The Mcse ! whatc'cr the Muse inspires, My soul the tuneful strain aclinires....scoTT. TO HOPE. O ! take, young Scrap), take thy harp, And play to me so cheerily ; For grief is dark, and care is sharp, Anil life wears on so wearily. O ! take thy harp ! Oh ! sing- as thou wert wont to do, "When, all youth's sunny season long, I sat and listened to thy song, And yet 'twas ever, ever new "With magic in each heaven-tuned string, The future bliss thy constant theme. Oh, then each little woe took wing Away like phantoms of a dream ; As if each sound, That fluttered round, Had floated over Lethe's stream ! J3ut tho 1 canst sing of love no more, For Celia showed that dream was vain -And many a fancied bliss is o'er, That comes not e'en in dreams again. Alas ! Alas ! How pleasures pass, And leave thee now no subject, save The peace and bliss beyond the grave 1 Then be thy flight among the skies; Take then, O ! take thy skylark's wing, And leave dull earth, and heavenward rise O'er all its tearful clouds, and sing On skvlark's wins: ! A FRAGMENT nr t. campbeil. Gentle and wedded love, how fair art thou ! How rich, how very rich, yet free of blame, How calm and how secure ! the perfect hours Pass onward to security w ith thee, "Without a sigh or backward look of sorrow. Pleasantly on they pass, never delayed By doubt or vain remorse, or desperate fear; But in thy train beauty and blooming joy Pass hand in hand, and young-cy'd hope, whose glance, Not dimm'd, yet softened, by a touch of care, Looks forward still, and serious happiness JLics on thy heart a safe and sheltered guest. Variety's the very spice of life, That gives it all its flavor. FilGM THE NATIONAL GAZETTE. We have seen the new British work on this country, entitled tk Views of So ciety and Manners in America, by an English woman." It is understood to be the production of a lady who visi ted the United States about a year or two ago, in company with a sister and without any regular companion of the other sex. She printed, if we mistake not, a poetical drama and some other verse among us, but did not, we believe, inspire the American reader with a high idea of her qualifications for that department of composition. Her prose, in the present volume, is far superior to the poetry to which wre refer, and her kindness for America is even be yond what could have been expected from the most benignant temper and liberal spirit. She paints every thing coleur de rose ; treats of our intellect, morals, manners, education, religion, politics, political history and institutions, scenery, ike. and makes the most favorable report of us on every topic. This lady is the opposite of Fearons, Howitts, and all the slanderous race of vulgjr British travellers. She is as much distinguish ed from them by dignity of tone and refinement of mental tastes and par suits, as by her amiable and even en thusiastic feeling towards the United States. Her book will be read with in terest, and we think with some profit, in this country. The American peo ple must be pleased with so strong a testimony borne in their favor, although even the most relf-complacent among j them cannot fail to deem her represen tations rather too vividly and uniformly encomiastic to be strictly faithful. ! We annex some extracts from "The Views," to exemplify their tenor. The amusing account of the Post Bag in the back settlements of New-York, does not appear to be meant to dispar age the country, and is not, we appre hend, liable to the charge of much ex aggeration. kt I have been led to expect that the citizens of Philadelphia were lessprsc-1 tiseci in courtesy to strangers than those of New-York. Our experience does not confirm the remark. We have on ly to bear testimony to their civility. There is at first something cold and precise in the general air and manner of the people. This coldness cf exterior, however, wcars.off in a great measure, upon further acquaintance, and what may still remain you set down to the ruling spirit and philanthropic father of the city, and respect it accordingly. "The children of the peaceful and benignant William Penn, have not on ly inherited the fashion of their patri arch's garments, but his simple man- ners, nis active pnuantnropy, nis miia 1 iri 1 1 'ill forbearance, his pure and persevering charity, thinking no evil, taking no praise. 