Taylor, John, 1580-1653
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Taylor, John, 1580-1653
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The person Taylor, John, 1580-1653 represents an individual (alive, dead, undead, or fictional) associated with resources found in University of Missouri Libraries.
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- Taylor, John, 1580-1653
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- 1580-1653
393 Items by the Person Taylor, John, 1580-1653
22 Items that are about the Person Taylor, John, 1580-1653
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- [Wit and mirth]
- The Bible
- The Brownists conventicle, or, An assemble of Brownists, separatists, and non-conformists as they met together at a private house to heare a sermon of a brother of theirs neere Algate, being a learned felt-maker : contayning the whole discourse of his exposition with the manner and forme of his preaching, praying, giving thankes before and after dinner and supper : as it was lately heard and now
- The Brownists conventicle, or, An assemble of Brownists, separatists, and non-conformists as they met together at a private house to heare a sermon of a brother of theirs neere Algate, being a learned felt-maker : contayning the whole discourse of his exposition with the manner and forme of his preaching, praying, giving thankes before and after dinner and supper : as it was lately heard and now discovered by a brother of theirs who is turned out of their society upon some discontent to be buffeted by Sathan [sic] : his auditors were button-makers, translaters, weavers, box-makers, with divers other holy brethren and sisters
- The Brownists conventicle: or an assemble of Brownists, separatists, and non-conformists, as they met together at a private house to heare a sermon of a brother of theirs neere Algate, being a learned felt-maker. : Contayning the whole discourse of his exposition, with the manner and forme of his preaching, praying, giving thankes before and after dinner and supper, as it was lately heard and now discovered by a brother of theirs who is turned out of their society upon some discontent, to be buffeted by Sathan [sic]. His auditors were button-makers, translaters, weavers, box-makers, with divers other holy brethren and sisters
- The Brownists synagogve, or, A late discovery of their conventicles, assemblies, and places of meeting : where they preach and the manner of their praying and preaching : with a relation of the names, places and doctrines of those which doe commonly preach : the chiefe of which are these : Greene, the feltmaker, Marler, the buttonmaker, Spencer, the coachman, Rogers the glover : which sect is much increased of late within this city
- The Devil turn'd Round-head, or, Plvto become a Brownist : being a just comparison how the Devil is become a round-head : in what manner and how zealously, like them, he is affected with the moving of the Spirit : with the holy sisters of copulation, if he would seem holy, sincere, and pure, were it with the Devill himself : as also the Amsterdammian definition of a Familist
- The Devil turn'd round-head: or, Pluto become a Brownist. : Being a just comparison, how the Devil is become a round-head? In what manner, and how zealously (like them) he is affected with the moving of the spirit. With the holy sisters desire of copulation (if he would seem holy, sincere, and pure) were it with the Devill himself. As also the Amsterdammian definition of a Familist
- The Kings Most Excellent Majesties vvelcome to his owne house, : truly called the honour of Hampton Court, vvho came thither on the 24. of August, and so consequently hoped and humbly desired to White-Hall. Written by his Majesties most humble servant John Tailor, one of the yeoman of His Maiesties guard. Alius poeta aquatticus. From my house at the Crowne in Globe Lane (alias PhÅnix Ally, nere the Globe Taverne in Long Aker
- The Popes benediction or, his generall pardon to be purchased onely with mony and without penance: : sent into England by Ignatius Holy-water a Iesuit, to the Arch-bishop of Canterbury, and to the rest of his subjects there
- The Popes benediction, or, His generall pardon to be purchased onely with mony and without penance : sent into England by Ignatim Holy-water a Iesuit to the Arch-bishop of Canterbury and to the rest of his subjects there
- The anatomy of the separatists, alias, Brownists : the factious brethren in these times, wherein this seditious sect is fairely dissected, and perspicuously discovered to the view of world : with the strange hub-bub, and formerly unheard of hurly-burly, which those phanatick and fantastick schismatiks made on Sunday ... the 8 of May ... at the sermon of the Right Rev. Father in God, Henry, Bishop of Chichester
- The anatomy of the separatists, alias, Brownists : the factious brethren in these times, wherein this seditious sect is fairely dissected, and perspicuously discovered to the view of world : with the strange hub-bub, and formerly unheard of hurly-burly, which those phanatick and fantastick schismatiks made on Sunday ... the 8 of May ... at the sermon of the Right Rev. Father in God, Henry, Bishop of Chichester ..
- The booke of martyrs
- The booke of martyrs. : VVherein are set down the names of such martyrs as suffered persecution, and laid downe their liues for witnesse-bearing vnto the Gospell of Christ Iesus; drawne downe from the primitiue church, to these later times, especially respecting such as haue suffered in this land vnder the tyranny of Antichrist, in opposition to popish errors
- The booke of martyrsĀ· : VVherein are set downe the names of such martyrs as suffered persecution, and laid downe theire lives for witnesse-bearing unto the Gospell of Christ Jesus; drawne downe from the primitive Church, to these later times, especially respecting such as have suffered in this land under the tyranny of Antichrist, in opposition to popish errours
- The carriers cosmographie. or A briefe relation, of the innes, ordinaries, hosteries, and other lodgings in, and neere London, where the carriers, waggons, foote-posts and higglers, doe usually come, from any parts, townes, shires and countries, of the kingdomes of England, principality of Wales, as also from the kingdomes of Scotland and Ireland : With nomination of what daies of the weeke they doe come to London, and on what daies they returne, whereby all sorts of people may finde direction how to receiue, or send, goods or letters, unto such places as their occasions may require. As also, where the ships, hoighs, barkes, tiltboats, barges and wherries, do usually attend to carry passengers, and goods to the coast townes of England, Scotland, Ireland, or the Netherlands; and where the barges and boats are ordinarily to bee had that goe up the river of Thames westward from London. By Iohn Taylor
- The carriers cosmographie. or A briefe relation, of the innes, ordinaries, hosteries, and other lodgings in, and neere London, where the carriers, waggons, foote-posts and higglers, doe usually come, from any parts, townes, shires and countries, of the kingdomes of England, principality of Wales, as also from the kingdomes of Scotland and Ireland : With nomination of what daies of the weeke they doe come to London, and on what daies they returne, whereby all sorts of people may finde direction how to receiue, or send, goods or letters, unto such places as their occasions may require. As also, where the ships, hoighs, barkes, tiltboats, barges and wherries, do usually attend to carry passengers, and goods to the coast townes of England, Scotland, Ireland, or the Netherlands; and where the barges and boats are ordinarily to bee had that goe up the river of Thames westward from London. By Iohn Taylor
- The causes of the diseases and distempers of this kingdom; : found by feeling of her pulse, viewing her urine, and casting her water. The remedies are left to the skill and direction of more able and learned physitians.
- The certain travailes of an uncertain journey : begun on Tuesday the 9. of August, and ended on Saturday the 3. of September following, 1653. Wherein the readers may take notice, that the authors purpose was to travell, and write this following relation, for no other intent or purpose, but to pleasure himself, and to please his friends in the first place. By John Taylor, at the sign of the Poets Head, in PhÅniz [sic] Alley, near the Globe Tavern, in the middle of Long-Acre nigh the Covent-Garden. Those twelve following lines I gave to divers gentlemen and friends, before I went, and as they have kindly subscribed to my bill, I [d]o humbly expect their courteous acceptation of this booke
- The colde tearme, or, The frozen age, or, The metamorphosis of the Riuer of Thames
- The colde tearme: or, the frozen age: or the metamorphosis of the Riuer of Thames. : 1621
- The complaint of Christmas, : written after Twelfetide, and printed before Candlemas.
- The complaint of Christmas, and the teares of Twelfetyde
- The complaint of Christmas, and the teares of Twelfetyde : and the tears of Twelfetyde
- The complaint of ChristmasĀ· : And the teares of Twelfetyde. By Iohn Taylor
- The complaint of M. Tenter-hooke the proiector, and Sir Thomas Dodger the patentee
- The conversion, confession, contrition, coming to himselfe, & advice, of a mis-led, ill-bred, rebellious round-head : which is very fitting to be read to such as weare short haire, and long eares, or desire eares long
- The conversion, confession, contrition, comming to himselfe, & advice, of a mis-led, ill-bred, rebellious round-head : which is very fitting to be read to such as weare short haire, and long eares, or desire eares long
- The diseases of the times or, the distempers of the Common-wealth : Succinctly describing each particular disease wherin the kingdome is troubled. Contracted into these heads. viz. 1. The immedicable tumour of faction. 2. The strange diffusion of Brownianisme. 3. The stupendeous inundaton of heresie. 4. The desperate swelling of obstinacy. 5. The dangerous disease of feminine divinity. 6. The aspiring ambition of presumption. 7. The audacious height of disobedience. 8. The painted deceitfulnesse of hypocrisie
- The diseases of the times or, the distempers of the Common-wealth. : Succinctly describing each particular disease wherin the kingdome is troubled. Contracted into these heads. viz. 1. The immedicable tumour of faction. 2. The strange diffusion of Brownianisme. 3. The stupendeous inundaton of heresie. 4. The desperate swelling of obstinacy. 5. The dangerous disease of feminine divinity. 6. The aspiring ambition of presumption. 7. The audacious height of disobedience. 8. The painted deceitfulnesse of hypocrisie
- The diseases of the times, or, The distempers of the common-wealth : succinctly describing each particular disease wherin the kingdome is troubled : contracted into these heads viz. 1. the immedicable tumour of faction : 2. the strange diffusuion of Brownianisme : 3. the stupendeous inundation of heresie : 4. the desperate swelling of obstinacy : 5. the dangerous disease of feminine divinity : 6. the aspiring ambition of presumption : 7. the audacious height of disobedience : 8. the painted deceitfulnesse of hypecrisie
- The eighth vvonder of the vvorld, or Coriats escape from his supposed drowning : With his safe arriuall and entertainment at the famous citty of Constantinople; and also how hee was honourably knighted with a sword of King Priams. With the manner of his proceeding in his peregrination through the Turkish territories towards the antient memorable citty of Ierusalem. By Iohn Taylor
- The essence, quintessence, insence, innocence, lye-sence, & magnifisence of nonsence upon sence
- The essence, quintessence, insence, innocence, lye-sence, & magnifisence of nonsence upon sence: or, Sence upon nonsence. : The third part, the fourth impression, the fifth edition, the sixth addition, upon condition, that (by tradition) the reader may laugh if he list. In longitude, latitude, crassitude, magnitude, and amplitude, lengthened, widened, enlarged, augmented, encreased, made wider and sider, by the addition of letters, syllables, words, lines, and farfetch'd sentences. And the lamentable death and buriall of a Scottish Gallaway nagge. Written upon white paper, in a brown study, betwixt Lammas day and Cambridge, in the yeare aforesayd. Beginning at the latter end, and written by John Taylor at the sign of the poor Poets Head, in PhÅnix Alley, near the middle of Long Acre, or Coven Garden. Anno, millimo, quillimo, trillimo, daffadillimo, pulcher
- The fearefull sommer: or Londons calamitie, the countreys discurtesie, & both their miserie. By Iohn Taylor
- The fearefull summer, or, Londons calamity, the countries courtesy, and both their misery
- The fearefull summer: or, Londons calamitie, the countries discourtesie, and both their miserie : Printed by authoritie in Oxford, in the last great infection of the plague, 1625. And now reprinted with some editions [sic], concerning this present yeere, 1636. With some mention of the grievious and afflicted estate of the famous towne of New-Castle upon Tine, with some other visited townes of this kingdome. By Iohn Taylor
- The fooles of fate: or, The unravelling of the Parliament and Army. : Fate (for our crimes) permitted us to grumble 'gainst each thing, next for to be tumultuous, and fight against our King. ... Their Army are the peoples hate, both they will now pull down, and now behold the fools of fate fall dead by Charles his crowne
- The generall complaint of the most oppressed, distressed commons of England. : Complaining to, and crying out upon the tyranny of the perpetuall Parliament at Westminster.
