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circumstances so auspicious to the public expectation; and entire confidence was cherished in the apparent intentions of government; but this fair prospect, the fairest that had dawned upon that portion of the kingdom, was suddenly changed and clouded. The evil star of Ireland recovered its ascendency. Implacable resentments were roused; other counsels prevailed; and to them was sacrificed the system of policy that had been resolved upon, to be carried into effect through the instrumentality of Earl Fitzwilliam. The measure of concession, which had been tendered with the full concurrence of the royal representative, for which he conceived himself to be vested with competent authority, was refused a sanction by the British cabinet. His recall took place in consequence, after an administration of only three months, and Lord Camden was appointed his successor. The disappointment and grief attending this abrupt termination of his commission, could only be compared with the delight and hope with which his appointment had been hailed. The day of his departure from Dublin was marked as a day of mourning: the shops were closed, and a common feeling of despondence pervaded the whole community.

This unforseen and unfortunate turn of affairs became the topic of animated discussion upon Earl Fitzwilliam's return to England, and continued for some time to form an interesting subject to the public mind. One or two letters were communicated to the press, addressed by him to Earl Carlisle, vindicating the manner in which he had proceeded in the execution of the trust confided to him; asserting the competency of his authority for the purpose in question; and animadverting with great severity upon the arts which had been exerted to overthrow his administration. He appeared also in the house of lords, and challenged an investigation of his conduct in the face of the country; and maintained that his instructions had fully warranted the proceeding which the cabinet had subsequently seen fit to disavow. Blame had been publicly cast upon him as the representative of the sovereign, and he exhibited himself there in a calm and dignified attitude, ready to take up the guantlet which the government had thrown down. No reply was attempted. The Duke of Norfolk then gave notice of a motion for an address to the king, requesting that the correspondence between the ministry and the late Lord Lieutenant relating to his recall, should be laid before parliament; and a similar motion for inquiry was introduced into the house of

commons, without, however, leading to any satisfactory result. It was evident that the opportunity sought for was shurned, and that the government chose to shield its injustice by its silence.

In the debate which occurred in the house of peers, Earl Fitzwilliam publicly declared that he possessed sufficient authority for the measure which he had proposed to adopt in regard to the catholics, and further stated that no objection was opposed to the course of proceeding on his part previous to the dismission of certain active individuals from office on account of their political violence. This, he said, produced the clamours and misrepresentations which led to his removal, and would, as he feared, in time, be followed by worse consequences. This closing remark was obviously prophetic. The disadvantage of losing the timely and favourable opportunity then offered for effecting a conciliatory settlement of the distracting question of Irish catholic emancipation was long experienced, and has not yet entirely ceased to be felt. What sufferings would that unhappy country have been spared; how much blood would have been saved that has been poured out upon the scaffold; how much which has flowed into foreign climes might have been preserved within her own bosom, if that boon which was so long deferred, and so ungraciously and reluctantly accorded, had been granted under circumstances when it might have been received with gratitude.

From this period Lord Fitzwilliam withdrew in a great measure from political affairs, until the cessation of hostilities with France, when he joined with Lord Grenville and others, in condemning the delusive and short-lived peace of Amiens. On the formation of the whig ministry upon the death of Mr. Pitt, in 1806, Lord Fitzwilliam was again called to his former seat as president of the council. After the dissolution of that able and virtuous administration by the death of Mr. Fox, Lord Fitzwilliam did not intermit his attendance in the house of peers, until an advanced period, but ceased to take any further part in public affairs than belonged to the discharge of his senatorial duties. Faithful, however, at once to the original instinct and sympathies of his nature, and to those principles of education, which had distinguished his character from his first entrance upon the stage of life; he drew upon himself a decided mark of the displeasure of the ministerial government under the administration of Lord Liverpool in 1819, by presiding at a public meeting, for the purpose of inquiring into

the conduct of the magistrates concerning the massacre at Manchester. In consequence of this, he was dismissed from the office of Lord Lieutenant of the west riding of Yorkshire, to which he had been appointed after his recall from Ireland.

The character of this excellent and lamented nobleman is best sketched by the plain and simple recital of his life. It was marked by his private virtues, his public spirit, his liberal opinions, and the ample means which he employed of benevolence and munificence. Popular and indulgent as one of the largest landed proprietors in the realm, placed by Providence in a sphere of extensive and important influence, he was the inflexible enemy of every species of corruption and oppression. The purity and elevation of his purposes was never for a moment questioned. Through that portion of local patronage belonging to him under the late system of representation, which has been the subject of reform, and which was now more purely exercised, it may be observed that some of the most eminent and patriotic members have obtained their seats in parliament. As one of these distinguished individuals, it may be sufficient to allude to Sir James Mackintosh, a name well deserving to be associated in the same record with the illustrious object of the equal favour and respect of the Marquis of Rockingham; and it may be mentioned as an eminent felicity in the dispensation of this aristocratic power, in the illustrious line which has been traced, that the roll which began with Burke, should end at this point with Mackintosh. Although opposed, at one period, in their view of foreign politics, between Burke and Mackintosh there existed an affinity, drawing their minds into a mutual esteem and affection for each other, founded on their common hatred of oppression, and love for the good and beautiful in the constitution of their kind.

