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ed the artist) I was rather disappointed."-" What? (interrogated she) do you think any thing can exceed it? Do you know any Englishman who could paint as well?"-"Yes, many." "-" Could you?" angrily demanded the fair enthusiast." I should be sorry if I did not paint much better." At this reply Mrs. Cosway turned indignantly away from the artist, and from that hour ceased to admit him to her assemblies. This little anecdote, although it reflects a slight shade upon the candour of our fair artist, yet throws her friendship forward in the brightest light. But how careful ought the heart to be of indulging even its best affections to excess !

ence.

While pleasure, fame, and friendship surrounded Mrs. Cosway, a smothered melancholy corroded her heart. Very early in life she had lost a most beautiful and beloved infant, and from that hour she at different times displayed somewhat like a carelessness of existThe novelties and splendours of France for some time amused her; but their delights palled, and she became listless and unhappy. She looked with a sated eye on the various wonders of painting and sculpture, which conquest had collected within the walls of Paris. Here rose a new Pantheon; there bloomed the gardens of the Hourii. The business of life seemed to be the pursuit of pleasure. The couch of voluptuousness lay under a bower of roses. Beauty sported her unveiled graces before the sight; and her bright copies, shining in Parian marble, retreated amid the foliage of a thousand groves, in envy of the fairer original. From such scenes of more than

eastern

eastern luxury, Maria Cosway resolved to withdraw. In vain her friends remonstrated and wept: her reso lution was fixed; and at once laying aside all sublunary wishes, she retired to Lyons, where she is now a canoness and presides over a convent.

HENRY KETT, B. D.

SENIOR FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, OXFORD.

THE lives of the greatest part of literary men may fairly be introduced with the trite remark, “that except to those who delight in tracing the silent energies of the human mind, they can furnish little to interest or attract." The memoirs of the hero and the politician are read in the history of their country; but those of the professed scholar must be sought for principally in his works.

Henry Kett was born at Norwich, in the county of Norfolk, in the year 1761, and received his education at the grammar-school in that city, under the Rev. Mr. Lemon. Although not a professed pupil to the celebrated Dr. Parr, for some time master of that school, he has been often heard to acknowledge his obligations to that gentleman, who furnished him with instructions for the direction of his classical studies; and how well he has profited by these, the con current testimony of the first scholars in the university to which he belongs will evince. In 1777, at the age of sixteen, he was admitted a commoner of Trinity College, Oxford, and was chosen scholar the following year. About the time that Mr, Kett took

1804-1805.

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his bachelor's degree, Trinity College was distinguish ed by several young men of talents and learning, among whom may be enumerated Benwell, Headly, Bowles, and Dallaway, all since well known by their publications, particularly Mr. Bowles, one of the most admired poets of his age. Mr. Warton was senior fellow, and with his usual affability and attachment to young men of promise and merit, soon distinguished Mr. Kett, and favoured him with his particular regard, which continued without diminution until the period of his lamented death; and we have some reason for thinking that Mr. Kett was not regardless of the posthumous fame of his friend, but that he contributed a well written, though brief, life of him to the Biographical Dictionary.

Mr. Kett took the degree of A. M. in the year 1784, soon after which he was elected fellow, and appointed one of the college tutors. Among some of his first pupils he numbered the present Duke of Beaufort, and his next brother Lord Charles Somerset, to whom he paid unremitting attention the whole time they were under his care; nor in the discharge of the important duties of his office, for the long space of nearly twenty years, have we ever heard of an instance in which he has not united the character of friend with that of tutor, and made himself as much beloved by his affectionate concern for the interests of those committed to his care, as he was respected by them for his superior endowments.

He very early commenced his theological studies, nor did he give them up on taking orders, as is too commonly

commonly the case, but pursued them with increasing ardour; the effect of a real attachment to his profession. In consequence of the fame he had acquired in this respect, he was appointed Bampton lecturer in 1790, we believe at an earlier age than usual; and the university had no reason to be sorry for their choice. "His sermons (to use the words of a respectable critic) are intended to support the orthodox system of doctrine maintained by our established church, against the insinuations or direct attacks of Dr. Middleton, Mr. Gibbon, and Dr. Priestley. His labours commenced with an apology for the fathers of the church, whose characters as historians, as learned men, and as faithful depositaries of the true doctrine of the gospel, he defends with great zeal and animation. In opposition to the animadversions of Mr. Gibbon, he vindicates the apologies of the primitive christians, and corrects the misrepresentations which Mr. G. had given of the causes which contributed to the propagation of the christian faith. Mr. Kett afterwards undertakes to discuss and refute the leading principles in Dr. Priestley's History of the early Opinions concerning Christ. The concluding sermons of the volume are employed in establishing the authenticity and inspiration of the books of the New Testament, and in tracing an analogy between the primitive church and the church of England, on which he bestows a warm and elegant eulogy. From the perusal of these sermons we have received a high degree of pleasure, although we have frequently found ourselves obliged to differ from the learned author in X 2

his

his construction of the sense of ecclesiastical history in his reasonings and deductions. We think him, however, entitled to very respectful attention, from the unquestionable marks of learning and ingenuity which he discovers, which are likewise recommended by great manliness, perspicuity, and elegance of style."

"His sermon on the earliest martyrs of the christian church is written (say the Critical reviewers) in a style of eloquence which we have seldom seen surpassed;" and the learned and pious Mr. Jones, well known by his numerous theological and philosophical works, in his Life of Bishop Horne, commends Mr. Kett" for his very useful and learned Bampton lectures."

But it was not only in the defence of the doctrines of christianity that Mr. Kett distinguished himself; he was equally solicitous to show that their precepts influenced his practice. About the period of his being Bampton lecturer, he exerted himself, in conjunction with other friends, in rescuing Dr. John Uri, a native of Hungary, one of the best oriental scholars in Europe, from indigence and distress. This gentleman had been sent for from the university of Leyden to Oxford, and had been employed during the vigour of his faculties in taking a catalogue of the oriental manuscripts in the Bodleian library; but growing infirm and old, without relations or friends in his own country, he was discharged by the delegates of the press. By the benevolent interference, however, of Mr. Kett, of Mr. Agutter, now secretary of the Asylum, Mr.

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