r ft. '""''sftl GltERWIiOIlftUGmW C7 WEVXE8IMY JUNE fi. I82fi. NO. 7. J err ' O VJ t ' CD V ' b.l 0 I : j K v. i j f i i i r I i , a i I i - :.-' 4 4t -. ,..;.xt.. THtt IWTKJOT, If T. EARLY STH.LYGE, At Two Dollars ,ier aimumvpay- per fitted him. for a secluded retreat and select friendships His situation 'mi?ht seem to denrir him nf much prinfed and p..Mihed weekly by j of lnar IKerary stimulusHind that wide fellowship with the play nf hu man passions, which is no generally able within three months from the nefMtary .10 sustain the Heart id neaiiriiui una .vigorous exercise; suit ed to the general ! ucluVe of our moral nature, w juV adapted to erive his the vignrnus'oxiiansion. His lcute receipt of tho Hrst number, or Three Pllar after ilic expiration of that ' time. 4- - Not excusing to lim-H, neany in icrtetl three timps for one dollar, and 35 ceota for every miceeedint; pnhli- cation ; those ot greater Icntu in uie ane proportion Letters to the Edi tor must be post paid. was certainly inclined to the French modell. Thomion had more oplen- diur, Imt" leas of that earnest sjneer- The pmspeett of. its achievements ar enough to open all the fountains of the soul; to make it brpak f om its f enrihilitip ilirniilr K th lrom the Christan Spectator. ON THE GENIUS OF COWrEIl. . -T' lt90i..the mertls of Cowper it like aoalvino; the pualities of anjn iim.ite friend: the rmotiwm ofnr ifearts toHiiriI hi'i are D(.t so much ad t.i rati ou' A9ten!ernt"ij not ao much a rpvertrieo for illustrious geniui,a9 nflVrt.ien f. r the loveline of person al ehe.ra-.tler. Tho accounts of his lif-, as norlrnyrd by the hand of ritndh;p, and exhibited in hi pri vate correspond. Mte.P, and wrought in the d s-ri pti'nn of his poetry, ore tnado up of those leaser incidents and hourly displays of feoJing which fonfttitnte the mnteriftl friendship We feel ourselves linked toliim fy puthizin? word: he sizlied for the prtee- on and noiirrghment of tender chilhood; he wanted to repose on the b'Mom that loved him with maleroil fondues, flit gentle and innocent titfeeiions expanded th melv'S to ity that Oows.ir.to the heart ike a j tame and proscribed impurity of die trearrt or liquid patho. He h s a Hon; to pour around Christianity the more ambitious fancy and while in j litht of every taste, and the charm Cwper ytnt-trrtr-ttbsorhed by the ! of irresistible persuation. Then mel lit'auty of the scenery, in him you tin down every obstacle it sha!! eo thiak ofthe superlative elegance of forth conquering atvd t -eon'quer till thedj Option. Theone thr ws the every eye is raviilied Villi i's beauty, -C!i& 'anc 0,1 ,'10 rches of ( and every heart yields it the homage -VnW ,fnsia.nn tn:t crt- cvenerat ion I i rith h's pnsOi toe seene which his t,nre is to draw; while in the descriptions oi Cowper you have t e 'Virf' , - JCtl. REVIBW. nak5d and exact impress of the living Of the Memoir $ of Richard It nry Let beauty which caught his d'icate ana1 0 i i . - A i , puci a subiert, as the history of sensitive eye. l here is more loven- fT t 'j " . J, In A lltilto1 hlulai tm nn li il r A alia iinn in I hnmann Ami wnnra rmlihi ' 1.11 til M t. VHIVU) IIJU1 U ILUIIl t " . 4l . j n t 'in . . in the rnnc oT sees to be appointed delicat- a.siduitie,. and as the ten- out burstings of riotous and intoxica-1 . Beginning with the h it st.ps der vegetable drink, in its life from ted power, the wide diffusion of a! f '7 ". P0,;yof B'ttaiM to 4i i -iL . i l . f -5 i . i . .i '.wards Acserica, in 176, and brurbt the dews of the evenme: io the heart splrif so plastic and penetrating, that! , ... , . . o n . i L ... i . ,, ' , ... rt . ,? . - down to the adoption of the Consti of CoUter haiquHied on the soft efe-it moulds and tires every suh'ect of., . '. . i . rt u l j i i . r?' i tution and orjcanizition of the cov- cance of ternale coartesiej. lie enald of the hardest and roughest maUtieli. .. ... b flliin if hn lAiail am, trith tlia farvAtir mtrt ivprv nhipff. nrwl thill . . P ardouT of Ttirunar iind umaurrirT entho there is no forced animatio? lhere iseV:'7 ''V t. 10 e-f.vfJP'-i?! V:' siam With the boundlei e mlidenc1 no overflowing fulness; nothing want- A . a . as . a .1 of inexperience, he lanped his fri nl to his inmost self, and bathed and blagged him in tho oiitnourinff? of his purest affections. Domestic seclusion was the clem'nl in which he lived aid breathed. He delighted in the contemplation of human character and manners, as they displayed their countless hues to objects of pie sure aui,l"l)itiou: out they must be ehtstened and mel lowed by distance; the toil, and cla ins and nothing to spare. Cowper was u Cliistian, and I doubt not, that often has the devout spirit risen from th; persual of his strains, rand rapt in the hoty elevation caught Iroin this mingled Manic of genius tind piety, poured out the ecsta ies ol his soul for. such a gift to rugliiou. It has been the reproach or i..ifor'iine of its friends that they have cramped its energies by scholastic dt-iiaitions; thflkt.inneud of letting its native at titnaev: we are let into tne secreev and eanlidence of hi botohi; and i souls mingle with his, ami flw in i.l!:rr "!'