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Remember that you must behave in life as at an entertainment. Is any thing brought round to you? Put out your hand, and take your share with moderation. Does it pass by you? Do not stop it. Is it not come ? Do not stretch forth your desire towards it, but wait till it reaches you. Thus do with regard to children, to a wife, to public posts, to riches: and you will be, some time or other, a worthy partner.

"Remember that you are an actor in a drama, of such kind as the author pleases to make it: if short, of a short one; if long, of a long one. If it be his pleasure you should act a poor man, a cripple, a governor, or a private person, see that you act it naturally. For this is your business, to act well the character assigned you. To choose it, is another's.

"If you have an earnest desire of attaining to philosophy, prepare your self from the very first to be laughed at, to be scorned by the multitude, to hear them say, He is returned to us as a philosopher all at once! and whence this supercilious look? Now, for your part, do not have a supercilious look indeed, but still keep steadily to those things which appear best to you, as one appointed by God to this station. For remember, if you adhere to the same point, those very persons who at first ridiculed, will afterwards admire you: but if you are conquered by them, you will incur a double ridicule.

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ed am I! But it should be remembered, how we are affected in hearing the same thing concerning others.

"If any person had delivered up your body to any one whom he had met in the way, you would certainly be angry. And do you feel no shame in delivering up your own mind to be disconcerted and confounded by any one who happens to give you ill language.

"Duties are universally measured by relations. Is any one a father? In this are implied, as due, taking care of him, submitting to him in all things, patiently receiving his reproaches, his correction. But he is a bad father. Is your natural tie, then, to a good father? No: but to a father. Is a brother unjust? Well, preserve your own situation towards him; consider not what he does, but what you are to do. In this manner you will find, from the idea of a neighbour, a citizen, a general, the corresponding duties, if you accustom yourselves to contemplate the several relations.

"Immediately prescribe some character and form of behaviour to yourself, which you may preserve both alone and in company.

"For be assured, that if a person be ever so sound himself, yet if his companion be infected, he who converses with him will be infected likewise.

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If any person tells you, that such a person speaks ill of you, do not make excuses about what is said of you, but answer, 'He does not know my other faults, else he would not have mentioned only these.'

"If you are struck by the appearance of any promised pleasure, guard yourself against being hurried away by it; but let the affair wait your leisure, and procure yourself some delay. Then bring to your mind both points of time; that in which you shall enjoy the pleasure, and that in which you will repent and reproach yourself, after you have enjoyed it: and set before you, in opposition to these, how you will rejoice and applaud yourself if you abstain. And even though it should appear to you a seasonable gratification, take heed that its enticing, and agreeable, and attractive force, may not subdue you; but set in opposition to this, how much better it is to be conscious of having gained so

"When a neighbour's boy has had a slight accident, broken a cup, for instance, we are presently ready to say, These are things that will happen. Be assured then, that when your own cup likewise is broken, you ought to be affected just as when another's cup is broken. Transfer this in like manner to other things: Is the child or wife of another dead? There is no one who would not say, "This is an accident to which human nature is liable." But if any one's own children happen to die, it is presently, Alas! how wretch-great a victory.

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Lord Byron's Don Juan.

"When you do any thing from a clear judgment that it ought to be done, never shun the being seen to do it, even though the world should make a wrong supposition about it: for if you do not act right, shun the action itself; but if you do, why are you afraid of those who censure you wrongly?

"If you have assumed any character above your strength, you have both made an ill figure in that, and quitted one which you might have supported.

"Whtever rules you have deliberately proposed to yourself for the conduct of life, abide by them as so many laws, and as if you would be guilty of impiety in transgressing any of them: and do not regard what any one says of you, for this, after all, is no concern of yours. How long will you defer to think yourself worthy of the noblest improvements, and in no instance to transgress the distinctions of reason? You are no longer a boy, but a grown man. If, therefore, you will be negligent, and slothful, and always add procrastination to procrastination, purpose to purpose, and fix day after day, in which you will attend to yourself, you will insensibly continue without proficiency: and living and dying, persevere in being one of the vulgar. This instant then think yourself worthy of living as a man grown up, and a proficient. Let whatever appears to you to be the best, be to you an invioJable law. And if any instance of pain or pleasure, or glory or disgrace, be set before you, remember that now is the combat, now the olympiad comes on, nor can it be put off; and that by once being worsted and giving way, proficiency is lost; or, by the contrary, preserved."

