721 |
Epigrammes - vvritten on purpose to be read: with a proviso, that they may be understood by the reader; being ninety in number: besides, two new made satyres that attend them. By John Taylor, at the signe of the Poets Head, in Phœnix Alley, neare the middle of Long-Aker, or Covent Garden
|
John Taylor
|
printed in the yeare, 1651 |
Engelska |
722 |
The resolution of the Round-heads, to pull downe Cheap-side Crosse - Being a zealous declaration of the grievances wherewith their little wits are consumed to destruction. And what things they in their wisdome (yet left them) conceive fit to bee reformed. Also the answer to the rattle-heads, concerning their fictionate resolutions of the Round-heads. Wherein is explained every particular therein contained against them, with many godly counsells to Doctor Little-wit: the composer of their former scurrilous, and illiterate pamphlet
|
|
printed 1641 |
Engelska |
723 |
The semicircle on a sector - in two books. Containing the description of a general and portable instrument; whereby most problems (reducible to instrumental practice) in astronomy, trigonometry, arithmetick, geometry, geography, topography, navigation, dyalling, &c. are speedily and exactly resolved. By J. T
|
John Taylor
|
1667 |
Engelska |
724 |
Mercurius infernalis; or Orderlesse orders, votes, ordinances, and commands from Hell - established by a close committee of the Divell and his angells. Done neither by day, night, nor order, because neither time, place, person or order is to be observed in the infernall kingdome. The copy of this was found in a chink or cranny of a wall in Frier-Bacons study, By John Taylor
|
John Taylor
|
Printed in the yeare 1644 |
Engelska |
725 |
Truth's triumph: or, Old miracles newly revived in the gracious preservation of our soveraigne Lord the King - By Iohn Taylor
|
John Taylor
|
Printed in the yeare M.DC.XLIII. 1643 |
Engelska |
726 |
Oxford besiedged - surprised, taken, and pittifully entred on Munday the second of Iune last, 1645. by the valiant forces of the London and Westminster Parliament. Written, by a trusty wellwisher of theirs, who sted-fastly hopes, and heartily prayes, they may have the like prosperous successe in all their future undertakings. The writers name and surname begins with the 9th letter of the Greeke alphabet, io-ta
|
John Taylor
|
Printed in the last year of the Parliament's raigne, 1645 |
Engelska |
727 |
Ad populum, or, A lecture to the people - with a satyr against separatists
|
Peter Hausted
|
1678 |
Engelska |
728 |
A most learned and eloquent speech, spoken or delivered in the Honourable House of Commons at Westminster, by the most learned lawyer Miles Corbet, Esq - recorder of Great Yarmouth, and Burgess of the same, on the 31th day of July, 1647. taken in short-hand by Nocky, and Tom. Dunn, his clerks, and revised by John Tayler
|
John Taylor
|
1681? |
Engelska |
729-730 |
Verbum sempiternum
(flera utgåvor)
|
John Taylor
|
1693 |
Engelska |
731 |
A brown dozen of drunkards: (ali-ass drink-hards) whipt, and shipt to the Isle of Gulls: for their abusing of Mr. Malt the bearded son, and Barley-broth the brainlesse daughter of Sir John Barley-corne - All joco-seriously descanted to our wine-drunk, wrath-drunk, zeale-drunk, staggering times. By one that hath drunk at S. Patricks well
|
John Taylor
|
1648 |
Engelska |
732 |
The impartialest satyre that ever was seen - that speaks truth without fear, or flattery, or spleen: read as you list, commend it, or come mend it, the man that pen'd it, did with finis end it
|
John Taylor
|
1652 |
Engelska |
733 |
The Cities farevvell to the Parliament
|
|
1648? |
Engelska |
734 |
Salvator mundi
|
|
1670 |
Engelska |
735 |
The Levellers directory for private preaching new vamp'd. - In which, certaine formes are warranted (by the agitators) or rather justified; which the malignant sect contemne, and make ridiculous. Whereunto is annexed, divers spirituall postures, alluding to that of musket and pike
|
|
1648 |
Engelska |
736 |
Religions enemies - with a brief and ingenious relation as by Anabaptists, Brownists, Papists, Familists, Atheists and Foolists sawcily presuming to tosse religion in a blanquet
|
John Taylor
|
1641 |
Engelska |
737 |
Tresaurarium mathematicae, or, The treasury of mathematicks - containing variety of usefull practices in arithmetick, geometry, trigonometry, astronomy, geography, navigation and surveying ... to which is annexed a table of 10000 logarithms, log-sines, and log-tangents
|
John Taylor, mathematician
|
1687 |
Engelska |
738 |
A loving and friendly invitation to all sinners to repent - and a warning to all backsliders to return unto the Lord, while they have time and space given them : with a brief account of the latter part of the life of John Perrot, and his end &c. : also a testimony against Robt. Rich and John Perrot their filthy books lately printed against God's people in scorn called Quakers : with a postscript by another hand
|
John Taylor
|
1683 |
Engelska |
739 |
Misselanies, or, Fifty years gathering out of sundry authors in prose and verse - being the studious readings, painful collections, and some of them are the composings of the writer and publisher heerof
|
John Taylor
|
1652 |
Engelska |
740 |
Ephēmeris, or, An almanack for the year of our Saviour's incarnation 1696 - and from the creation, according to the best of history, 5645 ... : wherein is contained astronomical, astrological, and meteorological observations, lunations, eclipses, the diurnal motions of the planets, remarkable conjunctions, tables of the sun's rising ... : a table of houses ... for the meridian of Norwich, a table of the moon's age, tide tables
|
John Taylor, mathematician
|
1696 |
Engelska |