From the Eagle. THE FARRAGO. " MticaJl:tdy is a weariness to thr jlejh Yes, and of thcjfpirit too, said Plod, with a yawn, as he (hut up Simpfon's E":lid. What porter that has trundled baits in his wheel-barrow all day, from the bottom of Button Pier to Msfs. Drudge fcf Company's store, at the south end—what Irijh porter has worked harder, than I have at these demonitra tions. " Shut the book up for ever, if an • gles and triangles vex thy patient spirit. Plod," .fays Hcali/if looking anxiously at the mathematician, *• why fhouldeft thou die before thy time !" Go, burn each diagram and let the rust gather on thy dividers ; hasten to the Hotel, and call for " Punch to drown all fir——» With the merry fellows quaff, And IXtigh aloud with those who laugh) And drink a jaco-ferious cup, With foul*, who've got theif spirits up. 1 ' Gi le your purblind mind an opportuni ty to search for her {pe&acles, and, on the morrovt, (he r.'ill difcerri perhaps the forty seventh proposition. But if, rvith jaded attention, and with that aching head, thou wilt persevere, and still keep turning the laborious windlcfs to Trulh't well, ftrugling in Vain to draw the reluctant damsel iipy the vio lence of the exercifr will watte thy vigor ; and the pain of the fide, irid the hectic heart, will deCrop thy studious plans, and calcine to athes the busy fibres of that brain, which, even now, throbs j with anguish." This "fine harangue of Health is doubtless the mult pertinent tht ever pronounced, and, if her ad vice were followed, we (hould fee more rosy cheeks among cloistered students, and their volumes would contain moiey though the number of their pages, per haps would be less. King Salomon, wKen at the CfUege of Jerulalem, was. according to the bell accouftts, a very hard Undent. But he fuou found, that of reading many books, as well as making them, there was no end. So he rose up, one day* in a pet, threw the book, whith he was readingy into the fire, muttering fortiething a bout vanity and vexation of spirit. Now j it does not require a thimble full of So- j lomon's wisdom or experience, to appre- j ciate this matter, at the present day, as j juftlv as he. That class of methodical 1 readers, who read over and over again j each page ; who go on from {helf to ; fhelf, till they have toiled through a li brary as ample* as the Vatican ; who wear green silk before their dimmed eyes, and chafe, with camphire their temples, to relieve their heads aching with the ponderosity of knowledge, the whole'tribe will tell you, that too much learning hath made them mad : aye, and foolifh too. Fettered by systems, their minds are paflive—they read and believe, impatient of thinking, and afraid to doubt. A few books at once original and excellent, diligently meditated, and well digelted, would have rendered them genuine scholars. But now, the fountain of intelligence is turbid by too much foreign in Her ; it is like—for 1 dearly love a John Banyan's similitude, to illustrate aljlraS positions, it is like my neighbor Heedlefs's well, which he dug " by the way fide," and negledis to cover. Thelofs of the Alexandrian library has been greatly deplored. The last and ge neral conflagration is a trivial event, accor ding to some of the literati, in comparison ■with the burning of certain ancient books. On the contrary, I think it matter of ex ultation ; and the anniversary of the de finition of so many myriads of vapid vo lumes should be a day of thanksgiving, among at! the students in Christendom. Were the most judicious feleilions of books annually to be visited by Don Quixote's curate and barber, and to undergo the fiery trial, which those Purgators would inflidt, I am positive, learning, like one of my dingy tobacco-pipes, would come out fair er from the fiair.es. During the ages of fnonkery, the scarcity of books was a just topic of complaint: literature then fufFefed from excefiive leanness; now, from ple thora. Books in every art and science ire so multiplied, that the astonished student, entering upon any department of know ' iedge, fees before him an interminable profpeft.' If Solomon, so many centuries ago, when books were comparatively scarce, faftidioufly pronounced much Jtudy a iveanne/s ; what would he fay now, if a lawver should tell him that an abridge ment of iurifprudence filled one and twen ty folios ; pr, if a divine should count only one half of the controversial writers, and repeat the names of Gill, ofFlavel, White byandßurkitt ? Why the preacher would fay, that the labor of such reading was a « for; travail" indeed, and the prince af firm, that the clack offet'tn hundred wives and three hundred concubines were more tolerable, than such trumpery. Study, so far from "being a weariness," either of fiodv or mind, is molt delegable when rationally indulged. The rules for renting are concise and practical. Selert original books, and toj y not toil with them. Solomon fiimfelf ntver complained of wf troops, unditr the command of Capt. Sedam, confiding of about 100, march ed from this place for Trenton. ELIZABETH-TOWN, Sept. 3. Saturday last the troop of Horse of Capt. Williamfon's company met in this town, when all present made a volun tary offer of their set vices in the ft 1 eel corps of 1200 to fnarch for quelling the insurgents at Pittsburgh. We aifo hear that Capt. Ward's troop at New ark have made a like tender of the* fervu.cS. PHILADELPHIA, SEPTEMBER 9. From the General sldttrtifer of ihis Morning. WESTERN DISTURBANCES. Dispatches were yesterday received" from the Comtniffioners sent by the fe dcralandftate governments, tooffer terms to the infnrgents in the vveftern coun ties of this state. The information these contain, are not so favourable as was anticipated from the disposition ex ploited by the committee of conference. It appears, that the propositions made by the commiflioners, were laid before the committee of fafety, confiding of 60 members, of which the committee of conference were a part. They we. e taken into conGderation by the grand committee, 57 members being present ; on the 27th ult. Mr. Gallatin addrefled them in a speech of two hours long, in which he treated the fubjett in a very masterly manner; recommending obedi ence to the law, and recouife to the constitutional means of obtaining a re peal of it. He was followed by Mr. Bradford, who in a violent *nd inflam matory harangue of considerable length endeavored to tnake a contrary impveffi on ; he contended, that resistance to the opjjreffion of an odious excise was not only a duty, but that in the then si tuation of the western countiy it was practicable to render that opposition ef fectual ; that the only article wanted ta