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The tract is dedicated to Sir Thomas Howet and to Sir Robert Wiseman, Knights, and to Mr. John Wiseman. On the title-page is a wood-cut. 1620. 4to. Bindley, pt. iv. 157, 17s. Superbiæ Flagellum, or the Whip of Pride. 1621. 8vo. with a frontispiece. Bindley, pt. iv. 1056, 8s.

Taylor's Goose: describing the Wilde Goose, Tame Goose, the Taylors', Winchester, Clack, Soland and Huniburne Goose, Goose upon Goose, &c. 1621.

Motto. Et Habeo, Et Careo, Et Curo. London, 1621. 8vo. A-E 4 in eights. The engraved title is frequently wanting. A retort metrical upon Wither's motto, nec habeo, nec careo, nec curo, which was printed in 1618 and 1621.

A Memoriall of all the English Monarchs, being in number 150, from Brute to K. James. 1622. 8vo. with portrait of Taylor, wh. length with his badge inscribed I. R. as Waterman to James I. oar and empty purse, by T. Cockson, and wood-cuts.

A briefe Remembrance of all the English Monarchs, with their Raignes, Deaths and Places of Burial, from the Norman Conquest unto our most gratious Soveraigne. Printed by George Eld, 1622.

Wit and Mirth, chargeably collected out of Taverns, Ordinaries, Innes, Bowling Greens and Alleys, Alehouses, Tobacco-shops, Highwayes, and Water-passages. In Prose.

Master Thomas Coriat's Commendations to his Friends in England: from Agra, the Capitoll of the Great Mogol. In prose.

Laugh and be fat; or, a Commentary upon the Odcombian Banket.

Odcomb's Complaint; or Coriat's funerall Epicedium, or Death Song, upon his late reported Drowning.

The World's Eighth Wonder, or Coriat's Reviving from his supposed Drowning.

A few Lines, to small Purpose, against the scandalous Aspersions that are either maliciously or ignorantly cast upon the Poets and Poems of these Times.

The Life and Death of the most blessed amongst all Women, the Virgin Mary. 1622. 8vo.

A Shilling, or the Travailes of 12 Pence. 8vo. with frontispiece. Nassau, pt. ii. 676, 9s. Common Whore with all these Graces graced : Shee's very honest, beautiful and chaste. 1622. 8vo.

An errant Thiefe whom euery Man may trust: In Word and Deed exceeding true and iust: with a Comparason betweene a Thiefe and a Booke. Lond. 1622. 8vo. pp. 44. Anglo-Poet. 735, 31. 3s.

Bibl.

The unnaturall Father: or the cruell Murther committed by one John Rowse, of Ewell, Surry, upon two of his own Children.

In prose.

Taylor's Farewell to the Tower-Bottles. Dort, 1622. 8vo.

An Encomium or Enco-mi-ass-trick, to the Honour of the noble Captain O'Toole. 1622.

The Great O'Toole. 1622. 8vo. with portrait of O'Toole.

Taylor the Water Poet's Water Cormorant, his Complaint against a Brood of Land Cormorants, Satyres. 1622. 4to. Nassau, pt. ii. 1193, 5s. -n. d. 4to. Hibbert, 7940, 8s.

Sir Gregory Nonsence, his Newes from no Place. 1622. 8vo. Partly written in mock blank verse. The date on the titlepage is 1700, that at the end of the volume is 1622. Some copies bear the date of 1800. The Works of John Taylor the Water Poet. London, 1622. 8vo. Stanley, 390, morocco, 62. 16s. 6d.

The World runnes on Wheeles: or Oddes betwixt Carts and Coaches. London, 1623. 8vo. In prose, A-C 3, 19 leaves, A 1 contains 'The meaning of the Embleme.'

in 1623. Reprinted in the second volume Prince Charles his Welcome from Spain

of the Somers Collection of Tracts.