The descent of Earl Fitzwilliam is traced from an ancient stock, claiming consanguinity to the confessor, and deriving historical distinction from the hand of the conqueror. But he has acquired higher titles to the veneration of the present age, and the respect of posterity; titles, by which his honest and well earned fame will be cherished beyond those of Norman or Saxon origin, or of the heraldic honours by which the house was adorned under the Tudors, or the latter dignities to which it was raised by the reigning branch.

JOHN HOOKER Ashmun.

At Cambridge, April, 1833, John Hooker Ashmun, Esq., aged 33, Royal Professor of Law in Harvard University.

The state of professor Ashmun's health had been such for a long time, that his death was any thing but unexpected to his friends, and though the death of such a man can never be unseasonable, so far as he himself is concerned, it must always be so in relation to those who survive him. He was a man of so marked a character, exerting so uncommon an influence over all who approached him, and so completely filling his office and station, that however we may have supposed ourselves prepared to hear of his death, we feel, when the event has taken place, that we had never realized the extent of the loss we were to sustain.

He was a man cast in a peculiar mould. His mind had been developed, and his character formed, each by its own unassisted energies, and with very few external influences. He was highly independent in opinions and conduct; he made up his mind deliberately, and acted and spoke resolutely, according to his convictions. His mind was one of a high order; it was acute, discriminating, vigorous, philosophical, and creative. No man had a clearer and more intellectual piercing sight; he saw all things in their true forms, and exact proportions. He walked in the steady day-light of truth; he was never led astray by phantoms and unsubstantial gleams; he never mistook shadows for substances. He detected at once, sophistry, loose and inconsequential reasoning, fanciful distinctions, subtle refinements, and all the arts by which ardent partizans deceive others, and often themselves, and treated them with no mercy. His love of truth was a remarkable trait in his mind: he would not tolerate, even in conversation, those rash and extravagant assertions, which are always taken with more or less of qualification, according to the temperament of the speak

er.

He felt that it was wrong to be disloyal to truth, even in the smallest things. He had a great deal of wisdom-the perfection of good sense. His remarks were striking, and often profound. He looked upon life with a penetrating and sagacious eye, and his observations upon it were made with depth, sometimes with severity, never with bitterness. He did not talk much, but he said a great deal in a few words. His constant ill health, which often prevented him from reading and

studying, gave him more opportunity to think, and preserved the originality and freshness of his mind unimpaired.

Of his professional character, we feel hardly qualified to speak, but it is generally acknowledged that, as a lawyer, he had few equals, and no superior among those of his own standing. The early age at which he died, and his constant sickness, prevented him from making various and extensive acquisitions, but there were certain portions of the law, particularly the law of real property, of which he was thoroughly master. But his legal eminence arose from the remarkable original powers which he brought to the study of the science. Wherever he directed his concentrated efforts, he disentangled the knottiest points, and shed light upon the darkest, and most abstruse subjects. He applied general principles with great sagaeity and skill. He traced rules, apparently arbitrary, to their origin, and showed that they had a foundation, either in reason or abuse. Every subject that passed through his mind appeared in a new form, or was held up in a more striking light. Well versed in special pleading, familiar with all the technicalities of the law, and with a power of seeing minute distinctions, he could at once shake off all these trammels, and view the law as a liberal and expansive science, resting on immutable foundations, and capable of being moulded to met the claims of justice, the demands of reason, and the progress of society.

His method of instruction in the law, was peculiar to himself. He did not think itxpedient to explain every thing, and remove every difficulty from the learner's path. He preferred to awaken in the student's mind the desire of overcoming obstacles himself, and thought that what was gained in that way, was much more valuable than what was told him by his teacher. His commentaries and explanations were always given in few words, but were thoroughly satisfactory, and were treasured up in the memory like axioms. He acquired great influence over his pupils: he treated them as friends and companions; and his own mind was so Vigorous and original, that it gained an ascendancy over all who approached him familiarly. His examinations were so searching, and the desire of his approbation was so strong, that all, even the most indolent, if they pretended to study at all, studied faithfully, and learned accurately, The written lectures which he delivered, on certain portions of the law, will always be remembered by those who heard them,

as among the most valuable portions of their legal education.

