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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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# * il QpoiQm Whimi ; ** & m iN » 4 ety # f « i 4 Me ^ wi > iA ^ gmAny afpw sjrfci ij » I ^ i gh HurtV'Ifcefa ^ ' *^^ detd > ptontAins / embalmed in bejmj * t ^ ftse * and fragran ce . We 4 sj » this opportunity of mtwkicmg tfo » fottoifijig lew but valuable aeoteMfefc ijpnuteddqwn from the Hpa of the late S . T . Coleridge : GfraraQter qf Charles Lamb , by Coleridge . —• Charles Lamb baa pwt * totality and individuality of pbaracter Ibaa any other wan I JtBosr , or tare
ever koowj ) | a all niy life . Jn most men we distinguish bettrautfee $ fljurcnt powers oj ^ tQ ^^ f intellect as one being predominant over the other . The genius of "VVorUs ^ orth is greater than his talent , though ronsj 4 prao | e . fW talent of Souther is greater than his genius , though respectable ; ana « o any But in Charles Lamb it is altogether one ; his genius is talent , and jjjfs talent is genius , and his heart is h # whole and one as his heed . The inU words that come from him sometimes on religious subjects would shbcfc yo « from the mouth of any other man , but from him they seem mere flashes W be
fifawork . If an argument seem to has reasop not fully true ^ bwt * & o * tf in Jtbajt o < 14 desecrating way : yet hi 3 will , the inward man , is , I well , kntw profoundlv reJigioqs . . Wa ^ ch him when alon e , and you will find ton " w | either a Sable or an old divine } or an old English poet ; in such isnia pl ^ - sure . * '¦ ' . - ¦• • - ¦ « - ¦ . ¦ ,.-.,
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The London Review . No . II * It is not our jwrpose to criticise the contents of this mrmber , but otytfr to paeqtibn tnat we have been both surprised and gr ieved by a riQJ £ appended ^ 6 ah article on the * Rationale of Political RepreaeutaUo ^ * ' ana the more so , on account of the signature ( A ) which tfiai aarticfe bears « Tliere must be some inadvertence or mistake in the caae ; or els « we must have mistaken the writer , and the character which it i *
intended the London Review * should sustain . The note in aue « ttoti tt appended tb an extract from Mr . Bailees work ,- relative to xfie exttoQr sion of women from the elective franchise ( the passage was quo > te < t In our own notice of the work , * Monthly Repository' for June last ; p . 44 ) 7 ); and runs thtm : ' , i
• Into the reasons of any other kind which may be given for th « exclusion of women , we shall not enter ; trot because we think any of them valid , hut because the subject ( though in a philosophical treatise on i ^ mffnta ^ tioiu it could not have been passed over in silence ) is not oae whjcli , in the present state of the public wind , pojild be inade a topic of popular discussion with any prospect of practical advantage . '—p . 35 ^ .
We must protest strongly both against Uie general pxiocipiit her © laifi down , and the pantiouiar application of that principle . The * ix > ndoQ Review can confer no greater * practical ad vantage ' , op the public , than by the free and full discussion of any ap <^ ev £ jry ( | mac il ^ H may be fai ^ lv presented pQ ^ U n uU ^ . It was annxnuw ^ J i # ^ ke orffaii of the Philosophic Reformers , whom we understood to W & £ §
party banded together for | h « attainment of influence by ayo ^ VW fljlpopWar topics , bMt a iiei of oridDaJ and ih ^ e ^ aim was to inculcate sound principles In p olitical ana moral p ^ iloaoph f . * ad to lead the way in th « fearleas amucatioD of thote pnncipiea to all social relations and individual con&erns . The laM t&ing we ex * pe ^^ rf fteur ** Miihi ^ nai ^ t j ^ e AitMMfu ] U > VtUe pvWo injod ^ 4 ^ ooi Jbe j ^> n 3 s # elM l V # | i a motto * fix tsaimWbring ife » biH . Ato , « r uft * yt « ltok 4 sj ^ MriistoA « ticfi aAktu 4 « g 0 / Oar notion wav ^ hat these rtYiewors watq ts ^ M IW
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1835, page 627, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2649/page/63/
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