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SUPERSTITIOUS OBSERVANCES;

and raptures, not mutual, could make him.

So flagrant a violation of the laws, alarmed the country; and a detachment of foldiers, headed by the sheriff, in a few days refcued the lady, and conducted Sullivan to prison.

He was tried and convicted; but, before fentence of death was paffed, the court permitted him to put the following queftion: "Madam! matters have been carried against me with a high hand, and they are now come to an extremity which it is only in your power to palliate; if you will marry me, the court will perhaps confider my cafe in another light, and fave my life?" "If I loved you," (inftantly replied the violated and indignant female, indignant female, erect, with juft pride and refentment) "if I loved you to diftraction, I would not ftir a step to fave your life; though the punishment you are about to undergo will not restore my blafted honor, it may hereafter protect innocence from violence and villainy."

This impetuous and mifguided pupil of impulfe, foon after fuffered an ignominious death.

It is not to defend his conduct that the prefent article is inferted, a more important object, and I truft, one of more moral tendency was in view.

Let those whom nature gave Form to enchant, and beauty to enslave,

-let lovely, bewitching women, be cautious how they receive or encourage the addreffes of young men, least the natural effufions of chearfulness and good temper, fhould be mistaken for partiality and approbation. It becomes every

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woman to examine her own heart, and the merits of the candidate for her regard, early, and with fcrupulous accuracy. If he is fo unfortunate as to prove neither interefting or agreeable, every good, and every fenfible female, will at once candidly fay fo, and fpeak her mind with delicacy and firmnefs; nor for the fake of a dangler at Ranelagh, and a partner at a ball, ruin a man's happiness for ever.

The betrayer of virgin innocence, falls defervedly by the fword of an unhappy father, or an incenfed brother; the ravifher is led to a difgraceful death, and no one will complain; but is the infamous coquette to go unpunished, who fmiles but to deceive, and wins only to betray?-if there be a hotter place in hell, furely it must be referved for fuch unfeeling monsters! fhould this reflection arreft one woman in her unprincipled career, or fave one lover from experiencing that blafted hope, which makes the heart fick, and leads to the bottomlefs abyfs of defpair and death; Sullivan will not have fuffered, nor will Hackman have died in vain.

SUPER

tion.

UPERSTITIOUS Obfer. vances, after the Reforma

In a country which, but eighty years before, had treamed with the blood of Proteftant Martyrs, who can read, without astonishment, that the following ceremonies were made use of, and confidered as effential by an English prelate, before a building, made with bands, could be made ufe of, for the purpose of a creature, like man, imploring forgiveness of his Maker, and afking a thankful heart?

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The

The church in queftion was that of St. Catherine Creed, which had been lately repaired. As the Bishop (it is fcarcely neceffary to say Laud) approached the western door, he joined, with his reverend affiftants, in the following fervent exclamation: "Open, ye everlasting doors, that the King of Glory may enter in." This was repeated, till the doors, opening inward, as by an invifible hand, admitted them. They then proftrated themselves; and, in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghoft, pronounced it holy ground; the Bishop, in the mean time, collecting duft in his hand, fcattered it in the air. With feveral eminent doctors, he next went round the church in proceffion, repeating the nineteenth, and alfo the hundredth pfalm.

Curfes were then folemnly pronounced against all those who fhould prophane the holy place; Laud devoutly bowing to the east, at the end of every curfe, and concluding each with, "Let all the people fay, Amen." Bleffings were alfo copiously poured forth on the builders and framers of the church, and the contributors towards its ornaments.

After the fermon, our zealous Bishop proceeded to confecrate, and administer the facrament. He approached the communion table, alternately bending his body, and raifing his head and eyes towards Heaven. Having reached a table, on which the bread and wine ftood, but covered, he made a paufe, ap. parently breathing forth pious ejaculations; then making seven bows, and reading many prayers, he ventured to raise up the corner of the

napkin, wherein the bread was enclosed; as foon as the vegetable production caught his eye, the cloth dropped incontinently from his hand, his countenance and geftures exhibited strong marks of awe and veneration, and, ftruck as it were by holy fear, he retired backwards many steps. With the like forms, exactly, fcrupulously, and almost theatrically practifed, with regard to the wine, particularly the retreating backward, the facrament was at length adminif tered, and the ceremony of confecration concluded.

