Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
PN6173 .H42 1675 | Nugæ venales, or, Complaisant companion being new jests, domestick and forreign, bulls, rhodomontados, pleasant novels and miscellanies. | 2 |
PN6173 .H42 1686 | Nugæ venales, or, A complaisant companion being new jests, domestick and forreign, bulls, rhodomontados, pleasant novels and miscellanies / | 2 |
PN6173 (INTERNET) |
England's jests refin'd and improv'd being a choice collection of the merriest jests, smartest repartees, wittiest sayings, and most notable bulls yet extant, with many new ones never before printed to which are added XIII ingenious characters drawn to the life / Tarltons jests Drawne into these three parts. 1 His court-witty iests. 2 His sound city iests. 3 His countrey pretty iests. Full of delight, wit, and honest mirth. The first and best part of Scoggins iests full of witty mirth and pelasant shifts, done by him in France, and other places: being a preseruatiue against melancholy. / A journey to Hell, or, A visit paid to the Devil a poem. Witty apophthegms delivered at several times, and upon several occasions |
5 |
PN6173 .M47 | A Merry-conceited fortune-teller prognosticating to all trades and professions their good and bad fortune : calculated according to art for the meridian of England but may serve for all four parts east, west, north and south from the beginning of the world to the end thereof. | 2 |
PN6173.N49 1674 | News from Mount Aetna., or, The fatal courtship of the rebellious fryer, who made love to the devil, appearing in the shape of a nvn | 1 |
PN6173 .N49 1813 | New oddest of all oddities, for 1813 : being an odd book of all the odd sermons, odd tales, odd sayings, and odd scraps of poetry, that have been recited and sung in all odd companies, by all the odd wits and broad grinners of the present odd age / | 1 |
PN6173 .P37 1604 | Pasquils iests, mixed with Mother Bunches merriments. Wherevnto is added a doozen [sic] of gulles. : Pretty and pleasant, to driue away the tediousnesse of a winters euening. | 1 |
PN6173 .P47 1671 | Westminster-drollery, or, A choice collection of the newest songs & poems, both at court and theaters | 2 |
PN6173 .P47 1672 | Westminster-drollery, or, A choice collection of the newest songs & poems both at court and theaters | 2 |
PN6173 .P472 1672 | Westminster drollery. being a compleat collecion of all the newest and choicest songs and poems at court and both the theaters, and never printed before / | 2 |
PN6173 .P54 1599 | A pil to purge melancholie: or, A preprative [sic] to a pvrgation: or, Topping, copping, and capping: take either or whether: or, Mash them, and squash them, and dash them, and diddle come derrie come daw them, all together. | 1 |
PN6173 .R68 1604 | Looke to it: for, Ile stabbe ye. | 1 |
PN6173 .R69 1673 | Well met gossip: or, Tis merry when gossips meet. [ne]wly enlarged, with very merry songs, pleasant for maids, wives, and widdows and delightfull to all that shall read it. | 1 |
PN6173 .S33 1673 | The Sack-full of newes | 2 |
PN6173 .S38 | The satirist, or, Monthly meteor. | 1 |
PN6173 .S48 1603 | Sir Henry Griffith letters, | 1 |
PN6173 .S85 1974 | Merry passages and jeasts : a manuscript jestbook / | 1 |
PN6173 .T29 | [Wit and mirth] | 1 |
PN6173 .T29 1628 | 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 / | 1 |
PN6173 .T37 1638 | Tarletons jests drawne into these three parts. [brace] 1 His court-witty iests. 2 His sound city iests. 3 His countrey-pretty iests [brace] Full of delight, wit, and honest mirth. | 1 |