The Booke of bulls, baited with two centuries of bold jests, and nimble-lies, or, A Combat betweene sence and non-sence, being at strife who shall infuse most myrth into the gentle-reader a treatise in variety of pleasure second to none ever yet printed in the English-tongue : wherein is contained nothing alreadie published / collected by A.S. Gent.
- Title
- The Booke of bulls, baited with two centuries of bold jests, and nimble-lies, or, A Combat betweene sence and non-sence, being at strife who shall infuse most myrth into the gentle-reader a treatise in variety of pleasure second to none ever yet printed in the English-tongue : wherein is contained nothing alreadie published / collected by A.S. Gent.
- Publication
- Imprinted at London :: For Daniel Frere and are to be sold at the Bull in Little-Brittaine,
- 1636.
- Rights/Permissions
-
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- Subject terms
- English wit and humor.
- Bulls, Colloquial.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A18367.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"The Booke of bulls, baited with two centuries of bold jests, and nimble-lies, or, A Combat betweene sence and non-sence, being at strife who shall infuse most myrth into the gentle-reader a treatise in variety of pleasure second to none ever yet printed in the English-tongue : wherein is contained nothing alreadie published / collected by A.S. Gent." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A18367.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 22, 2024.
Contents
- frontispiece
- title page
- To the Blinde Reader.
- TO The discerning Reader.
- TO The Bull-Reader.
-
THE
BOOK OF
Bulls.
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-
THE
TWO LAST
Centuries of Bulls,
Iests and Lies.
- jest
- A lowd Lie.
- Of a Fellow with a wide Mouth.
- A Lie.
- Of one who thought to get ano∣thers Sword by praising it.
- A Lie.
- Of a Puritan.
- A Lie.
- Of two chollerieke Gamesters.
- A Lie.
- Of the Kings Evill.
- A Lie.
- Of an old Man and a Boy.
- A Lie.
- Of a Gentlewoman who sung out of time, and tune.
- A Lie.
- Of a Thiefe.
- A Lie.
- Of a Fart.
- A Lie.
- Of a Three-penny-Ordinary.
- A Lie.
- Of a Woman in Labour.
- A Lie.
- Of a Glutton.
- A Lie.
- A Lie.
- A Lie.
- A Lie.
- Of an Ape Carrier.
- Of a Protestant, and a Papist.
- Of two Gentlemen, and an Hostesse.
- Of the Sunnes Eclipse.
- Of a loving Wife.
- Of a loving couple.
- Of a Poet, and a Sculler.
- Another of his touching a Pigge.
- A Jinne of his to catch Fiddles.
- Of a journy of his into the Countrey.
- Of one whose Horse tired.
- Of another whose Horse tired.
- Of a Gentleman, and a Carman.
- Of a Player, and a Bearward.
- Of a Boy that saw a Dogge in a Wheele.
- Of a ridiculous Fellow.
- Of taking the Wall.
- Of a House and a Sellar.
- Of a witty Clearke.
- Of a Spitter before a Justice.
- Of a Tailor and a Horse.
- Of Evill in Good.
- Of a Jakesfarmer.
- Of a Child, and a fat Man.
- Of Bankes, and his Horse.
- Of two men stunge with Gnats.
- Of a Merry Fellow.
-
Of one who
rswore being bound. - Of a Gentleman and a Pandar.
- Of a Drunkards eyes.
-
Of a
pend all in drinke. - Of one who lost his nose with the French Pox.
- Of another nose lost with the same Pox.
- Of Peters being at Rome.
- Of the same Captaine Norris.
- Of an Annuitie given to the same Captaine, by Sir Edward Norris.
- Of a short Cloake.
- Of no Lawyer is Heaven.
- Of a fellow who gave his eldest Sonne to the Divell.
- Of a foolish Constable.
- Of a posie for a Ring.
- Of a posie for a Ring.
- Of one that called the Pope Antichrist.
- Of a Woman and her Daughters▪ ugly alike.
- Of Knights oth' Post.
- Of a Formall Fellow.
- Of a Traveller.
- Of a witty Wench and her Lover.
- Of laying ods.
- Of a blind fellow playing upon a wheeled Cymball.
- Of a long Nose.
- Of a Gentleman, and a Shrieve of London.
- Of a Silenc'd Minister, who spake in the nose.
- Of a Puritans kneeeling to the Kings health.
- Of a blind Man.
- Of a Captaine and his Hostesse.
- Of one demanding the way.
- Of an Ʋsurer.
- Of a Doctor of the Ciuill Law created at Orleans in FRANCE.
- Of a mad-Man.
- Of a fellow who had a shrew to his wife.
- Of the builder of Bedlam.
- Of a fellow three times im∣prisoned for naming his profession.
- Of a Suter to a Widow.
- A witty encounter betweene two.
- Of a most significant word.
- Of a Drunkard.
- Of an ugly Man, and a beauti∣full Woman.
-
Of the same Mouns
ere. - Of a one ey'd Fellow.
- Of a Musitian.
- Of two Beggars.
- Of Lice.
- Of Lice.
- Of loosing Eares.
- Of two Roarers.
- Of an ugly Woman.
- Of a Constable.
- Of a Constable.
- Of a Souldier.
- Of a begging Souldier.
- Of a short Memory.
- Of a Foole.
- Of a Fellow having two Wives.
- Of a fellow in a Tempest.
- Of a red-headed Host, and his more red-headed Guest.
- Of a red-headed Chymney-Sweeper.
- Of one in danger of arresting.
- An Epitaph upon on who died of the French-Poxe.
- Of two Sects of Philosophers, the Hennists, and Eggists.
- Of taking the Wall.
- Of Baboones.
- Of a Glutton.
- Of the Duke of Lerma.
- Of a foolish Moun-siere.
- Of the same Mounsiere.
- Of the same Moun-siere.
- Of the same Mounsiere.
- Of a Poet.
- Of Poets in generall.
- Of Purgatory.
- Of an Offering at a Wedding.
- Of one who in a short time get a great estate by seaven Wives.
- Of a Hare.
- Of Sallets.
- Of drinking with herbes.
- Of drinking with an Orange peele.
- Of a new Papist.
- Of a Taylors Bill.
- Of loosing eares.
- Of a Souldier.
- Of a Welshman.
- Of one who fear'd arresting.
- Of three Ʋniversities.
- Of a Play.
- Of Frigiditie.
-
Of
s ipwrack. - Of a young Seaman.
-
Of
. - Of a Disputation betweene a Protestant and a Papist.
- Of Healths.
- Of one in a storme.
- Of a Sea Captaine, and an Ʋsurer.
- Of two who went to see two playes.
- Of houshold stuffe.
- Of a Gentleman Arrested.
- Of two Brothers.
- Of a octour that dis∣puted by Signes.
- Of two Drunkards.