All praises, but for these, decry; • But chief o'er all, ye wiser Fair, Hail, holy task !-'Tis thine t'impart Should danger threat the favourite child. Is there, whom fafhion, pride, or pleasure, The coward bold become]. -The great Poet of Nature has touched this fenti. ment with exquifite beauty: "Unreasonable creatures feed their young; And though man's face be fearful to their eyes, Who hath not feen them (even with thofe wings, Make war with him that climb'd unto their neft, And there Storge Natural love and affection.] The tender and careful nurfing of children, is the first and most natural duty incumbent upon parents. cannot be a greater reproach to creatures that are indued with reason, than to neglect a duty, to which Nature directs even the brutes.--It cannot be neglected without a downright affront to Nature. TILLOTSON, Vol, i, 606. They They flept fecure;-herfelf fuftains, She gave her young, and prov'd from thence In vain the concert in the grove, • Thus liv'd fhe, till one fatal day, She fish'd the brook ;-fhe div'd the main, The thought was frenzy.-No;-she press'd Her fharp beak on her own kind breast, With cruel piety, and fed Her wondering infants as fhe bled *. "Accept, the cry'd, dear, pretty crew! This facrifice to love and you." "Mad fool, forbear," exclaim'd a SPIDER, That indolently loung'd befide her; "This horrid act of thine evinces Your ignorance of courts and princes. Lord, what a creature!-Tear thy neck fast, And mark'd their manners well, as I did,- Knows Fed br wondering infants, &c.] In every place we meet with the pic. ture of the Pelican, opening her breast with her bill, and feeding her young ones, with the blood diftilling from her. This hath been afferted by many holy writers, and was an hieroglyphic of piety, and pity, among the Egyptians; on which confi deration, they spared them at their tables. PSEUDODOX. EPIDEM The Pelican has a peculiar tenderness for its young, and is fuppofed to admit them to fuck blood from its breaft. CALMET. Lady OSTRICH -] On the leaft noife, or trivial occafion, the for fakes her eggs, or her young ones: to which perhaps the never returns; or if the 2 Knows all the fafhion on this head: 'Tis true, fome accident may hurt it, And brooms and brushes be my ruin! Foul fiend-the lovely Martyr cry'd, "Twas thefe, not Pallas, fpoil'd thy face †, Yes, thy own bowels hung thee there―― A felon, out of Nature's care "Twixt heaven and earth, abhorr'd of both, Yet Coterieans! who profefs No bufinefs but to dance and drefs, does, it may be too late either to restore life to the one, or to preferve the lives of the others. The Arabs often meet with a few of the little ones, no bigger than wellgrown pullets, half farved, fraggling, and moaning about, like fo many diftrefied SHAW'S TRAVELS. pbans for their mother. Gives it the elements to rurfe] She leaveth her eggs in the earth-and forgetteth that the foot may crush them, or that the wild beat may break them. She is hardened against her young ones, as though they were not hers; her labour is in vain without fear; because God hath deprived her of wisdom, neither hath he imparted to her understanding. Job xxxix. They have fo little brains, that Heliogabalus had fix hundred heads for his fupper. DR. YOUNG. t-Not Pallas, Spoil'd thy face.] See Ovid's Metamorphofis, beginning of Book VI. the transformation of Arachne into a Spider, tranflared by Dr. Croxal. This race of beings may be easily ciftinguifhed by their pride, felf conceit, and utter impatience of all advice. Ovid introduces one of them anfwering the goddess of Wisdom herself in this manner : Thou doating thing! whefe idle babling tongue CROXAL What then must a poor poet expect from the modern Arachnes ?-if there be any fuch among us. Coterieans, Pantheifts, &c.] It is impoffible to guess what particular people are here addreffed by the Author. The geographical dictionaries, ancient and modern, have been fearched in vain. It has been thought, when we are favoured with fuller accounts of the island of Otakita, and its inhabitants, the difficulty may be removed. For my own part, however, judging from the fingularity of their manners, I am apt to fufpect they are particular cafts of those very extraordinary people, SLAWKENBERGIUS. the HOTTENTOTS, Pantheifts! Pantheifts! who no God adore, Housewives, that ftay at home no more, Than lamps and tapers' greafy gleam; In the foregoing extract we have given the Author's notes, as a fpecimen of his manner of commenting on himself; but we apprehend that his poems would have proved more acceptable to his Fair Readers, had they lefs required, or obtained, so much expofition. As to the Critics, our Bard affects to be very indifferent about their cenfures. His appeal, he fays, is to the ladies. If their encouragement of the work (of which the prefent publication is only the first part) fhall juftify its continuation, he affures them that the fecond Book fhall wait on them in a few months if not, he adds, this is his laft vifit.' We must not forget to add, that this work is decorated with elegant engravings. ART. V. A free Enquiry into the Origin, Progrefs, and prefent State of Pluralities. By W. Pennington. 