498. AFFIRMING, with a judicial oath, is expressed by lifting ap the right hand and eyes towards heaven; if conscience be applied to, by laying the right hand upon the breast exactly upon the heart; the voice low and solemn, the words slow and deliberate; but when the affirmation is mixed with rage or resentment, the voice is more open and loud, the words quicker, Laconics. I have seen the flower-withe: ing on the stalk, and its bright leaves-spread on the ground. I looked again; it sprung forth afresh; its stem was crowed with new buds, and its sweetness filled the air. I have seen the sun set in the west, and the shades of night shut in the wide horizon: there was no color or shape, nor beauty, nor music; gloom and darkness brooded around. I looked! the sun broke forth again upon the east, and gilded the mountain-tops; the lar rose-to meet him from her low nest, and the shades of darkness filed away. I have seen the insect, being come to its full size, languish, and re and the countenance has all the confidence of a fuse to eat: it spun itself a tomb, and was shroudstrong and peremptory assertion. Notes. The Duke had reproached Lord Thurlow with his plebeian extraction and his recent admission to the peerage. He rose from the woolsack and advanced slowly to the place from which the chancellor addresses the house, then fixing his eye on the Duke (in the words of a spectator,) "with the look of Jove when he has grasped the thunder," spoke as follows: My Lords-I am amazed; yes my Lords, I am amazed at his grace's speech. The noble duke cannot look before him, behind him, or on either side of him, without seeing some noble peer, who owes his seat in this house to his successful exertions, in the profession to which I belong. Does he not feel that it is as honorable, to owe it to these, as to being the accident of an accident? To all these noble lords, the language of the noble duke is as applicable, and as insulting, as it is to myself. But I don't fear to meet it single and alone. No one venerates the peerage more than I do-but, my lords, I must say, that the peerage solicited me,-not I the peerage. Nay more,-I can say, and will say, that as a peer of parliament,-as speaker of this right honorable house, as keeper of the great seal,-as guardian of his majesty's conscience,-as lord high chancellor of England-nay, even in that character alone, in which the noble duke would think it an affront to be considered-but which character none can deny me-as a MAN, I am, at this time, as much respected, as the proudest peer I now look down upon. A man of sovereign parts he is esteem'd! Well fitted in the arts, glorious in arms; Nothing becomes him ill, that he would well. The only soil of his fair virtue's gloss, (If virtue's gloss will stain with any soil,) Is a sharp wit match'd with too blunt a will: [wills Whose edge hath power to cut, whose will still It should none spare that come within his power. Anecdote. Butler, Bishop of Durham, and author of the Analogy, being applied to for a charitable subscription, asked his steward what money he had in his house; the steward informed him there were five hundred pounds. "Five hundred pounds!" said the bishop; "what a shame for a bishop to have such a sum in his possession!" And he ordered it all to be given to the poor immediately. Bold with joy, Forth from his lonely hiding-place, The world 1 still deceived by ornament. ed in the silken cone: it lay without feet, or shape, or power to move. I looked again: it had burst its tomb; it was full of life, and sailed on colored wings through the soft air; it rejoiced in its new being. Varieties. 1. Many a young lady can chatter in French or Italian, thrum the piano, and paint a little, and yet be ignorant of housekeeping, and not know how even to make a loaf of bread, roast a piece of meat, or make a palatable soup. 2. It is a false idea to think of elevating woman to her right position of intelligence and influence in society, without making her thoroughly and practically acquainted with the details of domestic life. 3. It is wrong for either men or women, to bury themselves in their everyday avocation, to the neglect of intellectual and moral culture, and the social amenities of life: but it is still worse to give exclusive attention to the latter, and utterly neglect the former; because, in the former are involved our first and most important duties. 4. Neg. lected duties never bring happiness: even the best of society would fail to delight, if enjoyed at the expense of human duties. 5. That which is our duty should always take precedence: otherwise no effort to obtain happiness can be successful. Still-let my song-a nobler note assume, The happiness-of human kind, A villain, when he most seems kind, REVISION. 