i Domejtic Articles. NEW-YORK, Nov. 17 Mr. Adderlej's Lectures on Belles Lettres. (Continued from our paper of yefterdajr.) Avid after farther knowledge we apply ; to Geography which invites our contempla tion to the earth itfelf. It examines its mountains and its vallies. Itdefcribes the vulcanoes, their eruptions, their lava, , altd their effedts. It treats of the natural productions of each climate a.id country, and of all that relates to the philosophical state of the globe- It then extends its en quiries to the inhabitants of the earth, and endeavours to determine their number,their manners, language and habits* It exhibits the divisions, magnitude and contents of e&ch country, and ends by making us per fe6t with the produdtions of every clime— New motives for curiolity and refcarch.— We-commence the study of nature, taking for our guide the bed authors on the subject, we delight in l'eeking in mines for thole tolfils of which we begin to perceive the claliiticatiin. With pleal'ure we range the field for plants,whole gender and proper ties we commence to diftmguilh. We be come botanilt,. All hature has for us new charms, and •continually presents frefli otyecss far admiration and inftrn&ion. Solicitous to underlUnd the lcience of the operations of nature, we study natural philo fojihy, by which we become acquainted with thole bodies that nature produces,and which we discovered from our knowledge of natu ral history. Experimental philosophy and chemistry next teach us i uw to tnalize the Compolition of bodies, and to dilcover the alterations of which such compolit ons ar,; susceptible. Hence, while in the purluit of agriculture, and on opening the bosom of the earth, we dilcover that it abounds in metals, which by patient experiments, we have made applicable to ruflic ends or com mercial purposes. Not coutent, we dive i Hill deeper, we drag the rich metal from the bowels of the lordid mine, then with the falhioning hand of the enlightened artist, ■we give it that llamp and polish, to which if is indebted for all its acknowledged worih and currency. But 'tis not necelTary to dwell on every eircujjftance which tends to the improve- : ment of »ur nature. I (lull pals over Ana- j tqßiy, Pharmacy, General Grammar, the j dead languages, Eloquence, Poetry, Politics, j Juris udenee, Political and Kural EocO- j liemy, ko. Stc.—l Ihall not Ray to prove the influence «f music cb the u»ind, or the grace | which dancing lieftows on the body. ■ flow much politenefi embellilhes, how much j manners adorn. .But I mult take care to ; dwell utxfu a tubject to the knowledge of which it is we v we moll of our fuperiotity over the unlettered man. ljViean religion. Omit this and ill the acquirements recited would b.- futile —perhip? dangerous vain. The laws are watchful that one citieen fiiould not hurt another; and they punilh all attempts upon perlons and property but there are certain duties which they cannot prescribe, and the tranfgrelfions of which elcape their sword—such as those of father, of huiband, of triend, of superior, of inferior; the) therefore, become the fubjedt of a morality which nothing but Christianity can inculcate, or religion ellablifh in our hearts. It is difficult, by scholastic learn ing, always to persuade men how much it is their interfft to be confUntly virtuous- Al most all are dil'pofed to depart from the principle ei morality wljen they believe tliey may da it with impuni ty ; it belongs to religion to teach them, that if they flatter themselves to es cape from punishment, and from the dis grace which attaches to those who break the agreements of focifety, yet they cannot in the fame manner avoid the eye of the Al mighty, whose exillence all nature demon strates to them. Conscience, awakened by a fenl'e of religious obligations, comes forth and writes, in charadter, too legible, upon the wall, 4 Thou haft been weighed in the balance and art found wanting.' It ex hibits the sword suspended by a thread over the head of the criminal. It checks the robber in the streets by night —it causes the instrument of death to tremble in the hands of the highwayman, and it an ells the feet of the vile l'educer, at the very moment that he advances, with the steps of a Tar quin.to violate the honours of the virtuous house. 