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A WARNING.

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On fair as heaven and chaste as light!
Did nature mould thee all so bright,
That thou shouldst e'er be brought to weep
O'er languid virtue's fatal sleep,
O'er shame extinguish'd, honor fled,
Peace lost, heart wither'd, feeling dead?

No, no a star was born with thee,
Which sheds eternal purity.
Thou hast, within those sainted eyes,
So fair a transcript of the skies,
In lines of light such heavenly lore,
That man should read them and adore.
Yet have I known a gentle maid
Whose mind and form were both array'd
In nature's purest light, like thine ;-
Who wore that clear, celestial sign,
Which seems to mark the brow that's fair
For destiny's peculiar care:
Whose bosom too, like Dian's own,
Was guarded by a sacred zone,
Where the bright gem of virtue shone;
Whose eyes had, in their light, a charm
Against all wrong, and guile, and harm.
Yet, hapless maid, in one sad hour,
These spells have lost their guardian power;
The gem has been beguiled away;
Her eyes have lost their chast'ning ray;
The modest pride, the guiltless shame,
The smiles that from reflection came,
All, all have fled, and left her mind

A faded monument behind;
The ruins of a once pure shrine,
No longer fit for guest divine.

Oh! 'twas a sight I wept to see-
Heaven keep the lost one's fate from thee!

то

"Tis time, I feel, to leave thee now, While yet my soul is something free; While yet those dangerous eyes allow

One minute's thought to stray from thee

Oh! thou becom'st each moment dearer; Every chance that brings me nigh thee, Brings my ruin nearer, nearer,

I am lost, unless I fly thee.

Nay, if thou dost not scorn and hate me, Doom me not thus so soon to fall; Duties, fame, and hopes await me,But that eye would blast them all!

For, thou hast heart as false and cold
As ever yet allured or sway'd,
And couldst, without a sigh, behold

The ruin which thyself had made.

Yet, could I think that, truly fond,
That eye but once would smile on me,
Ev'n as thou art, how far beyond

Fame, duty, wealth, that smile would be!

Oh! but to win it, night and day,

Inglorious at thy feet reclined, I'd sigh my dreams of fame away,

The world for thee forgot, resign'd.

But no, 'tis o'er, and thus we part,

Never to meet again-no, never. False woman, what a mind and heart Thy treach'ry has undone forever!

WOMAN.

AWAY, away-you're all the same,

A smiling, flutt'ring, jilting throng; And, wise too late, I burn with shame, To think I've been your slave so long

Slow to be won, and quick to rove, From folly kind, from cunning loath, Too cold for bliss, too weak for love,

Yet feigning all that's best in both;

Still panting o'er a crowd to reign,—

More joy it gives to woman's breast To make ten frigid coxcombs vain, Than one true, manly lover blest.

Away, away-your smile's a curse-
Oh! blot me from the race of men,
Kind pitying Heaven, by death or worse,
If e'er I love such things again.

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1 In Plutarch's Essay on the Decline of the Oracles, Cleombrotus, one of the interlocutors, describes an extraordinary man whom he had met with, after long research, upon the banks of the Red Sea. Once in every year, this supernatural personage appeared to mortals and conversed with them; the rest of his time he passed among the Genii and the Nymphs. Hepi тηv spv0рav Jadaooav cúpov, avoparois ανά παν ετος άπαξ εντυγχάνοντα, ταλλα δε συν ταις νύμφαις, νομασι και δαίμοσι, ὡς ἔφασκε. He spoke in a tone not fur removed from singing, and whenever he opened his lips, a fragrance filled the place: φθεγγομένου δε τον τόπον ευωδια κατείχε, του στόματος ήδιστον αποπνέοντος. From him Cleombrotus learned the doctrine of a plurality of worlds.

2 The celebrated Janus Dousa, a little before his death, imagined that he heard a strain of music in the air. See the poein of Heinsius, “In harmoniam quam paulo ante obitum audire sibi visus est Dousa." Page 501.

