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 |
---|---|
A47832 | Are not the shadowes of the Evening stretched out? |
A47832 | But are not Printers the fittest Instruments in Searches? |
A47832 | But if 60 Presses must be reduc''d to 20, what shall all those People do for a Livelyhood that wrought at the other 40? |
A47832 | But where are our old Eli''s now? |
A47832 | Darest thou be so impudent to put thy self in Gods stead, to meddle with mens Consciences, and Lord it in Religious Concerns? |
A47832 | Have ye not sins enough of your own, but will ye wrap your selves up, in the Treachery, Murder, Bloud, Cruelty and Tyranny of others? |
A47832 | Is not God upon the Threshold of his Temple, ready to fly? |
A47832 | Let the Joyners, Carpenters, and Smiths be Question''d likewise what Presses they have Erected, or Amended,& c. When, and for Whom? |
A47832 | What hope that the Reformed Religion will be protected and Maintained, by the Son, which was so Irrellgiously betray''d by the Father? |
A47832 | What signifies That, but only a Stronger Obligation to a Closer Confederacy? |
A47832 | and may we not fear the Sun- setting of the Gospel? |
A47832 | our Elijahs? |
A47832 | our Moses''s? |
A47832 | our Vriahs? |
A60058 | And being asked by Mr. Harris, How he knew they were all those Books? |
A60058 | And what, did you do it in the Day- time, was you not at it in the Night? |
A60058 | And what, that was for hastening the Book, was it not? |
A60058 | Harris, Benjamin, d. 1716? |
A60058 | Harris, Benjamin, d. 1716? |
A60058 | He said so before the Masters and Wardens of the Company; who questioned him, why he sold such Scandalous Things? |
A60058 | Mr. Goodall( another Neighbour of Mr. Harris''s) said, upon his being asked, If he were acquainted with him? |
A60058 | My Lord, I have seen this Book several times in his Shop, and others too: And I have asked him, VVhy he would so publickly Vend them? |
A60058 | Was not this Printed before you saw it? |
A60058 | Was not this in Print before you saw it in his Shop? |
A60058 | We had need look about us, for if at such a time, and for such a base Book, such Clamorous Noises shall be made, what shall become of us? |
A60058 | What can you say? |
A60058 | What did Mr. Harris give you, ha? |
A60058 | ],[ London? |
A60058 | and, If he were wo nt to Oppose, or to Scandalize the KING or Government? |
A60058 | eng Harris, Benjamin, d. 1716? |
A60058 | have you never had any of him before? |
A60058 | — Friend, does not he come, and give you some money at other times? |
A28439 | As also from Popish Books of all sorts? |
A28439 | Every Author Writes either Truth or Falshood; If he Writes Truth, why should he be oppressed or stifled? |
A28439 | I would fain know why is not any Vicious Habit as bad or worse, then a False Opinion? |
A28439 | Is it for that the Subject of these Bills or Tickets are dangerous to the Government? |
A28439 | Then who should he study to please, right or wrong, but his Prince and Pay- master? |
A28439 | What advantage is it to be a Man, over it is to be a Boy at School, if we have only''scap''d the Ferula, to come under the Fescu of an Imprimatur? |
A28439 | Who hath the disposal of all Places and Offices of Preferment? |
A28439 | Who payes him his Wages? |
A28439 | Why should I not have the same freedom to write, as to speak? |
A37430 | And is there no Judgment to be made in these Circumstances? |
A37430 | Are all the Means of Information useless, and to be despised, if this is not suffered? |
A37430 | Are these Persons to be suffered to proceed in their Errors, and pervert the Faith of others? |
A37430 | As first, How far the Duty of the Civil Governing Powers extends in Matters of Religion? |
A37430 | Now, what dismal Consequences can we imagine must attend such vile Practices? |
A37430 | The Martyrdom of King Charles the First, and the Restauration of this Church and Monarchy, in the Return of King Charles the Second? |
A37430 | What Branch of our Establishment, of moment and importance, has the Liberty of the Press left free and untouched? |
A37430 | Where then is that Nursery of Implicit Faith and Ignorance? |
A37430 | how can the Manners of Men be animadverted on, or their Neglects, or Irregularities in the Publick Worship of GOD be censured? |
A48197 | And shall that which was intended by divine Goodness to deliver all from Sacerdotal Slavery, be made the means of bringing it on again? |
A48197 | And were we not almost brought to that pass in the late Reigns? |
A48197 | Has the Protestant Religion a fair Trial in Italy, where nothing can be heard in its defence? |
A48197 | Ought they not then to see the different Translations and Explications? |
A48197 | or, in other words, Protestants or Papists? |
A50883 | And who shall silence all the airs and madrigalls, that whisper softnes in chambers? |
