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Taylor, John (1615]). The muses mourning, or, Funerall sonnets on the death of Iohn Moray Esquire. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1617.). Three vveekes, three daies, and three houres obseruations and trauel, from London to Hamburgh in Germanie. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1618.). A briefe remembrance of all the English monarchs, from the Normans conquest, vntill this present. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1618.). The pennyles pilgrimage, or, The money-lesse perambulation, of Iohn Taylor, alias the Kings Majesties water-poet. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1619.). A kicksey winsey, or, a lerry come-twang. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1620.). Taylor his trauels. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1620.). The life and death of the most blessed among women, the Virgin Mary mother of our Lord Iesus. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1620]). An English-mans loue to Bohemia. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1621.). Superbiæ flagellum, or, The vvhip of pride. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1621.). Taylor's motto. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1621.). The colde tearme, or, The frozen age, or, The metamorphosis of the Riuer of Thames. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1621.). The praise, antiquity, and commodity, of beggery, beggers, and begging. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1621.). The vnnaturall father, or, The cruell murther committed by [one] Iohn Rowse of the towne of Ewell, ten m[iles]from London, in the county of Surry, vpon two of his owne children. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1621]). [Taylors goose]. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1621]). A shilling, or, The trauailes of twelue-pence. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1621]). The subjects joy for the Parliament. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1622.). A verry merry vvherry-ferry-voyage, or, Yorke for my money. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1622.). An arrant thiefe, vvhom euery man may trust. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1622.). Taylors farevvell, to the Tovver-bottles. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1622.). The great O Toole. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1622.). The water-cormorant his complaint. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1623.). A new discouery by sea, with a vvherry from London to Salisbury, or, A voyage to the West, the worst, or the best. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1623.). The praise and vertue of a iayle, and iaylers. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1623.). The world runnes on vvheeles, or, Oddes, betwixt carts and coaches. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1624.). True louing sorow, attired in a robe of vnfeigned griefe. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1624]). The scourge of basenesse, or, The old lerry with a new kicksey, and a new cum twang with the old winsye. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1625.). For the sacred memoriall of the great, noble, and ancient example of vertue and honour, the illustrious and welbeloued Lord, Charles Howard, Earle of Nottingham. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1625.). The fearefull summer, or, Londons calamity, the countries courtesy, and both their misery. EEBO-TCP.

Taylor, John (1625]). A liuing sadnes, in duty consecrated to the immortall memory of our late deceased albe-loued soueraigne lord, the peeereles paragon of princes, Iames, King of great Brittaine, France and Ireland. EEBO-TCP.

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Source:  OpenStax, Online humanities scholarship: the shape of things to come. OpenStax CNX. May 08, 2010 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11199/1.1
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