Mr. Penn's advice in the choice of Parliament-men, in his Englands great interest in the choice of this new Parliament ; dedicated to all her free-holders and electors. Penn, William, 1644-1718. 1688 Approx. 2 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 1 1-bit group-IV TIFF page image. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2009-03 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). B04671 Wing P1249A ESTC R181610 53981693 ocm 53981693 180297 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B04671) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 180297) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English Books, 1641-1700 ; 2824:47) Mr. Penn's advice in the choice of Parliament-men, in his Englands great interest in the choice of this new Parliament ; dedicated to all her free-holders and electors. Penn, William, 1644-1718. 1 sheet ([1] p.) s.n.], [London : published this fourth of December, 1688. Caption title. Place of publication suggested by Wing. Excerpted from the author's "Englands great interest in the choice of this new Parliament", originally published in 1679. "The abovesaid being not unseasonable at this present conjecture, it is thought meet to have it thus published this fourth of December, 1688"--colophon. Reproduction of the original in the National Library of Scotland. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. 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Understanding these processes should make clear that, while the overall quality of TCP data is very good, some errors will remain and some readable characters will be marked as illegible. Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. The texts were encoded and linked to page images in accordance with level 4 of the TEI in Libraries guidelines. Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng England and Wales. -- Parliament -- Elections -- Early works to 1800. Great Britain -- Politics and government -- 1660-1688 -- Early works to 1800. Broadsides -- England -- 17th century. 2008-04 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2008-06 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2008-07 Mona Logarbo Sampled and proofread 2008-07 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-09 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion Mr. Penn's ADVICE In the Choice of Parliament-Men , IN HIS Englands great Interest in the Choice of this New Parliament ; Dedicated to all her Free-holders and Electors . PRay see that you chuse sincere Protestants : Men that don't play the Protestant in Design , and are indeed disguis'd Papists , ready to pull off their Masks when time serves : You will know such by their Laughing at the Plot , disgracing the Evidence , admiring the Traytors Constancy that were forc'd to it , or their Religion and Party were gone beyond an Excuse , or an Equivocation . The contrary are Men that thank GOD for this Discovery , and in their Conversation zealously direct themselves in an Opposition to the Papal Interest , which indeed is a Combination against good Sense , Reason and Conscience , and to introduce a blind Obedience without ( if not against ) Conviction ; and that Principle which introduces implicit Faith and blind Obedience in Religion , will also introduce implicit Faith and blind Obedience in Government ; so that it is no more the Law in the one than in the other , but the Will and power of the Superior , that shall be the Rule and Bond of our Subjection : This is that Fatal Mischief Propery brings with it to civil Society , and for which such Societies ought to be aware of it , and All those that are Friends to it . [ Pag. 4. ] The abovesaid being not unseasonable at this present Conjuncture , it is thought meet to have it thus Published this Fourth of December , 1688. FINIS .