CRAf I1iavc 6tVor uioii the Altar of Go'd, eternal hostility to every form of Tyranny over the Mind of Man." VoIUSU'C I ! , aadtees TT BH A lJACHEr.(jU.hlnVI3. nr tii Wr.ii m Am "A Highland Laddie h'card of 'war.'' "riio'illfilit waA diirk, the wihila blew UnJ) My fircliy fitu whs blinking; fSays I, I'm almost forty -five, . And wlmtliavo Iliccn thinking! Theft filtall I ucil, or shall I notJ , Khali I I)C lonely ever, ''Ami pjiurn great nature's noljlcst latot I'll he a bachelor never. A bachcloi! micli a Useless thing" , The world Uhb pdsigssing; . None bharc.) the blank within his hedtl, To none he is a blessing. 'Ifhq hn.i wealth tome wish him dcrtilj If poor, he's shunned for ever: IJ'on riches canllot purchase Mis?) I'll be a bachcldr rievtirt Was lovely wdman nol iicMnfi.1 To shard Blir joys and sorrow! To breathe tliii burning brow ofcardj To cltccr the light of morrow! Mutbarhelorf, aftdr nature's Itlwti, lliir dearest tics they sevdr; fCo rhild'cii lisp around his bodj I'll be a bachelor noen They spedk of joys tfld bachelor knotty, "VVltL'n whlc U flowing round him; Hut murk lilm when tile llioriiiiig.diiwns. What dismal thoughts confound him! A pair of tongs without a leg, The snuffers without either, Are not more useless in their wnyj I'll bo a bachelor lictdr'i "OPwIGXlTi-L ESSAY. Fort Tufc Ciilvmiha Df. mock at. On tlio Origin and Progress of thP Arts. Some useful ttrls nuist be nearly coeval with the human race; for food, clothing, antl habitation, even in thc'ir original sim plicity, require some aft. Many other al'ls are of sucli antiquity, as to place the inv'en tora beyond the feacli of tradition. Sever al have gradually crept intB existence, without an inventor. The busy mind, however, nfeustomed to a beginning in things, caiinol rest lilt it find' df imagine a beginning to every art. Uacchui is said to have- invented wine; and Staphylus, the mixing water with wine. . The bow' and nrrow arc ascribed, by tradition, to Scyth ios, son of Jupiter, though a weapon all the v.orldover.'nwinihg' Is so Useful, that It musibcJuwopfwith tJorrio illustrious ih iV.cntor! it was inscribed) by the Egyptians, ilo tficir goddess Ists; by the Greeks, lo Minerva by the Peruvians, lo Mama Ella, wife tclhc first (sovereign Mango Capac; and, by" the Chinese, lo the wife of their cmpdror Yao. Marl; here, by the way, a connection of" ideas: spinning is a female oc cupation, and it must have had a female in ventor. In the luintcr-statc men itfo wholly occu pied .in procuring food, clothing, habitation, and oilier necessaries; and have no time nor zeal for studying, conveniences. The case of the shepherd-slate affords both lime and inclination for useful arts; which arc greatly promoted by numbers who arc re lieved by agriculture ffohi bodily labour. The soil) hy gfadual improvements in hus bandry, affords plenty witli less labour than at first; and thesurplus hands iirc chiploycd, first in useful arts, and next in those of a muscmenU Arts, accordingly, make the quickest progress in a fertile soil, which 'produced plenty witli little labour. Arts flourished daily in Egypt and Chaldea, 'countries very fertile "When men, who originally lived in caves Jiko some wild animals, began lo think of a Indrd commodious habitation) their first riouscs wBro extremely simple": witness the liouscs of the Canadian savages, which "continue so lo this dayi Their houses, "says Charlevoix, arc built with ifiss art, neatness, and solidity, than those of the btaVei's, having neither chimneys nor win dows; a hold only is left m the roof, for admitting light and emitting smoke. That hole must be stopped when it raiiis or snows; and, of course, the lire is ptit oilt, that the inhabitants irfay not bo blinded with smoke. To have passed so many ages in that manner, without thinking of any improve ment, shews how grftatly men nro influen ced hy custom. Tlio blacks of Jamaica arc still more rude in their buildin-'s: their huts niaOOMsitmu Columbia 'cofnty, fa. Saturday, may g, issi. ale erected without ttven a hole in the roof; and accordingly, at home, they brdallio no thing but siiiokdt ItcvdilgQ daily produced hostile weapons; Thd club and the dart arc obvious inven tions ndt so the )ow atid the arrow; and, for that rcasoil, it is not easy td say how that weapon came to be universal. As iron is seldom found in amine lihd othdr metals, it was a latd discovery: at Ihd siege ofTfoy, spears; dafts, and arrows, were headed With bfass. Mencsthcus, who succeeded Theseus in the kingdom bf Alliens, and led fifty ships to the siege of Troy, was repu ted the first who marshalled ilit army in batllo array. Instruments of defence arc mado necessary by those" Of olfcHcc. Triihks bf trees, interlaced with branches, and sup ported with dartln tlltlde the first fortifica tions; fd wliich succeeded a Wall finished with a parapet, for shooting, in safety, ar rows at besieger's; As a parapet covers but lialf the body, holes were left ili the