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tnmy ;•* ahd a course on cbenviStry had Weiv given more than once , by Mr . Matthew Turner , an eminent apothecary and chemist inXiverpool , who was the first that grppare d in the large way for sale , hd introduced into general
practiced' the sulp huric aether . The firnnei * course must necessarily have been very imperfect ; and tKbuVh to the latter the
philosophfeal world is under great obli * Rations , as it gave Dt . Priestley his first ideas on the . subject of dhennU isti ^ y , ( Mem . p . 56 ) , yet the me *; circumstance of Mr . Turner ' s tJis *
frfdft residence and various engagein&ftis required that the subject should be conctens ^ d into as few lectures as possible , and prevented frequent repetitions . It was therefore a great advantage whicji the students for many years enjoyed , of having these lectures regularly
repeated , * n alternate sessions , by a gentleman fully acquainted with iis subject , to whom , and to his colleague , Dr . Enfield , may Be applied , witb great justicc , what Johnson has said of Goldsmith , —
** JtiiJiil ieti git quod orn&vit . The coiirse of anatomy consisted of fifteen or tvventy lectures , that 5 ^ t tli ^ iwistr \ r of nbout thirtv . For ttte * Mk& of tnose who attended the former he drew up a * Sketch of the Animal Economy / ' which he
afterwards translated into elegant "Latin , witb a paiticular view to lead btudents in medicine to pay a corripet ^ Ltftirf "A vie ; for the latter , he published " Heads of £ b * 9 !! W&i !> ' vAiJ ^ amwwi *
WfSMPWWjW but now ^^ ffl ^^ !^^^ * W ^ H ^^ HliMtttaa . ^^ ni v ^ vVt ui ^ VU rarnaps' tins may be as proper
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a plact ^ as ^ nfW' ^ mk ^ mE i ' fjfer the 'd ^ tjitW WW ' B ^ l hold poster , Wi % ^ ) OT ^ C cdisif 61 a ; ttempts < vi ? re made to " ^ fgage a foreigner j u the capacity of father of the modern lahgtik ^ ie ^ - ^ a 1 SI . Fantin la Tourj a M . Le Macttre , alias Mara ' , * , and a Mr ; Lewis
Guery ; but no ^ e , c * f them cqnn - hued for any | en ^ tV f ) f ti rrie . At length , the Trustees ieSoly ^ cf to eti - gage Mr . Huline , an Ert ^ Iish gentlernan , who had resid ^^ Ydadf vifhoQojn tin lied td t ^ ch pxetieh 9 ant ! also feqeing ^ to sut ^ as cho ^ e it , till the cfofse fc >? the acatlfeteyw It is- belidved ttlAt he still resides in
Warrington . The business of the acj&deiny went on from 1 ^ 74 t ^ i ? 7 8 , % two tutore continuing 16 , perform the work of thi * efc f tf 1 ft a 3 ^ a s- beefi mentioned , in p . 17 ^ l > ii A % i ii found it necessity t ^ ft ^ nr tfii
* There ia ^ rcat reak&ii ' ui ^ Uijii that thift was the infamdus Maratr > tfht associate of Robespierrq * and the victim of Charlotte C 6 rda » y . 3 ( t t $ kpowjti ( tha ^ he was in England about this tfme , and published in Lonclon a Milo ^ o ^ i ^ Essay on the conncctl&i between tht
Body and the Soul of M ^ vartd > sdmsr where in the country j ^ 3 d a prinqipaJ hand in prinfiner , in quarto , a work bf considerable abSftt ^ totfC hf * ^ aiti # tendency , cntid 6 d ^ ^» Chains of fhvtfyr Mara , as his name is spelt ia the Mi % utes of the Acadefny ,, very ^ oon kft Warrlrigtorl , whence he went to Ox fora , robbed the Ashmolcan Museum ,
escaped to Ireland , wasi apprehended in fiSjyi ^ iri ^ an < Lcojryjct ^ iJgL Q 3 $ 0 < undfcr the name of 1-c Maitfe , ahdn * en . fenced t % tha I ^ ulkn . 94 f | W ^ M * Here ^ he o fliis old | 5 u ^ il « at WairilBgtoQ , a native of Bristol , saw him . He wa « afterwards a Bookseller in Bxjstol and failed ; was con iftfedM th ^ goal of
tliat ^ tty , but refused by ' \\ m Society J ^ > L * l ? f ^^ lfi ^^ ^ fl ? - for mall sums . One ^ jg . ' ^^ b hS ^^ J ^^ BtblvgOB ^ a ^ i ^ aftii « a « miitt ^^ 9 * Wjitionai Assembly ia Paps la i 79 2 '
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57 ^ Historical AectmAt t 1 ie Wlatmgh > k- # Mht } t $ *
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1813, page 578, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2432/page/18/
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