My dear - the precarious state of Lady - health for some time past, or rather the necessity there has been of keeping her in a state of constant quiet and uninterrupted repose, ... [electronic resource].
1787
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Title
My dear - the precarious state of Lady - health for some time past, or rather the necessity there has been of keeping her in a state of constant quiet and uninterrupted repose, ... [electronic resource].
Created/published
[London?] : [s.n.], [1787?]
Description
[4]p. ; 4.ĚŠ
Associated name
Note
This record was provided by a vendor. It may contain incorrect or incomplete information.
Attributed to George Villiers.
Title from first few lines of a satirical letter.
Reproduction of original from Bodleian Library (Oxford).
Attributed to George Villiers.
Title from first few lines of a satirical letter.
Reproduction of original from Bodleian Library (Oxford).
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Cengage Gale, 2009.
ESTC staff note
A MS. note in the Bodleian Library tract volume, in which this piece is found, suggests the author is George Villiers; at least three George Villiers are known to have lived between 1785 and 1790, the period during which all the songs in the tract volume were composed by the same poet. This piece in the volume is bound between one dated 1787 and another on Warren Hastings's trial in Westminster Hall, which began on 13 February 1788
Cited/described in
English Short Title Catalog (ESTC), T221355
Place of creation/publication
Great Britain -- England -- London.
Item Details
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