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A

VISION OF PHILOSOPHY.

"TWAS on the Red Sea coast, at morn, we met The venerable man ;' a healthy bloom Mingled its softness with the vigorous thought That tower'd upon his brow; and, when he spoke, 'Twas language sweeten'd into song-such holy

sounds

As oft, they say, the wise and virtuous hear,
Prelusive to the harmony of heaven,
When death is nigh; and still, as he unclosed
His sacred lips, an odor, all as bland
As ocean-breezes gather from the flowers
That blossom in elysium, breathed around.
With silent awe we listen'd, while he told
Of the dark veil which many an age had hung
O'er Nature's form, till, long explored by man,
The mystic shroud grew thin and animous,
And glimpses of that heavenly form shone thro':-
Of magic wonders, that were known and taught
By him (or Cham or Zoroaster named)
Who mused amid the mighty cataclysm,
O'er his rude tablets of primeval lore ;*
And gathering round him, in the sacred ark,
The mighty secrets of that former globe,
Let not the living star of science sink
Beneath the waters, which ingulf'd a world!-
Of visions, by Calliope reveal'd

To him, who traced upon his typic lyre
The diapason of man's mingled frame,
And the grand Doric heptachord of heaven.
With all of pure, of wondrous and arcane,
Which the grave sons of Mochus, many a night,

of the deluge, and transmit the secrets of antediluvian knowledge to his posterity. See the extracts made by Bayle, in his article, Cham. The identity of Cham and Zoroaster depends upon the authority of Berosus, (or rather the impostor Annins,) and a few more such respectable testimonies. See Naudé's Apologie pour les Grands Hommes, &c., chap. viii., where he takes more trouble than is necessary in refuting this gratuitous supposition.

5 Chamum à posteris hujus artis admiratoribus Zoroastrum, seu vivum astrum, propterea fuisse dictum et pro Deo habitum.-Bochart. Geograph. Sacr. lib. iv. cap. 1.

Orpheus.-Paulinus, in his Hebdomades, cap. 2, lib. iii., has endeavored to show, after the Platonists, that man is a diapason, or octave, made up of a diatesseron, which is his soul, and a diapente, which is his body. Those frequent allusions to music, by which the ancient philosophers illustrated their sublime theories, must have tended very much to elevate the character of the art, and to enrich it with associations of the grandest and most interesting nature. See a preceding note, for their ideas upon the harmony of the spheres. Heraclitus compared the mixture of good and evil in this world to the blended varieties of harmony in a musical instrument, (Plutarch. de Animæ Procreat. ;) and Euryphamus, the Pythagorean, in a fragment preserved by Stobæus, describes human life, in its perfection, as a sweet and well-tuned lyre. Some of the ancients were so fanciful as to suppose that the

Told to the young and bright-hair'd visitant
Of Carmel's sacred mount.'-Then, in a flow
Of calmer converse, he beguiled us on

operations of the memory were regulated by a kind of musical cadence, and that ideas occurred to it "per arsin et thesin," while others converted the whole man into a mere harmonized machine, whose motion depended upon a certain tension of the body, analogous to that of the strings in an instrument. Cicero indeed ridicules Aristoxenus for this fancy, and says, "Let him teach singing, and leave philosophy to Aristotle;" but Aristotle himself, though decidedly opposed to the harmonic speculations of the Pythagoreans and Platonists, could sometimes condescend to enliven his doctrines by reference to the beauties of musical science; as, in the treatise Περι κοσμου attributed to him, Καθαπερ δε εν χορώ, κορυφαίου κατάρξαντος, κ. τ. λ.

The Abbé Batteux, in his inquiry into the grine of the Stoics, attributes to those philosophers the same mode of illustration. "L'âme étoit cause active moitiv airios; le corps cause passive de тov naoxei :—l'une agissant dans l'autre ; et y prenant, par son action même, un caractère, des formes, des modifications, qu'elle n'avoit pas par elle-même; à peu près comme l'air, qui, chassé dans un instrument de musique, fait connoître, par les différens sons qu'il produit, les différentes modifications qu'il y reçoit." See a fine simile founded upon this notion in Cardinal Polignac's poem, lib. 5, v. 734.

