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INTELLIGENCE.
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Transcript
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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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being settled a $ ifcerchants at Baltimore , Monthly Mag . _ ——»—
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Lately , at Leeds , aged 19 , Mr . Robert Newcome Bell , grandson of the late Her . Newcome Cappe , and nephew of the late Robert Cappe , M . D ., of York ; a truly excellent young man , who , by His
amiable disposition and ' promising talents , had already proved himself worthy of his relation to the eminent persons whose names he bore . From a very early period he had not only obtained the affectionate attachment of his nearest
connexion ? , but excited , in all those who had the opportunity of observing the dawn of his active and vigorous mind , confident expectations of future distinction . He was destined to the medical profession ; and particularly to the department of surgery , to which he had always manifested a peculiar and decided
inclination ; so that from the very first he applied himself to the pursuits and studies necessary to prepare him for the exercise of it , with a zeal and ardour which are rarely found , except in those whom long experience has enabled gradually to overcome the painful impressions
attendant upon the first introduction to surgical practice . By these qualities , and by his pleasing manners , the index of a pure and virtuous mind , he conciliated the esteem of many * distinguished ornaments of his profession , and nearly all the members of it resident in the town
of Leeds followed him with sincere regret to his grave . His own attachment to it was strong and enthusiastic ; the result of an ardent thirst after knowledge , animated and directed by a lively sense of
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Methodist-Unitarian Associationy in Lancashire . Thr Annual Meeting of " The Methodist-Unitarian Association ? ' was held at Padiham , on Thursday , May 30 . The room in which the congregation assemble being but small , ic was found necessary to conduct the i ^ eligious services in the open air . At eleven o ' clock in tlie
morn-^ g , the worship was commenced by Mr . (*> Harris , of Bolt on , wjia gave out the "ymns ; Mr . H . Claifce fxrayed and read tne Scriptures /; Mi \ ft . 4 > ee , of Preston , aeh yered a most animated and masterly < 'isgourse from 1 Cor . viii * " To us there is but oner God , the Father . " The
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the importance of the object to vvKk-h it was t ^ be applied ^ and ? those who ofr * ^ rrettj * t * i& ulahnferiW which ; thfc * whole power of * his naiad was devoted to the attahVmeiit of this object , could not bot look forward with sanguine arid , as it
seemed , not uhreesonable expectations , to the- tinie ^ apparently not vfcry distant , when he wcHiid ftccupy at station of great eminence ah ^ tfstraine * sv It Has pleased Divine Providenee ^ tri order it otherwise ; and the sudden removal of this amiable
youth imist be added totlie' many instances of early mortality , ^ Tiich might be expected to impress the most limefleeting mind with the necessity of being always ready , when we perceive that
neither youth nor health , nor the possession of the most valuable endowments , cari furnish any exemption from the common lot of humanity . W . T .
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congregation , which was supposed to exceed four hundred , most was deeply attentive . The evening service was also opened by Mr . Harris . Mr . J . Taylor , of Rochdale , engaged in prayer , and Mr . Harris preached from Mai . ii . 10 : " Have we not all one Father ? " The number o £
auditors who listened to this most interesting and very ably-delivered sermon amounted to upwards of one thousand . The interval between th $ services itffrs most agreeably and usefully speut . <> jie hundred and forty-one friend ? ^ n 4 meptf r bers of the Association sat cjown to a plain , cheap dinner . After- din ^ ery Mr . G . Harris being called tp tjie Clmir , and as many friends admitted as tne Voora
Intelligence.
INTELLIGENCE .
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Int € Uig >^ c& * A ^]^ hiktUt-t / nitarkin $ wvkitioninLaricu $ Jt # e . 4 JQJ
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Aged 30 , Percy Bysshk Shelley , Esq ., eldest son of Sir Timothy Shelley , of Castle Goring , Bart . He perished at sea , in a storm , with his friend Captain Williams , of the Fusileers , off Via Reggia , ori the coast of Italy . He had been at
Pisa , and was returning to his villa at Lerici . Mr . Shelley was the author of 4 * Cenci , " a tragedy : *< Queen Mab , " and several minor pieces , which prove him to have vcen a m ^ n of highly cultivated genius . His last Work was "
Hellas , " a dramatic poem , called forth by the recent events in Greece , in which he took the warmest interest , and dedicated it to Prince Alexander Maurocordato , whose friendship he enjoyed , and for whom he expressed the highest admiration . —Monthly Mag ,
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VQT ,, XVII . 4 K
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1822, page 577, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2516/page/57/
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