Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
PR2337 .R95 1634ab | The noble soldier / | 1 |
PR2337.R95 (INTERNET) | A search for money, or, The lamentable complaint for the losse of the wandring knight, Mounsieur l'Argent Or come along with me, I know thou louest money : Dedicated to all those that lack money / | 1 |
PR2337.R98 P76 1529 | A proper dyaloge betwene a gentillman and an husbandma[n] eche complaynenge to other theyr myserable calamyte through the ambicion of the clergye. | 1 |
PR2337.S2 (INTERNET) |
Adams complaint. The olde vvorldes tragedie. Dauid and Bathsheba Pans pipe three pastorall eglogues, in English hexameter. With other poetical verses delightfull. For the further delight of the reader, the printer hath annexed hereunto the delectable poeme of the Fisher-mans tale. The fissher-mans tale of the famous actes, life and loue of Cassander a Grecian knight. / Flora's fortune The second part and finishing of the Fisher-mans tale. Containing, the strange accidentes which chaunced to Flora, and her supposed father Thirsis : also the happie meeting with her desired Cassander. / |
4 |
PR2337.S25 (INTERNET) |
Virtus post funera viuit, or, Honour tryumphing over death being true epitomes of honorable, noble, learned, and hospitable personages / A description of time applied to this present time. With times merry orders to be observed. The vow breaker, or, The faire maide of Clifton in Notinghamshire as it hath beene diuers times acted by severall companies with great applause / |
3 |
PR2337.S5 (INTERNET) |
Picturæ loquentes, or, Pictures drawne forth in characters VVith a poeme of a maid / A comparyson bytwene. iiij. byrdes, the larke, the nyghtyngale, ye thrusshe [and] the cuko, for theyr syngynge who shuld be chauntoure of the quere |
2 |
PR2338 .A15 1872 | The poetical works of George Sandys / | 1 |
PR2338 .D3 1955 | George Sandys, poet-adventurer : a study in Anglo-American culture in the seventeenth century. | 1 |
PR2338 .D3 1955a | George Sandys, poet-adventurer : a study in Anglo-American culture in the seventeenth century. | 1 |
PR2338 .E45 2002 | George Sandys : travel, colonialism, and tolerance in the seventeenth century / | 1 |
PR2338 .P37 1648 | A paraphrase upon the divine poems | 2 |
PR2338 .P37 1676 | A paraphrase upon the divine poems | 2 |
PR2338.S3 A7 1927 | Table talk of John Selden, | 1 |
PR2339.S2 P44 | Philomythie, or, Philomythologie wherin outlandish birds, beasts, and fishes, are taught to speake true English plainely. / | 1 |
PR2339.S2 P44 1622 | Philomythie, or, Philomythologie wherin outlandish birds, beasts, and fishes, are taught to speake true English plainely / | 1 |
PR2339.S2 P54 1622 | Philomythie, or, Philomythologie wherin outlandish birds, beasts, and fishes, are taught to speake true English plainely. / | 1 |
PR2339.S2 S42 1616 | The second part of Philomythie, or Philomythologie Containing certaine tales of true libertie. False friendship. Power vnited. Faction and ambition. / | 2 |
PR2339.S2 S42 1625 | The second part of Philomythie, or Philomythologie containing certaine tales of true libertie, false friendship, power vnited, faction and ambition / | 1 |
PR2339.S3 A7 1696 | Table-talk: : being the discourses of John Selden, Esq; or his sense of various matters of weight and high consequence; relating especially to religion and state. | 1 |
PR2339.S3 A7 1890 | The table-talk of John Selden / | 1 |