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RELIGIOUS, AND POLITICO-RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE.
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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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every branch of literature , yet he deli >\ hted n © t in a vain display of his acqu r Tiicnts but was anxious only to maire his abilities ireful both to himself and others . Ke was snatched away
from his admiring friends by a rapid and violent di order , at that period of life when from the strength of his constitution aided by temperance , they had promised themselves a long enjoy-. jtient of the benefit of his virtue .. " March 16 , in consequent of L ^ ing
crashed by a waggon , Mr K . YDD WAKE , who was convicted in 179 6 , as it has been thought by many , on insufficient evidence , upon a charge of insulting the King on his way to the Parliament His sentence wa very severe and generally so considered at the time . He was " imprisoned and kept to hard labour in Gloucester Gaol for five years , and to stand once in the pillory . " To mitigate this sentence would have been a graceful act of prerogative , as the offence cha ged was against the royal person , but the ministry o £ rhat day do not appear to have recommended mercy , and the whole penal y was exacted . Mr . K . W . after his enlargement , published some account of the transaction for which he was
accused and of his sufferings in prison . On Sunday , the 22 nd of March , at Newbury in Berkshire , in the ai * t year of hi- ; age , after a long ., lingering , and painful illne s , which he bore with the most exemplary fortitude , with that resignation and patient submission to the Almighty disposer of events , which
dignify the Christian , and adorn human nature , Mr WILLIAM GR . 1 GG , youngest Son of Mr . Samuel Grigg , of that pLice . A youth of unsullied integrity , possessed of the most amiable , placid , and benevolent disposition . In him were seen piety towards God , and good-will towards men , inseparably united . A most affectionate and
dutiful son , a faithful and sincere friend , a social and an agreeable companion . Religious without enthusiasm , of btrict
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R EMGIOUS . UNITARIAN FCTND . —The menil > crs , of this society will p lease to take notice , that the lVhit 5 u < : ti . h > . Kolf-Yejriy
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virtue , and unaffected Christian piety . With these qualities his end t ^ r'Tihiated in peace , and his death was serene and happy . He sleeps in Je us . and a blecsed and glorious immortality awaits him . The remembrance of his worth , will cause the eyes of hi- , affii ^ ted relative s to stream with the tears of love i . » . nd
sorrow , and his loss will be severely felt and deeply regretted by al who had the happiness of sharing his acquaintance . Reader ! whoever thou art ! reflect
on him ! Mark the perfect man , and behold the upright , for the end of that man is peace . S . April zi , at Drapers-hall , London ,
the Rev . GEORGE WALKER , late ¦ I > ^ w of Waventree in Lancashire , F . R . S . and President of the Literary Society at Manchester , and formerly Minister of a congregation of Protestant Dissenters at Nottingham .
Of tHis gentleman we hope to give some further account , in a future Number . At Paris . M . De LALANDE , the celebrated French Astronomer , in the 77 th year of his age . In the year 1788 , one year before the
commencement of the French Revolution , M . dc Lalande re-published his joiirney through Italy , in which he quotes some elegant Italian Stanzas which had been extant a number of years , that are predictive of a gvc ; t Prince who should come from beyond the Alps and restore Italy to her former rank among die
nations . M . De LOLME author of the celebrated work on tfce Constitution of England , died a few months since in one of tlieTmost retired pats of Switzerland , to whichhewithdrew fromEngland
about fire or six years ago . The house he inhabited in the village of Swen , which was last summer visited by a dreadful fall of part of a neighbouring mountain , and a rapid inundation , was swept away about s ^ x weeks after his decease , with near 2 , 00 inhabitants .
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Mating will be omitted the present year , and that the annual Sermon will bepreachedou Wednesday the a 1 st or Oct . Application is' interickcl to be iUa . de to
Religious, And Politico-Religious Intelligence.
RELIGIOUS , AND POLITICO-RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE .
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» Oi .. < 1 . ti Q
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BcUgious Intelligence . 211
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1807, page 217, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2379/page/49/
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