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without a possibility of endangering the safety of his throne by rivalry, or tarnishing its lustre, by approximation.

DLXXXVII.

TIME is the most undefinable yet paradoxical of things; the past is gone, the future is not come, and the present becomes the past, even while we attempt to define it, and like the flash of the lightning, at once exists and expires.Time is the measurer of all things, but is itself immeasurable, and the grand discloser of all things, but is tself undisclosed. Like space, it is incomprehensible, because it has no limit, and it would be still more so, if it had *. It is more obscure in its source than the Nile, and From the bright Empyrean where he sits

High throned, above all height, cast down his eye,

His own works, and man's works at once to view."

* If we stand in the middle of a dark vista, but with a luminous obJect at one end of it, and none at the other, the former will appear to be short, and the latter long. And so perhaps it is with time; if we look back upon time that is past, we naturally fix our attention upon some event with the circumstances of which we are acquainted, because they have happened, and this is that luminous object which apparently shortens one end of the vista; but if we look forward into time that is to come, we have no luminous object on which to fix our attention, but all is uncertainty, conjecture, and darkness. As to time without an end, and space without a limit, these are two things that finite beings cannot clearly comprehend. But if we examine more minutely into the operations of our own minds, we shall find that there are two things much more incomprehensible, and these are time that has an end, and space that has a limit. For whatever limits these two things, must be itself unlimited, and I am at a loss to conceive where it can exist, but in space and in time. But this involves a contradiction, for that which limits, cannot be contained in that which is limited. We know that in the awful name of Jehovah, the Hebrews combined the past, the present, and the future, and St. John is obliged to make use of a periphrasis, by the expressions of : nai i ny, ερχόμενος, Who is, and was, and is to come; and Sir Isaac Newton considers infinity of space on the one hand, and eternity of duration on the other, to be the grand sensorium of the Deity: it is indeed a sphere that alone is worthy of Him who directs all the movements of nature, and who is determined by his own unalterable perfections, eventually to produce the highest happiness, by the best meaus ; summam felicitatem, optimis modis.

ως, και

in its termination than the Niger; and advances like the slowest tide, but retreats like the swiftest torrent. It gives wings of lightning to pleasure, but feet of lead to pain, and lends expectation a curb, but enjoyment a spur. It robs Beauty of her charms, to bestow them on her picture, and builds a monument to merit, but denies it a house; it is the transient and deceitful flatterer of falsehood, but the tried and final friend of truth. Time is the most subtle yet the most insatiable of depredators, and by appearing to take nothing, is permitted to take all, nor can it be satisfied, until it has stolen the world from us, and us from the world. It constantly flies, yet overcomes all things by flight, and although it is the present ally, it will be the future conqueror of death. Time, the cradle of hope, but the grave of ambition, is the stern corrector of fools, but the salutary counsellor of the wise, bringing all they dread to the one, and all they desire to the other; but like Cassandra, it warns us with a voice that even the sagest discredit too long, and the silliest believe too late. Wisdom walks before it, opportunity with it, and repentance behind it; he that has made it his friend, will have little to fear from his enemies, but he that has made it his enemy, will have little to hope from his friends.

NOTES, &c. &c.

Article 10.

THERE were two tyrants of this name, the last of whom ruled with such tyranny, that his people grew weary of his government. He, hearing that an old woman prayed for his life, asked her why she did' so; she answered, "I have seen the death of several tyrants, and the successor was always worse than the former, then camest thou, worse than all the rest; and if thou wert gone, I fear what would become of us, if we should have a worse still."

Article 107.

THAT the wicked prosper in the world, that they come into no misfortune like other folk, neither 'are they plagued like other men, is a doctrine that divines should not broach too frequently in the present day. For there are some so completely absorbed in present things, that they would gladly subscribe to that blind and blasphemous wish of the marshal and duke of Biron, who, on hearing an ecclesiastic observe, that those whom God had forsaken, and deserted as incorrigible, were permitted their full swing of worldly pleasures, the gratification of all their passions, and a long life of sensuality, affluence, and indulgence, immediately replied, "That he should be most happy to be so forsaken."

