John Taylor
1580 – 1653
80 works on record
Works
A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs
Most curious Mercurius Brittanicus, alias Sathanicus, answer'd, cuff'd, cudgell'd, and clapper-claude ...
The watermens suit concerning players
The Bible
Verbum sempiternum
Crop-eare curried, or, Tom Nash his ghost, declaring the pruining of Prinnes two last parricidicall pamphlets
The number and names of all the kings of England and Scotland, from the beginning of their governments to this present
The Divisions of the Church of England crept in at XV several doores by divers
A letter sent to George Wither, poetica licentia esquire, by a plain dealing friend of his to prevent his future pseudography
The history of the New Testament
A common vvhore vvith all these graces grac'd
Mad verse, sad verse, glad verse and bad verse
An armado, or nauy, of 103. ships & other vessels, who haue the art to sayle by land, as well as by sea
Differing worships, or, The oddes, betweene some knights service and God's
Verbum sempiternum
Bull, beare, and horse, cut, curtaile, and longtaile
Englands comfort and Londons ioy
The praise, antiquity, and commodity, of beggery, beggers, and begging
Religions enemies
The discovery of a swarm of seperatists, or, A leathersellers sermon
The life and death of the most blessed among women, the Virgin Mary mother of our Lord Iesus
Tom Tel-Troths come to town againe with his humors
The needles excellency
A cluster of coxcombes, or, Cinquepace of five sorts of knaves and fooles
The olde, old, very olde man: or the age and long life of Thomas Par
A shilling or, The trauailes of twelue-pence
The whole life and progresse of Henry Walker the ironmonger
Drinke and vvelcome: or The famous historie of the most part of drinks, in use now in the kingdomes of Great Brittaine and Ireland
An Exact description of a Roundhead and a long-head shag-poll
An arrant thiefe, vvhom everie man may trust
The water-cormorant his complaint
A short relation of a long journey made round or ovall by encompassing the principalitie of Wales
The pennyles pilgrimage, or The money-lesse perambulation, of Iohn Taylor, alias the Kings Majesties water-poet
A preter-plvperfect spick and span new nocturnall, or Mercuries weekly night-newes
An arrant thiefe, vvhom euery man may trust
Taylor's motto
The diseases of the times, or, The distempers of the common-wealth
A letter sent to London from a spie at Oxford
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
The sculler
[The praise of hemp-seed]
Tailors travels from London to the Isle of VVight, vvith his returne, and occasion of his iourney
Taylors farewel
A full and compleat answer against the writer of a late volume set forth
St. Hillaries teares shed upon all professions from the judge to the petty fogger
The great O Toole
To the right honorable assembly, the lords, knights, esquires, and burgesses of the honorable House of Commons in Parliament. The humble petition of the antient overseers, rulers, and assistants of the Company of Watermen
Mercurius Nonsencicus, written for the vse of the simple vnderstander
VVit and mirth
An humble desired union betweene prerogative and priviledge
Iohn Taylors manifestation and ivst vindication against Iosva Chvrch his exclamation
A Preparative to studie, or, The vertue of sack
A Second message to Mr. Willam Lavd late Archbishop of Canterbury, now prisoner in the Tower, in the behalfe of Mercurie
A pedlar and a Romish priest in a very hot discourse, full of mirth, truth, wit, folly, and plain-dealing
The old, old, very old man: or, The age and long life of Thomas Par, the son of Iohn Parr of Winnington in the parish of Alberbury; in the county of Salopp, (or Shropshire)
Three vveekes, three daies, and three houres obseruations and trauel, from London to Hamburgh in Germanie
Taylors arithmetick from one to tvvelve
Taylors pastorall
Wit and mirth
Taylor his trauels: from the citty of London in England, to the citty of Prague in Bohemia
Mercvrivs aqvaticvs; or, The vvater-poets answer to all that hath or shall be writ by Mercvrivs britanicvs ...
The Popes complaint to his minion cardinals, against the good successe of the Bohemians and their generall proceedings
A seasonable lecture, or, A most learned oration
The complaint of Christmas, and the teares of Twelfetyde
Superbiæ flagellum, or, The vvhip of pride. By Iohn Taylor
All the vvorkes of Iohn Taylor the water-poet
Lvcifers lacky, or The devils new creature
The liar, or A contradiction to those who in the titles of their bookes affirmed them to be true, when they were false although mine are all true, yet I terme them lyes
An honest ansvver to the late published apologie for private preaching
A famous fight at sea
Taylors farevvell, to the Tovver-bottles
Jacke a Lent
Mad fashions, od fashions, all out of fashions, or, the emblems of these distracted times
The old, old, very old man: or, the age and long life of Thomas Par, the son of John Parr of Winnington in the parish of Alberbury
A brief director for those that would send their letters to any parts of England, Scotlaud[!], or Ireland. Or a list of all the carriers, waggoners coaches, posts, ships, barks, hoys, and passage-boats, that come to London, from the most parts and places, by land & sea
Some small and simple reasons delivered in a hollow-tree in Waltham Forrest in a lecture on the 33. of March last
The Kings Most Excellent Majesties vvellcome to his owne house, truly called the honour of Hampton covrt, vvho came thither on the 24. of August, and so consequently hoped and humbly desired to White-Hall
Misselanies or, fifty years gatherings, out of sundry authors in prose and verse
A short relation of a journey through Wales
The anatomy of the separatists, alias, Brownists