This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A04735 | AS it fell vpon a day, in the merry moneth of may: Sitting in a pleasant shade, with a gowne of mertle made? |
A04775 | N. Okes,[ London? |
A06285 | s.n.,[ London: 1624?] |
A06317 | Barker?,[ S.l. |
A07311 | Gosson?,[ S.l. |
A10550 | GOod morrow faire Nansie, whither so fast, I pray swéet, whither are you walking? |
A13985 | Printed by R. Oulton for Iohn[ Wright] t[he] younger, and are to be sold a[t his] shop in the Old- Baily,[ London]:[ 1640?] |
A14605 | Beale?,[ London: ca. |
A16276 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.): ill. For H.G., Printed at London:[ 1624?] |
A20444 | Bill? |
A19010 | Printed for F.C., London:[ 1632?] |
A26052 | Into what darknesse will our Church be hurld If such as these be call''d The light o th''World? |
A25542 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 168-?] |
A29338 | s.n.,[ London? |
A30540 | : 1660?] |
A06305 | : 1603?] |
A06305 | Kingston?,[ S.l. |
A06664 | Jones?,[ London? |
A06664 | Jones?,[ London? |
A08794 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A08794 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A10686 | Figures of Time, Death and? |
A12330 | Or how should they be reladen thence in due time, if stock be wanting there? |
A12330 | What should cause our ships to stay so long, if there were stock to buy their lading? |
A14320 | R. V.( Richard Vennard), d. 1615? |
A14320 | R. V.( Richard Vennard), d. 1615? |
A19012 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.): ill. For H.C., Printed at London:[ 1632?] |
A19012 | Hang vp sorrow, I can borrow money for to buy two pots, Who can say to liue to morrow? |
A33493 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 169-?] |
A33239 | ], London: 1667? |
A20771 | : 1620?] |
A20771 | s.n.,[ Dublin? |
A22155 | Islip?,[ London? |
A22155 | Islip?,[ London? |
A34142 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
A35793 | ],[ London? |
A36665 | HOW comes it, Gentlemen, that now aday''s When all of you so shrewdly judge of Plays, Our Poets tax you still with want of Sence? |
A36666 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.); Printed for J. Tonson, London:[ 1682?] |
A37375 | [ London? |
A40412 | Now therefore amidst these Disadvantages, can I promise any better Success? |
A39604 | Sheriff Bethel ask''d Mr. Fitz- harris, What have you to say? |
A29977 | 1 sheet( 2 p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A29977 | : 1680?] |
A41972 | And in these seeing- Times how blind are we? |
A41360 | Sold by John Overton at the White Horse in Little Britain...,[ London?] |
A43622 | May Colledge, Rouse, and Hone, their Fate On Traytors all attend; What though it seems a little late? |
A43304 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1680?] |
A08979 | 1630?] |
A08979 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A08979 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A08967 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A08967 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A08967 | Now what should be the reason ▪ thinke you, she was so coy? |
A44859 | WHat Rayling Asse is Hudibrasse? |
A08946 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A08946 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A45009 | What though I was pictur''d with an Owls head and a Fools Coat? |
A09526 | B. Alsop and T. Fawcet,[ London? |
A09526 | Inter''d with Fame, his Soule to Heauen fled? |
A45379 | Printed for William Gilbertson..., Lonpuo[ sic]:[ 1662?] |
A46474 | s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
A14129 | The much- afflicted mothers teares for her drowned daughter/[ by?] |
A14129 | The much- afflicted mothers teares for her drowned daughter/[ by?] |
A14129 | how much worse than any sauage Beare, She- Wolfe, or Tygresse, must I now appeare? |
A34028 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1695?] |
A36236 | And whether it can then properly be called Bulloyn, or ought to pay Duty outwards? |
A22656 | : 1628?] |
A22656 | Bonham Norton and John Bill? |
A22656 | [ London? |
A36672 | In one poor Isle, why shou''d two Factions be? |
A36672 | What if some one inspir''d with Zeal, shou''d call ▪ Come let''s go cry, God save him at White Hall? |
A43748 | Brome, Richard, d. 1652? |
A43748 | what''s a Widow? |
A44171 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A44171 | : 1660?] |
A47261 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A47703 | s.n.,[ London: 1650?] |
A47962 | Are our Sacred or Civill Liberties dear to us? |
A17512 | But what may we expect of this our Prelat? |
A17512 | Harris, Paul, 1573- 1635? |
A17512 | or preachers? |
A17512 | who hath ordinarily in his mouth: To what end should Parish Priests be learned? |
A48043 | : 1691?] |
A36640 | Love and I, what can Love and I do more? |
A36640 | what can Love and I do more? |
A35803 | But, Lord, what can these Souls plead before thee, When they so wilfully flie to their own misery? |
A26698 | Neale, Thomas, d. 1699? |
A26698 | Neale, Thomas, d. 1699? |
A49062 | s.n.,[ London: 1667?] |
A31645 | For if the Blind lead the Blind must not both fall into the Ditch? |
A31645 | The Lord give you Eyes to see? |
A31645 | What could I have done more in faithfullnesse and respect to him, or mine own soul? |
A49219 | We have nothing left us but to fly to God by Fasting, Mourning, and Prayer; and who knows if he will turn these evils from us? |
A38528 | CAN Angry Frowns rest on thy Noble Brow For Trivial Things? |
A38528 | Or can a stream of muddy Water flow From th''Muses Springs? |
A38528 | Or great Apollo bend his Vengeful Bowe''Gainst popular Stings? |
A50850 | Printed for William Gilbertson,[ London]:[ 1662?] |
A51657 | Printed for J. Wright, J. Clark, W. Thackeray and T. Passenger,[ London]:[ 1683?] |
A51336 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1660?] |
A52111 | and sold by the booksellers, London:[ 1700?] |
A53377 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1695?] |
A45237 | Every Subject sees the way now chalked out for future Justice, and who dares henceforth tread besides it? |
A45237 | Gentlemen, FOR God''s Sake be wise in your well meant Zeal: Why do you argue away pretious Time that can never be revoked or repaired? |
A45237 | Our Liberties and Proprieties are sufficiently declared to be sure and legal; our Remedies are clear and irrefragable: What do we fear? |
A53818 | s.n.,[ Oxford? |
A53819 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Oxford? |
A53821 | s.n.,[ Oxford? |
A46319 | Why should Men''s Liberties be thus abridg''d, And Conscience hinder''d in what''s privileg''d? |
A46319 | Why should a petty Government constrain Men to What Acts of Parliament doth scorn to do? |
A46619 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A46619 | : 1688?] |
A46970 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A46970 | : 169-?] |
A55361 | 1 sheet([ 2] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1676?] |
A34132 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1688?] |
A34132 | Whether there lies any Obligation upon a Man to give his Answer in Manner and Form Propos''d? |
A34132 | Whether to Endeavour an Alteration in the Government, be not Criminal? |
A48637 | :[ 1681?] |
A29394 | How do they stile the King? |
A29394 | What is an Imperial Crown? |
A29394 | What says that Oath? |
A29394 | s.n.,[ London: 1690?] |
A37009 | How would all honest Hearts their Fates esteem, Were all our Common- Council- men like him? |
A37009 | In time such wholsom Documents receive: Uds Zooks, who knows but I may stand for Shrieve? |
A37009 | This is his Character, and is''t not pity But such as he bore Office in the City? |
A37009 | WHat in my face cou''d this strange Scribler see,( Uds Heart) to make an Evidence of me? |
A36671 | 1 sheet([ 2] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1687?] |
A36671 | To dare in Fields is Valour; but how few Dare be so throughly Valiant to be true? |
A36671 | What can we do, when mimicking a Fop, Like beating Nut- trees, makes a larger Crop? |
A36671 | What safety could their publick Acts afford? |
A56161 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London:: 1659?] |
A49500 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) Printed for F. Coles, T. Vere, J. Wright, and J. Clarke,[ London?] |
A49500 | :[ 1680?] |
A49374 | WHAT more can man expect from Majesty, Than Thanks, acknowledging their Loyalty? |
A56845 | The Name of Lords shall be abhor''d, for ev''ry Man''s a Brother, What Reason then in Church or State, one Man should Rule another? |
A56563 | what Present shall we pay To your Auspicious Deity to day? |
A58119 | If Alderman did Spirit men away, Why may not Poets then Kidnap a Play? |
A53516 | In Lands where Cuckolds multiply like ours, What Prince can be too Jealous of their powers, Or can too often think himself alarm''d? |
A53516 | When, from the filthy Dunghil- faction bred, New- form''d Rebellion durst rear up its head, Answer me all: who struck the Monster dead? |
A59338 | influence the Bar? |
A45652 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A45652 | : 168-?] |
A45652 | Renatus Harris, organ- maker, his challenge to Mr. Bernard Smith, organ- maker Harris, Renatus, 1640?-1715? |
A59418 | What a pleasure it is to see bottles before us, With the women among us to make up the Chorus? |
A59337 | HOw finely would the Sparks be catch''d to Day, Should a Whig- Poet Write a Tory- Play? |
A46612 | But I''ll appeal to your Lordship and your Brethren, Whether these Children are not unkind and ungrateful? |
A46612 | Should not they rather humble themselves, and acknowledge their Faults, and amend it for the time to come? |
A46612 | What against Heaven? |
A46719 | What cou''d be more pernicious and destructive to the Fundamental Laws of the Nation, than to Establish a Power in the Monarch, to dispence with them? |
A46719 | What deeper stroke to the Protestant Church, than to Erect a Court of Ecclesiastical Commissioners, to pull down Her Pillars? |
A46719 | What greater Inlet to Popery, than to take off the Test and Penal Laws? |
