•
The Betraying of Christ (1598) • ''The Letting of Humour's Blood in the Head-vaine
(epigrams and satires) and A Mery Meetinge, or tis Mery when Knaves mete
(1600) – the two latter being publicly burnt by order, but republished later under other names (Humors Ordinarie
and The Knave of Clubbes'') • ''Greene's Ghost haunting Conie-Catchers'' (1602), which he pretended to have edited from
Greene's papers, but which is largely borrowed from his printed works •
Tis Merrie when Gossips meete (1602), a dialogue between a Widow, a Wile, a Maid and a Vintner • '''' (1604), in which Death describes the tyrants, careless divines and other evil-doers whom he will destroy • ''Hell's broke loose
(1605), an account of John of Leyden. In the same year a Theatre of Divine Recreation
(not extant), poems founded on the Old Testament, and a collection of epigrams entitled Humor's Antique Faces'' •
A Terrible Battle between ... Time and Death (1606) •
Democritus, or Doctor Merry-man his Medicines against Melancholy humors, reprinted, with alterations, as
Doctor Merrie-man, and Diogenes Lent home (1607), in which Athens is London •
The Famous History of Guy, Earl of Warwick (1607), a long romance in Rowlands's favorite six-lined stanza, and one of his hastiest, least successful efforts •
Humors Looking Glasse (1608) • (dubiously)
Martin Mark-all, Beadle of Bridewell (1608 or 1610), a history of roguery containing much information about notable
highwaymen (q.v.
kings of gypsies) and the completest vocabulary of
thieves' slang up to that time, ==Later works==