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kind among the higher order, in the formation of their fchemes, in the felection of their studies, in the choice of their place of refidence, in the employment and diftribution of their time, in their thoughts, converfation, and amufements, are confidered as being at liberty, if there be no actual vice, to confult in the main their own gratification.

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Thus the generous and wakeful fpirit of Chriftian benevolence, feeking and finding every where occafions for its exercife, is exploded, and a fyftem of decent felfishness is avowedly established in its ttead; a fyftem fcarcely more to be abjured for its impiety, than to be abhorred for its cold infenfibility to the opportunities of diffufing happiness. "Have we no families, or are they provided "for? Are we wealthy, and bred to no profeffion? Are we young "and lively, and in the gaiety and vigour of youth? Surely we may "be allowed to take our pleasure. "We neglect no duty, we live in 66 no vice, we do nobody any harm, "and have a right to amuse ourselves. "We have nothing better to do, we "with we had; our time hangs heavy on our hands for want of

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it."

and fhall the benevolence of Chrif tians want employment?

Yet thus life rolls away with too many of us in a course of "fhapeless "idlenefs." Its recreations conftitute its chief bufinefs. Watering places-the fports of the field-cards! never-failing cards!-the affemblythe theatres-all contribute their aid -amufements are multiplied, and combined, and varied, to fill up "the void of a liftlefs and languid "life;" and by the judicious ule of these different refources, there is of ten a kind of fober fettled plan of domestic diffipation, in which with all imaginable decency year after year wears away in unprofitable vacancy. Even old age often finds us pacing in the fame round of amufements which our early youth had tracked out. Meanwhile, being confcious that we are not giving into any flagrant vice, perhaps that we are guilty of no irregularity, and it may be, that we are not neglecting the offices of religion, we perfuade our felves that we need not be uneasy. In the main we do not fall below the general standard of morals of the class and ftation to which we belong, we may therefore allow ourfelves to glide down the ftream without apprehenfion of the confequences.

I pity the man who can travel from Dan to Beersheba, and cry "It Some of a character often hardly is all barren." No man has a right to be diftinguished from the class we to be idle. Not to speak of that have been juft defcribing, take up great work which we all have to ac. with fenfual pleasures. The chief complish; and furely the whole at- happinefs of their lives confift in one tention of a short and precarious life fpecies or another of animal gratifiis not more than an eternal intereft cation; and thefe perfons perhaps may well require; where is it that will be found to compofe a pretty in fuch a world as this, health, and large defcription. It will be rememleifure, and affluence, may not find bered, that it belongs not to our purfome ignorance to inftruct, fome pofe to fpeak of the grefsly and feanwrong to redrefs, fome want to fup. daloufly profligate, who renounce ply, fome mifery to alleviate? Shall all pretenfions to the name of Chrifambition and avarice never fleep? tians, but of those who, maintaining Shall they never want objects on a certain decency of character, and which to faften? Shall they be fo perhaps being tolerably observant of obfervant to difcover, fo acute to dif. the forms of religion, may yet be not cern, fo eager, fo patient to purfue, improperly termed feber fenfualifts. Ed. Mag. June 1797.

3 H

Thefe,

Thefe, tho' less impetuous and more measured, are not lefs ftaunch and fteady, than the profeffed votaries of licentious pleasure, in the pursuit of their favourite objects. "Morti. fy the flesh, with its affections and lufts," is the Chriftian precept; a foft Juxurious course of habitual indulgence, is the practice of the bulk of modern Chriftians; and that constant moderation, that wholefome difcip line of restraint and felf denial, which are requifite to prevent the unper. ceived encroachment of the inferior appetites, feem altogether difufed, as the exploded aufterities of monkifh fuperftition.

Chriftianity calls her profeffors to a ftate of diligent watchfulness and active fervices. But the perfons of whom we are now fpeaking, forgetting alike the duties they owe to themselves and to their fellow-creatures, often act as though their condition were meant to be a state of uniform indulgence, and vacant, unprofitable floth. To multiply the comforts of affluence, to provide for the gratification of appetite, to be luxurious without diseases, and indolent without laffitude, feems the chief ftudy of their lives. Nor can they be clearly exempted from this clafs, who, by a common error, fubftituting the means for the end, make the prefer vation of health and fpirits, not as inftruments of usefulness, but as fources of pleasure, their great bufinefs and continual care.

Others again feem more to attach themfelves to what have been well termed the " pomps and vanities of this world." Magnificent houfes, grand equipages, numerous retinues, fplendid entertainments, high and fathionable connections, appear to confitute, in their eftimation, the fupreme happiness of life. This clafs too, if we mistake not, will be found numerous in our days; for it must be confidered that it is the heart, fet on thefe things, which conftitutes the ef.

fential character. It often happens, that perfons, to whofe rank and ftation thefe indulgencies moft properly belong, are most indifferent to them.