A very merry wherry ferry Voyage, or Yorke for my Money. With a Description of that famous Man O'Toole the Great. 1623. 4to. Nassau, pt. ii. 1191, with portrait of O'Toole, by Delaram, morocco, 61. 16s. 6d. resold Hibbert, 7943, 5l. 10s.

The Praise and Vertue of Jayle and Jaylers, &c. 1623. 8vo.

A Discovery by Sea, from London to Salisbury. (1623?) Reprinted in The Crypt, new Series, no. vi.

Funeral Elegies upon Prince Henry, Earl of Nottingham, Bp. of Winchester, Duke of Richmond, John Moray Esq. and Earl of Holdernesse.

Taylor's Travels to Hamburgh in Ger many, and to Prague in Bohemia, in 1616. In prose and verse.

The Book of Martyrs, 1st and 2d Part.

Taylor's Water Worke: or the Sculler's Travels from Tyber to Thames, &c. This contains the Sculler, a collection of Epigrams.

Pastorall, being both historicall and satyricall; or the noble Antiquitie of Shepheards, with the profitable Use of Sheepe. Lond. 1624. 4to. In verse. Inglis, 1395, 17. 19s.

The Scourge of Basenesse. 1624?

Jack-a-Lent, his Beginning and Entertainment: with the mad Pranks of his Gentleman Usher Shrove Tuesday, that goes before him; and his Footman Hunger at tending. In prose.

Taylor's Urania. Consisting of 87 octave

stanzas.

The several Sieges, Assaults and Sackings, &c. of Jerusalem. 1st & 2d Part.

Against Cursing and Swearing. In prose.
Taylor's Revenge, or the Rimer, Wm.

Fennor, firkt, ferrited, and finely fetcht over sundry new Additions, corrected, revised and the Coals. newly imprinted. 1630. London, 1630. fol. Fennor's Defence against John Taylor, Reed, 5646, 21. 7s. Grave, 400, morocco, or I am your first Man, &c. 31. 6s. Duke of York, 5249, morocco, 31. 15s. Bindley, pt. iii. 2076, 47. 14s. 6d. Knights, 4243, 67. 2s. 6d. pt. iii. 857, russia, 61. 6s. 1417, russia, 61. 8s. 6d.

A Cast over the Water by John Taylor, given gratis to Will. Fennor, the Rimer, from London to the Kings Bench.

-

A living Sadnes in Duty, consecrated to the immortal Memory of James, King of Great Britaine, France and Ireland. (1625.) 4to. with a frontispiece. Bindley, pt. iv. 1097, 7s. 6d. Gordonstoun, 2242, 31. 3s.

The fearefull Summer, or London's Calamitie. 1626. A short address to the printer is signatured 'John Taylor of Oriell Colledge in Oxford.'

Anagrams and Sonnets. several persons of distinction.

Addressed to

An Armado, or Navy of Ships and other Vessels, who have the Art to sayle by Land, as well as Sea. 1627. 8vo. In prose. This Navy consists of words terminating with the syllable ship. Sir M. M. Sykes, pt. iii. 624, 21. 2s.

The Begger, or the Praise, Antiquitie, and Commoditie of Beggarie, Beggars and Begging.

A Kicksey-Winsey, or a lerry-cometwang: wherein John Taylor hath satyrically suted 750 bad Debtors, that will not pay him for his Return of his Journey from Scotland.

The Praise of cleane Linen, with the commendable Use of the Laundress.

The true Cause of the Waterman's Suit concerning Players: and the Reasons that their Playing on London Side is their extream Hindrance. In prose.

A Dogge of Warre; or, the Travels of Drunkard, the famous Cur of the round Woollstaple in Minster.

The Dolphin's Danger and Deliverance : a Seafight in the Gulph of Persia, famously fought by the Dolphin of London, against five of the Turks Men of War and a Sattie, Jan. 12, 1616.