1 Pythagoras is represented in Iamblichus as descending | with great solemnity from Mount Carmel, for which reason the Carmelites have claimed him as one of their fraternity. This Mochus or Moschus, with the descendants of whom Pythagoras conversed in Phoenicia, and from whom he derived the doctrines of atomic philosophy, is supposed by some to be the same with Moses. Huett has adopted this idea, Démonstration Evangélique, Prop. iv. chap. 2, § 7; and Le Clerc, among others, has refuted it. See Biblioth. Choisie, tom. i. p. 75. It is certain, however, that the doctrine of atoms was known and promulgated long before Epicurus. "With the fountains of Democritus," says Cicero," the gardens of Epicurus were watered ;" and the learned author of the Intellectual System has shown, that all the early philosophers, till the time of Plato, were atomists. We find Epicurus, however, boasting that his tenets were new and unborrowed, and perhaps few among the ancients had any stronger claim to originality. In truth, if we examine their schools of philosophy, notwithstanding the peculiarities which seem to distinguish them from each other, we may generally observe that the difference is but verbal and trifling; and that, among those various and learned heresies, there is scarcely one to be selected, whose opinions are its own, original and exclusive. The doctrine of the world's eternity may be traced through all the sects. The continual metempsychosis of Pythagoras, the grand periodic year of the Stoics, (at the conclusion of which the universe is supposed to return to its original order, and commence a new revolution,) the successive dissolution and combination of atoms maintained by the Epicureans all these tenets are but different imitations of the same general belief in the eternity of the world. As explained by St. Austin, the periodic year of the Stoics disagrees only so far with the idea of the Pythagoreans, that instead of an endless transmission of the soul through a variety of bodies, it restores the same body and soul to repeat their former round of existence, so that the "identical Plato, who lectured in the Academy of Athens, shall again and again, at certain intervals, during the lapse of eternity, appear in the same Academy and resume the same functions:"sic eadem tempora temporaliumque rerum volumina repeti, ut v. g. sicut in isto sæculo Plato philosophus in urbe Athe

Through many a maze of Garden and of Porch,
Through many a system, where the scatter'd light
Of heavenly truth lay, like a broken beam

niensi, in eâ scholâ quæ Academia dicta est, discipulos docuit, ita per innumerabilia retro sæcula, multum plexis quidem intervallis, sed certis, et idem Plato, et eadem civitas, eademque schola, iidemque discipuli repetiti et per innumerabilia deinde sæcula repetendi sint.-De Civitat. Dei, lib. xii. cap. 13. Vanini, in his dialogues, has given us a similar explication of the periodic revolutions of the world. "Eâ de causâ, qui nunc sunt in us? ritus, centies millies fuerunt, totiesque renascentur quoties ciderunt." 52.

The paradoxical notions of the Stoics upon the beauty, the riches, the dominion of their imaginary sage, are among the most distinguishing characteristics of their school, and, according to their advocate Lipsius, were peculiar to that sect. "Priora illa (decreta) quæ passim in philosophantium scholis ferè obtinent, ista quæ peculiaria huic sectæ et habent contradictionem: i. e. paradoxa.”—Manuduct. ad Stoic. Philos. lib. iii. dissertat. 2. But it is evident (as the Abbé Garnier has remarked, Mémoires de l'Acad. tom. xxxv.) that even these absurdities of the Stoics are borrowed, and that Plato is the source of all their extravagant paradoxes. We find their dogma, “dives qui sapiens," (which Clement of Alexandria has transferred from the Philosopher to the Christian, Pædagog. lib. iii. cap. 6,) expressed in the prayer of Socrates at the end of the Phædrus. Ω φίλε Παν τε και αλλοι όσοι τηδε θεοι, δοίητε μοι καλω γενέσθαι τανδοθεν ταξωθεν δε όσα έχω, τοις εντος είναι μοι φιλιας πλούσιον δε voutou rov copov. And many other instances might be adduced from the Αντερασται, the Πολιτικός, &c. to prove that these weeds of paradox were all gathered among the bowers of the Academy. Hence it is that Cicero, in the preface to his Paradoxes, calls them Socratica; and Lipsius, exulting in the patronage of Socrates, says, "Ille totus est noster." This is indeed a coalition, which evinces as much as can be wished the confused similitude of ancient philosophical opinions: the father of skepticism is here enrolled among the founders of the Portico; he, whose best knowledge was that of his own ignorance, is called in to authorize the pretensions of the most obstinate dogmatists in all antiquity.

