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Anne Evans (1820–1870), wrote poems and music, which in 1880 were edited and published with a memorial preface by Anne Thackeray Ritchie. Arthur Evans (1822–1850) Clerk in Holy Orders. John Evans , K.C.B., F.R.S. (1823–1908), was treasurer of the Royal Society (1878–98), president of the Society of Antiquaries (1885–92) and a writer ...
Elliott wrote two poems entitled "To Thomas Lister". One is a stirring exhortation to take a high theme in his poetry, [17] the other a humorous exercise in hexameters marking the measure as "in English undignified, loose, and worse than the worst prose", in response to verses sent him by Lister. [18]
On 11 November 1771 he was invited to the Baptist church in Byrom Street, Liverpool, and began his ministry there on 15 April 1772. [1] Medley's Liverpool meeting-house was enlarged in 1773, and in 1789 a new building was erected for him in the same street. His old meeting-house was consecrated in 1792 as St. Stephen's Church.
In the poem “Painted Tongue,” Byas writes: “We twist and turn in the mirror,/ my mother and I becoming each other,/ her bruises and scars passed down,/ family heirlooms that will take/ me ...
Contributions to the Family Treasury [33] Contributions to Pagenstecher's Collection (1864) [34] The story of four centuries, sketches of early Church history for youthful readers, Jane Laurie Borthwick (1864) Missionary Evenings at Home (1866), Jane Laurie Borthwick; Lessons on the Life of Christ for the Little Ones at Home (1871), Jane Laurie ...
Boberg was also the editor of the free-church magazine Sanningsvittnet ('Witness of the Truth') from 1889 to 1916. He published his own books and poetry through the magazine's publishing house, and bought the magazine in 1894. He was a preacher at Flora Church from 1890 to 1892 and Immanuel Church from 1892 to 1909, both in Stockholm.
John Marriott (1780–1825) was an English poet and clergyman. [1] Marriott was born at Cottesbach, in 1780, and educated at Rugby, and Christ Church, Oxford.He was the second of two who obtained honours in the schools in 1802, the first year in which there was a public examination for honours at Oxford.
The reverend Frederick Kates distributed about 200 unattributed copies as devotional materials for his congregation at Old Saint Paul's Church, Baltimore during 1959 or 1960. [1] [3] The papers mentioned the church's foundation date of 1692, which has caused many to falsely assume that the date is that of the poem's origination. [4] [5]