock is my landlord, and buſineſs often brings me to his houſe in the wood, to pay my rent, or aſk [194]for ſomething I want. Beſides, I ſometimes bring a fat pig there, and other things to fell. My daughter likewiſe has ſometimes a piece of work in hand for the ladies, and ſhe and I take a walk with it there by a better and ſhorter way than you went. You cannot think how glad they are to ſee us, and they let me into all their perplexities and diſtreſs.

On hearing this, a ſudden thought of being ſerviceable to theſe ladies came into my head, and I was going to aſk a queſtion in relation to it, when two horſemen rode up to the door, and one of them called Houſe! This, ſays my landlord, is old Cock and his man; and immediately went out to him, to know his will. He told him, he came for the ride-ſake himſelf, to ſee if any letters were left for him by that day's poſt at his houſe, and would dine with him if he had any thing to eat. That I have, (the man replied), as fine a fowl, bacon and greens, as ever was ſerved up to any table, and only one gentleman, a ſtranger and traveller, to ſit down to it. Cock upon this came into the room I was ſitting in, and after looking very earneſtly at me, ſaid, Your ſervant, Sir. I told him I was his moſt humble, and right glad to meet with a gentleman for ſociety in that lone place. I immediately began a ſtory of a cock and a bull, and made the old fellow grin now and then. I informed [195]him among other things, that I was travelling to Weſtmoreland, to look after ſome eſtates I had there, but muſt hurry back to London very ſoon, for my wife was within a few weeks of her time. You are a married man then, Sir, he replied. Yes, indeed, and ſo ſupremely bleſt with the charms and perfections, the fondneſs and obedience of a wife, that I would not be unmarried for all the world: few men living ſo happy as I am in the nuptial ſtate.—Here dinner was brought in, and to ſave the old gentleman trouble, I would cut up the fowl. I helped him plentifully to a ſlice of the breaſt, and the tips of the wings, and picked out for him the tendereſt greens. I was as complaiſant as it was poſſible, and drank his health many times. The bottle after dinner I put about pretty quick, and told my old gentleman, if affairs ever brought him up to London, I ſhould be glad to ſee him at my houſe in Golden-Square, the very next door to Sir John Heir's; or, if I could be of any ſervice to him there, he would oblige me very much by letting me know in what way. In ſhort, I ſo buttered him with words, and filled him with fowl and wine, that he ſeemed well pleaſed, eſpecially when he found there was nothing to pay, as I informed him it was my own dinner I had beſpoke, and [196]dined with double pleaſure in having the ſatisfaction of his moſt agreeable company. He was a fine politician, I ſaid, and talked extremely well of the government and the times: that I had received more true knowledge from his juſt notions, than from all I had read of men and things, or from converſing with any one. The glaſs during this time was not long ſtill, but in ſuch toaſts as I found were grateful to his Jacobite heart, drank brimmers as faſt as opportunity ſerved, and he pledged me and cottoned in a very diverting way. He grew very fond of me at laſt, and hoped I would ſpare ſo much time, as to come and dine with him the next day. This honour I aſſured him I would do myſelf, and punctually be with him at his hour. He then rid off, brim full, and I walked out to conſider of this affair. But before I proceed any farther in my ſtory, I muſt give a deſcription of this man.

A deſcription of old Cock the lawyer. Cock, the old lawyer and guardian, was a low man, about four feet eight inches, very broad, and near ſeventy years old. He was humped behind to an enormous degree, and his belly as a vaſt flaſket of garbage projected monſtrouſly before. He had the moſt hanging look I have ever ſeen. His brows were prodigious, and frowning in a ſhocking manner; his eyes very little, and above an inch [197]within his head; his noſe hooked like a buzzard, wide noſtrils like a horſe, and his mouth ſparrow. In this caſe, was a mind quite cunning, in the worſt ſenſe of the word, acute, artful, deſigning and baſe. There was not a ſpark of honour or generoſity in his ſoul.

How to circumvent this able one, and deliver the two beauties from his oppreſſive power, was the queſtion: it ſeemed almoſt impoſſible; but I reſolved to do my beſt. This I told Clancy, and requeſted, as I was to dine with Cock the next day, that he would be there in the morning, on ſome pretence or other, and let the ladies know, I offered them my ſervice, without any other view than to do them good; and if they accepted it, to inform me by a note, ſlipt into my hand when they ſaw me, that if they could direct me what to do, I would execute it at any hazard, or let them hint the leaſt particular that might have any tendency to their freedom in ſome time to come, though it were three months off, and I would wait for the moment, and ſtudy to improve the ſcheme. This my landlord very carefully acquainted them with, at the time I mentioned; and by two o'clock I was at Cock's houſe, to ſee theſe beauties, and know what they thought of the ſervice offered them. [198]The old man received me much civiler than I thought he would do when he was ſober, and had, what my landlord told me was a very rare thing in his houſe, to wit, a good dinner that day. Juſt as it was brought in, the ladies entred, (two charming creatures indeed), and made me very low courteſies, while their eyes declared the ſenſe they had of the good I intended them. Cock ſaid, theſe are my nieces, Sir, and as ſoon as I had ſaluted them, we ſat down to table. The eldeſt carved, and helped me to the beſt the board afforded, and young as they were, they both ſhewed by their manner, and the little they ſaid, that they were women of ſenſe and breeding. They retired, a few minutes after dinner, and the youngeſt contrived, in going off, to give me a billet in an inviſible manner. I then turned to Cock intirely, heard him abuſe the government in nonſenſe and falſhoods, as all Jacobites do; and after we had drank and talked for better than an hour, took my leave of him very willingly, to read the following note.

SIR,

As you can have nothing in view but our happineſs, in your moſt generous offer of aſſiſtance, we have not words to expreſs our grateful ſenſe of the intended [199]favour. What is to be done upon the occaſion, as yet we cannot imagine, as we are ſo confined and watched, and the doors of the houſe locked and barred in ſuch a manner every night, that a cat could not get out at any part of it. You ſhall hear from us however ſoon, if poſſible, to ſome purpoſe; and in the mean time we are,

SIR,
Your ever obliged ſervants,
  • M.T.
  • A.L.

What to do then I could not tell; but as I rid back I conſulted with my lad O Fin, who was a very extraordinary young man, and aſked him what obſervations he had made on the ſervants and place. He ſaid, he had tried the depth of the water in the mote all round, and found it fordable at one angle, waiſt high, and about two feet broad the rock he trod on. He had ſtripped, and walked it over to be ſure of the thing. As to the people, he fancied there was one young man, a labourer by the year under the gardener, who would, for a reaſonable reward for loſing his place, be aiding in the eſcape of the ladies; for he talked with pity of them, and with great ſeverity of his maſter: that [200]if I pleaſed, he would ſound this man, and let me know more in relation to him: that if he would be concerned, he could very eaſily carry the ladies on his back acroſs the water, as he was a tall man, and then we might take them behind us to what place we pleaſed: or, if it was not ſafe truſting this man, for fear of his telling his maſter, in hopes of more money on that ſide, then, he would himſelf engage to bring the ladies and their cloaths over, on his own back, with wetting only their legs, if they could be at the water-ſide ſome hour in the night. This was not bad to be ſure; but I was afraid to truſt the man; for, if he ſhould inform old Cock of the thing, they would be confined to their chambers, and made cloſe priſoners for the time to come. It was better therefore to rely entirely upon O Fin, if they could get into the garden in the night.

In anſwer then to another letter I had from the ladies by my landlord's daughter the next morning, in which they lamented the appearing impoſſibility of an eſcape, I let them know immediately the ſtate of the water, and deſired to be informed what they thought of the gardener's man; or, if he would not do, could they at any particular hour, get to that angle of the mote I named, to be brought over on my man's back, and then immediately ride off behind us on pillions, which [201]ſhould be prepared.mdash;Their anſwer was, that they dared not truſt any of Mr. Cock's men, but thought my own ſervant would do, and the ſcheme reaſonable and ſeemingly ſafe, if they could get out. They gave me a million of thanks for my amazing care of them, and called the immortal powers to witneſs the high ſenſe they had of their unutterable obligation to me.

Waiting then for them, I ſtaid at the little inn three days longer, and at laſt received a billet to let me know, that at twelve o'clock that night, which was the ſixth of June, they could, by an accident that had happened, be at the appointed place, and ready to go whereever I pleaſed. To a minute my man and I were there, and in a few moments, O Fin brought them and their cloaths over ſafe. In an inſtant after they were behind us, and we rid away as faſt as we could. Six hours we travelled without ſtopping, and in that time, had gone about thirty miles. We breakfaſted very gaily at our inn, and when the horſes had reſted a couple of hours, we ſet out again, and rid till three in the afternoon, when we baited at a lone houſe in a valley, called Straveret Vale, which had every rural charm that can be found in the fineſt part of Juan Fernandes. A young couple, vaſtly civil, kept here a ſmall clean public houſe, the ſign of the pilgrim, on the very [202]margin of a pretty river, and the plain things they had were as good as we could deſire. Their bread, their drink, their fowl, their eggs, their butter, cheeſe, vegetables, and bacon, were excellent, and as they had good beds, I thought we could not do better than lie by for two or three days in this ſweet place, 'till it was determined, where the ladies ſhould fix. We were at leaſt fixty miles from old Cock's houſe, and in an obſcurity that would conceal us from any purſuers; for we had kept the croſs roads and by-ways, and were on the confines of Weſtmoreland. Here then we agreed to reſt for a little time. In reality, it was juſt as I pleaſed. The ladies were all acknowledgment for what I did to deliver them, and all ſubmiſſion to my direction. They had each of them thirty guineas in their purſes, as they ſhewed me, but what to do after that was gone, or where to go while it laſted, to be in ſafety, they could not tell.

The affair perplexed me very much, and I turned it a thouſand ways, without being able to ſettle it as I would. I had two young heireſſes on my hands, who wanted more than a year of being at age, and I muſt ſupport them, and place them in ſome ſpot of decency, ſecurity, and peace, ſince I had gone thus far, or I had injured them greatly, inſtead of ſerving them, in bringing them [203]from their guardian's houſe. This took up all my thoughts for three days. I concealed however my uneaſineſs from them, and endeavoured to make the houſe and place quite pleaſing to them. I kept up a chearfulneſs and gaiety, and we ſat down with joy and pleaſure to breakfaſt, dinner, and ſupper. Within doors, we played at cards, we ſung, and I entertained them with my German-flute. Abroad, we walked, fiſhed, and ſometimes I rowed them up the river in a boat the man of the houſe had. The whole ſcheme was really delightful, and as the girls had great quickneſs and vivacity, and were far from being ignorant, conſidering their few years, I could have wiſhed it was poſſible to ſtay there much longer: but it was no place for them, and I was obliged to call at Claytor, in a little time. I could not forget my promiſe to the lovely Miſs Spence. My honour was engaged, and there was no time to loſe. It is true, if I had not been engaged, I might immediately have married either the beautiful Miſs Tilſton, or the more beautiful Miſs Llandſoy, then become my wards; but as they were minors, if ſuch a wife died under age, I could be no gainer, and might have children to maintain without any fortune. All theſe things ſat powerfully on my ſpirits, and I was obliged at [204]laſt to make the following declaration to the ladies, which I did the third day after dinner.

Miſs Tilſton, Miſs Llandſoy, I am ſenſible you have too high an opinion of what I have done to ſerve you, and think there is more merit in it than there really is; for a man of any generoſity and ability would, I imagine, do all that was poſſible to deliver two young ladies of your charms and perfections, from the ſlavery and miſery your guardian kept you in: I am likewiſe ſure you believe I would do every thing in my power, to ſecure your happineſs, and give you the poſſeſſion of every bleſſing of time. I honour, I admire, I regard you both, to a high degree; and if I were ſome powerful genie, I would crown your lives with ſtable felicity and glory. But nature, ladies, has irrevocably fixed limits, beyond which we cannot paſs, and my ſphere of action is far from being large. My fortune is not very great, and thereby prevents my being ſo uſeful a friend to you as I would willingly be. However, though it is not in my power to do according to my inclination, in regard to your caſe, and with ſecurity place you in ſome ſtation fit for your rank and worth, yet I can bring you to a ſpot of tranquillity, and in ſtill life enable you to live without perplexity or care of any kind. You ſhall have peace and little, and may perhaps hereafter ſay, you have enjoyed more real [205]happineſs, for the time you had occaſion to reſide there, than you could find in the tumult, pomp, and grandeur of the world.

Here I gave the ladies an account of Orton-Lodge, in the northern extremity of Weſtmoreland, where I had lived a conſiderable time told them the condition it was in, the goods, the books, the liquors, and other neceſſaries and conveniencies that were there, and if, in that charming romantic ſpot, where no mortal could come to hurt them, they could bear to live for a while, I would ſettle them there, and get a man ſervant to work in the garden, and a couple of maids. I would likewiſe procure for them two cows, a few lambs, ſome poultry, and corn, and ſeeds for the ground: in ſhort, that they ſhould have every thing requiſite in ſuch a place; I would return to them as ſoon as poſſible; I would write to them often, directing my letters to the neareſt town, to be called for by their man. What do you ſay, ladies, to this propoſal? In London it is not poſſible for you to be: at a farm-houſe you might have no ſatisfaction: and any where that was known and frequented, you may be liable to diſcovery, as Cock, your guardian, will enquire every where; and if he hears of you, you will be carried home moſt certainly to his diſmal habitation, and be uſed ten times [206]worſe than before. What do you think then of this ſcheme?

Sir, (they both replied) you are to us a ſubaltern power, by heaven ſent to deliver us from miſery, and ſecure our happineſs in this world. We have not words to expreſs the gratitude of our ſouls for this further inſtance of your goodneſs in the offer you make us, nor can it ever be in our power to make you the return it deſerves. You will be pleaſed to accept our grateful thanks, and all we have to add at preſent, our prayers for your preſervation and health. Conduct us, we beſeech you, immediately to that ſweet ſpot of peace you have deſcribed.

This being agreed on, the next thing to be done was to get two horſes for the ladies, for mine were not able to carry double any further, if there had been a turnpike road before us; then up the mountains we were to go, where no double horſe could travel; and when they were at the Lodge, they would want horſes to ride ſometimes, or to remove, if the neceſſity of their caſe ſhould happen to require it: to my landlord therefore I applied upon the occaſion, and he very quickly got for me not only two pretty beaſts, but a young labouring man, and two country girls to wait upon the ladies. I then ſent to the next town for a couple of ſide-ſaddles, gave the ſervants directions to go to the Rev. [207]Mr. Fleming's houſe, to wait there till they heard from me, and then we ſet out for Orton-Ladge. Two days we ſpent in travelling there, feeding on cold proviſions we had with us, and lying a night on the fern of the mountains. The ſecond evening we arrived at the Lodge. There I found every thing ſafe, and the place as I had left it. I opened my various ſtore-houſes, to the ſurprize of the young ladies, and brought them many good things; biſcuits, potted char, potted black-cocks, ſweetmeats, and liquors of various kinds: O Fin likewiſe got us a diſh of trouts for ſupper, and the two beauties and I ſat down with chearfulneſs to our table.— Vaſtly amazed they were at all they ſaw. Every thing was ſo good, and the wild charms of the place ſo pleaſing, that they could not but expreſs the tranſports they were in at their preſent ſituation. The whole they ſaid, was charming as inchantment, and in language there was not a force ſufficient to expreſs their grateful ſentiments upon the occaſion. This gave me much pleaſure, and till the end of June, I lived a very happy life with theſe fine young creatures. They did all that was poſſible to ſhew their eſteem and gratitude. Excluſive of their amazing fine faces, and perſons, they were ingenious, gay, and engaging, and made [208]every minute of time delightful. If I had not been engaged to Miſs Spence, I ſhould certainly have ſat down in peace with theſe two young ladies, and with them connected, have looked upon Orton-Lodge as the Garden of Eden. They were both moſt charming women. Miſs Llandſoy was a mere divinity!

SECTION VII.

[209]
Come all, O come, ye family of joy;
Ye children of the chearful hour, begot
By wiſdom on the virtuous mind; O come!
Come innocence, in conſcious ſtrength ſecure;
Come courage, foremoſt in the manly train;
Come all, and in the honeſt heart abide,
Your native reſidence, your fortreſs ſtill,
From real or from fancied evils free:
Let's drive far off, for ever drive that bane,
That hideous peſt, engender'd deep in hell,
Horrid to ſight, and by the frighted furies
In their dread panic Superſtition nam'd.
Let reſcu'd fancy turn aloft her eye,
And view yon wide extended arch; behold
You cryſtal concave, ſtudded with the gems,
The radiant gems of heaven, that nightly burn,
In golden lamps, and gild th' aetherial ſpace;
That ſmiling vault, that canopy of ſtars.
Or eaſtward turn, and ſee, ſerenely bright,
The full-orb'd moon begins her ſilent round:
The mountain tops, the rocks, the vales, the lawns,
By her ſet off, adorn'd, and made delightful.
On earth, benign, ſhe ſheds her borrowed ray,
And onward leads along her ſparkling train.
Behold yon blazing ſun, in glory riſe:
Oceans of light he pours upon the world,
And night with all her train before him fly.
All nature ſmiles, rejoicing in his beams.
The feather'd kinds their morning anthem ſing:
The fiſh ſkim ſportive o'er the gilded lakes:
Their tow'ring tops the waving foreſts ſhew;
And op'ning flowers their various dyes diſplay,
Perfume the air, and grateful incenſe yield.
It is a glorious and charming ſcene.
[210]
What ſhould we fear then? this grand proſpect brings.
No dreadful phantom to the frighted eye,
No terror to the ſoul; 'tis tranſport all!
Here fancy roves in ſweet variety.
All theſe, in their eternal round, rejoice;
All theſe, with univerſal praiſe, proclaim
Their great Creator; bountiful, benign,
Immenſely good, rejoicing in his creatures.
They wake new raptures in the heart of man;
And fill his ſoul with gratitude immenſe.

July 1, 1731. My departure from Orton-Lodge a ſecond time: miſſed my road: the country deſcribed.§. 1. THE firſt of July, juſt as the day was breaking, I mounted my horſe, and went again from Orton-Lodge. The morning being extremely fine, and every thing appearing as in the above lines, I rid ſoftly on for three or four hours, and was ſo delighted with the beauties, and an infinite variety of lovely objects my eyes were feaſted with, that I did not mind the way; and inſtead of coming to the turning that was my road, I got into a bending valley, which ended at a range of rocky mountains. For half an hour I travelled by the bottom of theſe frightful hills, and came at length to a paſs through them, but ſo narrow, that the beaſts had not above an inch or two to ſpare on each ſide. It was dark as the blackeſt night in this opening, and a ſtream came from it, by the waters falling in ſeveral places from the top of the high incloſing precipices. It was as ſhocking a foot-way as I had ever ſeen.

[211] Finn, (I ſaid to my young man) as the bottom is hard, and you can only be wet a little, will you try where this paſs ends, and let me know what kind of country and inhabitants are beyond it? That I will, ſaid O Finn, and immediately entred the cleft or crevice between the mountains. A couple of hours I allowed my adventurer to explore this dark way; but if in that time he could make nothing of it, then his orders were to return: but there was no ſign of him at the end of ſix hours, and I began to fear he had got into ſome pound. After him then I went, about one o'clock, and for near half a mile, the narrow way was directly forward, a rough bottom, and ancle deep in water; but it ended in a fine flowery green of about twenty acres, ſurrounded with ſteep rocky hills it was impoſſible to aſcend. Walking up to the precipice before me, I found many caverns in it, which extended on either hand, and onwards, into a vaſt variety of caves; ſome of them having high arched openings for entrance, and others only holes to creep in at; but all of them ſpacious within, and high enough for the talleſt man to walk in.

In theſe diſmal chambers I apprehended my fellow had loſt himſelf, and therefore went into them as far as I could venture, that is, without loſing ſight of the day, and cried out Finn! Finn! but could hear no [212]ſound in return. This was a great trouble to me, and I knew not what to do. Back however I muſt go to my horſes, and after I had ſpent two hours in ſearching, ſhouting, and expecting my lad's return, by ſome means or other, I was juſt going to walk towards the crevice, or dark narrow paſs I had come through to this place, when caſting my eyes once more towards the caverns in the mountains, I ſaw my boy come out, leaping and ſinging for joy. He told me, he never expected to ſee the day-light more: for after he had fooliſhly gone too far into the caves, till he was quite in the dark, in hopes of finding a paſſage through the mountain to ſome open country, he was obliged to wander from chamber to chamber he knew not where for many hours, without one ray of light, and with very little expectation of deliverance; that he did nothing but cry and roar, and was hardly able to ſtand on his legs any longer, when by a chance turn into a cave, he ſaw ſome light again, and then ſoon found his way out. Poor fellow! he was in a ſad condition, and very wonderful was his eſcape.

After this, we made what haſte we could to our horſes, which we had left feeding in the vale, and Finn brought me ſome cold proviſions from his wallet for my dinner. I dined with great pleaſure, on account of the [213]recovery of my lad, and when we had both recruited and reſted ſufficiently, on we went again. We found the valley winded about the mountains for three miles, and then ended at the higheſt hill I had ever ſeen, but which it was poſſible to aſcend. With great difficulty we and our horſes got to the top of it, and down on the other ſide. Six mountains of the ſame height, whoſe tops were above the clouds, we had to croſs, and then arrived at a bottom, which formed a moſt delightful ſcene.

Mrs. Thurloe's ſeat in Weſtmoreland.§. 2. The Vale of Keſwick, and Lake of Derwentwater, in Cumberland, are thought by thoſe who have been there, to be the fineſt point of view in England, and extremely beautiful they are, far more ſo than the Rev. Dr. Dalton has been able to make them appear in his Deſcriptive Poem; (addreſſed to two ladies, at their return from viewing the coal-mines, near Whitehaven, that is, the late excellent Lord Lonſdale's charming daughters;) or than the Doctor's brother, Mr. Dalton, has painted them in his fine drawings; and yet they are inferior in charms to the vale, the lake, the brooks, the ſhaded ſides of the ſurrounding mountains, and the tuneful falls of water, to which we came in Weſtmoreland. In all the world, I believe, there is not a [214]more glorious rural ſcene to be ſeen, in the fine time of the year.

In this fine vale, I found one pretty little houſe, which had gardens very beautifully laid out, and uſefully filled with the fineſt dwarf fruit trees and ever-greens, vegetables, herbs, and ſhrubs. The manſion, and the improved ſpot of ground, were at the end of the beautiful lake, ſo as to have the whole charming piece of water before the door. The projecting ſhaded fells ſeemed to nod or hang over the habitation, and on either hand, a few yards from the front of the houſe, caſcades much higher than that of dread Lodore, in Cumberland, fell into the lake. There is not any thing ſo beautiful and ſtriking as the whole in any part of the globe that I have ſeen: and I have been in higher latitudes, north and ſouth, than moſt men living. I have converſed with nations who live many degrees beyond the poor frozen Laplander. I have travelled among the barbarians who ſcorch beneath the burning zone.

An acccount of the [...] Miſs Thurlie's.§. 3. Who lived in this delightful valley, was, in the next place, my enquiry, after I had admired for an hour the amazing beauties of the place. I walked up to the houſe, and in one of the parlour windows, that had a view up the loch, I ſaw a young beauty ſitting with a muſic-book [215]in her hand, and heard her ſing in a maſterly manner. She could not ſee me, but I had a full view of her fine face, and as I remembred to have ſeen her ſomewhere, I ſtood gazing at her with wonder and delight, and was ſtriving to recollect where I had been in her company, when another young one came into the room, whom I had reaſon to remember very well, on account of an accident, and then I knew they were the two young ladies I had ſeen at Mr. Harcourt's. (ſee p. 374. of Memoirs of ſeveral Ladies of Great Britain,) and admired very greatly for the charms of their perſons, and the beauties of their minds. Upon this I walked up to the window, and after a little aſtoniſhment at ſeeing me, they behaved with the greateſt civility, and ſeemed to be highly pleaſed with the accidental meeting. While we were talking, their mamma came into the apartment, and on their letting her know who I was, and where they had been acquainted with me, the old lady was pleaſed to aſk me to ſtay at her houſe that night, and to aſſure me ſhe was glad to ſee me, as ſhe had often heard her daughters ſpeak of me. Three days I paſſed with great pleaſure in this ſweet place, and then with regret took my leave. Theſe two fine young creatures were the Miſs Thurloe's, and are Mrs. Lowman and Mrs. Munkley, in the Memoirs of ſeveral Ladies [216]of Great Britain. In the 2d volume of that work, the reader will find their lives.

Account of a Carthuſian monaſtery in Richmondſhire.§. 4. The 5th of July I left Mrs. Thurloe's, and by the aſſiſtance of a guide, had a fine ride to the houſe of Friar Fleming, in Richmondſhire, where I arrived by noon. I dined with this good Franciſcan, and ſhould have lain there that night, but that I could not help being melancholy, on miſſing my dear friend Tom, the Monk's brother, who died of a fever, as before related. From him then I parted in the evening, and rid to a Carthuſian monaſtry, which conſiſted of ſeven monks, men of ſome eſtate, who had agreed to live together in this remote place, and paſs their lives in piety, ſtudy, and gardening. I had a letter from Fleming to one of theſe gentlemen, the ſuperior, letting him know I was his near friend, and deſiring he would receive me as himſelf; that, although a proteſtant, I was of no party, but in charity with all mankind. This letter procured me all the kindneſs and honours theſe gentlemen could ſhew me. They behaved with great civility and tenderneſs, and gave me the beſt they had, good fiſh, good bread, good wine, excellent fruit, and fine vegetables; for as to fleſh, they never eat any, by their rule.

They were all learned and devout men, very grave and ſilent for the moſt part, except [217]when viſited, but without any thing ſtiff or moroſe in their manner. They had a large collection of books, and ſeemed to underſtand them well. What time they had to ſpare from the hours of divine ſervice, and working in their gardens, according to the rule of St. Benet, which they follow, they give to ſtudy, and had many volumes of their own writing; being moſtly old MSS. they had tranſcribed, Greek, Latin, and French. Making ſuch copies was their principal work in the cloſet.

Reaſons for reading the works of the Rabbies, fictitious and extravagant as they are.§. 5. I ſtayed two days with theſe gentlemen, and had a good deal of uſeful converſation with them, on various ſubjects. On looking into the writings of the Rabbies, which I ſaw in their library, I told one of theſe Chartreux, that it was a wonder to me, that any one read ſuch extravagant fabulous relations and deſpicable fictions as theſe books contained, and ſhould be glad to know, what good could be extracted from them.

The Friar replied, that notwithſtanding their being fictitious and extravagant to a high degree, yet great uſe may be made of the works of the Rabbies, and eſpecially of the Talmud of Babylon (11) [217]We obtain from [218]thence a knowledge of the cuſtoms and opinions of the Jews, which afford ſome benefit. In the next place, they ſerve to the confirmation [219]of the hiſtory of Jeſus Chriſt; for it appears by the Babyloniſh Talmud, that there was one Jeſus, who had diſciples, lived in ſuch and ſuch a place, and did and ſaid divers things; and in the Bible many texts relating to the Meſſias are confirmed and explained by theſe books of the Rabbies, though not by them intended. This I have ſince found to be the truth of the caſe. I have read the works of the Rabbins ſince, and find it to be as the Carthuſian ſaid. For example;

It is ſaid in Gen. iii. 15. I will put enmity between thy ſeed and her ſeed. It ſhall bruiſe thy head, and thou ſhalt bruiſe his heel. Now the Targum of Onkelos gives the ſenſe thus: The man ſhall be mindful of, or remember, what thou (ſatan) haſt done to him in times paſt, and thou ſhalt obſerve, watch or haunt him till the end of days; that is, the ſerpent or devil ſhould purſue and have dominion over the world till the laſt days, and then the prince of this world ſhould be caſt out, [220]and the works of the devil deſtroyed. Beacharith Heyamim, the end of days, or laſt days, is, by a general rule, given by the moſt learned Rabbins, meant of the Meſſias. So Kimchi on Iſa. ii. 2.—and Abarbriel and R. Moſes Nachm on Gen. xlix. 1. inform us.

It is likewiſe very remarkable, that the Targum of Jeruſalem, and that of Jonathan Ben Uziel, apply this place to the coming of the Meſſias. They give the words the following ſenſe. — I will put enmity between thy ſeed and her ſeed: when the ſons of the woman keeping my law, they ſhall bruiſe thy head, and when they break my law, thou ſhalt bruiſe their heel; but the wound given to the ſeed of the woman, ſhall be healed, but thine ſhall be incurable; they ſhall be healed in the laſt days, in the days of the Meſſias.—Such is the opinion of the moſt learned Jews:—and from thence it follows, that the Chriſtians have not put their ſenſe upon the text I have cited to ſerve their own turn; the Rabbins, we ſee, give the very ſame meaning to the place.

Again in Numb. xxiv. 17. we have the famous prophecy of Balaam: There ſhall come a ſtar out of Jacob, and a ſceptre ſhall riſe out of Iſrael. — In Iſaiah xi. 1. it is written; And there ſhall come forth a rod out of the ſtem of Jeſſe, and a branch ſhall grow out of his roots, and the ſpirit of the Lord ſhall reſt [221]upon him. And in Jeremiah xxiii. 5.6. Behold the days ſhall come, ſaith the Lord, that I will raiſe unto David a righteous branch,and this is his name whereby he ſhall be called, The Lord our Righteouſneſs. That the Chriſtians apply theſe texts to the Meſſias, I need not inform the reader: but it muſt be grateful to obſerve, that the paraphraſes of Onkelos, Jonathan, and Jeruſalem, all of them expreſsly attribute the prophecy of Balaam to the Meſſias. And Rabbi Moſes Hadarſan and Maimon, ſay, he is here called a Star, (which ſignifies what Malachi expreſſes by the Sun of Righteouſneſs. Mal. iv. 2. and Zechariah by the Eaſt. I will bring forth my ſervant the Eaſt. Zach. iii. 8. as it is tranſlated in the Vulgar, Septuagint, Arabic, and Syriac) is here, ſay theſe Rabbins, called a Star, becauſe he ſhould come and deſtroy idolatry, among the heathen nations, by becoming a light to the gentiles, and the glory of Iſrael.

As to the other two texts, the Jews do likewiſe attribute them to the Meſſias. Rabbi Joſeph Albo, ſpeaking of the words, The Lord our Righteouſneſs, in particular, ſays expreſsly, that this is one name given to the Meſſias. Albo, Sep. ikker. lib. 2. c. 28. Thus do the Jews concur with us in the application of texts to the Meſſias. But what is become of this Meſſias, they cannot tell. They [222]are amazed, perplexed, and confounded about him. They diſpute on the article, and have the wildeſt fancies in relation to it. Whereas the Chriſtians give a clear and conſiſtent account of the Meſſias, and by every argument that can be deſired by a rational, prove the truth of chriſtianity.

Again: in Iſa. ix. 6. we have theſe words: Unto us a child is born, unto us a ſon is given, and the government ſhall be upon his ſhoulders: and his name ſhall be called Wonderful, Counſellor, the Mighty God, the Everlaſting Father, the Prince of Peace. Or as the Alexandrian MS. hath it, He ſhall call his name the Angel, Wonderful, Counſellor, Mighty, the Governor, the Prince of Peace, the Father of the age to come. This is thought by all Chriſtians to be a plain declaration of the Meſſias; for to apply it to any mere mortal, as to Hezekiah, or Iſaiah's ſon, cannot be done without the greateſt abſurdity: and therefore Ben Maimon (epiſt. ad Afric.) fairly yields that theſe words belong to the Meſſias, and ſo doth Jonathan Ben Uziel in his Chaldee paraphraſe. The Talmud itſelf allows it. Tract. Sanhedrim. that it relates to a perſon not come in the time of the prophets, but to the man, whoſe name is the Branch, which was to come forth out of the ſtem of Jeſſe, and to grow out of his roots. My ſervant the Branch. Behold the man whoſe name is the Branch. Zech. iii. 8. and ch. xii. [223]and Iſa. iv. 1. Even the perſon that ſhall be ſent; Shilo, that remarkable perſon God had promiſed to his people. So ſays the Talmud.

But further; as to the birth of the Meſſias, in reſpect of the manner and the place, it is thus ſet down by the prophet Micah, v. 2. And thou Bethlehem Ephrata, though thou be little among the thouſands of Judah, yet out of thee ſhall come forth unto me, that is to be ruler in Iſrael; whoſe goings forth have been of old, even from everlaſting.—And in Iſa. vii. 14. are theſe words, Behold a virgin ſhall conceive, and bring forth a ſon, and call his name Immanuel. In theſe two texts, (the Chriſtians ſay) the place of the birth of the Meſſias, and the manner of it, are as plainly deſcribed as words can do; and if they cannot, without abſurdity, be explained as relating to any other perſon, then it muſt be perverting the meaning of the records, to oppoſe this explication: but this the Jews are far from doing. The place is acknowledged in the Talmud, in the Chaldee paraphraſe of Jonathan, and all their moſt famous maſters declare with one voice, that Bethlehem indiſputably belongs to the Meſſias. Exte Bethlehem coram me prodibit Meſſias, ut ſit dominium exercens in Iſrael, cujus nomen dictum eſt ab aeternitate, a Diebus ſeculi. (Talmud. lib. Sanhedrim, et Midraſch. The hillinic Rabbi Selemoh. paraph. Jonath. in Loc. Rabbi David Kimchi.)—And as to [224]the manner, tho' it be true that ſome Jews ſay, the Hebrew word Gnalma ſignifies a young woman as well as a virgin; yet Kimell, Jarchi, and Selemoh, three of their greateſt Rabbins, confeſs that here is ſomething wonderful preſaged in the birth and generation of this perſon, and that he was not to be born as other men and women are born. What can we deſire more, in the caſe, from an enemy? And in truth, the behold, or wonder, with which the text begins, would be nothing, if it was only that a young woman ſhould have a child: — and as to the Hebrew word Gnalmah, if it ever does ſignify a young women, which I very much doubt, yet in the tranſlation of the Seventy, who well underſtood the original ſurely, they render the word by parthenos, [...]in Graec; which always ſignifies a virgin in the ſtrict propriety of the phraſe. And in the Punic language, which is much the ſame as the Hebrew, the word Alma ſignifies a virgin, virgo intacta, and never means a young woman.

Such are the advantages we may gain by reading the books of the Rabbins; and to me it is pleaſing to ſee theſe great Hebrew maſters granting ſo much to us for our Meſſias, while they hate our holy religion beyond every thing. Even the gay among the Jews, (if I have been truly informed by one who danced a night with them) have, in contempt and abhorrence [225]of our faith, a country-dance, called The Little Jeſus.

An account of Knareſhorough and its waters.§. 6. The eighth of July, I left the little Chartreuſe, and went from thence to Knareſborough, where I arrived that night, and reſided three days. It is a fine old town, and borough by preſcription, in the Weſt-riding of Yorkſhire, and wapentake of Claro. The vaſt hills of Craven look beautifully wild in its neighbourhood, and the rapid river Nid, which iſſues from the bottom of thoſe mountains, almoſt encompaſſes the town. It is 175 meaſured miles from London, and the beſt way to it is from Ferrybridge to Wetherby, the left hand road, where there is an excellent inn, and from that to Knareſborough.

When this very antient town paſſed from the poſterity of Surlo de Burgh, the founder of it, we know not, but we find that Henry III. Reg. 13. granted the honour, caſtle, and manor, to the Earl of Kent, Margaret. his wife, and their iſſue and heirs, and that on failure of iſſue and right heirs, it returned again to the crown: for Edward the Second, among other lands, gave this lordſhip of Knareſborough to his favourite Pierſe de Gaveſton, Earl of Cornwall, and his heirs. Gaveſton was taken not long after by the Barons, in Scarborough caſtle, after a ſhort ſiege, and on Gaverſly-heath, near Warwick, was beheaded [226]by order of the Earl of Warwick, June 20, 1312.

By the fall of the inſolent Gaveſton, who had been baniſhed by the great Edward the Firſt, but recalled and received into favour by Edward the Second, before his father's funeral was performed; by the death of this favourite, who had involved his maſter's intereſt with his own, and rendered any diſpleaſure againſt himſelf, the want of duty to the prince (juſt as Lord B * * *, and the now Outs did the other day) which ruined the miſerable King; Knareſborough came again to the crown, and ſo continued till the 44th of Edward the Third, when this king made a grant of the honour, caſtle, and manor of this town, and the cell of St. Roberts; to John of Gaunt, the king's fourth ſon, who was Earl of Richmond, and created Duke of Lancaſter, on his having married one of the coheireſſes of Henry Duke of Lancaſter. Other great eſtates were likewiſe given at the ſame time to this fourth ſon of Edward, that he might maintain his grandeur: and ever ſince, this town has belonged to the dutchy of Lancaſter. It is an appendage to the crown.

Not far from this town, are two wells, as ſtrong of ſulphur as Harrogate-water, and as valuable, though no one takes any notice of them. One lies in the way to Harrogate, in [227]a low ground by a brook-ſide. The other is Bitton-ſpaw, in a park by Mr. Staughton's houſe.

Deſcription of a dropping well.As to the famous dropping-well or petrifying water, it lies on the weſt ſide of the town and river, about 26 yards from the bank of the Nid. It riſes 15 yards below the top of a mountain of marle ſtone, and in four falls, of about two yards each fall, comes to an eaſy aſcent, where it ſpreads upon the top of an iſthmus of a petrified rock, generated out of the water, which falls down round it. This iſthmus or rock is ten yards high, and hangs over its baſe or bottom about 5 yards. It is near 16 yards long and 13 broad, and as it ſtarted from the bank about fifty years ago, leaves a chaſm between them, that is about three yards wide. In this chaſm, you will find petrified twigs of trees, ſhrubs, and graſs-roots, hanging in moſt beautiful pillars, all interwoven, and forming many charming figures; and on the common ſide are whole banks like Stalactilites, hard and inſeparable from the rock, where the water trickles down. Theſe petrefactions, the falling water, and the little iſthmus or iſland being beautifully cloathed with aſh, oſier, elm, ſambucus, ſervicana major, geraniums, wood-mercury, hart's-tongue, ſage, ladies mantle, cowſlips, wild angelica, &c. form all together a delightful ſcene. — The firſt ſpring of this water is out of a ſmall hole on the little mountain, in the [228]middle of a thick-ſet of ſhrubs. It ſends out 20 gallons in a minute of the ſweeteſt water in the world, and it is 24 grains in a pint heavier than common water.

Obſervations on petrifying waters.Moſt people are of opinion, that petrifying water is dangerous drink, and may produce abundance of miſchief, in cauſing the ſtone and gravel in the body: the original particles or principles of the ſtony ſubſtance called ſpar, which are in abundance ſuſpended in this kind of water, muſt get into the flood-gates of the kidneys and ureters, (as they opine) and create great miſery in a little time.

But this fear of petrefactions in living animal bodies is grounded upon neither reaſon nor experience; for the ſpar in theſe waters forms no petrefactions, whilſt in a briſk motion, or in a temperate ſeaſon, or on vegetables while they preſerve their vegetating life. While there is warmth and circulation of juices, there can be no incruſtation or petrefaction from the ſuſpended ſtony particles. Beſides, if the minims of ſpar are not within the ſpheres of ſenſible attraction, whilſt in motion; much leſs are they ſo when mingled with the fluids of the human body: you may therefore very ſafely drink theſe limpid petrifying waters at all times, as a common fluid, if they come in your way, as the beſt, and moſt grateful or pleaſant water in the world, on account of the infiniteſimals, or original [229]leaſts, of ſpar that are in them, in vaſt quantities, but infinitely ſmall particles: and if you are ſick, in many caſes ſure I am, they are the beſt of medicines. Human invention has nothing equal to them for fluxes of any part of the body, or colliquations from an acid ſalt. So far are they from being in the leaſt dangerous, that in all unnatural diſcharges, by ſpitting, ſtool, or urine; by exceſſive menſtrual or haemorrhoidal fluxes, in the fluor albus, diabetes, profuſe ſweatings; in the diarrhoea, dyfentry, or lienteria (where the ſprings are not quite worn out:) in ulcers of the viſcera, hectic fevers, atrophy, and colliquations or night ſweats, there is not any thing in phyſic more profitable or pleaſant, to recover a patient. Let your doſe, in ſuch caſes, be three half-pints of Knareſborough dropping-well in the forenoon; and before you begin to drink this water, remember to take two doſes of rhubarb, to cleanſe off the excrements of the firſt viſcera. You muſt not drink ale, drams, or punch, during a courſe of theſe waters: and take but very little red port. You muſt likewiſe have a ſtrict regard to diet. Let it be milk, eggs, jellies, barley-broth, chickens, kid, lamb, and the like. You muſt avoid all ſalt, ſharp, ſtimulating things, day-ſleep, and night-air: but agreeable converſation, and diverſions that require very little exerciſe, conduce to the ſucceſs of [230]this kind of water, in the diſtempers I have mentioned. If ſuch diſeaſes are curable, you may expect a reſtoration of health.

But, in the dropſy, jaundice, diminiſhed or irregular menſes; in hyppo, melancholy, ſtuffings of the lungs, obſtructions of the viſcera, ſtoppages of the lacteals and miſentery, glandular ſwellings, king's-evil, or any caſe, where thinning, relaxing, opening, deterging, attenuation or ſtimulation are wanting, ſuch water is death.

Note; reader, there is another excellent petrifying-water at Newton-Dale in Yorkſhire, N. R. thirteen miles from Scarborough. — Another near Caſtle-Howard, the fine ſeat of the Earl of Carliſle, ten miles from York.— Another, near Skipton, in that rough, romantic, wild and ſilent country, called Craven, in the Weſt-riding of Yorkſhire.—And one, called Bandwell, at Stonefield in Lincolnſhire, weſt of Horncaſtle, which is 122 miles from London. Theſe ſprings, and many that are not to be come at among the vaſt fells of Weſtmoreland, and the high mountains of Stanemore, have all the virtues of Knareſborough dropping-well; though Knareſborough-water is the only one reſorted to by company: and as to this ſpring, I can affirm from my own knowledge, that it is as excellent, and truly medicinal, as the famous petrifying-water at Clermont. There is no manner of need [231]for Britons going to the mountain Gregoire in Baſſe-Auvergne.

A POSTILLA, (12) Containing an Account of Wardrew Sulphur-water,—the Life of Claudius Hobart,—and A Diſſertation on Reaſon and Revelation.

In my account of ſulphur-waters, I forgot to mention one very extraordinary ſpring of this kind, and therefore, make a poſtilla of it here, that the reader may find in one ſection all I have to ſay on mineral waters.— And as I found by the ſide of this water, a man as extraordinary as the ſpring, I ſhall add his life, to my account of the water, and a couple of little pieces written by him.

[232] Of Wardrew ſulphur-water.In Northumberland, on the borders of Cumberland, there is a place called Wardrew, to the north-weſt of Thirlwall-caſtle, which ſtands on that part of the picts-wall, where it croſſes the Tippel, and is known by the name of Murus Perforatus, (in Saxon, Thirlwall) on account of the gaps made in the wall at this place for the Scots paſſage. Here, as I wandered about this wild, untravelled country, in ſearch of Roman antiquities, I arrived at a ſulphur-ſpring, which I found to be the ſtrongeſt and moſt excellent of the kind in all the world. It riſes out of a vaſt cliff, called Arden-Rock, over the bank of the river Arde or Irthing, ſix feet above the ſurface of the water, and comes out of a chink in the cliff by a ſmall ſpout. The diſcharge is fifty gallons in a minute from a mixture of limeſtone and ironſtone. And the water is ſo very foetid, that it is difficult to ſwallow it. The way to it is not eaſy, for there is no other paſſage than along a very narrow ledge, about nine inches broad, which has been cut off the rock over the deep river, and if you ſlip, (as you may eaſily do, having nothing to hold by) down you go into a water that looks very black and ſhocking, by the ſhade of the hanging precipice, and ſome aged trees which project from the vaſt cliff.

This dangerous ſituation, and its remoteneſs, will prevent its being ever much viſited, admirable as the ſpaw is; yet the country-people [233]thereabout make nothing of the ledge, and drink plentifully of the water, to their ſure relief, in many dangerous diſtempers.— It is to them a bleſſed ſpring.

A deſcription of Wardrew in Northumberland.The land all round here was one of the fineſt rural ſcenes I have ſeen, and made a penſive traveller wiſh for ſome ſmall public-houſe there, to paſs a few delightful days. Its lawns and groves, its waters, vales, and hills, are charming, and form the ſweeteſt ſofteſt region of ſilence and eaſe. Whichever way I turned, the various beauties of nature appeared, and nightingales from the thicket inchantingly warbled their loves. The fountains were bordered with violets and moſs, and near them were clumps of pine and beech, bound with ſweet-briar, and the tendrils of woodbine. It is a delightful ſpot: a paradiſe of blooming joys, in the fine ſeaſon of the year.

The hiſtory of Claudius Hobart.§. 8. One inhabitant only I found in this fine ſolitude, who lived on the margin of the river, in a ſmall neat cottage, that was almoſt hid with trees. This was Claudius Hobart, a man of letters, and a gentleman, who had been unfortunate in the world, and retired to theſe elyſian fields, to devote the remainder of his time to religion, and enjoy the calm felicities of contemplative life. He was obliged by law to reſign his eſtate to a [234]claimant, and death had robbed him of a matchleſs miſtreſs, of great fortune, to whom he was to have been married. The men who had called themſelves his friends, and as Timon ſays in Lucian, honoured him, worſhiped him, and ſeemed to depend on his nod, [...], no longer knew him; jam ne agnoſcor quidem ab illis, nec aſpici ne dignantur me, perinde ut everſum hominis jam olim defuncti cippum, ac temporis longitudine collapſum pretereunt quaſi ne norint quidem; [...]: ſo true (continued Mr. Hobart) are the beautiful lines of Petronius;

Nomen amicitiae ſi quatenus expedit, haeret,
Calculus in tabula mobile ducit opus.
Quum fortuna manet, vultum ſervatis amici:
Cum cecidit, turpi vertitis ora fugâ.

And ſo ſweet Ovid ſays was his caſe,

Eandem cum Timone noſtro ſortem
Expertus naſo, qui ſic de ſeipſo:
En ego non paucis quondam munitus amicis:
Dum flavit velis aura ſecunda meis:
Ut fera terribili tumuerunt aequora vento,
In mediis lacera puppe relinquor aquis.

So Hobart found it, and as his health was declining from various cauſes, and he had nothing in view before him while he appeared, but miſery: therefore, he retired to Wardrew, [235]while he had ſome money, built the little houſe I ſaw on a piece of ground he purchaſed, and provided ſuch neceſſaries and comforts as he imagined might be wanting: he had a few good books, the bible, ſome hiſtory, and mathematics, to make him wiſer and better, and abroad he diverted himſelf moſtly in his garden, and with fiſhing: for fifteen years paſt he had not been in any town, nor in any one's houſe, but converſed often with ſeveral of the country people, who came to drink the mineral-water: what he had freſh occaſion for, one or other of them brought him, according to his written directions, and the money he gave them, and once or twice a week he was ſure of ſeeing ſomebody: as the people knew he was not rich, and lived a harmleſs life, they were far from being his enemies, and would do any thing in their power to ſerve the hermit, as they called him: but he ſeldom gave them any trouble. His food was biſcuit, honey, roots, fiſh, and oil; and his drink, water, with a little rum ſometimes: He was never ſick, nor melancholy; but by a life of temperance and action, and a religion of truſt and reſignation, enjoyed perpetual health and peace, and run his latent courſe in the pleaſing expectation of a remove, when his days were paſt, to the bright manſions of the bleſt.

[236] Such was the account Mr. Hobart gave me of himſelf, (which made me admire him much, as he was but fifty then) and to convince me his temper had nothing Timonean or unſocial in it from his ſolitary life, he requeſted I would dine with him. He entertained me with an excellent pickled trout and biſcuit, fine fruit, and a pot of extraordinary honey: with as much creme of tartar as lay on a ſixpence, fuſed in warm water, he made half a pint of rum into good punch, and he talked over it like a man of ſenſe, breeding, and good humour. We parted when the bowl was out, and at my going away, he made me a preſent of the following MS. and told me I might print it, if I could think it would be of any uſe to mankind. It was called, The Rule of Reaſon, with a few Thoughts on Revelation.

A tract.§. 9. The throne of God reſts upon reaſon, and his prerogative is ſupported by it. It is the ſole rule of the Deity, the Mind which preſides in the univerſe, and therefore is venerable, ſacred, and divine. Every ray of reaſon participates of the majeſty of that Being to whom it belongs, and whoſe attribute it is; and being thereby awful, and inveſted with a ſupreme and abſolute authority, it is rebellion to refuſe ſubjection to right reaſon, [237]and a violation of the great and fundamental law of heaven and earth.

To this beſt, and fitteſt, and nobleſt rule, the rule of truth, we ought to ſubmit, and in obedience to the ſacred voice of reaſon, reſiſt the importunities of ſenſe, and the uſurpations of appetite. Since the will of that Being, who is infinitely pure and perfect, rational and righteous, is obliged and governed by his unerring underſtanding; our wills ſhould be guided and directed by our reaſon. In imitation of the wiſeſt and beſt of Beings, we muſt perpetually adhere to truth, and ever act righteouſly for righteouſneſs ſake. By acting in conformity to moral truths, which are really and ſtrictly divine, we act in conformity to ourſelves, and it is not poſſible to conceive any thing ſo glorious, or godlike. We are thereby taught the duties of piety, our duties toward our fellows, and that ſelf-culture which is ſubſervient to piety and humanity.

Diſcourſe on the rule of reaſon.Reaſon informs us there is a ſuperior Mind, endued with knowledge and great power, preſiding over human affairs; ſome original, independent Being, compleat in all poſſible perfection, of boundleſs power, wiſdom and goodneſs, the Contriver, Creator, and Governor of this world, and the inexhauſtible ſource of all good. A vaſt collection of evidence demonſtrates this. Deſign, intention, [238]art, and power, as great as our imagination can conceive, every where occur. As far as we can make obſervations, original intelligence and power appear to reſide in a Spirit, diſtinct from all diviſible, changeable, or moveable ſubſtance; and if we can reaſon at all, it muſt be clear, that an original omnipotent Mind is a good Deity, and eſpouſes the cauſe of virtue, and of the univerſal happineſs; will gloriouſly compenſate the worthy in a future ſtate, and then make the vicious and oppreſſive have cauſe to repent of their contradicting his will. It follows then moſt certainly, that with this great ſource of our being, and of all perfection, every rational mind ought to correſpond, and with internal and external worſhip adore the divine power and goodneſs. His divine perfections, creation and providence, muſt excite all poſſible eſteem, love, and admiration, if we think at all; muſt beget truſt and reſignation; and raiſe the higheſt reſentments of gratitude. All our happineſs and excellency is from his bounty, and therefore not unto us, not unto us, but to his name be the praiſe. And can there be a joy on earth ſo ſtable and tranſporting as that which riſes from living with an habitual ſenſe of the Divine Preſence, a juſt perſuaſion of being approved, beloved and protected by him who is infinitely perfect and omnipotent?

[239] By reaſon we likewiſe find, that the exceſſes of the paſſions produce miſery, and iniquity makes a man compleatly wretched and deſpicable: but integrity and moral worth ſecure us peace and merit, and lead to true happineſs and glory. Unleſs reaſon and inquiry are baniſhed, vice and oppreſſion muſt have terrible ſtruggles againſt the principles of humanity and conſcience. Reflection muſt raiſe the moſt torturing ſuſpicions, and all ſtable ſatisfaction muſt be loſt: but by cultivating the high powers of our reaſon, and acquiring moral excellence, ſo far as human nature is able; by juſtice and the benevolent affections, virtue and charity, we are connected with, and affixed to the Deity, and with the inward applauſes of a good heart, we have the outward enjoyment of all the felicities ſuitable to our tranſitory condition. Happy ſtate ſurely! There are no horrors here to haunt us. There is no dreadful thing to poiſon all parts of life and all enjoyments.

Let us hearken then to the original law of reaſon, and follow God and nature as the ſure guide to happineſs. Let the offices of piety and beneficence be the principal employment of our time; and the chief work of our every day, to ſecure an happy immortality, by equity, benignity, and devotion. By continual attention, and internal diſcipline, reaſon can do great things, and enable [240]us ſo to improve the ſupreme and moſt godlike powers of our conſtitution, and ſo diſcharge the duties impoſed upon us by our Creator, that when we return into that ſilence we were in before we exiſted, and our places ſhall know us no more, we may paſs from the unſtable condition of terreſtrial affairs to that eternal ſtate in the heavens, where everlaſting pleaſures and enjoyments are prepared for thoſe who have lived in the delightful exerciſe of the powers of reaſon, and performed all ſocial and kind offices to others, out of a ſenſe of duty to God. Thus does truth oblige us. It is the baſis of morality, as morality is the baſis of religion.

This, I think, is a juſt account of moral truth and rectitude, and ſhews that it is eſſentially glorious in itſelf, and the ſacred rule to which all things muſt bend, and all agents ſubmit. But then a queſtion may be aſked, What need have we of revelation, ſince reaſon can ſo fully inſtruct us, and its bonds alone are ſufficient to hold us; — and in particular, what becomes of the principal part of revelation, called redemption?

Account of revelation.The ſyſtem of moral truth and revelation, (it may be anſwered) are united, and at perfect amity with each other. Morality and the goſpel ſtand on the ſame foundation; and differ only in this, that revealed religion, in reſpect of the corrupt and degenerate ſtate [241]of mankind, has brought freſh light, and additional aſſiſtance, to direct, ſupport, and fix men in their duty. We have hiſtories which relate an early deviation from moral truth, and inform us that this diſeaſe of our rational nature ſpread like a contagion. The caſe became worſe, and more deplorable, in ſucceeding ages; and as evil examples and prejudices added new force to the prevailing paſſions, and reaſon and liberty of will, for want of due exerciſe, grew weaker, and leſs able to regain their loſt dominion, corruption was rendered univerſal. Then did the true God, the Father of the Univerſe, and the moſt provident and beneficent of Beings, interpoſe by a revelation of his will, and by advice and authority, do all that was poſſible, to prevent the ſelf-deſtructive effects of the culpable ignorance and folly of his offspring. He gave the world a tranſcript of the law of nature by an extraordinary meſſenger, the Man Chriſt Jeſus, who had power given him to work miracles, to rouſe mankind from their fatal ſtupidity, to ſet their thoughts on work, and to conciliate their attention to the heavenly declaration. In this republication of the original law, he gave them doctrines and commandments perfectly conſonant to the pureſt reaſon, and to them annexed ſanctions that do really bind and oblige men, as they not only guard and ſtrengthen religion, but [242]affect our natural ſenſibility and ſelfiſhneſs. Religion appears to great diſadvantage, when divines preach it into a bond of indemnity, and a mere contract of intereſt; but excluſive of this, it muſt be allowed, that the ſanctions of the goſpel have a weight, awfulneſs, and ſolemnity, that prove to a great degree effectual. Safety and advantage are reaſons for well-doing.

In ſhort, the evidence of the obligation of the duties of natural religion is as plain and ſtrong from reaſon, as any revelation can make it; but yet the means of rendering theſe duties effectual in practice, are not ſo clear and powerful from mere reaſon, as from revelation. The proof of obligation is equally ſtrong in reaſon and inſpiration, but the obligation itſelf is rendered ſtronger by the goſpel, by ſuperadded means or motives. The primary obligation of natural religion ariſes from the nature and reaſon of things, as being objects of our rational moral faculties, agreeably to which we cannot but be obliged to act; and this obligation is ſtrengthened by the tendency of natural religion to the final happineſs of every rational agent: but the clear knowledge, and expreſs promiſes which we have in the goſpel, of the nature and greatneſs of this final happineſs, being added to the obligation from, and the tendency of reaſon or natural religion to the final happineſs [243]of human nature, the obligation of it is thereby ſtill more ſtrengthened. In this lies the benefit of chriſtianity. It is the old, uncorrupt religion of nature and reaſon, intirely free from ſuperſtition and immorality; delivered and taught in the moſt rational and eaſy way, and enforced by the moſt gracious and powerful motives.

Of the Myſteries, Trinity, and Sacrifice of the Croſs.But if this be the caſe, it may be aſked, Where are our holy myſteries—and what do you think of our Redemption? If natural reaſon and conſcience can do ſo much, and to the goſpel we are obliged only for a little more light and influence, then Trinity in Unity, and the Sacrifice of the Croſs are nothing. What are your ſentiments on theſe ſubjects?

