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Untitled Article
tw-still Had he practically remembered tbe -difference between a popular and a declamatory style * It is act * by noaoay "words , miichf repetition , or an oratorical swell of phraseology ,, that information is most effectively or most acceptably conveyed ii * to the rmnds of the comparatively uninstructed . The author may prune ajid simplify , to much advantage , in a future edition . 'The staple of 1 m work is excellent , W . J . F .
The Principles of Perspective . By William Rider . 'T ' Hisi ? a remarkabl y simple and lucid account of the theory of perspective , with reference to its practical application hi drawing from : nature . It was originally designed for the author ' ^ pupils : both teachers and pupils generally may benefit much by its use .
Practical Observations on Hornceopathy . By W . tJroackes , >> U , > ::., -,. - . . M . R . C . S . V #£ * rule of the homoeopathic system is , that medicines will remdii& ifie ^ Jsaitie disease which they are capable of producing . It wffli'ffSiidvered or invented by Dr Hahneman of Upper Saxony , who , after reading of the febrifuge virtues of Cinchona bark , de-$ 9 £ f&i #$ d tp . try its effects on his own person when in health , and a * bfetttete& thai he found it to produce in a short period all the « ymf ) itom * . > o £ intermittent fever . He proceeded to try other raeto
« bom % ^> ia ( iicl find that they all produced the same disease tb ^^ ere capable of curing . Struck with these results , he made tWtfa f thr ^' foundation of his system . His first dissertati on was ^ ubmiled m 1796 . His work s have gon e tli rough four editions -W / Y ^ have been appointed in Germ any , A ^ wTa , Rufesia , and Poland , to ascertain the soundness of his 4 ft c , triae . The author states that several hundred practitioners qilrft ^ e Con ti n ent have adopted this new plan of treatment ; and tb * tfH > apy are now studying it deeply in England with a view to oommencing its practice , some of whom are in extensive bwsi-9 iesdy and whose names stand deservedly higli . l
• T » e author enters into n © detail of the mode of practice , ex-- i&ptf ' tO' -atttte that all the medicines are used pure and unmixed , find irr extremely minute quantities ; that bleeding is never resorted to , except in apoplexy ; and outward applications , never . T ^ j . wlujn e is concluded by an account of a variety of cases in Vdtift ^ o bft A bates lumself to have effected cures by the new -iJWtoliW ^ ap lqding typhus and scarlet fever , consumption , and cbotetti . tcf ,
^ Ptftijty of " the Church of England . By Dr Saitme ^ Joh nson . T « i * " aefehce * ' maybe summed up ih a very « fciort cju ^ otttion jrom a dialogue between Dr Johnson and 'MrS'Ktoowlcfi , who
Untitled Article
5 t 4 OrtU&it Nati&t .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Aug. 2, 1836, page 520, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2660/page/60/
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