2 edition of Englands obligations to Captain William Bedloe, the grand discoverer of this most horrid plot. found in the catalog.
Englands obligations to Captain William Bedloe, the grand discoverer of this most horrid plot.
Published
1679
by Printed by Thomas Dawks in London
.
Written in English
Edition Notes
Series | Early English books, 1641-1700 -- 1401:36. |
The Physical Object | |
---|---|
Format | Microform |
Pagination | 1 broadside |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL16706992M |
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Englands obligations to Captain William Bedlowe: the grand discoverer of this most horrid plot. Englands obligations to Captain William Bedloe, the grand discoverer of this most horrid plot. Part I: to which are added emblems of his loyalty and the Jesuits treachery and cruelty.
the grand discoverer of this most horrid plot. ;\/span>\n \u00A0\u00A0\u00A0\n schema:name\/a> \" Englands obligations to Captain William. This banner text can have markup. web; books; video; audio; software; images; Toggle navigation. New York and its institutions, A library of information, pertaining to the great metropolis, past and present By Rev.
Richmond. William Lilly, author of Englands Propheticall Merlin, warned his readers that a year of disaster would ensue for every day a comet was observed.4 Little wonder that the whole continent breathed a sigh of relief when the November comet sputtered slowly out of sight two months after it.
Captain Cotton rode to the hail door some hours later and delivered a packet into Mouktons hand, after an urgent entreaty to see that unwilling gentle- man. Captain Grimswade with his dying 1)reath desired me to place these papers in your hand, Mr.
Monkton, and en. But as to the Prejudice, which he therefore reserved as the most e√ectual and taking, to undoe the Author by, that he is Immoderately Zealous for the Non-conformists; it is the e√ect of as strong a Phancy, or as Malicious an Intention as the Former; it being scarce possible to open the Book in any place without chancing upon some passage.