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They are all fire-and every one doth shine-
But there's but one, in all, doth hold his place!

Here is a manifestation of his

JULIUS CÆSAR, iii. 1.

knowledge of the

stars, through the

changes in the positions of the effect of the rotation of the earth. But what shall we say, how shall we express our surprise and admiration at his distinctly defining the principle of gravitation, long before Sir Isaac Newton was born, -to whom the merit of the discovery has been so honourably attributed, from his enlarged and scientific explanations of its operating effects, acting throughout the whole system of the Universe? As it applies to our Earth it is thus defined by Shakespeare:

Time, force, and death,

Do to this body what extremes they can ;

But the strong base, and building of my love,

Is, as the very centre of the earth,

Drawing all things to it.

TROILUS AND CRESSIDA, iv. 2.

Here is an instance of intellectual supremacy, that at least approaches to inspiration: and it would indeed be "gilding refined gold," to adduce any additional instance to illustrate his gifted intellect,-for we may justly say that he possessed a mind

So perfect, and so peerless; seem'd created

Of every creature's best.

TEMPEST, iii. 1.

We must, however, give one trait of his intimate knowledge of the innate qualities, and apparent states, of the human mind. The case is a medical one, and his analysis of it is so clear, and so concise, that the President of the College of Physicians, in a Lecture to that body, introduced it, to illustrate his own discourse upon Insanity; as an exemplary definition of that disease. It is in the scene where Hamlet rebukes his mother for her marriage with his uncle, and she charges him with being "in ecstacies," he says in reply,

Ecstacy!

My pulse, as yours, doth temperately keep time,
And makes as healthful music. It is not madness
That I have uttered: bring me to the test,

And I the matter will re-word; which madness
Would gambol from.

HAMLET, iii. 4.

Can any thing be more definite or more lucid upon the subject?

The distinguished beauties in the language of Shakespeare, his vast conceptions, his boundless

ideas, his innate knowledge of human nature, his inimitable descriptive powers, have been so often and so ably analysed and portrayed, that it would be supererogation to enter upon those themes; we only request permission to repeat Dr. Johnson's illustration of his powers, as conveyed in his celebrated prologue at the opening of Drury Lane Theatre, in 1747, viz.—

When Learning's triumph o'er her barbarous foes

First reared the Stage, immortal Shakespeare rose ;
Each change of many-colour'd life he drew,
Exhausted worlds, and then imagin'd new :

Existence saw him spurn her bounded reign,

And panting Time toil'd after him in vain.

It delights the mind to read such an encomium from the pen of the most eminent writer of the age in which he lived, acknowledging the pre-eminence of his gifted predecessor.

Previous to entering upon the presentation of the following religious extracts from the works of Shakespeare (which may be justly termed his moral beauties), it is proper that the cause or motive should be

stated which gave rise to the selection, and the publication of them.

Upon visiting Stratford-upon-Avon, the Compiler observed in the room where "Shakespeare's Relicks" are exhibited, a large written paper, in a gilt frame, (designedly presented to the view), termed " a copy of Shakespeare's Will," but drawn up in the Roman Catholic form; representing itself, as a faithful copy of the real Will, deposited at Doctors' Commons.

Having repeatedly seen printed copies of his genuine Will, fraud was immediately apparent; and as it was manifestly placed there for the purpose of deceiving the world, by the insidious attempt to prove him a Papist, the Compiler resolved, in justice to Shakespeare's memory-in justice to the Reformed Religion—and in justice to the divinity of Truth,— to expose the fraudulent design, by proving from Shakespeare's own writings, that he lived and died a true Protestant.

With this view, the following extracts from his works, and from the Scriptures, have been collected, and placed together in parallel positions, to shew the

close affinity that exists between the sentences there exhibited, from his works, and passages taken from Holy Writ.

It has been thought right, however, antecedently to present to the reader, copies of the preambles to the true and the fraudulent Wills, in order that he may, himself, judge of the motive for the fabrication, and of the motive for the refutation.

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