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THE

ECLECTIC REVIEW.

MDCCCXXXIV.

JANUARY-JUNE.

THIRD SERIES.

VOL. XI.

Φιλοσοφίαν δὲ οὐ τὴν Στωικὴν λέγω, οὐδὲ τὴν Πλατωνικὴν, ἢ τὴν Επισ
κουρεῖον τε καὶ ̓Αριστοτελικήν· ἀλλ ̓ ὅσα εἴρηται παρ' ἑκάστῳ τῶν αἱρεσέων
τούτων καλῶς, δικαιοσύνην μετὰ εὐσεβοῦς ἐπιστήμης ἐκδιδάσκοντα, τοῦτο
σύμπαν τὸ ΕΚΛΕΚΤΙΚΟΝ φιλοσοφίαν φῆμι.

CLEM. ALEX. Strom. L. 1.

LONDON:

JACKSON AND WALFORD,

18, ST. PAUL'S CHURCH-YARD.

1834.

G. WOODFALL, angel court, SKINNER STREET, LONDON,

ACT to regulate the Labour of Children and young Persons in the Mills and

Factories of the United Kingdom

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THE

ECLECTIC REVIEW,

FOR JANUARY, 1834.

Art. I. 1. Reports of the British and Foreign School Society, 1831-2-3. 8vo.

2. Reports of the National Society, 1831-2-3. 8vo.

3. An Act to regulate the Labour of Children and Young Persons in the Mills and Factories of the United Kingdom, passed 29th August, 1833. 3 & 4 Will. IV. Chap. ciii.

4. Speech of the Lord Chancellor on the Education of the People, as reported in the Times and Morning Chronicle of March 15, 1833. 5. Edinburgh Review, No. CXVII. Art. 1. National Education in England and France.

6. Foreign Quarterly Review, No. XXIV. Art. 1. Necessity and Practicability of a National System of Education.

7. Popular Education in England. By D. D. Scott, Esq. London, 1833.

THAT it is the duty of a Christian People, to take care that,

in some way or other, facilities are afforded for the instruction of its youth, we suppose few will dispute. The God who constituted the various relations of social life, has imposed the obligation. It is the order of His providence, that every successive generation of the human family, shall in this particular, as well as in many others, be dependent upon that which precedes it. The chain which thus binds together the children of men, cannot be severed :-the responsibility which the connection involves, can never be evaded.

There are, it is true, a goodly number still to be found, who practically maintain the strange paradox, that it is not the will of God that all his rational creatures should be, in any enlarged sense of the word, intelligent. With such persons, we hold no

VOL. XI.-N.S.

B

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