The undue folicitude about them is more vifible in perfons of inferior conditions and fmaller fortunes, in whom it is not rarely detected by the ftudious contrivances of a misapplied ingenuity to reconcile parade with economy, and glitter at a cheap rate. But this temper of difplay and competition is a direct contrast to the lowly, modeft, unaffuming carriage of the true Chriflian: and wherever there is an evident effort and struggle to excel in the particulars here in queftion, a manifeft wifh thus to rival fuperiors, to outstrip equals, to dazzle inferiors, it is manifest the great end of life, and of all its poffeffions, is too little kept in view, and it is to be feared that the gratification of a vain oftentatious humour, is the predominant difpofition of the heart.

As there is a fober fenfuality, fo is there alfo a fober avarice, and a fober ambition. The commercial and the profeffional world compose the chief fphere of their influence. They are often recognized, and openly avowed as juft mafter principles of action. But where this is not the cale, they affame fuch plaufible fhapes, are called by fuch fpecious names, and urge fuch powerful pleas, that they are received with cordiality, and fuffered to gather frength without fufpicion. The feducing confiderations of diligence in our callings, of fuccefs in our profeffion, of making handfome provifions for our children, beguile our better judgements. "We "rife early, and late take reft, and "eat the bread of carefulness." our few intervals of leifure, our exhaufted fpirits require refreshment; the ferious concerns of our immortal fouls, are matters of fpeculation too grave and gloomy to answer the pur

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may

pofe, and we fly to fomething that may better deferve the name of relaxation, till we are again fummoned to the daily labours of our employ

ment.

Meanwhile, religion feldom comes in our way, fcarcely occurs to our thoughts; and when fome fecret mif. givings begin to be felt on this head, company foon drowns, amufements diffipate, or habitual occupations infenfibly difplace or fmother the ri fing apprehenfion. Profeffional and commercial men perhaps, especially when they happen to be perfons of more than ordinary reflection, or of early habits of piety not quite worn away, eafily quiet their confciences by the plea, that neceffary attention to their bufinefs leaves them no time

to think on these serious fubjects at prefent. " Men of leifure they con"fefs fhould confider them; they "themselves will do it hereafter "when they retire; meanwhile they

are ufefully, or at least innocently "employed. This business and picafure fill up our time, and the " one "thing needful," is forgotten. Ref pected by others, and fecretly applauding ourfelves (perhaps congra-tulating ourfelves that we are not like fuch an one who is a fpendthrift, or a mere man of pleasure, or fuch another who is a notorious mifer) the true principle of action is no lefs wanting in us, and perfonal advancement, or the acquifition of wealth, is the object of our fupreme defires and predominant pursuits.

REMARKABLE CHANGE OF AN AFRICAN'S COMPLEXION.
From the Monthly Magazine.

IN July 1796, Henry Mofs came to
Philadelphia, and returned to Vir-
ginia in November following. He
produced a certificate of which the
following is a copy :-

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giment in which he ferved, who af
ferted, that he was then black, and,
that there was no reafon to question
his veracity. When at Philadel
phia, the President (Washington) faw
him, as well as many others, whofe
notice of him was attracted by the
fingularity of the cafe. He appeared
to be a modeft, well-behaved man,
and the clear pertinent manner in
which he answered their various quef-
tions, left them in no doubt of the
truth of such parts of his story as reft-
ed on his own credit. Being asked
a great many, tending to discover
whether the change had been effect-
ed by any alteration in his mode of
life or diet, of his health, of cuta.
neous diforders, or remedies used for
their removal, or any other phyfical
caufe? nothing appeared to account
for it.

"I do hereby certify, that I have "been well acquainted with Henry "Mofs, who is the bearer hereof, up"wards of thirty years; the whole "of which time he has fupported an honest character. In the late war, "he enlifted with me in the conti"nental army, as a foldier, and be"haved himself very well as fuch."From the first of my acquaintance "with him, till within two or three years paft, he was of as dark a "complexion as any African; and, "without any known caufe, it has "changed to what it is at prefent. "He was free-born, and ferved his "time with Major John Brint, late "of Charlotte county. Given under my hand, the 2d of Sept. 1794. Jofeph Holt, Bedford county." He was alfo perfonally known to feveral of the other officers of the re3 H 2

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He has all the features common to the African; though not fo ftrongly. marked. His ftature is about five feet fix inches; his age 42 years. On his face, from the roots of his

hair,

hair, on the finciput, about one inch in breadth, extending by his right ear, with increafe of breadth un der his chin, and upwards, to with in two inches of the left ear, is perfectly fair as any European. From the eye-lids, above both eyes, the African complexion has entirely difappeared. For nearly one inch in latitude, under the right eye, there is a fmall white streak; and under the left eye, a broader one. Around his mouth, is a streak of white, fhaded by another remaining ftreak of black, reaching nearly to the chin, under which, all round his neck, he has a very fair European complex

ion.

The lines dividing the black from the white, are not regularly defined, but indented and infulated, the borders appearing as islands and peninfulas, as are reprefented on the chart of a fea coaft. The whole of his breast, arms, and legs, fo far as it was decent to expofe them to a mixed company, were of a clear European complexion, interfperfed with fmall fpecks of his original colour, as freckles on the fkin of a fair woman appear in fummer. The backs and palms of his hands are alfo perfectly fair; but on their fides, from the wrifts to the ends of his thumbs and fingers, there are ftripes of black; and on the outfides of his thumbs and fingers, there are fpots of it. But generally between the limbs, and where ever skin meets skin, and is covered by clothing, the change is perfect (from the colour of an African, to that of a fair European; and it was believed, that the whole of the former, then remaining, if accurately meafured, would not amount to one square foot.

