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Untitled Article
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But Mr . F . should exercise a little candour towards English writers , who cannot be expected to have that profound knowledge of the Welsh churcHes and ministers which he discovers * As to other errors , I doubt not your judicious readers will make ; all the allowance for them which the nature of such a work requires . I shall never print < another edition / ' but were I tq
print twenty more , I should not expect to see it free from errors , even with Mr . R ' s . assistance ; and perhaps some Welsh divine who 6 hall come after him , may find errors in his accounts of his own countrymen . . As to those which he refers to in the Nonconformist's Memorial , I have no more apprehension of their sinking the credit of the work , than I have that your repu ~ tati 6 n , Sir , as an Editor , will suffer from the errata in the first number of the Monthly Repository , as noticed in your second . If you think proper to insert this , I promise you that you shall have no more trouble of this kind from your obedient servant , Hackney , March 1 , 1806 . S . Palmer *
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130 Story of a Penitent Prostitute .
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STORY OF A PEKITENT PROSTITUTE . y To the Editor of the Monthly Repository . Sir , That the way of transgressors is hard , * ' is a truth confirmed in the experience of every individual instance of immoral
practice . Such it was in the case of that unfortunate female , whose story is here related , and which at the \ yash of art esteemed friend , I have transmitted for your Magazine , hoping you will give it a place therein . ' ¦ I remain your ' s , &c .
Chatham . T . C . A , A gentleman in the medical line ^ at Glasgow , was some timq since requested to visit a patient , and was conducted up three
pair of stairs , into a gloomy , shabby , skylighted apartment . When he entered he saw two young females , sitting on the side of a very poorly furnished bed without curtains . On approaching , he found one of them in the agonies of death , supported bv the other , who was persuading her to take a hit of bread dipt
in spirits ; but the pale emaciated figure refused , saying in a feeble , languid voice , it would but contribute to prolong her misery , which she hoped was drawing to an end , and looking at the Doctor , she thus addressed him , You have come too late , Sir , I want not your assistance /* Here she fetched a deep sigh and dropped upon the bed , every
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), March 2, 1806, page 130, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1722/page/18/
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