z CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY THIS BOOK IS ONE OF A COLLECTION MADE BY BENNO LOEWY 1854-1919 AND BEQUEATHED TO CORNELL UNIVERSITY Cornell University Library Z92 1.098 D72 3 1924 029 543 240 olin S Pi Cornell University WM Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029543240 The impression of this work is strictly limited to fifty -one copies. THE DOUCE COLLECTION. A HAND-LIST EARLY ENGLISH LITERATURE PRESERVED IN THE DOUCE COLLECTION BODLEIAN LIBRARY; SELECTED FROM THE PRINTED CATALOGUE OF THAT COLLECTION, J. 0. HALLIWELL, Esq. LONDON: FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION ONLY. 1860. L z on AGioJ^f 4^" <\ J. E. ADLAKD, PKlNTiE, llAKTHOLOMEW CLOSE. PREFATORY NOTE. The following pages comprise a list of the principal volumes of early Englisli literature preserved in the Douce Collectionj selected from the printed Catalogue for the use of those students who do not care for the more modern portion of the library, and who find that a folio volume is inconvenient for constant reference. The Douce Collection was bequeathed to the Bodleian Library in 1834. It contains numerous rarities, purchased -many years previously from the collections of Henderson, Pearson, Farmer, and Herbert. There are many volumes that would be found elsewhere with great difficulty, and some few that are believed to be unique. Soveniber, 1860. THI3 DOUCE COLLECTION. A. (J.) The yoimger brother his apologie, or a fathers free power disputed^ for the disposition of his lands or other his fortunes to his sonne^ sonnes, or any one of them 4to. Oxford, 1634.. Abdias the prophet. Abdias the prophet ; interpreted by T. B. ; bl. lett. 8vo. Lond. Henry Binneman, 1574. Abenezrah (Kinki) . An everlasting prognostication of the change of weather 8vo. Lond. for M. G. n. d. Achilles Statins sen Tatius, Alexandrinus. The loves of Clitophon and Leucippe, transl. from the Greek 8vo. Oxford, 1638 Acuna (Hernando da). The resolved gentleman; trans- lated by Lewes Lewkenor 4to. Lond. by R. Watkins, 1594 Adams (Jack). His perpetual almanack 8vo. Lond. n. d. Adams (John), of the Inner Temple. Index Villaris ; or an alphabetical table of all the cities, market-towns, parishes, villages, and private seats, in England and "Wales fol. Lond. 1680 jVddison (Lancelot), D.D. West Barbary, or, a short narrative of the revolutions of the kingdoms of Fez and Morocco 8vo. Oxford, 1671 The present state of the Jews ; to which is annexed a summary discourse of the Misna, Talmud, and Ge- mara 8vo. Lond. 1682 Admiralty. A declaration of the Commons, concerning the jurisdiction of the Admiralty. 4to. Lond. 1648 Ady (Thomas), jNI.A. A perfect discovery of witclies ito. Lond. IGGl yElfricus (Abbas). A testimonie of antiquitie, shewing the auncient fayth in the church of England touch- ing the sacrament of the body and blonde of the Lord ; Saxon and Engl. 8vo. Lond. by lohn Day, n. d. A Saxon treatise concerning the Old and .New Testa- ment, now first published with English of our times, by Will. L'Isle 4to. Lond. 1623 ^lianus (Claud), Tacticus. His tactiks or art of embat- tailing an army after the Grecian manner; with notes by J. Bingham fol. Lond. 1616 ^sopus. His fables in tru orthography ; translated by William BuUoker, bl. let. imperf. 8vo. Lond. by Edm. Bollifante, 1585 — in Englyshe, with all his lyfe and fortune ; (Caxton's translation) bl. let. 8vo. {by W. Myddelton), n. d. — another edition 8vo. Lond. 1634 — translated into Eng. verse by Will. Barret 8vo. Lond. 1639 — ■ paraphrasM in verse, adorned with sculpture, by John Ogilby fol. Lond. 1665 — ... another edition ; 2 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1673 — in English, French, and Latin, by Th. Philipott and Rob. Codrington ; and with sculptures by Francis Barlow fol. Lond. 1687 Albertus, Magnus, Bolstadius Ord. Prsed. His secrets : of the vertues of herbes, stones, and certaine beasts 8vo. Lond. 1637 Aleman (Matheo) . The rogue : or, the excellencie of his- tory displayed, in the notorious life of that incom- parable thief, Guzman de Alfarache : epitomiz'd from the Spanish, by A. S. 8vo. Lond. 1655 Alexander (William), earl of Sterline. Recreations with the muses fol. Lo7id. 1 637 Alexis (of Piemount) His secretes, transl. by W. Warde ; 4 parts, bl. let. 4to. Lond. for John Wight, 1568, 78 Aleyn (Charles). The historic of that wise and fortunate prince, Henrie the Seventh, a poem 8vo. Lond. 1638 3 Algorismus. An introduction of algorisme, to learne to reckon with the penne, or with the counters, in whole numbers or in broken, bl. let. 8vo. Lond. lohn Charlewood, 1581 Allen (William) . Killing no mitrder, by Col. Titus 4to. Lond. 1689 Allot (Robert) . Englands Parnassus : or, the choysest flowers of our moderne poets 8vo. Lond. 1600 Almanac. Almanacks for various years, in 58 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1607-1771 Alport (Edward). David's catechisme 8vo. Lond.lQ2?> Amadis of Greece. The most excellent and famous history of Amadis of Greece, surnam'd, the knight of the burning sword (a translation from the seventh book of Amadis of Gaul), bl. let. 4to. Lond. 1694 Andrewes (Abraham). The hunting of the greene lyon, in verse ; p. 278 of Ashmole's theatr. chem. q. v. Antichrist. A short description of Antichrist vnto the nobilitie of England, &c. bl. let. 8vo. a. p. (1554) Antoninus (Marcus Aurelius Verus). The golden boke, transl. oute of Frenche into Englishe, by John Bourchier, &c. (written by Ant. de Guevara, q. v.) Antonius. The most excellent history of Antonius and Aurelia ; or, the two incomparable lovers 4to. Lond. 1682 Apocrypha. Apocripha : transl. by M. Coverdale 4to. [this is a portion of the Bible printed at London by And. Hester, 1550] Apophthegmata. Witty apophthegms delivered at several times by king James, king Charles, the marquess of Worcester, lord Bacon, and sir Tho. Moore, col- lected by T. Baily 8vo. Lond. 1658 Apparel. England's vanity ; or, the voice of God against the monstrous sin of pride, in dress and apparel 8vo. Lond. 1683 Apuleius. The eleuen bookes of the Golden Asse, trans- lated out of Latin into English, by Will. Adlington 4to. Lond. by Valentine Sy mines, 1596 4 Aretinus (Petms). The sixth part of the wandring- whore revived 4to. Lond. 1663 Argalus. The unfortunate lovers : the history of Argalus and Parthenia 8vo. Lond. Argote y de Molina (Gongalo de) . El conde Lucanor 4to. Seuilla, 1575 Aristajnetus. Letters of love and gallantry, from the (jreek 8vo. Lond. 1698 Aristoteles. The problems of Aristotle, with other philo- sophers and phisitions 8vo. Edenhorough, by R. Waldgraue, 1595 Armada (the Spanish) . The copie of a letter sent out of England to don Bernardin Mendoza, ambassadour in Prance for the king of Spaine, declaring the state of England, &c. 4to. Lond. 1588 Certaine advertisements out of Ireland, concerning the losses and distresses happened to the Spanish nauie, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1588 A packe of Spanish lyes, sent abroad in the world ; now ripped vp, vnfolded, and by iust examination con- demned Bvo. Lond. 1588 An answer to the untruthes, published and printed in Spaine, in glorie of their supposed victorie atchieued against our English navie ; translated from the Spanish by James Lea 4to. Lond. 1589 Arms. Mars his field, or the exercise of armes, where in lively figures is showne the right use and perfect manner of handling the buckler, sword, and pike 8vo. Lond. n. d. Armin (Robert). The valiant Welshman, or, the true chronicle history of the life and valiant deeds of Caradoc the great, king of Cambria, now called Wales ; a play 4to. Lond. 1663 Armstrong (Johnny). The pleasant and delightful history of Johnny Armstrong of Westmoreland 4to. Lond. n. d. Army. Laws and ordinances of warre, established for the better conduct of the army 4to.. Lond. n. d. Arnold (Richard). The names of the baylifs custos mairs and sherefs of the cite of London, otherwise called Arnold's Chronicle ; bl. let. fol. n. d. Arrian. The Fal of the late Arrian Printed by William Powell, 12mo. 1549 [A fragment of one leaf only] Ars. The book intytulyd^ The art of good lywyng and good deyng; bl. let. fol. Paris, 1503, imperfect Arthur (prince). The hystorye of the mooste noble and worthy prynce kynge Arthur ; bl. let. (fol. Lond. by W. Copland, 1557) imperfect The auncient order, societie, and unitie laudable of prince Arthure and his knightly armory of the round table transl. and collected by E.. Robinson : in verse, bl. let. 4to. Lond. John Wolfe, 1583 The most ancient and famovs history of the renowned prince Arthur ; 3 parts 4to. iowc?. 1634 Articuli. Articles to be enquired of in the generall visi- tation of Edmonde (Bonner) bisshoppe of London ; bl. let. 4to. Lond. Joh. Cawood, 1554 Injunctions given by the queen's majesty, in 1559 8vo. [Lond. 1595) — and 4to. Lond. 1600 Advertisements partely for due order in the publique administration of common prayers, and using the holy sacraments. And partely for the apparell of all per- sons ecclesiastical! 4to. Lond. Thos. Dawson, 1584 The articles 4to. 1593 Articles to be inquired of in the visitation, in the first yeare of queene Elizabeth 8vo. Lond. Ch. Barker, 1595 — ' and 4to. Lond. 1600 Articles to be inquired of in the first metropoliticall visitation of Richarde (Bancroft), archbp. of Canter- bury 4to. Lond. 1605 Articles to be inquired of within the archdeaconry of Middlesex, by the church-wardens and sworne-men in euery parish 4to. Lond. 1620 A collection of articles, canons, injunctions, &c. together with several acts of parliament concerning ecclesias- tical matters ; some whereof are to be read in churches 8vo. Lond. 1699 Ascham (Roger). A report and discourse of the affaires of Germany, and the emperour Charles his court 4to. Lond. by John Daye, 1570 The scholemaster 4to. Lond. by John Daye, 1571 Toxophilus, the schole, or partitions of shooting 4to. Lond. by Thomas Marshe, 1571 iVshmole (Elias). Theatrum chemicum Britannicum ; containing severall poeticall pieces of our famous English philosophers, who have written the herme- tique mysteries in their owne ancient language ^ ^ 4to. Lond. 1652 The institution, laws, and ceremonies of the most noble order of the garter fol. Lond.lQTZ Auction catalogue of his library 4to. Lond. 1694 Aubrey (John), F.R.S. MisceUanies, upon day-fatality; local -fatality ; ostenta; omens; dreams, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1696 Avenar (John). The enimie of securitie; or, a daily exer- cise of godlie meditations, in English by Thomas Rogers 8vo. Lond. 1600 JqV. Augustinus (J. Aurelius), Hipponensis episcopus. Of the citie of God, with the learned comments of Jo. Lod. Vives, englished by J. H[ealey] fol. s. I. 1610 His rule in englysshe alone ; bl. let. 4to. Lond. Wynkyn de Worde, 1535 Certaine select prayers, gathered out of S. Augustines meditations, which he calleth his priuate talke with God; bl. let. 8vo. Lond. John Daye, 1577 Godly meditations made in the forme of prayers ; bl. let. 8vo. Lond. John Daye, n. d. Austin (Samuel). Naps upon Parnassus: a sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened. (Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1658 Austin (William), of Gray's Inn. Hsec homo, wherein the excellency of the creation of woman is described 8vo. Lond. 1637 The anatomy of the pestilence, a poem in three parts 8vo. Lond. 1666 Ayres (Philip). Mythologia Ethica; or, three centuries of ^sopian fables in Eng. prose, done from JSsop, Phsedrus, Camerarius, and all other eminent authors on this subject 8vo. Lond. 1689 B. (A.) Synopsis of vocal musick 8vo. Lond. 1680 B. (F.) Vercingetorixa : or, the Germane Princess reduc'd to an English habit (in verse) 4to. Lond. 1663 B. (G.) Ludus Scacchiae : Chesse-play. Translated out of the Italian into the English tongue (with a poeme of a whole game by W. B.) 4to. Lond. H. Jackson, 1597 B. (J.) The fortresse of fathers, ernestlie defending the puritie of religion, and ceremonies, by the trew expo- sition of certaine places of Scripture 8vo. s. I. 1566 B. (J.) The copy of a letter lately written by a Spanishe gentleman to his friend in England, in refutation of sundry calumnies, there falsly bruited, and spred emonge the people 8vo. , 1589 B. (O.) Questions of profitable and pleasant concernings talked of under an oake in Kenelworth parke, called by the Reporter the " Display of vaine life," with a Panacea to cure the principall diseases of this present time 4to. Lond. by Rich. Field, 1594 B. (P.) The amours of Bonne Sforza, queen of Polonia 8vo. Lond. 1684 B. (W.), M.A., i. e. William Barton, q. v. A. view of the many errors and som gross absurdities in the old translation of the Psalms in English metre 4to. Lond. 1654 — another edition 4to. Lond. 1655 B. (W.) A touch-stone for gold and silver wares 8vo. Lond. 1677 Bacon (Francis), lord Verulam. The historic of the raigne of king Henry the Seventh fol. Lond. 1623 — et Latine 8vo. Amst. 1662 The historic of life and death 8vo. Lond. 1638 Sylva Sylvarum : or, A naturall historic fol. Lond. 1639 — and with the History of life and death fol. Lond. 1658 Bacon (Friar). The famous history of frier Bacon; bl. let. 4to. Lond. n. d. and 8vo. Lond. 1766 The most famous history of the learned fryar Bacon 4to. Newcastle, n. d. Baker (Humfrey). The well-spring of sciences, which teacheth the perfect worke and practise of arithme- tick 8vo. Lond. 1617 Balaius (Joannes), Anglus. Yet a course at the Romyshe foxe ; a dysclosynge or openynge of the manne of syime, contayned in the late deelaratyon of the popes olde faythe made by Edm. Boner. (^^"["^ under the feigned name of John Harryson.) hi. let. 8vo. Zurik, by Olyuer Jacobson, 154d The pageant of popes, contayning the lyues of all the bishops of Rome, from the beginninge of them to the yeare of grace 1555. Englished with sondrye addi- tions by J. Studley ; bl. let. 4to. Lond. by Thomas Marshe, 1574 A brefe comedy or enterlude concernynge the tempta- cyon of our lorde and saner Jesus Christ, by Sathan in the desart ; bl. let. 4to. , 1538 A mysterye of inyquyte contayned within the heretycall genealogye of Ponce Pantolabus dysclosed and con- futed; bl. let. Bvo. Geneua, Mych. Woode, 1545 A dialoge or communicacyon to be had at a table be- twene two chyldren, gathered out of the holy scrip- tures ; bl. let. Bvo. Lond. for Rich. Foster, 1549 The laboryouse journey and serche of Johan Leylande for Englandes antiquities ; bl. let. Bvo. Emprented at London by Johan Bale, 1549 The vocacyon of J. B. to the bishopriek of Ossorie in Irelande, his persecucios in y" same and finall de- lyueraunce; bl. let. Bvo. Rome, 1553 The first two partes of the actes or vnchaste examples of the Englyshe votaries ; bl. let. 3vo. Lond. by Jhon Tisdale, 1560 A declaration of Edmonde Bonners articles, concerning the cleargye of London dyocese ; bl. let. Bvo. Lond. by Jhon Tysdall, 1561 The image of both churches, after the most wonderfull and heauenly reuelation of Sainct John the Euangelist, contayning a very fruitful! exposition or paraphrase upon the same; bl. let. Bvo. Lond. Tho. East, n. d. His apology agaynste a ranke Papyst; bl. let. Bvo. Lond. by Jhon Day, n. d. An expostulation or complaynte agaynste the blasphemyes of a franticke papyst of Hamshyre ; bl. let. Bvo. Lond. Jhon Daye, n. d. The firste examination of the worthy seruant of God Mastres Anne Askew Bvo. n. d. Baldwin (William). A myrrour for magistrates (called afterwards the last part) ; in verse ; bl. let. Ho. Lond. by Thos. Marsh, 1559 The last part of the mirour for magistrates (hi verse) ; bl. let. -Ato. Lond. by Tho. Marshe, 1578 IJales (Peter) . The writing schoolemaster : conteining three bookes in one ; the first teaching Swift writ- ing : the second. True writing : the thirdj Faire writing 4to. Lond. by Thomas Orwin, 1590 Ballads. See Songs. Bancroft (Rich.), D.D. A sermon on i Joh. iv. 1, preached at Paules crosse the 9. of Feb. being the first Sunday in the Parleament, Anno 1588 8vo. Lond. by J. J. 1588 Banister (Richard). A treatise of one hundred and thir- teene diseases of the eyes, and eye-liddes 8vo. Lond. 1622 Barclaius (Joannes), i^j-genis: cum clave 8vo. Lugd. Bat. 1630 — trans, by Kingsmill Long ito. Lond. 1636 Satyrieon ; quinque partes 8vo. Lugd. Bat. 1637 The mirrovr of mindes ; or, Barclay^s Icon animorum englished by Th. May 8vo. Lond. 1631 Barcley (Alexander) . The introductory to wryte, and to pronounce Frenche ; bl. let. fol. Lond. by Rob. Copelande, 1521 Barker (Thomas) . The art of angling 8vo. Imperfect. [Lond. 1651) Biu'low (WiUiam), D.D. The summe and substance of the conference at Hampton Court, Jan. 14, 1603 4to. Lond. 1625 — another edition ^to. Lond. 1638 Biu-lowc (William). Magneticall aduertisements -Ito. Lond. 1616 liarncs or Berners (Juliana). Treatyses perteynynge to hawkynge and huntynge with other dyuers play- saunt materes belongynge unto noblesse 4to. Westmestre, by TFynkyn the Worde, 1496 Baron (Robert). Pocula Castalia (inverse) 8vo. Lond. 1650 The Cyprian academy 8vo. {Lond. 1647) Barri (Giacomo). The painters voyage of Italy; trans- latt'd by W. Lodge " 8vo. Lond. 1679 10 Eartas (Guillaume de Saluste, seigneur du). His devine weekes and workes translated by Josuah Syluester ; 3rd edition 4to. Lond. 1611 — 4th edition 4to. Lond. 1613 — and with additions fol- Lond. 1641 The historie of Judith, in forme of a poeme ; enghshed by Th. Hudson ; at the end of his devine weekes Part (the first four books) of du Bartas, English and French, and in his owne kinde of verse, by WiUiam L'lale : with a commentary by S. G. S. 4to. Lond. 1625 Barthlet (John) . The pedegrewe of heretiqnes 4to. Lond. Henry Denham, 1566 Bate (John) . The mysteries of nature and art ; in foure parts 4to. n. p. 1635 Bateman or Batman (Stephen). A christall glasse of Christian reformation ; with plates 4to. Lond. by John Day, 1569 The golden booke of the leaden goddes 4to. Lond. Tho. Marshe, 1577 Batman uppon Bartholome his booke De proprietatibus rerum fol. Lond. Thomas East, 1583 Bathe (William). A briefe introduction to the skill of song Lond. by Thomas Este, n. d. Batt (John). The portraiture of hypocrisie, liuely and pithilie pictured in her colours 8vo. Lond. Rob. Robinson for J. Dalderne, 1589 Bayly (Thomas), D.D. Herba parietis : or, the wall- flower fol. Lond. 1650 Beau Chesne (John de) . A booke containing divers sortes of hands, set forth by John de B. C. and John Baildon 4to. Lond. 1603 Beaumont (sir John), hart. Bosworth-field : with a taste of the variety of other poems 8vo. Lond. 1639 Becon or Beacon (Thomas). The relikes of Rome, con- cernynge church ware and matters of religion 8vo. Lond. by Jhon Day, 1563 — and 8vo, ibid. n. d. The pomander of prayers 8vo. Lond. lohn Daye, 1578 — and 8vo. ibid. n. d. 11 Beda (Venerabilis), presbyter. The history of the church of Englande : transl. by The. Stapleton 4to. Antwerp, 1565 Bedloe (capt. William) . His life and death 8vo. Lond. 1681 Bedwell (William). Mohammedis imposturae: that is, a discovery of the manifold forgeries, falshoods, and horrible impieties of the blasphemous seducer Mo- hammed. Whereunto is annexed the Arabian Trudgman 4to. Lond. 1615 Beggar. The history of the blind begger of Bednal- Green 4to. Lond. n. d. Bell (Adam). Adam Bell, Clim of the Clough, and Wil- liam Cloudesle (in verse, bl. let.) 4to. Lond. 1683 Bellianis (Don), of Greece. The honour of chivalry ; or, the famous and delectable history of Don Bellianis of Greece (the first part) . 4to. Lond. 1650 — and with the second and third part, translated out of Italian by J. Shurley 4to. Lond. 1683 — and translated by Fr. Kirkman ; 3 parts 4to. Lond. 1671-3 — • abridged 4to. Lond. n. d. — another abridgment 8vo. Lond. n. d. Bellot (James). The French grammer. (bl. let.) 8vo. Lond. by Thos. Mar she, 1578 Belon (Peter). The mock duellist; or, the French vaUet. A comedy 4to. Lond. 1675 Benlowes (Edward). Theophila: or. Loves sacrifice. A divine poem fol. Lond. 1652 Berkeley (George), earl of Berkeley. Historical appli- cations and occasional meditations upon several subjects {Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1680 Bernard (Richard). A guide to grand-jury men, in cases of witchcraft, &c., in two books 8vo. Lond. 1627 Bernai'dus (S.), abbas Clareuallensis. Querela sive, dia- logus animse et corporis damnati. Lat. and Eng- lish, by W. Crashaw 8vo. Lond. s. a. 12 Bernier (Franfois). The history of the late revolution of the empire of the Great Mogol ; from the French ; 2 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1671 Bert (Edmund). An approved treatise of hawkes and hawking 4to. Lond. 1619 Beuys (sir), of Southampton. Sir Beuys of Southampton (in verse, bl. let.) 4to. Lond. Rycharde Pynson, n. d. and 4to. Lond. 1662 and 8vo. Aberdeen, n. d. The gallant history of the life and death of sir Bevis of Southampton (in prose) 4to. Lond. n. d. — and revised ; with some account of Ascapart 8vo. Southampton, 1775 Sir Beuys of Hampton, bl. let. 4to. Wynkyn de Worde. [Only two leaves of an unknown edition of this ro- mance; 32 lines in a page; printed with the same types as the " Memorare novissima," a work by the same printer] " Beware the Cat." 8vo. One leaf. The argument ; begins, " It chaunced that at Christemas last." See Herbert's Ames, p. 1238. Eitson's Bibl. poet. 118. Collier's Annals of the Stage, i. xx and 152. [There were three editions of this extraordinary volume, 1561, 1570, and 1584. The only copy known (which was of the latter edition) formerly belonging to Tho. Rawlinson, West, Herbert, Steevens, Duke of Rox- burghe, and subsequently in Mr. Heber's library, and lately in that of Loscombe, wants the title] Bible. The Byble, that is the holye Scripture of the Olde and New Testaments faythfully translated in Eng- lysh (by Miles Coverdale) and newly ouersene and correcte [Imperf.) 