528. JUDGING-demands a grave, steady look. with deep attention, the countenance altogether clear from any appearance, either of disgust, or favor: the pronunciation slow, distinct, and emphatical, accompanied with Inile action, and that very grave. JUDGING ACCORDING TO STRICT LAW. If you refuse--to wed Demetrius- Therefore, fair Hermia, question your desires, Anecdote. In the early period of the French revolution, when the throne and the altar had been overturned, a Benedictine monastery was entered, by a devastating band, its inmates treated with wanton and unprovoked cruelty, and the work of demolition and plunder going on,-when a large body of the inhabitants rallied, drove the spoilers away, but secured the ringleaders, whom they would have severely punished, had not the abbot, who had received the worst indignities from these very leaders, rushed forward to protect them. "I thank you, my children," said he," for your seasonable interference; let us, however, show the superiority of reli gion, by displaying our clemency, and suffering them to depart." The ruffians were overpowered by the abbot's humanity, fell at his feet, entreated his benediction and forgiveness. But yonder-comes the powerful king of day, Rejoicing in the east. The less'ning cloud, The kindling azure, and the mountain's brow, Miscellaneous. 1. In opening a cause, Illum'd with fluid gold, his near approach give a general view or the grounds on which Betoken glad. Lo, now, apparent all the charge is made, and of the extent, magni- Aslant the dew-bright earth, and color'd air, tude, tendency, and effect of the crime al-He looks-in boundless majesty abroad; ledged. 2. There is some consolation for dull And sheds the shining day, that, burnish'd, plays authors, that the confectioner may put good On rocks, and hills, and tow`rs, and wand'ring into their books, if they fail to do it themselves. High gleaming from afar. [streams, 3. Uncle Toby's oath: "The accusing spirit, Varieties. 1. Should we be governed by which flew up to heaven's chancery, with the our feelings, or by our judgment? 2. Earths, oath, blushed-as he gave it in; and the re-waters, and atmospheres-are the three gecording angel-dropped a tear upon it, and neral elements, of which all natural things blotted it out forever. 4. Would not many are made. 3. The human body is composed persons be very much surprised, if their ideas of all the essential things which are in the of heavenly joys, should be exhibited here- world of nature. 4. The three periods of our after, to show them their falsity? 5. Beauty development are--infancy, including the first is given, to remind us, that the soul should be seven years; childhood--the second seven, kept as fair and perfect in its proportions, as and youth-the third seven; the close of the temple in which it dwells; the spirit of which, is the beginning of manhood. 5. beauty flows in, only where these proportions Adolescence-is that state, when man begins are harmonious. 6. Can any one be a lover to think, and act-for himself, and not from of truth, and a searcher after it, and yet turn the instruction, and direction of others. 6. his back on it, when presented, and call for The cerebellum, and consequently, the vomiracles? 7. The aphorism, "Know thy-luntary principle of the mind, never sleeps ; self," is soon spoken, but one is a long time but the cerebrum, and of course, the reasonin obeying it; Gracian-was placed among ing faculty-does. 7. Beware of the erronethe seven wise men of Greece, for having ous opinion, that you must be remarkably been the author of the maxim; but never, re-original; and that to speak, and write, unplied the sage, was any one placed there for like anybody else, is a great meril. having performed it. Who painted Justice blind, did not declare Infers, his ministers are obliged to hear Man's rich with little, were his judgment true. 'Tis certain, greatness, once fallen out with fortune, Firm in his better strength, and like a tree 529. MALICE, or Spite, is a habitual malevolence, long continued, and watching occasion to exert itself on the hated object; this hateful disposition sets the jaws and gnashes the teeth, sends blasting flashes from the eyes. stretches the mouth horizontally, clinches the fists, and bends the elbows in a straining manner to the body; the tone of voice, and expression, are much the same as in anger, but not so loud; which see. These two engravings represent, the smaller one, revengeful hatred, and the other, abhorrence, fear, contempt, without power, or courage. How like a fawning publican he looks! He ends out money gratis, and brings down I will feed fat-the ancient grudge I bear him. (Even there where merch'nts most do congregate,) 530. MELANCHOLY, or Fixed Grief, is