It was less than two years after this prophane mockery, that another circumftance occurred, which proved, that the Bishop retained the inquifitorial difpofition, as well as the fuperifttious notions, of the church of Rome.

The collegiate church of St. Edmund, in the City of Salisbury, had, with its revenues, remained in the hands of the crown, from the days of the rapacious and libidinous Henry, to the reign of James the First, when it was fold to a private perfon; and having fucceflively paffed through feveral hands, was at length purchased by the parishioners, who repaired it, and made it their parish church. The windows had been preserved, and were painted after the old fashion, containing, among other things, the hiftory of the creation, in which, God the Father was reprefented in the form of an old man, with compasses in his hand. This picture offended many of the parishioners, who, in the warmth of proteftant zeal, confidered it as a remnant of the whore of Babylon. A veftry being called on the

occafion,

occafion, it was propofed by Mr. Henry Sherfield, Recorder of Salifbury, and one of the congrega tion of St. Edmund's, to remove the obnoxious window, which was agreed to; and the next morning, fending for a glazier, he accompanied him to the church, and pointing out, with his ftick, the glafs which was to be changed, in the heat of reform, or the carelessness of indifference, he broke feveral of the panes.

This action of Sherfield was reported to Laud, by one of those good-natured friends in a neighbourhood, which few men are without; an information was exhibited against him in the Star-Chamber, he was committed to prifon, fined five hundred pounds, and removed from his post.

SURFACE, CHARLES, in the

School for Scandal, the effects of fuch a character, held up for applause and admiration, injurious to the interests of fociety. See Sheridan; obferving, that nothing in that article is meant to extend to a defence of the fentimental hypocrify of Jofeph.

SUTHERLAND, JAMES, Sludge of the Admiralty Court UTHERLAND, JAMES, of the

at Minorca, from which he was difmiffed in an arbitrary manner by General Murray, the governor, who afterwards furrendered that ifland. For this injury, Mr. Sutherland received pecuniary fatisfaction; but it was not money that could restore tranquility to a mind endued with the highest and most delicate fenfe of honor.

This unmerited difmiffion, of which his royal mafter never gave any public mark of disapprobation, inflicted a deep wound, which ne

ver was healed; he confidered himself as facrificed to heat of temper and mifrepresentation, and the fame law which procured him redrefs, having helped to diminish his refources, the afflicting humiliation of poverty was added to the anguifh of a wounded fpirit. After repeated appeals and petitions to the King and his minifters, which were either neglected or not received, finding it no longer in his power to struggle with the evils of his fituation; unable to dig, and afhamed to beg, he deliberately refolved to put an end to his exiftence, in the prefence of the Sovereign who had been fo ftrongly prejudiced against him. This purpofe he executed as the King, in his carriage, was defcending Conftitution Hill, in the Green Park, on his way to the levee, Auguft 17, 1791; when the unhappy man advanced towards him, and falling on one knee, lodged the contents of a pistol in his heart.

This is not the first inftance, in which the fmiles or frowns of a King, remarkable for correct conduct and mildness of manners, felf-accufation, or fuicide. have been followed by defpair,

Early in the present reign, Mr. Yorke, a younger branch of the Hardwicke family, had been prevailed on, by the immediate perfonal application of the King, to accept the feals, contrary to the most exprefs and facred promises he had made to men, with whom he was closely united by blood, as well as principle. On this trying occafion, our young politician, (who appears to have been by no means deficient either in intellectual endowinent or perfonal cha

racter)

racter) is faid to have been expofed, for hours, to the most preffing intreaties, which he refifted with firmnefs, but with decency and respect.

After a long, and apparently an ineffectual struggle, the royal combatant found that victory was unattainable on the fair, even ground, of equity and good faith: he therefore dexterously fhifted his attack from the understanding to the paffions and feelings of his unhappy fubject. After reproach ing him, with a mixture of tenderness and anger, for his cruelty and ingratitude towards a friend who loved him, and a King, to whom he and his family must be indebted for every thing they hoped for or enjoyed, he fuddenly funk on his knees, and burst into tears.

