HE 
Onthe e evening of the a fare as foon as his majefty 
was feated {who was always known by the conductor of the 
ee: and the officers "of the court, though con- 
ed by his drefs from the company), Heidegger as ufual 
ordered the mufic to play ** God fave the King ;’’ but his 
back was no fooner turned, than the falfe Heidegger eee A 
them to ftrike up ‘‘ Over the Water to Charley 
whole company were inftantly thunderftruck, snd ‘oll thes 
er flew to the mufic-gallery, fwore, 
raved ; accufed the muficians of | drunkennefs, 
or 0 sity fet on by fome fecret enemy -to ruin him. 
The king and the countefs laughed fo immoderately, that 
they hazarded a difcovery. While Heidegger flaid in the 
le “ God fave the King’? was the tune 3. but when, after 
ai matters to rights, he retired to one of the dancing- 
rooms, to obferve if decorum was kept by the company, 
the Dantes ftepping forward, = placing himfelf upon 
the floor of the theatre, juft in t of the mufi ic-gallery, 
ed out in a molt audible waite, imitating Heidegger, 
damned them for blockheads, had he not juft told them 
toplay “Over the Water to Charley:??’ ‘A paufe enfued ; 
the muficians who knew his = acter, in their turn, thought 
him either drunk or mad; but as he continued his vocifera- 
a * Charley’? was played peaks At this repetition of 
fig ta affront, fome of the officers of the guards, 
ways attended upon thefe occafions, — for afcend- 
ge tices, oe nicking es muficians out ; but the late 
duke of Cumberland, who cou d hardly sales mre in- 
Ke d, The mae were thrown into great onfahon: 
« Shame ! Shame ! 1”? refounded from all parts ; mies Hei- 
degger once more flew in a violent rage to that part of the 
theatre eins the gallery. -Here the duke of Montagu, 
ee rng himfelt to him, told him, ‘ the king was 
t paffion ; that his beft way was to go inftantly and 
apology, . for certainly the mnficians were mad, and 
ds to difcharge them,’’ Almoft at the fame inftant he 
d the falfe Heidegger to do the fame. The fcene now 
e truly comic in the circle — the king. Heideg- 
had no fooner made an humble a for the infolence of 
muficians, but the ne Hadaggersd wae, and ina plain- 
tive tone, cried out ; indeed, fire, it was not my fault, “ but 
devil in my likenefs: ’? Poor Heidegger turned round, 
flared, (py ale, and could not utter a word. 
pe hike w ag in his ear the fum of 
counterfeit w: 
e | Reanzas, tran- 
e, are fuppo 
th ck of a page « Peon 
« £ his tre ee -_ of the « Tliad’” 
“Su, inthe Britifhh Mu few 
Pan s 7“ fide ard aad called fowitiicls liquoty 
axe he drank pe and ear 
hae Henge Ghote. 
“ot two saree 
og gtheads of Bar oe 
Then Heidegger all like the cae rd, 
the whole tab le of tilbes bee 
> then i Nees ae 
t his own. 
i | Who’ wert Jos Png ar 
e plot, were thrown into a ftupid con. 
HE 
Being once at a fupper'with a large compte when a ant 
tion was debated, which nationalift of had t 
reatelt ingenuity ; ‘to the furprife of all siclietas he “tained 
that ncn areas tor the Swifs, and appealed to himfelf for the 
trutho was born a Swils,’’ faid he, ‘* and came 
to England withbur a farthing, where I have found means 
to gain gsooo/, a year, and to fpendit. Now I defy the 
_moit are Englifhman to go to mh ae and either to 
gain that income or to {pen nd it ‘ther 
He always feemed fenfible-of Handel's worth and : fuperior 
abilities, favouring and accommodating him in all his unders 
takings with the ufe of his. theatre, in sagisies to his 
opponents and enemies. 
e died Sept, 4th, 1750, at the advanced , age. af go 
— at his houfe at Richmond, in Surrey, where. he was 
uri 
HEIDELBE RG, in Geography, acity of Germany, in the 
circle of the Lower Rhine, form merly capital of the palatinate, 
but ceded, in 1803, among the aa to the elector of 
Baden. Iti is fituated on the S. fide of the Neckar, and was 
furrounded with walls in the 12th century. It has often been 
burnt and plundered; in 1799it was taken by the French. The. 
univerfity of Heidelberg was founded in 1386, and has been 
under the direction of 20 profeffors, = whom fo ur are Cal. 
vinifts. When this city was takem by t he Bavarian in 1622, 
its library was transferred to the Vatican. Although it. 
is now fmall, it contains three churches for | in Catholics. 
and Proteftants of different perfuafions , feveral co nventS, 
an- anatomical theatre, a a military hofpital, ‘more than 20 foun- 
en its 
tains, and fix gates. It has been noted for its 
capacious tun; it is commercial, an 
ftuffs, filk ftockings, &c. Its shedsihaed are chiefly a 
therans, with a free toleration ; bi miles §..of Frankfort 
on the Maine. N. lat. 49° 24'. E. long. 8° 43'. 
IDELBURG, a handfome town of Ameri 
Dauphine co iteetiare: — about 100 rane 
and two’German churches erans and Calvinifts, and 
1990 inhabitants 3 74 miles N. W. oe W of Philadelphia~— 
_Alfo, two townthips i in the fame ftate, one in Yerk county, 
‘the other in that of Northampton, containing 1238 inhabit- 
ants,—Alfo, a Moravian fettlement in Rachie. begua 
in 1743; feven miles from Litiz, in Warwick townfhip, 
Lancaiter county. 
HEIDELSHEIM, a town of 
nate cat the Rhine, fituated on the Se 
, an ‘fland in 
ot 
Einentn of 2 by, cniaced 
GHT, the third on 
ith evard to its elevation a 
"To find e hei a hill, fee A Pa article’ of Levene 
LING, towards the 
~ Heicn See ALTITUDE 
| Afro ny, 4» Geagraphy, Ke. 
, Ae temps &e. the lature of a horfe, 
oe cd a imperfe@tion Se td, chai. Sot som: 
toby 
betwixt fi mpirdes 9 the lower part of the heels. - Some _ 
ure their colts after this manner at a year old, being of 
sie gest 88 the lege) fa colt at this age a as they 
willbe. © : 
Ae ~The 
nes Wier: | : 
