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for help, and question not but he will either avert or turn them to my advantage.-Though I know neither the time nor the manner of the death I am to die, I am not at all solicitous about it; because I am sure that he knows them both, and that he will not fail to comfort and support me under them.

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No. VIII. FRIDAY, MARCH 9.

At Venus obscuro gradientes aere sepsit,
Et multo nebulæ circum Dea fudit amictu,
Cernere ne quis eos

VIRG.

They march obscure, for Venus kindly shrouds
With mists their persons, and involves in clouds.
DRYDEN.

I SHALL here communicate to the world a couple of letters, which I believe will give the reader as good an entertainment as any that I am able to furnish him with; and therefore shall make no apology for them.

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SIK,

To the Spectator.

I AM one of the directors of the Society for the • Reformation of Manners, and therefore think myself a proper person for your correspondence. I have thoroughly examined the present state of religion in Great Britain, and am able to acquaint you with the predominant vice of every market town in the whole island. I can tell you the progress that virtue has made in all our cities, boroughs, and corporations; and know as well the evil practices that

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are committed in Berwick or Exeter, as what is done in my own family. In a word, Sir, I have my correspondents in the remotest parts of the na'tion, who send me up punctual accounts from time 'to time of all the little irregularities that fall under 'their notice in their several districts and divisions.

'I am no less acquainted with the particular quarters ' and regions of this great town than with the different 6 parts and distributions of the whole nation. I can 'describe every parish by its impieties, and can tell ( you in which of our streets lewdness prevails, which < gaming has taken possession of, and where drunkenness has got the better of them both. When I am 'disposed to raise a fine for the poor, I know the lanes and alleys that are inhabited by common Swearers. When I would encourage the hospital of 'Bridewell, and improve the hempen manufacture, I am very well acquainted with all the haunts and re'sorts of female night-walkers.

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After this short account of myself, I must let you 'know that the design of this paper is to give you 'information of a certain irregular assembly, which 'I think falls very properly under your observation, especially since the persons it is composed of are criminals too considerable for the animadversions ' of our society. I mean, Sir, the Midnight Mask, which has of late been very frequently held in one ' of the most conspicuous parts of the town, and which 'I hear will be continued with additions and improve'ments. As all the persons who compose this law'les assembly are masked, we dare not attack any of 'them in our way, lest we should send a Woman of 'Quality to Bridewell, or a Peer of Great Britain to the Counter! besides that, their numbers are so very great, that I am afraid they would be able to rout our whole fraternity, though we were accompaed with all our guard of constables. Both these

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6 reasons, which secure them from our authority, make them obnoxious to yours; as both their disguise and their numbers will give no particular 6 person reason to think himself affronted by you.

If we are rightly informed, the rules that are ob'served by this new society are wonderfully contrived for the advancement of cuckoldom. The wo'men either come by themselves, or are introduced by friends, who are obliged to quit them upon their 'first entrance, to the conversation of any body that addresses himself to them. There are several C rooms where the parties may retire, and, if they

please, shew their faces by consent. Whispers, t squeezes, nods, and embraces, are the innocent free'doms of the place. In short, the whole design of this libidinous assembly seems to terminate in assignations and intrigues; and I hope you will take effec⚫tual methods by your public advice and admonitions, to prevent such a promiscuous multitude of both 6 sexes from meeting, together in so clandestine a

manner.

I am

Your humble servant
and fellow-labourer,

'T. B.'

Not long after the perusal of this letter, I received another upon the same subject; which by the date and style of it, I take to be written by some young Templar.

‹ Sir, Middle-Temple, 1710-11, 'WHEN a man has been guilty of any vice or folly, I think the best atonement he can make for it, is to warn others not to fall into the like. In order

to this I must acquaint you, that some time in February last I went to the Tuesday's masquerade. Upon my first going in I was attacked by half a 'dozen of female Quakers, who seemed willing to 'adopt me for a brother, but upon a nearer exami'nation I found they were a sisterhood of coquettes 'disguised in that precise habit. I was soon after 'taken out to dance, and, as I fancied, by a woman ' of the first quality; for she was very tall, and moved gracefully. As soon as the minuet was over we ogled one another through our masks; and as I am 6 very well read in Waller, I repeated to her the four following verses, out of his poem to Vandyke:

6

The heedless lover does not know
Whose eyes they are that wound him so;
But, confounded with thy art,

Enquires her name that has his heart.

'I pronounced these words with such a languishing air, that I had some reason to conclude that I had

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'made a conquest. She told me that she hoped my face was not a kin to my tongue; and looking upon her watch, I accidentally discovered the figure ' of a coronet on the back part of it. I was so trans'ported with the thought of such an amour, that I " plied her from one room to another with all the gallantries I could invent; and at length brought things to so happy an issue, that she gave me a 'private meeting the next day, without page or 'footman, coach or equipage. My heart danced in " raptures; but I had not lived in this golden dream above three days, before I found good reason to wish that I had continued true to my laundress. I have 'since heard, by a very great accident, that this fine lady does not live far from Covent-Garden, and that 'I am not the first cully whom she has passed herself upon for a countess.

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Thus, Sir, you see how I have mistaken a cloud for a Juno: and if you can make any use of this adventure, for the benefit of those who may possibly be as vain young coxcombs as myself, I do most heartily give you leave. 'I am, Sir,

Your most humble admirer,
'B. L.'

I design to visit the next Masquerade myself, in the same habit I wore at Grand Cairo; and till then shall suspend my judgment of this midnight entertain

ment.

C.

No. IX. SATURDAY, MARCH 10.

Tigris agit rabida cum tigride pacem
Perpetuam, sævis inter se convenit ursis.

Tiger with tiger, bear with bear, you'll find
In leagues offensive and defensive join❜d.

Juv.

TATE.

MAN is said to be a sociable animal, and, as an instance of it, we may observe, that we take all occasions and pretences of forming ourselves into those little nocturnal assemblies which are commonly known by the name of Clubs. When a set of men find themselves agree in any particular, though ever so trivial, they establish themselves into a kind of fraternity, and meet once or twice a week upon the account of such a fantastic resemblance. I know a considerable market-town, in which there was a club of fat men, that did not come together, as you may well suppose, to entertain one another with sprightliness and wit, but to keep one another in countenance; the

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