On this page
-
Text (2)
-
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
Luke Hi . 7 t with which compare Josephus' Antiq . 13 , 9 , 11 . Where he is treating of the Idumeans reduced under the Jewish religion by Hyrcanus , he mentions circumcision alone , for
he says , that Hyrcanus gave option to the Idumeans either to leave their native country , or to he circumcised and conform to the Jewish rites , and that with these last conditions they complied . But from the silence of the writer nothing : can with certainty
be inferred ; and since from other sources the antiquity of the baptism of proselytes is rendered very probable , Josef > hus may be thought in this instance to have mentioned one principal ceremony only instead of all the rites of initiation . But John by his baptism bound the Jews to repentance , ( ver . 11 , compared with Luke iii . 10 , 14 , ) and he initiated them to the new dispensation shortly to be introduced by the Messiah . B . M .
Untitled Article
On the Death of Miss Mauy Sutton , of Hinckley , who died February 15 , 1826 , aged 24 . She possessed every virtue that can adorn human nature .
AND art thou also dead , Thou loved and lovely one ? Thou should ' st have longer stay'd , So dear to all where known . I do not wonder much That thou hast ceased to be , Death ever calls on such , On lovely ones like thee . The garden ' s sweetest bloom Is severed first or seared ; There ' s some unkindly doom For every thing endeared !
I sigh that so much worth So earlily should fall , To all the sweets of earth—Insensible to all . For earth , though dark and drear , Has many a sunny spot , Life many a joy still dear , The young who die taste not . I sigh to think thy rest
Must be the cold damp tomb ; For surely thou hadst blest And cheered a brighter home . And there are they shall weep Full many a bitter tear Over thy silent sleep , O ' er many a virtue dear .
Untitled Article
O ' er filial sympathy , That knew no chill but death ; O ' er hopes , that bloomed with thee That perished with thy breath . Sure it were sad to bead O ' er a grey parent ' s tomb , Even when years extend To farthest date their doom . But sadder is the tear , The sigh more deep and wild , When age bends o ' er the bier
Of a loved , loving child . Death ! spare the human flower When opening into bloom ; For soon arrives the hour When age seeks its last home * How ruthless is thy sway , Reaper of years too brief ! Thy sickle bears away , Each hour , the human sheaf . No trace is left behind
Of those that once were dear , Save thoughts like ivy twined , Twining like that , to sear ; Save memories that dwell On pleasures once possessed ; Save feelings that but tell How vainly we were blest . How calm the dead repose ! Their dreams how visionless ! Earth ' s pleasures and earth ' s woes Nor soothe them nor distress .
And Spring these glooms shall break * And bring its buds and flowers ; But she will not awake , Through all its sunlight hours . Fairly its blooms shall wreath , And spice and colouring fling ; For her no sweets they breathe , To her no beauty bring . What is life ' s heritage ?
Whither do mortals go ? Nature has not a page In her wide book to show . Turn from the dust away , Mortality and tears 1 There is a fairer day , A brighter scene appears .
Hope was not vainly given , And Virtue shall not ( lie ; This , shows us , brings us heaven , That , immortality . The light of life shall break , The resurrection come ;
Sleeper of death , awake ! Meet friends in your bright home . JOSEPH DARE . Ilincklcy , March 3 , 182 G .
Untitled Article
P 38 Mr . Dare ' s Verses on the Death of Miss Mary Sutton .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1826, page 738, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2555/page/38/
-