Early works
Resource Information
The concept Early works represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in University of Missouri-Kansas City Libraries.
The Resource
Early works
Resource Information
The concept Early works represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in University of Missouri-Kansas City Libraries.
- Label
- Early works
- Authority link
- http://id.worldcat.org/fast/01411636
- Source
- fast
A sample of Items that share the Concept Early works See All
Context
Context of Early worksSubject of
No resources found
No enriched resources found
- "In God we trust" ; : the religious beliefs and ideas of the American founding fathers
- (Of the) institution and education of children
- (Of) agriculture
- (Of) bookes
- (Of) education : John Milton's tractate
- (Of) friendship
- (On the) equality among mankind
- (On the) motion of the heart and blood in animals
- (On) the education of women
- A Bank dialogue between Dr. H.C. and a country gentleman
- A Book of the valuations of all the ecclesiasticall preferments in England and Wales : entituled Nomina & valores omnium & singulorum archiepiscopatuum, episcopatuum ... ac omnium aliarum promotionum ... quæ ad solutionem decimæ partis earund' Dom' regi & reginæ nuper tenebantur
- A Breviate of the state of Scotland : in its government, supream courts, officers of state, inferiour officers, offices, and inferiour courts, districts, jurisdictions, burroughs royal, and free corporations
- A Brief account of the priviledges and immunities granted by the French King to the East-India Company, &c., of France for the encouraging and improving of trade and navigation : together with an extract of a declaration which the said King hath put forth for the encouragement of trade in general
- A Brief and summary narrative of the many mischiefs and inconveniences in former times as well as of late years occasioned by naturalizing of aliens
- A Brief survey of the growth of usury in England, with the mischiefs attending it
- A Catalogue of the damages for which the English demand reparation from the United-Netherlands : as also a list of the damages, actions, and pretenses for which those of the United-Netherlands demand reparation and satisfaction from the English : together with the answer of the English, subjoyn'd to the several and respective points of their demands
- A Christian-testimony born by the people of God in scorn called Quakers in London : in their patient suffering the taking away and spoiling of their goods for non-payment of tythes to the parish priests
- A Clause in the act of Parliament for laying a duty on leather and skins ... : the grievous case without a parallel
- A Collection of papers relating to the East-India trade : wherein are shewn the disadvantages to a nation, by confining any trade to a corporation with joint-stock
- A Collection of petitions presented to the honourable House of Commons against the trade with France ....
- A Collection of tracts concerning the present state of Ireland : with respect to its riches, revenue, trade, and manufactures
- A Collection of voyages and travels : some now first printed from original manuscripts : others translated out of foreign languages and now first publish'd in English : to which are added some few that have formerly appear'd in English
- A Collection out of the book called Liber regalis, remaining in the treasury of the church of Westminster : touching the coronation of the king and queen together, according to the usual form
- A Compleat alphabetical abridgement of the statutes now in force relating to stamp duties : :whereby at one view may be seen what stamps are required on all sorts of deeds, writings, and agreements ... : and also those which are exempt from the stamp duties : together with the several penalties or forfeitures
- A Computation of what a tax laid only on shooes, boots, slippers, and gloves may amount unto in a year : whereby it is made appear it will bring more mony into the Exchequer, and be a less tax on the subject, of as little charge and trouble to collect, and the poor not so liable to be oppress'd by it as by a general tax on leather
- A Coppy of 1. The letter sent by the Queenes Majestie concerning the collection of the recusants mony for the Scottish warre, Apr. 17, 1639 : 2. The letter sent by Sir Kenelme Digby and Mr. Mountague concerning the contribution. 3. The letter sent by those assembled in London, to every shire. 4. The names of the collectors in each county in England and Wales. And 5. The message sent from the Queenes Majestie to the House of Commons by Master Comptroller the 5. of Febr. 1639
- A Copy of a letter concerning the election of a Lord Protector. : Written to a member of Parliament
- A Cup of coffee, or, Coffee in its colours
- A Declaration from the poor oppressed people of England : directed to all that call themselves, or are called lords of manors through this nation, that have begun to cut or that through fear and covetousness, do intend to cut down the woods and trees that grow upon the commons and waste land
- A Declaration of the libertyes of the English nation : principally with respect to forests
- A Dialogue at Oxford between a tutor and a gentleman, formerly his pupil, concerning government
- A Dialogue between a director of the new East-India Company and one of the committee for preparing by-laws for the said company : in which those for a rotation of directors and the preventing of bribes are particularly debated
- A Dialogue betwixt Mr. State Rogue, a Parliament-man, and his old acquaintance Mr. John Undertaker
- A Dialogue or accidental discourse betwixt Mr. Alderman Abell, and Richard Kilvert, the two maine projectors for wine, and also aldermans Abels wife, & c : contayning their first manner of their acquaintance, how they began to contrive the patent itselfe, how they obtayned it, and who drew the patent : also in what state they now stand in, and how they accuse and raile at each other with invective speeches ..