4to. Sowthivarke by James Nycolson, 1537 The Bible in English (Cranmer's) that is to saye. The content of al the holy scripture both of the olde and newe Testament 4to. {Lond.) Edward Whytchurche, 1550 The Byble, faythfully set furth according to y ' coppy of Thomas Mathewes trauslacion fol. Lond. by Jhon Day, 1551 1:5 The Bible in Euglishe according to the translation of the great Byble 4to. Loud. Richarde Grafton, ir)")^ The Bible in Englishe (Cranmcr's), that is to say the contentes of al the holy Scripture, both of the olde and newe testament fol. Land. Richarde Harrison, 1562 The holy Byble (Bishop's), conteynyng the olde Testa- ment and the newe fol. Lond. Franc. Coldock, 1575 The Bible (Genevan), transl. according to the Ebrew and Greeke ; with most profitable annotations fol. Lond. by Christ. Barker, 1578 The holy Bible (Bishop's) conteyning the olde Testa- ment, and the newe fol. Lond. by the assignement of Ch. Barker, 1 758 The Bible (Genevan) translated according to the Ebrew and Greeke and conferred with the best translations in diners languages fol. Lond. by Christ. Barker', 1583 The Bible (Genevan) : translated according to the He- brew and Greeke ; with annotations 4to. Lond. by Robert Barker, 1615 The holy Bible : newly translated, with most profitable annotations upon all the hard places and other things of great importance 4to. Lond. 1649 The holy Bible (from Gen. to 2 Chron. Interleaved with MS. notes) 8vo. Lond. 1655 Storys and prophesis out of the holy scriptur, gar- nyschede with faire ymages and with deuoute praeirs 8vo. Andivarpe by my Symon Cowke, 1536 The true and liuely historyke pvrtreatvres of the woll Bible 8vo. Lyons by Jean of Tournes, 1553 Bilson (the boy of) . The boy of Bilson : or, a true dis- covery of the late notorious impostures of certaine Romish priests in their pretended exorcisme, or expulsion of the Diiiell out of a yomig boy, named William Perry : with a discourse for the more easie discerning- of such Romish spirits 4to. Lond. 1622 Bieston (Rogerus). The bayte and snare of Fortune (in verse, bl. let.) fol. Lond. John IVayland, n. d. Billingsley (Martin) . The pen's excellencie, or the secre- taries delighte 4to. Lond. 1641 Biochimo ( ) . The royall game of cheese-play ; illus- trated with almost an hundred garabetts, being the studv of Biochimo 8vo. Lond. 1656 11. Biondi (Gio. Francesco). Coralbo. A romance fol. Land. 165;) Blanc (Vincent le). The world surveyed; or, his famous voyages and travailes ; rendred into English by p. B. fol. Lond. 1660 Blener-Hasset (Thomas). The seconde part of the mir- rour for magistrates (in verse) 4to. Rich. Webster, 1578 Blith (Walter). The English improver improved, or the survey of husbandry surveyed 4to. Lond. 1653 Blosius (Lewis), abbot of St. Benet's order. A mirrour for monkes 8vo. Paris, 1676 Blount (Charles) . Anima mundi : or, an historical narra- tion of the opinions of the ancients concerning man's soul after this life 8vo. Lond. 1679 Great is Diana of the Ephesians : or, the original of idolatry [Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1695 An appeal from the country to the city, for the preser- vation of his majesty's person, liberty, property, and the protestant religion {Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1695 A just vindication of learning, and the liberty of the press 8vo. Lond. 1695 Blount (Thomas) . The academic of eloquence 8vo. Lond. 1654 Glossographia : or, a dictionary, interpreting all such hard words, as are now used in our refined English tongue 8vo. Lond. 1656 — third ed. 8vo. Lond. 1670 — fourth ed. 8vo. Lond. 1681 Animadversions upon sir Richard Baker's chronicle, and its continuation 8vo. Oxon. 1673 Fragmeuta autiquitatis. Antient tenures of land, and jocular customs of some mannors Bvo. Lond. 1679 Blount (Thomas-Pope), baronettus. Censura celebriorum authorum fol. Lond. 1690 A natural history : containing many not common obser- vations : extracted out of the best modern writers 8vo. Lond. 1693 De re poetica; or, remarks upon poetry 4to. Lond. 1694 15 Blundevill (Thomas). A newe booke containing the ai-te of ryding and breakinge greate horses 8vo. Land, by IT. Seres, u. d. Boaystuau (Peter) . Theatrum mundi ; the theatre or rule of the worldj wherein may be sene the running race and course of euerye mans life ; transl. by J. Alday 8vo. Land, by H. D. n. d. Boccaccio. The decameron ; containing an hundred pleasant novels fol. Lond. 1620 The modell of wit, mirth, eloquence, and conversation ; framed in ten dayes, of an hundred curio as pieces, by seven honoiu'able ladies and three noble gentlemen fol. {Lond.) 1625 His novels and tales fol. Lond. 1684 Amorous Fiammetta; done into English by B. Giouano (Barth. Young) 4to. Lond. by I. C. 1587 Boccus (king). The hystory and questyons of kynge Boc- cus and Sydracke, transl. out of Frenche by Hugo of Caumpeden (in verse) 4to. Lond. by Tho. Godfray (1510) Bodenham (John). Bel-vedere, or the garden of the muses (in verse) 8vo. Lond. 1600 Boemus (Joannes), Aubanus. The manners, lawes, and customes of all nations : transl. from the Lat. by Ed. Aston 4to. Lond. 1611 Bohun (Edmund). The character of queen Elizabeth 8vo. Lond. 1693 A geographical dictionary ; continued, corrected, and enlarged by Mr. Bernard fol. Lond. 1693 Bold (Henry), olim e Nov. coll. Oxon. Poems lyrique, macaronique, heroique, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1664 Bolton (Edmund) . The elements of armories 4to. Lond. 1610 Nero Caesar; or, monarchie depraved fol. Lond. 1624 Bonaventura (S.) Vita Christi ; the lyfe of our Lorde Jhesu Chryste 4to. Lond. Wynkyn de Worde, 1517 Bonner (Edmunde), bp. of London. A profitable and necessarye doctrine, with certayne homelyes; 2nd edit. ' 4to. Lond. by Jhon Cawodde, 1555 IG Iniuiictions geuen in his visitation the yore of our Lorilc god a thousand fine hundreth fifty and foure 4.to. Lond. by John 'Caicood, 4 Oct. 15."),' The booke of cookery^ bl. let. 12mo. One leaf, containing the following receipts : To make a stewe after the guyse of beyonde the sea To make egges in moonshyne To make an applemorse To frye Trypes To make a tarte of Prunes [Not in Herbert.] The booke of Martyrs Four leaves of this diminutive book ; each leaf mea- suring only If inch by 1 inch. In each leaf is a couplet describing the death of some " martyr" thus : Then first loane Bouhgton & a man call'd Bahrain, By faith (through fire) went to old fa- ther Abram. Borde or Boorde or Boarde (Andrewe), D.M. A com- pendyous regimente or dyetary of health (bl. let.) 8vo. Lond. by Thos. Colwel, 1562 The breviarie of health 4to. Lond. Tho. Este, 1598 The boke of the introduction of knowledge. Reprinted 4to. Lond. n. d. The peregrination of doctor Boarde; p. 764. vol. ii. Benedicti abbatis, a Hearne Bovet (Richard). PandEemonium, or the Devil's cloyster; being a further blow to modern sadduceism, proving the existence of witches and spirits 8vo. Lond. 1684 Bower (Edmond) . Doctor Lamb revived ; or, witchcraft condemn'd in Anne Bodenham 4to. Lond. 1653 Boys (John), D.D. deane of Canterburie. His workes fol. Lond. 1623 Bradshaw (William). English Puritanisme; containeing the maine opinions of the rigidest sort of those that are called Puritanes in the realme of England 8vo. s. I. 1605 Brady (Robert)^ M.D. A full aud clear answer to a book written by William Petit^ together with some observations upon a book called Jani Anglorum facies nova. {Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1681 Brandt or Brant (Sebastianus), J. C. Stultifera navis qua omnium mortalium narratur stultitia. The ship of fooles, with diuers other workes adioyned, transl. by Alexander Barclay fol. Lond. John Cawood, 1570 The grete shyppe of fooles. Transl. by Henry Watson. 4to. Lond. TFynkin de TVorde, 1518 Brathwait (Richard) . Barnabse itinerariumj or Bamabee's journall ; 1st edition 8vo. s. I. et a. A solemne joviaU disputation, theoreticke and practicke; briefely shadowing the law of drinking 8vo. Oenozythopolis, 1617 A strappado for the DiueU. Epigrams and satyres^ &c. 8vo. Lond. 1615 The Arcadian princesse ; or, the triumph of justice 8vo. Lond. 1635 Ar't asleepe husband ? A boulster lecture 8vo. Lond. 1640 A comment upon the two tales of our ancient, renowned, and ever-living poet Sr. Jefficay Chaucer, the miller^s tale, and, the wife of Bath 8vo. Lond. 1665 Brerewood (Edw.) Enquiries touching the diversity of languages and religions through the chief parts of the world 8vo. Lond. 1674 Breton (Nicholas). Pasquil's mad-cappe, throwne at the corruptions of the times. With his message to men of all estates ; in verse {Anon.) 4to. Lond. 1626 A mad world my masters, mistake me not ; or, a merry dialogue betweene two trauellers, the taker and mis- taker {Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1635 Brevia. Natura brevium 8vo. Lond. in Hart (John), Chester Heralt. An orthographic, con- teyning the due order and reason, howe to write or paint thimage of mannes voice, most like to the life or nature 8vo. Lond. William Seres, 1569 Hartlib (Samuel). The true and readie way to learne the Latine tongue 4to. Lond. 1654 63 Uarvey ((iabriel). Pierces supererogation; or a new prayse of the old asse 4to. Lond. by John Wolfe, 1593 Harvey (Gideon), M.D. The conclave of physicians, de- tecting their intrigues, frauds, and plots, against their patients 8vo. Lond. 1683 Harvey (William), M.D. prof, of anat. in the coll. of phys. of London. Anatomical exercitations concerning the generation of living creatures ; to which are added particular discourses of births, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1653 Ilasse ( Jean- Adolphe) . The comic tunes &c. to the cele- brated dances perform^ at both theatres; books I, II, III. 4to. Lond. n. d. Haughton (William). A pleasant comedie called, A woman will have her will. (Anon.) 4to. Lond. 1631 Englishmen for my money ; or, a woman will have her will ; a comedy (a reprint) 8vo. Lond. n. d. Hausted (Peter), M.A. e coll. reg. Cantabr. Senile odium, comoedia Cantabrigise recitata 8vo. Cantab. 1633 The rivall friends ; a comoedie 4to. Lond. 1632 Hawes (Stephen) . The history of graund Amoure and la bel Pucell, called the pastime of pleasure (in verse, bl. let.) 4to. Lond. by Rich. Tottell, 1555 Ilawkwood (sir John). The honour of the taylors; or, the famous and renowned history of sir J. H. 4to. Lond. 1687 Three ancient and curious histories, containing, the life and actions of sir J. Hawkewood, &c. 4to. Lond. 1743 Memoirs of him; No. iv Bibliotheca topographica Britannica 4to. Lond. 1782 Additions to the memoirs (No. xix of the same) ibid. Hayman (Robert). Quodlibets, lately come over from New Britaniola, Old Newfoundland; in foure bookes 4to. Lond. 1628 1 ''^ 1 Gl llaywarde (sir John), LL.D. The first part of the life and raigne of king Henrie IIIIj extending to the end of the first yeare of his raigne 4to. Lond. by John Wolfe, 1599 An answer to the first part of a certaine conference, con- cerning succession, published not long since under the name of R. Dolman 4to. Lond. 1603 The right of succession asserted against the false reason- ings and seditious insinuations of R. Dolman alias Parsons, and others 8vo. Lond. 1683 The lives of the iii Normans, kings of England; WiUiam the first, William the second, Henrie the first 4to. Lond. 1613 The life and raigne of king Edward the sixt 4to. Lond. 1630 The beginning of the reign of queene Elizabeth [being part of the second edition of the above work] 8vo. Lond. n. d. Head (Richard) . The English rogue ; 4 parts (the last two parts by Fr. Kirkman) 8vo. Lond. 1668-80 — abridged ; to which is added a fifth part 8vo. Lond. 1688 Proteus redivivus ; the art of wheedling or insinuation 8vo. Lond. 1684 The miss displayed, with all her wheedling arts and cir- cumventions 8vo. Lond. 1675 The history of mother Shipton. {Anon.) 4to. n. p. or d. Heale (William), of Ex. coll. An apologie for women 4to. Oxf. 1609 Healey (John). The discovery of a new world, or a de- scription of the South Indies, hetherto unknowne (a humorous version of bishop HaU's Mundus alter et idem) 8vo. for Ed. Blount, n. d. Heath (Robert). Clarastella: together with poems occa- sional, elegies, epigrams, satyrs 8vo. Lond. 1650 Paradoxical assertions and philosophical problems ; by R. H. [ascribed in a MS. note to Robert Heath] 8vo. Lond. 1659 Heaven. Heaven's happiness ; or a brief epitomie of the blessed and happy estate of God's saints in heaven 8vo. Lond. n. d. 65 Hegg (Robert). The legend of St. Cutlibert, with tlie antiquities of the church of Durham 8vo. Lond. 1663 Heliodorus Emissenus, episc. Tricensis. An Jilthiopic historicj written in Greeke, no lesse wittie then pleasaunt j englished by Thomas Underdowne 4to. Lond. Frauncis Coldocke, 1587 Help. A pore helpe The buckler and defence Of Mother holy kyrke, And weapo to driue hence Al that against her wircke. (in verse) 8vo. s. I. et a. Helvicus (Christopher). His historical and chronologicall theatre, faithfully done into Eng. with additions fol. Lond. 1687 Henry VIII, rex. Anglise. A necessary doctrine and ervdition for any Christen man 4to. Lond. by Tho. Berthelet, 1543 — and 8vo. Lond. by Jhon Mayler, 1543 — and Svo. Lond. by Tho. Berthelet, 1545 Henrietta Maria, queen to Charles I. Her life and death Svo. Lond. 1669 An elegy on K. Henry VII. bl. let. broadside. At the top a woodcut of the king crowned lying in bed, with the sceptre in his left hand, on either side of the cut the royal arms. Seven stanzas of eight lines, in two columns ; unfortunately the left side of the sheet is cut so as to destroy the beginning of the first four stanzas ; the seventh is as follows : And nowe for conclusyon aboute his herse Let this be grauyd for endeles memorye With sorowfidl tunes of Thesyphenes verse Here lyeth the puyssaunt and myghty henry Hector in batayl Ulyxes in polecy Salamon in wysdome the noble rose rede Creses in rychesse Julyus in glory Henry the seuenth ingraued here lyeth dede. Dr. Farmer, to whom this formerly belonged, conjectured that Skelton was the author of this elegy (not in Herbert) . G6 Herberay (Nicholas de), Sr. de Essars. The most excelleut history of the renowned and valiant knight^ Don Flores of Greece ; transl. by W. P. 4to. Lond. 1664 Herbert ( ). French and English dialogues 8vo. Lond. 1660 Herbert (Edward lord), of Cherbury. The life and raigne of king Henry the Eighth fol. Lond. 1649 Herbert (sir Thomas), bart. A relation of some yeares travaile, begunne anno 1626, into Afrique and the greater Asia fol. Lond. 1634 — fourth impression fol. Lond. 1677 Heresbachius (Conradus). Foure bookes of husbandry; newly englished and increased by Barnaby Googe 4to. Lond. 1601 Hermit. The lamentable vision of the devoted hermit fol. s. I. et a. Herodotus, Halicarnassensis, transl. by B. R. 4to. Lond. by Thos. Marshe, 1584 Herrick (Robert) . Hesperides ; or his works both humane and divine 8vo. Lond. 1648 His noble numbers ; or pious pieces, ibid. Heuringius (Simon), Salicedensis, M.D. An almanack and prognostication for the yeare of our Lord 1551 single sheet. Lond. by John Turck Hexham (Hendrick) . A large Netherdutch and English dictionarie, with a grammar 4to. Rotterdam, 1648 Heylin (Peter), D.D., preb. of "Westminster. The history of that most famous saynt and souldier of Christ Jesus St. George of Cappadocia, asserted 4to. Lond. 1631 The history of the sabbath ; 2 bookes 4to. Lond. 1636 Cosmographie in foure bookes, contayning the choro- graphie and historic of the whole world fol. Lond. 1653 Observations on the history of the reign of king Charles, published by H. L. (Hammond L'Estrange) 8vo. Lond. 1656 Exameu historicum, or a discovery and examination of the mistakes, falsities, and defects, in some modern histories ; in two hooks 8vo. Lond. 1659 The voyage of Prance ; or a compleat journey through Prance 8vo. Lond. 1673 Ecclesia restaurata; the history of the reformation of the church of England fol. iorec?. 1674 Heywoode (John). The spider and the flie (in verse) 4to. Lond. Tho. Powell, 1556 His woorkes [his epigrammes] 4to. Lond. by Tho. Powell, 1562 — and 4to. Lond. 1566 — and 4to. Lond. Thomas Marsh, 1576 Hey wood (Thomas) . A woman kilde with kindnesse ; 3d edit. 4to. Lond. 1617 If you know not me, you know no hody ; or the troubles of queene Elizabeth ; 2 parts 4to. Lond. 1623 Nine bookes of various history concerninge women fol. Lond. 1624 The fair maid of the west; or a girle worth gold; 2 parts 4to. Lond. 1631 The English traveller 4to. Lond. 1633 The heirarchie of the blessed angeUs fol. Lond. 1635 Philocothonista ; or, the drunkard, opened, dissected, and anatomized. {Anon.) 4to. Lond. 1635 A challenge for beautie ; a comedy 4to. Lond. IQZQ The fayre maide of the exchange ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1637 Pleasant dialogues and dramma^s 8vo. Lond. 1637 The rape of Lucrece ; a true Roman tragedy ; 5th impr. 4to. Lond. 1638 The wise-woman of Hogsdon ; a comedie 4to. Lond. 1638 Loves mistresse : or, the queenes masque ; 2d impres- sion 4to. Lond. 1640 — another second impression (very diiferent from the former) 4to. Lond. 1640 The life of Merlin surnamed Ambrosius, his prophesies and predictions interpreted 4to. Lond. 1641 Fortune by land and sea; a tragi-comedy, by T. H. and W. Rowley 4to. Lond. 1655 The actor's vindication 4to. Lond. (1658) 68 Hickeringill (Edmund). Jamaica viewed; with all the ports, harbours, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1661 Hicks (William). Grammatical drollery, consisting of poems and songs ; wherein the rules of the nouns and verbs in the accedence are pleasantly made easie 8vo. Lond. 1682 Oxford jests, refined and enlarged 8vo. Lond. 1720 Higden (Kanulphus). The discripcion of Britayne (from Higden's Polycronicon) imperf. fol. Lond. William Caxton, 1480 — and fol. imp. {Westmestre by Wm. Caxton, 1482) — and fol. Southwerke, Peter Treveris, 1527 Higgins (John) . The first parte of the mirour for magis- trates 4to. Lond. by Thomas Mar she, 1575 The falles of unfortunate princes : whereunto is added the famous life and death of queene Elizabeth (the mirror for magistrates of 1610, with a new title page), by J. H. and Richard Niccols 4to. Lond. 1619 Hill (Thomas) . A pleasant history ; declaring the whole art of physiognomy 8vo. by W. Jaggard, 1613 Natural and artificial conclusions 8vo. Lond. 1684 Hilary, St. St. Hillaries teares, shed upon all professions 4to. Lond. 1642 Hilton (John) . Catch that catch can ; or a choice collec- tion of catches, rounds and cannons for 3 or four voyces 8vo. Lond. 1652 Hispania. The estate of English fugitives under the king of Spaine 4to. Lond. 1595 The character of Spain ; or, an epitome of their virtues and vices 8vo. Lond. 1660 Historia. Straunge, lamentable and tragicall hystories, transl. out of French by Robert Smythe, and publ, by Tho. Newton 4to. Lond. by Hugh Jackson, 1577 A collection of farthing histories 8vo. Lond. v. y. Histoires prodigieuses extraictes de plusieurs fameux au- theurs Grecs et Latins, sacrez et prophanes ; 6 voU. 8vo. Paris, 1598 [Generally known under the name of Briastau et Belle-forest.] 69 Holbein (Hans). Historiarum veteris Testament! icones ad vivum expressse ; cum Lat. et Gall, expositione 4to. Lugd. Melch. et Gasp. Trechsel, 1539 — in. Ynglishe and Frenche 4to. Lyons, J. Frellon, 1549 Holinshed (Raphaell). The cliroaicles of England, Scot- lande, and Irelande ; 2 vols. fol. Lond. George Bishop, 1577 Holland. A true coppy of the admonitions sent hy the sub- dued provinces to the states of Holland ; and the Hollanders answere to the same 4to. Lond. by John Wolfe, 1598 The Dutch drawn to the life 8vo. Lond. 1664 Holland (Henry). A treatise against witchcraft 4to. Cambr. 1590 Hollyband (Claudius) . The treasurie of the French tong ; teaching the waye to varie all sortes of verbes ; enriched, with wordes and phrases, &c. 4to. Lond. by Hen. Bynneman, 1580 A dictionarie, French and English 4to. Lond. by T. 0., 1593 The Italian schoole-maister ; and a fine Tuscan historic called Arnalt and Lucenda Svo. Lond. 1597 The French schoolemayster bl. lett. Svo. no title — and Svo. Lond. 1619 — corrected and amended by James Giffard Svo. Lond. 1636 — newly corrected and enlarged by James Giffard Svo. Lond. 16i9 The French Littleton ; a most easy, perfect, and absolute way to learne the French tongue Svo. Lond. 1635 — and 8vo. Lond. 1630 Holme (Randle). The academy of armory; or a store house of armory and blazon fol. Chester, 1688 Holyday (Dr. Barten). The Shoomakers holy-day; or the gentle craft ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1610 The fellow traveller through city and countrey, by Democritus Secundus Svo. n. p. 1658 [Attributed to HoUiday by Mr. Malone, but by Mr. Douce to H. Edmonson or Edmundson] Homerus. His Iliads translated, adorn'd with sculpture, and illustrated with annotations, by J. Ogilby fol. Lond. 1660 70 His Odysses, translated according to ye Greeke^ by Geo. Chapman ; first twelve books ; first ed. fol. Land. n. d. Homilise. Certaine sermons appoynted by the quenes maiesty, to be declared and read, by al parsons, vicars, and curates, everi Sunday and holi day 4to. Lond. Rich. Jugge and John Cawood, 1563 Certain sermons or homilies appointed to be read in churches in the time of queen Elizabeth fol. Lond. 1676 Hood (Robin) . A true tale of Robin Hood ; setting forth the life and death of that renowned outlaw 8vo. by J. Norris, n. d. The noble birth and gallant atchievements of that remarkable outlaw Robin Hood 4to. Lond. n. d. Robin Hood's garland ; containing his merry exploits, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1670 — and (with various illustrations) 8vo. Lond. n. d. The whole life and merry exploits of bold Robin Hood, earl of Huntington 8vo. Lond.llZJ Hookes (N.) Amanda, a sacrifice to an unknown god- desse ; or a free-will offering of a loving heart to a sweet-heart 8vo. Lond. 1653 Hooper, or Hoper (John), bishop of Worcester and Gloucester. A declaration of the ten holy com- mandementes of AUmyghthye God 8vo. s. I. 1548 Hopton (Arthur) . His concordancy (of years) enlarged 8vo. Lond. 1635 Horatius (Quintus), Flaccus. Art of poetry, englished by Ben. Jonson (with other works of the author) 8vo. Lond. 1640 — and fol. Lond. 1640 A medicinable morall ; that is, the two bookes of his satyres, englyshed accordyng to the prescription of saint Hierome, by T. Drant 4to. Lond. by Thos. Marshe, 15'66 Hornianus (GuU.), Caesarisburgensis. Vulgaria 4to. Lond. per Rich. Pynson, 1519 Home (Andrew). The booke called, The mirrour of justices, with The diversity of courts ; transl. by W. H. 8vo. Lo7id. 1646 71 Home (Henry). The perfect and compleat bel-mau ; or, the bel-man's diurnal 8vo. Lond. 1666 Hosius (Stanislaus)j bp. of Wormes in Prussia. A most excellent treatise of the begynnyng of heresyes in oure tyme ; transl. out of Laten by R. ShacMock 8vo. Antw. by JEg. Diest, 1565 Howard (Henrie), earl of Northampton. A defensatiue against the poyson of supposed prophecies 4to. Lond. by John Charlewood, 1583 — and fol. Lond. 1620 Howard (hon. James). AH mistaken, or the mad couple; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1672 The English mounsieur ; a comedy 4to. Lond.\Q7-l Howard (hon. sir Robert). Poems 8vo. Lond. 1660 Howell (James). Instructions and directions for forren travell; with an appendix 8vo. iored'. 