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with a cloud, or with smoke, for oppression of the king by the armies of an enemy; tempestuous winds, or the motion of clouds, for wars; thunder, or the voice of a cloud, for the voice of a multitude; a storm of thunder, lightning, hail, and an overflowing rain, for a tempest of war descending from the heavens and clouds politic on the heads of their enemies; rain, if not immoderate, and dew, and living water, for the graces and doctrines of the Spirit; and the defect of rain, for spiritual bar

renness.

In the earth, the dry land and congregated waters, as a sea, a river, a flood, are put for the people of several regions, nations, and dominions; embittering of waters, for great affliction of the people by war and persecution; turning things into blood, for the mystical death of bodies politic, that is, for their dissolution; the overflowing of a sea or river, for the invasion of the earth politic, by the people of the waters; drying up of waters, for the conquest of their regions by the earth; fountains of waters for cities, the permanent heads of rivers politic; mountains and islands for the cities of the earth and sea politic, with the territories and dominions belonging to those cities; dens and rocks of mountains, for the temples of cities; the hiding of men in those dens and rocks, for the shutting up of idols in their temples; houses and ships for families, assemblies, and towns in the earth and sea politic; and a navy of ships of war, for an army of that kingdom that is signified by the sea.

Animals also, and vegetables, are put for the people of several regions and conditions; and particularly trees, herbs, and land animals, for the people of the earth politic; flags, reeds, and fishes, for those of the waters politic; birds and insects, for those of the politic heaven and earth; a forest, for a kingdom; and a wilderness, for a desolate and thin people.

If the world politic, considered in prophecy, consists of many kingdoms, they are represented by as many parts of the world natural, as the noblest by the celestial frame, and then the moon and clouds are put for the common people; the less noble, by the earth, sea, and rivers, and by the animals or vegetables, or buildings therein; and then the greater and more powerful animals and taller trees, are put for kings, princes, and nobles. And because the whole kingdom is the body politic of the king, therefore, the sun, or a tree, or a beast, or bird, or a man, whereby the king is represented, is put in a large signification for the whole kingdom; and several animals, as a lion, a bear, a leopard, a goat, according to their qualities, are put for several kingdoms and bodies politic; and sacrificing of beasts, for slaughtering and conquering of kingdoms; and friendship between beasts, for peace between kingdoms. Yet sometimes vegetables and animals are, by certain epithets or circumstances, extended to other significations; as a tree, when called the 'tree of life' or 'of knowledge;' and a beast, when called 'the old serpent,' or worshipped.

A passing notice of Matthew Henry, and William Wotton, will close our present remarks.

MATTHEW HENRY was the son of the Rev. Philip Henry, and was born in 1662. His education, until the eighteenth year of his age, was conducted exclusively by his father, under whose care he became remarkably accomplished in the learned languages, especially in the Hebrew. He first selected the law as his profession, and accordingly entered Gray's Inn as a student; but yielding to a strong desire for the office of the ministry, he turned his attention to theology, and studied it for some time, with great diligence and zeal. In 1685, he was chosen pastor of a dissenting church at Chester, where he officiated about twenty-five years, and in 1711, he changed the

scene of his labors to Hackney, where he continued till his death, which occurred in 1714.

Of a variety of theological works published by this excellent divine, the largest and best known is his Commentary on the Bible. It was originally printed in five volumes folio, the Commentary on the Epistles being afterwards added by various other divines. Considered as an explanation of the sacred volume, this popular production is not of great value; but its practical remarks are peculiarly interesting, and have secured for it a place in the very first class of expository works. The following extract from the exposition of the twenty-fourth verse of the sixth chapter of Matthew's Gospel, may be taken as a specimen of the nervous and pointed remarks with which the work abounds :

YE CAN NOT SERVE GOD AND MAMMON.

Mammon is a Syriac word that signifies gain, so that whatever is, or is accounted by us to be gain, is mammon. 'Whatever is in the world-the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life'-is mammon. To some, their belly is their mammon, and they serve that; to others, their ease, their sports and pastimes, are their mammon; to others, worldly riches; to others, honours and preferments: the praise and applause of men was the Pharisees' mammon in a word, self-the unity in which the world's trinity centres-sensual, secular self, is the mammon which can not be served in conjunction with God; for if it be served, it is in competition with him, and in contradiction to him. He does not say we must not, or we should not, but we can not serve God and Mammon; we can not love both. or hold to both, or hold by both, in observance, obedience, attendance, trust, and dependence, for they are contrary the one to the other. God says, 'My son, give me thine heart;' Mammon says, -No-give it me.' God says, 'Be content with such things as ye have;' Mammon says, 'Grasp at all that ever thou canst'-" Rem, rem, quocunque modo, rem"'money, money, by fair means or by foul, money.' God says, 'Defraud not; never lie; be honest and just in thy dealings;' Mammon says, 'Cheat thy own father if thou canst gain by it.' God says, 'Be charitable;' Mammon says, 'Hold thy own; this giving undoes us all.' God says, 'Be careful for nothing;' Mammon says, 'Be careful for every thing.' God says, 'Keep holy the Sabbath day;' Mammon says, 'Make use of that day as well as any other, for the world.' Thus inconsistent are the commands of God and Mammon, so that we can not serve both. Let us not, then, halt between God and Baal, but, choose ye this day whom ye will serve,' and abide by your choice.

