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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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deetiny of man . ol ^^ rlffiJM 1 # ^^ hg ; ^ w ^^^^ bejng pB ## J according to th # i ? , &W ^ ppi ^ qgij ^^^ i ^ t ^^ nw ^^ rfW ^ ^ consoling doctrine ® f , |^ j 6 ^^ toatiQ )^ pfthe , whole ^ huinan n $ e to punty and happiness being irarar | #$ : % ?^ EeJ ^ u 9 io ^ lciphrpp , w ^ t ^ tpA ^ ipli the latter would naturalfy } r ^^ w { j £ n seeding irelief frQHi hi& terror of dea | h ; yet , though his need of such a relief is the hinge on whjch thejwWe of the story turns , it is not told what was the effect of the reception of this belief on the mind of the Epicurean . That it was not great , may be inferred from the fact that he denied his faith on the first temptation , and employed all hi&
powers to induce Alethe to forswear herself and live . Little better results than these could indeed be expected from those parts of the discourses of Melanius with which we are presented ; and though the greater number are conveniently said to be omitted , the reader is not tempted to regret his loss , as they were confessedly unable to inspire the disciple wjth ^ urage ^ ox , to teach him sincerity . There is , to be sure , one excuse which has been made for the avowed flimsiness of his hero ' s conversion . It has been said that if
Alciphron bad teen represented as an actual and abiding convert ^ befo ^ e ^ the loss of Alethe , he would have been too open to the observation ; that jloife was his converterj by motives which would as easily , under differed rfreur& . stancels , have made Mm a believer in any creed ; and that mV aroweif'In firmity of purpose white the reward of conviction was within his attaintrieilt ,
and the sincerity which his after sufferings attested when that prifce wais > fbr > ever withdrawn which could have cast a doubt upon the single-heartedtiess of hiis . profession , place his character upon the most respectable footing which the author could assign to it . To all this , we ean only say that it is at best a contrivance to evade a difficulty which the author had better have avoided altogether . '
It realty seems ati injury to Christianity to represent it thus powerless flimsy , and mia ^ tiatWe . 'Th ^ professors of other faiths have been known tc lay down their liv&'fbt conscience' sake , and we cannot but wish that the community m the * deWt teet beieh worshipers of fire , of the planets , of any thing rather than ^ fo ^ 'Godof Christians , whose gospel is too sacred to be used as an instrument for a purpose so light that the records of Paganism would have answered as'well . The interest of Mr . Moore ' s own Fire
worshipers is superior to that of the E picurean convert , and our sympathies with the former are not disturbed by the dread of touching too lightly on a sacred subject . What Mr . Moore ' s religious opinions and feelings may be , or whether he meant to gratify any particular sect by the doctrines of his text , or the comments and quotations in his notes , we know not : but in these subjects he is not at home ; and we hope this is the last time that he will attempt to honour religion ( if such be his aim ) by making it the
ground-Work of his elegant fictions ; or to create an interest in his fictions by iatrodicing themes too vast for his powers and unsuited to his genius . ' Christianity , even in its outward fortunes , belongs to the world of mind ; Mk Moored talents direct him to the delineation of the world of matter ; exfeeta ty < indeed , when civil liberty is in question;—then the stream of his elo- »
qofenW poifs forth a deeper and stronger tide . To these subjects let him apply ikis eminent talents * When he speaks , of the graces and beauties of flatiilWM , wfoejfl he * leads us among her groves and valleys , her gardefl % bowers a ? ri& streams , We follow him With delight . When he ittvit ? es < to ^ heiifeas ^ the song and the dance , outMspiritfl leap ^ ind ^ parkle ^ like the teiiitainnkiMl sealed by the wand of the enchanter . When he raises the watch-word of
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1827, page 908, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1803/page/52/
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