4 Is this a dagger which I fee before me the handle tow'rd my hand ? Come, let nie clutch thee—l have thee not, alid yet I lee thee Hill. Art thou not, fatal vision, fenGble to feeling as to fightor art thou but a dagger of the mind, a falfe crea tion proceeding from the heat opprelTed brsin ? I fee thee yet, in form as palpable as that which now ldraw, See. &c. There's no such thing—lt is the bloody business which informs thus to mUie eyes. Gra cious God ; if this be the language of him who meditates the crime of murder, what are to be the accents of-hirn who has already committed the flagrant deed ? After a scene like this I know of nothing that can yield a more sensible pleal'ure to a refledting mind, than this fpe&acle, tc figure to onefelf one of your ancestors rc viliting this land which he only knew whei inhabited by Aboriginal tribes, —which he only knew wbile it prefentcd a nation without a esuntry, a people without laws, and a worship without charadter or disci pline. What would be his emotions or discovering yourcities—your palaces—youi temples—your edifices of legislation and juris prudence, (landing perhaps on the very {'pot where flood the huts of the wretches who fir ft presented him the calimut of peace or offered the figurative ensign of friend flyp and concord. What would be his as- tonilhment to fee the flag of his defcen- j dants, soaring proud ahd sumptuous, in seas where Indian intellect is 1011, or glid ing triumphant in the immenle rivers and bays, where he firtt beheld the rude canoe of the innoGent native coming to gaze at cautious distance, or to give the needed aid, or grant the wanted succour. For him, to find a country, which at bed he must have left an infant, colony, rel'peded abroad immenie and flouri filing at home, would na turally excite this enquiry. 1 his iplended change, to what powerful attribute is it due i Merciful God 1 would the holy man exclaim, it is due alone to thee. 1 had not where to lay me do^n—-no temple in which to worlhip ihee—no alter at which to offer up my praile. My God, and the God ot my fathers, were not heard of or known. But the li.Jvt of thegolpeland the learning with which thou haft endowed my offspring, have given them the comforts and bleflings which I did not merit at thy hands, lhcy behold around them all the glittering em blems of chriliianity & that cross Evangeli cal which loars from the highest Pinnacle of cyery department. Now may I exclaim with the (tranger who firlt visited the camp of the people of God. " O Israel how beauteous are thy Tents ! 0 Jacob what order what harmony are in thy pavalions ! ! !" In proving the influence of knowledge on the human character it may be understood that I consider that Bhilofophy and the Sci ences Ihould cunltitute the principle study of man, and that from his youth he Hiould fuccellivcly pats thro' the several branch.s 1 enumerated. In truth with the addition of the dead languages the lan will be found a complete I'ylteiJi of human know ledge. It may be deemed a vafl one but in its vaftnel's, itsgreateft utility con lilts. Education is th« novitiate of life : and in life manifold and various are the Rations. One cannot decide which of them would beftfuita fubjeft of whose dispositions and capacity, we are ignorant; but by teaching him during his youth to know the different means of being ufeful to society, he will be prepared to serve it afterwards in all it em ployments ; by opening to him the entrance —by (Irewing roses in his way—and by pointing out to him the traft of the diffe rent courses he may travel through, he will have acquired, light lufficiciit to chufe that which agrees the belt with bis taste and with his talents. Having made thi> choice, another fyltem of education demands h.s immediate attention : 1 mean a profei&onal one. To the want of this it is that we are to attiibute the errors fe vitible in humaH conduft. Weeccul'c the lawyer of duplicity and ignorance ; we reproach the minitter of want of morals and zeal ; the phyfieian of want of knowledge and humanity, and the merchant of want of integrity and prin ciple. The history of every day exhibits the unfortunate mariner fleering with fan cied iecurity for the rock or the (hoal on wh'ich all his profpettsand your speculation pcnlh ; and the account of every battle gives a portrait of ihe thoughtlels soldier revelling t on the furface while the mine advances in secret which is to deltroy the foundations oil which his numerous ariiy (tands. •By a prefellional education such compli cated evils may not only be diminilhed but nearly avoided. From Horace and Quin tilian, Demosthenes and Cicero, the lawyer and 4egillator draw rules and examples of taste and eloquence ; but they must tirll be prepared by Seneca and other moral writers for the reading of their works.— They mult, b) a preliminary knowledge of the human heart, its inclinations and ca prices ; by a certain acquaintance with manners and with prejudices, and by a ha bit of observing attentively both vices and virtue* he able to discover them where they are, and know how to exhibit the true, im partial,pifture to the public in its real light. Physic being a fciencethai cannot be I'ulfi ciently explored ; it is fit, for the happincl's of the human race, that young men of the gre'atefl genius i of the uioft vigorous, the most just & sagacious spirit (houldalone apply themlelves to its Itudy—this truth be comes more manifeft when we exa mine the parti, the delicate and frague springs, of which this machine called the human body is composed To know how to feleft and properly apply the molt efficacious remedies for the remo val of each disorder,& to discover the latent xaufe, can only be the fruit of much talents and application.