^Jortv HUMAN LIFE. L.n t lias aMioxisand charms A tlio’isand (Ircams of bliss; Hope, Frieiulship, I.ovc, thy bosom warms,— A gleam of mercy this: But soon that sun-lit hour is past, And Hope flits shivering from the blast. Life lias a thousand ills,— A thousand anxious foars; Clouds gather on the sunny hills And doubts dissolve in tears: But Hope comes sn.iling through the atoim-- A ra\nb»w round her angel-fom. tifc has r. thousand joys, Youth fondly dreams for ever; But night draws on—Ycutii droops and s»ghs “ Will day return ?—Oh never !” Swift as a breath, light breaks the gloom, .And Gladness smiles on Sorrow’s tomb. ’Tis but a change at best, Upon Life’s busy shore,— A httle toil, a little rest, And all its cares are o’er. Then seal’d, immutable, thy state,— i'ix’d—an irrevocable fute ! it is a dream!—But know Death’s cold hand breaks that slumber; And who shall tell, if bliss or woe Those countless moments luimLev ’ ^t is beyond un angel’s k'. n To picrce the rcil tliat ris^i then’ Life is a narrow sea, But who its bounds may tell ? Its VI- wkss dep'lis- Eternity,— Its limits—Heaven or Hell! \ point—a moment,—on it h:tng TInutter’dbliss—exhaustlfss pang! 'Ti^ thine;—but moments past. Nor pra>ers nor tears recal; £’en while thou readest, light and fast Tim’s noiseless footsteps fall; And o’er Life’s golden sands he flie?. His pHth serene as evening skies. Health basks upon thy brow,— But Death’s cold victims see ; Soon thou must lie as they do now, And others gaze on thee, Wlicn Life, and Hope’s gay visions seem To them as bright as once thy dream. I'rom out life’s rosc-wreath’d bow’r Thou glistenest gaily forth, And all is bright,—a sunny hour On sky, and sea, and earth ; But darkness cotncth, and the gloom 1^0 beam can pierce—a rayless tomb ! Oh, where thy spirit, when Friends round thy couch are weeping, Borne on an angel’s pinion then, From where that dust is sleeping; Deatli solves the question !—Ere it comc, pre pare. None find their pardon, or repentance there ! V!ccncl to him and his Linlly. It hr»p- jrarfcti*. Mixing tojjCther profit and di light. Erom Kome in the Nineteenth Century. CONVKN’rS. The French sujipressed all convents of men, without exccptiort. 'I'hey sciz eel iij)ou their revenues, took possessiou of their ancient habitations, invested as Xuany ol" their tonsured lieads with tin military cap and featliers, as could be madg to submit to them, and shipped ofT thost' who refused to renounce their vows, to imprisonment in ('orsica and Sardinia. That the poor and the old, “,vho had passetl thfeir peaceful lives in the cloistcr, and p;ivon to their convcnt the little stipend that was to secure sup port to their latter years, must hare suffereil severely, when thus deprived of all, there can be no doubt. In the same siu.Mmary manner, all the nunner ies in Home, exccplinp; two, were sup pressed ; but how( ver wise might have been their gfa iual abolition, thenii{)ro- priety of turiiing out at once so many secluded, and in most cases, destitute and harndess females, cannot be doubt ed. But .since they liad been suppress ed, and all the evil consequences once iocurred, I caimot but lament that they should have been a?i;ain restored. The monastic orders, and the inquisition, were simultaneously reinstated, after the decline and fall ol Bonaparte. The convents of men are nests of vice, hvpocrisy, and abominaton, and are, for the most part, filled with younj; sturdy bc»2::u'S. I counted upwards of fifty convents lor men, and live-and-tliirty fur w’omcn, in Romo and its vicinity, and probably some vrcre left unrecord ed. The brief li’;-.tory of a nun formerly if the ponrent of Si. Sylvestro, was I’elat- fd to me by one n! the sistns, anil is quite a Tomance. iler name was Sasso I’crrato : she was lelt an (uphon and an heiress in her infancy, and j>lared in the CO^^•entby her uncle, who was hrr^uar- dii'H. with the intetition of inducing hot 'O talic the veil, that her fortune might pcncd, liowpver, that ato'neof the j^rand ])rocessions of the Virgiti, which the nuns were assembled to behold, the Sasso Ferrato saw, and was seen by the captain of the guards, stationed at the convent, a younj^er son of the Ginstin- iani family, and a brother of one of her youthful companions in the convent. Ilis visits to his sister become frequent, and Sasso P’crrato c;enerally contrived to accompany her friend on these occa sions. They became desperately in love, but the cruel uncle refused his consent, and