Honour conceal'd, strangely reveal'd; or the worthy Praise of the renowned Archibald Armstrong.

Verbum Sempiternum.
Salvator Mundi.

The Churches Deliverances.

A Memoriall of all the English Monarchs, (151) from Brute to King Charles, in heroicall Verse. 1630. 8vo. with wood cut portraits. Nassau. pt. ii. 674, 17s. White Knights, 4063, 11.

The Great Eater of Kent, or Part of the admirable Teeth and Stomacks Exploits of Nicholas Wood of Harrisom (Harrietsham) in the County of Kent. London, 1630. 4to. Gordonstoun, 2244, 27. 17s.

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White

Sir M. M. Sykes,

Nassau, pt. ii. Towneley, pt. ii.

1668, russia, 67. 16s. 6d. Roxburghe, 3367, 77. Inglis, 1438, morocco, 77. 2s. 6d. Dent, pt. ii. 1414, 8. Stanley, 391, russia, 107. Bibl. Anglo-Poet. 731, russia, 127. 12s. Towneley, pt. i. 853, with plates from the small edition inserted, russia, 15l. 15s. Collation.—Title, dedication to the world, verse and contents, 5 leaves; part the first, 148 pages; part the second, 343 pages, not including a dedication to Mr. Trim Tram Senceles; part the third, 146 pages.

John Taylor's Thame and Isis. 1632. Three Triumphs of London, in the Reign of Cha. I. Robert Parkhurst, Mayor. 1634.

Triumphs of Fame and Honour: at the Inauguration of Robert Parkhurst, Clothworker. Compiled by John Taylor, the Water-Poet. 1634. 4to.

The olde, old, very olde Man: or the Age and long Life of Thomas Parr, the Son of John Parr of Winnington, in the Parish of Alderbury, in the County of Salop or Shropshire. London, 1635. 4to. 16 leaves including the wood-cut portrait of Old Parr, in a black cap, sitting in a chair. Bibl. AngloPoet. 740, 41. 4s. Gordonstoun, 2243, with portrait of Parr by Van Dalen, 51. 5s. Lloyd, 1285, with portrait of Parr by C. V. Dalen, 31. 3s. 1703. 4to. Bindley, pt. iii. 2270, 21. 5s. Lond. 1739. 4to. — 1794. In this edition the postcript is omitted. The life is to be found in the seventh volume of the Harleian Miscellany, and in various collective works.

Wit and Mirth, being 113 pleasant Tales and witty Jests. London, 1635. 8vo. White Knights, 4064, with portrait in pen and ink,

17. 7s.

John Taylor the Water-poet's Travels through London, to sit all the Taverns in the City and Suburbs, alphabetically disposed; with the Names of all the Vintners at that Time. 1636.

The Fearefull Summer or London Calamitie, with the grievous Estate of NewCastle, upon Tyne. London, 1636. 4to. with a frontispiece. Partly in verse. Hibbert, 7942, russia, 17. 2s. Reed, 7450, 17. 15s. North, pt. iii. 795, russia, 27.

Drinke and Welcome: or, the famous Historie of the most Part of Drinks in Use now in the Kingdomes of G. Britaine and Ireland with an especiall Declaration of the Potency, Vertue and Operation of our En

All the Workes of John Taylor the Water-glish Ale. With a Description of all Sorts of Poet, beeing sixty and three in Number, collected into one Volume by the Author, with

Waters, from the Ocean Sea to the Teares of a Woman. As also, the Causes of all Sorts

of Weather, faire or foule, Sleet, Raine, Haile,, Frost, Snow, Fogges, Mists, Vapours, Clouds, Stormes, Windes, Thunder and Lightning. Compiled first in the high Dutch Tongue, by the painefull and industrious Huldricke Van Speagle; a grammaticall Brewer of Lubeck; and now most learnedly enlarged, amplified, and translated into English Prose and Verse: By John Taylor. London, by Anne Griffin, 1637. 4to. pp. 26. Gough, 3611, 9s. Reed, 1739, 10s. 6d. Bibl. Anglo-Poet. 738, with a ms. list of Taylor's productions, extracts from them, &c. 61. 6s.

