Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 55.djvu/440

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Hindley's ‘Miscellanea Antiqua Anglicana,’ vol. iii. 8vo, 1873. Ludicrously dedicated to ‘Sir’ Thomas Coryat. 15. ‘The Booke of Martyrs’ (in verse), 1617. This, from its diminutive size, 1½ inch by 1 inch, is termed a ‘Thumb-book;’ reprinted in the folio of 1630; 64mo, 1639; and again in 5 vols. 64mo, 1765. 16. ‘The Pennyles Pilgrimage, or the Money-lesse perambulation … from London to Edenborough’ (in prose and verse), 4to, 1618 (F). 17. ‘A Briefe Remembrance of all the English Monarchs’ (in verse and prose), 8vo, 1618, and again in 1622 (F). With twenty-five execrable half-length portraits of the sovereigns. 18. ‘A Memoriall of all the English Monarchs’ (in verse), 8vo, 1622; another edit. 1630 (F). 19. ‘A Kicksey Winsey; or a Lerry Come-Twang’ (in verse), 8vo, 1619; another edit. with many alterations, as ‘The Scourge of Basenesse,’ 1624. 20. ‘The Praise of Hemp-Seed, with the voyage of Mr. Roger Bird and the Writer hereof … from London to Quinborough in Kent. As also a Farewell to the Matchless deceased Mr. Thomas Coriat’ (in verse), 4to, 1620; another edit. 1623 (F). 21. ‘Iack a Lent, his Beginning and Entertainment;’ black letter, 4to, 1620; another edit., ‘with new additions,’ 1620 (F). 22. ‘Fill Gut and Pinch Belly’ (a broadside in verse), 1620. 23. ‘Taylor his Trauels from … London … to Prague in Bohemia’ (in mingled verse and prose), 4to, 1620. 24. ‘An English-Mans Love to Bohemia’ (in verse, 4to, Dort [London], 1620 (F). 25. ‘The Muses Movrning … or Funerall Sonnets on the Death of Iohn Moray, Esquire,’ 8vo [1620?] (F). 26. ‘The Life and Death of the … Virgin Mary’ (in verse), 8vo, 1620; another edit. 1622 (F). 27. ‘The Colde Tearme … or the Metamorphosis of the River of Thames,’ s. sh. fol. [1621]; a ballad ascribed to Taylor. 28. ‘Taylor's Goose: describing the Wilde Goose,’ &c., (in verse), 1621 (F). 29. ‘The Subjects Joy for the Parliament;’ a broadside of 112 lines [1621]. 30. ‘Taylor's Motto: et Habeo, et Careo, et Curo’ (in verse, with an engraved title depicting Taylor standing on a rock), 8vo, 1621 (F). The title is a travesty of that of a poem by George Wither, called ‘Wither's Motto: Nec Habeo,’ published in 1618, and again in 1621. 31. ‘The Praise of Antiquity and the Commodity of Beggery’ (in verse and prose), 4to, 1621 (F). 32. ‘Superbiæ Flagellum, or the Whip of Pride’ (‘A Few Lines … against the Scandalous Aspersions … vpon the Poets and Poems of these Times’), (in verse), 8vo, 1621 (F). 33. ‘The Vnaturall Father: or the cruell Murther committed by one Iohn Rowse,’ 4to, 1621 (F); reprinted in C. Hindley's ‘Misc. Antiq. Angl.,’ loc. cit. 34. ‘Sir Gregory Nonsense His Newes from no place’ (in verse), 8vo, 1700 [sic], i.e. 1622; reprinted in C. Hindley's ‘Misc. Antiq. Angl.,’ loc. cit. (F). 35. ‘The Great O Toole’ (in verse), with a well-engraved portrait of ‘Arthurus Severus O Toole Nonesuch: ætatis 80,’ 8vo, 1622 (F). 36. ‘A Shilling, or the Trauailes of Twelue pence’ (in verse), 8vo [1622] (F). 37. ‘A Common Whore’ (in verse), 8vo, 1622; another edit. 1625 (F). 38. ‘An Arrant Thiefe’ (in verse), 8vo, 1622; other edits. in 1625 and 1635 (F). 39. ‘Taylors Farewell to the Tower Bottles’ (in verse), 8vo, Dort [London], 1622 (F). 40. ‘The Water-Cormorant his Complaint against a Brood of Land-Cormorants … fourteene Satyres’ (in verse), 4to, 1622 (F). 41. ‘A Very Merry Wherry-Ferry-Voyage; or Yorke for my Money’ (in verse), 8vo, 1622 (F); reprinted in C. Hindley's ‘Misc. Antiq. Angl.,’ loc. cit.; another edit. 1623, ‘whereunto is annexed a very pleasant Description of … O Toole the Great.’ 42. ‘The Praise and Vertue of a Jayle and Jaylers’ (in verse), 8vo, 1623 (F). 43. ‘A New Discovery by Sea, with a Wherry from London to Salisbury,’ 1623 (F) (in verse and prose); reprinted in the ‘Crypt,’ new ser., No. vi., and in C. Hindley's ‘Misc. Antiq. Angl.,’ loc. cit. 44. ‘Prince Charles His Welcome from Spaine in 1623’ (prose and verse), 1623 (F). 45. ‘Honour Conceal'd, strangdly reveal'd; or the worthy Praise of … Archibald Armstrong’ (in verse), 1623 (F). 46. ‘The World runnes on Wheeles’ (in prose), 8vo, 1623 (in F) and 1635. 47. ‘Taylors Pastorell … or the noble antiquitie of Shepheards, with the profitable vse of Sheepe’ (mostly in verse), 4to, 1624 (F). 48. ‘True Loving Sorrow attired in a Robe of Griefe; presented upon the … Funerall of the … Duke of Richmond and Lennox’ (a broadside in verse), 1624 (F). 49. ‘The Scourge of Basenesse,’ 8vo, 1624 (F). This is another edit. of Taylor's ‘A Kicksey Winsey,’ &c., 1619, containing a list of new ‘Defaulters’ on account of his subsequent ‘Adventures,’ with the same woodcut representing his ‘slip'rie debters.’ 50. ‘The Praise of Cleane Linnen’ (in verse), 1624 (F). 51. ‘For the Sacred Memoriall of … Charles Howard, Earle of Nottingham’ (in verse), 1625 (F). 52. ‘A Liuing Sadnes, in duty consecrated to the Immortall Memory of … James, King of Great Britaine’ (in verse), 4to, 1625 (F). *53. ‘The Fearefull Sommer,’ 8vo, Oxford, 1625; another edit. the same year (F); another edit., ‘with some Editions [sic] concerning … 1636,’ 4to, London, 1636 (this has been reprinted by the