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The General character of the dog
illustrated by a variety of original and interesting anecdotes of that beautiful and useful animal, in prose and verse -
Tales of the robin, and other small birds
selected from the British poets, for the instruction and amusement of young people -
A discourse of the divinity of Our Lord Jesus Christ proving that the denial of his deity, is by a just and necessary consequence a denial of Christian Religion. By Joseph Taylor
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Comedies and tragedies
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Antiquitates Curiosae: The ethymology Of many Remarkable, Old sayings, proverbs, and singular customs
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A court of guard for the heart
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A brief enquiry whether they who assert, and they who deny, the divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ, may have communion together at the Lords table
By Joseph Taylor -
The beauty of the Lord, in his temple, &c
In three parts. ... By Joseph Taylor -
Grace, grace: or, the exceeding riches of grace, manifested to the chiefest of sinners
Being a faithful relation of the dealings of God with Vilest of his Greatures, Joseph Taylor. In four parts. I. Experiences in Child-Hood. II. Those which he took for Conversion. III. Of his sad and lamentable Falls into Sin afterwards. IV. Of his present Conversion, and Call to the Ministry -
God's tender mercy and infinite compassion surmounting man's severity
in a remarkable and surprising manner exemplified, in the following curious and very extraordinary narrative of the revivication [sic] of young Joseph Taylor, who was supposed to have been hanged to death, (in company with that notorious highwayman, pickpocket and housebreaker, Archibald Taylor) on Boston-Neck, on Thursday, the eight of May, 1788, for a violent assault and robbery on the highway, committed on the person and property of Mr. Nathaniel Cunningham, butcher, in October, 1787. -
Narrative of the revivication [sic] of Joseph Taylor
who was supposed to have been hanged to death, on Boston-Neck, on Thursday the eighth day of May, 1788, for robbery -
A remarkable and extraordinary narrative of the revivification of Joseph Taylor
who was supposed to have been hanged to death, on Boston Neck, on Thursday the 8th of May, 1788, for a violent assault and robbery on the highway, committed on the person and property of Mr. Nathaniel Cunningham; and who was, by means of several persons, recovered to life and health, notwithstanding it was two hours and forty-three minutes after he was cut down, before they could render him any assistance. -
The revivication [sic] of young Joseph Taylor
who was supposed to have been hanged to death, (in company with that notorious highwayman, pickpocket and housebreaker, Archibald Taylor,) on Boston-Neck, on Thursday, the eight of May, 1788, for a violent assault on the person and property of Mr. Nathaniel Cunningham, butcher, in October, 1787. -
A faithful and wise servant, had in honour, throughout the churches
A discourse occasioned by the much lamented death of the Rev. Edward Wigglesworth, D.D. Hollis Professor of Divinity in Harvard College, Cambridge; who departed this life, January 16. 1765. In the 73d year of his age. Having faithfully and laudably discharged the office of professor, for more than 42 years -
Chaucer's uncanny regionalism
rereading the North in The Reeve's Tale -
Thoughts on the production and formation of animal bodies, &c
With the natural cause of the recovery of persons apparently dead by drowning; and many other things worthy of notice: by Joseph Taylor -
Oratio funebris in obitum Edvardi Wigglesworth, S.T.P. quam, in sacello Holdeniano, apud Collegium Harvardianum, ... habuit Josephus Taylor
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Information for His Majesty's Advocate, against Joseph Taylor, pannel
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The wild-goose chase
a comedie as it hath been acted with singular applause at the Black-Friers : being the noble, last, and onely remaines of those incomparable drammatists, Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher, Gent. : retriv'd for the publick delight of all the ingenious and private benefit of John Lowin and Joseph Taylor, servants to His late Majestie