The Popes funerall. Containing a plaine, succinct, and pithy reply,
to a pretensed answere of a shamelesse and foolish libell, intituled, The
forerunner of Bels downfall. VVhich is nothing else indeede, (as the
indifferent reader shall preceiue by the due peruse thereof, but an euident
manifestation of his owne folly; with the vtter confusion of poperie, and
all popish vassals throughout the Christian world.
Dublin Core
Title
The Popes funerall. Containing a plaine, succinct, and pithy reply,
to a pretensed answere of a shamelesse and foolish libell, intituled, The
forerunner of Bels downfall. VVhich is nothing else indeede, (as the
indifferent reader shall preceiue by the due peruse thereof, but an euident
manifestation of his owne folly; with the vtter confusion of poperie, and
all popish vassals throughout the Christian world.
to a pretensed answere of a shamelesse and foolish libell, intituled, The
forerunner of Bels downfall. VVhich is nothing else indeede, (as the
indifferent reader shall preceiue by the due peruse thereof, but an euident
manifestation of his owne folly; with the vtter confusion of poperie, and
all popish vassals throughout the Christian world.
Creator
Thomas Bell
Source
STC (2nd ed.) 1825
Publisher
Thomas Creede, S. Stafford, and T. Purfoot, William Welby, William Welby
Identifier
482
Collection
Citation
Thomas Bell, “The Popes funerall. Containing a plaine, succinct, and pithy reply,
to a pretensed answere of a shamelesse and foolish libell, intituled, The
forerunner of Bels downfall. VVhich is nothing else indeede, (as the
indifferent reader shall preceiue by the due peruse thereof, but an euident
manifestation of his owne folly; with the vtter confusion of poperie, and
all popish vassals throughout the Christian world.,” John Bagford's Albums of Fragments, accessed November 25, 2024, https://digitalbookhistory.com/johnbagford/items/show/3260.
to a pretensed answere of a shamelesse and foolish libell, intituled, The
forerunner of Bels downfall. VVhich is nothing else indeede, (as the
indifferent reader shall preceiue by the due peruse thereof, but an euident
manifestation of his owne folly; with the vtter confusion of poperie, and
all popish vassals throughout the Christian world.,” John Bagford's Albums of Fragments, accessed November 25, 2024, https://digitalbookhistory.com/johnbagford/items/show/3260.