ministers of his Majesty's Government | ruling planets, some mistake was com conceive themselves privileged by conferring with me on the subject, I shall most likely bring it into immediate operation. I will tell you thus much, that it is something like a plan for establishing a profound astrologer at each Court of Europe, or of the world. These shall statedly compare and combine their celestial observations; and, taking the average horoscope of the nations, direct the proceedings of the respective governments in a sure and prosperous way. Thus all problematical speculations will be at an end; national concerns will have the stamp of certainty on them all; and individual ones be conducted by the same unerring guide. The tradesman will buy and sell by the stel mitted; and he was thereby thrown from the northern to the southern hemisphere, that he may be perfected in the celestial system. Will it be said, Sir, that the stars have no concern in these matters; when it is known that Timoleon, that noble Greek, won all his famous battles on his own birth-day? and when it is considered, that Solyman gained the battle of Mohace, and took the fortress of Belgrade, and the isle of Rhodes, and the town of Buda, each on the 29th of August? Is there nothing in all this? and is there nothing in the sister sciences of geomancy, and chiromancy, and onomancy, and other branches of the same sublime origin? Declare, ye hosts of men who have ex larian predictions; the stockholder | perienced their truth and their utility. will lay up and sell out on the same principles; in short, the whole affairs of the kingdoms will be managed by specific and certain laws, instead of the vacillating and hazardous ones at present pursued. Some difficulties might indeed present themselves; but in the execution of what vast design are there not difficulties to overcome? The nation, I trust, will not leave this hint in embryo; but the vox populi will join with the vox stellarum, in urging our rulers to a reformation of their conduct in this respect. Another scheme of mine is, that all our public men, as generals, historiographers, &c. shall be well instructed in this science. To the latter characters it would be eminently useful; for, by acquainting themselves with the horoscopes of great personages, they could, without the assistance of public documents, personal intimacies, and such like vague testimonies, ascertain their true histories, and hand down to posterity indisputable records of their times. What a pity it is, that Rapin, Hume, Gibbon, and others, had not cultivated an acquaintance with this high department of knowledge! I have had some suspicion that our great commander Wellington is a master in this science. On what other principle can it be accounted for, that in every battle he has been victorious, even when he met the "child and champion of jacobinism" at Waterloo ? I am much mistaken, too, if Napoleon is not one of our disciples; but, most likely, in calculating the horoscope of Moscow, and the aspects of Wellington's Is it not known that a comet passed its perihelion on the 14th of April, 1665, and that the same year the metropolis of England was desolated by a tremendous plague; and the year following, nearly destroyed by fire? Thus realizing the Bard's description, Is it not miserably true, that the dogstar sheds its baleful influence on the earth? Does not the moon regulate our weather and swell our tides? Do not the sweet influences of Pleiades touch the sons of men? Do not our spirits sink or rise as the firmament pours on us its cheering or its gloomy aspect? Are not the clouds our masters, and the stars our rulers? Every sound mind joins in the affirmation, and we are all astrologers against our will. Though this letter has inadvertently become rather lengthy, yet I hope this will be excused on account of the great benefit that will result to your readers, to our rulers, and to the public at large; by producing in every mind an immoveable conviction of the firm basis on which our system stands;-a pyramid, whose base covers the orbit of Saturn, and lifts its head to the stars of the seventh magnitude. I am, Sir, Your obedient servant, Liverpool, July 13, 1819. STELLARIO. ANECDOTE OF MONTECUCULI. MONTECUCULI, a celebrated Italian general, who was the great competitor of the renowned Turenne, one day, while his army was on a march, issued an order that any of his soldiers found walking over the corn, should be put to death. A private, who was ignorant of the mandate, on returning from a neighbouring village, walked through a path in a corn-field, where he was seen by the general, who directed the Prevot to hang him. The soldier, on discovering his situation, advanced towards Montecuculi, and pleaded his ignorance; but pleaded in vain. Prevot," replied the general, “shall do his duty." As all this occurred almost in an instant, the soldier, who had not been disarmed, turned to him, and in a fit of rage, despair, and vengeance, exclaimed, -" I was not guilty before, but now I am;" and immediately discharged his piece at the general. Fortunately, the shot missed him; and Montecuculi pardoned the offender. Remarkable Epitaphs. "The That when he rose again, laid here alone, On the 3d of November last, being in Yorkshire, I had the curiosity to visit Kirklees Park*, where the famous Robin Hood was interred. The spot is inclosed by a wall four feet in height, on the top of which is a six or seven feet high iron-railing. Several yewtrees grow contiguous; and the following is the inscription on the stone, which I took pains to copy correctly, both as it respects the spelling and capitals. "Hear underneath dis litl stean Vil england nivr si agen' Obitt 24. kal. Decembris 1247." 