On this page
-
Text (1)
-
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
with our wishes for a speedy and great increase to the weight of his duties . " Mr . Hornby returned thanks . He observed that such aid as he could render to the Association he would give with great pleasure , because he firmly believed that it tended to promote the cause of truth and liberty , and to diffuse peace an earth and good will among mankind . More contracted views than
these his judgment could not sanction . He would not iuterrupt the hilarity of the meeting : by going into any details connected with his office of Treasurer . At the same time he felt . it his duty to state , that in that capacity he required their aid and support . Such of them as had heard the re ports read at the meeting in the moruing must know , that on the one hand the sum at the command
of the committee was small , and on the other that the demands upon them were various and extensive , as fresh fields of usefulness were continually opening . He had taken the liberty , in the morning , of suggesting one or two Instances of the means by which the funds of the Association might be increased ; and he had no doubt that such an increase would
take place * His only wish was to receive with the one hand and to give with the * other . After congratulating the meeting and the town of Manchester on having a local treasurer so valuable as Mr . Richard Potter , Mr . Hornby concluded by saying , that he had attended many meetings , but never any where so much spirit was infused . He hoped that that was but the forerunner of many other meetings equally honourable to the county of Lancaster .
The Vicip-President , Mr . G . W . Wood , now rose to propose the health of the Chairman , whose friendship he had had the happiness of possessing from his earliest infancy . He ( the Chairman ) had been bred in those principles which had ever marked his career . He had always been ready to take the
place which his rank in society gave him in advocating the rights of his fellowmen , to secure their liberties and to promote their happiness . He ( Mr . ( 3 Tpttie ) was likewise descended from a nonconformist minister , eminent in his day , and had always shewn himself a firm and consistent Protestant Dissenter . [ Cheers . ) H $ then gave ,
" The Cliairrnan of the present Meeting . " The Chairman returned thanks , observing that he had no other claim upon their notice thaji that lie had been , was , and should continue to be , a steady
Untitled Article
friend to civil and religious liberty . The Chairman then gave , " The Secretaries of the Association . " Dr . Bowring . — Mr . Chairman and Gentlemen , if those with whom eloquence is a habit , and whose thoughts we have been accustomed to follow along the golden chain of their intellectual superiority , feel embarrassed on
occasions like this , we , who are not accustomed to such occasions , may well crave an excuse and ask your candid reception of the few words we have to ytter . For myself and my colleagues it is impossible to express the delight we feel at witnessing a meeting like this , and if any spur were wanting to encourage us to pursue the holy work in which we are engaged , the sympathy
this day exhibited would be an abundant motive . We come to tell you the honest tale of our doings , and in that tale , though there is much to please and encourage , ihere is something to disappoint . Societies , as well as individuals , have salutary lessons to learn from depression ; and we have had occasion to reflect , that the uses of adversity are sweet to associations as well as to
individuals . But to whatever part of the globe we turn there is much to reward us for the past and to encourage our exertions for the future . One great object of this Association has for the present been defeated . The removal of some from Calcutta , and the death of others , —for death has there extended its
empire as welt as to other places , —have thrown for the present a cloud over that part of British India . But if there oar expectations have been disappointed , far more have they been realized in other parts of the Eastern world . We have had the unspeakable satisfaction to see
temples raised to the one God in the midst of polytheism and idolatry . It has been from your funds that those temples have been raised , and it has been by your encouragement that light has gone forth to those dark parts of the earth ; and our success has , compared with oui * means , been greater than that of any of our Trinitarian rivals in the field of
Christian exertion . You hare done much also for knowledge . You have erected schools in the midst of ignorance ; aud among the Hindoos , men have come forward , who have had the sagacity to perceive , amid tfce efforts made by every class of Christians in that part of the world , the superior advautages of Unitarian Christianity . Even among them there are men who I 131 * knowledge , come from what quarter so-
Untitled Article
*>/ 0 Intelligence . — Unitarian Association
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Aug. 2, 1830, page 570, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2587/page/66/
-