1650 A survey of the signorie of Venice fol. Lond. 1651 Epistolse Ho-Elianse ; familiar letters, domestic and forren ; 4 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1655 Londinopolis ; an historicall discourse, or perlustration of the city of London fol. Lond. 1657 A brief character of the Low-countries under the states. {Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1659 A perfect description of the people and country of Scot- land. {Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1659 The parley of beasts : or, Morphandra queen of the in- chanted island fol. Lond. 1660 Lexicon Tetraglotton ; an English-French-Italian- Spanish dictionary fol. Lond. 1660 A nomenclature of proper terms, ibid. Proverbs in all the said toungs. ibid. \ new English grammar, for forreners to learne English ; another grammar of the Spanish or Castilian toung, whereunto is annexed a discours or dialog ; Eng. and Span. 8vo. Lond. 1662 Hugo (Hermannus), e soc. Jesu. Pia desideria; or, di%'ine addresses ; with plates ; englished by Edm. Arwaker 8vo. Lond. 1690 lluloetus (Richardus). Abcedaiiuni Anglico-Latinum fol. Lond. 1552 72 Ilis dictionarie, newelye corrected, amended, set in order, and enlarged, by Thomas Higgins ; Eng. Lat. and Pr. fol. Lond. Thorn. Marshius, 1572 Hume (sir Patrick). The promine, contening the maner, place, and time of the maist illuster king James the sext his first passing to the feildis (in verse) fol. Edinb. Johne Ros, 1580 Hunt (Nicolas), M. A. Judiciary exercises; or practical conclvsions 8vo. Lond. 1631 Hunt (Thomas), M.A. of Pemb. coll. Abecedarium scho- lasticum ; or the grammar-scholars flower-garden, &c., for the attainment of the Latine tongue; second ed. 8vo. Lond. 1681 Huon de Bordeaulx, due de Guyenne. The ancient, hon- orable, famous, and delightfull historie of Huon of Bordeaux; third edit. 4to. Lond. 1601 liurleston (Randoll). Newes from Rome concerning the blasphemous sacrifice of the papistieaU masse, with dyvers other treatises very godlye and profitable 8vo. Cantorbury , T. Mychell, n. d. Huttenus (Ulricus). De morbo Gallico ; transl. by Tho. Poynel [Paynel] 8vo. Lond. ap. Tho. Bertheletum, 1534 Hutten (Robert). The sura of diuinitie drawen out of the holy scripture very necessary, not onlye for curates and yong studentes in diuinitie, but also for al Christen men and women 8vo. Lond. by John Day and W. Seres, 1548 H yll (Thomas) . The profitable art of gardening ; third edit. 4to. Lond. Henr. Bynneman, 1579 J. (D.) King Charles I. no such saint, martyr, or good protestant as commonly reputed 4to. Lond. 1698 J. (H.) The history of the life and death of pope Joane 4to. Lond. 1663 J aeke of Dover. Jacke of Dover ; his quest of inquirie, or his privy search for the veriest foole in England 4to. Lond. 1604 Jack (three fingered). The wonderful life and adventures of three fingered Jack, the terror of Jamaica 8vo. Lond. n. d. 73 Jacobus I, rex Anglise. Dsemonologiej in forme of a dia- logue ; divided into three bookes 4to. Edinb. 1597 — and 4to. Lond. 1603 His majesties instructions to his dearest sonne, Henry the prince 8vo. Lond. 1603 — and 8vo. Lond. 1682 A booke of proclamations, published since the beginning of his majesties most happy reigne over England, &c., untill this present moneth of Febr. fol. Land. 1609 His majesties speach in the starre chamber, the xx of June, 1616 4to. Lond. by Robert Barker, n. d. His declaration to his subjects concerning lawful! sports to be vsed 4to. Lond. 1618 The narrative history of him for the first fourteen years ; 4 parts 4to. Lond. 1651 James (Thomas), D.D. keeper of the Bodl. Lib. A trea- tise of the corruption of scripture, councils and fathers, by the prelates, pastors, and pillars of the church of Rome, or maintenance of popery 8vo. Lond. 1688 Jefferies (George), lord JefPeries. The bloody assizes, or a compleat history of his life 4to. Lond. 1689 Jeremiah, the prophet. His wailyngs, done into Englyshe verse by T. Drant; at the end of his transl. of Horace's Satyrs, q. v. Jests, V. Facetiae. .Amusements, serious and comical; or a new collection of bon-mots, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1719 London jests ; or a collection of the choicest joques and repertees 8vo. Lond. 1720 Cambridge jests ; or, witty alarums for melancholy spirits 8vo. Lond. 1721 Pinkethman's jests ; or, wit refined ; in two parts 8vo. Lond. 1735 Job Miller's jests ; or the wits vade mecum 8vo. Lond. 1739 Bogg-witticisms ; or, dear joy's common places 8vo. n. p. or d. The button-maker's jests 8vo. Lond. n. d. The cabinet of mirth 8vo. Lond. n. d. The jests of the camp 8vo. Lond. n. d. Coffee-house jests 8vo. imperfect The delicate jester ; or^ wit and humour without ribaldry 8vo. Lond. n. d. Eccentricities; or, the merry jester 8vo. Lond. n. d. The feast of wit, and banquet of humour 8vo. Lond. n. d. Female jester j or, wit for the ladies 8vo. Lond. n. d. Ingelend (Thomas) . A pretie and very new enterlude ; called the disobedient child (bl. let.) 4to. Lond. by Thomas Colwell, n. d. Interlude. Thenterlude of youth (bl. let.) 4to. Lond. by John Waley, n. d. A newe mery and wittie comedie or enterlude, treating upon the historic of Jacob and Esau, taken out of the xxvii chap, of the first booke of Moses, entituled Genesis 4to. Lond. H. Bynneman, 1568 Johnson (Richard) . The crown garland of golden roses, gathered out of England's royal garden 8vo. Lond. (1662) The renowned history of the seven champions of Chris- tendom; 2 vols. 8vo. iojid 1755 — and 2 parts 4to. Lond. n. d. — and abridged 4to. Lond. n. d. The most pleasant history of Tom a Lincoln, that ever renowned soldier, the red-rose knight 4to. Lond. (1706) Johnson (Samuel), chaplain to the earl of Russel, and rector of Corrington. Julian the apostate, being a short account of his life, &c. ; together with a com- parison of popery and paganism 8vo. Lond. 1683 Johnston (Robert). The historie of Scotland during the minority of king James ; done into Engl, by T. M. 8vo. Lond. 1646 Jolly (Thomas). A vindication of the Surey demoniack as no impostor ; or, a reply to a certain pamphlet publish'd by Mr. Zach. Taylor, called the Surey impostor 4to. Lond. 1698 Jones (Andrew). Morbus Satanicus; the Devil's disease; or, the sin of pride arraigned and condemned 8vo. Lond. 1667 Jones (Inigo). Britannia triumphans; a masque by I. J. and W. Davenant 4to. Land. 1637 Jones (John), phisition. The arte and science of pre- seruing bodie and soule in healthe, wisedome, and catholike religion 4to. Lond. Henry Bynneman, 1579 — another edition 4to. {imperfect) Jones (John). Adrasta; or the womans spleene, and loves conquest; a tragi-comedie 4to. Lond. 1635 Jones (Thomas) . The British language in its lustre ; or, a copious dictionary of Welsh and English 8vo. Lond. 1688 Jordan (Thos.) London triumphant; or, the city in jollity and splendour 4to. Lond. 1672 Joscelinus (Joannes). The life off the 70 archbishopp off Canterbury presentlye sittinge, englished, and to be added to the 69 lately sett forth in Latin (bl. let.) 8vo. n. p. 1574 JosephuSj or Joseppus Gorionides. The wonderful and most deplorable history of the latter times of the Jews, with the destruction of Jerusalem 8vo. Lond. 1662 Jovius (Paulus), episc. Nucer. A shorts treatise upon the Turkes chronicles ; transl. by Peter Ashton 4to. Lond. by Edwarde Whitchurche, 1546 A discourse of rare inventions, both miHtarie and amorous, called Imprese ; with a preface by S. Daniell 8vo. Lond. 1585 Sir Isenbras. bl. let. 4to. One leaf; sign. A. ii. thirty-one lines in a page. Begins, Lordinges listen and you shal here Of elders that before vs were. Mr. Douce supposed this to have been printed by Cop- land, and refers to Mr. Garrick's copy of that edition in the British Museum ; upon comparing them how- ever, it is evidently from another press. The seventh line begins with a singularly shaped Y, which may lead perhaps to the discovery of the printer. [Not in Herbert] 76 Isocrates. A perfite looking glasse for all estates ; nowe englished by T. Forrest^ with sundrie examples and pithy sentences both of princes and philosophers 8vo. Lond. Tho. Purfoote, 1580 Italy. The character of Italy ; or, the Italian anatomized, by an English chyrurgion 8vo. Lond. 1660 Juda (Leo), or Juda Leo de Modena. The history of the rites, customes, and manner of life of the present Jews throughout the world ; transl. from the ItaUan by Edm. Chilmead 8to. Lond. 1650 Ive (Paule). The practise of fortification 4to. Lond. Th. Orwin, 1589 Jus. The ten ours and fourme of indentures, obligations, quitaunceSj byUes of paymente, letters of sale, and letters of exchaung, protections, supplications, com- playntes ; a certificate, and the copy of saue condite (bl. let.) 8vo. Lond. by John Tysdale, n. d. Juvenal. Sixteen satyrs ; trans, with notes by sir Robert Stapylton 8vo. Lond. 1647 — transl. by Barten Holyday fol. Oaof. 1673 Kalenborowe. The storie of the parson of Kalenborowe [imperf.) 4to. [printed by John Doesborcke at Antwerpe) Keepe (Henry). Monumenta Westmonasteriensia ; or, an historical account of the original, increase, and present state of St. Peter's, or the abby church of Westminster 8vo. Lond. 1683 Kennett (White),D.D., bishop of Peterborough. Parochial antiquities attempted in the history of Ambrosden, Burcester, and other adjacent parts in the counties of Oxford and Bucks ; with a glossary 4to. Lond. 1695 Kidder (Richard), D.D., bishop of Bath and WeUs. Reflections on a French Testament printed at Bor- deaux A.D. MDCLxxxvi 4to. Lond. 1690 King (Daniel) . The cathedrall and conventuall churches of England and Wales orthographically delineated fol. n. p. 1656 King (Henry), bp. of Chichester. Poems, elegies, para- doxes, and sonets 8vo. Lond. 1664 77 Kinner (Cyprian). A continuation of John-Amos-Come- nius school-endeavours ; or a summary delineation of C. K. his thoughts concerning education, or the way and method of teaching 4to. for R. L. n. d. Kirbye (George). The first set of English madrigals, to 4, 5, and 6 voyces 4to. Lond. Thomas Este, 1597 Kirchmaier. Regnum papisticum auctum 8vo. Basil, 1559 The popish kingdome, or reigne of antichrist ; englyshed by Barnabe Googe ; to which is annexed the spirituall husbandrie 4to. Lond. Hen. Denham, 1570 Kirke (John). The seven champions of Christendome 4to. Lond. 1638 Kirkman (Francis). The wits, or sport upon sport Bvo. Lond. 1662 The wits, or sport upon sport ; in selected pieces of drollery, digested into scenes by way of a dialogue ; 2 parts Bvo. Lond. 1672 The unlucky citizen; experimentally described in the various misfortunes of an unlucky Londoner 8vo. Lond. 1673 The third and fourth parts of the English rogue, by Richard Head, q. v. KnoUes (Richard), of Line. coll. The generaU historic of the Turkes fol. Lond. 1638 Knox (Robert). An historical relation of the island Ceylon, in the East-Indies fol. Lond. 1681 L. (D.) (forsan Donald Lupton). The Scots scouts dis- coveries ; by their London intelligencer 4to. Lond. 1642 — and p. 454, vol. i, of Phoenix Britannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. L. (sir T.) Remarks upon remarque : or a vindication of the conversations of the town ; in another letter to sir T. L. 8vo. Lond. 1673 La Chaise (Frangois d'ALx de) . The history of father La Chaise, Jesuite, and confessor to Lewis XIV. 4to. Lond. 1693 Lambard (Guil.) A perambulation of Kent, conteining the description, hystorie, and customs of that shyre 4to. Lond. for Ralphe Newberie, 157Q 78 The duties of constables, borsholders, tythingmen, and such other lowe and lay ministers of the peace, &c.; now enlarged 8vo. Lond. 1606 Eirenarcha ; or of the office of the justices of peace, in foure bookes ; reuised, corrected, and enlarged 8vo. Lond. 1607 La Mothe (G. de). The French alphabet, teaching to pronounce Fr. naturally, to read it perfectly, to write it truely, and speak it accordingly Bvo. Lond. E. Allde, 1595 The treasure of the French tung, containing sentences, proverbes, &c. ibid. Langbaine (Gerard), F. An account of the English dra- matick poets 8vo. Oxf. 1691 The lives and characters of the English dramatick poets ; first begun by Mr. Langbain and continued (by Mr. Gildon) 8vo. Lond. (1698) Langlande (Robert). The vision of Pierce Plowman (bl. let.) 4to. Lond. by Roberte Crowley, 1550 — newlye imprynted after the authours olde copy, with a brefe summary of the principal! matters set before every part called Passus ; whereunto is annexed his crede 4to. Lond. by Owen Rogers, 1561 Langton (Christopher). An introduction into phisycke, wyth an vniuersal dyet 8vo. by Edw. Whytchurche, n. d. Languages. A philosophicall essay for the reunion of the languages 8vo. Oxf. 1675 Lanterne. Here begynnethe the lanterne of lyght (bl. let.) 8vo. Lond. Rob. Redman, n. d. Lassels (Richard) . The voyage of Italy 8vo. Paris, 1670 Latham (Symon). His falconry; or, the faulcons lure and cure; in 2 books 4to. Lond. 1615-18 Latimer (Hugh), bishop of Worcester. His sermons 8vo. Lond. John Daye (1549) Fruitfull sermons 4to. Lond. John Daye, 1584 Lavaterus (Ludov.), Tigurinus. Of ghostes and spirites walking by night : eng. by R. H. 4to. Lond. Th. Creede, 1596 79 Laud ("William), archbishop of Canterbury. A speecli delivered in the star-chamberj at the censure of Bastwick, Burton, and Prinn, concerning innova- tions in the church 4to. Lond. 1637 The history of his troubles and tryal, wrote by himself during his imprisonment in the tower; with the diary of his own hfe, and a supplement published by Henry Wharton fol. Lond. 1695 Lawes (William). Musica harmonia; or, choice almans, corants, and sarabands, for one treble and basse 4.to. Lond. 1651 Lawrence (Leonard). A small treatise betwixt Arnalte and Lucenda, entituled, the evill-intreated lover, or melancholy knight 4to. Lond. 1639 Lawson (WiUiam). A new orchard and garden; or, the best way for planting, grafting, &c.; (being the third booke of the country contentments by Ger- vase Markham) 4to. Lond. 1648 Lawyer. The lawyer's last farewell, or the poor man's freedome enlarged; containing the regulating of the law, &c. 4to. Lond. 1652 Leanerd (John). The rambling justice, or the jealous husbands ; with the humours of sir John Twiford 4to. Lond. 1678 Leaver (Thomas) . A sermon preached at Pauls Crosse 8vo. Lond. by John Day, 1550 A sermon preached the thyrd Sonday in Lent before the kynges majestie, and his honorable counsell 8vo. Lond. by John Day, 1550 Lebechea (Diomedes de). The Dutch rogue; or, Gusman of Amsterdam traced from the craddle to the gal- lows; being the life, rise, and fall of D. de L. 8vo. Lond. 1683 Lecture. Divers crabtree lectures; also a lecture betweene a pedler and his wife in the canting language 8vo. Lond. 1639 Lefevre (Raoul). The ancient historic of the destruction of Troy ; transl. by W. Caxton 4to. Lond. 1607 Legerdemain. Hocus pocus junior ; the anatomy of leger- demain 4to. Lond. 1638 80 Leigh (Edward), M.A. of Magd. Hall. England described ; or the several counties and shires thereof briefly- handled 8vo. Lond. 1659 Choice observations of all the kings of England, from the Saxons to the death of king Charles the first Svo. Lond. 1661 Analecta Csesarum Romanomm, or select observations of all the Roman emperors, by him and his son Henry Leigh ; also certain choice Fr. proverbs Svo. Lond. 1664 Leigh or Legh (Gerard) . The accedens of armory Svo. Lond. Richard Tottill, 1562 — and 4to. Lond. by Richard Tottell, 1591 — and 4to. Lond. Henrie Ballard, 1597 Lentulo (Scipio). His Italian grammer, transl. from the Latin by H. Granthan Svo. Lond. by Thos. Vautroullier, 1575 — and Svo. Lond. by T. Vautrollier, 1587 Le Roy (Adrian). A briefe and plaine instruction to set all musicke of eight divers tunes in tableture for the lute 4to. Lond. James Rowbothome, 1574 Lessius (Leonard). Hygiasticon, or the right course of preserving life and health unto extream old age, from the Latine Svo. Camb. 1634 L'Estrange (Hammond). The alliance of divine offices, exhibiting all the liturgies of the church of England since the reformation, as also the late Scotch ser- vice-book, &c. with annotations fol. Lond. 1690 Leti (Gregorio) . The life of Donna Olympia Maldachini, faithfully rendered into English Svo. Lond. 1666 Lhuyd (Humfrey). The breuiary of Britayne : as this most noble, and renowned Hand, was of auncient time deuided into three kingdomes, England, Scot- land, and Wales ; englyshed by Tho. Twyne Svo. Lond. by Rich. Johnes, 1573 Lidgate or Lydgate (John). The Troye booke otherwyse called the sege of Troye 4to. Lond. Richard Pymon, 1513 «1 'Y\n) auncieiit liistorie and onely trewe and syneere crouicle of the warres betvvixte the (Grecians and Trojans, by Daretus a Trojan, and Dictus a Grecian, transl. into Englyshe verse fol. Lond. Tho. Marshe, 1555 A treatise shewing and declaring in maner of tragedye the falles of sondry most notable princes and prin- cesses with other nobles (in verse) fol. Lond. JRichard Tottel, 1554 Licia, or the Poemes of Love 4to. 1598 [The title-page and three pages of a proof-sheet] Life. Cyuile and uncyuile life 4to. Lond. by Richard Jonex, 1579 Lightfoote (John), M.A. Christs coll. Cambr. Erubhin ; or, miscellanies Christian and Judiacall 8vo. Lond. 1629 Ligon (Richard). A true and exact history of the island of Barbadoes fol. Lond. 1673 Lilius (Grulielmus), grammaticus. A short introduction of grammar generally to be used 4to. Lond. by the assignes of Frauncis Flowar, 1588 Lilly (John), M.A. Euphues, the anatomy of wit 4to. Lond. 1617 Euphues and his England 4to. Lond. 1617 Mother Bombie ; as it was sundrie times plaied by the children of Pauls Bvo. Lond. 1632 Gallathea; played before the queenes majestic at Greenwich, on new-yeeres day, at night, by the children of Pauls 8vo. Lond. 1635 Sixe court comedies 8vo. Lond. 1632 Euphues and Lucilla : or, the false friend and inconstant mistress : to which is added Ephoebus ; or, instructions for the education of youth 8vo. Lond. 1716 Lilly (William). Merlini Anglici ephemeris : or general and monethly predictions upon several eminent con- junctions of the planets for the year, 1650 8vo. Lond. 1650 — for the year 1659 8vo. Lond. 1659 — for the vear 1682 8vo. Lond. 1682 6 82 Tjimning. A very proper treatise, wherein is breefely set foorth the art of limming, &c. 4to. Lond. by Thomas Purfoote, 1588 Linch or Linche (Eichard). The fountains of ancient fiction : wherein is liuely depictured the images and statues of the gods of the ancients 4to. Lond. 1599 Linde (sir Humfrey). A letter to a lady of great worth, much afflicted for Syr Humfrey^s sake, hearing him ill spoken of 8vo. s. I. 1634 Lindesay or Lindsay (sir David) . His works, newly cor- rected 8vo. Glasg. 1696 Lingua. Digiti-lingua, or the most compendious, copious, facile, and secret way of silent converse ever yet discovered 8vo. Lond. 1698 Lipsius (Justus). Miracles of the B. Virgin, or an his- torical account, &c. of the image entituled, our blessed lady of Halle 4to. Lond. 1688 L'Isle (William) . The faire Ethiopian (in verse) 4to. Lond. 1631 Lister (Martinus), M.D. A journey to Paris in the year 1698 8vo. Lond. 1699 — and third edition 8vo. Lond. 1699 Lithgow (William). Nineteen years travels through the most eminent places in the habitable world 8vo. Lond. 1682 Littleton (Adamus), S.T.D. Linguae Latinse liber dic- tionarius quadripartitus ; 3 voll. 4to. Lond. 1678 A new dictionary, with additions from a MS. by John Milton ' 4to. Cambr. 1693 Littleton (sir Thomas). Tenures newly and moost truly correctyd and amendyd 8vo. Lond. ex. ad. Rich. Pynsoni, 1525 Lyttylton tenures newly imprinted 8vo. Lond. in cedibus Thome Bertheleti, 1530 The old tenures 8vo. Lond. Robert Redman, 1532 His tenures ; p. 132. naturae Brevium, q. v. Llewellyn (Martin), St. of Ch. Ch. Oxf. Men-miracles, with other poems 8vo. Xowrf. 1656 83 Lloyd (David). The legend of captain Jones (.-ino/i.) 8vo. Lo/nl. K;:")!) Lloyd (Lodowicke). The triplicitie of triumphes . 4to. Lond. Rich. Jhones, 1591 I he pdgrimage of princes, penned out of sundry Greeke and Latine aucthours 4to. Lond. by Will. Jones, n. d. — newly published 4to. Lond. 1607 Tioart (Gasp), della comp. di Jesu. Instructions and advertisements how to meditate the misteries of tlie Rosarie of the most holy Virgin Mary ; from the ^^^- 8vo. n. p. or d. Lobeira (Vasco). The ancient, famous and lionorable history of Amadis de Gaule, transl. by Ant. Munday, books i— iv. fol. Lond. 1619 — the fifth book 4to. Lond. 1664 — part VI. transl. by Francis Kirkman 4to. Lond. 1653 Locke (Matthew). The present practice of musick vin- dicated against the " exceptions and new way of attaining musick, published by Th. Salmon" 8vo. Lond. 1673 Lodge (Thomas). A looking glasse for London and England, by T. L. and Robert Greene 4to. Lond. by Thomas Creede, 1598 Lomazzo (Gio. Paolo), Milan, pittore. A tracte containing the artes of curious paintinge, caruinge, buildinge ; eng. by Richard Haydocke fol. Oxf. Jos. Barnes, 1598 London. The lamentacyon of a Christen against the citye of London, for some certaine greate vyces used therein 8vo. n. p. 1548 The order of my lord maior, the aldermen, and the sheriffs, for their meetings, and wearing of their apparell throughout the yeere 8vo. J^ond. 1621 The honour of London apprentices exemplified 4to. Lond. 1647 London's flames revived, or, an account of the several informations exhibited to a committee appointed by parliament to enquire into the burning of London 4to. Loud. 1689 8-t Lord (Henry) . A discoverie of the sect of the Banians 4to. Land. 1630 Loveday (Robert) . His letters domestick and forrein 8vo. Land. 1659 Lovelace (Richard) . Lucasta : epodes^ odes, sonnets, songs, &c. to which is added Aramantha, a pastoral! 