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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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t&ft ^ V'flfe m& $$$ tne c ^ df evil . He ttfwhbjtai he fpves tk&frmffifii will sometimes meet with evjl , ' sonj ^ tinges wjth good , but he tp whom £ e
gives son ow will be always exposed to injuries . Djre calamity wil } persecute hitti wjiije } ie remams uppn the earth . He will pass through life , honoured neither bjr ^ pds nor nie pV ^ his has tiie appearance pf aij amplification of the 8 th Vers % 'bftheixxYth Psalm : * In the
hand of tnfc Lord there is a cup and the wjne is f & ! , it is full of mixture ; and he pou / r ^ tfy out pf the same , but the dregs therebfailtlie wicked of the earth shall wrltji ^ tKfcjii b \ it ^ and drinli them . * V £ . t ^ V j Nowy ^ pw ^ n ihe word mixture occur ^ ' iii both 'passages , they are not even } is
jiaYaftJei ^ ' tritichless there any reason t # suppose that Homer imitated the lft&fcn : ' trfn e mixture in Homer is a temperin g x ) f thecup of adversity ; the mixed wMe ofHebrew poetry is wine drugged or * spiced , so as more speedily to make the nations drunk with the fury of
Jehpvafr ; the one mixture dilutes , the other strengthens . That part of the work , which is cpmprfeheiided in the six sections which we h&v ' e enumerated above , appears to have beett executed with great care and repeated perusals of Homer . Scarcely any thing is . rimittjed , as far as we have observe ^ , whiGh belongs tp the picture of this age . ' It ; will be read with pleasure W those Who wish to know what were
the manners and sentiments of these early- times ; and will be very useful to ttoe $ i » dent , b y supplying him with an mtelligible explanation of many terms , which $ r& vidry falsely or inadequately e ^ p liiitt ^ d \ n the lexicons . The benefit of'the letter cla , sa wpul < jl be much proiiipted by a stiH mPre frequent introduction of the Greek term at the foot of the page , the addition ot a Greek index , and the reform of the typography , which is inaccurate beyond any-thing that we remember to have seen .
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Aut . V . —A Sermon preached at th $ Chapel in Hanover Square , Newcastle-Aipon-Tyne * March ^ 25 , 1827 , fo fingr t ^ he last / Jay of the Century wit y , z '{ # Dedication tv the Public , $ Mship < £ W * By William Tur . r FttEVe ^ ceH < ettt au thW pf $ iB discourse bedbh ^ s y to > a school of pi- ^ hfers who tijtttt *? > ^ Iiq * ^ o ^ on ^ bity ah « ttW !) be ne ^ lecMNf " giving ^ ijlife vgync ^ fc } #
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$ mwm $ mbMbrm in ^ t ^ t which m * ^' cHvV ^^ W ^ atibn ^ ith ^ un- flPt ^' aW ^ iii ojc&i& ^ df rare oc « te 8 iic ! i ii '^ p-eriajnently to a Dissenting ^ Gpngrfeatrois the centenary o ^ the ' fmMffl 6 n / of tMr place of Worship . r e ^ n ^ M' vicissit ude Pf thk World at large and pf ihe families and
individuals who conippse tpe religious community , the femembrance of departed worth , the progress of religious knowledge and liberty , the continued enjoyment of spiritual privileges not always accompanied by th g faithful improvement of them , and a multitude of other topics , offer themselves so readily , that the preacher ' s difficulty lies rather in selection than in invention . Mr . Turner ' s
text , Heb . x . 32 , 33 , ** Call to remembrance the former days , " &c , leads him first to consider briefly the principles of Nonconformity , and to contrast the condition of the Puritans in fbritter days with that of Protestant Dissenters lit these happier times ^ afocMhkri to etiter on some topics more imiiiediately concerning the pastor ^ nd hti floo ^ jr '
*'• 1 have been led , " he dt ^ rves , "hy the present occasion" t 6 ¥ ecur' % tht ? old Trust-deeds arid ty \ $ r &c 6 r&fbf the congregationy knaa ^ 'ThWebashed ' front one to anothej , aiid ^ b ^ ei'Vedtm almost entire change * of Barnes atid families which have ap () eiiiet -t ip Ije ^ f hiffuence during the ^ eVetar itfteiVate of sibbut foi ^ ty years ^ acli , whfch haVeela ^ d between the dateS' of bfile of thiese ins ^
trameritoiis arid ano ^ Hey , T hjiVenot been able to ke ^ mysefr f * rbm exclaiming with the Rpyal Preichek , * ^ ne ^ generation pagseth a \ vay [ ahdi another getieratioti cPiheth /*' "Now , surely , these are cir ^ uoa - ' stances which may well make us seridua and thoughtful . May we wof iril ^ pv ^ the subject by carrying forward- ' ' ^ fr thoughts to some particular consecjttent ^ etf which naturally follow from such ^ fluc ^ tuatin ^ state of things ? ' Haf n ^ t ^ u ' bli reflections assist' us better W'ifc ^ !( < Sur part in our own generation ^ JA 1 nd ptypUM us for tie time when we also nrUdt *' $$ & ]
out of it , and give place t ( V the'& 6 tii # toP tion that shall follow ? Will theV not teach its tl ^ at there is only one ' thin ^ thlitf is permanent and immpt"tar , Faitfi ah < H I » V # and airGpodness ? tf in o 1 xr ' $ - > neratipn we strive ' to cultivate { fife " W ( r $ Mi be safe against the injuries pY ' Trtite ! and eye , n ihe sirok ^ of dtttfti Itself . '» W # shall be' sVe , fnrou ^ K' tW ble ^ Biuc' ' of Gbft by Christ Jesus , in tHd ^ eVersloii o ^ a liappy intiinoHaKtyr EV ^ ry tiling eteet ¦¦\ , \ l \)\ is . ' ii'l- ' .-i . 'i i *! ' ! . ^ , ^ -. , - ¦ ¦ «' , ¦ ¦¦ v ' - ' t ' y ' * ^ ^ <> i 1 ) ' * ' ' imtetiiw { ¦ ' ' ""¦ ¦
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Critidai Notice . gjfi
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1827, page 915, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1803/page/59/
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