f*& J. REESE LIBRARY V OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA .... jt^t A ccessions No. J2U<4^- f- ?-*/_ Shelf No 1 . TMK HISTORICAL READER, DESIGNED FOR THE USE OF SCHOOLS AND FAMILIES. ON A NEW PLAN. BY REV. J. L. BLAKE, A. M. c/ St. Matthew's Churchy and Principal of a Literary Seminary , Boston. " History serves to amuse the imagination ; to interest the passions ; to tm prove the understanding ; and to strengthen the sentiments of virtue and piety/ STEREOTYPE EDITION. ?ssS oncortr, W. 3%. PUBLISHED BY HORATIO HILL young persons, especially, to place a false estimate on human conduct that, in the same degree as they thence fail duly to appreciate real goodness, they will become the less inclined to it ; and in the same degree as they become familiar- ized with vice, they will view it with less -abhorrence, and will con- sequently be the less secured against temptations to it. The Author would not deny that this may sometimes be the case ; but he does maintain, that there is no necessary tendency in history, to produce these deleterious effects in the human character. Those who read history, must blame themselves or their teachers, if suitable moral reflections are not made as they pass along. If history were studied as it ought, the most tragical relations which disfigure its ensanguin- ed pages might be made conducive to our instruction. If we did but reflect on the tears of the widows and orphans, and imagine ourselves to hear the groans of the wounded and dying ; if we represented to ourselves the splendid and warlike appearance of an army, at its first taking the field, contrasted with the distressful spectacle of its shat- tered remains, after a hard fought battle, or a bloody campaign ; w* IT iv PREFACE. hould be thunderstruck at the reflection, and contemplate with hor- ror the dreadful effects of the human passions, instead of being greatly dazzled with what is called martial glory, and unduly inspired with love for the praise usually bestowed on it in history. The names of the several persons from whose writings extracts have been made in this work, are not annexed to those extracts, be- cause in some instances the same article has been taken from differ- ent writers, and in other instances the phraseology has been partially altered the former of which renders the giving of names inconve- nient, and the latter might be considered an act of injustice, inasmuch as it would ascribe to the individuals named what is not properly their own. The Author, however, aiming to let the work possess as much variety of style as possibly consistent with his main plan, has avoided introducing his own phraseology, in many instances, where the extracts made are evidently susceptible of improvement in this particular. Indeed, it has been found difficult, if not impossible, to obtain that variety, connected with that approved excellency of style, which is practicable in a collection of extracts on more mis- cellaneous subjects. The best class of writers on history is compa- ratively small ; and the subject admits also only a comparatively small rhetorical diversification of language. The Author nevertheless in- dulges the belief, that this compilation is not greatly wanting in that variety and excellency of style which are of the first importance in books for the use of schools ; and, that it will be found well calculated to inspire the youthful mind with a desire for more extensive and connected reading on this useful and interesting subject. J. L. BLAKE. INDEX. PA6B THE CREATION Paradise - - - - . 19 An Evening in Paradise .... 15 The Deluge ib. The Antediluvians 18 The World contemplated at a Distance 22 The Tower of Babel 23 The Assyrians ...... 26 The Ruins of Babylon 29 The Egyptians The Egyptian Pyramids ..... 34 The Falling Tower .... 36 The River Nile 37 The Progress of Writing 39 The Trojan War 41 Battle of Thermopylae ... 44 Socrates ...... .43 The Social State -*-.-. 52 Battle of Marathon .... 52 Seneca - 55 Patriotism ....... 58 The Carthaginians ...... ib. The Warrior's Wreath - - . - - 62 Solomon's Temple ---- 63 Revolt of the Ten Tribes 65 Israel's Return from Egypt .... 68 The Grateful Princess 69 Julius Caesar and Pompey 74 Battle of Pharsalia - 76 The World a Fleeting Show .... 81 Death of Antony - * - - - ib. Death of Cleopatra - .... 85 The Captive Lady - - Death of Ccesar ...... 89 Catiline's Conspiracy ...... The Tears of Judah 95 Destruction of Jerusalem - - - - io. Order of Nature 103 The Fall of Rome 104 Rise of Mahometanism ... 106 Empire of China .... HO INDEX. PAGE Charles V. Emperor of Germany - - - - 116 Mahomet - - - . . . 117 The Feudal System - - . - 118 The Crusades ]22 Chivalry ........ ]g6 The Reformation - - , - - -132 Translation of the Bible - - - - 136 The Dungeon . - - - 137 Patriots and Martyrs ..... 143 The Order of Jesuits - - - 143 An Evening Sketch ...... 153 Martyrs of Armorian ...... 153 Morning Hymn , - 156 Siege of Calais ...... 157 Uncertainty of the World 161 Massacre of Swedish Nobility .... 162 A Summer's Morn ]69 Joan of Arc ....... 170 Discovery of America ..... 175 The Times of Old ...... 178 Capture of Montezuma - . . . . 181 Conquest of Mexico ...... 188 Victory 196 William Wallace - - - - 197 The Exile - - - 201 Robert Bruce - - - ' - - ib. Mary Queen of Scots ... 209 Fall of Jericho - 213 Charles I. of England 214 The Ruins 218 Gun-Powder Treason - .... 219 Disappointed Ambition ..... 222 The Aged Prisoner - 224 The Inquisition ...... 226 Plymouth Colony ...... 232 The Indian Princess 38 T>e World at Rest 241 Settlement of Rhode Island - 242 Settlement of Pennsylvania .... 247 Liberty - - - - - - - - 257 Capture of Mrs. Duston 258 New England Witchcraft - ' - ' 261 Peter the Great . - \ - 268 General Oglethorpe > - - 269 Benjamin Franklin - - 271 Destruction of Tea at Boston 272 First American Congress ..... 276 Battle of Bunker's Hill - , - . - . 278 Burning of Charlestown - 284 General Lyman ...... 286 Excision of Wyoming ..... 291 New-England - - - - - - 296 INDEX Tornado in Barbadoes American Independence French Bastile .... Lafayette in the Dungeons of Olmutz The Wise Choice Abdallah and Sabat - The Land of Rest The French Revolution Silver and Gold The Star in the East - Battle of Trafalgar - The Field of Battle Human Slavery ... Origin of African Slavery - The Negro's Complaint WilliainTell .... Battle of Erie .... Surrender of Quebec - Alexander Selkirk - - * Bonaparte's Campaign in Russia Burning of Moscow . The Kremlin of Moscow Battle of New-Orleans The Miseries of War - The Historian's Reflections The Common Lot Address to the Deity - Til ?AGX 298 300 301 303 310 311 313 ib. 314 318 319 327 328 331 336 338 340 345 351 353 355 358 363 366 368 370 ORDER OF THE PLATES. United States Capitol, to face the Title Page. Tower of Babel, - - - - - page 23 Ancient Pyramids, - . - - " 34 Socrates, - - . . - " 48 Solomon's Temple, ... ' 63 Hegira, Flight of Mahomet, - - - 106 First Landing of Columbus, - - - " 175 William Wallace and the two Friars, - " 197 Landing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth, - " 232 Roger Williams crossing the PawtucJcet River t 244 Destruction of Tea in Boston Harbor, * '* 272 William TO, "338 gpTufi^ ^ V o> THE "f [UJTIVERSIT HISTORICAL READER. THE CREATION. 1. THE creation of the world is the first transaction, wkh which we are presented by history, and is the most truly sublime and glorious, that imagination can conceive. But of this stupendous event, no particulars are recorded calcu- lated only to gratify an idle curiosity it seems to have been the great, if not the only object of the inspired penman, to make known the important truth, that the heavens and the earth were created by the immediate power of God. 2. The earth, subsequent to its creation, was a fluid, dark, and shapeless mass of matter ; The vast immeasurable abyss Outrageous as a sea, dark, wasteful, wild, Up from the bottom turn'd by furious winds And surging waves, as mountains, to assault Heav'n's height, and with the centre mix the pole. But at the sovereign command of the Almighty, the cheer- ful light appeared ; the firmament expanded, to divide the upper from the lower waters ; the congregated floods retired to their destined beds, and the dry land was crowned with a rich profusion of herbage, fruits, and flowers. 3. These great occurrences, having occupied the three first days, the succeeding one was devoted to an illumination of the newly created globe on the fourth day, the face of heaven was decorated with myriads of stars, and the greater luminaries were so disposed, as to distinguish between day and night, and to divide the seasons of the year. What is the first event with which history presents us ? Have we any particular account of the creation of the world ? What object had the inspired penman chiefly in view, when writing the history of the creation ? 10 THE CREATION. God saw the light was good ; And ight from darkness by the hemisphere Divided ; light the day and darkness night He nanrd. Thus was the first day ev'n and morn ; Nor past uncelebrated, nor unsung By the celestial quires, when orient light Exhaling first from darkness they beheld ; Birth-day of heav'n and earth ; with joy and shout The hollow universal orb they filFd, * And touch'd their golden harps, and hymning praisVi God and his works. 4. The waters were then replenished with an abundant variety of fish ; the odoriferous air was fanned by the pinions of innumerable birds ; the verdant meads were stocked with cattie ; and every part of the earth was inhabited by its ap- propriate tribes. To complete, and truly to excel the whole, on the sixth day, God created man of the dust of the ground ; and breathing into his body the breath of life, or immortali- ty, caused him to become a living soul. Shortly subsequent to his own creation, Adam was thrown into a deep sleep, dur- ing which the Almighty took from his side a rib, formed it into the body of a woman, and endued her also with life and immortality. 5. Now heav'n in all her glory shone, and rolFd Her motions, as the great first Mover's hand First wheel'd their course : earth in her rich attire Consummate lovely smil'd ; air, water, earth, By fowl, fish, beast, was flown, was swum, was walk'd Frequent ; and of the .sixth day yet remain'd ; There wanted yet the master-work, the end, , Of all yet done ; a creature who, not prone And brute as other creatures, but endued With sanctity of reason, might erect His stature, and upright with front serene Govern the rest, self-knowing, and from thence Magnanimous to correspond with heav'n, But grateful to acknowledge whence his good Descends, thither with heart and voice and eyes, Devoted in devotion, to adore And worship God supreme, who made him chief Of all his works. 6. "When Adam first beheld the fair partner of his life, THE CREATION. 11 finding her of his own likeness and complexion, he was struck with a secret sympathy, and exclaimed with rapture, This is now bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh. He easily fore- saw, that the love and union which were now to take place between them, were to be lasting. The divine hand which conducted the woman to Adam, did it in the light of a ma- trimonial father ; and having joined them together, he pro- nounced upon them a benediction, intimating, that they might live to see the earth replenished with a numerous pro- geny. * 7. Thrice happy man, And sons of men, whom God hath thus advanced, Created in his image, there to dwell And worship him, and in reward to rule Over his works, on earth, in sea, or air, And multiply a race of worshippers Holy and just : thrice happy if they know Their happiness, and persevere upright. 8. Thus, by the creative influence of the Eternal Spirit, were the heavens and the earth finished in the space of six days so admirably finished an unformed chaos changed into a system of perfect order and beauty that the adorable Architect himself pronounced it very good, and all the son? of God shouted for joy. 9. The Creator from his work Desisting, though unwearied, up return'd, Up to the heav'n of heav'ns his high abode, Thence to behold this new created world Th' addition of his empire, how it show'd In prospect from his throne, how good, how fair, Answering his great idea. Up he rode Follow'd with acclamation and the sound Symphonious of ten thousand harps that tun'd Angelic harmonies : the earth, the air Resounded. The heav'ns and all the constellations rung, The planets in their station listening stood, While the bright pomp ascended jubilant. 10. According to the Bible, or Hebrew chronology, the creation of the world is placed in the year 4004 before tho What is the chronology of the creation of the world ? 12 PARADISE. Christian era. The Chinese, Hindoos, and Egyptians, have made pretensions to a much earlier origin ; but these pre- tensions are supported by no decisive historic documents, and must therefore be attributed to national vanity, which prompts every people to trace back their origin into the re- motest antiquity, in order to give additional eclat to their nation. PARADISE. 1. To facilitate the intended happiness of our first pa- rents, the Almighty Creator had provided for their residence a most delightful spot, called Eden. It was watered by four rivers, and from its natural fertility and the richness and va- riety of its productions, it was fitly called a Garden. Among its vegetable productions, were two remarkable Trees, one called the Tree of Life, and the other the Tree of Knoio- ledge. It is supposed, that the first of these trees communi- cated immortality to all who should eat o'f it ; or that it fur- nished a sovereign remedy against all the evils incident to the life of man ; and the latter was to enable persons to dis- tinguish between Good and Evil. 2. Into this earthly Paradise did the Almighty conduct Adam and Eve, giving them orders to take care of the garden, and to superintend the plants. He granted them permission to eat of the fruit of every tree, except of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. This he strictly charged them not even to touch, on the penalty of incurring his dis- pleasure, and thereby entailing upon themselves and their descendants, mortality, disease, and death.. With this small restraint, God left them in the garden of Eden, where every thing was pleasing to the sight, and accommodated to their mutual enjoyment. 3. Thus fixed in the most beautiful situation, possessed of innocence, devoid of guilt, and free from care, the happiness of our first parents seemed complete Have any nations pretended to an origin more remote than that given to the creation of the world by the chronology of the Bible ?' What was the name of the garden, in which Adam and Eve wero placed ? What two remarkable trees are named as being in it ? Un- der what prohibition were Adam and Eve placed in Eden ? PARADISE. 13 Perfection crowif d with wond'rous frame, And peace and plei-.ty smil'd around ; They felt no grief, they knew no shame, But tasted heaven on earthly ground. But alas ! their bliss was transient, their innocence fleet- ing, and short their exemption from toil and care. 4. The devil, viewing the felicity of the first human pair with those painful sensations which are natural to depravity of heart, determined to allure them from their innocence, and to stimulate them to the crime of disobedience. In consequence of this infernal design, he began by persuading Eve, through the agency of the serpent, to tast the prohi- bited tree of knowledge, telling her, that by su doing, both herself and her husband would become sensible of the dif- ference between good and evil, would acquire much addi- tional happiness, and even not be inferior, in point of wis- dom, to God himself. 5. Unhappily the artifices of the serpent prevailed. Eve gazed on the tempting fruit till her appetite was inflamed ; its beautiful hue made her fancy it a most delicious food ; and, at length, she sacrificed her duty to gratify her curiosi- ty. She stretched forth the presumptuous hand, took of the baneful fruit, and eat, to her own destruction. She pluck'd, she eat ; Earth felt the wound, and nature, from her seat, Sighing through all her works, gave signs of woe That all was lost. 6. Pleased with the taste of the fruit, and fancying herself already in possession of that additional happiness the serpent had promised her, she flew to Adam, and enticed him to par- ticipate in her crime. He scrupled not to eat i Against nis better knowledge ; not deceived, But fondly overcome with female charm. Earth trembled from her entrails, as again In pangs, and Nature gave a second groan ; Sky lowerM, and mutt'ring thunder, some sad drops Wept at completing of the mortal sin. Did they comply with this prohibition ? What induced them to violate the law of God ? 14 PARADISE. 7. Remorse, the natural consequence of guilt, now open* ed their eyes to each other's nakedness. No longer shielded by innocence from shame, they were mutually shocked at the reciprocal indecency of their own appearance. Art was now substituted to conceal what their criminality rendered too obvious ; aprons were made of fig-leaves ; and they doubtless highly applauded themselves for acquiring, at the expense of their integrity, the faculty of invention, to re move difficulties which their former simplicity prevented their perceiving. 8. While they were in a state of innocence, they no sooner heard the voice of God approach them, than they ran with ecstasy to meet him, and with humble joy to welcome his gracious visits ; but now their Maker was become a terror to them, and they a terror to each other. Their consciences painted their transgression in the blackest colors, all hope was banished, and nothing remained but horror and despair. 9. When, therefore, after their transgression, they heard the voice of the Lord in the garden, instead of running, with cheerfulness and joy, to meet him as before, they flew to its most retired parts, that they might conceal themselves from his sight. But the Almighty soon called them from their dark retreat ; they were unable to escape the knowledge of his* omniscient eye, though covered with foliage ; they both appeared before him, and acknowledged their guilt. 10. The man, however, attempted to excuse himself by laying the blame to the woman, and pleaded her persuasions, as the cause of his criminality. The woman endeavored to remove the crime from herself to the serpent ; but the Al- mighty thought proper to make all three the objects of his distributive justice. As the serpent had been the original cause of this evil, God first passes sentence on him, which was, that he should ever after creep on the ground, and thereby become incapable of eating any food, except whal was mingled with dust. The woman was given to under- stand, that she had entailed upon herself sorrow and pain, and subjection to her husband. The punishment of Adam consisted in a life of perpetual toil and slavery, in order to What, was the curse pronounced on the serpent for his agency in the apostacy of our first parents ? What was tho curse pronounced on Eve ? On Adam ? THE DELUGE. 15 keep in due subjection those passions and appetites, to gra- tify which he had transgressed the divine command. 11. The awful decree being thus solemnly pronounced, as well on the author of the offence, as on the offenders, them- selves, the Almighty, to enhance their sense of the crime, and the tokens of his displeasure, expelled the guilty pair from the blissful regions of Paradise, and placed, at the east end of the garden, a guard of angels, not only to prevent their return, but to secure the forbidden fruit, in future, from the unhallowed hands of polluted mankind. 12. Thus, by this original pollution, fell our first parents, who, from the happiest condition that can be conceived, plunged themselves into a state of wretchedness, and there- by entailed misery on their descendants. They eat the apple, it is true ; We taste the wormwood and the gall ; And to these distant ages rue The dire effects of Adam's fall. AN EVENING IN PARADISE. Now came still evening on, and twilight gray Had, in her sober livery, all things clad ; Silence accompanied ; for beast and bird, They to their grassy couch, these to their nests Were sunk, all but the wakeful nightingale ; She all night long her amorous descant sung ; >Silence was pleased. Now glow'd the firmament With living sapphires Hesperus, that led The starry host, rode brightest ; till the moon, Rising in clouded majesty, at length, Apparent queen, unveil'd her peerless light, And o'er the dark her silver mantle threw. THE DELUGE. 1. THE wickedness of mankind had rapidly increased Were they permitted to remain in Paradise ? How were they prevented from returning into it ? af 16 THE DELUGE. with the increasing population, and the earth was literally filled with violence ; yet the forbearance of God was conti- nued towards them, and he mercifully resolved to grant them the space of one hundred and twenty years for repentance ; during which time, he declared that his Spirit should strive with man, in order to awaken him to a sense of his depra- vity, and eventually to reclaim him to the paths of peace and virtue. 2. It is here proper to remark, that notwithstanding the general corruption, one man was found perfect in his gene- ration, and walking humbly with his God. This person was Noah, the son of Lamech, who exerted himself, on every oc- casion, to introduce a reformation both of worship and con- duct ; and to this end he undertook the laborious task of public admonition, warning his auditors of the fatal conse- quences that must result from their enormities. His zealous counsel was, however, treated with disdain, and the deluded race continued in the practice of every vice, till God is said to have been grieved at his heart, for the formation of such rebellious and incorrigible creatures. 3. Finding all attempts to reclaim the inhabitants of the earth to be fruitless that they were resolved on ruin, the Almighty decreed an universal deluge that should utterly de- stroy them, together with the birds of the air and the beasts of the field. From this tremendous sentence, Noah and his family were excluded. This venerable patriarch, having found grace in the eyes of the Lord, was directed to build a certain vessel or ark, for the preservation of himself and family, and of such a quantity of animals of every species, as would be sufficient to replenish the earth again, when the threatened flood should subside. 4. In obedience to the divine command, Noah readily en- gaged in the work to which he was appointed. With respect to the dimensions of the ark, we read in Scripture, that its length was three hundred cubits, its breadth fifty, and its What effect did the increasing population of the antediluvian world have on morals ? Did God resolve immediately to destroy mankind for their great wickedness ? How long time did he allow them for re- pentance and reformation ? What righteous person was there found, at this time, on earth ? Did God employ him to reclaim the wicked inhabitants ? Did they listen to his admonitions ? In what way did Goa resolve to destroy the old world? How were Noah and his fa- mily to be saved ? What was the length of the ark ? Its breadth ? THE DELUGE. 17 height thirty. Its form was that of an oblong square, with a flat bottom, and a sloping roof, elevated one cubit in the middle. It consisted of three stories, each of which, exclud- ing the thickness of the floors, might have been eighteen feet high, and was divided into separate apartments. It was, in all probability, well supplied with light and air ; and though it had neither sails nor rudder, it was admirably con- trived for lying steadily upon the surface of the water, and for thus preserving the lives of its various inhabitants. 5. The appointed time of vengeance being come, and the ark completed, Noah went on board, in the year of the world 1656, with his wife, his sons, and his daughters-in-law, taking with him all kinds of beasts, birds, and reptiles, by pairs and by sevens, as he was expressly commanded ; while the rest of mankind, regardless of his repeated warnings, continued to indulge in luxury and dissipation, till the flood came and overwhelmed them with a swift destruction ; for in the self-same day, were the fountains of the great deep broken up, the windows of heaven were opened, and the inundating torrents began to fall, which continued without intermission for forty days and forty nights. The waters also increased gradually during the space of five months, when they rose to the elevation of twenty-seven feet above the summits of the highest mountains. 6. The irrevocable decree of heaven having been thus awfully accomplished, a wind was caused to pass over the earth, in consequence of which the waters began to assuage ; and on the first day of their decrease, they sunk so consider- ably, that the ark rested on the mountains of Ararat. This happened on the seventeenth day of the seventh month, or the sixth of May ; and by the first day of the tenth month, answering to our nineteenth of July, the tops of the neigh- boring hills began to appear. 7. Towards the end of the ensuing month, Noah opened one of the windows of the ark, and sent forth a raven, which flew to and fro till the earth was dry, but afforded him no What was its height ? What was the form of the ark which God directed him to build ? In what year of the world did Noah go on board the ark ? How long did the incessant rains continue which caused the deluge ? For what length of time did the waters continue to rise ? How high did they rise above the summits of the highest mountains ? Where did the ark rest when the waters subsided 3 18 THE ANTEDILUVIANS. satisfactory intelligence; he, therefore, let out a dove three successive times, allowing seven days to elapse between each excursion. The first time she returned quickly, having found no spot sufficiently firm and dry to afford a resting place ; the second time, she came back in the evening, bring- ing an olive branch in her mouth, as a proof that the flood was greatly abated ; and the third time she returned no more. 8. On the first day of the first month, or the twenty-third of October, the patriarch, who was now in the six hundred and first year of his age, removed the covering of his vessel, in order to take a view of the surrounding scenery, and dis- covered that the surface of the earth was perfectly free from water ; he continued, however, in the ark, till the twenty- seventh of the second month, or the eighteenth of Decem- ber, when he came forth, in pursuance of the divine com- mand, together with his wife, his family, and every living creature which had been intrusted to his care, for one year and ten days, according to the antediluvian computation, or during the space of three hundred and sixty-five days of our present time. THE ANTEDILUVIANS. 1. THE history of the antediluvians, particularly with re- gard to their religion, policy, arts, and sciences, would cer- tainly be considered as a subject of great value, were it pos- sible to expatiate upon these points with strict regard to tmth ; but as the sacred volume affords but little whereon we might ground our assertions, and the page of profane his- tory is clouded with fable, we must candidly acknowledge that our remarks are founded chiefly upon conjecture. 2. With respect to the religious rites of the primeval race of men we can only venture to affirm, that they offered sa- crifices, both of animals, and of the fruits of the earth ; yet some writers have attempted to prove that all the patriarchs, from Adam, had certain times and places set apart for the In what manner did Noah ascertain when the earth had become suffi- ciently dry to leave the ark ? At what season of the year did he leave it ? What was his age on leaving it ? How long did Noah continue in the ark ? Is much known of the religion, policy, arts and sciences of the antediluvians ? What can be affirmed of their religious rites ? THI-: ANTEDILUVIANS. 19 celebration of divine worship, and devoted a portion of their property to the maintenance of the priests. 3. Their politics and civil constitutions are hid in impene- trable darkness, and consequently afford no foundation even for conjecture. It is however probable, that the patriarchal form of government was set aside by tyranny and oppression ; and that this change took place much sooner among the de- scendants of Cain than those of Seth. We also imagine, that their communities were but few, and consisted of vast numbers of people previous to the union of the families of Seth and Cain, and that all mankind, subsequent to that im- prudent junction, constituted but one great nation, divided into several disorderly associations, and living in a state of anarchy, which indisputably tended to contaminate the thoughtless race with an univer 0f , , depravity of manners. 4. Even with regard to their arts and sciences, but little can be said ; and they appear rather to have devoted their time to luxury and dissipation, than to useful discoveries or men- tal improvement. The last generation of Cain's line found out the art of working metal ; and music seems to have beefi invented about the same time. Some have supposed that the science of astronomy was cultivated by the antediluvians ; but this opinion has no solid foundation ; and the erroneous opinions of those who have attributed various books to the patriarchs, Adam, Seth, and Enos, are too absurd to merit a serious refutation. 5. The antediluvian world is supposed to have been ex- ceedingly different from that which we now inhabit, and to have been stocked with a greater number of inhabitants than the present earth is capable of containing ; and indeed this idea seems tolerably well founded, when we consider the iurprising length of men's lives previous to the deluge, and the numerous generations that were then contemporary. 6. Various causes have been assigned by different authors for this longevity ; some imputing it to the sobriety of tht; antediluvians, and the extreme simplicity of their diet What is probabte as to their government ? When did they attain to the art of working metal ? Did they become acquainted with mu- MC, and wheft ? Is it supposed that the antediluvian world was dif- ferent from what the world now is ? What circumstance renders thii supposition probable ? What three reasons have been assigned for the longevity of tha antediluvians ? 20 THE ANTEDILUVIANS. others supposing that it resulted from the peculiar excellence of the plants, herbs, and fruits, that were first appointed for the subsistence of the human race and others asserting that it was the natural consequence of a strong and vigorous con- stitution. 7. Each of these opinions may be considered as partak* iv;* of the truth, though, in reality, they will not bear the test of strict examination ; for if we readily admit the idea, that some, or even many, of the antediluvians were remark- able on account of their temperance and simplicity, we must of necessity acknowledge, that the majority of them were etrangers to these virtues, and especially at a time when they are said to have been eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, till the flood came and swallowed them up. 8. With respect to the wholesome or nutritious virtues of the vegetable world, it may be justly supposed that they were less degenerated in those days than in the present yet, it must at the same time be remembered, that sin had entered into the world ; God had inflicted a curse upon the ground for man's sake ; and agricultural labor was even then as re- quisite as it is now. We are not therefore to imagine that the natural world exhibited that brilliancy of beauty, that abundant fertility, and that unspotted purity, at the time to which we advert, that literally glowed upon the whole, and pervaded each constituent part, when first created when man, the image of his Creator, roved unconscious of sin or shame, amidst the matchless delights of Eden ; rejoiced in the friendship of his God ; and viewed with guileless raptures the subjugated tribes of inferior animals. Then, indeed, we may naturally suppose, that every pendent fruit which deco- rated the verdant branches, or swept the embroidered ground, was indeed replete with flavor and nutrition ; that every blade of grass possessed inherent virtues ; and that every plant of the earth was, in the language of its Creator, very good. But no sooner had Adam transgressed the divine command, and forfeited his own innocence, than creation began to lan- guish beneath 'the influence of the curse ; and many of the plants became useless, while others were rendered disgusting What objection is there to its being owing to their temperance and simplicity ? What objection is there to its being caused by the pe- culiar txcellence of thoir plants, herbs, and fruits ? THE ANTEDILUVIANS. 21 and poisonous. Consequently the longevity of the antedi- luvians cannot be justly attributed to the second cause given. 9. As to the opinion, tiiat the long lives of those men were but natural consequences of the peculiar strength of their stamina, or first principles of their bodily constitutions, we are willing to receive it as a concurrent though not an ade- quate cause ; for Shem, who received his birth before the deluge, and possessed all the virtues of the antediluvian con- stitution, fell short of the age of his forefathers by three hundred years, because the greatest part of his life was pass- ed after his egression from the ark. 10. From these considerations, therefore, we are inclined to impute this longevity rather to the salubrious constitution of the antediluvian azr, than to any other cause ; and upon the supposition that this air became contaminated and un- wholesome after the flood, it will appear consistent that the pristine crasis of the human body should have been gradu- ally broken ; and that the life of man should consequently have been shortened, in successive ages, to the present com- mon standard. 11. Whether men were permitted to regale on the flesh of animals before the flood, is a question that has been long and frequently controverted. Those who imagine it was un- lawful before that period, found their opinion upon God's as- signing vegetables for food to man and beasts at the creation ; and upon the express permission which Noah received, to eat flesh after the deluge ; and those who entertain a contrary opinion, imagine that animal food was included in the ge- neral grant of dominion given to Adam, over the fish of the sea, the fowl of the air, and every living thing thai moved upon the earth ; and indeed this supposition receives a great degree of strength from the fact, that beasts were divided into clean and unclean before the flood ; and that animals were then also sacrificed to the Deity. 12. With regard to commerce, it was, in all probability, carried on with greater facility before the flood, than after- What objection to the supposition of its being caused by natural vigor of constitution ? If neither of these can be considered an adequate cause of their longevity, to what more probable cause can we assign it ? Were men permitted before the flood to feed on the flesh of animals ? What reason can be given against it ? What reason can be given in favor of the supposition? 22 THE WORLD CONTEMPLATED. wards ; as there was but one language in the* world. Yet it is evident they had no idea of navigation, and of extending their trade to remote parts, by the assistance of any kind of vessels ; or otherwise some families might certainly have es- caped the flood besides the patriarch Noah. Indeed it is sufficiently obvious, that commerce, however it might be con- ducted, was not as necessary at that time as it has been since, not only because the wants of men have been greatly in- creased, in proportion to the injury which the earth and its various productions received from the overwhelming flood that was brought upon it ; but also because they resided to- gether in greater numbers, and could easily obtain every article they desired, by bartering with their nearest neigh- bors. THE WORLD CONTEMPLATED AT A DISTANCE. 'Tis pleasant through the loop-holes of retreat To peep at such a world ; to see the stir Of the great Babel, and not feel the crowd ; To hear the roar she sends through all her gates At a safe distance, where the dying sound Falls a soft murmur on th' uninjur'd ear. Thus sitting, and surveying thus at ease The globe and its concerns, I seem advanced To some secure and more than mortal height, That liberates and exempts me from them all. It turns submitted to my view, turns round With all its generations ; I behold The tumult and am still. The sound of war Has lost its terrors ere it reaches me ; Grieves, but alarms me not. I mourn the pride And avarice that make man a wolf to man ; Hf3ar the faint echo of those brazen throats By which he speaks the language of his heart, A nd sigh, but never tremble at the sound. He travels and expatiates ; as the bee Ifj it supposed that the antediluvians were acquainted with ship navigation, as we are ? Can a particular reason be assigned against ih> supposition, and what is it ? TOWER OF BABEL THE TOWER OF BABEL. From flower to flower, so he from land to land ; The manners, customs, policy, of all, Pay contribution to the store he gleans ; He sucks intelligence in every clime, And spreads the honey of his deep research At his return a rich repast for me. He travels, and I too. I tread his deck, Ascend his topmast, through his peering eyes Discover countries, with a kindred heart Suffer his woes, and share in his escapes ; While fancy, like the ringer of a clock, Runs the great circuit, and is still at home. THE TOWER OF BABEL. 1. IT is not, in the least, to be doubted, that Noah and his family, for some years after the flood, continued to reside in the neighborhood of the mountains of Armenia, where the ark had rested. But his descendants, in course of time, having a numerous progeny, the greater part of them quitted this place, and, directing their course eastward, came at length to the plains of Shinar, on the banks of the river Eu- phrates. Attracted by the convenience of its situation, and the natural fertility of the soil, they resolved not to proceed any further, but to make this their fixed place of residence. 2. Having formed this resolution, in order to render them- selves famous to future generations, they determined to erect a city, and in the city a building of such stupendous height as should be the wonder of the world. Their principal mo- tives in doing this, were, it is supposed, to keep themselves together, in one body, that by their mutual strength and councils, as the world increased, they might bring others under their subjection, and thereby become masters of the universe. 3. The idea of the intended tower gave them the most singular satisfaction, and the novelty of the design induced Is it supposed that Noah and his family continued any time near the place where the ark had rested ? Where did they go, on lear- ing this place ? In what way did they become determined to dis- tinguish themselves, on settling in the plains of Shinar ? 24 THE TOWER OF BABEL. them to enter upon its construction with the greatest alacri* ty. One inconvenience, however, arose, of which they were not at first apprised, namelj, there being no stone in the country with which to build it. But this defect was soon supplied by the nature of the soil, which, being clayey, they soon converted into bricks, arid cemented them together with a pitchy substance, called bitumen, the country produc* ing that article in great abundance. 4. As the artificers were numerous, the work was carried on with great expedition, and in a short time the walls were raised to a prodigious height. But the Almighty being dis- satisfied with their proceedings, thought proper to interpose, and totally put an end to their ambitious project ; so that the first of their vanity became only a monument of their folly and weakness. 5. Though the descendants of Noah were at this time ex- ceedingly numerous, yet they spoke the same language. In onler, therefore, to render their undertaking ineffectual, and to lessen the towering hopes of these aspiring 'mortals, the Almighty formed the resolution of confounding their lan- guage. In consequence of this, a universal jargon took place, and the different dialects caused such a detraction of thought, that, incapable of understanding or making known to each other their ideas, they were thrown into the utmost disorder. 6. By this awful stroke of divine justice, they were not only deprived of prosecuting their intended plan, but of the greatest pleasure a social being can enjoy, namely mutual converse and agreeable intercourse. We are not, however, to suppose, that each individual had a peculiar dialect or language to himself; but only the several tribes or families, which are supposed to have been about seventy in number. These detaching themselves according to their respective dialects, left the spot, which, before the consequences' of their presumption, they had considered as the most delightful on Wli.it inconvenience did tliey experience at first, in building* Ihcir city and tower ? How did they obviate the inconvenience of not having stones with which to build ? Did they commence their (yjnitttnplaU'd work ? Was God pleased with their design ? In what way did he manifest his displeasure, and stop their work ? Is it supposed, that in the confusion of language on this occasion evanr ; dividual was made to have a dialect of his own? THE TOWER OF BABEL. 25 earth, and took up their temporary residences in such places cs they either pitched on by choice, or were directed to by chanc<>. 7. Thus did the Almighty not only defeat the designs of those ambitious people, but likewise accomplished his own, by having the world more generally inhabited than it other wise could have been. The spot on which they had begun to erect their tower, was, from the judgment that attended so rash an undertaking, called Babel (afterwards Babylon,) which, in the Hebrew tongue, signifies confusion. 8. The confusion of tongues, and dispersion of the famih of Noah, happened 101 years after the flood, as is evident from the birth of Peleg, the son of Heber (who was the great- grandson of Shem,) and was born in the 101st year after that memorable period. He received his name from this singular circumstance, the word Pcleg, in the Hebrew language, sig- nifying partition, or dispersion. 9. The descendants of Noah being now dispersed, in pro- cess of time,from their great increase, they scattered themselves to distant parts of the earth, and, according to their respec- tne families, settled in different parts of the world. Some took up their residence in Asia ; some in Africa ; and others in Europe. By what means they obtained possession of the several countries they inhabited, the sacred historian has not informed us. It is, however, natural to suppose, that their respective situations did not take place from chance, but from mature deliberation ; and that a proper assignment was made of such and such places, according to the divisions mid sub- divisions of the different families. 10. When Babel was confounded, and the great Confederacy of projectors wild and vain Was split into diversity of tongues, Then, as a shepherd separates his flock, These to the upland, to the valley thoso God drave asunder, and assigned tlieir lot , good effects did the Almighty accomplish from this confusion of language ? What is the place called, whore it took p !&*; At what time was this memorable event? Are we informal! : .n what way the descendants of Noah took possession of the sev*-aJ countries they afterwards inhabited ? What is probable on Uu* rabject ? 3t 26 THE ASSYRIANS. To all the nations. Ample was the boon He gave them, in its distribution fair And equal ; and he bade them dwell in peace. THE ASSYRIANS. 1. THE Assyrians, or Syrians, inhabited the country which was first settled by Ashur, a son of Shem, and afterwards taken by Nimrod, a grandson of Ham. Assyria is now a part of Persia. The Assyrian was one of the four universal monarchies, and was the first empire that ever existed. Her kings usually staled themselves, by way of eminence, king of kings ; and it is probable, from the most correct accounts of that remote period, that, in power, they were surpassed by none, and equalled by few, if any, of the contemporary po- tentates. 2. Nineveh, the capital of Assyria, and Babylon, the ca- pital of Babylonia, a province of Assyria, were two of the most memorable cities of which we have any account in his- tory. Nineveh was built on the Tigris, and is supposed to have contained no less than a million of inhabitants. It was surrounded by a wall, one hundred feet high, and so thick that three carriages might be driven abreast on the top of it. Babylon was built over the Euphrates, and was sur- rounded by a wall 87 feet in thickness, 360 feet in height, and 60 miles in circumference. This city was nearly square, and contained one hundred brazen gates, twenty-five on each side. 3. The building of Nineveh has been ascribed both to Nimrod and Ninus his son ; and, it is probable, that the former began, and the latter completed it. It was undoubt- edly named in honor of Ninus. Babylon is said to have Who first settled ancient Assyria ? Who next took possession of it ? Of what country is it now a part.' What was the political importance of Assyria ? What title did her kings assume P-^What two memorable cities did Assyria contain ? Where was Nineveh situated ? How many inhabitants did it contain ? How was it sur- rounded? Where was Babylon situated ? What was the height of the wall that .surrounded it ? How large its circumference ? What was Jt* form ? Under whose direction was Nineveh built ? THE ASSYRIANS. 27 been built by Semiramis, the widow of Ninus. After the death of her husband, she became determined to eclipse his glory, by building a city that should surpass Nineveh. This she attempted in enhnrinii ;m less wounded in their pride than stung with a sense of the atrocious villany, determined to extinguish the flames of their resentment in the blood of Priam and his people, who refused to restore the illustrious fugitive. 3. A powerful ar.my was accordingly sent to wage war with the Trojans ; but the enterprise was found to be attend- ed with unforeseen difficulties. The Trojans were a brave and gallant people, of considerable resources, and very great courage. Hector, the son of Priam, equalled only by Achil- les, commanded the Trojans, and often disputed the field of victory with invincible bravery and various success ; and when, after the death of Hector, the Trojans could no longer keep the field, the city of Troy was defended by lofty towers and impregnable walls. 4. The fortune of Greece prevailed ; not hov/ever by arms, but by stratagem. The Greeks, worn out by a war of ten years, determined to risk their hopes on one desperate effort, which, if successful, would end the war in victory ; if not, would exterminate all hope of conquest for the present, if not for ever. They made preparations for returning home, embarked in their ships, and set sail ; but they left near the city a wooden horse of vast size, in which was enclosed a band of their bravest heroes. This image, they pretended as an offering to the goddess Minerva, to be placed in the Trojan citadel. To give effect to this stratagem, Sinon was despatched over to the Trojans,, with an artful and fictitious story, pretending he had made his escape from the Greeks. The superstition of the times gave them complete success. The whim struck the Trojans favorably. They laid open their walls, and, by various means, dragged the baneful mon- ster, pregnant with destruction, into the city. Who commanded the Trojans ? How was Troy finally taken t THE TROJAN WAR. 43 5. That night was spent in festivity through Troy. Ever* guard was withdrawn ; all threw aside their ai ms ; and, dis- eolved in wine, amusement, pleasure, and repose, gave fu.. effect to the hazardous enterprise of the hardy Greeks. The fleet, in the night time, drew back to the shore ; the men landed and approached the city ; the heroes in the wooden horse sallied forth, killed what lew they met, opened the city- gates, and the Greeks entered. The night, which was begun in feasting and carousal, ended in conflagration and blood. The various parts of this daring plan, liable to great uncer- tainties and embarrassments, were concentrated and made effectual by the signal of a torch shown from a conspicuous tower by Helen herself, the perfidious beauty who had caused the war. 6. Never was national vengeance more exemplary, or ruin more complete. The destruction of Troy took place 1184 years before the Christian era. This fall of the Tro- jan empire was final. Independence and sovereignty never returned to those delightful shores ; nor has that country since made any figure in history. It continued to be pos- sessed and colonized by the Greeks, while they flourished, and followed the fortunes and revolutions of the great em- pires. 7. If the charms of Helen proved the destruction of Troy, yet the Greeks themselves, though they were able to punish her seducer, had little reason to boast of their conquest, or glory in their revenge. On their return, their fleets were dispersed, and many of their ships wrecked on dangerous coasts. Some of them wandered through long voyages, and settled in foreign parts. Some became pirates, and infested the seas with formidable depredations. A few, and but a few of them, returned to their homes, where fortunes equally disastrous followed them. Their absence, for a course of years, had quite altered the scene of things ; as it had opened the way to conspiracies, usurpations, and exterminating revo- lutions. Their vacant thrones had been filled by usurpers ; and their dominions, left defenceless, had fallen a prey to every rapacious plunderer. The states of Greece, which, at the beginning of the Trojan war, were rising fast to pros- When did the destruction of Troy take place ? By whom was it then possessed ? What effect had the Trojan war upon the prosperity of the Greoks ? 5 44 BATTLE OF THERMOPYLAE. perity, power, and happiness, were overwhelmed with ca iamities, and seemed returning rapidly to savage barbarity. BATTLE OF THERMOPYLAE. 1. THER?/EOPYL^E is a strait or narrow pass of mount OEta, between Thessaly and Phocis, but 25 feet broad, which therefore might be defended by a small number of forces, and which was the only way through which the Persian ar- my could enter Achaia, and advance to besiege Athens. This was the place where the Grecian army thought fit to wait for the enemy the person who commanded it was Le- onidas, one of the two kings of Sparta. The whole Grecian forces, joined together, amounted only to 11,200 men, of which number 4,000 only were employed at Thermopylae to defend the pass. But these soldiers, says Pausanias the his- torian, were all determined, to a man, either to conquer or die ; and what is there that an army of such resolution is not able to effect ! 2. Xerxes, in the mean time, was upon his march ; and as he advanced near the straits of Thermopylae, he was strangely surprised to find that they were prepared to dis- pute his passage. He had always flattered himself, that on the first hearing of his arrival, the Grecians would betake themselves to flight ; nor could he ever be persuaded to be- lieve, what Demaratus had told him from the beginning of his project, that at the first pass he came to, he would find his whole army stopped by a handful of men. He sent out a spy to take a view of the enemy. The spy brought him word, that he found the Lacedaemonians out of their en- . trenchments, and that they were diverting themselves with military exercises, and combing their hair this was the Spartan manner of preparing themselves for battle. 3. Xerxes, still entertaining some hopes of their flight, waited four days on purpose to give them time to retreat ; and in this interval of time, he used his utmost ende.avors to , gain Leonidas, by making him magnificent promises, and What is Thermopylae ? Who commanded the Grecian forces at this strait? How many men had he left with him to defendt.hu strait ? BATTLE O* THERMOPYLAE. 45 assuring him that he would make him master of all Greece, if he would come over to his party. Leonidas rejected his proposal with scorn and indignation. Xerxes, having after- wards wrote to him to deliver up his arms, Leonidas, in a style and spirit truly laconical, answered him in these words, " Come and take them." Nothing remained but to prepare themselves to engage the Lacedaemonians. Xerxes first commanded his Median forces to march against them, with orders to take them all alive, and bring them all to him. These Medes were not able to stand the charge of the Gre- cians ; and being shamefully put to flight, they showed, says Herodotus, that Xerxes had a great many men, and but few soldiers. The next that were sent to face the Spartans, were those Persians called the Immortal Band, which consisted of 10,000 men, and were the best troops in the whole army. But these had no better success than the former. 4. Xerxes, out of all hopes of being able to force his way through troops so determined to conquer or die, was extremely perplexed, and could not tell what resolution to take ; when an inhabitant of the country came to him, and discovered a secret path to the top of an eminence, which overlooked and commanded the Spartan forces. He quickly despatched a detachment thither ; which, marching all night, arrived there at break of day, and possessed themselves of that advantage- ous spot. The Greeks were soon apprised of this misfor- tune ; and Leonidas, seeing that it was now impossible to repulse the enemy, obliged the rest of the allies to retire, but staid himself with his 300 Lacedaemonians, all resolved to die with their leader ; who being told by the oracle, that either Lacedaemon or her king must necessarily perish, de- termined, without the least difficulty or hesitation, to sacri- fice himself for his country. 5. The Spartans lost all hopes either of conquering or escaping, and looked upon Thermopylae as their burying place. The king exhorting his men to take some nourish- ment, and telling them that they should sup together with old Pluto, they set up a shout of joy, as if they had been in- vited to a banquet ; and, full of ardor, advanced with their What reply did Leonidas make when Xerxes wrote to him to de- liver up his arms ? How did Xerxes, with the Persians, succeed in reaching an eminence that overlooked and commanded the Spartan ? How many of hii force* remained to periah with Lonida ? 46 BATTLE OF THERMOPYLAE. king to battle. The shock was exceedingly violent and bloody. Leonidas himself was one of the first that fell. The endeavors of the Lacedaemonians to defend his dead body, were incredible. At length, not vanquished, but oppressed by numbers, they all fell except one man, who escaped to Spaita, where he was treated as a coward and traitor to his country, and nobody would keep company or converse with him. But soon afterwards, he made a glorious amend for his fault, at the battle of Plataea, where he distinguished himself in an extraordinary manner. Xerxes, enraged to the last degree against Leonidas, for daring to make head against him, caused his dead body to be hung upon a gallows, and made the intended dishonor of his enemy his own immortal disgrace. 6. Xerxes lost in that affair above 20,000 men, among whom were two of the king's brothers. He was very sensi- ble, that so great a loss, which was a manifest proof of the courage of their enemies, was capable of alarming and dis- couraging his soldiers. In order, therefore, to conceal the knowledge of it from them, he caused all his men that were killed in that action, except 1,000, whose bodies he ordered to be left upon the field, to be thrown together into large holes, which were secretly made, and covered over afterwards with earth and herbs. This stratagem succeeded very ill ; for when the soldiers in the fleet, being curious to see the field of battle, obtained leave to come thither for that pur- pose, it served rather to discover his own littleness of soul, than to conceal the number of the slain. 7. Dismayed with a victory th f at had cost him so dear, he asked Demaratus, if the Lacedaemonians had many such sol- diers. That prince told him, that the Spartan republic had . a great many cities belonging to it, of which all -the inhabit- ants were exceeding brave ; but that the inhabitants of La- cedsemon, who were properly called Spartans, ajid who were about 8,000 in number, surpassed all the rest in valor, and were all of them such as those who had fought under Leonidas. 8. The action of Leonidas, with his 300 Spartans, was not the effect of rashness or despair ; but was a wise and noble conduct, as Diodorus Siculus has. taken care to observe, in What did Xerxes cause to be done with the dead body of Leonjdas ? How many men had Xeries slain in the battle of Thermopylra ? BATTLE OF THERMOPYLAE. 47 the magnificent encomium upon that famous engagement, to which he ascribes the success of all the ensuing victories and campaigns. Leonidas, knowing that Xerxes marched at the head of the forces of the east, in order to overwhelm and crush a little country by the dint of his numbers, rightly conceived, from the superiority of his genius and understand- that if they pretended to make the success of that war consist in opposing force to force, and numbers to numbers, all the Grecian nations together would never be able to equal the Persians, or to dispute the victory with them ; that it was therefore necessary to point out to Greece another means of safety and preservation, whilst she was under these alarms ; and that they ought to show the whole universe, who had all their eyes upon them, what glorious things may be done, when greatness' of mind is opposed to force of body, true courage and bravery against blind impetuosity, the love of liberty against tyrannical oppression, and a few disciplined veteran troops against a confused multitude, though ever so numerous. 9. These brave Lacedaemonians thought it became them, who were the choicest soldiers of the chief people of Greece, to devote themselves to certain death, in order to make the Persians sensible how difficult it is to reduce freemen to slavery ; and to teach the rest of Greece, by their example, either to vanquish or to perish. The event proved the just- ness of such sentiments. That illustrious example of cou- rage astonished the Persians, and gave a new spirit and vigor to the Greeks. The lives then of this heroic leader and his brave troops were not thrown away, but usefully employed ; and their death was attended with a double effect, more great and lasting than themselves had imagined. 10. On one hand, it was in a manner the seed of theii ensuing victories, which made the Persians for ever after lay aside all thoughts of attacking Greece ; so that, during the seven or eight succeeding reigns, there was neither any prince, who durst entertain such a design, nor any flatterer in his court who durst propose the thing to him. On the other hand, such a signal and exemplary instance of intre- pidity made an indelible impression upon all the rest of the Grecians, and left a persuasion deeply rooted in their hearts, that they were able to subdue the Persians, and sub- vert their vast empire. Cimon was the man who rnad the 48 SOCRATES. first attempt of that kind with success. Agesilaus afterwards pushed that design so far, that he made the great monarch tremble in his palace at Susa. Alexander at last accom- plished it with incredible facility. He never had the least doubt, no more than the Macedonians who followed him, or the whole country of Greece that chose him general in that expedition, but that with 30,000 men he could reduce the Persian empire, 300 Spartans having been sufficient to check the united forces of the whole east. 11. The brave will love the brave, and deep revere ; Let freemen honor with a brother's tear That king of freedom arid his Spartan band Who nobly fought to save their native land. No love of conquest urg'd them to invade ; They fought th' invader, and they fell betray J d. Should foemen fill our country with alarms, Think of Thermopyla?, and rouse to arms. SOCRATES. 1. SOCRATES, the famous Greek philosopher, was born at Athens, about 451 years before Christ. He gave "early proofs of his valor in the service of his country ; but chiefly applied himself to the study of philosophy, and was a person of irre- sistible eloquence and accomplished virtue! His distinguish- ing characteristic was a perfect tranquillity of mind, which enabled him to support, with patience, the most troublesome accidents of life. He used to beg of those with whom he usually conversed, to put him on- his guard, the moment they perceived in him the first emotions of anger ; and when they did so, he instantly resumed perfect composure and compla- cency. His wife, Xantippe, a woman of the most whimsical and provoking temper, afforded him sufficient opportunity of exercising his patience, by the revilings and abuse with which she was constantly loading him. 2. Socrates possessed, in a superior degree, the talent of reasoning. His principal employment was the instruction Where and when was Socrates born ? r$E s ilPDB SOCRATES. 49 of youth, an object to which he directed all his care and at- tention. He kept, however, no fixed public school, but took every opportunity, without regarding times or places, of con- veying to them his precepts, and that in the most enticing, agreeable manner. His lessons were so universally relished, that the moment he appeared, whether in the public assem- blies, walks, or feasts, he was surrounded with a throng of the most illustrious scholars and hearers. The young Athe- nians quitted even their pleasures to listen to the discourse of Socrates. 3. He greatly exerted himself against the power of the thirty tyrants, and in the behalf of Theramenes, whom they had condemned to death ; insomuch that they became so alarmed at his behavior, that they forbade him to instruct the Athenian youth. Soon after, an accusation was fofmally exhibited against him by Melitus, containing in substance ' That he did not acknowledge the gods of the republic, but introduced new deities in their room ;" and further, " that he corrupted the youth." He urged, in his defence, that he had assisted, as others did, at the sacrifices and solemn festi- vals. He denied his endeavoring to establish any new wor- ship. He owned, indeed, he had received frequent admoni- tions from a divine voice, which he called his genius, that con- stantly attended him, and discovered to him future events ; that he had often made use of this divine assistance for the service of himself and his friends ; but, that if he had been thus particularly favored by Heaven, it was owing chiefly to the regularity of his life and conduct ; and that the approba- tion of the Supreme Being, which was given him as a reward for his virtue, ought not to be objected to him as his crime. 4. Then, as to the other article, wherein he was accused of corrupting the youth, and teaching them tr> despise the settled laws, and order of the commonwealth, he said, he had no other view in his conversation with them, than to regulate their morals ; that as he could not do this with any public authority, he was therefore forced to insinuate himself into their company, and to use, in a manner, the same methods to reclaim, which others did to corrupt them. 5. How far the whole charge affected him, it is not easy to determine. It is certain, that amidst so much zeal and What were the charges against Socrates ? 50 SOCRATES. superstition as then reigned in Athens, he never durst openly oppose the received religion, and was therefore obliged to preserve an outward show of it. But it is very probable, from the discourses he frequently held with his friends, that, in his heart, he despised and laughed at their monstrous opinions, and ridiculous mysteries, as having no other foundation than the fables of the poets ; and that he had attained to a notion of the one only true God ; insomuch that, upon the account of his belief of the Deity, and his exemplary life, some have thought fit to rank him with Christian philosophers. And indeed his behavior upon his trial was more like that of a Christian martyr than of an impious pagan ; where he ap- peared with such a composed confidence, as naturally results from^ innocence ; and rather, as Cicero observes, as if he were* to determine upon his judges, than to supplicate them as a criminal. 6. But how slight soever the proofs were against him, the faction was powerful enough to find him guilty. It was a privilege, however, granted him, to demand a mitigation of punishment to change the condemnation of death, into ba- nishment, imprisonment, or a fine. But he replied generous- ly, that he would choose neither of those punishments, be- cause that would be to acknowledge himself guilty. This answer so incensed his judges, that they determined he should drink the hemlock, a punishment, at that time, much in use among them. Thirty days were allowed him. to pre- pare to die ; during which time, he conversed with his friends with the same evenness and serenity of mind he had ever x dono before. And though they had bribed the jailer for his escape, he refused it, as an ungenerous violation of the laws. He was about seventy years old when he suffered ; which made him say, he thought himself happy to quit life, at a time when it begins to be troublesome ; and that his death was rather a deliverance than a punishment. 7. Cicero has described, with great elegance, the lofty sentiments and magnanimous behavior of Socrates. While he held the fatal cup in his hand, he declared, that he con- sidered death not as a punishment inflicted on him, but as a help furnished him of arriving so much sooner at heaven. What privilege was granted Socrates on being found guilty ? How did he reply to this offer ? In what manner did he suffer death ? SOCRATES. 51 He gave it as his opinion, that upon the departure of our souls from our bodies, there are two passages for conducting thorn to the places of their eternal destination ; one leading to never ending punishment, \\hich receives those souls, that, during their residence on earth, have contaminated them- selves with many great crimes ; the other, leading to a st&e of felicity and bliss, which receives the souls of those who have lived virtuously in the world. 8. When Socrates had finished his discourse, he bathed himself. His children being then brought to him, he spoke to them a little, and then desired them to be taken away. The hour appointed for drinking the hemlock being come, they brought him the cup, which he received without any emotion, and then addressed a prayer to heaven. It is highly reasonable, said he, to offer my prayers tcf the Supreme Being on this occasion, and to beseech him to render my departure from earth, and my last journey, happy. Then he drank of the poison with amazing tranquillity. Observing his friends in this fatal moment, weeping, and dissolved in tears, he re- proved them with great mildness, asking them, whether their virtue had deserted them ; " for." added he, " I have alway.^ heard, that it is our duty calmly to resign our breath, giving thanks to God." After walking about a little while, perceiv- ing the poison beginning to work, he lay down on his couch, and, in a few moments after, breathed his last. Cicero declares that he could never read the account of the death of Socrates without shedding tears. 9. Who firmly stood in a corrupted state, Against the rage of tyrants single stood, Invincible ; calm Reason's holy law, That voice of God within the attentive mind, Obeying fearless, or in life, or death Great Moral Teacher ! Wisest of Mankind ! 10. Soon after his death, the Athenians were convinced of his innocence, and considered all the misfortunes which afterwards befel the republic, as a punishment for the injus- tice of his sentence. When the academy, and the other places of the city where he taught, presented themselves to the view of his countrymen, they could not refrain from re- flecting on the reward bestowed by them, on one who had 52 BATTLE OF MARATHON. done them such important services. They cancelled the de- cree which had condemned him ; put Melitus to death ; ba- nished his other accusers ; and erected to his memory a statue of brass, which was executed by the famous Lysippus. THE SOCIAL STATE. MAN in society is like a flower Blown in its native bed 'tis there alone His faculties, expanded in full bloom, Shine out ; there only reach their proper use. But man, associated and leagu'd with man By regal warrant, or self-join'd by bond For interest-sake, or swarming into clans Beneath one head for purposes of war, Like flowers selected from the rest, and bound And bundled close to fill some crowded vase, Fades rapidly, and, by compression marr'd, Contracts defilements not to be endur'd. BATTLE OF MARATHON. 1. THE Persian army, commanded by Datis, consisted of 100,000 foot, and 10,000 horse. That of the Athenians amounted in all but to 10,000 men. This had ten generals, of whom Miltiades was the chief; and these ten were to have the command of the whole army, each for a day, one after another. There was a great dispute among these offi- cers, whether they should hazard a battle, or expect the ene- my within their walls. The latter opinion had a great ma- jority, and appeared very reaspnable ; for what appearance of success could there be in facing, with a handful of sol- diers, so numerous and formidable an army as that of the Persians ? Miltiades, however, declared for the contrary opinion ; and showed, that the only means to exalt the cou- rage of their own troops, and to strike a terror into those of Who commanded the Persians ? How numerous were the Persians TI the battle of Marathon ? How many were in the Athenian army ? Who commanded the Athenians ? BATTLE OF MARATHON. 53 the enemy, was to advance boldly towards them with an air of confidence and intrepidity. Aristidi's strenuously de- fended this opinion, and brought so many of the command- ers into it, that it finally prevailed. 2. Aristides reflecting, that a command which changes every day, must necessarily be feeble, unequal, not of a piece, often contrary to itself and incapable either of pro- jecting or executing any uniform design, was of opinion that their danger was both too great and tooj)ressing for them to expose their affairs to such inconveniences. In order to pre- vent them, he judged it necessary to vest the whole power in one single person ; and, to induce his colleagues to act con- formably, he himself set the first example of resignation. When the day came on which it was ! >is turn to take upon him the command, he resigned it to Miltiades, as the more able and experienced general. The other commanders did the same, all sentiments of jealousy giving way to the love of . the public good ; and by this da^'s behavior we may learn, that it is almost as glorious to acknowledge merit in other persons, as to have it in one's self. 3. Miltiades, however, thought fit to wait till his own day came. Then, like an .able captain, he endeavored, by the advantage of the ground, to gain what he wanted in strength and number. He drew up his army at the foot of a moun- tain, that the enemy should not be able either to surround him, or charge him in the rear. On the two sides of his army he caused large trees to be thrown, which were cut down on purpose, in order to cover his flanks, and render the Persian cavalry useless. Datis, their commander, was very sensible that the place was not advantageous for him ; but, relying upon the number of his troops, which was infinitely superior to that of the Athenians, and, on the other hand, not being willing to stay till the reinforcement of the Spartans, he determined .to engage. The Athenians did not wait for the enemy's charging them. As soon as the signal was given for battle, they ran against the enemy with all the fury ima- ginable. 4. The battle was very fierce and obstinate. Miltiades had made the wings of his army exceeding strong, but had left the main body more weak, and not so deep ; the reason of which seems manifest enough. Having but 10,000 men to oppose to such a numerous and vast army, it was imposed- 54 BATTLE OF MARATHON. ble for him either to make a large front, or to give an equal depth to his battalions. He was obliged, therefore, to take his choice ; and he imagined, that he could gain the victory v no otherwise than by the efforts he should make with his two wings, in order to break and disperse those of the Persians ; not doubting but, when his wings were once victorious, they would be able to attack the enemy's main flank, and com- plete the victory without much difficulty. This was the same plan as Hannibal followed afterwards at the battle of Cannae, which succeeded so well with him, and which indeed can scarce ever fail of succeeding. 5. The Persians then attacked the main body of the Gre- cian army, and made their greatest efforts particularly upon their front. This was led by Aristides and Themistocles, who supported it a long time with an intrepid courage and bravery ; but were at length obliged to give ground. At that very instant came up their two victorious wings, which had defeated those of the enemy, and put them to flight. No- thing could be more seasonable for the main body of the Gre- cian army, which began to be broken, being quite borne down by the numbers of the Persians. The scale was quick- ly turned, and the barbarians were entirely routed. They all betook themselves to their heels, and fled, not towards their camp, but to their ships, that they might make their es- cape. The Athenians pursued them thither, took seven of their ships, and set many of them on fire. The Athenians had not above 200 men killed in this engagement ; whereas of the Persians above 6,000 were slain, without reckoning those wjio fell into the sea as they endeavored to escape, or those that were consumed with the ships set on fire. 6. Hippias was killed in the battle. That ungrateful and perfidious citizen, in order to recover the unjust dominion usurped by his father, Pisistratus, over the Athenians, had the baseness to become a servile courtier to a barbarian prince, and to implore his aid against his native country. Urged on by hatred and revenge, he suggested all the means he could invent to load his country with chains ; and even put himself at the head of its enemies, with design to reduce that city to ashes, to which he owed his birth, arid against which he had How many of the Athenians were slain in this battle ? How many f the Persians ? SENECA. 5J no other ground of complaint than that she would not ac- kiiowleiJu< him for her tyrant. An ignominious death, to- gether with everlasting infamy entailed upon his name, was the just reward of so black a treachery. 7. It is almost without example, that such a handful of men as the Athenians were, should not only make head against so numerous an army as that of the Persians, but should entirely rout arid defeat them. One is astonished to see so formidable a power attack so small a city, and miscar- ry ; and we are almost tempted to disbelieve the truth of an event that appears so improbable, and whioh, nevertheless, is very certain and unquestionable. Th : s battle alone shows what wonderful things may be per for me a by an able general, who knows how to take his advantages ; by the intrepidity of soldiers, who are not afraid of death ; by a zeal for one's country ; the love of liberty ; an hatrecj and detestation of slavery and tyranny ; which were sentiments natural to the Athenians, but undoubtedly very much augmented and in- flamed in. them by the very presence of Hippias, whom they dreaded to have again for their master, after all that had passed between them. SENECA. 1. SENECA was born in Corduba, in Spain, about the be- ginning of the Christian era. Though he was bred to the law, his genius led him rather to philosophy, and he applied his wit to morality and virtue. Notwithstanding his philo- sophic studies, he was first made quaestor, then praetor, and some say that he was chosen consul ; but whether he bore those honors before or after his banishment, is uncertain. 2. In the first year of the emperor Claudius, he was ba- nished into Corsica, when Julia, the daughter of Germani- cus, was accused by Messalina of adultery ; Seneca beinsr charged as one of the adulterers. But Messalina dying, and Agrippina being married to Claudius, she prevailed upon tho emperor to recal Seneca, after he had lived in exile about Where was Seneca born ? When ? By whom was he banished into Corsica ? For what was he banished r 56 SENECA. eight years. She afterwards recommended him as tutor to her son Nero. Had that prince attended to the wisdom of his preceptor, through the course of his reign, as much as he did for the first five years of it, he would have been -the de- light instead of the detestation of mankind. 3. Nero condemned Seneca to die, under pretence that he had conspired with Piso, to deprive him of the governmen*. The manner of his death is particularly related by Tacitus. " Now follows," says he, " the death of Seneca, to Nero's great satisfaction ; not because it appeared that he was of Piso's conspiracy, but because Nero was resolved to do that by the sword, which he could not effect by poison ; for it is reported, that Nero had bribed Cleonicus, Seneca's freed- man, to give his master poison, which did not succeed ; for his diet was very simple. He lived chiefly upon vegetables, and seldom drank any thing but water. 4. " Natalis was sent upon a visit to him with a complaint, that he would not permit Piso to visit him. To whom Sene- ca answered, that meetings and conferences between them could do neither of them any good, but that he had a great interest in Piso's welfare. Upon this, Granius Silvanus, a captain of the guard, was sent to examine Seneca upon the discourse which had passed between him and Natalis, and to return his answer. He found Seneca at supper with his wife, Paulina, and two of his friends, and immediately gave him an account of his commission. Seneca told him that it was true, that Natalis had been with him in Piso's name, with a complaint that Piso could not be admitted to see him, and that he excused himself by reason of his want of health. * 5. " This answer of Seneca was delivered to Caesar in the presence of Poppoea and Tigellinus, the intimate confidants of this barbarous prince ; and Nero asked him, whether he could gather any thing from Seneca, as if he intended to kill himself. The tribune's answer was, that he did not find him at all affected with the message, nor so much as change countenance upon it. Go back to him, then, says Nero, and tell him that he is condemned to die ; but that the manner of his death is left to his own choice. Seneca received the To whom was Seneca a tutor ? Who condemned him to death 3 Why was he condemned ? % SENECA. 57 message without surprise or disorder ; and chose to dio by having his veins opened in a warm bath. 6. " On the day of his death, seeing his friends very much affected, he said to them Where is all your philosophy now ? Where is all your premeditated resolutions against weakness of behavior ? Is there any man so ignorant of Nero's cru- elty, as to expect, after the murder of his mother, and his brother, that he should spare the life of his tutor ?" 7. After some general expressions to this purpose, he took his wife in his arms, and having somewhat fortified her against the present calamity, he besought and conjured her to moderate her sorrows and betake herself to the contempla- tion and comforts of a virtuous life, which would be ample compensation to her for the loss of her husband. Paulina, on the other hand, said, she was determined to bear him company ; and ordered the executioner to do his duty. 8. Accordingly, the veins of both their arms were opened at the same time. But after Paulina had bled for a consi- derable time, Nero gave orders to prevent her death, for fear his cruelty should grow more insupportable and odious. Whereupon the soldiers gave all freedom and encouragement to her servants to bind up the wounds, and to stop the blood ; but whether at the time they were doing it, she was sensible of it, is a question. She survived her husband for some years, with all respect to his memory ; but so miserably paie and wan, that every body might read the loss of her blood and spirits in her very countenance. 