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• one , became the friend of the other . To these when we add Dr . Jcbb , Dr . Heberden , Baron Maseres
Mr . Wyvill , Mr . Dodson , we may judge of the excellence of Sir . Lindsey ' s character , by that of the admirable persons with whom lie was connected . At-the house
i ) f Baron Maseres , at Rycgate , in the year of 18 O 1 , he was first seized with a paralytic affection , which gradually diminished his powers till his death . But . his si ! ind was but little impaired till within a year of his death , and to his last moments he retained
his memory and attachment to sacred truth . The scriptures were daily read to him , which never failed to call forth some pertinent remark , and his countenance
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beamed with delight on the renewal of those impressions , which were always the dearest to his
heart . * ' The death of such k man could not t > ut be sensibly felt . In every Unitarian church we believe in England , it was noticed with appropriate marks of respect for his
memory , and several sermons were published upon the occasion * He died on the 3 d of November , 1808 , and was carried to Bunhili j&elds , on the 11 th , privately , according to his own directions ; but several of his friends and his
congregation came to the ground and united in that service , which however melancholy , teaches them in their sorrow to indulge the certain hopes of future happiness .
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BHIEF MEMOIR . OF THE REV . SAMUEL SAY .
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We have be ^ n favoured by the lundness of the Rev . Samuel Say Toms , of Framlingham , with a folio volume of original MS .
papers and letters , formerly belonging to his ancestor Mr . Samuel Say , with permission to extract iind use them , at discretion , for the Monthly Repository . The collection consists chiefly of letters to and from Mr . Say : his
correspondents were men of the first eminence amongst the Dissenters of his day . Some notes are occasionally added by the present owner of the papers . Of Mr . Say ' s letters , some originals , but more copies are preserved ; of those of his friends the originals ,
* . Of Mr . Gyles Say , a short account is given in Palmer ' s Noncon . Mem . vol . i * . p . ^ 79 » a 8 o . 3 ndecL A further account is contained in a letter of Mr , Samuel Say ' s , written it should seem for Dr . Calamy ' s use , but too late- to be inserted ixthis account of the ejected ministers , which wiXL be hereafter copied into this worfc
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which makes them doubly valuable , are pasted into the volume . Our selections will be given monthly , under the head of Thr Say Papers * By way of introduction , we shall begin with a Brief Memoir of Mr . Say . Mr . Samuel Say , was the second son of M-r . Gyles-Say , 'wire was ejected by the act of
uniformity , 1662 , from the living , of St . Michael's , in the town of Southampton ; and after the dispensing power assumed by king James II , which set the nonconformists at liberty was pastor of a dissenting congregation at Gucstwick ^ in Norfolk , to the time of his death , April 7 , l (> 92 * .
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Brief Memoir of the Rev . Samutl Say * J 6 >
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Jan. 2, 1809, page 5, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1732/page/5/
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