As to the Trinity, it is a word invented by the doctors, and ſo far as I can find, was never once thought of by Jeſus Chriſt and his apoſtles; unleſs it was to guard againſt the ſpread of tritheiſm, by taking the greateſt care to inculcate the ſupreme divinity of God the Father: but let it be a trinity, ſince the church will have it ſo, and by it I underſtand one Uncreated, and one Created, and a certain divine virtue of quality. Theſe I find in the Bible, God, Jeſus the Word, and a Divine Aſſiſtance or Holy Wind, (not Holy Ghoſt, as we have tranſlated it): called a Wind, becauſe God, from whom every good and perfect [244]gift cometh, gave the moſt extraordinary inſtance of it under the emblem of a Wind; and holy, becauſe it was ſupernatural. This is the ſcripture doctrine, in relation to the Deity, the Meſſias, and the Energy of God; of which the Wind was promiſed as a pledge, and was given as an emblem, when the day of Pentecoſt was come; and if theſe three they will call a Trinity, I ſhall not diſpute about the word. But to ſay Jeſus Chriſt is God, though the apoſtles tell us, that God raiſed from the dead the Man Jeſus Chriſt, whom they killed; that he had exalted him at his right hand, and had made him both Lord and Chriſt; and to affirm that this Ghoſt (as they render the word Wind) is a perſon diſtinct and different from the perſon of God the Father, and equally ſupreme;—this I cannot agree to. If the ſcripture is true, all this appears to me to be falſe. It is a mere invention of the Monks.

As to Redemption, it may be in perfect conſiſtence and agreement with truth and rectitude, if the accompliſhment of it be conſidered as premial, and as reſulting from a perſonal reward: but to regard the accompliſhment as penal, and as reſulting from a vicarious puniſhment, is a notion that cannot be reconciled to the principle of rectitude. Vicarious puniſhment or ſuffering appears an impoſſibility: but as Jeſus, by adding the [245]moſt extenſive benevolence to perfect innocence, and by becoming obedient to death, even the death of the croſs, was moſt meritorious, and was entitled to the higheſt honour, and moſt diſtinguiſhed reward, his reward might be our deliverance from the bonds of ſin and death, and the reſtoration of immortality. This reward was worthy of the giver, and tended to the advancement and ſpread of virtue. It was likewiſe moſt acceptable to the receiver. It no way interfered with right and truth. It was in all reſpects moſt proper and ſuitable. Theſe are my ſentiments of Redemption. This appears to me to be the truth on the moſt attentive and impartial examination I have been capable of making.

To this, perhaps, ſome people may reply, that though theſe notions are, for the moſt part juſt, and in the caſe of redemption, in particular, as innocence and puniſhment are inconſiſtent and incompatible ideas, that it was not poſſible Chriſt's oblation of himſelf could be more than a figurative ſacrifice, in reſpect of tranſlation of guilt, commutation of perſons, and vicarious infliction; though a real ſacrifice in the ſenſe of intending by the oblation to procure the favour of God, and the indemnity of ſinners: yet, as the author appears to be a Socinian, his account is liable to objections. For, though the Socinians acknowledge the truth and neceſſity of the revelation [246]of the goſpel, yet, in the opinion of ſome great divines, they interpret it in ſuch a manner, as no unprejudiced perſon, who has read the ſcriptures, with any attention, nor any ſenſible heathen, who ſhould read them, can poſſibly believe. They make our Redeemer a man, and by this doctrine reflect the greateſt diſhonour on chriſtianity, and its Divine Author.

This is a hard charge. The Socinians are by theſe divines deſcribed as people who read the ſcriptures with prejudice, and without attention; men more ſenſeleſs than the Heathens, and as wicked too; for, in the higheſt degree, they diſhonour Chriſt Jeſus and his religion. Aſtoniſhing aſſertion! It puts me in mind of an imputation of the celebrated Waterland in his ſecond charge;—"What atheiſm chiefly aims at, is, to ſit looſe from preſent reſtraints and future reckonings; and theſe two purpoſes may be competently ſerved by deiſm, which is a more refined kind of atheiſm. —Groundleſs and ridiculous calumny. True and proper deiſm is a ſincere belief of the exiſtence of a God, and of an impartial diſtribution of rewards and puniſhments in another world, and a practice that naturally reſults from, and is conſonant to ſuch belief; and if atheiſm aims to ſit looſe from reſtraints and reckonings, then of conſequence, deiſm is the grand barrier to the purpoſes of atheiſm. The true [247]Deiſt is ſo far from breaking through reſtraints, that he makes it the great buſineſs of his life to diſcharge the obligations he is under, becauſe he believes in God, and perceives the equity and reaſonableneſs of duties, reſtraints, and future reckonings. The aſſertion therefore demonſtrates the prejudice of Dr. Waterland, in relation to the Deiſts.

And the caſe is the ſame in reſpect of the charge againſt the Socinians. It is the divines that are prejudiced againſt them; and not the Socinians in ſtudying the New Teſtament. It is the grand purpoſe of our lives to worſhip God, and form our religious notions according to the inſtructions of divine wiſdom. We examine the ſacred writings, with the utmoſt deſire, and moſt ardent prayer, that we may be rightly informed in the trueſt ſenſe of the holy authors of thoſe divine books; and it appears to our plain underſtandings, after the moſt honeſt labour, and wiſhes to heaven for a clear conception of holy things, that the Father is the ſupreme God, that is, the firſt and chief Being, and Agent; the firſt and chief Governor; the Fountain of Being, Agency, and authority: that the Chriſtian Meſſiah, the Man Chriſt Jeſus, was ſent into the world to bear witneſs to the truth, and preach the goſpel of the kingdom of God, that kingdom of God which is within you, ſaith the Lord, Luke xvii. 21. not a kingdom of Monks, a ſacerdotal empire of power, propoſitions, [248]and ceremonies. He came to call ſinners to repentance and amendment of life, to teach them the law of love, and aſſure mankind of grace and mercy and everlaſting glory, if they kept the commandments, and were obedient to the laws of heaven; laws of righteouſneſs, peace, giving no offence, and unanimity in the worſhip of the God and Father of our Lord Jeſus Chriſt: but that, if they did not repent, and ceaſe to be hurtful and injurious; if they did not open their eyes, and turn from darkneſs to light, from the power of ſatan unto God, and put on ſuch an agreeable and uſeful temper and behaviour, as would render them a bleſſing in the creation, they would be numbered among the curſed, and periſh everlaſtingly, for want of real goodneſs and a general ſincerity of heart. This the Socinians think is what Chriſt propoſed and recommended, as the only and the ſure way to God's favour, through the worthineſs of the Lamb that was ſlain. We ſay this is pure religion. It is true, original chriſtianity, and if the glorious deſign of our Lord is anſwered by his miracles and preaching, by his death, his reſurrection, his aſcenſion, and by the grace of the holy, bleſſed, and ſanctifying Spirit, it could reflect no diſhonour on chriſtianity, and its divine author, if our Redeemer was a meer man. If by the aſſiſtance of God Almighty, a mere man performed the whole work of our [249]redemption, all we had to do was to be thankful for the mighty bleſſing. The love of God in this way had been equally ineſtimable. The worth of Jeſus would be ſtill invaluable.

But it is not the opinion of the Socinians that Chriſt was a mere man. It is plain from this aſſertion, that the Rev. Dr. Heathcote, (in his Remarks on free and candid Diſquiſitions) knows nothing of them: the account they give of Jeſus Chriſt, is very different. They ſay, he was a moſt glorious agent united to a human body, and ſo far from being a mere man, that he was ſuperior to angels. He was the next in character to the neceſſarily exiſting Being. He is the brightneſs of the Father's glory, and the expreſs image of his perſon: he has an excellency tranſcendent, and to the life repreſents what is infinitely great and perfect.

If they do not allow that he made the worlds, or had an eternal generation; if they ſay, he had no exiſtence till he was formed by the power of God in the womb, and aſſert this eminency is proper to the Man Chriſt Jeſus; yet they are far from affirming he was therefore a mere man: no; they believe he was decreed to be as great and glorious as poſſible, and that God made the world for him; that he was made the image of the inviſible perſon of the Father; an image the moſt [250]expreſs and exact; as great as God himſelf could make it; and of conſequence, ſo tranſcendent in all perfections, that what he ſays and does is the ſame thing as if God had ſpoken and acted. This is not making him a mere man. No: they ſay he is the firſt of all, and the head of all creatures, whom the infinite love of God produced, to promote greatneſs, glory, and happineſs among the creatures, by the ſuperlative greatneſs and glory of Jeſus; and that angels, and the ſpirits of the juſt made perfect, might have the pleaſure of beholding and enjoying the preſence of this moſt glorious Image, that is, of ſeeing their inviſible Creator in his Image Jeſus Chriſt. He is not a mere man; but the brightneſs of the glory of God, the expreſs Image of his perſon, and raiſed ſo much higher than the angels, as he has inherited from God a more excellent name than they, to wit, the name of Son, and is the appointed heir of all things.

So that this Socinianiſm reflects no diſhonour on Chriſtianity and its Divine Author. It conduces as much to the glory of God, and the benefit of man, as any chriſtianity can do. There is ſomething vaſtly beautiful and ſatisfactory in the notion of Chriſt's being the moſt glorious Image of the inviſible Father, whenever his exiſtence began. The many tranſcendent excellencies of the Meſſias, in whom [251]all fulneſs dwells, are exerciſed upon men to their happineſs, and to his glory; and we learn from thence, that greatneſs and glory are the reſult of the exerciſe of virtue to the relief and happineſs of others. The Redeemer of the world is, in this account, the next in dignity and power to the Great God; and the perfections of the Father do moſt eminently ſhine forth in him. We are hereby made meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the ſaints in light, and delivered from the power of darkneſs. We give thanks unto the Father, who hath tranſlated us into the kingdom of the Son of his love.

It is certain then that the divines have miſrepreſented the people, who are injuriouſly called Socinians, as the religion they profeſs is Scripture-Chriſtianity: I ſay injuriouſly, becauſe, in the firſt place, the word Socinian is intended as a term of great reproach to chriſtians, who deſerve better uſage for the goodneſs of their manners, and the purity of their faith: and in the next place, that Socinus was ſo far from being the author of our religion, that he was not even the firſt reſtorer of it. He did not go to Poland to teach the people there his religious notions, but becauſe there was a unitarian congregation there, with whom he might join in the worſhip of the Father, through Jeſus the Mediator, as his [252]conſcience would not ſuffer him to aſſemble with thoſe who worſhip a Being compounded of three divine perſons.

But it is time to have done, and I ſhall conclude in the words of a good author in old French * The extract muſt be a curious thing to the reader, as the valuable book I take it from is not to be bought.

Noſtre confeſſion de foy até depuis la premiere predication de l'evangile puiſque nous luy donnons la ſainte ecriture pour fondement, mais il arrive de nous ce qu'il arrive des tous ceux qui ſe ſont detachés de l'egliſe Romaine aux quels le papiſtes donnent malgré eux pour autheurs de leur religion Luther, Calvin, & autres docteurs qui n'ont eté que les reſtorateurs, des dogmes & de veritès qui s'etoyent preſque perdues ſous le gouvernement tyrannique de l'egliſe Romaine pendant lequel l'ecriture ſainte etoit devenue un livre inconnu a la pluſpart de chretiens la lecture en ayant été defendue communement. Mais par un decret de la providence de Dieu le periode de la revolution etant venu chacun a commencé a deterrer la verité la mieux qu'il a pu, & comme dans chaque revolution il y a des chefs & des gens illuſtres, ainſi dans le retabliſſement des dogmes etouffès ſi longtems par le papiſme Luther, Calvin, Arminius, & Socin, ont été des hommes illuſtres [253]& dont on a donné le nom aux religions, Vous ſçaurez donc s'il vous plaiſt que Socin bien loin d'avoir été autheur de noſtre religion n'en a pas été meme la premier reſtaurateur: car il n'etoit venu en Pologne que parce qu'il avoit appris qu'il s'y etoit deja formée une aſſemblée de gens qui avoyent des opinions ſemblables aux ſiennes: Je vous diray de plus, que la ſeule choſe que le fait un heros dans noſtre religion c'eſt qu'il en a ecrit des livres, mais il ny a preſque perſonne qui les life, car comme Socin etoit un bon juriſconſulte il eſt extremement long & ennuyeux; & outre que nous ne voulous point avoir d'autre livre de religion que le nouveau Teſtament & point d'autres docteurs que les apoſtres. C'eſt pourquoy, c'eſt bien malgré nous qu'on nous appelle Sociniens ou Arriens: ce ſont des noms dont la malignité de nos ennemys nous couvre pour nous rendre odieux. Nous appellons entre nous du ſimple nom de Chretiens. Mais puiſque dans cette deſunion de la chretienté, on nous dit qu'il ne ſuffit pas de porter ce nom univerſel, mais qu'il encore neceſſairement ſe diſtinguer par quelque appellation particuliere, nous conſentons donc de porter le nom de chretiens unitaires pour nous diſtinguer de chretiens trinitaires. Ce nom de chretiens unitaires nous convient fort bien comme a ceux qui ne voulant en aucune façon encherye ſur la doctrine de Jeſus Chriſt, [254]n'y y ſubtiliſer plus qu'il ne faut, attachent leur croyance & leur confeſſion poſitivement a cette inſtruction de Jeſus Chriſt qui ſe trouve dans le 17 chap. de l'evangile de St. Jean, quand il dit—Mon pere l'heure eſt venue, glorifiez voſtre fils afin que voſtre fils vous glorifie, comme vous luy avez donné puiſſance ſur tous les hommes a fin qu'il donne la vie eternelle a tous ceux que vous luy avez donné or la vie eternelle conſiſte a vous connoiſtre, vous qui eſtes le ſeul Dieu veritable, & Jeſus Chriſt que vous avez envoyé. La meme leçon nous donne l'apoſtre St. Paul dans le 8 chap. aux Cor. diſant, — qu'il n'y a pour nous qu'un ſeul Dieu qui eſt la pere duquel ſont toutes choſes & nous pour luy, & il n'y a qu'un ſeul ſeigneur qul eſt Jeſus Chriſt, par lequel ſont toutes choſes & nous par luy. C'eſt donc a cauſe de cette confeſſion que nous nous appellons chretiens unitaires par ce que nous croyons qu'il n'y a qu'un ſeul Dieu, pere & Dieu de noſtre ſeigneur Jeſus Chriſt, celuy que Jeſus Chriſt nous a appris d'adorer, & lequel il a auſſy adoré luy meme, l'appellent non ſeulment noſtre Dieu mais ſon Dieu auſſy ſelon qu'il a dit, je m'en vay a mon pere & voſtre pere, a mon Dieu & a voſtre Dieu.

Ainſy vous voyez que nous nous tenons aux verités divines. Nous avons la religieuſe veneration pour la ſainte ecriture. Avec tout cela [255]nous ſommes ſerviteurs tres humble des meſſieurs les trinitaires,—penes quos mundanae fabulae actio eſt, & il ne tient pas a nous que nous ne courrious de tout noſtre coeur a leurs autels, s'ils vouloyent nous faire la grace de ſouffrir noſtre ſimplicité en Jeſus Chriſt, & de ne pas vouloir nous obliger a la confeſſion de ſupplements a la ſainte ecriture*

An account of Socinus.§. 8. The great and excellent Fauſtus Socinus was born at Sienna, in the year 1539, and died at Luclavie, the third of March, 1604, aged 65. His book in defence of the authority of the ſacred ſcriptures is a matchleſs performance; and if he had never written any thing elſe, is alone ſufficient to render his memory glorious, and precious to all true chriſtians. Get this book, if you can. It is the fineſt defence of your Bible that was ever publiſhed. (Steinfurti, A. 1611. edit. Vorſt.) And yet, ſuch is the malignity of orthodoxy, that a late great prelate, Dr. Smalbroke, Bp. of Litchfield and Coventry, (who died A. D. 1749) could not help blackening the author when he mentioned the work: his words are theſe; — "And if Grotius was more eſpecially aſſiſted by the valuable performance of a writer, otherwiſe juſtly of ill fame, I mean, Fauſtus Socinus's little book De Auctoritate S. Scripturae, this aſſiſtance," &c. 2d charge to [256]the clergy of St. David's, p. 34. — Here the admirable Fauſtus, a man of as much piety, and as good morals, as hath lived ſince the apoſtles time, who truly and godly ſerved the almighty and everlaſting God, through our Lord and Saviour Jeſus Chriſt, is painted by this eminent hand a man of ill fame; and for no other reaſon but becauſe his heavenly religion made him oppoſe the orthodox hereſy of three Gods, as taught in the creed of Athanaſius; and piouſly labour, by the purity of his doctrine and example, to keep the world from corruption.

Let us then be careful to confeſs the holy unitarian faith. Let us take the advice of Socinus, and be original chriſtians. Let there not be in our religion a God compounded of three ſupreme ſpirits, equal in power and all poſſible perfections. Let us worſhip the Inviſible Father, the firſt and chief Almighty Being, who is one ſupreme univerſal Spirit, of peerleſs Majeſty; and, as the inſpired apoſtles direct, let us worſhip him through his moſt glorious Image, the Man Chriſt Jeſus; our Redeemer and Mediator, our King and our Judge.

N. B. Though the reverend Dr. Heathcote hath been very unfriendly in his account of the Chriſtians he calls Socinians, in his Obſervations before mentioned, yet you are not from thence to conclude that he belongs [257]to the Orthodox Party. He is far from it. and therefore I recommend to your peruſal not only his Curſory Animadverſions upon free and candid Diſquiſitions, and his finer Boyle-Lecture Sermons on the Being of God, but alſo his Curſory Animadverſions upon the Controverſy, concerning the miraculous Powers, and his Remarks on Chapman's Credibility of the Fathers Miracles. They are three excellent pamphlets. The firſt is againſt the ſcholaſtic Trinity. And the others on the ſide of Doctor Middleton, againſt the miracles of the Fathers.

Note Reader, Dr. Heathcote's two pamphlets on the ſide of Dr. Middleton, and the Rev. Mr. Toll's admirable pieces in vindication of the Doctor againſt the miracles of the Fathers, will give you a juſt and full idea of the late controverſy. Mr. Toll's pieces are called — A Defence of Dr. Middleton's Free Enquiry — Remarks upon Mr. Church's Vindication — And his Sermon and Appendix againſt Dr. Church's Appeal.

And if you would ſee all that can be ſaid in relation to this matter, get likewiſe Dr. Syke's Two previous Queſtions: and the Two previous Queſtions impartially conſidered; by the ſame author.

Remarks on two Pamphlets againſt Dr. Middleton's Introductory Diſcourſe: — Two Letters to the Rev. Mr. Jackſon, in Anſwer to his Remarks on Middleton's Free Inquiry: — And, A View of the Controverſy, concerning [258]the miraculous Powers, ſuppoſed to have ſubſiſted in the Chriſtian Church through ſeveral ſucceſſive Centuries.

Theſe pamphlets will bind into two large octavo volumes, and make a valuable collection of critical religious learning.

Note, Reader, of that admirable work, called Bibliotheca Fratrum Polonorum, by Socinus, Crellius, Sclichtingius, and Wolzgoenius, 6 tomes, fol. Irenopoli 1656. The firſt and ſecond volumes are the writings of Socinus; the third and fourth by Crellius; the fifth by Sclichtingius; and the ſixth by Wolzogenius: they are all well worth your reading, as they contain the moſt valuable and excellent learning; and eſpecially Socinus and Crellius. In another place, (where you will find me alone in a ſolitude) I ſhall give ſome curious extracts from the works of theſe great, injured men, and a ſummary of their lives.

SECTION VIII.

[259]
When Love's well tim'd, 'tis not a fault to love;
The ſtrong, the brave, the virtuous, and the wiſe,
Sink in the ſoft captivity together.

The author returns to Harrogate, and from thence goes to Cleator in Weſtmoreland, to wait upon Miſs Spence.FROM Knareſborough, I went to Harrogate again, and there found the following letter, of an old date, left for me.

SIR,

As you told me, you intended to go to London ſoon, and buſineſs obliges me to ride up to the capital a few weeks hence, I ſhould take it as a great favour, if you would make Weſtmoreland your way, and through Lancaſhire to the Cheſter road, that I may have your protection and guidance in this long journey.

I am, Sir, Your humble ſervant, Maria Spence.

This letter ſurprized me. Yes, dear creature, I ſaid, I will make Weſtmoreland my way to London. At four in the morning I mounted my horſe, and rid to Cleator. I arrived there at ſix in the evening, and had travelled that day 75 miles; to wit, from [260] Harrogate to Boroughbridge, 8; from thence to Catarric, 22; to Gretabridge, 15; to Bows, 6; to Brugh in Weſtmoreland, 12; to Kirkby-Steven, near Wharton-Hall, 6; to Cleator, 6: — 75 miles. I dined at Catarric on a hot pigeon-pye juſt drawn, and ale of one ear, that is, admirable, (as Rabelais means by the phraſe, "We had wine of one ear," alluding to the one ſhake of the head to the right ſhoulder, when a thing is excellent); and I gave the horſes another feed of corn at Bows, the George, kept by Railton the Quaker (an excellent inn, and the maſter of it an inſtructive and entertaining orator). I mention theſe things for your benefit, reader, that you may know where to ſtop to advantage, if you ſhould ever ride over the ſame ground I went that day.While I waited at the inn, till the horſes had eaten their corn, the landlord brought me a paper, dropt, by a lady he knew not, ſome days before at his houſe. He added, it was a curioſity, and worth my ſerious conſideration. A MORNING and EVENING PRAYER.Almighty and ever-living God, have mercy on me. Forgive me all my ſin, and make my heart one, to fear thy glorious fearful Name, Jehovah. Guide me with thy counſel, I beſeech thee, and be the ſtrength of my life and my portion for ever.O Lord Jehovah, defend me from the power and malice, the aſſaults and attempts, of all my adverſaries, [261]and keep me in health and ſafety, in peace and innocence. Theſe things I aſk in the name of Jeſus Chriſt, thy Son, our Lord; and in his words I call upon thee as, Our Father, who art in heaven, &c. Obſervations relative to Miſs Dudgeon's Prayer.This prayer pleaſed me very much. In the moſt beautiful manner, as well as in a few words, it expreſſes all we need aſk from heaven; and if Miſs Dudgeon of Richmondſhire was the compoſer of it, as I have been aſſured ſince, upon enquiry, I here place it to her honour, as a monument of her piety and ſenſe; and in hopes the illuſtrious of her ſex will uſe ſo ſhort and excellent a form of devotion in their cloſets morning and night.[262] There is an expreſſion in this prayer, which for ſome time I could not well comprehend the meaning of; that is, Make my heart one: but on conſidering it, I found it ſupported by the greateſt authorities.Among the ſayings of Pythagoras, one is, be ſimply thyſelf. Reduce thy conduct to one ſingle aim, by bringing every paſſion into ſubjection, and acquiring that general habit of ſelf-denial, which comprehends temperance, moderation, patience, government, and is the main principle of wiſdom. Be ſimply thyſelf, and ſo curb deſire, and reſtrain the inclinations, and controul the affections, that you may be always able to move the paſſions as reaſon ſhall direct. Let not every foremoſt fancy, or every forward appearance, have the leaſt maſtery over you; but view them on every ſide by the clear light of reaſon, and be no further influenced by the imaginations of pleaſure, and apprehenſions of evil, than as the obvious relations and nature of things allow. Let the reſult of a perception which every rational mind may have of the eſſential difference between good and evil, the be cauſe or ground of obligation. This will add greatly to quiet, and be productive of much real felicity. It will render every preſent condition ſupportable, brighten every proſpect, and always incline us more to hope than to fear. This is the doctrine of Pythagoras.I likewiſe find that David expreſſes the ſame thought in the 86th Pſalm, ver. 11. which is rendered in the Bible tranſlation, Unite my heart to fear thy name;—in the Common-Prayer Book, O knit my heart unto thee, [263]that I may fear thy name: but the Hebrew is, "Make my heart one, to fear thy name;" meaning, Let the fear of thee be the one ruling diſpoſition of my ſoul, in oppoſition to the double-minded man, which the Hebrew elegantly expreſſes by a heart and a heart; one that draws to the riches, pleaſures, and honours of this world; and another to the practice of all virtue.As to the other part of the prayer, which has the words—glorious—fearful—Jehovah;—whereas in the 86th Pſalm it is only ſaid—"to fear thy name;" the author certainly took them from the 28th chapter of Deuteronomy, ver. 58. The deſign of the dreadful threatnings in this chapter ſet before the people, is there thus expreſſed,—that thou mayeſt fear this glorious and fearful name, JEHOVAH THY GOD; (in our tranſlation, the Lord thy God). And therefore I think theſe words are very finely uſed in this prayer."It is amazing to me (ſays the Rector of St. Mabyn), that throughout the Bible, the tranſlators have every where changed the word Jehovah for the word Lord, when God himſelf gave the word Jehovah as his name to be uttered; and as in this word the whole myſtery of the Jewiſh and Chriſtian diſpenſations ſeem to have been wrapped up.Say to the people, Ami Jehovah. I am Jehovah. Ye ſhall know that I Jehovah am your God, which bringeth you out from under the burdens of the Egygtians. Exod. vi. 6, 7. And Deut. vi. 4. Hear, O Iſrael, Jehovah our God is one Jehovah.Then as to this word's comprehending the two diſpenſations, a good writer obſerves that, though God was known to his true worſhippers by many other [264]names, as God Almighty, the High God, the Everlaſting God, &c. yet Jehovah was his one peculiar name; a name which he had appointed to himſelf, in preference to all others, and by which he declared by Moſes he would be diſtinguiſhed for the time to come.And as of all the names of God, this ſeems to be the moſt expreſſive of his eſſence, as it can only be derived from the root which ſignifies to be, and denotes the one eternal ſelf-exiſtent Being, from whom all other things derive their being, and on whom they muſt depend; —As the word does likewiſe ſignify makes to be what was promiſed or foretold, and by ſuch meaning declares, as often as the word is repeated, that Jehovah our God is not only ſelf-exiſtent, and the Creator of the world, but Him in whom all divine prophecies and predictions centre; it follows, in my opinion, that we ſhould utter this awful name in our addreſſes to God, and not, like the Jews, through a ſuperſtition omit it, and uſe another inſtead of it."N. B. The Rector of St. Mabyn is the Rev. Mr. Peters; and the paſſage is to be found in an excellent Preface to the octavo edition of his admirable Diſſertation on the Book of Job, in reply to that part of the Divine Legation of Moſes demonſtrated, in which the author, my Lord of Glouceſier, ſets himſelf to prove, that this book is a work of imagination, or dramatic compoſition, no older than Ezra the prieſt, whom he ſuppofes to be the writer of it, in the year before Chriſt 467, or the year 455, in the 20th year of the reign of Artaxerxes, king of Perſia, when Daniel's ſeventy weeks begins; that is, the period of 490 years, that were to be fulfilled before the paſſion of our Saviour. And further, [265](according to the author of the Legation), that this allegorical drama or poem was written to ſquiet the minds of the Jewiſh people under the difficulties of their captivity, and to aſſure them, as repreſented by the perſon of Job, of thoſe great temporal bleſſings which three prophets had predicted.Now in the Preface to the book aforementioned, in anſwer to all this (and fully and beautifully anſwered it is), you will find, I ſay, the paſſage relating to the word Jehovah, and more than I have quoted from it.As to Pythagoras the Samean, mentioned in this note, on account of his ſaying—Be ſimply thyſelf;—he was famous in the 60th olympiad, as Jamblicus informs us; that is, his Elikia, or Reign of-Fame, began in the firſt year of this olympiad, which was the year before Chriſt 540; for 60 × 4 gives 250 − 777 leaves 537 + 3, the plus years of the olympiad; i. e. 2, 3, 4 = 540.—And he died in the 4th year of the 70th olympiad, that is, the year before Chriſt 497: for 70 × 4 = 280 − 777 remains 497: there are no plus years to be added here, as it happened in the 4th or laſt year of the olympiad. This philoſopher was contemporary with, and a near friend to, the renowned Phalaris, who was murdered in the year before Chriſt 556, when the Belſhazzar of Daniel aſcended the throne of Babylon. And as Pythagoras lived to the age of 90, according to Diogenes, he muſt have been born in the beginning of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar; the year this conqueror took Jeruſalem, and its king Zedekiah, which was olymp. 47.3. and of conſequence before Chriſt 590: for 47 × 4 = 188 − 777, remains 580 + 1=590. This was 54 years before Theſpis invented [266] tragedy * and 11 years before the birth of Aeſchylus, the reformer of tragedy. Cyrus was then in the 10th year of his age.It is likewiſe evident from hence, that Pythagoras muſt have lived through the reigns of Cyrus, Cambyſes, and the greateſt part of the reign of Darius Hiſtaſpes, who ſlew Smerdis the Magi, and is called in ſcripture Abaſuerus; the king of Perſia, who married Eſther, and ordered Haman the Amalekite to be hanged on the gallaws he had erected for Mordecai the Jew, in the year before Chriſt 510.Note, David was before Pythagoras 519 years.Reader, As to the word Elikia, which I have uſed to expreſs the reign or time of flouriſhing of Pythagoras; I have an obſervation or two to make in relation to it, which I think worth your attending to.Clemens Alexandrinus ſays (Stromata, p. 40), [...]: that is, The years from Moſes to Solomon's Elikia are 610; to wit, Moſes's life —120From his death to David's acceſſion —450David's reign —40 610From this paſſage it is plain, that the Elikia of Solomon is not meant of his nativity, but of the beginning of his reign, when he was 33 years of age.It is then very ſurpriſing that Dodwell ſhould inſiſt upon it, that Elikia always ſignifies nativity. It is the more wonderful, as Dodwell quotes this paſſage from Clement; and as it is impoſſible to make out 610, [267]without coming to the 33d of Solomon, as I have reckoned it.Nay, in another place of the Stromata, Clement ſays, Iſaiah, Hoſea, and Micah lived after the Elikia of Lycurgus; where he can only mean the time when that lawgiver flouriſhed; for, from the Deſtruction of Troy to the Akmé of Lycurgus, was 290 years: and from Solomon, in whoſe time Troy was taken, to the time of the prophets, was 360 years.Thus does learning accommodate things. Dodwell wanted to fit a paſſage in Antilochus to his own calculation, and ſo 312 years from the Elikia of Pythagoras, that is, ſays Dodwell, from the nativity of the philoſopher (he meant taking the word in that ſenſe) to the death of Epicurus, brings us exactly to the time. Who can forbear ſmiling? A favourite notion is to many learned men a ſacred thing. Dodwell ſettles his paſſage in Antilochus to his mind, by perverting the word Elikia.This, to be ſure, in prophane things, can do no great harm: but when the practice is brought into things ſacred, it is a detriment to mankind. Some divines, for example, to ſupport a notion as unreaſonable as it is dear to them, tell us that the word Iſos ſignifies ſtrict equality, not like: and that when St. Paul ſays [...], we muſt conſtrue it, Jeſus Chriſt was ſtrictly equal to the moſt high God. This is ſad conſtruction, when Homer, Euripides, Aeſchylus, make the word Iſos to import no more than like. Iſanemos, ſwift as the wind; Iſatheos phos, like a God; Iſanerios, like a dream.And when a divine is poſitive that os and kathos, as, and even as, words occurring in the New Teſtament, [268]ſignify a ſtrict equality, and not ſome ſort of likeneſs; this is miſerable perverſion, and hurts the chriſtian religion very greatly; as they endeavour, by ſuch a given ſenſe, to prove that the man Chriſt Jeſus is to be honoured with the ſame divine honours we offer to God the Father Almighty, by the command and example of Jeſus, who was ſent from God, and was a worſhipper of God; who lived obedient to the laws of God, preached thoſe laws, and died for them in the cauſe of God; who was raiſed from the dead by God, and now fits on God's right hand; intercedes with God, and in his Goſpel owns his Father to be his and our only true God. This is ſad accommodation. Tho' the words never ſignify more than a degree of likeneſs in the Greek claſſics, yet our headſtrong orthodox monks will have them to mean ſtrict equality; and Alexander the Great and Alexander the Copperſmith are the ſame Being. Amazing! Gentlemen; here is but One Ball, and out of itſelf you ſhall ſee this one ball ſend forth two other balls, big as it, and yet not loſe one atom of its weight and grandeur. Hocus pocus, Reverendiſſimi ſpectatores, the One is Three.And now, Gentlemen, be pleaſed to obſerve the miracle reverſed. Pilluli pilluli, congregate, Preſto preſio, unite: obſervate, Signori Dottiſſimi, the Three are One.— Such is the becus pocus the monks have made of their Trinity.* Olymp. 61.1. Selden's Comment on the Arundel Marble.

[261] When I came to Miſs Spence's door, I ſent in my name by a ſervant, and immediately Maria came out herſelf to welcome me to Cleator. She told me ſhe was glad to ſee me, and extremely obliged to me, for riding ſo many miles out of my way, to travel up with her to London; but as ſhe had never been further from home than Harrogate, and was afraid of going ſuch a journey by herſelf, ſhe writ to me, in hopes curioſity and my great complaiſance to the ladies, might induce me to take Cleator in my way to town, tho' ſo much about: but as ſo many weeks had paſſed ſince ſhe came away from the Wells, and ſhe heard nothing of me, ſhe had laid aſide all expectation of my coming. This made the viſit the more pleaſing.

[262] In anſwer to this, I replied, that if I had got her letter ſooner, I would have been with her long before: but that was not poſſible, as I had been at a little lodge and farm of mine in the northern extremity of Weſtmoreland, to ſettle things there, and returned [263]to Harrogate but yeſterday, when I had the honour of receiving your letter, and upon reading it, ſet out at day-break this morning to kiſs your hand, and execute any commands.

[264] The manner of paſſing the evening at Cleator, the firſt night I was there.§. 2. Here an excellent hot ſupper was brought in, and after it, Miſs Spence ſaid, ſhe was ſurprized to hear I was an inhabitant of Weſtmoreland, as ſhe had never heard of [265]me in the north, nor ſeen me at Harrogate before the other day.

I told her I was a ſtranger in the county, and by a wonderful accident, as I travelled a [266]few years ago out of curioſity, and in ſearch of a friend, up Stanemore-hills, I became poſſeſſed of a lodge I had on the northern edge [267]of Weſtmoreland, where I lived a conſiderable time, and once imagined I ſhould never leave it, as it is the moſt romantic and the moſt beautiful ſolitude in the world.

[268] While I was giving this ſhort relation, Miſs Spence ſeemed greatly amazed, and her uncle, an old clergyman, who had looked with great attention at me, hoped it would be no offence to aſk me how old I was.

None at all, Sir, I replied. I want ſome months of twenty-ſix; and though I dance and rattle at the wells, and am now going up to London, where all is tumult and noiſe, [269]yet my paſſion for ſtill life is ſo great, that I prefer the moſt ſilent retreat to the pleaſures and ſplendors of the greateſt town. If it was in my power to live as I pleaſe, I would paſs my days unheard of and unknown, at Orton-Lodge, ſo my little ſilent farm is called, near the ſouthern confines of Cumberland, with ſome bright partner of my ſoul. I am ſure I ſhould think it a compleat paradiſe to live in that diſtant ſolitude with a woman of Miſs Spence's form and mind.

But tell me, I requeſt, Maria ſaid, how did you get to the confines of Weſtmoreland over Stanemore hills, and what was that accident that put you in poſſeſſion of Orton-Lodge? It muſt be a curious account, I am ſure.

This, I replied, you ſhall hear to-morrow morning after breakfaſt; there is not time for it now. All I can ſay at preſent is, that it was love kept me among the mountains for ſome years, and if the heaven-born maid (vaſtly like you, Miſs Spence, ſhe was) had not, by the order of heaven, been removed to the regions of immortality and day, I ſhould not have left the ſolitude, nor would you ever have left the ſolitude, nor would you ever have ſeen me at Harrogate: but deſtiny is the dirigent: mutable is the condition of mortals, and we are blind to futurity and the approaches of fate. This led me over the vaſt mountains of Stanemore, enabled me [270]to croſs the amazing fells of Weſtmoreland, and brought me to that ſpot, where I had the honour and happineſs of becoming acquainted with Miſs Spence. Thus did we chat till eleven, and retired to our chambers.

But the old gentleman, the doctor, when he came with me into my apartment, told me we muſt have one bottle more, for it was his nightcap, without which he could not ſleep: he then bid the ſervant make haſte with it, and when that was out, we had another. He was a ſenſible agreeable man, and pleaſed me very much, as he appeared a zealous friend to the illuſtrious houſe of Hanover; whereas almoſt all the clergymen I had been in company with ſince I came to England, were Jacobites, and very violent ones.

A converſation relating to the Revolution, and excluſion of James II.§. 3. I remember, among other things, I aſked this Divine, over our wine, — If popery is ever ſo corrupt, could men be debarred of their rights for an attachment to it? — Are not crowns hereditary? — And is not treaſon in our country ſtamped with ſo peculiar an infamy, as involving the delinquent's innocent children in the forfeitures, or penal conſequences that await it, on purpoſe to check the rebellion of Britons by ſuch an accumulated puniſhment of evil doers?

[271] To this the doctor replied, that the excluſion of a popiſh prince muſt be lawful, if we ought to ſecure our property and religion, and, as in duty bound, oppoſe his trampling upon the laws, and his own ſolemn declarations. If the people have privileges and intereſts, they may defend them, and as juſtifiably oppoſe notorious domeſtic oppreſſions, as foreign invaſions. The head of the community, has no more a licence to deſtroy the moſt momentous intereſts of it, than any of the inferior members, or than any foreign invader. If a king has no paſſion to indulge, incompatible with the welfare of his people, then, as protection and obedience are reciprocal, and cannot ſubſiſt, the one without the other, it muſt be a crime in the people not to honour, and obey, and aſſiſt the royal authority. It is not only the intereſt but the duty of the ſubject to obey the prince, who is true to the important truſt repoſed in him, and has the welfare of the people at heart. But ſuch a king cannot be a papiſt. The Romiſh prince will not only ſtretch a limited prerogative into lawleſs power, and graſp at abſolute monarchy; but will break through the moſt ſacred ties, and ſubvert the rights he was ſworn to guard, to re-eſtabliſh popery in this kingdom. Could James the Second have kept the ſeat of government, and baffled all oppoſition, we may conclude from what he [272]did, from his trampling upon the laws, and his own ſolemn declarations; from his new court of inquiſition (the high commiſſion court) to ſubvert the conſtitution of the church of England, and to lay waſte all its fences againſt popery; from that furious act of his power, which fell on Magdalen-college, and his two cruel acts of parliament in Ireland, (repeal of the act of ſettlement, by which the proteſtant gentlemen were deprived of their eſtates; and the act of attainder, by which they were to be hanged, for going to beg their bread in another country, after they had been robbed of all in their own by their king, who had ſworn to protect them); from hence, I ſay, it is plain, that if James could have ſat firm upon the throne, his miſguided conſcience would have induced him to the moſt inhuman acts of violence. He would have proceeded to the barbarities; and rekindled the flames of Mary. Had he continued to reign over theſe kingdoms, it is moſt certain, that inſtruction and perſuaſion only would not have been the thing, but where inſtruction and perſuaſion failed, impriſonments, tortures, death, would have been uſed, to compel us to believe all the groſs abſurdities of Rome, their impieties go God, and contradictions to common ſenſe. We muſt throw away our reaſon and our bibles, the nobleſt gifts of heaven, and neither think nor ſpeak, [273]but as we are bid by men no wiſer than ourſelves; or, we muſt expire under torments as great as the devil and the monks could deviſe. It was therefore neceſſary, for the preſervation of our church and ſtate, to exclude James and his popiſh heirs. The common welfare required this ſalutary precaution. The collected intereſt of the community is the primary end of every law.

All this, I ſaid, ſeems quite right. To be ſure, during that ſhort twilight of power, which dawned upon popery in England in the years 1689 and 90, its rage was imprudent. It did diſcover its fury and reſentment. In one of the Iriſh acts you have mentioned, more than 2000 people were attainted, and ſome of them the moſt noble and venerable characters in Ireland. Yet had ſucceſs attended the arms of James, this would have been but the beginning of ſorrows. And probably a ſon of chriſtian Rome would have proſcribed more in theſe two iſlands, than in heathen Rome, out of the whole vaſt Roman empire, were given up to deſtruction for their virtue, by the cruel triumvirate, Auguſtus, Antony, and Lepidus: And of conſequence, ſince dear experience convinced, it was equally abſurd and vain, to imagine that a popiſh head would govern a proteſtant church by any councils, but thoſe of popiſh prieſts, as it was to imagine that a popiſh king [274]would govern a proteſtant ſtate by any councils, but thoſe of popiſh counſellors; it muſt therefore be owned, that the Lords, and others, aſſembled at Nottingham, were juſt in declaring, that King James's adminiſtrations were uſurpations on the conſtitution; and that they owned it rebellion to reſiſt a king that governed by law; but to reſiſt a tyrant, who made his will his law, was nothing but a neceſſary defence. This, to be ſure, is juſt. But ſtill, if crowns are hereditary, and one ſevere puniſhment of treaſon was intended to check all rebellion, were we not a little too haſty in the affair of the Revolution? And might we not have expected ſomething better from the good ſenſe and good nature of James, if we had waited a while, till he could ſee the folly of his proceedings?

To this the Doctor replied, that as to James's good ſenſe, it never appeared he had any: and in reſpect of his many real good qualities, they were extinguiſhed by his bigotry, and could never be of ſervice to a proteſtant ſpirit, the ſpirit of freemen: it was therefore incumbent on them, who knew and loved the invaluable bleſſings they enjoyed, to act as they did; that is, as the wiſdom of our conſtitution requires in ſuch caſes.

As to the crown's being hereditary,—and the ſevere puniſhment of treaſons; — in reſpect [275]of the firſt particular, there is no natural or divine law declares crowns hereditary. If a certain rule of ſucceſſion has been eſtabliſhed in moſt kingdoms, the ſingle point of view in it was public good, or a prevention of thoſe inteſtine commotions, which might attend an election: But as every rule is diſpenſible, and muſt give way when it defeats the end for which it was appointed; ſhould the cuſtomary ſucceſſion in a kingdom prove at any time productive of much greater evils than thoſe it was intended to obviate, it may queſtionleſs be ſuperſeded occaſionally. This point is evident from reaſon. Though the crown in our own country is generally hereditary, yet that right is to be ſet aſide, if the ſecurity of our civil and religious liberty requires it. If the pretence of James was a right to dominion, in oppoſition not only to the ſenſe of the legiſlature, but to that of the nation, then the popiſh prince was juſtly excluded, for denying the public good to be the ſupreme law. Had the right he claimed been eſtabliſhed, then our religion, our liberties, and the ſafety of our fortunes, had been no longer our own. In caſe of ſuch eſtabliſhment, the glory of our conſtitution was no more. The ſum of the matter is, the royal family of the Steuarts being Roman Catholics, makes their caſe ſimilar to an extinction of it.

[276] And as to the accumulated puniſhment of treaſon in Great Britain, that can only be deſigned as a powerful check to rebellion, againſt a king whoſe darling view is the welfare of the people. No infamy, forfeitures, or death, can be too ſevere for the man, who rebels againſt a prince that governs for the good of the people, and endeavours to tranſmit our ſtate ſafe to poſterity. To plot againſt ſuch a ſovereign is a great crime indeed. To conſpire againſt a prince, whoſe life is of the utmoſt conſequence to the community, is an enormity that ought to be ſtamped with a peculiar infamy, and puniſhed in the ſevereſt manner. But it can be no treaſon to act againſt a papiſt, who violates every maxim of our conſtitution, and by every maxim of popery labours to deſtroy our religion and liberties. Every man may repel unlawful attempts upon his perſon and property, and is armed by God with authority for ſelf-defence.

To this it was replied, that I thought the Doctor quite right, and for my own part was determined to oppoſe a popiſh prince, whenever he comes on with his unalienable and indefeaſible claim, to introduce his abſurd and cruel religion, to deprive us of our rational chriſtianity, and make us ſlaves, inſtead of free-born ſubjects. No popiſh James, to write our themes, but (filling a bumper) may this [277]nation be ever happy in a king whoſe right is founded upon law, and who has made it the rule of his government. May Britons ever remember the mercileſs rage of popery, and the envious malice of France; each ready to lay waſte the whole fabric of our excellent conſtitution, and cry aloud, with all the embittered ſons of Edom, Down with it, down with it, even to the ground. — Here the clock ſtruck one, and we parted.

A Deſcription of Cleator.§. 4. Early the next morning I was up, according to my wont, and walked out, to look at the place. Cleator is one of the fineſt ſpots that can be ſeen; in a wild romantic country. The natural views are wonderful, and afford the eye vaſt pleaſure. The charming proſpects of different kinds, from the edges of the mountains, are very fine:—The winding hills, pretty plains, vaſt precipices, hanging woods, deep vales, the eaſy falls of water in ſome places, and in others cataracts tumbling over rocks, — form all together the moſt beautiful and delightful ſcenes. All the decorations of art are but foils and ſhadows to ſuch natural charms.

In the midſt of theſe ſcenes, and in a theatrical ſpace of about two hundred acres, which the hand of nature cut, or hollowed out, on the ſide of a mountain, ſtands Cleator-Lodge, a neat and pretty manſion. [278]Near it were groves of various trees, and the water of a ſtrong ſpring murmured from the front down to a lake at the bottom of the hill.

Character of Maria Spence.§. 5. This was Miſs Spence's country-houſe. Here the wiſe and excellent Maria paſs'd the beſt part of her time, and never went to any public place but Harrogate once a year. In reading, riding, fiſhing, and ſome viſits to and from three or four neighbours now and then, her hours were happily and uſefully employed. Hiſtory and Mathematics ſhe took great delight in, and had a very ſurpriſing knowledge in the laſt. She was another of thoſe ladies I met with in my travels, who underſtood that method of calculation, beyond which nothing further is to be hoped or expected; I mean the arithmetic of fluxions.

Very few men among the learned can conſider magnitudes as generated by motion, or determine their proportions one to another from the celerities of the motion by which they are generated. I queſtion if the Critical Reviewers can do it (I am ſure they cannot), though they have made ſo licentiouſly free with me. They may however pretend to know ſomething of the matter, and ſo did Berkley, late Biſhop of Cloyne in Ireland: yet that prelate, in reality, underſtood [279]no more of the method than a porter does, though he preſumed to write againſt it, and the divine Newton, the inventor of it: I ſay it. But Maria Spence, in the 24th year of her age (at this time), was a maſter in the fluxionary way. She had not only a clear and adequate notion of fluxions, but was able to penetrate into the depths of this ſcience, and had made ſublime diſcoveries in this incomparable method of reaſoning. She aſtoniſhed me. I thought Mrs. Burcott and Mrs. Fletcher (mentioned in my firſt volume, p. 275.) were very extraordinary women, on account of their knowledge in algebra, and the ſine anſwers they gave to the moſt difficult problems in univerſal arithmetic: but this ſort of reaſoning is far inferior to the fluxionary method of calculation; as the latter opens and diſcovers to us the ſecrets and receſſes of nature, which have always before been locked up in obſcurity and darkneſs. By fluxions, ſuch difficulties are reſolved, as raiſe the wonder and ſurpriſe of all mankind, and which would in vain be attempted by any other method whatſoever. What then muſt we think of a young woman well ſkilled in ſuch work; — not only able to find the fluxions of flowing or determinate quantities, that is, the velocities with which they ariſe or begin to be generated in the firſt moments of formation (called the velocities of the incremental [280]parts), and the velocities in the laſt ratio's, as vaniſhing or ceaſing to be; but from given fluxions to find the fluents; — and be ready in drawing tangents to curves; in the ſolution of problems de maximis & minimis, that is, the greateſt or leaſt poſſible quantity attainable in any caſe; in the invention of points of inflection and retrogreſſion; in finding the evoluta of a given curve; in finding the cauſtic curves, by reflection and refraction, &c. &c. — this was amazing beyond any thing I had ſeen; or did ever ſee ſince, except Mrs. Benlow of Richmondſhire, with whom I became acquainted in 1739. (See Memoirs of ſeveral Ladies of Great Britain, Vol. I.) With aſtoniſhment I beheld her. I was but a young beginner, or learner, in reſpect of her, though I had applied ſo cloſe to fluxions (after I had learned algebra), that my head was often ready to ſplit with pain; nor had I the capacity, at that time, to comprehend thoroughly the proceſs of ſeveral operations ſhe performed with beauty, ſimplicity, and charming elegance. Admirable Maria! No one have I ever ſeen that was her ſuperior in this ſcience: one equal only have I known, the lady a little before mentioned. And does not this demonſtrate, that the faculties and imagination of women's minds, properly cultivated, may equal thoſe of the greateſt [281]men?A reflection on the education of the women. And ſince women have the ſame improvable minds as the male part of the ſpecies, why ſhould they not be cultivated by the ſame method? Why ſhould reaſon be left to itſelf in one of the ſexes, and be diſciplined with ſo much care in the other. Learning and knowledge are perfections in us not as we are men, but as we are rational creatures, in which order of beings the female world is upon the ſame level with the male. We ought to conſider in this particular, not what is the ſex, but what is the ſpecies they belong to. And if women of fortune were ſo conſidered, and educated accordingly, I am ſure the world would ſoon be the better for it. It would be ſo far from making them thoſe ridiculous mortals Moliere has deſcribed under the character of learned ladies; that it would render them more agreeable and uſeful, and enable them by the acquiſition of true ſenſe and knowledge, to be ſuperior to gayety and ſpectacle, dreſs and diſſipation. They would ſee that the ſovereign good can be placed in nothing elſe but in rectitude of conduct; as that is agreeable to our nature; conducive to well-being; accommodate to all places and times; durable, ſelf-derived, indeprivable; and of conſequence, that on rational and maſculine religion only they can reſt the ſoal of the foot, and the ſooner they turn to it, the happier here and hereafter they ſhall be. [282]Long before the power of ſenſe, like the ſetting ſun, is gradually forſaking them, (that power on which the pleaſures of the world depend) they would, by their acquired underſtanding and knowledge, ſee the folly of pleaſure, and that they were born not only to virtue, friendſhip, honeſty, and faith, but to religion, piety, adoration, and a generous ſurrender of their minds to the ſupreme cauſe. They would be glorious creatures then. Every family would be happy.

But as to Miſs Spence, this knowledge, with a faultleſs perſon, and a modeſty mor graceful than her exquiſite beauty, were not the things that principally charmed me: nor was it her converſation, than which nothing could be more lively and delightful: nor her fine fortune. It was her manners. She was a Chriſtian Deiſt, and conſidered Benevolence and Integrity as the eſſentials of her religion. She imitated the piety and devotion of Jeſus Chriſt, and worſhipped his God and our God, his Father and our Father, as St. John expreſsly ſtiles the God of Chriſtians, xx. 17. She was extremely charitable to others, and conſidered conſcious virtue as the greateſt ornament and moſt valuable treaſure of human nature. Excellent Maria!

The author's departure§. 6. With this young lady, and her two ſervants (her footman and her woman,) I [283]went up to London. from Cleator for London, July 31. 1731. We ſet out from Cleator the 31ſt day of July, and without meeting with any miſchief in all that long way, came fafe to London. We were nine days on the road; and as the weather was fine, and our horſes excellent, we had a charming journey. My companion was ſo agreeable, that had it been two thouſand miles from Cleator to London, inſtead of 272, I ſhould ſtill have thought it too ſhort. Her converſation was ſo various and fine, that no way could ſeem tireſome and tedious to him that travelled with her. Her notions and remarks were ever lively and inſtructive. It was vaſt pleaſure to hear her, even on the drieſt and moſt abſtruſe ſubjects, on account of the admiration her diſcourſe raiſed, and the fine knowledge it communicated, to one who underſtood her. I will give an inſtance.

§. 7. In riding over the mountains the firſt day, we miſſed the road in the evening, and inſtead of getting to a very good inn, where we intended to reſt, we were forced to ſtop at a poor little public houſe, and right glad to get in there, as the evening was tempeſtuous and wet, dark and cold. Here we got ſome bacon and freſh egges for ſupper, and the ale was good, which amuſed us well enough till nine o'clock. We then propoſed to play at cribbage for an hour, and called for a pack [284]of cards; but they had none in the houſe, and we were obliged to divert ourſelves with converſation, till it was time to retire. Miſs Spence began in the following manner.

A diſcourſe on fluxions.Was Newton, Sir, or Leibnitz, the author of that method of calculation, which lends its aid and aſſiſtance to all the other mathematical ſciences, and that in their greateſt wants and diſtreſſes? I have heard a foreigner affirm, that the German was the inventor of fluxions.

That cannot be (I replied). In the year 1696, Dr. Barrow received from Mr. Newton a demonſtration of the rule of the quadrature of curves, which the Doctor communicated to Mr. Collins; and as this is the foundation of fluxions, and the differential calculus, it is evident Mr. Newton had invented the method before that time.

In the beginning of the year 1673, Leibnitz was in England, again in October 1676; and the interval of this time he ſpent in France, during which he kept a correſpondence with Oldenburgh, and by his means with J. Collins; and ſometimes alſo with Newton, from the laſt of whom he received a letter, dated June 18, 1676, wherein is taught the method of reducing quantities into infinite ſeries, that is, of exhibiting the increments of flowing quantities. This method was utterly [285]unknown to Leibnitz, before he received the aboveſaid letter of Newton's, as he himſelf acknowledges in a letter to Oldenburgh, dated Auguſt 27, 1676; for before that time, he ſays in his letter, he was obliged to transform an irrational quantity into a rational fraction, and then by diviſion, after the method of Mercator, to reduce the fraction into a ſeries.

It is likewiſe certain, that Leibnitz did not then underſtand theſe ſeries, becauſe, in the ſame letter, he deſires Newton would explain to him the manner how he got theſe ſeries. And again in a ſecond letter from Newton to Leibnitz, dated October 24, 1676, he gives yet clearer hints of his method, and illuſtrates it by examples, and lays down a rule, by which, from the ordinates of certain curves, their areas may be obtained in finite terms, when it is poſſible.

By theſe lights, and aſſiſted by ſuch examples, the acute Leibnitz might have learned the Newtonian method.

It is plain he did ſo; for in 1684, he firſt publiſhed, in the Leipſic Acts, his Elements of the Differential Calculus, without pretending to have had the method before the year 1677, the year he received the two letters from Newton: and yet, when Sir Iſaac publiſhed his books of the number of curves of the firſt kind, and of the quadrature of figures, [296]the editors of the Acts ſaid Leibnitz was the firſt inventor of the differential calculus, and Newton had ſubſtituted fluxions for differences, juſt as Honoratus Faber, in his Synopſis Geometrica, had ſubſtituted a progreſſion of motion for Cavallerius's method of indiviſibles; that is, Leibnitz was the firſt inventor of the method, Newton had received it from him (from his Elements of the Differential Calculus), and had ſubſtituted fluxions for differences; but the way of inveſtigation in each is the ſame, and both center in the ſame concluſions.

This excited Mr. Keil to reply; and he made it appear very plain from Sir Iſaac's letters, publiſhed by Dr. Wallis, that he (Newton) was the firſt inventor of the algorith, or practical rules of fluxions; and Leibnitz did no more than publiſh the ſame, with an alteration of the name, and manner of notation. This however did not ſilence Leibnitz, nor ſatisfy the foreigners who admired him. He abuſed Dr. Keil, and appealed to the Royal Society againſt him; that they would be pleaſed to reſtrain the Doctor's vain babblings and unjuſt calumniations, and report their judgment as he thought they ought to do, that is, in his favour. But this was not in the power of the Society, if they did juſtice; for it appeared quite clear to a committee of the members, appointed [287]to examine the original letters, and other papers, relating to the matter, which were left by Mr. Oldenburgh and Mr. J. Collins, that Sir Iſaac Newton was the firſt inventor of fluxions; and accordingly they publiſhed their opinion. This determines the affair. When this is the caſe, it is ſenſeleſs for any foreigner to ſay Leibnitz was the author of fluxions. To the divine Newton belongs this greateſt work of genius, and the nobleſt thought that ever entered the human mind.

