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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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* I loe to hear your daughters dear , Their rustic tale in sang revealing ; Whene ' er your music greets my ear , My bosom swells wi' a joyous feeling , Scotland dear .
* Tho' I to other lands may gae , As the robin comes in wintry weather , I'll hameward flee whene ' er I may . An' nestle amang the mountain heather , Scotland dear
' When I maun die , O I wad lie Where I an' life first met thegither ; That rny cold clay , thro' its decay , Might live and bloom in the mountain heather ,
Scotland dear / This volume is dedicated to the best living Scottish songster , Allan Cunningham , by whom its contents have been warmly praised ; and whose judgment might have superseded ours , were it not that we always choose to judge for ourselves , even in the presence of such masters of the art ; albeit , with a quantum valeat when we differ .
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Plain Advice to Landlords and Tenants , Washbourne . We understand that upwards of six thousand copies have been sold of this useful compendium . Eighteen pence is a cheap premium for insurance against the manifold expenses and vexations which may arise out of the relations of landlord and tenant , lodging-house keepers and lodginghirers . The public are indebted to Mr . Washbourne for the industry with which this and many other little books of a similarly useful description are got up .
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A Letter to the Archbishop of Canterbury . By a Curate . Certain questions have been forwarded by , the Bishops to their Clergy , tending to elicit information , or its semblance , preparatory ( as is supposed ) to some plan of Church Reform . In that aristocratical spirit which pervades our institutions , —even though they be , as whatever is Christian must be , professedly founded on the broadest principle of human equality and fraternity , —these queries have been addressed to
Incumbents and not to Curates ; to the gentlemen , and not to the operatives , of the Establishment . Hereupon the Curate ventures to question the Archbishop , and puts the very reasonable inquiry , why the Curates were not invited to answer for themselves on points which they were most competent to elucidate , and in which their interests , and those of the incumbents , their employers , are directly at variance ? To this
pertinent question , several others succeed , equally deserving the attention of the Dignitary to whom they are addressed , and of the public generally . Amongst other demands , the Curate asks , What is the reason that the Clergy , as a body , are at present degraded before mankind ? ' And he justly adds , ' The answer is immediate ; they have commuted the means which , the Deity gave them for the dissemination of Divine truth and
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Critical Notices . 143
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 2, 1835, page 143, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2642/page/63/
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