7 research outputs found
An essay to do good. By a disswasive from tavern-haunting, and excessive drinking. / By Benjamin Wadworth, Pastor of a church of Christ in Boston; ; together with a lecture sermon, by the same author.
An essay to do good. [electronic resource] : By a disswasive from tavern-haunting, and excessive drinking. By Benjamin Wadworth, Pastor of a church of Christ in Boston; together with a lecture sermon, by the same author.
Caption title.Running title: A disswasive from excessive drinking.Imprint from colophon, p. 44. A colophon on p. 22 reads: Read this essay and give it to thy neighbour. Boston, N.E. January, 25th. 1709,10."The all-seeing eye of God our judge should restrain us from sin, and quicken us to duty; urg'd in a lecture-sermon, preached at Boston, N.E. December 22. 1709."--p. 23-44. Running title: Gods eye should restrain us from sin, and quicken us to duty.Signatures: Ap6s(-1 leaf) B-Dp6s (D6 blank). - SHOULD SIGNATURE A1 HAVE 6 LEAVES? TITLE PAGE?Evans,Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from Boston Public Library
Recommended from our members
Ensemble Concerts
Recital performed at the UNT College of Music Voertman Hall
The complaynt of veritie, made by Iohn Bradford. An exhortacion of Mathewe Rogers, vnto his children. The complaynt of Raufe Allerton and others, being prisoners in Lolers tower, & wrytten with their bloud, how god was their comforte. A songe of Caine and Abell. The saieng of maister Houper, that he wrote the night before he suffered, vppon a wall with a cole, in the newe In, at Gloceter, and his saiyng at his deathe
Elizabethan & Jacobean pamphlets.
Introduction.--A reply to Stephen Gosson's school of abuse in defense of poetry, musick, and stage plays, by Thomas Lodge.--Pappe with an hatchet, by John Lyly.--A pretie and wittie discourse betwixt wit and will, by Nicholas Brenton.--A groat's worth of wit, by Robert Greene.--Pierces supererogation; or, A new prayse of he old asse, by Gabriel Harbey.--A wonderfull strange and miraculous, astrological prognostication for this yeer of our Lord God, 1591, by Thomas Nash.--The Guls hornbook, by Thomas Dekker.Mode of access: Internet