gloomy, sedentary, and motionless. The lower jaw falls, the lips are pale, the eyes cast down, half shut, the eyelids swollen and red, or livid tears trickling silently and unmixed, with total inattention to anything that passes. Words, if any, are few, and those dragged out rather than spoken; the accents weak and interrupted, sighs breaking into the middle of words and sentences. There is a stupid weight-upon my senses; Of melancholy-is a fearful gift; Moody and dull melancholy, Kinsman to grief and comfortless despair. Worth makes the man, and want of it the fellow. MELANCHOLY-discloses its symptoms accord ing to the sentiments and passions of the minds. it affects. An ambitious man fancies himself a lord, statesman, minister, king, emperor, or monarch, and pleases his mind with the vain hopes of even future preferment. The mind of a covetous man secs nothing but his re or 87 and looks at the most valuable objects with an eye of hope, or with the fond conceit, that they are already his own. A love-sick brain adorcs, in romantic strains, the lovely idol of his heart, or sighs in real misery, at her fancied frowns. And a scholar's mind evaporates in the fumes of imaginary praise and literary distinction. Anecdote. Routs. "How strange it is," said a lady, "that fashionable parties should be called routs? Why, rout, formerly signified-the defeat of an army; and when soldiers were all put to flight, or to the sword, they were said to be routed!" "This title has some propriety too;" said an observer of men and things, "for at these meetings, whole families are frequently routed out of house and home." Varieties. 1. Agriculture--is the true foundation of all trude and industry; and of course, the foundation of individual and national riches. 2. When the moon, on a clear, autumnal evening, is moving through the heavens in silent glory, the earth-seems like a slumbering babe, smiling in its sleep, because it dreams of heaven. 3. The truths of science are not only useful, in themselves, but their influence is exceedingly beneficial in mental culture. 4. Let your amusements be select and temperate, and such as will fit you for the better performance of your duties; all others are positively injurious. 5. Raise the edifice of your virtue and happi ness, on the sure foundation of true religion, or love to God, and love to man. 6. That will be well and speedily done in a family or community, when each one does his part faithfully. 7. Eloquence--is the power of seizing the attention, with irresistable force, and never permitting it to elude the grasp, till the hearer has received the conviction, that the speaker intends. That I must die, it is my only comfort; And coming events-cast their shadows before. Admiration and Love. There is a wide difference between admiration and love. The sublime, which is the cause of the former, al 531. PARDONING-differs from acquitting. in is-the latter-means clearing a person, after trial, of guilt; whereus, the former-supposes guilt, and signifies merely delivering the guilty person from punishment; pardoning requires some de-ways dwells on great objects, and terrible; gree of severity of aspect, and tone of voice, be cause the pardoned one is not an ol ject of active, unmixed approbation; otherwise, its expression is much the same as granting; which see. PARDONING A CRUEL PERSECUTION. [men. We pardon thee; live on, the state hath need of Great souls-forgive not injuries, till time 532. PERPLEXITY, IRRESOLUTION, ANXIETY, are always attended with some degree of fear; it collects the body together, as if for gathering up the arms upon the breast, rubs the forehead, the eyebrows contracted, the head hanging on the breast, the eyes cast downward, the mouth shut, the lips compressed; suddenly, the whole body is agitated, alters its aspect, as having discovered something; then, falls into contemplation as before; the motions of the body are restless and unequal; sometimes moving quick, and sometimes slow; the pauses, in speaking to another, long, the tone of voice uneven, the sentences broken and unfinished; sometimes talks to himself, or makes grimaces, and keeping half of what arises in the mind. the latter on small ones, and pleasing; we submit to what we admire, but we love what submits to us; in one case we are forced, in the other we are flattered, into compliance. Laconics. 1. Every one, who would be an orator, should study Longinus on the sublime. 2. Many of our books, containing pieces for decla mation, remind one of a physician's leaving medicine with a patient, without directions how to take it. 3. Would it not be well for some competent person to compile a work, to be called "Sengs of the People," for all trades and avocations? 