wall: a lKitlcring-ralri was first used by Pericles the Athenian, and perfected by the Carthagcni aiis at the siege of Cades. To oppose that formidable machine, the wall was built with advanced pafapdts, for throwing stones and (ire upon the enemy; which kept them at a distancdt A wooden booth upon wheels, aiid pushed close lo the wall, seettrdd the men who wrought the ballcring-rain. This invention was rendered ineffectual, by sur rounding Ihe wall with a deep and broad ditdll. Besiegers were reduced lo the ne cessity of inventing engines for throwing stdilcs and javelins upon those who occu pied thd advanced parapets, in order to give opportunity for filling up the ditch and an cient histories expatiate upon the powerful operation of the catapults and balista. These engines suggested a new invention for de fence. Instead of circular wall, it was a built with salient angles, like the teeth of a saw, in order that one part might flank another. That form of a wall was after wards improved, by raising rouitd towers upon the salient angles; and the towers were improved by making them square. The ancidnts had no occasion for any form more dompldtc. This being suffi cient for defending against all the missile weapons tit that time known. The inven tion of caliiion required a variation ili mili tary architecture. The first cannons were made of iron bars, forming a concave cyl inder united by rings of copper. The first calititln-balls were of stone, which required a very large aperture. A cannon Was redu ced to a smaller sizo, by usingiron forballs, instead of stone; and that destructive en gine was perfected by making it of cast metal. To resist its force, bastions were invented, horn-works, crown-works, half moons, &c. Sic. and military architecture became a system governed by fundamental principles and general rules. Hut all in vain: it has indeed produced fortifications that have made sieges horribly bloody; but artillery, at the same time, has been carri ed to such perfection, and the art of attack so improved, that, according to the general opinion, no fortification can be rendered impregnable. The only impregnable dc- fcncc'ls good neighbourhoods among weak princes, ready lo unite whenever one' of them is attacked with superior force: and nothing tends more effectually to promote such union, than constant experience that fortifications ought not tobc relied on. With fdspect to itaval architecture, the first vessels were beams joined together and covered with planks, pushed along with loilg poles in shallow water, and drawn by animals in deep water. To these suc ceeded trunks of trees, c'Ut hollow, termed by the Greeks, moxyles. The tidxt were planks joined together in form of a mon oxlc. The thought of imitating a fish ad vanced naval architecture. A prow was constructed in imitation of tho head; a stern, with n moveable holm, in imitation of tho tail; and oars in imitation of the fins. Sails wcro at last added; which invcntionvas so early, that the contriver is unknown. 11c foro the year 1010, ships of war, in Eng land, had no port holes for gum, as at pre PRINTED AND PUHLISIIED BY JOHN S. INGltAM; sent: thdy had only a few Cannons placed on the upper deck. When Homer composed his poems (at ldast, during the Trojan war,) the Greeks ate tile flesh of bulls and of rans, not hav ing acquired ihe art which rd'.idvcs us frbm the necessity of following their examples Kings aiid princes killed and cooked their victuals; spoonssi forks, tabld-cloths-, nap kins, were unknown. They fed sitting, (the cuslom of reclining upon beds being afterwards copied from Asia,) and, like other savages; thdy w'drc grdat caters: At the timd mentioned they had riot chimneys, nor candles, nor lamps; Torches arc frcs quently lnentloncd by Homer, but lamps never. A vas'c was placed upon a tripod, In which Was burned dry wood, for glvirig" light. Locks and kdys Yvdrti ndt cbininbh at that time. Bundles were secttfed with ropds, intricately combined; and hence the famous Gordiail knot; Shoes and stock" ings were not early kndwn among them; nor buttons, nor saddles, iior stirfups. Plutarch reports, that Gracclm' caused stones to be erected along the highways leading from Rome, for the convenience of mounting their horses; for, at that time, stirrups were unknown; llidugii all obvious invention. Linen for shirts Was not used in Rome for many years after th6 govern ment became despotic: even so late as the 8th century, it was not common in Europe. I hales, one of the seven Wise men of Greece, about six hundred years before Christ, invented the following method for measuring the height of an Egyptian, pyra mid, lie watched the progress of the sun, till his body and the shadow were of the same length, and at that instant measured tho shadow of the pyramid; which donse- qucntly gave its height. Aincsis, king of kgyP1! w''o was present at the operation, thought it a Wonderful effect of genius; and the Greeks admired It highly; Geometry