996 resultados para Taylor, Nathaniel W. (Nathaniel William), 1786-1858.


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Written in response to Taylor's Concio ad clerum. A sermon delivered in the chapel of Yale College, September 10, 1828. ...

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Evangelus Pacificus [pseud.] is identified as Rev. Hubbard Winslow in Franklin B. Dexter's Biographical sketches of the graduates of Yale College, v. 5, New Haven, 1911, p. 721, and in William Cushing's Initials and pseudonyms, v. 2, Waltham, Mass., 1963, p. 303.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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The "Review of Spring on the means of regeneration" was written by Nathaniel William Taylor and appeared in successive issues of the Quarterly Christian Spectator, v.1, 1829. It was later published in pamphlet form as Essays on the means of regeneration, New Haven, Baldwin and Treadway, printers, 1829.

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Evangelus Pacificus [pseud.] is identified as Rev. Hubbard Winslow in Franklin B. Dexter's Biographical sketches of the graduates of Yale College, v.5, New Haven, 1911, p.721. Winslow's review of Tyler's Strictures was entitled: An evangelical view of the nature and means of regeneration ... Boston, Perkins and Marvin, 1830.

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Nathaniel Freeman made entries in this commonplace book between 1786 and 1787, while he was an undergraduate at Harvard College. The book includes the notes Freeman took during three of Hollis Professor Samuel Williams' "Course of Experimental Lectures," and cover Williams' lectures on "The Nature & Properties of Matter," "Attraction & Repulsion," and "The Nature, Kind, & Affections [?] of Motion." These notes also include one diagram. The book also includes forensic compositions on the subjects of capital punishment, the probability of "the immortality of the soul," and "whether there be any disinterested benevolence." It also includes a poem Freeman composed for his uncle, Edmund Freeman; an anecdote about Philojocus and Gripus; an essay called "Character"; a draft of a letter to the Harvard Corporation requesting that, in light of the public debt, the Commencement ceremonies be held privately to lower expenses and exhibit the merits of economy; and an "epistle" to his father, requesting money. This epistle begins: "Most honored sire, / Thy son, poor Nat, in humble strains, / Impell'd by want, thy generous bounty claims."

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Reminiscences of royal and noble personages during the last and present centuries: v. 5, p. [341]-396.

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Reminiscences of royal and noble personages during the last and present centuries: v.5, p. [341]-396.

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Without music.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Includes bibliographical references.