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The things that make for peace. Delivered in a sermon preached before the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor, and the Court of Aldermen, at Guild-Hall Chappel, upon the 23 of August, 1674
Sharp, John (1645-1714)
1674
Text: Rom. xiv.19. With initial imprimatur leaf.
Two speeches. I. The Earl of Shaftsbury's speech in the House of Lords the 20th. of October, 1675. II. The D. of Buckinghams speech in the House of Lords the 16th. of November 1675. Together with the protestation, and reasons of several Lords for the dissolution of this Parliament; entred [sic] in the Lords journal the day the Parliament was prorogued, Nov. 22d. 1675
Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper Earl of (1621-1683); Buckingham, George Villiers Duke of (1628-1687)
Printed Anno Domini. 1675
First edition. First and last leaf are blank. With an errata slip pasted to titlepage verso. Errata slip line 2 ends "l. 18. r." A variant reads: errata slip line 2 ends "l.18.r Lords." Drop-head ...
Two speeches. I. The Earl of Shaftsbury's speech in the House of Lords, the 20th. of October, 1675. II. The D. of Buckinghams speech in the House of Lords, the 16th. of November 1675. Together with the protestation, and reasons of several Lords for the dissolution of this Parliament; entered in the Lords journal the day the Parliament was prorogued, Nov. 22d. 1675
Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper Earl of (1621-1683); Buckingham, George Villiers Duke of (1628-1687)
Printed Anno Domini. 1675
Second edition.
A short dissertation upon that species of misgovernment called an oligarchy
Sharpe, Gregory (1713-1771)
1748
Published anonymously. Ascribed to Gregory Sharpe (OCLC, ESTC).
Remarks on the opinions of some of the most celebrated writers on Crown Law : respecting the due distinction between manslaughter and murder : Being an attempt to shew that the plea of sudden anger cannot remove the imputation and guilt of murder, when a mortal wound is wilfully given with a weapon : that the indulgence allowed by the courts to voluntary manslaughter in rencounters, and in sudden affrays and duels, is indiscriminate... With a prefatory address to the reader, concerning the depravity and folly of modern men of honour
Sharp, Granville (1735-1813)
1773
With a half-title page. Final page errata.