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friend, General Montgomery, had attempted it, and declared it was impossible to breathe there: notwithstanding this, the subject of this memoir descended, with three other gentlemen, and, after much toil and difficulty, reached the bottom of the fall. To arrive at the immense sheet that constituted the principal object of curiosity, it was necessary to rush through a small one. Two out of the three who had accompanied him, declined the achievement; but one having promised, and kept his word, they effected their purpose, and stood entirely at their case during the space of five minutes, "under an arch formed on one side of hollow rock, one hundred and thirty-six feet high, and on the other of water precipitated from that rock, which arch might contain five hundred men, in a situation perfectly free from wet. The noise was stunning," it is added, " and the strait, as far as the eye could trace it, was nothing but a heap of foam."

When they had stood here during five minutes, a "whistling wind" arose, and drove the spray in their faces, in a manner that was very disagreeable, and at last intolerable. They staid on the whole ten minutes, and then retired as they went.

Captain Morris was one of the first to patronise the institution called the Literary Fund; and when Richard III. was acted by some of the members, he undertook to personate the tyrant, for the benefit of such of his fellow labourers as did not happen to be blessed with the gifts of fortune. It was his original wish to have played Othello, but by a strange dis

avowal of every thing in the shape of merit, he deemed the former more suitable to his person *.

The character of Richard requires great powers, as it is made up of dissimulation, abilities, and valour, qualifications seldom compatible with each other. To play the lover to Lady Anne, to act the hypocrite at court, and display the warrior in the field, demand a compass of voice, a variety of gesticulation, and a command of intellectual powers, seldom to be met with but in a first-rate performer.

'Teach not thy lip such scorn; for it was made

For kissing, lady, not for such contempt.

If thy revengeful heart cannot forgive,

Lo, here I lend thee this sharp-pointed sword;
Which, if thou please to hide in this true breast,
And let the soul forth that adoreth thee,

I lay it naked to the deadly stroke,

And humbly beg the death upon my knee.

"Nay, do not pause, for I did kill King Henry; But 'twas thy beauty that provok'd me.

* "But I, that am not shap'd for sportive tricks,
Nor made to court an amorous looking-glass;
I that am rudely stamp'd, and want love's majesty,
To strut before a wanton, ambling nymph;
I, that am curtail'd of this fair proportion,
Cheated of feature by dissembling nature;
Deform'd, unfinish'd, sent before my time
Into this breathing world, scarce half made up,
And that so lamely and unfashionably,
That dogs bark at me as I halt by them:
Why I, in this weak piping time of peace,

Have no delight to pass away the time,
Unless to spy my shadow in the sun,
And descant on my own deformity."

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Nay, now dispatch; 'twas I that stabb'd young Edward,
But 'twas thy heavenly face that set me on.

[She lets fall the sword.

Take up thy sword again, or take up me."

When this speech is contrasted with the following, the difficulty attendant on the undertaking will be evident; and on this occasion it is no common praise to say, that Captain Morris, while he fulfilled a very honourable and charitable task, conducted himself so as at once to merit and ensure applause. "Slave, I have set my life upon a cast,

And I will stand the hazard of the die.
I think there be six Richmonds in the field;
Five have I slain to-day instead of him.--

A horse! a horse! my kingdom for a horse!"

It will convey no contemptible specimen of his powers of criticism, when we observe, that he has reviewed and suggested einendations to the works of Pope, the most correct of all our English pocts. Nor will it afford a contemptible specimen of his learning, when we observe, that we generally find Homer open on his desk, and that he regularly reads both the Iliad and Odyssey every year.

Captain Morris at present lives with all the sequestered obscurity of a hermit, in the neighbour. hood of Hampstead; but we hope that he will soon return to the more immediate vicinity of the metropolis, and mix as heretofore with his old friends,

CAPTAIN

CAPTAIN CHARLES MORRIS.

AN attempt has been often made to define man by his peculiarities, and the most prominent of these have accordingly been selected for that purpose. Risibility, produced by the flexibility or rather distortion of the muscles, and generally accompanied by a sudden convulsive noise, denoting merriment, is usually referred to on this occasion, by way of elucidation; but we see no reason why the biped to whom we now allude, may not with equal propriety be designated a singing as well as a laughing animal. In the former, as in the latter case, a certain degree of grimace is usually adopted; and notwithstanding mankind develop their faculties (gradually, yet the one is likely to have been within a few years, and perhaps a few months, as ancient as the other.

Having said thus much respecting the antiquity of the art, it may be expected we should not omit its utility. It appears in ancient times to have been the grand and original instrument of civilization: for we are told that the ballads supposed to have been sung by Homer taught the first precepts of morals and politics to the Grecian cities, which afterwards contended for the honour of giving him birth. The effects produced by the war songs of an inhabitant of Miletus, have furnished a subject for admiration, perhaps doubt, in modern times; and yet, wonderful as they may appear, were an invasion of this country to take place, we doubt not but that every village

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village would have its Tyrtæus, and the youth of England be zealous to rival, if not to surpass, those of Lacedæmon.

There are poets of another description, who, instead of affecting to legislate for whole nations, or to arouse the energies of a city or an army, are content with the more humble task of contributing to the harmless conviviality of society. It is their wish to add to the relish of the banquet by mirth, to heighten the charms of festivity by jollity, and to give a new zest to wine by entwining the "rosy bowl" with the emblems of the Lyric Muse.

Anacreon, one of these, appears to have dedicated his hours to love and wine, and no doubt was accustomed to set the table" in a roar," like some of his successors. Such of his compositions as have reached us consist wholly of amatory and bacchanalian odes. To these the subject of this memoir has added political songs; a species of poetry in which his precursor does not seem to have indulged. As their pursuits were thus in some measure different, we trust and firmly believe that their end will not be the same; for although they appear to have both occasionally sacrificed to the jolly god, yet we cannot suppose that the poet of England, like his precursor of Teos, will ever die by means of a grape stone, or be killed in consequence of indulging too freely in new wine.

Captain Charles Morris, a younger brother of the subject of the foregoing article, and one of the four sons of a captain in the army, was born in London.

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