A50883 | And who shall then stick closest to ye, and excite others? |
A50883 | As therefore the state of man now is; what wisdome can there be to choose, what continence to forbeare without the knowledge of evill? |
A50883 | But some will say, What though the Inventors were bad, the thing for all that may be good? |
A50883 | How goodly, and how to be wisht were such an obedient unanimity as this, what a fine conformity would it starch us all into? |
A50883 | How great a vertue is temperance, how much of moment through the whole life of man? |
A50883 | I know nothing of the licencer, but that I have his own hand here for his arrogance; who shall warrant me his judgement? |
A50883 | Lastly, who shall forbid and separat all idle resort, all evill company? |
A50883 | Next, what more Nationall corruption, for which England hears ill abroad, then houshold gluttony; who shall be the rectors of our daily rioting? |
A50883 | What should he doe? |
A50883 | Wherefore did he creat passions within us, pleasures round about us, but that these rightly temper''d are the very ingredients of vertu? |
A50883 | Yet if all can not be of one mind, as who looks they should be? |
A50883 | and what shall be done to inhibit the multitudes that frequent those houses where drunk''nes is sold and harbour''d? |
A47914 | And again, what credit is this to our Church, to have such a Form of Publique Worship, as Papists may without offence Joyn with us in? |
A47914 | And what did they give us, in exchange for this Form of Publique worship, but a Directory without either the Decalogue, or a Creed in''t? |
A47914 | And what were they but Canting Sermons, Popular Petitions, Tumults, Associations, Impostures, and Disaffected Common- Councils? |
A47914 | And yet what ensu''d upon the peoples joyning in this officious piece of misguided Zeal and Duty? |
A47914 | But may not Men Petition( you will say) and Petition for a good thing? |
A47914 | But see how Benhadad rewards him for it? |
A47914 | But was ever any thing in appearance more harmless, Loyall or Conscientious, then this Protestation? |
A47914 | But what did all this amount to, without a Fond of Mon, Mony, Arms, and Amunition, to carry on the Work? |
A47914 | But what do they say all this time to his AUTHORITY? |
A47914 | But why should we not press him to ● t; and ferret out all these Caterpillers from about him? |
A47914 | How many Congregations destitute of able, Faithfull Teachers; Preaching in season and out of season, and labouring in the Word? |
A47914 | How many Insufficient negligent and scandalous Pastors? |
A47914 | It is a kinde of an odd way of putting the Question: as who should say, Sir, May we be so bold? |
A47914 | More and more Greedy still, and more Insatiable? |
A47914 | Now( says Bishop Hall) If the Devil confess Christ to be the Son of God, shall I disclaim the Truth because it passeth through a damned mouth? |
A47914 | Or as many Porters and Carmen here in London put in for the better government of the Herring- Trade in Yarmouth? |
A47914 | Plow- Iobbers as well Subscribe a Petition to the Lord- Mayor of London for the Calling of a Common- Council? |
A47914 | Were they not English Prelates that conspired to sell their Brethren into Romish slavery? |
A47914 | Why come not in the Scottish Army against the King? |
A47914 | and did not those very Concessions make them still Bolder and Bolder? |
A47914 | whither''s he gone? |
A47914 | — Why should life be farther granted to them, whose very lif ● brings death to all about them? |
A93589 | ARe you in such fears of your Government, that you make friends to me to be silent? |
A93589 | And why do you speak so of a loud Conquest over me? |
A93589 | Are we to be ever consulting with flesh and blood? |
A93589 | Are you one of those who pretend to be in the mount with God, and to give Laws for Religion? |
A93589 | Because I stated the Opinions of men, Am I therefore a man of all those Opinions? |
A93589 | Can we trust you in the more excellent mysteries of the Father, while you trifle thus and deceive the Brethren? |
A93589 | Can you see these yet bleeding, and desire to persecute by such a President of Blood? |
A93589 | Can you thus remember Prelates, and yet petition to be such Presbyters? |
A93589 | Is Presbytery, because Parochial, Classical, Provincial, lesse Tyrannical then Episcopal, because many rule in that, and in this but one? |
A93589 | Is it not a power in your Eldership and Presbyterie, how little or large soever, over the Churches and Congregations? |
A93589 | Is it so weak, that it may be cried down? |
A93589 | Is not the Question of the Presbytery yet stated? |
A93589 | Know you not that Gospel patternes are more seen by the Spirit now then before? |
A93589 | Know you not that the Temple or Legal worship before was said to be in the Oldnesse of the Letter? |
