01870nam 2200313Ia 450 99638626940331620200824132139.0(CKB)4940000000080640(EEBO)2240941020(OCoLC)ocm13436666e(OCoLC)13436666(EXLCZ)99494000000008064019860415d1652 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|As you were, or, The Lord General Cromwel and the grand officers of the armie their remembrancer[electronic resource] wherein as in a glass they may see the faces of their soules spotted with apostacy, ambitious breach of promise, and hocus-pocus-juggleing with the honest soldiers and the rest of the free-people of England : to the end that haveing seene their deformed and fearfull visage, they may be returning to doe their first pretended workes, wipe of their spots, mend their deformities & regaine their lost credit : in a word, save themselves and the gaspeing libertyes of the surprized and enslaved English nation : least enlargement and deliverance arise to the English from another place, but they and their fathers house shall be destroyed : Ester 4. and 14. : all which is contained in a letter directed to the Lord Generall Cromwel, to be communicated to the grandees of his army /written by L. Colonel John Libvrne May 1652 ..[Amsterdam? s.n.]May 1652[2], 33 pReproduction of original in the University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign Campus). Library.eebo-0167Lilburne John1614?-1657.1001077EAAEAAm/cWaOLNBOOK996386269403316As you were, or, The Lord General Cromwel and the grand officers of the armie their remembrancer2381735UNISA