- A Discourse concerning banks
- A Discourse concerning militia's and standing armies : with relation to the past and present governments of Europe, and of England in particular
- A Discourse of the necessity of encouraging mechanick industry : wherein is plainly proved that luxury and the want of artisans labour became the ruin of the four grand monarchies of the world, in the former age, and of Spain and other countries, in this, and the promoting of manual trades the rise of the Dutch, Germans, &c. : parallel'd and compared with and shewn to be practicable under the present constitution of England
- A Discourse on a land-bank, or, Ways and means to increase the coin of this kingdom : in two parts ... : to which is added, a postscript, with a proposal to advance two hundred thousand pounds to the government by way of gratuity : humbly offer'd to the consideration of the present Parliament
- A Discourse touching Tangier : in a letter to a person of quality : to which is added The interest of Tanger
- A Familiar discourse between George, a true-hearted English gentleman, and Hans, a Dutch merchant, concerning the present affairs of England
- A Free conference touching the present state of England both at home and abroad, in order to the designs of France
- A Fund for supplying and preserving our coin, or, An essay on the project of new-coining our silver
- A Further explication of the proposal relating to the coyne
- A General bill of all the christnings and burials from the 20. of December, 1681, to the 19. of December, 1682 : according to the report made to the Kings most excellent majesty
- A Geographical Dictionary, : In which are Described the most Eminent Countries, Towns, Ports, Seas, Streights and Rivers in the whole World. Together with a New and Accurate Map of the World. Very Useful for the Understanding of all Modern Histories
- A Jerk for the jacks, or, All their hopes are lost : being an account of the vast and prodigious expectations our foreign foes and domestick enemies, the French, the Papists, and the Jacobites, lately had of a new revolution upon the stop of commerce occasion'd by the badness of, and calling in our silver coin, and how basely they are balk'd ..
- A Journal of several remarkable passages : before the honourable House of Commons and the right honourable the lords of Their Majesties most honourable Privy Council, relating to the East-India trade
- A Just narrative of the hellish new counter-plots of the Papists : to cast the odium of their horrid reasons upon the Presbyterians ... with an account of their particular intreigues carried on to insnare Mr. Blood
- A Letter concerning the disabling clauses lately offered to the House of Commons for regulating corporations
- A Letter from a minister of the Church of England to a gentleman in the countrt [sic] : with instructions how to behave himself in sickness
- A Letter humbly offer'd to the consideration of all gentlemen, yeomen, citizens, freeholders, &c. that have right to elect members to serve in Parliament
- A Letter to a gentleman in the country concerning the price of guineas
- A Letter to a gentleman, upon a royal fishery, a council of trade, and a national fishery
- A Letter to a member of Parliament concerning guards and garisons
- A Letter to a member of Parliament concerning the Bank of Scotland and the lowering of interest of money
- A Letter to a member of Parliament concerning the four regiments commonly called Mariners
- A Letter to a member of Parliament occasioned by the growing poverty of the nation from the want and decay of trade and wrong management thereof : with some overtures for encreasing and promoting the one and rectifying the other
- A Letter to a member of Parliament, occasion'd by the votes of the House of Commons against their late speaker, and others
- A Letter to a member of the honourable House of Commons in answer to three queries : I. whether there is no other cause of our want of bullion and coin but the cliping of our money and the expence of the war, II. whether it is possible to manage the trade of the nation without a supply in specie equal to what we have lost, III. whether a forc'd credit can be an expedient under our present circumstances : with some other remarks in relation to our own and foreign manufacturies
- A Letter to a member of the late Parliament concerning the debts of the nation
- A Letter to a member of the late Parliament concerning the debts of the nation
- A Letter to an eminent member of Parliament about the present rate of guineas and the influence they will have on our expected new money
- A Letter to the public : Containing the substance of what hath been offered in the late debates upon the subject of the act of Parliament, for the better preventing of clandestine marriages
- A Letter to two members of Parliament
- A List of several ships belonging to English merchants, taken by French privateers since December, one thousand six hundred seventy and three : also a brief account touching what applications hath been made for redress, at the Council-Board and with the Committee of Trade
- A Mediterranean passage by water : from London to Bristol, &c., and from Lynne to Yarmouth, and so consequently to the city of York for the great advancement of trade & traffique
- A Model for erecting a bank of credit : with a discourse in explanation thereof : adapted to the use of any trading countrey, where there is a scarcity of moneys, more especially for His Majesties plantations in America
- A Moderate computation of what the water-tax (proposed to the honourable House of Commons) may amount to, towards the supplying parliamentary funds
- A Modest offer of some meet considerations, tendred to the English about their coyne and trade, and particularly to East-India
- A New ballad upon the Land-Bank, or, Credit restored : to the tune of All for love and no money