.') jo rurtcr:t n? thoughts and jovs anl sadiMs. ) ther poets are borne above ns, and break away from the sympathies f the sool, and are wafted in vast el vxlinD nn the hreftlh of general fftnii': WC UU llirill Willi rrilll! "i t-'ii rtrnTHrr-rrr win f r r-'-n rWY , Tircr' xr wonder,- and evory hrakinsrof this restless and turbid life he-loved to feel a;d pity" them til; but it was in the musing quiet i.i'i'.n(!i:i-.u; O vjt.i A. nr.t- wiu at a !:M;ine; from th haua's of men, a'uNir feelings soothed to the mild nM-o'f an evening sky, listens to the mingled inurnmrs of a busy and ex a aa piruisr uav too heartlessness or an nately. of the subtil it an I of the most expansive school; the anion and reaction apon each other of (he ma ture political strength of the English Cabinet, and tho ndolesent energy of America. It is G 1 1 with charac ters, wilh an eloquence', like that which was wont to he hoard in the storms of ths old coromon-weahbi; strains of exhortation and resolute -----responses echo to each other across the Atlantic; in the !iifu'ng scenes of the war, alt the races of m n and the lae;'' of civ lzation are minded, the have both from the pulpit and' the ant! tumultuous heraoaa! Irait. and favourite virtue, and weakness, are swallowed up in ihr fall blaze of intellectual gl try. But Cowptr has descended from the dar.zliog height and glorious compa ny f his fellowdumnanes, hovering orr the dw lling of peaceful life, lidJi ng down upon them a soft radiance as imploring the love and frl.whip of moitality. 'His imas;e is mineltd wth our visions of domes tie htis: it dwells amonaf the remem- ary. ih'e gallant Chevaliers of Poland I . I V ... . . . . i.. a : ' ore.,, di.tfai.ed it by a n iai.it and uu" ". ,,,c an cr,c,1,i :JBW lied its lustre by numerous aii'l grins perveriiuiei of las;.'; they h iv e chil led itsgenerous and l.)'iy tt?ii b narrow and spiritless and common place sentiment. This reproach can "is". re mjiunfi'ir-er poMjieu savage. At 'oe m'iment The mighty fleets of Kuropo aro tfiund-ring n the Antilles; a lu next, the blue eye Brunsvvicker, the veterans of the e- ven Years' War, are i&en winding. CAetlutg moot hg of awny which rolled j9epara.ticn bfivveenLtt.sle um; over hiih. must have e;iven double tion, is u most unnaiurul divorce, attractions to a scene of elm and Cowper liad a soul keenly alive to hallowed repose; here hr found rest every beauty of nature and art: and and healing to his wounded spirit; religion, as invelted with the cliurui here it flowed even and tranquil like of his poetry, never wore an earthly the gentle ripples of an ocean after a robe that shone so like its hue of uri nip;ht of shipwreck and storm; and the giual an I celestial loveliness. Ne scenery of life comes reflected fmm ver dwelt there iu a human being a his mind in all its originat beauty temper that mingled so kindly with and in crystalline purity, the bland spirit of Christianity. It There-is an indefinable charm touched with its hallowed fire all the i .. i .:r-. Y .i;.;;,.. tieman, to efiniiu ate tothe Ameri pervadiner the writings of Cowper springs of his elegant taste; it breath- bered pleasures1 of childhood and : whieh the heart only can understand ed its iospiring vigour into all has Jio we. 1'he spirit., of .his soft and! He has no loftiness of diction, or sur- innocent loves, till every element of pr'sinc novemes oi luuurrry to ieau ms ueauii mi gemus, unc inv mcucs captive the fancy. His style Is that it described, wafted nothing but in of an even and unambitious nhrase-leeose to heaven. .What ! shall man olo&ry. You see no labour of thought, be attracted to every other of his in nor sudden impulses of inspiration, terests by the forms of a seductive w pen ne rises, u is in enue unnu-i rneinrie, aou iur jiuci ui a uninaui Ution. I here is , sometimes such n and fascinating imagery! halgeti want of vigour that he