LORD BYRON'S DON JUAN.

AGAIN has the voice of the mighty autocrat of British poets sounded from the spot of his voluntary ostracism to the shores of this, his native country; long have the admirers of the noble bard been anxiously expecting the future cantos of Don Juan; and long have the friends of religion and morality been fearing for what should come next in the exquisitely disgusting details of this unprofitable, yea, iniquitous poem. At last it is before the public, and neither of the above

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Now my lost fancy falls into the yellow Leaf,' and imagination droops her pinion, And the last truth which hovers o'er my desk Turns what was once romantic to burlesque."

Two things yet appear to be his Lordship's abomination, and these he seems to continue to hate as cordially as a good Mussulman does pork;marriage and society. We are afraid there is but too good reason for his antipathy to both, which leave him but a very inadequate judge of the blessings of either. He long ago wrote that "He was the most unfit of men, to herd with

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And this we believe: on the subject of marriage also, he has often given his opinion; he has here again introduced it, and it is " sour" enough: "Tis melancholy, and a fearful sign

Of human frailty, folly, also crime, That love and marriage rarely can combine; Although they both are born in the same clime. Marriage from love, like vinegar from wine--A sad, sour, sober beverage-by time Is sharpen'd from its high celestial flavour Down to a very homely, household savour."

There hath long been a mystery about this man, which has rendered him an object of peculiar interest. Voluntarily exiled from his own land, a fugitive in that country which once was Grecce, yea, and which is Greece still, notwithstanding the barbarous names by which the moderns have parcelled it out, and the mushroom race that has sprung over the graves of their forefathers; from that country his poetical inspirations have come hither like the awful responses of the Delphic oracle: we heard the voice, but were hidden from the pseudo-divinity which delivered it. Yet even Lord Byron himself may learn in time that the pungency of his own productions will destroy their effect on pa

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Review-History of Boston.

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ther, and in spite of the remonstrance of Haidée, and the dagger of her hero, called in a band of his attendants, who presently carried Juan on board, and bore away with him to Constantinople, and sold him for a slave, leav ing the frantic female to die of a broken heart. HereJuan enters upon a new series of those illicit adventures which his Lordship's peculiar taste can furnish in such variety: the principal sultana having fixed her mind on a

lates which he has so highly stimulated, and that something more will be necessary to maintain his popularity than the distance between England and Ravenna-yet he has not only the poetry of nobility, but the nobility of poetry. And if piety and purity had been the blandishments of his muse, and his native country the soil of his productions, there are few names in the peerage which I should more have honoured than that of Byron. The following stanzas are interest-paramour, and seeing Juan walk past ing, as connected with the name of Dante; and have, like many others, little to do with Don Juan:

"I pass each day where Dante's bones are laid:
A little cupola, more neat than solemn,
Protects his dust, but reverence here is paid
To the bard's tomb, and not the warrior's
column:

The time must come, when both alike decay'd,
The chieftain's trophy, and the poet's volume,
Will sink where lie the songs and wars of earth,
Before Pelides' death, or Homer's birth.
“With human blood that column was cemented,
With human filth that column is defil'd ;
As if the peasant's coarse contempt were vented
To shew his loathing of the spot he soil'd;
Thus is the trophy us'd, and thus lamented'
Should ever be those blood-hounds, from

whose wild

Instinct of gore and glory earth has known
Those sufferings, Dante saw in hell alone."

I shall conclude these desultory remarks by an imperfect sketch of the subjects of these three cantos of Don Juan, not supposing that my animadversions will have any influence upon those who have read, or intend to read the poem; yet I marvel how any modest maiden or virtuous matron can allow herself to read it, and not impugn her own innocence: such a cage of unclean birds it is impossible to turn into the imagination, but they must leave a trace or a taint on the heart.

