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A soveraign antidote to prevent, appease, and determine our unnaturall and destructive civill warres and dissentions
Wherein divers serious considerations tending to this purpose are propounded both to the King and subjects, the Parliaments and Sir Iohn Hothams proceedings at Hull and in the militia justified, Sr Iohn Hothams actions proved to be neither treason, felony, nor trespas, by the laws of the land, nor any just ground or cause at all for his Majestie to rayse an army, or a most unnaturall civill warre in his kingdome. With a most serious exhortation both to the King and subjects to embrace and preserve peace and abandon civill warres, with other matters worthy of consideration -
A soveraign antidote to prevent, appease, and determine our unnaturall and destructive civill warres and dissentions
wherein divers serious considerations tending to this purpose are propounded to both the the King and subjects, the Parliaments and Sir Iohn Hothams proceedings at Hull and in the militia justified : Sr. Iohn Hothams actions proved to be neither treason, felony, nor trespas, by the laws of the land, nor any just ground or cause at all for His Majestie to raise an army, or a more unnaturall civill warre in his kingdome : with a most serious exhortation both to the King and subjects to embrace and preserve peace and abandon civill warres with other matters worthy of consideration -
Vox populi, or, The peoples humble discovery of their own loyaltie and His Maiesties ungrounded iealousie
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A vindication of Psalme 105.15, touch not mine anoynted, and doe my prophets no harme, form some false glosses lately obtruded on it by royallists
proving that this divine inhibition was given to kings not subjects : to restraine them from injuring and oppressing Gods servants and their subjects : who are Gods anoynted as well as kings : and that it is more unlawfull for kings to plunder and make war upon their subjects by way of offence then for subjects to take up armes against kings in such cases by way of defence : with a briefe exhortation to peace and unity -
The Aphorismes of the kingdome
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A vindication of Psalme 105.15. (touch not mine anointed, and doe my prophets no harme) from some false glosses lately obtruded on it by Royalists
Proving, that this divine inhibition was given to kings, not subjects; to restraine them from injuring and oppressing Gods servants, and their subjects; who are Gods anoynted, as well as kings: and that it is more unlawfull for kings to plunder and make war upon their subjects, by way of offence, then for subjects to take up armes against kings in such cases by way of defence. With a briefe exhortation to peace and unity -
A soveraigne antidote to prevent, appease, and determine our unnaturall and destructive civill wars and dissentions
wherein divers serious considerations tending to this purpose, are propounded both to the king and subjects ... : with a most serious exhortation both to the king and subjects to embrace and preserve peace, and abandon civill warres, with other matters worthy of consideration : also Vox popvli, or the peoples humble discovery of His Majesties ungrounded iealousies and their own loyaltie -
A divine tragedie lately acted
or, A collection of sundrie memorable examples of Gods judgements upon Sabbath-breakers, and other like libertines, in their unlawfull sports, hapning within the realme of England, in the compasse onely of few yeers last past, since the book was published, worthy to be known and considered of all men, especially such, who are guilty of the sin or archpatrons thereof -
Vox populi: or The peoples humble discovery, of their own loyaltie, and His Maiesties ungrounded iealousie
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A soveraign antidote to prevent, appease, and determine our unnaturall and destructive civill warres and dissentions
Wherein divers serious considerations tending to this purpose are propounded both to the King and subjects, the Parliaments and Sir Iohn Hothams proceedings at Hull and in the militia justified, Sr Iohn Hothams actions proved to be neither treason, felony, nor trespas, by the laws of the land, nor any just ground or cause at all for his Majestie to rayse an army, or a most unnaturall civill warre in his kingdome. With a most serious exhortation both to the King and subjects to embrace and preserve peace and abandon civill warres, with other matters worthy of consideration -
The aphorismes of the kingdome
1. The Parliament is the moderation of monarchy. ... 2. The power of it is sufficient to prevent and restraine tyranny. ... 3. The essence of the law is the free consent of the law-makers. ... 4. The sole reason of the King is not the sound judgement of the kingdome. ... 5. All the votes in Parliament are directive to the law, none destructive. ... 6. The vote that is directive and coactive, is no wayes nomotheticall. ... 7. The negative vote of a King is no more than the dissent of one man. ... 8. The affirmative vote of a King makes not the law; ergo, the negative cannot destroy it. ... 9. He that cannot destroy a law made, cannot destroy it in the making. ... 10. The power that makes lawes, repeales and revives them as reason requires. ... 11. Kings that doe good to their subjects of bountie, would be free of the obligation. ... 12. Laws are the best directions and obligations for all men to follow. To submit the principality to the laws is more than the crowne -
A vindication of Psalme 105.15. (touch not mine anoynted, and doe my prophets no harme) from some false glosses lately obtruded on it by Royallists
Proving that this divine inhibition was given to kings, not subjects; to restraine them from injuring and oppressing Gods servants, and their subjects; who are Gods anoynted, as well as kings: and that it is more unlawfull for kings to plunder and make war upon their subjects, by way of offence, then for subjects to take up armes against kings in such cases by way of defence. With a briefe exhortation to peace and unity -
A pleasant purge for a Roman Catholike to evacuate his evill humours
consisting of a century of polemicall epigrams, wherein divers grosse errors and corruptions of the Church of Rome are discovered, censured, refuted, in a facetious yet serious manner -
A moderate and most proper reply to a declaration, printed and published under His Maiesties name, December 8
intended against an ordinance of Parliament for assessing, but indeed animating and encouraging the malignants, and delinquents, in their violent courses, for the maintenance of themselves, and their malignant army