Published in London in 1830, this volume collects anti-christian arguments by greek and constantine philosophers. 116 pages including a fourteen page introduction.
Hoffmann, Joseph Pike, D. S. Andrews, Dorothy E.G. Woollard, Walter M. Keesey, Douglas S. Andrews, Richard Pike, Robert J. S. Bertram, Fred Richards, Elizabeth Butler, John Nisbet, H. G. Hampton, Sam J. M. Brown, Frederick Carter, Lester G. Hornby, E.V. Cole, Eugène Béjot, W. J. Rolfe, George Eyre, Todd and Gordon Home, R.S. Austin, Herman Melville & Thomas Taylor
Thomas Adams, Richard Alleine, Isaac Ambrose, Samuel Annesley, John Arrowsmith, Gervase Babington, Sir Richard Baker, William Bates, Richard Baxter, Paul Baynes, Robert Bolton, Samuel Bolton, John Bunyan, Jeremiah Burroughs, Nicholas Byfield, Edmund Calamy, Richard Capel, Joseph Caryl, David Clarkson, John Collinges, Robert Dingley, John Död, Samuel Doolittle, Thomas Doolittle, John Durant, William Dyer, Daniel Dyke, Jeremiah Dyke, William Fenner, John Flavel, Thomas Gataker, Thomas Gouge, William Gouge, William Greenhill, William Gurnall, Robert Harris, Arthur Hildersam, James Janeway, William Jenkyn, Edward Lawrence, Matthew Lawrence, Samuel Lee, Christopher Love, Thomas Manton, Joseph Mede, Christopher Nesse, John Owen, William Perkins, Francis Roberts, Ralph Robinson, John Rogers, Henry Scudder, Obadiah Sedgwick, Samuel Shaw, John Shower, Richard Sibbes, Samuel Slater, Henry Smith, William Spurstowe, Rchard Steele, Peter Sterry, Richard Stock, George Swinnock, Nathanael Taylor, Thomas Taylor, Ralph Venning, Nathaniel Vincent, Thomas Vincent, Richard Vines, Thomas Watson & William Whittaker