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Taylor, John, 1580?-1653
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1000995
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Taylor, John, 1580?-1653
Taylor John 1580-1653
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A Description of the Round-head and rattle-head
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A Preparative to studie, or, The vertue of sack
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A Second message to Mr. Willam Lavd late Archbishop of Canterbury, now prisoner in the Tower, in the behalfe of Mercurie
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A bavvd
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A brave and valiant sea-fight, upon the coast of Cornewall, the 17. of Iune last past
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A brave memorable and dangerous sea-fight, foughten neere the road of Tittawan in Barbary
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A brief director for those that would send their letters to any parts of England, Scotlaud, or Ireland. Or A list of all the carriers, waggoners coaches, posts, ships, barks, hoys, and passage-boats, that come to London, from the most parts and places, by land & sea
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A briefe relation of the idiotismes and absurdities of Miles Corbet, Esquire, councellor at law, reorder and burgesse for Great Yarmouth
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A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs
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A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs, from the Normans conquest, vntill this present. By Iohn Taylor
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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
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A cast over the vvater, by John Taylor. Giuen gratis to William Fennor, the rimer, from London to the Kings Bench. Or a replication to Fennors answer. With admonitions, and friendly exhortations in prose and verse, perswading the said Fennor to penitence, that he may hang with the clearer consience at Saint Thomas of Waterings. Heere may you see a fellow brau'd and baffled, and (like a iade) is spurgal'd; swicht, and snaffled
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A cluster of coxcombes; or, Cinquepace of five sorts of knaves and fooles
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A common vvhore
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A delicate, dainty, damnable dialogue
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A dialogue between a pedler and a popish priest
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A dialogue, or, Rather a parley betweene Prince Ruperts dogge whose name is Puddle, and Tobies dog whose name is Pepper, &c
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A dialogve, or, Rather a parley betweene Prince Ruperts dogge whose name is Pvddle, and Tobies dog whose name is Pepper &c
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A dog of vvar, or, The trauels of Drunkard, the famous curre of the Round-Woolstaple in Westminster
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A dog's elegy, or, Rvpert's tears
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A dreadful battle between a taylor and a louse, or, A tryal of skill to prove if we can
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A famous fight at sea
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A full and compleat answer against the writer of a late volume set forth
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A full and compleat answer against the writer of a late volume set forth, entituled A tale in a tub, or, A tub lecture
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A funerall elegie
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A iuniper lecture
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A juniper lecture
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A kicksey winsey: or a lerry come-twang: wherein Iohn Taylor hath satyrically suited 800. of his bad debters, that will not pay him for his returne of his iourney from Scotland
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A late weary, merry voyage and journey, or, Iohn Taylors moneths travells
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A letter from Rhoan in France
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A letter sent to London from a spie at Oxford
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A liuing sadnes, in duty consecrated to the immortal memory of our late deceased albe-loued soueraigne Lord, the peereles paragon of princes, Iames, king of great Brittaine, France and Ireland
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A liuing sadnes, in duty consecrated to the immortall memory of our late deceased albe-loued soueraigne lord, the peeereles paragon of princes, Iames, King of great Brittaine, France and Ireland
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A memorial of all the English monarchs
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A most horrible, terrible, tollerable, termagant satyre
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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
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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
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A new discouery by sea, with a vvherry from London to Salisbury. Or, a voyage to the West, the worst, or the best
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A pedlar and a Romish priest in a very hot discourse, full of mirth, truth, wit, folly, and plain-dealing
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A plea for prerogative, or, Give Cæsar his due
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A preter-pluperfect, spick and span new nocturnall, or Mercuries weekly night-newes
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A preter-plvperfect spick and span new nocturnall, or Mercuries weekly night-newes
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A recommendation to Mercurius Morbicus
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A reply as true as steele to a rusty, rayling, ridiculous, lying libell
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A sad and deplorable loving elegy
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A seasonable lecture, or a most learned oration
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A shilling or, The trauailes of twelue-pence
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A short relation of a long iourney
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A svvarme of sectaries and schismatiqves
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A svvarme of sectaries, and schismatiques
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A tale in a tub or, A tub lecture
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A three-fold discourse betweene three neighbours, Algate, Bishopsgate, and John Heyden the late cobler of Hounsditch, a professed Brownist
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A valorous and perillous sea-fight
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A verry merry vvherry-ferry-voyage, or, Yorke for my money
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Ad populum, or, A lecture to the people
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Ad popvlvm, or, A lecture to the people
