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"I have been brushing

stand what a person can mean who should say the dzhu this morning"? One may put invention upon the rack, but the darkest enigma of the celebrated sphinx could not be more enveloped in mystery. Thus, it may be supposed that he had been cheating an Israelite in a bargain for some old clothes, or it may possibly mean that he had been sparring with Mendoza; but least of all would it be thought that he had been only sauntering in the dewy meadows.

We have seen that some words will by slow degrees become transmissible into our vernacular state; it is much to be regretted that the facility of exchange in other cases should be instantaneous; for surely the jostling of such a word as dissipated out of our pronouncing dictionaries, and the substitution of dizzy-pated in its stead, must provoke a smile from gravity, or a frown from common sense. Have we not

already addle-pated, num-scull, shallow-brains, and many more synonymous terms; what possible advantage then can arise from the new coinage, if more weight and value must be purloined from another quarter?

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That these interpolations, so revolting to established custom, and so degrading to the judgment of the practitioners should be tolerated at the tea-table, at the bar, or on the stage, is surely more than sufficient; but to insult the house of God by the silly affectation is abominable. Í can sit with tolerable patience to hear (as I sometimes have done) the Capting of our salvation," or, "in the fust place reform, and in the next pur-ze-vere;" but when I hear from one pulpit, that "we are all by Na-chure the crea-chures of wrath, but that the Gosple poors the balm of comfort into the woonded buzzum;" or from another the petition, that the "Almighty would in his own dzhu time accomplish his purposes"-then are my devotions dizzypated, and my indignant feelings roused; and then it is that I devoutly wish all such vile, corrupt, puerile, hotch-potch lingo at the devil. J. L.

SONNET FROM VINCENZIO DA FILICAJA.

SEE a fond mother and her offspring round,

Her soft soul melting with maternal love,

Some to her breast she clasps, and others prove

By kisses her affection: on the ground

Her ready foot affords a rest for one;
Another smiling sits upon her knee ;
By their desiring eyes and actions free,

And lisping words their little wants are known---
To those she gives a smile, a frown to these,
But all in love. Thus awful Providence
Watches and helps us-oft denies our sense
But to invite more earnest prayer and praise,
Or by withholding that which we implore,
In the refusal gives a blessing more.

2.

HUMBOLDT'S TRAVELS.*
.*

THERE are some men whose names seem to irradiate the age in which they are born, whose every step in life forms an epoch in science, and who, as if Nature herself were sedulous to guard them as her historians, escape unhurt through perils that would alike appal the mind, and overwhelm the bodies, of less enthusiastic, less gifted individuals. Such is Humboldt, every addition to whose travels is an addition to our stock of knowledge. In him all the qualities that are requisite for a philosopher and a man of science are most happily combined, whilst the energies of his mind seem to transform themselves into physical powers of more than natural strength, to enable him to follow whither his ardour leads him. The termination of his "Personal Narrative" has made its appearance, and the last part is no way inferior to the first, in vigour of research, truth of inference, and beauty of moral reflection. It is not easy for persons who stay quietly at home, to imagine the exceeding energy of mind which must be called up, to bear some of the torments, the privations, the perplexities, of a man exposed to every variation of climate, and to peculiarities attendant on each, of which he may be totally ignorant. The moschettoes, for instance, just beyond the mouth of the Rio Aranca, assume the appearance of an evil so formidable as to forbid all the attempts of man towards civilization in the quarter which they infest, in a degree greater than is known in any other part of the habitable globe.

"The lower strata of air, from the surface of the ground to the height of fifteen or twenty feet, are filled with venomous insects like a condensed vapour. If in an obscure spot, for instance in the grottoes of the cataracts formed by superincumbent blocks of granite, you direct your eyes toward the opening enlightened by the sun, you see clouds of moschettoes more or less thick, according as these little animals, in their slow and regular movements to their own music [mouvemens lents et cadencés], form into groups, or spread themselves abroad. At the mission of San Borja, the suffering from moschettoes is greater than at Carichana; but in the raudales, at Atures, and above all at Maypures, this suffering may be said to attain its maximum. I doubt whether there be a country upon earth, where man is exposed to more cruel torments in the rainy season. Having passed the fifth degree of latitude, you are somewhat less stung; but on the Upper Oroonoko the stings are more painful, because the heat, and the absolute want of wind, render the air more burning, and more irritating in its contact with the skin."

