Eebo + Ecco-Tcp: Combined Collection Search
56846 documents available in this collection
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37401.Whitbread, Thomas, 1618-1679, defendant. ● The tryals and condemnation of Thomas White alias Whitebread, provincial of the Jesuits in England, William Harcourt, pretended rector of ]ondon, John Fenwick,procurator for the Jesuits in England, John Gavan alias Gawen, and Anthony Turner, all Jesuits and priests; for high treason: in conspiring the death of the King, the subversion of the government, and Protestant religion. At the Sessions in the Old-Bailey for London and Middlesex, on Friday and Saturday, being the 13th and 14th of June, 1679. Published by authority. ● 1679
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37402.Whitbread, Thomas, 1618-1679. ● M. Whitebread's contemplations during his confinement in Newgate ● 1679
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37403.Whitbread, Thomas, 1618-1679. ● The Speeches of the five Jesuits that were executed at Tyburn on Friday the 20th of this instant June, 1679 ● 1679
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37404.Whitby, Daniel, 1638-1726. ● A sermon in confutation of R. H. the author of The guide in controversies Shewing that his most plausible arguments produced against Protestants, do more effectually conclude for Judaism against Christianity. By Daniel Whitby, D.D. chantor of the church of Sarum. ● 1679
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37405.Whitby, Daniel, 1638-1726. ● The absurdity and idolatry of host-worship proved, by shewing how it answers what is said in scripture and the writtings of the fathers, to shew the folly and idolatry committed in the worship of heathen deities : also a full answer to all those pleas by which papists would wipe off the charge of idolatry, and an appendix against transubstantiation, with some reflexions on a late popish book called The guide in controversies / by Daniel Whitby ... ● 1679
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37406.White, Robert, 1645-1703. ● A Poem upon Mr. Tytus Oates the first discoverer of the late popish plot. ● 1679
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37407.Whitehall, John, fl. 1679-1685. ● The Leviathan found out, or, The answer to Mr. Hobbes's Leviathan in that which my Lord of Clarendon hath past over by John Whitehall ... ● 1679
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37408.Whitehall, Robert, 1625-1685. ● 1679, gratulamini mecum, or, A congratulatory essay upon His Majesties most happy recovery by Robert Whitehall. ● 1679
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37409.Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723. ● The real Quaker a real Protestant, and the spirit of popery directly struck at in answer to a most malicious and scandalous book, entituled, The papists younger brother, by a disguised author under the titles Misoplanes and Philalethes, but on the contrary proved Philoplanes, Misalethes / by a servant of Christ, G. Whitehead. ● 1679
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37410.Wild, Robert, 1609-1679. ● Dr. Wild's poem. In nova fert animus, , or, A new song to an old friend from an old poet, upon the hopeful new Parliament. ● 1679
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37411.Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. ● Counsels and comforts for troubled consciences contained in a letter, lately written to a friend / by Henry Wilkinson ... ● 1679
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37412.Willes, Samuel, 1611-1684. ● A sermon preach'd at the funeral of ... Lady Mary, daughter to Ferdinando, late Earl of Huntingdon, and wife to William Jolife of Caverswell-castle in the county of Stafford, Esq. ... Decemb. xii, 1678 by Samuel Willes ... ● 1679
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37413.Williams, John, 1636?-1709. ● A sermon preached before the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor, and aldermen of the city of London, at the Guild-hall chappel, October 12. 1679 by John Williams ... ● 1679
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37414.Williams, John, 1636?-1709. ● An impartial consideration of those speeches, which pass under the name of the five Jesuits lately executed viz. [brace] Mr. Whitebread, Mr. Harcourt, Mr. Gawen, Mr. Turner, and Mr. Fenwick : in which it is proved, that according to their principles, they not only might, but also ought, to die after that manner, with solemn protestation of their innocency. ● 1679
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37415.Williams, John, 1636?-1709. ● Christianity abused by the Church of Rome, and popery shewed to be a corruption of it being an answer to a late printed paper given about by papists : in a letter to a gentleman / by J.W. ● 1679
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37416.Willis, Thomas, 1621-1675. ● Pharmaceutice rationalis. Sive Diatriba de medicamentorum operationibus in humano corpore. Authore Tho. Willis M.D. in Univ. Oxon. Prof. Sedleiano, nec non Coll. Med. Lond. Societ. Reg. Socio ● 1679
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37417.Willis, Thomas, 1621-1675. ● Pharmaceutice rationalis: or, An exercitation of the operations of medicines in humane bodies. Shewing the signs, causes, and cures of most distempers incident thereunto. : In two parts. : As also a treatise of the scurvy and the several sorts thereof, with their symptoms, causes, and cure. / By Tho. Willis ... ● 1679