- A New project humbly offer'd to the consideration of the honourable House of Commons for the more effectual encouragement of a general trade, the facilitating the changing of our clipp'd money and sinking the bad, for raising the King 100000 l. and for the more speedy and more chearfull payment of all the King's taxes, without loss to any, and with gain to all
- A New song
- A Notable plot discovered in a letter sent by an agent here in London to the Earl of Cleveland at the Hague : shewing how the said agent set the Committee of Mincing-Lane on worke to procure an act to put out all the old officers of the Custom-house, by which means the Customes will be destroyed
- A Pair on printing : Atkyns' The original and growth of printing, William Caslon and the first English type specimen book : reproduced in facsimile
- A Particular of the silks, and a specimen of the toyes and handicraft-wares, which came from the East-India on the ships Martha, Sarah, and Dorothy : with the rates at which they were sold at the late sale at the East-India House : according to the books of sales of these ships, and printed cargoes
- A Plain and easy way to pay the debt due to the orphans of London : without charge to either city or country (but of great advantage to both)
- A Poem upon the prentices feast at Merchant-Taylors-Hall
- A Proposal for a new adventure wherein none can be unfortunate, greater allowance being made to the blanks than was in the million adventure, with the same security, and managed by the same commissioners
- A Proposal for carrying on the war : in a letter to a nobleman
- A Proposal for erecting a general bank, which may be fitly called the Land Bank of England
- A Proposal for putting some stop to the extravagant humour of stock-jobbing
- A Proposal for raising a fund for supply of the deficiency of the clipt money, on houses, buildings, & c : which is hoped, may be found more equal than by that of the windows
- A Proposal for remeeding our excessive luxury
- A Proposal for the raising the summe of two hundred thousand pounds or more per annum as a fund or security : for advancing moneys for the service of the government with great ease to the subject
- A Proposal to raise four hundred thousand pounds per ann. without any imposition or new tax, by amending the deficiency of an old one, namely, the excise on beer and ale
- A Proposal to the Bank of England and the banks now setting up : with some few considerations about goldsmiths notes
- A Rambling letter to a friend
- A Remedie against the losse of the subject by farthing-tokens : discovering the great abuses of them heretofore and the prevention of the like hereafter by making them of such a weight as may countervaile their worth in current coyne and proposing a satisfactorie way for the exchange of those that are already dispersed abroad : with some usefull cautions touching the receipt of certaine forraigne coyne : published for the good of Commonwealth in generall, but more especially of the poorer sort
- A Reply to a paper entituled An answer to the sugar-refiners paper
- A Reply to a paper intituled Reasons against the prohibiting the wearing East-India and Persian wrought silks, &c. humbly offer'd to the honourable House of Commons ..
- A Reply to the answerer of the letter sent to the author of a paper called The doctrine of passive obedience and jure divino disproved ..
- A Reply to the paper entituled, an Answer to the case of the proprietors and refiners of rock-salt
- A Representation concerning the late Parliament in the yeer 1654 : to prevent mistakes
- A Review of the universal remedy for all diseases incident to coin : with application to our present circumstances. In a letter to Mr. Locke
- A Scheme for raising two millions upon annuities for lives : out of a fund of 120,000 l. per ann. appropriated to that use, with greater ease to the government and more advantage to the subject than any other scheme heretofore
- A Seasonable memento both to king and people upon this critical juncture of affaires ..
- A Seasonable proposal to the nation concerning a register of estates in this kingdom : tendred to the consideration of the publick-spirited in both houses ..
- A Serious advice to the African and Indian Company
- A Short account of some approved methods already settled to make provision for posterity : with an assay towards establishing a company for that purpose more advantageous than any before invented
- A Short and true relation concerning the soap-business : containing the severall patents, proclamations, orders, whereby the soape-makers of London, and other His Majesties subjects, were damnified, by the gentlemen that were the patentees for soape at Westminster, with the particular proceedings concerning the same
- A Short answer to The case of British buckrams for tillets, asserted
- A Short vindication of marine regiments : in answer to a pamphlet entituled A letter to a member of Parliament concerning the four marine regiments
- A True account of land forces in England, and provisions for them, from before the reputed Conquest downwards : and of the regard had to foreiners : in a letter to A.B.C., T.T.T., &c. : with animadversions upon their Argument and History of standing armies, Militia reformed, pretended Confutation of the ballancing letter, Life of Milton, and Letters concerning guards, garrisons, and mariners
- A True relation of what has passed between the English Company Trading to the East-Indies, and the Governor and Company of Merchants of London Trading into the East-Indies, touching an agreement between both companies : together with some remarks thereon
- A View of the penal laws concerning trade and trafick : alphabetically disposed under proper heads, wherein for that purpose are collected all the statutes to the end of the last session 1697 ... also some necessary additions of penalties and forfeitures collected and published by way of monition ... to which is added a table of such offences, &c. as are punishable in the crown office ..
- A Word in season about guineas
- A Word in season about guineas, and the poor's clipp'd mony
- A Wulfstan manuscript containing institutes, laws and homilies. : British Museum Cotton Nero A.i.
