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OBITUARY.
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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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right in their own eyes ; -but it is evident , one principle having united Russia , Denmark , and trance , there was no al-Yernative for Sweden , but to unite with £ hem , and renounce " its connection with Great Britain , or to fight for its independence . The &tng of Sweden has
imitated France in its conscription . He Bas ordered a vast Jevy of troops , from all between the ages of eighteen and tMrty-five : and , if he possesses the hearts of his subjects , it cannot be doubted , that such a force is capable of re&btrjigevery effort of the invaders . But it cannot be forgotten , that he has beea the
rashest t > f all the sovereigns , who have endeavoured to resist the progress of French principles , and the very resistance has introduced the knowledge of them amongst his subjects . He lost Pomerania without any regret on the part of the people ; and the contest , in which he is now engaged , will , it is to
Obituary.
OBITUARY .
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March 12 . Aged 53 . At West-Ham , of which he was vicar , GEORGE GREGORY , D . D . F . S . A . Domestic Chaplain to the Bishop of LlandafF , Prebendary of St , Paul's , Lecturer of St . Giles , Crif > p lega , te , and for some time Preacher at the Foundling Hospital . Dr . Gregory was born in I 754 > of a . family which had been formeily settled in North Britain . His father •* an
elegant scholar /* and a clergyman of the church of Ireland , died when his son was only 1 % years of aee . His mother , a native of Lancashire , now removed to JLiverpool , and placed her ton under a schoolmaster , of the name of Holden , "who was reputed an excellent
mathematician , and by whom his scholar " touch distirfguished for his proficiency in learning . ** He is said , at this period , to have w dedicated to study two-thirds of bis time ; " an attention to improveinert which probably vciy few schoolboys have displayed , even of tho e who have afterwards attained to eminence .
I Jh > mother , however , designed him for trade , till- " convinced , at length , of his invincible repugnance to her plan , she cheerfully acquiesced in his choice of the clerical profession , which appeared tu km most congenial to his literary pur-
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be feared , shake his throne to its very foundations . It is not to be omitted , in our reflections on the grand events * which have passed , an ( J are now passing * before our eyes , that the Protestant have been equal sufferers with the Popish powers .
We cannot conclude our report f this months without lamenting the suicides that have tak-ea place in it . Our country is supposed to be more notorious for this species of cowardice than any other . The unfortunate persons who labour under such a degree of fear are to be pitied , and the jury kindly treats them
as insane : but a true regard for the precepts of the -gospel , and the bearing in mind of the sufferings of Christ aijd his apostles , will be a great preservative against the danger of falling into the melancholy despondency , which ttxakes a man his own assassin .
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suits . Besides his classical studies , he passed two years in the University of Edinburgh , where he made the mathematical and physical sciences his great object of attainment . " In 1778 , he was ordained to " the curacy of . Liverpool , the laborious duties of which he
continued to perform as long as he resided in that place . " Here he had the advantage of an acquaintance with the learned Gilbert Wakefield , who , for abdut nine months , served a curacy in that town , before he became the classical tutor in the academy at Warrington . He mentions his friend Dr . Gregory"" ( Mem . 1 , 17 & ) as one of t « vvo honourable exceptions among * ' the Church of England
clergy in Liverpool , " who were then in a very ** low condition , with respect to dignity of character , bpth in manners and in learning . " On Mr . Wakefield ' s
removal to W&rrington , their intimacy was strengthened by a correspondence which extended through nearly the seven following years ,. Dr . Gregory kindly communicatecj the letters of his friend to the J . ditors of Wakefield ' s Memoiis >
in the first volume of which . they have been published . It may be added , upon good authority , that he was the writer of the Character of Mr . Wal * dfreld , by %
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*> t& ' * Obituary *
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iyeorfft Qr ? vory <> -D * D » -f- S . A * :
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1808, page 218, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2391/page/46/
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