A rope treble-twisted, for John Tayler the water-poet. Or rather for his malignant friends in London, which make use of his name to slander and abuse the Parliament, and well-affected party, in their pernicious pamphlets; and particularly, Mr. John Booker, a man of known honesty, and one who scornes to calculate for the meridian of Oxford. Snarle not, malignants: if you do, here's rope enough for you, and all that love the Pope.

People / Organizations
Imprint
London: printed according to order, for G. Bishop, Septemb. 27. 1644.
Publication year
1644
ESTC No.
R18206
Grub Street ID
72386
Description
8 p. ; 4⁰
Note
Attributed to John Booker. Cf. NUC pre-1956.

A reply to: Taylor, John. John Taylor being yet unhanged, sends greeting, to John Booker (1644).

A variant of the edition with "printed for G.B. Septemb. 28. 1644" in imprint.Citation/references Wing (2nd ed., 1994), B3731

Thomason, E.10[14]