tinguilhable at one or the other of the lunar poles lie also proves, that like the poles of the earth, they are alternately covered with snow and ice. Mr. Herfchell is now waiting anxiously for a to tal lunar eclipse, in hopes ic will afford him an opportunity of making some new discoveries, to improve the planetary knowledge of the eigh teenth century. Miss Herfchel, lifter to the As tronomer, has lately written a second letter to the lioval lociety, on aitronomical fubje do. 36J do. 4 1J do. House, AS the ladies in general are more affe&ed by the prevalence of immorality nun men, it often furpiizes me, that they do not cuiicdvor 10 look thole vices out of countenance among our sex, which are so frequently fatal to their own tranquility. l.ouis the XlVth was it.led the o R eat— with how much justice will appear from the following txtra£l of a letter, written to luni by the excellent feneton. " Your people whom you ought love as your children, and who have hitherto fell so strong an dffettion for you, are dying of hunger. The cultivation of the country is almost wholly aban doned ; the towns and villages are depopulated ; every species of trade is decaycd,and no longer supports those who work in it j com merce is annihilated.—.You have consequently deflroyed one hait the real internal flrength of your kingdom, to gain and maintain litllecontjuefts abroad. Instead of draining money from the im poverilhed people, it was necelfary to give them alms and food. The whole kingdom of Fiance is become a great hospital, deso late and without provisions. The inagiflrates arc degraded, and the nobility, againfl whom judgements have been obtained, live only by protections. You are importuned by crouds who de mand and who murmur.—lt is you, yourfelf, Sire, who have cre ated all these embarrafTinents ; for the whole kingdom being iu ined, you haveevery thing in your own hands, and none can live but by your benefactions. Such, Sire, is this great kingdom, such is its prosperity, under a King who is every day piinted as the de light of his people, and who would be so in reality, if the counsels of fychophants had not poifoncd him." Rome once mistress of the world, owed her origin to a band of ruffians, whom (he hafelf would have gibettcd in almoftanv fub iequeut peiioil of her existence. What were the firft foundefs of the Bviiifh empire but a moiley colle&ion of abandoned wretches ! And are not the justly tamed Americans their lineal descendants ? The philosopher, when he contemplates human nature as liable to degenerate to a level with the brute, may, by turning the picture again, beaold it emerging from its debasement, and, riftng on the grades of refinement, claim alliance with the angels of light. By virtue and indullry the United States hold their claim to greatness: Laden with our own produce, the Amcncaa flag is the Olive Branch ot Peace in every feftion of the globe. That our citizens should be brought up in habits of virtue and industry is as elTemial to the prosperity of our country, as it is to families or individuals: Everyman has some part to atl on the bufyftage of life,and if"anyone negle&s the lot afiigned him, so ciety is mjuied by the omiflioo, 01 it mufl be remedied by the en creafed cxcrtionof others. Postscript. BY THE MAIL ARRIVED LAST EVENING. ABSTRACT OF FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 20. A Gentleman, who arrived in townyejleriay from Alexandria, informs ; That a vejfel had arrived there from Dunkirk, and brought accounts to the firjl of October—which jlate, that a full accommodation of all differences had taken place, between Spain and En gland. By recent accounts from Holland we are informed, that owing to the great decline of the Dutch commerce the agio of the bank, of Amsterdam has fallen to less than one per cent, above par. The average ol the agio or advancc on bank, money has com monly been 3 per. cent. 2nd it has frequently been up to 5 per cent. The price of silver had also greatly risen, dollars were at 53 stivers ; this extraordinary event is accounted for on different principles, the general idea is, that it originated in the great de mand for fpecic to Ihip tothe United States. There can be no doubt of the Spanish fleets' having re turned into port the 6th Sept. This account has been corrobora ted from vaiious quarters; consequently the story of an engage ment, via Charleifon, (S. C.) falls to the ground. The very formidable preparations made by Great-Britain, are evidently designed to prevent a war. Peace is perhaps more necelTary to that country, thaji to any other in Europe: This is the opinion of Mr. Pi tt, and ofhet - wisest and best men: Spaia will therefore deliberate a good while before she attacks a power, in itfelf more than her match, and prepared at all points for the worst. France cannot seriously meditate hostilities : According to the statements made by her patriots in the National Assembly, her fi nances are in so critical a situation, that extra expenccs at this en ds, would involve the nation in bankruptcy. Catharine,deferred by the Empeior,is looking out for new al lies ; but the account of her entering into an alliance with Sweden, in order to support the war against the Porte, is hardly credible, if, as has been reported, Sweden has been in league with the latter. —Should it, however, turn out to be fact, that Qie considers Gufta vus no longer as an enemy, it ftiongly indicates that ihe is tired of, or io much exhausted by the war, that she is determined to fol low the example of the Emperor of Germany, and make peace with the Turks. It is intercfting to trace the different origins of the commotions which agitate the various parts of Europe. In France the revolution was preceded by free thinking, li bertinism and philofophy—before these down topples the whole hierarchy ; for making a fweepflakes of the property of the cler gy—that formidable pillar of despotism is Tapped at its founda tion. In Germany, on the other hand, only the gradual attempts of the late Emperor to reform abuses, has kindled a flame of op position to what is there confidcred as an outrageous attack on the dearest rights and privileges of the people. By a London paper of ißih Sept. it appears that Peace was proclaimed at Stockholm, capital of Sweden, the 31ft August. The late fire at Madrid burnt ten days. ' The Britilh fleet under Lord Hows had arrived at Spithead, and the general opinion in London was, that there would be peacc through Europe. On Saturday the 6th inft. died at Bollon, aged 64, the Hon. Jam es Bo wdoi n, Esq. late Governor of the State of Massachu setts ; President of the American Academy of Arts and Scienccs ; and of the Massachusetts Humane Society ; Fellow of the Royal So cieties of London and Dublin ; and 0% the Society of Arts in G. Britain ; and Doctor ot Laws in the Universities of Cambridge and Edinburgh. \_An account Sf his funeral folemnitiesJhalL ap pear in our next.] Virtue alone boasts immortality / By death transplanted to congenial climes, It blooms eternal near the throne of Goo ! BOW DO IN is gone !— Columbia feels the.ft roke Which took hi in : — When good men die, The sacred barrier round the public weal Sustains a breach ——* — Death may destroy his thousands in an hour, Nor make the flighted impress on creation :— Time rolls oblivious o'er the common wave, And makes the rippling fca soon fraooth again ; Hut Science, Virtue, Honor. Patiiot-Worth, Rcmov'd to Heav'n, a chasm leave behind That Nature'* age will prove too fljort to Jill# l. XTR ACTS.