A13972 | Are we not at home, when we are in our ships, surging in those channels, and on the seas? |
A13972 | For the Masters of the Trinitie- house, in point of qualitie, who can iustly except against vs? |
A13972 | In point of care, may any be equall to vs? |
A13972 | is not this knowledge within the compasse of our element, and of ours onely? |
A13972 | who will or can dispute or reason with vs in this element? |
A55265 | 1 sheet( 2 p.) s.n.,[ London: 1675?] |
A55265 | HOw far of old( as Fame records) Did English Arms advance? |
A62727 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A63968 | What tho''we did by Sion''s Waters mourn? |
A37333 | ( As the Lounes was removing him from Court to Prison, ther chanced a Curat to be present, who asked, what was the matter, what ailed them at the Dog? |
A37333 | Favor( qwoth a Chield, who had been sk ● eping all the while, and only heard the word favor) what, show favor to such a Loun as he? |
A49525 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) Printed for I. Wright, I. Clarke, W. T[hakeray] and T. Passenger,[ London?] |
A49525 | HOw many wicked Sins, are Reigning in our Land? |
A49525 | Then fear,& c. NOw to Young people likewise, good counsel I will give, If thou''lt it take,''t will do thee good, so long as thou dost live? |
A64947 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A53892 | What a notorious piece of Ingratitude is it for men to Conspire to take away that Life, which freely gave them their own? |
A46055 | How goes she in apparel, delights she not in pride? |
A46055 | How goes she in her carriage, does she not pout and lowre? |
A46055 | Oh the Devil is so busie in her, she can not hold an hour: Canst thee not tame the Devi ●, I say? |
A46055 | Printed for F. Coles, T. Vere, J. Wright, and J. Clarke,[ London]:[ 166-?] |
A54314 | Percy, James, 1619- 1690? |
A54314 | Percy, James, 1619- 1690? |
A54314 | eng Percy, James, 1619- 1690? |
A59431 | But why was such an Host of Swearers prest? |
A59431 | What an enlightning Grace is want of Bread? |
A39286 | Is not rebellion as the sinne of witchcraft? |
A39286 | and is not this the Royal Law? |
A39286 | and was it not the aggravation that they also took possession? |
A39286 | is it not our Saviours expresse command, give unto Caesar that which is Caesars? |
A25374 | And consequently where is the Security of any Man? |
A25374 | And now I pray consider where is this Liberty and Property? |
A25374 | Can any thing be more plain to demonstrate this than my present Case? |
A25374 | Nay, where the very Laws themselves? |
A25374 | What are these Proceedings but Arbitrary in a Superlative manner, and such as no Reign ever produced before? |
A25374 | Where the Rights and Priviledges of the Subject? |
A74891 | : 1643?] |
A64365 | And how, I pray, is there here an Universal drawn from a Particular? |
A63513 | Was not Ireland your own? |
A63513 | could not Forty Thousand from time to time been easily and without Suspicion Transported, and upon a signal been ready and willing for any Service? |
A57504 | now preferr''d so High, What Marvels from that Prospect dost thou spy? |
A57504 | s.n.,[ London: 1679?] |
A57504 | to Raise Immortal Spire On Sea- coal Basis? |
A58104 | 1 sheet( 3 columns) s.n.,[ London? |
A58104 | Ah that ye could but mind the mounrnful cry That is for you, to hear this in God''s fear, Repent, repent, for why, why will ye die? |
A58104 | Can ye not see what all your rage hath wrought, Your Perseoutions and your Banishment? |
A65880 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A65880 | eng Bugg, Francis, 1640- 1724? |
A66011 | But why do I thus Rant without a cause? |
A66011 | Is not Concealment Policy? |
A58649 | R. S. 1 sheet([ 1] p.) Printed for Robert Wilson..., London:[ 1660?] |
A58649 | Thus saith the Lord, Are you feeding your selves for the Slaughter? |
A77720 | Bugg, Francis, 1640- 1724?. |
A53816 | Annon de agnoscendâ supremà Regiae majestatis potestate,& de observandis statutis hujus Universitatis juramentum non semel suscepimus? |
A53816 | Annon fidei articulis,& religionis iterum& saepius subscripsimus? |
A53816 | Et quis, vel quid fidem Ecclesiae, Regi, vel Academiae datam violare cogat? |
A77239 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n,[ London? |
A77644 | : 1696?] |
A78098 | If that can ne''re be Copy''d to its worth, Who shall the Beauty of her Mind set forth? |
A54423 | So if this were the Popes, he must yet plead ignorance of a Gospel case; And who is meetest for Bedlam, the POPE or JOHN PERROT? |
A54423 | eng J. P.--( John Perrot), d. 1671? |
A54061 | What Maid? |
A54061 | what Goddess could maintain the Forts? |
A54061 | with what Lustre did he make his Courts? |
A78055 | s.n.,[ London: 1660?] |
A78150 | : 1686?] |
A54315 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A54315 | Percy, James, 1619- 1690? |
A54315 | Percy, James, 1619- 1690? |
A54315 | eng Percy, James, 1619- 1690? |
A54311 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1680?] |
A54311 | Percy, James, 1619- 1690? |
A54311 | Percy, James, 1619- 1690? |
A54311 | eng Percy, James, 1619- 1690? |
A78249 | : 1690 or 1691?] |
A78256 | : 16--?] |
A67354 | Can such a pile from Ruine rise? |
A38517 | But oh, what Spirit of Deceit afar, Possess''d our Pulpits, and bewitch''d the Bar? |
A38517 | But was e''er seen the like, in Prose or Metre, To this mad Play, or work of Father P? |
A38517 | What Bane, what Mischief on poor Mortals shed By Vermin, from the Laws corruption bred? |
A38517 | What Singing, Dancing, Interludes of late Stuff, and set off our goodly Farce of State? |
A38517 | What''s stablish''d Law, where standing Armies come; Or who''ll talk Gospel to a Kettle Drum? |
A38517 | When Law, and bald Divinity begins, Why then, the marvel that a Poet sins? |
A70758 | WHat think ye meant Wise Providence, when first POETS were made? |
A72984 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A72984 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A73557 | ; Simon Passæus sculpsit, L. Breton, Nicholas, 1545?-1626? |
A73557 | ; Simon Passæus sculpsit, L. Breton, Nicholas, 1545?-1626? |
A79380 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Cambridge? |
A80187 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1695?] |
A79925 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1660?] |
A76932 | WHy should I thus complain of thee? |
A76932 | why shouldst thou say thy heart will break And all for love of my sweet sake? |
A64720 | 1 sheet( 2 p.) s.n.,[ London: 1681?] |
A64720 | Is''t fit for Us to be control''d By slavish Fear, so want bright Gold From dangers distant, but how far Could ne''er be prov''d yet by you Sir? |
A64720 | shall not we Men hang, or quit, Or Witness sham, as we think fit? |
A77134 | Doth not the Rich love of God appear towards us herein? |
A80297 | What less can we think our selves obliged to; when we consider in what manner St. Paul conjures the Corinthians? |
A78154 | Cave''s Books to Auction? |
A78154 | God forbid, how then Shall he write th''History of all learned Men? |
A46272 | By T. I. RIddle my Riddle( for I mean to pose yee) What is it Raiseth yee, Yet Overthrows yee? |
A46272 | Selfe, or, A riddle called the monster by T.J. Jordan, Thomas, 1612?-1685? |
A46272 | Soar to a Septer, yet sink to a Iibbet? |
A46272 | What is it makes a Man( by Toyl and Labour, With all the wit he can) to Cheate his Neighbour? |
A46272 | What is''t That makes Men deny to pay Tribute? |
A46272 | What makes Disputants keep such a puther, Shutting the Gates of Bliss, One against t''other? |
A80267 | : 1700?] |
A80491 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A81258 | That the Case of the Paper makers, doth much concern the Paper Sellers? |
A78282 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1680?] |
A78282 | This they ought to prove; but admit they should, yet if more Glass of all sorts are here made than can be vended, what can a Joynt- Stock do more? |
A80973 | [ 1?] |
A81286 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 169-?] |
A60724 | Did vertue ever go without reward? |
A60724 | Who knows what Honours thou may''st yet regain? |
A60724 | Who knows what is for such desert prepar''d? |
A81290 | : 1700?] |
A25800 | And did I not concur to bind the Landlords for their Tenants, though I was mainly concerned? |
A25800 | And have I not always keep''d my Tenants in obedience to His Majesty? |
A25800 | Have I not shewed my Zeal to all the ends of the Test? |
A25800 | How then can it be imagined, that I have any sinister design in any thing that I have said? |
A25800 | Was I not for offering proper supplies to His Majesty and his Successor? |
A81973 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A36193 | And mounted him upon thy Wings so high, That he could almost touch the very Skie, And now must Oates stand in the Pillory? |
A36193 | And must he too( when once he has stood there) Be sent to Ride upon the Three- Leg''d- Mare? |
A36193 | Did''st thou not once make Oates thy Favourite, Thy only Darling, and thy dear Delight? |
A36193 | Is that the way to pay his Christmas- Box? |
A36193 | Was he not once the Saviour of the Nation, And must he be Contemn''d and out of Fashion? |
A36193 | What if he did Forswear himself a little, Must his sweet Bum be rubb''d thus with a Nettle? |
A36193 | Zouns what''s the meaning of it with a Pox? |
A36193 | why art thou thus unkind, So wavering and unconstant in thy Mind, To turn( like weather- Cocks) with every Wind? |
A72981 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A72981 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A72981 | You Whore quoth the Cooper, is this your bore pig? |
A80258 | : 1696?] |
A80258 | s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
A65998 | Could You believe Our Royal Head would fail To Nod those down who fell before our Tail? |
A65998 | Or could Your Amsterdam by her commands, Make London carry Coals to warm her Hands? |
A77164 | AS Tom met Roger upon the Road said he How dost thou do? |
A77164 | Said Roger, what will you give your son, and he shall have my daughter? |
