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Charles Mason's, and was given to me by his widow. Mr.-Maityn told me his family was of Combe Martyn in Dorsetshire, where they had been settled from the Conquest, and gave for arms A. 2 bars G.

"The English Connoisseur: containing an account of whatever is curious in Painting and Sculpture, &c. in the Palaces and Seats of the Nobility and principal Gentry of England, both in Town and Country. Lond. 1764. Two small 8vo. volumes. No name, but by Mr. Martyn, who is now in Italy with his wife on a party of pleasure, Dec. 1779."

113. Sir Tho. Twisden, Justice of the King's Bench.

"Gave 101. to Emanuel College New Chapel.

"He was an eminent Judge and Antiquary."

He was younger brother to Sir Roger Twisden, Bart. the Editor of Decem Scriptores: and was himself created a Baronet; ́and was ancestor of the present Sir John Twisden of Bradbourne near Maidstone.

114. Brook Taylor, LL. D. St. John's.

A celebrated mathematician, &c.

He was eldest son of Nathaniel Taylor, Esq. of Bifrons,near Canterbury. See his Life by his grandson, the late Sir Wm. Young, Bart.

His younger brother was grandfather of the present Edward Taylor of Bifrons, Esq. late M. P. for Canterbury; and of Gen. Herbert Taylor, &c.

Dr. Taylor was a friend and correspondent of Pope's Lord Bolingbroke; and eminent for his genius, talents, and acquirements.

END OF VOL HI

GENERAL INDEX.

À.

ACROSTIC on Elizabetha Trium-

phans, 452

Algebra, a tract on, by Waring,
noticed, 163

Amatory Sonnetteers, allusion to, 420
America, discovery of, adverted to, in
Goodall's Tryall of Travell, 421

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Jews in, by Tho. Thorow-
good, S. T. B. Norfolciensis, 1660,
34

Angels, Heywood's Discourse of,
noticed, 358

Anotomie, Time's, by Robert Pricket,

1606, 445. Extracts, 446-450
Apparel, ancient prices of, 510
Apprentice in London, counsel to one,
from his father, 320

Armada, Spanish, extract from Roger
Cotton's poem in allusion to that
event, 139

Armour of Proofe, by R. C. (Roger
Cotton), 1596, 138
Athenæ Cantabrigienses, collections
for, 39, 211, 537

--

Oxonienses, referred to for
an account of Barten Holyday,D.D.
292
Aucthour, exhorting a friend concern-
ing mariage, 464

B.

Baccharis Coronaria, from Powell's
Ismarus, 173

Balm of Gilead, by Jos. Hall, D. D.
1660, 284. Extracts, 284

cited, 501
Barleycorn, Sir John, the arraigning
and indicting of, by Thomas Ro-
bins, 1675, 132
Baronies, cases of claims to, temp.
Ja. I. 345

Bartas Metaphrased,' lines of Bp.
Hall prefixed to, 162

ΒΑΣΙΛΙΚΟΝ ΔΩΡΟΝ, a selection

from, called A Prince's Looking-
glass by William Willymat, 482
Baubles, meaning of the term, 257, n.
Bay, the, an extract from Powell's
Ismarus, 171

Bedlam, Wit's, 453

Betraying of Christ, by S. R. (Samuel
Rowlands), 1598, 353. Address to
the reader, ib. Extract relative to
Mount Calvary, 355
Biographiana. Collectanea for Athenæ
Cantabrigienses, 39, 211, 537
Bishop Kennett's letters, 359
Bohemia, occasion of the alteration of
the armes of, 11

Bookishness of Julia, epigram on, 454
Bruised Reed, a celebrated tract by
Dr. Sibbes, noticed, 498
Burgh, barony, claim to, temp. Ja. I.
345

C.

