"Catiline," and were printed in the EUROPEAN MAGAZINE for JANUARY 1795. TO HENRY FUSELI, ESQ. R. A. QUEEN-ANN ARTIST fublime! with every talent bleft, Their fhining poignards they at once difplay; Beyond the vifible diurnal fphere: Burft Earth's strong barrier, feek th' abyfs of Hell, Our La Terribil Via, applied by Agoftino Caracci to Michael Angelo. Our danger from thy pious colours fee, Then to the Heav'n of Heav'ns afcend; pourtray Whose matchless Mufe dares fing in strains fublime, Proceed, my friend, a Nation fafely truft, The Bard himself, from his Elyfian bowers, Well pleas'd, fhall fee his fame extend with thine, S. ARCHBISHOP USHER Saw the execution of Charles the Firft from the Countess of Peterborough's houfe near Whitehall: he he fwooned away, and, being carried to his bed, is said to have prophefied what happened in England ever fince. "Oliver Cromwell, out of an humble re fpect to the memory of fo learned and pious "a champion of the Proteftant caufe as this "learned Prelate, iffued an order to the Com"miffioners of the Treasury for two hundred "pounds, to defray the expences of his funeral." -From a MS. Letter in the Bodleian Library. HENRY MARTIN, Esq. (Commonly called HARRY MARTIN,) Said, during the Civil War between Charles the First and his Parliament, "If his Majefty were to "take advice of his gunfmiths and of his powder"men, he would never have Peace." When he drew up the remonftrance of the Parliament, in which it is called a Commonwealth, he said in one part of it, "reftored to its ancient. "Government of Commonwealth." Sir Henry Vane ftood up and reprimanded him, and wondered at his impudence in affirming fuch a notorious lie. He made the motion to call thofe perfons to account, and to turn them out of the House of Commons as enemies to their country and betrayers trayers of the Commonwealth of England, who addreffed Richard Cromwell, and promised to ftand by him with their lives and fortunes. This decided Republican gave the completest testimony that ever was given to the excellence of the character of Charles the Firft, when he faid, in the debate upon King or no King, in 1649, after the execution of Charles, that" if they must have "a King, he had rather have the last than any "Gentleman in England." "This viper," fays Wood in his Athena, "which had been foftered in the bofom of Parlia ment, was against the Parliament itself, and against "all Magistrates, like a fecond Wat Tyler, all Pen " and Inkhorn Men must down. This his levelling doctrine is contained in a Pamphlet, called England's Troubles Troubled,' wherein all "rich men whatfoever are declared enemies to "the mean men of England, and in effect war de"nounced against them. Befides all this, he being "a Colonel, plundered so much wherever he came, "that he was commonly called the Plunder Master "General". "Soon after the Restoration, after one or two "removes from prison to prifon, he was fent to Chepstowe • Abbé Sieyes was asked, when he thought the Revolution in France would end: he replied, in a verfe of the Magnificat, "When the Hungry are filled with good things, and the "Rich are fent empty away." Chepstowe Castle in Monmouthshire, where he " continued another twenty years, not in wanton nefs, riotousness, and villainy, but in confinement, and repentance if he had pleased. Some "time before he died me made this Epitaph by way of Acroftic on himself: "Here or elsewhere (all's one to you or me), 66 My life was worn with ferving you and you, "And death's my pay it seems, and wellcome too, "Revenge destroying but itself, while I "To birds of prey leave my old cage and fly. "Examples preach to the eye, care (then mine fays) "Not how you end, but how you spend your days." Aged 78. Athen. Oxon. Vol. ii. page 494 & 495. " became a Henry Martin," adds Wood, "Gentleman Commoner of Univerfity College, "Oxon, at the age of 15 years, in 1617, where "and in public giving a manifeftation of his pregnant parts, he had the degree of Batchelor "of Arts conferred upon him in the latter end of " 1619." He was a striking inftance of the truth of Roger Afcham's obfervation: "Commonlie," fays he, "men very quick of wit, be very light of condi"tions. In youth they be readie fcoffers, privie "mockers, and ever over-light and merrie. In |