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Ale ale-vated into the ale-titude
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All the vvorkes of Iohn Taylor the water-poet
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An English-mans loue to Bohemia
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An Exact description of Prince Ruperts malignant she-monkey, a great delinquent
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An Exact description of a Roundhead, and a long-head shag-poll
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An apology for private preaching
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An armado, or nauy, of 103. ships & other vessels, who haue the art to sayle by land, as well as by sea
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An armado, or nauye, of 103. ships & other vessels; who haue the art to sayle by land, as well as by sea
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An armado, or, a navy, of a hundred and three ships, and other vessels; who have the art to sayle by land, aswell as by sea
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An arrant thiefe
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An arrant thiefe, vvhom euery man may trust
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An arrant thiefe, vvhom everie man may trust
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An honest ansvver to the late published apologie for private preaching
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An honest answer to the late published apologie for private preaching
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An humble desired union betweene prerogative and priviledge
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Aquamusæ: or, Cacafogo, cacadæmon, Captain George Wither wrung in the withers
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Bevvare of false prophets, or, A true relation of the examination and confesion of Roalond Bateman of St. Mary's at Newington in Southwark
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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
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Christian admonitions against the tvvo fearefull sinnes of cursing and swearing
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Christmas in & out
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Christmas in & out, or, Our Lord & Saviour Christs birth-day
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Cornu-copia, or, Roome for a ram-head
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Crop-eare curried, or, Tom Nash his ghost
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D-E
Differing worships, or, The oddes, betweene some knights service and God's
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Divers crabtree lectures
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Drinke and vvelcome: or The famous historie of the most part of drinks, in use now in the kingdomes of Great Brittaine and Ireland
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Englands comfort and Londons ioy
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Epigrammes
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F-J
Faire and fowle vveather: or a sea and land storme
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Faire and fowle weather: or a sea and land storme betweene two calmes.
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Fill gut, & pinch belly
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For the sacred memoriall of the great, noble, and ancient example of vertue and honour, the illustrious and welbeloued Lord, Charles Howard, Earle of Nottingham
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Grand plvtoes remonstrance, or, The devill horn-mad at Roundheads and Brownists
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Great Britaine, all in blacke
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Great Britaine, all in blacke
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Heads of all fashions
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Heauens blessing, and earths ioy. Or a true relation, of the supposed sea-fights & fire-workes, as were accomplished, before the royall celebration, of the al-beloved mariage, of the two peerlesse paragons of Christendome, Fredericke & Elizabeth
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I Marry Sir, heere is nevves indeed
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Iack a Lent his beginning and entertainment
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Iohn Taylor being yet unhanged sends greeting to Iohn Booker that hanged him lately in a picture, in a traiterous, slanderous, and foolish London pamphlet called A cable-rope double-twisted
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Iohn Taylor being yet unhanged, sends greeting, to Iohn Booker
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Iohn Taylors last voyage, and adventure
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Iohn Taylors manifestation and iust vindication against Iosua Church
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Iohn Taylors manifestation and ivst vindication against Iosva Chvrch his exclamation
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John Taylors vvandering, to see the vvonders of the vvest
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K-O
Laugh, and be fat.
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Love one another, a tvb lectver
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Love one another: a tub lecture
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Lucifers lacky
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Lvcifers lacky, or The devils new creature
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Mad fashions, od fashions, all out fashions, or, The emblems of these distracted times
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Mad fashions, od fashions, all out of fashions, or, The emblems of these distracted times
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Mad verse, sad verse, glad verse and bad verse
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Mad verse, sad verse, glad verse and bad verse. Cut out, and slenderly sticht together, by John Taylor. Who bids the reader either to like or dislike them, to commend them, or come mend them
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Mercuries message defended against the vain, foolish, simple, and absurd cavils of Thomas Herbert a ridiculous bullad-maker
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Mercuries message defended, against the vain, foolish, simple, and absurd cavils of Thomas Herbert a ridiculous ballad-maker
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Mercurius Aquaticus, or, The vvater-poets ansvver to all that hath or shall be writ by Mercurius Britanicus. Ex omni ligno non fit Mercurius
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Mercurius Nonsencicus, written for the vse of the simple vnderstander
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Mercurius infernalis; or Orderlesse orders, votes, ordinances, and commands from Hell
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Mercvrivs Aqvaticvs, or, The vvater-poets ansvver to all that hath or shall be writ by Mercvrivs Britanicvs
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Misselanies, or, Fifty years gathering out of sundry authors in prose and verse
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Most curious Mercurius Brittanicus, alias Sathanicus, answer'd, cuff'd, cudgell'd, and clapper-claude .