9. Seneca was an excellent moralist, and a sound philoso- pher ; but he does not make so considerable a figure as a poet, and a writer of tragedies. His sentiments, indeed, are sublime, and his images lively and poetical ; but both the fable and the execution of his plays are irregular. He wante that noble simplicity, and pathetic manner, which recommended Euripides ; and he seems to have written more for the use of the closet, than of the stage. In v r hat manner was Seneca executed ? 6t 58 THE CARTHAGINIANS. PATRIOTISM. 1. THEY praise and they admire they know not what, And know not whom, but as one leads the other ; And what delight to be by such extoll'd, To live upon their tongues and be their talk, Of whom to be dispraised is no small praise ? His lot who dares be singularly good, Th' intelligent among them and the wise Are few, and glory scarce of few is raised. This is true glory and renown, when God Looking on the earth, with approbation marks The just man, arid divulges him through heaven To all his angels, who with true applause Recount his praises. 2. They err who count it glorious, to subdue By conquest far and wide, to overrun Large countries, and in fields great battles win, Great cities by assault ; what do these worthies But rob and spoil, burn, slaughter and enslave Peaceable nations, neighboring or remote, Made captive, yet deserving freedom more Than those their conquerors, who leave behind Nothing but ruin wheresoe'er they rove, And all their flourishing works of peace destroy. Then swell wth pride, and must be titled gods, Great Benefactors of mankind, Deliverers, Worshipped with temple, priest and sacrifice ! One is the son of Jove, of Mars the other ; Till conqueror Death discovers them scarce men, Rolling in brutish vices, and deformed, Violent or shameful death their due reward. THE CARTHAGINIANS. 1. IT is supposed that Carthage had its origin about one hundred years before Romulus began the building of Rome, and eight hundred and fifty years before the Christian era. The founders of it were a company of Phoenicians. Dido, By whom, and when, was Carthage founded ? THE CARTHAGINIANS. 59 to escape the cruelty of her brother Pygmalion, king of Tyre, who had murdered her husband Sichaeus, sailed with a com- pany of faithful adherents, to the coast of Africa, and there having landed, founded a city, that afterwards vied with the most powerful and magnificent on earth. The city of Car- thage stood at the bottom of a gulf, on a peninsula, near the place where now stands the city of Tunis ; and the territory of Carthage was about the same that now constitutes the kingdom of Tunis. Carthada, or Carthage, in the Phoeni- cian and Hebrew language, means a new city. 2. Many of the neighboring people, invited by the pros- pect of lucre, repaired to Carthage, to sell to these foreigners the necessaries of life, and shortly after incorporated them- selves with them. These inhabitants, who had been thus gathered from different places, soon became numerous. Al- though the early history of this people is necessarily, like that of most ancient states, involved in much obscurity, yet there is reason to believe the city was continually enlarging her borders, and adding to her wealth. At the time of her greatest splendor, the city itself occupied the space of twenty- three miles in circumference, was surrounded by three walls, and contained seven hundred thousand inhabitants. 3. The Carthaginians were indebted to the Tyrians, not only for their origin, but for their manners, language, cus- toms, laws, religion, and their great application to commerce, as will appear in every part of their history. They spoke the same language with the Tyrians, and these the same with the Canaanites and Israelites, that is, the Hebrew tongue, or at least a language that was entirely derived from it. And the Carthaginians were never forgetful of the country from whence they came, and to which they owed their origin. They sent regularly every year to Tyre a ship freighted with presents as an acknowledgment paid to their ancient coun- try ; and they never failed to send thither the first fruits of their revenues nor the tithes of the spoils taken from their enemies, as offerings to Hercules, one of the principal gods of that city. 4. Monarchy is supposed to have been the original govern- What circumstances gave rise to the building of Carthage ? What was the condition of Carthage at the time of her greatest splen- dor ? What was the language of the Carthaginians ' 60 THE CARTHAGINIANS. merit of Carthage ; neither is it known at what period it assumed the form of a republic. It is, however, generally allowed, that the republic consisted of the people, a very nu- merous senate, and two suffetes, or presiding magistrates. These suffetes corresponded in rank and power with the consuls at Rome and kings at Macedon ; but were not, like the latter, chosen for life. They were elected from among the richest citizens, that they might be the better able to support their dignity with splendor. The election of a senator depended upon the voice of the people, and the sena- tors themselves ; but the ^manner of their being chosen is unknown. When the votes of the senate were unanimous, they possessed the power of giving laws, from which there was no appeal. But when the suffrages were divided, or when the suffetes stood alone, the decision was referred to the people, who then gave the final decree. 5. The commerce of Carthage was the principal cause of her greatness and wealth her fleets covered every coast ; and by having the sovereignty of the sea, for more than six centuries, she monopolized, in no small degree, the commercial interests of the whole world. But what commerce was to the wealth of Carthage, Hannibal was to her military glory. linger him, she acquired a name more durable than brass. At the age of nine years, he is said to have taken an oath of eternal enmity to the Romans ; and the indefatigable perseverance with which he ever aimed at their destruction proved his sincerity. He subdued all the nations of Spain that resisted the Carthagi- nian power; and after eight months' siege, took the city of Saguntum. This city was in alliance with the Romans ; and its inhabitants were so attached to the Roman interest^ that, rather than fall into the hands of their enemies, they set fire to their houses and other effects, and perished in the flames. 6. The capture of Saguntum is more celebrated for its being the commencement of the second Punic war, than for the magnitude of the city, or the force necessary to its reduc- tion. It is nevertheless sufficiently memorable, when taken in connexion with the battle of Cannae, that immediately fol- lowed it, to give Hannibal a place among the most distin- guished warriors. The victory of Cannae is not only one To what may the greatness and wealth of Carthage be attributed ? Under what general did the Carthaginians obtain a military nara* ? THE CARTHAGINIANS. 01 of the most splendid achievements in the Carthaginian hero, but it is also one of the most splendid achievements recorded in the history of warfare. The whole army of Hannibal did not exceed 50,000 ; but so well directed were all his move- ments, that no less than 40,000 Romans were slain. This victory, although complete, proved of little use to the Cartha- ginians. The Romans, to free themselves from Hannibal, determined on invading his own dominions. When Carthage saw her coasts invaded, she recalled Hannibal, as it had been calculated by the Romans that she would. 7. Hannibal left Italy, which he had kept under perpetual alarms for sixteen years, with the greatest reluctance. He seemed aware of the reverse of fortune that soon awaited him. Shortly after his return to Africa, the two hostile ar- mies met at Zama, where was a general engagement. The Roman victory was complete 23,000 Carthaginians were slain, and as many more taken prisoners. After this decisive battle, Hannibal seemed convinced of his own inability to revenge his country's wrongs ; and therefore employed him- self in persuading the neighboring princes to make wa: against the Romans. But not succeeding in his attempts, and the Roman senate being apprised of his designs, and sending to Bithynia to demand him of Prusias, Hannibal terminated his own life by poison. 8. The city and republic of Carthage were destroyed by the termination of the third Punic war, 147 years before Christ. The city was in flames during seventeen days ; and the news of its destruction caused the greatest joy at Rome. The Roman senate immediately appointed commissioners, not only to raze the walls of Carthage, but even to demolish and burn the very materials of which they were made ; and in a few days, that city, which had once been the seat of commerce, the model of magnificence, the common store- house of the wealth of nations, and one of the most power- ful states in the world, left behind no traces of its splendor, of its power, or even of its existence. The history of Car- thage is one of the many proofs that we have of the transi- tory nature of worldly glory ; for of all her grandeur, not a How many of the Romans were killed in the battle of Cannoe ? How many of the Carthaginians were slain and taken prisoners in the battle of Zama ?- What were the circumstances of Hannibal's death ? When wns the city of Carthage destroyed ? 3 THE WARRIOR'S WREATH. wreck remains. Her own walls, like the calm ocean, that conceals for ever the riches hid in its unsearch\ble abyss, now obscure all her magnificence. THE WARRIOR'S WREATH. BEHOLD the wreath which decks the warrior's brow. Breathes it a balmy fragrance sweet ? Ah, no ! It rankly savors of the grave ! 'Tis red but not with roseate hues ; 'Tis crimson'd o'er With human gore ! 'Tis wet but not with heavenly dews ; 'Tis drench'd in tears by widows, orphans shed. Methinks in sable weeds I see them clad, And mourn in vain, for husbands slain, Children belov'd, or brothers dear, The fatherless In deep distress, Despairing, shed the scalding tear. I hear, 'mid dying groans, the cannon's crash, I see, 'mid smoke, the musket's horrid flash Here famine walks there carnage stalks- Hell in her fiery eye, she stains With purple blood, The crystal flood, Heaven's altars and the verdant plains ! Scenes of domestic peace and social bliss Are chang'd to scenes of wo and wretchedness, The votaries of vice increase Towns sack'd, whole cities wrapt in flame ! Just Heaven ! say, Is this the bay Which warriors gain is this call'd FAME ! SOLOMON'S TEMPLE. 03 SOLOMON'S TEMPLE. 1. THE peace and prosperity of Solomon's reign were well adapted to the prosecution of that work which David had designed, hut which was to be accomplished by his success- or. The king } therefore, took advantage of the time, and made preparations for building the house of the Lord. In the first place, he sent messengers to Hiram, king of Tyre, who had been the friend of his father, informing him of his intentions, and requesting from him a supply of cedar and fir. This was readily and cheerfully bestowed, and the two kings entered into a covenant of perpetual peace and friendship. Solomon then levied thirty thousand workmen, arid arranged them in three companies of ten thousand each, giving to Adoniram, one of his officers, the oversight and command of the whole. 2. These laborers were to be employed, with the servants of Hiram, in Mount Lebanon ; but only one company was sent out at a time, which remained for a month, and then re- turned home, and was succeeded by another. In carrying on the work, there were, also, seventy thousand whose duty it was to bear burdens, and eighty thousand who were em- ployed as hewers of stone in the mountains. The number of overseers amounted to thirty-three thousand. This mag- nificent undertaking was commenced in the fourth year of Solomon's reign, four hundred and forty years from the time of the settlement of the Israelites in the land of Canaan ; and the building was completed, in all its parts, in seven years, during which, the sound of axe, or hammer, or any tool of iron, was not heard upon it, the timber being all made ready in the forest, and the stones in the quarries. 3. Solomon, also, built for himself two very superb and costly palaces, together with a house of equal beauty and splendor for the queen. In completing the temple, a distin- guished artisan from Tyre, by the name of Hiram, had been employed, who cast two pillars of brass, each eighteen cubits in height, upon which were raised chapiters, adorned with lily work, net work, and pomegranates. These pillars were What in Solomon's reign was well suited to the building of the temple ? Who assisted Solomon in building the temple ? How many persons were employed in the building of the temple ? How Jong time was ipent in it ? 6*4 SOLOMON'S TEMPLE. placed at the entrance of the porch, one upon the right hand and the other upon the left. 4. Hiram, also, made all the vessels and instruments which were to be used in the services of the sanctuary ; and thus ilie building became ready for the devotions and offerings of the people. Solomon then caused the ark to be removed to the place which he had prepared for it in .the temple, upon which the glory of the Lord filled the house, and the king proceeded to the dedication in a solemn and fervent prayer, in which he implored the divine favor upon the work of his hands, and the services to which it was appropriated. He concluded with a blessing which he pronounced upon the congregation ; and after offering a vast number of sacrifices, arid keeping a feast to the Lord seven days, he dismissed the people, who returned to their habitations, rejoicing in the goodness of God, and praising the merits of their king. 5. Not long after the dedication of the temple, the Lord appeared a second time to Solomon, and told him that he had heard and accepted his prayer and supplication, and that his favor should for ever rest upon the house which had been built. He declared, moreover, that the continuance of the government in the family of David would be dependent upon the constancy and fidelity with which the divine laws were observed. At the expiration of twenty years, probably, from the time of Solomon's coronation, a present was made by him to Hiram, king of Tyre, of .certain cities, in return for his assistance in building the temple, with which the latter was not well pleased ; wherefore, that part of the country was called Cabul, a name denoting dissatisfaction. Solomon then applied himself to the building, repairing, and fortifying of various towns within his dominions ; engaging, also, ex- tensively in commerce, and sending his ships to Ophir for gold. 6. Among the persons who came from distant parts to wit- ness the glory, and to be edified with the w isdorn of Solo- mon, was the queen of Sheba, who resolved to make trial of his understanding by proposing for his solution many diffi- cult questions upon various subjects. The answers of the king not 'only gave satisfaction to her mind, but filled her What remuneration did Solomon make Hiram for his aid in build- ing the temple p UKVOLT OF TIIK TKN TRIBES. Go with astonishment and admiration ; and having made him a valuable present of gold and spices, she returned to her own country, with the most exalted opinion of his knowledge and power. With the fame of Solomon, his riches also in creased ; for his vessels brought him an abundance of gold, insomuch that it was applied to the most common uses, sil- ver being held in no estimation. In short, the richest gifts poured in upon him from every country ; and to obtain his friendship, and to see his face, was the - prevailing ambition of the princes and philosophers of the age. 7. But such is the imperfection of the human character, that even Solomon, surrounded as he was with every bless- i ng, and exalted to the highest summit of earthly glory, for- sook, at last, the Lord, his benefactor, and went after the gods of the heathen. The close of his life was disgraced by idola- try, to which he was turned by the temptations and artifices of his wives. Thus he provoked the anger of the Almighty, who declared to him, that, as a punishment for his wicked- ness, the government should, in part, be taken away from his family. 8. In addition to this, enemies were raised, up against him, and the remainder of his days was clouded with care and sorrow. Among his foes, was one by the name of Jerobo- am, who was the son of N^bat, a servant of Solomon. This man had received from the prophet Ahijah, an intimation that he was destined to the throne ; in consequence of which, he attempted to alienate the affections of the people from their sovereign. When the king became acquainted with what had taken place, he concerted a plan to destroy Jero- boam, but the latter prevented its execution by fleeing into Egypt, where he remained till the death of Solomon, which happened soon after. He died in the fifty-eighth year of his age, having reigned forty years, and was buried in the sepul- chre of his father, in the city of David. REVOLT OF THE TEN TRIBES. 1. AFTER the death of Solomon, the people assembled at Shechem, to make his son Rehoboam king. They had pre- Who succeeded Solomon : (56 REVOLT OF THE TEN TRIBES. viously sent to Egypt for Jeroboam, who had returned and was present with them upon the occasion. Before proceed- ing to the acknowledgment and anointing of the son of Solo- mon, they determined to ascertain whether he was disposed to release them from the burdens under which they had suf- fered in the former reign ; and to this end, they sent to him a deputation, with Jeroboam at the head of it, to obtain from him a promise that, on his advancement to the throne, he would redress their grievances. Rehoboam immediately summon- ed a council of old experienced men, to whom he communi- cated the message he had received, and requested their opi- nion in regard to the answer which he ought to give. They advised him, without hesitation, to comply with the wishes of the people ; but instead of regarding their direction, he referred the subject to the determination of some of his young and thoughtless companions. 2. "By these he was told to pay no respect to the complaints or feelings of the people ; but to state to their messengers, that so far from lessening the evils which they represented, he would greatly increase them. This advice, which was agreeable to his own sentiments, he imprudently followed ; in consequence of which, ten tribes^ immediately revolted from the house of David, and made Jeroboam their king. The nation thus became divided into two parts, of which the one was designated by the name of Israel, and the other by that of Judah. The tribe of Judah retained the adherence of the Benjamites, but there were comparatively so few of the latter, that both families were included under one general appellation. 3. Rehoboam, upon this unexpected defection, .sent Ado- ram, who was over the tribute, to collect from the Israelites their accustomed taxes ; but the enraged multitude stoned him to death. He then hastened with all speed up to Jeru- salem, where he assembled a large force of the men of Ju- dah and Benjamin, and prepared to give battle to Jeroboam, that he might thus bring back the rebel tribes to their alle- giance. His intentions were, however, frustrated ; for the word of the Lord came to him by the prophet Shemaiah, for- What caused the Ten Tribes of Israel to revolt from Judah ? Who became king of Israel ? Which Tribe continued to adhere to Judah ? What of importance happened to Jerusalem in the reign of Reho- boam ? REVOLT OF THE TEN TRIBES. (57 biddjug him to take up arms, and declaring that the event which had occurred was according to the divine will. 4. From this time there is but little recorded of the reign of Rchoboam. His subjects became exceedingly vicious and depraved, and abandoned themselves to idolatry and all manner of wickrdiuvs ; in consequence of which, the king of Egypt was sent against them, who took the city of Jeru- salem, and robbed the temple and the palace of their trea- sures, and carried away the shields of gold which Solomon had made ; in the place of which the king substituted others of brass. Rehoboam was forty-one years old when he began to reign, and he continued on the throne seventeen years, at the expiration of which he died, and was buried with his fathers. He was succeeded by his son Abijam. 5. The revolted Israelites under Jeroboam did not exceed their brethren of Judah in virtue and piety. The king, in order to prevent the people from going up to Jerusalem to sacrifice, which he supposed they would be inclined to do from their former habits, and their reverence for the temple and the ark, made two golden calves, the one of which he placed in Dan, and the other in Bethel, the northern and southern extremities of his dominions. He also established festivals to be observed on the same days with those of Je- rusalem, and advanced to the priesthood the lowest of the people, who were not of the house of Levi. In these ways he made Israel to sin, and provoked the severe displeasure of the Lord. 6. On a certain day, as Jeroboam stood by the idol which he had erected at Bethel, impiously executing the office of a priest, by burning incense, a prophet of God came thither from Judah and denounced a heavy wo upon the altar, and upon those who should sacrifice upon it, which he declared should be accomplished in the reign of a future prince by the name of Josiah ; and to confirm the truth of his predic- tion, he further said, that the altar should be rent, and the ashes upon it poured out. This speech so incensed Jerobo- am, that, stretching out his hand, he ordered his attendants to seize the prophet ; but his hand immediately withered away, and the altar became rent so that the ashes fell upon the ground. What did Jeroboam do to prevent his people, from going up to Je rusalem to olTer sacrifice ? What happened to Jeroboam at Bethel * 68 xdRAEL'S RETURN FROM EGYPT. , 7. The king was then convinced of the inspiration of the prophet, and entreated him to pray for the restoration of his hand, which he readily did, and it returned to its former state. Jeroboam then urged the stranger to go home with him and receive some refreshment ; but the latter refused the invitation, upon the ground, that the Lord had command- ed him neither to eat nor to drink. He then departed from the place, and was followed by an old prophet, who had been informed by his sons, of the transactions at the altar, and who had persuaded him, by a false statement, to return. 8. While they were seated at the table, the word of the Lord came unto the old prophet, and he addressed the man of God who was from Judah, declaring in substance, that in consequence of his disobedience to the command of heaven, he should not be buried in the sepulchre of his fathers. This sentence was soon put in execution ; for immediately after leaving the city, he was attacked by a lion and slain. The prophet of Bethel, when he heard of this calamity, went out and took the body, which had been neither torn nor disfi- gured, and returning with it, caused it to be buried in his own tomb ; at the same time expressing his confidence that the predictions concerning the altar would all be fulfilled, and giving it in charge to his sons, that when he died, they should ky him by the side of the man of God. ISRAEL'S RETURN FROM EGYPT. When Israel, of the Lord beloved, Out from the land of bondage came, Her fathers' God before her moved, An awful guide in smoke and flame. By day, along the astonished lands, The cloudy pillar glided slow ; By night, Arabia's crimsoned sands Returned the fiery column's glow. There rose the choral hymn of praise, And trump and timbrel answered keen ; And Zion's daughters poured their lays, With Priests' aid Warriors' voice between. THE GRATEFUL PRINCESS. 00 No portents now our foes amaze, Forsaken Israel wanders lone ; Our fathers would not know thy ways, And thou hast, left them to their own. But present still, though not unseen ! When brightly shines the prosperous day, Be thoughts of Thee a cloudy screen To temper the deceitful ray : And, oh ! where stoops on Judah's path In shade and storm the frequent night, Be thou long-suftering, slow to wrath, A burning and a shining light ! Our harps we left by Babel's streams, The tyrant's jest, the Gentile's scorn ; No censer round our altar beams, And mute are timbrel, trump, and horn. But thou hast said, the blood of goat, The flesh of rams I will not prize, A contrite heart, a humble thought, Are mine accepted sacrifice. THE GRATEFUL PRINCESS. 1. The king of Armenia, who was vassal to the Medes, looking upon them as ready to be swallowed up by the for- midable league formed against them, thought fit to lay hold on this occasion to shake off* their yoke. Accordingly he refused to pay them the ordinary tribute, and to send them the number of troops he was obliged to furnish in time of war. This highly embarrassed Cyaxares, who was afraid at this juncture of bringing new enemies upon his hands, if he undertook to compel the Armenians to execute their treaty. But Cyrus, having informed himself exactly of the strength and situation of the country, undertook the affair. The im- portant point was to keep his design secret, without which it was not likely to succeed. He therefore appointed a great mnting match on that side of the country ; for it was his Of whom was the king of Armenia vassal ? How did Cyrus get possession of him ? 70 THE GRATEFUL PRINCESS. custom to ride out that way, and frequently to hunt with the king's son and the young noblemen of Armenia. On the day appointed, he set out with a numerous retinue. The troops followed at a distance, and were not to appear till a signal was given. After some days hunting, when they were come pretty near the palace where the court resided, Cyrus com- municated his design to his officers, and sent Chrysanthes with a detachment, ordering them to make themselves mas- ters of a certain steep eminence, where he knew the king used to retire, in case of an alarm, with his family and his treasure. 2. This being done, he sent an herald to the king of Ar- menia to summon him to perform the treaty, and, in the meantime, ordered his troops to advance. Never was a court in greater surprise and perplexity. The king was conscious of the wrong he had done, and was not in a condition to support it. However, he did what he could to assemble his forces together from all quarters ; and in the meantime de- spatched his youngest son, called Sabaris, into the mountains with his wives, his daughters, and whatever was most precious and valuable. But when he was informed by his scouts, that Cyrus was coming upon their heels, he entirely lost all courage, and all thoughts of making a defence. The Armenians fol- lowing his example, ran away, every one where he could, to secure what was dearest to him. Cyrus, seeing the country covered with people that were endeavoring to make their es- cape, sent them word, that no harm should be done them, if they staid in their houses ; but that as many as were taken running away should be treated as enemies. This made them all retire to their habitations, excepting a few that followed the king. 3. On the other hand, they that were conducting the prin- cesses to the mountains, fell into the ambush Chrysanthes had laid for them, and were most of them taken prisoners. The queen, the king's son, his daughters, his eldest son's wife, and his treasure, all fell into the hands of the Persians. The king hearing this melancholy news, and not knowing what would become of him, retired to a little eminence, where he was presently invested by the Persian army and obliged to surrender. Cyrus ordered him, with all his farni- What order did Cvrus send the inhabitants of Armenia. THE GRATEFUL PRINCESS. . 71 ly, to be brought to the midst of the army. At that very in- stant arrived Tigranes, the king's eldest son, who was just returned from a journey. At so moving a spectacle he could not forbear weeping. Cyrus, addressing himself to him, said, " Prince, you are come very seasonably to fre present at the trial of your father ;" and immediately he assembled the cap- tains of the Persians and Medes, and called in also the great men of Armenia. Nor did he so much as exclude the ladies from this assembly who were there in their chariots, but gave them full liberty to hear and see all that passed. 4. When all was ready, and Cyrus had commanded silence, he began with requiring of the king, that in all the questions he was going to propose to him, he would answer sincerely, because nothing could be more unworthy a person of his rank than to use dissimulation or falsehood. The king promised he would. Then Cyrus asked him, but at different times, proposing each article separately and in order, whether it was not true that he had made war against Astyages, king of the Medes, his grandfather ; whether he had not been overcome in that war, and in consequence of this defeat had concluded a treaty with Astyages ; whether by virtue of that treaty he was not obliged to pay a certain tribute, to furnish a certain number of troops, and not keep any fortified place in this country ? 5. It was impossible for the king to deny any of these facts, which were all public and notorious. " -For what rea^ son, then," continued Cyrus, " have you violated the treaty in every article ?" " For no other," replied the king, " than because I thought it a glorious thing to shake off the yoke, to live free, and to leave my children in the same situation." " It is really glorious," answered Cyrus, " to fight in defence of liberty ; but if any one, after he is reduced to servitude, should attempt to run away from his master, what would you do with him ?" " I must confess," said the king, " I would punish him." " And if you had given a government to one of your subjects, and he should be found to commit malver- sations, would you continue him in his post ?" " No, cer- tainly ; I would put another in his place." " And if he had amassed great riches by his unjust practices ?" "I would Who was the king's son mentioned ? What did Cyrus require ot :-h 5 72 THE GRATEFUL PRINCESS. strip him of them." " But, (which is still worse) if he had held intelligence with your enemies, how would you treat him ?" " Though I should pass sentence upon myself," re- plied the king, " I must declare the truth ; I would put him to death." At these words Tigranes tore his hair from his head, and rent his garments ; the women burst out into la- mentations and outcries, as if sentence was actually passed upon him. 6. Cyrus having again commanded silence, Tigranes ad- dressed himself to the prince to this effect : " Great prince, can you think it consistent with your wisdom to put my fa- ther to death, even against your own interest ?" " How against my interest ?" replied Cyrus. " Because he was never so capable of doing you service." " How do you make that appear ? Do the faults we commit enhance our merit, and give us a new title to consideration" and favor ?" " They certainly do, provided they serve to make us wiser. For of inestimable value is wisdom ; are either riches, courage, or address to be compared to it ? Now, it is evident this single day's experience has infinitely improved my father's wisdom. He knows how dear the violation of his word has cost him. He has proved and felt how much you are superior to him in all respects. He has not been able to succeed in any of his designs ; but you have happily accomplished all yours, and with that expedition and secrecy, that he has found himself surrounded and taken before he expected to be attacked ; and the very place of his retreat has served only to ensnare him." " But your father," replied Cyrus, " has yet under- gone no sufferings that can have taught him wisdom." " The fear of evils," answered Tigranes, " when it is so well founded as this is, has a much sharper sting, and is more capable of piercing the soul than the evil itself. Besides, permit me to say, that gratitude is a stronger and more prevailing motive than any whatever ; and there, can be no obligations in the world of a higher nature than those you will lay upon my fa ther. His fortune, liberty, sceptre, life, wives, and children, all restored to him with such a generosity ; where can you find, illustrious prince, in one single person, so many strong and powerful ties to attach him to your service ?" How were Tigranes and the women affected when the king con- fessed himself guilty ? Through whose solicitations did Cyrus spare the kino* ? THE GRATEFUL PRINCESS. 73 7. " Well, then," replied Cyrus, turning to the king, " if I should yield to your son's entreaties, with what number of men, and what sum of money, will you assist us in the war against the Babylonians ?" " My troops and treasures," says the Armenian king, " are no longer mine ; they are entirely yours. I can raise 40,000 foot, and 8,000 horse ; and as to money, I reckon, including the treasures which my father left me, there are about 3,000 talents in ready money. All these are wholly at your disposal." Cyrus accepted half the num- ber of troops, and left the king the other half, for the defence of the country against the Chaldeans with whom he was at war. The annual tribute which was due to the Medes he doubled, and instead of 50 talents exacted 100, and borrowed the like sum over and above in his own name. " But what would you give me," added Cyrus, " for the ransom of your wives ?" " All that I have in the world," answered the king. II And for the ransom of your children ?" " The same thing." c( From this time, then, you are indebted to me the double of all your possessions ! and you, Tigranes, at wha price would you redeem the liberty of your lady ?" Nou he had but lately married her, and was passionately fond of her. " At the price," says he, " of a thousand lives, if I had them." Cyrus then conducted them all to his tent, and en- tertained them at supper. It is easy to imagine what trans- ports of joy there must have been upon this occasion. 8. After supper, as they were discoursing upon various subjects, Cyrus asked Tigranes, what was become of a go- vernor he had often seen hunting with him, and for whom he had a particular esteem. " Alas," says Tigranes, " he is no more ; and I dare not tell you by what accident I lost him." Cyrus pressing him to tell him, " My father," con- tinued Tigranes, " seeing I had a very tender affection for this governor, and that I was extremely attached to him, was jealous it might be of some ill consequence, and put him to death. But he was so honest a man, that, as he was ready to expire, he sent for me, and spoke to me in these words 1 Tigranes, let not my death occasion any disaffection in you towards the king your father. What he has done to me did not proceed from malice, but only from prejudice and What did Tigranes propose to give for the liberty of himself and 74 JULIUS CJ2SAR AND POMPEY. a false notion wherewith he was unhappily blinded." " O the excellent man !" cried Cyrus, " never forget the last ad- vice he gave you." 9. When the conversation was ended, Cyrus, before they parted embraced them all, as in token of a perfect reconcilia- tion. This done, they got into their chariots, with their wives, and went home full of gratitude and admiration. Nothing but Cyrus was mentioned the whole way ; some extolling his wisdom, others his valor, some admiring the sweetness of his temper, others praising the beauty of his person and the majesty of his mien. " And you," says Tigranes, addressing himself to his lady, " what do you think of Cyrus 7 aspect and deportment ?" " I do not know," replied the lady, " I did not observe him." " Upon what subject then did you fix your eyes ?" " Upon him that said he would give a thou- sand lives to ransom my liberty." JULIUS CAESAR AND POMPEY. 1. The ambition of Caesar and of Pompey had now evi- dently the same object ; and it seemed to be the only ques- tion in those degenerate times, to which of these aspiring leaders the republic should surrender its liberties. The term of Caesar's government was nearly expiring; but to secure himself against a deprivation of power, he procured a proposal to be made in the senate by one of his partisans, which wore the appearance of great moderation, namely, that Caesar and Pompey should either both continue in their governments, or both be deprived of them, as they were equally capable of endangering the public liberty by an abuse of power. 2. The motion passed, and Csesar immediately offered to resign, on condition that his rival should do so ; but Pom- pey rejected the accommodation ; the term of his govern ment had yet several years duration, and he suspected the proposal to be a snare laid for him by Caesar. He resolved to maintain his right by force of arms, and a civil war was What strong expression of her gratitude did she make to her hiis hand ? What proposition did de'sar make ? ^Did Pompey accede to it ? .iruus C.M;SAR AND POMPEY. 75 the necessary consequence. The, consuls and a great par.' of the senate were the friends of Pompey. Caesar had on his side a victorious army, consisting of ten legions, and the body of the Roman citizens, whom he had won by his libe- rality. Mark Antony and Cassius, at that time tribunes of the people, left Rome and repaired to Caesar's camp. 3. The senate, apprehensive of his designs, pronounced a decree, branding, with the crime of parricide, any confirm nd- er who should dare to pass the Rubicon, (the boundary be- tween Italy and the Gauls) with a single cohort, without their permission. Caesar infringed the prohibition, and inarched straight to Rome. Pompey, : > whom the senate committed the defence of the state, had no army. He quit- ted Rome, followed by the consuls and a part of the senate, and endeavored hastily to levy troops over all Italy and Greece ; while Caesar triumphantly entered the city, amidst the acclamations of the people, seized the public treasury, and possessed himself of the supreme authority without op- position. 4. Having secured the capital of the empire, he set out to take the field against his enemies. The lieutenants of Pom- pey had possession of Spain. Caesar inarched thither, and subdued the whole country in the space of forty days. He returned victorious to Rome, where, in his absence, he had been nominated dictator. In the succeeding election of magistrates, he was chosen consul ; and thus invested, by a double title, with the right of acting in the name of the re- public. Pompey had, by this time, raised a numerous army, and Caesar was anxious to bring him to a decisive engage- ment. He joined him in Illyria, and the first conflict was of doubtful issue ; but leading on his army to Macedonia, where they found a large reinforcement, he gave battle to Pompey in the field of Pharsalia, and entirely defeated him. Fif- teen thousand were slain, and 24,000 surrendered themselves prisoners to the victor, A. U. C.* 705, B. C. 49. What decree did the Roman senate pronounce at this time ? What did Pompey, as Caesar advanced to Rome ? With what title was Ctrsar invested, after returning from Sppin ? At what battle defeated ? * Anno Urbis Conditne. or year of building the city. 8 BATTLE OF PHARSAL1A. BATTLE OF PHARSALIA. 1. As the armies approached, the two generals went from rank to rank, encouraging their troops. Pompey represent- ed to his men, that the glorious occasion, which they had long besought him to grant, was now before them ; " and in- deed," cried he, " what advantages could you wish over an enemy, that you are not now possessed of? Your numbers, your vigor, a late victory, all ensure a speedy and an easy conquest over those harassed and broken troops, composed of men worn out with age, and impressed with the terrors of a recent defeat. But there is a still stronger bulwark for our protection than the superiority of our strength the justice of our cause. You are engaged in the defence of liberty, and of your country. You are supported by its laws, and followed by its magistrates. You have the world spectators of your conduct, and wishing you success. On the contrary, he whom you oppose is a robber and oppressor of his coun- try, and almost already sunk with the consciousness of his crimes, as well as the bad success of his arms. Show, then, on this occasion, all that ardor, and detestation of tyranny, that should animate Romans, and do justice to mankind." 2. Caesar, on his side, went among his men with that steady serenity, for which he was so much admired in the midst of danger. He insisted on nothing so strongly, to his soldiers, as his frequent and unsuccessful endeavors for peace. He talked, with terror, on the blood he was going to shed, and pleaded only the necessity that urged him to it. He deplored the many brave men that were to fall on both sides, and the wounds of his country, whoever should be vic- torious. His soldiers answered his speech with looks of ar- dor and impatience ; which observing, he gave the signal to begin. The word on Pompey's side was, Hercules the in- vincible ; that on Caesar's, Venus the victorious. There was only so much space between both armies, as to give room for fighting ; wherefore, Pompey ordered his men to receive the first shock, without moving out of their places, expect- ing the enemy's ranks to be put into disorder by their motion. Caesar's soldiers were now rushing on with their usual impe- tuosity, when, perceiving the enemy motionless, they all stop- ped short, as if by general consent, and Halted in the midst of B ATT u: or PHARSAL1A. 7? their career. A terrible pause ensued, in which both armies continued to gu/e upon each other with mutual terror. 3. At length, (Vsar's men, having taken breath, ran furi- ously upon the enemy, first discharging their javelins, and then drawing their swords. The same method was observed by Pompey's troops, who as vigorously opposed the att His cavalry, also, were ordered to charge on the very onf iho bjaver-f gerrrf. pro ducc-i v DEATH OF ANTONY. 81 THE WORLD A FLEETING SHOW. This world is all a fleeting show, For man's illusion given The smiles of Joy, the tears of Wo, Deceitful shine, deceitful flow There's nothing true but Heaven ! And false the light on Glory's plume As fading hues of even ; And Love, and Hope, and Beauty's bloom, Are blossoms gathered for the, tomb There's nothing bright but Heaven ! Poor wanderers of a stormy day, From wave to wave we're driven, And Fancy's flash, and Reason's ray, Serve but to light the troubled way There's nothing calm but Heaven ! DEATH OF ANTONY. 1. ANTONY, being lost in luxury and effeminacy with Cle- opatra, gave Caesar* time to get his forces together, who might otherwise have been easily Defeated, had Antony come upon him before he was prepared. Antony's fleet consisted of five hundred large ships, on board of which was an army of two hundred thousand foot, and twenty-two thousand horse. Caesar had only two hundred and fifty ships, eighty thousand foot, and twelve thousand horse. Antony was ad- vised by his ablest commanders not to engage by sea ; but Cleopatra advising to the contrary, they came to a general engagement near the city of Actium in Epirus. Victory was for sometime doubtful, till the retreat of Cleopatra, who fled with the whole Egyptian squadron, and was precipitately fol- lowed by Antony, declaring every thing was lost ; for Anto- ny's army immediately submitted to Caesar. Where did the armies of Caesar and Antony come to an engage- ment ? What first turned the scale of victory in favor of Caesar ? * Octavius. nephew and successor of Julius, who won the battle of Pharsalia. 82 DEATH OF ANTONY, 2. Antony and Cleopatra escaped to Alexandria, where she put many great persons to death, fearing they might take up arms against her on account of the defeat she had met with. To avoid falling into the hands of Caesar, she formed the most extraordinary design of having her ships in the Mediterranean carried into the Red Sea, over the isthmus of seventy miles ; but in this she was prevented by the Ara- bians, who burnt them all. Antony finding himself deserted by all his followers, for some time secluded himself from company in his house, which he called Timonium, where he pretended to act the part of Timon the man-hater ; but he soon returned to Cleopatra, and with her spent the re- mainder of his life. 3. They agreed to send ambassadors to Caesar, to sue for peace ; and Antony submitted to the meanness of demand- ing life of him, on the shameful conditions of passing it at Athens, as a private person, if Caesar would give Egypt to Cleopatra and her children. The queen, however, was so treacherous as to give private orders to her ambassadors, to mention her only in the treaty. Caesar would not admit Antony's ambassadors to an audience ; but he gave a favora- ble reception to those of "the queen, being particularly de- sirous of securing her person to adorn his triumph, and her treasures to enable him to pay the debts he had contracted to defray the expense of the war. 4. The ambassadors proving unsuccessful, Antony en- deavoured to extinguish in himself the sense of his present misfortunes, and the apprehension of those that threatened him, by abandoning himself to feasting and voluptuousness. Cleopatra and he regaled themselves alternately, and emu- lously contended to excel each other in the incredible mag- nificence of their banquets. Cleopatra, however, foresaw^ what might, happen, and collecting all sorts of poison, dis- covered at length that the asp was the only one which caus- ed neither torture nor convulsions, and which throwing the person bit into an immediate heaviness and stupefaction, at- tended with a slight perspiration upon the face, and a numb- ness of all the organs of sense, gently extinguishing life ; so that those who were in that condition, were angry when any What extraordinary measure did Cleopatra adopt to prevent falling \into the hands of Cassar ? \ DEATH OF ANTON T. 8* one awakened them, or endeavoured to mak them rise, Tike people exceedingly sleepy. This was the poison she fixed upon ; but applied herself, with extraordinary solicitude, in caressing Antony, to dispel his suspicions and complaints. 5. Caesar. IHMIIIJ fully sensible that it was of the hisrhrst importance to him not to leave his victory unfinished, invest ed Pelusium, and summoned the governor to open the gates. Seleucus, who commanded there for Cleopatra, had received secret orders upon that head, and surrendered the place without waiting for a siege. Such was the wickedness of this queen, in whom the most odious vices were complicated. She absolutely renounced all modesty ; had a violent pro- pensity to fraud, injustice, and cruelty ; and, what was worse than all, was a most detestable hypocrite. While the rumor of this treason spread through the city, Cleopatra ordered her most precious moveables to be carried to a place of security. 6. Caesar was in hopes of making himself master of Alex- andria in a short time, by means of the intelligence he held with Cleopatra, on which he relied no less than on his army. Antony, being ignorant of her intrigues, prepared for an ob- stinate defence. He made a vigorous sally, and returned victorious into the city, which was the last effort of his ex- piring genius ; for, after this exploit, fortitude and sense of glory forsook him, or were of no more service to him. In- stead of pursuing his victory, and keeping a watchful eye over Cleopatra who betrayed him, he flew to her in his ar- mor, and threw himself at her feet. The palace echoed with acclamations, as though the siege had been raised ; and Antony and Cleopatra spent that day, and part of the night, in the most abandoned folly. 7. Antony now resolved to make the last attempt, both by sea and land, with a fixed resolution to conquer or die. He ordered his attendants to fill him out wine plentifully, saying, " This may be, perhaps, the last piece of service you will be able to do me ; for to-morrow you may change your master, when I, stretched on the ground, shall be no more." On the approach of day, Antony drew up his forces on some rising ground out of the city, and from thence beheld his galleys, which were rowing out of the port, and going to attack those of Caesar ; but how shall I express his astonish* What wa the character of Cleopatra ? 84 DEATH OF ANTONY. rnent when he beheld his admiral delivering up his fleet to his enemy ! At the same time his cavalry seeing this, de- eerted him and went over to Caesar, when his in&ntry was obliged to submit. Unhappy Antony ! in vain do you fly to the palace to seek Cleopatra, that you may murder her for her perfidy ; she is not there ; the ignominious wretch is retired. 8. Cleopatra had secured herself from his fury among the tombs, whica quarter was fortified with good walls, and the gates were shut. She desired that Antony should be told that she had destroyed herself. Struck with the idea of her death, he passed immediately from the excess of rage to the most violent transports of grief, and thought only of follow- ing her to the grave. Having taken this resolution, he shut himself up in his apartment, with a freedmaii, whom he had caused to take off his armor, and commanded him to plunge his dagger into his bosom. But his servant, full of affection, respect, and fidelity for his master, stabbed himself with it, and fell dead at his feet. Antony looking upon this action as an example for him to follow, thrust his sword into his body, and fell upon the floor in a torrent of his blood, which he mingled with that of his faithful servant. 9. At that moment an officer came to let him know that Cleopatra was alive. He no sooner heard her name pro- nounced, than he opened his dying eyes, suffered his wounds to be dressed, and caused himself to be carried to the fort, where she had shut herself up. Cleopatra would not permit the gates to be opened to give him entrance, for fear of some surprise ; but she appeared at a lofty window, from whence she threw down chains and cords. Antony was made fast to these, and Cleopatra, assisted by two women, who were the only persons she had brought with her to the tombs, drew him up. Never was there a more moving sight. An- tony, all bathed in his blood, with death painted in his face, was dragged up into the air, turning his dying eyes, and ex- tending his feeble hands to Cleopatra, as if to conjure her to receive his last breath ; while she, with her features dis- torted, and her arms strained, pulled the cord with her whole strength. 10. When she had drawn him up to her, and placed him What induced Antony to destroy himself? DEATH OF CLEOPATRA. 8i> on a bed, she threw her clothes upon him, and making the most mournful exclamations, cut off his hair, according to the superstition of the pagans, that that was a relief to those who died a violent death. Her cries recalling his fainting spirits, and seeing the aflliction she was in, he told her, with a view to comfort her, that he should die in peace, since he would expire in her arms ; and that he did not blush at his defeat, since he had been vanquished by Romans. Having thus spoken, he expired, being then in the fifty-third yenr of his age. His death put an end to all civil wars, and gave Caesar an opportunity of completing his ambitious desipue. DEATH OF CLEOPATRA. 1. JUST about the time that Antony breathed his last, Proculeius, who had received particular orders to seize Cle- opatra, arrived from Caesar. He could not refrain from shedding tears on this melancholy occasion, which was ag- gravated by the bloody sword that was presented to him. The queen refused to go with him, but permitted him to speak to her from without. 2. Proculeius, after having observed the situation of th sepulchre, went and informed Caesar of his observations. Caesar then sent Gallus to speak with her, which he did in the same manner as Proculeius. In the mean time, the lat- ter, bringing a ladder, and being followed by two officers, got in at the window, where Antony had been drawn up, and went to the gate, where Cleopatra was talking with Gal- lus. One of her female attendants, seeing him, shrieked and cried, " Ill-fated princess, thou art taken !" Cleopatra had raised a dagger to stab herself, when Proculeius, catch- ing her in his arms, thus addressed her " You injure both ir and yourself, in attempting to deprive him of so no- ble an opportunity to exert his clemency." He seized her dagger, and shook bar robes, to discover if any poison was concealed under them. Caesar then sent a freed-man to Who received orders from Ccesar to seize Cleopatra? Did he sue ceed in seizing her ? Who was then sent by Csesar to take her 5 - What did s ] ie attempt doing, when taken ? 86 DEATH OF CLEOPATRA. guard Cleopatra, ordering him to use her like a queen, but to prevent her from laying violent hands upon herself 3. Caesar then entered Alexandria without further oppo- sition, and gave Cleopatra fair hopes of the kindest treat- ment ; though he intended only to pervert her treasures to his own purposes, a id reserve her person to grace his tri- umph. But w!-:i 4 n he had both in his power, he disregarded her, and she- ' aid she had no other means of avoiding the disgrace of adding to the glory of his triumph, than by put- ting a period to her life. 4. Caesar went and paid her a visit, when she endeavored to captivate this young conqueror, as she had before capti- vated Julius Csesar and Antony. But alas, the charm was now broken ! Cassar, with the utmost coolness, only advised her not to despond, declaring that he would treat her with all possible tenderness. 5. He permitted her to dispose of her jewels as she thought proper ; and, after giving her the kindest assurances, he left her/ Csesar imagined he had artfully over-reached Cleopa- tra, by inspiring her with a love of life, which he, in fact, wished to prolong, only for the sake of his triumph ; but herein he soon found his mistake. Caesar had before given Cleopatra leave to bury Antony, which she did with the ut- most magnificence. According to the custom of Egypt, she caused his bod^ to be embalmed with the most exquisite per- fumes of the east, and placed it among the tombs of the Egyptian kings. 6. Cleopatra hearing that Caesar intended to send her away within three, days, conjured him to let her pay her last obligations to the remains of Antony, which he granted. She then visited Antony's tomb, strewing it with flowers, and watering it with tears. She then returned to her cham- ber, went into a bath, and from thence to the table, where a splendid entertainment was prepared. When she arose from table, she wrote a letter to Csesar, wherein she ear- nestly desired to be laid in the same tomb with Antony ; and having made all leave her chamber, except her two women, she shut the door, sat down upon the bed, and asked for a basket of figs, which a peasant had lately brought. ' This What were Csesar's designs in regard to Cleopatra and her tre cures ? What did she aim to do when visited by Os&sar ? DEATH OF CLEOPATRA. 87 supposed peasant was one of the queen's domestics, who had eluded the vigilance of the guards. She placed the basket by her, and a moment after lay down, as if she had fallen asleep ; but this was the effect of the asp, which was con- cealed among the fruit, and had stung her in the arm, which she had held to it. The poison immediately communicated to the heart, and killed her without pain. 7. Thus died, in the thirty-ninth year of her age, this princess, whose wit and beauty had made so much noise in the world, after having reigned twenty-two years from the death of her father, twelve of which she passed with Antony. She was a woman of great parts, as well as of great wicked- ness ; and spoke several languages with the utmost readi- ness. In her death ended the reign of the Ptolemies in Egypt, after it had continued from the death of Alexander 294 years. 8. Caesar, on the receipt of Cleopatra's letter, instantly despatched a messenger to her, who found her dead on a golden couch, dressed in royal robes, looking like one asleep, with one of her maids dead at her feet, and the other expir- ing. Caesar was very much troubled at Cleopatra's death, as it robbed him of the noblest ornament of his triumph, He ordered her body to be buried near that of Antony, agree- ably to her request, which was accordingly done with the greatest funeral pomp. Her women had also a pompous in- terment, in memory of their fidelity. After Cleopatra's death, Egypt was made a Roman province, and governed by a praefect sent from Rome for that purpose. 9. Caesar having now greatly enlarged the Roman domi- nions, was received at Rome as a, conqueror, who had put an end to the miseries and calamities of most nations. He tri- umphed three days successively, with extraordinary magnifi- cence ; first, for Illyricum ; secondly, for the victory of Ac- tium ; and thirdly, for the conquest of Egypt. On this oc- casion; the temple of Janus was shut, which was the third time since the foundation of Rome, having stood open 205 years. How did Cleopatra destroy hor life ? "What was her age when she destroyed herself? How lon-j had she reigned ? What reign ended with the death of Cleopatra ?" 88 THE CAPTIVE LADY. THE CAPTIVE LADY, RESTORED TO HER LOVER BY SCIPIO. ). WHEN to his glorious first essay in war, New Carthage fell, there all the flower of Spain Were kept in hostage ; a full field presenting For Scipio's generosity to shine. A noble virgin, Conspicuous far o'er all the captive dames, Was mark'd the gen'ral's prize. She wept and blush'd, Young, fresh, and blooming like the morn. An eye, As when the blue sky trembles through a cloud Of purest white. A secret charm combin'd Her features, and infus'd enchantment through them. Her shape was harmony. But eloquence Beneath her beauty fails ; which seem'd on purpose By nature lavish'd on her, that mankind Might see the virtue of a hero try'd, Almost beyond the stretch of human force. 2. Soft as she pass'd along, with downcast eyes, Where gentle sorrow swell'd, and now and then Dropp'd o'er her modest cheeks a trickling tear, The Roman legions languish'd, and hard war Felt more than pity ; e'en their chief himself, As on his high tribunal rais'd he sat, Turn'd from the dang'rous sight ; and, chiding, ask'd His officers, if by this gift they meant To cloud his glory in its very dawn. 3. 'She, questioned of her birth, in trembling accents, With tears and blushes, broken told her tale. But when he found her royally descended ; Of her old captive parents the sole joy ; And that a hapless Celtiberian prince, Her lever and belov'd, forgot his chains, His lost dominions, and for her alone Wept out his tender soul sudden the heart Of this young, conquering, loving, godlike Roman, Felt all the great divinity of virtue. 4. His wishing youth stood check'd ; his tempting power, Restrain'd by kind humanity. At once, DEATH OF C.ESAR 69 He for her parents and her lover call'd. The various scene imagine. How his troops Look'd dubious on, and wonder'd what he meant ; While stretch'd below, the trembling suppliant lay, Rack'd by a thousand mingling passions fear, Hope, jealousy, disdain, submission, grief. Anxiety, and love, in every shape. To these, as different sentiments succeeded, As mix'd emotions, when the man divine Thus the dread silence to the lover broke 5. " We both are young both charm'd. The right of war Has put thy beauteous mistress in my power ; With whom I could, in the most sacred ties, Live out a happy life. But know, that Romans, Their hearts, a_s well as enemies, can conquer ; Then take her to thy soul, and with her, take Thy liberty and kingdom. In return, I ask but this when you behold these eyes, The&e charms, with transport, be a friend to Rome. 1 ' Ecstatic wonder held the lovers mute ; While the loud camp, and all the clustering crowd That hung around, rang with repeated shouts. Fame took th' alarm, and through resounding Spain Blew fast the fair report ; which, more than arms, Admiring nations to the Romans gain'd. DEATH OF QfflSAR. 1. C.ESAR having been made perpetual dictator, and re- ceived from the senate accumulated honors, it began to be rumored that he intended to make himself king ; and though in fact he was possessed of the power, the people, who had an utter aversion to the name, could not bear his assuming the title. Whether he really designed to assume that empty honor, must now for ever remain a secret ; but certain it is, that the unsuspecting openness of his conduct marked some- thing like a confidence in the innocence of his intentions. What first caused a jealousy against Cur ? 90 DEATH OF CAESAR. 2. When informed, by those about him, of the jealousies of many persons who envied his power, he was heard to say, that ho had rather die once by treason, than to live continu- ally in apprehension of it. When advised by some to beware of Brutus, in whom he had for some time reposed the great- est confidence, he opened his breast, all scarred with wounds, saying, " Can you think Brutus cares for such poor pillage as this ?" And being one night at supper, as his friends dis- puted among themselves what death was easiest, he replied, that which was most sudden and least foreseen. But to convince the world how little he had to apprehend from his enemies, he disbanded his company of Spanish guards, which facilitated the enterprise against his life. 3. A deep conspiracy was therefore laid against him, com- posed of no less than sixty senators. They were still the more formidable, as the generality of them were of his own party, who having been raised above other citizens, felt more strongly the weight of a single superior. At the head of this conspiracy were Brutus, whose life Caesar had spared after the battle of Pharsalia, and Cassius, who was pardoned soon after, both prastors for the present year. Brutus made it his chief glory to have descended from that Brutus who first gave liberty to Rome. The passion for freedom seemed to have been transmitted with the blood of his ancestors down to him. But though he detested tyranny, yet he could not for- bear loving the tyrant, from whom he had received the most signal benefits. 4. The conspirators, to give a color of justice to their pro- ceedings, remitted the execution of their design to the ides of March,, the day on which Caesar was to be offered the crown. The augurs had foretold that this day would be fatal to him ; and the night preceding, he heard his wife Calphur- nia lamenting in her sleep ; and being awakened, she con- fessed to him that she dreamed of his being assassinated in her arms. These omens in some measure began to change his intentions of going to the senate, as he had resolved that day ; but one of the conspirators coming in, prevailed upon him to keep his resolution, telling him of the reproach that would attend his staying at home till his wife had lucky Of what was Caesar warned to beware ? Who engaged with Bru- us in a conspiracy to destroy Ceesar ? DEATH OF C^SAR. 91 dreams, and of the preparations that were made for his ap- pearance. 5. As he went along to the senate, a slave who hastened to him with information of the conspiracy, attempted to come near him, but could not for the crowd. Artemidorus, a Greek philosopher, who had discovered the whole plot, delivered him a memorial, containing the heads of the information ; but Caesar gave it,. with other papers, to one of his secreta- ries, without reading, as was usual in things of this nature. Being at length entered the senate-house, where the conspira-' tors were prepared to receive him, he met one Spurina, an au- gur, who had foretold this danger, to whom he said, smiling, " Well, Spurina, the ides of March are come." " Yes," re- plied the augur, " but they are not yet over." 6. As sodh as he had taken his place, the conspirators came near him, under pretence of saluting him ; and Cimber, who was oe of them, approached in a suppliant posture, pretending to sue for his brother's pardon, who had been banished by his order. All the conspirators seconded him with great earnestness ; and Cimber, seeming to sue with still greater submission, took hold of the bottom of his robe, holding him so as to prevent his rising. This was the signal agreed on. Casca, who was behind, stabbed him, though slightiy, in the shoulder. Csesar instantly turned round, and with the steel of his tablet, wounded him in the arm. 7. However, all the conspirators were now alarmed ; and enclosing him round, he received a second stab, from an un- known hand, in the breast, while Cassius wounded him in '*he face. He still defended himself with great vigor, rush- ing among them, and throwing down such as opposed him, till he saw Brutus among the conspirators, who, coming up, stuck his dagger into his thigh. From that moment Caesar thought no more of defending himself; but looking upon this conspirator, cried out, " And you too, my son !" Then covering his head, and spreading his robe before him in or- der to fall with greater decency, he sunk down at the base of Pompey's statue, after receiving three-and-twenty wounds from hands which he vainly supposed he had disarmed by his benefits. 8. Caesar was killed in the fifty-sixth year of his age, and 34. At what age wa Caesar assassinated .* 92 CATILINE'S CONSPIRACY. about fourteen years after he began the conquest of the world. If we examine his history, we shall be equally at a loss whether most to admire his great abilities or his wonder- ful fortune. To pretend to say, that from the beginning he planned the subjugation of his native country, is doing no great credit to his well known penetration, as a thousand ob- stacles lay in his way, which fortune, rather than conduct, was to surmount. No man, therefore, of his sagacity, would have begun a scheme in which the chances of succeeding were so many against him ; it is most probable, that, like all very successful men, he only made the best of every occur- rence ; and his ambition rising with his good fortune, from at first being contented with his humbler aims, he at last be- gan to think of governing the world, when he found scarce an obstacle to oppose his designs. Such is the disposition of man, whose cravings after power are always most insatiable when he enjoys the greatest share. CATILINE'S CONSPIRACY. 1. ABOUT sixty-one years before Christ, one of the most dangerous conspiracies broke out that had ever threatened Rome. At the head of this conspiracy was Lucius Sergius Catiline, who was descended from a very illustrious patrician family of great antiquity. He had been brought up amidst the tumults and disorders of a civil war, and had been the instrument of the cruelties of Sylla, to whom he was devoted. Destitute of either morals or probity, he discovered not the least veneration for the gods ; and being ever disgusted with the present, was always unhappy with respect to the future 2. Though master of few abilities, he was bold, rash, and intrepid, and had not even prudence enough properly to conceal his own infernal designs, where it was necessary he should, in order to prevent their miscarriage. As extrava- gance is the first cause of the violation of all laws, so Cati- line, having contracted vast debts, and being unable to pay them, grew desperate, and aimed at nothing less than the highest and most lucrative employments. For this purpose, When was Catiline's conspiracy formed ? What was the character of Catiline ? CATILINE'S CONSPIRACY 93 he associated with those young Romans, whose excesses had ruined their fortunes, and rendered them the contempt of every discerning person in the city. 3. These abandoned wretches formed a horrid conspiracy to murder the consuls, and to put to death the greatest part of the senato r s. Even the day was fixed, which was to have given birth to the most infamous attempt that had ever hap- pened in the commonwealth since the foundation of Rome. At the signal given by Catiline, they were to rush on the consuls and murder them ; but Catiline being too hasty in the signal, it was not obeyed ; and thus the massacre was put off till another time. 4. This conspiracy was daily strengthened by all the young people of Rome, who, having been rocked in the cradle of luxury, and enervated by a continual succession of pleasures ; such as had ruined themselves by excesses, and were no longer able to support their extravagancies ; the ambitious, who aspired to the highest posts in the state ; and others, who had revenge, which they wanted to gratify on some superior ; all these, actuated by different passions, embarked in the cause of Catiline, who made them the largest promises, and at the same time exhorted them to employ their interest to procure his being elected cohsuj. No time could better suit the conspirators, as Pompey was then engaged in a war in the east, and Italy had no army to protect it. 5. Cicero, however, who was then consul, found means to bribe Fulvia, a lady of an illustrious family, which she had dis- honored by her criminal amours with one of the chief of the conspirators. From this woman, Cicero got such informa- tion as enabled him to counteract all Catiline's projects. Soon after, Cicero accused Catiline, while he was present in the senate, of his impious design ; but he endeavored to clear himself of the charge. Finding he could not bring the sena- tors to his way of thinking, and being called by them an enemy and a parricide, he cried out in a furious tone of voice, " Since snares are every where laid fgr me, and those to whom I am odious exasperate me beyond measure, I will not perish singly, but involve my enemies in my ruin." 6. Catiline, having spoken these words, flew out of the What was the object of this conspiracy ? Who was instrumental in counteracting this conspiracy ? 04 CATILINE'S CONSPIRACY senate-house, and sending for the chief conspirators, told them what had passed. Then exhorting them to murder the consul, he left Rome that night, accompanied by three hun- dred of his associates, and went and joined Manlius. He caused lictors, with fasces and axes, to walk before him, as if he had really been a magistrate. Upon the news of this insurrection, the senate ordered Antonius, the consul, to march the legions against the rebels, and Cicero to look after the peace of the city. 7. Soon after, Lentulus, Cethegus, Gabinius, and two more who were principals of the conspiracy, were arrested, con- victed, and conveyed to different prisons. The contest in the senate was long and warm, respecting the nature of the pu- nishment that should be inflicted upon them. It was, how- ever, at last resolved that they should be put to death ; and Cicero, upon the bare sentence of the senate, and without submitting the matter to the people, as was usual, ordered them to be executed in the different prisons in which they were confined. These executions at once crushed the plot, and overturned all the designs of the conspirators, who had that night resolved to rescue them from confinement, that they might immediately join Catiline. 8. News^being brought to Catiline's camp, of we late exe- cutions, great numbers of his soldiers abandoned him in the night ; but this did not disconcert or dishearten Catiline, for he was determined either to ruin the commonwealth, or pe- rish in the attempt. He thereupon raised new forces, filled the cohorts with them, and soon completed the legions, which were all inflamed with the same passion for blood and slaughter and the destruction of their native country. By the good management of the consul, Catiline found himself surrounded by the enemy. He therefore resolved to hazard a battle, though he was considerably inferior in number. 9. Petreius, who had served thirty years in the field, and from a private soldier had been made a general, commanded for the republic in the room of the consul, who was suddenly taken ill. He engaged Catiline with the greatest bravery, and the battle was sustained on both sides with the utmost intrepidity. Petreius was at last victorious, and the rebels were all put to the sword. But Catiline, who could not bear the thoughts of surviving the rain of his party, rushed into that part of the battle where death was making the greatest DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM. 96 havoc, and there fell a victim to his own folly and iniquity. He was afterwards found among the dead and mangled bo- dies of the rebels, which lay in heaps. On his pale and life- less face was still pictured the haughty ferocity of his soul, which even death could not extinguish. THE TEARS OF JUDAH. HUSH'D is the voice of Judah's mirth And Judah's minstrels too are gone ; The harps that told Messiah's birth, And hung on Heaven's eternal throne. Fled is the bright and shining throng That swell'd on earth the welcome strain, And lost in air the choral song That floated wild on David's plain. For dark and sad is Bethlehem's fate, Her valleys gush with human blood ; Despair sits mourning at her gate, And Murder stalks in frantic mood. At morn, the mother's heart was light, Her infant bloom'd upon her breast ; At eve, 'twas pale and wither'd quite, And gone to its eternal rest. Weep on, ye childless" mothers, weep ! Your babes are hush'd in one cold grave ! In Jordan's stream their spirits sleep, Their blood is mingled with the wave. DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM. 1. JERUSALEM was built on two mountains, and surround- ed by three walls on every side, except where it was enclosed with deep valleys, which were deemed inaccessible. Each wall was fortified by high towers. The celebrated temple, arid strong casde of Antonia, were on the east side oi the 96 DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM city, and directly opposite to the Mount of Olives. But not- withstanding the prodigious strength of this lamed metropo- lis, the infatuated Jews brought on their own destruction by their intestine contests. At a time when a formidable army was rapidly advancing, and the Jews were assembling from all parts to keep the passover, the contending factions were continually inventing new methods of mutual destruction, and in their ungoverned fury they wasted and destroyed such vast quantities of provisions as might have preserved the city many years. 2. Such was the miserable situation of Jerusalem, when Titus began his march towards it with a formidable army ; and, having laid waste the country in his progress, and slaughtered the inhabitants, arrived before its walls. The sight of the Romans produced a temporary reconciliation among the contending factions, and they unanimously resolv- ed to oppose the common enemy. Their first sally was ac- cordingly made with such fury and resolution, that, though Titus displayed uncommon valor on this occasion, the be- siegers were obliged to abandon their camps, and flee to the mountains. No sooner had the Jews a short interval of quiet from their foreign enemies, than their civii disorders were renewed. John, by an impious stratagem, found means to cut off, or force Eleazer's men to submit to him ; and the factions were again reduced to two, who opposed each other with implacable animosity. 3. The Romans, in the mean time, exerted all their ener- gy in making preparations for a powerful attack upon Jeru- salem. Trees were cut down, houses levelled, rocks cleft asunder, and valleys, filled up ; towers were raised, and bat- tering rams erected, with other engines of destruction, against the devoted city. After the offers of peace, which Titus had repeatedly sent by Josephus, were rejected with indignation, the Romans began to play their engines with all- their might. The strenuous attacks of the enemy again unit- ed the contending parties within the walls, who had also en - gines, which they plied with uncommon fury. They had taken them lately from Cestius, but were so ignorant of their When did Titus commence his march towards Jerusalem ? What feast were the Jews observing at this time ? By whom did Titus frequently send offers of peace ? DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM. U7 use, they did little execution, while the Roman legions made terrible havoc. The rebels were soon compelled to retire from the ponderous stones, which they threw incessantly from the towers they had erected, and the battering rams were at full liberty to play against the walls. A breach was soon made in it, at which the Romans entered and encamp- ed in the city, while the Jews retreated behind the second enclosure. 4. The victors immediately advanced to the second wall, and plied their engines aud battering rams so furiously, that one of the towers they had erected began to shake, and the Jews who occupied it, perceiving their impending ruin, set it on fire, and precipitated themselves into the flames. The fall of this structure gave the Romans an entrance into the second enclosure. They were, however, repulsed by the be- sieged ; but at length regained the place entirely, and pre- pared for attacking the third and inner wall. The vast num- ber of people which were enclosed in Jerusalem occasioned a famine, which raged in a terrible manner ; and as their calamities increased, the fury of the zealots, if possible, rose to a greater height. They forced open the houses of their fellow citizens, in search of provisions; if they found any, they inflicted the most exquisite tortures upon them, under pretence that they had food concealed. The nearest rela- tions, in the extremity of hunger, snatched the food from each other. 5. Josephus, who was an eye-witness of the unparalleled sufferings the Jews experienced during the siege of their me- tropolis, remarks, that " all the calamities that ever befel any nation since the beginning of the world were inferior to the miseries of his countrymen at this awful period." Thus we see the exact fulfilment of the emphatic words of our Savior respecting the great tribulation in Jerusalem. " For then shall be great tribulation^ such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be" 6. Titus, who was apprized of their wretched condition, relaxed the siege four days ; and, being still desirous of sav- ing the city, caused provisions to be distributed to his army in sight of the Jews, who flocked upon the walls to behold it. What distressing consequences resulted from having such multi- tudes of Jews shut up in Jerusalem ? 98 DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM. Josephus was next sent to his countrymen, to attempt to per suacle them not to plunge themselves in inevitable ruin, by persisting in defence of a place which could hold out but lit- tle longer, and which the Rdmans looked upon as already their own. He exhorted them, in the most pathetic terms, to save themselves, their temple, and their country ; and painted in strong colors the fatal effects which would result from their obstinacy. But the people, after many bitter in- vectives, began to dart their arrows at him ; yet he continued to address them with greater vehemence, and many were induced by his eloquence to run the utmost risk in order to escape to the Romans ; while others became more desperate, and resolved to hold out to the last extremity. 7. The Jews who were forcibly seized by the Romans without the walls, and who made the utmost resistance for fear of punishment, were scourged and crucified near the city. j? amine made them so daring in these excursions, that five hundred, and sometimes more, suffered this dreadful death every day ; and, on account of the number, Josephus ob- serves, that " space was wanted for the crosses, and crosses for the captives." And yet, contrary to Titus's intention, the seditious Jews were not disposed to a surrender by these horrid spectacles. In order to check desertion, they repre- sented the sufferers as suppliants, and not as men taken by resistance. Yet even some, who deemed capital punishment inevitable, escaped to the Romans, considering death, by the hands of their enemies, a desirable refuge, when compared with the complicated distress which they endured. And though Titus mutilated many, and sent them to assure the people that voluntary deserters were well treated by him, and earnestly to recommend a surrender of the city, the Jews reviled Titus from the walls, .defied his menaces, and conti- nued to defend the city by every method which stratagem, courage, and despair, could suggest. 