Remark, on this book by the Radford "I knew the Rev. Wietlood great Sue Kiow we he or as consider de very excenter in his but I always took hime to be a worthy & indende to be baritable to his neighbours, but had got such gloomy notions into by head, & constantly prophecy by wich terrible notions, or rather, denunciations from God (which now took plote in his time, altho he constantly expected them ) that it made people afraid of him - The waivery fond of holding an argument, & & constantly told him, it was quite sidiculous for him, 2 other even He I to pretend to expound, explain, the Revelations of St. John the & great difficulty I could procure copy of carr Aldredy publication, & even then, who kindly made me a present of this book, I would not however but be forcibly I truck with the idea of preetdres four having printed clove has the ad and cofries of this work, & nover (to ing Knowledge) sold a single one, he straps appeared very shy when I mentioned the subject to him, in any shape is why or wherefore, the depoment knowetto not THE LITTLE BOOK; (See the Tenth Chapter of Revelations) 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18th CHAPTERS OF REVELATIONS. Aldred (Hitherto hath the Lord helped us.-1 Sam. vfi. 12.) HIGH PEAK, DERBYSHIRE. Derbyshire Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.Cor. x. 14, LONDON: PRINTED BY C. STOWER, PATERNOSTER ROW. 1811. INTRODUCTION. WOE, WOE, WOE TO THE INHABITANTS OF THE EARTH BY REASON OF THE OTHER VOICES OF THE TRUMPET OF THE THREE ANGELS WHICH ARE YET TO SOUND. Rev. 8th Chap. 13th Verse.-The Verse immediately preceding the ten Chapters, and the first woe. THE elucidation of the six chapters with the short address were sent in manuscript to Mr. ADDINGTON, on the 24th March, 1803, I took it to the post office at Tideswell, saw it put into the bag, the bag sealed and sent away, it therefore must have reached its destination: a letter inclosed expressed my views respection its publication; and as a number of the passages have now taken place as they are there explained, I should think myself inexcusable in withhold ing it. Since the elucidation was forwarded to Mr. Addington, serious reflections induced me to apprehend that the ninth, tenth, eleventh, and |