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Sökning efter: John Taylor 1221 träffar

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501 A recommendation to Mercurius Morbicus. - Together with a fair character upon his worth. To the reader. Unto the arrant'st knave that lives by bread, I send this greeting; (you may please to read) ... I may to many now seem to deface him, but when I physick take, O then, I'le grace him John Taylor Printed in the yeer 1647 Engelska
502 John Taylors vvandering, to see the vvonders of the vvest. - How he travelled neere 600. miles, from London to the Mount in Cornwall, and beyond the Mount, to the Lands end, and home againe. Dedicated to all his loving friends, and free minded benefactors. In these dangerous dayes for rich men, and miserable times for the poore servants of the late King, (whereof I was one, 45. yeers to his royall father and himself) I thought it needful to take some course to make use of some friends, and devise a painfull way for my subsistence; which was the journey I have past, and this booke heere present; for which purpose I gave out many of these following bills, to which neere 3000. gentlemen and others, have kindly subscribed, to give me a reasonable reward John Taylor Printed in the yeer 1649 Engelska
503 VVestminster Fayre, newly proclaimed. - My muse thus venters sic to open her ware, and bids you welcome to Westminster Fayre. Wherein, votes, orders, ordinances, this September, are to be sold, with many a rotten Member, a Parliament man; I need say no more: a close committee-man that loves a w- a sequestrator; sure the Devill's not worse then an excise-man, far a greater curse: only a pursuivant, to make hell full, the country poore, the city a meere gull. T'is but a penny, in: too small a fee, to sell you spectacles, these strange sights t'see John Taylor 1647 Engelska
504 The fooles of fate: or, The unravelling of the Parliament and Army. - Fate (for our crimes) permitted us to grumble 'gainst each thing, next for to be tumultuous, and fight against our King. ... Their Army are the peoples hate, both they will now pull down, and now behold the fools of fate fall dead by Charles his crowne John Taylor Printed in the yeer. 1648 Engelska
505 A testimony of the ministers in the county of Stafford to the trueth of Jesus Christ, and to the Solemn League and Covenant, - as also against the errours, heresies, and blasphemies of these times, and the toleration of them. Sent up to the ministers within the province of London, subscribers of the first testimony 1648 Engelska
506 Taylors arithmeticke, from one to twelve John Taylor 1650 Engelska
507 Ranters of both sexes, male and female. - being thirteen or more, taken and imprisoned in the gate-house at Westminster, and in the new-prison at Clerken Well. Wherein John Robins doth declare himself to be the great God of Heaven, and the great deliverer, and that his wife is with childe with Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the world. With divers other blasphemous opinions, here truely set forth. Maintained before the Right VVorshipful Justice Whittacre, & Justice Hubbert John Taylor 1651 Engelska
508 An apology for private preaching. - In which those formes are warranted, or rather justified, which the maligannt sect contemne, and daily by prophane pamphlets make ridiculous. (Viz.) Preaching in a tub. Teaching against the backe of a chaire. Instructing at a tables end. Revealing in a basket. Exhorting over a buttery hatch. Reforming on a bed side. Or (indeed) any place, according to inspiration (since it is knowne) the spirit moves in sundry places.) Whereunto is annexed, or rather conjoyned, or furthermore united, or moreover knit, the spirituall postures, alluding to that of musket and pike. by T.J John Taylor 1642 Engelska
509 The high and mightie commendation of the vertue of a pot of good ale. - Full of wit without offence, of mirth without obscenitie, of pleasure without scurrilitie, and of good content without distaste. Whereunto is added the valiant battell fought betweene the Norfolk cock and the Wisbich cock. written by Thomas Randall Thomas Randolph MDCXLII. 1642 Engelska
510 An humble desired union betweene prerogative and priviledge. - Shewing, that if one draw too hard one way, and the other another, the whole common-wealth must be in danger to be pull'd in sunder John Taylor 1642 Engelska