8. In order to accelerate the destined ruin of Jerusalem, Titus, discouraged and exasperated by the repeated destruc- tion of his engines and towers, undertook the arduous task of enclosing the city with a strong wall, in order to prevent the inhabitants from receiving any succor from the adjacent country, or eluding his vengeance by flight. Such was the persevering spirit of the soldiers, that in three days they en- closed the city by a wall nearly five miles in circuit. Thus DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM. 99 was the prophecy of our Savior accomplished : " The days shall come upon t/ir.c, when ikine, /mw/Y.s- shall cast a trench about thcc, tntd compass thee round, and keep thee, in on every side." Upon this, the famine raged with augmented vio- lence, and destroyed whole families ; while Jerusalem exhi- bited a horrid spectacle of emaciated invalids and putrescent bodies. The dead were too numerous to be interred ; and many expired in the performance of this office. The public calamity was too great for lamentation, and the silence of unutterable wo overspread the city. 9. The zealots, at this awful period, endeavored to en- courage the obstinacy of the people, by hiring a set of wretches, pretenders to prophecy, to go about the city, and declare the near approach of a speedy and miraculous deli- verance. This impious stratagem for a while afforded delu- sive hopes to the miserable remains of the Jewish nation. But at length an affair took place in Jerusalem, which filled the inhabitants with consternation and despair, and the Ro- mans with horror and indignation. A Jewess, eminent for birth and opulence, rendered frantic with her sufferings, was reduced to the dreadful extremity of killing and feeding up- on her infant. Titus, being apprized of this inhuman deed, swore the total extirpation of the accursed city and people ; and called Heaven to witness that he was not the author of their calamity. 10. The Romans having pursued the attack with the ut- most rigor, advanced their 'last engines against the walls, af- ter having converted into a desert, for wood to construct them, a country well planted, and interspersed with gar- dens, for more than eleven miles round the city. They scal- ed the inner wall, and after a sanguinary encounter, made themselves masters of the fortress of Antonia. Still, how- ever, not only the zealots, but many of the people, were yet so blinded, that, though nothing was now left but the temple, and the. Romans were making formidable preparation to bat- ter it down, they could not persuade themselves that God would suffer that holy place to be taken by heathens ; but still' expected a miraculous deliverance. And though the war was advancing towards the^emple, they themselves burnt What caused Titus to resolve on the complete ruin of Jerusalem, uad the extirpation of its inhabitants ? 10 100 DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM. -V the portico, which joined it to Antonia ; which occasioned Titus to remark, that they began to destroy, with their own hands, that magnificent edifice which he had preserved. 11. The Roman commander had determined in council not to burn the temple, considering the existence of so proud a structure an honor to himself. He therefore attempted to batter down one of the galleries of the precinct ; but as the strength of the wall eluded the force of all his engines, his troops next endeavored to scale it, but were repulsed with considerable loss. When Titus found, that his desire of sav- ing the sacred building was likely to cost many lives, he set fire to the gates of the outer temple, which, being plated with silver, burnt all night, and the flame rapidly communi- cated to the adjacent galleries and porticoes. Titus, who was still desirous of preserving the temple, caused the flames to be extinguished ; and appeased the clamors of his troops, who vehemently insisted on the necessity of razing it to the ground. The following day was therefore fixed upon for a general assault upon that magnificent structure. 12. The utmost exertions of Titus to save the temple were, however, ineffectual. Our Savior had foretold its total destruction ; and his awful prediction was about to be accomplished. " And now," says Josephus, " the fatal day approached in the revolution of ages, the 10th of August, emphatically called the day of vengeance, in which the first temple had been destroyed by the king of Babylon." While Titus was reposing himself in his pavilion, a Roman soldier, without receiving any command, but urged as it were by a divine impulse, seized some of the blazing materials, and with the assistance of another soldier, who raised him from the ground, threw them through a window into one of the apartments that surrounded the sanctuary. The whole north side, up to the third story, was immediately enveloped in flames. The Jews, who now began to suppose that Heaven had forsaken them, rushed in with violent lamenta- tions, and spared no effort, not even life itself, to preserve the sacred edifice on which they had rested their security. 13. Titus, being awakened by the outcry, hastened to the spot, and commanded his soj^iers to exert themselves to the utmost to extinguish the fire. He called, prayed, and threat- What induced Titus to wish the preservation of the temple ? DESTRUCTION OF JKKI SALEM. 101 cned his men. But so grout was tlie clamor and tumult, that his entreaties and menaces were alike disregarded. The exasperated Romans, who resorted thither from the camp, were engaged either in increasing the conflagration, or killing the Jews ; the dead were heaped about the altar, and a stream of blood floated at its steps. 14. Still, as the flames had not reached the inner part of the temple, Titus, with some of his chief officers, entornd the sanctuary and most holy place, which excited his asto- nishment and admiration. After having in vain repeated his attempts to prevent its destruction, he sa\; d the golden can- dlestick, the table of shew-bread, the altar of perfumes, which were all of pure gold, and the volume of the law, wrapped up in a rich golden tissue. Upon his leaving the sacred place, some other soldiers set fire to it, after tearing off the golden plating from the gates and timber work. 15. A horrid massacre soon followed, in which prodigious multitudes perished ; while others rushed, in a kind of fren- zy, into the midst of the flames, and precipitated themselves from the battlements of their falling temple. Six thousand persons, who, deluded by a false prophet with the hopes of a. miraculous deliverance, had fled to a gallery yet standing without the temple, perished at f>nce by the relentless bar- barity of the soldiers, who set it "on fire, arid suffered none to escape. The conquerors carried their fury to such a height, as to massacre all they met, without distinction of age, sex, or quality. They also burnt all the treasure houses, containing vast quantities of money, plate, and the richest furniture. In a word, they continued to mark their progress with fire and sword, till they had destroyed all, except two of the temple gates, and that part of the court which was destined for the women. 16. In the mean time, many of the zealots, by making the most vigorous exertions, effected their escape from the temple, and retired into the city. But the avenues were so strictly guarded, that it was impossible for them to escape. They therefore fortified themselves, as well as they were able, on the south side of it ; from whence John and Simon sent to desire a conference with Titus. They were answer- ed, that though they had caused all this ruin and effusion of blood, yet their lives should be spared, if they would surren- And what finally determined him to destroy it ? 10* DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM. der themselves. They replied, that " they had engaged by the most solemn oaths not to deliver up their persons to him on any condition ; and requested permission to retire to the mountains with their wives and children." The Roman general, enraged at this insolence, ordered proclamation to be made, that not one of them should be spared, since they persisted in rejecting his last offers of pardon. 17. The daughter of Zion, or the lower city, was next abandoned to the fury of the Roman soldiers, who plunder- ed, burnt, and massacred, with insatiable rage. The zealots next betook themselves to the royal palace, in the upper and stronger part of Jerusalem, styled also the city of David, on Mount Zion. As many of the Jews had deposited their possessions in the palace for security, they attacked it, killed eight thousand four hundred of their countrymen, and plun- dered their property. 18. The Roman army spent nearly twenty days in mak- ing great preparations for attacking the upper city, especial- ly the royal palace ; during which time many came and made their submission to Titus. The warlike engines then played so furiously upon the zealots, that they were seized with a sudden panic, quitted the towers which were deemed impregnable, and ran like madmen towards Shiloah, intend- ing to have attacked the wall of circumvallation, and escaped out of the city. But being vigorously repulsed, they endea- vored to conceal themselves in subterraneous passages ; and as many as were discovered, were put to death. 19. The conquest of Jerusalem being now completed, the Romans placed their ensigns upon the walls with triumphant joy. They next walked the streets, with swords in their hands, and killed all they met. Amidst the darkness of that awful night, fire was set to the remaining divisions of the city, and Jerusalem, wrapped in flames, and bleeding on every side, sunk in utter ruin and destruction. During the siege, which lasted nearly five months, upwards of eleven hundred \ thousand Jews perished. John and Simon, the two grand rebels, with se^en hundred of the most beautiful and vigorous of the Jewish youth, were reserved to attend the victor's triumphal chariot. After which Simon was put to death ; and John, who had stooped to beg his life, con- demned to perpetual imprisonment. How long did the siege last ? How many Jews perished in i< ORDER OF NATURE. 103 20. The number who were taken captive, during the fatal contest with the Romans, amounted to ninety-seven thou- sand, many of whom were sent into Syria, and other pro- vinces, to be exposed on the public theatres, to fight like gla- diators, or to be devoured by wild beasts. The number of those destroyed, during the war, which lasted seven years, is computed to have been one million four hundred and sixty-two thousand. When the sword had returned to its scabbard, for want of objects whereon to exercise its fury, arid the troops were satisfied with plunder, Titus command- ed the whole city and temple to be demolished. Thus were our Saviour's prophecies fulfilled " Thine enemies shall lay thee even with tlie ground, and there shall not be left one stone upon another." ORDER OF NATURE. 1. SEE, through this air, this ocean, and this earth, All matter quick, and bursting into birth. Above, how high progressive life may go ! Around, how wide ! how deep extend below ! Vast chain of being ! which from God began, Natures ethereal, human, angel, man, Beast, bird, fish, insect ! what no eye can see ; No glass can reach ! from infinite to thee, From thee to nothing ! on superior pow'rs Were we to press, inferior might on ours ; Or in the full creation leave a void, Where, one step broken, the great scale's destroyed ; From nature's chain, whatever link you strike, Tenth or ten thousandth, breaks the chain alike. 2. What if the foot, ordain'd the dust to tread, Or hand to toil, aspir'd to be the head ? What if the head, the eye, or ear, repin'd To serve mere engines of the ruling mind ? Just as absurd, for any part to claim To be another, in this gen'ral frame Just as absurd, to mourn the tasks or pains, The great directing MIND of ALL ordains. 10t 104 THE FALL OF ROME. 3. Ail are but parts of one stupendous whole, Whose body Nature is, and God the soul ; That chang'd through all, and yet in all the same, Great in the earth, as in th' ethereal frame ; Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze, Glows in the stars, and blossoms in the trees, Lives through all life, extends through all extent, Spreads undivided, operates unspent, Breathes in our soul, informs our mortal part, As full, as perfect, in a hair as heart ; As full, as perfect, in vile man that mourns, As the rapt seraph that adores and burns ; To him, no high, no low, no great, no small ; He fills, he bounds, connects and equals all. 4. Cease, then, nor Order imperfection name ; Our proper bliss depends on what we blame. Know thy own point ; this kind, this due degree Of blindness, weakness, Heaven bestows on thee. Submit in this, or any other sphere, Secure to be as blest as thou canst bear ; Safe in the hand of one disposing Power, Or in the natal, or the mortal hour. All nature is but art unknown to thee ; All chance, direction, which thou canst not see ; All discord, harmony, not understood ; All partial evil, universal good ; And, spite of pride, in erring reason's spite, One truth is clear, " Whatever is, is RIGHT." THE FALL OF ROME. 1. AFTER various wars and competitions, Constantine, in the year of Christ 320, became sole master of the Roman empire. He certainly did whatever could be done, by an accomplished general and statesman, towards restoring the empire to its ancient glory. But, alas ! he did not reign over the ancient Romans. His people had been often de- When did Constantine become master of Rome ? THE FALL OF ROMi:. 105 feated, humbled, enslaved, and trampled in the dust. The true Roman spirit was long since utterly extinguished ; and as we have had occasion to observe, Italy itself was filled with a mighty heterogeneous mass of population, of no fixed character. His strong genius, for a moment, sustained, but could not ultimately save, the falling fabric. 2. The ambition of Constantine gave a more fatal blow to the Roman empire, than even the vices of Commodus. To secure to himself a glory equal to that of Romulus, he formed the resolution of changing the seat of empire. The place upoi> which he pitched as a new capital, and which should immortalize his name, was indeed well chosen. The ancient city of Byzantium enjoyed the finest port in the world, on the strait of the Thracian Bosphorus, which com- municates with those inland seas, whose shores are formed by the most opulent and delightful countries of Europe and Asia.. Thither Constantine caused the wealth of the empire to be conveyed ; and directly a new and splendid city arose, which was able to rival ancient Rome. That proud capi- tal, so long the mistress of empire, suddenly became but a satellite, and was forsaken of honor, wealth, and glory ; since the emperor, and all who were devoted to his interest, used every possible means to exalt the new seat of empire. 3. This wound was deadly and incurable. It proved fa- tal not only to one city, but to the western empire. Rome was utterly abandoned by Constantine ; nor was it much alleviated under his' successors, among whom a permanent division of the empire taking place, Rome and Italy fell under the government of a series of weak, miserable, short- lived tyrants, who rose by conspiracy, and fell by murder, in rapid succession ; till, in the 476th year of the Christian aera, Augustulus, the last of the Roman emperors, was con- quered and dethroned by Odoacer, king of the Heruli, who, at the head of an immense army of barbarians, overrun all Italy, and put a period to the western empire. 4. Thus ended Rome, after having stood 1229 years. When' we consider the length of her duration, her character, and the nature and extent of her resources, we shall not What method did Constantine adopt to immortalize his name ? What was the original name of Constantinople ? Who put a period to the Roman empire ? When did he do it ? How long had Rom then existed ? 106 RISE OF MAHOMETANISM. hesitate to pronounce her the most powerful and important city which ever existed, and as standing at the head of the first rank of cities. But if this remark is true of Rome in the times of which we are now speaking, it will serve to awaken our admiration, when we consider that Rome surviv- ed even this shock ; and, as though she was destined to bear rule, from being the head of a most powerful empire, she soon became the head of ,an ecclesiastical institution not less pow- erful. She spread her wing over all the powers of Europe. They trembled at her mandates. She deposed monarchs at her pleasure, trampled on crowns and sceptres, and, for ten centuries, exerted the most despotic sovereignty. She is, even to this day, one of the finest cities in the world. . - RISE OF MAHOMETANISM. 1. WHATEVER might have been the extraction of Maho- met, his property was small. He engaged himself as a ser- vant to a rich widow of Mecca, who bestowed on him her hand and her fortune, and raised him to the rank of an opu- lent citizen. He is said to have been a man of extraordinary bodily and mental accomplishments. The former part of his character is probable, the latter is unquestionable. . The en- dowments of his mind, however, were the gifts of nature, not of education, since, as it is asserted, he was wholly illite- rate. Such was the man, who was destined to effect the greatest revolution in human ideas, as well as in human af- fairs, that has ever taken place since the establishment of Christianity. Inspired by enthusiasm or ambition, he with- drew to a cave about three miles from the city, and having there spent some time in silent contemplation, announced himself a prophet of the Most High, and proclaimed the re- ligion of the Koran. 2. The religion then prevailing in Arabia was Zabaism, which, as in all other countries, had degenerated into the grossest idolatry ; but as universal toleration and uncivilized How did Mahomet acquire his riches ? Where was the Koran written? What was the leligi on of Arabia when Mahomet began his career ? RISE OF MAHOMETANISM. 107 freedom there prevailed, while the adjacent countries were shaken with the storms of conquest and tyranny, the victims of political and religious oppression took refuge in the deep recesses of those extensive deserts. In the reigns of Titus and Adrian, great numbers of Jews had retired into Arabia, and Christians of all the persecuted sects had sought the same calm retreat. Arabia, therefore, displayed a mixture of Pagans, Jews, and Christians of all sects and denominations. 3. Mahomet, although destitute of literature, had studied the book of nature and of man, and conceived the great de- sign of instituting a religion that might unite all the Arabi- ans under its banners ; and his scheme was admirably calcu- lated for that purpose. His observations on the state of the world might convince him that idolatry was not only an un- reasonable, but a declining system. His naturally strong' understanding and sound judgment would enable him to per- ceive the existence of one Supreme and sole Deity to be so rational an article of belief, that no permanent system of religion could be established, except on that solid basis. By testifying his regard for the Scriptures, and acknowledging the prophetic character and divine mission of Moses and Je- sus, he lessened the prejudices of the Jews and Christians against his doctrine, while his recommendation and practice of prayer, fasting, and mass, acquired him the reputation of superior sanctity. 4. Comprising in his grand design a military, as well as a religious system, he promised a paradise of sensual delights to all who should fall in the cause of his faith. He allowed polygamy, to which he knew the Arabians to be strongly in- clined ; but he reprobated drunkenness, to which they had much less propensity. Considering intoxication as a vice degrading to human nature, and incompatible with a capa- city for great understandings, he resolved to take away the temptation to a habit so pernicious, by prohibiting the use of inebriating liquors. To investigate all the 'particulars of his system would lead to a tedious prolixity ; and it suffices to 'observe, that they were admirably adapted to the ideas and circumstances of his countrymen. His pretensions, however, to a celestial authority, excited the jealousy of the citizens of Mecca, and a powerful faction expelled him from his na- tive city. 5. In the year of the Christian ra 622, the memorable 108 RISE OF MAHOMETANISM. epoch of the Hegira, Mahomet, with his friend Abubekar, and a few other followers, escaping from Mecca, fled to Me- dina, where he assumed the military, as well as the prophetic character. Having made many proselytes in that place, he assembled a determined and daring band, inspired with en- thusiasm, and animated with the expectation of a paradise of sensual delights, which he promised to all his followers, but in a superior degree of glory and pleasure to those who should fall in the cause of the Koran. This was the first vital spark of the empire of the Arabs. Here he assumed the exercise of the regal as well as the sacerdotal function; and declared himself authorized to use force as well as persuasion, in order to propagate his doctrines. Liberty of conscience was granted to Christians and Jews, on condition of the payment of tribute ; but to idolaters, no other alternative was left but conversion or the sword. 6. By inculcating, in the most absolute sense, the doc- trines of fate and predestination, he extinguished the princi- ples of fear, and exalted the courage of his followers . into a dauntless confidence. By impressing strongly on the ardent imagination of the Arabs a voluptuous picture of the invisi- ble world, he brought them to regard death as an object not of dread, but of hope and desire. From all sides, the rovers of the desert were allured to the standard of religion and plunder ; and the holy robbers were soon able to intercept the trading caravans. In all enterprises of danger and diffi- culty, their leader promised them the assistance of the angel Gabriel, with his legions of the heavenly host ; and his au- thoritative eloquence impressed on their enthusiastic imagi- nations the forms of those angelic warriors, invisible to mortal eyes. By these arts, he inspired his followers with an irre- sistible enthusiasm. 7. A regular war was commenced between the Mahome- tans and the inhabitants of Mecca, in consequence of an attack by 'the former upon a caravan belonging to the latter. The caravan was plundered, although it was escorted by 950 men, while the assailants amounted to no more than 313. In the year 625, the Meccans, with about 10,000 men, laid siege to Medina, but without success ; and finally lost all What is Mahomet's flight to Medina called ? When did it take place ? What toleration did he allow the Jews and Christians of Arabia * RISK OF MAHOMETAN1SM 1C* hopes of subverting the throne, or of putting a stop to the conquests of the exiled prophet. Mahomet, encouraged by their defeat, directed his attention to the subjugation of Mec- ca, his native city. His power had increased by thc'submia sion of several Arabian tribes ; and his army, which consistcc of a few hundreds only, now amounted to 10,000 cnthusi astic warriors. Mecca surrendered on his approach, and acknowledged him as the apostle of God. Thus, after sever years of exile, the fugitive was enthroned as the prince and prophet of his country. 8. The conquest of Mecca determined the faith and obe- dience of the principal Arabian tribes ; and the obstinate remnant, which still adhered to the idolatry of their ances- tors, was soon subdued or extirpated. The famous kaaba, or pantheon of Mecca, was purified, and 350 idols, with which it was defiled, were broken in pieces. The sentence of de- struction was in the same manner executed on all the idols of Arabia. All the people of that vast country adopted the worship of one God, and acknowledged Mahomet as his prophet and their sovereign. The rites of pilgrimage were, through piety or policy, re-established. The prophet him- self set an example to future ages, by fulfilling the duties of a pilgrim ; and 114,000 pious believers accompanied his last visit to the kaaba, or house of God. A perpetual ] aw was also enacted, prohibiting all unbelievers in the Koran from setting foot within the precincts of the holy city. 9. A revolution was thus effected in an obscure corner of the world, which shortly after subverted or shook the most powerful monarchies, and extended its effects to the distant regions of Asia, Africa, and Europe. The prophet of Ara- bia commenced hostilities with the Greek empire, and un- furled his banners on the confines of Syria ; but after having lost some of his most intrepid commanders, without having made any great progress, the war was neither of long con- tinuance, nor productive of any remarkable events. The mission and life of Mahomet now drew near to an end. Dur- ing the space of four years, his health had gradually declin- ed ; but till the third day preceding his dissolution, he performed the functions of public prayer, arid asserting to the last the divine authority of his mission, he expired at about How long had Mahomet been exiled from Mecca, when it surren- dered to his arms % If 110 EMPIRE OF CHINA. the age of sixty-three, with the firmness of a philosopher, and the faith of an enthusiast. 10. In making an impartial estimate of the qualifications which distinguished the prophet of Arabia, it must be ac- knowledged that the vigor of his mind, and the measure of his intellectual powers, appear to have been extraordinary. At the commencement of his mission, his hopes could rest only on a very precarious foundation. The difficulties which he had to encounter were great. During a considerable time, converts were slowly made, and his prospects of suc- cess were far from being such as could animate his efforts, or flatter his hopes. Amidst all these embarrassing circum- stances, his enterprising spirit, his steady fortitude, and his patient perseverance, command admiration. 11. But among the distinguishing characteristics of his mind, his extraordinary talent of knowing mankind is the most remarkable. No one had ever more accurately or more G uccessfully studied human nature. No one more exactly kne*v wii suited the ideas and inclinations of men, or more perfectly understood the method of gaining an ascendency over their minds, and of rendering their passions subservient to a great design. An impartial view of the character of this extraordinary man shows that he was formed for every thing that is great, that his ideas were grand and elevated, and his views extensive. EMPIRE OF CHINA. 1. THE antiquity of this vast empire, and the state of its government, laws, manners, and attainments in the arts and sciences, .have furnished a most ample field of controversy. Voltaire, Raynal, and other writers of similar p v inciples, have, for the purpose of discrediting the scriptural account of the origin of mankind, and the received notions of the age of the universe, given to the Chinese empire an immense antiquity, and a character of such high civilization and know- lodge of the sciences and arts at that remote period, as to be utterly irreconcilable with the state and progress of man, as described in the books of Moses. On the other hand, it is At what age did Mahomet die ? EMPIRE OF CHINA. Ill probable that the desire of invalidating those opinions has induced other writers of ability to go to an opposite extreme ; to undervalue this singular people, and to give too little weight to any accounts which we have, either of the duration of tli<-ir empire, the economy of their government and police, or of their attainments in the arts and sciences, Amidst this con- trariety of sentiments, we shall endeavor to form such opinion as appears most consonant to the truth. 2. The panegyrists of the Chinese assert that their em- pire has subsisted above 4000 years, without any material alteration in its laws, manners, language, or even fashion of dress; in evidence of which they appeal to a series of eclipses, marking contemporary events, all accurately calcu- lated, for 2155 years before the birth of Christ. As it is easy to calculate eclipses backwards from the present day to any given period of time, it is thus possible to give to a his- tory, fictitious from beginning to end, its chronology of real eclipses. This proof, therefore, amounts to nothing, unless it were likewise proved that all those eclipses were actually recorded at the time when they happened ; but this neither has been nor can be done ; for it is an allowed fact, that there are no regular historical records beyond the third centu- ry before the Christian aera. The present Chinese are utterly ignorant of the motions of the celestial bodies, and cannot cal- culate eclipses. The series mentioned has therefore in all probability been calculated by some of the Jesuits to ingra- tiate themselves with the emperors, and flatter the national vanity. The Jesuits have presided in the tribunal of ma- thematics for above 200 years. 3. But if the authentic annals of this empire go back even to the third century before Christ, and record a* that time a high state of civilization, we must allow that the Chinese are an ancient and early polished people, and that they have pos- sessed a singular constancy in their government, laws, and manners. Sir William Jones, no bigoted encomiast of this people, allows their great antiquity and early civilization, and, with much apparent probability, traces their origin from the Hindoos. lie appeals to the ancient Sanscreet records, which mention a migration from India of the military class termed Chinas, to the countries east from Bengal. The sta- To whom doei Sir William Jonei trace the origin of the Chinese f 113 EMPIRE OF CHINA. tionaiy condition of the arts and sciences in China prove* that these have not originated with that people ; and many peculiarities of the manners, institutions, and popular reli- gion of the Chinese, have a near affinity with those of the Hindoos. 4. The government of China is that of an absolute mo- narchy. The patriarchal system pervades the whole, and binds all the members of this vast empire in the strictest sub- ordination. Every father is absolute in his family, and may inflict any punishment short of death upon his children. The mandarin of the district is absolute, with the power of life and death over all its members ; but a capital sentence cannot be inflicted without the emperor's approbation. The emperor's power is absolute over all the mandarins, and every subject of the empire. To reconcile the people to this despotic authority, the sovereign alone is entitled to relieve the wants of the poor, and to compensate public calamities, as well as the misfortunes of individuals. He is therefore icgarded as the father of his people, and even adored as a benevolent divinity. 5. Another circumstance which conciliates the people to their government is, that all honors in China are conferred according to merit, and that chiefly literary. The civil man- darins, who are the magistrates and judges, are appointed to office according to their measure of knowledge and mental endowments. No office or rank is hereditary, but may be aspired to by the meanest of the people. The penal laws of China are remarkably severe, but their execution may be re- mitted by the emperor. The judicial tribunals are regulat- ed by a body of written laws of great antiquity, and founded on the basis of universal justice and equity. The emperor's opinion rarely differs from the sentences of those courts. One tribunal judges of the qualification of the mandarins ; another regulates the morals of the people, and the national manners ; a third is the tribunal of censors, which reviews the laws, the conduct of the magistrates and judges, and even that of the emperor himself. These tribunals are filled byan equal number of Chinese and Tartars. What is the government of China ? How are honors in China oonforred ? EMPIRE OF CHINA. 113 0. It has been observed, that the sciences have been sta- tionary in this empire for many ages ; and they are at this day extremely low, though far beyond the attainments of a barbarous people. The language of China seems to oppose the prosecution of speculative researches. It has no regular inflections, and can with difficulty express abstract ideas. We have remarked the ignorance of the Chinese in mathe- matics and astronomy. Of physics they have no acquaint- ance beyond the knowledge of apparent facts. They never ascend to principles, or form theories. Their knowledge of medicine is extremely limited, and is blended with the most contemptible superstition. Of anatomy, they know next to nothing ; and in surgery, they have never ventured to ampu- tate a limb, or to reduce a fracture. 7. The state of the useful and elegant arts has been equal ly stationary as that of the sciences. They have attained, many years ago, to a certain point of advancement, which they have never gone beyond. The Chinese are said to have manufactured glass for 2000 years, yet at this day it is infe- rior in transparency to the European, arid is not used in their windows. Gunpowder they are reported to have known from time immemorial, but they never employed it in artillery or fire-arms till taught by the Europeans. Printing they are said to have invented in the age of Julius Caesar ; yet they know not the use of moveable types, but print from blocks of wood. When first shown the use of the compass in sail- ing, they affirmed that they were well acquainted with it, but found no occasion to employ it. The art of painting in Chi- na is mere mechanical imitation, without grace, expression, or even accuracy of proportions. Of the rules of perspective they have not the smallest idea. In sculpture, as in the fi- gures of their idols, the Chinese artists seem to delight in dis- tortion and deformity. Their music is not regulated by any principle of science ; they have no semi-tones ; and their in- struments are imperfect and untunable. The Chinese archi- tecture has variety, lightness, and sometimes elegance, but has no grandeur or symmetrical beauty. 8. Yet, in some of the arts, the Chinese have attained to great perfection. Agriculture is carried in China to the What is the state of the sciences in China at this time r What %rt in China are carried to a great degree of perfection ? 11* 114 EMPIRE OF CHINA. highest pitch of improvement. There is not a spot of waste land in the whole empire, nor any which is not highly culti- vated. The emperor himself is the chief of the husband- men, and annually holds the plough with his own hands. Hence, and from the modes of economizing food, is support- ed the astonishing population of 333 millions, or 260 inhabit- ants to every square mile of the empire. The gardening of the Chinese, and their admirable embellishment of rural na- ture, have of late been the object of imitation in Europe, but with far inferior success. The manufacture of porcelain i an original invention of this people ; and the Europeans, though excelling them in the form and ornament of the uten- sils, have never been able to attain to the excellence of the material. 9. The morals of the Chinese have furnished much subject both of encomium and censure. The books of Confucius are said to contain a most admirable system of morality ; but the principles of morals have their foundation in human na- ture, and must, in theory, be every where the same. The moral virtues of a people are not to be estimated from the books of their philosophers. It is probable that the manners of the superior classes are, in China, as elsewhere^much in- fluenced by education and example. The morals of the low- er classes are said to be beyond measure loose, and their practices most dishonest ; nor are they regulated by any prin- ciple but selfish interest, or restrained but by the fear of punishment. 1 0. The religion of the Chinese is different in the differ- ent ranks of society. There is no religion of the state. The emperor and the higher mandarins profess the belief of one Supreme Being, Changli, whom they worship by prayer and thanksgiving, without any mixture of idolatrous prac- tices. They respect the Lama of Thibet, as the high-priest or prophet of this religion. A prevalent sect is that of Tao- sse, who believe in the power of magic, the agency cf spirits, and the divining of future events. A third is the sect of Fo. derived from India, whose priests are the Bonzes, and whose fundamental doctrine is, that all things rose out of nothing, What Chinese writer is said to have a good system of morality ?- What are the morals of Jie lower classes in China ? What is the rr- >igion of the emperor and fhe higher mandarins > EMPIRE OF CHINA. 115 and finally must return to it ; that all animals are first to un- dergo a series of transmigrations ; and that, as man's chief happiness is to approach as near as possible to a state of an- nihilation in this lifer^ absolute idleness is more laudable than occupation of any kind. A variety of hideous idols arc wor- shipped by this sect. 11. The Chinese have their sacred books, termed Kings, which, amidst some good moral precepts, contain much mys- tery, childish superstition, and absurdity. These are chiefly resorted to for the divining of future events, which seems the ultimatum of research among the Chinese philosophers. The observation of the heavenly bodies is made for that purpose alone ; the changes of weather, the performance or omission of certain ceremonies, the occurrence of certain events in particular times and places, are all believed to have their in- fluence on fiiturity, and are therefore carefully observed and recorded ; and the rules by which those omens are interpret- ed are said to have been described by the great Confucius, the father of the Chinese philosophy, 500 years before the Christian asra. 12. We conclude, on the whole, that the Chinese are a very remarkable people ; that their government, laws, policy, and knowledge of the arts and sciences, exhibit unquestiona- ble proofs of great antiquity and early civilization ; but that the extraordinary measure of duration assigned to their em- pire by some modern writers} rests on no modern proof; nor are their government, laws, manners, arts, or scientific attain- ments, at all deserving of that superlative and most exagger- ated encomium which has been bestowed on them. 13. From time's remotest dawn, where China brings, In proud succession, all her patriot kings ; O'er desert sands, deep gulfs, and hills sublime, Extends her massy wall from clime to clime ; With bells and dragons crests her pagod-bowers, Her silken palaces, and porcelain towers ; With long canals a thousand nations laves ; Plants all her wilds, and peoples all her waves. 116 CHARLES V. CHARLES V. EMPEROR OF GERMANY. 1. CHARLES V. emperor of Germany, king of Spain, and lord of the Netherlands, was born at Ghent, in the year 1500. He is said to have fought sixty battles, in most of which he was victorious ; to have obtained six triumphs, conquered four kingdoms, and to have added eight principalities to his dominions ; an almost unparalleled instance of worldly pros- perity, and the greatness of human glory. 2. But all these fruits of his ambition, and all the honors that attended him, could not yield true and solid satisfaction. Reflecting on the evils and miseries which he had occasion- ed, and convinced of the emptiness of earthly magnificence he became disgusted with all the splendor that surrounded him ; and thought it his duty to withdraw from it, and spend the rest of his days in religious retirement. 3. Accordingly, he voluntarily resigned all his dominions to his brother and son ; and after taking an affectionate and last farewell of his son, and a numerous retinue of princes and nobility that respectfully attended him, he repaired to his chosen retreat. It was situated in Spain, in a vale of no great extent, watered by a small brook, and surrounded with rising grounds covered with lofty trees. 4. A deep sense of his frail condition and great imperfec- tions appears to have impressed his mind in this extraordi- nary resolution, and through the remainder of his life. As soon as he landed in Spain, he fell prostrate on the ground, and considering himself now as dead to the world, he kissed the earth, and said, " Naked came I into the world, and naked I now return to thee, thou common mother of man- kind !" 5. In this humble retreat, he spent his time in religious exercises and innocent employments ; and buried here in solitude and silence, his grandeur, his ambition, together with all those vast projects, which for near half a century had alarmed and agitated Europe, and filled every kingdom in it, by turns, with the terror of his arms, and the dread of being subjected to his power. Where and when was Charles V. born ? How many battles is he aid to have fought ? How many kingdoms to have conquered ? What extraordinary act characterized the latter part of hie life - MAHOMET. 117 6. Far from taking any part in the political transactions of the world, he restrained his curiosity even from any in- quiry concerning them ; and seemed to view the busy scene he had abandoned with an elevation and indifference of mind which arose from his thorough experience of its vanity, as well as from the pleasing reflection of having disengaged himself from its cares and temptations. 7. Here he enjoyed more complete contentment than all his grandeur had ever yielded him ; as a full proof of which he left this short but comprehensive testimony ; " I have tasted more satisfaction in my solitude in one day, than in all the triumphs of my former reign. The sincere study, profession, and practice of the Christian religion, have in them such joys and sweetness, as are seldom found in courts and grandeur." MAHOMET 1. O'ER fair Arabia's spicy plains, By foul Mahomet's flag unfurl'd, Despotic superstition reigns, Clanking aloft her mental chains ; Affrighting, blinding, half the abject eastern world. 2. As spreads the mountain torrent wide, With dreadful desolating course ; So, bursting forth on every side, Urg'd by ambition, lust, and pride, The bloody prophet strides with overwhelming foioe. 3. So was the beauteous East despoil'd Of nature's gifts ; of arts renown'd : Her shady groves, her mountains wild ; Her fanes o'erthrown, in ruins pil'd f r Or clear'd, to let his mosque profane the hallow'd ground. 4. Aloft the gilded crescent now (Where once the cross) triumphant rears, Blind ignorance bids her votaries bow, Repeat the Koran, breathe the vow, Or vainly pray to one who neither sees nor hear* 118 THE FEUDAL SYSTEM. 5. The Turk's own mind example gives, Of what such superstition breeds ; Debas'd, luxurious, proud, he lives ; Despises knowledge, and believes His sword, his haranij all he now or ever needs. THE FEUDAL SYSTEM. 1. The inhabitants of the north of Europe and Asia, who issued in great multitudes from their native forests, during the fourth and fifth centuries of the Christian sera, and who overturned the Roman empire, introduced a new species of government into the conquered countries, which is knov/n by the name of the Feudal System. It is very remarkable, that although the barbarians who framed it, settled in their newly acquired territories at various times, were command- ed by different leaders, and spoke different languages, yet the system was established, with little variation, in every country in Europe. This great uniformity is peculiarly striking, and has furnished some writers with an argument, that all these people sprang originally from the same stock. But the fact may perhaps with more probability be attributed to the similar state of their manners, and the similar situa- tion in which they all found themselves, on taking possession of their new domain. 2. The plan of the feudal constitution was this :- Every freeman, or soldier, for the terms were at that period synony- mous, upon receiving an allotment of conquered lands, bound himself to appear in arms against the common enemy, when- ever he should be called upon by his commander. This mili- tary service was the condition upon which every one received, and the tenure by which he continued to possess, his lands ; and this obligation was esteemed both easy and honorable. The same service which a soldier owed to his officer, was due from an officer to his king. The king obliged those among whom he distributed the conquered lands, to repair to his standard, with a number of followers, in proportion to Who instituted the Feudal System of government t What was the plan of this systerr ? THE FEUDAL SYSTEM. Ill) the extent of their respective estates, and to assist him in all his expeditions. Thus u feudal kingdom conveys rather the idea of a military than a civil establishment The victorious army, taking their posts in different districts of a country, continued to be arranged under its proper officers, and to be subject to martial law. 3. The principle of policy upon which this singular esta- blishment was founded, was self-defence. The new settlers in n country wished to protect themselves, not only against the attacks of the inhabitants, whom they had expelled from their possessions, but against the more formidable inroads of fresh invaders. But, unfortunately for the happiness of mankind, and the tranquillity of society, it was replete with many evils. The powerful vassals of the crown soon ac- quired that land as urialienable property, which was origi- nally a grant during pleasure, and appropriated to themselves titles of honour, as well as places of trust. In process of time, they obtained the power of sovereign jurisdiction, both civil and criminal, within their own domains; and they ex- ercised the privilege of coining money, and of carrying on wars against their own private enemies. 4. Barons possessed of such enormous power disdained to consider themselves as subjects; and the consequence was, that a kingdom was broken into as many separate prin- cipalities as it contained powerful nobles. Innumerable causes of jealousy and discord subsisted between them, and gave rise to constant wars. Every country in Europe, either wasted or kept in continual alarm during these feuds, was filled with castles and places of strength erected for the se- curicy of the despotic chieftain, not against foreign invasion, but domestic hostilities. In the reign of Stephen of Eng- land, when the feudal system was in its height, not less than a thousand castles, with their dependent territories, are said to have covered the southern part of the island of Great Bri- tain. Among fierce and haughty chieftains, the laws enact- ed by princes and magistrates commanded no degree of re- spect ; and the right of retaliation and revenge was consi- dered as an inherent privilege of their order. 5. In fine, the estate of every baron was an independent What was the principle of policy upon which the Feudal System was founded ? Was it attended with evils ? What were some of these evils ? 20 THE FEUDAL SYSTEM. territory ; his castle was a strong and well garrisoned for- tress, and he always considered himself as living in a state of war. When provoked by injury, he met his adversary at the head of his vassals in hostile array, and trusted to his sword for the decision of the contest. Every man was the avenger of his own wrongs, and sought the redress of his grievances in single combat, the regulation and ceremonies of which were formed into a system of jurisprudence. The common people, the most numerous and most useful part of the community, were reduced to the miseries of slavery. The peasant was considered as the mere produce of the soil, and was transferred from one lord to another, with the uten- sils and cattle of his farm. The king, stripped of almost every prerogative, and possessing little more than the empty title of sovereign, had neither power to protect the innocent, nor to punish the guilty. Indeed, a general anarchy, de- structive of all the comforts which men expect to derive from a state of society, prevailed. 6. To complete and confirm these evils, the progress of time gradually fixed and rendered venerable an esta)jlish- ment which originated in violence, and was continued with every species of despotism and injustice ^ a system which was as hostile to the intellectual as to the moral improve- ment of the mind ; which banished science und the arts, sunk mankind into gross ignorance, obscured the sacred light of Christianity in the thickest darkness of superstition, and was favorable only to the growth of those stern virtues which are characteristic of uncivilized nations. The rigor of tyranny hardened the minds of the nobles, the yoke of vassalage debased the spirit of the people, the generous sen- timents inspired by a sense of equality were extinguished, and there was no check to ferocity and violence. Accord- ingly a greater number of those atrocious actions, which fill the mind with astonishment and horror, occur in the history of the feudal times than in that of any period of the same extent in the annals of Europe. 7. Such was the deplorable state of society from the se- venth to the eleventh century. From that sera may be dated the return of government, laws, and manners, in a contrary What was the continuance of the deplorable state of society occa- sioned by the Feudal System ? THE FEUDAL SYSTEM. 121 crtrection. Wo shall lien -alter notiix the favorable effects of the Crusades and chivalry upon the feudal system. In succeeding times, a variety of causes began to operate, which checked the licentiousness of the barons, softened the fero- city of their manners, and finally put a period to their domi- nation. The establishment of standing armies, in the fif- teenth century, gave more effectual authority to kings ; and from that time they no longer regarded the nobles as their equals, or found it necessary to have recourse to timid couu- sels, or feeble efforts, to control their po or. They began, not only to wield the sceptre, but to brandish the sword ; and either checked the designs of their barons by intimidation, or punished their rebellion by force. 8. Charles the Seventh of France, urged by his desire of expelling the English from France in the year 1445, was the first who adopted this measure ; but as it was so repug- nant to the genius of the feudal system, and required the greatest boldness to carry it into execution, he retained a large body of forces in his service, and appointed funds for their regular payment. The principal nobility soon resorted to his standard, and looked up to him as the judge and the re warder of merit. The feudal militia, composed of men of rank and military talents, who were only occasionally called out, were in time regarded with contempt, by soldiers accus- tomed to the operations of regular service. 9. The above example of breaking the independent power of the barons- was followed by the politic Henry VII. of England. He undermined that edifice, which it was not prudent to attack with open force. By judicious laws he permitted his nobles to break the entail upon their estates, and to expose them to sale. He prohibited them from keep- ing numerous bands of retainers, which had rendered them formidable to his predecessors. By encouraging agriculture and commerce, and all the arts of peace during a long reign, and by enforcing a vigorous and impartial execution of the laws, he not only removed many immediate evils resulting from the feudal system, but provided against their future re- turn. The influence of his salutary plans was gradually felt, What establishment restored to kings their proper authority ? At what time were standing armies introduced ? What kinor of France adopted this method to destroy the Feudal System n What king of England followed his example in thip particular 5 122 THE CRUSADES. and they contributed more and more, in process of time, to the good order, prosperity, and general welfare of his sub- jects. THE CRUSADES. 1. THE Crusades were expeditions undertaken for the re- covery of the Holy Land out of the hands of the Infidels or Saracens. They derive their name from the French word croix, cross, which the adventurers in these holy wars always wore as an ensign of their cause. The Crusades began in the eleventh century, and continued about two hundred years. They are important to the historian, as involving the interests of the principal nations of Europe, at that time ; and to the philosopher, as fraught with consequences inti- mately connected with the happiness of succeeding genera- tions. They were also highly important, if we consider the great numbers who were engaged in them, or their long and obstinate perseverance in the same design, notwithstanding an almost uninterrupted series of hardships, losses, and defeats. 2. It is natural to the human mind, to view those places which have been distinguished by being the residence of any illustrious personage, or the scene of any great transaction, with some degree of delight and veneration. Hence Judea, or the Holy Land, has been an object of veneration with Christians from the earliest ages of the church ; and, in pe- riods of great ignorance, this veneration has nearly approach- ed to idolatry. To visit the country which the Almighty had selected as the inheritance of his favorite people, and in which the Son of God had accomplished the redemption of mankind, was regarded as the most acceptable service that could be paid to heaven. And as this distinct pilgrimage could not be performed without considerable expense, fatigue, and danger, it appeared the more meritorious, and came to be considered as an expiation for almost every crime. & An opinion which spread with rapidity over Europe What were the Crusades ? From what did they derive their name ? At what time did they commence, and how long did they continue ? Why have Christians been in the habit of visiting Judea, or the Holy Land ? THE CKl SADES. 12* about the close of the tenth and beginning of the eleventh century, and which gained universal credit, wonderfully aujr- niented the number of credulous pilgrims, and increased the ardor with which they undertook this perilous voyage. The thousand years mentioned by St. John were supposed to be accomplished, and the end of the world to be at hand. A general consternation seized mankind ; many relinquished their possessions ; and abandoning their friend ; and families, hurried with precipitation to the Holy Land, where they ima- gined that Christ would quickly appear t<> judge the woild. But the pilgrims were exposed to outrages of every kind from the infidel Saracens; and, on their return from Palestine, they related the dangers which they had encountered, and described with exaggeration the cruelty and vexations to which they had been subjected. 4. When the minds of men were thus prepared, the zeal of a fanatic monk, who conceived the idea of leading all the forces of Christendom against the infidels,, and of driving them out of the Holy Land by violence, was sufficient to give a beginning to that wild enterprise. Peter the Hermit, for that was the name of this martial apostle, ran from province to province with a crucifix in his hand, exciting princes and people to this Holy War ; and where v$r he came, kindled the same enthusiastic ardor for it with which he himself was animated. Others likewise engaged in this same enterprise. Some of them went clad in sackcloth, with their heads and feet bare. They flew from kingdom to kingdom with in- credible speed, promising to each soldier of the cross, at least, the eternal blessing of heaven, and threatening such as remained inactive with the endless wrath of an offended Deity. 5. Their success was beyond calculation. Persons of all ranks catched the contagion, and enlisted under the banners of the cross. The flame spread, and continued to burn, from the shores of the Baltic to the straits of Gibraltar, and from the banks of the Danube to the bay of Biscay. In all places What circumstance increased the number of pilgrimages to the Holy Land about the close of *he 10th and the beginning of the llth century ? What treatment did Christians receive in their pilgrim- ages ? Who actively engaged in exciting Christians, at this time, to avenge the injuries they received ? Was Peter successful in enlist- ing persons to* go against the Infidels ? 124 THE CRUSADES. the martial trumpet was heard, and warlike preparations were seen. Immense swarms of people thronged from all quar- ters to places of general rendezvous, whence, in still larger bodies, they* rolled like mighty torrents into Asia. If we may believe the concurring testimony of contemporary writ- ers, six millions of persons actually devoted themselves to this holy warfare ; and so completely were the nations of Europe agitated and carried away by this general and pow- erful passion, that to make, preserve, and recover acquisitions in Judea and its neighborhood, was the grand and favorite object for two centuries. 6. The first efforts of valor, animated by enthusiasm, were irresistible ; part of Lesser Asia, all Syria, and Palestine, were wrested from the infidels ; the banner of the cross was displayed on Mount Zion ; Constantinople, the capital of the Christian empire, in the East, was afterwards seized by a body of those adventurers, who had taken arms against the Mahometans ; and an Earle of Flanders, and his descend- ants, kept possession of the imperial throne during half a century. But though the first impression of the Crusaders was so unexpected that they made their conquests with great ease, they found infinite difficulty in preserving them. Es- tablishments so distant from Europe, surrounded by warlike nations, animated with fanatical zeal scarcely inferior to that of the Crusaders themselves, were perpetually in danger of being overturned. Before the expiration of the thirteenth century, the Christians were driven out of all their Asiatic possessions, in the acquisition of which immense sums of money had been expended, and not less than two millions, of men had perished. 7. But however vain and extravagant the Crusades were, they were productive of lasting good to mankind. The general union of all Europe in one common cause, although a wild religious frenzy was at the bottom of it, prevented many wars, hush- ed many commotions, and caused numberless animosities to How many persons are said to have enlisted in the Crusades ? "What contributed to the success of the Crusades in their first expedi- tions ? What prevented their maintaining the advantage which they had thus obtained over the Saracens ? How many persons are said to have lost their lives in them ? Why did the Crusades serve to produce refinement of manners, improvements in the arts, and ex- tension of commerce ? THE CRUSADES. 125 be forgotten the inhabitants of different countries became acquainted with each other ; and especially, when they met in the remote regions of Asia, they looked upon each other as brethren engaged in one grand cause, where life, honor, and glory, were all at stake. The Crusades may in fact be regarded as the commencement of that intercourse among the people of Europe which has been ever since increasing, and which cannot fail to assimilate and polish their manners. 8. Rude and ignorant as the Crusaders were, they could not travel through and continue in so many interesting coun- tries with indifference ; or behold their various customs and institutions, without acquiring information and improvement. Among the Greeks, they surveyed the productions of the fine arts, and the precious remains of antiquity, the magnificence of the eastern courts, and the models of extensive and curious manufactories. In Asia, they beheld the traces of knowledge and arts, which the patronage of the caliphs had diffused through their empire. Every object which struck their at- tention, pointed out a far higher state of improvement than their own countries had reached ; every object, therefore, while it excited the wonder of them all, could not fail to excite a spirit of imitation among those who are active and ingeni- ous. As these new scenes presented themselves, their eyes were gradually opened to a more extensive prospect of the world, and they acquired new modes of thinking, felt a sense of new wants, and a taste for new gratifications. 9. In the superior intelligence and refinements of Cairo and Constantinople, they discovered various commodities worth importing into Europe. From this period is dated the introduction of silk and sugar, which were conveyed into Italy from Greece and Egypt ; and the advantages which re- sulted from a more enlarged and adventurous traffic to the Pisans, the Genoese, and Venetians, who laid the foundation of the modern commercial system. The Crusaders began that intercourse with the East which, under the pacific forms of commerce, has continued with little interruption ever since. On their return to Europe, they introduced a new taste in buildings, a more superb display of magnificence on public occasions, the rich manufactures of Asia, together with a more romantic spirit of enterprise, and th3 first im provements in learning and science. 10. The most beneficial effects of the Crusades were vi- 12 126 CHIVALRY. ble in the alteration which they occasioned in the state of property, by the emancipation of vassals from the tyranny of their lords, and by increasing the growing independence of the feudal tenants. Many of the great barons, unable to support the expenses incurred by their expeditions to Pales tine, sold their hereditary possessions. The monarchs of different countries took advantage of these opportunities of annexing considerable territories to their dominions, and purchased them at a small expense. The fiefs, likewise, of those barons who died in the holy wars without heirs, re- verted to their respective sovereigns ; and by these posses- sions being taken from one scale and thrown into the other, the regal power increased in proportion as that of the nobili- ty declined. CHIVALRY. 1. CHIVALRY arose naturally from the condition of society in those ages in which it prevailed. Among the Germanic nations, the profession of arms was esteemed the sole em- ployment that deserved the name of manly or honorable. The initiation of the youth to this profession was attended with peculiar solemnity and appropriate ceremonies. The chief of the tribe bestowed the sword and armor on his vas- sals, as a symbol of their devotion to his service. In the progress of the feudal system, these vassals, in imitation of their chief, assumed the power of conferring arms on their sub-vassals, with a similar form of mysterious and pompous ceremony. 2. The candidate for this distinction, accompanied by his sponsors and his priests, passed the night previous to his ini- tiation in watching his arms, and in the duty of prayer. The next morning he repaired to the bath, the water of which was intended to serve as an emblem of the purity of his pro- fession. He then walked to the nearest church, clothed in white garments, and presented his sword to the minister offi- ciating at the altar, who returned it to him with his benedio How did they tend to produce a better distribution of power, by altering the condition of property ? With what ceremony were per nona admitted to knighthood ? CHIVALRY. 127 lion. After taking the accustomed oaths to his sovereign, or feudal chief, he was invested by the attendant knights and ladies with the various parts of his armor. The sm< -rci^n then rising from the throne, conferred upon him, while kneel- ing, the honor of knighthood, by giving him three strokes with the flat part of a drawn sword upon his shoulders or neck. He then saluted the young warrior, and pronounced these words " In the name of God, of St. Michael, and St. George, I make thee a knight be brave, bold, and loyal." ;J. Chivalry, though considered, commonly, as a wild insti- tution, the effect of caprice, and the source of extravagance, certainly had a very serious influence in refining the man- ners of European nations. The feudal state was a state of almost perpetual war, rapine, and anarchy ; during which, the weak and unarmed were exposed to insults or injuries. The power of the sovereign was too limited to prevent these wrongs, and the administration of justice too feeble to redress them. The most effectual protection against violence and oppression was often found to be that which the valor and generosity of private persons afforded. The same spirit of enterprise which had prompted so many gentlemen to take up arms in defence of the oppressed pilgrims in Palestine, incited others to declare themselves the patrons and avengers of injured innocence at home. 4. When, too, the final reduction of the Holy Land under the dominion of infidels put an end to these foreign expedi- tions, the latter was the only employment left for the activity and courage of adventurers. To check the insolence of overgrown oppressors ; to rescue the helpless from captivity ; to protect, or to avenge women, orphans, or ecclesiastics, who could not bear arms in their own defence ; to redress wrongs, and to remove grievances, were deemed acts of the highest prowess and merit. Valor, humanity, courage, jus- tice, honor, were the characteristic qualities of chivalry. To these was added religion, which mingled itself with every passion and institution during the middle ages, and by infus- ing a large portion of enthusiastic zeal, gave them such force as carried them to romantic excess. 5. This singular institution, in which valor, gallantry, and How has the institution of chivalry commonly been considered ? What were the characteristic qualities of Chivalry > 128 CHIVALRY. religion, were so strangely blended, was wonderfully adapted to the taste and genius of martial nobles ; and its effects were soon visible in their manners. War was carried on with less ferocity, when humanity came to be deemed the orna- ment of knighthood, no less than courage. More gentle and polished manners were introduced, when courtesy was re- commended as the most amiable of knightly virtues. Vio- lence and oppression decreased, when it was reckoned meri- torious to check and punish them. A scrupulous adherence to truth, with the most religious attention to fulfil every en- gagement, became the distinguishing characteristic of a gentleman, because chivalry was regarded as the school of honor, and inculcated the most delicate sensibility with re- gard to these points. The admiration of these qualities, to- gether with the high distinctions and prerogatives conferred on knighthood in every part of Europe, inspired persons of noble birth, on some occasions, with a species of military fa- naticism, and led them to the most extravagant enterprises. 6. But even in these enterprises, they deeply imprinted on their minds the principles of generosity and honor. These principles too were strengthened by every consideration that can affect the senses or touch the heart. The wild exploits of those romantic knights, who sallied forth in quest of ad- ventures, are well known, and have been treated with proper ridicule ; but it is a fact, that the political and permanent effects of the spirit of chivalry have been less observed. Perhaps the humanity which accompanies all the operations of war, the refinements of gallantry, and the point of honor, the three chief circumstances which distinguish modern from ancient manners, may be ascribed in a great measure to this institution, which has appeared whimsical to superficial ob- servers, but by its effects has proved of great benefit to mankind. 7. The sentiments which chivalry inspired had a wonder- ful influence on manners and conduct, during the twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth centuries. They were so deeply rooted that they continued to operate after the vigor and reputation of the institution itself began to decline. What eflect did chivalry have on war ? Has chivalry given rise to great extravagances ? Have these extravagances received the ridicule which they justly deserve ? Have the advantages of chival- Vj been an much known as its extravagances r CHIVALRY. t Some considerable transactions recorded in history resembla the adventurous exploits of chivalry, rather than the well regu- lated operations of sound policy. Some of the ino^t eminent personages whose characters are therein delineated were strongly tinctured with this romantic spirit. Francis I. was ambitious to distinguish hjmself by all the qualities of an accomplished knight, and endeavored to imitate the enter- prising genius of chivalry in war, as well as its pomp and courtesy during peace. The fame which the French mo- narch acquired by these splendid actions, so far dazzled his more temperate rival, that he departed, on some occasions, from his usual prudence and moderation, and emulated Francis in deeds of prowess, or of gallantry. 8. Important and numerous were the privileges attached to this profession of arms, and its duties were at once ardent and indispensable. To protect the ladies was an essential part of them. Incapable of taking arms for the preservation of their property, and destitute of the means to prove the purity of their characters, if attacked by malevolence or slander, they would frequently, in those uncivilized times, \\hen law and justice were silenced by violence and force, have seen their lands become a prey to some tyrannical neigh- bor, or had their reputation blasted by the breath of calumny, if some knight had not come forward in their defence. To the succor of the distressed, the protection of orphans, the emancipation of captives, and the chastisement of oppression, he likewise dedicated his sword, and his life. If he failed in a scrupulous attention to these benevolent offices, he was looked upon as deserting the most solemn obligations, and was degraded from his rank with public marks of disgrace. If he performed them with activity and spirit, he was regard- ed as an honor to his profession, and his renown was spread over every part of Europe. 9. The treatment of women in Greece and Rome was harsh and degrading. They were confined to a state of se- clusion from the world, had but few attentions paid them, and were allowed to take little share in the general intercourse of lite. The northern nations, on the contrary, paid a kind of religious veneration to the female sex, considered them as What may be considered the most important duties of chivalry ? (Sec sec. 8*) What was the treatment of women in Greece and Homo ? 130 CHIVALRY. endowed with superior, and even divine qualities, gave them a seat in their public councils, and followed their standard to bat- tle. These fierce barbarians, in the course of their ravages in the Roman empire, when they involved the monuments of ancient art in destruction, and pursued their enemies in arms with the most bloody severity, always forbore to oher violence to women. They introduced into the west of Eu rope the respectful gallantry of the north ; and this benevb ience of sentiment was cherished and matured by the insti- tution of chivalry. 10. Thus has a great change of manners been effected by following up a leading principle of the institution of chivalry, and giving a conspicuous place to the female sex in the ranks of society. The passion of love, purified by delicacy, has been heightened by the pleasures of sentiment and imagina- tion ; the sphere of .conversation has been enlarged and me- liorated ; it has gained more propriety, more vivacity, more wit, and more vanity ; social intercourse has been divested of formality, and is regulated by the laws of true politeness. It has opened new sources of satisfaction to the understand- , ing, and afforded new delights to the heart. The merit of the sexes has been raised, they having a better title to the esteem of each other ; the characters both of men and women have been marked by more amiable qualities, and the stock of re- fined pleasures and social happiness has been considerably increased. 11. A knight was always known by a device on his shield, and the peculiarities of his blazonry, which were allusive to some of his martial exploits. Great honors were paid to him after his decease, particularly if he was slain in battle. His funeral was most solemn, and fully attended. His sword, helmet, spurs, gauntlets, and armorial ensigns, were sus- pended over the hallowed spot of his interment, or his ce- notaph. His splendid tomb, graced with his effigy, and marked with a suitable inscription, was considered as a tri- bute of the justest respect to his virtues, and as a powerful incentive to inflame the youthful warrior to tread the same path of valor and renown. 12. The following, among many other anecdotes, have been What treatment were they accustomed to receive among the orthern nations ? How wan a knight always to be known ? CHIVALRY I* related, as specimens of the influence of chivalry in those rude ages. Edward, the black prince, was accomplished, valiant, and amiable. Soon after the battle of Poictiers, in 1356, he landed at Southwark, and was met by a great concourse of people, of all ranks and stations. His prison- er, John, king of France, was clad in royal apparel, and mounted on a white steed, distinguished by its size and beauty, and by the richness of its furnitpre. The conqueror rode by his side, in meaner attire, and carried by a black palfry. In this situation, more honorable than all the inso- lent parade of a Roman triumph, he passed through the streets of London, and presented the king of France to his father, who received him with the same courtesy as if he had been a neighboring potentate that had voluntarily come to pay him a friendly visit. It is impossible, on reflecting on this noble conduct, not to perceive the advantages which re- sulted from the otherwise whimsical principles of chivalry, and which gave, even in those rude times, some superiority even over people of a more cultivated age and nation. 13. The chevalier Bayard was quartered, one winter, at Grenoble, near a young lady of good family, but of indigent circumstances ; her beauty inflamed his love, and her situa- tion gave him hopes of being able to gratify it. Her mother, urged by poverty, accepted his proposals, and compelled her reluctant daughter to visit him. As soon as she was intro- duced into his presence, she threw herself at his feet, and with streaming eyes besought him not to dishonor an unfor- tunate damsel, whom it was more consistent with a person of his virtuous character to protect. " Rise," exclaimed the chevalier, " you shall quit this place as innocent as you enter- ed it, but more fortunate." He instantly conducted her home, reproved the mother, and gave the daughter a marriage portion of 600 pistoles. What anecdote is related of Edward the black prince, to illustrate the advantages of chivalry ? What one is related of the chevalier Bayard ? 133 THE REFORMATION. THE REFORMATION. 1. IT was from causes seemingly fortuitous, and from a source very inconsiderable, that all the mighty effects of the reformation flowed. Leo X., when raised to the papal throne, found the revenues of the church exhausted by the vast pro- jects of his two ambitious predecessors, Alexander VI. and Julius II. TTis own temper, naturally liberal and enterpris- ing, rendered him incapable of that severe and patient econo- my which ihe situation of his finances required. On the contrary, his schemes for aggrandizing the family of Medici, his love of splendor, his taste for pleasure, and his magnifi- cence in rewarding men of genius, involved him daily in new expenses ; -in order to provide a fund for which, he tried every device, that the fertile invention of priests had fallen on, to drain the credulous multitude of their wealth. Among others, he had recourse to a sale of Indulgences. 2. According to the doctrine of the church of Rome, all the good works of the saints, over and above those which are ne- cessary towards their own justification, are deposited, together with the infinite merits of Jesus Christ, in one inexhaustible treasury. The keys of this were committed to St. Peter, and to his successors the popes, who open it at pleasure, and by transferring a portion of this superabundant merit to any particular person, for a sum of money, may convey to him, either the pardon of his own sins, or release, for any one in whose happiness he is interested, from the pains of purgatory. Such indulgences were first invented in the eleventh century, by Urban II. as a recompense for those who went in person upon the meritorious enterprise of con- quering the Holy Land. They were afterwards granted to those who hired a soldier for that purpose ; and, in process of time, were bestowed on such as gave money for accom- plishing any pious work, enjoined by the pope. Julius II. had bestowed indulgences on all who contributed towards building the church of St. Peter at Rome ; and as Leo was carrying on that magnificent and expensive fabric, his grant was founded on the same pretence. What method did Leo X. adopt to replenish his exhausted treasu- ry ? When were the Indulgences first invented, and by whom ? Who was the principal person employed in disposing of Indulgence* m Saxony ? THE REFORMATION. 1JJ3 3. Tetzel. a Dominican Friar, of licentious morals, but of an active spirit, was the principal person employed in retail- ing these indulgences in Saxony. He, assisted by the monks of his order, executed the commission with zeal and suc- cess, but with little discretion and decency ; and though by magnifying excessively the benefit of their indulgences, and by disposing of them at a very low price, they carried on, for some time, an extensive and lucrative traffic among the cre- dulous and the ignorant, the extravagance of the assertions, as well as the irregularities in their conduct, came at last to give general offence. The princes and nobles were irritated at seeing their vassals drained of so much wealth, in order to -eplenish the treasury of a profuse pontiff. Men of piety regretted the delusion of the people, who, being taught to rely for the pardon of their sins on the indulgences which they purchased, did not think it incumbent on them either to study the doctrines taught by genuine Christianity, or to practise the duties which it enjoins. Even the most unthink- ing were shocked at the scandalous behavior of Tetzel and his associates, who often squandered in drunkenness, gam- ing, and low debauchery, those sums which were piously be- stowed in hopes of obtaining eternal happiness : and all began to wish that some check were given to this commerce, no less detrimental to society than destructive to religion. 4. Such was the favourable juncture, and so disposed were the minds of his countrymen to listen to his discourses, when Martin Luther first began to call ia question the efficacy of indulgences, and to declaim against the vicious lives and false doctrines of the persons employed in promulgating them. He soon acquired grea* reputation, not only for hia piety, but for his love of knowledge, and his unwearied ap- plication to study. The great progress he made in his study of the Scriptures, augmented so much the fame both of his sanctity and his learning, that Frederic, elector of Saxony, having founded an university at Wittemberg, on the Elbe, the place of his residence, Luther was chosen first to teach philosophy, and afterwards theology there ; and discharged both offices in such a manner that he was deemed the chief ornament of that society. Who was the particular friend and patron of Martin Luther ' 13 134 THE REFORMATION. 