| http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#value | - He supposedly drew the largest and most genteel London audience that ever assembled in a dissenting place of worship.[1] He appealed to a broad audience, including Anglicans, actors such as Sarah Siddons and the Kembles.[2] William Wordsworth admired his sermons, although he felt that Fawcett was unstable, and is alleged to have modelled the Solitary in his poem The Excursion after him.[3]
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