- The great O Toole
- The great eater, of Kent, or Part of the admirable teeth and stomacks exploits of Nicholas Wood, of Harrisom in the county of Kent : His excessiue manner of eating without manners, in strange and true manner described, by Iohn Taylor
- The great eater, of Kent, or Part of the admirable teeth and stomacks exploits of Nicholas Wood, of Harrison in the county of Kent : His excessiue manner of eating without manners, in strange and true manner described, by Iohn Taylor
- The hellish Parliament being a counter-Parliament to this in England, containing the demonstrative speeches and statutes of that court : together with the perfect league made between the two hellish factions the papists and the Brownists
- The hellish Parliament being a counter-Parliament to this in England, containing the demonstrative speeches and statutes of that court : together with the perfect league made between the two hellish factions the papists and the Brownists
- The hellish Parliament being a counter-Parliament to this in England, containing the demonstrative speeches and statutes of that court. : Together with the perfect league made between the two hellish factions the papists and the Brownists
- The honorable, and memorable foundations, erections, raisings, and ruines, of divers cities, townes, castles, and other pieces of antiquitie, within ten shires and counties of this kingdome : namely, Kent, Sussex, Hampshire, Surrey, Barkshire, Essex, Middlesex, Hartfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Oxfordshire: with the description of many famous accidents that have happened, in divers places in the said counties. Also, a relation of the wine tavernes either by their signes, or names of the persons that allow, or keepe them, in, and throughout the said severall shires. By John Taylor
- The honorable, and memorable foundations, erections, raisings, and ruines, of divers cities, townes, castles, and other pieces of antiquitie, within ten shires and counties of this kingdome : namely, Kent, Sussex, Hampshire, Surrey, Barkshire, Essex, Middlesex, Hartfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Oxfordshire: with the description of many famous accidents that have happened, in divers places in the said counties. Also, a relation of the wine tavernes either by their signes, or names of the persons that allow, or keepe them, in, and throughout the said severall shires. By John Taylor
- The impartialest satyre that ever was seen : that speaks truth without fear, or flattery, or spleen: read as you list, commend it, or come mend it, the man that pen'd it, did with finis end it
- The impartiallest satyre that ever was seen : that speaks truth without fear, or flattry, or spleen, read, as you list, commend it, or come mend it, the man that pen'd it, did with Finis end it
- The liar, or A contradiction to those who in the titles of their bookes affirmed them to be true, when they were false although mine are all true, yet I terme them lyes
- The liar. : Or, A contradiction to those who in the titles of their bookes affirmed them to be true, when they were false : although mine are all true, yet I terme them lyes. Veritas veritatis
- The life and death of the most blessed among women, the Virgin Mary mother of our Lord Iesus : VVith the murder of the infants in Bethlehem, Iudas his treason, and the confession of the good theife and the bad
- The life and death of the most blessed among women, the Virgin Mary mother of our Lord Iesus : VVith the murder of the infants in Bethlehem, Iudas his treason, and the confession of the good theife and the bad
- The life and death of the most blessed among women, the Virgin Mary mother of our Lord Iesus : With the murder of the infants in Bethlehem, Iudas his treason, and the confession of the good theife and the bad
- The muses mourning: or funerall sonnets on the death of Iohn Moray Esquire. By Iohn Taylor
- The names of all the Dukes, Marquesses, Earls, Viscounts, & Barons, dead or living, that have been or are in England, Scotland, & Ireland, in and since the raign of Queen Elizabeth, to this yeare, 1653. By John Taylor
- The needles excellency : A new book wherin are diuers admirable workes wrought with the needle. Newly inuented and cut in copper for the pleasure and profit of the industrious
- The needles excellency : a new booke wherin are diuers admirable workes wrought with the needle ; newly inuented and cut in copper for the pleasure and profit of the industrious
- The needles excellency : a new booke wherin are diuers admirable workes wrought with the needle. Newly inuented and cut in copper for the pleasure and profit of the industrious
- The nipping and snipping of abuses: or The woolgathering of vvitte : With the Muses Taylor, brought from Parnassus by land, with a paire of oares wherein are aboue a hundred seuerall garments of diuers fashions, made by nature, without the helpe of art, and a proclamation from hell in the Deuils name, concerning the propogation, and excessiue vse of tobacco. By Iohn Taylor
- The noble cavalier caracterised, and a rebellious caviller cavterised
- The number and names of all the kings of England & Scotland : from the beginning of their governments, to this present. As also, the times when, and how long each of them reigned. Shewing how many of them came to untimely ends: eyther by imprisonment, banishment, famine, poyson, drowning, beheading, falling from horses, slaine in battells, murdered, or otherwise. By J.T
- The number and names of all the kings of England and Scotland, from the beginning of their governments to this present : as also how long each of them reigned, how many of them came to untimely ends, either by imprisonments, banishments, famine, killing of themselves, poyson, drowning, beheading, falling from horses, slaine in battells, murthered, or otherwise
- The number and names of all the kings of England and Scotland, from the beginning of their governments to this present : as also how long each of them reigned, how many of them came to untimely ends, either by imprisonments, banishments, famine, killing of themselves, poyson, drowning, beheading, falling from horses, slaine in battells, murthered, or otherwise
- The old, old, very old man: or, The age and long life of Thomas Par, the son of Iohn Parr of Winnington in the parish of Alberbury; in the county of Salop, (or Shropshire) : who was borne in the raigne of King Edward the fourth, in the yeare 1483. Hee lived 152 yeares, nine monthes and odd dayes, and departed this life at Westminster the 15 of Novem. 1635, and is now buried in the Abby at Westminster. His manner of life and conversation in so long a pilgrimage; his marriages, and his bringing up to London, about the end of September last. 1635. Whereunto is added a postscript, shewing the many remarkable accidents that hapned in the life of this old man. Written by Iohn Taylor
- The old, old, very old man: or, The age and long life of Thomas Par, the son of Iohn Parr of Winnington in the parish of Alberbury; in the county of Salopp, (or Shropshire) : who was borne in the raigne of King Edward the 4th. being aged 152. yeares and odd monethes. His manner of life and conversation in so long a pilgrimage; his marriages, and his bringing up to London about the end of September last. 1635. Whereunto is added a postscript, shewing the many remarkable accidents that hapned in the life of this old man. Written by Iohn Taylor
- The olde, old, very olde man: or the age and long life of Thomas Par : the sonne of John Parr of Winnington in the parish of Alberbury; in the country of Salopp, (or Shropshire) who was borne in the raigne of King Edward the 4th. and is now living in the Strand, being aged 152. yeares and odd monethes. His manner of life and conversation in so long a pilgrimage; his marriages, and his bringing up to London about the end of September last. 1635. Written by Iohn Taylor
- The pennyles pilgrimage, or The money-lesse perambulation, of Iohn Taylor, alias the Kings Majesties water-poet : How he trauailed on foot from London to Edenborough in Scotland, not carrying any money to or fro, neither begging, borrowing, or asking meate, drinke or lodging. With his description of his entertainment in all places of his iourney, and a true report of the vnmatchable hunting in the brea of Marre and Badenoch in Scotland. With other obseruations, some serious and worthy of memory, and some merry and not hurtfull to be remembred. Lastly that (which is rare in a trauailer) all is true
- The praise and vertue of a iayle, and iaylers : With the most excellent mysterie, and necessary vse of all sorts of hanging. Also a touch at Tyburne for a period, and the authors free leaue to let them be hanged, who are offended at the booke without cause. By Iohn Taylor
- The praise and vertue of a iayle, and iaylers : With the most excellent mysterie, and necessary vse of all sorts of hanging. Also a touch at Tyburne for a period, and the authors free leaue to let them be hanged, who are offended at the booke without cause. By Iohn Taylor
- The praise of hemp-seed : With the voyage of Mr. Roger Bird and the writer hereof in a boat of brown-paper, from London to Quinborough in Kent. As also, a farewell to the matchlesse deceased Mr. Thomas Coriat. Concluding with the commendations of the famous riuer of Thames. By Iohn Taylor. The contents of the booke are in the next leafe before the preamble. The profits arising by hempseed are cloathing, food, fishing, shipping, pleasure, profit, iustice, whipping
- The praise of hemp-seed : With the voyage of Mr. Roger Bird and the writer hereof, in a boat of brown-paper, from London to Quinborough in Kent. As also, a farewell to the matchlesse deceased Mr. Thomas Coriat. Concluding with the commendations of the famous riuer of Thames. By Iohn Taylor. The contents of the booke are in the next leafe before the preamble. The profits arising by hemp-seed are cloathing, food, fishing, shipping, pleasure, profit, iustice, whipping
- The praise, antiquity, and commodity, of beggery, beggers, and begging. Iohn Taylor
- The praise, of cleane linnen : With the commendable vse of the laundresse. By Iohn Taylor
- The scourge of basenesse, or, The old lerry with a new kicksey, and a new cum twang with the old winsye : wherein Iohn Taylor hath curried or clapperclawed, neere a thousand of his bad debters, who will not pay him vpon his returnes from Scotland, Germany, Bohemia, the voyages of the paper boate, and his nauigations to Yorke and Salsbury with Oates
- The sculler : rowing from Tiber to Thames with his boate laden with a hotch-potch, or gallimawfry of sonnets, satyres, and epigrams. With an addition of pastorall equiuocques or the complaint of a shepheard. By Iohn Taylor
- The subjects joy for the Parliament : [by] Iohn Taylor
- The travels of twelve-pence ...
- The triumphs of fame and honour, or, The noble accomplish'd solemnity, full of cost, art and state, at the inauguration and establishment of the true worthy and right nobly minded Robert Parkhurst, into the right honourable office of Lord Maior of London : the particularities of every invention in all the pageants, shewes and triumphs both by water and land, are here following fully set downe, being all performed by loves, liberall costs, and charges of the right worshipfull and worthy Brother-hood of the Cloth-workers the 29 of October 1634
- The vnnaturall father, or, The cruell murther committed by [one] Iohn Rowse of the towne of Ewell, ten m[iles] from London, in the county of Surry, vpon two of his owne children : with his prayer and repentance in prison, his arrai[gn]ment and iudgement at the Sessions, and his execution for the said fact at Croydon, on Munday the second of Iuly, 1621
- The vnnaturall father, or, The cruell murther committed by [one] Iohn Rowse of the towne of Ewell, ten m[iles] from London, in the county of Surry, vpon two of his owne children : with his prayer and repentance in prison, his arrai[gn]ment and iudgement at the Sessions, and his execution for the said fact at Croydon, on Munday the second of Iuly, 1621
- The vvhole life and progresse of Henry Walker the ironmonger : first, the manner of his conversation : secondly, the severall offences and scandalous pamphlets the said Walker hath writ, and for which he is now a prisoner in New-Gate : thirdly, the forme of the inditement which is laid against him, by the Kings sergeants at law, and his learned counsell : fourthly, his conviction by the iury : fiftly, his recantation and sorrow for the publicke wrong he hath done His Majesty and the whole kingdome : here are also many remarkable passages concerning the offence, and apprehending the said Henry Walker, with a true relation of his severall escapes and rescues from the hands of justice, &c.
- The vvhole life and progresse of Henry Walker the ironmonger. : First, the manner of his conversation. Secondly, the severall offences, and scandalous pamphlets the said Walker hath writ, and for which he is now a prisoner in New-Gate. Thirdly, the forme of the inditement which is laid against him, by the Kings sergeants at law, and his learned counsell. Fourthly, his conviction by the iury. Fiftly, his recantation, and sorrow for the publicke wrong he hath done His Majesty and the whole kingdome. Here are also many remarkable passages concerning the offence, and apprehending the said Henry Walker, with a true relation of his severall escapes and rescues from the hands of justice; &c. Collected and written by Iohn Taylor
- The vvonder of a kingdom, dedicated to the iunto at VVestminster : rascall reformers, snowie devills, behold the period of your evills
- The vvonder of a kingdom, dedicated to the iunto at VVestminster : rascall reformers, snowie devills, behold the period of your evills ..
- The vvorld runs on wheeles, or, Oddes betuueen cartes and coaches
- The water-cormorant his complaint : against a brood of land-cormorants. Diuided into fourteene satyres. By Iohn Taylor
- The watermens suit concerning players
- The world runnes on vvheeles: or oddes, betwixt carts and coaches
- The world turn'd upside down, or, A briefe description of the ridiculous fashions of these distracted times
- This author hath newly caused all his works (being aboue 60.) to bee printed into one volume
- Three vveekes, three daies, and three houres obseruations and trauel, from London to Hamburgh in Germanie : amongst Iewes and gentiles, with descriptions of townes and towers, castles and cittadels, artificiall gallowses, naturall hangmen: and dedicated for the present, to the absent Odcombian knight errant, Sr. Thomas Coriat. Great Brittaines error, and the worlds mirror. By Iohn Taylor
- Three vveekes, three daies, and three houres obseruations and trauel, from London to Hamburgh in Germanie : amongst Iewes and gentiles, with descriptions of townes and towers, castles and cittadels, artificiall gallowses, naturall hangmen: and dedicated for the present, to the absent Odcombian knight errant, Sr. Thomas Coriat. Great Brittaines error, and the worlds mirror. By Iohn Taylor
- To the Right Honorable assembly, the Lords, Knights, Esquires, and Burgesses of the Honorable House of Commons in Parliament: : the humble petition of the antient overseers, rulers and assistants of the Company of Watermen. VVherein is showed, how intollerably they have been abused and slandered, with false accusations, by divers refractory and abusive watermen, who have mislead many others to their faction. Their odious slanders being heere truly confuted, and the innocencie of the rulers declared. By Iohn Taylor
- To the right honorable assembly, the lords, knights, esquires, and burgesses of the honorable House of Commons in Parliament. The humble petition of the antient overseers, rulers, and assistants of the Company of Watermen : wherein is shewed how intollerably they have been abused and slandered ... by divers refractory and abusive watermen who have mislead many others to their faction ...
- Tom Nash his ghost: or The currying of crop-eare. : The pruining of Prinnes prurient parricidicall pamphlets wherein he stretch'd the soveraigne prower of Parliaments and his new found way of opening the Great Seal; by a short, brief, concise, compendious, contracted survey, & animadversions of some of his falsities, fooleries, absurdities, & nonsence blaspheamies, treasons, seditious incitations, provocations, and precontrivements, in mustering, arraying, rallying, training, and leading forth into publique so many ensignes of examples of old reviv'd rebels or new devised chimeraes. With a strange prophesie reported by some authors to be Merlins some say it was Nimpshags & some the Witch of Endor
- True louing sorow, attired in a robe of vnfeigned griefe : presented vpon occasion of the much bewailed funerall of that gracious and illustrious prince Lewis Steward, Duke of Richmond and Linox, Eearle [sic] of Newcastle and Darnely ... who departed this life at White-Hall on the Thursday the 12 of February ...
