The Persecuted Family: A Narrative of the Sufferings of the Covenanters in the Reign of Charles II

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Robert Carter, 1841 - Covenanters - 115 pages

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Page 37 - He stablishes the strong, restores the weak, Reclaims the wanderer, binds the broken heart, And, armed himself in panoply complete Of heavenly temper, furnishes with arms Bright as his own, and trains by every rule Of holy discipline, to glorious war, The sacramental host of God's elect! COWPER.
Page 52 - rose the song, the loud Acclaim of praise. The wheeling plover ceased Her plaint; the solitary place was glad; And, on the distant cairn, the watcher's ear Caught, doubtfully at times, the breeze-borne note.
Page 76 - The Lord is on my side; I will not fear what man can do unto me.
Page 25 - Their pastors were soon forbidden to preach even in the fields, or to approach within twenty miles of their former charges; and all the people, as well as their pastors, who were not prepared to abjure their dearest rights, and to submit to the most galling and iniquitous civil and religious despotism, were denounced as traitors,
Page 62 - But there is a joy in grief, when peace dwells in the bosom of the sad." They sorrowed not as those who have no hope. Mr. Bruce wiped the tear of affection from his eye, and thus addressed the peasants, who could not refrain their tears, as they stood around, and looked on the grave.
Page 52 - shadow of death, yet will I fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.
Page 86 - ther from us: and will you now take from me my only brother, and from my father an only son ? O, sir, have you no son, that you may know what my father will feel ? Have you no brother, dear to you as mine is to me ? My dear, dear brother!
Page 25 - despotism, were denounced as traitors, and doomed to capital punishment. To admit any one who refused compliance into shelter,—to favour his escape, or not to assist in apprehending him,—subjected the person so convicted to the same
Page 29 - their eyes to the seat, where his wife sat, bathed in tears, and her children, Andrew and Mary, 3* weeping aloud, and looking up to their father, —and when they thought, that they were to be driven out from their happy home, to wander in poverty,—again their tears flowed, and again they looked and wept. Mr. Bruce was the

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