A93589 | Nor do I glory I hope in the quick dispatch of what I do: but do not you as well over deliberate, as I over dispatch, and glory in that? |
A93589 | THat the gradual subordination is made good by Mr. Rutherford,& c. Is this reasoning or reference? |
A93589 | Where are you? |
A93589 | Why are you so much in the defence of jeasting, and so serious in your Scripture proofes so it? |
A93589 | Yea surely: What else hath your Assembly and othersibeen doing? |
A93589 | [ If the Sun be there, why no more Light there then? |
A93589 | and will you set up a divine right over that now? |
A93589 | but are you no better acquainted with the Spirit, in the things of God? |
A93589 | did the disciples and Brethren when they spake the Word of God, tugge first amongst so many School- men? |
A93589 | in the Covenant or no? |
A93589 | independent upon the Magistrate, coercive to all that believe not as they believe, as to Heretiks and Schismaticks? |
A93589 | is it not a Parliament Ordinance you take them by? |
A93589 | or rather not more tyrannical, because one Tyrant is not so much as many together? |
A93589 | so many Commentators? |
A93589 | so many Fathers? |
A93589 | so many moderne Divines? |
A93589 | so many old Poets as you do? |
A42050 | And if so, How can two such Persons be in an equal Capacity of Salvation, except a wrong way do as directly lead to Heaven as the right one? |
A42050 | And if so, How could the trial of Religions depend upon the Press in those early days, when as yet it had no being? |
A42050 | And is it not high time to watch the Press, lest any thing steal from thence, which may Poyson the Heads of unwary Men? |
A42050 | And is the, how, all? |
A42050 | And was not the neglect of this Duty a sin in former Ages, when there was not so much as one Press in all the World? |
A42050 | And whom he means by these Hereticks, he elsewhere tells us, Calvinistos& Lutheranos Haereticos esse quis non videt? |
A42050 | Are not their Writings and ours to be seen, and had in many Shops in London, Oxford, Cambridge, and other great Towns and Cities? |
A42050 | Are ten thousand of us at once presumed to be Hypocrites, Juglers, and gross Dissemblers with God and Man? |
A42050 | But here it may be demanded, Who must judge, whether such or such an Opinion be justified or condemned by such or such a Text? |
A42050 | But is the miscarriage of some few Licensers an Argument that they should all be laid aside? |
A42050 | But to whom ought the Care of this be committed? |
A42050 | But what do they speak? |
A42050 | But whence might this gross Ignorance of theirs arise? |
A42050 | But where lieth the Fault? |
A42050 | But why did St. Paul inflict it? |
A42050 | Did any of them ever provoke the professours of Divinity in either of our Universities, to a publick Disputation, and was refused? |
A42050 | Did they give them an universal Liberty of Conscience? |
A42050 | Did they indulge them? |
A42050 | For if our Directions should chance to prove wrong, What Excuse could we make? |
A42050 | Have they not received our printed Answers to their printed Objections? |
A42050 | Have we no Catechisms, no Systems of Divinity left amongst us? |
A42050 | His Inference is this, If the first be their Duty, the Press ought not to be restrained; But why not? |
A42050 | If they have, Why should this Author complain for want of fair Play? |
A42050 | Is a Bridle and a Halter the same thing? |
A42050 | Is it indeed his pleasure, that ill Men, and ill Opinions, should be indulged and countenanced in his Church? |
A42050 | Is the what excluded? |
A42050 | It will not fright Men from considering,& c. but what Men? |
A42050 | Must we permit the Church our Mother, or her Sons who are our Brethren to receive Wounds in their Heads, because we have Balsam enough to Cure them? |
A42050 | Must we permit the Souls of Men to be poysoned, because we abound with Sovereign Antidotes? |
A42050 | Nay more, are there not Popish and Socinian Catechisms to be had in England? |
A42050 | Nay, are there not Books of Controversies exposed to Sale in our Cities, greater Towns, and both our Universities? |
A42050 | Nay, the Psalmist tells his God, They speak against thee; and what wonder then if they speak against his Religion too? |
A42050 | Now, the Question is, Who must judge betwixt us and them? |
A42050 | Of the same mind was St. Paul, who saith, Their Mouths must be stopped; but how can that be done, if there may be no Penal Laws? |
A42050 | Protestants they are, but why are they such? |
A42050 | Quae est pejor mors animae, quàm libertas erroris? |
A42050 | Some Judges have been corrupted, and must we therefore have neither King nor Judg? |
A42050 | Suppose a Man profess the Religion of Mahomet with the greatest Devotion that can be, would not the what condemn him, or would the how excuse him? |