- Truth's triumph: or, Old miracles newly revived in the gracious preservation of our soveraigne Lord the King : By Iohn Taylor
- VVestminster Fayre, newly proclaimed. : My muse thus venters [sic] to open her ware, and bids you welcome to Westminster Fayre. Wherein, votes, orders, ordinances, this September, are to be sold, with many a rotten Member, a Parliament man; I need say no more: a close committee-man that loves a w- a sequestrator; sure the Devill's not worse then an excise-man, far a greater curse: only a pursuivant, to make hell full, the country poore, the city a meere gull. T'is but a penny, in: too small a fee, to sell you spectacles, these strange sights t'see
- VVit and mirth : being 113 pleasant tales and witty iests. Chargeably collected out of taverns, ordinaries, inns, bowling greens, and allies, alehouses, tobacco-shops, highwayes, and water-passages. Made vp and fashioned into clinches, bulls, quirks, yerks, quips, and ierks. Apothegmatically bundled vp and garbled at the request of old Iohn Garrets ghost. By Iohn Taylor, water-poet
- VVit and mirth : being 113 pleasant tales and witty iests. Chargeably collected out of taverns, ordinaries, inns, bowling greens, and allies, alehouses, tobacco-shops, highwayes, and water-passages. Made vp and fashioned into clinches, bulls, quirks, yerks, quips, and ierks. Apothegmatically bundled vp and garbled at the request of old Iohn Garrets ghost. By Iohn Taylor, water-poet
- VVit and mirth : chargeably collected out of tauernes, ordinaries, innes, bowling greenes, and allyes, alehouses, tobacco shops, highwayes, and water-passages. Made vp, and fashioned into clinches, bulls, quirkes, yerkes, quips, and ierkes. Apothegmatically bundled vp and garbled at the request of old Iohn Garrets ghost. By Iohn Taylor, water-poet
- VVit and mirth : chargeably collected out of tauernes, ordinaries, innes, bowling greenes, and allyes, alehouses, tobacco shops, highwayes, and water-passages. Made vp, and fashioned into clinches, bulls, quirkes, yerkes, quips, and ierkes. Apothegmatically bundled vp and garbled at the request of old Iohn Garrets ghost. By Iohn Taylor, water-poet
- Verbum sempiternum
- Verbum sempiternum
- Verbum sempiternum
- Verbum sempiternum[.]
- Wit and mirth : chargeably collected out of tauernes, ordinaries, innes, bowling greenes, and allyes, alehouses, tobacco shops, highwaies, and water-passages : made vp, and fashioned into clinches, bulls, quirkes, yerkes, quips, and ierkes : apothegmatically bundled vp and garbled at the request of old Iohn Garrets ghost
- Works of John Taylor : the water-poet
- Works of John Taylor, the Water Poet
- [Faire and fowle weather: or a sea and land storme betweene two calmes.] : [With an apologie in defense of the painefull life, and needfull vse of sailors.
- [Taylor's motto] : [et habeo, et careo, et curo]
- [Taylors goose] : [describing the wilde goose]
- [The praise of hemp-seed]
- A bavvd : A vertuous bawd, a modest bawd: as shee deserves, reproove, or else applaud. Written by John Taylor
- A bavvd : A vertuous bawd, a modest bawd: as shee deserves, reproove, or else applaud. Written by John Taylor
- A brave and valiant sea-fight, upon the coast of Cornewall, the 17. of Iune last past : betwixt three Turkish pyrats, men of warre, and onely one English merchants ship of Plimouth, (called the Elizabeth) being not above 200. tun. Wherein they all behaved themselves so valiantly, that (after a long and bloudy fight) they quit their ship out of the hands of the cruell Turke, with the losse only of three men, but slue many of the Turks, to their everlasting honour. Written from Plimouth by a good hand, and exemplified for the delight of the reader
- A brave memorable and dangerous sea-fight, foughten neere the road of Tittawan in Barbary : where the George and Elizabeth (a ship of London) under the command of Mr. Edmond Ellison, having but 19. peeces of ordnance, was encompass'd and encountred by nine great Turkish pyrat ships, or men of war, they being in number of men at the least 60. to one; and their ordnance more than ten to one against the English, yet (by Gods assistance) they were encouraged to a resolute fight, and obtained a glorious victory over their miscreant enemies, and a happy returne with men, ship, and goods to London
- A brief director for those that would send their letters to any parts of England, Scotlaud, or Ireland. Or A list of all the carriers, waggoners coaches, posts, ships, barks, hoys, and passage-boats, that come to London, from the most parts and places, by land & sea : Alphabetically printed, so that none may pretend ignorance, who would gladly send, but know not where to carry their letters. With the dayes when they come, and when they return. And also to send letters to the most habitable parts of the world, and to have an answer
- A briefe relation of the idiotismes and absurdities of Miles Corbet, Esquire, councellor at law, reorder [sic] and burgesse for Great Yarmouth
- A briefe relation of the idiotismes and absurdities of Miles Corbet, Esquire, councellor at law, reorder [sic] and burgesse for Great Yarmouth
- A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs : from the Normans Conquest, vntill this present
- A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs : vvith their raignes, deaths, and places of buriall: from the Normans Conquest, vnto our most glorious soueraigne. By Iohn Taylor
- A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs : vvith their raignes, deaths, and places of buriall: from the Normans Conquest, vnto our most glorious soueraigne. By Iohn Taylor
- A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs : with their raignes, deaths, and places of buriall : from the Normans Conquest, vnto Our Most Gratious Soueraigne
- A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs, from the Normans conquest, vntill this present. By Iohn Taylor
- A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs, from the Normans conquest, vntill this present. By Iohn Taylor
- A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs, from the Normans conquest, vntill this present. By Iohn Taylor
- A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs, from the Normans conquest, vntill this present. By Iohn Taylor
- A brown dozen of drunkards: (ali-ass drink-hards) whipt, and shipt to the Isle of Gulls: for their abusing of Mr. Malt the bearded son, and Barley-broth the brainlesse daughter of Sir John Barley-corne : All joco-seriously descanted to our wine-drunk, wrath-drunk, zeale-drunk, staggering times. By one that hath drunk at S. Patricks well
- A brown dozen of drunkards: (ali-ass drink-hards) whipt, and shipt to the Isle of Gulls: for their abusing of Mr. Malt the bearded son, and Barley-broth the brainlesse daughter of Sir John Barley-corne. : All joco-seriously descanted to our wine-drunk, wrath-drunk, zeale-drunk, staggering times. By one that hath drunk at S. Patricks well
- A cast over the vvater, by John Taylor. Giuen gratis to William Fennor, the rimer, from London to the Kings Bench. Or a replication to Fennors answer. With admonitions, and friendly exhortations in prose and verse, perswading the said Fennor to penitence, that he may hang with the clearer consience at Saint Thomas of Waterings. Heere may you see a fellow brau'd and baffled, and (like a iade) is spurgal'd; swicht, and snaffled
- A cast over the vvater, by John Taylor. Giuen gratis to William Fennor, the rimer, from London to the Kings Bench. Or a replication to Fennors answer. With admonitions, and friendly exhortations in prose and verse, perswading the said Fennor to penitence, that he may hang with the clearer consience at Saint Thomas of Waterings. Heere may you see a fellow brau'd and baffled, and (like a iade) is spurgal'd; swicht, and snaffled
- A cluster of coxcombes, or, Cinquepace of five sorts of knaves and fooles : namely, the domatists, publicans, disciplinarians, anabaptists, and brownists, their originals, opinions, confutations, and, in a word, their heads roundly jolted together : also shewing how in the raignes of sundry kings, and in the late Q. Elizabeths raign the Anabaptists have bin burnt as hereticks, and otherwayes punished : and that the sect of the brownists is so new, that many are alive who knew the beginning of it : with other sects displayed
- A cluster of coxcombes; or, Cinquepace of five sorts of knaves and fooles: : namely, the domatists, publicans, disciplinarians, anabaptists, and Brownists; their originals, opinions, confutations, and (in a word) their heads roundly jolted together. Also shewing how in the raignes of sundry kings, and in the late Q. Elizabeths raign the Anabaptists have bin burnt as hereticks, and otherwayes punished. And that the sect of the Brownists is so new, that many are alive who knew the beginning of it. With other sects displayed. By John Taylor
- A common vvhore : vvith all these graces grac'd: shee's very honest, beautifull and chaste.
- A common vvhore : vvith all these graces grac'd: shee's very honest, beautifull and chaste. Written by Iohn Taylor
- A common vvhore : vvith all these graces grac'd: shee's very honest, beautifull and chaste. Written by Iohn Taylor
- A common vvhore : with all these graces grac'd, shee's very honest, beautifull and chaste. Written by Iohn Taylor
- A delicate, dainty, damnable dialogue. : Between the Devill and a Jesuite. By Iohn Taylor
- A dialogve, or, Rather a parley betweene Prince Ruperts dogge whose name is Pvddle, and Tobies dog whose name is Pepper &c : vvhereunto is added the challeng which Prince Griffins dogg called Towzer hath sent to Prince Ruperts dogg Puddle in behalfe of honest Pepper Tobies dog : moreover the said Prince Griffin is newly gone to Oxford to lay the moger and to make up the match
- A dialogve, or, Rather a parley betweene Prince Ruperts dogge whose name is Pvddle, and Tobies dog whose name is Pepper &c. : vvhereunto is added the challeng which Prince Griffins dogg called Towzer hath sent to Prince Ruperts dogg Puddle in behalfe of honest Pepper Tobies dog : moreover the said Prince Griffin is newly gone to Oxford to lay the moger and to make up the match
- A dog of vvar, or, The trauels of Drunkard, the famous curre of the Round-Woolstaple in Westminster : His seruices in the Netherlands, and lately in France, with his home returne. By Iohn Taylor. The argument and contents of this discourse is in the next page or leafe
- A dreadful battle between a taylor and a louse, or, A tryal of skill to prove if we can : a taylor more than ninth part of a man
- A famous fight at sea : VVhere foure English ships vnder the command of Captaine Iohn Weddell, and foure Dutch ships fought three dayes in the Gulfe of Persia neere Ormus, against 8. Portugall gallions, and 3. friggots. As also the memorable fight and losse of the good ship called the Lion, with the barbarous crueltie of the enemie truly declared. With a farewell and hearty well-wishing to our English sea and land forces
- A full and compleat answer against the writer of a late volume set forth : entituled A tale in a tub, or, A tub lecture : with a vindication of that ridiculous name called roundheads : together with some excellent verses on the defacing of Cheapside crosse : also proving that it is far better to preach in a boat than in a tub
- A full and compleat answer against the writer of a late volume set forth : entituled A tale in a tub, or, A tub lecture : with a vindication of that ridiculous name called roundheads : together with some excellent verses on the defacing of Cheapside crosse : also proving that it is far better to preach in a boat than in a tub
- A full and compleat answer against the writer of a late volume set forth, entituled A tale in a tub, or, A tub lecture: : with a vindication of that ridiculous name called round-heads. Together with some excellent verses on the defacing of Cheap-side crosse. Also proving that it is far better to preach in a boat than in a tub. By Thorny Ailo, Annagram
- A funerall elegie, : in memory of the rare, famous, and admired poet, Mr. Beniamin Ionson deceased. VVho dyed the sixteenth day of August last, 1637, and lyeth inter'd in the Cathedral Church of Saint Peter at Westminster.