- A beacon set on fire: or The humble information of certain stationers, citizens of London, to the Parliament and Commonwealth of England. : Concerning the vigilancy of Jesuits, papists, and apostates, (taking advantage of the divisions among our selves and the states great employment,) to corrupt the pure doctrine of the Scriptures. Introduce the whole body of popish doctrine & worship. Seduce the subjects of this Commonwealth unto the popish religion, or that which is worse. By writing and publishing many popish books, (printed in England in the English tongue within these three last years, therein maintaining all the gross points of popery ... And blasphemous books of another nature: all made evident by the catalogue and contents of many of the aforesaid books added hereunto. Published for the service of the Parliament and commonwealth. Hoping that the Parliament by sufficient laws ... will set themselves ... to maintain the faith that was once delivered to the saints against all the enemies thereof
- A bill for sale of the late Earl of Ranelagh's estate at Chelsea and Cranborn, in the counties of Middlesex and Berks
- A book of funds, or, Some reasonable projections and proposals for raising three millions of money per annum for supplies, to be granted His Majesty by such ways and methods as will be least burthensome to the people during the war
- A breife [sic] memento to the present unparliamentary junto : touching their present intentions and proceedings to depose and execute, Charles Steward, their lawfull King.
- A breviat of some proposals prepared to be offered to the great wisdom of the nation, the King's most excellent Majesty, and both houses of Parliament for the speedy restoring the woollen manufacture, by a method practiced in other nations : already perused and approved by those known promoters of England's weal and safety, the most illustrious Prince Rupert and the Right Honourable, the Earl of Shaftsbury ...
- A breviate of the establishment of the Friendly Society : for securing houses from loss by fire, by mutual contribution agreed by the trustees inrolled in Chancery, and to be seen at large at the office
- A brief account of some of the late incroachments and depredations of the Dutch upon the English : and of a few of those many advantages which by fraud and violence they have made of the British nations since the revolution, and of the means enabling them thereunto
- A brief account of some travels in Hungaria, Servia, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Thessaly, Austria, Styria, Carinthia, Carniola, and Friuli : as also some observations on the gold, silver, copper, quick-silver mines, baths, and mineral waters in those parts : with the figures of some habits and remarkable places
- A brief account of the intended Bank of England
- A brief advertisement to the merchant and clothier about the present state of the woollen manufactures of this nation : to which is added an abstract of a late impression of England's interest by trade
- A brief and serious warning to such as are concerned in commerce and trading : who go under the profession of truth, to keep within the bounds thereof, in righteousness, justice and honesty towards all men
- A brief apology in behalf of the people in derision call'd Quakers. Written for the information of our sober and well-inclined neighbours in and about the town of Warminster in the county of Wilts. by Will. Chandler, Alex. Pyot, J. Hodges, and some others
- A brief description of New-York, formerly called New-Netherlands : with the places thereunto adjoyning : together with the manner of its scituation, fertility of the soyle, healthfulness of the climate, and the commodities thence produced : also some directions and advice to such as shall go thither ... : likewise a brief relation of the customs of the Indians there
- A brief explication of the last fifty Psalms: : from Psal. 100. to the end.
- A brief narrative of the late treacherous and horrid designe, which by the great blessing and especiall providence of God hath been lately discovered : and for which, publike thanksgiving is by order of both Houses of Parliament appointed on Thursday the 15. of June, 1643. Together with a true copie of the commission under the great Seal, sent from Oxford, to severall persons in the citie of London. Ordered by the Commons in Parliament, that this narration and commission be read in all churches and chappels, in the cities of London and Westminster, and suburbs thereof, on the day abovesaid. H. Elsynge Cler. Parl. D. Com
- A brief narrative of the nature & advantages of the Land-Bank, as proposed by Dr. Hugh Chamberlain, the first author of founding a bank on an annual revenue
- A brief vindication of Mr. Percivall Brunskell's case : with an account of twenty one years most remarkable passages
- A briefe and most excellent exposition, of the .xij. articles of our fayth, commonly called the Apostles Creede: : wherein as well playnely, for the capacitie of the symple, as pithyly for the satisfying of the learned, are handled the principall poyntes of Chris[tian] relygion.
- A briefe description of the whole world : wherein is particularly described all the monarchies, empires and kingdomes of the same, with their academies
- A buccaneer's atlas : Basil Ringrose's South Sea waggoner : a sea atlas and sailing directions of the Pacific coast of the Americas, 1682
- A case concerning the buying of bishops lands, with the lawfulness thereof : and the difference between the contractors for sale of those lands and the corporation of VVells : ordered anno. 1650 to be reported to the then Parliament, with the necessity thereof since fallen upon Dr. Burges
- A case of conscience resolved. : Wherein it is cleared, that the King may without impeachment to his oath, touching the clergy at coronation, consent to the abrogation of episcopacy. And the objections against it in two learned treatises, printed at Oxford, fully answered.
