On this page
-
Text (7)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Untitled Article
the only just prm < ap * es of opposition to a faithless tyrant—by their fierce opposition to religious liberty—and , above all * by their tame and base unconditional submission to Charles II . who was bred in the school of hypocrisy and profligacy * and who even went beyond the lessons of his education * , . ( To be continued . )
Untitled Article
his fish at a high rate ; but this butcher ' s son will hold over flesh , to get money thereby . "
Untitled Article
No . CCXIV . Cardinal Wolsey . ^ W Amongst the praises bestowed upon olsey , let us not forget ( says Jortin , referring to Luther ' s Table-Talk ) "lose of a certain Zany , who seems to tore played his part very well :
In England was a cardinal , the son of a butcher , ( he means Wolsey ) C ^ K ning whom a knavish fool said , ^ od be praised , that we have got such cardinal : wheh he cometh to be rope , may freely eat flesh in Lent JM on forbidden days ; for St . Peter in ? * J sher ~ man , and he forbad eat" *<* flesh , to thte end he might sell
Untitled Article
No . CCXIIL A Kemble-Pipe In the county of Herefordshire the people have by tradition an account of what is called " a Kemble Pipe , " meaning the last one smoked at a
sitting : — -the story alludes to a man of that name , who , in the cruel persecution under that merciless bigot , Queen Mary , being condemned for heresy—in his walk of some miles from the prison to the stake , amidst a crowd of weeping friends , with the tranquillity and fortitude of a primitive martyr smoked a pipe of tobacco I
Untitled Article
tLDA NINGS ; OR , SELECTIONS ABfI > R EFLECTIONS MADE IN A COURSE OF GENERAL READING . No , CCXIL
u Mumpsimus "— New Siwnpsitnus " An old priest ( says Camdeh ) always i * ead in his portass [ breviary ]
mumpsimiis domine for sumpstmus ; whereof when he was admonished , he said , that he had now used mnmpsirnus thirty years , and would not leave his old mumptimus for their new sumpnmus *
Untitled Article
GlewliftpSi 165
Untitled Article
No . CCXV . Lupanthropieii I was credibly informed by a gentleman of Dantzic ( says Sir John Reresby , in his Travels , 1657 ) , that in some parts of Prussia the peasants will
ordinarily go into the vast woods , there fancy themselves to be wolves , prey upon raw flesh for some months , go upon all fours , and fly from the sight of man ; whether from frenzy , or that they were actually ± ransformed * said he , is doubted , which would
appear more ridiculous , had not some Greek authors written long since of * this kind of metamorphosis * calling it Lupanthropia , from beiag sometimes man , sometimes wolves 5 and that we know Nebuchadnezzar ate grass with beasts for some time . 8 vo . 1813 . p * 1414
Untitled Article
No . CCXVIL Etymology of Libel . It was a new bat witty Etymfc * loffie , which the Lord Chancelloutf
St . Albans ( at Star . Cha . i \\ th 6 cause of the Nottingham JLibel ) gav 6 of a ifbely ' that it was derived of si lie forged at home , and a bell to ring it up and dowhe the country . Holy Table , Name ahd Thingt 1657 * p . 1-
Untitled Article
N ( k CCXVL Mahometan Calvinism * And one of them shall say * Verily I had an intimate friend while I lived
m the world , who said unto me , Art thou one of those who assertest the truth of the resurrection ? After we shall be dead and reduced to dust and bones , shall we surely be judged ? Then he shall say to his companions ^ Will ye look down ? and he shall look
down , and shall see him in the midst of hell : and he shall say unto him * By God , it wanted little but thou hadst drawn me into ruin , and had it not been for the grace of my Lord * I had surely been one of those who have been delivered up to eternal tor * menti Sale ' s Koran , V . iL p . 31 O #
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), March 2, 1815, page 165, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1758/page/37/
-