- A iuniper lecture : With the description of all sorts of women, good, and bad: from the modest to the maddest, from the most civil, to the scold rampant, their praise and dispraise compendiously related. Also the authors advice how to tame a shrew, or vexe her
- A iuniper lecture : With the description of all sorts of women, good, and bad: from the modest to the maddest, from the most civil, to the scold rampant, their praise and dispraise compendiously related. Also the authors advice how to tame a shrew, or vexe her
- A juniper lecture : VVith the description of all sorts of women, good and bad. From the modest, to the maddest, from the most civill, to the scold rampant, their praise and dispraise compendiously related. Also the authors advice how to tame a shrew, or vex her
- A kicksey winsey: or a lerry come-twang: wherein Iohn Taylor hath satyrically suited 800. of his bad debters, that will not pay him for his returne of his iourney from Scotland
- A late weary, merry voyage and journey, or, Iohn Taylors moneths travells : by sea and land, from London to Gravesend, to Harwich, to Ipswich, to Norwich, to Linne, to Cambridge, and from thence to London : performed and written on purpose to please his friends and to pleasure himselfe in these unpleasant and necessitated times
- A letter sent to London from a spie at Oxford : written by owle-light, intercepted by moon-light, printed in the twi-light, dispersed by day-light, and may be read by candlelight : to his honourable and worshipfull friends M. Pym, M. Martin &c., and to all worthy members, authours, abettours, and aiders in or of this holy rebellion : which letter was intercepted and taken prisoner by Iohn Taylor at Layghton-Buzzard on Thursday the 32th of August last, and committed to the presse
- A liuing sadnes, in duty consecrated to the immortal memory of our late deceased albe-loued soueraigne Lord, the peereles paragon of princes, Iames, king of great Brittaine, France and Ireland : Who departed this life at his mannour of Theobalds, on Sunday last, the 27. of March, 1625
- A liuing sadnes, in duty consecrated to the immortall memory of our late deceased albe-loued soueraigne lord, the peeereles paragon of princes, Iames, King of great Brittaine, France and Ireland : Who departed this life at his mannour of Theobalds, on Sunday last, the 27. of March, 1625. By Iohn Taylor
- A liuing sadnes, in duty consecrated to the immortall memory of our late deceased albe-loued soueraigne lord, the peeereles paragon of princes, Iames, King of great Brittaine, France and Ireland : Who departed this life at his mannour of Theobalds, on Sunday last, the 27. of March, 1625. By Iohn Taylor
- A memorial of all the English monarchs : being in number 150. from Brute to King Iames. In heroyicall verse, by Iohn Taylor
- A memorial of all the English monarchs : being in number 151, from Brute to King Charles. In heroicall verse by Io. Taylor
- A most horrible, terrible, tollerable, termagant satyre : most fresh and newly made, and prest in print, and if it bee not lik'd, the Divells in't
- A most learned and eloquent speech : spoken (or delivered in the honourable House of commons at Westminster)
- A most learned and eloquent speech, spoken or delivered in the Honourable House of Commons at Westminster, by the most learned lawyer Miles Corbet, Esq : recorder of Great Yarmouth, and Burgess of the same, on the 31th day of July, 1647. taken in short-hand by Nocky, and Tom. Dunn, his clerks, and revised by John Tayler
- A most learned and eloquent speech, spoken or delivered in the Honourable House of Commons at Westminster, by the most learned lawyer Miles Corbet, Esq; : recorder of Great Yarmouth, and burgess of the same, on the 31th day of July, 1647.
- A new discouery by sea, with a vvherry from London to Salisbury. Or, a voyage to the West, the worst, or the best : That e're was exprest. By Iohn Taylor
- A new discouery by sea, with a vvherry from London to Salisbury. Or, a voyage to the West, the worst, or the best : That e're was exprest. By Iohn Taylor
- A pedlar and a Romish priest in a very hot discourse, full of mirth, truth, wit, folly, and plain-dealing
- A pedlar and a Romish priest in a very hot discourse, full of mirth, truth, wit, folly, and plain-dealing.
- A plea for prerogative, or, Give CƦsar his due : being the wheele of fortune turn'd round, or, the world turned topsie-turvie : wherein is described the true subjects loyalty to maintain His Majesties prerogative and priviledges of Parliament
- A plea for prerogative: or, give CƦsar his due. : Being the wheele of fortune turn'd round: or, the world turned topsie-turvie. Wherein is described the true subjects loyalty to maintain His Majesties prerogative and priviledges of Parliament. By Thorny Aylo: alias, John Taylor
- A preter-pluperfect, spick and span new nocturnall, or Mercuries weekly night-newes; : wherein the publique faith is published, and the banquet of Oxford mice described
- A preter-plvperfect spick and span new nocturnall, or Mercuries weekly night-newes : wherein the publique faith is published and the banquet of Oxford mice described
- A preter-plvperfect spick and span new nocturnall, or Mercuries weekly night-newes : wherein the publique faith is published and the banquet of Oxford mice described
- A recommendation to Mercurius Morbicus. : Together with a fair character upon his worth. To the reader. Unto the arrant'st knave that lives by bread, I send this greeting; (you may please to read) ... I may to many now seem to deface him, but when I physick take, O then, I'le grace him
- A reply as true as steele to a rusty, rayling, ridiculous, lying libell : which was lately written by an impudent unfoder'd Ironmonger and called by the name of An answer to a foolish pamphlet entituled, A swarme of sectaries and schismatiques
- A reply as true as steele to a rusty, rayling, ridiculous, lying libell : which was lately written by an impudent unfoder'd Ironmonger and called by the name of An answer to a foolish pamphlet entituled, A swarme of sectaries and schismatiques
- A reply as true as steele, to a rusty, rayling, ridiculous, lying libell; : which was lately written by an impudent unfoder'd ironmonger and called by the name of An answer to a foolish pamphlet entituled, A swarme of sectaries and schismatiques By Iohn Taylour
- A sad and deplorable loving elegy : consecrated to the living memory of his best assured friend, the generally beloved, M. Richard Wyan deceased, late his Majesties proctor for the high court of the Admiralty. Who departed this life at his house at Bryl in Buckinhamshire, on Thursday the 16. of August last. 1638
- A seasonable lecture, or a most learned oration: : disburthened from Henry VValker, a most judicious quondam iron-monger, a late pamphleteere and now (too late or too soone) a double diligent preacher. As it might be delivered in Hatcham Barne the thirtieth day of March last, stylo novo. Taken in short writing by Thorny Ailo; and now printed in words at length, and not in figures
- A seasonable lecture, or, A most learned oration : disburthened from Henry VValker, a most judicious ... iron monger : a late pamphleteere and now, too late or too soone, a double diligent preacher : as it might be delivered in Hatcham barne the thirtieth day of March last stylo novo
- A shilling or, The trauailes of twelue-pence
- A short relation of a long iourney, : made round or ovall by encompassing the principalitie of Wales, from London, through and by the counties of Middlesex and Buckingham, Berks, Oxonia, Warwick, Stafford, Chester, Flint, Denbigh, Anglesey, Carnarvan, Merioneth, Cardigan, Pembrooke, Caermarden, Glamorgan, Monmouth, Glocester, &c. This painfull circuit began on Tuesday the 13 of July last, 1652. and was ended (or both ends brought together) on Tuesday the 7. of September following, being near 600. miles. Whereunto is annexed an epitome of the famous history of Wales.
- A svvarme of sectaries and schismatiqves : wherein is discovered the strange preaching, or prating, of such as are by their trades coblers, tinkers, pedlers, weavers, sowgelders and chymney-sweepers
- A svvarme of sectaries and schismatiqves : wherein is discovered the strange preaching, or prating, of such as are by their trades coblers, tinkers, pedlers, weavers, sowgelders and chymney-sweepers
- A svvarme of sectaries, and schismatiques: : wherein is discovered the strange preaching (or prating) of such as are by their trades coblers, tinkers, pedlers, weavers, sowgelders, and chymney-sweepers. By John Taylor. The cobler preaches, and his audience are as wise as Mosse was, when he caught his mare
- A tale in a tub or, A tub lecture : as it was delivered by my-heele Mendsoale, an inspired Brownist, and a most upright translator. In a meeting house neere Bedlam, the one and twentieth of December, last, 1641. VVritten by J. T
- A tale in a tub, or, A tub lecture : as it was delivered by Mi-Heele Mendsoale, an inspired Brownist and a most upright translator in a meeting house neere Bedlam, the one and twentieth of December last, 1641
- A tale in a tub, or, A tub lecture : as it was delivered by Mi-Heele Mendsoale, an inspired Brownist and a most upright translator in a meeting house neere Bedlam, the one and twentieth of December last, 1641
- A tale in a tub, or, A tub lecture : as it was delivered by my-heele Mendsoale and inspired Brownist and a most upright translator : in a meeting house neere Bedlam the one and twentieth of December, last 1641
- A three-fold discourse betweene three neighbours, Algate, Bishopsgate and John Heyden the late Cobler of Hounsditch, a professed Brownist : whereunto is added a true relation, by way of dittie, of a lamentable fire which happened at Oxford two nights before Christ-tide last, in a religious brothers shop, knowne by the name of Iohn of all-trades
- A three-fold discourse betweene three neighbours, Algate, Bishopsgate, and John Heyden the late cobler of Hounsditch, a professed Brownist. : Whereunto is added a true relation (by way of dittie) of a lamentable fire which happened at Oxford two nights before Christ-tide last, in a religious brothers shop, knowne by the name of Iohn of all-trades
- A valorous and perillous sea-fight
- A valorous and perillous sea-fight : Fought with three Turkish ships, pirats or men of warre, on the coast of Cornewall, (or Westerne part of England) by the good ship named the Elizabeth, of Plimmouth, she being of the Burthen of 200 tuns, which fight was bravely fought, on Wednesday, the 17 of Iune last part. 1640
- A verry merry vvherry-ferry-voyage, or, Yorke for my money : sometimes perilous, sometimes quarrellous, performed with a paire of oares, by sea from London by Iohn Taylor, and Iob Pennell
- A verry merry vvherry-ferry-voyage: or Yorke for my money : sometimes perilous, sometimes quarrellous, performed with a paire of oares, by sea from London, by Iohn Taylor, and Iob Pennell. And written by I.T
- A verry merry vvherry-ferry-voyage: or Yorke for my money : sometimes perilous, sometimes quarrellous, performed with a paire of oares, by sea from London, by Iohn Taylor, and Iob Pennell. And written by I.T
- Ale ale-vated into the ale-titude : or, a learned oration before a civill assembly of ale-drinkers, between Paddington and Hogsdon, the 30. of February last, anno millimo quillimo trillimo. By John Taylor
- Ale ale-vated into the ale-titude : or, a learned oration before a civill assembly of ale-drinkers. Between Paddington and Hogsdon, the 30. of February last, anno millimo quillimo trillimo. By John Taylor
- All the vvorkes of Iohn Taylor the water-poet : Beeing sixty and three in number. Collected into one volume by the author: vvith sundry new additions corrected, reuised, and newly imprinted, 1630
- All the workes of Iohn Taylor the water-poet : Beeing [sic] sixty and three in Number
- All the works of John Taylor : the water poet
- An English-mans loue to Bohemia : with a friendly farewell to all the noble souldiers that goe from great Britaine to that honorable expedition. As also, the names of the most part of the kings, princes, dukes, marquisses, earles, bishops, and other friendly confederates, that are combined with the Bohemian part
- An English-mans loue to Bohemia : with a friendly farewell to all the noble souldiers that goe from great Britaine to that honorable expedition. As also, the names of the most part of the kings, princes, dukes, marquisses, earles, bishops, and other friendly confederates, that are combined with the Bohemian part. By Iohn Taylor
- An apology for private preaching : in which those formes are warranted or rather justified, which the maligannt sect contemne and daily by prophane pamphlets make ridiculous : viz. preaching in a tub : teaching against the backe of a chaire : instructing at a tables end : revealing in a basket : exhorting over a buttery hatch : reforming on a bad side or, indeed, any place according to inspiration, since it is knowne, the spirit moves in sundry places : whereunto is annexed, or rather conjoyned or furthermore united, or moreover knit the spirituall postures, alluding to that of musket and pike
- An apology for private preaching : in which those formes are warranted, or rather, justified, which the malignant sect contemne and daily by prophane pamphlets make ridiculous, viz., preaching in a tub, teaching against the backe of a chaire, instructing at a tables end, revealing in basket, exhorting over a buttery hatch, reforming on a bed side, or, indeed, any place, according to inspiration, since it is knowne, the spirit moves in sundry places : wherevnto is annexed, or rather conjoyned, or furthermore united, or moreover, knit, the spirituall postures alluding to that of musket and pike
- An apology for private preaching : in which those formes are warranted, or rather, justified, which the malignant sect contemne and daily by prophane pamphlets make ridiculous, viz., preaching in a tub, teaching against the backe of a chaire, instructing at a tables end, revealing in basket, exhorting over a buttery hatch, reforming on a bed side, or, indeed, any place, according to inspiration, since it is knowne, the spirit moves in sundry places : wherevnto is annexed, or rather conjoyned, or furthermore united, or moreover, knit, the spirituall postures alluding to that of musket and pike
- An apology for private preaching. : In which those formes are warranted, or rather justified, which the maligannt sect contemne, and daily by prophane pamphlets make ridiculous. (Viz.) Preaching in a tub. Teaching against the backe of a chaire. Instructing at a tables end. Revealing in a basket. Exhorting over a buttery hatch. Reforming on a bed side. Or (indeed) any place, according to inspiration (since it is knowne) the spirit moves in sundry places.) Whereunto is annexed, or rather conjoyned, or furthermore united, or moreover knit, the spirituall postures, alluding to that of musket and pike. by T.J
- An armado, or nauy, of 103. ships & other vessels, who haue the art to sayle by land, as well as by sea : morally rigd, mand, munition'd, appoynted, set forth, and victualled, with 32. sortes of ling, with other prouisions of fish & flesh
- An armado, or nauye, of 103. ships & other vessels; who haue the art to sayle by land, as well as by sea : Morrally, rigd, mand, munitiond, appoynted, set forth, and victualed, with 32. sortes of ling: with other prouisions of fish & flesh. By Iohn Taylor. The names of the ships, are in the next page
- An armado, or, a navy, of a hundred and three ships, and other vessels; who have the art to sayle by land, aswell as by sea : Morally, rig'd, man'd, munition'd, appointed, set forth, and victualled, with two and thirty sorts of ling: with other provisions of fish & flesh. By John Taylor. The names of the ships, are in the page before the description of the navie
- An arrant thiefe : whom euery man may trust in word and deed, exceeding true and iust : with a comparison betweene a thiefe and a booke
- An arrant thiefe, vvhom euery man may trust : in vvord and deed, exceeding true and iust. With a comparison betweene a thiefe and a booke. Written by Iohn Taylor
- An arrant thiefe, vvhom everie man may trust : in word & deed, exceeding true and just. With a comparison betweene a thiefe and a booke. Written by Iohn Taylor
- An honest ansvver to the late published apologie for private preaching : wherein is justly refuted their mad forms of doctrine, as, preaching in a tub, teaching against the backe of a chaire, instructing at a tables end, revealing in a basket, exhorting over a buttery hatch, reforming on a bed side : with an objection to their common plea of divine inspiration, directly, without passion, proving there is but nice distinction betwixt the brownists and papists who have bin equall disturbers of the state yet in continuall controversie one against the other : with an argument against Round-heads
- An honest answer to the late published apologie for private preaching. : Wherein, is justly refuted their mad forms of doctrine: (as.) preaching in a tub. Teaching against the backe of a chaire. Instructing at a tables end. Revealing in a basket. Exhorting over a buttery hatch. Reforming on a bed side. With an objection to their common plea of divine inspiration, directly (without passion) proving there is but nice distinction betwixt the brownists and papists, who have bin equall disturbers of the state yet in continuall controversie one against the other. With an argument against Round-heads. by T.J
- An humble desired union betweene prerogative and priviledge : shewing, that if one draw too hard one way, and the other another, the whole common-wealth must be in danger to be pull'd in sunder
- An humble desired union betweene prerogative and priviledge. : Shewing, that if one draw too hard one way, and the other another, the whole common-wealth must be in danger to be pull'd in sunder
- AquamusƦ: or, Cacafogo, cacadƦmon, Captain George Wither wrung in the withers : Being a short lashing satyre, wherein the juggling rebell is compendiously finely firked and jerked, for his late railing pamphlet against the King and state, called Campo-musƦ
- AquamusƦ: or, Cacafogo, cacadƦmon, Captain George Wither wrung in the withers : Being a short lashing satyre, wherein the juggling rebell is compendiously finely firked and jerked, for his late railing pamphlet against the King and state, called Campo-musƦ. By John Taylor
- AquamusƦ: or, Cacafogo, cacadƦmon, Captain George Wither wrung in the withers. : Being a short lashing satyre, wherein the juggling rebell is compendiously finely firked and jerked, for his late railing pamphlet against the King and state, called Campo-musƦ. By John Taylor
- Bull, beare, and horse, cut, curtaile, and longtaile. VVith tales, and tales of buls, clenches, and flashes. As also here and there a touch of our beare-garden-sport; with the second part of the merry conceits of wit and mirth. Together with the names of all the bulls and beares
- Christian admonitions against the tvvo fearefull sinnes of cursing and swearing : most fit to be set vp in euery house, that the grieuousnesse of those sinnes may be both remembred, and auoyded, whereby the hatred of them may possesse the heart of euery Christian
- Christian admonitions against the tvvo fearefull sinnes of cursing and swearing : most fit to be set vp in euery house, that the grieuousnesse of those sinnes may be both remembred, and auoyded, whereby the hatred of them may possesse the heart of euery Christian
- Christmas in & out : or, our Lord & Saviour Christs birth-day
- Christmas in & out, or, Our Lord & Saviour Christs birth-day : to the reader ...
