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there is the serpent ' s tooth of scandal at her heel , and it requires all the energy of a Siddons , or the courage of her high-sou led and talented niece , to ' crush the reptile ere it deeply wound . ' Let but the stinging tongue choose a fitter subject for its venom , ' and we should see many who , with hearts glowing with the wish
to increase the happiness of others , and feeling a power within , which they have not courage to use , would come forward , freed from the goading restraint that the world ' s opinion is to them , and dedicating their talents , their virtues , to the improvement of their species , find one reward in the applause of a grateful public , and another , and far dearer , in the quiet of their own
approving . And now to return to our worthy archdeacon—may he continue to patronize an art , which we think one of the highest means for purifying our nature ; may he live to desire many another performance at the theatre , North Walsham ; * the Bottle Imp' again , if he chooses , seeing that its tendency throughout is to prove the consequent attendance of suffering on guilt , and that it carries with it a conviction that your * sin will be sure to find
you out . ' May his example be followed by many others of equally high standing , so that it shall cease to be a wonder and a scandal even to the editor of the Record , ' that such places are attended by such persons ; and may all who have the interest of the drama at heart unite to render it , by their example , their activity , and their continued pursuit in promoting its best interests , the means of increasing that virtue and happiness which is the aim and end of our being !
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Petition for Pdland . 409
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( To the Editor of the Monthly Repository . ) Bristol , 23 rd May , 1832 . Sir , —We have recently had among us the venerable Polish senator , Niemcewicz , the President of the Royal Society of Poland , designated in the last Edinburgh Review as the ' fellow-prisoner and worthy companion of Kosciusko / and one of that provisional
government ' by whose prudence it was hoped that external warfare and internal strife might be avoided . ' He embarked here for America , in the year 1797 , with the Polish patriot ; and his visit here has awakened a train of deeply interesting recollections in the hearts of the older friends of liberty among us . Your readers cannot have forgotten the eloquent discussion
of the affairs of Poland in the House of Commons , on the 18 th of April , introduced by Mr . Fergusson ; and though the report of it , as given in the daily journals , is meagre , enough was conveyed to excite the attention , and to cherish that deep feeling of commiseration , which must always attend the thought of Poland . In the ' Mirror of Parliament ' there U an exceedingly valuable report
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No . 66 . 2 G
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PETITION FOR POLAND .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1832, page 409, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1814/page/49/
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