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subjects to be answered by any per- from the scriptural purport of the son who may read your work. The Mosaic sacrifices, and the express practice is, I think, calculated to pro- spirit of scripture declarations on the duce permanent usefulnesss, in eli- point. citing from those who, perhaps, never entertained the most remote idea| of communicating their sentiments to the world, many useful observations, and in opening to them a path for lite-made. "The law" of ceremonies "havrary pursuits. ing only the shadow of good things

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The writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews has clearly shewn, that the sacrifices under the law should cease when the great atonement for sin was

Your correspondent, "Scriptor," to come, and not the very image of inquires, Upon what authority Jewish customs are abolished among us, since Christ and his disciples conformed to many, such as the Passo- | ver, &c."

the things, could not make the comers thereunto perfect;" and when Christ came, he said, "Sacrifices, and burntofferings, and offerings for sin, which are offered by the law, thou wouldst not, neither hadst pleasure therein." "Lo I come to do thy will, O God!" "He taketh away the first" (the Jewish ceremonies) “that he may esta

The Jewish ceremonies were, doubtless, most interesting and splendid. Their fascinations were so irresistible, that we find many of them obtained among some of the primitive profes-blish the second," (the sacrifice of sors of Christianity, and they are still embraced by some churches professedly Christian. The attachment shewn to these customs by the church of Rome, is too manifest to need remark; and it has, perhaps, more than any thing besides, contributed to effect its apostasy.

It is not, however, my present intention to inquire, whether these ceremonies are calculated to assist or impede the influence of Christianity on the minds of its professors; but that they are disallowed by what are called orthodox Christians, is a wellknown fact indeed, your querist grounds his inquiry upon the circumstance that these ceremonies are abolished amongst us.⠀⠀

It is generally admitted that the Passover, like other ceremonies among the Jews, was typical of that great event, which, in the fulness of time, should take place the redemption of mankind. It can, therefore, be easily supposed, that all the prefigurations of this great event should continue in full exercise, until the thing which they all represented should itself be fully accomplished. But when this redemption was effected by the atonement of Jesus Christ, it was to be expected, that those observances which

typified it, should at once cease; indeed, the end of their office would be fully accomplished when the event to which they pointed was brought to pass. It must, therefore, be obvious, admitting this view of the ceremonies, that the authority upon which they are abolished among us," is derived

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himself.) In the same epistle, the great atonement for sin is distinguished from the sacrifices of the law, by its being once offered. "After he had offered one sacrifice," "he for ever sat down at the right-hand of God," "there being no more sacrifice for sin."

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Jesus and his disciples did, indeed, observe many of those rites which Moses had commanded. He " came not to destroy the law, but to establish the law," by performing all its requisitions, and he taught his disciples to do likewise, because the time was not then come for him to perfect that law by his sufferings. It was, therefore, quite consistent with the Saviour's mission, for him to observe all those institutions which were appointed as types of himself: but when the death of our blessed Redeemer occurred, the whole book of Jewish rites was closed; and when Jesus uttered, “It is finished," that dispensation was "abolished" which, for ages, had, like John the Baptist, directed the Jewish nation to the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world."

June 20, 1821.

B. B.

$

Reply to a Query.—In Answer to this

Question, "Which are the most valuable, NATURAL or ACQUIRED abilities?" we have received the following observations from IVEN.

As you have not been very explicit in specifying whether physical or mental

847

Natural or acquired Abilities.-A Parody.

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2nd, They are derived from a higher

abilitics are intended, I had in a fit of what you may, perhaps, call per-source-they are the gifts of nature: verseness, chosen to apply it in the former sense; but as, upon cooler consideration, I think the frivolity of those remarks would expose me to your just censure, 1 now beg to consider it as applying to mental abilities, and shall, therefore, not trouble you with my previous lucubrations. As I intend to be as brief as possible, it will not be necessary to enter into any description of the different powers of the mind, as they will be more readily conceived of than expressed, and as they do not form the principal subject of inquiry.

The object of your question, I take then to be the comparative value of natural and acquired abilities; and I shall endeavour to make my remarks apply equally to the individual possessor, and to society at large.

I am of opinion, then, that natural abilities are the most valuable in both cases, for the following reasons

and here it may be proper to premise, that, as this is not intended for a religious essay, the term nature is not used in a religious sense; nor yet in strict accordance with heathen philosophy. We shall not then proceed to deify nature; but while we consider man as a rational and intelligent creature, we shall trace the origin of all his mental powers to the " First Great Cause and Grand Intelligence;" and having taken this view of the subject, it will scarcely be necessary to assert the superiority of this source, and that the gifts must consequently, in a measure, possess the perfection of their high origin.