Rutilius, in his Itinerarium, has ridiculed the sabbath of the Jews, as "lassati mollis imago Dei ;" but Epicurus gave an eternal holiday to his gods, and, rather than disturb the slumbers of Olympus, denied at once the interference of a Providence. He does not, however, seem to have been singular in this opinion. Theophilus of Antioch, if he deserve any credit, imputes a similar belief to Pythagoras :—not (Πυθαγορας) τε των πάντων θεούς ανθρώπων μηδεν φροντι Cetv. And Plutarch, though so hostile to the followers of Epicurus, has unaccountably adopted the very same theological error. Thus, after quoting the opinion of Anaxagoras and Plato upon divinity, he adds, Kotros our åpapraνουσιν αμφότεροι, ότι τον θεον εποίησαν επιστρεφόμενου Twν avoрwivov.-De Placit. Philosoph. lib. i. cap. 7. Plato himself has attributed a degree of indifference to the gods, which is not far removed from the apathy of Epicurus's heaven; as thus, in his Philebus, where Protarchus asks, Ουκούν εικος γε ούτε χαίρειν Θεούς, ούτε το εναντιον ; and Socrates answers, Πάνυ μεν ουν εικός, ασχημον γουν αυτων ἑκάτερον γιγνομενον εστιν ;—while Aristotle supposes a still more absurd neutrality, and concludes, by no very flattering analogy, that the deity is as incapable of virtue as of vice. Και γαρ ώσπερ ουδεν Θηριου εστι κακία, ουδ' αρετη, ούτως ovde Scov.-Ethic. Nicomach. lib. vii. cap. 1. In truth, Aristotle, upon the subject of Providence, was little more correct than Epicurus. He supposed the moon to be the limit of

From the pure sun, which, though refracted all Into a thousand hues, is sunshine still,1

The lone, eternal One, who dwells above, And of the soul's untraceable descent

And bright through every change! he spoke of Him, From that high fount of spirit, through the grades

divine interference, excluding, of course, this sublunary world from its influence. The first definition of the world, in his treatise Περι Κοσμου, (if this treatise be really the work of Aristotle,) agrees, almost verbum verbo, with that in the letter of Epicurus to Pythocles; and both omit the mention of a deity. In his Ethics, too, he intimates a doubt whether the gods feel any interest in the concerns of mankind.Ει γαρ τις επιμέλεια των ανθρωπίνων ύπο θεων γινε Tai. It is true, he adds wonɛp dokɛt, but even this is very skeptical.

In these erroneous conceptions of Aristotle, we trace the cause of that general neglect which his philosophy experienced among the early Christians. Plato is seldom much more orthodox, but the obscure enthusiasm of his style allowed them to accommodate all his fancies to their own purpose. Such glowing steel was easily moulded, and Platonisin became a sword in the hands of the fathers.

The Providence of the Stoics, so vaunted in their school, was a power as contemptibly inefficient as the rest. All was fate in the system of the Portico. The chains of destiny were thrown over Jupiter himself, and their deity was like the Borgia of the Epigrammatist, "et Cæsar et nihil." Not even the language of Seneca can reconcile this degradation of divinity "Ille ipse omnium conditor ac rector scripsit quidem fata, sed sequitur; semper paret, semel jussit."-Lib. de Providentiâ, cap. 5.

