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thought of putting it into the post-office; sometimes, of hiring a person to deliver it. But the confidence which had been reposed in me; the importance of the trust; and my tacit engagement to deliver it personally operated so powerfully on my mind, that after I had rode a few miles, I determined, whatever risk and expense I might incur, to hire a carriage for the purpose, to go to New York as speedily as possible, deliver the letter, and return iminediately. My design, so far as it respected the charge of the letter, was completely accomplished. I delivered it, according to the direction, and my own engagement. I was, however, obliged to remain in New York that night, as the packet boat, in which I had crossed the bay, could not sail till next morning. This was a mortifying circumstance, as I wished to return very expeditiously. The delay was, however, unavoidable. I put up at an inn, Bear the wharf from which the packet was to sail in the morning, and waited for that period with some anxiety.

I thought I had conducted my business with so much caution, that no one acquainted with me had known of my being in the city. I had, however, been noticed by some person who knew me; and, in the evening, to my great surprise, my uncle, whom I have mentioned before, paid me a visit. He treated me affectionately, and with much prudent attention: and, after some time, strenuously urged me to go with him to my father's house; but I firmly refused to comply with his request. At length he told me, that my mother was greatly distressed on account of my absence; and that I should be unkind and undutiful, if I did not see her: This made a strong impression upon me. I resolved, therefore, to spend a short time with her, and then return to my lodgings, The meeting which I had with my dear and tender parent was truly affecting to me. Every thing that passed, evinced the great affection she had for me, and the sorrow into which my departure from home had plunged her. After I had been some time in the house, my father unexpectedly came in and my embarrassment, under these circumstances, may easily be conceived. It was, however, instantly removed, by his approaching me in the most affectionate manner. He saluted me very tenderly; and expressed great satisfaction on seeing me again. Every degree of resentment was immediately dissipated. I felt myself happy, in perceiv ing the pleasure which my society could afford to persons so intimately connected with me, and to whom I was so much indebted. We spent the evening together in love and harmony: and I abandoned entirely, without a moment's hesitation, the idea of leaving a house and family, which were now dearer to me than ever.

He resumed his studies under the charge of a private tutor, and his father at last granted him permission to pursue the profession of his choice. He was a fellow student with John Jay; was admitted and commenced practice with good success, which continued until the commencement of the American Revolution, when finding nothing to do in the courts, and wishing to recruit his health, he retired with his wife (he had become a married man some years before) to Islip, Long Island. Here he remained four years, and then becoming tired of country sports and comparative inaction, returned to the city and entered into mercantile business with such success, that at the close of the war he found himself possessed of a handsome property. He retired from business to a beautiful country-seat, Bellevue, then a few

miles from the city, but long since included in its limits, where he resided for three years. He was then forced to leave this pleasant home in quest of health. After passing some time with the Moravians at Bethlehem, he sailed to England by the advice of his physicians, in order to avoid the rigors of a New York winter. His sojourn was not designed to be extended beyond a year; but, though he earnestly desired to return to his native country, the state of his health would not permit the change, and he passed the remainder of his long life in England, at a small country-seat in the vicinity of York. The disease with which he was afflicted was a weakness in the lower limbs, which precluded him from walking, and after a time from any exercise whatever. His Christian fortitude and cheerfulness, however, enabled him to bear up against this calamity: and just at the time when his life seemed about to become useless to himself, it began to be pre-eminently useful to others. With a well educated and active mind, he naturally turned to literature as a pursuit, and he has recorded the beneficial results to his health which this course produced.

In the course of my literary labours, I found that the mental exercise which accompanied them, was not a little beneficial to my health. The motives which excited me to write, and the objects which I hoped to accomplish, were of a nature calculated to cheer the mind, and to give the animal spirits a salutary impulse. I am persuaded, that if I had suffered my time to pass away, with little or no employment, my health would have been still more impaired, my spirits depressed, and perhaps my life considerably shortened. I have therefore reason to deem it a happiness, and a source of gratitude to Di. vine Providence, that I was enabled, under my bodily weakness and confinement, to turn my attention to the subjects which have, for so many years, afforded me abundant occupation. I think it is incumbent upon us, whatever may be our privations, to cast our eyes around, and endeavour to discover, whether there are not some means yet left us, of doing good to ourselves and to others; that our lights may, in some degree, shine in every situation, and, if possible, be extinguished only with our lives. The quantum of good which, under such circumstances, we do, ought not to disturb or affect us. If we perform what we are able to perform, how little soever it may be, it is enough; it will be acceptable in the sight of Him, who knows how to estimate exactly all our actions, by comparing them with our disposition and ability.

