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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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loft * attempted to comfort him , and by -giving him money to buy another , alleviated his sorrow ; still he , had lost his own cow , and the tear continued to fall . Pursuing his jpucijey , Fenelon found the
very cow which was rfie object of so . much affliction ; and like the good shepherd , he himself drove it back before him in a dark night to the young man ' s cottage .
u This , ' * says the Cardinal de Maury , " is , perhaps the finest trait in Feneion ' s life . Woe to those who read it without being affected V " The virtues of
Fene-Jon , continues the cardinal , " give his history something oi the air or romance ; but his name will never die . To this moment , the Flemminders bless his memory , and Call him the Gaud Archbishop . "
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Many of Fenelon ' s relations were happy imitators of his virtues . The Abjbe de Fenelon may be particularly mentioned . After a length of years , uniformly devoted to religion and virtue , he retired to Paris , and spent the remainder of his life in endeavouring to procurt ; a religious and moral
educa-$ ion , for the poor Savoyard boys , with whom , under the ancient government , Paris abounded . Allowing hiipself no more than was nece $ sary for his mere subsistence , he contrived , with the remaining part of his income , and with the
contributions which he raised upon his friends , to accomplish this edifying work . The horrors of the Revolution forced bin } from it , and he ^ retjred % 6 tfye delightful solitude of , t ^ ' l ^ o ^ l f { Stf Valerian . He was ^ y ^ u ^ tl to his retreat , and CQnveyed f ; o the prison of the Lux-
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embourg ; he was then in his 80 th year . When this became public , all the little Savoyard boys assembled , and went in a body to the National Assembly : they loudly petitioned the Assembly for his liberty ; and offered that any num . ber of them should be constituted
prisoners in his stead , as hostages for his good conduct . This ,, for a time delayed his fate : hut a day was at length fixed for his execu * tion . One of the poor Savoyards , whom the abbe had instructed and
assisted , was at that time , turnkey of the prison of the Luxembourg . Perceiving his benefactor among the victims led out to execution , he sprang forward , and in
a state of distraction , strained him in his embiace and cried aloud . " My father : my father ! are you then going to die ! You , whose life has been an uniform act of
goodness !** Be comforted , " the abbe said to him , * death is not an evil to him , who can no longer do good . My dear child , your sensibility at this moment comforts my heart . Farewell , my friend ! farewell , Joseph ! Think
sometimes upon me . "—* Alas V answered the poor Savoyard , "I shall never forget you . ' The abbe ascended the fatal cart , with
sixty-eight other victims . He exhorted them , during the whole way , to sorrow for their sins , to confide in God , and to offer up to him , with resignation , the sacrifice of their lives . Having
arrived at the guillotine , he once more addressed them ; he exhorted them to form , with all their hearts , in an act of repentance for their sins ! all of them humbly inclined their heads ; hie pronounced over them the , words of absolution ; and continued to suggest to them
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Anecdotes of Fenelon and his family . 541
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? OI .. VII . 4 A
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1812, page 541, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1752/page/9/
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