Taylor, John, 1580-1653
Taylor, John, 1578-1653
John Taylor English poet (1578-1653)
Taylor, John
VIAF ID: 8192736 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/8192736
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a John Taylor ‡c English poet (1578-1653)
- 100 1 _ ‡a Taylor, John
- 100 1 _ ‡a Taylor, John ‡d 1580-1653
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Taylor, John ‡d 1580-1653
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Taylor, John, ‡d 1580-1653
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Taylor, John, ‡d 1580-1653
- 100 1 _ ‡a Taylor, John, ‡d 1580-1653
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (74)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Ale ale-vated into the ale-titude : or, a learned oration before a civill assembly of ale-drinkers, between Paddington and Hogsdon, the 30. of February last, anno millimo quillimo trillimo. By John Taylor | |
All the works of John Taylor, the water poet. | |
The anatomy of the Separatists, alias, Brownists, the factious brethren in these times : wherein this seditious sect is fairely dissected and perspicuously discovered to the view of world : with the strange hub-bub and formerly unheard of hurly-burly, which those phanatick and fastastick schismaticks made on Sunday in the afternoone, being the 8 of May in the parish of S. Olaves in the Old-Jury at the sermon of the Right Rev. Father in God, Henry, Bishop of Chichester, in the presence of the Right Honorable the Lord Major of this renowned metropolis and diverse worthy members of the House of Commons. | |
The aprentices [sic] advice to the XII bishops lately accused of high treason by the honourable assemblies of both Houses : with our friendly admonition, to take heed how they falsely accuse those innocent worthies in Parliament, whose lives are more deare to us then all the 25 prelates, though they were hang'd together | |
Aquamusæ: or, Cacafogo, cacadæmon, Captain George Wither wrung in the withers : Being a short lashing satyre, wherein the juggling rebell is compendiously finely firked and jerked, for his late railing pamphlet against the King and state, called Campo-musæ. By John Taylor | |
The armies letanie : imploring the blessing of God on the present proceedings of the armie | |
An arrant thiefe : whom euery man may trust in word and deed, exceeding true and iust | |
Beschrijvingh van den ouden, ouden, heel ouden man: ofte Den ouderdom ende 't leven van Thomas Parr. | |
The Bible | |
A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs, from the Normans conquest, vntill this present. By Iohn Taylor | |
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 : All joco-seriously descanted to our wine-drunk, wrath-drunk, zeale-drunk, staggering times. By one that hath drunk at S. Patricks well | |
The Brownists synagogue : or a late discovery of their conventicles, assemblies, and places of meeting, where they preach, and the manner of their praying and preaching : with a relation of the names, places, and doctrines of those which doe commonly preach. The chiefe of which are these. Greene, the feltmaker. Marler, the buttonmaker. Spencer, the coachman. Rogers the glover. Which sect is much increased of late within this city. A kingdome divided cannot stand. | |
The carriers cosmographie : innes, hosteries, and other lodgings in and neere London | |
Cesta do Čech | |
The coaches ouerthrow. Or, A ioviall exaltation of divers tradesmen, and others, for the suppression of troublesome hackney coaches : To the tune of, Old King Harry | |
A common vvhore : vvith all these graces grac'd: shee's very honest, beautifull and chaste. Written by Iohn Taylor | |
Complaint of Christmas. Selections | |
Cornu-copia, or, Roome for a ram-head : Wherein is described the dignity of the ram-head above the round-head, or rattle-head | |
The Decoy duck : together with the discovery of the knot in the dragons tayle called &c | |
The diseases of the times or, the distempers of the Common-wealth : Succinctly describing each particular disease wherin the kingdome is troubled. Contracted into these heads. viz. 1. The immedicable tumour of faction. 2. The strange diffusion of Brownianisme. 3. The stupendeous inundaton of heresie. 4. The desperate swelling of obstinacy. 5. The dangerous disease of feminine divinity. 6. The aspiring ambition of presumption. 7. The audacious height of disobedience. 8. The painted deceitfulnesse of hypocrisie | |
A dog of war | |
An exact description of Prince Ruperts malignant she-monkey, a great delinquent : Having approved her selfe a better servant, then his white dog called Boy. Laid open in three particulars: 1. What she is in her owne shape. 2. What she doth figuratively signifie. 3. Her malignant tricks and qualities | |
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 : iustice in Eyre of all His Maiesties forests, parks, and chases on this side Trent, Knight of the Honourable Order of the Garter, and one of the lords of His Maiesties most Honourable Priuy Councell | |
The Friers lamenting, for his not repenting : being a relation of the life and death of Francis Colewort a frier, who related a little before his death a threefold plot of treason : with his conversion to the Protestant religion, at Hungerford in Barkshire | |
Great Britaine, all in blacke : For the incomparable losse of Henry, our late worthy prince. By Iohn Taylor | |
The great O Toole | |
