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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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Souths $ erm < ms . St . Ardteon i Jan . 1 , 1814 « t Sir ,, I lately added to my smaH library thts volumes of your Reposi tory , w h i c L h a ^ fo u n a i ts vv ay into this corner of the island , where , expecting the close of life ' s
various «; ay , I hear the tumuk of the distant throng As that of stsis remote or dying storms , And meditate on scenes more silent still . 0 . You must know , Mr . Editor , that the engagements of active life never allowed me a methodic
cal application to any department < of liteiaturc or science . My reading , at intervals of leisure short , and seized , as it were , by stealth , has thus been
unconnected , to a degree ^ of which you , whom I gues > s to be a regular student ,. can have , happily for yourself , no conception . Now that grey hairs are more than here and there upon me , it is too
late to form a new habit . I must , therefore , be satisfied with literary pursuits , miscellaneous and desultory , to the end of the chapter .
, Remarking your encouragement of correspondents , by impartially executing your editorial office , J am j inclined to send you some account of such discoveries as may be made in an elbow chair . That an , old man should prefer old books will not surprise , and I Confess that my eyos are more accustomed to the sober tints of antiquity than to the mellow hues of modern hot-press . 1 . have lately proposed to improve my occasional acquaintance with South into intimacy , by a regular perusal of his sermons . ;( h » , ftit of Osero * emitted , " The
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vvays of WIsd ^ B ^ wjtyft of Flea * sacitness / V was recommended U ? our forefatfaer * a century \ ago . fifi the Taller * ,- ( 305 and £ 11 ) a »^
can scarcely fail to be interesting in centuries ioCorae , for the w ^ t and wisdom of , South as Johnson t > ays of Butler ' s name , can only perish with his language * Yet I i \) ust demur to * the use of tea *
son nut shewing itself till about the seventh year /* ( ed . 17 37 * i . 9 . ) , as an opinion unsupported by experience or observation * Nor do J know of ar > y scriptural authority for expecting the resur . rection to consist ofthe Hrepa * - ration of ih ^ same numerical body ,
by a reunion of all the scattered parts . ' ( pi 20 . ) Yo ^ ng ^ a jn # fenile poet in the age of SdtitJi , " So far imbibed this notion as to give the following ilescriptibn in hfs Ci Last Day r'' first publi ^ h ^ dili 1713 , without any design * o burlesque a seriovu subject : ^
Now enamels rattle ; scattered limbs and all / ; The rarious bones , obsequious to the call , ; . r ^ Self-mov'd advance , % he neck perha | Ki to nieet £ . The distant head , the distant legs r ^ tic ' ¦¦
feet . ¦ ' - •¦ "'• ' rtIVB Dreadful to view ! see through the dusky sky , , T Fragments of bodies in confusion flyc To distant regions joui neyiug , there to claim ¦>¦ » -. - ^ JDeserteu members , and complete tli * frame . , , „ 4 - ^ Ha vi ng then in trod uc £ < 3 $$ 6 death of Pomp ^ y , the poet acfds ' j ; This severM head and trunk , « hall join once more , Tho * realms now rise between , and oceans roaiv ^ The trumpet ' s sound each vagraftt mote shall Leai ^ .. ; , ,.-v y . Or fixt in earth , or if afloat in air t Obey the tiij ^ n ^ kl ^ Wawd in the wind-. A » d not one $ leepinf atoaa lag behial *
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 2, 1814, page 104, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2437/page/32/
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