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Mr Thomas Coriat to his friends in England sendeth greeting
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New preachers nevv
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Newes and strange newes from St. Christophers of a tempestuous spirit, which is called by the Indians a hurry-cano or whirlewind
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No Mercurius Aulicus
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Nonsence upon sence, or, Sence, upon nonsence
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Odcombs complaint: or Coriats funerall epicedium
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Of alterations strange, of various signes, heere are compos'd a few poetick lines
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Old nevves newly revived, or, The discovery of all occurences happened since the beginning of the Parliament
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Old nevves newly revived: or, the discovery of all occurrences happened since the beginning of the Parliament
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Oxford besiedged
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P-T
Part of this summers travels, or News from hell, Hull, and Hallifax, from York, Linne, Leicester, Chester, Coventry, Lichfield, Nottingham, and the Divells Ars a peake
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Peace, peace, and we shall be quiet. Or, Monarchie asserted, the Kings right vindicated
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Prince Charles his vvelcome from Spaine
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Ranters of both sexes, male and female
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Rare physick for the chvrch sick of an ague
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Rebells anathematized, and anatomized: or A satyricall salutation to the rabble of seditious, pestiferous pulpit-praters
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Religions enemies
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Religions lotterie, or, The churches amazement
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Roger the Caterburian that cannot say grace for his meat, with a low-crown'd hat before his face, or, The character of a prelaticall man affecting heighths
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Saint Hillaries teares, shed upon all professions, from the iudge to the petty fogger, from the spruce dames of the exchange, to the durty walking fishmongers, from the Coven-Garden lady of iniquity, to the Turnebal-Streete-trull, and indeed, from the Tower-stairs to Westminster-Ferry, for want of a stirring midsomer terme, this yeare of disasters, 1642
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Salvator mundi
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Sir Gregory Nonsence his newes from no place
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Some small and simple reasons delivered in a hollow-tree in Waltham Forrest in a lecture on the 33. of March last
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Some small and simple reasons, delivered in a hollow-tree, iu Waltham Forrest, in a lecture, on the 33. of March last
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St. Hillaries teares
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St. Hillaries teares shed upon all professions from the judge to the petty fogger
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Stripping, vvhipping, and pumping. Or, The five mad shavers of Drury-Lane
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Superbiæ flagellum, or, The vvhip of pride. By Iohn Taylor
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Tailors travels from London to the Isle of VVight, vvith his returne, and occasion of his iourney
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Taylor his trauels: from the citty of London in England, to the citty of Prague in Bohemia
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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
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Taylor's motto
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Taylors Vrania, or His heauenly muse
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Taylors arithmetick from one to tvvelve
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Taylors arithmeticke, from one to twelve
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Taylors farevvell, to the Tovver-bottles
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Taylors feast
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Taylors goose
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Taylors pastorall
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Taylors revenge, or, The rymer William Fennor firkt, feritted, and finely fetcht ouer the coales
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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
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Taylors vvater-worke: or the scullers trauels, from Tiber to Thames
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The Brownists conventicle, or, An assemble of Brownists, separatists, and non-conformists as they met together at a private house to heare a sermon of a brother of theirs neere Algate, being a learned felt-maker
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The Brownists synagogve, or, A late discovery of their conventicles, assemblies, and places of meeting
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The Decoy duck
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The Devil turn'd Round-head, or, Plvto become a Brownist
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The Devil turn'd round-head: or, Pluto become a Brownist
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The Divisions of the Church of England crept in at XV several doores by divers
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The Dolphins danger and deliuerance
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The Friers lamenting, for his not repenting
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The Irish footman's poetry, or, George the rvnner against Henry the walker, in defence of Iohn the Swimmer
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The Kings Most Excellent Majesties vvelcome to his owne house
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The Popes benediction, or, His generall pardon to be purchased onely with mony and without penance
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The anatomy of the separatists, alias, Brownists
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The aprentices advice to the XII bishops lately accused of high treason by the honourable assemblies of both Houses
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The armies letanie
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The booke of martyrs
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The carriers cosmographie. or A briefe relation, of the innes, ordinaries, hosteries, and other lodgings in, and neere London, where the carriers, waggons, foote-posts and higglers, doe usually come, from any parts, townes, shires and countries, of the kingdomes of England, principality of Wales, as also from the kingdomes of Scotland and Ireland
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The causes of the diseases and distempers of this kingdom
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The certain travailes of an uncertain journey
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The coaches ouerthrow. Or, A ioviall exaltation of divers tradesmen, and others, for the suppression of troublesome hackney coaches
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The colde tearme, or, The frozen age, or, The metamorphosis of the Riuer of Thames
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The complaint of Christmas
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The complaint of Christmas, and the teares of Twelfetyde