A42050 | Tell me then, are our Bibles out of Print, or taken from us? |
A42050 | The Heretick must not be destroyed, but may he not be restrain''d? |
A42050 | There are indeed in the word of God, as the Apostle saith, Some things hard to be understood; but in what Texts do these difficulties lie? |
A42050 | These indeed are very considerable Objections against the Restraint of the Press, were they true; But how doth our Author prove them so to be? |
A42050 | They who have a good Cause, but who are they? |
A42050 | To this our Lord sent his hearers, Search the Scriptures; and again, How readest thou? |
A42050 | Upon whom, or what, must this sin be charged? |
A42050 | We are abundantly convinced that our Religion can not be false; and why then should any Man presume that we have indeed other thoughts concerning it? |
A42050 | We grant it, but what then? |
A42050 | We have so, and bless God for it; But what then? |
A42050 | We, who teach Men that a false Religion leads towards Hell, do we know our own to be false, and yet embrace it still? |
A42050 | Well, the main Parties, now contending, are the Church of England, and our Socinians, and have not these Men very often been heard already? |
A42050 | What one single Soul would be the worse? |
A42050 | Who must determine, whether the Scripture be on their side, or ours? |
A42050 | Why else doth the Apostle mention the Glorious Light of the Gospel? |
A42050 | Why should he unworthily tell the World, that we dare not suffer our Religion to undergo a fair Trial, for fear it should prove False? |
A42050 | did Hezekiah, did Josiah, nay did Jehu, grant a Publick Indulgence for the Worship of Idols, because many both Laicks and Priests were for it? |
A42050 | the whole Clergy? |
A42050 | 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉, shall I bring a Rod to whip and scourge you? |
A85393 | ( b) Curse you with Bell, Book, and Candle? |
A85393 | ( b) If I did exhort or incourage men to go boldly unto Jesus Christ, doth not the great Apostle the same? |
A85393 | ( c) Dr. Kendal hath charged you home to the life: why do you not answer his challenge? |
A85393 | ( c) Is the not authorizing some men to word it with the Holy Ghost, to charge the Blasphemies and Heresies of the times upon the Holy Ghost? |
A85393 | 16. will you ask him, did you not mean PROVDLY? |
A85393 | 5. Who are in a regular capacity of power, to nominate and appoint such persons, to whom the said power over the Press ought to be committed? |
A85393 | 8. and much more of those other Penmen of the Scriptures, who so frequently call the Idols of the Heathens, by the name of Gods also? |
A85393 | A many- headed Beast thou art; for what, or who, May I with peace and safety, for my Guide allow? |
A85393 | And if the case were thus with you and them, how should their Kingdome,( and consequently your interest therein) stand? |
A85393 | And who knows not but the same words may have different interpretations and senses put upon them? |
A85393 | Are not you men, who abhominate to make use of your own wits, reasons, or judgements in matters of Religion, especially to trust unto them? |
A85393 | Are there no such doings in those parts of your Common- wealth of learning, which you are wo nt to frequent and visit? |
A85393 | Are you Heaven, or any the Inhabitants thereof? |
A85393 | But if your handling me, as you have done in your Epistle, be your sparing me, what would your inclemential and hard intreatings of me have been? |
A85393 | But what saith it? |
A85393 | Do I anywhere ascribe unto God an Autocratorical Majesty over Books and Opinions? |
A85393 | Do you not wonder that men should speak, or understand any thing? |
A85393 | For if many things, or many spirits of Doctrines be not suffered to come to the knowledge of men, how shall they be able to try them? |
A85393 | For if the case were thus with God, should not the world have cause to demand ▪ with those in Malachy, Where is the God of judgement? |
A85393 | For was there ever any man, who lost himself, by seeking God constantly? |
A85393 | How then shall men of your trade, yea or our selves, have that liberty you speak of? |
A85393 | I may have cause indeed to wonder at your boldness in sining, but have you any cause to wonder at that, which is not? |
A85393 | I pray what is the Blasphemy, and what is the Errour of which you have accused me? |
A85393 | If it be the former, how is the civil Magistrate in a capacity of conferring it, or investing any man with it? |
A85393 | If it be the latter, how are men set apart for the ministery of the Word of God, and prayer, capable of the investiture? |
A85393 | If so, Fortis ubi est Ajax? |
A85393 | Is not he one of the six, if not of the three? |
A85393 | It seems you claim a right of power to make Licencers: What need you petition the Parliament? |
