Imatges de pàgina
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Curio (Cælius Secundus). Pasquine in a traunce, turned but lately out of the Italian, by W. P.

4to. Lond. Wylliam Seres, n. d.

Curtesye. The booke of Curtesye, or Lytyll John

4to. n. d.

[A fragment of two leaves only]

Printed by Caxton.

Curteys (Richard), bp. of Chichester. A sermon preached before the queene at Richmond, on Judg. i. 1-13 8vo. Lond. by Henry Bynneman, 1575

Curtius (Quintus). His history, conteyning the actes of the greate Alexander; transl. by John Brende

8vo. Lond. by Rych. Tottyl, 1570

Customs. The rates of the custome house; whereunto is also added the true difference and contents of waights and measures

8vo. Lond. by John Alde, 1583

D. (E.) The prayse of nothing

4to. Lond. by H. Jackson, 1585

D. (I.) Vox Graculi, or Jacke Dawes prognostication 4to. n. p.

1623

D. (J.) The knave in graine, new vampt: a comedy 4to. Lond. 1640

D. (R.) The strange and prodigious religious customs and manners of sundry nations 8vo. Lond. 1683 D. (W.) A tragi-comicall history of our times, under the borrowed names of Lisander and Calista (from the French of Vital d'Audiguier) 8vo. Lond. 1652 Daille (John). A treatise concerning the right use of the fathers in the decision of controversies

4to. Lond. 1651

Dallington (Robert). A method for trauell; shewed by taking the view of France, as it stoode in the year 4to. Lond. T. Creede, n. d.

1598

Dancing. The dancing-master; 2 vols.

and vol. I.

8vo. Lond. 1716, 19

8vo. Lond. 1721

The art of dancing, a poem; second ed.

8vo. Lond. 1744

A choice collection of 200 favourite country dances performed at court, Bath, Tunbridge, and all public places, with proper figures of directions to each tune 8vo. Lond. 1744

D'Anvers (Henr.) A treatise of baptism; wherein that of believers and that of infants is examined by the scriptures, &c.; second ed. 8vo. Lond. 1674

The history of Christianity amongst the ancient Britains and Waldensians. Ibid.

Darrell (John). A true narration of the strange and grevous vexation by the Devil, of 7 persons in Lancashire, and William Somers of Nottingham

4to. n. p. 1600 A detection of that sinnful, shamful, lying, and ridiculous discours of Samuel Harshnet, entituled; a discoverie of the frawdulent practises of John Darrell 4to. n. p. 1600

Dauborne (Robert), M.A. The poor-man's

comfort; a

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Lond. 1655

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music

4to. Aberdene, 1666

training

4to. Lond. 1618

Davidson (Thomas).

four, and five parts; with a brief introduction to

Davies (Edward). Military directions; or the art of

Davies, or Davys (sir John). Nosce teipsum.

This

oracle expounded in two elegies: 1. of humane
knowledge; 2. of the soule of man, and the immor-
talitie thereof
8vo. Lond. 1622

Davies or Davis (John), of Kidwelly. The ancient rites and monuments of the monastical and cathedral church of Durham 8vo. Lond. 1672

Dawson (Thomas). The good huswifes Iewell; newly set foorth with additions

the second part

8vo. Lond. for Edw. White, 1596

8vo. Lond. by E. Allde for E. White, 1597

Day (Angel). The English secretorie; or, plaine and direct method, for the enditing of all manner of epistles or letters

4to. Lond. by R. I. for C. Burbie, 1595 Day (John). The blind-beggar of Bednal-Green, with the merry humor of Tom Strowd the Norfolk 4to. Lond. 1659

yeoman Deacon (John). Dialogical discourses of spirits and divels, by John Deacon and John Walker

4to. Lond. 1601

A summarie answere to al the material points in any of Master Darel his bookes, by J. D. and J. Walker

Debes (Lucas Jacobson), M.A.

