Crop-eare curried, or, Tom Nash his ghost, declaring the pruining of Prinnes two last parricidicall pamphlets, being 92 sheets in quarto, wherein the one of them he stretch'd the soveraigne power of Parliaments; in the other, his new-found way of opening the counterfeit Great Seale. Wherein by a short survey and ani-mad-versions of some of his falsities, fooleries, non-sense, blasphemies, forreigne and domesticke, uncivill, civill treasons, seditions, incitations, and precontrivements, in mustering, rallying, training and leading forth into publique so many ensignes of examples of old reviv'd rebells, or new devised chimeraes. With a strange prophecy, reported to be Merlins, or Nimshag's the Gymnosophist, and (by some authours) it is said to be the famous witch of Endor's. By John Taylor.
- All titles
-
- Crop-eare curried, or, Tom Nash his ghost, declaring the pruining of Prinnes two last parricidicall pamphlets, being 92 sheets in quarto, wherein the one of them he stretch'd the soveraigne power of Parliaments; in the other, his new-found way of opening the counterfeit Great Seale. Wherein by a short survey and ani-mad-versions of some of his falsities, fooleries, non-sense, blasphemies, forreigne and domesticke, uncivill, civill treasons, seditions, incitations, and precontrivements, in mustering, rallying, training and leading forth into publique so many ensignes of examples of old reviv'd rebells, or new devised chimeraes. With a strange prophecy, reported to be Merlins, or Nimshag's the Gymnosophist, and (by some authours) it is said to be the famous witch of Endor's. By John Taylor.
- Tom Nash his ghost
- People / Organizations
-
- Imprint
-
[Oxford]: Printed [by Leonard Lichfield], in the year, 1644. [i.e. 1645]
- Publication year
- 1645-1645
- ESTC No.
- R212364
- Grub Street ID
- 87969
- Description
- [2], 40 p. ; 4⁰
- Note
- Place of publication and printer's name from Wing.
Publication year is given according to Lady Day dating; Wing has 1644[5]; Thomason catalogue lists under 1645.
A reply to William Prynne's "The soveraigne power of parliaments and kingdomes" and "The opening of the great seale of England".
Annotation on Thomason copy: "feb: 17th. Oxon".