Cantabrigienses, Athenæ, collections
for, 39, 211, 537
Chara nimis amicitia, an epigram,
416

Charles II. his restoration foretold by
Walter Gostelo, 107
Chatsworth, description of, from Bp.
Kennett's letters, 361

Christ's Nativity, Robert Holland's
Holy History of, 137

-, the Betraying of, by S. R.
(Samuel Rowlands), 1598, 353.
Extracts, 353, 355

Christian Religion, answer to a late
view of the internal evidence of, by
whom written, 247.

Church, St. Paul's, her bill for the
Parliament, by Hen. Farley, 1621,
426

44

Ciceronianus Gabrielis Harucii, 1577,
349. Dedication, ib.
Civil Warres of England, the History
of, in English verse, 331
Claims of Peerage, cases of, in the
male line, temp. Ja. 1. 344
Comforts against imprisonment, by
Bishop Hall, 285

Coming of God in mercy, in ven-
geance, by Walter Gostelo, 1658,
106
Complaint, Penelope's, by Peter Colse,
1596, 529. Dedication, 530. Ad-
dress to the readers, 531. Pene-
lope's answer to her wooers, 532.
Her epistle to Ulysses, 532
Commendatory Sonnets to the first
edition of the first three books of
Spenser's Fairy Queen, 346
Considerations Occasionall, or Hora
Vacivæ, by John Hall, 305
Convocation Writ, amendment of,
mentioned in Bishop Kennett's let-
ters, 376

Copy of Letters sent to the Quene
(Mary) by Archbp. Cranmer, 1556,
281. Extract, 282

Copyholder of Bridgetown, extract
from Edmund Sharpe's song so
called, 214

Cordis, Schola, in 47 Emblems, 1647,
323

Cotton, explanation of the verb, 41 3, n.
Counsel, a father's to his son, an ap-

prentice in London, by Caleb
Trenchfield, Gent. 1678, 320
Cranmer, Archbp. copy of his letters
sent to the Quene, and also to Dr.
Martin and Dr. Stoure, 1556, 281
Crook-back, epigram on a, 454
Crowne, the soules immortal, 13

D.

Dancing, Essay on, was Soame Jenyns"

first poetical essay, 240
Darius, Sir Wm. Alexander's, enco-
miastic verses to, by Walter Quin,
435

David, a paraphrase upon the Psalms
of, by George Sandys, 1636, 81
David's Hainous Sinne, Heartie Re-
pentance, Heavie Punishment, by
Tho. Fuller, M.D. 1631, 164
Death, Remains after, by Richard
Brathwaite, 1618, 196. A descrip-
tion of death, 197. Epitaphs upon
sudden and premature deaths, 202

Debtor, a careful, verses on, by E.
Hake, 276

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Dedication, an interesting one, pre-
fixed to Gold's Kingdom and this
unhelping age,' 271

; extract from Arthur
Hall's to Sir Tho. Cecill, of his ten
bookes of Homer's Iliades, 1581,
512. From Churchyard's, of Ovid
de Tristibus to Chr. Hatton, Esq.
514

Devil, Strappado for, extracts from
Brathwayte's, 145, 203
Discontented Mind, passion of a, 1621,
419, Extract, ib. Close, 421.
Discourse, the, a poem by An. Col-
lins, extracts from, 180
Dissimulation, Essay on, from Hall's
Horæ Vacivæ, 314

Diuell, the Practyse of the, by L
Ramsey, 1590, 439. Specimens,
440

Divine Songs and Meditacions, by An.

Collins, 1653, 123, 180, 182
Dodechedron of Fortune, the, trans-
lated from the French of John de
Meum by Sir W. B. Knight, 1613,
313

'Droupe and die,' by E. Hake, 276
Dump, on the death of Henry Earl of
Pembroke, by John Davies of Here-
ford, 259

Dutch Miller, the merry, 1672, 131

E.

