Anglicanus scotched [a reply to View of the character, position, and prospects, of the Edinburgh Bible society, by Anglicanus].1828 |
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Seite 6
... facts announc- ed by ANGLICANUS himself , that that gentleman had lived in a situation by far too elevated for the Doctor to reach , where the mutterings of his thunder , if heard at all , could send only a hardly audible reverberation ...
... facts announc- ed by ANGLICANUS himself , that that gentleman had lived in a situation by far too elevated for the Doctor to reach , where the mutterings of his thunder , if heard at all , could send only a hardly audible reverberation ...
Seite 9
... fact , that ANGLICANUS cannot expect his Letters to be read in England , unless they be better than the " best written Pamphlet " that has appeared on the subject , and yet that they have a London as well as an Edin- burgh publisher ...
... fact , that ANGLICANUS cannot expect his Letters to be read in England , unless they be better than the " best written Pamphlet " that has appeared on the subject , and yet that they have a London as well as an Edin- burgh publisher ...
Seite 16
... fact of my being a Scotsman , is enough to condemn me without farther hear- ing . It is of no use to plead that it was no fault of mine that I was born in a Scottish cottage , rather than in an English palace . The fact , that I am a ...
... fact of my being a Scotsman , is enough to condemn me without farther hear- ing . It is of no use to plead that it was no fault of mine that I was born in a Scottish cottage , rather than in an English palace . The fact , that I am a ...
Seite 22
... fact , that my opinions , whether right or wrong , are as honestly my own as his , or those of the most learned man , aye , or those of the most in- dependent of all thinkers , -the most foolish woman in Edin- burgh . I beg Dr THOMSON ...
... fact , that my opinions , whether right or wrong , are as honestly my own as his , or those of the most learned man , aye , or those of the most in- dependent of all thinkers , -the most foolish woman in Edin- burgh . I beg Dr THOMSON ...
Seite 23
... fact may militate against the phrenological improvement mentioned above . The consider- ation of this circumstance I remit to Mr Combe , and observe that while no Englishman , or Episcopalian , can think the less " of me , every ...
... fact may militate against the phrenological improvement mentioned above . The consider- ation of this circumstance I remit to Mr Combe , and observe that while no Englishman , or Episcopalian , can think the less " of me , every ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
absurdity abuse ANGLI ANGLICANUS appear ANGLICANUS represents antipathy and ill-will Apocrypha controversy Assembly Room aught aversion and disdain beloved country best written Pamphlet Bible Society bite hath pinch'd boldest Scot Buxton CANUS careless censures character charge Christianly-affectioned neighbours Church of Scotland condescends cordial antipathy countenances of Christian cultivated religious Society cynical discontent dare defend dignified Englishman Doctor Dr THOMSON drubbing Earl Street Edinburgh Presbytery Edinburgh Society English Episcopalian exhibits fancy's farther feeble feeling Frae Gambier give HENRY GREY honour imputation insult labours lence Letters of ANGLICANUS London Committee meet the countenances money-loving habits motto nameless accuser never Newcastle North of England opinions perhaps pinch'd and pain'd pious and Christianly-affectioned poor popular Parliament-man poverty Presbyterian reply reproach Scotsman Scottish Church Scottish Ministers settled sentiments shew sigh South St George's suppose Teignmouth thing think that ANGLICANUS torrent true unprovoked words had teeth write
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 21 - Where is the •Royal Duke, or popular Parliament-man, or place-holding nobleman, that has ever meddled with a movement or influenced a decision of the Bible Society ? or the individual among the Society's efficient labourers who has ever asked a favour, or found an avenue open to him for the prosecution of his private interest, through ties •held in that association ? The humble, and on earth humbly-requited services of the spiritual temple are left to those whose hearts affect these labours—...
Seite 22 - Nay, do not think I flatter; For what advancement may I hope from thee, That no revenue hast but thy good spirits To feed and clothe thee? Why should the poor be flatter'd? No; let the candied tongue lick absurd pomp, And crook the pregnant hinges of the knee Where thrift may follow fawning.
Seite 15 - The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance, and of my cup, Thou maintainest my lot : and, on the justest grounds, he immediately adds, The lines have fallen to me in pleasant places ; yea, I have a goodly heritage.
Seite 9 - Instructor, and if they have any thing to spare, to show their detestation of the men they do not know, and of the affairs they do not understand, they send it north to swell the coffers and the pride of the Edinburgh Bible Society. But such contributions, like picturesque scenery on other men's estates, will do more to gratify the taste than to extend the resources of the Society, that has the benefit of them. — I would not, however, by any means say that all Scottish...
Seite 9 - English abettors of Edinburgh principles? Let us see. There is not, I •will answer for it, a native Englishman among them. Poor ministers the chief of them, of small Scottish congregations, stationed on the wrong side of the border, who sigh in obsequious fondness after a church that has not cherished them with reciprocal attachment. Their highest conceptions of worldly glory and felicity do not surmount the dome of St George's — it would not do for them to slight what they conceive to be the...
Seite 9 - But we are told that these views are gaining ground in the North of England, and that even from London some contributions have been received by the Edinburgh Society. And who are those English abettors of Edinburgh principles ? Let us see : there is not, I will answer for it, a native Englishman among them. Poor ministers the chief of •them, of small Scottish congregations, stationed on the wrong side of the -border, who sigh in obsequious fondness after a Church that has not cherished them with...
Seite 9 - a parochial charge," with benefice of £150 per annum in some obscure glen, or on some dreary heath of their and Dr Thomson's " beloved country." Such individuals send their homage and mite to the Edinburgh Society. And of the tribe of needy adventurers who every year migrate to the genial South, there are hundreds whose rank does not entitle them to forget, as their betters for the most part do, their presbyterian education and early predilections, and whom sordid sentiments, vulgar manners, and...
Seite 9 - Scottish ministers settled in the North of England, or that all poor laymen removing to London, are of this character; only that in most cases it is a spirit of prejudice and cynical discontent which leads men so situated to send money to Edinburgh, in preference to giving it where their more pious and christianly-affectioned neighbours give theirs. It is...
Seite 9 - ... habits, preclude from the amiable circles of cultivated religious society. These do not for a long time change their sentiments or society with the scene of their existence. They continue to read and rail, for the sake of old times, with the Edinburgh Instructor, and if they have any thing to spare, to show their detestation of the men they do not know, and of the affairs they do not understand, they send it north to swell the coffers and the pride of the Edinburgh Bible Society. But such contributions,...
Seite 22 - WE do right in speaking of this as a hard lesson. It is one of the hardest of all the many lessons we have to learn. It is a lesson so hard to learn that but few perfectly learn it. There is only one here and there who is able to say with the Apostle, " I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content.