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The second part of the triall of Lieut. Col. John Lilburn
by an extraordinary or speciall commission of oyer and terminer, at the Guild-hall of London; the 24 25, 26, of October, 1649. Being exactly the first dayes work of the judges, &c. (which was not inserted in the last:) with Judge Keeble's large speech to the grand-jury. In which is also contained, divers additions aud [sic] amendments of the first part of his triall: with divers remarkable observations in law, upon the illegality of all their three dayes proceedings with him. Unto which is also annexed; certain demonstrative reasons of the impossibility of overthrowing juries, and the now setting up arbitrary high courts of justice; the practise of which in Empson and Dudley (although they had an Act of Parliament in Hen: the 7ths. time, made by King, Lords, and Commons, for their commission) cost them their heads as traitors, for subverting the fundamentall freedomes and liberties of the nation -
A letter of due censure, and redargvtion [sic] to Lieut: Coll: John Lilburne
touching his triall at Guild-Hall-London in Octob: last. 1649. Wherein if there be contemper'd some corrosive ingredients, tis not to be imputed unto malice: the intent is, to eat away the patients proud, dead flesh, not to destroy any sincere, sound part -
To the supreme authority, the people assembled in Parliament
The humble petition of Lieutenant Colonel John Lilburne -
An Act for satisfying Lieutenant-Colonel John Lilburn, the sum of one thousand five hundred eighty and three pounds, eighteen shillings, four pence
out of the remainder of the lands of the late deans and chapters -
To the supreme authority, the Parliament of the Common-wealth of England
the humble petition of John Poyntz, alias Morris