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37418.Willis, Thomas, 1621-1675. ● Pharmaceutice rationalis: or, The operations of medicines in humane bodies. The second part. With copper plates describing the several parts treated of in this volume. By Tho. Willis, M.D. and Sedley Professor in the University of Oxford. ● 1679
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37419.Wilson, Thomas, 17th cent. ● A sermon on the gunpowder treason, with reflections on the late plot by Thomas Wilson ... ● 1679
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37420.Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698. ● The country-man's guide or plain directions for ordering. Curing. Breeding choice, use, and feeding. Of horses, cows, sheep, hoggs, Adorn'd with sculptuers, shewing the proper places in the bodies of the said several beasts, where the said distempers do usually happen. Published for the publick good, by W.W. ● 1679
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37421.Witherden, Thomas. ● Elixir salutis; or the great preservative of health called by some, the never-failing cordial of the world. : Being most pleasant and safe for all ages, sexes, and constitutions ... / Prepared by me, Tho. Witherden ... ● 1679
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37422.Womock, Laurence, 1612-1685. ● Go shew thy self to the priest safe advice for a sound Protestant / by L. Womock ... ● 1679
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37423.Womock, Laurence, 1612-1685. ● The late proposal of union among Protestants, review'd and rectifi'd being a vindication of the most reverend father in God, Edwin, Lord Arch-Bishop of York, and the reverend Dr. Tillotson, Dean of Canterbury, from the misprisions of an apocryphal proposer : with a full answer to his proposal, presented to the Parliament. ● 1679
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37424.Woodford, Samuel, 1636-1700. ● A paraphrase upon the Canticles, and some select hymns of the New and Old Testament with other occasional compositions in English verse / by Samuel Woodford ... ● 1679
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37425.Woodroffe, Benjamin, 1638-1711. ● A sermon preached before the Right Honorable the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the city of London at the Guild-Hall Chappel October 26, 1679 by Benjamin Woodroffe ... ● 1679
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37426.Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks. ● A general bill of all the christnings and burials, from the 17. of December, 1678 to the 16. of December, 1679 according to the report made to the Kings Most Excellent Majesty, by the Company of Parish- Clerks of London, ● 1679
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37427.Wyatt, W. (William), d. 1712. ● A sermon preached to those, who had been scholars of St. Paul's school in Guild-Hall Chapel, London, at their anniversary-meeting on St. Paul's Day, 1678/9 / by W. Wyatt ... ● 1679
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37428.Wynne, Thomas. ● An anti-christian conspiracy detected, and Satan's champion defeated being a reply to an envious scurrilous libel without any name to it, called, Work for a cooper : being also a vindication of my book, entituled, The antiquity of the Quakers ... / by me Thomas Wynne. ● 1679
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37429.Wyvill, Christopher, Sir, 1614-1672?. ● A discourse, prepared for the ears of some Romanists (at a general quarter sessions, in the north, when they were summon'd to take the oaths.) By Sr. Christopher Wyvill baronet, one of His Majesties justices of the peace in those parts: and now profered to the eyes of them all ● 1679
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37430.Yarranton, Andrew, 1616-1684. ● A coffee-house dialogue, or, A discourse between Captain Y--- and a young barrester of the Middle-Temple with some reflections upon the bill against the D. of Y. ● 1679
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37431.Yeamans, Isabel. ● An invitation of love, to all who hunger and thirst after righteousness, to come and take of the water of life freely without money and without price with a word of advice to such as are asking the way to Sion (and are weeping) with their faces thither-ward : together with a faithful warning to the inhabitants of Babylon, to come out of her, lest (partaking of her sins) ye also come to partake of her plagues / by Isabel Yeamans. ● 1679
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37432.Yelverton, Henry, Sir, 1566-1629. ● The rights of the people of England, concerning impositions stated in a learned argument, by Sir Henry Yelverton ... ; with a remonstrance presented to the Kings most excellent Majesty, by the honorable House of Commons, in the Parliament, An. Dom. 1610 ... ● 1679
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37433.Yonge, James, 1647-1721. ● Currus triumphalis, è terebinthô, or, An account of the many admirable vertues of oleum terebinthinæ more particularly, of the good effects produced by its application to recent wounds, especially with respect to the hemorrhagies of the veins, and arteries, and the no less pernicious weepings of the nerves, and lymphaducts : wherein also, the common methods, and medicaments, used to restrain hemorrhagies, are examined, and divers of them censured : and lastly, a new way of amputation, and a speedier convenient method of curing stumps, than that commonly practised, is with divers other useful matters recommended to the military chirurgeon, in two letters : the one to his most honoured, James Pearse, Esq, chirurgeon to His Royal Highness the Duke of York, and chirurgeon general to His Majestie's Navy Royal : the other, to Mr. Thomas Hobbs, chirurgeon in London / by James Yonge. ● 1679