A77164 | When shall we marry them together old Roger, then said tom? |
A54709 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A54709 | : 1681- 2?] |
A54709 | When by the Rabbles fruitless Zeal You lost Your Royal Fathers Love, Your growing Fortune cross''d; Say, was Your Bargain, think ye, worth the Cost? |
A54709 | Why with such eager speed hunt You a Crown You''re so unfit to wear, were it Your own? |
A54709 | Would You be Great? |
A78409 | Must I alone, unhappy I, When all my dear lov''d Swains are gone, Be doom''d to tarry here alone? |
A78409 | eng Wollaston, Francis, d. 1685? |
A83664 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) Joseph Hunscott,[ London?] |
A83833 | Winter, John,-- Sir, 1600?-1673? |
A83834 | Winter, John,-- Sir, 1600?-1673? |
A63970 | A certain Capuchin Monk said to the Duke of Luxemburgh, Will you give ▪ that Soul to the Devil, which we have fetch''d out of the Fire? |
A63970 | And how barbarous an Act would this seem, not only to Foreign Nations, but to Posterity also? |
A76403 | or have you not gone on in Sin and Evil still? |
A76695 | If thy conscience accuse thee, what peace canst thou have? |
A51147 | I may say to you as it s said in another case who hath believed our report? |
A51147 | bless me at these years, to whom? |
A51147 | for what? |
A51147 | what would be the effect of Marraiage? |
A51147 | why should you and I fall out? |
A84460 | A mercy at such a time as this, to say no more; what Mercies it hath in the Bowels of it, time will declare ▪ who knows? |
A43198 | And who the Plague was it, they stickled about then? |
A43198 | But prethee Jack, are they all returned home yet from Oxford? |
A43198 | Dissolv''d? |
A43198 | I''Faith, thou sayest very well? |
A43198 | S''Death, when? |
A43198 | Well, but what Newes have you from Oxford, what, are we like to have a longer Session than they had last? |
A43198 | What, I pray, was the cause of this? |
A43198 | Why not understand it? |
A43198 | what were you affraid of, that made you enter upon such a tumultuous Complement? |
A80764 | Is this Christianity to your Brethren, to leave them sick and wounded, with my Judgments? |
A77717 | Did burning heat Consume it? |
A77717 | That drives all in, Andwilt thou out? |
A77717 | Wa''st cold? |
A77767 | That they believe in and confess to Jesus Christ... Bugg, Francis, 1640- 1724? |
A77767 | That they believe in and confess to Jesus Christ... Bugg, Francis, 1640- 1724? |
A86382 | s.n.,[ London: 1679?] |
A80568 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A80568 | The Head is very sick, our Body too Is in an inward Hecktick; what shall''s do? |
A80568 | what mean you? |
A87474 | Not actually by James II?. |
A87955 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1699?] |
A88260 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1646?] |
A90316 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Oxford: 1681?] |
A90390 | But what were the ten Commandements a figure or shadow of? |
A91342 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1690?] |
A92249 | : 1695?] |
A66551 | And where''s the Booty, where''s thy Treasure then? |
A66551 | But must he then have none? |
A66551 | Can nothing bribe thee to recal his Breath? |
A66551 | What if I then, ca n''t bring as others do? |
A66551 | Where thy Proud Conquests o''re the Sons of Men? |
A66551 | With what I have, his Funeral Hearse Isle strew, And to the Dust his dear remains Persue: Sad thought, and must he thither go? |
A91966 | How dare you make a mock of Love, or speak against the Singers sweet? |
A92182 | great shal be thy wo, who shal lament thy case? |
A69870 | Mrs. Cox, What shall I say? |
A69870 | Oh now''t is found I hope; Have not you seen the Dancing of the Rope? |
A69870 | POX on this Play- house,''t is an old tir''d Jade,''T will do no longer, we must force a Trade; What if we all turn Witness of the Plot? |
A69870 | Shall we take Orders? |
A69870 | Who have we here again, what Nymphsi''th''Stocks? |
A69870 | Will nothing do? |
A85437 | Can any Man promise us any thing better than Heaven? |
A85437 | Or, Can any Man threaten us with any ▪ thing worse than Hell? |
A87602 | Life and death of famous Thomas Stukely Johnson, Richard, 1573- 1659? |
A87602 | Life and death of famous Thomas Stukely Johnson, Richard, 1573- 1659? |
A87887 | Did it Drop into a Printing House, and Publish it self? |
A87887 | — How Casually, Good- man Sense- lesse? |
A87601 | Tune is, King Henry''s going to Bulloign,& c. Life and death of famous Thomas Stukely Johnson, Richard, 1573- 1659? |
A87601 | Tune is, King Henry''s going to Bulloign,& c. Life and death of famous Thomas Stukely Johnson, Richard, 1573- 1659? |
A89224 | Monro, Alexander, d. 1715? |
A89224 | Monro, Alexander, d. 1715? |
A92955 | Dolus an virtus? |
A93318 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1641?] |
A93516 | s.n.,[ London? |
A55909 | Against the Souldiers Lusts and Gullets, VVould they preserve their VVives and Pullets, And break our Guns to save our Bullets? |
A55909 | I pray then let''em shew their Games, Fix us to one of their Extreams; A Common- wealth, or else K. Iames? |
A55909 | WOuld they who have Nine Years look''d Sow''r, Against a French and Popish Pow''r, Make Friends with both in half an Hour? |
A55909 | Wou''d they but say what th''are pursuing, Who th''are advancing, who undoing, Which sort of Men do threaten ruin? |
A55909 | Would they discreetly break that Sword, By which their Freedom was restor''d, And put their Trust in Lewis Word? |
A55909 | Would they leave England unprotected, To shew how well they are affected, And get themselves next Bout Elected? |
A55909 | Would they oblige a Winter- Sea, Their prudent Orders to obey, Or keep a straying Wind in pay? |
A55909 | Would you turn Hero''s into Pads, And crush the Sp''rits of our brave Lads, And make them look like Bedlam Mads? |
A93551 | s.n.,[ London? |
A94028 | ,[ London: 1679?] |
A77146 | ( some may say) Are not Ministers to have a Maintenance? |
A77146 | And is not he that preacheth the Gospel, to live of the Gospel? |
A77146 | Now some may say, Do you compare your selves to Christ? |
A77146 | WHo goeth a Warfare at his own Charge? |
A77146 | Were not they that waited at the Altar, to partake of the things of the Altar? |
A77146 | and he that soweth Spiritual, to reap Carnal things? |
A77124 | How 〈 ◊ 〉 Oaths and Drunkenness abound in the Nation? |
A77124 | How 〈 ◊ 〉 gross Darkness cover the Hearts of the People, as though they 〈 ◊ 〉 made a League with Death, and an Agreement with Hell? |
A77124 | Is it a Time to solace thy self in Musick and ● ● ● cing? |
A77124 | Is not the Time exceeding Precious? |
A77124 | Thou hast far exceeded Sodom in thy Prophane ● ● How hath Wickedness spread it self over the Land? |
A77124 | and wilt 〈 ◊ 〉 spend thy Pretious Time in Pleasure and Vanity? |
A94441 | s.n.,[ London? |
A94491 | s.n.,[ London: 1660?] |
A94463 | s.n.,[ London? |
A94578 | : 165-?] |
A94784 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.): ill.( woodcuts) Printed for R. Burton, at the Horse shooe[ sic] in Westsmithfield, neer the Hospital- gate,[ London]:[ 1665?] |
A95646 | s.n.,[ London: 1675?] |
A96182 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1675?] |
A29187 | ( as it is called) and where had you that name but from the Pope? |
A29187 | And why do you feast upon it, and make merry? |
A29187 | And why do you keep a Day for the Innocent Children whom Herod slew, or caused to be slain? |
A29187 | But what do you keep it for? |
A29187 | Consider well upon these things, and who it was that first commanded these Dayes to be kept: Was it not the Pope? |
A29187 | Do you keep it in remembrance of his Martyrdom? |
A29187 | Do you not herein justifie Herods fact, and so become guilty of innocent blood? |
A29187 | Do you not herein justifie the deeds of that Generation who slew him? |
A29187 | If so, how dare you Feast and Rejoyce as if you were glad of his Death? |
A29187 | If you had it not from him, tell us where you had it, and who was the first Author of it, and of the penalty for not keeping it? |
A87603 | Life and death of famous Thomas Stukely Johnson, Richard, 1573- 1659? |
A87603 | Life and death of famous Thomas Stukely Johnson, Richard, 1573- 1659? |
A92956 | Who to her Fate a Path like Thee could choose; A Fate unmourn''d? |
A92956 | what Frost can chill where Hell can warm? |
A92785 | : 1699?] |
A92785 | s.n.,[ London? |
A77135 | And was there not as much seeming Holiness amongst them as is amongst you? |
A84327 | Otherwise what signifies their concernments to the publick in any thing? |
A91865 | And now, who will stand up and plead? |
A91865 | Is there no room among you to receive his Testimony, who hath felt the Wrath of God, revealed against the Man of Sin, in his own particular? |
A91865 | when on your behalfs sorrow had filled my heart; the Word was unto me, Write: And, what shall I write? |
A92184 | Humphrey Crouch?. |
A92184 | aut 1 sheet([ 1]) p.): ill. printed for F. Coles, in Wine- street, neer Hatten- Garden, London:[ 1670?] |
A92227 | : 1695?] |
A92227 | Besides, Commissions encourage the Men the better to defend their Ships; For who will fight, when if they should overcome they dare not seize? |
A92227 | s.n.,[ London? |
A91922 | Now mark, Christ sayes, I come not to bring Peace on Earth, but a Sword, and a Fire; and what will I, if it be already kindled? |
A55017 | 1 sheet( 2 p.) Printed by J. Leake for Richard Grosvenor, bookseller,... and are to be sold by A. Jones..., London: 16[85?] |
A55017 | My Undertaking is great and difficult: Who can speak of Kings, without Awe and Reverence? |
A55017 | Or, Who can be an Orator, when those Two contrary Passions of Grief and Joy, at once struggle in his Breast? |
A55017 | What Joyes are wanting to make us Happy, which he will not bestow? |
A55017 | What Vertues can we wish for in a Prince, which our present Soveraign brings not to his Throne? |
A55017 | What shall I say more? |
A55017 | Would we have our Religion secured? |
A55017 | Would we have our Rights and Liberties preserved? |