It muſt be ſo (Maria replied): As the caſe is ſtated, Sir Iſaac Newton was moſt certainly the inventor of the method of fluxions: And ſuppoſing Leibnitz had been able to diſcover and work the differential calculus, without the lights he received from Newton, it would not from thence follow, that he underſtood the true method of fluxions: for, though a differential has been, and to this day is, by many, called a fluxion, and a fluxion a differential, yet it is an abuſe of terms. A fluxion has no relation to a differential, nor a differential to a fluxion, The principles upon which the methods are founded ſhew them to be very different; notwithſtanding the way of inveſtigation in each be the ſame, and that both center in the ſame concluſions: nor can the differential method perform what the fluxionary [288]method can. The excellency of the fluxionary method is far above the differential.

This remark on the two methods ſurprized me very much, and eſpecially as it was made by a young lady. I had not then a notion of the difference, and had been taught by my maſter to proceed on the principles of the Differential Calculus. This made me requeſt an explication of the matter, and Maria went on in the following manner.

Magnitudes, as made up of an infinite number of very ſmall conſtituent parts put together, are the work of the Differential Calculus; but by the fluxionary method, we are taught to conſider magnitudes as generated by motion. A deſcribed line in this way, is not generated by an appoſition of points, or differentials, but by the motion or flux of a point; and the velocity of the generating point in the firſt moment of its formation, or generation, is called its fluxion. In forming magnitudes after the differential way, we conceive them as made up of an infinite number of ſmall conſtituent parts, ſo diſpoſed as to produce a magnitude of a given form; that theſe parts are to each other as the magnitudes of which they are differentials; and that one infinitely ſmall part, or differential, muſt be infinitely great, with reſpect to another [289]other differential, or infinitely ſmall part: but by fluxion, or the law of flowing, we determine the proportion of magnitudes one to another, from the celerities of the motions by which they are generated. This moſt certainly is the pureſt abſtracted way of reaſoning. Our conſidering the different degrees of magnitude, as ariſing from an increaſing ſeries of mutations of velocity, is much more ſimple, and leſs perplexed than the other way; and the operations founded on fluxions, muſt be much more clear, accurate, and convincing, than thoſe that are founded on the Differential Calculus. There is a great difference in operations, when quantities are rejected, becauſe they really vaniſh; —and when they are rejected, becauſe they are infinitely ſmall: the latter method, which is the differential, muſt leave the mind in ambiguity and confuſion, and cannot in many caſes come up to the truth. It is a very great error then to call differentials, fluxions, and quite wrong to begin with the differential method, in order to learn the law or manner of flowing.

With amazement I heard his diſcourſe, and requeſted to know by what maſter, and what method, ſhe obtained theſe notions; for they were far beyond every thing on the ſubject that I had ever met with. What ſhe ſaid concerning the nature and idea of fluxions, [290]I though juſt and beautiful, and I believe it was in her power, to ſhew the baſes on which they are erected.

An account of Martin Murdoch.My maſter, Sir, (Maria anſwered) was a poor traveller, a Scotchman, one Martin Murdoch, who came by accident to my father's houſe, to aſk relief, when I was about fifteen years old. He told us, he was the ſon of one of the miniſters of Scotland, and came from the remoteſt part of the Highlands: that his father taught him mathematics, and left him, at his death, a little ſtock on a ſmall farm; but misfortunes and accidents obliged him in a ſhort time to break up houſe, and he was going to London, to try if he could get any thing there, by teaching arithmetic of every kind. My father, who was a hoſpitable man, invited him to ſtay with us a few days, and the parſon of our pariſh ſoon found, that he had not only a very extraordinary underſtanding, but was particularly excellent at figures, and the other branches of the mathematics. My father upon this agreed with him to be my preceptor for five years, and during four years and nine months of that time, he took the greateſt pains to make me as perfect as he could in arithmetic, trigonometry, geometry, algebra, and fluxions. As I delighted in the ſtudy above all things, I was a great proficient for ſo few years, and had Murdoch been longer with me, I ſhould [291]have been well acquainted with the whole glorious ſtructure: but towards the end of the fifth year, this poor Archimedes was unfortunately drowned, in croſſing one of our rivers, in the winter time, and went in that uncomfortable way, in the thirty-ſixth year of his age, to the enjoyment of that felicity and glory, which God has prepared for a virtuous life and honeſt heart. Why ſuch men, as the poor and admirable Murdoch, have often ſuch hard meaſure in this world, is not in my power to account for; nor do I believe any one can: but what I tell you is one of thoſe ſurprizing things, and I lamented not a little the loſs of ſuch a maſter. Still however I continued to ſtudy by many written rules he had given me, and to this day, mathematics are the greateſt pleaſure of my life.

As to our method, my maſter, in the firſt place, made me perfectly underſtand arithmetic, and then geometry and algebra, in all their parts and improvements, the methods of ſeries, doctrine of proportions, nature of logarithms, mechanics, and laws of motion: from thence we proceeded to the pure doctrine of fluxions, and at laſt looked into the Differential Calculus. In this true way my excellent maſter led me, and in the ſame difficult path every one muſt go, who intends to learn Fluxions. I would be but loſt labour for any perſon to [292]attempt them, who was unacquainted with theſe Precognita.

When we turned to fluxions, the firſt thing my maſter did, was to inſtruct me in the arithmetic of exponents, the nature of powers, and the manner of their generation. We went next to the doctrine of infinite ſeries; and then, to the manner of generating mathematical quantities. This generation of quantities was my firſt ſtep into fluxions, and my maſter ſo amply explained the nature of them, in this operation, that I was able to form a juſt idea of a firſt fluxion, though thought by many to be incomprehenſible. We proceeded from thence to the notation and algorithm of firſt fluxions; to the finding ſecond, third, &c. fluxions; the finding fluxions of exponential quantities; and the fluents from given fluxions; to their uſes in drawing tangents to curves; in finding the areas of ſpaces; the valves of ſurfaces; and the contents of ſolids; their percuſſion, oſcillation, and centers of gravity. All theſe things my maſter ſo happily explained to my underſtanding, that I was able to work with eaſe, and found no more difficulty in conceiving an adequate notion of a naſcent or evaneſcent quantity, than in forming a true idea of a mathematical point. In ſhort, by the time I had ſtudied fluxions two years, I not only underſtood their fundamental principles and operations, and could inveſtigate, and give the ſolution of the moſt [293]general and uſeful problems in the mathematics; but likewiſe, ſolve ſeveral problems that occur in the phaenomena of nature.

Here Maria ſtopped, and as ſoon as aſtoniſhment would permit me to ſpeak, I propoſed to her ſeveral difficult queſtions, I had heard, but was not then able to anſwer. I requeſted her, in the firſt place, to inform me, how the time of a body's deſcending through any arch of a cycloid was found: and if ten hundred weight avoirdupoiſe, hanging on a bar of ſteel perfectly elaſtic, and ſupported at both ends, will juſt break the bar, what muſt be the weight of a globe, falling perpendicular 185 feet on the middle of the bar, to have the ſame effect? — My next queſtions were, how long, and how far, ought a given globe to deſcend by its comparative weight in a medium of a given denſity, but without reſiſtance, to acquire the greateſt velocity it is capable of in deſcending with the ſame weight, and in the ſame medium, with reſiſtance? — And how are we to find the value of a ſolid formed by the rotation of this curvilinear ſpace, A C D about the axis A D, the general equation, expreſſing the nature of the curve, being [...]— How is the center of gravity to be found of the ſpace encloſed [294]by an hyperbola, and its aſymptete? And how are we to find the center of oſcillation of a ſphere revolving about the line P A M, a tangent, to the generating circle F A H, in the point A, as an axis?—Theſe queſtions Maria anſwered with a celerity and elegance that again amazed me, and convinced me that, notwithſtanding the Right Rev. metaphyſical diſputant, Dr. Berkley, late Biſhop of Cloyne in Ireland, could not underſtand the doctrine of fluxions, and therefore did all he could to diſgrace them, and the few mathematicians who have ſtudied magnitudes as generated by motion; yet, the doctrine, as delivered by the divine Newton, may be clearly conceived, and diſtinctly comprehended; that the principles upon which it is founded, are true, and the demonſtrations of its rules concluſive. No oppoſition can hurt it.

When I obſerved, that ſome learned men will not allow that a velocity which continues for no time at all, can poſſibly deſcribe any ſpace at all: its effect, they ſay, is abſolutely nothing, and inſtead of ſatisfying reaſon with truth and preciſion, the human faculties are quite confounded, loſt, and bewildered in fluxions. A velocity or fluxion is at beſt we do not know what;—whether ſomething or nothing: and how can the mind lay hold on, or form any accurate abſtract idea of ſuch a ſubtile, fleeting thing?

[295] Diſputants (Maria anſwered) may perplex with deep ſpeculations, and confound with myſterious diſquiſitions, but the method of fluxions has no dependance on ſuch things. The operation is not what any ſingle abſtract velocity can generate or deſcribe of itſelf, but what a continual and ſucceſſively variable velocity can produce in the whole: And certainly, a variable cauſe may produce a variable effect, as well as a permanent cauſe a permanent and conſtant effect. The difference can only be, that the continual variation of the effect muſt be proportional to the continual variation of the cauſe. The method of fluxions therefore is true, whether we can or cannot conceive the nature and manner of ſeveral things relating to them, though we had no ideas of perpetually ariſing increments, and magnitudes in naſcent or evaneſcent ſtates. The knowledge of ſuch things is not eſſential to fluxions. All they propoſe is, to determine the velocity or flowing wherewith a generated quantity increaſes, and to ſum up all that has been generated or deſcribed by the continually variable fluxion. On theſe two baſes fluxions ſtand.

This was clear and juſt, and ſhewed that the nature and idea of fluxions is agreeable to the nature and conſtitution of things. They can have no dependance upon any metaphyſical ſpeculations, (ſuch ſpeculations as that [296] anti-mathematician, my Lord of Cloyne, brought in, to cavil and diſpute againſt principles he underſtood nothing of, and maliciouſly run the account of them into the dark;) but are the genuine offspring of nature and truth. An inſtance or two may illuſtrate the matter.

  • 1. A heavy body deſcends perpendicularly 16 1/12 feet in a ſecond, and at the end of this time, has acquired a velocity of 32⅙ feet in a ſecond, which is accurately known. At any given diſtance then from the place the body fell, take the point A in the right line, and the velocity of the falling body in the point may be truly computed: but the velocity in any point above A, at ever ſo ſmall a diſtance, will be leſs than in A; and the velocity at any point below A, at the leaſt poſſible diſtance, will be greater than in A. It is therefore plain, that in the point A, the body has a certain determined velocity, which belongs to no other point in the whole line. Now this velocity is the fluxion of that right line in the point A; and with it the body would proceed, if gravity acted no longer on the body's arrival at A.
  • 2. Take a glaſs tube open at both ends, whoſe concavity is of different diameters in different places, and immerſe it in a ſtream, till the water fills the tube, and flows through it. Then, in different parts of the tube, the velocity of the water will be as the ſquares [297]of the diameters, and of conſequence different. Suppoſe then, in any marked place, a plane to paſs through the tube perpendicular to the axis, or to the motion of the water, and of conſequence, the water will paſs through this ſection with a certain determinate velocity: But if another ſection be drawn ever ſo near the former, the water, by reaſon of the different diameters, will flow through this with a velocity different from what it did at the former, and therefore to one ſection of the tube, or ſingle point only, the determinate velocity belongs. It is the fluxion of the ſpace which the fluid deſcribes at that ſection; and with that uniform velocity the fluid would continue to move, if the diameter was the ſame to the end of the tube.
  • 3. If a hollow cylinder be filled with water, to flow freely out through a hole at the bottom, the velocity of the effluent will be as the height of the water, and ſince the ſurface of the incubent fluid deſcends without ſtop, the velocity of the ſtream will decreaſe, till the effluent be all out. There can then be no two moments of time, ſucceeding each other ever ſo nearly, wherein the velocity of the water is the ſame; and of conſequence, the velocity, at any given point, belongs only to that particular indiviſible moment of time. Now this is accurately the fluxion of the fluid then flowing; and if, at that inſtant, more [298]water was poured into the cylinder, to make the ſurface keep its place, the effluent would retain its velocity, and ſtill be the fluxion of the fluid. Such are the operations of nature, and they viſibly confirm the nature of Fluxion. It is from hence quite clear, that the fluxion of a generated quantity, cannot retain any one determined value for the leaſt ſpace of time whatever, but the moment it arrives at that value, the ſame moment it loſes it again. The fluxion of ſuch quantity can only paſs gradually and ſucceſſively thro' the indefinite degrees contained between the two extreme values, which are the limits thereof, during the generation of the fluent, in caſe the fluxion be variable: But then, though a determinate degree of fluxion does not continue at all, yet, at every determinate indiviſible moment of time, every fluent has ſome determinate degree of fluxion; that is, every generated quantity has every where a certain rate of increaſing, a fluxion whoſe abſtract value is determinate in itſelf, though the fluxion has no determined value for the leaſt ſpace of time whatever. To find its value then, that is, the ratio one fluxion has to another, is a problem ſtrictly geometrical; notwithſtanding the Right Rev. anti-mathematician has declared the contrary, in his hatred to mathematicians, and his ignorance of the true principles of mathematics.

[299] If my Lord of Cloyne had been qualified to examine and conſider the caſe of fluxions, and could have laid aſide that unaccountable obſtinacy, and invincible prejudice, which made him reſolve to yield to no reaſon on the ſubject;—not to regard even the great Maclaurin's anſwer to his Analyſt; — he would have diſcovered, that it was very poſſible to find the abſtract value of a generated quantity, or the contemporary increment of any compound quantity. By the binomial theorem, the ratio of the fluxion of a ſimple quantity to the fluxion of that compound quantity, may be had in general, in the loweſt terms, and as near the truth as we pleaſe, whilſt we ſuppoſe ſome very ſmall increment actually deſcribed: And whereas the ratio of theſe fluxions is required for ſome one indiviſible point of the fluid, in the very beginning of the increment, and before it is generated, we make, in the particular caſe, the values of the ſimple increments nothing, which before was expreſſed in general: then all the terms wherein they are found vaniſh, and what is left accurately ſhews the relation of the fluxions for the point where the increment is ſuppoſed to commence. As the abſtract value of the fluxion belongs only to one point of the fluent, the moments are made to vaniſh, after we have ſeen by their continual diminution, whither the ratio tends, [300]and what it continually verges to; and this becomes as viſible as the very character it is written in.

But Dr. Berkley was unacquainted with mathematical principles, and out of his averſion to theſe ſciences, and zeal for orthodoxy, cavilled and diſputed with all his might, and endeavoured to bring the matter to a ſtate unintelligible to himſelf, and every body elſe. —Here Maria had done, and for near a quarter of an hour after, I ſat ſilently looking at her, in the greateſt aſtoniſhment.

But as to our travels, the 10th of Auguſt we got ſafe to London, and the conſequence of the journey was, that the laſt day of the ſame month, I had the honour and happineſs of being married to this young lady.

SECTION IX.

[301]

I am thinking with myſelf every day, (ſays one of the philoſophers) how many things are dear to me; and after I have conſidered them as temporary and periſhable, I prepare myſelf, from that very minute, to bear the loſs of them without weakneſs.

CLEANTHES.
(14)

[301] The death of the author's 4th wife, and his behaviour thereupon.§. 1. WISE is the man, who prepares both for his own death and the death of his friends; who makes uſe of the [302]foreſight of troubles, ſo, as to abate the uneaſineſs of them, and puts in practice this reſolution of the philoſopher. I thought of this the morning I married the beautiful and ingenious Miſs Spence, (as related in the latter end of my eighth ſection), and determined if I loſt her, to make the great affliction produce the peaceable fruits of righteouſneſs. The man muſt feel, in ſuch a caſe; the chriſtian will ſubmit. Before the end of ſix months, ſhe died, and I mourned the loſs with a degree of ſorrow due to ſo much excellence, endearment and delight. My complaint was bitter, in proportion to the deſires of nature. But as nature ſays, let this cup paſs: grace ſays, let thy will be done. If the flower of all my comfort was gone — the glory departed! yet thy glory is, O man, to do the will of God, and bear the burthen [303]he lays upon thee. Let nature, grace, and time, do their part, to cloſe the wound, and let not ignorance impeach the wiſdom of the moſt high. The cup which my father hath given me: ſhall I not drink? I will. I will not quarrel with providence. In ſhort, I reſigned, and not long after I had buried this admirable woman, (who died at her ſeat in Weſtmoreland,) I went into the world again, to relieve my mind, and try my fortune once more. What happened there, I will report, when I have related the extraordinary caſe of my wife, Miſs Spence, and the four phyſicians I had to attend her. It is a very curious thing.

The caſe of a lady in a fever, and an account of four phyſicians who attended her.§. 2. This young lady was ſeized with that fatal diſtemper, called a malignant fever: Something foreign to nature got into her blood, by a cold, and other accidents, it may be, and the luctus or ſtrife to get clear thereof became very great. The efferveſcence or perturbation was very ſoon ſo violent as to ſhew, that it not only endangered, but would quickly ſubvert the animal fabrick, unleſs the blood was ſpeedily diſperſed, and nature got the victory by an excluſion of the noxious ſhutin particles. The thirſt, the dry tongue, the coming cauſus, were terrible, and gave me too much reaſon to apprehend this charming [304]woman would ſink under the conflict. To ſave her, if poſſible, I ſent immediately for a great phyſician, Dr. Sharp, a man who talked with great fluency of medicine and diſeaſes.

This gentleman told me, the Alkaline was the root of fevers, as well as of other diſtempers, and therefore, to take off the efferveſcence of the blood in the ebullitions of it, to incide the viſcous humour, to drain the tartarous ſalts from the kidnies, to allay the preternatural ferment, and to brace up the relaxed tones, he ordered orange and vinegar in whey, and preſcribed ſpirit of ſulphur, and vitriol, the cream, chryſtals, and vitriolate tartar in other vehicles. If any thing can relieve, it muſt be plenty of acid. In acidis poſita eſt omni curatio. But theſe things gave no relief to the ſufferer.

I ſent then in all haſte for Dr. Hough, a man of great reputation, and he differed ſo much in opinion from Sharp, that he called an acid the chief enemy. It keeps up the luctus or ſtruggle, and if not expelled very quickly, will certainly prove fatal. Our ſheet anchor then muſt be the teſtacea, in vehicles of mineral water, and accordingly he ordered the abſorbent powders to conflict with this acidity, the principal cauſe of all diſeaſes. Pearl and coral, crab's eyes, and crab's claws, he preſcribed in diverſe forms; [305]but they were of no uſe to the ſick woman. She became worſe every hour.

Dr. Pym was next called in, a great practitioner, and learned man. His notion of a fever was quite different from the opinions of Sharp and Hough. He maintained that a fever was a poiſonous ferment or venom, which ſeized on the animal ſpirits: it breaks and ſmites them; and unleſs by alexipharmics the ſpirits can be enabled to gain a victory in a day or two, this ferment will bring on what the Greeks call a ſynochus, that is, a continual fever. In that ſtate, the venom holds faſt the animal ſpirits, will not let them expand, or diſengage themſelves, and then they grow enraged, and tumultuating, are hurried into a ſtate of exploſion, and blow up the fabric. Hence the inflammatory fever, according to the diverſe indoles of the venom; and when the contagious miaſms arrive at their higheſt degree, the malignant fever ariſeth. The ſpirits are then knocked down, and the marks of the enemies weapons, the ſpots, &c. appear. This (the Doctor continued) is the caſe of your lady, and therefore the thing to be done is, to make the malignant tack about to the mild, and produce an extinction of the ferment, and relief of the ſymptoms. This I endeavour to do by alexipharmics and veſicatories, and by ſubduing the poiſon by the bark and the warmer antidotes. Thus did my Doctor marſhal [306]ſhal his animal ſpirits, fight them againſt the enemy venom, to great diſadvantage. If his talk was not romance, it was plain his ſpirits were routed, and venom was getting the day. His alexipharmics and warm antidotes, were good for nothing. The malady encreaſed.

This being the caſe, I ſent again in haſte for a fourth doctor, a man of greater learning than the other three, and therefore, in opinion, oppoſite, and againſt their management of the fever. This great man was Dr. Froſt. He was a mechanician, and affirmed that, the ſolid parts of the human body are ſubjected to the rules of geometry, and the fluids to the hydroſtatics; and therefore, to keep the machine in right order, that is, in a ſtate of health, an aequilibrium muſt be maintained, or reſtored, if deſtroyed. The balance muſt not turn to one ſide or the other. To reſtore ſanity in acute caſes, and in chronic too, our buſineſs is to prevent the veſſels being elevated or depreſt beyond the ſtandard of nature: when either happens, the diviſion of the blood is increaſed, the motion is augmented, and ſo beget a fever. There cannot be an inordinate elevation of the oily or fiery parts of the blood, till the veſſels vibrate above the ſtandard of nature.

In a ſlight fever, the blood increaſes but little above the balance; but if more than one day; turns to a ſynochus, which is but the ſame [307]fever augmented beyond the balance of nature. This turns to a putrid ſynochus, and this to a cauſus. This is the caſe of your lady. From an elevated contraction (the Doctor contitinued, to my amazement,) her blood obtains a greater force and motion; hence greater diviſion, hence an increaſe of quantity and fluidity: and thus from greater diviſion, motion and quantity increaſed, ariſes that heat and thirſt, with the other concomitant ſymptoms of her fever; for the blood dividing faſter than it can be detached through the perſpirastory emunctories of the ſkin, is the immediate cauſe of the heart's preternatural beating: And this preternatural diviſion of the blood ariſes from the additional quantity of obſtructed perſpirable matter, added to the natural quantity of the blood.

Things being ſo, (the Doctor went on) and the fever riſing by the blood's dividing faſter than can be detached by the ſeveral emunctories; and this from an elevation of the ſolids bove the balance, we muſt then ſtrive to take off the tenſion of the ſolids, and ſubtract the cauſe. This makes me begin in a manner quite contrary to the other phyſicians, and I doubt not but I ſhall ſoon get the better of the fury and orgaſm, make an alteration in the black ſcabrous tongue, and by according with the modus of nature, throw forth the matter of the diſeaſe. I will enable [308]nature to extricate herſelf. I hope to diſentangle her from the weight.

Thus did this very learned man enlarge; and while he talked of doing wonders, the dry and parched ſkin, the black and bruſhy tongue, the cruſty fur upon the teeth, and all the ſignals of an incendium within, declared her diſſolution very near. As the ſerum diminiſhed faſt, and the inteſtine motion of the craſſamentum increaſed, nature was brought to her laſt ſtruggles. All the diſmal harbingers of a general wreck appeared, to give the by-ſtanders notice of approaching death. She died the ninth day, by the ignorance of four learned Phyſicians. — Had theſe Gentlemen confidered the fever no otherwiſe than as a diſeaſe ariſing from ſome unuſual ferment, ſtirred up among the humours of the blood, diſturbing both thoſe natural motions and functions of the body, hindering perſpiration, and thereby giving quick and large acceſſion to ſuch parts of the aliment or liquors taken down, as are diſpoſed to ferment; and there is always a ſtrong diſpoſition that way; for the blood has a three-fold motion,—fluidity, common to all liquors,—protruſive, from the impulſe of the heart and arteries,—and fermentative, that is, a motion throughout of all its parts, which quality is owing to the diſſimilar parts of the blood; — for being a compound of various particles, there muſt be a [309]colluctation when they occur, and of conſequence, a continual fermentation: As this is juſt and moderate, it is for the good of the animal, and purifies the blood: if it is too much, it tends to a fever; — if it ſtill increaſes, it produces the burning cauſus: Hard is the ſtruggle then, and if nature cannot diſpume, even helped by art, the patient has no hazard for life: Hence it is, that we are ſo ſubject to fevers, — and that it carries away more people than all the reſt of the diſeaſes: Out of every forty-two that have it; twenty-five generally die. It was ſo in the time of Hippocrates, 430 years before Chriſt: And ſo Dr. Sydenham and Dr. Friend found it, in their practice:

But (I ſay) had my four Doctors conſidered the fever as I have plainly ſtated it, without vainly pretending to be ſo wiſe as to know the eſſential cauſes of it; and in the beginning of it, before the terrible appearances, the vigil, delirium, ſubſultus, the dry black tongue, the furred teeth, and the pale, unconcocted urine, had cauſed a depletion by large bleeding, had opened the pores by a mild ſudorific, had then given a vomit, Rad. Ipecacuanha in ſmall ſack-whey or chicken-water, and let the ſufferer indulge in that thin diluting liquor, an emulſion of the ſeeds and almonds in barley water, and if the patient required it, a draught of table-beer with a [310]toaſt, between whiles; had this been done very ſoon, there might be relief as quickly; or if the fever ſtill run high, to bleed again, and waſh down ſome proper alexipharmic powder with a proper cordial julap, it is poſſible nature would have been able to accompliſh the work, and health had been again reſtored. I uſe the word proper alexipharmic, and proper cordial julap, becauſe the Theriaca and Mithridatium of the ſhops, which are commonly, almoſt always ordered as an alexipharmic bole, are rather poiſons than uſeful in a fever; and becauſe the tincture and ſyrup of ſaffron, the treacle-water, or any other diſtilled compound, are not fit cordials in the caſe; but it ſhould be the conſerva lujulae in an emulſion ex ſem. fr. cum amygd. in aq. hordei. This is the true alexipharmic,—and the only cordial, to be given in a fever. — But it was the deſtructive alexipharmics and cordials of the ſhops they forced down Maria's throat, and this, with the other bad preſcriptions and management, killed one of the fineſt and moſt excellent women that ever lived.

And now to give the world a better idea of this admirable woman than any deſcription of mine can exhibit, I ſhall here place a few religious little Pieces, which ſhe writ, while Miſs Spence, and which I found among her papers.

MORAL THOUGHTS: Written by Miſs SPENCE.

[311]
MORALITY.

ABSTRACT, mathematical, or phyſical truth, may be above the reach of the bulk and community of mankind. They have neither the leiſure, nor the neceſſary helps and advantages to acquire the natural knowledge of arts and ſciences. The many calls and importunities of the animal kind, take up the greateſt part of their time, thoughts, and labor, ſo that the more abſtract ſpeculations, and experimental diſquiſitions of philoſophy, are placed by providence quite out of their reach, and beyond their ſphere of action.

On the contrary, moral truth, right and wrong, good and evil, the doing as we would be done by, and acting towards all men as they really are, and ſtand related in ſociety; theſe things are as evident to the underſtanding, as light and colors are to the eye, and may be called the intellectual, moral ſenſe. Here needs no deep learning, or trouble and expence of education, but the ſame truths are as evident, and as much ſeen and felt by the learned and unlearned, the gentleman and [312]the ploughman, the ſavage or wild Indian, as by the beſt inſtructed philoſopher. The divine perfections ſhine through all nature, and the goodneſs and bounty of the Creator to all his creatures, impreſs the obligation of imitating this wiſeſt and beſt of Beings upon every man's heart and conſcience.

But notwithſtanding the maxims of morality are thus ſolidly eſtabliſhed, and adapted to all capacities; and though every man has a happineſs to ſeek, and a main end to ſecure, which muſt be infinitely preferable to any concerns of life, yet here it is we find, that mankind in general have been moſt loſt and bewildered, as if providence had placed their own happineſs, and the way to it, more out of their power than any thing elſe. How this ſhould happen, might ſeem unaccountable at firſt ſight, and yet it can be no'great myſtery to any man tolerably acquainted with the world and human nature. It is no difficult matter to diſcover the reaſons hereof, and it is withal highly uſeful to give them their due conſiderarion.

1. The principal cauſe I take to be the prevailing ſtrength and bias of private, corrupt, animal affection, and deſires. Reaſon is ſilenced and borne down by brutal appetite and paſſion. They reſolve to gratify their ſenſual appetites and deſires, and will therefore never taſte or try the ſuperior pleaſures and enjoyments [313]of reaſon and virtue. But ſuch men as theſe having declared open war againſt their own reaſon and conſcience, and being reſolved at all riſks to maintain the combat, muſt be ſelf-condemned, and cannot plead ignorance, or error of judgment in the caſe.

2. Another fundamental cauſe of moral error, is the prejudice and prepoſſeſſion of a wrong education. Falſe principles and abſurd notions of God and religion, wrought early into the tender, unexperienced mind, and there radicated and confirmed from time to time, from youth to riper age, by parents, teachers, our moſt intimate friends and acquaintance, and ſuch as we have the beſt opinion of, and confide moſt in; ſuch cauſes make ſuch ſtrong impreſſions, that the groſſeſt errors, thus rivetted and fixed, are with the greateſt difficulty ever conquered or cleared off. In this caſe, men turn out well-grounded believers, and are well-armed againſt conviction. Circumciſion or baptiſm fixes their religion in their infancy, and their church is as natural to them as their country. Free enquiry is with them an apoſtaſy from the orthodox party, and as the great and ſure tryal of their faith and fortitude, they will hear no reaſonings about the holy religion they have taken upon truſt.

3. Then the few, who have applied themſelves to the ſtudy of morality, have done it [314]for the moſt part in a manner confuſed; and ſuperficial enough: and often ſo, as even to build upon principles either entirely falſe, or obſcure and uncertain; either foreign to its proper buſineſs, or mixt up with groſs errors, and abſurdities. From whence it comes to paſs, that in all languages, the terms of morality, both in common diſcourſe, and in the writings of the learned, are ſuch as have the moſt obſcure, confuſed, indetermined, and unfixed ideas, of any other terms whatever; men for the moſt part deſpiſing the things which are plain and ordinary, to run after ſuch as are extraordinary and myſterious; and that they either will not know, or reject even truth itſelf, unleſs ſhe brings ſome charm with her, to raiſe their curioſity, and gratify their paſſion for what is marvellous and uncommon.

In ſum, the prejudices of the underſtanding, the illuſions of the heart, and the tyranny eſtabliſhed in the world with relation to opinions, form a grand obſtacle to the ſerious ſtudy of morality; and to the attainment of a more exact knowledge of our duty. Nor is it to be expected that any will very much apply themſelves to make diſcoveries in theſe matters, whilſt the deſire of eſteem, riches, or power, makes men eſpouſe the well-endowed opinions in faſhion, and then ſeek arguments either to make good [315]their beauty, or varniſh over and cover their deformity.—Whilſt the parties of men, cram their tenets down all men's throats, whom they can get into their power, without permitting them to examine their truth and falſehood; and will not let truth have fair play in the world, nor men the liberty to ſearch after it; what improvements can be expected of this kind? What greater light can be hoped for in the moral ſciences? The ſubject part of mankind in moſt places might, inſtead thereof, with Egyptian bondage, expect Egyptian darkneſs, were not the candle of the Lord ſet up by himſelf in men's minds, which it is impoſſible for the breath of man wholly to extinguiſh; how much ſoever the infallible guides of one church, and the orthodox rulers of another, may ſcheme and labour to ſubject conſcience to human juriſdiction, and bring the inward principle and motive of action within the cognizance of their political theocracy, or theocratic policy.

After all this, is it to be wondered at, that ſuch, whoſe occupations and diſtractions of life, or want of genius and outward helps, do not allow them to engage in long and profound meditations, are found to have generally underſtandings ſo ſhort and narrow, and ideas ſo falſe or confuſed, in matters of morality.

[316] And ſince this is the caſe of the greateſt part of mankind, it has no doubt been always God's will, that they, who had the greateſt light, and whom his providence had furniſhed with the greateſt helps, ſhould communicate their knowledge to ſuch, as were not able of themſelves to acquire it ſo eaſily, or in ſo great a degree.

RELIGION.

What is Religion? The true, eternal, immutable religion of God and nature, conſiſts, as I opine, in the filial love and fear of God, and the brotherly love of mankind; in the practice of all thoſe moral duties of truth and righteouſneſs, which reſult from it, under a fiducial truſt in, and dependence on God, and the conſtant ſenſe of his power and preſence in all our actions, as the rewarder of good and puniſher of bad men. This is the religion founded in nature and reaſon, and which muſt be at all times and every where the ſame. As this religion was in a great meaſure loſt, and neglected, amidſt the general ignorance, ſuperſtition, and idolatry of the world, it was the great buſineſs and deſign of revelation to reſtore it, and ſet moral truth and reaſon in its original light, by bringing mankind to [317]the right uſe of their reaſon and underſtanding in ſuch matters.

After Epicurus and Zeno, Of Eclectics. there were no new ſucceeding ſchemes of morality, but each man betook himſelf to that ſect, where he found what moſt ſuited his own ſentiments.

In the reign of Auguſtus, Potamo of Alexandria, introduced a manner of philoſophiſing, which was called the Eclectic, becauſe it conſiſted in collecting from all the tenets of preceding philoſophers, ſuch as appeared moſt reaſonable; out of which they formed each man his own ſyſtem of philoſophy.—It appears from Cicero's works, that he was an Eclectic.

And why ſhould it not be good in religion, as well as in philoſophy? I own I am an Eclectic in divinis. And the ſum of my religion is, without regard to modes or parties,—ſo to live to the glory of the Father,—without attachment to the creature,—for the ſanctification and happineſs of mankind; that when this fleeting ſcene of ſin and ſorrow ſhall vaniſh, and paſs away from ſight, the angels of God may give my ſoul a ſafe tranſition to that heavenly happineſs, which no thought can lay hold on, and which no art can deſcribe.

[318] Of reaſon and truth.The practice of reaſon and truth is the rule of action to God himſelf, and the foundation of all true religion. It is the firſt and higheſt obligation of all rational beings, and our divine Lord came down from heaven to earth to teach it to mankind. Chriſt preached a plain doctrine to men, fitted to reform their hearts and lives—intended to make them perfect in ſelf-denial, humility, love, goodneſs, and innocence; and to enoble them, with hearts raiſed above the world, to worſhip the Father in ſpirit and in truth.

But this glorious religion the Romiſh prieſts have perverted into a ſyſtem of myſteries, and ſtaring contradictions, the better to ſupport the worſt and moſt deplorable purpoſes of temporal wealth, power, pride, malice, and cruelty. In direct oppoſition to reaſon and common ſenſe, we muſt commence generous believers in an eccleſiaſtical chriſtianity, and confeſs the ſymbol of their holy Athanaſius, though it be no more, or better, than the effects of a luxuriant fancy, without likeneſs and correſpondency, in the real nature and reaſon of things; 17, 4, and 19 are 41, ſays convocation to his believers, and your religion, my brethren, is all a tremendous myſtery: You muſt adore as ſuch, what the Infidels renounce as a contradiction.

Thus ſhamefully do theſe prieſts ſink the credibility of our goſpel, and impoſe upon the [319]ſilly people, a ball of wax for the religion of Jeſus; making them believe contrary to knowledge, and prefer a ſyſtem that is a lye againſt the light of nature, and the goſpel.

But the chief end, duty, happineſs, and higheſt perfection that man can arrive at, conſiſts, and is found, in a perfect exerciſe of human reaſon.

We read in Chronicles, Of Integrity. that Hezekiah began his good reign with the revival of religion, which had long ſuffered by the neglect and profanation, or through the neglect and omiſſion of his predeceſſors. To this purpoſe he opened the doors of the houſe of the Lord, and iſſued a decree, that all Iſrael ſhould come to keep the paſſover, which they had not done of a long time. But as the legal cleanſing and purifying, could not be performed by great numbers that did eat the paſſover, by the appointed time, on account of many things, and particularly the force of long interval and diſuſe; therefore this irregularity employed the devotion of the good king, as the canon of the paſſover, under the ſtricteſt prohibition, and the ſevereſt penalty, forbid any one to eat, that did not come with outward and legal purity, No unclean perſon ſhall eat of it; and he prayed for the people, ſaying, The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart to ſeek God, [320]the Lord God of their fathers, though he be not cleanſed according to the purification of the ſanctuary; and the Lord hearkened unto Hezekiah, ſays the next verſe, and healed the people, that is, took off the penalties of the canon, and gave them the benefit of the rite. From hence it follows, that, however defective we may be in outward rites and ceremonies of a church, yet inward truth and purity will be accepted in default of outward things. Inward dispoſition is the ſubſtance of religion, and may compound for the want of outward matters; but outward ſervice can never be accepted inſtead of inward purification.

And it farther follows, if the outward ſolemnities of religion cannot be obtained upon lawful terms, (which is the caſe of many, in reſpect of Popery and Athanaſian worſhip,) then will the good Lord pardon and be propitious to thoſe who prepare their heart to ſeek him, though they be not cleanſed according to the ſolemn inſtitution, and ritual purification.

This text is in the vulgar Latin, Dominus bonus propitiabitur cunctis qui in toto corde requirunt Dominum, Deum patrum ſuorum, et non imputabit eis quod minus ſanctificati ſunt.—The good Lord will be propitious to all thoſe, who in their whole heart ſeek the Lord God of their fathers, and will not impute [321]to them their being leſs ſanctified than they ought.

Of Prieſtcraft in the tranſmiſſion of moveables, from the deceaſed to the living. * Hiſtories in all ages the full of the encroachments of the clergy, yet they all omit one of the moſt ſucceſsful ſtratagems to ingroſs money. We are indebted to our ſtatute-book for informing us of one of the moſt notorious pieces of prieſtcraft that ever was practiſed. Would one believe, that there is a country, and in Europe too, where the clergy gained ſuch an aſcendant over the minds of the people, as tamely to ſuffer the moveable eſtate of every man who died inteſtate, to be ſwallowed up by them; yet ſo prevalent was ſuperſtition in our country, that it produced a law preferring the Biſhop to the next of kin; and in its extenſion excluding the children, the wife, and the relations of the deceaſed, nay the creditor; and giving all to the Biſhop per averſionem. Such was the ſhameful rapacity of the clergy here for ages. Such a monſtrous practice was eſtabliſhed upon this foundation, that the moveable effects of every deceaſed perſon, his own appointment failing, ought to be laid out for promoting the good of his ſoul; and ſo the ORDINARY took poſſeſſion, without deigning to account with any mortal.—This began [322] temp. Hen. I. when the ORDINARY, for the good of the ſoul of the deceaſed, obtained a directing power, and was in the nature of an overſeer, and ſomewhat more. In the time of King John, the ORDINARY drew blood, as Bacon well expreſſes itDiſcourſe of laws. p. 1, and 66. and New abridgement of the law. p. 398.; for tho' the poſſeſſion was as formerly, yet the dividend muſt be in the view of the church, and by which means, the dividers were but mere inſtruments, and the right was vaniſhed into the clouds. But temp. Hen. III. it was ſettled, the ORDINARY had not only gotten the game, but gorged it. Both right and poſſeſſion were now become the clergy's: the ORDINARY was to diſtribute it according to pious uſes: and no uſe ſo pious as to appoint to himſelf and his brethren.

The 1ſt ſtatute that limited the power of the ORDINARY was 13th Ed. I. c. 19. By this the ORDINARY was obliged to ſatisfy the inteſtate's death ſo far as the goods extended.—And 31ſt Ed. III. cap. 2. the actual poſſeſſion was taken from the ORDINARY, by obliging him to give a deputation to the next and moſt lawful friends of the inteſtate, for adminiſtrating his goods. But this ſtatute proved but a weak check to the avarice of the clergy. Means were fallen upon to elude it, by preferring ſuch of the inteſtate's relations, who were willing to offer the beſt terms: this corrupt practice was ſuffered [325]in the days of Hen. VIII. when the clergy loſing ground, the ſtatute 21 Hen. VIII. was enacted, bearing, "That in caſe any perſon die inteſtate, or the executors refuſe to prove the teſtament, the Ordinary ſhall grant adminiſtration to the widow, or to the next of kin, or to both, taking ſurety for true adminiſtration."

This ſtatute, as it points out the particular perſons who are intitled to letters of adminiſtration, without leaving any choice to the Ordinary, was certainly intended to cut him out of all hope of making gain of the effects of perſons dying inteſtate. But the church does not eaſily quit its hold. Means were fallen upon to elude this law alſo. Though the poſſeſſion given by this ſtatute was wreſted out of the hands of the Ordinary, yet his pretenſions ſubſiſted intire, of calling the adminiſtrator to account, and obliging him or her to diſtribute the effects to pious uſes. This was an admirable engine in the hands of a churchman for ſqueezing money. An adminiſtrator who gave any conſiderable ſhare to the Biſhop, to be laid out by him, without doubt, in pious uſes, would not find much difficulty in making his accompt. This rank abuſe moved the judges ſolemnly to reſolve, that the Ordinary, after adminiſtration granted by him, cannot compel the adminiſtrator to make diſtributionNew abridgement of the law. p.398.. And at laſt, the right [324]of the next of kin was fully eſtabliſhed by ſtatute 22 and 23 Car. II. cap. 10. This. cuts out the Ordinary intirely.

Of the Athanaſian creed.If I thought the Athanaſian creed was a part of the religion of Jeſus, I ſhould be induced to entertain a hard thought of Chriſtianity. I ſhould think it enjoined a ſlaviſh ſubmiſſion to the dictates of deſigning men; and inſtead of a reaſonable ſervice, required us to renounce our underſtandings, to apoſtatize from humanity, and degenerate into brutes, by giving up our reaſon, which alone diſtinguiſhes us from them. Moſt unjuſt charge upon our holy religion! A religion, which enlarges our rational faculties, filling the mind with an aſtoniſhing idea of an eternal duration, and thereby giving us a contempt of the mean, tranſient pleaſures of this life, and which we and the brutes enjoy in common: A religion that requires only the higheſt degree of reverence towards the MOST HIGH, the moſt refined purity of heart and mind, and the moſt noble and diffuſive charity towards all mankind: In ſhort, that eſtabliſhes righteouſneſs upon earth, and intire obedience to the will of God; that ſo having put the oyl into our lamp, according to the goſpel parable, it may not only meaſure the courſe of time, but light us beyond it, to the coming of the bridegroom, and the morning of eternity.

[325] But this will not do for the Doctors, they muſt have eſtabliſhed CREDENDA for judgments of all ſizes—they muſt have a formulary of dogmatic theology — an ATHANASIAN JUMBLE, to ſupport the HOLY CHURCH; though their creed burleſques mathematical certainty, and renders their eccleſiaſtical chriſtianity inferior to the antient pagan religion. A trinity is the eccleſiaſtical God; but whether three diſtinct conſcious beings of co-ordinate power, equal independency, and unorigination, and ſo THREE proper deities;—or, only three ſymbols of natural powers—In this the Doctors are not agreed; but the majority are for the THREE proper Deities: this hereſy of three Gods we muſt ſubſcribe to, or the prieſts will number us with the infidels, and do us all the miſchief they can.—Hence it comes to paſs, that humanity, ſweetneſs of temper, and moderation, are baniſhed from ſociety; religion, like a cloak, is made uſe of to authoriſe hatred, violence, and injuſtice; and the chriſtian religion, as the prieſts have forged it, and ſhew it off, that is, upon its preſent footing, as an eſtabliſhment, is pernicious to mankind, and ought to go, that the people may be reſtored again to Chriſt's religion, and be led to attend to the command of God; which is to believe in the name of his ſon Jeſus Chriſt, and to love one another.

FAITH.
[326]

"Faith is the ſubſtance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not ſeen;" (Heb. xi. 1.) that is, faith is ſuch a firm perſuaſion as gives, as it were, a ſubſtance or preſent exiſtence to the good things which we hope for, and which are not yet in being, and as engages us to depend upon the truth of unſeen things, as really, as upon ocular demonſtration.

—"He endured, as ſeeing him who is inviſible;" (ver. 27.) that is, Moſes as really believed the being and attributes of the inviſible God, as if he had ſeen him with his eyes; and fully depended upon his conduct and aſſiſtance.

The better thing provided for Chriſtians.

"And theſe all having obtained a good report through faith, received not the promiſe, God having provided ſome better thing for us, that they without us ſhould not be made perfect;" (Heb. xi. 39, 40.) that is,—Though the upright under the law have a good character in Scripture, and of conſequence were accepted of God upon the account of their faith in the divine power and goodneſs, yet they received not the promiſed reward of another life, immediately on their leaving this [327]world: God provided this better thing for us Chriſtians, that we ſhould be made happy immediately, as ſoon as we leave this world, that ſo they might not be made happy in heaven, till Chriſtianity commenced, and Chriſtians ſhould be there received to happineſs with them.

Note 1. It is plain from what the Apoſtle ſays before, that the thing promiſed is the better and more enduring ſubſtance in heaven.

2. The better thing provided for Chriſtians, cannot be the reſurrection from the dead, and the being, after that, received into the heavenly Jeruſalem; ſince herein we ſhall have nothing better than the good people who lived under the law: therefore, better things can only mean our enjoyment of God immediately upon our leaving this world.

It is ſtrange then that Biſhop Fell, and Whitby ſay, the better thing means the Meſſias, or the heavenly country to be fully poſſeſſed at the end of the world.

Of the ſame opinion is Pyle.—He ſays, our pious anceſtors under the law, though in a ſtate of reſt and happineſs, after death, yet received not the full and complete enjoyment of celeſtial glory, that being deferred till the laſt and great diſpenſation of the Meſſiah be [328]paſt, that ſo they and ſincere Chriſtians, may be all rewarded and crowned together, with the happineſs both of body and ſoul, at the final day of judgment: But if ſo, tell me Mr. Pyle, where is the better thing provided for us Chriſtians?

3. Beſides, if the Apoſtle may be his own interpreter, the word perfect means the intermediate ſtate of good ſouls in paradiſe, and not the complete ſtate after the reſurrection. In the next chapter, he ſpeaks of the ſpirits of the juſt made perfect, by which he means undoubtedly the ſeparate ſouls now in glory.

In a word, the deſign of the Apoſtle was to prove that, ſince God has provided ſome better thing for us, we appear to be more in his favour; and therefore the argument from their being juſtified to our being juſtified by faith, is ſtronger, that is, ſuch a faith as has an operative influence, by rendering our lives a comment upon the bleſſed nature of God.

And that this was the meaning of the Apoſtle in the ſomething better provided for us Chriſtians, appears yet plainer from the conſequence drawn by the inſpired writer, to wit, that we ought with the greater patience and courage to endure perſecution, ſince God has provided ſomething better for us [329]than for them. If the ancient believers held out, who expected but a ſtate of ſleep, till the time of the general reſurrection: much more ſhould we patiently ſuffer affliction, and even death itfelf, for the ſake of truth, and of the goſpel, when we know, that God has promiſed us ſomething better; to wit, that we ſhall be conducted to paradiſe immediately after death, and be there ſpirits of juſt men made perfect, and be with Chriſt, which is far better than either to ſleep after death, or to live longer in this world.

Let us lay aſide (then) every weight, and the ſin which doth ſo eaſily beſet us, and let us run with patience the race that is ſet before us. Let us put away every thing from us, that would hinder us from improving in virtue and goodneſs; looking to and imitating Jeſus, the leader and captain of the faithful, and an example of ſpotleſs virtue and perfect obedience. The love of the world is enmity with God, and to place our affections here, is to vilify that better proviſion which he has made for us. We are but ſtrangers and pilgrims here. The human ſtate is but a paſſage, not a place of abode. It is a ſtation of exerciſe and diſcipline, and was not deſigned for the place of enjoyment. That happy country is before us.

AVOIDINGS.
[330]

Avoid all indirect arts in the purſuit of a fortune.—All unlawful methods in ſelf-preſervation.—And every gratification that militates with reaſon and benevolence.

The Offices of a Chriſtian.

Theſe are heavenly-mindedneſs, and contempt of the world, and chuſing rather to die than commit a moral evil. Such things, however, are not much eſteemed by the generality of Chriſtians: Moſt people laugh at them, and look upon them as indiſcretions; therefore there is but little true chriſtianity in the world. It has never been my luck to meet with many people that had theſe three neceſſary qualifications.—And as for the people, excluſive of their going to church to make a character—or to ogle one another—or out of ſuperſtition to perform ſo much opus operatum, a job of lip-ſervice, which they idly fancy to be religion, they, I mean the great and the ſmall, might as well be Heathens as Chriſtians, for any real chriſtian purpoſe they anſwer, in a ſtrict adherence to the three offices aforementioned. The name of Chriſtian ſounds over Europe, and large parts of Aſia, Africa, and America: [331]But if a Chriſtian is what St. Paul defines it, to wit, a man that is heavenly-minded, that contemns the world, and would die rather than commit a moral evil, then is the number of Chriſtians very ſmall indeed.

The meaning of John vi. 44. No man can come to me, except the Father draw him.

That is,—No one can be a Chriſtian, unleſs his regard for the Deity and natural religion inclines him to receive a more improved ſcheme of religion.

But Dr. Young, in one of his ſermons, explains this text in the following manner.—No one can live up to the religion of Jeſus, and reach Chriſtian perfection, unleſs the Father enlightens and enables him, by the operative influence of his holy ſpirit. We can do nothing, in reſpect of what ought to be done, to be more than nominal Chriſtians, without the inward principle of ſanctification.—This I think is mere methodiſm.

N. B. The excellent Dr. Lardner expounds the text in the following words:— No man will come to me, and receive my pure, ſublime, and ſpiritual doctrine, unleſs he have firſt gained ſome juſt apprehenſions concerning the general principles of religion. And if a man have ſome good notions of God, and his perfections, and his will, as [332]already revealed, he will come unto me. If any man is well diſpoſed: if he has a love of truth, and a deſire to advance in virtue, and religious knowledge; he will readily hearken to me, and believe in me. Sermons, Vol. I. p. 303.

Of Baptiſm, in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

What is the meaning of baptizing them into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghoſt?

It ſignifies receiving men by baptiſm to the profeſſion and privileges of that religion, which was taught by the Father, Son, and Spirit, that is, which the Father taught by the Son, in his life-time, and by the Spirit, after his aſcenſion.

Or, to be baptized, is ſolemnly to profeſs our reſolution to adhere to that holy doctrine, which is the mind and will of God the Father, publiſhed to the world by his Son, whom he ſent from heaven for that purpoſe, and confirmed by the power of the Holy Ghoſt.

Note, An able writer, St. Hillary, ſays (De Trinitate, lib. 2. ad calcem, on Matt. xxviii. 19.) that baptiſing in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, ſignifies, — In confeſſion of the author of all [333]things, and of the only begotten, and of the gift.

Of Chriſtian Idolatry.

What a ſurpriſing incident is idolatry in the church of Chriſt! that after the religion of Jeſus had accompliſhed its glorious deſign, and ſubverted idolatry and ſuperſtition throughout the world, it ſhould itſelf be wounded almoſt to death, by the enemy it had ſubdued! This is the caſe all over the realms of popery. And can they be ſaid to have any true religion among them, where the theology of Athanaſius prevails?

Churchiſm and Creeds.

I have no very good opinion of creeds. Jeſus Chriſt came with a legatarian power from God, the Supreme Being, to declare his will to mankind; and the great work to be done, (ſo far as I can find in the goſpel,) is, the perfecting our minds in all that is truly excellent; by labouring to excel in all the virtues of the goſpel, by loving the whole race of mankind with an univerſal charity, and ſtriving to add to the ſatisfaction and happineſs of all about us, and with whom we have any connexion.

SECTION X.

[334]
Thou attribute divine! thou ray of God!
Immortal reaſon! come, and with thee bring,
In thy exulting train, invincible,
The honeſt purpoſe, and the chearful heart;
The joyful fancy, fill'd with images
Of truth, of ſcience, and of ſocial love.
There is no ground for fear, while we are good:
Nature's the nurſe, and providence the guide.

An account of Richmond the beau, and old Ribble the chemiſt.§. I. HAVING loſt Maria, as related in the ninth ſection, I went up to London, and on my way to the metropopolis, dined at a pleaſant village, not far from Nottingham, where I ſaw two gentlemen well worth mentioning. They were ſitting in a room the waiter ſhewed me into, and had each of them a porringer of mutton broth. One of them ſeemed a little conſumptive creature, about four feet ſix inches high, uncommonly thin, or rather exſiccated to a cuticle. His broth and bread however he ſupped up with ſome reliſh. He ſeemed to be paſt threeſcore. His name was Ribble.

The other was a young man, once very handſome, tall and ſtrong, but ſo conſumed [335]and weak, that he could hardly ſpeak or ſtir. His name was Richmond. He attempted to get down his broth, but not above a ſpoonful or two could he ſwallow. He appeared to me to be a dying man.

While I beheld things with aſtoniſhment, the ſervant brought in dinner, a pound of rump ſtakes, and a quart of green peas; two cuts of bread, a tankard of ſtrong beer, and a pint of port wine: with a fine appetite, I ſoon diſpatched my meſs, and over my wine, to help digeſtion, began to ſing the following lines:—

I.
Tell me, I charge you, O ye fylvan ſwains,
Who range the mazy grove, or flow'ry plains,
Beſide what fountain, in what breezy bower,
Reclines my charmer in the noon-tide hour?
II.
Soft, I adjure you, by the ſkipping fawns,
By the fleet roes, that bound along the lawns;
Soft tread, ye virgin daughters of the grove,
Nor with your dances wake my ſleeping love.
III.
Come, Roſalind, O come, and infant flow'rs
Shall bloom and ſmile, and form their charms by yours;
[336] By you the lilly ſhall her white compoſe;
Your bluſh ſhall add new bluſhes to the roſe.
IV.
Hark! from yon bow'rs what airs ſoft warbled play!
My ſoul takes wing to meet th' inchanting lay.
Silence, ye nightingales! attend the voice!
While thus it warbles, all your ſongs are noiſe.
V.
See! from the bower a form majeſtic moves,
And ſmoothly gliding, ſhines along the groves;
Say, comes a goddeſs from the golden ſpheres?
A goddeſs comes, or Roſalind appears.

While I was ſinging theſe lines, and all the while I was at dinner, the gentlemen looked with wonder at me, and at laſt, as ſoon as I was ſilent, old Ribble expreſſed himſelf in the following words.— You are the moſt fortunate of mortals to be ſure, Sir. A happy man indeed. You ſeem to have health and peace, contentment and tranquillity, in perfection. You are the more ſtriking, when ſuch ſpectacles as my couſin Richmond (pointing to the dying gentleman in the room) and I are in contraſt before you. I will tell you our ſtories, Sir, in return [337]for your charming ſong, and hope what I am going to ſay may be of ſervice to you, as you are coming on, and we going off from this world.

The picture of beau Richmond.My kinſman there, the dying Richmond, in that chair, was once a Sampſon, and the handſomeſt man of his time, though the remains of beauty or ſtrength cannot now be traced. By drinking and whoring he brought himſelf to what you ſee; to a ſtate that eludes all the arts of medicine. He has an aggravated cough, which produces a filthy pus of an aſh-colour, ſtreaked with blood, and mixed with filaments torn from his lungs and membranes, and with the utmoſt difficulty he reſpires. He has a perpetual violent pain in his breaſt, a pricking ſoreneſs in his paps when he coughs, and defects in in all his functions. He has that flux of the belly, which is called a lientery, and the fluids of his body are waſted in colliquative ſweats. A ſtretching pain racks him if he lies on either ſide, by reaſon of ſome adheſion of the lungs to the pleura. His hair is fallen off, and his nails you ſee are dead-coloured, and hooked. His countenance, you obſerve, is Hippocratical, the very image of death: his face a dead pale, his eyes ſunk, his noſe ſharp, his cheeks hollow, his temples fallen, and his whole body thin like a ſkeleton. What a figure now is this [338]once curled darling of the ladies: It was done, good Sir, by the hand of Intemperance.

The picture of a temperate man, born with a conſumption.§. 3. As to myſelf, (Ribble continued,) I brought a confumption into the world with me, and by art have ſupported under it. I was born with the ſharp ſhoulders you ſee, which are called pterogoides, or wing-like, and had a contracted thorax, and long cheſt, a thin and long neck, a flaccid tone of all the parts about the breaſt, and a very flabby contexture of the muſcles all over my body: but nevertheleſs, by a ſtrict temperance all my life, and by following the directions of Dr. Bennet in his Theatrum tabidorum, I have not only made life tolerable, but ſo removed the burden of ſtagnant phlegm from the thorax, by throwing it down by ſtool, and up by expectoration, — exhaling it ſometimes through the ſkin, and at other times digeſting it with faſting, that I contrive more uſeful hours to myſelf than the ſtrong and young can enjoy in their continued ſcenes of diſſipation and riot. In me is ſeen the wonderful effect of rule and ſobriety. I am now paſt fifty ſeveral years, notwithſtanding my very weak and miſerable conſtitution, and by attending to nature, and never indulging in gratification or exceſs, am not only able to live without pain, but to divert life by experimental philoſophy. (Ribble went on) I [339]came down to this pleaſant place, chiefly for the benefit of poor Richmond, my kinſman, (whom you ſee with his eyes ſhut before you, the very picture of death,) and alſo, with a view to do ſome good to myſelf, as it is the fineſt air in the world. I took a houſe in the village to live the more eaſily, as the lodging-houſes are all crowded here, and reſolved to amuſe the days I have left in cultivating the ſcience of chemiſtry; not in order to finiſh what nature has begun, do you ſee me, (as the alchymiſts talk,) and procure to the imperfect metals the much deſired coction; but, to examine ſubſtances, and by the examination, obtain ideas of the bodies capable of the three degrees of fermentation, ſpiritous, acetous, and putrid; and of the products of thoſe fermentations, to wit, ardent ſpirits, acids analogous to thoſe of vegetables and animals, and volatile alkalis.

