On this page
- Departments (3)
-
Text (6)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
TO THE READER.
-
TO CORRESPONDENTS.
-
Untitled Article
-
Printed by C. and #!• • Bi^Knii MM Piil^y street.
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 Address to the Reader has been transferred to this place , for a reason connected with the Advertisements . . $ . .,. . A rogue of a friend , who knows our dislike of making alterations hi the manuscripts of our correspondents , has stolen a march upon us in his visit to the Copper Works at Harefield , and absolutely taken advantage of our ultra-beneficent pages to encourage the / gentle u ^ gentleuess of 5 aMingl rH o&reVelrt : fw 4 / dafi Wdre the
reader , that he is to be taken at his word as to his unskilfulness in the craft . Videri vuli bad angler , et est . ( He wishes to be thought a bad angler , and he is one ; as Martial said of the pauper , who affected to be able to afford a show of his poverty . ) Our friend is too good a poet to be a proper dilacerator of jaws . He only affects it out of an ultra-sympathy with the universal , —with the quicquid agunt homines ( whatever other men doj ; a very good principle , but in practice not thoroughly needful to a teacher of men ; otherwise such an one ought occasionally to tfteal a little , or stick people with bayonets , in order to keep alive a sense of his common
humanity . Since writing our article on the Queen and the Working Classes , we rejoice to , see that O'Connell has been invited to dine with a meeting of the latter ; and thai lie has accepted the invitation , in a letter full of his usual energy arid sound serise * The lovers of justice and thorough public spirit have also been delighted at seeing ; , the part taken with the many by the current number of the London antf We * tmingtcr Review , —a publication that has lately shewn itself more than ever full of materials for eloquent and masterly influence on the social mind . L . H . ¦
Untitled Article
We have unfortunately been obliged to delay Mr Scott ' s poem , * A Dream of Jsobe , * till bur next ? We have no recollection of the MS . mentioned by Mr G . H . ; but will inquire about it . . ;; ' ¦[ _ ,. _ We are obliged to Mr G ., and doUbt not that he expresses his real opinion ; but we do not feel authorised to give the world a criticism on a book which we have not seen . / ' ;;' - ¦ •¦ ' ¦ ••¦ Lines on the " Protestant Burial Ground at Rome , " the first opportunity * >^ , ,
It is qoly by one of those repeated accidents which baffle the will , that the rnetaphysical paper of our correspondent , L . D ., has been delayed . It will appear next month . We have great respect for his powers of mind , and from what we ddeJ 6 & !' him by letter , for his temper and disposition ; and should be sorry if he , thought u $ ; negligent . ,.. , ( ukl B fj ^* has undoubtedly a genuine poetical feeling , whidronJywflmt ^ feulti ^ aiioii ' V but we exhort him by no means to let the " course of his life" depend upon it . Poetry cannot command the necessaries of life , though it may add a mil lion-fold io its comforts . „ . . ¦ , . . . ' ..-. ¦ . . ¦ , . ,. . ,., ^ < ¦ .,,:, We are not able to avail ourselves of the communications of our fair correspondent , L / E ., or of the entertaining story of A . C . ' ^
Our Mend , VV . A . W ., is a thinking man , but he will not take pains to write a f publishabfo style . _ . . ; . - , : ¦•¦ '' Jichion ' a paper on Cemeteries will be inserted with great pleasure in our next . The feelings of A . B . are touching ; Dut may there riot be a little more danger than fee suspects in dwelling upon theim ? . ; . :.: * . 1 If our esteemed friend * M . C , of Devonport , had cultivated writing as much a » he has done the affections , and his ibVe of the writings of others , his pen Would have been of no mean " order . We doubt whether we ought to say this pabliclyi as lii « letter is marked private , but we have reasons for it thiit he ; woiil ^ j pardon ., Will he write to us ag « ui , and say that he do ^ s so ? We were delighted to hear of him and his , though sorry to come up < m the passage which so beautifully speaks 6 f the fitltle ** shadow that * steals between them and their Jprayers . " * r ; .-: v . > h . ¦ r
To The Reader.
TO THE READER .
To Correspondents.
TO CORRESPONDENTS .
Untitled Article
Ta RKADKfts of THp JlifpM | THi . y RKi » osiToijLV . -In consequence of No . I of the New Series being out of print , the publisher will feel obliged to subscribers vtbo will exchange No . I of the New Series for the current Number . ' ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ^' ¦' ¦ , = ¦• ¦ ; . ¦¦¦ ' '" ' ¦[¦ ni- . % ' ¦; . . ' - . - , !;¦ .: /; , j , ¦; , ' . . \ 'i ';; , . ,. .... - v-a , .. »
Printed By C. And #!• • Bi^Knii Mm Piil^Y Street.
Printed by C . and # !• • Bi ^ Knii MM Piil ^ y street .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 1, 1837, page unpag, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1837/page/72/
-