8vo. Lond. 1649 Low (Henry), M.D. A new almanacke and prognostica- tion for the yeare 1569 8vo. Lond. Tho. Marshe, n. d. Lowe (Peter) . A discourse of the whole art of chyrurgerie 4to. Lond. 1634 The presages of Hippocrates, ibid. Lowndes (William). An essay for amendment of the silver coins Bvo. , 1695 Lucian. Necromantia ; a dialog of Lucian — Interlocuters, Menippus and Philonides. fol. n. d. Fragments of two leaves. The work is in two columns, the Latin on one syde and English verse on the other.. See Herbert, p. 341, and Collier's Annals of the stage, II, 366. Lupton (T.), Siqvila; too good to be true 4to. Lond. by Hen. Bynneman, 1580 The second part and knitting up of the book entituled " Too good to be true" 4to. Lond. Hen. Binneman, 1581 A thousand notable things of sundry sorts, enlarged; whereunto is now added one hundred excellent con- ceits never before printed 8vo. Lond. 1660 Lynne (Gwalter). The beginning and endynge of all popery or popishe kyngedome out of hye Almayne [sc. prophetia Joachimi abbatis] 4to. Lond. by John Herforde, n. d. M. (G.) Delight and pastime : or, pleasant diversion for both sexes 8vo. Lond. 1697 M. (P.) The Cimmerian matron ; to which is added the mysteries and miracles of love 8vo Lond. 1668 M. (R.) Scarronides; or 'Virgile travestie ; a mock-poem 8vo. Lond. 1665 85 M. (W.) A remembrance of the worthy show and shooting hj the duke of Shoreditch, and his associates the worshipful citizens of London 8vo. Lond. 1682 M. (W.) The queen's closet opened, being incomparable secrets in physick, preserving, &c. Bvo. Lond. 1698 Machiavelli (Nicolo) . The arte of warre ; transl. by Pet. Whitehorne 4to. s. I. 1588 Mackenzie (sir George) . The laws and customes of Scot- land, in matters criminal 4to. Edin. 1678 Madness. The mirrour of madnes; transl. from the French by Ja. Sanford, q. v. Maine (Jasper), St. of Ch. Ch. The amorous warre; a tragi-comoedy ■ 8vo. Oa,f. 1659 The city match ; a comoedy 8vo. Oxf. 1659 Malmerophus. A fragment of a ballad of two lovers. London, John Wolfe for Edward White, 1583 Malynes (Gerard de) . A treatise of the canker of Englands common wealth 8vo. Lond. 1601 Saint George for England, allegoricaUy described 8vo. Lond. 1601 Consuetudo, vel lex mercatoria; or, the ancient mer- chant law, in three parts fol. Lond. 1622 Mandeville (Johannes de). His voyages and trauailes 4to. Lond. by Th. Este, n. d. Manuel (Juan), principe. El conde Lucanor 4to. Madrid, 1642 Manwayring (sir Henry). The sea-mans dictionary 4to. Lond. 1670 Man wood (John) . A treatise and discourse of the lawes of the forrest ; also a treatise of the Purallee 4to. Lond. Tho. Wight and B. Norton, 1598 Marbecke (John). The lyues of holy sainctes, prophetes, patriarches, and others fol. n. p. 1574 Marcellinus (Ammianus) . The Eoman historie ; digested into 18 bookes, the remains of 31 written first in Latine by him, transl. by Philemon Holland fol. Lond. 1609 .Margareta (S.), virgo et martyr. A fragment of an Eng. metrical life of her printed by Pynson 80 Mariana ( Joliu de) . I'he general liistory of Spain, from the first peopling of it by Tubal till the death of king Ferdinand ; transl. bv capt. John Stevens fol. Lond. 1699 Market. The lawes of the market 8vo. Lond. by John Wolfe, 1595 Markham (Francis). Five decades of epistles of warre fol. Lond. 1622 The booke of honour ; or five decads of epistles of honour fol. Lond. 1625 Markham (Gervais or Jervis). A health to the gentle- manly profession of seruingmen^ or the seruingmans comfort 4to. Lond. by W. W. 1598 The art of archerie 8vo. Lond. 1 634 The English husbandman, drawne into two bookes; newlie reviewed, corrected, and inlarged 4to. Lond. 1635 Cheape and good husbandry for the well-ordering of all beasts and f'owles 4to. Lond. 1648 Country contentments; or, the husbandman's recrea- tions 4to. Lond. 1649 The inrichment of the weald of Kent 4to. Lond. 1649 Markhams farewell to husbandry 4to. Lond. 1649 The English house-wife 4to. Lond. 1649 — and sixth ed. 4to. Lond. 1656 The young sportman's instructor 8vo. Lond. n. d. ^larmyon (Shackerly), M.A. Hollands leaguer; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1633 A fine companion ; a comedy 4to. Lorac?. 1633 JMarsh (A.) The ten pleasures of marriage 8vo. Lond. 1682 The confession of the new married couple ; being the second part of the ten pleasures of marriage 8vo. Lond. 1683 Marston (John) . The insatiate couutesse ; a tragedie 4to. Lond. 1631 The parasitaster, or thefawne 8vo. Lond. 1633 Antonio's revenge, or the historic of Antonio and Mellida 8vo. Lond. 1633 Martialis (M. A'alerius). Select epigrams, english»d bv Tho. Mav 8vo. Land. 1629 87 Martin the metropolitane. Hay any worke for Cooper 4to. n. p. or d. The just censure and reproofe of Martin Junior. 16mo. n. d. Wants the first leaf. See Herbert, 1692 Martin (Gregory). A discoverie of the manifold corrup- tions of the holy scriptures by the heretikes of our dales 8vo. Rhemes, by John Fogny, 1583 Mascall (Leonard) . A profitable booke declaring dyuers approoued remedies to take out spottes and staines in silkes, veluets, &c., out of Dutche 4to. Lond. by Th. Purfoote, 1588 Mason (John), M.A. The anatomic of sorcerie 4to. Lond. 1612 Mather (Cotton), D.D. Late memorable providences re- lating to witchcrafts and possessions Svo. Lond. 1691 The wonders of the invisible world ; observations upon the nature, the number, and the operations of the devils, &c. Svo. Boston, 1693 The wonders of the invisible world ; being an account of the tryalls of several witches lately executed in New- England 4to. Lond. 1693 Mather (Increase), D.D. pres. of Harvard coll. at Cambr. New-England. Cases of conscience concerning evil ^ spirits personating men, witchcrafts, infallible proofs of guilt in such as are accused with that crime 8vo. Boston, 1693 — and 4to. Lond. 1693 Matlock (John). Fax nova artis scribendi; or, an intro- duction to the best forms and proportions of all letters 4to. Lond. 1685 Matrimonium v. Marriage. The pleasures of matrimony, intermix'd with variety of merry and delightful stories. 5th ed. 8vo. Lond. 1695 Maunsell (Andrew). The catalogue of English printed bookes; 2 parts fol. Lond. John Windet, 1595 May (Robert). The accomplisht cook, or the art and mystery of cookery Svo. Lond. 1665 May (Thomas). A continuation of the subject of Lucans historical poem, till the death of Julius Csesar Svo. lond. 1567 (1G57) ss Mcdc (Joseph), B.D. Christ's coll. Cambr. A paraphrase and exposition of the prophesie of St. Peter con- cerning the day of Christ's second coming 4to. Lond. 1653 The apostacy of the latter times ; or the Gentiles theology of daemons, revived in the latter times amongst Christians, in worshipping of angels, deifying and invocating of saints, adoring of reliques, &c. 4to. Lond. 1654 jNIediolano (Joannes de) . The regiment of helthe, in Eng. by Tho. Paynel 4to. Lond. by Tho. Berthelet, 1541 Regimen sanitatis Salerni : this booke teachyng all people to governe them in health is translated out of the Latine tongue into English by Thomas Paynell 8vo. Lond. by Wyllyam How, 1575 Regimen sanitatis Salerni ; the schoole of Salernes most learned and juditious directorie, for the guide aud governing the health of man; with the comment and all the Latine verses reduced into Eng. 4to. Lond. 1617 .ALeggot (Richard). The rib restored, or the honour of marriage : a sermon on Gen. ii. 18 4to. Lond. 1656 Mela (Pomponius) . His rare and singuler worke of the situation of the world ; translated into Englishe by Arthur Golding 4to. Lond. for Th, Racket, 1590 Melancholia. Antidotum melancholise joco-serium 8vo. Franco/. 1668 Laugh and be fat ; or an antidote against melancholy 8vo. Lond. 1753 Melbancke (Brian) . Philotimus : the warre betwixt nature and fortune 4to. Lond. by Roger Warde, 1583 Mellis (John). Records arithmeticke ; corrected and beautified 8vo. Lond. 1615 Melton (John) . Astrologaster, or the figure caster ; rather the arraignment of artlesse astrologers, and fortune- tellers, that cheat many ignorant people under the pretence of foretelling things to come, &c. 4to. Lond. 1620 INlelvill (Elizabeth), lady Culros. Ane godlie dreame compylit in Scottish meter 4to. Edinb. 1603 89 Meudoza (vVntonio de) . Querer por solo querer ; to love only for love's sake; a dramatic romance, trans, by- sir Ric. Fanshawe 4to. Lond. 1671 Mendoza (Diego Hurtado de) . Lazarillo or the excellent history of LazariUo de Tormes ; transl. by David Rowland 8vo. Lond. 1672-77 The pleasant adventures of the witty Spaniard, Lazarillo de Tormes 8vo. Lond. 1688 Mendo9a (Juan Gongalez de). The historic of the great and mightie kingdome of China; transl. out of Spanish by R. Parke 4to. Lond. I. Wolfe, 1588 Mennis (sir John) . Musarum delicise, or the muses re- creation by sir J. M. and James Smith 8vo. Lond. 1656 Mercator (Gerard). His atlas; transl. by H. Hexham; 3 vols. fol. Amst. 1633-8 Meriton (George). The praise of Yorkshire ale : to which is added a Yorkshire dialogue 8vo. York, 1685 — and 8vo. York, 1697 Merrett (Christophorus), M.D. Pinax rerum naturalium Britannicarum 8vo. Lond. 1666 A short view of the frauds and abuses committed by apothecaries, as well in relation to patients as physi- cians 4to. Lond. 1669 Middlebourgh. A briefe rehersal of the accorde and agreement that the captaynes, &c. of Middleborow and Armew have made in yelding themselves to the prince of Orange 8vo. Lond. by Rich. J hones {1^7^) Middleton (Thomas) . A faire quarreU, with new additions of M. Chaughs and Trimtrams roaring and the bauds song, by T. M. and W. Rowley 4to. Lond. 1632 Michaelmas terme; a comedy. {Anon.) 4to. Lond. 1630 A chast mayd in Cheape-side ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1630 The changeling; a tragedy by T. M. and W. Rowley 4to. Lond. 1653 The mayor of Quinborough; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1661 Anything for a quiet life ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1663 Miege (Guv) . The great French dictionary ; 2 parts ^ fol. Lond. 1688 90 ^Iill(Humplu7)- A nights search : discovering the nature and condition of all sorts of night-walkerSj with their associates ; digested into a poeme 8vo. Land. 1640 The second part ; discovering the condition of the various fowles of the night 8vo. Land. 1646 .Milton (John). His poems, both English and Latin, compos'd at several times 8vo. Lond. 1645 Paradise lost, a poem in ten books; 1st ed. 4to. Lond. 1668 The history of Britain, that part especially now calFd England 8vo. Lond. 1677 Missa et Missall. The doctrine of the masse bobke; transl. into Englyshe 1544 8vo. Wyttonburge, Nicholas Dorcastor, s. a. The cauteles, canon, and ceremonies, of the most blas- phemous, abhominable, and monsti'ous popish masse ; with certaine annotations for the understanding of the text, set forth by Peter Viret and translated out of French into English by Tho. Stocker 8vo. Lond. Th. Vautrollier, 1584 The up-cheringe of the messe (in verse), bl. let. 8vo. Lond. John Daye, and Will. Seres, n. d. Mo£Fat, Mojg'et or Mouffet (Thomas), M.D. The silke wormes and their flies, in verse 4to. Lond. by V. S. 1599 Monachi. The monk unvaiFd : or, a facetious dialogue, discovering the scandalous lives of monks, fryers, &c. ; translated from the French by C. V. 8vo. Lond. 1678 Monier (P) . The history of painting, sculpture, architec- ture, graving, and of those who have excelled in them 8vo. Lond. 1699 Montaigne (Michel de). His essayes, or morall, politike and millitarie discourses; done into English by John Florio fol. Lond. 1603 — and fol. Lond. 1613 Montalvan (Fernanda de la Roxas de la Puebla de). The Spanish bawd represented in Celestina ; or, the tragicke-comedy of Calisto and Melibea, translated by James Mabbe fol. Lond. 1631 [Attributed by N. Antonio in his Bibliotheca Hispana to Rodrigo Cota, q. v.] 91 IVIoiitalvan (Juan Perez) . Aurora Ismenia and the prince ; translated by Thomas Stanley 8vo. Lond. 1650 Montanus (Arnoldus);. Atlas Ja,pannensis ; being remark- able addresses by way of embassy from the East- India company of the united provinces to the emperor of Japan, englished by J. Ogilby fol. Lond. 1670 Atlas Chinensis ; being a second part of a relation of remarkable passages in two embassies to the vice-roy Singlamong, &c. englished by J. Ogilby fol. Lond. 1671 Montelion. The famous history of Montelion, by Emanuel Foord, q. v. Monte-mayor (George de) . Los siete libros de la Diana, trad, de I'Espagnol en Fr. et conferez es deux langues par S. G. Pavilion 8vo. Paris (1603) - transl. out of Spanish into English by Bartholomew Yong fol. Lond by Edm. Bollifant, 1598 Moutenay (Georgette de). Stamm Buch, darinnen christlicher tugenden beyspiel, einhundert ausser- lesener emblemata, mit schonen kupfferstiicken gezieretj mit. Lat. Hisp. Ital. Teutsch. Eng. vnd Niderl. versen vermehret 8vo. Franck. am Mayn, 1619 Monte Rocherii (Guido de). Manipulus curatorum 8vo. Lond. per Julian. Notariuni, 1508 Morrison (Robert). Horse Sinicse; translations from the popular literature of the Chinese 8vo. Lond. 1812 Moraes (Francis de) . The first and second part of the no lesse rare, then excellent and stately history of the famous and fortunate prince Palmerin of England ; translated by A. Munday 4to. Lond. 1639 More (Edward). A lytle and bryefe treatyse, called the defence of women, and especially of Englyshe women, made agaynst the scholehowse of women (in verse), bl. let. 4to. Lond. by John Kynge, 1560 More (Henry), D.D. Ch. coU. Cambr. Democritus Plato- nissans, or, an essay upon the infinity of worlds out of Platonick principles; with Cupids conflict, and the philosophers devotion 8vo. Cambr. 1646 Divine dialogues containing sundry disquisitions and instructions concerning the attributes and providence of God. 2 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1668 Morindos. The famous and renowned history of Morindos a king of Spaine; who maryed with Miracola a Spanish witch 4to. Lond. 1609 Morley (Thomas), B. Mus. Canzonets; or little short songs to three voyces. Altus 4to. Lond. Tho. Est, 1593 — Bassus 4to. Lond. Tho. Est, 1593 The first booke of balletts to five voyces. Altus 4to. Lond. Thomas Este, 1595 Quintus 4to. Lond. Thomas Este, 1595 Canzonets ; or little short songs to foure voyces. Tenor 4to. Lond. by Peter Short, 1597 A plaine and easie introduction to practicall musicke fol. Lond. by Peter Short, 1597 Madrigals to five voyces. Altus 4to. Lond. Tho. Este, 1598 Madrigals to foure voices. Tenor 4to. Lond. Tho. Este, 1600 Mors (Roderyck) . His complaint unto the parlament house of Ingland for the redresse of certein wycked lawes, evell custumes and cruell decrees (bl. let.) 8vo, Gyneve by Myghell Boys, n. d. [Attributed by Holinshed to Henry Brinklow] Morus (Thomas), Anglise cancellarius. De optimo reipub- licae statu, deque nova insula Utopia 4to. Basil, ap. Jo. Frobenium, 1518 A frutefull, pleasaunt, and wittie worke, of the beste state of a publique weale, and of the newe yle, called Utopia ; translated by Raphe Robynson (bl. let.) 8vo. Lond. by Abr. Weale, 1556 — a new editioii, with introduction, by the rev. T. F. Dibdin 4to. Lond. 1808 La description de I'isle d'Utopie, trad, par Barthelemi Aneauj avec Fepistre liminaire composee par M. Bude 8vo. Paris, 1550 — trad, par Sam. Sorbiere 8vo. Amst. 1643 — par Mr. Gueudeville 8vo. Amst. 1730 GuUielmi Rossei opus quo retegit ac refellit insanas Lutheri calumnias adversus Henricum VIII 4to. Lond. 1523 0^ 93 Epigrammata 8vo. Lond. 1G38 — et ad calc. tract, de statu Eutopise, &c. ut supra Qualis uxor deligenda ; p. 279. Baudii amorum A dyaloge wherin he treatyd dyuers maters, as of the veneration and worshyp of ymagys and relyques, &c. wyth many othere thyngys touchyng the pestylent sect of Luther and Tyndale. (bl. let.) fol. Lond. Johannes Rastell, 1529 The answere to the fyrst parte of the poysened hooke whych a namelesse heretyke hath named the souper of the lorde 8vo.' Lond. by W. Rastell, 1534 The workes wrytten by him in the Englysh tonge Lond. John Cawod, John Waly, and Rich. Tottell, 1557 Moryson (Fynes) . An itinerary containing his ten yeeres travell through the twelve dominions of Germany, Bohmerland, Sweitzerland, Netherland, Denmarke, ^I Poland, Italy, Turky, France, England, Scotland, and Ireland fol. Lond. 1617 Mosse (Miles), B.D. The arraignment and conviction of vsurie 4to. Lond. by the vnddow Orwin, 1595 Moulin (Pierre du), Th. P. The masse in Latin and English, with a commentary and observations upon it; transl. by James Mountaine 8vo. Lond. 1641 Moulton (Thomas), D.D. The myrour or glasse of helthe, necessary and nedeful for euery person to loke in, that wyll kepe theyr body from the syckenes of the pestylence (bl. let.) {Anon.) 8vo. Lond. Robert Wyre, n. d. Mounslowe (Alex.) An almanacke and prognostication, made for the yeere of our Lorde God, 1579 8vo. Lond. Rich. Watkins, 1579 Mountaine (Dydymus) . The gardeners labyrinth 4to. Lond. Henry Bynneman, 1577 — and 4to. Lond. 1608 Mulcaster (Richard). Positions, wherin those primitive circumstances be examined, which are necessary for the training up of children 4to. Lond. by Tho. Vautrollier, 1581 The first part of the elementarie which entreateth chefelie of the right writing of our English tung 4to. Lond. by Tho. Vautroullier , 1582 9i Munday (Antony). Zel an to, the fountain of fame ; 3 parts 4.to. Lond. by John Charlewood, 1580 The English Romayne lyfe ; discouering the lines of the Englishmen at Roome, &c. 4to. Lond. J. Charlewoode, 1582 A briefe chronicle of the successe of times, from the creation of the world to this instant 8vo. Lond. 1611 Mundy (John). Songs and psalm es composed into 3, 4, and 5 parts ; contra-tenor 4to. Lond. by Tho. Est, 1594 Murrell (John) . Two bookes of cookerie and carving 8vo, Lond. 1641 Music. The first booke of consort lessons, made by diuers exquisite authors, for six instruments to play to- gether 8vo. Lond. William Barley, 1599 Pammelia ; musickes miscellanie ; or mixed varietie of pleasant roundelayes and delightfuU catches, of 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, parts in one 4to. Lond. 1618 Musick and mirth, presented in a choice collection of rounds or catches for three voyces 4to. Lond. 1651 A musicall banquet, set forth in three choice varieties of musick 4to. Lond. 1651 A vade mecum for the lovers of musick, shewing the excellence of the rechorder 8vo. Lond. 1679 The theater of music; or a choice collection of the newest and best songs sung at court and public theatres ; vols. i. ii. iv. fol. Lond. 1685—1687 Thesarus musicus ; being a collection of the newest songs, book ii. fol. Lond. 1694 Mercurius musicus ; or the monthly collection of new teaching songs ; 3 parts 4to. Lond. 1699 Mynshull (Richard). Vienna : wherein is storied the valorous atchieuements, constant loue, &c. of Sr. Paris of Viennse and his princess Vienna [Anon.) 4to. Lond. n. d. (Also attributed to Manwaring by Haslewood; see Censura Litteraria vi, 118) N. (S.) The loyal garland : containing choice songs and sonnets of our late unhappy revolutions 8vo. Lond. 1671 95 Nabbes (Thomas). The springs glorie : vindicating love by temperance against the tenent, Sine Cerere et Baccho friget Venus ; moralized in a maske 4to. Lond. 1638 Narrationes. Herein is conteined the booke called Nouse narrationeSj the booke called Articuli ad nouas nar- rationes, and the booke of diuersities of courtes 8vo. Lond. in ad. Rich. Tottell, 1561 Nash (Thomas). Piercie Pennilesse, his supplication to the diiiell 4to. Lond. Nich. Ling, 1595 Have with you to Saffron-walden ; or Gabriell Harueys hunt is vp 4to. Lond. John Danter, 1596 Nashes lenten stuffe 4to. Lond. 1599 Pappe with an hatchet ; alias, a figge for my god sonne ; or, cracke me this nut 4to. , n. d. Naunton (sir Robert) . Fragmenta regalia, or observations on the late queen Elizabeth, her times and favorits 4to. s. I. 1611 — and ; p. 77, of P. Hentzner's travels, q. v. Naworth (George), i. e., sir George Wharton, q. v. Nazianzen. His epigrams and spirituall sentences, trans- lated by Thomas Drant 8vo. 1568 [Four leaves in verse, a fragment] Neade (William). The double-armed man, by the new inuention : briefly shewing some famous exploits atchieued by our Brittish bowmen 4to. Lond. 1625 Needham or Nedham (Marchmont). His history of the rebellion; in verse; p. 174, vol. i, of phoenix Bri- tannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. Nevile or Neville (Henry). An exact diurnall of the parliament of ladyes 4to. s. I. et a. The parliament of ladies 4to. s. I. 1647 The ladies, a second time, assembled in parliament 4to. s. I. 1647 A parliament of ladies, with their lawes newly enacted 4to. s. I. 1647 Newtonus (Thomas). lUustrium aliquot Anglorum enco- mia ; p. 169, vol. V. Lelandi collect, q. v. A notable historic of the Saracens: drawen oiit of Augustine Curio and sundry other good authours 4to. Lond. by W. How, 1575 90 An lierbal for the Bible, containing a plaine and familial- exposition of such sitoilitudes, parables, and metaphors, both in the Olde Testament and the News, as arc- borrowed and taken from herbs, &c. 8vo. Lond. Edm. Bollifant, 1587 Niccols (Richard). The falles of unfortunate princes whereunto is added the famous life and death of queene Elizabeth (the mirror for magistrates of 1610 with a new title page) ; by R. N. and J. Higgitis, q. v. Nichols or Niccols (John). His pilgrimage, whrein (sic) is displaied the Hues of the proude popes, ambitious cardinals, lecherous bishops, fat bellied monkes, and hypocriticall Jesuites Bvo. Lond. Tho. Dawson, 1581 A declaration of his recantation 8vo. Lond. by Christ. Barker, 1581 A true report of his late apprehension and imprisonne- ment ; with his confession 8to. Rhemes, by John Fogny, 1583 Nicodemus. Nichodemus his gospel 8vo. s. I. et. a. Nychodemus gospell. bl. let. 4to. 1529 It wants only the first two leaves. Colophon. 1 Thus endeth Nychodemus gospell. Imprynted at London in Ponies chyrche yarde by me John Sket. In the yere of oure lord god. m.ccccc.xxix. the vi. day of Apriell. Then his mark Noot (Jan Vander), patr. van Antwerpen. Verscheyden poetische werken ; met beelden ; Duytsch. en Fr. fol. Anv. 1581 Le theatre auquel sont exposes et monstres les incon- ueniens et miseres qui suiuent les mondains et vicieux, ensemble les plaisirs et contentemens dont les fideles ioiiissent ; (avec des figures par Marc Garrard) 8vo. Lond. Jean Day, 1568 A theatre wherein be represented as wel the miseries and calamities that follow the voluptuous worldlings, as also the greate ioyes and plesures which the faithful do enjoy 8vo. Lond. H. Bynneman, 1569 Cort begryp der XII boeken olympiados ; Duytsch en Fr. fol. Anvers, Giles vanden Rade, 1579 97 vTorden (John) . Speculum Britainiise, the first parte ; an historicall and chorographicall description of Mid- dlesex 4to. s. I. 1593 the description of Hartfordshire 4to. .s. /. 1598 '^^orth (Dudley)j fourth lord North. Ohservations and advices oeconomical 8vo. Lond. 1669 S^ortlibrooke (John), minister. A treatise wherein dicing, dauncing, vaine plaies or enterludes with other idle pastimes, &c. commonly used on the sabboth day, are reprooued 4to. Lond. by Thos. Dawson, 1579 S'orton (Thomas) . Ordinall of alchemie ; p. 1 of Ashmole's theatr. chem., q. v. N^orton (Thomas). The several confessions of Thomas Norton and Christopher Norton, two of the northern rebels, who suffered at Tyburn, 1570 ; p. 419, vol. i, of phoenix Britannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. N^oue (Fran9ois de la). His politicke and militarie dis- courses, transl. out of the Fr. by E. A. 4to. Lond. by Thomas Orwin, 1587 Certaine obseruations of things happened during the three late ciuill warres of France, ibid. Sovels, and Tales. The English mounsieur ; a comical novel 8vo. Lond. 1679 Royal loves, or the unhappy prince ; a novel, written in Fr. now rendered into Eng. 8vo. Lond. 1680 The unequal match, or the life of Mary of Anjou, queen of Majorca 8vo. Lond. 1681 -. — the second and last part 8vo. Lond. 1683 The extravagant poet : transl. out of Fr. by Cr. R. 8vo. s. I. 1681 S[owell (Alex.), dean of St. PauFs. A catechisme, or institution of Christian religion 8vo. Lond. 1638 3eeana. Decrees and orders of the committee of safety, of the commonwealth of Oceana 4to. Lond. \6^9 Dchinus (Bernardinus) . De purgatorio dialogus 8vo. Tiguri, apud Gessneros, s. a. A tragoedie or dialoge of the uniuste usurped primacie of the bishop of Rome, and of all the iust abolishyng of the same ; translated by John Ponet 4to. II. p. 1549 98 Ogilby (John). The fables of ^sop, paraphras'd in verse and adorned with sculpture 4to. Lond. 1651 America; being the latest and most accurate description of the new world fol. Lond. 1671 Olde (John) . A confession of the most auncient and true Christen catholike olde belefe, accordyng to tiie ordre of the xii articles of our common crede 8vo. Sothewarke, Christopfio?