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State Of Public Affairs. 383
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
.France Is Restored Again To Enrope. The...
h ej ^ & ted by the sufferings it has endured / But surely the nation cannot be so profoundly stupid as not to have acquired some knowledge by its intercourse with the Fifeach and English , and the many excellent writings add rested to them
by their own countrymen , lime will discover their real state ; but at present the prospect is deplorable . It augurs well , however , for the independence of their colonies in America . NorWay seems determined to maintain its independence , under a king
of its own choosing ; and as yet no hpstile measures have been taken against her by the Swedes . It is supposed that their object will be obtained by negociation ; and that the couutry , divided into parties , m ^ ay be brought over to consent to the uuion by the application of those the
lixeaps thaft f ^ ilitatisd union between Gre ^ Britain and Ireland . T ^^ Qp ^ f ^ i ^ ^ jipub tle ^ will be a vervj'ipxj ^^ jyg . yjae to . tfte Swedes - a ^» % i ? W ^ DS nations do » p |; i ^ tef f e ^^ t | ie issue of the contefi , is jbV noMeajis certain . Thougft the S"wedeS mv # a jbetter disciplined
arigji g * * get the Norwegians are a bt | i ; ve $ & $$ ) and are capable of making ^ ise of P ^ defence which n & m-M & ^ a ?^ ira % bestowed ° fflJ 9 feP ^ W «^ ty short , they may , it ^^ p ^ re ^ rue jto % e mselves ^ defy . i ' *** *? fact a 11 the •«?*
pmm o $ Xte WgrJ (< j ( J # W & rg ® arm y would pejr ^ l | i amon ^ their mountaias for \ vkxxi of subsistence . - ! $ *& Jregr , oicing § for peace , as if this coiin ^ ry were not atiU involved iq a
wa ^ r W ith Ataierica , and the fcte . s in h ^ w uour of t % emperor of Uu ^ sia ajp ^ l Rje kmgjP ^ P ^ ssia , occupy the w hp |^ of ^ K e pubilic attention . The P ^^| ieg ^ nQ ^ inty , geu ^ an ^ me / chau ^ ^ ^ ied v ^ ith each other in tfte ' ^ iple . n ^ f oUr at tl \ eir entertiin ^ -
nieats : but everjf . jt ) Uip ^ feIl far short o |^ b ^ ;^ g iij ^ eii gQ . ^| tK whicti the i km ^ rf » a ^ f ^^ L ^ f ^ s to w 4 ? . altib W e Quii W f i haii . ^^ fflf t ^ teW rt- ^^ ^^
.France Is Restored Again To Enrope. The...
Africa with great eloquence . . Petitions were agreed to be presented to both houses of parliament ,, aad it was pressed upon the meeting to procure petitions from all parts of the country . The management of the business was vested in the com- *
mittee of the Africao Institution ? and we need not call upon our read * ers to give their assistance , as we arepersuaded that , wherever an opportunity is offered to them , they will not fail to exert themselves in th © cause of liberty and humanity ,
A melancholy instance of depra- * vity has occurred in the trial ^ nd conviction of several persons for a conspiracy , which for a time v ^ eat under the name of the Hoax upon the Stock Exchawg-e , Under this title of hoa £ jnany unthinking ©^
wicked persons amuse themselves by putting the honest and icdus ^ trious to a great deal of trouble and vexation : but on this occasion a trick was played off to enrich thtj parties at the expense of the public , by cpining a lie , and availing
themselves of the effect of it on the funds ; In this idle plot were engaged—two members of the house of commons * one a distinguished naval character and a nobleman—a French military iiobleinau , a captain , in tb ^ arm y- — and some inferior a & euts . Judgment
wa & i > as * ed on , those that appeared , cousi ^ tiag in fine and imprisonrweat on al | f and on th ree namely , th ^ JCngiisfi and the French nobleman , aiula stock-broker , the pillory . This example will deter others froiu *
ferred upon this occasion the I ^ qooui * of a baronetage oil the lord n ^ fiyp ^ who in every respect was entitled j to such a mark of royal [ favour , anxj , both by the dignity oi his dapoit ^ ment , and the integrity of 1 m jiioraj character , supported the charactei * of the first magistrate of the metro
polis . The unhappy blot in the treaty of peace , on the slave trade , occasioned a meeting of the friends to the abolition , which was numerously attended ; and the chief parliamentary speakers advocated the cause of
State Of Public Affairs. 383
State Of Public Affairs . 383
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1814, page 383, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/mrp_02061814/page/63/
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