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37434.Young, Edward, 1641 or 2-1705. ● A sermon preached before His Majesty at White-Hall, 29 Decemb. 1678 by Edward Young ... ● 1679
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37435.A Brief account of the several plots, conspiracies, and hellish attempts of the bloody-minded papists against the princes and kingdoms of England, Scotland, and Ireland from the Reformation to this present year, 1678 as also their cruel practices in France against the Protestants in the massacre of Paris, , with a more particular account of their plots in relation to the late Civil War and their contrivances of the death of King Charles the First, of blessed memory. ● 1679
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37436.A Catalogue of the names of those holy martyrs who were burned in Queen Maries reign as also the particular places where, with the years and months and several of the days, when they suffered. ● 1679
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37437.A Declaration of the earthly flatform. ● 1679
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37438.A Dialogue between Duke Lauderdale and the Lord Danby ● 1679
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37439.A Dialogue betwixt the Devil and the ignoramus doctor ● 1679
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37440.A Disputation proving that it is not convenient to grant unto ministers secular jurisdiction, and to make them lords statesmen in Parliament ● 1679
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37441.A Full and true narrative of one Elizabeth Middleton, a Roman-Catholick living in Gardners-Lane, Westminster who endeavouring to turn the late hellish-plot on the non-conformists, thereby to vindicate her own sect, the papists, was before several witnesses heard to wish that she might never see the light ... ● 1679
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37442.A Full and true relation of a comet or blazing-star, that lately appeared, and was seen by many who are eye-witnesses thereof, in this city of London, on the 28th and 29th of July last with many weighty observations upon the same. ● 1679
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37443.A Full and true relation of the tryal and condemnation of twelve notorious highway-men, murderers, and clippers of money at the assizes holden for the county of Derby, this present August 1679 ... ● 1679
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37444.A Further account of the proceedings against the rebels in Scotland, since the arrival of His Grace the Duke of Monmouth communicated in a letter to a person of quality from Edenburgh, dated the 19th of this instant June, 1679 : with the substance of a new declaration, published by the rebels. ● 1679
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37445.A Further and more particular account of the total defeat of the rebels in Scotland the number of the slain, two standards and 1200 prisoners brought into Edenburgh, and the confession of divers of the prisoners, how they were drawn into this horrid rebellion : a letter from Edenburgh, June 24, at midnight. ● 1679
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37446.A Letter from Amsterdam to a friend in Paris ● 1679
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37447.A Letter from Legorn, Decem. 1, 1679 ● 1679
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37448.A Letter from a gentleman in the country to his friend in London occasioned by a prophesie that was lately found in the place of retirement of Father Lewis at Comb, in Hereford-Shire ... ● 1679
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37449.A Letter from a minister of the Church of England communicated to the right honourable the lord mayor, relating to Thomas White, alias Whitebread, who was lately executed for high-treason. ● 1679
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37450.A Letter to a friend in the country concerning His Grace the Duke of Buckingham ● 1679
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37451.A Letter to a friend shewing from Scripture, Fathers, and reason, how false that state-maxim is, royal authority is originally and radically in the people. ● 1679
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37452.A List of both houses of Parliament prorogued to the 26th of January, 1679 ● 1679
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37453.A List of the parliament of women ● 1679
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37454.A New Scotch ballad call'd Bothwell-Bridge, or, Hamilton's hero, to the tune of Fortune my foe. ● 1679
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37455.A New ballad upon the present conspiracy of the papists sung by Belzebub, at a merry-meeting of the devils. ● 1679
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37456.A Perfect catalogue of all the lords treasurers that have been in England to this present year, 1679 with particular observations on Thomas Earl of Danby. ● 1679
