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George Fox (1) (1624–1691)

Author of The Journal of George Fox

For other authors named George Fox, see the disambiguation page.

74+ Works 1,842 Members 39 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Credit: Mark Barker, 2005,
Bunhill Fields Quaker Burial Ground, London

Series

Works by George Fox

The Journal of George Fox (1694) 762 copies
The works of George Fox (1990) 23 copies
Warlord's Hill (1982) 6 copies
George Fox's Journal (2015) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Quaker Reader (1962) — Contributor — 298 copies
Historical writings of Quakers against war — Contributor — 9 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Fox, George
Birthdate
1624-07
Date of death
1691-12-13
Burial location
Quaker Burying Grounds, Bunhill Fields, London, UK
Gender
male
Nationality
England
Country (for map)
UK
Places of residence
London, England, UK
Organizations
Religious Society of Friends

Members

Reviews

Previously unpublished or uncollected papers, edited from the manuscripts with introduction and notes by Henry J. Cadbury.
 
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PendleHillLibrary | Sep 17, 2023 |
Contains the Short Journal, the Itinerary Journal, and the Haistwell Diary,
 
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PendleHillLibrary | Sep 1, 2022 |
 
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PendleHillLibrary | 2 other reviews | Aug 30, 2022 |
George Fox’s written legacy is huge. After his death in 1691 they were assembled into three major titles: his two-volume Journal (published in 1694), his two-volume Epistles (1696) and finally is doctrinal writings in 1706. Since then, only his Journal has endured many reprints and editions.

Though Fox wrote over 400 epistles in his lifetime, there are many that simply duplicate his ideas and assertions. It therefore made little economic sense to repeatedly reprint the entirety of them in any future edition which explains their rarity. In consequence, they appear as selections—and selections involves choice. One such selection was published in 1825 by Samuel Tuke, a well-respected Quaker from York. And it was this edition that caught the eye of Lucy Hodgkin some twenty years earlier whilst researching for her book on Quaker Saints (available in our Library).

But though she was attracted to the format of Tuke’s edition, she realised if she was to publish a collection of epistles that was truly personal to her, she had to undertake a serious study of all four hundred or so of them published in the 1698 edition. It was to be a time-consuming though spiritually enriching task for, as shes writes in her Introduction 'I came to discover an almost an unworked mine containing rich veins of Truth full of strong counsel and bracing comfort that are increasingly needed in our modern world' (a prescient remark given the outbreak of the second world war was only two years away). But the result of her fruitful endeavors was the publication of her ‘Day-Book of Comfort and Counsel’
… (more)
 
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ExeterQuakers | 1 other review | Aug 20, 2020 |

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Statistics

Works
74
Also by
2
Members
1,842
Popularity
#13,976
Rating
½ 4.3
Reviews
39
ISBNs
113
Languages
1
Favorited
2

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