To this purpoſe, I made for myſelf a laboratory, and about a year ago, began to employ my veſſels and furnaces in various proceſſes. A vaſt variety of entertaining things have ſince occurred, and my life is thereby made agreeable and pleaſing; though to look at my poor frame, one would think me incapable of any ſatisfactions. I will give you an inſtance or two of my amuſements, and do you judge, if they may not afford a mind more delight, than the tumultuous [340]joys of love and wine, horſe-racing, cock-fighting, hunting, and other violent pleaſures can yield.

A hiſtory of metals.§. 4. You know, good Sir, I ſuppoſe, that there are ſix metals, two perfect, and four imperfect. Gold and ſilver, perfect: the others, copper, tin, lead, and iron. Quickſilver is by ſome called a ſeventh metal: but that I think cannot be, as it is not malleable. Yet it is not to be confounded with the ſemi-metals, as it differs from the metals no otherwiſe than by being conſtantly in fuſion; which is occaſioned by its aptneſs to flow with ſuch a ſmall degree of heat, that be there ever ſo little warmth on earth, there is ſtill more than enough to keep mercury in fuſion. It muſt be called then, in my opinion, a metallic body of a particular kind: And the more ſo, let me add, as art has not yet found out a way of depriving it wholly of its Phlogiſton.

What phlogiſton is.I muſt obſerve to you, good Sir, in order to be intelligible in what I am ſaying, that the Phlogiſton in metals is the matter of fire as a conſtituent principle in bodies. It is the element of fire combined with ſome other ſubſtance, which ſerves it as a baſis for conſtituting a kind of ſecondary principle; and it differs from pure fixed fire in theſe particulars, that it communicates neither heat nor [341]light,—it cauſes no change, but only renders body apt to fuſe by the force of a culinary fire,—and it can be conveyed from body to body, with this circumſtance, that the body deprived of the phlogiſton is greatly altered, as is the body that receives it.

What ſemi-metals are.And as to the ſemi-metals, (which I mentioned) you will be pleaſed to obſerve, that they are regulus of antimony, biſmuth, zinc, and regulus of arſenic. They are not malleable, and eaſily part with their phlogiſton. Zinc and biſmuth are free from the poiſonous quality: but arſenic is the moſt violent poiſon; eſpecially the ſhining cryſtalline calx of it, or flowers raiſed by the fire, and named white arſenic: and regulus of antimony is likewiſe a poiſon; not in its nature, but becauſe it always contains a portion of arſenic in its compoſition.

The nature and compoſition of Antimony. Antimony is of a pretty white bright colour, and has the ſplendor, opacity, and gravity of a metal, but under the hammer crumbles to duſt. A moderate heat makes it flow, and a violent fire diſſipates it into ſmoke and white vapors. They adhere to cold bodies, and when the farina is collected, we call theſe vapors flowers of antimony.

What butter of antimony is. Butter of antimony, good Sir, that wonderful corroſive, is a compound made by diſtilling pulverized regulus of antimony, and corroſive ſublimate. The production, on operation, is a white matter, thick and ſcarce [342]fluid, which is the regulus of antimony united with the acid of ſea-ſalt. Here the corroſive ſublimate is decompounded, the mercury revivified, and the acid combined with it, quits it to join the regulus of antimony, becauſe its affinity with it is greater.

(Little Ribble, the Chemiſt, went on, and with difficulty I could refrain from laughing; not on account of the man's talking nonſenſe, for his diſcourſe was the very reverſe of that; but by reaſon of the gripe he had of my arm, the pulls he gave me, if I happened to look another way, and the ſurpriſing eagerneſs with which he ſpoke; which ſhewed, that he was chemically ſtruck to an amazing degree.)

Liver of antimony.But liver of antimony, good Sir, is made of equal parts of nitre and antimony. On the mixture's being expoſed to the action of fire, a violent detonation enſues, and the deflagrating nitre conſumes the ſulphur of the antimony, and even a part of its phlogiſton. A greyiſh matter remains after the detonation, and this is what we call liver of antimony. It contains a fixed nitre, a vitriolated tartar, and the reguline part of antimony vitrified.

How antimony separates gold from other metals.The principal uſe the Chemiſts make of antimony is to ſeparate gold from the other metals. All metals, gold excepted, have a greater affinity with ſulphur than the reguline [343]part of antimony. As to gold, it is incapable of contracting any union with ſulphur. If therefore I have a maſs compounded of various metals, and want to get the gold out, I melt it with antimony, and as ſoon as it flows, every thing in the maſs which is not gold, unites with the ſulphur, in or of the antimony, and cauſes two ſeparations, that of the ſulphur of antimony from its reguline part, and that of the gold from the metals with which it was mixed: This produces two new combinations. The metals and the ſulphur, in fuſion, being lighter, riſe to the ſurface; and the gold and the reguline part of antimony being heavieſt, the combination of them ſinks to the bottom. Now the buſineſs is to part theſe two, and to this purpoſe, I expoſe the combination to a degree of fire, capable of diſſipating into vapors all the ſemi-metal the maſs contains. The reguline being volatile, goes off by the great heat, and my gold remains pure and fixed in my crucible.

The excellence of antimonial wine.As to the antimonial wine, made by the eſſence of antimony, that is, by impregnating the moſt generous white wine, with the minims or leſts of antimony, which the phyſicians have found out, it is not the part of a chemiſt to ſpeak of that; and therefore, I ſhall only obſerve to you, that it is the beſt vomit, the beſt purge, and the beſt thing for [344]a ſweat, in the world. I will tell you, good Sir, what I heard an eminent Doctor ſay of it. — Affirmo ſanctiſſime, nihil inde melius, nihil tutius, nihil efficacius, deprehendi unquam, quam tritum illum, ac ſimplicem vini automonialis infuſum ex vino albo generoſo, aromate aliquo ſtomachico adjecto. Epotus largiter maximas movit vomitiones, in minuta tantùm quantitate, ad guttas puta viginta, aut triginta, adhibitus ſudores elicit benignos; paulo tamen majorae aleum ſolvit leniter. Medicamentum, paratu quidem facillimum, at viribus maximum.—And therefore, good Sir, when any thing ails you, let me recommend the antimonial wine to you. Thirty drops will ſweat you effectually. About forty or fifty purges in a happy manner.

The nature of Biſmuth.But as to the ſecond ſemi-metal, biſmuth, it has almoſt the ſame appearance as regulus of antimony, but of a more duſky caſt, inclining ſomewhat to red. It requires leſs heat than antimony to flow, and like it, and the other ſemi-metals, is volatile, by the action of a violent fire, and under the hammer is duſt. In fuſion, it mixes well with all metals, and whitens them by union, but deſtroys their malleability. In flowing, it loſes its phlogiſton with its metallic form. And it has a ſingular property, which the other ſemi-metals have not, of attenuating lead ſo as to make [345]it amalgamatic with mercury, ſo perfectly as to make it paſs with it through ſhamoy leather. As ſoon as the amalgama is made, the biſmuth goes off or ſeparates; but the lead for ever remains united with the mercury.

An extraordinary sympathetic Ink.It is of a ſolution of the ore of biſmuth, we make that very curious and uſeful thing, called ſympathetic ink, which is a liquor of a beautiful colour, like that of the lilach or pipe-tree bloſſom. The proceſs in preparing this liquor is tedious and difficult by aqua fortis, aqua regis, and fire, and therefore the ink is rarely to be met with. It is not to be had, unleſs ſome gentleman who makes chemiſtry his employment, gives one a preſent of a bottle of it; as I do now to you, in hopes it may ſome time or other be of ſingular ſervice to you; for I have conceived a great regard for you, tho' I never ſaw you before, as you ſeem not only more teachable than any I have met with, but to delight in the information I give you relating to chemical things.

Here I returned my Chemiſt many thanks, and profeſſed my eternal obligation to him; that I could liſten for years to him; and wiſhed it was poſſible to become his diſciple, that I might ſee him by experiment facilitate the ſtudy of a ſcience, more entertaining, inſtructive, and extenſively uſeful than any other. But how, dear Sir, am I to uſe this ink, you are ſo vaſtly good as to give me, [346]to make it more uſeful than any other ink could be?

I will tell you (Ribble replied): you muſt write with this lilach-coloured liquor, on good well gummed paper, that does not ſink; and the ſingularity of the ink, conſiſts in its property of diſappearing entirely, and becoming inviſible, though it be not touched with any thing whatever: And this diſtinguiſhes it from all others. The writing muſt dry in a warm air, and while it is cold no colour can be perceived: but gently warming it before the fire, the writing gradually acquires a greeniſh blue colour, which is viſible as long as the paper continues a little warm, and diſappears entirely when it cools. When other ſympathetic inks are made to appear by proper application, they do not diſappear again; but this liquor from the ore of biſmuth muſt have the fire or heat kept to it, to render it legible. If a man writes to his miſtreſs, ſuppoſe, or to a miniſter of ſtate, with lemon juice, once the writing has been warmed by the fire, and the letters by that means appear, the epiſtle may be afterwards read at any time and place; but if the lady's father ſhould by accident get your letter, written in lilach-coloured liquor, it muſt ſtill remain a ſecret to him: For if on getting it, and opening the ſeal, he could ſee no writing, and therefore imagining it was writ with lemon juice, or [347]ſome other ſympathetic ink, he ſhould hold it himſelf to the fire, or bid his ſervant hold it to the heat, that the letters might be produced, and made viſible, yet the moment biſmuth-ink is taken away from the fire, and begins to cool, it is as inviſible again, as a ſheet of white paper. How ſerviceable this may be on various occaſions, may be eaſily conceived.

Of Zinc.But as to our third ſemi-metal, called Zinc, this is ſo like biſmuth to appearance, that ſome have confounded it with Zinc; though it differs from it eſſentially in its properties, and will unite with all metalline ſubſtances, except biſmuth. It is volatile by fire above all things, and makes a ſublimate of the metallic ſubſtances with which it is fuſed. Zinc mixed with copper in the quantity of a fourth part, produces braſs. If the Zinc is not very pure, the compoſition proves tombac, or Prince's metal.

The nature of regulus of arſenic. Regulus of arſenic, the fourth ſemi-metal, has a colour reſembling lead, unites readily with metallic ſubſtances, and renders them brittle, unmalleable, and volatile. The calx of it produced by fire, may be made volatile by more fire, and in this differs from the calx of all metalline ſubſtances; for all other calx's are fixed, and cannot be moved. It has likewiſe a ſaline character, in which its corroſive quality or poiſon conſiſts: a quality from [348]which the other metallic ſubſtances are free, when they are not combined with a ſaline matter. Theſe things being noticed, in relation to metals, and ſemi-metals in general, I will now proceed to relate a few curious caſes, in reſpect of the metals.

The characters of gold. Gold, our firſt metal, has ten ſenſible criterions. It is the heavieſt and denſeſt of all bodies: the moſt ſimple of all bodies: the moſt fixed of all bodies: the only body that cannot be turned into ſcoriae, by antimony and lead; the moſt ductile of all bodies: ſo ſoft as to be ſcarcely elaſtic or ſonorous: muſt be red hot to melt: is diſſolvable by ſea-ſalt and its preparations, but remains untouched by any other ſpecies of ſalts; and of conſequence not liable to ruſt; as aqua regia and ſpirit of ſea-ſalt do not float in the air, unleſs in laboratories; or chemiſts ſhops, where we find them ſometimes: It unites ſpontaneouſly with pure quick-ſilver: It never waſtes by emitting effluvia, or exhalations. Theſe are the ten ſenſible properties or characteriſtics of this metal. It is certainly pure gold, if it has theſe criterions, and they are of great uſe in life; eſpecially to perſons who have to do with that ſubtil tribe, the alchemiſts.

As to the weight of gold, it is more than nineteen times heavier than water, bulk for bulk, and this property is inſeparable from it; it being impoſſible to render gold more [349]or leſs heavy; and for this reaſon, the ſpecific gravity of gold, if it had no other criterion, might demonſtrate real gold. To make gold, other metals muſt be rendered equiponderant to it: And therefore, if an alchemiſt ſhould offer to obtrude a metal on you for gold, hang an equal weight of pure, and of ſuſpected gold by two threads to a nice ballance, and on immerging them in water, if the alchemiſt's gold be pure, the water will retain both pieces in oequilibrio; otherwiſe, the adulterate metal will riſe, and the pure deſcend.

The reaſon is, all bodies loſe ſome of their weight in a fluid, and the weight which a body loſes in a fluid, is to its whole weight, as the ſpecific gravity of the fluid is to that of the body. The ſpecific gravity of a body is the weight of it, when the bulk is given; 38 grains of gold weighed in the air, is not the true weight of it: for there it loſes the weight of an equal bulk of air: It weighs only 36 grains in the water, and there it loſes the weight of as much water, as is equal in bulk to itſelf, that is, 2 grains, and as the gold weighs 38 grains, it follows, that the weight of water is to that of gold, bulk for bulk, as 2 to 38, that is, as the weight loſt in the fluid is to the whole weight.

And ſo, if a piece of gold, and a piece of copper, are equiponderant in air, yet in water the gold will outweigh the copper; becauſe [350]their bulks, tho' of equal weight, are inverſely as their ſpecific gravities, that is, the gold muſt be as much leſs than the copper, as the ſpecific gravity of gold is greater than that of copper: And as they muſt both loſe weight in proportion to bulk in water, therefore the gold, the leſſer of the two, loſes leſs of its weight than the copper does, and conſequently, out-weighs the copper in water. I hope this is clear. The caſe is the ſame, in proportion, in pure gold, and gold mixed with other metals. The bulk of the pure gold muſt be leſs than that of allayed gold, and its weight greater in water; tho' both equiponderate (a pound ſuppoſe) in air.

It is very plain, Sir, and I requeſt you will proceed. You give me valuable information, and oblige me very much. This pleaſed the Chemiſt, and the ingenious little Ribble went on.

As to the ſimplicity of gold, we mean, by a ſimple body, that whoſe minuteſt part has all the phyſical properties of the whole maſs. Now diſſolve a grain of gold in aqua regia, and from a ſingle drop of the ſolution, a particle of gold may be ſeparated, and have all the characters of gold, (except thoſe of magnitude,) though the ſeparated particle of gold ſhall only be the millionth part of the grain. —Or, fuſe a ſingle grain of gold with a maſs of ſilver, and mix the whole together, ſo that [351]the gold ſhall be equally diſtributed: then take a particle thereof, and you will have a particle of perfect gold; for diſſolve the leaſt part of the mixture in aqua fortis, and a quantity of gold will precipitate to the bottom. It will bear the ſame proportion to the grain, that the part diſſolved did to the whole maſs.

Having mentioned aqua regia and aqua fortis, I muſt, to be intelligible, ſay two or three words in relation to them. Aqua regia is an extract by fire from ſea-ſalt and ſpirit of nitre. The acid liquor that comes over from them into the receiver, is aqua regis.—Aqua fortis, or ſpirit of nitre, is a nitrous acid ſeparated from its baſis, nitre, by the vitriolic acid. Aqua regis only will diſſolve gold. Silver is not ſoluble by aqua regis; its proper ſolvent is the acid of nitre or aqua fortis. — But if you want to ſeparate a maſs of gold and ſilver, either will do. You may diſſolve the gold by aqua regia, and let the ſilver remain pure: or, diſſolve the ſilver by aqua fortis, and let the gold remain pure. Only note in this caſe of a mixed lump of gold and ſilver, the operation by aqua fortis is preferable, for this reaſon; that aqua regis in diſſolving the gold, takes up likewiſe a little ſilver; but aqua fortis hath not the leaſt effect on gold:—And note further, that if there be equal parts of gold and ſilver in the mixture, they cannot be [352]parted by aqua fortis. It has not then the leaſt effect on the ſilver, which is very ſtrange. To make aqua fortis act duly on ſilver mixed with gold, the ſilver muſt be at leaſt in a triple proportion to that of the gold. The reaſon of the ſingular effect is, that when the gold exceeds, or the parts of both are equal in quantity, then, as both are intimate, united in the maſs, the parts or minims of the gold coat over the parts of the ſilver, and defend them from the action of the aqua fortis. In this caſe, aqua regia muſt be uſed to diſſolve the gold, and leave the ſilver pure: or, as aqua regia takes up a little of the ſilver, when it diſſolves the gold, melt the metalline maſs, and add as much ſilver, as will make it a triple proportion to the gold. Then you may by aqua fortis take up all your ſilver in the diſſolution, and leave all the gold pure.

But as to the third criterion of gold, its being the moſt fixed of all bodies, this is evident from the violence of fire having no effect on it. An ounce of it expoſed for the ſpace of two months, in the eye of a glaſs furnace, does not loſe half a grain. It may from thence be ſaid to be incorruptible.

As to gold's reſiſting antimony, and not turning into ſcoriae by its force, it is moſt certain from hence, that if you take a maſs conſiſting of gold, ſilver, copper, the other metals, with ſtones, &c. and fuſe it with antimony, the [353]bodies will flow on the ſurface, and be eaſily blown off by the bellows: the antimony all evaporates, and leaves the gold alone. This is called the laſt teſt of gold, to try the purity of it. If the remaining gold have loſt nothing of its weight, it is allowed perfectly pure, and called gold of twenty-four carats; or if it be found 1/24 lighter, it is ſaid to be twenty-three carats fine.

The wonderful ductility of gold.But as to the ductility of gold, this is the moſt extraordinary property of it. The arts of gold-beating and wire-drawing, ſhew us things quite amazing. In leaf-gold, a grain and a quarter of the metal, may be made to cover an area of fifty ſquare inches; and if the leaf be divided by parallel lines 1/100 part of an inch, a grain of gold will be divided into five hundred thouſand minute ſquares, all diſcernible by the eye: yet this is not the moſt can be done by the hammer. A ſingle grain of gold may be ſtretched into a leaf that will cover a houſe, and yet the leaf remain ſo compact, as not to tranſmit the rays of light, nor ever admit ſpirit of wine to tranſude. This however is nothing to the effects of wire-drawing.

A gold wire is only a ſilver one gilt, and if you coat a ſilver cylinder of forty-eight ounces weight, with one ounce of gold, which is ſufficient, this cylinder may be drawn out into a wire ſo very fine, that two yards thereof [354]ſhall weigh only one grain, and 98 yards only 49 grains, ſo that one grain of gold gilds 98 yards; and of courſe the ten thouſandth part of a grain, is above one third part of an inch long. And ſince the third part of an inch is yet capable of being divided into ten leſſer parts viſible to the eye, it is evident that the hundred thouſandth part of a grain of gold, may be ſeen without the help of a microſcope: And yet ſo intimately do its parts cohere, that though the gold wherewith the wire is coated, be ſtretched to ſuch a degree, there is not any appearance of the colour of ſilver underneath. Nor is this all.

In ſupergildings, that is, to make the richeſt lace, they employ but 6 ounces of gold, to cover or gild 45 marks of ſilver, that is, twenty-two pounds and a half avordupoiſe weight, rounded into the form of a cylinder or roller, which hath fifteen lines in diameter, and twenty-two inches in length; and here the ſtratum of gold which invelopes the ingot that is to be drawn into wire, hath no more thickneſs than the fifteenth part of a line, which is extremely thin; as a line is the twelfth part of an inch.

But to make the common gold-thread, they do not uſe more than two ounces of gold, and ſometimes not more than one, to gild or cover ingot I have mentioned, and then the inveloping ſtratum is not more in thickneſs, if [355]two ounces be employed, than the 45th part of a line; and if one ounce be uſed, but the 90th part of a line. Two ounces of gold is generally uſed, in gilding or covering the ingot I have mentioned, and vaſtly thinner muſt the ſtratum be, when the ingot is drawn till it ſurpaſſes the fineneſs of a hair, and the diameter is nine thouſand times ſmaller than what it had in the maſs: By weighing out half a dram of this thread or wire, it is found by meaſuring the length of the half dram, that the ingot of 22 ½ pounds, and 22 inches long, is changed into a length of 1163520 feet, that is, ninety-ſix leagues and 196 fathom; for the half dram of wire or thread meaſures 202 feet; by conſequence, an ounce of it, 3232 feet; a mark of it, or eight ounces, 25856 feet. And yet, aſtoniſhing as this length is, for two ounces of bold to be drawn to, the gold which covers the ſilver never ceaſes to gild it. The gold ſtill keeps pace with the wire, ſtretch it to what length the drawers can, through the wire-drawing irons, and holes much ſmaller one than another. The ſilver never appears.

It does not however reſt there. Before the thread or wire is wound on ſilk, and before they ſpin it, it muſt be flatted by paſſing it between ſteel wheels extremely well poliſhed, and this flatting increaſes its length to more than a ſeventh part. One ingot, therefore, [356]of 8 marks or 22 ½ pounds, and 22 inches long, by this increaſe of a 7th part, is brought to the length of 111 leagues, that is, about 300 Engliſh miles.

But amazing as this extent is, it is not the utmoſt bounds to which the ductility of gold may be carried. One ounce only of gold is ſometimes uſed to cover one ingot, and drawn to the length I have mentioned, and by the time it has paſſed the flatting wheels, the gold that covers the ſilver laminae, muſt have its thickneſs reduced to leſs than the millionth part of a line; that is, a twelve millionth of an inch. This is beyond the reach of our conception. Imagination cannot plumb her line ſo low.

But, Sir, (I ſaid) May not the gold be divided into ſmall grains ſeparate one from another, but yet near enough to give their colour to the ſilver? Though we may not be able to ſee the thing, yet I think it may be imagined; the gold on the laminae doth not form a continued leaf.

Experience, good Sir, demonſtrates the contrary,—that every point of ſilver hath its cover of gold. Put a piece of this gilt wire in aqua fortis, the ſilver will be diſſolved, and the gold left a perfect, continuous tube. It is an amazing thing! And ſhews the aſtoniſhing power of the firſt cauſe! As to the reaſon of this ductility, and why gold in ſuch a [357]manner adheres to ſilver, ſo as never to part from it, if the 22 ½ pounds of ſilver gilded with one ounce of gold could be extended by art for ever, this is paſt our finding out. It is a ſecret of nature we cannot form any idea of.

Calignoſa nocte premit Deus.

Ribble went on. Theſe are the things moſt remarkable in relation to gold; and I have only to add, that as to the manner of getting it, it is found ſometimes in glebes or clods, conſiſting of gold alone; ſometimes in a powdry form, and then called gold- duſt, or ſand-gold, in the ſands and mud of rivers and brooks; but moſt commonly in whitiſh clods, dug out of mines of vaſt depth, and intermixed with ſilver and various foſſils. This they reduce by fire to a maſs of metal, and by aqua regia or aqua fortis, the gold is eaſily taken out of the ore.

And as to gold's being ſo yielding and ductile by human art, it is to be obſerved, that in return it exerts a greater power on the human mind. Paſſive it is in its ductility, but more active in its influence on man. It is a greater tyrant than a ſlave. It drives repeated millions of the human race to death and hell. King of metals as it is, bright and glorious to behold, and what procures innumerable bleſſings to mankind; yet, without the grace of God, to moderate the paſſion [358]for it, and to direct the mind in a true uſe of it, it is more dangerous to beings on a trial in a firſt ſtate, than even poverty can be in this lower hemiſphere. What villainies are daily committed to get it! What iniquities daily perpetrated by thoſe who have plenty of it! Lead us not into temptation, ſhould relate as well to too much of it, as to a total want of it; and it is well prayed,—In all time of our wealth, good Lord deliver us.

Mr. Ribble's concluſion, containing his religious thoughts and advice.In my opinion, neither poverty nor riches, but a middle ſtate, is the thing we ſhould deſire. It is in this condition, we can beſt live ſoberly, or with a ſound mind, and conduct ourſelves as thoſe who have an intelligent ſpirit to preſide in body. Too much gold moſt commonly inverts this order, and produces an apoſtaſy that ſets the inferior powers in the throne, and enſlaves the mind to the body: It gives the paſſions the commanding influence, and makes reaſon receive law from appetite.

If we look into the world, we find too often, in this caſe, that wealth is big with innumerable ſins. The rich are filled with wine, wherein is exceſs, and ſhew an unbridled diſſoluteneſs of manners. Their eyes behold ſtrange women, and their hearts utter perverſe things. Inſtead of regarding the common good, they commit the moſt extravagant [359]injuries. Of ſuch a hardning nature is too much gold, that it tends to make conſcience inſenſible and ſtupid, and renders it for ever unapt for impreſſion. Then whoredom and wine, and new wine, take away the heart, and men are made to forget the law of God.

But having neither poverty nor riches, in the calm middle ſtate, having all reaſonable conveniencies, we can fairly come by; a vaſt variety of creatures for our food, and wine in its ſeaſon, to make glad the heart; we may then partake of the bounties of providence, with a ſober freedom, and at the ſame time, can beſt lay up for ourſelves a good foundation, or ſecuity for the time to come, that we may lay hold of eternal life.

Tho' it is with a proſpect of difficulties, that all muſt enter upon religion, and with labour and difficulty, maintain our ground, and acquit ourſelves like chriſtians, that is, reſiſt the devil in all his aſſaults, overcome the world in its enſnaring influence, and mortify the irregular inclinations of nature; yet in the happy middle ſtate, where there is no poverty nor riches, that is, great wealth, we can make everlaſting glory and felicity our governing aim, and bound our ambition and deſires by nothing ſhort of the reſurrection of the dead. We may live in a full and ready ſubmiſſion of the ſoul to the authority of [360]God's word. Things eternal may have the aſcendant in our practical judgment, and then with pleaſure we become followers of them, who through faith and patience inherit the promiſes.

Good Sir, this is all our ſowing time, and whatſoever a man ſoweth, that ſhall he alſo reap. He that ſoweth to his fleſh, ſhall of his fleſh reap corruption; but he that ſoweth to the ſpirit, ſhall of the ſpirit reap everlaſting life. And therefore, whether your lot be caſt in the happy middling ſtate, or you were born to thouſands a year, let wiſdom be your rule, and prefer that happineſs which has everlaſting duration, in the realms of light above, to any preſent good that can come in competition with it. Do not ſpend money for that which is not bread— and your labour for that which ſatisfieth not. Do not employ your pains for that which hath vanity written upon it, by the word of God, by the teſtimony of the wiſeſt men, and by frequent experience: but let your principal regard be for your immortal ſoul, when nothing can be given in exchange for the ſoul. Implore the light and grace of the good ſpirit, and by the quickening influences of the Father of the univerſe, and the exertion of your whole ſtrength, let it be the principal labour of your every day, to make advances in the divine life, and be a bleſſing to ſociety [361]wherever you come. In virtue and charity may you excel.

You will pardon old Ribble, I hope, good Sir, and excuſe his addreſſing himſelf to you in this manner. It is an odd concluſion, I own, to a diſcourſe on metals and ſemi-metals; but it is from an extreme regard I have conceived for you, that I talk as I do, and preſume to call upon you, (as you are a young man of fortune, I ſuppoſe) to conſider ſeriouſly of that decree, which is the reſult of unerring wiſdom, and the will of the Rector of the univerſe, to wit, that we are all under the law of death, and through that gate muſt paſs, perhaps at a day's, an hour's warning, to the reſurrection of the dead, to be adjudged to happineſs or miſery, as time has been employed, and life ſpent here. This is the decree of the Moſt High God, and of conſequence, it is incumbent on us, to prepare for the awful hereafter, and endeavour by good actions, and a virtuous mind, by purity of conſcience, and an exalted piety, to come off well in judgment. Happy—thrice happy they that do ſo.

Here little Ribble the Chemiſt had done, and I had reaſon to return him my very hearty thanks for the favour of his whole diſcourſe. I was vaſtly obliged to him for the knowledge he had given me, in relation to the philoſophy of metals, and taking him by the hand, [362]promiſed him, that I would ever gratefully remember his moral concluſion. This pleaſed the old gentleman, and at four in the afternoon we parted.

A charming vale, and country houſe, in Nottinghamſhire, the feat of Mr. Moncktes.§ 3. Reflecting on the wonders of the metals, which I had heard old Ribble ſo well diſcourſe of, and being more intent on what had been told me of theſe things, that I might never forget ſuch uſeful learning, I trotted on for ſeveral hours without minding the road, and arrived as the ſun was ſetting in a deep and melancholy vale, through which a pleaſant river run, that by the murmur of its ſtreams, ſeemed to be marked out for the rendezvous of the thoughtful, who love the deep receſſes, and embowring woods, with the ſoft thrillings of gliding ſtreams, as much as the ſprightly court the gayeſt ſcenes. In this ſweet ſpot, I found a pretty country houſe, and not knowing where I was, rid up to the door, to enquire my way. A gentleman, who ſeemed to be about forty, immediately appeared, let me know I was at a conſiderable diſtance from any town, and as it was near ten, told me I had beſt reſt with him that night, and I was moſt heartily welcome. This was humane and civil. I accepted the kind invitation, and immediately went in with him. He brought me into a decent room, and gave me a handſome meal. We [363]had a couple of bottles after ſupper, talked of a thouſand things, and then withdrew to wind up the machines. He would not let me ſtir the next morning, and after dinner we became well acquainted. Six days this gentleman prevailed with me to ſtay at his houſe, and then I left him with regret. He was ſo generous, ſo civil, and in every thing ſo agreeable, that I could not avoid admiring him, and regarding him to an extreme degree. His name was Monckton.

Character of Mr. Monckton.§ 4. Avery Monckton had ſeen the world, when he was a young man, and by reading much, and thinking a great deal, had acquired an extenſive knowledge, and a deep penetration. In him the gentleman and the ſcholar were viſible. He ſeemed ſuperior to folly, and his philoſophy appeared to be an aſſiduous examination of his ideas, fancies, and opinions, in order to render them true and juſt. His religion conſiſted in a chearful ſubmiſſion to the divine pleaſure, with reſpect to all things independent of us, or abſolutely external to us; and in a continued exertion of benevolence, in doing all the good he could. What the theology of ſects was, and the notions of divines, he never minded. It was his opinion, that an active charity is the only thing that can liken and approve us to the original benevolent mind: [364]and that it is reaſonable to ſubmit to all his diſpenſations, ſince the providence of an infinitely perfect Being, muſt do all for the beſt in the whole. This was Avery Monckton, Eſq In his perſon he was tall, and very thin.

This gentleman told me the following remarkable ſtory relating to himſelf, on my aſking him, if he had ever been married?— Yes, Sir, he replied: When I was about five and twenty, a young lady came in my way, who had all the external charms that ever adorned a woman, and I thought her mind as perfect in goodneſs of every kind, as minds can be on this earth. I made my addreſſes to her, and with ſome difficulty perſuaded her to accept of a good jointure, and be a wife; for ſhe had got it into her head, that chriſtian perfection conſiſted in a virgin-life. I loved her to an extreme degree, and fancied myſelf beyond mortals happy, as her fondneſs ſeemed equal to my paſſion, and ſhe expreſſed it in a moſt tranſporting way. Three months paſſed on in this delightful manner, and I ſhould have thought an age but minutes, if the ſcene was to have no change. But every thing muſt have an end in this poor ſtate. Buſineſs called me one morning early into the city, and till it was late at night, I thought not to return: Back however I was compelled to [365]go for ſome papers, I had forgot, and deſigning to ſurprize agreeably my wife, came in by a key I had, at the waſh-houſe door, and unſeen went ſoftly up to my chamber, where I expected to find my beloved in a ſweet ſleep. Gently I touched the lock, and intended, as my charmer ſlumbered, to give this idol of my heart a kiſs: But, as I opened the door without being heard, I ſaw a man by my bed-ſide, and my fond faithful wife, buttoning up his breeches. Amazement ſeized me, but I was not in a rage. I only ſaid, is that Louiſa I ſee, and ſhut the door. Down ſtairs I went immediately, and out again the ſame way I came in. I was done with love for ever, and from that time never ſaw my wife more. A ſhip being to ſail the next day for Conſtantinople, I went a paſſenger in it, and reſolved to live abroad ſome years.

Six years I reſided in Greece, and viſited every curious place: Four I ſpent in Aſia minor, and two in Italy and France. I diverted myſelf with noting down the extraordinary things I ſaw, and I purchaſed ſeveral fine antiquities by the way. When done, I came back to my country again, and this little ſeat I now live at, being to be ſold, I bought it immediately, and have reſided here ever ſince. My ſtudy, my garden, and my horſe, divert me fully and finely every day. [366]I have all I deſire in this world, and reign more happily over my few ſubjects, in this airy, ſilent, ſecret ſpot, than the greateſt monarch can do on a throne. My people are only one young man, who is my gardener, my footman, and my groom, and two old women, my maids. Theſe are ever attentive to my will, and by their good behaviour and management, make my lodge as agreeable, and life as pleaſing, as can be expected in this ſyſtem of things.

Monckton's ſtory pleaſed me much, and I wondered greatly at his happy temper, when he ſaw his beloved wife buttoning up the breeches of the man. But did you ever hear what became of her after?—And faulty as ſhe was, may there not be found an honeſt charming woman, to render your hours more delightful than ſtudy and contrivance can make them, without a ſoft partner thro' life? Come into the world with me, Sir, and I will engage to find out for you a mere primitive chriſtian of a woman, with all the beauties of body that Lucian gives his images.

You are very good, Sir, (Monckton replied) in offering to look out for another wife for me, and I thank you very heartily, for your well-meant kindneſs; but as I never enquired what became of my firſt wife, from the morning I left her, and know only that ſhe is dead, [367]as her jointure has not been demanded for ſeveral years paſt; ſo ſhall I never be concerned with a ſecond. Perhaps there are ſome honeſt women in the world. I hope ſo: but I have had enough of marriage. Beſide, I think it time now to turn my thoughts a better way. In the forty-fifth year of my age, it cannot be weak, to begin to conſider the great change before me, and fix my hopes on a good remove into ſome better and happier region. If I was unfortunate with a wife when a young man, I have little reaſon to expect better days with one, as age comes on. I might find myſelf again moſt ſadly miſtaken. But there can be no diſappointment in making it the principal work of life, to prepare, in ſuch a retirement as this, for that approaching hour, when we muſt ſubmit to the power and tyranny of death and corruption. By this means, the greateſt happineſs may be ſecured. In every thing elſe, there is uncertainty and vanity. I ſpeak principally in reſpect of my time of life, who am haſtning faſt to fifty: but at every time, it is my opinion, that men, as rationals, and beings who take on themſelves the honourable profeſſion of the chriſtian religion, ſhould not comply with the criminal liberties allowed in the world, and give into the illicit uſages and cuſtoms of place and company, for fear of ridicule, or to avoid giving offence; but keep [368]ſtrictly to the will and laws of their higher country, and in all things have a ſpecial regard to holineſs, and truth, and purity.

I do not ſay this by way of preaching, but that you may thereby have a truer idea of the man you chanced to find in a lone houſe on this vaſt common. Seven years have I now lived here, and in all that time, have not been once in London: but ſometimes I ride to a neighbouring village, and if on the road, or at an inn, I can pick up a ſenſible agreeable man, I love to dine with him, and drink a pint of wine. Such a man I frequently ride in queſt of, and if he be intirely to my mind, (which is very rarely the caſe,) I invite him home with me, to paſs at my lodge two or three days. Far then am I from being unſocial, though I live in ſolitude; but I left the world, becauſe I was ill-uſed in it, and happen to think very differently from the generality of men. Here Monckton ended his ſtory, and a little after we parted.

A bait at a lone inn, and the arrival of Miſs Turner of Skelſmore vale.§. 5. I rid for ſix hours without meeting with any thing remarkable; but as I baited about three o'clock at a lone inn, the ſituation of which was ſo fine in foreſt and water, that I determined to go no further that day, there arrived a little after, a young lady, her maid, and two men ſervants. They were all well-mounted, and the lady's beaſt in particular, [369]as great a beauty of its kind, as its miſtreſs was among women. I thought I had ſeen the face before, and had been ſome where or other in her company; but as it muſt be ſeveral years ago, and her face and perſon were a little altered, I could not immediately recollect her: but Finn, my lad, coming up to me, aſked me, if I did not remember Miſs Turner of Skelſmore-vale *? Miſs Turner, I ſaid;—to be ſure, now I think, it is ſhe; but this lady juſt arrived here is much fatter, and, if it be poſſible, ſomething handſomer. It is her, believe me, quoth Finn, and you ought to wait upon her inſtantly. I went. It was Miſs Turner, one of the beauties that adorns a gallery of pictures in the North, and who is with great truth in the following lines deſcribed, in a Poem written on this collection of paintings.

The picture of Miſs Turner.
But ſee! Emilia riſes to the ſight
In every virtue, in every beauty bright!
See thoſe victorious eyes, that heav'nly mien!
Behold her ſhine like Love's reſiſtleſs Queen!
Thou faireſt wonder of thy faireſt kind!
By heav'n ſome image of itſelf deſign'd!
As if in thee it took peculiar care,
And form'd thee like ſome fav'rite ſeraph there,
But tho' thy beauty ſtrikes the raviſh'd ſight
Thy virtue ſhines diſtinguiſhingly bright!
And all the graces of thy form combin'd,
Yield to the charms of thy unblemiſh'd mind;
[370] Where all is ſpotleſs, gentle, and ſerene,
One calm of life untouch'd by guilt or pain!
Could I in equal lays thy worth deſign,
Or paint exalted merit ſuch as thine!
To lateſt ages ſhould thy name ſurvive,
And in my verſe Emilia ever live;
Th' admiring world ſhould liſten to thy praiſe,
And the fair portrait charm ſucceeding days.

This lady knew me at once, on my entring the room where ſhe was, and we dined together. She told me, her brother, my friend, died in Italy, on his return home; and Miſs Jaquelot, her couſin and companion, was happily married; and that being thus left alone, by theſe two accidents, ſhe was going up to London, to reſide in the world.

My addreſs to Miſs Turner.§. 6. Miſs Turner, (I ſaid then) as you are now your own miſtreſs, I may with juſtice make my addreſſes, and tell you, that from the firſt hour I ſaw you, I was in love with you, and am ſo ſtill: that if you will do me the honour to be my wife, I will make the beſt of huſbands. I have now ſome fortune, and if you will allow, that an honeſt man is the beſt companion for an honeſt woman, let us marry in the country, and inſtead of going up to that noiſy tumultuous place called London, retire to ſome ſtill delightful retreat, and there live, content with each other, as happy as it is poſſible for two young mortals to be in this lower hemiſphere. What do you ſay, Miſs Turner?

[371] Miſs Turner's anſwer: and our marriage.§. 7. You ſhall have my anſwer, Sir, in a few days: But as to going up to London, I think I had beſt ſee it, ſince I am come ſo far. It may give me a new reliſh for ſtill life, and make the country ſeem more charming than I thought it before. On the other hand, it may perhaps make me in love with the town, and put me out of conceit with the country. In ſhort, on ſecond thoughts; I will not go up to the Capital. I will return to Skelſmore-vale. I think ſo now: But how I may think in the morning, at preſent I do not know. In the mean time, (Caeſia continued,) ring, if you pleaſe, for a pack of cards, and let us paſs the evening in play. The cards were brought in, the game began, and before we had played, many hours, I ſaw this dear charming creature was all my own. She ſat before me, like bluſhing beauty in the picture, (in the gallery of Venus,) enriched with thought, warm with deſire, and with delicate ſenſations covered over: I could not help wiſhing for father Fleming, my friend, to qualify us for the implanted impulſe, and ſanctify the call. Early the next morning I ſent Finn for him, and he was with me in a few days. The evening he arrived we were married. Man and wife we ſat down to ſupper.

The Author's apology for marrying again ſo ſoon.§. 8. Here the moroſe, the viſionary, and the dunce, will again fall upon me, for marrying [372]a fifth wife, ſo quickly after the deceaſe of the fourth; who had not been three months in her grave: But my anſwer is, that a dead woman is no wife, and marriage is ever glorious. It is the inſtitution of heaven, a bleſſing to ſociety, and therefore hated by the devil and maſs-prieſts. Satan by oppoſing it, promotes fornication and perdition. The prieſts by preaching againſt it, drive the human race into cloyſters; deſtroy every thing gentle, generous, and ſocial; and rob the people of their property. Celibacy is popery and hell in perfection. It is the doctrine of devils, and a war with the Almighty. It is againſt the inſtitutions of nature and providence; and therefore, for ever execrable be the memory of the maſs-prieſts, who dare to call it perfection.

My dear Reader, if you are unmarried, and healthy, get a wife as ſoon as poſſible, ſome charming girl, or pretty widow, adorned with modeſty, robed with meekneſs, and who has the grace to attract the ſoul, and heighten every joy continually;—take her to thy breaſt, and bravely, in holy wedlock, propagate. Deſpiſe and hiſs the maſs-prieſts, and every viſionary, who preaches the contrary doctrine. They are foes to heaven and mankind, and ought to be drummed out of ſociety.

SECTION XI.

[373]
Quid quaeri, Labiene, jubes?—
An noceat vis ulla bono? Summaque perdat
Oppoſita virtute minas? Laudandaque velle
Sit ſatis, et nunquam ſucceſſu creſcat honeſtum?
Scimus, et hoc nobis non altius inferet Ammon.
Cato's anſwer to Labienus, when he requeſted him to conſult the oracle of Jupiter Ammon. Lucan, B. 9.
Where would thy fond, thy vain enquiry go?
What myſtic fate, what ſecret would'ſt thou know?
If this ſad world, with all its forces join'd,
The univerſal malice of mankind,
Can ſhake or hurt the brave and honeſt mind?
If ſtable virtue can her ground maintain,
While fortune feebly threats and frowns in vain ?
If truth and juſtice with uprightneſs dwell,
And honeſty conſiſt in meaning well?
If right be independent of ſucceſs,
And conqueſt cannot make it more nor leſs?
Are theſe, my friend, the ſecrets thou would'ſt know,
Thoſe doubts for which to oracles we go?
'Tis known, 'tis plain, 'tis all already told,
And horned Ammon can no more unfold.
ROWE.

Or thus.

What ſhould I ASK, my friend,—if beſt it be
To live enſlav'd, or thus in arms die free!
If it our real happineſs import,
Whether life's fooliſh ſcene be long or ſhort?
If any force true honour can abate,
Or fortune's threats make virtue bow to fate?
[374] If when at noble ends we juſtly aim,
The bare attempt entitles us to fame?
If a bad cauſe, that juſtice would oppreſs,
Can ever grow more honeſt by ſucceſs?
All this we know, wove in our minds it ſticks,
Which Ammon nor his prieſts can deeper fix.
They need not teach with venal cant and pains,
That God's inevitable will holds our's in chains,
Who act but only what he pre-ordains.
He needs no voice to thunder out his law,
Or keep his creatures wild deſires in awe:
Both what we ought to do, or what forbear,
He once for all did at our births declare:
What for our knowledge needful was or fit,
With laſting characters in human ſoul he writ.
But never did he ſeek out deſert lands
To ſkulk, or bury truth in deſert ſands,
Or to a corner of the world withdrew,
Head of a ſect, and partial to a few.
Nature's vaſt fabrick he controuls alone;
This globe's his footſtool, high heaven his throne.
Eſtque Dei ſedes, ubi terra, et pontus, et aer,
Et caelum, et virtus. Superos quid quaerimus ultra?
In earth, ſea, air, and what e'er elſe excels,
In knowing heads, and honeſt hearts he dwells.
Why vainly ſeek we then in barren ſands,
In narrow ſhrines, and temples built with hands,
HIM, whoſe dread preſence does all places fill,
Or look, but in our reaſon for his will!
Whate'er we ſee is GOD, in all we find
Apparent prints of his eternal mind.
Sortileges egeant dubii ſemperque, futuris
Caſibus Ancipetes: me non oracula certum,
Sed mors certa facit: pavido fortique cadendum eſt.
Hoc ſatis eſt dixiſſe Jovem. Sic illa profatur.
Let floating fools their courſe by prophets ſteer,
And live of future chances ſtill in fear;
No oracle or dream the crowd is told,
Shall make me more or leſs reſolv'd and bold;
[375] Death is my ſure retreat, which muſt on all,
As well on cowards, as on the gallant fall.
This ſaid he turn'd him with diſdain about,
And left ſcorn'd Ammon to amuſe the rout.(15)
[375]
Non exploratum populis Ammona relinquens.

The unfortunate death of Miſs Turner, the author's fifth wife.§. 1. FOR ſix weeks after our marriage, we reſided at the inn, on account of the charms of the ground, and ſeemed to be in poſſeſſion of a laſting happineſs it is [376]impoſſible for words to deſcribe. Every thing was ſo ſmooth and ſo round, that we thought proſperity muſt be our own for many years to come, and were quite ſecure from the flames of deſtruction; but calamity laid hold of us, when we had not the leaſt reaſon to expert it, and from a fulneſs of peace and felicity, we ſunk at once into an abyſs of afflictions. Inſtead of going back to Skelſmorevale, as we had reſolved, my wife would go up to London, and paſs a few weeks there, and [377]thereabout, before ſhe retired to the mountains. I was againſt it, but her will was my law. We ſet out for the Capital, and the firſt day's journey was delightful: But her fine beaſt having met with an accident in the night, by a rope in the ſtable, which got about it's foot, cut it deep, and rendered it unable to travel; we took a chariot and four to finiſh our way; but on driving by the ſide of a ſteep hill, the horſes took fright, ran it down, over came the carriage, and my charmer was killed. This was a diſmal ſcene. She lived about an hour, and repeated the following fine lines from Boiſſard, when ſhe ſaw me weeping as I kneeled on the ground by her;—

Nil proſunt lacrumae, nec poſſunt fata moveri:
Nec pro me queror; hoc morte mihi eſt triſtius ipſa,
Moeror Atimeti conjugis ille mihi.(16)

[377] Juſt as ſhe expired, ſhe took me by the hand, and with the ſpirit of an old Roman, bid me adieu.

[378] Can you form an idea, Reader, of the diſtreſs I was then in? If is not poſſible I think, [379]unleſs you have been exactly in the ſame ſituation; unleſs you loved like me, and have [380]been as miſerably ſeparated from as charming a woman. But it was in vain for me to continue lamenting. She was gone for ever, [381]and lay as the clod of the valley before me. Her body I depoſited in the next churchyard, and immediately after, rid as faſt as I could to London, to loſe thought in diſſipation, and reſign the better to the decree. For ſome days I lived at the inn I ſet up at, but as ſoon as I could, went into a lodging, and it happened to be at the houſe of the famous Curl the bookſeller; a man well known in the Dunciad, and Pope's letters to his friends, on account of Curl's frauds in purchaſing and printing ſtolen copies of Mr. Pope's works. It is in relation to theſe tricks, that Pope mentions Curl in his Dunciad and Letters. A ſuccinct hiſtory of him I ſhall here give: but had I complied with his requeſts, it would have been a long relation, to the advantage and glory of this extraordinary man: For he came one morning into my cloſet, with an apron full of papers; being letters, memorandums, parodies, and notes, written by or concerning himſelf; and requeſted I would, on a good conſideration, write his life, to his profit and honour, and make it a five ſhilling book. That I ſaid was not then in my power to do: but I would, one time or other, give the public a true account of him, [382]and make it conclude I hoped to the glory of his character. Here it is.

The picture and character of Curl the Bookſeller.§. 2. CURL was in perſon very tall and thin, an ungainly, aukward, white-faced man. His eyes were a light-grey, large, projecting, gogle and pur-blind. He was ſplay-footed, and baker-kneed.

He had a good natural underſtanding, and was well acquainted with more than the title pages of books. He talked well on ſome ſubjects. He was not an infidel as Mrs. Rowe miſrepreſents him in one of her letters to lady Hartford, (afterwards Dutcheſs of Somerſet). He told me, it was quite evident to him, that the ſcriptures of the Old and New Teſtament contained a real revelation. There is for it a rational, a natural, a traditionary, and a ſupernatural teſtimony; which rendered it quite certain to him. He ſaid, he no more doubted the truth of the chriſtian religion, than he did the exiſtence of an independent ſupreme Creator; but he did not believe the expoſitions given by the divines. So far Curl was right enough. His fault was, that with ſuch a belief, he took no pains with his heart. Truſting intirely to the merits the Saviour, like too many other miſtaken chriſtians, he had no notion of religion as an inviſible thing within us, called the kingdom of God: He did not even conſider it as a good outſide thing, that [383]recommends a man to his fellow-creatures. He was a debauchee to the laſt degree, and ſo injurious to ſociety, that by filling his tranſlations with wretched notes, forged letters, and bad pictures, he raiſed the price of a four ſhilling book to ten. Thus, in particular, he managed Burnet's Archiology: And when I told him he was very culpable in this, and other articles he ſold, his anſwer was, What would I have him do? He was a bookſeller. His tranſlators in pay, lay three in a bed, at the Pewter-Platter Inn in Holborn, and he and they were for ever at work, to deceive the Public. He likewiſe printed the lewdeſt things. He loſt his ears for the Nun in her Smock, and another thing. As to drink, he was too fond of money, to ſpend any in making himſelf happy that way; but at another's expence, he would drink every day till he was quite blind, and as incapable of ſelf-motion as a block. This was Edmund Curl: But he died at laſt as great a penitent, (I think in the year 1748) as ever expired. I mention this to his glory.

As Curl knew the world well, and was acquainted with ſeveral extraordinary characters, he was of great uſe to me at my firſt coming to town, as I knew nobody, nor any place. He gave me the true characters of many I ſaw, told me whom I ſhould avoid, and with whom I might be free. He brought me to the play-houſes, and gave me a judicious [384]account of every actor. He underſtood thoſe things well. No man could talk better on theatrical ſubjects. He brought me likewiſe to Sadler's Wells, to the night-cellars, and to Tom King's, the famous night-houſe at Covent Garden. As he was very knowing, and well-known at ſuch places, he ſoon made me as wiſe as himſelf in theſe branches of learning; and, in ſhort, in the ſpace of a month, I was as well acquainted in London, as if I had been there for years. My kind preceptor ſpared no pains in lecturing.

But what of all things I thought moſt wonderful was the company I ſaw at the Sieur Curl's. As he was intimate with all the high whores in town, many of them frequented his ſhop, to buy his dialogues, and other lively books. Some of theſe girls he often aſked to dine with him, and then I was ſure to be a gueſt. Many very fine women I thereby ſaw, but none worth mentioning, till Carola Bennet arrived. She did ſurprize me. Her mind and body were very wonderful, and I imagine a deſcription of her, and her ſtory afterward will not be ungrateful to my readers.

The picture of Carola Bennet.§. 3. Carola Bennet was at this time in the two and twentieth year of her age, a dazzling beauty in the height of life and vigour. Her eyes were black and amazingly fine: Her mouth charming: Her neck and breaſt very [385]beautiful: Her ſtature was juſt what it ought to be. She had a glow of health, a luſcious air, and a bewitching vivacity: Her manners were wonderfully winning, and the tone of her voice ſo ſweet and inſinuating, that her words and looks went directly to the heart. She had read many books of gaiety, wit, and humour; eſpecially the French; and talked delightfully on ſuch ſubjects. She ſang to perfection: but her converſation was too free, and ſhe ſeemed to have no ſenſe of any religion. It was a fine entertainment to be in her company, as I often was, yet I could not help ſighing, to ſee ſo many any perfections on the brink of everlaſting deſtruction.—This young lady all of a ſudden diſappeared. Curl knew not what was become of her: but as I rid ten years after through Devonſhire, in the fineſt part of that romantic county, I ſaw her one morning, (as I ſtopped to water my horſe in a brook that ran from a park,) ſitting on a ſeat, under a vaſt beautiful cedar tree, with a book in her hand. I thought I was no ſtranger to the fine face, and as I was pretty near to her, I called out, and aſked, if ſhe was not Miſs Bennet? She knew me at once, and pointing to a gate that was only latched, deſired I would come to her. I went and found ſhe was the miſtreſs of the fine ſeat at a ſmall diſtance off. She brought me into the houſe, would not ſuffer me to [386]ſtir that day, and told me the ſtory of her life. I think it worth placing here.

Hiſtory of Miſs Bennet.§. 4. Carola Bennet was the daughter of John Bennet, Eſq a Yorkſhire gentleman, who died when ſhe was in her 19th year, and left her in the care of her aunt, an old lady who was outwardly all ſaint, and within a devil. This Carola knew well, and requeſted her father to get another guardian for her, or leave her to manage herſelf; for Mrs. Hunfleet, her aunt, was far from being that primitive chriſtian he took her for, and ſo great a miſer, that excluſive of all her other vices, her avarice alone was enough to ruin her niece. She would ſacrifice the whole human race for half a thouſand pounds. But all his daughter ſaid was in vain. He believed his ſiſter was godlineſs itſelf, in its utmoſt latitude and extent; that ſhe lived a continued oppoſition to our mortal enemies, the world, ſin, and the devil; and that her heart was a mere magazine of univerſal honeſty, probity of manners, and goodneſs of life and converſation. Integrity and rectitude, and benevolence, as he thought, were the bright criterions of her ſoul. She will teach you, Carola, to faſt and pray, and make you like herſelf, a mere ſaint.

It was to no purpoſe then for the daughter to remonſtrate: She could only weep, as her [387]father was poſitive, and after his death was obliged to go home with Mrs. Hunfleet. There, as ſhe expected, ſhe had too much of the outward bodily exerciſe of religion, every thing that can be named within the circle of external worſhip; ſuch as public and private ſervices, faſtings, macerations, bowings, expanded hands and lifted eyes, which Lord Halifax (in his advice to a daughter,) calls the holy goggle: but that all this accompanied the internal acts of the old woman's mind, and went along with her heart and ſoul, Carola had reaſon to doubt. She ſaw it was but outward profeſſion, — all hypocriſy, — that her life belied her creed, and her practice was a renunciation of the chriſtian religion. This appeared to be the caſe very quickly. The aunt ſold her to one Cantalupe for five hundred pounds. Under pretence of taking her to viſit a friend, ſhe brought her to a private bagnio, or one of thoſe houſes called convents.

A deſcription of a London convent: and an adventure there.§. 5. Such houſes ſtand in back courts, narrow lanes, or the moſt private places, and ſeem to be uninhabited, as the front windows are ſeldom opened, or like ſome little friary, where a company of viſionaries reſide; but within are elegantly furniſhed, and remarkable for the beſt wines. The woman who keeps the houſe is the only perſon to be [388]ſeen in them, unleſs it be ſometimes, that a high-priced whore, who paſſes for the gentlewoman's daughter, by accident appears.