The character of Mr. Ashmun could only be understood by those who saw him familiarly. His ill health, and a slight deafness with which he was afflicted, prevented him from mingling much in society, but this seemed to bind him more closely to those who knew him intimately. His affections were strong and constant, and his disposition eminently social. His bodily infirmities made him appear sometimes austere and irritable, but no man had a warmer heart, or a deeper sensibility. If he had ever given pain, he felt it no less himself, and always made up for it by some marked kindness in tone, looks, or manner. He associated with his pupils on terms of perfect equality, and gained their attachment, while he preserved their respect, and parted with none of the dig nity of his station and character. He delighted to mingle with them, and to be sur rounded with the fresh and buoyant spirits, which are the natural heritage of youth and health, but to which he had been long a stranger. Though his heart was heavy, he loved the sunshine of happy faces. His feelings we e not only strong, but tender and delicate. He was not in the habit of revealing in words what was passing within him, but with his friends, the tones of his voice, and the expression of his face, were an unerring index to the emotions which were stirring

his soul.

For several months past, his mind literally kept his body alive. His life was always a constant struggle, and a constant victory-a victory of the spirit over the flesh, of the immortal essence over its dying tenement. There was something heroic and inspiring in this moral strength; this power to rise superior to all bodily infirmities, and to keep the post of duty to the last. He bore his sickness with the firmness of a martyr. He never complained, and never fell into that habit so common with invalids, of talking about himself, and his own feelings, till the ear of affection itself became weary of the sound. He had too much dignity and self-respect, to be perpetually drawing upon the sympathy of others, and making them bear the burden of his afflictions. His ill health, which made the world, perhaps, do him injustice, made his society more interesting to his friends, and the influence of his character more important upon them. In moments of doubt and despondency, there was something invigorating in the thought, that if he, at his early age, and with such

a weight of infirmity to sustain, had accomplished so much, how much more could they do, when aided by such good angels as hope and health.

JOHN NEILSON.

In New-Brunswick, N. J., Col. John Neilson, an officer in the war of the revolution. This brave man was born in the vicinity of New-Brunswick, on the 11th day of March, 1745, and passed his minority in and near that place, excepting a few years in Philadelphia for his education. In 1769 he settled at the head of a young family at New-Brunswick, in a mercantile establishment, with the prospect of a favourable and prosperous business, until disturbed by the breaking out of the war in 1776. While the government of Great Britain were pursuing their wild and unjust project of taxation, Mr. Neilson united his influence with the guardians of our land, in opposition to their iniquitous measures. The controversy having assumed a serious complexion, he raised a company of militia; and, being appointed their captain, was soon after called into service, on an expedition to the east end of Long-Island, under the command of General Heard, for the purpose of disarming the disaffected population in that part of the county. When relieved from that service, he resumed the care of his business, and attended the training of his company, in order to make them soldiers.

On the 31st of August, 1775, he was appointed colonel of the battalion of minute-men in the county of Middlesex, and commissioned by the deputies of the several counties of New-Jersey, in provincial congress. This commission was signed Hendk. Fisher, President.

Early in 1776, he was solicited to be come a deputy to the continental congress at Philadelphia; but such were, at that time, the exigencies of the service, that he felt it to be his duty to remain with his regiment, and he never took his seat in that distinguished body.

To evince how justly his sentiments, and the propriety of his conduct on this occasion, were appreciated, it is only necessary to state, than when soliciting individuals in the different states, known to be efficient friends to that measure, with a view to their influence in securing a favourable reception, congress transmitted the copy of the declaration for that part of New-Jersey to Colonel Neilson. When received, the sentiments of the people of New-Brunswick upon that subject, were

unknown. A meeting, comprising most of the population, was convened in the public streets, and a decided and violent opposition from many of the inhabitants was apprehended. Fearless of personal consequences, Colonel Neilson ascended a stage, hastily prepared for the occasion, and with a firm and audible voice, proceeded to read the declaration to the assembled multitude. At the conclusion, he was greeted with loud huzzas by so great a majority, that the opponents of the measure did not dare to avow themselves.

On the first day of August, 1776, he was appointed to the command of the regiment of infantry, for the county of Middlesex; and, in September and October, served in command of his own regiment, and the militia of Somerset, on the lines in Essex and Bergen counties. In November he was relieved by other militia, and returned to his family. In December, of the same year, a large division of the British army invaded the state of NewJersey, made a rapid march to NewBrunswick, on their way to the Delaware; and the militia of Middlesex and Somerset being now dispersed, the field officers of his regiment, including himself, Lieutenant Colonel Taylor, Major Van Embury, with Colonel Frelinghuysen, and others of the county of Somerset, joined the American army, then on their retreat to the west side of the Delaware river, as volunteers.

