Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
PR3291.A1 C36 1700 | The Caping trade a new song, much in request. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 C37 |
Carmen natalitium to His Highness the Duke of Glocester, an heroick poem. The Careless curate and the bloudy butcher in a narrative of sad news from Chelmsford in Essex, declaring an execrable murther committed by a barbarous butcher ... : to the tune of Oh women, monstrous women. The Character |
6 |
PR3291.A1 C37 1680 |
The Catholick gamesters, or, A Dubble match of bowleing The Catholick gamesters, or, A dubble match of bowleing |
3 |
PR3291.A1 C37 1700 | Captain Kid's farewel to the seas, or, The famous pirate's lament. To the tune of, Coming down | 1 |
PR3291.A1 C379 1660 |
The Cavaleers complaint. To the tune of, I tell thee Dick, &c. The cavaliers complaint. To the tune of, I tell thee Dick, &c. |
2 |
PR3291.A1 C38 | The Cavaliers comfort; or, Long lookt for will come at last. Here's good news, from sea now sent to the shore, and good news on land, so what would you have more. : To the tune of The king injoys his own again. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 C38 1700 | The Causes of Scotland's miseries a poem in imitation of the VI. Ode of the third book of Horace. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 C4 1655 | A fairing for young-men, or, The careless lover | 2 |
PR3291.A1 C42 | Chastities conquest, or, No trusting before marriage a new song, you virgins that your fame and honour prize, learn here by saving both, how to be wise, secure your treasure till you have secur'd, the purchaser and then you are insur'd a thing that forehand freeness ne'r procur'd. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 C42 1681 | The Character of an English-man | 2 |
PR3291.A1 C47 1683 | Certain meditations upon justification by Christ alone | 2 |
PR3291.A1 .C48 | Charming amintas:, or, The yieldling virgin to a pleasant new tune. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 C48 | A cheat in all trads, or The world turned upsid down | 1 |
PR3291.A1 C52 1672 | Chaucer's ghoast, or, A piece of antiquity containing twelve pleasant fables of Ovid penn'd after the ancient manner of writing in England, which makes them prove mock-poems to the present poetry : with the history of Prince Corniger and his champion Sir Crucifrag, that run a tilt likewise at the present historiographers / | 1 |
PR3291.A1 C52 1689 | The Character of a true Protestant English souldier with that of a doublet-pinking bully-hec, or a cowardly-spirited animal who dares not venture his life in the service of his country. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 C52 1691 | Charecters [sic] of some young women, belonging to the changes, who are to be dispos'd of by way of auction, July 41 [sic] | 1 |
PR3291.A1 C53 1681 | The Character of wit's squint-eyed maid, pasquil-makers | 2 |
PR3291.A1 C56 1661 | Choyce poems being songs, sonnets, satyrs and elegies / | 1 |
PR3291.A1 C57 |
A call to Charon to carry the dying lover over to the Elizium shades: or, The discontented lover overcome with grief. A pleasant new song greatly in request. To the tune of, Charon make haste, &c. The Cities farevvell to the Parliament. The city asse The citizens vindication against the down right countrey-man. (alias Boobee) ... |
4 |
PR3291.A1 C57 1659 | The City of Londons new letany to the tune of The black-smith. | 1 |