01899nam 2200349 n 450 99639376680331620200824132005.0(CKB)3810000000005395(EEBO)2248516657(UnM)99872931e(UnM)99872931(EXLCZ)99381000000000539519850611d1643 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|Englands losse and lamentation, occasioned by the death of that Right Honourable, Robert Lord Brooke, Baron of Beauchamp-court, who was slaine at Lichfield the second day of March. 1642[electronic resource] Amplified, by some mournfull funerall expressions, from the authors feeling sense of so unvaluable a losse; complaining of the kingdomes stupidity, to awake a people slumbering in security, insensible of their insuing misery. Concluding with some consolations to his friends, and terror to his enemies popishly affected, and all malignants. By a loyall subject to the King, and a lover of the late Lord Brookes, and all his wel-wishersLondon Printed for L. ChapmanAnno Dom. 1642 [i.e. 1643][8] pAttributed to Francis Quarles in the Wrenn Catalogue.Reproduction of original in Thomason Collection, British Library.eebo-0018Great BritainHistoryCivil War, 1642-1649Loyal subject to the King and a lover of the late Lord Brookes and all his wel-wishers1005205Quarles Francis1592-1644,Cu-RivESCu-RivESCStRLINWaOLNBOOK996393766803316Englands losse and lamentation, occasioned by the death of that Right Honourable, Robert Lord Brooke, Baron of Beauchamp-court, who was slaine at Lichfield the second day of March. 16422310542UNISA