1 An Anchor necessary for safety. When seas are tranquil and serene, And skies are cloudless, clear, and bright, When all around is one vast scene Of peace, of grandeur, and delight,The sailor walks the deck with ease, Indulging all his little pride, As on before a gentle breeze He sees his vessel smoothly glide. Elated with his present joy, Her various trappings he surveys; Her carvings now arrest his eye, And now her costly gildings blaze: He views aloft, in tow'ring height, Her swelling canvass rise and spread, And contemplates with fond delight The splendid figure of her head. But when deep gloom o'erspreads the sky, And winds and waves discordant jar; When thunders roar, and lightnings fly, "And all is elemental war;" His dream expires, his fear awakes, His pleasing contemplations die, Straight to his anchor he betakes,On that his hopes of life rely. Thus man, while passing o'er life's sea, When all things round assume a smile, Indulges thoughtless mirth and glee; Each trifle can his heart beguile: When fortune fills his crowded sail, And wealth flows in with ev'ry wind, Well pleas'd he courts the flatt'ring gale, As all the bliss for man design'd. He lifts ambition's shining vane, Displays the gaudy flag of pride, And scuds along the placid main, Without a compass for his guide. THE HOUR OF PEACE. BY THOS, GISBORNE. WHEN groves by moonlight silence keep, When infancy at ev'ning tries By turns to gain each parent's knees, blishment of State Lotteries; which, he argues, tends to cherish a spirit of gaming, and to draw after it a train of evils, which, in their effects and consequences, spread into numerous departments of domestic life. Through the temptation which this fascinating system holds out, many, he observes, who, in the subordinate stations of civilized society, are entrusted with money, have been induced to risk the property of their employers; and, when they have discovered that their foolish adventures have been unsuccessful, they have had recourse to other crimes to escape detection; till, shut from every hope, they have either absconded, to prey on the public, or have terminated their existence by suicide. Of the time unavoidably wasted in contrivances to raise money to purchase tickets, and in calculating upon the issue of the adventure, he has also taken notice. He likewise adverts to the offices of insurance, pointing out their pernicious tendencies; and finally concludes, that the whole system inevitably leads to demoralization. His second subject is that of contested elections; which, he contends, introduce excessive dissipation, promote drunkenness and inattention to labour, and give a sanction to bribery and perjury. The principles of moral rectitude, thus wounded, soon cease to operate in their primitive vigour; and the trained delinquent carries among his associates the lessons he has learnSOME time in the month of March, ed from those, who should have taught 1819, we were favoured, by an inha-him virtue both by their precepts and example. ON THE CAUSES OF DELINQUENCY bitant of Liverpool, with an Essay, professing to develop the causes of delinquency and crime, as named in the title of this article. Just at that moment, we were laying before the public the substance of a pamphlet, written in America, in which several topies of discussion introduced into these papers seemed to be anticipated. These circumstances rendered the appearance of this article at that time comparatively unnecessary; and directed its omission until the present. To such points as have not been particularly noticed, and to others which are placed in a new light, we shall now pay due attention; but we find it necessary, for reasons already mentioned, to give condensation to his remarks, selecting only the essence of his observations. The first cause of delinquency and crime which he mentions is, the estaNo. 6. VOL. I. His third subject is the comfortable accommodations, which, through mistaken humanity, our common jails afford. Detected in the commission of crimes, which he has been instructed to perpetrate, the offender is consigned to a jail, which, on examination, he finds more comfortable than his own habitation. Here vice reigns in triumph among the prisoners; and dissipation and gambling divide his hours. Hence, having nothing more to fear from the loss of reputation, he becomes, on his release, should he escape with only a slight punishment, prepared for every species of villany, for which his abilities and a jail education could qualify him. And being neglected and abandoned by all, except those whose views are conformable to his own, he again renews his 20 depredations, and rather wishes for a legerdemain philosophy, which seeks jail, that he may enjoy its wretched comforts, than dreads the punishment which the laws may inflict. He balances the hope of escaping, against the possibility of conviction, and hazards all for the booty he attempts to acquire. to account for the simple phenomena of matter and motion, by introducing into nature such fanciful agents, as INNATE ATTRACTION, ETERNAL PROJECTILE FORCE, INHERENT REPULSION, MATTER OF HEAT, &c. &c. The fourth topic introduced, is the multiplication of oaths; which, he argues, are administered on such trifling occasions, as tend to destroy their dignity, and to deprive them of solemnity, by which alone they become a bond of civil society. In favour of what he asserts, he adverts to the Excise and Customs, and adduces some specific instances, which unhappily prove, that, in these departments, oaths are generally viewed by multitudes who take them with acknowledged indifference. The late income and property taxes he considers as having proved highly injurious to public morals, on account of the oaths with which they were associated, and as having given laxity to the ties of moral obligation. In his last topic, he adverts to taxation itself; and argues, that in the same proportion as imposts are multiplied and heavy, they have a natural tendency to generate a disposition to evade their application. To accomplish this, no subterfuge is left untried; and, with many, no duplicity is thought too criminal to be practised. Even among those whose names and characters have been celebrated for loyalty, he contends, that no small number may be found, who have discovered the art of detaching turpitude from a violation of law. This pernicious principle, he argues, when once unhappily adopted, opens an easy passage to the vices which distinguish the present age. It separates law from justice, and reducing obedience to the former as a matter of expediency, leaves the latter wholly unguarded. I have the honour to be, Your obedient servant, RICHARD PHILLIPS. Bridge-street, July 24, 1819. IN defence of the principles of the pretended orthodox philosophy, five appeals