4. Let ters and words are like the notes of a tune, representative of sounds and ideas. 5. Descriptive speech and writing, are like landscape panting. 6. The natural world is an allegory, the meaning of which we may find in ourselves. 7. Were a spectator to come from the sther world, into many of our congregations, he would regard the sing ing, and perhaps the worship, as any thing but devotional. Varicties. 1. He, who will peep into a drawer, will likely be tempted to take some thing out of it; and he, who steals a cent in his youth, will be very apt to steal a dollar in manhood. 2. A great change in life, is like a cold bath in winter; we all hesitate to make the first plunge. 3. The farther you advance in any art, or science, the more will you be delighted with simplicity of manner, and less attracted by superficial ornament. 4. One of the grand objects of education is-to collect Shall she come in? wer't good? principles and apply them to practice; and Yes-tis Emilia:-by and by-she's dead. Tis like she comes to speak of Cassio's death; I think she stirs again. No. What's the best? when this is generally done, mankind will be brought nearer to equality. 5. It is as imAnecdote. Peter the Great made a law, possible for us to understand a thing, without in 1722, that if any nobleman beat, or ill-having the image of it on the retina of the treated his slaves, he should be looked upon mind's eye, as it is to see any thing, without as insane, and a guardian be appointed, to having its image on the retina of the bolily take care of his person and estate. The great monarch once struck his gardener, who, be-eye. 6. Is not the educatim of children, for time and eternity, the highest social, civil, ing a man of great sensibility, took to his bed, moral and religious duty, we are called upand died in a few days. Peter, on hearing of on to perform? this, exclaimed, with tears in his eyes: I have civilized my subjects; I have conquered other | A Deity-believ'd, is joy begun; nations; yet I have not been able to civilize A Deity ador'd, is joy advanc'd; and conquer myself. A Deity belov'd, is joy matur'd. There is no remedy for time misspent, No healing-for the waste of idleness, Not now-to be redeemed! ye sting not less And shape his acts, and discipline his mind, PLEASURE OF PIETY. Euch branch of piety delight inspires: Of man-in audience with the Deity. Punishments. There are dreadful pun 533. MODESTY --is a diffidence of ourselves, accompanied with delicacy in our sense of what-ishments enacted against thieves; but it were ever is mean, indirect, or dishonorable, or a fear of doing these things, or of having them imputed to us. Submission is an humble sense of our inferiority, and a quiet surrender of our power to a superior. Modesty bends the body forward; has a placid, downcast countenance, bends the eyes to the breast, if not to the feet, of the superior chara ter the voice is low, the tone submissive, and the words few. Submission adds to them a lower bending of the head, and a spreading out of the arms and hands, down wards towards the person submitted to. Now, good my lord, Let there be some more test of my metal, O noble sir! Your ever kindnesss doth wring tears from me ; As lamps burn silent with unconscious light, which every man might be put in a method how much better to make such good provisions, by to live, and so be preserved from the fatal necessity of stealing, and of being imprisoned, or dying for it. Varieties. 1. Some politicians consider honesty excellent in theory,-and policy safe in practice; thus admitting the absurd theory, that principles entirely false, and corrupt in the abstract, are more salutary in their practical manifestation, than principles essentially good and true. 2. In public and private life, in the learned and unfearned professions, in scenes of business, and in the domestic circle, the masterpiece of man is decision of character. 3. The inoral sense of the people, is the sheetanchor, which alone can hold the vessel 0. state, amidst the storms that agitate the world. 4 True religion has nothing to fear, but much to hope, from the progress of scientific truths. 5. A writer or speaker should aim so to please, as to do his hearers and readers the greatest amount of good. 6. It is not the Part of a lover of truth, either to cavil or reject, without due examination. 