by arts which intimidated the young and inexperienced mind of Sasso Ferrato, by pow’erful interests which rendered the complaints of her lover vain, and by his authority as representative of her parents, he suc ceeded in obliging her to take the veil. She lived only two years afierwanls. Ilei’ lover became a maniac, and after being confined some t^me, continued during the remaitiing years of his life to roam alxjut the neigl.liourhootl of the city, though harmless in his actions, his hair and beard growing wild, bis dress neglected, and his manneis gloomy and ferocious. The most severe of the female monas tic orders, is that t>f Santa Theresa, in which its unfortunate votaries are doom ed to unceasing midnight vigils, and daily fasts , topenai\ce, austerity, and mortification; while all intercouser with their friends, all indulgence ul the sweet affections of nature, are as sedulously interdicted, as if they were crimes ol thr blacUestdye. It is the a;reat merit of their lives, that death is continually before their eyes—continually piesent to their thoughts—like a man that should stand rooted before a clocli, and inse in its contemplation, the interven ing momerits. But to all intents and pur poses, to all tliK iluties, pleasures, and hopes of life, they are as completely deatl, as if the grave had closed over them. Tliere is in Rome a convent called the Sepolto Vivo, in which are buried contumacious, or fanatic nuns, from all convents—females condemned by the Inquisition for too little, or too much religion—and wives and daughters, whose husbands and fathers have the means to prove that they deserve, or the interest to procure the order for, such punishment. Instances have oc curred, where resistance to the will of a parent, or causeless jealousy conceived by the husband, have been followed by this horrible vengeance. What may pass within its walls can never be known ; none but its victims enter it, and none of them ever return. They see no hu man beings excepting once a year, when, in the presence of the abbess, they may have an inte;jcourse with their father or mother*; but they must not tell the secrets of their prison house. They hear no tidings of the world that surrounds them, nor even know when their dearest friends are removed by death. rOLOSSKUM. Crossing over to the other side, be neath the broken and deAjced triumph al arch of Titus, fast tottering to its fall, but beautiful even in decay, we beheld the grandest remains of antiquity in the world—the majestic ruins of the migh ty Colosseum. No relic of former greatness—no monument of human power—no memorial of ages that are fled, ever Sj)oke so forcibly to the heart, or awakened feelings, so poweiful and unutter:d)lu. The art of the painter, or the strains of the poet might avail in some degree to give a faint idea of the Colosseum—but can description give you any thought of its lofty majesty and ruined grandeur ? Ilow convey to your mind tlu? sense of its beautiful propor a sniull segment is the oxlc rp.al elevation [ reservca entire. In the inside the l estruction is nioie complete. 1 he niar- i)le seats are all torn away ; the steps and vomitories are overthrown, and the sloping walls and broken arches which once supported them, are overgrown with every wild and^mplancholy v/eed, waving in all the luxuriance of desola tion. We asrendcd by a temporary wooden staircase, to the highest prac ticable point of the edifice—traversed the circling corridors, and caught through the opening arches glimpses of the scatLered rums, the dark pine trees, and purple liills of the distant country. We looked down on the vast grass grown arena ; its loneliness and silence were only broken by son»e Capuchin friars kneeling before the re presentations of our Saviour’s last suf ferings, and muttering their oft repeated prayers as they told their beads. What solitude and desertion ! hat a change iVom the day that litus dedi cated it by the slaughter of five thou sand wild beasts, and the savage com bats of gladiators ; when Roman galleys rode in its ample arena in the counter feit confusion of a mock naval fight, and when a hundred thousand voices rent the air at once, with shouts of ac clamation ! On that wide arena, often deep w’ith blood, w'cre only to be seen the symbols and the worship of a reli gion then unknown, but which has ban ished from the earth those fiend-like sjiorts and barbarous sacrifices that dis graced human nature. IMPF.niAL ROME. The following day we ascended to the loftv summit of tin* tow'cr ot the Capitol—What a prnspect ’burst upon our view ! To the north—the east — and even to the west, the modern City, extends ; but to the south, ancient Rome reigns alone, the time stricken mistress of the w orld, saiily seated on her de serted hills, amidst thf ruined trophies of her fame,* and the mouhlering monu ments of her power, silently mourning the fall of her gi eat ness : on her solitude mine; ‘V.e visits the first people in Sackatoo, and they nevor allow him to go away without giving him a few Geo- Pa nuts, or money to buy them.’ In compliance with this hint, I requested forty cowries to he given to the tellow, with strict orders never to cross my Ihreshold. Sidi Sheikh now related to me a professional anecdote ol my unin vited visitor. Being brother of the ex ecutioner of the Yacoba, of which place he was a native, he appplied to the Gov ernor for his brother’s sitiiation, boast- of superior adroitness in the family vocation. The Governor coolly re marked, ‘ We will try go fetch your brother’s head !’ He instantly went ... quest of his brother, and finding him seated at the door of his house, vv’ithout noise or warning he struck oft his head with a sword, at one blow ; then carry- ingthebteeding head to the Governor, &. claiming the rew’ard of such transcend ent atrocity, he was appointed to the V'acant ofljce. The Sultan being after- w’ards in want of an expert headsnun, sent for him to Sackatoo, whore, a sliort time after his arrival, he had to ofl'iciate at the execution of 2000 Tuarisks, who, 'n conjunction with the rebels ot Goober, had attempted to plunder the country, but wofc ail made prisoners ; th;s event hai)pened about forty yejirs ago. I may here add, that the capital punishments inflicted in Soudan, are beheading, im paling, and crucifixion ; the first being reserved for Mahometans, and the other two practised on Pagans. I W’as told, as a matter of curiosity, that wretches (ifi the cross generally linger three days, before death puts an end to their sufl'er- ings.” The old Count de Segur. w’ho was re ceived a member of the Cincinnati, re lates the following anecdote— “A Colonel greatly distinguished by his birth, an excellent officer. I)ut whose education had been neglected, and w'ho made himself remarked for some very ludicrous grammatical crors in speak- said to mr, when I was named a ‘‘You did; wcJl, &iul might net ihl. -ack as well have contained hay as pota^ tors p”~Neaw, sur, it codna be hay, h* could hardly carry it.” “Well, but I suppose horses do ea» hay with you “ Neaw, sur, they duni na eat hay wi’mr, for I dunna eat hay.” These answers produced the niost vio- lent roars of laughter, in which the Court jo'ined, and the unfortunate coun&fl. ut terly abashed, was obliged to desist from an examination in which he evidently had the worst. English paper. Harvard College is the oldest and may with propriety be styled the parent lUera- ary institution of our country. It founded in 1638, and was endowed with a legacy, by the Rev. John Harvard of Charlestown, of £778 17 2 sterling, bc- inp one half of his estate. In acknowl- tfdgement of> his magnificence it bears his name. Degrees were first conferred ' in 1642, in 1650 it was chartered. The professorship of divinity and mathema tics and natural philosophy were founded in 1762 by Mr. Thomas Hollis of Lon don. The professorship of Hebrew was established by Thomas Hancock, Esq. in 1765. Other professorships have since been established and generally endowcil by individuals. From the fouudinf of iherollei^e to the yt-.ir 179‘1-, three tliuus- and rhree hundred and niiiety-nini* youii^^ poi suns received its honuurs, of whom 10/9 became ministers of the gospt I, Boston Patriot. There is in the U. St aes more nominal nobility than ary country in the world ex hibits of legitimate creation. Ever) (Jo- vernor is Eirel/encc; *'very jud‘?e, s« I'^ior, uni! rcj-rescrt-i'.ive is Ilonornble ; and eve ry justice of pi^ ice is i:!stin^uishcd by the riiivalious title rf Enquire.—These frivolities should 'ie carffullv discourufj- ed, and the danf'-Tou-i assumptions by evorv real friend of liberty. «ppcs« d.