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The remaining correfpondence of this year between Mr. Jones and his friends, is not important I felect from it only two letters, which cannot fail to please, although they may not be particularly interesting,

Resolved to learn no more rudiments of any kind, but to perfect myself in,

First, 12 languages, as the means of acquiring accurate knowledge of the

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N. B. Every species of human knowledge may be reduced to one or other of these divisions. Even law belongs partly to the History of Man, partly as a science, to dialectic.

The 12 languages are,

Greek,

Latin,

Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese,

Hebrew, Arabic,

Persian,

Turkish,

German, English.

1780.

Mr. JONES to the Bishop of St, ASAPH.

MY LORD,

November 23, 1780.

Had I not been prevented by particular business from writing to your lordship on Tuesday evening and yesterday, I would have informed you before, that we had done ourselves the honour (and a very great one we shall ever esteem it) of electing your lordship a member of our club *. The election was of courfe unanimous, and it was carried with the fincere approbation and eagernefs of all present. I am sorry to add, that Lord Camden and the Bishop of Chester were rejected. When Bishops and Chancellors honour us with offering to dine with us at a tavern, it feems very extraordinary that we should ever reject fuch an offer; but

* Generally known by the name of the Turk's-Head Club, held in Gerrard Street, Soho. The establishment of this club was first proposed by Sir Joshua Reynolds to Burke and Johnson, and the original members of it were the friends of these three. The number of members was gradually increased to forty, comprehending men of the most distinguished characters, and eminent for their learning, talents, and abilities.

there is no reafoning on the caprice of men. Of our club I will only fay, that there is no branch of human knowledge, on which some of our members are not capable of giving information, and I truft that as the honour will be ours, fo your lordship will receive fome pleasure from the company once a fortnight, of fome of our firft writers and critics, as well as our moft virtuous fenators and ac

complished men. I think myself highly honoured in having been a member of this fociety near ten years, and chiefly in having contributed to add fuch names to the number of our friends as thofe of your lordship and lord Althorp. I fpoke yesterday in Weft, minfter-Hall for two hours and a half, on a knotty point of law, and this morning for above an hour, on a very interesting public queftion; to-morrow I muft argue a great caufe, and am therefore obliged to conclude with affuring

Your lordship, that I am,

With the higheft, &c.

W. JONES.

The Bishop of St. ASAPH to Mr.

JONES.

DEAR SIR,

November 27.

You was prevented by Sir Joshua Reynolds in your kind intentions of giving me the earliest notice of the honour you have done me. I believe Mr. Fox will allow me to fay, that the honour of being elected into the Turk's-Head Club is not inferior to that of being the reprefentative of Westminster or Surry. The electors are certainly more difinterested, and I fhould fay they were much better judges of merit, if they had not rejected Lord Camden and chofen me. I flatter myself with the hopes of great pleasure and improvement in such a fociety as you describe, which indeed is the only club of which I ever wished myself a

member.

Though I am much flattered with hearing

from

you, I was delighted with the cause of your delaying to write. Your talents have found means, by their own weight, to open

the way to public notice and employment, which could not long be fhut against them. Your pleadings for the nephew against the daughter promise something very curious in the particulars of the cafe, which feems to call for great abilities to defend it.

I would not neglect the first opportunity of answering your very obliging letter, though it being early poft day, I am forced to write in a greater hurry than I could wifh.

I am, &c.

J. ST. A.

After an interval of fix years, we find Mr. Jones retracing his favourite haunts with the Arabian mufes. He devoted the leisure hours of the winter of 1780-1 to complete his translation of feven ancient poems of the highest repute in Arabia*. Literature, po

*At the beginning of the seventh century, the Arabic language was brought to a high degree of perfection, by a sort of poetical academy, that used to assemble at stated times in a place called Ocadh, where every poet produced his best composition, and was sure to meet with the applause that it deserved: the most excellent of these poems were transcribed in characters of gold upon

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