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TAYLOR, John.

The whole life and progress of Henry Walker the Ironmonger. First, The manner of his conversation. Secondly, The severall offences, and scandalous pamphlets the said Walker hath writ, and for which he is now a prisoner in New-Gate. Thirdly, The forme of the indictment which is laid against him, by the Kings sergeants at law, and his learned counsell. Fourth, his conviction by the Iury. Fifthly, His recantation, and sorrow for the publicke wrong he hath done his majesty and the whole kingdome. Here are also many remarkable passages concerning the offence, and apprehending the said Henry Walker, with a true relation of his severall escapes and rescues from the hands of Justice, etc. Collected and written by John Taylor.

      Printed at London. 1642 - 4to [8]p. Full modern calf, sponge patterned, with blind stamped decoration, spine titled in gilt. The Bradley Martin copy with bookplate. A very good copy. First edition. Wing T530. Rare; this is the only copy to have appeared at auction in the last 20 years. John Taylor, (1589-1653) the Water Poet. Walker gained the epithet "ironmonger" from an early apprenticeship, however he was drawn into journalism and preaching and through both means he propagated his anti-episcopal message. He printed numerous "seditious and scandalous libels" and in 1644 became involved in the periodical press, being responsible for many short-lived but influential titles, including Occurrences of Certain Speciall and Remarkable Passages, 1644 and subsequently Perfect Occurrences. "During 1642 Walker engaged in a pamphlet exchange with John Taylor, who repeatedly stigmatized him as an ignoramus ironmonger and a scandalous preacher. Walker's contemporary notoriety was chiefly as a newsbook editor, perhaps second only to Marchmont Nedham in prominence." (ODNB) In relation to the printing of seditious literature, Taylor accuses Walker of being the "chiefe or main stickler in this cause", and goes on to describe the setting-up of Walker's bookshop; "hee not having any word of God in his said shop above the bulke or size of a horne-booke". Taylor estimates that Walker's output must have been "4 or 500,000 of such pamphlets. by which means or doings, some hundred of thread-bare scribblers fell to the trade of scandalous writing, and news making.these scandalous fooleries (or knaveries) were of such attractive force and power, that they drew at least 500 vagrants and vagabonds from all the shires about London, and they were all suddenly metamorphis'd and transforme'd into wandering booksellers". Taylor discusses Walker's network of pamphlet distributors and goes on to relate various brushes with the law, including one incident where Walker, before a sojourn in Newgate prison, hides in an upholsterer's shop, escaping from the authorities on a boat down the Thames. [Attributes: First Edition; Hard Cover]

      [Bookseller: C. R. Johnson Rare Book Collections]
Last Found On: 2009-03-08          Check current availability from:     AbeBooks


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