Merlini liberati errata: or, The prophecies and predictions of John Partridge, for the year of our Lord, 1690, &c. With useful annotations on them. Together with an epistle touching his respect to those glorious martyrs of the people, King Charles I. and Arch-Bishop Laud. By an earnest honourer of his King and country, and faithful votary to a true astrology. December 31. 1692. Imprimatur, Edmund Bohun.

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Title
Merlini liberati errata: or, The prophecies and predictions of John Partridge, for the year of our Lord, 1690, &c. With useful annotations on them. Together with an epistle touching his respect to those glorious martyrs of the people, King Charles I. and Arch-Bishop Laud. By an earnest honourer of his King and country, and faithful votary to a true astrology. December 31. 1692. Imprimatur, Edmund Bohun.
Author
Earnest honourer of his King and country.
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London :: Printed for G.C. at the Blew-Ball in Thames-street,
1692.
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"Merlini liberati errata: or, The prophecies and predictions of John Partridge, for the year of our Lord, 1690, &c. With useful annotations on them. Together with an epistle touching his respect to those glorious martyrs of the people, King Charles I. and Arch-Bishop Laud. By an earnest honourer of his King and country, and faithful votary to a true astrology. December 31. 1692. Imprimatur, Edmund Bohun." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/B26791.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 17, 2024.

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September, 1690.

The Man Accosts us here in his wonted way of Veracity, thus, At the last Newthe first application of thewas to the ☌ ♂ and ☍ ♃ and they two the only Angular Stars at that time. But there's scarce one Syllable of Truth in all this, for the ☽ then defluxed from her ☌ ☉ to a ✶ ♄ and reached not the ☌ ♂ until the next day at Midnight. Nor is ♂ Angular in that Lunation, if he mean locally and virtually so; and other Angularity is of no force. But ♀ is Angular, which our Liberate Merlin could not see. He that makes a Lye the Basis of his Judgments, is not likely to befriend us with Truth in his Pre∣dicting Futurities. But thus doth J. P. Ergo, &c.

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