44 The Americans are very good talkers, and admirable listeners; under- stand perfectly the exchange of know- ledge, for which they employ conver- sation and employ it solely. They have a surprising stock of information, but this runs little into the precincts of imagination; facts form the ground work ot their discourse. I hev are . . . . . " accustomed to rest their opinion on , 1 . , . on ingenious theories and abstract rea- soning; and are always wont to over- turn the one, by a simp e appeal to the other, fhey have much general know- ledge, but are best read in philosophy, history, political economy, and the gen- eral science ot government. Ihe gov world, however, is the book which they , . 1 1 1 lebpok which they ntively, and they consider most atte make a general practice olf turning oyer c Pi6e3 evei iai. a I...HU m.u comes across them : they do this very quietly, and very civihy, and with the understanding: thjt vou are at perfect ig thJt you are at perlect hberty to do the same by them, . fhey are entirely mauvaise nonte. 1 he constant exercise ot the reason- ing power gives to their character and manners a mildness, plainness, and un- changing suavity, sin has are oken re- marK ai m Lurope m men ucvotcu o the abstract sciences. Wonderfully patient and candid in argument, close reasoners, acute observers, and ongi- nal thinkers, they understand little play of words, or as the French more dis- tinctly express it, badinage. The peo- pie have nothing of the poet in them, nor of the bcl esprit. On the other hand, thev are well informed and lib- eral philosophers, who can give you in a 1 a. uuu ,u. oui a utuuu cum enlightened views, than you could re- I f A I ceive irom me nrsi corps meraire ci.AXy. npith,rrlpR;r. nnrwJll dramatize of Europe by listening to them a whole evening. It is said that every man has ins lorte and so per- naps, nas every na ion : uuil 01 me 1ucjj1.au 10 Lciuuuiv uuuu. sense i iius stt rlirtg quality is the current com ol the country, and it is curious to see how immediately it tries the metal of other minds. In truth, I know no peo- pie who will sooner make you sensible 01 your own ignorance. C S 4 It was finely answered by an A- merican citizen to an Jburopean who, lnokintr rnnnrl him. exclaimed. 41 Yes : O 7 this is all well. You have all the vul-! gar and the substantial, but I look in vain for the ornamental. Where are your ruins and your poetry r" "There , are our ruins," replied the Republi- j e part ot cur government. A bow can, pointing to a revolutionary soldier ' er had been erected in a field adjoining who was turning up the glebe ; and then extending his hand over the plain stretched before them, smiling with luxuriant farms and little vallies, peep ing out from beds of trees "There is our poetry." "There is something truly sublime in the water scenery in America ; her lakes, spreading into the inland seas, their vast, deep and pure waters, re flecting back the azure of heaven, un stained with a cloud ; her rivers, col lecting the waters of hills and plains interminable, rolling their massy vol umes for thousands of miles, now bro ken into cataracts to which the noblest cascades of the old hemisphere are those of rivulets, and then sweeping down their broad channels to the far off ocean, the treasures of a world. The lakes and rivers of this continent seem to despise all foreign auxiliaries of nature or art, and trust to their own unassisted majesty to produce effect upon the eye and the mind; without alpine mountains or moss-grown ruins, they strike the snectator with awe. Extent, width, depth it is by these intrinsic qualities that they afiect him ; their character is one of simple gran deur : you stand upon their brink or traverse their bosom, or gaze upon their rolling rapids and tumbling cata racts, and acknowledge at once their power and immensity, and your own insignificance and imbecilitv. Occa sionally you meet with exceptions to this rule. I recall at this moment the beautiful shores c i the P assaic its graceful cascades, its wall cf wooden hills, and rich and varied landscape, all spread beneath a sky of glowing sap phires ; a scene for Claude to gaze up on. These north western waters, how ever, have nothing of this variety ; you find them bedded in vast level plains, bordered only by sable forests, from which the stroke of the axe Has just startled the panther and the savage." -)c V ff rK Varieties. In our last we gave our readers a charminir