Rowlands, Samuel, 1570?-1630?
Rowlands, Samuel, 1573?-1630?
Rowlands, Samuel, ca. 1570-ca. 1630
Samuel Rowlands
Rowlands, Samuel
VIAF ID: 10195989 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/10195989
Preferred Forms
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Rowlands, Samuel ‡d 1570-1630
- 100 1 _ ‡a Rowlands, Samuel ‡d 1570-1630
- 100 1 0 ‡a Rowlands, Samuel ‡d 1570?-1630?
- 100 1 0 ‡a Rowlands, Samuel, ‡d 1570?-1630?
- 100 1 _ ‡a Rowlands, Samuel, ‡d 1573?-1630?
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- 100 0 _ ‡a Samuel Rowlands
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (15)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Ave Caesar, God save the king | |
Beschryvinge van de helsche tormenten ende van de hemelsche vreugde, dienende om den sorgheloosen ende onbedachten sondaar te brenghen van den wegh der verdoemenisse tot den wegh van het hemelsche Chanaan | |
The betraying of Christ : Judas in despaire | |
Bibliographical Index, miscellaneous poems title- pages & to the works of Samuel Rowlands | |
Blacke dogge of Newgate | |
The bride, 1905: | |
The courte of ciuill courtesie : fitly furnished with a pleasant porte of stately phrases and pithie precepts, assembled in the behalfe of all younge gentlemen and others that are desirous to frame their behauiour according to their estates at all times and in all companies, therby to purchase worthy prayse of their inferiours and estimation and credite amonge theyr betters | |
Democritus, or Doctor Merry-man his medicines, against melancholy humors | |
Diogenes lanthorne | |
Doctor merry-man: or nothing but mirth. Written by S.R | |
The famous history of Guy earle of Warwicke. By Samuel Rowlands | |
A fooles Bolt is Soone Shott | |
The Four Knaves : a series of satirical tracts | |
Good newes and bad newes | |
Greenes ghost haunting coniecat chers | |
Guy of Warwick (Romance) | |
Heavens glory, Seeke it : earts vanitie, flye it : hells horror, fere it | |
Hell's broke loose | |
Hels torments, and heavens glorie | |
Humors antique faces. | |
Humors Looking Glasse | |
Humors ordinarie : where a man may be verie merrie, and exceeding vvell vsed for his sixe-pence | |
The knaue of harts : Haile fellow, vvell met | |
The Knave of Clubbes | |
The letting of humours blood in the head vaine, &c. | |
Looke to it: for, Ile stabbe ye | |
Martin Mark-all, beadle of Bridevvell; his defence and answere to the Belman of London : Discouering the long-concealed originall and regiment of rogues, when they first began to take head, and how they haue succeeded one the other successiuely vnto the sixe and twentieth yeare of King Henry the eight, gathered out of the chronicle of crackeropes, and (as they tearme it) the legend of lossels. By S.R | |
The Melancholie Knight | |
The melancholy cavalier. Or, Fancy's master-piece : A poem | |
More knaues yet? : The knaues of spades and diamonds. With new additions | |
The night-raven. By S.R | |
A paire of Spy-Knaves... | |
Roome, for a messe of knaues : Or, a selection, or a detection, or, a demonstration, or a manifestation. of foure slaues. Or, a conuiction, or a comiction, or, a combination, or a copulation of foure varlets. Or, a reperition, or a repetition. Or, a replication, or a recapitulation. of foure harlets. With a narration or a declaration, a relation or an explication, of a strange (but true) battell, fought in the little Isle (or worlde) of Man | |
A sacred memorie of the miracles wrought by our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ. Written by Samuel Rowlands | |
Sir Thomas Overbury, or, The poysoned knights complaint | |
A terrible battle between... Time and Death | |
Time well improved: or, some helps for weak heads, in their meditations : on [brace] heaven's glory, earth's vanity, hell's horrour. With prayers fitted for several occasions. Whereunto is added the verses used by the bell-men of London, in their nightly perambulations | |
Tis Merrie when Gossips meete | |
Uncollected poems (1604?-1617). | |
A whole crew of Kind Gossips all metto be merry |