[A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume I (of 3) by Thomas Clarkson]@TWC D-Link book
A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume I (of 3)

INTRODUCTION
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But what are these internal impressions, but the dictates of an internal voice to those who follow them?
But if pious men would believe themselves to have been thus providentially led, or acted upon, in any ordinary case of virtue, if it had been crowned with success, George Fox would have had equal reason to believe, from the success that attended his own particular undertaking, that he had been called upon to engage in it.

For at a very early age he had confuted many of the professors of religion in public disputations.

He had converted magistrates, priests, and people.

Of the clergymen of those times some had left valuable livings, and followed him.

In his thirtieth year he had seen no less than sixty persons, spreading, as ministers, his own doctrines.


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