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
ted were made during the mayoralties of ancestors of my own / In J 696 , it was ordered that any person but a Protestant freeman , presuming to g * o to the Mayor ' s feast * should pay five shillings , or be set in the , stocks . 1702 * Several Papists , who had been admitted freemen , were
disfranched , and it was ordered that no Papist should be made Jfree again . I 744 . Gregory Grimes , victualler , was disfranched , for having a Popish wife . Researches in the South of Ireland * by T- Crofton Croker , 4 to . pp , 152 and 159 . 160 .
Untitled Article
456 A Friendly Correspondence > between ari tfmtarian and a Calvinist .
Untitled Article
Park Wood , March 15 , 1824 . HOMER . ILIAD . B . i . v . 468 , Ov $ e xi 9 vfA , o <; eSevtro $ ocito $ iuryq' is an expression that frequently occurs in this poem , admitting * of
various interpretations , according to the opinions of the Ancients : of whom some explain it as indicating a table furnished with ample viands for the complete entertainment of the guests ; some maintain that it denotes a
division of the food to be distributed in similar rations on the board ; and others assert that it implies a feast , . good par excellence , as consisting of delicacies and luxuries in the highest state of perfection . -See Athenaeus , B . 1 . C . x . A parallel passage in the fourth Iliad , v . 261 , appears to elucidate its ambiguity :
A \ A 0 l AftOtKH Aocirpov irivooviy , crott 8 e iu \ z 7 ov § eira $ ocier Agamemnon observes to Idomeneus , that while inferior Acbaeans , the rest of the clan , drank only the measures of wine , meted to them , vyith equity and impartiality , —the chieftain was honoured with a goblet ,
replenished at his will , by youths in attendance , watching his nod , that the heroes might regale their companions in arms , and pledge one another in full cups , in imitation of the celestials , who are described by the bard as served by Ganymede ; and quaffing nectar in convivial succession from
circulating vases of gold /* Colos . iv , 1 , seems to correspond to Psalm exxiiu 2 . Behold , the eyes of servants look unto the hands of their masters—for their portion of meat and of work : Masters , enjoins the . Apostle , give s # i equal portion ^—
Untitled Article
A Friendly Correspondence between an Unitarian and a Calvinist . ( Continued from p . 401 . ) NtoL 8 th October . AM glad that you begin to take I alarm at being engaged in trying Almighty God at our own tribunal .
For ray part I am terrified , and wish to run away from the discussion , and betake myself to agonizing prayer . If you did so , I ana most perfectly sure you would not write as you do . Let God decide ! How did I begin the controversy ? I said that the celebrated Mr . I g appeared to me
to be but partially awakened , ( judging by his own words , ) and in fact every one . Before I implicated you I ought to have introduced myself ; I acknowledge this omission , and beg pardon . Having been told thai you
disallowed the doctrine of the Atonement , I accounted for it upon the principle of not being duty convinced of sin . Is there a man in the world that is so ? I include myself in the query . Let me look at that which yoii will not behold , that J may appreciate it fully . I believe that < 36 d designs we should
Untitled Article
-rtjK KroTqra * See Provw inpri . 15 : A virtttoiis wonrati ff riseth also while it is yet night , and givethf meat to her household , and a portion to her maidens . " Tempora mutanttiiv N . B . Bishop Pearson on the Creed remarks , that ' ** the Fathers agreed
in nothing more than they did in believing a real descent of the soul of Christ unto the habitation of the souls departed : the persons to whom , and end for which he descended , they differ nw—but as to a real descent to the
infernal parts they all agree /* Is not this hypothesis probably derived from the fictions of the Heathen Mythology , delineated by Homer and Virgil in the descent of their respective hefoe ^ , Ulysses and
iEneasi—Through twilight shades , by incantation , . led To view the 4 i pale dominions of the dead : " I bant obscuri sola sub nocte per umbram , Peique doraos . Ditis vacuas , et inania
regna : Quale per incertam lunam , sub luce maliguk , &c . —iEneis 9 B . vu W . EVANS . ¦ ii ^ i ^
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Aug. 2, 1824, page 456, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2527/page/8/
-