—Let the parent of the candidate, therefore, for this profeflian be cautious not to ule any compulsion. Let him refleft well that it is an important, a truly important qufOion he is about to de termine. It involves this awiul one, whe ther his son is hereafter to be conlidered the phyfieian or the atTalTin ot society. With | out he be perfeftly qualified he ftould not j make the choice. Arms Ihould not be put ! into the hands of a person who may inflift | wounds which no medicine can reach— j which all the powers of reason will be una i ble to cure ; the youth in the years of rea son mull discover his errors—his mind will refufe to be comforted—-" "1 he spirit of a i man may indure his infirmities, but a wounded spirit who can bear." The mariner requiring less information (liould never be clalTed among the ignorant, r Being a good Mathematician, he ought in i the course of one year to acquire from > Astronomy Navigation and Geography fuf . cient intelligence to circumnavigate the i globe, and bring his hard earned wealth in : l'afety, into the bosom of his country, with ) out fearing the rocky channel or the (hallow , found. The soldier has dill an ealier tra£l to pur i sue." he kas however to study what made r I Turenne fuccefsful, and Conde great .* I ! What gave Saxe viftory and Malbro' re , nown : What bellowed on Walhington ; immortality, and on Warren the Itaried : tomb. / If, while imitating such illuftrioHs names, . he vjould invent, improve, produce, he might become not only a soldier, but a learned man, a refplendant genius—even the benefaflor of his country, if Providence ftiould permit. Of all the profeflious I come from enu merating, none requires more univerlal knowledge than that of the Merchants. He ought to have a perfect notion of the laws and productions of his own country and be equally intimate with the diftinguiflj, ing charafterifti'cs of every other. H« ftiould poflei's a thorough ftatilHcal infor mation, be a Linguist and Piiiloiopher.— His mind should be liberal and vast. His heait ihould not be the slave of avarice, nor that of luxurious excels. He foould be acctidomed to vitw Commerce as a libe ral proiVifion, which binds I'ociety in bonds infinitely more firm than any other whaifo ever, aild consequently regard himfeli as a mong the firft class of his countrymen, and not Hoop to any dishonorable l'pecalation or degrading traffic, which certainly belongs not to his office or charafter. I have deferred till bow to speak of the f Ministers of the Gospel, though whoever n are Christians, with minds humble by devo- q tion mill) give them a Preeminence above J theml'elves, and cotifeft that they hold a « i coniiderable rank in civil and humanized a governments. He who would be a candidate for the Church Ihould not waste his youth, as too j many do, in Itudying Homer, Virgil, Ana creon, Ovid and Catullus, who principally paint the tenderness, the fury, or the volup- ttoufnel's of ".he paflions. Ihe history of j fabulous gods and heroes is surely not a j proper one to form the heart or the under- Handing. He ihould rather turn to that j facrrd History which abounds in examples t of virtue and fublunity. There let him ltudy Chrillianity in its cradle and con template the venerable charattcrs who firfl gave it their unpurch'.fed sup , port. He will find them fubjeft, turn- . j by-turn, to persecution, iinprifonment ( and death. Content to dispense with the j gilded Temple, and endeavoring to emit, , from ti.e dark Civerns into whxh they were , driven by the tyrants of antiquity some fee blefpailis of tb«t light divine which sow , shines refplendant even through this land which was supposed to be far beyond the in- | .. fluence of its beams. It « plrafing to a mind, not loft to refleftion, or lunk in brti- j J tual purl'uits, to follow th fe eai ly pallors of ■ the Church »nd to fee with what humility and zeal they performed their religious I rights, or executed their various duties. 1 The> comforted the nftli&ed—vilited the e sick dried the Orphans ;ind the Widows ' t»ars — carried the alms ot the Church into J the hiding place of the unfortunate, —traver- r led with their bleeding venerable feet the depths of the valley and the (harp summit ; of the mountain in order to diltribute the j knowledge ; the comfort of the faith among ta | the innocent inhabitants ot the fields and of the villages. This Hiltory alfcabouads with the best models for pulpit eloquence. —The influ* 1 encei which St. Paul pofleffid over the pafii ons of his hearers, is evident from this verse taking from his farewell speech to the Ep- , hefian Eiders, which is a continued strain of the pathetic. " And having heard this, they fell upon his neck and kilTrd him grieving mod of all for the words which he uttered that they should see his face no more."