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.

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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.
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"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 June 10, 2024.

Pages

Page [unnumbered]

Epigram 24.

WHo dares for Gluttony the Pope accuse,* 1.1 Or gainst voluptuous dyet make's complaints? His Holynes so many Fasts doth vse, As 〈◊〉〈◊〉, and fasting dayes, and Eeues of Saints. Yet where Pride, 〈◊〉〈◊〉, and Auarice are found, Heart gnawing Enuy, and fell murdering Wrath, There rauenous Gluttony must needs abound, Else other vices will be out of breath. For Papists fasts are generally more deare, Then feasts of 〈◊〉〈◊〉 with all their cheare.

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