- Cornu-copia, or, Roome for a ram-head : wherein is described the dignity of the ram-head above the round-head or rattle-head
- Cornu-copia, or, Roome for a ram-head. : Wherein is described the dignity of the ram-head above the round-head, or rattle-head
- Crop-eare curried, or, Tom Nash his ghost, : declaring the pruining of Prinnes two last parricidicall pamphlets, being 92 sheets in quarto, wherein the one of them he stretch'd the soveraigne power of Parliaments; in the other, his new-found way of opening the counterfeit Great Seale. Wherein by a short survey and ani-mad-versions of some of his falsities, fooleries, non-sense, blasphemies, forreigne and domesticke, uncivill, civill treasons, seditions, incitations, and precontrivements, in mustering, rallying, training and leading forth into publique so many ensignes of examples of old reviv'd rebells, or new devised chimeraes. With a strange prophecy, reported to be Merlins, or Nimshag's the Gymnosophist, and (by some authours) it is said to be the famous witch of Endor's. Runton, pollimunton plumpizminoi papperphandico.
- Differing worships, or, The oddes, betweene some knights service and God's : Or Tom Nash his ghost, (the old Martin queller) newly rous'd, and is come to chide and take order with nonconformists, schismatiques, separatists, and scandalous libellers. VVherein their abusive opinions are manifested, their jeeres mildly retorted, and their unmannerly manners admonished. By Iohn Taylor
- Divers crabtree lectures : Expressing the severall languages that shrews read to their husbands, either at morning, noone, or night. With a pleasant relation of a shrewes Munday, and shrewes Tuesday, and why they were so called. Also a lecture betweene a pedler and his wife in the canting language. With a new tricke to tame a shrew
- Drinke and vvelcome: or The famous historie of the most part of drinks, in use now in the kingdomes of Great Brittaine and Ireland : with an especiall declaration of the potency, vertue, and operation of our English ale. With a description of all sorts of waters, from the ocean sea, to the teares of a woman. As also, the causes of all sorts of weather, faire or foule ... Compiled first in the high Dutch tongue, by the painefull and industrious Huldricke Van Speagle, a grammaticall brewer of Lubeck, and now most learnedly enlarged, amplified, and translated into English prose and verse. By Iohn Taylor
- Englands comfort and Londons ioy : expressed in the royall triumphant and magnificent entertainment of our dread soveraigne Lord, King Charles
- Englands comfort and Londons ioy : expressed in the royall triumphant and magnificent entertainment of our dread soveraigne Lord, King Charles ..
- Englands comfort and Londons joy : expressed in the royall triumphant, and magnificent entertainment of our dread Soveraigne Lord, King Charles, at his blessed and safe returne from Scotland on Thursday the 25 of Novem., 1641, by the Right Honourable Richard Gurney, Esquire, Lord Major, with the Right Worshipfull Knights, and Aldermen, Sheriffes and Companies of this famous City of London : together with the manner and forme how the state is to bee observed and performed by the severall companies on horse-backe and foot for the conducting of His Majesite, the Queene, the Prince and all the royal progeny, to the Guild Hall, London, to dinner and from thence to His Majesties palace at White Hall : also the severall speeches and other verses presented to His Sacred Person at that time
- Epigrammes : vvritten on purpose to be read: with a proviso, that they may be understood by the reader; being ninety in number: besides, two new made satyres that attend them. By John Taylor, at the signe of the Poets Head, in PhÅnix Alley, neare the middle of Long-Aker, or Covent Garden
- Faire and fowle vveather: or a sea and land storme : betweene two calmes. With an apologie in defense of the painefull life, and needfull vse of sailors. By Iohn Tailor
- For the sacred memoriall of the great, noble, and ancient example of vertue and honour, the illustrious and welbeloued Lord, Charles Howard, Earle of Nottingham : iustice in Eyre of all His Maiesties forests, parks, and chases on this side Trent, Knight of the Honourable Order of the Garter, and one of the lords of His Maiesties most Honourable Priuy Councell : who departed this life at his mannour of Haleing in Surrey on Thursday the 14 of December, 1624, and was buried at Rigate, amongst his honourable ancestors, the 20 of December last, 1624
- Great Britaine, all in blacke : For the incomparable losse of Henry, our late worthy prince
- Great Britaine, all in blacke : For the incomparable losse of Henry, our late worthy prince. By Iohn Taylor
- Great Britaine, all in blacke : for the incomparable losse of Henry, our late worthy prince
- Heads of all fashions : being a plain defection or definition of diverse and sundry sorts of heads, butting, jetting or pointing at vulgar opinion : and allegorically shewing the diversities of religion in these distempered times : now very lately written, since calves-heads came in season
- Heads of all fashions, : being, a plain desection or definition of diverse and sundry sorts of heads, butting, jetting, or pointing at vulgar opinion. And allegorically shewing the diversities of religion in these distempered times. Now very lately written, since calves-heads came in season
- Heauens blessing, and earths ioy. Or a true relation, of the supposed sea-fights & fire-workes, as were accomplished, before the royall celebration, of the al-beloved mariage, of the two peerlesse paragons of Christendome, Fredericke & Elizabeth : With triumphall encomiasticke verses, consecrated to the immortall memory of those happy and blessed nuptials. By Iohn Taylor,
- Heav'n's blessing and Earth's joy, or, A true relation of the supposed sea-fights and fire-workes
- Iack a Lent his beginning and entertainment : with the many pranks of his gentleman-vsher Shroue Tuesday that goes before him, and his foot-man Hunger attending. With new additions, dedicated both to the butchers farewell and the fishmongers entrance: written to choake melancholy, and to feed mirth. By Iohn Tailor
- Iohn Taylor being yet unhanged sends greeting to Iohn Booker that hanged him lately in a picture, in a traiterous, slanderous, and foolish London pamphlet called A cable-rope double-twisted
- Iohn Taylors last voyage, and adventure, : performed from the twentieth of Iuly last 1641. to the tenth of September following. In which time he past, with a scullers boate from the citie of London, to the cities and townes of Oxford, Gloucester, Shrewesbury, Bristoll, Bathe, Monmouth and Hereford. The manner of his passages and entertainement to and fro, truly described. With a short touch of some wandring and some fixed scismatiques, such as are Brownist, Anabaptists, famalies, humorists and foolists, which the authour found in many places of his voyage and iourney.
- Iohn Taylors manifestation and iust vindication against Iosua Church : his exclamation, with a true relation of Church his generation, with his soule combination, with a pretence of reformation, of his wrong'd occupation, hath brought all out of fashion
- Iohn Taylors manifestation and ivst vindication against Iosva Chvrch his exclamation : with a trve relation of Church his generation, with his soule combination, with a pretence of reformation of his wrong'd occupation, hath brought all out of fashion
- John Taylors vvandering, to see the vvonders of the vvest. : How he travelled neere 600. miles, from London to the Mount in Cornwall, and beyond the Mount, to the Lands end, and home againe. Dedicated to all his loving friends, and free minded benefactors. In these dangerous dayes for rich men, and miserable times for the poore servants of the late King, (whereof I was one, 45. yeers to his royall father and himself) I thought it needful to take some course to make use of some friends, and devise a painfull way for my subsistence; which was the journey I have past, and this booke heere present; for which purpose I gave out many of these following bills, to which neere 3000. gentlemen and others, have kindly subscribed, to give me a reasonable reward
- Laugh, and be fat. [: or a commentary vpon th Odcombyan blanket].
- Love one another, a tvb lectver : preached at Watford in Hartfordshire at a conventicle on the 25 of December last, being Christmas day
- Love one another, a tvb lectver : preached at Watford in Hartfordshire at a conventicle on the 25 of December last, being Christmas day
- Love one another: a tub lecture, : preached at Watford in Hartfordshire at a conventicle on the 25. of December last, being Christmas day, by John Alexander, a joyner. His text was taken out of the epistle of Saint Iohn, and himselfe was taken by Captaine Bird, Lieutenant Rock, and other officers, from whom he received such usage as his doctrine did deserve; for which the said officers were commended by the Parliament
- Lvcifers lacky, or The devils new creature : being the true character of a dissembling Brownist whose life is hypocriticall, instructions schismaticall thoughts dangerous, actions malicious and opinions impious : with the relation of their repulse from the Parliament house upon Thursday the 4 of December : and the reason why constables had warrants in the city and liberties of London to take up men to guard the Parliament-House upon Friday the 12 of December, 1641
- Mad fashions, od fashions, all out fashions, or, The emblems of these distracted times
- Mad fashions, od fashions, all out of fashions, or, The emblems of these distracted times.
- Mad verse, sad verse, glad verse and bad verse : cut out, and slenderly sticht together
- Mad verse, sad verse, glad verse and bad verse.
- Mad verse, sad verse, glad verse and bad verse. Cut out, and slenderly sticht together, by John Taylor. Who bids the reader either to like or dislike them, to commend them, or come mend them
- Mercurius Aquaticus, or, The vvater-poets ansvver to all that hath or shall be writ by Mercurius Britanicus. Ex omni ligno non fit Mercurius
- Mercurius Nonsencicus, written for the vse of the simple vnderstander
- Mercurius infernalis; or Orderlesse orders, votes, ordinances, and commands from Hell : established by a close committee of the Divell and his angells. Done neither by day, night, nor order, because neither time, place, person or order is to be observed in the infernall kingdome. The copy of this was found in a chink or cranny of a wall in Frier-Bacons study, By John Taylor
- Mercvrivs Aqvaticvs, or, The vvater-poets ansvver to all that hath or shall be writ by Mercvrivs Britanicvs
- Misselanies, or, Fifty years gathering out of sundry authors in prose and verse : being the studious readings, painful collections, and some of them are the composings of the writer and publisher heerof
- Most curious Mercurius Brittanicus, alias Sathanicus, answer'd, cuff'd, cudgell'd, and clapper-claude ..
- Most curious Mercurius Brittanicus, alias Sathanicus, answer'd, cuff'd, cudgell'd, and clapper-claude ...
