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Some clear truths particularly demonstrated unto the King and council, and both houses of Parliament, with all judges, justices, merchants, and shipmasters, why the innocent and peaceable people, called Quakers, ought not to be banished out of their native land, or any other way exposed to sufferings. Also, the law described in its nature and end. With a postscript to all honest, sober, and impartial jurors

Archive Print Item: Birkbeck Library 99.29

Details

Type of record: Book

Title: Some clear truths particularly demonstrated unto the King and council, and both houses of Parliament, with all judges, justices, merchants, and shipmasters, why the innocent and peaceable people, called Quakers, ought not to be banished out of their native land, or any other way exposed to sufferings. Also, the law described in its nature and end. With a postscript to all honest, sober, and impartial jurors

Level: Item

Classmark: Birkbeck Library 99.29

Creator(s): Smith, William (1672)

Publisher: [publisher not identified]

Publication city: London

Date(s): 1664

Language: English

Size and medium: 12 pages

Persistent link: https://explore.library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections-explore/228322

Printed items catalogue: https://leeds.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?vid=44LEE_INST:VU1&docid=alma991012422979705181

Collection group(s): Quaker Collection

Description

Attributed to William Smith. cf. BM.


Signed at end: W.S.


Indexed in: Wing S4329; Smith II, 609.

Additional description

Bound [no.29] with his: The day-spring from on high, 1659: Birkbeck Library 99.1

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