Bibliography
This is an automatically generated bibliography describing the content of this study carrel.
- A06234
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: Orders conceiued and agreed to be published, by the Lord Mayor and aldermen of the citie of London, and the iustices of peace of the counties of Middlesex and Surrey, by direction from the Lords of His Maiesties most honourable Priuie Councell
- date: 1608.0
- words: 2671
- flesch: 59
- summary: In general, first editions of a works in English were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably Latin and Welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. IF any person visited doe fortuue , by negligent looking vnto , or by any other meanes , to come or be conuayed from a place infected , to any other place , the Parish from whence such partie hath come , or beene conuaied , vpon notice thereof giuen , shall at their charge cause the saide party so visited and escaped , to be carried and brought backe againe by night , and the parties in this case offending , to bee punished at the direction of the Alderman of the Warde , and the Iustices of the Peace respectiuely : and the house of the receiuer of such visited person , to be shutte vp for twenty daies . THat euery house visited be marked with a red Crosse of a foote long , in the middle of the Doore , euident to be seene , and with these vsuall printed wordes : that is to say , Lord haue mercy vpon vs to be set close ouer the same Crosse , there to continue vntill lawfull opening of the same house .
- keywords: alderman; bedding; bee; books; characters; citie; common; counties; doe; early; eebo; england; english; euery; examiners; honourable; house; infected; iustices; london; lord; maiesties; mayor; night; online; orders; parish; peace; persons; tcp; tei; text; vnto; vpon; watchmen; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A06236
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: Commune consilium tentum in camera Guild-hall civitatis London undecimo die Julii, anno Dom. 1612 ...
- date: 1612.0
- words: 2141
- flesch: 44
- summary: And that after the binding of such Apprentice or Apprentices in form before declared , the said Apprentice or Apprentices shall at the Charges of the Master so presenting the same Apprentice , be by the Party to whom he was bound set over before the Chamberlain of the said City of London for the time being , to the Party by whom he shall be so presented , and him shall serve the residue of his Term , to the intent that at the expiration of the said Term , the said Apprentice or Apprentices may be made free of the said Company of Painter-Stainers . And be it further Enacted , by the Authority aforesaid , That if any Person or Persons using the Art of Painting within this City or Liberties thereof , and not being free of the said Company of Painter-Stainers , shall at any time or times hereafter take any Apprentice or Apprentices bound unto himself , or in any other manner than is before declared , he or they shall forfeit for every Apprentice so bound the Sum of Twenty Pounds of lawful Money of England , to be recovered by Action of Debt , Bill , or Plaint , to be commenced and presented in the Name of the Chamberlain of the said City of London for the time being , in the King's Majesty's Court to be holden in the Chamber of the Guild-Hall of the said City , before the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the said City , wherein no Essoign or Wager of Law shall be admitted or allowed for the Defendant : City of London (England).
- keywords: aforesaid; apprentices; art; books; chamberlain; characters; city; civitatis; company; early; eebo; england; english; free; freemen; hall; london; master; milite; online; painter; painting; phase; said; stainers; tcp; tei; text; time; wardens
- versions: original; plain text
- A06237
- author: City of London (England).
- title: By the major a proclamation for the prices of tallow and candles.
- date: 1620.0
- words: 1250
- flesch: 64
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: books; candles; characters; city; early; eebo; encoding; england; english; image; london; online; oxford; partnership; phase; prices; tallow; tcp; tei; text; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A06241
- author: City of London (England). Court of Aldermen.
- title: Orders to be vsed in the time of the infection of the plague vvithin the citie and liberties of London, till further charitable prouision may be had for places of receite for the visited with infection
- date: 1625.0
- words: 3273
- flesch: 69
- summary: Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. In general, first editions of a works in English were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably Latin and Welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so.
- keywords: alderman; bee; bitch; books; chanell; charge; citie; dayes; dying; early; eebo; english; euery; family; haue; house; imprisonment; infected; infection; liberties; london; lord; orders; paine; parish; person; place; prouision; red; said; sicke; surueyers; tcp; text; time; vpon; women; xxviii
- versions: original; plain text
- A06242
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor (1624-1625 : Gore)
- title: By the major whereas the infection of the plague is daily dispersed more & more in diuers parts of this city and the liberties thereof ...
- date: 1625.0
- words: 1424
- flesch: 63
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 28787)
- keywords: books; characters; citie; city; early; eebo; england; english; houses; image; infected; infection; liberties; london; lord; online; oxford; partnership; phase; plague; said; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A06243
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: Orders heertofore conceiued and agreed to bee published by the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the citie of London and the iustices of peace of the counties of Middlesex and Surrey, by direction from the lords of His Maiesties most honourable priuie councell, and now thought fit to be reuiued, and againe published.
- date: 1625.0
- words: 2984
- flesch: 59
- summary: THat the sweeping and filth of houses to bee daily carried away by the Rakers , and that the Raker shall giue notice of his comming by the blowing of a horne , as heretofore hath beene done . THat the Laystalles be remoued as farre as may bee out of the City , and common passages , and that no Night-man or other be suffered to emptie a Vault into any Garden , neere about the City . Euery visited house to be marked .
- keywords: againe; bedding; bee; books; characters; citie; city; common; counties; direction; disease; early; eebo; english; euery; examiners; haue; house; infected; infection; iustices; london; night; orders; parish; peace; persons; plague; said; sicke; tcp; text; visited; vnto; vpon; watchmen
- versions: original; plain text
- A06248
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the mayor the right honourable the lord mayor, and his brethren the aldermen of the city of London, considering how the infection of the plague is dispersed in divers and sundry places neere about this city, doe ... command all manner of persons ... to take notice of, and obserue these seuerall articles ensuing ...
- date: 1630.0
- words: 1560
- flesch: 61
- summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A06248) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 28788) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: books; characters; citie; city; doe; early; eebo; england; english; euery; honourable; infection; liberties; london; lord; mayor; online; persons; phase; places; plague; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A06251
- author: Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks.
- title: A true report of all the burials and christnings within the city of London and the liberties thereof, from the 23. of December, 1602 to the 22. of December 1603 whereunto is added the number of euery seuerall parish, from the 14. of Iuly to the 22. of December, aswell within the citie of London and the liberties thereof, as in other parishes in the skirtes of the cittie, and out of the freedome adioyning to the cittie : according to the weekly reports made to the Kings Most Excellent Maiestie / by the Company of Parish Clearks of the same citie.
- date: 1603.0
- words: 2089
- flesch: 62
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A06251) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 27844)
- keywords: alhallowes; books; characters; christnings; church; citie; city; company; december; early; eebo; english; iune; lane; liberties; london; march; martins; mary; mighels; olaues; online; parish; parishes; plague; september; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A06259
- author: Chettle, Henry, d. 1607?
- title: A True bill of the whole number that hath died in the cittie of London, the citty of Westminster, the citty of Norwich, and diuers other places, since the time this last sicknes of the plague began in either of them, to this present month of October the sixt day, 1603 with a relation of many visitations by the plague, in sundry other forraine countries.
- date: 1603.0
- words: 2984
- flesch: 77
- summary: In the yéere 540. there began an vniuersall plague all ouer the world , that continued 50. yéeres with great violence . plague 60 From the 12 of August to the 19.
- keywords: august; books; bridewell; citty; diuers; early; eebo; english; great; hath; haue; london; norwich; number; parishes; people; pesthouse; pestilence; places; plague; septemb; sicknes; tcp; text; time; true; visitations; vvhereof; weeke; westminster; whereof; yéere
- versions: original; plain text
- A06260
- author: City of London (England).
- title: [Bill of mortality]
- date: 1621.0
- words: 1178
- flesch: 68
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A06260) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 25129)
- keywords: alhallowes; andrew; bennet; bill; books; botolph; characters; early; eebo; encoding; english; image; liberties; london; margaret; martins; mary; michael; olaues; online; oxford; parishes; partnership; peters; phase; plague; tcp; tei; text; whereof; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A06271
- author: Dekker, Thomas, ca. 1572-1632.
- title: London looke backe at that yeare of yeares 1625 and looke forvvard, vpon this yeare 1630 / written not to terrifie, but to comfort.
- date: 1630.0
- words: 6678
- flesch: 79
- summary: The Moon and her Wa●ting-ma●de .. The Death of K. I. The Death 〈…〉 The 〈…〉 graue . sh●ll make it like the vvinges of a Doue , couered with Siluer : and vvhose Feathers are like the yellovv Gold ; Say to thy Soule , it shal bee as white as the Snow in Zumon , and co●s●sse that Gods Mercy is like the mountaine of Bashan : Say to thy Health , that the Chariots vvhich God sent to guard it vvere tvventy thousand Angels , amongst whom , the Lord was as in the Sanctuary of Sinay .
- keywords: agen; angell; art; backe; bed; bee; bell; books; characters; children; church; citty; comfort; day; death; early; earth; eebo; encoding; england; english; euery; eyes; face; faire; feauer; fight; forvvard; god; gods; good; graue; great; hand; haue; health; heauen; images; iudge; kings; lay; life; london; looke; looke backe; man; mee; men; mercy; onely; online; open; ouer; owne; oxford; partnership; pestilence; phase; physitian; reason; repentance; samaria; schoole; sea; selfe; set; sicke; sicknesse; sinnes; spotted; stand; t ●; tcp; tei; text; thee; thine; thou; thy; time; vnder; vpon; vvere; vvhich; vvith; wee; world; xml; yeare; ● d; ● e; ● n; ● s; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A06473
- author: Lupton, Donald, d. 1676.
- title: London and the countrey carbonadoed and quartred into seuerall characters. By D. Lupton
- date: 1632.0
- words: 15459
- flesch: 67
- summary: The me● that keepe it are no slug● gards , but are very ready for they Watch and War● continually . Lend it a fauourable sm●le to comfort and cherish it , and it shal be the highth of my desires ; thus presenting my selfe , it , and what is , or shall be mine , to your Honor.
- keywords: aboue; actions; age; ale; alwayes; bad; beasts; bee; beholden; best; better; bin; bodies; body; books; bridge; businesse; care; characters; charges; charity; chiefe; children; church; citizens; city; common; company; countrey; court; day; deale; desire; doe; doth; drinke; early; eebo; end; england; english; euery; eyther; faces; faire; famous; feare; fellow; fish; foure; garden; giue; glory; gold; good; grace; great; ground; hand; hard; hath; haue; head; hee; heere; himselfe; honest; house; ill; imployment; inhabitants; iustice; keepe; land; law; learne; learning; leaue; lesse; life; little; liue; london; long; lord; loue; lupton; man; mans; mars; meanes; men; merry; money; musicke; nature; nay; neuer; new; newes; number; office; old; onely; ouer; owne; passe; pay; persons; pitty; place; play; pleasure; poore; preferment; pride; professors; respect; rich; right; sayd; schollers; schoole; sea; seeme; seldome; serieant; set; shee; souldiers; speake; stay; strange; streete; strength; strong; subiect; sure; tcp; tei; tenants; text; themselues; thing; thinke; thought; times; trade; true; vnder; vnto; vpon; vse; vsually; want; water; wealth; wel; wil; wine; woemen; wonder; words; work; world; worst; young; ● e; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A07877
- author: Muggins, William.
- title: Londons mourning garment, or funerall teares worne and shed for the death of her wealthy cittizens, and other her inhabitants. To which is added, a zealous and feruent prayer, with a true relation how many haue dyed of all diseases, in euery particuler parish within London, the liberties, and out parishes neere adioyning from the 14 of Iuly 1603. to the 17 of Nouember. following.
- date: 1603.0
- words: 8647
- flesch: 71
- summary: nay , then I see the Prouerbe old is true , The widdowes care is st●dious where to loue , Sith women are so fickle , men to you , LONDON laments , will ye her plaints remoue . Is there none founde , that feeles a present smart ? Nor none a liue , that can c●use Teares to flow ?
- keywords: age; alhallowes; babes; books; characters; children; christ; church; cittie; cry; day; dead; deare; death; diseases; doe; doth; dye; early; eebo; english; euery; eyes; father; foode; foorth; fresh; funerall; giue; glory; god; gods; goe; good; great; hand; hath; haue; health; heart; heauy; high; house; infant; inward; kisses; labour; lane; left; liberties; life; like; little; liue; london; long; lord; loue; louing; man; martins; mary; men; mighels; mother; mourne; mourning; nay; neere; neuer; new; onely; online; owne; oxford; paine; parents; parish; partnership; people; phase; plague; poore; power; pray; relation; remaine; rest; rich; riches; sad; selfe; set; seuerall; sight; sinnes; small; sonne; sorrowes; spare; stay; store; street; sweete; tcp; teares; tei; tender; text; thee; themselues; thine; thou; thy; times; true; vnto; voice; vpon; weake; wealthy; wee; weepe; wife; wiues; woes; worke; woulde; wrath; yeeres; zealous
- versions: original; plain text
- A13497
- author: Taylor, John, 1580-1653.
- title: Stripping, vvhipping, and pumping. Or, The five mad shavers of Drury-Lane strangely acted, and truely related. Done in the period, latter end, tayle, or rumpe of the dogged dogge-dayes, last past, August. 1638. Together with the names of the severall parties which were actors in this foule businesse.
- date: 1638.0
- words: 4106
- flesch: 52
- summary: Suppose this I●●●e had beene guilty of a fault , must these Women be their owne revengers , their owne witnesses , their owne Judges ? must they have the Law in ●●eir owne hands , thus to usurpe● 〈◊〉 wholsome Lawes , and make havo●● of a woman in this un●ill mann●●● Women shall I call them● nay , rather monsters : or else some evill spirit in their shapes , to commit such inhumane and unnaturall acts as these : such actions they be that are past example , nay ; never the like heard of , to commit such uncivill actions , and upon their owne Sexe , whose civill carriage should be example to the younger sort ; their actions were such , as I said before , that I blush to relate them , and ought not to be divulg'd no lowder than a whisper : The Heathens that knew not God would not have done the like : Hee gives a false sweete-seeming rellish to the Drunkards Cup , he ●ars the Glut●on against the day of slaughte● , he tips the Blaspheamers tongue with Oaths and Curses , he wher 's the Slanderers and backbiters speech , and makes it keene and cutting ; hee teaches the rare and ancient Ar● of Lying , ( and hath 〈◊〉 innumerable ●umber of apt 〈…〉 Scholl●●s ) hee turnes ang 〈…〉 venge , Revenge into Murd 〈…〉 to Impie●y , Truth into Theft● Love into Jealousie , Jealousie into hatred and madnesse ; and ( in a word ) to summe up all together , the Devill doth labou● dayly , and all his endeavour is wholly bent to make worke for the Hangman , and draw soules to his Infernall Kingdome .
- keywords: actions; actors; august; bee; books; businesse; characters; devill; doth; drury; early; eebo; encoding; end; english; envy; evans; hath; images; ioane; jealousie; lane; like; love; mad; man; matter; mistris; night; online; owne; oxford; partnership; past; period; phase; pumpe; pumping; razor; reason; shavers; shee; stripping; taverne; tcp; tei; text; time; truth; wicked; wife; withall; women; works; xml; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A20054
- author: Dekker, Thomas, ca. 1572-1632.
- title: The dead tearme. Or, VVestminsters complaint for long vacations and short termes Written in manner of a dialogue betweene the two cityes London and Westminster. The contentes of this discourse is in the page following. By T. Dekker.
- date: 1608.0
- words: 18815
- flesch: 68
- summary: Howsoeuer ( out of the fashion of Confe●●●es , or out of a pride to shew my wit ) I haue checkt thée for de●ecting thy Spirits for any stroakes of calamity , yet beléeue me , the care that I haue of my Children , whom I sée drooping , Conquers the height of my minde , subdues my Nature , 〈…〉 me ( with sorrow ) almost the gra●●ling on the ground . A merrie lest of two London Porters performed there , about burying of a Londo●●● .
- keywords: a20054; able; aboue; againe; age; art; backe; bee; beene; beginning; beléeue; best; better; bin; bloud; blow; bodies; body; books; bosome; breath; builded; buildings; care; cause; chamber; characters; children; citties; citty; common; company; complaint; confesse; crosse; crowne; cut; daily; daughter; day; dayes; dead; death; dekker; diseases; diuine; doe; doth; drinke; driuen; early; earth; edward; eebo; end; england; english; euen; euery; eyes; fall; feare; foote; foure; french; frée; gaue; giue; glory; goe; good; goodly; great; greater; greatest; hadde; hand; handes; happy; hast; hath; haue; head; heart; heauen; hee; henry; high; himselfe; holy; honour; house; image; iohn; king; kingdome; kinges; kéepe; land; large; law; layde; length; lie; life; like; little; london; long; loue; low; lye; lyes; man; mans; mee; memory; men; mother; mée; names; nations; nature; nay; neuer; new; noble; notes; nowe; number; o thou; old; onely; open; ouer; owne; oxford; page; paradox; pen; people; place; plague; poore; praise; present; pride; princely; princes; queenes; raigne; religion; rest; reuerend; rich; royall; saxons; second; selfe; set; sets; seuerall; shee; siluer; sinnes; sonne; sorrow; souldiers; soule; stand; state; stew; stone; strength; strike; sée; tcp; tearme; tei; tell; text; thee; themselues; theyr; thine; thou; thou art; thy; thée; time; true; vacations; vnder; vnto; voyce; vpon; vppe; water; way; wealth; wee; westminster; whilest; wife; wish; woman; woorthy; worke; world; yea; yeares; young; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A20060
- author: Dedekind, Friedrich, d. 1598. Grobianus.
- title: The guls horne-booke: By T. Deckar
- date: 1609.0
- words: 17313
- flesch: 56
- summary: Besides , it will adde much to your fame to let your tongue walke faster then your téeth , though you be neuer so hungry , and rather then you should sit like a dumb Coxcomb , to repeat by heart , either some verses of your owne , or of any other mans stretching euen very good lines vpon the rack of censure , though it be against all law , honestie or conscience , it may chaunce saue you the price of your Ordinary , & be●et you other Suppliments . There was then neither the Spanish slop , nor the Skippers galligas●● : the Switzers blistred Cod-péece , nor the Danish sléeue , sagging downe like a Welsh wallet , the Italians close strosser , nor the French standing coller : your trebble-quadruple Daedalian ruffes , nor your stiffe necked Rebatoes ( that haue more arches for pride to row vnder , then can stand vnder fiue London Bridges ) durst not then set themselues out in print : for the pattent for starch could by no meanes bee signd .
- keywords: aboue; againe; alowd; apparell; bare; bed; bee; belly; best; better; betwéene; body; booke; braine; breath; bée; cap; chamber; chap; characters; church; cittie; clothes; coach; cold; companies; company; complement; cost; councell; country; court; courtier; creation; crowne; custome; danger; day; delicate; desperate; dice; dinner; discourse; doe; doore; downe; drawers; drinke; eares; early; eebo; english; euen; euery; excellent; eye; eyes; face; fairest; fare; fashion; father; fellow; fit; fiue; fooles; foure; french; frée; féete; gallant; generall; gentleman; giue; golden; good; goose; great; guls; haire; halfe; hand; hang; hath; haue; hauing; head; health; heart; hee; himselfe; hold; horne; horses; houres; house; héere; indéede; iudgement; knights; kéepe; labour; laugh; law; life; like; lodging; london; long; lord; loue; man; mans; mary; matter; meanes; meate; men; middle; money; morning; mouth; naked; neuer; new; night; number; old; onely; open; ordinary; ouer; pay; peace; penny; physicke; play; poet; powles; praise; present; purse; péece; question; reason; reckoning; rest; roome; satten; schoole; selfe; set; siluer; sir; sléepe; sound; stage; stand; strong; stuffe; suit; sure; swéet; séene; table; tauerne; tcp; tei; text; thine; thou; thy; thée; time; tobacco; tongue; true; turne; téeth; vnder; vnto; vpon; vse; walke; want; warme; watch; wil; wine; wit; women; world; worse; y e; yard; yeare; yong; ● e; ● y; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A20067
- author: Dekker, Thomas, ca. 1572-1632.
- title: A knights coniuring Done in earnest: discouered in iest. By Thomas Dekker.
- date: 1607.0
- words: 21492
- flesch: 57
- summary: WH●●● the 〈◊〉 man was plying his Fares , & following his thrift , the wandring knight , ( Syr Dago●● ) hauing d●●patch't with the 〈…〉 that hee 〈…〉 hee went , was ●ust at that time walking in one of the 〈◊〉 Gardens ; hee meant to take that in his waye , But the internall lawes barring him from entrance into those sacred palaces , he wa●●ed the other to him , and ●hen related ( verbatim ) his maisters answere and resolution : which the Suppliant receiues ( considering he was now where he would be ) with as ●●we words as hee was wont to carry pence in his pu●s● . WOnder is the daughter of Ignorance , none bu●●ooles will maruell , how I and this Grand Sophy of the whore of Babilon came to be to familiar together , or how we met , or howe I knewe where to find him , or what Charmes I carried about mee whil'st I talkt with him , or where ( if one had occasion to vse his Diuellsh●p ) a Porter might fetch him with a wet finger .
- keywords: able; aboue; acheron; action; anie; b ●; bare; battaile; bee; beeing; bene; best; better; betweene; bin; blacke; bloud; boat; bodies; body; books; breath; brokers; calld; cast; chamber; chap; characters; charon; cheekes; children; church; colours; common; companie; coniuring; conscience; countrey; court; creation; danger; day; death; dekker; diuell; doe; doth; dreadfull; early; earth; edition; eebo; elements; encoding; end; ende; england; english; euen; euery; eyes; face; fall; fare; fashions; fathers; fellowes; ferry; fire; france; french; furie; gaue; gentleman; giue; glad; gods; goe; gold; good; great; ground; halfe; hall; hand; hard; hath; haue; hauing; head; health; hearts; heauen; hee; heere; hell; himselfe; hold; hope; horne; hot; house; howe; hung; images; item; kings; knewe; knight; knowne; labour; land; language; large; lead; learning; leaue; left; life; light; like; little; liue; london; long; longer; looke; loue; lust; lye; lyes; mad; maister; man; mans; mary; matter; meanes; mee; men; miles; mischiefe; money; muses; musicke; nature; nay; neuer; newes; nowe; number; o ●; olde; onely; online; open; ouer; owne; oxford; pa ●; partnership; passengers; pay; pence; penny; petition; phase; place; plague; players; poets; poore; post; purpose; quarter; quoth; reader; readie; ready; reason; red; rest; rich; riuer; runne; sayes; schollers; sculler; sea; second; sessions; set; seuerall; shee; shew; shore; siluer; sinnes; soldiers; sonne; soules; speake; spirits; stand; strange; streame; sun; supplication; sure; sweet; syr; tcp; tei; tell; temple; text; th ●; thee; themselues; therfore; thē; thing; thomas; thou; thought; thy; time; trades; trees; true; turne; vnder; vnlesse; vpon; vse; vsurer; vtter; wa ●; water; waterman; way; wee; westminster; whil'st; wide; wife; wits; women; words; work; world; worse; worship; xml; yea; yeeres; young; ● d; ● e; ● ing; ● n; ● r; ● rs; ● s; ● t; ● u; ● y; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A20080
- author: Dekker, Thomas, ca. 1572-1632.
- title: A rod for run-awayes Gods tokens, of his feareful iudgements, sundry wayes pronounced vpon this city, and on seuerall persons, both flying from it, and staying in it. Expressed in many dreadfull examples of sudden death ... By Tho. D.
- date: 1625.0
- words: 9482
- flesch: 73
- summary: The braue Parlors , stately dining-Roomes , and rich Chambers to lye in , which many of our Citizens had here in London , are now turned to Hay-lofts , Apple-lofts , Hen-roosts , and Back-houses , no better then to keepe Hogges in : I doe not say in all places , but a number that are gone downe , and were lodged daintily heere , wish themselues at home , ( as complayning Letters testifie ) An ample Volume might be sent downe to you in the Country , of dismall and dreadfull Accidents ; not onely here within London , but more in the Townes round about vs. Death walkes in euery street : How many step out of their Beds into their Coffins ? And albeit , no man at any time is assured of life , yet no man ( within the memory of man ) was euer so neere death as now : because he that breakes his fast , is dead before dinner ; and many that dine , neuer eat supper more .
- keywords: art; awayes; backe; bee; behold; better; body; brother; childe; church; city; clothes; comming; country; day; dead; death; doe; doores; dreadfull; dyed; earth; eebo; english; euery; eyes; feare; fellow; fields; fiue; flye; foure; gentleman; giue; gods; goe; good; graue; great; hath; haue; hauing; health; heart; heauen; hee; home; houses; iudgements; keepe; kingdome; leaue; life; like; little; london; londoners; looke; man; mercy; miles; money; mother; nation; neere; neighbours; neuer; numbers; open; ouer; pay; people; pestilence; place; plague; poore; ready; rich; round; run; sent; set; shee; sicke; sinne; soules; stand; street; sudden; sword; tcp; text; thee; thou; thy; time; tokens; towne; vpon; wee; woman; yeeres
- versions: original; plain text
- A20082
- author: Dekker, Thomas, ca. 1572-1632.
- title: The seuen deadly sinnes of London drawne in seuen seuerall coaches, through the seuen seuerall gates of the citie bringing the plague with them. Opus septem dierum. Tho: Dekker.
- date: 1606.0
- words: 34834
- flesch: 62
- summary: In Sommer , it goes alone by the motion of wheeles : two Pages in light coloured suites , embrodered full of Butterflies , with wings ●●at slutter vp with the winde , run by him , the one being a dauncing boy the other a T●●●bler : His attend●nts are Folly ▪ Laughter , Inconstancie , Riot , Nicenesse , and Vainglorie : when his Court remoues hee is folowed by Tobacconists , Shittlecock-makers , Feather-makers , Cob-web-lawne-weauers , Perfumers , young Countrie Gentlemen , and Fooles . In doing which we know not vpon what Speeding points wee runne , for you ( that are Readers ) are the most despe●ate and fowlest players in the world , you will strike when a mans backe is toward you , and kill him ( if you ●ould for shame ) when he lies vnder your feete .
- keywords: a20082; able; aboue; againe; age; apishnesse; armes; army; arrowes; art; backe; bags; bankrupt; bare; base; battaile; beasts; bed; bee; begger; best; better; betwéene; bin; birth; bloud; body; bones; borne; bosome; braue; breake; breath; broken; brokers; buildings; béeing; béene; candle; cast; cause; certaine; chariot; children; church; cities; cittie; cittizens; city; ciuill; close; coach; cold; colours; comfort; comming; common; companies; company; conscience; couetousnesse; councellors; countries; country; couple; court; cowardly; crueltie; cruelty; curses; custome; cut; damned; danger; dangerous; daughter; day; dayes; dead; deadly; death; defiance; dekker; desperate; diseases; diuell; doe; dominions; dores; doth; downe; drawne; durst; dutch; eares; earth; eebo; empresse; end; enemies; enemy; england; english; entrance; euerie; euery; eye; eyes; face; fall; famine; father; feare; fellow; fellowes; field; fire; fooles; french; fresh; frée; garden; gates; gaue; gentlemen; giue; glorious; goe; gold; golden; good; great; greater; greatest; ground; guilty; halfe; hands; hanging; hard; hast; hath; haue; hauing; head; heades; heart; heate; heauen; heere; height; hell; herselfe; high; himselfe; home; honour; hope; horse; houses; howe; hye; indéede; inhabitants; ioy; irish; iron; kingdome; kings; knights; knowne; kéepe; lady; land; large; late; law; lawes; leaue; left; length; life; light; like; list; little; liue; liuing; london; long; looke; lords; loue; low; lye; lyes; lying; maisters; man; mans; march; meanes; men; mens; mercers; miserable; money; moste; mother; mouth; musicke; names; nations; nay; neuer; new; noble; number; oftentimes; old; onely; open; order; ouer; paire; parsimonie; pay; people; place; plague; play; players; pleasure; politick; poore; pouerties; pouerty; presence; pride; princes; princesse; prisoners; proud; purpose; quarrell; quarter; queene; ready; reason; receiue; red; resolution; rest; rich; riches; rotten; running; saue; scarce; schollers; scorne; second; seene; selfe; seruants; serue; seruice; set; seuen; seuerall; sh ●; shame; shee; shew; shillings; shop; shot; sicknes; sides; siluer; sinne; slaues; sloth; slothfull; soeuer; soldiers; sonnes; soueraigne; sound; speake; spirits; stand; standing; state; stead; strange; strangers; streete; strength; strike; strong; subiects; sée; t ●; tcp; terrible; text; th ●; thee; themselues; therfore; theyr; thē; thine; thou; thou art; thought; thy; thée; time; title; trades; triumph; troopes; true; truth; turne; venture; vices; vnder; vnlesse; vnto; vowed; vpon; vse; walke; walles; want; warre; waters; way; wealth; weary; wee; wert; whilest; wife; wil; wise; wit; wiues; women; worke; world; wrong; y ●; yea; yong; yéeres; ● d; ● e; ● o; ● s; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A20087
- author: Dekker, Thomas, ca. 1572-1632.
- title: A strange horse-race at the end of which, comes in the catch-poles masque. And after that the bankrouts banquet: vvhich done, the Diuell, falling sicke, makes his last will and testament, this present yeare. 1613. VVritten by Thomas Dekker.
- date: 1613.0
- words: 16669
- flesch: 71
- summary: Euen likewise 〈◊〉 contrary par●● are there no obiects of triumph , ( a●●ashe● presentations , banquets , and such like ) how glorious soeuer of themselues , but may haue their splendor and dignity ●eightned by a comparatiue tra●●cing of things in the same rank● and qualitie . For as he himselfe goes prowling vp and downe for his Prey , so do these take after him , and play their parts so well , that all Hell routes with ●●ughing , and rings with giuing them plaudits .
- keywords: a20087; able; aboue; ambition; backe; bad; bankrouts; banquet; bee; best; better; bloud; body; books; braue; bread; breake; breath; brokers; c ●; catch; cause; changes; characters; chariot; children; close; cold; comfits; common; company; conscience; content; cost; country; cut; d ●; daughters; day; dead; dekker; dishes; diuell; doe; drawne; drinke; early; earth; eebo; elements; emperours; end; english; euery; eye; eyes; faces; fall; father; fellowes; fire; foure; gallant; giue; glory; going; gold; good; grand; great; hands; hard; hath; haue; hauing; heads; heart; hee; heere; heires; hell; himselfe; hold; home; horse; hospitality; houses; hypocrisie; hée; images; ingratitude; item; keepe; land; lay; left; legacy; life; light; like; little; long; loue; mad; maister; maker; man; masque; masquers; mee; men; mens; money; musicke; names; neuer; new; notes; number; old; online; open; ouer; owne; page; parts; pay; people; persons; phase; picture; play; pleasure; poll; pols; poore; present; pride; princes; purpose; quality; r ●; race; ready; reason; rest; rich; roaring; roman; round; run; running; sea; second; set; sets; shee; shew; shop; siluer; sort; soules; sowre; state; strange; sure; sweete; sword; sée; taylor; tcp; tei; testament; text; theaters; thee; themselues; thing; thinke; thomas; thou; time; title; triumph; vertues; vnder; vnto; vpon; way; wealth; weary; wee; white; wilde; wine; wings; world; yeare; ● e; ● s; ● t; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A20094
- author: Dekker, Thomas, ca. 1572-1632.
- title: The vvonderfull yeare. 1603 Wherein is shewed the picture of London, lying sicke of the plague. At the ende of all (like a mery epilogue to a dull play) certaine tales are cut out in sundry fashions, of purpose to shorten the liues of long winters nights, that lye watching in the darke for vs.
- date: 1603.0
- words: 18243
- flesch: 51
- summary: With this learned Oration the Cobler was tutord : layd his singer on his mouth , and cried paucos palabros : he had sealed her pardon , and therefore bid her not feare : héervpon he named the malefactor , I could name him too , but that he shall liue to giue more Coblers heads the Bastinado . And told , that on such a night when he supt there ( for a Lord may sup with a clobler , that hath a pretty wench to his wife ) when the cloth , O treachero●s linnen ! was taken vp , and Menelaus had for a parting blow , giuen the other his fist : downe she lights ( this half-sharer ) opening the wicket , but not shutting him out of the wicket , but conu●is him into a byroom ( being the wardrob of old shooes and leather ) from whence the vnicorne cobler ( that dream● of no such spirits ) being ouer head and eares in sléepe , his snorting giuing the signe that he was cock-sure , softly out-steales sir Paris , and to Helenaes téeth prooued himselfe a true Troian . Ianus ( that beares two faces vnder one hood ) made a very mannerly lowe legge , and ( because he was the onely Porter at that gate ) presented vnto this King of the Moneths , all the New-yeares gifts , which were more in number , and more worth then those that are giuen to the great Turke , or the Emperour of Persia : on went Vertumnus in his lustie progresse , Priapus , Flora , the Dryades , and Ha●●adryades , with all the woodden rabble of those that drest Orchards & Gardens , perfuming all the wayes that he went , with the swéete Odours that breathed from flowers ; hearbes and trées , which now began to péepe out of prison : by vertue of which excellent aires , the skie got a most cleare completion ; lookte s●●g and smoothe , and had not so much as a wart st●●king on her face : the Sunne likewise was freshly and very richly apparelled in cloth of gold like a Bridegroome , and in stead of gilded Rosemary , the hornes of the Ramme , ( being the signe of that celestiall bride house where he lay , to be marryed to the Spring ) were not like your common hornes parcell gilt , but double double-gilt , with the liquid gold that melted from his beames , for ioy wereof the Larke sung at his windowe euery morning , the Nightingale euery nighte the Cuckooe ( like a single sole Fidler , that réeles from Tauerne to Tauerne ) plide it all the day long : Lambes friskte vp and downe in the vallies , Kids and Goates leapt too and fro on the Mountaines : Shepheards sat piping , country wenches singing : Louers made Sonnets for their Lasses , whilest they made Garlands for their Louers : And as the Country was frolike , so was the Citie mery : Oliue Trées ( which grow no where but in the Garden of peace ) stood ( as common as Béech does at Midsomer ) at euery mans doore , braunches of Palme were in euery mans hand : Stréetes were full of people , people full of ioy : euery house séemde to haue a Lorde of misrule in it , in euery house there was so much ●ollity : no Scritch-Owle frighted the silly Countryman at midnight , nor any Drum the Citizen at noone-day ; but all was more calme than a still water , all husht , as if the Spheres had bene playing in Consort :
- keywords: able; againe; amazed; appeare; backe; bed; behold; bene; better; blood; body; booke; breath; bride; bée; calling; cast; casting; certaine; characters; children; church; chéekes; citie; citizen; cobler; cold; come; comfort; common; company; countrey; creation; cut; darke; day; dead; death; doores; double; downe; driuen; durst; dwell; eares; early; earth; edition; eebo; encoding; end; ende; england; english; epilogue; ere; euen; euery; eye; eyes; face; fall; farre; fashion; field; fire; fooles; foote; fresh; friend; generall; giue; glad; god; goe; gold; good; graue; great; ground; halfe; hall; hand; handes; hard; hast; hath; haue; hauing; head; health; heart; heauen; hee; hell; himselfe; home; honest; house; husband; hée; héeles; images; indéed; infection; iustice; king; kéepe; lay; layd; length; life; lines; little; liue; liuing; london; londoner; long; lord; loue; louers; lye; mad; maister; makes; man; mans; mary; men; mens; mery; money; morning; muses; names; neuer; new; night; nose; number; o ●; onely; online; open; ouer; oxford; pale; paper; parish; partnership; people; pestilence; phase; picture; place; plague; play; poore; powles; purpose; queene; ranne; reader; ready; reason; rest; rich; roome; rosemary; saint; saue; second; set; sextons; shew; shillings; shot; shée; sicke; sicknes; siluer; small; sore; soule; sound; spring; stand; stead; stoode; strange; stuffe; sun; sure; sée; tales; tcp; tei; text; themselues; thine; thomas; thou; thrust; thrée; thy; time; tinker; title; true; turne; valiant; vnder; vpon; water; way; went; white; wife; wilde; wits; wonder; wonderfull; works; world; wormes; worse; worth; xml; yeare; ● e; ● s; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A20101
- author: Dekker, Thomas, ca. 1572-1632.
- title: Iests to make you merie with the coniuring vp of Cock VVatt, (the walking spirit of Newgate) to tell tales. Vnto which is added, the miserie of a prison, and a prisoner. And a paradox in praise of serieants. Written by T.D. and George Wilkins.
- date: 1607.0
- words: 22275
- flesch: 56
- summary: Now to our Foysts , alias , pickpocket , alias cutpurse , he has as many alias as a good gentleman of Wales ▪ and indéede is as good a benefactor to the alehouse hee consists of an army of three strong ▪ namely , foystes and snaps , his common wealth to liue in , or ground to encamp in , is the antient great grand father Powles , & all other little churches his children , besides Parish garden , or rather ( places of more benefit ) publick , & by your leaue priuat play houses Westminster hall is his good soyle , the dark entry going to the Six clarcks office , in chancary lau● his in the tearme time his deere and speciall good friend , London bridge his bountifull benefactor , all markets are his pur●eiors , and carefully prouide for him all faires his diligent factors , that bring him in his prouision in abundance , all pockets his exchequor , that are neuer shut against him , progr●sses his true paymaisters , though they pay seldome-in y ● Court or cock-pit , though the King himselfe be there , he dare incounter , he pri●e●●●ges no person , nor no place exempt with him , only the Exchange excepted , for saies he , where merchants méete , is no méeting for vs , If they once take vs , we are sure tog● to the old turn , for they are men deale all with great store of money , & very little mercy , the times when his skirmishes are hottest , is y ● time when they run attilt , is the day the Lord Mayor takes his oath , a new play , or whē some great cause is hard at the Star Chamber , now for the person himselfe that dus pick the pocket , and his ministers about him that giue furtherance to the action . if it bee seasoned with iudgement : but if with too much tar●ness● , it is hardly disgested but turne to quarrel .
- keywords: alwaies; art; askt; bed; bee; best; better; bin; books; boy; béeing; béene; c ●; cald; care; certaine; chamber; characters; children; citie; cock; comfort; comming; commodities; common; company; constable; corner; country; cut; day; death; doe; dogs; doth; downe; drunke; early; eebo; end; england; english; euen; euery; f ●; face; fellow; fire; fit; foole; foure; foyst; friends; g ●; gentleman; giue; god; goe; going; good; great; halfe; hand; hard; hath; haue; hauing; head; heart; hee; hell; himselfe; home; honest; hope; house; husband; iest; ill; images; ius ●; iustice; knaue; kéepe; l ●; late; law; leaue; lie; life; like; little; lodging; london; long; looke; lord; loue; lye; m ●; mad; maide; maister; man; mans; market; mary; matter; meanes; men; minde; miserable; mistres; money; morning; nature; nay; neere; neuer; new; newgate; night; note; o ●; offer; old; onely; open; ouer; paper; passe; payd; person; place; play; players; pocket; poore; present; prison; prisoner; purpose; purse; quoth; ready; reason; rest; rich; saies; sayd; scarce; second; seene; sergiants; serieants; seruant; seruingman; sessions; seuerall; shee; shew; shift; shop; sir; soldiers; soone; spare; speake; spirit; stall; stand; steale; stept; straight; strange; strong; sure; tauerne; tcp; tearme; tei; text; th ●; thee; themselues; thing; thinke; thou; thrée; thy; théeues; time; trade; true; truth; turne; vnder; vnto; vpon; vse; walke; wares; water; watt; way; wench; whore; wife; wine; wise; withall; woman; words; worke; world; worth; y ●; yong; ● ck; ● d; ● e; ● es; ● ing; ● ke; ● ll; ● n; ● r; ● res; ● s; ● st; ● t; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A22510
- author: Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649.
- title: By the King a proclamation for the better discouery and apprehension of those malefactors, who were actors in the late insolent riots and murders committed in Fleetstreet, London, vpon Friday, the tenth day of this instant moneth of Iuly.
- date: 1629.0
- words: 1550
- flesch: 59
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A22510) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 28694)
- keywords: actors; bee; books; characters; day; early; eebo; england; english; fleetstreet; friday; instant; iuly; king; late; london; malefactors; moneth; online; phase; riots; tcp; tei; tenth; text; vpon
- versions: original; plain text
- A22610
- author: Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649.
- title: Charles by the grace of God, king of England, Scotland, France & Ireland, defender of the faith, &c., to all and singular archbishops, bishops, archdeacons, deanes, and their officials ... to whome these presents shall come, greeting whereas we are credibly giuen to vnderstand, that by reason of grieuous visitation in this time of the great contagion of the plague amongst our poore subiects ...
- date: 1636.0
- words: 2081
- flesch: 53
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 28827)
- keywords: books; characters; charles; cities; collection; counties; early; eebo; england; english; great; haue; infection; king; london; middlesex; online; phase; places; plague; poore; reason; reliefe; said; singular; subiects; tcp; tei; text; time; townes; westminster
- versions: original; plain text
- A26164
- author: Atwood, William, d. 1705?
- title: Additions answering the omissions of our reverend author
- date: 1681.0
- words: 9590
- flesch: 63
- summary: that King John's Charter was either declarative of the Law as 't was before , or introductive of a new Law. 'T will be urg'd that when the King appointed but one for every County , they were impowr'd to consent to what de Communi Consilio contigerit ordinari , and that such a Council made Laws , as the Statute of the Staple made the 21 of E. 3. to which the answer is very obvious , that they made only Ordinances , not Laws , and that these were Magna Consilia , taken in a sense totally different from the Generalia Concilia , or Parliaments , and all this appears above the power and subtilty of our learned Doctors Evasions , in that the Record cited by himself in the 26 E. 3. calls the Assembly they are Summon'd to , Concilium only , and an Act of Parliament in the twenty eight of that King calls what was done in the twenty seven Ordinances , and that meeting a Great Council , Magnum Concilium ; but such a Council it was , and its Resolutions such meer Ordinances ( the distinction of which from Acts is well known ) that that very next Parliament finds it needful to confirm , and give them the force of a Law.
- keywords: 1st; aid; angliae; answer; argument; author; authority; barons; book; c. p.; capite; cestriae; characters; charge; charter; chief; city; common; conquest; consent; council; counties; county; cuidam; cum; demeasns; design; doctor; early; eebo; ejusdem; english; escuage; filio; freeholders; general; good; government; great; great council; heredi; homines; ipso; jani; john; king; king john; kingdom; knights; land; law; laws; libere; london; lords; man; meaning; members; military; milites; new; obscure; omissions; page; parliament; persons; petyt; places; power; precarious; privy; proof; proprietors; publick; qui; quod; reason; record; regis; regni; representatives; right; sense; service; shews; summon'd; tallage; tax; taxes; tcp; tei; tenents; tenure; text; time; understanding; viz; william; writs; years; yields
- versions: original; plain text
- A26181
- author: Atwood, William, d. 1705?
- title: The rights and authority of the Commons of the city of London in their Common-hall assembled, particularly in the choice and discharge of their sheriffs, asserted and cleared in answer to the vindication of the Lord-Mayor, Court of Aldermen, and Common-Council.
- date: 1695.0
- words: 25037
- flesch: 63
- summary: -- Court of Common Council. But Rice not being to be found , such Persons as were of the Common-Council were again ordered to resort up to their Place accustomed to Council ; where it was ordered , that every Citizen who had dep●●●ed out of the City since the Friday before , should forfeit 20 l.
- keywords: act; acts; advice; aldermen; antient; arch; authority; body; cart; case; certain; chamber; charter; choice; chuse; cities; citizens; city; civ; colour; common; common assent; common council; common hall; common law; commonalty; confirm'd; consent; contrary; council; counsel; county; court; custom; day; discharge; discharging; election; electors; eligible; eliz; english; entries; evident; excuce; express; farther; form; free; freemen; general; gild; good; great; greater; guildhall; hall; having; honest; john; judges; judgment; king; late; laws; legal; lib; liberties; like; livery; livery common; london; long; lord; making; man; manner; matter; mayor; mysteries; mystery; nature; new; number; oath; office; order; ordinance; parliament; penalty; people; persons; place; possession; power; present; present common; pretended; question; reason; reign; representation; resolution; richmond; right; rot; rowlet; said; said city; self; set; sheriffs; sufficient; tcp; text; things; time; town; true; vid; vindicator; void; ward; words; year
- versions: original; plain text
- A26409
- author: Adis, Henry.
- title: A declaration of a small society of baptized believers, undergoing the name of Free-willers, about the city of London
- date: None
- words: 6915
- flesch: 61
- summary: To this we cannot but answer , that so to●…e Judge were not so much as Common humanity , much less religion or Christianity ; but our Religion is , pure and undefi●… before God and our father , which is to visit the fatherless and widdowes , not to make fatherless and widdowes ; and to visit them in ●…eir afflictions , not to murther and destroy their Relations , to bring them under afflictions : but to this we further answer , that t●… and the fourth particular we judge seem to contradict one another , for murthering and destroying for difference in matters of R●…igion , and liberty of conscience cannot stand together , nor in the eye of reason can they be charged against one and the same per●…ns , for murthering and destroying for difference in matters of religion , destroyes liberty of conscience , & liberty of conscience sw●…ows up & drowns murthering , & destroying for difference in matters of religion ; so that it argues , that the assertors of these things ●…re yet in Babylon and confusion , with those our Apostle writ of ; in 1 Tim. 1.7 . To the second , That we would destroy the publick Ministry of the Nation , that differ from us in some things about Religion ; We do declare , that if there be a destruction intended between us , we must leave it at their doors , and desire them to Judge between the al-seeing God the searcher of all hearts and their own consciences , what they have intended by their so often pressing Parliament men from time to time , for a suppression of all that are not of their Judgment in matters of Religion : and upon search made , if they find themselves guilty of a desire of any such destruction to us , we shall beg them in Gods fear , to break off that evil by timely repentance , and make their pe●ce with God ; as for our parts , we are so far from desiring any revenge against them , or any other that shall desire or endeavour our ruin , as that in the presence of God , we shall rather pitty then envie them , and according to the requirement of our Law-giver , Mat. 5.44 .
- keywords: account; adis; answer; apostle; blood; books; christ; conscience; cor; day; declaration; declare; desire; duty; ecclesiastical; eebo; english; ephes; god; good; hath; henry; iohn; isa; judge; judgment; liberty; london; lord; love; man; mat; matters; men; mind; miscarriages; particular; people; persons; presence; publick; religion; rom; scriptures; selves; set; souls; spirit; sword; tcp; text; things; tim; time; true; truth; vers; works; world
- versions: original; plain text
- A28134
- author: Biddle, Ester.
- title: A warning from the Lord God of life and power unto thee o city of London, and to the suburbs round about thee : to call thee and them to repentance & amendment of life, without which you cannot see God : be ye separated from your priests, and from your idolatrous worship, and touch not the unclean thing, that the Lord may receive you ... and something also to the scattered seed of God, which hath been held in bondage under Pharaoh the Task-master : who am hated by the unwise, and foolish in heart, and am reproachfully call'd a Quaker / Ester Biddle.
