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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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Untitled Article
Baqmre . ? JHtf it is who hafck awoke rmo to « attqrtlitttfet& 4 # &a 3 q whohath made me ai ) perfect xx > n vert l ^~ he it is * v > ho hat h tau ght me to- walk in the godly walk of his own preoiau ^ doctriiiei ^ he it is—aye , and as sure as I have this poke—these fiveiingpr&on niy hand- ^ who liath amused my- sinftil soul fro m it& sleep ij ^ f i ^ ath
under your preachment ^ torn me clean away fra «^ ddstin | Glifwiiuti tt sluggish-mindedness unto the very briskest 06 lifei ^ # -He il ^ fcsfay ^ — - ^ and madam may look as sour as she pleases- ^^ nvho h ^ tb- Mone upon , my barren weedish field s and ploughed it with the ploirgh of truth , and harrowed it with grace- * givhig < fear , and / horror , I mu& watered it , and manured it , and sown therein the-sseecb of ' ttofc
righteous repentant sinner , so that a sunshiny tree is ? g » bwri tip with wide , wide branching arms , to exult , and glorify * andi ^ put fei ? th fi ^ xit fit to be gathered and dressed as . a meat-oflfering on the day of judgment and salvation for evermore . ' - > ais i Dr . Wizbeach looked utterly confounded . He fead > gradually sunk back ia his chair in amaze—such is the difference between
sincere passion , in whatever cause , and mere conventional assumption—< and as she proceeded he grew dumb ^ foundei ^ ed atid- ^ lBsblutely frightened . Meantime the larg € eyes of Vespasian p ^ esent ^ d black and white to each alternately . The lady was the first Who found hei ? speech . u 4 . f < r / * The wretched sinner will break a blood-vessel all bvdi ? the
carpet . Leave the room this instant- — -the doctor is perfectly shocked ftt you * - ^ and prepare to quit my house withia an-hoii * -, or y ^ sh all be taken up , and cqnfined in a mad ^ hotise ^ . , , t m 4 A pause of some length occurred , which was broken by Vesjia * sian in unappealing commiserative tone . - - ! ^ - w < Me hope you no send Mrs . Cooky away—she no calk stupidy ass no-more 3 ) ! i iV
^ / Jjtea ce * ideot T said the lady , * such wretches servants become by kind treatment ; it would be well if we could do entirely without them . Ls # ve the room , Mrs . Stains . * The eook was just becoming alarmed at what she had said in he ) r excitement , and was fast relapsing into a sense of their respective stations in society ; but this fresh attack brought back her courage ^ especially as she saw her place was irrecoverably lost ^ ^ iW&y am I a wretch , madam > so please you mada **^ I sh ould HJk , ^ \ o know ? Why is a poor servant more of a wretch than a rich
lady r- » Dc ^ without us indeed ! Or why more of a wretch than a rioh man like his reverence ? It was but two Lord ' st . day evenings ago that Mr . Livermore Stiles told us from the veiy pulpi % > that hia » evetence could no more enter the kingdom of heaven than » a camel . And I believe it . * - i « I wfehbeivto depart / pantedJJfc . Wizheach * is // -y < i
r *^ M ? fehStains / saidl the lacly ^ ^ I order you to leave the hotis ^ in half an hour , on pain of being sent to prison without judgfc / cm | tti * yi ' rt ^ Mei ( hope // yo # no s end nvisay cooky t 4 > prison jpa *> Hiiyi ? ee 4 &V
Untitled Article
94 * mgkQ&K < & < md , € h # * ekiicte ,
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1835, page 242, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2644/page/18/
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