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GENTLEMAN in Greenock
-
TO HIS
! | FRIEND in the Gorbals of Glajgow.
' SIR,
' r“ ¥ H E Work at C&mbuflang is fo differently
I fpoke of with us, that ferious People are
•JL at a Lofs what Opinion to entertain about
i it; and even People who went from this Place to
it CambnJlangftVi purpofe to fatiify themfelves,differ
i after they are come home ; fome calling it merely
! Delullons, others judging it a glorious Work of the
! Spirit of Almighty God : So, for my and others of
1 your Acquaintances here their Satisfaftion, I have
i troubled you with this Miflive, defiring you may
! favour us with your Opinion of the Affair. In
giving it freely, you’ll oblige,
Greenock, March SIR,
it. 1742.
Tour humble Servant,
A. B.
( s )
XTRACT
o F- A
E T T E R
FROM A
|L
:
GENTLEMAN in Greenock
-
TO HIS
! | FRIEND in the Gorbals of Glajgow.
' SIR,
' r“ ¥ H E Work at C&mbuflang is fo differently
I fpoke of with us, that ferious People are
•JL at a Lofs what Opinion to entertain about
i it; and even People who went from this Place to
it CambnJlangftVi purpofe to fatiify themfelves,differ
i after they are come home ; fome calling it merely
! Delullons, others judging it a glorious Work of the
! Spirit of Almighty God : So, for my and others of
1 your Acquaintances here their Satisfaftion, I have
i troubled you with this Miflive, defiring you may
! favour us with your Opinion of the Affair. In
giving it freely, you’ll oblige,
Greenock, March SIR,
it. 1742.
Tour humble Servant,
A. B.
( s )
XTRACT
o F- A
E T T E R
FROM A
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Chapbooks printed in Scotland > Religion & morality > True account of the wonderful conversion at Cambuslang > (3) |
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Permanent URL | https://digital.nls.uk/107129972 |
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Description | Over 3,000 chapbooks published in Scotland in the 18th and 19th centuries. Subjects include courtship, humour, occupations, fairs, apparitions, war, politics, crime, executions, Jacobites, transvestites, and freemasonry. Chapbooks are small booklets of 8, 12, 16 and 24 pages, often illustrated with crude woodcuts. Produced cheaply and sold by peddlars on the streets, they formed the staple reading material of the common people, along with broadsides. |
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