The Carriers Cosmographie. London, 1637. 4to. Lloyd, 1283, 3s. 6d. Reed, 6436, 3s. 6d.

The Needle's Excellency, or, a new Book of Patterns, with a Poem by John Taylor in Praise of the Needle. London, 1640. 4to. Extracts from Taylor's Praise of the Needle are given in Brydges' Censura Literaria and Restituta.

Differing Worships, or the Oddes betweene some Knights Service and God's. Or Tom Nash his Ghost, (the old Martin queller) newly rous'd, and is come to chide and take order with Nonconformists, Schismatiques, Separatists and scandalous Libellers. don, 1640. 4to. Seventeen leaves.

Lon

The

John Taylor's Last Voyage and Adventure, performed from the 20th of July last, to the 10th of September following. In which Time he past, with a Sculler's Boate, from the Citie of London, to the Cities and Townes of Oxford, Gloucester, Shrewesbury, Bristol, Bathe, Monmouth and Hereford. Manner of his Passages and Entertainement to and fro, truly described. With a short Touch of some wandring and some fixed Schismatiques; such as are Brownists, Anabaptists, Famalies, Humorists, and Foolists, which the Author found in many Places of his Voyage and Journey. London, by F. L. 1641. 8vo. pp. 32.

A Swarme of Sectaries and Schismatiques. 1641. 4to. with a frontispiece. Sir M. M. Sykes, pt. iii. 693, 17. 1s. Hibbert, 7941, with the three following tracts, 17. 17s.

An Answer to a foolish Pamphlet entitled A Swarme of Sectaries and Schismaticks. 1641. 4to. Sotheby's in 1826, 3s. 6d.

A Reply as true as Steele to a rusty, rayling, ridiculous, lying Libell, which was lately written by an impudent, unsoder'd Ironmonger (Henry Walker) and called by the Name of An Answer to a fooling Pamplet, intituled a Swarme of Sectaries.' Printed Anno Dom. 1641. 4to. pp. 6. Inglis, 1397, 15s. Sir M. M. Sykes, pt. iii. 692, 10s. Bibl. Anglo-Poet. 741.

Taylor's Physicke has purged the Divil, or the Divell has got a Squirt. 1641. 4to. This was written as an answer to a Swarme of Sectaries,' and therefore not by Taylor.

Religious Enemies, with a brief and ingenious Relation, as by Anabaptists, Brownists,

Papists, Famulists, Atheists, and Foolists, sawcily presuming to toss Religion in a Blanquet, by John Taylor. 1641. 4to. In prose. Nassau, pt. ii. 951, 10s.

George the Runner, against Henry the Walker, in Defence of John the Swimmer. 1641.

Hellish Parliament. 1641.

A Pedlar and a Romish Priest in a very hot Discourse, full of Mirth, Truth, Wit, Folly, and Plain-dealing, by John Taylor. Printed in the Yeare 1641. 4to. pp. 24. Inglis, 1396, 6s. Nassau, pt. ii. 1196, 10s. Sotheby's in 1821, 12s. Sir M. M. Sykes, pt. iii. 691, 17. Bibl. Anglo-Poet. 742, 17. 10s. 1699. 8vo. Inglis, 1452, 4s.

Englands Comfort and Londons Joy, expressed in the royal, triumphant and magnificent Entertainment of our dread Soveraigne Lord King Charles, at his blessed and safe Return from Scotland, on Thursday the 25th of November. London, 1641. 4to. With wood cuts. Rhodes, 2453, 61. 8s. 6d.

A delicate, dainty, damnable Dialogve, between the Devill and a Jesuite. By John Taylor. London, 1642. 4to. Four leaves, in verse. On the title is a wood cut.

