The
Catterpillers
of this Nation Anatomized.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v07
A New Trial of the Ladies. 2nd ed. 1658.
The Crafty Whore. 1658.
Philalethes, Mercurius. Select City Quaeries. 1660.
TRACTS AGAINST CHRISTMAS
Taylor, John. The Complaint of Christmas. 1646.
H. , T. A Ha! Christmas. 1647.
Younge, Richard. A Touchstone to try whether we be Christians in name
onely, or Christians in deed. 1648.
Palmer, George. The Lawfulness of the Celebration of Christs Birth-day
debated. 1648.
Reading, John. Christmas Revived. 1660.
TRACTS ON Past HISTORY
Cavendish, George. The Negotiations of Thomas Woolsey, the great Cardinall
of England. Containing his life and death. 1641.
Cotton, Sir Robert. The Troublesome Life and Raigne of King Henry the
Third. 1642.
The true Coppy of the Complaint of Roderyck Mors. 1642.
W[alker), G[eorge). Anglo-Tyrannus. 1650.
Chamberlain, Ed. The late Warre paralleld. Or, a brief relation of the
five years civil warres of Henry the Third. 1660.
EXPOSURES AND REFLECTIONS ARISING OUT OF THE WAR
J[ordan), T[homas). A Diurnall of Dangers. 1642. (Satire on contemporary
Diurnalls. )
Newes, True Newes, Laudable Newes, Citie Newes, Court News, Countrey
Neweg 1642. (Satire. )
A Remonstrance of Londons Occurrences. 1643.
Edwards, Thomas. Gangraena. 1646. Second part. 1646. Third part.
1646.
A fresh Whip for all scandalons Lyers [i. e. the ‘Diurnall-Writer' and the
Perfect Occurrence Writer']. 1647.
Mercurius Anti Mercurius. 1648.
F[orde), T[homas). Lusus Fortunae. 1649.
The Hue and Cry after those rambling protonotaries of the times, Mercurius
Elenctious, Britanicus, Melancholicus and Aulicus. 1651.
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Chapter XVI
515
PEACE PAMPHLETS
A Cure for the State. 1640. (Satire in the form of a medical prescription. )
Maddison, Sir Ralph. Englands Looking In and Out. 1640. (On the
financial and commercial condition of the country. )
Morton, Thomas. Englands Warning-Piece. 1642.
Prynne, W. A Soveraign Antidote to prevent, appease and determine our
unnaturall Civill Warres and Dissentions. 1642.
The Virgins Complaint for the losse of their Sweet-Hearts by these present
Wars, and keeping their Virginities against their wills. 1643.
Taylor, John. The Causes of the Diseases and Distempers of this Kingdom.
1645.
Study to be quiet. 1647.
Jennings, Theodore. The Right Way to Peace. 1647.
Levitt, William. The Samaritans Box newly opened. 1647.
Homes, Nath. Plain Dealing. 1652.
Certaine Conceptions or Considerations of Sir Percy Herbert. 1652.
TRACTS ON PRISONS AND ADMINISTRATION OF LAW
Wickins, Nathan. Wood-Street Compter's Plea for its Prisoner. 1638.
L. , W. The Courts of Justice Corrected and Amended, or The Corrupt
Lawyer Untrust, Lash'd and quasht. 1642.
Bagwell, William. The Distressed Merchant and the Prisoners comfort in
distresse. 1645.
A Looking-Glasse for all proud, ambitious, covetous and corrupt Lawyers.
1646.
P. , Theophilus. Salus Populi desperately ill of a languishing Consumption.
1648.
John Jones of Neyath in Coun. Brecon. The Crie of Bloud. 1651.
March, John. Amicus Reipublicae. 1651.
Jones, John. Every Mans Case; or, Lawyers Routed. 1652.
Miscellanea Magna. The Second Century. 1653. (A list of satirical mis-
interpretations of Latin legal phrases. )
Leach, Edmund. The Down-Fall of the Unjust Lawyers. 1653.
Multum in parvo: or a summary narrative on behalfe of prisoners captived
for debt. 1653.
Rogers, John. Sagrir. Or Doomes-day drawing nigh, with Thunder and
Lightening to Lawyers. 1653.
A New Case put to an Old Lawyer. 1656. (Satire. )
Cole, William. A Rod for the Lawyers, who are hereby declared to be the
grand robbers and deceivers of the nation. 1659.
The Out-Cries of the Poor, Oppressed and Imprisoned. By William Pryor
and Thomas Turner. 1659.
Adis, Henry. A Fannaticks Letter sent out of the Dungeon of the Gate-
House Prison of Westminster. 1661.
See
Hazlitt, W. C. Bibliography of Prisons. [The Bibliographer, vol. vi. ]
Langford, J. A. Prison Books and their Authors. 1861.
Notes and Queries, ser. x, vol. xi. June 26, 1909.
ROGUE PAMPHLETS AND BURLESQUES
[See Chandler, F. W. , The Literature of Roguery, vol. I, chap. 111. )
,
The Frogges of Egypt. 1641.
Wonderful Newes from Wood-Street Counter. 1642.
33-2
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516
Bibliography
F[idge], G[eorge). The English Gusman; or the History of that unparallela
thief James Hind. 1652.
A Pill to purge Melancholy. 1652.
Hinds Elder Brother, or the Master Thief Discovered, being a Relation of
the Life of Major Thomas Knowls. 1652.
B. , J. The Knight Errant: being a witty, notable and true relation of the
strange adventures of Sir William Hart. 1652.
S. , R. The Counter-Scuffle. 1653.
Gayton, Edmund. Pleasant Notes upon Don Quixot. 1654.