- A catalogue of engravers : who have been born, or resided in England
- A catalogue of the lords, knights, and gentlemen that have compounded for their estates
- A catalogue of the lords, knights, and gentlemen that have compounded for their estates : to which are added, some gentlemens names, which were omitted in the former edition
- A catalogue of the names of the dukes, marquesses, earles and lords, that have absented themselves from the Parliament, and are now with His Maiesty. : And of the names of the lords that subscribed to levie horse to assist His Majestie with. A copie of all the cavaliers of his Majesties marching army, with the number of captaines in each severall regiment ; every regiment containing a thousand souldiers. As also, a list of the army of his Excellency, Robert, Earle of Essex: with the names of the troops of horse under the command of William Earle of Bedford. Each troop consisting of sixtie horse ; besides two trumpetters, three corporalls, a sadler, and a farrier. With the instructions sent by the Parliament to his Excellency. A list of the navie royall, and merchants ships: the names of the captaines, and lievtenants ; their men and burdens, for the guard of the narrow-seas, and for Ireland. Moreover, the names of the orthodox divines, presented by the knights and burgesses, as fit persons to be consulted with by the Parliament touching the reformation of church government and liturgie. Lastly, the field officers chosen for the Irish expedition, for the regiments of 5000. foote and 500. horse
- A character of Her Highness the Princess *** attempted by an eminent physician, who has attended her from her birth
- A cleare and evident way for enriching the nations of England and Ireland : and for setting very great numbers of poore on work
- A collection of acts and ordinances of general use, made in the Parliament : begun and held at Westminster the third day of November, anno 1640, and since unto the adjournment of the Parliament begun and holden the 17th of September, anno 1656, and formerly published in print ... being a continuation of that work from the end of Mr. Pulton's collection : in two parts
- A collection of all the statutes now in force, relating to the excise upon beer, ale, and other liquors, and the duties upon malt, brandy, and hops : with an abridgment of the said statutes, and a table of the rates upon the several liquors, etc. shewing by what Acts they are imposed
- A collection of all the statutes relating to the excise : with notes in the margin : to which is added an abridgement or breviary of the said statutes, wherein the substance of all that relates to one and the same matter or head respectively is collected together and placed under one and the same proper title and referred to the pages of the said statutes for the more easie and ready finding : with a table of all the said titles subjoyned
- A collection of all the treaties of peace, alliance, and commerce, between Great-Britain and other powers : from the treaty signed at Munster in 1648, to the treaties signed at Paris in 1783. To which is prefixed, A discourse on the conduct of the government of Great-Britain in respect to neutral nations
- A collection of some papers writ upon several occasions : concerning clipt and counterfeit money, and trade, so far as it relates to the exportation of bullion
- A collection of the debates and proceedings in Parliament in 1694 and 1695 : upon the inquiry into the late briberies and corrupt practices
- A collection of the protests of the Lords of Ireland, from 1634 to 1771
- A collection of the severall acts, ordinances, & orders as well of Parliament as of His Highness the Lord Protector (now in force) for the levying of monies by way of excise and new-impost : together with severall orders of the Council, the Commissioners for Appeals and Regulating the Excise, &c. relating to the management thereof
- A collection of the statutes now in force relating to the stamp-duties
- A companion for debtors and prisoners, and advice to creditors : in ten letters
- A complaint to the House of Commons : and resolution taken up by the free Protestant subjects of the cities of London and Westminster, and the counties adjacent
- A complete collection of state-trials, and proceedings for high-treason, and other crimes and misdemeanours : from the reign of King Richard II to the end of the reign of King George I
- A conference with a theist : containing an answer to all the most usual objections of the infidels against the Christian religion, in five parts
- A confutation of a late pamphlet intituled, A letter ballancing the necessity of keeping a land-force in times of peace, with the dangers that may follow on it
- A constant kalendar, or, An almanack for 300 years : but more exactly serving for the next XIX years, being the circle of the moon, or the golden number, beginning in the year of our Lord 1655
- A continuation of Mr. John-Amos-Comenius school-endeavours, or, A summary delineation of Dr. Cyprian Kinner, Silesian, his thoughts concerning education, or, The way and method of teaching, exposed to the ingenuous and free censure of all piously-learned men ... : together with an advice how these thoughts may be successfully put in practice
- A continuation of The new digester of bones : it's improvements and new uses it hath been applyed to, both for sea and land : together with some improvements and new uses of the air pump, tryed both in England and in Italy
- A continuation of the defence of Hvgo Grotivs, in an answer to the review of his annotations : whereto is subjoyned a reply to some passages of the reviewer in his late book of schisme, concerning his charge of corruptions in the primitive church, and some other particulars
- A copy of a letter written the third of September 1651. by John Hedworth of Harraton in the county of Durham, Esquire, unto John Dodgson, constable at Harraton, John Lax, a leader of coles there, Steven Pattason, a stathe-man there, Ralph Hinderson, a leader of coles there, Robert Vickars, overman there, and to all other workmen whatever, that belong either to the colepits, stathes, or keels of Harraton colliery
- A declaration and protestation against the illegal, detestable, oft-condemned, new tax and extortion of excise in general : and for hops (a native incertain commodity) in particular
