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to provide for the North of Ireland as respectable a body of clergymen as ever existed * He considered that it was a great disadvantage to form a college in au exteinsif ^ maoufacturftig town ; and judging not merely from the result , but
forming an opinion d priori , he thought that great benefit must arise from a conimunieation between the different parts of the United Kingdom : it encouraged kindly feelings , dispelled prejudices , and promoted those sentiments which he was
sure the House would be desirous to cherish . He had very great donbt as to the propriety of interfering with the established system of education , and he must avow that there was-much in the proceedings of this Institution which he disapproved . What he had said to them was this—if Government consented to
grant the vote , they would then become responsible for their proceedings * AU the Government required was some check over their proceedings , and that check to be composed of two persons of the highest rank in the North of Ireland , who should take a part in their deliberations ; but they disclaimed nil intention of interference with the nomination of their
professors . He therefore hoped the Hon . Gentleman opposite ( Mr * Bice ) would be satisfied with a promise of inquiry at a future period . When the more pressing matters should have been gone through , then it would be very easy to give instructions to the Commissioners to inquire into this Institution *
Mr . Spring Rice observed , that provided the great object of inquiry wa £ obtained , it was of little importance whether it was effected by the interposition of Parliament , or by the orders of the Crown . As there was now an
understanding relative to that point , he should move that the Amendment should be withdrawn . Mr . Brougham was disposed to believe that the Irish Government had no
view , by any interference on its part , to possess itself of the patronage of the Institution ; but he did think that the tendency of that proposition was even * tuaBy to obtain * an absolute controul over the Establishment .
Mr . Secretary PeeC said , that when a Veto , over the appointment of the Pro * lessors , was offered , he declined it as a most invidious exercise . He well recollected , indeed , the discussion had brought it to his recollection , that in the letter alluded to , he disclaimed any interference in the appointment of the Professors . —The Petition was ordered to he printed .
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The Rev . & . Ajllakd , B . A ., has accepted an invitation to . become the minister of the Unitarian congregation at the Great Meeting , Hinckley ,
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638 Inteliigences ^ Parliamektary . ^ Literary . —Notices .
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NOTICES . We are requested to give notice * that a New Unitarian Chapel will be opened in York Street , St . James ' s Square , for divine service , in the month of December next . Full particulars hereafter .
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We see with pleasure an advertisement of the whole Works and Correspondence of Sir Thomas Browne y Kat ., M * J > . * of Norwich , under the care of S . WHkin ,
F . L . S ., and Member of jthe Wernerian Society of Edinburgh * With the VVorkp will be given the Critical and Explanatory Notes and Observations of Sir Kenelm Digby , Dean Wren , Lefebire , Keci , Moltr Digby , Dean Wren , Lefebire , KechMoltr
, keuius and others ; andl also the Life of Browne , by Johnson , with copious and interesting additions . The Editor promises that some of the works shall be collated with original MSS *
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LITERARY . Ttie Milton Mtiuss&ript . —This anxT iously-expected work is announced in 4 to . for the beginning of the ensuing year . It is printing at the Cambridge University press , under the care of Mr . Stunner , librarian and-historiographer to his Majesty * The Latin title is as folfc
lows : " JJoannis Miltoni Aneli de Don Dlows f oannis Miltotji Angli de octrina Christiana Libri duo posthumi , nunc primum typis mandati . " With the original will be published a translation by Mr . Sumner , entitled "A Treatise on Christian Doctrine , by John Milton . "
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^^•^^^^^ B ^^^ BBi ^^^^^^* ' Mr . Hone and the Quarterly Review . — It may be known to our readers that Mr . Hone some time ago published a book called The Apocryphal Gospels . For this he was charged with igoorance , fraud and impiety , by a Quarterly He ^
viewer . He put out a reply under the title of i € Aspersions Answered /* in which he ingenuously confessed some errors , but convicted the Reviewer of other errors . The anonymous antagonist lias returned to the charge , with an acknowledgment of some of his owo blunders aud new abuse of Mr . Hone .
The latter gentleman has published a irejoinder , in a sixpenny pamphlet , under the title of " An Article for the Quarterly Review , * ' in which he shews great ability and spirit , and has convicted the Reviewer of such dishonest artifices as must disgust evea the proprietors of the Quarterly , no w , at least , that they are exposed to the public .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 2, 1824, page 638, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2529/page/62/
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