In theſe brothels the Sieur Curl was well known, and as the wine in them is always excellent, (but a ſhilling a bottle dearer than at the tavern,) and one ſits without hearing the leaſt noiſe, or being ſeen by any one, I have often gone with this ingenious man to ſuch places, on account of the purity of the wine, and the ſtillneſs of the houſe; as there are no waiters there, nor any well-dreſt huſſies to come in the way. You are as ſilent as in a cave; nor does a woman appear, except as before excepted, unleſs it be by appointment at this kind of meeting-houſe, as ſuch places may well be called: for there not ſeldom does many a married woman meet her gallant. One evening that I was there with Curl, there came in the wife of a very eminent merchant, a lady of as excellent a character as any in the world; who was never ſo much as ſuſpected by any of her acquaintance, but allowed by every body to be a woman of pure morals and unſpotted chaſtity. She came in firſt with a black maſk on her face, from her chair, and was by the woman of the houſe ſhewn into a chamber up ſtairs: Half an hour after, there was another ſoft tap at the door, and a gentleman was let in, who was ſhewed up to the chamber [389]the lady was in: As the door of the room Curl and I were ſitting in, happened to be open as this adventurer paſſed by, I knew the man. He was an Iriſh gentleman of large fortune, with whom I was well acquainted. He was ever engaged in amours, and was ſome years after this hanged at Cork, for raviſhing Sally Squib, the quaker. His name then can be no ſecret: But as to the the lady's name, I ſhall never tell it, as ſhe left ſeveral children, who are now living in reputation; but only obſerve, that there are, to my knowledge, many women of ſuch ſtrict virtue in the world. If you aſk me reader, how I came to know who ſhe was? I will tell you. As ſhe came down ſtairs in a maſk at ten at night, in the manner ſhe went up, I concluded ſhe was a married woman of diſtinction, and followed her chair, when it went off. She changed at Temple Bar, and then took a hackney coach, which drove beyond the Royal Exchange; I followed till it ſtopped at a grand houſe, into which ſhe went without a maſk, and had a full view of her fine face. I enquired next day who lived in the houſe I ſaw her go into, and was told it was Mr. *****, a merchant of the greateſt repute. Often did I ſee this lady after this, was ſeveral times in her company, and if I had not known what I did, ſhould have thought her a woman of as great virtue as ever lived. There was not the leaſt [390]appearance of levity or indecency in her. To all outward appearance, ſhe was chaſtity and diſcretion in fleſh and blood. — But as to Carola Bennet.

The hiſtory of Miſs Bennet continued.§. 6. Soon after her aunt and ſhe arrived at Mrs. Bedewell's, in came Cantalupe as a viſiter, and after tea, they went to cards. Then followed a ſupper, and when that was over, they gave the innocent Miſs Bennet a doſe, which deprived her of her ſenſes, put her to bed, and in the morning ſhe found herſelf ruined in the arms of that villain Cantalupe. Diſtraction almoſt ſeized her, but he would not let her ſtir. She called, but no one came near to her relief. He ſwore a million of oaths, that it was pure love made him buy her of her aunt, as he heard ſhe was going to marry another man, and if ſhe would but ſhare with him in his great fortune, ſince the thing was done, he would, (by every ſacred power he vowed) marry her that evening or the next, the firſt time they went out, and be the trueſt and moſt tender huſband that ever yet appeared in the world. This, and the ſituation ſhe was in, naked and claſped in his ſtrong arms, without a friend to aid her, within doors or without, made her ſenſible her reſentments were in vain, and that ſhe had better acquieſce, and make the man her huſband, if ſhe could, ſince it was her [391]hard fate, and that in all probability ſhe might conceive from the tranſactions of the night. This made her have done. She lay as he requeſted till noon, and hoped he would prove as faithful as he had ſolemnly ſwore to be.

But when the night came, an indiſpoſition he feigned, made him unable to ſtir out that evening, and he requeſted the idol of his heart, whom he loved more than life, to give him leave to defer it till the next. For ſix days he put it off in the ſame manner, during which time, they never ſtirred out of the bagnio, and the ſeventh day he left her faſt aſleep in bed. A billet-doux on the dreſſing-table informed her, that he was obliged to ſet out that morning for France, and as he intended to be back in a few months, he hoped ſhe would not think him faithleſs at once. He left her a hundred pound bank note, which was all he had then to ſpare, as he had paid to her aunt 500 l. a few days before.

Thus fell the beautiful Miſs Bennet by the treachery of her ever-curſed aunt, and was made a whore very much againſt her will. The aunt, in the mean time, had ſhut up her houſe, and was gone no one knew where. She took ſeveral jewels with her, and a large ſum of money, both the property of her niece. She left her but little of her fortune, and reported [392]every where, that Carola was gone into keeping with a great man, and had before been debauched by her footman. In ſhort, all that could be done this woman did, to impoveriſh and defame her niece, and as ſhe had paſſed upon the world for a praying virtuous old piece, her reports were thought ſo true, that all the female acquaintance Miſs Bennet had, laughed at the ſtory ſhe told, and ſhunned her as a foul fiend. She was baniſhed from all modeſt company. They conſidered her as the moſt deteſtable proſtitute, for excuſing herſelf (they ſaid) by blackning the character of ſo pious and upright a woman as Mrs. Hunfleet, her aunt, was.

A reflexion on hypocrites.§. 7. Thus did iniquity ruin and triumph over innocence in the maſk of religion, and a thouſand times, to my own knowledge, it has done the ſame thing. I have often known wretches pretend to ſeek the kingdom of God, and his righteouſneſs, in the firſt place, and by believing all the monks have invented, by conſtantly attending public worſhip, and an unnatural kind of ſobriety, paſs for people that were ready and willing to ſuffer every thing the cauſe of God and truth can require from rationals: yet theſe holy mortals could make the ſervice of God not only ſtand with unwilling infirmities, (the common caſe of the beſt humanity,) but conſiſt with wilful [393]and preſumptuous ſinning, and a malevolence as great as the devil had againſt our firſt parents. A miniſter of the goſpel, who paſſed for an admirable man, did his beſt to ruin my character for ever with my father. One of the holieſt men in the world, cheated me of a thouſand pounds, left in his hands for my uſe, for fear I ſhould ſpend it myſelf. And a rich man, commonly called piety and goodneſs, from the ſeeming ſimplicity of his manners, the ſoftneſs of his temper, and the holy goggle of his eyes in his public devotion, arreſted me on a note of hand, one third of which was intereſt thrown into the principal, and made me pay intereſt upon intereſt, without mercy, or waiting as I in-treated, till it was more convenient. Many more ſuch praying, ſanctified villains I could mention, in reſpect of whom Edmund Curl was a cherubim, fond as he was of a girl and a flaſk. Curl owned he was a ſinner, and that he was led by thirſt and repletion to indulge: but the hypocrites with profeſſions of eſteem for the pearl of great price, and that they have parted with their Herodias, for the ſake of eternal life; yet wilfully diſobey from a paſſion for ſubſtance; and the ſhrine of bright Mammon in this world, has a greater influence on their ſouls than all the joys of an everlaſting heaven to come. What they do is a farce. Upon what they have, they reſt their all.

[394] But as to Miſs Bennet: In this ſad condition, ſhe ſecreted herſelf for ſome months from the world, and notwithſtanding her conſtitution and taſte, intended to retire among the mountains of Wales, and live upon the little ſhe had left: but unfortunately for ſo good a deſign, the matchleſs Sir Frederic Dancer came in her way, and by money, and the force of love, perſuaded her to be his companion while he lived, which was but for a ſhort time. A young nobleman prevailed on her next, by high rewards, to be the delight of his life for a time; and at his death, ſhe went to the arms of an Iriſh peer. She had what money ſhe pleaſed from theſe great men, and being now very rich, ſhe determined, on the marriage of her laſt Lord, to go into keeping no more, but to live a gay life among the agreeable and grand. She had loſt all her notions of a weeping and gnaſhing of teeth to come, in the converſation of theſe atheiſtical men, and on account of her living as happily as ſhe could in this world. What religion ſhe had remaining, was placed in giving money to the ſick and poor, which ſhe did with a liberal hand: And her charity, in all its charms, ſhe often ſhewed to the moſt deſerving men. Thoſe who had much of this world's goods paid dear: but ſhe had compaſſion on the worthy, though they could not drive in a chariot to her door. [395]This was the caſe of Miſs Bennet, when I ſaw her at Curl's.

But all of a ſudden ſhe diſappeared, and no one could tell what was become of her: that I learned from herſelf, when I chanced to ſee her under the cedar tree, (as before related) in the park.

A young clergyman, Mr. Tench, an Iriſhman of the county of Galway, who was very rich, and had a fine ſeat in Devonſhire, ſaw her at the opera, and fell in love with her. He ſoon found out who ſhe was, waited upon her, and offered to marry her, if ſhe would reform. At firſt, ſhe ſhewed very little inclination to a virtuous courſe, and, as her manner was, ridiculed the intereſt of another life. The bleſſedneſs of heaven ſhe laughed at, and made a jeſt of riches, honours, and pleaſures to be found on the other ſide the grave. This did not however diſhearten Tench. He was a ſcholar and a man of ſenſe, and as he loved moſt paſſionately, and ſaw ſhe had a fine capacity, he was reſolved, if poſſible, to reclaim her, by applying to her bright underſtanding.

Mr. Tench's converſation with Miſs Bennet, in relation to religion.§. 8. He obſerved to her, in the firſt place, (as ſhe informed me) that, excluſive of future happineſs, godlineſs was profitable in all things, that is, even in this life, in proſperity and adverſity, in plenty and in want, in peace and in war, in confuſion and ſecurity, [396]in health, in honour and diſgrace, in life and in death, and in what condition ſoever we may be. This he proved to her ſatisfaction, and made it plain to her conception, that by it only we can acquire a right judgment of perſons and things, and have a juſt and due eſtimate of ourſelves: that unleſs held in by reaſon and religion, pleaſure, though innocent of itſelf, becomes a thing of deadly conſequence to mortals; and if we do not uſe it in due time, place, circumſtance, meaſure and limits, it neceſſarily involves us in difficulties and troubles, pain and infamy: if we ſtifle the grand leading principles, reaſon and religion, by ſin and vice, and let deſire and inclination range beyond bounds, we muſt not only plunge into various woes in this world, but as creatures degenerated below the beaſt, become the contempt and abhorrence of the wiſe and honeſt. To this ſad condition muſt be annexed a reflective miſery, as we have conſcience or reaſon, that will examine, now and then, the whole procedure of life, do all we can to prevent it, and the remorſe that muſt enſue, on account of our wretched and ridiculous conduct, is too bitter a thing for a reaſonable creature to acquire, for the ſake of illicit gratification only; and this becomes the more grievous in reflexion, as pleaſures are not forbidden by religion, but allowed to the moſt upright, and ordained [397]for the holy ſervice of God; to recruit nature, and enliven the ſpirits; to propagate the human ſpecies, and preſerve the flame of love in the married ſtate. If there was then no other life but this, it is moſt certainly our intereſt in regard to fame and advantage, to be governed by reaſon and religion.

And if we are not to be annihilated with the beaſt, but are to anſwer hereafter for what we have done, whether it be good or bad, ſurely the main buſineſs of life ſhould be to govern ourſelves by godlineſs, that is, to be chriſtians in our principles, holy in our converſation, and upright in our behaviour. If the goſpel be true, (as has been proved a thouſand and a thouſand times, by the wiſeſt men in the world, to the confuſion and ſilence of infidelity,) and the Son of God came into the world, not to make Judea the ſeat of abſolute and univerſal empire, and eſtabliſh a temporal dominion in all poſſible pomp and magnificence, (as the Jews moſt erroneouſly and ridiculouſly fancied, and to this day believe,) but to prepare greater things for us; to relieve us from the power of ſin, and the endleſs and unſpeakable miſeries of the life which is to come; to propoſe a prize far more worthy of our expectations than the glories of civil power, and to ſecure to us the happineſs both of ſoul and body to all eternity, in the kingdom of God; then certainly, in [398]regard to ourſelves, we ought to attend to his heavenly leſſons, and turn from the unlawful enjoyments of this life, to the endleſs and ſolid happineſs of a future ſtate. As this is the caſe, we ſhould cheriſh and improve a faith of inviſible things, by ſerious and impartial conſideration. We ſhould attend to the evidence which God has given us for the truth of chriſtianity, evidence very cogent and ſufficient; and then ſhew our faith by works ſuited to the doctrine of Chriſt; that is, by recommending the practice of virtue, and the worſhip of one God, the Creator of the univerſe.

Conſider then, Miſs Bennet, that you ſtand on the brink of death, reſurrection, and judgment; and it is time to begin by ſerious and humble enquiry to arrive at a faith of ſtrength and activity; that by your eminence in all virtue and holineſs, you may make the glorious attempt to be greateſt in the kingdom of heaven. This will be a work worthy of an immortal Soul: Nor will it hinder you from enjoying as much happineſs in this lower hemiſphere, as reaſon can deſire. For godlineſs is profitable unto all things, having promiſe of the life that now is, and of that which is to come.

Thus (Miſs Bennet that was, continued) did this excellent young clergyman talk to me, and by argument and reaſoning in the [399]gentleſt manner, by good ſenſe and good manners; made me a convert to chriſtianity and goodneſs, He ſnatched me from the gulph of eternal perdition, and, from the realms of darkneſs, and the ſociety of devils, brought me into the kingdom of the Meſſiah. To make me as happy as it was poſſible even in this world, he married me, and landed me in this charming ſpot you found me in. For ſeven years, we lived in great happineſs, without ever ſtirring from this fine ſolitude, and ſince his death, I have had no inclination to return to the world: I have one lady for my companion, an agreeable ſenſible woman, a near relation of Mr. Tench's, and with her, and ſome good books, and three or four agreeable neighbours, have all the felicity I care for in this world. When you ſaw me at Curl's, I had no taſte for any thing but the comedy, the opera, and a tale of La Fontaine; but you found me with a volume of Tillotſon in my hand, under that aged and beautiful cedar, near the road; and in thoſe ſermons I now find more delight, in the ſolemn ſhade of one of thoſe fine trees, than ever I enjoyed in the gayeſt ſcenes of the world. In theſe ſweet ſilent walks I am really happy. Riches and honour are with me, yea durable riches and righteouſneſs. To the bleſſings of time, I can here add the riches of expectation and comfort, the riches of future glory and happineſs. [400]This makes me fond of this fine retreat. In contentment, peace, and comfort of mind, I now live. By hearkning to the commandments, my peace is a river.

Here Mrs. Tench had done, and I was amazed beyond expreſſion. This charming libertine was quite changed. It was formerly her wont (when I have ſat an evening with her at Curl's,) to make a jeſt of the chriſtian ſcheme, — to laugh at the devil and his flames; her life was all pleaſure, and her ſoul all whim: but when I ſaw her laſt, ſhe was ſerious, and ſeemed to enjoy as happy a ſerenity and compoſure of mind, as ever mortal was bleſſed with. Even her eyes had acquired a more ſober light, and in the place of a wild and luſcious air, a beautiful modeſty appeared.

A reflexion on the converſion of Miſs Bennet.§. 9. And now to what ſhall I aſcribe this aſtoniſhing alteration? Shall I ſay with our methodiſts and other viſionaries, that it muſt be owing to immediate impulſe, and proceeded from inward impreſſion of the Spirit? No: this will not do. It was owing to be ſure, to the word (not in-ſpoken) but taught by Chriſt in his goſpel. When her friend Tench opened the New Teſtament to her, her good underſtanding inclined her to hearken. She began to conſider: She pondered, and had a regard to the goſpel, now laid before her, by that ſenſible and excellent young clergyman. She [401]became a believer. And as the Apoſtle ſays, We can do all things through Chriſt who ſtrengthens us; that is, ſays Dr. Hunt, in one of his fine ſermons, through the directions of Chriſt, and through the arguments and motives of the chriſtian doctrine. Well ſaid, Hunt. It muſt be our own choice, to be ſure, to be good and virtuous. So far as men are paſſive, and are acted upon, they are not agents. Without power to do good or evil, men cannot be moral or accountable beings, and be brought into judgment, or receive according to their works.

Dr. Lardner, in his excellent ſermon on the power and efficacy of Chriſt's doctrine, has a fine obſervation; — Would any ſay, that the neceſſity of immediate and particular influences from Chriſt himſelf, is implied in this context, where he ſays, that he is a vine, and his diſciples branches, and that their bearing fruit depends as much upon influences from him, as the life and vigour of branches do upon the ſap derived from the root of the tree? It would be eaſy to anſwer, that the argument in the text is a ſimilitude, not literal truth. Neither is Chriſt literally a vine, nor are his diſciples, ſtrictly ſpeaking, branches. Men have a reaſonable, intellectual nature, above animals and vegetables. They are not governed by irreſiſtible, and neceſſary, or mechanical powers. But it is ſound doctrine, [402]and right principles, particularly the words of Chriſt, which are the words of God, that are their life, and may, and will, if attended to, powerfully enable them to promote good works, and to excell, and perſevere therein.

Two Iriſh gentlemen call upon me, and bring me to a gaming table, kept by a company of ſharpers, where I loſe all my fortune.§. 10. But it is time to my own ſtory. —While I lodged at Curl's, two Iriſh gentlemen came to ſee me, Jemmy King an attorney, and that famous maſter in chancery, who debauched Nelly Hayden, the beauty, and kept her ſeveral years. I knew theſe men were as great rakes as ever lived, and had no notion of religion; that they were devoted to pleaſure, and chaſed away every ſober thought and apprehenſion by company, by empty, vicious, and unmanly pleaſures: The voice of the monitor was loſt, in the confuſed noiſe and tumult of the paſſions: but I thought they had honour at the bottom, according to the common notion of it. I never imagined they were ſharpers, nor knew, that being ruined in Ireland, they came over to live by a gaming table. The Doctor eſpecially, I thought was above ever becoming that kind of man, as he had a large eſtate, and the beſt education; always kept good company; and to appearance, was as fine a gentleman as ever was ſeen in the world. With theſe two I dined, and after dinner, they brought me, as it were, out of curioſity, to a gaming table, they had [403]by accident diſcovered, where there was a bank kept by men of the greateſt honour, who played quite fair, and by hazarding a few guineas, I might perhaps, as they did, come off with ſome hundreds.

At entring the room, I ſaw about twenty well-dreſt men ſitting round a table, on which lay a vaſt heap of gold. We all began to play, and for two or three hours, I did win ſome hundreds of pounds: the Doctor and the other cheat, his friend, ſeemed to loſe a large ſum; but before morning they won it all back from me, with a great deal more; and I not only loſt what I had got then, but, excepting a few pounds, what I was worth in the world; the thouſands I had gained by my ſeveral wives. I had ſold their eſtates, and lodged the money in my banker's hands. The villains round this table got it all, and my two Iriſhmen were not to be ſeen. They diſappeared, and left me madly playing away my all. I heard no more of them, till I was told ſeveral years after, that they were in the Iſle of Man, among other outlawed, abandoned, wicked men; where they drank night and day, according to the cuſtom of the place, and lived in defiance of God and man. There theſe two advocates of impiety dwelt for ſome time, and died as they had lived; enemies to all good principles, and friends to a general corruption.

[404] As to the well-dreſt company round the table, they went off one by one, and left me all alone to the bitter thought, which led me to what I was ſome hours before, by what I then found myſelf to be. I was almoſt diſtracted. What had I to do with play, (I ſaid)? I wanted nothing. And now by villains, with a ſett of dice that would deceive the devil, I am undone. By ſharpers and falſe dice I have ſat to be ruined. The reflexion numb'd my ſenſes for ſome time: and then I ſtarted, was wild, and raved.

Curl's ſcheme to carry off an heireſs, which I did in a ſucceſsful manner.§. 11. This tranſaction made me very thoughtful, and I ſat within for ſeveral days, thinking which way to turn. Curl ſaw I was perplexed, and on his aſking me if I had met with any misfortune, I told him the whole caſe; that I had but one hundred pounds left, and requeſted he would adviſe me what I had beſt do. To do juſtice to every one, Curl ſeemed deeply concerned, and after ſome ſilence, as we ſat over a bottle at a Coffee-houſe, he bid me take notice of an old gentleman, who was not far from us. That is Dunk the miſer, who lives in a wood about 20 miles off. He has one daughter, the fineſt creature in the univerſe, and who is to ſucceed to his great eſtate, whether he will or not; it being ſo ſettled at his marriage; [405]but he confines her ſo much in the country, and uſes her ſo cruelly every way, that I believe ſhe would run away with any honeſt young fellow, who could find means to addreſs her. Know then (continued Curl) that I ſerve Mr. Dunk with paper, pens, ink, wax, pamphlets, and every thing he wants in my way. Once a quarter of a year, I generally go to his country-houſe with ſuch things, as he is glad to ſee me ſometimes; or if I cannot go myſelf, I ſend them by ſome other hand. Next week I am to forward ſome things to him, and if you will take them, I will write a line by you to Miſs his daughter, recommend you to her for a huſband, as one ſhe may depend on for honour and truth. She knows I am her friend, and who can tell, but ſhe may go off with you. She will have a thouſand a year, when the wretch her father dies, if he ſhould leave his perſonal eſtate another way.

This thought pleaſed me much, and at the appointed time, away I went to Mr. Dunk's country-houſe with a wallet full of things, and delivered Curl's letter to Miſs. As ſoon as ſhe had read it, I began my addreſs, and in the beſt manner I could, made her an offer of my ſervice, to deliver her from the tyrant her father. I gave her an account of a little farm I had on the borders of Cumberland, a purchaſe I had made, on account [406]of the charms of the ground, and a ſmall pretty lodge which ſtood in the middle of it, by a clump of old trees, near a murmuring ſtream; that if ſhe pleaſed, I would take her to that ſweet, ſilent ſpot, and enable her to live in peace; with contentment and tranquility of mind; tho' far away from the ſplendors and honours of the world: and conſidering, that a chriſtian is not to conform to the world, or to the pomps and vanities of it; its grand cuſtoms and uſages; its dreſs and entries; its ſtage repreſentations and maſquerades, as they miniſter to vice, and tend to debauch the manners; but are to look upon ourſelves as beings of another world, and to form our minds with theſe ſpiritual principles; it follows then, I think, that a pleaſing country ſituation for a happy pair muſt be grateful enough. There peace and love and modeſty may be beſt preſerved; the truth and gravity of our religion be ſtrictly maintained; and every lawful and innocent enjoyment be for ever the delights of life. Away from the idle modes of the world; perpetual love and unmixed joys may be our portion, through the whole of our exiſtence here; and the inward principles of the heart be ever laudable and pure. So will our happineſs as mortals be ſtable,—ſubject to no mixture or change; and when called away from this lower hemiſphere, have nothing to fear, as we uſed this [407]world, as tho' we uſed it not; as we knew no gratifications and liberties but what our religion allows us: as our enjoyments will be but the neceſſary convenience and accommodation, for paſſing from this world to the realms of eternal happineſs: Follow me then, Miſs Dunk; I will convey you to a ſcene of ſtill life and felicity, great and laſting as the heart of woman can wiſh for.

The charming Agnes ſeemed not a little ſurprized at what I had ſaid, and after looking at me very earneſtly for a minute or two, told me, ſhe would give me an anſwer to Mr. Curl's letter in leſs than half an hour, which was all ſhe could ſay at preſent, and with it I returned to give him an account of the reception I had. It will do, he ſaid, after he had read the letter I brought him from Miſs Dunk, but you muſt be my young man for a week or two more, and take ſome more things to the ſame place. He then ſhewed me the letter, and I read the following lines.

SIR,

I am extremely obliged to you for your concern about my happineſs and liberty, and will own to you, that in my diſmal ſituation, I would take the friend you recommend, for a guide through the wilderneſs, If I could think his heart was as ſound as his head. If [408]his intentions were as upright as his words are fluent and good, I need not be long in pondering on the ſcheme he propoſed.— But can we believe him true, as Lucinda ſays in the play?

The ſunny hill, the flow'ry vale,
The garden and the grove,
Have echo'd to his ardent tale,
And vows of endleſs love.
The conqueſt gain'd, he left his prize,
He left her to complain,
To talk of joy with weeping eyes,
And meaſure time by pain.

To this Curl replied in a circumſtantial manner, and vouched very largely for me. I delivered his letter the next morning, when I went with ſome acts of parliament to old Dunk, and I found the beauty, his daughter, in a roſy bower;—Simplex munditiis, neat and clean as poſſible in the moſt genteel undreſs; and her perſon ſo vaſtly fine, her face ſo vaſtly charming; that I could not but repeat the lines of Otway,

Man when created firſt wander'd up and down,
Forlorn and ſilent as his vaſſal brutes;
But when a heav'n-born maid, like you appear'd,
Strange pleaſures fill'd his ſoul, unloos'd his tongue,
And his firſt talk was love.—

A deal I ſaid upon the occaſion: we became well acquainted that day, as her father had [409]got a diſorder that obliged him to keep his bed, and by the time I had viſited her a month longer, under various pretences of buſineſs invented by the ingenious Curl, Agnes agreed to go off with me, and commit herſelf intirely to my care and protection: But before I relate this tranſaction, I think it proper to give my readers the picture of this lady; and then an apology for her flying away with me, with whom ſhe was but a month acquainted.

The picture of Miſs Dunk. Agnes in her perſon was neither tall nor thin, but almoſt both, young and lovely, graceful and commanding: She inſpired a reſpect, and compelled the beholder to admire and love and reverence her. Her voice was melodious; her words quite charming; and every look and motion to her advantage. Taſte was the characteriſtic of her underſtanding: Her ſentiments were refined: And a ſenſibility appeared in every feature of her face. She could talk on various ſubjects, and comprehended them, which is what few ſpeakers do: but with the fineſt diſcernment, ſhe was timid, and ſo diffident of her opinion, that ſhe often concealed the fineſt thoughts under a ſeeming ſimplicity of ſoul. This was viſible to a hearer, and the decency of ignorance added a new beauty to her character. In ſhort, poſſeſſed of excellence, ſhe [410]appeared unconſcious of it, and never diſcovered the leaſt pride or precipitancy in her converſation.—Her manner was perfectly polite, and mixed with a gaiety that charmed, becauſe it was as free from reſtraint as from boldneſs.

In ſum, excluſive of her fine underſtanding, in her dreſs, and in her behaviour, ſhe was ſo extremely pleaſing, ſo vaſtly agreeable and delightful, that ſhe ever brought to my remembrance, when I beheld her, the Corinna deſcribed in the beautiful lines of Tibullus:

Illam quicquid agit, quoquo veſtigia flectit,
Componit furtim ſubſequiturque decor;
Seu ſolvit crines, fuſis decet eſſe capillis;
Seu compſit comptis eſt veneranda comis.
Urit ſeu tyria voluit procedere pulla;
Urit ſeu nivea candida veſte venit.
Talis in aeterno felix Vertumnus Olympo
Mille habet ornatus, mille decenter habet.
When love would ſet the gods on fire, he flies
To light his torches at her ſparkling eyes.
Whate'er Corinna does, where'er ſhe goes,
The graces all her motions ſtill compoſe.
How her hair charms us, when it looſely falls,
Comb'd back and ty'd, our veneration calls!
If ſhe comes out in ſcarlet, then ſhe turns
Us all to aſhes,—though in white ſhe burns.
Vertumnus ſo a thouſand dreſſes wears,
So in a thouſand, ever grace appears.

[411] Such was the beautiful Agnes, who went off with me, and in ſo doing acted well and wiſely, I affirm, on her taking me only for an honeſt man; for there is no more obedience due from a daughter to her father, when he becomes an unrelenting oppreſſor, than there is from a ſubject to an Engliſh king, when the monarch acts contrary to the conſtitution. Paſſive obedience is as much nonſenſe in a private family, as in the government of the prince. The parent, like the king, muſt be a nurſing father, a rational humane ſovereign, and ſo long all ſervice and obedience are due. But if, like the prince, he becomes a tyrant, deprives his daughter of her natural rights and liberties; will not allow her the bleſſings of life, but keep her in chains and miſery; ſelf-preſervation, and her juſt claim to the comforts of exiſtence and a rational freedom, give her a right to change her ſituation, and better her condition. If ſhe can have bread, ſerenity, and freedom, peace and little, with an honeſt man, ſhe is juſt to herſelf in going off with ſuch a deliverer. Reaſon and revelation will acquit her.

Thus juſtly thought Miſs Dunk, and therefore with me ſhe fled at midnight. We met within half a mile of her father's houſe, by the ſide of an antient wood, and a running ſtream, which had a pleaſing effect, as it happened to be a bright moonſhine. With her [412]foot in my hand, I lifted her into her ſaddle, and as our horſes were excellent, we rid many miles in a few hours. By eight in the morning, we were out of the reach of old Dunk, and at the ſign of the Pilgrim, a lone houſe in Eſur-vale, in Hertfordſhire, we breakfaſted very joyfully. The charming Agnes ſeemed well pleaſed with the expedition, and ſaid a thouſand things that rendered the journey delightful. Twelve days we travelled in a fulneſs of delights, happy beyond deſcription, and the thirteenth arrived at a village not far from my little habitation. Here we deſigned to be married two days after, when we had reſted, as there was a church and a parſon in the town, and then ride on to Foley farm in Cumberland, as my ſmall ſpot was called, and there ſit down in peace and happineſs.

But the ſecond day, inſtead of riſing to the nuptial ceremony, to crown my life with unutterable bliſs, and make me beyond all mankind happy, the lovely Agnes fell ill of a fever. A ſenſe of weight and oppreſſion diſcovered the inflammation within, and was attended with ſharp and pungent pains. The blood could not paſs off as it ought in the courſe of circulation, and the whole maſs was in a violent fluctuation and motion. In a word, ſhe died in a few days, and as ſhe had requeſted, if it came to that, I laid her [413]out, and put her into the coffin myſelf. I kept her ſeven days, according to the cuſtom of the old Romans, and then in the dreſs of ſorrow, followed her to the grave.—Thus was my plan of happineſs broken to pieces. I had given a roundneſs to a ſyſtem of felicity, and in the place of it, ſaw death and horror, and diſappointment before me.

What to do next I could not tell. One queſtion was, ſhould I return to Orton-lodge, to my two young heireſſes? No: they wanted two years of being at age.—Then, ſhall I ſtay at Foley-farm where I was, and turn hermit? No: I had no inclination yet to become a father of the deſarts.—Will you return to London then, and ſee if fortune has any thing more in reſerve for you? This I liked beſt; and after ſix months deliberation on the thing, I left my farm in the care of an old woman, and ſet out in the beginning of January.

A winter night-ſcene on the mountains of Weſtmoreland.§. 13. It was as fine a winter's morning as I had ſeen, which encouraged me to venture among the Fells of Weſtmoreland; but at noon the weather changed, and an evening very terrible came on. A little after three, it began to blow, rain, and ſnow very hard, and it was not long before it was very dark. We loſt the way quite, and for three hours wandered about in as diſmal a night as ever [414]poor travellers had. The ſtorm rattled: The tempeſt howled: We could not ſee the horſe's heads, and were almoſt dead with cold. We had nothing to expect but death, as we knew not which way to turn to any houſe, and it was impoſſible to remain alive till the day appeared. It was a diſmal ſcene. But my time was not yet come, and when we had no ground to expect deliverance, the beaſts of a ſudden ſtopt, and Soto found we were at the gate of a walled yard. There he immediately made all the noiſe he could, and it was not long before a ſervant with a lantern came. He related our caſe within, and had orders to admit us. He brought me into a common parlour, where there was a good fire, and I got dry things. The man brought me half a pint of hot alicant, and in about half an hour, I was alive and well again. On enquiring where I was, the footman told me, it was Doctor Stanvil's houſe; that his maſter and lady were above in the dining-room, with ſome company, and he had directions to light me up, when I had changed my cloaths, and was recovered. Upon this I told him I was ready, and followed him.

My arrival at Dr. Stanvil's houſe, and introduced to the Doctor, and company.On the ſervant's opening a door, I entred a handſome apartment, well lighted with wax, and which had a glorious fire blazing in it. The doctor received me with great politeneſs, [415]and ſaid many civil things upon fortune's conducting me to his houſe. The converſation naturally fell upon the horrors of the night, as it ſtill continued to rain, hail, and blow, beyond what any of the company had ever heard; and one of the ladies ſaid, ſhe believed the winter was always far more, boiſterous and cold among the Fells of Weſtmoreland, than in any other part of England, for which ſhe gave ſeveral good reaſons: The ſolemn mountains, the beautiful vallies, the falling ſtreams, form one of the moſt charming countries in the world in ſummer-time; but in winter, it is the moſt dreadful ſpot of earth, to be ſure.

The ſurpriſing ſtory of Mrs. Stanvil.The voice of the lady who talked in this manner, I thought I was well acquainted with, but by the poſition of the candles, and the angle of a ſcreen in which ſhe ſat, I could not very well ſee her face: Amazement however began to ſeize me, and as an elegant ſupper was ſoon after brought in, I had an opportunity of ſeeing that Miſs Dunk whom I had buried, was now before my eyes, in the character of Dr. Stanvil's wife; or, at leaſt, it was one ſo like her, it was not poſſible for me to diſtinguiſh the figures:—there was the ſame bright victorious eyes, and cheſnut hair; the complexion like a bluſh, and a mouth where all the little loves for ever dwelt; there was the fugitive dimple, the inchanting [416]laugh, the roſy fingers, the fine height, and the mein more ſtriking than Calypſo's. O heavens! I ſaid to myſelf, on ſitting down to ſupper, What is this I ſee! But as ſhe did not ſeem to to be at all affected, or ſhewed the leaſt ſign of her having ever ſeen me before that time, I remained ſilent, and only continued to look with admiration at her, unmindful of the many excellent things before me.—In a minute or two, however, I recovered myſelf. I ate my ſupper, and joined in the feſtivity of the night. We had muſic, and ſeveral ſongs. We were eaſy, free, and happy as well-bred people could be.

Finn's obſerration, and diſcourſe in my bedchamber, on the company's retiring to their apartments.At midnight we parted, and finding an eaſy-chair by the ſide of my bed, I threw myſelf into it, and began to reflect on what I had ſeen; Finn ſtanding before me with his arms folded, and looking very ſeriouſly at me. This laſted for about a quarter of an hour, and then the honeſt fellow ſpoke in the following manner.—I beg leave, Sir, to imagine you are perplexing yourſelf about the lady of this houſe, whom I ſuppoſe you take for Miſs Dunk, we brought from the other ſide of England, half a year ago, and buried in the next church-yard to Blenkern. This, if I may be ſo free, is likewiſe my opinion. I would take my oath of it in a court of juſtice, if there was occaſion for that. However ſhe got out of the grave, and by [417]whatever caſualty ſhe came to be Mrs. Stanvil, and miſtreſs of this fine houſe; yet I could ſwear to her being the lady who travelled with us from the weſt to Cumberland. But then, it ſeems very wonderful and ſtrange, that ſhe ſhould forget you ſo ſoon, or be able to act a part ſo amazing, as to ſeem not to have ever ſeen you before this night. This has aſtoniſhed me, as I ſtood behind your chair at ſupper, looking full at her; and I obſerved ſhe looked at me once or twice. What to ſay to all this, I know not; but I will make all the enquiry I can among the ſervants, as to the time and manner of her coming here, and let you know to-morrow, what I have been able to collect in relation to her. In the mean time, be advis'd by me, Sir, tho' I am but a poor fellow, and think no more of the matter to the loſs of your night's reſt. We have had a wonderful deliverance from death by getting into this houſe, I am ſure, and we ought to lie down with thankfulneſs and joy, without fretting ourſelves awake for a woman, or any trifling incident that could befall. Beſide, ſhe is now another man's property, however it came to paſs, and it would be inconſiſtent with your character to think any more of her. This may be too free; but I hope, Sir, you will excuſe it in a ſervant who has your intereſt and welfare at heart. — Here the ſage Finn had done. He withdrew, and I went to ſleep.

[418] Finn's account of Mrs. Stanvil, which he had from the ſervants.Betimes the next morning, Finn was with me, and on my aſking what news, he ſaid, he had heard ſomething from all the ſervants, and more particularly had got the following account from the doctor's own man:—that Dr. Stanvil had a ſmall lodge within three miles of the houſe we were in, and retired there ſometimes to be more alone, than he could be in the reſidence we were at; that this lodge was a mere repoſitory of curioſities, in the middle of a garden full of all the herbs and plants that grew in every country of the world, and in one chamber of this houſe was a great number of ſkeletons, which the doctor had made himſelf; for it was his wont to procure bodies from the ſurrounding church-yards, by men he kept in pay for the purpoſe, and cut them up himſelf at this lodge: that ſome of theſe dead were brought to him in hampers, and ſome in their coffins on light railed cars, as the caſe required: that near ſix months ago, the laſt time the doctor was at this lodge, there was brought to him by his men the body of a young woman in her coffin, in order to a diſſection as uſual, and the bones being wired; but as it lay on the back, on the great table he cuts up on, and the point of his knife at the pit of the ſtomach, to open the breaſt, he perceived a kind of motion in the ſubject, heard a ſigh [419]ſoon after, and looking up to the head ſaw the eyes open and ſhut again: that upon this, he laid down his knife, which had but juſt ſcratch'd the body, at the beginning of the linea alba, (as my informer called it) and helped himſelf to put it into a warm bed: that he took all poſſible pains, by adminiſtering every thing he could think uſeful, to reſtore life, and was ſo fortunate as to ſet one of the fineſt women in the world on her feet again. As ſhe had no raiment but the ſhroud which had been on her in the coffin, he got every thing belonging to dreſs that a woman of diſtinction could have occaſion for, and in a few days time, ſhe ſparkled before her preſerver in the brightneſs of an Eaſtern princeſs: He was quite charmed with the beauties of her perſon, and could not enough admire her uncommon underſtanding: He offered to marry her, to ſettle largely on her, and as ſhe was a ſingle woman, ſhe could not in gratitude refuſe the requeſt of ſo generous a benefactor: My informer further related, that they have both lived in the greateſt happineſs ever ſince; and the doctor, who is one of the beſt of men, is continually ſtudying how to add to the felicities of her every day: that he offered to take her up to London to paſs the winters there, but this ſhe refuſed, and deſired ſhe might remain where ſhe was in the country, as it was really moſt agreeable [420]to her, and as he preferred it to the town.

A reflexion on Miſs Dunk's marrying Dr. Stanvil.This account made the thing quite plain to me. And to judge impartially, conſidering the whole caſe, I could neither blame the lovely Agnes for marrying the doctor, nor condemn her for pretending to be a ſtranger to me. She was fairly dead and buried, and all connexion between us was at an end of courſe, as there had been no marriage, nor contract of marriage. And as to reviving the affair, and renewing the tenderneſs which had exiſted, it could anſwer no other end than producing unhappineſs, as ſhe was then Mrs. Stanvil, in a decent and happy ſituation. And further, in reſpect of her marrying the doctor ſo ſoon after her ſeparation from me, it was certainly the wiſeſt thing ſhe could do, as ſhe had been ſo intirely at his diſpoſal, was without a ſtitch to cover her, and I in all probability, after burying her, being gone up to London, or in ſome place, where ſhe could never hear of me more; I might likewiſe have been married, if any thing advantageous had offered after laying her in the church-yard. And beſide, ſhe neither knew the place ſhe fell ſick in, nor the country the doctor removed her to, as ſoon as ever he could get any cloaths to put on her. So that, naked and friendleſs as ſhe was, without any money, and ignorant of [421]what became of me; without a poſſibility of informing herſelf; I could not but acquit her. I even admired her conduct, and reſolved ſo far to imitate her, in regard to the general happineſs, that nothing ſhould appear in my behaviour, which could incline any one to think, I had ever ſeen her before the night the tempeſt drove me to her houſe. I was vexed, I own, to loſe her. But that could be no reaſon for making a ſenſeleſs uproar, that could do nothing but miſchief.

As compoſed then as I could be, I went down to breakfaſt, on a ſervant's letting me know they waited for me, and found the ſame company, who had ſo lately parted to ſlumber, all quite alive and chearful, eaſy and happy as mortals could be. At the requeſt of Dr. Stanvil, who was extremely civil, I ſtaid with them two months, and paſſed the time in a delightful converſation, intermixed with muſic, cards, and feaſting.My departure from Dr. Stanvil's houſe. With ſadneſs I left them all, but eſpecially on account of parting for ever with the late Miſs Dunk. It was indeed for the pleaſure of looking at her, that I ſtaid ſo long as I did at Dr. Stanvil's; and when it came to an eternal ſeparation, I felt that morning of my departure, an inward diſtreſs it is impoſſible to give an idea of to another. It had ſome reſemblance (I imagine) of what the viſionaries call a dereliction; when they ſink from [422]extaſy to the black void of horror, by the ſtrength of fancy, and the unnacountable operation of the animal ſpirits.

Some obſervations on Mrs. Stanvil's coming to life again, after being taken out of the grave.Here, before I proceed, I think I ought to remove ſome objections that may be made againſt my relation of Mrs. Stanvil's coming to life again, and her being brought from the couch of laſting night to a bridal bed. It is not eaſy to believe, that after I ſeemed certain ſhe was dead, and kept her the proper number of days before interment; ſaw her lie the cold wan ſubject for a conſiderable time, and then let down into the grave; yet from thence ſhe ſhould come forth, and now be the deſire of a huſband's eyes. This is a hard account ſure. But nevertheleſs, it is a fact. As to my being miſtaken, no leſs a man than Dr. Cheyne thought Colonel Townſend dead: (See his Nervous Caſes:) And that ſeveral have lived for many years, after they had been laid in the tomb, is a thing too certain, and well-known, to be denied. In Bayle's dictionary, there is the hiſtory of a lady of quality, belonging to the court of Catharine de Medicis, who was brought from the church vault, where ſhe had been forty-eight hours, and afterwards became the mother of ſeveral children, on her marriage with the Marquis D'Auvergne.—The learned Dr. Connor, in his hiſtory of Poland, gives us a very wonderful relation of a gentleman's reviving [423]in that country, after he had been ſeemingly dead for near a fortnight; and adds a very curious diſſertation on the nature of ſuch recoveries. The caſe of Dun Scotus, who was found out of his coffin, on the ſteps going down to the vault he was depoſited in, and leaning on his elbow, is full to my purpoſe. And I can affirm from my own knowledge, that a gentleman of my acquaintance, a worthy excellent man, was buried alive, and found not only much bruiſed and torn, on opening his coffin, but turned on one ſide. This many ſtill living can atteſt as well as I. The reaſon of opening the grave again, was his dying of a high fever in the abſence of his lady, who was in a diſtant county from him; and on her return, three days after he was buried, would have a ſight of him, as ſhe had been extremely fond of him. His face was ſadly broke, and his hands hurt in ſtriving to force up the lid of the coffin. The lady was ſo affected with the diſmal ſight, that ſhe never held up her head after, and died in a few weeks. I could likewiſe add another extraordinary caſe of a man who was hang'd, and to all appearance was quite dead, yet three days after his execution recovered as they were going to cut him up. —How theſe things happen, is not eaſy to account for; but happen they do ſometimes. And this caſe of Mrs. Stanvil, may be depended on as a fact.

[424] N. B. The following is the thing promiſed the Engliſh reader at page 381.

The legend on the monument of Homonoea, tranſlated into Engliſh.

Atimetus.

If it was allowed to lay down one's life for another, and poſſible by ſuch means, to ſave what we loved from the grave, whateever length of days was allotted me, I would with pleaſure offer up my life, to get my Homonoea from the tomb; but as this cannot be done, what is in my power I will do,—fly from the light of heaven, and follow you to the realms of laſting night.

Homonoea.

My deareſt Atimetus, ceaſe to torment your unhappy mind, nor let grief thus feed on your youth, and make life bitterneſs itſelf. I am gone in the way appointed for all the mortal race: All muſt be numbered with the dead. And ſince fate is inexorable, and tears are in vain, weep not for me, once more I conjure you. But may you be ever happy, may providence preſerve you, and [425]add to your life thoſe years which have been taken from mine.

The perſon who erected the monument to the memory of Homonoea.

Stop, traveller, for a few minutes, and ponder on theſe lines.

Here lies Homonoea, whom Atimetus preferred to the greateſt and moſt illuſtrious women of his time. She had the form of Venus, the charms of the graces; and an underſtanding and ſenſibility, which demonſtrated that wiſdom had given to an angel's form, a mind more lovely. Before ſhe was twenty, ſhe was diſſolved. And as ſhe had practiſed righteouſneſs, by carrying it well to thoſe about her, and to all that were ſpecially related, ſhe parted with them, as ſhe had lived with them, in juſtice and charity, in modeſty and ſubmiſſion, in thankfulneſs and peace. Filled with divine thoughts, inured to contemplate the perfections of God, and to acknowledge his providence in all events, ſhe died with the humbleſt reſignation to the divine will, and was only troubled that ſhe left her huſband a mourner. Excellent Homonoea.

May the earth lie light upon thee, and in the morning of the reſurrection, may you awake again to life, and riſe to that immortality and glory, which God, the righteous [426]Judge, will give to true worth and dignity; — as rewards to a life adorned with all virtues and excellencies, — the dikaiómata, — that is, the righteous acts of the Saints.

SECTION XII.

[427]
Opinion's foot is never, never found
Where knowledge dwells, 'tis interdicted ground;
At wiſdom's gate th' opinion's muſt reſign
Their charge, thoſe limits their employ confine.
Thus trading barks, ſkill'd in the wat'ry road,
To diſtant climes convey their precious load.
Then turn their prow, light bounding o'er the main,
And with new traffic ſtore their keels again.
Thus far is clear. But yet untold remains,
What the good genius to the crowd ordains,
Juſt on the verge of life.
He bids them hold
A ſpirit with erected courage hold.
Never (he calls) on fortune's faith rely,
Nor graſp her dubious gift as property.
Let not her ſmile tranſport, her frown diſmay,
Nor praiſe, nor blame, nor wonder at her ſway,
Which reaſon never guides: 'tis fortune ſtill,
Capricious chance, and arbitrary will.
Bad bankers, vain of treaſure not their own,
With fooliſh rapture hug the truſted loan.
Impatient, when the pow'rful bond demands
Its unremember'd cov'nant from their hands.
Unlike to ſuch, without a ſigh reſtore
What fortune lends: anon ſhe'll laviſh more.
Repenting of her bounty, ſnatch away,
Yea, ſeize your patrimonial fund for prey,
Embrace her proffer'd boon, but inſtant riſe,
Spring upward, and ſecure a laſting prize,
The gift which wiſdom to her ſons divides;
Knowledge, whoſe beam the doubting judgment guides,
Scatters the ſenſual fog, and clear to view
Diſtinguiſhes falſe int'reſt from the true.
Flee, flee to this, with unabating pace,
Nor parly for a moment at the place,
[428] Where pleaſure and her harlots tempt, nor reſt,
But at falſe wiſdom's inn, a tranſient gueſt:
For ſhort refection, at her table fit,
And take what ſcience may your palate hit:
Then wing your journey forward, till you reach
True wiſdom, and imbibe the truth ſhe'll teach.
Such is th' advice the friendly genius gives,
He periſhes who ſcorns, who follows lives.
SCOTT'S CEBES.(17)

A reflexion as I rid from Dr. Stanvil's houſe.§. 1. WITH this advice of the genius in my head, (which by chance I had read the morning I took my leave of Dr. Stanvil,) I ſet out, as I had reſolved, for York, and deſign'd to go from thence to London; hoping to meet with ſomething good, and purpoſing, if it was poſſible, to be no longer the Rover, but turn to ſomething uſeful, and fix. I had loſt almoſt all at the gaming-table, (as related) and had not thirty pounds of my laſt hundred remaining: This, with a few ſheep, cows and horſes at Orton-lodge, and a very ſmall ſtock at my little farm, on the [429]borders of Cumberland, was all I had left. It made me very ſerious, and brought ſome diſmal apprehenſions in view: But I did not deſpair. As my heart was honeſt, I ſtill truſted in the providence of God, and his adminiſtration of things is this world. As the infinite power and wiſdom of the Creator was evident, from a ſurvey of this magnificent and glorious ſcene; — as his care and providence over each particular, in the adminiſtration of the great ſcheme was conſpicuous; can man, the favourite of heaven, have reaſon to lift up his voice to complain, if he calls off his affections from folly, and by natural and ſupernatural force, by reaſon and revelation, overbears the prejudices of fleſh and blood;—if he ponders the hopes and fears of religion,—and gives a juſt allowance to a future intereſt? Hearken to the commandments, (ſaith the Lord,) and your peace ſhall be as a river.

A tempeſt.§. 2. On then I trotted, brave as the man of wood, we read of in an excellent French writer,(18) [429]and hoped at the end of every [430]mile to meet with ſomething fortunate; but nothing extraordinary occurred till the ſecond evening, when I arrived at a little lone public-houſe, on the ſide of a great heath, by the entrance of a wood. For an hour before I came to this reſting-place, I had rid in a tempeſt of wind, rain, lightning and thunder, ſo very violent, that it brought to my remembrance old Heſiod's deſcription of a ſtorm.

Then Jove omnipotent diſplay'd the god,
And all Olympus trembled as he trod:
He graſps ten thouſand thunders in his hand,
Bares his red arm, and wields the forky brand;
Then aims the bolts, and bids his lightnings play,
They flaſh, and rend thro' heav'n their flaming way:
Redoubling blow on blow, in wrath he moves,
The ſing'd earth groans, and burns with all her groves:
A night of clouds blots out the golden day,
Full in their eyes the writhen lightnings play:
Nor ſlept the wind; the wind new horror forms,
Clouds daſh on clouds before th' outragious ſtorms;
While tearing up the ſands, in drifts they riſe,
And half the deſarts mount th' encumber'd ſkies:
At once the tempeſt bellows, lightnings fly,
The thunders roar, and clouds involve the ſky.

It was a dreadful evening upon a heath, and ſo much as a buſh was not to be met [431]with for ſhelter: but at laſt we came to the thatched habitation of a publican, and I thought it a very comfortable place: We had bread and bacon, and good ale for ſupper, and in our circumſtances, it ſeemed a delicious meal.

The Author is informed of an old acquaintance of his, who lived not far from the inn he arrived at.§. 3. This man informed me, that about a mile from his habitation, in the middle of the wood, there dwelt an old phyſician, one Dr. Fitzgibbons, an Iriſh gentleman, who had one very pretty daughter, a ſenſible woman, to whom he was able to give a good fortune, if a man to both their liking appeared; but as no ſuch one had as yet come in their way, my landlord adviſed me to try the adventure, and he would furniſh me with an excuſe for going to the doctor's houſe. This ſet me a thinking: Dr. Fitzgibbons, an Iriſh gentleman, I ſaid: I know the man. I ſaved his ſon's life, in Ireland, when he was upon the brink of deſtruction, and the old gentleman was not only then as thankful as it was poſſible for a man to be, in return for the good I had done him, at the hazard of my own life; but aſſured me, a thouſand times over, that if ever it was in his power to return my kindneſs, he would be my friend to the utmoſt of his ability. He muſt ever remember, with the greateſt gratitude, the benefit I had [432]ſo generouſly conferred on him and his. All this came full into my mind, and I determined to viſit the old gentleman in the morning.

§. 4. Next day, as I had reſolved, I went to pay my reſpects to Dr. Fitzgibbons, who remembered me perfectly well, was moſt heartily glad to ſee me, and received me in the moſt affectionate manner. He immediately began to repeat his obligations to me, for the deliverance I had given his ſon, and that if it was in his power to be of ſervice to me in England, he would leave nothing undone that was poſſible for him to do, to befriend me.(19) [432]He told me, that [433]darling ſon of his, whoſe life I had ſaved, was an eminent phyſician at the court of Ruſſia, where he lived in the greateſt opulence and reputation: and as he owed his exiſtence as ſuch to me, his father could never be grateful enough in return. Can I any way ſerve you, Sir? Have you been fortunate or unfortunate, ſince your living in England? Are you married or unmarried? I have a daughter by a ſecond wife, and if you are not yet engaged, will give her to you, with a good fortune, and in two years time; if you will ſtudy phyſic here, under my direction, will enable you to begin to practice, and get money as I have done in this country. I have ſo true a ſenſe of that generous act you did to ſave my ſon, that I will with pleaſure do any thing in my power that can contribute to your happineſs.

[434] To this I replied, by thanking the doctor for his friendly offers, and letting him know, that ſince my coming to England ſeveral years ago, which was occaſioned by a difference between my father and me; I had met with ſeveral turns of fortune, good and bad, and was at preſent but in a very middling way; having only a little ſpot among the mountains of Richmondſhire, with a cottage and garden on it, and three or four beaſts, which I found by accident without an owner, as I travelled through that uninhabited land; and a ſmall farm of fifty acres with ſome ſtock, on the borders of Cumberland, which I got by a deceaſed wife. This, with about fifty guineas in my purſe, was my all at preſent; and I was going up to London, to try if I could meet with any thing fortunate in that place; but that, ſince he was pleaſed to make me ſuch generous offers, I would ſtop, ſtudy phyſic as he propoſed, and accept the great honour he did me in offering me his daughter for a wife. I told him likewiſe very fairly and honeſtly, that I had been rich by three or four marriages ſince my being in this country; but that I was unfortunately taken in at a gaming-table, by the means of two Iriſh gentlemen he knew very well, and there loſt all; which vext me the more, as I really do not love play:—that as to my father, I had little to expect from him, tho' [435]he had a great eſtate, as our difference was about religion; (which kind of diſputes always have the cruelleſt tendency;) and the wife you know he married, a low cunning woman, does all ſhe can to maintain the variance, and keep up his anger to me, that her nephew may do the better on my ruin. I have not writ to him ſince my being in England: Nor have I met with any one who could give me any account of the family. This is my caſe, Sir.

And what (Dr. Fitzgibbons ſaid) is this fine religious diſpute, which has made your father fall out with a ſon he was once ſo fond of?—It was about trinity in unity, Sir: a thing I have often heard your ſon argue againſt by leſſons he had from you, as he informed me. My father is as orthodox as Gregory Nazienzen, among the antient fathers, or Trapp and Potter, Webſter and Waterland, among the modern doctors; and when he found out, that I was become an unitarian, and renounced his religion of three Gods, the horrible creed of Athanaſius, and all the deſpicable explications of his admired divines, on that ſubject; — that I inſiſted, that notwithſtanding all the ſubtle inventions of learned men, through the whole chriſtian world, yet God Almighty hath not appointed himſelf to be worſhipped by precept or example in any one inſtance in his holy word, [436]under the character of Father, Son, and Holy Ghoſt; — that the worſhip of three perſons and one God is expreſly contrary to the ſolemn determination of Chriſt and his Apoſtles;— and in numbers of inſtances in the New Teſtament it is declared, that the one God and Father of all is the only ſupreme object, to whom all religious worſhip ſhould be directed:— that for theſe reaſons, I renounced the received doctrine of a co-equal trinity, and believed our great and learned divines, who laboured to prevent people from ſeeing the truth as it is in Jeſus, would be in ſome tribulation at Chriſt's tribunal; where they are to appear ſtripped of all worldly honours, dignities, and preferments, poor, naked, wretched mortals, and to anſwer for their ſupplement to the goſpel, in an invented hereſy of three Gods. —When my father heard theſe things, and ſaw the religious caſe of his ſon, his paſſion was very great. He forbid me his table, and ordered me to ſhift for myſelf. He renounced me, as I had done the triune God.

The doctor wondered not a little at the account I had given him, (as my father was reckoned a man of great abilities,) and taking me by the hand, ſaid, I had acted moſt gloriouſly: that what loſt me my father's affection, was the very thing that ought to have [437]induced him to erect a ſtatue to my honour in his garden: — that ſince I was pleaſed to accept of his offer, his friendſhip I might depend on:— that if I would, I ſhould begin the next day the ſtudy of phyſic under his direction, and at the end of two years, he would give me his daughter, who was not yet quite twenty.

The picture of Julia Fitzgibbons.§. 5. Juſt as he had ſaid this, Miſs Fitzgibbons entred the room, and her father introduced me to her. The ſight of her aſtoniſhed me; tho' I had before ſeen ſo many fine women, I could not help looking with wonder at her. She appeared one of thoſe finiſhed creatures, whom we cannot enough admire, and upon acquaintance with her, became much more glorious.

What a vaſt variety of beauty do we ſee in the infinity of nature. Among the ſex, we may find a thouſand and a thouſand perfect images and characters; all equally ſtriking, and yet as different as the pictures of the greateſt maſters in Italy. What amazing charms and perfections have I beheld in women as I journeyed through life. When I have parted from one; well I ſaid, I ſhall never meet another like this inimitable maid; and yet after all, Julia appeared divinely fair, and happy in every excellence that can [438]adorn the female mind. Without that exact regularity of beauty, and elegant ſoftneſs of propriety, which rendered Miſs Dunk, whom I have deſcribed in theſe Memoirs, a very divinity, Julia charmed with a graceful negligence, and enchanted with a face that glowed with youthful wonders, beauties that art could not adorn but always diminiſhed. The choice of dreſs was no part of Julia's care, but by the neglect of it ſhe became irreſiſtible. In her countenance there ever appeared a bewitching mixture of ſenſibility and gaiety, and in her ſoul, by converſe we diſcovered that generoſity and tenderneſs were the firſt principles of her mind. To truth and virtue ſhe was inwardly devoted, and at the bottom of her heart, tho' hard to diſcover it, her main buſineſs to ſerve God, and fit herſelf for eternity. In ſum, ſhe was one of the fineſt originals that ever appeared among womankind, peculiar in perfections which cannot be deſcribed; and ſo inexpreſſibly charming in an attractive ſweetneſs, a natural gaiety, and a ſtriking negligence, a fine underſtanding, and the moſt humane heart; that I found it impoſſible to know her without being in love with her: Her power to pleaſe was extenſive indeed. In her, one had the lovelieſt idea of woman.

