Remains of Sir Walter Raleigh; viz. Maxims of state. Advice to his son: his sons advice to his father. His sceptick. Observations concerning the causes of the magnificency and opulency of cities. Sir Walter Raleigh's observations touching trade and commerce with the Hollander and other nations; proving that our sea & land commodities inrich and strengthen other countreys against our own. The prerogative of Parliaments in England, proved in a dialogue between a councellour of state and a justice of peace. His letters to divers persons of quality.
- All titles
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- Remains of Sir Walter Raleigh; viz. Maxims of state. Advice to his son: his sons advice to his father. His sceptick. Observations concerning the causes of the magnificency and opulency of cities. Sir Walter Raleigh's observations touching trade and commerce with the Hollander and other nations; proving that our sea & land commodities inrich and strengthen other countreys against our own. The prerogative of Parliaments in England, proved in a dialogue between a councellour of state and a justice of peace. His letters to divers persons of quality.
- Sir Walter Raleigh's instructions to his sonne, and to posterity Sir Walter Raleigh's Observations touching trade and commerce with the Hollander Prerogative of Parliaments in England
- People / Organizations
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- Imprint
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London: printed by Iohn Redmayne for Margaret Sheares at the Bible in Bedford-street in Covent-Garden, 1664.
- Publication year
- 1664-1664
- ESTC No.
- R26912
- Grub Street ID
- 110154
- Description
- [12], 264; [10], 122 p. : port. ; 12⁰
- Note
- With a frontispiece portrait of the author (A1v), engraved and signed: Ro: Vaughan.
Includes "The dutiful advice of a loving son, to his aged father" (E12v-F7v), which has been wrongly attributed to Raleigh. It is rather an excerpt from Robert Southwell's "An epistle of a religious priest unto his father", first printed in: A short rule of a good life.
"Sir Walter Raleigh's instructions to his sonne, and to posterity" and "Sir Walter Raleigh's observations touching trade and commerce with the Hollander" each have separate dated title page; pagination and register are continuous.
"The prerogative of Parliaments in England" has separate dated title page, pagination, and register. It was originally published in 1628.
- Uncontrolled note
- Signatures from DFo