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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 -
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 -
A booke containing all such proclamations as were published during the raigne of the late Queene Elizabeth
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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 -
The whole booke of psalmes
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By the Queene. Whereas by diuerse and sundrie proclamations heeretofore published ... restraint was giuen and made, that no shippes, crayres, uessels, shipmasters, mariners or sea-faring men whatsoeuer, of this realme of England, or the Teritories of the same ...
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By the Queene. Forasmuche as the tyme wherein common interludes in the Englishe tongue are wont vsually to be played
... The Quenes Maiestie doth straightly forbyd al maner interludes to be playde eyther openly or priuately, except the same be notified before hande -
By the Queene. Forasmuch as the Queenes Maiestie our soueraigne Ladie is credibly enfourmed, that the infection of the plague is at this present in sundry places in and around the cities of London and Westminster ...
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By the Queene. Forasmvch as contrary to good order and expresse lawes made by parliament, in the xxxiii. yere of the raigne of the Queenes Maiesties most noble father ... many men doe daily vse to ryde with handgonnes and dagges ...
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By the Queene. The Queenes Maiestie vpon consyderations very great, and presently importyng the mayntenaunce of her people in peace with her neyghbours ...
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By the Queene. A proclamation for keeping of the peace in London
The Queenes Maiestie commandeth all manner her subiects of what degree soeuer they bee [...] -
By the Queene. Forasmuch as within these few dayes there haue been certaine infamous libels full of malice and falshood spread abroad ...
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A proclamation against selling of shippes
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By the Queene. Whereas the Queenes most excellent Maiestie, vpon information heretofore geuen vnto the same, of the great and excessiue pryces that wines transported hither out of Fraunce ...
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By the Quene. The Quenes Maiestie beyng infourmed, that in some partes of her realme, sundrye either ignoraunt or malicious people doe spread rumours abroad, that the base testons of foure pence halfepeny should not be currant after the end of Ianuary next [...]
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By the Queene. A proclamation for the ordering of the exchange of money vsed by merchants, according to the lawes and statutes of the realme
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By the Queene. The Queenes Maiestie contynuing in her former earnest disposition to deliuer this realme from the infamy of all maner of base moneys ...
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By the Queene. Forasmuch as the Queenes Maiestie our soueraigne Ladie is credibly enfourmed, that the infection of the plague is at this present in sundry places in and about the citie of Westminster ...
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By the Queene. Whereas of late yeeres, there hath ben an intermission of the free traffike of marchants ...
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By the Queene. Forasmuch as vpon the lamentable complaynt made vnto the Queenes most excellent Maiestie by sundry her louing subiects
the clothiers of diuers parts of the realme, and of a multitude of other people mainteined in their handlabours by them -
By the Queene. Where the Quenes mooste excellent Maiestie standeth aswell by her hyghnes owne grauntes as by the grauntes of the kynges [and] Quene, her highnes most deare father, brother [and] sister, with the yerely payment of many annuities [and] pencions to diuers late religious persons ...