delineation of private character from the pen of Miss Wright. The following anecdotes il- Iustrative of the nation, and some of its brightest ornaments, are ecmallv gratifying to the pride of our hearts, as Americans. She thus describes thn circumstances of the mutiny of the Pennsylvania line, in die seventh year Qf tbe revolutionary war.' u Faiming under the united hard. a- f 1... i-i.c-.r r i i i .1 .1 iuuu anu. cunning, iney wuneircw irom the body qf the army' demanding that which their officers had not to give, the ;TV,m.wi;.,,j .r .1 To awc theml (utQ obc(Hen Gen. w nted hh isl1 thcy n-' tL;. bt. J uc Unct ' Lt UV. .OVtr nndrVsner.f -vn.i. hnt if von f are a dcaj Wc .1 1, . ,1..,. tV''K - enemy.; uui arc uclc j m in- ed on obtainingour just rights.'' They w:thfi - ;n"-r,w w:,k ifw Lrm9 and field pieces "to a neighboring lown committed no devastations but pcrsisted ;n their demands, dispatched some of its mimi k... r .u Congress :mbcrs to the n,t;n(,ipc ilf i,,. tuco emissarics .from the cnemy appcarcd anions them. TJnrn11dmnn.nl forms xvm 4ir,ri . u t,rf.r-t.mt or.,1 imrn.-dinte mv.-r ',n,l nwUtnnr ,.f n bod t;f ro x troo aIrtadv on tneir march towards them. ' Their'reply was thc instant seizure-of their evil temp ter .vhnm lhtfV senf. imerlinrK- ,,n- dcr a d from thdr Qwn bod -Q the ami. enerni whn h:ld nn:ntefi hi; nU. tnU .At thi -r 1; A : thtm of thf. ronOT,ss'sfnmm;s.;ni:r tuf.:r :,..,,. wprr fttntpfl :ln1 P.firi.ccrf, . but vhen president Keed olTered them u,twi.,i 1,:W1. c purse as a reward for their fidelity in hav5nfr .nrrnrWrl tho th Jr-. dv patriots refused them. We have (.Qne a dutv we owe( reward$ but thc approbation of that rnlmtrv fnr wMrh w. r bIt.d m a country peopled by such men, might be overrun, but could not k cnhfliiffl " TECUMSE1I. A gentleman from one of the north- western states related a lew days since ,.11.." 1 - -11 l4lc lunuwiug anecuoie, as illustrative or the sense ot honor and devoted sen- timents which characterize many of the Indian warriors. beveral Vears atro. at a treatv held 1 J Wlth some Indian tribes at Vincennes, m Indiana, at which the celebrated Te- cumseh was present, general Harrison acted as one of the commissioners on the town for the meeting of the parties. IJeiore the council was opened, Gen. II arrison handed several chairs to thc American officers and gentlemen who were present before he offered one to Tccumseh. On handing him one, the haughty warrior thrust it aside i and surveying those around him with a mingled expression of pride and con tempt, threw himself in a reclining pos ture on the ground. Gen. Harrison endeavored to sooth him, and through the interpreter, asked whether he in tended to offend his Great Father? " My father I" said the indignant chief, 44 the Sun is my father, and the Earth is my mother, and I will repose my self on her bosom." Albany Statesman. Remedy against lying. A Chinese silversmith, to whom the English gave the name of Tom Workwell, brought home some silver spoons, as he called them, to a captain of a ship, who had ordered them. The gentleman sus pecting that his friend Tcm had played liim a trick, common in China, of ad ding no small quantity of tutenague to :he usual proportion of alloy, taxed l-.im with the cheat, which he denied with the strongest asseverations of his innocence. The captain then told him, that he had brought with him a famous water, called lie rcvVr, which being placed on the tongue of a person sus pected cf tellirg.an untruth, if the e?e were so, burned a hole in it; if otherwise, the party escaped with hon or, and m.hurt. Tom, thinking it a trick, readily consented , upon which, with much form, aaingle drop of aqua fortis was put upon his tongue ; he in stantly jumped about the room in vio lent pain, crying out, 4 Very true, half tutenague, half tutenague,' in hopes that confessing the fact, might stop the progress of the lie xvatcr, which, from the pain he felt, he had some reason to think possessed the quality ascribed to it. Several Europeans who were pres ent, and who hud bought different pie ces of plate from him, now pat simi lar questions to him ; and he confessed that it had been his constant practice, to add a very large quantity of tuten- ague to every article made in his shop, for which, during-the continuance 01 the pain, he promised ample reparation, LAUGILIBLB SKETCH OF THE I.Air. Law ! law ! law ! is like a