- date: 1660.0
- words: 10646
- flesch: 23
- summary: what wouldst thou give for peace with God , when thy day shall be turned into darness , & thy table shall be made a snare unto thee , and thou shalt be like the hearth in the Wildernesse , which seeth not when good cometh , thy lovers shall pass away , & trouble shall compass thee round about ; then if thou hadst the whole world thou wouldst give it for peace with God , but then will thy day be sealed up , and there will be no place found for repentance ; therefore I desire thee in the dreadful power of God , put not the day of the Lord afar off , but let the Sword of the Lord cut down , and the fire burn up all that is contrary to God ; and away with thy Idols , down with thy Images , pluck down thy high places , for the Lord will be avenged of thy Groves , thy strong Okes , and tall Cedars , and he will ride upon thy high hills , and thy fenced City will he lay waste ; and he will ease the innocent , and deliver the oppressed , thy prison doors shall be broke up , and the bonds of iniquity burst asunder , the agreement made with hell and death will be disannulled ; and though many of us have been halled out of your Mass-houses , and have been halled before Magistrates , both by Papists and Protestants ; yet know this , that our God in whom we trust , he lives for ever , and he sits as Judge amongst the Gods . remember how the Lord overtook the old world in their evil deeds , he came upon them as a thief in the night , when they little thought of him , he took them eating and drinking , Marrying , and giving in marriage , and he repented that ever he made man upon the Earth , and he overtu●ned them in his fiery wrath , and in his fiery indignation , he spared not Jerusalem , wherein his Temple was built ; and dost thou think that the Lord will spare thee ? I am afraid the Lord will overturn thee in flames of fire , as he did them in their gain-sayings : Therefore amend thy life while it is to day , and prize the short moment of time which thou hast yet to spend , least God cast thee into Hell , which is prepared for the wicked and abominable .
- keywords: blessed; christ; city; coming; day; death; doth; drink; dust; earth; estate; fallen; fire; friends; glorious; glory; god; gods; good; habitation; hand; hath; heart; heaven; holy; honor; immortal; judgement; judges; kingdome; know; lamb; land; life; light; london; lord; lord god; love; man; men; old; peace; people; power; priests; pure; religion; repent; repentance; righteous; righteousness; rulers; sea; seed; short; sin; son; soul; spirit; streets; text; thee; thee o; thing; thou; thy; time; truth; vain; way; wicked; words; world; worship; wrath
- versions: original; plain text
- A29648
- author: Bromley, Richard.
- title: The case of Richard Bromley as to his being concern'd in city affairs / humbly offered to the consideration of the Lord Mayor, Aldermen and Common-council in answer to the reflections of Colonel Pierce.
- date: 1700.0
- words: 2682
- flesch: 58
- summary: IT is amongst other Things Enacted , That the Chamberlain of this City , for the time being , shall from henceforth pay unto the Lord Mayor of the City of London , for the time being , the Sum of 40 l. per Annum out of the Profits of the King's Beams , in Consideration of the Advantages , &c. formerly accruing to the Lord Mayors of this City , and that all other Profits to be made and raised out of the Duties of the said Beams ( all necessary Charges being first deducted ) shall wholly be to the Vse of the Mayor and Commonalty , and Citizens of this City , to be paid and accounted for accordingly , to the Chamberlain of the said City , for the time being , and to no other Vse or Purpose whatsoever : And all other Acts of Common-Council repugnant hereunto , are by the said Act Repealed , Annulled , and made Void , to all Intents and Purposes whatsoever . Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: act; aforesaid; aldermen; beams; books; bromley; case; characters; city; colonel; committee; common; consideration; council; court; early; eebo; english; farmers; fees; lord; mayor; partnership; pounds; richard; said; sir; tcp; tei; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A29768
- author: Brown, Thomas, 1663-1704.
- title: Amusements serious and comical, calculated for the meridian of London by Mr. Brown.
- date: 1700.0
- words: 29456
- flesch: 68
- summary: One would be apt to think at first sight , that he might reach the End on 't , before he could count Twenty ; but there are so many By-Walks and Allies to cross , so many Turnings and Windings to find out , that he is soon convinced of his Mistake . On the other side , I have seen some Old Stagers walk upon Court Ground , as gingerly as upon Ice , or a Quagmire : And with all the Precaution and Fear imaginable , lest they should fall from a great Fortune by the same Defects that rais'd them : And not without cause , for the Ground is Hard in some Places , and Sinks in others ; but all People covet to get upon the highest Spot , to which there is no coming but by one Passage , and that is so narrow , that no Ambitious Pretender can keep the Way , without Justling other People down with his Elbows : And the further Mischief on 't is , that those that keep their Feet , will not help up those that are fallen :
- keywords: able; age; air; amusement; ancient; arms; author; away; bare; beau; beautiful; beauty; best; black; blood; body; book; bully; business; cause; certain; chamber; characters; charming; church; circle; citizens; city; clear; coat; coffee; college; comical; common; company; confounded; coquets; countess; country; court; curiosity; danger; day; days; deal; death; devil; diamond; different; discourse; doctor; dog; dony; eebo; english; eyes; face; fair; fall; fear; fellow; figure; fine; fit; folks; fool; fortune; friend; gallantry; gaming; genius; gentleman; god; gold; good; grave; great; greater; ground; half; hall; hand; handsome; happy; hard; head; hearing; heart; high; home; honesty; honour; house; humour; husband; hymen; ill; inclination; indian; judge; ladies; lady; land; language; law; lead; learned; leave; left; life; little; living; london; long; looks; lord; lost; love; making; man; manner; marriage; matter; men; merit; mind; modesty; moment; money; mouth; naked; nation; natural; nature; nay; new; noise; number; obliged; occasion; office; old; open; opinion; original; painter; parts; passage; patient; people; persons; physick; picture; place; play; pleasant; pockets; poet; poor; possible; present; pretty; publick; purpose; quality; reading; ready; reason; reply'd; reputation; rest; rich; right; room; run; scarce; second; self; selves; sence; set; shew; shop; short; sir; small; society; soldier; solid; spark; speak; state; stay; subject; sword; talk; tcp; tears; text; thing; tho; thought; time; title; touch; town; trade; tradesman; traveller; trouble; true; turn; understanding; value; variety; vertue; vertuous; vices; view; voyage; walk; want; way; weary; wife; wisdom; wit; wits; wives; women; words; work; world; worse; worth; wou'd; year; yonder; young
- versions: original; plain text
- A31107
- author: Barton, William, 1598?-1678.
- title: Mercy in the midst of judgment by a gracious discovery of a certain remedy for London's languishing trade : in a sermon preached before the right honourable, the lord mayor and the citizens of London, on September 12, 1669, at the new repaired chappel at Guild-Hall / by D. Barton ...
- date: 1670.0
- words: 11819
- flesch: 72
- summary: To labour in the fire , and to weary themselves for vanity , to lose oleum & operam , cost and paines , is sufficient to bring men to desperation ; Especially when that little which is coming in , doth no good ; when God blows on it , and takes away the nourishing virtues , so that either men dare not eat their fill ▪ for feare of want another day ; or if they do eat , the Staffe of bread being broken for want of Gods concurrence , they are not satisfied A Boulimy , or Canine appetite , being a disease common at such times , when in the fulness of their sufficiency ( as Zophar in Job speaks of the wicked ) they are in streights ; that little is so far from abating , that it encreaseth the Calamity : And so much for the first Particular , the Judgment with the Severity of it . The Heavens are the Storehouses of Gods good treasure , which he openeth to mans profit and nourishment , yet they cannot drop down fatness on the earth , if God close it up , and with-hold the seasonable showers , which he can do if he please , and will do , if he be provoked .
- keywords: barton; better; blessing; books; bread; care; cause; characters; christ; churches; city; cor; cost; creatures; david; day; destruction; doth; early; earth; eebo; english; famine; general; glory; god; gods; gods house; good; gracious; great; hand; heaven; high; himselfe; holy; home; honour; honourable; hope; hosts; house; jerusalem; jews; judgment; king; labour; land; life; little; london; lord; man; matter; mercy; moses; nature; nay; neglect; new; people; place; presence; private; prophet; psa; publick; reason; religion; rest; right; ruines; saith; sea; second; service; set; severity; sin; sins; tcp; tei; temple; text; things; time; title; trade; true; vers; want; wast; way; work; world; worship
- versions: original; plain text
- A32288
- author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685.
- title: Charles R. His Majesty in his princely compassion and very tender care taking into consideration the distressed condition of many his good subjects, whom the late dreadful and dismal fire hath made destitute ...
- date: 1666.0
- words: 1329
- flesch: 60
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements).
- keywords: books; care; characters; charles; distressed; early; eebo; encoding; england; english; good; image; late; london; online; oxford; partnership; persons; phase; pleasure; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A32296
- author: Calthrop, Henry, Sir, 1586-1637.
- title: Reports of special cases touching several customes and liberties of the city of London collected by Sir H. Calthrop ... ; whereunto is annexed divers ancient customes and usages of the said city of London.
- date: 1670.0
- words: 49084
- flesch: 54
- summary: 5. d. in the pound ; for Linwood , who writ in the time of K. H. 6. in his Provincial Constitutions debating the question , whether the Merchants and Artificers of the City of London ought to pay any Tythes ? sheweth , that the Citizens of London by an ancient Ordinance observed in the said City are bound every Lords day , and every principal Feast-day , either of the Apostles , or others whose Vigils are fasted to pay one farthing for every ten shillings rent , that they paid for their houses wherein they dwelt ; and in 36. H. 6. there was a composition made between the Citizens of London and the Ministers of London , that a payment should be made by the Citizens according unto the rate of 3. sh . But those that argued on the behalf of the Citizens of London , were of opinion that this Fine , and Income was not within the intent and meaning of the Decree ; for the Decree being that the Citizens and Inhabitants of the City of London , and Liberties of the same for the time being shall yearly for ever without fraud , or covin , pay their Tythes to the Parsons , Vicars , Curates of the said City and their Successors for the time being , after the rate hereafter following ; that is , to wit , of every ten shillings rent by the year , of all , and every House , and Houses , Shops , Warehouses , Cellars , and Stables within the said City , and Liberty of the same , sixteen pence half-penny , and of every 20. sh .
- keywords: according; act; action; adjoyning; adventurers; aforesaid; aldermen; alwayes; ancient; apprentice; assizes; authority; bar; behalf; bench; benefit; bill; body; branch; bulk; buy; cap; case; cast; certain; chamberlain; charge; charter; chief; church; citizens; city; clothes; common; common law; commonalty; constable; contrary; convenient; councel; county; course; court; custome; day; dayes; death; debt; decree; default; defendant; discharge; distress; divers; doth; dung; duty; dwelling; edward; eliz; england; english; execution; executor; executrix; exercise; fine; forreign; frances; fraud; freeman; general; george; god; good; grant; great; ground; guild; hall; hanger; hath; having; henry; high; hold; holden; house; howsoever; husband; hust; imprisonment; income; indenture; information; insomuch; intent; intestate; iohn; item; judgement; jury; justices; king; lands; late; law; lawful; laws; letters; liberties; lights; like; london; lord; majesties; majesty; making; man; manner; matter; mayor; meaning; merchandizes; merchants; mind; ministers; moyety; names; nature; new; night; oath; offences; officers; old; open; opinion; order; ordinance; orphans; pain; parish; parliament; particular; parties; party; patent; payment; pence; person; personal; place; plaintiff; pleas; port; pound; power; present; prisage; priviledge; process; promise; provision; question; rate; realm; reason; reasonable; record; regard; rent; require; requireth; respect; return; river; said; said city; said house; said mayor; said ward; seas; second; self; set; sheriffs; shillings; ships; sir; sort; soveraign; space; special; statute; streets; subject; sufficient; suit; summons; tcp; tenants; tenements; term; text; thames; thing; thomas; time; town; trade; true; tun; tythes; view; viz; void; walls; ward; warrant; water; way; wife; wines; woman; words; writ; year; yearly; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A32567
- author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685.
- title: By the King a proclamation for the keeping of markets to supply the city of London with provisions, and also for prevention of alarms and tumults, and for appointing the meeting of merchants.
- date: 1666.0
- words: 1331
- flesch: 62
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32567) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 110260)
- keywords: books; characters; charles; city; early; eebo; england; english; king; london; markets; meeting; merchants; online; phase; provisions; supply; tcp; tei; text; tumults
- versions: original; plain text
- A32652
- author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685.
- title: By the King, a proclamation touching the charitable collections for relief of the poor distressed by the late dismal fire in the city of London
- date: 1668.0
- words: 1949
- flesch: 52
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32652) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107277)
- keywords: books; characters; city; collections; constables; day; distressed; early; eebo; english; fire; general; hands; high; king; london; moneys; parishes; places; poor; proclamation; relief; said; tcp; tei; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A32848
- author: Chillingworth, William, 1602-1644. Reply of the London petitioners to the late answer to their petition for peace.
- title: The Petition of the most substantiall inhabitants of the citty of London, and the liberties thereof, to the Lords and Commons for peace together with the answer to the same, and the replye of the petitioners.
- date: 1642.0
- words: 8085
- flesch: 58
- summary: SHEWETH , THat the present sense of our miseries , and apprehension of inevitable ruine both of the Church and Common-wealth , make us to become humble suitors to this Honourable Assembly ( the likeliest means under God for our reliefe ) to consider our distressed estates , and to provide a speedy remedy for our present and future evills , earnestly desiring you to weigh the care and Iudgement of our Predecessors , who by a known Law , setled and preserved our Protestant Religion , our Liberties , and Properties , with a right understanding between King and Subjects , which produced peace and plenty in our Streets . This we conceive a more equall way , then for two of the Estates ( especially when the major part by fear of tumults and Armies is absent ) to judge by no rule but their own votes of the Rights of the third : to whom if it may be allowed to be sole arbitrary Iudges both of Iustice and Policy , both of what is due to you , and fit for you , both from King and Subjects , the accommodation that is left can only be this ; that , so you may have all that your selves desire , you are contented to endure peace , and such an one indeed you had hard hearts , if you would not accept .
- keywords: accommodation; affections; answer; armes; best; better; blood; cause; citty; commons; conditions; desire; doe; enemies; english; friends; god; good; great; hath; honest; honour; house; iacob; inhabitants; king; kingdome; known; law; lawes; liberties; london; long; lords; majesty; means; men; new; parliament; party; peace; people; persons; petition; petitioners; power; present; publique; reason; religion; request; right; rule; safe; security; selves; sense; state; subjects; text; things; time; trust; truth; understanding; warre; way
- versions: original; plain text
- A33393
- author: Clayton, Robert, Sir, 1629-1707.
- title: The speech of Sir Robert Clayton, Kt., Lord Mayor elect for the city of London, at the Guild-Hall of the said city, to the citizens there assembled on the 29th of September 1679, for the electing of a lord mayor for the year ensuing
- date: 1679.0
- words: 1748
- flesch: 61
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: books; characters; city; clayton; early; eebo; english; god; good; government; images; london; lord; mayor; online; oxford; partnership; phase; robert; said; sir; speech; tcp; tei; text; work
- versions: original; plain text
- A33493
- author: Cadman, Thomas.
- title: The case of several hackney-coachmen in and about the cities of London and Westminster and the suburbs, occasioned by one Robert Murrey and his adherents, to the utter ruin of many families, for his and his accomplices private interest
- date: None
- words: 1677
- flesch: 55
- summary: Thomas Cadman [and 7 others]. Place and date of publication from Wing. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 58418)
- keywords: accomplices; act; books; cadman; characters; coaches; coachmen; early; eebo; english; hackney; interest; london; murrey; online; phase; private; project; robert; said; suburbs; tcp; tei; text; thomas; westminster
- versions: original; plain text
- A33715
- author: Cole, John, 17th cent.
- title: A full and more particular account of the late fire with several losses at Newmarket : in a letter from thence of the 24th instant. 1683.
- date: 1683.0
- words: 1570
- flesch: 67
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). A33715) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 61090)
- keywords: account; books; characters; cole; early; eebo; english; fire; horses; instant; john; late; letter; losses; newmarket; online; particular; partnership; phase; tcp; tei; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A34205
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons.
- title: Concerning the prices of wine &c. Die Mercurii, Maii 26, 1641.
- date: 1641.0
- words: 682
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A34205 of text R43115 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing C5697). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A34205) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 109818)
- keywords: books; commons; die; early; england; english; maii; mercurii; patent; prices; text; wine
- versions: original; plain text
- A34518
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: A copy of the report of the Committee of Common Council appointed to consider the abuses committed by the farmers of the city markets, &c.
- date: 1696.0
- words: 1990
- flesch: 58
- summary: We have also several Times heard the Complaints of the Market People , Inhabitants and others , and do find , That the said Farmers have taken from them greater Rates than they ought to have done , Extorting the same by all the ill Usages imaginable , as by putting them to vexatious Suits , Arresting , Imprisoning , and Ruining many of them , and thereby have forced them from the said Markets , which have very much Inhanced the Rates of Provisions , and made them the more scarce . Upon the whole Matter , We are of Opinion , That the present Farmers have Forfeited their Lease by Non-Payment of their Rent , and by Converting the Markets to other Uses than ought to be by the Covenants contained therein ; and that , according to a Proviso in the said Lease , Five Shillings may be tender'd to avoid the same accordingly , and that the said Markets may be managed by a Committee , according to the aforementioned Act , which We humbly conceive will tend much to the Advantage of the City , and the Ease of the People concerned ; All which we humbly submit to the Wisdom of this Honourable Court.
- keywords: abuses; act; books; characters; city; committee; common; common council; council; court; early; eebo; english; farmers; lease; london; markets; online; people; rates; report; said; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A35206
- author: Crouch, John, fl. 1660-1681.
- title: Londineses lacrymæ Londons second tears mingled with her ashes : a poem / by John Crouch.
- date: 1666.0
- words: 2695
- flesch: 78
- summary: 9 p. Printed for T. Palmer ..., London : 1666. eng London (England) --
- keywords: a35206; ashes; author; available; books; characters; church; churches; cities; city; creation; crouch; data; early; edition; eebo; elements; encoding; english; fiery; fire; flames; good; heaven; images; john; keying; london; long; man; markup; old; online; oxford; page; partnership; phase; poem; project; proquest; second; street; tcp; tears; tei; text; things; time; transcribed; vvhen; vvhere; work; world; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A35591
- author: M. C.
- title: A word of remembrance, reproof & counsel, to England and London put forth by one that loves and longs for their prosperity.
- date: 1663.0
- words: 1873
- flesch: 56
- summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A35591) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 105538) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: books; characters; counsel; didst; early; eebo; encoding; england; english; god; great; image; like; london; lord; online; oxford; partnership; people; phase; tcp; tei; text; thee; thou; word; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A36598
- author: Dryden, John, 1631-1700.
- title: Annus mirabilis, The year of wonders, 1666 an historical poem containing the progress and various successes of our naval war with Holland, under the conduct of His Highness Prince Rupert, and His Grace the Duke of Albemarl : and describing the fire of London / by John Dryden, Esq.
- date: 1667.0
- words: 16354
- flesch: 81
- summary: PAge 4. line 3. for an read 〈◊〉 page 5. in the Not●s , read thus , ponti armenta & mag●as pascit , &c. page 8. line 2. for under●ook ▪ read 〈◊〉 ▪ page 10. in the 〈◊〉 , for nau●●agiunt est read 〈…〉 page 15. line 3. AN HISTORICAL POEM : CONTAINING The Progress and various Successes of our Naval War with Holland , under the Conduct of His Highness Prince RUPERT , and His Grace the Duke of ALBEMAR● .
- keywords: air; albemarl; arms; battel; bear; behold; belgians; best; blows; bold; books; bore; brave; bring; britain; canon; care; cast; characters; charge; city; close; combat; conduct; country; courage; danger; day; days; deep; design'd; dire; distant; dryden; duke; dutch; early; eebo; english; ere; eyes; face; fair; fame; farther; fate; fear; fight; find; fire; flames; fleet; flow; foe; foes; forc'd; force; fortune; france; frequent; gain; general; god; gold; good; great; greater; grow; guide; guns; half; hand; heard; heav'n; high; highness; historical; holland; home; honour; hope; ibid; ill; images; john; kind; king; labour; land; lay; left; length; lie; like; line; little; london; long; lord; lost; loud; love; low; main; man; mean; meet; men; mighty; mind; nations; nature; naval; navy; near; new; nobler; north; number; o'r; ocean; onely; open; ovid; page; passage; people; place; play; poem; poet; poor; port; pow'r; praise; prey; pride; prince; proper; read; reason; rest; restore; retire; rich; rise; rocks; round; royal; ruine; run; rupert; sails; scarce; sea; second; seem'd; set; ships; shore; sir; spread; stay; straight; streets; strong; strove; subjects; successes; sun; suppli'd; tcp; tei; terms; text; things; thought; time; town; trade; use; vain; valour; vast; verse; vessels; virgil; vvho; war; warm; waters; waves; way; wealth; weary; wide; wind; wings; wit; wonders; words; work; world; year; ● s; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A37567
- author: England and Wales.
- title: An act for reviving and continuing of several acts of Parliament touching the militias of the city of Westminster, borough of Southwark, and the hamlets of the Tower of London
- date: 1651.0
- words: 753
- flesch: 63
- summary: no An Act for reviving and continuing of several Acts of Parliament touching the militia's of the city of Westminster, borough of Southwark, an England and Wales 1651 355 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A37567 of text R40492 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing E1066).
- keywords: act; acts; borough; city; england; english; london; militia; parliament; southwark; text; westminster
- versions: original; plain text
- A37852
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: The new uotes of Parliament for the fvther secvring of those officers that are appointed for the ordering of the militia, May 1642
- date: 1642.0
- words: 890
- flesch: 69
- summary: ORdered by the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled , That the Persons intrusted with the ordering of the Militia of the Citie of London , shall have power to draw the trained Bands of the Citie into such usuall and convenient places within three miles of the said Citie , as to them from time to time shall seem fit for the training and exercising of the Souldiers , & that the said Soldiers upon summons shal from time to time appeare & not depart from their Colours without the consent of their Officers , as they will answer their contempt to the Parliament . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A37852 of text R221694 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing E1672).
- keywords: england; english; fvther; houses; london; militia; officers; ordering; parliament; secvring; text; time; uotes; wales
- versions: original; plain text
- A38556
- author: Elborough, Robert.
- title: London's calamity by fire bewailed and improved in a sermon preached at St. James Dukes-Place wherein the judgements of God are asserted, the times of those judgments specified, the reasons for those judgments assigned, and all in some measure suitably applied / by Robert Elborough ...
- date: 1666.0
- words: 14744
- flesch: 79
- summary: For Englands sake don 't you hold your peace , and for Londons sake don 't you rest , till the righteousness thereof goe forth as brightness , and the Salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth , Isa . 62. 1. Sixthly , Secure the interest of your Soul with and in God ; get God to be yours in the midst of those Judgements , wherein you can't say , that any thing is yours Hath God by Fire destroyed thy house , and taken away thy Estate ? and hast thou not yet God to be thine ? what wilt thou doe ? Oh hath God poured out the Vials of his Indignation , and hast thou not got God to be thine ? what wilt thou doe ? I , God hath spoken in the voyce of Mercy , and thou hast not heard ; in the voyce of his Ministers , and thou hast not heard ; in the voyce of Threatnings , and thou hast not heard ; in the voyce of sad Presages , and thou hast not heard ; in the voyce of the Plague , and the Sword , and thou hast not heard ; and now in this dreadful Judgement of Fire , and thou dost not hear ; no , though the Fire hath burnt round about , and in the midst of thee , and there be such sad and dismal effects of it , yet thou dost not hear .
- keywords: abomination; amos; art; beloved; calamity; canst; care; christians; city; comfort; condition; cup; day; desolation; destruction; doe; doth; earth; eebo; england; english; enjoyments; estate; ezek; fiery; fire; glory; god; gods; good; grace; grant; great; greatest; ground; hand; hast; hath; hearts; heaven; hell; high; houses; indignation; iniquity; isa; jer; judgement; judgments; kindle; know; left; little; london; long; lord; mercies; mercy; midst; misery; nation; ordinary; people; persons; place; plague; poor; proceedings; reason; righteous; ruine; sad; secure; security; selves; severity; sin; sodom; sore; souls; suffering; sure; sword; tcp; text; thee; thing; thou; threatnings; thy; times; undone; usual; voyce; want; way; work; world
- versions: original; plain text
- A38662
- author: Essex, Robert Devereux, Earl of, 1591-1646.
- title: The Earle of Essex his speech in the Partilrie garden to the souldiers on Tuesday last with His Majesties propositions to the citizens of London likevvise terrible and blovdy news from Yorke concerning the great affront which was given to the said city by the cavileers and how the citizens gave them a repulse and shut up the gates : whereunto is annexed, Londons resolution for the defence of the King and Parliament.
- date: None
- words: 1532
- flesch: 64
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A38662 of text R17460 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing E3335). With His Majesties propositions to the citizens of Lo Essex, Robert Devereux, Earl of 1642 1035 4 0 0 0 0 0 39 D The rate of 39 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the D category of texts with between 35 and 100 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: artilrie; cavileers; citizens; city; defence; earle; english; essex; garden; great; london; majesties; men; propositions; resolution; royall; shall; souldiers; speech; text; tuesday; wee; yorke
- versions: original; plain text
- A38845
- author: Royal College of Physicians of London.
- title: An exact account of all who are the present members of the King's College of Physicians in London, and others authorized by them to practice in the said City, and within seven miles compass thereof, whereby ignorant and illegal pretenders to the exercise of the said faculty, may be discovered, who dayly impose on unwary people, and claim immunities and priviledges, appertaining only to that corporation.
- date: 1676.0
- words: 1410
- flesch: 75
- summary: Dr. Nathan . Dr. Barrough .
- keywords: books; characters; college; early; edward; eebo; english; henry; image; john; king; knight; london; med; online; oxford; partnership; phase; physicians; reg; richard; robert; said; samuel; sir; tcp; tei; text; thomas; william
- versions: original; plain text
- A39247
- author: Eliot, George, 17th cent.
- title: London's lamentation: or, Godly sorrow and submission. By George Elliott, author of God's warning-piece to London.
- date: 1665.0
- words: 1791
- flesch: 73
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). I hope the World shall see that God above , Doth not me hate , but dearly doth me love ; And that the time will come , I trust e're long , When God will put into my mouth a Song Of Thanks and Praise , then shall I see and know , My Scarlet sins are wash'd as white as Snow .
- keywords: author; books; characters; doth; early; eebo; english; george; god; good; hand; image; lamentation; london; online; partnership; phase; sins; stay; tcp; tei; text; trust; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A39838
- author: Flower, Christopher, 1621 or 2-1699.
- title: Mercy in the midst of judgment with a glimpse of, or a glance on, London's glorious resurrection like a Phoenix out of it's ashes delivered in a sermon preach'd at St. Dunstans in the West, Sept. 2, 1669 being the day of publick fasting and humilation in consideration of the late dreadful fire, by Chr. Flower.
- date: 1669.0
- words: 10405
- flesch: 59
- summary: Not about the Affairs of one single Empire , or of some certain Kingdoms , but the work of that day will be about the business of the whole World : About the chiefest and eternal Good , about the chiefest and eternal Evil. 3. It may be call'd the Great Day , because that day will comprehend the past days of all Ages : it will be as a Recapitulation of all days , from the first day that ever dawn'd ; and on it , as in the last Scene of a Comedy , whatsoever at any time was acted on the Stage of the World , shall then be exhibited to view .
- keywords: able; angels; ashes; behold; blood; books; characters; christ; city; clouds; coming; day; days; dead; death; dreadful; dreadful day; early; earth; eebo; end; english; eternal; eyes; feet; fire; flesh; flower; glorious; glory; god; gods; good; great; great day; habitations; hand; hath; heart; heaven; holy; hope; jerusalem; jews; judge; judgment; justice; known; life; like; london; long; lord; man; manifest; mercy; midst; needs; night; paul; people; phoenix; place; power; present; prophet; reason; respect; resurrection; saint; saith; self; sentence; son; sun; sword; tcp; tei; terrible; text; thee; things; thou; thought; time; true; wicked; words; world
- versions: original; plain text
- A39902
- author: Ford, Richard, Sir, d. 1678.
- title: The speech of Sr. Richard Ford, Knight, and alderman of London made at Guild-hall to the liveries of the several companies of that city, on Michaelmass day, 1670, upon their election of him to be lord mayor of the same city for the year ensuing / taken in short-hand writing by a person then present.
- date: 1670.0
- words: 1546
- flesch: 60
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A39902) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 105351)
- keywords: alderman; books; characters; city; companies; day; early; eebo; english; ford; god; great; knight; liveries; london; online; person; richard; self; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A41346
- author: Fisher, A. Abigail.
- title: A few lines in true love to the inhabitants of England, especially this great City of London, who are called Christians.
- date: 1696.0
- words: 1592
- flesch: 60
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A41346) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 34343)
- keywords: books; characters; christians; city; early; eebo; england; english; great; hath; inhabitants; london; lord; love; online; partnership; people; phase; tcp; tei; text; true; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A41571
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: The discovery of a great and wicked conspiracy against this kingdom in generall, and the City of London in particular Being a letter sent from the Hague in Holland, and directed to Secretary Nicholas, but intercepted by the way, and read in both Houses of Parliament on Saterday the 26 of November, 1642. Also, what great preparations of money, men, and arms, there is now made in Holland, France, and Denmark, to assist the Kings Majesty in England. With the manner how the said letter was intercepted and taken. Whereunto is added, an order by the Lord Major, for the raising of 30000 l. in the City of London.
- date: None
- words: 2407
- flesch: 62
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A41571 of text R217958 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing G1303E). 10 C The rate of 10 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: arms; army; city; conspiracy; england; english; france; generall; goring; great; holland; horse; kingdom; kings; letter; london; lord; majesty; money; nicholas; parliament; particular; raising; said; text; wicked
- versions: original; plain text
- A41827
- author: Graunt, John, 1620-1674.
- title: Natural and political observations mentioned in a following index, and made upon the bills of mortality by John Graunt ... ; with reference to the government, religion, trade, growth, ayre, diseases, and the several changes of the said city.
- date: 1662.0
- words: 28762
- flesch: 66
- summary: 3. These Bills were Printed and published , not onely every week on Thursdays , but also a general Accompt of the whole Year was given in , upon the Thursday before Christmas Day : which said general Accompts have been presented in the several manners following , viz. 6. 4 In the Year 1625 , every Parish was particularized , as in this following Bill : where note , That this next year of Plague caused the Augmentation , and Correction of the Bills ; as the former year of Plague , did the very being of them . 1624. 1625.
- keywords: abortives; accompt; age; aged; air; alhallows; anno; annum; appears; bear; beggars; better; bills; births; books; burials; casualties; cause; certain; chap; children; christned; christnings; church; city; columns; country; decad; december; die; dies; difference; diseases; doth; double; dying; eebo; encreased; england; english; families; females; fewer; forasmuch; gate; general; good; government; gowt; great; greater; greatest; grown; hackney; half; hath; head; healthfull; houses; increase; infants; inhabitants; john; king; leave; liberties; lights; like; little; live; london; long; lordship; males; man; mary; matter; men; millions; mortality; mother; natural; nature; new; number; observation; old; onely; parishes; parts; people; persons; physicians; place; plague; polygamy; pox; present; proportion; reason; religion; rickets; said; searchers; second; self; set; shews; sickly; single; sixteen; small; state; stomach; stone; stopping; street; subject; table; tcp; teeth; text; time; total; trade; true; use; viz; walls; week; westminster; whereof; women; work; world; years
- versions: original; plain text
- A42008
- author: Greene, Thomas, 1634?-1699.
- title: A lamentation taken up for London that late flourishing city, a bitter, yea a bitter lamentation over all her inhabitants yet living within and about her borders, and over all her rulers and mighty men, who are fled from her as from a murtherer, with good counsel and advice, from the spirit of the Lord to all, that they may turn unto him before the vials of his wrath be poured out for their utter destruction. By a lover of truth and righteousness: Thomas Greene.
- date: 1665.0
- words: 3879
- flesch: 36
- summary: This was signified unto me by the Spirit of the Lord when I was in his dreadful fear , overshadowed with his Heavenly power , and I waited to see it effected , or a return to the Lord by cealing from unrighteousness , which most of all I desired , that he might have diverted his intended Judgments ; But Oh how hast thou dishonoured his name , and walked after thy own hearts lusts , as those that have forgotten the Lord dayes without number , and hast not humbled thy self before him , but hast regarded iniquity , and walked in cruelty , against the Lord and his poor people , and hast walked proudly , so that many of thy Inhabitants scarcely knew what to eat , or to drink , or what to put on , and yet a professing people , having on you the name of Christians , but are seen of all those whose eyes are open to be in the nature of Heathens , Turks , or Infidels , who are not found in the nature of Christ , who came not to destroy mens lives but to save them ; but on the contrary thy Rulers and Magistrates with their attendance , have been found persecuting and imprisoning , knocking down , and wounding even some unto death a peaceable people that fear the Lord , that he hath raised up in these last dayes to be as signes and wonders , whose residence and dwelling is amongst you ; who have but testified against unrighteousness , and assembled themselves together as the antient Christians in the dayes of old , who feared the Lord , and thought upon his Name ; and when all this Cruelty would not do nor bring them down , whom God hath raised up ; then was invented in thee another way , thou didst see thy pomp and greatness would do thee no good while these people called Quakers were among you , their Laws being divers from thy Laws , their Worship to thy Worship ; then thou hast concluded with the rest of the Rulers of the Land , even as Haman who said , it 's not for the Kings profit to let them live among us ; then this cruel Edict was invented in thy Borders to make such a Law as thou might be sure to find these people transgressors of , that thou mightest say as those unworthy Jewes , who said , Wee have a Law , and by our Law Christ ought to die . Oh this your Law will not excuse you before the Lord who seeth your insides , and will judge you according as your works are , not by the sight of the eye nor by the hearing of the ear , but he will enter into righteous judgement with you , for he is determined to plead with all flesh to bring down the haughty , and to lay the lofty low ; and for all thy transgressions and cruelties God is now risen to plead with thee ; for thou hast been the womb in the which cruelty without mercy hath been conceived , thy Rulers with their Allies have been examples to all cruel minded men thorough the Nation , therefore must thou drink a bitter cup , and into thy hand hath the Lord first put it ; for when thou began to banish ( by that late devised Law ) those people out of the Land that feared the Lord , and durst not mak shipwrack of their faith , and of a good conscience ; then did the Lord begin with thee , and poured out his Plagues upon very few , as thou beganest first to banish two or three of the people of the Lord ;
- keywords: bitter; books; borders; characters; city; counsel; cruelty; early; eebo; english; god; good; great; greene; hath; hearts; inhabitants; iniquity; lamentation; late; law; london; lord; men; mercy; peace; people; plague; return; rulers; spirit; tcp; tei; text; thee; thomas; thou; unto; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A42547
- author: Gearing, William.
- title: God's soveraignty displayed from Job 9. 12. : Behold he taketh away, who can hinder him? &c., or, A discourse shewing, that God doth, and may take away from his creatures what hee pleaseth, as to the matter what, the place where, the time when, the means and manner how, and the reasons thereof : with an application of the whole, to the distressed citizens of London, whose houses and goods were lately consumed by the fire : an excitation of them to look to the procuring causes of this fiery tryal, the ends that God aims at in it, with directions how to behave themselves under their losses / by William Gearing ...
- date: 1667.0
- words: 51866
- flesch: 67
- summary: if he will stop thy breath , and deliver thee up to death , who can hinder him ? as if Job should have said thus : He hath taken away my Children , my Cattel , my substance , my health , my strength , and all my outward comforts , and if he now come and take away my life too , I cannot hinder him . God threatned the old world , Gen. 6.6 , 7. I will destroy man from the face of the earth . The Original word signifies ( as Pareus observeth upon the place ) I will steep him as a man steepeth a piece of earth in water , till it turn to dirt ; man is but clay , a speaking piece of clay , and is apt to forget his Maker , and the matter whereof he is made ; none but God can reduce man to his first principles , and original matter whereof he was made : there is no dust so high , but the great God is able to give it a steeping .
- keywords: able; abraham; absalom; abundance; act; adultery; afflictions; age; angels; apostle; apparel; army; august; author; bear; beast; beauty; bee; behold; better; blood; bodies; body; book; brethren; burn; burning; canaan; candlestick; care; cast; cause; chap; children; christ; christian; church; churches; cities; citizens; city; cometh; comfort; command; condition; conscience; content; continuance; corn; country; creation; creatures; crosses; crown; cruel; cry; cup; cut; daies; david; day; death; degree; delight; desire; destruction; diseases; distressed; divers; divine; dost; doth; drink; dwell; early; earth; earthly; emperours; end; ends; enemies; english; estate; eternal; eternity; everlasting; evil; eyes; face; fading; fall; famous; far; father; favour; fear; feet; field; fire; flesh; flower; folly; fool; fourth; fruits; gen; glory; god; god doth; god saith; godly; gods; gold; good; gospel; grace; great; great city; greater; greatest; ground; habitation; hand; happiness; hath; having; head; heart; heathen; heaven; heavenly; hell; high; holy; home; honour; hope; house; hunger; iii; inhabitants; iniquities; instruments; iron; israel; jerusalem; job; john; joseph; joy; judgement; king; kingdome; labour; land; law; leave; left; life; like; little; live; living; london; long; longer; lord; lord god; losses; love; low; luk; lusts; man; manner; mans; mark; matter; men; mens; mercy; miserable; miseries; month; moses; mountains; mourn; mourning; naked; natural; nature; necessary; need; non; ordinances; original; outward; parents; particular; patience; people; perishing; persons; philistines; place; plague; pleased; pleaseth; pleasure; poor; pope; portion; possession; poverty; power; precious; present; pride; princes; prison; promises; prophet; proud; psa; psal; punishment; purpose; read; reason; remove; respect; rest; return; reward; rich; riches; right; rod; roman; rome; sad; saints; saith; salvation; sam; saviour; second; sect; seeking; self; selves; sense; september; servants; set; short; sick; silver; sin; sins; solomon; sorrow; soul; spirit; stone; strange; strength; stript; strong; substance; sun; sweet; sword; tcp; temple; temporal; text; thanks; thee; thine; things; thou; thought; time; towns; true; understanding; vanity; ver; vineyard; viz; want; water; way; wayes; wealth; whatsoever; wicked; wine; wings; wisdome; wise; words; work; world; worldly; worship; worth; wrath; years
- versions: original; plain text
- A42600
- author: Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks.
- title: A general bill for this present year ending the 19. of December, 1665. according to the report made to the Kings most excellent Majesty. By the Company of Parish Clerks of London, &c.
- date: 1665.0
- words: 1923
- flesch: 59
- summary: By the Company of Parish Clerks of London , &c. Buried Pla. St Albans Woodstreet 200 121 St Alhallowes Barking 514 330 St Alhallowes Breadst . 35 16 St Alhallowes Great 455 426 St Alhallowes Honila . By the Company of Parish Clerks of London, &c. Bills of mortality.
- keywords: alhallowes; books; botolph; characters; clerks; company; early; eebo; encoding; english; general; image; kings; london; margaret; martins; mary; michael; olaves; online; oxford; parish; parishes; partnership; pesthouse; phase; plague; tcp; tei; text; works; xml; year
- versions: original; plain text
- A42601
- author: Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks.
- title: A general bill of all the christnings and burials, from the 17. of December, 1678 to the 16. of December, 1679 according to the report made to the Kings Most Excellent Majesty, by the Company of Parish- Clerks of London, &c.
- date: 1679.0
- words: 1917
- flesch: 55
- summary: S t Margaret Pattons 13 S t Mary Abchurch 25 S t Mary Aldermanbury 33 S t Mary Aldermary 37 S t Mary le Bow 25 S t Mary Bothaw 2 S t Mary Colechurch 3 S t Mary Hill 18 S t Mary Magd. Oldfishstr . 25 S t Mary Mounthaw 11 S t Mary Summerset 37 S t Mary Stainings 13 S t Mary Woolchurch 3 S t Mary Woolnoth 29 S t Martins Ironmongerl . 13 S t Martins Ludgate 36 S t Martins Orgars 32 S t Martins Outwich 19 S t Martins Vintrey 61 S t Matthew Fridaystreet 15 S t Michael Bassishaw 36 S t Michael Cornhil 34 S t Micha●● Crookedlane 42 S t Micha●● Queenhith 51 S t Micha●● Quern 24 S t Micha●● Royal 17 S t Micha●● Woodstreet 17 S t Mildr●d Breadstreet 24 S t Mildr●d Poultrey 40 S t Nicho●as Acons 9 S t Nicho●as Coleabby 27 S t Nicho●as Olaves 11 S t Olave ●artstreet 64 S t Olave Jewry 16 S t Olave Silverstreet 33 S t Pancr●s Soperlane ●4 S t Peter Cheap 6 S t Peter Cornhil 33 S t Peter Pa●lswharf 9 S t Peter Poor 32 S t Steven Colemanstreet 126 S t Steven Walbrook 29 S t Swithin 32 S t Thomas Apostle 21 Trinity Par●sh S t Vedast dias Fosters 48 Christned in the 97 Parishes within the Walls 1876 Buried 3074 Plague 0 S t Andrew Holborn 937 S t Bartholomew Great 89 S t Bartholomew Less 25 S t Bridget 413 Bridewel Precinct 23 S t Botolph Aldersgate 245 S t Botolph Aldgate 681 S t Botolph Bishopsgate 465 S t Dunstan West 341 S t George Southwark 375 S t Giles Cripplegate 1466 S t Olave Southwark 954 S t Saviour Southwark 614 S t Sepulchr●s Parish 727 S t Thomas Southwark 105 Trinity Minories 21 At the Pesthouse Christned in the 16 Parishes without the Walls 4023 Buried 7481 Plague 0 Christs Church 159 S t John at Hackney 88 S t Giles in the Fields 1245 S t James Clerkenwel 416 S t Kathar .
- keywords: alhallows; andrew; bennet; books; botolph; burials; characters; company; december; early; eebo; encoding; english; general; image; john; london; margaret; martins; mary; micha; olave; online; oxford; parish; partnership; peter; phase; plague; southwark; tcp; tei; text; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A43159
- author: Head, Richard, 1637?-1686?
- title: The floating island, or, A new discovery relating the strange adventure on a late voyage from Lambethana to Villa Franca, alias Ramallia, to the eastward of Terra del Templo, by three ships, viz. the Pay-naught, the Excuse, the Least-in-sight, under the conduct of Captain Robert Owe-much, describing the nature of the inhabitants, their religion, laws and customs / published by Franck Careless, one of the discoverers.
- date: 1673.0
- words: 14500
- flesch: 51
- summary: The Least in Sight , and the Excuse , and that the Paynought ( that approved , and well appointed Pinnace ) shall accompany them ; and that the charge and command of them be committed and confirmed on Robert Owe-much , who shall man them with persons best qualified in the Art of Insolvency , the greater part whereof the said Robert hath known , and tryed to be men of much Trust , being his own Creditors , and Creatures of his own making , and that he requite some of them , by bestowing on them Employments under his Command ; for Example , let his Mercer be made Master of the Least in Sight , and his Baker , Boat-Swain ; as for his Vintner , because he bestowed many a shot upon him in his prosperity , let him be made Master-Gunner in adversity ; and that he may make his Enemies to Smoak , let his Tobacco-man be Gunner's-Mate ; let his Taylor ( having the best Stomach for action ) be made Steward and have charge of the Victual for the Voyage . In which place to divert my self and boon associates , I formed this supposed Voyage from Lambeth to the Bridge on one side , and back again the other , recounting all remarkables between the two Shores ; the one whereof ( on the City side ) I call the Christian , on Southwark side the Turkish or Barbarian . Towards Cape-verd ( or Greens-wharse near Chairing-cross ) I have somewhat sharply censur'd the idle humors of some ; but I protest none but such who deserve the severest censure : Men that are so onely in appearance , and Gentlemen by their gaudy apparel ; who having little to live on but their shifts , imploy all the time they can spare from Drinking and Whoring , in racking their Wits to indulge their sensuality by any means whatever .
- keywords: account; air; alias; antient; bear; benefit; best; better; black; books; breath; captain; careless; case; characters; charge; city; close; company; conduct; considerable; council; countries; country; course; customs; danger; day; del; discourse; discovery; drunk; early; eastward; eebo; encoding; end; enemy; english; excellent; excuse; extraordinary; face; fall; famous; far; fear; fire; form; franca; free; gate; general; good; great; greater; half; hands; hath; head; hell; hold; hot; house; images; inhabitants; insufferable; intended; island; issue; john; kins; known; lambethana; land; landlord; lane; late; laws; length; liquor; little; london; long; making; man; master; meet; men; money; mouth; nature; new; noise; notice; online; owe; oxford; partnership; parts; pay; people; persons; phase; place; poor; present; priviledges; purpose; ramallia; ramy; reason; reckoning; religion; report; resolved; rest; richard; robert; round; roy; self; ships; shore; shot; sight; small; society; sort; special; stand; strange; strength; summer; taylor; tcp; tei; templo; tenant; terra; text; thing; thought; time; tobacco; town; use; vice; villa; viz; voyage; water; way; weather; westward; whereof; white; wind; works; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A43604
- author: Beaumont, Francis, 1584-1616.
- title: A Preparative to studie, or, The vertue of sack
- date: 1641.0
- words: 1223
- flesch: 76
- summary: [no entry] 1641 911 1 0 0 0 0 0 11 C The rate of 11 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words. A Preparative to studie, or, The vertue of sack This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A43604 of text R22858 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing H1790).
- keywords: a43604; books; cup; doe; early; earth; english; fire; h1790; images; london; online; preparative; r22858; sack; selfe; studie; tcp; text; thinke; thou; vertue; wing
- versions: original; plain text
- A44696
- author: Howe, John, 1630-1705.
- title: A sermon preach'd Febr. 14, 1698, and now publish'd, at the request of the Societies for reformation of manners in London and Westminster by John Howe ...
- date: 1698.0
- words: 10401
- flesch: 67
- summary: 4. SOMEWHAT positive is manifestly carried in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , to subject or subordinate my self to him , under this very notion , as the Minister of God for good . IT was most apparently a thing worthy of God , when he Peopled this World with such a sort of Creatures as Man , to provide for the maintaining of common Order among them , who without Government were but a Turba , a Colluvies , as a noted Heathen speaks on a different account , a Rout of Men.
