Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
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PR3291.A1 M45 1676 | The Memory of the just is blessed and is to be had in everlasting remembrance a most useful (pithy and deserved) commendation of (that pious and reverend minister of the gospel) Mr. Thomas Wadsworth, who changed this life for a better, October 29, 1676 : printed in meeter to perfume his name and keep alive his memory to future posterity. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 M46 1756a | Memoirs of an Oxford scholar. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M47 | The Merry milk-maid being her longing-desire after matrimony, that she might be one of the honourable society of gossips : to the tune of Tan tivee. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 M47 1661 | Merry drollery, or A Collection of [brace] jovial poems, merry songs, witty drolleries intermix'd with pleasant catches | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M47 1663 | A Merry dialogue between a maid and her master, or, All covet, all loose ... to a delightful new tune called, Fill her belly full, full. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M47 1665 | A Merry dialogue betwen Thomas and John. In the praise, and dispraise of women, and wine. : Thomas against the women doth contend ... To a gallant delightful new tune, well known amongst musitianers, and in play-houses, called, Women and wine. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M47 1672 | A Merry life and a short, or, The VVay to bring a noble to nine-pence ... tune of The new corant .. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M47 1680 |
The Merry wives of Wapping, or, The Seaman's wives clubb each one her husbands absence doth bemoan, complaining they are forc'd to lye alone, and that they want what other women have, although they married are to seamen brave, at length being flasht with brisk reviving brandy, their sorrows melt away like sugar candy : to the tune of The country m[i]ss, or, The plowmans prophesie. The Merry discourse between two lovers, or, The Joyful meeting betwixt John and Betty ... to a new tune, or Dighby's farewell. The Merry countrey maids answer to the countrey lovers conquest ... the tune is, Once I lov'd a lass with a rowling eye. |
4 |
PR3291.A1 M47 1682 | Merlin reviv'd, or, An Old prophecy lately found in a manuscript in Pontefract-Castle in York-shire | 2 |
PR3291.A1 M47 1684 | The Merry plow-man and loving milk-maid | 2 |
PR3291.A1 M47 1688 | A Merry nevv dialogue between a courteous young knight, and a gallant milk-maid ... to the tune called Adams fall, or Jocky and Jenny, or Where art thou going my pritty maid. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M476 1680x | The Merry maid of Shoreditch, her resolution and good counsel to all her fellow maids; and says that she will never tye her self to a crab tree so long as she has a whole wood to range in. : The tune is, I have a mistris of my own: or, Hold buckle and thong together. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M477 1658x | Merry Tom of all trades. Or, A trick to get mony at every dead lift, made known by Tom of all trades that bravely could shift. : From one place to another about he did range, and at his own pleasure his trade he could change. : The tune is, Behold the man. &c. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M477 1674x | A Merry wedding; or, O brave Arthur of Bradly. To a pleasant new tune. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M5 | The miserable mountebank, or, A fierce encounter betwixt down right Dick and this devil of a doctor one morning in a market place. It seems he says he'd raise the dead, by vertue of his pill, but Richard came and broke his head, for his confounded skill. To the tune of, Cold and raw. This may be printed, R.P. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M52 1680 | [The midwi]ves ghost ... to the tune of When Troy town, &c. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M57 1615 | Mistris Turners farewell to all women | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M57 1661 | Misery to bee lamented, or, A Doleful relation of the sad accident which befell Lawrence Cawthorn a journey-man- butcher, belonging to the shambles in Newgate-Market, who being supposed to be dead, was caused to be presently buried by his lanlady [sic] Mris. Co[o?]k ... and how he came to himself again ... it being also certainly reported, that he was heard to utter many grievous shrieks and groans ... from Friday night, June 21 to Monday morning June 24, 1661 : to the tune of Troy town. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M57 1674 | The Mistaken mid-vvife, or, Mother Mid-night finely brought to bed relating how a midwife in London ... to take off the scandal of barreness ... wore a pillow under her cloaths to deceive her neighbours ... : tune of I am a jovial batchelor, &c. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M57 1677 | A Mite from a mourner upon the loss of that faithful and able minister of the gospel, Mr. Richard Kentish, who departed this life Jan. 31, 1676. | 2 |