The hellish Parliament being a counter-Parliament to this in England, containing the demonstrative speeches and statutes of that court : together with the perfect league made between the two hellish factions the papists and the Brownists | |
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 : namely, Kent, Sussex, Hampshire, Surrey, Barkshire, Essex, Middlesex, Hartfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Oxfordshire: with the description of many famous accidents that have happened, in divers places in the said counties. Also, a relation of the wine tavernes either by their signes, or names of the persons that allow, or keepe them, in, and throughout the said severall shires. By John Taylor | |
An humble desired union betweene prerogative and priviledge : Shewing, that if one draw too hard one way, and the other another, the whole common-wealth must be in danger to be pull'd in sunder | |
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 | |
A letter from Rhoan in France | |
Mad fashions, od fashions, all out of fashions | |
Miscellanies in prose and verse : In two parts. Part I. containing I. The Bible abridg'd in English verse. II. The ten commandments, with our Saviour's golden rule, etc. III. Advice concerning covetousness and temperance, in verse; also of pride, avarice and luxury, and of health and happiness. IV. The sieges of Jerusalem. V. Short sentences worthy of consideration, in prose. etc. VI. Of gravity and decency. VII. The folly of envy. VIII. Of fortitude. IX. The universal law of equity. X. Of Justice and truth. | |
Monarchie asserted, the Kings right vindicated | |
The needles excellency : a new booke wherin are diuers admirable workes wrought with the needle ; newly inuented and cut in copper for the pleasure and profit of the industrious | |
A new history of the Old and New Testament : in a short, easy and instructive manner. | |
The old, old. Dutch | |
The old, old, very old man : or, the age and long life of Thomas Parr, the son of John Parr of Winnington, in the parish of Alberbury, in the county of Salop, or Shropshire, who was born in the reign of King Edward IV. being aged 152 years and odd Months. his Manner of Life and Conversation in so long a Pilgrimage; his Marriages, and his bringing up to London, about the end of September last. 1635. Whereunto is added, A Postscript, shewing the many remarkable Accidents that happen'd in the Life of this Old Man. Written by John Taylor. | |
A pedlar and a Romish priest in a very hot discourse, full of mirth, truth, wit, folly, and plain-dealing | |
Pennyles Pilgrimage Or The Money-lesse Perambulation of John Taylor | |
Portraits already used in Taylor's Brief remembrance ... 1621. | |
The praise, antiquity, and commodity, of beggery, beggers, and begging. Iohn Taylor | |
The praise, of cleane linnen : With the commendable vse of the laundresse. By Iohn Taylor | |
The praise of hemp-seed : With the voyage of Mr. Roger Bird and the writer hereof in a boat of brown-paper, from London to Quinborough in Kent. As also, a farewell to the matchlesse deceased Mr. Thomas Coriat. Concluding with the commendations of the famous riuer of Thames. By Iohn Taylor. The contents of the booke are in the next leafe before the preamble. The profits arising by hempseed are cloathing, food, fishing, shipping, pleasure, profit, iustice, whipping | |
A preparative to studie: or, The vertue of sack· | |
Prince Charles his vvelcome from Spaine : who landed at Portsmouth on Sunday the fift of October, and came safely to London on Munday the sixt of the same, 1623. Wtih the triumphs of London for the same his happy ariuall. And the relation of such townes as are situate in the wayes to take poste-horse at, from the city of London to Douer: and from Calais through all France and Spaine, to Madrid, to the Spanish court | |
Rare physick for the chvrch sick of an ague : prescribing excellent and most accurate physick to be given to the church which has been sicke a long time : with the names of every particular disease and the manner how she contracted them and by what meanes as also prescripts to remedy the same : humbly commended to the Parliament, those admirable physicians of the church and state | |
Rebells anathematized, and anatomized: or A satyricall salutation to the rabble of seditious, pestiferous pulpit-praters : with their brethren the weekly libellers, railers, and revilers, Mercurius Britannicus, with the rest of that sathanicall fraternity | |
Religions enemies : with a brief and ingenious relation, as by Anabaptists, brownists, papists, familists, atheists and foolists, sawcily presuming to tosse religion in a blanquet | |
Religions lotterie, or, The churches amazement : vvherein is declared how many sorts of religions there is crept into the very bowels of this kingdome, striving to shake the whole foundation and to destroy both church and kingdom | |
The resolution of the Round-heads, to pull downe Cheap-side Crosse : Being a zealous declaration of the grievances wherewith their little wits are consumed to destruction. And what things they in their wisdome (yet left them) conceive fit to bee reformed. Also the answer to the rattle-heads, concerning their fictionate resolutions of the Round-heads. Wherein is explained every particular therein contained against them, with many godly counsells to Doctor Little-wit: the composer of their former scurrilous, and illiterate pamphlet | |
