You, my Lord, have conspicuously proceeded to both: and though your present address is not the same, as when I was permitted to inscribe to you a former work, yet, the sound principles of your heart remain inviolable, they cannot be altered. To such a Patron, I am proud of the permis sion which you have granted me, of dedicating these Essays. I have the Honor to be, MY LORD, With the utmost respect, Your Lordship's very faithful servant, EDWARD BARRY. READING, August 1, 1806. Job Lousley's Book Blewberry Berks 1821 ESSAY I. CELIBACY. AMONG the variety of subjects, which B much indebted to writers for faithful obser vations and instructions on these topics: nor in common life and society is much information to be gathered; for these subjects are particularly susceptible either of the jokes of stupid-levity, or, are made the themes of pensive deliberation.. From these opposite quarters, satisfactory counsel is not to be expected: but if equally distant from either, a middle path be taken, it will be a safeguard to the mind against the follies of the one and the fears of the other. In representing the different states of C bacy and Wedlock; instead of confining thei observations to the abstract merits or demerits of these allotments; most people, are for bringing them to the test of their individual experience, and so long as different tempers and constitutions live on the earth, such representations must necessarily be partial and selfish, and always liable to exception: the person who surrenders up his opinion, and and forbodes his own fate on observing that of another, is perpetually the shuttlecock of fancy and the barometer of accident: equally absurd and spiritless are those, who, on the false principle of watching in others the different events of Celibacy and Wedlock, make. up their minds to continue in the one, or engage in the other. The injunction of Celibate life, was one, among the many superstitions brought by Pythagoras out of Egypt, he forbad marriage to his disciples: The Pythagoreans were under such severe prohibition of marriage, that some of the Priests* purposely disabled themselves from women. In such high esteem was the Celibacy of Priests among the Pagans, that Æneas, in *As those of Cybele, and the Priests of Diana at Ephesus, who emasculated themselves. Virgil is supposed to pass through the Elysian Fields, and see no other Priests in Paradise but such as had led a single life; and Zeno, Prince of the Stoicks, held this sort of denial in such reverence, that he never approached a woman. From this Pagan source, the stream has continued to the present time; for their ideas of Celibacy are not only adopted, but their examples are followed by the Priests of the Romish Church; though this kind of abstinence did not pass as a law, nor was insisted on as a matter of Ecclesiastical con-. formity, till about the year six hundred. In the Council of Trent it was proposed to set the Clergy again at liberty from this yoke, but the Pope would not accede to it. About the middle of the third century after Christ, it must be confessed that there were some plausible reasons for submitting to |