Excerpt from Good English, or Certain Reasons Pointing Out the Safest Way of Settlement in This Kingdom: Drawne From the Nature of the Aims and Interests of the Severall Parties Ingaged; And as the Case Now Stands, This Second Day of May, 1648 Dition of greater, unto your Po/lerz'ty 5 acquit then your {elf nobly', and let not the fountain from whence youderiyed your horror, be thus prophaned, and vilified by the very filth of the people. Confider the miferies that muft fall upon your country, by an Army of hungry Stranger: now ready toinvade us: Imagine that the eyes of the Nation are up on you, as one that may prevent all, or at leafl fhorten their abode here, by uniting with his Wajejhe. Baniflr that accurfed Principle of rzot trufling are injured Prime, which becomes none but implacableand incorrigible Troi iors. See that fuch Term be propounded unto him, that may nor claih either With his Conference or Honor that it. May appear unto all men, you defire Peace at his hands, who is the mof't peaceable, pioue, graciom' Prince living. But if you entertain orhe1'counjellr, l-rnow that you will be look'd on by the coefe of all thol'e de/olotzom which {hall 1 and the time of Revenge will come, (from above) wherein you {hall Withfwrdw, con fcffe your neglect of this honeft uldvz'ee, ' given from a private hand, that would thinke it an bonor to kifl'e yours, if your Lord pleafe firfi to kifl'e Mojqfiie'r, upon jar/l and bayomele con ltlons.
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