The French convert: : being a true relation of the happy conversion of a noble French lady, from the errors and superstitions of popery, to the reformed religion, by means of a Protestant gardiner, her servant. Wherein is shewed, her great and unparallell'd sufferings, on the account of her said conversion; as also her wonderful deliverance from two assassins hired by a popish priest to murther her; and of her miraculous preservation in a wood for two years; and how she was at last providentially found by her husband, who, together with her parents, was brought over by her means to the embracing of the true religion, as were divers others also. The whole relation being sent by a Protestant minister, now a prisoner in France, to a French refugee in London.
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Imprint: | New-London [Conn.]: : Printed and sold by T. Green., [1766?] |
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Description: | vii, [1], 9-84 p. ; 17 cm. (12mo) |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Print Book |
Local Note: | Library Company copy from the Michael Zinman Collection of Early American Imprints. Library Company copy imperfect: wanting all after p. 66. NEH-Readex: not in Readex; not at AAS. |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/10358621 |