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37457.A Pillar set upon the grave of the Reverend Dr. Robert Wilde ● 1679
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37458.A Prophesie, which hath been in a manuscript, in the Lord Powis's family sixty years ● 1679
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37459.A Protestants resolution: shewing his reasons why he will not be a Papist Digested into so plain a method of question and answer, that an ordinary capacity may be able to defend the Protestant religion, against the most cunning Jesuit or Popish priest. Useful for these times. ● 1679
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37460.A Relation of the birth, as well as of several remarkable passages during the minority of the victorious James, Duke of Monmouth, eldest son to His Majesty of Great Britain, France, and Ireland with the true account of his many signal and heroick victories in Holland, Flanders, and Scotland to his immortal fame : with the manner of his departure from Whitehall and of his joyful reception in Holland. ● 1679
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37461.A Second letter from Legorn with a farther account as incredible and unparalell'd as the first : from aboard the Van-Herring, December 10, 1679. ● 1679
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37462.A Testimony to the Lord's power and blessed appearance in and amongst children wherein is expressed the great love of God to them ... ● 1679
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37463.A True account of the great victory obtained over the rebels in Scotland by His Majesties forces under the command of His Grace the Duke of Monmouth, the 22d of this instant June, 1679 in a letter to a person of quality. ● 1679
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37464.A True account of what past at the election of knights of the shire for the county of Bucks correcting several falsities and mistakes in a late pamphlet entituled A letter from a free-holder of Buckinghamshire to a friend in London in another letter from an assured hand, 1679. ● 1679
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37465.A True narrative of the confession and execution of the seven prisoners at Tyburn, on Friday the 19th of this instant December 1679 ● 1679
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37466.A True narrative of the present state of affairs in Scotland, respecting the rebellion sent in a letter to a person of quality. ● 1679
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37467.A True relation of what is discovered concerning the murther of the Archbp. of St. Andrews and of what appears to have been the occasion thereof. ● 1679
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37468.A Very strange, but true relation of the raining showre of blood at Shewall in the parish of Stoake Idith in the county of Hereford, on the 16th. day of this instant July, 1679 the examination whereof was taken upon oath the 18th. of this instant July before Richard Hopton Esq. one of His Majesties justices of the peace for the said county. ● 1679
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37469.A Word within-doors, or, A reply to a word without-doors in which the divers opinions of succession to the Crown of England, are compared, in a letter to a person of worth. ● 1679
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37470.A breif account of the Popes pretences of a civil right to the Crown of England, and the answer thereunto ● 1679
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37471.A collection of all the acts, memorials letters, that pass'd in the negotiation of the peace with the treaties concluded at Nimeguen / translated from the French copy, printed at Paris with privilege ; The articles of peace between the Emperor and the French King, and those between the Emperor and the King of Sweden, translated from the Latin copy, printed at Nimeguen. ● 1679
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37472.A collection of certain horrid murthers in several counties of Ireland committed since the 23 of Octob. 1641 : abstracted out of certain examinations taken by vertue of several commissions under the great seal of Ireland. ● 1679
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37473.A congratulatory poem on the safe arrival of His Grace James Duke of Monmovth, at Utretch, on Saturday Sept. 27. 1679. ● 1679
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37474.A consultation between the Pope and a Jesuit, concerning the way how to introduce Popery into England. ● 1679
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37475.A dialogue between death and Doctor Robert Wyld, who dyed lately of an apoplexy. ● 1679
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37476.A faithful compendium, of the birth, education, heroick exploits victories of His Royal Highness the Illustrious Prince James, Duke of York As also the full and just account of his kind reception, and high entertainment by the Scotch nobility at Edenburgh, the metropolitan city of Scotland. ● 1679
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37477.A letter on the subject of the succession ● 1679
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37478.A letter to a friend, about the late proclamation on the 11th of December, 1679, for further proroguing the Parliament till the 11th of November next ensuing ● 1679
