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VIII. Thou shalt-not steal.

People. Lord, have mercy, &c.

IX. Thou shalt-not beár' fálse witness-against

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thy-neighbour.

People. Lord, have mercy, &c.

tional slowness and force in the delivery, in order that they may possess their due weight and dignity.

Thou shalt-not beár.] According to Boswell, Dr. Johnson corrected Garrick in his manner of pronouncing the Ninth Commandment, "in which (said Dr. Taylor, the relator of the anecdote) the emphasis should be upon 'not' and 'false witness.""-If this representation be correct, how extraordinary must have been Garrick's manner, if he avoided giving emphasis to 'false witness.' According to Sir John Hawkins's account of the story, the difference between Garrick and Johnson was this: the former laid stress upon 'shalt,' and the latter upon 'not;' but neither of them could have intended (as the late Dr. Gregory supposed, p. lxxvi. of his 'Essay on the Composition and Delivery of a Sermon') that 'false witness,' the crime to be forbidden, should be excluded from its due share of emphasis. Probably, the only difference between the two methods was the following:

Garrick's, Thou shalt-not béar' fálse witness,' &c.Johnson's 'Thou shalt not beár' fálse witness,' &c. The latter mode is that which is generally used; but in the present work, the preference is given to the former, as being most agreeable to the custom which prevails in conversation, in pronouncing an auxiliary verb coupled with the negative. See the first note on the Second commandment.]

-false witness] Some readers, excluding the word 'witness' from any separate inflection, make it partake of that

X. Thou shalt-not covet thy néighbour's

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house; thou shalt-not covet thy neighbour's

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wife; nor his sérvant nor his maid, nor his ox'

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nor his ass-nor A'NY-thing-that-is-hìs.

which is given to the word 'false;' saying either 'fálse witness,' or fàlse-witness.' Both these modes would imply, that, although we must not bear false-witness against our neighbour, we are allowed to bear true witness against him. Such an inference would convey very unnecessary information.]

-against thy neighbour] In the account respecting the difference between Garrick's and Johnson's manner of pronouncing this Commandment, it is observable that nothing is said relative to the mode of delivering the concluding words-' against thy neighbour.' It may therefore be inferred, that they were included under the inflection given to the word 'witness.' This is, perhaps, the best way, because the words have been previously implied, though not expressed, in the three preceding Commandments: Thou shalt do no murder,' i. e. against thy neighbour; Thou shalt not commit adultery' against thy neighbour; Thou shalt not steal' from thy neighbour. It is further observable, that our Lord quotes the ninth Commandment without the words

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against thy neighbour;' the meaning of it being complete, independently of that addition. St. Mark x. 19.]

ANY'-thing-that-is-hìs] In the preceding part of this Commandment, the coveting of various particulars belonging to ' our neighbour' is forbidden: the concluding clause extends still further, and forbids us to covet àny thing that is his. To convey this meaning, the word 'any' must be emphatic. The usual mode of delivering the words is this:-'ány thing that is his.' The meaning of which, expressed at length, would be

People. Lord, have mércy-upon-us, and write all these thy laws' in our hearts-we beseech thee.

Thou shalt not covet any thing that is (not thine own, but) his.' One inference from which would be, that we may lawfully covet what is our own. But so feeble and superfluous an inference can never be intended.]

COLLECTS FOR THE KING.

Let us pray.

Almighty God, whose kingdom is ēvērlàsting' and power ínfinite-have mércy upon the whole

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Church; and só-rule the héart of thy chósenservant' GEORGE, our kìng and governor,, that hé-(knowing whóse-minister-he-is-) may,

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Let us pray] "When the Commandments are finished, the devoutness and fervency of manner, required in the subsequent prayer, constitute that change and variety which cannot fail of assisting to increase the ardency of devotion."

-knowing whose minister] Here the emphasis is frequently laid on the word 'minister "that he, knowing whose minister-he-is;" whereas it should be, "that he, knowing whose-minister-he-is," i. e. knowing that he is the minister of Almighty God. And the same emphasis should, for the same

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above áll-things, séek thy hónour and glòry; and that wè, and áll-his-subjects-(dúly considering whóse-authority-he-hath-) may faith

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fully sèrve, honour, and humbly obéy-him, ìnthee' and for-thee, according to thy blessed word and órdinance, through Jesus Christ our

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Lord; whó, with thee and the Holy Ghost,

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liveth and reigneth èver' one God, world without ènd.

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OR,

Almighty and everlasting Gód-we are taught

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by thy hòly Wórd, that the hearts of KìNGS' are in THY'.rule-and-governance,, and that thou dostdispose-and-govern-them, as it seemeth best to

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reason, be preserved in the following part-" and that we, and all his subjects, duly considering whose authority he hath," &c. SHERIDAN.

The propriety of inserting the parenthetic marks in this Collect appears doubtful. The words included within them, so materially affect the meaning of the context, that they will be best read without regard to the general rule for reading a parenthesis faster.]

-all-his-subjects] The emphasis is frequently placed on 'subjects,' instead of 'all;' which mode of reading would imply that we, the present petitioners, are not included amongst subjects.]

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thy gòdly wisdom-we húmbly beseech-thee, sóto-dispose-and-govern' the heart of GEORGE thy

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sèrvant, our-king-and-governor-that' in áll

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his thoughts, wòrds, and wórks, he may éver séek' THY'-honour-and-glóry; and stúdy to pre

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sérve thy people' committed to his charge' in

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wealth, peace, and gòdliness.-Grant thìs, O mērciful Father,, for thy dèar Són's-sake, Jesús Christ our Lord.

THE NICENE CREED *.

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I believe in óne GòD, the Father Almighty,

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Máker of Heaven and earth, and of all-things' visible and invisible;

* In repeating the Creed, the directions given, p. 94, require to be observed.

-Heaven and earth] The connexion between this and the following clause, is frequently destroyed, by inserting too much pause after the word 'earth,' and adopting the falling instead of the rising inflection.]

-invisible] The accent must be laid on the first syllable to mark the contradistinction. The erroneous pronunciation of visubble and invisubble must be carefully avoided.

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