- keywords: account; act; argument; authority; business; case; characters; common; community; conscience; course; design; doubt; duty; eebo; effect; end; english; evil; fear; god; good; goodness; governing; government; great; hath; heaven; higher; hurt; judge; judgment; justice; laws; like; little; london; lord; magistrate; man; means; men; mind; minister; nature; occasion; office; order; original; people; persons; place; plain; power; present; punishment; purpose; reason; reference; ruler; sake; self; selves; sense; sermon; set; sort; state; subject; subordinate; sword; tcp; temper; text; thee; things; tho; time; viz; way; whatsoever; wickedness; words; world; wrath
- versions: original; plain text
- A44971
- author: Scottish pen.
- title: An humble advice to His Sacred Majesty anent the drawing of Londons charter by a Scottish pen.
- date: 1683.0
- words: 1119
- flesch: 65
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com).
- keywords: advice; books; characters; charter; early; eebo; encoding; english; image; majesty; online; oxford; partnership; pen; phase; sacred; scottish; tcp; tei; text; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A45552
- author: Hardy, Nathaniel, 1618-1670.
- title: Lamentation, mourning, and woe sighed forth in a sermon preached in the parish-church of St. Martin in the Fields, on the 9th day of September : being the next Lords-day after the dismal fire in the city of London / by Nath. Hardy ...
- date: 1666.0
- words: 10889
- flesch: 69
- summary: Now that God hath overthrown some among us , as God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah , it is time surely for those who have been guilty of Sodoms sins , to accuse themselves for their pride , fulness of bread , abundance of idleness , and not strengthning the hands of the Needy . Now that so many houses of God are burnt up , and laid waste in the City , and their Teachers are removed from them ; it is time for those to bethink themselves , who either out of Prophaneness have neglected , or out of Schism vilified the houses of God ; and if not like this City of Jerusalem killed and stoned , yet disheartned and contemned those who were sent unto them .
- keywords: account; act; ashes; books; calamity; characters; christ; church; churches; cities; citizens; city; compassion; cross; day; destruction; dismal; divine; doleful; doth; early; earth; eebo; enemies; england; english; evil; eyes; fire; flame; general; god; gods; good; goodly; great; greater; grief; hand; hardy; heart; heaven; holy; houses; humane; inhabitants; jerusalem; kingdom; lamentation; late; like; london; lord; love; man; men; merciful; mind; misery; mourning; nay; near; need; oxford; parish; particular; people; persons; pity; place; prophet; reason; rejoyce; respect; ruine; sad; saith; saviour; self; sermon; shall; sins; sir; sorrow; sun; tcp; tears; tei; text; time; true; weepeth; weeping; whil'st; wicked; work; yea; year
- versions: original; plain text
- A47853
- author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704, attributed name.
- title: The finall protest, and sence of the citie
- date: 1659.0
- words: 1397
- flesch: 70
- summary: The finall protest, and sence of the citie This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A47853 of text R217624 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L1247C). We do therefore declare to the World , that we will by Violence oppose all Violence whatsoever , which is not warranted by the letter of the Established Law : and that in pursuance of this duty , both toward the Nation , and City , an insolent Souldier , and an Apostatized Magistrate shall be to us as the same thing .
- keywords: a47853; books; citie; city; common; early; england; english; finall; l1247c; london; online; order; parliament; protest; r217624; sence; tcp; text; wing
- versions: original; plain text
- A47876
- author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704.
- title: The lawyer outlaw'd, or, A brief answer to Mr. Hunts defence of the charter with some useful remarks on the Commons proceedings in the last Parliament at Westminster, in a letter to a friend.
- date: 1683.0
- words: 22196
- flesch: 46
- summary: What pretence then have the House of Commons , who can bring none to Answer in this manner , to any right or legal power to take or Imprison any Criminal whatsoever ? 'T is true , the Common , and generally all men in Authority , are inclin'd to enlarge their own Jurisdiction , and stretch it as far as possible ; but sure a bare Vote of that House in favour of themselves , or a late practice never heard of in former Ages , shall not be of force enough in any Court of Justice to elude the solemn Acts of King and Parliament . To which the Bishop of Canterbury answer'd by the Kings command , That the Commons are Petitioners and Demanders , and that the King and Lords always had , and of right shall have the Judgments in Parliament , even as the Commons themselves have shewed ; saving that in Statutes to be made , or Grants and Subsidies , or such things as are to be done for the publick profit of the Realm , the King will have especially their advice and assent , 1 H. 4. Rol. Parl n. 79. Who now is to be believ'd , Sir Edward Coke attributing to the Commons , or the Commons themselves wholly disclaiming all Power of Judicature ? Or shall a single Lawyers Ipse dixit , or proofless assertion , be of greater weight , than so solemn a Declaration upon Record , approv'd off by King , Lords , and Commons ?
- keywords: act; acts; ages; aldermen; ancient; answer; arbitrary; argument; authority; baron; best; better; bill; book; breach; burgess; case; charter; chief; choosing; church; cities; city; coke; committed; commons; consent; contrary; cou'd; council; court; crime; criminal; crown; custom; dangerous; days; declar'd; defence; designs; divers; duke; duty; edward; eebo; enemies; england; english; execution; experience; express; faction; factious; favour; fellow; fine; force; free; general; gentleman; good; government; great; greater; hath; house; hunt; illegal; imprison'd; judges; judicature; jurisdiction; justice; king; kingdom; known; lands; late; law; laws; lawyer; legal; liberties; liberty; like; london; long; lords; loyal; majesty; man; mayor; members; misdemeanors; monarchy; nation; nature; necessary; need; new; non; oath; occasion; officers; old; opinion; original; pag; papists; parliament; party; peace; people; persons; petition; plain; plot; point; popery; popish; power; prerogative; pretend; prince; priviledge; proceedings; process; protestants; publick; purpose; queen; realm; reason; record; redress; reign; religion; representatives; right; rome; said; saith; secure; sense; sheriffs; short; shou'd; sir; sovereign; state; statutes; subject; sure; tcp; text; thing; tho; time; true; tryal; unwarrantable; vote; way; wou'd; writ; years
- versions: original; plain text
- A48972
- author: City of London (England). Commissioners of Lieutenancy.
- title: By the Commissioners of Lieutenancy for the said city
- date: 1688.0
- words: 1262
- flesch: 65
- summary: and Charles Duncomb Esq; be a committee from the said Lieutenancy to attend His Royal Highness the Prince of Orange ... Place and date of publication suggested by Wing. Reproduction of original in the Guildhall, London. Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107410)
- keywords: books; characters; city; commissioners; december; early; eebo; english; highness; knt; lieutenancy; london; online; orange; partnership; phase; prince; said; sir; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A48974
- author: City of London (England).
- title: By the Commissioners for Sewers, Pavements, &c. in London it is ordered, that the clerk do forthwith send to the deputies and common council-men of the several wards, a note of the names of the pavier or paviers designed for each ward ...
- date: 1671.0
- words: 1522
- flesch: 58
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A48974) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107411)
- keywords: books; characters; city; commissioners; common; council; deputies; early; eebo; england; english; forthwith; london; online; partnership; pavements; paviers; phase; said; sewers; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A48975
- author: City of London (England). Committee for the Militia of London.
- title: September 29. 1642. The persons to whom the militia of the Citie of London is committed, for the safetie of the said Citie, have thought fit, and hereby declare.
- date: 1642.0
- words: 1024
- flesch: 75
- summary: at Bridge end by Magnis Church . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A48975 of text R212512 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2851H).
- keywords: a48975; books; captain; citie; collonell; early; end; england; english; fit; lievtenant; london; major; militia; night; persons; richard; safetie; said; september; serjant; text; wing
- versions: original; plain text
- A48976
- author: Committee for the Militia of London.
- title: Whereas the Committee for the Militia of London, taking into consideration that not withstanding their commission, directed to their Sub-Committee sitting at Salters Hall in Breadstreet for the listing of all persons fit for the warres, and forming them into several regiments
- date: 1644.0
- words: 854
- flesch: 58
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A48976 of text R37944 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2851I). [London : 1644] Title taken from first line of text.
- keywords: a48976; breadstreet; committee; consideration; english; hall; london; militia; persons; salters; sub; text; ward
- versions: original; plain text
- A48978
- author: City of London (England).
- title: At the sub-committee at Salters Hall in Breadstreet whereas by ordinance of Parliament of the 26 of March last, the collectors for the weekly meale within this city of London and the liberties, are after assessement of each person within the limits, to make demand thereof, of the person so assessed ...
- date: 1644.0
- words: 1038
- flesch: 59
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A48978 of text R37951 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2851M). [London : 1644] Title information from first sentences of text.
- keywords: assessed; bee; city; collectors; committee; english; liberties; london; march; ordinance; person; said; salters; sub; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A48980
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: The Common Councell of the City of London (having taken knowledge that many persons within the said city and liberties (out of a pious zeale and good affection to the publique cause) have of late freely and voluntarily subscribed divers summes of money towards the maintaining of forces to bee sent forth by the committee of the militia ...
- date: 1644.0
- words: 941
- flesch: 65
- summary: The Common Councell of the City of London (having taken knowledge that many persons within the said city and liberties (out of a pious zeale and good affection to the publique cause) have of late freely and voluntarily subscribed divers summes of money towards the maintaining of forces to bee sent forth by the committee of the militia ... City of London (England). The Common Councell of the City of London (having taken knowledge that many persons within the said city and liberties (out of a pious zeale and good affection to the publique cause) have of late freely and voluntarily subscribed divers summes of money towards the maintaining of forces to bee sent forth by the committee of the militia ... City of London (England).
- keywords: books; city; committee; common; councell; council; court; early; england; english; london; militia; parliament; said; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A48983
- author: City of London (England).
- title: A Common Councell holden in the chamber of the Guild-hall of the city of London, the eighth day of July, in the yeare of our Lord 1657 ...
- date: 1657.0
- words: 1184
- flesch: 65
- summary: WHereas by the great resort of people to the Market in Leaden-hall street , the same street is so thronged , pestered and annoyed , that the common passage is hindred , and made dangerous to the Inhabitants and Passingers , and many evills and inconveniencies have thence happened and arisen : It is for remedy and prevention thereof for time to come , and for incouragement and accomodation of the People resorting to buy and sell in the said Market Enacted , Ordained and Established by the right Honorable the Lord Maior , the right Worshipfull the Aldermen his Brethren , and the Commons of the City of London , in Common Councell assembled , and by the authority of the same : That from and after the first day of August next ensuing , the Market for Mutton , Veale , Lamb , and Porke shall no longer be , or be holden or kept in the street of Leaden hall , but shall be thenceforth kept in the Green-yard within the same Hall , to which place all Country Butchers , Farmers and such others as may keep and frequent the said Market to sell any sort of flesh before mentioned , shall and may come , remaine and abide with their goods and Commodities on Mondayes , Wednesdaies , Fridaies and Saterdaies weekly from the twenty ninth day of September to the twentie fifth day of March till five of the clock in the afternoone , and from the twentie fifth day of March till the nine & twentieth day of September , till seven of the clock in the afternoone and no longer , and shall or may have standings assign'd or set out unto them paying for every standing fower pence a day , that is to say , two pence halfe penny a day to the City Officer that is or shall be appointed Collector of the said Duty , to the use of the Chamber of London , and the other three halfe pence thereof to the Serjeant of the Channell for the time being . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A48983 of text R39339 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2852J).
- keywords: chamber; city; common; councell; day; eighth; england; english; flesh; guild; hall; holden; july; london; lord; market; said; text; yard
- versions: original; plain text
- A48995
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Commune Concilium tentum in Camera Guihald' civitas London die Jovis, vicesimo quarto die Martii, anno Dom' millesimo sexcentesimo sexagesimo nono ... an Act Appointing the Exchange-Hours.
- date: 1669.0
- words: 1420
- flesch: 55
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: act; bell; books; characters; clock; die; dom; early; eebo; encoding; england; english; exchange; hours; image; johanne; london; online; oxford; partnership; phase; said; tcp; tei; text; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A49000
- author: England and Wales. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (London)
- title: Martis vicesimo primo die Octobr. 1684 annoq, regni Regis Caroli Secundi, Angliæ &c. tricesimo sexto it is ordered by this court that the order hereafter following (against servants being retained without a testimonial) made at the last quarter sessions held for this city, shall be forthwith printed and published ... / Lond. ss. ad General Quarterial' Sessionem pacis Domini Regis, tent' pro Civitat' London, per adjournament' apud Justice-Hall in le Old-Baily, London, die Mercurii, scilicet Octavo die Octobris, anno regni Regis Caroli secundi, nunc Angl' &c. tricesimo sexto.
- date: 1684.0
- words: 1565
- flesch: 58
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A49000) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 106012)
- keywords: books; caroli; characters; city; court; early; eebo; english; general; london; quarter; regis; regni; said; secundi; servants; service; sessions; sexto; tcp; testimonial; text; tricesimo
- versions: original; plain text
- A49011
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: The address of the Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and Commons of the city of London in Common-Council assembled presented to Her Majesty at Whitehall, August 17. 1693.
- date: 1693.0
- words: 1283
- flesch: 60
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A49011) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 108109)
- keywords: aldermen; books; characters; city; common; council; early; eebo; england; english; london; lord; majesties; majesty; mayor; online; oxford; partnership; phase; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A49017
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Wednesday, the 5th day of August, 1696, at a committee of Common Council, held for the publick markets of the city of London
- date: 1696.0
- words: 1613
- flesch: 65
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A49017) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107434)
- keywords: books; broad; city; committee; common; council; day; early; eebo; english; farmers; foot; london; long; markets; pence; people; publick; rates; said; standing; tcp; text; week
- versions: original; plain text
- A49034
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Orders set downe by the court of Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the city of London concerning the rates of carriages with carrs within this city and the liberties thereof to continue untill further order be taken in that behalf.
- date: 1647.0
- words: 959
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A49034 of text R37985 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2864C). 167 F The rate of 167 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the F category of texts with 100 or more defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: aldermen; carriages; carrs; city; court; english; goods; like; load; london; lord; places; rates; set; text; weight
- versions: original; plain text
- A49036
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Whereas against divers lawes, orders and provisions, great numbers of men and women and their children and servants doe daily on the weeke daies, all the day long, sit in the high-street of Cheape, with multitudes of baskets, tubbs and other vessels of fruit, roots, hearbs, plants, flowers and other garden commodities to sell ...
- date: 1657.0
- words: 1183
- flesch: 60
- summary: Whereas against divers lawes, orders and provisions, great numbers of men and women and their children and servants doe daily on the weeke daies, all the day long, sit in the high-street of Cheape, with multitudes of baskets, tubbs and other vessels of fruit, roots, hearbs, plants, flowers and other garden commodities to sell ... City of London (England). Whereas against divers lawes, orders and provisions, great numbers of men and women and their children and servants doe daily on the weeke daies, all the day long, sit in the high-street of Cheape, with multitudes of baskets, tubbs and other vessels of fruit, roots, hearbs, plants, flowers and other garden commodities to sell ... City of London (England).
- keywords: cheape; city; commodities; day; doe; flowers; fruit; garden; hearbs; london; place; plants; roots; said; street; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A49037
- author: City of London (England).
- title: My lord mayor and this Court of Aldermen taking into consideration the wants and necessities of the honest and laborious poore inhabitants (especially of the out parishes) of this city ...
- date: 1658.0
- words: 723
- flesch: 60
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A49037 of text R39820 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2864H). [1658] Title from first 3 lines of text.
- keywords: aldermen; city; consideration; court; english; honest; inhabitants; laborious; london; lord; mayor; necessities; text; wants
- versions: original; plain text
- A49039
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Whereas the fish-market at Billingsgate, by reason of the dismal fire and other accidents, hath for some late years been in much disorder, and yet continues without that due regulation ...
- date: 1671.0
- words: 1216
- flesch: 66
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). [1671] Title from first four lines of text.
- keywords: billingsgate; books; characters; early; eebo; encoding; english; fish; image; london; market; online; oxford; partnership; phase; reason; tcp; tei; text; title; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A49040
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Whereas in and by the additional act of Parliament for rebuilding the city of London, it is enacted, that the Lord Maior and Court of Aldermen shall be and are thereby impowered and required to cause all and every the sheds, shops and other buildings ... to be taken down and removed ...
- date: 1673.0
- words: 1217
- flesch: 65
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A49040) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107914)
- keywords: aldermen; books; buildings; characters; city; court; early; eebo; english; london; lord; maior; online; partnership; phase; sheds; shops; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A49041
- author: City of London (England).
- title: This court taking into their consideration, that the utmost time appointed for taking down and removing all such sheds, shops, and other like buildings, which have been erected since the late dismal fire ...
- date: 1674.0
- words: 1105
- flesch: 62
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A49041) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107923) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1637:67)
- keywords: books; buildings; characters; city; court; early; eebo; english; image; london; online; oxford; partnership; phase; sheds; tcp; tei; text; time; title
- versions: original; plain text
- A49043
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Jovis duodecimo die Maii 1698, annoque regni Regis Willielmi ... this day an order and report made by the Committee for Letting the Cities Lands, touching several duties taken by several officers and others at Billingsgate ...
- date: 1698.0
- words: 2638
- flesch: 60
- summary: this day an order and report made by the Committee for Letting the Cities Lands, touching several duties taken by several officers and others at Billingsgate ... City of London (England). this day an order and report made by the Committee for Letting the Cities Lands, touching several duties taken by several officers and others at Billingsgate ... City of London (England).
- keywords: allen; annum; billingsgate; boat; books; characters; city; committee; day; die; duties; early; eebo; english; fish; lands; london; lord; mayor; note; order; report; salt; tcp; tei; tenant; text; tolls; vessel; waterside; yeomen
- versions: original; plain text
- A49044
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Jovis decimo quinto die Junij, 1699, annoque regni Regis Willielmi Tertij ... whereas by the ancient laws and statutes of this realm, there ought to be but one weight and measure used throughout this kingdom ...
- date: 1699.0
- words: 1491
- flesch: 61
- summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A49044) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107729) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: books; characters; city; early; eebo; english; image; laws; london; measure; online; oxford; partnership; person; phase; said; shillings; statutes; tcp; tei; text; title; weight
- versions: original; plain text
- A49045
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Jovis decimo quarto die Decembris, 1699, annoque regni Regis Willielmi Tertij ... whereas not withstanding several good and wholsom orders of this court heretofore made for the prevention of forestalling, regrating and other abuses in the fish-market of Billingsgate ...
- date: 1699.0
- words: 1539
- flesch: 59
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A49045) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107730)
- keywords: billingsgate; books; characters; city; court; early; eebo; english; fish; forestalling; good; london; market; online; orders; partnership; phase; said; sale; tcp; tei; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A49046
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Martis vicesimo quinto die Junij 1700, annoq. regni Regis Willielmi Tertij ... the King's Most Excellent Majesty, and His late religious and gracious Queen, as also the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament, having frequently express'd their great sense of the deplorable increase of prophaeness, vice and debauchery in this kingdom ...
- date: 1700.0
- words: 1258
- flesch: 61
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107731)
- keywords: books; characters; city; commons; debauchery; early; eebo; english; fair; great; image; king; london; majesty; online; oxford; partnership; phase; tcp; tei; text; title; vice
- versions: original; plain text
- A49047
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Jovis decimo die Octobris, 1700, annoq. regni Regis Willielmi Tertii ... upon reading the humble petition of the inhabitants and shopkeepers in and about Exchange-alley in Cornhill ... it is ordered that none of the Exchange-brokers do for the future agitate any business between merchant and merchant, or others in the open alley ...
- date: 1700.0
- words: 1195
- flesch: 63
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Second part of title taken from text.
- keywords: alley; books; brokers; characters; early; eebo; english; exchange; image; london; merchant; online; oxford; partnership; phase; said; tcp; tei; text; title; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A49050
- author: City of London (England).
- title: The Report of the governours of the corporation for improving and releiving the poor of this city of London, and liberties thereof
- date: 1655.0
- words: 1387
- flesch: 65
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A49050 of text R39650 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2877B). Poor laws -- England.
- keywords: a49050; blest; books; care; city; corporation; day; doth; early; england; english; fatherless; god; gods; good; governours; l2877b; liberties; london; orphans; poor; report; text; wing; work
- versions: original; plain text
- A49051
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Novem. 12. 1642 yov are to give notice in your pulpit tomorrow, that all such in your parish as have listed themselves to go for souldiers ...
- date: 1642.0
- words: 565
- flesch: 73
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A49051 of text R39652 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2878A). [London : 1642] Second part of title taken from first four lines of text.
- keywords: books; early; english; london; notice; parish; pulpit; souldiers; text; tomorrow; yov
- versions: original; plain text
- A49052
- author: City of London (England).
- title: Apill [sic] 15, 1643 you are required to commend to God in your prayers ...
- date: 1643.0
- words: 504
- flesch: 73
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A49052 of text R39653 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2878C). [London : 1643] Second part of title taken from first line of text.
- keywords: a49052; apill; books; early; english; god; london; prayers; text; wing
- versions: original; plain text
- A49055
- author: City of London (England).
- title: By the major forasmuch as it is conceived and apprehended by the Common-councell, that the city at the present is in great danger ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 755
- flesch: 71
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A49055 of text R39656 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2882D). [1648] Second part of title taken from first three lines of text.
- keywords: a49055; books; city; common; councell; danger; english; great; london; major; present; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A49056
- author: City of London (England).
- title: By the major for as much as the gathering together of persons old and young ... on the Lord's Day ... when they should be exercised publicly or privately in the duties of religion ...
- date: 1649.0
- words: 762
- flesch: 68
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A49056 of text R39654 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2883B). Second part of title taken from first eight lines of text.
- keywords: a49056; books; city; day; english; gathering; london; lord; major; old; persons; text; young
- versions: original; plain text
- A49057
- author: City of London (England).
- title: By the mayor whereas by neglect of executing the good lawes and statutes against rogues, vagabonds, and sturdy beggars ...
- date: 1656.0
- words: 1382
- flesch: 65
- summary: WHereas by neglect of executing the good Lawes and Statutes against Rogues , Vagabonds , and Sturdy beggers That vermine of this Common wealth doth now swarme in and about this City and Liberties , disturbing and annoying the inhabitants and Passengers , by hanging upon Coaches , and clamarous begging at the doores of Churches and private Houses and in the Streets and common wayes ; veguiling the modest , laborious and honest poore , ( the proper objects of Charity ) of much releife and Almes which otherwise might bee disposed to them by bountifull and well minded people : And by this meanes and their corrupt and prophane communication , doe bring dishonor to God , scandall to Religion , and shame to the Government of this City : And for as much as it is intended and resolved that for Reformation of this living Nusance , the said Lawes and Statutes shall bee hence-forth duely and strictly executed within this City and Liberties thereof , and the penaltyes and punishments thereby appointed , imposed and inflicted upon all Persons offending against the same : I doe therefore give notice thereof , And in the name of his Highnes the Lord Protector , doe hereby require and Command all Constables and other Officers and Persons whatsoever within this City and Liberties , to bee diligent and watchfull about their duties herein : For better information whereof and that none may excuse himselfe by pretence of ignorance , I have caused some branches of the said Statutes of most Common concernment to bee added hereunto , expecting that accordingly every Constable doe presently apprehend ( and so continue to doe during his said Office ) all such Rogues , Vagabonds and Sturdy beggers as shall bee found in his parish or precinct , or shall bee brought or sent to him by any of his Neighbors , and to send to Bridewell the place of Correction ) such of them as live within this City and Liberties , who are there to bee received and dealt withall according to Law ; and such as live not within the Liberties aforesaid , to whipp and passe away to the place of their dwelling or last aboad . And that all other Persons doe apprehend or cause to bee apprehended all such as they shall see or know to resort to their houses to receive or begg any Almes , and carry or cause them to bee carried to the next Constable , And that in all other things they give that furtherance to this worke as by the Law is required .
- keywords: bee; beggers; cap; city; constable; doe; english; good; lawes; liberties; london; parish; person; rogues; said; statutes; sturdy; text; vagabonds
- versions: original; plain text
- A49062
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the mayor to all constables, beadles, and other His Majesties officers and loving subjects within the city of London, and every of them.
- date: 1667.0
- words: 1336
- flesch: 66
- summary: Ye shall also swear , that during the time that ye shall stand in the office , and occupy the room of a Constable , ye shall once at the least every month certify and shew to one of the Clerks of the Mayors Court , and in the same Court , as well the names as surnames of all Freemen which ye shall know to be deceased within the month , in the parish wherein ye be inhabited , as also the names and surnames of all the children of the said Freemen so deceased , being Orphans of this City , and you shall enquire of all and every the offences done contrary to the statutes made , 1 Jacobi , 4 Jacobi , 21 Jacobi , to restrain the inordinate haunting and tipling in Innes and Alehouses , and for repressing of drunkennesse , and due presentments thereof make according to the said statutes . The Oath of the Constables within the City of LONDON . YE shall sweare , that ye shall keep the peace of our Soveraign Lord the King well and lawfully after your power .
- keywords: books; characters; city; constables; early; eebo; england; english; image; london; majesties; mayor; online; oxford; partnership; phase; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A49065
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the maior the Right Honourable the Lord Maior ... doth hereby think fit to publish and declare, that all manner of persons within this city and the liberties thereof, do from time to time duly observe and conform themselves to the laws and ordinances established for the suppression of abuses, disorders and misdemeanours ...
- date: 1672.0
- words: 1881
- flesch: 60
- summary: doth hereby think fit to publish and declare, that all manner of persons within this city and the liberties thereof, do from time to time duly observe and conform themselves to the laws and ordinances established for the suppression of abuses, disorders and misdemeanours ... doth hereby think fit to publish and declare, that all manner of persons within this city and the liberties thereof, do from time to time duly observe and conform themselves to the laws and ordinances established for the suppression of abuses, disorders and misdemeanours ...
- keywords: books; characters; city; disorders; doth; early; eebo; england; english; good; honourable; house; liberties; london; lord; lordship; maior; manner; online; partnership; persons; phase; suppression; tcp; tei; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A49066
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the maior whereas divers persons rudely disposed, within this city, have of late years been observed to behave themselves in an uncivil and insolent manner towards persons of quality ...
- date: 1673.0
- words: 1470
- flesch: 64
- summary: By the maior whereas divers persons rudely disposed, within this city, have of late years been observed to behave themselves in an uncivil and insolent manner towards persons of quality ... By the maior whereas divers persons rudely disposed, within this city, have of late years been observed to behave themselves in an uncivil and insolent manner towards persons of quality ...
- keywords: books; characters; city; divers; early; eebo; england; english; image; london; manner; online; oxford; partnership; persons; phase; quality; streets; tcp; tei; text; twentieth; uncivil
- versions: original; plain text
- A49068
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the maior whereas divers rude and disordered young-men, apprentices and others, do now of late presume and take to themselves a liberty ... to throw about squibs and fireworks in the streets ...
- date: 1674.0
- words: 1356
- flesch: 62
- summary: By the maior whereas divers rude and disordered young-men, apprentices and others, do now of late presume and take to themselves a liberty ... to throw about squibs and fireworks in the streets ... City of London (England). By the maior whereas divers rude and disordered young-men, apprentices and others, do now of late presume and take to themselves a liberty ... to throw about squibs and fireworks in the streets ... City of London (England).
- keywords: books; characters; city; disordered; early; eebo; england; english; late; london; maior; online; oxford; partnership; phase; rude; squibs; streets; tcp; tei; text; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A49072
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the mayor, to the alderman of the ward of [blank] whereas I have received a rule made yesterday by His Majesties Court of Kings-Bench, whereby (upon great complaint made to the said court, that squibs and crackers are frequently thrown into coaches passing the streets of this city ...)
- date: 1684.0
- words: 1343
- flesch: 66
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A49072) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 110275)
- keywords: books; characters; city; coaches; court; crackers; early; eebo; england; english; london; mayor; online; persons; said; squibs; streets; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A49073
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the mayor, to the alderman of the ward of [blank] whereas divers good laws have been made, and are still in force, for the suppressing and punishing of vagrants, vagabonds, and other idle persons ...
- date: 1687.0
- words: 1376
- flesch: 63
- summary: By the mayor, to the alderman of the ward of [blank] whereas divers good laws have been made, and are still in force, for the suppressing and punishing of vagrants, vagabonds, and other idle persons ... City of London (England). By the mayor, to the alderman of the ward of [blank] whereas divers good laws have been made, and are still in force, for the suppressing and punishing of vagrants, vagabonds, and other idle persons ... City of London (England).
- keywords: books; characters; city; early; eebo; england; english; good; image; laws; london; mayor; online; oxford; partnership; phase; tcp; tei; text; vagrants; ward
- versions: original; plain text
- A49075
- author: Chapman, John, Sir, 1633-1689.
- title: By the mayor. To the alderman of the ward of [blank] Whereas His Highness the Prince of Orange, hath been pleased to signifie to me this day, that divers persons (pretending themselves to be citizens of London) in a tumultuous and disorderly manner have lately disturbed the present convention of the Lords and Commons at Westminster ...
- date: 1689.0
- words: 1114
- flesch: 61
- summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A49075) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 110278) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: books; characters; citizens; city; commons; day; early; eebo; england; english; london; mayor; online; phase; tcp; tei; text; tumultuous; ward
- versions: original; plain text
- A49080
- author: City of London (England). Court of Aldermen.
- title: London ff. ad generalem session' pacis dom' regis, tent' pro civit' London' per adjornament' apud Justice-Hall in le Old-Baily, London', die Mercurii, scil. Octavo die Maii anno regni domini nostri Willielmi Tertii, nunc regis Angl', &c. septimo coram Thoma Lane, milite, majore civitat' Lond', Roberto Clayton, mil', Patien' Ward, mil', Roberto Jeffery, mil', Thoma Stampe, mil', & Willielmo Ashhurst, milit', aldermannis civitat' prædict', & Salathiel Lovell, mil' servien' ad legem ac recordatore ejusdem civit', ac al' sociis suis justic' dicti dom' regis ad pacem in civitat' præd' conservand'; necnon ad diversas felon', transgr' & al' malefact' infro eandem civitat' perpertrat' audiend' & terminand' assign'.
- date: 1695.0
- words: 1375
- flesch: 58
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 110452)
- keywords: books; characters; city; civitat; die; dom; early; eebo; england; english; lane; london; mil; online; oxford; partnership; phase; regis; roberto; tcp; tei; text; thoma
- versions: original; plain text
- A49094
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons. Committee to Enquire into the Burning of London.
- title: London's flames being an exact and impartial account of divers informations given in to the committee of Parliament, by divers members of Parliament, and many other persons of quality (whose names are inserted in this book) concerning the dreadful fire of London in the year 1666, and the many other strange fires which have happened since : together with what was said by M. Langhorn, now a prisoner, and condemned for the horrid Popish Plot, concerning the great fire : wherein is plainly proved, that the papists were the contrivers and actors in the burning of that great and noble city.
- date: 1679.0
- words: 9884
- flesch: 52
- summary: To which he answered ; I know not whether it be the hottest for Weather or Action : The said Yaxley , coming to the same House , the week after the Fire , Mr. Kitely said to him with some trouble ; I have often thought upon your hot Thursday , To which she replyed , It was not indeed upon the Thursday but it hapned upon the Sunday come sevennnigt after ; Mr. Yaxley bearing these Evidences produced against her , prompted her to avoid the words , saying , that upon the 13th of August , she did tell Mr. Kitely , That they say next Thursday , will be the darkest Thursday , that ever was in England , but not otherwise ; Which she affirms to have received from one Fynchman . Mr. Freeman of Southwark Brewer , whose House there was lately burned , informs , that the same day his House was fired , about a quarter of an hour before three , was found a paper with a Ball of Wild-fire , containing near a pound wrap'd up in it , in the nave of a wheel , in an outer house , where lay a great quantity of Timber ; how this house was fired he knoweth not ; but this he affirms to the Committee , it could not be by accident , because there had not been any Candle or Fire in the House where the Hay lay , that whole day ; and the Hay being laid up before Midsummer very dry , it could not possibly be set on fire within it self ; and moreover , he said , the Hay-loft was on fire on the top of the House , and that the Fire spread from one end of the Roof to the other in an instant . Mr. Richard Harwood saith , That he being near the Feathers Tavern by St. Pauls , on the fourth of September , something like Wild-fire by the sparkling and spitting of it , appeared , whereof he gave notice to some Souldiers there , who caused it to be quenched .
- keywords: bakers; balls; books; burning; catholick; church; city; clock; come; committee; company; county; discourse; divers; door; eebo; eeves; enfield; england; english; family; father; fire; firing; french; george; gifford; great; hand; harvey; house; hubert; information; informs; john; lane; letter; like; london; master; mother; mrs; night; oath; oxley; papists; parliament; pedilow; person; place; plot; popish; prisoner; religion; richard; robert; roman; said; saith; september; set; ship; sir; street; stubbs; tcp; text; things; thomas; thursday; time; turn; white; william; words; year; young
- versions: original; plain text
- A50854
- author: Mill, Humphrey, fl. 1646.
- title: The second part of The nights search, discovering the condition of the various fowles of night, or, The second great mystery of iniquity exactly revealed with the projects of these times : in a poem / by Humphrey Mill, author of The nights search.
- date: 1646.0
- words: 40749
- flesch: 86
- summary: 〈◊〉 of the pleasant dishes ; What happinesse can , be more to man Then so to embrace his wishes ? The place where they did feast , I 'm loth to name ; Seeing I disclose , and they conceale their shame , 〈◊〉 note , 〈◊〉 was neere Long-Acre , in a place , In which Hells featfull She shall reap disgrace :
- keywords: abuse; agen; ape; asleep; bad; bare; base; baud; bawd; bed; begging; best; better; bill; bin; birds; black; blind; bloud; blush; body; bold; bones; book; breath; breed; call'd; came; care; cast; cause; chamber; charge; cheat; choice; close; clouds; coat; cold; common; company; conceit; constant; content; cost; course; court; coyne; creep; crime; crowne; cry; cure; cut; dame; darknesse; day; dead; death; debt; deep; degrees; delight; desire; devill; disgrace; dish; divell; doe; dost; doth; double; doubt; drink; dust; dwell; dy'd; dye; earth; ease; els; end; ends; engag'd; english; epitaph; ere; eyes; face; faine; fala; fall; fame; fancies; feare; feast; fee; feed; fees; fire; fit; flesh; fowles; free; friend; gain; gender; gentle; goe; gold; golden; good; grave; great; grief; ground; guard; guests; guilty; halfe; hand; hang; hard; hast; hath; hay; head; heart; heaven; hell; help; high; himselfe; home; honest; hopes; hounds; house; humors; humphrey; husband; ill; impudence; intent; issue; item; jade; jove; joyes; judge; justice; kind; knaves; land; late; lawes; leave; left; letcher; lies; life; like; little; live; living; long; look; loose; lord; lov'd; love; low; lower; lust; lye; mad; maid; man; mans; master; meat; meet; meeting; men; mens; merrie; merry; mill; mind; mirth; miserie; mistris; modest; money; morall; mother; muse; mutton; names; nature; need; neighbours; new; night; noble; nose; note; officers; old; onely; open; order; paines; pale; parts; passe; past; pawne; pay; peece; pimp; place; play; pleasure; plots; poore; poyson; praise; present; prey; pride; priest; print; prison; private; promise; purchase; purse; rage; rais'd; rate; read; reason; rest; rich; rise; room; rotten; rout; search; second; sect; selfe; sell; sense; service; set; shame; shee; shew; shot; silent; sin; sink; sinners; sins; skill; skin; snare; song; soone; sores; sorrow; souldier; soule; sound; spi'd; spie; spirits; spring; stand; state; stay; store; strange; street; strife; strong; subject; sun; sweet; teares; text; thee; thine; things; thou; throat; thy; time; tongue; torments; town; trade; triumph; true; trull; trust; truth; turn; turn'd; turnes; us'd; use; vent; verie; vermine; view; vile; vpon; wait; want; watch; way; white; whore; wife; wine; wing; wise; wit; woman; words; work; world; worse; wrath; young
- versions: original; plain text
- A51231
- author: Moore, John, Sir, 1620-1702.
- title: The speech of the Right Honourable Sir John Moore, Kt., Lord Mayor Elect, at Guild-Hall, Sept. 29, 1681
- date: 1681.0
- words: 1142
- flesch: 64
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A51231) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 100078)
- keywords: books; characters; early; eebo; english; great; honourable; image; john; jonathan; lord; moore; online; oxford; partnership; phase; sir; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A52474
- author: Royal College of Physicians of London.
- title: The names of the fellows of the King's College of Physicians in London, and others authorized by them to practise in the said city, and within seven miles compass thereof.
- date: 1683.0
- words: 1228
- flesch: 77
- summary: Dr. Nehemiah Grew . Dr. Rob.
- keywords: books; censor; characters; college; early; eebo; english; fellows; image; john; king; knight; london; online; oxford; partnership; phase; physicians; reg; richard; sir; tcp; tei; text; thomas; william
- versions: original; plain text
- A52519
- author: E. N.
- title: Londons destroyer detected: and destruction lamented: or, some serious ruminations, and profitable reflections upon the late dreadful, dismal, and never-to-be-forgotten conflagration Wherein is briefly comprehended several things considerable, in order to Londons present recovery, and future prosperity.
- date: 1666.0
- words: 2460
- flesch: 75
- summary: Till thou hadst famous London quite undone ; The Mart of Natious , and the Kingdoms Pride , In Europe was not such a place beside . Consider Soul , who e're thou art indeed ; If nothing yet hath made thy heart to bleed : Me thinks , here ' s something now , might make it sore , And make thee mourn , till thou canst mourn no more .
- keywords: books; characters; destroyer; destruction; didst; dost; dreadful; early; eebo; english; future; god; hath; heart; london; lord; online; oxford; partnership; phase; poor; sins; soul; tcp; tei; text; thee; thou; time; works; yea
- versions: original; plain text
- A52520
- author: E. N.
- title: London's plague-sore discovered. or, Some serious notes and suitable considerations upon the present visitation at London wherein is something by way of lamentation, information, expostulation, exhortation and caution : whereunto is annexed, A never-failing antidote against the plague.
- date: 1665.0
- words: 2502
- flesch: 74
- summary: Then learn this lesson from it you that can , 'T is vain to trust in any mortal man , For if in danger thou his help shalt crave , Alas ! poor worm ! himself he cannot save . Examine well , and thou maist find it so ; Sin is the cause of this thy present WO , And therefore now , while it is call'd , to day Repent , and turn to God without delay : Break off thy Sins ; Let Righteousness take place , It may be yet thou mayst partake of Grace ;
- keywords: antidote; books; characters; city; day; early; eebo; encoding; english; face; god; good; hast; images; late; london; notes; online; oxford; partnership; phase; plague; poor; present; sins; sore; tcp; tei; text; thee; thou; thy; way; works; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A53403
- author: City of London (England). Court of Aldermen.
- title: Orders conceived and published by the Lord Major and aldermen of the city of London, concerning the infection of the plague
- date: 1665.0
- words: 3664
- flesch: 59
- summary: In general, first editions of a works in English were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably Latin and Welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. THat the sweeping and filth of houses be daily carried away by the Rakers , and that the Raker shall give notice of his coming by the blowing of a Horn as heretofore hath been done .
- keywords: aldermen; apparel; bedding; books; care; cause; characters; chirurgions; city; common; daies; disease; early; eebo; english; examiners; house; infected; infection; london; lord; night; orders; parish; person; plague; remove; said; searchers; sick; special; stuff; tcp; tei; text; time; visited; watchmen
- versions: original; plain text
- A54298
- author: Child, Francis, Sir, 1642-1713, recipient.
- title: Mr. Pepys to the Right Honourable Sir Francis Child, Kt. Lord Mayor, and to the Court of Aldermen upon the present state of Christ-Hospital.
- date: 1699.0
- words: 3397
- flesch: 54
- summary: In general, first editions of a works in English were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably Latin and Welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. Lord Mayor, and to the Court of Aldermen upon the present state of Christ-Hospital.
- keywords: authority; better; books; characters; child; christ; court; early; eebo; encoding; english; francis; gentlemen; governours; honourable; hospital; house; images; little; london; lord; lordship; mayor; online; oxford; partnership; pepys; phase; present; right; said; self; sir; state; tcp; tei; text; vnder; works; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A54552
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: A petition of the major, aldermen, and common-councell of the citie of London, to His Majestie together with His Majesties gracious answer thereunto.
- date: 1641.0
- words: 1770
- flesch: 54
- summary: A petition of the major, aldermen, and common-councell of the citie of London, to His Majestie together with His Majesties gracious answer thereunto. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 257:E181, no 39) A petition of the major, aldermen, and common-councell of the citie of London, to His Majestie together with His Majesties gracious answer thereunto.
- keywords: aldermen; answer; citie; city; common; councell; court; divers; england; english; fears; good; gracious; great; hall; house; london; majestie; major; parliament; persons; petitioners; text; way
- versions: original; plain text
- A54607
- author: Petty, William, Sir, 1623-1687.
- title: Another essay in political arithmetick, concerning the growth of the city of London with the measures, periods, causes, and consequences thereof, 1682 / by Sir William Petty ...
- date: 1683.0
- words: 7218
- flesch: 67
- summary: We also say , That 669930 is near the Number of People now in London , because the Burials are 22331. which Multiplyed by 30 , one dying Yearly out of 30 , as appears in the 94 pag. of the aforementioned Observations ) maketh the said Number ; and because there are 84 Thousand Tenanted Houses ( as we are Credibly Informed ) which at ●8 in each , makes . If the Number of Acres in the Habitable part of the Earth , be under 50. Thousand Millions ; if Twenty Thousand Millions of People , are more than the said Number of Acres will feed ; ( few or no Countries being so fully Peopled ; ) and for that in six doublings ( which will be in 2000 Years ) the present 320 Millions will exceed the said 20 Thousand Millions .
- keywords: acres; anno; annum; better; births; books; burials; causes; characters; city; consequences; countrey; difference; double; doubling; eebo; england; english; flood; foraign; good; great; ground; growth; hath; houses; increase; inhabitants; london; man; measures; men; miles; millions; number; observations; parishes; people; periods; plagues; present; said; scriptures; self; sir; states; table; tcp; text; time; vast; viz; work; world; years
- versions: original; plain text
- A54615
- author: Petty, William, Sir, 1623-1687.
- title: A further assertion of the propositions concerning the magnitude, &c. of London contained in two essays in political arithmetick mentioned in Philos. transact. numb. 183 : together with a vindication of the said essays from the objections of some learned persons of the French nation / by Sr. W. Petty, Knt. ...
- date: 1682.0
- words: 1827
- flesch: 66
- summary: 3. The next is the excellent Monsieur Auzout from Rome , who is content , that London , Westminster , and Southwark — with the contiguous Housing may have as many People as Paris and its Suburbs ; and but faintly denyeth , that all the Housing within the Bills , may have almost as many People as Paris and Roven , but saith that several Parishes inserted into these Bills , are distant from , and not contiguous with London , and that Grant so understood it . Concerning the Number of People in London , as also in Paris , Roven , and Rome , viz.
- keywords: auzout; bills; books; characters; city; early; eebo; english; essays; families; london; monsieur; number; online; paris; people; petty; phase; rome; roven; said; tcp; tei; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A54619
- author: Petty, William, Sir, 1623-1687.
- title: Observations upon the cities of London and Rome Sir William Petty ...
- date: 1687.0
- words: 1200
- flesch: 65
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: anno; books; characters; cities; early; eebo; english; london; observations; online; partnership; people; petty; phase; rome; sir; tcp; tei; text; william
- versions: original; plain text
- A54629
- author: Petty, William, Sir, 1623-1687.
- title: Two essays in political arithmetick concerning the people, housing, hospitals, &c. of London and Paris / by Sir William Petty ...
- date: 1687.0
- words: 3134
- flesch: 63
- summary: As to the Wealth and Gain accruing to the Inhabitants of London and Paris by Law-suits ( or La chicane ) lonely say that the Courts of London extend to all England and Wales , and affect seven Millions of People , whereas those of Paris do not extend near so far : Moreover there is no palpable conspicuous argument at Paris for the Number and Wealth of Lawyers like the Buildings and Chambers in the Two Temples , Lincoln's Inn , Gray's Inn , Doctors Commons , and the seven other Inns in which are Chimnies , which are to be seen at London , besides many Lodgings , Halls and Offices relating to the same . 2. That at London the Hospitals are better and more desirable than those of Paris , for that in the best at Paris there die 2 out of 15 , whereas at London there die out of the worst scarce 2 of 16 , and yet but a fiftieth part of the whole die out of the Hospitals at London , and ⅖ or 20 times that proportion die out of the Paris Hospitals which are of the same kind ; that is to say , the number of those at London who chuse to lie sick in Hospitals rather than in their own Houses , are to the like People of Paris as one to twenty ; which shews the greater Poverty or want of Means in the People of Paris than those of London .
- keywords: anno; annum; best; books; burials; charité; city; dieu; early; eebo; english; greater; hath; hospitals; hostel; houses; housing; london; medium; number; paris; people; petty; plague; said; sir; tcp; text; viz; william; year
- versions: original; plain text
- A55392
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council, recipient.
- title: A paper presented by divers citizens of the city of London, Sept. 5. 1682. to the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen
- date: 1682.0
- words: 1215
- flesch: 65
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A55392) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 30217)
- keywords: books; citizens; city; court; divers; dubois; early; eebo; english; john; london; papillon; right; said; smith; tcp; text; thomas; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A56777
- author: Peacham, Henry, 1576?-1643?
- title: The art of living in London, or, A caution how gentlemen, countreymen and strangers drawn by occasion of businesse should dispose of themselves in the thriftiest way not onely in the citie but in all other populous places as also a direction to the poorer sort that come thither to seeke their fortunes / by H. P.
- date: 1642.0
- words: 3233
- flesch: 59
- summary: Noble and simple rich and poore yong and old , from all places and Countries either for pleasure ( and let me adde beside , to save the charge of House-keeping in the Countrey ) or for profit , as Lawyers to the Tearmes , Country-men and women to Smithsield and the Markets or for necessity , as poore yong men and maids to seeke services and places , serving-men Masters , and some others all manner of imploiment . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A56777 of text R22580 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing P942).
- keywords: a56777; acquaintance; art; books; businesse; care; caution; chamber; citie; company; countrey; countreymen; early; english; fortunes; friends; gentlemen; horse; like; london; man; men; money; non; occasion; onely; owne; places; play; populous; purse; quoth; ready; roman; selfe; shee; sort; strangers; text; time; way
- versions: original; plain text
- A57082
- author: Croplie, Thomas.
- title: The resolutions of the army, against the King, kingdome and city. Iuly 15. 1648. at 8 of the clocke in the morning.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 811
- flesch: 79
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A57082 of text R210984 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing R1165A). Reproductions of the originals in the British Library (Thomason Tracts) and the Harvard University Library (Early English Books).
- keywords: a57082; army; books; city; clocke; early; english; king; kingdome; morning; resolutions; text; wing
- versions: original; plain text
- A57504
- author: Rochester, John Wilmot, Earl of, 1647-1680.
