On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (4)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
INTELLIGENCE.
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
Ad&ttofitv tMfi QMmryof Mr , GrMan , p . 365 . ikr . ChftATTAN came into Parliament , we are informed , about the ^ ear 1773 . Towards the close of the American war he carried against both the English and Irish Gpv ^ nmqn > & $ ' repeat of those sj ^ tntes , wWch hs& given Ae British Parliament , and in some respects the * Privy Council of England , an absolute controul over the legislature of his native country . He Ms been sines the year 1790 , the strenuous , persevering and powerful advocate for an entire abolition of the penal
laws against the Catholics . This mes ^ sure , in the separate Parliament of ireland , he repeatedly declared to be essential to the complete deliverance of that country from the yoke of the British minister , as , since the Union , he has , in the language of Mr . Pitt , described Catholic emancipation to be a necessary step
towards giving both countries the full benefit of that important measure . Mr . QrattflT ? had ^ long laboured under dropsy of the chest ; the closing period of his life ' wa ^ s attended by circumstances of uncommon and melancholy interest . It is well known that he was conscious
© f his approaching dissolution ; and that , when he devoted " his last breath to his country / ' he was sensible that his appearance m Parliament , for the pious purpose of recommending to the House of Commons the cause so near his heart , must tend to accelerate that mournful
sacrifice . His enfeebled frame did not second the aspirings of his bold and fervent spirit ; he was doomed to bequeath emancipation as a legacy—not to bestow it as a . gift *
Mr . Grattan ' s eloquence was peculiar and ^ original . It resembled that of no speaker that we have ever heard . His voice was naturally feeble , but practice made it audible ; and laborious effort , combined with a care&il and studied arti-
Untitled Article
DOMESTJC . Reugioijs . New Unitarian Chapel , Rqptey , J&epty /* ftire > '¦*' ' ni 0 eld 9
October l $ 9 1820 . To 4 jm * # Ife ^ yterian © aitariaifc Cha * ppl at Ripley , in Derbyshire , was opened on . Hie 30 th of last July , when an excellent and appropriate discourse was d $ liveredjjy the Ren « $ fr * rdHigginson , of
Untitled Article
cation , rendered his h ^ b tones jbo piecing that none of them were Jop $ . Mr . Grattan had no wit , or rather , in ParHa ment , he did not exhibit any . He seldom discussed the details of any question , but fastened on a few of the lea 4 ! Bg principles , which he developed and illustrated
with singular strength of language , and copious felicity of imagination . His sentences were full of antithesis ; and , rather than ^ pse that farourjLt ^ structure of ex * - pression , he would build it up occasionally of common-place or even puerile matter . His diction was often rich , and raised with metaphor . Some characteristics of his style were inseparable from it .
whether m the most abrupt reply , or in compositions the most critically prepared and meditated . His arguments were frequently a string of epigrams . His retorts and personal invectives were distinguished by a keen and pithy sarcasm , which told upon every nerve of his ill-starred opponent . There was , nevertheless , an earnestness and solemnity , an innate and manifest consciousness of his own
rectitude , about the man , which taught his hearers to respect and admire him when he most failed to convert them to the opinions of which he was the advocate . Mr . Grattan ,, in society , was playful and simple as a child : irritable , perhaps , in a public assembly , he was elsewhere the
very soul of courtesy , complacency and cheerfulness . Of hisj early contemporaries Mr . Foster ( almost alone ) survives him—the first who , by a systematic policy , laid the foundation of extensive agriculture in Ireland , and the chief encourager , in modern times , of the Irish linen manufacture .
Mr . Grattan ' s property consisted for the most part of the sum of £ 50 , 000 , which had been tendered to him by his country , and it was honourably earned . —( Times , )
Untitled Article
Derby , to a very respectable and crowded congregation . In the course of his sermon , th , e preacher set tfotth , with peculiar clearness , the principles of Dissent in general , and the . opinions by whi < Sh we , as Unitarians , are distinguished 4 tota the
rest of our Dissenting brethren in particular , and concluded with an ipf ) lication of it , highly impressive , which could not fall of having the feappieet effect ^ on hi » headers . During th service a collection was made towamSs AtytfMji ^ « f the chajwl / w ^ h att ^ iinSd -to ft
Untitled Article
60 ©^ Intelligence . —N&e Unitarian Chapel , B $$$ $ /> Derbyshire ^
Intelligence.
INTELLIGENCE .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 2, 1820, page 620, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2493/page/56/
-