3rd, They involve a greater degree of responsibility. As man is an accountable being, having received from the highest possible source numerous mental powers and faculties; he necessarily becomes responsible for the exercise and improvement of those talents, and hence their value is enhanced above any other powers he may possess, supposing him to be able to originate in his own mind any ca

1st, Because natural abilities lie at the very foundation of all acquired; and here I am almost inclined to affirm, that, strictly speaking, there are no such things as acquired abilities, inde-sual or permanent capacities. pendently of natural; but as I do not 4th, They are better calculated to inwish to get rid of the subject so unce- sure success.-Though it is not inremoniously, I shall leave it with you tended, that persevering application to specify a few instances of that de- will not surmount many difficulties, scription. It appears to me, how- and ultimately enable a person of but ever, that the case of an idiot is scanty intellectual powers to arrive at strictly in point here; he has no na- a good degree of knowledge, and pertural mental abilities; and, I ask, can haps to some degree of literary emihe acquire any? But in those cases nence; yet it must be allowed, that apparently favourable to the acquire- where great natural genius is enjoyed, ment of talents, may it not rather be and where, likewise, perseverance and considered as the eliciting, or im- due application (as the question adprovement, of talents already possess-mits an equal degree of industry in ed, or the directing of them into a different channel, than the implantation of a new principle by any efforts of our own? I grant that most or all of our mental powers may be improved by culture, of which the memory is a remarkable instance; but this is widely different from the attainment of any new and independent faculty: THE following lines by Dryden, conI know that many great men have re-tain, perhaps, one of the finest comferred their success in the attainment of a knowledge of the arts and sciences, &c. to their persevering application; but could they have persevered, if they had not possessed natural powers of mind; and if those powers had not been suited, and naturally formed capable of such particular exercise?

both parties) are in exercise, enlarged success and unfading glory will be the result of the right improvement of natural abilities.

A PARODY.

pliments paid to Milton, that this as-
tonishing poet ever received; a com-
pliment which even the genius of
Dryden could never surpass.

"Three poets, in three distant ages born,
Greece, Italy, and England, did adorn ;
The first in loftiness of thought surpast,
The next in majesty, in both the LAST:

849

Flour.-Review: Mexican Revolution.

The force of nature could no farther go,
To make a THIRD, she join'd the other two!"

These lines have given rise to the
Parody which is subjoined. It was
occasioned by the meeting of an au-
thor, very shabbily dressed in an old
velvet waistcoat, on which he had
sewed embroidery of a later date.
Three waistcoats in three distant ages born,
The bard with faded lustre did adorn.
The first in velvet's figured pride surpast;
The next in 'broidery; in both the last;
His purse and fancy could no farther go,
To make a third, he join'd the former two.

To Ascertain the Purity of Flour.

THE purity of flour may be partly ascertained, by grasping a handful, and squeezing it for half a minute, when, if laid even roughly on a table, it will preserve its form: if adulterated, it will soon fall down; especially if the adulteration, instead of whiting, be ground stones, bones, or plaster of Paris.

2. Dip the fore-finger and thumb into a little s weet oil, and take up a small quantity of flour between them; if pure, it may be rubbed for any length of time, and it will not become adhesive; but if it be mixed with whiting, it soon becomes putty: if pure, it also, becomes dark-coloured, but if impure, it is very little altered by the oil.

3. Lemon-juice, or vinegar, will also detect the presence of whiting, by the agitation produced in the flour; pure flour produces no particular effect with these fluids.

850

On examining the military chest, it was found to contain about 18,000 dollars. What thus remained of the specie, together with some spare arms and artillery, was buried in the fort.

"Every thing being in readiness, the garrison prepared to evacuate the fort. A distressing scene then took place. The necessity of aban doning the unfortunate wounded, whom, from the nature of the barranca over which it was necessary to pass, it was impossible to carry out, was imperious. The hospital was filled with these victims, the majority of whom were the officers and men who had accompanied Mina from Soto la Marina: they were incapable of bodily exertion; the limbs of most of them being broken. Parting with such men, who had fought so bravely, and who were so devoted to the cause they had espoused, filled every breast with unutterable agony. Some anticipated the fate that awaited them, and entreated their friends to terminate their existence; some

indulged hopes of mercy from the Spaniards;
spair, covered their faces, and were unable to
while others, overwhelmed with grief and de-
bid what they considered a final adieu.
"At eleven o'clock at night, Colonel Bradburn
proceeded with the division to the appointed
spot, whence the sally was to be made. The
route chosen was through the barranca before
was any chance of escape. On arriving at the
described, the only direction by which there
rendezvous, Colonel Bradburn was surprised to
find that Don Pedro, who had reached there
first, had imprudently permitted the women and
children to precede the march. They soon got

into confusion, and by their screams alarmed
the enemy, and thus apprised them of what was
in agitation. From the difficulties which the
barranca presented, it was impracticable for
the troops to remain formed in their march;
and bence, in the darkness of the night, they
soon dispersed, every one exploring his path,

and endeavouring to take care of himself.

