And much was | she | charmed with a | tone | Who so lately had | witness'd | her own. 77771 And A:. Λ And gave them a | grace so di- | vine,| Λ Could in- | fuse into | numbers of | mine.| Λ And e'en to my- | self never | seem'd◄ | ^ A Though the pleasures of | London ex- | ceed | In number the days of the | year,│1 Λ For the close-woven | arches of | limes,| Λ On the banks of our | river, I know,| Are | sweeter to | her many | times | Λ Λ .. With a well-judging | taste from a- | bove," Then (whether em- | bellish'd or rude) | love.| 'Tis Nature a lone that we love. The a- | chievements of | art may a- | muse,|| Λ .. Λ .. .. Λ Λ hills, and | valleys, dif- | fuse 1 Λ Λ a sacred de- | light. Catharina a- | lone can re- | joice; | May it | still be her | lot to pos- | sess Λ .. .. ^ :: .. The scene of her | sensible | choice! | .. .. To in- | habit a | mansion re- | mote Λ Λ From the clatter of | street-pacing | steeds, Towing all her | moments at | home;| And with scenes that new rapture in- | spire, Λ And ours would be | pleasant as | hers, .. Λ A: Λ COWPER. Might we view her en- | joying it | here.1111111 Λ EXTRACT FROM JUNIUS. My Lord, if the measures in which you have been most successful | had been sup- | ported by | | | any tolerable ap- | pearance of | argument, I should have thought my | time | not | ill em- | ployed tinuing to examine your conduct in con- | as a minister, and | stating it | fairly to the public. || But | when I highest | national im- | portance | see | questions of the carried as they have been, the | consti- | tution || openly | violated, | argument or decency, up the cause in de- | spair. with- | out and the | first | principles of I con- fess I give your predecessors | had a- | bilities | suf- ficient to | give a color to their | measures. || If they in- | vaded people, they | did not | dare to | offer the | rights of the to their | under | standing: a di-rect insult and, in | former times, the most | venal | parliaments | made it a con- dition in their | bargain with the | minister, | that he should furnish them with some | plausible pre- | tences for selling their | country and them- | selves. You have had the | merit of | intro- | ducing a | more com| pendious system of government and | logic. neither ad- dress yourself to the passions | You | nor the | under- | standing, but | simply to the touch. |◄ You apply yourself | im- | mediately to the | feelings of your friends; | who, | contrary to the forms of parlia ment, never | enter | heartily | into a de- | bate | un- | til they have di- | vided. | Re- | linquishing, | therefore, | all | idle views of a- | mendment to your grace, or of | benefit to the public, || let me be per- | mitted to | leave for an- | other | letter | the exami- | nation of your character and conduct; || simply re- | marking in | this | that there is something in both which dis- | tinguishes you | not only from | all | other | ministers, but all other | men. It is not that you | do | wrong by de- | sign, | but that you should never | do | right by mis- | take. | It is not that your | indolence, and your ac- | tivity, have been equally | misap- | plied || but that the | first uniform | principle, | or | if I may | call it the | genius of your life, should have | carried you | through every | possible | change | and | contra- | dicmomentary | impu- | tion of conduct, with- | out the tation or color of a | virtue. | And that the | wildest | spirit of inconsistency should | never | once have be- | trayed you into a wise or | honorable | action. DR. FRANKLIN'S JOURNEY FROM BOSTON TO PHILADELPHIA, IN OCTOBER, 1723. My friend a- | greed for my | passage tain of a | New York | sloop. wind I found myself with the | cap By | favor of a | good in | three | days in | New York, nearly three | hundred | miles from my | home, | at the age only of seventeen | years, with- | out | knowing an | indi- | vidual |in the| place, and with | · very little | money in my | pocket. Phila- | delphia | I | hesitated | not was a to | hundred miles | further. em- | bark in a | boat in | order to re- | pair by the shortest cut of the sea to | Amboy; | leaving my | trunk and ef- | fects to come | after me by the usual and more | |