fine woman's temper; a jery difficult study. Law is like a book of surgery ; a great many ter rible cases in it. Law is like fire and wa ter ; very good servants, but very bad when they get the upper hand of us. It is like a homely genteel woman, very well to fol low : It is also like a sc'olding wife, very bad when it follows us. And ag tin, it is like bad weather, most people choose to keep out of it. In law there are four parts: thc quidlibet, the quodlibct, the quid pro quo, and the sine qua non. Im primis, the quidlibet, or who began first ? Because, in all actions of assault, thc law is clear, that firobh jokis is absolutift maris, sine jokis : which being elegantly and clas sically rendered into English, is, that what soever he be that gave the first stroke, it was absolutely ill and without a joke. Sec ondly, the quodIibet,or the damages ; but that the law has nothing to do with, only to state them ; for whatever damages en sue, they are all in client's perquisites, according to the ancient Norman motto : if he is cast, or castandrum, he is " sem per ruinandum." Thirdly, eiuid pro quo, feeing counsel ; giving words for money, j or having moncv for words ; according to that ancient Norman motto : " Sicurat ; lex," ve live to perplex. Fourthly, the sine qua non, or, without something, what would any thing be good for ? Without a Urge fee, what would be the out to'of the law ? JtODERJV JLIAWERS. COXVEHS1TIOS . It is said that the emptiest vessels make the greatest noise. Don't let that deter you from making a free exercise of your lungs. It is conducive to your health. Therefore, in every conversation, howev- j and to propagate and encrease those er trivial it may be, be sure to bawl as loud j enslaving fears which render men ab as possible. I c0i,ltel V unfit fnr imdrrfrihin rr nrul nr- - anr peopie imagine tnai ne wno wiks the least on the subiect is the weaker par - 4. r , J .r , ,r , ty ; therefore, by vociferating as loud and as fast as possible, you will be thought to u u-t. r k i... .Many people imagine that he who talks have the heiter of the anrument hv th generality of your hearers, especially if properly interlarded with oaths. " Always whisper what you call secrets in company, whether you are in posses- sion of any or not. It shews the open ness of your disposition. When you mean to introduce an inter esting story, make out a kind of preface about an hour's length, by way of impres sing on your hearers the pleasure they are nhnnt tr rerpivp. Tt thev should he dis- appointed, that is not your fault, you did vour best; and so much time has been passed away at least to your own satisfac- tion. Introduce as many episodes and digres sions into your narrative as you can possi bly contrive to biing in. Loud laughter at, you don't know what, is a fine auxiliary in company, when your stock of reason is exhausted; this expe dient never fails to carry down all before you. When a person is in the midst cf an in teresting relation, discover great impa tience, by various signs and tokens, to show you are prepared for a contradiction, In all conversations studiously avoid brevity. If you have a good thing to say, the more you make of it the better; hence modesty and diffidence should be disre- garded in polite company, as conceit and assurance 'vill be sure to come off con- .-ri r- i i r. querors. i ne iormer mntiers vou irom saving what vou ought on anv subject : the latter makes ycu say a great deal more, Then surely the preference should be giv- en to the latter. . Some old fashioned people have thought a good stock of attentive reading very ne- ccssary to carry on an interesting conver sation ; but thanks to modern discoveries, we have got the better of these prejucii, ces: all that is now necessary, is never to put a ceminel on your tongue ; nature has made it for motion ; and though some may esteem rescrvedness and silence virtues, you will find, by the mere dint of assur ance and loud discourses, about any thing that strikes your fertile imagination, you will b? considered a very useful, accepta ble, and communicative gentleman ; at tiie sume time be sure to let your hands and arms assist your tongue at every marked period ; pay no regard to giving a back handed blow to those near you, every two or three minutes. It revives their atten tion to the topic on which you are giving your liberal sentiments. It shews great civility