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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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of an O ^ tiiaiy * # ^^ Hfe ^ ^ acquired some kfiowiedge oC Medid ^ m 0 & ® m ^ MM dm $ m ^ e ^^ m . ^^^^^ tage ^^ Ma po ^ a- nfeigh ) b « mts ^ w ^ professional assistance ^^^^ immediate call , and Jtewa » « Bi ! 6 iiA ; dog in his afcten *
xlaoce < m thdse who repaired his aid . In this ao& in every act of compassionate attention to the casualties of a populous district , he was cheerfully seconded by ^ % 6 te to ^ ri ( tl ^ fe ^ ter or Mr .
Stephen Maberly , of Mangotsfield , ) whose domestfe and neighbourly virtues have left imppes 8 ie « s , after a lapse of 30 year * , highly grateful to the survivors of her family . In the care and moral education of his children his solicitude could Hot
b& swpassed , and his own example of a strict adherence to truth upon all occa ston&aad ^ Mttler all ctrotitnstances formed a groundwork , the benefits of which they have every reaeon to acknowledge . He was at de < c&re& ^ enemy to the demora * l&big application « f blows , both at home and at scfeoai , and , without a tincture of
hauteur m his -own composition , he endeavoured to inculcate a feeling of inde peridence . That which they have considered a defect , is the retirement in which they lived for the most part , and at the same time with an expectation that they should be acquainted with the manners of the world . The plan he adopted for reli-¦
, i y : •• - , - " ' . ? Breakfastingwith a magistrate , an invalid , whom he had the day before ftir&fehed with a ticket of admission to a medical institution , was brought ia charged' with an infraction of the game lawsv After a consultation with a brother
magistrate * it was proposed ( lest he should bavt ^ come preparedt to pay - the legal penalty ) tm double it , as a pretext ^ r ; c ^ m « nittifigf him to prison—he repreae ^ nteil to them the state of Ae man ' s healthy and the probable consequences of
confinementr-furgmg the injusuce of the proceeding ; ^ d , ;^ length asked if it m * m ^ y ¦! fp $ mfm . * >*!*» 'ttoG i » wwi *** & < m >{ ammpK ^ m ^ ^ jmm htm ^ h ^ hmi wh if ^ plipt ^ ^ l * i ? |»^( fei | f ^| r ^ i& ^» ijt 4 ,. h& km * . IfflSSHP ^ PuBepm ^ fim ^ i ^ ifmm-i A muriHt ^^ »
c < ^ m ^ mXbi ^ mm ^^ my ' S ^ BSBRK
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the most sutffe ? ff the many wrtjwii ni ^ s to future happinefi « . One part of the Aty ! ^ w ^ i # i | iiy |^^ ? d ^ i | toes . .. of Ariauism , a # a |^^ i |^|^ ia || t ^ ^ i ^ concerus of this Hfe ^ ^^ a * ^ . ^ wards 0 f eternityr and the ^ her part to the more awful dogmas of Galvin as tlic onfemeans of saly ^ ion . a - r ^ i , < }
Neither creeds yj | pr catecbism ^ formed any systematic 4 Jtt&jQf msttuclioii at borne , because nope coujd be found to reconcile accordant ^ pmnions 3 and when introduced by the jininister or friends of either parent , the c ^ illdren happily escaped the mental slavery yynich results from die best of such compositions , throueh the
objections of the oiher . * [ JpteWas , a ri p 4 observer of sabpath ord ^ ance ^ ^ and in all respects exhibited a sufficient ? atiach ment to the famUy feith ; but from an early period , his mmd was tinctured with a love of Bbert ^ : d&U apd religi ^ ufif
which , as years and knowledge increased , he became anxious to promote by his uiost active exertions . Th % mterests of the 3 mall Presbyterian congregation at Frenchay were objects of his assiduous attention , and his official administi-ation of the lay duties of the place , were not lightly
estimated by the minister or members , who found his services useful even after his removal to a distance of twenty miles . Deficiences in their small charitable collections were , in many cases of emergency supplied from his own purse . His marriage , already noticed , threw him into the midst of a zealous Calvinistic societv of Mi
wife ' s relatives and friends , whose officious , though well-meant concern for the future welfare of himself and family , proved a serious cau « e of intetTTiptio _ n am annoyance , and led him into the depAS of religious controversy . Perhaps few persons m his limited sphere have been more constantly or more earnestly ^ engaged in doctrinal disputes , ; both writtett and verbaland his surviv ^^ arfe f ^ r fiiniBWf f ^ 1
; «**»»*¦ "' wvwr- } **** % *• ' < ura mimymnrsr * . ** - ' *** f -. LTTrk from thfiildtig Ms time <« uaityeiib W gradnal ^ progT *^ of his ifaii ^ 4 pii a st ^ erf compVratite-spifUual tbi ^ ldoiB ^ 6 j | I latter « omieuiar ^^ eS « t « ¦ , d » ^ UffcTf SOT jaJiis * ' At ^^ R
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1820, page 554, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2492/page/54/
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