- A declaration and representation from the forces of the northern associations to his Excellencie, Sir Thomas Fairfax. : And by him presented to the Parliament, June the 12th. 1647
- A declaration concerning the newly invented art of double writing : wherein are expressed the reasons of the authors proceedings in procuring a priviledge for the same : as also of the time, manner, and price, of the discovery of the said art, and of the instruments belonging thereunto ... : whereunto is annexed a copie of an ordinance of both houses of Parliament, approving the feasibility and great use of the said invention, and allowing a priviledge to the inventor, for the sole benefit thereof for 14 years, upon the penalty of one hundred pounds
- A declaration made by the Earl of Nevv-Castle, Governour of the town and county of New-Castle : and generall of all His Majesties forces raised in the northern parts of this kingdom, for the defence of the same. For his resolution of marching into Yorkshire. As also, a just vindication of himself from that unjust aspersion laid upon him, for entertaining some popish recusants in his forces
- A declaration of His Highnes, by the advice of his council : setting forth, on the behalf of this Commonwealth, the justice of their cause against Spain. Friday the 26th of October, 1655. Ordered by His Highness the Lord Protector, and the council, that this declaration be forthwith printed and published. Hen: Scobell, Clerk of the Council
- A declaration of His Highnes, by the advice of his council : shewing the reasons of their proceedings for securing the peace of the Commonwealth, upon occasion of the late insurrection and rebellion. Wednesday, October, 31. 1655. Ordered by his Highness and the Council, that this declaration be forthwith printed and published. Hen: Scobel, Clerk of the Council
- A declaration of the Commons assembled in Parliament : upon two letters sent by Sir John Brooks, (sometimes a Member of the Commons House this parliament ... being a projector, a monopolist, and a fomentor of the present bloudy and unnaturall war ; for bearing of arms actually against the Parliament) to William Killegrew at Oxford (intercepted neer Coventrey) giving his advice how the King should proceed in the Treaty upon the propositions for peace, presented unto him by the Parliament. With the names of the lords, baronets, knights, esquires, gentlemen, ministers and freeholders, indicted the last sessions at Grantham, of high-treason, by Sir Peregrine Bartue and the said Sir John Brooks, before themselves, and other their fellow-cavaliers, rebels and traitors, commissioners, appointed, (as they say), for that purpose. ... Also, the ordinance of both Houses, made the 17 of Decemb. 1642. that the pretended commissioners, and all others, sheriffs, officers, jurors, and any whom it may concern, may know what to expect, that shall presume to molest the persons or estates of any for their service to the Parliament and Kingdom. With some abstracts of credible letters from Exceter ... Ordered by the Commons in Parl. that this declaration and letters be forthwith printed and published: H: Elsynge, Cler. Parl. D. Com
- A declaration of the Commons assembled in Parliament, for bringing to condigne punishment, those that have raised false and scandalous rumors against the House, how that they intend to assesse every mans pewter, and lay excizes upon other commodities : as also further directions to his excellence the Earle of Essex, Generall of the Army, and to the committee for his assistance in the Army, appointed by both houses of Parliament
- A declaration of the Commons of England in Parliament assembled : expressing their reasons and grounds of passing the late resolutions touching no farther address or application to be made to the King. Die veneris, 11. Februarii, 1647. Ordered by the Commons assembled in Parliament, that this declaration be forthwith printed and published: H: Elsynge, Cler. Parl. D. Com
- A declaration of the General Council of the Officers of the Army: agreed upon at Wallingford-house, 27th Octob. 1659. : Thursday, 27th Octob. 1659. Ordered by the General Council of the Officers of the Army, that this declaration be forthwith printed and published. Tho: Sandford Secret
- A declaration of the Lord Generall and his Councel of Officers, shewing the grounds and reasons for the dissolution of the late Parliament
- A declaration of the Lords & Commons assembled in Parliament, against George Lord Goring : for levying war against the Parliament and Kingdom, in taking up arms in Kent and Essex. Also three orders, the first, an order of the Commons in Parliament assembled, for putting the Militia in the several counries [sic] in execution for the safety of their counties. The second, an order of both Houses, for taking away the Court of Wards. The third, giving power to the Committee of Plundred Ministers, to commit such Churchwardens as shall countenance & set up Delinquent Ministers to preach. Together with an ordinance of both Houses of Parliament, for payment of tythes. Ordered by the Commons assembled in Parliament, that this Declaration be forthwith printed and published. H: Elsynge, Cler. Parl. D. Com
- A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament : concerning the disbanding of the army: with instructions for the same. As also two ordinances: one for taking the accounts of the souldiary of the kingdom. The other for releefe of maimed souldiers and marriners, and the widowes and orphans of such as have died in the service of the Parliament. Die Veneris 28 Maii 1647. Ordered by the Lords assembled in Parliament, that this declaration, instructions, and ordinances be forthwith printed and published. Joh. Brown Cler. Parliamentorum
- A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament : die Mercurii, 10 May 1643
- A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament : for the raising of all power, and force, as well trained bands as others, in severall counties of this kingdom, to lead against all traytors, and their adherents, and them to arrest and imprison, and to fight with, kill, and slay all such as shall oppose any of His Majesties loving subjects that shall be imployed in this service, by either or both Houses of Parliament