must have been in its very cradle at that time. Anaximandcr, some ages before Christ, made the first map of tlid earth, so lar as was then known. About the end of of the thirteenth century, spdctaclcs, for assisting the sight, were invented by Alex ander Spina, a monk of Pisai So useful an invention cannot be too niudh dxtolicd. Ata'period df life when tht! judgment Is in maturity, and reading is of great benefit, the eyes begin to grow dim. One cannot help pitying the condition of bookish men before that invention; many of whom must ' have had their sight greatly impaired, while their appetite for reading was hi vigour. As the origin and progress of writing make a capital article in the present sketch, they must not bo overlooked) To write, or, in other words, to exhibit thoughts to the eye, was early attempted in Egypt, by hieroglyphics: but these were not confined to Egypt: figure's, composed of painted feathers, Were used in Mexico, to express ideas; and, hy such figures, Montezuma re ceived intelligence of tho Spanish invasion. In Peru, the only arithmetical figures known wcro knots of various colours, which served to cast up accounts. The second step nat uially, in the progress of the art of writing, is, to represent eacli word by a mark, term ed a li:ttj:k; which is tho Chinese way of writing. They have about eleven thousand of theso marks, or letters, in common use; and, in matters of science, they employ to the number of sixty thousand. Our way is far more easy aiid commodious: instead of marks, or letters, for words, (wliich are in finite,) we represent, by marks or letters, tho articulate sounds that compose wtirds: these sounds exceed not thirty in number; add, consequently, the satrfo number of marks or letters is sufficient for writing. This was at once td stop from hieroglyph ics, tho most imperfect modo of writing, to letters' representing sounds, the hiosl per fect; for there is no probability that the Chinese modo was over practised in this part of the world. With us, the learning to read is so easy, as to be acquired in child hood; and wo arc ready for tho sciences as soon as the mind is ripe for them: the Chi nese mode, on the contrary, is an insur- mountablc obstruction to knowledge; be cause, it being tho work of a lifetime to read with eascj ho lime remains for study ing the sciences. Our case Was, In some measure, the same at the restoration of learning: it required an age to be familiarized with the Greek and Latin tongues; and too littld time -remained for gathering knowl edge out of their books. The Chinese stand upon a more equal footing with re spect to arts; for these may be acquired by imitation, or oral instruction, without books: The art of writing with letters represent ing sounds is, of all inventions, the most important and the least obvious. The way of writing ih China makes so naturally the second slop ill the progress of the arts, that olif good fortune, in stumbling upon a way so much more perfect, cannot be sufficient ly admired, since, to it wc are indebted for our superiority in literature above the Chi nese. Their way of writing is a fatal ob struction to scich'cc; for it ig so rivettcd, by invctdrate practice, that the difficulty would ndt be greater to make them changd their language than their letters. Hieroglyphics were a sort of writing miserably imperfect, bill as they made a tolerable shift with these letters) (llbWdvdr cumbersome to those who know" better,) they never dreamt of any im provement. Hence it may be averred, with great certainty, that, in China, the sciences though still in ilifaiidyi will forev er continue sd. The art of writing was known in Greece wheii Homer composed his Iliad; for he t .... .:! . . .. t gives, soincwncre, a hint oi it. It was at that time probably in its infancy, and used only forrecor'dirig laws, religious precepts, or other shbrl Wdrksi Cyphers, invented in Ilindostan, were brought into France, from Arabia, about the end of the tenth cen- 'Ur;' - D' THE APPEAHANCI3 GV TlflXGS. Br Old iie.-iriinfetsi A counterfeit looks very much like a golden c'oiri; but there" is a great difference between thdiri, aiid when we" have" fhista. ken the one for the otlicr, wc feel sadly disappointed. It is so witli il thousand things in the world, they arc not halfso val uable as they seem lo bei In tiic days of my youth, when playing with half a dozen of my companions, wo saw something at a distance as bright as a diamond. A high hedge, it deep ditch, and a boggy field, lay between us tiiid thd ob ject wliich had so much excited our atten tion. After tearing oiir clothes aiid running till wc were out df breath, we found iliat which glittered in tho sun's rays like a dia mond, to bo nothing more than a bit of glass a piece of an old broken bottldj Now I will venture to say that you have often given yourself as much trouble as I did, and got nothing better than a piece of broken bottle for your pains; When a young man, I oncd saw a beauti ful blue cloud resting on the side of a very high mountain in Cumberland, called the Shiddaw; and I thought it would be a very pleasant thing to climb up close to it, so I mado tho attempt. 