511 Iohn Taylors last voyage, and adventure, - performed from the twentieth of Iuly last 1641. to the tenth of September following. In which time he past, with a scullers boate from the citie of London, to the cities and townes of Oxford, Gloucester, Shrewesbury, Bristoll, Bathe, Monmouth and Hereford. The manner of his passages and entertainement to and fro, truly described. With a short touch of some wandring and some fixed scismatiques, such as are Brownist, Anabaptists, famalies, humorists and foolists, which the authour found in many places of his voyage and iourney John Taylor 1641 Engelska
512 An Exact description of a Roundhead, and a long-head shag-poll. - taken our sic of the purest antiquities and records. Wherein are confuted the odious aspersions of malignant spirits: especially in answer to those most rediculous, absurd and beyond comparison, most foolish baffle-headed pamphlets sent into the world by a sinking locust, viz. The devill turn'd Round-head. The resolution of the Round-head. double brace The vindication of the Round-head. and Jourdan the players ex-exercising sic 1642 Engelska
513 Ale ale-vated into the ale-titude - or, a learned oration before a civill assembly of ale-drinkers, between Paddington and Hogsdon, the 30. of February last, anno millimo quillimo trillimo. By John Taylor John Taylor Printed in the yeare, 1651 Engelska
514 Christmas in & out - or, our Lord & Saviour Christs birth-day John Taylor 1652 Engelska
515 The number and names of all the kings of England & Scotland - from the beginning of their governments, to this present. As also, the times when, and how long each of them reigned. Shewing how many of them came to untimely ends: eyther by imprisonment, banishment, famine, poyson, drowning, beheading, falling from horses, slaine in battells, murdered, or otherwise. By J.T John Taylor 1650 Engelska
516 A juniper lecture - VVith the description of all sorts of women, good and bad. From the modest, to the maddest, from the most civill, to the scold rampant, their praise and dispraise compendiously related. Also the authors advice how to tame a shrew, or vex her John Taylor 1652 Engelska
517 A short relation of a long iourney, - made round or ovall by encompassing the principalitie of Wales, from London, through and by the counties of Middlesex and Buckingham, Berks, Oxonia, Warwick, Stafford, Chester, Flint, Denbigh, Anglesey, Carnarvan, Merioneth, Cardigan, Pembrooke, Caermarden, Glamorgan, Monmouth, Glocester, &c. This painfull circuit began on Tuesday the 13 of July last, 1652. and was ended (or both ends brought together) on Tuesday the 7. of September following, being near 600. miles. Whereunto is annexed an epitome of the famous history of Wales John Taylor 1653 Engelska
518 The certain travailes of an uncertain journey - begun on Tuesday the 9. of August, and ended on Saturday the 3. of September following, 1653. Wherein the readers may take notice, that the authors purpose was to travell, and write this following relation, for no other intent or purpose, but to pleasure himself, and to please his friends in the first place. By John Taylor, at the sign of the Poets Head, in Phœniz sic Alley, near the Globe Tavern, in the middle of Long-Acre nigh the Covent-Garden. Those twelve following lines I gave to divers gentlemen and friends, before I went, and as they have kindly subscribed to my bill, I do humbly expect their courteous acceptation of this booke John Taylor 1654 Engelska
519 The names of all the Dukes, Marquesses, Earls, Viscounts, & Barons, dead or living, that have been or are in England, Scotland, & Ireland, in and since the raign of Queen Elizabeth, to this yeare, 1653. By John Taylor John Taylor Printed in the year, 1653 Engelska
520 The essence, quintessence, insence, innocence, lye-sence, & magnifisence of nonsence upon sence: or, Sence upon nonsence. - The third part, the fourth impression, the fifth edition, the sixth addition, upon condition, that (by tradition) the reader may laugh if he list. In longitude, latitude, crassitude, magnitude, and amplitude, lengthened, widened, enlarged, augmented, encreased, made wider and sider, by the addition of letters, syllables, words, lines, and farfetch'd sentences. And the lamentable death and buriall of a Scottish Gallaway nagge. Written upon white paper, in a brown study, betwixt Lammas day and Cambridge, in the yeare aforesayd. Beginning at the latter end, and written by John Taylor at the sign of the poor Poets Head, in Phœnix Alley, near the middle of Long Acre, or Coven Garden. Anno, millimo, quillimo, trillimo, daffadillimo, pulcher John Taylor 1654 Engelska

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