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..i'i4.jihw* /jfT -W^^m^formmt ^ siovXi^. .; . ; r .W;; ••<? ?; kw? ftiw ?H'»i.r- Ulira-€eiihoUcil8min France.
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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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be era ^ W «^* y >* M tiw ^ T * S" the £ raud ?^ Mfe- ^ Pf'we *« , | K > $ Sibif to believeiowt ^ liOTe ^ is soiiaetlmiiEC at work stronger waa m © . spirit of truth jwq liberty ? « Pp ^ ir : stat ^ of Frai ^ fe
would ekdiife w TOS ^ p ^ i ^ bensions and all the alarais ' 6 f th ^ wis e and the goQcl . TO « gr # t pnHciples of freedom , gftmifered ipgeiher out of the mighty w ^ eckd lot the Revolution , seemed to hayife beett "ftiH ^ re cognized and established on a lasting foundation ^ but in a moment of false and fatal security they have been under *
mined , arid civil and religious tyranny are already shouting over their ruins . The # forming spirijt had _ spread through a great part of Christendom , before it wad openly proclaimed and honoured by those illustrious advocates whose names are connected with its most splendid early triumphs . In the love of which to be
learning , began cultivated in Europe , tlie Reformation found its mightiest ally . Leo the Xth . scarcely suspected that he was the great patron of those heresies against which he f ^ minated his loudest anathemas ; but > fe . m&y salely as ^ i ^ t , that for one heretic alarmed into recantation by , the terrors o ^ hi ^ hulls , he made a hundred by his patronage of literature : * and while the progress
¦ . ¦ tV ^ iv ' ' ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ U ^^^^^ ^ Y ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^ \ nL « . ^ * jp ^ & $ *¦ i ° ? ° into the Ji ^ tvri ^ qM ^ tion , p order to amstawmy 4 gm 18 & M ^ ce ^ s ^^ % |^ e S ^ si ^ te ^ ^ SHttw a w $ & % mstrtSm mmb of me poet ,
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of civilisation on the ope hand broke the fetters of spiritual bondage and ted oiiVtii Protestantism and reform , these in their turn , and as a natural
# e-action , destroyed the bid aiid barbarotts notions whicli ^ ld i > i ah in p $ - litical servitude and slavery , and taught him to standJeriijt " 'ffi * Me energy arid strength of civij ^ Bfertgr . Th ^ ie tivo positions , that thd triumphs of Protest ^ nism have been and are greatly , depeujifint on the extension of knowledge and civilization , and that its progress must promote the cause of genuine freedom , are singularly
corroborated by the present situation of France . * Since the period when the orthodox and infallible arguments of " sword and guii" had established the principles of •* legitimacy /* and a hundred and fifty thousand armed men had philosophically and satisfactorily demonstrated that nations are in reality nothing better than the appendages of royalty , the mejre trappings of a coronation robe , or the animals which adorn a magnificent national estate , grazing ttierevby the ^ ufiferance of the kingly possessor , something , as giving
and . exclaimed , " O that I could have converted thee V Ad Maronis mausoleum Ductus , fudit super eum Piaerorum lacryinaB . f Quem te , inquit , reddidisaem Si te ^ viyu m inveni ^ sem Poetarum maxime !
... Of late aeveral attempts have been made , in viojiation , pf tije ^^ harter and in contempt of public opinion , to interfere iSKS ^ K- fi ^ Wu ^ P ^ M xm . M » md 9 ^ mM&-eoo ft **** fi ^ e ^ hvm ^^
peatry during the ptoceasi ^ m ^ tttehpmt Thb ' sentence was , oftofit ^> oii ^^ i | court of omtim > , iimi ** ilteQ <> 8 > XW TStik i ' i -I ¦
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^ _^ Af ^ w&& ^ jaii l ^" . - .... ¦ . rv « Vvfc , Ai-M :. " / • jpil .: . ¦ : , ¦¦;• . / ""' u ? v /^ vi ' ad ^ j : > ¦ . ¦
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vol . xv 2 u
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__ NoT li ^ ¦ ¦¦ ¦• ' > - >™ y * mu % iyn
..I'I4.Jihw* /Jft -W^^M^Formmt ^ Siovxi^. .; . ; R .W;; ••≪? ?; Kw? Ftiw ?H'»I.R- Ulira-€Eiihoucil8min France.
.. i'i 4 . jihw * / jfT -W ^^ m ^ formmt ^ siovXi ^ . . ; . ; . ;; ••
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1820, page unpag, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2489/page/1/
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