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versation; they have no skill in commerce or the stocks, and I have no knowledge of the history of families or the factions of the country; so that when the first civilities are over, they usually talk to one another, and I am left alone in the midst of the company. Though I cannot drink myself, I am obliged to encourage the circulation of the glass; their mirth grows more turbulent and obstreperous; and before their merriment is at an end, I am fick with disgust, and, perhaps, reproached with my fobriety, or by fome fly infinuations infulted as a cit.

Such, Mr. Adventurer, is the life to which I am condemned by a foolish endeavour to be happy by imitation; fuch is the happiness to which I pleased myself with approaching, and which I considered as the chief end of my cares and my labours. I toiled year after year with cheerfulness, in expectation of the happy hour in which I might be idle: the privilege of idleness is attained, but has not brought with it the bleffing of tranquility.

T.

I am,

Yours, &c.

MERCATOR.

No. CIII. Tuesday, October 30. 1753.

- Quid enim ratione timemus,

Aut cupimus?

Juv.

How void of reason are our hopes and fears!

DRYDEN,

In those remote times when by the intervention of Fai ries, men received good and evil, which succeeding generations could expect only from natural causes, Soliman, a mighty prince, reigned over a thousand provinces in the distant regions of the east. It is recorded of Soliman, that he had no favourite; but among the principal nobles of his court was Omaraddin.

Omaraddin had two daughters, Almerine and Shelimah. At the birth of Almerine, the fairy Elfarina had prefided; and in compliance with the importunate and reiterated request of the parents, had endowed her with every natural excellence both of body and mind, and decreed that " she should be fought in marriage by "a fovereign prince."

When

When the wife of Omaraddin was pregnant with Shelimah, the fairy Elfarina was again invoked; at which Farimina, another power of the aërial kingdom, was offended. Farimina was inexorable and cruel; the number of her votaries, therefore was few. Elfarina was placable and benevolent; and Fairies of this character were observed to be superior in power, whether because it is the nature of vice to defeat its own purpose, or whether the calm and equal tenor of a virtuous mind prevents those mistakes, which are committed in the tumult and precipitation of outrageous malevolence. But Farimina, from whatever caufe, refolved that her influence should not be wanting; she, therefore, as far as she was able, precluded the influence of Elfarina, by first pronouncing the incantation which determined the fortune of the infant, whom the discovered by divination to be a girl. Farimina, that the innocent object of her malice might be despised by others, and perpetually employed in tormenting herself, decreed, " that her person should be rendered hideous by every species of deformity, and that all her wishes "should spontaneously produce an opposite effect."

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The parents dreaded the birth of the infant under this malediction, with which Elfarina had acquainted them, and which she could not reverse. The moment they beheld it, they were solicitous only to conceal it from the world; they confidered the complicated deformity of unhappy Shelimah, as some reproach to themfelves; and as they could not hope to change her appearance, they did not find themselves interested in her felicity. They made no request to Elfarina, that the would by any intellectual endowment alleviate miseries which they should not participate, but seemed content that a being so hideous should fuffer perpetual disappointment; and, indeed, they concurred to injure an infant which they could not behold with complacency, by sending her with only one attendant to a remote castle which stood on the confines of a wood.

that

Elfarina, however, did not thus forsake innocence in distress; but to counterbalance the evils of obfcurity, neglect, and ugliness, the decreed, that " to the taste of "Shelimah the coarsest food should be the most exqui"site dainty; that the rags which covered her, should " in her estimation be equal to cloth of gold; that she " should prize a palace less than a cottage; and that " in these circumstances love should be a stranger to " her breast." To prevent the vexation which would arife from the continual disappointment of her wishes, appeared at first to be more difficult; but this was at length perfectly effected by endowing her with Con

tent.

While Shelimah was immured in a remote castle, neglected and forgotten, every city in the dominions of Soliman contributed to decorate the perfon, or cultivate the mind of Almerine. The house of her father was the refort of all who excelled in learning of whatever class; and as the wit of Almarine was equal to her beauty, her knowledge was foon equal to her wit.

> Thus accomplished, she became the object of universal admiration; every heart throbbed at her approach, every tongue was silent when she spoke; at the glance of her eye every cheek was covered with blushes of diffidence or defire, and at her command every foot became swift as that of the roe. Bnt Almerine, whom ambition was thus jealous to obey, who was reverenced by hoary wisdom, and beloved by youthful beauty, was perhaps perhaps the most wretched of her sex. Perpetual adulation had made her haughty and fierce; her penetration and delicacy rendered almost every object offenfive; she was disgusted with imperfections which others could not discover; her breast was corroded by detef tation, when others were softened by pity; she loft the sweetness of fleep by the want of exercise, and the relish of food by continual luxury; but her life became yet more wretched, by her sensibility of that paffion, on which the happiness of life is believed chiefly to depend.'

Nouraffin, the physician of Soliman, was of noble bir, and celebrated for his skill through all the East. He had just attained the meridian of life; his perfon was graceful, and his manner soft and infinuating. Among many others, by whom Almerine had been taught to investigate nature, Nourassur had acquainted her with the qualities of trees and herbs. Of him the learned, how an innumerable progeny are contained in the parent plant; how they expand and quicken by degrees; how from the fame foil each imbibes a different juice, which rifing from the root hardens into branches above, swells into leaves, and flowers, and fruits, infinitely various in colour, and taste, and smell: of power to repel diseases, or precipitate the stroke of death.

Whether by the caprice which is common to violent paffions, or whether by some potion which Nouraffin found means to administer to his scholar, is not known; but of Nourassin she became enamoured to the most romantic excess. The pleasure with which she had before reflected on the decree of the fairy, " that " she should be fought in marriage by a sovereign " prince," was now at an end. It was the custom of

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