02239nam 2200337 n 450 99639232520331620221108100810.0(CKB)4940000000108392(EEBO)2240942667(UnM)99863332(EXLCZ)99494000000010839219930415d1648 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|Mr. Prinns charge against the King[electronic resource] Shewing that the Kings design, purpose, and resolution, his endeavours, practice, and conversation, have alwayes been engaged, byassed, and tended to settle, establish, confirm, popery, tyranny, and slavery, in, among, over his dominions, subjects, people, and in order to that design, end, and purpose, he writ to the Pope of Rome ... engaging himself to the said Pope, to endeavour to settle the popish religion only in his dominions; and since his coming to the crown, hath extented extraordinary favonrs [sic] upon, and protecti- on [sic] of notorious papists, priests & Jesuits, against all prosecution of lawes enacted against them; notwith- standing all his protestations to the contrary, hath raised up a most horrid, unnatural, and bloudy warre, arming his Roman Catholique subjects to massacre, plunder, torture, imprison, ruine, his loyall, faithfull pious Protestant subjects to burn, sack, and spoile their cities, towns and villages, collected from the bookes written. /By William Prinne of Lincolns Inne, Esquire. Being but a very small tast from that main ocean of that which he hath written concerning the King, ..London [s.n.]Printed in the year 1648[1], 7 pAnnotation on Thomason copy: "[illegible] mber: 4th".Reproduction of the original in the British Library.eebo-0018Great BritainHistoryCharles I, 1625-1649Early works to 1800Great BritainPolitics and government1625-1649Early works to 1800Prynne William1600-1669.198500Cu-RivESCu-RivESCStRLINWaOLNBOOK996392325203316Mr. Prinns charge against the King2418939UNISA