2^0 SINGULAR CHARACTER. 



most in democratic countries, where freedom is 

 indulged in all the modifications of thought, 

 speech, and action, that do not infringe on the 

 laws ; and as the popidation of America is deri- 

 ved from almost all the nations of Europe, it must 

 unquestionably combine heterogenous qualities, 

 which have not as yet been moulded into unifor- 

 mity and sameness. What Rochester in his witty 

 poem upon nothing said ironically, may, as it re- 

 spects part of the tirst, and the whole of the second 

 line, be applied in sober seriousness to the Ameri- 

 can people : 



** French truth, Dulch proioess, British policy, 



Hibernian learning, Scotch civilili/, 



Spaniard's despatch, Dane s wit, are mainly seen in thee.' 



In my last voyage on the canal, I met with an 

 old s0a Captain, who appeared to unite in his 

 character the honest bluntness arid generous 

 frankiiess of a sailor, with the characteristic in- 

 genuity and enterprising spirit of t'le Yankee. 

 He 'nad before the revolution commanded sea ves- 

 sels from eastern ports. He had often doubled 

 Cape Horn, and pursued the whale in the great 

 South Saa. He had visited many of the ports of 

 Great Britain, and every island in the West Indies 

 was familiar to him. At the breaking out of the 

 Revolutionary war, he entered on board a priva- 