Such arguments, and fuch rhetoric, Mr. Yorke felt himself unable either to answer or oppose:in an agonizing conflict between his loyalty and his integrity, his honour and his intereft; in a fatal, a faithless moment, he gave way. Every expedient to foothe, to heal, to reconcile, to animate, and exalt, was industriously felected; he was to be the confidential friend of his mafter, not a ministerial tool, and an honourable title was to be attached to the feals. But, on his return from the King's closet, he found the door of that brother whom he had deceived, for ever fhut against him. Few of my readers will with me to recite the bloody conclufion of this negocia tion; it may be fufficient to obferve, that he exhibited every fymptom of mental anguish and hopeless repentance, but not of deranged intellect; and that the

barony of Morden was, I believe, never registered in the houfe of peers.

The fecond inftance was General Carpenter, a military veteran, whofe long life, devoted to the public fervices, or the domestic offices of his Sovereign, was not fufficient to protect him from court calumny, and the arrow which flieth in the dark. He withdrew from the fervile herd, who watch the fignal to flatter or to hate; he withdrew from that countenance, which, till then, had beheld him with approbation, to the valley and fhadow of death.

It is not my wifh, however obvious the inftances, however eafy the tafk, it is not my wish to crowd the page with examples of injured private worth, and royal ingratitude; but should this perishable volume, in its rapid defcent to the land of oblivion, chance to be perufed by kings, or their defcendants, in their intervals of repofe from party cabal or loose pleasure; it may ferve to remind them, that fubjects are men of like paffions and like feelings with themselves; that the wounds of injury or infult are doubly envenomed when inflicted by those who are protected by eminence, power, and wealth, from an appeal to the sword.

Perfons of

that exalted defcription fhould recollect, that, by tempting us from the paths of rectitude, with those rewards placed at their disposal, for far other purposes, the mainfpring of moral conduct is effentially injured; that one vicious character rewarded, or one good man difgraced, may influence the conduct of thousands, whom fear

cannot

cannot awe, or precepts will not reach. Great men ought not to be difappointed if, (as was the cafe with David Mallet) after they have been inculcating the bafe leffons of infidelity, and lax morality towards others, their own vile maxims fhould afterwards be put in practice against themselves.

The feveral instances I have mentioned, were confidered in the light of lunacy, according to the legal judicial opinion, and in compliance with the ufeful, perhaps the amiable prejudices of mankind in favour of unfortunate relatives; yet I cannot perfuade myself to think that a refolution to commit the damnable and unpardonable crime of fuicide, alone, and not accompanied with other circumftances, is any greater proof of an absence of reason, than the commiffion of any fin of proportionate horror and magnitude. The parricide, plunging his knife into that bofom from which he first drew the streams of life, and the mother, dooming her ill-fated offspring to untimely death, ftand in the fame predicament with the self-destroyer; they all appear, from previous perturbation, and, in fome inftances, of lingering death, from fubfequent repentance, fully aware of the unnatural abominations they have been guilty of, and the certainty of punishment fooner or later overtaking them. Paffion, avarice, a fear of fhame, a dread of the world, of ridicule, of poverty, difgrace, contempt, and depreffion, equally goad them on to that precipice which they all dread at the moment they rush down.

Every deviation from moral

rectitude, may, perhaps, ftrictly fpeaking, be a fpecies of tempo rary madness; but if an inordi nate purfuit of bad means, towards the attainment of unlawful ends→→→→ if fearching for a deceitful resource against calamities and diftreffes, which, at times, have harrowed up the heart ftrings of us all, are unerring criterions of infanity; I cannot but be of opinion, that the intellects of the felon, or highwayman, are equally deranged with thofe of the devoted fuicide: and I fear that few of us have been able to steer fo cautioufly, at a certain tumultuous period of our lives, but that our conduct and convictions have at times been wretchedly at

variance.

The fubject of this article may be produced in fupport of my theory: educated with the nice fenfe of honour, and ftern integrity, and in habits of intimacy with men of high rank, military worth, and political fagacity; with a female family, initiated (perhaps culpably initiated, for a man whofe income was only for life, as it is not my intention to defend his conduct) in the modern forms of fashion, and elegant accomplishment:-thus fituated, and thus furrounded, he was in one moment difmiffed;-in one moment every fource of neceffary fupport, as well as refined indulgence was cut off; and whilft his generous fpirit was ftruggling with penury, corporal malady was added to mental diftrefs, which, at times, tinctured his conduct, language, and manners, with incoherence, and irregularity, miftaken, long before the fatal catastrophy, for symptoms of madness.

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