A27945
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The Batchellors banquet, or, A banquet for batchellors wherein is prepared sundry dainty dishes to furnish their tables curiously drest and seriously served in : [p]leasantly discoursing the variable humours of women, their quickness of wits and unsearchable deceits.
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1677
(1677)
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Wing B259; ESTC R25901
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61,402
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71
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A42026
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[Apographē storgēs], or, A description of the passion of love demonstrating its original, causes, effects, signes, and remedies / by Will. Greenwood, [Philalethēs].
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Greenwood, Will.
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1657
(1657)
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Wing G1869; ESTC R43220
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76,029
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156
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View Text
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A09402
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A discourse of the damned art of witchcraft so farre forth as it is reuealed in the Scriptures, and manifest by true experience. Framed and deliuered by M. William Perkins, in his ordinarie course of preaching, and now published by Tho. Pickering Batchelour of Diuinitie, and minister of Finchingfield in Essex. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table; one of the order and heades of the treatise; another of the texts of Scripture explaned, or vindicated from the corrupt interpretation of the aduersarie.
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Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Pickering, Thomas, d. 1625.
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1610
(1610)
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STC 19698; ESTC S114527
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101,186
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282
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A01402
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The rich cabinet furnished with varietie of excellent discriptions, exquisite charracters, witty discourses, and delightfull histories, deuine and morrall. Together with inuectiues against many abuses of the time: digested alphabetically into common places. Wherevnto is annexed the epitome of good manners, exttracted from Mr. Iohn de la Casa, Arch-bishop of Beneuenta.
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T. G., fl. 1616.; Gainsford, Thomas, d. 1624?; Della Casa, Giovanni, 1503-1556. Galateo.
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1616
(1616)
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STC 11522; ESTC S102804
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122,087
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364
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View Text
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A29205
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Schisme garded and beaten back upon the right owners shewing that our great controversy about Papall power is not a quaestion of faith but of interest and profit, not with the Church of Rome, but with the Court of Rome : wherein the true controversy doth consist, who were the first innovators, when and where these Papall innovations first began in England : with the opposition that was made against them / by John Bramhall.
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Bramhall, John, 1594-1663.
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1658
(1658)
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Wing B4232; ESTC R24144
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211,258
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494
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A35568
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A treatise proving spirits, witches, and supernatural operations, by pregnant instances and evidences together with other things worthy of note / by Meric Casaubon.; Of credulity and incredulity in things natural, civil, and divine
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Casaubon, Meric, 1599-1671.
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1672
(1672)
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Wing C815; ESTC R21714
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218,874
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336
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