A PORTRAITURE OF QUAKERISM, TAKEN FROM A VIEW OF THE MORAL EDUCATION, DISCIPLINE, PECULIAR OF THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS. BY THOMAS CLARKSON, M. A. AUTHOR OF SEVERAL ESSAYS ON THE SUBJECT OF IN THREE VOLUMES. VOL. II. SECOND EDITION. London: PRINTED BY R. TAYLOR AND CO., SHOE-LANE, FOR LONGMAN, HURST, REES, AND ORME, PATERNOSTER-ROW. 1807. 110. c. 178. OF THE SECOND VOLUME. VOL. II. a SECT. SECT. 3, neither do they use mourning garments- reasons why they thus differ from the world these reasons further elucidated by con- SECT. . Trade—Quakers view trade as a moral question -prohibit a variety of trades and dealings SECT. 2, but though the Quakers thus prohibit many trades, they are found in some which are con- Settlement of differences-abstain from duels-and also from law-have recourse to arbitration- their rules concerning arbitration-an account |