On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (3)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
* EXTRACTS FROM NEW PUBLICATIONS.
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
the VfffY season you pretend to honour the holy Jesus , and io have special ieal for nis cause . 6 . Wisel y choose your associates , and shun the company of irreligious ajid intemperate men and their enter iainments : or where this cannot be
done , draw a comparison between their words and actions and your Saviour ' s , which may well inflame your love of him , and fix your abhorrence of their principles and practices . 7 . Forget not that charity to the poor , or the smallest good office ( if
Untitled Article
[ K singular work has just appeared , entitled " Artnata , a Fragment , " a thin 8 vo . volume , published by Murray , jllbemarle Street , which is attributed to the pen of Lord Erskine . The iiiter&al evidence of the author is decisive : nis vigorous genius is imprinted on every fine .
The work is properly speak ing a Romance , but is at the same time too true a picture of the moderft history and present state of England , for which " Armata" may be considered by the reader as another name . , Our extracts will hp sufficiently intejligifcie without further preface , or cote and comment . £ p . ]
Mr . Fox . MY confidence in this opinion is the mire unshaken from the rccolleetion that 1 held it at the very time , it ! common With a man whom to have known as I did would have repaid all the toils and perils you Have undergoqe . —I
look upoja you , indeed , as a benighted tjrav ^ Iier , to have been cast upon our shores after : th *« great light was set . — - Never was , a keing gifted with an undersiandmg « o perfect , nor aided by a pereeption whiah suffered nothing toscscape from its dominion . ^—He * was never
] £ B 0 Wn to onait « oy . thi nu -which in the sMghltst degree could affect the matter t i > he > ieoii 4 ^< 3 kred , hot to confonnd things * 3 * r& )\ -distinguishable , however ajipaterttjy the same * anU his conclusions were always so luminous arid eoiwin € M ) g , ? tiiat you might as firmly depend ujwfi themes when substances it * na ^ Uice ti $ before you *** * he palpable fytm& assigned to jthem from the toun-
Untitled Article
you are able to o tMrmar ^ y ftnte necessitous , especially if reti ° idut , will now and always be very preasing to the Redeem ^ - , if it proceeds from a principle of faith , leve and obedience . 8 . Think seriously , that however
you may rejoice for Christ ' s birth , if you are not born again of the spirit , and thereby turned from your sinf unto God , and interested in the death , and mediation of Jesus ; his secoiifj coming will be most dreadful to yotf , and issue in your condemnation to eternal punishment .
Untitled Article
elation of the world . — -Such were his qualifications for the office of a statesman : and his profound knowledge , always under the guidance of the sublime simplicity of h \ % heart , softening without unnerving the giant strength of his intellect , gave a characteir to his eloquence which I shall not attempt to describe , knowing nothing by which it may be compared .
Mr . Pitt . The astonishing events whieb arc soon to close my narrative , could not , upon any human calculation , ( at least in my opiniony ) have happened as they did , without the commanding talents of an extraordinary young man , who
yet might not have nourished at so early an age , but from being the son of " another man who had jtistly acquired a great reputation in out country by superior eloqueiice , always exerted in the cause of freedom : nor could hi £
descendant , eloquent as he was , have risen to so premature an eminence but by treading in his father ' s steps , plead- * ing the eaufe of public reformation , which at ( ha £ time was highly popular , and of which he too took the lead from ?
his very earliest youth : neither could even this illustrious course have prOr duced the events which followed , butpn the contrary might have averted theru * if he bad not turned short ^ touml ^ bn a sudden and not only renounced his
farmer opinions , but sounded the alarm , when other * persevered in the sentiments they had irribibed froul his own . ) ipsi— -But hmoty is a libel when it departs 1 * 1 any thing frbm theHrijtbj . r- * Lt must be admitted that the influence
Untitled Article
146 Armala , a tragm&iL '
* Extracts From New Publications.
* EXTRACTS FROM NEW PUBLICATIONS .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), March 2, 1817, page 140, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2462/page/12/
-