Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Knickerbocker, or New-York Monthly Magazine, 1846, Vol. 28
Among those belonging to our first and second'ages, we would mention cotton, the mathers and thompson, as men of fervent piety, sound in thought, acute in reasoning, and powerful in argu ment. After these came President stiles, a profound scholar, equally distinguished for his attainments in both sacred and pro fane learning; Dr. Samuel johnson, the father of the American Episcopal Church; hopkins, who contributed much to theological science during the last century; jonathan edwards, the acutest analyst that the world has known since the days of Plato. Robert Hall considers him the greatest of the sons of men.' His power of subtle argument, ' says Sir james mackintosh, was perhaps unmatched, certainly was unsurpassed among men and it was joined, as in some of the ancient mystics, with a character which raised his piety to fervor. Among the followers of edwards we would refer to Dr. Dwight, a thorough scholar, a fervent and pro found thinker, an advocate of the highest principles of reli ion and philosophy, in whose character was combined the rarest an noblest of human virtues.
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