Oates well thresh't. : Being a dialogue of country-make betwixt a farmer, and his man-boy, Jack. The good man, who had lost much by the grain, hears Presbyter-Jack to plead for it in vain. The tune, Which no body can deny, &c. The burden must be twice repeated.
1681
Available at Vault - Craven
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Title
Oates well thresh't. : Being a dialogue of country-make betwixt a farmer, and his man-boy, Jack. The good man, who had lost much by the grain, hears Presbyter-Jack to plead for it in vain. The tune, Which no body can deny, &c. The burden must be twice repeated.
Created/published
London : Printed for R.H., in the year, 1681.
Description
1 sheet (2 p.) ; (fol.)
Associated name
Note
Verse - "Our Oates, last week not worth a groat,".
Cited/described in
Wing, D.G. Short-title catalogue of books printed in England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, and British America, and of English books printed in other countries, 1641-1700 (CD-ROM, 1996), O64
English short title catalogue (ESTC), R17742
English short title catalogue (ESTC), R17742
Place of creation/publication
Great Britain -- England -- London.
Call number
137- 196f
Folger-specific note
Manuscript numbered "72.". Disbound. Provenance: Bridgewater Library - Huntington Library duplicate copy
Call number
ART Vol. b71 Vol. 1 no.32
Folger-specific note
ac254568. Trimmed and mounted. Interleaved in: Tutchin, J. The bloody assizes (Wing T3370A), with 23 other Wing items, 2 18th cent. items and 29 prints, all relating to the Glorious Revolution, 1688-89. Half bound in maroon goatskin; marbled end-papers; all edges gilt. Provenance: armorial bookplate of Roberti Comitis de Crewe [Robert Earl of Crewe]; bookseller's description (from Maggs?), numbered 758, tipped to front paste-down; bought by the Folger from Christopher Edwards, 1997