24 the traveller. Now. Yo 
service: in the mean time an acknowled gment of the 
receipt) of this, will oblige, Sir, yours, t#& *. 
Erin LIEBHABER. 
THE TRAVELLER.’ No, I. 
For the Bee. 
Tue advantages to be derived from travelling have 
been already so often pointed out, that it would be 
impertinent in me to attempt saying any thing new © 
upon the subject. When they go abroad, the most 
of our countrymen are too young to digest what 
they see or hear, and are more eager after amuse- 
ments, than solicitous to improve themselves by ma~ 
king observations on the various humours, habi-— 
tudes, and modes of life of the inhabitants; or on 
the climates, laws, and governments of the countries 
which they visit. 
If we consider how few there are capable of reflec- 
ting on these matters, even in advanced life, we will 
not be surprised at the small:number that are bene- 
fitted by it. But surely a man of parts will reap 
more advantage from judicious travelling, than from 
any other mode of instruction. 
John William Spencer is a person of this descrip-~ 
tion. Born to a plentiful fortune in the west of 
* The Editor will be much obliged to this wiiter, for future commu- 
nications. Some foreiga correspondents from whom much with good 
reason was expected have proved unfaithful, Others are now coming for- 
ward, and there is reason to hope they will increase ; but the number of 
communications that prefs for insertion give little r.om for #1er articles, 
many of which have been long pos:poned. There is reason to believe 
that the Sulirude by Zimmerman is not translated. é 
