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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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attend every Sunday , or twice on the same day , the assistance of other volunteers in this work of charity Is earnestly invited , especially as there is every prospect of as great an increase to the school as our place of
meeting will accommodate . If this should meet the eye of any of the youth of either sex , who are disposed to co-operate in this act of benevolence , their services will be thankfully received . The school commences at half-past nine in the morning , and at three in the afternoon .
* I beg also to observe , that the funds which were formed for the outfit of the school , by means of the charitable donations of certain kind individuals , are now exhausted , and that small annual subscriptions , or trifling donations , will be thankfully received , and faithfully applied to the
purposes of this important object . J am pleased to find , and glad to " acknowledge , that the idea which I suggested to jthe committee , and on which they very readily permitted me to act , has been partially , and , I have no doubt , will yet be more fully realized . I thought that the
opening of a place of worship in the district , and the establishment of a Sunday-school , would facilitate my intercourse with the poor . This has already led me to call on those , whom , otherwise I might not have seen , and has given me easy access where I ttiight , without it , have found some difficulty . Calling , as a visitor , to
inquire after the children , in case of their non-attendance , &c , has invariably been well received by the parents , and in some cases with much apparent gratitude . This alone , as the school increases , will find mean introduction to different families , and will lead to a knowledge of their circumstances and moral condition .
As , however , I wish , on this subject , to deal neither in fiction nor conjecture , I will take the liberty of simply stating one fact of recent occurrence , out of several that I mi ght name . This may enable your readers to
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judge whether I am . correct- in my suggestion as to the plan adopted . In the earlypart of last week I called at a house to inquire after two of the Sunday scholars , who had not attended for the two preceding Sundays . 1 saw the father , who said
their mother ' s illness had prevented their attendance . I inquirecE ~ into ~ the nature of her complaint , and said I should be glad to see her , if it were agreeable to him . He replied , she had been ill some time , but lie believed was now very near the end of her sufferings ; yet he seemed not to wish me to see her . I then asked
what , in her weak state , she could make use of , and offered to bring her a little arrow-root the next day . He coldly thanked me , and I retired . The next iHorning I werIK , accompa ^ - nied by my daughter , and saw the poor creature , . who expressed gratitude for my attention ; and after
conversing with her , and praying by her , my daughter having—promised- 40 bring her some articles of linen , of which she seemed much in want , we left her . When we again called with the promised parcel , we found a girl , of about sixteen years of age , sitting before a fire-place ,
looking very disconsolate , and , on my hesitating , she said , pointing with her finger to a small inside room , " Walk in , sir , there is my poor dear mother , her sufferings are now ended ; " and she burst into a flood of tears . On my attempting to console her , she said , ' ¦ * O , sir , I
am not sorry that my dear mother is released ; but if it had pleased God to take me with her , I should be happy . " On my inquiring for her f ^ keT ( jko ^ 4 Ji 0 jK ^ gPl % e . put )_ kit she scarcely knew where .
Perceiving her shivering with cold , as well as overwhelmed with grief , my daughter asked her why she did not light a fire and attend to the other children ? She replied , «« O , Miss ! during my mother ' s illness , we have burnt all our coals , ' and have no money to buy any j nor have we any
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iMb Z UNITARIAN CHRONICLE .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 1, 1832, page 242, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1825/page/2/
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