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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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Vow when the evening came , or what . . instead . ^ . t * i \ . i ;> « i- . * j ; ,. Of evening there does in its turn succeed , glorious JllumiTiatkms made on high By at ) the stars ai . d planets of the sky , In just degrees' and shining order plac'id , Spectators chai' * h * d and the blcss'd dwellings grac ed . Thro * all tb * ia 1 ighten * d air swift Firewwks flew , 'Which with repeated shouts glad cherubs threw . Comets' jkSceoded with their sweeping train , Then fell , in starry eiiow ' rs and glitt ' nng raiw . In air ten thousand meteors blazing
bung * Wbich from th * eternal battlements were flunu , Such universal / joy ia heav ' n they shew \ J , Such mirth and triumph did the day conclude . Pr ince Arthur . B . ii . 4 , th ed . 18 ^ . ^ 714 ) pp- 49 , 50 .
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No . CXLV , Consolation for the Afflicted . -. A poor Dervise , whose , feet were naked for waitt of shoes , made a pilgrimage ^ to Mecqa curbing his uaha . ppy fate and Aim
cusing lieaven of cruelty . \ v \* ef % he arrived a , t the gate ^ of i ; he ( gr * iii ! Cp mosqye of Coufa , he perceive ^ a poor man y / hp h ^ d b y some accident lost botfr hi ^ teet . Ttte
s ^ g ht cf a man nip re unfortunate thsw himself ^ ffor ^ ed Jivm consolation , and convinced him that the diotresp w ^ s greater to be withqut ffitt tj ^ a ^ i willp ^ iU * hof $ . ' »» ...-we .. - , ^ . - ; ¦ . ; . ' . . 1 ¦ ' . t ' ^ ¦ i- iit * > j ^ w ^ : ' . ' v . v /^ i . ! : -vVii" . ^ j ^ :, Ik * O
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Gleamngs , 669
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> To . CXLHl . fyftfirnentJ * { FQ 7 ftl $ irabcau . ^ AJas , what do we gain by hatitig tntn . In mder to : ti ve a inong tktaa cidist we . not practice forbearance in Ijaj ^ e ib « y not all more ofvgood ^ han bad . JLet us
oot ^ aggecrate ; we pauit the danger ? tfaat surround ua ^ let us not conceal our mu ^ Itipilied plea * - sures . We talk of QUTiRiisfortunes and forget oar felicities . We be . hold it is said- * more of vice and suffering , ithan of virtue and enis
joyment *; ^ ut this true , for ( Bflv « Q ( hi ;^ ontiAaes and society M ^^ te # . Jf Jthere were more of m than , of gO 0 i j pe fljipuld # 1 be ' ^ ' ^ jr 'tit ^ . ) ' a ?/ • , " * .
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No . CXLIV . " William Perm . ( From an American Magazine . ) Pt nn , the founder and Legislator of ' the colony of Pennsylvania ,
had both great and amiable qualities , and w ^ s no stranger to the essentials of ' good breeding , though he was too stubborn to yield to the firms of it . He had . 6 r
affected to have , all the spirit of the Haty which availed him . much as the leader of a penpte \ vh& made it part ot their religion . W * £ are informed that he sat with hi ^
hat on beiort Chailes II . and the king , as a gentle rebuke for hi& ill manners , put off his own . Upon which Penn said to bim ;
" Friend Charles , why dost thou not keep on thy hat ? " The king answered , " It is the custom of this place that never above one person should be covered at a "time .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 2, 1813, page 669, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2433/page/35/
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