Call Number (LC) Title Results
PR3291 .M9 My wife will be my master; or, The married-mans complaint against his unruly wife. The tune is, A taylor is a man. 1
PR3291.N3 (INTERNET) A sober whisper, concerning the evil of things present, and the good of things to come 1
PR3291.N3 L69 1673 The loyal garland containing choice songs and sonnets of our late unhappy revolutions, very delightful and profitable, both to this present, and future ages / 1
PR3291 .N48 A New bull-bayting, or, A Match play'd at the town-bull of Ely by twelve mungrills viz. 4 English, 4 Irish, 4 Scotch doggs, John Lilburn, Richard Overton, Thomas Prince, and William Walwyn, to stave and nose : with his last will and testament.
A New bull-bayting, or, A Match play'd at the town-bull of Ely by twelve mungrills viz. 4 English, 4 Irish, 4 Scotch doggs, John Lilburn, Richard Overton, Thomas Prince, and William Walwyn, to stave and nose : with his last will and testament ..
2
PR3291.N48 1686 The new royal march play'd upon the ho boys before the granadeers. 1
PR3291.N48 1689 A new song of an orange to the tune of, The pudding. 1
PR3291.N48 1690 A new touch of the times, or, Success to true-blew 1
PR3291 .N537 A New-Years-gift to the Honourable Admiral Russel, on his glorious victory over the French fleet 2
PR3291.N7 B44 1665 The Belgick lyon discover'd 2
PR3291 .O43 The old gentlewomans last legacy [t]o her sons and daughters upon her death-bed, a little before she departed out of this world. With her good instructions, that she gave them to live a godly sober life, for the good of their own souls, till God call them out of this world. Tune of My bleeding heart. Licensed according to order. 1
PR3291.P1 E93 1641 1641 An exact description of the manner how His Maiestie an his nobles went to the Parliament on Munday, the thirteenth day of Aprill, 1640 to the comfortable expectation of all loyall subjects, to the tune of Triumph and ioy, &c. / 1
PR3291 .P3 1672 On His royal highness His expedition against the Dutch. 1
PR3291.P3 B32 1691 Bacchus conculcatus, or, Sober reflections upon drinking an essay / 2
PR3291.P3 C864 1690 Cupids courtesie, or, The young gallant foil'd at his own weapon he scorned Cupid and his dart, until he felt a wounded heart : to a most pleasant Northern tune. 1
PR3291.P3 F35 A fairing for maids. Being the honest maids councel to all other, better then she had given her by her mother, she wishes maides in time for to be wary, and with what young-men they intend to marry, a single life is gallant she doth say, for being bound perforce they must obey. 1
PR3291.P3 H52 1680 Hickledy-pickledy, or, The Yorkshire curates complaint to the tune of Alas, poor scholar, &c. 2
PR3291.P3 (INTERNET) Mundorum explicatio, or, The explanation of an hieroglyphical figure wherein are couched the mysteries of the external, internal, and eternal worlds, shewing the true progress of a soul from the court of Babylon to the city of Jerusalem, from the Adamical fallen state to the regenerate and angelical : being a sacred poems / 1
PR3291.P3 V53 1685 A view of the world, being a poem of the times containing the root of rebellion, the tree of sedition, the leaves of contention, and the fruit of treason : [a]dvising every good Christian to obey governours and superiors, and not to kick at every occasion, nor to make a schism and rent in the church at every scruple, criticism, and mistake, but to live in peace and unity, lest (being found imposters before God and rebels to their King) their heads be mounted on a pole as a fruit of their treachery and rebellion.
A view of the world, being a poem of the times containing the root of rebellion, the tree of sedition, the leaves of contention, and the fruit of treason : [a]dvising every good Christian to obey governours and superiors, and not to kick at every occasion, nor to make a schism and rent in the church at every scruple, criticism, and mistake, but to live in peace and unity, lest (being found imposters before God and rebels to their King) their heads be mounted on a pole as a fruit of their treachery and rebellion.
2
PR3291 P63 1689 A Poem on the coronation of King William and Queen Mary 2
PR3291.P73 1681 The present state of England: a pleasant new true ballad, to the tune of, The taylor and his lass: or, It was in the Prime, (of coucumber time. 1