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
Sir , ON Sunday , August 25 th , the Rev . S . W . Browne , A . B ., pastor to the congregation assembling at the Meeting-house in Monkwell Street , for
divine worship , pronounced a most impressive discourse on the awful death of the late Marquis of Londonderry . The subject of his sermon was the admixture of good and evil in the destiny of man : his text was from kecles . III . 4 , and in pursuing his subthe
ject , reverend preacher traced out a most powerful delineation of human woes and human joys : sometimes he led his audience on to the brink of des l r > and then mitigated the anguish ot the soul by presenting to it brighter views ; and as we are favoured with " 1 tracts , the public will Judge fort ^ l * S «* the preacher cafl s frame * * emt * me 8 of our "In the exuberance of life ' s blos-
Untitled Article
soming season , who bas not painted to himself in the most glowing tints the delights to be reaped from prosperity and lofty station ? And when any of these anticipations of the highcoloured imagination and ardent spirits of youth have been realized , who
has not bitterly wept at the disappointment ? and felt that fastidiousness and weariness of long-accustomed possession may wear out that eagerness of fruition , which the bounding heart and ever up-springing hopes of early life had flattered themselves would , in
their cases at least , know no ungenial blast ? The strongest constitutions , the most undimmed glory , the most princely fortunes , and the sweet relations of family and friendship are liable to sad vicissitudes . Who has not
seen a serene sea , glowing with the radiance of a mid-day sun , gently presenting to the eye the play of its bespangled waters ? . Often on a sudden has it been darkened over by a rising storm ; its waves roaring fearfully : so have we seen these earthly enjoyments sometimes pass rapidly away , and followed by all the storms of an agitated and adverse life . See the
young heir , wringing a father's heart by his extravagance , and causing his own manly beauty of countenance to be sicklied over by his vices 1 See the sweet affections of a warm breast
cruelly checked and wounded by the unfaithfulness of an unworthy husband , seeking what ?—rapturous delight from prostituted charms and a depraved mind , O God ! Equal misery hangs over the great ones of the earth . Once was I forcibly struck with a pencilled canvas , on which the masterly hand
of genius had made every circumstance pourtrayed , start into life ; and the beholder was , as it were , surrounded with the reality of the scene . Camps and armies were in the back-ground . The prominent subject of the picture was the once mighty Lord of immeasurable tracts of earth , denominated
kingdoms : the far renowned Bajazet * in a moment of discomfiture , was presented to the view : his brow , the seat of anxious care , was knit and scowling ; the horror of despair was depictured in every feature ; the interval of some hours , had elapsed since his defeat by the genius of Tamerlane , then in his ascendant ; so that the ^ gitefti <^ 6 ( necessarily attendant on a lost fi £ t # afc
Untitled Article
Griesiach ' s Prolegomena and Notes * 341
Untitled Article
Poole , Sir , Sept . 10 , 1822 . ALLOW me to state through the medium of your valuable publication , what I have often felt , viz ., a strong and earnest desire to see Griesbach ' s Preface and Prolegomena to his edition of the Greek New Testament
in an English translation . And if the principal of his notes were added to the translation , it would be all the better . The English theologian often hears of Griesbach ' s great work ; but he knows nothing of the rules which guided that eminent critic in his judgment concerning the various readings of the New Testament . He reads the
improved Version ; but can form little or no idea of the reasons why one reading is to be preferred to another . Since Parkhurst gave to Englishmen Hebrew and Greek Lexicons , through
the medium of the English tongue , and encouraged them to study the original languages of the Scriptures without taking the pains first to acquire the Latin , I believe there are several who can understand the
Hebrew and Greek of the Scriptures who do not understand the Latin . And upon the whole I am persuaded , that a translation of the above work would put into the hands of many , a great mass of information which would be highly acceptable and useful . A . B .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1822, page 541, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2516/page/21/
-