- New preachers nevv : Greene the feltmaker, Sencer the horse rubber, Quartermine the brewers Clarke with some few others that are might sticklers in this new kinde of talking trade, which many ignorant coxcomber call preaching : whereunto is added the last tumult in Fleetstreet raised by the disorderly preachment, pratings, and pratling of Mr. Barebones the leather-seller and Mr. Greene the felt-maker on Sunday last the 19 of Decemb
- New preachers, nevv. : Greene the feltmaker, Spencer the horserubber, Quartermine the brewers Clarke, with some few others, that are mighty sticklers in this new kinde of talking trade, which many ignorant coxcombes call preaching. Whereunto is added the last tumult in Fleetstreet, raised by the disorderly preachment, pratings, and pratling of Mr. Barebones the leather-seller, and Mr. Greene the felt-maker, on Sunday last the 19. of Decemb
- Newes and strange newes from St. Christophers of a tempestuous spirit, which is called by the Indians a hurry-cano or whirlewind : Which hapneth in many of those ilands of America or the West-Indies, as it did in August last, about the 5. day. 1638. Blowing downe houses, tearing up trees by the rootes, and it did puffe men up from the earth, as they had beene feathers, killing divers men. Whereunto is added the true and last relation of the dreadfull accident which hapned at Withicombe in Devonshire the 21. of October last past
- Newes and strange newes from St. Christophers of a tempestuous spirit, which is called by the Indians a hurry-cano or whirlewind : Which hapneth in many of those ilands of America or the West-Indies, as it did in August last, about the 5. day. 1638. Blowing downe houses, tearing up trees by the rootes, and it did puffe men up from the earth, as they had beene feathers, killing divers men. Whereunto is added the true and last relation of the dreadfull accident which hapned at Withicombe in Devonshire the 21. of October last past
- No Mercurius Aulicus; : but some merry flashes of intelligence, with the pretended Parliaments forces besiedging of Oxford foure miles off, and the terrible taking in of a mill, instead of the King and citie. Also the breaking of Booker, the asse-tronomicall London figure-flinger, his perfidious prediction failing, and his great conjunction of Saturne and Iupiter dislocated.
- Nonsence upon sence, or, Sence, upon nonsence : chuse you either or neither : written upon white paper, in a browne study, betwixt Lammas day and Cambridge, in the yeare aforesayd
- Odcombs complaint: or Coriats funerall epicedium : or death-song, vpon his late reported drowning. With his epitaph in the Barmuda, and Utopian tongues. And translated into English by Iohn Taylor
- Old nevves newly revived, or, The discovery of all occurences happened since the beginning of the Parliament : as the confusion of patent the deputies death Canterburies imprisonment, secretary Windebank L. Finob, doctor Roane, Sir Iohn Sucklin and his associates flight the fall of wines, the desolation of doctors commons the misery of the papists, Judge Barckleyes imprisonment and the ruine of Alderman Abels monopoly : most exactly compiled in a short discourse between Mr. Inquiseive a countrey gentleman and Master Intelligencer a newes monger
- Old nevves newly revived: or, the discovery of all occurrences happened since the beginning of the Parliament: : as, the confusion of patents, the deputies death, Canterburies imprisonment, secretary Windebank, L. Finch, Doctor Roane, Sir Iohn Sucklin and his associates flight, the fall of wines, the desolation of doctors commons, the misery of the papists, Iudge Barckleyes imprisonment, and the ruine of Alderman Abels monopoly. Most exactly compiled in a short discourse between Mr. Inquisitive, a countrey gentleman, and Master Intelligencer, a newes-monger
- Oxford besiedged : surprised, taken, and pittifully entred on Munday the second of Iune last, 1645. by the valiant forces of the London and Westminster Parliament. Written, by a trusty wellwisher of theirs, who sted-fastly hopes, and heartily prayes, they may have the like prosperous successe in all their future undertakings. The writers name and surname begins with the 9th letter of the Greeke alphabet, io-ta
- Part of this summers travels, or News from hell, Hull, and Hallifax, from York, Linne, Leicester, Chester, Coventry, Lichfield, Nottingham, and the Divells Ars a peake : With many pleasant passages, worthy your observation and reading. By Iohn Taylor
- Peace, peace, and we shall be quiet. Or, Monarchie asserted, the Kings right vindicated, : and the present government of the church proved to be one and the same with that in the primitive times. All which assertions are composed for the regulating of distracted minds, and satisfying of tender consciences, or misled in their opinions.
- Prince Charles his vvelcome from Spaine: : who landed at Portsmouth on Sunday the fift of October, and came safely to London on Munday the sixt of the same, 1623. Wtih the triumphs of London for the same his happy ariuall. And the relation of such townes as are situate in the wayes to take poste-horse at, from the city of London to Douer: and from Calais through all France and Spaine, to Madrid, to the Spanish court.
- Ranters of both sexes : male and female
- Ranters of both sexes, male and female: : being thirteen or more, taken and imprisoned in the gate-house at Westminster, and in the new-prison at Clerken Well. Wherein John Robins doth declare himself to be the great God of Heaven, and the great deliverer, and that his wife is with childe with Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the world. With divers other blasphemous opinions, here truely set forth. Maintained before the Right VVorshipful Justice Whittacre, & Justice Hubbert.
- Rare physick for the chvrch sick of an ague : prescribing excellent and most accurate physick to be given to the church which has been sicke a long time : with the names of every particular disease and the manner how she contracted them and by what meanes as also prescripts to remedy the same : humbly commended to the Parliament, those admirable physicians of the church and state
- Rebells anathematized, and anatomized: or A satyricall salutation to the rabble of seditious, pestiferous pulpit-praters, : with their brethren the weekly libellers, railers, and revilers, Mercurius Britannicus, with the rest of that sathanicall fraternity.
- Religions enemies : with a brief and ingenious relation as by Anabaptists, Brownists, Papists, Familists, Atheists and Foolists sawcily presuming to tosse religion in a blanquet
- Religions enemies : with a brief and ingenious relation, as by Anabaptists, brownists, papists, familists, atheists and foolists, sawcily presuming to tosse religion in a blanquet
- Sir Gregory Nonsence his newes from no place : Written on purpose, with much study to no end, plentifully stored with want of wit, learning, iudgement, rime and reason, and may seeme very fitly for the vnderstanding of nobody. Toyte, Puncton, Ghemorah, Molushque, Kaycapepson. This is the worke of the authors, without borrowing or stealing from others. By Iohn Taylor
- Some small and simple reasons delivered in a hollow-tree in Waltham Forrest in a lecture on the 33. of March last
- Some small and simple reasons, delivered in a hollow-tree, iu [sic] Waltham Forrest, in a lecture, on the 33. of March last.
- St. Hillaries teares shed upon all professions from the judge to the petty fogger : from the spruce dames of exchange to the durty walking fishmongers : from the coven-garden lady of iniquity to the turne-bal-streete-trull and indeed from the tower-staires to Westminster ferry : for want of a stirring midsomer terme this yeare of disasters, 1642
- St. Hillaries teares. : Shed upon. all professions, from the judge to the petty fogger. From the spruce dames of exchange, to the durty walking fishmongers. From the Coven-Garden lady of iniquity, to the Turne-bal-streete-Trull, and indeed from the tower-staires to Westminster ferry, for want of a stirring midsomer terme, this yeare of disasters, 1642. Written by one of his secretaries that had nothing else to doe
- Stripping, vvhipping, and pumping. Or, The five mad shavers of Drury-Lane : strangely acted, and truely related. Done in the period, latter end, tayle, or rumpe of the dogged dogge-dayes, last past, August. 1638. Together with the names of the severall parties which were actors in this foule businesse
- SuperbiƦ flagellum, or, The vvhip of pride. By Iohn Taylor
- Tailors travels from London to the Isle of VVight, vvith his returne, and occasion of his iourney
- Tailors travels from London to the Isle of Wight : with his returne, and occasion of his iourney
- Taylor his trauels from the citty of London in England, to the citty of Prague in Bohemia : the manner of his abode there three weekes, his observations there, and his returne from thence : how he past 600 miles downe the river of Elue, through Bohemia, Saxony, Anhalt, the bishoprick of Magdeburge, Brandenberge, Hamburgh, and so to England : with many relations worthy of note
- Taylor his trauels: from the citty of London in England, to the citty of Prague in Bohemia : The manner of his abode there three weekes, his obseruations there, and his returne from thence: how he past 600 miles downe the riuer of Elue, through Bohemia, Saxony, Anhalt, the bishoprick of Madeberge, Brandenberge, Hamburgh, and so to England. With many relations worthy of note. By Iohn Taylor
- Taylor his trauels: from the citty of London in England, to the citty of Prague in Bohemia : The manner of his abode there three weekes, his obseruations there, and his returne from thence: how he past 600 miles downe the riuer of Elue, through Bohemia, Saxony, Anhalt, the bishoprick of Madeberge, Brandenberge, Hamburgh, and so to England. With many relations worthy of note. By Iohn Taylor
- Taylor on Thame Isis: or The description of the tvvo famous riuers of Thame and Isis, who being conioyned or combined together, are called Thamisis, or Thames : With all the flats, shoares, shelues, sands, weares, stops, riuers, brooks, bournes, streames, rills, riuolets, streamelets, creeks, and whatsoeuer helps the said riuers haue, from their springs or heads, to their falls into the ocean. As also a discouery of the hinderances which doe impeache the passage of boats and barges, betwixt the famous Vniuersity of Oxford, and the city of London
- Taylor's arithmeticke, from one to twelve
- Taylor's motto : Et habeo, et careo, et curo
- Taylors Vrania, or His heauenly muse : With a briefe narration of the thirteene sieges, and sixe sackings of the famous cittie of Ierusalem. Their miseries of warre, plague, and famine, (during their last siege by Vespasian and his son Titus.) In heroicall verse compendiously described
- Taylors arithmetick from one to tvvelve : with a sollid discourse betweene yesterday, to-morrow, to-day, & a lover
- Taylors arithmeticke, from one to twelve
- Taylors farevvell, to the Tovver-bottles
- Taylors feast : contayning twenty-seaven dishes of meate, without bread, drinke, meate, fruite, flesh, fish, sawce, sallats, or sweet-meats, only a good stomacke, &c. Being full of variety and witty mirth. By John Taylor
- Taylors pastorall : being both historicall and satyricall: or the noble antiquitie of shepheards, with the profitable vse of sheepe: with a small touch of a scabbed sheepe, and a caueat against that infection
- Taylors revenge, or, The rymer William Fennor firkt, feritted, and finely fetcht ouer the coales : wherein his riming raggamuffin rascallity, without partiallity, or feare of principallity, is anagramatized, anotomized, & stigmatized : the occasion of vvhich inuectiue, is breifly set dovvne in the preface to the reader
- Taylors travels and circular perambulation, through, and by more then thirty times twelve signes of the Zodiack, of the famous cities of London and Westminster : With the honour and worthinesse of the vine, the vintage, the wine, and the vintoner; with an alphabeticall description, of all the taverne signes in the cities, suburbs, and liberties aforesaid, and significant epigrams upon the said severall signes. Written by Iohn Taylor
- Taylors vvater-worke: or the scullers trauels, from Tiber to Thames : with his boat laden with a hotch-potch, or gallimawfrey of sonnets, satyres, and epigrams. With an inkhorne disputation betwixt a lawyer and a poet: and a quarterne of new catcht epigrames, caught the last fishing-tide: together with an addition of pastorall equiuocques, or the complaint of a shepheard
Contributor of
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No enriched resources found
- Roger the Canterburian, that cannot say grace for his meat, with a low-crown'd hat before his face. Or the character of a prelaticall man affecting great heighths. Newly written, by G.T
- Roger the Caterburian that cannot say grace for his meat, with a low-crown'd hat before his face, or, The character of a prelaticall man affecting heighths
- Saint Hillaries teares, shed upon all professions, from the iudge to the petty fogger, from the spruce dames of the exchange, to the durty walking fishmongers, from the Coven-Garden lady of iniquity, to the Turnebal-Streete-trull, and indeed, from the Tower-stairs to Westminster-Ferry, for want of a stirring midsomer terme, this yeare of disasters, 1642
- Salvator mundi
- The aprentices [sic] advice to the XII bishops lately accused of high treason by the honourable assemblies of both Houses : with our friendly admonition, to take heed how they falsely accuse those innocent worthies in Parliament, whose lives are more deare to us then all the 25 prelates, though they were hang'd together
- Fill gut, & pinch belly: : One being fat with eating good men, the other leane for want of good women
- The aprentices advice to the XII. bishops lately accused of high treason, by the honourable assemblies of both Houses. : With our friendly admonition, to take heed how they falsely accuse those innocent worthies in Parliament, whose lives are more deare to us then all the 25. prelates, though they were hang'd together
- Grand Plutoes remonstrance, or, The Devill horn-mad at Roundheads and Brownists. : Wherein his Hellish Maiestie (by advice of his great counsell, Eacus, Minos & Radamanthus, with his beloved brethren, Agdistis, Beliall, Incubus & Succubus) is pleased to declare, 1. How far he differs from Round-head, rattle-head, or prickeare. 2. His copulation with a holy sister. 3. His decre [sic] affection to romish Catholikes, and hate to Protestants. 4. His oration to the rebells
- A letter from Rhoan in France
- A letter from Rhoan in France
- Grand plvtoes remonstrance, or, The devill horn-mad at Roundheads and Brownists : wherein His hellish Maiestie, by advice of his great counsell, Eacus, Minos & Radamanthus, with his beloved brethren, agdistis, beliall, incubus & succubus : is pleased to declare 1. how far he differs from round-head, rattle-head or prickeare : 2. his copulation with a Holy Sister : 3. his decre affection to Romish Catholikes and hate to Protestants : 4. his oration to the rebells
- The armies letanie, : imploring the blessing of God on the present proceedings of the armie.