"In the bottom of the barranca, the picquets and sentries of the enemy were encountered; with whom a continual skirmishing prevailed.

Many of the fugitives dropped down from of the enemy. The screams of the women, the reports of the enemy's musquets, the cries of those who fell, the groans of the wounded, and

weakness; others were shot by the random fire

the intense darkness which reigned around,

gave to the scene indescribable horror. Some
few, particularly of the females, were so dis-
mayed, that they returned to the fort; preferring
the chance of a pardon to the risk of that de-

REVIEW.-Memoirs of the Mexican struction which then seemed inevitable.
Revolution, &c.

(Concluded from col. 759.)
Two attempts were afterwards made
by the besiegers to carry the fort by
storm; but the resistance of the brave
defenders, reduced as they were
through famine and desertion, com-
pelled them to retreat with loss. By
the last shot which the besiegers fired,
Colonel Young was deprived of life.
On his death the command of the fort
devolved on Lieut. Col. Bradburn, who,
on discovering that the enemy mani-
fested no inclination to raise the siege,
and finding their own provisions and
ammunition quite exhausted, deter-
mined forthwith to evacuate the place.

The

greater part, however, by the dawn, had gained the opposite summit of the barranca. Here, many of them flattered themselves the danger was over; but the foreigners, being ignorant

of the topography of the place, were uncertain every step might place them in the power of which way to direct their course, fearing that the enemy. They marched on as chance directed them, in parties of two, three, or six. Soon after day-light, they were beset by parties of the enemy's cavalry, who had been ordered along the summit of the barrauca, as soon as it was known that the garrison had evacuated enemy's cavalry rushed in among the flying and kneeling individuals. No quarter was given. Cut to pieces by the sword, or transfixed with lances, the greater part of the fugitives were destroyed. The few who escaped, among whom tion to the dense and foggy state of the atmosphere. The clothes and money found on the victims, were looked upon as prizes by the cavalry soldiers, who for that reason preferred killing to making prisoners of them; for if they

the fort. Another scene of horror began:-the

was Don Pedro Moreno, owed their preserva

851

Review-Mexican Revolution.

had spared their lives, and conducted them as prisoners to head-quarters, the booty would not have been so great, as in that case they might

bave lost the clothes.

ficiently strong.

852

The warrior, indeed, perceives no difficulty connected with it. He finds justice securely entrenched under the cover of his arms, and prowess with him is the criterion of right. Ani

heroes, whose exploits have been recorded in the pages of fame, he only aims at wealth and military glory; he marches on in his career of conquest over heaps of slain, and smiles at the blood which either flows around him, or smokes upon his sabre.

"The next morning, the enemy entered the deserted fort in triumph. Then ensued a tragedy, by order of the infuriated Linan, which it is vain to attempt to depict in colours suf-mated by the example of kings and "The hospital, as we have before observed, was filled with wounded, a large majority of whom were foreigners, principally Americans. Those who could hobble to the square, a few paces distant, were made to do so, while others, whose fractured limbs would not permit them to move, were inhumanly dragged along the ground to the fatal spot. There stood the ferocious Linan, feasting on the spectacle; regardless of their miserable situation, of their former gallant conduct, of the clemency and respect which they had shewn to royalist prisoners ummindful of all these considerations, he ordered them to be stripped of all their clothes, "Linan occupied three days in compelling the other prisoners that were found in the fort, to demolish the works; which being effected, he ordered them to be brought to the square, and there shot. One of the prisoners, immediately before being shot, discovered the place where the treasure and other articles were buried; but even this information did not save his life.

and shot down, one by one.

"Thus terminated the siege of Sombrero; out of the two hundred and sixty-nine men who had entered the fort with Mina, only fifty escaped."

From the extracts thus given, the reader will be able to contemplate the horrors of war, reflect on the cruelty of the Spaniards, on the bravery of Mina and his followers, on the author's talents as a writer, and on his fidelity as a narrator of the facts which he describes.

We have already hinted, that the delineation given in these volumes are not without some tincture of colouring unfavourable to the Spaniards, whose character is almost every where placed in an unpleasant light. The facts themselves are, however, of such a nature, that they cannot with justice be questioned, when viewed in the abstract; although it must be allowed, that a writer, under an impression of opposite feelings, would have found occasion to give prominence to another class of objects.

The Spaniards, in the conquest of Mexico and Peru, acted upon that principle which Mina followed. The only difference lay in the result of their exertions;-the former were rewarded with wealth and victory, and the latter was recompensed with poverty and death. Among all the

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mighty troublers of the earth, Who swam to sov'reign rule through seas of

blood,"

from Nimrod to Napoleon, there is scarcely an invader to be found, to whom the charge of injustice will not apply. The history of nations is too frequently, like the laws of Draco, written in blood; and he who can justify the depredations of these military marauders, may become apologists for Mina.