No wonder that in the missions of the Oroonoko, in the villages placed on the banks of the river, surrounded by immense forests, stations to which the unfortunate priests of Spain are condemned for twenty years together, the plaga de los moscos, the plague of the flies,

"Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of the New Continent, during the years 1799-1804. By Alexander De Humboldt and Aimé Bonpland; with maps, plans, &c. Written in French by Alexander de Humboldt, aud translated into English by Helen-Maria Williams." Vol. V.

affords an inexhaustible subject of conversation, and that when two persons meet in the morning the first questions they address to each other are "How did you find the zancudoes during the night? How are we to-day for the moschettoes?" Some of these poor missionaries shewed their legs to Mr. Humboldt, which were so discoloured by the repeated stinging of the different species of these tormentors (for their name is legion) that it was difficult to see a trace of the whiteness of the skin between the spots of coagulated blood. The different species do not congregate together, but occupy the air in succession, and sometimes there is a short interval of quiet between the changes, which is enjoyed with an ecstasy that must make the recommencement of the attack still more insupportable. It is a mistake to imagine that the Indians are less susceptible of the bites of these insects than the Europeans. "How comfortable must people be in the moon," said a Saliva Indian to father Gumilla; "she looks so beautiful and so clear that she must be free from moschettoes." Mr. Humboldt's account of this plague of the deserts is minute and highly interesting; as is also his description of the missions in general, and of those whom God has ordained, as the monks despairingly express themselves, to inhabit them. But our limits forbid us to enter into particulars: instead of which we will present our readers with the following characteristic sketch of a part of the travelling suite of Mr. Humboldt and his companion Bonpland, in their passage up the Rio Negro.

"In one of the huts of the Pacimonales we made the acquisition of two large fine birds, a toucan (piapoco)*, approaching the ramphastos erythrorhynchos, and an ana, a species of macaw, seventeen inches long, having the whole body of a purple colour, like the p. macao. We had already in our canoe seven parrots, two manakins (pipra), a motmot, two guans, or paras de monte, two manaviris (cercoleptes or viverra caudivolvula), and eight monkeys, namely, two ateles t, two titis, one viudita §, two douroucoulis or nocturnal monkeys ||, and the cacajao with a short tail¶. Father Zea whispered some complaints at the daily augmentation of this ambulatory collection. The toucan resembles the raven in its manners and intelligence. It is a courageous animal, but easily tamed. Its long and stout beak serves to defend it at a distance. It makes itself master of the house, steals whatever it can come at, and loves to bathe often and fish on the banks of the river. The toucan we had bought was very young; yet it took delight, during the whole voyage, in teazing the cusicusis, or nocturnal monkeys, which are sad and passionate. I did not observe what has been related in some works of natural history, that the toucan is forced, from the structure of its beak, to swallow its food by throwing it up into the air. It raises it indeed with some difficulty from the ground,

Kiapoco, or aviapoco.

+ Marimonda of the Great Cataracts, simia belzebuth, Brisson.

Simia sciurea, the saimiri of Buffon.

vol. i. p. 327, 334, 353, and 357.)

(See my "Rec. d'Observ. de Zoologie," § Simia lugens. (Ib., p. 319).

|| Cusicusi or simia trivirgata. (Ib. p. 307 and 358.) This is the aotus of Illiger. (Ib. p. 317.) These last three species are

¶ Simia melanocephala, mono feo.

new.

but, having once seized it with the point of its enormous beak, it has only to lift it up by throwing back its head, and hold it perpendicularly as long as it is in the act of swallowing. This bird makes extraordinary gestures when preparing to drink. The monks say, that it makes the sign of the cross upon the water; and this popular belief has obtained for the toucan, from the creoles, the singular name of diostede (God grant it thee.)

"Most of our animals were confined in small willow cages; others ran at full liberty all over the boat. At the approach of rain, the macaws sent forth frightful cries, the toucan wanted to gain the shore to fish, and the little monkeys, the titis, went in search of father Zea, to take shelter in the large sleeves of his Franciscan habit. These scenes were often repeated, and made us forget the torment of the moschettoes."

