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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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are ? t an end , arid it seems that every thing is to be \ einured fo ; the regaining of ? I e c' -n utTL'd p . ' ovin . es The efforts "will ? however , prove ineffectual , but the , * ¦ : i , - - , A -. do not appear to be Strong enough to nrake any great ;• d - vancts thi- , suirmcr , The Tu ks have been succc .-sfnl in -another quarter ; for Egypt , ov ^ r which they exc . rc . sed only a doubtful authority , see si . to he entirely in their hant . s , and it must be a loivr tim - ' . befar-. tie IVtam luks can recover from the effects of the late barbarous
massacre . The few who escaped have taken refuge in Upper Egypt but the Turkish governor eems to be of a very different disposition from his predecessors , and he wilh hardly give them an opportunity of recruiting their strength . No Vvar , as yet- between this country
and A v p , •?¦ a Every month of peace is a joyful acquisition , and we hope that we shall every month announce the same good news . e cann t see any good reason' for the two nations fighting , though . lausibie preten . es in abundance wi . l be found on eithtr side , whenever they choose to unsheathe the ¦ sword . Bloodshed there may be in abundance ; but the hard blows given
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Camhridgcs h ire an d I An co In a hue JJtiitarian Association . This association was held on Wednesday and Thursday , " the 17 th and 18 th of July , atSoham , in vJambridgeshire , in the Unit . iian Chapel lately ereeted in that \ illage . The services commenced on Wednesday evening , when Mr . JL . Kirby , lately of Creek , in Norfolk , now of Lutton ^ Lincolnshire , re . d the scriptures and prayed : and Mt . Aspland preached from Nehemiah iv . 19 , 2 . 0 , on the dilficulrie ^ Unitarians ha e to overcoine , and the necessity of uaion and co-operation n order to success . ? On the Thursday morning , two sermons were delivered the firi t by Mr . Plaits , of Boston , from John xvii . 3 , in which the nature -and design of Christ unity were described and the second ty Mr . Bennett , of Ditch ing ^ Sussex , from Acts xxiv , 14 , shewing that JJnAtarianism comprises all the
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will not e s tablish the rectit ude of the proceedings of either party . 1 n America as well as England , there area ^ ffici ' ent number of malignant spirits to ^ ir up contention , who care not for the life of man , or the ruin they occasion to the peaceful manufacturer , the agricultvn ' isr and the merchant .
The Spanish Colonies present a very interest ng appearance . The Ca accas and B jenos ^ yres , declared independent of the mother country arc making laws for the regulation of their
respective-states . Nomina ly , they acknowledge Ferdinand as their sovereign but as they have a national representation his power must be limited , in the Caraccas they have a singular character , M Iran it a , a general , born in the provincc of Mexico , and who has gained g eai experience by histravels in Europe . By the addresses that haVe been made to
him in the Caraccas , it appears that he is di p f ayin < r his talents in these half civilized regions ; arid perhaps we may see him gra ping at the sceptre . Of Mexico and Peru we know scarcely any thing-, yet th se countries will probably soon follow the example of the other colonies .
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principles , consolations and motives which render religion important and desirable . In the evening of the same day , Mr . Aspland preached from Luke xxii . 47 : the obiect ot the sermon was to prove thjt there was nothing in our Lord ' s Lst sufferings inconsistent wth his being a man , that there was much
in them inconsistent with hi > being any other than a man , and tnat his whole carriage and conduct throug hout them prove him to h ;^ ve been a righteous man , a true prophet and the Christ ; in conclusion , the example of Christ in his sufferings was recommended to m " " tion , on the ground that such as possess hLs viitue will share in the gW of h ! s reward . Between the services on this
day , the members of the association and their fncnds dined together , to the number of 33 , and the -afternoon was occupied in conference on top ics connected with the object of the meeting . The public services were well attended ,
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508 TntdUgcnce . —Cambridgeshire mid Lincolnshire Association
Intelligence.
INTELLIGENCE .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Aug. 2, 1811, page 508, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2419/page/60/
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