On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
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
Thou hast appeared amopg the na . dons as a light ptlaced upon a bill . At a distance they faave contemplated tky beauty , they have soundeq forth thy praiae in different languages , Thou hast not been deaf to their commendations . T 66 u hlast coveted and still covet .
est a good report amo , ng men . How shall I address thee on thy different deformities ! Behold thou hast already put some of ttiern away from thee . But thy movements are too slow for the
brevity of human life . Time passeth away as a shadow ; and yet thou remaniest not half awake from thy apathy . Arise ! arise let japt thy Zion be longer
obscured . Th y Jerusalem may yet become the praise of the whole earth . The people may yet floc , k Uitto thee as doves to the windows , . , as they did in the beginning . r JOHN WALKER . : ! I ; ¦' ' ¦ . ¦ ¦ ^ J , ¦ ' . . HI
Untitled Article
men ! created } uV ^ ^ eAitb ^ flMib ^ lK phic nor Chris ^ n , The passage to ^ wbi ^ t re& £ is from Dr . Hartley ^ Qn first
reading this passage sojpae ye $ r $ since , it awakened in my heart ali those feelings of serene deiigkt which arise from the conternpla * tion of ihe dearest connection of
human life , viewed in its most just and amiable form ;¦—and these feelings have been confirmed by every subsequent perusal- :. } Dr . Hartley says , in his Obser ^ vations on Man , Part ii . p . 301 ur-4 i
J proceed to consider brjieq ^ l the several principal relations of life , and the duties arising froin them . The first of tb ^ se ,, is tb ^ t of husband and wife . Tj ) j ^ I ^ y ] Dgj our neighbour begins here . , THhi ^
is the first instance pf it ^ $ qd , where this love ii ^ muj > ual aud pere feet , there an entire equality 9 I the two sexes takes , pkice . ,. ' ., . TCb ^ authority of the man is only a
mark of our present degenerate state ; by reason of which domi * nion must be placed somewhere , and therefore in the man , as being of greater bodily strength m \ dt firmness of mind . But this is
that kind of right or property , which men are obliged to give np » though women are also obliged to acknowledge it . Suppose the sexes to share all th ^ ir joys and
grie& perfectly , to b $ v € > » ft entire concern for each other , and espe * ciaUy for each oth # H *? s Vernal ueU fare , , and they are . as it w ^ ere ^ reinstated in paradise ; awl the ( louiunoa q ( the luau mm the wow
man , with her subjection , and consequent reluctance , can only take place again upon their mutu * - al transgression * And though in this Imperfect state it seems impoa * - 6 ibie » for any one to love another
Untitled Article
1 ' Wive s * 3 v ^ 13 , 1813-Priding in a late nutnberofyour itejioBitory fviii . 657 J an article
from Mil ton "On Wives / 'in a strain so different to those m ^ uly and liberal sentiments which usually per . vadeyour work , I beg leave in reply
to offer an extract from an author of ti 6 less authority , perhaps in tirfa instance of much greater , for Mifton was on this subject biassed by partial and elfish feelings . In niiirrying a gay and lively young
Woman he did an unwi&e thing j 10 requiring her cheerfully and immediately to fall into his mode of life , so vfery different to that to which she had bieeri aiccustoWied ,
Was still more unreasonable ; and to indulge in those feelings of resentment which tia disappoint-
Untitled Article
H && * k ,
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Jan. 2, 1814, page 36, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2436/page/36/
-