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OBITUARY.
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Untitled Article
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Untitled Article
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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.
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Obituary.
OBITUARY .
Untitled Article
Sir , As you have in your last and former numbers , given an account of Dr . Percy , I have thought it not unhkuly that your readers might be gratified with the following sketch of the character of his amiable but short-lived
successor , drawn up by his intimate friend Dr . Stock , and communicated to me by a near relation of the d < ceased . I am , Sir , very respectfully , V . F .
Some Account of the Life and Character of the Rev . George " Ball , D . D . late Bishop of Dromore in Ireland . To pay a just tribute of praise to departed virtue , is not only an
amiable principle of our nature , but a duty which we owe to the living , insetting before them examples worthy of imitation , particularly when such examples may be considered as having a direct
and immediate influence upon the liberal youth of the rising age , who are justly esteemed among the fairest hopes and most solid supports of a nation . Of this description was the late excellent Bishop of Dromore , whose
character well deserves a more lasting memorial than the following short account can bestow , yet even here will be found some qualities
and virtues that may excite an ingenuous mind to laudable exertion . He was born in Northumberland , of a respectable family , © f whom some were men of learning and ability * His father was
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many years rector of the parisk of Earsden , one of his brothers was a fellow of Cambridge , and the celebrated Brown , who answered Shaftesbury , was nearly related to him . Having received the first rudiments of classical education
under an able master , he gave so early a promise of capacity , that his friends directed his views to the University of Dublin , whose fellowships are an honourable and independent provision for life ; accordingly , in the year 17 fOf he
was admitted a student , with very flattering prospects of success . In the undergraduate course , he obtained the highest academic honours , to which was added a character of diligence , sobriety and good conduct so exemplary , that
he was held in vfery general esteem ; how much he was esteemed by the Board , consisting of the Provost and senior Fellows of the college , we have a striking instance , in their dispensing with a general regulation in his favour , and in con *
fernng upon him emoluments intended exclusively for the natives of Ireland . And he proved himself worthy of this unusual grace ; for some time after , he became a candidate for a fellowship , and succeeded j by excellent answering , on his first trial . This station he
filled above twenty-three years the greatest part of the time , as tutor , in which capacity there certainly never was one at any period , superior to him , for fidelity , £ are and judgment , in managing his pupils . He possessed a clearness and precision , in his manner of instructing , which always sa-
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( 18 b )
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), March 2, 1812, page 186, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1746/page/50/
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