499. Having gone thro', briefly, with the major passions, and given illustrations of each, before dismissing these important subjects, it may be useful to present the minor ones; occasionally alluding to the principal ones. The accompanying engra. ving represents. calm fortitude, discretion, benevolence, goodness, and nobility. Admira tion may also be combined with amazement: surprise, (which signifies-taken on a sudden,) may, for a moment, startle; astonishment may stupefy, and cause an entire suspension of the faculties; but AMAZEMENT has also a mixture of perturbation; as the word means to be in a maze, so as not to be able to collect one's self: there is no mind that may not, at times, be thrown into amazement at the awful dispensations of Providence. ADMONITION TO ACT JUSTLY. Remember March, the ides of MARCH remember! That struck the foremost man—of all this world, Anecdote. Ethelwold, bishop of Winchester, in king Edgar's time, sold the gold and silver vessels belonging to the church, to relieve the poor, during a famine, saying: "There is no reason, that the senseless temples of God, should abound in riches, while his living temples ware perishing with hunger." DOMESTIC LOVE AND HAPPINESS. O happy they! the happiest of their kind! Merit-seldom shows often delay til to Laconics. 1. The idle morrow, what ought to be done to-day. 2. Science is the scribe, and theology the interpreter of God's works. 3. Regret is unavailing, when a debt is contracted; tho' a little prudence, might have prevented its being incurred. 4. A loud, or vehmen? mode of delivery, accompanied by a haughty action, may render an expression highly offensive; but which would be perfectly harmless, if pronounced properly. 5. Dishonesty chooses the most expeditious route; virtue the right one, though it be more circuitous. 6. Is the soul a mere vapor, a something without either essence or form? 7. Impressions, firmly fixed in the mind, and long cherished, are erased with great difficulty; how important, then, they should be good ones. Difficulty-is a severe instructor, set over us by the supreme ordinance of a parental guardian and legislator, who knows us better than we know ourselves, and he loves us better too. He, that wrestles with us, strengthens our nerves, and sharpens our skill. Our antagonist is our helper. This amicable conflict with difficulty obliges us to an intimate acquaintance with our object, and compels us to consider it in all its relations. It will uct suffer us to be superficial. VARIETIES. Sleep-seldom visits sorrow; Still raise-for good-the supplicating voice, Pour forth thy fervors-for a healthful mind, Call it diversion, and the fill goes down. 500. Arguing requires a cool, sedate, attentive aspect, and a close, slow, and emphatical accent, with much demonstration by the hand; it assumes somewhat of authority, as if fully convinced of what it pleads for; and sometimes rises to great vehemence and energy of action: the voice clear, distinct, and firm as in confidence. REASONING WITH DEFERENCE TO OTHERS. Ay, but yet Laconics. 1. To know-is one thing, to de. is another. 2 Consider what is said, rather than who said it: and the consequence of the argument, rather than the consequence of him, who delivers it. 3. These proverbs, maxims, and laconics, are founded on the facts, that mankind are the same, and that the passions are the disturbing forces; the greater or less prevalence of which, give individuality to character. 4. If parents give their children an improper education, whose is the misfortune, and whose the crimes? 5. The greater your facilities are for acquiring knowledge, the greater should be your efforts: and ge[ing, nius-is the power-of making efforts. 6. The wish-world's unfavorable views of conduct and character, are as floating clouds, from which the brightest day is not free. 7. Never marry-but for love; and see that thou lovest only what is lovely. Let us be keen, and rather cut a little, [tleman, 591. AFFECTATION-displays itself in a thousand different gestures, airs, and looks, according to the character which the person affects. Affectation of learning-gives a stiff formality to the whole person: the words come stalking out with the pace of a funeral procession, and every sentence has the solemnity of an oracle. Affectation-of pity-turns up the goggling whites of the eye to heaven, as if the person was in a trance, and fixes them in that posture so long, that the brain of the beholder grows giddy: then comes up deep grumbling, a holy groan from the lower part of the thorax, but so tremendous in sound, and so long protracted, that you expect to see a goblin rise, like an exhalation from the solid earth: thus he begins to rock, from side to side, or backward and forward, like an aged pine on the side of a hill, when a brisk wind blows; the hands are clasped together, and often lifted, and the head shaken with foolish vehemence; the tone of voice is canting, or