have been made to credulity, which merit special exposure before I conclude my personal concern in this great controversy. The first, is an attempt to evade the question, by alleging, that attraction and gravitation are mere names of the effects, and that by them it is not pretended to define any cause. To this it may be replied, that to give names to effects is not the business and object of genuine philosophy; and that it is the bounden duty of legitimate philosophers, to adopt an explanation of the proximate cause of an effect, in preference to any term which may merely describe the effect; and, therefore, it is not a sufficient reason for refusing to inquire into the cause, that a mere name of the effect has been generally recognized. That would be a despicable philosophy, which contented itself merely with giving learned names to phenomena; and any old woman, who says that a body falls to the earth on account of its weight, would exhibit as profound a discrimination as any self-called philosopher, who might assert that it falls owing to its gravitation, or owing to the preponderating attraction of the earth. The Newtonians profess to consider, by the word attraction, merely the name of the law or phenomenon. But when we apply their name or law to the several phenomena, and ask them why the planets do not fall to the sun, as well as a stone to the earth, they then abandon the name, as a law, and tell us that the tendency towards the sun is counteracted by a force, which they call projectile or centrifugal. Yet, as this counteraction is a force, surely that which is counteracted must also be a force; and therefore, in spite of all equivocation, the name is by themselves converted into a force or ten dency to the centre, governed by a certain law. Here then we are at issue: I admit this law, as a result of certain local mechanical forces, and which, being local, and not essentially universal, does not require the hypothesis of a counteracting projectile or centrifugal force. But they assert, that the law is a result of forces inherent in matter, and universal as matter; and then, to counteract this universal force, which would unite all bodies in one mass, they are obliged to feign the existence of a centrifugal or projectile force, which, however, is not supported by any experiment like that of a falling stone, but is created by themselves, for the sole purpose of reconciling another hypothesis of their own to the phenomena! sun. sarily moves towards the centre of the terrestrial masses, because it is the patient of the orbicular and rotatory motions of the mass, and because the common force, which revolves the heterogeneous mass, necessarily produces equal momenta in every part; and equal momenta can only result from every part revolving at distances from the centre, which are inversely as their densities: and I have also found, that it is highly probable that the planets move round the sun, because having no innate tendency to move in any direction, and having atmospheres which gradually fine off, and vanish into the medium of space, they are susceptible of being moved by the exceedingly slight forces created by the medium of space in curvilinear orbits, corresponding with the circular motions of the sun round the centre of the planetary system; the force of the impulse being measured by the relative bulks of the masses concerned, and by the law of divergency, or reciprocal square of the distance; and the areas of the medium of space, moved by the action and re-action of the same forces, or described by the radiusvector, must always be necessarily equal. This confusion arises from considering the phenomena of the terrestrial mass, and those of the sun and planets, as similar, and as results of the same universal cause. A stone falls to the earth, but a planet does not fall to the Nevertheless, the Newtonians assert, that the planets have a tendency to fall to the sun, though they do not fall! They assert that of which they have no proof in any fact; and then, upon this assertion, they found a system of physics! A stone falls to the earth; and, from this fact, they deduce the monstrous conclusion, that the planets also have a tendency to fall to the sun; though it is notorious they do not fall, and never evince any disposition to fall! But, the analogy between the force which impels a The second assertion of the defendstone to the earth, and that which re-ers of the pretended orthodox princi tains the planets in their orbits, is, in truth, confirmed by no fact: it is, therefore, evident, that the analogy is gratuitous, and highly probable that it is utterly false. The assertion, therefore, that physical philosophy is perfect, without considering the true mechanical cause of the action and re-action of distant unconnected bodies on one another, is a mere pretence to cover inadvertency, prejudice, or pride. ples of philosophy, is, that they accord with geometry, and are confirmed by the researches of the most profound mathematicians; and therefore ought not to be disturbed. In considering the assumptions of this piece of arrant sophistry, I appeal to every one who has applied geometry to the Keplerian law, whether that science takes, or affects to take, any cognizance whatever of the source of that law? It is the same thing to geometry, whether it is assumed as analogous to emanations, on the whimsical hypothesis of emanating gravific particles; whether it was a false analogy deduced from Galileo's law of falling bodies; whether it was an astrological harmony of Kepler's; or whether it was ascribed to attraction by Hooke; the geome It does not follow, because a stone moves towards the centre of the earth, and the planets move in orbits round the sun, that therefore the proximate causes of motions so dissimilar, and in such contrary directions, are the same. I should rather infer, that the proximate causes are altogether different; and, instead of saying that they were the same, and then inventinganew force to explain the difference, I should rather search for appropriate and existing motions of nature, calculated by themselves to produce the peculiar motions. And having made this search, I have discovered, that a stone neces- | trician acts merely on the abstract law, |