He

His debut in literature was a modest one. prepared a work, The Power of Religion on the Mind, giving the testimony of many eminent men "in recommendation of religion, as the great promoter of our happiness here and hereafter,” and printed five hundred copies at his own expense. which he presented anonymously to the principal inhabitants of the vicinity. It was so well received that the author was induced to publish it in the ordinary manner. It met with a large sale; other editions were called for, and on the issue of the sixth, he was induced to put his name to the title-page.

His next work was the English Grammar. This originated in the following manner. A school had been established in York for the education of young ladies. Mr. Murray was desirous that the

close study of the English language should form a portion of the course pursued. As the young teachers at first employed themselves needed instruction in this branch of knowledge, he assembled them in his own house for oral instruction. They found themselves so much benefited by his exertions, that they urged him to write an English grammar for the use of their pupils. This he consented to do. The work was published in 1795, and was followed by a volume of exercises, and a key explanatory of their construction. These were published in 1797, and an abridgment, by the author, of his grammar for the use of schools appeared the same year.

The series was completed by the issue of a volume of extracts from the best authors of the language, under the title of the English Reader. Ile soon after published a volume of similar character devoted to French literature.

The author's autobiography* closes with the year 1809. It was continued by the Friend to whom it was addressed, Elizabeth Frank, to the close of his long life of 81 years, February 16, 1826. His wife, to whom he was tenderly attached, survived him. They had no children. His will provided for the investment of his property, after the death of his wife, in the hands of trustees in the city of New York, and the expenditure of its yearly income

In liberating black people who may be held in slavery, assisting them when freed, and giving their descendants or the descendants of other black persons, suitable education; in promoting the civilization and instruction of the Indians of North America; in the purchase and distribution of books tending to promote piety and virtue, and the truth of Christianity, and it is his wish that "The Power of Religion on the Mind, in Retirement, Affliction, and at the Approach of Death," with the author's latest corrections and improvements, may form a considerable part of those books; and in assisting and relieving the poor of any description, in any manner that may be judged proper, especially those who are sober, industrious, and of good character.

The lines "To my Wife" have been generally attributed to Lindley Murray. They were published in the Southern Literary Messenger, for October, 1836, from a manuscript copy, endorsed Lindley Murray to his Wife, "apparently written as far back as 1783," found among a parcel of letters from the sisters of the grammarian to a lady friend. They, however, appear, with the exception of the last stanza, in the Weccamical Chaplet, a selection of original poetry, comprising smaller Poems, serious and comic; classical trifles; sonnets, inscriptions, and epitaphs; songs and ballads; mock heroics; epigrams, fragments, &c. Edited by George Huddesford. Cr. 8vo., pp. 223, 6s. bds. Leigh & Sotheby, 1805; a collection which derives its name from the circumstance, that all its contributors were educated at Winchester school, founded by William of Wickham. The Poem in question, with the title, "Song-Mutual Love," is quoted as one of the novelties, or new poems, of this publication in the Monthly Review, for February, 1806; and is stated to be, with many of

* Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Lindley Murray, in a Series of Letters, written by himself; with a preface, and a continuation of the Memoirs. By Elizabeth Frank. New York. 1827.

the best picces of the volume, by Huddesford, who is spoken of as a "legitimate (literary) descendant of Mat Prior."

Huddesford published in 1801, Poems, including Salmagundi, Topsy Turvy, Bubble and Squeak, and Crambe Repetita, Lond. 1801. 2 vols. 8vo. 12s. Most of these had previously appeared in a separate form. The shorter pieces are interspersed with poems by his friends. In 1805, he published his Champignons du Diable, or Imperial Mushrooms, a mock heroic poem in five cantos; including a Conference between the Pope and the Devil, on his Holiness' Visit to Paris, illustrated with Notes. 12mo. (Noticed in Monthly Review, 38, p. 272.)