- Truthal, 1556 Olivieri di Castiglia. The history of Olivaires of Castile, and Arthur of Dalgarve ; transl. out of Spanish into the Italian, and from the Ital. made English 8vo. Lond. 1695 Ordinarium. Thordynary of Chrysten men 4to. Lond. Wynkyn de worde, 1506 Ormerod (Oliver). The picture of a papist 8vo. Lond. 1606 Ornatus. The famous, pleasant, and delightful history of Ornatus and Artesia 4to. Lond. n. d. Ortelius (Abrahamus). Theatrum orbis terrarum; the theatre of the whole world fol. Lond. 1606 Osborn (Francis) . His miscellaneous works ; 2 vols. Bvo. Lond. 1722 Historical memoirs on the reigns of queen Elizabeth and king James Bvo. Lond. 1658 A miscellany of sundry essayes, parodoxes, &c. ; together with politicall deductions from the history of the earl of Essex 8vo. Lond. 1659 Overbury (sir Thomas) . His wife, with additions of new characters, and many other wittie conceits neuer before printed Bvo. Lond. 1627 — and Bvo. Lond. 1628 — and 8vo. Lond. 1655 Ovid. De arte amandi, and the remedy of love, englished, with the loves of Hero and Leander ; a mock poem Bvo. Lond. 1673 — and Bvo. Lond. 1683 The art of love , Bvo. Amst. n. d. His heroycall epistles, transl. by George Turberuile Bvo. Lond. by Henrie Denham, n. d. — and englished l)y Wye Saltonstall 8vo. Loud. 1639 99 His festivalls, or Romaiie calendar, traiisl. by Joliu Grower 8vo. Cambr. 1640 The XV bookes, entytuled metamorphosis, translated oute of Latin into English meeter by Arthur Golding 4to. Land. Willy am Seres, 1567 — englished, mythologiz'd, and represented in figures, by George Sandys fol. Lond. 1632 De ponto ; containing foure books of elegies, translated by Wye Saltonstall 8vo. Lond. 1639 His tristia; translated into English by Wye Saltonstall 8vo. Lond. 1672 His elegies, by C{hristopher) M(arlow). 8vo. Middlehoargh, ii. d. Epigrames by (Sir) .T(ohn) D(avis). ibid. Ovidius exulans; or Ovid travestie, a mock-poem ou five epistles of Ovid, by Naso Scarronnomimus 8vo. Lond. 1673 Ovington (John), M.A. A voyage to Suratt in the vear 1689 8vo. Lond. 1696 Owen (Lewis). A genealogie of all popish monks, friers, and Jesuits -Ito. Lond. 164-6 P. (L.) The witch of the woodlands; or, the cobler's new translation 8vo. Southwurk (1674) P. (R.) Magnum in parvo, or the practice of geometry with a new order aad particular method thereof 8vo. Lond. 1671 P. (T.), forsan Tho. Porter. A witty combat, or thj female victor ; a trage-comedy 4to. Lond. 1663 P. (T.) The accomplish'd lady's delight in preserving, physick, beautifying and cookery 8vo. Lond. 167.") — and 8vo. Lond. n. d. P. (W.) The history of witches and wizards : giving a true account of all their tryals, &c. 8vo. Lond. n. d. Pagitt (Ephraim) . Heresiography, or a description of the heretickes and sectaries sprang up in these latter times 4to. Loud. 1648 100 Painter (William). The palace of pleasure beautified adorned and well furnished with pleasaunt histories and excellent nouels^ selected out of divers good and commendable authours ; 2 vols. 4to. Lond. by Thos, Marshe, 1569 Painters. The true effigies of the most eminent painters, and other famous artists that have flourished in Europe fol. ■ 1694 Palingenius (Marcellus), Stellatus. The zodiake of life, transl. by Barnabse Googe 8vo. Lond. by H. Denham, 1565 — and 4to. Lond. by Rob. Robinson, 1588 Palladien, fils du roy Milanor d'Angleterre. The famous, pleasant, and delightful history of Palladine of England, transl. out of French by A. Munday, second edition Bvo. Lond. s. a. Palmendos, son to Palmerin d'Oliva. The famous history ofPalmendos, translated by Anthony Munday 4to. Lond. 1653 Palmerin d^Olive. Palmerin d'Oliva ; shewing the mirrour of nobilitie ; 3 parts, turned into English by A. Munday 4to. Lond. 1637 Palsgrave (Jehan). Lesclarcissement de la langue Fran- 9oyse fol. Johan Haukyns, 1530 Panedonius (Philogenes), i.e. Richard Brathwait, q. v. Pannier- Alley. News from Pannier- Alley ; or, a true relation of some pranks the devil hath lately play'd with a plaster-pot there 4to. Lond. 1687 Papa. A pacquet of popish delusions, false miracles, and lying wonders 8vo. Lond. 1681 A whip for the devil; or the Roman conjurer ; discover- ing the folly, profaneness, and superstition of the papists Bvo. Lond. 1683 Rome's rarities ; or the pope's cabinet unlock'd and ex- pos'd to view 8vo. Lond. 1684 Miracles wrought by popish saints 4to. s. L et a. Paradinus (Claudius), Can. Bellijocensis. The heroicall devises ; with the lord Gabriel Symeons and others; translated out of Latin into English by P. S. 8vo. Lond. by William Kearney, 1591 101 Paravicino (Pietro). The true idioma of the Italian tougue 8vo. Lond. 1660 Parys. Thystory of the knyght Parys, and of the fayr Vyene. bl. let. 4.to. Wynkyn cle Words Four leaves ; sign. D i, and F i, and their corresponding leaves. The type of this fragment is the same as that of the " Memorare novissima." Parke (R.) The historie of the great and mightie king- dome of China, translated from the Spanish of Joan. Gonzales de Mendoza, q. v. Parker (Henry), a Carmelite of Doncaster. A compendi- ouse treetise dyalogue of Dines and pauper, that is to say, the riche and the pore fructuously tretyng vpon the X commaundmentes fol. Lond. by Richarde Pynson, 1493 [attributed to Parker by Ant. a Wood.] Parker (Henry). The true portraiture of the kings of England ito. Lond. 1688 Parkes (William) . The curtaine-drawer of the world 4to. Lond. 1613 Parkinson (John). Paradisi in sole paradisus terrestris, or, a choice garden of all sorts of rarest flowers, with a kitchin- garden fol. Lond. 1656 Parliament. An ordinance of parliament concerning the subsidie of tonnage and poundage 8vo. Lond. 164.2 A subsidie granted to the king, of tonnage, poundage, and other summes of money, payable upon mer- chandize 8vo. Lond. 1642 The rates of merchandizes, that is to say, the subsidy of tonnage, the subsidy of poundage, and the subsidy of woollen, cloths, and old drapery 8vo. [Lond.) 16^2 The ordinance for the regulating of the rates on the customes and excise of tobacco Svo. iowrf. 1643 A collection of all the publicke orders, ordinances and declarations of both houses of parliament, from the ninth of March 1642, untill Dec. 1646, together with severall of his majesties proclamations and other papers, printed at Oxford ; [Husband's second collec- tion] fol. Lond. 1646 102 An ordinance to prohibite the transporting of wooll and fullers-earth 8vo. [Land.) 1647 An ordinance of the lords and commons assembled in parliament, for the establishing of the subsidy of tonnage and poundage, together with the book of rates 8vo. Land. 1647 An act for the redemption of captives 8vo. Lond. 1650 An act of the commons assembled in parliament, esta- blisliing the present commissioners of the customes 8vo. Lond. 1650 Historical collections, or an exact account of the pro- ceedings of the four last parliaments of queen Elizabeth ; collected by Hevwood Townshend fol. Lond. 1680 ^Vn abstract, of certaine acts of parlement ; of certaine her maiesties iniunctions ; of certaine canons, con- stitutions, and synod als provinciall 4to. s. I. et a. A second narrative of the late parliament so called, printed 1658 ; p. 125, vol. i, of the Phoenix Britannicus by J. Moryan, q. v. Parr (Katherine), queen of England. Prayers or medy- tacions, wherein the mynd is stirred, paciently to suflre all afflictions here ; collected out of holy woorkes 8vo. Lond. by Th. Bertheht, 1545 — and 8vo. n.p. or d. Parrots. Psittacorum regio; the land of parrots, or the she-lands; with a description of other strange adjacent countries, in the dominions of prince de I'Amour 8vo. Lond. 1669 Parry (Kobert). Moderatus ; the most delectable and famous historic of the blacke knight 4to. Lotid. Rich. Jhones, 1595 Parsons (Robert), Jesuit. A treatise of three conversions to England from Paganisme to Christian religion ; 3 vols. 8vo. n.p. 1633-4 Leycesters common-wealth 4to. n. p. 1641 A conference about the next succession to the crown of England 8vo. re-printed at N. 1681 Pasquil. Pasquils paUnodia, and his progresse to the Tauerne, where after the suruey of the sellar you are presented with a pleasant pynte of poeticall sherry 4to. Lond. 1619 103 Pasquils jests; with the merriments of mother Bunch 4to. Land. 1669 Pastor. A faythfull admonycion of a certea trewe pastor and prophete, now transl. into Inglyssh, with a pre- face of M. Philip Melancthon, bl. let. 8vo. Grenewych, Conrade Freeman, 1554 Patriarchs. The testamentes of the twelve patriarches, the sonnes of lacob, by Robert Grosthed, bp. of Lincolne ; englished by A. G(olding) 8vo. Land, by John Daye, 1581 Patrick (Saint). The delightful history of his life and death 8vo. Lond. 1G85 Patrick (John). Reflexions upon the devotions of the Roman church. {Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1674 Patterns. Here foloweth certaine patternes of cut-workes : newly invented and never published before; also sundry sortes of spots, as flowers, birdes, &c. and never but once published before 4to. Lond. s. a. Patterson (Matthew), D.M. The image of bothe churches, Hiervsalem and Babel, vnitie and confvsion, obe- dienc and sedition 8vo. Tornay, 1633 Paurinio. The amorous passions of Paurinio, by R. T., in verse [A fragment of two leaves only] Payne (Nevil). The fatal jealousie; a tragedy 4to. Lond. 1673 Peacham (Henry). The garden of eloquence, conteyning the figures of grammer and rhetorick 4to. Lond. H. Jackson, 1577 Peacham (Henry), M.A. Trin. coll. Cambr. Minerva Britanna, or a garden of heroical devises, furnished and adorned with emblemes and impresa's of sundry natures 4to. Lond. 1612 The gentlemans exercise 4to. Lond. 1634 The compleat gentleman ; 2d impression 4to. Lond. 1634 — and 3d impression 4to. Lond. 1661 The truth of our times 8vo. iowc?. 1638 The worth of a peny, or, a caution to keep money 4to. Lond. 1664 and 4to. Lond. 1669 104 I'ecle (George). His merrie conceited jests 4to. Lond. n. d. Peerson (Martin) . Priuate musicke^ or the first booke od' ayres and dialogues ; contayning songs of 4 5, and 6 parts of seuerall sorts, and being verse and chorus, is fit for voyces and viols 4to. Lond. 1620 Pen. The excellency of the pen and pencil, exemplifying the uses of them in the most exquisite and myste- rious arts of drawing, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1688 Peidcethman (John). Artachthos, or a new booke declaring the assise or weight of bread, &c. 4to. Lond. 1638 Perm (William). William Penn and the quakers, either impostors or apostates, which they please 8vo. Lond. 1696 Penny. Penny-wise, pound foolish ; or, a Bristow diamond, set in two rings, and both crack'd ; imperfect 4to. Lond. 1631 Penny histories. Various penny histories, collected in 10 volumes 8vo. v. y. A collection of penny histories, printed at Manchester 8vo. V. y. A collection of northern penny histories ; 4 vols. 8vo. V. p. and y. A collection of penny histories ; northern editions ; 4 vols. Bvo. V. p. and y. A collection of Scottish penny histories 8vo. V. p. and y. Penri, or Penry (John). His appellation, vnto the highe court of parliament, from the bad and injurious dealing of th' archb. of Canterb., &c. 8vo. n.p. 1589 Oh read ouer D. John Bridges, for it is a worthy worke. (bl. let.) 4to. Printed oversea, in Europe, within two furlongs of a bounsing priest, n. d. Percyuall (Richard). Bibliotheca Hispanica; containing a grammar with a dictionarie in Spanish, English, and Latine 4to. Lond. lo. Jackson, 1591 A dictionarie in Spanish and English, augmented, with a grammar, by John Minsheu fol. Lotid. Edm. Bollifant, 1599 10,-j Perkius (William) . The foundation of Christian religion, gathered into six principles 8vo. Lond. 1677 Pericles. The most renowned history of the invincible Pericles of Greece 8vo. Lond. s. a. Person (Samuel), King's coU. Camb. An anatomical lecture of man 8vo. Lond. 1664 Peters (Hugh). Tales and jests, with his sentence and execution, and a short account of his life, Lond. 1660 : a reprint Svo. Lond. 1807 England's shame, or the unmasking of a politick atheist, Hugh Peters, by W. Yonge, q. v. Peters pattern ; or the perfect path to worldly happiness, in a funeral oration at his interment; by I. C; p. 354. vol. I of the Phoenix Britannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. Petrarch. The true and admirable history of patient Grisel ; translated from the French 4to. Lond. 1674 Phisicke against fortune, as well prosperous, as adverse ; englished by Th. Twyne 4to. Lond. Richard watkyns, 1579 Petronilla (The lyfe of), bl. let. 4to. n. d. Two leaves. " This publication," says Herbert (Dibdin's edition II, 538), " is very old. It begins with Pynson's mark, and has but four leaves in 20 eight-lined stanzas and four lines more." This fragment contains the first * fourteen stanzas. Begins, The parfite lyfe to put in remembraunce Of a virgyn moost gracious and entere Which in all vertu had souereyn suifysaunce Callyd Petronylla petyrs doughter dere. Petronius Arbiter (Titus). The satyr with its fragments, recovered at Belgrade ; translated by W. Burnaby 8vo. Lond. 1694 Petrus Hispanus. The treasuri of helth, transl. into Englysh by Humfre Lloyd with additions ; bl. let. 8vo. Lond. Wyllyam Coplande, n. d. Pettie (George), student of Ch. Ch. A petite palace of Pettie his pleasure: containing manie pretie his- tories 4to. Lond. 1613 Pettit (Edward), M.A. The visions of the Reformation 8vo. Lond. 1683 106 Petty (sir William). A political essay; or, summary review of the kings and government of England since tlie Norman conquest 8vo. Lond. 1698 Philipps (Fabian) . The antiquity, legality, reason, duty, and necessity of prseemption and pourveyance for the king 4to. Lond. 1663 Philips (Edward), nephew of Milton. The new world of English words, or a general dictionary ; containing the interpretations of such hard words as are derived from other languages fol. Lond. 1663 — and fol. Lond. 1678 — sixth ed. by J. K. fol. Lond. 1706 Theatrum poetarum; or a compleat collection of the poets; with some observations and reflections upon many of them, particularly those of our own nation 8vo. Lond. 1675 Philips (John), nephew of Milton. Maronides, or Virgil travestie 8vo. Lond. 1672 A satyr against hypocrites {Anon.) 4to. Lond. 167 4^ Duellum musicum ; or, the musical duel ; p. 35 of the present practice of musick vindicated, by Matt. Locke, q. v. Philosophia. The schoolemaster, or teacher of table philo- sophie [a translation from the mensa philosophiea, by Thomas Twyne] -ito. by Richarde Jones, 1576 Philostratus (Flavins), Lemnius. The two first books con- cerning the life of Apollonius Tyaneus ; translated by C. Blount fol. Lond. 1680 -Pilkiugton (James), bp. of Durham. The burnynge of PaHles church in London in the yeare of oure Lord 1561 [Anon); with a confutacion ; bl. let. 8vo. Lond. by Willy am Seres, 1563 Piuelli (Lucas), of the societie of Jesus. The Virgin Marie^s life, with meditations, transl. by E. G. 8vo. Doway, 1604 Pitt (Moses). The cry of the oppressed; together with the case of the publisher 8vo. Lond. 1691 An accoiint of Anne JefFeries; p. 545, vol. i, of the Phoenix Britannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. Pix (Mary). The Spanish wives; a farce 4to. Lond. 1696 107 Plague. Orders, thought meete by her majestie &c. to be executed in all places infected with the plague 4to. London, by Chr. Barker, 1593 An aduise concerning sundry good rules and easie medi- cineSj &c., ibid. Piatt (sir Hugh) . A closet for ladies and gentlewomen, or the art of preserving, conserving, and candying 8vo. Lond. 1611 The jewel house of art and nature 4to. Lond. 1653 Playford (Henry). Wit and mirth; an antidote against melancholy ; 3rd ed. 8vo. Lond. 1682 Pleasant musical companion ; being a choice collection of catches by eminent masters 4to. Lond. 1707 Playford (John) . The dancing-master, or plain and easie rules for the dancing of country-dances, with the tunes to each dance 'Svo. Lond. 1665 Musick's delight on cithren Svo. Lond. 1666 Catch that catch can ; or the musical companion, con- taining catches and rounds for three and four voyces 4to. Lond. 1667 Musicks recreation on the viol, lyra-way 4to. Lond. 1669 The musical companion 4to. Lond. 1673 The second book of the pleasant musical companion 4to. Lond. 1687 The division- violin ; containing a collection of divisions upon several grounds for the treble- violin 4to. Lond. 1685 Vade mecum ; or, the necessary companion Svo. Lond. 1687 Plays, Tragedies, Comedies, Interludes, &c. A second and third blast of retrait from plaies and theaters Svo. Lond. by Henrie Denham, 1580 The costHe whore, a comicall historic 4to. Lond. 1633 Sir Gyles Goose-Cappe, knight ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1636 The queen, or the excellency of her sex 4to. Lond. (1653) Tom Tyler and his wife 4to. Lond. 1661 Knavery in all trades ; or the coflFee-house ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1664 The mistaken husband ; a comedie 4to. Lond. 1675 108 Wits led by tlie nose; or a poet's revenge; a tragi- comedy 4to. Lond. 1678 The muse of New-Market ; or mirth and drollery 8vo. Lond. 1680 Plinius (C.)j Secundus, Veronensis. The historic of the world, transl. into English by Philemon Holland ; 2 vols. fol. Lond. 1601 Plot (Robert), LL.D. The natural history of Oxford- shire, being an essay toward the natural history of England fol. Oxford, at the {Sheldon) theater, 1677 His account of his intended journey through England and Wales for the discovery of antiquities; p. 165 vol. II of Leland's itinerary. Plowman (Pierce), i. e. Robert Langlande, q. v. Plutarch. The lives of the noble Grecians and Romanes, transl. into Fr. by lames Amiot, and out of Fr. into Eng. by Tho. North fol. Lond. Rich. Field, 1595 The philosophic eommonlie called, the morals; trans- lated out of Greeke into English by Philemon Hol- land fol. Lond. 1603 How one maye take profite of his ennemies ; with Fr. Poyngz translation of Cebes, q. v. Poemata, see Songs, Garlands. The proude wyues Pater Noster, that wolde go gaye, and undyd her husbonde and went her waye ; bl. let. 4to. Lond. by John Kynge, 1560 An antidote against melancholy, made up in pills, com- pounded of witty ballads, jovial songs, and merry catches 4to. Lond. 1661 Folly in print, or book of rymes 8vo. Lond. 1667 A collection of poems written upon several occasions by several persons 8vo. Lond. 1673 Wit and drollery, jovial poems 8vo. Lond. 1682 Money masters all things, or satyrical poems 8vo. Lond. 1698 Pointz (Robert). Testimonies for the real presence of Christes body and blood in the blessed sacrament of the aultar 8vo. Lovanii, 1566 109 Pole or Poole (Reginald), cardinal and archbishop of Can- terbury. Articles to be enquyred in thordinary ■v-isitacion of his grace wythin hys dioces of Can- torbury, in the yeare of oiir Lorde God, 1556 4to. Canterbury, by Ihon Michel (1556) Ponet (John), D.D., bishop of Rochester. A shorte trea- tise of politike pouuer, and of the true obedience which subiectes owe to kynges, &c. 8vo. n. p. 1556 An apologia fully avnsweringe by scriptures and aun- ^ , r ceant doctors a blasphemose boke against the godly mariadge of priests 8vo. m. j9. 1556 Ponthus. The noble hystory of the moost excellent and myghty prynce and hygh renowmed (sic) knyght kynge Ponthus of Salyce and of lytell Brytagne [imperf.] 4to. Lond. Wynkyn de Worde, 1511 Poole (Josua), M.A., Clare hall, Camb. The English Parnassus, or a help to English poesie 8vo. Lond. 1677 Pope (Walter), D.M. The wish 4to. Lond. 1697 Porter (Henry). The pleasant history of the two angry women of Abington 4to. Lond. for William Ferbrand, 1599 Porter (Hierome), of the order of St. Benedict. The flowers of the lives of the most renowned saincts of the three kingdoms, England, Scotland and Ireland; the first tome 4to. Doway, 1632 Powel (Thomas). Wheresoeuer you see mee, trust vnto your selfe ; or, the mysterie of lending and bor- rowing 4to. Lond. 1623 Tom of all trades ; or, the plaine path- way to preferment 4to. Lond. 1631 Prat (B.), of Merton coll. Oxon. A persuasive from the creatures to a perfect resignation of the will to God's; with an appendix Bvo. Lond. 1695 Pratt (Hugh) . Delightes for ladies, to adorne their per- sons, tables, closets, and distillatories Bvo. Lond. 1611 Preces. This prayer of Salisbury vse is set out a long wout ony serchyng, bl. let. 8vo. Parys, Francoyn Regnault (1531) 110 An exhortacion vnto prayer, thought mete by the kynges maiestie, and his clergye, to be reade to the people; also a letanie, bl. let. 8vo. Lond. Rich. Grafton, 1544 An exhortacion vnto prayer thoughte mete &c. to be read to the pEople in euery church afore processyons ; also a letanie with suffrages, &c. bl. let. 8vo. Lond. by Tho. Berthelet, 1544 The booke of the common prayer and administracion of the sacramentes, and other rites and ceremonies of the churche fol. Lond. E. Whitchurche, 1549 — and bl. let. fol. Lond. R. Graftonus, 1552 — another ed. fol. Lond. R. Graftonus, 1552 — and fol. Lond. R. Jugge et J. Cawode, 1571 — and 8vo. Lond. R. Jugge (1576) — and 8vo. Lond. R. Barker, 1604 — and 4to. Lond. 1606 — and fol. Lond. 1661 Bassus ; certaine notes set forth in foure and three parts to be song at the morning communion, and euening praier fol. Lond. John Day, 1560 Medius ; mornyng and euenyng prayer and communion, set forthe in foure partes, to be song in churches fol. Lond. John Day, 1565 Contra tenor^ &c. fol. Lond. John Day, 1565 The tenor, &c. fol. Lond. John Day, 1565 The booke of common prayer, and administration of the sacraments, &c. for the use of the church of Scotland fol. Edinb. 