Salvator Mundi | |
The scourge of basenesse, or, The old lerry with a new kicksey, and a new cum twang with the old winsye : wherein Iohn Taylor hath curried or clapperclawed, neere a thousand of his bad debters, who will not pay him vpon his returnes from Scotland, Germany, Bohemia, the voyages of the paper boate, and his nauigations to Yorke and Salsbury with Oates | |
The sculler rowing from Tiber to Thames | |
A Second message to Mr. Willam Lavd late Archbishop of Canterbury, now prisoner in the Tower, in the behalfe of Mercurie : together with a postscript to the author of that foolish and ridiculous answer to Mercury | |
A shilling or, The trauailes of twelue-pence. | |
Short relation of a journey through Wales, 1859. | |
Sir Gregory Nonsence his newes from no place : Written on purpose, with much study to no end, plentifully stored with want of wit, learning, iudgement, rime and reason, and may seeme very fitly for the vnderstanding of nobody. Toyte, Puncton, Ghemorah, Molushque, Kaycapepson. This is the worke of the authors, without borrowing or stealing from others. By Iohn Taylor | |
Some small and simple reasons delivered in a hollow-tree in Waltham Forrest in a lecture on the 33. of March last | |
St. Hillaries teares : Shed upon. all professions, from the judge to the petty fogger. From the spruce dames of exchange, to the durty walking fishmongers. From the Coven-Garden lady of iniquity, to the Turne-bal-streete-Trull, and indeed from the tower-staires to Westminster ferry, for want of a stirring midsomer terme, this yeare of disasters, 1642. Written by one of his secretaries that had nothing else to doe | |
Superbiæ flagellum, or, The vvhip of pride. By Iohn Taylor | |
Tailors travels from London to the Isle of VVight, vvith his returne, and occasion of his iourney | |
Taylor his trauels: from the citty of London in England, to the citty of Prague in Bohemia : The manner of his abode there three weekes, his obseruations there, and his returne from thence: how he past 600 miles downe the riuer of Elue, through Bohemia, Saxony, Anhalt, the bishoprick of Madeberge, Brandenberge, Hamburgh, and so to England. With many relations worthy of note. By Iohn Taylor | |
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 : With all the flats, shoares, shelues, sands, weares, stops, riuers, brooks, bournes, streames, rills, riuolets, streamelets, creeks, and whatsoeuer helps the said riuers haue, from their springs or heads, to their falls into the ocean. As also a discouery of the hinderances which doe impeache the passage of boats and barges, betwixt the famous Vniuersity of Oxford, and the city of London | |
Taylors arithmetick from one to tvvelve : with a sollid discourse betweene yesterday, to-morrow, to-day, & a lover | |
[Taylors goose] : [describing the wilde goose] | |
Taylors pastorall : being both historicall and satyricall: or the noble antiquitie of shepheards, with the profitable vse of sheepe: with a small touch of a scabbed sheepe, and a caueat against that infection | |
Taylors Vrania, or His heauenly muse : With a briefe narration of the thirteene sieges, and sixe sackings of the famous cittie of Ierusalem. Their miseries of warre, plague, and famine, (during their last siege by Vespasian and his son Titus.) In heroicall verse compendiously described | |
A three-fold discourse betweene three neighbours, Algate, Bishopsgate and John Heyden the late Cobler of Hounsditch, a professed Brownist : whereunto is added a true relation, by way of dittie, of a lamentable fire which happened at Oxford two nights before Christ-tide last, in a religious brothers shop, knowne by the name of Iohn of all-trades | |
Tom Nash his ghost | |
Tom Tel-Troths come to town againe with his humors : Vnder which humour is contained these particulars: viz. A rope for a parat. A bable for a foole. A springe for a woodcocke. And a snare for a fox. Collected and published to make honest and wise men merry, or fooles and knaves mad | |
Travels through Stuart Britain | |
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 : the particularities of every invention in all the pageants, shewes and triumphs both by water and land, are here following fully set downe, being all performed by loves, liberall costs, and charges of the right worshipfull and worthy Brother-hood of the Cloth-workers the 29 of October 1634 | |
Truth's triumph: or, Old miracles newly revived in the gracious preservation of our soveraigne Lord the King : By Iohn Taylor | |
Valorous and perillous sea-fight | |
Verbum sempiternum | |
A verry merry vvherry-ferry-voyage: or Yorke for my money : sometimes perilous, sometimes quarrellous, performed with a paire of oares, by sea from London, by Iohn Taylor, and Iob Pennell. And written by I.T | |
VVit and mirth : chargeably collected out of tauernes, ordinaries, innes, bowling greenes, and allyes, alehouses, tobacco shops, highwayes, and water-passages. Made vp, and fashioned into clinches, bulls, quirkes, yerkes, quips, and ierkes. Apothegmatically bundled vp and garbled at the request of old Iohn Garrets ghost. By Iohn Taylor, water-poet | |
The vvorld runs on wheeles, or, Oddes betuueen cartes and coaches | |
The water-cormorant his complaint : against a brood of land-cormorants. Diuided into fourteene satyres. By Iohn Taylor | |
Works. 1630 | |
The world turn'd upside down, or, A briefe description of the ridiculous fashions of these distracted times |