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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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* A ^ Wti > y& $ t \ tM * s ; le * mthere is 4 ^^ yid ^^ tb ^ hi ^ 4 * flfec L ' Trat&hatfc tfce clause ffiefty ' ^ Jacbb was a rrran tt ^ l ¥ oRMT m £ tfr w ^ dftife" White f ¥ ** ^ r ' suit ^^ if ESad ; ^ « to < tti t > T the
J $ l < f , mr )* re £ re ^ ty * rarie < l , thc& * of Jacob , di&elliHg- irt $ erits , were fewatiA similar i& each d € he > : h « wai ^ a shepherd aud fc ^ tfraps Itherd&niart v b ' nl nothing more . ThuS thVforce of the original term is pfe&eYved ^ an ^ a consistent , intelligible sense , given tt > the passage .
r ., xix . , *? -Xhfire is no speech , &c . " Setter , no speech and no b % ngwigey their QQ &fkH * t h&urd-. Yet thcj& sound , &c . itod sq Rosen muller , Horsley and JvJLpt ^ jifilssohD , / The contrast , too * is adorablypjceserved in the paraphrase
< , o ^ xxiv , jj § , " , The face of the Lord , &c . " Sonae years since , we had marked || $ is Verse as intended" to be read in a $ > ajre « thesis : and rrrore recently \ ve nave b £ en gratified By perceiving that I ^ £ udge considers k in the same ligbi .
Ixv , 12 . ^'« . tJrie little hifls rejoice ^ &p . S ^ puW ^ t not be , . gjqrd tfteviselves uyfe / it , joy f Sp XlosenmuHer , ~ sese accwgynt , ^ nd Menxlelssohn , giqitcn
«* 3 ^ .. 9 . a tale . Compare with this passage Joi > xxxviL 2 , V the sound that g ^ eth ^ &c . / ' TbeHebrew word is the same in both these texts ; M ' udge
rendpr ^ it , a stgjfi , ( jeddes , a breathing . ^ rve ge n eral scntirnent is illustrated by Homer , 0 dyss . vii . 30 , ¦ cvcei iriEfQv ye voijaa * :. X ihoug ¥ if , indee ^ J , as it exists in the xnjn 4 J ^ not pecessarily fugitive ; yet the sound , whei&er Joijd or « oft , which conveys it , vanishes in a moment .
cry - 14 . * flerb ,, for the seririce of man . " "V ^ e aire < rf opinion tb& £ the parallelism recjtttfes f herbs f&p the aniaiab Which serve ttosaffi" 8 c ? e Roseny ^ vMer ' s ti 6 te' ( in 16 c . ) and Litres ne Jidfk , &C- Vol . II . 413 , 414 . This
beautiful psalm celebrate * We&tten , in iFiJ ' stteCESSivW appearance * . ckTvii . # . * ' the yotrfig raven s &c . ^ Tfig VJomitoon feaaderlng i « ta ^ rie and viMie . ^ nd thfc stxbject arid construction oftht ve ^ sfei" Vlen&aorf an «| thifcr transla tion v r ; - ¦ ^' ¦ ' ' ' ° ; ' * ; y <* 5 % ^ tM o ^ e | K ^ ! : > >! : , /^ a ^ ^ oqng r ^ ycr ^ , i ^ A ^ r c ^ r' cfiy /<*/ * € / kuxsj > etik dii co 9 iM ' A \ e ^ tqdkmnj ^ ifc &fiUi # d&ttpar 4 eimians" The Scench
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Geae ^ v . ^ lfers ^ nCcwisuk , too ^ RosennrfiHer ( in loe . ) , ^ wxd-Michaeli& E |> im ^ U ad Ljowth . Fraelect . xix . J , , if h iWe conclude by reqwestiog some of oar learned' correspondents tQ fayoiir u « wUhIatianslati € MiLiaf Psalin ci ,, particularly of the . second verse . This and many other difficult parts of the book , are entirely passed in silence by JBishoJj Horsley . .
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Art . 11 . —Sermons * on Various Subjects By the late Richard Price , D . D . F . R . S . London : printed for Longman and C ® . 1816 . 8 v vo . pp . 404 . OUR desire of possessing another volume of Dr . Price ' s Sermons , is at length gratified . A more welcome communication could not be made to the admirers of enlightened p iety and of Christian eloquence . The talents of this illustrious man , as a preacher , were of the first order : and his discourses are models for addressee from the pulpit . His subj ^ cfc —the most solemn ^ a nd interesting truths of religion *— -come home to
every man ' s business and bosom . iHc wastes no time in elahorlrte or misplaced critical disquisitions / but proceeds without delay lo state his purpose and unfold his . plan . Hi 5 , atyle is easy and simple , yet dijjnified , « nergetic , affectionate and fervent ; level to the understandings of hia
hearers , and penetrating their hearts . In , a greater ^ degree tnah we coin rjqonly observe ^ he employs tjie language an < d the niaaner which a ^ e appropriate to compositions of this kind . Sepnons demand the use af the . pronouns / and you ; a decepX familiarity becomes them , and the speaker must on no account overlook his relation to his audience . It is 1
unjust and irrational to sw ^ pose * that egotism consists in the frequent recurrence of the monosyllable ^ which we have just mentidtied j this weakness being rather" chargeable on the s |* e £ iid ! fr who restl ^ sty aacl ctrcuitousiy avoids these wtjrd& 1 aft the' * efleci of his
thoughts being turned perpetually to ktinseffl Who ijmagrties that * Dr . Pric ^ was an egotist T ( , n W ^ haH Ap w * brQce ^ rf to an anajysw of the contents of $ bjs jjojiunei which ¦ U edited b y IMtr . Morgan ^ aud introduced wltn ^ V euilabie ^ , pd akode ^ luieface . / ,. .
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- ^ ^ ^ ( : ' - &ttfo& . ~< 3 > r * e e s Serm&k . ' ~ ¦¦ > ¦ ^
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Jan. 2, 1817, page 43, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2460/page/43/
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