The Locator -- [(subject = "Poor--Juvenile fiction")]

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Author:
Richmond, Legh, 1772-1827. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n86829766
Title:
The young cottager / by the Rev. Legh Richmond, Rector of Turvey, Bedfordshire, England.
Publisher:
New-York Religious Tract Society :
Copyright Date:
1821
Description:
36 pages ; 18 cm
Subject:
Christian life--Juvenile fiction.
Poor--Juvenile fiction.
Children--Death--Juvenile fiction.
Youth--Death--Juvenile fiction.
Children--Conversion to Christianity--Juvenile fiction.
Parent and child--Juvenile fiction.
Faith--Juvenile fiction.
Proselytizing--Juvenile fiction.
Clergy--Juvenile fiction.
Children--Conversion to Christianity.
Children--Death.
Christian life.
Faith.
Clergy.
Parent and child.
Poor.
Proselytizing.
Fiction.
Juvenile works.
Other Authors:
New York Religious Tract Society. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n82020148
Notes:
"January, 1821." "An authentic narrative." "The loveliness of early Piety"--poem page 36. Bound with: The miserable made happy, or, The history of Mrs. Wilkins, no. 6; The fire-alarm; The history of Jonathan Brown, the bargeman (no. 172); Pause and think, am I a Christian? by Rev. J. Alleine (no. 169); Plan adopted by some of the schools in France; The twin sisters or, two girls of nineteen: being the intersting adventures of Sophia and Charlotte Melford, an affecting narrative written by Charlotte, one of the sisters; Five minutes' consideratin (no. 111); Short sermons; The great question answered, what shall I do to be saved (no. 19); The young cottager, by the Rev. Legh Richmond (no. 45); The death bed of a modern free-thinker (no. 94); Indolence; Poor Sarah, or, religion exemplified in the life and death of a Pious Indian woman (no. 145); To the afflicted (no. 55); The day of judgment, or the grand reckoning; Sixteen short sermons, making a solemn appeal to the consciences of men (no. 33); Life and death of Mrs. Denby (no. 34); The death-bed of a medical student (no. 73); 6 verses occasioned by reading the preceding affecting narrative; The warning voice (no. 90); Prayer; The dairyman's daughter, extracted from an authentic and interesting narrative, communcated by a clergyman of the Church of England (no. 15); The converted Negro (no. 11); A warning to gamblers and swearers, in the awful death of Richard Parsons...to which is added, an affecting narrative of the death of Joseph Shepherd... (no. 110); An account of the death of Ann Swift; The effects of infidel principles/On bad company; It is a faithful saying (no. 30). IaU
Summary:
The account of the last illness and death of little Jane, the author's "first-born spiritual child in the ministry of the Gospel". She had attended his Saturday-afternoon classes where the "churchyard became a book of instruction, and every grave-stone a leaf of edification."
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1108871837
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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