His hair is undergoing a fimilar change, from the black cripfy wool of the African, to the foft curly hair of an European, wherever the colour of the fkin is altered; and in the white parts, it is become foft and

long, inftead of harsh and fhort. Upon preffing his skin with a finger, the part preffed appeared white; and on removal of the preffure, the displaced blood rushed back, fuffufing the part with red, exactly as in the cafe of an European, in like circumftances; and his veins, and their ramifications, had the fame appearance. In the borders of the two colours, their appear, ed no difcontinuity, or fiffure, in the external furface of the skin; and it feemed evident, that the change was not occafioned by the cafting off the epidermis, but by the diffolution of the rete mucofum, between the dermis and epidermis: fo that he was not fenfible of the leaft obftruction, on the paffage of a razor from the black to the white, or from the white to the black parts of his face.

He faid, that his paternal grandfa ther was born in Africa, and his grandmother an Indian native of America; that his father (the issue of their marriage,) married a mulatto woman, born of an African father; and an Irifh mother; and that his maternal grandfather was a native of Africa: That about February 1792, he first perceived a change in his skin, about the roots of his finger-rails, which extended to the length of the first joints; that about two months afterwards, the back of his neck began to change gradually extending downward, and round his body, to most parts covered by his clothes; that the alteration was greater in the fecond, than the first year; and that he has not perceived much, if any, progress in the winter, or cold weather. In the lat ter part of the fummer of 1796, it was fo rapid on his face and hands, that feveral who revifited him, after an absence of 12 or 14 days, discovered a very obvious alteration; and they had no doubt, that if he thould live over another fummer or two, the change would be completed through out. He remarked, that fince it be gan, he has been much more fenfible

of

of the heat of the fun on his fhoulders, than formerly'; and that blifters and freckles have been raised on every part which holes in his clothes had exposed to its action; and alfo, that he has felt the cold much more fenfibly than before.

Such is the history, fo far as it goes, of the change of a negro to a white man; a change, which, had Henry Mofs happened to have been a slave, would have furnished an irrefragable argument for annihilating his owner's claim.

MEMOIRS OF THE LATE MRS POPE, OF COVENT-GARDEN THEATRE.
[Concluded from our last, page 359.]

MISS

Authors, and Performers, that, from the bare hint from her physician Dr. Warren, that her business might diffipitate her diforder, the cheerfully tried the experiment.

ISS YOUNGE having made fome occafional trips to Ireland, her fame in Dublin was as well eftablished as in London. The Manager of Crow-treet Theatre therefore, in the year 1785, renewed an Nature, however, was not to be engagement with her for that fum- conquered thus; her illness increased mer, when the in company with the upon her fo much, that on her return late Mr Henderfon and Mr Pope (a from the Theatre (he was feized with young actor from Dublin, who made fuch a lightness in her head, as for a his appearance the winter before at while to deprive her of all fenfation. Covent Garden Theatre in Oroono- From this moment fhe was confined ko with very confiderable applaufe,) to her bed, and it was foon difcoverfet out for that capital in the June ed that he had a paralytic affection. of the fame year. Accident threw During the first month there were Mr Pope, Mifs Younge, and another hopes of her recovery, as the retainLady of her acquaintance, into the ed her fenfes pretty accurately, and fame poft-chaife, and as Cupid avails employed them to the best of all pofhimself much of accident, the two fible purposes, in conftant acis of prayformer, from fellow travellers, foon er, and pious refignation to her condicommenced lovers. In short, to- tion. wards the clofe of that feafon they were married together in Dublin, on terms of fettlement, &c. very creditable to the fincerity of Mr Pope's affections.

The following winter Mr and Mrs Pope reaffumed their fituations at Covent Garden Theatre; he in the first lines of Tragedy and Comedy, fhe as evidently the first actress in all the parts of her profeffion; which fhe fupported with a ftationary degree of reputation till Thurfday the 26th of January 1797, when, in the run of the new Comedy called "A Cure for the Heart Ache," he was reluctantly confined to her bed. She was fo ill three days before this, that none but those who felt like her would venture out; but fuch was her zeal for her profeffion, fuch her, invariable fenfe of duty to Managers,

During this interval, being requef ted by a female friend to endeavour to compofe herfelf, the complacently faid, "The would, if he would first permit her to repeat Pope's Univerfal Prayer," which the immediately began, and recited without ever miffing a fingle word, with a precision, a fervour, and fullness of voice, that delighted and aftonished every body about her.

For the laft fortnight the daily be. came more infenfible, feldom fpeaking, and then evidently with great effort, until Sunday the 12th of March. when the refufed all nourishment, and gave strong symptoms of approaching diffolution. She continued in this flate till the morning of the 14th, when he made figns to a particular friend as if the had fomething to communicate; many things were fuggeft

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