[439] The Author marries Miſs Fitzgibbons his ſeventh wife.§. 6. To this fine creature I was married at the end of two years from my firſt acquaintance with her; that is, after I had ſtudied phyſic ſo long, under the care and inſtruction of her excellent father; who died a few weeks after the wedding, which was in the beginning of the year 1734, and the 29th of my age. Dying, he left me a handſome fortune, his library, and houſe; and I imagined I ſhould have lived many happy years with his admirable daughter, who obliged me by every endearing means, to be exceſſively fond of her. I began to practiſe upon the old gentleman's death, and had learned ſo much in the two years I had ſtudied under him, from his lecturing and my own hard reading, that I was able to get ſome money among the opulent round me; not by art and colluſion, the caſe of too many doctors in town and country, but by practiſing upon conſiſtent principles. The method of my reading, by Dr. Fitzgibbon's directions, was as follows; and I ſet it down here for the benefit of ſuch gentlemen, as chuſe to ſtudy in the private manner I did.

A METHOD of ſtudying PHYSIC in a private Manner: By which means a Gentleman, with the Purchaſe of a Diploma, may turn out DOCTOR, as well as if he went to PADUA, to hear MORGANNI.

[440]

THE firſt books I got upon my table, were the lexicons of Caſtellus and Quincy; one for the explication of antient terms; and the other of modern. Theſe, as Dictionaries, lay at hand for uſe, when wanted.

I then opened the laſt edition of Schelhammer's Herman Conringius's Introductio in univerſam artem medicam, ſingulaſque ejus partes; I ſay the laſt edition, 1726, becauſe that has an excellent preface by Hoffman. This book, which comes down to the beginning of the 17th century, I read with great care; eſpecially Gonthier Chriſtopher Schelhammer's notes, and additions, which have enriched the work very much. (By the way, they were both very great men, and bright ornaments to their profeſſion. They writ an amazing number of books on medicine. Conringius died December 1681, aged 75. Schelhammer, in January 1716, in the 67th year of his age.)

The next introductory book to the art, was Lindenius renovatus de ſcriptis medicis, [441]quibus praemittitur manuductio ad medicinam. This book was firſt called Libro duo de ſcripturis, &c. and written by Vander Linden, a famous Leyden profeſſor, who publiſhed it in the year 1637, in a ſmall octavo. In the ſame form it was printed in 1651 and 1662: theſe three editions at Amſterdam: But the valuable edition is that of Nuremburg, 1686, by George Abraham Merklinus, who made very many and excellent additions to this fourth edition, and called it Lindenius renovatus, as he had augmented it to a vaſt 4 to. John Antonides Vander Linden died in March 1664, aged 55. And Merklinus in April 1702, in the 58th year of his age. They both writ many books in phyſic: but there have been ſuch improvements made by the diligence and ſucceſs of modern phyſicians, that it would be only loſs of time to read over all their works, or all the authors of the 17th century.

The next books I opened, were the learned Daniel Le Clerc's hiſtory of phyſic, which commences with the world, and ends at the time of Galen; and the great Dr. Friend's hiſtory, which is a continuation of Le Clerc, down to Linacre, the founder of the College of Phyſicians, in the reign of Henry VIII. —Theſe books ſhewed me the origin and revolutions of phyſic, and the antient writers and their works on this ſubject. By the way, Daniel [442]Le Clerc died in June 1728, aged 76, and ſome months.

When I had read theſe things,* I turned next to botany, and read Raii Methodus plantarum emendata, Londini 1703. Raii Synopſis methodica ſtirpium, Ed. 3. And Tournefort's Inſtitutiones rei herbariae. Theſe books with a few obſervations of my own, as I walked in the gardens, the fields, and on the plains, furniſhed me with ſufficient knowledge of this kind for the preſent. The vaſt folio's on this ſubject are not for beginners.

Chemiſtry was the next thing my director bid me look into, and to this purpoſe I peruſed Boerhaave's Elementa chemiae: and Hoffman's Obſervationes phyſico-chemiae: Theſe afford as much chemiſtry as a young phyſician need ſet out with: but as books alone give but an imperfect conception, I performed moſt of the common operations in the portable furnace of Becher.

The materia medica in the next place had my attention, that is, thoſe animal, vegetable, and foſſil ſubſtances, which are uſed to prevent, cure, or palliate diſeaſes. And in order to know the names of all the drugs, [443]their hiſtory, the adulterations they are ſubject to, their virtues, their doſe, their manner of uſing them, and the cautions which they require, — to get a ſufficient knowledge of this kind, I looked into Geoffrey's materia medica, and made a collection of the materia at the ſame time, that I might conceive and remember what I read.

Pharmacy, or the art of preparing and compounding medicines, was the next thing I endeavoured to be a maſter of. And that I might know how to exalt their virtues, to obviate their ill qualities, and to make them leſs nauſeous, I read to this purpoſe, Quincy's pharmaceutical lectures and diſpenſatory: and took care to be well verſed in all the pharmacopoeia's, thoſe of London, Edinburgh, Paris, Boerhaave, Bate, and Fuller. And I read very carefully Gaubin's methodus praeſcribendi. This gave me the materials, and taught me the form of preſcribing.

Anatomy I ſtudied next, that is, the art of dividing the ſeveral parts of a body, ſo as to know their ſize, figure, ſituation, connexions, and make. I began with Drake and Keil, and then read over Winſlow. I had likewiſe open before me at the ſame time, at my entrance upon this ſtudy, a good ſet of plates, the tables of Euſtachius and Cooper, and turned them carefully over as I read. The doctor then ſhewed me how to diſſect, [444]but chiefly by the direction of a book called the Culter Anatomicus of Michel Lyſerus, ou methode courte, facile, & claire de diſſequer les corps humaines. I was ſoon able to perform myſelf. It was the third edition of Lyſerus, 1679; which has many curious anatomical obſervations added to it by Gaſpard Bartholin, the ſon of the celebrated Thomas Bartholin, Copenhagen profeſſor. (Michel Lyſére was the diſciple of the great Thomas Bartholin. Thomas died, December 1680, in his 64th year. Michel in 16 [...]9.) a young man; regretté à cauſe de ſon merite. I had alſo Nichol's Compendium, and Hunter's Compendium. By theſe means, and by reading the authors who have written upon ſome one part only; ſuch as Peyerus de glandulis inteſtinus. Experimenta circa pancras. De Graaf de organis generationis. Gaſp. Bartholin de diaphragm. Malpigius de pulmonibus — de venibus — de liene, et de cornuum vegetatione. Lower de corde—de ventriculo, et de cerebri anat. Willis de reſpiratione. Gliſſon de hepatoe. Caſſ [...]rius de vocis audituſque organis. Walſalou de aure. Havers on the bones. Munro on the bones. Douglas on the muſcles. Morgagni adverſaria. Ruyſhii opera. Nuck's Adenographia. Wharton's Adenographia. Ridley's anatomy of the brain. Santorini obſervationes. Boneti ſepulchrum anatomicum. Blaſii anatomia animalium. Tyſon's anatomy of the oran-outang. By theſe means, I cut up the [445]body of a young woman, I had from a neighbouring church-yard, and acquired knowledge enough of anatomy.

N. B. If all the pieces written upon ſome one part of the body, are not to be had ſingle, the reader inclined to the delightful ſtudy of phyſic, will find them in the Bibliotheca Anatomica, 2 vols. folio.

Here before I proceed, I will mention a very curious caſe, which occurred in my diſſecting the body I have ſpoken of. It was as remarkable an example of a preternatural ſtructure as ever appeared.Caſe of a young woman with a double vagina. In cutting her up, there was found two vaginas, and a right and left uterus. Each uterus had its correſponding vagina, and the uteri and the vaginae lay parallel to each other; there was only one ovarium; but two perfect hymens. The labia ſtretched ſo as to take in the anus, terminating beyond it; and as they were in large ridges, and well armed, the whole had a formidable appearance. If it ſhould be aſked, Could a perfect ſuperfoetation take place in ſuch a perſon? Moſt certainly there might be one conception upon the back of another at different times; therefore, I ſhould not chuſe to marry a woman with two vaginas, if it was poſſible to know it before wedlock.

But to proceed, — The next things I read, were the Inſtitutes of Medicine, that is, ſuch books as treat of the oeconomy and contrivance [446]of nature in adapting the parts to their ſeveral uſes. The books purely phyſiological, are, Keil's Tentamina. Sanctorii aphoriſmi. Bellini de pulſibus et urina. Borellus de motu animalium. Harvey de motu cordis: —And de generation animalium. (two admirable pieces.) Friend's Emmenologia. Simpſon's Syſtem of the Womb. And Pitcairne's Tracts. Theſe are the beſt things relating to phyſiology, which may be called the firſt part of the Inſtitutions of Phyſic.

The 2d part of the Inſtitutes is the Art of preſerving ſuch a ſyſtem as the body, in an order fit for the exerciſe of its functions as long as poſſible. The 3d part is pathology, which teaches the different manners in which diſeaſes happen; and the various cauſes of theſe diſorders, with their attendants and conſequences: The 4th part is the doctrine of ſigns, by which a judgment is formed of the ſound or bad ſtate of the animal: And the 5th is Therapentica, that is, the means and method of reſtoring ſanity to a diſtempered body. Treatiſes on all theſe matters, are what we call inſtitutions of phyſic, and in relation, to the four laſt mentioned, the beſt books are, Hoffman's Syſtema medicinoe rationalis, and Boerhaave's Inſtitutions, with his lectures upon them. Theſe books I read with great attention, and found them ſufficient.

[447] Being inſtituted in this manner, I turned next to the practical writers, and read the hiſtory of diſeaſes and their cure from obſervations of nature. This is called pathologia particularis, and is the great buſineſs of a phyſician. All that has been ſaid is only preparatory to this ſtudy. Here then I firſt very carefully read the authors who have written a ſyſtem of all diſeaſes; and then, ſuch writers as have conſidered particular caſes. The beſt ſyſtem writers are Boerhaave's aphoriſms and comment. Hoffman's pathologia particularis; being the laſt part of his Syſtema medicinae. Jumher's coſpectus medicinae. Allen's Synopſis. Shaw's Practice of phyſic; and Lomnii opuſculum aureum.

The writers on a few and particular diſtempers are, Sydenham opera. Moreton's Puretologia. Bellini de morbis capitis et pectoris. Ramazzini de morbis artificium. Wepſemus de apoplexia. Floyer on the aſthma. Aſtruc de lue venerea. Turner's ſynopſis: And of the ſkin. Muſgrave de arthritide. Highmore de paſſione hyſterica et hypocondria. Gliſſon de rachitide. Clericus de lumbrico lato. Daventer ars obſtetricandi. Mauriceau des femmes groſſes. Harris de morbis infantium. Turner's letter to a young phyſician. All theſe books very carefully I read, and to your reading add the beſt obſervations you can any where get, or make yourſelf. I writ down in the ſhorteſt manner, abſtracts [448]of the moſt curious and uſeful things, eſpecially the repreſentations of nature; and refreſhed my memory by often looking into my notebook. Every thing taken from nature is valuable. Hypotheſis is entertaining rather than uſeful.

And when I was reading the hiſtory of diſeaſes in the authors I have juſt mentioned, I looked into the antient Greek and Latin medical writers; for all their merit lies in this kind of hiſtory. Their pharmacy and anatomy is good for nothing. They ſcarce knew any thing of the human bodies, but from the diſſections of other animals, took their deſcriptions. The great Veſalius in the beginning of the 16th century, was the firſt that taught phyſicians to ſtudy nature in diſſecting human bodies; which was then conſidered by the church as a kind of ſacrilege.(20) [448]As to chemiſtry, they had no [449]notion of it. It was not heard of till ſome hundred years after the lateſt of them. In botany they had made little progreſs. In ſhort, as they knew little of botany;—nothing of chemiſtry; as their ſyſtems of natural philoſophy and anatomy were falſe and unnatural, (and it is upon anatomy and natural philoſophy, that phyſiology or the uſe of the parts is founded,) we can expect nothing from the antients upon theſe heads, but mere imaginations, or notions unſupported by obſervation or matter of fact. It is their hiſtory of diſeaſes ſupports their character. Hippocrates, in particular, excels all others on this head: but this great man was not perfect even in this. Knowledge in nature is the daughter of time and experience. Many notions of the animal oeconomy were then abſurd; and if Hippocrates was too wiſe to act always up to his theory, yet he could not be intirely free from its influence.

[450] The names of the antient original greek medical writers are, Hippocrates, Dioſcorides, Aritaeus, Galen, and Alexander. The latin writers of phyſic are, Celſus, Scribonius Largus, Caelius Aurelianus, Marcellus Empericus, Theodorus Priſcianus, and Sextus Placitus. We have beſides ſeveral collectors, as Oribaſius, Aetius, Paulus Aeginita, &c. Nicander, the medical poet; and the fragments of Soranus, Rufus Epheſius, Zonorates, Vindicianus, Diocles Caryſtius, Caſſius, and a few others: but all theſe may be looked into afterwards. The original authors are ſufficient in the noviciate.

As to the latin medical writers, Celſus, and Caelius Aurelianus only, are worth reading. Celſus lived in the latter end of the reign of Auguſtus, and is admirable for the purity of his latin, and the elegance of his ſenſe. You muſt have him night and morning in your hands, till you are a maſter of the terms and expreſſions peculiar to phyſic, which occur in him. The ſtyle of Caelius is very bad, and his cavils tedious: but his deſcription of diſeaſes is full and accurate. In this reſpect he is a very valuable writer. He lived in the ſecond century, as did Galen likewiſe.

As to Hippocrates, who was contemporary with Socrates, he was born the firſt year of the Soth Olympiad, 460 before Chriſt. René [451]Chartier's Edit. Paris, 1639, is the moſt pompous: but Vander Linden's, Leyden, 1668, 2 vols. in 8vo, is the beſt. When I read Hippocrates, I did alſo look into Proſper Alpini's good book, De preſagienda vita, et morte aegrotantium: In which he has with great care collected and methodized all the ſcattered obſervations of Hippocrates, relating to the dangerous or ſalutary appearances in difeaſes. At the ſame time, I likewiſe read this great man's Medicina Methodica. (He died profeſſor of botany at Padua, Feb. 1617, Aet 64. and was born November, 1553.) I did likewiſe look into the beſt commentators on Hippocrates; whoſe names you will find in Conringius's Introduction, which I have mentioned.

N. B. The beſt edition of Dioſcorides's Materia medica, is that of Frankfort, 1598, folio. The beſt edition of Aritaeus, who lived before Julius Ceſar's time (as Dioſcorides did, A.D. 46) is Boerhaave's, 1731, folio. The beſt edition of Galen's works, are that of Bâle, 1538, in 5 vols. and that of Venice, 1625, in 7 volumes. Alexander of Tralles flouriſhed in the 6th century, under Juſtinian the Great, and left the following works, Therapentica, Lib 12. De ſingularum corporis partium vitiis, aegritudinibus, & injuriis, Lib. 5. Epiſt. de lumbricis: Tractatus de puerorum morbis: Liber de febribus. The beſt greek copy is [452]that of Stephens, Paris, 1548, folio. In greek and latin, Baſil, 1658. But in neither of theſe editions is to be found the Epiſtle de lumbricis. You muſt look for that in the 12th volume of Fabricius's Bibliotheca Graeca.

In the laſt place, beſides all the authors I have mentioned, I likewiſe looked into the original obſervation writers, and miſcellaneous books relating to phyſic. They afford excellent knowledge, where the authors are faithful and judicious. Such are the obſervationes medicae of Nicolaus Tulpius (a curious book; and the dedication of it to his ſon Peter, a ſtudent in phyſic, good advice; 2d edition, 1652, is the beſt: it is a fourth part larger than the 1ſt edition, that came out in 1641.) The obſervationes et curationes medicinales of Petrus Foreſtus, Lib. 22. — The obſervationes medicae of Joannes Theodorus Schenkius. — And the various Journals, and Tranſactions of learned Societies; which are repoſitories in which the physician finds much rare and valuable knowledge. And as a phyſician ought to have a little acquaintance with the modern practice of ſurgery, I concluded with Heiſter's, Turner's, and. Sharp's Surgery.

By this method of ſtudying phyſic in the middle of a wood, and employing my time and pains in reading the antients, and conſidering [453]their plain and natural account of diſeaſes, I became a Doctor, as well as if I had been a regular collegiate in the world. — But it is time to think of my various ſtory, and I ſhall detain my Reader no longer from it, than while he reads the following tranſlation of the charming mythological picture of Cebes; which is placed here, as the golden 10th Satire of Juvenal is put after the XIIIth Section of this work, by way of entertainment between the acts.

A Tranſlation of the Table of Cebes.
The thing is a Dialogue between an Old Man and a Traveller.

WHILE we were walking in the temple of Saturn, (in the city of Thebes,) and viewing the votive honours of the God, the various offerings which had been preſented to that deity, we obſerved at the entrance of the Fane, [454]a picture tablet that engaged our attention, as it was a thing intirely new, both with regard to the painting and the deſign. For ſome time, we ſtood conſidering the device and fable, but ſtill found ourſelves unable to gueſs the meaning. The piece did not ſeem to be either a city or a camp; but was a kind of a walled court, that had within it two other incloſures, and one of them was larger than the other. The firſt court opened at a gate, before which a vaſt crowd of people appeared, impatient to enter; and within a group of female figures was repreſented. Stationed at the porch without, was ſeen a venerable [455]form, who looked like ſome great teacher, and ſeemed to warn the ruſhing multitude. Long we gazed at this work, but were not able to underſtand the deſign, till an old man came up to us, and ſpoke in the following manner.

§ 1. O. It is no wonder ſtrangers, that you cannot comprehend this picture: for even our inhabitants are not able to give a ſolution of the allegoric ſcene. The piece is not an offering of any of our citizens, but the work of a foreigner, a man of great learning and virtue, and a zealous diſciple of the Samian or Elean ſages, who [456]arrived here many years ago, and by his converſation inſtructied us in the beſt learning, which is morality. It was he built and conſecrated this temple to Saturn, and placed here this picture you ſee before you.

A Tranſlation of the Mythological Picture of Cebes: By the Rev. and famous Jeremy Collier.

AS we were taking a turn in Saturn's temple, we ſaw a great many conſecrated preſents, remarkable enough for their curioſity: Amongſt the reſt, we took particular notice of a picture hung over the door; the piece we perceived was all emblem and mythology; but then the repreſentation was ſo ſingular and out of cuſtom, that we were perfectly at a loſs whence it ſhould come, and what was the meaning of it. Upon a ſtrict view, we found it was neither a city, nor a camp, but a ſort of court, with two partitions of the ſame figure within it, tho' one of them was larger than the other. The firſt court had a crowd of people at the gate, and within we ſaw a great company of women. Juſt at the entrance of the firſt gate, there ſtood an old man, who by his geſture and countenance, ſeemed to be buſy in giving advice to the crowd as they came in. And being long at a ſtand about the deſign of the fable, a grave man ſomewhat in years, making up, begins to diſcourſe us in this manner. Gentlemen, ſays he, I underſtand you are ſtrangers, and therefore 'tis no wonder the hiſtory of this picture ſhould puzzle you: For there are not many of our own countrymen than can explain it. For you are to obſerve, this is none of our town manufacture * But along while ago, a certain outlandiſh man of great ſenſe and learning, and who by his diſcourſe and behaviour, ſeem'd to be a diſciple of Pythagoras and Parmenides; this gentleman, I ſay, happening to travel hither, built this ſtructure, and dedicated both the temple and this piece of painting to Saturn. Sir, ſaid I, had you any acquaintance with this gentleman. Yes, ſays he, I had the benefit of his converſation, and was one of his admirers a long time. For, to my thinking, tho' he was but young, he talked at a ſtrange ſignificant rate *.

N. B. The remainder of Collier's facetious verſion, is omitted for want of room.

T.

And did you know, (I ſaid) and converſe with this wiſe man?

O.

Yes, (he replied) I was long acquainted with him, and as he was but young, and talked with great judgment upon the moſt [457]important ſubjects, with aſtoniſhment I have liſtned to him, and with pleaſure heard him explain the moral of this fable.

T.

Expound to us then, (I conjure you) the meaning of the picture, if buſineſs does not call you away; for we long to be inſtructed in the deſign of the piece.

O.

I am at leiſure, (the old man anſwered) and willingly conſent to your requeſt; but I muſt inform you firſt, there is ſome danger in what you aſk. If you hearken with attention, and by conſideration underſtand the precepts, you will become wiſe, virtuous, and bleſt*: if otherwiſe, you will be abandoned, blind, and miſerable The explanation of the picture reſembles the enigma of the Sphinx, which ſhe propoſed to every paſſenger that came that way. If they could expound the riddle they were ſafe; but if they failed in the attempt, they were deſtroyed by the monſter Folly is as it were a Sphinx to mankind. She aſks you, How is good and ill defined? If you cannot explain the problem, and happen to miſjudge, you periſh by degrees, and become [458]the victim of her cruelty. You do not die immediately, as the unhappy did by the Theban monſter; but by the force and operation of folly, you will find yourſelf dying from day to day, your rational part wounded and decayed, every noble power of the foul confounded, and like thoſe given up to puniſhment for life, feel the laſt of thoſe pangs, which guilt prepares for the ſtupid: but if by thinking, you can underſtand and diſcern the boundaries of good and ill, then folly like the Sphinx muſt periſh, and your life will be bleſt with happineſs and ſerenity.—Hear me then with all your attention.

Theſe things being previouſly obſerved by the old man, and we intreating him to begin, he lifted up a wand he held, and pointing to the picture, ſaid, the firſt incloſure repreſents human life, and the multitude at the gate, thoſe who are daily entring into the world. That aged perſon you ſee on an eminence, directing with one hand, and holding in the other a roll, which is the code of reaſon, is the genius of mankind; benevolent, he ſeems to bend, and teach the people what they ought to do; ſhews them as they enter into life the path they ought to take; the way which leads to danger, and that which bears to ſafety and happineſs.

T.

And which is the way, (I ſaid) and how are they to find it?

O.
[459]

That you ſhall know hereafter: but at preſent you muſt take notice of that painted woman ſeated on a throne very near the gate. She is called Deluſion, and by every art, with fawn and ſoft infection, preſents a bowl of ignorance and error to all that enter into life. They take the cup, and in proportion to what they have drank of the intoxicating mixture, are led away by the women you, ſee, at a little diſtance from Impoſture, to deſtruction ſome, and ſome to ſafety; leſs erring and leſs blind thoſe being who have but taſted of deluſion's cup.

Theſe women ſo variouſly dreſt, and ſo profuſely gay, are called the Opinions, Deſires, and Pleaſures: You obſerve how they embrace each mortal as he arrives within the gate, promiſe the greateſt bleſſings, and compel their votaries to wander with them where they pleaſe.

T.

But who (I aſked) is that woman placed on a globe, who appears not only blind, but ſeems to be wild and diſtracted? Inceſſantly ſhe walks about, and flings her favours capriciouſly: From ſome ſhe ſnatches their effects and poſſeſſions, and beſtows them upon others.

O.

They call her Fortune, (replied the old man). Her attitude marks her character. Her gifts are as unſtable as her tottering ball; and all who depend upon her ſpecious promiſes, [460]are deceived when moſt they truſt her, and find themſelves expoſed to the greateſt misfortunes.

T.

There is a great crowd I perceive ſurrounding her, and if too commonly ſhe meditates miſchief, whene'er the ſmiles, what is the meaning of their attendance?

O.

Theſe are the inconſiderate, and ſtand there to catch the toys ſhe blindly ſcatters among them; (wealth, fame, titles, an offſpring, ſtrength or beauty, the victor's laurel, and arbitrary power:) Thoſe who rejoice, and are laviſh in their praiſes of this divinity, have received ſome favours from her, and call her the goddeſs of good fortune: But thoſe whom you ſee weeping and wringing their hands, are ſuch whom ſhe has deprived of every good; they curſe her as the goddeſs of ill fortune.

T.

But (replied I) as to riches, glory, nobility, a numerous poſterity, power, and honour, which you called toys, why are they not real advantages?

O.

Of theſe things (our Inſtructor anſwered) we ſhall ſpeak hereafter more fully: At preſent it is better to continue the explication of the picture.

§ 2. Caſt your eyes next then on that higher incloſure, (proceeded the old man) and take notice of the women on the outſide thereof. You obſerve how wantonly they are [461]dreſt: The firſt of them is Incontinence, looſely zoned, her boſom bare; and the other three are, Riot, Covetouſneſs, and Flattery. They watch for the favourites of fortune. You ſee they careſs them, and try to bring them to the pleaſures of their ſoft retreat; where the bowl ſparkles, the ſong reſounds, and joys to joys ſucceed in every jocund hour: But at length Diſtreſs appears, and the favourite of a day diſcovers, that his happineſs was merely imaginary, under a deluſion; but the evils that attend his pleaſures real. When he has waſted all he had received from fortune, he is forced to enter himſelf into the ſervice of thoſe miſtreſſes, and by them compelled to dare the fouleſt and moſt deſperate deeds; villain and knave he becomes; ſtabs for a purſe; his country ſells for gold; and by deceit and ſacrilege, by perjury, treachery, and theft, endeavours for ſome time to live. But ſhiftleſs at length, and unable to acquire ſupport by crimes, they are conſigned to the dire gripe of Puniſhment.

T.

What is ſhe, I beg you will inform us?

O.

Look beyond thoſe women, called the Opinions, (continued the old man) and you will ſee a low gate, opening into a dark and narrow cave: you may obſerve at the entrance of it, three female figures very ſwarthy and foul, covered with rags and filthineſs; and near them, ſtanding naked by their ſide, [462]a frightful lean man*. Cloſe to him is another woman, ſo meagre and ghaſtly you perceive, that it is not poſſible for any thing to reſemble him more.

T.

We ſee them, and requeſt to be informed who they are?

O.

The firſt with a whip in her hand, is Puniſhment, and next to her ſits Sadneſs, with her head reclining on her knees; that woman tearing her hair is Trouble; the naked lean man is Sorrow, and the image by his ſide wild Deſpair. You ſee they are all going to ſeize the unhappy man of pleaſure, and make him feel the greateſt pain and anguiſh: For they carry him to the houſe of Miſery, and in the pit of Woe he is to paſs the remainder of life, unleſs Repentance comes to his relief.

T.

And what then follows, (I ſaid) if Repentance interpoſes?

O.

She reſcues him from his tormentors, and gives him a new view of things. He has from her ſome account of true learning, but the hint ſo ſhort, that it may lead him likewiſe to falſe learning. If he be ſo happy as to underſtand, and chuſe right, he is delivered from prejudice and error, and paſſes the reſt of his days in tranquillity and peace: but if he be miſtaken, inſtead of wiſdom, he [463]only gains that amuſing counterfeit, which turns him from vice to ſtudious folly.

T.

Great (I replied) are the riſks we mortals run: But who is this falſe learning?

§. 3.

O.

At the entrance of the ſecond incloſure*, you may obſerve a woman neatly dreſt, and of a good appearance; decent the port,—ſpotleſs the form: This is the counterfeit, but the vulgar call her true learning: Even the happy few, who ſucceed in the purſuit of wiſdom, are commonly detained too long by this deceiving fair one: Nor is it ſtrange; for, ſkilled as ſhe is in all the learning, and in every art can grace the head, you ſee what crouds of admirers ſhe has; poets, orators, logicians, muſicians, arithmeticians, geometricians, aſtrologers, and critics.

T.

But who, (I aſked my inſtructor,) are thoſe women, ſo buſy on every ſide, and ſo earneſt in their addreſſes to this company? They look like Incontinence and her companions, and the opinions whom you ſhewed us in the firſt court. Do they alſo frequent the ſecond incloſure?

O.

Yes, (replied the old man,) Incontinence is ſometimes ſeen here. The opinions do likewiſe enter; for the early potion theſe men received from Impoſture ſtill operates. Ignorance [464]finds a place here; and even Extravagance and Folly. They remain under the power of theſe, till having left falſe learning, they enter upon the path that leads to Wiſdom. When they arrive at the enlightned ground of Truth, they get her ſovereign remedy *, and are freed from the ill effects of Ignorance and Error. This enables them to throw off the wild hypotheſis, — the learned romance, — and to employ the precious hours of life in thinking to the wiſeſt purpoſes. Had they ſtaid with falſe learning, they never could have delivered themſelves from theſe evils.

T.

Proceed then, I pray you, (ſaid I) and ſhew us the way that leads to Happineſs and Wiſdom.

§. 4.

O.

Do you ſee (proceeded the venerable man,) that riſing ground, which appears [465]ſo deſart and uninhabited. You may obſerve upon it a little gate, that opens in a narrow and unfrequented path; the avenue a rugged rocky way. You perceive a little onward, a ſteep and craggy mountain with precipices on either ſide, which ſink to a frightful depth. This is the way to Wiſdom.

T.

It ſeems a dreadful way, as painted in this table.

O.

Yet higher ſtill obſerve that rock, towards the mountain's brow, and take notice of the two figures which ſit upon it's edge, and appear to be as beautiful and comely as the goddeſs of health. They are ſiſters; Temperance the one, Patience the other. With friendſhip in their looks, and arms protended over the verge of the cliff, you ſee them lean, to encourage thoſe who paſs this way, and rouze the ſpirits of the fainting ſons of Wiſdom, who has ſtationed theſe two ſiſters there. They urge the brave men on; tell them the hardſhips will leſſen by degrees,— the paſſage will become more eaſy and agreeable as they advance, and offer them their aſſiſtance to aſcend the ſummit, and reach the top of the rock. That being gained, they ſhew them the eaſineſs and pleaſantneſs of the reſt of the way to wiſdom: The charming road invites one's eyes: How ſmooth and flowery, green and delightful, does it appear!

T.
[466]

It does indeed.

§. 5.

O.

Look next (the excellent old man continued,) at that diſtant blooming wood, and near it you will ſee a beautiful meadow, on which there ſeems to fall a light as from a purer heaven, a kind of double day. In this lightſome field *, you may perceive a gate which opens into another incloſure, which is the abode of the bleſſed. Here the Virtues dwell with Happineſs. In this region of eternal beauty, the righteous reſt.

T.

It does appear a charming place.

O.

Obſerve then near the portal, a beauteous form of a compoſed aſpect: She ſeems mature in life, and her robe is quite plain, without affectation or ornaments. Her eyes are piercing; her mien ſedate: She ſtands not on a globe, (like Fortune) but upon a cube of marble, fixed as the rock ſhe is on before the gate. You ſee on either ſide of her two lovely nymphs, the very copies of her looks and air. This matron in the middle is true learning, Wiſdom herſelf; and the two young beauties are Truth and Perſuaſion. Her ſtanding on a ſquare, is an expreſſive type of certainty in the way to her; and denotes the unalterable and permanent nature of the bleſſings ſhe bestows on thoſe who come to [467]her. From her they receive courage and ſerenity; that confidence and contempt of fear, which exempts the happy poſſeſſors from any diſturbance, by the accidents and calamities of life.

T.

Theſe are valuable gifts. But why without the walls does Wiſdom ſtand?

O.

To preſent the purifying bowl to thoſe who approach, and reſtore them to themſelves. As a phyſician by degrees firſt finds out the cauſe of a violent diſorder, and then removes it, in order to reſtore the man to health; ſo Wiſdom, as ſhe knows their malady, adminiſters her ſovereign medicine, and frees them from all their evils. She expels the miſchiefs they had received from deluſion, their ignorance and error, and delivers them from pride, luſt, anger, avarice, and all the other vices they had contracted in the firſt incloſure. In a word, ſhe reſtores them to ſanity, and then ſends them in to Happineſs. and the Virtues.

T.

Who are, they? (I ſaid).

§. 6.

O.

Do you not ſee within the gate, (my inſtructor replied) a ſociety of matrons, beautiful and modeſt, dreſt unaffected, and without any thing of the gay exceſs? Theſe are Science and her ſiſters, Fortitude, Juſtice, and Integrity, Temperance, Modeſty, Liberality, Continence, Clemency, and Patience. They hail [468]their gueſts, and the company ſeem to be in raptures.

T.

But when the friends to virtue are admitted into this charming ſociety, where do they lead then to?

O.

See you not (reſumed the good old man,) the hill beyond the grove; that eminence which is the higheſt point of all the incloſures, and commands a boundleſs proſpect. There, on a glorious throne, you may obſerve a majeſtic perſon in her bloom, well dreſt, but without art or laviſh coſt, and her temples adorned with a beautiful Tiar: This is Happineſs, the regent of that bleſſed abode, and as the moral heroes approach her, you may perceive her, with the Virtues who ſtand aſſiſtant round her, going to reward the friends of wiſdom with ſuch crowns as are beſtowed on conquerors.

T.

Conquerors! (I ſaid) In what conflicts have theſe perſons been victorious?

O.

They have, in their way to the realm of Happineſs, deſtroyed the moſt formidable and dangerous monſters, who would have deſtroyed them, if they had not been ſubdued: Theſe ſavage beaſts at war with man are, ignorance and error; grief, vexation, avarice, intemperance, and every thing that is evil. Theſe are vanquiſhed, and have loſt all their power. The moral hero triumphs now, tho' their ſlave before.

T.
[469]

Great atchievements indeed! A glorious conqueſt. But excluſive of the honour of being crowned by Happineſs and the Virtues, is there any ſalutary power in the crown that adorns the hero's head?

O.

There is, young man. The virtue of it is great. Poſſeſſing this, he is happy and bleſſed. He derives his felicity from no external object, but from himſelf alone.

T.

O happy victory! And being thus crowned, what does the hero do —where next his ſteps?

O.

Conducted by the Virtues, he goes back to ſurvey his firſt abode, and ſee the crowd he left;—how miſerably they paſs their time; waſte all their hours in crimes, and in the whirl of paſſions live. Slaves to ambition, pride, incontinence, vanity, and avarice, they appear tormented with endleſs anxiety. They have forgot the inſtructions the good genius gave them, at their entrance into life, and ſuffer thus becauſe they cannot find the way to Wiſdom.

T.

True: (I ſaid) But I cannot comprehend, why the Virtues ſhould bring the heroes back to the place they came from: Why ſhould they return to view a well-known ſcene?

O.

The reaſon (anſwered my inſtructor) is, becauſe they had not a true idea of what they had ſeen. Surrounded by a confuſion [470]of things as they paſſed on, they could not diſtinctly perceive what was done. The miſts of ignorance and error obſcured the proſpect as they journied on, and by that means, they were ſubject to miſtakes. They could not always diſtinguiſh between good and evil. But now that they have attained to true learning, with concern they behold the mad world the virtues ſhew them again, and being enlightned by wiſdom, are perfectly happy in themſelves. The miſery of the numberleſs fools they behold now, ſtrikes them very ſtrongly, and gives them a delightful reliſh for their preſent happineſs.

T.

It muſt be ſo. And when they have ſeen theſe things, where do they then go?

O.

Wherever they pleaſe. Safely they may travel where they will: In all times, and in all places they are ſecure, as their integrity is their defence. Every where they live eſteemed and beloved by all. The female monſters I have mentioned, Grief, Trouble, Luſt, Avarice, or Poverty, have now no power to hurt them; but as if poſſeſſed of ſome virtuous drug, they can graſp the viper, and defy deſtruction.

T.

What you ſay is juſt. But who are all theſe perſons deſcending the hill?

O.

Thoſe that are crowned (the old man ſaid) are the happy few I have deſcribed. You ſee what joy is in their faces: And thoſe [471]who ſeem forlorn and deſperate, under the command of certain women, are ſuch who by their folly have not found the way to true learning; or ſtopping at the rough and narrow aſcent you obſerved, went to look for an eaſier path, and ſo quite loſt the road. The tormentors who drive them on are, Trouble, Deſpair, Ignominy, and Ignorance. Wretched you ſee them return into the firſt incloſure, to Luxury and Incontinence and yet they do not accuſe themſelves as the authors of their own ruin, which is very ſtrange; but rail at Wiſdom, and revile her ways; aſſerting, that the true pleaſures of life are only to be found in luxury and riot. Like the brutes, they place the whole ſatisfaction of man in the gratification of ſenſual appetite.

T.

But who are thoſe other lovely women, who return down the hill ſo full of gaiety and mirth?

O.

They are the opinions, who having conducted the virtuous to the region of light, are coming back to invite and carry others thither, by ſhewing them the felicity and ſucceſs of thoſe they brought to the manſion of Wiſdom.

T.

And do the opinions never enter with thoſe they bring into that happy place, where the virtues and true learning reſide?

O.

No: Opinion can never reach to ſcience; they only deliver their charge into the hands [472]of wiſdom, and then, like ſhips that give up their lading, in order to ſail for a new cargo, they return to bring other Eleves to reaſon and felicity.

T.

This explanation of the table, (I ſaid) is quite ſatisfactory: But you have not yet informed us, what the good genius bids the multitude do, as they appear on the verge of life?

O.

He charges them to act with courage, and be magnanimous and brave in all events; a thing I recommend to you, young man; and that you may have a true idea of this, I will tell you what I mean by a bold ſpirit, in paſſing through this world.

§ 7.

O.

Then lifting up his arm again, and pointing with his wand to a figure in the picture; that blind woman ſtanding on a globe, as I told you before, is Fortune. The genius forbids us to truſt her, or imagine her ſmiles will be laſting happineſs. Reaſon is never concerned in what the does. It is Fortune ſtill; without principle ſhe acts, is arbitrary and capricious, and inconſiderately and raſhly for ever proceeds. Regard not then her favours, nor mind her frowns: But as ſhe gives and takes away, and often deprives of what we had before, we are neither to eſteem or deſpiſe her; but if we ſhould receive from her a gift, take care to employ it immediately to ſome good purpoſe, and eſpecially [473]in the acquiſition of true ſcience, the moſt laſting and precious poſſeſſion. If we act otherwiſe, in reſpect of Fortune, we imitate thoſe wretched uſurers, who rejoice at the money paid in to them, as if they received it for their own uſe; but pay it back with regret, forgetting the condition, that it was to be returned to the proprietor on demand. Regardleſs of Fortune then, and all her changes in this mortal life, the genius adviſes to paſs bravely on, without hearkning to the ſollicitations of Incontinence and Luxury in the firſt incloſure, to reject their temptations, and go on to falſe learning: With her he would have us make a ſhort ſtay, to learn what may be of ſervice to uſe in our journey to Wiſdom. This is the advice of the genius to thoſe who enter into life.

T.

Here the good old man had done, and I thanked him for his explanation of the picture. Only one thing (I ſaid) there was more, which I muſt requeſt he would tell me the meaning of. What is it we can get by our ſtay with falſe learning?

O.

Things (he anſwered) that may be of uſe to us. The languages, and other parts of education, which Plato recommends, may hinder us from being worſe employ'd, and keep us from illicit gratification. They are not abſolutely neceſſary to true happineſs; but they contribute to make us better. Something [474]thing good and uſeful they do afford; tho' virtue, which ought to be the principal buſineſs in view, may be acquired without them. We may become wiſe without the aſſiſtance of the arts, tho' (as obſerved before,) they are far from being uſeleſs: as by a good tranſlation made into our own tongue, we may know what an author means, and yet by taking the pains to become maſters of the original language, might gain more advantages,—ſuch as entring better into the writer's ſenſe, and diſcovering ſome beauties which cannot otherwiſe be found: So the uſeful things in the ſciences may be very quickly and eaſily learned, and tho' by great labour in becoming accurately acquainted with them, we might fill our heads with ſpeculations, yet this cannot make us the wiſer and better men. Without being learned, we may be wiſe and good.

T.

And are the learned then in no better a condition than the people in reſpect of moral excellence? (I ſaid). Are the ſpeculations of the ſcholar, and the arts and fine inventions of the ſchools, of no uſe in perfecting the moral character? This to me ſeems a little ſtrange.

O.

Blind as the crowd is the man of letters, in this particular (my inſtructor replied): All his ſtudies and curious knowledge have no relation to his living right. With all the tongues, and all the arts, he may be a libertine, [475]a ſot, a miſer, or a knave, a traitor to his country, and have no moral character at all. This we ſee every day.

T.

But what is the cauſe of ſo ſtrange a thing, I requeſted to know? I obſerve that theſe men of letters ſeem to ſit down contented in the ſecond incloſure, and do not attempt to go on to the third where Wiſdom reſides; tho' they ſee continually before their eyes ſo many paſſing on from the firſt court, where they had lived for ſome time in lewdneſs and exceſs, to the habitation of true learning.

O.

It is their remaining in this ſecond incloſure, that occaſions their being inferior in moral things to thoſe who have not had a learned education. Proud and ſelf-ſufficient on account of their languages, arts, and ſciences, they deſpiſe what Wiſdom could teach them, and will not give themſelves the trouble of aſcending with difficulty to the manſion of true learning. They have no taſte for the leſſons of Wiſdom; while the humble mount to her exalted dwelling, thoſe ſcholars, as you ſee, are ſatisfied with their ſpeculations and vain conceits. Dull and untractable in the improvement of their hearts, and regardleſs of that exact rectitude of mind and life, which is only worth a rational's, toiling for (as he is an Eleve for eternity), they never think of true wiſdom, nor mind her offered light. Their curious ingenious notions, [476]are what they only have a reliſh for; the imaginations of thoſe men of letters cannot reach that ineffable peace and contentment, that ſatisfaction and pleaſure, which flow from a virtuous life and an honeſt heart. This is the caſe of our learned heads, uleſs repentance interferes to make them humble, and ſcatters the vain viſions they had from falſe opinion.

This (concluded the venerable teacher) is the explication of this parable or allegory. May you oft revolve upon theſe leſſons, and lend your whole attention to the attainment of true wiſdom, that you may not embrace her ſhadow, the ſpeculations and inventions of the learned, but, by this inſtruction, acquire the true principles of morality and goodneſs. (21)

SECTION XIII.

[477][478][479]
Look round the habitable world, how few
Know their own good; or knowing it, purſue.
How void of reaſon are our hopes and fears!
What in the conduct of our life appears
So well deſign'd, ſo luckily begun,
But, when we have our wiſh, we wiſh undone?
The tenth Satire of Juvenal. DRYDEN.
Omnibus in terris quae ſunt a Gadibus uſque
Auroram et Gangem, pauci dignoſcere poſſunt
Vera bona, atque illis multum diverſa remota
Erroris nebula: quid enim ratione timemus
Aut cupimus? Quid tam dextro pede concipis, ut te
Conatus non paeniteat, votique peracti?
JUVENALIS, Sat. X.

[479] The unfortunate death of Julia.§. 1. HAVING married the illuſtrious Julia, as related in my laſt Section, and by the death of her father ſoon after the wedding, acquired a handſome ſettlement, [480]a conſiderable ſum of money, and a valuable collection of books; I thought myſelf ſo happily ſituated in the midſt of [481]flouriſhing mercies, and ſo well ſecured from adverſity, that it was hardly poſſible for the flame of deſtruction to reach me. But when I had not the leaſt reaſon to imagine calamity was near me, and fondly imagined proſperity was my own, infelicity came ſtalking on unſeen; and from a fulneſs of peace, plunged us at once into an abyſs of woe. It was our wont, when the evenings were fine, to take boat at the bottom of a meadow, at the end of our garden, and in the middle [482]of a deep river, paſs an hour or two in fiſhing; but at laſt, by ſome accident or other, a ſlip of the foot, or the boat's being got a little too far from the bank-ſide, Julia fell in and was drowned. This happened in the tenth month of our marriage. The loſs of this charming angel in ſuch a manner, ſat powerfully on my ſpirits for ſome time; and the remembrance of her perfections, and the delights I enjoyed while ſhe lived, made me wiſh I had never ſeen her. To be ſo vaſtly happy as I was, and be deprived of her in a moment, in ſo ſhocking a way, was an affliction I was hardly able to bear. It ſtruck me to the heart. I ſat with my eyes ſhut ten days.

A reflexion on the death of Julia.§. 2. But loſſes and pains I conſidered were the portion of mortals in this trying ſtate, and from thence we ought to learn to give up our own wills; and to get rid of all eager wiſhes, and violent affection, that we may take up our reſt wholly in that which pleaſeth God: Carrying our ſubmiſſion to him ſo far, as to bleſs his correcting hand, and kiſs that rod that cures our paſſionate eagerneſs, perverſeneſs, and folly.

We ought likewiſe to learn from ſuch things, to look upon the ſad accidents of life, as not worthy to be compared with what Chriſt underwent for our ſakes, who, though [483]he was a Son, yet he learnt obedience by the things that he ſuffered; and with chriſtian reſignation live in a quiet expectance of a future happy ſtate, after our patience has had its perfect work: Conſidering that theſe light and momentary afflictions, are not worthy to be compared with the glory that Chriſt hath purchaſed for us; and if we are faithful to death, hath promiſed to beſtow upon us.

In all theſe things reſigning to the wiſdom of God, and not merely to his will and authority, believing his diſpoſal to be wiſeſt and beſt; and that his declarations and promiſes are true, though we cannot in ſome caſes diſcern the reaſon of ſuch an end, and ſuch means being connected: Nor can imagine how ſome promiſes can be made good. Patience, (I ſaid) my ſoul! Patience, and what thou knoweſt not now, thou ſhalt know in a little time. Thus I reaſoned, as I ſat with my eyes ſhut.

Thoughts on wives and whores.§. 3. And when I had done, I called to Soto ô Finn, my man, to bring the horſes out immediately, and I would go ſome where or other to ſee new ſcenes, and if I could, get another wife: As I was born with the diſeaſe of repletion, and had made a reſolution not to fornicate; it was incumbent on me to have a ſiſter and companion, with whom I might lawfully carry on the ſucceſſion. As a friend [484]to ſociety, and paſſively-obedient to the laws of my higher country, a wife for ever, I declared; for, if on loſing one, we can be ſtill ſo fortunate as to get another, who is pretty without pride; witty without affectation; to virtue only and her friends a friend:

Whoſe ſenſe is great, and great her ſkill,
For reaſon always guides her will;
Civil to all, to all ſhe's juſt,
And faithful to her friend and truſt:
Whoſe character, in ſhort, is ſuch,
That none can love or praiſe too much.

If ſuch a charmer ſhould again appear, and ten thouſand ſuch there ever are among the ſex, ſilly and baſe tho' the majority may be; what man could ſay he had had enough of wedlock, becauſe he had buried ſeven ſuch wives? I am ſure I could not. And if, like the men who were but ſtriplings at fourſcore, in the beginning of this world, I was to live for ages, and by accidents loſt ſuch partners as I have deſcribed; I would with rapture take hundreds of them to my breaſt, one after another, and piouſly propagate the kind. The moſt deſpicable of all creatures is a whore. An abomination to heaven: And if God was a mere fanciful fear; yet ſuch a wretch the proſtitute is, that neither honour nor honeſty can ever be expected from her. But, in defiance to divine and human laws, ſhe lives a fee to mankind; to ruin the fortune, [485]pox the body, and for ever damn the ſoul of the miſerable man, who is dunce enough to become a Limberham to the execrable wretch. The misfortunes I have known happen to gentlemen of my acquaintance, by ſtreet-whores, chamber-whores, and kept-whores, would make a volume as large as this I am writing: and leave another world quite out of the hiſtory. I have ſeen gentlemen of the beſt fortunes and education, become worn-out beggars in the ſtreets of London, without any thing hardly to cover them, by the means of thoſe execrable harlots; ſome have become bullies to bawdy-houſes; and many I have beheld going to the gallows, by maintaining the falſeſt and leaſt-engaging of women: But take a modeſt ſenſible woman to your heart, who has the fear of the great God before her eyes, and a regard to the laws of her country: Share your fortune generouſly with her, that ſhe may have her innocent amuſements and dreſs, be for ever good-humoured, be true to her bed, and every felicity you may taſte that it is poſſible to enjoy in this lower hemiſphere. Let a wife be our choice, as we are rationals.

The ſtate of Orton-lodge, on my arrival there.§. 4. With theſe notions in my head, I mounted my horſe; and determined, in the firſt place, to pay a viſit to my two beauties at Orton-lodge, who were by this time at age, and ſee what opinions they had acquired, [486]and if they had any command for me: But when I arrived at my romantic ſpot, I found the ladies were gone, all places ſhut up, and no ſoul there; the key of the houſe-door was left for me, and a note faſtned to it, to inform me how the affair was.

SIR,

Not having had the favour of hearing from you for almoſt three years, and deſpairing of that honour and happineſs any more, we have left your fine ſolitude, to look after our fortunes, as we are of age; and on enquiry have found, that old Cock, our cruel guardian, is dead and gone. We are under infinite obligations to you, have an extreme ſenſe of your goodneſs, and hope, if you are yet in the land of the living, that we ſhall ſoon be ſo happy as to get ſome account of you, to the end we may return the weighty balance due from,

SIR,
Your moſt obliged, and ever humble ſervants,

From the date of this letter it appeared, that they were not a month gone before my arrival; but to what place they ſaid not, and it was in vain for me to enquire. I found every thing in good order, and all the goods ſafe; [487]the garden full of fruits and vegetables, and plenty of various eatables in the houſe, pickled, potted, and preſerved. As it was in the month of June, the ſolitude looked vaſtly charming in it's vales and foreſt, its rocks and waters; and for a month I ſtrove to amuſe myſelf there, in fiſhing, ſhooting, and improving the ground; but it was ſo dull, ſo ſad a ſcene, when I miſſed the bright companions I had with me in former days; who uſed to wander with me in the vallies, up the hills, by the ſtreams, and make the whole a paradiſe all the long day, that I could not bear it longer than four weeks; and rid from thence to Dr. Stanvil's ſeat, to aſk him how he did, and look once more at that fine curioſity, Miſs Dunk that was, but at the time I am ſpeaking of, his wife. However, before I left my lodge, I made a diſcovery one day, as I was exploring the wild country, round my little houſe, that was entertaining enough, and to this day, in remembrance, ſeems to me ſo agreeable, that I imagine a relation of this matter may be grateful to my Readers. It contains the ſtory of a lady, who cannot be enough admired, can never be ſufficiently praiſed.

The Hiſtory of the beautiful LEONORA.

[488]

§. 5. As I rambled one ſummer's morning, with my gun and my dog; over the vaſt mountains, which ſurrounded me at Orton-lodge, I came as the ſun was riſing to a valley about four miles from my houſe, which I had not ſeen before, as the way to it, over the Fells, was a dangerous road. It was green and flowery, had clumps of oaks in ſeveral ſpots, and from the hovering top of a precipice at the end of the glin, a river falls ingulphed in rifted rocks. It is a fine rural ſcene.

Here I ſat down to reſt myſelf, and was admiring the natural beauties of the place, when I ſaw three females turn into the vale, and walk towards the water-fall. One of them, who appeared to be the miſtreſs, had an extravagance of beauty in her face, and a form ſuch as I had not often ſeen. The others were pretty women, dreſt like quakers, and very clean. They came very near the water where I was, but did not ſee me, as I was behind two rocks which almoſt joined: And after they had looked a while at the headlong river, they went back, and entring a narrow-way between two hills diſappeared. I was greatly ſurpriſed at what I [489]had ſeen, not imagining I had ſuch a neighbour in Richmondſhire, and reſolved to know who this beauty was. The wonders of her face, her figure, and her mien, were ſtriking to the laſt degree.

Ariſing then as ſoon as they were out of ſight, I walked on to the turning I ſaw them enter; and in half an hour's time came to a plain, thro' which ſeveral brooks wandered, and on the margin of one of them, was a grove and a manſion. It was a ſweet habitation, at the entrance of the little wood; and before the door, on banks of flowers, ſat the illuſtrious owner of this retreat, and her two maids. In ſuch a place, in ſuch a manner, ſo unexpectedly to find ſo charming a woman, ſeemed to me as pleaſing an incident as could be met with in travelling over the world.

At my coming near this lady ſhe appeared to be aſtoniſhed, and to wonder much at ſeeing ſuch an inhabitant in that part of the world: but on pulling off my hat, and telling her I came to viſit her as her neighbour; to pay my humble reſpects to her, and beg the honour of her acquaintance; ſhe aſked me, from what vale or mountain I came, and how long I had been a reſident in that wild part of the world ? This produced a compend of ſome part of my ſtory, and when I had done, ſhe deſired, me to walk in. Coffee [490]and hot rolls was ſoon brought, and we breakfaſted chearfully together. I took my leave ſoon after, having made her a preſent of ſome black cocks and a hare I had ſhot that morning; and hoped, if it was poſſible to find an eaſy way to my lodge, which I did not yet know, that I ſhould ſome time or other be honoured with her preſence at my little houſe; which was worth her ſeeing, as it was ſituated in the moſt delightful part of this romantic ſilent place, and had many curioſities near it; that in the mean time, if it was agreeable, I would wait upon her again, before I left Richmondſhire, which would be ſoon: For I only came to ſee how things were, and was obliged to haſten another way. This beauty replied, that it would give her pleaſure to ſee me, when I had a few hours to ſpare. Three times more then I went very ſoon; we became well acquainted, and after dinner one day, ſhe gave me the following relation.

My name was Leonora Sarsfield before I married an Iriſhman, one Burk, whom I met at Avignon in France. He is one of the handſomeſt men of the age, tho' his hopes were all his fortune; but proved a villain as great as ever diſgraced mankind. His breeding and his eloquence, added to his fine figure, induced me to fancy him an angel of a man, and imagine I had well beſtowed a hundred [491]thouſand pounds, to make him great, and as happy as the day is long: For three months he played the god, and I fondly thought there was not ſuch another happy woman as myſelf in all the world. I was miſtaken. Burk found out by ſome means or other, that I had concealed five thouſand pounds of my fortune from his knowledge; and that I was in my heart ſo good a proteſtant, that it was impoſſible to bring me over to popery, or ever get me to be an idolater at the maſs, before the tiny god of dough:—that I could never be brought to look upon the invented ſuperſtitions, and horrible corruptions of the church of Rome, as the true religion; nor be ever perſuaded to aſſiſt at the Latin ſervice in that communion, as it muſt be an abomination to Chriſt and to God, if the goſpel may be depended upon as the rule of faith: —When Burk perceived theſe things, he threw off the diſguiſe, and appeared a monſter inſtead of a man, as he was a bigot of the firſt order, a furious papiſt, (which I did not know, when we married;) and as he was by nature as cruel, as he was avaricious by principle, he began to uſe me in the vileſt manner, and by words and deeds, did all he could to make my life a burthen to me. He was for ever abuſing me in the vileſt language; curſing me for a heretic for ever damned; and by blows compelling me to inform him where my money was. He has left me all [492]over blood very often, and when he found I ſtill held out, and would not diſcover to him what remained of my fortune; nor, which I valued much more than my money, violate my religion, by renouncing the cuſtoms and practice of the reformed church, and joining in the ſinful worſhip of the maſs; he came to me one night with a ſmall oak ſapling, and beat me in ſuch a manner as left me almoſt dead. He then went out of the houſe, told me he would return by twelve, and make me comply, or he would break every bone in my body. This happened at a country-ſeat of mine in this ſhire; all the ſervants being obliged to lie every night in an out-houſe, that he might have the more power over me. His exceſſive avarice was but one cauſe of this inhuman behaviour: It was the zeal of this raging bigot for his ever-curſed popery, that made him act the unrelenting inquiſitor.