- title: Upon the stately structure of Bow-Church and steeple, burnt, an. 1666, rebuilt, 1679, or, A second poem upon nothing
- date: 1679.0
- words: 1538
- flesch: 74
- summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A57504) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 110704) Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements).
- keywords: books; bow; characters; church; dragon; early; eebo; encoding; english; image; john; london; new; online; oxford; partnership; phase; rebuilt; rochester; second; stately; steeple; structure; tcp; tei; text; thou; wilmot; wing; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A59306
- author: Settle, Elkanah, 1648-1724.
- title: An elegie on the late fire and ruines of London by E. Settle.
- date: 1667.0
- words: 2236
- flesch: 71
- summary: Yes justly styl'd But were 't a Fury too , 't were here too mild : Some the next Church their Sanctuary make And that as Common Treasury partake , But for defence in vain their Wealth remove When for their own their Sanctuaries prove Too weak ; in brief 't is but a short Repreive Surpris'd at last only a while survive , One Merchant swears the Elements conspire Rescu'd from Water to be wrackt by Fire .
- keywords: books; characters; creation; early; edition; eebo; elegie; elements; encoding; english; fate; fire; general; great; images; late; like; london; online; original; oxford; page; partnership; phase; project; ruines; sad; settle; tcp; tei; text; verse; work; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A59353
- author: Settle, Elkanah, 1648-1724.
- title: The triumphs of London performed on Thursday, Octob. 29, 1691, for the entertainment of the Right Honourable Sir Thomas Stamp, Kt., lord mayor of the city of London : containing a true description of the several pageants, with the speeches spoken on each pageant : all set forth at the proper costs and charges of the worshipful Company of Drapers / by E.S.
- date: 1691.0
- words: 37954
- flesch: -276
- summary: xml:id=A59353-007-a-2620>&c.</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-007-a-2630/> </p> <div type=poetic_speech xml:id=A59353-e1980> <pb facs=tcp:105381:7 n=13 xml:id=A59353-007-b/> <head xml:id=A59353-e1990> <w lemma=albion pos=n1g-nn reg=Albion's xml:id=A59353-007-b-0010>ALBION's</w> <w lemma=speech pos=n1 reg=Speech xml:id=A59353-007-b-0020>Speech</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-007-b-0030>.</pc> </head> <l xml:id=A59353-e2000> <w lemma=while pos=cs reg=Whilst xml:id=A59353-007-b-0040>WHilst</w> <w lemma=nassaus pos=n1g-nn reg=Nassaus' xml:id=A59353-007-b-0050 rendition=#hi>Nassaus</w> <w lemma=trump pos=n1 reg=Trump xml:id=A59353-007-b-0060>Trump</w> <w lemma=shall pos=vmb reg=shall xml:id=A59353-007-b-0070>shall</w> <w lemma=it pos=pn reg=it xml:id=A59353-007-b-0080>t'</w> <w lemma=endless pos=j reg=endless xml:id=A59353-007-b-0090>endless</w> <w lemma=age pos=n2 reg=Ages xml:id=A59353-007-b-0100>Ages</w> <w lemma=blow pos=vvi reg=blow xml:id=A59353-007-b-0110>blow</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0120>,</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2020> <w lemma=far pos=av_j reg=Far xml:id=A59353-007-b-0130>Far</w> <w lemma=as pos=acp-cs reg=as xml:id=A59353-007-b-0140>as</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-007-b-0150>the</w> <w lemma=boyne pos=n1-nn reg=Boyne xml:id=A59353-007-b-0160 rendition=#hi>Boyne</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0170>,</pc> <w lemma=or pos=cc reg=or xml:id=A59353-007-b-0180>or</w> <w lemma=shannons pos=n1g-nn reg=Shannons' xml:id=A59353-007-b-0190 rendition=#hi>Shannons</w> <w lemma=water pos=n2 reg=Waters xml:id=A59353-007-b-0200>Waters</w> <w lemma=flow pos=vvi reg=flow xml:id=A59353-007-b-0210>flow</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0220>:</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2050> <w lemma=three pos=ord reg=Third xml:id=A59353-007-b-0230>Third</w> <w lemma=Edward pos=n1-nn reg=Edward xml:id=A59353-007-b-0240 rendition=#hi>Edward</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-007-b-0250>and</w> <w lemma=five pos=ord reg=Fifth xml:id=A59353-007-b-0260>Fifth</w> <hi xml:id=A59353-e2070/> <w lemma=Henry pos=n1g-nn reg=Henry's xml:id=A59353-007-b-0270 rendition=hi-before-apostr>Henry's</w> <w lemma=deathless pos=j reg=deathless xml:id=A59353-007-b-0290>deathless</w> <w lemma=name pos=n1 reg=name xml:id=A59353-007-b-0300>name</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0310>,</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2080> <w lemma=all pos=d reg=All xml:id=A59353-007-b-0320>All</w> <w lemma=centre pos=n1_vg reg=centring xml:id=A59353-007-b-0330>centring</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A59353-007-b-0340>in</w> <w lemma=one pos=pi reg=One xml:id=A59353-007-b-0350>One</w> <w lemma=consummate pos=vvg reg=Consummating xml:id=A59353-007-b-0360>Consummating</w> <w lemma=fame pos=n1 reg=Fame xml:id=A59353-007-b-0370>Fame</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0380>;</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2090> <w lemma=bear pos=vvb reg=Bear xml:id=A59353-007-b-0390>Bear</w> <w lemma=up pos=acp-av reg=up xml:id=A59353-007-b-0400>up</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0410>,</pc> <w lemma=fair pos=j reg=fair xml:id=A59353-007-b-0420>fair</w> <w lemma=Albion pos=n1-nn reg=Albion xml:id=A59353-007-b-0430 rendition=#hi>Albion</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0440>,</pc> <w lemma=thy pos=po reg=thy xml:id=A59353-007-b-0450>thy</w> <w lemma=exalt pos=j_vn reg=exalted xml:id=A59353-007-b-0460>exalted</w> <w lemma=pride pos=n1 reg=Pride xml:id=A59353-007-b-0470>Pride</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0480>,</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2110> <w lemma=rise pos=vvb reg=Rise xml:id=A59353-007-b-0490>Rise</w> <w lemma=high pos=j reg=high xml:id=A59353-007-b-0500>high</w> <w lemma=my pos=po reg=my xml:id=A59353-007-b-0510>my</w> <w lemma=monumental pos=j reg=Monumental xml:id=A59353-007-b-0520>Monumental</w> <w lemma=pyramid pos=n1 reg=Pyramid xml:id=A59353-007-b-0530>Pyramide</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-007-b-0540>.</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2120> <w lemma=but pos=acp-cc reg=But xml:id=A59353-007-b-0550>But</w> <w lemma=while pos=cs reg=whilst xml:id=A59353-007-b-0560>whilst</w> <w lemma=my pos=po reg=my xml:id=A59353-007-b-0570>my</w> <w lemma=elevate pos=vvn reg=Elevated xml:id=A59353-007-b-0580>Elevated</w> <w lemma=thought pos=n2 reg=thoughts xml:id=A59353-007-b-0590>thoughts</w> <w lemma=i pos=pns reg=I xml:id=A59353-007-b-0600>I</w> <w lemma=raise pos=vvb reg=raise xml:id=A59353-007-b-0610>raise</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0620>,</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2130> <w lemma=all pos=av_d reg=All xml:id=A59353-007-b-0630>All</w> <w lemma=tune pos=vvn reg=tuned xml:id=A59353-007-b-0640>tuned</w> <w lemma=to pos=acp-p reg=to xml:id=A59353-007-b-0650>to</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-007-b-0660>the</w> <w lemma=great pos=j reg=Great xml:id=A59353-007-b-0670>Great</w> <w lemma=williams pos=zz reg=WILLIAM'S xml:id=A59353-007-b-0680 rendition=#hi>WILLIAMS</w> <w lemma=hallow pos=j_vn reg=hallowed xml:id=A59353-007-b-0690>hallow'd</w> <w lemma=praise pos=n1 reg=Praise xml:id=A59353-007-b-0700>Praise</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0710>;</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2150> <w lemma=while pos=cs reg=Whilst xml:id=A59353-007-b-0720>Whilst</w> <w lemma=my pos=po reg=my xml:id=A59353-007-b-0730>my</w> <w lemma=transport pos=vvn reg=Transported xml:id=A59353-007-b-0740>Transported</w> <w lemma=veneration pos=n1 reg=Veneration xml:id=A59353-007-b-0750>Veneration</w> <w lemma=mount pos=vvz reg=mounts xml:id=A59353-007-b-0760>mounts</w> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2160> <w lemma=to pos=acp-cs reg=To xml:id=A59353-007-b-0770>To</w> <w lemma=that pos=cs reg=that xml:id=A59353-007-b-0780>that</w> <w lemma=vast pos=j reg=vast xml:id=A59353-007-b-0790>vast</w> <w lemma=theme pos=n1 reg=Theme xml:id=A59353-007-b-0800>Theme</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0810>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-007-b-0820>and</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-007-b-0830>the</w> <hi xml:id=A59353-e2170> <w lemma=sum pos=vvn reg=Summed xml:id=A59353-007-b-0840>Summ'd</w> <w lemma=mass pos=n1 reg=Mass xml:id=A59353-007-b-0850>Mass</w> </hi> <w lemma=recount pos=vvz reg=recounts xml:id=A59353-007-b-0860>recounts</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0870>:</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2180> <w lemma=it pos=pn reg='t xml:id=A59353-007-b-0880 type=contract1>'T</w> <w xml:id=A59353-007-b-0880c type=contract2 lemma=be pos=vvz reg=is join=left>is</w> <w lemma=just pos=j reg=just xml:id=A59353-007-b-0890>just</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0900>,</pc> <w lemma=my pos=po reg=my xml:id=A59353-007-b-0910>my</w> <w lemma=lord pos=n1 reg=Lord xml:id=A59353-007-b-0920>Lord</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0930>,</pc> <w lemma=i pos=pns reg=I xml:id=A59353-007-b-0940>I</w> <w lemma=pay pos=vvb reg=pay xml:id=A59353-007-b-0950>pay</w> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=Your xml:id=A59353-007-b-0960>Your</w> <w lemma=equal pos=j reg=Equal xml:id=A59353-007-b-0970>Equal</w> <w lemma=due pos=n1_j reg=due xml:id=A59353-007-b-0980>due</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-0990>;</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2190> <w lemma=you pos=pn reg=You xml:id=A59353-007-b-1000>You</w> <w lemma=share pos=vvb reg=share xml:id=A59353-007-b-1010>share</w> <w lemma=his pos=po reg=his xml:id=A59353-007-b-1020>his</w> <w lemma=cause pos=n1 reg=Cause xml:id=A59353-007-b-1030 rendition=#hi>Cause</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-1040>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-007-b-1050>and</w> <w lemma=must pos=vmb reg=must xml:id=A59353-007-b-1060>must</w> <w lemma=his pos=po reg=his xml:id=A59353-007-b-1070>his</w> <w lemma=honour pos=n1 reg=Honour xml:id=A59353-007-b-1080>Honour</w> <w lemma=too pos=av reg=too xml:id=A59353-007-b-1090>too</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-007-b-1100>.</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2210> <w lemma=do pos=vvz reg=Does xml:id=A59353-007-b-1110>Does</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-007-b-1120>the</w> <w lemma=arm pos=j_vn reg=Armed xml:id=A59353-007-b-1130>Arm'd</w> <w lemma=Caesar pos=n1-nn reg=Caesar xml:id=A59353-007-b-1140>Caesar</w> <w lemma=drive pos=vvi reg=drive xml:id=A59353-007-b-1150>drive</w> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=Your xml:id=A59353-007-b-1160>Your</w> <w lemma=foe pos=n2 reg=Foes xml:id=A59353-007-b-1170>Foes</w> <w lemma=before pos=acp-p reg=before xml:id=A59353-007-b-1180>before</w> <w lemma=you pos=pn reg=You xml:id=A59353-007-b-1190>You</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-1200>;</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2220> <w lemma=yes pos=uh reg=Yes xml:id=A59353-007-b-1210>Yes</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-1220>,</pc> <w lemma=you pos=pn reg=You xml:id=A59353-007-b-1230>You</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-1240>,</pc> <w lemma=kind pos=j reg=kind xml:id=A59353-007-b-1250>kind</w> <w lemma=patriot pos=n1 reg=Patriot xml:id=A59353-007-b-1260 rendition=#hi>Patriot</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-1270>,</pc> <w lemma=plume pos=vvb reg=Plume xml:id=A59353-007-b-1280>Plume</w> <w lemma=his pos=po reg=his xml:id=A59353-007-b-1290>his</w> <w lemma=wing pos=n2 reg=Wings xml:id=A59353-007-b-1300>Wings</w> <w lemma=for pos=acp-p reg=for xml:id=A59353-007-b-1310>for</w> <w lemma=glory pos=n1 reg=Glory xml:id=A59353-007-b-1320 rendition=#hi>Glory</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-1330>:</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2250> <w lemma=divide pos=vvb reg=Divide xml:id=A59353-007-b-1340>Divide</w> <w lemma=between pos=acp-p reg=between xml:id=A59353-007-b-1350>between</w> <w lemma=you pos=pn reg=you xml:id=A59353-007-b-1360>you</w> <w lemma=then pos=av reg=then xml:id=A59353-007-b-1370>then</w> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=your xml:id=A59353-007-b-1380>your</w> <w lemma=share pos=vvd reg=shared xml:id=A59353-007-b-1390>shared</w> <w lemma=renown pos=n1 reg=Renown xml:id=A59353-007-b-1400>Renown</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-1410>,</pc> </l> <l xml:id=A59353-e2260> <w lemma=William pos=n1-nn reg=William xml:id=A59353-007-b-1420 rendition=#hi>William</w> <w lemma=that pos=cs reg=that xml:id=A59353-007-b-1430>that</w> <w lemma=wear pos=vvz reg=Wears xml:id=A59353-007-b-1440 rendition=#hi>Wears</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-007-b-1450>,</pc> <w lemma=you pos=pn reg=you xml:id=A59353-007-b-1460>you</w> <w lemma=that pos=cs reg=that xml:id=A59353-007-b-1470>that</w> <w lemma=support pos=vvb reg=support xml:id=A59353-007-b-1480>support</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-007-b-1490>a</w> <w lemma=crown pos=n1 reg=Crown xml:id=A59353-007-b-1500>Crown</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-007-b-1510>.</pc> </l> </div> </div> <div type=pageant xml:id=A59353-e2290> <pb facs=tcp:105381:8 n=14 xml:id=A59353-008-a/> <head xml:id=A59353-e2300> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=The xml:id=A59353-008-a-0010>The</w> <w lemma=three pos=ord reg=Third xml:id=A59353-008-a-0020>Third</w> <w lemma=pageant pos=n1 reg=Pageant xml:id=A59353-008-a-0030>Pageant</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0040>,</pc> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-008-a-0050>the</w> <w lemma=theatre pos=n1 reg=Theatre xml:id=A59353-008-a-0060>Theatre</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-008-a-0070>of</w> <w lemma=victory pos=n1 reg=Victory xml:id=A59353-008-a-0080>Victory</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-008-a-0090>.</pc> </head> <p xml:id=A59353-e2310> <w lemma=on pos=acp-p reg=ON xml:id=A59353-008-a-0100>ON</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-008-a-0110>a</w> <w lemma=spacious pos=j reg=spacious xml:id=A59353-008-a-0120>spacious</w> <w lemma=stage pos=n1 reg=Stage xml:id=A59353-008-a-0130>Stage</w> <w lemma=be pos=vvz reg=is xml:id=A59353-008-a-0140>is</w> <w lemma=eleborate pos=av_j reg=Eleborately xml:id=A59353-008-a-0150>Eleborately</w> <w lemma=contrive pos=vvn reg=contrived xml:id=A59353-008-a-0160>contrived</w> <w xml:id=A59353-008-a-0170 lemma=& reg=& pos=cc>&</w> <w lemma=erect pos=vvd reg=Erected xml:id=A59353-008-a-0180>Erected</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-008-a-0190>a</w> <w lemma=stately pos=j reg=stately xml:id=A59353-008-a-0200>stately</w> <w lemma=amphitheatre pos=n1 reg=Amphitheatre xml:id=A59353-008-a-0210>Amphitheatre</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-008-a-0220>of</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-008-a-0230>the</w> <w lemma=rich pos=j-s reg=Richest xml:id=A59353-008-a-0240>Richest</w> <w lemma=egyptian pos=j-nn reg=Egyptian xml:id=A59353-008-a-0250>Egyptian</w> <w lemma=marble pos=n1 reg=Marble xml:id=A59353-008-a-0260>Marble</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0270>,</pc> <w lemma=curious pos=av_j reg=curiously xml:id=A59353-008-a-0280>curiously</w> <w lemma=wrought pos=vvn reg=wrought xml:id=A59353-008-a-0290>wrought</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-008-a-0300>and</w> <w lemma=adorn pos=vvn reg=adorned xml:id=A59353-008-a-0310>adorned</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0320>;</pc> <w lemma=design pos=vvn reg=designed xml:id=A59353-008-a-0330>design'd</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-008-a-0340>and</w> <w lemma=build pos=vvn reg=built xml:id=A59353-008-a-0350>built</w> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A59353-008-a-0360>after</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-008-a-0370>the</w> <w lemma=corinthian pos=j-nn reg=Corinthian xml:id=A59353-008-a-0380 rendition=#hi>Corinthian</w> <w lemma=order pos=n1 reg=order xml:id=A59353-008-a-0390>order</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0400>,</pc> <w lemma=with pos=acp-p reg=with xml:id=A59353-008-a-0410>with</w> <w lemma=column pos=n2 reg=Columns xml:id=A59353-008-a-0420>Columnes</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-008-a-0430>and</w> <w lemma=pilaster pos=n2 reg=Pilasters xml:id=A59353-008-a-0440>Pilasters</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A59353-008-a-0450>in</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-008-a-0460>a</w> <w lemma=quadrangular pos=j reg=Quadrangular xml:id=A59353-008-a-0470>Quadrangular</w> <w lemma=form pos=n1 reg=Form xml:id=A59353-008-a-0480>Form</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0490>,</pc> <w lemma=wherein pos=crq-q reg=wherein xml:id=A59353-008-a-0500>wherein</w> <w lemma=be pos=vvb reg=are xml:id=A59353-008-a-0510>are</w> <w lemma=seat pos=vvn reg=seated xml:id=A59353-008-a-0520>seated</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A59353-008-a-0530>in</w> <w lemma=four pos=crd reg=four xml:id=A59353-008-a-0540>four</w> <w lemma=arch pos=n2 reg=Arches xml:id=A59353-008-a-0550>Arches</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0560>,</pc> <w lemma=bear pos=vvg reg=bearing xml:id=A59353-008-a-0570>bearing</w> <w lemma=each pos=d reg=each xml:id=A59353-008-a-0580>each</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-008-a-0590>the</w> <w lemma=prospect pos=n1 reg=Prospect xml:id=A59353-008-a-0600>Prospect</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-008-a-0610>of</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=an xml:id=A59353-008-a-0620>an</w> <w lemma=amphitheatre pos=n1 reg=Amphitheatre xml:id=A59353-008-a-0630>Amphitheatre</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0640>,</pc> <w lemma=Neptune pos=n1-nn reg=Neptune xml:id=A59353-008-a-0650 rendition=#hi>Neptune</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-008-a-0660>and</w> <hi xml:id=A59353-e2340> <w lemma=Thetis pos=n1-nn reg=Thetis xml:id=A59353-008-a-0670>Thetis</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0680>,</pc> <w lemma=Mars pos=n1-nn reg=Mars xml:id=A59353-008-a-0690>Mars</w> </hi> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-008-a-0700>and</w> <w lemma=Bellona pos=n1-nn reg=Bellona xml:id=A59353-008-a-0710 rendition=#hi>Bellona</w> <w lemma=sumptuous pos=av_j reg=sumptuously xml:id=A59353-008-a-0720>sumptuously</w> <w lemma=dress pos=vvn reg=Dressed xml:id=A59353-008-a-0730>Drest</w> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A59353-008-a-0740>after</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-008-a-0750>the</w> <w lemma=manner pos=n1 reg=manner xml:id=A59353-008-a-0760>manner</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-008-a-0770>of</w> <w lemma=those pos=d reg=those xml:id=A59353-008-a-0780>those</w> <w lemma=heathen pos=j reg=Heathen xml:id=A59353-008-a-0790>Heathen</w> <w lemma=god pos=n2 reg=Gods xml:id=A59353-008-a-0800>Gods</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-008-a-0810>and</w> <w lemma=goddess pos=n2 reg=Goddesses xml:id=A59353-008-a-0820>Goddesses</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-008-a-0830>.</pc> </p> <p xml:id=A59353-e2360> <w lemma=Neptune pos=n1-nn reg=Neptune xml:id=A59353-008-a-0840 rendition=#hi>Neptune</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A59353-008-a-0850>in</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-008-a-0860>a</w> <w lemma=robe pos=n1 reg=Robe xml:id=A59353-008-a-0870>Robe</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-008-a-0880>of</w> <w lemma=sea-green pos=j reg=Sea-green xml:id=A59353-008-a-0890>Sea-Green</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0900>,</pc> <w lemma=fringe pos=vvn reg=fringed xml:id=A59353-008-a-0910>fringed</w> <w lemma=with pos=acp-p reg=with xml:id=A59353-008-a-0920>with</w> <w lemma=gold pos=n1 reg=Gold xml:id=A59353-008-a-0930>Gold</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0940>,</pc> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-008-a-0950>a</w> <w lemma=silver pos=n1 reg=Silver xml:id=A59353-008-a-0960>Silver</w> <w lemma=mantle pos=n1 reg=Mantle xml:id=A59353-008-a-0970>Mantle</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-0980>,</pc> <w lemma=on pos=acp-p reg=on xml:id=A59353-008-a-0990>on</w> <w lemma=his pos=po reg=his xml:id=A59353-008-a-1000>his</w> <w lemma=head pos=n1 reg=head xml:id=A59353-008-a-1010>head</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-008-a-1020>a</w> <w lemma=coronet pos=n1 reg=Coronet xml:id=A59353-008-a-1030>Coronet</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-008-a-1040>of</w> <w lemma=shell pos=n2 reg=Shells xml:id=A59353-008-a-1050>Shells</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-008-a-1060>and</w> <w lemma=coral pos=n1 reg=Coral xml:id=A59353-008-a-1070>Coral</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-1080>,</pc> <w lemma=his pos=po reg=his xml:id=A59353-008-a-1090>his</w> <w lemma=hair pos=n1 reg=hair xml:id=A59353-008-a-1100>hair</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-008-a-1110>and</w> <w lemma=beard pos=n1 reg=beard xml:id=A59353-008-a-1120>beard</w> <w lemma=Green pos=n1-nn reg=Green xml:id=A59353-008-a-1130>Green</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-1140>,</pc> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A59353-008-a-1150>in</w> <w lemma=his pos=po reg=his xml:id=A59353-008-a-1160>his</w> <w lemma=right pos=j reg=Right xml:id=A59353-008-a-1170>Right</w> <w lemma=hand pos=n1 reg=hand xml:id=A59353-008-a-1180>hand</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-008-a-1190>a</w> <w lemma=silver pos=n1 reg=Silver xml:id=A59353-008-a-1200>Silver</w> <w lemma=trident pos=n1 reg=Trident xml:id=A59353-008-a-1210>Trident</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-1220>,</pc> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A59353-008-a-1230>in</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-008-a-1240>the</w> <w lemma=other pos=d reg=other xml:id=A59353-008-a-1250>other</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-008-a-1260>a</w> <w lemma=banner pos=n1 reg=Banner xml:id=A59353-008-a-1270>Banner</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-008-a-1280>of</w> <w lemma=my pos=po reg=my xml:id=A59353-008-a-1290>my</w> <w lemma=lord pos=n2 reg=Lords xml:id=A59353-008-a-1300>Lords</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-008-a-1310>,</pc> <w lemma=etc pos=n-ab reg=etc. xml:id=A59353-002-b-0850>You.</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=And xml:id=A59353-002-b-0860>And</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-002-b-0870>the</w> <w lemma=unanimous pos=j reg=Unanimous xml:id=A59353-002-b-0880>Unanimous</w> <w lemma=acknowledgement pos=n2 reg=acknowledgements xml:id=A59353-002-b-0890>acknowledgements</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-002-b-0900>of</w> <w lemma=all pos=d reg=all xml:id=A59353-002-b-0910>all</w> <w lemma=good pos=j reg=good xml:id=A59353-002-b-0920>good</w> <w lemma=man pos=n2 reg=Men xml:id=A59353-002-b-0930>Men</w> <w lemma=be pos=vvb reg=are xml:id=A59353-002-b-0940>are</w> <w lemma=so pos=av reg=so xml:id=A59353-002-b-0950>so</w> <w lemma=sensible pos=j reg=sensible xml:id=A59353-002-b-0960>sensible</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-002-b-0970>of</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-002-b-0980>a</w> <w lemma=desert pos=n1 reg=Desert xml:id=A59353-002-b-0990 rendition=#hi>Desert</w> <w lemma=so pos=av reg=so xml:id=A59353-002-b-1000>so</w> <w lemma=conspicuous pos=j reg=conspicuous xml:id=A59353-002-b-1010>conspicuous</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-002-b-1020>,</pc> <w lemma=that pos=cs reg=that xml:id=A59353-002-b-1030>that</w> <w lemma=their pos=po reg=their xml:id=A59353-002-b-1040>their</w> <w lemma=concur pos=vvg reg=concurring xml:id=A59353-002-b-1050>concurring</w> <w lemma=best pos=av_j reg=best xml:id=A59353-002-b-1060>best</w> <w lemma=wish pos=n2 reg=Wishes xml:id=A59353-002-b-1070>Wishes</w> <w lemma=make pos=vvb reg=make xml:id=A59353-002-b-1080>make</w> <w lemma=you pos=pn reg=you xml:id=A59353-002-b-1090>you</w> <w lemma=one pos=crd reg=one xml:id=A59353-002-b-1100>one</w> <w lemma=unite pos=j_vn reg=United xml:id=A59353-002-b-1110>United</w> <w lemma=congratulation pos=n1 reg=Congratulation xml:id=A59353-002-b-1120>Congratulation</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-002-b-1130>.</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=And xml:id=A59353-002-b-1140>And</w> <w lemma=that pos=cs reg=that xml:id=A59353-002-b-1150>that</w> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=Your xml:id=A59353-002-b-1160>Your</w> <w lemma=lordship pos=n1 reg=Lordship xml:id=A59353-002-b-1170 rendition=#hi>Lordship</w> <w lemma=have pos=vvz reg=has xml:id=A59353-002-b-1180>has</w> <w lemma=so pos=av reg=so xml:id=A59353-002-b-1190>so</w> <w lemma=deserve pos=vvn reg=deserved xml:id=A59353-002-b-1200>deserved</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-002-b-1210>,</pc> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=your xml:id=A59353-002-b-1220>your</w> <w lemma=constant pos=j reg=Constant xml:id=A59353-002-b-1230>Constant</w> <w lemma=zeal pos=n1 reg=Zeal xml:id=A59353-002-b-1240>Zeal</w> <w lemma=for pos=acp-p reg=for xml:id=A59353-002-b-1250>for</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-002-b-1260>the</w> <hi xml:id=A59353-e300> <w lemma=honour pos=n1 reg=Honour xml:id=A59353-002-b-1270>Honour</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-002-b-1280>of</w> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=Your xml:id=A59353-002-b-1290>Your</w> <w lemma=country pos=n1 reg=Country xml:id=A59353-002-b-1300>Country</w> </hi> <pc xml:id=A59353-002-b-1310 rendition=#follows-hi>,</pc> <w lemma=be pos=vvz reg=is xml:id=A59353-002-b-1320>is</w> <w lemma=not pos=xx reg=not xml:id=A59353-002-b-1330>not</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-002-b-1340>the</w> <w lemma=business pos=n1 reg=Business xml:id=A59353-002-b-1350>Business</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-002-b-1360>of</w> <w lemma=yesterday pos=n1-nn reg=Yesterday xml:id=A59353-002-b-1370>Yesterday</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-002-b-1380>.</pc> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=Your xml:id=A59353-002-b-1390>Your</w> <w lemma=lordship pos=n1 reg=Lordship xml:id=A59353-002-b-1400>Lordship</w> <w lemma=set pos=vvd reg=set xml:id=A59353-002-b-1410>set</w> <w lemma=out pos=av reg=out xml:id=A59353-002-b-1420>out</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=an xml:id=A59353-002-b-1430>an</w> <w lemma=early pos=j reg=early xml:id=A59353-002-b-1440>early</w> <w lemma=devote pos=n1 reg=Devote xml:id=A59353-002-b-1450>Devote</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A59353-002-b-1460>in</w> <w lemma=so pos=av reg=so xml:id=A59353-002-b-1470>so</w> <w lemma=worthy pos=j reg=worthy xml:id=A59353-002-b-1480>worthy</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-002-b-1490>a</w> <w lemma=cause pos=n1 reg=Cause xml:id=A59353-002-b-1500>Cause</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-002-b-1510>.</pc> <w lemma=for pos=acp-p reg=For xml:id=A59353-002-b-1520>For</w> <w lemma=instance pos=n1 reg=Instance xml:id=A59353-002-b-1530>Instance</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-002-b-1540>,</pc> <w lemma=several pos=j reg=several xml:id=A59353-002-b-1550>several</w> <w lemma=year pos=n2 reg=Years xml:id=A59353-002-b-1560>Years</w> <w lemma=together pos=av reg=together xml:id=A59353-002-b-1570>together</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A59353-002-b-1580>in</w> <w lemma=those pos=d reg=those xml:id=A59353-002-b-1590>those</w> <w lemma=memorable pos=j reg=memorable xml:id=A59353-002-b-1600>memorable</w> <w lemma=day pos=n2 reg=Days xml:id=A59353-002-b-1610>Days</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-002-b-1620>,</pc> <w lemma=when pos=crq-cs reg=when xml:id=A59353-002-b-1630>when</w> <w lemma=Intrigue pos=n1-nn reg=Intrigue xml:id=A59353-002-b-1640 rendition=#hi>Intrigue</w> <w xml:id=A59353-002-b-1650 lemma=& reg=& pos=cc>&</w> <w lemma=design pos=n1 reg=Design xml:id=A59353-002-b-1660 rendition=#hi>Designe</w> <w lemma=sit pos=vvd reg=sat xml:id=A59353-002-b-1670>sat</w> <w lemma=high pos=j reg=high xml:id=A59353-002-b-1680>high</w> <w lemma=at pos=acp-p reg=at xml:id=A59353-002-b-1690>at</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-002-b-1700>the</w> <w lemma=helm pos=n1 reg=Helm xml:id=A59353-002-b-1710 rendition=#hi>Helm</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-002-b-1720>,</pc> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=Your xml:id=A59353-002-b-1730>Your</w> <w lemma=unshake pos=j_vn reg=unshaken xml:id=A59353-002-b-1740>unshaken</w> <w lemma=honour pos=n1 reg=Honour xml:id=A59353-002-b-1750 rendition=#hi>Honour</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-002-b-1760>and</w> <w lemma=honesty pos=n1 reg=Honesty xml:id=A59353-002-b-1770 rendition=#hi>Honesty</w> <w lemma=be pos=vvd reg=were xml:id=A59353-002-b-1780>were</w> <w lemma=think pos=vvn reg=thought xml:id=A59353-002-b-1790>thought</w> <w lemma=so pos=av reg=so xml:id=A59353-002-b-1800>so</w> <w lemma=dangerous pos=j reg=dangerous xml:id=A59353-002-b-1810>dangerous</w> <w lemma=to pos=acp-p reg=to xml:id=A59353-002-b-1820>to</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-002-b-1830>the</w> <w lemma=then pos=av reg=then xml:id=A59353-002-b-1840>then</w> <pb facs=tcp:105381:3 xml:id=A59353-003-a/> <w lemma=state-hammerers pos=j reg=State-hammerers xml:id=A59353-003-a-0010 rendition=#hi>State-Hammerers</w> <w lemma=at pos=acp-p reg=at xml:id=A59353-003-a-0020>at</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-003-a-0030>the</w> <w lemma=anvil pos=n1 reg=Anvil xml:id=A59353-003-a-0040>Anvil</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-0050>,</pc> <w lemma=that pos=cs reg=that xml:id=A59353-003-a-0060>that</w> <w lemma=no pos=d-x reg=no xml:id=A59353-003-a-0070>no</w> <w lemma=less pos=d-c reg=lesle xml:id=A59353-003-a-0080>less</w> <w lemma=than pos=cs reg=than xml:id=A59353-003-a-0090>then</w> <w lemma=court-power pos=n1 reg=Court-power xml:id=A59353-003-a-0100 rendition=#hi>Court-Power</w> <w lemma=be pos=vvd reg=was xml:id=A59353-003-a-0110>was</w> <w lemma=please pos=vvn reg=pleased xml:id=A59353-003-a-0120>pleased</w> <w lemma=to pos=acp-cs reg=to xml:id=A59353-003-a-0130>to</w> <w lemma=rise pos=vvi reg=rise xml:id=A59353-003-a-0140>rise</w> <w lemma=up pos=acp-av reg=up xml:id=A59353-003-a-0150>up</w> <w xml:id=A59353-003-a-0160 lemma=& reg=& pos=cc>&</w> <w lemma=wage pos=vvi reg=wage xml:id=A59353-003-a-0170>wage</w> <w lemma=against pos=acp-p reg=against xml:id=A59353-003-a-0180>against</w> <w lemma=you pos=pn reg=You xml:id=A59353-003-a-0190>You</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-0200>,</pc> <w lemma=witness pos=vvb reg=witness xml:id=A59353-003-a-0210>witness</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-003-a-0220>the</w> <w lemma=several pos=j reg=several xml:id=A59353-003-a-0230>several</w> <w lemma=potent pos=j reg=potent xml:id=A59353-003-a-0240>potent</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-0250>,</pc> <w lemma=opposition pos=n2 reg=Oppositions xml:id=A59353-003-a-0260>Oppositions</w> <w lemma=make pos=vvn reg=made xml:id=A59353-003-a-0270>made</w> <w lemma=against pos=acp-p reg=against xml:id=A59353-003-a-0280>against</w> <w lemma=you pos=pn reg=you xml:id=A59353-003-a-0290>you</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-003-a-0300>and</w> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=your xml:id=A59353-003-a-0310>your</w> <w lemma=long pos=j reg=long xml:id=A59353-003-a-0320>long</w> <w lemma=exclusion pos=n1 reg=Exclusion xml:id=A59353-003-a-0330>Exclusion</w> <w lemma=from pos=acp-p reg=from xml:id=A59353-003-a-0340>from</w> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=your xml:id=A59353-003-a-0350>your</w> <w lemma=rightful pos=j reg=Rightful xml:id=A59353-003-a-0360>Rightful</w> <w lemma=entrance pos=n1 reg=Entrance xml:id=A59353-003-a-0370>Entrance</w> <w lemma=into pos=acp-p reg=into xml:id=A59353-003-a-0380>into</w> <w lemma=trust pos=n1 reg=Trust xml:id=A59353-003-a-0390 rendition=#hi>Trust</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-003-a-0400>.</pc> <w lemma=but pos=acp-cc reg=But xml:id=A59353-003-a-0410>But</w> <w lemma=thank pos=n2 reg=thanks xml:id=A59353-003-a-0420>thanks</w> <w lemma=to pos=acp-p reg=to xml:id=A59353-003-a-0430>to</w> <w lemma=providence pos=n1 reg=Providence xml:id=A59353-003-a-0440>Providence</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-0450>,</pc> <w lemma=under pos=acp-p reg=under xml:id=A59353-003-a-0460>under</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-003-a-0470>the</w> <w lemma=present pos=j reg=present xml:id=A59353-003-a-0480>present</w> <w lemma=more pos=av-c_d reg=more xml:id=A59353-003-a-0490>more</w> <w lemma=benign pos=j reg=benign xml:id=A59353-003-a-0500>benign</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-0510>,</pc> <w xml:id=A59353-003-a-0520 lemma=& reg=& pos=cc>&</w> <w lemma=more pos=av-c_d reg=more xml:id=A59353-003-a-0530>more</w> <w lemma=auspicious pos=j reg=auspicious xml:id=A59353-003-a-0540>auspicious</w> <w lemma=administration pos=n1 reg=Administration xml:id=A59353-003-a-0550 rendition=#hi>Administration</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-0560>,</pc> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-003-a-0570>a</w> <w lemma=reign pos=n1 reg=Reign xml:id=A59353-003-a-0580>Reign</w> <w lemma=where pos=crq-cs reg=where xml:id=A59353-003-a-0590>where</w> <w lemma=integrity pos=n1 reg=Integrity xml:id=A59353-003-a-0600>Integrity</w> <w lemma=qualify pos=vvz reg=qualifies xml:id=A59353-003-a-0610>qualifies</w> <w lemma=for pos=acp-p reg=for xml:id=A59353-003-a-0620>for</w> <w lemma=magistracy pos=n1 reg=Magistracy xml:id=A59353-003-a-0630 rendition=#hi>Magistracy</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-0640>,</pc> <w xml:id=A59353-003-a-0650 lemma=& reg=& pos=cc>&</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-003-a-0660>the</w> <w lemma=courtier pos=n1 reg=Courtier xml:id=A59353-003-a-0670 rendition=#hi>Courtier</w> <w xml:id=A59353-003-a-0680 lemma=& reg=& pos=cc>&</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-003-a-0690>the</w> <w lemma=patriot pos=n1 reg=Patriot xml:id=A59353-003-a-0700 rendition=#hi>Patriot</w> <w lemma=be pos=vvb reg=are xml:id=A59353-003-a-0710>are</w> <w lemma=not pos=xx reg=not xml:id=A59353-003-a-0720>not</w> <w lemma=name pos=n2 reg=names xml:id=A59353-003-a-0730>names</w> <w lemma=incompatible pos=j reg=incompatible xml:id=A59353-003-a-0740>incompatible</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-0750>,</pc> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=your xml:id=A59353-003-a-0760>your</w> <w lemma=lordship pos=n1g reg=Lordship's xml:id=A59353-003-a-0770>Lordships</w> <w lemma=glory pos=n1 reg=Glory xml:id=A59353-003-a-0780>Glory</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-003-a-0790>of</w> <w lemma=be pos=vvg reg=being xml:id=A59353-003-a-0800>being</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-003-a-0810>the</w> <w lemma=fear pos=n1 reg=Fear xml:id=A59353-003-a-0820 rendition=#hi>Fear</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-003-a-0830>of</w> <w lemma=that pos=d reg=that xml:id=A59353-003-a-0840>that</w> <w lemma=age pos=n1 reg=Age xml:id=A59353-003-a-0850 rendition=#hi>Age</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-0860>,</pc> <w lemma=entitle pos=vvz reg=entitles xml:id=A59353-003-a-0870>intitles</w> <w lemma=you pos=pn reg=you xml:id=A59353-003-a-0880>you</w> <w lemma=to pos=acp-p reg=to xml:id=A59353-003-a-0890>to</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-003-a-0900>the</w> <w lemma=darling pos=n1 reg=Darling xml:id=A59353-003-a-0910 rendition=#hi>Darling</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-003-a-0920>of</w> <w lemma=this pos=d reg=this xml:id=A59353-003-a-0930>this</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-003-a-0940>.</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=And xml:id=A59353-003-a-0950>And</w> <w lemma=our pos=po reg=our xml:id=A59353-003-a-0960>our</w> <w lemma=proud pos=j reg=proud xml:id=A59353-003-a-0970>proud</w> <w lemma=metropolis pos=n1 reg=Metropolis xml:id=A59353-003-a-0980 rendition=#hi>Metropolis</w> <w lemma=receive pos=vvz reg=receives xml:id=A59353-003-a-0990>receives</w> <w lemma=she pos=pno reg=her xml:id=A59353-003-a-1000>her</w> <w lemma=salute pos=vvn reg=saluted xml:id=A59353-003-a-1010>saluted</w> <w lemma=praeior pos=n1 reg=PRAEIOR xml:id=A59353-003-a-1020 rendition=#hi>PRAEIOR</w> <w lemma=so pos=av reg=so xml:id=A59353-003-a-1030>so</w> <w lemma=please pos=vvn reg=pleased xml:id=A59353-003-a-1040>pleased</w> <w lemma=at pos=acp-p reg=at xml:id=A59353-003-a-1050>at</w> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=your xml:id=A59353-003-a-1060>your</w> <w lemma=inauguration pos=n1 reg=Inauguration xml:id=A59353-003-a-1070 rendition=#hi>Inauguration</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-1080>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-003-a-1090>and</w> <w lemma=with pos=acp-p reg=with xml:id=A59353-003-a-1100>with</w> <w lemma=such pos=d reg=such xml:id=A59353-003-a-1110>such</w> <w lemma=promise pos=j_vg reg=promising xml:id=A59353-003-a-1120>promising</w> <w lemma=confidence pos=n1 reg=confidence xml:id=A59353-003-a-1130>confidence</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-003-a-1140>of</w> <w lemma=so pos=av reg=so xml:id=A59353-003-a-1150>so</w> <w lemma=upright pos=j reg=upright xml:id=A59353-003-a-1160>upright</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-003-a-1170>and</w> <w lemma=unbiased pos=j_vn reg=unbiased xml:id=A59353-003-a-1180>unbiast</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-003-a-1190>a</w> <w lemma=ministry pos=n1 reg=Ministry xml:id=A59353-003-a-1200 rendition=#hi>Ministry</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-003-a-1210>of</w> <w lemma=equity pos=n1 reg=Equity xml:id=A59353-003-a-1220 rendition=#hi>Equity</w> <w xml:id=A59353-003-a-1230 lemma=& reg=& pos=cc>&</w> <w lemma=justice pos=n1 reg=Justice xml:id=A59353-003-a-1240 rendition=#hi>Justice</w> <w lemma=from pos=acp-p reg=from xml:id=A59353-003-a-1250>from</w> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=your xml:id=A59353-003-a-1260>your</w> <w lemma=lordship pos=n1 reg=Lordship xml:id=A59353-003-a-1270>Lordship</w> <w lemma=that pos=cs reg=that xml:id=A59353-003-a-1280>that</w> <w lemma=she pos=pns reg=she xml:id=A59353-003-a-1290>she</w> <w lemma=never pos=av-x reg=never xml:id=A59353-003-a-1300>never</w> <w lemma=entrust pos=vvn reg=entrusted xml:id=A59353-003-a-1310>entrusted</w> <w lemma=her pos=po reg=her xml:id=A59353-003-a-1320>her</w> <w lemma=scale pos=n2 reg=Scales xml:id=A59353-003-a-1330 rendition=#hi>Scales</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-003-a-1340>and</w> <w lemma=her pos=po reg=her xml:id=A59353-003-a-1350>her</w> <w lemma=sword pos=n1 reg=Sword xml:id=A59353-003-a-1360 rendition=#hi>Sword</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A59353-003-a-1370>in</w> <w lemma=a pos=d reg=a xml:id=A59353-003-a-1380>a</w> <w lemma=worthy pos=j-c reg=Worthier xml:id=A59353-003-a-1390>Worthier</w> <w lemma=hand pos=n1 reg=Hand xml:id=A59353-003-a-1400>Hand</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A59353-003-a-1410>.</pc> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=In xml:id=A59353-003-a-1420>In</w> <w lemma=which pos=crq-r reg=which xml:id=A59353-003-a-1430>which</w> <w lemma=high pos=j reg=high xml:id=A59353-003-a-1440>high</w> <w lemma=post pos=n1 reg=post xml:id=A59353-003-a-1450>post</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A59353-003-a-1460>of</w> <w lemma=honour pos=n1 reg=Honour xml:id=A59353-003-a-1470>Honour</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-1480>,</pc> <w lemma=i pos=pns reg=I xml:id=A59353-003-a-1490>I</w> <w lemma=join pos=vvb reg=join xml:id=A59353-003-a-1500>joyn</w> <w lemma=but pos=acp-av reg=but xml:id=A59353-003-a-1510>but</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A59353-003-a-1520>in</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A59353-003-a-1530>the</w> <w lemma=universal pos=j reg=Universal xml:id=A59353-003-a-1540>Universal</w> <w lemma=choir pos=n1 reg=Choir xml:id=A59353-003-a-1550>Quire</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-1560>,</pc> <w lemma=when pos=crq-cs reg=when xml:id=A59353-003-a-1570>when</w> <w lemma=all pos=d reg=all xml:id=A59353-003-a-1580>all</w> <w lemma=prosperity pos=n1 reg=Prosperity xml:id=A59353-003-a-1590 rendition=#hi>Prosperity</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-003-a-1600>and</w> <w lemma=hoppiness pos=n1 reg=Hoppiness xml:id=A59353-003-a-1610 rendition=#hi>Hoppiness</w> <w lemma=to pos=acp-p reg=to xml:id=A59353-003-a-1620>to</w> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=your xml:id=A59353-003-a-1630>your</w> <w lemma=lordship pos=n1 reg=Lordship xml:id=A59353-003-a-1640>Lordship</w> <w lemma=be pos=vvb reg=are xml:id=A59353-003-a-1650>are</w> <w lemma=most pos=av-s_d reg=most xml:id=A59353-003-a-1660>most</w> <w lemma=hearty pos=av_j reg=heartily xml:id=A59353-003-a-1670>heartily</w> <w lemma=wish pos=vvn reg=wished xml:id=A59353-003-a-1680>wisht</w> <w lemma=by pos=acp-p reg=by xml:id=A59353-003-a-1690>by</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-1700>,</pc> <hi xml:id=A59353-e560> <w lemma=my pos=po reg=My xml:id=A59353-003-a-1710>My</w> <w lemma=lord pos=n1 reg=Lord xml:id=A59353-003-a-1720>Lord</w> </hi> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-1730 rendition=#follows-hi>,</pc> </p> <closer xml:id=A59353-e570> <signed xml:id=A59353-e580> <w lemma=your pos=po reg=Your xml:id=A59353-003-a-1740>Your</w> <w lemma=most pos=av-s_d reg=most xml:id=A59353-003-a-1750>most</w> <w lemma=humble pos=j reg=humble xml:id=A59353-003-a-1760>humble</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A59353-003-a-1770>and</w> <w lemma=obedient pos=j reg=obedient xml:id=A59353-003-a-1780>obedient</w> <w lemma=servant pos=n1 reg=Servant xml:id=A59353-003-a-1790>Servant</w> <pc xml:id=A59353-003-a-1800>,</pc> <w lemma=e.