5. And from the pulpit, in the great church at Wittem- berg, he inveighed against the irregularities and vices of the monks who published indulgences ; he ventured to examine the doctrines which they taught, and pointed out to the peo- ple the danger of relying for salvation upon any other means than those appointed by God in his word. The boldness and novelty of these opinions drew great attention, and being re- commended by the authority of Luther's personal character, and delivered with a popular and persuasive eloquence, they made a deep impression on the minds of his hearers. Mean- while these novelties in Luther's doctrines, which interested all Germany, excited little attention and no alarm in the court of Rome. Leo, fond of elegant and refined pleasures, in- tent upon great schemes of policy, a stranger to theological controversies, and apt to despise them, regarded with the ut- most indifference the operations of an obscure friar, who, in the heart of Germany, carried on a scholastic disputation in a barbarous style. Little did he apprehend, or Luther him- self dream, that the effects of this quarrel would be so fatal to the papal see. 6. The solicitations, however, of Luther's adversaries, who were exasperated to a high degree by the boldness with which he animadverted on their writings, together with the surprising progress which his opinions made in different parts of Germany, roused at last the attention of the court of Rome, and obliged Leo to take measures for the security of the church against an attack that now appeared too serious to be despised. For this end, he summoned Luther to ap- pear at Rome, within sixtj days, before the auditor of the chamber, and the inquisitor-general, Prierias, whom he em- powered jointly to examine ms doctrines, and to decide con- cerning them. He wrote, at the same time, to the elector of Saxony, beseeching him not to piotect a man whose heretical and profane tenets were so shocking to pious ears ; and en- joined the provincial of the Augu&tinians to cherk, by his authority, the rashness of an arrogam monk, which brought disgrace upon the order of St. Augustine, and gave olTence and disturbance to the whole church. 7. Nor did this spirit of opposition to the doctrines and usurpations of the Romish church break out in Saxony ttiorie ; an attack no less violent, and occasioned by the same cause, was made upon them about this time in Switzerland. THE REFORMATION. 13 The Franciscans being entrusted with the promulgation of indulgences in that country, executed their commission with the same indiscretion and rapaciousness which had render- ed the Dominicans so odious in Germany. They proceeded, nevertheless, with uninterrupted success, till they arriu-d at Zurich. There Zuinglias, a man not inferior to Luther himself in zeal and intrepidity, ventured to oppose tin -in ; and being animated with a republican boldness, and free from those restraints which subjection to the will of a prince imposed on a German reformer, he advanced with more dar- ing and rapid steps, to overturn the whole fabric of the es- tablished religion. The appearance of such a vigorous aux- iliary, and the progress which he made, was, at first, matter of great joy to Luther. On the other hand, the decrees of the universities of Cologne and Louvain, which pronounced his opinions to be erroneous, afforded a great cause of tri- umph to his adversaries. 8. But the undaunted spirit of Luther acquired additional fortitude from every instance of opposition ; and pushing on his inquiries and attacks from one doctrine to another, he be- gan to shake the firmest foundations on which the wealth or power of the church were established. Leo came at last to be convinced, that all hopes of reclaiming him by forbear- ance were vain ; several prelates of great wisdom exclaim- ed no less than Luther's personal adversaries, against the pope's unprecedented lenity, in permitting an incorrigible heretic, who during three years had been endeavoring to sub- vert every thing sacred and venerable, still to remain within the bosom of the church ; the dignity of the papal see ren- dered the most vigorous proceedings necessary ; t/ie new emperor, it was hoped, would support its authority,' nor did it seern probable, that the elector of Saxony would so far for- get his usual caution as to set himself in opposition to their united power. 9. The college of cardinals was often assembled, in order to prepare the sentence with due deliberation ; and the ablest canonists were consulted how it might be expressed with unexceptionable formality. At last, on the loth of June, 1520, the bull, so fatal to the church of Rome, was issued. Who was a powerful advocate for the Reformation in Switzer- and ? When was the bull of excommunication passed upon Luther ? 136 THE REFORMATION. Forty-one propositions, extracted out of Luther's works, are therein condemned as heretical, scandalous, and offensive to pious ears ; all persons are forbidden to read his writings, upon pain of excommunication ; such as had any of them in their custody are commanded to commit them to the flames ; he himself, if he did not, within sixty days, publicly recant his errors, and burn his books, is pronounced an obstinate heretic ; is excommunicated, and delivered unto Satan for the destruction of his flesh ; and all secular princes are re- quired, under pain of incurring the same censure, to seize his person, that he might be punished as his crimes deserved. 10. This sentence, which he had for some time expected, did not disconcert or intimidate Luther. He boldly declar- ed the pope to be that man of sin, or antichrist, whose ap- pearance is foretold in the New Testament ; he declaimed against his tyranny and usurpations, with greater violence than ever ; he exhorted all Christian princes to shake off such an ignominious yoke ; and boasted of his own happiness in being marked out as the object of ecclesiastical indigna- tion, because he had ventured to assert the liberty of man- kind. Nor did he confine his expressions of contempt for the papal power to words alone ; Leo having, in the execu- tion of the bull, appointed Luther's books to be burnt at Rome, he, by way of retaliation, assembled all the professors and students in the university at Wittemberg, and, witb great pomp, in presence of a vast multitude of spectators, cast the volumes of the canon law, together with the bull of excommunication, into the flames ; and his example was imi- tated in several cities in Germany. 11. Wickliff, in the middle of the fourteenth century, by an attack on the doctrines of transubstantiation, indulgen- ces, and auiicular confession, and still more by a translation of the Scriptures into the vernacular tongue, had prepared the people of England for a revolution in religious opinions ; but his professed followers were not numerous. Had it not been for the intemperate passions of Henry VIII., the pro- gress of reformation in this country would have been far less rapid. This prince being excommunicated by the pope for What did Luther do with this \mll of excommunication ? Who prepared the minds of the people in England for the Reformation ? What did Wickliff do ? What caused Henry VIII. to declare him- self and the English church independent of the see of Rome ? THE DUNGEON. 137 having divorced his queen, declared himself head of the church in England. He proceeded to abolish the monaste- ries, and confiscate their treasures and revenues ; erecting, out of the latter, six new bishoprics and a college. Yet Henry, thougli a reformer, and a pope in his own kingdom, had not yet renounced the religion of Rome he was equal- ly an enemy to the tenets of Luther and Calvin, as to the pope's jurisdiction in England. 12. On the death of Henry VIII., 1549, and the accession of his son Edward VI., the protestant religion prevailed in England, and was favored by the sovereign ; but he died at the early age of 15, in 1 553 ; and the sceptre passed to the hands of his sister Mary, an intolerent catholic, and most cruel persecutor of the protestants. In her reign, which was of five years' duration, above 800 miserable vi6tims were burnt at the stake, martyrs to their religious opinions. Mary was succeeded in 1558, by her sister Elizabeth, a protestant, the more zealous from an abhorrence of the character of her predecessor. In her reign, the religion of England became stationary. The hierarchy was established in its present form, by archbishops, bishops, priests, and deacons. The liturgy had been settled in the reign of Edward VI. The canons are agreeable chiefly to the Lutheran tenets. THE DUNGEON. AND this place our forefathers made for man ! This is the process of our love and wisdom, To each poor brother who offends against us Most innocent, perhaps And what if guilty ? Is this the only cure ? Merciful God ! Each pore and natural outlet shrivelled up By ignorance and parching poverty, His energies roll back upon his heart, And stagnate and corrupt ; till, chang'd to poison, Who succeeded Henry VIII., and when ? What effect was pro- duced to the Reformation by the accession of Edward VI. ? Who succeeded Edward VL ? What religion did Mary favor ? How many persons were burnt in her reign for their religion ? Who suc- ceeded Mary, and when ? What was the religion of Elizabeth ? 13* 138 TRANSLATION OF THE BIBLE. They break out on him like a loathsome plague-spot- Then we call in our pampered mountebanks And this is their best cure . uncomforted And friendless solitude, groaning and tears, And savage faces, at the clanking hour Seen through the steams and vapor of his dungeon By the lamp's dismal twilight ! So he lies, Circled with evil, till his very soul Unmoulds its essence, hopelessly deformed By fellowship with desperate deformity ! With other ministrations, thou, O Nature ! Healest thy wandering and distemper'd child. Thou pourest on him thy soft influences, Thy sunny hues, fair forms, and breathing sweets, Thy melodies of woods, and winds, and waters, Till he relent, and can no more endure To be a jarring and discordant thing, Amid this general dance and minstrelsy ; But bursting into tears, wins back his way ; His angry spirit healed and humanized By the benignant touch of love and beauty. TRANSLATION OF THE BIBLE. 1. THE principal translation of the Old Testament into the Greek language, is that which is called the Septuagint. This name is derived from the Latin word septuaginta, se- venty, the version being related to have been made by seventy or seventy-two interpreters. It is recorded that, about the year before Christ 277, Ptolemy Philadelphus, being intent on forming a great library at Alexandria, in Egypt, sent to Eleazer, the high priest of the Jews, to request a copy of the Law of Moses ; and, as he was ignorant of the Hebrew tongue, he further desired that some men of sufficient capacity might be sent to translate it into Greek. 2. The messengers who went upon this errand, and car- ried with them many rich presents for the temple, were re- Why is the Greek translat'on of the Old Testament called the Septuagint ? TRANSLATION OF THE BIBLE. 139 ceived with great honor and respect, both by the high priest and all the people ; and having received a copy of the Law of Moses, and six elders having been assigned out of each tribe (seventy-two in all) to translate it, returned to Alexandria. Upon their arrival, the elders betook the m- selves to the work, and first translated the Pentateuch, after- wards the rest of the Old Testament, into Greek. What- ever may be thought of the truth of this story, it is certain, that the translation called the Septuagint, was held in es- teem and veneration almost equal to the original, arid was not only used by the Jews in flieir dispersion through the Grecian cities, but approved by the great Sanhedrim at Je- rusalem, and quoted and referred to by our blessed Savior and his apostles. 3. The Latin translations of the Bible were in early times extremely numerous, but they were chiefly made from the Septuagint, and not from the original Hebrew, until St. Je- rome, who was well versed in the Hebrew language, observ- ing the errors of the many Latin translations, and their fre- quent disagreement with the original, undertook an entirely new translation, and, with great care and exactness, trans- lated from the Hebrew all the Old Testament except the Psalms. This translation of St. Jerome was not universally received in the church ; and at length another, which is composed of this and some former translations, and which is called by the Romanists, the Ancient Vulgate, came into general use. 4. There were several versions of the Bible into the Saxon tongue ; but when the popes of Rome had established their spiritual tyranny, they forbade the reading of these transla- tions ; and in the fourteenth century, the common people had been so long deprived of the use of the Scriptures, that the latest of the translations were become unintelligible. Wickliff, therefore, who was a strenuous opposer of the cor- ruptions and usurpations of the church of Rome, and from whom we are to date the dawn of the Reformation in Great Britain, published a translation of the whole Bible in the English language ; but not being sufficiently acquainted with the Hebrew and Greek languages to translate from the What translation is called the Ancient Vulgate ? Who made the first translation of the Scriptures into the English language ? 140 TRANSLATION OF THE BIBLE. originals, he made his translation from the Latin Bibles which were at that time read in the churches. 5. So offensive was this translation of the Bible, to those who were for taking away the key of knowledge, and means of better information, that a bill was brought into the house of lords for suppressing it. This bill, however, w~s rejected ; but in the year 1408, in a convocation held at Oxford, it was decreed, by a constitution, " That no one should there- after translate any text of Holy Scripture into English, by way of a book, or little book, or tract ; and that no book of this kind should be read that was composed lately, in the time of John Wickliff, or since his death." This constitution led the way to great persecution ; and many persons were pu- nished severely, and some even with death, for reading the Scriptures in English. 6. During the sixteenth* century, as the Reformation ad- vanced, different translations of the Bible were made, the most distinguished of which was undertaken by royal com- mand, and under the direction of archbishop Parker. Dis- tinct portions, fifteen at least, were allotted to as many per- sons, eminent for their learning and abilities ; they all per- formed the work assigned, and the whole was afterwards revised with great care by other critics. This translation was published in 1658, with a preface, which was written by the archbishop ; and it is generally called the Bishop's Bible, because eight of the persons originally concerned in it were bishops. 7. In the conference held at Hampton Court, in 1603, before king James the first, between the Episcopalians and . Puritans, Dr. Reynolds, the speaker of the Puritans, request- ed his majesty, that a new translation of the Bible might be made, alleging that those which had been made in former reigns were incorrect. Accordingly his majesty formed the resolution of causing a new and more faithful translation to be made, and commissioned for that purpose fifty-four of the most learned men in the universities and other places. 8. At the same time, he required the bishops to inform therrrselves of all learned men within their several diocesses, who had acquired especial skill in the Hebrew and Greek What one was called the Bishops' Bible ? Under whose authority and direction was the translation now in common use made ? TRANSLATION OF THE BIBLE. 141 tongues, and had taken pains, in their private studies of the Scriptures, for the clearing up of obscurities, either in the Hebrew, or the Greek, or for the correction of any mistakes in the former English translations ; and to charge them to communicate their observations to the persons employed, that so, the intended translation might have the help and furtherance of all the principal learned men in the kingdom. 9. Before the work was begun, seven of the persons no*- minated for it, either were dead, or declined to engage in the task. The remaining forty-seven were ranged under six divisions, and several parcels of the Bible were assigned to them, according to the several places where they were to meet, confer, and consult together. Every one of the com- pany was to translate the whole parcel ; then they were each to compare their translations together, and when any com- pany had finished their part, they were to communicate it to the other companies, so that nothing might pass without general consent. 10. If any company, upon a review of the book so sent, doubted or differed upon any place, they were to note the place, and send back the reasons for their disagreement. If they happened to differ about the amendments, the differ- ence was to be referred to a general committee, consisting of the chief persons of each company, at <:he epd of the work. When any passage was found rema^Kably obscure, letters were to be directed, by authority, t* any learned persons in the land, for their judgment thereon. 11. The work was begun i* the spring of 1607, and pro- secuted with all due care *nd deliberation. It was about three years before it was finished. Two persons selected from the Cambridge translators, two from those at Oxford, and two from those at Westminster, then met at Stationers' Hall, and read over and corrected the whole. After long expectation, and g?eat desire of the nation, this translation came forth in ihs year 1611, the divines employed having taken the greatest pains in conducting the work, not only examining translations with the original, which was abso- lutely necessary, but also comparing together all the exist- ing translations, in the Italian, Spanish, French, and other languages. How many persons were employed in making it ? 142 PATRIOTS AND MARTYRS. 12. This is the translation of the Holy Scriptures now in common use amongst us ; and since that time there has been no authorised version of any part of the sacred volume. The excellency of it is such as might be expected, from the ju- dicious care with which it was conducted, and the joint la- bors of the many distinguished men employed upon it. 4s lov'd land, The sweets of liberty and ecfial laws ; But martyrs struggle for a brighter prize, And win it with more pain. Tfo*ir blood is shed In confirmation of the noblest clairh Our claim to feed upon immortal truth, To walk with God, to be divinely free, To soar, and to anticipate the skies ! Yet few remember them. They liv'd unkrown, Till persecution dragg'd them into fame, And chas'd them up to heaven. Their ashes flew No marble tells us whither. With their names No bard embalms and sanctifies his song ! And history, so warm on meaner themes, Is cold on this. She execrates indeed The tyranny that doom'd them to the fire, But gives the glorious sufferers little praise. THE ORDER OF JESUITS. . 143 THE ORDER OF JESUITS. 1. IN defending the citadel of Pampeluna, Ignatio Loyola, a Biscayan gentleman, was dangerously wounded. During the progress of a lingering cure, Loyola happened to have no other amusement than what he found in reading the lives of the saints. The effect of this on his mind, naturally en- thusiastic, but ambitious and daring, was to inspire him with such a desire of emulating the glory of these fabulous wor- thies of the Romish church, as led him into the wildest and most extravagant -adventures, which terminated at last in in- stituting the society of Jesuits, the most political and best regulated of all the monastic orders, and from which man- kind have* derived more advantages and received greater in- jury, than from any other of those religious fraternities. 2. When men take a view of the rapid progress of ' this society towards wealth and power ; when they contemplate the admirable prudence with which it has been governed ; when they attend to the persevering and systematic spirit with which its schemes have been carried on ; they are apt to ascribe such a singular institution to the superior wisdom of its founder, and to suppose that he had formed and digest- ed his plan with profound policy. But the Jesuits, as well as the other monastic orders, are indebted /or the existence of their order rather to the enthusiasm than to the wisdom of their founder. The wjM adventures, and visionary schemes, in which his enthusiasm engaged him, equal any thing in the legends of the Romish saints ; but are unwor- thy of notice in history, 3. Prompted by ibis fanatica/ spirit, or incited by the love of power and distinction, from which such pretenders to su- perior sanctity are not exempt, Loyola was ambitious of be- coming the founder of a. religious order. The plan which he formed of its constitution and laws, was suggested, as he gave out, and as hi? followers still teach, by the immediate inspiration of heaven. But notwithstanding this high pre- tension, his design met at first with violent opposition. The pope, to whom Loyola had applied for the sanction of his Who was the founder of the order of Jesuits ? Under what cir- cumstances was he led to the establishment of it ? Are the Jesuits indebted to the superior wisdom, or to the enthusiasm, of Loyola ? 144 THE ORDER OF JESUITS. authority to confirm the institution, referred his petition to a committee of cardinals. They represented the establish- ment to be unnecessary as well as dangerous ; and Paul re- fused to grant his approbation of it. At last, Loyola remov- ed all his scruples, by an offer which it was impossible for any pope to resist. He proposed, that besides the three vows, of poverty, of chastity, and of monastic obedience, which are common to all the orders of regulars, the members of this society should take a fourth vow, of obedience to the pope, binding themselves to go whithersoever he should com- mand, for the service of religion, and without requiring any thing from the holy see for their support. 4. At a time when the papal authority had received such a shock, by the revolt of many nations from the Romish church ; at a time when every part of the popish system was attacked with so much violence and success, the acquisition of a body of men thus peculiarly devoted to the see of Rome, and whom it might set in opposition to all its enemies, was an object of the highest consequence. Paul, instantly perceiv ing this, confirmed the institution of the Jesuits, by his bull ; granted t\e most ample privileges to the members of the so- ciety; and appointed Loyola to be the first general of the order. The rous austerities; they do not consume one half of their time in the repetition of tedious offices. But they are required to attend to all the transactions of the world, on account of the influence which these may have upon religion ; they are directed to study the disposition of persons in high rank, and to cultivate their friendship ; and by the very constitution, as well as genius of the order, a spirit of action and intrigue is infused into all its members. 6. As the object of the society of Jesuits differed from that of the other monastic orders, the diversity was no less in the form of its government. The other orders are to be considered as voluntary associations, in which whatever af- fects the whole body, is regulated by the common suffrage of all its members. The executive power is vested in the persons placed at the head of each convent, or of the whole society; the legislative authority resides in the community. Affairs of moment, relating to particular convents, are deter- mined in conventual chapters ; such as respect the whole order, are considered in general congregations. But Loyola, full of the ideas of implicit obedience, which he had derived from his military profession, appointed, that the government of his order should be purely monarchical. A general cho- sen for life, by deputies from the several provinces, possessed power that was supreme and independent, extending to every person, and to every case. 7. This general, by his sole authority nominated provincials, rectors, and every other officer employed in the government of the society, and could remove them at pleasure. In him was vested the sovereign administration of the revenues and funds of the order. Every member belonging to it was at What was the government of the order of Jesuits ? 14 146 THE ORDER OF JESUITS. his disposal ; and by his uncontrollable mandate, he could impose on them any task, or employ them in what service so- ever he pleased. To his commands they were required not only to yield outward 'obedience, but to resign up to him the inclinations of their own wills, and the sentiments of their own understandings. They were to listen to his injunc- tions, as if they had been uttered by Christ himself. Under his direction, they were to be mere passive instruments, like clay in the hands of the potter, or like dead carcasses, incapa- ble of resistance. Such a singular form of policy could not fail to impress its character on all the members of the order, and to give a peculiar force to all its operations. There is not, in the annals of mankind, any example of such a perfect despotism, exercised, not over monks, shut up in the cells of a convent, but over men dispersed among all the nations of the earth. 8. As it was the professed intention of the order of Jesuits to labor with unwearied zeal in promoting the salvation of men, this engaged them, of course, in many active functions. From their first institution, they considered the education of youth as their peculiar province ; they aimed at being spiritu- al guides and confessors ; they preached frequently in order to instruct the people ; they set out as missionaries to con- vert unbelieving nations. The novelty oif the institution, as well as the singularity of its objects, procured the order many admirers and patrons. The governors of the society had the address to avail themselves of every circumstance in its favor, and in a short time the number as well as the in- fluence of its members increased wonderfully. 9. Even before the expiration of the sixteenth century, the Jesuits had obtained the chief direction of the education of youth in every Catholic country in Europe. They had be- come the confessors of almost all its monarchs, a function of no small importance in any reign ; but under a weak prince, superior even to that of minister. They were the spiritual guides of almost every person eminent for rank or power. They possessed the highest degree of confidence and interest with the papal court, as the most able and zealous champions for its authority. The advantages which an active and en- terprising body of men might derive from all these circum- stances, are obvious. They formed the minds of men in their youth. They retained an ascendant over them in their TI1K ORDER OF JESUITS. 147 . advanced yr;u>. Ylirv po.v -rssrJ, at dilVcrciit periods, the direction of the most considerable courts in Europe. They mingled in all affairs. They took part in every intrigue and revolution. The general, by means of the extensive intelli- gence which he received, could regulate, the operations of the order with the most perfect discernment; and by means of his absolute power, could carry them on with tlie utmost vigor and eifect. 10. Together with the power of the order, il wealth con- tinued to increase. Various expedients wer<; devised for eluding the obligation of the vow of poverty. The order ac- quired ample possessions in every Catholic country ; and by the number as well as magnificence of its public buildings, together with the value of its property, moveable or real, it vied with the most opulent of the monastic fraternities. Be- sides the sources of wealth common to all the regular clergy, the Jesuits possessed one which was peculiar to themselves. Under pretext of promoting the success of their missions, and of facilitating the support of their missionaries, they ob- tained a special license from the court of Rome, to trade with the nations which they laboured to convert. In conse- quence of this, they engaged in an extensive and lucrative commerce, both in the East and West Indies. They opened ware-houses in different parts of Europe, in which they vend- ed their commodities. Not satisfied with trade alone, they imitated the example of other commercial societies, and aim- ed at obtaining settlements. They acquired possession ac- cordingly, of a large and fertile province in the southern continent of America, and reigned as sovereigns over some hundred thousand subjects. 11. Unhappily for mankind, the vast influence which the order of Jesuits acquired by all these different means, has been often exerted with the most pernicious effect. Such was tine tendency of tnat discipline observed by the society in its numbers, and such the fundamental maxims in its con- stitution, that every Jesuit was taught to regard the interest of the order as the capital object, to which every considera- tion was to be sacrificed. This spirit of attachment to their order, the most ardent, perhaps, that ever influenced any Under wnat pretext did the Jesuits obtain special license for com- merce with the nations in which Viey resided ? 148 THE ORDER OF JESUITS. body of men, is the characteristic principle of the Jesuits, and serves as a key to the genius of their policy, as well as to the peculiarities in their sentiments and conduct. 12. As it was for the honor and advantage of the society, that its members should possess an ascendant over persons in high rank, or of great power, the desire of acquiring and preserving such a direction of their conduct, with greater facility, has led the Jesuits to propagate a system of relaxed and pliant morality, which accommodates itself to the pas- sions of men, which justifies their vices, which tolerates their imperfections, which authorizes almost every action that the most audacious or crafty politician would wish to perpetuate. As the prosperity* of the order was intimately connected with the preservation of the papal authority, the Jesuits, influenced by the same principle of attachment to the interests of their society, have been the most zealous patrons of those doc- trines, which tend to exalt ecclesiastical power on the ruins of civil government. They have attributed to the court of Rome a jurisdiction as extensive and absolute as was claimed by the most presumptuous pontiffs in the dark ages. They have contended for the entire independence of ecclesiastics on the civil magistrate. They have published such tenets concerning the duty of opposing princes who, were enemies of the Catholic faith, as countenanced the most atrocious crimes, and tended to dissolve all the ties which connect subjects with their rulers. 13. As the order derived both reputation and authority, from the zeal with which it stood forth in defence of the Komish church against the attacks of the reformers, its mem- bers, proud of this distinction, have considered it as their peculiar function to combat the opinions and check the pro- gress of the Protestants. They have made use of every art, and have employed every weapon against them. They have set themselves in opposition to every gentle or tolerating measure in their favor. They have incessantly stirred up against them all the rage of ecclesiastical and civil persecu- tion. Monks of other Denominations have, indeed, ventured to teach the same pernicious doctrines, and have held opi- nions equally inconsistent with the order and happiness of What was the morality of the Jesuits ? What course did the Je suits take in regard to the Reformation ? THE ORDER OF JESUITS. 149 civil society. But they, from reasons which are obvious, have either delivered such opinions with greater reserve, or have propagated them with less success. Whoever recollects the events which have happened in Europe, during two cen- turies, will find that the Jesuits may justly be considered as responsible for most of the pernicious effects arising from that corrupt and dangerous casuistry, from those extravagant tenets concerning ecclesiastical power, and from that into- lerant spirit, which have been the disgrace of the Church of* Rome throughout that period, and which have brought so many calamities upon civil society. 14. But amidst many bad consequences flowing from the institution of this order, mankind, it must be acknowledged, have derived from it some considerable advantages. As the Jesuits made the education of youth one of their capital ob- jects, and as their first attempts to establish colleges for the reception of students were violently opposed by the universi- ties in different countries, it became necessary for them, as the most effectual method of acquiring the public favor, to surpass their rivals in science and industry. This prompted them to cultivate the study of ancient literature, with extra- ordinary ardor. This put them upon various methods for facilitating the instruction of youth ; and by the improve- ments which they made in it, they have contributed so much towards the progress of polite learning, that on this account they have merited well of society. Nor has the order of Jesuits been successful only in teaching the elements of li- terature ; it has produced likewise eminent masters in many branches of science ; and can alone boast of a greater num- ber of ingenious authors than all the other religious frater- nities taken together. 15. But it is in the new world, that the Jesuits have ex- hibited the most wonderful display of thfcir abilities, and have contributed most effectually to the benefit of the human spe- cies. The conquerors of that unfortunate quarter of the globe acted at first as if they had nothing in view, but to plunder, to enslave, and to exterminate its inhabitants. The Jesuits alone made humanity the object of their settling there. About the beginning of the last century, they obtain- ed admission into the fertile province of Paraguay, winch What were some of the principal benefits of the order of Jesuits . J 14* 150 THE ORDER OF JESUITS. stretches across the southern continent of America, from the east side of the immense ridge of the Andes, to the confines of the Spanish and Portuguese settlements on the banks of the river de la Plata. ' They found the inhabitants in a state little different from that which takes place among men when they first begin to unite together ; strangers to the arts ; sub- sisting precariously by hunting or fishing ; and hardly ac- quainted with the first principles of subordination and go- vernment. 16. The Jesuits set themselves to instruct and to civilize these savages. They taught them to cultivate the ground, to rear tame animals, and to build houses. They brought them to live together in villages. They trained them to arts and manufactures. They made them taste the sweets of so- ciety ; and accustomed them to the blessings of security and order. These people became the subjects of their benefac- tors, who have governed them with a tender attention, re- sembling that with which a father directs his children. Re- spected and beloved almost to adoration, a few Jesuits presid- ed over some hundred thousand Indians. They maintained a perfect equality among all the members of the community. Each of them was obliged to labor not for himself alone, but for the public. 17. The produce of their fields, together with the fruits of their industry of every species, were deposited in. common store-houses, from which each individual received every thing necessary for the supply of his wants. By this insti- tution, almost all the passions which disturb the peace of society, and render the members of it unhappy, were ex- tinguished. A few magistrates, chosen from among their countrymen, by the Indians themselves, watched over the public tranquillity, and secured obedience to the laws. The sanguinary punishments frequent under other governments were unknown, An admonition from a Jesuit ; a slight mark of infamy ; or, on some singular occasion, a few lashes from a whip, were sufficient to maintain good order among these innocent and happy people. 18. But even in this meritorious effort of the Jesuits for the good of mankind, the genius and spirit of their order have mingled and are discernible. They plainly aimed at What wai their object in settling in South America ? THE ORDER OF JESUITS. 151 establishing in Paraguay an independent empire, subject to the society alone, and which, by the superior excellence of its constitution and police, could scarcely have failed to ex- tend its dominion over all the southern continent of Ameri- ca. With this view, in order to prevent the Spaniards or Portuguese in the adjacent settlements, from acquiring any dangerous influence over the people within the limits of the province subject to the society, the Jesuits endeavored to in- spire the Indians with hatred and contempt of these nations. They cut off all intercourse between their subjects and the Spanish and Portuguese settlements. They prohibited any private trader of either nation to enter their territories. When they were obliged to admit any person in a public character from the neighboring governments, they did riot permit him to have any conversation with their subjects, and no Indian was allowed even to enter the house where these strangers resided, unless in the presence of a Jesuit. 19. In order to render any communication between them as difficult as possible, they industriously avoided giving the Indians any knowledge of the Spanish or of any other Euro- pean language ; but encouraged the different tribes, which they had civilized, to acquire a certain dialect of the Indian tongue, and labored to make that the universal language throughout their dominions. As all these precautions, with- out a military force, would have been insufficient to have rendered their empire secure and permanent, they instructed their subjects in the European arts of war. They formed them into bodies of cavalry and infantry, completely armed and regularly disciplined. They provided a great train of artillery, as well as magazines stored with all the implements of war. Thus they established an army so numerous and well appointed, as to be formidable in a country, where a few sickly and ill-disciplined battalions composed all the mili- tary force kept on foot by the Spaniards or Portuguese. How did the genius of the order of Jesuits discover itself in their ettleraents in South America ? 152 AN EVENING SKETCH. AN EVENING SKETCH. THE birds have ceased their song, All, save the black-cap, that, amid the boughs Of yon tall ash tree, from his mellow throat, In adoration of the setting sun, Chants forth his evening hymn. 'Tis twilight now ; The sovereign sun behind his western hills In glory hath declined. The mighty clouds, Kissed by his warm effulgence, hang around In all their congregated hues of pride, Like pillars of some tabernacle grand, Worthy his glowing presence ; while the sky, Illumined to its centre, glows intense,, Changing its sapphire majesty to gold. How deep is the tranquillity ! the trees Are slumbering through their multitude of boughs Even to the leaflet on the frailest twig ! A twilight gloom pervades the distant hills ; An azure softness mingling with the sky. The fisherman drags to the yellow shore His laden nets ; and, in the sheltering cove, Behind yon rocky point, his shallop moors, To tempt again the perilous deep at dawn. The sea, as waveless as a lake ingulf 'd 'Mid sheltering hills without a ripple spreads Its bosom, silent, and immense the hues Of flickering day have from its surface died, Leaving it garb'd in sunless majesty. With bosoming branches round, yon village hangs Its row of lofty elm trees ; silently Towering in spiral wreaths to the soft sky, The smoke from many a cheerful hearth ascends, Melting in ether. As I gaze, behold The evening star illumines the blue south, Twinkling in loveliness. O ! holy star, Thou bright dispenser of the twilight dews, Thou herald of Night's glowing galaxy, And harbinger of social bliss ! how oft, Amid the twilights of departed years. MARTYRS OF ARMORIAN Resting beside the river's mirror clear, On trunk of mossy oak, with eyes upturned To thee in admiration, have I sat Dreaming sweet dreams till earth-born turbulence Was all forgot ; and thinking that in thee, Far from the rudeness of this jarring world, There might be realms of quiet happiness ! MARTYRS OF ARMORIAN. 1. IN the reign of Theophilus, the Saracens ravaged many parts of the eastern empire, gained considerable advantages over the Christians, and at length laid siege to the city of Armorian, in Upper Phrygia. The garrison bravely defend- ed the place for a considerable time, and would have obliged their enemies to raise the siege, but the place was betrayed by a renegado. Many were put to the sword ; and two general officers, with some persons of distinction, were carried pri- soners to Bagdat, where they were loaded with chains, and thrown into a dungeon. They continued in prison for some time, without seeing any persons but their jailers, or having scarcely food enough for their subsistence. 2. At length they were informed, that nothing could pre- serve their lives, but renouncing their religion, and embracing Mahometanism. To induce them to comply, the caliph pre- tended zeal for their welfare ; and declared, that he looked upon converts in a more glorious light than conquests. Agreeably to these maxims, he sent some of the most artful of the Mahometans, with money and clothes, and the promise of other advantages, which they might secure to themselves by an abjuration of Christianity ; which, according to the casuistry of those infidels, might be made without quitting their faith ; but the martyrs rejected the proposal with horror and contempt. 3. After this, they were attacked with that fallacious and delusive argument, which the Mahometans still use in favor of themselves, and were desired to judge of the merits of the cause by the success of those that were engaged in it, and By whom was Armenian besieged and taken ? To what city were 'he prisoners carried captives ? 154 MARTYRS OF ARMORIAN. choose that religion which they saw flourished most, and was best rewarded with the good things of this life, which they called the blessings of heaven. Yet the noble prisoners were proof against all these temptations ; and argued strenuously against the authority of their false prophet. This incensed the Mahometans, and drew greater hardships upon the Chris- tians during their confinement, which lasted seven years. 4. Boidizius, the renegado who had betrayed Armorian, then brought them the welcome new r s that their sufferings woul conclude in martyrdom the next day : when taken from tlirir dungeon, they were again solicited to embrace the te- nets of Mahomet ; but neither threats nor promises could induce them to espouse the doctrines of an impostor. Per- ceiving that their faith could not by any means be shaken, the caliph ordered them to be executed. Theodore, one of the number, had formerly received priest's orders, and offi- ciated as a clergyman ; but afterwards quitting the church, he had followed a military life, and raised himself by the sword to some considerable posts, which he enjoyed at the time he was taken prisoner. 5. The officer who attended the execution, being apprised of these circumstances, said to Theodore, " You might, indeed pretend to be ranked among the Christians, while you served in their church as a priest ; but the profession you have taken up, which engages you in bloodshed, is so contrary to your former employment, that you should not now think of passing upon us for one of that religion. When you quitted the altar for the camp, you renounced Jesus Christ. Why then will you dissemble any longer ? Would you not act more conforma- ble to your own principles, and make your conduct all of a piece, if you came to a resolution of saving your life by owning our great prophet ?" 6. Theodore, covered with religious confusion at this re- proach, but still unshaken in his faith, made the following answer " It is true," says he, " I did in some measure abandon my God when I engaged in the army, and scarce deserve the name of a Christian. But the Almighty has given me grace to see myself in the true light, and made me sensible of my fault ; and I hope he will be pleased to accept my life as the only sacrifice I can now offer to expiate my guilt." To what profession had Theodore been educated ? What reason did the officer assign for Theodore's renouncing Christianity ? MARTYRS OF ARMORIAN. 155 7. This pious answer confounded the officer, who only answered, that he should presently have an opportunity of giving that proof of his fidelity to his Master. Upon which Theodore and the rest, forty-two in number, were beheaded. Two ladies of distinction, Mary and Flora, suffered martyr- dom at the same time. Flora was the daughter of an emi- nent Mahometan at Seville ; from whence he removed to Corduba, where the Saracen king resided, and kept his court. Her father dying when she was young, Flora was left to the care of her mother, who being a Christian brought her up in the true faith, and inspired her with sentiments of virtue and religion. 8. Her brother being a professed enemy to Christianity, and of a barbarous and savage temper, Flora was for some time obliged to use great caution in the practice of such vir- tues as must have exposed her to a persecution. She was too zealous to bear this restraint long ; for which reason she left Corduba, in company with her sister. Her departure soon alarmed her brother, who suspected her motives, and, in revenge, informed against several Christians of Corduba ; for as he did not know whither his sister was gone, he deter- mined to wreak his vengeance on such Christians as were present. 9. When Flora was informed of these proceedings, she considered herself as the cause of what the Christians had suffered at Corduba, and having an interior conviction that God called her to fight for her faith, she returned to that city, and proceeded to the persecutors, among whom she found her brother. That singing up to heaven's gate ascend, Bear on your wings, and in your notes, hispraise. Ye that in waters glide, and ye that walk The earth, and stately tread, or lowly creep, Witness, if I be silent, morn or even, , To hill or valley, fountain, or fresh shade, Made vocal by my song, and taught his praise. Hail, universal Lord ! be bounteous still, To give us only good ; and, if the night Have gather'd aught of evil, or conceal'd, Disperse it, as now light dispels the dark. SIEGE OF CALAIS. 1. EDWARD III., after the battle of Cressy, in the year 1347, laid siege to Calais. He had fortified his camp in so impregnable a manner, that all the efforts of France proved ineffectual to raise the siege or throw succors into the city. When did Edward III. besiege Calais f 15 158 SIEGE OF CALAIS. The citizens, under count Vienne, their gallant governor, made an admirable defence. France had now put the sickle into her second harvest, since Edward, with his victorious army, sat down before the town. The eyes of all Europe were intent on the issue. At length famine did more for Edward than arms. After suffering unheard of calamities, they resolved to attempt the enemy's camp. They boldly sallied forth ; the English joined battle ; and after a long and desperate engagement, count Vienne was taken prisoner, and the citizens who survived the slaughter retired within their gates. The command devolving upon Eustace St. Pierre, a man of mean birth but exalted virtue, he offered to capitulate with Edward, provided he permitted him to depart with life and liberty. 2. Edward, to avoid the imputation of cruelty, consented to spare the bulk of the plebeians, provided they delivered up to him six of their principal citizens, with halters about their necks, as victims of due atonement for that spirit of re- bellion with which they had inflamed the vulgar. When his messenger, Sir Walter Mauny, delivered the terms, conster- nation and pale dismay were impressed on every countenance. To a long and dead silence, deep -sighs and groans succeed- ed, till Eustace St. Pierre, getting up to a little eminence, thus addressed the assembly : t; My friends, we are brought to great straits this day. We must either yield to the terms of our cruel and unsparing conqueror, or give up our tender infants, our wives and daughters, to the bloody and brutal lusts of the violating soldiers. Is there any expedient left, whereby we may avoid the guilt and infamy of delivering up those who have suffered every misery with you, on the one hand or the desolation and horror of a sacked city on the other ? There is, my friends, there is one expedient left a gracious, an excellent, a godlike expedient ! Is there any here to whom virtue is dearer than life ? Let him offer him- self an oblation for the safety of his people ! He shall not fail of a blessed approbation from that Power, Avho offered up his only Son for the salvation of mankind!" Under whose command was the town defended ? On whom did it devolve, when Vienne was taken prisoner ? On what condition did Eaward consent to raise the siege > SIKGE OF CALAIS. 159 3. He spoke but an universal silence ensued. Each man looked around for the example of that magnanimity and virtue, which all wished to approve in themselves, though they wanted the resolution. At length St. Pierre resumed " I doubt not but there are many here, as ready, nay, more zealous of this martyrdom, than I can be ; though the sta- tion to which I am raised, by the captivity of lord Vienne, imparts a right to be the first in giving my life for your sakes. I give it freely I give it cheerfully. Who comes next ?" Five others, equally patriotic, soon followed his example. These six self-devoted victims then went out of the town bare- footed, with halters about their necks, and presented the keys to Sir Walter. He took the prisoners into his cus- tody ; then ordered the gates to be opened, and gave charge to his attendants to conduct the remaining citizens, with their families, through the camp of the English. 4. Before they departed, however, they desired permission to take their last adieu of their deliverers. What a parting ! What a scene ! They crowded, with their wives and chil- dren, about St. Pierre and his fellow prisoners. They em- braced they clung around they fell prostrate before them. They groaned, they wept aloud and the joint clamor of their mourning passed the gates of the city, and was heard throughout the English camp. The English, by this time, were apprised of what passed within Calais. They heard the voice of lamentation, and their souls were touched with compassion. Each of the soldiers prepared a portion of his own victuals, to welcome and entertaiji the half famished inhabitants ; and they loaded them with as much as their present weakness was able to bear, in order to supply them with sustenance by the way. At length St. Pierre and his fellow victims appeared under the conduct of Sir Walter and a guard. All the tents of the English were instantly empti- ed. The soldiers poured from all parts, and arranged them- selves on each side, to behold, to contemplate, to admire this little band of patriots as they passed. They bowed down to them on all sides. They murmured their applause of that virtue, which they could not but revere, even in enemies ; and they regarded those ropes which they had voluntarily Who first offered himself a sacrifice to save his fellow citizens ? 160 SIEGE OF CALAIS. assumed about their necks, as ensigns of greater dignity than that of the British garter. 5. As soon as they reached his presence, " Mauny," says v the monarch, " are these the principd IrJiLbJtants of Ca- lais?" " They are," says Mauriy "they are not only the principal men of Calais they are the principal men of France, my lord, if virtue has any share in the act of enno- bling." " Were they delivered peaceably ?" says Edward. " Was there no resistance, no commotion among the peo- ple ?" *' Not in the least, my lord ; the people would all have perished, rather than have delivered the least of these to your majesty. They are self-delivered, . self-devoted ; and come to offer up their inestimable heads, as an ample equi- valent for the ransom of thousands." Edward was secretly piqued at this reply of Sir Walter. But he knew the privi- lege of a British subject, and suppressed his resentment. " Experience," says he, " has ever shown, that lenity only serves to invite people to new crimes. Severity, at times, is indispensably necessary, to compel subjects to submission, by punishment and example. Go," he cried to an officer, " lead these men to execution." 6. At this instant a sound of triumph was heard through- out the camp. The queen had just arrived with a powerful reinforcement of gallant troops. Sir Walter Mauny flew to receive her majesty, and briefly informed her of the particu- lars respecting the six victims. As soon as she had been welcomed by Edward and his court, she desired a private audience. " My lord," said she, " the question I am to enter upon, is not touching the lives of a few mechanics it re- spects the honor of the English nation ; it respects the glory of my Edward, my husband,, my king. You think you have sentenced six of your enemies to death. No, my lord, they have sentenced themselves ; and their execution would be the execution of their own orders, not the orders of Edward. The stage on which they would suffer, would bo to them a stage of honor, but a stage of shame to Edward ; a reproach on his conquests ; an indelible disgrace to his name. Let us rather disappoint these haughty burghers, who wish to invest themselves with glory at our expense. We cannot whglly deprive them of the merit of a sacrifice so nobly intended, but we may cut them short of their desires ; in the place of that death by which their glory would be consummated, let us UNCERTAINTY OF THE WORLD. 101 bury them under gifts, let us put them to confusion with ap- plauses. We shall thereby defeat them of that popular opi- nion, which never fails to attend those who suffer in the cause of virtue." " I am convinced ; you have prevailed ; be it so ;" replied Edward. " Prevent the execution ; have them instantly be fore us." They came ; when the queen, with an aspect anc accents diffusing sweetness, thus bespoke them " Natives of France, and inhabitants of Calais, you have put us to vast expense of blood and treasure in the recovery of our just and natural inheritance ; but you have acted up to the best of an erroneous judgment ; and we admire and honor in you that valor and virtue, by which we are so long kept out of our rightful possessions. We loose your chains ; we snatch you from the scaffold. You are now free to depart to your kins- folk, your countrymen, to all whose lives and liberties you have so nobly redeemed, provided you refuse not the tokens of our esteem. Yet we would rather bind you to ourselves by every endearing obligation ; and for this purpose, we of- fer to you your choice of the gifts and honors that Edward has to bestow. Rivals for fame, but always friends to virtue, we wish that England were entitled to call you her sons." 11 Ah, my country !" exclaimed St. Pierre ; " it is now that I tremble for you. Edward only wins our cities but Phi lippa conquers hearts." UNCERTAINTY OF THE WORLD. 1. SELF-FLATTER'D, unexperienc'd, high in hope, When young, with sanguine cheer, and streamers, gay, We cut our cable, launch into the world, And fondly dream each wind and star our friend ; All, in some darling enterprise embark'd And where is he, can fathom its extent ? Amid a multitude of artless hands, Ruin's sure perquisite ! her lawful prize ! Some steer aright ; but the black blast blows hard, And puffs them wide of hope with hearts of proof, Through whose influence were the six prisoners spared ? 15* v 162 MASSACRE OF SWEDISH NOBILITY. Full against wind and tide, some win their way ; And when strong effort has deserv'd the port, And tugg'd it into view, 'tis won ! 'tis lost ! Though strong their oar, still stronger is their fate They strike ; and while they triumph, they expire. 2. In stress of weather most ; some sink outright ; O'er them, and o'er their names, the billows close ; To-morrow knows not that they e'er were born. Others, a short memorial leave behind, Like a flag floating, when the bark's ingulf 'd ; It floats a moment, and is seen no more One Caesar lives ; a thousand are forgot. How few, beneath auspicious planets born, (Darlings of Providence ! fond fate's elect !) With swelling sails make good the promis'd port, With all their wishes freighted ! Yet e'en these, Freighted with all their wishes, soon complain ; Free from misfortune, not from nature free, They still are men ; and when is man secure ? As fatal time, as storm ! the rush of years Beats down their strength ; their numberless escapes In ruin end And, now, their proud success But plants new terrors on the victor's brow What pain to quit the world, just made their own, Their nest so deeply down'd, and built so high ! Too low they build, who build beneath the stars. MASSACRE OF SWEDISH NOBILITY. 1. CHRISTIAN II., the Nero of the north, entering into an insidious negotiation with the Swedes, offered to go in per- son to Stockholm, in order to confer with the regent, provid- ed that six persons, whom he should name, were delivered as hostages for his safety. This proposal being accepted, Gus- tavus Vasa, a descendant of the ancient kings of Sweden, with five others of the principal nobility, were sent on board By what name is Christian II. sometimes called ? Who is Gusta- vus Vasa ? MASSACRE OF SWEDISH NOBILITY. 10a the Danish fleet. The perfidious Clfristian immediately car- ried them prisoners to Denmark, and returning the following year, with a more powerful armament, invaded Gothland, and wasted the country with fire and sword. The regent of Swe- den being killed in an ambuscade, and the senate divided OB the choice of a successor, the Danish king, taking advantage of their dissensions, advanced to Stockholm, which surrender- ed at his approach. Gustavus Trolle, the primate, now placed the crown of Sweden on the head of the Danish monarch. 2. This coronation was followed by one of the most horrid transactions recorded in history. Christian had promised a general amnesty ; and repairing to the cathedral, swore on the altar of the Supreme Being, that he would govern Swe- den, not with the severity of a conqueror, but the benevolence of a father. After this ceremony, he invited the senators and grandees to a sumptuous entertainment, that lasted three days, but concluded in the most tragical manner. The king and the primate had formed the horrid design of extir- pating the Swedish nobility ; and, in order to afford some pretext for their intended massacre, the archbishop, on the last daj of the feast, reminded the king, that the amnesty accorded to crimes against the state, did not include those committed against the church, and demanded justice in the name of the pope. The hall was immediately filled with soldiers, who secured the guests. The primate proceeded against them as heretics. A scaffold was erected before the gate of the palace, and ninety-four persons of the first dis- tinction, among whom was Eric, the father of Gustavus Vasa, were executed, for no other crime than that of defend- ing their country. 3. This nefarious transaction took place in the year 1520, which was soon followed by the deliverance of Sweden from Danish oppression. Promises and threats were made use of to reconcile Gustavus Vasa to the despotic authority of Christian, but in vain ; and the king, dreading his valor and constancy, gave orders to strangle him in prison. But Eric Banner, a Danish nobleman, who was charged with that de- How came he at Denmark, a prisoner or hostage ? Who crowned Christian II. king of Sweden ? Under what pretence was this mur- der committed ? How many of the Swedish nobles did Christian mur- der ? When was it ? 164 MASSACRE OF SWEDISH NOBILITY. testable commission, instead of executing it, obtained its revocation ; and held forth the hope, that he should be able to inspire the youth with a favorable disposition to the go- vernment of Christian. He was, therefore, allowed to take hirn into custody, on condition of his keeping him a prisoner in the fortress of Calo, in Jutland, and paying six thousand crowns, if he should make his escape. 4. The noble qualities of Gustavus gained the esteem of Banner and of the whole family, and he was not long at Calo before he received permission to walk about and hunt for his diversion. New recreations and amusements were every day proposed, and all the neighboring country endeavored to en- tertain the stranger. But nothing could make him forget that he was a ffrisoner ; nor could all the civilities he received compensate the chagrin he experienced at being deprived of his liberty. Restraint, however, became more painful, and the desire of escape more powerful, from the moment he re- ceived information of the massacre at Stockholm, in which his father and most of his relatives had been involved. 5. Convinced that every expedient ought to be attempted for procuring his liberty, which might be the means of res- cuing his country from destruction, Gustavus mounted his horse according to custom, under pretence of going to the chase, plunged deep into the forest, and, having arrived at a proper distance, assumed the garb of a peasant. Having quitted his horse, after a march of two days through almost impracticable paths, and over mountains, he arrived at Flens- burgh, the last town on the Danish frontier, into which no, person was admitted without a passport. Fortunately, how- ever, at that season of the year, the merchants of Lower Saxony carried on a considerable trade in cattle, which they purchased in Jutland. Gustavus hired himself to one of those merchants, and presenting himself to the governor as a dealer, was suffered to pass unmolested to Lubec. 6. Banner was no sooner informed of the escape of his prisoner, than following him with the greatest diligence, lie overtook him at Lubec, and reproached him with a breach of confidence. < Gustavus pleaded the existing circumstances as an apology, appeased his late host by promising to indem- nify him in the loss of his ransom^ and without delay, departed How did Gustavus Vasa escape from his keeper Eric Banner ? , MASSACRE OF SV/KD1SH NOBILITY. 105 for Sweden, though he knew that orders had boon every where given in that kingdom to seize and arrest him. The first town where he made himself known was Cahnar, which nad belonged to the late regent, whose widow still lived in it with her children, and a German garrison. Those mercenary soldiers only held the place for their own purposes, and were actually in treaty with the emissaries of Christian to deliver up the city. Gustavus assailed them with arguments, and told them that at the hazard of his life he had made his escape to Cahnar, in order to have the glory of participating with them in the flifficulties and dangers of resisting a tyrant, and of maintaining and defending the liberty of their country, which must be grateful to brave and generous minds. They asked him where were his resources, his army, his treasures ? and, on his remaining silent, they called him a madman, and threatened to apprehend him. 7. Disappointed in the expectations he had formed of gaining those soldiers to his purpose, Gustavus retired from the city with great expedition ; and his arrival being now publicly known, he was again obliged to have recourse to the garb of a peasant, in order to. conceal himself from the Da- nish emissaries. He was, nevertheless, on the point of being seized, when he escaped in a wagon of hay, and sought shelter in a retired spot, where stood an ancient castle be- longing to his family. From thence he wrote to his friends, informing them of his return, and requesting them to assem- ble a force for expelling the tyrant ; but they refused to un- dertake so hazardous and desperate an attempt. They were no longer the bold and intrepid Swedes, jealous of their li- berty, and the enemies of tyranny and oppression. T!/e terror excited by the massacre at Stockholm, had frozen up their courage. 8. Perceivingj therefore, that mean selfishness had sup- planted public spirit among his friends, Gustavus applied to the peasants ; who being a bold and independent racfi of men, had nothing to fear from the indignation of Christian, and who, he hoped, would embrace with ardor the opportu- nity of expelling the tyrant, and delivering thek country. In vain did he mingle with them, range through their vil- lages, assist at their assemblies and repasts, harangue them, and stimulate them to shake off the yoke. They an- swered, t; Under the government of the king of Denmark, 166 MASSACRE OF SWEDISH NOBILITY. we have salt and herrings. Whatever may be the success of a revolution, we cannot be otherwise than poor. Peasants we are ; and peasants we must remain, whoever is king of Sweden." 9. Repulsed in that quarter, he determined to proceed to Dalecarlia, where, if he failed in the attempt of exciting the inhabitants to revolt, he could live securely in the high moun- tains and thick forests of that country. Attended, therefore, by a peasant, to whom he was known, he travelled in dis- guise ; and, after a laborious and painful journey, arrived in the mountains of Dalecarlia, where he was deserted by his companion and guide, who robbed him of all the money he had provided for his subsistence. Destitute and in want, in a strange place, unknowing and unknown, he was urged by the call of hunger, and entered among the miners, with whom he wrought to earn a maintenance. Under the habit of a peasant, a woman in the mines perceived a fine embroi- dered shirt, which induced her to suspect that he was some man of distinguished rank, whom persecution had driven to seek an asylum in those caverns. The conjecture was re- ported to a neighboring gentleman, who, prompted by curi- osity, repaired to the mine to offer protection to the unfortu- nate stranger,. On approaching, he recognized Gustavus, with whom he had been acquainted at the university of Up- sal. Prudence obliged him to conceal his astonishment ; but at night he sent to him, made him an offer of his house, and gave him the strongest assurances of his friendship and protection. 10. Gustavus embraced with joy the offer of his generous friend, who informed him the Dalecarlians bore with impa- tience the Danish yoke ; that they were attached to the family of their ancient sovereigns ; and that great were the means of attack and defence, furnished by the nature of the country and the courage of the inhabitants. The frequent repetition of this conversation encouraged Gustavus to dis- close his designs to his friend, who was no sooner informed of the intentions of the fugitive youth, than he endeavored to dissuade him from his purpose, by representing to him, in the strongest light, the danger and difficulty of such an en- terprise. Gustavus neither believed the hospitable Dalecar- lian a friend to the Danes, nor did he think him capable of betraying him. But not wishing to disturb the life of a quiet MASSACRE OF SWEDISH NOBILITY. 107' and peaceable man, he departed; and (rusting to his own good fortune, took his way without a guide, through forests and over mountains, and arrived safe at the house of a noble- man named Peterson, with whom he had formerly been ac- quainted in the army. 11. Peterson received him with marks of respect and es- teem, listened with every appearance of lively interest to the recital of his misfortunes, seemed more affected by them than Gustavus himself, exclaimed against the tyranny of the Danes, and entered into his projects with apparent ardor and enthu- siasm. This perfidious wretch named the nobles and peasants on whom he cquld depend ; and having become acquainted with the designs of Gustavus, privately went to a Danish officer, and, in the hope of a rich recompense, communicated to him the projects and retreat of his guest. The Dane hastened to Peterson's house, which he surrounded with sol- diers ; but Providence watched over the preservation of the fugitive patriot. Peterson's wife, moved with compassion, had opportunely apprised him of the perfidy of her husband, and committed him to the care of a faithful servant, who conducted him to the house of a neighboring clergyman. 12. That ecclesiastic was a person who attentively studied mankind, reflected on public affairs, observed the course of events, aspired to no preferment, and was attached to no party. He received Gustavus with respect and tenderness, and assured him of his honor and secrecy. Far from being terrified by the project which the youthful hero entertained of opposing the power of Denmark, he traced out the path which was to lead him to ultimate success. (t You must not," said he, endeavor to gain over to your party, the no- bles, who are most of them satisfied with the security and independence which they enjoy in the mountains, and who take little concern in the revolutions that happen at court. It will be difficult to prevail on them to arm their vassals, because their wealth entirely depends on the number and in- dustry of that body of men, whose labors will be suspended by a war. But the most certain means of obtaining the end proposed, will be to induce the vassals to take up arms of their own accord." 13. In order to prepare matters for that crisis, the clergy- man undertook to propagate a report, that the Danes, were preparing to enter the province to establish new taxes by i68 MASSACRE OF SWEDISH NOBILITY. force of arms. He employed his relatives and friends to disseminate the alarming intelligence ; and when he was convinced that the public mind was sufficiently impressed with the idea, he advised Gustavus to repair to Mora, where all the peasants of the surrounding district were wont to assem- ble annually at a public feast. " Never," said this sensible man, " are the vassals more bold, or more inclined to revolt, than at the times of those meetings, when they estimate their strength by their number." Agreeably to the advice of this honest and sage counsellor, the young hero departed for Mora ; and on his arrival, found the peasants prepared for his reception, and impatient to see a nobleman illustrious for his birth, his valor, and his sufferings. 14. He appeared in the assembly with an air of intrepidity and resolution, tempered by a mixture of melancholy which was naturally excited by the death of his father and the other senators. The gazing multitude were instantly touched with compassion. But, when he spoke to them of the horrible massacre at Stockholm, of the tyranny of Christian, of the persecution of the provinces,, and of the miseries of the kingdom in general, the assembly was inflamed with indig- nation, exclaimed against the Danes, and vowed to revenge the death of their countrymen with the last drop of their blood. They immediately resolved to renounce their allegi- ance to Christian, and to sacrifice, without distinction, all the Danes in the province, as an atonement for the massacre of the Swedes. Gustavus took advantage of their kindled ardor, assembled around him the most determined of his hearers, attacked the castle in which resided the governor, who was unprepared for making resistance, took it by assault, and put to the sword the commandant .and aH his Danes. 15. In a few days, the whole province declared in favor of Gustavus ; the peasants flocked in crowds to his standard ; and, from that, moment, the life of this young hero was an uninterrupted series of triumphs and success. At the head of the brave Dalecarlians, he undertook the most perilous enterprises of war ; and his efforts were invariably crowned with victory. Being engaged in besieging Stockholm, which he closely pressed,and the Danes sailing to the relief of the garrison, a sudden frost bound their vessels in ice at a dis- tance from the port. Gustavus formed the bold resolution of burning the hostile fleet, and marched at the head of his A SUiMMER'S MORN. 161) troops, who grasped (heir swords in one hand, and torches HI the oilier. They endeavored to scale the vessels? hut the Danes commenced a terrihle discharge o.l' cannon and mus- ketry, in spite, however, of their hrave resistance, -cveral ot tin ships were set on lire, and abandoned with prec ; titation by each of the contending parties. The darkness oi the night, the groans of tiie wounded, the shrieks of tl ;e who were perishing in the flames, and the crackling of Me ice, struck the Danes with terror and consternation. Many of their Is were destroyed; and, in all probability, they would not have saved a single one, had not an intervening thaw prevented a second attack, which Gustavus intended to have made the following day. 16. This victory, which was gained in the sight of the capital, induced the most lukewarm of his countrymen to join him. A diet having assembled for the purpose of elect- ing a sovereign, the speaker, in characterizing a patriotic king, drew the portrait of Gustavus, whose vigilance, valor, activi- ty, and prudence, would, he said, be able to oppose and re- sist all the future attempts of Denmark to subjugate and enslave the nation again, under pretence of renewing the union of Calmar. This harangue was received with uni- versal applause ; and the people, impelled by their zeal, an- ticipated the votes of the senators and deputies of the pro- vinces, and proclaimed Gustavus king of Sweden. The air was rent with the acclamations of the multitude, and he was styled the savior and defender of his country. Gustavus modestly endeavored to refuse the crown ; but suffered him- self to be prevailed on by the prayers and entreaties of the whole assembly, and was accordingly acknowledged king of Sweden and of the two Gothlands, by the united voices of the Senate, deputies, and people, who took an oath of fidelity to the new monarch. A SUMMER'S MORN. 1. SWEET the beams of rosy morning, Silent chasing gloom away ; When was Gustwus acknowledged king of Sweden in 170 JOAN OF ARC. Lovely tints the sky adorning, Harbingers of opening day ! See the king of day appearing Slow his progress and serene ; Soon I feel the influence cheering Of this grand and lovely scene ! 2. Lovely songsters join their voices, Harmony the grove pervades ; All in nature now rejoices, Light and joy succeed the shades. Stars withdraw, and man arises, To his labor cheerful goes ; Day's returning blessings prizes, And in praise his pleasure shows ! 3. May each morn, that in succession Adds new mercies ever flowing, Leave a strong and deep impression Of my debt, for ever growing ! Debt of love, ah ! how increasing ! Days and years fresh blessings bring ; But my praise shall flow unceasing, And my Maker's love I'll sing ! JOAN OF ARC. 1 THE throne of France being vacated by the death of Charles VI., his son Charles VII., and Henry VI., king of England, were competitors for the crown. The cause of the English monarch was bravely supported by the sword ; and final success seemed almost ready to decide in his favor. City after city had been successively besieged, and success- ively fell before the arms of the victorious pretender. The city of Orleans, an important post of communication between the northern and southern parts, was the principal obstacle to his progress. He resolved, therefore, to lay siege to this place. The attack and the defence were carried on with an Who were competitors for the crown of France, on the death of Charles VI. ? What city seemed to present the most formidable ob- stacle to the final success of Henry VI. ? JOAN OF ARC. 171 equal deoree of vigor ; but, after many signal instances of valor performed by tbe besiegers and the besieged, Charles was on the point of giving up the city for lost, and thought of retiring to make his last stand at Languedoc. 2. At this critical juncture, that celebrated historic -xl phe- nomenon, the Maid of Orleans, appeared ; and his affairs took a turn which the most sanguine imagination could never have expected. This singular character was a country girl, named Joan d' Arc, who lived at a village of Lorrain, in the humble station of servant at an inn. It is said, that in this situation she had learned to ride and manage a horse, by be- ing frequently accustomed to act as hostler. The enthusi- astic turn of her imagination, inflamed by daily accounts of the occurrences then taking place, inspired her with a ro- mantic desire of relieving the distresses of her country and of its youthful monarch. Her inexperienced mind continu- ally revolving these important subjects, she mistook the im- pulses of fancy for celestial inspirations, and imagined herself vested with a divine commission to restore her sovereign to his rights, and her country to its independence. 3. In this persuasion, and animated by an enthusiasm, which, inspiring intrepidity, caused her to overlook all dan- gers and difficulties, and cast off all reserve, she presented / herself before Baudricourt, governor of Vaucouleurs, and informed him of her divine mission. The governor, influ- enced either by superstition or policy, sent her immediately to Chinon, where the French king then resided. Being in- troduced to the king, she immediately offered, in the name of the great Creator of heaven and earth, to raise the siege of Orleans, and to reinstate him in his kingdom, by con- ducting him to Rheims, to be anointed and crowned. 4. The king and court, perceiving that she might be made an useful instrument in this crisis of difficulty and danger, resolved to adopt the illusion ; and an excellent plan was contrived to give it weight in the minds of the people. An assembly of divines examined her mission, and pronounced it supernatural ; and every story that craft could invent, or ignorance believe, was used to attest the reality of her inspi- What singular character came to the aid of Charles VII. when Or- leans was besieged ? What had been her situation, a to rank and employment ? What promise did ehe make to the French king ? Were her services accepted ? 172 JOAN OF ARC. ration. It was every where published, that when first intro* duced to the king, whom she had never before seen, she instantly knew him, although purposely divested of every mark that might distinguish him from the rest of the as- sembly ; and that she demanded, as the instrument of her future victories, a sword of a particular kind, which was kept in the church of St. Catharine de Fierbois, and which, though she had never seen it, she minutely described. It was universally asserted, and as universally believed, that heaven had declared in favor of Charles, and laid bare its outstretched* arm to take vengeance of his enemies. 5. The minds of men being thus prepared, the maid was mounted on horseback, arrayed in all the habiliments of war, and shown to the people, who received her with the loudest acclamations. The English at first affected to treat this farce with derision ; but their imagination was secretly struck ; and superstition, ingrafted on ignorance, is irresisti- ble. Feeling their courage abated, they conceived them- selves to be under the influence of divine vengeance ; and a general consternation took place among those troops, which, before this event, were elated with victory, and fearless of danger. The maid, at the head of a convoy, arrayed in mar- tial habiliments, and displaying a consecrated standard, en- tered Orleans, arid was received as a celestial deliverer. But the count de Dunois, who commanded in the place, sensible of the difficulty of carrying on this farce, as well as of its importance, and of the dangerous consequences of any event that might detect its fallacy, did not deviate from the regular rules of war, nor suffer his mode of operations to be directed by enthusiasm. 6. He represented to her, that when heaven favors a cause, the divine will requires that the best human means should be used, to correspond with celestial aid. Thus, while she seemed to conduct every thing, she acted under his direction ; and, by his instruction, she defeated the English in several desperate sallies, drove them from their intrenchments, and compelled them to raise the siege. This event gave validity to her pretensions, and confirmed the general opinion of her What method did the count de Dunois take with the Maid of Or- ? JOAN OF ARC 173 divine mission. The French were more elated, and the English more dismayed. 