The second canto (before published) left Juan the hero, in the arms of Haidée, the princess of an island which her father seems to have held in fee simple by virtue of his piratical prowess; and who was out on a cruise when Juan was shipwrecked on his shore. The third canto unfolds the return of this "lawyer of the deep ;" his daughter having concluded him lost at sea, was in the thick of her revel with her paramour, his domestics, &c. when Lambro entered his own house; the old pirate choaks the risings of his resentment, which nevertheless burns fiercely within him, till he presently surprised the young couple toge

her window to the slave market, resolves to obtain him at all events. For this purpose she employs an old domestic of" the third sex," as his Lordship says;-Juan is purchased, brought to the palace, and attired by Baba the eunuch in a rich female costume, in order that he may pass unsuspected into the presence of the sultana, as a young female Frank. With a scene connected with this event, the canto and the volume closes.

It will not be difficult for those who do not care to read the poem, to divine how these situations are illustrated by his Lordship's pen, which seems, like an enchanter's wand, to summon all the facilities of the English language into his Protean stanzas; some of which are as stiff and unbending as the oak, and others as sweet as Hyblean honey, but it is the honey of the aconite, dulcet on the lip-but bitterness and poison in his belly that receives it.

H.

REVIEW.-Collections for a Topogra phical and Historical Account of Boston, and the Hundred of Skirbeck in the County of Lincoln, with Engravings, by Pishey Thomson. 8vo. pp. 460. London. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown; and Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, Paternoster-row; Nichols and Son, Parliament-street ; Major, Skinner-street; Symco, Ayrstreet, Piccadilly, &c. 1820.

BOSTON is a large commercial borough town of Lincolnshire in England. It stands in that division of the county called Holland, and is nearly surrounded by the fens, the greater part of which having been inclosed and drained, is now appropriated to arable and meadow lands.

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Review-History of Boston.

Previously to this great undertaking, Boston had lost much of its population and trade, but this event has renovated the place. It stands on the banks of the Witham, which discharges its waters into the sea, about five miles east of the town. Here is a commodious, well-frequented haven; and formerly an extensive trade was carried on in the exportation of wool, which being prohibited, the merchants employed their capitals in other branches of commerce; in consequence of which, the town has considerably increased in opulence, trade, and population. It is now one of the most considerable towns and ports in the county of Lincoln.

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In tracing the progress of Boston from the Norman invasion to the present time, Mr. Thompson has recorded the various incidents which have marked and diversified its history. Many of these are rendered remarkable by their singularity; and it is pleasing to observe throughout the whole, the visible influence of apparently secret causes, operating to produce those vicissitudes, which the progress of time displays to the observer's eye.

The ancient state of Boston exhibits many singular curiosities; among which the establishment of several religious houses, the manner in which their internal concerns were regulated, and the superstitious practices to which they gave rise, are not the least remarkable. Of the guilds, charters, and chantries, the author has taken special notice: and its ancient and stately church has been honoured with a minute description.

In a commercial view, Boston has been exposed to a variety of changes. Of these the author takes particular notice; marking the dates of its privileges, and mercantile revolutions, and recording the imposts, clogs, and impediments, which retarded its prosperity, and more than once reduced it to the eve of ruin.

Boston is a place of great antiquity. According to Bede, its former name was Botolph, from St. Botolph, a Saxon, who founded a monastery here, and thus gave origin to the town; but other writers assert, that the Romans had a station here; and they exhibit stones and urns that were dug out of the ruins in 1716, in support of their opinion. So early as the reign of Henry I. a man named Henry Chamberlain, with some accomplices, disguised in the habits of monks, set the town on fire in several places, that he might have an opportunity of plundering the inhabitants. Chamberlain was taken and executed, but he The account given of the river Witrefused to impeach his associates. ham, and its swans and fisheries, Such is the generally_received history cannot but prove interesting to all of this town, to which the volume be- who are acquainted with the district fore us refers. through which the water runs ; and the Mr. Thomson, however, in prosecu-historical observations which are made ting his work, is not guided by the uncertain light of common opinion. He examines the records of remote antiquity, avails himself of the aids Of the sea banks of Richmond fee which contemporary and preceding of honour, of public buildings, places antiquarians and historians furnish, of worship and of amusement, chariand finally, gives to his readers the re- table institutions, library, public gaol, sult of his investigations. This result, and seminaries of instruction, the auwith respect to the remote origin of thor gives a sufficiently detailed acthe town, conducts us back to the days count. To this he has added various of the Romans, and he adduces many observations on the commercial imbranches of evidence to give confirm-portance and prosperity of the town, ation to his decision. In collecting the evidence leading to this result, the author has exercised much industry, perseverance, and research, so that scarcely a source of information is left unexamined. Many curious documents are also introduced; and the various branches are enlivened by anecdotes which characterize the ages in which they are reported to have occurred.

on the adjacent fens, plainly prove, that through every age they have been deemed of importance.

as well as taken a survey of its environs, adverting to its accommodations, its charities, and to the literary characters who have adorned Boston with their names.

