An account of the trials on bills of exchange, wherein the deceit of Mr. John King and his confederates, and the pretence of lending money is exposed / [Joanna Southcott].
- Joanna Southcott
- Date:
- [1807]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: An account of the trials on bills of exchange, wherein the deceit of Mr. John King and his confederates, and the pretence of lending money is exposed / [Joanna Southcott]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![For now you'll find will come the midnight hour, When all mankind will feel the Bi uiegroom’s power; And you whose lamps ar ready now prepar 'd. The midnight non: will bring your full reward; And wit.i the Bridegroom you may enter in j That is my Kingdom you shall surely win.” The 180th page— « For Joel’s words together all 3re come ; From Gideon’s swordy->u me to understand, ]yjy sword is drawn to conquer every land ; For at the end you know that R >me must shake, W nen once the Revelations they do break ; That is their pronhecies f r to come true. And by their fall the tru.h you all may view. It men of learning do but weigh it deep : The sword was brandish’d and the powers do weep. Which made the sword to brandish all abroad. And every nation feels the glittering sword. ,, If not already, it will so come on. And every land will find my sword is drawD, Till men I have conquer’d and they all submit To lay their jewels humbly at my feet; That is their faith to trust in me alone, And then on the other must the sword come on. For it I’ll brandish in the enemy ; The powers of darkness shall my fury see; J For in the end I’il plunge it in his heart, Andhelike man shall feel the fata dart; For that’s the way that I shall sheath the sword. And then all fiesh shall know the living Lord Hath drawn the sword, and drawn it not in vain. When they do see their deadly foe is slain. And I shall make for men a glorious peace ; ^ Their foe I’ll conquer , and their jarring cease. These things I published to the world in Marcb 802, that they were all hastening on, wheni we «a n peace, and it was the general opinion of tli<» onversed with that the peace would be of a It- eration ; but now I can prove, from the news* ,ers that every truth hath hastened on upon ft .ations abroad, as it was foretold ; and we must ol erve, at that time, the bthevers were but few ; lot know there were fifty ; and now they are ^ o thousands, longing for the coming ot Const,](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b22042076_0054.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