a sing-song lullaby, not much removed from an Irish howl, and the words godly doggerel. AFFECTATION OF BEAUTY, and killing-puts a fine woman, by turns, into all sorts of forms, appearances and attitudes, but amiable ones: she undoes by art, or rather awkwardness, all that nature has done for her; for nature formed her almost an angel and she, with infinite pains. makes herself a monkey: this species of affectation is easily imitated, or taken off: in doing which, make as many, and as ugly grimaces, motions and gestures, as can be made; and take care that nature never peeps out; thus you may represent coquettish affectation to the life. Anecdote. A nobleman advised a bishop to make an addition to his house, of a new wing, in modern style. The prelate answered him, "The difference between your advice and that which the devil gave to our Saviour-is, that Satan advised Jesus to change stones into bread, that the poor might be fed; and you desire me to turn the bread of the poor into stones. A wise poor man, Is like a sacred book that's never read; Cheerful looks-make every dish-a feast, This World. What is the happiness that this world can give? Can it defend us from disasters? Can it preserve our hearts from grief, our eyes from tears, or our feet from falling? Can it prolong our comforts? Can it multiply our days? Can it redeem ourselves, or our friends from death? Can it soothe the king of terrors, or initigate the agonies of the dying? VARIETIES. Three poets, in three distant ages born, Greece, Italy, and England did adorn. The first in loftiness of thought surpassed; The next, in majesty; in both, the last. The force of nature could no further go; To make a third, she join'd the former two. Under a portrait of Milton-Dryden. The poetry of earth is never dead!When all the birds are faint with the hot sun, And hide in cooling trees, a voice will run, From hedge to hedge about the new-mown mead; That is the grasshopper's ;-he takes the lead In summer luxury ;-he has never done With his delights; for when tired out with fun He rests at ease beneath some pleasant weed The poetry of earth is ceasing never! On a lone winter evening, when the frost Has wro't a silence from the stove, there shrills The cricket's song, in warmth increasing ever, And seems to one, in drowsiness half lost, The grasshopper's among some grassy hills. Believe me, if all those endearing young charms, Which I gaze on so fondly to-day, [arms, It is not while beauty and youth are thy own, To which time will but make thee more dear. 503. AUTHORITY-opens the countenance, but draws the eye-brows a little, so as to give the look an air of gravity. AUTHORITY FORBIDDING COMBATANTS TO FIGHT. Let them lay by their helmets and their spears, And list what, with our council, we have done. Of civil wounds, plough'd up with neighbor's swords: great, but by keeping his resolutions; no per son ever escaped contempt, who could not keep them. Laconics. 1. Writing and printing serve as clothing to our ideas, by which they become visible in forms, and permanent in duration; thus, painters speak of embodying the fleeting colors of beautiful flowers, by fixing them in some earthly substance. 2. When the pupil of our intellectual eyes becomes adjusted to the darkness of error, genuine truth dazzles and blinds us. 3. Habit car only get the better of habit; but beware of chang ing one bad habit for another. 4. The torch of Therefore, we banish you our territories: You, cousin Hereford, upon pain of death, improvement, is destined to pass from hand to Till twice five summers have enriched our fields, hand; and what, tho' we do not see the order? 5 When nature is excited, she will put forth her f Shall not regret our fair dominions, But tread the stranger paths of banishment. forts; if not in a right, in a wrong way. 6. Con504. Philosophers say, that man is a mi-sent-is the essence of marriage, the ceremonies-its crocosm, or a little world, resembling in mi-form, and the duties—its uses. niature every part of the great; and, in our opinion, the body natural may be compared to the body politic; and if that be so, how can the Epicurean's opinion be true, that the universe was formed by a fortuitous concourse of atoms? which we will no more believe, than that the accidental jumbling of the let ters of the alphabet could fall by chance into a most ingenious and learned treatise of phi-they will avoid the former, and adhere to the latter losophy. On pain of death,-no person be so bold THE BOOK OF NATURE. Let fancy-lead, Anecdote. Eat Bacon. Dr. Watson, late bishop of Landaff, was enthusiastically attached to the writings of Lord Bacon; and considered, that no one, desirous of acquiring real sound knowledge, could read the works of that great man too often, or with too much care and attention. It was frequently remarked by him-"If a man wishes to