On this page
-
Text (3)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
French Monuments ; as the stones were scattered in every direction , it was impossible to form any idea of their united effect . We observed , however , three very rude figures carved in stone which it seems from an
inscription , of which the following is the substance , were intended to represent the Trinity 1 - " Peter Abelard , founder of this abbey , lived in the 12 th century : he was distinguished by the profundity of his learning and the rarity of his worth ; but having published a
work on the Trinity , which was condemned by the Council of Soissons , in 1120 , he retracted , and , to shew that his opinions w-ere orthodox , he made out of a single stone these three figures , which represent the three divine persons of the Holv Trinitv . " The burial
ground is kept in excellent order , to preserve which several gens d ' armes are constantly on duty : some of our party who had inadvertently trespassed , by leaving the path and crossing the grass , were rather roughly
accosted by the soldiers on guard , who were scarcely pacified by information that they were foreigners and consequently unacquainted with the rules of the place . A feeling of respect for the remains of the dead , and a wish to
preserve them from insult , seem natural to Ihe human heart ; we find traces of it in the remotest ages of antiquity ; whatever variety of customs as to the disposal of the dead may have prevailed in different nations , or even in the same nation at different
periods of its civilization , they all had one uniform object in view , that of protecting their remains from profanation and insult . And does not the same feeling beat responsive in our breasts ? Who of us but must have felt shocked ( when passing through
the common receptacles of mortality , particularly in the neighbourhood of our metropolis , ) to see the want of decency and respect with which the remains of former generations are treated , at seeing- their bones handled and thrown about with the utmost
carelessness and indifference , exposed to the idle gaze of every passenger ? Do they not seem to say to us with the unburied skeleton of Archytas—Nor thou , my friend , refuse with impiou hand A little portion of the wandering sandy To these my poor remains — . "
Untitled Article
In this respect we might with advantage take a lesson from our continental neighbours .
Untitled Article
Sir , Exeter , Oct . 13 , 1817 . FOR the satisfaction of your correspondent Historicus , in your last Number , [ p . 5 % 5 , ~ ] I have looked into Socrates for the fact he mentions , and have readily found the passage to which Sir E . Coke alluded , of which I send you a free translation . Socrat .
Hist . Eccl . L . i . cap . 38 : — " The Em > peror wishing to put Arius to the test sent for him to the palace , and asked , him whether he submitted to the Decrees of the Council of Nice : he
readily , without any delay , but with a fraudulent intention , signed in the Emperor ' s presence what it had decided respecting the faith . Constantine , surprised , required an oath in addition , and he carried his deceit so
far as to satisfy him even in this . The fraud which he practised in subscribing was , as I have heard , as follows : —They say , that Arius having written his own opinions upon a parchment which he had with him , carried it under his arm and swore that he
really believed according to what he had written . This last fact I have related only from hearsay , but that he added an oath to his subscription , I have asserted on the authority of the Emperor ' s letters /'
In the last sentence of this passage Historicus may perhaps find a reason for the story having been neglected by Mosheim and Priestley ; but he should have been very sure that it was a fabrication before he ventured to charge Sir E . Coke with so wanton and
useless , a falsehood as inventing it and ascribing it to Socrates . W . H .
Untitled Article
Lady Nithsdale ' s Letter . —Arius s alleged Fraud . 66 <>
Untitled Article
Sir , Nov . 2 , 1817 . riMHE letter which I lately trans-JL mitted to you , [ p . 460 , ] giving an accouut of Lord Nithsdale ' escape , was written by Lady Nithsdale to her sister , an abbess , at Bruges . The original is in the hands of Mr . Maxwell , of Yorkshire , who is descended from Lord Nithsdale . From an intimate friend of Mr . Maxwell I obtained the copy which 1 transmitted to you . T . C . HOLLAND .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 2, 1817, page 669, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2470/page/29/
-