8vo. 4s. White. 1772. E think it has been remarked by Dr. Sherlock, late Bishop of London, in a charge delivered to his clergy, that if a fea-captain hires a pilot to conduct his veffel to a particular port, he does not think it requifite exprefsly to ftipulate that the pilot fhall accompany him in the veffel, because this is taken for granted in the contract, and is the very end for which it is formed. Though the Bishop entered into other confiderations on the fubject, he feemed to think that this illuftration conveyed a fufficient argument against non-refidence, and confequently against pluralities, at lealt in that degree and excess in which they have prevailed in the Chriftian Church. The Author of the work now before us is one who is fcandalized by inftances of this kind: but he tells us that, had a fingle perfon held an hundred benefices, and taken care to provide a refident fubflitute in every large or populous parish, whofe falary was fufficient, and his qualifications fuitable; or had no perfon whatever been fuffered to undertake the care of more than two of the fmalleft parifhes, which in many fituations is very practicable, he would never have made any public complaint. Nor would he now, it is added, had he not found, a few months ago, that an anonymous application, which he made to a certain Prelate in 1767, had fo little effect, that this very Prelate himfelf became a commendamift as foon as he could.' 7 We We are told, that he had rather fee the evil redreffed than expofed; but as the anonymous letter has been difregarded, his view is, by a larger publication, to excite a more general and careful attention to a fubject, in which he apprehends the public is immediately interefted. What reafons Mr. Pennington may have to think that this performance will meet with any greater fuccefs than the private letter, or whether there is any probability of its producing any great effect, it is not in our power to determine. The nature and defign of the clerical office, without doubt, plainly evince that those who are engaged in it fhould refide with the people among whom they are to officiate, and for whofe affiftance and benefit fuch an appointment has folely been made. And fhould it be allowed that particular and extraordinary circumftances may fometimes, though rarely, render pluralities tolerable, it muft, nevertheless, appear very unreasonable and abfurd that the profits annexed to the minifterial function should be engroffed by those who do not attend to the discharge of the duties for which these emoluments are defigned to fupport and recompence them. The public, fays this Writer in his preface, fhall be made fenfible that religion fuffers as much (or more) by the oppreffion of pluralities under a Proteftant as it ever did under a Popish prelacy. And if there be any remains of manly virtue, any undiffembled affection for truth and piety, it is to be hoped that we fhall endeavour by every method becoming Chriftians, to deliver ourselves from a burthen, which neither the foreign Catholics nor our fathers were able to bear, and from every relique of a spiritual tyranny.' As every well-meant attempt to remove or leffen whatever is oppreffive or detrimental to the public is worthy of praise, our Author's defign undoubtedly merits commendation; and we muft add, that he profecutes it with fpirit. The fubject of his difquifition required a freedom of fentiment and expreffion, and this he is not at all folicitous to reftrain. The abufes of which he complains are, in his view, numerous and great, and have excited a kind of honeft indignation which rifes fuperior to ceremony or politenefs. But while he writes with the afperity of a fatirift, it may be doubted whether, at least as to fome parts of his performance, his acrimony may not rather tend to difguft than to convince those who are more immediately concerned; in which cafe, it is hardly to be expected, that they will ufe any warm endeavours to rectify the evil. 6 Blush, fays he in the conclufion of his preface, ye dignitaries of the highest rank, blush at your own forbearance, and do not make your negligence ftill more criminal by an attempt to juftify it. Can you expect the people will fupprefs their cenfures when they fee fo many hundreds of parishes without a re X 2 fident |