Disease 1743 Tate (Nathaniel) Poems T. M. for Benj. Tooke, 8vo, 1677 1744 Tate (Nathaniel) Syphilis, or a Poetical History of the French old morocco, gilt leaves 8vo, 1699 1746 Tatler (The) The Lucubrations of Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq., 4 vol. old calf 8vo, 1788 1747 Taylor (Francis) Grapes from Canaan, expressed in a short divine Poem morocco, gilt leaves, the Sykes copy 8vo, 1658 1748 TAYLOR (JOHN) Great Britaine all in Blacke for the incomparable losse of Henry, our late worthy Prince, in verse; the title within a black border, with wood portrait of the Prince, E. A., for J. Wright, 1613-The Fvnerals of the high and mighty Prince Henry, &c. T. S., for John Budgde, 1613 in one volume, russia 4to, 1749 TAYLOR (THOMAS) :-TAYLERS REVENGE, or the Rymer William Fennor Fiskt, Feritted and finely fetcht ouer the Coales; wherein his Ryming Raggamuffin Rascality, without Partiality or feare of Principallity, is Anagrammatized, Anatomized, and Stigmatized Printed at Rotterdam, at the signe of the bleu Bitch in Doglane, and are to be sold almost any where, and transported ouer sea in a Cods belly, and cast vp at Cuckolds Haven the last Spring-tide, 1615 FENNORS DEFENCE, or I am your first Man; wherein the Water-man, John Taylor, is dasht, sowst, and finally fallen into the Thames Roger Barnes, 1615 These two poetical pieces are of excessive rarity. The copies belonged to Mr. Bindley, at whose sale they produced £6. Fennor's Defence has one leaf supplied with manuscript. The two are bound together in half russia. 8vo 1750 Taylor (John) A Briefe Remembrance of all the English George Eld, for Henry Gosson, 8vo, 1618 1751 Taylor (John) An Englishmans Love to Bohemia, in verse, with woodcuts russia, the Sykes copy Printed at Dort, 4to, 1620 5. 1752 Taylor (Johu):-Taylor's Motto; et Habeo, et Careo, et Curo, а роет calf, g. l. J. T. and H. G., 8vo, 1621 The engraved title or frontispiece represents the Water Poet, with his royal badge, &c., standing on a rock. 1753 Taylor (John) Superbiæ Flagellum, or the Whip of Pride, a poem, with frontispiece calf G. Eld, 8vo, 1621 1754 Taylor (John) An Arrant Thiefe, &c., with a Comparison betweene a Thiefe and a Booke, a poem, first edition Park's copy 1755 Taylor (John) A Common Whore morocco, g. l. Edw. All-de, 8vo, 1622 ** This is the first edition, and is rare. . 1756 Taylor (John) Taylors Farewell to the Tower Bottles, in verse calf Printed at Dort, 8vo, 1622 1757 Taylor (John) The Life and Death of the most blessed among women, the Virgin Mary, Mother of our Lord Jesus, a poem morocco, g. 1. G. E., for J. T., 8vo, 1622 1758 Taylor (John) A Memoriall of all the English Monarchs, being in number 150, from Brute to King James, in Heroyicall Verse, woodcut portraits morocco, g.l. Printed at London, 8vo, 1622 1759 Taylor (John) A Shilling, or the Trauails of Twelve-pence, first edit. of this poem in verse 8vo, (1622) - 1760 Taylor (John) The Praise and Vertue of a Jayle and Jaylers, J. H., for R. B., 1623 50. 1761 Taylor's (John) A Werry Merry Wherry Ferry Voyage, or Yorke for Money, whereunto is annexed a very pleasant Description of that famous Man, O'Toole the Great, in verse, inlaid blue morocco, gilt leaves Edw. All de, 4to, 1623 This copy belonged to Mr. Nassau, at whose sale it was purchased by Mr. Triphook, for £6..16s..6d. Mr. Skegg has since inserted a most brilliant impression of the exceedingly rare portrait of O'TOOLE, by DELARAM, purchased at the sale of Mr. Graves's Collection of Portraits, for £10..10s. Richardson's copy of this rare portrait is also inserted. 16 1762 Taylor (John) the Scourge of Basenesse, or the old Lerry with 2.10 a New Kicksey, and a new cum twang with the old Winsye, in verse, the two last leaves MS. N. O., for Mathew Walbancke, 8vo, 1624 . 