7. Il manners are evidence of low breeding. As turns a flock of geese, and, on the green, Must still be strangled in its birth: or time Obstinacy-When satire flies abroad on falsehood's wing, Worcester! get thee gone; for I do see O sir, your presence is too bold and peremptory, You have good leave to leave us; when we need Anecdote. One of the emperors of China met a procession, conducting some malefac tors to punishment. On being informed of the fucts, he burst into tears; when one of his courtiers endeavored to comfort him, saying, "In a commonwealth, there must be punishment; it cannot be avoided, as mankind now are." His majesty replied. "I weep not, to see those men prisoners, nor to see them chastised; I know the gool must be protected from the bad; but I weep, because iny time is not so happy as that of old was, when the virtues of the princes were such. that they served as a bridle to the people, and their example was sufficient to restrain a whole kingdom." To recount Almighty works, What words, or tongue, of seraph-can suffice? Every man in this age has not a soul Something heavy on my spirit, SONNET. Like an enfranchised bird, that wildly springs, And feebly fluttering, sinks to earth once more- My heart still feels the weight of that remember'd cham 535. FRYMISING is expressed by benevolent oks, a soft but earnest voice, and sometimes by inclining the head, or nod of consent; the hands open with palm upward, toward the person to whom the promise is made: sincerity in promising is express'd by laying the hand gently on the heart. I'll deliver all, And promise you calm seas, auspicious gales, I will be true to thee, preserve thee ever, Where'er I go, my soul shall stay with thee; 536. REFUSING,when accompanied with Laconies. 1. We must be instructed by all things of one thing, if we would know that one thing thoroughly. 2. The evolution of the natural sciences, amounts to the creation of a new sphere, in the human mind. 3. All truths, scientific, philosophical and theological, are in perfect harmony with each other. 4. The use, or effect, which produces the end, must be the first point of analytic inquiry; i. e. first the fact, or result, and then, the reasoning upon it. 5. When it is impossible, to trace effects to visible causes, the mental sight inus! take up, and complete the operation. 6. There is a universal analogy between all the spheres of creation, natural, mental and spiritual, and between nature, and all things in human society. 7. Nature-is simple and easy, it is man that is diffi cult and perplexed. Genius. They say of poets, that they must be born such; so must mathematicians, so must great generals, and so must lawyers, and so, indeed, must men of all denominations, or it is not possible that they should excel; but with whatever faculties we are follow-born, and to whatever studies our genius may direct us, studies they still must be. Nature gives a bias to respective pursuits; and this strong propensity is what we mean by genius. Milton did not write his Paradise Lost; nor Homer his Fiad; nor Newton his Principia, without immense labor. They answer-in a joint-and corporate voice, Pride. The disesteem and contempt of others is inseparable from pride. It is hardly possible to overvalue ourselves, but by undervaluing our neighbors; and we commonly most undervalue those, who are, by other men, thought to be wiser than we are; and it is a kind of jealousy in ourselves that they are so, which provokes our pride. They said, her cheek of youth was beautiful, Light grief is proud of state, and courts compassion; Let coward guilt, with pallid fear, As in the blaze of day. Varieties. 1. When you can do it, with Till withering sorrow blanch'd the white rose there; out injury to truth and mercy, always avoid But grief did lay h's icy finger on it, a quarrel and a lawsuit. 2. When the foundation of our hope is assailed, ought we not Anecdote. Garrick and Hogarth, sitting to contend, earnestly, for the faith once delivtogether one day, mutually lamented the ered to the saints? 3. When there is a right want of a picture of Fielding; "I think," said desire, and an untiring industry, there will, Garrick, "I could make his face;" which he eventually, be the reward of light. 4. They, did accordingly. "For heaven's sake, hold," who understand most of a subject, will be ve said Hogarth, "remain as you are a few min-ry indulgent to those, who know but little of utes;" he did so, while the painter sketched it. 5. If we are unwilling to do anything for the outlines, which were afterwards finished ourselves, how can we expect others will do from their mutual recollection: and this draw-much for us? 6. Every deceiver, whether by ing was the original of all the portraits we have of the admired Tom Jones. He that holds fast the golden mean, The little-and the great.- The tallest pines-feel most-the power Comes heaviest-to the ground. The bolts-that span the mountain side, And spread the ruin round. Nature-is frugal, and her wants are few. word, or deed, is a liar, and no one, that has Whether present, or absent, you always appear, For when you are present, you're absent-my dear; And a perpetual feast-of nectar'd sweets, |