Huddesford's Poems show great ease and spirit in versification, with abundant wit. He seems to have thrown off effusions on subjects of the day, being probably a gentleman of easy fortune, writing for amusement. His Chaplet is dedicated by permission to Lord Loughborough: and among his school associates at Winchester were the present Archbishop of Canterbury, and other distinguished persons.* His claim to the verses in question appears superior to that of Murray, but neither deserves any greater praise than that of an adapter, as the lines in question are taken with slight alteration from the song, "Matrimonial Happiness," by John Lapraik, a Scotchman, who was born in 1727; published a volume of Poems in 1778; and died the keeper of the postoffice at the village of Muirkirk, in 1807. Burns hearing the song sung at a "rockin, to ca' the crack and weave the stockin,” was so struck with its beauty, that he addressed a rhyming epistle to the author. In it he says,

There was ae sang amang the rest,
Aboon them a'it pleased me best,
That some kind husband had addrest
To some sweet wife;

It thrill'd the heart strings through the breast,
A' to the life.

I've scarce heard ought described sae weel,
What generous manly bosoms feel;
Thought I, can this be Pope, or Steele,
Or Beattie's work?

They tould me 'twas an odd kind chiel
About Muirkirk.

The letter, as it well might, led to a correspondence, which includes two other poetical Epistles by Burns, between the poets. Burns says that Lapraik "often told him that he composed the song one day when his wife had been fretting o'er their misfortunes," which consisted in the loss of their small estate at Dalfram, near Muirkirk; "which little property he was obliged to sell, in consequence of some connexion, as security, for some persons concerned in that villanous bubble, The Ayr Bank."

Having thus traced the poem to the original source, we present it in its successive stages.

MATRIMONIAL HAPPINESS.

[By John Lapraik.] When I upon thy bosom lean,

And fondly clasp thee a' my ain,

* Southern Lit. Messenger, April, 1887.

+ Chambers's Life and Works of Burns, i. 115, 119, 153. Book of Scottish Song, p. 301.

I glory in the sacred ties

That make us one, wha ance were twain. A mutual flame inspires us baith,

The tender look, the meltin kiss:
E'en years shall ne'er destroy our love,
But only gi'e us change o' bliss.
Ha'e I a wish? It's a' for thee!

I ken thy wish is me to please;
Our moments pass sae smooth away,

That numbers on us look and gaze; Weel pleased they see our happy days, Nor envy's sel' finds aught to blame; And aye, when weary cares arise,

Thy bosom still shall be my hame.
I'll lay me there and tak' my rest;

And, if that aught disturb my dear,
I'll bid her laugh her cares away,
And beg her not to drop a tear.
Ha'e I a joy it's a' her ain!

United still her heart and mine;
They're like the woodbine round the tree,
That's twined till death shall them disjoin.

SONG-MUTUAL love.

[From the Weccamical Chaplet.] When on thy bosom I recline, Enraptur'd still to call thee mine,

To call thee mine for life,

I glory in the sacred ties,
Which modern wits and fools despise,
Of husband and of wife.

One mutual flame inspires our bliss,
The tender look, the melting kiss.

Even years have not destroyed;
Some sweet sensation ever new,
Springs up, and proves the maxim true,
That love can ne'er be cloy'd.

Have I a wish? 'tis all for thee.
Hast thou a wish? 'tis all for me.
So soft our moments move,
That angels look with ardent gaze,
Well pleased to see our happy days,

And bid us live and love.

If cares arise and cares will come,-
Thy bosom is my softest home;

I'll full me there to rest;
And is there aught disturbs my fair?
I'll bid her sigh out every care,

And lose it in my breast.