- The armies letanie, imploring the blessing of God on the present proceedings of the armie
- The armies letanie, imploring the blessing of God on the present proceedings of the armie
- The divisions of the Church of England : crept in at XV. several doores by divers, each having members very earnest in the seeking to have such a church and discipline here established, as is agreeable with their religion. For bishops 1 Papists. 2. Arians. 3. Arminians. 4. Canonists. Against Bishops. 5. Athests. 6. Adamites. 7. Familists. 8. Anabapists. 9. Luthetans. 10. Seperatists. 11. Brownists. 12. Puritans. Betwixt both. Novelists. Time-servers. Each in their true colours without any dissimulation in the world
- The high and mightie commendation of the vertue of a pot of good ale. : Full of wit without offence, of mirth without obscenitie, of pleasure without scurrilitie, and of good content without distaste. Whereunto is added the valiant battell fought betweene the Norfolk cock and the Wisbich cock. written by Thomas Randall
- Tom Tel-Troths come to town againe with his humors : vnder which humour is contained these particulars : viz. A rope for a parat, a bable for a foole, a springe for a woodcocke, and a snare for a fox : collected and published to make honest and wise men merry, or fooles and knaves mad
- I Marry Sir, heere is nevves indeed : being the copie of a letter which the Devil sent to the Pope of Rome, and kept in the conclave of cardinals ever since the yeare 1623 : and now published for the helpe and comfort of all romish Catholickes in this time of their great necessity to incourage them : brought over from Rome by Charon the ferriman, the last Jesuiticall-spring-tide of all their hellish practices to confound this kingdome of England
- I marry sir, Heere is newes indeed. : Being the copie of a letter which the Devil sent to the Pope of Rome, and kept in the conclave of cardinals ever since the yeare 1623. and now published for the helpe and comfort of all Romish Catholickes in this time of their great necessity, to incourage them. Brought over from Rome by Charon the ferriman the last Jesuiticall-spring-tide of all their hellish practices to confound this kingdome of England
- Tom Tel-Troths come to town againe with his humors. : Vnder which humour is contained these particulars: viz. A rope for a parat. A bable for a foole. A springe for a woodcocke. And a snare for a fox. Collected and published to make honest and wise men merry, or fooles and knaves mad
- The resolution of the Round-heads, to pull downe Cheap-side Crosse : Being a zealous declaration of the grievances wherewith their little wits are consumed to destruction. And what things they in their wisdome (yet left them) conceive fit to bee reformed. Also the answer to the rattle-heads, concerning their fictionate resolutions of the Round-heads. Wherein is explained every particular therein contained against them, with many godly counsells to Doctor Little-wit: the composer of their former scurrilous, and illiterate pamphlet
- A preparative to studie: or, The vertue of sackĀ·
- The coaches ouerthrow. Or, A ioviall exaltation of divers tradesmen, and others, for the suppression of troublesome hackney coaches : To the tune of, Old King Harry
- The coaches ouerthrow. Or, A ioviall exaltation of divers tradesmen, and others, for the suppression of troublesome hackney coaches. : To the tune of, Old King Harry
- Verbum sempiternum
- The friers lamenting, for his not repenting. : Being a relation of the life and death of Francis Colewort a frier, who related a little before his death a threefold plot of treason. With his conversion to the Protestant religion, at Hungerford in Barkshire
- Lucifers lacky, : or, the Devils new creature. Being the true character of a dissembling Brownist, whose life is hypocriticall, instructions schismaticall, thoughts dangerous, actions malicious, and opinions impious. With the relation of their repulse from the Parliament house upon Thursday the 4. of December and the reason why constables had warrants in the city and liberties of London to take up men to guard the Parliament house upon Friday the 12. of December, 1641
- A second message to Mr. Willam Lavd late Archbishop of Canterbury, now prisoner in the Tower : in the behalfe of Mercurie. Together with a postscript to the author of that foolish and ridiculous answer to Mercury
- The womens sharpe revenge: or an answer to Sir Seldome Sober that writ those railing pamphelets called the Iuniper and Crabtree lectures, &c. : Being a sound reply and a full confutation of those bookes: with an apology in this case for the defence of us women. Performed by Mary Tattle-well, and Ioane Hit-him-home, spinsters
- Tom Nash his ghost. : To the three scurvy fellowes of the upstart family of the snufflers, rufflers and shufflers; the thrice treble-troublesome scufflers in the church and state, the onely lay ecclesi-ass, I call generallissimo's. Being like Jobs 3. comforters, or the churches 3. anti-disciples, the clergies 3. persecuters, the states 3. hors-leeches, the divels 3. chaplaines; namely, the Anabaptist, the Libertine, and the Brownist. Written by Thomas Nash his ghost, with pap with a hatchet, a little revived since the 30. yeare of the late Qu. Elizabeths reigne when Martin Mar-Prelate was as mad as any of his tub-men are now
- Mercuries message defended against the vain, foolish, simple, and absurd cavils of Thomas Herbert a ridiculous bullad-maker : wherein his witlesse answers are clearly consuted : himselfe found guilty of hupocrisie : catcht broaching of popery : condemned by his owne words : and here and there for his impudent
- Mercuries message defended against the vain, foolish, simple, and absurd cavils of Thomas Herbert a ridiculous bullad-maker : wherein his witlesse answers are clearly consuted : himselfe found guilty of hupocrisie : catcht broaching of popery : condemned by his owne words : and here and there for his impudent faucinesse jerkt with the rod of correction to teach him more manners when he writes again
- Mercuries message defended, against the vain, foolish, simple, and absurd cavils of Thomas Herbert a ridiculous ballad-maker. : Wherein, his witlesse answers are clearly confuted, himselfe found guilty of hypocrisie, catcht broaching of popery, condemned by his owne words, and here and there for his impudent saucinesse jerkt with the rod of correction, to teach him more manners when he writes again. By the author of the said Mercuries message
- The Bible
- Verbum sempiternum[.]
- The decoy duck: : together with the discovery of the knot in the dragons tayle called &c
- Mercurius melancholicus, for King Charles the Second. : Against those bloody usurpers, tyrants, and traytors, of the juncto and army; communicating impartially, their unparalel'd proceedings, the variety of humors, and truth of affaires from all parts
- Mercurius melancholicus, or, Newes from Westminster and other parts
- Mercurius pacificus : Impartially communicating unto the Common-wealth of England the passages in the honourable House of Commons, as also in the army
- Mercurius pacificus, his lectures of concord seasonably read to our destructive discords, : from smal [sic] sparks to greatflames [sic], now in hope to be quencht by a treaty of peace
- Mercurius pacificus. : With a diligent search and inquiry for peace
- Ad populum, or, A lecture to the people : with a satyr against separatists
- Ad populum, or, A lecture to the people : with a satyr against separatists
- Ad popvlvm, or, A lecture to the people
- Ad popvlvm, or, A lecture to the people
- Ad popvlvm, or, A lecture to the people
- Ad popvlvm, or, A lecture to the people : with a satyr against separatists
- The Brownists synagogue : or A late discovery of their conventicles, assemblies; and places of meeting, where they preach, and the manner of their praying and preaching. With a relation of the names, places; and doctrines of those which doe commonly preach. The chiefe of which are these. Greene, the feltmaker. Marler, the buttonmaker. Spencer, the coachman. Rogers the glover. Which sect is much increased of late within this city
- The devills white boyes, or, A mixture of malicious malignants : with their much evill and manifold practises against the kingdome and Parliament : vvith a bottomlesse sack-full of knavery, popery, prelacy, policy, trechery, malignant trumpery, conspiracies, and cruelties, filled to the top by the malignants : laid on the shoulders of time and now by time emptied forth : and powred out to shew the truth and shame the Devill
- Mr Thomas Coriat to his friends in England sendeth greeting : from Agra the capitall city of the dominion of the great Mogoll in the Easterne India, the last of October, 1616. Thy trauels and thy glory to ennamell, with fame we mount thee on the lofty cammell; ...
- Mr Thomas Coriat to his friends in England sendeth greeting : from Agra the capitall city of the dominion of the great Mogoll in the Easterne India, the last of October, 1616. Thy trauels and thy glory to ennamell, with fame we mount thee on the lofty cammell; ...
- The Cities farevvell to the Parliament
- An Exact description of Prince Ruperts malignant she-monkey, a great delinquent : having approved her selfe a better servant then his white dog called Boy : laid open in three particulars 1. what she is in her owne-shape, 2. what she doth figuratively signifie, 3. her malignant tricks and qualities
- An Exact description of a Roundhead and a long-head shag-poll : taken our [sic] of the purest antiquities and records
- An Exact description of a Roundhead and a long-head shag-poll : taken our [sic] of the purest antiquities and records ..
- The Decoy duck : together with the discovery of the knot in the dragons tayle called &c
- The devills white boyes: : or, A mixture of malicious malignants, with their much evill, and manifold practises against the kingdome and Parliament. VVith a bottomlesse sack-full of knavery, popery, prelacy, policy, trechery, malignant trumpery, conspiracies, and cruelties, filled to the top by the malignants, laid on the shoulders of time, and now by time emptied forth, and powred out, to shew the truth, and shame the Devill. Time now at the last poures out much knavery. The Devill holds down fast to hinder the discovery. Malignants are the Divells agents still, the sack is England, which they strive to fil with misery and mischief, and this sack full stufft, is laid upon times aged back; time poures it out now in an angry mood, that all their knaveries may be understood
- A Description of the Round-head and rattle-head
- A Preparative to studie, or, The vertue of sack
- A Preparative to studie, or, The vertue of sack
- A Second message to Mr. Willam Lavd late Archbishop of Canterbury, now prisoner in the Tower, in the behalfe of Mercurie : together with a postscript to the author of that foolish and ridiculous answer to Mercury
- The Divisions of the Church of England crept in at XV several doores by divers : each having members very earnest in the seeking to have such a church and discipline here established as is agreeable with their religion : for bishops 1. Papists, 2. Arians, 3. Arminians, 4. Canonists against bishops, 5. Athests, 6. Adamites, 7. Familists, 8. Anabapists, 9. Luthetans, 10. Separatists, 11. Brownists 12. Puritans, betwixt both novelists, time-servers : each in their true colours without any dissimulation in the world
- The Divisions of the Church of England crept in at XV several doores by divers : each having members very earnest in the seeking to have such a church and discipline here established as is agreeable with their religion : for bishops 1. Papists, 2. Arians, 3. Arminians, 4. Canonists against bishops, 5. Athests, 6. Adamites, 7. Familists, 8. Anabapists, 9. Luthetans, 10. Separatists, 11. Brownists, 12. Puritans, betwixt both novelists, time-servers : each in their true colours without any dissimulation in the world
- The Dolphins danger and deliuerance : being a ship of 220. tunne hauing in her but 36. men and 2. boyes, who were on the 12. of Ianuary 1616. set vpon by 6. men of warre of the Turkes hauing at the least 1500. men in them : who fought with them 5. houres and a halfe, yet to the glory of God and the honor of our English nation, both shippe and goods safely brought vp the Riuer of Thames and deliuered
- The Dolphins danger and deliuerance : being a ship of 220. tunne hauing in her but 36. men and 2. boyes, who were on the 12. of Ianuary 1616. set vpon by 6. men of warre of the Turkes hauing at the least 1500. men in them : who fought with them 5. houres and a halfe, yet to the glory of God and the honor of our English nation, both shippe and goods safely brought vp the Riuer of Thames and deliuered
- The Friers lamenting, for his not repenting : being a relation of the life and death of Francis Colewort a frier, who related a little before his death a threefold plot of treason : with his conversion to the Protestant religion, at Hungerford in Barkshire
- The Irish footman's poetry, or, George the rvnner against Henry the walker, in defence of Iohn the Swimmer : being a sur-rejoinder to the rejoinder of the rusty ironmonger who endeavored to defile the cleare streames of the water-poet's Helicon
- The Irish footman's poetry, or, George the rvnner against Henry the walker, in defence of Iohn the Swimmer : being a sur-rejoinder to the rejoinder of the rusty ironmonger who endeavored to defile the cleare streames of the water-poet's Helicon
- An exact description of Prince Ruperts malignant she-monkey, a great delinquent: : Having approved her selfe a better servant, then his white dog called Boy. Laid open in three particulars: 1. What she is in her owne shape. 2. What she doth figuratively signifie. 3. Her malignant tricks and qualities
- The discovery of a swarme of seperatists, : or, a leathersellers sermon. Being a most true and exact relation of the tumultuous combustion in Fleet-street last Sabboth day being the 29. of Decem. truly describing how Burboon a letherseller had a conventicle of Brownists met at his house that day about the number of an hundred and fifty, who preached there himselfe about five houres in the afternoone. Shewing likewise how they were discovered, and what meanes, as also how the constable scattered their nest, and of the great tumult in the street. With another relation of a sermon, that prophet Hunt preached in St. Pulchers Church the same day aforesaid, making another combustion in the said parish, with a description of that sermon, which he preached in Westminster-hall not long since, with a relation also of that, which he would have preached in the Old Exchange
- The Levellers directory for private preaching new vamp'd. : In which, certaine formes are warranted (by the agitators) or rather justified; which the malignant sect contemne, and make ridiculous. Whereunto is annexed, divers spirituall postures, alluding to that of musket and pike
- The world turn'd upside down: or, A briefe description of the ridiculous fashions of these distracted times.