- keywords: 003; 007; > london; > text; a"/; author; b"/; b-0010">the</w; b-1720">,</pc; body xml; books; closer xml; div; early; english; foreign xml; hakala</label >; head xml; hi xml; hi">,</pc; id="a59353; idno; join="left">is</w; lemma="& lemma="after; lemma="age; lemma="all; lemma="as; lemma="be; lemma="colour; lemma="do; lemma="duty; lemma="four; lemma="fringe; lemma="from; lemma="gentleman; lemma="gown; lemma="hand; lemma="her; lemma="honourable; lemma="in; lemma="industry; lemma="majesty; lemma="more; lemma="my; lemma="not; lemma="on; lemma="other; lemma="our; lemma="plain; lemma="present; lemma="rear; lemma="right; lemma="several; lemma="silver; lemma="sit; lemma="speech; lemma="those; lemma="to; lemma="under; lemma="when; lemma="world; lemma="worshipful; opener xml; pc unit="sentence; pc xml; piece; piece</w; pos="acp; pos="av; pos="av_j; pos="cc; pos="cc">&</w; pos="crd; pos="d; pos="fw; pos="j_vn; pos="n1; pos="n1_j; pos="n1_vg; pos="pns; pos="po; pos="vmb; pos="vvn; pos="xx; pos="zz; reg="after; reg="all; reg="and; reg="are; reg="arms; reg="at; reg="banner; reg="blue; reg="but; reg="cities; reg="city; reg="colours; reg="companies; reg="company; reg="drapers; reg="drums; reg="each; reg="etc; reg="fair; reg="four; reg="from; reg="gentlemen; reg="glory; reg="gold; reg="gowns; reg="great; reg="have; reg="head; reg="her; reg="his; reg="honourable; reg="hoods; reg="in; reg="industry; reg="king; reg="large; reg="london; reg="lordship; reg="mayor; reg="must; reg="my; reg="neptune; reg="not; reg="one; reg="or; reg="order; reg="pageant; reg="plain; reg="present; reg="proper; reg="proud; reg="rear; reg="set; reg="several; reg="silver; reg="six; reg="so; reg="stage; reg="the; reg="their; reg="those; reg="though; reg="three; reg="two; reg="under; reg="whilst; reg="with; reg="world; reg="worshipful; reg="your; rendition="#follows; rendition="#hi">&c.</w; rendition="#hi">drapers</w; term >; text xml; title; trailer xml; type="contract1">'t</w; type="contract2; type="pageant; w lemma="a; w lemma="acknowledgement; w lemma="albion; w lemma="alderman; w lemma="amphitheatre; w lemma="arachne; w lemma="artful; w lemma="attend; w lemma="bachelor; w lemma="banner; w lemma="beautiful; w lemma="bellona; w lemma="beneath; w lemma="benefactor; w lemma="best; w lemma="between; w lemma="boyne; w lemma="bright; w lemma="budg; w lemma="buskin; w lemma="cause; w lemma="chariot; w lemma="city; w lemma="coat; w lemma="company; w lemma="confederacy; w lemma="contain; w lemma="coronet; w lemma="corporation; w lemma="crimson; w lemma="crown; w lemma="curl; w lemma="dare; w lemma="design; w lemma="diligence; w lemma="division; w lemma="draper; w lemma="drive; w lemma="equal; w lemma="erect; w lemma="etc; w lemma="europe; w lemma="fair; w lemma="fauna; w lemma="favour; w lemma="fife; w lemma="flaxen; w lemma="flock; w lemma="forty; w lemma="founder; w lemma="frolic; w lemma="glory; w lemma="gold; w lemma="green; w lemma="head; w lemma="hearty; w lemma="high; w lemma="honour; w lemma="join; w lemma="king; w lemma="land; w lemma="laurel; w lemma="leave; w lemma="lion; w lemma="london; w lemma="lordship; w lemma="manner; w lemma="mantle; w lemma="mayor; w lemma="merit; w lemma="mirth; w lemma="mistress; w lemma="mount; w lemma="move; w lemma="much; w lemma="music; w lemma="name; w lemma="of; w lemma="pageant; w lemma="patriot; w lemma="pay; w lemma="person; w lemma="plume; w lemma="proper; w lemma="proud; w lemma="purple; w lemma="pyramid; w lemma="reed; w lemma="represent; w lemma="rural; w lemma="sarsnet; w lemma="scarf; w lemma="scrip; w lemma="seat; w lemma="settle; w lemma="shepherd; w lemma="sheriff; w lemma="six; w lemma="stage; w lemma="standard; w lemma="straw; w lemma="success; w lemma="sword; w lemma="the; w lemma="thetis; w lemma="throne; w lemma="together; w lemma="town; w lemma="trade; w lemma="tranquillity; w lemma="triumph; w lemma="twenty; w lemma="we; w lemma="wherein; w lemma="while; w lemma="with; w lemma="work; w lemma="your; w xml; xml conversion; xml version="1.0
- versions: original; plain text
- A60917
- author: King, William, 1663-1712.
- title: A journey to London in the year 1698 after the ingenuous method of that made by Dr. Martin Lyster to Paris in the same year, &c. / written originally in French by Monsieur Sorbiere and newly translated into English.
- date: 1698.0
- words: 8001
- flesch: 77
- summary: A journey to London in the year 1698 after the ingenuous method of that made by Dr. Martin Lyster to Paris in the same year, &c. / written originally in French by Monsieur Sorbiere and newly translated into English. A journey to London in the year 1698 after the ingenuous method of that made by Dr. Martin Lyster to Paris in the same year, &c. / written originally in French by Monsieur Sorbiere and newly translated into English.
- keywords: admirable; air; beef; boats; books; bridge; cabbage; certain; characters; chocolate; city; clean; coaches; coins; curiosity; curious; discourse; ducks; dust; early; eebo; encoding; england; english; excellent; fair; france; french; gentleman; good; great; horse; houses; images; ingenuous; james; journey; king; large; lettice; light; little; london; lyster; magnificent; man; market; martin; meat; men; method; mind; monsieur; naked; notes; number; old; online; oxford; page; paris; park; particular; partnership; pease; people; pick; places; present; publick; reason; remarkable; roman; salt; set; shirts; sir; small; statues; stone; streets; tcp; tei; text; things; time; town; vast; white; women; work; xml; year
- versions: original; plain text
- A61503
- author: Sancroft, William, 1617-1693.
- title: Lex ignea, or, The school of righteousness a sermon preached before the King, Octob. 10, 1666, at the solemn fast appointed for the late fire in London / by William Sandcroft ...
- date: 1666.0
- words: 13821
- flesch: 71
- summary: To make short , Righteousness or Justice , though elsewhere a single Vertue , yet here 't is vittually All : — 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , said the Poet ; and the Philosopher after him , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , not a part , but all Vertue : and so often both in Scripture , and Fathers , comprehensively all Religion , the whole Duty of Man. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , saith S. Chrisostome : Omnes Virtutum species uno Justitiae nomine , saith S. Jerome . And now what shall I say more , if all that hath been said hitherto , prove ineffectual ? The Text affords yet one Expedient as the Chaldee Paraphrast may seem to have understood it : Because thy Judgment , saith he ( not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as in the Hebrew , but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Jews call it , and S. Jude from them , The Judgment of the great Day ) because that Judgment , though not as yet in the Earth , is yet fixt , and appointed , and prepared for all the Earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Hebrew it self too , for rather than in the Earth ) therefore most certainly , if at all , or for any thing , the Inhabitants of the World will learn Righteousness .
- keywords: almighty; apostle; ashes; books; bosom; cap; characters; city; common; david; day; dead; death; deep; discipline; doth; dreadful; dust; duty; dwell; early; earth; eebo; effect; end; english; evil; eyes; fast; fear; fire; forth; furnace; fury; giving; glorifie; glory; god; good; grace; great; hand; hard; heart; heaven; heavy; heed; holy; iii; image; inhabitants; instances; isai; judgments; justice; kind; king; knowledge; land; language; late; law; learners; learning; lesson; life; light; little; london; long; lord; love; majesty; man; matth; mercy; nation; nature; nay; needs; neighbour; new; original; particular; parts; peter; place; plagues; power; present; proper; prophet; rest; return; righteousness; sad; saith; salvation; schola; school; second; self; selves; sermon; set; sin; sins; song; tcp; tei; text; thee; thing; thou; time; truth; turn; universal; unjust; vengeance; water; way; william; wind; works; world; worse; wrath; xxiv
- versions: original; plain text
- A61910
- author: Citizen of London.
- title: Study to be quiet, or, Serious and seasonable advice to the citizens of London written by a Citizen of London.
- date: 1680.0
- words: 4636
- flesch: 60
- summary: Others there be , whose great felicity lies in hearing and telling News : These are a sort of Busie-bodies , and men for the most part , of small imployment , and as little discretion , that receive all they hear ( especially such things as will please their Party ) without examining the probability of its being true or false ; and having heard some odd Story , go ( big with it ) to the next Club , where it is related with abundance of formality ; and if it be any thing relating to the Government , it is ten to one but some Surmise or sad Descant , as bad as Malice can invent , is added over and above . Let us all endeavour to live like Men , and Christians , and boldly reprove such as offer to put Affronts and Contempts upon Authority : A far readier way to cure their itching Malady , than by taking pleasure in their Fooleries and impertinencies .
- keywords: advice; authority; books; characters; citizen; city; cry; danger; designs; duty; early; eebo; encoding; england; english; episcopacy; god; good; government; great; hath; honour; images; king; late; law; london; majesty; man; men; nation; office; online; oxford; partnership; party; peace; person; phase; project; protestant; quiet; religion; seasonable; sort; tcp; tei; text; things; times; true; way; work; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A62775
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: To the Kings Most Excellent Maiesty, the humble petition of the major, aldermen, and common-councell of the city of London
- date: 1642.0
- words: 969
- flesch: 58
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A62775 of text R33677 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing T1542A). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A62775) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 100161)
- keywords: aldermen; city; common; councell; divers; english; excellent; great; humble; kings; london; maiesty; majesties; major; parliament; persons; petitioners; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A62803
- author: Bethel, Slingsby, 1617-1697.
- title: To the Right Honourable Sir Patience Ward Knight, Lord Mayor of the City of London. The humble petition of the commons of the city of London, in Common-hall assembled, June 27. 1681
- date: 1681.0
- words: 1673
- flesch: 58
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com).
- keywords: address; books; characters; citizens; city; common; early; eebo; english; faithful; hall; honourable; humble; london; lord; majesty; mayor; petition; right; sheriffs; tcp; tei; text; time; ward; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A62804
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: To the Right Honourable, Sir Robert Clayton, Lord-Mayor of the city of London the humble petition of the common-hall assembled.
- date: 1680.0
- words: 1317
- flesch: 59
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A62804) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 60368)
- keywords: books; characters; city; clayton; common; early; eebo; encoding; english; hall; image; london; mayor; online; oxford; partnership; petition; phase; robert; sir; tcp; tei; text; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A63110
- author: Crawley, Francis, 1610 or 11-1683.
- title: The speech of the Honorable Sir George Treby, Knight, Recorder of the City of London, upon the presenting the Honorable Dudley North and Peter Rich, Esquires, Sheriffs of the City of London and County of Middlesex, in the Exchequer Chamber at Westminster, on the 30th of September, 1682
- date: 1682.0
- words: 1292
- flesch: 62
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: books; city; county; dudley; early; eebo; english; george; honorable; london; middlesex; north; peter; rich; sheriffs; sir; speech; tcp; text; treby
- versions: original; plain text
- A63188
- author: Tatham, John, fl. 1632-1664.
- title: Londinum triumphans : Londons triumphs celebrated in honour of the truely deserving Sir Anthony Bateman, Knight, Lord Maior of the honourable City of London, and done at the costs and charges of the Right Worshipful the Company of Skinners, the 29th of October, 1663 / by John Tatham.
- date: 1663.0
- words: 42315
- flesch: -678
- summary: :finalGrade><ep:defectRangePerGrade> The rate of 10.13 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words.</ep:defectRangePerGrade></ep:epHeader></xenoData><revisionDesc> <change><date>2003-06</date><label>TCP</label> Assigned for keying and markup </change> <change><date>2003-06</date><label>SPi Global</label> Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images </change> <change><date>2005-02</date><label>Mona Logarbo</label> Sampled and proofread </change> <change><date>2005-02</date><label>Mona Logarbo</label> Text and markup reviewed and edited </change> <change><date>2005-04</date><label>pfs</label> Batch review (QC) and XML conversion </change> </revisionDesc> </teiHeader> <text xml:id=A63188-t> <front xml:id=A63188-e0> <div type=title_page xml:id=A63188-e10> <pb facs=tcp:51302:1 xml:id=A63188-001-a/> <pb facs=tcp:51302:1 xml:id=A63188-001-b/> <p xml:id=A63188-e20> <w lemma=LONDINUM pos=n1-nn reg=LONDINUM xml:id=A63188-001-b-0010>LONDINUM</w> <w lemma=triumphan pos=n2 reg=TRIUMPHANS xml:id=A63188-001-b-0020>TRIUMPHANS</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A63188-001-b-0030>.</pc> </p> <p xml:id=A63188-e30> <w lemma=London pos=n1g-nn reg=LONDON'S xml:id=A63188-001-b-0040>LONDONS</w> <w lemma=triumph pos=n2 reg=TRIUMPHS xml:id=A63188-001-b-0050>TRIUMPHS</w> <w lemma=celebrate pos=vvn reg=CELEBRATED xml:id=A63188-001-b-0060>CELEBRATED</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-001-b-0070>:</pc> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=In xml:id=A63188-001-b-0080>In</w> <w lemma=honour pos=n1 reg=Honour xml:id=A63188-001-b-0090>Honour</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-001-b-0100>of</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-001-b-0110>the</w> <w lemma=true pos=av_j reg=truly xml:id=A63188-001-b-0120>truely</w> <w lemma=deserve pos=j_vg reg=Deserving xml:id=A63188-001-b-0130>Deserving</w> <w lemma=sir pos=n1 reg=Sir xml:id=A63188-001-b-0140>Sir</w> <w lemma=ANTHONY pos=n1-nn reg=ANTHONY xml:id=A63188-001-b-0150>ANTHONY</w> <w lemma=Bateman pos=n1-nn reg=BATEMAN xml:id=A63188-001-b-0160>BATEMAN</w> <w lemma=knight pos=n1 reg=Knight xml:id=A63188-001-b-0170>Knight</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-001-b-0180>,</pc> <w lemma=lord pos=n1 reg=LORD xml:id=A63188-001-b-0190>LORD</w> <w lemma=mayor pos=n1 reg=MAYOR xml:id=A63188-001-b-0200>MAIOR</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-001-b-0210>of</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-001-b-0220>the</w> <w lemma=honourable pos=j reg=Honourable xml:id=A63188-001-b-0230>Honourable</w> <w lemma=city pos=n1 reg=CITY xml:id=A63188-001-b-0240>CITY</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-001-b-0250>of</w> <w lemma=LONDON pos=n1-nn reg=LONDON xml:id=A63188-001-b-0260>LONDON</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A63188-001-b-0270>.</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=AND xml:id=A63188-001-b-0280>AND</w> <w lemma=do pos=vvn reg=DONE xml:id=A63188-001-b-0290>DONE</w> <w lemma=at pos=acp-p reg=At xml:id=A63188-001-b-0300>At</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-001-b-0310>the</w> <w lemma=cost pos=vvz reg=Costs xml:id=A63188-001-b-0320>Costs</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-001-b-0330>and</w> <w lemma=charge pos=n2 reg=Charges xml:id=A63188-001-b-0340>Charges</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-001-b-0350>of</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-001-b-0360>the</w> <w lemma=right pos=n1_j reg=Right xml:id=A63188-001-b-0370>Right</w> <w lemma=worshipful pos=j reg=Worshipful xml:id=A63188-001-b-0380>Worshipful</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-001-b-0390>the</w> <w lemma=company pos=n1 reg=Company xml:id=A63188-001-b-0400>Company</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-001-b-0410>of</w> <w lemma=skinner pos=n2 reg=SKINNERS xml:id=A63188-001-b-0420>SKINNERS</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-001-b-0430>,</pc> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=The xml:id=A63188-001-b-0440>The</w> <w lemma=29 pos=crd reg=29 xml:id=A63188-001-b-0450>29</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=th' xml:id=A63188-001-b-0460 rendition=#hi>th</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-001-b-0470>.</pc> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-001-b-0480>of</w> <w lemma=October pos=n1-nn reg=October xml:id=A63188-001-b-0490 rendition=#hi>October</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-001-b-0500>,</pc> <w lemma=1663. xml:id=A63188-003-b-0980>March.</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A63188-003-b-0990/> </p> <p xml:id=A63188-e440> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=In xml:id=A63188-003-b-1000>In</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-1010>the</w> <w lemma=rear pos=n1 reg=Rear xml:id=A63188-003-b-1020>Rear</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-003-b-1030>of</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-1040>them</w> <w lemma=fall pos=vvi reg=fall xml:id=A63188-003-b-1050>fall</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-003-b-1060>in</w> <w lemma=two pos=crd reg=two xml:id=A63188-003-b-1070>two</w> <w lemma=drum pos=n2 reg=Drums xml:id=A63188-003-b-1080>Drums</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1090>,</pc> <w lemma=one pos=crd reg=one xml:id=A63188-003-b-1100>one</w> <w lemma=fife pos=n1 reg=Fife xml:id=A63188-003-b-1110>Fife</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1120>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-003-b-1130>and</w> <w lemma=two pos=crd reg=two xml:id=A63188-003-b-1140>two</w> <w lemma=gentleman pos=n2 reg=Gentlemen xml:id=A63188-003-b-1150>Gentlemen</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-003-b-1160>in</w> <w lemma=plush pos=n1 reg=Plush xml:id=A63188-003-b-1170>Plush</w> <w lemma=coat pos=n2 reg=Coats xml:id=A63188-003-b-1180>Coats</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1190>,</pc> <w lemma=bear pos=vvg reg=bearing xml:id=A63188-003-b-1200>bearing</w> <w lemma=two pos=crd reg=two xml:id=A63188-003-b-1210>two</w> <w lemma=banner pos=n2 reg=Banners xml:id=A63188-003-b-1220>Banners</w> <w lemma=or pos=cc reg=or xml:id=A63188-003-b-1230>or</w> <w lemma=ensign pos=n2 reg=Ensigns xml:id=A63188-003-b-1240>Ensigns</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1250>;</pc> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A63188-003-b-1260>after</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-1270>them</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1280>,</pc> <w lemma=fall pos=vvb reg=fall xml:id=A63188-003-b-1290>fall</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-003-b-1300>in</w> <w lemma=six pos=crd reg=six xml:id=A63188-003-b-1310>six</w> <w lemma=gentleman pos=n2 reg=Gentlemen xml:id=A63188-003-b-1320>Gentlemen</w> <w lemma=usher pos=n2 reg=Ushers xml:id=A63188-003-b-1330>Ushers</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1340>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-003-b-1350>and</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-003-b-1360>in</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-1370>the</w> <w lemma=rear pos=n1 reg=Rear xml:id=A63188-003-b-1380>Rear</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-003-b-1390>of</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-1400>them</w> <w lemma=fall pos=vvi reg=fall xml:id=A63188-003-b-1410>fall</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-003-b-1420>in</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-1430>the</w> <w lemma=budge pos=vvb reg=Budge xml:id=A63188-003-b-1440>Budge</w> <w lemma=bachelor pos=n2 reg=Bachelors xml:id=A63188-003-b-1450>Batchellors</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A63188-003-b-1460>.</pc> </p> <p xml:id=A63188-e450> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=In xml:id=A63188-003-b-1470>In</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-1480>the</w> <w lemma=rear pos=n1 reg=Rear xml:id=A63188-003-b-1490>Rear</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-003-b-1500>of</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-1510>them</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1520>,</pc> <w lemma=fall pos=vvb reg=fall xml:id=A63188-003-b-1530>fall</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-003-b-1540>in</w> <w lemma=six pos=crd reg=six xml:id=A63188-003-b-1550>six</w> <w lemma=other pos=d reg=other xml:id=A63188-003-b-1560>other</w> <w lemma=trumpet pos=n2 reg=Trumpets xml:id=A63188-003-b-1570>Trumpets</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1580>;</pc> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A63188-003-b-1590>after</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-1600>them</w> <w lemma=two pos=crd reg=two xml:id=A63188-003-b-1610>two</w> <w lemma=other pos=d reg=other xml:id=A63188-003-b-1620>other</w> <w lemma=gentleman pos=n2 reg=Gentlemen xml:id=A63188-003-b-1630>Gentlemen</w> <w lemma=bear pos=vvg reg=bearing xml:id=A63188-003-b-1640>bearing</w> <w lemma=two pos=crd reg=two xml:id=A63188-003-b-1650>two</w> <w lemma=other pos=d reg=other xml:id=A63188-003-b-1660>other</w> <w lemma=banner pos=n2 reg=Banners xml:id=A63188-003-b-1670>Banners</w> <w lemma=or pos=cc reg=or xml:id=A63188-003-b-1680>or</w> <w lemma=ensign pos=n2 reg=Ensigns xml:id=A63188-003-b-1690>Ensigns</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1700>;</pc> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A63188-003-b-1710>after</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-1720>them</w> <w lemma=fall pos=vvi reg=fall xml:id=A63188-003-b-1730>fal</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-003-b-1740>in</w> <w lemma=eight pos=crd reg=eight xml:id=A63188-003-b-1750>eight</w> <w lemma=gentleman pos=n2 reg=Gentlemen xml:id=A63188-003-b-1760>Gentlemen</w> <w lemma=usher pos=n2 reg=Ushers xml:id=A63188-003-b-1770>Ushers</w> <w lemma=� pos=� reg=� xml:id=A63188-003-b-1780>�</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-003-b-1790>and</w> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A63188-003-b-1800>after</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-1810>them</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-1820>the</w> <w lemma=foin pos=n2 reg=Foins xml:id=A63188-003-b-1830>Foynes</w> <w lemma=bachelor pos=n2 reg=Bachelors xml:id=A63188-003-b-1840>Batchellors</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A63188-003-b-1850>.</pc> </p> <p xml:id=A63188-e460> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=In xml:id=A63188-003-b-1860>In</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-1870>the</w> <w lemma=rear pos=n1 reg=Rear xml:id=A63188-003-b-1880>Rear</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-003-b-1890>of</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-1900>them</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1910>,</pc> <w lemma=fall pos=vvb reg=fall xml:id=A63188-003-b-1920>fall</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-003-b-1930>in</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-1940>the</w> <w lemma=duke pos=n1 reg=Duke xml:id=A63188-003-b-1950>Duke</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-003-b-1960>of</w> <w lemma=York pos=n1g-nn reg=York's xml:id=A63188-003-b-1970 rendition=hi-before-apostr>York's</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-1980>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-003-b-1990>and</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-2000>the</w> <w lemma=duke pos=n1 reg=Duke xml:id=A63188-003-b-2010>Duke</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-003-b-2020>of</w> <w lemma=albemarle pos=n1g reg=Albemarle's xml:id=A63188-003-b-2030 rendition=hi-before-apostr>Albemarle's</w> <w lemma=eight pos=crd reg=eight xml:id=A63188-003-b-2040>eight</w> <w lemma=trumpet pos=n2 reg=Trumpets xml:id=A63188-003-b-2050>Trumpets</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-2060>;</pc> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A63188-003-b-2070>after</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-2080>them</w> <w lemma=two pos=crd reg=two xml:id=A63188-003-b-2090>two</w> <w lemma=gentleman pos=n2 reg=Gentlemen xml:id=A63188-003-b-2100>Gentlemen</w> <w lemma=bear pos=vvg reg=bearing xml:id=A63188-003-b-2110>bearing</w> <w lemma=two pos=crd reg=two xml:id=A63188-003-b-2120>two</w> <w lemma=other pos=d reg=other xml:id=A63188-003-b-2130>other</w> <w lemma=banner pos=n2 reg=Banners xml:id=A63188-003-b-2140>Banners</w> <w lemma=or pos=cc reg=or xml:id=A63188-003-b-2150>or</w> <w lemma=ensign pos=n2 reg=Ensigns xml:id=A63188-003-b-2160>Ensignes</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-2170>,</pc> <w lemma=than pos=cs reg=than xml:id=A63188-003-b-2180>then</w> <w lemma=12 pos=crd reg=12 xml:id=A63188-003-b-2190>12</w> <w lemma=gentleman pos=n2 reg=Gentlemen xml:id=A63188-003-b-2200>Gentlemen</w> <w lemma=usher pos=n2 reg=Ushers xml:id=A63188-003-b-2210>Ushers</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-2220>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-003-b-2230>and</w> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A63188-003-b-2240>after</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-2250>them</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-2260>the</w> <w lemma=livery pos=n1 reg=Livery xml:id=A63188-003-b-2270>Livery</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A63188-003-b-2280>.</pc> </p> <p xml:id=A63188-e490> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=In xml:id=A63188-003-b-2290>In</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-2300>the</w> <w lemma=rear pos=n1 reg=Rear xml:id=A63188-003-b-2310>Rear</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-003-b-2320>of</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-2330>them</w> <w lemma=fall pos=vvi reg=fall xml:id=A63188-003-b-2340>fall</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-003-b-2350>in</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-2360>the</w> <w lemma=drum-major pos=j reg=Drum-major xml:id=A63188-003-b-2370>Drum-Major</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-2380>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-003-b-2390>and</w> <w lemma=his pos=po reg=His xml:id=A63188-003-b-2400>His</w> <w lemma=majesty pos=n2 reg=Majesties xml:id=A63188-003-b-2410>Majesties</w> <w lemma=four pos=crd reg=four xml:id=A63188-003-b-2420>four</w> <w lemma=drum pos=n2 reg=Drums xml:id=A63188-003-b-2430>Drums</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-003-b-2440>and</w> <w lemma=Fife pos=n1-nn reg=Fife xml:id=A63188-003-b-2450>Fife</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-2460>;</pc> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A63188-003-b-2470>after</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-2480>them</w> <w lemma=two pos=crd reg=two xml:id=A63188-003-b-2490>two</w> <w lemma=other pos=d reg=other xml:id=A63188-003-b-2500>other</w> <w lemma=gentleman pos=n2 reg=Gentlemen xml:id=A63188-003-b-2510>Gentlemen</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-2520>,</pc> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-2530>the</w> <w lemma=one pos=pi reg=one xml:id=A63188-003-b-2540>one</w> <w lemma=bear pos=vvg reg=bearing xml:id=A63188-003-b-2550>bearing</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-2560>the</w> <w lemma=lord pos=n1 reg=Lord xml:id=A63188-003-b-2570>Lord</w> <w lemma=Mayor pos=n1-nn reg=Mayor xml:id=A63188-003-b-2580>Maiors</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-2590>,</pc> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-2600>the</w> <w lemma=other pos=pi_d reg=other xml:id=A63188-003-b-2610>other</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-2620>the</w> <w lemma=city pos=n1g reg=City's xml:id=A63188-003-b-2630>Cities</w> <w lemma=banner pos=n2 reg=Banners xml:id=A63188-003-b-2640>Banners</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-2650>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-003-b-2660>and</w> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A63188-003-b-2670>after</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-2680>them</w> <w lemma=twelve pos=crd reg=twelve xml:id=A63188-003-b-2690>twelve</w> <w lemma=gentleman pos=n2 reg=Gentlemen xml:id=A63188-003-b-2700>Gentlemen</w> <w lemma=usher pos=n2 reg=Ushers xml:id=A63188-003-b-2710>Ushers</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-003-b-2720>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-003-b-2730>and</w> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A63188-003-b-2740>after</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-003-b-2750>them</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-003-b-2760>the</w> <w lemma=court pos=n1 reg=Court xml:id=A63188-003-b-2770>Court</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-003-b-2780>of</w> <w lemma=assistant pos=n2 reg=Assistants xml:id=A63188-003-b-2790 rendition=#hi>Assistants</w> <pc unit=sentence xml:id=A63188-003-b-2800>.</pc> </p> <pb facs=tcp:51302:4 n=4 xml:id=A63188-004-a/> <p xml:id=A63188-e510> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=In xml:id=A63188-004-a-0010>In</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-004-a-0020>the</w> <w lemma=rear pos=n1 reg=Rear xml:id=A63188-004-a-0030>Rear</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-004-a-0040>of</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-004-a-0050>them</w> <w lemma=fall pos=vvi reg=fall xml:id=A63188-004-a-0060>fall</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-004-a-0070>in</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-004-a-0080>the</w> <w lemma=sergeant pos=n1 reg=Sergeant xml:id=A63188-004-a-0090>Serjeant</w> <w lemma=trumpet pos=n1 reg=Trumpet xml:id=A63188-004-a-0100>Trumpet</w> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-004-a-0110>and</w> <w lemma=sixteen pos=crd reg=sixteen xml:id=A63188-004-a-0120>sixteen</w> <w lemma=other pos=pi_d reg=other xml:id=A63188-004-a-0130>other</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-004-a-0140>of</w> <w lemma=his pos=po reg=His xml:id=A63188-004-a-0150>His</w> <w lemma=majesty pos=n1g reg=Majesty's xml:id=A63188-004-a-0160>Majesties</w> <w lemma=trumpet pos=n2 reg=Trumpets xml:id=A63188-004-a-0170>Trumpets</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-004-a-0180>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-004-a-0190>and</w> <w lemma=a pos=zz reg=a xml:id=A63188-004-a-0200>a</w> <w lemma=kettle pos=zz reg=Kettle xml:id=A63188-004-a-0210>Kettle</w> <w lemma=drum pos=zz reg=Drum xml:id=A63188-004-a-0220>Drum</w> <w lemma=in pos=acp-p reg=in xml:id=A63188-004-a-0230>in</w> <w lemma=his pos=po reg=His xml:id=A63188-004-a-0240>His</w> <w lemma=majesty pos=n1g reg=Majesty's xml:id=A63188-004-a-0250>Majesties</w> <w lemma=livery pos=n1 reg=Livery xml:id=A63188-004-a-0260>Livery</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-004-a-0270>;</pc> <w lemma=after pos=acp-p reg=after xml:id=A63188-004-a-0280>after</w> <w lemma=they pos=pno reg=them xml:id=A63188-004-a-0290>them</w> <w lemma=three pos=crd reg=three xml:id=A63188-004-a-0300>three</w> <w lemma=gentleman pos=n2 reg=Gentlemen xml:id=A63188-004-a-0310>Gentlemen</w> <w lemma=bear pos=vvg reg=bearing xml:id=A63188-004-a-0320>bearing</w> <w lemma=three pos=crd reg=three xml:id=A63188-004-a-0330>three</w> <w lemma=banner pos=n2 reg=Banners xml:id=A63188-004-a-0340>Banners</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-004-a-0350>,</pc> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-004-a-0360>the</w> <w lemma=one pos=pi reg=one xml:id=A63188-004-a-0370>one</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-004-a-0380>the</w> <w lemma=king pos=n2 reg=Kings xml:id=A63188-004-a-0390>Kings</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-004-a-0400>,</pc> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-004-a-0410>the</w> <w lemma=other pos=pi_d reg=other xml:id=A63188-004-a-0420>other</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-004-a-0430>the</w> <w lemma=duke pos=n1 reg=Duke xml:id=A63188-004-a-0440>Duke</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-004-a-0450>of</w> <w lemma=York pos=n1g-nn reg=York's xml:id=A63188-004-a-0460 rendition=hi-before-apostr>York's</w> <pc xml:id=A63188-004-a-0470>,</pc> <w lemma=and pos=cc reg=and xml:id=A63188-004-a-0480>and</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-004-a-0490>the</w> <w lemma=three pos=ord reg=third xml:id=A63188-004-a-0500>third</w> <w lemma=the pos=d reg=the xml:id=A63188-004-a-0510>the</w> <w lemma=banner pos=n1 reg=Banner xml:id=A63188-004-a-0520>Banner</w> <w lemma=of pos=acp-p reg=of xml:id=A63188-004-a-0530>of</w> <w lemma=st.
- keywords: 007; > bateman; > london; > text; a"/; a-0400">,</pc; author; b"/; body xml; books; corresp="a63188; div xml; e1130; early; english; hall; hall</w; head xml; hi xml; hi">,</pc; id="a63188; idno; item xml; john; join="right">(</pc; l xml; lane; lane</w; lemma="after; lemma="as; lemma="be; lemma="budge; lemma="colour; lemma="day; lemma="do; lemma="fall; lemma="from; lemma="gold; lemma="habit; lemma="hand; lemma="into; lemma="king; lemma="know; lemma="may; lemma="more; lemma="never; lemma="not; lemma="old; lemma="on; lemma="other; lemma="our; lemma="paul; lemma="rear; lemma="right; lemma="sergeant; lemma="several; lemma="she; lemma="shoulder; lemma="sit; lemma="such; lemma="than; lemma="three; lemma="to; lemma="towards; lemma="up; lemma="westminster; lemma="who; lemma="will; list xml; logarbo</label >; major; opener xml; pc unit="sentence; pc xml; pos="acp; pos="av; pos="av_j; pos="av_vg; pos="cc; pos="crd; pos="d; pos="j_vn; pos="n1; pos="n2_j; pos="pns; pos="po; pos="vmb; pos="vvn; pos="xx; pos="zz; ref xml; reg="about; reg="after; reg="all; reg="and; reg="another; reg="are; reg="arms; reg="as; reg="attendants; reg="bachelors; reg="banners; reg="beasts; reg="budge; reg="but; reg="by; reg="city; reg="colours; reg="companies; reg="company; reg="did; reg="do; reg="drums; reg="duke; reg="each; reg="figure; reg="foins; reg="foot; reg="four; reg="from; reg="gentlemen; reg="gowns; reg="head; reg="her; reg="his; reg="holds; reg="honour; reg="in; reg="let; reg="like; reg="london; reg="lordship; reg="maior; reg="majesty; reg="make; reg="march; reg="may; reg="men; reg="name; reg="not; reg="old; reg="one; reg="or; reg="order; reg="pageant; reg="paul; reg="persons; reg="place; reg="rear; reg="seven; reg="several; reg="six; reg="skinners; reg="so; reg="speech; reg="such; reg="the; reg="their; reg="these; reg="three; reg="trumpets; reg="two; reg="up; reg="ushers; reg="was; reg="whereof; reg="will; reg="york; reg="your; rendition="#follows; rendition="#hi">arms</w; rendition="#hi">england</w; rendition="hi; self</w; term >; text xml; title; trailer xml; type="speech; w lemma="about; w lemma="accord; w lemma="again; w lemma="albemarle; w lemma="albion; w lemma="alderman; w lemma="all; w lemma="appoint; w lemma="athens; w lemma="attendant; w lemma="bachelor; w lemma="banner; w lemma="basis; w lemma="beast; w lemma="benefactor; w lemma="body; w lemma="buff; w lemma="change; w lemma="christian; w lemma="church; w lemma="city; w lemma="coat; w lemma="company; w lemma="continual; w lemma="coronet; w lemma="dark; w lemma="defence; w lemma="depart; w lemma="direct; w lemma="divine; w lemma="draw; w lemma="duke; w lemma="eight; w lemma="england; w lemma="ensign; w lemma="exchequer; w lemma="fife; w lemma="figure; w lemma="flame; w lemma="forth; w lemma="four; w lemma="garment; w lemma="gentleman; w lemma="glory; w lemma="government; w lemma="gown; w lemma="grace; w lemma="guard; w lemma="happy; w lemma="her; w lemma="hold; w lemma="honour; w lemma="house; w lemma="in; w lemma="instrument; w lemma="javelin; w lemma="learn; w lemma="leopard; w lemma="like; w lemma="likewise; w lemma="livery; w lemma="london; w lemma="long; w lemma="lordship; w lemma="magistrate; w lemma="maior; w lemma="majesty; w lemma="man; w lemma="march; w lemma="merchant; w lemma="monkey; w lemma="mount; w lemma="name; w lemma="new; w lemma="nymph; w lemma="of; w lemma="over; w lemma="pageant; w lemma="part; w lemma="pedestal; w lemma="person; w lemma="place; w lemma="plush; w lemma="praise; w lemma="prove; w lemma="religion; w lemma="remote; w lemma="repair; w lemma="represent; w lemma="sarsnet; w lemma="satyr; w lemma="scarf; w lemma="scene; w lemma="seat; w lemma="six; w lemma="skinner; w lemma="speech; w lemma="stair; w lemma="strive; w lemma="the; w lemma="thereof; w lemma="through; w lemma="till; w lemma="together; w lemma="trade; w lemma="traffic; w lemma="trumpet; w lemma="turk; w lemma="unto; w lemma="we; w lemma="wharf; w lemma="whereon; w lemma="with; w lemma="wood; w lemma="your; xml conversion; xml version="1.0
- versions: original; plain text
- A63201
- author: Tatham, John, fl. 1632-1664.
- title: Londons tryumph celebrated the nine and twentieth day of October, in the year 1659, in honour of the much honoured Thomas Allen, lord mayor of the said city : presented and personated by an Europian, an Egyptian, and a Persian : and done at the costs and charges of the ever to be honoured Company of Grocers.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 4403
- flesch: 59
- summary: In general, first editions of a works in English were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably Latin and Welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. About Eight of the Clock the said Foot-Marshal Ranks out the said Company two by two .
- keywords: a63201; aldermen; allen; assistants; attendants; banners; batchellors; body; books; characters; city; commerce; companies; company; day; division; doe; drums; early; eebo; egyptian; english; ensignes; fals; fifes; foot; gentlemen; good; gowns; grocers; hall; hand; honoured; left; london; lord; lordship; master; mayor; page; pauls; pentioners; persian; right; said; severall; speech; tatham; tcp; tei; text; thomas; trumpets; tryumph; ushers; wardens; world
- versions: original; plain text
- A63202
- author: England and Wales. Court of King's Bench.
- title: The tryal of Tho. Pilkington, Esq., Samuel Shute, Esq., sheriffs, Henry Cornish, alderman, Ford Lord Grey of Werk, Sir Tho. Player, Knt. Chamberlain of London, Slingsby Bethel, Esq., Francis Jenks, John Deagle, Richard Freeman, Richard Goodenough, Robert Key, John Wickham, Samuel Swinock, John Jekyll, Sen. for the riot at Guild-Hall, on Midsommer-Day [sic], 1682 : being the day for election of sheriffs for the year ensuing.
- date: 1683.0
- words: 34621
- flesch: 81
- summary: My Lord , we say , That whereas they do charge in the Information , that there was an Assembly for the Election of Sheriffs , and that Sir John Moor being then Mayor , did lawfully , according to Law , adjourn this Assembly ; and that afterwards the Defendents , Pilkington and Shute , did continue this Assembly , and took a Poll , and so they would make this a Riot in the continuance of it . Gentlemen , the Information sets forth , That upon the 24 th of June last in Guildhall , there was a Common Hall summon'd by Sir John Moor Knight , and thereupon held for the Election of Sheriffs for the Year then ensuing the Feast of St. Michael : And that on the same 24 th of June , Sir John Moor then Mayor adjourn'd the Court till the Tuesday following by Proclamation . That after the said Adjournment , my Lord Mayor made Proclamation for all Persons to depart ; and that the Defendants intending to disturb the Peace of the King after the Adjournment aforesaid , did unlawfully , with many Persons unknown , meet together , and Riotously assault the Lord Mayor .
- keywords: account; adjourn'd; adjournment; aldermen; assembly; att; attorney; bearer; bethel; business; case; challenge; city; clayton; common; concerned; cornish; court; cryer; day; defendants; doth; election; evidence; gen; gentlemen; god; good; goodenough; great; guilty; hall; hath; higgins; hill; hooker; hustings; information; jefferies; john; jones; jury; king; law; lightfoot; london; long; lord gray; lord mayor; lordship; love; man; manner; matter; noise; oath; officers; opinion; order; people; persons; pilkington; place; player; point; poll; power; pray; proclamation; question; right; riot; robert; said; self; serj; serjeant; sheriffs; shute; sibley; sir; sir robert; sword; thing; thomas; thomson; time; way; williams; winnington; winstanley; witnesses; years
- versions: original; plain text
- A63326
- author: Dubois, John.
- title: A true account of the irregular proceedings at Gvild-Hall, about the swearing the two pretended sheriffs Mr. North and Mr. Rich, September 28, 1682
- date: 1682.0
- words: 3208
- flesch: 55
- summary: To the Right Honourable, the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen: the humble declaration of Thomas Papillon, mercer, and John Dubois, weaver ...: p. 3. Reproduction of original in University of Pennsylvania Library. THE last Night my Lord Mayor issued out Tickets to the Aldermen in these Words : Sir ; Your Worship is desired to be at a Court of Aldermen at Guild-Hall on Thursday next at nine of the Clock in the forenoon , in your violet Gown and Cloak , being the twenty eighth of September .
- keywords: aldermen; books; city; court; dubois; eebo; english; guild; hall; honourable; hustings; john; law; london; lord; lordship; mayor; north; office; papillon; proceedings; rich; said; selves; sheriffs; sir; souldiers; tcp; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A63385
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons. Committee to Enquire into the Burning of London.
- title: A true and faithful account of the several informations exhibited to the hounourable committee appointed by the Parliament to inquire into the late dreadful burning of the city of London together with other informations touching the insolency of popish priests and Jesuites ...
- date: 1667.0
- words: 13126
- flesch: 70
- summary: How his House was fired he knoweth not ; but this he affirmed to the Committee , That it could not be by accident , because there had not been any Candle or Fire in the House where the Hay lay , that whole day ; and that the Hay being laid in very dry , and before Midsummer , could not possibly be set on fire within it self . London (England) -- Fire, 1666 -- Sources.
- keywords: account; balls; belland; books; brook; burning; catholique; church; citizen; city; committee; commons; company; constable; county; darkin; day; discourse; duke; eebo; england; english; eves; father; fellow; fire; firing; frenchman; george; good; great; guard; hand; hearing; honourable; house; hubert; informations; insolency; ireland; jesuites; john; justice; king; lane; late; letter; life; like; london; lord; man; matter; mother; mris; night; oath; october; old; papers; papists; parliament; peidloe; people; person; place; plot; popish; priests; prison; pudding; religion; report; return; richard; robert; rome; room; said; self; september; set; sir; spake; street; tcp; text; thomas; time; true; way; william; woman; words; work; year; young
- versions: original; plain text
- A64521
- author: Tabor, John.
- title: Seasonable thoughts in sad times being some reflections on the warre, the pestilence, and the burning of London, considered in the calamity, cause, cure / by Joh. Tabor.
- date: 1667.0
- words: 24169
- flesch: 72
- summary: But then the startling and astonishing news of the Cities Conflagration , hurried my Muse to a new wrack of tormenting griefs , rending me as many others for a time capable of nothing but to stand in the way for News , wherein for some days together we still met with Job's messengers , with sad tidings of increasing misery : till at length occurring the joyful report of the miraculous extinguishing of the Flames , and unexpected Preservation of the unconsumed part of the City and Suburbs , my mind became more sedate and quiet , and my Muse set her self to reflect on this woe as the former , not without some thoughts of Publication , imagining this had revived mens sense of Gods just displeasure , and might render them capable of remorse for their sins , procuring these dire effects of it in such a dreadful succession of woes : then purposing to discover all our sins as cause of our sufferings , and knowing that by the Law is the knowledge of sin , I run over the Law of God in my thoughts , and observed how sins of all sorts against every Commandment , and others more directly against the Gospel abound among us , so that our sins being found so great , and numerous , we may not wonder our sufferings have been so many and calamitous : But I had rather we , and they in Peace Might live , and War might from all Nations cease Had not Astraea left the Earth , and rage Possest mens bosomes in this Iron age : Had not sin first divided men from God , Then from themselves , scattering all abroad To seek new Countries , all had still been one Language , and People , letting Warr alone .
- keywords: age; air; arms; bear; belgians; better; bliss; blood; bodies; bold; books; brave; bring; care; cause; cease; christian; christs; church; churches; city; countrey; courage; course; cure; day; days; dead; death; deep; design; die; doth; doubt; drink; duke; dust; dutch; e're; earth; eebo; england; english; ere; ev'ry; evil; eyes; face; faith; fall; false; fast; fear; find; fine; fire; flames; fleet; fly; foes; force; free; friends; fury; gain; giving; glory; god; god doth; gods; good; great; greater; greatest; ground; grown; guns; hand; hath; head; hearts; heat; heav'n; high; holland; holy; home; honour; hope; houses; humble; joy; judgments; kind; king; know; lament; land; late; law; laws; leave; lie; lies; life; light; like; little; lofty; london; long; lord; loss; love; low; loyal; lust; man; means; meet; men; mercy; mind; mortals; nation; navy; nay; near; new; noble; o're; obedience; ocean; old; parents; paul; peace; people; pestilence; pious; places; plague; poor; prey; pride; prince; proud; quench; reader; reflections; religion; repentance; rest; return; rise; ruines; rule; sad; scarce; sea; seas; second; self; sell; selves; sense; set; shame; shew; ships; shot; sickness; sin; sinful; sinners; sins; slain; slaughter; sorrow; sorts; souls; spare; spirits; spring; stand; store; success; sun; sure; tabor; tcp; text; thee; things; think; thou; thoughts; thousands; time; town; trade; triumph; true; trust; truth; vain; valour; vengeance; want; war; water; way; wealth; wind; wine; woe; woes; work; world; wrath; zeal
- versions: original; plain text
- A64990
- author: Vincent, Thomas, 1634-1678.
- title: God's terrible voice in the city by T.V.
- date: 1667.0
- words: 67586
- flesch: 53
- summary: But if houses for sin alone were sunke , and fuel for lust only were consumed , it would not be so much ; but the houses also for Gods worship , ( which formerly were a bulwark against the fire , partly through the walls about them , partly through the fervent prayers within them ) now are devoured by the flames , and the habitations of many who truly fear God , have not escaped ; and in the places where God hath been served , and his servants have lived ; now nettles are growing ; owles are screeching ; thieves and cut-throats are lurking : A sad face there is now in the ruinous part of London : and terrible hath the voice of the Lord been , which hath been crying , yea roaring in the City by these dreadful judgments of the Plague and Fire , which he hath brought upon us . It was an extraordinary hand of God which brought the plague , of which no natural cause can be assigned , why it should be so great that year , more then in former years , but that sin was grown to greater heighth ; and that a fire should prevaile , against all attempts to quench it , to burn down the City , and that judgment just following upon the heels of the other ; what reason can be assigned , but that Englands sins , and Gods displeasure hath been extraordinary ; God is a God of patience , and it is not a light thing will move him ; he is slow to anger , it must needs be then some great provocation which makes him so furious ; he is highly offended , before he lifts up his hand ; and he is exceedingly incens'd , before his anger breaks forth into such a flame ; for my part , I verily think , if it had not been for the crying abominations of the times , which are not chiefly to be limited to the City of London , and if the means of Gods prescription , according to the Rule of his Word , which England sometime could , had by England been made use of , that both Plague and Fire had been prevented .