With respect to the difference between the Stoics, Peripatetics, and Academicians, the following words of Cicero prove that he saw but little to distinguish them from each other:-"Peripateticos et Academicos, nominibus differentes, re congruentes; a quibus Stoici ipsi verbis magis quam sententiis dissenserunt."--Academic. lib. ii. 5; and perhaps what Reid has remarked upon one of their points of controversy might be applied as effectually to the reconcilement of all the rest. "The dispute between the Stoics and Peripatetics was probably all for want of definition. The one said they were good under the control of reason, the other that they should be eradicated."-Essays, vol. iii. In short, it appears a no less difficult matter to establish the boundaries of opinion between any two of the Philosophical sects, than it would be to fix the landmarks of those estates in the moon, which Ricciolus so generously allotted to his brother astronomers. Accordingly we observe some of the greatest men of antiquity passing without scruple from school to school, according to the fancy or convenience of the moment. Cicero, the father of Roman philosophy, is sometimes an Academician, sometimes a Stoic; and, more than once, he acknowledges a conformity with Epicurus; "non sine causa igitur Epicurus ausus est dicere semper in pluribus bonis esse sapientem, quia semper sit in voluptatibus."Tusculan. Quæst. lib. v. Though often pure in his theology, Cicero sometimes smiles at futurity as fiction; thus, in his Oration for Cluentius, speaking of punishments in the life to come, he says, "Quæ si falsa sunt, id quod omnes intelligunt, quid ei tandem aliud mors eripuit, præter sensum doloris ?"-though here we should, perhaps, do him but justice by agreeing with his commentator Sylvius, who remarks upon this passage, "Hæc autem dixit, ut causæ suæ subserviret." The poet Horace roves like a butterfly through the schools, and now wings along the walls of the Porch, now basks among the flowers of the Garden; while Virgil, with a tone of mind strongly philosophical, has yet left us wholly uncertain as to the sect which he espoused. The balance of opinion declares him to have been an Epicurean, but the ancient author of his life asserts that he was an

Academician; and we trace through his poetry the tenets of almost all the leading sects. The same kind of eclectic indifference is observable in most of the Roman writers. Thus Propertius, in the fine elegy to Cynthia, on his departure for Athens,

Illic vel studiis animum emendare Platonis, Incipiam, aut hortis, docte Epicure, tuis.

Lib. iii. Eleg. 21.

Though Broeckhusius here reads, "dux Epicure," which seems to fix the poet under the banners of Epicurus. Even the Stoic Seneca, whose doctrines have been considered so orthodox that St. Jerome has ranked him among the ecclesiastical writers, while Boccaccio doubts (in consideration of his supposed correspondence with St. Paul) whether Dante should have placed him in limbo with the rest of the Pagans-even the rigid Seneca has bestowed such commendations on Epicurus, that if only those passages of his works were preserved to us, we could not hesitate, I think, in pronouncing him a confirmed Epicurean. With smilar inconsistency, we find Porphyry, in his work upon abstinence, referring to Epicurus as an example of the most strict Pythagorean temperance; and Lancelotti (the author of "Farfalloni degli antici Istorici") has been seduced by this grave reputation of Epicurus into the absurd error of associating him with Chrysippus, as a chief of the Stoic school. There is no doubt, indeed, that however the Epicurean sect might have relaxed from its original purity, the morals of its founder were as correct as those of any among the ancient philosophers; and his doctrines upon pleasure, as explained in the letter to Menaceus, are rational, amiable, and consistent with our nature. A late writer, De Sablons, in his Grands Hommes vengés, expresses strong indignation against the Encyclopédistes for their just and animated praises of Epicurus, and discussing the question, "si ce philosophe étoit vertueux," denies it upon no other authority than the calumnies collected by Plutarch, who himself confesses that, on this particular subject, he consulted only opinion and report, without pausing to investigate their truth.Αλλα την δόξαν, ου την αλήθειαν σκοπούμεν. Το the factious zeal of his illiberal rivals, the Stoics, Epicurus chiefly owed these gross misrepresentations of the life and opinions of himself and his associates, which, notwithstanding the learned exertions of Gassendi, have still left an odium on the name of his philosophy; and we ought to examine the ancient accounts of this philosopher with about the same degree of cautious belief which, in reading ecclesiastical history, we yield to the invectives of the fathers against the heretics,-trusting as little to Plutarch upon a dogma of Epicurus, as we would to the vehement St. Cyril upon a tenet of Nestorius. (1801.)