B01737 | 1670- 1696? |
B01738 | 1670- 1696? |
B01723 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh: 1689?] |
B01746 | 1670- 1696? |
A95734 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A95734 | : 1680?] |
B01734 | 1670- 1696? |
B01983 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh: 1700?] |
A84282 | HOw fares My dear Leander? |
A84282 | Is there No way to stay an angry Father''s Wrath, whose Fury hath Bereav''d his Child of Comfort and Content? |
A84282 | Verse-"How fares my dear Leander? |
A84282 | What Voice Is this, th ● t calls Leander from her Bower, from yonder Tower? |
A84282 | and sold by the booksellers, London:[ 1700?] |
A96819 | : 1660?] |
A96819 | s.n.,[ London? |
A96975 | : 1689?] |
A96975 | Can We, His Friends, at such a Change complain? |
B02124 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Cambridge? |
B02129 | Brown,[ Aberdeen: 1650?] |
B00199 | 1640?]. |
A91911 | Since she''s insensible of Love, By Honour taught to hate, If we, forc''d by Decrees above, Must sensible to Beauty prove, How Tyrannous is Fate? |
A91911 | Such Bashfulness may well be blam''d; For since to serve we''re not asham''d, Why should she blush to Reign? |
A91911 | Ungentle Shepherd, cease for shame; Which way can you pretend To merit so Divine a Flame, Who to dull Life makes a mean Claim, When Love is at an End? |
A91911 | Would''st live, when Love is lost? |
B02473 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Dublin: 1680?] |
B01745 | M.] I''ll leave thee gold good store, thee to maintain; What can''st thou wish for more? |
B01745 | and T. Thackery, London:[ 1695?] |
B02536 | 1653 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ England? |
A87495 | : 1688?] |
A87495 | Why should any one think of an Heir, have you not got a King you can trust? |
A87495 | s.n.,[ London? |
B02736 | Reid?,[ Edinburgh: 1698] Caption title. |
B02908 | R. D. 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
B02633 | : 1689?] |
A36221 | Did I speak of good things? |
A36221 | Have I twice this day humbled my self before God in private? |
A36221 | How did I pray? |
A36221 | If God with the morning renewed Mercies, was I thankful? |
A36221 | If the day afforded me matter of sorrow, did I fret? |
A36221 | Needless, What need we care, and God too? |
A36221 | What have I been in company? |
A36221 | What have I been in my place and calling? |
A36221 | What have my thoughts been this day? |
A36221 | Which of you by taking thought, can add one cubit to his stature, or peny to his estate? |
A36221 | Whither will my Soul go, to Heaven or to Hell? |
A36221 | in Faith and Love? |
A36221 | or did I hear, and with Mary lay up? |
A36221 | or did I lye in the dust before God? |
B02832 | 1676- 1695? |
A84803 | But did God make man and woman with these Pomps Vanities and Lusts of the World? |
A84803 | But do not we see, that many that say so, run into all or many the lusts, and Pomps and Vanities of the World? |
A84803 | Now how comes this Lust of the Eye,& Pride of life, and Lusts of the flesh into man and woman? |
A84803 | Or how came they into them? |
A86010 | Ye generation of Vipers, how do you think to escape the Wrath of God who neglect so great Salvation? |
A86010 | who have itching ears that can not endure sound Doctrine, do you think to flee from the Wrath of God? |
B03124 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
A92790 | But what, I pray, Do''nt you think the others that separated from you good Catholicks? |
A92790 | Say you so? |
A92790 | Sold by Langly Curtis in Goat Court on Ludgate- hill, London:[ 1680?] |
A92790 | put it into the Commanders mind, to ask them one Question first: and it was this, He demanded if there were any Roman Catholicks among them? |
B02599 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
B02599 | : 1690?] |
B03989 | s.n.,[ London: 1681?] |
B02789 | Then you are watcht besides, with jealous care; What if my Lady''s Page should find you there? |
B02789 | What''s this, you''ll say, to Us and our Vocation? |
B02819 | s.n.,[ Scotland: 1700?] |
B04435 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
B02920 | 1665- 1674? |
B02920 | Then Master Bertue brave and bold, in Latine made a gallant spéech, Which all their misery did unfold, and their high favour did beseech? |
B04437 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
B02977 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
B02977 | : 1700?] |
A79749 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London: 1695?] |
A79749 | Arms support Arts: Does not Minerva hold From Mars her Shield and Safety? |
A79749 | Arms support Arts: Does not Minerva hold From Mars her Shield and Safety? |
A79749 | But what poor Altars can my Homage raise? |
A79749 | But what poor Altars can my Homage raise? |
A79749 | How shall I chant my Honour''d Captains Praise? |
A79749 | How shall I chant my Honour''d Captains Praise? |
A79749 | Who but the Sons of Art should shine in Arms? |
A79749 | Who but the Sons of Art should shine in Arms? |
B04477 | 1685- 1690? |
A90838 | Is''t not a Bull, or worse, We shall ha''th milk, yet you would fain be Nurse? |
A90838 | Must you go dream, and wish the Rotchet may, To the Lay- Elders Motley Coat give way? |
A90838 | Now d ● ess our Vineyards, or they feed our Flock Who brought our Royal Shepherd to the Block? |
A94271 | Can you that own the name of Christians rejoyce, and the Righteous suffer? |
A94271 | Have not the Messengers of the Lord in these late dayes foretold you, of those things which are now come upon you, concerning your nakedness? |
A94271 | How art thou fallen from thy first Love, that thou canst bow down thy back to an Idol? |
A94271 | Is there none of you that lay the Afflictians of Joseph to heart? |
A94271 | the Spirit of the Lord is grieved with the sad abominations of your Vanity; What is your Sincerity quite shut up in obscure darkness? |
B04678 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Glasgow? |
A56409 | And I think the Fellow had received better Instructions than the Dr. would have given him, who being ask''d who made him? |
A56409 | And over and above, to lay an Embargo, as it were, upon all future Attempts of that kind? |
A56409 | Ay, where are we now? |
A56409 | But to whose Determination will he submit that Point? |
A56409 | Is it not( says he) most reasonable to think that to be the sense of the Law, which learned Judges and Lawyers have agreed is the sense of it? |
A56409 | Well, but what Effect had those Endeavours towards his late Conversion? |
A56409 | What need you be so earnest tho? |
A56409 | Where will he be then? |
B04784 | 1676- 1685? |
A54055 | Ah poor land, what will this stiffe spirit,( which hath all along these times of trouble, repined at, and opposed the work of the Lord) bring thee to? |
A54055 | And is not the Lord able to carry on this work, further and further? |
A54055 | But alas, hast thou not set thy self against it from the very first? |
A54055 | Did he suffer them alwaies to be stopped in their progresse, and held in bondage by Episcopacy? |
A54055 | Hath there not been a sharp contention, between God and this Nation concerning this thing? |
A54055 | Look back with a single and honest eye, Hath it not been thus? |
A54055 | Nay, did he not at length break it down at their cries, and for their sakes? |
A54055 | Will nothing serve thy turn, but the enslaving of Gods heritage? |
A54055 | ],[ London? |
A91831 | How often have you perverted the right way of the Lord? |
A91831 | how have you caused his servants and messengers to be shamefully intreated for declaring unto you his truth in most parts of the Nation? |
A91831 | what will you do when the Lord requires his flock at your hands? |
A91831 | ye seed of evil- doers; How can you escape the damnation of Hell? |
B04897 | 1674 1674- 1679? |
A79653 | Can not the chance of a night, or an hour cross thy delights with as many sad tormentings? |
A79653 | Doth not that gripe, or that strain, or that fit shew thée the form of thy own true perfect likeness? |
A79653 | May not that smile, or that beck, or that look tell thée as well they are but vain deceiving? |
A79653 | May not the World by a check of that wealth put thée again to a low despised changing? |
A79653 | To pleasant new Tune, WHat if a day, or a moneth, or a year crown thy delights, With a thousand wisht contentings? |
A79653 | What if a grief, or a strain, or a fit, pinch thée with pain, or the féeling pangs of sickness? |
A79653 | What if a smile, or a beck, or a look, féed thy fond thoughts with many a swéet conceiving? |
A79653 | Why should Beauty be so proud, in things of no surmounting? |
B04792 | s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
A66547 | But can we do his Will as the Angels? |
A66547 | Did Paul forgive Alexander, when he said, The Lord reward him? |
A66547 | He that spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things? |
A66547 | How poor and beggerly are those glorified Cherubims, to thy self, to whom the World is nothing, yea, less then nothing? |
A66547 | Is not his Power Infinite? |
A66547 | May a wicked man thus pray? |
A66547 | This thou art tender of, what wilt thou do for thy great Name? |
A66547 | Where should poor Children go, but unto their Fathers house? |
A66547 | Will he suffer his excellency to be obscured? |
A66547 | Will not a Father hear? |
A66547 | Will not our heavenly King be bouniful? |
B04907 | What would the Commons have? |
B04927 | 1679- 1680? |
B04936 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
A91914 | How is it then that I inconstant am? |
A91914 | Scrope??" |
A91914 | Scrope??" |
A91914 | What Man or Woman upon earth can say I ever us''d''em well above a day? |
A91914 | What e''re you gave, I paid you back in bliss, Then where''s the obligation, pray, of this? |
A91914 | ],[ London? |
B04935 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
B04940 | O anima emigra, Christo moriente quid horres? |
B04939 | WHO without pale Amazement ponder can The Dissolution of the Frame of Man? |
B04942 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
