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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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4 ti > Somm t&'Hb * U m »* L
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It i * tiot always that there is a perfect correspondence between institution and practice , between the principle in wliicli tlve customs of society have had their origin and the actual con * chi&t of the community , professing to / acknowledge th ^ uijliiratuimof tlint principle . It would be no i in profit able ocrHpartum to mark the several instances in which wi the yrefl&nt ftge > tbb discrepancy plainly exist ? , and to investigate the cause of it ;
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cwfltrt ttte' MsnQu < i < Senfee receives the * ic& * Hqh trf icftMidecto * V Understand **^ givestheja + neyor bnildanpknowledge ; ReiW sifts ? orTegufattes our knowledge . Very well ; theia ., Sense m * kes idtattions ; Understanding makes conceptions ; Reason make « ideas . Under the three primitive colours of blue , red , and yfcttow , we have Intuition and Nature , Conception and Science Idea and God . Intuition is defined as " everything present in thne and space , that we feel , see , hear , taste , arto smell- |"
— -Cofnception is " everything absent in time and space ^^ that w ^ tiiink of only , but do not touch ; Idea is " everything * out of time and space , that we think of only , but which never Gail come into time and space . " ;;
Should this little notice be deemed acceptable , I ehati * at a fature thne , if permitted , attempt a further consideration bf the subject . But I should be more gratified if this , opemn g of the question incite younger and abler hands to the uthlertatkii )^ . » ,-. •; . ! . ' ¦ ¦¦¦ SfeTH-.
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i 1 •• * SONNET TO WORDSWORTH .
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DEVOTION AND SELF-SACIUFICE .
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5 Thou soul of grandeur in humanity ? With humbleness so dignified ; whoe power ; Is sympathy with virtue , placinu ; thee Upon a just , tho' hite apparnit throne , High in the immortal , amaranthine bower , Wheuce the G ' reat Living on the earth guze down , Perchance with tears such as thou oft hufct « iied ; , . Tfic clouds have burst , —men see thy stai-crown'd head . Thou lov ' st not mere excitement ' s fitful flare f Nor picturesque externals : s ^ ltinnly seen , A human heart to tlieV , pants and lies hare . Hard of pure nature ' s herniam serene , Thou rul ' st an ocean where no wrecks have heeii ; Bow , Time , renrov'd , to his subhuie ^ r < -y hair !
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1836, page 424, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2659/page/32/
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