Earldom of Northumberland, case cf
James Percy, claimant of, 519-
528

Eden, the Garden of, by Sir Hugh
Plat, Kt. 1675, 18. The publisher
to the reader, 19. The author's
epistle to all who delight in God's
vegetable creatures, 21. Second
part, 23
Elizabetha quasi vivens, Eliza's fune-
rall, by Henry Petowe, 1603, 23.
The Induction, 25. Eliza's Fune-
rall, 26
Elizabetha Triumphans, by J. Aske,
1588, 451. Acrostic, 452
Encomiastic Verses to Sir Wm. Alex-
ander's Darius, by Walter Quin,
435

England's Cæsar, by Henry Petowe,

1603, 30. Dedication to a plurality
of persons, 30. Ad lectorem, 31.

The induction, 32. His Majestie's
most royall coronation, 33
England and Ireland, historical allu-
sion to in Norden's Vicissitudo Re-
rum, 129

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Civil Warres of, a history of,
in English verse, by An. Cooper,
331
Epicedium, a funeral song upon the
life and death of Lady Helen Branch,
1594, 297. Invocation, 298. Com-
memoration of her benefactions, ib.
Epigram on Microcosmos, from Bas-

tard's Chrestoleros, 409, n.
Epigrams and Satires ascribed to Hen.
Parrot, 415
Epigrams:-from Wit's Bedlam :-
against a writing country school-
master, 454. Julia's bookishness,
ib. Of a crook-back, ib. Wolfan-
gus's great nose and thin beard, 455.
Fast and loose, ib. Loss of a great
stomach, ib.

Epistle of Octavia to Anthony, S.
Brandon's, 1598, 503. Extract from
Antony to Octavia, 504
Epitaph, Mason's, on Gray the poet,
231

on Lady Helen Branch, 297
on Prince Henry, by Walter
Quin, 437
Epitaphs, upon sudden and premature
deaths, by Richard Brathwaite, 202
Essays, from Hall's Horæ Vacivæ,
310-318

Europe, Affairs of, and of the Re-
public of Venice, Nani's History
of, translated by Sir Robt. Hony-
wood, 515

F.

Fable of Narcissus, Ovid's, translation
of, ascribed to Thomas Howell,
265

Fairy Queen of Spenser, commenda-
tory sonnets to the first edition of
the first three books of, 346
Fancy, the Forrest of, 1579, 456.
Epistle to the reader, ib. Heads of
the several pieces, and extracts,
458

Fastidium, a Latin eclogue, by Wm.

Hawkins, extract from, 236
Father's Counsel to his Son, by Caleb
Trenchfield, Gent, 1678, 321
Fire of London in 1666, described, by
· Thomas Vincent, 96

Fleece, the golden, by Richard Brath-
wayte, Gent. 1611, 303. Sonnets
or Madrigals, 304
Fluxions, a volume on, written by
Waring, 163

Fool, a Scotish, described; from
Armin's Nest of Ninnies, 506
Forrest of Fancy, 1579, 456
Fortune, the Dodechedron of, trans-
lated from the French of John de
Meum, by Sir W. B. Knight, 1613,
319. Some account of the original
author, ib.

Fragmentum Poeticum, 481
Fragments, poetical, by Richard Bax-
ter, 1681, 185. His notices on
several contemporary poets, 186.
Extracts from his poem called 'Love
breathing thanks and praise,' 189.
The Return, 192. Epistle to the
reader, ib. A description of Death,

197

Friendship, perfect, a plain description
of, 460

Funerall Song on the death of the La-
dy Helen Branch, 297. Comme-
moration of the life and death of,
ib. Epitaph, ib. W. Har. (proba-
bly Sir William Harbert), 1594,
298

G.

Gentlewomen, upstart new-fangled,
quippes for, 1595, 255

Gilead, Balm of, by Jos. Hall, D. D.

1660, 284. His dedicatory address,
ib. Comforts against imprison-
ment, 285.
God's Terrible Voice in the City, by
Thomas Vincent, 1667, 89. Ex-
tracts relative to the plague, 90-95•
Narrative respecting the great fire,
96-106

God, the coming of in mercy, in
vengeance, by Walter Gostelo, 1658,
106. Extracts, 108. Introduction
predicting the restoration of Charles
II. 110

the Love of, a black letter tract,
extracts from, 493
Gold's Kingdome and this unhelping
Age, by E. Hake, 1604, 268. Speech
intended to have been spoken to
King James at Windsor, 269. De-
dication, ib. Verses on a visitation
which swept away 30,000 souls,
272. No gold no goodnesse, 274.

