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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1852 Excerpt: …through favours here, But perfect as the truth is found, Let every truth be cleur. And therefore I have told thee they must see every thing; the perfect truth must be laid before them; the manner of my dealing with thee da by day; the letters that thou didst lay before them that were for Pomeroy must be all signed by the Skvex on each separate letter, and Underwood must write
taken from thy mouth by her; then must everyone be sealed up; and what I reveal to thee now must be all scale.1 i a Monday next, and written upon the same after it hath been read to the in: –all must be sealed up, and put into a box, with thy likeness; and when I command, thou must nail up the box. For, I now tell thee of thy former writings–they were for Believers, who had not the least doubt of thy reading aB it was, but now come lo Pomeroy’s words. First, he contended with thee, –what a knave people would call him if he should send a letter in a hand-writing no-one could read. Know thy answer: – You can write, Sir, as any-one can read, but I cannot, and therefore I will read it to you. He said, you may read anything, if I cannot see it myself. This threw me into a violent passion. He repeated again, would notthe world judge me a rascal, if I were to put writings into their hands, that no one could read but myself?–would they not say, I want to deceive them? I answered, true, Sir, if you were to do it, they may say it, because you can write better, but I cannot; you can write as anyone may read, and must disguise your hand to put it as they cannot read. But mine is in my own hand, and I cannot write in any other, and l would not read a false word to you, Sir, for the world. He repeated again, you might read what you…
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1852 Excerpt: …through favours here, But perfect as the truth is found, Let every truth be cleur. And therefore I have told thee they must see every thing; the perfect truth must be laid before them; the manner of my dealing with thee da by day; the letters that thou didst lay before them that were for Pomeroy must be all signed by the Skvex on each separate letter, and Underwood must write
taken from thy mouth by her; then must everyone be sealed up; and what I reveal to thee now must be all scale.1 i a Monday next, and written upon the same after it hath been read to the in: –all must be sealed up, and put into a box, with thy likeness; and when I command, thou must nail up the box. For, I now tell thee of thy former writings–they were for Believers, who had not the least doubt of thy reading aB it was, but now come lo Pomeroy’s words. First, he contended with thee, –what a knave people would call him if he should send a letter in a hand-writing no-one could read. Know thy answer: – You can write, Sir, as any-one can read, but I cannot, and therefore I will read it to you. He said, you may read anything, if I cannot see it myself. This threw me into a violent passion. He repeated again, would notthe world judge me a rascal, if I were to put writings into their hands, that no one could read but myself?–would they not say, I want to deceive them? I answered, true, Sir, if you were to do it, they may say it, because you can write better, but I cannot; you can write as anyone may read, and must disguise your hand to put it as they cannot read. But mine is in my own hand, and I cannot write in any other, and l would not read a false word to you, Sir, for the world. He repeated again, you might read what you…