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INTERSPERSED WITH MANY PARTICULARS RELATING TO THE
PECULIAR VIEWS OF THAT SOCIETY,

AND THE

SUFFERINGS OF ITS MEMBERS

FOR THE TESTIMONY OF A GOOD CONSCIENCE.

BY THE LATE

EDWARD SMITH. 1787-

1834

With a Prefatory Address by John Barclay.

LONDON:

DARTON AND HARVEY,

GRACECHURCH-STREET.

1836.

BX 7795 D52 56

LONDON:

JOSEPH RICKERBY, PRINTER,

SHERBOURN LANE.

THE

EDITOR'S PREFATORY ADDRESS.

THE Author of this volume having gone "the way of all the earth," and yielded up his spirit to the God of the spirits of all flesh, it becomes my duty, as the individual into whose hands the manuscript was by him in a very peculiar manner consigned, not only to lay before my readers some of the circumstances under which the work now makes its appearance; but also to give some brief account of my beloved and lamented Friend, whose unlooked-for translation from this state of being to a better, I trust will prove on the minds of many as a seal to his labour of love.

However liable we all are in the present probationary condition, to be mistaken in our estimates of men and things, and even by the soothing snares of friendship in its purest forms, to be led away from that unerring balance of the sanctuary, the

judgment of truth; yet surely there is some call upon me on the present occasion, to bear my testimony to the riches of that grace, by which my Friend was what he was: and therefore I trust, that in attempting to perform this debt of love, I shall be preserved from speaking unduly of the creature, as well as from neglecting to ascribe the glory of every good word and work to that Divine Source, whose workmanship at the best we are, created in Christ Jesus unto good works. Eph. ii. 10.

"Died Abner as a fool dieth ?" said David, when he lamented the death of a valiant man. And it has, in my best moments, when greatly divested of personal or selfish considerations of my own loss, even been cause of joy and gratitude to the Lord, who gives and takes away in his admirable discrétion and good pleasure, that he saw meet to remove my dear friend, while "his bow abode in strength," while he had his armour so evidently girt about him, when the spiritual weapons of the Christian's warfare were even in his hands,-in the strength of his time, in the clearness of his spirit; having been thus manifestly carried through to the precise completion of an undertaking that appeared to be laid upon him as his appointed duty, and about which he had thought it due to the cause of the gospel of truth to lay out the energies and the prayers of his soul.

And how was it, he was thus devotedly engaged

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