A copy of a letter written by Mr Stephen Marshall to a friend of his in the city, for the necessary vindication of himself and his ministry, against that altogether groundlesse, most unjust, and ungodly aspersion cast upon him by certaine malignants in the city, and lately printed at Oxford, in their Mendacium aulicum, otherwise called Mercurius aulicus, and sent abroad into other nations to his perpetuall infamy. In which letter the accusation is fully answered. And together with that, the lawfulnesse of the Parliaments taking up defensive arms is briefly an learnedly asserted and demonstrated, texts of Scripture cleared, all objections to the contrary answered, to the full satisfaction of all those that desire to have their consciences informed in this great controversie.
- All titles
-
- A copy of a letter written by Mr Stephen Marshall to a friend of his in the city, for the necessary vindication of himself and his ministry, against that altogether groundlesse, most unjust, and ungodly aspersion cast upon him by certaine malignants in the city, and lately printed at Oxford, in their Mendacium aulicum, otherwise called Mercurius aulicus, and sent abroad into other nations to his perpetuall infamy. In which letter the accusation is fully answered. And together with that, the lawfulnesse of the Parliaments taking up defensive arms is briefly an learnedly asserted and demonstrated, texts of Scripture cleared, all objections to the contrary answered, to the full satisfaction of all those that desire to have their consciences informed in this great controversie.
- Plea for defensive arms
- People / Organizations
-
- Imprint
-
London: printed for Samuel Gellibrand, at the Brazen Serpent in Pauls Church-yard, 1643.
- Publication year
- 1643
- ESTC No.
- R202869
- Grub Street ID
- 80048
- Description
- [2], 30 p. ; 4⁰
- Note
- Originally published in 1642 as: A plea for defensive arms.
In this printing the title page lacks the rule above the Biblical quotation.