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Miscellaneous pieces in verse
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Gospel sonnets
or Spiritual songs. In six parts. 1. The believer's espousals. 2. The believer's jointure. 3. The believer's riddle. 4. The believer's lodging. 5. The believer's soliloquy. 6. The believer's principles. Concerning creation and redemption-- law and Gospel-- justification and sanctification-- faith and sense-- heaven and earth. By the late Reverend Mr. Ralph Erskine, Minister of the Gospel at Dunfermline -
Gospel sonnets, or, Spiritual songs
In six parts. I. The believer's espousals. II. The believer's jointure. III. The believer's riddle. IV. The believer's lodging. V. The beliver's [sic] soliloquy. VI. The believer's principles. Concerning creation and redemption. Law and Gospel. Justification and sanctification. Faith and sense. Heaven and earth. By Ralph Erskine, M.A -
Gospel sonnets, or, Spiritual songs
In six parts. I. The believer's espousals. II. The believer's jointure. III. The believer's riddle. IV. The believer's lodging. V. The believer's soliloquy. VI. The believer's principles, concerning, creation and redemption. Law and Gospel, justification and sanctification, faith and sense, heaven and earth. By Ralph Erskine, M.A -
Y drydydd ran o ganiadau Sion; neu hymnau ac odlau ysprydol. Gan John Thomas
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I. The belief of the divinity of Jesus Christ necessary to salvation
II. The doctrines of transubstantiation and the trinity not equally credible. Being these maintained in the University of Cambridge, Anno 1696. By Robert Moss, D.D -
Poems on different subjects
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Minutes of the Fairfield Baptist Association, holden at Georgia, August 27 and 28, A.D. 1817
Together with their circular and corresponding letter -
Minutes of the Fairfield Baptist Association, holden at Morristown, June 12, and Sept. 4 and 5, 1816
Together with their circular and corresponding letter -
Zion's traveller
Or, the Christian's daily walk with God, when on his journey through the wilderness to the Holy Land. By the Rev. Ralph Erskine -
A Selection of sacred poetry, consisting of psalms and hymns ... compiled for the use of Unitarian Church in Philadelphia
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Two poems
First. On a soul pleading with God under a sense of its necessities. Second. Thoughts for a Lord's-Day morning -
Poezja świe̜ta
trzy cykle religijne baroku europejskiego -
Kyrie
geistliche Lieder -
Poetry of Hadewijch
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Sololoqvies theologicall
I am alone, and yet I am not alone, for the Father is with mee. By J. S. Gent -
Spiritual songs, or, Songs of praise to Almighty God upon several occasions
Together with the Song of Songs which is Solomons: [F]irst turn'd, then par[ap]hrased in English verse. To which may be added, Penitential cries -
Divine meditatio[ns] upon several subjects
Whereunto is annexed, God's love and man's unworthinesse. VVith [s]everal divine [e]jaculations. Written by John Quarles -
Ter tria: or The doctrine of the three sacred persons, father, son & spirit
Principall graces, faith, hope, & love. Main duties, prayer, hearing, and meditation. Summarily digested for the pleasure and profit of the pious and ingenious reader. By Faithfull Teate, preacher of the Word at Sudbury in Suffolk. Tria sunt onmia -
The Vanity of war and riches, compair'd [sic] with the pleasures of a retir'd and contemplative life
A poem, composed to the tune of Dr. Watts's Indian philosopher -
A sacred poem
in four books. A paraphrase on the book of Job. By the Rev. V.L. Bernard, A.M. & R. A. Rector Of Stockton, Norfolk -
Poems on divine subjects in two parts
To which is added, A poem to the memory of the Rev. Mr. Benjamin Stinton. By Tho. Harrison -
Rev'd. Mr. Davenport's song
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Gospel sonnets, or, Spiritual songs
In six parts. I. The believer's espousals. II. The believer's jointure. III. The believer's riddle. IV. The believer's lodging. V. The beliver's [sic] soliloquy. VI. The believer's principles. Concerning creation and redemption. Law and Gospel. Justification and sanctification. Faith and sense. Heaven and earth -
The Disobedient son, and cruel husband
Being a full and true account of one Mr. John James, a gentleman's son in Wiltshire, whose father left him an estate of twenty hundred pounds a year, and married a lady of great fortune in the same place; but being reduced to poverty and want with riotous living, he killed his wife and children, and afterwards hanged his mother on a tree in the orchard, with the last dying words of this wretch, who was hanged before his mother's door.