7. The raising of the siege of Orleans was one part of her promise to Charles ; the other, which was his coronation at Rheims, yet remained to be performed, and appeared a work of some difficulty. Rheims was in a distant part of the kingdom, -uid in the hands of a victorious enemy. The whole country through which it was necessary to pass, was occupied by the English, who rilled all the fortified places with garrisons. It was, however, deemed expedient to main- tain the belief of something supernatural in those events. Charles, therefore, resolved to avail himself of the consterna- tion of the enemy, and to follow his prophetic conductress He accordingly began his march towards Rheims, at the head of twelve thousand men. The English troops were every where petrified with terror ; every city and fortress surren- dered without resistance. Rheims opened its gates, and he was anointed and crowned, A. D. 1430, amidst the loudest acclamations. 8. The Maid of Orleans now declared that her mission was concluded ; but by the persuasions of the king, she con- sented to remain in his service. This determination, how- ever, proved fatal to the heroine. Having imprudently thrown herself into Compeigne, then besieged by the Eng- lish, she was taken prisoner in making a sortie. Policy, su- perstition, and vengeance, concurred in procuring her de- struction. The duke of Bedford was desirous of dispelling an illusion which converted the English into cowards, and the French into heroes. The measures which he took for that purpose have disgraced his name in the eyes of an en- lightened posterity, but they were perfectly in unison with the superstitious spirit of that age. By his order, she was tried by an ecclesiastical court, on charges of impiety, here- sy, and sorcery. Her ignorant or iniquitous judges found her guilty of all these crimes ; and this enthusiastic, but ad What was thought of the Maid of Orleans by the French < What was thought of her by the English ? Did she accomplish her promise to the king ? What induced her to remain in the king's service, after finishing her mission, as she termed it ? What was the con- cequence of her continuing in it ? Of what crimes was she accused by the English ? 16* 174 JOAN OF ARC. mirable patriot and heroine, whose life and conduct had been irreproachable, was consigned to the flames. 9. The revolution produced by the Maid of Orleans is perhaps the most singular that has occurred in any age or country, and her character and pretensions have been a sub- ject of dispute among historians and .divines. While the French writers affirmed that she was commissioned of God, and the English considered her as an agent of the devil, na- tional prejudice, united with superstition, directed their opinion. An accurate knowledge of the human mind, and of political history, will solve the problem, without having recourse to any thing of a miraculous nature. Some have supposed that the whole affair originated in the court, and that Joan d j Arc was from the very first instructed in the part that, she was to act. Pope Pius II. seems to have in- clined to this opinion. 10. But from her examination before the judges, in which she declares that she had frequently heard voices, and been favored with visits by St. Catharine and St. Margaret, it ap- pears that she was a deranged visionary, that the whole affair had originated from her own disordered imagination, and that the king and court considered her as an instrument that might be of use, and could be of no prejudice, in their situation, which already appeared desperate, availed them- selves of the illusion, and seconded it by imposture. On these principles, this extraordinary affair, the discussion of which has employed so many pens, is easily explained ; and sound reason, untirictured with superstition, will readily con- clude, that the celebrated Maid of Orleans was neither saint nor sorcerer, but a visionary enthusiast. The whole transac- tion was nothing more than a seasonable and successful con- currence of enthusiasm in the maid, of political craft in the court, and of superstitious credulity in the people, all which are far from being miraculous circumstances. 11. After the execution of the unfortunate maid, the illu- sion vanished ; but, as if heaven had resolved to mark with disapprobation this act of inhuman barbarity, the affairs of the English grew every day more unsuccessful. The duke What was done with the Maid of Orleans ? What opinion did pope Pius and some others entertain concerning hex ? On what principle can the whole of this extraordinary affair be accounted for ? FIRST LANDING OF COLUMBUS. DISCOVER Y OF AMERICA. m of Burglmdy deserted their interests ; the duke of Bedford soon after died ; and the French were every where victorious. Paris surrendered to their arms on Low Sunday, 14W>, after having been fourteen years in the possession of the. English Normandy and (Juienne, with Bordeaux, its capital, were con- quered, and the English for ever expelled from France, with the single exception of Calais ; which they still retained, as a solitary monument of their former greatness on the con- tinent. DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. 1. IT has been believed by many, that America was not unknown to the ancients ; and "from certain passages in the works of some of the writers of antiquity, as well as coinci- dences in the languages and customs of some nations of the old and new continent, plausible reasons have been advanc- ed in favor of the theory. Whatever knowledge, however, the inhabitants of Europe possessed of America, no traces of it existed at the period of the revival of letters ; it was generally supposed that the Canaries, or Fortunate Islands, formed the western boundary of their world. For the cor- rection of this error, and the discovery of a new continent, mankind are indebted to the genius and enterprise of Chris- topher Colon, a native of Genoa, better known to us by the name of Christopher Columbus. From a long and close ap- plication to the study of geography, this great man had ob- tained a knowledge of the true figure of the earth, far be- yond what wns common to the age in which he lived. Ano- ther continent, he conceived, necessarily existed, to complete the balance of the terraqueous globe ; but he erroneously conceived it to be connected with that of India. This error arose from the construction of the maps of that period, which represented the oriental countries of Asia as stretching vastly further to the east, than actual observation has proved tb-'m to extend. When did Paris surrender tc the French arms ? How long wr i it m the hands of the English ? Who discovered America ? Whaf led Columbus to suppose there was another continent ? 176 DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. 2. Having fully satisfied himself with the theoretical truth of his system, his adventurous spirit made him eager to verify it by experiment. For this purpose he applied to the senate of Genoa, developing his views, and representing the advan- tages which would accrue to the republic from the possession of a new route to the great source of opulence. The Geno- ese, however, treated the idea as absurd and chimerical, and rejected the proposal with contempt. Although disappointed in this first attempt, Columbus was not discouraged. Through his brother Bartholomew, he applied to Henry VII. of Eng- land ; but the cautious prudence of that monarch deprived him of the honor of patronising a man whose friendship would have immortalized him. The next attempt of Colum- bus was at the Portuguese court, which had in that age great- ly distinguished itself by favoring the spirit of discovery along the African coast. Here he met with an additional mortification, from an attempt to anticipate him in the en- terprise, which, however, proved abortive at an early period. As a last resource, he now laid his scheme before the court of Spain. 3. After eight years of anxious solicitation and contempt- uous neglect, he obtained a gleam of royal favor on his bold and original project. The interest of queen Isabella pro- cured him three small vessels, with which he set sail from the port of Palos, in Andalusia, on the 3d of August, 1492. He steered directly for the Canaries, whence after having refitted as well as he could his crazy and ill-appoint- ed flotilla, he again sailed on the 6th of September, keeping a due western course over an unknown ocean. Several days passed without a sight of land ; and the anxieties of the sailors, arising from this circumstance, were heightened by the variation of the compass, then first perceived. An open mutiny took place, which required all the courage and ad- dress of the great navigator to quell. They pursued their course ; but when thirty days had elasped without any indica- tion of an approach to land, both officers and men joined in a second revolt. Columbus was forced partially to give way to their remonstrances. He consented to return, if, after To whom did Columbus apply for aid in prosecuting his inten- tions ? Who finally aided him ? What difficultiea did he have to en- counter, after he left the Canaries ? . DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. 177 proceeding three days longer, nothing appeared to confirm his expectations. 4. With these assurances, they again proceeded, and about midnight, on the llth of October, Columbus, who was stand- ing on the fore-castle, discovered a light ahead. Morning displayed the joyful sight of land ; and the sailors were now as ardent in their expression of repentance and admiration, as they had before been insolent and ungovernable. The island of St. Salvador, one of the Bahamas, was the first part of America trodden by the feet of Europeans. From the rude poverty of the inhabitants, Columbus soon perceived that he was still at a distance from the shores of India. The fertile island of St. Domingo was next discovered ; and from some specimens of gold, Columbus began to entertain bright- er hopes. Here he left some of his men to form a colony ; and having touched at some of the other West India islands, among which were Cuba and Hispaniola, he returned to Spain. On his arrival, he immediately proceeded to court, where he was received with admiration and respect. The glory and benefit which promised to result from the disco- very, rendered the government eager to forward his design. A fleet of seventeen sail was prepared ; and Columbus, who was now appointed viceroy of all the countries he should discover, departed on his second voyage, accompanied by many persons of rank and distinction. During the progress of the voyage, he discovered the islands of Dominica, Mari- galante, Guadaloupe, Montserat, Antigua. Porto Rico, and Jamaica. 5. The success of this great man did not fail to excite envy and intrigue against him at the court of Spain. An officer was sent to act as a spy over his actions ; and Columbus soon found it necessary to return to Europe, for the purpose of defeating the machinations of his enemies. After great difficulty, he obtained leave to set out on a third expedition in 1498. Sailing south from Spain as far as the equator, he then directed his course to the west, and steered with the trade winds across the Atlantic. At the end of seventeen days the island of Trinidad was discovered, arid on the 1st of August he reached the mouth of the great river Orinoko. When did Columbus discover land ? What Island did he first dis- cover ? What discoveries did he make in the third voyage ? J78 THE TIMES OF OLD. From the magnitude of this stream he concluded that he had discovered the continent, and the continuance of land to the west confirmed the belief. He then coasted along westward to Cape Vela, from which he crossed over to Hispaniola. The new glory which Columbus had now acquired excited fresh intrigues against him, which prevailed so far, that he was superseded in his government, and sent home in irons. He justified himself, however, to the court, and in 1502 was allowed to ^ 3part on a fourth voyage, in the course of which he discover-^ d the harbor of Porto Bello, and a considerable part of the continent. He then returned to Europe, and died ?u Valladolid, in the year 1506, in the 59th year of his age. 6. A spirit of discovery was now universally excited. In 1499, Amerigo Vespucci, a Florentine, and a man of science and genius, sailed with a small squadron to the new world, but made but very little addition to the former discoveries. He however published on his return the first description of the new countries that had appeared ; and the injustice of mankind has given his name to the whole continent, an honor to which Columbus was so much more justly entitled. In the year 1500, the coast of Brazil was accidentally discover- ed by Alvarez de Cabral, the .Portuguese admiral, in conse- quence of having been driven too far to the west on a voyage round the Cape of Good Hope. The idea entertained ori- ginally 'by 'Columbus, that America was a part qf the conti- nent of Asia, was generally received until 1513, when the. Pa- cific Ocean being descried from the mountains of the isth- mus of Darien, this chimera began to vanish. THE TIMES OF OLD. , WHO needs a teacher to admonish him Thai flesh is grass ? That earthly things are mist ? What are our joys but dreams ? And what our hopes But goodly shadows in the summer -cloud ? Under what circumstances did Columbus return to Spain from hia third voyage ? How many voyages of discovery did he make ? When did he die, and at what age P-r-Why is the western continent calleH America ? What should it have been called ? THE TIMES OF OLD. 179 There's not a wind that Mows, but bears with it Some rainbow promise Not a moment flies But puts its sickle in the fields of life, And mows its thousands, witli their joys and cares. 'Tis but as yesterday, since on yon stars, Which now I view, the Chaldee shepherd* gaz'd, In his in id-watch, observant, and disposed The twinkling hosts, as fancy gave them shape. Yet in the interim, what mighty shocks Have buffeted mankind whole nations raz'd Cities made desolate the polish'd sunk To barbarism, and once barbaric states Swaying the wand of science and of arts; Illustrious deeds and memorable names Blotted from record, and upon the tongue Of grey tradition voluble no more. Where are the heroes of the ages past ; Where the brave chieftains where the mighty ones Who flourished in the infancy of days ? All to the grave gone down ! On their falPn fame Exultant, mocking at the pride of man, Sits grim For gctf ulness. The warrior's arm Lies nerveless on the pillow of its shame ; Hush'd is his stormy voice, and quench'd the blaze Of his red eye-ball. Yesterday his name Was mighty on the earth To-day 'tis what ? The meteor of the night of distant years, That flash'd unnotic'd, save by wrinkled eld, Musing at midnight upon prophecies, Who at her lonely lattice saw the gleam Point to the mist-pois'd shroud, then quietly Clos'd her pale lips, and lock'd the secret up Safe in the charnel's treasures. O how weak Is mortal man ! How trifling how confin'd His scope of vision ! Puff'd with confidence, His phrase grows big with immortality ; And lie, poor insectxrf a summer's day, Dreams of eternal honors to his name ; * Alluding to the first astronomical observations, made by the Chaldean shepherds. 180 THE TIMES OF OLD Of endless glory, and perennial bays. He idly reasons of eternity, As of the train of ages, when, alas ! Ten thousand thousand of his centuries Are, in comparison, a little point. Too trivial for account. O it is strange, 'Tis passing strange, to mark his fallacies; Behold him proudly view some pompous pile, Whose high dome swells to emulate the skies, And smile and say, my name shall live with this 'Till Time shall be no more ; while at his feet, Yea, at his very feet, ihe crumbling dust Of the fall'n fabric of the other day Preaches the solemn lesson. He should know, That time must conquer. That the loudest blast That ever fill'd Renown's obstrep'rous trump, Fades in the lapse of ages, and expires. Who lies inhumVl in the terrific gloom Of the gigantic pyramid 1 Or who Rear'd its huge wall 7 Oblivion laughs and says, The prey is mine. They sleep, and never more Their names shall strike upon the ear of man, Their mem'ry burst its fetters. Where is Rome ? She lives but in the tale of other times ; Her proud pavilions are the hermits' home. And her long colonnades, her public walks, Now faintly echo to the pilgrim's feet, Who comes to muse in solitude, and trace, Through the rank moss reveal'd, her honor'd dust. But not to Rome alone has fate confm'd The doom of ruin ; cities numberless, Tyre, Sidon, Carthage, Babylon, and Troy, Arid rich Phoenicia they are blotted out, Half-raz'd from memory ; and their very name And being, in dispute ! CAPTURE OF MONTEZUMA. 181 CAPTURE OF MONTEZUMA. 1. IN 1518, the governor of Cuba, Don Velasques, pro- jected an expedition against Mexico ; and desirous to arro- gate to himself the glory and advantages of the conquest, he conferred the command on Hernando Cortez, a bold ad- venturer, whose abilities were equal to any undertaking, and whose fortune and rank were not such as seemed calculated to inspire him with any higher ideas than of acting in per- fect subordination to his employer. The event, however, proved contrary to the expectation of Velasques. Before the expedition sailed from Cuba, he began to suspect the aspiring ambition of Cortez, and resolved to deprive him of the com- mand. But Cortez, apprised of his design, and perfectly secure of the attachment of his followers, immediately set sail with eleven small vessels, of which the largest was only 100 tons burden three were of 70 or 80 ; and the others were only small open barks. His whole force consisted only of G17 soldiers and seamen, all volunteers, and men of the 'most daring resolution. ~. With this small force he undertook the conquest of a vast empire. Having landed on the continent, he laid the foundation of the town of Vera Cruz, and built a fortress sufficiently strong to resist the attacks of an Indian army. At his first arrival, he received a message from JMon- tczuma, the Mexican emperor, requiring to know his inten- tions in visiting his country. Cortez announced himself as ambassador from the king of Spain, the most powerful mo- narch of the ea?t ; and declaring himself entrusted with such proposals as ho could impart only to the emperor in person, requested to be immediately conducted to the en pita 1. The .lean officers hesitated at this request, which they kus-u a-.uM bo extremely embarrassing to Montezuina, whose niimi h:i-.l 'K'convj harassed with alarming apprehensions our --M.ri lie hud heard of the landing of the Spaniards on his coast. Who projected the expedition against Mexico ? When was it . ; To \vlioin was the command of it given ? With what force did Cor- tez attempt the conquest of Mexico ? Of what town did lie lay the foundation on landing ? Who was the emperor of Mexico at Uii time? 182 CAPTURE OF MONTEZUMA. 3. During this interview, some painters, in the train of the Mexican officers, were employed in sketching, in their rude manner, the figures of the ships, the horses, the artillery, the soldiers, and whatever attracted their attention. Cortez per- ceiving this, and being informed that the pictures were de- signed to be presented to Montezuma, in order to give him a just idea of those strange and wonderful objects, resolved to render the representation as striking as possible, by exhi- biting such a spectacle as might give both them and their mo- narch an awful impression of the irresistible force of his arms. The trumpets, by his order, sounded an alarm ; the troops in a moment formed in order of battle ; both cavalry and infantry performed their martial exercises and evolu- tions ; and the artillery thundering in repeated discharges, being pointed against a thick forest adjoining to the camp, made dreadful havoc among the trees. The Mexicans were struck with that amazement, which a spectacle so novel, so extraordinary, so terrible, and so much above their compre- hension, might be expected to excite. Reports and repre- sentations of all these things were sent to Montezuma, who, as well as his subjects, conceived that the Spaniards were more than human beings, an opinion which Cortez took every opportunity of confirming and impressing on the minds of the Mexicans. 4. Montezuma afterwards sent many ambassadors to the Spanish camp with rich presents, expressing the greatest friendship for Cortez and the sovereign of Castile ; but con- stantly requesting him to depart from his dominions. This wa& the purport of every message from the Mexican mo- narch. Cortez, however, continuing to advance, the request was changed into a command ; Montezuma absolutely for- bade him to approach the capital, and required his immediate departure from the country. The Spanish genera-1, however, determined to proceed to Mexico, and concluded an alliance with several of the Mexican chiefs, who being weary with Montezuma's tyranny, took this opportunity of revolting against his government. Cortez soon perceived, that al- though the Mexican empire was extensive, populous, and powerful, it was very far from being firmly consolidated, a What method did Cortez take to impress the Mexican officers with the power of the Spaniards ? What method did Montezuma adopt to conciliate Cortez ? CAPTURE OF MONTEZUMA. 1S3 circumstance which inspired him with new hopes of effect ing its subjugation. 5. Previous to the commencement of his march towards Mexico, Cortez represented to his followers, that it would be the highest degree of folly to think of* returning to poverty and disgrace, after having spent their whole fortunes in the equipment of the expedition ; that they must absolutely re- solve either to conquer or perish ; that the ships were so much damaged, as to be unfit for service ; and that their small force would derive a very considerable accession of strength from the junction of 100 men necessarily left with the fleet. By these arguments, he convinced them of the neces- sity of fixing their hopes on what lay before them, without ever looking back, or suffering the idea of a retreat to enter their minds. With the consent of the whole army, the ves- sels were stripped of their sails, rigging, iron-work, and other articles, which might become usefal, and afterwards broken in pieces. t( Thus, by an effort of magnanimity, to which," says Dr. Robertson, " there is nothing parallel in history, 500 men voluntarily consented to be shut up in a hostile country, filled with powerful and unknown nations ; and having pre- cluded every means of escape, left themselves without any resource but their own valor and perseverance." 6. Cortez landed in Mexico on the 2d of April, 1518 ; and on the 16th of August, he began his march towards the metropolis, with 500 foot, 15 horse, and 6 field pieces. The rest of his men were left to garrison Che fort of Vera Cruz. In his progress, he was interrupted by a war with the Ilasca- lans, a numerous and warlike people, whose impetuous valor, however, was obliged to yield to the superiority of European weapons and tactics. The Ilascalans, who were inveterate enemies to the Mexicans, having experienced the valor of the Spaniards, whom they regarded as invincible, concluded with them a treaty of peace, and afterwards of alliance ; and contributed in no small degree to the success of their enter- prise. Cortez, with his Spaniards, accompanied with 6000 of his new allies, now advanced towards Mexico. They were met, in different parts of their journey, by messengers from Montezuma, bearing rich presents, and sometimes in- To what desperate measure did Cortez and the Spaniards resori before marching for Mexico ? 17t 184 CAPTURE OF MONTEZUMA- viting them to proceed, but at others requesting them to re- tire. No measures were taken to oppose his progress ; and such was the embarrassment of the Mexican monarch, that the Spaniards were already at the gates of his capital before it was determined whether to receive them as friends or ene- mies. 7. Mexico, seated on islands near the western side of the lake, was inaccessible except by three causeways, extending over the shallow waters. The Spaniards being arrived on the borders of the lake, advanced along the causeway with great circumspection ; and on their near approach to the city, they were met by about 1000 persons clothed in mantles of fine cotton, and adorned with plumes. These announced the approach of Montezuma, and were followed by about 200 others in an uniform dress, adorned also with plumes, and marching in solemn silence. Next appeared a company of a higher rank, in showy apparel ; and in the midst of them was Montezuma, in a chair or litter, richly ornamented with gold, arid feathers of various colors, and carried on the shoulders of four of his principal officers, while others sup- ported a canopy over his head. Thus the Mexican monarch, surrounded with barbaric pomp, introduced into his capital the subverter of his throne. He conducted the Spaniards into the city, assigned them quarters in a large building en- compassed with a stone wall, with towers at proper distances, and containing courts and apartments sufficiently spacious for their accommodation, and that of their allies. Here Cortez planted the artillery, posted sentinels, and ordered his troops to preserve the same strictness of discipline as if they had been encamped in the face of an enemy. 8. During some time the greatest harmony subsisted be- tween the Spaniards and Mexicans ; and Montezuma made presents of such value, not only to Cortez and his officers, but also to his private men, as demonstrated the opulence of his kingdom. The Spaniards, however, soon began to re- flect on their situation, shut up in Mexico, and surrounded by the waters of its lake. And the Ilascalans had earnestly dissuaded Cortez from venturing to enter a city of so pecu- liar a situation as Mexico, where he. might be shut up as in How if Mexico situated ? CAPTURE OF MONTEZUMA. 18* a snare, out of which it would be impossible to escape. These allies had also assured him that the Mexican priests had, in the name of the gods, counselled their sovereign to admit the Spaniards into his capital, where ho miijht with perfect security cut them oft' at one blow. The mind of Cortcz, howwer, was equal to his trying situation, and lie formed a plan no less extraordinary than daring. lie resolv- ed to seize Montezuma in his palace, and to carry him pri- soner to the Spanish quarters. From the veneration of the Mexicans for the person of their monarch, and from their implicit obedience to his will, he hoped, by having Montezu- ma in his power, to have the supreme direction of affairs ; or at least, by having so sacred a pledge in his hands, he made no doubt of being secure from aggression. 9. Before Cortez entered Mexico, an engagement had taken place near Vera Cruz between the Mexicans and a detachment of the Spanish garrison of that place ; and al- though the Spaniards were victorious, one of them happened to be taken prisoner. This unfortunate captive was imme- diately beheaded, and his head, after being carried in triumph to different cities, in order to convince the people that their invaders were not immortal, was at last sent to Mexico. Al- though Cortez had received intelligence of this affair in hi route, it had not deterred him from entering the city ; but, reflecting on his precarious situation, he resolved to make it a pretext for seizing the emperor. At his usual hour of vi- siting Montezuma, he went to the palace, accompanied by five of his principal officers, and as many trusty soldiers. Thirty chosen men followed after, not in order, but sauntering at intervals, as if they had no other object than curiosity. Small parties were posted at proper intervals between the Spanish quarters and the court, and the rest of the troops were under arms ready to sally out on the first alarm. 10. Cortez, with his attendants, being admitted as usual, he reproached the monarch with being the author of the vio- lent assault made on the Spaniards near Vera Cruz, by one of his officers. Montezuma, confounded at this unexpected reproach, asserted his innocence : and as a proof, gave on'ers to bring the officer and his accomplices prisoners to Mexico. Cortez professed himself convinced of Montazuma's inno- cence, but told him, that to produce the same conviction on the minds of his followers, it was necessary that he should ISfi CAPTURE OF MONTEZUMA. exhibit a proof of his confidence and attachment, by remov- ing from his palace, and taking up his residence in the Spanish quarters, where he should be honored as became a great monarch. Montezuma remonstrated against the strange proposal. His remonstrances, however, were vain he saw that Cortez was determined, and he found himself under the necessity of compliance. He was therefore carried in silent and sorrowful pomp to the Spanish quarters ; but when it was known that the strangers were carrying away the emperor, the people broke out in the wildest transports of rage, and threatened the Spaniards with immediate de- struction. But as soon as Montezuma waved his hand, and declared that it was an act of his own choice, the multitude, accustomed to revere every intimation of the sovereign's pleasure, quietly dispersed. 11. Cortez having the emperor in his power, now govern- ed the empire in his name ; and Montezuma was only the organ of his will, although he was attended as usual by his ministers, and the external aspect of the government under- went no alteration. The unfortunate monarch, however, was obliged to acknowledge himself a vassal to the king of Spain, and to accompany his professions of fealty and hom- age by a magnificent present to his new sovereign. His sub- jects, imitating his example, brought in liberal contributions. All the gold and silver, however, which the Spaniards had acquired since their entrance into Mexico, being now col- lected and melted down, amounted to no more than 600,000 pesos, exclusive of jewels and other ornaments, which were preserved on account of their curious workmanship. On being divided, a fifth part was set aside as a tax due to the king ; another fifth was allotted to Cortez as command- er-iri-chief ; the other officers received their shares in pro- portion to their rank ; and when the expenses of the expedi- tion were deducted, the share of a private man amounted to a hundred pesos, a sum much below their expectation. 12. In the mean time, Qualpopoca, the Mexican general, who commanded in the engagement mentioned in section 9th, together with his son, and five of the principal officers that had served under him, were brought prisoners to the capital. How did Cortez get possession of the person of Montezuma ? What was the amount of the presents received by the Spaniards ? Who was Qualpopoca ? CAPTURE OF MONTEZUMA. 187 by the order of Montezuma, and given up to Cortez ; who after undergoing the form of trial by a Spanish court mar- tial, and though they acted as brave and loyal subjects in obeying the orders of their sovereign, in opposing the inva- ders of their country, they were condemned to be burnt alive. The unhappy victims were instantly led forth. The pile on which they were laid was composed of the weapons collected in the royal magazine for the public defence. An innumerable multitude of Mexicans beheld, in silent asto- nishment, this fresh insult offered to the majesty of their em- pire an officer of distinction committed to the flames, by the authority of strangers, for having done what he owed in duty to his sovereign ; and the arms provided by their ances- tors for avenging such wrongs, consumed before their eyes. 13. Cortez believing, notwithstanding his profession to the contrary already mentioned, that Qualpopoca would not have ventured to act without orders from his master, was not satisfied with the punishment of the instrument while the author escaped with impunity. Just before Qualpopoca was led out to suffer, Cortez entered the apartment of Montezu- ma, followed by some of his officers, and a soldier carrying a pair of fetters ; and approaching the monarch with a stern countenance, told him that the persons who were now going to suffer, had charged him as the cause of the outrage that was committed ; and that it was necessary that he likewise should make atonement for that guilt ; without waiting for a reply, he commanded his soldiers to put the fetters on his legs -the orders were instantly obeyed. The monarch, who had been accustomed to have his person acknowledged as sacred and inviolable, considering this profanation of it as a prelude to his death, broke out into loud lamentations and complaints. His attendants fell at his feet, and bathed them with their tears, bearing up the fetters in their hands with officious tenderness, to lighten their pressure. When Cortez returned from the execution, he appeared with a cheerful countenance ; and ordered the fetters to be taken off. As Montczuma's spirits had sunk with unmanly dejection, they now rose to indecent exultation ; and he passed at once from the anguish of despair to transports of joy and fondness to- What was done with Qualpopoca ? What indignity was offered to Monteznma at the same time ? JS3 CONQUEST OF MEXICO. wards his deliverers. The spirits of Montezuma were now subdued ; and Cortez availed himself to the utmost of the power he had acquired over him. 9 CONQUEST OF MEXICO. . 1. CORTEZ, although master of the Mexican capital, and of the person of the monarch, was now threatened with new danger. Velasques hearing of his success, and enraged at seeing his own authority rejected, fitted out from Cuba an armament of 18 vessels, having 80 cavalry, 800 infantry, and 1 2 pieces of cannon, under the command of Pamphilo de Nar- vaez, who had orders to seize Cortez and his principal offi- cers, to send them to him in irons, and to complete the con- quest. Cortez now saw himself in a more difficult situation than ever, being under the necessity of taking the field, not against unskilful Indians, but against an army, in courage and discipline equal to his own. in numbers far superior, and commanded by an officer of distinguished bravery. Cortez, aware of the dangers which presented themselves on all 1 sides, endeavored to accommodate matters with Narvaez ; who treated his overtures with contempt, holding it impossi- ble that Cortez should be able to resist his power. Presump- tion always leads to mischievous consequences ; in the pre- sent instance, it gave Cortez a complete victory over his ene- mies. Narvaez was wounded, made prisoner, and thrown into fetters ; his army capitulated, and quietly submitted to their conquerors. 2. Cortez treated the vanquished in the most generous manner, giving them their choice, either of entering into his service, or of returning to Cuba. Most of them chose the former; and Cortez, when he least expected such fortune, saw no less than 1000 Spaniards arranged under iiis banner. With this reinforcement he marched back to Mexico, where his presence was extremely necessary. After so much inde- cision, the Mexicans now appeared to have resolved on the , . With what new dangers was Cortez threatened, after once being in possession of Mo&tezuma and Mexico ? How did he treat, the Spa- niards that he conquel 3d ? How many Spaniards had Cortez under hit banner, on the accession of the army of Narvaez ? CONQUEST OF MEXICO. 1SU extermination of their enemies. They took their arms, and attacked the Spanish quarters in such formidable numbers, and with such undaunted courage, that although the artillery pointed against their tumultuous crowds swept down multi- tudes at every discharge, the impetuosity of the attack did not abate. Fresh bodies of men incessantly rushed forward to occupy the places of the slain, and all the valor of the Spaniards was barely sufficient to prevent them from forcing their way into the fortifications. 3. Cortcz was astonished at the desperate ferocity of a people, who seemed at first to submit so patiently to a fo- reign yoke. He made from the quarters two desperate sallies ; but although numbers of the Mexicans fell, and part of the city was burned, he gained no permanent advantage ; and besides being wounded himself, lost twelve of his soldiers, a serious affair at that time, when, in his circumstances, the life of a Spaniard was so valuable. No resource was now left but to make use of the influence of the captive emperor, in order to quell the insurrection. Montezuma was brought, in regal pomp, to the battlement, and was compelled to ad- dress the people. But their fury rose above all restraint. Vol- leys of arrows and stones poured in upon the ramparts, and the unfortunate prince being wounded in the head by a st6ne, fell to the ground. The Mexicans, as soon as they saw their emperor fall, were struck with sudden remorse, and fled in precipitation and horror, as if they supposed themselves pur- sued by the vengeance of heaven for their crime. Monte- zuma was carried by the Spaniards to his apartments ; but be- ing now become weary of life, he tore the bandages from his wounds ; and obstinately refusing to take any nourishment, expired in a few days. 4. The death of Montezuma loosed the Mexicans from the restraints which their veneration for his person and dig- nity had imposed on their actions. A war of extermination was the immediate consequence ; and after various attacks, in which the Mexicans showed the most daring resolution, and had even at one time seized Cortez, and were near car- rying him off, the Spaniards found it necessary to retreat from a situation, in which they must be finally overwhelmed What wai the end of Montozuma ? 1DO CONQUEST OF MEXICO. by the immense multitudes and incessant attacks of their enemies. This measure, however, was not effected without extreme difficulty. The Mexicans, astonished at the repeat- ed efforts of Spanish valor, had now changed their system of hostility ; and instead of incessant attacks, had adopted the measure of breaking the causeways, and barricading the streets, in order to cut off all communications between the Spaniards and the country. 5 A retreat from Mexico, however, being now a measure of absolute necessity, it was effected in the night, but not without great loss ; for the Mexicans, from whom their pre- parations could not be concealed, had not only broken the bridges, and made breaches in the causeways, but attacked them on all sides from the lake. All Mexico was in arms, and the lake was covered with canoes. The Spaniards, crowded together on the narrow causeway, were hemmed in on every side, and, wearied with slaughter, were unable to bear up against the weight of the torrent that poured in upon them ; the confusion was universal ; and the tremen- dous sounds of the warlike instruments of the Mexicans, with the shouts of their barbarian multitudes, gave additional hor- ror to the scene. Cortez, with part of his soldiers, broke through the enemy ; but numbers, overwhelmed by the mul- titudes of aggressors, were either killed on the causeway, or perished in the lake ; while others, whom the Mexicans had taken alive, were dragged away in triumph to be sacrificed to the god of war. 6. In this fatal retreat, not less than half of the Spaniards, with above 2000 Ilascalans, were killed ; and all the artillery, ammunition, and baggage, were completely lost. The whole empire was now in arms ; and Cortez, having reviewed his shattered battalions, continued his retreat towards Ilascala, the only place where he could hope for a friendly reception. He met with no opposition till he reached the valley of Otum- ba, where the whole force of the Mexicans was concentrated. When the Spaniards had reached the summit of an emi- nence, they saw the spacious valley through which they were obliged to pass, covered with an army that extended as far as the eye could reach, and appeared to be innumerable. At the sight of this immense multitude, the Spaniards were as- tonished, and even the boldest were inclined to despair. 7 But Cortez, without allowing time for their fears to CONQUEST OF MEXICO. 191 gain strength from reflection, briefly reminded them that no alternative remained but to conquer or die, and instantly led them to the charge. The Mexicans waited their approach with inflexible firmness ; and notwithstanding the superiority of European discipline and arms, the Spaniards, though cessful in every attack, were ready to sink under the repeat- ed efforts of innumerable multitudes. But Cortez observing the great standard of the empire, which was carried before the Mexican general, and recollepting to have heard that on its fate the issue of every battle depended, put himself at the head of a few of his bravest officers, and pushed forward with an impetuosity that bore down all before it to the place where he saw it displayed. Cortez having brought the Mexi- can general to the ground with a stroke of his lance, tire select body of his guards was broken, and the imperial stand- ard was taken. The moment that the standard disappeared, the Mexicans were struck with an universal panic, and fled with precipitation. 8. The day after the battle of Otumba, the Spaniards reached the territories of the Ilascalans, their allies, who be- ing implacable enemies to the Mexican name, continued faithful to Cortez in this reverse of his fortune. Here he had an interval of rest and tranquillity, that was extremely neces- sary for curing the wounded, and for recruiting the strength of his soldiers, exhausted by a long series of hardships and fatigues. During this suspension of military operations, Cor- tez recruited his battalions with 180 adventurers newly arriv- ed from Spain and the islands, and obtained possession of some artillery, and ammunition, which had been sent by Velasques for the use of the army of Narvaez, and had been seized by the officers, whom Cortez had left in command at Vera Cri z. The Spanish general, having received these re- inforcements, resolved to re-commence the war, and attempt the reduction of Mexico. But as he knew this to be imprac- ticable, unless he could secure the command of the lake, he gave orders to prepare, in the mountains of Ilascala, materi- als for constructing twelve brigancines, which were to be car- How did Cortes succeed in dispersing the Mexicans at the valley of Otumba ? What method did Cortc/ adopt, when at Ilascala, to se- cure the command of tlio lake ? 18 103 CONQUEST OF MEXICO. riecl thither in pieces, ready to be put together and launched whoii their service should be found necessary. 9. On the 28th of December, 1520, Cortez began his se- cond march toward Mexico, at the head of 550 Spanish foot, and 40 horse, with 10,000 Ilascalans, and a train of nine field pieces. The Mexicans, however, were not unprepared for his reception. On tlae death of Montezuma, their nobili- ty, in whom the right, of electing the emperor appears to have been vested, had raised his brother Quetlavaca to the throne. This prince had displayed his courage and abilities in direct- ing those attacks that obliged the Spaniards to retreat from his capita'l ; and he took the most prudent and rigorous mea- sures for preventing their return ; but while he was arrang- ing his plans of defence, with an unusual degree of foresight, he died of the small-pox, a disorder unknown in America until it was introduced by the P^uropeans. In his stead the Mexicans elected Guatimozin, nephew and son-in-law of Montezuma, a young prince of distinguished reputation for abilities and valor. 1 0. The brigantines were now put together and launched, aud every preparation was made for the siege. Operations were speedily commenced, and the Mexicans displayed valor hardly inferior to that with which the Spaniards attacked them. The siege was long, and attended with heavy loss on both sides. On land, on water, by night and by day, one furious conflict continually succeeded to another. At length it was resolved to make one desperate attack, and Cortez, with a portion of his brave comrades, pushed forward with an impetuosity that bore down all opposition, and con- tinuing to gain ground, forced their way into the city. Gua- timozin, seeing the Spaniards within his capital, gave the signal, and the priests in the principal temple struck the great drum consecrated to the god of war. No sooner did the Mexicans hear the doleful solemn sound, calculated to inspire them with a contempt of death and an enthusiastic ardor, than they rushed on the enemy with frantic rage. 11. The Spaniards, unable to resist men, urged on no less by religious fury than hope of success, were obliged to Who was elected successor to Montezuma ? And who to Quetla- vaca? CONQUEST OF MEXICO. 108 retire with the greatest precipitation ; and in the scene of confusion which ensued, six Mi'xir:i:i capt:iins having s^i/.rd upon Cortez, were carrying him off, when two of his officers rescued him at the expense of their own lives, but not till after he had received several dangerous wounds. Above sixty Spa- niards perished in this retreat out of Mexico ; and what add- ed to their misfortune, forty of them fell alive into the hands of an enemy never known tOvshow mercy to a cap- tive. Night coming on, every quarter of the city was illu- minated, and the Mexican priests were busy in hastening the preparations for the death of the prisoners. It was a barba- rous triumph it was a horrid festival ! And the Spaniards could distinctly hear the shrieks of those who were sacrificed, and thought they could distinguish each unhappy victim by the well known sound of his voice. 12. The Mexicans, elated with their victory, sallied out next morning to attack Cortez in his quarters. But they did not rely on the efforts of their own arms alone. They sent the heads of the Spaniards whom they had sacrificed to the leading men in the adjacent provinces, and assured them that the god of war, appeased by the blood of their invaders, had declared, with an audible voice, that in eight days time those hated enemies should be finally destroyed, and peace and prosperity established in the empire. A prediction ut- tered with such confidence gained universal credit. The zeal of those who had already declared against the Spa- niards augmented ; and those who had hitherto been inactive, took arms with enthusiastic ardor to execute the decree of the gods. The Indian auxiliaries who had joined Cortez abandoned his army as a race of men devoted to certain de- struction. Even the fidelity of the Ilascalans was shaken, and the Spanish troops were left almost alone in their sta- tions. Cortez immediately suspended all military operations for the period marked out by the oracle. Under cover of the brigantines, which kept the enemy at a distance, his troops lay on the lake in safety, and the fatal term expired without any disaster. 13. Many of his allies, ashamed of their own credulity, now returned to their station. Other tribes, judging that the What circumstance for a time caused the allies of Cortez to forsak* hirer 194 CONQUEST OF MEXICO. gods, who had thus deceived the Mexicans, had decreed finally to withdraw their protection from them, joined his standard ; and so striking was the levity of this simple people, moved by every slight impression, that in a short time after such a defection of his confederates, Cortez saw himself at the head of a hundred and fifty thousand Indians. Notwith- standing this immense force, Cortez proceeded against the city with the greatest caution ; nor could he make any im- pression, till the stores nvhich Guatimozin had laid up were exhausted by the multitudes which had crowded into the capital to defend their sovereign and the temples of their gods. Then people of all ranks felt the utmost distresses of famine. But under the pressure of so many and such vari- ous evils, the spirit of Guatimozin remained firm and unsub- dued. He rejected with scorn every overture of peace from Cortez ; and disdaining the idea of submitting to the op- pressors of his country, determined not to survive its ruin. At the earnest solicitation of several of his chiefs he attempt- ed to escape, but was taken by the Spaniards. When brought before Cortez he appeared with a dignified counte- nance " I have done," said he, " what became a monarch. I have defended my people to the last extremity. Nothing now remains but to die. Take this dagger," laying his hand on one which Cortez wore, " plant it in my breast, and put an end to a life which can no longer be useful to my coun- try." 14. As soon as the capture of the emperor was known, the resistance of the Mexicans ceased, and Cortez took pos- session of the small part of the city that was not destroyed. The Spaniards, as may be expected, were elated with joy, by the completion of their difficult conquest, and the expecta- tion of sharing immense spoils. But in the latter respect they were miserably disappointed. Guatimozin, foreseeing his impending fate, had caused all the riches amassed by his ancestors to be thrown into the lake, and, instead of becom- ing masters of the treasures of Montezuma, and the spoils of the temples, t^e conquerors could collect only a small booty, amidst the ruins of a general desolation. The Spa- What induced the allies of Cortez to return to him ? How many Indians had he in his last attack on Mexico ? What disappointment did the Spaniards experience on the conquest of Mexico ? CONQUEST OF MEXICO. 195 niards exclaimed loudly against their general, whom they sus- pected of appropriating the greatest part of the spoils to his own use, as well as against Guatimozin, whom they accused of obstinately concealing his treasures. In order to allay this ferment, Cortez consented to a deed that sullied all the .glory of his former actions. He suffered the royal captive, with his principal minister, to be put to the rack, in order to oblige him to discover the place where his riches were con- cealed. The unhappy monarch bore his sufferings with all the firmness of a hero, till Cortez, ashamed of so horrid a scene, rescued the royal victim from the hands of uis tortu- rers. The unfortunate Guatimozin, however, was only re- served for further indignities. Some time afterwards, *j~ pected by Cortez of forming a scheme to throw off the Spa- nish yoke, he and two other persons of the greatest eminence in the empire were condemned to be hanged. 15. The fate of the capital, as both parties had foreseen, decided that of the empire. The provinces submitted, one after another, to the conquerors. It was not without difficul- ty, however, that they were reduced to the form of a Spanish colony. And, to the everlasting infamy of the conquerors, they affected to consider every effort of the Mexicans to as- sert their own independence, as the rebellion of vassals against their sovereign, or the mutiny of slaves against their master. Under the sanction of those ill-founded maxims, they reduced the common people in the provinces to the most humiliating of all conditions, that of personal servitude. Their chiefs were punished with greater severity, and put to death by the most excruciating tortures. In almost every district of the Mexican empire, the progress of the Spanish arms is marked with blood, and with deeds so atrocious as disgrace the enterprising valour that conducted them to suc- cess. In the country of Panuco, sixty caziques, and four hundred nobles, were burnt at one time ; and to complete the horror of the scene, the children and relatives of the wretch- ed victims were assembled, and compelled to be spectators of their dying agonies. To what disgraceful act did Cortez submit to satisfy them ? What became of Guatimozin ? 18t WILLIAM WALLA 2E AND THE TWO FRIARS. WILLIAM WALLACE. 197 WILLIAM WALLACE. 1. AN obscure individual, of no high rank, arid of still less fortune, rose to assert the honor and independence of his country, while the nobles and grandees of the kingdom, divided into factions, or adhering to the conqueror, seemed desirous of perpetuating its slavery. That strenuous patriot, but barbarous warrior, William Wallace, to whom many fa- bulous exploits are ascribed, but who in reality possessed all the valor of Achilles, joined to the prudence of Ulysses, ;md in these two respects merited the pen of a Homer to cele- brate his actions, ventured, almost singly, to attack the co- lossal power of the conqueror. His band of troops w r as so inconsiderable, and his progress so rapid, that the boldness and success of his enterprise are equally astonishing. His army, however, was daily increased by the numbers whom success allured to his standard. 2. Having in a very short time recovered all the p!aces which the English had held in their possession, except the single town of Berwick, his courage and conduct raised him so high in the esteem of the army, that he was, by a kind of military election, declared regent of the kingdom. Edward, who had engaged in a war with France, and was at that time in Flanders, agreed with the French king to refer their dif- ference to the arbitration of pope Boniface VIII ; and re- turning home, turned all his attention to quell the Scottish revolt. Having entered Scotland, he advanced to Falkirk, where he met the enemy's army, conducted by Wallace, and an obstinate battle again decided the fate of the kingdom. Although Edward had two of his ribs broken by a fall from his horse, in the beginning of the engagement, he kept the field, and commanded with the same presence of mind as if no accident had happened. The contest was obstinate and bloody, but the issue was fatal to the Scots, whose ferocious, but undisciplined bands, were not a match for Edward's ve- teran troops. 3. Wallace was defeated with so prodigious a slaughter, that, according to some authors, the Scots lost 60,000 men, while otlicrs reduce the number to 10,000, exhibiting, in To what office did Wallace's courage and success raise him ? What is wiid to have been tho loss of the Scots at the battle of Falkirk ? 198 WILLIAM WALLACE. then Contradictory narratives, another of those innumerable instances of the uncertainty of all circumstantial accounts, especially in regard to numerical statements. All that can with certainty be said, is, that the slaughter of the Scots was dreadful, and Edward's victory complete. Improving his advantages, he recovered all the places of strength as rapidly as ihey had been lost ; and may, on this occasion, be said to have a second time conquered Scotland. Wallace, with a few faithful followers, retired among the mountains and iiiurthus, \vhich nature had rendered inaccessible to ar- mies ; and, perceiving that his patriotic exertions inspired the nobles with jealousy, rather than emulation, he resigned the regency. 4. Comyn was, on his resignation, declared regent, an ofiice at that time of little consequence, as it gave him au- thority over only a small part of the kingdom, and a few scattered troops, who had escaped from the late battle. Through the mediation of Philip, king of France, a truce for seven months was procured for such of the Scots as re- fused to submit to Edward's authority. This gave the new regent an opportunity of exciting the barons to shake off the English yoke. Roused by his exhortations, both the nobles and people immediately flew to arms. In a short time, all Scotland rose as one man, the whole mass of the inhabitants, in the towns, and in the country, taking arms the same day, and almost at the same hour. The English garrisons, being every where attacked at the same moment, in so furious a manner, that all resistance was ineffectual, had no other al- ternative than that of being put to the sword, or of surren- dering on condition of immediately evacuating the kingdom. 5. This general revolt, which happened about the end of the year 1299, induced Edward to march early in the ensu- ing spring, and a third time to enter Scotland. The Scot- tish army, which consisted only of an ill-armed and undisci- plined' militia, not able to stand against Edward's veteran army, retired at his approach. The king, however, with his usual promptitude, pursued, overtook, and routed them, in a decisive engagement. The shatered remains of their forcej What induced Wallace to resign the .egency of Scotland ? Who was declared his successor ? Through whose mediation was a truca between England and Scotland effected ? In what year did the ro- rolt of the Scots under Comyn take place ? WILLIAM WALLACE. IW retreated into the marshes, which were known only to the natives, and amidst which the conquerors durst not continue their pursuit. Despairing of any good effects from further resistance, the Scots had nmv recourse to negotiation and en- treaties; but the inexorable Edward, rejecting all oilers of reconciliation, and insisting nn unconditional submission. they put themselves nii'I tlivir country under the papa! protection, and made Boniiace VIJI. an oiler of tin* & reignty. , <. This produced a brief from the pope to Edward, biting his own claim to the crown of Scotland. The ! j monarch assembled a parliament at Lincoln, for the purpose of deliberating on the pretensions of the Roman see. The papal brief was answered by a manifesto, asserting that Eng- land possessed, from time immemorial, the right of sove- reignty over Scotland. This manifesto of the parliament, was followed by a memorial from the king, in justification of his measures ; in which, if he could not equal the pope in sanctity, he resolved to outdo him in antiquity. Improving on that presented to the Scottish barons at Norham, in which he carried his claim no higher than Edward, the father of Athelstan, he now derived it from Brutus, the first fabulous king of Britain, and traced it through the reigns of all the fictitious monarchs, with whose names and exploits Geoffrey of Monmouth had embellished his historical romance. 7. This letter being written in the most respectful manner, without any expressions that could be offensive to his holi- ness, the difference between Edward and the pope was ac- commodated, and, at the solicitation of the French king, the truce with the revolted Scots was prolonged. At its expira- tion, Edward sent Segrave, governor of Berwick, with a formidable force, to renew the war, and complete the reduc- tion of Scotland. This general, apprehending no danger from the Scots, whom he considered as unable to make any resistance, divided his army into three columns, in order more completely to ravage the country. Meeting, however, unexpectedly, with the Scotch army, under the command of Com}n and Frazer, all the three bodies were successively defeated. When ngain subdued by Edward, under whose protection did Scoti place themselves ? 200 WILLIAM WALLACE. 8. In consequence of this disaster, Edward, the next year, 1303, entered the fourth time into Scotland, with so nume- rous an army, that he penetrated to the extremities of the kingdom, and ravaged the country, without meeting with any considerable resistance, the Scots being unable to oppose so formidable a power. Wallace alone, with a body of troops, continually harassed him, and revenged the Scots on such of the English soldiers as happened to stray from the main body of the army. Stirling castle was besieged the whole winter, and was at last obliged to capitulate. By its surren- der, Edward became master of all the fortified places, and, in this fourth expedition, completed his third conquest of Scotland. 9. A few determined patriots, however, retreating to places inaccessible to hostile approach, still held the conqueror's powers at defiance ; but Wallace, the principal instigator and soul of revolt, being betrayed into the hands of the English, was tried, condemned, and executed, as guilty of treason. His head, was, by Edward's command, placed upon London bridge, and his four quarters hung up in the four principal towns of Scotland. Here, as in many other cases, we have an opportunity of considering the difficulty of making a just estimate of actions from the echoes of common fame, and the ipse dixit of partial or inconsiderate writers. This ex- traordinary severity to the Scottish patriot is universally re- garded as an indelible blemish on Edward's memory ; but, if the cruelties imputed to Wallace had any foundation in fact, his punishment must be regarded as a just retribution. 10. Indeed, if the whole conduct of those conspicuous characters, who, in all ages and countries, have fallen by the hand of violence, could be minutely investigated, they would often be found, although less fortunate, little less criminal than their oppressors ; and the distributive justice of Provi- dence would appear more impartially dealt than superficial observers can perceive. But so often are we the dupes of misrepresentation, and so prone to hasty decision, that the illustrious victim of oppression and violence, who has him- self sacrificed, at the shrine of his ambition, his avarice, or his resentment, thousands of inferior celebrity, appears in In what year did Edward enter Scotland the fourth time ? What became of Wallace ? ROBERT BRUCE. 01 our eyes arrayed in the spotless robes of innocence. In con- templating his sufferings, we forget those which he his in- flicted on others. Historians deplore his fate, and blazon his virtues, and, in commemorating his misfortunes, endeavor to excite an ill-judged compassion. THE EXILE. NOT to Siberia's land of frost Was this devoted exile sent ; Nor Java's pestilential coast Severer was his banishment. Nought could the moral world afford To give him comfort, joy, or rest ; The ban his vices had incurr'd Conscience approv'd within his breast. The victim of a tyrant's power, Condemn'd in distant climes to roam, May sometimes find a happy hour, In hopes of pardon and of home. But what bright hour on him shall beam, Who, bearing an internal curse, Is banish'd from his own esteem, To burning regions of REMORSE. ROBERT BRUCE. 1. THE Scots, so many times vanquished, as often rebel- led ; no disasters could extinguish their martial genius, nor bring their independent minds to submit to a foreign yoke. Bruce, the rival of Baliol, being dead, his son, the famous Robert I, resolved to assert, with his sword, his claim to the crov/n of his ancestors. He then resided at London, as a prisoner at large ; and, finding that Edward had received in- telligence of his design, immediately made his escape. Be- , ing arrived in Scotland, and suspecting the fidelity of Comyn, with whom he had concerted his plan, and maintained a con- 19 202 ROBERT BRUCE. slant correspondence, he met a messenger, charged with letters from that nobleman to the king. 2. Having seized the messenger, and examined his de- spatches, his suspicions were confirmed. In consequence of this discovery, he repaired to Dumfries ; where, meeting with Comyn, he stabbed him with his own hand. Having thus drawn the sword, he had no other alternative than to throw away the scabbard, and, fully convinced that prompt and de- cisive measures could alone afford any hope of success or safety, he assumed the regal title, and was solemnly crowned at Scone. The new king of Scotland soon dispossessed the English of many of their fortified places ; but the earl of Pembroke, having entered the kingdom, with a numerous army, defeated him in two successive engagements. 3. Bruce, being now reduced to the last extremity, was obliged to escape out of Scotland, and to take refuge in the Hebudes, while Edward, advancing with a powerful army, sent out detachments on all sides, to seize his adherents, to whom no mercy was shown. Three brothers of the new king fell on the scaffold. His queen being taken, and sent into England, was kept in close confinement. The bishops of Glasgow and St. Andrews would also have fallen a sacri- fice to Edward's vengeance, had he not stood in awe of the pope. The countess of Buchan, sister of the earl of Fife, having assisted at Robert's coronation, was put in a wooden cage, and hung up on the walls of Berwick, as an object of ridicule to the people. Mary, the other sister, underwent the same fate at Roxburgh. The earl of Athol, allied to the royal families, both of Scotland and England, and conse- quently Edward's relative, was distinguished from the rest, by the fatal honor of being hanged on a gallows of an extra- ordinary height. Dreadful instances of Edward's inexorable severity, and of the ferocious spirit of the times. 4. Edward, having taken a severe vengeance on such of Robert's adherents as had been unfortunate enough to fall into his hands, retired to Carlisle, where he summoned the last parliament of his reign, in order to deliberate on the means of securing the possession of Scotland, by finally uniting it to England. Shortly after, supposing the Scots What caused Bruce to kill Comyn ? What was the fate of the ear! of Athol ? ROBERT BRUCE. 203 completely disabled from making any farther resistance, he left the command of the army to the earl of Pembroke, and returned to London, in order to concert his future j>! Robert no sooner heard of his absence, than sallying from his retreat, he assembled the scattered remains of his army, reinforced it with fresh supplies, which the Scotch barons brought from all quarters, and attacked the English general, whom he totally defeated and took prisoner. He then march- ed against the Earl of Gloucester, whom he obliged to re- treat to the castle of Ayre, and afterwards took and dis- mantled several towns, that he might not be under the ne- cessity of leaving garrisons, as well as in order to prevent them from affording any shelter to the English. 5. Edward, surprised and exasperated at this unexpected revolution, summoned all the barons of his realm to meet him at Carlisle, in the summer, A. D. 1307, under the penal- ty of forfeiting their fees, resolving to draw out the whole military force of his kingdom, and to render Scotland, from one extremity to the other, an entire scene of desolation. But divine Providence, having ordained that the union of the two kingdoms should at last be effected by more peaceable, as well as more equitable means, disappointed his sanguinary design. Being arrived at Carlisle, and ready to carry fire and sword into every corner of the devoted kingdom, he fell sick of a dysentery, and soon after died at Burgh on the sands, leaving the execution of his projects to his son and successor, to whom he gave strict charge never to grant peace or truce, till the final subjugation of Scotland should be accomplished. 6. Robert Bruce immediately prepared to take advantage of the consternation of the English, occasioned by the death of their king ; but a violent fit of sickness prevented him from carrying his measures into effect. The new king of England, advancing as far as Dumfries, struck the whole kingdom with terror. Nothing could exceed the perplexity of the Scots on this occasion ; their king being dangerously ill, and their forces, both in numbers and discipline, far infe- rior to those of the enemy. Edward's return into England, after leaving the command of the army to John Comyn, a To whom did Edward II. commit the command of the English army ? 204 ROBERT BRUCE. Scotch baron, was a matter of surprise to both kingdoms ; and re-animated the hopes of the Scots, not less than it ex- cited the murmurs of the English. Nothing, indeed, could be more strange than the conduct of Edward II., in thus re- linquishing the conquest of Scotland, when the number and ardor of his troops, and king Robert's sickness, promised him almost certain success. 7. But the new king of England had not the warlike in- clinations of his predecessor ; and the blandishments of a court were, to him, more alluring than the hardships and hazards of a campaign. His appointment of Comyn to the command, was also a subject of offence to the army. This general, although the determined enemy of king Robert, was a Scot ; and the English thought themselves dishonored by the preference given to a foreigner. Disaster was the con- sequence of these discontents. Comyn, willing to take ad- vantage of Robert's sickness, whom he supposed incapable of heading his army, advanced, in order to attack the Scots. The latter, though he found himself extremely weak, thought, that in so critical a juncture, flight or retreat might disheart- en his troops, and eventually occasion the loss of his king- dom. 8. Having, therefore, mounted his horse, supported by two esquires, he drew up his army, and, with a composure that produced a wonderful effect, waited the approach of the ene- my. Victory spon declared in his favor ; and the defeat of the English was the more astonishing, as, besides being su- perior in numbers, they were the very same troops who had vanquished the Scots in so many engagements. But Edward I. was no more. After this retreat, Comyn retired into Eng- land, and Robert ravaged the whole county of Argyle, which still belonged to the English. Edward Bruce, his brother, also defeated another English army, in the county of Galo- way ; and from that time, the Scots no longer dreaded the army of England. 9. Ths troubles of England, on account of Gaviston, pre- vented that court from paying any great attention to the af- fairs of Scotland. It is, however, said that Edward II., in 1307, the second year of his reign, led an army in person into Scotland ; but not having provided for its subsistence, and finding the country laid waste before him, returned, without effecting any thing of importance. In two succes- ROBERT BRUCE. 205 sive years, 1310 and 1311, Bruce had made two desultory expeditions into England, and carried off a great booty ; and the year following, lie recovered Perth, Lancrie, Dumfries, and Roxburgh. The Isle of Man voluntarily submitted to his dominion : and the casHe of Kdinburirh heinir carried by assault, he became master of all the fortified places, except Stirling castle, which was then the strongest in Scotland. The next year, 1313, he sent his brother to lay siege to that im- portant fortress, which was vigorously assaulted, and as brave- ly defended. But Philip Mowbray, the governor, finding no methods taken for his relief, concluded an agreement with the Scots, by which he engaged to deliver up the place at the end of a year, if not sooner relieved by reinforcements from England. 10. This train of events, so favorable to the Scots, and so disastrous to their enemies, now threatened the complete ex- pulsion of the English, and roused their king to decisive ex- ertion. He therefore summoned all his vassals to meet him, with their troops. The general rendezvous was fixed at Newcastle upon Tyne ; and so great was the alacrity of all, that Edward saw himself at the head of 100,000 men, Eng- lish, Welsh, Gascons, and Irish. To this numerous army the king of Scotland could oppose no more thao> 30,000 men ; but these were inured to war, and had frequently been victorious. Edward, entering the country without opposition, advanced towards Stirling, while Robert made every prepa- ration to give him a vigorous reception. Considering the superiority of numbers with which he had to contend, he ju- diciously drew up his army on an advantageous ground, where craggy rocks on one of the flanks, and a deep morass on the other, prevented it from being surrounded. The Scots, being resolved to conquer or die, received the English with such steady and determined resolution, that they soon threw their numerous army into confusion, and routed them with a most dreadful slaughter. 11. This decisive battle was fought near a small river, called Bannockburn, on the 25th of July, A. D. 1314 ; and, since the memorable day of Hastings, England had nevei received so terrible a defeat. The different historians, as is What was the respective number of the English and Scotch army, at the time of the battle near the river Bannockburn ? When wa* this battle fought : 19t 206 ROBERT BRUCE. ever the case, perplex us with the discordant accounts of this battle, and the loss there sustained. The earl of Gloucester, nephew of the king of England, with many other great lords of distinction, and, according to some, 700 knights, were left dead on the field ; while others assert, that the whole num- ber of English earls, barons, and knights, killed and taken prisoners, amounted to no more than 154. The Scotch his- torians make the whole loss of the English amount to 50,000, and say that the number of prisoners taken was greater than that of the victorious army. The English, on the contrary, reduce the number of their slain to 10,000. Amidst the discordances of historical details, we might be eternally be- wildered, if consequences did not elucidate those facts which contradictory evidence labors to obscure. In military histo- ry, especially, we have here a rule, which is almost infallible, 12. Reasoning on this principle, it is evident, that the vic- tory of the Scots was decisive, and the loss of the English exceedingly great, as the latter made a precipitate retreat, not thinking themselves in safety until they reached York, and never more ventured to face the king of Scotland in the field. The Scots, on the contrary, acquired an evident supe- riority ; and were, so long as the war continued, invariably successful. Robert at last besieged and took the strong frontier town of Berwick, and himself and his generals ravag- ed most of the northern borders of England. Not content- ed with his successes in Britain, he attempted the conquest of Ireland. Having sent his brother Edward thither, for that purpose, he afterwards followed in person ; but finding, on his arrival, that his brother was defeated and slain in bat- tle, by the archbishop of DuWin, general of the English army, or, as some say, taken prisoner, and hanged at Dun- dalk, he thought it best to desist from the enterprise, in order to improve the advantages gained by his armies in Britain. 13. Since the conquering days of Edward I., when the English were always victorious, the scales had surprisingly turned ; and they found themselves utterly unable to check the progress of the Scottish king. In this disastrous state of affairs, Edward II. found himself obliged to have recourse to the pope, as the Scots had done in the days of his father, What was the English loss at the battle of Bannockburn ? To what did Edward II have recourse for the support of his cause, besides fighting ? ROBERT BRUCE. 20? and with nearly the same success. He earnestly entreated his holiness to procure him a peace, or at least a truce with Scotland. John XXII., who then filled the papal chair, im- mediately complied with his request, and undertook to make peace between the kings of England and Scotland, not mediator, but in the character of sovereign arbitrator. For this purpose, he sent into England two legates, with a com- mission to conclude a peace between the two contending princes, and to compel both parties to accept it, under pain of excommunication and interdict. 14. The Scottish monarch, however, perpeiving the con- dition of the treaty to be decidedly partial to England, re- jected the papal arbitration. The legates, in consequence, pronounced sentence of excommunication against him, and laid an interdict on his kingdom. Robert, in the meanwhile, regardless of a censure which he considered as unjust, con- tinued the war, and committed great ravages. He plundered and burnt Northallerton, Boroughbridge, Scarborough, and many other places, and almost desolated the northern parts of England. The English were every where beaten ; and had, at the same time, the mof tification to find the spiritual arms of Rome unsuccessful. After much solicitation, how- ever, they obtained a truce for two years. This short period was no sooner elapsed, than Edward, who had just reduced the associated barons of his kingdom to submission, flattered himself with an expectation of equal success against his fo reign enemies. 15. Having, therefore, made great preparations for the in- vasion of Scotland, in hopes of repairing his former losses by one grand effort, he entered that kingdom, in the month of July, ]323 ; but, from his improvidence, and the precau- tion of his enemies, this, like his former expeditions, was only a series of disasters. Having neglected the proper means of furnishing his army with provisions, an imprudence which his former experience might have corrected, while the Scots, by removing or destroying every article of subsistence, had ef- fectually deprived him of any supplies in their country, his ill-conducted measures rendered a retreat indispensably ne- cessary. This, however, was only the beginning of his dis- asters. The English no sooner began their retreat, than the king of Scotland, appearing at the head of his army, pursued and overtook them at a place called Blackmore. Here they 208 ROBERT BRUCE. were not only defeated, with the loss of their baggage, but the whole army was almost totally dispersed, and Edward himself narrowly escaped. 16. The Scottish king, continuing his march, desolated the country with fire and sword, as far as to the very walls of York ; and, having burned the monastery of Ripon, and plundered the abbey of Beverly, returned to his kingdom with a great booty. Being desirous, however, of giving some respite to his kingdom, exhausted by those long and bloody wars, and of a reconciliation with the court of Rome, he consented to a truce for thirteen years. By this treaty, concluded A. t). 1323, a temporary stop Was put to those ravages, which, during so long a time, had almost desolated so considerable a part of Great Britain. This period, not- withstanding the frequent recurrence of bloody wars between the two kingdoms, may be considered as the epoch of the complete restoration of the Scottish monarchy. 17. The space of time which elapsed from the death of Alexander III., A. D. 1285, to the conclusion of this truce, includes a period of thirty-eight years of indescribable ca- lamity to the inhabitants of this island. Both Scotland and England had experienced the direful effects of a war, car- ried on with little regard to humanity. Almost the whole of the former, and a considerable part of the latter kingdom, had repeatedly been ravaged and devastated, with a ferocity of which a modern reader can scarcely form any idea. The severity of Edward I. excited a bitter animosity between the two nations, which mutual injuries and constant retaliation kept alive ; while the ferocious manners of the age tinctured all their conduct with barbarity, and merciless devastation marked the footsteps of their armies. The events of this period, which, however unpleasing, is highly interesting to the now happy inhabitants of the united kingdom of Great Britain, exhibit the contrast between ancient and modern times. 18. During the latter part of the reign of Robert I., Scot- land was in the zenith of her glory. The whole life of that monarch had been a scene of extraordinary exertion, attend- Did the pope succeed in reconciling the kings of Scotland and Eng- land ? What excited the bitter animosity that existed between the English and the Scots at this time ? When was Scotland in tha ze- nith of her glory ' MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS. 200 ed with uncommon success. For this, however, he might perhaps he, in a great measure, indebted to the death of Edward I. at so momentous a crisis. Robert's abilities were certainly of the most eminent class ; -hut, had IMS destiny compelled him to contend with the warlike genius and enter- prising spirit of the first Edward, instead of the pusillanimity of his successor, it is impossible to say on which side success would have rested. In the whole series of history, the states- man, or the warrior, will find few more curious subjects of contemplation, than the revolution effected by the critical death of Edward, at the very commencement of Bruce's re- volt. MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS. 1. ON Tuesday, the seventh of February, 1587, the two earls arrived at Fotheringay, and demanded access to the queen, read in her presence the warrant of execution, and required her to prepare to die next morning. Mary heard them to the end without emotion, and crossing herself in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, " that soul," said she, " is not worthy the joys of heaven, which repines because the body must endure the stroke of the executioner ; and though I did not expect that the queen of England would set the first example of violating the sa- cred person of a sovereign prince, I willingly submit to that which Providence has decreed to be my lot ;" and laying her hand on a bible, which happened to be near her, she solemn- ly protested that she was innocent of that conspiracy which Babington had carried on against Elizabeth's life. She en- treated with particular earnestness, that now in her last mo- ments her almoner might be suffered to attend her, and that she might enjoy the consolation of those pious institutions prescribed by her religion. Even this favor, which is usu- ally granted to the vilest criminal, was absolutely denied. 