1637 A brieif discours off the troubles begonne at Franckford in Germany A.D. 1554, abowte the booke off off (sic) common prayer and ceremonies ; bl. let. 4to. n. p. 1575 A suruey of the booke of common prayer 8vo. n. p. 1606 The queenes prayers or meditations : wherein the minde is stirred to suffer all afflictions here 8vo. Lond. William How, 1571 A booke of Christian prayers (with borders after Agnes Frew) 4to. Lond. by Rich. Yardley and Peter Short, 1590 Presbyter (John) . The last will and testament of sir John Presbyter, who dyed of a new disease called, the particuler charge of the army 4to. Printed in the yeere of Jubilee, 1647 Ill Presidents. A boke of Presidentes exactelye writtea in maner of a register ; bl. let. 8vo. Lond. Rich. Tottyll, 1562 Primaleon (de Grece) . The famous and renowned historie of Primaleon of Greece, translated by Anthony Munday ; 3 parts 4to. Lond. 1619 Prime (John), of New coll. Oxford. The consolations of David breefly applied to queene Elizabeth; in a sermon on Psalme xxiii, 4, preached in Oxford the 17. of November 8vo. Oxford, Joseph Barnes, 1558 Primer. A prymer in Englyshe and in Laten, translatyd after the Laten texte ; bl. let. 4to. Rowen, 1536 — and bl. let. 8vo. Paris, 1538 — and bl. let. 8vo. Lond. Jhon Mayler (1539) — and bl. let. 4to. Lond. The. petyt, 1543 The prymer in Latine, set forth after the vse of Salis- burye Bvo. Lond. by thassignes of Ihon Wayland, 1557 The prymer of Salysbery use ; bothe in Englyshe and in Laten, bl. let. 8vo. by John Gowghe (1536) — whereunto is added a playne and godly treatise con- cerning the masse, and the blessed sacrament ; bl. let. 4to. Lond. by John Waylande, 1555 — and 8vo. Rothomagi, 1556 — and with many godlie and deuoute praiers ; bl. let. 4to. Lond. by Ihon Kyngston and Henry Sutton, 1557 — and bl. let. 8vo. Lond. by the assygnes of Ihon Wayland, 1558 The prymer in English for children, after the vse of Sarum ; bl. let. 8vo. s. I. et a. This prymer of Salysbury vse is set out along wout ony serchyng; bl. let. 8vo. Paris, Fr. Regnault, 1527 — and with many prayers and goodly pyctures ; bl. let. 8vo. Parys, Franc. Regnault, 1532 — and bl. let. 8vo. Paris, Thylman karuer, 1534 — and bl. let. 8vo. Rouen, 1537 A prymer in Englyshe, with certeyn prayers and godly meditations, very necessary for all people that under- stonde not the Latyne tongue ; bl. let. 8vo. Lond. John Byddtll (1534) The primer, set foorth by the kynges maiestie and his clergie 4to. Lond. by Richard Grafton, 1545 — and 4to. Lond. by Rych. Grafton, 1547 112 A prymmer or boke of priuate prayer nedeful to be used of al faythfull Christianes 8vo. Lond. ex off. With. Seres, 1553 The primer, or office of the blessed Virgin Marie, in Latin and English, according to the reformed Latin, and with lyke graces priuileged 8vo. Antw. 1604 Printing. A decree of starre-chamber concerning printing, made the eleuenth day of July last past, 1637 4to. Lond. 1637 Procopius Csesariensis. The history of the warres of the emperor Justinian, in eight books ; englished by H. Holcroft fol. Lond. 1653 Prognostication (A), bl. let. 4to. Two leaves j the type is the same as the " Memorare novissima " Wynkyn de Worde It must have been printed before the year 1500, when prince Arthur, the eldest son of Henry VIT, died, as it contains the following prognostication : " The Prynce Arthure this yere shal prospere & encrease his substaiice & honour. My lord Herry duke of Yorke, & my lady Margarete his «yster the whiche shall after this be a queue or elles haue some grete honour shall this yere be hole & fortunate." Protestant. A demonstration ; by English protestant pre- tended bishops and ministers, &c. demonstatively proveinge, &c., that they have neither true and lawfull bishop, preist, minister, or any of cleargie function 8vo. Dovay, 1616 Prynne (WilHam). A briefe survay and censure of Mr. Cozens his couzening deuotions 4to. Lond. 1628 The unloueliness of love-lockes 4to. Lond. 1628 Healthes sicknesse : or, a compendious and briefe discourse; prouing, the drinking, and pledging of healthes, to be sinfull, and vtterly vnlawfull vnto Christians 4to. Lond. 1628 Histrio-mastix, the players scourge, or actors tragsedie; 2 parts 4to. Lond. 1633 Mount-Orgueil ; or, divine and profitable meditations, raised from the contemplation of these three leaves of natures volume; 1, rockes; 2, seas; 3, gardens 4to. Lond. 1641 ]]3 Comfortable cordials, ao:aiust disoomfortable feares of imprisonments and other sufferings iu good causes 4to. n. p. 1641 A new discovery of the prelates tyranny, in their late prosecutions of Mr. William Pryn, Dr. lohn Bast- wick, and Mr. Henry Burton 4to. Lond. 1641 The opening of the great seale of England 4to. Lond. 1643 The quakers unmasked 4to. Lond. 1655 A short demurrer to the Jews long discontinued barred remitter into England 8vo. Lond. 1656 A short sober pacific examination of some exuberances in and ceremonial appurtenances to the common prayer 4to. Lond. 1661 Aurum reginse ; or, a compendious tractate, and chro- nological collection of records in the tower and court of exchequer concerning the queen-gold 4to. Lond. 1668 Brief animadversions on, amendments of, and additional explanatory records to the fourth part of the institutes of the lawes of England, compiled by sir Edward Cooke fol. Lond. 1669 Psalmes of Dauid in metre, by Sternhold and Hopkins, first edition, 1549, bl. let. 16mo. One leaf containing part of Psalm xxi. O Lorde how ioifull is the kynge in thy strength and thy power : How vehemently he dooeth reioice, in thee his sauioure Printed by Whitchurch The psalter or boke of psalmes both in Latyn and Englyshe, wyth a kalender and a table ; bl. let. 8vo. Lond. Rich. Grafton, 1540 Psalmes or prayers taken out of holye scripture ; bl. let. 8vo. Lond. by Tho. Berthelet, 1545 The psalmes, or prayers, taken out of holy scripture, commonly called the kynges psalmes 8vo. Lond. William How, 1571 The psalter, or psalmes of Dauid, after the translation of the great Bible 8vo. Lond. Rich. Jugye, 1576 The whole psalter translated into English metre, which contayneth an hundreth and fifty psalmes 4to. Land, by lohn Daye, n. d. The psalmes of David (metrical, with the prose version added) 8vo. imperfect 8 114 The whole booke of psalmes^ colleoted into Englishe meter, by T. Sternehold, I. Hopkins and others 8vo. Lond. lohn Daye, 1577 — and 8vo. Lond. 1603 The booke of psalmes ; translated faithfully according to the Ebrewe 8vo. Lond. H. Denham, 1578 The psalmes of king David translated by king lames 8vo. Oxford, 1631 — and fol. lond. 1636 Purcell (Henry). New songs sung in the fooFs prefer- ment, or the three dukes of Dunstable 4to. Lond. 1688 Purchas (Samuel), minister at Estwood. Purchas his pilgrimage : or relations of the world and the re- ligions observed in all ages and places discovered from the creation unto this present fol. Lond. 1614 Purchas his pilgrim; microeosmus, or the historie of man 8vo. Lond. 1619 Purchas (Samuel), M.A., pastor at Sutton. A theatre of politicall flying-insects 4to. Jjond. 1657 Purgatory. Purgatory prov'd by miracles, collected out of Roman-catholick authors, with a preface con- cerning miracles 4to. Lond. 1688 Puritans. English puritanisme, by William Brad- shaw, q. v. Puttenbam (George). The arte of English poesie ; 3 bookes 4to. Lond. by Richard Field, 1589 — edited by Jos. Haslewood 4to. Lond. 1811 Pysa (Chrystyne of) . The book of fayttes of armes and of chyualrye ; transl. by W. Caxton, bl. let. fol. Westminster, per Caxton, 1489 Quarles (Francis). Divine poemes, reuised and corrected with additions by the author 8vo. Lond. 1630 Emblemes; 1st ed. 8vo. Zowc?. 1635 — second ed. 8vo. Camb. 1643 The shepheards oracles 4to. Lond. 1646 The virgin widow ; a comedie 4to. ioMfi?. 1649 115 Argalws and Parthenia; illustrated with tliirtv figures 4to. Lond. 1656 — and 8vo. Lond. 1677 Divine fancies, digested into epigrams, meditations, and observations 8vo. Lond. 1664 Enchiridion miscellaneum ; spare houres improv'd in meditations, from the pietie and the learning of F. Q. and A. Warwick 8vo. Amst. 1680 Quarles (John) . The history of the most vile Dimagoras, who by treachery and poison blasted the incom- parable beauty of divine Parthenia, interwoven with the history of Amoronzo and Celania 8vo. Lond. 165S R. (H.) Honours conquest; wherin is conteined the famous hystorie of Edward of Lancaster 4to. Lond. by Tho. Creede, 1598 Rabbotenu (Issac) . The bee hiue of the Romishe churche ; translated out of Dutch by G. Gilpin 8vo. Land, by Thos. Dawson, 1580 Rabelais (Frangois). His works, treating of the lives, heroick deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son PantagTuel, with the life of the author ; transl. by sir T. Urchard ; 2 books 8vo. Lond. 1653, 64 Grands annales tres veritables des gestes merueilleux du grand Gargantua et Pantagruel son filz, roy des Dipsodes ; 2 voll. 8vo. Lyon, Pierre de Tours, 1542 La plaisante, et ioyevse histoyre du grand geant Gar- gantua et de son fils Pantagruel : 3 voll. 8vo. Valence, 1547 La vie du fameux Gargantuas le plus terrible geant 8vo. Troyes, s. a. Ses songes drolatiques de Pantagruel 8vo. Paris, 1565 Rabisha (William). The whole body of cookery dissected 8vo. Lond. 1661 Radcliffe (Alexander), of Grey's Inn. The ramble; an anti-heroick poem ; together with some terrestrial hymns and carnal ejaculations 8vo. Lond. 1682 Rainoldus (Joannes) . The overthrow of stage-playes, by the way of controversie betwixt G. Gager and D. Rainoldes; certaine Latine letters betwixt Rain- oldes and doct. Geutilis 4to. O.fford, ] 629 IIG Rajus (Johannes). A collection of English proverbs, with short annotations ; whereunto are added local pro- verbs, old proverbial rhythmes, exotick proverbial sentences, and Scottish proverbs 8vo. Camb. 1670 A collection of English words not generally used ; with catalogues of English birds and fishes, and an account of the preparing and refining of such metals and minerals as are gotten in England 8vo. Lond. 1674 — and 8vo. Lond. 1675 — and 8vo. Lond. 1691 Raleigh (sir Walter) . The historic of the world fol. Lond. 1634 Judicious and select essayes and observations 8vo. Lond. 1650 Ramesey (William), M.D. Some physical considerations of the matter, origination, and several species of wormes 8vo. Lond. 1668 The gentlemans companion; or, a character of true nobility and gentry 8vo. Lond. 1672 Ramsey (Lawrence). The practise of the diuell; the auncient poisoned practises of the diuell, in his papistes, against the true professors of Gods holy worde, in these our latter dayes (in verse) 4to. Lond. n. d. Ramsey (William). Conjugium conjurgium; or, some serious considerations on marriage 8vo. Lond. 1684 Randolph (Bernard) . The present state of the islands in the Archipelago 4to. Oxford, at the [Sheldon) theater, 1687 The present state of the Morea, called anciently Pelopon- nesus 4to. Lond. 1689 Randolph (Thomas), M.A., Trin. coll. Cambr. Poems, %vith the muses looking-glasse and Amyntas 8vo. Oxford, 1640 The jealous lovers; a comedie presented to their majesties at Cambridge, by the students of Trinitie- colledge 8vo. Cambr. 1640 A pleasant comedie entitled Hey for honesty, down with knavery 4to. Lond. 1651 117 Rankins (William) . A mirrour of monsters 4to. Land, by I. C.for T. H. 1587 Rastell (William). A coUeccion of all the statutes (from the begynning of Magna Carta unto the yere of our Lorde 1557) which were before that yere imprinted 4to. Lond. Richard Tottyll, 1557 A collection in English, of the statutes now in force, con- tinued from the beginning of Magna Charta, vntill the ende of the session of parliament holden in the 21 yeere of the reigne of our gratious queene Elizabeth fol. Lond. by the deputies of Christ. Barker, 1591 Ravenscroft (Edward). Melismata ; musical phansies, fitting the court, citie, and countrey humors 4to. Lond. 1611 The citizen turnM gentleman ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1672 Mamamouchi; or the citizen turned gentleman ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1675 Scaramouch a philosopherj &c. 4to. Lond. 1677 King Edgar and Alfreda ; a tragi-comedy 4to. Lond. 1677 The English lawyer ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1&7% Dame Dobson ; or the cunning woman ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1684 Titus Andronicus ; or the rape of Lavinia; a tragedy alter'd from Shakespears works 4to. Lond. 1687 The London cuckolds ; a comedy 4to. Lond. \&S% The Canterbury guests ; or a bargain broken ; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1695 The anatomist ; or the sham doctor 4to. Lond.\GQ7 The Italian husband ; a tragedy 4to. Lond. 169% Rawlinson (John), D.D. Mercy to a beast; a sermon preached at St. Maries Spittle on Prov. xii^ 10 4to. Oxf. 1612 Raymond (Jo.) II Mercurio Italico ; an itinerary, con- tayning a voyage made through Italy, in the yeare 1646 and 1647 8vo. Lond. 1648 Raynalde (Thomas), phisition. The birth of mankynde, otherwyse named the womans booke 4to. {Lond.) 1565 Read (Alexander), M.D. Secrets of art and nature fol. [Lond. 1660) 118 Recorde (Robert), M.D. The ground of artes, teachyng the worke and practise of arithmetike 8vo. Lond. Reynold Wolff (1542) — and 8vo. Lond. 1575 — and enlarged by John Dee and since by John Mellis 8vo. Lond. (date torn off) — - and corrected and augmented by John Mellis, and additions by R. N. 8vo. Lond. 1615 Reeve (Edmund), B.D. An introduction into the Greeke tongue 4to. Lond. 1657 Reformation. Reasons shewing the necessity of reforma- tion of the publick, 1. doctrine, 2. worship, 3. rites and ceremonies, 4. church-government and dis- cipline 4to. Lond. 1660 Regius (Urbanus). A lytic treatise after the maner of an epystle : wherin he declareth the cause of the great controuersy, &c., in the chrysten relygyon : bl. let. 8vo. Lond. Gwalter Lynne, 1548 Reinardus Vulpes. The hystorye of reinard the foxe; bl. let. [imperfect) fol. [Pynson) n. d. The booke of Raynarde the foxe, conteining diuers goodlye historyes and parables 8vo. Lond. by Thomas Gnaltier, 1550 The most delectable history of Reynard the fox ; p. 1 4to. Lond. 1701 ~ p. 11 4to. Lond. 1681 The shifts of Reynardine the son of Reynarde the fox ; or a pleasant history of his life and death 4to. Lond. 1684 Renau, ou Regnault (L.) Histoire tragique de Pandosto, roy de Boheme et de Bellaria sa femme, ensemble les amours de Dorastus et de Faunia [trad, de I'Angloise de R. Green] 8vo. Paris, 1615 Renodseus (Joannes) . A medicinal dispensatory ; con- taining the whole body of physick, transl. by R. Tomlinson fol. Lond. 1657 Resurrection. The hope of the faythful, declaryng brefely and clearlye the resurreccion of our lords Jesus Chryst ; bl. let. 8vo. w. p. or d. Rhetorica. The whores rhetorick, calculated to the meridian of London 8vo. Lond. 1683 119 Ribadeneyra (Peter). The lives of saints with other feasts of the year according to the Roman calendar; transl. by W. P. fol. S. Omers, 1669 Rice (Richard). An inuectiue againste vices, taken for vertue 8vo. Lond. Ihon Kyngston, n. d. Rich (Barnaby). The true report of a late practise enter- prised by a papist with a yong maiden in Wales 4to. Lond. by Robert Walley, 1582 The honestie of this age; proouing by good circum- stance, that the world was neuer honest till now 4to. Lond. 1615 My ladies looking glasse, wherein may be discerned a wise man from a foole, a good woman from a bad ; and the true resemblance of vice, masked under the vizard of vertue 4to. Lond. \Q\^ Richardson (Dr. Edward). The English and Nether- dutch academy, in three parts Bvo. Amst. 1689 Rider (John) . His dictionarie, corrected and augmented by Francis Holy-Oke 4to. Lond. 1640 Rider (William), M.A. The twins ; a tragi-comedy 4to. Lond. 1655 Roberts (Lewes). The merchants mappe of commerce fol. Lond. 1638 Robertson (William), M.A. Phraseologia generalis ; Lat. et Engl. 8vo. Cambr. 1681 Roberte the Deuyll. bl. let. 4to. Wynkyn de Worde Fragments of six leaves of this metrical romance. See Advertisement (signed (I. H.) to the edition of it printed for Egerton, Whitehall, 1798 8vo. Robin Hood. A lytell geste of Robyn Hode. bl. let. 4to. Two leaves, sign. A iii, and corresponding leaf, con- taining from line 104 to line 238 of the first fytte ; it is mentioned by Ritson in his " Robyn Hood," p. 2, who supposed it to have been printed by Rastall, as did Dr. Farmer, its former possessor. Mr. Douce states that the type is the same as that used by W. de Worde in various of his works, which he enumerates. It certainly agrees with the type of the " Memorare novissima" described by Dibdin, ii, 329, and the " Ordynarye of Chrysten men," printed by de Worde in 1502, of which a fragment is in this collection. Each page contains 34 lines (Not in Herbert) 120 A lytell geste of Robyn Hode. bl. let. 4*o. Four leaves containing the fifth fytte and part of the sixth. The type agrees with what Wynkyn de W^orde used latterly, and the text corresponds so exactly with the collation given by Ritson of the copy in the public library at Cambridge, that it has been thought right to let it follow the preceding article of an early edition of the same work. Robinson (Thomas). The anatomic of the English nun- nery at Lisbon in Portugall 4to. {Lond.) 1637 — and p. 325, vol. i, of the phoenix Britannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. Robinson (Thomas) . Of the philosopher's stone ; p. 335 of Ashmole's theatr. chem., q. v. Robson (Simon). The choise of change, containing the tripUcity of diuinitie, philosophic and poetrie short for memorie 4to. Lond. by Roger Warde, 1585 Rodes (He we). The boke of nurture for men, seruauntes and chyldren, with Stans puer ad mensam, newly corrected 4to. Lond. by Thomas Petyt, n. d. Rogue, the French. The French rogue ; being a pleasant history of his life and fortune 8vo. Lond. 1672 Rohan (Henri II, due de). Son voyage faict en Tan 1600, en Italic, AUemaigne, Pays-Bas Vni, Angle- terre, et Escosse 8vo. Amst. 1646 Holland (John). The thrie tailes of the thrie priests of Peblis 4to. Edinb. 1603 Roman Catholicks. A request to Roman catholicks to answer the queries upon certain of their tenets 4to. Lond. 1687 Romanorum Gesta. A record of auncient histories, inti- tuled in Latin, Gesta Romanorum ; now newly perused and corrected by R. Robinson 8vo. Lond. by Tho. Est, 1595 — newly perused, and corrected with something added by R. R. 8vo. Lond. 1610 — and 8vo. Lond. 1662 — and 8vo. Lond. 1668 — and 8vo. Lond. 1681 — and 8vo. Lond. 1689 — and 8vo. Lond. n. d. 121 The young man's guide to a vertuous life (being an abridgement of the Gesta Romanorum) 8vo. Lond. 1698 Rook. The pleasant history of Cawwood the rook, or the assembly of birds 4to. Lond. n. d. — another edition 4to. imperfect Rosamond. The history of fair Rosamond 8vo. imperfect Rosarium. The mystik sweet rosary of the faythful soule (bl. let.) 8vo. Antwerpe, at Martyne Emprowers, 1533 The rosarie of our ladie 8vo. Antv. 1600 Rose (Giles). A perfect school of instructions for the officers of the mouth ; shewing the whole art of a master of the houshold, a master carver, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1682 Rosse (Alexander) , Mel Heliconium ; or poeticall honey gathered out of the weeds of Parnassus 8vo. Lond. 1642 Arcana microcosmi, or the hid secrets of man's body discovered ; in an anatomical duel between Aristotle and Galen concerning the parts thereof 8vo. Lond. 1652 A view of the Jewish religion 8vo. Lond. 1656 Mystagogus poeticus, or the muses interpreter; ex- plaining the historical mysteries, and mystical his- tories of the ancient Greek and Latin poets 8vo. Lond. 1672 Roswal. The pleasant history of Roswal and Lillian 8vo. n. p. or d. Rous (Francis), of Merton coll. Seven books of Attick antiquities; with an addition of the customs in marriages, burials, &c. by Z. Bogan 4to. Lond. 1685 Rowbothum (James) . The pleasaunt and wittie playe of the cheasts renewed, with instructions both to learne it easely, and to play it well 4to. Lond. Roulande Hall, 1562 Rowlands (Samuel). Good newes and bad newes 4to. Lond. 1622 Diogenes lanthorne 4ito. Lond. 1624 132 The famous history of Guy earle of Warwicke 4to. Lond. 1635 — and 8vo. Lond. n. d. A crew of kind London gossips all met to be merry ; to which is added ingenious poems, or wit and drollery 8vo. Lond. 1663 ^Tis merry when gossips meet. Lond. 1609 {Reprint) 8vo. Lond. 1818 Doctor Merry-man ; or nothing but mirth ; being a posie of pleasant poems and witty jests 4to. Newcastle, n. d. Rowland (William), M.D. Judiciall astrologie, judicially condemned 8vo. Lond. 1652 Rowly (Samuel). When you see me, you know me; or the famous chronicle historie of king Henrie the Eight, with the birth and vertuous life of Edward prince of Wales (a play) 4to. Lond. 1621 The noble souldier; or, a contract broken, justly revenged j a tragedy 4to. Lond. 1634 Rowley (William) . A new wonder, a woman never vext ; a pleasant conceited comedy 4to. Lond. 1632 A match at mid-night ; a pleasant comoedie 8vo. Lond. 1633 A merrie and pleasant comedy, called a shoo-maker a gentleman 4to. Lond. 1638 Rutherford (Samuel), D.D. Joshua Redivivus; or, his letters, in two parts 8vo. n. p. 1671 Rymer (Thomas) . The tragedies of the last age consider'd and examin'd, in a letter to Fleetwood Shepheard 8vo. Lond. 1692 A short view of tragedy, with some remarks on Shake- spear, and other practitioners for the stage 8vo. Lond. 1693 Ryves (Bruno), D.D., dean of Chichester and afterwards of Windsor. Mercurius rusticus ; or, the countries complaint of the barbarous out-rages committed by the sectaries of this late flourishing kingdome, with a briefe chronologic of the battails, &c. of this un- natural! warre to the 25 March 1646. {Anon.) 8vo. n. p. 1646 J>. E. Cupids whirligig; a comedy 4to. Lond. IQI& 123 S— cy (Ed.) The country gentleman's vade mecum, or his companion for the town 8vo. Lond. 1699 S. (I.) The pitiMl estate of the time present ; a Christian consideration of the miseries of this time, with an exhortation to amendement of life 8vo. Lond. Hen. Denham, 1564 S. (R.), perhaps S. Eowlands. The counter-scuiHe 4to. Lond. 1635 The counter-ratt. ibid. S. (T.) The second part of the Pilgrims progress 8vo. Lond. 1684 Sadeur (James) . A new discovery of terra incognita Aus- tralis 8vo. Lond. 1693 Saint-Germain (Christopher). The dialoges in English, betwene a doctor of diuinity, and a student in the lawes of England 8vo. Lond. in ced. Ric. Tottelli, 1580 St. Serfe (Tho.) Tarugo's wiles: or the coffee-house; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1668 Salisbury. A fragment of a Salisbury Commemoration Printed by Caxton Sallustius (C. Crispus). The famous cronicle of warre, whyche the Romaynes hadde agaynst Jugurth; transl. by syr alexander Barklaye, at the end of Felicius's conspiracie of Catiline, q. v. Salmon (William), prof, of physick. The family dictionary or houshold companion 8vo. Lond. 1696 Salter (Thomas) . A contention betwene three brethren ; that is to say, the whoremonger, the dronkarde, and the dice-player 8vo. Lond. by Tho. Gossan, 1581 Saltonstall (Wye) . Picturae loquentes, or pictures drawne forth in characters, with a poeme of a maid 8vo. Lond. 1635 Sammes (Aylett), Christ's coll. Cambr. Britannia antiqua iUustrata, or the antiquities of ancient Britain derived from the Phoenicians fol. Lond. 1676 Sampson (William) . The vow breaker, or the faire maide of Clifton ; a tragedy 4to. Lond. 1636 Sanderson (William) . Graphice ; or, the use of the pen and pensil fol. Lond. 1658 121. Saiidford (Ja.) The mirrour of madues; or, a paradoxe maintayning madnes to be most excellent; done out of French into English 8vo. Lond. Thomas Mar she, 1576 Sandys (George) . A relation of a journey begun an. Dom. 1610; foure bookes, containing a description of the Turkish empire, &c. fol. Lond. 1621 A paraphrase upon the psalmes of David and upon the hymnes dispersed throughout the Old and New Testaments 8vo. Lond. 1636 Sapientes (Septem). The history of the seven wise mas- ters of Rome 8vo. Lond. 1653 — forty-second edition 8vo. Lond. s. a. Roman stories ; or, the history of the seven wise mistresses of Rome, collected by Th. Howard 8vo. Lond. n. d. Saviolo (Vincentio) . His practise ; in two bookes, the first intreating of the use of the rapier and dagger, the second, of honor and honorable quarrels 4to. Lond. John Wolfe, 1595 Saul (Arthur). The famous game of chesse-play; aug- mented by Jo. Barbier 8vo. Lond. 1672 Saunderson (William). Aulicus coquinarise; or a vindi- cation in answer to a pamphlet, entituled "The court and character of king James." {Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1650 Savonarola (Hieron.), Ferrariensis ord. pred. A medita- cyon upon the psalme of In te Diie speraui, in va- rious Prymers, q. v. An exposicyon on the li psalme, in various Prymers, q. V. Savorsano (don Alonso). Three ingenious Spanish novels: namely. The loving revenge. The lucky escape, and The witty extravagant 8vo. Lond. n. d. Saxton (Christopher). Chartse geographicse omnium comi- tatuum Anglise ac WalliEe, coloribus distinctse fol. s. I. 1579 All the shires of England and Wales ; with additions by Philip Lea fol. Lond. n. d. Scarron (Paul). His novels, rendred into English, with some additions, by John Davies 8vo. Lond. 1667 125 The unexpected choice ; a novel, transl. by J. Davies 8vo. Lond. 1670 The city romance, made English 8vo. Lond. 1671 Schools. The childrens petition, or a remonstrance of the severities of school-discipline 8vo. Lond. 1669 Scobell (Henry) . A collection of acts and ordinances of general use, made in the parliament, begun and held at Westminster anno 1640 — 1656 fol. Lond. 1658 Scogan, Scogin or Scoggin (John). Scogin's jests; ga- thered by Andrew Board 4to. Lond. n. d. Scoloker (Anthony). A bryefe summe of the whole Byble : a Christyan instruction for all parsons, and the ordenary for all degrees ; out of the Doutch. bl. let. 8vo. Lond. by A. Scoloker, n. d. Daiphantus, or the passions of love ; comicall to reade, but tragicall to act; whereunto is added. The pas- sionate mans pilgrimage 4to. Lond. 1604 — a reprint 4to. Lond. 1818 A Godly dysputacion betwene a Christen shoemaker and a Popyshe Parson, with two other Parsons more, done within the famous citie of Norembourgh, translated by A. S. 24mo The Ordenary e for all faythfuU Chrystians to leade a vertuous and Godly lyfe 12mo. n. d. Scot (Reginald). The discouerie of witchcraft, wherein the lewde dealing of witches and witehmongers is notablie detected, &c. with a treatise vpon the nature and substance of spirits and diuels 4to. Lond. by W. Brome, 1584 — and fol. Lond. 1665 A perfite platforme of a hoppe garden 4to. Lond. Henrie Denham, 1578 Scotia. The lawes and actes of parliament, maid be king James the First, and his successours kinges of England fol. Edinb. be Rob. Walde-graue, 1597 Scott (Tho.) The Belgicke pismire 8vo. w.