Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
PR3291.A1 T6 1661 |
To the Kings Most Excellent Majesty and the Lords and Commons assembled in this present Parliament the most humble supplication of all those commission-officers &c. that have faithfully and constantly served and suffered for Your Most Sacred Majesty. To the Kings Most Excellent Majesty and the Lords and Commons assembled in this present Parliament the most humble supplication of all those commission-officers &c. that have faithfully and constantly served and suffered for Your Majesty's Royal Father of ever blessed memory, and Your Most Sacred Majesty. |
2 |
PR3291.A1 .T6 1672 | To His Royal Highness the Duke of York, upon his victory over the Dutch, May 28. 1672. With an account of the number of their ships that were taken, burnt, and sunk, &c. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 T6 1674 | To the Most Excellent & Illustrious Prince James, Duke of Monmouth and Buccleugh, &c., on the happy solemnity of His Grace's inauguration in the chancellourship of the most famous and renowned University of Cambridge | 2 |
PR3291.A1 T6 1680 | To the praise of Mrs. Cellier the popish midwife on her incomparable book. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 T6 1682 |
To His Grace Christopher Duke of Albemarle, &c., lately elected chancellour of the University of Cambridge a pindarick poem. To the duke, upon his return from Scotland The Tories confession, or, A merry song in answer to the Whigs exaltation: to the same tune of Forty one. |
5 |
PR3291.A1 .T6 1688 | Tom Tram of the west, son-in-law to Mother Winter. Shewing his merry jests, mad pranks, and odd conceits, which he in his life tiem performed. To which is added divers merry tales. Very pleasant and delightful to read. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 T6 1689 |
To his most excellent majesty William King of Great=Brittain, To His Highness the Prince of Orange, the humble address and supplication of the Cameronian Presbyterians in Scotland |
2 |
PR3291.A1 T6 1695 | To the memory of the queen a Pindarique ode. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 T6 1696 | To a pleasant new tune call'd A pot of good ale | 1 |
PR3291.A1 T6 1697 | Tom Brown's letter from the shades, to the French King in purgatory. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 T62 1662 | To the Queens Majesty on her happy arrival | 2 |
PR3291.A1 T62 1679 |
To His Royal Highness the Duke, upon his arrival To His Royal Highness the Duke |
4 |
PR3291.A1 T64 2007 | Guy of Warwick, 1661 / | 1 |
PR3291.A1 T65 1684 | The tongue combatants, or A sharp dispute between a comical couragious country grasier, and a London bull-feather'd butchers twitling, twatling, turbulent, thundering, tempestuous, terrifying, taunting, troublesome, talkative tongu'd wife. With The comical humours of the joviall London gossips, in a dialogue between a maid a wife and a widdow, over a cup of the creature. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 T66 1682 | Tony's lamentation, or, Potapski's city-case being his last farewel to the consecrated Whigs : the tune is, Let Oliver now be forgotten. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 T66 1683 | Tonys farewell : let polliticks do what they can, yet they at last must dye, and he that is a witty man is sometimes forc'd to fly. To the tune of, On the bank of a river, &c. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 T66 1688 | To poet Bavius occasion'd by his satyr he writ in his verses to the King upon the Queen's being deliver'd of a son. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 T674 | To the memory of my most honoured friend Sir Jonas Moore, Knight late surveyor general of His Majesties ordnance and armories. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 T68 | To that most lamentable and most incorrigible scribbler Bavius | 2 |
PR3291.A1 T7 |
The traytors downfall, or, A brief relation of the downfall of that phanatick crew who traiterously murthered the late kings majesty of blessed memory. To the tune of, Fa la la, &c. The trappand virgin or Good advice to maidens, that they may not be drawn into priminaryes by the specious pretences of their seeming amorist's, who having once obtained their wills, leace & forsake their betray'd mistresses ... Tune, When busie fame. The tragedy of Phillis, complaining of the disloyal love of Amintas. To a new court tune. The true lovers ioy: or, The reward of constany [sic] being, an amorous diaologue between a seaman and his love: the maid implores the aid of Charon's boat ... To a new tune, much in request. The tryall of true love to you I will recite between a fair young lady and a courteous knight. The tune is, Dainty come thou to me. The triumphs of four nations; or, A happy conclusion of peace, betwixt England, France, Denmark, and Holland. As it was confirm'd on Sunday night July the 21, at Breda; where ... the plenipotentiaries ... signed the Articles of Peace ... Tune is, Packingtons pound. Truth's integrity, or, A curious northern ditty called, Love will find out the way. To a pleasant new tune. A turn-coat of the times: who dothe by experience, profess and protest, that of all professions a turn coat's the best. Tune is, The king's delight: or, True Love is a gift for a queen. |
8 |