Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 55.djvu/442

 Richard Wyan deceased,’ 1638; a broadsheet. *82. ‘Part of this Summers Travels, or News from Hell, Hull, and Hallifax,’ &c., 8vo, 1639; reprinted in C. Hindley's ‘Misc. Antiq. Angl.’ loc. cit.). *83. ‘The Needles Excellency … with a Poem by John Taylor in Praise of the Needle,’ obl. 4to, 1640; apparently the 12th edit. ‘inlarged.’ *84. ‘A Valorous and Perillous Sea-fight fought with three Turkish Ships … by the good ship Elizabeth,’ 4to, 1640. *85. ‘Differing Worships, or the Oddes, betweene some Knights Service and God's’ (in verse), 4to, 1640. *86. ‘Iohn Taylors last Voyage … with a Scullers Boate from … London to … Hereford,’ 8vo, 1641. *87. ‘A Swarme of Sectaries and Schismatiqves’ (in verse), 4to, 1641. *88. ‘A Reply … to … a Swarme of Schismatiqves,’ 4to, 1641; a satire in verse against Henry Walker, who had ventured to answer Taylor's ‘Swarm of Sectaries.’ *89. ‘Religious Enemies,’ with a woodcut on title of the sectaries tossing the Bible in a blanket, 4to, 1641. *90. ‘A Pedlar and a Romish Priest, in a very hot Discourse’ (in verse), 4to, 1641; (reprinted 8vo, 1699). This is an appropriation of the ‘Pack Man's Paternoster,’ by Sir James Sempill [q. v.] (cf. Notes and Queries, 2nd ser. xi. 241). A manuscript copy is in Harleian MS. 7332, ff. 182–97, where the authorship is ascribed to Taylor. *91. ‘The Irish Footman's Poetry, 4to, 1641 … the Author George Richardson, an Hibernian Pedestrian’ (in verse); another lampoon upon Henry Walker; reprinted in ‘Fugitive Tracts,’ 2nd ser. 4to, 1875. *92. ‘The Liar,’ 4to, 1641. *93. ‘The complaint of M. Tenter-hooke, the Proiector, and Sir Thomas Dodger, the Patentee,’ s. sh. fol., 1641; a broadsheet in verse, with a quaint woodcut. *94. ‘The Hellish Parliament: being a Counter-Parliament to this in England,’ 4to, 1641. *95. ‘Some small and simple Reasons … by Aminadab Blower … against … the Liturgy’; four leaves in 4to, the authorship of which is doubtfully ascribed to Taylor. *96. ‘Englands Comfort and Londons Ioy: expressed in the royall … Entertainment of … King Charles at his … returne from Scotland,’ 4to, 1641, embellished with woodcuts; the ‘Verses’ at the end were presented by Taylor ‘to the king's own hand.’ *97. ‘A Tale in a Tub, or a Tub Lecture … by My-heele Mendsoale,’ 4to, 1641. *98. ‘To the Right Honorable Assembly … the Humble Petition of the … Company of Watermen,’ 4to, 1641; another edit. dated 1642. *99. ‘A Delicate … Dialogue between the Deuill and a Jesuite’ (in verse), 4to, 1642. *100. ‘The Devil turn'd Round-Head,’ 4to [1642]; answered by ‘Ambulatoria’ in ‘Tayler's Physicke,’ dated 1641. *101. ‘An Apology for Private Preaching,’ 4to [1642]. *102. ‘An Honest Answer to the late published Apologie for Private Preaching,’ 4to [1642]. *103. ‘An humble desired Union betweene Prerogative and Priviledge,’ 4to, 1642. *104. ‘Iohn Taylors Manifestation and ivst vindication against Iosva Chvrch his Exclamation,’ 4to, 1642 (Church was a hostile waterman). *105. ‘The VVhole Life and Progresse of Henry Walker the Ironmonger,’ 4to, 1642; reprinted in C. Hindley's ‘Misc. Antiq. Angl.,’ loc. cit. 106. ‘A Seasonable Lecture … disburthened from Henry Walker. Taken in short writing by Thorney Ailo’ [anagram of Iohn Taylor], 4to, 1642. *107. ‘Heads of all Fashions’ (in verse, with a large woodcut representing seventeen heads, though twenty are described), 4to, 1642; reprinted by E. W. Ashbee, 4to, 1871. *108. ‘Mad Fashions, Od Fashions, All Out of Fashions’ (in verse), 4to, 1642; reprinted by E. W. Ashbee, 4to, 1871, and by C. Hindley in ‘Misc. Antiq. Angl.,’ loc. cit. *109. ‘A Cluster of Coxcombes … the Donatists, Publicans, Disciplinarians, Anabaptists, and Brownists,’ 4to, 1642. *110. ‘A full … Answer against the Writer of … “A Tale in a Tub,” … by Thorny Ailo … with verses on … Cheap-side Crosse,’ 4to, 1642. *111. ‘A Plea for Prerogative … by Thorny Aylo’ (in verse), 4to, 1642. 112. ‘The Apprentices Advice to the XII Bishops’ (in verse), 4to, 1642. *113. ‘Aqua-Musæ: or Cacafogo, Cacadæmon, Captain George Wither Wrung in the Withers (in verse). Printed in the fourth Yeare of the Grand Rebellion,’ 4to [Oxford, 1643]. A reply to Wither's ‘Campo-Musæ.’ *114. ‘Truth's Triumph … in the Gracious Preservation of … the King’ (in verse), 1643. *115. ‘Mercvrivs Aqvaticvs; or, the Water-Poet's Answer to … Mercvrivs Britanicus … An Elegie on Master Pym,’ 4to, 1643. 116. ‘A Preter-plvperfect spick and span new Nocturnall,’ 4to [Oxford, 1643]. *117. ‘The Conversion … of a … Roundhead,’ 4to, 1643. *118. ‘A Letter sent to London from a Spie at Oxford,’ 4to, 1643. *119. ‘Crop-Eare Curried … the pruining of Prinnes two last Parricidicall Pamphlets,’ 4to [Oxford], 1644; a vigorous onslaught upon Prynne's ‘Sovereign Power of Parliament’ and ‘Opening of the New Great Seal.’ *120. ‘Mercurivs Infernalis; or Orderlesse Orders, Votes, Ordinances, and Commands from Hell,’ 4to, 1644. *121. ‘No “Mercvrivs Avlicvs,”’ 4to [Oxford], 1644; a reply to John Booker's ‘No “Mercurius Aquaticus,”’