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Sökning efter: John Taylor 1344 träffar

Titel Författare År Språk
681 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 John Taylor 1616 Engelska
682 Taylors travels and circular perambulation, through, and by more then thirty times twelve signes of the Zodiack, of the famous cities of London and Westminster - With the honour and worthinesse of the vine, the vintage, the wine, and the vintoner; with an alphabeticall description, of all the taverne signes in the cities, suburbs, and liberties aforesaid, and significant epigrams upon the said severall signes. Written by Iohn Taylor John Taylor 1636 Engelska
683 Taylors farevvell, to the Tovver-bottles John Taylor 1622 Engelska
684 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 of boats and barges, betwixt the famous Vniuersity of Oxford, and the city of London John Taylor 1632 Engelska
685 Taylor his trauels: from the citty of London in England, to the citty of Prague in Bohemia - The manner of his abode there three weekes, his obseruations there, and his returne from thence: how he past 600 miles downe the riuer of Elue, through Bohemia, Saxony, Anhalt, the bishoprick of Madeberge, Brandenberge, Hamburgh, and so to England. With many relations worthy of note. By Iohn Taylor John Taylor 1620 Engelska
686 Taylors pastorall - being both historicall and satyricall: or the noble antiquitie of shepheards, with the profitable vse of sheepe: with a small touch of a scabbed sheepe, and a caueat against that infection John Taylor 1624 Engelska
687 Taylor's motto - Et habeo, et careo, et curo John Taylor 1621 Engelska
688 The coaches ouerthrow. Or, A ioviall exaltation of divers tradesmen, and others, for the suppression of troublesome hackney coaches - To the tune of, Old King Harry 1636 Engelska
689 Mr Thomas Coriat to his friends in England sendeth greeting - from Agra the capitall city of the dominion of the great Mogoll in the Easterne India, the last of October, 1616. Thy trauels and thy glory to ennamell, with fame we mount thee on the lofty cammell Thomas Coryate 1618 Engelska
690 Bull, beare, and horse, cut, curtaile, and longtaile. VVith tales, and tales of buls, clenches, and flashes. As also here and there a touch of our beare-garden-sport; with the second part of the merry conceits of wit and mirth. Together with the names of all the bulls and beares John Taylor 1638 Engelska
691 Stripping, vvhipping, and pumping. Or, The five mad shavers of Drury-Lane - strangely acted, and truely related. Done in the period, latter end, tayle, or rumpe of the dogged dogge-dayes, last past, August. 1638. Together with the names of the severall parties which were actors in this foule businesse John Taylor 1638 Engelska
692 A common vvhore - vvith all these graces grac'd: shee's very honest, beautifull and chaste. Written by Iohn Taylor John Taylor 1625 Engelska
693 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 bad 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 John Taylor 1642 Engelska
694 The high and mightie commendation of the vertue of a pot of good ale - full of wit without offence, of mirth without obscenities of pleasure without scurrilitie, and of good content without distaste : whereunto is added the valiant battell fought between the Norfolk Cock and the Wisbich Cock Thomas Randolph 1642 Engelska
695 An honest ansvver to the late published apologie for private preaching - wherein is justly refuted their mad forms of doctrine, as, 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 : with an objection to their common plea of divine inspiration, directly, without passion, proving there is but nice distinction betwixt the brownists and papists who have bin equall disturbers of the state yet in continuall controversie one against the other : with an argument against Round-heads John Taylor 1642 Engelska
696 The vvhole life and progresse of Henry Walker the ironmonger - first, the manner of his conversation : secondly, the severall offences and scandalous pamphlets the said Walker hath writ, and for which he is now a prisoner in New-Gate : thirdly, the forme of the inditement which is laid against him, by the Kings sergeants at law, and his learned counsell : fourthly, his conviction by the iury : fiftly, his recantation and sorrow for the publicke wrong he hath done His Majesty and the whole kingdome : here are also many remarkable passages concerning the offence, and apprehending the said Henry Walker, with a true relation of his severall escapes and rescues from the hands of justice, &c John Taylor 1642 Engelska
697 A plea for prerogative, or, Give Cæsar his due - being the wheele of fortune turn'd round, or, the world turned topsie-turvie : wherein is described the true subjects loyalty to maintain His Majesties prerogative and priviledges of Parliament John Taylor 1642 Engelska
698 A cluster of coxcombes, or, Cinquepace of five sorts of knaves and fooles - namely, the domatists, publicans, disciplinarians, anabaptists, and brownists, their originals, opinions, confutations, and, in a word, their heads roundly jolted together : also shewing how in the raignes of sundry kings, and in the late Q. Elizabeths raign the Anabaptists have bin burnt as hereticks, and otherwayes punished : and that the sect of the brownists is so new, that many are alive who knew the beginning of it : with other sects displayed John Taylor 1642 Engelska
699 A svvarme of sectaries and schismatiqves - wherein is discovered the strange preaching, or prating, of such as are by their trades coblers, tinkers, pedlers, weavers, sowgelders and chymney-sweepers John Taylor 1642 Engelska
700 Mercuries message defended against the vain, foolish, simple, and absurd cavils of Thomas Herbert a ridiculous bullad-maker - wherein his witlesse answers are clearly consuted : himselfe found guilty of hupocrisie : catcht broaching of popery : condemned by his owne words : and here and there for his impudent 1641 Engelska

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