—. T!ifv are the first rcbes in which a lepub- lie advances to aristocracy, thence to monarchy, and from monarchy tooppres- ■iion and extravagance. frriinshnn''s U. Sinter. the habitations of man have not dared Ij m to intrude : no n.onun.ont, of his exis-' commander of Smnt La.nre, and Chtva- teiice appear, aeccptinp sue!, as connect; “f l,im with elerr.ilv. A few decaying convents and churches, are tlie inlf three of them, Sa.nt Lou,s, ba.nt We, modern buildings that meet the eye and Saint Cinnatus. But as to the last From the.'Capitol on which wc stand, i I . .... I /M1>« iX It we behold her hills heaped with ruin and shaded with where the y i deuce our American friends could have tL dS pin;;nd tv’.' “P-’. And yet he had himself the wide waste of theCampaKmai'f'^"'" America, and received the or- der like the other onicers. press —the plain of Latium—the far distant windings of the yellow Tiber—the | ^ ” ~ “ grass grown Forum at our feet, with its 1 ^ correspondent of the London “Eu- shattered porticoes, its fallen columns, j ropean Magazine,” who furnishes an ac- overthrowMi temples, and its triumphal; count of the principal American painters, arches fast mouldering to lfC»y-the | n,is story. ‘■vrnll r\t i A m f £k. h rM 1 cn tKo “ I will give you a pleasant anecdote of Sully. A husband wishin"^ to sur prise a beloved wife on her birth day. Palatine Hill, over.«pread with the ruin of Imperial palaces—the lofty vaults of the Temple of Peace—the broken frag- tions, its simplicity, its harnxjiiy, and its gr;uuifnr ; of the regular gradations of iJorie, Ionic, and Corinthia.i orders, that support its graceful ranges of (^re- eian Arcades; of the rich luu's with which lime have overspread its ma.s.sy walls. It stands alone m its solitary gtandeur ; far from modern Rome, her streets, her ehurchcs, her [)alaces ; and her population surioiinded only with the ruins of the imperial city ; above it ris'^ os the Palatine Hill, overshadowed by aged tvergreen.'i, and covered with the frowning ruins of the palace of the Ca> sars. On one sid" the triumphal arcii of Constantine still stands in nndimin- ished beauty, atlonic'd w'ith the .sjinils and trophies of bettor times. At its southern base, extends’ the long line of the vit/ /riuiujj/ialis', crossed with the lofty arches that once bore the Claudian waters to Nero's golden house. Behind it a{>peared the ilark ridge of the Celian jNIount, covercd v.ith the majestic remanis of ruined acjiieducts, moulderingwalls,and substructions, the very purpose oi which i?i unknown. We walked round the vast eircl,- of the Amp!nl!’''JU.rc'. In im) j^iirt has it been complete]} L.-oken tlirougb, and in onlv ments of the upper story of the baliis of Titus, the lonely tottered ruin of Miner-i va Wedica in the distance—the Eigjutic' circle of the Colos-.eum—the ' Celian | home and put up, whi e the wife aMount, crowned With the deep sha.le ofl 'y''* l?>'t before it was half done, the w'lfe paid him a visit by stealth.— “ Pray, Mr. Sully,” said she, “could you not contrive, think you, to make a portrait of me by such a day, (Sully star ed,) for that is my birth day,' and I should like of all things to surprise my husband.” “ WMiy-a-a,” said Sully, seeing that she had no idea of the trick; “ I cio believe that I could : and if you w'ill manage to draw your husband away the night before, I will have the picture hung up for you, and all ready to re ceive you in the morning.” “Delight ful said she. To work he went, tficre- fore, and so closely was he run, that Cypress, the ^broken arches of mighty aqueducts, and the crumbling walls of splendid temples—the massive ruins of the baths of Caracalla, frowning in gloomy grandeur on the slope of tlie further summit of the Aventine—the gray sepulchral Pyramid ofCaius Costius —the Tower of Cecilia Metelia—and far beyond, the long black line of the Via Appia, marked by mouldering and forgotten tombs—and ruined acjueducts stretching over the deserted plain, in Majestic loneliness, to the woody hills which terminate the view. Such was the prospect that extended before us to the south. It vvas Imperial Rome. WALLS OF HOMK. The walls are now coinj)Uted to form a circuit of about fourteen n)iles, and comjjrise an immense extent of unpeo pled land. 'I'he stranger may wandor lor liouis and miles within the walls-of this great capital, in solitude and silence as unbroken as if ho moic in a desert. He will pass alonj; iintf(^„deM loaiis, and hy abaiidoned natj.v.ifions ; he- w'ill see no life within tiieir gates ; no human beinj/J will greet iurn, and no voice wi!! answer to his call, (h er a wide extent of Rome to the south, her hills aie des olate. On the north and in the piairi of the Campus Martins alone ther- is life and motion. «-7;i t-^frnan Kxccutioner.