The preceding remarks, I wish the reader to observe, were written at a time when I thought the studies to which they refer much more important as well as more amusing than, I freely confess, they appear to me at present.

1 Lactantius asserts that all the truths of Christianity may be found dispersed through the ancient philosophical sects, and that any one who would collect these scattered fragments of orthodoxy might form a code in no respect differing from that of the Christian. "Si extitisset aliquis, qui veritatem sparsam per singulos per sectasque diffusam colligeret in unum, ac redigeret in corpus, is profecto non dissentiret a nobis."—Inst. lib. vi. c. 7.

3 Το μόνον και ερημον.

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Where are the chords she used to touch?
The airs, the songs she loved so much?
Those songs are hush'd, those chords are still,
And so, perhaps, will every thrill

Of feeling soon be lull'd to rest,
Which late I waked in Anna's breast.
Yet, no-the simple notes I play'd
From memory's tablet soon may fade;
The songs, which Anna loved to hear,
May vanish from her heart and ear;
But friendship's voice shall ever find
An echo in that gentle mind,

Nor memory lose nor time impair

The sympathies that tremble there.

1 This bold Platonic image I have taken from a passage in

TO

LADY HEATHCOTE,

ON AN

OLD RING FOUND AT TUNBRIDGE-WELLS.

"Tunnebridge est à la même distance de Londres, que Fontainebleau l'est de Paris. Ce qu'il y a de beau et de galant dans l'un et dans l'autre sexe s'y rassemble au tems des eaux. La compagnie," &c. &c.

See Mémoires de Grammont, Second Part, chap. iii.

Tunbridge Wells. WHEN Grammont graced these happy springs, And Tunbridge saw, upon her Pantiles, The merriest wight of all the kings

That ever ruled these gay, gallant isles;

Like us, by day, they rode, they walk'd,
At eve, they did as we may do,
And Grammont just like Spencer talk'd,
And lovely Stewart smiled like you.

The only different trait is this,

That woman then, if man beset her, Was rather given to saying "yes," Because, as yet, she knew no better

Each night they held a coterie,
Where, every fear to slumber charm'd,
Lovers were all they ougn to be,

And husbands not the least alarm'd.

Then call'd they up their school-day pranks,
Nor thought it much their sense beneath
To play at riddles, quips, and cranks,
And lords show'd wit, and ladies teeth

As-"Why are husbands like the mint?"
Because, forsooth, a husband's duty
Is but to set the name and print

That give a currency to beauty.

"Why is a rose in nettles hid

"Like a young widow, fresh and fair?" Because 'tis sighing to be rid

Of weeds, that "have no business there!"

And thus they miss'd and thus they hit,

And now they struck and now they parried; And some lay in of full grown wit,

While others of a pun miscarried.

collected together in the Galaxy.--Δήμος δε ονεις ων, κατά

Father Bouchet's letter upon the Metempsychosis, inserted | Πυθαγοραν, αἱ ψυχαι ὡς συνάγεσθαι φησιν εις τον γαλαξίαν. in Picart's Cérém. Relig. tom. iv.

-Porphyr. de Antro Nymph.

According to Pythagoras, the people of Dreams are souls

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