- A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament : that whatsoever souldier or souldiers shall breake open, pillage, or ransacke any mans house, under colour that they are papists, or persons dis-affected (without command of their captaine) shall be pursued and punished according to the law as felons. Also a speciall order of both Houses concerning irregular printing, and for the suppressing of all false and scandalous pamphlets. Die Sabbathi, August. 27. 1642. Ordered by the Lords and Commons, that this declaration and order be forthwith printed and published. John Browne Cler. Parliament
- A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament : with the advice and concurrence of the commissioners of Scotland, to publish their proceedings up[o]n His Majesties letter, touching a treaty of peace ; and to declare their resolutions and endeavours, to put an end to the unhappy distempers of the kingdome, by a safe and well grounded peace. 23 Martii, 1643. Ordered by the Commons in Parliament that Master Glynn take care for the printing of the declaration concerning His Majesties letter for a treaty of peace ; together with an act of this present Parliament, and severall other letters, thereunto annexed. Hen. Elsynge Cler. Parl. Dom. Com
- A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament to the whole kingdome concerning the excise : with additionall instructions for the better regulating of the same
- A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament upon the statute of 5 H.4 whereby the commission of array is supposed to be warranted : together with divers other statutes whereby it appeares that the said commission is not warranted by any act of Parliament, that it is contrary to the laws and customes of the realme, destructive to the liberty and property of the subject, contrary to the Petition of Right and the statute made this present Parliament : as also His Majesties letter to the sherif of Leicestershire to execute the said commission according to His Majesties proclamation
- A declaration of the Parliament assembled at Westminster. : January 23. 1659. Ordered by the Parliament, that this declaration be forthwith printed and published. Thomas St Nicholas, Clerk of the Parliament
- A declaration of the Parliament assembled at Westminster. Whereas by a clause in an act of this present Parliament for enabling and authorizing certain persons to be justices of the peace ..
- A declaration of the Parliament of England, in answer to the late letters sent to them from the commissioners of Scotland
- A declaration of the Parliament of England, of their just resentment of the horrid murther perpetrated on the body of Isaac Dorislaus, Doctor of the Laws, their resident at the Hague, on the 12th of May, 1649
- A declaration of the Parliament of England. : Written to the high and mighty Lords, the Lords States General of the Vnited Provinces of the Low-Countreys: concerning their last embassie extraordinary into England
- A declaration of the Parliament of the commonwealth of England, for a time of publique Thanksgiving, upon the five and twentieth of this instant August, for the great victory lately vouchsafed to their fleet at sea
- A declaration of the most Christian King, Louis the XIIIth [sic], King of France and Navarre : declaring the reasons wherefore His Majesty hath prohibited all trade with England, also that he hath given commission to raise an army for the assistance of the King of England
- A declaration of the officers of the army, inviting the members of the long Parliament, who continued sitting till the 20th of April, 1653. to return to the exercise and discharge of their trust. : Friday 6 May, 1659. Ordered by the Lord Fleetwood, and the general council of the officers of the army, that this declaration be forthwith printed and published. Thomas Sandford Secretary
- A declaration of the several proceedings of both Houses of Parliament : vvith those in the county of Kent now in arms against the authority of Parliament, manifesting their desires and endeavors for the avoiding of the effusion of blood. Ordered by the Commons assembled in Parliament, that this declaration and proceedings concerning the business of Kent by printed and published. H: Elsynge, Cler. Parl. D. Com
- A declaration of the well-affected Common-Councel-men of the city of London : in the name of themselvs and the inhabitants thereof, concerning the injustice and oppression which is unequally cast and laid upon the distressed citizens : wherein they remonstrate, relieving the oppressed, the mittigating of taxes and assessments, and laying it upon the rich marchants and others who are able to bear it, to the end that those who have bin oppressed may now go free ..
- A declaration or manifest of the high and mighty lords the States Generall of the Vnited Netherland Provinces : comprehending a true relation of their sincere intention, and lawfull proceedings in the treaty with the extraordinary embassadors, and the commissionaries of the present goverment [sic] of England, so as the same hath been held here in the Hague, as also at London. And likewise of the unjust and violent proceedings of those of the said government, which have forced the said States Generall by way of retortion, to defend their state and subjects against their oppressions
- A declaration or ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament concerning the seizing of horses for His Excellency the Earl of Essex : with a provision that this ordinance shall not extend to the seizing or taking of any horses, mares, or geldings of any the members of both houses of Parliament or any of the assistants of the House of Peers ... ; also, an order of the Commons House in Parliament concerning coals, that they shall be sold at 20 shillings the chaldron or 23 s. at the most ... unto the poor, and unto house-keepers and those of the meaner sort ..
- A declaration. The Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament do hereby order and declare that all commissioners of the admiralty ... army ... excise and customs ... that were in office ... the 25th day of April 1660 ... are ... required to proceed forthwith the execution of their respective commissions ....
