A Brief Memoir with Portions of the Diary, Letters, and Other Remains, - of Eliza Southall, Late of Birmingham, England by Eliza Southall
page 89 of 177 (50%)
page 89 of 177 (50%)
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satisfied almost entirely with it.
_12th Mo. 5th_. I have got my letter inserted in the _Friend_; the editor says my zeal has carried me too far as to _means_; he agrees as to the evil of the system. Oh that it were seen as it deserves! But how talk of abolition by _law_, and keep spirit-merchants in the Church? [See _Friend_, vol. iv. page 232.] _12th Mo. 11th_.--Letter to M.B. * * * _Nothing_, I think, loses by its foundation being tried. We see that in yet higher things it is needful and right often to try whether principle is firm; and, though sometimes we may tremble lest faith should fall in the trial, perhaps it would be more just to fear lest the trial should merely show it already to have fallen. What thou sayest about laying aside reasoning is very true; but how hard to do so! Saul's armor doubtless it is, as says the little tract. How easy, comparatively, to let any want go unsatisfied, rather than that imperious reason which urges its claim with so many good pretences, which tells us truth will always bear investigation, and that if we cannot explain by our small faculties experiences in which the highest mysteries are involved, the experiences must have been fallacious! How different is _this sort_ of voluntary and almost presumptuous self-investigation from submitting all to the unerring touchstone! It is, indeed, very instructive to observe that our |
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