Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 4, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Doddridge or search for Doddridge in all documents.

Your search returned 3 results in 1 document section:

edibility of the miracle which is said to have happened in connexion with Gardiner, and which has been recorded with great circumstantiality by his biographer, Dr. Doddridge. Most of our readers are well acquainted, no doubt, with the narrative. It bears that Gardiner, in his youth, was wild, thoughtless, dissolute, and utterly caIt is not reproduced from the memoirs by the reviewer, but he takes occasion to say that there is nothing marvellous in it from beginning to end. Carlyle says "Dr. Doddridge has marred this story, either through mistake, or through a desire to make Gardiner's confession more supernatural; for he introduces some sort of meteor or bl backward to speak on the subject, as many would have been." So, it seems, there is one miracle the less to be recorded hereafter. It is not possible to suspect Doddridge of wilful misrepresentation. The probability is that he was misled by his informant; but this example is sufficient to warn religious writers against receiving,