GUY 
etite was led to form a very high opinion uf ae piety and. 
harity. He was afterwards reid to t the eae 
of the ducheffe de Beauvilliers, and upon peed oe inter- 
courfe fhe gained a complete afcendancy over his min 
Madame Maintenon had fo high an efteem for her, that the 
was allowed to make frequent vifits to the convent of St. 
Cyr, where fhe communicated her doétrines and her works. 
At length, however, Madame Maintenoen became fufpicious, 
and upon confulting her Genus direG@tor, the bifhop of 
Chartres, e became more cautious an guarded ; and the 
pious Fenelon, much as he was prepoffeffed in favour of M. 
n’s do¢trines and writings, concurred in recommending 
to withdraw the latter from the fifters of St. Cyr, and to 
About this time 
her imaged frend, eae in es ity her her enemy and perfecutor, 
1695, to fign th 
usijanliied fabmithen to the decifions of the church. Upon 
hed return to Paris, and her renewed zeal in making profe- 
tay fhe was confined at i < bee and 
ot in the Baftile. When Fenelon, 
non Mad. Guyon was liberated fro m the Battile in 
Blois; where fhe the re- 
of her life in obfcurity, and in the private ex- 
ercifes o 2 a fincere though enthufiaftic. She died 
with all the ra tures of divine love which an ardent imagina- 
cannot, however, be difputed, that her fanaticifm had much 
mifled her os ih a that in her account of herfelf fhe 
pretenfions to a degree of pon above igs ok a 
ment of human nature in a ftate trial. Among. her 
writi we os Set a6 esate Difcourfes; 2a The Ol 
and New. ions,’ 
per, | Rs hee = soins: Sha ns have aoa 
= ation, it will not be fiecing that fe fhould have 
to be feledted, tranflated, and printed fome of the 
of Madame. Negi Bauffet’s Hift. of Fenelon. 
v. Dig I ee Fenton and Quixtists. 
_GUYSBOROUGH, or MANCHESTER, in Gener apis, a 
of Nova Scotia, on Chedabu@o oe 10 le 
NW pat pee anfo, 2 aati Hilifas, whi A ds 
Scpptained 2 families, 
was born at Hertford i in. 
fe- (called b 
icles, Aes to teftify her tl 
GUZ 
geal on the beg Teftament, in three vols. ato. which 
was completed in 1752. In the latter part of life Dr.. 
Guile loft his fight, ut as he was an extempore preacher, 
e continued his minifterial duties till within a few months’. 
of his death, which happened in 1761, when he was in the 
eighty-firft year of his a He was author alfo of “ The 
bch s Monitor,” « Sermons to young People,” and other. 
“GUZEL-HI ISAR, i 
Turkey, ia Natolia, anciently one “ Magneta Meandri,’’: 
the relidence of a pacha; di i 
ancien ently the se Lethau us.” 
3. 
45’. ng. 27 50°.— —Alfo, a a'town of Nil 2 r the 
W. co “es 15 miles N. E. of Fokia. N. lat. 38 Ee 
on 
GUZERAT, a peninfula of Hindooftan, about 200 
milés in and 140 wide, formed by the Arabian fea, 
y the Aftatics the “ fea of Om man,”’) and the 
gulfs of Cambay and Cutch, both of which penetrate far 
within the continent ; fubject to high and rapid tides, which 
throw up dangerous fand-banks, and to the « bore,’”’. {which 
fee,) which fo vates the water Anes! feet above of common 
furface of ~ fea, and rages here with great vi By 
s fubdivifions of ‘S tradt, and fill. more - ‘by 
the amount, = its revenue, ftated in ag re Acharee, we 
are led to confider it as oe very mportance, in the 
opinion of the Moguls. This prov ‘Hed iengk the foil is 
dry and fandy, and fome parts of it are woody and moun 
tainous, is one of the ae in “the Mogul empire ; abot 
ing in rice, cotton, ee. fruits ae various” 
with plenty of cattle ae gamrie The rain is conftant a2) 
the middle of June to the middle of September ; ee daring 
the other months the air is clear and ferene 
number of towns, which have flouriihing mas 
Page int the woods are richly ftored with timber. fit 
we : 
inhabited oy a boll ie race, and they are governed hy 
rajaus of their own, nor o they appear to have undergone 
at Poonah, whieh few) and Futty Sing Guicuar, or Guic- 
ker, who holds his fhare chiefly in the northern tae pia * 
(See Manrarras.) 
The fineit part of this country was 
G 
- aoe 
i ag ie ae rd, , but rage to. ro tbe an, 