4to. Lond. 1601 Foroæ, et Foroa rese

rata that is, a description of the islands and in-
habitants of Foroe; transl. from the Danish by
J. S.
8vo. Lond. 1675

Decker, or Dekker (Thomas). The whole magnifycent
entertainment: given to king James, queene Anne
his wife, and Henry Frederick the prince, the 15th
of March, 1603
4to. Lond. 1604
The seuen deadlie sinns of London 4to. Lond. 1606
A strange horse-race: with the catch-poles masqve, the
bankrouts banquet, and the diuell, falling sicke,
makes his last will and testament 4to. Lond. 1613
Villanies discouered by lanthorne and candle-light, and
the helpe of a new cryer called O per se O, being an
addition to the belmans second nightwalke. (Anon.)
4to. Lond. 1616

A tragi-comedy, called, Match mee in London

The dead terme

4to. Lond. 1631 imperf. 4to. (Lond. 1608)

Dee (John). General and rare memorials pertayning to the perfect arte of navigation. (Anon.)

fol. Lond. John Daye, 1577 His testament; p. 334 of Ashmole's theatr. chem., q. v.

De-Laune (Tho.) The present state of London

8vo. Lond. 1681

Deloney (Thomas). The pleasant history of John Winchcomb, in his younger ycares called Jack of New4to. Lond. 1630

bury

The garland of good-will; containing many pleasant songs, and pretty poems to sundry new notes

and

8vo. Lond. 1678

8vo. Lond. n. d.

The pleasant and princely history of the gentle craft

and

4to. Lond. 1696

4to.

Lond. n. d.

The noble and diverting history of the gentle-craft

8vo. Lond. 1737

4to. Lond. n. d.

The shooe-makers glory; or the princely history of the gentle craft The delightful and princely history of the gentle-craft

8vo. (no title)

Thomas of Reading, or, the Sixe Worthie Yeomen of the West, APP. 4to. Lond. 1632 The honour of the cloathworking trade, or the pleasant and famous history of Thomas of Reading, APP.

4to. no date Demosthenes. His three orations in fauour of the Olynthians, a people in Thracia; with those his fower orations titled expressely and by name against king Philip of Macedonie; englished by Th. Wylson

Sophy

4to. Lond. Henr. Denham, 1570

Denham (sir John). Poems and translations, with the 8vo. Lond. 1668 Dent (Arthur). A sermon of repentance, on Luke xiii, 5 8vo. Lond. 1622

Devereux (Robert), earl of Essex. His ghost, sent from Elysium, to the nobility, gentry, and commonality of England; 2 parts (by Tho. Scott); p. 441. vol. I of Phoenix Britannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. Dialogus. The dialoges of creatures moralysed; bl. let. 4to. s. 1. et a Digbie (sir Kenelme). His closet opened: whereby is discovered several ways for making of metheglin, sider, &c. with directions for cookery, preserving, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1699 Digges (Thomas and Dudly). Foure paradoxes, or politique discourses

4to. Lond. 1604

Dilke (Thomas). The lover's luck;

a comedy

8vo. Lond. 1696

8vo. Lond. 1697

The city lady or folly reclaim'd; a comedy

The pretender or the town unmaskt; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1698

land, and Ireland

Directory. A directory for the publique worship of God, throughout the three kingdoms of England, Scot4to. Lond. 1644 An ordinance for the taking away of the book of Common-Prayer. ibid.

Discourse. A help to discourse: or, more merriment mixt with serious matters: together with the countryman's counseller 8vo. Lond. 1654

Doctors Commons. The last will and testament of doctors commons

4to. n. p. 1641

Done (John). A miscellania of morall, theologicall, and

philosophicall sentances

Donne (John), D.D. dean of St. Paul's. with elegies on the author's death

8vo. Lond. 1650

Poems by J. D.

8vo. Lond. 1635

Paradoxes, problems, essayes, characters; to which is added a book of epigrams; transl. into English by J. Maine 8vo. Lond. 1652 Ignatius his conclave; with an apologie for the Jesuites. p. 105. ibid.

Dorrington (Theophilus), rector of Wittresham. Observa

tions concerning the present state of religion in
the Romish church, with reflections upon them;
made in a journey through some provinces of Ger-
many in the year 1698
8vo. Lond. 1699

Douce (Francis). Illustrations of Shakspeare, and of ancient manners; with dissertations on the clowns and fools of Shakespeare, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1807

Dover (Robert). Annalia Dubrensia upon the yeerely celebration of Mr. Rob. Dovers Olimpick games upon Cotswold Hills 4to. Lond. 1636

Drant (Thomas), bach. in divinity. Two sermons preached, the one on Cant. v. 6. at S. Maries Spittle on Tuesday in Easter weeke, 1570, and the other on Gen. ii. at the court at Windsor, the Sonday after twelfth day, 1569 8vo. Lond. John Daye, s. a.

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