- A decree lately made in the High Court of Starre-Chamber : after consultation had among the iudges, and certificate of their opinions in diuers things, &c. : and also a confirmation of that decree by His Sacred Maiestie, together with His Maiesties command that the same be printed, published, and put in due execution
- A decree of Starre-Chamber concerning inmates and diuided tenements in London or three miles about : made the fourteenth of February last past, 1636
- A defence and vindication of the right of tithes against sundry late scandalous pamphlets : shewing the lawfullnesse of them and the just remedy in law for them, as well in London as elsewhere
- A defence of ryme
- A defence of the Scots settlement at Darien : with an answer to the Spanish memorial against it and arguments to prove that it is the interest of England to join with the Scots and protect it : to which is added a description of the country and a particular account of the Scots colony
- A defence of the charter and municipal rights of the city of London : and the rights of other municipal cities and towns of England : directed to the citizens of London
- A description of new philosophical furnaces, or, A new art of distilling : divided into five parts : whereunto is added a description of the Tincture of gold or The true aurum potabile : also the first part of the Mineral work, set forth and published for the sakes of them that are studious of the truth
- A designe for bringing a navigable river from Rickmansworth in Hartfordshire to St. Gyles in the Fields : the benefits of it declared, and the objections against it answered
- A dialogue between a countrey gentleman and a merchant : concerning the falling of guinea's : wherein the whole argument relating to our money is discuss'd
- A dialogue between two friends : occasioned by the late revolution of affairs, and the oath of allegiance
- A diamond or rich jewel presented to the common-wealth of England for inriching of the nation : being necessary for the use of all marchants and tradesmen, and advantagious to the poor, wherein is declared a way, 1. How all forraign moneys may pass in England and gain the merchants 10 per cent ... 2. To settle a banke in London for furnishing all trades with money ... 3. To supply the nation with salt at three half pence the gallon. 4. To encrease the trade of fishing ... 5. To make England the richest nation in Europe ... 6. To save half the charges of the officers of excise and custome ... 7. To free all necessary commodities from taxes. 8. To settle an insurance office cheap ...
- A dictionary of the English language : in which the words are deduced from their originals, and illustrated in their different significations by examples from the best writers : to which are prefixed, a history of the language, and an English grammar
- A discours of husbandrie used in Brabant and Flanders : shewing the wonderfull improvement of land there, and serving as a pattern for our practice in this common-wealth
- A discourse (by way of essay) humbly offer'd to the consideration of the honourable House of Commons, towards the raising moneys by an excise : demonstrating the conveniency of raising moneys that way : together with an enumeration of some certain particular commodities, whereupon an annual receipt of one million may be presently settled, and with the same ease to the people, as any other part of His Majesty's revenue whatsoever
- A discourse betwixt Lieutenant Colonel Iohn Lilburn close prisoner in the Tower of London, and Mr Hugh Peter: upon May 25. 1649. Published by a friend, for the publick benefit
- A discourse concerning Ireland and the different interests thereof in answer to the Exon and Barnstaple petitions : shewing that if a law were enacted to prevent the exportation of woollen-manufactures from Ireland to foreign parts, what the consequences thereof would be both to England and Ireland
- A discourse concerning Puritans. : a vindication of those, who uniustly suffer by the mistake, abuse, and misapplication of that name. A tract necessary and usefull for these times
- A discourse concerning coining the new money lighter : in answer to Mr. Lock's Considerations about raising the value of money
- A discourse concerning prayer ex tempore, or, by pretence of the spirit. : In justification of authorized and set-formes of lyturgie
- A discourse concerning the fishery within the British seas and other His Majesties dominions : and more especially as it relates to the trade of the Company of the Royal Fishery of England, offered to consideration in order to subscriptions for raising a stock, for carrying on the affairs thereof upon the terms proposed
- A discourse concerning the great benefit of drayning and imbanking, and of transportation by water within the country
- A discourse concerning the illegality of the late ecclesiastical commission : in answer to The vindication and defence of it : wherein the true notion of the legal supremacy is cleared, and an account is given of the nature, original, and mischief of the dispensing power
- A discourse concerning trade, and that in particular of the East-Indies : wherein several weighty propositions are fully discussed, and the state of the East-India Company is faithfully stated
- A discourse for a king and Parliament : in four sections. Demonstrating I. The inconsistency of a free-state with the scituation of this countrey, and constitution of the people. II. Mischiefs incident to the continuance of their endeavours that act in order thereunto. III. The advantages probably attending a composure with the King of Scots. IV. Resolves to the grand objections that seeme to obstruct it. By a moderate and serious pen
- A discourse of fines : shewing by what easie (although corrupt and unlawful) method of practice it may happen that any person or his heirs in England at one time or other to be legally defrauded and disinherited by abuses in fines
- A discourse of government with relation to militia's
- A discourse of housebandrie : no lesse profitable then delectable : declaryng how by housebandrie, or rather housewiferie of hennes, for fiue hundred frankes or Frenche poundes ... once emploied one maie gaine in the yere fower thousande and fiue hundreth frankes ... written in the Frenche to