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volume, will cherish their memory, imbibe their spirit, and perpetuate their principles. Nothing seems to bring us so near to them as to read the history of their doings written in their own style by those of their own time and number.

We seem to be in their company and to join in their consultations and their prayers while they contemplate their removal to America. We sympathize in their crosses, and few comforts. We admire their pious magnanimity and constancy, and almost feel their sufferings. May it be the means of deepening our convictions of the importance of their religious principles, and of the desirableness of that strong and living faith which sustained their hearts, impelled them forward in their pilgrimage, and enabled them to say, as sorrowful, yet always rejoicing."

Their history serves as a powerful illustration of the truth and efficacy of their principles, and furnishes an example worthy of our grateful admiration.

In

"O ye, who proudly boast,

your free veins the blood of sires like these,
Look to their lineaments. Dread left ye loose
Their likeness in your sons.
Should Mammon cling

Too close around your heart, or wealth beget
That bloated luxury which eats the core

From manly virtue, or the tempting world

Make faint the Christian purpose in your soul,

Turn ye to Plymouth rock, and where they knelt, Kneel, and renew the vow they breathed to God." Boston, 1855.

. 359-367

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The Articles of Faith and Covenant of 1629, and of 1636 .
Extracts from Rev. Joseph Hunter's recent work, entitled Collec-
tions concerning the church or congregation of Protestant Sep-
aratists formed at Scrooby, in North Nottinghamshire, in the time
of King James I.

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Gov. Winslow's account of the natives of New England

459-464

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A Description of Plymouth, by De Rasieres, an ambassador froin
the Dutch at Manhattan, in 1627

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495-500

NEW ENGLAND'S MEMORIAL.

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