Vicissituedes progresse, : with its convoy through the counties of Essex, Kent, Surrey, Sussex, and Middlesex, to Westminster and to London. By way of premonstration.
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| Language: | English |
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[17--?]
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| Series: | Early English books online.
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Vicissitudes progress, with its convoy through the counties of Essex, Kent, Surrey, Sussex, and Middlesex, to Westminster and to London. By way of premonstration.
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A booke of cookery and the order of meates to bee served to the table, both for flesh and fish days. : With many excellent way's for the dressing of all vsual sorts of meat's both bak'd boyld or rosted of flesh, fish, fowle or others with their proper sauces. As also many rare inventions in cookery for made dishes: with most notable preserves of sundry sorts of Fruits. Likewise for making many precious waters, with divers approved medicines for grievous diseases. With certaine points of husbandry, how to order oxen horses sheep hogges, & with many other necessary points for husbandmen to know.
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The trial of L[ieut]. C[ollonel]. John Lilburne, by an extraordinary or special commission, of oyer and terminer at the Guild-hall of London, the 24, 25, 26. of Octob. 1649 : being as exactly ... and taken in short hand as it was possible to be done in such a crowd and noise and transcribed with an indifferent and even hand, both in references to the Court and the Prisoner, that no matter of Fact, as it was there disclosed, might truly come to publick view. : In which is contained all the judges names, and the names of the Grand inquest, and the names of the honest jury of Life and Death : Vnto which is annexed a necessary and essential appendix ... /
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The English improver, or a new survey of husbandry. : Discovering to ye kingdome, that some land, both arrable and pasture, may be advanced double or treble; other land to a five or tenfold: and some to a twenty fold improvement: yea, some now not worth above one, or two shillings, per acree, be made worth thirty, or forty, if not more. Clearly demonstrated from principles of sound reason, ingenuity, and late but most certaine reall experiences. Held forth under six peeces of improvement: viz. 1. By floating or watering such lands as are capable thereof. 2. By reducing boggy or drowned land to found pasture. 3. By such a way of ploughing and corneing old courser pasture, as not to impoverish it; and by such a method of enclosure, as shall provide for poore, and all interests without depopulation. 4. By discovering divers materials for soyle and compost, with the nature and use of them, as both tillage and pasture be advanced as high as promised. 5. By such a new plantation of divers sorts of woods, as in twenty yeares, they shall rise more than in forty yeares naturally. 6. By a more moderate improvement of other sorts of lands, according to their capacities they lye under, by more common experiences. /
by: Blith, Walter, fl. 1649
by: Blith, Walter, fl. 1649
The compleat instructor to the flute. Containing very plain & easie directions for young beginners, with variety of ye newest & best tunes, particularly the dances, song tunes & ye rest of ye musick in the Iubilee. Also all ye minuetts, boreys, regadoons, marches, trumpett tunes and song tunes now in use, to which is added ye newest French dances perform'd at ye ball at St. Iameses on ye princes birth day last.
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Juries justified: or, A word of correction to Mr. Henry Robinson; : for his seven objections against the trial of causes, by juries of twelve men. /
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