A85393 | Mr. Horn? |
A85393 | Or can you prove darknesse to be light, or the night day? |
A85393 | Or do you wonder that men in speech, should sometimes use metaphors? |
A85393 | Or doth it follow from hence, so much as by a dream of a consequence, that therefore the Press ought not to be free, because all things are not free? |
A85393 | Or is your Office of Presse- over- sight an alien to Religion, and irrelative to it? |
A85393 | Or that all men are not either Horses, or Mules? |
A85393 | Or what evil or untruth, is there in this connex proposition; If God reprobated any from Eternity, it must be himself? |
A85393 | The truth is, that to a State Religion it may be aptly said; Belluae multorum es capitum: nam quid sequar, aut quem? |
A85393 | Then the High Priest rent his clothes, saying, he hath spoken blasphemy: What further need have we of witnesses? |
A85393 | To say that Abraham begat Isaack, is it to charge Sarah with being an Adultresse? |
A85393 | What do you mean by The Religion, which the State owneth? |
A85393 | What do you mean, by the Christian Religion? |
A85393 | What if I do say, as you say I do? |
A85393 | When you say that all things are not free, in a free Common- wealth, do you speak to any purpose? |
A85393 | Whether the said power over the Press bee an Ecclesiastick, or civil power? |
A85393 | Yea, or what do you your selves think? |
A85393 | You say we give pernicious counsel to the Parliament, and advise them to authorize some men, Sir- named Orthodox, to word it with the Holy Ghost? |
A85393 | Your thought, that my works need not be called in, is very grave and considerate: should you not do well, humbly to present it to the Parliament? |
A85393 | do none of your Prophets speak Metaphors at any time? |
A85393 | is it not more proper to say, that Abraham begat Isaac, then to say, that God begat him? |
A85393 | or unto Holiness, then to honour those that are most polluted and abominable, as much as those that are holy? |
A85393 | that Peter warmed himself? |
A85393 | where do I talk either of your, or any other mans, impeaching David of Athisme? |
A85393 | where, or what is the necessity of the greatest Preacher under Heaven, in respect of them? |
A85393 | will Jesus Christ make proud or humble, those that come unto him? |
A38938 | A better man than you, for ought appears; you are indicted for a foul offence, so is not he? |
A38938 | Alas, said he, I have no skill in such things; who revised it then? |
A38938 | And did it purposely to do mischief? |
A38938 | And did not you know? |
A38938 | And who Printed the other part? |
A38938 | Are you Guilty, or not Guilty? |
A38938 | Are you Guilty, or not Guilty? |
A38938 | Are you all agreed of your Verdict? |
A38938 | Are you all agreed of your verdict? |
A38938 | Are you his Captain? |
A38938 | At the same time and in the same room with you? |
A38938 | At what time did you work about it? |
A38938 | Brewster guilty of the Offence whereof he stands Indicted, for printing the Sedicious book called The Speeches,& c. or not guilty? |
A38938 | By the Oath you have taken, did he send you for them to the Printers? |
A38938 | By the Oath you have taken, where was the place whence you were to fetch them, when you were to sell them? |
A38938 | By the Oath you have taken, who did you change sheets with? |
A38938 | By whose direction were they said there? |
A38938 | By whose direction? |
A38938 | By whose order did you Print that? |
A38938 | Can you remember to what Letter you printed? |
A38938 | Can you turn to any part of that you did Compose? |
A38938 | Did I give you any order to deliver them to any particular Booksellers? |
A38938 | Did I order you how you should print them, or Mr. Calvert? |
A38938 | Did any body correct books in your house but your Master? |
A38938 | Did he Compose the Title? |
A38938 | Did he compose one? |
A38938 | Did he confess that he read it? |
A38938 | Did he confess that? |
A38938 | Did he declare to you that he Printed the other? |
A38938 | Did he not enjoyn you privaey? |
A38938 | Did he not likewise Print? |
A38938 | Did he not say, He would not tell you ▪ or that it was no matter to you? |
A38938 | Did he not send you to the Book- binders for them when they were stitched? |
A38938 | Did he set you to work in Stitching those books? |
A38938 | Did he use other Correctors at any time? |
A38938 | Did he wish you to do it with privacy? |
A38938 | Did not you by his direction break the Form when Mr. L''Estrange came to search? |
A38938 | Did not you hear him say, that they had staid two hours for me at an Ale- house to be his Partner? |
A38938 | Did not you see the whole intire Copy in your Masters hand? |
A38938 | Did not you see your Master with Copie? |
A38938 | Did not your Master nor fellow- apprentice tell you who brought the Coppy? |