2. Her attendants, during this conversation, were bathed in tears, and though overawed by the presence of the two earls, with difficulty suppressed their anguish ; but no sooner When was Mary Queen of Scots beheaded ? 210 MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS. did Kent and Shrewsbury withdraw, than they ran to their mistress and burst out into the most passionate expressions of tenderness and sorrow. Mary, however, not only retain- ed perfect composure of mind herself, but endeavored to moderate their excessive grief ; and falling on her knees, with all her domestics round her, she thanked heaven that her sufferings were now so near an end, and prayed that she might be enabled to endure what still remained with decency and with fortitude. The greater part of the evening she employed in settling her worldly affairs. She wrote her tes- tament with her own hand. Her money, her jewels, and her clothes, she distributed among her servants according to their rank or merit. She wrote a short letter to the king of France, and another to the duke of Guise, ful! of tender but magnani- mous sentiments, and recommended her soul to their pray ers, and her afflicted servants to their protection. <3. At supper she ate temperately, as usual, and conversed not only with ease but with cheerfulness ; she drank to every one of her servants, and asked their forgiveness if ever she fail- ed in any part of her ditty towards them. At her wonted time she went to bed, and slept calmly for a few hours. Early in the morning she retired into her closet, and employed a con- siderable time in devotion. At eight o'clock the high sheriff' and his officers entered her chamber, and found her still kneeling at the altar. She immediately started up, and with a majestic mien, and a countenance undismayed, and even cheerful, advanced towards the place of execution, leaning on two of Paulet's attendants. She was dressed in a mourn- ing habit, but with an elegance and splendor which she had long laid aside, except on a few festival days. An Agnus Dei hung by a promander chain at her neck ; her beads at her girdle ; and in her hands she carried a crucifix of ivory. 4. At the bottom of the stairs , the two earls, attended by several gentlemen from the neighboring counties, received her, and there sir Andrew Melvil, the master of her house- hold, who had been secluded for some weeks from her pre- sence, was permitted to take his last farewell. At the sight of a mistress whom he tenderly loved, in such a situation, he melted into tears ; and as he was bewailing her condition, and complaining of his own hard fate, in being appointed to carry the account of such a mournful event into Scotland, Mary replied, " Weep not, good Melvil, there is at present MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS 211 great cause for rejoicing. Thou shall this day see Mary Stu- ifft delivered from all her cares, and such an end put to her tr- dk>O8 sufferings, as she has long expected. B(>ar witness that I die constant in my religion; firm in my fidelity towards Scotland ; and unchanged in my affection towards France. Commend me to my son. Tell him I have done nothing in- jurious to his kingdom, to his honor, or tp his rights ; and God forgive all those who have thirsted without cause for my blood." 5. With much difficulty, and after many entreaties, she prevailed on the two earls to allow Melvil, together with three of her men-servants and two of her maids, to attend her to the scaffold. It was erected in the same hall where she had been tried, raised a little above the floor, and covered, as well as a chair, the cushion, and block, with black cloth. Mary mounted the steps with alacrity, beheld all this apparatus of death with an unaltered countenance, and signing herself with the cross, she sat down in the chair. Beale read the warrant for execution with a loud voice, to which she listen- ed with a careless air, and like one occupied in other thoughts. Then the dean of Peterborough began a devout discourse, suitable to her present condition, and offered up prayers to heaven in her behalf; but she declared she could not in con- science hearken to the one nor join in the other ; and kneel- ing down, repeated a Latin prayer. When the dean had finished his discourse, she with an audible voice, and in the English tongue, recommended unto God the afflicted state of the church, and prayed for prosperity to her son, and for a long life and peaceable reign to Elizabeth. She declared that she hoped for mercy only through the death of Christ, at the foot of whose image she now willingly shed her blood ; and lifting up and kissing the crucifix, she thus addressed it : *' As thy arms, O Jesus, were extended on the cross ; so iw.ith the outstretched arms of thy mercy receive me, and forgive my sins." 6. She then prepared for the block by taking off her veil and upper garments ; and one of the executioners, rudely endeavoring to assist, she gently checked him, and said: with a smile, that she had not been accustomed to undjess, before so many spectators, nor to be served by such valets* With Who attended Mary at her execution ? What clergyman .attend d her .'Was she pleased with his services ? 212 MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS. calm but undaunted fortitude, she laid her neck on the block ; and while one executioner held her hands, the other, at the second stroke, cut off her head, which falling out of its attire, discovered her hair already grown quite grey with cares and sorrows. The executioner held it up still streaming with blood, and the dean crying out, " So perish all queen Eliza- beth's enemies," the earl of Kent alone answered Amen. The rest of the spectators continued silent, and drowned iri tears ; being incapable, at that moment, of any other senti- ments but those of pity or admiration. 7. Such was the tragical death of Mary, queen of Scots, after a life of forty-four years and two months, almost nine- teen years of which she passed in captivity. All contempo- rary authors agree in ascribing to Mary the utmost beauty of countenance and elegance of shape, of which the human form is capable. Her hair was black, though according to the fashion of that age she frequently wore borrowed locks, and of different colors. Her stature was of a height that rose to the majestic. She danced, she walked, and rode with equal grace. Her taste for music was just, and she both sung and played upon the lute with uncommon skill. To- wards the close of her life, long confinement and the coldness of the houses in which she had been imprisoned, brought on a rheumatism, which often deprived her of the use of her limbs. No man, says Brantome, ever beheld her person without admiration- and love, or will read her history without sorrow. 8. To all the charms of beauty, and the utmost elegance of external form, she added those accomplishments which render their impression irresistible. Polite, affable, insinuat- ing, sprightly, and capable of speaking and of writing with equal ease and dignity. Sudden, however, and violent in all her attachments ; because her heart was warm and unsuspi- cious. Impatient of contradiction ; because she had been accustomed from her infancy to be treated as a queen. No stranger, on some occasions, to dissimulation ; which, in that perfidious court where she received her education, was reck- oned among her necessary arts of government. Not insensi- ble of flattery, or unconscious of that pleasure with which al What was Mary's age ? How much of her life had she passed in prison ? '.!, OF JI. 2J3 most even- woman 'Beholds the influence of her own beauty. Formed with the qualities which we love, not with theta! that we ad mi iv ; sh<- was a:i agreeable, woman, rather than an illustrio'.; ; the aprons of the executioners, and every thing stained with Ji cr blood, were reduced to ashes. Not long after. Eliza- beth appointed her body to be buried in the Cathedral of Peterborouo - K with royal magnificence. But this vulgar arti- fice was employe^ in vain ; the pageantry of a pompous fune- ral did not efface the memory of those injuries which laid Mary in her grave, jf^rnes, soon after his accession to the English throne, ordered her body to be removed to Westmin- ster 3 abbey, and to be deposited among the monarchs of land. FALL OF JERICHO. WHO is that chief, already taught to urge The battle stream, and roll its darkest surge, Whose army marches through retiring seas, Whose gory banner, spreading on the breeze, Unfolds o'er Jericho's devoted towers,* And, like the storm o'er Sodom, redly lowers 1 The moon can answer ; for she heard h is tongue,. And cold and pale o'er Ajalon she hung.t The sun can tell O'er Gibeon's vale of blood, Curving their beamy necks, his cours ers stood, Held by that hero's arm, to light his wrath, And roll their glorious eyes upon hi s crimson path. What mine, exploding, rends that g racking ground 1 What earthquake spreads those sm oulderi.ng ruins round t The sons of Levi, round that city > bear * Joshua vi. 20. i JoshMa x. 12, 13. 20 214 CHARLES I. OF ENGLAND. The ark of God, their consecrated care, And, in rude concert, each returning morn, Blow the long trump, and wind the curling horn. No blackening thuader smok'd along the wall No earthquake shook it Music wrought its fall. CHARLES I. OF ENGLAND. 1. FROM the sixth to the twentieth of January was spent in making preparations for his extraordinary trial. The court of justice consisted of a hundred and thirty-three per- sons named by the commons ; but of these, never above se- venty met upon the trial. The members were chiefly com- posed of the principal officers of the army, most of them of very mean birth, together with some of the lower house, and a few citizens of London. Bradshaw, a lawyer, was chosen president ; Coke was appointed solicitor for the people of England ; Dorislaus, Steele, and Aske, were named assist- ants. The court sat at Westminster hall. 2. The king was now conducted from Windsor to St. James's, and the next day was brought before the high court to take his trial. When he was brought forward, he was conducted by the mace-bearer to a chair placed within the bar. Though long detained a prisoner, and now produced as a criminal, he still sustained the dignity of a kirjg ; he surveyed the members of the court with a stern, haughty air, and without moving his hat sat down, while the members were also covered. His charge was then read by the solici- tor, accusing him of having been the cause of all the blood- shed that followed since the commencement of the war ; at that part of the charge, he could not suppress a smile of con- tempt and indignation. After the charge was finished, Brad- shaw directed his discourse to the king, and told him, that the court expected his answer. 3. The king, with great temper, entered upon his defence, by declining the authority of the court. He represented, that, having been engaged in treaty with his two houses of How many persons constituted the court that tried king Charles ? What description of persons chiefly composed this court ? Who was appointed president ?-*-On what ground did the king decline making" his defence ? I. OF r.NCi'LANI). 215 (>:irli;n uMit, ;.n i Inxin-j finished jiiciust every article, he ex- Id a dilVt rent treatment from that lie now received, lie perceived, he said. no appearance of an upper house, which was necessary to constitute a just, tribunal. .That he was himself the kin25 5. 11<' saw nothing which brought to his recall. rtion, either that particular (}ii:<: '\\ or the ohj formerly acquainted. The houses of his near- i->[ i ; . re fresh in his memory had a n.'W a|' . in vain wero his looks directed to all the objects around him ; hu could discover nothing of which he had the smallest remembrance. Terriiied, IK; stopped and (etched a deep sigh. To him wliat did it import, that the city was peopled with living creatures ? .None of them were alive to him; he was unknown to all the world, and he knew nobody ; and whilst he wept, he regretted his dungeon. 6. At the name of the Bastile, which he often pronounced and even claimed as an asylum, and the sight of his clothes which marked his former age, the crowd gathered around him ; curiosity, blended with pity, excited their attention. The most aged asked him many questions, but had no re- membrance of the circumstances which lie recapitulated. At length accident, brought to his way an ancient domestic now a superannuated porter, who, confined to his lodge for fifteen years, had barely sufficient strength to open, the gate. Even he did not know the master he had served ; but in- formed him that grief and misfortune had brought his wife to the grave thirty years before ; that his children were gone abroad to distant climes, and that of all his relations and friends, none now remained. 7. This -recital was made with the indifference which peo- ple discover for the events long passed and almost forgotten. The miserable man groaned, and groaned alone. The crowd around, offering only unknown features to his view, made him feel the excess of his calamities even more than he would have done in the dreadful solitude which he had left. Overcome with sorrow, he presented himself before the mi- nister, to whose humanity he o\ved that liberty which was now become a burden to him. Bowing down, he said, " Restore me again to that prison from which you have taken roe. I cannot survive the loss ofl^rny nearest relations ; of my friends ; and in one-vyord, of a whole generation. Is if pos- sible in the same moment to be informed of this universal destruction and not to wish for death ? What was the reason of his wislrnjr to be again returned to the Bastile? THE INQUISI'f ION. 8. " This general mortality, which to others comes slowly and by degrees, has to me been instantaneous, the operation of a moment. Whilst secluded from society, I lived with myself only ; but here I can neither live with myself, nor with this new race, to whom my anguish and despair appear only as a dream." The minister, was melted ; he caused the old domestic to attend this unfortunate person, as only he could talk to him of his family. 9. This discourse was the single consolation which he re- ceived ; for he shunned intercourse with the new race, born since he had been exiled from the world ; and he passed his time in the midst of Paris in the same solitude as he had done whilst confined in a dungeon for almost half a century. But the chagrin and mortification of meeting no person who could say to him, " We were formerly known to each other," soon put an end to his existence. THE INQUISITION. 1. THE court of Inquisition was founded in the year 1204, or not long after that time. To Dominic de Guzman, the honor of first suggesting the erection of this extraordinary court is commonly ascribed. He was born in the year 1 170, descended from an illustrious Spanish family. He was edu- cated for the priesthood ; and grew up the most fiery and the most bloody of mortals. Before his time, every Bishop was a sort of inquisitor in his own diocese ; but Dominic contrived to incorporate a body of men, independent of every human being, except the Pope, for the purpose of ensnaring and destroying Christians. Having succeeded in his diabo- lical designs, and formed a race like himself, first called preaching, and then Dominican friars, he died in his bed, was canonized as a saint, worshipped as a divinity, and pro- posed as a model of piety and virtue to succeeding genera- tions ! 2. The Pope gave the Inquisitors the most unlimited pow- ers, as judges delegated by him, and immediately represent- When waa the Inquisition founded ? By whom was it founded ? What powers were given the Inquisitors ? THE INQUISITION. ^7 ing his person, they were permitted to excommunicate, or sentence to death, whom they thought proper, upon the slightest information of heresy ; were allowed to publish cru- sade against all whom they deemed heretics ; and enter into leagues with sovereign princes, to join those crusades with their forces. About the year 1244, their power was further increased by the emperor Frederic the Second, who declar- ed himself the protector and friend of all Inquisitors, ana published two very cruel edicts, viz. that all heretics, who continued obstinate, should be burnt ; and that all heretics, who repented, should be imprisoned for life. This zeal iu the emperor for the Inquisitors, and the Roman Catholic per- suasion, arose from a report which had been propagated throughout Europe, that he intended to turn Mahometan ; the emperor therefore attempted, by the height of bigotry and cruelty, to show his attachment to popery. 3. Pope Innocent IV. endeavored to establish the Inqui- sition on a permanent foundation. It was every where in- trusted to the care of Dominican friars. But many of the most populous states that were subject to the see of Rome, never permitted the establishment of the tribunal among them. In Fiance it was early introduced, but soon after expelled, in such a manner, as effectually to preclude a re- newal of the attempt. Nor has it been alike severe in every place into which it has been introduced. In Spain and Portugal this scourge and disgrace to humanity has for cen- turies glared with its most frightful aspect. In Rome it has been much more tolerable. Papal avarice has served to counterbalance papal tyranny. The wealth of modern Rome has arisen very much from the constant resort of strangers from all countries and of all denominations. This would have been, in a great measure, prevented by such a horrid tribunal as existed at Lisbon and Madrid. 4. Exclusive of the cruel punishments inflicted by the holy office, it may be truly affirmed, that the Inquisition is a school of vice. There the artful, judge, grown old in habits of subtlety, along with the sly secretary, practises his cun- ning in interrogating a prisoner, to fix a charge of heresy. What two edicts were published by Frederic II. ? Was the Inqui- sition permitted to be established in all the States subject to Rome ? In what places has it been carried to the greatest extent ? What terra may be justly applied to the Inquisition ? 228 THE INQUISITION. Now he fawns, and then he frowns ; now he sooths, and then he looks dark and angry ; sometimes affects to pity and to pray, at other times, insults and bullies ; and talks of racks and dungeons, flames, and the damnation of hell. One while, he lays his. hand upon his heart, and sheds tears ; and promises and protests, he desires not the death of a sin- ner ; but would rather that he would turn and live ; and all that he can do, he will do, for the discharge, and even for the preferment, of his imprisoned brother. Another while, he discovers himself as deaf as a rock, false as the wind, and cruel as the poison of asps. 6. The court of Inquisition, although it was not the pa- rent, has been the nurse and guardian of ignorance and su- perstition wherever it has prevailed. It was introduced into Spain, or promoted there, by Ferdinand and Isabella ; and was principally intended to prevent the relapse of the Jews and Moors, who had been converted, or who pretend- ed to be converted, to the faith of the Church of Rome. Its jurisdiction, however, was not confined to the Jews and Moors ; but extended to all those, who in their practice or opinions, differed from the established Church. In the united kingdom of Castile and Arragon, there were 18 different In- quisitorial courts, having each its counsellors, termed apos- tolical inquisitors, its secretaries, Serjeants, and other officers ; and besides these, there were 20,000 familiars dispersed throughout the kingdom, who acted as spies and informers, and were employed to apprehend all suspected persons, and commit them for trial, to the prisons which belonged to the Inquisition. By these familiars, persons were seized on bare suspicion, and, in contradiction to the established rules of equity, they were put to the torture, tried and condemned by the Inquisitors, without being confronted, either with their accusers, or with the witnesses on whose evidence they were condemned. The punishments inflicted were more or is dreadful, according to the caprice and humor of the u :ges. The unhappy victims were either strangled, or com- mitted to the flames, or loaded with chains, and shut up in dungeons during life their effects confiscated, and their families stigmatized with infamy. Who promoted the courts of Inquisition in Spain? flow man* wore they ? I THE INQUISITION. 2<29 7. This institution was, no doubt, well calculated to pro- duce a uniformity of religious professions ; but it had a ten- dency also to destroy the sweets of social life, to banish all freedom of thought and speech, to disturb men's minds with the most disquieting apprehensions, arid to produce the most intolerable slavery, by reducing persons of all ranks in life to a state of abject dependence upon priests ; whose integrity were it even greater than that of other men, though in every false profession of religion it is less, must have been corrupt- ed by the uncontrolled authority which they were allowed to exercise. By this tribunal^ a visible change was wrought in the temper of the people ; and reserve, distrust, and jealousy, became the distinguishing characteristics of a Spaniard. It confirmed and perpetuated the reign of ignorance and su- perstition, inflamed to rage religious bigotry, and by the cruel spectacles to which, in the execution of* its decrees, it familiarized the people, it nourished in them that ferocious spirit which, in the Netherlands and America, they mani- fested by the deeds that have fixed an indelible reproach upon the Spanish name. 8. Authors of undoubted credit affirm, and without the least exaggeration, that millions of persons have been ruined by this horrible court. Moors were banished, a million at a time. Six or eight hundred th6usand Jews were driven away at once, and their immense riches seized by their accusers, and distributed among their persecutors, while thousands dissembled and professed themselves Christians, only to be harassed in future. Heretics of all ranks and of various de- nominations were imprisoned and burnt, or fled into other countries. The gloom of despotism overshadowed all Spain The people at first reasoned, and then rebelled, and murder- ed the Inquisitors ; the aged murmured and died ; the next generation repined and complained ; but their successors were completely tamed by education ; and until very lately the Spaniards have been trained up by their priests to shud- der at the thought of thinking for themselves. 9. A simple narrative of the proceedings of the Inquisi- tion has shocked the world, and the cruelty of it has becorno "What tendency had the Inquisition ? What number of persons been ruined by this court ? What has most fully displayed to " yes of mankind the temper of the papal religion * 2lt 230 THE INQUISITION. proverbial. Nothing ever displayed so fully to the eyes of mankind the- spirit and temper of the papal religion. Let us hear the description which Voltaire, a very competent witness, gives of it. " Their form of proceeding is an infalli- ble way to destroy whomsoever the Inquisitors wish. The prisoners are not confronted with the accuser or informer. Nor is there any informer or witness, who is not listened to : a public convict, a notorious malefactor, an infamous person, a child, are in holy office, though no where else, credible accusers and witnesses. Even the son may depose against his father, the wife against her husband." The wretched prisoner is no more made acquainted with his crime than with his accuser, and were he told the one, it might possibly lead him to guess the other. 10. To avoid this, he is compelled, by tedious confine- ment in a noisome dungeon, where he never sees a face but the jailer's, and is not permitted the use of either books or pen and ink or should confinement alone not be sufficient, he is compelled, by the most excruciating tortures, to inform against himself, to discover and confess the crime laid to his charge, of which he is often ignorant. This procedure, unheard of till the institution of this court, makes the whole kingdom tremble. Suspicion reigns in every breast. Friend- ship and quietness are at an end. The brother dreads his brother ; the father his son. Hence taciturnity has become the characteristic of a nation, endued with all the vivacity naturaj to the inhabitants of a warm and fruitful climate. To this tribunal we must likewise impute that profound ig- norance of sound philosophy, in which Spain lies buried, while Germany, England, France, and even Italy, have dis- covered so many truths, and eniarged the sphere of our knowledge. Never is human nature so debased as where ignorance is armed with power. 11. But these melancholy effects of the Inquisition are a trifle when compared with those public sacrifices, called Auto da Fe, or Act of Faith, and to the shocking barbari- ties that precede them. A priest in a white surplice, or a monk who has vowed meekness and humility, causes his What is the prisoner compelled to do by the inquisitorial courts ? What is the ignorance of philosophy in Spain to be imputed to ? When is human nature most debased ? By what name are the pui- lic sacrifices called ? THE INQUISITION 231 fellow creatures to be put to the torture in a dismal dungeon, A stage is erected in the public market place, where the con- demned prisoners are conducted to the stake, attended with a train of monks and religious confraternities. They sing psalms, say mass, and butcher mankind. Were a native of Asia to come to Madrid upon a day of an execution of this sort, it would be impossible for him to tell whether it were a rejoicing, a religious feast, a sacrifice, or a massacre ; and yet it is all these together ! The kings, whose presence alone in other cases is the harbinger, of mercy, assist at this spectacle, uncovered, seated lower than the Inquisitors, and are spectators of their subjects expiring in the flames. 12. The following is an account of an Auto da Fe, per- formed at Madrid in the year 1682. The officers of the In- quisition, preceded by trumpets, kettle-drums, and their ban- ner, marched on the 30th of May, in cavalcade, to the pa- lace of the great square, where they declared by proclama- tion, that on the 30th of June the sentence of the prisoners would be put in execution. There had not been a spectacle of this kind at Madrid for several years before, for which reason it was expected by the inhabitants with as much im - patience as a day of the greatest festivity and triumph- When the day appointed arrived, a prodigious number of people appeared, dressed as splendid as their respective cir- cumstances would admit. In the great square was raised a high scaffold, and thither, from seven in the morning till the evening, were brought criminals of both sexes ; aff the In- quisitions in the kingdom sending their prisoners to Madrid. 13. There was among those who were to suffer, a young Jewess of exquisite beauty, and but seventeen years of age. Being on the same side of the scaffold where the queen was seated, she addressed her in the following pathetic speech ; " Great queen ! will not your royal presence be of some ser- vice to me in my miserable condition 1 have regard to my youth; and oh ! consider that I am about to die for professing a religion imbibed from my earliest infancy !" Her majesty seemed greatly to pity her distress, but turned away her eyes, as she did not dare to speak a word in behalf of a person who had been declared a heretic by the Inquisition. 14. Mass now began, in the midst of which the priest At what time, and where wa an Auto da Ft, performed > 232 PLYMOUTH COLONY. came from the altar, placed near the scrffold, and seated himself in a chair prepared for that purpose. Then the chief Inquisitor descended from the amphitheatre, dressed in his cope, and having a mitre on his head ; after bowing to thn altar, he advanced towards the king's balcony, and went up to it, attended by some of his officers carrying a cross and the gospels, with a book containing the oath by which the kings of Spain oblige themselves to protect the Catholic faith, to extirpate heretics, and support, with all their power, the prosecutions aud decrees of the Inquisition. On the approach of the Inquisitor, and on his presenting this book to the king, his majesty rose up, bare-headed, and swore to maintain the oath, which was read to him by one of his coun- sellors ; after which the king continued standing till the In- quisitor had returned to his place, when the secretary of the holy office mounted a sort of pulpit, and administered a like oath to the counsellors and the whole assembly. 15. The mass was begun about twelve at noon, and did not end until nine in the evening, being protracted by a proclamation of the sentences of the several criminals which were all separately rehearsed aloud one after the .other. Next followed the burning of twenty-one men and women, whose intrepidity in suffering that horrid death was asto- nishing ; some even thrusting their hands and feet into the flames with the most dauntless fortitude. The situation of the king was so near to the criminals that their dying groans were very audible to him ; he could not, however, be absent from this dreadful scene, as it is esteemed a religious one ; and his coronation oath obliges him to give a sanction by his presence to ail the acts of the tribunal. PLYMOUTH COLONY. 1. NEW ENGLAND owes its origin, as a civil and Christian community, to a congregation of Puritans under the pastoral care of the Rev. John Robinson. Not being tolerated in the exercise of that religious liberty which they reckoned What number of persons were burnt ? What does the coronation oath of the king oblige him to do ? To whom does New-England owe Us origin, as a religious and civil community ? LANDING OF THE PILGRIMS PLYMOUTH COLONY. 33 necessary for their spiritual edification and growth in grace, they resolved on emigration to some foreign country. Their views were, at once, directed to Holland, where the spirit of commerce had dictated a free toleration in matters of faith and worship. Accordingly, in 1607, a part of the congre- gation sailed for Amsterdam, where, in the following year, they were joined by their pastor and such others as had been obliged to remain behind. But from Amsterdam they soon judged it adviseable to remove to Leyden. In this place they continued about eleven years, and experienced much satisfaction in the enjoyment of their Christian privileges. 2. But a continuance and permanent settlement in Hol- land was now viewed as defeating, in a great measure, the object of leaving their native country. They were not join- ed in Leyden by so many of their English friends as they expected, and many of such as did come over, only specu- lated in trade, and added but little to their spiritual prospects. A continuance, therefore, in Holland, would finally be the means of scattering their families and descendants ; the old people would die, and the young ones would soon be amal- gamated with the people of their adopted country, arrcl so the great object of preserving and promoting their peculiar state of church polity would be lost. Another removal was considered a duty ; and after much inquiry, America, the newly discovered world, was fixed upon as an asylum. 3. It was determined that a part of them should go and prepare the way for others ; and that if a major part should consent to go, the pastor should go with them ; otherwise ho should remain in Holland. It was found, on examination, that though a major part was willing to go, yet they could not get ready in season ; therefore, the greater number being obliged to stay, they required Mr. Robinson to stay with them. Mr. Brewster, the ruling elder, was appointed to go with the minority, who were to be an absolute church of themselves, as well as those who should stay, with this pro- viso, " that as they should go over or return, they should be reputed as members, without further dismission or testimo- nial." The others were to follow as soon as possible. 4. On the 6th of September, 16*20, the company, consist- How long did Mr. Robinson's society remain in Leyden , before re wiving- to remove to America ' 234 PLYMOUTH COLONY. ing of one hundred and one souls, exclusive of the crew, pro- ceeded on their voyage in the ship May-jlower, commanded by Capt. Jones. The former part of their passage was at- tended with nothing remarkable, but the latter exposed them to frequent and great perils. " On the ninth of November they made land, which proved to be the sandy cliffs of Cape Cod." Not the land to which they, in their own imagina- tion, had been directing their course. Hudson's river was their object, a part of the country within the limits of Vir- ginia, as their charter had expressed ; but at Cape Cod, they were north of that tract of country nearly two degrees. But here they were compelled to stay their voyage ; for though they attempted to direct their course to the south, 'yet a%- verse winds, a dangerous coast, and the unwillingness of the master of the ship, constrained them to cast anchor on this northern shore. The land which first struck their attention was so barren, and so destitute of every thing inviting, that they explored their neighboring coast with their boat, till a harbor across the bay presented too many desirable db- jects to justify any further perilous experiments and specu- iatM ; . 5. It is evident, that the captain of the May-jlower was bribed by the agents of the Dutch West India Company to take these people to the northward of their settlements, lest the -lew settlers should prove an annoyance to their trade. By this piece of treachery, they were landed so far to the north as to be out of the bounds expressed in their patent, and that instrument could be of no use whatever 'to them. Of this circumstance, some unhappy spirits on board were apprised, and began to boast, that as soon as on shore, there would be no law, no restraint. " It was therefore thought proper, before disembarcation, that they should enter into an association, and combine themselves into a political body, to be governed by a majority. To this they consented ; and a written instrument being drawn, they subscribed it with their own hands, and by unanimous vote chose John Carver their governor for one year." This document was signed by forty-one individuals, twenty-four being heads of families, and the other seventeen single men. Hd mak soft fd\v many made the first company of emigrants ? Where did they te land ? Where did they expect'to land ? Why were they carried IT north? How many persona signedtheir articles of civil compact ? PLYMorni COLONY. 2:10 6. The \ :m:ed in Cape* Cod Harbor about five weeks, during which time lour persons died ; on tbe Kith of December lb i the b:i\ and anchored in tbc harbor of Pi.YMorni. a name which they gave to tlieir intended settlement, partly from the pla.ce having i>- ":i J o named in captain Smith's map, hut in ially "in rem^mbr of the very kind and friendly treatment they had received from the inhabitants of Plymouth, the last port of their na- tive country from which they sailed." What could have lu-en the cause of this people undertaking this voyage and settlement, at such a season of the year, we are not inform- ed ; but it looks as if it had been occasioned by some mishap or oversight : for when they made land, the snow had begun to fall, and winter was setting in fast. 7. Upon their arrival at Plymouth, having fixed upon the best spot for a town settlement, " they went immediately to work, laying out house-lots ; felling, sawing, riving, and car- rying timber ; and before the end of December, though in- terrupted by stormy weather, by the death of two, and by the sickness of many of their number, they had erected a store house with a thatched roof, in which their goods were de- posited, under a guard. Two rows of houses were begun, and as fast as they could be covered, .the people, who were classed into nineteen families, came ashore and lodged in them. On Lord's day, the 31st of December, they attended divine service for the first time on shore," and dedicated their settlement to God, by the name previously fixed upon, as its standing designation. 8. The length of their voyage, including all the delays, perils, disappointments, and disar-ters, which attended it, a voyage of 134 days, from the time they left Southampton to their arrival in Plymouth harhor, ill prepared them to en- dure and brave the rigors of a North American winter, and in a wilderness too, where there was no asylum prepared for them, no house built, no fresh and wholesome provision, no vegetation, no friend to receive them ; or to bid them wel- come. These afflictive circumstances, as we may naturallj expect, were the cause of that mortal sickness which pre- vailed among this tribe of pilgrim adventurers, during the first When did they land at Plymouth ? Into how many families WM the colony divided ? 09 236 PLYMOUTH COLONY. four months of their settlement. At the end of March, the Mortal Bill stood thus " December, 6 January, 8 Feb- ruary, 17 March, 13 Total, 44. Of these, 21 were sub* scribers to the civil compact ; and 23 were women, children, and servants. 9. At times, the number of the diseased was such, tha not more than six or seven were able to attend the duties of the station, and these were almost wholly employed in attend- ing the sick. The crew of the vessel was in a similar situa- tion, of which they did not recover till April, and then half of them had fallen victims to the dire calamity. Great as this affliction was, it was attended with some marks of a kind superintending Providence. For the first three months, no Indians appeared to alarm or disturb them. It was found afterwards, that this district had been entirely laid waste by a pestilence (perhaps the yellow fever) which had prevailed two or three years before. This fact was evinced by the ex- tent of the fields, the number of the graves, and the' rem- nants of the skeletons lying on the ground. 10. The events we have now mentioned, respecting the depopulation of this country, by wars and pestilence, consi- dered in reference to the settlement of our fathers in the desolated places, are certainly very remarkable. The danr gers to which they were exposed from these untutored tribes were greatly lessened ; and the lands which they occupied being depopulated and deserted, the rights of no man were infringed. The Pilgrims of Plymouth obtained their right of possession to the territory on which they settled, by titles as fair and unequivocal as those by which any human property can be held. Although it has been adopted as a principle of natural law, that Europeans had a right to take and occu- py a portion of the American continent, since it was not all needed by the natives, who were comparatively few in num- ber ; yet, it was policy and seeming justice, to make the In- dians a satisfactory compensation, on taking from them what they had considered their own. 11 ' On the 1 6th of March the inhabitants of Plymouth were alarmed at seeing a sturdy Indian walk into their set- tlement, and passing by the houses, go directly where th people were collected. He saluted them in broken English. How many persons died the first. PLYMOl.JT.Ii COLON \. 21H and bid them welcome. He was affable, and told them his dwelling was live days' travel thence ; that he was a saga- more, or prince, lie understood the geography of the coun- try ; gave an account of the different tribes, their sagamores, and number of men. He had been acquainted with the* English, who had taken ilsh at Monhigan, and knew the names of their captains, lie was naked, excepting a leather belt about his waist, with a fringe a span wide. He had a bow and two arrows, was tall and straight, his hair long be- hind, and short before. They kindly entertained him, and gave him a horseman's coat. He tarried all night, and in- formed them that the place where they were was Patuxet, and that about four years before, all the inhabitants had died ; that not a man, woman, or child, survived. 12. Upon going away, he promised to return in a few days, which he accordingly did, and brought five others with him. Thus a communication was opened between the settlers and the native tribes ; alliances were entered into, and great har- mony prevailed. Squanto, a native who had been kidnapped by the English traders some time before, and who had made his way back again, came and took up his abode with them, and proved a faithful friend till death, which happened the following year. Squanto, in consequence of being thus car- ried to Europe, had escaped the universal mortality of his tribe at Patuxet. He was profitably employed for the colo- ny, during his life, in making his new friends acquainted with the surrounding country, and in other useful services. 13. It will be remembered that Mr. Robinson remained at Leyden with the majority of the society, but with the ex- pectation of being able, with more of his flock, to join those who had emigrated, at some future but not very distant time. This, however, on the part of Mr. Robinson, was not realiz- ed ; for, in the year 1625, he was taken to his rest, greatly lamented by all who had been blessed under his ministry ; bat soon after his death, the remaining part of the congre- gation accomplished their wishes, in uniting with their brethren at Plymouth In the year 1629, the number had increased to 300 ; having then received a great part of theii brethren in Holland ; among whom, were the widow and What had become of tho native inhabitants of New-England ? What Indian came and resided with- them ? 238 THE INDIAN PRINCESS. children of their deceased pastor. Their increasing name began to be felt in the mother country, so that not only did it bring over new settlers, but their patent was enlarged and perfected, so as to give them the power and authority of a body politic. 14. The 22d of December is celebrated as an anniversary festival, to commemorate the landing of the Plymouth colony. A discourse is delivered, adapted to the occasion ; after pub- lic worship, more forcibly, tp impress their minds with the circumstances of their meritorious forefathers, clams, fish, ground-nuts, and victims from the forest, constitute a part of their grateful repast. For a number of years the same anni- versary was celebrated in Boston by the descendants of the Plymouth pilgrims and others. Here, too, the festal board displayed the style of other times ; treasures, which had been hidden in the sand, and game from the woods, mingled with other provisions of the table. It is a festival, rational and happy in its tendency. It reminds the guests of the virtues and sufferings of their fathers ; by a comparison of circum- stances, it excites transports of gratitude, elevates the affec- tions, and amends the heart. THE INDIAN PRINCESS. 1. PERHAPS they, who are not particularly acquainted with the history of Virginia, may be ignorant that Pocahontas, an Indian princess, was the protectress of the English, and often screened them from the cruelty of her father. She was but twelve years old, when captain Smith, the bravest, the most intelligent, and the most humane, of the first colonists, fell into the hands of the savages. He already understood their language, had traded with them several times, and often ap- peased the quarrels between the Europeans and them. Often had he been obliged also to fight them and punish their per- fidy. 2. At length, however, under the pretext of commerce, he was drawn into an ambush, and the only two companions who accompanied him fell before his eyes ; but though alone, At what age was Pocahontas when captain Smith Jell into the hands of the Indians ? THE INDIAN PRINCESS. 230 by his t!r\ f .-'-ity, he extricated himself from \he troop which surrounded him ; until, unfortunately, imagining he could *ave himself by crossing a morass, he stuck fast ; so that tho -avagcs, against whom he had no means of defending him- self, at last took and bound him, and brought him to Pow- hatan. 3. The king was so proud of having captain Smith in his power, that lie sent him in triumph to all the tributary prin- jces, and ordered that he should be splendidly treated, till he returned to. suffer that death which was prepared for him. The fatal moment at length arrived. Captain Smith was laid 1 upon the hearth of the savage king, and his head placed upon a large stone to receive the stroke of death, when Po- cahontas, the youngest and darling daughter of Powhatan, threw herself upon his body, clasped him in her arms, and declared, that if the cruel sentence was executed, the first blow should fall on her. 4. /All savages (absolute sovereigns and tyrants not ex- cepted) are invariably more affected by the tears of infancy, than the voice of humanity. Powhatan could not resist the tears and prayers of his daughter. Captain Smith conse- quently obtained his life on condition of paying for his ran- som a certain quantity of muskets, pow^r, and iron utensils ; but how were they to be obtained ? They would neither per- mit him to return to James Town, nor let the English know where he was, lest they should demand him sword in hand Captain Smith, who was as sensible as courageous, said thai if Powhatan would permit one of his subjects to carry to James Town a leaf which he took from his pocket-book, he should find under a tree, at the day and hour appointed, all the articles demanded for his ransom. 5. Powhatan consented ; but without having much faith in his promise's, believing it to be only an artifice of the captain to prolong his life. But he had written on the leaf a few lines, sufficient to give an account of his situation. The messenger returned. The king sent to the place fixed upon, and was greatly astonished to find every thing which had been demanded. Powhatan could not conceive this mode of transmitting thoughts ; and captain Smith was henceforth How happened captain Smith to be taken by the Indians? Hov did Pocahontas save his life ? 22t 240 THE INDIAN PRINCESS. looked upon as a great magician, to whom they could not show too much respect. He left the savages in this opinion and hastened to return home. 6. Two or three years after, some fresh differences arising amidst them and the English, Powhatan, who no longer thought them sorcerers, but still feared their power, laid a horrible plan to get rid of them altogether. His project was to attack them in profound peace, and cut the throats of the whole colony. The night of this intended conspiracy, Poca- hontas took advantage of the obscurity ; and, in a terrible storm, which kept the savages in their tents, escaped from her father's house, advised the English to be on their guard, but conjured them to spare her family, to appear ignorant of the intelligence she had given, and terminate all their differ- ences by a new treaty. 7. It would be tedious to relate all the services which this angel of peace rendered to both nations. It shall only be added, that the English, it is not known from what motives, but certainly against all .faith and equity, thought proper to carry her off. Long and bitterly did she deplore her fate, and the only consolation she had was captain Smith, in whom she found a second father. She was treated with great re- spect, and married to a planter by the name of Rolfe, who soon after took her to England. This was in the reign of James the First ; and it is said that the monarch, pedantic and ridiculous in every point, was so infatuated with the pre- rogative of royalty, that he expressed his displeasure, that one of his subjects should dare to marry the daughter even of a savage king. 8. It will not perhaps be difficult to decide on this occa- sion, whether it was the savage king who derived honor from finding himself placed upon a level with the European prince, or the English monarch, who by his pride and prejudices, re- duced himself to a level with the chief of the savages. Be that as it will, captain Smith, who had returned to. London before the arrival of Pocahontas, was extremely happy to see her again ; but dared not treat her with the same familiarity as at James Town. As soon as she saw him, she threw her- self into his arms, calling him her father ; but finding that How came Pocahontas to fall into the power of the English ?- To whom was she married ? THE WORLD AT REST. 241 he neither returned her caresses with equal warmth, nor the endearing title of daughter, she turned aside her head and wept bitterly ; and it was a long time before they could ob- tain a single word from her. 9. Captain Smith inquired several times what could be the cause of her affliction. " What !" said she, " did I not save thy life in America ? When I was torn from the arms of my father, and conducted amongst thy friends, didst thou not promise to ne a father to me ? Didst thou not assure me that if I went into thy country, thou wouldst be my father, arid that I should be thy daughter ? Thou hast deceived me; and behold me, now here, a stranger and an orphan." It was not difficult for the captain to make peace with this charm- ing creature, whom he tenderly loved. He presented her to several people of the first quality; but never dared to take her to court, from which, however, she received several favors. 10. After a residence of several years in England, an ex ample of virtue and piety, and attachment to her husband, she died, as she was on the point of embarking for America. She left an only son, who was married, and left none but daughters ; and from these are descended some of the prin cipal characters in Virginia. THE WORLD AT REST. BEHOLD the world Rests, and her tir'd inhabitants have paus'd From trouble and turmoil. The widow now Has ceas'd to weep, and her twin orphans lie Lock'd in each arm, partakers of her rest. The man of sorrow has forgot his woes ; The outcast, that his head is sheltarless, His griefs unshard. The mother tends no more Her daughter's dying slumbers ; but, surpris'd With heaviness, and sunk upon her couch, Dreams of her bridals. E'en the hectic, lull'd On Death's lean arm to rest, in visions wrapt, Where did Pocahontas spend the remainder of her life ? Who or* her descendants ? 242 SETTLEMENT OF RHODE ISLAND. Crowning with hope's bland wreath his shudd'ring nurse, Poor victim ! smiley. Silence and deep repose Reign o'er the nations ; and the warning voice Of nature utters audibly within The general moral ; tells us, that repose, Deathlike as this, but of far longer span, Is coming on us that the weary crowds, Who now enjoy a temporary calm. Shall soon taste lasting quiet. 4 wrapt around With grave-clothes ; and their aching, restless heads Mould'ring in holes and corners unobserv'd, Till the. last trump shall break their sullen sleep. SETTLEMENT OF RHODE ISLAND. L THE first European inhabitants of New England came to this country with the professed design of escaping religious persecution ; but the principles of religious liberty at that time were so little understood, that they exercised upon their fellow Christians, as soon as possessed of the power, the same intolerance which they had professed to view with^so much abhorrence in others. The state of Rhode Island, or more properly of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, as it is called in the British charter which constituted it a political community, and under which its civil government is still administered, was originally settled by persons who resorted thither in order to enjoy those rights of conscience in matters of religion which were not allowed them in Massachusetts. The state took its name from 'the two first settlements within its limits. That of Providence Planta- tions was begun by Roger Williams and ,his associates in 163G ; and that of Rhode Island was begun by Dr. John Clark, William Coddington, and others, about the year 1638. Besides these a third settlement was begun by Samuel Gor- ton and others, at Pautuxet river, in the year 1641. 2. Roger Williams may with justice be, and he usually is, considered the founder of the state arid the parent of the From what does the state of Rhode Island and Providence Plants tions derive its name ? Where and by whom were the three first set- tlements made ? What induced them to settle here ? SETTLEMENT OF RHODE ISLAND. 243 religious freedom which has ever prevailed in it. He was a native of Wales, born in the year 1598, and had a liberal education, under the patronage of Sir Edward Coke. The occasion of his receiving the favor of that distinguished law- yer was very singular. Sir Edward, one day, at church, ob- serving a youth taking notes from a sermon, beckoned and received him into his pew. He obtained si^ht of the notes, which were a judicious selection of (he most interesting *.'n- timents delivered by the preacher. This mil. Itis great modesty induced Sir Edward to solicit the ^.rents' of young Williams to let him have the care, of their Sv;ii. The request was readily granted, and he soon entered upon the study of the law. Mr. Williams received all possible assist- ance from his generous patron ; but finding this employment not altogether congenial to his feelings, he turned his atten- tion to divinity. After having completed his theological stu- dies and entered upon the duties of the ministry, he was led to embrace the sentiments of the Puritans, with some of whom he shortly afterwards embarked for America, being the oth of February, 1631. 3. On his arrival he was invited to become an assistant to Mr. Skelton, minister of the religious society in Salem ; but some objections being -made by the civil authority, he went to Plymouth, where he preached two or three years, and was held in high estimation by governor Bradford and the people. But Mr. Skelton becoming old, a second application was made to Mr. Williams to become his assistant. With this request he complied, although the general court again at- tempted to prevent it : and so successful had he been in gaining the affections of the people at Plymouth, that many of them removed with him. But his removal to Salem led immediately to events of great interest to himself and to the country in which he was destined by Providence to act so conspicuous a part. It is stated by his biographers, that in one year he literally filled the place with his obnoxious sen- timents. 'His favorite topic was liberty of conscience, on which he so much insisted as to offend a few leading indi- viduals of tlie congregation ; and he further maintained, which was still more offensive, that civil magistrates, as such, Under whose direction and patronage did Roger Williams receive bis education ? What led ir Edward Coko to educate hira * 244 SETTLEMENT OF RHODE ISLAND. had no authority from God to regulate or control the affairs of religion. He also insisted that the princes of Europe had no right whatever to dispose of the possessions of the Ameri- can Indians. 4. The magistrates, apprehending from his peculiar talents and address, that his opinions would extend themselves, made several attempts to. convince' him of his supposed errors; but, being unsuccessful in these attempts, in October 1635, they passed upon him the sentence of excommunication and banishment. Permission, however, was given him to remain within the jurisdiction of the colbny till Spring, on condition " that he would not go about to draw others to his opinions." But it being reported to the governor and assistants, that he held meetings in his house for the purpose of inculcating " such points as he had been censured for ;" arid that he had already drawn -about twenty persons to these opinions, 'intend ing with them to 'establish a plantation about Narraganset Bay,. " from which the new infection might easily spread into their churches, the people being much taken with the appre hension of his godliness," it was resolved that he should be sent back to England in a ship then ready to depart. They accordingly sent for him to come to Boston ; but he made some excuse for not complying with their request, upon which they issued an order to apprehend and convey him on board I he ship. Mr. Williams, however, aware of their designs, had been three days gone before the officer retched the house. 5. The next that was heard of him was on Sekonk plain, a few miles east of Providence. Here he obtained' a grant of land from the chief sachem at Mount Hope, now in Bris- tol, R. I. but being informed by a letter, and messenger from Plymouth, that this place was within their patent, it. was re- solved to cross the Pawtucket river and take up their abode more immediately with the savages. It is said, that when Mr. Williams and his friend Olney, and Thomas Angel, a hired servant, approached the opposite shore in thek canoe, they were met by the savages and saluted by the. Indian word, that signifies, wihat cheer ? They then pursued their course till they came to a pleasant spring upon the side cf a- hill, which is the northerly part of what is now the large, and , - - 7 Who accompanied Roger Williams when ho went to Providence after being 'banished from Massachusetts? SETTLEMENT OF RHODE ISLAND. 245 flourishing town of Providence. In this place they resolved to settle, ;m. .11 ero he found that favor among the savages which Christians had denied him. Many of his friends and adhe- rents soon repaired to his new habitation. He had the hap- piness to gain the friendship of two powerful Narraganset princes, of whom he made a formal purchase of a territory sufficient for himself and his friends. He soon acquired a sufricient knowledge of the Indian language to transact the affairs of trade and other necessary negotiation, and perhaps no man ever had more influence over the savage tribes than Roger Williams. This influence enabled him to sooth the ' irritable Indian chiefs, and break up their confederacies against the English ; and the first act of this kind was per- formed in favor of the colony from which he had been ba- nished. It is not necessary in most cases for the historian to sit in judgment upon the conflicting claims to divine au- thority, between different religionists, for the support of their respective peculiarities, whether in faith or worship ; but in the present case it is too obvious to escape observation, that in practice the religion of Mr. Williams was more conforma- ble to the precepts of Jesus Christ than that of his perse- cutors. 7. But if, from a view of these unhappy divisions, it should be supposed Mr. Williams exercised more of the Christian temper than his enemies, it should always be remembered, that it is nearly a matter of course, such is the imperfection of human nature, for dissenters from any established religion, to fall into unnecessary peculiarities, and into a seeming dis- position to irritate the feelings of the majority when no conscientious scruple requires it. It is possible that mny have been the case with Mr. Williams, and the other di^ ers from the religion that prevailed in New England at that time. As good a man as Mr. Williams is supposed to be by his friends, and as correct as were his opinions on h'gious liberty and it cannot be pretended that they were less correct than the opinions of any other man living at that By whom, and for what reasn, did Psoviifefloe receive to name ? 23 246 SETTLEMENT OF RHODE ISLAND. time his greatest admirers will acknowledge him no more than human. Nor is it necessary, as already intimated, to suppose that all the censure is just which was cast upon the persons, who, in this country, at the time under considera- tion, exercised a persecuting spirit ; for, then, as has been observed, religious liberty was but imperfectly understood and had they lived in this enlightened age of the world, not unlikely they would abhor such a spirit as much as ourselves. 8. Shortly subsequent to the banishment of Roger Will- iams, it was found that Massachusetts was much convulsed by religious discords, which caused a synod to be holden at Newton, now Cambridge, which adjudged sundry religious opinions to be heretical, and passed sentence of banishment upon such as held the most obnoxious of them. These dis- turbances induced John Clark, an eminent physician, Will- iam Coddington, and several others of their friends, in the year 1638, to resolve on a removal out of the jurisdiction of that state ; and by the advice of Roger Williams they were induced to settle at Aquidneck, now called Rhode Island. On the 7th of March, 1638, the men of this party, to the number of eighteen, united themselves into a body politic, and chose William Coddington their judge or chief magis- trate. At the commencement of this settlement on Rhode Island, Dr. Clark became the minister of a society of Bap- tists then formed ; and he continued to act in this character till his death, which happened in 1676, in the 66th year of his age. The particulars of his imprisonment at Boston, of his being sentenced to , pay a fine of twenty pounds or be publicly whipped, for preaching at Lynn where he had occa- sion to go on business, and of the important part which he took both at home and in England in the concerns of his in- fant colony, are minutely detailed in the biographical notices of his life. 9. The hardships and privations endured by the first set- tlers of the other New England colonies, have drawn forth the warmest sympathies of the Christian and philanthropist. When we see persons, solely for religious considerations, willing to forsake the scenes and companions of their youth, to cross the wide ocean amidst perils and sufferings, and^hen to settle for life in a region surrounded by savages and wild beasts of the most ferocious kind, in a region almost destitute of the elegancies and delights of civilized life, we cannot SF/ITLKMKNT OF PENNSYLVANIA. declared themselves unable to assign a cause for these sin- gular affections of the children. This man, 'more ignorant, or more superstitious, than his companions, confessed h/s suspicion, that the children were bewitched. The declara- tion appears to have been decisive. The connexions of the children immediately applied themselves to fasting and prayer ; and summoned their friends to unite in their devo tions. On the llth of the following March, Mr. Paris in- vited several of the neighboring ministers to unite with him in prayer at his own house. It was observed, that during the religious exercises the children were generally decent, and still ; and that after the service was ended, they renew- ed their former inexplicable conduct. 5 A few days before this, an Indian man and woman, servants in the house of Mr. Paris, formed a kind of magical cake ; which like the mola among the Romans, was es- teemed sacred in Mexico ; the native country of the woman ; and was supposed by these ignorant creatures, to possess an efficacy, sufficient to detect the authors of the witchcraft. This cake was given to the house dog, as having the com- mon canine prerogative of corresponding with the invisible world. Soon after the spell was finished, the children, ac quainted, probably, with its drift, and therefore naturally considering this as the proper time to make disclosures, be- gan to'point out the authors of their misfortunes. The first person accused was the Indian woman herself ; who was ac- cordingly committed to prison ; and after lying there some time, escaped without any further punishment, except being sold to defray the expense of her prosecution. 6. Two other women, of the names of Good and Osborne ; one, long sunk in melancholy, the other bedrid, were next accused by the children ; and, after being examined, were also comnlitted to prison. Within five weeks a Mrs. Corey, and a Mrs. Nurse, women of unblemished character, and professors of religion, were added to the number of the ac- cused. Before the examination of Mrs. Corey, Mr. Noyes, minister of Salem, highly esteemed for his learning, piety, and benevolence, made a prayer. She was then vehemently accused by Mrs. Putnam, the mother of one of them, and by , When and under what circumstances was witchcraft in Salem made a matter of public interest? 264 NEW ENGLAND WITCHCRAFT. several other persons, who now declared themselves bewitch* ed, of beating, pinching, strangling, and in various other ways afflicting them. Mrs. Putnam, particularly, complain- ed of excruciating distress ; and with loud, piercing shrieks, excited in the numerous spectators emotions of astonish- ment, pity, and indignation, bordering upon frenzy. Mrs. Corey was, of course, pronounced guilty, and imprisoned. Soon after her commitment, a child of Sarah Good, the me- lancholy woman mentioned above, a child between four and five years old, was accused by the same woman of bewitch- ing them ; and accordingly was imprisoned. 7. In the mean time fasts were multiplied. Several public ones were kept by the inhabitants of the village ; and, final- ly, a general fast was holden throughout the colony. By these successive solemnities the subject acquired a conside- ration literally sacred; and alarmed, and engrossed the minds of the whole community. Magistrates and clergymen gave to it the weight of their belief, and their reputation ; led their fellow citizens into a labyrinth of error, and iniqui- ty ; and stained the character of their country, in the eye of all succeeding generations. Had Mr. Paris, instead of lis- tening to the complaints of the children in his family, and holding days of fasting and prayer, on so preposterous an occasion, corrected them severely ; had the physician, men- tioned above, instead of pronouncing them bewitched, ad- ministered to them a strong dose of ipecacuanha ; had the magistrates who received the accusations, and examined the accused, dismissed both, and ordered the accused to prison, or finally, had the judges of the superior court directed the first indictment to be quashed, and sent the prisoners home ; the evil, in either of these stages, might undoubtedly have been stopped. But, unhappily, all these were efforts of rea- son which lay beyond the spirit of the times. 8. That Mr. Paris, Mr. Noyes, and Mr. Hale, believed the existence of the witchcraft in Salem Village, cannot be questioned. That they seem to have been men of a fair re- ligious character must be acknowledged. But it must also be acknowledged, that both they and Messieurs Hawthorn and Corwiri, the magistrates principally concerned, men of good character likewise, were, in the present case, rash and inexcusable. They were not merely deceived ; but they de- ceived themselves and infatuated others. They were not NEW ENGLAND WITCHCRAFT. 2tt> merely zealous, but unjust. They received from persons unknown, injudicial proceedings as witnesses, evidence equally contradictory to law, to common sense, and to the scriptures. Spectral evidence, as it was termed, that is, evidence founded on apparitions, and other supernatural apprararuvs, professed to be seen by tlic accusers, was the only basis of a tram of capital convictions. 9. Children, incapable of understanding the tit; which they gave testimony, were yet, at times, the onlv nesses ; and what was still worse, the very things v, ;. ,h tbny testified, were put into their minds and mouths, by the oxa- miners, in the questions which they asked. In one case, a man, named Samuel Ward well, was tried, condemned, and executed, on the testimony of his wife arid daughter, who appear to have accused him, merely for the sake of saving themselves. Soon after these examinations, the number of " accusers, and by necessary consequence of the accused also, multiplied to a most alarming degree. To recite the story would be useless, as well as painful. In substance, it would be little else than what has been already said. All those who were executed, denied the charge, and finally declared their innocence ; although several of them, in the moment of terror, had made partial confessions of their guilt. A considerable number, for the same purpose, acknowledged themselves guilty, and thus escaped death. To such a de- gree did the frenzy prevail, that in the January following, the grand jury indicted almost fifty persons for witchcraft. 10. Nor was the evil confined to this neighborhoqd. It soon spread into various parts of Essex, Middlesex, and Suf- folk. Persons at Andover, Ipswich, Gloucester, Boston, and several other places, were accused by their neighbors, and others. Fcr some time, the victims were 'selected only from the lower classes. It was not long, however, before the spirit of accusation began to lay hold on persons of more conse- ouence. On the 5th of August, 1692, Mr. George Bur- roughs, who had formerly preached in Salem Village, and afterwards at "Wells, in the province of Maine, was brought to trial for bewitching Mary Wolcott, an inhabitant of the village, and was condemned. Mr. English, a respectable merchant in Salem, and his wife ; Messrs. Dudley and John Bradstreet, sons of the late Gov. Bradstreet ; the wife of Mr. Hale ; the lady of sir William Phipps, and the Secretajgr $66 NEW ENGLAND WITCHCRAFT. of Connecticut, were all among the accused. Mr. English and his wife fled to New York. Mr. Dudley Bradstreet had already committed between thirty and forty persons for this supposed crime ; but being weary and discouraged, declined any further interference in the business. Upon this, he was charged \\ith having killed nine persons by witchcraft ; and was obliged to flee to the district of Maine. His brother John being accused of having bewitched a dog, and riding upon his back, fled into New Hampshire. At Andover, a dog was accused of bewitching several human beings, and put to death. 11. The evil now became too great to be borne. A man, > named Giles Corey, had been pressed to death for refusing to plead ; and nineteen persons had been executed. More than one third of these were members of the Christian Church ; and more than one half had borne an unblemished character. One hundred and fifty were in prison ; two hundred others were accused. Suspense and terror spread through the colony. Neither age nor sex, neither ignorance nor innocence, neither learning nor piety, neither reputation nor office, furnished the least security. Multitudes appear to have accused others, merely to save themselves. Among the accused, not a small number confessed themselves guilty for the same reason ; for by a strange inversion of judicial process, those who confessed the crime escaped ; while those who protested their innocence, died without proof, and with- out rnercy. 12. While the mischief was thus rolling up to a moun- tainous size, the principal persons in the colony began seri- ously to ask themselves where it would end. A conviction began to spread that the proceedings were rash, and indefen- sible. Mr. Hale probably changed his opinion, because his wife was accused. The same consideration undoubtedly in- fluenced sir William Phipps. A respectable man in Boston, having been accused by some persons at Andover, arrested his accusers for defamation ; and laid his damages at a thou- sand pounds. In consequence of this spirited conduct, the frenzy in that town disappeared. In other pl3es, the dis- How many persons were indicted for witchcraft, by the Grand Jury of Salem, in January 1693 ? How many had been executed : What was the greatest number imprisoned at one time r Of accused ? NEW ENGLAND WITCHCRAFT. 967 tresses, the fair character, and the apparent innocence of many of the sufferers, wrought silently, hut powerfully, on the people at large. At the last special court of Oyer and Terminer, holden on this subject, of fifty who wevo brought to trial, all were acquitted, except three ; and these were re- prieved by the governor. These eVents wen* followed by a general release of those who had been imprisoned. Thus the cloud which had so long hung over the colony, .-Jowly and sullenly retired ; and like the darkness of Eirypt, was to the great joy of the distressed inhabitants, surci/nned by serenity and sunshine. 13. At this period, and for some time after, attempts were made in various places to revive these persecutions ; but they failed of success. It has been said that ah inhabitant of Northampton accused one of his neighbors of bewitching him to the Hon. Mr. Partridge, a very respectable magistrate in Hatfield. This gentleman, understanding perfectly the nature of the accusation, and foreseeing the mischiefs which would spring from any serious attention to it, told the ac- cuser, that as it was not in his power to try the cause imme- diately, he would hold a court at Northampton for that pur- pose, on a special day of the succeeding week ; but that he could now finish a part of the business. It was a rule of law, he said, that the informant should, in various cases, re- ceive half of what was adjudged. A person convicted of witchcraft, was by law punished with twenty stripes. He should, therefore, order ten of these to the accuser. They were accordingly inflicted on the spot. At the appointed time the court was opened at Northampton ; but no accuser appeared. 14. This confessedly illegal, but exemplary, wise, and just administration, smothered the evil here in its birth. Had measures equally wise been adopted throughout the colony, the story of New England witchcraft would never have been told. From this period the belief of witchcraft seems gradually, and almost entirely, to have vanished from New England. There is, perhaps, no country in the world, whose inhabit- ants more generally treat the whole train of invisible beings which people the regions of superstition and credulity, with less respect, or who distinguish religion from its counterfeits How was the progress of witchcraft checked at Northampton ? 268 PETER THE GREAT. with more universality, or correctness. Even conjurers and fortune-tellers, who so easily fascinate the curiosity of man- kind, and acquire an importance in the eye of fancy which reason reprobates, are generally regarded, here, with con- tempt and ridicule. PETER THE GREAT. IMMORTAL Peter ! first of monarchs ! He His stubborn country tamed, her rocks, her fens, Her floods, her seas, her ill-submitting sons ; And while the fierce barbarian he subdued, To more exalted soul he fais'd the man. Ye shades of ancient heroes, ye who toiled Thro' long successive ages to. build up A laboring plan of state, behold at once The wonder done ! behold the matchless prince ! Who left his native throne, where reigned till then A mighty shadow of unreal power ; Who greatly spurned the slothful pomp of courts ; And, roaming every land, in every port, His sceptre laid aside, with glorious hand Unweary'd plying the mechanic tool, Gathered the seeds of trade, of useful arts, Of civil wisdom, and of martial skill. Charged with the stores of Europe home he goes 1 Then cities rise amid the illumined waste ; O'er joyless destrts smiles the rural reign ; Par-distant flood to flood is social joined ; The astonished Euxine hears the Baltic roar ; Proud navies ride on seas that never foamed With daring keel before ; and armies stretch Each way their dazzling files, repressing here The frantic Alexander of the north, And awing there stern Othman's shrinking sons. Sloth flies the land, and ignorance, and vice Of old dishonor proud ; it glows around, Taught by the royal hand that roused the whole, One scene of arts, of arms, of rising trade ; For what his wisdom planned, and power enforced, More potent still, his great example showed. * GENERAL OGLETHORPE. 269 GENERAL OGLETHORPE. 1. THE life of general Oglethorpe, the founder of Georgia, would require but little embellishment to make it a tale oi romance. It was full of variety, adventure, and achieve ment. His ruling passions were the love of glory, of hia country, and of mankind, and these were so blended toge ther in his mind that they formed but one principle of action, He wasj^hero, a statesman, an orator, the patron of letters, the choren friend of men of genius, and the theme of praise for great poets. 2. In his youth, after having been the confidential aid-de- cainp of the earl of Peterborough, whom he resembled in his restless activity of mind and body, he early attracted the notice of the great duke of Marlborough, and afterwards served with distinguished reputation under prince Eugene, in Germany, Hungary, and Turkey. From his boyhood he uniformly enjoyed the friendship and confidence of his gal- lant and eloquent countryman, John, duke of Argyle, who, in an animated speech in parliament, bore splendid testimony to his military talents, his natural generosity, his contempt for danger, and his devotion to the public weal. 3. Passing from the camp to the senate, he soon became conspicuous for his manly independence, and still more for the ardor and purity of his benevolence. Anticipating the labors of Howard, he plunged into the dark and pestilential dungeons, in which prisoners for debt in England were at that time confined, dragged to light the most atrocious abuses, restored to freedom multitudes who had long suffered under legal oppression, and obtained public and exemplary punish- ment of the men who had been guilty of these outrages against justice and humanity. 4. Soon after this a colony was projected, which, without any prospect of profit or remuneration to those who directed it, had in view the double object of relieving England from some portion of the daily increasing burden of her pauper- ism, and of opening an avenue to useful and independent industry to those who had fallen into unmerited misfortune. General Oglethorpe was placed at the head of this enterprise, With what philanthropist has general Oglethorpe been comparod ? What wa the object in founding Georgia ? 270 GENERAL OGLETHORPE. i and entered upon it with that ardor which marked all his undertakings. Animated by the hope of gaining glory, and of doing good, he cheerfully expended a large portion of his private fortune, and encountered every variety of fatigue and danger. 5. It was in 1732, immediately after making a spirited and patriotic effort in parliament to restore a constitutional mjli- tia, and to abolish arbitrary impressment for the sea-service, that he left England to become the founder of the colony of Georgia. The suppression of the slave-trade had also long engaged his attention, and under his auspices this infant co- lony set the example of a legal prohibition of this traffic in ihc blood of man. G. Various untoward circumstances conspired to check the growth of the new settlement, and to frustrate the innu- merable plans of agricultural and political improvement, which \v< % re constantly suggested by the busy and fertile mind of the {rover nor ; and, in a few years, these labors were completely interrupted by the alarm of a Spanish and Indian war. The benign legislator and magistrate resumed, at once, the habits of his youth, and approved himself the hardy, daring, and adventurous soldier. By his unwearied activity, and the ex- ample of his personal courage, not less than by his military skill and enterprise, in the laborious southern campaigns of 1740 and 1742, he repelled the inroads of a far superior ene- my, which threatened the subjugation of Georgia and the devastation of the Carolinas. 7. It was this fine combination of chivalry and philan- thropy in the character of general Oglethorpe, graced as it was by a variety of accomplishments and the love of letters, that excited the warm admiration of Johnson, who intended to become his biographer that called forth the eulogy of Pope, in those well known lines, And driven by strong benevolence of soul, Shall fly, like Oglethorpe, form pole to pole ; and which induced Thomson to celebrate the praises of the founder of Savannah, among those of the most brilliant he- roes and patriots of ancient or of English history What law was passed in Georgia concerning slavery, an it first ettlemant ? BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. 