0 how many times did I turn my back to the mountaiil, to rest my self, before I had clambered half way up its rugged sides! ' I did reach the cloud at last, but had not inuch reason to congratu late myself. That which appeared from Keswick vale a beautiful blue cloud, was, when I approached it, nothing more than a thick mist. Not only was it without beau ty, but it hindered mo from seeing any thing that was beautiful. Tho lovely vtilley, atid the magnificent lake beloW me, were com pletely hiddeu from my view, and I came down from the Skiddaw in a much worso temper than I went Up; I was very silly for thus being put out of temper and I must confess that since theii, often has old Hum phrey got into a mist in following out the inclinations of his heart. How has it been with you? What a world of trouble Wd give our selves to attain what is of little value! and disannnintninnt enrL'u nn nnrn. ilm Aiilum of yesterday prevents not the expectation I of to-day destroys not the hope of to mor row. Again i sliy 1iat tilings arc not what tlicv appear, and we willingly allow ourselves to be cheated roifi childhbbu to old afro, bv running after or climbing to Obtain what is any thing but the thing we take it to be. 0 that we could use this world as not aba sing it, remembering that the fashion of it passeth away! But nb! In vain the wise man tells us of the things Wc seek, that "all is vanity aria vexation of spirit." In vain an apostle exhorts its "to set our affections on things above, noton things'dnthc earth."' Disbelieving the assertion of the one, and disregarding the exhortation bf the "other, wc stilij like children-, run after hubbies that lose their brightness t'h'e moment they" arc possessed. But while we thus complain that tilings arc not what they appear, are we ourselves what wc appear to bd? Though I have been speaking df othdf matters; this th6 qUdstiUtt t wanliid b coiric" ttr. This" qu6i tion; brought homo to oiif iicartS, is likd cutting the finger-nail to the quick, taking a thorn out of a tender part) or Irldded touching thd apple of tlid dydj btii it is worth while putting it for ail thai: thhef people may oppose us, but the eloscst method of questioning is, to question oup selves. Are we, then, what wc Appear td be? For if wc are either ignorant of thd evil of otfr own hdarts, br railing against others when wrj art; more gifllty than they are, it is high time that soch ii state of things slibtild'bc 'alteircfi. Were the Searcher of all hearts to put the inquiry to you and to me, "art thoii what thou appearest to be?" w"duld Hot the reply be, "if I justify friyseif, mine own. mouth shall condemn me' if I say I am pert feet, it shall also "IfdVc mc perverse: t will lriy liiy hand Upon my mouth. fllb' CONFESSION OF blib'TIUS; Grotius Was' & great itiah. Iis natural powers were sucli, that at the age of 15, he had made a vast proficiency in polite literature"; arid he pleaded at the bar wheft 17. At the age of lie Was appointed attorney general: He became a public ahi bassador, and wa3 the companion of kirigSt Tbwards the dlose" bf his life, at the aif8 df 02, rdileclirig 6ri his' various pursuits dild engagements, he left this testimony for th6 admonition of tho learned: tflhl Hsittnn pfo sus pefdidi ilihil tigetido I'abonost; that is; "Alas! t have Wasted my whole life in Ia boi'ioUSly ddirig nothing!''' Lest the readef; itt thd end of his days, should be forced lo make the same painful reflection; let him' noW remember what -a greater than Grotius said "One thing is Heedful)" and let the securing of eternal life, according to the directions of the gasp pel, bd lils first, his chief c'OriCcfh; Look to the End. Consider we'll tlid end ih every thing you dothc" e'ftel! not the Immediate results the mdmdntafy grate ideation the' apparent gain or advantage for the time but the end of all your course of conduct; Look on into the future until you elearly sec It and ftot iritagiiie lite consequences afd to terminate in an hour, a day, a week, a month, a year, or even an age. The end the end is far beydhd, in eternity. Few, indeed, iirc file faults or follies of men which rnddt with nd rctribu tion here suffering CdrHes with every vicei as its inseparable companion. But thd end, I repeat, is not now and it is the end I pt'ay ydu to consideh n tl ' il ' Ti Absdnde lessons small pass'ioiis, and id' creases great ones; as the wind extinguishes tapdrs and kindles fires.- tt is impossible that an ill-natured rnin can have a public spirit; fof how should he ove ten thousand men whoever loved one? A Prodigy. An Irishman" recommend ing an excellent milch cdw, said that she would give milk year aftfer year, without having calves; because it'rstn in the breed; as she came of a cow that never had a CALF ! 1