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8. Kakourgoi sive, Medicastri: : slight healings of publique hurts. Set forth in a sermon preached in St. Pauls church, London, before the Right Honourable the Lord Major, Lord General, aldermen, Common Council, and companies of the honourable city of London February 28. 1659. Being a day of solemn thanksgiving unto God, for restoring the secluded members of Parliament to the House of Commons: (and for preserving the city) as a door of hope thereby opened to the fulness and freedom of future Parliaments ...

9. Kakourgoi, sive medicastri: Slight healers of publick hurts set forth in a sermon preached in St. Pauls Church, London, before the Right Honorable the Lord Mayor, Lord General, aldermen, Common-Council, and companies of the honorable City of London. Febr. 28. 1659. Being a day of solemn thanksgiving unto God for restoring the secluded members of Parliament to the House of Commons: (and for preserving the city) as a door of hope thereby opened to the fulness and freedom of future Parliaments: the most probable means under God for healing the hurts, and recovering the health of these three Brittish kingdoms

15. Karolinska bildidéer

16. Katadynastēs: might overcoming right· Or a cleer answer to M. John Goodwin's Might and right well met. : Wherein is cleared, that the action of the Army in secluding many Parliament men from the place of their discharge of trust, and the imprisoning of some of them, is neither defensible by the rules of solid reason, nor religion

28. The keepers of the liberties of England by authority of Parliament, to all parsons, ministers, lecturers, viccars, and curates as also to all justices of the peace, mayors, burgers, sheriffes, bayliffes, constables, overseers of the poor, and headboroughs. And to all other officers, ministers, and people whatsoever, as well within liberties as without, to whom these presents shall come, greeting

29. The keepers of the liberties of England by authority of Parliament, to all parsons, ministers, lecturers, viccars, and curates as also to all justices of the peace, mayors, burgers, sheriffes, bayliffes, constables, overseers of the poor, and headboroughs. And to all other officers, ministers, and people whatsoever, as well within liberties as without, to whom these presents shall come, greeting

37. The Kentish miracle; or, A strange and miraculous work of Gods providence, shewed to a poor distressed widdow, and her seven small fatherless children. Who lived by a burnt six-penny loaf of bread, and a little water, for above seven weeks, in the wild of Kent, to the praise and glory of almighty God. To the tune of, A rich merchant-man. Entred according to order

43. Kerdiston dōron. King Charles the Second, His most Sacred Majestie; presented to the Right Honourable Houses of Parliament in their next session, as the strength, honour and peace of the nations, in the iewells of his crown, and iustice of his people. Delivered in eight distinct sermons, in St. Mildreds Canterbury, beginning the Sunday before Lent, and concluded on Easter-day

48. The key of worldly wealth. Or, a new vvay, for improving of trade: shewing how a few tradesmen agreeing together, may both double their stocks, and the increase of their stocks, without 1. Paying any interest, 2. Great difficulty or hazard, 3. Advance of money, 4. Staying for materialls, 5. Prejudice to any trade, or person, 6. Incurring any other inconvenience. In such sort, as both they and all others (though never so poore) who are in a way of trading, may 1. multiply their returnes, 2. Deale onely for ready pay, 3. Much under-sell others, 4. Put the whole nation upon this practice, 5. Gain notwithstanding more then ordinary, 6. Desist when they please without damage: And by this meanes this distressed commonwealth shall be exceedingly advantaged, chiefly in all those particulars expressed in the next page. All which in this treatise in conceived by judicious men to be fully proved, doubts resolved, and objections either answered or prevented

49. The keyboard in Baroque Europe