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THE literary reputation of Jay is incidental to his political career, and attaches to the national state papers which he sent forth from the Continental Congress, which did much to prepare the way for American liberty, and to his contributions to the Federalist, by which he assisted in permanently securing that liberty which he was one of the first to promote. His "Address to the people of Great Britain," in 1774, called forth the admiration of Jefferson. It is marked by moral earnestness and patriotic fervor, quali

ties shared by his address to the inhabitants of Canada and the people of Ireland. The appeal

of the Convention of the State of New York to the people in 1776, and the address of Congress to the country in 1799, meeting the financial condition of the times, and his Address to the people of the State of New York, in support of the adoption of the Constitution, are his other chief productions of this kind. He wrote five papers of the Federalist; the second, third, fourth, and fifth, on Dangers from foreign force and influence, and the sixty-fourth on the treatymaking power of the senate. He would have furnished others had he not received an injury in the interim, in his vindication of the law in the Doctors' mob of the city of New York.

Jonn Jarg

Of Huguenot descent, Jay was a native of the city of New York, born December 12, 1745, a graduate of Columbia College, a delegate to the first revolutionary Congress at the age of twentyeight, three years later Chief Justice of his State, Minister of Spain and negotiator of the peace with Great Britain, Secretary of State, Chief Justice of the United States, Governor of his own State: abundant honors and employment, which still left him nearly thirty years of rural retirement at Bedford, where he died May 17, 1829, at the age of eighty-four. Moral worth and sober judgment have had no finer exemplification in our best political annals. His life, written by his son William Jay, contains a Selection from his Correspondence.

FROM THE ADDRESS OF THE NEW YORK CONVENTION, 1776. "Under the auspices and direction of Divine Providence, your forefathers removed to the wilds and wilderness of America. By their industry, they made it fruitful-and by their virtue, a happy country. And we should still have enjoyed the blessings of peace and plenty, if we had not forgotten the source from which these blessings flowed; and permitted our country to be contaminated by the many shameful vices which have prevailed among us.

"It is a well known truth, that no virtuous people were ever oppressed; and it is also true, that a Scourge was never wanting to those of an opposite character. Even the Jews, those favourites of Heaven, met with the frowns, whenever they forgot the smiles of their benevolent Creator. By ty. rauts of Egypt, of Babylon, of Syria, and of Rome, they were severely chastised; and those tyrants themselves, when they had executed the vengeance of Almighty God, their own crimes bursting on their own heads, received the rewards justly due to their violation of the sacred rights of mankind. You were born equally free with the Jews, and have as good a right to be exempted from the arbitrary domination of Britain, as they had from the invasions of Egypt, Babylon, Syria, or Rome. But they, for their wickedness, were permitted to be scourged by the latter; and we, for our wickedness, are scourged by tyrants as cruel and implacable as those. Our case, however, is peculiarly distinguished from theirs. Their enemies were strangers, unenlightened, and bound to them by no

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of reason and of nature; or the great duties they owe to their God, themselves, and their posterity, have any effect upon them-if neither the injuries they have received, the prize they are contending for, the future blessings or curses of their children the applause or the reproach of all man

ties of gratitude or consanguinity. Our enemies, on the contrary, call themselves Christians. They are of a nation and people bound to us by the strongest ties. A people, by whose side we have fought and bled; whose power we have contributed to raise; who owe much of their wealth to our industry, and whose grandeur has been augmented by our ex-kind-the approbation or displeasure of the Great ertions.

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"You may be told that your forts have been taken; your country ravaged; and that your armies have retreated; and that, therefore, God is not with you. It is true, that some forts have been taken, that our country hath been ravaged, and that our Maker is displeased with us. But it is also true, that the King of Heaven is not, like the king of Britain, implacable. If we turn from our sins, He will turn from his anger. Then will our arms be crowned with success, and the pride and power of our enemies, like the arrogance and pride of Nebuchadnezzar, will vanish away. Let a general reformation of manners take place-let universal charity, public spirit, and private virtue be inculcated, encouraged, and practised. Unite in preparing for a vigorous defence of your country, as if all depended on your own exertions. And when you have done all things, then rely upon the good Providence of Almighty God for success, in full confidence that without his blessing, all our efforts will inevitably fail.

