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ERRATUM.
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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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avowal ! Have words any meaning I If so , this Attorney-General and the faction to which he belongs , are the true conspirators . That is conspiracy , when
a minority oppress and dethrone the majority ; and not the less a conspiracy because it is successful . It was a conspiracy which would re-establish the Tarquins in Rome—it was a conspiracy which re-introduced the Bourbons into
Fiance ;—and the conspiracy is permanent which opposes by force and fraud the declaration of the national will . This M . Bellart talks of the French Carbonari . He says their law is assassination . What is his law ? Let the memory of Ney , and the other victims of his horrible ministry , answer ! Assassination ! What assassination is so dreadful
as that which is committed in the name of justice , when folly and fury direct the administration of cruel laws ?
In France , with the age of civil persecution that of religious superstition is returning . The Jesuits are spread over the country—the convents are being rebuilt—one foolery of the worst period of
Popery is added to another . Spain and Italy will soon cease to be words of mockery in this respect . France has put in her claim to the inheritance of persecution , which we trusted might have been permitted to die away .
Erratum.
ERRATUM .
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wards read the first chapter of bis translation of a Chinese uove ^ entitledf TV ^ Two Cousins . This novel , which appears to give a faithful picture of Chinese ra&nners , will probably be atlifcfreti by thoSe who seek in works of thi ^ Mfrd for something else than incredible adventured extravagant sentiments , and other abuses of the imagination , too prevalent in the romantic productions of these times . The Duke of Orleaus has declared himself the protector of this society . /
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P 372 , verse 2 , line 4 of the Hymu , for God read " One . "
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392 Intelligence . —Foreign x France . Jddia .
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INDIA . A College has been instituted at Poonah , under tin ; sanction of Government , for the preservation and advancement of Hindoo literature , and the education of young men of the caste of Brahmans , in the several branches of science and
knowledge which usually constitute the objects of study of the learned of India . Teii native professors have been appointed . All young men of respectability are ad-f mitted to attend the College gratis ; but /' with the view of encouraging useful learning , Government has allowed five
rupees each per month , for the maintenance of one hundred scholars , ten in each branch of study . The books at present in the possession of Government are appropriated to the use of the College , and others are to be procured from Calcutta . The Visram palace is devoted to the institution .
Amongst various points of miscellaneous information contained in the Fourth Report of the Calcutta School-Book Society , the recent establishment of a similar society at Penang is mentioned , and also the successful progress of the institutions
at Madias and Bombay ; and the endowment by Government of the Hindoo Col lege at Calcutta , for the encouragement of the study of Shan&kreet , and through the medium of that language of general literature . Mr , H . Wileon has consented
to superintend the publication of the first six books of Euclid in the Shan&kreet language . The re-publication of extensive editions of many of the Society ' s most useful elementary works has been determined on . Government has presented the sum of 7000 rupees to the Society , and ordered a monthly contribu ^ tion of 5000 more .
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A new society of men of letters , under the title of the Asiatic Society , held its first meeting at Paris on the 1 st of April , under the presidency of M . Le Baron Sylvester de Sacy , well known for his extensive and profound acquaintance with the languages
of the East . The object of this society , which counts among its members some of the most illustrious names in French literature and in the state , is the propagation of the study of the languages of Asia . They began on this occasion , by adopting the rules and regulations which are to conduct them in their future
labours , and by the preliminary operations indispensable for the constitution of the society . M . de Sacy pronounced a discourse , distinguished by the most profound views and most ingenious observations , on Oriental studies , and on the advantages which must result from their progress to religion , history , the useful arts and diplomacy . M . Reoausat after-
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1822, page 392, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2513/page/72/
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