01950nam 2200373Ia 450 99638803740331620200824132515.0(CKB)4940000000085872(EEBO)2264177678(OCoLC)ocm43077677e(OCoLC)43077677(EXLCZ)99494000000008587219991222d1675 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|The second part of the Quakers quibbles[electronic resource] set forth in reply to a quibbling pretended answer of G. Whiteheads, intituled The Quakers plainness &c. : Wherein many more of their quibbles and equivocations are manifested. : Also the companion betwixt the pretended prophet Muggleton and the Quakers justified to be true, rational, and necessary : whereunto is added an advertisement to Mr. W. Penn, George Whitehead, and the Quakers. : Touching their Jesuitical shifts, evasions, and unparallel'd confidence; : their grand mystery of directing the intention : with their pope-like power to sanctify and unsanctify words /by the same indifferent PennLondon, Printed for F. Smith at the Elephant and Castle in Cornhil near the Royal Exchange1675[8], 101, [1] p"To the reader" signed: Thomas Thompson."H. Hedworth is also suspected of being the author of 'The Quakers Quibbles'"--Smith, J. Bibliotheca anti-Quakeriana, London, 1873.Reproduction of original in: Christ Church Library, Oxford, England.eebo-0026Society of FriendsControversial literatureSociety of FriendsThompson Thomas445548Hedworth Henry1004358Penn William1644-1718.444261EAEEAEWaOLNBOOK996388037403316The second part of the Quakers quibbles2425651UNISA