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Untitled Article
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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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i And was it fot nouglit , that be breathed his > last fey the death tfie brave most fear to dte That victorious Guilt , with her trumpet blast , Gave his name to the winds of infamy f Has he woa but this—that over his tomb Even Hate , for a moment , blushed to smile , And that they , who bad sealed it , mourned the doom , Of him who died for his Orphan Isle ? Believe it not !—Oh , rather believe ¦ That his spirit , like those of the Saints on high ,
The cloudy glooms of the grave will cleave From beneath the Golden * shrine to cry ! Nor yet in the earth will his free blood sink—It shall rise ere long , in a fount of flame , While a nation ' s hearts of the bright wave drink , Which for ever murmurs of his name !
And the harp , too long in darkness hung , Shall awaken in Liberty ' s sunbright smile , Till her Martyr ' s meed of fame be flung Upon all the winds of his own Green Isle ! Crediton . 1 ^ 1
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Adams and Jefferson . ( Extract from a Letter from an Englishman resident in America . ")
HpHE deaths of Mr . Adams JL and Jefferson , on the same day and on the anniversary of the fiftieth year from the signing of the Act of Independence , was remarkable . They must both be considered as great men . Very different men they certainly were . Mr . Adams had much learning * , and in this respect far surpassed his rival and contemporary . I cannot help thinking also , that he was much the most honest of the two . He was also the best
politician , well understanding the principles of human nature , and the mode ln which these principles develope themselves in society and government . In the formation of our general and state councils this country ^ under the greatest obligation to his acuteness , firmness , honesty and abitieti
py . erson understood mankind ) etter in detail , and much excelled | " in address . He was a shrewd . dll < l able politician ; excelled in adaptm his course to the feelings of the " " miiude ; and , if I am not greatly justaken , continually acted upon a W ° * niaiioauvrintr and finesse inch was altogether at variance with ^ penness of Mr . Adam s' temper
* Hev . vi . 9 . and viii . 3 .
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H ^ wand character , and which he would not have condescended to practise if he had been able to do it . Jefferson had always in his mouth the honeyed words that fascinate the multitude , philanthropy , liberty , &c . Adams , on the contrary , frequently very bluntly reminded the people of their
faults and duties , and let them know in plain terms , that demagogues may be as unprincipled and dangerous as tyrants , and that popular passions are not less to be dreaded than the caprices and injustice of courts and cabinets . This they did not like to hear . Jefferson often asserted , and always left them to infer , that all would go well if the will of lite sovereign people was in no respect controuled . Adams wanted temper , and had no small share of vanity
Jefferson was by no means destitute of this latter quality , but was too cool and too wise to shew it . Adams had undoubtedly a firm and deep conviction of the truths of revealed religion . Many religious sentiments were uttered , and I hope felt , by Jefferson in the latter part of his life . He seems certainly to profess
himself an Unitarian , but I am not sure that he has ever given any positive proof of his belief in revealed religion . Adams was a zealous Unitarian , and thoroughly understood
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/ Adams and Jefflertm * ' 74 ?
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1826, page 743, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2555/page/43/
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