Α 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 THE SLAVE-TRADE. IN THREE VOLUMES. VOL. II. SECOND EDITION. London: PRINTED BY R. TAYLOR AND CO., SHOP-LANE, FOR LONGMAN, HURST, REES, AND ORME, PATERNOSTER-ROW. 1807. 110. c. 178. CONTENTS OF THE SECOND VOLUME. 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 |