On the 31st of December, 1776, General Washington issued an order, directing Colonel Neilson, with the militia officers before mentioned, to proceed into the state of New-Jersey, and use their exertions to call together and embody the militia of the state.

The British troops, after the capture of the Hessians at Trenton, retreated, and the head quarters of their army being then in New-Jersey, halted, and went into winter quarters at New-Brunswick. The militia of the state being now partially embodied, part joined the main army, whilst those of Middlesex, with others, were placed under the command of Colonel Neilson, and ordered to take post at Cranberry. Early in 1777, and soon after the establishment of the post at Cranberry, information was communicated to him by a deserter from the British lines, that an outpost of British troops under the command of a refugee officer, was formed at Bennett's Island, two or three miles from the main army at New-Brunswick. A plan for surprising them being immediately formed by Colonel Neilson, a messenger was despatched to General Putnam,

then commanding at Princeton, for assistance. The general very promptly despatched a reinforcement, consisting of from 40 to 50 riflemen. These having arrived in good season, and being united to his own command at Cranberry, Col. Neilson commenced his line of march about sunset, and moved steadily forward by the direct route to Bennett's Island. The night was clear and frosty, and the ground covered with snow, yet the movement was conducted with such circumspection, that they leaped and passed the stockade within which the British were quartered, and were in the midst of them before they were discovered. The surprise was so complete, that the commanding officer of the post, and his whole force, amounting to sixty or seventy men, with their arms, &c., were made prisoners. On this occasion, Colonel Neilson narrowly escaped with his life. Being one of the first to leap the stockade, a sentinel pressed his gun against his breast, while at the same instant, Captain Farmer, a true Jersey Blue, flourished his sword over his head, exclaiming "throw up your gun, you d-d scoundrel, or I will cut you The man being intimidated, obeyed, and the Colonel escaped unhurt. The party returned with only the loss of a man or two, to Cranberry, and on the succeeding day, he had the satisfaction of forwarding his prisoners, with their arms and accoutrements, to General Putnam, at Princeton.

down."

In the months of September, October, and November, 1777, he was on service at the lines, at Elizabethtown, with the militia of Somerset and Middlesex, under the command of General Dickinson. In June and July, 1778, he served in Monmouth county, being part of the time under the command of General Dickinson, and a part of the time holding a separate command. In Sep. and Oct., 1778, he was engaged in repelling an invasion of the enemy, and in May, June, and July, 1779, in commanding the militia on the lines at Elizabethtown, Newark, &c. On the 18th September, 1780, he was appointed by the Quarter-Master-General of the United States' army, his deputy, for the state of New-Jersey, and continued in that department till the close of the war. While engaged in these various services, he held an extensive correspondence with General Washington, Governor Livingston, and other superior officers, which contains much valuable information, and now remains in the possession of his family.

The character and services of Colonel Neilson were highly appreciated by his

fellow-citizens; and so well assured were the enemy of the importance of his influence and exertions to the American cause, that many attempts were made to seize his person. His popularity was the means of preserving him from these attempts, as he always received a sufficient notice from some one of his numerous friends to enable him to escape.

As soon as the great object of independence was secured, and the blessings of peace restored to our land, Col. Neilson returned, with renewed ardour, to the business and duties of private life. Once, only, during the long period of years that have since elapsed, could he be drawn from his retirement. The occ sion was worthy of the patriot, and the appeal too strong to be resisted. He was elected by the people of his native county one of the delegates to the convention of the people of New-Jersey, to take into consideration the constitution of the United States, submitted for "their assent and ratification."

A zealous and influential advocate of that glorious and happy constitution, he saw it adopted and ratified by the whole people; and feeling that union, justice, and liberty were secured to his country, rejoiced in the assurance that he might ever thereafter live withdrawn from the busy theatre of public action. Out of 40 members who composed that convention, embracing the best and wisest of NewJersey's favourite sons, Colonel Neilsonwas the latest survivor.

EDMUND KEAN.

May 15, 1833, at his house, Richmond Green, aged 45, Edmund Kean, the accomplished actor.

Kean was born November 4, 1787, in Castle-street, Leicester-square. His father, Aaron Kean, was a tailor, and brother to Moses Kean, the celebrated ventriloquist; his mother was a daughter of George Saville Carey, a lyrist of the last century. He was so neglected in nursing, that his deformity at four years of age disqualified him for posturing feats on the Dury-lane stage; and it was only by timely application of bracing-irons, that his limbs ever resumed any thing like symmetry. His "first appearance on any stage" was on the head of the Elephant in Bluebeard. At five years old, he re appeared at Dury-lane, in John Kemble's goblin corps in Macbeth. He was afterwards sent to school in Orange court, whence he ran away, and went as cabin boy on board of a vessel bound for Ma

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