Wil Bagnal's Ghost. 1655.
The Witty Rogue arraigned, condemned and executed. Or, the history of
that incomparable thief Richard Hainam. 1656.
The Devils Cabinet broke open; or, A New Discovery of the High-way
Thieves. 1657.
Head [? ], Richard.
The Catterpillers of this Nation Anatomized. 1659.
The English Rogue, described in the life of Meriton Latroon. 1665.
Rptd Pearson.
JEST BOOKS AND COMIC DIALOGUES
S-8. Paradoxes or Encomiums in the Praise of being lowsey, Treachery,
Nothing, Beggary. 1653.
Gayton, E. Wit Revived. 1655.
Here's Jack in a Box, that will Conjure the Fox. 1656.
Cox, R. Actaeon and Diana. 1656.
Mirth in abundance. 1659.
The Hangman's joy. 1660.
F[ord], E. Fair Play in the Lottery. 1660.
A Choice Banquet of Witty Jests. 1660.
The Booke of Merry Riddles. 1660.
The Rich for Money and the Poor for Nothing. 1672.
H[ickes], W. Oxford Jests Refined and Enlarged. 1684.
Coffee House Jests. By the author of the Oxford Jests. 4th ed. with
large additions. 1686.
See
Ashton, J. Humour, Wit and Satire of the Seventeenth Century. 1883.
Halliwell, J. 0. The Jokes of the Cambridge Coffee Houses in the Seven-
teenth Century. 1841.
COFFEE PAMPHLETS
The Coffee Scuffle occasioned by a contest between a learned Knight and a
pitifull Pedagogue. 1662. (Satirical verses, said to be made by Woolnoth
on Sir J. Langham and Evans a schoolmaster. )
A cup of Coffee: or Coffee in its Colours. 1663.
News from the Coffee-House. 1667.
Cleiveland, J. The Character of a Coffee-house. 1673.
Rules and Orders of the Coffee-house. 1674. (Attached to A Brief
Description. )
The Coffee Houses Vindicated. 1675.
Hickes, William. Coffee-House Jests. By the Author of the Oxford-Jests.
1677.
Y- Captain. A Coffee-House Dialogue. 1679.
A Continuation of the Coffee House Dialogue between Captain Y. and a
Baronet of the Middle-Temple. 1680 [? ].
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Chapter XVI
517
See
Macaulay, T. B. History of England, chap. III. 1858-61.
Beljame, A. Le Public et les Hommes de Lettres en Angleterre au Dix-
huitième Siècle. 1897.
ESSAYS
Warner, John. The Gaine of Losse. 1645.
Hall, John. Horae Vacivae. Or, Essays. 1646.
Montagu, Walter. Miscellanea Spiritualia. 1647.
Manley, Tho. Temporis Angustiae: Stollen Houres Recreations. 1649.
Gott, Sam. An Essay of the True Happines of Man. 1650.
Harflete, Henry. A Banquet of Essayes. 1653.
Enchiridium Epigrammatum Latino-Anglicum. An Epitome of Essais,
Englished out of Latin by Rob. Vilvain. 1653.
Church, Nathanael. Cheap Riches. 1654.
Robinson, J. The Birth of a Day. 1654.
C[ulpeper), T[homas). Morall Discourses and Essayes. 1655.
TREATISES ON KNOWLEDGE
Of the Vanitie and uncertaintie of artes and sciences; Englished by
Ja. San[ford). 1569. Other translations 1575, 1676, 1694. The original
De incertitudine et vanitate scientiarum declamatio invectiva. . . 1531. By
Agrippa, H. C. See Schellhorn, J. G. , Amoenitates Literariae, Tome II,
1725.
W[ilkins), John). Mathematical Magick. 1648.
Cusanus, C. The Idiot, in four books. 1650. Trans. from Latin.
Waterhouse, Edward. An humble Apologie for Learning and Learned Men.
1653.
Webster, Jo. Academiarum Examen. 1653.
Ward, Seth (bp of Salisbury). Vindiciae Academiarum. 1654.
Casaubon, Meric. A Treatise concerning Enthusiasm. 1655.
B. , J. Heroick Education. 1656.
B[lount], T[homas). Glossographia. 1656.
Glanvill, Jos. The Vanity of Dogmatizing. 1661.
Casaubon, Meric. On Credulity and Incredulity. 1668 and 1670.
CHARACTER SKETCHES
A True Description of the Pot-Companion Poet. 1642.
The Character of a Puritan. By Martin Mar-Prelat. 1643.
Wilson, J. A New Anatomie, or Character of a Christian or Roundhead.
1645.
May, Thomas. The Character of a right Malignant. 1645.
The Character of an Oxford-Incendiary. 1645.
Cleiveland, John. The Character of a London Diurnall. 1645.
A Full Answer to a Scandalous Pamphlet intituled A Character of a London
Diurnall. 1645.
The Oxford Character of the London Diurnall examined and answered. 1645.
A Character of the New Oxford Libeller. 1645.
The Drunkard's Character. 1646.
Geree, John. The Character of an Old English Puritane or Non-Conformist,
1646.
C[leiveland), J. The Character of a Moderate Intelligencer. 1647.
A Recommendation to Mercurius Morbicus. 1647. (Satire on H. Walker, i. e.
"The Ironmonger,' author of Mercurius Morbicus. )
F[orde), T[homas). The Times Anatomizd in severall Characters. 1648.
6
7
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518
Bibliography to Chapter XVI
(Cleiveland, John. ] The Character of a Country Committee-man. 1649.
The Character of Mercurius Politicus.