and ttteniion, o point blank contradict another when Lc labors under a momentary mistake. IEOM the cronciAx. ON THE TERRORS OF DEATH. Death has ever been termed the king of terrors and the terror of kings ; and its tyrannical sway is a most important subject of deep meditation. This grim tyrant closes the scene of our present existence, and puts an end to all our worldly projects and imaginary schemes of hanniness. What have mankind so ' rrreat a reluctance and aversion to ? It : readily mav be answered, nothing! The very thought terrifies, and there fore is diverted as much as possible, as too awful and gloomy, to make way for the gayer and more sprightly ima ges. And to this it is undoubtedly owing, that so many behave with so little decency, so little of manly firm ness and courage under the immediate apprehensions of it. If without re garding the consequences cf death, we consider it only as an unavoidable event, but at the same time shocking to na ture, it is certainly wisdom to render it intimate and familiar to the mind, that its horrors being diminished by frequent and close conversation with it, we may submit with becoming resig nation, to the appointment of an all wise Providence, and to the universal law of mortality. This will be an un speakable happiness to enrsches, i that critical hour, when every thing around us has a melancholy aspect, and the spirits are faint and languid ; it ir. honorable to human nature, and repre sents it in an advantageous light ; it has a natural tendency to encourage and comfort these who serve us, and inspire them with a generous contempt of death. But, to be unprepared for what we know will certainly happen, and for want of due reflection upon it, to meet it, when it eloes happen, with trem bling and confusion, is an argument of weakness and pusillanimity ; it debases the dignity of our nature, and makes it appear despicable ; it is a reproach to our religion, as if its principles were not strong enough to support us under those special exigencies, in which their influence is most desirable, and, without it, tends to dispirit others, rnmni:su:nfr mnnv noKi, f!c: r ; c ,ish5n b, d . f , , . r . . J . I utmost importance to society. Iher i . . , , 1 , , . - , j .s incIc.ed a Sycat de.al ln men s naturr I formation and constitution : some, nr ere al formation and constitution : some are bold ad daring spirits, that scarce any thing can depress and control -r while others are of such fearful, and susdicious temners. as to be alarmed i i 1 y by every imagination of danger; and to such, it may be next to impossible to compose and quiet their minds, in the near view of dissolution. But most certain it is, that if any thing will enable a man to behave in his last mo- ments with tolerable calmness and re- signation, it is tne using nimselt to meditate on his departure hence, its necessity, and the tolly ot repining or struggling against the fixed and unal terable laws of Providence ; and above all, on the glorious rewards of piety and true goodness in the future life, in comparison of which, all worldly glory and pleasure are insignificant and trnling. But this leads me to a subject of still deeper reflection : "The awful consequences of death." And not to contemplate these, with the greatest concern, with the strictest attention, must argue unaccountable stnpiditv, that Wft are hardencd even aRa;nst-a sense -f Qur ;mercsl- ,or h r . r fut"re state 's the. n'- flsed. F" ner srfnf nt n'inninp;s nr m,Friv T - - --ri thereiore demands our chief regard, if we act merely on principles of reason and common prudence; and thjs hie con be but of little importance, any otherwise than as, bv the appointment Qf the wise Author of Nature, it is cjn- nected with and preparatory to it. Be sides, our meditating on the state of good and bad men hereafter, will fur nish us with the most encouraging mo tives to the practice of religion and universal righteousness, and the most ! powerful persuasives from vice and impurity. For we can none of us, surely, be so rash as to resolve to per sist in dissolute courses, with shame and remorse, misery and ruin, full in view. And nothing can so effectually disarm death of its terror, or adminis ter such consolation and support in the prospect of it, as this thought, that it' opens a passage for us into eternal life, and the enjoyment of blessedness and glory inconceivable. f