ation can alien conc
tant
ert S
h the Rev. Brewin Grant, B. A. A report was published by Partridge and Oakley at 2s. 6
us. He had wit, readiness, and an electric velocity of speech, boasting that he could speak
acrid
t milk of kindn
ity. In Glasgow, in 1854, I met Mr. Grant again during several nights' discussion in the City Hall. This debate also was published, as was one of three nights with the Rev. J. H. Rutherfor
1854, one at Stockport. At an adjourned conference Mr. Joseph Barker (whom we had converted) presided.* We had a London Secular Society which met at the Hall of Science, City Road, and held its Council
o. 428, Vol.
Philosophy of the People. It commenced by showing the necessity of independen
ird and flower has an owner, what has the poor man to do with orthodox religion which begins by proclai
is virtually the property of the capitalist, no less in England than is the slave in New Orleans.* Society blockades poverty, leaving it scarce escape. The artisan is engaged in an imminent struggle against wrong and inj
ssed with Dr. Parker in Banbury. In his Six Chapters on Secularism** which was the title of his book, he makes pleasant references to that debate. The Christian Weekly News of that day sa
The English slave
pe
then, neighbour, W
self an energetic
ist
ose our own consciousness, violate our moral sense, lead us out of sympathy with humanity, then we shall abandon them." This was exactly the case of Secularism which he undertook to confute. Dr. Langford held a more
I had said that, "There were three cla
e diss
e indi
ellectually
eing able to attend to it, through constitutional insensibility to its appeals. The intellectually independent avoid it as opposed to freedom, morality and progress." It was to these classes, and not to Christians, tha
ph Parker publishe
elps to Truth Seeke
ontaining "The Se
tance of more than
book, from the Chri
ht it on its
d to John Stuart Mill, to whose friendship and criticism I had often been indebted, and he
nt to the argument and to those supposed to be confuted by it. They resolved to issue twenty-thousand copies at one shilling a volume. The most eminent Evangelical ministers and congregations of the day subscribed to the project. Four persons put down their names for one thousand copies each, and a strong list of subscribers was sent out. Unfortunately I published another article intending to induce readers of the Reasoner to procure copies, as they would find in its candid pages a wealth of quotations of free-thought opinion with which very few were acquainted. The number of em
ional offence as h
the truth, whereas
s life from f