—But the (tyle of this Apottle was more than pathetic it ; was commanding sublime, strong. At one time his voice i«uft have resembled the thunder,:it another the music ofthe spheres.. , Hence did the abandoned Feltx trem ble while Agrippa tho' a king and an infi- j del cried out. I " Almost thou pei fuadefl me to be a Chri'tian." Indeed I may venture to appeal to j thofegentlemen are acquainted with, Licero and Demol'rhenes whether there be not much similarity, between their harrangues and the Argumentations of St. Paul, and whether any of the belt orations ancient or modern can vie with much less excels, his celebrated juftifica-! tion to be found in iheAfts. The young Candidate, ihould du y commit it to memory, and repeated by heart. Ihi sudden appeal he will find beautiful. Agrippa believed thou in the Pro phets," and his own as sudden reply, ' I know that thou believed," betrays mitch eloquence and a profound know ledge of the human heart. In no work can any thing bp found so truly sublime so inimitable as what concludes the chapter i have alluded to. Would to God that not only thou out all those who hear me this day were not only almost but altogether, such as I am \ Cave these bonds. Let it not be fufpefted that the study I thus recommend will render the stu dent a bigot, a hypocrite or fedtarift. Every paflage to be found tends to en courage liberality and toleration. —Be- tween God and the heart of man it gives no authority to interfere. It no where fays that religion is to be inculcalated , by violence that it consists in the pofi i tion of the body, the motion of the lips or the elevation of the fight. On the ' contrary it will rather teach him. that it : is formed of the ftritteft praftice of vir -1 tue united to devotion to God and be nevolence to man. And its study will ' teach him to conclude the beautiful - words of Do&or Blair. : O Devotion to thee we owe the highest : improvement of our nature, and much oi - the enjoyment ot our life» Thou art the i fupßort of our virtue and the reft ot oui 1 foul?, in this turbulent world. 1 hou com pote (I the thoughts. Thou calmelt the pal , lions. Thou exalteft the heart. Thy : communicatioas,and thine ojily, are impart- Ed to the low, no less than to the high—to the poor as well as to the rich. In thy pre sence, worldly diftinclions cease ; and un der thy influence worldly sorrows are for gotten. l'hou art tbe balm of th; wounded mind. Thy fan&uary is ever open to the miserable ; fliut only to the unrighteous and impure. Thou beginnefl on earth, the temper ot' heaven. In thee, the hods of AngeU andblefled spirits eternally rejoice. BALTIMORE, November (7. It mud afford real pleasure to every ci tizen «f the state, to know that we have lo rich a treasury as will appear from the fol lowing, taken from a communication made to the general affeinbly of Maryland, by Robert Denny, Esq. and gen. An estimate of the state debt, made up to the fiift of Nov. 'BOO, leaves a balance of £.129,272 13 6 current money, and alio 643.074 dollars 81 cents, in flock of the United States, to the credit of the i'tate of Maryland. The different species of flock are Dots. Cts. 188.759 6 123,650 30 330,635 45 Six per cent Deferred Three per ceat State of the polls in Cecil county, for an election of President and Vica Presi dent. Thomas. G'lpin, Norwich, lft diftri& ,134 5 J Elk ton, 3d do. 20 353 Charleston, 3d do. 132 78 battle Swamp, 4th From Annapolis—November 15. \ « I enclol'e you the mod ijitcrcPing tranf aftion of the ieflion. The old Council and Governor Ogle are continued. Therepub i licans in the house can do nothing at a joint ] i vote. The aristocratic votes of the Senate, ( overrule all their propositions." By the Senate, Nov. 11, 1800. . Centlemen, 1 We propose on Thursday next (if agreea- j ble to your house) to go into a joint ballot for the elettion of a len&tor to represent this , (late in the Senate of the United States, Iter the third day of March next. By order, 1 Wm. GREENE, Clk. House of Delegates. The committee to whom was referred the message of the Senate of the 11th inft. have taken the fame into confideratiofi',, and do thereupon recommend the following mefl'age in answer thereto, viz. By tie House of Delegates, Nov. 13, 1800' Gentleman of ths Senate. Your mefiage of the Uth inft. highly merits and has julUy obtained our ref peftful attention and our mod leriout ' consideration. And could we conGs- ' tently with our ideas of the impreflive duty we owe to our conllituents, we I would willingly accede to your pro i position of proceeding to the Eleftion of a Senator, to represent this State in the Se nate of the United States : But perfuadud as we are, that the interefl of the Republic would be greatly advanced by a reference of this momentous fubjeft, to the confide ' ration of the nex: General Aflembly,we are unwilling at this lime to proceed to the eleftion, the event of which will be obvi "* oufly of such. extenGve and lading import : ance. By order. LEWIS G VSSAWAY, Clk. On tha i'econd reading of the report of the committee appointed to answer the meflage of the Senate of the 1 lth inft. for ppointing a senator to