B04954 | — Quis talia fando temperet à Lachrymis? |
B05092 | In Fifty two, ful well you know England gave you an over- throw How bare you now for to Resist again? |
B01840 | : 1690?] |
B01840 | What? |
B01840 | s.n.,[ London? |
B01840 | shall my Viol silent be, or leave her wonted Scriding? |
B04275 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.): ill.( woodcuts) Printed for P. Brooksby at the golden Ball in VVest- Smithfield.,[ London]:[ 1685?] |
B04275 | she, the Mault- man his money must have also I must pay excise, If I should trust every drunken knave where will my money rise? |
B04308 | Or wherefore didst thou live? |
B04308 | Why art thou dead? |
B04677 | The Ev''ning crowns the Day, and what remains? |
B04677 | s.n.,[ Edinburgh: 1699?] |
A78109 | Have not some of you cryed against the Pope and his inventions these many years? |
A78109 | What, have you lost your zeal for the Lord? |
A78109 | What, is all your profession come to this? |
A78109 | What, observing Christmas in London yet? |
A78109 | What, ye of the Reformed Churches? |
A78109 | What, ye that have seemed some years since to turne away from these things, are ye even again observing these things? |
A78109 | You seem to be joyned to Idols, as if an Idol were your God; is not this idolatry? |
A78109 | and are you sitten down in the practice of his inventions? |
A78109 | and is your zeal quite dead which once was in you against the practices of the whore of Rome? |
A78109 | what, art thou falling back into Popish Idolatry again? |
A78109 | which sometime there hath been a spirit in thee which hath denyed? |
B04811 | 1625- 1680? |
B04811 | 1625- 1680? |
B04941 | What Heart? |
B04941 | Why then should we accompt his Gain our Losse? |
B04937 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
B04937 | WHat is this World? |
B05020 | Brooksby, at the Golden- Ball, in West Smithfield.,[ London]:[ 1685?] |
B04055 | Death will approach, there''s none that knows how soon; Shall we then trifle out our precious time? |
B04055 | Doth he not mind to settle our abode? |
B04055 | poor soul neglector; And thankless shall we be unto our God: No; who of all should praise him more then we? |
B01844 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
B01844 | : 1700?] |
B01844 | WHat? |
B01844 | What sweetet musick would you hear, than Hounds and Beigles crying? |
B01844 | shall my Viol silent be, or leave her wonted scriding? |
A79640 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.): ill.( woodcuts) printed by I.B[ell] for Frrncis[ sic] Coles, London:[ 1654?] |
A79640 | Can not the chance of a night or an hour crosse thy delights, with as many sad tormentings? |
A79640 | Doth not that gripe or that strein or that fit, Shew thee the form of thy own true perfect likeness? |
A79640 | May not that smile, or that beck, or that look tell thée as wel they are but vain deceiving? |
A79640 | May not the world by a check of that wealth, put thée again to a low despiced chancing? |
A79640 | WHat if a day or a moneth or a yeare, crown thy delights, With a thousand wisht contentings? |
A79640 | What if a grief, or a strain, or a fit, Pinch thée with pain, or the feeling pangs of sicknesse? |
A79640 | What if a smile, or a beck, or a look, Féed thy fond thoughts with many a swéet conceiving? |
A79640 | What if the world with allures of her wealth Raise thy degrée to a place of high advancing? |
A79640 | Why should beauty be so proud, in things of no surmounting? |
B04439 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
B04439 | : 1670?] |
B04439 | But who will judge who he s the prior Seat?'' |
B04438 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
B04438 | : 1685?] |
B04822 | 1625- 1680? |
B04822 | 1625- 1680? |
B04822 | Printed for F. G...., London:[ 1650?] |
A66859 | And is not your Hearts sad, and condemnation upon your Spirits at the same time? |
A66859 | Are ye not the s; piritual Egypt and Sodom, in which Christ is Crucified? |
A66859 | Areye Singing, whilst the Lords Spirit doth Mourn, and the Lamb of God slain in you? |
A66859 | But like he Pope, Is not the Inside Black as Hell and Death? |
A66859 | Do ye appear like Sheep Outwardly, whilest Within there lodgeth all manner of Putrefaction? |
A66859 | Have ye made the Outside White, like the Saints? |
A66859 | Is not he Lamb of God Slain in you? |
A66859 | Is this to deny the Popes supremacy? |
A66859 | Is this to make Melody in your Hearts to the Lord? |
A66859 | Nay, it is the Living, The Living that can make known his Truth: Can the Grave praise Him? |
A66859 | Or can his Loving Kindness be declared in Death, or his Faithfulness in the Land of Destruction, and shadow of Death? |
B04904 | Little Boy with thy Bow, why dost thou threaten? |
B04904 | Little Boy, tell me why thou art here diving, Art thou some Run- away, and hast no biding? |
B04904 | Printed for F. Coles..., London,:[ 1650?] |
B04818 | 1625- 1680? |
B04818 | 1625- 1680? |
B04818 | 1678- 1681? |
B04901 | 1679- 1691? |
B04901 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
B04901 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
B04934 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh? |
B04934 | Wherefore GOD takes thee home, where now thou sings Grave, wher''s they conquest? |
B04934 | death where are thy stings? |
A84873 | AM I so fair and cruel too, As has reported been by you? |
A84873 | And through me have received wrong pray is this false or true? |
A84873 | Long I have lov''d ▪ and am abus''d, And when I offer, I am refus''d, can any suffer more? |
A84873 | That your''e resol ●''d to torture me, O are you not unkind? |
A84873 | What grief of heart do I endure? |
A84873 | When did the darts of my disdain, Give any reason to complain? |
A84873 | When first to me you did make Suit, If then I held you in dispute, was this disloyalty? |
B03424 | 1625- 1680? |
B03424 | 1625- 1680? |
B03424 | Or wilt thou be Taster of my Wine, To wait on me when I do dine? |
B03424 | Wilt thou be Vsher of my Hall, To wait upon my Nobles all? |
A79991 | & c. And doth not their name( who exercised that Cruelty) remain as an ill savour unto all sober People( truly fearing God) unto this day? |
A79991 | And could they by all their Tyranny then exercised, root out or extinguish that Faith and Religion, that they then strook at? |
A79991 | FRIENDS, WHat do you mean by these Practices? |
A79991 | Or do you think to prevail against the Ancient of Dayes, although your Predecessors could not? |
A79991 | Was it not the very overthrow and rooting out of that Persecuting Power, Religion, and Faith? |
A79991 | or what do you expect to bring to pass by these your Undertakings and Proceedings? |
A64342 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
A64342 | : 1688?] |
A64342 | V. Whether any ought to believe he will be for Liberty any longer than it serves his turn? |
A64342 | WHether any Real and Zealous Papist was ever for Liberty of Conscience? |
A64342 | Whether if these Penal Laws and Test were repealed, there would not many turn Papists that now dare not? |
A64342 | Whether the King be a Real and Zealous Papist? |
A64342 | Whether this King in his Brother''s Reign did not cause the Persecution against Dissenters to be more violent than otherwife it would have been? |
A64342 | and whether his great eagerness to have the Penal Laws and Test repealed be onely in order to the easie establishing of Popery? |
A64342 | if he be; whether he can be truly for Liberty of Conscience? |
A92215 | How long wilt thou be angry? |
A92215 | If this be done to the green and fruitful tree, what shall become of the drie and withered? |
A92215 | That being yet so young, should bring forth so cruel a Monster? |
A92215 | shall thy jealousie burn like fire for ever? |
B05743 | Stirling, James, 1631- 1672?. |
B04931 | If we affirm( who''l take it in ill part?) |
B04931 | Joseph was Jacobs darling, And what not? |
B04931 | Let any strangers eye( the most observant) Distinction make of Master from a Servant, Without your Art? |
B04931 | Yea without Taylors, where''s the difference, Betwixt a Countesse and a Countrey Wench? |
A81422 | Is that good Sense? |
A81422 | Look out i''th''World, who live at such a Rate? |
A81422 | The Morning''s best, Who e''er was good too soon? |
A81422 | What hazard all on such slight Terms as this? |
A81422 | Who told thee so? |
A81422 | Young Man, why up so soon i''th Morn? |
A81422 | ● hat need you fear? |
A81422 | ● ho lives in Joy that takes this uncouth Course? |
A81422 | ● ● me, come, fond Youth, Is no Man wise but you? |
A81422 | ● ● ough? |
A81422 | ● ● ● d you not better spend your days in Joys? |
A81422 | 〈 … 〉 now in Pleasure, what wilt lose thy Flower? |
B05855 | 1663- 1664? |
A30776 | And after turn''d out the whole Houseful, Of Peers as dangerous and unuseful? |
A30776 | Did not our Worthies of the House, Before they broke the Peace, break Vows? |
A30776 | Did they not Swear at first to Fight For the Kings Safety and his Right? |
A30776 | Did they not Swear in express words, To prop and back the House of Lords? |
A30776 | Did they not Swear to Live and Die With Essex, and straight laid him by? |
A30776 | Did they not Swear to maintain Law, In which that Swearing made a Flaw? |
A30776 | Do not your Juries give their Verdict As if they felt the Cause not heard it? |
A30776 | For Priviledge of Parliament, In which that Swearing made a Rent? |
A30776 | For Protestant Religion Vow, Which did that vowing disallow? |
A30776 | For having freed us first from both Th''Allegiance and Supremacy Oath, Did they not next compel the Nation To take and break the Protestation? |
A30776 | Have equal power to Adjourn, Appoint Appearance and Return? |
A30776 | Is''t not ridiculous and non- sense A Saint should be a slave to Conscience? |
A30776 | To take th''Engagement and disclaim it, Enforc''d by those who first did frame it? |
A30776 | Was not the Cause at first begun With Perjury, and carried on? |
A30776 | Was there an Oath the Godly took, But in due time and place they broke? |
A30776 | Why should not Conscience have Vacation, As well as other Courts o''th''Nation? |