But whatever may be said respecting the principles by which Mina was actuated, nothing can be inferred from hence, either to the advantage or dis advantage of the volumes which record transactions of which he is the hero. The narrative abounds with a variety of incidents; among which none are more interesting, than those that accompany the capture and death of this daring adventurer.

Independently of these, the descriptions given of the country, its governTo men in different walks of life, ment, its population, wealth, internal whose minds have been trained to va- resources, together with the manners 'ried modes of reflection, questions of of the inhabitants, interest the feela very opposite nature will readily oc-ings, which are alternately soothed cur. The warrior and the moral phi- and harassed; while mingled emotions losopher seem to belong to distinct of pity, sympathy, contempt, and inspecies of beings. The latter will dignation, occasionally occupy the readily inquire, what were the motives mind. No person, we think, can peruse which induced Mina to enter South these volumes with attention, without America, to commit depredations on acknowledging them to be instructive, the Spanish territories? This is a ques-important, and interesting. We shall tion which we must confess it is more be pleased to learn, that the author has easy to propose, than satisfactorily to beeh amply remunerated for his past solve. sufferings, and his present labour.

Review-Literary Fund.

853
REVIEW. The incorporated Society for
the management and distribution of
the Literary Fund. 8vo. 66, Nichols &
Son, Parliament Street, London,
1821.

THE pamphlet before us is of such a
complexion, that its principal claim
to the notice of a reviewer, arises from
its connection with the subject of which
it details the history. It presents to
us an account of the origin, progress,
and incorporation of a society, esta-
blished for the purpose of affording
relief to literary characters reduced
to a state of distress.

The author informs us, that this benevolent institution originated with the late Mr. David Williams, who, so early as the year 1773, communicated his ideas on the subject to a literary club, of which he was then a member, but not finding that cordial co-operation and support which he had anticipated, his plans lay dormant until 1788, when they were revived by the death of the learned and amiable Floyer Sydenham, who being arrested for a small debt, contracted under the necessity of subsisting, expired beneath the pressure of his calamity. On this afflicting occasion, a small subscription was raised among the literary friends of Mr. Williams, and an appeal was made to the public by his pen.

These efforts proved so far successful, that in 1790, the society was formed, its constitution fixed, its officers appointed, and its first annual festival auspiciously celebrated. At the fourth anniversary, the late Captain Thomas Morris recited a poem which he had composed for the purpose, and his example being followed by some gentlemen of superior talents, poetic recitation became the distinguishing accompaniment of the society's annual celebration.

In 1797, a permanent fund was established through some very liberal donations, which gave to the Society a considerable capital. To this the late Mr. Samuel Salte added by bequest a legacy of £100.

In 1803, the accession of the Earl of Chichester to the society, constituted a kind of epoch in its history, since, by the liberal exertions of this enlightened nobleman, it was elevated to the attention of the Prince of Wales, our present sovereign, with whose immediate patronage it was honoured, and by whose royal munifi

1

854

cence it has since been permanently established.

The society standing on this exalted ground, soon attracted the notice of the late Mr. Thomas Newton, a member of the family of our immortal philosopher, by whom it was assisted on its progress with a bequest of his entire possessions.

Having attained this state of importance, a royal charter of incorporation was deemed necessary, and for this an application was immediately made. Several obstacles, however, so far obstructed the progress of the applicants, that some years elapsed before the object could be attained. But through the influence and perseverance of the Earl of Chichester and Sir Benjamin Hobhouse, every opposition was at length surmounted, and on the 18th of May, 1818, the deed which established the incorporation was ratified with the privy seal.

Such is the history which this pamphlet details, in a pleasing and perspicuous manner. To the various literary characters who have been relieved by the institution, the author adverts with an equal degree of pathos, feeling, and delicacy. The charter of the society, and the rules of the institution, are also placed before the reader, and these are followed by a long list of subscribers, among whom many of the most exalted personages in the nation appear.

The pamphlet before us is well written, and fairly printed; but we have introduced it to the notice of our readers, principally from a wish to promote the welfare of an institution, which we cannot but think deserving of that support which it has already obtained, and highly worthy of the strongest recommendation.

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REVIEW.-Memoirs of the Rev. John Taylor, late Pastor of the General Baptist Church at Queenshead, near Halifax, Yorkshire; chiefly compiled from a MS. written by himself. By Adam Taylor. 8vo. pp. 144. London, Baynes & Son, Paternoster Row, and Mann, Commercial Road: 1821. WHEN men, who have been long distinguished for talents, piety, and usefulness, are taken from the active scenes of life, to the repositories of death, and from the fluctuations of time to the immutabilities of eternity, they present us with an awful crisis in

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