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gentleman's son run among the hounds; but he is, they tell me, as fleet and as dangerous as the best of the pack.

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WILL'S COFFEE-HOUSE, AUGUST 31.

THIS evening was spent at our table in discourse of propriety of words and thoughts, which is Mr. Dryden's definition of wit; but a very odd fellow, who would intrude upon us, and has a briskness of imagination more like madness than regular thoughts, said that Harry Jacks was the first who told him of the taking of the citadel of Tournay"; and,' says he, ⚫ Harry deserves a statue more than the boy who ran to the senate with a thorn in his foot, to tell of a victory.' We were astonished at the assertion, and Spondee asked him, What affinity is there between that boy and Harry, that you say their merit has so near a resemblance as you just now told us?' Why,' says he, Harry, you know, is in the French interest; and it was more pain to him to tell the story of Tournay, than to the boy to run upon a thorn to relate a victory which he was glad of.' The gentleman, who was in the chair, upon the subject of propriety of words and thoughts, would by no means allow, that there was wit in this comparison; and urged, that 'to have any thing gracefully said, it must be natural; but that whatsoever was introduced in common discourse with so much premeditation, was insufferable." That critic went on: Had Mr. Jacks,' said he, told him the citadel was taken, and another had answered, "he deserves a statue as well as the Roman boy, for he told it with as much pain," it might have passed for a sprightly expression; but there is

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'Le 3 de Sept. S. N. et par consequent le 23 Août V. S. la citadele de Tournai se rendit aux alliés qui l'avoient assiegée.'-Le Nouvelliste Philosophe.

a wit for discourse, and a wit for writing. The easiness and familiarity of the first is not to savour in the least of study; but the exactness of the other is to admit of something like the freedom of discourse, especially in treatises of humanity, and what regards the belles lettres. I do not in this allow that Bickerstaff's Tatlers, or discourse of wit by retail, and for the penny, should come within the description of writing.' I bowed at his compliment, and--but he would not let me proceed.

You see in no place of conversation the perfection of speech so much as in an accomplished woman. Whether it be that there is a partiality irresistible when we judge of that sex, or whatever it is, you may observe a wonderful freedom in their utterance, and an easy flow of words, without being distracted (as we often are who read much) in the choice of dictions and phrases. My lady Courtly is an instance of this. She was talking the other day of dress, and did it with so excellent an air and gesture, that you would have sworn she had learned her action from our Demosthenes. Besides which her words were so particularly well adapted to the matter she talked of, that though dress was a new thing to us men, she avoided the terms of art in it, and described an unaffected garb and manner in so proper terms, that she came up to that of Horace's simplex munditiis ;' which whoever can translate in two words, has as much eloquence as lady Courtly. I took the liberty to tell her that all she had said with so much good grace, was spoken in two words in Horace, but would not undertake to translate them;' upon which she smiled, and told me, she believed me a very great scholar;' and I took leave.

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o' Les dames démêleront mieux que moi si ce paragraphe est eloge ou satyre.'-Le Nouvelliste Philosophe.

FROM MY OWN APARTMENT, AUGUST 31.

I HAVE been just now reading the introduction to the history of Catiline by Sallust, an author who is very much in my favour: but when I reflect upon his professing himself wholly disinterested, and at the same time see how industriously he has avoided saying any thing to the praise of Cicero, to whose vigilance the commonwealth owed its safety, it very much lessens my esteem for that writer; and is one argument, among others, for laughing at all who pretend to be out of the interests of the world, and profess purely to act for the service of mankind, without the least regard to themselves. I do not deny but that the rewards are different; some aim at riches, others at honour, by their public services. However, they are all pursuing some end to themselves, though indeed those ends differ as much as right and wrong. The most graceful way then, I should think, would be to acknowledge that you aim at serving yourselves; but at the same time make it appear, it is for the service of others that you have these opportunities.

Of all the disinterested professors I have ever heard of, I take the boatswain of Dampier's ship to be the most impudent, but the most excuseable. You are to know that in the wild searches that navigator was making, they happened to be out at sea, far distant from any shore, in want of all the necessaries of life; insomuch that they began to look, not without hunger, on each other. The boatswain was a fat, healthy, fresh fellow, and attracted the eyes of the whole crew. In such an extreme necessity, all forms of superiority were laid aside: the captain and lieutenant were safe only by being carrion, and the unhappy boatswain in danger only by being worth eat

ing. To be short, the company were unanimous, and the boatswain must be cut up. He saw their intention, and desired he might speak a few words before they proceeded; which being permitted, he delivered himself as follows:

GENTLEMEN SAILORS,

FAR be it that I should speak it for any private interest of my own; but I take it that I should not die with a good conscience, if I did not confess to you, that I am not sound. I say, gentlemen, justice, and the testimony of a good conscience, as well as love of my country, to which I hope you will all return, oblige me to own that black Kate of Deptford has made me very unsafe to eat; and, I speak it with shame, I am afraid, gentlemen, I should poison you.'

This speech had a good effect in the boatswain's favour; but the surgeon of the ship protested he had cured him very well, and offered to eat the first steak of him himself.

The boatswain replied, like an orator, with a true notion of the people, and in hopes to gain time, that

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he was heartily glad if he could be for their service;' and thanked the surgeon for his information. .However,' said he, I must inform you for your own good, that I have, ever since my cure, been very thirsty and dropsical; therefore, I presume, it would be much better to tap me, and drink me off, than eat me at once, and have no man in the ship fit to be drank.' As he was going on with his harangue, a fresh gale arose, and gave the crew hopes of a better repast at the nearest shore, to which they arrived next morning.

Most of the self-denials we meet with are of this

sort; therefore, I think he acts fairest who owns he hopes at least to have brother's fare, without professing that he gives himself up with pleasure to be devoured for the preservation of his fellows,

ST. JAMES'S COFFEE-HOUSE, AUGUST 31.

LETTERS from the Hague of the 6th of September N.S. say, that the governor of the citadel of Tournay having offered their highnesses the duke of Marlborough and the prince of Savoy to surrender that place on the 31st of the last month, on terms which were not allowed them by those princes, hostilities were thereupon renewed; but that on the 3rd, the place was surrendered, with a seeming condition granted to the besieged above that of being prisoners of war for they were forthwith to be conducted to Conde, but were to be exchanged for prisoners of the Allies; and particularly those of Warneton were mentioned in the demand. Both armies having stretched towards Mons with the utmost diligence, that of the Allies, though they passed the much more difficult road, arrived first before that town, which they have now actually invested; and the quartermaster-general was, at the time of despatching these letters, marking the ground for the encampment of the covering army.

To the Booksellers, or others whom this Advertisement may

concern.

• Mr. Omicron ", the unborn poet, gives notice,

The writer of this note has been told, on very respectable authority, that Mr. Oldmixon was here ridiculed under the name of Mr. Omicron.See Tatler, No. 43. and note.

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The editor of the Supplement to Swift's Works,' also, vol. i. p. 47. speaking of Mr. Oldmixon, tells us, that he was dignified in the Tatler by the name of Omicron the unborn poet.' And see the notes on the Dunciad, book ii. ver. 283.

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