Mad Fashions, Od Fashions, or, The Emblems of the distracted Times. London, 1642. 4to. pp. 8, with a frontispiece. Lloyd, 1284, 10s. Reed, 7449, 16s. Bindley, pt. iv. 924, 27. 11s. Bibl. Anglo-Poet. 739, 2l. 12s. 6d.

John Taylor, the Water-poet's Manifestation. 1642.

A Plea for Prerogative or give Cæsar his Due, being the Wheele of Fortune turn'd round. London, 1642. 4to. Inglis, 1398, 12s.

An humble desired Union between Prerogative and Privilege. London, 1642. 4to. Manifestation and Vindication against Joshua Church. Lond. 1642. 4to.

A Tale in a Tub, or a Tub Lecture, as it was delivered by My-heele Mendsole. Printed in the Yeare when Brownists domineer, 1642. 4to. Nassau, pt. ii. 1189, 4s.

Answer to the Tale of a Tub, or a Tub Lecture with Verses on the Defacing of Cheapside Cross. London, 1642. 4to.

The Petition of the Company of Watermen to the Parliament. London, 1642. 4to. The Life and Progress of Hen. Walker the Iron-monger. Lond. 1642. 4to.

A Cluster of Coxcombes. 1642. 4to.

A seasonable Lecture, or a most learned Oration disburthened from H. Walker, a quondam Iron-monger, a late Pamphletere and now a double diligent Preacher. Lond. 1642. 4to. With a wood cut. Bindley, pt. iv. 116, 45. Sir M. M. Sykes, pt. iii. 694, 8s.

Mercvrivs Aquaticvs, or the Water-poet's Answer to all that hath or shall be writ by Mercvrivs Britanicvs. Printed in the Waine of the Moone, page 121, and Number 16, of Mercurius Britannicus. 1643. 4to. Eleven leaves. White Knights, 2744, 10s.

Aqua-Musæ, or Cacafogo Cacadæmon : Captain George Wither wrung in the Withers: &c. Printed in the fourth Year of the grand Rebellion. 4to. pp. 16. Bibl. Anglo-Poet. 741. Wither's Campo Musæ produced the above pamphlet.

No Mercvrivs Avlicvs, but some merry Flashes of Intelligence, &c. Printed in the Yeare 1644. 4to. Four leaves. See Booker, John.

John Taylor being yet unchanged sends greeting to John Booker that hanged him lately in a Picture, in a Pamphlet called A 1644. 4to. Cable Rope double twisted.

Tom Nash's Ghost. Oxford, 1644. 4to. Mad Verse, sad Verse, glad Verse, and bad Verse. (1644). 4to.

Ad Populum, or, a Lecture to the People. 1644. 4to.

Crop Eare curried. Printed 1644. 4to. Rebels anathematized and anatomized. Oxf. 1645. 4to.

The Causes of the pers of this Kingdom.

Diseases and DistemOxf. 1645. 4to. The Complaint of Christmas. (1646). 4to. The Kings Welcome to Hampton Court, 1647. 4to. Marquis of Townshend, 3042, 15s. The Number and Names of all the Kings of England and Scotland to 1649. Lond. 1649. 8vo.

John Taylor's Wandering to see the Wonders of the West. How he travelled neere 600 miles from London to the Mount in Cornwall, and beyond the Mount, to the Land's End, and home againe. Printed in the Yeere 1649. 4to.

A long weary merry Voyage and Journey or John Taylor's Month's Travells by Sea and Land, from London to Gravesend, to Harwich, to Ipswich, to Norwich, to Linne, to Cambridge; and from thence to London. Performed and written on Purpose to please his Friends, and pleasure himselfe, in these unpleasant and necessitated Times. 1650. In prose and verse.

4to.

Arithmetic from one to twelve. (1650.) - 1653..

