Call Number (LC) Title Results
PR3291.A1 L392 The loyal soldiers of Flanders a new song, made by a Protestant centinel of the English forces : to an excellent new tune, much in request. 1
PR3291.A1 L4 1973 Letters from the living to the living. : Anonymous / 1
PR3291.A1 L45 A Leicester-shire frolick; or, The valiant cook-maid Being a merry composed jest of five taylors that had been at work till their wages came to five pounds; likewise a merry conceited cook-maid that lived in the house, went to her master and desired him to lend her a horse, and she would venture her skill to take the 5-pound from these five taylors, without either sword or pistol, in a jesting way, to make her master some sport and to show her valour: her master loving mirth more then sadness, agreed to it: so a horse was sadled, and other things to disguise her self, because she might not be known: away she went (it being in the evening) and met them before they got home, with nothing in her hand but a black pudding, the faint-hearted taylors delivered her their money very quietly, for fear they should a been shot through with a black pudding, and what followed after is expressed in this following ditty. Tune is, Ragged and torn. With allowance. 1
PR3291.A1 L47 1660 A Letter to the House from the Laird Wareston, late president of the Committee of Safety 1
PR3291.A1 L47 1666 A Letter to the Bishop of Munster containing a panegyrick of his heroick atchievments, in heroick verse.
A Letter to the Bishop of Munster; containing a panegyrick of his heroick atchievments, in heroick verse.
2
PR3291.A1 L47 1684 A Letter to Ferguson or any other the suppos'd author of a late scandalous libel entituled An elogie upon Sir Tho. Armstrong : from one that heartily wishes them what they deserve. 2
PR3291.A1 L47 1686 A Letter to a virtuous lady to disswade her from her resolution of being a nun 2
PR3291.A1 .L47 1689 A letter from Lewis the Great to James the Less, his lieutenant in Ireland with reflections by way of answer to the said letter, or serious comtemplations at an unseasonable time. 2
PR3291.A1 L48 1698 A letter to Mr. Congreve, occasion'd by the death of the Countess Dowager of Manchester, late wife to his excellency the Right Honourable Charles Montague, one of the Lords Justices of England, first commissioner of the treasury, and Chancellor of the Exchequer, &c. 1
PR3291.A1 L49 1770a The Life, adventures, intrigues, and amours of the celebrated Jemmy Twitcher / 1
PR3291.A1 L5 The life of love. Let he or she, from chains are free, prize high their liberty. Loves a disease, that seems to please yet breeds captivity. To the tune of, The fair one let me in: Or, Busie fame. 1
PR3291.A1 L5 1657 Little Iohn and the four beggers, a new merry song of Robin Hood and little John, shewing how Little John went a begging, and how he fought with four beggers, and what a prize he got of the four beggers, the tune is, Robin Hood and the begger. 1
PR3291.A1 L52 1974 The Life and memoirs of Ephraim Tristram Bates. 1
PR3291.A1 L53 The life and death of Sheffery ap Morgan, son of Shon ap Morgan
The life and death of Sheffery Morgan, son of Shon ap Morgan.
2
PR3291.A1 L53 1670 The Life and death of Rosamond, King Henry the Second's concubine and how she was poysoned to death by Queen Elenor. 2
PR3291.A1 L53 1681 Libertatis amator: a litany 1
PR3291.A1 L53 1690 The Life and death of Sir Hugh of the Grime 2
PR3291.A1 L5615 2007 The London jilt, or, The politick whore 1
PR3291.A1 L57 1679 A List of the parliament of women 2
PR3291.A1 L59 1990b Love letters between a certain late nobleman and the famous Mr. Wilson / 1