Wither, George 1666a: Difference between revisions

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{{SrcVars}}<div class="no-img">Wither, George. ''Three private meditations, which being, for the most part, of publick concernment, are therefore published, by their author'', Geo. Wither. ''The first, is, a private thanksgiving, consisting of three hymns, whereby God is magnified for his mercy vouchsafed in the late ingagement between the English and the Dutch, in June 1665. Composed after celebrating the publick thanksgiving commanded by the King. The second, is a sacrifice of praise & prayer, by him offered to Almighty God, for his providential respect, to him, his wife and children, during his imprisonment in the disgraceful goal of Newgate, when left destitute of all ordinary means of subsistance, by being deprived both of his estate and liberty. The third, intituled Nil ultra, is a soliloquium, wherein this author expresses the improbability of an effectual proceeding further, to prevent the sins and plagues increasing, by ought which he can offer to consideration. [London]: [s.n.], Re-printed in the year 1666. 48 pp. 8vo.
<div class="no-img">{{BibliographicalItemTop}}Wither, George. ''Three private meditations, which being, for the most part, of publick concernment, are therefore published, by their author'', Geo. Wither. ''The first, is, a private thanksgiving, consisting of three hymns, whereby God is magnified for his mercy vouchsafed in the late ingagement between the English and the Dutch, in June 1665. Composed after celebrating the publick thanksgiving commanded by the King. The second, is a sacrifice of praise & prayer, by him offered to Almighty God, for his providential respect, to him, his wife and children, during his imprisonment in the disgraceful goal of Newgate, when left destitute of all ordinary means of subsistance, by being deprived both of his estate and liberty. The third, intituled Nil ultra, is a soliloquium, wherein this author expresses the improbability of an effectual proceeding further, to prevent the sins and plagues increasing, by ought which he can offer to consideration. [London]: [s.n.], Re-printed in the year 1666. 48 pp. 8vo.




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'''Copies'''
'''Copies'''
* BL
* British Library
* Bodleian Library   
* Bodleian Library   
* Victoria and Albert Museum National Art Library   
* Victoria and Albert Museum National Art Library   
* Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine Library   
* Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine Library   
* Harvard University   
* Harvard University   
* Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery    
* Huntington Library   
* University of California, Los Angeles, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library   
* University of California, Los Angeles, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library   




Citation: <onlyinclude>[[Wither, George 1666a|Wither, George. ''Three private meditations'' ([London], 1666)]]</onlyinclude>
'''Citation'''
* <onlyinclude>[[Wither, George 1666a|Wither, George. ''Three private meditations'' ([London], 1666)]]</onlyinclude>




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Latest revision as of 09:02, 22 February 2021

Wither, George. Three private meditations, which being, for the most part, of publick concernment, are therefore published, by their author, Geo. Wither. The first, is, a private thanksgiving, consisting of three hymns, whereby God is magnified for his mercy vouchsafed in the late ingagement between the English and the Dutch, in June 1665. Composed after celebrating the publick thanksgiving commanded by the King. The second, is a sacrifice of praise & prayer, by him offered to Almighty God, for his providential respect, to him, his wife and children, during his imprisonment in the disgraceful goal of Newgate, when left destitute of all ordinary means of subsistance, by being deprived both of his estate and liberty. The third, intituled Nil ultra, is a soliloquium, wherein this author expresses the improbability of an effectual proceeding further, to prevent the sins and plagues increasing, by ought which he can offer to consideration. [London]: [s.n.], Re-printed in the year 1666. 48 pp. 8vo.


Bibliographical sources

  • ESTC (advanced search for "private", "meditations", "wither").


Copies

  • British Library
  • Bodleian Library
  • Victoria and Albert Museum National Art Library
  • Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine Library
  • Harvard University
  • Huntington Library
  • University of California, Los Angeles, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library


Citation