The sculler rowing from Tiber to Thames with his boate laden with a hotch-potch, or gallimawfry of sonnets, satyres, and epigrams. With an addition of pastorall equiuocques or the complaint of a shepheard. By Iohn Taylor.
- Title
- The sculler rowing from Tiber to Thames with his boate laden with a hotch-potch, or gallimawfry of sonnets, satyres, and epigrams. With an addition of pastorall equiuocques or the complaint of a shepheard. By Iohn Taylor.
- Author
- Taylor, John, 1580-1653.
- Publication
- Printed at London :: By E[dward] A[llde] & are to be solde [by Nathaniel Butter] at the Pide-bull neere St. Austins gate,
- 1612.
- Rights/Permissions
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- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A13493.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"The sculler rowing from Tiber to Thames with his boate laden with a hotch-potch, or gallimawfry of sonnets, satyres, and epigrams. With an addition of pastorall equiuocques or the complaint of a shepheard. By Iohn Taylor." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A13493.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 19, 2024.
Contents
- title page
-
TO THE RIGHT WOR∣shipfull and worthy fauourer of lear∣ning, my singular good Maister, Sir WIL∣LIAM WAAD Knight, Liefetenant of his Mties Tower of London, your poore seruant Iohn Tay∣lor,consecrates this his first Inuentions: wishing You, and Yours, all happines temporall and eternall. -
To the right worshipfull and my euer respected, M
r . IOHN MORAYEsquire. -
To my deere respected friend Mr.
Beniamin Iohnson. -
To my louing friend IOHN TAYLOR. -
To the one and onely water-Poet and my friend Iohn Taylor. - In laudem Authoris.
- poem
-
To my louing friend Iohn Taylor. - To my friend both by water and land IOHN TAYLOR.
-
To my louing friend IOHN TAYLOR. - Prologue to the READER.
- TO TOM CORIET.
- The Author in his owne defence.
-
To the whole kennell of
Anti∣Christs hounds, Priests, friers, monks, and Iesuits, mastiffs, mongrells, Islands, Spanniells, blood-hounds, bobtaile∣tike, or foysting-hound: the Sculler sends greeting.- Epigram 1.
- Epigram 2.
- Epigram 3.
- Epigram 4.
- Epigram 5.
- Epigram 6.
- Epigram 7.
- Epigram 8.
- Epigram 9.
- Epigram 10
- Epigram 11.
- Epigram 12.
- Epigram 13.
- Epigram 14.
- Epigram 15.
- Epigram 16.
- Epigram 17.
- Epigram 18.
- Epigram 19.
- Epigram 20.
- Epigram 21.
- Epigram 22.
- Epigram 23.
- Epigram 24.
- Epigram 25.
- The beliefe of a Romish Catholike. Epig. 26.
- Epigram 27.
- Epigram 28.
- Epigram 29.
-
To his aproued good friend M
r .Robert Branthwayt. -
To his well esteemed friend Mr.
Maximilian Waad. -
To my friend Mr.
William Sherman. - Epigram 1.
- Epigram 2.
- Epigram 3.
- Epigram 4.
- Epigram 5.
- Epigram 6.
- Epigram 7.
- Epigram 8.
- Epigram 9.
- Epigrom 10.
- Epigrum 12.
- Epigram 12.
- Epigram 13,
- Epigram 14.
- Epigram 15.
- Epigram 16.
- Epigram 17.
- Epigram 18.
- Epigram 19.
- Epigram 20.
- Epigram 21.
- Epigram 22.
- Epigram 23.
- Epigram 24.
- Epigram 25.
- Epigram 26.
- Epigram 27.
- Epigram 28.
- Epigram 29.
- Epigram 30.
- Epigram 31.
- Epigram 32.
- Epigram 33.
- Epigram 34.
- Epigram 35.
- Epigram 36.
- Epigram 37.
- Epigram 38.
- Epigram 39.
- Epigram 40.
- Epigram 41.
- Epigram 42.
- Epigram 43.
- Epigram 44.
- Epigram 45.
- Epigram 46.
- Satire
- Satire.
- Pastorall Equinocks, or a Shepheards complaint.
- Epitaph.
- Sonnet: In trust lies treason.
- Death with the foure Elements.
- Epilogue.
- poem