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37479.A letter to an honourable member of the House of Commons, in the vindication of the Protestant Reformed Church, as established by law, in opposition to the superstitious and idolatrous Church of Rome ● 1679
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37480.A list of one unanimous club of voters in His Majesties Long Parliament, dissolved in 78 very fit to be thought on at the next new choice. ● 1679
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37481.A list of the horse races that are to be run in the two months of March and April, at New-Market, next ensuing. Feb. 1679. ● 1679
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37482.A list of the names and sums of all the new subscribers for enlarging the capital stock of the governour and company of the bank of England, pursuant to the act of Parliament ● 1679
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37483.A new satyricall ballad of the licentiousness of the times. To the tune of, The blinde beggar of Bednall-Green. ● 1679
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37484.A paraphrase upon justice, or The powerful operation of gold: with some resentments against the proceedings of the Catholick cause. ● 1679
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37485.A poem of congratulation on the happy return of His Grace James Duke of Monmouth. 1679. ● 1679
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37486.A poem on the burning of the Pope being solemnly performed on Queen Elizabeths birth-day this instant November the 17th, 1679. ● 1679
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37487.A poem upon the right of succession to the crown of England, ● 1679
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37488.A psalm of thanksgiving, to be sung by the children of Christs-Hospital, on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday in Easter holy-days (according to ancient custom) at St. Mary Spittle, for their founders and benefactors, 1679. ● 1679
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37489.A safe and easy way to obtain free and peaceable elections, without imposition, noise or charge proposed to consideration now the regulation of elections is under debate. ● 1679
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37490.A seasonable warning to the Commons of England discovering to them their present danger, and the only means of escaping it, to be by a prudent choice of old English spirits, to serve their kind and countrey in the approaching Parliament. ● 1679
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37491.A second consultation between the Pope and the Turk, concerning the propagation of the Catholick faith. ● 1679
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37492.A sober letter, touching predestination and obduration Sent to a minister in the city of Bristol. ● 1679
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37493.A true account of the horrid murder committed upon His Grace, the late Lord Archbishop of St. Andrevvs primate and metropolitan of all Scotland, and one of His Majesties most honourable privy council of that kingdom. With a detection of the lyes published in a late scandalous relation of that murther; and of the pretended occasion thereof. Published by Authority. ● 1679
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37494.A true account of the late most doleful, and lamentable tragedy of old Maddam Gwinn mother to Maddam Elenor Gwinn; vvho was unfortuately drowned, in a fish-pond, at her own mansion-house, near the neat-houses. With an account how that much to be deplored accident, came to pass; and what is expected will be the sequel of the same. With an epitaph, composed against the solemnity of her pompous funeral and many other circumstances. ● 1679
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37495.A true and perfect relation of a monstrous and prodigous whale lately cast on shore at rings-end near Dublin in Ireland with the manner of its taking, Also, an account of what dammages happened to several ships in those parts by a great storm. Sent over in letters from Dublin, to several merchants and others in London. With allowance. ● 1679
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37496.A true relation of the inhuman cruelties lately acted by the rebels in Scotland with the manner of their taking of Glascough, rifling the Lord Archbishops house, digging the Bishop of Argyles children out of their graves, and many other barbarities : being the substance of a letter sent to a person of quality. ● 1679
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37497.Advertisement of two books ● 1679
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37498.An Abstract of some letters to an eminent learned person concerning the excellency of the Book of common-prayer, ● 1679
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37499.An Acconut [sic] of the deportment and last words of Mr. Richard Langhorne, who was drawn, hang'd and quarter'd at Tyburn for high-treason, on Munday, July 14, 1679 ● 1679
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37500.An Account of the fire at New-prison by Clerkenwel whereby the greatest part of that house was burnt down on Friday night, May the 9th, 1679 : presumed on very violent suspitions to be set on fire by a papist that was there in custody, and by that means escaped / taken from the mouth of the keeper of the said prison. ● 1679