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
common . way ; as . I shall do this at lar ^ e in the work on the Laws affecting all Sects , which I am now preparing . 1 take this opportunity of earnestly requesting any of your readers , xvho may be in possession of any cases
at all bearing on the laws of toleration , or may be able to suggest any hints for my assistance in the prosecution of my plan , to oblige me by their communications , addressed to me at No . $ , Inner Temple Lane . T . N . TALFOURD .
Untitled Article
perusal . I read it again with my pen in my hand , and at one time I had a thought of making public my observations upon it . But on looking over my extracts , I found that they would occupy too large a space , and the occurrence of the babe-sprinkling at
Paris , afforded me an opportunity of saying as much as the subject appeared to me to deserve in the Repository . This , I trust , will exculpate me entirely from the charge , which I should think a highly criminal one , of
censuring a work without giving it a perusal . As to the next point , that I have controverted " an argument which it is plain that I do not understand , " that must remain with your readers to determine . I cannot allow our friend to be a proper judge in this case .
I come next to a very severe charge against myself and a numerous class , it seems , whom he distinguishes * by the epithet of ot 7 ToAAo j , in plain Eng - Iish , the multitude . I am said to be one , " with whom confidence of assertion and a contemptuous sneer supply
the place of proof . " Now , this sort of language is so common with polemic divines , that it escapes their pen almost as a thing of course , like the signature of your very humble servant at the end of a letter . But here I cannot allow our friend Belsham to be
a judge . I differ from him certainly , and should be very sorry if his charge was true : but he evidently writes under a degree of irritation too natural to him , when his opinions are controverted . As to the multitude of whom he speaks in such contemptuous terms , 1 trust that he is mistaken in his
estimation of them : and I hope that Qi TroAAot Iv eCfAev ev X p * r 9 ^ Our friend Belsham , in his usual way , beats about the bush to look for something independent of the matter in hand , to attach to his opponent . This he finds in the title of the Monthly Retrospect , and he amuses himself with the terms Political Christian and Christian
Politician . Now this is just as much to the purpose , as if I had published a pamphlet on his Plea , and interlarded it with the terms Metaphysical Divine and Divine Metaphysician , intending
by that to convey the same contempt of our friend ' s divinity and metaphysics , as he does of my politics and Christianity . But this mode of writing is , to say the least of it , in very bad taste .
Untitled Article
Reply to Mr . Belsham by Ignotus . 0 © 5
Untitled Article
Reply to Mr . Belsham by Ignotns . Sir , ' Nov . 1 O , 1817 . OUR friend Belsham is one of the best creatures in the world , except when he takes pen in hand : but when he has seated himself at his desk , and a polemical fit is upon him , adieu
to his usual urbanity , his general suavity of manners . Xoo many instances have occurred in your Repository of this unhappy temper , and he has received repeated admonitions on his mode of writing , which never assists his argument , and is improper whether the writer is considereci in the
character of a gentleman or a Christian . In the course of my observations on public affairs , I have made an allusion [ p . 448 ] , to .. ~; % written by our
friend , in vindication of babe-sprinkling ; for I will not profane the term of baptism , by applying it to the ceremony , for which he is an advocate . This has excited his wrathful
indignation ; and he has vented it [ pp . 606 —609 ] , in the usual manner of polemical divines . He has shot his bolt , telum imbelle sine ictu ; and , if . my character alone were concerned in it , should willingly have passed it over in silence . But in his attack he has
used such language , respecting the Unitarians , that I cannot allow his sarcasms to pass unnoticed . Mr , Belsham thinks the title to my monthly remarks " quaint . " On this subject I do not think it worth while to make any observation ; but when ne says , that 1 have passed a censure
upon " a work which I probably never * ead , " this is an imputation not to J > e overlooked , and I shall reply to it |> y a simple statement of the fact . I heard accidentally of Mr . Belsham s publication , and procured a copy of it soon after . I read it with no small Jtegree of astonishment at its contents ; « ut I waji ttot satisfied with the firat
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 2, 1817, page 655, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2470/page/15/
-