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dress on the utility and importance of the mechanic arts delivered by John Fairbanks, Esq. The procession then went to Concert Hall and partook of an entertainment. Toasts and sentiments and songs, adapted to the occasion, and corresponding with the temper of the times, closed the usual festivities of the day.

CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS.-The benevolent and humane reader, will be gratified to see the record of two most laudable societies, lately instituted in Boston for the relief of suffering humanity. One of these is called the Fuel Society, and is formed for the express purposes of supplying the poor and indigent with fuel. The officers and benefactors of the institution are among the most liberal and respectable of our citizens. The subscriptions, are said, already to exceed 3,000 dollars.The other is styled the Fragment Society, and consists of ladies. Its object is to supply clothing for distressed women and children. 1600 garments have already been distributed by the trustees of this society.

Correspondence.

The elegant and strikingly correct likeness of the Rev. Dr. LATHROP, published in our last, was drawn by Mr. HENRY WILLIAMS of Boston. We mention this, (and wish it to be remembered by our patrons) solely from a principle of justice to Mr. W. His name should have been placed on the plate, as the painter, but was omitted by an oversight of the engravAn equally correct and finished portrait of the Hon. DAVID COBB, drawn by Mr. Williams, is now in the hands of Mr. Edwin, and will embellish some future number of the Polyanthos.

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"Amicus" complains that our theatrical reviewer" has been very dull and stupid for two months not to notice Mr. Young's provincial dialect." We believe that Mr. Young is not exclusively entitled to censure on the score of bad pronunciation. Perhaps what we have written in a preceding page may satisfy "Amicus." If not, we are not disposed to undertake the drudgery of" writing down this local diction." The letter of "Amicus" smacks powerfully of the green room.

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We shall never envy the honors which wit and learning obtain in any other cause, if we can be numbered among the writers who have given ardor to virtue and confidence to truth. Dr. Johnson.

BIOGRAPHY.

LIFE OF JOHN LOCKE.

THIS illustrious philosopher, was born 1632, at Wrington, near Bristol, of a respectable family. He was educated at Westminster school, and in 1651 was elected to Christchurch, Oxford, where he took regularly his degrees in arts.

Already distinguished by his great proficiency in polite literature, he now applied himself to physic, but though he obtained some reputation at Oxford, he soon found his constitution inadequate to the fatigues of the profession, and gladly accepted the office of secretary to Sir William Swan, sent envoy to the elector of Brandenburg, 1664. Two years after, he became acquainted with lord Ashley, afterwards earl of Shaftesbury, and not only by curing him of a dangerous abscess in the breast, but by the intelligence of his conversation, and the great powers of his mind, he deserved and obtained his lasting friendship. At the recommendation of this noble patron he relinquished medicine for the study of politics, and of civil and ecclesiastical history, and soon after employed himself in drawing up constitutions for the government of Carolina, of which his friend, now chancellor of the excheq uer, and other lords, had obtained a grant from the crown.

VOL. I.

22

In 1672 on the elevation of Shaftesbury to the office of lord chancellor, Locke was made his secretary of the presentations, but on the disgrace of his patron the next year he lost his appointment, though he still continued secretary to the board of trade, where the earl was a commissioner, and enjoyed it with an annexed salary of 500l. per year, till the dissolution of the commission in 1674. Soon after he went to Montpellier, for the benefit of his health, as he was apprehensive of a consumptive attack, and here he devoted himself partly to medical pursuits, and to the composition of his Essay on Human Understanding, till in 1679, his patron, raised to be president of the council, recalled him home. His prospects of preferment were transitory,; the earl in six months was disgraced and imprisoned, and in 1682 escaped for fear of being prosecuted for high treason, to Holland, where Locke, equally faithful to him in adversity as in prosperity, followed him. There, by his intercourse with some suspected persons after the death of his patron, the exiled philosopher drew upon himself the resentment of the government; he was not only removed from his studentship at Christ-church, which he had hitherto kept as an honorable literary retreat, but he was accused by the English envoy before the States General, and his person claimed as guilty of treasonable correspondence in favor of Monmouth's invasion. Thus persecuted, Locke concealed himself for twelve months, devoting his time to literary labors, and two years after, when he returned to England in consequence of the revolution, he published his celebrated essay, which had engaged him nine years in the composition. As he was considered a sufferer for political opinions he was rewarded with the place of commissioner of appeals, worth 2007. a year, and he was offered the honorable office of envoy to some foreign courts, but this he declined, ambitious only after that tranquillity and retirement, which he found in the friendly invitations of Sir Francis and lady Masham at Oates.

In 1695 he was prevailed upon to accept the place of commissioner of trade and plantations, for which he was so well

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