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REVIEW.
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Transcript
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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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I would not give thy shining locks For regal ermine ' s pride ; I would not give thy tender voice For music ' s flowing tide !
And for the wealth of India ' s gold , For all it could ; impart ; For monarch's po ^' r , or monarch ' s throne , I w 6 uld not give thy heart !
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REVIEW .
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4 t stlla pl £ 4 s ? d to praise , yet not afraid toblamr . * Pop * *
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Art . I . —A new and appropriate System of Education for the Labouriiig People ; elucidated and explained , according to the Plan which has been established for the Religious and Moral Instruction of Male and Female Children ^ admitted into the Free School , No . 19 , Orchard Street , in the City of Westminster : containing an Exposition of the nature and importance of the design , as it respects the general interests of the Community , Kc . He' By P . Colquhoiin , L . L . D * Hatchard . 1806- 2 s . 6 d .
The improvements of our age have been so numerous and so rapid , that it would have been truly surprising , if our mode of communicating ittstimction to the labouring people , had notbeen ameliorated by the general taste . It was not in the nature of things , that a system so defective should have retained all its imperfections in the midst of Universal reform ; accordingly , a few years since an
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vol . n * 3 E
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THE SUMMARY OF HUMAN CONSOLATION . Nor prayers nor tears can human ills prevent % From these no refuge like a life well spent : j $ iit if Religion can the mind engage ^ Her balm shall many a rising pang assuage ^ The present prospect gild with cheering light , And hope supply to make the future bright . W . H . R ,
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Colquhonrfs System of Education . 38 ,
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individual till then unknown , and by no means opulent , undertook theboldand patriotic task of establishing one differing essentially from any of those in use ; and rested his own fortune as well as the success of the systenr , upon his ability to triumph over the whole of those yariaus prejudices ^ which oppose innovations of every kind , however beneficial their objects -
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1807, page 381, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2382/page/41/
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