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OBITUARY.
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The se » 4 e »« es ( 43 , 44 , > that we proceed to extract , \ viil gratify and ib ^^ fifi ^ ^ ** J ^ i ^ fe ^ ler Vl most affecting il > lustmtons ( and the powe £ of Tliustratinff a subject was bis distinguishing faculty )
were drawn from the most familiar scenes of 0 fe > and > after he became a father , wygt un frequentlyfrom the Incidents which 3 ^ ch to that relation . An example of tl ^^ l afford so oie idea of tjie manner ip whlMk he availed himself of images drawTi ^^ Syp- the domestic circle * His Let hm
text was fii ^ Ir xxvii . 5 : take ftgfat of my ^ mm ^ 9 thai he may make peace u ? ith me ^ ^ mS ^ he shall make peace with m * I tfi ^^^ aid £ e * < t caa convey the meauiage ^ tji is passage , so that every one inay ui * j |^ stand it , by Tvhat took place in niy o wil $ | gmly within
these few days . One of i » $ J ^ ej chijLr dren had committed a fault ^ M ^| ch I thought it my duty to chastise BS ® - ; ^ called him to me , explained to liim the evil of what he had done , and told him how grieved I Was that I must punish him for it ; he heard me in silence , and then lushed into my arms , and hurst into * tears ; I could sootier have cut off
my arm than have then struck him for hi& fault : he had taken fiold of my most valuable person there was a rare union of unaffected dignity and gentleness , a preVemment degree of that mitts sapfentia , which at Once instructs and charms . Mis memoir of Mr . Strange and
his Preface to the Abridgment of M . Henry ' s Posthumous Treatise , ( M . Rep . V . 364 , ) are fine examples of his taste and judgment , as a wtiteiv
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Died , Nov . 11 , 18 ^ 3 > ^ t residence in Washington County , Alabama State , North America , aged 58 , the Hon . Harut Toulmin , Me a Judge of the District Couit of the United States for the Mississippi District . The subject of this memoir was the eldest son of the late
Rev . Joshua Toulrain , D . D ., and was horn at Taunton , in the year 1766 \ He was from an early period destined for the ministry , and was carefully educated with that view , bjr his excellent father . At
a proper age he was placed at Hoxton Academy , where he pursued and completed his studies , under Drs « Rees , Kippis and Savage , who thea superintended the Institution . At the age of twenty-one he received and accepted an invitation
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strength , and he had made peace with WiQi one further quotation we conclude : it is jMr . ^ me 0 s J ^ cps ta the Duke ' aS-,. Qv ^^ ii 9 : x ^~^ fiA \^ f ^ meeting of an Auxiliary BiMe Society at Northaiunton Anp * 25 ^ - 65 ^ . < * - ¦
** I am confident f sha ^ ^ t ©^ ii € your G * ace , If I ventfure to ailin » , f ! ia € you tiever appeared in a situation more t ^ uly dignified than at the present mo ^ inent . As ^ aiemberof the great seriate of the nation , ( lUKjaestionably the inasti illustrious cMf assewdliiy ia the fe ^ finS
yon appear under the bonourahle title ef a BHtish peer ; bdt fi&e under the «^ Btt more dignified character " of a jChristian believer : there you take your ^ eat a # oiate of a body of legislators to ail individual empire ; but here as a friend to ai periling world r there y&a are the subject 6 $ H venerable , but alas ! disabled earthly
sovereign ; here you appear as thet loyal ^ ti ^ ect of the * blessed awd only Potentate * — King of kings and Lord of lords , who only hath immortality : ' there you are stationed as a counselor , consulting the well-being of the country ; bt \ t . £ Aere you preside at the head of a bantf © f advocates in the cause of human
salvation , nor would an angel from heaven think himself demeaned by oocu ^ yirig the Chair which yout Grace nils , on an occasion like this ; for if there ) be joy in heaven over one shiner who
repents , what must be the emotions of those benevolent spirits , in witnessing the proceedings of this day , which have fdr their object the repentance and salvation of millions ?" [ To be continued . ]
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to undertake the pastor&l office at the village of Montou , in Lancashire . Here he continued only about a year , when he removed to Chowbent , in the same county . His sphere of usefulness was there greatly enlarged . He was in the midst of a very populous neighbourhood , and his services
in the ministry were highly and deservedly valued . He frequently addressed a congregation of eight hundred hearers . The time of his residence at Chowbent , was distinguished as the era of
politicoreiigioas persecution . The French Revolution took place , and was followed , in this country , by the strenuous efforts of GoYeriMtnent to suppress every independent expression of public opinion . The ingenuous mind of Mr . Toulmin could ill
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Q btiu * m .--The Honmtrable Harrrt Toulmin . fgfgl
Obituary.
OBITUARY .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), March 2, 1824, page 179, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2522/page/51/
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