A PORTRAITURE OF QUAKERISM, AS TAKEN FROM A VIEW OF THE MORAL EDUCATION, DISCIPLINE, PECULIAR CUSTOMS, RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES, POLITICAL AND CIVIL ECONOMY, AND CHARACTER, OF THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS. BY THOMAS CLARKSON, M. Α. AUTHOR OF SEVERAL ESSAYS ON THE SUBJECT OF PRINTED BY R. TAYLOR AND CO., SHOE-LANE, FOR LONGMAN, Hurst, REES, AND ORME, 02.27-33 Ѕвст. 3. -neither do they use mourning garments- SECT. 2. -but though the Quakers thus prohibit many trades, they are found in some which are con- Settlement of differences-abstain from duels and also from law-have recourse to arbitration- SECT. 1. Poor-no beggars among the Quakers-manner of relieving and providing for the poor. 89 SECT. 2. Education of the children of the poor provided 94 Introduction.-Invitation to a perusal of this part of the work the necessity of humility and charity God has given to all, besides an intellectual, a spiritual Except a man has a portion of the same Spirit which Jesus, and the Prophets, and the Apostles had, he cannot know spiritual things-this doc- trine confirmed by St. Paul and elucidated Neither, except he has a portion of the same Spirit, can he |