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"Cease, then, to desire the flesh-pots of Egypt, and remember her task-masters and oppression. No longer hesitate about rejecting all dependence on a king who will rule you with a rod of iron: freedom is now in your power-value the heavenly gift: remember, that if you dare to neglect or despise it, you offer an insult to the Divine bestower-nor despair of keeping it. After the armies of Rome had been repeatedly defeated by Hannibal, that imperial city was besieged by this brave and experienced general, at the head of a numerous and victorious army. But, so far were her glorious citizens from being dismayed by the loss of so many battles, and of all their country-so confident were they in their own virtue and the protection of Heaven, that the very land on which the Carthaginians were encamped, was sold at public auction for more than the usual price. These heroic citizens disdained to receive his protections, or to regard his proclamations. They invoked the protection of the Supreme Being-they bravely defended their city with undaunted courage-they repelled the enemy and recovered their country. Blush, then, ye degenerate spirits, who give all over for lost, because your enemies have marched through three or four counties in this and a neighbouring State-ye who basely fly to have the yoke of slavery fixed on your necks, and to swear that you and your children shall be slaves for ever.

"Rouse, brave citizens! Do your duty like men; and be persuaded that Divine Providence will not permit this western world to be involved in the horrors of slavery. Consider, that from the earliest ages of the world, religion, liberty, and reason have been bending their course towards the setting sun The holy gospels are yet to be preached in these western regions; and we have the highest reason to believe that the Almighty will not suffer slavery and the gospel to go hand in hand. It cannot, it will not be.

"But if there be any among us, dead to all sense of honour, and love of their country; if deaf to all the calls of liberty, virtue, and religion; if forgetful of the magnanimity of their ancestors, and the happiness of their children; if neither the examples nor the success of other nations-the dictates

Judge-or the happiness or misery consequent upon their conduct, in this and a future state, can move them; then let them be assured, that they deserve to be slaves, and are entitled to nothing but anguish and tribulation. Let them banish from their remembrance the reputation, the freedom, and the happiness they have inherited from their forefathers. Let them forget every duty, human and divine; remember not that they have children: and beware how they call to mind the justice of the Supreme Being: let them go into captivity, like the idolatrous and disobedient Jews; and be a reproach and a by-word among the nations. But we think better things of you, we believe and are persuaded that you will do your duty like men, and cheerfully refer your cause to the great and righteous Judge. If success crown your efforts, all the blessings of freemen will be your reward. If you fall in the contest, you will be happy with God in heaven."

BENJAMIN RUSH.

THE benevolent and ingenious Dr. Benjamin Rush, the friend of Franklin, was born on his father's farm near Philadelphia, December 24, 1745. One of his ancestors, John Rush, a captain of horse under Cromwell, emigrated from England to the state among its first settlers. In his boyhood he was fortunate, after the death of his father, in being placed under the instruction of his aunt's husband, Dr. Finley, afterwards President of Princeton, then at Nottingham, a country town in Maryland, remarkable for the simplicity and purity of its people. At fourteen he entered the College at Princeton, then presided over by the eloquent and patriotic Davies. He was graduated the next year, studied medicine with Dr. Redman, translated the aphorisms of Hippocrates, and wrote a Eulogy on the Rev. Gilbert Tennent, the associate of Whitefield, at Philadelphia, passed to Edinburgh, where he took his degree in 1768, returning the next year to America after a residence in London and Paris. He then became connected with the College of Philadelphia as Lecturer on Chemistry, and afterwards, when that institution became the University of Pennsylvania, as a Professor of the Institutes and Practice of Medicine, delivering courses of medical lectures for fortyfour years. His theories, and the story of his success in the treatment of the yellow fever of 1793, in which he derived aid from the acumen of Dr. Mitchell of Virginia,* of which he published an account in 1794, belong to the annals of medical science.

His political principles were displayed in his zeal on the breaking out of the Revolution, when

John Mitchell, an Englishman, Fellow of the Royal Society, settled in Virginia as physician about 1700, wrote on botany, and also an Essay on the Causes of the Different Colours of People of Different Climates, attributing the variation to climate, published in the Philosophical Transactions. His paper on the Yellow Fever of Virginia, in MS., was communi. cated by Franklin to Rush, who made one of its hints on the use of purgatives, the basis of his medical practice in that disease. He died about 1750.-Ramsay's Eulogy on Rush. Thacher's Med. Biog. Miller's Retrospect, 1. 318.

he sat in Congress and signed the Declaration of Independence. He bore a medical appointment in the military service. In 1787 he was a member of the State Convention for the adoption of the Federal Constitution. In the latter years of his life he held the government appointment of Treasurer of the Mint. He was greatly honored and esteemed at home and abroad. His death occurred at Philadelphia, April 19, 1813, in his sixty-eighth year. Jefferson, writing to John Adams the ensuing month, says, "Another of our friends of seventy-six is gone, my dear sir, another of the co-signers of the Independence of our country: and a better man than Rush could not have left us, more benevolent, more learned, of finer genius, or more honest."

