On this page
-
Text (3)
-
Untitled Article
-
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
to& , hQ ?« f th ^ jr # ^ M € ^ J * he .-to . isii ^ arked , * It is the most natural , and mirh a 3 « I should li ^ o—not as tpany who spend so much time in drinking wine ,
which la below thp dignity of man t * asked ff Friends had any colleges for the education of their young men ; thought it would be better if they had ; and inquired if any went to Oxford or Cambridge if they would adopt the costume .
" On taking leave of S . G ., he said , c Take my hand as a friend and a brother . I have had great satisfaction , in tfeda interview , and hope , when parted , we shall often think of each other . '
" In giving this very interesting account S . & . said , no words could convey the fulness of his satisfaction in having ; paid this visit . I believe he may be truly called a Christian Prince . *'
Untitled Article
& Tkm&kto m JoS iw \ y % ^ &kbi < z-mty Sta ) Htl < ttd . 703
Untitled Article
Alhwich , Sir * September 5 , 1821 . THE second chapter of the pro phecy of Joel i § made to com
oiefi ^ e , in our version , with the , following words and punctuation : — " BIqw ye the trumpet in Zion , and sound an alarm in my holy mountain : let all the inhabitants of the land
tremble ? for the day of the Lord cometb , for it is nigh at hand : a day of darkness and . of gloominess ,. a day of clouds and of thick darkness , as . the morning spread upon the mountains ; a great people and a strong ; there hath not been ever the like , neither shall be any more after it , even to the years of many generations . "
Uf > on this passage I beg to observe , I . That instead of the colon after the words tremble and hand , the semicolon- should he used , as the subsequent clauses are too intimately cbfcnected with those which precede to admit the colon . 2 . The sentence should end at
the word darkness in the second , verse , because cQ 0 ?{> lete sense fa formed at that word-. Wtet follows beg&is ano * ther sentence ; has an evident relation : to the great and strong people alluded to ; and & # <> rds arnoet beautiful simile respecting ; the rapid and universal spread orthe invaders . & The phrase
<* a great people and a strong" hasi something clumsy i » it ; and it would be more agreeable with the idiom pf the ^ jpgfjish language to turn . it into—« ^ reffi ^ ttrtd strong peopt& . 4 . The word cnfj > rendered peopfe , denotes an < M 8 wia * e& * bocl y , and as-theeonnexiiw ^ clearly proves thut the prophet i » de ^
Untitled Article
Cum tua praevideas oculis mala lippus inunctis , Cur in auiicorum vitiis tarn cernis acir * turn , Quam aut aquila , aut serpens Epidau- ^ rius ? Hor .
Sir , Nov ' . 13 , 1821 . YOU hsive tiiought'it a wholesome practice to record occasionally the opinions of Orthodoxy . The following may not prove unacceptable to some of your readers . " In these matters I am so fearftil
that I date not speak * farther j yea , almost none otherwise , than thet text doth ( us it were ) lead me 6 y the hand . " Martt / n's Letters . " If we set up these notions of our
own as the standardqf * faith * and require a peremptory assent to all tjjb inferences whicH appear to flow from them , we quit t |? he true , the BEVEALED GOB , AND BETAKE
OURSELVES TO THE H > 0 I » S OF OUR OWN brain . " @oplestwi on Predestination Had only ih& spirit of these two short periods been generalised and acted up to by tike diseiptes of Ohlfet ; wouPd tJhere have been an AthmMsum in Christendom ? Were theyW niW > wonM one Remain in Christendom & A RIBI ^ ON ^ y-CHJPSTI ^ < . * ¦ * * - - - - ...... . mmmmmtm ^ . ¦ ¦ - ' : .: * '
Untitled Article
scribing the p * ogres ^ o £ an army < i £ locusts , soipe term should be tfised more significant than that adopted by our translators ^ for when plain En-.
glfehcnen see the word people in tl ^ e text , they naturally conclude thart the prophet is in reaBty predicting the inarch of a pmieerful array of rational beings . With these remarks I desire
respectfully to submit the follxmmg Version and punctuation to the consi deration of your readers : " Blow ye the trumpet in Zion , and sound an alarm in my holy mountain : let all the inhabitants of the land tremble ; for the dav of Jehovah J comes . tremble ; for the day of ehovah comes
, for it approaches ; a day of darkness and of gtdoim , a day of clouds and of thick darkness . As the dawn , spreads Upon the mountains , so shall a great and . strong army : nothing has beeii Eke them from ancient times , neither shall any thing resemble them again through future ages . WILLIAM PROBERT .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1821, page 703, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2507/page/7/
-