WILLIAM WOTTON was the son of Henry Wotton, rector of Wrentham, in Suffolk, and was born at Wrentham, on the thirteenth of August, 1660. In childhood his talent for languages was so extraordinary and precocious, that when only five years of age, he was able to read Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, almost as well as English. At the age of twelve he took the degree of bachelor of arts, previously to which he had gained an extensive acquaintance with several additional languages, including Arabic, Syriac, and Chaldee; as well as with geography, logic, philosophy, chronology, and mathematics. As in many similar cases, however, the expectations excited by his early proficiency, were not realized by any great achievements in after-life. His death occurred on the thirteenth of February, 1726. The following pas

sage from his Reflections upon Ancient and Modern Learning, very briefly records the change of manners which took place among literary men during the seventeenth century :—

DECLINE OF PEDANTRY IN ENGLAND.

The last of Sir William Temple's reasons of the great decay of modern learning is pedantry; the urging of which is an evident argument that his discourse is levelled against learning, not as it stands now, but as it was fifty or sixty years ago. For the new philosophy has introduced so great a correspondence between men of learning and men of business; which has also been increased by other accidents amongst the masters of other learned professions; and that pedantry which formerly was almost universal is now in a great measure disused, especially amongst the young men, who are taught in the universities to laugh at that frequent citation of scraps of Latin in common discourse, or upon arguments that do not require it; and that nauseous ostentation of reading and scholarship in public companies, which formerly was so much in fashion. Affecting to write politely in modern languages; especially the French and ours, has also helped very much to lessen it, because it has enabled abundance of men, who wanted academical education, to talk plausibly, and some exactly, upon very many learned subjects. This also has made writers habitually careful to avoid those impertinences which they know would be taken notice of and ridiculed; and it is probable that a careful perusal of the fine new French books, which of late years have been greedily sought after by the politer sort of gentlemen and scholars, may in this particular have done abundance of good. By this means, and by the help also of some other concurrent causes, those who were not learned themselves being able to maintain disputes with those that were, forced them to talk more warily, and brought them, by little and little, to be out of countenance at that vain thrusting of their learning into every thing, which before had been but too visible.

Lecture the Chirty-Fourth.

SIR GEORGE MACKENZIE-JOHN STRYPE-HUMPHREY PRIDEAUX-CHARLES LESLIE -ANDREW

FLETCHER-WILLIAM

NICOLSON-MATTHEW TINDAL-WILLIAM

LOWTH-RICHARD BENTLEY-FRANCIS ATTERBURY-WILLIAM WHISTON-JOHN ARBUTHNOT-DANIEL DEFOE.

D

URING the period which we are now contemplating, Scotland produced many men, eminent for both genius and learning, but scarcely any who attempted to compose in the English language. The difference between the common speech of the two countries, had been widening ever since the days of Chaucer and James the First, but particularly since the acquisition of James the Sixth to the English throne-the Scotch language remaining stationary or declining, while the English was advancing in refinement, both in structure and pronunciation. Accordingly, except the works of William Drummond, who had studied and acquired the language of Jonson and Drayton, there appeared, in Scotland, no estimable specimen of vernacular prose or poetry, between the time of Maitland and Montgomery, and that of Sir George Mackenzie, Lord Advocate for Scotland, from the Restoration to the Revolution.

GEORGE MACKENZIE, descended from an ancient and noble family, was the nephew of the Earl of Seaforth, and was born at Dundee, in the county of Angus, in 1636. He gave early proofs of remarkable genius, having made the necessary preparations, and entered the university of Aberdeen, before he had reached the tenth year of his age. Thence he passed to St. Andrews, where he finished his studies in his sixteenth year, immediately after which he turned his thoughts, with great application, to the study of the civil law; with a view to perfect himself in which, he travelled into France, and applied himself, in the university of Bourges, very closely to his studies, for about three years. On his return to Scotland he was immediately admitted as an advocate at the bar, though he had not yet attained the legal age. In the course of a few years he attained to such eminence as a pleader, that, in 1661, he was chosen to plead the cause of the Marquis of Argyle, who was beheaded at Edinburgh, for high-treason, on the twenty-seventh of May of the

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