^. 1623 The second part of vox populi ; or, Gondomar appearing in the likeness a Machiavel, in a Spanish parliament ; p. 341, vol. I, of the Phoenix Britannicus by J. Mor- gan, q. V. 126 Robertj earl of Essex's ghost ; sent from Elysium to the nobility, gentry, and commonality of England ; 2 parts ; p. 441, ibid. Scudamore (James). Homer h la mode; a mock poem upon the first and second books of Homer's Iliads (Anon.) 8vo. Oxford, 1665 Seager (Francis). The schoole of vertue : with certaine of prayers and graces compiled by R. C. [Robert Crowley] 8vo. {no title) The school of vertue, and book of good nurture; teach- ing children and youth their duties ; also certain prayers and graces ; compiled by R(obert) C(rowley) 8vo. Lond. 1687 Seeker (William) . A wedding ring fit for the finger ; or, the salve of divinity on the sore of humanity; a sermon at a wedding, on Gen. ii, 18 8vo. Lond. 1658 Sects. The original and sprynge of all sectes and orders, by whome, whan, or were they beganne ; translated out of hye Dutch into Englysh. bl. let. 8vo. Lond. James Nicolson, 1537 Segar (sir William) . The booke of honor and armes 4to. Lond. R. Jhones, 1590 Honor military and civiU ; contained in foure bookes fol. Lond. 1602 Seller (Abraham). The antiquities of Palmyra: with an appendix, and commentary on the inscriptions lately found there 8vo. Lond. 1696 Sendebar. The morall philosophic of Doni ; drawne out of the auncient writers : transl. by Tho. North 4to. Lond. by Henry Denham, 1570 Seneca (Lucius Annseus). His workes newly inlarged and corrected by Thomas Lodge fol. Lond. 1620 De remedis (sic) fortuitorum; Lat. and Engl, by R. Whyttyngton 8vo. Lond. W. Myddylton, 1547 The forme and rule of honest lyuynge ; Lat. and Engl. by R. Whyttyngton 8vo. Lond. W. Myddylton, 1546 The myrrour or glasse of maners and wysedome, Lat. and Eng. by Rob. Whyttyngton , 8vo. Lond. Wyllyam Myddylton, 1547 127 His woorke concerning benefyting, that is too say the dcoing, receyving and requyting of good turnes ; translated by Arthur Golding 4to. Lond. John Bay, 1578 Thyestes; a tragedy^ to which is added mock-Thyestes in burlesque by J. Wright 8vo. Lond. 1674 Severus (Alexander). The image of governance compiled of the actes and sentences of the moste noble empe- rour Alexander Severus ; late transl. by syr Thomas Eliot knt. 4to. Lond. Tho. Berthelet, 1541 Shaxton (Nycolas)j bp. of Salisbury. Iniunctions gyuen by the bysshop of Salysbury throughout his dioces. bl. let. 4to. Lond. Johan Byddell, 1538 Sheppard (S.) Epigrams and poems 8vo. Lond. 1651 Sherburne (Edward). Salmacis^ Lyrian and Sylvia, for- saken Lydia, the rape of Helen, and other poems 8vo. Lond. 165] SherifiF. In this boke is conteyned the oflyces of shyrefFes, baillyflfes of libertyes, eschetours, constables and coroners, &c. bl. let. 8vo. {Lond. Thomas Petit), 1543, imperfect Sherrj' (Richard) . A treatise of schemes and tropes very profitable for the better understanding of good authors, bl. let. 8vo. Lond. John Day (1550) Shirley (James). The wittie faire one; a comedie 4to. Lond. 1633 The triumph of peace : a masque presented by the innes of court 4to. Lond. 1633 The gamester 4to. Lond. 1637 — as altered by Garrick 8vo. Lond. 1778 The lady of pleasure ; a comedie 4to. Lond. 1637 The maides revenge ; a tragedy 4to. Lond. 1639 Poems, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1646 The triumph of beautie 8vo. -Lowrf. 1646 Narcissus ; or the self-lover 8vo. Lond.\Q4sG Six new playes 8vo. Lond. 1653 The wedding 4to. Lond. 1660 The ball; a comedy, by J. S. and George Chapman, q. V. Shotterel (Robert). Archerie revived: or the bow-man's excellence ; an heroick poem, by R. S. and Thomas Durfey 8vo. Lond. 1676 128 Shurley (John). The most delightful history of Reynard the fox, in heroic vers 4to. Lond. 1681 Sidney (sir Philip), knt. The countesse of Pembrokes Arcadia fol. Lond. 1613 Valour anatomized in a fancy ; p. 188, vol, i, of the Phoenix Britannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. Wooeing stuff; p. 189. Ibid. Siege of Harflet, and batayl of Agincourt. bl. let. 4to. Two leaves ; sign. A ii, and its corresponding leaf. Begins, Gramercy syrs the kynge can say Our ryght I trust than shall be wone And I wyll quyte you if I may Therfore I warne you bothe olde and yonge To make you redy without delay To Southampton to take your way. At saynte Peters tyde at Lammasse For by the grace of God and if I may Ouer the salte see I thynke io passe, (sic) See Hearne's Tho. de Elmham, p. 359 ; and Evans' Old Ballads, ii, 334 (ed. 1810) The latter is however only a copy of the former, which was transcribed from a Cotton MS. now in the British Museum ; Vitellius, D xii, 1 1, fol. 214 Mr. Douce remarks in a note, " There is a very ma- terial difference between the ballad as there printed and the present fragment." [Not in Herbert] Silver (George). Paradoxes of defence 4to. Lond. for Edw. Blount, 1599 Sinners. Examples howe mortall synne maketh the syn- ners inobedyentes to haue many paynes and doloures within the fyre of hell. bl. let. 8vo. Lond. Rob. Wyer, s. a. Skelton (John), poet laureate to king Henry VIII. A Skeltonicall salutation Or condigne gratulation And iust vexation Of the Spanish nation, &c. 4to. Lond. for Toby Cooke, 1589 129 Magnyfyceuce. A goodly interlude and mery, deuysed and made by Mayster Skelton ; poet laureate, late deceasyd. bl. let. fol. n. d. Two leaves ; sign. G ii and G iii, formerly belonged to Dr. Farmer. There is a perfect copy in the public library at Cambridge. Skinker (Tannakin) . A certaine relation of the hog-faced gentlewoman called mistris Tannakin Skinker, who was borne at Wirkham, &c. 4to. Lond. 1640 Sleidane (Jhon). A famouse cronicle of 'oure time, called Sleidanes Commentaries ; translated from the Latin by Jhon Daus fol. Lond. Jhon Dale, 1560 Smith (Henry). The trumpet of the soule, sounding to judgement ; a sermon on Eccles. xi, 9 8vo. Lond. for John Perrin, 1591 Seven godly and learned sermons upon seven diuers textes of scripture 8vo. Lond. R. Field, 1591 The afifinitie of the faithfull; a sermon on Luke viii, 19—31 8vo. Lond. by TV. Hoskins, 1591 The wedding garment ; a sermon on Eom. xiii, 14 Bvo. Lond. 1591 The benefite of contentation ; a sermon on 1 Tim. vi, 6 8vo. Lond. Abell loffes, 1591 A preparative to marriage, whereunto is annexed a trea- tise of the Lord's supper, and another of vsurie 8vo. Lond. R. Field, 1591 Three prayers, whereunto is annexed a godly letter to a sicke friend ; p. 249. ibid. The pride of king Nebuchadnezzar; a sermon on Dan. iv, 26, 27 8vo. Lo7id. Thomas Scarlet, 1591 The fall of king Nabuchadnezzar ; a sermon on Dan. iv, 28 — 30 8vo. Lond. Tho. Scarlet, 1591 The restitution of king Nabuchadnezzar ; a sermon on Dan. iv, 31 — 34 8vo. Lond. Tho. Scarlet, 1591 A fruitfull sermon upon i Thess. v, 19—21 8vo. Lond. W. Hoskins, 1591 Smith (captain John) . The generall historic of Virginia, New-England and the Summer isles fol. Lond. 1624 Smith (John). Cytherea ; or the enamouring girdle; a comedy 8vo. Lond. 1677 9 130 Smith (sir Thomas). The common-wealth of England, and maner of government thereof 4to. Lond. Val. Simmes, 1594 Smythe (sir John). Certain discourses, concerning the formes and effects of diners sorts of weapons &c. 4to. Lond. by R. Johnes, 1590 Instructions, obseruations, and orders mylitarie 4to. Lond. by Ric. Johnes, 1595 Snow. The cold yeare 1614 a deepe snow ; in which men and cattel have perished 4to. Lond. 1614 Solinus (Caius Julius). The noble actions of humaine creatures ; transl. by Arthur Golding 4to. Lond. J. Charlewoode, 1587 Solomon. His bokes (translated from the French), bl. let. 8vo. Lond. by Wyllyam Copland, 1551 The song of songs, translated by D. Fenner 8vo. Middleburgh, by Rich. Schilders, 1587 Somnerus (Gulielmus), Cantuariensis. Dictionarium Sax- onico-Latino-Anglicum, voces, phrasesque prsecipuas Anglo-Saxonicas complectens fol. Oxon. 1659 The antiquities of Canterbury; with an appendix 8vo. Lond. 1640 A treatise of the Roman ports and forts in Kent ; with his life, published by James Brome, M.A. 8vo. Oxford, 1693 Songs. The loyal garland ; or a choice collection of songs, &c. Imperfect. 8vo. [Lond. 1686.) A large collection of ancient ballads, chiefly black letter ; 3 vols. fol. V. p. and y. A large collection of single songs and ballads made by Joseph Hazlewood and bound in 5 vols. 4to. V. p. and y. Sorel (Charles). The extravagant shepherd; or, the his- tory of the shepherd of Lysis ; translated by John Davies fol. Lond. 1654 La vraye histoire comique de Francion ; 3 voU. 8vo. Leyde, 1721 — done into English by a person of honor fol. Lond. 1655 Southwell (Robert). St. Peters complainte, Mary Mag- dalene's teares, with other workes of the author Svo. Lond. 1680 131 Sparrow (Antliony), bishop of Exeter. A collection of articles, injunctions, canons, orders, ordinances and constitutions ecclesiastical; witli other publick records of the church of England 4to. Land. 1657 A rationale upon the book of Common-Prayer of the church of England 8vo. Lond. 1676 Speed (John) . The historic of Great Britaine under the conquests of the Eomans, Saxons, Danes, and Normans fol. Lond. 1623 Theatrum imperii magnee Britannise fol. Amst. 1646 A prospect of the most famous parts of the world fol. Lond. 1631 Speed (John), M.D. of St. John's coll. Oxford. Batt upon batt ; a poem upon the parts, patience, and pains of Barth. Kempster 4to. Lond. 1694 Spencer (Benjamin). Vox civitatis, or London's complaint against her children in the country; p. 97, vol. i, of the Phoenix Britannicus by J. Morgan Spenser (Edmund). The shepheards calender. [Anon.) 4to. Lond. by John Windet, 1591 The faerie queene disposed into xii bookes fol. Lond. 1609 Spotswood (John), archbp. of St. Andrews. The history of the church of Scotland ; from the year 303, to the reign of king James the VI. fol. Lond. 1668 Spy. The English spy; or, the intrigues, pollicies, and stratagems of the French king 8vo. Lond. 16 — Stafford (Anthonie) . Staffords Niobe ; or his age of teares 8vo. Lond. 1611 Stafford (William) . A compendious or briefe examination of certayne ordinary complaints, of divers of our countrymen in these our dayes 4to. Lond. by Tho. Marshe, 1581 Stanbrigus (Joannes). Vulgaria 4to. Lond. Wynkyn de Worde, s. a. Stanley (Charles), earl of Derby. The protestant religion is a sure foundation and principle of a true Christian 4to. Lond. 1671 Stanley (Thomas). Poems. 8vo. n.p. 1651 132 Stans puer ad mensam. bl. let. 4to. n. d. Wynkyn de Worde One leaf; sign, a iii. Herbert, p. 227 Go lyttell byll barayne of eloquence Pray the yong children that the shal here or rede (Though thou be nat compendyous of sentece) Of the clauses for to take good hede Whiche to all vertue shall the youthe leade Of the wrytynge though there be no date If ought be amysse put the faute in Lydgate. Stapleton (Thomas) , student in divinity. A counterblast to M. Homes vayne Waste against M. Pekenham 4to. Lovanii, 1567 Star-chamber. The star-chamber epitomized 4to. n.p. 1641 Starlings. The wonderful battel of Starlings, fought at the city of Cork, in Ireland, Oct. 1621, p. 250 of the Phcenix Britannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. Statins (P. Papinius) . An essay upon Statius ; or, the five first books of his Thebais, done into English verse by J. Stephens 8vo. Lond. 1648 Statuta. Nona statuta fol. Lond. Richarde Pynson, s. a. Paruus codex qui antiqua statuta et noua vocatur 8vo. Lond. Rob. Redman (1525) Magna Carta, cum aliis antiquis statutis 8vo. Lond. in ed. Tho. Bertheleti, 1531 Secunda pars veterum statutorum 8vo. Lond. Th. Bertheleti, 1533 Magna Charta, cum statutis quae antiqua vocantur 8vo. Lond. ap. Rich. Tottelum, 1556 Magna Charta cum statutis tum antiquis, cum recentibus 8vo. Lond. Richard Tottill, 1587 In this boke are conteyned these statutes whiche to put in execution the justyces of peace &c. were of late admonished by the kynge 8vo. Lond. Tho. Bertheletus, 1538 The whole volume of statutes at large, which at anie time heeretofore haue beene extant in print since Magna Charta untill the 29th yeere of the reigne of our souereigne ladie Elizabeth fol. Lond. for Chr. Barker, 1587 — vntill the sixteenth yeere of the raigue of our soue- raigne lord lames ; 2 vols. fol. Lond. 1618 The statutes at large ; by Joseph Keble fol. Lond. 1684 Statutes &c. of warre. bl. let. 4to. 1513. Four last 133 leaves sign. C. Tj Here endeth certayne statutes and ordenaunces of warre made ordeyned &c. by kynge Henry the viii. Emprynted at the hyghe comaunde- ment of our Soueraygne lorde the kynge Henry the VIII. By Richarde Pynson, prynter vnto his noble grace The yere of onre lorde m.ccccc and xiii. [Not in Herbert] The ordynal or statuts concernynge artyfycers, seruauntes, and labourers, newly prynted with dyuers other thyngs therunto added. 24mo. n. d. At the bottom of the title is the sign of R. Wyer, " St. John," but without the eagle. Six leaves. Stephens (John), of Lincolnes Inne. New essayes and characters ; with a new satyre in defence of the common law, and lawyers 8vo. Lond. 1631 Stevenson (Matthew). Occasions off-spring; or poems upon severall occasions 8vo. Lond. 1654 Norfolk drollery; or, acompleat collection of the newest songs, jovial poems, and catches, &c. 8vo. Lond. \Q7^ Stopford (Joshua), B.D., rector of All-Saints, York. Pagano-papismus ; or, an exact parallel between Rome-Pagan and Rome-Christian, in their doctrines and ceremonies 8vo. Lond. 1675 Story (John) . A declaration of his life and death ; p. 289, vol. I of Phcenix Britannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. Stow (John) . A summarie of Englyshe chronicles 8vo. Lond. Tho. Marshe, 1565 — and 8vo. Lond. by Thos. Marshe (1566) A summarie of Englyshe chronicles ; continued til this present moneth of Nouember 1567 8vo. Lond. hy Tho. Marshe (1567) _ and 8vo. [Lond. 1570) — and 8vo. {Lond. 1573), imperf. — vnto this present yeare of Christ, 1575 8vo. Lond. Rich. Tottle and H. Binneman (1575) — vnto this present yeare of Christ, 1580 4to. Lond. by Ralphe Neiuberie (1580) — and unto this present yeare of Christ, 1587. 8vo. Lond. by Ralph Newberie and H. Denham (1587) — continued vnto this present yere of Christ, 1598 8vo. Lond. Rich. Bradocke, 1598 — and unto this present yeare of Christ, 1604 8vo. Lond. 1604 134 The annales of England untill this present yeare 1605 4to. . Lond. (1605) — or abridgement of the English chronicle ; augmented with very many memorable antiquities, and continued unto the end of the yeare 1610; by E. Howes 8vo. Lond. 1611 — and unto the yeare 1618 Bvo. Lond. 1618 — and unto the end of this present yeere 1631 fol. Lond. 1631 A survay of London 4to. Lond. lohn Wolfe, 1598 — and 4to. Lond. 1603 — and 4to. Lond. 1618 A survey of the cities of London and Westminster and the borough of Southwark ; corrected by J. Strype ; 2 vols. fol. Lond. 1754-1755 Stradlingus (Joannes). Epigrammatum libri quatuor 8vo. Lond. 1607 Stranmore (George). A book of fortune ; with prophetical solutions fol. (imperf.) Struys (John) . His perillous and most unhappy voyages in Europe, Africa, and Asia, rendered out of Nether dutch by John Morrison 4to. Lond. 1683 Strype (John), M.A. Memorials of Thomas Cranmer sometime archbp. of Canterbury, fol. Lond. 1694 The life of the learned sir Thomas Smith 8vo. Lond. 1698 Stuart (George) . Joco-serious discourse, in two dialogues between a Northumberland gentleman and his tenant, a Scotchman, both old chevaliers 4to. Lond. 1686 Stubbe (Henry), of Ch. Ch. The Indian nectar, or a dis- course concerning chocolata 8vo. Lond. 1662 The miraculous conformist, or an account of severall marvailous cures performed by the stroaking of the hands of Mr. Valentine Greatarick, &c. 4to. Oxford, 1666 Stubbe (PhilHp), coU. Trin. Cantab. Fraus honesta; comoedia Cantabrigise acta 8vo. Lond. 1633 The anatomic of abuses 8vo, {Land. R. Jones, May 1583), imperfect — et 4to. Lond. Richard Johnes, 1595 135 Stubs (John). A battle-door for teachers and professors to learn singular and plural; by J. S. and G. Fox and Benjamin Furley, q. v. Styward (Thomas). The pathwaie to martiall discipline, devided into two bookes 4to. Lond. T. East, 1581 Suetonius (Caius), Tranquillus. The historie of twelve Caesars, emperonrsof Rome; translated by Philemon Holland fol. Lond. 1606 The history of the twelve Caesars ; newly translated and illustrated with their heads 8vo. Lond. 1677 Summers (Will), jester to King Henry VIII. A pleasant history of his life and death 4to. Lond. 1676 Supremacy. A protestation of the kings supremacie 8vo. n. p. 1605 Sutcliffe (Matthew). The practise, proceedings, and lawes of armes 4to. Lond. Ch. Barker, 1593 Sutton (Christopher), D.D. of Line. coll. Oxford. Disce vivere ; learns to live, &c. ; wherein is shewed, that the life of Christ is the most perfect patterne of direction to the life of a Christian Svo. Lond. 1602 Swan (John), M.A. Trin. coU. Cambr. Speculum mundi, or a glasse representing the face of the world 4to. Cambr. 1644 Swetnam (Joseph). The schoole of the noble and worthy science of defence 4to. Lond.lQ\7 The arraignment of lewd, idle, forward and unconstant women 4to. Lond. 1628 — and with merry dialogues, witty poems and jovial songs 8vo. Lond. 1704 and 8vo. Lond. 1733 Swetnam, the woman-hater, arraigned by women; a new comedie 4to. Lond. 1620 Swinburne (Henry). A treatise of spousals; or matri- monial contracts 4to. Lond. 1686 Sydrach (le Saige). The hystory and questyons of kynge Boccus and Sydracke, transl. out of Frenche by Hugo of Caumpedon (in verse) 4to. Lond. by The. Godfrey (1510) 136 Sylvain (Alexandre) . Epitomes de cent histoires tragicques ; ensemble quelques poemes 8vo. Paris, 1581 The orator; handling a hundred seuerall 'discourses, in forme of declamations ; englished by L. P. 4to. Land. Adam Islip, 1596 Sylvius (iEneas), postea Pius II papa. The historie of Eurialus and Lucre tia; translated by C. AUen 8vo. Lond. 1639 T. (D.), forsan Daniel Tuvil. Essaies politicke and morall 8vo. Lond. 1608 T. (G-.) Roger the Canterburian ; who cannot say grace for his meat, with a low crown'd hat before his face ; p. 285, vol. i, of the Phoenix Britannicus by J. Morgan, q. v. T. (John). Keepe within compasse; or, the worthy legacy of a wise father to his beloued sonne 8vo. Lond. 16 . . T. (E-.) Purgatory survey'd 8vo. Paris, 1663 T. (T.), i. e. Thomas Twyne, q. v. Tabourot (Jehan). Orchesographie, et traicte par lequel toutes personnes peuvent apprendre I'exercice des dances 4to. Lengres (1588) Tacitus (P. Cornelius) . His annales ; the description of Germanie ; translated by Richard Grenewey fol. {Land.) 1604 The end of Nero and beginning of Galba ; foure bookes of the histories ; and the life of Agricola, transl. by sh' H. Savile fol. {Lond.) 1604 Taffin (John) . The amendement of life ; in four books 4to. {Land. 1595) Tales. The mock-Clelia, being a comical history of French gallantries and novels in imitation of Don Quixote ; translated out of the French 8vo. Lond. 1678 Tarlton (Richard) . News out of purgatory 4to. Lond. 1630 Tasso (Torquato) . Godfrey of Boulogne, or the recouerie of lerusaiem ; done into English heroicaU verse by Edward Fairefax, gent. fol. Lond. 1624 137 Aminta, englisht^ with Ariadne's complaint [by J. Reynolds] 4to. Land. 1628 AmintaSj a pastoral ; made English by Mr. Oldmixon 8vo. Lond. 1698 Tatham (John). The Scots figgaries, or, a knot of knaves; a comedy 4to. Lond. 1653 Taverner (Richard). Prouerbes or adagies, gathered out of the Chiliades of Erasmus ; with new additions, as well of Latin prouerbes as of English 8vo. Lond. William How, 1569 The garden of wysdome conteynynge pleasaunt floures, drawen forth of good aucthours ; 2 bookes 8vo. Lond. by Wyll. Myddylton, s. a. — another edition 8vo. no title Tavernier (Jean Bapt.) A collection of several relations and treatises singular and curious; published by Edm. Ever aid fol. Lond. 1680 Taxes. A treatise of taxes and contributions 4to. Lond. 1667 Taylor (John), water-poet. All his workes fol. Lond. 1630 The needles excellency 4to. Lond. 1640 The old, old, very old man Thomas Parr 8vo. Lond. 1794 Jack a lent 4to. date cut off Taylor (Silas). The history of Gavel-kind, with the etymology thereof 4to. Lond. 1663 Taylor (Zach.), A.M. The Surey impostor; being an answer to a late fanatical pamphlet entituled The Surey demoniack 4to, Lond. 1697 Taylour (Charles) . A narrative of the strange and unex- pected finding of the crucifix and gold-chain of St. Edward the king and Confessor 4to. Lond. 1688 Temple (sir John), kt. The Irish rebellion 8vo. Lond. 1679 Temple of glas. bl. let. 4to. Imperfect remains of the four last leaves, but contammg the colophon— Explicit the Temple of glas. By Rvcharde Pynson. On the last page his device. ' [Not in Herbert] 138 A trental. bl. let. 4to. n. d. Four leaves^ con- cluding thus : This trental is wryten in thre langage In latyn frenche and englysshe eke In Ara cell who wyl it se In the southe side he may it seke God brynge vs to the blysse that euer shalbe. Amen. If Emprentyd by Rychede Pynson [Not in Herbert] Terentius (Publius)^ Afer. Terence in English ; fabulee comici facetissimi et elegantissimi poetse Terentii omnes Anglicse factse^ oper^ Eic. Bernard 4to. Cantabr. apud Joan. Legal, 1598 — and 4to. Lond. 1629 His comedies made English with his life and some remarks^ by L. Echard and others 8vo. Loni. 1694 Testamentum (Novum). The Newe Testament (Tindale's second translation ; see Cotton, p. 130), imperf. Bvo. (pirated edit, of 1534) — newlye corrected (by W. Tyndale) 8vo. n. p. 1536 — yet once agayne corrected, wheare vnto is added an exhortacion of Erasmus 8vo. {Antwerp), n. d. The Newe Testament, both in Latine and Englyshe; by Myles Coverdale (slightly imperf. ; see Herbert, p. 1448) 4to. Southwarke, J. Nicolson, 1538 — another edition (see Herbert, p. 1449) 4to. Southwarke, by J. Nicolson, 1538 — another copy, imperfect The Newe Testament ; Lat. and Eng., imperf. 