- keywords: able; afraid; anger; angry; answer; arm; arrows; awake; awakened; away; bear; beginning; better; blood; bodies; body; bowels; broken; building; burning; calls; cause; children; christ; christians; church; cities; citizens; city; consciences; contrary; course; covetousness; cry; cup; cut; darkness; day; dead; death; deep; design; desolation; destruction; difference; discourse; disease; displeasure; doors; dreadful; drinking; drunkenness; dust; ears; earth; effect; end; enemies; england; escape; estates; esteem; eternal; evil; extraordinary; eyes; face; faith; fall; families; famine; far; father; faults; fear; feet; fierce; fire; fire hath; flames; flesh; friends; fury; future; general; glorious; glory; god; god doth; god hath; god speaketh; gods; gods people; good; goodness; gospel; grace; great; great god; greater; greatest; ground; guilty; habitations; hand; hard; hath; head; hearts; heaven; heed; hell; help; high; hold; holy; hopes; houses; humble; humility; hypocrites; ierusalem; inhabitants; iniquities; iniquity; inward; isa; israel; jesus; joy; judgements; known; labour; land; late; law; lay; leave; left; life; like; lips; little; live; london; london hath; londoners; long; looks; lord; lord god; lord hath; loud; love; lusts; lye; lying; man; means; mercies; mercy; midst; mind; ministers; morning; mount; mourn; mouth; necessary; need; neer; neglect; new; night; noise; number; oaths; open; ordinances; outward; pardon; parts; people; persons; pet; place; plague; poor; power; prayer; preaching; pride; profane; profession; prov; psal; punishment; ready; reason; reformation; regard; religion; repentance; rest; return; riches; righteous; righteousness; roaring; rod; rom; ruine; sabbath; salvation; search; secret; self; selves; servants; set; shame; shew; sick; sin; sinners; sins; sleep; sodom; soul; sound; spake; speaking; speeches; spirit; spiritual; stand; stay; stir; stones; strange; streets; strength; strong; sun; sweet; sword; tcp; temporal; terrible; text; thee; thick; thine; things; thou; thoughts; thousands; threatneth; thy; thy god; time; tongue; trade; troubles; true; trust; truth; ungodly; utter; vain; vengeance; view; voice; water; wayes; wealth; week; weeping; wicked; wickedness; wine; withall; women; wonder; words; work; world; worse; worship; wrath; yea; year
- versions: original; plain text
- A65193
- author: J. V.
- title: Golgotha; or, A looking-glass for London, and the suburbs thereof Shewing the causes, nature and efficacy of the present plagues; and the most hopeful way for healing. With an humble witness against the cruel advice and practice of shutting-up unto oppression. Both now and formerly experienced to encrease, rather than prevent the spreading thereof. / By J.V. grieved by the poor, who perish daily hereby.
- date: 1665.0
- words: 9364
- flesch: 70
- summary: GOLGOTHA : OR , A Looking-Glass for London , &c. WHoever would administer to the Cure , must first consider the Cause and Nature of any Visitation , and especially reverence any light given from God , who hath been pleased above all to appropriate this of the Pestilence as his imediate Sword : and hath acquainted the sons of men , as with the Causes , so with the dreadful Efficacy and Nature thereof , Ezek. In speaking to the Cure , I shall first shew what is not likely to effect it ; 2dly , What is ; and lastly , giving those that have worthily gone before me , their real due in the prescript of outward Medicines , I shall cast in my Mite of that sort also , in addition only to any thing I have seen , without detraction from any , or seeking gain , or the honour which is from men , I trust , but that which is of God only .
- keywords: advice; bed; books; case; causes; characters; children; cruel; cure; day; direction; doctors; drink; drops; early; eebo; effect; english; experience; ezek; fear; flowers; general; glass; god; good; habitation; hand; hath; heart; hereof; high; house; infection; isa; israel; jer; job; juniper; like; little; london; long; lord; man; means; men; milk; nature; night; oppression; ounces; parts; people; pestilence; plague; poor; posset; present; prov; psal; refuge; sage; scripture; self; set; shutting; sick; spirit; sulphur; sweat; swelling; tcp; tei; text; things; timely; times; true; turn; use; visitation; water; way; wine; witness; works; worship; yea
- versions: original; plain text
- A65241
- author: Waterhouse, Edward, 1619-1670.
- title: A short narrative of the late dreadful fire in London together vvith certain considerations remarkable therein, and deducible therefrom : not unseasonable for the perusal of this age written by way of letter to a person of honour and virtue.
- date: 1667.0
- words: 37704
- flesch: 45
- summary: Famine , Fire , beyond this bound yee shall not pass . Which considered , there may several particulars be mentioned which might subserve to this ruine ; As first the general and malicious conjunctions of enemies ab●o●d who knowing London the Governments Epitome , the Copy from the life of this Empires Majesty , the second Throne of Rega● Glory , the readiest and most certain supply of all necessaries for Offence or Defence , the great Sanctury of Protestantisme , the almost all of Great Britain , this so combined in London to her Soveraigns lustre , the Nations supply , and her opposites disappointment , might rationally originate evill thoughts against her , and thence evil practises upon her , and as the chief and most fatal to her this of Fire ; which as it hastneth the spoil , so both terrifieth the inhabitants , and gives rise through the suddenness of its confusion to any discontented numbers in her , whose designs being tenebrious , and their Partizans lewd and desperate , can have no sitter an opportunity to act a Sicilian Vespers , or a Parisian Massacre in , then in that mist and fog of danger and inconsideration , wherein every ones particular concern becomes a neglect of the publick , and the Nerves , Sinews , and Arteries of Governments contexture become shrivelled ●p , and by reason of their violent Convulsions , incorrespondent to their general designment ; This wa● one of those evils that might have made , and probably was designed to make the time of the Fire more fatal than God in goodness suffered it to prove ; for since contemptor propriae vitae Magister tuae is a true rule , and it is riveted in the corrupt nature of man to revenge injuries by destruction of the Soul , body , substance and being of enemies , and mens ambitions are most keen in exploits for their Countreys , to cause good to which , a Great spirit would not only beg off a believed curse , as that Venetian Senator did the Popes interdiction of Venice , with a Rope about his neck , lying like a dog at the Popes feet , and not being to be drawn thence till he obtained it , but with Codrus dye to obtain his Countreps liberty , I say considering that policy tempts power to scruple little , that is , its advantage , and that where ever there is mony to give , there will be service to exchange for it , be the fact as horrid and sanguinary as that of Faux or any like it ; and considering that no mischief done us can amount to any thing like this to London , it is not improbable but that this Fire might be first kindled in the revenge , and then lighted further by the hands of miscreants hired thereunto ; for did not Herostratus a base Fellow , purely to have a name for villany , set on fire the famous Temple of Ephesus , the worlds wonder ? &c. Did not Iudas the Gaulomite , and Sadoc the Pharisee , with his lewd comorades , set on fire the Temple of Ierusalem ? For whereas he Marched against Ierusalem of old , charging her from his pale horse of fury , bringing truculent and bloudy Enemies against it : Romans , Syrians , Arabians , all which accompanyed ●espasian against it , and that then when there were 270000 Jews which came to Sacrifice , shut up by the siege in it as in a Prison , and were slain and starved during the siege and at its rendition , whereof 600000. were cast out of the City in such distress that a Bushel of Wheat was sold for a talent which is 600 Crowns , and the dung and raking of the City sinks was ●●●d good Commons , and necessity made a Mother kill her Child and dress it , and whereas the dead Bodies lay so thick , that the way by them was not passable , the whole City flowing with bloud ; so that many parts set on fire were quenched by the bloud of them that were slain , and after all the City was burned , whereas God thus punished Ierusalem by giving it a Cup of trembling , and filling it brimful with deadly Poyson , leaving no remnant from which succession should arise , or rebuilding , and re-inhabitation become probable and effective , yet to the praise of the glory of his Grace be it written , and be this loving kindness of the Lord never forgotten by London .
- keywords: ability; accident; account; act; activity; advantage; aged; aid; annal; anno; ashes; assurance; bare; beauty; beloved; best; better; blessed; blessing; bloud; boast; body; books; bread; breeding; bridge; buildings; burning; cause; certain; characters; charge; charity; charles; chief; children; christ; christian; church; churches; circumstances; cities; citizens; city; clergy; colledge; come; comfort; commands; common; condition; confidence; confusion; conscience; contrary; counsel; country; courage; course; credit; danger; day; dayes; death; debts; deep; degrees; design; displeasure; doth; dreadful; early; earth; edit; eebo; effects; end; enemies; england; english; essex; evil; execution; eyes; face; faith; fatal; father; favour; fear; fire; forth; fortune; free; fruits; fury; future; general; glorious; glory; god; god o; gods; good; goodness; government; grace; gracious; great; greater; greatest; greatness; ground; guilt; halls; hand; happy; hath; head; heart; heaven; help; high; hold; holy; home; honest; honour; hope; houses; humiliation; iames; ierusalem; imployed; indignation; inhabitants; instances; instruments; interest; iob; iosephus; isa; isaiah; jac; jer; joy; judgement; judgments; justice; kindness; king; knows; labour; lands; lane; late; laws; learned; learning; left; lib; liberty; library; life; light; like; little; live; london; long; lord; loss; love; low; majesty; man; mans; market; master; measure; memory; men; mens; mention; mercies; mercy; mighty; misery; money; nation; native; natural; nature; near; neer; neglect; new; noble; non; number; o london; old; open; opportunity; opposites; order; orderly; ordinary; papists; pardon; parliament; parts; paul; pay; people; persons; piety; place; plenty; policy; poor; potent; poverty; power; praise; prayers; present; preserved; prey; princes; probable; progress; promise; prophet; proportion; prosperity; providence; publick; publique; punishment; purpose; rage; ready; real; reason; rejoyce; religion; remarkable; renown; renowned; return; rich; riches; righteousness; river; rome; ruine; salvation; sea; second; secret; security; self; selves; september; service; set; sin; sinners; sins; sir; small; societies; sodom; solomon; sort; soul; souldiers; speak; spirit; spoil; state; street; strength; subjects; success; suitable; supply; sword; tacitus; tcp; temple; terms; terrour; text; thames; thine; things; thou; thought; thousands; timber; time; trade; true; trust; truth; union; value; view; vigour; wall; want; war; waste; water; way; ways; wealth; whereof; wind; wisdom; wise; witness; words; work; world; worthy; wrath; yea; years; york; zeal; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A65468
- author: W. W., Loyal citizen.
- title: Animadversions on the late vindication of Slingsby Bethel, Esq., wherein the ancient and laudable customs of the city of London are asserted against the scandalous reflections he has made upon them : in a letter to the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen / by a loyal citizen.
- date: 1681.0
- words: 3335
- flesch: 60
- summary: I 'le assure you a very good caution these hard times to our City Livry : men : Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor.
- keywords: bethel; books; characters; citizen; city; customs; day; early; eebo; english; feasting; fellow; good; honour; honourable; house; images; keeping; king; late; laudable; london; lord; loyal; man; mayor; office; online; oxford; partnership; phase; point; reason; reflections; sheriff; slingsby; tcp; tei; text; times; vindication
- versions: original; plain text
- A66757
- author: Wither, George, 1588-1667.
- title: Joco-serio. Strange news, of a discourse between two dead giants expressed in an epigram, to one inquisitive for news, and was composed by occasion of a scurrilous pamphlet, entituled, A dialogue between Colbrant and Brandamore, the two giants in Guild-hall London. Which pamphlet was not only intended to abuse this author, and some particular persons by name, but the said city also, in the late election of their Parliamentary Members. Thereto is added an antidote against all ill news whatsoever, which proving effectual to many lately reputed phanaticks, may possibly be vertual to some other. Jeers will be self-condemned, and stingless if contemned. G. W.
- date: 1661.0
- words: 2517
- flesch: 68
- summary: Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A66757) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 37951)
- keywords: books; brandamore; characters; colbrant; dialogue; discourse; early; eebo; english; giants; good; guild; hall; ill; inquisitive; london; men; news; occasion; online; pamphlet; phase; scurrilous; self; serio; strange; tcp; tei; text; things; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A69725
- author: Calthrop, Henry, Sir, 1586-1637.
- title: The liberties, usages, and customes of the city of London confirmed by especiall acts of Parliament, with the time of their confirmation : also divers ample, and most beneficiall charters, granted by King Henry the 6, King Edward the 4, and King Henrie the 7th, not confirmed by Parliament as the other charters were, and where to find every particular grant and confirmation at large / collected by Sir Henry Colthrop, Knight, ...
- date: 1642.0
- words: 7689
- flesch: 82
- summary: The liberties, usages, and customes of the city of London confirmed by especiall acts of Parliament, with the time of their confirmation : also divers ample, and most beneficiall charters, granted by King Henry the 6, King Edward the 4, and King Henrie the 7th, not confirmed by Parliament as the other charters were, and where to find every particular grant and confirmation at large / collected by Sir Henry Colthrop, Knight, ... Calthrop, Henry, Sir, 1586-1637. The liberties, usages, and customes of the city of London confirmed by especiall acts of Parliament, with the time of their confirmation : also divers ample, and most beneficiall charters, granted by King Henry the 6, King Edward the 4, and King Henrie the 7th, not confirmed by Parliament as the other charters were, and where to find every particular grant and confirmation at large / collected by Sir Henry Colthrop, Knight, ... Calthrop, Henry, Sir, 1586-1637. Carpenter, John, 1370?-1441?
- keywords: alb; albo; albo fol; aldermen; ancient; anno; bin; charter; citizens; city; commons; confirmation; customes; england; exchequer; farm; fee; fol; folio; foren; free; goods; heirs; henrie; henry; justices; king; lib; liberties; like; london; major; manner; middlesex; ministers; new; office; parliament; peace; pleas; said; sheriffes; statute; text; time; victuals
- versions: original; plain text
- A69947
- author: England and Wales.
- title: An ordination and declaration of both Houses of Parliament sent to the lord maior of London for the religious observation of the Lords Day commonly called Sunday and a command from the maior directed to all church-wardens and constables in every ward in the city of London for the due execution thereof : also concerning the election of certaine new captaines chosen for the security of the city in these dangerous times with the names of the said captaines chosen for the new militia : also a relation of a late tumult happening in Chancery Lane by certaine Gentlemen of Lincolnes-Inne to the great disturbance and amazement of all the inhabitants.
- date: 1642.0
- words: 2166
- flesch: 52
- summary: An ordination and declaration of both Houses of Parliament sent to the lord maior of London for the religious observation of the Lords Day commonly called Sunday and a command from the maior directed to all church-wardens and constables in every ward in the city of London for the due execution thereof : also concerning the election of certaine new captaines chosen for the security of the city in these dangerous times with the names of the said captaines chosen for the new militia : also a relation of a late tumult happening in Chancery Lane by certaine Gentlemen of Lincolnes-Inne to the great disturbance and amazement of all the inhabitants. England and Wales. An ordination and declaration of both Houses of Parliament sent to the lord maior of London for the religious observation of the Lords Day commonly called Sunday and a command from the maior directed to all church-wardens and constables in every ward in the city of London for the due execution thereof : also concerning the election of certaine new captaines chosen for the security of the city in these dangerous times with the names of the said captaines chosen for the new militia : also a relation of a late tumult happening in Chancery Lane by certaine Gentlemen of Lincolnes-Inne to the great disturbance and amazement of all the inhabitants. England and Wales. Penington, Isaac, Sir, 1587?-1660.
- keywords: capt; captaines; certaine; chancery; city; day; declaration; english; gentlemen; houses; inhabitants; inne; lane; late; lincolnes; london; lords; maior; names; new; observation; parliament; religious; security; sunday; text; time; tumult; ward; wing
- versions: original; plain text
- A70061
- author: Gadbury, John, 1627-1704.
- title: Fore-warn'd, fore-arm'd, or, England's timely warning in general and London's in particular by a collection of five prophetical predictions published by Mr. William Lilly forty years ago, two of Mr. John Gadbury's, anno 1678, and one of Mother Shipton's long since, all at large published in the said Mr. Lilly and Gadbury's own words, purporting I, London's danger anno 1683 and its catastrophe soon thereafter, II, The danger that the Protestant religion will be brought unto all over Europe, and by whom effected and where contrived, III, That England in general will be brought into great calamities and by what means, IV, The extinguishment of a very great family in some part of Europe, V, That the breach of some nations priviledges, ancient customs and long enjoyed rights may produce dangerous effects : all of which are published by the author, not to affright the people with, but to warn them of, knowing that evil before-hand warned of commonly hurts less then that which comes at unawares.
- date: 1682.0
- words: 3572
- flesch: 62
- summary: Fore-warn'd, fore-arm'd, or, England's timely warning in general and London's in particular by a collection of five prophetical predictions published by Mr. William Lilly forty years ago, two of Mr. John Gadbury's, anno 1678, and one of Mother Shipton's long since, all at large published in the said Mr. Lilly and Gadbury's own words, purporting I, London's danger anno 1683 and its catastrophe soon thereafter, II, The danger that the Protestant religion will be brought unto all over Europe, and by whom effected and where contrived, III, That England in general will be brought into great calamities and by what means, IV, The extinguishment of a very great family in some part of Europe, V, That the breach of some nations priviledges, ancient customs and long enjoyed rights may produce dangerous effects : all of which are published by the author, not to affright the people with, but to warn them of, knowing that evil before-hand warned of commonly hurts less then that which comes at unawares. Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 100707) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 426:12, 788:19) Fore-warn'd, fore-arm'd, or, England's timely warning in general and London's in particular by a collection of five prophetical predictions published by Mr. William Lilly forty years ago, two of Mr. John Gadbury's, anno 1678, and one of Mother Shipton's long since, all at large published in the said Mr. Lilly and Gadbury's own words, purporting I, London's danger anno 1683 and its catastrophe soon thereafter, II, The danger that the Protestant religion will be brought unto all over Europe, and by whom effected and where contrived, III, That England in general will be brought into great calamities and by what means, IV, The extinguishment of a very great family in some part of Europe, V, That the breach of some nations priviledges, ancient customs and long enjoyed rights may produce dangerous effects : all of which are published by the author, not to affright the people with, but to warn them of, knowing that evil before-hand warned of commonly hurts less then that which comes at unawares.
- keywords: anno; author; books; characters; city; conjunction; creation; danger; early; eebo; effects; england; english; europe; family; fifth; fore; gadbury; general; great; john; king; lilly; london; long; mother; nation; page; particular; people; priviledges; protestant; religion; said; second; shipton; tcp; tei; text; time; william; words; years
- versions: original; plain text
- A70420
- author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704.
- title: Goodman Country to his worship the city of London
- date: 1680.0
- words: 3498
- flesch: 65
- summary: But this we hope , they are men for the purpose , and will stand stiffly up to preserve our Kings Life , Property , and Protestant Religion . Then no Counters , Newgate , Ludgate , or Kings-Bench will be allowed , for as fast as men become malefactors or run in debt , or break , they will presently take refuge under the wings of the Army , and live upon Pay and Plunder .
- keywords: affected; army; books; cause; characters; church; city; country; early; eebo; encoding; england; english; god; good; great; hath; honest; images; king; like; london; masquerade; men; money; online; oxford; papists; partnership; phase; popish; protestants; religion; sheriffs; tcp; tei; text; true; war; wing; work; worship; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A70490
- author: Hale, Matthew, Sir, 1609-1676.
- title: Londons liberties, or, A learned argument of law and reason, before the Lord Mayor, Court of Aldermen, and Common-Council, at Guild-Hall between Mr. Maynard, now the Kings eldest serjeant at law, Mr. Hales, late Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench, and Mr. Wilde, lately one of the justices of the same court, of council for the Livery-men of London, and Major John Wildman, and Mr. John Price, of council for the Freemen of London : wherein the freedom of the citizens of London in their elections of their mayor, sheriffs, aldermen, and common-council-men, is fully debated, their most ancient charters examined, and on both hands agreed to be but a confirmation of their former rights : with their opinions concerning the forfeiture of Londons charter.
- date: 1682.0
- words: 21685
- flesch: 61
- summary: , it is said men of every Ward did Choose : whence I Collect that by the expression of the Commonalty summoned hereto , is understood the Twelve Men from the Wards ; so that it appeareth clearly in my humble Opinion , That it was the Practice of the City for near two hundred Years , to Choose by their Representatives , before it came to be the Usage of the City , to Choose by the Livery-men of the Companies . A●d indeed it is well that you are both Judges and Parties ; they said , and doubtless they are ingenious , that they desire you to proceed according as you should be satisfied in conscience , the which for my part I doubt not but that you will ; there was much said how much it did behove you in point of danger ; but what that danger is I understand not ; but he tels you he urged it out of zeal ; also he tels you much of some secret Absolom ; but for my part I understand not what , nor who he means hereby ; I will take no advantage of any mans affection nor inclinations at all ; but the man which that Gentlemen spake to the business in hand , was that he cited many precedents and records for the practice of what he now desireth my be effected ; But truly I do extreamly much misunderstand those presidents and Records that he produceth , If that they are not as full against them , as any thing can be said .
- keywords: act; aldermen; ancient; answer; argument; assent; business; case; charter; chief; choice; chosen; chuse; citizens; city; common; common council; commonalty; companies; consequence; council; counsel; court; custom; deputies; desire; discreet; doth; edward; electing; election; england; free; freemen; general; gentlemen; good; government; grant; great; hales; hall; hath; honourable; iohn; judges; king; law; lawful; leave; liberties; liveries; livery; london; long; lord; lord mayor; man; matter; maynard; mayor; men; mention; number; officers; opinion; parliament; people; persons; petition; pleased; power; practice; presidents; price; question; read; reason; record; representatives; right; said; saith; second; sheriffs; tcp; text; thing; time; unalterable; usage; ward; way; wildman; words; years
- versions: original; plain text
- A72789
- author: City of London (England). Court of Aldermen.
- title: Orders devised and agreed upon by the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen of the citie of London, the seventh day of march, 1632. for and concerning the good government of the gaole of Newgate
- date: 1633.0
- words: 1719
- flesch: 61
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). [London : 1633?] See also STC 16727.1--STC. Imprint and pagination from STC. Line 1 of text ends: 'shillings'. Reproduction of original in the Guildhall Library, London, England.
- keywords: bee; books; boxe; characters; early; eebo; england; english; gaole; good; item; keeper; london; lord; mayor; orders; prisoners; said; steward; tcp; tei; text; time; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A72792
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Mayor whereas the right honourable the Lords of His Maiesties most honourable Priuy Councell ... finding that the said abuse hath appeared in nothing more than in the excessiue rates of poultry ...
- date: 1634.0
- words: 1398
- flesch: 63
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 178628)
- keywords: books; characters; early; eebo; england; english; hath; honourable; london; lord; maiesties; mayor; online; phase; poultry; prices; rates; said; set; tcp; tei; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A72798
- author: Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks.
- title: 1602. 1603. A true report of all the burials and christnings within the Citie of London and the liberties thereof, from the 23. of December, 1602 to the 22. of December, 1603 VVhereunto is added the number of euery seuerall parish, from the 14. of Iuly, to the 22. of December, aswell within the Citie of London, and the liberties thereof, as in other parishes in the skirts of the citie and out of the freedome, adioyning to the Citie: according to the report made to the Kings most Excellent Maiestie, by the Company of Parish Clearkes of the same citie.
- date: 1625.0
- words: 2092
- flesch: 60
- summary: A true report of all the burials and christnings within the Citie of London and the liberties thereof, from the 23. of December, 1602 to the 22. of December, 1603 VVhereunto is added the number of euery seuerall parish, from the 14. of Iuly, to the 22. of December, aswell within the Citie of London, and the liberties thereof, as in other parishes in the skirts of the citie and out of the freedome, adioyning to the Citie: according to the report made to the Kings most Excellent Maiestie, by the Company of Parish Clearkes of the same citie. A true report of all the burials and christnings within the Citie of London and the liberties thereof, from the 23. of December, 1602 to the 22. of December, 1603 VVhereunto is added the number of euery seuerall parish, from the 14. of Iuly, to the 22. of December, aswell within the Citie of London, and the liberties thereof, as in other parishes in the skirts of the citie and out of the freedome, adioyning to the Citie: according to the report made to the Kings most Excellent Maiestie, by the Company of Parish Clearkes of the same citie.
- keywords: alhallowes; books; characters; christnings; citie; company; december; early; edition; eebo; english; iune; liberties; london; march; martins; mary; michael; online; parish; parishes; plague; report; september; tcp; tei; text; true; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A72819
- author: Stationers' Company (London, England)
- title: To the Honourable House of Commons assembled in Parliament. An abstract of the generall grieuances of the poore free-men and iourney-men printers oppressed and kept in seruile bondage all their liues by the vnlawfull ordinances of the master and wardens of the Company, which they fortifie only by a warrant dormant.
- date: 1621.0
- words: 1979
- flesch: 58
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 151070)
- keywords: benefit; bookes; characters; commons; company; decree; early; eebo; england; english; free; generall; haue; london; maiesties; masters; men; online; ordinances; petitioners; phase; poore; printers; printing; priuiledge; stationers; tcp; tei; text; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A72822
- author: Hopkins, Edward, fl. 1621.
- title: To the honorable assembly of the Commons house of Parliament, and to the committees, for grieuances of the same house. The humble petition of Edward Hopkins, William Barwell, Iohn Bellamy, Robert Vilet, Iohn Walter, Robert Wright, and other wharfingers in and neere the Cittie of London
- date: 1621.0
- words: 1645
- flesch: 60
- summary: Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 151074) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: assembly; books; carres; characters; diuers; early; eebo; english; haue; house; iohn; london; maiesties; online; petitioners; robert; said; subiects; tcp; tei; text; themselues; trade; vse; walter; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A72823
- author: Company of Woodmongers (London, England)
- title: To the honorable assembly of the Commons house of Parliament, and to the committees for grieuances of the same house: the answere of the master, wardens and fellowship of woodmongers, London, to the complaint of some few wharfingers and others, whereof, some are forraine, and some free of the same citie
- date: 1621.0
- words: 1847
- flesch: 59
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). To the honorable assembly of the Commons house of Parliament, and to the committees for grieuances of the same house: the answere of the master, wardens and fellowship of woodmongers, London, to the complaint of some few wharfingers and others, whereof, some are forraine, and some free of the same citie Company of Woodmongers (London, England) 1621 Approx.
- keywords: act; books; carremen; carres; citie; common; company; councell; court; early; eebo; england; english; honorable; house; iacobi; london; master; ordinances; persons; said; tcp; text; wardens; woodmongers; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A74093
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: And being above -- xxiijc. weight upon every hundred ijd. ...
- date: 1647.0
- words: 1088
- flesch: 77
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A74093 of text R210463 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.11[10]). Corporate authorship conjectured from text.
- keywords: a74093; bales; bee; city; distance; english; goods; ijd; item; like; load; london; places; said; text; thomason; weight; wharfe
- versions: original; plain text
- A74121
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: To the present visible supreame power, assembled at VVestminster The humble petition, and desires of many thousand well-affected persons, in, and about the city of London, in behalf of themselves and the whole Kingdome.
- date: 1649.0
- words: 1186
- flesch: 62
- summary: Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 162971) To the present visible supreame power, assembled at VVestminster The humble petition, and desires of many thousand well-affected persons, in, and about the city of London, in behalf of themselves and the whole Kingdome.
- keywords: desires; england; humble; kingdome; london; parliament; persons; petition; power; present; supreame; text; thomason; time; visible
- versions: original; plain text
- A74131
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Wednesday the 27 August, 1651. Mr. Speaker, by way of report acquaints the House of the great appearance of the militiaes of London, Westminster, Southwarke, and the hamblets of the Tower, on Monday last in Finsbury feilds, ...
- date: 1651.0
- words: 749
- flesch: 69
- summary: [London : 1651] Title from opening lines of text. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A74131 of text R211350 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.16[22]).
- keywords: appearance; great; london; militiaes; monday; parliament; report; southwarke; speaker; text; thomason; way
- versions: original; plain text
- A74147
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Mayor. Whereas by neglect of executing the good lawes and statutes against rogues, vagabonds, and sturdy beggers, that vermine of this Common-wealth doth now swarme in and about this city and liberties, ...
- date: 1655.0
- words: 1421
- flesch: 66
- summary: WHereas by neglect of executing the good Lawes and Statutes against Rogues , Vagabonds , and Sturdy beggers , That vermine of this Common-wealth doth now swarme in and about this City and Liberties , disturbing and annoying the inhabitants and Passengers , by hanging upon Coaches , and clamarous begging at the doores of Churches and private Houses and in the Streets and common Dayes ; beguilling the modest , laborious and honest poore , ( the proper obiects of Charity ) of much reliefe and Almes which otherwise might bee disposed to them by bountifull and well minded people : And by this meanes and their corrupt and prophane communication , doe bring dishonor to God , scandall to Religion , and shame to the Government of this City : And for as much as it is intended and resolved that for Reformation of this living Nusance , the said Lawes and Statutes shall bee hence-forth duely and strictly executed within this City and Liberties thereof , and the penaltyes and punishments thereby appointed , imposed and inflicted upon all Persons offending against the same : I doe thereofore give notice thereof , And in the name of his Highnes the Lord Protector , doe hereby require and Command all Constables and other Officers and Persons whatsoever within this City and Liberties , to bee diligent and watchfull about their duties herein : For better information whereof and that none may excuse himselfe by pretence of ignorance , I have caused some branches of the said Statutes of most Common concernment to bee added hereunto , expecting that accordingly every Constable doe presently apprehend ( and so continue to doe during his said Office ) all such Rogues , Vagabonds and Sturdy beggers as shall bee found in his parish or precinct , or shall bee brought or sent to him by any of his Neighbors , and to send to Bridewell ( the place of Correction ) such of them as live within this City and Liberties , who are there to bee received and dealt withall according to Law ; and such as live not within the Liberties aforesaid , to whipp and passe away to the place of their dwelling or last aboade .
- keywords: bee; beggers; cap; city; constable; doe; good; lawes; liberties; london; mayor; parish; rogues; said; statutes; sturdy; text; vagabonds
- versions: original; plain text
- A74149
- author: Governors for the Poor (London, England)
- title: At a court held by the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor President, and the rest of the Governors of the Corporation for the Poor of London the 6th of February, 1655.
- date: 1655.0
- words: 1160
- flesch: 52
- summary: At end: Signed by the Appointment of the said Corporation; by William Haslope Clerk to the said Corporation. Annotation on Thomason copy: feb. 7th. WHereas the Governors of the Corporation for the Poor of London , have from year to year given publique notice of their having a Stock of Flax , Hemp , and Tow , at either of their Workhouses , to imploy the Poor within this City and Liberties thereof ; And for some years together did imploy about one thousand Poor at Work , besides the Poor Children that are Educated by the said Corporation in Learning and Arts ; Yet neverthelesse there are many Vagrants and Common Beggers which continually frequent the Streets of this City , and refuse to receive or undertake any lawfull work , or imployment , to the Scandall of the Government of this City , and the profession of Religion .
- keywords: city; corporation; court; end; governors; honourable; london; lord; mayor; poor; president; rest; right; said; text; thomason; work
- versions: original; plain text
- A74155
- author: Williams, Oliver, fl. 1657-1670.
- title: A prohibition to all persons who have set up any offices called by the names of addresses, publique advice, or intelligence within the cities of London and VVestminster, the borough of Southwark, and three miles about the same.
- date: 1657.0
- words: 1138
- flesch: 55
- summary: He doth further certifie all whom it shall or may concern , that he is resolved with all possible speed to set up the said Office of Intelligence , in such convenient places as may be for the better executing the power granted in the said Letters Pattents , according to the true intent and meaning thereof ; And the said Oliver Williams by the power and authority therein granted and confirmed , as aforesaid , doth hereby require and prohibit all and every person and persons whatsoever , that from henceforth neither they nor any of them presume to set up any such Office or Offices , or shall any longer continue the Office or Offices , set up as aforesaid , or to Officiate in the same , either by the name of the Office of Addresses , Publick Advice , or Intelligence , or any other name whatsoever , for the performance of those things granted as aforesaid , without sufficient Authority first obtained under the hand and Seal of the aforesaid Oliver Williams or his Assigns , during the said term , As he or they will answer the same at their peril , Dated the 26 day of May , 1657. THese are to certifie all persons whatsoever , whom it may any wayes concerne ; That whereas the late King Charles the 20 Day of December , in the 13 year of his Raign did for himself his Heirs and Successors , grant one Indenture of Lease under the Great Seal of England , to Captain Robert Innes his Executors , Administrators , and Assignes , for the term of 41 years , of an Office then called the Intelligence Office , of all kinds of Intelligence whatsoever , of all Bargaines , of things lost , or found , for helping Masters and Mistrisses to Servants , and Servants to Services , And all other things of the like nature , within the Cities of London and Westminster ; The Borough of Southwark , and three miles about the same , inhibiting and forbidding all other persons whatsoever , from erecting any other Office or Offices , of the like nature , without authority under the hand and Seal of the said Captain Robert Innes , or his Assignes ; And that notwithstanding the said Prohibition in the said Grant is still in full force for divers yeares yet to come ; several persons without any legal authority have , in divers places of the Cities of London and Westminster , and Borough of Southwark , set up several Offices of the like nature , by the name of the Office of Addresses ; And lately by the name of the Office of publick Advice ; as appeareth by a printed paper printed by one Mr. Thomas Newcomb , wherein ( contrary to Law , ) several persons have assumed a power to themselves , of imposing rates upon the several particulars therein set forth and expressed , whereas in the Lease granted to the said Captain Robert Innes , it is left to the voluntary disposition of the persons addressing themselves to the said Office what to give ; which Grant amongst others was confirmed by an Act of Parliament , bearing date the 29 day of January 1648 : And also by an Ordinance of his Highnesse the Lord Protector , with the advice and consent of his Council , hearing date the 26 of December 1653 ; And the said Grant is now exemplified under the Great Seal of England , in the name of his Highnesse the Lord Protector , at the request of Oliver Williams , Assigne to the said Captain Robert Innes .
- keywords: addresses; advice; borough; cities; intelligence; london; office; oliver; persons; said; set; southwark; text; thomason; williams
- versions: original; plain text
- A74205
- author: Church, Andrew, fl. 1641.
- title: To the right honourable the knights, citizens and burgesses now assembled in Parliament. The humble petition of Andrew Church, George Allen, Thomas Sander, Robert Parkinson, Iohn Tippin, and Iohn Wigmore as it was by them delivered to Master Speaker the 9 of August, in the behalfe of the multitude of poore trades-men and artificers, in and about the cities of London and Westminster, with the suburbs and liberties of them both, and by Master Speaker, presented to the honourable house of Commons, the 16. of the same moneth.
- date: 1641.0
- words: 1282
- flesch: 62
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A74205 of text R210201 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.4[27]). HVMBLY SHEWETH , THat the infinite number and increasing multitudes of Aliens which have and still doe Intrude themselves into this Kingdome are so great both of French , Walloones and Dutch , and their accesse of using trades here in these Citties and liberties , which is the Rumating of the most part of the poorer sort of Tradesmen in the said Citties and liberties , That thereby the French , Walloones and Dutch have got our trades into their hands so , that we native borne subiects are enforced to be their servants , and have our bread snatched out of our hands by them , A thing not suffered in any other Common wealth .
- keywords: aliens; andrew; burgesses; church; citizens; honourable; humble; iohn; knights; liberties; london; master; parliament; petition; poore; speaker; text; trades
- versions: original; plain text
- A74776
- author: Howell, James, 1594?-1666.
- title: Down-right dealing, or The despised Protestant speaking plain English to the Kings most excellent Majesty the honourable houses of Parliament. The city of London. The Army. And all other peace-desiring commons of this divided and self-destroying kingdome. / Written by J.H. an impartiall observer of the present transactions of the court, city, and camp.
- date: 1647.0
- words: 4455
- flesch: 52
- summary: A Kingdome , City , or House , divided against it self cannot stand . And truely if the kingdome hath a means to preserve it self against the King , being then acting against the welfare of the Kingdome ; It hath a power likewise to secure it self against the Parliament , and Army too , if they shall act , in the same way , and shall not prosecute the main end ( to wit ) the peoples welfare .
- keywords: army; city; commons; day; division; end; england; english; excellent; future; god; good; gracious; great; hath; honour; honourable; houses; interests; justice; kingdome; kings; london; long; love; majesty; nay; parliament; particular; peace; people; persons; poor; power; present; right; self; selves; subjects; text; thomason; welfare
- versions: original; plain text
- A75224
- author: P. A., zealous well-willer of the whole kingdome and parliament.
- title: A letter of advice to the Londoners to forewarn them of their neere approaching miseries and to rouze them (if it be possible) out of their senslesse security.
- date: 1643.0
- words: 2025
- flesch: 55
- summary: Doe you looke for advice ? it will be good that you make it appeare that you haue first shook off that Lethargie that ha's possest you , for till then you are not capable of advice : if I thought you were a wake I would advise you to doe what ? to stop your eares against the Syren inchantments of such as you may be sure ( by your former sufferings , and sorcing you to these present shifts and 02 extremities ) wish you not well ; and to open your eares to such your Brethren who hazard themselves and their Fortunes in your behalfe , who have liv'd amongst you , and of whose faith and sound affection you have had so much experience : follow their advice , I am a stranger to you , and thinke not much if they shall put you upon what for the present shall be irksome to you , your sicknesse is so desperate that 't will be well if rough and chargeable meanes can cure you . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A75224 of text R15547 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.6[113]).
- keywords: a75224; advice; doe; enemies; english; friends; kingdome; kings; letter; londoners; miseries; neere; parliament; possible; selves; set; text; thomason; time; willer; zealous
- versions: original; plain text
- A75756
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: At a generall meeting of the Committee for Arrears, the 13th. of September, anno Dom. 1648.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 954
- flesch: 68
- summary: And whereas also by the same Precept , the Collectors in their severall Divisions were required to be active and diligent in the collecting of the said severall Assessments ; and that the Collectors within a certain time therein prefixed , were to make up their Accompts concerning the same , with the Deputy and Common-councell-men in their said severall Divisions , and pay in the Money then remaining in their hands to the Treasurers at War : And that return should by the Deputy Common-councell-men and Collectors be made to this Committee , of the Names of such persons within their Ward , as have not paid their said Assessments , and the summes by them owing , and the reasons why they pay not the same ; And if any of the said Collectors should be remiss that then their Names were to be this day also returned ; and thereupon ( according to an Order of the honourable House of Commons ) to be certified to a Committee of Parliament , as in and by the said Precept , relation being thereunto had , may more at large appear : All which nevertheless , and although the said Committee this day expected Returns to have been made , according to the same Precept ; but the said Service being ( as it now seems ) neglected , It is therefore Ordered , That time be given for the doing the matters and things contained in the former Precept , by the said Deputy , Common-councell-men , and Collectors , and every of them , untill Tuesday next at Two of the clock in the afternoon ; with this intimation also , That if the said Returns are not by that time made , that then the Deputies and severall Common-councell-men doe make return of such of the said Collectors as either obstruct or neglect the Work , or fail in doing any thing of them required , whose Names are by this Committee to be then returned to the said Committee of Parliament ; or in default thereof , the said Deputies and Common-councell-men are to be returned to the said Committee of Parliament , there to be dealt withall according to their demerit : with this also , That further time or favour is not to be expected . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A75756 of text R210933 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.13[18]).
- keywords: arrears; collectors; committee; common; councell; england; london; men; said; september; severall; text; thomason; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A75759
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council. Committee for Arrears.
- title: At a meeting of the Committee of Arrears the eleventh day of December, 1648.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 696
- flesch: 73
- summary: Committee for Arrears. Committee for Arrears.
- keywords: a75759; arrears; books; committee; day; december; eleventh; english; london; meeting; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A75869
- author: Adams, Thomas, Sir, 1586-1668.
- title: The humble petition of the worshipful Thomas Adams, John Langham, and James Bunce, aldermen of London, presented to the Lords at their bar on Tuesday April 25. 1648. Wherein is declared their firm resolution to stand for the defence of the established laws of the land. Also their protestation against the lords jurisdiction over them or any other commoners in criminal cases. With their appeal from the Lords to their proper and competent judges (a jury of their equals) and judges sworn to proceed according to the known law of England. Together with a salva libertate by them sent to the lieutenant of the Tower, April 23. 1648.
- date: None
- words: 2348
- flesch: 62
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A75869 of text R206259 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason E435_31). This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A75869 of text R206259 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason E435_31).
- keywords: adams; aldermen; april; bunce; cases; commoners; england; equals; free; james; john; judges; jurisdiction; langham; law; laws; lieutenant; london; lords; lordships; parliament; people; petition; sir; text; thomas; tower
- versions: original; plain text
- A75870
- author: Adams, Thomas, Sir, 1586-1668.
- title: Plain dealing or a fair vvarning to the gentlemen of the Committee for Union : in a letter intended to Alderman Foulks, to be communicated unto them accordingly at Gurney House, or elsewhere. / Written by a friend to the Parliament, City and kingdom, and for their vindication, is now published to the world.
- date: 1647.0
- words: 3248
- flesch: 53
- summary: Was not their disobedience disowned with a great deal of fained sorrow , since own'd with a great deal of real Joy ; doth any man know what to make of the Army now , one piece of it is for Paul , and other for Apollos , and an other for Sephaes , but all out of order , all disobedient to the Parliament , ever and anon professing that the Parliament is not yet for their turn ; so that the truth is , and I think all the world can never make it out , that there is any thing to be said for them , but that whilst they were obedient , God honoured them to be Instruments to this poor Kingdom ; which very service makes me pour out many a prayer to God , to pour upon them the spirit of Repentance and Obedience , without which I much doubt of any good by your meeting : for when God comes to enquire after all those things , I am afraid he wil charge upon the Armies disobedience , the new * War you talk of , the accusation of the Imprisoned and banished ones , the renting and tearing in piec●s the Parliament , the City , the whole Kingdom , nay 3 , Kingdoms , the hinderers of Irelands Relief ; promoters of the Famine , both of bread , and of the word of the Lord , and of all the sad Consequences we fear may follow : But I believe the last great turn given to the Parliament by that 1000 Horse , commanded by Major Desborough into Hide Park ( to execute that dreadful Declaration or poysonous purge , of which the Parliament hath never yet recovered , and was such a blow to the Gospel of Jesus Christ and to these three Kingdoms ●● cannot yet be paralel'd ) wil require a thorough REPENTANCE : And though we cannot see all the plots and designs of men , yet God knows all the present juglings of this Age ; and we have had so much experience in all the transactions , since this unhappy difference , as to say , surely this putting of the Army thus out of joynt is to try the skil of some or other .
- keywords: a75870; adams; agitators; alderman; armies; army; city; committee; common; dealing; disobedience; duty; english; fair; friend; gentlemen; god; good; great; hath; house; kingdom; letter; nay; new; officers; parliament; plain; repentance; set; sir; text; thomason; treason; union; vvarning; war; wil; world; ● ●
- versions: original; plain text
- A76009
- author: Albemarle, George Monck, Duke of, 1608-1670.
- title: A letter of His Excellencie the Lord General Monck, to the Speaker of the Parl. From Guild-Hall, London
- date: None
- words: 942
- flesch: 69
- summary: From Guild-Hall, London Albemarle, George Monck, Duke of, 1608-1670. From Guild-Hall, London Albemarle, George Monck, Duke of, 1608-1670.
- keywords: city; gates; general; george; guild; hall; letter; london; monck; parliament; portcullises; speaker; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A77668
- author: Browne, George, gunner.
- title: A modell of the fire-workes to be presented in Lincolnes-Inne fields on the 5th. of Novemb. 1647. Before the Lords and Commons of Parliament, and the militia of London, in commemoration of Gods great mercy in delivering this kingdome from the hellish plots of papists, acted in the damnable Gunpowder treason. With their present statues and proportions.
- date: 1647.0
- words: 1040
- flesch: 67
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A77668 of text R210669 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.11[92]). Before the Lords and Commons of Parliament Browne, George, gunner. 1647 528 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
- keywords: 5th; commons; englands; fields; fire; george; great; gunner; inne; king; london; lords; militia; papists; parliament; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A78071
- author: Butter, Nathaniel, d. 1664.
- title: A letter with a narrative, written to the right Hon:ble Thomas Allen Lord Major of London, &e. [sic] concerning a strange sight that appeared over this city of London, in the yeare 1642. when the King was driven from his Parliament, dated as followeth
- date: 1659.0
- words: 1282
- flesch: 71
- summary: A letter with a narrative, written to the right Hon:ble Thomas Allen Lord Major of London, &e. A letter with a narrative, written to the right Hon:ble Thomas Allen Lord Major of London, &e.
- keywords: allen; ble; butter; city; english; god; hon; letter; london; lord; major; narrative; sight; strange; text; thomas; time; yeare
- versions: original; plain text
- A78087
- author: City of London (England). Committee for the Militia.
- title: By vertue of severall ordinances of Parliament, authorizing the Committee of the Militia of London and liberties thereof, ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 713
- flesch: 62
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A78087 of text R211017 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.12[101]). [London : 1648] Title from opening lines of text.
- keywords: city; committee; england; english; liberties; london; militia; ordinances; parliament; severall; text; thomason; vertue
- versions: original; plain text
- A78156
- author: Barkstead, John, d. 1662.
- title: May 27. 1651. For as much as the inhabitants of Pauls Church yard are much disturbed by the souldiers and others, ...
- date: 1651.0
- words: 584
- flesch: 74
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A78156 of text R211273 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.16[5]). [London : 1651] Title from opening words of text.
- keywords: a78156; barkstead; benjamin; blundell; english; inhabitants; john; pauls; souldiers; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A78765
- author: Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649.
- title: By the King. His Majesties declaration whereby to repeale and make voyd, all licenses, by himselfe granted for bringing any goods or commodities, from the cities of London and Westminster and other places, in rebellion against His Majesty, contrary to his late proclamation, prohibiting trade and commerce with the said citties and places.
- date: 1643.0
- words: 1001
- flesch: 64
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A78765 of text R212008 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.7[59]). 191 F The rate of 191 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the F category of texts with 100 or more defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: cities; commodities; england; goods; king; licenses; london; majesties; majesty; places; proclamation; said; text; westminster
- versions: original; plain text
- A78766
- author: Calamy, Edmund, 1600-1666.
- title: The city remembrancer. Or, A sermon preached to the native-citizens, of London, at their solemn assembly in Pauls on Tuesday, the 23 of June, A.D. MDCLVII. / By Edm. Calamy B.D. and pastor of the church at Aldermanbury.
- date: 1657.0
- words: 12968
- flesch: 75
- summary: Here are two words used {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , the last word signifieth , that God made it , summo artificio , to set out his skill and workmanship . 2. You must be holy in your carriage towards God ; you must not onely give man his due , but God his due ; you must not only have the Gospel , but obey the Gospel ; you must not onely be good Citizens , but good Christians .