Article 188.

I am not so hardy as to affirm, that the French revolution produced little, in the absolute sense of the word. I mean that it produced little if compared with the expectations of mankind, and the probabilities that its first developement afforded of its final establishment. The papal power, the dynasty of the Bourbons, the freedom of the press, and purity of representation, are resolving themselves very much into the "statu quo ante bellum." It is far from improbable that the results of a “reformation" now going on in Spain, with an aspect far less assuming than the late revolution in France, will be more beneficial both to the present and future times than that gigantic event, which destroyed so much, but which repaired so little, and which began in civil anarchy, but ended in military despotism.

Article 352.

ANDREW CASALPHINUS, chief physician to pope Clement the 8th. published a book at Pisa on the 1st of June 1569, intitled, Questionum Peripateticarum, Libri V., in which there is this passage, which evidently shows that he was thoroughly acquainted with the circulation of the blood: Idcirco Pulmo per venam arteriis similem, ex dextro cordis ventriculo, fervidum hauriens sanguinem, eumque per anastamesim arteriæ venali reddens, quæ in sinistrum cordis ventriculum tendit, transmisso interim aere frigido per asperæ arteriæ canales, qui juxta arteriam venalem protenduntur, non tamen osculis communicantes, ut putavit Galenus, solo tactu temperat. Huic sanguinis circulationi ex dextro cordis ventriculo, per pulmones, in sinistrum ejusdem ventriculum, optime respondent ea quæ ex dissectione apparent. Nam duo sunt vasa in dextrum ventriculum desinentia, duo etiam in sinistrum. Duorum autem, unum' intromittit tantum, alterum educit, membranis eo ingenio compositis." As I have a remark on inoculation in the article to which this note refers, I shall quote an ingenious writer, who says, "When it was observed that the inoculation produced fewer pustules and did not disfigure the countenance like the natural small pox, the practice was immediately adopted in those countries, where the beauty of the females constituted an important source of wealth; as for example in Georgia, and Circassia. "The Indians and the Chinese," says the same writer, “have practised inoculation for many ages, in all the empire of the Burmahs, in the island of Ceylon, in Siam, and in Cambodia.

Article 576.

BURKE was one of the most splendid specimens of Irish talent; but his imagination too often ran away with his judgment, and his interest with both

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Note.-The Figures refer not to the Page, but to the Articles.

ACADEMICAL honours useful, when, | Caution, a cunning one, 559.

80.

Celebrity, short road to it, 86.

Coat, shabby one, what few can af-
ford to wear, 210.

Adversity and Prosperity both Characters oddly contradictory, 60.
Church schisms in it to be lament
temptations, 19.
Advice, 190. To Projectors, 316. ed, 485.
Agreement dangerous, when, 376.Classification, 297.
Agriculture, the safest source of
wealth, 270.
Alexander makes a distinction not
without a difference, 467.
Ambition. Its Evils, 37. Bears no
rival passion, 148.
Analogy powerful, when, 328.
Anger and Confidence, 35.

wine 240

Like

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Bills drawn on futurity, 395.

Code, civil, not likely to be mended,

141.
Commentators, 153.
Common sense right without rules,

48.

Contemporaneous applause, 6.
Constitution of mind, what fittest
for a great man, 63.
Conceit differs from confidence, 75.
Constellation of great men, 225.
Conversation, a concert of mind, 407.
Conversion slow in India, 182.
Country towns all alike, in what,

585.

Cowardice most incorrigible, when,

44.

Coxcombs seldom alone, 77.
Courtiers abused but courted, 234
Cromwell, his narrow escape, 412.
Cunning differs from skill, 74.
Curse, a blessing in disguise, 67.
Dairo of Japan, 443.
Death terrible in what, 419.
Debts give consequence, 166,
Defeat politic, when, 129.
Defendit numerus an unsafe rule, 34.
Demagogues despotic, 392.
Destruction proceeds geometrically
preservation arithmetically, 352.
Devil laughs, at whom, 484.

Bodies more difficult to make up Different reports of travellers, why,

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