02024nam 2200481 n 450 99639092610331620200818224029.0(CKB)4940000000099802(EEBO)2240853817(UnM)99830430e(UnM)99830430(EXLCZ)99494000000009980219950731d1680 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|The dying-mans last sermon, or, The fathers last blessing[electronic resource] left and bequeathed as a legacy to his children, immediately before his death. Being comfortable meditations and preparations for the day of death: which for the worth of them are more worthy to be written in letters of gold, than ink and paper. By Andrew Jones, a servant of Jesus ChristLondon printed for W.Thackeray, T. Passinger, P. Brooksby, and J. Williamson1680[22] p. portAttributed (erroneously?) to John Hart by Wing.Signatures: A B⁴ (-B4).Frontispiece illustration is a woodcut.Caption title on A3: The fathers last blessing, left and bequeathed as a legacy unto his children, a little before his death.Text in black letter.Copy stained.Reproduction of the original in the British Library.eebo-0018Death and dyingEarly works to 1800Christian lifeQuotations, maxims, etcEarly works to 1800ChildrenReligious lifeEarly works to 1800Death and dyingChristian lifeQuotations, maxims, etc.ChildrenReligious lifeJones AndrewM.A.569681Hart JohnD.D.,Cu-RivESCu-RivESUk-ESCStRLINWaOLNBOOK996390926103316The dying man's last sermon. Or The Fathers last blessing2314684UNISA