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" I never heard an oath, and you might have ridden many miles before you heard any. Also, you could not for a great part of the country have lodged in a family where the Lord was not worshipped by reading, singing, and public prayer. Nobody complained more... "
Hansard's Parliamentary Debates - Page 13
by Great Britain. Parliament - 1834
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The Edinburgh Observer: Or, Town and Country Magazine, Issues 1-11

1817 - 292 pages
...miles hefore you had heard any. Also, you could not, for a great part of the country, have lodged in a family where the Lord was not worshipped by reading, singing, and puhlic prayer. Nohody complained more of our church government than our taverners, whose ordinary comment,...
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The British Review, and London Critical Journal, Volume 11

English literature - 1818 - 594 pages
...miles before you hade heard any : also, you could not, for a great part of the countrey, have lodged in a family where the Lord was not worshipped by reading, singing, and publick prayer. Nobody complained more of our church government than our taverners, whose ordinary...
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Memoirs of the Rev. John Blackader

Andrew Crichton, John Blackader - Covenanters - 1826 - 384 pages
...miles before you hade heard any. Also, you could not, for a great part of the country, have lodged in a family where the Lord was not worshipped, by reading, singing, and public prayer. Nobody complained more of our church government, than our ta_yerners, whose ordinary...
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Biblical Repository and Quarterly Observer

Religion - 1837 - 1068 pages
...miles before you had heard any ; also, you could not, for a great part of the country, have lodged in a family where the Lord was not worshipped by reading, singing, and public prayer. Nobody complained more of our churchgovernment than our taverners, whose ordinary lamentation...
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Great Britain, France and Belgium: A Short Tour in 1835, Volume 2

Heman Humphrey - Belgium - 1838 - 362 pages
...where I never heard an oath — and you would not, for a great part of the country, have lodged in a family where the Lord was not worshipped by reading, singing, and prayer. " Nobody," he quaintly adds, " complained more of our church government than our taverners, whose ordinary lament...
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Jethro: A System of Lay Agency, in Connection with Congregational Churches ...

John Campbell - Great Britain - 1839 - 424 pages
...many miles before you heard one; also you could not, in a great part of the country, have lodged in a family, where the Lord was not worshipped by reading, singing, and public prayer."* So thorough and complete was the work of Reformation in Scotland,—sixty-seven years...
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Patrick Welwood: A Tale of the Times of the Kirk and Covenant, for the Young

Patrick Welwood, John Anderson - Covenanters - 1841 - 334 pages
...oath, and you might have rode many miles before you had heard any ; also, you could not have lodged in a family where the Lord was not worshipped by reading, singing, and prayer. Nobody complained more of our church government than the taverners whose ordinary lamentation was, that their trade was...
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Sketches of Scottish Church History: Embracing the Period from the ..., Volume 1

Thomas M'Crie - Reformation - 1841 - 602 pages
...many miles before you heard any. Also, you could not, for a great part of the country, have lodged in a family where the Lord was not worshipped, by reading, singing, and public prayer. Nobody complained more of our Church government than our taverners; whose ordinary lamentation...
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Annals of the Persecution in Scotland, from the Restoration to the Revolution

James Aikman - Covenanters - 1842 - 586 pages
...many miles before you heard any : also, you could not for a great part of the country have lodged in a family where the Lord was not worshipped by reading, singing, and public prayer. Nobody complained more of our churchgovernment than our taverners, whose ordinary lamentation...
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Annals of the Persecution in Scotland: From the Restoration to the Revolution

James Aikman - Persecution - 1842 - 604 pages
...many miles before you heard any : also, you could not for a great part of the country have lodged in a family where the Lord was not worshipped by reading, singing, and public prayer. Nobody complained more of our churchjrovernment than our taverncrs, whose ordinary lamentation...
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