In this collection, the families that have been renowned for wealth and power, hold a distinguished rank. Some of these have long since become extinct; but others still retain, in the

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Review-Memoirs of the Rev. Dan Taylor.

neighbourhood of Boston, their primitive dignity and importance.

This volume also contains a list of all the members of grand councils, and of parliament, who have stood for this borough from the year 1352 to the present time; and this is followed by a catalogue of all the mayors, of the recorders, deputy recorders, townclerks, and judges of the admiralty, so far as their names could be ascertained.

The geological observations which Mr. Thomson has introduced, from the information he had been able to collect from the inhabitants, or from personal inspection, and from various old documents, are replete with sensible and philosophical reflections. Several of these carry back our views to the days of the Romans; and the vestiges of art which have been dug up at various times, confirm the opinion of that high antiquity which the author advocates.

From the town of Boston, Mr. Thomson makes an excursion into the adjacent parishes of Skirbeck, Fishtoft, Freiston, Butterwick, Bennington, Leverton, Leake, and Wrangle. Of these parishes he traces the ancient history, noting whatever they furnish that may be deemed remarkable, either in nature or art.

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derable antiquity and importance; and to the antiquarian and the historian the work before us will prove highly interesting. On some doubtful points, a difference of opinion will probably be found between the author and his contemporaries in the same, or similar departments of literature; bat the authorities which he has quoted in support of what he has advanced, are suflicient to shield him from the shafts of captious criticism, where his reasonings and arguments are incompetent to produce conviction.

For his laudable attempts to rescue from oblivion the history of a place of no common renown and veneration, Mr. Thomson is entitled to the thanks of his readers; and his successful perseverance entitles him to an equal degree of praise. To the inhabitants of other districts he has set an example worthy of imitation. Should this be followed with similar ardour, and with the same degree of persevering inquiry, we shall soon be in the possession of better materials for a general topographical history of our country than has hitherto been submitted to the public eye. The work we conceive possesses considerable merit; we are pleased in being able to recommend it to public patronage; and we shall be glad to find the author's industry aud talents recompensed according to their descrts.

REVIEW.-Memoirs of the Rev. Dan.
Taylor, late Pastor of the General
Baptist Church, Whitechapel, Lon-
don; with Extracts from his Diary.
Correspondence, and Unpublished
Manuscripts. By Adam Taylor. 8vo,
331. Baynes and Son; Whittemore,
Mann, &c. London, 1820.

The botanical history furnishes nothing remarkable; but the agricultural survey makes ample amends for this deficiency. In this survey it is pleasing to observe the furface of the soil, which formerly swelled the bogs and deserts of the world, teeming with pasture, and waving an abundant harvest to the sun. In no part of England are the effects of persevering industry more visible, perhaps, than in the fens of Lincolnshire. The appendix contains miscellaneous articles alphabetically arranged, but we cannot enter into any thing like an ana-tained respecting Mr. Dan Taylor's lysis of its varied contents. This work concludes with an index chronologically arranged, and with a general index referring to every thing remarkable in the volume.

WHATEVER opinions may be enter

creed by those who concur with, or differ from him, all must agree in this, that he was a man of brilliant talents, of indefatigable industry, and of sterling piety; and to these distinguishing characteristics, his biographer has done competent justice.

From several pages it was our intention to give some specimens of the author's talents as a writer, and of his Mr. Dan Taylor was born in Decemindefatigable perseverance in collect-ber, 1738, at a place called Sour-Milk ing his materials, but the length of | Hall, in Northowram. His strong atour observations will prevent their tachment to learning was noted in his being introduced. early years; and it is almost needless Boston is certainly a place of consi- | to add, that his proficiency kept pace

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