Showing 1 to 7 out of 7 results
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TextEEBO-TCP (Phase 2)Date of publication:
1647Description:Caption title. Attributed to Henry Neville. A satire. Imprint from Wing. Annotation on Thomason copy: "July 15 1647". Reproduction of the original in the British Library.This item contains 4 files (102.28 KB).Publicly Available -
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TextEEBO-TCP (Phase 2)Date of publication:
1647Description:Attributed to Henry Neville by Wing. Place of publication from Wing. Annotation on Thomason copy: on title page: "May 18th"; on page 5: misnumbering altered from 13 to 5. Reproduction of the original in the British Library.This item contains 4 files (98.72 KB).Publicly Available -
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TextEEBO-TCP (Phase 1)Date of publication:
1647Description:Verse - "Why kept your train-bands such a stirre?". A satire on the Presbyterians in Parliament. Imprint from Wing. In two columns. Annotation on Thomason copy: "Aug: 13 1647". Reproduction of the original in the British Library.This item contains 4 files (84.4 KB).Publicly Available -
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TextEEBO-TCP (Phase 2)Date of publication:
1647Description:Attributed to Henry Neville by Wing. Place of publication from Wing. With a woodcut illustration on the title page. "An inferior reprint of the pamphlet, omitting the woodcut, was made in the 19th century"--Madan. Annotation ...This item contains 4 files (72.42 KB).Publicly Available -
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TextEEBO-TCP (Phase 1)Date of publication:
1647Description:A ballad in the form of a mock litany stairizing the army and Parliament. The principal author of Mercurius melancholicus (1647-1649) was John Hackluyt; but rival periodicals with the same name sporadically appeared, one ...This item contains 4 files (139.73 KB).Publicly Available -
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TextEEBO-TCP (Phase 1)Date of publication:
1647Description:Verse - "Most gracious, omnipotent,". Imprint from Wing. Annotation on Thomason copy: "June 5th London. 1647". Reproduction of the original in the British Library.This item contains 4 files (84.93 KB).Publicly Available -
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TextEEBO-TCP (Phase 1)Date of publication:
1647Description:Verse - "From a painted ladie with black patches,". A Royalist satire on presbyters, independent traders, and agitators. Imprint from Wing. Part 1 not traced. Annotation on Thomason copy: "Nouemb 13 1647". Reproductions ...This item contains 4 files (95.01 KB).Publicly Available -