271 Ix> swarming southward on rejoicing suns Gny colonies extend ; the calm retreat Of undeserved distress, the bettor homo Of those whom bigots chase from foreign lands. Not built on Rapine, Servitude, an i NVo, And in their turn some petty tyrant's prey ; But bound by social freedom, linn they rise, Such as of late an Oglethorpe has formed, And crowding round, the plcas'd Savannah sees. 8. General Oglethorpe administered the affairs of the colony for about eleven years. He afterwards passed " without fear and without reproach," through many alternations of fortune, both in public and private life, constantly emulating Howard in the zeal and extent of his charity, and sustaining a charac- ter as a soldier and a gentleman, such as sir Philip Sidney or lord Falkland might have envied. His habitual temperance and activity preserved his health and faculties to extreme old age. lie died in 1785, affording the first example, in mo- dern times, of the founder of a colony who has lived to see that colony recognised by the world as a sovereign and inde- pendent state. Col. Daniel Boon, the adventurous founder of the state of Kentucky, is, perhaps, the only other instance of this remarkable distinction. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. SKT; on yon dark'ning height bold Franklin tread, Heaven's awful thunders rolling o'er his head ; Convolving clouds the billowy skies deform, And forky flames emblaze the black'ning storm. See the descending streams around him burn, Glance on his rod, and with his guidance turn ; He bids conflicting heav'ns their blast expire, Curbs the fierce blaze, and holds th' imprison'd fire. No more, when folding storms the vault o'erspread, The livid glare shall strike thy face with dread ; Nor tow'rs nor temples, shudd'ring with the sound, Sink in the flames, and spread destruction round. At what age and when did General Oglethorpe die ? \Vh* r*aem bianco is there between hit life and that of Col Daniel livn, th* (bunder of Kentucky ? 2W DESTRUCTION OF TEA AT BOSTON. His daring toils, the threat'ning blasts that wait, Shall teach mankind to ward the bolts of fate ; The pointed steel o'ertop th' ascending spire, And lead o'er trembling walls the harmless fire ! In his glad fame while distant worlds rejoice, Far as the lightnings shine, or thunders raise their voice. DESTRUCTION OF TEA AT BOSTON 1. AFTER the act of the British parliament, laying a duty on paper, glass, tea, &c. was repealed, with the exception of tea, on which the duty was continued, associations were en- tered into in all the colonies of North America, to discourage the use of. it. The consumption was of course greatly di- minished, and the tea accumulated in the English warehouses. The East India Company sought relief from government, and urged them to take off the duty on importation in America, and double the duty on exportation in England. This pro- posal, which would have produced nearly the same result as to the amount of revenue received, and. have obviated one serious cause of dispute, was declined. 2. The ministry, bent on levying their American duty, thought this tea the most useful article for the experiment. They calculated that this luxury, which, from long habit and extensive use, had become almost a necessary of life, would inevitably find purchasers, in spite of all private associations or patriotic agreements. In this casB, as in many others, they reposed a false confidence in their estimate of human character ; and forgot that some general maxims, however just in ordinary times, may be inapplicable in great emergen- cies, even among a people more corrupt and effeminate, than those whom they were now endeavoring to subdue. But to meet the wishes of the company, a drawback was given in England, equal to the duty which they had asked to have re- moved, and a guarantee against loss, in the experiment of making shipments of tea to the colonies. 3. Large shipments of tea were made to the principal ports of the continent, and a general ferment prevailed over every part of the country. It was not only determined that What proposition did the East India Company propose to obviate the difficulty concerning tea ? si DESTRUCTION OF TEA AT BOSTON. 273 the tea itself should not be received, but whoever made use of this (ministerially) obnoxious herb, was regarded as an cn^my to the country. The utmost vigilance was employed to prevent its b^in^ consumed by I hose persons, \\hoM- in IK* cent daily comforts were thus involved in the vortex >! national contention ; a rigid inquisition was every wlu-n enforced for this purpose, that on other grounds would have been both odious and absurd, but was justified by the neces- sity of combating, in this familiar shape, a principle, which was shortly after to be resisted by open war. 4. Long before the ships arrived with the tea, arrange- ments were made to avert the threatened mischief. In many cases, the consignees were induced to decline accept- ing the charge of it. Very spirited resolutions were entered into at a public meeting of the citizens in Philadelphia, with which the consignees complied by resigning their appoint- ment. From that city, and from New York, it was sent back to England in the same ships that brought it. In Charles* ton, it was landed, and stored expressly in damp warehouses, where it was destroyed by the humidity. In Boston, it was destined to a more violent destruction. 5. Two of the vessels, with the tea, arrived on Saturday November 27th. A town meeting was held on Monday fol- lowing, and resolutions were passed similar to those of Phila- delphia, calling on the consignees, among whom were two sons of governor Hutchinson, to decline the charge of it. A vote was then passed with acclamations, " that the tea shall not be landed, that no duty shall be paid, and that it shall be sent back in the same bottoms." After this vote, Mr. Quin- cy, a young and eloquent advocate, and ardent patriot, with a strong perception of the events that would follow from the measure now in contemplation, and wishing to try the spirit. and to increase the energy of his fellow citizens, by setting before them, in a strong light, the consequences that mUrht be expected from their resolves, addressed the meeting in the following terms : G. " It is not, Mr. Moderator, the spirit that vapors within these walls, that must stand us in stead. The exertions of this day will call forth events, which will make a very diffcr- What measures were adopted by the citizens of America, when larUS look'd ; and still around them spread, From south to north, th' immeasurable shade ; At last, the central shadows burst away, And rising regions open'd on the day. lie saw, once more, bright Del'ware's silver stream, And Penn's throng'd city cast a cheerful gleam ; The dome of state, that met his eager eye, Now heav'd its arches in a loftier sky. The bursting gates unfold and lo, within, A solemn train, in conscious glory, shine. The v:ell-kriown forms his eye had trac'd before, In diff'rent realms along th' extended shore; Here grac'd with nobler fame, and rob'd in state, They look'd and mov'd magnificently great. How much tea was there thrown overboard ? Is any of it still pre* erred ? How came it to be preserved ? FIRST AMERICAN CONGRESa B77 High on the foremost seat, in living light, Majestic Randolph caught the hero's sight Fair on his head, the civic crown was plac'd, And the first dignity his sceptre grac'd. He opes the cause, and points in prospect far, Through all the toils that wait th' impending war, But, hapless sage, thy reign must soon be o'er, To lend thy lustre, and to shine no more. So the bright morning star, from shades of ev'n, Leads up the dawn, and lights the front of heav'n, Points to the waking world the sun's broad way, Then veils his own, and shines above the day. And see great Washington behind thee rise, Thy following sun, to gild our morning skies ; O'er shadowy climes to pour th : enliv'ning flame The charms of freedom and the fire of fame. Th' ascending chief adorn'd his splendid scat, Like Randolph, ensign'd with a crown of state, Where the green patriot bay beheld, with pridf , The hero's laurel springing by its side ; His sword hung useless, on his graceful thigh On Britain still he cast a filial eye ; But sovereign fortitude his visage bore, To meet their legions on th' invaded shore . Sage Franklin next arose, in awful mien, And smil'd, unruffled, o'er th' approaching scone ; High, on his locks of age, a wreath was brac'd, Palm of all arts, that e'er a mortal grac'd ; Beneath him lie the sceptres kings have borne, And crowns and laurels from their temples torn. Nash, Rutledge, Jefferson, in council great, And Jay and Laurens op'd the rolls of fate. The Livingstons, fair freedom's generous band, The Lees, the Houstons, fathers of the land, O'er climes and kingdoms turn'd their ardent eyes, Bade all th' oppress'd to speedy vengeance rise ; All powers of state? in tlieir extended plan, Rise from consent to shield the rights of man. Bold Wolcott urg'd the all-important cause ; With steady hand the solemn scene he draws ; 278 BATTLE OF BUNKER'S HILL. Undaunted firmness with his wisdom join'd, Nor kings nor worlds could warp his steadfast mind. Now, graceful rising from his, purple throne In radiant robes, immortal Hosmer shone ; Myrtles and bays his learned temples bound, The statesman's wreath, the poet's garland crown'd Morals and laws expand his liberal soul, Beam from his eyes, and in his accents roll. But lo ! an unseen hand the curtain drew ; And snatch'd the patriot from the hero's view ; Wrapp'd in the shroud of death, he sees descend The guide of nations and the muse's friend. Columbus dropp'd a tear. The angel's eye Trac'd trie freed spirit mounting through the sky. Adams, enrag'd, a broken charter bore, And lawless acts of ministerial power ; Some injur'd right in each loose leaf appears, A king in terrors and a land in tears ; From all the guileful plots the veil he drew, With eye retortive look'd creation through ; Op'd the wide range of nature's boundless plan, Trac'd all the steps of liberty and man ; Crowds rose to vengeance while his accents rung, And Independence thunder'd from his tongue. BATTLE OF BUNKER'S HILL. 1. WHETHER he was deceived by the resemblance of name, or from some other motive unknown, colonel Prescott, instead of repairing to the heights of Bunker's Hill, to forti- fy himself there, advanced further on in the peninsula, and immediately commenced his intrenchments upon the heights of Breed's Hill, another eminence, which overlooks Charles- town, and is situated towards the extremity of the peninsula, nearer to Boston. The works were pushed with so much ardor, that the following morning, by day break, the Ameri- Why was Breed's Hill fortified instead of Bunker's Hill ? : OF BUNKER'S HILL. 271) cans hail already constructed a squarr redoubt, capable of affording them some shelter from the enemy's lire. The la- bor had been conducted with such silence, that the English had no suspicion of what was passing. It was about four in the morning, when the captain of a ship of war first per- ceived it, and began to play his artillery. The report of the cannon attracted a multitude of spectators to the shore. 2. The English generals doubted the testimony of their senses. Meanwhile the thing appeared too important not to endeavor to dislodge the provincials, or, at least, to prevent them from completing the fortification commenced ; for, as the height of Breed's Hill absolutely commands Boston, the town was no longer tenable, if the Americans erected a bat- tery upon this eminence. The English, therefore, opened a general fire of the artillery of the town, of the fleet, and of the floating batteries stationed around the peninsulas of Bos- ton. It hailed a tempest of bombs and balls upon the works of the Americans they were especially incommoded by the fire of a battery' planted upon an eminence named Cop's Hill, which, situated within the town, forms a species of tower in front of Breed's Hill. But all this was without effect. The Americans continued to work the whole day, with unshaken constancy ; and towards night, they had already much ad- vanced a trench, which descended from the redoubt to the foot of the hill, and almost to the bank of Mystic river. The fury of the enemy's artillery, it is true, had prevented them from carrying it to perfection. 3. In this conjuncture, there remained no other hope for the English generals, but in attempting an assault, to drive the Americans, by dint of force, from this formidable posi- tion. This resolution was taken without hesitation ; and it was followed, the 17th of June, 1775, by the action of Breed's Hill, known also by the name of Bunker's Hill ; much renowned for the intrepidity, not to say the temerity, of the parties ; for the number of the dead and wounded ; and for the effect it produced upon the opinions of men, in regard to the valor of the Americans and the probable issue of the whole war. 4. Between mid-day and one o'clock, the heat being in- Why were the English so desirous to dislodge the Americans from Breed's Hill ? When was the battle of Bunker's Hill fought ? 26 280 BATTLE OF BUNKER'S HILL. tense, all was motion in the British camp. A multitude of sloops and boats, filled with soldiers, left the shore of Boston, and stood for Charlestown ; they landed at Moreton's Point, without, meeting resistance ; as the ships of war and armed vessels effectually protected the deharcation with the fire of their artillery, which forced the enemy to keep within his in- trcnchmerits. This corps consisted of ten companies of grenadiers, as many of light-infantry, and a proportionate artillery ; the whole under the command of major-general Howe, and brigadier general Pigot. The troops, on landing, began to display, the light infantry upon the right, the grena- diers upon the left ; but, having observed the strength of the position, and the good countenance of the Americans, ge- neral Howe made a halt, and sent to call a reinforcement. 5. The English formed themselves in two columns. Their plan was, that the left wing, under general Pigot, should attack the provincials in Charlestown ; while the cen- tie assaulted the redoubt ; and the ** : ght wing, consisting of light-infantry, should force the passage near the river Mystic, and thus assail the Americans in Hank and rear; which would give the English complete victory. It appears, also, that General Gage had formed the design of setting fire to Charlestown, when evacuated by the enemy, in order that the corps, destined to assail the redoubt, thus protected by the flame and smoke, might be less exposed to the fire of the provincials. 6. The dispositions having been all completed, the Eng- lish put themselves in motion. The provincials, that were stationed to defend Charlestown, fearing lest the assailants should penetrate between this town and the redoubt, and thus to find themselves cut off from the rest of the army, re- treated. The English immediately entered the town, and fired the buildings as they were of wood, in a moment the combustion became general. They continued a slow march against the redoubt and trench ; halting, from time to time, for the artillery to come up, and act with some effect, previous to the assault. The flames and smoke of Charlestown were of no use to them, as the wind turned them in a contrary direction. 7. Their gradual advance, and the extreme clearness of Why were the English induced to burn Charlestown ? . BATTLE OF BUNKER'S HILL. 2*1 Ihc air, permitted tlic Americans to level their musket?. Thcv, however, suffered the enemy to approach, before tlu-y commenced their lire; and waited for tin; assault in pro- found tranquillity. It would he difficult to paint the scene of terror presented by these circumstances. A large town, all enveloped in (lames, which, excited by a violent wind, rose to an immense height, and spread every moment more and more ; an innumerable multitude, rushing from all parts, 10 witness so unusual a spectacle, and see the issue of the sanguinary conflict that was about to commence. The Bos- to::ians, and soldiers of the garrison, not in actual service, were mounted upon the spires, upon the roofs, and upon the heights. The hills, and circumjacent fields, from which the dread arena could be viewed in safety, were covered with swarms of spectators, of every rank, and age, and sex ; each agitated by fear or hope, according to the party he espoused. 8. The English having advanced within reach of the musketry, the Americans showered upon them a volley of bullets. This terrible fire was so well supported, and so well directed, that the ranks of the assailants were soon thinned and broken they retired, in disorder, to the place of their landing some threw themselves precipitately into the boats. The field of battle was covered with the slain. The officers were seen running hither and thither, with pro- mises, with exhortations, and with menaces, attempting to rally the soldiers, and inspirit them for a second attack. Fi- nally, after the most painful efforts, they resumed their ranks, and marched up to the enemy. The Americans reserved their fire, as before, until their approach, and received them with the same deluge of balls. The English, overwhelmed and routed, again fled to the shore. In this perilous mo- ment, General Howe remained for some time alone upon the field of battle all the officers, who surrounded him, were killed or wounded. It is related, that, at this critical con- juncture, upon which depended the issue of the day, Gene- ral Clinton, who, from Cop's Hill, examined all the move- ments, on seeing the destruction of his troops, immediately resolved to fly to their succor. 9. This experienced commander, by an able movement, re-established order ; and, seconded by the officers, who fell all the importance of success to English honor and the course 283 BATTLE OF BUNKER'S HILL. of events, he led the troops to a third attack. It was direct- ed against the redoubt, at three several points. The artil- lery of the ships not only prevented all reinforcements from coming to the Americans, by the isthmus of Charlestown, but even uncovered, and swept the interior of the trench, which was battered in front at the same time. The ammu- nition of the Americans was nearly exhausted, and they could have no hopes of a recruit. Their fire must, of ne- cessity, languish. Meanwhile, the English had advanced to the foot of the redoubt. The provincials, destitute of bayonets, defended themselves valiantly with the butt end of their muskets. But the redoubt being already full of ene- mies, the American general gave the signal of retreat, and drew off his men. 10. While the left wing and centre of the English army were thus engaged, the light infantry had impetuously at- tacked the palisades, which the provincials had erected in haste, upon the bank of the river Mystic. On the one side, and on the other, the combat was obstinate ; and if the as- sault was furious, the resistance was not feeble. In spite of all the efforts of the royal troops, the provincials still main- tained the battle in this part ; and had no thoughts of retir- ing, until they saw the redoubt and upper part of the trench were in the power of the enemy. Their retreat was execut- ed with an order not to have been expected from new levied soldiers. . This strenuous resistance of the left wing of the American army was, in effect, the salvation of the rest ; for, if it had given ground but a few instants sooner, the ene- my's light infantry would have taken the main body and right wing in the rear, and their situation would have been hopeless. 11. But the Americans had not yet reached the term of their toils and dangers. The only way that remained of re- treat, was by the isthmus of Charlestown ; and the English had placed there a ship of war and two floating batteries, the balls of which raked every part of it, The Americans, how- ever, issued from the peninsula, without any considerable loss. It was during the retreat, that Dr. Warren received his death. Finding the corps he commanded hotly pursued How many times did the English approach the redoubt before they drove the Americans from it ? BATTLE OF BUNKER'S HILL. 283 . by the enemy, despising all danger, he stood alone before the ranks, endeavoring to rally his troops, and to encou rage them by his own example. He reminded them of the mottos inscribed on their ensigns ; on one side of which were these words "An appeal to Heaven ;" and on the other " Q,ui transtulit, sustmet ;" meaning, the same Pro- vidence which brought their ancestors through so many perils, to a place of refuge, would also deign to support theii descendants. 12. An English officer perceived Dr. Warren, and knew him; he borrowed the musket of one of his soldiers, and hit him with a ball, either in the head or in the breast. He fell dead upon the spot. The Americans were apprehensive lest the English, availing themselves of victory, should sally out of the peninsula, and attack the head-quarters at Cam- bridge. But they contented themselves with taking posses- sion of Bunker's Hill, where they entrenched themselves, in order to guard the entrance of the neck against any new enterprise on the part of the enemy. The provincials, hav- ing the same suspicion, fortified Prospect Hill, which is situ- ated at the mouth of the isthmus, on the side of the main land. But neither the one nor the other were disposed to hazard any new movement ; the first, discouraged by the loss of so many men, and the second, by that of the field of bat tie, and the peninsula. The provincials had to regret five pieces of cannon, with a great, number of utensils, employ- ed in fortification, and no little camp equipage. 13. General Howe was greatly blamed by some, for hav- ing chosen to attack the Americans, by directing his battery in front against the fortifications upon Breed's Hill, and the trench that descended towards the sea, on the part of Mystic river. It was thought, that if he had landed a respectable detachment upon the isthmus of Charlestown, an operation, which the assistance of the ships of war and floating batte- ries would have rendered perfectly easy to him, it would have compelled the Americans to evacuate the peninsula, without the necessity of coming to a sanguinary engagement They would thus, in effect, have been deprived of all com- munication with their camp, situated without the peninsula ; How came Dr. Warren by his death ? In what important particu- lar has it been thought that general Howe erred : * 284 BURNING OF CHARLESTOWN. and, on the part of the sea, they could have hoped for no re* treat, as it was commanded by the English. 14. In this mode, the desired object would, therefore, have been obtained without the sacrifice of men. Such, it is said, was the plan of general Clinton ; but it was rejected, so great was the confidence reposed in the bravery and dis- cipline of the English soldiers, and in the cowardice of the Americans. The first of these opinions was not, in truth, without foundation ; but the second was absolutely chimeri- cal, and evinced more of intellectual darkness in the Eng- lish, than of prudence, and just notions upon a state of things. By this, fatal error, the bravery of the Americans was con- firmed ; the English army debilitated ; the spirit of the sol- diers, , and perhaps the final event of the whole contest, de- cided* BURNING OF CHARLESTOWN. lr THE horror of the scene of Bunker's Hill was increas- ed by the conflagration of Charlestown, effected during the heat of the battle, by the orders of Gen. Gage. Charlestown, besides two hundred other buildings, contained, at that time, six public edifices, and about four hundred dwelling houses. In justification of this wanton act of barbarity, it was given out, that the American troops had stationed themselves in these buildings, and under their covert successfully annoyed their enemies. The truth is, there were no American troops in the town. What may have been the motives which produced the devastation, it is impossible to determine. 2. It may have been the indulgence of revenge ; or an intention to strike terror into the Americans, and to teach them, that their towns were universally destined to the flames. It may have been an expectation of adding to the confusion of the day, and of giving in this manner a favora- ble issue to the conflict. Whatever was the motive, it is probable, that the buildings were regarded as belonging to the rebels, and as being, therefore, of little value. But this act was unnecessary, useless, and wanton ; and must attach _________ By whose orders was Charlestown burnt ? How many buildings did it contain ? What was the. alleged reason for burning it..' BURNING OF CHARLESTOWN. 285 to the authors of it perpetual infamy. Two thousand people were in a moment deprived of their habitations, furniture, and other necessaries ; and property, amounting to one hun- dred and twenty thousand pounds sterling, perished in the flames. 3. Nor was this conflagration less unwise, than wicked. Instead of terror, it excited only rage instead of producing submission, it roused a more determined hostility. The at- tack in the field was such as war authorizes ; was on men, and on soldiers ; and could be easily forgotten. Here the assault was made on the man of grey hairs, the defenceless female, and the cradled infant. It edged therefore a resent- ment, already keen a breach, which before was wide, u rendered immeasurable^ 4. In Europe, where events of this nature have received a dreadful kind of justification from immemorial custom, towns and cities perish, and their inhabitants are consigned to ruin, without resentment or surprise. Scarcely a sigh is breathed, or a tear falls, at the recital of the melancholy talc. But America was irl her youth ; and the scene was here a novelty. The genuine emotions of nature, approved by rea- son, and founded in truth, sprang up, therefore, instinctively in every bosom. On the soundest principles, every man, when he heard the story, determined that no plea could be alleged for this piece of cruelty. The sufferings of the in- habitants he regarded with intense pity, and the authors of them with loathing and horror. 5. But unjust and unworthy, as the burning of Charles- town was, its flames wonderfully enhanced the dreadful mag- nificence of the day. To the vollies of musketry, and the roar of cannon ; to the shouts of the fighting, and the groans of the dying; to the dark and awful atmosphef^ of smoke, enveloping the whole peninsula, and illumined in every quar- ter by the streams of fire from the various instruments of death, the conflagration of six hundred buildings added a gloomy and amazing grandeur. In the midst of this waving lake of flame, the lofty steeple, converted into a blazing py- ramid of fire, towered, and trembled over the vast pyre ; and finished the scene of desolation. / Was the burning of Charlestown favorable to the British ? 286 v GENERAL LYMAN. GENERAL LYMAN. 1. FEW Americans have a better claim to the remem- brance of posterity, than major-general Phinehas Lyman. of Suffield, Connecticut ; and the history of few men, who have been natives of it, can be more interesting. He graduated at Yale College, in 1738, aged twenty-two years. When a senior sophister, he was chosen one of the Berkleian scho- lars, and in 1739 was appointed a tutor. In this office he continued three years with much reputation. He then devoted himself to the profession of the law, in which he soon became eminent. In 1755, he was appointed major general and commander-in-chief of the Connecticut forces ; and he fyeld this office until the Canadian war was ended. He then went as commander-in-chief of the American troops in the expedition to the Havanna, in the year 1762. In all these employments he rendered important services to his country ; and acquired a high reputation for wisdom, integ- rity, bravery, military skill, and every honorable character- istic of a soldier. 2. During the whole course of the war, besides the high testimony given to his worth by the state, he received many others ; particularly from the British officers who were his companions in service ; by several of whom he was holden in peculiar esteem. By these gentlemen he was so advan- tageously spoken of in Great Britain, that an invitation was given him by some persons in high office to visit that coun- try. A company had been formed, by his exertions, under the name of Military Adventurers ; composed chiefly of such as had been officers, during the preceding war. Their ob- ject was to obtain from the British government a considera- ble tract o land, bordering on the rivers Mississippi and Yazoo on this tract they proposed to plant themselves, and as large a colony of their countrymen as they could induce to join them. General Lyman went to England as agent for this company ; and entertained not a doubt, that his ap- plication would be immediately successful. 3. Soon after his arrival, his own friends in the ministry were removed. Those who succeeded them, had other friends to Where did general Lyman live before leaving Connecticut ? What induced him to go to England ? GENERAL LYMAN. 287 provide for ; and found it convenient to forget his services. Fora while, his open heart admitted the encouragements given to him in London ; and charitably construed the spe- cious reasons, alleged for successive delays, in the most fa- vorable manner. After dragging several tedious years in the melancholy employment of listening to court . he found, in spite of all his preconceptions, that tl whom his business lay, trifled alike with his inU-n-i> imd their own integrity. Shocked at the degradation which he must sustain, by returning to his own country without ac- complishing his design, and of appearing as a dupe of court hypocrisy, where he had never appeared but with dignity and honor, he probably, though not without many struggles, re- solved to lay his bones in Britain. But, after eleven of the best years of his life being frittered away in this manner, the tract of land in question was granted to the petitioners, and he was induced to revisit his native country. Many of the petitioners, however, were in the grave ; others were already hoary with age ; and all of them were removed beyond that period of life, at which men are willing to plant themselves in a wilderness, lying under a new climate, and a thousand miles from their homes. 4. His return to Connecticut was in 1774, where he re- mained a short time, and then with his eldest son, and a few companions, embarked for the Mississippi to make some pre- paration for the reception of his family, who were soon to follow. Accordingly the family, together with a small num- ber of their friends, in the following year, was planted in the neighborhood of Natches ; a town originally built by the French on the eastern side of the Mississippi, one hundred and eighty miles north of New Orleans by land, and twice that distance by water. The little colony remained in this place till the breaking out of the Spanish war in 1781, when hearing that an armed force was ascending the river, they resolved to seek their flight through an immense wilderness, inhabited by savages, to Savannah in Georgia, the nearest post in the possession of the English. From the Spaniards they had every thing to fear. A flight through the wilder- How long did General Lyman remain in England ? Where did ho and his family Fettle on leaving Connecticut ? Why and when did they leave Natcheg ? 288 GENERAL LYMAN. ness involved distresses without number ; but presented a possibility of safety. These unfortunate people determined, therefore, to attempt it. without hesitation. But they wan- dered before reaching Savannah one hundred and Ibrty-nine days, and, according to their reckoning, more than one thou- sand three hundred and fifty miles. 5. The dangers and hardships, which they encountered in their progress, resembled more the adventures of knight-cT- rantry, than the occurrences of real life. The caravan was numerous ; including women and children, as well as men some of the children infants at the breast. They were all mounted on horseback ; but the ruggedness of the ground obliged such as were able to walk, to make a great part of their way on foot. The country through which they passed was intersected by numerous, and those often broad and deep, rivers. Steep and lofty mountains, equally difficult to climb, and to descend, obstructed their path. Marshes im- passable forced them to take long tedious circuits. The rivers they were obliged to swim on horseback ; and in at- tempting to cross one of them, several of their number had well nigh perished. Their sufferings from the dread of wild beasts and savages were incessant. The Choctaws, through whose territory, and along whose borders, their journey lay for a great extent, had espoused the Spanish interest ; and of course become their enemies and from Indian enemies no concealment, no speed, no distance, can furnish safety. The most quiet, the most secure moments, are. like the si- lence before a stroke of lightning, a mere prelude to danger and death. 6. Famine also, threatened them in their best circum- stances ; and frequently stared them in the fcce. Once they were reduced to their last morsel. Often they suffered in- tensely from t'lirst. In one instance, when both they arid their horses were nearly famished, a lady who was of their company, wandered in search of water some distance from their encampment ; and found a small spot, which exhibited on its surface a degree of moisture. She scraped away the earth with her hands ; and, having hollowed out a basin of considerable size, saw it soon partially filled with about a What was the distance of the route of General Lyman and his fa- mily to Savannah ? How long wore they performing it ? GENERAL LYMAN. 289 quart of perfectly pure and sweet water. Having assuag- ed her own thirst, she called the rest of the company ; who. together with their horses, all drank at this liitle spot, until they were satisfied; the water returning regularly to the same height, as soon as it was exhausted, It ought not to be forgotten, that disease attacked them in various in- stances ; and obliged those who were well, to halt for the recovery of the sick. 7. One instance of the perilous situation in which they were placed deserves particular notice. About two days U-- fore they reached the first village of the Creeks, which was on their way, their provisions were exhausted. As they had lived for some time on a scanty allowance, many of them had lost both their strength and spirits. How long it would be before a new supply could be obtained, it was impossible to determine. In this situation, those who suffered most se- verely, gave themselves up to despair ; and. pronouncing all further efforts fruitless, concluded to die on the spot. It uas with no small difficulty, that their more robust and resolute companions persuaded them to renew their exertions for a short time, and to proceed with a slow and heavy progress on their journey. At the moment when every hope was vanish- ing, they discovered that they were in the neighborhood of this village. 8. Three of their company were then deputed to go for ward, make known their wants, and if possible, obtain relief from the savages. Colonel McGillivray, who for several years exercised an entire control over the Creek nations, had for some time resided in this place ; but unfortunately was now absent. As they approached the village, the Indi- ans observed, that their saddles were such as were used by the Virginians, and enemies. In vain they asserted, that they were subjects of the king of Great Britain, and friend? of the Creeks. The saddles refuted their assertions. Aboui seventy of the savages formed a circle around the messen- gers. In vain did they allege the defenceless state of them- selves and their company ; the presence of their women and children ; their destitution of arms, and even of bread ; nnd the frank, friendly manner, in which they had entered the village Why were General Lyman and his family suspected by the Crock of being Virginian* ? 290 GENERAL LYMAN. 9. The expedition, however, still appeared mysterious to the Indians ; the motives which led to it strange and inex- plicable ; and the unfortunate saddles decisively contradic- tory to all their professions. An earnest, and in the end a very vehement debate commenced among them, of which only a few ill boding words were understood by the messen- gers such as Virginian, long knife, no good, and some others. From these they determined, upon the best grounds that their fate was nearly, if not quite decided. At the same time, every warrior seized his knife ; every face became dis- torted with wrath ; and every eye lighted up with fierce and gloomy vengeance. At this desperate moment, a black ser- vant of Col. McGillivray returning from abroad, entered the circle, and demanded the cause of the tumult. The Indians replied, that these strangers were Virginians, as was clearly proved by their saddles ; that, of course, they were bad men, enemies to the Creeks, and to their father the king of Great Britain ; and that, therefore, they ought immediately to be killed. 10. The black fellow then asked the messengers who and whentoe they were, and what was their errand to their vil- lage. To these inquiries they returned an answer with which he was perfectly satisfied. He then told the Indians, that they had wholly mistaken the character of the men ; that taey were not Virginians, but British subjects, good men, and friends to the Creeks ; that they were in distress, and instead of being killed, ought therefore to be instantly relieved. When he found that his remonstrances did not satisfy the Indians, and that they still believed the messen- gers to be Virginians, he called them rascals, fools, and mad- men. This abuse they took very patiently, without attempt- ing a reply ; but still declared themselves wholly unsatisfied. At length one, more moderate than the rest, said, " If they are Englishmen, as they profess, they can make paper talk ;" meaning, that if they were Englishmen, they must have kept a journal, which they could now read for the satisfaction of the Creeks. 11. The black fellow, seizing the hint, asked the messen- gers whether they had kept any such journal. They replied in the negative. He then asked them whether they had any written paper about them observing that it would answer EXCISION OK WYOMIM, M\ the pu J [>ock- .iiiul an old It ; ;;: tin- letter tin- 1>I him ; dilion ; and promised to Ml til*,' ited the adve'i- IT1 tin- time when (hey v tMlow interpreted sentence b Indians listened with profound attention* As it nn. their countenances, which at tin of the un to relax, gradually softened ; and be- loom rrave way to a smile, and the is succeeded by friendship. The whole body put 92 EXCISION OF WYOMING. 2. In a word, this little country presented, in reality, the image of those fabulous times which the poets have described under the name of the Golden Age. But their domestic fe- licity was no counterpoise to the zeal with which they were animated for the common cause ; they took up arms and flew to succor their country. It is said they had furnished to the army no less than a thousand soldiers, a number truly prodi- gious for so feeble a population, and so happy in their homes. Yet notwithstanding the drain of all this vigorous youth, the abundance of harvests sustained no diminution. Their crowded granaries, and pastures replenished with fat cattle, offered an exhaustless resource to the American army. 3. But neither so many advantages, nor even the retired situation of these unfortunate colonists, could exempt them from the baneful influence of party spirit. Although the to- ries, as they called them, were not so numerous as the parti- sans of liberty, yet they challenged attention by the arro- gance of their character, and the extent of their pretensions. Hence, not only families were seen armed against families, but even sons sided against their fathers, brothers against brothers, and, at last, wives against their husbands. So true it is, that no virtue is proof against the fanaticism of opinion, and no happiness against political division. 4. The tories were, besides, exasperated by their losses in the excursions they had made in company with the savages in the preceding campaign. But that which envenomed them the most, was, that several individuals of the same par- ty, who, having quitted their habitations, were come to claim hospitality, then so much in honor among the Americans, and particularly at Wyoming, had been arrested as suspect- ed persons, and sent to take their trial in Connecticut. Others had been expelled from the colony. Thus hatreds continued more and more rancorous. The tories swore re- venge they coalesced with the Indians. The time was favorable, as the youth of Wyoming were then at the army. In order the better to secure success, and to surprise their enemies before they should think of standing upon their de- fence, they resorted to artifice. They pretended the most friendly dispositions, while they meditated only war and re- i - How many soldiers did Wyoming furnish the American army MING. #ja 5. ^ :ute their ; with to rulti\atr peace. These perfidies lulled the inhabir.in's \ OF WYOMING. 95 He was awakened hut too soon from (liis dream of security ; in an instant the Miva^es sprung from their ambush, and fell upon him with hidoous veil*. 10. lie formed his little troop into a compact column, and if mind in danger than he had mani- Though surprised, the Americans exhibited >!ution that, the advantage was rather on i : when a soldier, either from treachery or cowardice, cried out aloud " The colonel his ordered a retreat. 11 The Americans immediately break, the savages leap in among the ranks, and a horrible carnage ensues. The fugitives fall by missiles, the resisting by clubs and tomahawks. The wounded overturn those that are not ; the dead and the dying are heaped together promiscuously. Happy those who expire the soonest ! The savages reserve the living for tortures ! and the infuriate tories, if other arms fail them, mangle the prisoners with their nails ! Never was rout so^deplorable ; never was massacre accompanied with so many horrors. Nearly all the Americans perished ; about, sixty escaped from the butchery, and, with Zebulun, made their way good to a redoubt upon the other bank of the Sus- quehanna. 11. The conquerors invested Kingston anew ; and to dis- may the relics of the garrison by the most execrable specta- cle, they hurled into the place above two hundred scalps, still reeking with the blood of their slaughtered brethren. Colonel Dennison, who commanded the fort, seeing the im- possibility of defence, sent out a flag to inquire of Butler what terms would be allowed the garrison, on surrendering the fort. He answered, with all the fellness of his inhuman character, and in a single word the hatchet. Reduced to this dreadful extremity, the colonel still made what resist- ance he could. At length, having lost almost all his soldiers, he surrendered at discretion. The savages entered the fort, and began to drag out the vanquished ; who, knowing the hands they were in, expected no mercy. But, impatient of the tediousness of murder in detail, the barbarians after- wards bethought themselves of enclosing the men, women, and children, promiscuously in the houses and barracks, to which they set fire, and consumed all within ; listening, de- ighted, to the moans and shrieks of the expiring multitude. 12- The fort of Wilkesbarre still remained in the power 296 N E W-ENGL AND. of the colonists of. Wyoming. The victors presented them selves before it ; those within, hoping to find mercy, surren- dered at discretion, and without resistance. But if opposi- tion exasperated these ferocious men, or rather these tigers, insatiable of human blood, submission did not soften them. Their rage was principally exercised upon the soldiers of the garrison ; all of whom they put to death, with a barbarity ingenious in tortures. As for the rest, men, women 3 and children, who appeared to them not to merit any special at- tention, they burned them as before, in the houses and bar- acks. The forts being fallen into their hands, the barbari- ans proceeded, without obstacle, to the devastation of the country, They employed at once, sword, fire, and all ir> strurneiits of destruction. The crops, of every description, were consigned to the flames. The habitations, granaries, a,nd other constructions, the fruit of years of human indus- try, sunk in ruin under the destructive strokes of these can- uibals. NEW-ENGLANb. HAIL to the land whereon we tread, Our fondest boast ; The sepulchre of mighty dead, The truest hearts that ever bled, Who sleep on glory's brightest bed, A fearless host ; No slave is here our unchain'd feet Walk freely, as the waves that beat Our coast. Our fathers cross'd the ocean's wave To seek this shore ; They left behind the coward slave To welter in his living grave ; With hearts unbent, high, steady, brave, They sternly bore What became of the women and children in forts Kingston and Wilkesbarro J NF.\Y-KV;LANI). Such toils as meaner souls had quell'd ; But souls Jik< thcsr, such toils impell'd To H>;ir. Hail (o ih' morn, when first, they stood iit. : And fe ;nm'd th' invading flood, And wrote our dearest rights in blood, And mow'd in ranks -he hireling brood, In desp'rate fight ; O ! 'twas a proud, exulting day, For ev'n our fallen fortunes lay In light. There is no other land like thee, No dearer shore ; Thou art the shelter of the free ; The home, the port of liberty Thou hast been, and shall ever be, Till time is o'er. Ere I forget to think upon My land, shall mother curse the son She bore. , Thou art the firm, unshaken rock, On which we rest ; And, rising from the hardy stock, Thy sons the tyrant's frown shall mock, And slavery's galling chains unlock, Arid free th' oppress'd All who the wreath of freedom twine Beneath the shadow of their vine, Are blest. We love thy rude and rocky shore, And here we stand Let foreign navies hasten o'er, And on our heads their fury pour, And peal their cannon's loudest roar, And storm our land ; They still shall find our lives are giv'n To die for home ; and lean'd on heav'n Our hand. 29S TORNADO IN BARBADOES. TORNADO IN BARBADOES. 1. IT was now the month of October, 1780, and the in- habitants of the islands were in the enjoyment of that unex- pected tranquillity which resulted from the cessation of arms, when their shores, and the seas that washed them, were as- sailed by so dreadful a tempest, that scarcely would there be found a similar example in the whole series of maritime re- cords, however replete with shocking disasters and pitiable shipwrecks. If this fearful scourge fell with more or less violence upon all the islands of the West Indies, it no where raged with more destructive energy than in the flourishing island of Barbadoes. It was on the morning of the tenth, that the tornado set in, and it hardly began to abate forty* eight hours after* The vessels that were moored in the port, where they were considered in safety, were wrenched from their anchors, launched into the open sea, and abandoned tc the mercy of the tempest. Nor was the condition of the inhabitants on shore less worthy of compassion. 2. In the following night, the vehemence of the hurricane became yet more extreme ; houses were demolished, trees uprooted, men and animals tossed hither and thither, or over- whelmed by the ruins. The capkal of the island was well nigk rased to a level with the ground. The mansion of the governor, the walls of which were three feet in thickness, was shaken to its foundations, and every moment threatened to crumble in ruin's. Those within had hastened to barri- cade the doors and windows, to resist the whirlwinds ; all their efforts were of no avail. The doors were rent from their hinges, the bars and fastenings forced ; and chasms started in the very walls. The governor, with his family, sought refuge in the subterraneous vaults ; but they were soon driven from that shelter, by the torrents of water that poured like a new deluge from the sky. 3. They issued then into the open country ; and, with ex- treme difficulty and continual perils, repaired under the co- vert of a mound, upon which the flag-staff was erected ; but that mass being itself rocked by the excessive fury of the wind, the apprehension of being buried under the stones that were detached from it, compelled them again to remove, and to retire from a 1 ! habitation. Happily for them, they held together ; for without the mutual aid they lent each other, TOKNADO L\ BA KB A IX >KS. 29<) th.'_ DIM ;ill inevitablv have perished. Alter a long and toilsome march in the midst of ruins, they succeeded in gain- ing a battery, where they stretched themselves, face dnvi- ward. on the ground, behind the carriages of the heaviest cannon, still a wretched and doubtful asylum, since those very cnrria^* >ntinually put in motion by the impetu- osity of the vortical :TOi:ted and detained, but were exposed to disgraceful in- dignities, because they had been the friends of the Con- stitution. After being detained a short time by the Aus- trians, they were given up to the Prussians, who, because their fortresses were nearer, were supposed to be able to receive and guard them more conveniently. At first, they were confined at Wesel on the Rhine, and afterwards in dungeons at Magdeburg. 3. But the Prussians at last became unwilling to bear the odium of such unlawful and disgraceful treatment of pri- soners of war, entitled to every degree of respect from their rank and character ; and especially from the manner in which they had been taken. They, therefore, before they made peace gave them up to the Austrians, who finally trans- ferred them to most unhealthy dungeons in the citadel of Olmutz. The sufferings to which Lafayette was here ex- posed, in the mere spirit of a barbarous revenge, are almost incredible. He was warned, " that he would never again see any thing but the four walls of his dungeon ; that he would never receive news of events or persons ; that his name would be unknown in the citadel, and that in all accounts of him sent to court, he would be designated only by a number; that he would never receive any notice of his family, or of the existence of his fellow prisoners." At the same time, knives and forks were removed from him, as he was officially informed, that his situation was one which would naturally lead him to suicide. 4. His sufferings, indeed, proved almost beyond his strength. The want of air, and the loathsome dampness and filth of his What became of Lafayette and his companions ? Why were they given up to the Prussians, and where were they confined ? Why did the Prussians deliver them back to the Austrians, and where were they finally transferred ? Of what was Lafayette warned ?- What is said of his sufferings ? pfc d . st nolic'' SO lo\v. thai hi-; hair (Ml fn>;:i him entirely by I m^s. At ; lime, 'ranee were confiscated, his wife cast into prison, airi adherence to the Constitution was call< -rushed with death. r>. 11 is friends, howoror, all over Europe, were carefully watch i >[)portumty to obtain some intelligence which should, at least, render his existence certain. In June 179-1, they sent Dr. Bollman to Germany to ascertain what had been his Inte, and if he were still alive, to endeavor to pro- cure !i . With great difficulty, he traced the French prisoners to the Prussian frontiers, and there ascertained, that an Austrian escort had received them, and taken the road to O1;-. irong fortress in Moravia, one hundred and fifty miles north of Vienna, and near the borders of Si- lesia. At Olmutz, Dr. Bollman. ascertained that several state prisoners were kept in the citadel with a degree of caution and mystery, which must have been not unlike that used towards the half fabulou personage in the iron mask. He did not doubt but Lafayette was one of them, and mak- ing himself professionally acquainted with the military sur- geon of the post, soon became sure of it. By very ingenious means, Dr. Bollman contrived to communicate his projects through this surgeon to Lafayette, and to obtain answers without exciting the surgeon's suspicions ; until at Sast, after the lapse of several months, during which, to avoid all risk, Dr. Bollman made a long visit at Vienna; it was determin- ed that an attempt should be made to rescue Lafayette, while, on one of the airiiv/s, with which he was then regularly in- dulged, on account of his broken health. in as this was arranged, Dr. Bollman returned to Vienna, and communicated his project , to a young Ameri- can, 1 nc of Francis K. Huger, then accidentally in A; r of the person at whose house, near Charles- had been first received on his landing in i in sent to Gen; hen 3 'Vhat was finally determined v/ith regard to Ln/hyettp : T - Dr Bollmnn communicate his project 3 306 IMPRISONMENT OF LAFAYETTE. America ; a young man of uncommon talent, decision, and enthusiasm, who at once entered into the whole design, and devoted himself to its execution with the most romantic earnestness- These were the only two persons on the con- tinent, except Lafayette himself, who had the slightest sus- picion of these arrangements for his rescue, and neither of these persons knew him by sight. It was therefore concert- ed between the parties, after the two friends had come to Olmutz in November, that, to avoid all mistakes when the rescue should be attempted, each should take off his hat and wipe his forehead, in sign of recognition, and then, having ascertained a day when Lafayette would ride out, Dr. Boll- msLU and Mr. Huger sent their carriage ahead to Hoff, a post town about twenty-five miles on the road they wished to take, with directions to have it waiting for them at a given hour. The rescue they determined to attempt on horse- back ; and they put no balls into their pistols, and took no other weapons, thinking it would be unjustifiable to commit a murder even to effect their purpose. 7. Having ascertained that a carriage which they sup- posed must contain Lafayette, since there was a prisoner and an officer inside, and a guard behind, had passed out of the gate of the fortress, they mounted and followed. They rode by it, and then slackening their pace and allowing it again to go ahead, exchanged signals with the prisoner. At two or three miles from the gate the carriage left the high road, and passing into a less frequented track, in the midst of an open country, Lafayette descended to walk for exercise, guarded only by the officer who had been riding with him. This was evidently the moment for their attempt. They therefore rode up at once, and after an inconsiderable strug- gle with the officer, from which the guard fled to alarm the citadel, the rescue was completed. One of the horses, how- ever, had escaped during the contest, and thus only one re- mained with which to proceed. Lafayette was immediately mounted on this horse, and Mr. Huger told him in English, to go to Hoff. He mistook what was said to him for a mere general direction to go off- delayed a moment to see if he could not assist them then went on then rode back again What was concerted between the parties ? How did they deter- mine to attempt the rescue ?- In what manner did they effect it ? IMPRISONMENT OF LAFAVKTTK. 307 and asked once more, if he could be of no service and finally, urged anew, galloped slowly av. The horse that had I, and both Dr. Bollman aii(i .Mr. linger mounted him, intending tf. follow ami te. But the animal proved in: b!e. threw them, and left them for .some time, -tunned by their fall. On recovering their horse a second time, Dr. Bollman alone mounted ; Mr. Huger thinking that, from his own imperfect knowledge of the German, he could not do as much towards effecting their main purpose. These accidents 'd their romantic enterprise. Mr. Huger, who could now attempt his escape only on foot, was soon stopped by some peasants who had witnessed what had passed. Dr. Bollman easily arrived at Hoff; but not finding Lafayette there, lingered about the frontiers till the next night, when he too was arrested and delivered up to the Austrians. And finally Lafayette, having taken a wrong road and pursued it till his horse could proceed no further, was stopped at the village of Jagersdorff, as a suspicious person, and detained there till he was recognised by an officer from Olmutz, two days afterwards. 9. All three of them were brought back to the citadel se- parately, and were there separately confined without being permitted to know any thing of each other's fate. Mr. Hu- ger was chained to the floor, in a small arched dungeon, about six feet by eight, without light, and with only bread and water for food ; and once in six hours, by day and by night, the guard entered, and with a lamp, examined each brick in his cell, and each link in his chain. To his earnest request to know something of Dr. Bollman, and to learn whether Lafayefte had escaped, he received no answer at all. To his more earnest request to be permitted to send to his mother in America merely the words, " I am alive," signed with his name, he received a de refusal. Indeed, at first, every degree of brutal severity was practised towards both of them, but afterwards this severity was relaxed. The two prisoners were placed nearer together, where they could What defeated the enterprise < f Dr. Bollman and Mr. Huger ? - Did they succeed in escaping 1 What was the success of Lafayette J What was finally their fate 1 How were they treated at ^first ? What --'ntm^nt. afterwards, and what of their trial ? 303 IMPRISONMENT OF LAFAYETTE. communicate, and their trial for what, in Vienna, was mag- nified into a wide and alarming conspiracy, was begun with all the tedious formalities that could be prescribed by Austri- an fear and caution. 10. How it would have turned, if they had been left en- tirely unprotected, it is not difficult to conjecture ; but at. this crisis of their fate, they were secretly assisted by Count Metrowsky, a nobleman living near their prison, whom nei- ther of them had ever seen, and who was interested in them only for what, in the eyes of his government, constituted theit crime. The means lie used to influence the tribunal that judged them, may be easily imagined, since they were so far successful, that the prisoners, after having been confined for trial eight, months, were sentenced only to a fortnight's im- prisonment as their punishment, and then released. A few hours after they left Olmutz, an order came from Vienna directing a new trial, which, under the management of the ministers, would of course have ended very differently from the one managed by Count Metrowsky ; but the pri- soners were already beyond the limits of the Austrian domi- nions. Lafayette, in the meanwhile, was thrown back into his obscure and ignominious sufferings, with hardly a hope that they could be terminated, except by his death. During the winter of 1794-5, he was reduced to almost the last ex- tremity by a violent fever, and yet was deprived of proper attendance, of air, of suitable food, and of decent clothes. To increase his misery, he was made to believe that he was only reserved for a public execution, and that his chivalrous deliverers would perish on the scaffold before his window ; while, at the same time, be was not permitted to know whether his family were still alive, or had fallen under the revolutionary axe, of which, during the few days he was out of his dungeon he had heard such appalling accounts. 11. Madame de Lafayette, however, was nearer to him than he could imagine to be possible. She had been releas- ed from prison, where she, too, had nearly perished ; and having gained strength sufficient for the undertaking, and sent her eldest son for safety to the care of General Wash- Who assisted Dr. Bellman and Mr. linger ? What was their six? ecsg ? What took place after they left Olmutz ? What is said of La- fisyette meanwhile - What of Madame de Lafayette and family : IM1 r OF LAFAYETTE. W.< iugton, she set out, accompanied by her two y|Jr," said Sabat, in his imperfect English, " he never changed, he never changed. And when he bowed his head to receive the blow of death, all Bochara seemed to say, ' What new thing is this ?' " What is the consequence if a Mahometan of rank becomes a Chris- tian ? By what means was Abdallah delivered to the king of Bochara for punishment ? THH I'RKM:II REVOLUTION. THE LAND OF REST. THERE is a calm for those who weep, A rest for weary pilgrims found ; And while the mould'ring ashes sleep, Low in the ground The Soul, of origin divine, GOD's glorious image, freed from clay., In heaven's eternal sphere shall shine, A star of day ! The Sun is but a spark of fire, A transient meteor in the sky ; The Soul, immortal as its Sire, SHALL NEVER DIE. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. 1. THE history of the French revolution, and of the e?ents which led to it, has hitherto been written only by party zeal- ots, and those of no very commanding talents or extended views. When hereafter its Tacitus shall arise, what subjects will it afford for his philosophy and for his eloquence ! Vir- tue and vice mixed in mad confusion ; the basest passions and the noblest feelings, on all sides, and often in the same breast, struggling together for the mastery. France made glorious in a thousand hard-fought fields by the universal and unrivalled valor of Frenchmen. France rendered up a trembling victim to tyrant after tyrant, by the universal cow- ardice of Frenchmen. The female character in its greatest elevation and in its deepest depravity. Woman, now dread- ful with fiend-like intelligence and malignity, and now, ex- alted into more than Roman heroism by higher principles than Pagan antiquity ever knew. 2. Throughout the long and dreadful narrative, the histo riari will never lose sight of the meek and steady virtues o the patriot king. He will describe him in early youth, in tl midst of a corrupt and sensual court, forming his conscien and regulating his life by the mild and holy precepts of I nelon ; surrounded by bigoted or heartless politicians, 314 ST-LVER AND GOLD. glowing with affection for his people, and eagerly co-operat ing with the enlightened friends of freedom in the reform of abuses, the limitation of his own powers, and the esta- blishment of popular rights. He will relate, that he staked every thing on this vast and bold experiment of regulated liberty and representative government ; and at last volunta- rily offered up his life in that cause, rather than purchase it at the expense of the blood of his countrymen. He will portray him, as the danger thickened, summoning all his vir- tues to his heart, and rising greater and greater in the hour of calamity. 3. Finally, the historian will paint the sorrows and the consolations of his prison or rather, he will tell that touching story in the plain words of those who saw and loved him to the last ; and then, as he follows the king to the place of his death, accompanied by his last and faithful friend, the vene- rable Abbe Edge worth, he will insensibly catch that good man's pious enthusiasm, and with him, forgetting the wrongs of the patriot and the sorrows of the husband and the father, in his veneration of the saint and the martyr, he will exclaim at the foot of the scaffold, "Go, Son of -St. Louis, ascend to heaven." SILVHR AND GOLD. 1. THE circulation of gold and silver in different ages and in different parts of the world, is a curious and interesting, but, in some respects, a difficult subject of investigation. It appears that those metals were used as a medium of com- merce so early as in the time of Abraham, and that they served as ornamental articles of dress, in a period little less remote ; and, indeed, although we have no authentic infor- mation relative to this particular, it is extremely probable that gold and silver were used as ornaments before they were stablished as a medium of commerce, and the standard 'hereby to estimate the comparative value of other articles. 2. We may collect from sacred history, that gold and sil- r, as well as divers kinds of precious stones, were suffi- low early is it known that silver and gold were used a a medium ommerce * SILVER AND GOLD. JJ15 ciently plenti nl in Egypt at the time of the egress of the Israelites; an u the v:iluuhle Offerings of the people, for the construction of the tabernacle, with nil the rich material which that structure was composed, as well as those used lor the high priest's garments, and in the whole apparatus of re- ligion, were furnished out of those treasures which they had carried out of that country ; for no other channel can be discovered, or even with any appearance of probability ima- gined, by which the Israelites could at that period be supplied with such plenty of those valuable commodities ; for they had not then obtained any wealth by the plunder of enemies ; the spoils of Midian being the first considerable acquisition of this kind after their departure from Egypt ; and the Midi- anitish war was an event posterior to the construction of the tabernacle. 3. In regard to commerce, there is no where any mention made, nor the least appearance of any being carried on by the Israelites, whereby they could have obtained such a stock of valuable materials, so soon after their entrance into the wilderness. In their conquests of the land of Canaan, they appear to have sometimes made a considerable booty ; but it is not until the reign of David that we observe that profusion of wealth, which seems astonishing in a period of such remote antiquity. And the abundance of gold and silver which Jerusalem displayed in the succeeding reign of Solomon, has staggered the credulity of some readers of the Jewish nation. 4. It appears, however, that those metals were at that timo very plentiful in Egypt, and in sqveral countries of Asia. The history of David's wars and conquests makes it appear evident that very considerable quantities of gold and silver had, by sonic means, been introduced into the countries situ- ated between the Euphrates and the Levant Sea ; and it seems that this influx of wealth must have been, in a great measure, the effect of the trade carried on by the Tyrians arid Egyptians with' the eastern and southern parts of the world. 5. Still no historical documents exist, which can give us any certain information by what channel those vast quantities of gold and silver had entered into the countries to which At what time in the Jewish history was there first an incredible quantity of gold and silver ? 09 a 16 SILVER AND GOLD. allusion was made ; and we are equally left in the dark re- specting the parts from whence those riches were brought, as there cannot be found in history, either ancient or modern, sacred or profane, the least hint that any mines of those me- tals existed in any of those countries ; nor does history inform us in what part of the world they were found. 6. In this, as in many other historical subjects, we are en- tirely left to conjecture ; and the most probable conjecture is, that the gold and silver of the ancient world was the pro- duce of Africa, where those metals, especially gold, is known to abound, both in the interior and the eastern parts ; espe- cially in Monomopata, Monoemugi, and Sofala ; which last is, by many, supposed to be the land of Ophir, to which So- lomon's fleets used to sail ; although others, with less proba- bility, suppose it to have been the island of Ceylon, or some other part of India, or the oriental islands. 7. In whatever parts of Africa or Asia these metals were found, it is, however, highly probable, that they were intro- duced into Egypt, and the western parts of Asia, by the Ara- bian, Egyptian, and Tyrian merchants. The Egyptians, es- pecially, might bring a considerable part of them by their caravans, which, from time immemorial, used to travel into Ethiopia, under which name all the interior and southern parts of Africa were formerly comprehended ; as the Ethio- pian caravans in like manner traded into Egypt. 8. In the flourishing ages of Greece, gold and silver began to be plentifully introduced into that country, particularly after the conquest of Persia by Alexander, which caused the wealth of that empire to circulate westward. All this while Rome was exceedingly poor, and her warlike citizens pos- sessed a very small quantity of those valuable metals, until the conquest of Macedonia, and the Grecian kingdoms of Asia, caused the riches of the east to flow into her bosom. After the Goths and other northern nations began to make successful inroads into the Roman empire, the plunder of its provinces put them in possession of part of its riches ; and gold and silver, with which they had before been almost wholly unacquainted, began by those predatory wars to be introduced among them. Where is it probable that the gold and silver of the ancient world was obtained ? How were they probably introduced into Egypt arid Ihc western part of Asia * SILVER AND GOLD. 317 9. After the total subversion of the western empire, those riches, which Rome had accumulated hy so many centuries of successful rapine, were by derives diffused over all Eu- rope, ami gold and silver introduced into the n-Lrions of the north. The abundance of gold and silver, which, as history informs us, was displayed with profusion, in the palaces, the dress, the arms, &c. of the ancients, seems astonishing, and almost incredible, to modern readers ; and a person who ex- amines the subject only in a superficial manner, is ready to ask this question What is become of that abundance of those metals which was displayed in certain countries ; for example, in Jerusalem and Judah, in ancient times ? And why do we not see the same profusion of gold and silver in the present age, especially as the mines of America have produced such abundance ? 10. The question is not of a difficult solution, and the an- swer is obvious. In the ages of antiquity, gold and silver were not so extensively diffused, nor so generally circulated, as at present. In the times here under consideration, and in the countries of which our histories treat, wealth was con- centrated within a contracted circle. Egypt, and that small district of Asia which extended from the Levant sea, and the Grecian Archipelago, to the Euphrates, with Assyria and Chaldea, were the only countries where history, either sacred or profane, mentions any such abundance of gold and silver. 11. Those metals had not then circulated any farther from the countries where they were produced, and they were lodged in a few hands. They remained chiefly among the princes and grandees. Commerce had not at that period branched out into a sufficient number of ramifications to dis- seminate them among the people at large. This is the reason why such a profusion of them was seen in some particular palaces, and with some particular persons. 12. We read of the importation of those metals into the Isiaclitish dominions by Solomon's fleets; but it is highly probable, that this trade was monopolized by the crown ; and, notwithstanding the extraordinary display of wealth in Jerusalem, we are not to suppose, that so great a quantity of ^ What lias become of that abundance of gold and silver which wa. displayed in some rmcient nations ? 3J8 THE STAR IN THE EAST. gold and silver was in circulation among the farmers, trades* men, and mechanics of Israel, as among those of several European countries ; nor that the whole quantity accumu- lated in Solomon's kingdom would bear any comparison with the amount of the circulating cash of England and France. 13. The wealth then accumulated in one narrow corner, was afterwards dispersed among the Persians, then among the Greeks and Carthaginians, next among the Romans ; and at last throughout all Europe, where no gold or silver had ever been disseminated before. The treasures, which ap- peared immense when concentrated within a narrow space, became small, when divided into so many portions, and dis- pe.rsed into so many countries ; and this circumstance made gold and silver extremely scarce, which had seemed so plen- tiful at a far more early period. Gold was indeed so scarce, that none was ever coined in England before the eighteenth year of Edward the Third, A. D. 1345 ; nor any silver but pennies, half-pence, and farthings. THE STAR IN THE EAST. THE night was moonless Judah's shepherds kept Their starlight watch their flocks around them slept.* To heaven's blue fields their wakeful eyes were turn'd, And to the fires that there eternal burn'd. Those azure regions had been peopled long, With Fancy's children, by the sons of song And there, the simple shepherd, conning o'er His humble pittance of Chaldean lore, Saw, in the stillness of a starry night, The Swan and Eagle wing their silent flight ;t * See Luke, ii. 6 15. t For the help of those wholly unacquainted with astronomy it is proper \o observe, that the Swan, the Eagle, Berenice's lock, Bootes, the Pleiades, the Lyr3, nnd Auriga or the Charioteer, are the names of constellations, or the parts of constellations, visible in the northern hemisphere of course, in Judea. Cynosure is the classical name of the Polestar. Why do gold and silver now appear less plenty than they did ra ancient times ? BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. 3J0 And, from their spangled pinions, as they flew, On Israel's vales of verdure shower the dew Saw there, die brilliant gems, that nightly flare, In the thin mist of Berenice's hair ; And there, Bootes roll his lucid wain, On sparkling wheels, along the ethereal plain ; And there, the Pleiades, in tuneful gyre, Pursue for ever the star-studded Lyre ; And there, with bickering lash, heaven's Charioteer Urge round the Cynosure his bright career. While thus the shepherds watch'd the host of night, O'er heaven's blue concave flash'd a sudden light. The unrolling glory spread its folds divine, O'er the green hills and vales of Palestine ; And lo ! descending angels, hovering there, Stretch'd their loose wings, and in the purple air, Hung o'er the sleepless guardians of the fold ; When that high anthem, clear, and strong, and bold. On wavy paths of trembling ether ran " Glory to God Benevolence to man Peace to the world ;" and in full concert came, From silver tubes, and harps of golden frame, The loud and sweet response, whose choral strains Lingered and languished on Judea's plains. Yon living lamps, charm'd from their chambers blue, By airs so heavenly, from the skies withdrew All ? all, but one, that hung and burn'd alone, And with mild lustre over Bethlehem shone. Chaldea's sages saw that orb afar, Glow unextinguished ; 'twas Salvation's Star. BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. I. NELSON'S column was steered about two points more to the north than Collingwood's, in order to cut off the ene- my's escape into Cadiz the lee line was, therefore, first en- gaged. " See," cried Nelson, pointing to the Royal Sove- reign, as she steered right for the centre of the enemy's line 320 BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR cut through it, astern of the Santa Anna three decker, and engaged her at the muzzle of her guns on her starboard side " See how that noble fellow, Collingwood, carries his ship into action !" Collingwood delighted in being first in the heat of the fire ; and knowing the feelings of his command- er, and old friend, turned to his captain, and exclaimed *' Rotherham, what would Nelson give to be here ?" Both of these brave officers, perhaps, at this moment thought of Nelson with gratitude, for a circumstance which had occurred on the preceding day. Admiral Collingwood, with some of the captains, having gone on board the Victory, to receive instructions, Nelson inquired of him where his captain was ? and was told in reply that they were not upon good terms with each other. " Terms !" said Nelson ; " good terms with each other !" Immediately he sent a boat for captain Rotherham ; led him, as soon as he arrived, to Collingwood t and saying, " Look, yonder are the enemy I" bade them shake hands, like Englishmen. 2. The enemy continued to fire a gun at a time at tho Victory, till they saw that a shot had passed through her main-top gallant sail ; then they opened their broadsides, aiming chiefly at her rigging, in the hope of disabling her before she could close with them. Nelson, as usuaJ, had hoisted several flags, lest one should be shot away. The ene- my showed no colors till late in the action, when they began to feel the necessity of having them to strike. For this rea son, the Santissima Trinidad, Nelson's old acquaintance, as he used to call her, was distinguished only by her four decks ; and to the bow of this opponent he ordered the Victory to be steered. Meantime, an incessant raking fifre was kept up upon the Victory. The admiral's secretary was one of the first who fell he was killed by a cannon shot while convers ing with Hardy. 3. Captain Adair, of the marines, with the help of a sailor, endeavored to remove the body from Nelson's sight, who had a great regard for Mr. Scott ; but he anxiously asked " Is that poor Scott that's gone ?" and being informed that it was indeed so, exclaimed "Poor fellow !" Presently a double- headed shot struck a party of marines, and killed eight of them upon which Nelson immediately desired captain Adaii In what ship was lord Nelson ? BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. 321 to disperse his mm round the ship, that they might not suffer BO much from IXMIILT together. A few minutes afterwards, a shot struck the fore brace bits on the quarter deck, and passed between Nelson and Hardy, a splinter from the bit tearing oil' Hardy's buckle, and bruising his foot. Both stopped, and looked anxiously at each other, each supposing the other to be wounded. Nelson then smiled, and said ' This is too warm work, Hardy, to last long." 4. The Victory had not yet returned a single gun fifty of her men had been by this time killed or wounded, and her main-top-mast, with all her studding sails, and their booms, shot away. Nelson declared, that in all his battles, he had seen nothing which surpassed the cool courage of his crew on this occasion. At four minutes past twelve, she opened her fire from both sides of her deck. It was not possible to break the enemy's line, without running on board one of their ships Hardy informed him of this, and asked which he would prefer. Nelson replied " Take your choice, Hardy, it does not signify much." The master was then ordered to put the helm to port, and the Victory ran on board the Re- doubtable, just as her tiller-ropes were shot away. The French ship received her with a broadside ; then instantly let down her lower deck ports, for fear of being boarded through them, and never afterwards fired a great gun during the action. Her tops, like those of all the enemy's ships, were filled with riflemen. Nelson never placed musketry in his tops ; he had a strong dislike to the practice ; not mere- ly because it endangers setting fire to the sails, but also be- cause it is a murderous sort of warfare, by which individuals may suffer, and a commander now and then be picked off, but which can never decide the fate of a general engage- ment. 5. Captain Harvey, in the Temeraire, fell on board the Redoubtable on the other side. Another enemy was. in like manner on board the Temeraire so that these four ships formed as compact a tier as if they had been moored toge- ther, their heads all lying the same way. The lieutenants of the Victory, seeing this, depressed their guns of the mid- dle and lower decks, and fired with a diminished charge, lest How many of the Victory's crew were killed before she commenced firing ? On board of what French ship did the Victory run ? 322 BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. the shot should pass through, and injure the Temeraire And because there was danger-that the Redoubtable might lake fire from the lower deck guns, the muzzles of which touched her side when they were run out, the fireman of each gun stood ready with a bucket of water ; which, as soon as the gun was discharged, he dashed into the hole made by the shot. An incessant fire was kept up from the Victory from both sides ; her larboard guns playing upon the Bucen- taure and the huge Santissima Trinidad. 