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68 Cafafogue of
184—Bonny Lass I love thee well, |
bonny Lad I love thee better, 1
The I Bonny Scottish Lad, | And The | Yielding Lass. |
To an excellent new Tune much in Request, called The Liggan Waters. |
Printed for J. Conyers at the Black Raven in Holborn. | [1682-91.]
3 woodcuts, 4 cols. B.L.
See also "An Answer to the Bonny Scot = Behold, I pray, what's come to pass ".
B.S. ^;. Rox.-. Pepysrf-.^
475 41 " 269
185—Both Men and Women listen well, |
A Merry Jest I will you tell, |
The Woman to the Plow | And | The Man to the Hen-Roost. | Or,
a fine way to cure a Cot-Quean, |
The Tune is, I have for all good wives a Song. |
Finis. I
Printed for J. Wright, J. Clarke, W. Thackeray, and T. Passinger. | [1670-82.]
4 woodcuts, 4 cols. B.L.
No. 283 of Thackeray's List.
2 3
^°^' 534' ^"''^ 2o* ■^"'"S 397. 39S.
186—Both Parents and Lovers, I pray now attend, |
Unto the Relation which I have here penn'd, |
The Tragical Ballad : | Or, The j Nobleman's Cruelty to his Son. |
In Four Parts, viz |
[i.] Shewing how. a young Esquire fell in Love with his Mother's
Waiting Gentle- | woman. |
2. How they were privately Married, and she proving with Child,
was turned out of | Doors by his Parents. |
3. The Cruelty of his Parents when they knew that he was Married
to her. I
4. How they contrived to send him to Cadiz, where he had his
Head shot ofif by | a Cannon Ball ; and how his Ghost
appeared to his Parents. |

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