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would eventually win recognition from the government and decried
Priestley's abrasive strategy. Priestley replied in a dismissive pamphlet, but the two still remained friends. Eventually, after the failure of the
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Throughout his career, Enfield focused more on ethics than on theology in his many published sermons and essays. He was also a contributor to the
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was essential to his students, he studied mathematics one summer and subsequently published a textbook dedicated to
Priestley:
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at the behest of his teacher and minister, William Hextal. In 1763 he became the minister at Benn's Garden Chapel in
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remained in print until the middle of the nineteenth century and inspired other anthologies, such as
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to be the minister of the Cairo Street Chapel and a tutor of rhetoric and modern languages at
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and at his death had just started a biographical dictionary project with
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and supported the government intertwined with it. When fellow
Unitarian
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In
Norwich Enfield's congregation assembled prominent families: the
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Remarks on
Several Late Publications in a Letter to Dr. Priestley
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Institutes of
Natural Philosophy, Theoretical and Experimental
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159:(1774), an anthology of literary extracts intended to teach
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Despite being a
Unitarian, Enfield still respected the
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60:to William and Ann Enfield. In 1758, he entered
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268:An Essay towards the History of Leverpool
33:(29 March 1741 – 3 November 1797) was a
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181:Enfield industriously translated
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122:(1770). Enfield believed that
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16:British Unitarian minister
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129:Feathers Tavern Petition
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82:Octagon Chapel, Norwich
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165:Exercises in Elocution
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206:C. B. Jewson (1975).
173:Mary Wollstonecraft's
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249:Claudia L. Johnson,
56:Enfield was born in
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157:The Speaker
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46:The Speaker
25:The Speaker
288:Categories
271: [
142:John Aikin
124:Dissenters
89:Martineaus
74:Warrington
161:elocution
66:Liverpool
44:entitled
42:elocution
38:Unitarian
178:(1789).
152:(1783).
48:(1774).
183:Brucker
169:Speaker
35:British
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70:draper
193:Notes
106:Works
212:ISBN
52:Life
274:sic
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