Sir Gregory Nonsence his newes from no place Written on purpose, with much study to no end, plentifully stored with want of wit, learning, iudgement, rime and reason, and may seeme very fitly for the vnderstanding of nobody. Toyte, Puncton, Ghemorah, Molushque, Kaycapepson. This is the worke of the authors, without borrowing or stealing from others. By Iohn Taylor.

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Title
Sir Gregory Nonsence his newes from no place Written on purpose, with much study to no end, plentifully stored with want of wit, learning, iudgement, rime and reason, and may seeme very fitly for the vnderstanding of nobody. Toyte, Puncton, Ghemorah, Molushque, Kaycapepson. This is the worke of the authors, without borrowing or stealing from others. By Iohn Taylor.
Author
Taylor, John, 1580-1653.
Publication
Printed in London :: [By N[icholas] O[kes]] and are to bee sold betweene Charing-Crosse, and Algate,
1700 [i.e. 1622]
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"Sir Gregory Nonsence his newes from no place Written on purpose, with much study to no end, plentifully stored with want of wit, learning, iudgement, rime and reason, and may seeme very fitly for the vnderstanding of nobody. Toyte, Puncton, Ghemorah, Molushque, Kaycapepson. This is the worke of the authors, without borrowing or stealing from others. By Iohn Taylor." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A13499.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 6, 2024.

Pages

Page [unnumbered]

Some sence at last to the learned.

YOu that in Greeke and Latine learned are, And of the ancient Hebrew haue a share: You that most rarely oftentimes haue sung, In the French, Spanish or Italian tongue, Here I in English haue imploid my pen, To be read by the learnedst Englishmen, Wherein the meanest Scholler plaine may see, I vnderstand their tongues, as they do me.
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