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Partridge's advice to the Protestants of England
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The true Protestants humble desires to the Kings most excellent Majesty. Or, Protestant-like propositions for His Majesties perusall, tending to a safe and well-grounded peace. VVith a commination or chorus of the people against those that desire it not
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ESTC R210645 ; Verse - "That your Majesty will be pleased to signe" ; A Royalist poem;Place of publication from Wing ; Column 3 line 1 reads "A commination to be confir-". Variant: column 3 line 1 reads "A comination to be confirmed"
180161

The true Protestants humble desires to the Kings most excellent Majesty. Or, Protestant-like propositions for His Majesties perusall, tending to a safe and well-grounded peace. VVith a commination or chorus of the people against those that desire it not
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ESTC R210645 ; Verse - "That your Majesty will be pleased to signe" ; A Royalist poem;Place of publication from Wing ; Column 3 line 1 reads "A commination to be confir-". Variant: column 3 line 1 reads "A comination to be confirmed"
180162

Advice to the city or the Wiggs loyalty explain'd
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ESTC R374 ; Verse - "Remember ye: wiggs what was formerly done, remember your mischeifs in forty and one, when" ; A Tory satire on the Whigs; Engraved ; Place of publication and actual printer's name from Wing ; Huntington Library copy has Narcissus Luttrell's MS. date: 23 Sept. 1682
135949

O Lord thy word is our sure touch stone
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ESTC S123442 ; Title from first extant line of text. Known only from two fragments each containing parts of the same three stanzas. Each stanza begins "O Lorde .." ; In verse ; Imprint from STC
131401:51a

Dialogue. M. Why am I daily thus perplext? Why beyond womans patience vext?
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ESTC R214461 ; Title from caption title and first line of text;Imprint from Wing ; Verse - "M. Why am I daily thus perplext?" ; Dialogue [between M(ary of Modena) and J(ames II) .. -- Wing
472983

Lilly lash't vvith his ovvn rod. Or, An epigram on the quaint skill of that arch temporizing astrologer Mr. William Lilly. : Collected out of his almanacks, from 1647, to this present year, 1660
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ESTC R211923 ; In verse. First line reads: "Sound first A trumpet, that the world may hear,". ; Place of publication from Wing. ; Annotation on Thomason copy: "May 14". ; A variant exists where the imprint has "year. 1660." Cf. ESTC.
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