6. It had been part of Nelson's prayer, that the British fteqt might be distinguished by humanity in the victory which he expected. Setting an example himself, he twice gave orders to cease firing upon the Redoubtable, supposing that she had struck, because her great guns were silent ; for, as she carried no flag, there was no means of instantly ascer- taining the fact. From this ship, which he had thus twice spared, he received his death. A ball, fired from her mizen top, which, in the then situation of the two vessels, was not aiore than fifteen yards from that part of the deck where he was standing, struck the epaulet on his left shoulder, about a quarter after one, just in the heat of the action. He fell upon his face, on the spot which was covered with his poo? secretary's blood. 7. Hardy, who was a few steps from him, turning round, saw three men raising him up. " They have done for me at Jast, Hardy," said he. " I hope not !" cried Hardy. ' Yes," he replied, " my back bone is shot through." Yet, even now, not for a moment losing his presence of mind, he ob- served, as they were carrying him down the ladder, that the tiller-ropes, which had been shot away, were not yet replac- ed ; and ordered that new ones should be rove immediately then, that he might not be seen by the crew, he took out his handkerchief, and covered his face and his stars. Had he but concealed these badges of honor from the enemy, England, perhaps, would not have had cause to receive with sorrow the news of the battle of Trafalgar. 8. The cockpit was crowded with wounded and dying men ; over whose bodies he was, with some difficulty, con- veyed and laid upon a pallet in the midshipmen's birth. It was soon perceived, upon examination, that his wound was From whence was the ball fired that struck Nelson ? BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. 31& mortal. This, however, was concealed from all except cajv tain Hardy, the chaplain, and the medical attendants. He himself being certain, from the sensation in his back, and the gush of blood which he felt momentarily within his breast, that no human care could avail him, insisted that the sur- geon should leave him, and attend to those to whom he might be useful ; " for," said he, " you can do nothing for me." 9. All that could be done was to fan him with paper, and frequently to give him lemonade, to alleviate his intense thirst. He was in great pain, and expressed much anxiety for the event of the action, which now began to declare it- self. As often as a ship struck, the crew of the Victory hurraed ; and at every hurra, a visible expression of joy gleamed in the eyes, and marked the countenance of the dy- ing hero. But he became impatient to see captain Hardy ; and as that officer, though often sent for, could not leave the deck, Nelson feared that some fatal cause prevented him, and repeatedly cried " Will no one bring Hardy to me ? He must be killed ! He is surely dead !" 10. An hour and ten minutes elapsed, from the time when Nelson received his wound, before Hardy could come to him. They shook hands in silence ; Hardy in vain strug- gling to suppress the feelings of that most painful, and yet Bublimest moment. " Well, Hardy," said Nelson, " How goes the day with us?" " Very well," replied Hardy ; "ten ships have struck ; but five of their van have tacked, and show an intention of bearing down upon the Victory. I have called two or three of our fresh ships round, and have no doubt of giving them a drubbing." " I hope," said Nelson, " none of our ships have struck ?" Hardy answered, " There is no fear of that." Then, and not till then, Nelson spoke of himself. " I am a dead man, Hardy," said he " I am go- ing fast it will all be over with me soon. Come nearer to me. Let my dear lady Hamilton have my hair, and all other things belonging to me." Hardy observed, that he hoped Mr. Beatty could yet hold out some prospect of life. " Oh no !" he replied, " it is impossible. My back is shot through. Beatty will tell you so." Captain Hardy then, once more, shook hands with him ; and with a heart almost bursting, hastened upon deck. 11. By this time, all feeling below the breast was gone ; f:24 BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. and Nelson, having made the surgeon ascertain this, said to him " You know I am gone. I know it. I feel something rising in my breast" putting his hand on his left side 11 which tells me so." And, upon Beatty's inquiring whether his pain was very great, he replied, ' " So great, that I wish I was dead." " Yet," said he, in a lower voice, " one would like to live a little longer too !" And, after a few minutes, in the same under tone, he added " What would become of poor lady Hamilton, if she knew my situation !" Next to his country she occupied his thoughts. Captain Hardy, some fifty minutes after - he had left the cockpit, returned ; and again taking the hand of his dying friend and comman- der, congratulated him on having gained a complete victory. How many of the enemy were taken he did not know, as it was impossible to perceive them distinctly ; but fourteen or fifteen at least. 12. " That's well," cried Nelson ; " but I bargained for twenty." And then, in a stronger voice, he said ct An- chor, Hardy ; anchor." Hardy, upon this, hinted that ad- miral Collingwood would take upon himself the direction of affairs. " Not while I live, Hardy !" said the dying Nelson, ineffectually endeavoring to raise himself from his bed " Do you anchor." His previous order for preparing to an- chor had shown how clearly he foresaw the necessity of this. Presently, calling Hardy back, he said to him, in a low voice " Don't throw me overboard" and desired that he might be buried by his parents, unless it should please the king to order otherwise. Then A reverting to private feelings " Take care of my dear lady Hamilton, Hardy take care of poor lady Hamilton." "Kiss me, Hardy," said he. Har- dy knelt down, and kissed his cheek ; and Nelson said, "Now I am satisfied. Tljank God, I have done my duty." Hardy stood over him in silence, for a moment or two ; then knelt again, and kissed his forehead. " Who is that ?" said Nelson ; and being informed, he replied, " God bless you, Hardy." And Hardy then left him for ever. 13. Nelson now desired to be turned upon his right side, and 'said-" I wish I had not left the deck ; for I shall soon be gone." Death was, indeed, rapidly approaching. He said to his chaplain " Doctor, I have not been a great sin- ner" and after a short pause, " Remember, that I leave lady Hamilton, and my daughter Horatia, as a legacy to my BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. 3'tt country." His articulation now became difficult ; but he was distinctly heard to say, " Thank God, I have done my duty !" These words he repeatedly pronounced ; and they were the last words which he uttered. He expired at thirty minutes after four three hours and a quarter after he receiv- ed his wound. 14. Within a quarter of an hour after Nelson was wound- ed, above fifty of the Victory's men fell by the enemy's mus- ketry. They, however, on their part, were not idle ; and it was not long before there were only two Frenchmen left alive in the mizen-top of the Redoubtable. One of them was the man who had given the fatal wound but he did not live to boast what he had done. An old quarter-master had seen him fire ; and easily recognised him, because he wore a glazed cocked hat and white frock. Two midshipmen, Mr. Collingwood and Mr. Pollard, kept firing at the top, and this quarter-master supplied them with cartridges. One of the Frenchmen, attempting to make his escape down the rigging, was shot by Mr. Pollard, and suddenly fell. But the old quarter-master, as he cried out, " That's he, that's he," and pointed at the other, who was coming forward to fire again, received a shot in his mouth, and fell dead. Both the midshipmen then fired, at the same time, and the fellow dropped into the mizen-top. When they took possession of the prize, it was found, that one ball passed through his head, and another through his breast. 15. The Redoubtable struck within twenty minutes after the fatal shot had been fired from her. During that time, she had been twice on fire, in her forechains and in her fore- castle. The French, as they had done in other battles, made use, in this, of fire balls, and other combustibles im- plements of destruction, which other nations, from a sense of honor and humanity, have laid aside which add to the sufferings of the wounded, without determining the issue of the combat which, indeed, none but the cruel would em ploy, and which never can be successful against the brave. , How long did Nelson live aftdr being wounded ? How many of the Victory's men within a quarter of an hour fell by the enemy's musketry ? Did the person who shot Nelson escape alive ? How long after Nelson was wounded, before the Redoubtable struck ? Of what did the French make use, in this battle, not practised by othei civilized nationi ? 32t: BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. Once they succeeded in setting fire, from the Redoubtable to some ropes and canvass on the Victory's booms. The cry ran through the ship ; but it produced no confusion the men displayed that perfect self-possession in danger, by which English seamen are characterized they extinguished the flames on board their own ship, and then hastened to extin- guish them in the enemy, by throwing buckets of water from the gangway. 16. What the English would have done from gallantry, some of the crew of the Santissima Trinidad did to save themselves. Unable to stand the tremendous fire of the Vic- tory, whose larboard guns played against this great four- decker, and not knowing how else to escape them, nor where else to betake themselves for protection, many leaped over- board, and swam to the Victory ; and were actually helped up her sides by the English during the action. The Spa- niards began the battle with less vivacity than the French, but they continued it with greater firmness. The Argonau- ta and Bahama were defended till they had each lost about four hundred men the St. Juan Nepomuceno lost three hundred and fifty. Often as the superiority of British cou- rage had been proved against France upon the seas, it had never been more conspicuous than in this decisive conflict. Five of the English ships v/ere engaged muzzle to muzzle with five of the French. In all five the French lowered their lower deck ports, and deserted their guns ; while the English continued deliberately to load and fire, till they had made their victory secure. 17. The total British loss in the battle of Trafalgar amount- ed to 1587. Twenty of the enemy struck, bu* unhappily the fleet did not anchor, as Nelson, almost with his dying breath, had enjoined a gale came on from the south-west ; some of the prizes went down ; some went on shore ; one effected its escape into Cadiz ; others were destroyed ; four only were saved, and those with the greatest exertions. The wounded Spaniards were sent on shore, an assurance being given that they should not serve till regularly exchanged ; How many men were killed on board the Argonauta and Bahama ? On board the St. Juan Nepomuceno ? What wa.s the whole British loss ? How many of the French and Spanish ships struck to the English fleet ? How many of this mvmber were saved by the British 3 -Whv were thev not al! saved ? THE FIELD OF HATTLE. :? and tlu- Sj \viih a griH'rous feeling, offered the use of their hospitals lor their wounded enemies, pledging ike honor of S[>;:in that they should he carefully attended there. When the storm, after the action, drove some of the prizes upon the coast, they declared that the English, who were thus thrown into their hands, should not be considered as prisoners of war ; and the Spanish soldiers gave up their own beds to their shipwrecked enemies. j^&^ o*. In THE FIELD OF BA THE sun had disappear'd beneath the flood, The watchful sentinels, with weary tread, Measur'd the waning of the day of blood., And careless trod among th' unburied dead ' The grass is wet, but not with wbolesome dew Its verdure blushes deep with human gore ; And friends and foes promiscuously strew This silent bed, at enmity no more. How few of all who met with deadly zeal, Knew well the causes of conflicting pride ' How fewer still could personally feel The hatred which has lain them side by side ! I pity such by hard condition led To be the passive instruments of )x>wer ; Who sell their lives and liberty for bread To satisfy the cravings of an hour. No one so mean of all the brave who die, But calls some sympathizing sorrow forth ; Small is the share of grief that meets the eye, Unnotic'd falls the tear for humble worth- Few see the father bending o'er the son, The sole sad prop on which his age depended ; The helpless widow wandering alone, And thousand houseless orphans unbefrienJed. 30 HUMAN SLAVERY. O could the wail of orphans reach his ear, Or could he feel a parent's agony, And see the widovv'd mother's hopeless tear, The sure and dreadful price of victory O could th' ambitious once approach, and view I 1 he desolation his ambition made Methinks some milder method he'd pursue, And quit for ever war's unhallow'd trade. O when will justice guide, and wisdom light, And mercy to the great her rays impart ? A splendid victory proves no conqueror right, And worlds could never heal one broken heart. What is a nation's honor, if the price Is individual peace, and happiness ? And what is glory, if her temple rise Upon the base of national distress ? Then if the certain fruits of war are wo, And the destruction of domestic bliss ; Ungather'd let the warrior's laurels grow They must be poisonous in a soil like this. HUMAN SLAVERY. 1 HISTORY presents to the eye of reason and humanity the shocking spectacle of an extensive system of slavery ex- isting among the nations of antiquity. We have, in a gene- ral view of the social system of Rome, under the republican and imperial governments, seen the rigorous treatment of slaves in the early ages, and contemplated with pleasure the amelioration of their condition in the latter times of the re- public, and under the government of the empeiors. This happy change in the condition of slavery proceeded from a variety of causes ; and the establishment of Christianity at length added its benign influence to soften the condition of those unfortunate mortals, who were placed in that abject and depressed state. Did human slavery extensively prevail among ancient nation* ? SLAVMKV. '&() indeed, peculiarly calcu- lated to produi-" liiis happy effect. By teaching that the Have an-! his master must appear without distinction before the tribunal of the impartial Judge of all mankind, it held out to the former a >!ivn<: inducement to a patient acquiescence in his condition, while it inspired the latter with sentiments of humanity and benevolence towards those whom Providence had thus placed under his authority. And although the sys- tem of slavery was not absolutely abolished on the establish- ment of Christianity, its hardships were considerably miti gated ; for certainly no Christian, who was worthy of the name, could treat his slaves with unprovoked cruelty, or un- necessary rigor. 3. The subversion of the empire by the northern nations, by reducing slaves and their masters, for the most part, to the same state of villanage, under the feudal system, in a great measure annihilated the system of absolute personal slavery, as it had existed among the Romans. The Turks, and other nations, who subverted the empire of the Caliphs, again in- troduced the Roman custom of condemning to slavery their prisoners of war ; and the same system was, by way of re- taliation, adopted by the crasaders. 4. After the enthusiastic frenzy of the religious wars had subsided, in proportion as the minds of men became more enlightened, as religion became better understood, and better practised, and as the advancement of commerce and civiliza- tion diffused wealth among the people, the system of slavery gradually disappeared, and the feudal system was, by a con- currence of causes, at last abolished in several parts of Eu- rope. It is, however, a melancholy circumstance, that the extinction of slavery in Europe was so soon followed by its establishment in America. We have seen that various causes concurred, in such a manner, as rendered the effect inevita- ble. In this life, evil is invariably mixed with good, and we, finite creatures, are not able to comprehend the designs of a I low did Christianity tend to the amelioration of the condition of laves in the latter part of the Roman republic ? What effect had the subversion of the Roman empire, by the northern nations, upon slavery ? Who again introduced the Roman oistom of condemning to slavery their prisoners of war ? And who adopted the very pra. The colonists, on their part, finding their cause daily losing ground, and seeing reason to apprehend the anathe- mas of the church, as well as the effective resentment of the mother country, took a new ground, and discovered a post which they supposed, and which actually proved, in some degree, impregnable. They represented the necessity of having hands to cultivate the new settlements, arid to work the mines, without which they must be abandoned, and all hopes of drawing any advantage from the discovery and Conquest of those rich countries be for ever extinguished : and they represented the natives as an indolent race, whom no wages, no rewards, courid induce to work, and whom no- thing but absolute compulsion could oblige to apply to any kind of useful labor. 7. This representation, indeed, was not untrue. Then indolent and inactive life had rendered them equally unable and unwilling to apply to any kind of labor. Unaccustom- ed, as they had ever been, to the elegancies and luxuries of civilized life, and ignorant of their use, they could not su]> ] them worth the trouble of acquisition, and were asto- nished that the Europeans should either work themselves, or desire others to labor, for the possession of things not imme- diately necessary for the support of life ; gold and silver were things of no value among them. They had never made use of those metals, except such pieces as they had accidentally found, and used merely as ornaments ; and they could not conceive by what infatuation the Spaniards could be induced to ransack the bowels of the earth, and to establish a system of laborious employment for the acquisition of those metals, which appeared to them of so little use, and which they could do so well without. 8. It is very evident, that men of such ideas, and accus- tomed to so simple a state of life, could not be induced to labor for the sake of gain*; for it is an invariable principle of human nature not to labor for the acquisition of any thing 334 ORIGIN OF AFRICAN SLAVERY the possession of which is esteemed of no value. This plea, therefore, of the colonists, was unanswerable. The pros- pect of drawing immense wealth from the new world could not be abandoned. Hands were necessary to cultivate the soil and work the mines. The natives would not work for wages ; nothing but compulsory means could induce them to employ themselves in labor. These circumstances pre- cluded the possibility of emancipating the Americans. The exertions of the friends of humanity were rendered abortive, in regard to the accomplishment of their grand object ; but they were not, however, without a beneficial effect. 9. The court of Spain seriously studied to ameliorate the condition of the Americans ; and different plans were form ed, and different measures adopted, for that purpose. Every new regulation, relative to colonial affairs, was favorable to the cause of those oppressed people. As it was not possible to draw any advantage from the mines, unless they were wrought, and the Americans would not work for hire, a cir- cumstance which imposed the necessity of using coercive measures, it was at length determined, that they should bo freed from the tyrannical oppression of their imperious task- masters, and only obliged to work by corvees in rotation, snd to receive fixed wages for the days they were obliged to work% This was, indeed, the most rational method of gradually overcoming their habitual indolence and rooted aversion to labor, and of making them industrious and useful members of society. 10. Notwithstanding the rational and humane measure* adopted by the court of Spain, the advocates of American liberty were not fully satisfied ; and Father de las Casas, whose character is strongly marked by that determined reso- lution which no opposition can disconcert, and that ardent zeal which can never abandon a favorite project, was firmly bent on trying every expedient in order to accomplish the complete emancipation of the natives of the new world ; and in his zeal for so good a cause, unfortunately hit upon the desperate expedient of negro slavery, thus alleviating the miseries of America by hurling them upon Africa. 11. Father de las Casas, Cardinal Ximenes, and other Who was the first that suggested th idea of thus employing th negroes ? ORIGIN OF AFRICAN SLAVERY. 3:16 projectors of the slave trade, who were undoubtedly nunane and benevolent men, imagined, that by importing from Afri- ca a number of slaves, taken prisoners in the wars, which frequently took place among the savage nations of that conti- nent, or such as were malefactors, convicted of crimes against society, they might make useful laborers of many on whom the punishment of death or slavery would otherwise \ ed in Africa, in consequence of martial law or judicial tence. They might also, with no small probability of con-' jecture, imagine that slaves, procured from a dispirit coun- try, and purchased at a great expense, would be better treat- ed and taken care of by their interested masters, than the unfortunate natives, whose Iive3 appeared of no value in the eyes of the colonists. 12. It was also considered, that the negroes had not that rooted aversion to labor, which so strongly characterized the natives of the new continent, and that their robust con- stitutions, and the strongly compacted frame of their bodies, rendered them capable of undergoing those labors and fa- tigues which threatened the extirpation of the whole race of the natives of America. To all these considerations, there might, perhaps, be added, the expectation that the introduc- tion of a number of robust slaves into the colonies, would in time be productive of a race of active and industrious labor- ers ; and that in two or three generations, the Americana becoming accustomed to a civilized life, and acquainted with its conveniences, would gradually lose their aversion to em- ployment, which has, indeed, been in some degree the case, and that the necessity of slavery would in time be super- seded by the increase of voluntary laborers. 13. These considerations might, and many of them un- doubtedly did, present themselves to the minds of the first projectors of the African slave trade, and sufficiently evince the rectitude of their intentions. The consequences, it ia true, have been in many respects shocking to humanity ; but these they did not, and indeed, could not foresee. Man is liable to error ; and some men are so circumstanced, that the slightest mistake in their conduct cannot fail of produc- ing the most fatal consequences, either to themselves or to others ; a condition too hard for a finite capacity ; yet, if we What were Las Catas' motives for employing the negrooi f 8?fc THE NEGRO'S COMPLAINT earbfully peruse the history of mankind, or extend our ob serrations abroad in the world, we may easily perceive, that many persons are placed in such a situation, among whom the first projectors of the slave trade may, with great propri- ety, be numbered. 14. It is computed by M. 1'Abbe Raynal, that between eight and ten millions of negroes have been imported into the American colonies, and that one million and a half do not now remain. If this calculation be just, or nearly so, it exhibits a destruction of the human species, of which the history of mankind affords few examples, and which must proceed from a series of sufferings shocking to humanity. It cannot be attributed to the change of climate ; for the countries from whence the negroes are brought, are situated within the torrid zone, and in the same climate as most of the American settlements into which they are imported ; and, excepting Batavia, scarcely any countries can be found on the surface of the globe where the air is more sultry and in- salubrious than in Negroland and Guinea. This singular and shocking destruction of the unhappy Africans, may therefore, without doubt, be chiefly attributed to their violent separation from their country and their connexions, and that depression of spirits inseparable from a state of slavery. THE NEGRO'S COMPLAINT. 1. FORC'D from home and all its pleasures, Afric's coast I left forlorn ; To increase a stranger's treasures, O'er the raging billows borne. Men from England bought and sold me, Paid my price in paltry gold ; But, though slave they have enroll'd me, Minds are never to be sold. 2. Still in thought as free as ever, What are England's rights I ask, How many negroes, has it been computed, have been imported into America ? And how many of them still live > Till: MACRO'S COMPLAINT. Me from my delights to sev< r, Me to torture, me to ta Fleecy locks, and black complexion Cannot forfeit nature's claim ; Skins may differ, but affection Dwells in white and black the same, If. Why did all-creating nature Make the plant for which we toil '? Sighs must fan it, tears must water, Sweat of ours must dre.-s the soil. Think, ye masters, iron hearted. Lolling at your jovial boards ; Think how many backs have smarted For the sweets your cane affords. 4. Is there, as ye sometimes tell us, Is there one who reigns on high I Has he bid you buy and sell us, Speaking from his throne, the sky 7 Ask him, if your knotted scourges, Matches, blood-extorting screws, Are the means that duty urges, Agents of his will to use ? 6. Hark ! he answers wild tornadoes, Strewing yonder sea with wrecks ; Wasting towns, plantations, meadows, Are the voice with which he speaks, He, foreseeing what vexations Afric's sons should undergo, Fix'd their tyrants' habitations Where his whirlwinds answer No. G. By our blood in Afric wasted, Ere our necks receiv'd the chain ; By the mis'ries that we tasted, Crossing in your barks the main ; By our sufferings since ye brought us To the man-degrading mart ; All sustained by patience, taught us Only by a broken heart. 388 WILLIAM TELL. 7. Deem our nation brutes no longer, Till some reason ye shall find Worthier of regard, and stronger Than the color of our kind. Slaves of gold, whose sordid dealings Tarnish all your boasted pow'rs, Prove that you have human feelings, Ere you proudly question ours. WILLIAM TELL. 1. BEFORE Switzerland was delivered from the dominion of Austria, the governor of Uri, named Geisler, resided in the city of Altorf ; who by abusing the power intrusted to him, iniquitously exercised the most cruel tyranny. Inter- est or caprice alone directed his decisions ; justice and reason were banished ; judgment was sold ; the innocent were pu- nished arbitrarily ; and the ministers of the tyrant committed the most enormous crimes with impunity. He at last added extravagance to cruelty ; and having caused a pole to be erected in a public square, and placed a hat upon it, he or- dered, under pain of death, that all who passed that way, should bow down before it, and reverence it as they did his own person. 2. In the same canton, there lived a man of rough but frank manners, named William Tell, who, having come on business to Altorf, passed through the public square, and be- holding the pole with the hat upon it, hesitated a moment between wonder and laughter ; but not knowing its object, and but little curious to inquire, he negligently passed this emblem of power. The irreverence paid to the pole, and the infraction of the severe edict, were speedily reported to the governor, who, being filled with rage, ordered the criminal to be instantly arrested, and brought before him. He received the offender with the savage look of cruelty pe- culiar to a base mind, jealous of its authority, and ferocious when it is made the subject of derision. 3. Villain, said he, is this your respect for my power and "for vnaftt /ffence was William Tell condemned to death ? WILLIAM TELL. decrees '? But you shall feel their full weight, and afford a wretched proof that my dignity is not to be affronted with impunity. Astonished, but not intimidated, at this invec- tive, Tell freely inquired of what he was accused, as lie was unconscious of any crime. Contempt and derision of my power, said the tyrant. I had no notice, replied Tell, of your edict; and without being instructed, I should never have dreamed of saluting a pole, or that irreverence to a hat was high treason against the state. Enraged at the tone and air of derision with which this was pronounced, and the rea- sonableness of the still more humiliating reply, he command- ed the unfortunate man to be dragged away to the lowest dungeon of the castle, and there, loaded with chains, await his execution. 4. While the tyrant was revolving the subject in his own mind, and endeavoring to invent some unheard-of punish- ment, which should strike terror into the Swiss, the only and beloved son of Tell was brought into his presence by the soldiers. His ingenious cruelty immediately conceived the barbarous design of compelling the virtuous Tell to be- come the murderer of his son. For this purpose, he order- ed the child to be placed at a considerable distance, and then placing an apple upon his head, he offered a full pardon to the wretched parent, if he should strike it off with an arrow. 5. Horror-struck at the proposal, he fell at the feet of the tyrant, and besought him to take his life, and not insist upon the fatal experiment. But the anguish of the parent only strengthened tfie determination of Geisler ; and the bow and a quiver of arrows were brought forth. The governor, at- tended by his satellites, now proceeded to the square, to wit- ness the scene. The unhappy boy was conducted into the centre, bound to the pole, and the fatal apple was placed upon his head. Geisler thrilled with joy at the preparations ; but a groan of horror arose on all sides from the populace who had assembled. (5. Although Tell was accounted the most skilful archer in the canton, it was some time before he could obtain his asual self-possession. At last, with a firm hand, he placed the arrow ; and, when he drew the fatal spring, the specta- On what condition wa William Tell pardoned ? 340 BATTLE OF ERIE, tors, who had for some time remained in breathless silence, barst forth into a convulsive groan. At that instant the arrow sped with the velocity of lightning, and piercing the apple, bore it to some distance without injuring the child. A shout of applause testified the joy of the spectators. The governor alone appeared dissatisfied with the result, and turn- ed his eye upon the successful archer with the aspect of dis- appointed revenge. 7. At that instant, another arrow, which Tell had con- cealed under his cloak, fell upon the ground. Unequalled archer ! said the tyrant, since you were only to shoot once, for what purpose was this second arrow concealed ? To have pierced you to the heart, replied the magnanimous Tell, if I had been so unfortunate as to kill my son. For this heroic answer he was condemned to perpetual imprisonment in a dungeon at Kuffnacht, the residence of Geisler. Tell was accordingly bound, and placed in a boat, that Geisler him- self might convey him across the lake of Altorf to his castle. 8. Scarcely, however, had the boat performed half the passage, when a furious squall covered the surface of the lake with threatening waves. Geisler, as humble in the hour of danger as he had been arrogant when fear was at a dis- *ance, entreated Tell, who was accounted the most skilful boatman in the canton, to save him ; and unbound his pri- soner with his own hands. Tell seated himself at the helm, steered the boat towards a rock, leaped upon it, and then, in an instant, with the same manly strength, pushed back the boat into the lake, escaped, and concealed himself. At length the storm abated, and Geieler gained the shore. As he was about to enter his fortress, Tell, who had by a circu- itous route reached the spot before him, discharged an arrow a. the tyrant, which pierced his heart ; and thus paved the way for that conspiracy which laid the foundation of his country's liberty. BATTLE OF ERIE. 1. A'T 10 A. M. the wind hauled to the southeast, and brought the American squadron to windward. Commo- For what was William Tell then sentenced to perpetual imprwon ftont ? How did he escape from this punishment ? BATTLE OF ERIE. 341 dorc Perry then hoisted his Union Jack, having for a motto the dying words of the valiant Lawrence, " Don't give up the ship !'' It was received with repeated rhcerings l>y the officers and crews. And now iiaving formed his line, lie bore for the enemy, who likewise cleared for action, and hauled up his courses. It is deeply interesting to picture to ourselves the advances of these gallant and well-matched squadrons to a contest, where the strife must be obstinate and sanguinary, and the event decisive of the fate of almost an empire. 2. The lightness of the wind occasioned them to approach each other but slowly, and prolonged the awful interval of suspense and anxiety that precedes a battle. This is the time, when the stoutest hearts beat quick, " and the boldest holds his breath ;" it is the still moment of direful expecta- tion ; of fearful looking out for slaughter and destruction ; when even the glow of pride and ambition is chilled for 9 while, and nature shudders at the awful jeopardy of exist ence. The very order and regularity of naval discipline, heighten the dreadful quiet of the moment. No bustle, no noise prevails to distract the mind, except at intervals the shrill piping of the boatswain's whistle, or a murmuring whisper among the men, who, grouped around their guns, earnestly regard the movements of the foe, now and then stealing a wistful glance at the countenance of their com- manders. In this manner did the hostile squadrons approach each other, in mute watchfulness and terrible tranquillity ; when suddenly a bugle was sounded from on board the ene- my's ship Detroit, and loud huzzas immediately burst from all their crews. 3 No sooner did the Lawrence come within the reach of the enemy's long guns, than they opened a heavy fire upon her, which, from the shortness of her guns, she was unable to return. Commodore Perry, without waiting for his schoo- ners, kept on his course, in such gallant and determined style, that the enemy supposed it was his intention to board. In a few minutes, having a nearer position, he opened his fne. The length of the enemies' guns, however, gave them vastly When was the battle of Erie? (10th of September, 1813.) Who commanded the American squadron ? What was the motto on com- modore Perry's union jack ? What was the name of the vessel in which he commenced the eneaoreraent ? 31 + 342 BATTLE OF ERIE. the advantage, and the Lawrence was excessively cut up, without being able to do any great damage in return. Their shot pierced her sides in all directions, killing our men on the birth-deck and in the -steerage, where they had been taken down to be dressed. One shot had nearly produced a fatal explosion ; passing through the light room, it knocked the snuff of the candle into the magazine ; fortunately, the gunner happened to see it, and had the presence of mind to extinguish it immediately with his hand. 4. Indeed, it seemed to be the enemy's plan to destroy the commodore's ship, and thus throw the squadron into confu- sion. For this purpose, their heaviest fire was directed a> the Lawrence, and blazed incessantly upon it from their largest vessels. Finding the hazard of his situation, Perry made sail, and directed the other vessels to follow, for the purpose of closing with the foe. The tremendous fire, how- ever, to which he was exposed, soon cut away every brace and bowline, and the Lawrence became unmanageable. Even in this disastrous plight, she sustained the action for upwards of two hours, within canister distance, though for a great part of the time he could not get more than three guns to bear upon her antagonists. It was admirable to behold the perfect order and regularity that prevailed among her valiant and devoted crew, throughout this scene of horror. No trepidation, no confusion occurred, even for an instant ; a? fast as the men were wounded, they were carried below, and others stept into their places ; the dead remained where they fell, till after the action. 5. At this juncture, the fortune of the battle trembled on a point, and the enemy believed the day their own. The Lawrence was reduced to a mere wreck ; her decks were streaming with blood, and covered with mangled limbs, and the bodies of the slain ; nearly the whole of her crew was either killed or wounded ; her guns were dismounted ; "and the commodore and his officers helped to work the last that was capable of service. But amidst all this peril and disas- ter, the youthful commander is said to have remained per- fectly composed, maintaining a serene and cheerful counte- nance, uttering no passionate or agitated expression, giving out his orders with calmness and deliberation, and inspiriting every one around him by his magnanimous demeanor. BATTLE OF ERIE. 343 6. At this crisis, finding the Lawrence was incapabie of further service, and seeing the hazardous situation of the conflict, he formed the bold resolution of shifting his flag. Giving the ship, therefore, in charge to lieutenant Yarnall. who had already distinguished himself by his bravery, he hauled down his union, bearing the motto of Lawrence, and taking it under his arm, ordered to be put on board the Nia- gara, which was then in close engagement. In leaving the Lawrence, he gave his pilot choice either to remain on board, or accompany him ; the faithful fellow told him/ 4 ' he would stick by him to the last," and jumped into the boat. Hs then went off from the ship in his usual gallant manner, standing up in the stern of the boat, until the crew absolutely pulled him down among them. 7. Broadsides were now levelled at him, and small arnw were discharged by the enemy, two of whose vessels were within musket shot, and a third one nearer. His brave ship- mates who remained behind, stood watching him in breath- less anxiety ; the balls struck around him, and flew over hia head, in every direction ; but the same special providence tha* seems to have watched over the youthful hero through- out this desperate battle, conducted him safely through a shower of shot, and they beheld with transport his inspiring flag hoisted at the mast-head of the Niagara. No sooner was he on board, than captain Elliot volunteered to put off } a boat, and bring into action the schooners, which had been kept astern by the lightness of the wind ; the gallant offer was accepted, and Elliot left the Niagara to put it in execution. 8. About this time, the commodore saw, with infinite re- gret, the flag of the Lawrence come down. The event was unavoidable ; she had sustained the whole fury of the enemy, and was rendered incapable of defence ; any further show of resistance, would have been most uselessly and cruelly to have provoked carnage among the relics of her brave and mangled crew. The enemy, however, were not able to take possession of her, and subsequent circumstances enabled her again to hoist her flag. 9. Commodore Perry now made signal for close action, Did commodore Perry continue on board the Lawrence through tht whole engagement ? Why did he leave it, and under what circum stance* ? 344 BATTLE OF ERIE. and the small ressels got out their sweeps, and made all sail Finding that the Niagara was but little injured, he deter- mined, if possible, to break the enemy's line. He accord- ingly bore up, and passed ahead of the two ships and brig, giving them a raking fire from his starboard guns, and also to a large schooner and sloop from his larboard side at half pistol shot. Having passed the whole squadron, he luffed up s aiid Jaid his ship alongside the British commodore. The smaller vessels, under the direction of captain Elliot, having, in the mean time, got within grape and canister distance, and keeping up a well directed fire, the whole of the enemy struct; excepting two small vessels, which attempted to es- cape, but were taken. 10. The engagement lasted about three hours, and never was victory more decisive and complete. The captured squadron exceeded ours in weight of metal and number of g'His. Their crews were also more numerous ; ours were a motley collection, where there were some good seamen, but eked out with soldiers, volunteers, and boys, and man'y were on the sick list. More prisoners were taken than we had men to guard. The loss on both sides was severe. Scarcely any of the Lawrence's crew escaped unhurt. Among those slain, was lieutenant Brooks, of the marines, a gay and ele gant young officer, full of spirit, of amiable manners, and remarkable for his personal beauty. Lieutenant Yarnall, though repeatedly wounded, refused to quit the deck during ihe whole of the action. 11. Commodore Perry, notwithstanding that he was con* tinually in the most exposed situations' of the battle, escaped uninjured ; he wore an ordinary seaman's dress, which, per- haps, prevented him from being picked off by the enemy's sharp shooters. He had a younger brother with him, on board the Lawrence, as midshipman, who was equally fortu- nate in receiving no injury, though his shipmates fell all around him. Two Indian chiefs had been stationed in the tops of the Detroit, to shoot down our officers ; but when the action became warm, so panic struck were they with the ter- rors of the scene, and the strange perils that surrounded them, that they fled precipitately to the hold of the ship, where they were found after the battle, in a state of utter consternation. The bodies of several other Indians are said to have been found the next day on the shores of the lake, SURRENDER OF QUEBEC. 346 supposed to have been killed during the engagement, and thrown overboard. \'2. It is impossible to state the number of killed on board the gnemy. It must, however, have been very great, as their vessels were literally cut to pieces ; and the masts of their two principal ships so shattered that the first gale blew them overboard. Commodore Barclay, the British commander, certainly did himself honor by a brave and obstinate resist- ance. He had seen much service, having been desperately wounded in the battle of Trafalgar, and afterwards losing an arm in another engagement with the French. In the pre- sent battle, he was twice carried below, on account of his wounds, and had the misfortune to have his remaining hand shot away. While below the second time, his officer came down and told him that they must strike, as the ships were cut to pieces, and the men could not be kept to their guns. Commodore Barclay was then carried on deck, and after taking a view of their situation, and finding all chance of success was over, reluctantly gave orders to strike. SURRENDER OF QUEBEC. 1. QUEBEC stands on the north side of the St. Lawrence, and on the west of the St. Charles, which latter river emp- ties into the formor immediately below the town. Its fortifi- cations are strong, and the city elegant and extensive. It consists of an upper and lower town ; the lower town is built upon the strand, which stretches along the base of the lofty rock on which the upper is situated. This rock continues with a bold and steep front, far to the westward, parallel to and near the river St. Lawrence. On this side, therefore, the city might well be deemed inaccessible. On the other, it was protected by the river St. Charles, in which were several armed vessels and floating batteries, deriving addi- tional security from a strong boom drawn across its mouth. The channel of this river is rough and broken, and its borders Who commanded the British squadron ? What injury did commo- dore Barclay receive in the engagement : What is the situation of Quebec 346 SURRENDER OF QUEBEC. intersected with ravines. On its left or eastern bank, was encamped a French army strongly intrenched, and amount- ing, according to all the English accounts, to ten thousand men. The encampment extended from the St. Charles east- ward to the river Montmorency, and its rear was covered by aw almost impenetrable wood. 2. To render this army still more formidable, it was com- manded by a general, who, in the course of the present war, had given signal proofs of active courage, and consummate prudence. The same marquis de Montcalm, who, when strong enough to act offensively, had so rapidly cairied Os- wego and fort William Henry, and who, when reduced to the defensive, had driven Abercrombie with so much slaugh- ter from the walls of Ticonderoga, was now at the head of the army which covered Quebec, and was an antagonist in all respects worthy of Wolfe. Although perceiving, in their full extent, the difficulties with which he was environed, the British general possessed a mind too ardent, and too replete with military enthusiasm, to yield to them. Unpromising as were his prospects, he did not hesitate respecting the part it became him to take. He could not submit to. the dis- grace of relinquishing an enterprise intrusted to him, while any huroari means for accomplishing his object remained unessayed. 3. A bold plan was formed, well adapted to the adventu- rous spirit of the English general, and the desperate situa- tion of his affairs'. This was to land the Droops in the night a small distance above the city, on the northern bank of the river, and by scaling a precipice accessible only by a narrow path, and therefore but weakly guarded, to gain by the morning the heights back of the town, where it has been stated to have been but slightly fortified. The difficulties attending the execution of this scheme are represented to have been numerous. The stream was rapid, the shore shelving, the intended and only practicable landing place so narrow as to be easily missed in the dark, and the steep above, such as not to be ascended without difficulty even when unopposed. Under these circumstances, it was appa- rent, that a discovery and a vigorous opposition would not Who commanded tho French army ? Who commanded the En- glish ? How did general Wolfe effect a landing ? SURRENDER OF QUEBEC.. ;W7 only defeat the enterprise, but probably occasion the destruc tion of a great part of the troops engaged in it. 4. This bold resolution being taken, the admiral moved up the river, several leagues above the place where it wad designed to land, and made demonstrations of an intention to debark a body of troops at different places. During the night, a strong detachment was put on board the flat bot- tomed boats and fell silently down with the tide to the plac< fixfcd on for the descent, which was made with equal secrecy and vigor, about a mile above cape Diamond, an hour before day break, Wolfe himself being the first man who leaped on shore. The highlanders and light infantry who composed the van, under the particular command of colonel Howe, were intended to secure a four-gun battery, which defended an intrenched path by which the heights were to be ascend- ed ; and, dislodging from thence a captain's guard, to cover the landing of the remaining troops. 5. The violence of the current forced them rather below the point of debarcation, and this circumstance increased their difficulties. However, scrambling up the precip.ce, by the aid of the rugged projections of the rocks, and the branches of trees and plants growing on the cliffs, into which it was every where broken, they gained the heights, and very quickly dispersed the guard, which did not maku the resistance to have been expected from the advantages of their situation. The whole army followed up this nurrow pass, and having only encountered a scattering fire from some Canadians and Indians, from which very Irttle low was sustained, they gained the summit by the break of day, where the corps were formed under their respective leaders. 6. The intelligence that the English were in possession of the heights of Abraham was soon conveyed to Montealm. Believing it to be impossible that an enterprise attended with 60 much difficulty could have been achieved, that officer supposed it to be only a feint, made with a small detach- ment, for the purpose of drawing him from his present strong and well chosen position. On being convinced of his error, he comprehended at once the full force of the ad- vantage which had been gained, and the necessity it impos- ed on him of changing his plan of operations. Perceiving that a battle was no longer avoidable, and that the fate of Quebec depended on its issue, he prepared for it with prompt- 348 SURRENDER OF QUEBEC ness and with courage. Leaving his strong camp at Mont* morency, he crossed the river St. Charles for the purpose of attacking the English army. 7. This movement was made in the view of Wolfe, who without loss of time formed his order of battle. His right wing was commanded by general Monckton, and his left by general .Murray. The right flank was covered by the Lou* isburg grenadiers, and the rear and left by the light infantry of Howe, who had now returned from the four-gun battery. The reserve consisted of Webb's regiment, drawn up in eight sub-divisions with large intervals between them. Montcalm had formed his right and left wing about equally of European and colonial troops. His centre consisted of a column of Europeans ; and two small field pieces were brought up to play on the English line. In this order he marched to the attack, advancing in his front about one thousand five hundred militia and Indians, who were shel- tered by bushes, from whence they kept up on the English an irregular and galling fire. 8. The movement of the French indicating an intention to flank his left, general Wolfe ordered the battalion of Am- herst, with the two battalions of royal Americans, to that part of his line, where they were formed en potcnce under general Townshend, presenting to the enemy a double front. Disregarding the irregular fire of the Canadian militia and Indians, he ordered his troops to reserve themselves for the main body of the enemy, advancing in the rear of those ir- regulars ; but in the mean time, a field piece which had been brought up, played briskly and with effect on the French column. Montcalm had taken post on the left of the French army, and Wolfe on the right of the English, so that the two generals rnet each other, at the head of their re- spective troops, where the battle was most severe. 9. The French advanced briskly to the charge, and com- menced the action with great animation. The English are stated to have reserved their fire until the enemy were within forty yards of them, when they gave it with immense effect. It was kept up for some time with great spirit, when Wolfe, advancing at the head of Bragg's and the Louisburg grena- diers with charged bayonets, received a mortal wound, of which he soon afterwards expired. Undismayed by the loss of their general, the English continued their exertions under SURRENDER OF QUEBEC. 340 Monckton, on u!;om the command ijow devolved. II r- also ived a hail through his hodv, \vhich is stated to have passed through his lungs, and general Townshend took com- mand of the JJrili^h army. Ahout the same time, Montcalm, fighting in the front of his battalions, received a mortal wound ; and general Senexergus, the second in command, also fell. The It-it wing and centre of the French began to give way, and being pressed close with the English bayonet and the highland broadsword, were driven, notwithstanding one attempt to rally and renew the attack, partly into Que- bec, and partly over the St. CharJes river. 10. On the left and rear of the English, the action was less severe, and the attack much less animated. The light infantry had been placed in the houses, and colonel Howe, the better to support them, had taken post with two compa- nies still further to the left, behind a copse. As the right of the French attacked the English left, he sallied out from this position against their flanks, and threw them into disor- der. In this critical moment, Townshend advanced severa^ platoons of Amherst's regiment against their front, and com- pletely frustrated the intention Montcalm had formed of turning the left flank. Townshend maintained his position, for the purpose of keeping in check the right wing of th e French and a body of savages stationed opposite the light infantry, for the purpose of getting into and falling on their rear. 11. In this state of the action, Townshend was informed that the command had devolved on him. Proceeding in- stantly to the centre, he found that part of the army thrown into some disorder by the ardor of pursuit, and his immedi- ate efforts were employed in restoring the line. Scarcely was this effected, when Monsieur de Bougainville, who had been detached as high as cape Rouge to prevent a landing above, and who on hearing that the English had gained the plains of Abraham, hastened to the assistance of Montcalm, appeared in the rear at the head of one thousand five hun- dred men. Fortunately, the right wing of the enemy, as well as their left and centre, was now entirely broken, and had been driven off the field. Two battalions and two pie- ces of artillery being advanced towards Bougainville, he re- tired, and Townshend did not think it adviseable to risk tho 350 SURRENDER OF QUEBEC. important advantages already gained, by a pursuit of this fresh body of troops through a difficult country. 12. In this decisive battle, nearly equal numbers appear to have been engaged. The English, however, possessed this immense advantage they were all veterans while not more than half the French army were of the same descrip- tion. This circumstance would lead to an opinion that some motive, not well explained, must have existed to induce Moritcalm to hazard a general action before he was joined by Bougainville. The French regulars, who do not appear to have been well supported by the militia or Indians, were almost entirely cut to pieces. On the part of the English, the loss was by no means so considerable, as the fierceness of the action would indicate. The killed and wounded were less than six hundred men ; but among the former, was the commander in chief. This gallant officer, of whom the most exalted expectations had very justly been farmed ; whose uncommon merit and singular fate have presented a rich theme for panegyric to both the poet and historian, re- ceived, in the commencement of the action, a ball in his wrist ; but without discovering the least discomposure, wrap- ping a handkerchief around his arm, he continued to encou- rage his troops. 13. Soon afterwards, he received a shot in the groin. This painful wound he also concealed, and was advancing at the head of the grenadiers, when a third bullet pierced his breast. Though expiring, it was with reluctance he per- mitted himself to be conveyed into the rear, where, careless about himself, he discovered, in the agonies of death, the most anxious solicitude concerning the fate of the day. Be- ing told that the enemy was visibly broken, he reclined his head from extreme faintness, on the arm of an officer stand- ing near him ; but was soon aroused with the distant sound of " they fly'! they fly !" " Who fly ?" exclaimed the dying hero. On being answered " the French," " Then," said he, 4< I depart content ;" and almost immediately expired in the arms of victory. " A death more glorious," adds Mr. Bel sham, " and attended with circumstances more pictu- resque and interesting, is no where to be found in the annala of history." What were the words of Wolfe when tdld the French were fled '". ALEXANDER SHLK1RK. 14. With le.-.s !' LTD-M! fortune, hut not less of heroism, expired the equally gallaiU Montcalm. The same lovo of glory, and the same fearlessness of death, which in o n - markahlc a manner distinguished the British Uriro, were not less conspicuous in the conduct of his competitor for victory and for fame. He expressed the highest satisfaction on hearing that his wound was mortal; and when told he could survive only a few hours, quickly replied, " So much the better ; 1 shall not then Jive to see the surrender of Que- bec." The first days after the action were employed by general Townshend in fortifying his camp, cutting a road up the precipice, for the conveyance of his heavy artillery to the batteries on the heights, and making the necessary prepa- rations for the siege of Quebec. But before his batteries were opened, the town capitulated, on condition that the in- habitants should, during the war, be protected in the free ex- ercise of their religion, and the full enjoyment of their civij rights, leaving their future destinies to be decided by the general peace. ALEXANDER SELKIRK. ' Lines supposed to have been written by Alexander Selkirk t during his solitary abode in the island of Juan Fernandez. 1. I AM monarch of all I survey, My right there is none to dispute ; From the centre all round to the sea, I am lord of the fowl and the brute. O solitude ! where are the charms, That sages have seen in thy face ? Better 'dwell in the midst of alarms, Than reign in this horrible place. 2. I am out of humanity's reach, I must finish my journey alone ; Never hear the sweet music of speech , I start at the sound of my own. What were the words r f Montcalm on being told hi wound wa mortal ; 352 ALEXANDER SELKIRK. The beasts that roam over the plain, My form with indifference see ; They are so unacquainted with man, Their tameness is shocking to me. 3. Society, friendship, and love, Divinely bestow'd upon man, O, had I the wings of a dove, How soon would I taste you again ! My sorrows I then might assuage In the ways of religion and truth ; Might learn from the wisdom of age, And be cheer'd by the sallies of youth*. 4. Religion ! what treasure untold Resides in that heavenly word ! More precious than silver and gold, Or all that this earth can afford. But the sound of the church-going bell These valleys and rocks never heard , Never sigh'd at the sound of the knell, Or smil'd when a sabbath appear'd. 5. Ye winds, that have made me your sport Convey to this desolate shore, Some cordial endearing report Of a land I shall visit no more. My friends, do they now and then send A wish or a thought after me ? O tell me I yet have a friend, Though a friend I am never to see. 6. How fleet is a glance of the mind ! Compar'd with the speed of its flight, The tempest itself lags behind, And the swift winged arrows of light. When I think of my own native land, In a moment I seem to be there ; But, alas ! recollection at hand Soon hurries me back to despair. 7. But the sea fowl is gone to her nest, The beast is laid down in his lair ; BONAPARTE'S CAMPAIGN IN RUSSIA. Even here is a season of And I to my cabin repair. There's mercy in every place, And mercy, encouraging thought, Gives even alHiction a grace, And reconciles man to his lot. BONAPARTE'S CAMPAIGN IN RUSSIA. 1. THE year 1812 will stand as an epoch in history, dis- tinguished by the commencement of a war, which was ulti- mately productive of events, such as Europe had never witnessed since the descendants of Japhet first spread them- selves over her ample domain. When we consider the ele- vated rank of some of the persons concerned in the tremen- dous military drama, the extraordinary talents of others, th magnitude of the events, and the importance of the final catas- trophe this clash of contending nations may be denominated the war of giants. 2. The Russian emperor, disdaining any longer to submit to the restrictions of the continental system established bj the ruler of France, resolved to assert the independence, and extend the commerce of his empire, by opening his ports t<5 the ships of all nations. This magnanimous resolution ga?e rise to a war between Franoe and Russia, of which the fust campaign was attended with a destruction of the human spe- cies unexampled in modern history. Towards the end o / June, the emperor of the French entered the Russian do* minions with an army of nearly three hundred thousand men, in the highest state of equipment and discipline. With this tremendous force he compelled the Russians to abandon their fortified camp at Drissa, and after being victorious in the battles of Mohilow and Poltosk, as well as in several other actions, he burned the large city of Smolenskow. Still pro- ceeding into the interior of Russia, he remained master of the field at the sanguinary battle of Borodino ; but the car- nage was almost incredible, and the loss on both sides nearly When did the war between Russia and France commence ? What was the number of the French army that entered Prussia ? Wha* important bittles were fought on their way to Moscow ? 32* 354 BONAPARTE'S CAMPAIGN IN RUSSIA. equal. A view of the ensanguined scene is said to have drawn from the French emperor this exclamation, " Never has there been seen such a field of battle." 3. After this bloody victory, the emperor of the French advanced to Moscow. On the 15th of September he entered that capital, and fixed his head quarters in the Kremlin, the ancient and magnificent palace of the czars. But the city having been set on fire by the Russians, the invader found himself in the midst of smoking ruins. Until this critical moment, the military career of the French emperor had dis- played an unvaried scene of splendid success. The crimson wing of victory had fanned his banners ; and most of the oations of Europe regarded his arms as invincible. Accus- tomed so long to the smiles of fortune, he scarcely supposed that she would ever frown ; and when he sat down on the throne of the czars, he never thought of the abyss that wag opening under his feet. 4. Napoloon was no sooner master of Moscow, than he offered peace to the emperor Alexander, who magnanimously rejected his proposals. The invader now saw the impossi- bility of procuring supplies for his troops during the severe season which was approaching. The Russian forces in the mean while daily increased in number, fresh troops arriving from different quarters ; and the winter set in both somewhat sooner and with greater severity than usual. In these cir- cumstances, Napoleon began his retreat on the 18th of Octo- ber, exposed to the* incessant attacks of the Russians. In these bloody encounters, the French were generally defeated ; the severity of the season in that rigorous climate, in con* junction with hunger and fatigue, being more destructive than the sword, their once formidable army was nearly anni- hilated ; and their retreat exhibited a scene of slaughter and loss, to which history scarcely affords any parallel. 5. From comparing a variety of documents, it appears that there perished of the French between eighty and ninety thousand, besides above a hundred and sixty thousand that were made prisoners ; so that this disastrous retreat cost Napoleon nearly two hundred and fifty thousand men, forty When did Bonaparte enter Moscow ? How was his offer of peace treated by Alexander ? What induced Bonaparte to leave Moscow ' When did he leave it? How many men did he lose in his retreat from Moscow ? BURNING OF MOSCOW 355 thousand horses, and above eleven hundred pieces of artil- lery, which he had carried from France or taken from the Russians. The French emperor, who with his principal ge- nerals escaped with great difficulty, reached Paris about the end of December. (). The victorious Russians, who now had the emperor Alexander at their head, having driven the French beyond the frontier, still continued the pursuit, and advanced without opposition into Germany. On the 4th of March, 1813, they entered Berlin, where they were received not as invaders, but as deliverers from the tyrannical yoke of France. The na- tions who had for a time been obliged to submit to the over- whelming power of Napoleon, began to resolve on effecting their emancipation. Prussia set the example, which was followed by several German states ; and the crown prince of Sweden, Bernadotte, formerly one of ? T apoleon's generals joined in the confederacy against France. 7. In the mean while the shattered remnants of the^French army having reached the Elbe, and received some reinfo/c* .Tients, concentrated themselves on the line of that river And the emperor having ordered fresh levies of conscripts, made formidable preparations for the ensuing campaign. Large bodies of troops marched from all parts of France to the banks of the Elbe ; hostilities commenced with great vigor ; in several severe actions the French had the advan- tage ; and Europe was astonished at the numerous and foi midable forces that Napoleon brought into the field, and the gigantic efforts which he made, notwithstanding his losses in the "Russian campaign. An armistice, novvever, was con- cluded, and the contending powers entered into negotiations for a peace. BURNING OF MOSCOW. 1. WHETHER the destruction of Moscow was the effect of unbounded patriotism, or matter of policy, is a speculation that will long interest the politician. It certainly filled the minds of every individual with horror and revenge ; but from the previous unshaken loyalty, and unabated courage of the How many horses wcro lost in this retreat ? How many pieces of artillery ? 356 BURNING OF MOSCOW. Russians, it was scarcely a necessary act to stimulate them to further feelings of revenge against a foe, who had already given too many insults. The city might have been saved, and the same fate would have pursued the followers of Na- poleon. If the provisions and store-houses had been de- stroyed, the French could not have remained longer than they did. It was entirely from the want of provisions that the retreat of the French army became necessary. Very few of the churches were destroyed ; from the nature of their structure they could not be burnt, though considerably injured these alone were sufficient to have contained one hundred thousand men. 2. Besides, many of the public buildings and palaces were entirely built of brick, and many of the rooms arched with the same. Of these, only the roofs and windows were destroyed - and which could have been easily renewed from the neigh- boring forests. It was the original intention of the Russians, only to destroy the magazines of provision, in the event of the enemy gaining possession of the city. The stores were in consequence kept unremoved, until too late ; and when the order was given to set them on fire, the frenzy of t?ie moment carried the flaming torch to every house ; and which* cool judgment now condemns. The Exchange and store- houses were set on fire the morning of the day on which the French army entered. It partly communicated with the contiguous buildings, and all those houses and hovels coa structed of wood, soon fell a sacrifice to the flames. 3. During the evening, a violent storm arose, which con- tinued during three days, and occasioned a rapid expansion of the fire still these wooden houses were the only part of the city that suffered, with some occasional streets, where the houses were closely built together but all those palaces and magnificent buildings, which stood in isolated situations, surrounded by gardens, so characteristic of Moscow, were all individually set on fire. It is reported by the present in- habitants who remained in the city during its occupation by the French, that every afternoon, at a certain hour, the flames burst out with increased vigor ; and at those times, numerous From what cause did the retreat of the French army become ne- cessary ? How many persons might have been accommodated in the rburches not burnt ? Was it the original intention of the Russians to burn Moscow ? BURNLNG OF MOSCOW. 867 reports of pistols were heard, which is asserted to have been used in firing phosphorus halls into the houses, and thug se f - tirig them on fire. All the walls remained ; and many of them without much injury hut every house was root: and without either windows or doors. Many superb houses were completely demolished, particularly the theatres. 4. It is improbable that. Moscow will ever be jebui't 0:1 a scale equal to its former magnificence. The ual is too favorite a rival, and it is a matter of poli.-v in th" go- vernment not to increase Moscow, in order to j!endent. : to tlie helfry of St. Ivans, is seen the top of the great bell, which was cast in the reign of the empress Anne. Many descriptions have been given of this extraordinary bell ; only the top can now be seen, the pit in which it lay bein completely filled up with the ruins of the church. This is the largest bell ever founded, and it remains in the place where it was originally cast. Its weight is computed to be 44,377 pounds ; its circumference is sixty-seven feet and four inches ; and its height is twenty-one feet and four inches. The Russians relate, that while this beJl was in fu- sion, the nobles and the people cast in, as votive offerings, their plate and money ; and consequently that it contains a iarge quantity of gold and silver. 8. Besides these churches, there are the convent of Ischu- dof, and the church of the Holy Trinity and some small chapels. The church of the Holy Trinity forms the princi- pal gateway, or entry to the Kremlin from the fourth divi- sion of the city. In this church the body of a distinguished saint is placed ; and in respect to his remains, every indi- vidual passing under the portal is compelled to uncover his head. Besides the churches, convents, and monasteries, the Kremlin contains the palaces of the czars and of the patri- archs, with the arsenal and some other modern buildings. None of them are particularly grand. Within the wa'is of the Kremlin there are not less than one hundred and oi_uht spires and cupolas ; of these, forty-five are richly gilded, the inted either green, red, or white. l v -. The house in which Napoleon lodged is the most modern and elegant building in the Kremlin. The > from it is most extensive. In front of the hoi; the guns taken from the French army during from Moscow. They are placed on the ground parallel to What is the weight of the Great Bell of Moscow ? How many piles and cupolas are there in the Kremlin ' 33 THE KREMLIN OF MOSCOW. u.ch other, with tickets affixed to each division, marking the time and place where they were taken. The first line com- prehends sixty beautiful pieces of light artillery, with IVd^o- Icon's initials on each ; the other divisions contain the guns of all the kingdoms and states of Europe, of various dimen- sions. Altogether, there are eight hundred guns, the glori- ous trophy of the Russian conquest ! 10. It. is impossible to give any particular description of the palaces or riches of the Kremlin ; it is only the bare walls, ruinous and deserted, that now invite the stranger's curiosity. When all hopes were banished from the ambi- tious and discontented mind of the French ruler, and when he found that he could no longer maintain his usurpation of the seat of the czars, he determined on destroying what he had not the courage nor strength to defend. The beautiful church of St. Ivan fell as the first sacrifice to his revenge. The walls of the Kremlin were next mined the explosion took place ; but from its immense thickness, only a part of it was destroyed. The north-west angle, with two fine spires, was completely destroyed, occupying nearly one hun- dred yards in extent. On the east side next to the river, are two considerable breaches. The rest of the wall is per- fectly entire. 11. Many parts of the wall are nearly forty feet in thick- ness, and in general from twenty to thirty feet in height. The top of the wall is divided into a number of Gothic loop- holes, and at regular distances by Gothic spires. There are Fix gates by which the Kremlin is entered, though only two of them are used. A new and elegant promenade was lately finished between the east wall and the river, which adds greatly to the beauty of the Kremlin, from what is repre- sented in old drawings. The Kremlin has long been con- sidered, by those who have not beheld it, as a spot of un- common magnificence and extent. It certainly does not answer that high description which the traveller is led to ex* pect. The buildings are numerous, but they are heavily constructed, and grouped together without order or design r.very thing is sacrificed to mere show of gildings and use less cupolas. How many pieces of artillery are there in the Kremlin of Moscow raptured by the Russians ? What is the thickness of the walls of tho Kremlin ? BATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS. 3&'J KATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS. J. ON the morning of the first of January, 1815, Sir Ed ward Packenham was discovered to have constructed batteries near the American works, and at day-light commenced a heavy fire from them, which was well returned by Jackson. A bold attempt was, at the same time, made to turn the left of the Americans ; but in this the enemy was completely re pulsed. The British retired in the evening, from their bat teries, having spiked their guns, and leaving behind a, quan Uty of ammunition. The loss of the Americans, on this occasion, was eleven killed and twenty-three wounded. On ihe fourth, general Jackson was joined by two thousand five hundred Kentuckiaris, under general Adair ; and on the sixth, the British were joined by general Lambert, at the bead of four thousand men. The British force now amount- ed to little short of fifteen thousand of the finest troops ; that of the Americans to about six thousand, chiefly raw militia, a considerable portion unarmed, and from the haste of their departure, badly supplied with clothing. All the private arms which the inhabitants possessed were collected, and the la- dies of New Orleans occupied themselves continually in making different articles of clothing. The mayor of the city, Mr. Girod, was particularly active at this trying moment 2. The British general now prepared for a serious attempt nn the American works. With great labor hq had complet- ed, by the seventh, a canal from the swamp to the Missis- sippi, by which he was enabled to transport a number of his boats to the river ; it was his intention to make a simultane- ous attack on the main force of general Jackson on the left Dank, and, crossing the river, to attack the batteries on the right. The works of the American general were by this time completed ; his front was a straight line of one thousand yards, defended by upwards of three thousand infantry and artillerists. The ditch contained five feet of water ; and his front, from having been flooded by opening the levees and frequent rains, was rendered slippery and muddy. Eight distinct batterie3 were judiciously disposed, mounting in all twelve guns of different calibres. On the opposite side of Who commanded the British in their attack on New Orleans ? Who commanded the Americans ? How large was general Jack* on's army ? Hew numerous was the British force ? 364 BATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS the river, there was a strong battery of fifteen guns, and the entrenchments were occupied by general Morgan, with the Louisiana militia, and a strong detachment of the Kentucky troops. o. On the memorable morning of the eighth of January, general Puckenham, having detached colonel Thornton with a considerable force, to attack the works on the . right bank of the river, moved with his whole force, exceeding twehne thousand men, in two divisions, under major-generals Gibbs and Kean ; and a reserve under general Lambert. The first {>f these officers was to make the principal attack ; the tw$ columns were supplied with scaling-ladders, and fascines. Thus prepared, the Americans patiently waited the attack, jvhicb would decide the fate of New Orleans, and perhaps oi Louisiana. The British deliberately advanced in solid columns, over an even plain, in front of the American ir* trenchments, the men carrying, besides their muskets, fas- cines, and some of them ladders. A dead silence pre- cailed, until they approached within reach of the batteries, -yhich commenced an incessant and destructive cannonade ; ihey, notwithstanding, continued to advance in tolerable order, cluing up their ranks, as fast as they were opened by the firs of the Americans. 4. When they came within reach, however, of the miu* ketry and rifles, these joined with the artillery, and produced such dreadful havoc, that they were instantly thrown into confusion. Never was there so tremendous a fire, as that kept up from the American lines; it was a continued stream | those behind loading for the men in front, enabled them to fire with scarcely an intermission. The British columns were literally' swept away ; hundreds fell at every discharge. The British officers were now making an effort to rally their men ; and in this attempt, their commander, a gallant officer, general Packenham, was killed. The two generals, Gibbs and Kean, succeeded in pushing forward their columns a second time ; but the second approach was more fatal than the first ; the continued rolling fire of the Americans re- sembled peals of thunder ; it was such as no troops cou(d withstand ; th advancing columns broke, and no effort to rally them could avail ; a few platoons only advanced to the edge of the ditch, to meet a more certain destruction, 5. An unavailing attempt was made to bring them u^ a TH: ;it:s OF WAR. 36? sed to I;.' ..\-r air, whili; tbe blood freezing as it flows, binds them to ih, amidst the trampling of horsea, and the insults of ;in enraged foe ! If they arc spared by the humanity of tbe enemy and carried from the field, it is but a prolongation of torment. Conveyed in uneasy vehicles, often to a remote distance, through roads almost impassable, they are lodged in ill-prepared receptacles for the wounded and the sick, where tbe variety of distress bailies all the efforts of humanity and skill, and renders it impossible to give to each the attention he demands. Far from their native home, no tender assiduities of friendship, no well known voice, no wife, or mother, or sister, is near to sooth their sorrows, re- lieve their thirst, or close their eyes in death ! Unhappy man ! and must you be swept into the grave unnoticed and unnum- bered, and no friendly tear be shed for your sufferings or mingled with your dust ? 5. We must remember, however, that as a very small pro- portion of a military life is spent in actual combat, so it is A very small part of its miseries which must be ascribed to this source. More are consumed by the rust of inactivity than by the edge of the sword ; confined to a scanty or unwhole- some diet, exposed in sickly climates, harassed with tiresome marches and perpetual alarms ; their life is a continual scene of hardships and dangers. They grow familiar with hunger, cold, and watchfulness. Crowded into hospitals and prisons, contagion spreads amongst their ranks, till the ravages of dis- ease exceed those of the enemy. 6. We have hitherto only adverted to the sufferings of those who are engaged in the profession of arms, without taking into our account the situation of the countries which c:o the scene of hostilities. How dreadful to hold every thing at the mercy of an enemy, and to receive life itself as a boon dependent on the sword ! How boundless the fears which such a situation must inspire, where the issues of life and death are determined by no known laws, principles, or customs, and no conjecture can be formed of our destiny, except as far as it is dimly deciphered in characters of blood, in the dictates of revenge, and the caprices of power ! 7. Conceive but for a moment the consternation which the approach of an invading army would impress on the peaceful villages in our own neighborhood. When you have - .nr.