A93013 | But can the Parliament upon mis- information passe us for enemies, and wee not therein perceive the designes of our Enemies? |
A93013 | Can we be proclaimed Rebels and your Honours remain secure? |
A93013 | Can we suffer and you not sympathise? |
A93013 | Can wee be satisfied with a complement, when our fellow Soldiers suffer at every Assize, for acts meerly relating to the Warre? |
A93013 | Is it not our lives wee seek for? |
A93013 | Where shall wee be secured, when the meer envy of a malicious person is sufficient to destroy us? |
B06083 | When we labour under a Distemper, that threatens our Life, what would we not be content to bear in order to a perfect Recovery? |
B06103 | Sovereign( 1694- 1702: William II) 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ Edinburgh: 1698?] |
B06556 | 1681- 1686? |
A97265 | If the Harbour at Dunkirk be finished, Whether the Strength of England and Holland by Sea can destroy it? |
A97265 | If the Harbour of Dunkirk were finished, Whether England can be without Two Hundred Men of War to justifie the Honour of the Crown and Trade? |
A97265 | If the Harbour of Dunkirk were finished, Whether Holland will not be forced upon necessity to joyn with the French? |
A97265 | Whether the Harbour of Dunkirk may be destroyed, and rendred useless before it be finished? |
B06774 | Printed for P. Brooksby at the Golden Ball in Pye- Corner,[ London]:[ 1680?] |
B06274 | : 1675?] |
B06274 | s.n.,[ London? |
B06418 | I fall, I fall, Whome shall I call? |
B06418 | Was he too bold, That needs would hold With curbing raines, the day, And make Sols fiery Steeds obay? |
A42958 | 1685. and there took an Oath, called the Coronation Oath, what then? |
A42958 | Angels and Stars; why, what should they do there? |
A42958 | Ask Jack where that Law is written; and whether it is not a part of Kings- will''s Magna Charta? |
A42958 | But who doubts Ease and Quiet? |
A42958 | By whose Example must our after Kings, Shun all those Causes whence Rebellion springs? |
A42958 | Can a PRINCE be born That shall the World with Regal Acts a ● ● orn In future times? |
A42958 | How many Learned Pens have deign''d to write Of things stupendious in EIGHTY EIGHT? |
A42958 | Quere? |
A42958 | Sith such a radiant fixed Star did rise In our Horizon? |
A42958 | Speaking of the Dispencing Judges; What have they done( says he) that looks like the Actions of Tr ● s ● lian? |
A42958 | Sure you will not judge him a Papist for that; will ye? |
A42958 | Who hath seen him there in the last two or three years? |
A42958 | Who says that EIGHTY EIGHT nought signifies? |
A42958 | Who says that Eighty Eight nought signifies? |
A42958 | and yet that fertile Year Be passive thought, wherein he did appear? |
A42958 | or against whom? |
A42958 | or what single Persons have they oppressed? |
A42958 | was it not of his own free Choice? |
A42958 | what Countrys have they Injur''d? |
A42958 | what is here to do; A Year of Wonders dost thou call it John? |
A42958 | with whom have they Conspired? |
B06211 | 1681- 1682? |
B06211 | Taubman, Matthew, d. 1690? |
B06211 | Taubman, Matthew, d. 1690? |
B04470 | For why? |
B04470 | I hear a murmuring report, Passing amongst the common sort: For some says this, and some says that, And others tell, I know not what? |
B04470 | WHat accident, what strange mishap, Awakes me from my heavenly nap? |
B04470 | What is the cause of this great change? |
B04470 | What sprit? |
B04470 | Where shall I turn me first about, for my acquaintance is worn out? |
B04470 | what God- head by the lave, Hath rais''d my Body from the Grave? |
A53021 | The Dissenters can not go to Church out of Piety, yet whether they ought not to go out of spight? |
A53021 | V. Whether the Tories are not more mad with Dissenters for coming to Church, than they were for their going to Conventicles? |
A53021 | Whether Roger Lestrange did well con over his Politicks in snarling so horribly against the Trimmers? |
A53021 | Whether a Tory talks sence of any other thing but of Drink and a Whore? |
A53021 | Whether any man ever saw such a deal of fooling for nothing? |
A53021 | Whether any man ever trusted one Tory that did not betray him? |
A53021 | Whether it be not enough to make a prudent man spew, to hear Hodge and his Tories tattle gravely of Policy and Religion? |
A53021 | Whether the Tories by forcing the Dissenters to come to Church, do make them any jot the more for the Church of England than they were before? |
A53021 | Whether while the Prohibiting Act is in force, and our Church takes the Communion in Claret, we are of the Religion established by Law? |
A96823 | 4,& Acts 5. went straight- way and spake boldly in the same Name, even all the Words of that Life? |
A96823 | First, Whether your Ministry hath been received of Man, and by Man upheld, or from God and his pure unlimitted Spirit, and by him upheld? |
A96823 | This I charge not upon all but upon some, yet let all consider the Righteousness of the Lord, who rendereth unto every man according to his Deeds? |
B06565 | 1674- 1679? |
B06565 | Here in this Song Good- Fellow thou mayst find, How Money makes a Man, if thou''rt not blind? |
B06565 | Here in this song good fellow that mayst find, how money makes a man, if thou''rt not blind? |
B06565 | Here in this song good fellow that mayst find, how money makes a man, if thou''rt not blind? |
A93361 | Do not even the Nations stand and look at you? |
A93361 | Have you not made your selves a reproach amongst men, and as a by- word amongst the people? |
A93361 | Is this the fruit of your profession? |
A93361 | O horrible, and wicked cruelty, and merciless tyranny which is found in the midst of you? |
A93361 | and are not your hearts yet hardned against reproof? |
A93361 | and are you not to be reproved for your envy against Gods people? |
A93361 | and do not the upright in heart mourn in secret because of your sins? |
A93361 | and do you think now to stop the mouths of people by publishing your strong reasons? |
A93361 | and has the spirit of truth led you to do these things? |
A93361 | but who amongst you will believe these things, and who can entertain the Council of the Lord? |
B05793 | For she hath lost her game& grace Both Trixie and the Maiden- trace B ● ● what rem ● ed? |
B05793 | On Bag- pipes now no body blaws, For Habbie''s dead, Or who shall cause our Shearers shear Who will bend up the Brags of Weir? |
B05793 | The life and death of the piper of Kilbarchan, or The epitaph of Habbie Simpson Sempill, Robert, 1595?-1665? |
B01388 | -- Quis dives salvetur? |
B01388 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London? |
B01388 | 1690?] |
B01388 | An answer to Clemens Alexandrinus''s sermon upon Quis dives salvetur? |
B01388 | I shall shew, First, How a Good Rich Man may be never the Worse for living Odly? |
B01388 | Quis dives salvetur? |
B01388 | What Rich Man can be Sav''d? |
B01388 | What rich man can be sav''d? |
B01388 | What rich man can be sav''d? |
B01388 | What rich man can be sav''d? |
B01388 | civilwar no An answer to Clemens Alexandrinus''s sermon upon Quis dives salvetur? |
B03450 | 4thly, Of any Man or Men amongst them, then he hath of G. Fox, and other Faithful Labourers with him among the Quakers? |
B03450 | And are the so called Doctors, and Rectors, and those that abet him, to be commended for their Wisdom? |
B03450 | Doth it therefore follow that the Dictate or Light of God''s Spirit in him was Fallible? |
B03450 | Is it now to be looked for outwardly? |
B03450 | Is it visible to the carnal Eye, and''where is that Coming to be? |
B03450 | What is the Glory of the Father, in which Christ''s Coming is? |
B03450 | Yea, Did not he fail sorely( as well as G. K.) when he denied his Master? |
A28920 | He protested that she jested, his design vvas nothing so; Come le ts dally, shall I? |
A28920 | Maids beware, and have a care of flattering youths, vvho oft do try, And will dally Shall I? |
A28920 | Printed for P. Brooksby...,[ London]:[ 1684?] |
A28920 | Shall I? |
A28920 | Shall I? |
A28920 | Shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A28920 | shall I? |
A89445 | And go to''s grave without a single sigh? |
A89445 | Are these your fears? |
A89445 | Can Monk and Brown die, And Wild be tame? |
A89445 | Canst not be Wild, but thou''t be also rude? |
A89445 | Hum, Haw, nay stay, what shall we hold forth next? |
A89445 | If a recanting Penitent but part With''s errors, saying, Mines a broken heart;''Gainst him Wild writes: Why? |
A89445 | If thou art Bishop, Gout, speak, what dost ail? |
A89445 | No doubt your hearts with joy it needs must fill To think you suffer: Why? |
A89445 | Shall Englands Trusty, Loyal General dye? |
A89445 | This Brown''s sure should in thine his Chaplain Wild: Hast thou thy Patron of his dues beguil''d? |
A89445 | Wild, hath thy Muse no subject? |
A89445 | doth she want one? |
A89445 | not write an Elegie? |
A89445 | thou''rt ingrateful: Hast so soon forgot Who made thee Bishop, did he make thee sot? |
A76214 | And should not a Creature live to the Ends and Uses which it was made for? |
A76214 | And that the attaining of such an Endless Glory, had been worth thy greatest care and labour? |
A76214 | At last bethink thee what thou art? |
A76214 | Do you not heartily wish that this had been your course? |
A76214 | Hast thou got more by the world and sin, than Heaven is worth? |
A76214 | How justly are they condemned, who sell their part of endless Joyes, for a shadow and dream of transitory pleasures? |
A76214 | How wilt thou answer for such treacherous ungodliness? |
A76214 | O how much happier are the blessed Souls in Heaven, than we? |
A76214 | Therefore let it be speedily your work, to try whether this be your case or not? |
A76214 | Thou art almost at the end of worldly pleasures, and hast all that ever they will do for thee? |
A76214 | What think you now of a sinful and of a holy life? |
A76214 | Would you take this course if it were to do again? |
A76214 | and God recover you? |
A76214 | and for what End and Work thou camest into the world? |