A38938 | Did not your Master use to correct other works before this? |
A38938 | Did not your Master work in that time? |
A38938 | Did not your Mr. presse the dispatch? |
A38938 | Did you Print but one Impression? |
A38938 | Did you Print the Title? |
A38938 | Did you and he agree that he should Print the other part? |
A38938 | Did you ask your Master who delivered him this Copy to Print? |
A38938 | Did you change sheets with him? |
A38938 | Did you deliver them accordingly? |
A38938 | Did you deliver them to any Body? |
A38938 | Did you hear this man say that he had corrected it? |
A38938 | Did you know there were those passages in them? |
A38938 | Did you not open them? |
A38938 | Did you open them afterward, and did they appear to be this book? |
A38938 | Did you see that book, that very book? |
A38938 | Did you sell any of them for him? |
A38938 | Did you speak for them? |
A38938 | Did your Master Compose that? |
A38938 | Did your Master give you that to Compose? |
A38938 | Did your Master work at the Presse about this work, any part of the time? |
A38938 | Did your other man, or you, ever correct? |
A38938 | Do not Book- Sellers keep Account ▪ what Books they sell, and set down the money? |
A38938 | Do not you know who began where you left off? |
A38938 | Do you believe it to be your Masters? |
A38938 | Do you think the Press is open to print what you list? |
A38938 | Douglas his was printed in Scotland; Was it Licensed here? |
A38938 | From whence had you them? |
A38938 | Had you no discourse of the danger of it? |
A38938 | Had you no more? |
A38938 | Has he been in the Shop when they have been sold? |
A38938 | Have you any more to say? |
A38938 | Have you any more to say? |
A38938 | Have you any more? |
A38938 | Have you any thing else to say to the Indictment? |
A38938 | Have you any thing else? |
A38938 | Have you done? |
A38938 | Have you seen your Master write heretofore? |
A38938 | He came first and knockt at our Chamber door; said I, Who is there? |
A38938 | He said that the Copie of the Book was brought to him by one Evans, maid to Mistris Calvert ▪ that for the Author, being asked if he knew him? |
A38938 | He saies he did so; what have you to say to the Charge? |
A38938 | He seemed to confess that he had corrected it himself, for when I urged it to him that he could not chuse but know the matter of it by reading it? |
A38938 | He spake this in the presence of two or three here present; could you read over this Book, said I, and not know that it was not fit to be Printed? |
A38938 | Hearken to your Verdicts as the Court hath Recorded them; You say, that& c. and so you say all? |
A38938 | Hide, I doubt we shall not be able? |
A38938 | Hide, What do you mean by Time, and Place? |
A38938 | Hide, What would you have? |
A38938 | How came he to bring them to you? |
A38938 | How came you by the book? |
A38938 | How did you deliver them to me? |
A38938 | How long agoe was it since they were brought to you to print? |
A38938 | How long had you been at work upon it? |
A38938 | How many Books were delivered to you? |
A38938 | How many did you deliver in that manner? |
A38938 | How many of those did your Mr. compose? |
A38938 | How many sheets did you print? |
A38938 | How many was his part? |
A38938 | How many? |
A38938 | How much did you Print? |
A38938 | How say you, is Nathan Brooks guilty of the Offence for printing and selling the said book? |
A38938 | How say you, is Simon Dover guilty of the Offence for printing and publishing The Speeches,& c. or not guilty? |
A38938 | How will you be Tryed? |
A38938 | How will you be Tryed? |
A38938 | How will you be tryed? |
A38938 | How wilt thou be Tryed? |
A38938 | I asked Mr. Twyn further, How did you dispose of those sheets which you had printed, those several heaps whether are they gone? |
A38938 | I asked him( Mr. Twyn said I) who corrected this sheet? |
A38938 | I asked the Prisoner at my house, whether he could not write or read? |
A38938 | I desire to ask Mr. Creek a few Questions; Mr. Creek, How much of that in the Indictment did you Print? |
A38938 | I desire to ask him one Question ▪ whether Mr. Creek saw this book a printing at Mr. Dovers house, or no? |
A38938 | I desire you to consider, I being only a workman, how can I be guilty of Sedition and Scandalous things? |
A38938 | I did ask him in the house of the Constable: Who corrected this? |
A38938 | I do say, I never saw the man before, I would ask whether ever he saw me before in his life? |
A38938 | I know you use to let your Titles of a New Book lie open upon your Stalls, did you lay these open? |
A38938 | I think it is enough, what say you to it Friend? |
A38938 | If I did not mistake; you desired to have Councell; Was That your request? |
A38938 | If you have a thousand to this purpose only, what signifies it? |
