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LILBURNE
LILBURNE
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LILBURNE (John) See Mastbbton (g.) The Triumph
stain'd: being an answer to Truths triumph, i.e. a
pamphlet so called, and lately set forth by Mr. J. Wild-
man . . . with a full . . . account of an information . . .
given in to the House of Lords . . . Jan. 18, 1647
against
J. Lilburn and J. Wildman. . . . 1647, 4".
- See Maynard {Sn j.) King's Serjeant. A Speech
spoken in the . . . House of Commons by Sir J. Maynard
. . . wherein he hath stated the case of Lieutenant
Colonel J. L., whereunto is annexed the copie of a peti¬
tion presented August 1, 1648, to the . . . House of
Commons, subscribed by neare ten thousand persons, in
the behalfe of L. C. J. L., with the answer, orders, and
proceedings of the Lords and Commons thereupon.
1648, 4°.
- See OxFOED (w.) Vincit qui patitur; or. Lieutenant
Colonel J. Lylborne decyphered, in a short answer . . .
to a most notoriously false pamphlet of the said Lylborns
intituled, John Lylborne revived, printed at Bruges in
Flanders. . . . 1653, 4".
- See P., H. A Letter of due censure and redargution to
Lieut. Coll. J. L.; touching his triall at Guild-Hall,
London, in Octob. last, 1649. . . . 1650, 4°.
- See Peynne (w.) The Lyar confounded, or a briefe re¬
futation of J. L.'s miserably-mistaken-case . . . seditious
calumnies, and . . . lyes against . . . Parliament . . . and
Mr. W. Prynne. ... 1645, 4°.
- See Prynnb (w.) A Plea, or protest, made by W. Prynne,
Esquire, and by him sent unto J[ohn] M[aynard],
Knight, one of the eleven impeached members. . . . Pub¬
lished ... by Lionel Hurbin, Gentleman [i.e. J. L.] . . .
1648, 4°.
- See Eemonsteance of many thousand citizens, and
other freeborn people of England to their owne House of
Commons, occasioned through the illegall . . . imprison¬
ment of that . . . suiferer for his countries freedoms.
Lieutenant Col. J. L. . . . 1646, 4°.
- See Ebvibw (A) of a certain pamphlet under the name of
one J. L. . . . 1645, 4°.
- See SHErHEAED (s.) The Earners fam'd; or, an Answer
to two seditious pamphlets, the one intituled the Just
Man in bonds; the other a Pearle in a dunghill, written
in the behalfe of . . . J. L. . . . 1646, 4°.
- See Sheppard (s.) Animadversions upon J. L.'s two
last books, the one intituled Londons liberty in chaines
discovered, the other an Anatomy of the Lords cruelty.
. . . 1646, 4°.
- See Sheppard (s.) The Famers fam'd, or an Answer to
two seditious pamphlets, the one intituled the Just man
in bonds, the other a Pearle in a dunghill, written in be¬
halfe of that notorious lyar, and libeller J. L. . . . 1646,
4°.
- See Ward (eobert) Soldier, pseud, [i.e. John Lil-
BURNE.] The Hunting of the foxes. . . . Directed to all
the free-commons of England. . . . By E. W., etc. [By
J. Lilburne.] Somees (j.) Baro7i Somcrs, Collection of
tracts, vol. 6. 1811, 4°.
- See White (j.) Warden of the Totver. John White's
Defence, in behalfe of himself, his . . . Commander, the
Lieutenant of the Tower and the other his fellow-warders ;
against a lying and slanderous pamphlet written by J. L.,
and intitled Liberty vindicated against slavery. . . .
1646, 4°.
LILBURNE (John) See Wildman (j.) Truths triumph;
or. Treachery anatomized ; being an impartiall discovery
of the false and treacherous information of M. Masterton
. . . against L. C. J. L., and I. Wildman, at the Lords'
Barre, Jan. 18, 1647[-48], concerning a meeting of
severall honest men, in East Smithfield. . . . i647[-48],
4°.
- An Agreement of the free people of England tendered
as a peace-offering to this distressed Nation, by Lieuten¬
ant Colonel J. Lilburne, Master Willi[am Walwyn,
Majster Thomas Prince, and Master Eichard Overton,
[Prisoners in the TJower of London, [May 1, 1649]. . . .
London, Giles Calvert, [1649].
4°. 7 in. 8 pp. Title-page mutilated.
- An Alarum to the House of Lords against their in¬
solent usurpation of the common liberties, and rights of
this nation, manifested by them, in their present tyran-
nicall attempts against . . . John Lilburne. . . .
[London], 1646.
4°. 7 in. 12 pp.
- An Anatomy of the Lords' tyranny and injustice exer¬
cised upon Lieu. Col. J. Lilburne, now a prisoner in the
Tower of London, delivered in a speech by him, Novem.
6, 1646, before the . . . Committee of the House of Com¬
mons, appointed to consider of the priviledges of the
commons of England. . . . [London, 1646.]
4°. 7 in. 23 pp.-f(l) p.
- The Copy of a Letter, from Lieutenant Colonell John
Lilburne to a friend. (July 25, 1645.) [London, 1645.]
4°. 7J in. 24 pp.
- A Defencive declaration of L. Col. J. Liiburne against
the unjust sentence of his banishment by the late Parlia¬
ment of England, directed in an epistle from . . .
Flanders May 14, 1653, to . . . the Lord Generall Crom-
wel, and the rest of the officers . . . managing the pre¬
sent affairs of England. ['? Amsterdam, 1653.]
4°. 7 in. Englisli and Dutch. 8 pp.
- A Defensive declaration of Lieut. Col. J. Lilburn,
against the unjust sentence of his banishment by the
late Parliament of England; directed in an epistle from
his house in Bridges in Flanders, May 14, 1653 (Dutch
or new still [sic] or the 4 of May 1653 English or old
stile) to . . . the Lord General Cromwell, and the officers
of his army. . . . Unto which is annexed, an additional
appendix directed from the said . . . J. Lilburn, to his
Excellency and his officers, occasioned by his present
imprisonment in Newgate . . . dated ... 20 of June,
1653. [London 1653.]
4°. 6f in. 20 pp.
- The Engagement vindicated and explained ; or, the
Eeasons upon which Lieut. Col. J. Lilburne, took the
Engagement. . . . January 22, 1650.
London, J. Cloioes, 1650.
4°. 7iin. (2)-t-4+ (2) pp.
- England's birth-right justified, against all arbitrary
usurpation, whether regall or parliamentary, or under
what vizor soever, with divers queries, observations and
grievances of the people, declaring this Parhament's
present proceedings to be directly contrary to those
fundamentall principles, whereby their actions at first
were justifyable against the King. . . . [? By J. L.]
1645,4°. See England's.
- England's new chains discovered; or, the serious ap¬
prehensions of a part of the people, in behalf of the
Commonwealth. . . . [? By J. L.] [1649], 4°. See
England's.

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