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 Date of publication : 1657      Subject : Society of Friends     Clear All
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    • Burrough, Edward, 1634-1662. (7)
    • Fox, George, 1624-1691. (5)
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    • Naylor, James, 1617?-1660 (3)
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    • EEBO-TCP (Phase 1) (14)
    • EEBO-TCP (Phase 2) (24)

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    EEBO-TCP (Phase 2)
    Text
    To you that are crying, what is become of our forefathers, if the light be the way which you be in, and what is become of the martyrs that suffered?
    Date of publication:
    1657
    
    Author(s):
    Fox, George, 1624-1691.
    Description:
    Caption title. Signed: G.F. Imprint from colophon. Date of publication suggested by Wing. Imperfect: stained. Reproduction of original in the Huntington Library.
     This item contains 4 files (37.66 KB).
     
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  • Text
    EEBO-TCP (Phase 1)
    Text
    The vvofull cry of unjust persecutions, and grevious oppressions of the people of God in England, through the injustice of some of her rulers, and wikednesse of teachers and people, who hasten to fulfil the measure of their forefathers cruelty. With a lamentation over them all who rewards the Lord evill for good, and is a warning to them all for repentance; shewing that the coming of the Lord is nigh. And this may serve for an answer in full, to all such who have persecuted by violence, by word or writing the innocent people in scorn called Quakers. With a short addition, which shewes unto all, the ground of persecution; in its first cause, and the enmity which is betwixt the two seeds, is clearly discovered, by a friend to the suffering seed of God, E.B.
    Date of publication:
    1657
    
    Author(s):
    Burrough, Edward, 1634-1662.
    Description:
    E.B. = Edward Burrough. "To the reader" dated: The 7 month 1657. P. 35 misnumbered 25. Annotation on Thomason copy: "8ber [i.e. October] 22", "1657". Reproduction of the original in the British Library.
     This item contains 4 files (1.12 MB).
     
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  • Text
    EEBO-TCP (Phase 2)
    Text
    The reviler rebuked: or, A re-inforcement of the charge against the Quakers, (so called) for their contradictions to the Scriptures of God, and to their own scriblings, which Richard Farnworth attempted to answer in his pretended Vindication of the Scriptures; but is farther discovered, with his fellow-contradictors and revilers, and their doctrine, to be anti-Scriptural, anti-Christian, and anti-spiritual. By John Stalham, a servant of the great bishop and shepherd of souls, appointed to watch his little flock at Terling in Essex.
    Date of publication:
    1657
    
    Author(s):
    Stalham, John, d. 1681.
    Description:
    A reply to: The Scriptures vindication against the Scotish contradictors. The words "so called" are enclosed in square brackets on title page. Includes index. Annotation on Thomason copy: "Jun 6.". Reproduction of the ...
     This item contains 4 files (2.35 MB).
     
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  • Text
    EEBO-TCP (Phase 2)
    Text
    The hidden things of Esau brought to light, and reproved in an answer to a book intituled A true relation of a dispute between Francis Fulwood, minister of West Alvington, in the county of Devon, and Thomas Salthouse, as it is said, of the county of Westmerland, before the congregation of them called Quakers, in the house of Henry Pollexpher Esquire, in the said parish of West. Published in the truth's defence, and sent abroad in the world, to pursue the unknown authors imperfect relation. By a follower of the Lamb in the war against the Beast and false prophet, known to the world by the name of Thomas Salthouse.
    Date of publication:
    1657
    
    Author(s):
    Salthouse, Thomas, 1630-1691.
    Description:
    The last leaf is blank. Reproduction of the original in the British Library.
     This item contains 4 files (230.54 KB).
     
    Publicly Available

  • Text
    EEBO-TCP (Phase 2)
    Text
    The guilty-covered clergy-man unvailed; in a plain and candid reply unto two bundles of wrath and confusion, wrapt up in one and twenty sheets of paper. The one written by Christopher Fowler and Simon Ford of Reading; the other by William Thomas of Ubley in Somersetshire. Wherein all their malicious slanders and false accusations, which they cast upon the truth, are clean wash'd off; their weapons with which they war against the Lamb, broken over their own heads; and they, with the rest of the tyth-exacting teachers, proved to be the great incendaries, and mis-leaders of these nations. In which also there is made a brief and sober application, to the magistrates, and other inhabitants, within the city of Bristol. / By Thomas Speed, a friend to all that tremble at the Word of the Lord; but an irreconcileable enemy to the mysterious deceit, and monstrous hypocrisie of those that do teach for hire, and divine for money.
    Date of publication:
    1657
    
    Author(s):
    Speed, Thomas, b. 1622 or 3.
    Description:
    A reply to "A sober answer to an angry epistle" by Christopher Fowler and Simon Ford and "Rayling rebuked" by William Thomas. Annotation on Thomason copy: "Nou: 18". Reproduction of the original in the British Library.
     This item contains 4 files (577.82 KB).
     
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