A38938 | Is it your Lordships pleasure, I shall read it all? |
A38938 | Is that the book? |
A38938 | J. Keeling Were they Publickly to view as other Books? |
A38938 | J. Keeling Where was this Book kept? |
A38938 | Joseph Walker My Lord, whereas my Master is Indicted for Printing this Book — Lord Hide Your Master? |
A38938 | Joseph Walker, was the whole copy of this book in the house at that time when you composed that which you did? |
A38938 | Judge Keeling, Did any set them at work but your self? |
A38938 | Judge Keeling, Tell us to whom you carried this Copy to be Corrected? |
A38938 | Judge Keeling, The papers were found wet wi ● h you; who was in your House? |
A38938 | Judge Keeling, Was it printed at your House or no? |
A38938 | Jury ▪ Did he confess he Printed it? |
A38938 | L. Hide After you had stampt the sheet, who did peruse, and over- read it, to see if it were right? |
A38938 | L. Hide What folio is that you ended at? |
A38938 | L. Hide ▪ What did he confess before Mr. Secretary? |
A38938 | L. Hide, Have you any thing else to say? |
A38938 | L. Hide, If you have any thing to say, speak it, God forbid but you should have a full hearing, say what you will? |
A38938 | Le Strange, what he thought of it? |
A38938 | Let there be what there will in it, if you knew the Title, look you to it; have you any thing else to ask? |
A38938 | Morton What talk had you about receiving them? |
A38938 | Morton What was the substance of it? |
A38938 | Morton When you had taken these sheets, were they wet, or not? |
A38938 | Mr North Did they charge you to do it privately? |
A38938 | Mr. Lestrange coming up to my Husband, sayes he, Are you sure there is nothing in your Rooms? |
A38938 | Mr. Mortlock, How many of those books did you receive of this Nathan Brooks? |
A38938 | Mr. North VVhosold them? |
A38938 | My Lord, this very book did Mercer bring down, told us, He would be hang''d for never a Rogue of them all; did he think to lay his books at my door? |
A38938 | My self, and my Mistris sometimes, L. Hide VVere they brought to the Shop to sell by his privity? |
A38938 | No, that you can not, unless you saw him write them; but was it like his hand? |
A38938 | No? |
A38938 | Observe the time when it was printed, was it not to set forward Rebellion? |
A38938 | Or, Who Corrected it? |
A38938 | Ordinary demanded of him, What it was, that could prevail with him, to undertake the Printing of it? |
A38938 | Pray Sir thus; were you in the house when Mr. L''Estrange came up? |
A38938 | Pray my Lord, give me leave to aske Creeke one question? |
A38938 | Publickly, as other Books, or in other Roomes? |
A38938 | Set John Twyn to the Bar, Look upon him my Masters; how say you, is he Guilty of the High Treason whereof he stands indicted, or not guilty? |
A38938 | Shall I speak to the whole matter, or only to the particular you last mentioned? |
A38938 | That the Jury can best tell; have you any more questions? |
A38938 | That we use as Evidence, that he had uttered the first, because he went upon a second: how many did you Print at first? |
A38938 | The Phenix, or Solemn League and Covenant; you all know it, and rue it; When was it printed? |
A38938 | The Title, what is it? |
A38938 | The first was three thousand you say, what number did they take? |
A38938 | The question asked by my Lord, is, whether he did confess he revised it, or whether you did collect it from his reply? |
A38938 | Then by the Oath that you have taken, were not the corrections of this Book like those of other corrections by his own hand? |
A38938 | Then for the other Sermon, by what Licence was that printed? |
A38938 | Then we must not trouble our selves; Did you never see the hand before, with which this Copy was written? |
A38938 | There were two Impressions Printed, did not you Print more in one, then in the other? |
A38938 | These three men joyn''d to bear each man his share? |
A38938 | They all? |
A38938 | Thresher, by the Oath that you have taken, did you see those sheets hang ▪ upon the line in his house? |
A38938 | To what purpose were they? |
A38938 | To whom did you pay the money that you receied for them? |
A38938 | Truely I had no body but my self; I read it over; What thought you upon reading it? |
A38938 | Tryals being put off; Are you content to lye in Goal till the next Sessions? |
A38938 | VVere they in the Shop to be sold? |
A38938 | VVho fetched them away? |
A38938 | Was he not used to tell you the Authors of books that you printed? |
A38938 | Was the Copy written, or printed? |
A38938 | Was there any body in the house besides you and your Master? |
A38938 | Was there any body in the house that might Correct it? |
A38938 | We desire to know upon what Statute Law this Indictment is grounded? |
A38938 | We will take care of that; Have you any more to say? |