Of his numerous professional writings, his Medical Inquiries and Observations form a series of four volumes. This work, which was published in a third edition, revised and enlarged by the author, in Philadelphia, in 1809, with a number of special medical topics, includes the Inquiry into the Cause of Animal Life, the Natural History of Medicine among the North American Irdians, the Influence of Physical Causes upon the Moral Faculty, a paper On the State of the Body and Mind in Old Age, and the ingenious Account of the Influence of the Military and Political Erents of the American Revolution upon the Human Body.*

His Medical Inquiries and Observations upon the Diseases of the Mind, following the same general title, form another volume, which appeared in 1812, not long before his death; a book which is of interest to the general reader by the variety of its topics and its frequent personal anecdotes.

His reading was various, and all brought to bear on his medical studies. It was his constant object to popularize and render attractive the principles of medicine. His Introductory Lectures to Courses of Lectures upon the Institutes and Practice of Medicine, connect many important moral topics with the science which he discussed.

There is a pleasant early volume of his Essays, Literary, Moral, and Philosophical, collected by him in an octavo, in 1798, chiefly from his papers in the Museum and Columbian Magazine of Philadelphia. It is a favorable display of his tastes and powers. His habits of intellectual industry were ingenious and unceasing. He was greatly influenced by the example of Franklin, of whose conversation he meditated writing a volume, an undertaking which it is much to be regretted he did not execute. He was always in company with a book-if not a written volume, at least, as his eulogist Dr. Ramsay remarked, the book of nature. He kept with him a notebook, in one part of which he inserted facts, in another, ideas and reflections, as they arose in his own mind, or were the suggestions of others. He advised his pupils to lay every person they met with in stage-coaches, packets, or elsewhere, under contribution for facts in the physical sciences. It was a saying of his, which reminds

Corvisart, in his Essay on the Diseases and Organic Lesions of the Heart and great Vessels, notices the increase of affections of that nature under the excitement of the French Revolution.

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Benjamin Reesh

one of his free use of the lancet, "that ideas, whether acquired from books or by reflection, produced a plethora in the mind, which can only be relieved by depletion from the pen or tongue.' His judgment was not, however, always equally sound, his restless inquisitiveness of knowledge being sometimes at fault. The Rev. Dr. Staughton, who delivered a funeral sermon on his death, said, "His intellect was a Columbus, mistaking sometimes the nature and extent of discovery, but delighting in the voyage, calm, persevering, and successful." One of these false discoveries in intellectual geography, was the notion expressed in his Observations on the Study of the Latin and Greek Languages, of the worthlessness of that branch of education. His zeal carried him so far on this point, as to advance the thesis, "the cultivation of these languages is a great obstacle to the cultivation and perfection of the English language."

Schoolboys had in him a good friend. His paper On the Amusements and Punishments proper for Schools resolutely opposes corporal punishment, as his Essay on the Punishment of Crimes by Death, does hanging, for he thought the best means of prevention to be, "by living, and not by dead examples." His Paradise of Negro Slaves-A Dream, the vision appended to his notice of the Life of Anthony Benezet, is a dramatic and highly pathetic appeal for humanity to the African. His benevolence was shown in his efforts to improve the condition of prisons; and his practical Christianity, by the disposition which he made of his Sunday fees. He gave them entirely to objects of charity. His generosity led him, in the yellow fever time, to communicate freely to the public the remedies, the success of which had brought him a great accession of practice. When he received five thou

He thought the study of grammar was too early forced upon the attention of children. He recommended geography and natural history as primary studies. "By making natural history the first study of a boy," says he, with great beauty, "we imitate the conduct of the first teacher of man. The first lesson that Adam received from his Maker in Paradise, was upon Natural History."

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