A reflexion on popery.I aſked you, Sir, before I began my ſtory, if you were a catholic, and as you aſſured me you were the very reverſe, I may indulge myſelf a little in expreſſing my reſentments againſt that religion of Satan, which the Popiſh doctors drew out of the bottomleſs pit. It is a religion formed in hell by devils, and from them brought by thoſe arch-politicians, the maſs-prieſts, to make the world their ſlaves, or rack the human race to death, by torments that would perhaps melt even devils. O bloody [493]and infernal ſcheme of worſhip! Surely there is ſome choſen curſe, ſome hidden thunder in the ſtores of heaven, red with uncommon wrath, to blaſt the men, who owe their greatneſs to their apoſtaſy from the religion of Chriſt Jeſus; and to the woes and pains they lay on mankind. By the religion of modern Rome, you ſee in me a wife almoſt tortured to extinction by a holy Roman catholic huſband: Nor am I the only married proteſtant woman, who has felt the ſtripes and bruiſes of a mercileſs popiſh companion. Thouſands to be ſure have ſuffered as well as I upon the ſame account, tho' none in ſo miſerable a manner. Even fathers have loſt all bowels for their children, and become the moſt violent perſecutors, when the bleſſed religion of popery has been in diſpute. Children, for it's ſake, have deſtroyed their parents; and the world has been turned into a field of blood, to feed and ſupport thoſe dreadful ſlaughterers, the maſs-prieſts; and gratify the blind and impious religious fancies of their well-taught religioniſts, commonly called catholics. What I have ſuffered gives me a true ſenſe of popery. It has made me conſider its errors and iniquities with double attention. I tremble at the thoughts of its prevailing in this land.(23)

[494] But as to my tragical relation, (continued Leonora:) — Being thus left by Burk in this ſad ſituation, bleeding, and miſerable [495]with pains, but ſtill in dread of worſe uſage on his return; I crawled down ſtairs, to a ſmall door in a back place, which opened to a private way out of the houſe. This was known only to myſelf, as it was a paſſage my father had made, (in caſe of thieves, or any villains,) from a little unfrequented cellar, by a narrow aſcending arch, to a thicket in the corner of a ſhrubby field, at a ſmall diſtance from the houſe. To a labyrinth made in this ſmall grove I made what haſte I could, and had not been long there, before I perceived through the trees my inhuman huſband; and as he came near me, heard him ſay, ſhe ſhall tell me where my money is, (for all ſhe has is mine;) and worſhip our lady and the hoſt, or I will burn [496]her fleſh off her bones, and make her feel as many torments here, as the heretics are tortured with in everlaſting pain. The ſight of the monſter made me tremble to ſo violent a degree, that I was ſcarcely able to proceed to the cottage of a poor woman, my ſure friend, about two miles from the place I was hid in; but I did my beſt to creep through croſs ways, and after many difficulties, and ſuffering much by going over ditches, I got to my reſting-place. The old woman, my nurſe, ſcreeched at the ſight of me, as I was ſadly torn, and all over gore. Such a ſpectacle to be ſure has ſeldom been ſeen. But by peace and proper things, I got well again in two months, and removed to this lone houſe, which my father had built in this ſpot for his occaſional retirement. Here I have been for two years paſt, and am as happy as I deſire to be: Nay vaſtly ſo, as I am now free and delivered from a monſter, whoſe avarice and cruelty made me a ſpectacle to angels and men: Becauſe, Sir, I would not reduce myſelf to the ſtate of a beggar, to ſatisfy his inſatiable love of money: nor worſhip his dead-woman, and bit of bread; his rabble of, ſaints, images, relicks, and that ſovereign cheat, the Pope; becauſe I would not give up all I had, and become an idolater, as far more deſpicable and ſinful than the antient Pagans; as the Romiſh ritual and devotions, are more ſtupid and abominable [497]than the Heathen religion; for diſobedience in theſe reſpects, pains and penalties without ceaſing were my appointment, and I was for ſome months as miſerable as the damned.

Such, Sir, was my fatal marriage, which I thought would be a ſtock of ſuch felicities, that time only by many years could reduce to an evaneſcent ſtate, and deprive me of: As Venus was at the bridal with her whole retinue; the ardent amorous boy, the ſiſter-graces in their looſe attire; Aglavia, Thalia, and Euphroſine, bright, blooming, and gay; and was attended by Youth, that wayward thing without her; was conducted by Mercury, the god of eloquence, and by Pitho, the goddeſs of perſuaſion; as all ſeemed pleaſurable and inchanting, my young imagination formed golden ſcenes, and painted a happineſs quite glorious and ſecure. But how precarious and periſhing is what we mortals call felicity! Love and his mother diſappeared very ſoon, as I have related; and to them ſucceeded impetuous paſſion, intenſe, raging, terrible, with all the furies in the train. The maſked hero I had married was a Phalaris, a miſer, a papiſt; a wretch who had no taſte for love, no conception of virtue, no ſenſe of charms; but to gold and popery would ſacrifice every thing that is fair and laudable. Le Diable a quatre he ſhined in as a player, and was the Devil himſelf in fleſh and blood. [498]Where is the reſt of your with uplifted arm, was the thundering cry in my ears. You ſhall be a catholic, damn you, or I'll pinch off the fleſh from your bones.

A remark on this lady.Here the beautiful Leonora had done, and I wondered very greatly at her relation: Nor was her action in ſpeaking it, and the ſpirit with which ſhe talked, leſs ſurpriſing. With admiration I beheld her, and was not a little pleaſed, that I had found in my neighbourhood ſo extraordinary a perſon, and ſo very fine an original. This lady had ſome reaſon to abhor the word catholic, and might well be angry with popery, tho' ſhe carried her reſentment a little too far; but had the Reader ſeen her attitude, her energies, and the faces ſhe made, when ſhe mentioned the corruptions of popery, or the word huſband; ſure I am, it would be thought much more ſtriking than Garrick in Richard, or Shuter in his exhibition of Old Philpot. I was greatly delighted with her, and as ſhe was very agreeble in every thing, I generally went every ſecond day to viſit her, while I continued in Richmondſhire; but this was not long. I journeyed from thence to pay my reſpects to Dr. Stanvil and his lady, whom I have mentioned before. And what happened there, I ſhall relate in the next Section: Only ſtop a few minutes my good Reader, to peruſe the [499]tranſlation of the tenth Satire of Juvena1; which is placed here by way of entertainment, as I ſaid in another place, and to make good my aſſertion, that we know not what we would be at in our fancies and our fears.

The Tenth Satire of Juvenal.

SURVEY mankind, muſter the herd
From ſmootheſt chin to deepeſt beard;
Search ev'ry climate, view each nation,
From loweſt to the higheſt ſtation;
From Eaſtern to the Weſtern Indies,
From frozen Poles to th' line that ſinges;
Scarce will you find one mortal wight,
Knows good from ill, or wrong from right:*
'Cauſe clouds of luſt and paſſion blind,
And bribe with intereſts the mind;
And while they combat in our heart,
Our fondneſs crowns the conqu'ring part.
What is the thing under the ſun,
That we with reaſon ſeek or ſhun?
Or juſtly by our judgment weigh'd,
Should make us fond of, or afraid?
Whate'er is luckily begun,
Brings ſure repentance at long-run.
[500] The diſtant object looming great,
Poſſeſt proves oft an empty cheat;
And he who wins the wiſh'd-for prize,
A trouble often dearly buys.
Some for their family importune,
And beg their ruin for a fortune.
The courteous gods granting their prayers,
Have intail'd curſes on their heirs.
Of wizards ſome inquire their doom,
Greedy to know events to come,
And by their over caution run
On the ſame fare they ſtrove to ſhun:
Some have petition'd to be great,
And eminent in church and ſtate.
This in the war's a famous leader,
T'other at bar a cunning pleader;
The cauſe on either-ſide inſure you,
By dint of noiſe ſtun judge and jury:
And if the buſineſs won't bear water,
Banter and perplex the matter.
But their obſtrep'rous eloquence
Has fail'd ev'n in their own defence:
And ſaving others by haranguing,
Have brought themſelves at laſt to hanging.
Milo preſuming on his ſtrength,
Caus'd his own deſtiny at length.
The greedy care of heaping wealth,
Damns many a ſoul and ruins health,
And in an apoplectic fit,
Sinks them downright into the pit.
How many upſtarts crept from low
Condition, vaſt poſſeſſions ſhow?
Whoſe eſtate's audit ſo immenſe
Exceeds all prodigal expence.
[501] With which compare that ſpot of earth,
To which theſe muſhrooms owe their birth:
Their manners to dad's cottage ſhow,
As Greenland whales to dolphins do.
In Nero's plotting diſmal times,
Riches were judg'd ſufficient crimes.
Firſt ſwear them traitors to the ſtate,
Then for their pains ſhare their eſtate.
Fat forfeitures their toils reward:
Poor rogues may paſs without regard.
Some are hook'd in for ſenſe and wit,
And ſome condemn'd for want of it.
The over-rich Longinus dies,
His bright heaps dazzled envious eyes.
Neither could philoſophy,
Wiſdom, deſert, or piety,
Rich Seneca from his pupil ſave,
'Tis fit he ſend him to a grave,
And then reſume the wealth he gave.
The guards the palaces beſet,
For noble game they pitch their net:
While from alarms and pangs of fear,
Securely ſleeps the cottager.
If you by night ſhall happen late,
To travel with a charge of plate;
With watchful eyes and panting heart,
Surpriz'd, each object makes you ſtart:
While rack'd with doubts, oppreſt with fear,
Each buſh does an arm'd thief appear:
A ſhaken reed will terror ſtrike,
Miſtaken for a brandiſh'd pike.
Before the thief, the empty clown*
Sings unconcern'd and travels on*.
[502]
With warm petitions moſt men ply
The gods, their bags may multiply;
That riches may grow high and rank,
Outſwelling others in the bank.
But from plain wood and earthen cups,
No poiſon'd draught the peaſant ſups.
Of the gold goblet take thou care,
When ſparkling wine's ſpic'd by thy heir:
Then who can blame that brace of wiſe men,
That in diff'ring moods deſpiſe men:
Th' old merry lad ſaunters the ſtreets
And laughs, and drolls at all he meets:
For paſtime rallies, flouts, and fools 'em,
Shams, banters, mimics, ridicules 'em.
The other ſage in maudling wiſe,
Their errors mourns with weeping eyes.
Dull fools with eaſe can grin and ſneer,
And buffoons flout with ſaucy jeer.
What ſource could conſtant tears ſupply,
To feed the ſluices of each eye;
Or t'others merry humour make,
His ſpleen continually to ſhake?
[503] Could he in ſober honeſt times
With ſharp conceit tax petty crimes:
And every where amongſt the rout,
Find follies for his wit to flout;
Which proves that Gotham and groſs climes,
Produce prodigious wits ſometimes.
The joys and fears of the vain crowd,
And whimp'ring tears he'd jear aloud;
Wiſely ſecure, fortune deride,
By foppiſh mortals deified;
Bid her be hang'd, and laugh at fate,
When threatned at the higheſt rate;
Whilſt fools for vain and hurtful things,
Pour out their prayers and offerings,
Faſt'ning petitions on the knees*,
Of their regardleſs deities*.
For place and power, how many men vie,
Procuring mortal hate and envy;
Heralds long-winded titles ſound,
Which the vain owners oft confound.
Down go their ſtatues in diſgrace;
The party hangs up in the place.
In rage they break chariot triumphant,
Becauſe a knave 'fore ſet his rump on't:
[504] Poor horſes ſuffer for no fault,
Unleſs by bungling workmen wrought.
The founder's furnace grows red hot,
Sejanus ſtatue goes to pot:
That head lately ador'd, and reckon'd
In all th' univerſe the ſecond,
Melted, new forms and ſhapes aſſumes,
Of piſs-pots, frying-pans, and ſpoons*.
The crowd o'erjoyed that Caeſar's living,
Petition for a new thankſgiving;
How the baſe rout inſult to ſee
Sejanus dragg'd to deſtiny,
Would you on theſe conditions, Sir,
Be favourite and prime miniſter,
[505]
As was Sejanus? Stand poſſeſt
Of honours, power, and intereſt;
Diſpoſe ſupreme commands at will,
Promote, diſgrace, preſerve, or kill;
Have foot and horſe-guards, the command
Of armies both by ſea and land.
Had you not better aſk in prayer,
To be ſome petty country mayor;
There domineer, and when your pleaſure's
Condemn light weights, break falſe meaſures;
Though meanly clad in ſafe eſtate,
Than chuſe Sejanus robes and fate?
Sejanus then, we muſt conclude,
Courting his bane, miſtook the good.
Craſſus and Pompey's fate of old,
The truth of this ſure maxim told:
And his who firſt bow'd Rome's ſtiff neck,
And made the world obey his beck*.
The novice in his accidence,
Dares pray his wit and eloquence
May rival Roman Cicero's fame,
And Greek Demoſthenes' high name:
Yet to both theſe their ſwelling vein
Of wit and fancy prov'd their bane.
No pleading dunce's jobbernowl
Revenge e'er doom'd to grace a pole.
The trophies which the vanquiſh'd field
Do to the glorious victors yield,
Triumphant conquerors can bleſs,
With more than human happineſs:
This, Roman, Grecian, and barbarian,
Spurr'd to acts hazardous and daring;
[506] In ſweat and blood ſpending their days,
For empty fame, and fading bays.
'Tis the immoderate thirſt of fame
Much more than virtue does inflame:
Which none for worſe or better take,
But for her dower and trapping's ſake.
The fond ambition of a few,
Many vaſt empires overthrew;
While their atchievements with their duſt,
They vainly to their tombſtones truſt.
For ſepulchres like bodies lie,
Swallow'd in death's, obſcurity*.
Behold how ſmall an urn contains
The mighty Hannibal's remains:
That hero whoſe vaſt ſwelling mind
To Afric could not be confin'd:
Nature's impediments he paſt,
And came to Italy at laſt:
There, after towns and battles won,
He cries, comrades, there's nothing done,
Unleſs our conqu'ring powers
Break down Rome's gates, level her towers,
[507] Root up her poſts, and break her chains,
And knock out all oppoſers brains:
Whilſt our troops ſcour the city thorough,
And fix our ſtandard in Saburra *.
But what cataſtrophe of fate,
Does on this famous leader wait:
His conduct's baffled, army's broke,
Carthage puts on the Roman yoke:
Whilſt flight and baniſhment's his fate,
His ruin'd country's ſcorn and hate.
Go, madman, act thy frantic part,
Climb horrid Alps, with pains and art,
Go, madman, to be with mighty reputation,
The ſubject of a declamation
One world's too mean, a trifling thing,
For the young Macedonian king;
He raves like one in baniſhment,
In narrow craggy iſland pent:
In one poor globe does ſweat and ſqueeze,
Wedg'd in and crampt in little-eaſe.
But he who human race once ſcorn'd,
And ſaid high Jove King Philip horn'd,
While manag'd oracles declare
The ſpark great Ammon's ſon and heir;
At Babylon, for all his huffing,
Finds ample room in narrow coffin.
Man ſwells with bombaſt of inventions,
When ſtript, death ſhews his true dimenſions.
[508]
So do we read wild Xerxes rent
Mount Athos from the continent,
And in a frolic made a ſhift,
To ſet it in the ſea adrift:
With ſhips pav'd o'er the Helleſpont,
And built a floating bridge upon't:
Drove chariots o'er by this device,
As coaches ran upon the ice.
He led ſo numberleſs a rout,
As at one meal drank rivers out.
This tyrant we in ſtory find,
Was us'd to whip and flog the wind;
Their jailor Eolus in priſon,
Ne'er forc'd them with ſo little reaſon:
Nor could blue Neptune's godhead ſave him,
But he with fetters muſt enſlave him.
Yet after all theſe roaring freaks,
Routed and broke he homeward ſneaks;
And ferries o'er in fiſhing-boat
Through ſhoals of carcaſes afloat;
His hopes all vaniſh'd, bilked of all
His gaudy dreams: See pride's juſt fall.
The frequent ſubject of our prayers,
Is length of life and many years:
But what inceſſant plagues and ills,
The gulph of age with miſchief fills!
We can pronounce none happy, none,
Till the laſt ſand of life be run.
Marius's long life was th' only reaſon,
Of exile and Minturnian priſon.
Kind fate deſigning to befriend
Great Pompey, did a fever ſend,
That ſhould with favourable doom,
Prevent his miſeries to come:
[509] But nations for his danger griev'd,
Make public prayers, and he's repriev'd:
Fate then that honour'd, head did ſave,
And to inſulting Caeſar gave.
'Tis the fond mother's conſtant prayer,
Her children may be paſſing fair:
The boon they beg with ſighs and groans,
Inceſſantly on marrow-bones.
Yet bright Lucretia's ſullen fate,
Shews fair ones are not fortunate.
Virginia's chance may well confute you,
Good luck don't always wait on beauty.
Let not your wills then once repine,
Whate'er the gods for you deſign.
They better know than human wit,
That does our exigence befit.
Their wiſe all-ſeeing eyes diſcern,
And give what beſt ſuits our concern.
We blindly harmful things implore,
Which they refuſing, love us more.
Shall men aſk nothing then? Be wiſe,
And liſten well to ſound advice.
Pray only that in body ſound,
A firm and conſtant mind be found:
A mind no fear of death can daunt,
Nor exile, priſon, pains nor want:
That juſtly reckons death to be
Kind author of our liberty:
Baniſhing paſſion from our breaſt,
Reſting content with what's poſſeſt:
That ev'ry honeſt action loves,
And great Alcides toil approves,
Above the luſts, feaſts, and beds of down,
Which did Sardanapalus drown.
[510] This mortals to themſelves may give;
Virtue's the happy rule to live.
Chance bears no ſway where wiſdom rules,
An empty name ador'd by fools.
Folly blind Fortune did create,
A goddeſs, and to heaven tranſlate.(24)

SECTION XIV.

[511][512][513]
Bear me, ye friendly powers, to gentler ſcenes,
To ſhady bow'rs, and never-fading greens;
To flow'ry meads, the vales, and mazy woods,
Some ſweet ſoft ſeat, adorn'd with ſprings and floods
Where with the muſes, I may ſpend my days,
And ſteal myſelf from life by ſlow decays.
With age unknown to pain or ſorrow bleſt,
To the dark grave retiring as to reſt;
While gently with one ſigh this mortal frame,
Diſſolving turns to aſhes whence it came;
And my freed ſoul departs without a groan;
In tranſport wings her flight to worlds unknown.

The Author goes to viſit Dr. Stanvil and his lady. Aet. 29. July 2, 1734.§. 1. FROM Orton-lodge I went to Baſſora, to pay my reſpects to Dr. Stanvil and his charming conſort. I was received by them both with the greateſt goodneſs and civility; but as before, this lady did not ſeem to have had any former acquaintance, one might well think from the part ſhe acted, that ſhe had never ſeen me, till the accident I have related brought me to her huſband's houſe. I did not however even hint any thing to the contrary, but turning to the Doctor a little after my arrival, began to aſk him ſome queſtions.

[514] A queſtion propoſed to Dr. Stanvil, how the Spaniſh fly acts in bliſter-ſtupors.§. 2. As he had an Eſſay on fevers in his hand, when I entred the room, I requeſted to know, how he accounted for the effects of Cantharides, in raiſing and ſtrengthning a low trembling pulſe, and driving the natural heat and efflatus of the blood outward,—in giving relief in delirious ravings, ſtupors, and loſs of reaſon,—in reducing continual fevers to diſtinct remiſſions,—and in cleanſing and opening the obſtructed glands and lymphatics, ſo as to bring on the critical ſweats, let looſe the ſaliva and glandular ſecretions, and bring down the thick ſoluble urine? How does bliſtering, ſo happily brought in by the phyſical bully of this age, Dr. Radcliff, ſo wonderfully cool and dilute the blood? It ſeems to me ſomewhat ſtrange.

The Doctor's opinion, how the cantharides act on the body in bliſters.§. 3. Dr. Stanvil replied: It is eaſily accounted for. The Spaniſh fly, that extremely hot and perfectly cauſtic inſect, is ſtocked with a ſubtile, active, and extremely pungent ſalt, which enters the blood upon the application of the bliſter, and paſſes with it through the ſeveral glandular ſtrainers and ſecretory ducts. This ſtimulating force of the fly's ſalt, occaſions the pain felt in making the water with a bliſter, (which may be taken off by a thin emulſion made with the pulp of roaſted apples in milk and water), and cauſes [515]the liberal, foul and ſtinking ſweats, while the Epiſpaſtic is on.

This being evident, it is plain from thence, that the penetrating ſalts of the fly, that is, the volatile pungent parts of the cantharides, act in the blood by diſſolving, attenuating, and ratifying the viſcid coheſions of the lymph and ſerum; by ſtimulating the nervous coats of the veſſels, throw off their ſtagnating viſcidities, and by cleanſing the glands, and forcing out the coagulated ſerum, reſtore the circulation and freedom of lymph from the arteries to the veins; opening, ſcouring and cleanſing at the ſame time, the expurgatory glands.

The wiſdom and goodneſs of God in the production of the Spaniſh fly, for the benefit of man.In ſhort, as common cathartics purge the guts and cleanſe and throw off their clammy, ſtagnating, and obſtructing contents, by rarifying and diſſolving the viſcid coheſions of the fluids, and by ſtimulating the ſolids; ſo do the active ſalts of the fly penetrate the whole animal machine, become a glandular lymphatic purge, and perform the ſame thing in all the ſmall ſtraining conveying pipes, that common purgatives effect in the inteſtines: and as by this means, all the ſluices and outlets of the glandular ſecretions are opened, the cantharides muſt be cooling, diluting, and refrigerating in their effects to the greateſt degree, tho' ſo very hot, cauſtic, and pungent in themſelves. So wonderfully [516]has the great Creator provided for his creature, man; in giving him not only a variety of the moſt pleating food; but ſo fine a medicine, (among a thouſand others) as the Spaniſh fly, to ſave him from the deſtroying fever, and reſtore him to health again. It is not by a diſcharge of ſerum, as too many doctors imagine, that a bliſter relieves, for five times the quantity may be brought off by bleeding, vomiting, or purging; but the benefit is intirely owing to that heating, attenuating, and pungent ſalt of this fly, (and this fly only), which the divine power and goodneſs has made a lymphatic purgative, or glandular cathartic for the relief of man, in this fatal and tormenting malady. Vaſt is our obligation to God for all his providential bleſſings. Great are the wonders that he doth for the children of men.

Dr. Stanvil's ſudden death, and the cauſe of it.§. 4. Here the Doctor dropt off his chair, juſt as he had pronounced the word men, and in a moment became a lifeleſs ſordid body. His death was occaſioned by the blowing up of his ſtomach, as I found upon opening his body, at the requeſt of his lady.—When the blood which is confined within the veſſels of the human body, is agitated with a due motion, it maintains life; but if there be a ſtagnation of it in an artery, it makes an aneuriſm; in a vein, a varix; [517]under the ſkin, a bruiſe; in the noſe, it may excite an haemorrhage; in the veſſels of the brain, an apoplexy; in the lungs, an haemoptoe; in the cavity of the thorax, an empyema; and when it perfectly ſtagnates there, immediate death.

An animal (obſerve me Reader) muſt live ſo long as this fluid circulates through the conical pipes in his body, from the leſſer baſe in the centre, the heart, to the greater in the extreme parts; and from the capillary evaneſcent arteries, by the naſcent returning veins to the heart again; but when this fluid ceaſes to flow through the incurved canals, and the velocities are no longer in the inverſe duplicate ratio of the inflated pipes, then it dies. The animal has done for ever with food and ſex; the two great principles which move this world, and produce not only ſo much honeſt induſtry, but ſo many wars and fightings, ſuch cruel oppreſſions, and that variety of woes we read of in the tragical hiſtory of the world. Even one of them does wonders. Cunnus teterrim [...] belli cauſa. And when united, the force is irreſiſtible.

But as I was ſaying, when this fluid ceaſes to flow, the man has done with luſt and hunger. The pope, the warriour, and the maid, are ſtill. The machine is at abſolute reſt, that is, in perfect inſenſibility: And the ſoul of it is removed to the veſtibulum or porch of [518]the higheſt holy place; in and Burnet of the Charter-houſe), as needful to our contact with the material ſyſtem; —as it muſt exiſt with a ſpiritual body to be ſure, (ſays the Rev. Mr. Caleb Fleming, in his Survey of the ſearch after ſouls), becauſe of its being preſent with its Saviour, beholding his glory, who is in human form and figure, which requires ſome ſimilitude in the vehicle, in order to the more eaſy and familiar ſociety and enjoyment. Or, as the learned Maſter of Peter-houſe, Dr. Edmund Law, and Dr. Sherlock, Biſhop of London, informs us, it remains inſenſible for ages, till the conſummation of all things; — from the diſſolution of the body, is ſtupid, ſenſeleſs, and dead aſleep till the reſurrection.

Such was the caſe of my friend, Dr. Stanvil; he dropt down dead at once. A rarefaction in his ſtomach, by the heat and fermentation of what he had taken the night before at ſupper, deſtroyed him. That concave viſcus, or bowel, which is ſeated in the abdomen below the diaphragm, I mean the ſtomach, was inflamed, and as the deſcending trunk of the aorta paſſes down between it and the ſpine, that is, between the ſtomach and back part of the ribs, the inflation and diſtention of the bowel compreſſed and conſtringed the tranſverſe ſection of the artery aorta, in its deſcending branch, and by leſſening [519]it, impeded the deſcent of the blood from the heart, and obliged it to aſcend in a greater quantity than uſual to the head. By this means, the parts of the head were diſtended and ſtretched with blood, which brought on an apoplexy, and the operation upward being violent, the equilibrium was intirely broken, and the vital tide could flow no more. This I found on opening the body. I likewiſe obſerved that, excluſive of the compreſſure of the deſcending trunk of the artery aorta, the muſcular coats of the ſtomach were ſtretched, inflated, and diſtended; and of conſequence, the blood-veſſels which enter into the conſtitution of thoſe muſcles, were ſtretched, dilated, and turgid with blood, and therefore the blood could not be driven forward in the courſe of its circulation with its natural and due velocity, but muſt prove an obſtacle to the deſcent of the blood from the heart, and oblige almoſt the whole tide to move upwards. This, and the conſtringing the aorta, at its orifice or tranſverſe ſection, between the coſtae and the bowel called the ſtomach, is enough, I aſſure you, Reader, to knock up the head of a giant, and put a ſtop to all the operations of nature. Thus fell this gentleman in the 32d year of his age.

[520] The character of Dr. Stanvil.§. 5. Whether the learned Dr. Edmund Law (25), and the great Dr. Sherlock biſhop of London (26), be right, in aſſerting, the human ſoul ſleeps like a bat or a ſwallow, in ſome cavern for a period, till the laſt trumpet awakens the hero of Voltaire and Henault, I mean Lewis XIV. to anſwer for his treachery, falſhood, and cruelty; or, whether that excellent [521]divine Mr. Fleming has declared the truth, in maintaining in his late ſurvey, that the conſcious ſcheme was the doctrine of Chriſt and his apoſtles; this however is certain, that my friend Stanvil is either now preſent with his Saviour, beholding his glory, in a vehicle reſembling the body of our Lord; as the diſſenter juſt mentioned teaches;—or if, according to the author of the Conſiderations on the ſtate of the world, (Archdeacon Law) and my Lord of London, in his Sermons, the ſcriptures take no account of an intermediate ſtate in death, and we ſhall not awake or be made alive until the day of judgment; then will my friend have eternal life at the reſurrection; he was as worthy a man as ever lived; an upright chriſtian deiſt, whoſe life was one unmixed ſcene of virtue and charity. He did not believe a tittle of our prieſtly myſteries, or regard that religion which ſkulks behind the enormous columns of conſecrated opinions; but, as chriſtianity was revealed from heaven, to bring mankind to the worſhip of the one ſupreme God and governour of the world, and lead them into the paths of humanity, he rejected the ſuperſtition of Monks and their diſciples, and in regard to the voice of reaſon, and the words of the goſpel, adored only the ſupreme Being, manifeſted his love of God by keeping the commandments, and his love of his neighbour, by doing all the good in his power. Such a man [522]was Dr. John Stanvil. If men of fortune would form their manners on ſuch a model, virtue by degrees would ſpread through the inferior world, and we ſhould ſoon be free from ſuperſtition.

§. 6. Having mentioned the ſleeping and the conſcious ſchemes, I would here examine theſe opinions, and ſhew why I cannot think, a dead inconſcious ſilence is to be our caſe till the conſummation of the ages; as a happineſs ſo remote would weaken I believe the energy and influence of our conceptions and apprehenſions, in reſpect of faith, hope, and expectations. To curb deſire, or ſuffer ſeverely here, for the ſake of truth and virtue, and then ceaſe to be, perhaps for ten thouſand years to come, or much longer; (for there is not any thing in revelation, or an appearance out of it, that can incline a rational man to think he is near the day of judgment or general reſurrection); this ſeems to be an obſtacle in the progreſs of the pilgrim: And therefore, why I rather think, we ſtep immediately from the dark experiences of this firſt ſtate, to a bliſsful conſciouſneſs in the regions of day, and by death are fixed in an eternal connexion with the wiſe, the virtuous, and the holy:—This, I ſay, I would in the next place proceed to treat of, by conſidering what the ſcriptures reveal in relation to death, and what is moſt probable [523]in reaſon; but that it is neceſſary to proceed in my ſtory.

Mrs. Stanvil's behaviour on the death of her huſband.§. 7. When the beautiful Mrs. Stanvil ſaw her huſband was really dead, and had paid that decent tribute of tears to his memory, which was due to a man, who left her in his will all his eſtates, real and perſonal, to be by her diſpoſed of as ſhe pleaſed; ſhe ſent for me to her chamber the next morning, and after a long converſation with her, told me, ſhe could now own who ſhe was, and inſtead of acting any longer by the directions of her head, let me know from her heart, that ſhe had ſtill the ſame regard for me, as when we travelled away together from her father's houſe in the Weſt, to the North of England: And if I would ſtay at Baſſora where I was, but for three months ſhe muſt be away, ſhe would then return, and her fortune and hand I might command. This I readily conſented to, and when the funeral was over ſhe departed. For the time agreed on, I continued in the houſe, and to a day ſhe was punctual in her return. We were married the week after, and I was even happier than I had ever been before; which muſt amount to a felicity inconceivably great indeed. Six months we reſided at her ſeat, and then thought it beſt to pay a viſit to my father in Ireland. We arrived at Bagatrogh Caſtle in the weſtern extremity of that iſland, [524]in the ſpring of the year 1735, and were moſt kindly received.

My father longed to ſee me, and was very greatly rejoiced at my coming; but I found him in a dying way, paralytic all over, and ſcarcely able to ſpeak. To my amazement, he was become as ſtrict a unitarian as myſelf, and talked with abhorrence of Athanaſian religion. This was owing, he ſaid, to my MS. Remarks I left with him on Lord Nottingham's Anſwer to Mr. Whiſton's Letter to his Lordſhip; which MS. of mine he had often read over when I was gone, and thereby was thoroughly convinced, on conſidering my reaſoning, that chriſtians are expreſly commanded, upon pain of God's diſpleaſure, to worſhip one ſupreme God, and him only, in the name and through the mediation of Jeſus Chriſt. Upon this religious practice as a fundamental rule he had at laſt fixed. He ſaw it was the ſafe way, and would never depart from it. He told me, the parſon of his pariſh, a right orthodox divine, who had been his chum in the univerſity, and very intimate with him, was greatly troubled at this change in his ſentiments, and ſaid many ſevere things; but he no more minded the Athanaſians now, than he did the idolatrous papiſts. This gave me great pleaſure, and recompenſed me for what I had ſuffered on a religious account. I gave thanks to [525]God that truth through my means had prevailed.*

THE CONCLUSION.

AND now, my candid Reader, to take my leave of you at this time, I have only to obſerve, that as this volume is full large, I cannot add my intended XVth ſection, but only ſay in a ſhort ſummary, that ſoon after my arrival at Bagatrogh Caſtle, my father's ſeat on Mall-Bay, on the coaſt of Galway in Ireland, the old gentleman died, and as in a paſſion, he had irrevocably ſettled the greateſt part of his large eſtate on a near relation of mine, and had it not in his power to leave me more than a hundred a year, a little ready money, and a ſmall ſhip, which lay before his door in the Bay, he deſcended to the grave in great trouble, with many tears. Like old Iſaac over Eſau, he wept bitterly, and wiſhed in vain, that it was in his power to undo what he had done.

As ſoon as my father was buried, I returned to England with my wife, in the little veſſel, now my own, which lay in the Bay, [526]and immediately after landing, and laying up my ſhip in a ſafe place, we went to Baſſora again, there lived for one year as happy as two mortals could be; but in the beginning of the year 1736; ſhe died of the ſmall pox, and to divert my mind, it came into my head to go to ſea, and make ſome voyages in my own little ſhip, which was an excellent one for ſtrength and ſailing, tho' but a ſloop of twenty-five tons. I went captain myſelf, and had an ingenious young gentleman, one Jackman, for my mate, who had been in the Eaſt Indies ſeveral times, ſix good hands, and two cabbin-boys. Every thing neceſſary, convenient, and fit, books, mathematical inſtruments, &c. we took on board, and weighed anchor the 5th of July, 1736.

We went on ſhore at the Canary Iſlands, the Cape de Verd Iſlands, and other places. We paſſed the Sun in 15 degrees North latitude, and from that time ſtanding South; croſſed the Line; the heats intolerable, and the muſquitoes and bugs inſufferable. We ſoon loſt ſight of the Northern ſtar, and had the Croſiers and Magellan clouds in view. In three months time we anchored at St. Catharine's on the coaſt of Brazil. The 2d of December we ſaw the Streights la Maine, that run betwixt Terra del fuego and Staten, and is the boundary between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans; but inſtead of venturing into [527]them, and hazarding our lives among the impetuous blaſts and waves which ſweep round Cape Horn, (as Admiral Anſon did the 7th of March 1741, two months too late, by the fault of the miniſtry, in his way to the South Seas), we kept out at ſea to the Eaſt of Staten-land, and ran to the latitude 64, before we ſtood to the Weſtward. The weather was fine, as it was then the height of ſummer, to wit, in December and January. All the occurrences in this courſe, the diſcovery we made in the latitude above-mentioned of an inhabited iſland, governed by a young Queen, and what appeared and happened there, and in our run from thence to Borneo and Aſia, round the globe; and from China to Europe, on our return home; with the events we afterwards met with, and the obſervations I made in other places, the Reader will find in a book called, The Voyages and Travels of Dr. Lorimer.

Nine years of my life was ſpent in travelling and ſailing about, and at laſt I returned to reſt and reflect, and in rational amuſements paſs the remainder of my time away. I retired to a little flowery retreat I had purchaſed within a few miles of London, that I might eaſily know what was doing in this hemiſphere, while I belong to it; and in the midſt of groves and ſtreams, fields and [528]lawns, have lived as happily ever ſince, as a mortal can do on this Planet.

Dr. Cheyne (by the way I obſerve,) calls it a ruined Planet, in his wild poſthumous book;(27) (a notion he had from his maſter, enthuſiaſtic Law),(28) [528]but from what I have ſeen on three continents, and in traverſing [529]the ocean round the globe, from Weſt to Eaſt, and from the Southern latitude 64, to 66 North; a Planet in reality ſo divinely made and perfect, that one can never ſufficiently adore and praiſe an infinitely wiſe God for ſuch a piece of his handy work: — A world ſo wiſely contrived, ſo accurately made, as to demonſtrate the Creator's being and attributes, and cauſe every rational mortal to acknowledge that Jehovah is our God, and fear and obey ſo great and tremendous a Being — the power and glory of our God.

But as I was ſaying, after my return, I bought a little ſpot and country-houſe, where I might reſt from my labours, and eaſily [530]know what is doing in this hemiſphere: — how gloriouſly our moſt gracious and excellent king endeavours to advance the felicity of his people, and promote the honour and dignity of Great Britain: — how indefatigable the preſent miniſtry is in purſuing ſuch meaſures, as demonſtrate they have the intereſt of their country at heart; as evince how well they ſupply the deficiencies of their predeceſſors in office: — and how zealouſly the combined wiſdom of the whole legiſlature acts for the preſervation of the Britannic conſtitution, and the liberties and properties of the people; that the ends of the late war may be anſwered, and the peace at laſt give univerſal ſatisfaction.

To hear ſuch news; and know what France and Spain are doing; — and what the renowned Anti-Sejanus is writing; (Anti-Sejanus who deſerves the curſe and hatred of the whole community*) I purchaſed a retirement near the capital; a ſpot ſurrounded with woods and ſtreams, plants and flowers; and over which a ſilence hovers, that gives a reliſh to ſtill life, and renders it a contraſt to the buſy, buſtling, envious crowds of men.

Here I ſat down at laſt, and have done with hopes and fears for ever.

[531]
"Here grant me, heav'n, to end my peaceful days,
And paſs what's left of life in ſtudious eaſe;
Here court the muſes, whilſt the ſun on high,
Flames in the vault of heav'n, and fires the ſky;
Soon as Aurora from her golden bow'rs,
Exhales the fragrance of the balmy flow'rs,
Reclin'd in ſilence on a moſſy bed,
Conſult the learned volumes of the dead;
Fall'n realms and empires in deſcription view,
Live o'er paſt times, and build whole worlds anew;
Oft from the burſting tombs, in fancy raiſe
The ſons of Fame, who liv'd in antient days;
Oft liſten till the raptur'd ſoul takes wings,
While Plato reaſons, or while Homer ſings.
Or when the night's dark wings this globe ſurround,
And the pale moon begins her ſolemn round;
When night has drawn her curtains o'er the plain,
And ſilence reaſſumes her awful reign;
Bid my free ſoul to ſtarry orbs repair,
Thoſe radiant orbs that float in ambient air,
And with a regular confuſion ſtray,
Oblique, direct, along the aerial way:
Fountains of day! ſtupendous orbs of light!
Which by their diſtance leſſen to the ſight:
And if the glaſs you uſe, t'improve your eyes,
Millions beyond the former millions riſe.
For no end were they made? Or, but to blaze
Through empty ſpace, and uſeleſs ſpend their rays?
Or ought we not with reaſon to reply,
Each lucid point which glows in yonder ſky,
Informs a ſyſtem in the boundleſs ſpace,
And fills with glory its appointed place:
[532] With beams, unborrow'd, brightens other ſkies,
And worlds, to thee unknown, with heat and life ſupplies.
But chiefly, O my ſoul, apply to loftier themes,
The opening heav'ns, and angels rob'd with flames:
Read in the ſacred leaves how time began,
And the duſt mov'd, and quicken'd into man;
Here through the flow'ry walks of Eden rove,
Court the ſoft breeze, or range the ſpicy grove;
There tread on hallow'd ground where angels trod,
And rev'rend patriarchs talk'd as friends with God;
Or hear the voice to ſlumb'ring prophets giv'n,
Or gaze on viſions from the throne of heav'n.
Thus lonely, thoughtful may I run the race
Of tranſient life, in no unuſeful eaſe:
Enjoy each hour, nor as it fleets away,
Think life too ſhort, and yet too long the day;
Of right obſervant, while my ſoul attends
Each duty, and makes heav'n and angels friends:
Can welcome death with Faith's expecting eye,
And mind no pangs, ſince Hope ſtands ſmiling by;
Nor ſtudious how to make a longer ſtay,
Views heav'nly plains and realms of brighter day;
Shakes off her load, and wing'd with ardent love,
Spurns at the earth, and ſprings her flight above,
Soaring thro' air to realms where angels dwell,
Pities the ſhrieking friends, and leaves the leſſning bell."
THE END.
Notes
*
The author of Tuphlo-pero-gamia is the Rev. Mr. William Thompſon; a junior Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, when I was a member of that univerſity. He was a man of the fineſt parts and learning, and was remarkable for a temper ſo vaſtly happy, that he was always called Benign Billy. His Paraphraſe on Job, in blank verſe, is an admirable thing: It is, in my opinion, far preferable to the ingenious Broome's paraphraſe on this ſacred book.
(1).

The black cock is as large as our game cocks,Deſcription of the black cock. and flies very ſwift and ſtrong. The head and eyes are large, and round the eyes is a beautiful circle of red. The beak is ſtrong, and black as the body; the legs robuſt and red. It is very high eating; more ſo than any native in England except the fen-ortolan; but in one particular it exceeds the fen birds, for it has two taſtes; it being brown and white meat: under a lay of brown is a lay of white meat; both delicious: the brown is higher than the black moor cock, and the white much richer than the pheaſant.

The moor-cock.The moor cock is likewiſe very rare, but is to be had ſometimes in London, as the ſportſmen meet with it now and then on the hilly-heaths, not very far from town; particularly on Hindhead-heath, in the way to Portſmouth. It is as large as a good Darking fowl, and the colour is a deep iron-grey. Its eyes are large and fine as the black cock's; but, inſtead of the red circle round them, it has bright and beautiful ſcarlet eyebrows.

The cock of the wood.The cock of the wood, (as unknown in London as the black cock) is almoſt as large as a turkey, but flies well. The back is a mixture of black, grey, and a reddiſh brown; the belly grey, and the breaſt a pale brown, with tranſverſe lines of black, and a little white at the tips of the feathers. It has a large round head, of the pureſt black, and over its fine hazle eyes, there is a naked ſpace, that looks like an eye-brow of bright ſcarlet. It is delicious eating, but far inferior to the black cock.

(2).

Of celibacy and marriage. If ſucceſſion be the main thing, and to prevent the extirpation of the reſt of mankind by junction, why may it not be carried on as well without marriage, as in that confined way? I anſwer, that as the author and founder of marriage, was the Antient of Days, God himſelf, and at the creation, he appointed the inſtitution: as Chriſt, who was veſted with authority to abrogate any laws, or ſuperſede any cuſtom, in which were found any flaw or obliquity, or had not an intrinſic goodneſs and rectitude in them, confirmed the ordinance, by reforming the abuſes that had crept into it, and reſtoring it to its original boundary: As he gave a ſanction to this amicable covenant, and ſtatuted that men ſhould maintain the dignity of the conjugal ſtate, [49]and by virtue of this primordial and moſt intimate bond of ſociety, convey down the race of mankind, and maintain its ſucceſſion to the final diſſolution; it is not therefore to be neglected or diſregarded. We muſt not dare to follow our fancies, and in unhallowed mixtures, or an illegal method, have any poſterity. As the great God appointed and bleſſed this inſtitution only, for the continuance of mankind, the race is not to be preſerved in another way. We muſt marry in the Lord, to promote his glory, as the apoſtle ſays, 1 Cor. vii. 39. The earth is not to be repleniſhed by licentious junction, or the promiſcuous uſe of women. Dreadful hereafter muſt be the caſe of all who ſlight an inſtitution of God.

I am ſenſible, the libertine who depreciates and vilifies the dignity of the married ſtate, will laugh at this aſſertion: The fop and debauchee will hiſs it, and ſtill do their beſt to render wedlock the ſubject of contempt and ridicule. The Roman clergy will likewiſe decry it, and injuriouſly treat it as an impediment to devotion, a cramp upon the ſpiritual ſerving of God, and call it an inſtrument of pollution and defilement, in reſpect of their heavenly celibacy.

But as God thought marriage was ſuitable to a paradiſaical ſtate, and the ſcriptures declare it honourable in all: as this is the way appointed by heaven to people the earth; and the inſlitution is neceſſary, in the reaſon and nature of things, conſidering the circumſtances in which mankind is placed; to prevent confuſion, and promote the general happineſs; as the bond of ſociety, and the foundation of all human government; ſure I am, the rake and the maſs-prieſt, muſt be in a dreadful ſituation at the ſeſſions of righteouſneſs; when the one is charged with libertiniſm and gallantries, with madneſs [50]and folly, and with all the evils and miſchief they have done by illicit gratification, contrary to reaſon, and in direct oppoſition to the inſtitutes of God;— and when the other, the miſerable maſs-prieſts, are called to an account, for vilifying the honour and dignity of the married ſtate, and for ſtriving to ſeduce mankind into the ſolitary retirements of celibacy, in violation of the laws of God; and more eſpecially of the primary law or ordinance of heaven. Wretched prieſts! Your inſtitutions are breaches in revealed religion, treſpaſſes upon the common rights of nature, and ſuch oppreſſive yokes as it is not able to bear. Your celibacy has not a grain of piety in it. It is policy and impiety.

Hear me then, ye libertines and maſs-prieſts: I call upon you of the firſt row, ye rakes of genius, to conſider what you are doing, and in time, turn from your iniquities: Be no longer profligate and licentious, blind to your true intereſt and happineſs, but become virtuous and honourable lovers, and in regard to the advantages of this ſolemn inſtitution, called wedlock, as well to the general ſtate of the world, as to individuals, marry in the Lord; ſo will you avoid that dreadful ſentence, Fornicators and adulterers God will judge, that is, puniſh; and in this life, you may make things very agreeable, if you pleaſe; though it is in the heavenly world alone, where there ſhall be all joy and no ſorrow. Let there be true beauty and gracefulneſs in the mind and manners, and theſe with diſcretion, and other things in your power, will furniſh a fund of happineſs commenſurate with your lives. It is poſſible, I am ſure, to make marriage productive of as much happineſs as falls to our ſhare in this lower hemiſphere; as the nature of man can reach to in his preſent condition. [51]For, as to joy flowing in with a full, conſtant and equal tide, without interruption and without allay, there is no ſuch thing. Human nature doth not admit of this. "The ſum of the matter is this: To the public the advantages of marriage are certain, whether the parties will or no; but to the parties engaging, not ſo: to them it is a fountain that ſendeth forth both ſweet and bitter waters. To thoſe who mind their duty and obligations ſweet ones; to thoſe who neglect them bitter ones."

In the next place, ye monks, I would perſuade you, if I could, to labour no longer in ſtriving to cancel the obligations to marriage by the pretence of religion. The voice of heaven, and the whiſpers of ſound and uncorrupted reaſon are againſt it. It is will-worſhip in oppoſition to revelation. It is ſuch a preſumption for a creature againſt the author of our nature, as muſt draw down uncommon wrath upon the head of every maſs-prieſt, who does not repent their preaching ſuch wicked doctrine. Indeed I do not know any part of popery that can be called chriſtianity: but this in particular is ſo horrible and diabolical, that I can conſider the preachers for celibacy in no other light than as ſo many devils. May you ponder in time on this horrible affair.

(3).

Severin Bini, or Binius, Of councils, and the editors of them. as he is commonly called, was a doctor of divinity at Cologne, in the circle of the Lower Rhine in Germany, and canon of that archiepiſcopal cathedral. He publiſhed in that city, in the year 1606, an elegant edition of all the councils in four very large volumes, folio, and by this work, made the editions or collections of James Merlin, Peter Crabb, and Lawrence Surius, of no value: but the 2d edition publiſhed by Binius in the year 1618, in nine volumes ſmaller folio, is far preferable to the firſt: and the Paris Edition of Bini's Councils in 1638, in ten large volumes, folio, is enlarged, more correct, and of conſequence ſtill better than the 2d edition of Binius. This is not however the beſt edition to buy, if you love to read that theological ſtuff called Councils. The Louvre edition des Conciles en 1644, in 37 volumes in folio, is what you ſhould purchaſe; or, that of 1672, Paris, by the Jeſuits Labbé and Coſſart, in 18 large [80] volumes in folio. This laſt is what I prefer, on account of the additions, correctneſs, and beauty of the impreſſion. Pere Hardouin did likewiſe print a later very fine edition of the Councils, with explications and free remarks; an extraordinary and curious work I have been told: but I could not even ſee it in France, as the parliament of Paris had ordered the work to be ſecreted, on account of the remarks.

N. B. Binius, whom I have mentioned, was born in the year 1543, and died 1620, aet. 77.

N. B. James Merlin, the firſt editor of the Councils, was a doctor of divinity, and chanoine of Notre-dame de Paris. Beſides the Councils, two large volumes in folio, he publiſhed the works of Richard de St. Victor, Paris, 1518. — the works of Peter de Blois, Paris, 1519. — and the works of Durand de St. Pourçain, Paris, 1515. His own work are, A Defence of Origen, in 4 to. a good thing; and, Six Homilies on Gabriel's being ſent to the Virgin Mary, in 8vo; which homilies are not worth half a farthing.—Merlin was born in the year 1742, and died 1541, aged 69.

N. B. Peter Crabb, the 2d editor of the councils, was a Franciſcan friar. He publiſhed two volumes in folio of Councils, at Cologne, in 1538; and a third volume in 1550.—Was born 1470; died 1553; aet. 83.

N. B. Lawrence Surius, the third editor of the Councils, a monk of the Charireux, publiſhed his edition of them, in four large volumes in folio, 1560; and a few years after printed his Lives of the Saints, in ſix tomes. He writ likewiſe a ſhort Hiſtory of his own Time; and, An Apology for the Maſſacre of St. Barthelemi. He was the moſt outragious, abuſive bigot that ever writ againſt the Proteſtants. The great men of his own church deſpiſed him; and Cardinal Perron, in particular, [81]calls him bête and l'ignorant. He was born 1522; died 1578, aet. 56.

N. B. Philip Labbée, the Jeſuit, the 5th editor of the councils, and the next after Binius, was born in 1607; died 1667, aet. 60. He lived only to publiſh 11 vols. of the Councils, the 11th came out the year he died; and the other ſeven were done by Coſſart. Labbé was a man of learning, and beſides his collection of Councils, writ ſeveral other pieces. The beſt of them are, Bibliotheca bibliothecarum: Concordia chronologica: Bellarmini philologica: and The Life of Galen.

Gabriel Coſſart, the continuator, publiſhed the other ſeven volumes in 1672, and died at Paris, the 18th of December, 1674, aet. 59.

N. B. 1. Richard de St. Victor (whoſe works I ſaid were publiſhed by Merlin, at Paris, 1518) was a Scotchman, and prior of the abbey of St. Victor in Paris. He died the 10th of March, 1173, aet. 91.—He was the author of Three critical and hiſtorical diſſertations on the Tabernacle; two on the Temple; three on the harmony of the chronology of the kings of Judea and Iſrael; Commentaries on the Pſalms, Canticles, the Epiſtles of St. Paul, and the Revelation; Some treatiſes in divinity; and Several diſquiſitions relating to ſpiritual life. There have been four editions of theſe pieces, and the beſt of them is that of Rouen in 1650, in two volumes, by Father John de Toulouſe, who writ the life of Richard, and added it to his edition. The three other editions are that of Paris, 1518; of Venice, 1592; of Cologne, 1621. Richard de Victor has been highly commended by ſeveral celebrated writers, by Henri de Grand, Trithem, Bellarmine, and Sixte de Sienne. There are many curious and fine things in his writings, it muſt be allowed: but in general, he is too ſubtil, too diffuſe, and too full [82]of digreſſions. His commentaries, for the moſt part, are weak. I am ſure he did not underſtand St. Paul. But, for the 12th century, he was an extraordinary man.

But who was St. Victor, to whom the abbey of Chanoines Regulieres in Paris, and the greater abbaye of Chanoines in Marſeilles, are dedicated? He was a Frenchman, who fought under the Emperors. Diocleſian and Maximian with great applauſe, in the moſt honourable poſt; but in the year 302, ſuffered martyrdom for refuſing to ſacrifice to the idols. He was executed on the ſpot where the abbey of St. Victor in Marſeilles now ſtands, and there they have his reliques, a la reſerve du piée, that is, except his foot, which lies in the Abbaye de St. Victor de Paris. William Grimaud, abbot of St. Victor de Marſeille, on his being made Pope Urban the 5th, A. D. 1362, took the foot of St. Victor from his abbey, when he left it, and made a preſent of it to John, Duke of Berry, (one of the ſons of John the firſt king of France, who was taken priſoner by Edward the Black Prince, in the battle of Poitiers, Sept. 19, 1356): and this duke of Berry gave the ineſtimable foot to the monks of St. Victor in Paris. There it remains to this day; and tho' ſo ſmall a part of the bleſſed Victor, ſheds immenſe benefits on the pious Catholics who adore it. Happy Catholics!

2. As to Peter de Blois, he was arch deacon of Bath, in the reign of Henry the ſecond, and died. in London, in the year 1200, aet. 71. His works are 183 letters on various ſubjects, 20 ſermons, and 17 tracts of ſeveral kinds. They were firſt printed at Mayence in 1500.— Then by Merlin, Paris, 1519, as before mentioned.— Afterwards, John Buſée, the Jeſuit, gave an edition of [83]them in 1600, which is far preferable to that of Merlin. But the moſt valuable edition is that of Peter de Gouſſainville, in folio, Paris, 1667: to this edition is prefixed the life of Peter de Blois, and very learned remarks on Peter's writings, and the ſubjects he writ on, are added, by Gouſſainville. De Blois's works contain many excellent things, and his life is a curious piece. Some of his notions relating to the ſcriptures are very good, and he writes well againſt vice. He is a good author for the age he lived in. His letters are well worth reading; eſpecially ſuch of them as relate to his own time. King Henry the ſecond ordered him to make a collection of them for his (the king's) uſe.

3. Durand de St. Pourçain, was biſhop of Meux, in 1326, and died the 13th of September, 1333, in the 89th year of his age. His works are, Liber de origine juriſdictionum, (a learned piece); and Commentaries on the four books of ſentences. (The book called, The Sentences, was written by the famous Peter Lombard, biſhop of Paris, who died in the year 1164. aet. 82. In the Sentences, one of the propoſitions argued on is this: Chriſtus ſecundum quod eſt homo, non eſt aliquod. Some call theſe Sentences excellent, which is what I cannot think them: but in Durand's Commentary on them, there are ſeveral excellent things.)

As to the Jeſuit, Jean Buſée, (who publiſhed the 3d edition of Peter de Blois) he died at Mayence the 30th of May, 1611, aged 64, and was the author of many books not worth mentioning.

The learned Gouſſainville (who printed the laſt edition of De Blois, with notes, and the life) died in the year 1683, extremely poor and miſerable. He likewiſe [84]publiſhed the works of St. Gregory, the firſt pope of that name, with many valuable remarks and notes. There are four editions of this pope's works; that of Tuſſiniani, biſhop of Venice, by order of pope Sixtus the 5th: the Paris edition, 1640: Gouſſainville's edition: and the late Benedictine edition: but Gouſſainville's is, in my opinion, the moſt valuable.

N. B. The Sermons in the firſt and ſecond editions of Peter de Blois' works, are not his, but Peter Comeſtor's. De Blois' ſermons are only to be found in Gouſſainville's edition of this arch-deacon's works. Note, Peter Comeſtor was a regular canon of St. Victor's in Paris, and died in the year 1198, aet. 65.—Beſides the ſermons publiſhed by miſtake as the work of De Blois, he writ a large ſcholaſtic hiſtory, which comprehends the ſacred hiſtory from Geneſis to the end of the Acts. This is reckoned a good thing; and has been abridged by one Hunter, an Engliſhman.

Of councils.But as to Councils; we have the following account of the eighteen general ones in the Vatican library, and are told, that the ſeveral inſcriptions affixed to them were made by pope Sixtus the 5th; the famous Felix Peretti, who was born the 13th of December, 1521, and died the 27th of Auguſt, 1590, in the 69th year of his age.