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Droupe and die; looke up and live,
276. A careful debtor, ib. Passages
from a memorial address to Richd.
Lovelace, Esq. 277

Golden Fleece, by Richard Brath-
wayte, 1611, 303. Pieridum Invo-
catio, ib. Sonnets or Madrigals,
304. The author to his disconso-
late brother, ib.

Googe, Barnaby, his descent, 35
Gratulatio Quadrilinguis in Nuptiis
Caroli I. et Pr. Henr. Mar. Fr. of
Walter Quin, mentioned in his Ser-
tum Poeticum, 438
Gratulationum Valdinensium libri
quatuor Gabrielis Harucii, 1577,
350

Grones, Greevous of the Poore, a
tract on mendicity, noticed, 503
Gunpowder Plot, a poem in relation
to, 329

-

verses against, in
Pricket's Time's Anotomie, 450

H.

Harleian Miscellany, Mr. Parke's Sup-
plement to, a poem by E. Hake in,
278

Heart, the covetousnesse of the, from
Schola Cordis, 323. The enlarging
of the, 326

Henry, Prince, his laudable Life and
deplorable death, by James Max-
well, A.M. 1612, 477
Hey for Horn Fair, or Room for
Cuckolds, 1674, 131
Heywood, Thomas, note respecting
in Brathwaite's Survey of History,
358

History, a Survey of, or a Nursery for
Gentry, by Richard Brathwayte,
Esq. 1638, 339 Dedication, ib.
Another, 343. Extract, 344.
Holy Rood, or Christ's Crosse, by
John Davies, 1609, 260. Extract,
261. Sonnets appended to the
poem, 262
Hop-patentee, verses on, from "A
Pack of Patentees," 266
Hora Vacivæ, by John Hall, 1646,
305. Complimentary verses to the
author, 307. Essay I. Of opinions,
310. II. Of time, 312. IX. Of
dissimulation, 314.
Titles of the

other essays, 318
Huic habeo non tibi, an epigram,
416

Humility, an epigram by HughCromp-
ton, 168

I.

I would and I would not, by B. N.
(probably Nicholas Breton), 1614,
174
Iambics, Latin, by Bp. Hall, 163
Imprisonment, comforts against, by
Bp. Hall, 285

Ismarus, the Thracian, a description
of, by Thomas Powell, 1601, 169.
Extract, 171

J.

James I. speech intended to have been
spoken to him at Windsor, 269

poem to, on his progress to
Scotland, by Hen. Farley, 428
Jest, none like a true jest, or life of
Capt. James Hind, 1674,
Jevvel House of Art and Nature, by

Sir Hugh Platt, of Lincoln's Inn,
Knight, 1653, 17

Jews in America, &c. Tho. Thorow-
good, S. T. B. Norfolciensis, 1660,
34

L.

Laquei Ridiculosi, ascribed to Henry
Parrot, 415

Lawiar's Lesson, the, 302
Letters of Bishop Kennett, 359. De-
scription of Chatsworth, 361
Life and Death of Lady Helen Branch,
commemoration of, 297

Life of Jacke Wilton, Nashe's, extract
from, 507

London Apprentice, counsel to from
his father, 320

London, plague of, in 1665, described
by Thomas Vincent, 89. Fire of,
in 1666, 96

Looking Glasse, a Prince's, by Wm.
Willymat, 1603, 482

Lord's Prayer, versified by Robert
Holland, 137

Love breathing thanks and praise,'
a poem by Richard Baxter, extracts
from, 189

Fowler's Tarantula of, 133.
Specimen, 134, 286
Love's Missives to Virtue, with Es-

saies, by Robert Beaumont, 1660,
278. Extract, 279. Subjects of
the essays, ib. Extract from the
last, 280

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