.XjB OK DR. young's night thoughts. June 8> 



" How rich ! how yoor \ how ahjeft ! how auguft ! 

 " How complicate, how worderful is man !" 



And again, fpeaking of Narcifi'a. 



" F.ar'y, hriphf, tranfient, chafte as morning dew! 

 " She ij)arkltd, was exhal'd ! and went to heav'n." 



For the Bee. 



Mr. Bee, 

 Names have no fmall efFecH: on things. It is for this 

 reafon, I am going, through the medium of your pa- 

 triotic paper, to fuggeft the advantages which our coun- 

 try -would derive from the alteration of a name. 



At prefent, the tenants about me call the gentlemen, 

 whofe lands they otcupy, majlers. I obferve this im- 

 proper term has a very ill efFeft both upon us proprie- 

 tors, and upon our tenants. We are apt to take the 

 tenants at their word, and to imagine them to be our 

 fervants, and to command their fervices for running our 

 errands, and doing our wprk, as if we really were their 

 majlers, and paid them' wages : Whereas they pay us, 

 in general, very good rents for our lands, and, in fo 

 doing, confer a great obligation on us : For I do not 

 know what kind of a figure I and my wife would make, 

 nor how we could feed and educate our numerous fa- 

 mily, were it jnot for the rents which we receive from 

 thefe fervants. At leafl, I have tried to farm my own 

 little bit of land ; but, alas ! Sir, for want of llcill, and 

 attention, and economy, I loft my rent every year,' 

 and got belides into debt. How little then do we find 

 in our tenants of the character of fervants ? The wifli 

 of a wife man would be to have many of the former, 

 and few of the latter. 



This is not the worfl; of it, Sir ; our poor tenants are 

 foolifh enough to think themfclves our fervants; and in- 

 {lead of ti?Hing us frankly they have bufinefs of their 

 ©wn to mind, are as obedient to cur commands, as if 