A76214 | to hate your sin, and to live and love a holy life, in mortifying the flesh, and seeking Heaven before the world? |
A76214 | what suffering too dear for such a Blessedness? |
A84814 | And are all things upheld by the Scriptures, is that your Logick? |
A84814 | And is it not said the Scriptures must be fulfilled? |
A84814 | Have you not lost your understanding? |
A84814 | Is not he the living Word? |
A84814 | Nay, doth not some of your old Translations call the Scripture a Catologue? |
A84814 | What would you have done to Peter? |
A84814 | and is it not the Living Word, which fulfills the words? |
A84814 | and some again calls it a story, and yet you call it the Word? |
A84814 | and tels you, the Revelation is words? |
A84814 | and the Word is immortal; are writings immortal? |
A84814 | are you not blind that can not distinguish writings, weh is Scriptures, from Christ,& God, but put them in their place? |
A84814 | how many names have you given it here? |
A84814 | what would ye have done to John if he had been under your power, who tels you Christs name is the word of God? |
A84814 | who tels you the Word is immortal, and all things are upheld by the Word of his power? |
A84814 | will you set the scriptures in the room of God, and give them his name? |
A77961 | And shall the Lord utterly lay you aside, and never make more use of you? |
A77961 | FRIENDS, WHere is the Good Old Cause now? |
A77961 | Is there no hope of your return to the Good Old Cause? |
A77961 | and how woeful you are fallen, from what you once seemed to be; and when will you remember the Good Old Cause? |
A77961 | and many great Oppressions are this day abounding in the Nations; and was not the Good Old Cause once laid down, to be against all these things? |
A77961 | and what is become of it? |
A77961 | and where are they that truly contend for it? |
A77961 | and you have seemed once to be the asserters of this, and sometimes the vindicators of it, but what is become of it now? |
A77961 | as for you, have not you foregone it? |
A77961 | in whose hands doth it lie? |
A77961 | is the Good Old Cause ceased, and clean perished? |
A77961 | is your zeal perished? |
A77961 | or are you ceased to contend for it, through your unfaithfulness? |
A77961 | or is your strength betrayed, that you can not plead for it as formerly? |
A84812 | And Secondly, I would know the Reason of thee, Why thou and you forsook us near about twenty years ago, and left your Church? |
A84812 | And if so, Who were their God- Fathers and God- Mothers, and where stood the Font, and who Commanded the Cross? |
A84812 | And whether Timothy and Titus, which were called Bishops, were called Gracious Lords, as your Bishops are? |
A84812 | And whether had all these God- Fathers, and God- Mothers? |
A84812 | And whether he had a God- Father, or God- Mother, yea, or nay? |
A84812 | And whether or no John Baptized Christ in a Font, and signed him with the Sign of the Cross? |
A84812 | And whether or no the Eunuch, when Philip Baptized him, did he it in a Font with the Sign of the Cross? |
A84812 | And whether or no those several thousands that Peter Baptized, whether he Baptized them in a Font, and signed them with the Sign of the Cross? |
A84812 | CHANSELLOR, WHY do you not come to Church? |
A84812 | For doth not the Lord say, He will require both the Fleece and Flock? |
A84812 | For who hath watched over me and been my Keeper about these twenty years? |
A84812 | Give a Reason why you will not come? |
A84812 | Therefore what have you to do to call us in question contrary to the Kings Speech and Declaration, and Word of a King, we being peaceable? |
B01762 | 1 sheet([ 1] p.) s.n.,[ London, 1661?] |
B01762 | And is it decent for a Minister to read these things merrily, and with a singing voice? |
B01762 | And why should it be so in a Cathedral Church, more than in all other Churches? |
B01762 | Besides in Cathedrall Churches, they sing their Prayers, and is it not meet that this also be altered? |
B01762 | I could add other prayers also of like kind: Now is it not meet to alter this? |
B01762 | Is it not meet that this be altered? |
B01762 | Is it not meet then, that this singing should be altered? |
B01762 | May not persons of years have a cross on their fore- heads made after the Lords Supper, as well as Infants after Baptisme? |
B01762 | Now Christ never appointed any of them: and shall such Ceremonies be called indifferent things? |
B01762 | Now being these had no good Original, why should we follow Papists in them? |
B01762 | Now is this decent, when a man reads a Chapter, to sing it? |
B01762 | Or is it so edifying, to sing it, as it is to read it in a sober and grave tone of voice? |
B01762 | and matters of Order and Decency? |
B01762 | of the Gospel and Epistle is read, what need is there to read also a piece, or a part of a Chapter out of the Gospel and the Epistles? |
A04122 | 10 Item, whether doth your Parson, Vicar or Curate( being no Preacher allowed) presume to expound the Scriptures, in his owne Cure, or elsewhere? |
A04122 | 13 Item, whether be there in your Parish any persons that contemne or abuse, by word or dee ● e, the Ministers of the Church? |
A04122 | 16 Item, whether there be any in your Parish that be common Drunkards, swearers, or blasphemers of the name of God? |
A04122 | 21 Item, whether there be in your Parish any that( in contempt of their owne Parish Church) doe resort to any other Church or Chappell? |
A04122 | 24 Item, whether such Persons, or other in your Parish, haue married the Banes not first solemnely asked, or at vnseasonable houres? |
A04122 | 31 Item, Is there in your Parish any other matter or cause of the Cognizance of the Church aboue not expressed, worthy presentment in your iudgement? |
A04122 | 8 Item, how many Benefices or Ecclesiasticall promotions hath your Parson or Vicar, and how farre distant are they the one from the other? |
A04122 | And vpon euery Sunday, when there is no Sermon, doth hee or his Cure reade some one of the Homilies prescribed? |
A04122 | By whose sentence were they diuorced, and by whose licence, and by whome were they so married? |
A04122 | Declare your knowledge in the premisses, and what you haue credibly heard? |
A04122 | by what names are they called, and how and by whom are they serued? |
A04122 | or doth hee procure( once in a Moneth at the least) a Sermon to be preached in his Cure, by Preachers lawfully licensed? |
A04122 | what Chappels hath hee to his Cures belonging? |
A90323 | An Animae fiant sapientiores quiescendo? |
A90323 | An Bilis sit excrementum corporis inutile? |
A90323 | An Bona opera sint ad vitam aeternam necessaria? |
A90323 | An Christus solus sit Mediator? |
A90323 | An Delinquens ultra i d quod cogitavit de eventu teneatur? |
A90323 | An Dogmata Fidei rationis humanae examini subjici fas sit? |
A90323 | An Ex falsis possit inferri Verum? |
A90323 | An Febres sedes suas habeant in Corde? |
A90323 | An Gesta per eum qui per errorem Magistratu functus est, rata sint habenda? |
A90323 | An Imaginatio producat effectus reales ad extra? |
A90323 | An In Jure deterior sit conditio Faeminarum quàm Masculorum? |
A90323 | An In Variolis& Morbillis regimen frigidum sit prosicuum? |
A90323 | An Lex naturae sit dispensabilis? |
A90323 | An Liceat Clericis Matrimonium contrahere? |
A90323 | An Liceat Ministris Ecclesiae Stipendia accipere? |
A90323 | An Liceat praescriptâ formulâ orare? |
A90323 | An Magistratus habeat potestatem in Adiaphoris? |
A90323 | An Materia ex quâ Lac conficitur sit Sanguis? |
A90323 | An Patres sub Veteri Testamento habuerint Promissiones tantùm temporales? |
A90323 | An Plures sint Mundi? |
A90323 | An Pro ratione Legis ejus Sententia sit extendenda& restringenda? |
A90323 | An Reus Actori instrumenta edere teneatur? |
A90323 | An S. S. Scripturae Auctoritas pendeat à Traditione Ecclesiasticâ? |
A90323 | An Sacra celebranda sint sermone vernaculo? |
A90323 | An Sancti sint invocandi? |
A90323 | An Signatura Corporis sit certus animi index? |
A90323 | An Similitudo foetûs respectu Parentis fiat ab imaginatione? |
A90323 | An Statuta recipiant interpretationem à Jure communi? |
A90323 | An Terra sit mobilis? |
A90323 | An Variolae& Morbilli sint morbi maligni? |
A26953 | 1. Who are you that dare dispute against God? |
A26953 | 4. Who is it( then) that with you goes for a Believer, or a Christian? |
A26953 | And how weak in Faith are the most of true Believers? |
A26953 | And that as verily as I ever see a man? |
A26953 | But why would not God let us have the SIGHT of Heaven and Hell; being that would have prevailed for our Conversion more generally and more certainly? |
A26953 | Do you count Faith an Infallible sort of Knowledge then? |
A26953 | Does it not concern every man, then, to make sure of this Faith? |
A26953 | How plain is the reason, that Believers are seriously holy, just, and charitable? |
A26953 | How plain is the reason, that Vnbelievers are careless of their hearts and ways; and mock at Believers care, and take them for fools and mad men? |
A26953 | If Faith be the Eye by which I do see, whereby should I quicken my self to live by it? |
A26953 | If I had seen Lazarus in Abraham''s Bosom? |
A26953 | If the Reward and Punishment were seen, what should difference wise men and fools good men and bad? |
A26953 | In worldly matters, men can go to much cost and pains for things they never saw; why not in spiritual matters? |
A26953 | O how rare a Jewel is true Faith? |
A26953 | O should I then ever chuse to be ungodly, or be patient of so being? |
A26953 | Or for too much and plain Preaching? |
A26953 | Or had a Messenger from God to tell me, I must die to morrow? |
A26953 | Or if it be not, wherewithal should I stir up my self to seek Faith and the Life of Faith? |
A26953 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, why hast thou made me thus? |
A26953 | Should I ever be drawn away by Temptations again as I have been? |
A26953 | Should I ever be offended with a Minister again, for plainest Reproof, and closest Exhortation? |
A26953 | Should I ever be quiet under uncertainty of my Reconciliation unto God? |
