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The heartie confession of a Christian, deuised for his owne comfort, written for his remembrance, and now published for the vse of M.H. and others his faithfull and priuate friends onely
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ESTC S121840 ; A song - "Lord giue thy iudgements to our King, therein instruct him well:" ; At head of title: Feare God and honour the King;Publication date conjectured by STC ; The music is by John Farrant
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The elegy on that reverend presbyter Mr. William Jenkins, who finisht his obstinacy the 19th. of January in the goal of Newgate, where are above fourscore dissenters, of almost as many of the several scattered churches remaining. In a dialogue between despair and comfort: in imitation of a former elegy, in dialogue between faith and sense. Seiz'd and supprest by authority
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The saint turn'd curtezan: or, A new plot discover'd by a precious zealot, of an assault and battery design'd upon the body of a sanctify'd sister, &c. Who in her husband's absence, with a brother did often use to comfort one another till wide mouth'd Crop, who is an old Italian, took his mare napping, and surpriz'd her stallion: who 'stead of entertainment from his mistris, did meet a cudgelling not match'd in hist'ries. To the tune of the Quakers ballad: or, All in the land of Essex
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A song, on the confession and dying words of William Stevenson, merchant, late of North-Allerton, in the county of York, aged 27 years, who was executed at Durham on Saturday the 26th of August, 1727, for the barbarous murder of Mary Fawden, near Hartlepool in the bishoprick of Durham taken from his own mouth the night before his execution, by a person that went to visit him while in goal. To the tune of, Since Cælia's my foe
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ESTC N68213 ; "Good Lord! I'm undone, thy Face I would shun,". ; In this edition, the text is in two columns separated by an ornamental rule. The title and two woodcuts are above the first two columns. The first woodcut is a portrait of Stevenson and the second woodcut is a portrait of his execution by hanging.
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