- keywords: act; apostle; blessed; britain; builder; caesar; calamy; charity; chief; children; christ; christians; cities; citizens; city; common; considerable; day; desirable; divine; doth; earthly; england; excellency; famous; famous city; father; feast; fellow; foundation; free; freemen; glorious; glory; god; godly; good; gospel; great; greater; happiness; happy; hath; heaven; heb; hee; holiness; holy; hope; house; jesus; jew; kingdom; kings; labour; liberality; life; like; london; lord; love; luc; mat; mean; mean city; meeting; men; mercy; ministers; nation; native; noble; non; onely; original; paradise; parents; pauls; people; persons; place; poor; prerogative; privileges; providence; religion; religious; rev; rich; riches; righteous; roman; rome; saints; saith; selves; sermon; set; sin; sins; son; tarsus; text; things; time; true; want; way; wealth; wicked; works; world; year
- versions: original; plain text
- A78812
- author: Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649.
- title: By the King. His Majesties gratious proclamation to the cities of London and VVestminster.
- date: 1642.0
- words: 1292
- flesch: 55
- summary: WHEREAS amongst other Arts used by the Promoters of this horrid and desperate Rebellion against Vs , great Industry and Subtility hath been applyed to corrupt Our Subjects of Our Cities of London and Westminster , first by engaging them in Factions and Tumults to awe the members of both Our Houses of Parliement who would not consent to their seditious Designes ; then by perswading them to Loanes and Contributions for the maintenance of the Army now in Rebellion against Vs , upon pretence that the same was raised for the defence of Our Person , the Protestant Religion , the Laws of the Land , and Priviledge of Parliament ( WHEREAS in truth it is for the destruction of them all ) by their yeelding obedience to , and executing the pretended Ordinance of the Militia : and lastly by infusing into them a desperate sense of their own Condition , and that We are so much incensed against them for the premises , that We intend to plunder , and give up the wealth of those Our Cities , as a prey to Our Souldiers : We do hereby declare , That We are yet far from being so much incensed against those Our Cities , as these men desire to be believed , and in truth have endeavoured to make Vs : but We beleive that those Tumults were contrived by the Persons whom We haue formerly accused of that practice , and raised out of the meanest and poorest People of those Our Cities and Suburbs , without the privity and consent of the best and substantiall Gi. izens and Inhabitants , and that the Loanes and Contributions which have been since raised ( though they have passed more generally than We expected from the duty and sobriety of men of fortunes and understanding ) have beene wrested and extorted from them by threats and menaces , and feare of plundering and violence . And therefore We do hereby offer Our free and gracious Pardon to all the Citizens and Inhabitants of Our said Cities of London and Westminster , for all Offences concerning the premises committed against Vs before the publishing of this Our Proclamation ( except all those Persons whom We have excepted in Our Declaration of the 12 of August , and except Alderman Fulke and Captaine Manwaring , against all which We shall proceed according to the Rules of Law , as against Traytors and Stirrers of sedition against Vs ) and We do assure them in the word of a King , that no violence shall be offered by Our Army , or any part of it to any of them , not doubting but their demeanour will henceforward be such , that VVe shall not be compelled to bring Our Army against them .
- keywords: a78812; army; cities; england; english; gratious; king; london; majesties; online; proclamation; rebellion; sovereign; text; thomason; vvestminster; wales
- versions: original; plain text
- A79006
- author: Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649.
- title: By the King. A proclamation for the free and safe passage of all clothes, goods, wares, and merchandize to our city of London.
- date: 1642.0
- words: 882
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A79006 of text R211521 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.5[114]). A Proclamation for the free and safe passage of all Clothes , Goods , Wares , and Merchandize to Our City of LONDON .
- keywords: city; clothes; england; english; free; goods; king; london; merchandize; passage; proclamation; safe; text; thomason; wares
- versions: original; plain text
- A79105
- author: Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649.
- title: His Royall Maiesties speech: spoken in the High Court of Parliament on Friday, December the 2. 1641, with the love which His Majesty lately hath shown to the city of London, by knighting five aldermen, at his palace at Hampton Court, and royally giving them againe into their hands London-Derrie.
- date: 1641.0
- words: 823
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A79105 of text R9799 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason E199_33 E199_34). Text continuous despite pagination.
- keywords: a79105; aldermen; city; court; england; english; hampton; king; london; love; majesty; royall; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A79808
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council attributed name.
- title: The cities X commandements, commanded to be read in all churches, by Mr L. Warner and the Common Councell.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 1350
- flesch: 70
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A79808 of text R210812 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.11[133]). l. on that day thou shalt doe no manner of work , thou nor thy sonne , nor thy daughter , for we have entred that day into the Kalendar , and command it to bee kept holy .
- keywords: -early; 669.f.11[133; a79808; books; churches; cities; city; commandements; common; counsell; day; english; masters; online; text; thomason; thou; warner; wee; westminster
- versions: original; plain text
- A80247
- author: City of London (England). Committee for the Militia.
- title: The Committee of the Militia London, and the liberties thereof, earnestly desire you to enquire what armes are in your ward, ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 633
- flesch: 70
- summary: [London : 1648] Title from opening lines of text. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A80247 of text R210784 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.12[29]).
- keywords: a80247; armes; city; committee; english; liberties; london; militia; text; thomason; ward
- versions: original; plain text
- A80248
- author: City of London (England). Committee for the Militia.
- title: The Committee of the Militia of London, and the liberties thereof, taking into their serious consideration the imminent danger that the Parliament and city are in: ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 634
- flesch: 59
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A80248 of text R210787 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.12[30]). [London : 1648] Title from opening lines of text.
- keywords: city; committee; consideration; danger; imminent; liberties; london; militia; parliament; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A80546
- author: Corbet, Jeffrey.
- title: The Protestant's warning-piece or, The humble remonstrance of Ieffery Corbet citizen and grocer of London, composed for the view of his Highness, the Parliament, and all the good people in England, Scotland, and Ireland; and published to frustrate the designes of the incendiaries employed by the Pope, and the King of Spain, who have severall yeares contrived to fire the city of London in a 100 places at once, and then proceed to their long intended massacre.
- date: 1656.0
- words: 2201
- flesch: 69
- summary: The Protestant's warning-piece or, The humble remonstrance of Ieffery Corbet citizen and grocer of London, composed for the view of his Highness, the Parliament, and all the good people in England, Scotland, and Ireland; and published to frustrate the designes of the incendiaries employed by the Pope, and the King of Spain, who have severall yeares contrived to fire the city of London in a 100 places at once, and then proceed to their long intended massacre. Corbet, Jeffrey. The Protestant's warning-piece or, The humble remonstrance of Ieffery Corbet citizen and grocer of London, composed for the view of his Highness, the Parliament, and all the good people in England, Scotland, and Ireland; and published to frustrate the designes of the incendiaries employed by the Pope, and the King of Spain, who have severall yeares contrived to fire the city of London in a 100 places at once, and then proceed to their long intended massacre. Corbet, Jeffrey.
- keywords: bloody; city; corbet; designes; england; friends; god; good; highness; incendiaries; interest; ireland; iustice; king; london; massacre; nations; parliament; people; persons; places; pope; protestants; said; spain; text; time; yeares
- versions: original; plain text
- A80956
- author: England and Wales. Council of State.
- title: By the Protector an order and declaration of His Highness, by the advice of His council, commanding all persons who have been of the late Kings party, or his sons, to depart out of the cities of London and Westminster, and late lines of communication, on or before Monday the fifth day of November, 1655.
- date: 1655.0
- words: 1315
- flesch: 55
- summary: By the Protector an order and declaration of His Highness, by the advice of His council, commanding all persons who have been of the late Kings party, or his sons, to depart out of the cities of London and Westminster, and late lines of communication, on or before Monday the fifth day of November, 1655. England and Wales. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A80956 of text R211670 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.20[17]).
- keywords: advice; cities; commonwealth; communication; council; day; fifth; highness; late; lines; london; lord; november; order; persons; protector; said; text; westminster
- versions: original; plain text
- A81293
- author: Denham, John, Sir, 1615-1669.
- title: Mr. Hampdens speech occasioned upon the Londoners petition for peace.
- date: 1643.0
- words: 1123
- flesch: 78
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A81293 of text R212629 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.6[122]). 93 D The rate of 93 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the D category of texts with between 35 and 100 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: a81293; books; denham; early; english; hampdens; john; king; londoners; online; peace; petition; sir; speech; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A82304
- author: C. D.
- title: A seasonable letter of advice delivered to the Major of London; as he was sitting at Common Councell at Guild-Hall, on Tuesday the 27. of December, and by him read on the bench.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 690
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A82304 of text R211405 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.22[35]). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A82304) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 163618)
- keywords: advice; common; councell; december; guild; hall; london; major; seasonable; text; thomason; tuesday
- versions: original; plain text
- A82377
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: An act for continuing two former acts touching elections in the city of London.
- date: 1650.0
- words: 607
- flesch: 70
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A82377 of text R212067 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.15[69]). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A82377) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 163142)
- keywords: a82377; act; acts; city; elections; england; english; london; parliament; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A82636
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament, concerning diverse well affected persons and citizens of the City of London who are willing and ready to undertake and advance a considerable number of souldiers, and them to arme, maintaine, and pay for severall months ensuing, or during these times of danger, upon the publike faith. Die lunæ. 14. Novemb. 1642
- date: 1642.0
- words: 1505
- flesch: 67
- summary: ACcording to an ordinance of Parliament bearing date the fourteenth day of this present Moneth of November 1642 concerning the advancing of a considerable number of Souldiers , by contribution of Money ; and Armes , to be raised within this City , and liberties by the subscriptions of persons to be called upon in the severall Wards and Parishes , for the perfecting of this necessary worke , and the furtherance of the same , being directed by the said ordinance unto us the Major and Sheriffs of this City , and to such subcommittee , as by us shall be thought fit , for the execution of the contents of the said ordinance , we doe therefore hereby ordaine and appoint the severall persons here under mentioned that is to say ( Robert Sweet for La●gborne Ward . Tho. Hutchins for B●shopsgate Ward .
- keywords: affected; citizens; city; commons; considerable; declaration; diverse; faith; john; london; lords; money; number; parishes; parliament; persons; said; severall; souldiers; subscriptions; text; times; ward
- versions: original; plain text
- A82679
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament, for the Kings Majesties speedy coming to London. Die Sabbathi, ultimo Julii, 1647.
- date: None
- words: 725
- flesch: 73
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A82679 of text R210589 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.11[55]). 45 D The rate of 45 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the D category of texts with between 35 and 100 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: commons; declaration; england; julii; kings; london; lords; majesties; parliament; sabbathi; text; ultimo
- versions: original; plain text
- A82713
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament that the sheriffes of London shall be saved and kept harmelesse by the authority of both Houses, for not publishing some late messages and proclamations lately sent them in his Majesties name.
- date: 1642.0
- words: 762
- flesch: 66
- summary: A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament that the sheriffes of London shall be saved and kept harmelesse by the authority of both Houses, for not publishing some late messages and proclamations lately sent them in his Majesties name. England and Wales. A declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament that the sheriffes of London shall be saved and kept harmelesse by the authority of both Houses, for not publishing some late messages and proclamations lately sent them in his Majesties name. England and Wales.
- keywords: authority; commons; declaration; harmelesse; houses; london; lords; messages; parliament; proclamations; sheriffes; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A82779
- author: City of London (England). Committee for the Militia.
- title: August, 1. 1647. For the better satisfaction of the kingdome, the City of London, (who hath been the principall maintainer of the Army) now advancing against them, is for peace, ...
- date: 1647.0
- words: 730
- flesch: 67
- summary: City of London (England). FOR the better satisfaction of the Kingdome , The City of London , ( who hath been the Principall maintainer of the Army ) now advancing against them , is for Peace , and hath omitted nothing to shew their desires to maintaine a good understanding with the Army ; What the City doth in standing upon their Guard , is for their owne defence , and not to engage in a new War , but to put a speedy period to the Kingdomes troubles , and hasten Irelands reliefe ; They professe they have , and shall alwayes endeavour to procure the Souldiers indempnity , and that they may have their Arreares paid them ; and have no other end but that God may have his glory , the Kings Majesty setled in his just Rights , the Parliament enjoy their Priviledges and Freedomes , and the Subject their fundamentall Laws Liberty and Peace ; And this being the resolution of this City , they are confident no Person of Honor , good Conscience and lover of their Countrey will draw sword or use violence against them , but rather stand for their defence and safety . Ordered by the Committee of Lords and Commons for the safety of the King , Parliament , City , and Kingdom , And also by the Committee of the Militia of the City of London and parts adjacent , that this Declaration bee Printed and Published .
- keywords: a82779; army; august; better; city; committee; hath; kingdome; london; maintainer; principall; satisfaction; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A82877
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Die Sabbathi 24. Iulii 1647. The Lords and Commons having seene a printed paper intituled, A petition to the Lord Mayer, Aldermen, and Commons of the City of London in the Guild Hall assembled, ...
- date: 1647.0
- words: 887
- flesch: 65
- summary: The Lords and Commons having seene a printed paper intituled, A petition to the Lord Mayer, Aldermen, and Commons of the City of London in the Guild Hall assembled, ... England and Wales. The Lords and Commons having seene a printed paper intituled, A petition to the Lord Mayer, Aldermen, and Commons of the City of London in the Guild Hall assembled, ... England and Wales.
- keywords: aldermen; city; commons; die; england; guild; hall; iulii; london; lord; mayer; paper; parliament; petition; sabbathi; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A82907
- author: Browne, John, ca. 1608-1691.
- title: A new declaration of the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled, in answer to His Majesties letter to the lord major and the court of aldermen of the city of London, and concerning his declaration to the county of Yorke at Heyworth Moore by his last speciall summonds, Luna 20. day of Junæ, 1642. / Ordered by the Lords in Parliament that this declaration be forthwith printed and published, Joh: Brown cler. Parl. ; With a letter from the Lord Paget, lord lievtenant of the county of Buckingham, to the earle of Holland, shewing the readinesse of that county to obey the ordinance of Parliament touching the militia ; and the examination of the Lord Magwire, Colonell Read, cousin-germane to Tyrone, Capt. Mac Mallion, brother-in-law to Philomy O-neale, the relation being truly taken from their owne mouths word for word as followeth, before a committee of both houses in the court of wards on Munday the 21. of June, 1642.
- date: 1642.0
- words: 2515
- flesch: 61
- summary: A new declaration of the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled, in answer to His Majesties letter to the lord major and the court of aldermen of the city of London, and concerning his declaration to the county of Yorke at Heyworth Moore by his last speciall summonds, Luna 20. / Ordered by the Lords in Parliament that this declaration be forthwith printed and published, Joh: Brown cler.
- keywords: answer; city; committee; commons; county; court; day; declaration; doe; england; english; examination; great; houses; kingdome; lawes; letter; london; lord; maiesty; majesties; militia; ordinance; paget; parliament; text; wards; word; yorke
- versions: original; plain text
- A82916
- author: City of London (England). Committee for the Militia.
- title: An order for the sixe regiments to advance tovvards Reading. By the Lord Mayor, and the rest of the Committee for the Militia of London.
- date: 1643.0
- words: 788
- flesch: 67
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A82916 of text R211987 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.7[45]). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A82916) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 161026)
- keywords: city; committee; england; london; lord; mayor; militia; reading; regiments; rest; sixe; text; tovvards
- versions: original; plain text
- A82930
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: An order of the committee of the Lords and Commons at Guild-hall for the defence of the kingdom for the disarming and securing the persons of such as are disaffected to the Parliament :nd [sic] Commonwealth, with citie of Lodon [sic] and Westminster, and the suburbs within three miles of the citie. With a proclamation by the Lord Maior of London.
- date: None
- words: 2064
- flesch: 55
- summary: And authority is hereby given to the said Lord Maior of London , Sheriffes , Leiutenants , Colonels , Lieutenant Colonels , Captaines and other Officers , and to every of them , before or at the time of the execution of the premises , to make proclamation in the severall Wards within the said citie of London , and likewise in such severall places within the suburbs thereof , the citie of Westminster , Burrough of Southwarke , and other places and precincts within thre miles of the citie of London , as they or any of them shall think convenient thereby commanding all and every the person and persons , which according to the true intent and meaning of this Order , are to be disarmed , and their persons secured , that they and every of them from and after the time of the making of the said proclamation , shall repaire unto , continue and abide , in their severall houses , lodgings , or places of their usuall abode , untill the premises shall be duely executed and performed , and during such time only and in such manner , as by the said severall proclamations shal be enioyned . 4. A variant of the edition with line 3 of title beginning with the cities of London in place of with citie of Lodon.
- keywords: bands; citie; colonels; committee; commons; defence; houses; london; lord; maior; officers; order; parliament; persons; places; premises; respective; said; severall; suburbs; text; westminster
- versions: original; plain text
- A82945
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Fryday the 10th of December. 1652. An order of the Parliament touching the extraordinary rate of coals.
- date: 1652.0
- words: 579
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A82945 of text R211568 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.16[74]). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A82945) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 163227)
- keywords: 10th; a82945; coals; december; england; extraordinary; fryday; order; parliament; rate; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A82948
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Die Jovis 18 May, 1648. Ordered by the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled, that all the commission-officers and others within the city of London and the liberties thereof, bee, and are hereby required to act upon the commissions they now have ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 698
- flesch: 69
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A82948 of text R176469 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing E1733C). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A82948) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 172882)
- keywords: city; commission; commons; england; english; jovis; liberties; london; lords; officers; parliament; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A82956
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Die Mercurij 16. Aprill, 1645. Ordered by the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled, that the Lord Major of the city of London is hereby desired and required to give direction that publike thanksgiving be made on the next Lords day, in every church, & chappel within the lines of communication, and bills of mortallity for Gods blessing to the forces in Scotland, against the rebells in that kingdome.
- date: 1645.0
- words: 663
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A82956 of text R200015 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason E278_10). Ordered by the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled, that the Lord Major of the city of London is hereby desired and required to give direction that publike thanksgiving be made on the next Lords day, in every church, & chappel within the lines of communication, and bills of mortallity for Gods blessing to the forces in Scotland, against the rebells in that kingdome.
- keywords: aprill; city; commons; die; england; london; lords; major; mercurij; parliament; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A82960
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Die Veneris, 28 August. 1646. Ordered by the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament, that Tuesday, being the eight day of September, now next coming, be set a part for a day of publike thanksgiving within the Cities of London and Westminster, ...
- date: 1646.0
- words: 668
- flesch: 70
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A82960 of text R212302 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.9[66]). Title from heading and first lines of text.
- keywords: august; commons; day; die; england; london; lords; parliament; september; text; tuesday; veneris
- versions: original; plain text
- A83034
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: An ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament concerning the election of Common-councel men, and other officers in the City of London. Die Mercurii 20. Decemb. 1648.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 817
- flesch: 71
- summary: An ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament concerning the election of Common-councel men, and other officers in the City of London. An ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament concerning the election of Common-councel men, and other officers in the City of London.
- keywords: city; commons; councel; december; election; england; london; lords; officers; ordinance; parliament; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A83133
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Die Veneris 4 Octob. 1644. An ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament for sending forth five regiments out of the City of London; and parts adjacent.
- date: 1644.0
- words: 1249
- flesch: 58
- summary: IT is this day Ordained by the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled , that the Committee of the Militia of the City of London and parts adjacent , within the Lines of Communication , and Parishes mentioned in the weekly bills of Mortality , shall have power , and is hereby authorised to command the Red and Blue Regiments of Trayned Bands of the said City ; and the Red Regiment of Trayned Bands of Westminster ; the Yellow Regiment of Trayned Bands of the Borough of Southwark ; and the Yellow Regiment of Auxiliaries of the Hamblets of the Tower , consisting of five thousand men , or thereabouts , and such other Forces as they shall think fit , either of Horse , or Foot , raised or to bee raised under the command of the said Committee of the Militia , within the Limits aforesaid , to March from the severall parts aforesaid , according to the Discipline and order of Warre , under the conduct and command of such Major Generall , Collonels , Lieutenant Collonels , Captains , and other Officers , as the said Committee shall appoint , together with all such necessary provisions of Armes Ammunition , Ordnance , and other Carriages , and to joine with such other Forces of Horse and Foote , as are under the command of the Earle of Manchester , and Sir William Waller , or either of them , according as they shall bee directed by both Houses , or the Committee of both Kingdomes ; to resist and subdue the Forces raised without authority of Parliament ; and to recover , and preserve such places as are now possessed by the Enemy . And all Sub-committees made , or to bee made , Constables , Headboroughs , Provost Marshals , and other Officers , are hereby required to bee aiding and assisting from time to time for the better furthering and effecting all such services as are contained or intended by this Ordinance , according as they shall bee directed by the said Committee within the Limits aforesaid ; as they will answer the contrary under the penalties herein mentioned .
- keywords: bee; city; command; committee; commons; england; forces; london; lords; militia; ordinance; parliament; parts; regiments; said; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A83227
- author: City of London (England). Committee for the Militia.
- title: An ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament for the putting out of the cities of London and VVestminster, and late lines of communication, and twenty miles distant, for six months, all delinquents, papists, and others that have been in armes against the Parliament.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 2075
- flesch: 57
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). An ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament for the putting out of the cities of London and VVestminster, and late lines of communication, and twenty miles distant, for six months, all delinquents, papists, and others that have been in armes against the Parliament.
- keywords: cities; city; cler; commons; communication; december; eebo; england; english; justices; late; liberties; lines; london; lords; miles; militia; ordinance; papists; parliament; persons; said; search; tcp; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A83432
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Die Martis 29. Februarii. 1647. Resolved by the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament. That no person or persons whatsoever, presume to raise lift, muster, or gather together any souldiers, ...
- date: None
- words: 684
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83432 of text R210819 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.11[135]). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 162788)
- keywords: commons; die; februarii; london; lords; martis; muster; parliament; person; souldiers; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A83448
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Thursday the 17th of July, 1651 Resolved by the Parliament, that the fair usually held and kept yearly at James's, within the liberty of the city of Westminster, on or about the twenty fifth day of July, be forborn this year; ...
- date: 1651.0
- words: 605
- flesch: 71
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83448 of text R211308 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.16[14]). 1 sheet ([1] p.) printed by John Field, printer to the Parliament of England, London : [1651] Title from caption title and opening words of text.
- keywords: 17th; england; english; fair; james; july; liberty; parliament; text; westminster; yearly
- versions: original; plain text
- A83449
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Friday the four and twentieth day of December, 1652. Resolved by the Parliament, that the markets be kept to morrow, being the five and twentieth day of December; ...
- date: 1652.0
- words: 654
- flesch: 69
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83449 of text R211587 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.16[77]). Title from caption and opening words of text.
- keywords: day; december; england; english; friday; london; markets; morrow; parliament; text; thomason; twentieth
- versions: original; plain text
- A83541
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Two ordinances of the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled 26. July 1647.
- date: 1647.0
- words: 659
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83541 of text R210572 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.11[50]). 337 F The rate of 337 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the F category of texts with 100 or more defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: a83541; commons; england; july; london; lords; ordinance; parliament; text; thomason; wales
- versions: original; plain text
- A83608
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Die Lunæ. 14. Novemb. 1642. Whereas divers well-affected persons, citizens of the city of London, and others, have advanced severall great summes of money, and other supplies for the safety of the King, Parliament, and kingdome, ...
- date: 1642.0
- words: 818
- flesch: 71
- summary: [London : 1642] Title from caption and opening words of text. Place and date of publication from Wing. Signed at bottom of text:
- keywords: citizens; city; die; divers; great; kingdome; london; money; novemb; parliament; persons; safety; said; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A83621
- author: Committee for the Militia of London. aut
- title: The 21. of August. 1643. Whereas the Committee for the Militia in the city of London by vertue of an ordinance of both houses of Parliament ... have power to command the shutting up of all shops ...
- date: 1643.0
- words: 924
- flesch: 66
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83621 of text R204136 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.7[33]). Title from caption and first lines of text.
- keywords: -early; august; city; committee; england; english; houses; london; militia; parliament; said; text; vertue
- versions: original; plain text
- A83623
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Die Sabbathi. 30. Sept. 1643. Whereas the companies of London have been rated by an act of Common Councell, towards the raising of monies advanced by the city, for the publique service ...
- date: 1643.0
- words: 630
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83623 of text R211981 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing E2491). Title from caption and first lines of text.
- keywords: act; common; companies; councell; die; english; london; parliament; raising; sabbathi; sept; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A83649
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: Primo die Novembris, 1648. At the Committee of the House of Commons appointed for the consideration of the petition of the Lord Mayor, aldermen, and commons of the City of London, in Common-councell assembled, presented to the House of Commons; for addition of maintenance within the province of London.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 1007
- flesch: 62
- summary: At a meeting of the Committee appointed by the Common-councell of London, to conferre with the Honorable Committee of Parliament, for the obtaining of an addition for the maintenance of the ministers within the province of London. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83649 of text R211033 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.13[36]).
- keywords: committee; commons; councell; die; england; house; london; lord; novembris; order; parliament; province; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A83728
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons.
- title: Die Lunæ, 8. Junii. 1646. It is this day ordered by the Commons now assembled in Parliament, that on the next Lords day the respective ministers of the severall churches, and chappels within the cities of London and Westminster, ...
- date: 1646.0
- words: 691
- flesch: 73
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83728 of text R212298 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.9[63]). [London : 1646] Title from heading and first lines of text.
- keywords: -early; commons; day; england; junii; london; lords; ministers; parliament; respective; severall; text; westminster
- versions: original; plain text
- A83769
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons.
- title: Die Mercurii, 15 Maii, 1644. An order of the Commons assembled in Parliament, for the removall out of the Cities of London and VVestminster, and line of communication, all recusants, wives of recusants, and the wives of such persons as are in arms against the Parliament together with all suspitious persons, or such as have lately come from Oxford, or any of the Kings quarters.
- date: None
- words: 875
- flesch: 69
- summary: An order of the Commons assembled in Parliament, for the removall out of the Cities of London and VVestminster, and line of communication, all recusants, wives of recusants, and the wives of such persons as are in arms against the Parliament together with all suspitious persons, or such as have lately come from Oxford, or any of the Kings quarters. An order of the Commons assembled in Parliament, for the removall out of the Cities of London and VVestminster, and line of communication, all recusants, wives of recusants, and the wives of such persons as are in arms against the Parliament together with all suspitious persons, or such as have lately come from Oxford, or any of the Kings quarters. England and Wales.
- keywords: cities; commons; communication; line; london; order; parliament; persons; recusants; removall; suspitious; text; wives
- versions: original; plain text
- A83770
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons.
- title: Die Mercurii, 15 Maii, 1644. An order of the Commons assembled in Parliament, for the removall out of the cities of London and Westminster, and line of communcation, all recusants, wives of recusants, and the wives of such persons as are in arms against the Parliament: Together with all suspitious persons, or such as have lately come from Oxford, or any of the Kings quarters.
- date: None
- words: 864
- flesch: 68
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83770 of text R218984 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing E2651A). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A83770) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 171348)
- keywords: cities; commons; english; line; london; order; parliament; persons; recusants; removall; suspitious; text; westminster; wives
- versions: original; plain text
- A83777
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons.
- title: Die Veneris, 19 Januarii, 1648 [i.e. 1649]. Ordered by the Commons assembled in Parliament, that all commission-officers, and others of the trained-bands and auxiliaries under the militia of the city of London, and liberties thereof; bee, and are hereby required to act upon the commissions they now have ...
- date: 1649.0
- words: 634
- flesch: 69
- summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A83777) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 172897) This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83777 of text R176483 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing E2658C).
- keywords: city; commission; commons; england; english; januarii; london; militia; officers; parliament; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A83865
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Die Sabbathi, 13 Januarii, 1648. Whereas by an ordinance of Parliament, bearing date the 20th of December last, the Lord Mayor hath issued out his precepts for the due observation thereof, and that for the most part Common-councell-men are chosen in every ward, ...
- date: 1649.0
- words: 816
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83865 of text R211141 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.13[69]). Whereas by an ordinance of Parliament, bearing date the 20th of December last, the Lord Mayor hath issued o England and Wales.
- keywords: common; councell; december; die; england; hath; januarii; london; lord; ordinance; parliament; sabbathi; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A83872
- author: Elsynge, Henry, 1598-1654.
- title: Die Lunæ 7[mo] November, 1642. Whereas in these times of publique danger and distraction, there is a recourse unto the city of London of divers persons ...
- date: 1642.0
- words: 704
- flesch: 75
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83872 of text R211190 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing E2779). 281 F The rate of 281 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the F category of texts with 100 or more defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: city; commons; danger; distraction; england; english; london; november; publique; said; text; times
- versions: original; plain text
- A83873
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons.
- title: Die Lunæ 7mo. November, 1642. Whereas in these times of publique danger and distraction, ...
- date: 1642.0
- words: 651
- flesch: 74
- summary: WHereas in these times of publique danger and distraction , there is a recourse unto the City of London of divers persons that are come into the said City and Suburbs thereof to reside , and have taken Houses or Lodgings for their habitations , being strangers and altogether unknown how they stand affecte ; It is therefore Ordered by the Commons in Parliament , that the Lord Major of the said City , shall cause a generall search and enquirie to be made from time to time throughout the said City and Suburbs thereof , and to take speciall notice of the said persons and their attendants , and of their names ; and for the better discovery how they stand affected , shall tender unto them the Propositions for Horse Money or Plate , and to take their subscriptions , and to informe himselfe whether they doe make their paiements accordingly into the Guild Hall of the said City ; And to returne the names of such as cannot give a good account of their coming to the said City or suburbs thereof , or that should refuse to subscribe to the said Propositions , according to their severall Estates and qualities , that some further course may be forthwith taken by this House in that behalfe . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83873 of text R211190 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.5[96]).
- keywords: 7mo; city; danger; die; distraction; england; november; parliament; publique; said; text; times
- versions: original; plain text
- A83909
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Lords.
- title: An order of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, assembled at Westminster, in the House of Lords, December 22. 1688.
- date: 1688.0
- words: 1589
- flesch: 77
- summary: Earl of Oxford . Earl of Shrewsbury .
- keywords: bishop; books; characters; city; december; duke; earl; eebo; encoding; english; grey; house; image; london; lord; online; order; oxford; partnership; peace; phase; said; spiritual; tcp; tei; temporal; text; viscount
- versions: original; plain text
- A83923
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Lords.
- title: Die Mercurii 22. Julii 1646. Whereas divers malignants and others that have adhered to the King against the Parliament, are now come to the Cities of London and Westminster, and other places within the Parliaments quarters: ...
- date: 1646.0
- words: 752
- flesch: 71
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83923 of text R212300 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.9[65]). Title from heading and first lines of text.
- keywords: divers; england; house; julii; king; london; malignants; mercurii; parliament; person; text; westminster
- versions: original; plain text
- A84300
- author: Delamer, George Booth, Baron, 1622-1684.
- title: An express from the knights and gentlemen now engaged with Sir George Booth to the city and citizens of London, and all other free-men of England.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 2455
- flesch: 43
- summary: Worthy CITIZENS , and all other our English FREE-MEN and BRETHREN , AS we are English-men we are all incorporated into one Body , and though distinct and different Families , Fortunes , and Qualities , yet fellow Members and Coheirs of one and the same Birthright ; not onely by nature , as we are the Sons of men , ( nature obliging all in one Common and equal Bond of Freedom and Unity , ) but by certain sacred Laws and Customes of peculiar and inherent Right to this Nation ; general , equal , and impartial to all , without respect of persons , rank , quality , or degree , derived through all successions of Ages , by the blood Justice and Prudence of our Fore-fathers to us their posterity , as ours , and the Right of our Children after us , not disinheritable : though this Age were wholly made up of Apostates and Traytors to Common Justice and Freedom , and should make sale of , and deliver up their Children as slaves and vassails , yet English Right abideth , to wit , our just Lawes and Liberties , and may justly be reinforced as opportunity may present ; Sometimes they sleep but never dye , their total Extinguishment is not to be imagined so long as any English-man , or English-blood abideth : and whoever undertaketh , ( though by Arms , or otherwise , ) their recovery and redemption is justified in that very Action by the Laws of God , of Nations , Nature , Reason , and by the Laws of the Land ; and within the Bowels of our Nation amongst our selves no War can be justified , but upon that score , the contrary is Sedition , Murder , Treason , Tyranny and what not , and the Instruments thereof no other in the Eye of English Freedom and Right , but as Bears , Wolves , and other Beasts of prey . Therefore we beseech you , we conjure you as English men , to stand by your Native Countrey , and your Countreys Cause : Our voyce is , and it is no other than the Consent and Voyce of the People , A New Free Parliament , A New Free Parliament ; it is the English mans main Birthright , which we are resolved to put the People in possession of , or to perish with our Swords in our hands .
- keywords: a84300; blood; booth; brethren; citizens; city; common; early; england; english; express; free; freedom; gentlemen; george; george booth; good; government; justice; knights; laws; london; man; men; nation; new; parliament; people; right; sir; text; thomason; war
- versions: original; plain text
- A84448
- author: England and Wales. Committee of Safety.
- title: By the Committee of Safety. A proclamation Forasmuch as this Committee hath received certain information of several designs and endeavours of persons ill-affected to the publique peace and good of this Common-wealth, ...
- date: 1659.0
- words: 1015
- flesch: 63
- summary: A proclamation Forasmuch as this Committee hath received certain information of several designs and endeavours of persons ill-affected to the publique peace and good of this Common-wealth, ... England and Wales. A proclamation Forasmuch as this Committee hath received certain information of several designs and endeavours of persons ill-affected to the publique peace and good of this Common-wealth, ... England and Wales.
- keywords: certain; committee; common; designs; endeavours; information; london; papers; peace; persons; proclamation; safety; text; thomason; wealth
- versions: original; plain text
- A84453
- author: England and Wales. Committee of Safety.
- title: By the Committee of Safety of the Common-wealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland. A proclamation touching the summoning of a Parliament
- date: 1659.0
- words: 929
- flesch: 67
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A84453 of text R211385 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.22[24]). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 135080)
- keywords: a84453; books; committee; common; early; england; english; ireland; parliament; proclamation; safety; scotland; summoning; text; wales; wealth
- versions: original; plain text
- A84471
- author: England and Wales. Council of State.
- title: By the Council of State. A proclamation. Whereas several officers reduced and disbanded, within the space of a year last past, do now remain in and about the cities of London and Westminster, and frequently resort thither, who may be justly suspected (in these times of danger) to be inclineable (through the influence of their discontent with the present posture of affairs) to foment dissatisfactions, and to combine amongst themselves, and with others of the same principle, for disturbance of the publick peace: ...
- date: 1660.0
- words: 938
- flesch: 67
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A84471 of text R40212 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.24[23]). [1660] Title from caption and opening lines of text.
- keywords: cities; council; england; english; london; officers; proclamation; space; state; text; thomason; wales; year
- versions: original; plain text
- A84566
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: An act constituting Major-General Philip Skippon to be major-general and commander in chief of all the forces within the city of London, the late lines of communication, and weekly bills of mortality.
- date: 1650.0
- words: 844
- flesch: 61
- summary: And the said Major General Philip Skippon shall have power , and is hereby authorized from time to time to Command , Lead , Conduct and Imploy the Forces so raised or to be raised as aforesaid , for the protection , and safe guarding of the Parliament from all force and violence , and likewise of the Cities of London and Westminster , and parts adjacent , within the said late Lines of Communication , and weekly Bills of Mortality ; and for the suppressing of all Tumults , Insurrections , Rebellions and Invasions , and of all Forces that shall be raised without Authority of Parliament within the limits aforesaid ; And shall and may Fight with , Kill and Slay all such as shall by force oppose him , and the Forces under his Command , in the execution of this Act ; And to observe and follow such other Directions , which the said Major General shall from time to time receive from the respective Committees for the Militia aforesaid , or either of them , within their respective Limits and Jurisdictions , in order to the Peace and Safety of the Parliament , Cities and places aforesaid ; And likewise to observe all such Orders and Directions as he shall from time to time receive from the Parliament or Councel of State . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A84566 of text R211958 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.15[37]).
- keywords: act; chief; england; forces; general; london; major; parliament; philip; skippon; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A84567
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: An Act constituting Major-General Philip Skippon to be major-general, and commander in chief of all the forces within the city of London, the late lines of communication, and weekly bills of mortality
- date: 1650.0
- words: 877
- flesch: 60
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A84567 of text R211958 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.15[37]). 25 C The rate of 25 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: act; chief; commander; communication; england; forces; general; london; major; parliament; philip; skippon; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A84576
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: An act enabling the militia of the City of London to raise horse vvithin the said city and liberties for defence of the Parliament, City of London, and liberties thereof, and the parts adjacent.
- date: 1650.0
- words: 1115
- flesch: 65
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A84576 of text R211955 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.15[35] 669.f.15[36]). no An act enabling the militia of the City of London to raise horse vvithin the said city and liberties: for defence of the Parliament, City o England and Wales.
- keywords: adjacent; city; committee; england; furniture; horse; liberties; london; militia; parliament; parts; said; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A84836
- author: Fox, George, 1624-1691.
- title: A vvarning to all in this proud city called London to call them to repentance least the wrath of the Lord break out against them; this is the day of your visitation if you will own it.
- date: 1654.0
- words: 1080
- flesch: 72
- summary: VVO unto thee O London , ( so called by name ) who hast made a profession of Christ ; but hast cleared thy self from Christ , who lives in the affections of lusts , for who are Christs have Crucified the flesh , with the affections and lusts ; your pride stinks before the Lord , your glory and renown must wither : plagues , wo and misery , and vengeance from God , is coming upon you all , you proud and lofty ones , who have been the Adversaries of God , your profession stinks before the Lord , pride and hardheartedness abounds , cruelty and oppression grows & abounds in your Streets , and such are you that would know meanings to the Scriptures , and cries for meanings , meanings , and which lives in your conceivings , which must be scattered from the Lord God , and from the Life which gave forth the Scriptures , for you have here cleared your selves from the life which was in them which gave forth the Scriptures , for the Life which gave forth the Scriptures , hews down pride and oppression , and envious ones , and lusts hardheartedness , which thy streets are ful of : And O London thou art full of Inventions , and full of Images and Image-makers , Pictures , glassed hoods , vails , and round atire like the Moon ; let the Life which gave forth the Scriptures search thee , and Judg thee , and bring thee under Conedmnation , for these things art thou guilty of , O how doth all excess abound , and pride and lusts , and filthiness , which stinks before the Lord God , and the smell of it is come up amongst his children , Plagues , plagues , plagues , is to be poured upon thee ; how beautiful art thou in thy colours , and in thy changeable suits of Apparrel , and thy dainty dishes , Dives like , who was turned into Hell ; the Life which gave forth the Scriptures , shall Judg thee Eternally , and the Life it lyes upon thee Judging thee : Over all the heads of the wicked , heads of the oppressors , heads of the proud , the Devil is King ; wo is pronounced from the Life of God upon thee , who hath drawn out his Sword , to hew thee to peices , and to thresh thee ; to scatter you all as chaff with the wind , to burn you as stubble with the fire , The Mouth of the Lord hath spoken it ; this is the portion of all the wicked . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A84836 of text R211903 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.17[82]).
- keywords: city; fox; george; god; life; london; lord; plagues; pride; proud; scriptures; text; thee; thomason; wrath
- versions: original; plain text
- A84849
- author: Fairfax, Thomas Fairfax, Baron, 1612-1671.
- title: The Lord General's letter to the Lord Major, aldermen, and Common-Councell of London concerning the armies advance up to the City of London; and desiring the advance of 40000 li. presently, for pay of the army.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 831
- flesch: 70
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A84849 of text R211078 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.13[49]). The Lord General's letter to the Lord Major, aldermen, and Common-Councell of London concerning the armies advance up to the City of London; and desiring the advance of 40000 li.
- keywords: advance; aldermen; armies; city; common; councell; fairfax; general; letter; london; lord; major; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A85196
- author: Fox, Margaret Askew Fell, 1614-1702.
- title: To the general council of officers The representation of divers citizens of London, and others well-affected to the peace and tranquility of the Common-wealth.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 1325
- flesch: 58
- summary: Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 163600) Images scanned from microfilm: (Thomason Tracts ; 247:669f22[17]) To the general council of officers The representation of divers citizens of London, and others well-affected to the peace and tranquility of the Common-wealth. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A85196 of text R211362 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.22[17]).
- keywords: a85196; askew; citizens; common; council; divers; fox; friends; general; government; london; margaret; officers; parliament; peace; representation; text; thomason; tranquility
- versions: original; plain text
- A85469
- author: Gostelo, Walter.
- title: The coming of God in mercy, in vengeance; beginning with fire, to convert, or consume, at this so sinful city London: oh! London, London.
- date: 1658.0
- words: 15800
- flesch: 49
- summary: The Court of Rome acknowledged ( as well it may ) to be infected , now sick , and may fall ; certainly the body which already totters can not stand long : hear the words again you of the Church of Rome , Men in Orders and others , for clearly there is many of you , that I love well , and there is too many of you that merit not to be beloved , the very words of the infallible Prophecy agreeable to the word of God also , are these , The Church of Rome shall fall ; the words heard in the vision are these , The Altars of Rome are not fitted for the service of God ; you have read what her priests suffered , suddenly struck down to the Ground , wounded on the heads only , as Prophecied of Old , the seed of the woman shall Break thy head , when a deceitful Serpent , on no part else is the wound visible , what those heads were all unclean ; Wolves , Foxes , Dogs and Swine . Certainly on purpose is it thus shewed me with ashes under it , that I may let you all see and know its readiness to Execute Gods Command , first upon you of London , Begin at London , then his three Kingdoms and Christian world : Men and Brethren , either suffer your Corruptions and Rebellions of all sorts of which you are Horridly Guilty against God and his King Charles Stuart , ( your Sacrifices are Dirt , your hypocrisies are the Greatest , your Rebellions have no compare ) suffer all these things and whatever more to be burnt up and consumed in you by his sent-out fire of mercy ; which if you shall madly neglect to do , deceive not your selves , it shall suddenly do its other work commissioned , for to make ashes of you and all those mountains of opposition that men or Devils , have , can , or dare , raise up to obstruct the way and rule of Gods Vice-gerent , Charles Stuart , your only lawful King and Soveraign .
- keywords: afraid; almighty; answer; april; behalf; book; chapter; charles; cherubims; church; city; city london; come; coming; cromwell; crown; day; deliverance; dirt; doers; doth; early; earth; eighth; enemies; evil; fear; fire; flagons; fulfill; glorious; god; gods; good; gostelo; great; hand; haste; hath; heads; heaven; house; king; law; light; like; london; long; lord; majesty; man; men; mercy; new; nigh; oliver; onely; people; persons; place; pleased; print; prophecy; protector; purpose; reader; redemption; repent; restore; rome; sacrifices; self; selves; set; shewed; short; sinful; stand; stuart; text; things; time; true; truth; vengeance; vision; wall; white; wicked; wonder; words; work; world; years
- versions: original; plain text
- A86813
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: The humble petition of the Lord Major, aldermen, and commons of the City of London in Common-councell assembled: to the Right Honorable the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled. Together with their answers to the said petition.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 2240
- flesch: 65
- summary: City of London (England). City of London (England).
- keywords: aldermen; army; citizens; city; common; councell; everard; generall; good; honorable; house; humble; information; john; late; london; lord; lord major; major; parliament; petition; petitioners; right; said; sir; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A86895
- author: Hunscot, Joseph.
- title: To the right worshipful Iohn Fowke, alderman of the ward of Farrington within, to the deputy, Common-counsell, and to the rest of the inhabitants of the aforesaid ward. The humble petition of Joseph Hunscot citizen and stationer of London.
- date: 1647.0
- words: 776
- flesch: 63
- summary: The humble petition of Joseph Hunscot citizen and stationer of London. Hunscot, Joseph. The humble petition of Joseph Hunscot citizen and stationer of London. Hunscot, Joseph. 1 sheet ([1] p.) s.n.,
- keywords: common; counsell; deputy; farrington; fowke; hunscot; joseph; london; rest; said; text; thomason; ward
- versions: original; plain text
- A87344
- author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons.
- title: The impeached and imprisoned citizens, aldermen, and members, absolution from guilt or treason, by an ancient vote of the Commons House, when full, free, dis-ingaged, and out of ward-ship to the army. Die Lunæ 2 Martij. 1645.
- date: 1647.0
- words: 692
- flesch: 71
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A87344 of text R210726 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.11[105]). But the Actions of the now Impeached and Imprisoned Citizens , Aldermen and Members , for which they stand Accused and Committed are such ; Yea , warranted by Ordinances , Votes , and Orders of both Houses then sitting , Ergo ; Those Fugitives and Preingaged Members , and other persons who have accused , impeached , arrested and troubled them for so doing , are by this Vote , declared to be publique enemies to the State , and the greater Traytors of the two , as most honest dis-interessed men repute them .
- keywords: absolution; aldermen; citizens; commons; guilt; house; impeached; members; text; thomason; treason; vote
- versions: original; plain text
- A87651
- author: Dawe, fl. 1653.
- title: The keepers of the liberties of England by authority of Parliament, to all parsons, ministers, lecturers, viccars, and curates as also to all justices of the peace, mayors, burgers, sheriffes, bayliffes, constables, overseers of the poor, and headboroughs. And to all other officers, ministers, and people whatsoever, as well within liberties as without, to whom these presents shall come, greeting.
- date: 1653.0
- words: 1678
- flesch: 55
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A87651 of text R211694 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.17[50]). The keepers of the liberties of England by authority of Parliament, to all parsons, ministers, lecturers, viccars, and curates as also to all justices of the peace, mayors, burgers, sheriffes, bayliffes, constables, overseers of the poor, and headboroughs.
- keywords: authority; charitable; city; dawe; day; england; good; hereof; inhabitants; lecturers; letters; liberties; london; ministers; overseers; parish; parliament; parsons; pattents; people; places; said; text; viccars
- versions: original; plain text
- A87885
- author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704, attributed name.
- title: The engagement and remonstrance of the City of London, subscribed by 23500 hands.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 1167
- flesch: 64
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A87885 of text R211365 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.22[18]). [L'Estrange, Roger, Sir] 1659 835 2 0 0 0 0 0 24 C The rate of 24 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: a87885; books; citizens; city; early; engagement; english; hands; l'estrange; liberties; london; online; r211365; remonstrance; roger; text; thomason; wee
- versions: original; plain text
- A87888
- author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704, attributed name.
- title: The final protest, and sense of the citie
- date: 1659.0
- words: 1381
- flesch: 68
- summary: The final protest, and sense of the citie This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A87888 of text R211388 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.22[26]). [L'Estrange, Roger, Sir] 1659 1138 2 0 0 0 0 0 18 C The rate of 18 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: a87888; books; citie; city; common; early; english; final; l'estrange; london; online; order; parliament; protest; r211388; roger; sense; tcp; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A87901
- author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704, attributed name.
