Letzte Suchanfragen
Ergebnisse für *
Es wurden 6 Ergebnisse gefunden.
Zeige Ergebnisse 1 bis 6 von 6.
Sortieren
-
Bumography: or, A touch at the lady's tails
being a lampoon (privately) dispers'd at Tunbridge-Wells, in the year 1707 -
The phenix
or, a revival of scarce and valuable pieces from the remotest antiquity down to the present times. Being A Collection of Manuscripts and Printed Tracts, no where to be found but in the Closets of the Curious. By a gentleman who has made it his business to search after such pieces for Twenty Years past -
Bumography
or, a touch at the lady's tails, being a lampoon (privately) dispers'd at Tunbridge-Wells, in the year 1707. By a water-drinker. With the names and characters of the most noted water-drinkers. Also, a merry elegy upon Mother Jefferies, the antient water-dipper -
The pulpit-Fool. A satyr
-
The second part of the pulpit-fool. A satyr. Containing, a distinct character of the most noted clergy-men in the Queens dominions, both Church-Men and Dissenters
-
Athenian sport: or, two thousand paradoxes merrily argued, to amuse and divert the age: as a Paradox in praise of a Paradox. Corporeal Affections remain after Separation. The Eye beholds as much when it looks on a Shilling, as when it speculates the whole Heaven. Inconstancy is a most commendable Virtue. Every Man is corporally born twice. No Man sees but he that is stark blind. The Restor'd Maidenhead, or a marry'd Woman may be twice a Virgin. Athenian, or Intellectual, Sport is the Recreation of Pre-Existent Spirits. 'tis the Pleasantest Life to be always in Danger. The same numerical Voice of a Preacher is not heard by any two of his Auditors. What we call Life, is Natural Death. Content is the greatest Misery. He is the Happiest Man who has neither Mony nor Friend. Fruition's nothing, or a Paradox proving there's no Pleasure in Copulation. To imprison a Debtor is to set him at Liberty. Green come from the Dead, or no Man lives but he that is Hang'd. The Virgin-Paradox, or a Young Lady may Love and Hate the same Person at the same Time. The Loving Shrew, or the Kindest Women are the most Cruel. And so on, to the Defence of 2000 Paradoxes (or Pleasant Theses) which seem Strange, and Contrary to the Common Opinion. With Improvements from the Honourable Mr. Boyle, Lock, Norris Collier, Cowley, Dryden, Garth, Addison, and other Illustrious Wit. By a member of the Athenian Society