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The complaint of M. Tenter-hooke the proiector, and Sir Thomas Dodger the patentee
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The conversion, confession, contrition, comming to himselfe, & advice, of a mis-led, ill-bred, rebellious round-head
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The devills white boyes, or, A mixture of malicious malignants
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The diseases of the times, or, The distempers of the common-wealth
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The eighth vvonder of the vvorld, or Coriats escape from his supposed drowning
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The essence, quintessence, insence, innocence, lye-sence, & magnifisence of nonsence upon sence: or, Sence upon nonsence
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The fearefull sommer: or Londons calamitie, the countreys discurtesie, & both their miserie. By Iohn Taylor
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The fearefull summer, or, Londons calamity, the countries courtesy, and both their misery
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The fearefull summer: or, Londons calamitie, the countries discourtesie, and both their miserie
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The fooles of fate: or, The unravelling of the Parliament and Army
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The generall complaint of the most oppressed, distressed commons of England
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The great O Toole
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The great eater, of Kent, or Part of the admirable teeth and stomacks exploits of Nicholas Wood, of Harrisom in the county of Kent
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The hellish Parliament being a counter-Parliament to this in England, containing the demonstrative speeches and statutes of that court
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The high and mightie commendation of the vertue of a pot of good ale
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The honorable, and memorable foundations, erections, raisings, and ruines, of divers cities, townes, castles, and other pieces of antiquitie, within ten shires and counties of this kingdome
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The impartialest satyre that ever was seen
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The impartiallest satyre that ever was seen
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The liar
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The liar, or A contradiction to those who in the titles of their bookes affirmed them to be true, when they were false although mine are all true, yet I terme them lyes
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The life and death of the most blessed among women, the Virgin Mary mother of our Lord Iesus
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The muses mourning: or funerall sonnets on the death of Iohn Moray Esquire. By Iohn Taylor
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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
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The needles excellency
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The nipping and snipping of abuses: or The woolgathering of vvitte
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The noble cavalier caracterised, and a rebellious caviller cavterised
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The number and names of all the kings of England & Scotland
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The number and names of all the kings of England and Scotland, from the beginning of their governments to this present
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The old, old, very old man: or, The age and long life of Thomas Par, the son of Iohn Parr of Winnington in the parish of Alberbury; in the county of Salop, (or Shropshire)
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The old, old, very old man: or, The age and long life of Thomas Par, the son of Iohn Parr of Winnington in the parish of Alberbury; in the county of Salopp, (or Shropshire)
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The olde, old, very olde man: or the age and long life of Thomas Par
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The pennyles pilgrimage, or The money-lesse perambulation, of Iohn Taylor, alias the Kings Majesties water-poet
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The praise and vertue of a iayle, and iaylers
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The praise of hemp-seed
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The praise, antiquity, and commodity, of beggery, beggers, and begging. Iohn Taylor
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The praise, of cleane linnen
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The scourge of basenesse, or, The old lerry with a new kicksey, and a new cum twang with the old winsye
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The sculler
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The subjects joy for the Parliament
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The travels of twelve-pence .
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The triumphs of fame and honour, or, The noble accomplish'd solemnity, full of cost, art and state, at the inauguration and establishment of the true worthy and right nobly minded Robert Parkhurst, into the right honourable office of Lord Maior of London
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The vnnaturall father, or, The cruell murther committed by Iohn Rowse of the towne of Ewell, ten miles from London, in the county of Surry, vpon two of his owne children
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The vvhole life and progresse of Henry Walker the ironmonger
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The vvonder of a kingdom, dedicated to the iunto at VVestminster
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The vvorld runs on wheeles, or, Oddes betuueen cartes and coaches
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The water-cormorant his complaint
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The watermens suit concerning players
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The world runnes on vvheeles: or oddes, betwixt carts and coaches
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The world turn'd upside down, or, A briefe description of the ridiculous fashions of these distracted times
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The world turn'd upside down: or, A briefe description of the ridiculous fashions of these distracted times
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This author hath newly caused all his works (being aboue 60.) to bee printed into one volume
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Three vveekes, three daies, and three houres obseruations and trauel, from London to Hamburgh in Germanie
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To the Right Honorable assembly, the Lords, Knights, Esquires, and Burgesses of the Honorable House of Commons in Parliament
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Tom Nash his ghost: or The currying of crop-eare
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Tom Tel-Troths come to town againe with his humors
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True louing sorow, attired in a robe of vnfeigned griefe
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Truth's triumph: or, Old miracles newly revived in the gracious preservation of our soveraigne Lord the King
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U-Z
VVestminster Fayre, newly proclaimed
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VVit and mirth
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Verbum sempiternum
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Wit and mirth
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