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alone who contemplate the Supreme Being as an object of veneration and of love, who feel the influence of that pure devotion which constitutes the solace of the human mind in times of deep distrefs, and humiliating afflictions. In like manner it. is those only who love and venerate the king for his kindness and beneficence, who are to be relied upon in times of trial and distrefs; at which times only he can have occasion for their aid. What avails 'it him that during the sunshine of prosperity he receives the daily oblations of a thousand applauding tongues, if in the day of adversity he fhall have no friends in whom he can confide. If fear only shall induce his vafsals to obey, who can tell but that very dread may induce them to plot in secret to destroy in one moment this object of their hate? Will not this idea present itself to the mind of the sovereign at times, and deprive him of the power of enjoying those very pleasures he aimed at securing by those harfh means. I would not, O king! have the perpetual anxiety of dreading that my life was in danger from every one who approached me, for all the wealth and all the power the world could confer upon me. We must all meet death some time. It can come but once; and when it does come, let us meet it without the dread which conscious guilt inevitably occasions. I have too sincere, a love for your imperial majesty, to be able to see you embrace a conduct, that must, I know, overwhelm your generous soul in perpetual distress, without entering my warmest difsent to such a proposal. You have

now in your power, an opportunity of gaining the affections of your Belgian subjects, which if suffered to escape may never more return. Neither your illustrious father nor your uncle could boast of such good fortune;-suffer it not, then, O prince! to pass away in vain. For more than a century past secret difsatisfactions have prevailed among the subjects of Belgia. They were jealous lest the Austrian princes wished to curtail their ancient privileges, those privileges, which, when fully enjoyed, rendered their native princes the greatest in Europe. While these jealousies subsisted, no concefsions that were consistent with good government could have satisfied them. Happily for you, the French havving made an irruption into these territories has convinced them that the influence of good laws, strictly enforced, is the greatest of all earthly blefsings. They sigh for the return of these blessings, though they tremble from the dread of that power which they feel they cannot resist, and which they know they have provoked. It is the mark of a little mind to punish the weaknesses of others with unrelenting severity. Great minds alone dare to overlook offences. All mankind reverence and adore the man who can nobly forgive those who have given him just occasion of offence. Act then this noble part; and by one generous deed command the love and esteem of all your subjects, and the veneration of the whole world. A few months ago you issued a proclamation offering in the freest terms to grant to your Belgian subjects all the privileges they have so long been anxious to secure. VOL. XIV.

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ment you had no authority in these provinces, and it was construed to be only an act of meanness or your part. The time is now arrived for you to fhow it was the natural dictates of a just and beneficent mind. You now have it in your power to command what you will; let your will then order, in the hour of prosperity, what it formerly approved. Let it be proclaimed in all your Belgian provinces it is your royal will, that the people fhould enjoy the same privileges as they ever did enjoy under the government of their most favourite nativé princes; and let this be done with sincerity. I fhall be answerable for the success of this happy event. Proclaim at the same time a free and unlimited oblivion and indemnity to all persons, without a single exception, for every act performed by them before the day on which the proclamation fhall be published among them; warning them that for every act con trary to their due allegiance, or in contravention of the law, from that day forward, fhall be punishable as the law awards. Do this, O prince! Go forward with confidence among them. Aet with the candour that is natural to yourself, and I fhall be answerable with my head for the succefs of this measure.

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Here he stopped. While he was yet speaking his eyes were animated with an unusual lustre ; his voice gradually acquired an open clearnefs and force, very unlike to what was looked for at the beginning, and his countenance glowed with a kind of celestial ardour: but when he ceased, his countenance began to fall; he looked abafhed, as if conscious that he had been hurried into an inadvertent for

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wardnefs, and he sunk down into his seat in a kind of deliquium. The emperor, who eyed him all the time with a tender solicitude, hastily rose from his seat, and running to him, kindly grasped him by the hand; thanked him for the generous advice he had offered; said it accorded much with his own feelings, but that he dared not to trust to these im plicitly on the present occasion.

While he was thus engaged, a mefsenger hastily entered with a packet; and with a joyful countenance announced good news from the Netherlands,-another important victory gained near Louvain. Every one was now so anxious to know the particulars that the council broke up in a hurry, and I was left alone for a fhort time to ruminate on what I had just seen.

From the conversation of some attendants who afterwards entered, I understood that the young orator was the son of a nobleman of great eminence lately deceased; that he had been in some measure the companion and attendant of the emperor during the course of his education; that a cordial intimacy and mutual esteem subsisted between them; and that great hopes were entertained by the people, who admired the young nobleman on account of his candour and affability, that the dispositions of the emperor were naturally beneficent and humane. I also secretly rejoiced at the cordiality I had remarked. But I must for the present have done so good Sir adieu.

TIMOTHY HAIRBRAIN,

SIR,

To the Editor of the Bee.

THE following letter, one of four on the seasons, fell with its companions into my hands by succefsion to the papers of a worthy gentleman in England lately deceased.

They all bear the date of the year sixteen hundred and eighty-five.

As they contain (although addrefsed to the imagination,) many curious circumstances relating to the appearances of nature, and some respecting economy and art, I have placed notes on the margin where elucidation might furnish agreeable or useful information, suited to our climate and country. I am, Sir, your constant reader,

A. B.

To the Daughters of Sophia on the dawning of the Spring.

Alathea, Isabella, Sophia, my dear girls, the daughters of my dearest friends! the delightful season of verdure is come. Rise up, my fair ones, and come away; for, lo! the winter is past, the rain is over and gone, the flowers appear on the earth, the time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land. Come my dearest, let us go forth into the field, let us lodge in the villages. Thus, my dear girls, did I apostrophise this morning, in the course of a charming walk to inhale the first freshnefs of reviving nature, and look at the opening of the spring.

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