XII.
“Rights of the Kingdom,” by John Sadler
Rights of the Kingdom; | Or, | Customs of our Ancestours:... With an Ocasionall Discourse of Great Changes yet | expected in the World. |
London, | Printed by Richard Bishop. 1649.|[¹]
(4to. 4 ll. + Aa–Mm + f–z + a–c in fours.) [I. S.]
sig. G4. “How they are Now, I need not say, although I might also beare them witnesse, that They are yet Zealous in Their Way. nor doe they wholly want, ingenuous able men. of whom I cannot but with Honour, mention Him, that hath so much obliged the world, by his learned Writings; Rab Menasseh Ben Israel: a very learned, Civill Man, and a Lover of our Nation.
“The more I think upon the Great Change, now comming on Them, and All the World; the more I would be Just and Mercifull to Them, to All.”
[¹] It was republished thirty-three years later anonymously, as was the first issue.
London: Printed for J. Kidgell. 1682. 4to. 4 ll. + 319 pp. [B. M.]