N. Okes
Active Years
Min year: 1600, Max year: 1637, Max count: 21
As Printer
- 1600: The complaint of grace
- 1607: The glory of the godlie graine
- 1607: Conclusions vpon dances, both of this age, and of the olde
- 1608: The redemption of lost time
- 1608: A godly and learned answer, to a lewd and vnlearned pamphlet
- 1608: Errour on the left hand, through a frozen securitie
- 1609: The vvay to life
- 1610: An aduertisement to the English seminaries, amd [sic] Iesuites
- 1610: A looking glasse for maried folkes
- 1610: A sermon preached in August the 13. 1610. In Canterbury to the corporation of black-smiths
- 1611: Manuale catholicorum
- 1611: Scala c?li
- 1611: Certaine epistles of Tully verbally translated: together with a short treatise, containing an order of instructing youth in grammer, and withall the use and benefite of verball translations
- 1611: Mary sitting at Christs feet
- 1612: The third work of mercy. Or, The sinners entertainement of harbourlesse Christ
- 1612: Scala coli. Nineteene sermons concerning prayer
- 1613: The embassador between heauen and earth, betweene God and man. Or A booke of heauenly and healthy meditations and prayers for earthly and sickly soules and sinners
- 1613: Epithalamium vpon the all-desired nuptials of Frederike the fift
- 1613: Teares of ioy shed at the happy departure from Great Britaine, of the two paragons of the Christian world. Fredericke and Elizabeth, Prince, and Princesse Palatines of Rhine
- 1613: A treatise of metallica
- 1613: A monumental columne, erected to the liuing memory of the euer-glorious Henry, late Prince of Wales. . . By Iohn Webster
- 1614: The scourge of Venus: or, The wanton lady
- 1614: A true and almost incredible report of an Englishman, that (being cast away in the good ship called the Assention, in Cambaya, the farthest part of the East Indies) trauelled by land through many vnknowne kingdomes, and great cities
- 1614: A proclamation, published by the high and mightie Prince Elector Iohn Sigismond Marquesse of Brandenburgh, the foure and twentieth day of February anno 1614
- 1614: The grounds of diuinitie
- 1614: The prodigals teares: or His fare-well to vanity
- 1614: The harborlesse guest: or, The third worke of mercy
- 1615: Lingua: or, The combat of the tongue, and the fiue senses for superiority
- 1616: The tree of good and euill: or A profitable and familiar exposition of the Commandements
- 1619: Seauen sermons, or the exercises of seauen sabbaths
- 1619: The worldlings aduenture
- 1620: A helpe to discourse. Or, A miscelany of merriment
- 1621: Wither's motto
- 1624: Loues garlan[d] or, Posies for rings, hand-ke[r]chers, and cloues
- 1625: An excellent and best approoued treatise of the plague
- 1626: An examination of those things wherein the author of the late Appeale holdeth the doctrines of the Pelagians and Arminians, to be the doctrines of the Church of England
- 1631: A booke of merrie riddles
- 1631: Perfet [sic] directions for all English gold, now currant in this kingdome
- 1632: Accompts cast up
- 1633: The ruine of Rome. Or, An exposition vpon the whole Reuelation
- 1633: Davids repentance. Or, A plaine and familiar exposition of the Lj. Psalme
- 1633: The great assize, or, Day of iubilee
- 1634: Three pious & religious treatises
- 1635: Hoptons concordancy enlarged
- 1635: Catiline his conspiracy. VVritten by Ben: Ionson. And now acted by his Maiesties Servants with great applause
- 1635: The argument of the pastorall of Florimene
- 1637: Hero and Leander: begun by Christopher Marloe, and finished by George Chapman
- 1637: The ph?nix of these late times: or the life of Mr. Henry Welby, Esq
- 1637: Curiosities: or the cabinet of nature
Thu Dec 07 21:50:31 CST 2023