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BEING A COLLECTION OF

ESSAYS AND FRAGMENTS,

BIOGRAPHICAL, RELIGIOUS, EPISTOLARY, NARRATIVE
AND HISTORICAL,

DESIGNED FOR THE PROMOTION OF PIETY AND VIRTUE, TO PRESERVE IN
REMEMBRANCE THE CHARACTERS AND VIEWS OF EXEMPLARY
INDIVIDUALS, AND TO RESCUE FROM OBLIVION

THOSE MANUSCRIPTS LEFT BY THEM,

WHICH MAY BE USEFUL TO

SURVIVORS.

The memory of the just is blessed.-Solomon,

Gather up the fragments that remain, that nothing be lost.

John vi. 12.

EDITED BY JOHN & ISAAC COMLY, BYBERRY,

VOL. VI.

PHILADELPHIA:

PRINTED FOR THE EDITORS BY J. RICHARDS,

No. 129 North Third Street.

1835.

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FRIENDS' MISCELLANY.

No. 1.]

EIGHTH MONTH, 1834.

[VOL. VI.

MEMOIRS

Of the Life of Elisha Kirk.

The subject of the following Memoirs was born in the township of East Caln, county of Chester, and State of Pennsylvania, on the 25th of the 12th mo. 1757. His parents, Caleb and Elizabeth Kirk, were members of the religious Society of Friends; and by their piety and consistent conduct as such, were an ornament to their profession. Under their care the mind of their son was prepared, in very early life, to receive the seed of the heavenly kingdom, and, like the good ground, to bring forth fruit to the praise of the great Husbandman.

It appears, by a brief memorandum in his own handwriting, that so early as the fifth year of his age, his mind was susceptible of "the reproofs of instruction." On one occasion, having been guilty of disobedience to his father, he says, "Afterwards, walking out alone, I was led into a state of deep thoughtfulness about my situation, attended with an anxious desire that I might so live, in future, as to obtain a state of happiness, when time to me should be no more; being at that time convinced that I could not inherit such a state without obedience to my parents, and a cross to my own inclinations." Such early fruits of religious care, and evident manifestation of the Divine Gift, afford great encourageVOL. VI.-1

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