become wise, he should eat Bacon." Making Resolutions. Never form a resolution that is not a good one; and, when once formed, never break it. If you form a resolution, and then break it, you set yourself a bad example, and you are very likely to follow it. A person may get the habit of breaking his resolutions; this is as bad to the character and mind, as an incurable discase to the body. No person can become Physiological Ignorance—is undoubtedly, the most abundant source of our sufferings: every person, accustomed to the sick, must have heard them deplore their ignorance-of the neces sary consequences of those practices, by which their health has been destroyed: and when men shall be deeply convinced, that the eternal laws of Nature have connected pain and decrepitude with one mode of life, and health and vigor with another, It is strange, however, to observe, that the gener Tis doing wrong-creates such doubts. These Though wisdom-wake, Where no ill seems. Tis god-like magnanimity-to keep, 505. BUFFOONERY-assumes a sly, arch, leering gravity; nor must it quit the serious aspect, though all should split their sides: which command of countenance is somewhat difficult, but not so hard to acquire, as to restrain the contrary sympathy-that of weeping when others weep. Examples will suggest themselves. COMMANDING requires a peremp.ory air, a severe and stern look: the hand is held out, and moved towards the person to whom the order is given, with the palm upwards, and sometimes it is accompanied with a significant nod of the head to the person address'd. If the command be absolute, and to a Laconies. 1. Every act of apparent disor der and destruction, is, when contemplated aright and taking in an immeasurable lapse of ages, the most perfect order, wisdom, and love. 2. As it respects the history of our race, scarce y the first hour of man has yet passed over our heads; why then do we speak of partiality? 3. In turning our eyes to the regions of darkness, in the history of man, as well as to those of light, we are induced to reflect upon our ignorance, as well as up on our knowledge. 4. The natural history of man, vegetables, and minerals; and, in mastering the former, we receive a key to unlock the mysteries person unwilling to obey, the right hand is extend-is of more importance than that of all animals, Silence, ye winds, That make outrageous war upon the ocean: And thou, old ocean! lull thy boisterous waves; Ye wavering elements, be hushed as death, While I impose my dread commands on hell; And thou, profoundest hell! whose dreadful sway Is given to me by fate and demi-gorgon- [gions; Hear, hear my powerful voice, thro' all thy reAnd from thy gloomy caverns thunder the reply. Begone! forever leave this happy sphere: For perjur'd lovers have no mansions here. Look round the habitable world, how few Know their own good, or, knowing it, pursue. Happiness-does not consist so much in outward circumstances and personal gratifications, as in the inward feelings. There can be no true enjoyment of that, which is not honestly obtained; for a sense of guilt infuses into it a bitter ingredient, which makes it nauseous. What pleasure can the drunkard have in his cups, when he knows, that every drop he swallows, is so much dishonestly taken from his wife and children; and, that, to satisfy his brutal propensity, they are deprived of the necessaries of life? Anecdote. Dr. Franklin. The following epitaph, was written by himself, many years previous to his death: "The body of Benjamin Franklin, Printer, (like the cover of an old book, its contents torn out, and stripp'd of its lettering and gilding,) lies here food for worms; yet the work itself shall not be lost; for it will, (as he believed,) appear once more in a new and more beautiful edition, corrected and amended by the Author." He is a parricide to his mother's name, And with an impious hand murthers her famme, That wrongs the praise of women; that dares write Libels on saints, or with foul ink requite The milk they lent us. None think the great unhappy, but the great. of the latter. 5. Some professors of religion boast of their ignorance of science; and some would. be philosophers, treat with contempt, all truths, that are not mathematical, and derived from facts: which show the greatest folly? Effects of Success. If you would revenge yourself on those who have slighted you, be successful; it is a bitter satire on their want of judgment, to show that you can do without them,-a galling wound-to the self-love-of proud, inflated people; but you must reckon on their hatred, as they will never forgive you. VARIETIES. They never fail, who die The ocean,-when it rolls aloud, And everlasting mountains reel, She wanders forth to muse and weep. Hath laid the leaf and blossom low, And Joy hath dash'd it from his crest, To wither on her wither'd breast. |