Of many tribes of Indians being in the constant habit of eating human flesh, M. Humboldt does not appear to entertain the smallest doubt; and, indeed, it would be folly to disbelieve what the missionaries, though unwillingly, admit, and the Indians themselves boast of. Cocuy, a celebrated warrior, and chief of the Manitivitanoes, used to devour the finest and fattest of his wives, an instance of epicurism which scandalized no little the worthy missionaries, who converted him to christianity; though, without working that change in his appetite which they did in his belief. “It is a bad habit," says father Gili, of these people of Guyana, "in other respects so good and so mild.” "You cannot imagine,' said the old missionary of Mandavaca, all the perversity of this familia de Indios. You receive men of a new tribe into the village; they appear to be mild, good, and laborious; but, suffer them to take part in an incursion (entrada) to bring in the natives, and you can scarcely prevent them from murdering all they meet, and hiding some portions of the dead bodies.' In reflecting on the manners of these Indians, we are almost terrified at that combination of sentiments, which seem mutually to exclude each other; that faculty of nations to become but partially humanized; that preponderance of customs, prejudices, and traditions, over the natural reflections of the heart. We had a fugitive Indian from the Guaisia in our canoe, who had become sufficiently civilized in a few weeks, to be useful to us in placing the instruments necessary for our observations at night. He was no less mild than intelligent, and we had some desire of taking him into our service. What was our regret, when, talking to him by means of an interpreter, we learned, 'that the flesh of the marimonde monkeys, though blacker, appeared to him to have the taste of human flesh.' He told us that his relations (that is, the people of his tribe) preferred the inside of the hands in man, as in bears.' This assertion was accompanied with gestures of savage joy. We inquired of this young man, so calm and so affectionate in the little services which he rendered us, whether he still felt sometimes a desire to eat of a Cheruvichahena. He answered without discomposure, that, living in the mission, he would only eat what he saw was eaten by los Padres. Reproaches addressed to the natives on the abominable practice, which we here discuss, produce no effect; it is as if a Bramin of the Ganges, travelling in Europe, reproached us with our habit of feeding on the flesh of animals. In the eyes of the Indian of the Guaisia, the Cheru

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vichahena was a being entirely different from himself; and whom he thought it was no more unjust to kill, than the jaguars of the forest. It was merely from a sense of propriety, that, as long as he should remain in the mission, he would only eat the same food as los Padres. The natives, if they return to their tribe (al monte), or find themselves pressed by hunger, soon resume their ancient habits of anthropophagy. And why should we be so much astonished at this inconstancy in the tribes of the Oroonoko, when we are reminded, by terrible and well ascertained examples, of what has passed among civilized nations in times of great scarcity? In Egypt, in the thirteenth century, the habit of eating human flesh pervaded all classes of society; extraordinary snares were spread for physicians in particular. They were called to attend persons, who pretended to be sick, but who were only hungry; and it was not in order to be consulted, but devoured. An historian of great veracity, Abd-Allatif, has related, how a practice, which at first inspired dread and horror, soon occasioned not the slightest surprise.*"

Next to the contemplation of this feast of the anthropophagi, we recommend the following for its singularity, to the imagination of our readers, to look upon with what appetite they may.

"The hut, where the natives were assembled, displayed during several days a very singular aspect. There was neither table nor bench, but large roasted monkeys, blackened by smoke, were ranged in order resting against the wall. These were the marimondes (ateles belzebuth), and those bearded monkeys called capuchins, which must not be confounded with the weeper, or sai (simia capucina of Buffon). The manner of roasting these anthropomorphous animals contributes singularly to render their appearance disagreeable in the eyes of civilized man. A little grating, or lattice, of very hard wood, is formed, and raised one foot from the ground. The monkey is skinned, and bent into a sitting posture; the head generally resting on the arms, which are meagre and long; but sometimes these are crossed behind the back. When it is tied on the grating, a very clear fire is kindled below. The monkey, enveloped in smoke and flame, is broiled and blackened

Account of Egypt by Abd-Allatif, Physician of Bagdad, translated into French by M. Silv. de Sucy, p. 360-374. "When the poor began to eat human flesh, the horror and astonishment caused by repasts so dreadful were such, that these crimes furnished the never ceasing subject of every conversation. But at length the people became so accustomed to it, and conceived such a taste for this detestable food, that people of wealth and respectability were found to use it as their ordinary food, to eat it by way of regale, and even to lay in a stock of it. This flesh was prepared in different ways, and the practice being once introduced, spread into the provinces, so that examples of it were found in every part of Egypt. It then no longer caused any surprise; the horror, it had at first inspired, vanished; and it was mentioned as an indifferent and ordinary thing. This fury of devouring one another became so common among the poor, that the greater part perished in this manner. These wretches employed all sorts of artifices to seize men by surprise, or decoy them into their houses under false pretences. This happened to three physicians among those who visited me; and a bookseller, who sold me books, an old and very corpulent man, fell into their snares, and escaped with great difficulty. All the facts which we relate as ocular witnesses fell under our observation accidentally, for we generally avoided seeing spectacles, which inspired us with so much horror."

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