- title: The resolve of the Citie
- date: 1659.0
- words: 1338
- flesch: 69
- summary: 2007-09 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2007-10 Apex CoVantage Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2007-11 Emma (Leeson) Huber Sampled and proofread 2007-11 Emma (Leeson) Huber Text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion The RESOLVE of the CITIE . OVr Respects to Peace , and Order , are too notorious to be questioned , since by the meer Impressions of Charity and Obedience , we have thus long suspended the Justice we owe to our Selves , together with that Vengeance , which the Blood of our Murthered Companions requires at our hands . The resolve of the Citie This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A87901 of text R211401 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.22[32]).
- keywords: a87901; books; citie; city; council; december; early; england; english; l'estrange; officers; online; order; r211401; resolve; roger; selves; sir; tcp; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A88025
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: A letter sent to the Right Honourable, the Lord Mayor of the City of London, by Lieutenant Colonel Kiffin, Captain Gosfright, Captain Hewling, and Lieutenant Lomes, touching the seizing of their persons, and searching their houses for arms; and also shewing the forgery and falsehood of a scandalous pamphlet, intituled A manifesto and declaration of the Anabaptists, and other congregational churches, &c. published Febr. 28. 1659.
- date: None
- words: 1652
- flesch: 56
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88025 of text R211646 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.23[72]). A letter sent to the Right Honourable, the Lord Mayor of the City of London, by Lieutenant Colonel Kiffin, Captain Gosfright, Captain Hewling, and Lieutenant Lomes, touching the seizing of their persons, and searching their houses for arms; and also shewing the forgery and falsehood of a scandalous pamphlet, intituled A manifesto and declaration of the Anabaptists, and other congregational churches, &c. published Febr.
- keywords: arms; captain; city; colonel; declaration; gosfright; hewling; honourable; houses; kiffin; letter; lieutenant; lomes; london; lord; lordship; manifesto; mayor; persons; right; scandalous; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A88351
- author: City of London (England). Committee for the Militia
- title: A list of the names of the severall colonells, and their colours with the leiutenant [sic] colonells, serieant maiors, and capt. and lieutenants appointed by the committee, for the ordering of the militia of this honourable city of London.
- date: 1642.0
- words: 676
- flesch: 66
- summary: Captaine Tucker . Captaine Tompson .
- keywords: alderman; captaine; city; colonell; colour; committee; england; leivtenant; london; maiors; major; militia; serjeant; severall; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A88438
- author: Commissioners of Sewers of the City of London.
- title: At a Court of Sewers held at the Guild Hall, London on Saterday the fifth of February in the year of our Lord 1652. ...
- date: 1653.0
- words: 1148
- flesch: 69
- summary: Hills for John Bellinger in Clifford's Inne-lane, London : [1653] Title from caption and opening words of text. civilwar no Sewers London ss.
- keywords: city; commissioners; court; encroachments; english; february; fifth; guild; hall; london; lord; said; saterday; sewers; text; thomason; year
- versions: original; plain text
- A88441
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: An act of Common-Councell concerning the collecting and gathering of the fifteenes granted for the necessary defences of the City of London.
- date: 1643.0
- words: 1122
- flesch: 62
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88441 of text R212635 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.7[4]). And forasmuch as this Court is informed by some Members thereof , that the Collecting of the said monies is much detarded and hindered , by reason that divers Collectors conceive that they have not power to distraine for the same , in case the same be refused to be paid ; For clearing of which doubt , and furthering the Collecting of the same ; It is declared granted , and enacted by the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor , the Right Worshipfull the Aldermen his Brethren , and Commons in this Common Councell assembled , and by authority of the same : That it shall and may be lawfull to and for all and every of the Collectors of the said Fifteenes , respectively within his and their respective divisions or collections , to distraine any person or persons refusing to pay the said Fifteenes , by his , her , and their goods and Chattels , and the same to take , carry away and retaine , untill such person or persons so refusing , shall pay his or her part or portion of the said Fifteenes .
- keywords: a88441; act; city; civitatis; collecting; collectors; common; councell; court; england; english; fifteenes; gathering; honourable; johan; london; necessary; persons; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A88442
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: An Act of Common Councell, for the prohibiting of all persons vvhatsoever, from crying or putting to sale about the streets within this city, and liberties, any pamphlets, books, or papers whatsoever, by way of hawking, to be sold and for the punishment of the offenders therein, according to the custome and law of this city.
- date: 1643.0
- words: 1044
- flesch: 62
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88442 of text R211991 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.7[49]). 34 C The rate of 34 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: books; city; civitatis; common; councell; crying; custome; england; hawking; johan; law; london; pamphlets; persons; prohibiting; sale; streets; text; way
- versions: original; plain text
- A88446
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: Commune Concilium tent. vicesimo septimo die Iulii, 1648. Forasmuch as this court did apprehend the great danger the Parliament and city is in, in regard of the many commotions in this kingdom, and the distractions thereof; ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 947
- flesch: 67
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88446 of text R37952 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.12[94]). Title from caption and first line of text.
- keywords: city; committee; court; die; english; great; iulii; london; militia; parliament; said; septimo; text; thomason; vicesimo
- versions: original; plain text
- A88447
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: In pursuance of the order of the Honorable Committee of Parliament it is desired by the Committee of Common-councell of London, that the minsters and church-wardens, with the assistance of other inhabitants ... doe on Wednesday next, at ten of the clock in the forenoon, make an exact return at the Guild-hall London, ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 711
- flesch: 63
- summary: 2007-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2007-08 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2007-09 Mona Logarbo Sampled and proofread 2007-09 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion IN pursuance of the Order of the Honorable Committee of Parliament It is desired by the Committee of Common-councell of London , That the Minister and Church-wardens , with the assistance of other inhabitants of the respective Parishes within the Province of London , doe on Wednesday next , at ten of the clock in the forenoon , make an exact return at the Guild-hall London , of all the Lands , Houses , and Impropriations belonging to Deans and Chapters lying within their severall Parishes , and in what street and Parish the same doth lye , and what rent so neer as they can learn is paid to the said Deanes and Chapters for the same , and to what Deans and Chapters the same doth belong , and who is the immediate Tenant to the said Deans and Chapters , and for what term to come ; and likewise , whether their Parsonage be an Impropriation or not , and if it bee , then who hath the inheritance of the Impropriation : To the intent , That the said Committee of Common-councell may give full satisfaction to the said Committee of Parliament , concerning the perticulars aforesaid . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88447 of text R211039 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.13[37]).
- keywords: a88447; committee; common; councell; england; english; honorable; london; order; parliament; pursuance; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A88448
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: At a Common-councel held on Tuesday the 20th day of August, 1650. London.
- date: 1650.0
- words: 667
- flesch: 75
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88448 of text R211984 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.15[48]). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A88448) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 163122)
- keywords: -early; 20th; august; city; common; councel; court; day; england; london; text; tuesday
- versions: original; plain text
- A88451
- author: Alleyne, Thomas, Sir, fl. 1660.
- title: At a Common-Council holden at the Guild-hall London, on VVednesday the 23 day of November 1659.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 819
- flesch: 71
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88451 of text R211344 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.22[11*]). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A88451) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 163594)
- keywords: a88451; city; common; council; day; england; english; great; guild; hall; holden; london; november; text; thomason; vvednesday
- versions: original; plain text
- A88453
- author: Alleyne, Thomas, Sir, fl. 1660.
- title: At a Common Councel holden in the Guild-hall London on VVednesday the 14th of December, 1659.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 746
- flesch: 68
- summary: City of London (England). City of London (England).
- keywords: 14th; city; common; councel; court; december; guild; hall; holden; london; mayor; peace; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A88454
- author: Alleyne, Thomas, Sir, fl. 1660.
- title: Aleyn mayor. At a Common Councel holden in the Guildhall London on Wednesday the 14th of December, 1659.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 701
- flesch: 69
- summary: City of London (England). City of London (England).
- keywords: 14th; books; city; common; councel; court; december; early; english; holden; london; mayor; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A88455
- author: Alleyne, Thomas, Sir, fl. 1660.
- title: At a Common Councel holden in the Guildhall London, on Tuesday the 20th of December, 1659.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 898
- flesch: 64
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88455 of text R211396 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.22[28]). City of London (England).
- keywords: 20th; a88455; city; common; councel; court; december; english; guildhall; holden; london; lord; mayor; text; thomason; tuesday
- versions: original; plain text
- A88456
- author: Alleyne, Thomas, Sir, fl. 1660.
- title: Aleyn mayor. At a Common Councel holden in the Guildhall London, on Tuesday the 20th of December, 1659.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 858
- flesch: 66
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88456 of text R211396 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2852N). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 171412)
- keywords: 20th; aleyn; books; city; common; councel; court; december; early; english; guildhall; holden; london; mayor; text; tuesday
- versions: original; plain text
- A88457
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: A Common Council holden the 29. of Decemb. 1659 To this Common Council was presented a report by Alderman Fowke; as followeth. At the Committee of Common Council, &c.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 1290
- flesch: 79
- summary: At the Committee of Common Council, &c. City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- keywords: ald; alderman; bateman; cap; city; col; commissioners; committee; common; common council; council; court; decemb; england; esq; fowke; london; major; officers; report; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A88465
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: Februar. 18. 1642. Whereas the Lords and Commons of both Houses of Parliament, made request at a common councell holden this day in the afternoone, ...
- date: 1643.0
- words: 943
- flesch: 70
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88465 of text R211650 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.5[125]). [London : 1643] Dated and signed at bottom of text:
- keywords: common; councell; day; februar; holden; houses; london; lords; mayor; men; money; parliament; request; said; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A88466
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Mayor. Whereas the Lords Day, (commonly called Sunday) is of late much broken and prophaned by diverse disorderly people, in carrying and putting to sale diverse victuals and other things: ...
- date: 1643.0
- words: 1109
- flesch: 65
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88466 of text R211716 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.7[22]). [London : 1643] Title from caption and first lines of text.
- keywords: broken; city; day; disorderly; diverse; england; late; london; lords; mayor; milke; retailing; said; sale; sunday; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A88467
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Mayor. To the aldermen of the ward of [blank] Forasmuch as the Lords day, commonly called Sunday, is of late much broken and prophaned, by a disorderly sort of people, in frequenting tavernes, alehouses, and the like, ...
- date: 1643.0
- words: 940
- flesch: 69
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88467 of text R211998 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.7[54]). [1643] Title from caption and first lines of text.
- keywords: a88467; broken; city; day; english; forasmuch; late; london; lords; mayor; sunday; text; thomason; time; ward
- versions: original; plain text
- A88470
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Major. A proclamation for the bringing into the Port of London, any manner of fevvell.
- date: 1644.0
- words: 726
- flesch: 73
- summary: City of London (England). City of London (England).
- keywords: a88470; bringing; city; england; english; fevvell; london; lord; major; manner; port; proclamation; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A88471
- author: Atkins, Thomas, Sir.
- title: 15. June, 1645. It is desired that all the ministers in London, the liberties, and within the lines of communication doe this Sabbath day blesse God that hee hath beene pleased to heare our prayers in the behalf of our army ...
- date: 1645.0
- words: 606
- flesch: 74
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88471 of text R200104 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason E288_20). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A88471) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 113035)
- keywords: a88471; communication; day; doe; english; liberties; lines; london; ministers; sabbath; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A88472
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Major. Forasmuch as it is conceived and apprehended by the Common-councell, that the city at the present is in great danger; ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 799
- flesch: 74
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88472 of text R39656 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.12[15]). [1648] Title from caption and opening lines of text.
- keywords: a88472; city; common; councell; danger; england; great; london; major; present; text; thomason; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A88473
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Major. Forasmuch as it is conceived and apprehended by the Court of Common-councell, that the citie at the present in great danger; ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 1070
- flesch: 73
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88473 of text R210755 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.12[18]). Title from caption and opening lines of text.
- keywords: cause; citie; city; common; councell; court; great; london; major; night; present; text; thomason; ward
- versions: original; plain text
- A88475
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Major. Forasmuch as notwithstanding divers good acts and ordinancees of Parliament, and the frequent aadmonitions formerly given in this behalf by the present Lord Maior, this predecessors late Lord Maiors of this city, it is observed, that the Lords day, and the days of publike fast, are in these sad times of distraction and calamity much profaned, ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 1484
- flesch: 52
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88475 of text R211019 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.12[102]). [1648] Title from caption and opening lines of text.
- keywords: acts; city; day; dayes; divers; english; fast; frequent; good; houses; london; lord; maior; ordinances; parliament; persons; publike; said; severall; text; time
- versions: original; plain text
- A88476
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Major. Whereas by severall orders of the House of Commons in Parliament assembled, and by a letter to the the speaker of that House, from the Committee of the countie of York, this day delivered to the Common-councell by a committee of the said House of Commons, it is declared, that the Parliaments army in the northern parts are in a sad and distressed condition for want of food and other necessaries; ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 1263
- flesch: 61
- summary: Whereas by severall orders of the House of Commons in Parliament assembled, and by a letter to the the speaker of that House, City of London 1648 723 1 0 0 0 0 0 14 C The rate of 14 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88476 of text R210884 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.13[9]).
- keywords: army; arrears; city; collectors; committee; commons; councell; day; house; letter; london; orders; parliament; said; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A88477
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Major. Whereas it is made known to my self, the aldermen, and commons in Common-councell assembled, by a letter received from his excellency the Lord Fairfax, that his Lordship for the preventing of the quartering of his army in the city, doth require, that a present supply of money may be paid for the use of the army, ...
- date: 1648.0
- words: 814
- flesch: 69
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88477 of text R211081 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.13[50]). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A88477) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 162946)
- keywords: aldermen; army; city; commons; councell; known; london; lord; major; money; self; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A88478
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Major. To the Alderman of the ward of [blank]. Whereas the City of London, and the liberties thereof, is exceedingly pestered with rogues, vagabonds and sturdy beggars, aswel men as women, ...
- date: 1649.0
- words: 870
- flesch: 75
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88478 of text R211366 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.15[22]). Title from caption and first lines of text.
- keywords: beggars; blank; city; liberties; london; men; rogues; sturdy; text; thomason; time; vagabonds; ward
- versions: original; plain text
- A88479
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the Major. Whereas by an act of Parliament, entituled, An act against unlicensed and scandalous bookes and pamphlets, and for better regulating of printing; ...
- date: 1649.0
- words: 1134
- flesch: 58
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88479 of text in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.14[79]). Title from caption and opening lines of text.
- keywords: a88479; act; better; bookes; city; doe; london; lord; major; pamphlets; parliament; persons; scandalous; text; thomason; unlicensed
- versions: original; plain text
- A88481
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: By the mayor. To the aldermen of the ward of [blank] Whereas oftentimes heretofore, especially towards winter the evenings growing dark, many loose and vagrant persons have been found to wander about the streets and lanes to lurk in corners within this city ...
- date: 1654.0
- words: 1799
- flesch: 63
- summary: Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
- keywords: books; characters; city; early; eebo; england; english; houses; london; loose; mayor; online; order; persons; phase; places; streets; tcp; tei; text; thomason; time; ward; winter; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A88482
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor.
- title: Forasmuch as notwithstanding divers good Acts and Ordinances of Parliament made for the better observation of the Lords-day, days of publique humiliation, and thanksgiving, and the many endeavours used for the due execution thereof it is observed that the Lords day is very much prophaned, ...
- date: 1656.0
- words: 1207
- flesch: 51
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88482 of text R211836 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.20[33]). [London : 1656] Title from opening lines of text.
- keywords: acts; better; city; day; divers; execution; good; liberties; london; lords; observation; offenders; ordinances; persons; said; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A88483
- author: City of London (England).
- title: At the general quarter-sessions of the publick peace holden for the City of London by adjournament at Justice-hall in the old Baily London, on VVednesday the xij day of January in the year of our Lord 1652 before John Fowke Maior of the City of London, Thomas Atkins, Thomas Andrewes, Thomas Foote, John Kendricke, aldermen of the City of London, and William Steel recorder of the same city, Samuel Avery, Robert Titchborne and John Dethicke, aldermen of the said city, and other their fellowes justices assigned to keep the publick peace in the City of London, and also to hear and determine divers fellonies, trespasses and other misdemeanours within the same city committed.
- date: 1653.0
- words: 1276
- flesch: 54
- summary: At the general quarter-sessions of the publick peace holden for the City of London by adjournament at Justice-hall in the old Baily London, on VVednesday the xij day of January in the year of our Lord 1652 before John Fowke Maior of the City of London, Thomas Atkins, Thomas Andrewes, Thomas Foote, John Kendricke, aldermen of the City of London, and William Steel recorder of the same city, Samuel Avery, Robert Titchborne and John Dethicke, aldermen of the said city, and other their fellowes justices assigned to keep the publick peace in the City of London, and also to hear and determine divers fellonies, trespasses and other misdemeanours within the same city committed. Images scanned from microfilm: (Thomason Tracts ; 246:669f16[82]) At the general quarter-sessions of the publick peace holden for the City of London by adjournament at Justice-hall in the old Baily London, on VVednesday the xij day of January in the year of our Lord 1652 before John Fowke Maior of the City of London, Thomas Atkins, Thomas Andrewes, Thomas Foote, John Kendricke, aldermen of the City of London, and William Steel recorder of the same city, Samuel Avery, Robert Titchborne and John Dethicke, aldermen of the said city, and other their fellowes justices assigned to keep the publick peace in the City of London, and also to hear and determine divers fellonies, trespasses and other misdemeanours within the same city committed.
- keywords: adjournament; aldermen; city; january; john; justice; london; lord; maior; order; peace; price; publick; rate; said; sessions; text; thomas; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A88790
- author: A. L.
- title: To all the honest, wise, and grave-citizens of London, but more especially to all those that challenge an interest in the Common-Hall.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 1344
- flesch: 62
- summary: Time hath now put that into your hands , which Petition upon Petition could not obteine , for such is our miseries , that those which had Power had not Will to grant our Requests , and experience hath not only satisfied mee , but ( I thinke ) every honest man , that the ground of our neglects or rather denyalls , are selfe interests , and private respects , which indeede are and have beene , from time to time , the very fludgates to let in our miseries , and the very choake Peare to Peace , the blessed ground of all our happinesse : for who more averse to any motion or Petition for Peace in this City , then they that are invested in places of power and profit , and what greater unhappinesse can befall us then this , that our grand Trustees , should as much as in them lyes , bring King , Kingdome , and Citie into an everlasting undoing ; behold then you gallant and brave Citizens , and know that it is yet in your power ( through the mercies of our God ) to prevent a finall ruine , of this distressed , distracted , dying Kingdome ; and the better to effect it , let it bee your first worke on the Hall-day ( and bee sure to doe it the first ) remove the causes , and the effects will cease , bee not over-power'd with policie , nor with enforcement of arguments , nor with the approach of Souldiers , and Troopers ; the two first may seeme to perswade you , the latter may terrifie you into an everlasting undoing , but I say first presse on to the marke , lest you shut the stable doore when the steede is stoln ; which is , to point out the Acans that trouble your Citie , for it is to bee feared , except those wicked ( I had like to have said accursed ) things bee removed , this City and Kingdome will hardly bee established in Peace ; This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88790 of text
- keywords: a88790; bee; citie; citizens; city; common; english; grave; great; hall; honest; interest; kingdome; london; peace; text; thomason; time; wise
- versions: original; plain text
- A88836
- author: Lawson, John, Sir, d. 1665.
- title: Two letters from Vice-Admiral John Lavvson, the one to the Right Honourable, the Lord Mayor of the City of London; to be communicated to the court of aldermen, and Common-Council of the said City. The other, to the Honorable the commissioners for the militia of the City of London. Dated December the 28. 1659.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 1143
- flesch: 64
- summary: civilwar no Two letters from Vice-Admiral John Lavvson, the one, to the Right Honourable, the Lord Mayor of the City of London; to be communicated to th Lawson, John, Sir 1659 640 1 0 0 0 0 0 16 C The rate of 16 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A88836 of text R211413 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.22[42]).
- keywords: admiral; aldermen; city; commissioners; common; council; court; england; john; lawson; london; lord; mayor; militia; text; thomason; vice
- versions: original; plain text
- A89198
- author: Wither, George, 1588-1667, attributed name.
- title: A mode the cities profound policie, in delivering themselves, their city, their vvorks and ammunition, into the protection of the Armie.
- date: 1647.0
- words: 1252
- flesch: 78
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A89198 of text R209816 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.11[69]). Massey was made the Generall Of all your mighty Forces ; But when he on the Foe should fall , He wanted men and horses .
- keywords: armie; brave; brave common; common; counsell; counsell men; doe; english; men; mode; o brave; policie; profound; protection; text; thomason; vvorks
- versions: original; plain text
- A89588
- author: Marshall, Stephen, 1594?-1655.
- title: A thanksgiving sermon: preached to the Right Honorable the Lord Maior, aldermen, and Common Councell of the Citie of London, upon occasion of the many late and signall victories, and deliverances vouchsafed to the Parliaments forces, in Pauls Church London, July 28. 1648. By Stephen Marshall, B.D. Minister of Gods Word at Finchingfield in Essex.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 11990
- flesch: 49
- summary: That the Lord doth sometimes leave his owne people to bee under the tyranny of them that hate them : I say his own people ( for this was Emanuels land , you 'l read it called by the very name of Emmanuel in the eighth chapter ) the Assyrian shall come and fill the breadth of thy land O Emmanuel ; they were Emmanuels people that should have these terrible yokes put upon them : to understand this lesson , bee pleased to premise thus much ; That it is of all judgements one of the most terrible and uncomfortable that ever a people can be exposed to , to have those that hate them to tyrannize over them , that was Davids prayer , I have done justice and judgement , give me not up to mine oppressors : O Lord deliver mee from that judgement , that I bee not left to wicked men , to put yokes upon my neck , to beate my shoulders ; and God used to threaten it as one of the severest plagues that ever should come upon his people , when hee was angry with them , that hee would give them up , that they that hated them should beare rule over them : and truely it will easily appeare to bee one of the terriblest judgements of all , because it is a misery that is opposite and contrary to the greatest mercy that can bee enjoyed upon earth ; which is to have rulers and governors , such as are over a people , to bee as a Sun or a Shield , as a Shepheard , as a Protector , as a Father , for these are names whereby the Spirit of God deseribes good Magistrates & rulers , to give such to a people as may defend every one in his own right , protect the fatherlesse and widow , and see that every one have justice and judgement , that there may be no complaining in the streets of a people ; but that they may live and serve God in godlinesse and honesty , in peace , to bee preserved in security and tranquillity , O happy are the people that are in such a case , faith the Spirit of God in the 144. Psalme ; now if this bee the greatest earthly mercy , then for God to give up a people , or to let them be given up to the judgement that is contrary to it , that their shepheards should bee like them in the 34. of Ezekiel , who should kill the fat , and tread under feet the leane , that should pluck off the wooll , and teare off the skinne ; that should bee as they are described in the 7. of Micah , as briars and thornes that should rend and teare the people that are under them , when the Lord shall give men up to such a condition , that those that should defend them , should enter into the field of the fatherlesse , and undoe a man and his neighbour , without mercy and compassion , this of all judgements in the world is one of the cruellest , and the heaviest that a people can bee given up to : now I tell you that God sometimes leaves his owne people to this condition , there are abundance of examples , and I should spend the time needlesly to receite them to you , because you cannot bee ignorant of them ; so they were in Egypt , when their lives were made burdensome to themselves , by reason of the heavy yoke of bondage that lay upon them ; so they were in the times of the Iudges , oftentimes an enemy comes in , carries away the harvest that they are ready to reape , sometimes carries away the corne they had gather'd into their barnes , mightily oppressed them , put heavy yokes upon them ; so was it in Babylon , if you reade but the fifth of Lamentations , it will make you weep to consider the sad complaint that the Church makes there , Our inheritance is turned to strangers , our houses to aliants , wee have drunke our water for money , our wood is sold unto us , our necks are under persecution , we labour and have no rest , servants rule over us ; wee eate our bread with the perill of our lives , Princes are hanged up by the hand , young men are taken to grinde , and the children fell under the wood , &c. such abundance of examples there are that I shall not need to prove it , onely let me a little discover to you out of the Word , for what causes the Lord uses to leave his owne people to this terrible judgement : I finde three cleer causes why God oftentimes hath left his own people to be given up to oppressors , to Tyrants , to put such heavy yokes upon their necks , their states , their consciences , their liberties , and the first & greatest & most frequent is when God himself offer'd to be the King and ruler of his people , to put the yoke of his government upon their necks , a yoke that should be sweet and easie , honorable & profitable , and his people cast off Gods yoke , would not be under that , then hath the Lord frequently let them fall under the yoke of some others , that they might know the difference betwixt being Gods servants , and the servants of other men ; take but two instances of this , one in the 2 Chronicles 12. This then for the meaning of it , That whatsoever enemies should rise up against the Church or people of God , however they may keepe them under for a while , Christ hath a purpose , and will in his owne due time break them , and their yokes in peeces , and he will doe it in a strange way , by his own hand , in a way that shall bee very easie to him to worke , but very hard for them ; either to resist or to beare .
- keywords: aldermen; army; bee; breake; broken; burden; cause; chapter; christ; church; citie; common; councell; day; deliverance; doe; doth; enemies; england; esay; fire; gideon; god; gods; gods people; good; gospel; government; great; hand; hast; hath; hearts; heaven; heavy; hee; himselfe; honorable; jesus; joy; king; land; london; lord; manner; marshall; meanes; men; mercy; oppressors; owne; people; power; rage; right; rod; saith; selves; sermon; servants; set; spirit; staffe; stephen; text; things; thou; time; verse; way; wayes; wee; wicked; word; yokes
- versions: original; plain text
- A89742
- author: Goring, George Goring, Baron, 1608-1657.
- title: The demands and proposals of the Earle of Norwich, and Sr. Charles Lucas, (in the name of themselves, and the rest of his Majesties officers and souldiers in the city of Colchester) to Generall Fairfax, concerning the surrendering of the said city, ad their resolution thereupon. With the answer of the Lord Generall to the said demands and proposals also, the proceedings of the Scots-Royalists neare the Parliament doores, and their animating on the people to cudgell the Parliament. Likewise, the d[i]scovery of a great designe in the city of London, to have murthered most of the Parliament men, and the apprehending of the Princes agent at the Royall Exchange, and taking of divers commissions from his Highnes to the citizens, for the raising of a army for his Royal father the King. Signed, Charles. P.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 2454
- flesch: 63
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A89742 of text R205129 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason E460_25). The rate of 20 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: agent; answer; charles; citizens; city; colchester; demands; designe; earle; exchange; fairfax; generall; goring; great; inhabitants; london; lord; lucas; norwich; officers; parliament; people; petitioners; princes; proposals; rest; said; souldiers; text; town; treaty
- versions: original; plain text
- A89782
- author: Nutt, Thomas, 17th cent.
- title: Nineteene humble propositions for peace, which the author desireth to cleere and make evident to all the true-hearted citizens of London if God will direct their hearts to heare and imbrace the same (and importune the Parliament for the practice thereof) for the good of city and countrey, humbly shewing.
- date: 1643.0
- words: 1272
- flesch: 69
- summary: 2007-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2007-07 Apex CoVantage Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2007-08 Jason Colman Sampled and proofread 2007-08 Jason Colman Text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion Nineteene humble Propositions for Peace , which the Author desireth to cleere and make evident to all the true-hearted Citizens of London , if God will direct their hearts to heare and imbrace the same ( and importune the Parliament for the practice thereof ) for the good of City and Countrey , humbly shewing , THat your poor and almost restlesse Suppliant , who for the space of eight or nine moneths in the neglect of his own private affairs and livelihood having continually almost had new solicitations in his thoughts of certaine probable wayes and means for the deliverance of this City and almost the whole Kingdome with the spare of much money now spent , and bloud now spilt , hath sought continuall opportunity to declare the same to you that being faithfull had power to execute the same , yet notwithstanding could never get a hearing , Gods time being not then come , do yet once more , not knowing Gods time , try if God will now at last move your hearts in generall , or any particulars of you , to joyn together to hear him at large concerning that , the heads whereof he hath here set down , he doth not doubt but if God affect your hearts to hear , and endeavour the practice of the same , that you will think it the best spent time you spent in temporall occasions since our King departed from us , which also will be joyfull to many , and incourage them in your defence , which at present for feare dare not move therein , for if God do it , he will do it I conceive by a means yet unthought of in generall . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A89782 of text R212078 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.8[21]).
- keywords: author; city; countrey; desireth; enemies; evident; food; god; hearts; increase; london; nutt; peace; practice; text; thomason; true
- versions: original; plain text
- A90166
- author: City of London (England). Committee for the Militia.
- title: Orders conceived and approved by the Committee for the Militia of the county of Middlesex as expedient for the present to be published and practised in the said county without the lines of communication.
- date: 1644.0
- words: 1442
- flesch: 65
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A90166 of text R35082 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.10[12]). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A90166) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 162553)
- keywords: armes; captaines; collonel; committee; county; dayes; english; expedient; london; middlesex; militia; officers; pay; present; regiment; said; souldiers; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A91163
- author: Parker, Henry, 1604-1652.
- title: Accommodation cordially desired, and really intended. A moderate discourse: tending, to the satisfaction of all such, who do either wilfully, or ignorantly conceive that the Parliament is disaffected to peace. Written upon occasion of a late pamphlet, pretended to be printed at Oxford; entituled a Reply to the answer of the London-Petition for peace.
- date: None
- words: 15173
- flesch: 42
- summary: The great contrivers of our sad divisions , which abuse the weake reason of the people , to keepe up an unfortunate misunderstanding between King and Subject are not named by the Replicant ; but they are clearely pointed out to be the Chiefe Lords and Commons in Parliament : for he saith , Every new Vote of late hath been a new affliction : and he makes Pennington and the Citty Lecturers to be but Iourney-men Rebels under them : and even this Hellish slander he venteth under the name of the Petitioners , whom he stiles the most considerable persons of the Citty : and at the same time affirmeth , that the people generally are of honest affections . Can the Parliament expresse zeale to peace better then by contracting all its rights and priviledges into one compendious proposition , for the setling of union ? To purchase true peace , the Parliament desires nothing but to retain the meere being of a Parliament ; that is , to be the supreme Court of King and Kingdome .
- keywords: absolute; accommodation; advise; answer; arbitrary; arbitrary power; armes; army; bee; best; better; blood; body; cause; commons; considerable; contrary; court; david; declaring; defence; delinquents; difference; doe; elizabeth; enemies; england; english; false; fault; fit; force; free; friends; generall; god; great; hath; hee; himselfe; honourable; house; instruments; interest; ireland; iustice; judges; king; kingdome; kings party; knowne; late; law; lawes; lesse; liberty; like; likely; london; lords; love; major; making; man; matters; meere; moderate; monarchy; nation; nature; nay; new; non; owne; papists; parliament; particular; parties; party; peace; people; persons; petition; petitioners; pleasure; policy; power; princes; private; priviledges; protestants; publike; queen; question; reason; regard; religion; replicant; reply; right; rule; safe; safety; satisfaction; saul; sayes; seeke; set; sides; sole; sort; state; subjects; submission; sword; text; things; think; thomason; time; true; trust; want; warre; wise
- versions: original; plain text
- A91200
- author: Prynne, William, 1600-1669.
- title: A just and solemn protestation and remonstrance of the lord mayor, aldermen, sheriffs, common-councell-men, and other citizens and freemen of London against two late ordinances of the Lords and Commons that now sit, for the choosing of common-councell-men and other officers within the city and liberties thereof ... which ordinances bear date the 18, and 20 of December, 1648.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 2848
- flesch: 34
- summary: A just and solemn protestation and remonstrance of the lord mayor, aldermen, sheriffs, common-councell-men, and other citizens and freemen of London against two late ordinances of the Lords and Commons that now sit, for the choosing of common-councell-men and other officers within the city and liberties thereof ... which ordinances bear date the 18, and 20 of December, 1648. A just and solemn protestation and remonstrance of the lord mayor, aldermen, sheriffs, common-councell-men, and other citizens and freemen of London against two late ordinances of the Lords and Commons that now sit, for the choosing of common-councell-men and other officers within the city and liberties thereof ... which ordinances bear date the 18, and 20 of December, 1648.
- keywords: aldermen; army; citizens; city; common; contrary; councell; customs; elections; english; force; franchises; freedom; freemen; houses; liberties; london; lord; members; men; officers; ordinances; parliament; pretended; protestation; sheriffs; solemn; text; time; void
- versions: original; plain text
- A91301
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: To the Right Honourable, the Lord Mayor, aldermen, and commons of the city of London in Common-Council assembled; the humble petition and address of the sea-men, and watermen, in and about the said city of London.
- date: 1659.0
- words: 1093
- flesch: 57
- summary: Watermen's Company (London, England) City of London (England). City of London (England).
- keywords: a91301; aldermen; books; city; common; council; early; english; honourable; humble; london; lord; mayor; nations; petition; right; text; trade; watermen; wing
- versions: original; plain text
- A91587
- author: Henrietta Maria, Queen, consort of Charles I, King of England, 1609-1669, attributed name.
- title: The Queenes Majesties propositions to the Kings most Excellent Majesty. Wherein is declared, Her Majesties gracious will and pleasure, concerning the City of London, and His Excellencie Sir Thomas Fairfax, together, with Her Mjaesties desires, touching the discipline of the Church of England, and ease of tender consciences. Briefly intimated in Her Majesties gracious message to the King at Hampton-Court.
- date: 1647.0
- words: 2054
- flesch: 60
- summary: VVHereas the great neglect of divers persons within the City of London , hath occasioned too many delayes in raising Money for supply of the Army , and other Forces of the Kingdome ; His Excellency Sir Thomas Fairfax , and the General-Councell of the Army , Doth declare , That they take notice of the great wants of the Souldiery , both of the Army , and other Forces , and Garrisons ; as also of the sufferings of the County , in respect of free quarter , which might have been peevented , and a course taken for disbanding superfluous Forces , and sending over of others for the reliefe of Ireland , and the supplying of those that are there already , had it not been for neglect or delay of those on whom the Parliament have depended in that particular , and they doe especially take notice of the delayes made by the City in advancing of that summe , which the Houses have demanded of them upon the security of the Arreares so long since due from the City to the Army ; upon which they doe declare , and propound to this effect . Lastly , since it is most evident , that for the speedy bringing in of the money required upon the arrears , there wants not in the said Major , Aldermen , and Common-Councell , either authority to levy it , or ability to advance it by way of Loan till it can be levyed , and it is therefore offered , That in case the Money be not brought in by the time limited , the Parliament would be pleased to give leave to the Generall ( with the advice and directions of the Committee for the Army ) for the levying of the said Arreares All which they rather desire from grounds of reason and evidence from the speeches of many in the City , and designes and hopes of the Parliament and Armies Enemies to raise the Army into distempers , and the Country about them into confusion .
- keywords: army; church; city; councell; court; ease; england; excellent; fairfax; generall; good; gracious; great; houses; kings; london; majesties; majesty; message; parliament; pleasure; propositions; queenes; sir; tender; text; thomas
- versions: original; plain text
- A91799
- author: Richardson, Thomas, waggon-master-general.
- title: Whereas I am informed that some evil disposed persons (upon pretence of imployment or authority from me, to hire and bring in teams of draught horses and carts, for the service of the King and Parliament) ...
- date: 1643.0
- words: 742
- flesch: 65
- summary: A notice from Thomas Richardson, Wagon-master General, of certain persons having fraudulently received money from some of His Majesty's subjects, upon pretence of employment by him. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A91799 of text R211709 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.7[18]).
- keywords: authority; disposed; evil; general; imployment; master; persons; pretence; richardson; service; teams; text; thomas
- versions: original; plain text
- A91818
- author: Ridgley, Sam.
- title: Sir, By virtue of a letter from His Highness the Prince of Orange to the sheriffs of London ... Sam. Ridgley, Beadle.
- date: 1689.0
- words: 964
- flesch: 66
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 152345)
- keywords: books; characters; early; eebo; english; image; london; online; oxford; partnership; phase; ridgley; sam; sir; tcp; tei; text; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A91839
- author: Rise, Augustin, attributed name.
- title: The loyall subjects lamentation for Londons perversenesse, in the malignant choice of some rotten members, on Tuesday the 19. of March 1661.
- date: 1661.0
- words: 1410
- flesch: 69
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com).
- keywords: books; characters; choice; early; eebo; encoding; english; image; london; malignant; march; members; online; oxford; partnership; perversenesse; phase; rotten; subjects; tcp; tei; text; tuesday; works; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A92309
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: Received the [blank] day of [blank] 1642 of [blank] the summe of [blank] towards the arming, maintaining, and paying of souldiers weekly for severall months ensuing, which money is to be repayed againe upon the publicke faith of the kingdome, with interest for the time, as appeareth by an ordinance of Parliament dated the 14 day of November, 1642.
- date: 1642.0
- words: 985
- flesch: 60
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com).
- keywords: books; characters; day; early; eebo; english; online; ordinance; parliament; partnership; phase; tcp; tei; text; time; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A92777
- author: Seaman, Lazarus, d. 1675.
- title: Reverend and beloved, it hath pleased the Right Honorable the Lord Major of the City of London, once and again to write unto the ministers thereof respectively, in a very pious and pathetical manner. ...
- date: 1651.0
- words: 1453
- flesch: 66
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A92777 of text R211395 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.16[28]). [London : 1651] Title from opening words of text.
- keywords: a92777; beloved; christ; city; day; english; god; honorable; london; lord; major; ministers; place; reverend; right; sabbath; seaman; text; thomason; works
- versions: original; plain text
- A93905
- author: Stillingfleet, Edward, 1635-1699.
- title: Sir, you may perceive by the inclosed brief for rebuilding the cathedral church of St. Paul ...
- date: 1678.0
- words: 3741
- flesch: 69
- summary: In general, first editions of a works in English were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably Latin and Welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. I am sensible what Objections a Work of this nature is like to meet with in our Age ; wherein some love to cavil at whatever relates to God and his Worship ; and especially if it be like to cost them any thing ; others who seem very zealous for some kind of Religion , are for enjoying it on as cheap and easie terms as may be ; and many of those who declare a good will to this Work , yet express great dissatisfaction both as to this method of proceeding , and the time we have chosen , which they think very unsuitable to such a design , if we either respect the present State of the City or Nation .
- keywords: annum; books; brief; building; cathedral; chamber; characters; christ; church; churches; city; company; early; eebo; english; god; good; great; hath; london; men; online; paul; phase; pounds; religion; said; sir; subscriptions; tcp; tei; temple; text; time; ward; way; work; worship; years
- versions: original; plain text
- A93957
- author: Strange, Jacob.
- title: Sir, You are desired to send in your horse & armes required of you by warrant from the Militia of London, to the new artillary-ground, upon Monday next being the nine and twentieth of this instant Iuly, by eight of the clock in the forenoone. Dated this 26 of Iuly 1650. Your reall freind[sic] Jacob Strange.
- date: 1650.0
- words: 593
- flesch: 73
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A93957 of text R205913 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason E608_14). Date and place of publication from Wing. Annotation on Thomason copy: vide 4th June 1650 in ye follio collection..
- keywords: armes; artillary; horse; jacob; london; militia; new; strange; text; thomason; warrant
- versions: original; plain text
- A94419
- author: Albemarle, George Monck, Duke of, 1608-1670.
- title: To His Excellency the Lord General Monck The unanimous representation of the apprentices and young men inhabiting in the City of London.
- date: None
- words: 1027
- flesch: 61
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A94419 of text R205554 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.23[33]). 17 C The rate of 17 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: a94419; apprentices; city; england; english; excellency; free; general; london; lord; men; monck; people; representation; text; thomason; unanimous; young
- versions: original; plain text
- A94436
- author: City of London (England).
- title: To the alderman, deputy and common-councel-men of the ward of [blank]
- date: 1660.0
- words: 1373
- flesch: 73
- summary: 2. Of the Names and Surnames of every Person who hath been or now is Deputy to any Alderman of the said Ward . Of the Names and Surnames of every Doctor of Physick residing within your said Ward .
- keywords: act; alderman; city; common; councel; degree; deputy; english; london; men; money; persons; said; surnames; text; thomason; ward
- versions: original; plain text
- A94568
- author: City of London (England). Court of Common Council.
- title: To the Parliament of England the humble petition of the Mayor, aldermen, and commons of the City of London, in Common-Council assembled.
- date: 1660.0
- words: 776
- flesch: 61
- summary: City of London 1660 308 1 0 0 0 0 0 32 C The rate of 32 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words. The petition of the Mayor and commons of London in Common Council assembled, that the militia of London may be forthwith settled in the hands of citizens of known integrity and interest in the city.
- keywords: aldermen; city; common; council; england; humble; london; mayor; parliament; petition; petitioners; text; thomason
- versions: original; plain text
- A94698
- author: England and Wales. Parliament.
- title: To the supreme authority of this nation in Parliament assembled. The humble petition of the Lord Major and Court of Aldermen of the Citie of London.
- date: 1650.0
- words: 815
- flesch: 62
- summary: HUMBLY SHEWETH , THat your Petitioners acknowledge the wisdome and goodnesse of this Parliament in the Acts of the last year , for regulating Elections of Aldermen , Common-counsell men , and other Officers of this City ; and doe humbly conceive that severall of the same limitations may again conduce to the good of this City . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A94698 of text R212069 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.15[70]).
- keywords: aldermen; authority; citie; court; humble; london; lord; major; nation; parliament; petition; petitioners; supreme; text
- versions: original; plain text
- A95020
- author: Aleyn, Thomas, Sir, fl. 1660.
- title: A true copy of the letter sent from the Lord Mayor, aldermen and Common-Council, at a Common-Council holden in Guildhall London, on the 29th of December, 1659 Directed to the Right Honorable George Moncke, General of the forces in Scotland.
- date: None
- words: 1072
- flesch: 62
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A95020 of text R211442 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.22[58]). A true copy of the letter sent from the Lord Mayor, aldermen and Common-Council, at a Common-Council holden in Guildhall London, on the 29th of December, 1659 Directed to the Right Honorable George Moncke, General of the forces in Scotland.
- keywords: 29th; aldermen; common; council; early; george; guildhall; holden; honor; honorable; letter; london; lord; mayor; right; text; true
- versions: original; plain text
- A96571
- author: William III, King of England, 1650-1702.
- title: The Prince of Orange his speech to the citizens of London.
- date: 1688.0
- words: 1456
- flesch: 63
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 173014)
- keywords: books; characters; citizens; creation; early; edition; eebo; encoding; england; english; god; image; london; online; orange; oxford; partnership; phase; prince; speech; tcp; tei; text; work; xml
- versions: original; plain text
- A97191
- author: Him who is a lover of righteousnesse and peace.
- title: A warning, or, a word of advice to the City of London, and to the whole Kingdome of England, concerning the armies intentions and actions; / by him who is a lover of righteousnesse and peace; and at present a member of the army, very vsefull and considerable.
- date: 1648.0
- words: 2700
- flesch: 49
- summary: This is that others see , although you see it not : and that which you cry up as the onely way of Peace and Libertie , others see it to be the high way of bondage and ruine ; give them therefore Libertie to save you with feare pulling you out of the fire , &c. Fourthly , That they might once see this poore bleeding and dying Kingdome delivered from its oppressions and burdens , and established in its just Rights and Freedomes ; and this is that which God will effect , whatever shall say him nay , although at present to many , the remedie seems worse then the disease , yet the end shall be glorious . Object . Thirdly , That by this means the Justice of God may be taken off the Kingdome , which is not like to be , untill justice be executed ; for God is a just God and will make inquisition for blood ; and blood cryeth for blood , and it s far better justice take hold of a few , if God so please , then of many thousands as must be expected , if justice be not executed ; for believe it , the way of the Treatie is the high way of ruine even to those who cry it up , work it and manage it , and you will finde the Army to be in the hands of God , your saviours in delivering you from it .
- keywords: actions; advice; armies; army; city; england; god; good; great; intentions; justice; kingdome; london; lover; parliament; peace; people; power; righteousnesse; ruine; text; thine; thou; warning; way; word
- versions: original; plain text
- A97317
- author: Browne, John, ca. 1608-1691.
- title: Die Sabbathi 19. Decembris, 1646. It is ordered by the Lords in Parliament assembled, that the city printer shall print and publish the two petitions presented to the house this day ... / John Browne cler. Parliamentorum.
- date: 1646.0
- words: 642
- flesch: 72
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A97317 of text R492269 in the English Short Title CatalogTextual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 171304)
- keywords: browne; city; decembris; die; english; house; john; london; lords; parliament; text
- versions: original; plain text
- B02616
- author: Denham, John, Sir, 1615-1669.
- title: Mr. Hampdens speech, occasioned upon the Londoners petition for peace.
- date: 1643.0
- words: 1126
- flesch: 78
- summary: Denham, John, Sir 1643 770 5 0 0 0 0 0 65 D The rate of 65 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the D category of texts with between 35 and 100 defects per 10,000 words. Early English books online.
- keywords: -early; b02616; books; denham; english; hampdens; john; king; londoners; online; peace; petition; sir; speech; text; wing
- versions: original; plain text
- B03615
- author: Hawkins, Thomas, fl. 1695?
- title: To each gentleman soldier in the company [of] Captain John Hulls, captain in the Yellow regiment of trained bands of London.
- date: 1691.0
- words: 1168
- flesch: 64
- summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B03615) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 181680)
- keywords: books; captain; characters; early; eebo; encoding; english; great; image; london; online; oxford; partnership; phase; regiment; tcp; tei; text; thomas; works; xml; yellow
- versions: original; plain text
- B04140
- author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor's Court
- title: Orders set downe by the court of Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the city of London, concerning the rates of carriages with carrs within this city and the liberties thereof, to continue untill further order be taken in that behalf.
- date: 1655.0
- words: 1035
- flesch: 62
- summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription B04140 of text R179965 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing L2864FA). 31 C The rate of 31 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words.
- keywords: carriages; city; court; english; lane; liberties; like; load; london; lord; mayor; places; rates; set; text; weight; wharfs
- versions: original; plain text
- B04141
- author: Chiverton, Richard.
- title: Chiverton Mayor. Tuesday the eighth day of December 1657. An order of the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen, against concealing and colouring the goods of aliens and foreyners.
- date: 1657.0
- words: 1059
- flesch: 63
- summary: City of London (England). City of London (England).
- keywords: aldermen; alyens; chiverton; city; court; december; england; english; foreyners; goods; london; lord; mayor; said; text; tuesday
- versions: original; plain text
- B04522
- author: Norton, John, b. 1662.
- title: The Kings entertainment at Guild-Hall or, Londons option in fruition.
- date: 1674.0
- words: 1430
- flesch: 69
- summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B04522) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 182709)
- keywords: books; characters; city; early; eebo; encoding; english; fruition; great; guild; hall; image; john; london; mayor; norton; online; oxford; partnership; phase; sun; tcp; tei; text; works; xml
- versions: original; plain text