almost bord- ius pour forth its praises of natu ers on the very rerge of tameness. mil the stars above us twinkle down when some happy thought will awa (with new lustre, and the u Mole eanti ken a new gleam of poetic fefvoue wske to new beauty, as when it burst and every reader will forgive him his fresh from the bosom of almigh error The tone of feeling that per- ty love? Shall viee itself "glitter in vades his composition is perfectly in- the magic of unwanted melody, and imitable, it Is so entirely the effusion the. heart be drunken with its sorce of his native and spontaneous tern- ries? Shall the God of heaven be perament. The directness and sira- blasphemed ,in colours dipped in Lis pli'ity ofhis expression, too, no art own glory; and shall religion, the can equil because art did not pro- joy of angels, the dearest friend of duee it; it is limpid as water, and the humanity, the bright hope and vis- sentiment i seen through it as a me- ion of immortality, meet the naked dium of nefeet transparency, ft is selfishness of the heart without a A original and Jieculi r so shaped graee to soften and conciliate? Must Jovcly eharaeter steals through the re i an os o i ; p r i v aii nie r co u r e anu social afa ities. .We throw open to hint the inmost sanctuaries of ourbo somsYiod he enters a dear and wel eoue visiter. His very name kin dl np within ns a glow of human sensibility and celestial purity. Th thought of him is like a whispering Yisinn of paradise. How softly do onr contemplations repose on this dearest and most sacred imageof oje jjiu! how quietly he steals away one and another of sympathies, vtill t he enchanted heart Surrenders in -sweet captivation, and rejoices in his pow r! ; 'r There was in the constitution of Cowper a Jeepandstrons; morality, a.quiet but inexttngnihahle warmth of temperament, in which every pure and amiable feeling sprung; up in ever-bloomiog freshness and verdure. oollow. hearted poetry of France had Spread its elegant aud i frosty incrus tations wver the fountains of the Bciliah Hf Jicon; hu t th est reams i i II flowed beneath and collected in secret their force, till they gushed forth efipiiu cau mililiu; peace is nude; thirteen republics stand side by side n the continent, bleeding fronl the wounds' of war, tremblingly alive for the in- dependence, which their labors and agonies.had gained them; the trial of war had been borne, that of peaeo succeeds; a Constitution is proposed, is discussed, is adopted; a new: life is breathed bv it iuto the exhausted channels of the nation, whieh starts from that moment in a career of pros peril? so rapid, so resistless, so ad venturous, that the reality every, day puts our bristliest visions to shame. And this astonishing drama of events was the work of our days; its theatre was our beloved cunt ry; its tmmor- tal actors were our fathers. Office Seeking. 'The Georgetown Metropolitan, fo?. ' forms us that a resignation v',onJ ihe Clerks in the Treasury 0(B at V'ashlnagton City took place recent- : ly, and adds, that as soon as the re- signainn was known, then ' cstne tho, V tug of precedence in the1anteriam ii , her. Memb'ers of Congress 'who.ha'd ' friends to serve, broken merchants;",. discharged clerks, ruined spendthrifts and idle boys, msbed in ouepromis-r cuous mass, until the Secretary found' 1 it necessary, in preserve bis'person 'j . from beni2 tnk. u by storm, to have a 1 e 4 anee. so impregnated with the warai and living spirit that glowed within him, that it seems not collected from the common voeabuHry of the lan guage, but the birth of occasion, and to be" thrown out as a new creation warm and sparkling in the genius, of from the omnipotence of his fancy. Cowper ,,. I in many respects Juowper was .a The original temperament of Cow- contrast to Thomson, whoso geoias labfl pasted up m the anle-ehamher ikaAAieii4iM shaft of Wiethe subtleties of deprav been maJe. We uoderstrtnol that the ' -ed reason, and the host of mighty plan was highly approved of, and that pa-sions--but must it also wig-au several HecretariesJiavtf ordcreoT : a -natural war with those very refine siejn to be )ung up, subscribed o one mentt and sensibilities ofournature, side..1 Novaeaocies in this 'iTice," j; which owe to it their purest nourish- and on he oilier. Vacancies filled," ment and noblest elevationr It has by whrh it Hill be suited lor any douo that, for. man, whj eh ought, to emergencies, even that,.. of resigoa- fill eVerjr heart with enthusiasm, tion. 7 . . '''&r;. - : w. "-( t.i - '