  • 1 ſt Council, which is that of Nice in 325. St. Sylveſter being pope, and Conſtantine the great emperor, Jeſus Chriſt the Son of God is declared conſubſtantial with his Father; the impiety of Arius is condemned; and the emperor, in obedience to a decree of the council, ordered all the books of the Arians to be burnt.
  • 2d Council, which is that of Conſtantinople in 38 [...]. The holy Damaſus being pope, and Theodoſius the elder emperor, the divinity of the Holy Ghoſt is defended againſt the impious Macedonius, and his falſe doctrine is anathematized.
  • [85] 3d Council, which is that of Epheſus in 431. St. Celeſtin being pope, and Theodoſius the younger emperor, Neſtorius, who divided Jeſus Chriſt into two perſons, is condemned; and the Holy Virgin is decreed to be the mother of God.
  • 4th Council, which is that of Chalcedonia in 451. St. Leo being pope, and Marcian emperor, the unhappy Eutychius is anathematized, for maintaining that Jeſus Chriſt had but one nature.
  • 5th Council, which is the ſecond of Conſtantinople in 553. Vigilius being pope, and Juſtinian, emperor, the debates relating to the doctrine of Theodore, biſhop of Mopſueſte, Ibas, biſhop of Edeſſa, and Theodoret, biſhop of Cyr, are ſuppreſſed, and the errors of Origen are ſeparated from the holy doctrine.
  • 6th Council, which is the third of Conſtantinople in 680. St. Agatho being pope, and Conſtantine Pagonatus, emperor, the heretics called Monothelites, who admitted but one will in Jeſus Chriſt, are condemned.
  • 7th Council, which is the ſecond of Nice in 784. Adrian being pope, and Conſtantine, the ſon of Irene, being emperor, the impiety of the image-breakers is condemned, and the worſhip of the holy images is eſtabliſhed in the church.
  • 8th Council, which is the fourth of Conſtantinople in 689. Adrian the ſecond being pope, and Baſil, emperor, Ignatius, patriarch of Conſtantinople, is re-eſtabliſhed in his ſee, and Photius, the uſurper, is with ignominy driven away.
  • 9th Council, which is the firſt of Lateran in 1122.*
  • 10th Council, which is the ſecond of Lateran in 1139.*
  • [86] 11th Council, which is the third of Lateran in 1179. Alexander the third being pope, and Frederick the firſt emperor, the errors of the Vandois are condemned.
  • 12th Council, which is the fourth of Lateran in 1215. Innocent the third being pope, and Frederick the ſecond, emperor, the falſe opinions of the abbot Joachim are condemned; the holy war, for the recovery of Jeruſalem, is reſolved; and the croiſades are appointed among chriſtians.
  • 13th Council, which is the firſt of Lyons in 1245. Under the pontificate of Innocent the 4th, the emperor Frederick is declared an enemy to the church, and deprived of the empire; they deliberate on the recovery of the Holy Land; St. Lewis, king of France, is declared chief of that expedition. The cardinals are honoured with red hats.
  • 14th Council, which is the ſecond of Lyons in 1274. Gregory the tenth being ſovereign pontiff, the Greeks are reunited to the church of Rome; St. Bonaventure does ſignal ſervice to the church in this council; Friar Jerome brings the king of the Tartars to the council, and that prince receives, in the moſt ſolemn manner, the bleſſed water of baptiſm.
  • 15th Council, which is that of Vienne in 1311. Under the pontificate of Clement the fifth, the Decretals, called the Clementines from the name of this pope, are received and publiſhed; the proceſſion of the holy ſacrament is inſtituted throughout Chriſtendom; and profeſſors of the oriental languages are eſtabliſhed in the four moſt famous univerſities in Europe, for the propagation of the chriſtian faith in the Levant.
  • 16th Council, which is that of Florence in 1439. The Greeks, the Armenians, and the Ethiopians, are reunited to the catholic church, under the pontificate of Eugene the fourth.
  • [87] 17th Council, which is the fifth of Lateran, began in the year 1517. They declared war againſt the Turks, who had ſeized the iſland of Cyprus, and poſſeſſed themſelves of Egypt, on the death of the ſultan: the emperor Maximilian the firſt, and Francis the firſt, king of France, are appointed generals of this war, under the the popes Julius the ſecond, and Leo the tenth.
  • 18th Council, which is that of Trent, the laſt of the oecumenical or general councils: held from the year 1545 to the year 1563. Paul the third, Julius the third, and Pius the fifth, reigning at Rome, the Lutherans and other heretics are condemned, and the ancient diſcipline of the church is re-eſtabliſhed in her exact and regular practice.

Theſe, reader, are the eighteen famous General Councils; and if you will turn to the third volume of a work, called, Notes relating to Men, and Things, and Books, you will find my obſervations on them; my remarks on the popes, the princes, and the fathers, aſſembled; their unchriſtian immoralities, and ſad acts againſt the laws of Chriſt, in order to eſtabliſh for ever, that very ſenſeleſs, and very wicked religion, called Popery; that is, a compoſition of ſin and error ſo baſe and abominable, that we might expect ſuch a thing from the devil; but it is impoſſible it could come from heavenly-inſpired fathers. In that book, you will find many thoughts on the religion delivered to the world by thoſe Councils, and by them eſtabliſhed, though it is in reality a diſgrace to chriſtianity; a diſhonour to the religion of nature; and a faction againſt the common rights of mankind: what ought to be the juſt object of univerſal contempt and abhorrence; whether we conſider it as a ſyſtem of idolatry, impiety, and cruelty; or, as a political ſcheme, to deſtroy the liberties, and engroſs the properties of mankind. Of theſe things, particularly and largely, in the piece referred to.

[88] Here I have only further to obſerve, that in the large collections of the Councils, it is not only the eighteen oecumenical the collectors have gathered, but ſo much of all the councils as they could find, their acts, letters, formularies of faith, and canons, from the firſt council at Jeruſalem, A. D. 49, to the laſt council in the 18th century; which was convoked by the archbiſhop of Ambrun againſt Jean de Soanem, biſhop of Senez. Theſe amount to above 1600 councils. Note, Reader, the condemnation, the baniſhment of old John de Soanem (in the 80th year of his age) the moſt learned and excellent prelate in France, of his time, by Firebrand Tartuff, archbiſhop of Ambrun, and his council, (A. D. 1727, September 21) was on account of the biſhop's admirable paſtoral inſtruction againſt the execrable conſtitution unigenitus, and the antichriſtian formulary of pope Alexander the ſeventh; and becauſe he recommended the reading of Pere Queſnel's very pious and fine Reflections Morales.— This famous Janſeniſt, and father of the oratory, Pſaquier Queſnel, was the author of many books, (ſome of them very good) and lived to a great age. He was born in 1636, and diet at laſt in priſon (if I miſtake not) a ſufferer for religion. He was ſeverely perſecuted for many years.

*
The canons of theſe two councils are wanting, and they have no inſcription in the Vatican.
*
The canons of theſe two councils are wanting, and they have no inſcription in the Vatican.
(4).

Quid tam proprium Chriſti quam advocatum apud deum patrum adſtare populorum. (Ambroſ. in Pſal. 39.)—Pro quo nullus interpellat ſed ipſe pro omnibus, hic unus veruſque mediator eſt. (Aug. Cont. Parmen. l. 2. c. 8.

(5).

The Roman doctors ſay, the ſaints know the tranſactions that are done here below, by revelation or intuition. —To this I anſwer, if it is by revelation, that they know our requeſts and prayers to them, then it muſt be either from God or from angels; of which there is not the leaſt aſſurance or certainty to be any where found; but if we could be ſure of it, then, in my opinion, we ought to pray to God or angels to make known our prayers to ſaints; which would be ſtrange religion. —If it be by intuition, as the greateſt part of the doctors ſay, and that the ſaints ſee the requeſts in the divine eſſence, as men ſee things in a corporeal glaſs; then, (excluſive of anſwering that the ſcriptures ſay no ſuch thing) the ſaints muſt ſee all things in the divine eſſence, or only ſuch things as God is pleaſed to permit them to ſee: if all things, they would be omniſcient: if only the things permitted to be ſeen, how is it poſſible for us to know whether God is pleaſed to permit them to ſee therein our prayers, or to know the requeſts we make to them, unleſs he had told us ſo. Let it be revelation or intuition, it is ſad ſtuff.

(6).
Lord Cobham's, now Earl Temple's ſeat in Buckinghamſhire, 59 miles from London.
(7).

An abſtract of Dr. Chandler's obſervations on Bellarmine's ſixth note of the church. Reader, it is well worth your while to turn to the firſt volume of that admirable work, the Salter's-hall Sermons againſt Popery, and there ſee how the Cardinal's notes of his church are conſidered by that learned and excellent man, Dr. Samuel Chandler. His conſideration of the 6th note more immediately concerns me here, and therefore I give you an abſtract of it.

The writings of the apoſtles are allowed even by our adverſaries to be the oldeſt records of chriſtianity, and therefore to this antient and infallible rule we ought to appeal, to determine the controverſy between us and the papiſts, that is, to ſee how far this antiquity favours their doctrine and practices, or is in agreement with ours.

1. The proteſtants renounce the Pope, and acknowledge one law-giver, the Lord Jeſus Chriſt, for theſe reaſons,—That the Pope is not mentioned in the New Teſtament; that Chriſt ſays, one is your maſter, even Chriſt; and St. Paul ſays, there is but one Lord, and one Faith: the whole family in heaven and earth is named of the Lord Jeſus Chriſt.

2. Proteſtants do not pay any worſhip at all to ſaints and angels, but as St. Paul directs, conſider Jeſus Chriſt as their ſole mediator and advocate; for there is but one God, and one mediator between God and man, the man Jeſus Chriſt. They ſay, ſuch veneration and prayer to ſaints and angels is ſuperſtition and will-worſhip, and only worſhip God with all their hearts and ſouls, with the moſt raiſed affections, and the highſt degrees of love and fear, faith and confidence; for it is written, Thou ſhalt worſhip the Lord God, and him only ſhalt thou ſerve: And the angel in the Revelation ſaid to John, who fell down [110]at his feet to worſhip him, See thou do it not, for I am thy fellow-ſervant.

3. We affirm, that in the ſacrament of the Lord's Supper, after conſecration, there is nothing exiſtent but bread and wine; for St. Paul ſays, Whoſoever ſhall eat this bread and drink this cup, and as often as you eat this bread and drink this cup.

4. We affirm the euchariſt is only a memorial of Chriſt's death; for Chriſt ſays, do this in remembrance of me; and St. Paul aſſures the Corinthians from Chriſt himſelf, (1 Cor. xi. 24) that they were to receive the elements with this view only: and in his epiſtle to the Hebrews he tells us, that by one offering Chriſt hath for ever perfected thoſe who are ſanctified; and that becauſe there is remiſſion of ſins under the new covenant, there is no more offering for ſin; which proves; the euchariſt is not a propitiatory ſacrifice.

5. We renounce the doctrine of purgatory, and affirm that the future ſtate is no ſtate of probation; for at death, the duſt ſhall return to the earth as it was, and the ſpirit ſhall return to God who gave it. And St. Paul declares, that at the judgment-ſeat of Chriſt every one ſhall receive the things done in the body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad.

6. Proteſtants affirm, that the worſhip of God ought to be performed in a language which all men underſtand; and that they have a right to ſearch the ſcriptures: For, if I ſpeak with tongues; (ſays the apoſtle) in ſuch a language as thoſe I ſpeak to cannot underſtand, what ſhall I profit you? Let all things be done to edifying. And Chriſt bids us ſearch the ſcriptures: And how could the word of Chriſt dwell richly in us in all wiſdom, teaching and admoniſhing one another in pſalms, hymns, and ſpiritual ſongs, if we [111]had not the word of Chriſt, and the ſcriptures of truth to read and conſult for ourſelves.

Theſe are the proteſtant doctrines, and we ſee they were taught by Chriſt and by his apoſtles. We have the ſanction of the moſt venerable antiquity on our ſide, and this note of the true church of Chriſt belongeth to us in the higheſt perfection.

When the papiſts then ſcornfully ſay, Where was your church before Luther and Calvin? The anſwer is obvious: the doctrine of our church was in the writings of the inſpired apoſtles, where the church of Rome is never to be found;—the ſame that was taught by Chriſt himſelf, whom they have forſaken, and whoſe faith they have corrupted. As to our predeceſſors and profeſſors, they were the perſecuted diſciples of the crucified Jeſus, thoſe martyrs and confeſſors, whoſe blood the church of Rome hath cruelly ſpilt. This is the genuine antiquity the proteſtants have to boaſt of. Their doctrines are the word of Chriſt, and their fathers were put to death by papiſts for the teſtimony of Jeſus.

But the papiſts on the contrary, excluſive of the example of the devil, who was a murderer from the beginning, and Antiochus Epiphanus, Nero, Domitian, and other monſters of mankind, who went before them in the meaſures of perſecution, cruelty, and blood; and excepting the idolatrous nations of the earth, and the falſe prophets and deceivers among the Jews, by whoſe authority and example they may vindicate their own idolatries, they have no genuine antiquity to plead. Many of their doctrines were unknown to, or abhorred by the primitive church, and are mere novelties and innovations, that were originally introduced by ſuperſtition, and then maintained by cruelty and blood.

(9).

Of Monſ. Bouhier, preſident of the French academy. Reader—Bouhier, preſident of the French academy, (to whom Le Blanc inſcribes his 58th letter) died in 1746. He was a ſcholar. L'Abbé de Olivet, (from whom he had the late fine edition of Cicero in ſeven volumes 4 to) ſpeaks of him in the following manner;—Je me ſuis preté à ce nouveau travail, & d'autant plus volontiers, que M. le Préſident Bouhier a bien voulu le partager avec moi.—On ſera, ſans doute, charmé de voir Cicéron entre les mains d'un traducteur auſſi digne de lui, que Cicéron lui-même étoit digne d'avoir traducteur un ſavant du premier ordre. Tuſc. tome 1. p. 13.—And again;—Feu M. Le Préſident Bouhier, le Varron de notre ſiecle, & l'homme le plus capable de bien rendre les vraies beautez d'un original Grec ou Latin, avoit tellement retouché ſes deux Tuſculanes, qu'on aura peine à les reconnoître dans cette nouvelle édition. Tuſc. tome 2. p. 1.

[119] This is Olivet's account of Bouhier; and I have heard ſome gentlemen who knew him ſay, that he was a very fine genius; but, they added, a popiſh bigot to the laſt degree, and therefore, Le Blanc choſe him as the fitteſt perſon of his acquaintance, to write an epiſtle to, that abuſed the reformation, and the Engliſh divines. Great is the prejudice of education! When ſo bright a mind as Bouhier's cannot ſee the deformity of Popery, and the beauty of the reformation; but, on the contrary, with pleaſure reads the deſpicable defamation in Le Blanc's letter.

N. B. The two Tuſculans, ſo finely tranſlated by Bouhier, are the 3d, De aegritudine lenienda: and the 5th, Virtutem ad beatè vivendum ſeipſa eſſe contentam. De la vertu: Qu'elle ſuffit pour vivre heureux.—See likewiſe, M. Bouhier's curious and uſeful remarks on the three books, De Natura Deorum; the five Tuſculans; Scipio's dream; and on the Catilinaires, or three orations againſt Catiline. Theſe remarks are the third volume.

(10).

A word or two relating to tranſubſtantiation. Note, reader, in the fourth volume of a work, called, Notes relating to Men, and Things, and Books, you will find ſome more of my remarks on the Abbé Le Blanc's epiſtles. You will ſee, among other obſervations on this monk, a vindication of Archbiſhop Tillotſon. The Abbé rails at one of this prelate's fine ſermons, with great malice and impudence, and has the vanity to think his miſerable declamation an anſwer. This wretched and deſpicable Romiſh apsſtate has the impudence and impiety to defend the worſhip of his God of dough, and would, if it were in his power, perſuade the readers of his letters, to adore the tiny cake he proſtrates himſelf before. For this the reader will find the maſs-prieſt well chaſtiſed in the work I have referred to; and ſee the doctrine of the Lord's Supper ſet in a true light. You will find there a curious hiſtory of the maſs, from the time the popiſh doctors firſt drew it out of the bottomleſs pit; and ſee it made quite evident, [135]that in this abominable article of their faith, as well as in every other part of their execrable religion, they make void the law of God, and ſink the human race into the vileſt ſlavery and idolatry. Beware then, Chriſtians, of popery. Still bravely dare to proteſt againſt her infernal ſchemes and inventions, and draw your religion from the book of God, that holy volume of ineſtimable treaſure. It is our light in darkneſs,—our comfort under affliction,—our direction to heaven,—and let us die in defence of it, if ever there ſhould be occaſion, rather than ſuffer the blood-thirſty papiſts, the red-handed idolaters, to ſnatch it out of our hands. They will give us for it the deſpicable legends of fictitious ſaints and falſe miracles;—a hiſtory of diſeaſes cured inſtantly by relicks;—accounts of ſpeaking images;—ſtories of travelling chapels;—wonders done by a Madona;—and the devil knows what he has crowded into their wretched heads. Down with popery then, the religion of hell, and may that happy ſtate be erected, when truth and love ſhall embrace and reign. Come Lord Jeſus, come quickly.

(11).

An account of the Talmuds. Reader, that you may the better underſtand the converſation I had with this learned Carthuſian, I muſt [218]inform you what the Talmud, and other writings of the Rabbies, are.—

The Talmud is a celebrated piece of Jewiſh literature, that is full of Rabinical domination and enthuſiaſm. The Rabbins pretend, this book contains the Oral laws, and other ſecrets, which God communicated to Moſes. It conſiſts of two parts, each of which is divided into ſeveral books. In the firſt part, which they call Miſhna, is the text. In the other, is a ſort of comment on the text, and this is ſtiled the Gemara.

This oral law, or tradition of the Jews, was collected after the deſtruction of the Temple, A. D. 150, by Rabbi Judah, and is by them preferred before the ſcripture. They ſuppoſe it was orally delivered by Moſes to Iſrael, and unlawful to be written; but when Jeruſalem was deſtroyed, they were conſtrained to write it, leaſt it ſhould be loſt; but yet it was ſo written, as that none but themſelves might underſtand it.—This Miſhna and Gemara compleat the two Talmuds:—that of Jeruſalem, A. D. 230;—and that of Babylon, 500 years after Chriſt. Many parts of theſe Talmuds are tranſlated by ſeveral learned men, who have endeavoured to render them intelligible: but in order to underſtand them fully, you muſt read the Jad Chaſka, or Miſhna Torah of Moſes Maimonides, who was phyſician to the king of Egypt about 600 years ago. This Rabbi hath comprized the ſubſtance of the Miſhna and Gemara of the Talmud, in his books, and enabled us to underſtand all the Miſhna with eaſe and pleaſure. See likewiſe the Clavis Talmudica, Cock's Excerpta, and the works of the excellent Ludivicus de Campeigne du Veil, who had been a Jew, but became a Roman Catholic; from Rome went over to the Church of England, where he was for ſeveral years in the character of a great divine: but at laſt turned Baptiſt, and died a member of that chriſtian church; which loſt him all his friends and intereſt. [219]He died the beginning of this century, with the reputation of an upright Chriſtian and a moſt learned man. There is no tolerable account given of him in any of the Biographical Dictionaries. What they ſay is ſhort and next to nothing. And the Popiſh accounts are not only ſhort, but falſe, and mere calumny.—I took a great deal of pains ſome years ago, to collect among the Baptiſts, and from others who knew this great man, every thing I could get relating to him and his works, and formed what I had got into a life of him, which I did intend to inſert in this place: but by ſome accident or other, it is gone. I cannot find it any where.

(12).
A Poſtilla, reader, is a barbarous word made up of the words poſt illa, and was brought into uſe in the twelfth century, when the marginal explicators of the bible left the margins, and under their text writ ſhort and literal notes, before which they put the word poſtilla, inſtead of the words poſt illa, meaning the particular words in the text, from whence, by a letter, they referred to the little note below: but in the 13th century, the barbarous word took ſo much, that all the commentators following, appropriated the name to their moſt copious commentaries, contrary to the firſt practice in the uſe of the word, and for three centuries after, the biblial learning was all poſtilla, till at length the word diſappeared, according to the wonted inconſtancy and agitation of all human things, and gave place to a new and fifth invention, called tractatus, or homily. This is the hiſtory of a poſtilla.
*
Or rather in bad French, as the writer was no Frenchman.
*
La verité & la religion en viſite. Alamagne 1695.
(14).

Cleanthes was a native of Aſſus in Lyſia, in Aſia Minor, and ſo very poor, when he came to Athens to ſtudy, that, for his ſupport, he wrought at nights in drawing water for the gardens, and in grinding behind the mill. He attended the lectures of Zeno, ſucceeded him in his ſchool, and grew into very high eſteem with the Athenians. He lived to 99, but the year he died we know not. His maſter Zeno died 342 years before Chriſt, and had converſed with Socrates and Plato.

The antient academics were Plato, (the diſciple of Socrates), Speucippus, Zenocrates, Polemo, Crates, and Crantor; and from Crates, the fifth academic, ſprung the old ſtoics, to wit, Crates, Zeno, Cleanthes, Chryſippus, and Diogenes the Babylonian; not he that was ſurly and proud. Cicero in his works often mentions this Babylonian, the ſtoic. We find in the Roman hiſtory, that he was living in the year of Rome 599, that is, 155 years before Chriſt; but when he died we know not. Theſe gentlemen [302]of the two old ſchools were to be ſure great philoſophers, —excellent men: but then, to be ſtrictly impartial, we muſt own, that all they knew in relation to the will of God, and a kingdom to come, was but poor moral learning, in reſpect to what is written in the New Teſtament for our inſtruction, if we will lay aſide our fancies and ſyſtems, and let reaſon explain revelation. The Chriſtian religion is really more for the glore of God, and the good of mankind, than reaſon, without inſpiration, has been able to teach. Chriſtianity; without the additions and ſupplements of monks, is not only above all juſt exception, but preferable to any other ſcheme.

*
Note, This article relating to the encroachments of the clergy, was not found among Miſs Spence's papers; but is inſerted here as in a proper place.
*
See the Life of John Buncle, Vol. I. p. 404.
(15).

The temple of Jupiter Ammon was ſituated on the ſouth part of the deſarts of Lybia, about 200 miles from the borders of Egypt. Theſe deſarts conſiſting of fluctuating ſands are of a vaſt unknown extent, and by the riſing of the wind, roll like waves of the ſea, fall like ſnow, and have buried whole armies: But the ſpot in the middle of which the temple ſtood, is fine fixed land, ſeven miles in circumference, richly planted and watered with fountains and ſtreams; a delightful and healthful place, though the vaſt deſarts all round are ſcorching ſands, without ſo much as one well or rivulet to be ſeen any where. Alexander the Great was there in the year 332, or 1 before Chriſt. And Cato in the year before Chriſt 46. Lucan gives a fine deſcription of this march of Cato in his IXth book. — And of the ſpot where Ammon reigned, ſays—

Here, and here only, through wide Lybia's ſpace,
Tall trees, the land, and verdant herbage grace.
Here the looſe ſands by plenteous ſprings are bound,
Knit to a maſs, and moulded into ground:
Here ſmiling nature wears a fertile dreſs,
And all things here the preſent God confeſs.

The Latin is vaſtly fine.

Eſſe locis ſuperos teſtatur ſylva per omnem
Sola virens Libyen, nam quicquid pulvere ſicco
Separat ardentem tepida berenicida lepti,
Ignorat frondes. Solus nemus abſtulit Ammon.
Sylvarum fons cauſa loco, qui putria terrae
Alligat, et domitas unda connectit arenas.

[376] This ſpot in Lybia is to this day the ſame beautiful and wonderful place; the moſt charming piece of ground in the world, in the midſt of the moſt horrible deſarts; but inſtead of Corniger, (as Lucan calls Ammon) an African prince named Abu Derar, now reigns there, and his palace ſtands where the temple ſtood in Alexander's and Cato's time. I ſaw not long ago a gentleman who had been on the ſpot and told me this. He further ſaid, that this king and his people had been converted to the chriſtian religion by an Abyſſinian prieſt, and had better notions of chriſtianity than many of our great divines; for they have not a thought of trinity in unity; nor would they ſay, to gain the whole world, what the great Dr. Potter does in one of his ſermons, to wit, that whatſoever pain or miſery God himſelf did ſuffer in his human nature: Or as Trapp expreſſes himſelf in his diſcourſe on the marriage at Cana, —A ſweet ſmile ſat on the face of the great God:— meaning Jeſus: — Horrible ſayings! O wretched orthodoxy! But they think, without daring to invent and add to the goſpel, that Jeſus Chriſt was (and was no more than) the Meſſias, ſent by God for the ſalvation of mankind.

At what time this Oracle of Jupiter Ammon ceaſed is not certain. We are ſure it was of no reputation in the time of Trajan. All the Oracles ceaſed, when men opened their eyes, and laid aſide their impertinent credulity. This was the true cauſe of the ceſſation; though the fathers aſcribe it to the coming of the Saviour of the world. It was mere prieſtcraft to make money.

(16).

Homonoea and Atimetus: and the epitaph of Homonoea at large. Theſe lines from the antiquities of Boiſſard, are a real inſcription on a tomb in Italy, which this antiquary found in his travels, and copied it as a curioſity to the world. It is to be ſeen on the monument to this day. Homonoea was a great beauty at the court of the Emperor Honorius, and married to Atimetus, a courtier and favourite, who preferred her to the moſt illuſtrious of ladies of that time, on account of her extraordinary charms, and uncommon perfections; but the did not long enjoy the honour and happineſs ſhe was married [378]into. Before the was twenty, death ſnatched her away, in the year of the reign of Honorius, A. D. 401. and the following beautiful epitaph was cut on her monument, and remains to this day: I place it here for the entertainment of my readers, and likewiſe La Fontaine's elegant tranſlation of it.

Homoea's Epitaph.
Si penſare animas ſinerent crudelia fata,
Et poſſet redimi morte aliena ſalus:
Quantulacunque meae debentur tempora vitae
Penſarem pro te, cara Homonoea, libens.
At nunc quod poſſum, fugiam lucemque deoſque,
Ut to matura per ſtuga morte ſequar.

[Atimetus the huſband, is the ſpeaker of theſe ſix lines.]

Parce tuam conjux fletu quaſſare juventam,
Fataque merendo ſollicitare mea.
Nil proſunt lacrumae, nec poſſunt fata moveri.
Viximus: hic omnes exitus unus habet.
Parce, ita non unquam ſimilem experiare dolorem.
Et faveant votis numina cuncta tuis!
Quodque mihi cripuit mors immatura juventae,
Hoc tibi victuro proroget ulterius.

[Homonoea is ſuppoſed to ſpeak theſe eight lines, to her huſhand; and then relates her caſe to the traveller, who is paſſing by.]

Tu qui ſecura procedis mente parumper
Siſte gradum quaeſo, verbaque pauca lege.
Illa ego quae claris fueram praelata puellis,
Hoc Homonoea brevi condita ſum tumulo,
Cui formam paphia, et charites, tribuere decorem,
Quam Pallus cunctis artibus eruduit.
Nondum bis denos aetas compleverat annos,
Injecere manus invida fata mihi.
Nec pro me queror; hoc morte mihi eſt triſtius ipſa,
Moeror Atimeti conjugis ille mihi.
[379] Sit tibi terra levis, mulier digniſſima vitâ
Quaeque tuis olim perfruerêre bonis.

[Theſe two lines may be the words of the Public, or of whoever crected the monument to the memory of Homonoea.

Now ſee how finely La Fontaine has done this inſcription into verſe.

Si l'on pouvoit donner ſes jours pour ceux d'un autre
Et que par cet échange on contentat le ſort,
Quels que ſoint les momens qui me reſtent encore
Mon ame, avec plaiſir, racheteroit la votre.
Mais le deſtin l'ayant autrement arrété,
Je ne ſçaurois que fuir les dieux & la clarté,
Pour vous ſuivre aux enfers d'une mort avancée.
Quittez, ô chere epoux, cette triſte penſée,
Vous alterez en vain les plus beaux de vos ans:
Ceſſez de fatiguer par de cris impuiſſans,
La parque et le deſtin, deitez inflexibles.
Mettez fin â des pleurs qui ne le touchent point;
Je ne ſuis plus: tout tent â ce ſuprême poinct.
Ainſi nul accident, par des coups ſi ſenſibles
Ne vienne à l'avenir traverſer vos plaiſirs!
Ainſi l'Olimpe entier s'accorde a vos deſirs!
Veüille enfin atropos, au cours de vôtre vie
Ajoûter l'etenduë à la mienne ravire!
Et toy, paſſant tranquille, apprens quels ſont nos maux,
Daigne icy t'arréter on moment a les lire,
Celle qui preſerée aux partis les plus hauts,
Sur le ceur d'Atimete acquir un doux empire;
Qui tenoit de venus la beauté de ſes traits,
De Pallas ſon ſçavoir, des graces ſes attraits,
Giſt ſous ce peu d'eſpace en la tombe enſerrée,
Vingt ſoleils n'avoient pas ma carriere éclairés,
[380] Le ſort jetta fur mois ſes envieuſes mains;
C'eſt Atimete ſeul quit fait que je mens plains,
Ma mort m'afflige moins que ſa douleur amere.
O femme, que la terre à tes os ſoit legere?
Femme digne de vivre; et bientôt puſſes tu
Recommencer de voir les traits de la lumieres,
Et recouvrer le bien que ton ceur a perdu.

Or thus in proſe.

S'il ſuffiſoit aux deſtins qu'on donât ſa vie pour celle d'un autre, et qu'il fût poſſible de racheter ainſi ce que l'on ayme, quelque ſoit le nombre d'années que les parques m'ont accordé, je le donnerois avec plaiſir pour vous tirer de tombeau, ma chere Homonée; mais cela ne ſe pouvant, ce que je puis faire eſt de fuïr le jour et la preſence de dieux, pour alter bientôt vous ſuivre le long du Styx.

O mon chere epoux, ceſſez de vous affliger; ne corrompez plus le fleurs de vos ans; ne fatiguez plus ma deſtinée par de plaintes continuëlles: toutes les larmes ſont icy vaines; on ne ſauroit émouvoir la parque: me voila morte, chacun arrive à ce terme la. Ceſſez done encore un fois: Ainſi puiſſiez-vous ne ſentir jamais une ſemblable douleur! Ainſi tous les dieux ſoient favorable a vos ſouhaits! Et veüille la parque ajoûter a vôtre vie ce qu'elle a ravi à la mienne.

Et toy qui paſſes tranquillement, arreté icy je te prie un moment ou deux, afin de lire ce peu de mots.

Moy, cette Homonée que preferra Atimete a de filles conſiderables; moy a qui Venus donna la beauté, les graces et les agrémens; que Pallas enfin avoit inſtruite dans tous les arts, me voilà icy renfermée dans un monument de peu d'eſpace. Je n'avois pas encore vingt ans quand le ſort jetta ſes mains envieuſes ſur ma perſonne. Ce n'eſt pas pour moy que je m'en plains, c'eſt pour mon [381]mari, de qui la douleur m'eſt plus difficile à ſupporter que ma propre mort.

Que la terre te ſoit legere, ô épouſe digne de retourner à la vie, et de recouvrer un jour que tu a perdu!

N. B. The reader who does not underſtand French, will find this in Engliſh at the end of this XIth Section.

(17).

As the table of Cebes does beſt in proſe, and the Rev. Mr. Collier the Nonjuror's tranſlation of this fine mythological picture is not good, I ſhall place another verſion of this table at the end of this Section. I made it at the requeſt of a young lady, who did not like Mr. Collier's verſion. The fine picture does to be ſure, in his Engliſh, look more like a work in the cant language of L'Eſtrange, or Tom Brown, than the antient and charming painting of Cebes the Theban philoſopher. It is fitter to make the learned men of a beer-houſe laugh, than to delight and improve people of breeding and underſtanding.

(18).

In Claude's reply to Arnaud, the French papiſt, we are told it was the humour of the Prince of Condé, to have a man of wood on horſe-back, dreſt like a field-officer, with a lifted broad ſword in its hand; which figure was faſtened in the great ſaddle, and the horſe it was on always kept by the great Condé's ſide, when he travelled or engaged in the bloody field. Fearleſs [430]the man of wood appeared in many a well-fought day; but as they purſued the enemy one afternoon through a foreſt, in riding hard, a bough knocked off the wooden warrior's head; yet ſtill he galloped on after flying foes, to the amazement of the enemy, who ſaw a hero purſuing without a head. Claude applies this image to popery.

(19).

The caſe was this. As I was returning one ſummer's evening from Tallow-Hills, where I had been to ſee a young lady, (mentioned in the beginning of my firſt volume,) I ſaw in a deep glen before me two men engaged; a black of an enormous ſize, who fought with one of thoſe large broad ſwords which they call in Ireland, Andrew Ferraro; and a little thin man with a drawn rapier. The white man I perceived was no match for the black, and muſt have periſhed very ſoon, as he had received ſeveral wounds, if I had not haſtned up to his relief. I knew him to be my acquaintance, young Fitzgibbons, my neighbour in the ſame ſquare of the college that I lived in; and immediately drawing an excellent Spaniſh tuck I always wore, took the Moor to myſelf, Fitzgibbons not being able to ſtand any longer; and a glorious battle enſued. As I was a maſter at the ſmall ſword in thoſe days, I had the advantage of the black by my weapon, (as the broad ſword is but a poor defence [433]againſt a rapier,) and gave him three wounds for every ſlight one I received: But at laſt he cut me quite through the left collar-bone, and in return, I was in his vaſt body a moment after. This dropt the robber, who had been a trumpeter to a regiment of horſe; and Fitzgibbons and I were brought, by ſome people paſſing that way, to his father's houſe at Dolfins-barn, a village about a mile from the ſpot where this affair happened. A ſurgeon was ſent for, and we recovered in a few weeks time; but my collar-bone was much more troubleſome to me, than the wounds Fitzgibbons had were to him, tho' he loſt much more blood. This was the ground of the obligation the doctor mentioned in his converſation with me.

*
If Mangetus had publiſhed his Bibliotheca ſcriptorum medicorum, 2 vols. folio, at the time I am ſpeaking of, the Doctor, my friend, would have recommended it to a beginner.
(20).

When Veſalius began to diſſect human bodies, he was conſidered by the people as an impious cruel man; and before he could practice publicly, he was obliged to get a deciſion in his favour from the Salamanca divines. C'eſt ce qui engagea Charles V. de faire faire une conſultation aux theologiens de Salamanque, pour ſavoir ſi en conſcience on pouvoit diſſequer un corps humain, pour en connoître la ſtructure. (Niceron Memoirs:) They would not let him ſettle in France; but the republic of Venice gave him a profeſſor's chair at Padua, where he diſſected publicly, and taught anatomy ſeven years. He was but 18, when he publiſhed his famous book, La fabrique du corps humain, which was [449]the admiration of all men of ſcience: And a little after, he made a preſent of the firſt ſkeleton the world ever ſaw, to the univerſity of Bale; where it is ſtill to be ſeen. This great man, Andrew Veſal, was born the laſt of April, 1512; and in the 58th year of his age, October 15, 1564, he was ſhipwreck'd on the iſle of Zante, and in the deſerts there was famiſhed to death. His body was found by a goldſmith of his acquaintance, who happened to land there not long after, and by this man buried. Veſal's works are two volumes in folio, publiſhed by Herman Boerhaave, Lugduni Batavorum, 1725. Every phyſician ought to have them.

*
The Greek words which Mr. Collier renders town-manufacture, are [...].
And what he calls outlandiſh, is [...].
*
The Greek is, [...].
*
[...].
[...].
This monſter, who lived near Thebes, was ſaid to be the daughter of Typhon and Echidna, and had a head and face like a girl, wings like a bird, and in the reſt, like a dog.
*
This man Mr. Collier calls, an ill-looking ſkeleton of a fellow, with ſcarce a tatter to his limbs. Cant! The Greek is, [...].
*
The three incloſures in Cebes, allude to the diviſion of human life into the ſenſual, the ſtudious, and the virtuous.
*
Mr. Collier tranſlates it,—they enter into a courſe of phyſic. The Greek is, [...]. And what Mr Collier a little before tranſlates, —She opens a vein, and gives then a glaſs of her conſtitution:— when the have taken the ſtirrup cup:brimmers:—the laſſes friſk about: Salute with a deal of welcome, and the lug them off,—ſome to ruin, and ſome to the gallows:—All this, and much more night-cellar ſtuff, the Theban philoſopher had not an idea of, as any one may ſee who can turn to the Greek. How Collier learned ſuch guard-phraſes, and why he uſe them, ſeemed for ſome time very ſtrange to me, till I was informed by one who knew this Divine well, that in the days of his youth, he kept very low company, and was known at ſeveral night-houſes. In that period of his life, he tranſlated Cebes.
*
[...].
[...]. conſtanti vultu, or conſtans vultum.
(21).

This is not all the table of Cebes. There follows a diſputation in the Socratic method, concerning the claim of wealth, and other externals, to the title of good things: but it is dry, and no part of the picture or mythology. For this reaſon I ſtop here.

As to the picture of Cebes, it is to be ſure a fine thing, and greatly to the honour of the Theban philoſopher, who was one of the diſciples of Socrates; and about twenty at the time of the death of his maſter: Socrates died by the executioner, in the 70th year of his age, before our Lord, 402.—Cebes was about eighty, at the birth of Epicurus.

A remark on the table of Cebes.But after all that can be ſaid in praiſe of this excellent remain of antiquity, ſtill the little ſyſten of ethics is but a poor performance, in reſpect of any ſection of the goſpel of Chriſt. Cebes ſays nothing of the Deity: [477]Nor does he mention the miſchiefs of vice, and the benefits of virtue, as a divine conſtitution.

An Apoſtle, on the contrary, (to mention only one particular out of a thouſand from the chriſtian books,) calls to the human race in the following manner: "I beſeech you, brethren, by the mercies of Almighty God, the Father of the Univerſe, who hath graciouſly admitted you to, the faith, and revealed the terms of acceptance; that ye preſent your bodies now a living ſacrifice, holy and acceptable to the Deity, which is the reaſonable and ſpiritual ſervice required of you in the time of the goſpel; and not offer the bodies of beaſts any more as the Heathen world were wont to do.

And, as perſons now wholly devoted to the Lord of heaven and earth, be not conformed to the faſhions and ways of this world; but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind; that ye may prove what is the good, the acceptable, and perfect will of God. Abhor that which is evil, in all your dealings: Cleave to that which is good: Let love be without diſſimulation, and be kindly affectioned one to another; not advancing yourſelves, but in honour preferring one another. Be not ſlothful in buſineſs, but fervent in ſpirit; as ſerving the Lord Jehovah in your ſeveral ſtations. Rejoice in hope of a refreſhment to come, in the realms of bliſs: Be patient in tribulation, which God will reward, and continue inſtant in prayer.

In ſum, let us follow the ſteps of Chriſt, and in imitation of his divine humility, his devotion, his love, be for ever meek and forbearing, gentle and charitable, and live in the ſpirit of prayer."

What is there in the table of Cebes like this ſpiritual and religious virtue, this love to God, this zeal for his honour and ſervice, and an intire dependence upon him in all conditions of life? The virtues of the heroes of antiquity are noble and excellent qualities; — their courage, and juſtice, and temperance, and gratitude, and love to their country are fine things: but they ſeem to have been calculated for the civil life. Thoſe heroes were virtuous without being pious, and appear rather [478]as ſelf-ſufficient independent beings, than as ſervants and votaries of God Almighty. It is theſe Chriſtian virtues I hove mentioned, that adorn and perfect human nature. It is theſe things that moſtly contribute to the happineſs of the world, and of every man in it.

N. B. Mr. Scott, at the end of his Notes on Cebes, has the following remark. — If this philoſopher had repreſented the effects of virtue and vice as a divine conſtitution, he would have ennobled his inſtruction, and done greater ſervice to the intereſt of morality. But thoſe important intereſts are effectually provided for by revelation. There the precepts of virtue are the laws of God. There we find a clear and compleat ſyſtem of his will. There our obedience is encouraged by hope in his pardoning mercy and powerful aſſiſtance, by the life, death, and reſurrection of his own ſon; and by promiſes and threatnings which extend the reward of righteouſneſs, and the puniſhment of wickedneſs unto a future ſtate of exiſtence.

(22).

Sir Robert Stapylton has done this Satire in the following manner.

In all th' earth, from Cales weſtward to the ſtreams
Of Ganges gilded with the morning beams.
To few men good and ill unmaſk'd appear,
For what with reaſon do we hope or fear?
What haſt thou by thy happieſt project gain'd,
But thou repent'ſt thy pains and wiſh obtain'd?

[480] Mr. Dryden's tranſlation is by far the fineſt, to be ſure. It is a charming thing: but whether it comes ſo near the intended humour and briſk turns of Juvenal, as a third tranſlation the Reader will find at the end of this ſection, may admit of ſome conſideration. — I add here the ſixteen laſt lines of Dryden's Verſion, the moſt beautiful part of the Satire; that it may be near for comparing with the tranſlation I have mentioned.— And for the ſame reaſon, I likewiſe place here the ſame number of lines done by Stapylton.

Yet not to rob the prieſts of pious gain,
That altars be not wholly built in vain:
Forgive the gods the reſt, and ſtand confin'd
To health of body, and content of mind;
A ſoul that can ſecurely death defy,
And count it nature's privilege to die;
Serene and manly, hardned to ſuſtain
The load of life, and exercis'd in pain;
Guiltleſs of hate, and proof againſt deſire;
That all things weighs, and nothing can admire;
That dares prefer the toils of Hercules
To dalliance, banquets, and ignoble eaſe.
The path to peace is virtue: What I ſhow,
Thyſelf may freely on thyſelf beſtow:
Fortune was never worſhipp'd by the wiſe;
But, ſet aloft by fools, uſurps the ſkies.
DRYDEN.
Yet that for ſacrifice thou may'ſt prepare
Thy white hog, and for ſomething make thy pray'r.
Pray that the Gods be graciouſly inclin'd,
To grant thee health of body, and of mind.
Aſk a ſtrong ſoul that may death's terrors ſcorn,
And think to die, as good as to be born:
[481] As great a gift of nature, that no croſs
Can daunt, that knows no paſſion, fears no loſs:
That Hercules his labours can digeſt,
Far better than Sardanapalus's feaſt,
His wenches, or his feather-beds; I ſhow
What thou thyſelf may'ſt on thyſelf beſtow.
The path to peace is virtue; All the powers
Will be our own, if wiſdom be but ours:
And yet to thee, vain fortune, we have given
The name of goddeſs, and plac'd thee in heav'n.
STAPYLTON.
Ut tamen et poſcas aliquid, voveaſque ſacellis
Exta, et candiduli divina tomacula porci:
Orandum eſt, ut ſit mens ſana in corpore ſano.
Fortem poſce animum, et mortis terrore carentem,
Qui ſpatium vitae extremum inter munera ponat
Naturae, qui ferre queat quoſcunque labores,
Et venere, et coenis, et pluma Sardanapali;
Monſtro, quod ipſe tibi poſſis dare: ſemita certè,
Tranquillae per virtutem patet unica vitae.
Nullum numen habes, ſi ſit prudentia: ſed te
Nos facimus, fortuna, deam, coeloque locamus.
JUVENAL.
(23).
An Addreſs to the Proteſtant Ladies of Great Britain.

What a thing, Ladies, is Popery! Whether we conſider it in a religious view, or regard it as a political [494]contrivance, to gratify the avarice, and ambition of the clergy, it appears the juſt object of our contempt, as well as of our abhorrence. It does not only make its prieſts the ſlaughterers of mankind; witneſs the inquiſition, the Moriſco's, Thorn *, England, Ireland, France, the Low Countries, Hungary, and other theatres of barbarity, the moſt ſhocking and inhuman; but it cauſes even huſbands to become mere devils to wives, who are angels of women in mind and body, and can only be charged with their being proteſtants. So Burk the papiſt behaved to one of the fineſt and moſt excellent women I have ſeen. Nor was this lady the only unhappy one I have known made ſo by popiſh huſbands. I have ſeen a thouſand proteſtant wives, the moſt amiable and worthy women, as wretched as cruelty could make them, by their huſband's zeal for the maſs-prieſts religion; a religion fit only for hell, and that ought to make every proteſtant female tremble at the idea of a catholic huſband: He may be as kind and good to a Romiſh wife, as it is poſſible for man to be to a woman; but if he marries a proteſtant, he muſt be a Satan to her by virtue of his religion. Never hearken then, O ye proteſtant ladies, to a popiſh ſuitor; however rich or outwardly agreeable he may be. Think of the principles and ſpirit of that church, whoſe unſucceſsful attempts on our religion and liberties, have given occaſion for the ſolemnity of the 5th of November, and that of the 23d of October. Blood and cruelty are her conſtitution: And by thoſe principles and practices with regard to civil ſociety, as well as by her doctrines, ſhe [495] promotes infidelity, and ſtrives to render the word of God of none effect. She deſtroys the credibility of the goſpel. — Could that religion come down from heaven, which claims a right not only to perſecute ſingle perſons, but to devote whole nations to deſtruction by the blackeſt treachery, and moſt inhuman maſſacres;—and which teaches ſuch abſurdities as tranſubſtantiation, maſſes, purgatory, penances, indulgences, and attrition:— Abſurdities that diſſipate the poor Romans of thoſe guilty fears, which natural conſcience might otherwiſe keep alive in men. Such things (without mentioning the adoration of the croſs and other images, and the increaſing multitude of imaginary mediators), intirely deſtroy the credibility of any ſyſtem with which they are connected. God cannot be the author of a ſcheme which weakens and corrupts the law of nature.— No popery then for you.

*
The Moriſco's were expelled Spain, A. D. 1492.—The inquiſition was erected four years after;—and the doings at Thorn, (by which the quantity of blood formerly spilt on the ground by ever-curſed Popery was increaſed) in the year 1724.
*
The deſign of this fine Satire is to ſhew, that endowments and bleſſings of the mind, as wiſdom, virtue, juſtice, and integrity of life, are the only things worth praying for.
*
The Latin of theſe two lines is— Cantabit vacuus coram latrone viator.

Which Dryden tranſlates thus—

The beggar ſings, ev'n when he ſees the place
Beſet with thieves, and never mends his pace.

Shadwell, Poet Laureat in King William's time, does it thus—

While the poor man, void of all precious things,
In company of thieves, jogs on and ſings.

Holiday thus —

‘Before the thief, who travels empty, ſings.’

Stapylton thus —

The poor wayfaring man, that doth not bring
A charge along, before the thief will ſing.
*
The Latin of theſe two lines is— Cantabit vacuus coram latrone viator.

Which Dryden tranſlates thus—

The beggar ſings, ev'n when he ſees the place
Beſet with thieves, and never mends his pace.

Shadwell, Poet Laureat in King William's time, does it thus—

While the poor man, void of all precious things,
In company of thieves, jogs on and ſings.

Holiday thus —

‘Before the thief, who travels empty, ſings.’

Stapylton thus —

The poor wayfaring man, that doth not bring
A charge along, before the thief will ſing.
Juvenal here means Democritus.
*
The Latin of theſe two lines is — Propter quae fas eſt genua incerare deorum.

Which Mr. Dryden does not tranſlate at all: — His lines are —

He laughs at all the vulgar cares and fears:
At their vain triumphs, and their vainer tears:
An equal temper in his mind he found,
When Fortune flatter'd him, and when ſhe frown'd:
'Tis plain from hence that what our vows requeſt,
Are hurtful things, or uſeleſs at the beſt.
*
The Latin of theſe two lines is — Propter quae fas eſt genua incerare deorum.

Which Mr. Dryden does not tranſlate at all: — His lines are —

He laughs at all the vulgar cares and fears:
At their vain triumphs, and their vainer tears:
An equal temper in his mind he found,
When Fortune flatter'd him, and when ſhe frown'd:
'Tis plain from hence that what our vows requeſt,
Are hurtful things, or uſeleſs at the beſt.
*
Mr. Dryden's Engliſh is,—
Sejanus, almoſt firſt of Roman names,
The great Sejanus, crackles in the flames:
Form'd in the forge, the pliant braſs is laid
On anvils: And of head and limbs are made,
Pans, cans, and piſs-pots, a whole kitchen trade.

The Latin is,—

Jam ſtrident ignes, jam follibus atque caminis
Ardet adoratum populo caput, et crepat ingens
Sejanus: Deinde ex facie toto orbe ſecunda
Fiunt urceoli, pelves, ſartago, patellae.
Sejanus, the vile miniſter of Tiberius, was executed by order of the Emperor, A. D. 31. and to prevent his ſuſpecting any ſuch thing, and providing againſt the calamity, which the favourite might eaſily have done, as he commanded the Praetorians, and had all power given him, his maſter named him his collegue in the conſulſhip; which of all things Sejanus moſt deſired, and thought the higheſt mark of his ſovereign's affection. So true it is that we know not what we wiſh for.
*
Julius Caeſar, who acquired the ſovereign ſway by art and ſlaughter, and when a tyrant, fell by his own deſires.
*
The beautiful Latin is,—
—Et laudis titulique Cupido
Haeſuri ſaxis cinerum cuſtodibus: ad quae
Diſcutienda valent ſterilis mala robora ficus:
Quandoquidem data ſunt ipſis quoque fata ſepulchris.
Which Mr. Dryden renders in the following manner.
This avarice of praiſe in times to come,
Thoſe long inſcriptions crowded on the tomb,
Should ſome wild fig-tree take her native bent,
And heave below the gaudy monument,
Would crack the marble titles, and diſperſe
The characters of all the lying verſe.
For ſepulchres themſelves muſt crumbling fall
In time's abyſs, the common grave of all.
*
The greateſt ſtreet in Rome.
The Latin is,—
—I demens currepur Alpes.
Ut pueris placeas, et declamatio fias.
Go, climb the rugged Alps, ambitious fool,
To pleaſe the boys, and be a theme at ſchool.
DRYDEN.
(24).

As I had not room for all the Xth Satire, what is ſeen here, is rather an abridgement than an intire verſion: But the whole ſenſe of the author is preſerved, though ſeveral of his examples and illuſtrations are left out.

And ſo excellent a thing, Dr. Burnet biſhop of Saliſbury thought this Satire, that in his famous Paſtoral Letter he recommmends it, (and the Satires of Perſius), to the peruſal and practice of the divines in his dioceſe, as the beſt common places for their ſermons; and what may be taught with more profit to the audience, than all the new ſpeculations of divinity, and controverſies concerning faith; which are more for the profit of the ſhepherd, than for the edification of the flock. In the Satires, nothing is propoſed but the quiet and tranquillity of the mind. Virtue is lodged at home, (as Mr. Dryden expreſſes it, in his fine dedication to the Earl of Dorſet), and diffuſed to the improvement and good of human kind. Paſſion, intereſt, ambition, myſtery, fury, and every cruel conſequence, are baniſhed from the doctrine of theſe ſtoics, and only the moral virtues inculcated, for the perfection of mankind.

But ſo unreaſonable and infatuated are our ſhepherds, too many of them I mean, that a rational chriſtian cannot go to church without being ſhocked at the abſurd and impious work of their pulpits. In town and country, almoſt every Sunday, thoſe bright theologers are for ever on the glories of trinity in unity, and teaching their poor people that God Almighty came down from heaven to take fleſh upon him, and make infinite ſatisfaction to himſelf. This is the cream of chriſtianity, in the [511]account of thoſe teachers. The moral virtues are nothing, compared to a man or a woman's ſwallowing the divine myſtery of an incarnate God Almighty. Over and over have I heard a thouſand of them on this holy topic, ſweating and drivelling at each corner of their mouths with eagerneſs to convert the world to their myſteries.—The adorable myſtery! ſays one little prieſt, in my neighbourhood in Weſtminſter.—The more incomprehenſible and abſurd it appears to human reaſon, the greater honour you do to heaven in believing it, ſays another wiſe man in the country. But tell me, ye excellent divines, tell me in print if you pleaſe, if it would not be doing more honour to the law of heaven, to inform the people, that the true chriſtian profeſſion is, to pray to God our Father for grace, mercy, and peace, through the Lord Jeſus Chriſt; without ever mentioning the Athanaſian ſcheme, or trinity in unity: (which you know no more of than ſo many pigs do, becauſe it is a mere invention, and not to be found in the Bible): And in the next place, to tell your flocks in ſerious and practical addreſs, that their main buſineſs is, as the diſciples of the holy Jeſus, a good life;—to ſtrive againſt ſin continually, and be virtuous and uſeful to the utmoſt of our power;—to imitate the purity and goodneſs of their great maſter, (the Author of eternal ſalvation to all them that obey him), and by repentance and holineſs of heart, in a patient continuance in well-doing, make it the labour of their every day, to live ſoberly, righteouſly, and godly in this preſent world: You muſt become partakers of a divine nature, having eſcaped the corruption that is in the world through luſt, and by acquiring the true principles of chriſtian perfection, render yourſelves fit for the heavenly bliſs. This, my dearly beloved brethren, is the great deſign of Chriſt and his goſpel. You muſt receive Jeſus Chriſt as your Saviour and Mediator,—you muſt be exerciſed unto godlineſs, and have the ways of God in your hearts. By a courſe of obedience and patience, you muſt follow the captain of our ſalvation to his glory.

[512] To this purpoſe, I ſay, our clergy ought to preach; and if in ſo ſaying, they think me wrong, I call upon them to tell me ſo in print, by argument; that I may either publicly acknowledge a miſtaken judgment;—or prove, that too many miniſters miſlead chriſtian people in the article of faith and practice. By the ſtrict rules of chriſtian ſimplicity and integrity, I ſhall ever act.

(25).

N. B. Dr. Law is ſtill maſter of Peter-Houſe, Cambridge, and not only one of the moſt learned men of the age, but as fine a gentleman and as good a man as lives. His merits, I am ſure, as a ſcholar and a chriſtian, entitled him to the maſterſhip of St. John's, on the death of Dr. Newcomb; tho' he loſt it, as often the beſt men do in reſpect of things temporal. But notwithſtanding all the fine learning of Dr. Law, I think he is miſtaken in many of his notions, and eſpecially in his Notes on Archbiſhop King's book of Evil; as I intend to ſhew in my Notes aforementioned: His Tritheiſm likewiſe requires a few animadverſions; which I ſhall humbly offer with plainneſs, fairneſs, and freedom.

(26).

N. B. Dr. Sherlock biſhop of London died at Fulham, after a long and lingering illneſs, Saturday, July 18, 1761, three months after the great and excellent biſhop Hoadley; who departed this life at Chelſea, April 20, 1761. Sherlock and Hoadley never agreed; and which of them was right I attempt to ſhew in my Notes on Men and Things and Books. Which will be publiſhed as ſoon as poſſible. Why I think Hoadley's Sermons far preferable to Sherlock's; (vaſtly beautiful tho' ſome things are in the diſcourſes of the latter); and that my Lord of Wincheſter's plain account of the Supper is a moſt rational and fine performance; as gold to earth in reſpect of all that has been written againſt this book:— Why, I ſay, all Hoadley's Tracts are matchleſs and invulnerable, and that he was victor in the Bangorian controverſy, the Reader will find in many conſiderations on theſe ſubjects in the book called Notes, &c. aforementioned.

*
The Reader will find theſe Remarks of mine, on Lord Nottingham's Letter to Mr. Whiſton, in my Notes relating to men, things, and books. Which will be publiſhed as ſoon as poſſible.
(27).

It is a queſtion with ſome, if this book was not written by the Doctor's viſionary daughter, or by her and the Rev. Athanaſian bigot, her brother. But as I knew the Doctor after he was a little crack'd with imaginary religion, and have heard him talk as in this book, I am poſitive it is his.

(28).

N. B. The Rev. Nonjuror, Mr. William Law, the father of our Methodiſts, and the diſciple of Jacob Behmen the theoſopher, died at King's Cliff near Nottingham, April 13, 1761, ſeven days before biſhop Hoadley; againſt whom he was a bitter writer in the Bangorian controverſy. — I knew this famous viſionary very well, and ſhall remark largely on his writings in my Notes relating to Men and Things and Books.

Law was the moſt amazing compound I have ever ſeen. He was a man of ſenſe, a fine writer, and a fine gentleman; and yet the wildeſt enthuſiaſt that ever appeared among men. His temper was charming, ſweet, and delightful; and his manners quite primitive and uncommonly pious: He was all charity and goodneſs, and ſo ſoft and gentle in converſation, that I have thought myſelf in company with one of the men of the firſt church at Jeruſalem while with him. He had likewiſe the juſteſt notions of chriſtian temper and practice, and recommended them in ſo inſinuating a manner, that even a rake would hear him with pleaſure. I have not ſeen any like him among the ſons of men in theſe particulars. It was wrong to put him in the Dunciad, and call him one Law, as Pope does. He was really a very [529]extraordinary man; and to his honour be it remembred, that he had the great concern of human life at heart, took a deal of pains in the pulpit, and from the preſs, (witneſs his two fine books on a devout life,) to make men fear God and keep his commandments. He was a good man indeed.

But what ſtrange books did he write! His Appeal to the Deiſts — His Spirit of Prayer and Love — His earneſt and ſerious Anſwer to Trapp — His Notes and Illuſtrations on Behmen — His Replies to Hoadley; and, what is ſtranger ſtill, his abuſe of biſhop Hoadley, in his Appeal I have mentioned.

Here, had I room, I would relate a very curious converſation that paſſed between Dr. Theophilus Bolton, archbiſhop of Caſhell in Ireland, (a moſt excellent, moſt ſenſible, and moſt learned man,) and me, (at the third night's ſale of archbiſhop King's library in Dublin,) in relation to Mr. Law. It happened on his Lordſhip's buying Jacob Behmen's Works for a pound, and then aſking me, who ſtood by him, if I had read them, and could enable him to underſtand them? But this I muſt place in my Notes aforementioned.

*
As an abetter of arbitrary power, and for attempting to raiſe the prerogative.
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Zitationsvorschlag für dieses Objekt
TextGrid Repository (2020). TEI. 5671 The life of John Buncle Esq containing various observations and reflections made in several parts of the world and many extraordinary relations pt 2. University of Oxford Text Archive. . https://hdl.handle.net/21.T11991/0000-001A-5901-F