- The high and mightie commendation of the vertue of a pot of good ale : full of wit without offence, of mirth without obscenities of pleasure without scurrilitie, and of good content without distaste : whereunto is added the valiant battell fought between the Norfolk Cock and the Wisbich Cock
- Rare physick for the church sicx [sic] of an ague : prescribing excellent and most accurate physick to be given to the church which has been sicke a long time. With the names of every particular disease, and the manner how she contracted them, and by what meanes, as also prescripts to remedy the same. Humbly commended to the Parliament, those admirable physicians of the church and state
- Bevvare of false prophets : or, a true relation of the examination, and confesion, of Roalond Bateman, of St. Mary's at Newington in Southwark, who was apprehended and now lies in prison for saying if a peace were not between this and Whitsonday he would pluck some of the Lord in Parliament, out by the eares and stab'd them, also that he said he is the son of God, and if they put him to death he should and would rise againe the third day, and that for a certaine he hath fasted from the 13 of May, till the 7 of Iune, and so continues to Newprison at Clarkenwell
- Bevvare of false prophets, or, A true relation of the examination and confesion of Roalond Bateman of St. Mary's at Newington in Southwark : who was apprehended and now lies in prison for saying if a peace were not between this and Whitsonday he would pluck some of the Lord in Parliament out by the eares and stab's them : also that he said he is the son of God and if they put him to death he should and would rise againe the third day, and that for a certaine he hath fasted from the 13 of May till the 7 of Iune and so continues to Newperson at Clarkenwell
- The answer to the rattle-heads concerning their fictionate resolution of the Round-Heads. : Wherein is explained euerie particular therein contained against them, with many godly counsels to Doctor Little-wit: the composer of their former scurrulous and illeterate pamphlet
- Religions enemies. : With a brief and ingenious relation, as by Anabaptists, Brownists, papists, Familists, Atheists and Foolists, sawcily presuming to tosse religion in a blanquet
- Religions lotterie, or the churches amazement. : VVherein is declared how many sorts of religions there is crept into the very bowels of this kingdome, striving to shake the whole foundation and to destroy both church and kingdom. Namely these 16. hereafter mentioned. 1 Papists 2 Arians 3 Arminians 4 Canonists 5 Atheists 6 Adamites 7 Familists 8 Anabaptists 9 Lutherans 10 Separatists 11 Brownists 12 Puritanes 13 Novolists 14 Time-servers 15 Rattle-heads 16 Round-heads. Whereunto is annexed each of their severall opinions, with sufficient arguments to confute each opinion, and to prove them enemies to the peace of the church and kingdome
- Craftie Cromwell: or, Oliver ordering our new state. : A tragi-comedie. Wherein is discovered the trayterous undertakings and proceedings of the said Nol, and his levelling crew. Shall Cromwell not be famous made unto the after-times, ... this shall be their memoriall, these rogues their King betrayd.
- Religions lotterie, or, The churches amazement : vvherein is declared how many sorts of religions there is crept into the very bowels of this kingdome, striving to shake the whole foundation and to destroy both church and kingdom ..
- A dog's elegy, or, Rvpert's tears : for the late defeat given him at Marstonmoore, neer York, by the three renowned generalls, Alexander, Earl of Leven, general of the Scottish forces, Fardinando, Lord Fairefax, and the Earle of Manchester generalls of the English Forces in the North : where his beloved dog, named Boy, was killed by a valiant souldier who had skill in necromancy : likewise the strange breed of this shagg'd cavalier whelp'd of a malignant water-witch with all his tricks and feats
- A dog's elegy, or, Rvpert's tears, : for the late defeat given him at Marstonmoore, neer York, by the three renowned generalls; Alexander Earl of Leven, general of the Scottish forces, Fardinando, Lord Fairefax, and the Earle of Manchester generalls of the English Forces in the North. Where his beloved dog, named Boy, was killed by a valiant souldier, who had skill in necromancy. Likewise the strange breed of this shagg'd cavalier, whelp'd of a malignant water-witch; with all his tricks, and feats. Sad Cavaliers, Rupert invites you all that does survive, to his dogs funerall. Close-mourners are the witch, Pope, & devill, that much lament ye'r late befallen evill
- Religions lotterie, or, The churches amazement : vvherein is declared how many sorts of religions there is crept into the very bowels of this kingdome, striving to shake the whole foundation and to destroy both church and kingdom ... : whereunto is annexed each of their severall opinions, with sufficient arguments to confute each opinion, and to prove them enemies to the peace of the church and kingdome
- Roger the Canterburian that cannot say grace for his meat, with a low-crown'd hat before his face, or, The character of a prelaticall man affecting heighths
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- Tom Tel-Troths come to town againe with his humors. : Vnder which humour is contained these particulars: viz. A rope for a parat. A bable for a foole. A springe for a woodcocke. And a snare for a fox. Collected and published to make honest and wise men merry, or fooles and knaves mad
- Tom Nash his ghost. : To the three scurvy fellowes of the upstart family of the snufflers, rufflers and shufflers; the thrice treble-troublesome scufflers in the church and state, the onely lay ecclesi-ass, I call generallissimo's. Being like Jobs 3. comforters, or the churches 3. anti-disciples, the clergies 3. persecuters, the states 3. hors-leeches, the divels 3. chaplaines; namely, the Anabaptist, the Libertine, and the Brownist. Written by Thomas Nash his ghost, with pap with a hatchet, a little revived since the 30. yeare of the late Qu. Elizabeths reigne when Martin Mar-Prelate was as mad as any of his tub-men are now
- Roger the Canterburian, that cannot say grace for his meat, with a low-crown'd hat before his face. Or the character of a prelaticall man affecting great heighths. Newly written, by G.T
- The resolution of the Round-heads, to pull downe Cheap-side Crosse : Being a zealous declaration of the grievances wherewith their little wits are consumed to destruction. And what things they in their wisdome (yet left them) conceive fit to bee reformed. Also the answer to the rattle-heads, concerning their fictionate resolutions of the Round-heads. Wherein is explained every particular therein contained against them, with many godly counsells to Doctor Little-wit: the composer of their former scurrilous, and illiterate pamphlet
- The high and mightie commendation of the vertue of a pot of good ale. : Full of wit without offence, of mirth without obscenitie, of pleasure without scurrilitie, and of good content without distaste. Whereunto is added the valiant battell fought betweene the Norfolk cock and the Wisbich cock. written by Thomas Randall
- Religions lotterie, or the churches amazement. : VVherein is declared how many sorts of religions there is crept into the very bowels of this kingdome, striving to shake the whole foundation and to destroy both church and kingdom. Namely these 16. hereafter mentioned. 1 Papists 2 Arians 3 Arminians 4 Canonists 5 Atheists 6 Adamites 7 Familists 8 Anabaptists 9 Lutherans 10 Separatists 11 Brownists 12 Puritanes 13 Novolists 14 Time-servers 15 Rattle-heads 16 Round-heads. Whereunto is annexed each of their severall opinions, with sufficient arguments to confute each opinion, and to prove them enemies to the peace of the church and kingdome
- The discovery of a swarme of seperatists, : or, a leathersellers sermon. Being a most true and exact relation of the tumultuous combustion in Fleet-street last Sabboth day being the 29. of Decem. truly describing how Burboon a letherseller had a conventicle of Brownists met at his house that day about the number of an hundred and fifty, who preached there himselfe about five houres in the afternoone. Shewing likewise how they were discovered, and what meanes, as also how the constable scattered their nest, and of the great tumult in the street. With another relation of a sermon, that prophet Hunt preached in St. Pulchers Church the same day aforesaid, making another combustion in the said parish, with a description of that sermon, which he preached in Westminster-hall not long since, with a relation also of that, which he would have preached in the Old Exchange
- The decoy duck: : together with the discovery of the knot in the dragons tayle called &c
- The friers lamenting, for his not repenting. : Being a relation of the life and death of Francis Colewort a frier, who related a little before his death a threefold plot of treason. With his conversion to the Protestant religion, at Hungerford in Barkshire
- The divisions of the Church of England : crept in at XV. several doores by divers, each having members very earnest in the seeking to have such a church and discipline here established, as is agreeable with their religion. For bishops 1 Papists. 2. Arians. 3. Arminians. 4. Canonists. Against Bishops. 5. Athests. 6. Adamites. 7. Familists. 8. Anabapists. 9. Luthetans. 10. Seperatists. 11. Brownists. 12. Puritans. Betwixt both. Novelists. Time-servers. Each in their true colours without any dissimulation in the world
- The coaches ouerthrow. Or, A ioviall exaltation of divers tradesmen, and others, for the suppression of troublesome hackney coaches : To the tune of, Old King Harry
- Religions enemies. : With a brief and ingenious relation, as by Anabaptists, Brownists, papists, Familists, Atheists and Foolists, sawcily presuming to tosse religion in a blanquet
- A letter from Rhoan in France
- Rare physick for the church sicx [sic] of an ague : prescribing excellent and most accurate physick to be given to the church which has been sicke a long time. With the names of every particular disease, and the manner how she contracted them, and by what meanes, as also prescripts to remedy the same. Humbly commended to the Parliament, those admirable physicians of the church and state
- Craftie Cromwell: or, Oliver ordering our new state. : A tragi-comedie. Wherein is discovered the trayterous undertakings and proceedings of the said Nol, and his levelling crew. Shall Cromwell not be famous made unto the after-times, ... this shall be their memoriall, these rogues their King betrayd.
- Bevvare of false prophets : or, a true relation of the examination, and confesion, of Roalond Bateman, of St. Mary's at Newington in Southwark, who was apprehended and now lies in prison for saying if a peace were not between this and Whitsonday he would pluck some of the Lord in Parliament, out by the eares and stab'd them, also that he said he is the son of God, and if they put him to death he should and would rise againe the third day, and that for a certaine he hath fasted from the 13 of May, till the 7 of Iune, and so continues to Newprison at Clarkenwell
- I marry sir, Heere is newes indeed. : Being the copie of a letter which the Devil sent to the Pope of Rome, and kept in the conclave of cardinals ever since the yeare 1623. and now published for the helpe and comfort of all Romish Catholickes in this time of their great necessity, to incourage them. Brought over from Rome by Charon the ferriman the last Jesuiticall-spring-tide of all their hellish practices to confound this kingdome of England
- A second message to Mr. Willam Lavd late Archbishop of Canterbury, now prisoner in the Tower : in the behalfe of Mercurie. Together with a postscript to the author of that foolish and ridiculous answer to Mercury
- Grand Plutoes remonstrance, or, The Devill horn-mad at Roundheads and Brownists. : Wherein his Hellish Maiestie (by advice of his great counsell, Eacus, Minos & Radamanthus, with his beloved brethren, Agdistis, Beliall, Incubus & Succubus) is pleased to declare, 1. How far he differs from Round-head, rattle-head, or prickeare. 2. His copulation with a holy sister. 3. His decre [sic] affection to romish Catholikes, and hate to Protestants. 4. His oration to the rebells
- The aprentices advice to the XII. bishops lately accused of high treason, by the honourable assemblies of both Houses. : With our friendly admonition, to take heed how they falsely accuse those innocent worthies in Parliament, whose lives are more deare to us then all the 25. prelates, though they were hang'd together
- The answer to the rattle-heads concerning their fictionate resolution of the Round-Heads. : Wherein is explained euerie particular therein contained against them, with many godly counsels to Doctor Little-wit: the composer of their former scurrulous and illeterate pamphlet
- The Brownists synagogue : or A late discovery of their conventicles, assemblies; and places of meeting, where they preach, and the manner of their praying and preaching. With a relation of the names, places; and doctrines of those which doe commonly preach. The chiefe of which are these. Greene, the feltmaker. Marler, the buttonmaker. Spencer, the coachman. Rogers the glover. Which sect is much increased of late within this city
- A preparative to studie: or, The vertue of sackĀ·
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- Mercurius pacificus : Impartially communicating unto the Common-wealth of England the passages in the honourable House of Commons, as also in the army
- Mercurius melancholicus, for King Charles the Second. : Against those bloody usurpers, tyrants, and traytors, of the juncto and army; communicating impartially, their unparalel'd proceedings, the variety of humors, and truth of affaires from all parts
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/resource/e7wVYaQ4PFs/" typeof="Person http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Person"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/resource/e7wVYaQ4PFs/">Taylor, John, 1580-1653</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/">University of Missouri Libraries</a></span></span></span></span></div>
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Data Citation of the Person Taylor, John, 1580-1653
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/resource/e7wVYaQ4PFs/" typeof="Person http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Person"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/resource/e7wVYaQ4PFs/">Taylor, John, 1580-1653</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/">University of Missouri Libraries</a></span></span></span></span></div>