6tt 



PRYNNE. 



Protestant and Popish authors, since ; of 40 

 heathen philosophers, historians, poets ; of 

 many heathen, many Christian nations, repub- 

 liques, emperors, princes, magistrates ; of sun- 

 dry apostolicall, canonical!, imperiall constitu- 

 tions ; and of our owne English statutes, ma- 

 gistrates, vniversities, writers, preachers. That 

 popular stage-playes (the very pompes of the 

 divell which we renounce in baptisme v if we 

 believe the Fathers) are sinfull, heathenish, 

 lewde, ungodly spectacles, and most pernicious 

 corruptions ; condemned in all ages, as into- 

 lerable mischiefes to Churches, to republickes, 

 to the manners, mimics, and soules of men. 

 And that the profession of play-poets, of stage- 

 players ; together with the penning, acting, 

 and frequenting of stage-playes, are unlawful!, 

 infamous, and misbecoming Christians... 



London, 1622. 4 



The perpetvitie of a regenerate mans estate. 

 Wherein it is manifestly proued by sundry ar- 

 guments, reasons and authorities, that such as 

 are once truly regenerated and ingrafted into 

 Christ by a liuely faith, can neither finally nor 

 totally fall from grace. It is also proved, 

 that this hath beene the receiued and resolued 

 doctrine of all the ancient Fathers, of all the 

 Protestant Churches and writers beyond the 

 seas, and of the Church of England... 



London, 1626. 4 



God, no impostor, nor delvdor. Or, an an- 

 swer to a Popish and Arminian cavill, in the 

 defence of free-will, and vniversall grace ; 

 wherein God's tender of grace by the outward 

 ministry of the Gospell, to reprobates, who 

 neither doe, nor can receive it ; is vindicated 

 from those aspersions of equivocation, falsitie, 

 and collusion, which some by way of obiection, 

 cast upon it. s. I., 1630. 4 



Anti-Arminianisme. Or, the Church of Eng- 

 land's old antithesis to new Arminianisme. 

 Wherein seven Anti- Arminian orthodox tenets 

 are evidently proved ; their seven opposite Ar- 

 minian (once Popish and Pelagian) errours are 

 manifestly disproved, to be the ancient, estab- 

 lished, vndoubted doctrine of the primitive 

 and moderne Church of England ; (as also of 

 the primitive and present Churches of Scot- 

 land and Ireland :) by the concurrent testimo- 

 ny of sundry ancient Brittish, English, Scot- 

 tish, Irish authours and records, from the 

 yeare of our Lord 430, till about the yeare 

 1440 : and by the severall records and writers 

 of these Cluirches, from the beginning of re- 

 formation to this present. 2d ed. 



. I., 1630. 4 



The unbishoping of Timothy and Titus, and 

 of the Angel of the Church of Ephesus : or, a 

 brief elaborate discourse, proving Timothy and 

 the Angel to be no first, sole, diocesan Bishop 

 of Ephesus, nor Titus of Crete ; and that the 

 power of ordination, or imposition of hands, 

 belongs jure divino to Presbyters, as well as 

 to Bishops, and not to Bishops only, as Bishops ; 

 who by divine institution are evidenced to be 

 one and the same with Presbyters, and many 



over one city, church, not one over many cities 

 or churches... [Title in MS.] 



London, 1636. 4' 

 Reprinted, London, 1660. 4 

 A breviate of the Prelates intolerable usurj>;i- 

 tions, both upon the Kings prerogative royall, 

 and on the subjects liberties. 3d ed. By W. 

 HUNTLBY. [Pseud.] s. I., 1637. 4 



The antipathic of the English lordly Prelacie, 

 both to regall monarchy, and civill unity : or, 

 an historicall collection of the severall exe- 

 crable treasons, conspiracies, rebellions, sedi- 

 tions, state-schismes, contumacies, anti-mo- 

 narchicall practices, and oppressions of our 

 English, Brittish, French, Scottish, and Irish 

 lordly Prelates, against our kingdomes, lawes, 

 liberties ; and of the severall warres, and civil 

 dissentions occasioned by them in, or against 

 our realm, in former and latter ages. Together 

 with the judgementof our owne ancient writers, 

 and most judicious authors, touching the pre- 

 tended divine jurisdiction, the calling, lordli- 

 nesse, temporalities, wealth, secular imploy- 

 ments, trayterous practices, unprofitablenesse, 

 and mischievousnesse, of lordly Prelates, both 

 to King, State, Church, with an answer to the 

 chiefe objections made for the divinity, or con- 

 tinuance of their lordly function. 2 parts. 



London, 1641. 4 



A new discovery of the Prelates tyranny, in 

 their late prosecutions of Mr William Pryn, an 

 eminent lawyer ; Dr John Bastwick, a learned 

 physitian ; and Mr Henry Burton, a reverent 

 divine... London, 1641. 4 



A soveraign antidote to prevent, appease, and 

 determine our unnaturall and destructive ci- 

 vill warres and- dissentions. Wherein divers 

 serious considerations tending to this purpose 

 are propounded both to the King and subjects, 

 the parliaments and Sir John Hotham's pro- 

 ceedings at Hull and in the militia justified, 

 Sir John Hotham's actions proved to be nei- 

 ther treason, felony, nor trespas, by the laws 

 of the land, nor any just ground or cause at 

 all for his Majestie to rayse an army, or a most 

 unnaturall civill warre in his kingdome. With 

 a most serious exhortation both to the King 

 and subjects to embrace and preserve peace 

 and abandon civill warres, with other matters 

 worthy of consideration. Second impression. 



London, 1642. 4 



An humble remonstrance against the tax of 

 ship-money lately imposed : laying open the 

 illegality, injustice, abuses, and inconveniences 

 thereof. W T ritten by W. P. An. 1636, during 

 his imprisonment in the tower of London, to 

 free his country from that heavy tax ; and then 

 communicated to some speciall friends in writ- 

 ing... Together with some brief e observations 

 touching the Great Scale of England. 



London, 1643. 4 

 Another copy. 



The soveraigne power of parliaments and king- 

 doms : divided into foure parts. Together 

 with an appendix : wherein the superiority of 

 our owne, and most other foraine parliaments, 