4to. {Lond. by Rob. Redman, 1538) — and 8vo. Paris, F. Regnault, 1538 — faythfully translated by Myles Coverdale ; imperf. 8vo. n. p. 1550 The New Testament (Coverdale^s) 8vo. Antwerpe, by Matthew Crom, 1539 — 4to. Land. Rycharde Jugge (1553) — 8vo. Geneva, 1557 — englished by L. Tomson (from the supposed library of Masterre Wyllyamme Shakespeare) 8vo, Lond. Christoph. Barker, 1581 — another edition 8vo. Lond. by Christ. Barker, 1589 — faithfully translated into English, out of the authen- ticall Latin ; by the English College at Douay 4to. Antwerp, 1600 139 The New Testament 8vo. Lond. 1625 Thayre (Thomas). A treatise of the pestilence 4to. title wanting Theocritus. The Idylliums (with Rapin's discourse of pastorals), done into English, by Th. Creech 8vo. Oxford, 1684 Thevet (Andre), d'Angoulesme. The new found vvorlde, or Antarctike ; newly translated into Englishe by M. Hacket 4to. Lond. Henry Bynneman, 1568 Thomas (William) . Principal rules of the Italian grammar, with a dictionary for the better understandyng of Boccace, Petrarcha, and Dante 4to. Lond. The. Berthelet, 1550 The historye of Italye 4to. Lond. Th. Marshe, 1561 Thomasius (Thomas). Dictionarium summa fide ac dili- gentia accuratissime emendatum; Latine et An- glice, cum Ph. Hollandi supplemento 4to. Lond. 1615 Thucidides. The hystory writtone of the warre, whiche was betwene the Peloponesians and the Athenyans ; translated oute of Prenche by Th. Nicolls fol. Lond. 1550 Tillotson (John), D.D., archb. of Canterbury. A discourse against purgatory 4to. Lond. 1685 — and 4to. Dublin, 1686 Tilnay (Edmonde). A briefe and pleasant discourse of duties in mariage, called the flower of friendshippe 8vo. Lond. Henrie Denham, 1571 Tompson (Jo.) A garden of delight, deck'd with choice flowers of English poetry 8vo. Lond. 1658 Topsell (Edward). The historic of foure-footed beastes, collected out of all the volumes of Conradus Gesner fol. Lond. 1607 The historic of serpents, or, the second booke of lining creatures fol. Lond. 1608 The history of four-footed beasts and serpents fol. Lond. 1658 140 Torquemeda (Antoni de). The Spanish Mandeuile of miracles (translated by L. Lewkenor) 4to. Lond. 1600 Torrent. This broadside was afterwards folded in quarto and used as a proof at the press for a romance (now lost in print) entitled " Torrente of Portyngale/' bl. let. Mr. Douce has likewise preserved two more leaves of this romance, of the same edition, which is clearly with Pynson's type ; begins, Thus the lady dwelled there Tyll that she delyuered were Of men chyldren two Of all poyntes were they gent Lyke were they to syr torent For his loue suffred they wo. Torriano (Gio.) The second alphabet consisting of pro- verbial phrases fol. Lond. 1662 Fabrica nova di dialoghi Italiani ; a new fabrick, or set of Italian dialogues, ibid. Piazza universale di proverbi Italiani ; or, a common place of Italian proverbs and proverbial phrases fol. Lond. 1666 The Italian revived ; or, the introduction to the Italian tongue 8vo. Lond. 1689 Mescolanza dolce di varie historiette 8vo. Lond. 1688 Tortello (Arcangelo) . The pope's cabinet unlocked; trans- lated into English by John Sidway; with an ap- pendix 4to. Lond. 1680 Travellers (the boke for) bl. let. 4to. Wynkyn de Worde Two leaves; sign. A ii, and corresponding leaf. It agrees with the type of the " Memorare novissima " mentioned before [Not in Herbert] Trenchfield (Caleb) . Christian chymistrie, extracting the honey of instruction from variety of objects 8vo. Lond. 1663 Tryon (Thomas) . A treatise on cleanness in meats and drinks, of the preparation of food, the excellency of good airs, and the benefits of clean sweet beds 4to. Lond. 1682 141 The way to make all people rich ; or, wisdom's call to temperance and frugality, by Philotheos Physiologus 8vo. Lond. 1685 Tuke (Thomas). The picture of a picture; or, the character of a painted woman [see app. to Tuke's treatise against painting, &c., p. 57] . fol. a broad sheet, n.p. or d. Turhervile (George) . The booke of faulconrie or banking, for the onely delight and pleasure of aU noblemen and gentlemen 4to. Lond. Henry Bynneman, 1575 The noble arte of venerie or hunting 4to. Land.. Henry Bynneman, n. d. Turbervil (Hodg). Walk, knaves, walk; a discourse in- tended to have been spoken at court ; p. 261, vol. i, of the Phoenix Britannicus, by J. Morgan, q. v. Turk. The policy of the Turkish empire 4to. Lond. Jo. Windet, 1597 Turner (William), M.D. The huntyng and fynding out of the Romish fox 8vo. Basyll, 1543 The rescuying of the Romishe fox, otherwyse called the examination of the hunter, deuised by steven gardiner 8vo. Winchester, by Hanse hit prik, 1545 A new booke of spirituall physik for dyuerse diseases of the nobilite and gentlemen of Englande 8vo. Rome, 1555 The first, seconde, and thirde parties of his herbal fol. Collen Arnold Birckman, 1568 A booke of the natures and properties, as well of the bathes in England as of other bathes in Germanye and Italye. ibid. A new boke of the natures and properties of all wines that are commonlye vsed here in England 8vo. Lond. by W. Seres, 1568 This booke sheweth at large the powers, commodities, vertues, and properties, of the three most renouned and famous preseruatives, or triacles. ibid. Turvey. The tincker of Turvey, his merry pastime in his passing from Billingsgate to Graves-end 4to. Lond. 1630 142 Tusser (Thomas). Fiue hundreth pointes of good hus- bandries as well for the champion or open countrie, as also for the woodland or severally mixed in euerie month with huswiferie 4to. Lond. by Peter Short, 1597 Tyndale (WUlyam). The obedyence of a Chrysten man. bl. let. 4to. Lond. by Wyllyam Coplande, 1561 Vfenius (Otho)^ Batavolugdunensis. Amorum emblemata; emblemes of love with verses in Latin, English and Italian [the English by Eic. Verstegan] 4to. Antv. 1608 Valentin. Valentine and Orson, the two sons of the emperour of Greece 4to. Lond. 1694 — and 4to. Lond. n. d. Valerianus (Johannes Pierius), Bellunensis. A treatise, which is intitled in Latin Pro sacerdotum barbis, translated into Englysshe 8vo. Lond. Tho. Berthelet, 1533 Valois (Marguerite de), royne de Navarre. The queene of Nauarres tales, now newly translated out of French into English 4to. Lond. by V. S. for I. Oxenbridge, 1597 Heptameron, or the history of the fortunate lovers; made English by Rob. Codrington Svo. Lond. 1654 The grand cabinet-counsels unlocked; or, the most faithful transaction of the court-affairs^ and growth and continuation of the civil wars in Prance, betwixt the Huguenots and the papists ; translated by Rob. Codrington Svo. Lond. 1658 Ubaldino (Petruccio), Florentiao. A discourse concerning the Spanishe fleete invadinge Englande in the yeare 1588, and overthrowne by her Ma"'- navie, under the conduction of lorde Charles Howard 4to. Lond. A. Hatfield, 1590 Udall (Nicolas). Floures for Latine spekynge, selected and gathered oute of Terence, and the same trans- lated into Englysshe 8vo. Londini, Tho. Bertheletus, 1533 Udall (W.), alias Wil. Strangeways. The historic of the life and death of Mary Stuart, Queene of Scotland Svo. Lond. 1636 143 Veel (Robert) . New court-songs and poems 8vo. Land. 1672 Venatles (col. Robert). The experienced angler; or, angling improved 8vo. Lond. 1662 Verdier (le sieur du). The love and armes of the Greeke princes; or, the romant of romants; translated from the French fol. Lond. 1640 Vergilius (Polydorus), Urbinas. An abridgement of his notable worke conteignying the deuisers and fyrst fynders out asweU of artes, ministeries, feactes and ciuil ordinaunces, as of rites and ceremonies com- monly vsed in the churche ; compendiously gathered by Thomas Langley 8vo. Lond. Richarde Grafton, 1546 Veron (John), Senonoys. The huntynge of purgatorye to death, made dialogewyse. bl. let. Bvo. Lond. by Jhon Tysdale, 1561 A dictionarie in Latine and English; newlie coiTected and enlarged by R. Waddington 4to. Lond. by Rafe Newberie and H. Denham, 1584 ViUeneuve (Huon de) . The history of the four sonnes of Aymon fol. imperf. Vilvain (Rob.), of Excester. Encliiridium epigrammatum Latino-Anglicum : an epitome of essais, englished out of Latin 8vo. Lond. 1654 Vincent (Sam.) The young gallanf s academy 8vo. Lond. 1674 The character of a town-huff ; p. 73. ibid. The character of a right generous and well-bred gentle- man; p. 87. ibid. Vincent (T.), minister of Maudlins, Milk Street. Gods terrible voice in the city Bvo. Lond. 1667 Viret (Pierre). Disputations Chrestiennes, touchant I'estat des trepassez {anon.) 8vo. 1552 — translated out of French by J. Brooke 4to. Lond. by Thomas East, 1579 Virgilius (Publius), Maro. The boke of Eneydos, out of Frenshe reduced in to Englysshe by me WyUm Caxton 4to. {Lond.) 1490 144. The first fovre bookes of Virgils ^neis, translated by Rich. Stanyhurst 8vo. Lond. byHen.Bynneman,1583 The xiii bookes of J^neidos ; translated into English verse by Th. Phaer and Th. Twyne 4to. Lond. by Will. Howe, 1584 The xii jiEneidSj translated by John Vicars 8vo. Lond. 1632 The Bucoliks together with his Georgiks, translated into English verse by Abr. Fleming 4to. Lond. by T. 0. 1589 Virgilius. The lyfe of Virgilius and of his deth and many marvayles that he dyd in hys lyfe time by whych- crafte and nygramancye thorowgh the helpe of the devyls of hell 4to. Anwarpe, John Doesborcke, n. d. Virtus. The boke of wisdome, otherwise called the flower of vertue ; translated fyrst out of Italion into French and out of French into English by John Larke 8vo. Lond. Tho. Colwell, n. d. Vives (Johannes Ludovicus) . A very frvtefvl and pleasant booke called the instruction of a Christen woman ; tourned out of latyne into Englishe by Rycharde Hyrde 4to. Lond. by Henry Wykes, 1557 Voragine (Jacobus de). The golden legende fol. [imperf.) Westmestre, by' Wyllyam Cawton, 1483 — and fol. Lond. Julyan Notary, 1503 — and fol. Lond. Wynkyn de Worde, 1527 Urquhart (sir Thomas), of Cromarty. The discovery of a most exquisite jewel, found in the kennel of Wor- cester-streets, the day after the fight 8vo. Lond. 1652 A peculiar promptuary of time : wherein is displayed a most exact directory for aU particular chronologies, in what family soever 8vo. Lond. 1652 W. (A.) A book of cookrye 8vo. Lond. by Edward Allde, 1591 W. (D.), of the Middle-Temple. A perspicuous compen- dium of several irregularities and abuses in the present practice of the common laws of England 4to. Lond. 1656 W. (N.) The refin'd courtier 8vo. Lond. 1663 M.5 W. (W.) England's witty and ingenions jester. 8vo. Load. n. d. ^)'agstafFe (John), M.A. Oriel, col. Oxford. The question of witchcraft debated ; or a discourse a!;ainst their opinion that affirm witches 8vo. Lond. 1 669 — 2d edit. 8vo. Lond.M\7\ Waller (sir William). The tragical history of Jetzcr 8vo. Lond. 1683 Walter (W.) The spectacle of loners : a lytell contravers dyalogue bytwene lone and councell — newly com- pyled by William Walter, bl. let. 4to. n. d. Two leaves ; on the first is the same woodcut of a ship fnll of people as in W. de Worde's edition of Richard Coenr de Lion, 1528 Walton (Izaak). The compleat angler; or, the contem- plative man's recreation ; 1st edition 8vo. Lond. 1653 — 4th edition 8vo. Lond. 1668 Ward (Edward). A trip to New-England; with a character of the country and people, both English and Indians . fol. Lond. 1699 Ward (Nathaniel). The simple cobler of Aggawam in America 4to. Lond. 1647 Warner (William) . The first and second part of Albions England ; with an addition contayning a breviat of the true historic of iEneas : in verse and prose 4to. Lond. by Thomas Oriviii, 1589 — 4to. Lond. by Thomas Orw'in, 1592 — 4to. Lond. 1612 Weamys (Anne). A continuation of Sir Ph. Sydney's Arcadia 8vo. Lond. 1651 Weather. Perpetuall and naturall prognostications of the change of weather ; translated out of Italian into English by J. P. 8vo. Lond. lohii IVolfe, 1591 Web, or Webbe (George), D.D. Catalogus protestan- tium ; or, the protestants kalender ; containing a surview of the protestants religion long before Luthers dayes, even to the time of the apostles, and in the primitive church 4to, Lond. 1624 ^ 10 146 Webster (John). A cure for a cuckold; a pleasant comedyj bj^ J. W. and "\V. Rowley 4-to. Land. 1661 The Tliracian wonder ; a comedy 4to. {Lond. IQQV) ATebster (John), M.D. The displaying of supposed witch- craft fol. Lond. 1677 Weelkes (Thomas). Ayeres or phantasticke spirites for three voices. Bassus 4to. Lond. 1608 jNIadrigals of 5 and 6 parts, apt for the viols and voices. Quinto 4to. Lond. 1600 Madrigals of 6 parts, &c. Quinto 4to. Lond. 1600 — Sesto 4to. Lond. 1600 Weldon (Sir A.) The court and character of king James 8vo. Lond. 1650 — whereunto is now added the court of king Charles; continued unto the beginning of these unhappy times 8vo. Lond. 1651 Wesley (Samuel). Maggots; or poems on several subjects, never before handled. {Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1685 Wharton (sir George) . A new almanack and prognostica- tion for the yeare 1644 8vo. Oxford, 1644 The cabal of the twelve houses astrologicall discovered 8to. Lond. 1659 Calendarium ecclesiasticum ; or, a new almanack after the old fashion for the commune year 1659 8vo. Lond. 1659 Wheler (sir George), preb. of Durham. An account of the churches or places of assembly of the primitive Christians 8vo. Lond. 1689 Whetstones (George) . A mirour for magestrates of cyties; and hereunto is added a touchstone for the time 4to. Lond. by Rich. lones, 1584 White (John) . The first century of scandalous, malignant priests 4to. Lond. 1643 A rich cabinet, with variety of inventions in several 'arts and sciences 8vo. Lond. 1677 White-hall. A deep sigh breath'd through the lodgings at White-hall deploring the absence of the court, and the miseries of the pallace 4to. Lond. 164:2 147 Whitehome (Peter). Certaine waies for the ordering of souldiours in battelray, and setting of battailes 4to. Lond. Th. East, 1588 Whitney (Geffrey). A choice of emhlemes and other devises for the moste parte gathered out of sundrie writers ; englished and moralized 4to. Leyden, 1586 Whytford (Richard), priest. The martiloge in englysshe after the use of the chirche of Salisbury ; as it is redde in Syon, ■\vith addicyons 4to. Lond. TTynhjn de Worde, 1526 Whythorne (Thomas). Bassus; of duos, or songs for two voices 8vo. Lond. Tli. Este, 1590 The third part of songes composed by him, conteyning songes for five voyces 4to. imperf. "Wickliff (John). Wycklyffes wycket : whyche he made in king Rycards days the second in the yere of oui- lorde Grod 1395. bl. let. 8vo. Norenburch, 1546 Two short treatises, against the orders of the begging friars 4to. Oxford, 1608 Wilcox (Thomas) . A glasse for gamesters : and namelie for suche as delight in cards and dise 8vo. Lond. by Jhon Kyngston, 1581 Wild (Robert), D.D. Iter Boreale; with large additions of several other poems 8vo. Lond. 1670 Williams (sir Roger). A briefe discourse of waiTe. 4to. Lond. by Th. Orw'm, 1590 — 2d edition 4to. Lond. by Th. Orwin, 1590 W^ilson ( — ), a non-conformist divine. Yitis degeneris; or, the degenerate-plant ; being a treatise of antient ceremonies; translated from the French by Thos. Douglas. (Anon.) 8vo. Lond. 1668 Wilson (Thomas), D.C.L. The arte of rhetorique. 4to. Lond. by Ihon Kingston, 1562 A discourse vppon vsurye, by waye of dialogue and ora- tions 8vo. Lond. by R. Tottel, 1572 The rule of reason, conteinyng the art of logike 4to. Lond. by Ihon Kynystun, 1580 148 A\'iue. Wiue, beer, ale, and tobacco, contending for superiority ; a dialogue 4to. Land. 1658 AVingate (Edmund), of Grays Inne. The exact constable; lourth edition " 8vo. Lond. 1677 AVinstanley (William). The Muses cabinet, stored with variety of poems 8vo. iowc?. 1655 England's worthies 8vo. Lond. 1684 The lives of the most famous English poets 8vo. Lond. 1687 The Essex champion; or, the famous history of sir Billy of Billerecay, and his squire Ricardo 4to. Lond. n. d. — and 8vo. Lond. (1699) Historical rarities and curious observations, domestick and foreign 8vo. Lond. 1684 Wit. Witt's recreations augmented, with ingenious con- ceites for the wittie and merrie medecines for the melancholie 8vo. Lond. 1641 Recreation for ingenious head-peeces ; or, a pleasant grove for their wits to walk in 8vo. Lond 1663 The second part of merry drollery, &c. collected by W. N., C. B., R. S., J. G., lovers of wit 8vo. Lond. n. d. Witches and Witchcraft. A strange report of sixe most notorious witches, who by their diuelish practises murdred aboue the number of foure hundred small children, besides the great hurtes they committed upon diuers other people 4to. Lond. 1601 The wonderful discoverie of the witchcrafts of Margaret and Phillip Elower, executed at Lincolne, March 11, 1618 4to. Lond. 1619 A most certain, strange, and true discovery of a witch ; being taken by some of the parliament forces, as she was standing on a small plack-board and sayling on it over the river of Newbury 4to. n. p. 1643 A true and exact relation of the severall informations, examinations, and confessions of the late witches, arraigned and executed in the county of Essex 4to. Lond. 1645 The power of witchcraft ; being a relation of one Mr. W. Harrison, of Cambden, how he was bewitched 8vo. Lond. 1663 149 A pleasant treatise of witches ; their imps, and meetings, persons bewitched, magicians, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1673 A true and impartial relation of the informations against three witches, who were convicted at Exon, Aug. 14, 1682 4to. Lond. 1682 A collection of modern relations of matter of fact con- cerning witches and witchcraft upon the persons of people 8vo. Lond. 1693 Sadducismus debellatus; or, a true narrative of the sorceries and witchcrafts exercis'd by the devil and his instruments on Mrs. Christian Shaw 4to. Lond. 1698 Withals (John). A short dictionarie in Latine and English, reuised by Lewis Euans, and now lastly augmented by Abr. Fleming 4to. Lond. Thomas Purfoot, 1599 — a new edition by W. Clerk 8vo. Lond. 1634 Wither (George). A view of the marginal notes of the popish Testament translated by the English fugitiue Papists resiant at Rhemes 4to. Lond. Edm. Bollifant (1588) Wither, or Wyther (George) . Abuses stript and whipt, or satirical essay es, divided into two bookes 8vo. Lo^d. 1614 The shepherds hunting 8vo. Lond. 1615 A satyre, dedicated to his most excellent majestic Bvo. Lond. 1615 Withers motto 8vo. Lond. 1633 Faire-virtue, the mistress of Phil' Arete 8vo. Lond. 1633 Juvenilia. 8vo. Lond. 1633 The hymnes and songs of the church 8vo. Lond. printed by the assignes of George Wither, n. d. Wodroephe (John) . The spared houres of a souldier in his travels ; or, the true marrowe of the French tongue fol. Dort, 1623 Women. The lawes resolutions of womens rights 4to. Lond. 1632 The womens sharp revenge; or, an answer to sir Seldome Sober, that writ those raibng pamphelets called the luniper and Crabtree lectures, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1640 150 The great advocate and oratour for women 8vo. n. p. 1682 Wood (William) . The bow-man's glory ; or^ archery- revived 8vo. Land. 1682 — and 8vo. Lond. 1691 Woodes (Nathaniell). An excellent new commedie intituled, the conflict of conscience 4to. Lond. Rich. Bradocke, 1581 World. A prospect of the most famous parts of the world 8vo. Lond. 1646 Worlidge (John). Systema horti-culturse ; or, the art of gardening 8vo. Lond. 1677 Wortley (Francis), knt. and bart. Characters and elegies. 4to. n. p. 1646 Wotton (sir Henry), knt. Reliquiae Wottonianse; or, a collection of lives, letters, poems, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1651 Wright (Leonard). A summons for sleepers 4to. n.p. 1589 A patterne for pastors ; p. 45, ibid. Writing. A common writing; whereby two, not under- standing one the others language, yet by the helpe thereof, may communicate their minds one to another 4to. n. p. 1647 Wyvill (sir Christopher), bart. Certaine serious thoughts which at several! times have stollen themselves into verse 8vo. Lond. 1647 Xenophon (Atheniensis) . His historic: containing the ascent of Cyrus into the higher countries ; trans- lated by J. Bingham fol. Lond. 1623 His treatise of housholde; translated by Gentian Heruet 8vo. Lond. Tho. Berthelet, 1537 — and 8vo. Lond. by John Allde, 1573 Yonge (William), M.D. Englands shame ; or, the un- masking of a politick atheist; being a full and faithful relation of the life and death of that grand impostor Hugh Peters 8vo. Lond. 1663 151 Yorke (James), black-smith. The union of honour; con- taining the armes, matches and issues of the kings, dukes, marquesses and carles of England, from the conquest untill this present yeere, 1640 fol. Lond. 1640 Young (Thomas), of Staple-Inne. Englands bane; or, the description of drunkennesse 4to. Lond. 1617 Youth. Youths behaviour; or, decencic in conversation amongst men : composed in French, now newly turned into English by Francis Hawktus ; 7th impression 8vo. Lond. 1661 — 8th impression, with additions ; and the first entrance of a youth to the university 8vo. Lond. 1663 — 11th impression with new additions 8vo. Lond. 1672 The second part of youth's behaviour, by Rob. Codring- ton, q. V. J. E. ADI.AED, PKINTliE, BAKTHOI OJIltw (M^