represent this State a the Senate of the Un'ted States, the qurllion was put, that the following be received at an amendment to the laid message. Yeas—3s Nays—4l. The report being read througho*t, the question was put that the House concur therewith. Yeas—42 Nays—3s Wanted to Charter FOR NEW TORK, TWO OR THREE ijljpV E S S E L S, Drawing not more than 8J feet water. Apply to WILL'm G. ROB't C. LATIMER Pine street wharf. in November 19 For Sale, <• Brig WilUam Lying between Mirkct and Chefnut Street# Burthen, 94 tons, carries remarkable well hav ing excellent accommodations,-If not fo'din 3 days, (aid BRIG will take, freight for Boftoa and Newburyport, alf®, one hundred barreh of beef, No. 1 and 4, of the firft order, foal lea ther, candles, handspikes and boards. For freight or paflage or any of the above articles please to apply on board. November 19 if 3^* To be Let, THOSE Large and commedifus, Sellers under theUniverfal Church, in Lumbard, hetwe«n 4th and jth Streets, Lately occupied by Mr.Joh? jit>ge and Co. Ei quire of JohuVenefs North Baft Corner ot Walnut in natcr St,or E. Howell No. 14 North Street- ' N<*v. li. A Boston Play Bill, announcing the Tragedy of DOUGLAS, avers that it is " written by David Hume, Efq ! !—The historian of England did not write plays ,• and the author of Douglas was John Home, a clergyman. John Langdon, the simple Senator from New Hampshire, has written a let ter to Esquire Ringgold, 6f Maryland, and this sagacious epistle is copied into the Aurora. The democratic Knight con gratulates the democratic squire upon the circumstance of " Gentlemen of property and influence, coming forward at this eventful moment, in the common cause of our country." These are "big found- 1 ing words of vanity," master Langdon, but who told you of the gentlemanly qualities of Democracy, or of the proper ty of a beggarly and hungry faction ? It is believed that Jacobin gentility y wealth and influence are equally in nubi bus ; and that the " eventful moment * which you talk of in your sonorous stile, is indeed approaching, when you and ' your afiociates will be consigned to the ! grave of political obfeurity, and not without *s*e chant of a requiem. The »apient senator proceeds, "I have no doubt we shall yet be saved." Here, Mr. L. must certainly be dreaming of that political Millenium, expedted under the Deiftical reign of Mammoth. For, Mr. Jefferfon excepted, no other saviour is adored by Jacobins. This Langdonian letter concludes with repeating some qf the hackneyed stories of Tenche, touching the private conversation of the President of the United States. . "In the conversation held between Mr. Adams, Mr. Taylor, and myfelf, Mr. Adams certainly expressed himfelf (as far as my memory serves me) in the very words mentioned in your letter, viz. That he hoped or elxpefted to fee the day when Mr. Taylor and his friend Mr. Giles would be convinced, that the people of America -would net be happy with* out an hereditary Chief Magijlrate ant Senate—or at le-ajt during life." The composition of the closing para graph of this classical epistle is so curious, so darkly mysterious, so whimfieally am biguous " so iwestly mawkish, and so smoothly dull" that we cannot refill the semptation of quoting it for the benefit of those inquisitive spirits, who wish to be initiated in all state mysteries. Here Mr. A. " certainly expressed himfelf," as far as the weak and treacher ous memory of Johnny Langdon can serve him in the very words mentioned in " 'Squire RinggoLPj letter." This is a beautiful example of that mode of testimony, peculiar to the Irish witnels, so honorably quoted by Junius for tefti- I fy» n g " according to the befl of his knoiu | ledge and belief. 643,074 81 diw Gazette of the United States. PHILADELPHIA, TIIWRSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER, SO. ACCURACY. Unfortunate Accident. At the celebration of the President's Birth-Day, at Portsmouth, just at even ing, the following misfortune happened : —Mr. Greenlief Clark, a sprightly, pro mising son of Jonathan Clark, Esq. of that town, being on a wharf, where he» and a number of his acquaintances had aflembied for the purpose of firing a can non, unhappyly while in the aft of ram ming down cartridge, the piece not be ing properly fpunged, the cartridge took fire and went off, taring his right arm so badly, that he was obliged to have f it cut off a few inches above the elbow, he was otberwife badly burnt, by his clothes taking fire, but being very near the capstan of the wharf, the explosion blew him over into the water, which immediately extinguished the fire ; fortunately no other person was injured. The letter from Lancaster, in this day's Gazette, completely unveils the ob ject of the Democrats, and betrays their fears. We congratulate the Federal Repub lican on the favorable afpett of the elec tion in Maryland and N. Carolina — Adams and Pinckney will certainly be the choice of the people. Cooper's letter ihall be noticed in due time. »* V'.