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Nordovicum, Angliae Civitas
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Brightstowe, vulgo; quondam venta, florentissimum Angliae Emporium
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Cestria (Vulgo) Chester, Angliae Civitas
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Juvenile monitor, or, The new children's friend
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The hermit of the forest, and the wandering infants
A rural fragment. ; Embellished with cuts -
A Select collection of the newest and most favorite country dances, waltzes, reels & cotillions
as performed at court and all grand assemblies -
The three woe-trumpets, of which the first and second are already past, and the third is now begun
under which the seven vials of the wrath of God are to be poured out upon the world ; being the substance of two discourses, from Rev. XI. 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 ; delivered in Parliament, on the 3d and 24th of February, 1793 -
Discourses on the several estates of man, on earth,-in heaven-and hell
Deduced from reason and revelation: as they were delivered in the Abbey Church, Bath -
A short vievv of the long life and raigne of Henry the Third, King of England
Presented to King Iames -
August 30. A continued iournall of all the proceedings of the Duke of Buckingham his Grace, in the Isle of Ree, since the last of Iuly
VVith the names of those noblemen as were drowned and taken in going to releeue the fort. As also the portaiture [sic] of the knife wit which his Excellence should haue beene murdered: which very knife was brought ouer by Captaine Buckestone, and deliuered vnto the Dutches of Buckinghame her Grace on Monday night last. Published by authoritie -
The avthoritie of the Chvrch in making canons and constitutions concerning things indifferent
and the obedience thereto required: with particular application to the present estate of the Church of England. Deliuered in a sermon preached in the Greene yard at Norwich the third Sunday after Trinitie. 1605. By Fran. Mason, Bacheler of Diuinitie, and sometime fellow of Merton College in Oxford. And now in sundrie points by him enlarged -
Weekly News (Archer Series)
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Weekly News (Fifth Series)
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The six bookes of a common-weale
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Articles concluded at Paris the xxiiij. of February 1605, stylo Angliæ
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A treatise concerning the causes of the magnificencie and greatnes of cities
deuided into three bookes -
Articles containing His Maiesties gracious offer to compound with his subiects for the tenure of their lands
and other profits growing by reason of their tenures in certaine cases as followeth -
The gouernment of cattell
diuided into three bookes, the first entreating of oxen, kine, and calues ... the second discoursing of the gouernment of horses ... the third discouering the ordering of sheepe, goates, hogges, and dogges -
Nummi Britannici historia, or, An historical account of English money
from the Conquest to the uniting of the two kingdoms by King James I, and of Great-Britain to the present time -
The interest of England in the Irish transplantation, stated
wherein is held forth (to all concerned in Irelands good settlement) the benefits the Irish transplantation will bring to each of them in particular, and to the Common-wealth in general, being chiefly intended as an answer to a scandalous, seditious pamphlet, entituled, The great case of transplantation in Ireland discussed. Composed and published at the request of several persons in eminent place in Ireland, to the end all who desire it, might have a true account of the proceedings that have been there in the business of transplantation, both as to the rise, progress, and end thereof. By a faithfull servant of the Common-wealth, Richard Laurence -
Sir Thomas Ouerbury his VVife. With additions of nevv characters, and many other wittie conceits neuer before printed
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The whole book of Psalmes
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The whole booke of Psalmes
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The white wolfe, or, A sermon preached at Pauls Crosse, Feb. 11 being the last Sonday in Hillarie tearme, anno 1627, and printed somewhat more largely then the time would permit at that present to deliuer
wherein faction is vnmasked, and iustly taxed without malice, for the safetie of weake Christians : especially, the Hetheringtonian faction growne very impudent in this citie of late yeeres, is here confuted -
A true and perfect relation of the whole proceedings against the late most barbarous traitors, Garnet a Iesuite, and his confederats
contayning sundry speeches deliuered by the Lords Commissioners at their arraignments, for the better satisfaction of those that were hearers, as occasion was offered; the Earle of Northamptons speech hauing bene enlarged vpon those grounds which are set downe. And lastly all that passed at Garnets execution