On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
sii y ^ his Lectures oo Chemistry , &c . &c . , i He takes credit to hin ^^ el / , ( 29 S ) for havingy ^ wjusn Vice , chancellor in 1 79 % < 4 \> y his vL gorous exertions , effected the ba ~ nishment of a very turbulent member of the University * on account
of'his disaffection to the ecclesiastical constitution of this country . " Attfciis distance of time ,, we shall not enier into the meiits of the
case , as it regards the accuser or the accused , —the learned and Wjprtjhy person in whose exile from Cambridge the Dean rejoices . We " vvijj only beg our readers to
mark the fact * that , by the acknowled&ment of Dr . Isaac Milixer Jhitaself , the Vice-chancellor ili ^ ?§ % ** acted in the double capaltiiy of procurerf and of judge :
** by his vigorous exertions he cf-Jxfled the banishment" of Mr . Fi * end ! His motives for speaking orifiis affair in bis Strictures on Dr . ^ Matshy may be shrewdly conjectured by somejwfeotrecollect th ^' ci- ' rcumstanccis of the trial .
u seerris to have been the singular lot of the President of QtieeVs College that ; " when Vi and •* Aivfien again Vice-chancel lor in ISiO , " he had to encounter the
opposition bf turbulent spirits and u outrageous offenders / ' Not being Dniversity men , we are perhaps more dispassionate observers arid hearers of what parses on tire banks of Cam and leis than the
inhabitants of those favoured spots . May we not therefore be
permit-41 1 ? he Tcawktw of thettntibiblical con . trovcrsy are fami ! larize 4 with italics and With tld ^ MAN I 5 A > 1 TAL 6 . - * ' 'f t ) r Kipling appeared as such in the process , ; , ; ^^^ , . ...
Untitled Article
te 4 iq him . that . m inordinate \ oy * of powsr * , 9 ^ ij ylulipio us display of awhority , ajp . unseasonable creation of new and obnoxiousr of . ficers * might po& . ^ i b } y > aggravate evils which wiser \ measures and
a more conciliatory spirit would have mitigated ^ if not prevented ? It is not enough that the ptoceedings of men i n high and responsible stations be legal 3 they rnu&t , at the same time , ipe ^ th ^ resu | jt , of a truly liberal and comprehensive mind . ¦ t , -
Ji \ these Strictures w § pcfrceivc wit , h cQnqern miany indications of a solicitudp ^—a , restless i £ @licitude ,- —about personal credit , and importance : we meet t # iih / expressions of those , " : limiaan .
passions" which * as . , we ar , § v taught by numerous examples , can disturb the quiet even of an University . The general fame of Dr-Marshy ^ s a . scholar and bifcljcql
cutic , asaimn of t ^ jient ^ a ^ d .. jrid ^ tion , stands deservedly feigh not pnly ip Cambridge ty ^ t ^ feer ^ er learning i % \ cuUiya ^ l , ; ? tJor /^ re the ? fac $ } tjes . and 1 he a ^ qui ^ ments of Dean fylilnex of a-cqiqinoa ^ or *
der . Rivalries and . , jealousies , hqweyc ; r , l | o ( h literary . ; $ n < t ecjclesiastical ^ may haunt ; academic shades ; and we fear thftt the controversy J ^) etw « en these two eminent
men will prpceed * , as it begins ^ much more in a discussion of matters respecting themselves , ascl < Brgymen and gownsmen , than in a calm consideration of the demands of the Bible Society 011 public & vour * ,. : ¦ . -
The more we are aquainted with that Society , the stronger is our conyictiofi pf its simplicity , usefulness and moment . It is precisely for thw reason th ^ t ^ we Ae »
Untitled Article
-6 ^ 2 Mitner ' s Tfcply to t& * R * Q * & *• Mmrsk .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1813, page 612, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2432/page/52/
-