A26953 | Should I ever stick at sufferings when God calls for them from me? |
A26953 | Should I not give over my greedy pursuit of worldly Wealth and Credit? |
A26953 | Should I not hear at another rate than ever yet I heard a Sermon? |
A26953 | Should I not highly value Christ, his Spirit, his Grace, his Promises, his Word, his Ordinances? |
A26953 | Should I not plead for the most serious Godliness? |
A26953 | Should I not say in my heart, that the most gainful sin is worse than madness? |
A26953 | Should I not then be all for Peace, Quietness and Love, with all that love the Lord Jesus Christ, and are seeking invisible things? |
A26953 | Should a man understand no more than he sees? |
A26953 | WHat means the Apostle by these words? |
A26953 | Well, how shall I know whether I have this true Faith and saving, tho''in the least and lowest degree of it? |
A26953 | What should I be if I had seen the things that God hath done already in time past? |
A26953 | What should I be if I heard Satan accusing me for all my sins unto God, and calling for justice against me? |
A26953 | What should I be if I saw the great and dreadful day of Judgment as Christ doth describe it? |
A26953 | What should I be, if I had seen and did now see the Damned in their miseries? |
A26953 | What should I be, if I saw the Lord continually before me? |
A26953 | What should I be, if I saw the face of Death, and were under the power of a mortal sickness, and were given over by all Physicians and Friends? |
A26953 | What should I be, if I saw the glory of Heaven above? |
A26953 | Why so? |
A64381 | ( a) A. P. press''d Writing, yet when Dr. T. began to do so, he declined it; But whereabouts would these Disputers be? |
A64381 | A. P. asking how we should know the Judgment of those Times? |
A64381 | A. P. demanded whether by the Universal Church, now in being, or by that which had been in the four first Centuries? |
A64381 | A. P. desired to know by what Hands? |
A64381 | And as to the latter, Mr. P. ask''d with great quickness, who gave us the Copies, how, where, when and the like? |
A64381 | And further D. T. ask''d him, If all the Patriarchs were there in person, or not? |
A64381 | And then, turning to Mr. P. he ask''d him, Under what Pope that Council was held? |
A64381 | But A. P. urging to know from what immediate Hands the Church of England had received them, when she began to reform? |
A64381 | But how then does he construe the Confession of Berengarius enjoyn''d by the said Pope, and his Synod? |
A64381 | But why should we be so eager about that, which on either Hand is said of us? |
A64381 | D. T. ask''d him whether all the world were good witnesses for this and not for the Bible? |
A64381 | D. T. ask''d him, what Arguments those were? |
A64381 | D. T. then replied, Is not a thing shown because it is not shown in a Market? |
A64381 | For he would not allow the Book of Maccabees to be Canonical; and what Bible did he send, for he confesses he understood no Greek? |
A64381 | Good Reason, for it was never propounded, the only Question of that kind was, Whether our Bible was a Bible, and how we could prove it to be so? |
A64381 | He had said more than was fit upon other occasions, why was he not in humour to say what was fit here? |
A64381 | He then asked D. T. what his opinion was of the Real Presence? |
A64381 | He turn''d to Mr. M. and said, Why do you bring a man who has not common skill in History? |
A64381 | Hoc igitur astruamus, quomodo potest, qui panis est, corpus esse Christi? |
A64381 | I am inform''d you desown you ever spoke to me to desire I woed not make a Pulpit Matter of it, may I beg the favour to know whither this be so or no? |
A64381 | Mr. M. ask''d what Writers? |
A64381 | Mr. M. asked D. T. how he proved that inward sense? |
A64381 | Mr. P. asked D. T. where he had this Story? |
A64381 | Now what a Judge has Mr. P. chosen toward the deciding of a Controversie, in which he is not reconcil''d to himself? |
A64381 | ON Monday there came a Youth to A. P. who desir''d to know, if he was willing to accept of a Conference with D. H. concerning Religion? |
A64381 | Or, whether some one Part of them were so? |
A64381 | Something I dropt accidentally about Succession, which he laid hold of, and with a kind of scornful Smile demanded, what Succession we could shew? |
A64381 | The ninth is the Violence of Queen Elizabeth,& c. But who are the violent? |
A64381 | Then A. P. demanded, Whether those different Bodies of Christians made one true Church, or no? |
A64381 | Then Mr. P. began again to ask Questions about the Bible; How, from what Churches, Copies,& c. we had received it? |
A64381 | Vides ergo quam operatorius sit sermo Christi? |
A64381 | What a consequence from hence is this, Therefore the Roman Church is to be heard as an infallible Guide in matters of Faith? |
A64381 | Whether a Gentlewoman of the Church of England was not after the Conference fallen distracted? |
A64381 | Whether he hath left every one to his own understanding in such Interpretation, without obliging him to submit his judgment to any others? |
A64381 | Whether there had not been five Ministers of the Church of England there against one Jesuite, who put them all to silence? |
A64381 | Whither receiving the Scripture from the Universal Church, you have received a Canon common to all distinct Bodies of Christians? |
A64381 | and read it out of the English Bible, and ask''d if the Translation were faulty? |
A64381 | p. 10. f. had r. had his? |
A64381 | they that provoke, or they they that punish when justly provok''d? |
A64381 | to be satisfi''d in these Questions: whether there had not been a Conference there? |
A64381 | whether Mr. U. and Mrs. U. were not stagger''d in their Religion upon this Conference? |
B05868 | & c. The rise of the Rivers, and their Emboucheurs? |
B05868 | & c. What Harbours they have? |
B05868 | And by whom built? |
B05868 | And what Curiosities of Art 〈 … 〉 have been found the ● ●? |
B05868 | And what Moon causeth High- water? |
B05868 | And what are the chief products thereof? |
B05868 | And who commands the Militia? |
B05868 | As also, what ancient Seats of Noble- Families are to be met with? |
B05868 | In what Bishoprick each County or any part thereof is? |
B05868 | Of what Standing? |
B05868 | The Bounds of their Diocese? |
B05868 | The Chief of the Name and the Branches? |
B05868 | The Constitution of their Government? |
B05868 | The Magistracy of Towns Corporated, when Incorporated? |
B05868 | The Memorable Exploits done by them, and the Eminent Men of the Name? |
B05868 | The Names of the Towns both Ancient and Modern? |
B05868 | The Number of their Professors, their Names, what they teach? |
B05868 | The Rise of their Family, Continuance, and their Branches? |
B05868 | The Trade of the Town; How inhabited, and their manner of Buildings? |
B05868 | The a ● count of the famous Men bred there, or Masters there? |
B05868 | The number of their Parishes in their Diocese? |
B05868 | Their Chapter? |
B05868 | Their Erection? |
B05868 | Their Heritable Command and Jurisdiction? |
B05868 | Their Houses, Churches and Chappels, Aedifices and Monuments? |
B05868 | Their Houses, the Description and Names of them? |
B05868 | Their Houses? |
B05868 | Their Jurisdiction, their Foundations for publick ● ● d pious Uses their Re 〈 … 〉 What Lands hold of them? |
B05868 | Their Jurisdiction? |
B05868 | Their Libraries, Curious Instruments? |
B05868 | Their Revenue and Dependencies? |
B05868 | Their Salaries, Foundations, and their Founders? |
B05868 | Their priviledges Jurisdiction and its Extent, their Constitution? |
B05868 | Their publick Houses, Churches, Forts, Monuments, Universities, Colledges, Schools, Hospitals, Manufactures, Harbours? |
B05868 | V. What Ancient Monuments, Inscriptions, graved and figured Stones; Forts and ancient Camps? |
B05868 | What Baronies and Burrows under them? |
B05868 | What Castles, Forts, Forrests, Parks, Woods, His MAJESTIE hath there? |
B05868 | What Command of the Militia? |
B05868 | What Fishing? |
B05868 | What Forrests, Woods, Parks, Loughs, Rivers, Mines, and Quarries they have? |
B05868 | What Forrests, Woods, Parks? |
B05868 | What Harbours, what Forrests, Woods, Parks? |
B05868 | What Memorable Actions raised or Aggrandized their Family? |
B05868 | What Monasteries, Cathedrals, or other Churches have been there, and how named? |
B05868 | What Plants, Animals, Mettals, Substances cast up by the Sea, are peculiar to the place, and how Ordered? |
B05868 | What Publick or Ancient Buildings? |
B05868 | What Roads, Bayes, Ports for shipping, and their Description? |
B05868 | What Rocks, and sholes on their Coast? |
B05868 | What Sheriffdomes, Bailliries, Stewartries, Regalities, Baronies and Burrows they have under them? |
B05868 | What Springs, Rivers, Loughs? |
B05868 | What Standing they are of? |
B05868 | What Towns of Note in the County, especially Towns Corporate? |
B05868 | What are the Observations of the Masters or Students, that may be for the Embellishment of this Work? |
B05868 | What great Battels have been there fought, Or any other Memorable Action or Accident? |
B05868 | What peculiar Customs, Manners or Dispositions the Inhabitants of each County or Town have among them? |
B05868 | What places give, or formerly have given the Title to any Noble- man? |
B05868 | What special Priviledge, Dignity and Heritable Command they have? |
B05868 | What the Government of the County is? |
B05868 | What the Nature of the County or place is? |
B05868 | What the Rise of their Family, their Priviledge and Dignity? |
B05868 | What their Latitude and Longitude is? |
B05868 | What their Priviledges and Dignities are? |
B05868 | What their Titles are? |
B05868 | Whether they be Burrows Royal, of Regality or Barony? |
B05868 | Who is Sheriff, Stewart or Baily? |
B05868 | With the Return of Parliament- Men? |
B05868 | With their various properties, whether Medicinal? |
B05868 | With what Fish replenished, whether rapid or flow? |
B05868 | their Priviledges, Jurisdiction and its Extent? |
B05868 | whether Sheriffdom, Stewartry, or Baillery? |