—Ca|)tain Clapj)crton gives the fol!(nvi;ig account ofa;i interview with the executioner of Sackatoo :—“I was sitting (says the au thor) in tile shade before my door, with Sidi Sheikh, the Sultan’s fighi, when an ill-looking wretch, with a fiond-like grin on his countenance, came and plac ed himself directly before me. I ask ed Sidi Sheikh w'ho he was? He an swered, with great composure, ‘ the ex ecutioner.’ I instantly ordered my ser vant to turn him out. ‘13c patu'ni,’ said vSidi Sheikh; laying his hand upon oncc or twice he had to let the husband out one door on tip-toe. Well, the por traits were finished : they were like. The night befo:-o the b arrived, and Sully finding both jiarties away, each being ieroyed away by th.e other^ hung them up,’(i!ie pictures, not the parties,) in their sujierb frames, just where tiny required to be hung. The resteftlic story we may as well skip, foi V.ho shall describe the surprise of h(,m, w'hen the W’ife got up early, and both keeping theircountenancestoa mir- ;ic!c, ar.d each feigning an excuse to to lend the other into the room where the portraits hurgside by side.” At a la'p Saliord Sessions, a man was put to the bar, cliargcd with stealing a sack hill of potatoes ; the principal wit ness a;^:iiiist him was a country lad, a- bout 14 ytars of age, w ho had seen the jjrison carrying theark on his slioulder. \V l)cn ilie counsel lo»' the prosecution had finished his examination, the oppo site counsel arose, and the following con- versation tuck place : “ \V ell, my lad, and so you’remcmbcr this day, when the potatoes arc said to have been stolen ?”—“ Neaw, sur, it wurna this day, it wur thnt day. “Well, wt'll, that day, if jou will have it so; and you say you saw the prisoner I .iirying the sack on jjiy shuulJer?”— “Yes. sur, I did.” A GOOD CONSCIKNCE. Dr. South, in one of his sermons, says Addison, having shown the vir tue of a good conscience in supporting; a man under the greatest trials and dif ficulties of life, concludes with repre senting its force and effjcacy in the hour of death. The third and last instance, in which, above all others, this confidencc towards God does most eminently siiow and exert itself, is at the timeofdecth, which surely gives the grand opportu nity of trying both the strength and worth of every principle. When a. man shall be just about to quit the stag(> of this world, to put off his mortality,, and to deliver up his last accounts to God; at which sad time his memory shall serve him for little else, but to ter rify him with a frightful review’ ot liis past life, and his former extravagances stripped of all their j)leasure, but main- ing I heir guilt : wdir.t is it then that cais promise him a fair p.i^sage into the c- ther world, or a comfortable appearanca before his dreadful Judge ivhen li“ is there ? not all the friends and interest?, all the riches and honours under heaven, can sj)eak so much as a word for hin^, or one word of comfort to him in that condition ; they may possibly reproach, but they cannot relieve him. ‘ No ; at this disconsolate time, when they busy tempter shall be more than usually apt to vex and trouble him, a.nd the pains of a dying body to hinder aw’ discompose him, and the settlement O' wordly affairs to disturb and coni imn ^ w’ord, all things conspn' i very make his sick-bed grievous and uiH'. rthdav can then stand up ail these ruins, and .speak life in t! ’ midst of death, but a cicar ‘And the testimony of • make the comforts of heavn; ■! sis.! '! upon his w’cary head, like a rei.' dew’, or shower ujion a |)archeu groiiu It shall give him some lively earnosl and secret anticipations of his ajipi oai - "'"jo.''’ the body undauntedly, and hit up head with confidence before saints aiV' angels. Surely comfort, which it con veys at this season, is something ‘-■Pn' than the capacities of mortality, and unspeakable, and not t.) be 'Jnc.tr stood till it comes to bo fcU. ‘And now, who W’ould not q-; t ■ ■ the {Measures, and trash, and t!i’'- which arc apt to captivate t!ie lieart c man, and pursue the greatest rigours ol piety, and austerities of a good lih’> purcliHse to himself such a cnnscienc*» as, at the hour of death, v. hen jdl i'*'' friendship in the \vor!d shall !'id (lieu, and the whole creation tfrn back upon him, shall dismiss the sou.» and close his eyes with that blessed sor- tenre, “ \N cll done thou good and t«il • ful servant, enter thy Lord r” thou into tr