1763 Taylor (John) For the Sacred Memoriall of the Great, Noble and Ancient Example of Vertue and Honour, Charles Howard, Earle of Nottingham Printed for H. G., 4to, 1625 This "Funerall Elegie," is illustrated with the rare portrait of the Earl, by Pass, an impression of which sold at General Dowdeswell's sale for £10. 71764 Taylor (John) An Armado, or Nauye, of 103 Ships and other Vessels, who haue the Art to Sayle by Land as well as by Sea, in verse, first edition morocco, the Sykes copy E. A., for H. Gosson, 8vo, 1627 1765 Taylor (John) ALL THE WORKES OF JOHN TAYLOR, the Water-Poet. Beeing Sixty and Three in number, collected into one volume by the Author, with sundry new additions, corrected, reuised, and newly imprinted, 1630, frontispiece, or rather, an additional title-page, engraved by Cockson morocco, elegantly tooled J. B.,for James Boler, folio, 1630 * * "These Bookes in number sixty-three are heere, Bound in one volume, scattered here and there, They stand not thus in order in the booke, But any man may finde them that will looke." The above lines occur at the end of the Index enumerating many pieces herein printed, of which no separate editions are known to be extant. 3 1766 Taylor (John) a Memorial of all the English Monarchs, being in number 151 from Brute to King Charles, in Heroical Verse, illustrated with woodcut portraits, very scarce calf, gilt leaves 21767 Taylor (John) An Arrant Thiefe. Whom everie Man may trust: John Beale, 8vo, 1630 In word and deed, exceeding true and just. a poem Henry Gosson, 8vo, 1635 ib. 1635 A Bawd, a vertuous Bawd, a modest Bawd; as shee deserves, reprove, or else applaud, partly in verse An Armado, or a Navy of a Hundred and Three Ships and other Vessels, &c. ib. 1635 Taylors Travels and Circular Perambulation through, and by more than thirty times twelve Signes of the Zodiack, of the famous Cities of London and Westminster A. M. 1626 Bull, Beare, and Horse, Cut, Curtaile, and Longtaile, with Tales and Tales of Buls, Clenches, and Flashes, as also here and there a touch of our Beare-Garden-sport, in verse and prose M. Parsons, for Henry Gosson, 1638 in 1 vol. green morocco, g. l. from the Hanrott collection "Taylors Travels" is an exceedingly curious and rare piece, wherein all the different Signs used at that period, in and about London, are alphabetically arranged, with Epigrams thereon. The next piece, " Bull, Beare," &c. is also very rare, but wants a leaf at the end: following this are fragments of "The World runs on Wheeles," 1635; and "A Catalogue of Tavernes in ten Shires about London.' which piece, as Taylor states in the dedication, is his "second booke upon Tavernes." It extends to p. 48, and wants only the title and page of dedication. * S 3.4 10 6.17 1. 16 2.11 ་ 1768 Taylor (John) A Liuing Sadnes, in Duty consecrated to the immortall memory of our late deceased Lord and Soueraigne, &c. James, who departed this Life at his Mansion at Theobalds, on Sunday last, the 27 of March, 1625 ** To this * poem 4to is added a portrait of King James, and an engraving of his Monument. 1769 Taylor (John) the Fearfull Summer, or Londons Calamitie, the Countries Discourtesie, and both their Miserie. Printed by Authoritie, in Oxford, in the last great Infection of the Plague, 1625, and now reprinted with some editions concerning this present yeere, 1636, in verse, with woodcut on title russia, gilt leaves 4to, 1636 1770 Taylor (John) Differing Worships, or the oddes betweene some Knights Service and God's, or Tom Nash his Ghost (the old Martin queller) newly rous'd, in verse William Ley, 4to, 1640 1771 Taylor (John) The Needles Excellency: a New Booke wherin are divers Admirable Workes wrought with the Needle. Newly invented and cut in copper for the pleasure and profit of all the Industrious * * red morocco, gilt leaves James Baler, oblong folio, 1640 *This is a very rare volume: The title-page is engraved with the figures of Wisdome, Industrie, and Follie. The various patterns for the needle are given in twenty-eight plates, which are preceded by a poem, intituled "The Prayse of the Needle," with sonnets addressed " To the Memory of Queenes and great Ladies." The present copy is inlaid. 