Page:A dictionary of printers and printing.djvu/509

 500

HISTORY OF PRINTING.

ford. By «ir John Birkenhead. Oxford ; printed by H. Hall, for W. Webb, bookseller, near to Queen's college.*

1643, Jan. 9. Certain InformatioK. No. 1.

1643, Jan. 30. 7%e Daily Intelligencer of Court, City, and Country, relating the most re- markable passages in either, which may save much labour in writing letters. London: printed for John Thompson.

1643, Jan. 30. TA« Spie, eommunicaling In- telligence from Oxford, No. 1.

1643, Feb. 6. Anti-Aulicui, No. 1.

1643, Feb. 7. Mercuriut Anglieus, No. 1.

1643, May II. Mercuriui Civieu*, oiLcmdoa Intelligencer,^ No. 1.

1643, May 20. Mercwrim Rutticut, the first week. 4to. By Bruno Ryves, the king's chaplain.

1643, June 9—16. The Parliament's Scout's Discovery, No. 1.

1643, July 3—10. A Weekly AeeowU, No. 1.

1643, July 19. Wednesday's Mercury, No. 1.

1643, Aug. 16 — ^22. Mercurius Britannictu, No. 1. By Marchmont Needham.

1643, Aug. 30— Sept. 7. The Scotch JnUlli- gencer, or the Weekly News from Scotland and the Court, No. 1.

1643, Sept. 23—30. The True Informer.

1643. The SeoU Intelliaeneer, or the Weekly Nem from Scotland and the Court. Printed at London.

1643, Oct. 5. The Scottish Mercury, No. 1.

1643, Oct. 7. New Christian Uses upon the Weekly true Patsagetand Proceedings, Ire. No.l.

1643, Sept. 30— Oct. 20. lite Scotch Dove.t

Our Dove tells newsea from the Kioes And of barmoniona letters tings.

1643, Oct. 21—28. The Welch Mercury.

1643, Oct. 23 — 30. Mercurius Cambro-Britan- nicus; British Mercury, or Welch Diurnal.

1643, Oct. ^—Nov. 2. The compleat IntelU. gencer and Resolver, No. 1.

1643, Nov. 3. Informator RusHcus ; or, the Country Intelligencer. No. 1.

1643, Nov. 8. Remarkable Passages. No. 1.

1643, Nov. 9. Mercurius Urbanus, No. 2.

1643, iVo».2— 9. The Kingdom's Weekli/ Post!^

1643. A Corantofrom beyond Seas, lifo. 1.

1643. Mercurius Aquaticus.\\

1643. Britannxcus Vapulans, No. 1.

1643, Nov. 2. Mercurius Vapulans; or, the Whipping of poor British Mercury, by Mer- curius Urbanus, younger brother to Aulicus.

until about 164<, after which time it onlj made an ac- casional appearance.
 * Mercwriia Avticut continued In weekly 4to. sheets,

t It is ornamented with a great variety of wooden cats ; and thta number, containing a vote of parliament with regard to the queen, is ornamented with her majesty's portraiture.

t A wood cut represents the dove with her sprig.

i It has a wood cut, represenUng the Post on horseback.

g This formed ■■ the Water Pocfa answerto all that hath or shall be writ by Mercvrivs Britannicvs ;" and Intended as a partial reply to No. 16 of that work. The same writer in the following year printed ■' No Mecmm Aolicv," in reply to John Booker. See BriKtk BliUographer, I. S20.

1644. The HypocriU discovered and cwni. By Samuel Torshall. 4to. The following in. stance of fanaticism and impiety is recorded in the above work: — A Mr. Greswold, a gentlemm of Warwickshire, whom a Brownist had by de- gree$ enticed from his parish church, was after. wards persuaded to return to it — ^but he retuned with a troubled mind, and lost in the preralcDt theological contests. A horror of bis {utme ex. istence shut him out, as it were, from bis proem one : retiring into his own house, with his childieD, he ceased to communicate with the living wotld. He had his food put in at the window; tad when his children lay sick, he admitted no one for their relief. His nouse, at length, was fonxd open ; and they found two children dead, uid the father confined to his bed. He had mangled his bible, and cut out the titles, contents, ud every thing but the very text itself ; for it seems that he thought that every thing human vas sinful, and he conceived that the titles of the books and the contents of the chapters, were to be cut out of the sacred scriptures, as htrin; been composed by men.

1644. The first periodical publication isied in Denmark appeared at Copenhagen in tliis year ; but not a single copy of this is now koomi to be remaining.

1644. A printing-office situate in the Butcher Row, at Oxford, was destroyed by fire.

1644, Sept. 8. IHed, Francis Quacles, author of the Emblem*, &c. He was boa near Rumford, in Essex, in 1592, and became secretary to archbishop Usher, was afterwards chronologer to the city of London, and wrote much in both prose and verse ; but bis principal work was his Emblems, a set of quaint pictorial designs, referring to moral and reh^ous ideas, and each elucidated by a few appropriate renei. His Enchiridion, a series of moral and political observations, is also worthy of notice. His verses were more popular in their own time ihaa those of the gayest court poets, being recom- mended by a peculiar harshness and gloom, ac- cordant with the feelings of a large portion of the people. The Emblems have been reprinted. Quarles was also the author of a comedy, called the Virgin Widow, l(f2l.

1644, Jan. 17—23. JfercMrrtw, j-c.

Upon my life new home, and wants a name. Troth let the reader then impose the same. Vsainicus,

Be-

Iwishthee; ifnotto,

HOTVS,

-for we lyes enough do kaov.

1644, Jan. 23 — 30. The Spy; communicatiiif intelligence from Oxford. Written by Duiwi Hotham, sir John's son.

1644, Jan. 24. Mercurius Ccelicus, by John Booker.

1644, Feb. 6. Mercurius not Veridiau, v yet Muttts ; but Cambro. or honest Britamv.

1644, Feb. 19—26. The Military Seiik.

1644, March 4. Mercurius Fopu/an* ; or, N»- worth stript and whipt

VjOOQ IC