Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
PR2382.S83 (INTERNET) | The subjects joy for the Parliament | 1 |
PR2382.S87 (INTERNET) | SuperbiƦ flagellum, or, The vvhip of pride | 1 |
PR2382.T3 (INTERNET) |
Taylors farevvell, to the Tovver-bottles Taylor's motto Et habeo, et careo, et curo. 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. Tailors travels from London to the Isle of VVight, vvith his returne, and occasion of his iourney 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. |
5 |
PR2382 .T39 1615 | 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. | 1 |
PR2382 .T39 1621 |
[Taylors goose] [describing the wilde goose] [Taylor's motto] [et habeo, et careo, et curo] |
2 |
PR2382 .T39 1653 | Taylors arithmetick from one to tvvelve with a sollid discourse betweene yesterday, to-morrow, to-day, & a lover. | 2 |
PR2382.T39 (INTERNET) |
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 / 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. |
2 |
PR2382.T7 (INTERNET) | Truth's triumph, or, Old miracles newly revived in the gracious preservation of our soveraigne Lord the King By Iohn Taylor. | 1 |
PR2382 .T72 1635 | The travels of twelve-pence ... | 1 |
PR2382 .T78 1624 | 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 ... / | 1 |
PR2382 .V47 1623 | 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 / | 1 |
PR2382.V47 (INTERNET) | A verry merry vvherry-ferry-voyage, or, Yorke for my money sometimes perilous, sometimes quarrellous / | 1 |
PR2382.W38 (INTERNET) | The water-cormorant his complaint against a brood of land-cormorants. Diuided into fourteene satyres / | 1 |
PR2382.W58 (INTERNET) | 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 |
PR2382.W6 (INTERNET) | The world turn'd upside down, or, A briefe description of the ridiculous fashions of these distracted times | 1 |
PR2383.A45 (INTERNET) | 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 | 1 |
PR2383 .C37 1994 | The world of John Taylor, the water-poet, 1578-1653 / | 1 |
PR2383.66 (INTERNET) | No Mercurius aquaticus, but a cable-rope, double twisted for Iohn Tayler, the water-poet, who escaping drowning in a paper-wherry-voyage, is reserved for another day as followeth, viz | 1 |
PR2384.T3 C53 1651 | Cheimonopegnion, or, A winter song | 2 |
PR2384.T4 (INTERNET) | Three treatises The pearle of the gospell, The pilgrims profession : and A glasse for gentlewomen to dress themselues by : to which is added A short introduction to the worthy receiuing of the Lords supper / | 1 |