A38938 | Well, and you set the letters to Print according to the Copy, and you had it of your Master, had you? |
A38938 | Were not some found under the bed? |
A38938 | Were the amendments that were brought back, like his hand? |
A38938 | Were there no strangers there? |
A38938 | Were they Printed in your Masters house? |
A38938 | Were they not of this book? |
A38938 | Were they open? |
A38938 | Were they put up privately? |
A38938 | Were you at work then, or before? |
A38938 | What became of the other? |
A38938 | What book? |
A38938 | What did you do with them? |
A38938 | What did you hear him confess before Sir Hewy Bennet? |
A38938 | What did your Master say when you told him Mr. L''Estrange was below? |
A38938 | What directions did your Master give you about Printing it, did he direct any privacy? |
A38938 | What do you mean by all printed formerly? |
A38938 | What doe you mean by Composing? |
A38938 | What else do you know? |
A38938 | What grounds have you to believe that Dover Printed the rest? |
A38938 | What is this but Justifying the printing of it? |
A38938 | What made you so loath to be their Partner, were they two hours perswading of you? |
A38938 | What needed all this, but that you knew what you were doing? |
A38938 | What private place was that? |
A38938 | What quantity was there of them? |
A38938 | What room? |
A38938 | What say you of it? |
A38938 | What say you to it? |
A38938 | What say you to this Book? |
A38938 | What say you, is he guilty of the Offence of printing and publishing the book called The Phenix,& c. or not guilty? |
A38938 | What say you? |
A38938 | What sayest thou, John Twyn, art thou Guilty of this High Treason, whereof thou standest indicted, or Not Guilty? |
A38938 | What time was this Printed? |
A38938 | What was it that burnt above? |
A38938 | What was the Title of it? |
A38938 | What was your Book ▪ binder''s Name? |
A38938 | What were the words that you read? |
A38938 | What were you then at work upon? |
A38938 | What''s that tome; if a man have a book in his house, and throw it down, and say so, doth that concern me? |
A38938 | When I questioned him how many was done? |
A38938 | When did you give Mr. L''Estrange information of this matter? |
A38938 | When my Husband went down, I called to my Sister; said I, Did you hear Mr. Brooks there? |
A38938 | When you had Printed them, what did you do with them? |
A38938 | When you had carried a sheet down, how long was it ere it was brought back again? |
A38938 | When you had printed one sheet, were there not some mistakes of the Letters to be mended? |
A38938 | Where are those men that changed the sheets, which of my men were they? |
A38938 | Where did you receive or find this Letter? |
A38938 | Where did you receive them? |
A38938 | Where were the books found when they were seized? |
A38938 | Where were they delivered? |
A38938 | Where were they found by the Oath you have taken? |
A38938 | Who Composed the second, third, and fourth sheet? |
A38938 | Who brought them back to you? |
A38938 | Who changed sheets with you? |
A38938 | Who compared them? |
A38938 | Who delivered it to you to compose? |
A38938 | Who delivered them to you? |
A38938 | Who did he say revised the Press? |
A38938 | Who did you send the Proofs to? |
A38938 | Who furnished you with blew paper? |
A38938 | Who gave you what you did? |
A38938 | Who helped you to that? |
A38938 | Who is your Landlord? |
A38938 | Who is your Master? |
A38938 | Who made the Amendment? |
A38938 | Who paid for the Printing? |
A38938 | Who paid you for printing of it? |
A38938 | Who paid you for them? |
A38938 | Who shall say for you? |
A38938 | Who shall say for you? |
A38938 | Who was the cause they did not, did your Master direct the privacy? |
A38938 | With as much privacy and expedition as I could? |
A38938 | Yes, said she, he has left a book here: said I, Do you know what''s in it? |
A38938 | You Composed you say foure pages; there are eight in a sheet, who composed the other of the same sheet? |
A38938 | You and he knew what book it was? |
A38938 | You knew the contents of the book? |
A38938 | You printed it: for whom? |
A38938 | You say you think you had some discourse with him; did not you speak about the danger of printing it? |
A38938 | You speak of your behaviour ▪ have you any testimony here? |
A38938 | You were not by to see it done? |
A38938 | by night, or by day? |
A38938 | did they work of their own heads? |
A38938 | he said, Yes; did not you know Treason when you read it? |
A38938 | he said, Yes; did not you use to read what you Printed? |
A38938 | how many dayes? |
A38938 | nor nothing? |
A38938 | or more? |
A38938 | sayes he, A Friend, Who are you? |
A38938 | the very individual book that I brought up there? |
A38938 | to set up the Scotch Presbytery? |
A38938 | were they sold? |
A38938 | who ● i ● ted it for the Press? |