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Author: Wastfield, Robert, fl. 1647-1665.
Title: The great obiection concerning the Quakers meetings fully answered. Wherein, in several particulars, it is proved, that although the said people do meet together, yet they are not transgressors of the law, according to right reason, which is the ground and foundation thereof; and therefore according to equity and good conscience, ought not to suffer for so doing, neither ought their meetings to be supprest. By a lover of all righteous laws, and just government, and one unto whom such laws are not a terror, R.W.
Print source: The great obiection concerning the Quakers meetings fully answered. Wherein, in several particulars, it is proved, that although the said people do meet together, yet they are not transgressors of the law, according to right reason, which is the ground and foundation thereof; and therefore according to equity and good conscience, ought not to suffer for so doing, neither ought their meetings to be supprest. By a lover of all righteous laws, and just government, and one unto whom such laws are not a terror, R.W.
Wastfield, Robert, fl. 1647-1665.

[London: s.n., 1662]
Notes:
R.W. = Robert Wastfield.
Imprint from Smith.
Imperfect: title page faded with loss of text; text cropped at head affecting paging.
Reproduction of the original in the British Library.
Subject terms:
Quakers -- Early works to 1800.
URL: https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A65231.0001.001
How to cite: For suggestions on citing this text, please see Citing the TCP on the Text Creation Partnership website.

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