John Taylor's Ale ale-vated into an Aletitude. Lond. 1651. 8vo. Lond. 1653. 8vo.

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Epigrammes, written 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. 1651.

Of Alterations strange, of various Signes, Here are compos'd a few poetical Lines: Here you may finde, when you this Booke have read,

The Crowne's transform'd into the Poet's Head.

Read well. Be merry and Wise. Written by John Taylor, Poeta aquatica. 1651. 8vo. Newes from Tenebris: or preterpluperfect Written by nocturnall or night Worke.

Candle-light, betwixt Owe-light and Moonlight, with the Help of Star-light and Twylight, and may be read by Day-light. 1652. In prose.

A merry Bill of an uncertaine Journey, to bee performed by John Taylor by Land, with his Aqua Musa. The certainty of the uncertaine Travels of John Taylor, performed in this Yeere, 1653.

The Names of all the Nobilitie in and since the Reign of Q. Elizabeth. Lond. 1653. 8vo.

Christmas in and out: or our Lord and Saviour Christ's Birth Day. Lond. 1653. 8vo.

A short Relation of a long Journey, with a short Abbreviation of the History of Wales. Lond. 1653. 8vo.

Certain Travels of an uncertain Journey. (1653.) 8vo.

The Essence, Quintessence, Insence, Innocence, Lifesence and Magnificence of Nonsence upon Sence. (1653). 8vo.

The suddaine Turne of Fortunes Wheele or a Conference holden in the Castle of St. Angello betwixt the Pope, the Emperour and the King of Spaine. 4to. pp. 60. A manuscript. Bibl. Anglo-Poet. 736, 31. 3s.

TAYLOR, John, LL. D. Elements of the Civil Law. Cambridge, 1755. 4to.

17.

This work is designed to serve for an introduction to the civil law. Combe, 2075, Gosset, 5198, 14s. 1756. 4to. Roxburghe, 734, 18s. - 1786. 4to. Gough, 3610, 14s.

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understanding the text of the Old Testament velling. London, 1799. 8vo. 2 vols. in the original language. Prefixed is a portrait of the author engraved by J. Houbraken. Heath, 689, 57. 12s. 6d. Dent, pt. ii. 1415, 6. 12s. Hollis, 1336, 71. 5484, morocco, 117.

Gosset,

A Paraphrase and Notes on the Epistle to the Romans; to which is prefixed a Key to the Apostolic Writings. London, 1745. 4to. This work is held in considerable estimation by those who are attached to Socinian or Arian sentiments. The key is reprinted in Bp. Watson's Collection of Tracts, who observes, it is greatly admired by the learned, as containing the best introduction to the Epistles, and the clearest account of the whole gospel scheme, which was ever written.' London, 1747. 4to. Best edition. 1754. 4to. Bishop of Ely, 1413, 16s. Gosset, 5197, 17. 1s. Lond. 1769. 4to. Williams, 1541, 12. 14s.

A Key to the Apostolic Writings, by John Taylor, D. D. abridged; with a preliminary Dissertation on the Scriptures of the New Testament, by Thomas Howe.

1805. 12mo. 3s. 6d.

Dr. Taylor has published other works.

TAYLOR, John. The History of the Travels and Adventures of the Chevalier John Taylor, Opthalmiater Pontifical, Imperial and Royal, &c. written by himself. London, 1761. 8vo. 3 vols.

Bindley, pt. iii. 1258, 10s. 6d. Taylor was a quack oculist, of much notoriety in his day.

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Fonthill, 2893, 17. 19s. John, M. D. Bhascara AchaLelawati, or a Treatise on Arithmetic and Geometry, translated from the original Sanscrit by John Taylor. Bombay, 1816. 4to. Dictionary, Hindoostanee and English, originally compiled by Capt. Joseph Taylor; revised and prepared for the press by W. Hunter, M. D. Calcutta, 1808. 4to. 2 vols. 6l. 6s.

Joseph.

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