1772 Taylor (John) The Hellish Parliament, being a Counter-Parliament to this in England, woodcut on title 4to, 1641 . 1773 Taylor (John) The Irish Footman's Poetry, or George the Runner against Henry the Walker, in defence of John the Swimmer. The author is George Richardson, an Hibernian Pedestrian, in verse 4to, 1641 1774 Taylor (John) Last Voyage and Adventure, performed from the twentieth of July last 1641, to the tenth of September, partly in verse calf F. L., for John Taylor, 1641 4to, 1641 ( 3.1775 Taylor (John) A Pedlar and a Romish Priest in a very hot Discourse, full of Mirth, Truth, Wit, Folly, and Plain Dealing, a poem 1776 Taylor (John) Religious Enemies, with a brief and Ingenious Relation, as by Anabaptists, &c. sawcily presuming to tosse Religion in a Blanquet, woodcut 14 14. Thomas Bates, 4to, 1641 1777 Taylor (John) A Reply as true as Steele to a Rusty, Rayling, Ridiculous, Lying Libell, &c. entituled A Swarme of Sectaries and Schismatiques, in verse, with woodcut on title 4to, 1641 2 1778 Taylor (John) A Swarme of Secturaies and Schismatiques, in An Answer to a foolish Pamphlet, entituled A Swarme of in one vol. 4to 1641 1779 Taylor (John) A Tale of a Tub, or a Tub Lecture, as it was delivered by My-heele Mendsole, an Inspired Brownist and a most upright Translator 8vo, 1641 // 1780 Taylor (John) The Apprentices Advice to the XII Bishops, in verse 4to, 1642 1781 Taylor (John) A Delicate, Dainty, Damnable Dialogve, between the Devill and a Jesuite, in verse, with woodcut on title J. H., for Thomas Banks, 4to, 1642 /21782 Taylor (John) A full and compleat Answer against the Writer of a late volume set forth, entituld A Tale in a Tub, or a Tub Lecture, &c. by Thorno Ailo, Anagram, in verse and prose F. Cowles, &c. 4to, 1642 3 1783 Taylor (John) an Humble Desirable Union betweene Prerogative and Privilege, very scarce 4to, 1642 1784 Taylor (John) Heads of all Fashions, being a plaine Desection or Definition of diverse and sundry sorts of heads, butting, jetting or pointing at vulgar opinion 9 9 John Morgan, 4to, 1642 *On the title is a woodcut representing seventeen Peads, though twenty are poetically described. 1785 Taylor (John) Mad Fashions, Od Fashions, All out of Fashions, or The Emblems of these Distracted Times, a poem, with woodcut on title John Hammond, 4to, 1642 1786 Taylor (John) A Seasonable Lecture, or a most learned Oration, disburthened from Henry Walker, a most judicious Quandam Ironmonger, &c. taken in short writing by Thorny Allo, &c. woodcut on title F. Cowles, &c. 4to, 1642 2. 1786*Taylor (John) Mercvrivs Aqvaticvs; or the Water-Poets Answer to all that hath or shall be writ by Mercvrivs Britannicvs ク 19. Printed in the Waine of the Moone, pag. 121, and Number 16 of Mercurius Britannicus, 4to, 1643 **This *** This is prose, with the exception of " An Elegy on Master Pym." 1787 Taylor (John) Crop-Eare Curried, or Tom Nash His Ghost, 4to, 1644 1788 Taylor (John) No Mercvrivs Avlicvs, but some merry flashes of Intelligence with the Pretended Parliaments Forces besiedging of Oxford foure miles off, and the terrible taking in of a Mill instead of the King and Citie calf, gilt leaves 4to, 1644 1789 Taylor (John) The Causes of the Diseases and Distempers of this Kingdom 4to, 1645 |